AQ DIIRI IA | IRD IBRARY [TT mim Il | i (| Il Ll | 1000 LE HL | i JL LIED EERE ELL HR RE 1 | [ 3M a CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY 74th Concress January 2d Session 1936 CGP SER DO20oog Y89132105 NOS5S34101 141 R Rs UNITED STATES CONGRESS 1936 JA Y OFFICIAL YeP93/ CONGRESSIONAL DIREC DALLAS PUBLIC LIBRARY GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS nr ch Ens wif ps A SA ins 74™ CONGRESS, 2° SESSION BEGINNING JANUARY 3, 1936 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS FIRST EDITION CORRECTED TO DECEMBER 21, 1935 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1935 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING By C. B. DEANE Office of Congressional Directory, Basement of the Capitol Phene, N Ational 3120, Branch 228 Copies of this publication may be procured from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office Washington, D. C., at $1.00 per copy (cloth) nal a mena et WAR — ES = il NOTES The following changes have occurred in the membership of the Seventy-fourth Congress since the election of November 6, 1934: Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in SENATORS Bronson Cutting, N. Mex________ Huey P. Long, 1a... io 5 Thomas D. Schall, Minn......__ REPRESENTATIVES Frederick Landis, 2d Ind._....___ Francis B. Condon, 1st R. 1 7 Griffin, Anthony yo 2dN.Y_.! John McDuffie, 1st Ala_.________ Michael L. Igoe, at large, I11.____ Cap R. Carden, 4th Ky Charles V. Truax, at lites, Ohio . William W. Arnold, 23d Ill_______ William F. Brunner, 2d N.-¥-... Henry M. Kimball, 3d Mich_.___ May 6,1935 Sept. 10,1935 Dec. 22,1935 . 15,1934 Oct. 19,1935 Mar. 2,1935 June 2,1935 Sept. 16, 1935 Sept. 27,1935 Dennis Chavez !________ me Charles A. Halleck___._. Charles F. Risk_________ Edward W. Curley_____ Frank W. Boykin__.____ William B. Barry_._.___ Verner W. Main____.___ May 20,1935 Feb. 35,1935 Aug. 19,1935 1Appointed by Governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected and qualified. All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indicated. III in p——— = A % UNO no nNOWO == —v—CN : = RANEY : : 1% 0 ©omorn bd > = B= =) Noy 11 Bag 1 | tes ¥ oN 3 [mes : rl p22 zs Ll ONO a Tis 7 = MON — LJ sid 3 Bhs M A enn ||| ~Ege 0 a : Z Novno B i : : : fe aN OY © : is 22g |B 0) 0 ONO - Ex - NN ral fis: ] : a —NN Ss ; . - ANN 22 AE AR oRN : Se 2 SE > = = = 8 Lo : wn E : > Noi 2 =r z 9 > — = [oa] < — 0 © T ra ; 5 = : me noN~N< ; [L oo => —— qm < E = : EES = ; S NOONO P 2) NOOO» oo © —00 NO BL ANN i am pe Ts IV rem cep 69132105 R 1936 JA Y4ePd3/ CONTENTS A Page Academy of Sciences, National .._____._____-__ 355 Accounting Office, General... ——_. 344 Accounts and Deposits, Commissioner of... 302 Accounts, Bureau of (Post Office Department). 315 Addresses of MEMDELS. ........ cone niwnnsmmnnmnnn 693 Adjutant General of the Army, The__.___...__ 306 Administrations: Agricultural Adjustment.....oeeeee eee 329 FederalbAleohols. comin coi iig anna 303 arm Cred iene rain SE 367 Federal Emergency Public Works_____.______ 367 Federal Emergency Relief __________________ 371 Eaderal HOUSING . cox neon wrt sen stoms pm——ss 348 F000 and: Drag i oie sire nh meri nme mms 332 Grain Futures... commensal 333 National: BeeoVery. coo-rewrmss-arement ean 372 Nationale Vonth i coe eve re tam ten m= 366 HE a 326 Puerto Rico Reconstruction... __ 378 Railroad, United Stales.......--cenenremenrs 345 Begsttlement i cic ee 366 Rural:Blectrification so oo enesnne- 366 TH LE LT Sete 4 ha eS Im 348 Contact offices at Capitol ___________.__ 265 IGT TT ea Tennis mpi ulate 371 Advisory Council of the National Arboretum___ 335 Aeronautical Board, the coi i 0 l.00.00 350 Aeronautics: Bureau ofc Se SR ESNIGR SL SINT 319 National Advisory Committee for_._._.______ 350 Agricultural Adjustment Administration _____ 329 Agricultural Economics, Bureau of. __.____.____ 330 Agricultural Engineering, Bureau of __________ 330 Agriculture, Department of .___________________ 327 Duties of... crevimmnrmmitin ara 459 Advisory Council of the National Arboretum. 335 Agricultural Adjustment Administration____ 329 Beltsville Research Center_....____________. 331 Bureau of— Agricultural Economies... _.__ 330 Agricultural Engineering. ________________. 330 Animal INAuSIrY.. oc oveeneadasa bi LIE] 330 Biological Survey........oue dao A inn 331 Chemistry and Soils....... call aosbosss 331 Dairy Industry. .......Sioiaiae Soa pr mais 331 Entomology and Plant Quarantine _______ 332 Home: Economies............saostenl 2. waudosy 333 Phnt Industry. ana aiIRl 333 Public Roads.coco tio sivaaninio Roa.cyis 334 Division of Operation. ..........loouiiss 328 Extonsion Service... oii. ci enna ba did 328 Food and Drug Administration____._________ 332 BOTeSt SOrVICE. av mr BEE Sm 332 Grain Futures Administration....___.________ 333 JADTAY times a Ca mri RET 328 Agriculture, Department of—Continued. Office of— Page Budget.andiPinanee i oC in 327 Experiment-Stationsi Lo 000 J 80.000 328 Tonformation oc on 0. 328 Personne)... cc errs 327 Solieltor. iia. 0.000 Tue Se 1000 Tas 328 Soil Conservation Service... ____.__ 334 Weather Burean...........covuvwniin suman rn te 335 Air Commerce, Bureau of. _. ..ooeeo______. 336 Air Corps, Army, Office of the Chief of the__._. 310 Aircraft Production, Office of the Director of__ 310 Alaska Ballroad. . ..oucisnammnmnnunnanes mmm 325 Alaska Road Commission. __._________________ 326 Alcohol Administration, Federal - .____________ 303 Alley Dwelling Authority for the District of Columbia Sua 0.0 Gr 0 man) 377 Dutiesiof ood La 8 Ri Ee. 536 Alphabetical list: Delegates and Resident Commissioners..._._ 154 Representatives. oo... fli. 2 lino 3000000. 147 Senators 05 RL gS AG JHE ZR IRI IR 145 American Battle Monuments Commission_____ 354 Dutiesiof... Sind GOI0ICUL BE 7 Ja 519 American National Red Cross.___. _.____.______ 356 American Retail Federation, Special Commit- tee to Investigate. ....... ET 205 Animal Industry, Bureau of. oo _________ 330 Apportionment of Representatives by States, under each census... .oooonaa Ul LL 238 Arboretum, Advisory Council of the National__ 335 Architect of the Capitol: Architect’s. Office... coonnnranina a 200000 263 House Office Building conn 00 264 Senate Office Building....coooo ona... 264 Archives Council, National .__________________ 538 Archives, The National loi C0 0000 030 0 376 Division of the Federal Register. ____________ 538 National Archives Council... ____.__ 538 National Historical Publications Commis- Slop... Said BLO dL SRR JN LE 537 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- SION. cee ani ent cia AER IIR 3563 Army Industrial College, the. _________________ 31% Army Medical ‘Conter....cccanacsnainonin... 308 Army Medical Museum and Library... _____. 308 Army-War College, the......coo.uecunuamaeades 311 Assignment of rooms in the Capitol: Basement floor and terrace... __.___.__ 273 Gallery floor... ccaceamsnadii nando 202000 279 Groundifoor. i vanian area i Bis LUTE 275 Prinelpal floor 0s. 30 Cl oi. 277 Assignments to committees: Representatives and Delegates... _._.___. 206 BeNAtorS. ree rR A Re i 182 Astrophysical Observatory. ...... cocoon. 355 Attendance on officers, Navy... ocean 320 | § VI Congressional Directory = : Page | poards—Continued. Page Attending physicians at the Capitol _.________. 264 Gono NOY as 310 Attorney General, biography of .______.________. 312 WospiinMization. 304 Attorney’s Office, United States.-oceeeoooo_. 392 A el a a 349 B Library of Congress Trust Fund._____.____. 268 Marine Examining. .....c-ccncneem=etanznaas 320 i Bank Board, Federal Home Loan.____._______ 360 Medical Examiners and Naval Examining ] Bank deposits (Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- Board (Medical)... ....e-crmemssone-a= 319 BOrAtIONY. Jr cn sa we wR ae 374 WNationalLabor Relations--.- ....._ 378 . Bank, Export-Import. ooocioss nll sania 377 National Mediation 2... ccoeeae a 349 ) Bankruptcy and Receivership Proceedings and Naval Consulting... o.oo econ 319 the Administration of Justice in United NavaliBxamining: 0 to 319 States Courts, Special Committee to Petroleum Administrative... _._____________ 326 Investigate... .cocecwostiobtatTiatl 179 Petroleum Labor Polley... =. oo 326 Barracks, Marine... _ loessosnt 320 Railroad Retirement. ........- i. cor=nenssmc= 378 Basement floor and terrace of Capitol: Regents, Smithsonian Institution __________ 354 Assignment of rooms on... o.oo. 0 Soul) 273 Retiring, Naval So oo we 319 DIBEYAIN Of... cv cise son ss SRS, Bob A0E 272 Boclal Seely co on oa ores mr mw mE mE 379 Battle Monuments Commission, American____ 354 Surveys and Maps of the Federal Govern- § Beltsville Research Center... ____________ 331 11TH ee SB he Re SiR 351 Bicentennial Commission, The George Wash- Potles of et 513 INGEN... coh ri mmm meme nen a S0 227 Tax Appeals, United States = © 347 A Biographies: ITE me aegis © ain, Sakis. Sliema in 503 1 Attorney Generali i. soianiaiolobde dod 312 Visitors to the Military Academy. __________ 228 Clerk of the House of Representatives.__.___ 259 Visitors to the Naval Academy.____._________ 228 Judges of the United States Court of Cus- Vocational Education, Federal ._____________ 323 toms and Patent Appeals... ___._______ 388 | Botanic Garden, United States. _____.__.______ 268 Justice of the— Budget and Finance, Officeof.________________ 327 Court of Claims of the United States....... HR EE IT DTI ee comm i ee Wien 304 Supreme Court of the United States....__. 383 LAT A her deln cabin asin ihdiute 425 United States Court of Appeals for the Dis- Building Commission: trict of Columbia... 387 Toreign Serviee. 2. ff oo. Bit di Len 352 | United States Customs Court... ._______._ 391 The Of. 295 | Postmaster General. RL HS SMALE CRA Ela 313 TEL TERT ara i de 295 President of the United States.-..........._. 297 United States Supreme Court... 295 4 Secretary of— 3 AgTICUILUTe...... nm bo di aR ah see io LED 327 Bupeans; OETA oE: ce i tocnomraIi ts Ya tiinnbing 336 Accounts, Post Office Department__ __._.____ 315 re i ge ee A aE 391 ACTONIRITIS.. J. oss vm ser mle oo mom ENS EER 319 sed pra 341 Agricaltural Economies. =... r35eal 330 oe ROR PRE PTR EUR RUN 316 Agricultural Engineering. ___________________ 330 Bonate.) 11 2140 Slat oot 953 Air Commereetse: con. basa lati Sunil 336 Bite © GbE puRrY hue 299 American Ethnology-.o .coteunooll “ouils 355 re Te 301 Animal Industry ues. muivmaino ll ouilll 330 | Wor. t toeciiglh ary img 305 Biological Survey... is Lsaociuasnil gail 331 t Secretaries to the President _________________ 297 Budget. ooo 304 Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Duties Of. ooo 425 Resident Commissioners. ___.________._ 3 Conger. 00 URL 00 IA RY 337 * Sergeant at Arms of the Senate_.__._________ 256 Chemistry and Sofls.2.d.__ 222 ood lit 331 Vice President of the United States_._______ 3 Childrens. tdi den oo or ot OE 342 Biological Survey, Bureau of, Department of CUSEOME... ow ms me wm mecha td REE WE eH 302 Agviealture So. oo. ile 331 Construction and Repair____________________ 318 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Dalry Industry. a -snassza 2d LLU TET 331 System... certo dntralL InsiBRRES 345 Rconomics, Agricultural... =. = 2 07 33 Duties ofescod Lyssissosndi loblmin: 496 Engineering, Navy....--0 00 J 318 | Boards: Engravingand Printing... ___..F 303 Aeronantieal fica ali uh aneas ln iam 350 Entomology and Plant Quarantine... _.____ 332 Y Central Statistical o.oo. Lilia i uns 370 Ethnology, American. ...-.-22. CL. .L 355 Compensation, Navy... .......... ob gos 319 IHOTION. «oot nema srr ne re PARR STE 338 Beonomy, JOIN. ...... ccc onn wenn dB ibe ais 350 Foreign and Domestic Commerce. _._________ 337 ; Engineers for Rivers and Harbors.__________ 309 Home Economics... 0000 2 2 333 Examination of Dental Officers, Navy. ______ 320 INAIaN. ARIS... rrr i a Ls in 322 | Examination of Medical Officers, Navy... ___ 320 Insalar Affairs... Colo li 000 S008 008 2) 310 Examining, Marine... cconemen cnee 250100 320 Internal Revenue. - - - -wumuwmswainn dill 200 303 Examining, Naval... . teeiouiead is indaiis 319 Tabor. Statistics... CoIioiiinunn A Baty Lo) 341 Federal Home Loan Bank _..________________ 360 AThTROUBES .. corridos sivas 338 Roreisn-"TTro le ZONES e warwerenonsnmnnimnanan= 376 Medicine ang SUIEErY-w--r=cn=eamnneannamn== 318 Er r— — Contents VII Bureaus—Continued. Page Page Mines: Leslie ioiapulsacndiosios 324 | Chaplain of the House of Representatives. ____ 259 Mint. ooo tel i cuts da tune tats) hs 303 | Chaplain ofthe Senate... _....._._...__._______ 253 Narcotics it oc uriamrrivvus is saibsofnlion ios 303 | Chaplains, Office of the Chiefof_______________ 306 Nations] Guard. x: fcg0 ossescloniislis 311 | Chemical Warfare Service, Office of Chief of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection. _____ 339 3 TTL Ne SO ME ee LL 311 INAVIZtIon, NOVY. ooo crn ernest SENET, 317 | Chemistry and Soils, Bureauof. ..._.._._.______ 331 Ordnance, NAVY... ous dbuumsdtbosia sini ll 318 | Chief Clerk and Superintendent, Treasury, Pan American Sanitary. ........._ Jo. ccoiss 356 Office.of.....c.unmibionil slot mele 302 Plant Industry. cae aioee eee iiosudecazs 333 | Chief of— Public Health Service... ccd. se-noweiiess 303 Alr-Corps.. cbieoaisoald otaaldes To iss 310 Beblie Roads. o.oo Ee 334 Cavalty och ain SRE opi) ae 306 Reelamation. ool oi iioi aio sin ucindiaio: 323 Chaplains... -i-o oo s-wabasad taro lens 306 Shipping Board... coosniraid-caminnis 339 Chemical Warfare Service... ..____.____ 311 Soils, Chemistry and. _~_ i. cise voiebs 331 Coast: Artillery... oul 0S 20. 000. 000] 306 Standards, National. gio. 5.0 sie vnitin obaces 338 Engineerdei do hadi ll gauged Jngnkigaiyl 309 Supplies and Accounts. ........ cocoon. 318 Plead Artillery. isis cuinsu. ian iaE dn 306 TA OL Rae Mr LS ER ie mS 335 Finance ita dooms Higa haonianyal 308 Womens a 342 Infantry. Loui. died sata aiing 2 51a] 306 Yards ond DoCKS...cvis svi e wine te eu 318 OrAnAN0e. ies ns caesar nial) fanien 310 Cc Chief Signal Officer, Office ofthe_.._._________ 310 Children’s’ Bureau... 28.0 S000 00. 342 Cabinet members, listof.._... coca 298 | Circuit Courts of Appeals of the United States... 386 Calendar et rr se Iv. | Oity-postoffies. i Slao gg) [Ala J S10] 405 California Debris Commission. __.........__.____ 309 | Civil Service Commission. _____________________ 343 Campaign expenditures, investigation of: Duties of... JEiiav Igo Loita JIT 486 House special committee... __._._________ 205 | Civilian Conservation Corps (Emergency Con- Senate select committee... ___________ 180 servation Work)... Co LL 0... 372 Canal, the Panama ieee ene ee smn 349 | Claims Commission: Capitol: GOrMION oc vn sawn bo USL r ol ALS 351 Architect of the— Special Mexican. ...ccceennmdedamesemasdsasl 351 Architectlst Offices mr = awk 263 | Claims Conventions, United States and Mexico. 351 House Office Building. = J. ©... = 264 | Claims, United States Court of ____________.___ 389 Senate’Office Building... .... 5. 264 | Classification, political, of Congress. .._....---- 142 Basement floor and terrace of— Clerk, House of Representatives (biography) -- 259 Assicnment Of TOOMS ON. = weme=rs=ons-r=s ax 273 | Clerks to House committees. ..._..._oocoo__-. 261 EL ee Ln Be 272 | Clerks to Senate committees _.._._____._______ 254 Building, history and description of ________ 269 | Club, the Congressional... ___________ 357 Gallery floor of— Coast and Geodetic SUrvey. oo ccoeooeoooao- 339 Assionmentofroomson. _.- _..__-l___. 279 | Coast Artillery, Office of the Chiefof..__.___._ 306 Eh hE ees Tr ER Ee v8 | Coast - Guard, the. .... .cosiicarasameessamadant 304 Ground floor of— Colleges: Assicnment ofrooms on... ec-----m= 275 ATIy:-Industrlol. cio csrsrmebennran re 311 RE TE Ee SS 274 AIMY- War. coo. daba lat ova 2 J 00021 311 Grounds, Commission on Enlarging the_.___ 225 | Columbia Hospital for Women ________________ 359 Office of— Columbia Institution for the Deaf ____________ 358 TEA A RES A a 263 | Commerce Commission, Interstate ..._.._____ 344 Attending physician... eco 265 | Commerce, Department of... ______________ 336 Congressional Record....—co-eoeneaema-z=nm 263 Duties: of . cocviciririsosisssres in SoS 467 Officers of the— Bureau of— iB eee arivanis sins ie 259 Ar COMEreR. coco vue sarin Gam tn 336 nT tie Se Sa aA 253 Fisheries. ooo... 2000 IE N00 SISITIES 338 er eR aR aE 264 Foreign and Domestic Commerce... ______ 337 Principal floor of— Tichthouses. . oi ouverts 338 Assicnment of rooms'on.. ooo roa 277 Navigation and Steamboat Inspection.___ 339 Berar Of aA Er 276 Standards... oriu rrr rere SL EAL 338 Railroad ticket office. oo oo =n 2a 264 The Census. coroner dB 0 TER SILUD0E 337 Reloaraph Oflees 0 re 264 Coast and Geodetic Survey.__._.______.__.__._. 339 Relephonie Xchange... conn ome meme 265 Patent Office... oo caaaaaa dm S00 3000, 339 Veterans’ Administration contact offices---_- 265 Shipping Board Bureau......._____.__ lL MC 339 Capitol Grounds, Commission on Enlarging__ 225 Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation. 340 Cavalry, Office of the Chief of _.______________ 306 | Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits... 302 Censas Butean rr oe a 337 | Commissions: Central Statistical Board... 0s 370 Alaska Road. © vei rman eae ith Dob O 326 Phitios of ans Ser 2 fan inte 534 American Battle Monuments. _____._._.______. 354 Central Statistical Committee ______________ 370 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater__________ 353 Changes in membership of the Seventy-fourth California Debris Lil Ll) Lia 309 TT EE Ne 111 Dial BL ha nee eee d ese 343 VIII Congressional Directory Commissions—Continued. Page Constitution Sesquicentennial ______________ 229 Employees’ Compensation, United States__.__ 343 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds____._________ 225 Federal Communications. __________._______ 379 IB eAera). POWOL... cri wwe nmin edna a wi 348 Federal Trade... slooitil 2000 G00 346 TINONARESS.. oC Se dL RL UE CLL TL 353 Foreign Service Buildings. ._.....___..______ 352 George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial _______ 228 George Washington Bicentennial ____________ 227 House Office: Building... soo... .... 0200. 225 International Boundary— United States, Alaska, and Canada_______ 352 United States and Mexico___....__________ 352 International Fisheries, United States and Ty EE Lo Ot aye ho J Mt 352 International Joint... .....corneenn ea on-So0000 351 Tntorstate Commerce. ...«czuemeomen-Jaoinol 344 Mexican Claims, Special... ..vewee—nsuazosls 351 Migratory Bird Conservation..________._____ 227 Mixed Claims, United States and Germany. 351 Mississippi River.cciiia alec do nuns Ho 309 Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza_________ 227 National Capital Park and Planning. _______ 353 National Forest Reservation. ____________ 226 National Historical Publications...._________ 537 Perry's Vietory Memorial... coon... 354 Public Utilities, District of Columbia._______ 404 Securities and Exchange... ooo... 375 Senate Office Building... oc scsaio tole 225 Supreme Court Building... ___.______ 225 Parift, United States. ue/ii cisio Dodinll oie 347 Territorial Expansion Memorial _______._____ 229 Thomas Jefferson Memorial .________________ 227 United States Roanoke Colony.______________ 228 Commissions and joint committees, congres- SONAL. wns dSgnost oad add 225 Committee assignments: Representatives toed) ia solBel coaulnh 206 SONAOrR.. vac arenes ns BSI are TN 182 Committee on Printing, Joint... __________ 226 DRIER GL. nein enn nedg Sr Las 482 Committee on the Library, Joint__________.___ 226 Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Joint________ 229 Committees: House— Assienments fo. - So docooi foo cones 206 BIOPE STO tras sank he ms rio oo SE Los 261 Meeting:days Of... co iod. muon sue mds sour 205 Membership of... ocean commzsaruast 252 192 Official stenographers to... o-oo... 263 Select andispeelal.i.. cisizusL Jog siosisnss 204 Senate— Assignmentsibo. sousioeaii tone nasal 182 BTR B 10. nnn rs tT Eat bE 254 Meeting days.of.-oacoonn nnn itananals ig 181 Membership.of. ..coovedosbdunst foo ton 173 Speecialiand select... co -oosadREI ESS 179 Committees, select and special: Senatetoomel in Bane daneifbanadl vain 179 Houses onto bird seman Mhoraaraaing 204 Commodity Credit Corporation ___.__.________ 375 Des Ofer a nin BE ato 535 Communications Commission, Federal _______ 379 Compensation Board, Navy.-._...___..__.___ 319 Compensation Commission, Employees’... 343 Page Comptroller General of the United States (General Accounting Office) _..________ 344 Comptroller of the Currency... __......._.___. 302 Conciliation Service, United States....________ 341 Congress: BADALY, Ofc cnn sserminnn aes haiti SI PH 267 Political classification of. ..o--.obo2 2020000 142 SeISIONBOL. on enran TA a a a a By 233 Congressional: Apportionment, by States. C..__ ____..0 238 CHIE Sins vasa a wes war SE Se, 357 Commissions and joint committees__________ 225 Delegations, by States. ......... 02, Arr 133 Districts, mapsef--..-. Pls Laan «3 639 Record, office of, at Capitol... ______________ 263 Conservation of Wildlife Resources, Select Committee on: OO a ar ne 204 ER a = non 179 Conservation Work, Emergency....___________ 372 Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission, TE BT ed mh es SP A 229 Construction and Repair, Bureau of_.__________ 318 Consular officers iis ea ee 543 Consulting’ Board, Navy. ~~~ 319 Continuous service of Senators. .._.__._________ 158 Conventions, United States and Mexico CO BIS rrr nnn ore end Ed me mes 351 Coordinator of Transportation, Federal _______ 371 Copyright Office, Library of Congress...._.____ 267 Corporation counsel’s office, District of Colum- 1 i A SE Lr eR ee 402 Corporations: Commodity Credit ids on ie ceancce==s 375 Federal Deposit Insurance... _ ooo ______ 374 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance..._____ 364 TeoderaliBurplus Relief =. ___. ee eae 371 Homa: OWNors Lio: cui mirncinr ses iinnss 361 Housing, Labor Department... _.____._______ 342 ImlandsWolerways:. Soo 0 352 Reconstruction Finance. _ ocean 359 Shipping Board Merchant Fleet... ________ 340 AT HR en RE 346 Council, National Archives. .....e-vvcecunme=s 538 Council, National Emergency... 374 Council of National Defense, United States_.._ 350 DUHEB OL... eo wisn onde rma 503 Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United Staten. 387 Cortof Glomerular 389 ER I Sb 520 Court of Impeachment, Senate. coeeeaaaae 239 Courts, District of Columbia: Court of Appeals, United States. ---.--__- 387 I DRE Se ea 393 DAENICIDAL..... ot ores mune maa Ses Ce 393 Relic... Sd a Pha SL na 393 SUDLOING. roo ais mia st me sms symten 392 Courts, United States: Circuit Courts of Appeals. === cacao 386 CINE so nent ame me a ame a 389 Customs... la om tna asa 391 Customs and Patent Appeals ..__-__-..____ 388 SHDEOING i oii Sina RE ries a EE oo bball ioe Er 383 Credit Corporation, Commodity. eecaaeaaao = 375 efi Contents IX Page Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents, Special Investigating Committeeon.__________ 205 Currency, Office of the Comptroller of the_____ 302 Customhouse...........s0. 02) Saige Tasos 304 Customs and Patent Appeals, United States Courtof.. Soile sini cv sami al 388 Customs, Bureau of ._ -I0EEa Sli lo 0d oot 302 Customs Court, United States..__________.___. 391 D Dairy Industry, Bureawlof-- ioc. cocoa 331 Deaf, Columbia Institution for the. __________. 358 Debates, Official Reporters of: Oa 262 Benates. of inn ee a 256 Debt Service, Public. cz. 0 ioteseat ot on ses 302 Delegates and Resident Commissioners: Alphabeticallst... 50 oo cososb sodmusraid og 154 Assignments to committees... __._.___________ 206 Biographies Of ttaccmasls inst toviswrlios 128 List of, with home post offices and Washing- tonaddresses. ........ oo cecaoio lol 702 Rooms and telephonesof. ..________.___.___.. 287 Servicerecordin Congress... ..__-._.. 172 Yotescastfor =o nay. oon ee aa 248 Delegations, congressional, by States_.._______ 133 Dental Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 320 Departments: 70 dln hE 1 CE ee ode ee se 327 COMMErCe I re va 336 Interior Ci aa 321 JUS i a a TE 312 BOY a I I 341 NOVY a 316 Post ico oa 313 Se EEE a er 299 asaya 301 Wares: ier nos Dinca ion gis man i an 305 Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal ______ 37 Deposits, Commissioner of Accounts and______ 302 Description and history of Capitol Building_._ 269 Diagram of the— Basement floor and terrace of the Capitol ___ 272 Gallery floor'of the Capitol....... 222 22 2000 278 Ground floor of the Capitol... ________ 274 Principal floor of the Capitol... ______ 276 Reseating plan of the House_____.___________ 282 Senate Chamber: ooo 20000 0 U0 280 Diplomatic and Consular Service... __.__._____ 543 Director of vehicles and traffie, District of Co- lumblas ioe... Re RI 403 Directoryof the. Senate...coo crea... lili. 281 Dispensary, Naval. cee coool iL 319 District of Columbia: Alley Dwelling Authority ___________________ 377 City. Dost offi... over mnern een aS 405 Corporation counsel’soffice.._..__..__.___.___ 402 Courtof Appealsforthe... ........ 10. 00. 387 Director of vehicles and traffic.._.___________ 403 Engineer department._.________________._____ 403 Pire department... 0 ui lou 0onl. Rll 403 Government... 2h co SIU lL Ga LI 401 Health department... ...uoidic oii 403 Juvenileicourt i. col so ii ld soiintiason init 393 Metropolitan police. ...o.urrmisiitsavin-. naa 404 Municipal Court ..ccid. savibe varabin-a amin 393 District of Columbia—Continued. Page Officers. Huw ibn oonoidl deninddiing 401 Origin and form of government______________ 397 Pollegieotrl ss cision rr ala a 393 Public Utilities Commission.______________ _. 404 Recorderof deeds... isi oueasan ilies 393 Register of wills and clerk of the probate eon ccs bnni dnd sandman 393 Supreme courbeinal can bits Sanirei oma 392 Division of Labor Standards_..._________._____ 341 Division of Operation, Agriculture Depart- ment. Lil dilisiininn i soar 328 Division of Radiation and Organisms_.._______ 355 Division of the Federal Register. _._____.________ 538 Division, Procurement, Treasury... .____.____ 304 Document room, House of Representatives.___ 260 Dominican Customs Receivership_________.____ 311 Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives... 260 Drug and Food Administration. ._____________ 332 E Economics: Bureawof Agricultaral 330 Bureagol Home. rou air sean 333 Economy Board, theJoint.__ + — 350 Education, Officeiefi co i 322 Electric Home and Farm Authority (Inc.).._._ 365 Electrification Administration, Rural._________ 366 Embassies, forefenier. ooo tru oS 543 Emergency Administration of Public Works, Bederals or 367 Emergency Conservation Work. _.____________ 372 DRO ah a A 509 Emergency Council, National ...__________ nrg) | Emergency Relief Administration, Federal ____ 371 Employees’ Compensation Commission, ETTORE Da a died dens ord Hl 343 197711 DU) Beant tba Aamo 508 Employment Service, United States___________ 342 Engineer Department, District of Columbia... 403 Engineer Office, United States._.___ _________. 309 Engineering, Bureau of Agricultural __________ 330 Engineering, Bureau of, Navy... .___._._____. 318 Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, Board of. __ 309 Engineers, Office of the Chiefof. ____.__._______ 309 Engraving and Printing, Bureau of__.._______. 303 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds, Commission OI EL ES Er so 225 Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Bureau of. 332 Ethnology, Bureau of American____.___._______ 355 Executive departments... __._.._______.____ 295 Experiment stations, Agricultural Department. 328 Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups._____ 155 Export-ImportiBank... Conia aa 377 Bris DHT SEN seine Sl eC Sat 536 Extension Service, Department of Agriculture. 328 F Farm Authority (Inc.), Electric Home and. .... 365 Farm Credit Administration... ___._______ 367 Duties of. er necieeaasizaLaLL 532 Federal Alcohol Administration._______________ 303 Federal Board for Vocational Education_.____. 323 Federal Board of Hospitalization. _____.______. 304 Federal Coordinator of Transportation, office OF cs oe mmm Sms we mi pe SR ESL TAL 371 Federal Communications Commission__....__. 379 DUtieS Of. conic rammed RT oe 520 Page Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. _._____ 374 Federal Emergency Administration of Public A i Ss AN pe Sen Sts 1 31 6 LE 367 Putlesiofl. Sori SA 00000 3500 534 Federal Emergency Relief Administration. ____ 371 Dptiesiol. nT 00N Due BMT 0 JRE 533 Federal Home Loan Bank Board._.____.______. 360 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpo- ration... I TRO A 0 RL 364 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 361 Federal Housing Administration. _____________ 348 Dutiegef aimausl S08 BURG DIEL, 0 JOU 539 Federal Power Commission... ___.________ 348 Buties of. lLurars Sa ili@ingd JEU 514 Federal Prison Industries, Inc... ..__._______ 378 Duties of. Sais roa SINE s Jo nk] 540 Federal Register, Division of the_.____________ 538 Federal Reserve System, Board of Governors He Ba Be En Ti 345 OS Of a hen eam a ar 496 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- GH al Rd Ee Ler 364 Federal Surplus Relief Corporation.___________ 371 Federal Trade Commission... oo. __i... 346 DIeS00 te i Sa Bein i aml wae 499 Field Artillery, office of the Chiefof __________ 306 Finance, office of the Chiefof._________________ 308 Finance Corporation, Reconstruction._________ 359 Finance Corporation, War..............._ir 346 Fine Arts, Commission of... - cv oveo- soon 353 BE RR iar le Sele 8 517 Fire department, District of Columbia. _______ 403 First Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 313 igheries, Burean of. i... enc eesten st das aueis 338 Floor leaders, House of Representatives________ 259 Foldingroom of the House. 2 —. 2 i... ...... 260 Folding room of the Senate_.___._____________ ._ 256 Food and Drug Administration_._______.______ 332 Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of... 337 Foreign consular officers in the United States. __ 557 Foreign diplomatic representatives in the nitedsStates. ot soci 00 adh soniou 543 Foreign Service Buildings Commission. __.____ 352 Foreign Service of the United States_.._____.___ 597 Foreign-Trade Zones Board. _.________________ 376 atlas ol ce i ae 535 Forest Reservation Commission, National _____ 226 Rorest Service. .... custo ie sve a So hts att 332 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General __._______ 315 Preedmen’S HOSPItS]. ic voen i mnamenentiza sams 325 Eyeor Gallery Of ATH. uv comiinn anim anmsot ns 355 G Gallery floor of Capitol: Assignment of FCOMB ONE. vvri meee meen ma 279 A TT ES EC em ai 278 Garden, United States Botanic... ________ 268 General Accounting Office... ________________ 344 Bultic of. ocean DAES 485 General Board ofthe Navy_____________ 0 Ses 319 General Dispensary, Army.__________._________ 308 General Land Office sl Lion, la lion od 321 General Staff, War Department_______________ 305 GReolozienl SULVEY.. uve ee cm mn mmm mmm 323 George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Com- TOIESION.. os Enea wma mm EA 228 x Congressional Directory Page George Washington Bicentennial Commission. 227 German Claims Commission... __________ 351 Government of the District of Columbia________ 401 Government Printing Office... _____.__... 268 Governors of the States and Territories. _______ 249 Grain Futures Administration. ..______._.___._ 333 Ground floor of the Capitol: Assignment ofroomsion.. 2 Ci... lL lO] 275 IASI. ee de me 274 Xi Headquarters Marine Corps... ooo onee-a 320 Health Department, District of Columbia______ 403 Health Service, Bureau of Public______________ 303 Historical Publications Commission, National. 537 History and description of the Capitol.._______ 269 Home and Farm Authority (Inc.), Electric_____ 365 Home Economics, Bureau of... ______.___ 333 Home Loan Bank Board, Federal ____.__.________ 360 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. _____________ 361 Home post offices of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with Washington ad- IE rete eid he sled oe 693 Home, United States Soldiers’. _____.__________ 358 Hospital for Women, Columbia. ________._._____ 359 Hospitalization, Federal Board of . . oo... 304 Hospitals: Hin in RL Nd En ee 325 NL a Oa Sa Ra 320 SER EE EC Me RS Le ES 325 House committees: AS Ie EO. =: 206 A EE SR 261 Meeting daysiof. c....ceeosmmsnnmsmeemdEe sete 205 Membership of. .c. 5 toe Seis ont mans -atnte 192 Officialistenographersto. one oroees 263 Selseband Spoil. i li in aren 204 House Office Building, Commission in Control ERNIE ER TL 225 House of Representatives: Miscellaneous officials... oo ooo ceca aon 263 Officers of .o 5. oobiotbnmuwnvsis bucp-aradt Sah toes 259 Personnel of: Chaplain. co. ibatieen tio dt bn itn os som 259 Clerks to committee... a. dose in iocao 261 Document 100M. cm oit cm ciic al nae naa 260 RolAING LOOM. ii divi nme s enad si wae Hae 05 260 Majority Leader... coiocacid bare amonee 259 Minority Leader. .. cus sw om es pemies dwn dea 259 Office of the— Clerc iain DARA SLY AoC a0 da 259 DOOTKRBDOL =. = ico ie et le SOLES 260 Legislative counsel... co loinc io ol 263 Official Reporters of Debates of .________ 263 Postmaster... ..._sailis team od 261 Sergeant at Arms... Sosa Conia 260 Speaker... ... i sdrmdelacinz ion tn 259 Speaker’s table. oii luis oun To andl 259 Stenographers to committees of ____._______ 263 Political classification of....... ti wir oC 142 Special and minority employees... -..___.___. 261 Housing Administration, Federal ___________.__ 348 Housing Corporation, Labor Department... 342 Howard University_...._..___.. SsHog nsliiovas 325 Hydrographic Office of the Navy... 317 Contents X31 I Page | Joint Committee: Page $1, : On Internal Revenue Taxation _.....____.__ 226 Immigration and Naturalization Service... 342 On Prange er gle C 296 Impeachment trials by the Senate... 239 Datics ol... .5 luiell Ionsinis if 482 Independent offices and establishments._-_____ 343 On the LIrarveucecild. coseninic vie sites 296 Index, IAivIdUal eee 2a a 703 On Veterans’ Affairs... ..._lsonlisabie 229 Indian Affairs, Bureau Of -- ooo ooo __ 322 | Judge Advocate General: Individual Index no 703 ATTY cones tenet inset lara pt) 307 Industrial College, Army.....oooooooomooooo 311 IBY ieris ie nmin nme nb ERS 10 POLS 319 Infantry, Office of the Chief Ofc omnes zoze-- 306 Justice, Department Or cdsraatah aie Ya saan 312 Information, office of, Agriculture Department. 328 DULCE Of. nutrient bath ragduet oritan 437 Information Service, United States..__..___.____ 375 | justices and officials: Inland Waterways Corporation __.__..________ 352 Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Duties of. eee eee 519 United States... issaiiinias aie 388 Inspector General, Office of the (Army)....__. 307 Court ol CRIME id). de. poorinin. suse ay 390 Institution for the Deaf, Columbia___._________ 358 Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, Tnsular Affairs, Bureanof. oon coco tla 310 United Slalesnst sles trator toons 389 Interior Department... ooo. 321 Supreme Court, United States.__.._.__..__._. 386 Dultlesof re REsnesl he 454 i Juvenile Court... .. ... Jeeal siuitsiseg. 393 Alaska Rallroad: cc ce. cooit ooet.. 325 Alaska Road Commission. .......covennrinian 326 L Bureau of— INABA ATRL. ain s09 i Tabor, Departmentof ..._. .._.-._—....... 341 Ni 324 atlas Of. a 478 BeelAmabion. © ae 323 Bureau'of Labor Statistics... ........ 341 Federal Board for Vocational Education_____ 323 Childrens Butea o_o Gra==coz 342 Treedmen’s HOSDHAL. orn ne tre omen ie 395 Conciliation Service, United States._......_. 341 General Tisnd Office. oo. 391 Employment Service, United States.___._.. 342 Qenlonleal BUTVEY er sie 393 Housing Corporation, United States .___.___ 342 Howard UBiVersity... oc ecec eer 395 Immigration and Naturalization Service... 342 National Park Service. oro 323 Labor Standards, Divisionof .______________ 341 Officoof Baueation: oo io 0 o.oo 322 Womens Boreal... .z__ _o._. 342 Oil Administration. a 396 | Labor Relations Board, National .________.____ 378 Petroleum Administrative Board__________.__ 306 | Labor Statistics, Bureau of. _.___._.._______ 341 Petroleum Labor Policy Board. _____________ 326 | land Office, General.......................... 321 St, Elizabeths Hospital ooo ooo 325 | Legislative Counsel: erritofiolofichals. © lite 325 House. ooo 263 Wor Minerals Relief... 0 325 Bonale. ce Es Sfer-crooacc 256 Internal Revenue, Bureau of. _________._______ 303 | Library, Department of Agriculture _...__.__. 328 Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee Library, Joint Committee on the....__________ 226 ER A a A 996 | Library of Congress: International Boundary Commission: Copyright Office. -- oc... - =o ooomeo oo. 267 ‘United States, Alaska, and Canada__..______ 352 Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Addi- Duties of Sr sadam Cae et asi) 511 tional Buildings for the ae er em me ee en te ee ee 225 United States and Mexico... ___ ooo... 352 Personmelof... ee... 267 A ERA pin 512 Prast-Fund- Board: rns oe ee 268 International Exchanges, Smithsonian Institu- Lighthouses, Bureauof. -....._. oo ._....._. 338 rR A en 355 | Loan Corporation, Home Owners’... _______. 361 International Fisheries Commission, United Lobbying Activities, Special Committee to Statesand Canada..." = 352 Investigate. .-_.-—..-—-.____—_..__.. 181 International Joint Commission... 351 | Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, Duties ar a ee 511 and Delegates, with home post offices. 693 Interparliamentary Union... oo... 227 M Interstate Commerce Commission_____________ 344 foi oman RL #55 | wal Contracts, Special Committee to Investi- SATs 317 gate Airand Ocean. oli. ciliii ano. 179 SEC ae TT a hd oe Majority Leader (House), office of .__..__.____. 259 J Maps of congressional districts ........._______ 639 Marine Barracks cocoon iuisniisianinduttesem 320 Joint Board, the... ....-..ccececeonnunrt ite 349 | Marine Corps headquarters... _._____. 320 Joint Economy Board, the... cacccaaaooao .. 350 | Marshal’s office, United States._.._._._________ 392 Joint commissions: Mediation Board, National .___________________ 349 Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for Medical Center, Navaloo ooo oo ioioas lads 320 the Library of Congress. -..-cooceeo-- 225 | Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Internationsl: cade. cubinredisast agsanaun =a 351 Board (Medical)... ale olil 319 X11 Congressional Directory Page Medical Officers, Board for Examination, INERT LCE TEE REE Tu 4 £3 1 03 00 320 Medical School, Naval. vow SE 22IHIEL 0 320 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of _____________ 318 Meeting days: House committees. ...... 22000.) 21000 08 05) 205 Senate commItiees. oc ouwein inion as a ddih 181 Members’ adAdresses.. .c cownmn nanan imei 693 Members of the Cabinet_.____._________________ 298 Members’ rooms and telephones. ____________ 283 Membership: House committees... 0. 30. 00 L 5200 192 Senate committees.....----c 30 lio. 0 denne 173 Membership changes of the Seventy-fourth Congressie lui. suseiag 18 CdSe 111 Memorial Commission, Perry’s Victory....... 354 Merchant Fleet Corporation, United States Shipping: Board... --.---o. bo nity 340 Metropolitan police. ao. ean 404 Mexican Claims Commission, Special _________ 351 Mexico and United States Claims Conventions. 351 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. ___ 227 Military Academy, Board of Visitors... .____ 228 A IReS, BUIeO Of neces es aie os oi sid 324 Minority employees (House)... .__._._. 261 Minority Leader (House), office of ____________ 259 Mint, Bureauofthe or 303 Miscellaneous officials of the House... ______. 263 Mississippi Flood-Control Project, Select Com- mittee to Investigate Labor Conditions ONG oni 179 Mississippi River Commission. ...___._.....____ 309 Mixed Claims Commission, United States and OPO ol. oo ore nk Eh 351 Monuments Commission, American Battle.._. 354 Municipal Conrbe cod sna 393 Munitions Industry, Special Committee on Investigation 0 the: =. over nnnan 180 Muscle Shoals (Tennessee Valley Authority)... 364 N Narcotics, Bureant ofa... coe folicdaninuais mmm 303 Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza Commis- SION Lr as brits Pt Be E Rar 227 National Academy of Sciences... __._._._______ 355 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 350 Duties ofr a ie Badan de Bo abd 510 National Arboretum, Advisory Council of the. 335 National Archives, The. ovo ried ta 376 DPulties.0f id diam ankle Sse ma 537 Division of the Federal Register .___.________ 538 National Archives Council... ________ 538 National Historical Publications Commis- glon tani ans leona aleaniin) d 537 National Archives Council .____...____________ 538 National Bank Redemption Agency ._________ 302 National Capital Park and Planning Commis- BION. tio oi mim mim SEIS UIE 353 Duties of... .. 20 uu aon aus J on 518 National Defense, Council of . __________ _______ 350 National Emergency Couneil ._________________ 374 United States Information Service._.______.._ 375 National Forest Reservation Commission. .__._ 226 National Gallery of Art... 8.0 kin... 355 National Gaord Bureatl. ec. -seicsanenic=ieaz ass 311 Page National Historical Publications Commission. 537 National Labor Relations Board. _..___________ 378 National Mediation Board. cee 349 Dutlesiol a en 495 National Monument Society, Washington_____ 353 National Muses 354 Nationdl Park Senvice. renames 323 National Recovery Administration____________ 372 ID HAD DNase aati athe nas 534 National Resources Committee .______________ 377 National Training School for Boys .---......_ 359 National Youth Administration_______________ 366 National Zoological Park... cere 355 Naturalization Service, Immigration and._____ 342 Naval Academy, Board of Visitors. _....__..__ 228 Navel Consaliimg Board... tL... 319 Noval: Dlspeneary cose rns ee 319 Naval Examining Board 0 ee ry 319 Naval Examining Board, Marine Corps... 320 Naval Hospitals ana 320 Naval Medieal Centers necoiuis oot inna. 320 Naval MedicaliSchool 25 o-oo oo 320 Naval ODSorvValoryi... auiie dicta n ae enn 318 Naval Operations, Officeof._..._ ~..__.._ ___. 317 Waval BetiringiBoard c=. aa. 319 Navigation and Steamboat Inspection, Bureau OL Ee A Bat Dds bmn om sia 339 Navigation, Bareswol 2. 2. = oo. 317 Nay Depastment. ee ianec=n 316 Des Ol nena 444 Attendanceon officers. 0... onsen rae 320 Board for Examination of— ental OMcors ie rea renames 320 Meodieal Officers... vei rereinomg= 320 Board of Medical Examiners. _____._________ 319 Bureau of— LL Re ea 319 Construction and Repair... -.----=-==ann 318 HET TA FED a Rae a CE as eee 318 Medicine and Surzery....---v-ee-oecemes== 318 Navieatlon atooe or oe cata 317 A ETE ee Ee I 318 Supplicsiand Accounts... nn cceoemrmnn== 318 Yaxdsand Docks... vmennenprre- 318 Compensation Board... .....c..ccnvnnnas oo 319 Generdl Board... 319 Headquarters Marine Corps... __.___. 320 Island covernments. ... = ooo -eaine 317 Marine Bagpgekse = =o ui 320 Marine Examining Board... .-.--=rexcasnm=e 320 Naval Consulting Bostd..-- --cronzaerannes 319 Naval DISDeNSMY oe onser airmen cea 319 Naval Bxamining Board. .....--ecrezeecee-v 319 Naval Hospital. eee 320 Naval Medieal Center: coueeeoinnonnnau-- 320 Naval Medical School... 320 Naval Retiring Board =. ee eve eee 319 Navy yard and station, Washington, D. C_. 319 Office of— Judge Advocate General... _________ 319 Naval Operations...5 evens i000 5 317 Navy yard and station, Washington, D. C___. 819 Newspapers represented in press gallery. _._____ 627 Notes showing membership changes in this CORCIeSs oe 111 Contents (4) Page Observatory: Astrophysical. coaoa moons Bian lll 355 Naval: ro ee Tae 318 Office of: Adjutant General, Army, The._.._.._....... 306 Budget and Finance, Agriculture Depart- FILLE Lotto er Bg ote op pp ab on LI TS 327 Chief Clerk and Superintendent of Treasury. 302 Chie ol Finance. or er 308 Chief Siena Officer ss oe eo 310 Comptroller of the Currency... ________ 302 Director of Aircraft Production-_..__________ 310 Mduacation ier Ar ey an, 322 Bzperiment Stations. ol 328 Federal Coordinator of Transportation. .____ 371 First Assistant Postmaster General _________ 313 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _______ 315 Geologleal’Survey.l. ir rR Ae 323 Information, Department of Agriculture..__. 328 Inspector General, Army .___ ooo... 307 Judge Advocate General— 5 Ay rr a re 307 Novy amend or a A eos 319 Legislative counsel— JRE I i kn em i Tm deen ne 263 Senate a eae 256 Naval Operations... nC eet, 317 Polen hr ee 339 Personnel, Department of Agriculture_____.__ 327 Postmaster-of the House. coon coe eran 261 Quartermaster General... wo eencurewn-- 307 Second Assistant Postmaster General_.______ 314 Solicitor, Agriculture Department. __________ 328 Surgeon General, ATIy._ cin eeren en 308 Third Assistant Postmaster General ._______ 314 Treasurer of the United States... _______.___ 302 TnitediStates Attorney. on en Oo 392 United Statesmarshal... c.f oo co a... 392 Office of the Chief of: ACOs. eae 310 (S11 nam E GE BSE Sr i 306 BL EL A Ee SS ee ML 306 Chemical Warfare Service... -o-cccccaemaan 311 Gira pn Hogar aerials oh sess lat gear ai, 306 IATL HLL oo Et At an ms dune bine 309 THI E70 08 LLL a Re pe ea Sh A 306 JERE 1m pt dn Coe sn ase art a Pc Se plas vn 306 EARNER i on cr mmm em —— 310 Officers of the— longer ci rn a ml de 259 ERE Ia LS Ra 253 Officials; Tertitotial cole irre 325 OilAdministration oo to. 326 Ordnance, Burean of, Navy... cc ceen---. 318 Ordnance, Office of Chiefof...___-_______ 310 Origin and form of government of the District of Columbia Li i i rennet 397 P Pan American Sanitary Bureau. ocooaa- 356 tiles Of tor Seaman 519 Pan American Union eT 4 Le Ee 355 Duties Ol Ss rr emma 484 Panama:Canal, the....cocoesr -micrwnrmemwens 349 XIII Page Park and Planning Commission, National BLT aT BE te 353 Park Service, Nationals cuit a 323 Patent Appeals, United States Court of Cus- toms andi rrr a ee 388 Patent? OMeas ot ft 339 Patents, Special Investigating Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of. _______ 205 Perry’s Victory Memorial Commission.____.__. 354 Dutiesof i ier rrsiiinsiain aad 522 Personnel, Office of, Department of Agricul- tare. cr rrr bn RL 0 donno 327 Persons entitled to admission to the press gallery, Mstiofi Oo So IUD rena 2 618 Petroleum Administrative Board ._.__________ 326 Petroleum Labor Policy Board. ___.________ 326 Philippines, government of the Common- wealthe oo SN TT 310 Physician at the Capitol, attending_____.______ 264 Plant Industry, Bureau of... ....._.0____ 333 Plant Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and. 332 Police: Baphiol..... viii ana nne—n wa SOND 30 HHH 264 Court. colonel ntl SR TOT 393 Meiropolitan.......oulala il Sunn Saat 404 Political classification of Congress. .__._.__._.___ 142 Postoffice, City... cain ae EEE Sa 2 405 Post Office Departmentas. ious. Loh aoa tel 313 Duties of do nui oimorssninii an ass 439 Bureawof:Accountso sci soiisia nhn cl 315 First Assistant Postmaster General. ______.__ 313 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _..____. 315 Second Assistant Postmaster General-.__.___ 314 Third Assistant Postmaster General ._____.__ 314 Post office of the Senate... __ 256 Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. at Capitol_....____ 265 Postmaster General, biography of... ______ 313 Postmaster ofthe House occ o oem 261 Power Commission, Federal... _..___. 348 President ofthe Senate. ooo ion ooo 253 President of the United States, biography of__. 297 President pro tempore of the Senate. _....._.___ 253 Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Con- gresses coincident with their terms... 250 Press gallery: List of persons entitled to admission to..-... 618 Newspapers represented in... _._____.._.__ 627 Rules governing admission $0... 617 Principal floor of the Capitol: Assignment of rooms on... 277 Diagramiol. i. same eaten SEA A Ea 276 Printing, Bureau of Engraving and-.....___..__ 303 Printing, Joint Committeeon_ occ... 226 BTA See RE et PR NG 482 Printing Office, Government... __.... 268 Prison Industries, Inc., Federal... ___.____ 378 Procurement Division, Treasury. .o--co-oo---- 304 Public: DebtiService..q.... vv ee nnn m ana 302 Public Health Service, Bureau of .___.._.______. 303 Public Roads, Bureau of... occa 334 Public Utilities Commission, District of Co- Yambia. i ih rae 404 Public Works, Federal Emergency Administra- BION Of oe ih mer imninmas Hom emma a a 367 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration... 378 XIV Q Page Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and Plants. 332 Quartermaster General... i... i iz. coe... 307 Rr Radiation and Organisms, Division of .________ 355 Railroad Administration, United States.______ 345 DOS ol toerentr folie bE uns itr ot 503 Rallvead, Alaska... oi oo No deine 325 Railroad Retirement Board.___.___._________ 378 Roflvoad ticketoMen. oc meh 264 Real Estate Bondholders’ Reorganization, Select Committee to Investigate ____ 205 Receivership and Bankruptcy Proceedings and the Administration of Justice in United States Courts, Special Committee to Investigate oi... diese. 179 Reclamation Buresussite foto aili fo gaint 323 Reconstruction Administration, Puerto Rico__ 378 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _________ 359 Batiestell rr ns LN Sen os 522 Recorder.ofdeeds. 0 i. 3a hatla 393 Recovery Administration, National .__________ 372 Red Cross, American National ._____.____.___._ 356 Redemption Agency, National Bank__________ 302 Registeriol wills. | io. von tin 000 393 Regular and special sessions of Congress, list of. 233 Reforestation (Emergency Conservation Work). 372 Relief Administration, Federal Emergency_._. 371 Relief Corporation, Federal Surplus._._____ Wreek vi] Relief, War Mineralsei i soiooil Jusadaint Alan 325 Reporters of debate: House... 2030080) Joivaarieo 3 Japiases il 263 Benate nnn an BIRT EE Wen 0 256 Representatives: Alphabeticallistof.. o.oo rn own 147 Apportioned to the several States under each ALE Bib omental doll peur pesto Sis 238 Assignments of, to committees_______________ 206 Blogranhiesigia "£2002 anate VI PHI 0 TH 3 List of, with home post offices and Wash- ington'addresses. ...- 0 on 695 Rooms and telephones of... __. ________ 287 Service of, showing Congresses in which it has been'rendered rita el 0 161 Votes enstior uno eto ii is oo agen 241 Reseating plan of the House, diagram of_______ 282 Resettlement Administration... ._._.__________ 366 Resident Commissioners and Delegates: Alphabetical Hel = 154 Assignments to committees... _______________ 206 Blographigsiof tr x ooaniro rs Cn 128 List of, with home post offices and Washing- on addresses ors sn XO a 702 Rooms and telephones of .___________________ 287 Service record in Congress__..________________ 172 Votes castor) tora a 248 Resources Committee, National _______________ 377 Riverand Harbor. Board... .. 309 Road Commission, Alaska "> ~~ =. ~~ 326 Roads, Bureamof Public... 334 Roanoke Colony Commission, United States. 228 Rooms and telephones: Renresentatives.. 0 ceria 287 TE Se le se 285 Congressional Directory Page Rules governing admission to press gallery____ 617 Rural Electrification Administration. _________ 366 187515 Eure Sees on TL Eee i | 540 S Si. Elizabeths Hospital... - ~*~ ~~ 325 Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Fed- on EE 364 School, Naval Medieal ~~... = 320 SesisiolBonators” wis er 281 Second Assistant Postmaster General__________ 314 Secretariesto Senators... 257 Secretaries to the President, biographies of.___ 297 Secretary of— Agriculture, biography of... cov ooo... 327 Commerce, biography of... ....____.... _.. ..__ 336 Interior, blozraphy of... __. = . . . = 321 Xabor, DIOCrAPNY Of. oz rao ow oa 341 Nayyblography of... _ sz - 5 = 316 Senate, biography Of. . .comene iste ini ant 253 Statopbiosraphviol vo 299 Treasury, biography of... cco 301 War, blographyeofe= 5 0, oo 305 Securities and Exchange Commission__________ 375 Security Board, Seelal-. o.oo. 379 Select and special committees: BI OMB0s. or ee 204 OA Os ch dle ce Tht ee I Ena 179 Senate: Diagram.oftheflooriof. co. coer oo 280 Ine Ra ae 281 Office Building Commission_._______________ 225 Personnel of— Sin in FERC ae 253 Clerks to committees... co 2° 254 OIAING TOON... marta t do ans ate = ota 256 Office of the— Legislativeconnsel "°° 256 Presidents 0 oC ea 253 EE Sa 253 Sergeant at ATMS. oe cemaetls 256 Official Reporters of Debates of .___________ 256 BostolRee. ae 256 President protempore... 253 Secretaries to Senators........_____________. 257 Political classifieationof...-.. = ___.__ 142 Special sessionsiof. = LT Lo 237 Senate committees: Assienments tos. Joo oo Tn oa Te 182 Clevs by om 254 Meeting days ol... ---ivoo-r tutor rmen ines 181 Mombership of =. or ores ee 173 Special. and S0lect....... vse etn nn oS ae 179 Senators: Alphohetieallst of... co. 2 °° 145 Blcovaphiesof oo oo eal er SE . 3 Continuous servieeol: _-__.__ ___ ~~ 158 Expiration of terms of service, by groups.___ 155 List of, with home post offices and Washing- CEG Tees sar bee rae 693 Rooms and telephones of... __________.____ 285 Seoretarionto _... . e Sars by 257 OTE CaSE TOT came ne oo ao 240 Sergeant at Arms: House of Representatives _._.___.____.______ 260 Senate, biography ef ro 256 Contents Service: Page Conciliation, United States. ..cooooo oo ____ 341 Employment, Labor Department. __________ 342 Extension, Agriculture Department. ________ 328 Foreign, United States. .....cocaeiiioi ils 597 HOTOSE. .. eon ween n= eirma lb sdb sab Ya da SHES 332 Immigration and Naturalization... _____ 342 Information, United States... ______.___ 375 National Park... if uieaid Socatioeall 323 Public Debt... .....ooii dented unioezand 302 Publie Health... tee otiodidecibiduivdand 303 Soil Conservation... .i.ceceidomrvoisradzonis 334 United States Employment... _._._._ 342 Service and terms in Congress: Pelegaies oor ia IEE 172 Representatives sw ceoaasc il niiad frond 161 Resident Commissioners... ________ 172 Senators: Continuous service... —oii-coocoll mooi 158 Expiration of terms....----.----3a-sctal 155 Sesquicentennial Commission, United States Ceonstitationaluiao le sizooioiminnino ll 229 Sessions of Congress, list of... ______________ 233 Sessions of the Senate, special, list of .__._______ 237 Shiloh National Park, Special Committee to Investigate Abuses at. ________________ 180 Shipping Board Bureau, United States_.....__ 339 Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation, United States. ccna. 2aSTId 3000 340 Signal Officer, Office of the Chief of ..__________ 310 Silver Committee, Senate Special .____________ 180 Smithsonian: Institution... oi coat ooo ol 354 Duties of. cee an REIS 483 Board of Regents, personnel of. _ ____________ 354 Establishment, personnel of. __________ 354 Government bureaus under direction of: Astrophysical Observatory. -....._._..___ 355 Bureau of American Ethnology..__..______ 355 Division of Radiation and Organisms.______ 355 Freer Gallery.of Artes cl lu... 003 Lo 355 International Exchanges... __________ 355 National Gallery of Art. eee 355 Najlional'Mugeum —--¥ . .. .. .......... 354 National Zoological Park. _____._._.__.______ 355 Social Security Board... 0.000 Jo tC DURE 379 Duties. «coud S00 i WIR URL EIEN 540 Soil Conservation Service... __________ 334 Soils, Bureau of Chemistry and__ _____________ 331 Soldiers’ Home, United States_.__...._________ 358 Solicitor, Agriculture Department_____________ 328 Speaker of the House of Representatives.._____ 259 Speaker,officeof the... omnia mann 259 Speaker’s table, personnel of __________________ 259 Special and minority employees of the House. _ 261 Special and select committees: LE TSE SL Be NER Or Si 204 Senator os ae sa Sasi I 179 Special Mexican Claims Commission... ____ 351 Special sessions of the Senate, dates of _________ 237 Standards, National Bureau of... _____________ 338 State delegations in Congress... ____._____ 133 State Depariment .....c.cceenarmiineenmmaanm 299 LITER EIT Ee ee A OR, 409 States and Territories, governors of the________ 249 Statistical Board, Central... ..... cae -ooo 370 Statistical Committee, Central... _____ 370 Statistical Information .ccvae n= ww=mmrme=s a= 231 XV Page Statistics, Bureau of Labor... _____ 341 Steamboat Inspection, Bureau of Navigation and fore maker a tne seid ba 339 Stenographers to House committees... 263 Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of, Navy...... 318 Supreme Court: Building Commission, United States..__.... 225 District of Columbia. . ...ooaaaoooo- 2 2ate... 392 United States... - mao aone oo fommen fl Spite 383 Biographies of the justices... _____.__ 383 Residences of the justices and officials___.. 386 Surgeon General of the Army.__._______.__.__. 308 Surplus Relief Corporation, Federal _.__._____. 371 Survey: Bureau of Biologieal......ccrvee ana docalnal.. 331 Coast and Geodetic. ttre donna Tin dodaun 339 CeologICAY teu o i bincinn dobeg i wai wi ERE Ae SRE 323 Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States, Special Committee on_. 180 Surveys and Maps of the Federal Govern- ment, Board ofc. va. wadasadatossnas 351 T Tariff Commission, United States_____._.___._.___ 347 Dutiesofea. cia ee re 505 Pax Appeals, Beawdol. = o.oo oo coir 347 Telegraph offices, Capitol... o.oo... ____ 264 Telephone Exchange, Capitol. ___.___._________ 265 Tennessee Valley Authority... ________ 364 Terms of Senators, expiration of. ______________ 155 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... 229 Territorinl officials.........cos iif galngari da nine 325 The Adjutant General, Office of .__________ aia :306 Third Assistant Postmaster General .__________ 314 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission. ___._ 227 Trade Commission, Federal... ____.___________ 346 Training School for Boys, National ___..___..__ 359 Transportation, Office of Federal Coordinator Of. cc cini sma mamn ne dS SE EO 0 0 371 Treasurer of the United States, Office of .._____ 302 Treasury Department.......ee.ounaaoioa ooo 301 Duties of... sexcii ideas Sin ie 415 Bureau of— Customs a soon i aol sarin al 30 Fovnal 302 Fngraving and Printing... ooo .--_2300. 303 Internal Revenue... _.____._.__. 303 Narcotics... cataaaaoss dua i iasgsinal il. 303 Public Health Service... _______. 303 The Budget. =m lsd Salus Ju Lo 304 4 TORY ET SA re A ae 303 Chief Clerk and Superintendent, Office of.__ 302 Coast Guard, the... coo. coat 2 304 Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits.____ 302 Comptroller of the Currency - - cccaeeeooooo = 302 Customhouse. .covneae emma rl Ld 304 Federal Alcohol Administration.._._________ 303 Federal Board of Hospitalization. ____.______ 304 Procurement Division.....--------ven-i--..- 304 Public Debt Service... iaaivnnie diced 302 Treasurer of the United States..__..._.__._.__._ 302 Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate. _____ 239 Trust Fund Board, Library of Congress....._. 268 U Union, Interparliamentary... cacao 227 Union, Pan American... o.oo i. =. 355 XVI Congresstonal Directory Page United States Court of Appeals for the District of Colombia is pil Loi iin Ain 387 United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeslenailioi os Sun OJ F000. 388 United States Customs Court_________________ 391 United States Roanoke Colony Commission____ 228 United States Territorial Expansion Commis- SlONET a saat sab ad SEALER END SE 229 UMIVersily, HOW... cv imamsmammm mma be 325 Vv Vehicles and traffic, District of Columbia, di- vector off dil SLi Bun CR En 403 Veterans’ Administration. eae eee 2000 348 Dutlesof am rsania ne eis ak DEN 510 Contact offices at Capitol... ____.____ 265 Veterans’ Affairs, Joint Committee on_._______ 229 Vice President of United States, biography of... 3 Virgin Islands, Special Committee to Investi- gate the Government of the____________ 180 Vocational Education, Federal Board for______. 323 Votes cast: Delegates and Resident Commissioners... .__ 248 Senators and Representatives... _.......___ 240 Ww War. College, ATMY....c... coda dni aaa itsgs sil War Department: - foie cngawdar Lani 305 Duties of sues ialauiti ssid as 426 Army Industrial College. _.__.__.._____.__. 311 Army: War College. so ca iu ua tiie Jolt 311 Bureau of Insular Aflairs. . cewdnean. 200000 310 Dominican Customs Receivership.________ 311 Government of the Commonwealth of the Phillppimesuroo ) loiiota Lona. il 310 General Stall. .......-. lal DplnIa ls 305 National Guard Bureau. i .....0.0. Jil lL Jils 311 Office of the— Adintant General. corinne aiden 306 Chief of Cavalty cos. ui on a0 306 Chief of Chaplains. ....«ommasau ban Sai i 306 Chief of Coast Artillery. v-veen-a i list. 306 Chief of Bugineers... ..-. cx wumwsas sition 309 Board of Engineers for Rivers and Har- | 1 Dr SR LA AE RE FELIS EERE A a 309 California Debris Commission....._._____ 309 Mississippi River Commission. ......__. 309 United States Engineer Office... ....._ 309 Chief of Field Artillery.evacacamaaacacaaa.- 306 War Department—Continued. Page Office of the—Continued. Chief of- Finance. 0. dl a. A000 000 308 Chiefof Infantry C23 00 on 00 306 Chiefof Ordnance... . 0% 310 Chiefofthe Air Corps... cacao ooo) 310 Chief of the Chemical Warfare Service_.___ 311 Chief Signal Officer. 11 > 200 5 lui is 310 Director of Aircraft Production. ..___..___. 310 Inspector General: - ico smiaan Blt 00 307 Judge Advocate General... _._____ 307 Quartermaster General. __________________ 307 Surgeon General. 22 Loin Sr in oH 308 Army Medical Center, Washington, {BRL Oe lS ER La 308 Army Medical Museum and Library____ 308 General Dispensary, United States Army 308 War Department General Staff________________ 305 ‘War Finance Corporation... Lu cia. 346 Dutiesiof cc. vin Bi 10. DR OTL 504 War Minerals Relief noisaiavon) Jed aisioanis 325 Washington addresses of Senators, Representa- tives, and Delegates, with home post offices. Su Ld La nina ati oan 693 Washington City post office. _______.___________ 405 Washington National Monument Society... __ 353 Washington Navy Yard and Station__________ 319 Waterways Corporation, Inland_______________ 352 Weather Bureami. coos zai belais 335 Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol _____ 264 ‘White House... .... toa 2 alin 00. LU 297 Wildlife Resources, Select Committee on Con- servation of: House... si camo SM SR a dr JOE 204 BNALe... ommend SSAC I RE 179 Women’s Buream oi sulaia sisi idusiiian 342 Wool, Special Committee to Investigate Pro- duction, Transportation, and Market- Ingold Lon sid and mn nokia 180 Works Progress Administration. ______________ 371 Duties of. ....comsindos ii ni mnsly 533 YX Yards and Docks, Bureau of. ; 318 Youth Administration, National. o_o. ___.__ 366 Z Zoological Park, National... ..ceoveeeacnnaac-- 355 BIOGRAPHICAL 30063°—T74—-2—1sT ED———1 Fh 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, Seven- tieth, 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 6 years, and reelected November 8, 1932. JOHN HOLLIS BANKHEAD, 2d, 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, Monros, Washington, and Wilcox (7 counties). Population (1930), 272,633. FRANK WILLIAM BOYKIN, Democrat, of Mobile, Ala., was born in Bladon Springs, Choctaw County, Ala., on February 21, 1885; educated in the public schools; began business career early in life; now prominently identified with real estate, farming, livestock, timber, lumber, and naval stores business in south Alabama; married Miss Ocllo Gunn of Thomasville, Clarke County, Ala., and they have five children; during the World War was official in shipbuilding com- panies which built 52 percent of all ships built on the Gulf coast prior to Armis- tice; was president of the Loyalty League of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana; is a thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner; a member of the Methodist Church; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on July 30, 1935, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John McDuffie. 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, * Biographies are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Congressmen. 3 4 Congressional Darectory ALABAMA 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, 1917-22; served in the Army with the Seventeenth and Seventy- first United States Infantry Regiments during the World War, 1917-19; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 2 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 years; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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. SAM HOBBS, Democrat, of Selma, Ala.; born at Selma, October 5, 1887; attended the public school, Callaway’s preparatory school, Marion Military Institute, Vanderbilt University, and University of Alabama; lawyer; married Sarah Ellen Greene, of Birmingham, Ala.; children: Sam Earle, Rosa Miller, and Truman; appointed judge of the fourth judicial circuit of Alabama in 1921, elected in 1923, and resigned to resume law practice in 1926; chairman of Muscle Shoals Commission, 1931; chairman Alabama N. R. A. Committee, 1933; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Chambers, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Ran- dolph, and Tallapoosa (8 counties). Population (1930), 273,763. JOE STARNES, Democrat, of Guntersville, Ala.; was born at Guntersville, Ala., March 31, 1895; graduate of public and high schools of Marshall County, Ala.; graduate, University of Alabama with degree of LL. B.; teacher; lawyer; member State Board of Education of Alabama; World War veteran, served with American Expeditionary Forces; served with One hundred and sixty-seventh In- fantry Alabama National Guard, 1923-34; married to Del Whitaker, 1918, and they have two sons—Joe, Jr., and Paul; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 22,035 votes, J. C. Swann, Republican, 7,282 votes. 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 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 to 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 ARIZONA Biographical 5 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. Member of Appropriations Committee and chair- man of Subcommittee on Appropriations, State, Justice, Commerce, and Labor. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blount, Cullman, 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 schocls 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 4 years; circuit solicitor, fourteenth judicial circuit, 1910-14; elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy- first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; after the death of Representative Pou was elected chairman of the Rules Committee in the Seventy-third Congress; elected Majority Leader, first session, of the Seventy- fourth Congress. : EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES : Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties). Population (1930), 282,241, ARCHIBALD HILL CARMICHAEL, Democrat, of Tuscumbia, Ala.; born in Dale County, Ala.; educated in the public schools and the University of Alabama; by profession a lawyer; served two terms in the house of representa- tives of the Legislature of Alabama and one term in the State senate; served as speaker of the house of representatives at both sessions when he was a, member; is a widower, and has four children—Jesse M. Carmichael, Charles E. Carmichael, A. H. Carmichael, Jr., and Herbert Carmichael; is a Mason, a Knight of Pythias, a Maccabee, and a Phi Beta Kappa; a member of the Methodist Church; elected, without opposition, to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on November 14, 1933, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Edward B. Almon; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—-CouNnTyY: 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 Legislature of the State of Arizona; reelected November 7, 1916, November 7, 1922, November 6, 1928, and November 6, 1934. 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; 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; reelected November 8, 1932. 6 Congressional Directory ARKANSAS REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 435,573. ISABELLA GREENWAY, Democrat, of Ajo, Ariz., was born in Boone County, Ky., March 22, 1886, of Scotch-Irish-French descent, only daughter of Tilden R. and Martha McComb Flandrau Selmes; early childhood in St. Paul, Minn., with grandfather, Judge Charles E. Flandrau, after death of father; education, Miss Chapin’s School, New York City; first marriage, 1904, to Robert H. Monroe Ferguson, of New York, and they had a son and a daughter; home- steaded, Tyrone, N. Mex., 1910; later resided intermittently between Tyrone and Santa Barbara, Calif.; in 1923 established residence in Arizona upon marriage to John Campbell Greenway, and they had one son; elected Democratic national committeewoman of Arizona in 1928; reelected in 1932, resigning in 1934; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on October 3, 1933, to fill the unexpired term caused by the resignation of Hon. Lewis W. Douglas; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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 Arkansas 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 1922-33, 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 Osceola, 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, 1897-99; judge of second judicial circuit of Arkansas, 1911-18; member constitutional convention of Arkansas, 1918; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy- first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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, 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, 1919-22; elected to the Seventy- second Congress; reelected to Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. ARKANSAS Biographical 7 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; Baptist; lawyer, which profession he has followed since admitted to the bar in 1898; extensively engaged in farming; served in Arkansas Legislature, 1903-5; prosecuting attorney, 1910-14; mayor Eureka Springs, 12 years; Presidential elector, and selected as electoral mes- senger, in 1916; delegate to numerous Democratic national conventions, includ- ing Chicago in 1932; married Miss May Obenshain; two daughters—Ruth Fuller Cross and Dorothy Fuller Mathews, both of Washington, D. C.; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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; attorney at law; prosecuting attorney of the twelfth judicial district of Arkansas for three terms, 1900-1906; Member of Congress for three terms, 1907-13, but was not a candidate for reelection; married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress without opposition, and reelected, without opposition, to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties). Population (1930), 278,663. DAVID DICKSON TERRY, Democrat, of Little Rock, Ark., son of William L. and Mollie Dickson Terry; born in Little Rock in 1881; attended the public schools of Little Rock, Bethel Military Academy in Virginia, the University of Virginia, and the law school of the University of Arkansas (B. L. 1903); married in 1910 to Miss Adolphine Fletcher of Little Rock; four children; lawyer by profession; served in the Infantry in World War; member of the Little Rock School Board, and representative in the legislature from Pulaski County, 1933; member board of directors Boys’ Clubs of America, Inc.; Episcopalian; member of Kappa Sigma and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; elected te the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on December 19, 1933, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Heartsill Ragon; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1930), 289,250. JOHN L. McCLELLAN, Democrat, of Malvern, Ark., was born at Sheridan, Grant County, Ark., February 25, 1896; educated in public schools of Arkansas; first lieutenant of A. S. S. C. during the World War; lawyer, practicing in Federal and State courts of Arkansas; prosecuting attorney of seventh judicial district of Arkansas, 1927-30; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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), and Josephine Pugh, of Chicago; married Mrs. Gertrude Bischoff, of Washington, D. C., Sep- tember 4, 1930; Baptist, Elk, Mason, Knight of Pythias, and Woodman of the World; also member El Dorado Lions Club; member XV Club, El Do- rado; member Committee on Appropriations; chairman, subcommittee War Department. 8 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA 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, 1928, and again in 1934. 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; vice chairman and acting chairman of the Democratic National Committee in the 1912 campaign; 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 the resigned; in 1922 moved to Los Angeles, and is senior member of the law firm of McAdoo, Neblett & Warner; in 1932 was elected Democratic national committee- man for California, and was chairman of the California delegation to the Demo- cratic 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 Republican opponent being 273,448; Tallant Tubbs, Republican, received 669,676 votes, and Robert Shuler, Prohibitionist, received 560,088 votes; author of The Challenge (1928) and Crowded Years (autobiography, 1931). REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, I.ake, 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 1907-17; president of the District Attorneys’ Association of California, 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; chairman of the Democratic caucus of the Seventy-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoe, 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 CALIFORNIA Biographical 9 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, to the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932, without opposition, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934; Republican whip. 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 five 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; re- elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—City 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CitYy 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, 18, and 19. Population (1930), 244,594. JOHN H. TOLAN, Democrat, of Oakland, Calif.; born at St. Peter, Minn., January 15, 1877; moved from Minnesota to Anaconda, Mont., in March 1897; attended University of Kansas Law School at Lawrence, Kans., and graduated in 1902, receiving degree of LL. B.; admitted to practice of law in Kansas in 1902 and in Montana the same year; county attorney in Deerlodge County, Mont., 1904-6; moved to Oakland, Calif., in 1914 and practiced law there ever since; member of the State bar of California and never held public office in this State; married; has five children living; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiv- ing 51,530 votes, Ralph R. Eltse, Republican and incumbent, 46,437 votes. 10 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 9 years; president of Tri-City (San Mateo, Burlingame, and Hillsborough) 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; renominated by Democratic, Republican, and Progres- sive Parties at primaries held on August 28, 1934, and reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress without opposition; 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. BERTRAND WESLEY GEARHART, Republican, of Fresno, was born at Fresno, Calif., on May 31, 1890, the son of John Wesley and Mary Elizabeth (Johnson) Gearhart; educated in the public schools at Fresno and at the Univer- sity of Southern California, graduating in 1914 with the degree of bachelor of laws; by profession a lawyer, practicing at Fresno; assistant district attorney and district attorney of Fresno County, 1917-23; served in the World War from August 1917 to February 1919, in both the United States and in France; Cali- fornia State commander, 1930-31, and national executive committeeman, 1932— 34 of the American Legion; member of the State athletic commission by appoint- ment of Gov. C. C. Young in 1931; member of the board of directors of the Cali- fornia Veterans’ Home by appointment of Gov. James Rolph in 1932; elected and served as one of the 22 delegates to the California convention for the repeal of the eighteenth article in amendment of the Constitution of the United States; nominated by both the Republican and Democratic Parties and elected, without opposition, to the Seventy-fourth Congress, on November 6, 1934. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving a majority of approximately 28,000 votes over his opponent, George R. Bliss. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population (1930), 264,952. JOHN STEVEN McGROARTY, Democrat, of Tujunga, Calif.; born in Foster Township, Luzerne County, Pa., August 20, 1862; educated in public schools and Harry Hillman Academy, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; honorary degree of doctor of liter- ature conferred by University of Southern California; honorary degree of doctor of laws conferred by University of Santa Clara; honorary degree of doctor of literature conferred by Loyola University; Knight of St. Gregory conferred by Pope Pius XI; Knight Commander of Isabella the Catholic conferred by King Alfonso XIII of Spain; poet laureate of California by action of State legislature; journalist; married; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 66,880 votes; William E. Evans, Republican, received 56,510 votes. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Lo0s 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; CALIFORNIA Biographical 11 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), past commander of United Spanish War Veterans and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States; organized a unit of each of these organiza- tions; 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 Evans- ville, Ind.; three adult children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 52, 54, and 56. Popula- tion (1930), 349,686. CHARLES KRAMER, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif. ; bornin Paducah, Ky.; attended public and parochial schools in Chicago, Ill., De Paul University, and Illinois College of Law; attorney at law; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by largest Democratic vote in State. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los 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 2 years; engaged in newspaper work; magazine and literary editor, Los Angeles Times, 1919-29; special lecturer on international trade, University of Southern California, 1920-21; publicity director of the Los Angeles water and power department, 1929-31; 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 those who were opposing the development of the city’s power enterprise; married Lillian C. 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 research in Europe, in 1927; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by 11,717 majority; vote cast: Thomas F. Ford, Democrat, 47.368; William D. Campbell, Republican, 35,598; scattering, 53; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934, by about 18,000 majority. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 57, 58, 63, and 65. Population (1930), 300,133. JOHN MARTIN COSTELLO, Democrat, of Hollywood, Calif.; born January 15, 1903, at Los Angeles, Calif.; educated in the Los Angeles public grammar schools and the Loyola University, Los Angeles, A. B.,, M. A,, and LL. B.; admitted to California State bar in 1924; practicing attorney, 1924-34; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 department) 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 courses at Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Mass., 1921-22; member of Delta Chi fraternity, Ramona Parlor, 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, 12 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA and organizations, and of the Los Angeles and the American Bar Associations; Member of the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by 118,850 votes. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 66, 67, and 68. Population (1930), 233,674. 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 Iowa for 5 years; editor of country newspapers in northwest Missouri for 10 years; engaged in building residences in Kansas City, Mo., 1908-12; 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, 1905-8; member and president of Los Angeles Harbor Commission, 1923-25; member of Los Angeles City Council for two terms, 1925 and 1927; toured Europe 5 months, 1907-8; round the world, 9 months’ trip, 1930; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. EIGHI ZEN en DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population 1930), 227,070. BYRON NICHOLSON SCOTT, Democrat, of Long Beach, Calif., was born in Council Grove, Kans., March 21, 1903; educated in the public schools and was graduated from the University of Kansas, with an A. B. degree, in 1924; taught school at Tucson, Ariz., and later moved to Long Beach, Calif., where he taught for 8 years; was awarded M. A. degree by the University of Southern California in 1931 for his work in American history and economics; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 52,042 votes to his Republican opponent’s 39,794 votes. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 6 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 7 children, 6 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 Italy) and of the Bank of America, resigning from the latter 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 to China in 1910; director of Knights Templar Educational Foundation of California; member of board of trustees, San Diego Scientific Library; member of Cuyamaca Club, San Diego Club, San Diego Country Club; vice president of the California-Pacific International Exposition; elected to the Seventy-third Con- gress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. : COLORADO Biographical 13 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, 1909-11; member of charter convention, city of Pueblo, 1911; member of the board of regents, Colorado State University, 1911-12; city attorney, Pueblo, 1911-15; 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. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CirY 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.; 2 years University of Colorado; 2 years Harvard College (A. B. Harvard, 1901); in business, newspaper and magazine work, Pueblo and Denver, 1901-6; gradu- ated Harvard Law School in 1909 (LL. B.); practiced law in Denver since 1909; member of firm of Lewis & Bond, attorneys, Denver; 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, Novem- ber 8, 1932, by a plurality over Republican opponent of 14,225; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934, by a plurality over Republican opponent of 25,671. 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, was born in New Hamp- shire, and when 1 year old his family moved to Clinton, Iowa, and to Custer County, Nebr., in 1879; his early education was acquired in the public schools; studied law and was admitted to the Nebraska bar; engaged extensively in farming and the growing of livestock in northern Nebraska; since moving to Fort Collins, 28 years ago, he has been engaged in farming and sheep feeding, and has been active in civic and community enterprises; served as a member of the city council of Fort Collins; director of one of the largest irrigation companies in northern Colorado; was active in the formation of the Mountain States Beet Growers Marketing Association, and has been president or vice president of the same since its incorporation, about 15 years ago; he has also served as president of the National Beet Growers Association since it was organized, and has been closely identified with its activities in conferences and conventions in the con- sideration of economic policies affecting the sugar-beet industry; married Miss Nancy Jane Sutton, and they have 3 children living—George G., Ralph P., and Mrs. Raymond L. West, 2 boys deceased, Harry and Hugh; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected on November 6, 1934, by a vote of 64,727 to 49,142, for his Republican opponent, having received a majority in 17 of the 19 counties in the district, being the first Democrat elected in the district since 1912. 14 Congressional Directory CONNECTICUT THIRD DISTRICT —CoUNTIES: 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, 1884-94; married Rosa May Chitwood, September 6, 1892; 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, 1905-7 and 1915-17; 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 battalion 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 Congress, after a lapse of 20 years from his previous service as a Member; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by 34,084 majority, carrying all counties. FOURTH DISTRICT —CounNtiEs: 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 in Illinois and stock ranch in 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 1887-89 he adjudicated and established the irrigation water rights of a large part of northwestern 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 amend- ments adopted by a general vote of the people; he also served 5 terms as city attorney and 2 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 is the ranking member of the Appropriations Committee and chair- man of the Interior Department Subcommittee; he has been elected to Congress 14 consecutive times (1909-37)—the Sixty-first to the Seventy-fourth Congresses, inclusive, being reelected to the latter on November 6, 1934, by a vote of 39,747 to 17,234 for his Republican opponent; chairman of the Democratic caucus of the Seventy-fourth Ri and Acting Majority Leader of the House during the entire first session of the Seventy-fourth Congress. CONNECTICUT (Population (1930), 1,606,903) SENATORS AUGUSTINE LONERGAN, Democrat, of Hartford; born at Thompson, Conn., educated in Connecticut schools and Yale University; practicing lawyer in Hartford; Member of Sixty-third, Sixty-fifth, 7Sixty-sixth, and Seventy- second Congresses; Democratic nominee for United States Senate in 1920, 1928, and 1932; chairman, in Connecticut, of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Founda- tion; 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. TR pr CONNECTICUT Biographical 15 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, defeating T. A. D. Jones, Republican; on November 6, 1934, was elected a Member of the United States Senate, defeating Senator Frederic C. Walcott. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 1,606,903. WILLIAM M. CITRON, Democrat, of Middletown, Conn., was born in New Haven, Conn., on August 29, 1896; was taken at a very early age by his parents to Middletown, Conn., where he attended the local grammar and high schools; was graduated from Wesleyan University with the degree of A. B. in 1918, and from Harvard Law School with the degree of LL. B. in 1921; was at training camps at Plattsburg, N. Y., and Camp Taylor, Ky., in the latter half of 1918, and was mustered out of the service in December 1918; represented Middletown in the State legislature in 1927 and 1931, where he was the Democratic floor leader; was unsuccessful Democratic congressional candidate in the Second Distriet in 1928 and for Congressman at Large in 1932; member of Connecticut Old Age Pension Commission by appointment of Governor in 1932 and 1933; clerk of the State senate in 1933; corporation counsel for city of Middletown since 1928; member of Elks, Eagles, Odd Fellows, Masons, and American Legion. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNty: Hartford. Population (1930) 421,097. HERMAN PAUL KOPPLEMANN, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn.; born May 1, 1880, resident of Hartford since 1882; educated in the public schools and attended Hartford High School; publishers’ agent for newspapers and magazines; married Adeline Augusta Greenstein, of Hartford; member of city council in 1904 and elected its president in 1911; member of Connecticut House of Representa- tives, 1913-14, and served as State senator, 1917-20, sponsoring several acts, most notable being the widows’ aid and children’s dependent act; vice president of the United Synagogues of America; member of the Salvation Army advisory board and a director in many philanthropic, civic, and religious organizations; affiliated with the Masonic Order and Knights of Pythias; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars and trustee of Disabled War Veterans’ Camp Fund; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress; sponsored Kopplemann resolution for investigation into dairy industry, law providing loans to industry and business, tobacco, and neutrality legislation; member Banking and Currency Committee. 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 of the University of the City of New York, 1890, with the degree of M. D.; member of the General Assembly of the State of Connecticut 16 years, 14 years in the house of representatives and 2 years in the senate; secretary of state 4 years; county commissioner for Tolland County 12 years; first selectman of Coventry 16 years; former president of the Connecticut State Medical Society; member of National Grange, Elk, Shriner, and thirty-second degree Mason; elected November 8, 1932, to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fourth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—NEwW 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. ; JAMES A. SHANLEY, Democrat, of New Haven; born in New Haven, Conn. ; graduated from New Haven public schools, Hillhouse High School, Yale College, 1920, and Yale Law School, 1923; taught mathematics in Carlton Academy, Summit, N. J., 1920-21, and Hillhouse High School, New Haven, 1921-34; married Miss Mildred Fleming in 1933; holder of various American Legion posts; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars; member of Connect- icut bar; associated with Arthur E. Feldman in the firm of Feldman & Shanley; educational director and athletic coach of the New Haven Boys’ Club; lieuten- ant in Field Artillery during the World War; graduate of Battery Commander’s School at Fort Sill, Okla., in 1917; captain in Artillery Reserve; adjutant, First 16 Congressional Directory DELAWARE Battalion and Commanding Officer Battalion Headquarters, One Hundred and Second Infantry, Connecticut National Guard, from 1929 to 1935; resigned to take oath as Congressman; major on staff of Gov. Wilbur L. Cross, 1931- ; member of Elks, Eagles, Knights of St. Patrick, Union League, New Haven Teachers League, and National Education Association of the United States; was defeated by House Leader John Q. Tilson in 1930 for election to the Seventy- second Congress, and defeated Joseph Morrissey in 1934 for election to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 3,100 votes; writes on political and athletic subjects. FOURTH BISTRICT.—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, LL. D., 1935; Columbia, LL. B., 1876; since 1877 has been interested in manufacturing and banking; was a member of the Connecticut constitutional convention 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—LitcHEFIELD COUNTY. NEW HAVEN CouNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Walcott. Population (1930), 241,269. J. JOSEPH SMITH, Democrat, of Waterbury, Conn., was born in Waterbury, Conn., January 25, 1904; educated in the public schools; was graduated from Yale College with bachelor of arts degree in 1925 and from Yale School of Law with bachelor of law degree in 1927; research fellow Yale School of Law, 1927-28; admitted to Connecticut bar in 1927; member of Elks and the Reserve Officers Association; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; major on staff of Gov. Wilbur L. Cross, of Connecticut; member of House Committee on Military Affairs; member of Waterbury Bar Association and American Bar Association. DELAWARE (Population (1930), 238,380) SENATORS DANIEL O. HASPINGS, 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, 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 6 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, for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1929; reelected on November 6, 1934, for 6-year term beginning January 3, 1935; 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. JOHN GEORGE STEWART, Republican, of Wilmington, Del., was born at Wilmington, Del., on June 2, 1890, the son of Hamilton and Mary Schaefer Stewart; educated in the schools of Wilmington, the Wilmington High School, FLORIDA | Biographical 17 and the University of Delaware; married Helen Taber Ferry, of Boston, Mass., on October 7, 1911, and they have two children—Frank Hamilton, born December 26, 1912, and Irene Taber, born February 1, 1922; president of Stewart & Dono- hue, Inc., general contractors; served on the Delaware State Athletic Commission from its organization in March 1931 until January 1, 1935; served as relief commissioner in charge of work relief under C. W. A. on the Delaware State Emergency Relief Commission; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 52,468 votes; John C. Hazzard, Democrat, receiving 45,927 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, and LL. D., University of Florida; member Legislature of Florida, 1893; mayor of Jacksonville, 1893-95 and 1901-3; chairman Board of Public Instruc- tion of Duval County, 1900-1906; chairman State Democratic Executive Com- mittee, 1904-7; 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 elec- tion 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 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 editor of a newspaper for some years; was a traveling salesman for 2 years; has been a fruit grower for some years; married; elected mayor of Lakeland, 1899, reelected 1901; elected member of Florida House of Representatives, 1902; State senator, 1904, for term of 4 years; president State senate, 1905; attorney general of Florida, 1909-13; Governor of Florida, 1913-17; elected United States Senator by popular vote in November 1916 for a term of 6 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, and again for a fourth term, beginning January 1935 and ending January 1941. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 1,468,211. WILLIAM JOSEPH SEARS, Democrat, of Jacksonville, Fla., was born December 4, 1874, in Smithville, Ga.; shortly afterward 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 2 months acted as commandant of the battalion in place of Lt. 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 30063°—74-2—]1ST ED——— 2 18 Congressional Directory FLORIDA 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; 2 years chairman Committee on Education; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large, and reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. : 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; 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 Teague of Municipalities; special counsel for the depart- ment of agriculture, State of Florida; served in the Navy during the World War; lieutenant commander, United States Naval Reserve; member of the Masonic lodge, Knight Templar, Ancient and Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine; Knights of Pythias, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the American Legion; married and has two children—Anne and J. Hardin, Jr.; elected to the Seventy- third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNtiES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Columbia, Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton, Jefferson, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Suwannee, 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; elected member of Mu Omega Pi fraternity; 1913-15, messenger Florida House of Representatives; 1915-17, assistant chief clerk; 1917-18, chief clerk; 1918-20, member of Florida House of Representatives, nominated and elected without opposition; elected speaker pro tempore Florida House of Representatives, 1918; elected and served as judge of Bradford County, Fla., 1920-24; 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 overwhelming majority; reelected to Seventy-second Congress; reelected without opposition to Seventy-third Congress; reelected to Seventy- aes ; married, October 1935, to Miss Bessie Lucile Harris, of Gaines- ville, Fla. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Joos Liheais) Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (15 counties). Population 1930), 240,978. MILLARD F. CALDWELL, Democrat, of Milton, Fla. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNmiks: 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 they have two sons, Mark, Jr., born March 18, 1916, and Joe, born RES By. CO i me ot BRL Bia A GEORGIA Biographical 19 August 8, 1918; served as county solicitor of Jeff Davis County, Ga., 1911-18; junior member of the law firm of Conyers & Wilcox, of Brunswick, Ga., 1919-25; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. GEORGIA (Population (1930), 2,908,506) SENATORS WALTER FRANKLIN GEORGE, Democrat, of Vienna, Ga., was born January 29, 1878; was elected on November 7, 1922, to the Senate vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Thomas E. Watson; reclected 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.; member of the American Legion; representative from Barrow County in the General Assembly of Georgia, 1921-31; speaker pro tempore, 1923-26; speaker, 1927-28, 1929-31; member of committee of five to revise the Code of Georgia, 1929; Governor of Georgia, June 27, 1931, to January 10, 1933; chair- man 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, after the expiration of his term as Governor. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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. HUGH PETERSON, Democrat, of Ailey, Ga.; born August 21, 1898, near Ailey, Montgomery County, Ga.; graduated from high school and the Brewton Parker Institute, 1916; attended University of Georgia, 1916-17; farmer; lawyer; editor of the Montgomery Monitor, Mount Vernon, Ga.; Methodist; Mason; former mayor of Ailey; member of house of representatives in General Assembly of Georgia from Montgomery County, 1923-30; chairman, State legislative committee on reorganization, 1931; member of senate in General Assembly of Georgia from fifteenth senatorial district, 1931-32; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; married June 24, 1930, Miss Patience Elizabeth Russell, of Winder, Ga., and they have one son—Hugh Peterson, Jr.,, born in Washington, D. C., on July 22, 1935. 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.; 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 1912-16; married Grace (Pitts) Hill, of Cordele, Ga., 1918; one child—Gene; elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 20 Congressional Directory GEORGIA THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: 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 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 1 year and then began the practice of law at Fort Gaines, Ga., in the summer of 1898, in partnership with E. 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, 1901-05; referee in bankruptcy for the western division of the northern district of Georgia, 1906-12; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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., Birmingham, Ala.; represented Pike County two terms in the Georgia Legislature, solicitor city court of Zebulon; solicitor general Flint judicial circuit, 1913-23; solicitor general Griffin judicial circuit, 1923-33; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth 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, 1914-16; chief deputy United States marshal, 1917-19; solicitor, city court of Decatur, 1923-27; city attorney of Decatur, 1927-29; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baldwin, Bibb, Bleckley, Crawford, Clascock, 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., 3 years; served two terms (1909-12) in the General Assembly of Georgia; speaker pro tempore during the term 1911-12; judge of the county court of Baldwin County 2 years; married; elected November 3, 1914, to the Sixty-third Congress to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses from the Tenth District; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses from the new Sixth District. GEORGIA Biographical 21 SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Douglas, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (14 counties). Population (1930), 270,112. 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; practiced 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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 2 years and was county superintendent of schools in that county for 1% 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, 1922-24; president of South Georgia Junior College, McRae, Ga., 1924-27; 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, 1928-32; president of the local bank for 3 years; nominated for the Seventy-third Congress on September 14, 1932, receiving 15,612 votes; Hon. W. C. Lankford, Democrat and incumbent, 10,552; was elected in the general election on November 8, receiving 20,021 votes, and defeating Dr. H. J. Carswell, Republican, who received 912 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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. B. FRANK WHELCHEL, Democrat, of Gainesville, Hall County, Ga., was “born in Lumpkin County on December 16, 1895; attended the public schools and the Gainesville High School; studied law at Gainesville, Ga., was admitted to the bar in 1925, and commenced practice in Gainesville; elected judge of the city court of Hall County, Ga., in April 1932, and served until elected to Congress; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: 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. PAUL BROWN, Democrat, of Elberton, Ga., was born in Hart County, Ga.; graduate of University of Georgia; lawyer and farmer; represented Oglethorpe County in General Assembly of Georgia 1907-8; delegate to Democratic National Convention in 1932; member of Methodist Church; married Miss Frances Lewis Arnold on October 21, 1914; two children—Robert Thomas and Frances Rosalyn Brown; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on July 5, 1933, to fill the unexpired term caused by death of Hon. Charles H. Brand, and reelected to Seveuty-fourth Congress without opposition. 22 Congressional Directory IDAHO 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. 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; engaged 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 Clarksfork, 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 Clarksfork, 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 Clarksfork, 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, in 1915, and they have two children—Compton I., Jr., and Enid Mary, ages 14 and 12, 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 precinct, county, and State; was a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions 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, and was reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by over 16,000 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Ada, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Blaine, Bonneville, Butte, Camas, Caribou, Cassia, Clark, Elmore, Franklin, Fremont, Gooding, Jefferson, Jerome, Lincoln, Madison, Minidoka, Oneida, Owyhee, Power, Teton, and Twin Falls (25 counties). Population (1930), 255,455. D. WORTH CLARK, Democrat, of Pocatello, Idaho; born at Idaho Falls, Idaho, on April 2, 1902; graduated from the University of Notre Dame, A. B., and from Harvard Law School, LL. B.; profession, lawyer; married Virgil Irwin, Tulsa, Okla.; assistant attorney general of Idaho, 1933-34; elected to the Seventy- fourth Congress by a majority of 20,347 votes. ILLINOIS Brographical 23 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; has 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; 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, confirming the primary vote of 1920; was defeated in election by Republican candidate—afterward Governor Small. As a Democrat, was re- elected to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930, by popular vote, with majority of 750,000, taking office on March 4, 1931. Elected Senate whip of the majority party; later being appointed Chairman of the Senate Committee on Election of Democratic Senators for 1934 election. 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 24 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS presiding judge of the Illinois Court of Claims, 1913-17; served two terms as representative in the General Assembly of Illinois, 1921-23; elected as Congress- man at large from Illinois to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; poslosinn November 6, 1934, as Congressman at large to the Seventy-fourth ongress. [One vacancy (at large).] FIRST DISTRICT.—CitYy oF CHICAGO: Ward 1; ward 2, precincts 1 to 94; ward 4, precincts 1 to 7; ward 11, precincts 40 to 54. Population (1930), 142,916. ARTHUR W. MITCHELL, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill. SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 1 to 58; ward 4, precincts 8 to 67; wards 5 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 20, 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. RAYMOND 8S. McKEOUGH, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born April 29, 1888, at Chicago, Ill., the second son of Timothy and Catherine Wiley McKeough; educated in the public and parochial schools, and was graduated from De La Salle Institute, Chicago, in 1905; began his business career with Armour & Co., and the livestock commission houses of the Union Stock Yards, Chicago; in clerical and executive departments of the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railroad for 17 years; connected with the investment securities business in Chicago since 1927; married January 3, 1911, to Mary Ethel Ormsby, daughter of Richard W. and Margaret Ormsby, and they have two daughters—Mrs. James J. Flanigan and Catherine McKeough; alternate delegate at large to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in 1932; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress (first political office sought) on November 6, 1934, defeating the incumbent Republican, Patrick H. Moynihan, by 23,445 votes. THIRD DISTRICT.—City oF 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 5 to 54; ward 16; ward 17, precincts 1 to 52, 55 to 69, 72, and 73; ward 18; ward 19, precincts 1 to 51, 53 to 55, and 57. Cook CoUNTY: Townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, 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 civic 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 2 sons and 1 daughter, Edward A., Jr., age 12 years, Robert J., age 10 years, and Rosemary, age 3 years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930, receiving 82,748 votes, a plurality of 23,384 over E. W. Sproul, Republican, who received 59,364 votes; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 2, precincts 95 to 97; ward 3, precincts 64 to 69; ward 11, precincts 1 to 39 and 55 to 57; 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 ILLINOIS Biographical 25 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, 1923-27; 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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 T'wenty-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, Dean of the House, Democrat, of Chicago; born April 4, 1866, in Czechoslovakia; 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 organizations of Chicago, Ill.; elected to the Sixtieth and to all subse- uent Congresses; chairman of the steering committee; member of the Rules ommittee; chairman of the Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. 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- cinets 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 63 to 57; ward 29; ward 30, precincts 21 to 66; ward 37, precincts 46 to 78. COOK CouNTY: 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 30, 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-fifth, forty-sixth, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—City or CHICAGO: Ward 26, precincts 1 to 7; ward 28, precincts 1 to 52; ward 30, precincts 1 to 20; ward 31; ward 32, 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- cincts 2 to 61; ward 45, precinct 1; ward 47, precincts 1 to 18; ward 50, precincts 52 to 69. Cook 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 14 years president and treasurer of Schuetz Construction Co., Chicago, general contractors and builders; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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. 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. JAMES McANDREWS, Democrat, of Chicago; was elected to the Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-sixth Congresses; again elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 26 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS TENTH DISTRICT.—CItYy 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 63; ward 46, precincts 1 to 11; ward 47, precinets 19 to 73, 76, and 77; wards 48 and 49; ward 50, precincts 1 to 51, and 70 to 73. COOK oh ee of Evanston, New Trier, Niles, and Northfield. LAKE COUNTY. Population 16 y D77,261. RALPH E. CHURCH, Republican, 300 Church Street, Evanston; lawyer, 10 South La Salle Street, Chicago; was born on a farm near Catlin, Vermilion County, Ill., May 5, 1883; received degree of A. B., University of Michigan, 1907, A. M. and LL. B., Northwestern University, 1909; admitted to the bar in 1909, since which time he has practiced law in Chicago; elected to the Illinois Legis- lature as representative from the sixth district in 1916; member of executive committee, central department, Citizens’ Military Training Camp Association, 1916; in May 1917, while serving in the fiftieth general assembly, he volunteered for military service; was later honorably discharged and was reelected to the fifty-first, fifty-second, fifty-third, fifty-fourth, fifty-fiftth, fifty-sixth, and fifty- seventh general assemblies; is a member of the Chicago, Ill., and American Bar Associations, Chicago Association of Commerce, Union League Club, Hamilton Club, Evanston University Club, Kiwanis, Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Chi frater- nities; Methodist; trustee of the National College of Education; married Mar- guerite Stitt, of New York City, on December 21, 1918, and they have three children—Ralph Edwin, Jr., 15, William Stitt, 12, and Marjory Williams, 7; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 100,161 votes, as against 94,993 for his Democratic opponent. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIiEs: Du Page, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population (1930), 363,136. CHAUNCEY W. REED, Republican, of West Chicago, Ill., was born at West Chicago, I11., June 2, 1890; educated in West Chicago public and high schools, Northwestern University, and Webster College of Law, where he graduated in 1915 with degree of LL. B.; served one term as city treasurer of the city of West Chicago, 1913-14; admitted to practice law in Illinois in 1915; elected and served four terms as secretary of the Du Page County Bar Association; during the World War served in the Kighty-sixth Division of the United States Army; elected State’s attorney of Du Page County in 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1932; was first commander of Naperville Post, No. 43, of the American Legion, and served as National Garde de la Porte and National Conducteur of La Société des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux; served two terms as president of the Illinois State’s Attorneys’ Association in 1927 and 1933; was chairman of the Du Page County Republican Central Committee for 8 years; a member of the law firm of Reed & Keeney, of Naperville, Ill.; was appointed in 1933 and reappointed in 1934 as one of a committee of nine by the Illinois State Bar Association to prepare a revision of the criminal laws of Illinois for presentation to the general assembly of that State; married, and has one daughter; on November 6, 1934, was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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., 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, Seventy- third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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; member of law firm of Allen & Heer, Galena, Ill.; during World War served for 27 months in this country and in France as a sergeant in the One hundred and twenty-third Regiment Field Artillery, Thirty-third Division; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. ILLINOIS Brographical 27 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; was educated in the public and high schools of Rock Island; in 1910 became associated with his father in the plastering-contracting business, which, since his father’s death in 1925, he still conducts under the name of Charles L. Thompson Son Co.; was elected treasurer of Rock Island County, in 1922; married Miss Margaret Flynn, of Davenport, Iowa, in 1924; in 1927 . was elected as the first Democratic mayor of his home city in exactly 30 years; reelected mayor in 1929 and in 1931; elected a member of the Democratic State central committee in 1930 and served during the Democratic State primary of 1932, when he became his party’s candidate for the nomination of Representative in Congress, being unopposed in the primary, and was elected to the Seventy- third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTieEs: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). 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, 1914-16, and as State's attorney of Adams County, 1916-20 and 1924-28; member of the State senate, 1928-32; married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 55,739 votes, and Burnett M. Chiperfield, Republican 42,255 votes: reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. 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, Ill., 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, 1917-19; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6 1934 by a majority of 27,682 votes over his Democratic opponent. SEVENTEENTH DIS TRICT.—CouNTIES: Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (5 coun- ties). Population (1930), 175,353. LESLIE C. ARENDS, Republican, of Melvin, Ill.; born at Melvin, Ill., Sep- tember 27, 1895; attended grade and high schools at Melvin, Ill., and Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; served in the United States Navy during the World War; charter member of Melvin Post, No. 642, American Legion, serving as post com- mander, county commander, and seventeenth district commander; member of Ford County Farm Bureau, past member of board of directors of Wesley Founda- tion at the University of Illinois; actively engaged in banking and farming since 1920; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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. E. 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. 28 Congressional Darectory ILLINOIS Pearson, of Danville; master in chancery of the circuit court, 1903-15; cor- poration counsel of Danville, 1925-31; 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 and was assigned a member of the Bank- ing and Currency Committee; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress and is now a member of the committee on Banking and Currency. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Coles, De Witt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1930), 274,137. DONALD C. DOBBINS, Democrat, of Champaign; born in Champaign County, Ill., March 20, 1878; educated at the University of Illinois and at George Washington University; lawyer; married; first elected to the Seventy- third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties). Population (1930), 158,262. SCOTT W. LUCAS, Democrat, of Havana, Ill., was born near -Chandlerville, in Cass County, Ill., February 19, 1892; attended the public schools and was graduated from Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, Ill., in 1914, with A. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in 1915 and commenced practice in Havana, I1l.; elected State’s attorney of Mason County, Ill., in 1920; appointed State’s attorney to fill vacancy created by death in 1925; commander of the American Legion, Department of Illinois, 1926; unanimously selected as national judge advocate of the American Legion at the Paris convention in 1927; thereafter unan- imously selected for four terms as national judge advocate, serving under four different national commanders; delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1932; appointed chairman of the Illinois State Tax Commission in January 1933; entered the military service during the World War as a private and was honorably discharged with the commission of lieutenant; served con- tinuously in the Officers’ Reserve Corps from the close of the war until appointed judge advocate general of the Illinois National Guard, in August 1934, with the rank of colonel; married to Miss Edith Biggs, of Havana, Ill., in January 1924, and they have one child—Scott W., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 38,445 votes, and Warren E. Wright, Republican, receiving 28,743 votes, carrying all 10 counties. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties). Population (1930), 233,252. HARRY H. MASON, Democrat, of Pawnee, Ill., was born in McLean County, I11., December 16, 1873; reared in Delavan, Tazewell County, Ill.; engaged as a newspaper publisher in Pawnee, Sangamon County, Ill., since 1903; married to Mabel Pennoyer, of Springfield, Ill., in 1912; treasurer of Sangamon County 1933-34; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 49,825 votes. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CounNTIiES: 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 2 years, and was graduated from Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., with degree of chemi- cal engineer; married Lorene Kohl, of Belleville, and they have 2 children— Edwin M., Jr., and Martin W.; member of the Elks; superintendent of plants, Morris & Co., 1918-28; served as chairman of the Democratic County Committee of St. Clair County, Ill., 1928-34; elected treasurer of St. Clair County in 1930; elected to the Seventy-third Congress in 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 61,574 votes, and defeating Jesse R. Brown, Republican, who received 47,680 votes. INDIANA Biographical 29 TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson® Lawrence, Marion, Richland. and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1930), 213,567. [Vacant.] TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—Countigs: 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, Il1.; elected to fill vacancy in Seventy-first Congress; elected to Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1930), 258,341. KENT ELLSWORTH KELLER, Democrat, born on a farm near Ava, Ill; attended country school; graduate of Southern Illinois Normal University and St. Louis Law School; Heidelberg University, Germany; owned and edited Ava Advertiser; taught school; founded Ava Community High School; passed bar examination at head of class of 73; gave up practice of law on account of tuber- culosis; went to Mexico; lived 4 years outdoors regaining health completely; mined there successfully 12 years; returned to Illinois because of the revolutions in Mexico; was elected to State senate in 1912 from the forty-fourth district, which was largely Republican; sponsored road program and other constructive legislation; became known as an aggressive progressive; campaigned 28 States for Democratic National Committee; elected to the Seventy-second Congress (1930) from district normally overwhelmingly Republican on a program for permanent solution of the unemployment problem; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by largest majority ever given a candidate from this district; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress (was the first candidate to carry every county in the district in its history) and has been closely identified with all liberal labor and social welfare legislation; advocated amendment to Constitution, if necessary, to carry this out; recognized authority on economics; author of Unemployment, Its Cause and Cure. INDIANA (Population (1930), 3,238,503) SENATORS FREDERICK VAN NUYS, Democrat, of Indianapolis, Ind.; born at Fal- mouth, Ind., April 16, 1874, the son of Dr. 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., 1909; prosecuting attorney of Madison County, 1906-10; member of the Indiana senate, 1913-16; president pro tempore of State senate, 1915; chairman of the Democratic State committee, 1917-18; United States attorney for the district of Indiana, 1920-22; 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. SHERMAN MINTON, Democrat, of New Albany, Ind., was born in George- town, Ind., October 20, 1890; received LL. B. degree from Indiana University in 1915 and LL. M. degree from Yale University in 1916; lawyer; served as public counselor for the State of Indiana from March 1, 1933, to July 31, 1934; during the World War served as captain of Infantry, 1917-19; overseas 1 year; married, three children; elected to the United States Senate on November 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941. 30 Congressional Directory INDIANA 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Kosciusko, Marshall, New- ton, Porter, Pulaski, Starke, Tippecanoe, and White (13 counties). Population (1930), 260,287. CHARLES A. HALLECK, Republican, of Rensselaer, was born in Jasper County, Ind., August 22, 1900, and has resided there all his life; attended grade and high schools in Rensselaer; was graduated from Indiana University with an A. B. degree in 1922 and with an LL. B. degree in 1924; elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Order of the Coif, and is also a member of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Phi; served in the World War, and is a member of the American Legion; married to Blanche White, of Indianapolis, and they have two children (twins), Charles W. and Patricia; was elected prosecuting attorney of the Jasper-Newton circuit before his graduation from college and was reelected four times; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on January 29, 1935, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Congressman-elect Frederick Landis, THIRD DISTRICT.—CounNties: Elkhart, La Porte, and St. Joseph (3 counties). Population (1930), 89,398. ’ 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; has one daughter, Susan; member of St. Joseph County, State, and American Bar Associations; member of board of education, city of South Bend, 1925-28; elected to the Seventy-second Congress over Andrew J. Hickey; reelected over Andrew J. Hickey to Seventy-third Congress to repre- sent new Third Indiana District; again reelected, 1934, over Andrew J. Hickey to the Seventy-fourth Congress; is a member of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; has been a member of the Committee on Military Affairs, the Special Committee on Government Competition with Private Business, and the Committee (Cole) to Investigate the Petroleum Industry. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Adams, Allen, De Kalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, Wells, and Whitley (8 counties). Population (1930), 275,523. JAMES I. FARLEY, Democrat, of Auburn, Ind.; elected to the Seventy- third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 1922-25; prosecuting attorney of Miami County 1926-27; member Indiana Railroad Commission 1930; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. INDIANA Biographical 31 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Boone, Fountain, Hamilton, Hendricks, Montgomery, Parke, Put- nam, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 4 years; served on Washington Board of Education 6 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, Seven- ty-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; was caucus chairman of Democratic Party for the Seventieth Congress; member from the House on George Rogers Clark Memorial Commission; selected as Majority Whip for the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer Vanderburgh, and Warrick (10 counties). Population (1930), 281,724. JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE, Jr., Democrat, of Evansville, Ind.; born March 2, 1895; educated in Lutheran parochial schools, high school, and is graduate of University of Wisconsin; veteran of the World War with 15 months’ service; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 National Bank; also director of Bedford Rural Loan & Savings Association and of American Security Co.; past president of Bedford Chamber of Commerce; interested in farming and banking; member of Democratic State central commit- tee, 1924-30; alternate delegate at large for Senator Thomas Taggart at Demo- cratic National Convention, Houston, Tex., 1928; elected to the Seventy-second Congress from the old Third District; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses from the new Ninth District. TENTH DISTRICT.—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 32 Congressional Directory 10WA in 1901; elected mayor of Connersville in 1904, and reelected in 1909; elected a Member of the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, and Sixty-fourth Congresses from the Sixth Indiana Congressional District, and again elected in 1932 a, Member of the Seventy-third Congress and in 1934 a Member of the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Tenth Indiana District. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTIES: Hancock and Madison. MARION COUNTY: Townships of Franklin, Lawrence, Perry, and Warren, towns of Beech Grove and Woodruff Place, and city of Indianapolis, ward 1 (except precincts 1 and 17); wards 2, 9, 10, 16, 17 (except precincts 4, 7, and 9); wards 18 and 22; with land unincorporated in Center Township lying east and south of wards 1, 2, 9, 10, 16, and 17 of the city of Indianapolis. 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 School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind.; taught in public schools 6 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 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 and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. LJ TWELFTH DISTRICT.—MARION CoUNTY: City of Indianapolis, ward 1, precincts 1 and 17; wards 3 to 8 and 11 to 15; ward 17, precincts 4, 7, and 9; wards 19 to 21; and the townships of Decatur, Pike, Washington, and Wayne, 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; member of Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Delta Chi (national newspaper frater- nity) and Society of The Indiana Pioneers; also member and former president of National Press Club; elected to Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. IOWA (Population (1930) 2,470,939) SENATORS L. J. DICKINSON, Republican, of Algona, Iowa, was born in Lucas County, Iowa, 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 Al- gona, Iowa, 1899; married, August 21, 1901, to Miss Myrtle Call; two children— L. Call and Ruth Dickinson Hunter; served as county attorney of Kossuth County two terms; committeeman Tenth Iowa District on Republican State cen- tral committee, 1914-18; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, 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 life- long Republican. 10WA Biographacal 33 LOUIS MURPHY, Democrat, of Dubuque, Iowa; born in Dubuque, Iowa, and has lived there continuously; third of eight children of John S. (deceased) 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 Towa 8 years, 1913-20; 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. — COUNTIES: 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 1904, receiving the degree of Ph. B., admitted to the Iowa bar in 1906 and the Illinois bar in 1907; member of Alpha 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Black Hawk, Bremer, Butler, Franklin, Grundy, Hardin, Marshall, Tama, and Wright (10 counties). Population (1930), 256,052. JOHN W. GWYNNE, Republican, of Waterloo, Iowa; born in Iowa County, Towa, October 20, 1889; received degree of B. A. in 1912 and LL. B. in 1914, from the State University of Iowa; judge of the municipal court of city of Waterloo for 6 years; prosecuting attorney of Black Hawk County for 6 years; served in the World War with the Eighty-eighth Division; married and has two children; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allamakee, Buchanan, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Dela- ware, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth (12 counties). Population (1930), 240,282. 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 3 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, 1908-31; 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, 1913-23; elected park commissioner of Decorah in 1923, in which capacity he is still serving; for 30063°—T74-2—1ST ED——3 34 Congressional Directory 10WA 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 com- mittee; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 62,598 votes; his opponent, G. N. Haugen, Republican, received 42,290 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 49,123 votes, to 43,123 for C. A. Benson, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Appanoose, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Ma- ost Monroe, Poweshiek, Ringgold, Union, Wapello, and Wayne (14 counties). Population (1930), 1,679. LLOYD THURSTON, Republican, of Osceola; born in Clarke County, Iowa, March 27, 1880; served in Spanish-American, Philippine, and World Wars; married; graduate of State University of Iowa, 1902; county attorney Clarke County 4 years; State senator 4 years; member of the Jefferson National Me- morial Expansion Association; director of the American Home Finding Associa- tion of Ottumwa, Iowa; member of the Congressional Philippine party attend- ing the inauguration of the President of the new Philippine Government in 1935; elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, from the old Eighth Congressional District; elected to the Seventy- third and Seventy-fourth Congresses from the Fifth Congressional District. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1930), 287,229. HUBERT UTTERBACK, Democrat, of Des Moines, Iowa; born in log cabin on farm near Hayesville, Keokuk County, Iowa, June 28, 1880; son of A. M. Utterback and Julia Esther Hayes (now deceased); educated in country school, Hedrick Normal and Commercial College, and Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa; received degrees of A. B. 1903, LL. B. 1906, LL. M. 1908; Gamma Chapter in Iowa, Phi Beta Kappa Society, Drake University (Des Moines), Acacia Fra- ternity, Alpha Phi Omega, Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity; married October 4, 1904, to Edith Gwynne (now deceased), and they had two children—Mrs. Morris O. (Esther) Penquite and Mrs. Paul K. (Gretchen) Ashby; married December 25, 1934, to Mrs. Cora Alice Prine; member of the University Church of Christ, Des Moines, Iowa; chairman, Des Moines Chapter American Red Cross, 14 years; chairman, Iowa State Council Red Cross chapters, from organization to 1934, now resigned; instructor, law department, Drake University, 26 years; lecturer, Still College, 20 years; active member for Iowa of grand council, Order of DeMolay for Boys; chairman, court of honor, Boy Scouts of America, Des Moines, Iowa, since 1915; member Lions Club; past district governor of Iowa Lions Clubs; chairman, major activities committee of Lions International, 4 years; chairman, legislative committee of Towa State Conference of Social Work, 3 years; former vice president of Iowa Humane Society; lawyer; admitted to bar in 1906; police judge of Des Moines, 1912-14; judge, ninth Iowa judicial district, January 1, 1915, to January 1, 1927; elected judge, Iowa Supreme Court, Novem- ber 8, 1932, by a majority over Republican opponent of 95,5647; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 50,828 votes; C. C. Dowell, Republican, receiving 46,074 votes; I. T. Jones, Farmer-Labor, receiving 448 votes; member of Judiciary Committee, Seventy-fourth Congress; president of New Members Club, Seventy-fourth Congress, first session. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Adair, Adams, Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Guthrie, Harrison, Ma Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, Shelby, and Taylor (13 counties). Population (1930), 274,168. OTHA D. WEARIN, Democrat, of Hastings, Iowa; born on a farm near Hastings on January 10, 1903; attended country school; graduated from Tabor Academy in 1920, and received B. A. degree from Grinnell College in 1924; mar- ried Lola Brazelton, 1931; 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 organizations; delegate to Iowa State Democratic conventions of 1924, 1926, 1928, and 1930; assistant secretary of Iowa Demo- cratic convention, 1928; temporary chairman, keynoter, and permanent chairman of Towa State Democratic judicial convention, 1930; elected to Iowa State Legis- lature in 1928 and reelected in 1930; assistant floor leader of minority party in forty-fourth General Assembly of Iowa; appointed by Governor of Iowa as a delegate to the International Mid-West Aeronautics Convention in Minneapolis, 1930; alternate delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in KANSAS Biographical 35 1932; while abroad in 1927 studied farm production and did research work in the International Institute of Agriculture in Rome; author of ‘An Iowa Farmer Abroad”, 1928; ‘ History of Tabor College’, 1931; editor of weekly syndicate ‘“‘An Iowa Farmer in Foreign Fields’, and coeditor of weekly syndicate, ‘ New Roadsin Old Mexico’; staff contributor to Wallace’s Farmer; member of Iowa State His- torical Society, Valley Forge Historical Society, Grinnell Alumnae, and farm organizations; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: 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, Iowa; educated in common schools and at Iowa State Teachers College; superintendent town schools; county superintendent; law course, State university; lawyer; president school board; member lower house in legislature and of State senate; member Seventy- second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; married; three children. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties). Population (1930), 308,798. GUY MARK GILLETTE, Democrat, of Cherokee, Iowa, was born there on February 3, 1879; admitted to the bar in 1900 and commenced practice in Cherokee, Iowa; is also interested in agricultural pursuits; served as prosecuting atterney of Cherokee County, 1907-9; member of the State senate, 1912-16; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, having a majority of 26,000 votes. 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 afterward 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. 36 Congressional Directory KANSAS REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Mar- shall, Nemaha, Shawnee, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1930), 273,849. WILLIAM PURNELL LAMBERTSON, Republican, farmer, Fairview, Brown County, Kans.; born there March 23, 1880; son of Civil War veteran and Kansas pioneer; married, 1908, Floy Thompson, Republic, Kans. ; four children— Alonzo, Elise, Edwina, and Milan; member of Kansas House of Representatives, four terms; speaker pro tempore and speaker; 4 years in Kansas Senate; on State board of administration; Baptist, Mason, Odd Fellow, Legionnaire, active in farm organizations; Member of Seventy-first and succeeding Congresses. 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 of Law; degrees from Western College, Coe College, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Kansas City School of Law; married Della Alforetta Daugherty, of Yankton, S. Dak., January 15, 1919; principal of St. John High School and superintendent of schools at St. John, Kans., 1897-1901; admitted to bar at Kansas City, Kans., 1902; elected judge of city court, 1907-9; 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, to the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934. THIRD DISTRICT.—Counties: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Mont gomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1930), 265,319. EDWARD W. PATTERSON, Democrat, of Pittsburg, Kans.; born October 4, 1895; served with American Expeditionary Forces in France; graduate of Saumur Artillery School; graduate of law school of the University of Kansas, 1922; married Miss Leah Kennedy, of Coffeyville, Kans., 1921; two children— Patricia and James; since 1922 engaged in practice of law at Pittsburg, Kans.; elected prosecuting attorney of Crawford County, Kans., 1926; elected to Seventy- fourth Congress, November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chase, Clay, Coffey, Dickinson, Geary, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Pottawatomie, Riley, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (14 counties). Population (1930), 229,108 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 Kan- sas 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 Guard; second lieutenant in Kansas National Guard, and later being transferred to Company M, One Hundred and Thirty-ninth Infantry, Thirty-fifth Division, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 counties). Population (1930), 246,902. JOHN M. HOUSTON, Democrat, of Newton, Kans.; born on a farm near Formosa, Kans., September 15, 1890; attended grade school in Wichita, Kans., high school in St. Johns Military School, Salina, Kans., business college, Wichita, Kans., and Fairmount University, Wichita, Kans.; engaged in the retail lumber business in Newton, Kans., for past 15 years; served two terms as mayor of KENTUCKY : B rographacal 37 Newton; served as director and president of Newton Chamber of Commerce; served two terms as director of Kansas State Chamber of Commerce; served as president of Kansas Lumbermen’s Association, Kansas State Elks Association, and Newton Lions Club; served as commander of Wayne G. Austin Post, No. 2, American Legion, Newton, -Kans.; served as chairman of Harvey County F. BE. R. Committee for 2 years; elected secretary of the Democratic State cen- tral committee, Topeka, Kans., 1934; enlisted in the United States Marine Corps, June 1917, served as honor guard for President Wilson for 8 weeks, later in charge of marine guard in State, War, and Navy Building; in officers’ camp at Quantico, Va., when armistice was signed; discharged in May 1919; married Charlotte Stellhorn, of St. Louis, Mo., May 28, 1920, and they have two chil- dren—Patricia Mary Jane, born March 19, 1922, and Robert Allan, born Novem- ber 15, 1925; life member Wichita Consistory No. 2, Scottish Rite Masons; life member Midian Temple Shrine, Wichita, Kans.; elected a Member of the Sev- enty-fourth Congress, vote being: John M. Houston, Democrat, 49,610; Ira Watson, Republican, 31,511; C. F. Whitson, Independent, 4,661; and Barney C. McCartney, Socialist, 1,164. 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. FRANK CARLSON, Republican, of Concordia, Kans.; born January 23, 1893, at Concordia, Kans.; attended rural schools, Concordia High School, Concordia Normal and Business College, and Kansas State College; World War veteran; member of Kansas Legislature, 1929 and 1931 sessions; chairman of Republican State committee in 1932; married, has two children; elected to the Seventy- fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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, 1921-27; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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, afterward attending Emory College at Oxford, Ga., and the University of Virginia Law School at Charlottesville, Va.; is a lawyer by profession, having 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 4 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 Louis- ville, Ky., 1919, and at Lexington, Ky., May 1924; was delegate at large to Democratic National Conventions at San Francisco in 1920, at New York in 1924, at Houston in 1928, and at Chicago in 1932, serving as temporary chair- man of the latter; elected to United States Senate from Kentucky for term beginning March 4, 1927; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1933. | 38 Congressional Directory KENTUCKY 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 4 years, 2 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 Brownsville in 1897; elected county attorney of Edmonson County in 1901 and served 2 years; second assistant attorney general of Kentucky, 1912=13, and first assist- ant attorney general, 1914-15; nominated#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 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; chairman 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; member of the Board of Regents of Smithsonian Institution. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Christian, Crittenden, Fulton, oan Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, McCracken, Marshall, and Trigg (14 counties). Population 1930), 238,189. 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Butler, Daviess, Edmonson, Henderson, Hopkins, Logan, MeL ean, Muhlenberg, Ohio, Simpson, Todd, Union, Warren, and Webster (15 counties). Population 1930), 338,117. 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 2 years at Centre 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 4 years; in 1921 was elected Commonwealth’s attorney of the sixth judicial district of Kentucky for a term of 6 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; elected delegate from Second District of Kentucky to the Democratic National Con- vention at Chicago in 1932; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. KENTUCKY Biographical 39 THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Jefierson. Population (1930), 355,350. EMMET O’NEAL, Democrat, of Louisville, Ky., was born in Louisville, Ky., on April 14, 1887; attended the public schools; was graduated from the academic departments of Centre College, Danville, Ky., in 1907 and Yale University in 1908, and from the law department of the University of Louisville in 1910; also did some post-graduate work at Yale University; was admitted to the bar in 1910, and practiced in Louisville, Ky., until 1917, when he enlisted in the First Division of the American Army at Paris, France; following his discharge in 1919 he re- turned to Louisville, and has since been active in civic affairs; served as one of the first department commanders of the American Legion of Kentucky in 1921, and has served that organization in many capacities; member of the board of trustees of Centre College, 1928-34; member of the firm of O’Neal, Alden & Co., investment securities; married Glessie Morris, and they have two children— Lydia, age 13, and Mary, age 11; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adair, Anderson, Barren, Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hancock, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Metcalfe, Nelson, Spencer, Shelby, Taylor, and ‘Washington (19 counties). Population (1930), 256,173. EDWARD WESTER CREAL, Democrat, of Hodgenville; lawyer; born in Larue County, Ky., the son of Edward C. and Jane Bryant Creal; reared on a farm; educated in the public schools of the county and later at Bowling Green, Ky., and at Centre College, Danville, Ky., and has degrees of B. S. and LL. B.; taught school; elected county school superintendent; served three terms as county attorney; elected Commonwealth attorney for a term of 6 years; reelected to same office, which he held at the time of his nomination to Congress; president of the Commonwealth Attorney’s Association of Kentucky in 1934; member of the State Democratic committee for 15 years; member of the Baptist Church and a Mason; active in every Democratic campaign since becoming a voter; married Miss Alice Crady, of Larue County, and they have two sons, 25 and 17 years of age; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, without opposition, at a special election held on November 5 1935, to fill the unexpired term caused by the death of Hon. Cap R. Carden. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Oldham, Pendle- ton, and Trimble (9 counties). Population (1930), 222,614. BRENT SPENCE, Democrat, of Fort Thomas, Ky.; son of Philip Brent and Virginia (Berry) Spence; born in Newport, Ky.; attorney at law; served as State senator for 4 years and city solicitor of the city of Newport for 8 years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Bourbon, Boyle, Casey, Clark, Estill, Fayette, Franklin, Garrard, Henry, Jessamine, Lee, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (17 counties). Popula- tion (1930), 317,571. 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, age 14; graduated, University of Kentucky, 1918; admitted to practice law, 1917; city attorney, Irvine, Ky., 1918-20; moved law office to Lexington, Ky., 1920, with residence at Paris; active campaigner in Kentucky and several other States, 1921-22, in organizing tobacco growers’ cooperative marketing associations; Member Sixty-ninth and Seventieth Congresses; nominated for Seventy-first Congress, but defeated in Hoover landslide of 1928; elected to Seventy-second Congress over Republican incumbent; reelected to Seventy-third Congress from State at large as the Representative of Sixth District; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, car- rying 15 of the 17 counties over Congressman John Young Brown in the pri- mary; member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; chairman of standing subcommittee on bridge bills; chairman of executive committee of Democratic National Congressional Committee. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Floyd, Johnson, Knott, Letcher, Magoffin, Martin, Perry, and Pike (8 counties). Population (1930), 245,598. 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 5 years, during which time he studied law preparatory 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 appointed special 40 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA 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 prosecuting attorney for a term of 4 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 reelected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by a majority of 12,440 votes over his Republican opponent; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Breathitt, Carter, Elliott, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Nicholas, Powell, Robertson, Rowan, and Wolfe (20 counties). Population (1930), 288,108. 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 of Kentucky; a Member of the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth Congresses; defeated in 1928; Member Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; member Ways and Means Committee. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bell, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Leslie, McCreary, Monroe, Owsley, Pulaski, Rockcastle, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (17 counties), Population (1930), 352,869. JOHN MARSHALL ROBSION, Republican, of Barbourville, Knox County, Ky., was reared on a farm and attended the common schools; received degree from the National Normal University of Lebanon, Ohio; also attended the Ohio Northern University, of Ada, Ohio, and Holbrook College, at Knoxville, Tenn.; received the degree of bachelor of laws from Centre College, Danville, Ky.; taught in the public schools of Kentucky and Union College, Barbourville, Ky.; engaged in the practice of law; was a delegate to the Republican National Con- ventions in 1916 and 1928; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty- eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and Seventy-first Congresses; appointed to the United States Senate on January 9, 1930, to fill vacancy caused by the resigna- tion of Hon. Frederic M. Sackett; member of Committee on Committees, chair- man of Committee on Mines and Mining, and ranking Republican on Committees on Roads, Education, and Pensions at time of his resignation from the House; assigned to Senate Committees on Banking and Currency, Civil Service, District of Columbia, and Military Affairs; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by 31,148 majority over his Democratic opponent, Dr. L. L. Terrell; married and has two children, John M. Robsion, Jr., and Mrs. Daisy R. Edmonds. - LOUISIANA (Population (1930), 2,101,593) SENATORS 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 University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, Baton Rouge, La., in 1895, 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 Decem- ber 12, 1905, to Miss Ruth Dismukes, of Natchitoches, of which marriage are the following children—XKatharine, Ruth, John, and Mary Elizabeth; member of Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Phi fraternities, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Masonic orders, Knights Templar, American Bar Association, Sons of the American Revolution, and Society of the Cincinnati; 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 election 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 S. 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. [Vacant.] LOUISIANA B 1ographical 41 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Orry oF 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, 1924-28; member of the Louisiana State Senate, 1928-31; elected on November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second Congress, and on November 8, 1932, to the Sovouip ing Congress; reelected on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fourth ongress. SECOND DISTRICT.—C1tY 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 like 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; member of Committee on Appropriations. FIFTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: 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 at Arcadia Male and Female College, Arcadia, La., and Iuka 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 Iuka, Miss., June 14, 1899; has 3 children—2 boys and 1 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Con- gresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 42 Congressional Drrectory MAINE 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. JARED Y. SANDERS, Jr., Democrat, of Baton Rouge, La.; lawyer; served in the United States Army in the World War, 1917-19, with the American Expedi- tionary Force; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the Sixth Congressional District at a special election held May 1, 1934, to fill vacancy caused by death of the Hon. Bolivar E. Kemp; reelected a Member of the Seventy-fourth Congress; married to Mary Briggs, one child—Mary Elizabeth Sanders. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Jefferson Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1930), 222,495. RENE 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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.; born on August 22, 1888, at Sugartown, La.; attended Louisiana State University, 1906-10, receiving B. A. degree, and 1912-14, receiving B. L. degree, and admitted to the practice of law in 1914; on April 9, 1922, he was married to Miss Marion S. Anderson, of Milwaukee, Wis.; they have 1 daughter and 1 son—Marion S. and Cleveland, Jr.; upon declaration of war against Germany he enlisted and served as a first lieutenant of Field Artillery throughout the duration of war, and upon being discharged resumed the practice of law at Alexandria, La.; is a member of the Masonic fraternity, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, American Legion, and a college fraternity of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; in 1920 was elected to serve as district attorney for the ninth judicial district of Louisiana and served in that capacity until March 1, 1933, when he resigned to assume his duties in Congress; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, without opposition; reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934, without opposition. MAINE (Population (1930), 797,423) SENATORS FREDERICK HALE, Republican, of Portland, Cumberland County, Maine, was born at Detroit, Mich., October 7, 1874; prepared for college at Lawrence- ville and Groton Schools, and graduated from Harvard in 1896; received the honorary degree of LL. D. from Bowdoin College in 1931; 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, 1928, and 1934. = His term of office will expire in 1941. WALLACE HUMPHREY WHITE, Jr., Republican, was born at Lewiston, Maine, August 6, 1877; was educated in the public schools of that city and grad- uated from Bowdoin College in 1899; was admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia in 1902 and of Maine in 1903; was elected as a Republican to the House of Representatives of the Sixty-fifth Congress and to each succeeding Congress up to and including the Seventy-first; in September 1930 was elected United States Senator from Maine for the term 1931-37; was appointed by President Coolidge as a delegate of the United States to the Pan American Elec- trical Communications Conference in Mexico City in 1924, and by the Secretary of State as a United States delegate to the International Telegraph Conference MARYLAND Biographical 43 in Paris in 1925, and as an unofficial observer of the United States at the Inter- national Juridical Conference on Wireless Telegraphy, held in Geneva, Switzer- land, in 1927, later being elected a member of this committee and president of the American section; was appointed by the President as a United States delegate to the International Radio Telegraphic Conference in Washington, D. C., in 1927, and as chairman of the United States delegation to the International Conference on Safety of Life at Sea, held in London, England, in 1929, and by the Secretary of State as chairman of the United States delegation to the meeting of the International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications, held at Copenhagen in 1931; is a member of the board of overseers of Bowdoin College; received the honorary degree of LL. D. in 1928. REPRESENTATIVES TEI CT Conny Cumberland, Oxford, Sagadahoc, and York (4 counties). Population SIMON MOULTON HAMLIN, Democrat, of South Portland, Maine; born at Standish (Richville), Maine, August 10, 1866; attended public schools, Gorham Normal, Bridgton Academy, and Bowdoin College, A. B.; taught school for 35 years, also serving as superintendent of schools; served as city clerk of South Portland, 1913; member of the board of registration, South Portland, 1926-32; mayor of South Portland, 1933; two daughters; married December 15, 1934, to Evelyn Field Ward; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on September 10, 1934, receiving 48,235 votes, and Carroll L. Beedy, Republican, receiving 46,635 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Kennebec, Knox, Lincoln, Somerset, and Waldo (7 counties). Population (1930), 264,434. "EDWARD CARLETON MORAN, Jr., Democrat, of Rockland, Maine; born at Rockland, December 29, 1894; graduated 1917 from Bowdoin College, Bruns- wick, Maine; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aroostook, Hancock, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (56 counties). Population (1930), 267,000. RALPH O. BREWSTER, Republican, of Dexter, Maine; born at Dexter, Maine, February 22, 1888; educated in the Dexter schools; graduated from Dexter High School, 1905, Bowdoin College, 1909, and Harvard Law School, 1913; principal of the Castine High School, 1910; admitted to the Maine bar in 1913; member of Portland school committee, 1915-23; representative to Maine Legislature, 1917; renominated, but resigned to enter military service; private, second lieutenant, captain, and regimental adjutant, Third Infantry, Maine National Guard; private, Field Artillery Central Officers’ Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor; representative to legislature in 1921; senator 1923; Governor of Maine 1925-29; chairman Governors’ conference 1926-27; married and has one son; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on September 10, 1934. 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 and Distinguished Service Cross; 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. GEORGE L. RADCLIFFE, Democrat, of Baltimore; lawyer; born at Lloyds, Md., August 22, 1877; son of John Anthony LeCompte and Sophie E. (Travers) Radcliffe; graduated from Cambridge (Md.) Seminary in 1893; A. B., Johns 44 Congressional Directory MARYLAND Hopkins, 1897, Ph. D., 1900; LL. B., University of Maryland, 1903; LL. D., Washington College, 1934; married Mary McKim Marriott on June 6, 1906, and they have one son—George Marriott Radcliffe, born June 9, 1919; principal of Cambridge Seminary, 1900-1901; teacher, Baltimore City College, 1901-2; admitted to Maryland bar in 1903; attorney for American Bonding Co., 1903-4, second vice president, 1906-14, and president, 1914-30—now director; first vice president, director, and member of executive committee of Fidelity & Deposit Co.; director of Baltimore Trust Co.; director of Title Guarantee & Trust Co.; member of Baltimore board, Liquor License Commission, 1916-19; secretary of state of Maryland, 1919-20; regional adviser 1933-34, region no. 10, Public Works Administration, for States of Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, West Vir- ginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and District of Columbia; member Maryland State Council of Defense, World War; special commissioner to organ- ize war-work records of Maryland; vice president of Maryland Historical Society; chairman of Maryland Democratic Campaign Committee, 1932; author: Gov- ernor Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War, 1902; elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, receiving 264,279 votes, Joseph I. France, Repub- lican, receiving 197,643 votes. Home, 12 Edgevale Road, Roland Park, Balti- more; office, Fidelity Building, Baltimore. 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; LL. D., Washington College, Maryland, 1935; lawyer; State’s attorney for Caroline County, 1904-8; elected to the Sixty- seventh Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford. CITY oF 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, also Glenarm, R. F. D., Baltimore County, Md.; resides on dairy farm at Mount Vista, Glen- arm post office, Baltimore County, Md.; born in Towson, Md., May 11, 1889; graduated from Towson High School, Towson, Md., 1907; graduated from Maryland Agricultural College (now University of Maryland) in civil engineer- ing in 1910; studied law at the University of Maryland, passing State bar in 1912; admitted to practice same year; entered Fort Myer Training Camp, Fort Myer, Va.,in August 1917, where he received first lieutenant commission and then assigned to the Three Hundred and Sixteenth Regiment of Infantry, Seventy- ninth Division, Camp Meade, Md.; embarked for overseas duty on July 8, 1918, returned after 11 months foreign service and discharged with the rank of captain of Infantry; member of the Baltimore County, State of Maryland, and American Bar Associations; member of the Board of Regents of the University of Mary- land, 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, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CIry 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, June 13, 1883, 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 East 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. MASSACHUSETTS B tographacal 45 FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTY 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; member of the Baltimore City Council in 1922; reelected in 1923 for a 4-year term; elected to the State senate in 1926; was delegate to the Democratic National Convention held at Houston, Tex., in 1928; appointed parole commissioner of the State of Maryland in 1929 and served until his elec- tion to Congress; was also delegate to Democratic National Convention held in Chicago, Ill., in 1932; 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; reelected on Novem- ber 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St. Marys (6 counties). City oF BALTIMORE: Ward 18, precincts4 to 8 and 14 to 16; wards 21, 23, and 24; ward 25, precincts 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 Congress 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 Research, of England, and the fraternal orders of Eagles and Elks; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress in 1932 and to the Seventy-fourth Congressin 1934. 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, 46 Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS 1918, to succeed the Honorable John W. Weeks, his Republican opponent; was defeated 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; reelected, November 6, 1928, by 124,492 plurality; reelected November 6, 1934, by 316,084 plurality; his term of office expires in 1941. 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 Mrs. Harry Hines Woodring; elected to the United States Senate, November 4, 1930, to succeed Senator Frederick H. Gillett, Republican, by a plurality over his op- Po former Senator William M. Butler, of 112,713; his term of office expires in . . 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- bare, 2a Worthington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol and Royalston. Population (1930), 274,703. ALLEN TOWNER TREADWAY, Republican, of Stockbridge; Amherst College, LL. D., 1934; active member, supreme council, thirty-third degree Scottish Rite, northern masonic jurisdiction; granger; Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1904; Massachusetts Senate, 1908-11; president of senate, 1909-11, inclusive; elected to the Sixty-third and succeeding Congresses, including the Seventy-fourth; ranking member of Ways and Means Committee, House of Representatives; member of Joint Congressional Committee on Internal Reve- nue Taxation. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN CouUNTY: 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, 1917-19; delegate to the State constitutional convention of 1918 and 1919; delegate to the Democratic National Convention at New York City in 1924, and at Houston, Tex., in 1928; delegate at large to Democratic National Conven- tion, Chicago, Ill., 1932; married Jane I. Campbell (deceased, Aug. 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 K. Kaynor, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 Ashburn- 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- geen Templeion, Warren, Webster, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. - Population I y2 . JOSEPH E. CASEY, Democrat, of Clinton, Mass.; born in Clinton, Mass., December 27, 1898; graduate of Boston University Law School, degree of LL. B.; attorney at law; member of the American Bar Association and the Massachu- PAA, io GF MASSACHUSETTS B 1ographical 47 setts Bar Association; member of the American Legion; delegate to Democratic National Conventions, 1924 and 1932; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Ashland and Hopkinton. WORCESTER CoUuNTY: 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, 1908-11; alderman, 1913-14; president of the board of aldermen, 1915-16; mayor of Worcester, 1917-19; member of the Governor's council, seventh Massachusetts district, 1925-28; married Freda C. Johnson, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority of 7,335 votes over Democratic opponent, David A. Goldstein; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 10,327 over Demo- cratic opponent, John J. Walsh; and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 15,663 over Democratic opponent, James H. Ferguson. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX 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), 309,888. EDITH NOURSE ROGERS, Republican, of Lowell; born, Saco, Maine, 1881; graduate Rogers Hall School, Lowell, and Madame Julien’s School, Paris, France; received honorary M. A. degrees from Tufts College and Bates College; served overseas, 1917; with American Red Cross in care of the disabled, 1918-22; ap- pointed 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 75,754 votes, against 46,125 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, 1903-9; expert assistant and editor of publications of National Monetary Commission, 1908-11; Director of the Mint, 1909-10; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1910-12; served in France continuously for 4% 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; reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress without opposition. 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 COUNTY: 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 afterward 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; 48 Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS reelected to the Seventy-first Congress after receiving both Democratic and Republican nominations; reelected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses; admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia on October 10, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX 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, 1889; graduate Somerville Latin School; attended Dartmouth College; 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; World War veteran, member of American Legion; married and has four children—Robert, 8 years; Arthur D., Jr., 7 years; Elaine, 2 years, and Ruth Mary, 5 months old; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 50,287 votes, and his opponent, George H. Norton, Republican, receiving 48,083 votes; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress, receiving 53,581 votes, and his opponent, William S. Howe, Republican, receiving 37,873 votes; member of Committee on the Judiciary. NINTH DISTRICT.—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. SUrroLK CoUNTY: City of Boston, ward 22. Population (1930), 298,398. } RICHARD M. RUSSELL, Democrat, of Cambridge, Mass., was born in Cambridge, Mass., on March 3, 1891; attended Middlesex School, Concord, Mass.; was graduated from Harvard College with A. B. degree in 1914, and from Harvard Law School with LL. B. degree in 1917; was admitted to the bar in 1919, and commenced practice in Boston, Mass.; married Helen Munson in 1916 and they have four daughters; during the World War served as a second lieutenant in the Three hundred and third Field Artillery with service in France as communica- tions officer of the One hundred and fifty-first Field Artillery Brigade; member of ! the Cambridge City Council, 1926-27; elected mayor of Cambridge, Mass., in 1929, and reelected in 1931 and 1933; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, defeating the incumbent, Hon. Robert Luce, of Waltham. PE 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, 1910-12. Sixty-fourth (1915) and subsequent Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: 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 P. HIGGINS, Democrat, of Boston, Mass.; born in the West End of Boston, February 19, 1893; married; one daughter—Eleanor, age 6; educated in the public schools of Boston; graduated from Harvard College in 1917 with S. B. degree; studied law at Northeastern College of Law and Boston University Law School; admitted to Massachusetts bar; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1929-34; occupation, chemical engineer and attorney at law, 1919-22; served in the United States Navy during the World War; member of the American Legion, the Law Society of Massachusetts, and the Democratic State committee (Massachusetts); elected on November 6, 1934, as an unopposed candidate, to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 2 years as Democratic leader; Member Seventieth Congress, filling unexpired term of the late James A. Gallivan; Member Seventy- first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress; World War veteran. MICHIGAN Biographical 49 THIRTEENTH DISTRICT. MIDDLESEX County: Town of Natick. NORFOLK COUNTY, City of Quincy, towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Dedham, Dover, Holbrook, Milton, Needham, Norwood, Randolph, Stoughton, Westwood, and Weymouth. PrymMouTHE CouN?Y: City of Brockton. Popu- lation (1930), 273,059. RICHARD B. WIGGLESWORTH, Republican, of Milton; born in Boston, April 25, 1891; educated at Harvard (A. B. 1912, LL. B. 1916); lawyer; assistant private secretary to Hon. W. Cameron Forbes, Governor General of the Philippine Islands, 1913; served in France during World War as captain, Battery E, and commanding officer, First Battalion, Three hundred and third 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 secre- tary of World War Foreign Debt Commission, 1922-24; assistant to agent general for reparation payments, Berlin, 1924-27; Paris representative and general counsel for organizations created under Dawes plan, 1927-28; member of Ameri- can Bar Association; Massachusetts Bar Association; American Legion; “40 and 8’; Veterans of Foreign Wars; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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, NORFOLK 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 Chronicle, North Attleboro; member Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1912-14; member Massachusetts State Senate, 1914-17; 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, 1922-25; in 1924, elected Member of the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-fourth. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket. Bristol CoUNtY: City of New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, and Fairhaven. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Cohas: set. PLYMOUTH COUNTY: Towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marion, Marshfield, Mattapoisett, Middleborough, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Rockland, Scituate, Ware- ham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Population (1930), 278,951. CHARLES L. GIFFORD, Republican, of Cotuit (Barnstable), Mass. ; educated in the public schools; taught school 10 years; engaged in real-estate development and summer hotels; member Massachusetts Legislature—house of representatives 1912-13, senate 1914-19; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation, August 2, 1921, of Hon. Joseph Walsh, and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-fourth. 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 30063°—T74—-2—18T ED——4 50 Congresstonal Durectory MICHIGAN 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; reelected for the term ending in 1941; Republican candidate for President pro tempore of the Senate in 1933 and 1935. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COiry 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, March 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, and 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—Caroline and Eleanor; interested in real-estate subdivision and the building business; president of the Sunnybrook Golf Club, Utica, Mich.; elected State senator 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 Associations, Polish National Alliance, Polish Falcons, University of Detroit Alumni Association, Chene Busi- ness Association; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 51,620 votes, and having a majority of 27,448 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 40,054 votes, and having a majority of 20,860 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—OounTiEs: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 260,168. EARL CORY MICHENER, Republican, of Adrian; born in Seneca County, near Attica, Ohio, November 30, 1876; removed with parents to Adrian, Mich., in 1889; educated in public schools of Adrian, the University of Michigan, and the law department of Columbian University; admitted to the bar in 1903, since which time he has practiced law; served throughout the Spanish-American War; married; has two children; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Population (1930), 261,506. VERNER W. MAIN, Republican, of Battle Creek; born at Ashley, in Delaware County, Ohio, December 16, 1885; son of Elwyn B. and Margaret (Lawrence) Main; married to Rose Hoppin, of Niles, Mich., December 18, 1915; four children— Marcia, Stuart, Janet, and Curtis; graduate of high school at Marion, Ohio, also of Hillsdale College and the law department of the University of Michigan with the degree of juris doctor; practiced law in Battle Creek for 21 years; volunteered for military service with the Field Artillery during the World War; in training at officers training camp at Louisville, Ky., at signing of the armistice; member of Gen. George A. Custer Post of the American Legion and of the Delta Tau Delta, national fraternity; appointed assistant prosecuting attorney for Calhoun County; elected to represent western district of Calhoun County in the State legislature; elected to the Battle Creek School Board; two-term president of Battle Creek Kiwanis Club; served on official boards of First Presbyterian Church of Battle Creek; selected to serve as president of the Battle Creek Chamber of Commerce; chosen to serve as president of the Battle Creek area of Boy Scouts of America; nominated at a special primary held on November 19, 1935, to fill the vacancy in the Seventy-fourth Congress caused by the death of Hon. Henry M. Kimball, with a majority of 1,527 over the combined votes of four other Republican candidates, and was elected at a special election held on December 17, 1935. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 coun- ties). Population (1930), 225,111. CLARE E. HOFFMAN, Republican, of Allegan, Mich.; born at Vicksburg, Pa., September 10, 1875; attended the public schools and was graduated from Northwestern University Law School in 1893; lawyer; married; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. OL MICHIGAN Biographical 51 FIFTH DISTRICT.—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. WILLIAM W. BLACKNEY, Republican, of Flint, Mich.; born at Clio, Genesee County, Mich., August 28, 1876; educated in the public schools of Gen- esee County; attended school at Big Rapids, Mich., and Olivet College, Olivet, Mich.; graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1912, since which time he has practiced law in Genesee County; he was assistant prosecuting attorney from 1913 to 1917; member of the board of education, Flint, for 10 years; has been instructor of the factory night school at Flint for 14 years; married to Cassie F. Miller, December 28, 1904, and they have three children— Shirley Mae, William W., Jr., and Jack Arnold; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTties: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, St. Clair, and Tuscola (6 coun- ties). Population (1930), 264,874. JESSE PAINE WOLCOTT, Republican, 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 as second lieutenant Machine Gun Company, Twenty-sixth Infantry, 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, 1927-30; district governor, Lions Clubs of Michigan, 1925-26; State commander, Veterans of Foreign Wars, 1926-27; first vice presi- dent, 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; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Countizs: Clinton, Gratiot, Ionia, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee (6 counties). Population (1930), 277,224. FRED 1. CRAWFORD, Republican, of Saginaw, Mich.; born at Dublin, Tex., May 5, 1888; engaged in farming, ranching, beet-sugar manufacturing, and marketing of farm products. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES; Benzie, Grand Traverse, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Missau- kee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (11 counties). Population (1930), 214,318. ALBERT J. ENGEL, Republican, of Lake City, Mich.; born in New Wagsh- ington, Crawford County, Ohio, January 1, 1888; educated in the first eight grades of public schools of Michigan; took high-school and preparatory work at Central Y. M. C. A. at Chicago; graduated from Northwestern University Law School, 1910, degree of LL. B.; married to Bertha M. Bielby and they have three children—Margaret Ann, age 13 years, Albert Joseph, Jr., age 10 years, and Helen Louise, age 3 years; elected prosecuting attorney of Lake City in 1917; enlisted during the World War on May 15, 1917; commissioned first lieutenant, A. G. D., at Fort Sheridan Training Camp, August 15, 1917; served in War Department at Washington from September 1 to October 15, 1917; sailed for France October 15, 1917; was promoted to rank of captain, and returned from France September 15, 1919, having served 23 months in France and Germany; served in Michigan State Senate 1921, 1927, 1929, and 1931; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, defeating Harry W. Musselwhite, Democratic Represent- ative, by a majority of 2,703. 52 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alcona, Arenac, Bay, Clare, Crawford, Gladwin, Iosco, Isabella, wi 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, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; married. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Alger, Alpena, Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Delta, Emmet, Kalkaska, Luce, Mackinac, Menominee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, and 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 (Mich.) College, graduating in 1911 with A. B. degree; a scholarship in political economy attracted him to the University of Illinois in 1911, 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 and Edward H. Fenlon, under firm name of Brown, Metz & Fenlon; served as prosecuting attorney of Mackinac County from 1914 to 1926; in 1930, on recommendation of the supreme court, appointed by the Governor a member of the State board of law examiners, reappointed in 1931 for 5-year term; was chairman of Democratic State conventions of 1924, 1932, and 1934; president First National Bank, St. Ignace, Mich.; vice president Paulding Sugar Co., Paulding, Ohio; secretary Arnold Transit Co., Mackinac Island, Mich. ; married, June 16, 1916, to Marion E. Walker, of St. Ignace; they have seven children—Mariana F., Ruth M., James J., Barbara J., Patricia J., Prentiss ., J1., and Paul W.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of approximately 7,000 over John J. O’Hara, Republican. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Baraga, Dickinson, Gogebie, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Mar= quette, and Ontonagon (8 counties). Population (1930), 204,608. FRANK E. HOOK, Democrat, of Ironwood, Mich.; born in I’Anse, Baraga County, Mich., May 26, 1893; graduated from IL’Anse High School in 1912; LL. B. degree, department of law, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Ind., 1918; attended Detroit College of Law in University of Detroit preparatory to Michi- gan bar examinations; admitted to practice law in the State of Michigan in October 1924; attorney, with law offices at Ironwood; World War veteran, member of Ironwood Post, No. 5, American Legion; served as city commissioner of city of Wakefield, Mich., and municipal judge, city of Wakefield; member of board of supervisors of Gogebic County, Mich.; married Elsie C. Schneider, of Ironwood, Mich., and they have two children—Mary Louise and Emma Mae; elected to Seventy-fourth Congress, the first Democrat to represent the Twelfth District, defeating W. Frank James, Republican, who held office from the Sixty-fourth and each succeeding Congress; votes cast: Frank E. Hook, Democrat, 37,298; W. Frank James, Republican, 34,281. THIRTEENTH DISTRECT.—CITY oF DETROIT: Wards 1 to 4, 6, and 8, and Highland Park city. Pope ulation (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.; enlisted in United States Army, 1918, and was commissioned second lieutenant in same; now holds commission of major in United States Reserve Corps; married Marie Cathrine Posselius, 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; not a candidate for Sixty-seventh Congress; elected to Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF DETROIT: Wards 17, 19, and 21 and townships of Gratiot and Grosse Pointe, in Wayne County. Population (1930), 350,212. LOUIS CHARLES RABAUT, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born there on December 5, 1886; attended a parochial school; A. B. degree 1909, Detroit College; LL. B. degree 1912, Detroit College of Law; M. A. degree 1912, Univer- MINNESOTA Bb tographical 53 sity of Detroit; admitted to the bar in 1912; active in the building and real-estate business for many years, but of late practicing law; married Stella M. Petz, of Detroit, and they have 3 sons and 6 daughters—F. Dermott, S. J. Marie Celeste, Louis 8d, Mary Jane, Vincent, Carolyn, Joan Marie, Stella Marie, and Martha; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 45,301 votes, and defeating John H. McPherson, Republican, who received 26,006 votes. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—City oF 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—John David, Jr., and James Victor; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the newly created Fifteenth District; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress; member of the Ways and Means Committee. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF 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 214 years and the Detroit Business University for 1 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 Hamtramck; in after 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, being first to represent this new district; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, defeating Clyde M. Ford, mayor of city of Dearborn, Republican. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—OAKLAND 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 Schoolin 1903, and of the Detroit Coliege 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., 1921-23; assistant prosecuting attorney of Oakland County, 1918-20; 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. MINNESOTA (Population (1930), 2,563,953) SENATORS HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, Farmer-Labor, of Miltona, Minn., was born in the township of Burbank, Kandiyobi County, Minn., January 8, 1881; elected to the United States Senate in 1922 for the term ending March 3, 1929; reelected in 1928; reelected in 1934, receiving 503,379 votes, to 200,083 received by N. J. Holmberg, Republican, 294,757 received by Einor Hoidale, Democrat, 5,620 avd by Alfred Tiala, Communist, and 5,618 received by Morris Kaplan, ocialist. [Vacant.] 54 Congressional Directory MINNESOTA REPRESENTATIVES « FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Rice, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (12 counties). Population (1930), 289,887. AUGUST HERMAN ANDRESEN, Republican, of Red Wing, Goodhue County; son of Rev. and Mrs. O. Andresen; married; B. A. degree from St. Olaf College, Northfield, and Red Wing Seminary, Red Wing, Minn., 1912; B. L. degree St. Paul College of Law, 1915; elected from Third Congressional District of Minnesota to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the First Congressional District of Minnesota. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Carver, Cottonwood, Dakota, Faribault, Jack- Soa 1 Sp McLeod, Martin, Nicollet, Scott, Sibley, and Watonwan (14 counties). Population 1930), 281,336. ELMER JAMES RYAN, Democrat, of South St. Paul, was born in the village of Rosemount, Minn., on May 26,1907; attended the public schools and Rosemount High School; was graduated from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn., in 1929, with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in 1929, and com- menced practice in city of South St. Paul; served as city attorney of South St. Paul from June 1933 to December 1934; married to Miss Elenore Moravee, of Glencoe, Minn., and they have one son—Elmer James Ryan, Jr., born June 29, 1034; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 43,677 votes; Henry Arens, Farmer-Labor, 37,663 votes; and L. P. Johnson, Republican, 35,968 votes. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Anoka, Chisago, Isanti, Washington. HENNEPIN COUNTY: All that part outside the city of Minneapolis; the city of Minneapolis, wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1, 2, and 6 to 12; wards 9 and 10. Population (1930), 288,289. ERNEST LUNDEEN, Farmer-Labor, of Edina Village, Minneapolis, Minn.; born at Beresford, S. Dak.; B. A., Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., 1901; law department of the University of Minnesota, 1901-3; married Norma Ward, of San Francisco, Calif., February 5, 1919, and they have two children—FErnest Ward and Joan Jessie; lawyer; admitted to the bar in 1906, and began practice in Min- neapolis; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives for two terms, 1910-14; delegate to the Republican National Conventions in Chicago in 1912 and 1916; Member of the Sixty-fifth (War) Congress, 1917-19, and voted against entering war, and against conscription for foreign service; 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 of Delta Sigma Rho; United Spanish War Veterans; honor member, Veterans of Foreign Wars; Mason; Methodist; first vice president, Civil War Veterans Association; delivered Memorial Day oration at National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.,in 1919, upon invitation of National Grand Army of the Republic; elected as a Congressman at large to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, from the Third District, receiving 59,097 votes, to 28,637 votes for his Republican opponent, 22,556 votes for his Democratic opponent, and 632 votes for his Communist opponent, out of a total vote of 110,922. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTY: Ramsey. Population (1930), 286,721. MELVIN J. MAAS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born on May 14, 1898, in Duluth, Minn. ; family moved to St. Paul same year; educated in St. Paul public schools; graduate of St. Thomas College; advance work at University of Minne- gota; shortly after leaving the university entered the employ of a surety company; later formed the firm of Dwyer-Maas Co., general insurance agents, St. Paul; served overseas in the aviation branch of the Marine Corps during the World War; was elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; again elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—HENNEPIN COUNTY, City of Minneapolis: Ward 4, precincts 3 to 5 and 13 to 25; wards 5 to 8 and 11 to 13. Population (1930), 297,934. 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, MINNESOTA B tographical 535) from which he graduated in 1906 with the degree of A. B. and in 1909 with the degree of LL. B.; received honorary degree 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, serving as chairman of its appropriations committee from 1917 to 1925; served as Governor of Minnesota three terms, 1925-31, re- organizing its State government, paying off 80 percent of the State debt, and reducing the State tax levy 13 percent; when a candidate for a third term, in 1928, received the largest vote ever cast for a candidate for Governor in his State; elected to the Seventy-third Congress in 1932, and served as Representative at large; reelected in 1934 from the Fifth Minnesota District to the Seventy-fourth ongress. ; SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Aitkin, Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Kanabec, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Pine, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (15 counties). Pop- ulation (1930), 303,242. HAROLD KNUTSON, Republican, of St. Cloud and Wadena; publisher of Wadena Pioneer Journal; first elected to Sixty-fifth Congress; reelected to each succeeding Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Big Stone, Chippewa, Douglas, Grant, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Lincoln, Lyon, Murray, Nobles, Pipestone, Pope, Redwood, Renville, Rock, Stevens, Swift, Traverse, and Yellow Medicine (19 counties). Population (1930), 286,125. PAUL JOHN KVALE, Farmer-Labor, of Benson; born at Orfordville, Wis., March 27, 1896; served 2 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; reelected as a Representative at large to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected as a Representative to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the newly bounded Seventh Congressional District. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Carlton, Cook, Itasca, Koochiching, Lake, and St. Louis (6 counties). Population (1930), 276,633. WILLIAM ALVIN PITTENGER, Republican, Duluth, Minn.; born on a farm near Crawfordsville, Ind., December 29, 1885; attended country schools; graduated from Wabash College, at Crawfordsville, Ind., in June 1909; from Harvard Law School, at Cambridge, Mass., in June 1912; engaged in law practice at Duluth, Minn., since 1912; served in the 1917 and 1919 sessions of the Minnesota, House of Representatives; married in 1918 to Phoebe Bell, of Mars Hill, Maine; has two children—Richard Pittenger, age 15 years, and Dorothy Pittenger, age 7 years; elected to the Seventy-first Congress, November 6, 1928, defeating William L. Carss, Farmer-Labor candidate; reelected to the Seventy-second Congress; unsuccessful candidate for election from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress in 1932; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, from the Eighth District. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Lake of the Woods, Mahnomen, Marshall, Norman, Otter Tail, Pennington, Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (15 counties). Population (1930), 253,786 RICHARD THOMPSON BUCKLER, Farmer-Labor, R. F. D., Crookston, Minn.; born in Coles County, Ill., October 27, 1871; attended the common schools; engaged in farming in Andover Township, Polk County, Minn., since 1904; has held numerous township and local school-district offices in the past 30 years; served as State senator from Polk County for three terms, 12 years; active in farm bureau and farmers’ union organizations for many years; married on October 20, 1891, to Addie Ball, at Charleston, Coles County, Ill; 5 children—4 daughters and 1 son; member of Eagles lodge and the Baptist Church; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 41,822 votes; Ole O. Sageng, Republican, 27,522 votes; and Martin O. Brandon, Democrat, 25,210 votes. 56 Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI 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 6 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. THEODORE GILMORE BILBO, Democrat, of Poplarville, Miss.; born on October 13, 1877, near Poplarville, in Pearl River County, Miss. ; educated in the public schools in that county; attended Peabody College at Nashville, Tenn., Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., and the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor; lawyer and farmer; member of the State senate, 1907-11; served as Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi, 1912-16, and as Governor, 1916-20 and 1928-32; married and has two children, Mrs. Jessie Forrest Smith, Washington, D. C., and Second Lt. Theodore G. Bilbo, Jr., Fort Bragg, N. C. (married twice, daughter by first marriage and son by second marriage); received 63,752 votes in the first primary, Ross A. Collins 42,209, and Senator Hubert D. Stephens 64,035; in the run-off primary, Governor Bilbo received 101,702 votes and Senator Stephens 94,587; elected to the United States Senate on November 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941. 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, Miss.; chairman of the Committee on World War Veterans’ Legislation; was born in Itawamba County, Miss., on March 29, 1882, son of Thomas B. and Modest Rutledge Rankin; was educated in the common schools, the high school, and the University of Mississippi, graduating from the law department of the latter institution in 1910; 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 4 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 to the Sixty-seventh Congress at the general election on November 2; renominated and reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; was a Roosevelt delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1932; has been one of the leaders in the House for the administra- tion’s power policies, and was co-author with Senator George W. Norris, of Nebraska, of the bill to create the Tennessee Valley Authority, which contained section 12 of the present T. V. A. Act, giving to the Tennessee Valley Authority the right to build transmission lines, to distribute power, and to build additional dams on the Tennessee River; successfully led the fight in the House to force the acceptance of that main provision of the bill in lieu of a bill which had been passed by the House; succeeded in getting a large portion of northeastern Mississippi connected up with the T. V. A. and supplied with electric energy from Muscle Shoals, at what President Roosevelt has called his ‘‘yardstick” rates; organized county electric power associations in every county in his district, and instituted a movement to get cheap electricity for lights and power to the people in the rural districts; has succeeded in getting this development started which has already resulted in the construction of a large number of rural power lines and the lighting of large numbers of farm homes, and has MISSISSIPPI B 1ographical 57 adopted as his slogan ‘‘ Let’s electrify every farm home in America’; was candi- date for Speaker of the House in the Seventy-third Congress, but was defeated in the Democratic caucus by Hon. Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois. SECOND BISTRICT.—CountiEs; Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, Union, and Yalobusha (10 counties). Population (1830), 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, Mascnic order, Shriners, Elks, Rotarian, 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 and Seventy-third Congresses without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; member of Committee on Agriculture; also member of National Forest Reservation Commission. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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; graduated from Mississippi College and in law from the University of Mississippi; moved to Greenwood, Leflore County, Miss., January 1, 1904; lawyer and cotton grower; married July 20, 1910, to Miss Anna Ward Aven; State senator; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress including the Seventy-fourth. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTiES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Grenada, Mont- gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1930), 184,266. A. L. FORD, Democrat, of Ackerman, Miss.; born at Potts Camp, Miss., on December 21, 1903; educated in the public schools and Cumberland University; admitted to the bar February 9, 1927; single; elected district attorney of the fifth circuit court district in 1931; nominated for Congress in the Democratic primary on September 18, and elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on Novem- ber 6, 1934. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Simpson, and Smith (10 counties). Population (1930), 244,562. AUBERT C. DUNN, Democrat, of Meridian, Miss.; born on November 20, 1896, at Meridian, Lauderdale County, Miss.; educated in the public schools of Meridian, the University of Alabama, and the University of Mississippi; World War veteran; twice commander of the T. C. Carter, Jr., Post, No. 21 of the Ameri- can Legion; admitted to the bar and practiced law at Meridian, Miss., from 1924 to 1934; former newspaper reporter on Cincinnati Enquirer; past president of the Lauderdale County (Miss.) Bar Association; elected district attorney of the tenth judicial district of Mississippi in August 1931; Mason, Shriner, Baptist; present potentate of Hamasa Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., Meridian, Miss.; teacher of ‘‘Scrap Iron’”’ Sunday-school class at First Baptist Church, Meridian, Miss.; married Miss Dorothy Crum, of Magnolia, Miss., November 1922, and they have three children—Ann, age 10, Winfield, age 7, and Da’on, age 3; in the first Democratic primary held in August 1934 his opponents were W. Lycurgus Spinks, a Baptist minister, Nate S. Williamson, attorney at law, Sam A. Wither- spoon, attorney at law and son of former Congressman S. A. Witherspoon, Sr., and Thomas L. Bailey, speaker of the house of representatives for the State of Mississippi, all from Lauderdale County, Miss.; Aubert Dunn led the ticket by more than 3,000 votes; and in the second primary he defeated Thomas L. Bailey in the run-off by more than 10,000 votes; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 58. Congressional Directory MISSOURI SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounmEs: Covington, Forrest, George, Gresne, 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.; 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., 1921-27, and as district attorney (Jackson, Harrisen, 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, Eik, Woodman of the World, Rotarian; member of American Legion, Forty and Eight, and Pi Kappa Alpha; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 22,831 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—O0UNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Pike, Rankin, Walthall, Warren, Wilkinson, and Yazoo (15 counties). Popula- tion (1930), 414,301. DAN R. McGEHEE, Democrat, of Meadville, Miss., was born September 10, 1883, son of W. C. and Nora L. McGehee (nee Nora Lumpkin), of Bude, Miss.; reared on farm at Little Springs, Franklin County, Miss.; attended the primary school of Little Springs; graduated from Mississippi College in 1903 with B. S. degree, and from the law school of the University of Mississippi in 1909; prac- ticed law in Meadville, Miss., since 1909; married Dorothy Hunt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Hunt, of Cuthbert, Ga., and they have four children—Lena Deane, Dorothy Ann, Gloria, and Patricia; member of the State legislature as senator from the sixth district, composed of Pike and Franklin Counties, 1924— 28; member of the house of representatives, 1928-32, and of the State senate from 1932 to the present; Mason, Shriner, Woodman of the World; member of Baptist Church; president of Bank of Franklin; planter; elected to the Seventy- fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. MISSOURI (Population (1930), 3,629,367) SENATORS 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; received honorary degree of LL. D. from Marshall College, Bethany College, and Washington and Lee University; Parliamentarian of the United States House of Representatives, 1913-17; attended first officers training camp at Fort Myer, Va., in 1917, receiving commission as captain; elected lieutenant colonel, Sixth Regiment Missouri Infantry, and served as lieu- tenant 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 Ot. Louis in 1928; member of Second Presbyterian Church of St. Louis; member MISSOURI Biographical 59 of Masonic and Odd Fellows orders, Missouri Athletic Club, and the St. Louis, (Mo.) and American Bar Associations; compiler of several manuals on parlia- mentary law; author of John Quincy Adams—Old Man Eloquent; 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 dur- ing the Presidential campaigns of 1916 and 1920), and they have three sons— Champ, 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. HARRY S. TRUMAN, Democrat, of Independence, Mo., was born at Lamar, Mo., May 8, 1884; married Bess Wallace June 28, 1919, one daughter—Mary Margaret; elected to the United States Senate on November 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Clark, Daviess, Grundy, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Marion, Mercer, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, Shelby, and Sullivan (16 counties). Popula- tion (1930), 244,369. 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 Teachers 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; his father, Andrew Jackson Romjue, was born in Scotland County, Mo., in 1840, and came of Ken- tucky parentage; his mother, Susan E. (Roan) Romjue, was born in Randolph County, Mo.; he has served 4 years as chairman of the central Democratic com- mittee 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 27 years of age; was elected to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty- sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Sevenfieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; was the director of organization in the Democratic State headquarters during the campaigns of 1928 and 1932, and at the general election terminating the 1932 campaign the entire State and National Democratic tickets carried Missouri by the largest majorities ever recorded in the history of the State; 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 Wood- men of the World). SECOND DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Benton, Boone, Camden, Carroll, Chariton, Cole, Cooper, Hickory, Howard, Lafayette, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Randolph, and Saline (15 counties). Population (1930), 287, 820. WILLIAM L. NELSON, Democrat, of Columbia, Mo.; born August 4, 1875, on a farm near Bunceton, Cooper County, of which county his parents, T. Al- pheus Nelson and Sarah A. (Tucker) Nelson (both now deceased), were natives, having descended from Virginia and Kentucky families; educated in public schools, Hooper Institute, William Jewell College, and Missouri College of Agri- culture; taught school 5 years; was once associated with L. O. Nelson, oldest of six brothers, in publication of Bunceton Weekly Eagle, which for a quarter century was continued under same family ownership as exponent of livestock and farming interests of central Missouri; represented Cooper County in the Forty-first and Forty-fourth Missouri General Assemblies, being author of various agricultural measures; in 1908 removed to Columbia to become assistant secretary of agricul- ture for Missouri, which position he held for 10 years; was married June 9, 1909, to Stella Boschert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Boschert, of Bunceton, and has one son, Will L., Jr.; farm owner and operator; elected from old Eighth District to Sixty-sixth Congress by a majority of 193 votes, to Sixty-ninth Con- gress by a majority of 940 votes, to the Seventieth Congress by a majority of 5,734 votes, to the Seventy-first Congress, by a majority of 6,788 votes, to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority of 7,471 votes, and from new Second District to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 17,641 votes. 60 Congressional Directory MISSOURI THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, DeKalb, Gentry, Harrison, Holt, Nodaway, Platte, Ray, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1930), 299,450. 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; deputy circuit clerk of Buchanan County, Mo., 1911-17; admitted to the practice of law in St. Joseph in 1916; served as city counselor of St. Joseph, 1926-30; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large in 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Third District. FOURTH DISTRICT.—JACckKSON County: Blue, Brooking, Fort Osage, Prairie, Sniabar, and Van Buren Townships. KANsAS City: Wards 9 to 14, and 16. Population (1930), 239,251. CHARLES JASPER BELL, Democrat, of Kansas City, Mo., was born in Lake City, Colo., in 1885; attended country schools in Jackson County, Mo.; Lees Summit (Mo.) High School, and Missouri University; graduated from Kansas City School of Law in 1913 with degree of LL. B.; lawyer; member of City Coun- cil of Kansas City, Mo., 1926-30; represented Kansas City in river conferences in Chicago and St. Louis; one of committee of three to draft administrative code, which now comprises the general law of Kansas City; in 1930 was elected es circuit judge, sixteenth Missouri circuit; resigned from bench in May 1934 and became partner in firm of Mosman, Rogers, Bell & Buzard, Bryant Building, Kansas City, Mo.; elected as Representative in the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Fourth Missouri District, on November 6, 1934, receiving 84,440 votes, to 18,659 votes for Horace Guffin, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—JACKSON County: Washington Township. KANsAS City: Wards 1 to 8, and 15. Population (1930), 231,203. 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 Kan- sas City, Mo., in 1905; chairman Democratic State committee in 1910; delegate to the Democratic National Conventions at Denver in 1908, at Baltimore 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; appointed chairman of the Special Committee to Investigate Government Competition with Private Enterprise; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Fifth District of Missouri. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Greene, Henry, Johnson, Pettis, Polk, St. Clair, and Vernon (11 counties). Population (1930), 287,786. 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 has served in this capacity for 23 consecutive years; also served as chair- man 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, a majority of 385,301 over his nearest Republican opponent; was declared the nominee from the new Sixth Congressional District MISSOURI Biographical 61 of Missouri in the August 1934 primary, winning this honor against two other sitting Members of Congress, and was elected in the November 1934 election to the Seventy-fourth Congress, defeating his Republican opponent by a majority of 11,000 votes. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Barry, Christian, Dade, Dallas, Douglas, Howell, Jasper, Law- Yon MDa, Newton, Ozark, Stone, Taney, Webster, and Wright (15 counties). Population 1930), 293,294. DEWEY SHORT, Republican, of Galena, Mo. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Carter, Crawford, Dent, Iron, Jefferson, Laclede, Madison, Oregon, Perry, Phelps, Pulaski, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Shannon, Texas, Washington, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1930), 253,716. 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 as Representative at large for the State of Missouri by a majority of 415,862, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the new Eighth Congressional District. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Maries, Monroe, Montgomery, Osage, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (13 counties). Population (1930), 207,068. 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.; professor of history, Stephens College, 1904-08; admitted to State and Federal bars and entered the practice of law at Troy, Mo.; married; two daughters; parliamentarian of the House of Representatives under Demo- cratic and Republican administrations; volunteered 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 treatise on parliamentary law in Encyclopaedia Britannica; editor and compiler of the Precedents of the House of Representatives by act of Congress; Regent of the Smithsonian Institution; received honorary degree of LL. D., conferred by William Jewell College, 1930, and Culver-Stockton College, 1932; elected to Sixty-eighth and suec- ceeding 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 congressional candidate on any ticket outside of St. Louis; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the new Ninth District by a majority of 16,503 votes. TENTH BDISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Dunklin, Mississippi, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, and Stoddard (10 counties). Population (1930), 251,817. ORVILLE ZIMMERMAN, Democrat, of Kennett, Mo., was born on a farm in Bollinger County, Mo., December 31, 1881; attended country school at Glen Allen and later attended Mayfield-Smith Academy at Marble Hill; graduated from State Teachers College at Cape Girardeau, Mo., in 1904, and from University of Missouri in 1911 with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in the same year and began the practice of law at Kennett, Mo., where he has since resided; volunteered for service in the World War; married Miss Adah G. Hemphill in 1919 and they have one son—Joe A.; member of Lions Club, American legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars (honorary), Masonie fraternity, and Methodist Church; member of board of education of city of Kennett and of the board of regents of State Teachers College at Cape Girardeau, Mo.; elected a Member of the Seventy- fourth Congress from the new Tenth Congressional District by a majority of 13,000. 62 Congressional Drrectory MISSOURI ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or St. Louis: Ward 4, precincts 4, 5, 9, 11, and 13 to 15; wards 5 to 9 and 14 to 17; ward 19, precincts 1 fo 4 and 11 to 19; ward 20, precinets 14 to 23; ward 22, precincts 1 to 4; wards 23 and 25; ward 28, precincts 1 to 4, 8 to 15, and 21 to 23. Population (1930), 341,538. THOMAS C. HENNINGS, Jr., Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo., was born in St. Louis, Mo., June 25, 1903, son of former Circuit Judge Thomas C. and Sarah Poullain Wilson Hennings; attended the public schools and the: Soldan High School of St. Louis; was graduated from Cornell University with A. B. degree in 1924; completed a law course at Washington University in 1926, was admitted to the bar the same year, and commenced practice in St. Louis; appointed an assistant circuit attorney for the St. Louis Circuit Court for Criminal Causes in 1929, and served until December 1934; appointed a colonel on Governor Park’s staff in 1932; member of the survey commission of the Missouri Association for Criminal Justice, 1924-25; director of the Cornell Alumni Corporation and former president of the Cornell Club of St. Louis; director of the American Red Cross; member of the Community Council Committee on Delinquency and Its Prevention; lecturer on criminal jurisprudence at the Benton College of Law; member of the American, Missouri State, and St. Louis Bar Associations; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 58,787 votes, L. C. Dyer, Republican, receiving 44,241 votes. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—ST. Louis CouNTtY. City or St. Louis: Wards 10 to 13, and 24; ward 28, precincts 1 to 9 and 22 to 31. Population (1930), 425,481. JAMES R. CLAIBORNE, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo., on June 22, 1882; grandson of Nathaniel Herbert Claiborne and great nephew of William C. C. Claiborne; 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 vears; lawyer, giving 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 Representative at large from Missouri to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 1,004,170 votes, the second highest vote of all the successful candidates; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress to represent the Twelfth District (old Tenth District), defeating Cleveland A. Newton, who represented the Tenth District from 1919 to 1927. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or St. Louis: Wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 3, 6 to 8, 10, and 12; ward 18; ward 19, precinets 5 to 10; ward 20, precincts i to 13; ward 21; ward 22, precincts 5 to 35; ward 26, precinets 5 to 7, 16 to 20, and 24 to 26; ward 27; ward 28, precincts 10 to 21. Population (1930) 266,534. JOHN J. COCHRAN, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo.; born August 11, 1880; lawyer; secretary to Hon. William L. 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 Relations 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 re- ceived 1,013,824 votes, leading Democratic candidates, receiving 9,654 more votes than Hon. James R. Claiborne (Democrat), and 404,556 more votes than the leading Republican candidate; candidate for United States Senate at primary August 7, 1934, in a four-cornered race; defeated by Harry Truman, the vote being Truman 276,850, Cochran 236,105, J. L. Milligan 147,614, G. L. Cleveland 7,651; received the largest vote ever given a Democratic candidate for the Senate who was not nominated; following the primary the candidate for Congress in the Thirteenth District, Joseph A. Lennon, withdrew and Cochran was unanimously nominated by the Congressional Committee to fill the vacancy; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress over his Republican opponent. George Strodtman, the vote being Cochran 60,006, Strodtman 31,282; Chairman, Committee on Expendi- tures in the Executive Departments. MONTANA Biographical 63 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 5 years as United States district attorney; elected United States Senator in 1922; reelected in 1928 and 1934. JAMES E. MURRAY, Democrat, of Butte, Mont.; born on a farm near St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada, May 3, 1876; graduated St. Jerome’s College, Berlin, Canada, 1895; New York University Law School, New York, LL. B. 1900, LL. M. 1901; admitted to Montana bar, 1901; served as county attorney of Silver Bow County, Mont., 1806-08; chairman of State advisory board, Mon- tana, P. W. A., 1933; married Miss Viola E. Horgan, of Memphis, Tenn., June 1905; has six sons, James A., William D., Edward E., Howard A., Charles A., and John S.; elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Thomas J. Walsh. REPRESENTATIVES FIBST 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; son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Monaghan, 51 Atlantic Street, Meaderville, Butte; attended Franklin public and Holy Savior parochial gram- mar schools, Butte; 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 Montana; member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, no. 240, of Butte, and member of Kappa Sigma fraternity; married December 30, 1933, to Miss Catherine McDermott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Joseph McDermott, of Butte, Mont.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by about 18,000 majority, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress by 31,000 majority. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Big Horn, Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Custer, Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Golden Valley, Hill, Judith Basin, Liberty, MeceCone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Petroleum, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Richland, Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland, Wibaux, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone National Park. Population (1930), 325,688. ROY E. AYERS, Democrat, of Lewistown, Mont.; born November 9, 1882 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 Lewistown High Schocl; graduated from Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Ind., with degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in his home town, Lewistown; served two terms as county prosecuting attorney; was elected district judge, and was at that time the youngest judgein America who could inflict the death penalty; was reelected judge a second and third time, and served until his resignation in 1922, 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 continuously engaged in livestock an d 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 46,153 votes over his Republican opponent. 64 Congressional Directory SERVE 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; afterward taught school and earned the money to defray expenses for a higher ed ication; attended Baldwin University, Berea, Ohio, and the Valparaiso University; studied law while teaching and afterward 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, 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. EDWARD RAYMOND BURKE, Democrat, of Omaha, Nebr., was born at Running Water, 8. 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 and they have two daughters—Beatrice and Barbara; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; elected United States Senator for the term beginning January 3, 1935. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Butler, Cass, Gage, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, Richardson, Saunders, and Seward (11 counties). Population (1930), 269,428. HENRY CARL LUCKEY, Democrat, of Lincoln, Nebr.; born in East St. Louis I1l.; reared on a Nebraska farm; attended the public schools and was graduated from the University of Nebraska with the degrees of M. A., B. A., and LL. B.; postgraduate work in Columbia University, New York City; married; engaged in farming and as realtor and builder; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 55,897 votes, Marcus Poteet, Republican, receiving 45,058 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1930), 479. td CHARLES F. McLAUGHLIN, Democrat, of Omaha, Nebr.; born at Lincoln Nebr., June 19, 1887, son of William and Mary (Cavanaugh) McLaughlin; A. B. 1908, University of Nebraska; LL. B. 1910, Columbia University; practiced law at Omaha since 1910, except 2 years (1917-19) spent in the United States Army; captain, Three Hundred and Forty-seventh Field Artillery, Ninety-first Division, American Expeditionary Forces; later major Field Artillery Reserves; married in 1920 to Margaret Bruce, daughter of Edward E. and Helen (Wheelock) Bruce; children—Edward Bruce 14, Mary Elizabeth 11; special master in chan- cery, Federal court, 1916-17; delegate to the Nebraska State constitutional convention, 1919-20; president, Omaha Bar Association, 1932-33; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 46,764 votes, against 36,579 votes for Judge Herbert Rhoades, Republican. NEVADA Biographical 65 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. KARL STEFAN, Republican, of Norfolk, Nebr.; born in Austria, March 1, 1884; attended the Omaha (Nebr.) public schools; newspaper writer, world traveler, radio announcer; married to Ida Elizabeth Rosenbaum at Omaha, Nebr., on January 30, 1907, and they have two children—Ida Mae Stefan Askren and Dr. Karl Franklin Stefan; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 72,369 votes, his opponent, Edgar Howard, Democrat, receiving 52,059 votes. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gosper, Hall, Hamilton, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Kearney, Nuckolls, Perkins, Phelps, Polk, Redwillow, Saline, Thayer, Webster, and York (25 counties). Population (1930), 290,318. CHARLES G. BINDERUP, Democrat, of Minden, Nebr., was born at Hor- sens, Denmark; came to America when 6 months of age; parents homesteading in Adams County, Nebr. in 1873; self-educated; engaged in creamery, mercantile, and agricultural pursuits; married Elena Westengaard, of Minden, Nebr., and they have three children; always interested in political economy; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 69,275 votes against 49,357 votes for James W. Hammond, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNMES: 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. HARRY BUFFINGTON COFFEE, Democrat, of Chadron, Nebr.; born in Sioux County, Nebr., March 16, 1890; attended the Chadron public schools, and graduated with an A. B. degree from the University of Nebraska in 1913; for the last 20 years has been president of the Coffee Cattle Co., Inc., with exten- sive ranch holdings in northwest Nebraska; owns and operates several farms and built up a successful real estate and insurance business in Chadron; never held public office previously; served as a second lieutenant in the Air Service during the World War, most of the time in the capacity of assistant camp adjutant; married Katherine Newbranch Douglas in 1935; Mason, Elk, Rotarian, Alpha Tau Omega, and a member of the American Legion; elected to the Seventy- fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 55,707 votes, and A. N. Mathers, Republican, receiving 49,061 votes. 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 4 years; reelected 1916, 1922, 1928, and November 6, 1934, to serve until 1941; 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 conven- tion to officially notify Gov. Alfred E. Smith of his nomination as candidate of the Democratic Party for President of the United States; elected President pro tempore of the Senate, March 9, 1933; appointed by the President of the United States as a delegate to the Monetary and Economic Conference held in London on June 12, 1933. 30063°—T74—-2—1ST ED———5 66 Congressional Directory NEW HAMPSHIRE PATRICK A. (PAT) McCARRAN, Democrat, born Reno, Nev., August 8, 1876; lawyer; educated public schools of Reno; University of Nevada (M. A.); member Nevada Legislature, 1903; represented Nevada in irrigation congress, 1903; district attorney, Nye County, Nev., 1906-08; associate justice, 1913-16, and chief justice, 1917-18, Supreme Court of Nevada; member of Nevada State Library Commission, member Nevada Board of Pardons, 1913-18; member Nevada State Board of Parole Commissioners, 1913-18; president Nevada State Bar Association, 1920-21; chairman Nevada State Board of Bar Examiners, 1931-32; member bar of California, Utah, Arizona, and Supreme Court of United States; vice president American Bar Association, 1922-23; author of many standard legal opinions, leading cases on water, mining, corporation, domesticrelations, crim- inal law, and civil procedure under the code (Nevada Reports, 35 to 42) ; married, August 1903, Martha Harriet Weeks; five children; elected to United States Senate November 8, 1932; term of office will expire in 1939; legal residence, Reno, Nev. 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, 1923-27; publisher of the Nevada State Journal, 1927-32; served as State engineer, 1919-23; 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; commanding officer, Five Hundred and Seventeenth Regiment Coast Artillery, Organized Reserves, United States Army; married; two children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. NEW HAMPSHIRE (Population (1930), 465,293) SENATORS HENRY WILDER KEYES, Republican, of Haverhill, was born at Newbury, V+t.,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, 1891-95, 1915-17; member New Hampshire Senate, 1903-05; treasurer State license commission, 1903-15; chairman State excise commission, 1915-17; Governor, 1917-19; 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, 1914-22; United States attorney for the district of New Hampshire, 1914-22; Governor of the State of New Hampshire, 1923-25; member of New Hampshire Public Service Com- mission, 1925-33; 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. MERRIMACK 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 Sanbornyville, January 10, 1892; educated in the public schools; Brewster Free Academy, Wolfeboro, N. H.; Dartmouth College; and University of Maine Col- NEW JERSEY Biographical 67 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, 1920-22; 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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, Lyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mont Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK COUNTY: Cities 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, and reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. NEW JERSEY (Population (1930), 4,041,334) SENATORS 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. ARTHUR HARRY MOORE, Democrat, of Jersey City, N. J.; born in Jersey City, N. J., July 38, 1879; educated in the public schools, Cooper Union, and received bachelor of law degree from New Jersey Law School; honorary degrees: LL. D., Rutgers University; LL. D., Seton Hall College; LL. D., New Jersey Law School; LL. D., John Marshall College of Law; M. A., Hahnemann Medical College; master of commercial science, Rider College; lawyer; secretary to mayor of Jersey City, 1908-11; city tax collector, 1911-13; city commissioner, 1913-25; married; twice elected Governor of New Jersey; elected to the United States Senate on November 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941, re- ceiving 785,971 votes; Hamilton F. Kean, Republican, receiving 554,483 votes; John S. Martin, Socialist, receiving 9,721 votes. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTiES: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1930), 359,948. 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 Penn- sylvania 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 68 Congressional Drrectory NEW JERSEY 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 Cam- den 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, a Federal food administrator for Camden County; in 1920, 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; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—Counmirs: 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, Sixth-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Beventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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., was born at Brown- town, Middlesex County, N. J., on August 30, 1887, the son of the late James Taylor Sutphin and Charlotte Brown; has resided at Matawan since early child- hood, where he attended the Matawan public schools; married Miss Catharine Bonner, and they have two children—Susan and William Taylor; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CountiES: Burlington and Mercer (2 counties). Population (1930), 280,684. D. LANE POWERS, Republican, Trenton, N. J.; born Philadelphia, Pa., July 29, 1896; educated public schools Philadelphia Pa.; graduated Pennsylvania Military College, Chester, Pa., degree of C. E., 1915, B. M. S., 1921; married 1918 to Edna May Thropp, of Trenton, N. J., has one daughter, Elane, born 1923; president Edwell Corporation, Trenton, N. J.; enlisted private April 1917, dis- charged first lieutenant April 1919; served three terms New Jersey State Legis- lature, 1927-30; elected to Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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; educated in the public schools and privately; married Edna H. Righter, Novem- ber 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., 1918-23; served as chairman of the Union County Republican committee and as secretary of the Republican State committee; elected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NEW JERSEY Biographical 69 SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hunterdon, Sussex, and Warren. BERGEN COUNTY: Cities of Garfield 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, 1905-07; mayor of Westfield, N. J., 1903-05; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress, Novem- ber 2, 1920; reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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; moved to Passaic, 1899; mayor, 1911-19; director of finance, 1919-23; president New Jersey State League of Municipalities, 1912-14; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—BERGEN County: City of Englewood, boroughs of Alpine, Bergenfield, Bogota, Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Closter, Cresskill, Demarest, Dumont, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Engle- wood Clifls, 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. HUDSON 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— 23; attorney for Cliffside Park Board of Education, 1921-23; 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 and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—EsseEx County: City of Newark, wards 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 11, and 15; borough of Glen Ridge; towns of Belleville, Bloomfield, and Nutley. HUDSON CoUNTY: Borough of East Newark; towns of Harrison and Kearny. Population (1930), 295,297. FRED A. HARTLEY, Jr., 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; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 8, 6, 7, 13, and 14; cities of East Orange, 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 College (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. 70 Congressional Directory NEW MEXICO 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 as president 2 years; trustee of University of Newark, and professor of law; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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 Montclair, was born in New York City, January 31, 1876; removed to Newark in 1884, and to Montclair in 1935; 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 E. Martin, of Newark; 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; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HuDsoN 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, educated, married, and always lived in Jersey City, N. J.; elected vice chairman of the State Democratic com- mittee in 1921, served continuously until 1932, when she was elected chairman; in 1923 was the first woman of the Democratic Party to be clected freeholder in Hudson County and in State; in 1924, 1928, and 1932 elected delegate at large to the Democratic National Conventions; also in 1924 elected to the House of Representatives, and has been reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy- second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; received the first 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 welfare 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 of the District of Columbia; the first woman chairman of a State committee; and introduced the first resolution in Congress to repeal the eighteenth amendment. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—HupsoN 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. EDWARD J. HART, lawyer, Democrat, of Jersey City. NEW MEXICO (Population (1930), 423,317) SENATORS CARL A. HATCH, Democrat, of Clovis, N. Mex., born at Kirwin, Phillips County, Kans., November 27, 1889; served as assistant attorney general of New Mexico 1917 and 1918; appointed district judge of the ninth judicial district of the State of New Mexico on January 1, 1923; elected to same office in 1924; resigned as district judge to reenter practice of law October 1, 1929; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. A. W. Hockenhull on October 10, 1933, and elected on November 6, 1934, to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Hon. Sam G. Bratton; chairman of the Democratic State central committee campaign in 1930; Presi- dential elector in 1932; married; two children. be NEW YORK Biographical : 71 DENNIS CHAVEZ, Democrat, 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; married and has three children; served as clerk of the United States Senate, 1918-19; member of New Mexico Legislature; practiced 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; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Clyde Tingley on May 11, 1935. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 423,317. JOHN J. DEMPSEY, Democrat, of Santa Fe, N. Mex.; was born at White- haven, Pa., June 22, 1879; left school at the age of 13; accepted job carrying water for crew contractors for Lehigh Valley Railroad in 1898; accepted position with Brooklyn Union Elevator Co. as telegrapher, held all positions; became vice president of Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co. which was created through merger of Brooklyn Union Elevator Co. and Kings County Elevator Co.; resigned in 1919 to become vice president of Continental Oil & Asphalt Co., resigning 1 year later to become independent oil operator; elected president of United States Asphalt Corporation in 1928, which position he still holds; appointed State N. R. A. director in 1933; also served as head of New Mexico housing campaign; president of the board of regents, University of New Mexico; mar- ried; three children; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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; doctor of science from Temple University; is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons; served as health commissioner of New York City 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, and November 6, 1934. 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; 8 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, 1924-26; resigned to become candidate for United States Senator; elected for the term expiring March 3, 1933; reelected for the term expiring in 1939; chairman of the National Labor Board, 1933-34. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGIE.—Population (1930), 12,588,066. MATTHEW J. MERRITT, Democrat, of Flushing, Long Island, County of Quon, New York; elected Representative at large to the Seventy-fourth ongress. 72 Congressional Directory NEW YORK CAROLINE O’DAY (Mrs. Daniel O'Day), Democrat, of Rye, Westchester County, N. Y.; born in Perry, Houston County, Ga.; educated in private schools and was graduated from Lucy Cobb Institute, Athens, Ga.; national committee- woman for New York State, 1932; commissioner, State board of social welfare, appointed May 1923; associate chairman New York Democratic State com- mittee, 1921-36; widow; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress as a Repre- sentative at large on November 6, 1934. 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 Strest, 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, toc 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 L. BACON, Republican, of Old Westbury, Long Island, N. Y., was born July 23, 1884, at Jamaica Plain, Boston, Mass.; Groton School, 1897-1903; A. B., 1907, Harvard College; LL. B., 1910, Harvard University Law School, United States Treasury Department, 1910-11; actively supported President Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party in 1912; former member of New York State Republican committee; delegate to Republican National Convention, 1920, voting for Leonard Wood on all ballots against Warren G. Harding; Platts- burg 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; Distinguished 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, Immigra- tion 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 Com- mission and of the Yorktown Sesquicentennial Commission; trustee National Roosevelt Memorial Association; Member of the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.~QUEENS County: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at Central Avenue on boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, southerly along said line to the Atlantic Ocean, along Atlantic Ocean to Rockaway Inlet and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northeast and north to Atlantic Avenue, east to Morris Avenue, south to Rockaway Road, southeast to Bergen Landing Road, northeast to Van Wyck Avenue, north to Newtown Road, northwest to boundary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, west along said boundary line and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northwest along said boundary line to Newtown Creek, northwest to East River, along East River and Long Island Sound through Powells Cove to point where boulevard intersects Powells Cove, south along boulevard to Eighteenth Street, east 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 Hillside Avenue, west to Bergen Avenues, south to Fulton Street, east to Old Country Road, southeast to Farmers Avenue, south to Central Avenue, and southeast td the point of beginning. Population (1930), 776,425. WILLIAM B. BARRY, Democrat, of Hollis, Queens County, N. Y.; born in County Mayo, Ireland, July 21, 1902, son of Thomas J. Barry and Catherine J. (Hennelly) Barry; education, grammar and high school; graduated from the New York University, with bachelor of commercial science degree, in 1925, and from New York University Law School, with bachelor of laws degree, in 1929; married Emily B. LaMude; member of the New York State bar and the United States customs bar; member of district attorney’s staff, Queens County, 1933-34; special NEW YORK Biographical 73 United States attorney, Customs Division of Attorney General’s office, 1934-35; member of Democratic executive committee of Queens County, 1930-35; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on November 5, 1935, to fill the unexpired term caused by the resignation of Hon. William F. Brunner, receiving 153,968 votes, to his opponent’s 51,729 votes. 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 Avenus, 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. JOSEPH L. PFEIFER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born on February 6, 1892, and has continuously resided in the district he represents; married Adeline L. McKean and they have 5 children—2 sons and 3 daughters; educated at St. Nicholas Parochial School, St. Leonard’s Academy, St. Francis College, and Long Island Medical College; licensed to practice in June 1914; interned at St. Catherine’s Hospital from March 1, 1914, to September 1915; has been connected with the St. Catherine’s, Greenpoint, Roosevelt, and Kings County Hospitals; received the honorary degree of Fellow of the American College of Surgeons in Philadelphia on October 30, 1925; has lectured on surgical topics before the leading medical societies of America; member of the Alumni Society of St. Catherine’s Hospital, North Brooklyn Medical Society, Kings County Medical Society, Brooklyn Surgical Society, and Fellow of the American College of: Surgeons; appointed by Governor Whitman, of New York, in 1917 to group 1, Columbia University, on the medical advisory board, instructing medical officers going overseas during the World War; at present is chief surgeon of St. Catherine’s Hospital and attending surgeon of Kings County Hospital; elected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of New York Bay and Sixty-third Street; thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh Avenue, to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place, to Dean Street, to Court Street, to Amity Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia Street, to Congress Street, to the waters of 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. FIFTH DISTRICT.—KiNgSs 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 Avenue, to Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Xalb 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 Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to the point of beginning. Population (1930) 246,215. MARCELLUS H. EVANS, Democrat, Brooklyn, N. Y. 74 Congressional Directory NEW YORK SIXTH DISTRICT.— KINGS CoUuNTty: 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.—XiNGs 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 DRISTRICT.—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 Hegeman 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. RICHARD J. TONRY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., September 30, 1893; educated in public and high schools, military academy, and Pratt Institute; engaged in real estate and insurance brokerage business; served with the United States Marines during World War as a sergeant; member of the State assembly, 1922-29; member of Board of Aldermen, City of New York, 1930-34; married; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 111,247 votes; Sigurd J. Arnesen, Republican, receiving 44,423 votes; Baruch C. Vladeck, Socialist, receiving 22,149 votes; and Hyman Costrell, Communist, receiving 7,576 votes. NINTH DISTRICT.—KINGS AND QUEENS COUNTIES: 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., NEW YORK Biographical 75 Stephen J., Lindsay H., and Roy H.; lawyer; studied law at Brooklyn Law School and St. Lawrence University; alderman, city of New York, 1922-31; 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 Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Flushing A venue, thence along Flushing A venue 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- meneced practice in New York City in 1912; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty- eighth Congress, November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; member of the House Committee on the Judiciary; married and has two daugh- ters; home address is 303 McDonough Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—RI1cEMOND COUNTY. NEW YORK COUNTY: Bedloe Island, Ellis Island, Governors Island, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at East River and Market Street, alnng Market Street to Henry Street, to Catherine Street, to East Broadway, along East Broadway to Chatham Square, to Worth Street, to Baxter Street, to Canal 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 on ot Manhattan Island, along East River to Market Street, the place of beginning. Population 1930), 218,545. JAMES A. O'LEARY, Democrat, of West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y.; born at New Brighton, Staten Island, April 23, 1889; attended St. Peter’s School, Augustinian Academy, and Westerleigh Collegiate Institute, all Staten Island institutions; married, and has 3 children—2 daughters and 1 boy; while engaged in the study of law, accepted an offer to enter the business and industrial field, and later became general manager of the North Shore Ice Co. and an official in numerous other Staten Island enterprises; elected to the Seventy-fourth Con- gress on November 6, 1934, receiving 36,393 votes; Arthur L. Willshaw, Repub- lican, receiving 15,595 votes; and Vernon B. Hampton, Independent, receiving 6,666 votes. 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 Broadway to 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 East 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, 1911-14; 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, 1919-22; 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, Seventy- first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 76 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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, Seventy- third, and Seventy-fourth 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 East 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, 1606; Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, 1924; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy- second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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-fifth Street, along West Fifty-fifth Street to Eighth Avenue, along Eighth Avenue to West Thirty-eighth Street, along West Thirty- eighth Street to Seventh Avenue, along Seventh Avenue to West Fourteenth Street, along West Four- teenth Street to the 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; engaged in real-estate business; member of New York Assembly, 1910-12, and New York Senate, 1913-22; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; member of Committee on Avopropriations. : SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORE 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 Avenue, 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. O'CONNOR, Democrat, of New York City; A. B., Brown University; LL. B., Harvard Law School; New York Assembly, three terms; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. Ww. Bourke Cockran; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy- second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. Chairman of the Rules Committee. NEW YORK Biographical 7 SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW 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 Ninety-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 oe and Ruth Pratt, Republican, 29,776 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth ongress. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—N&w York County: 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 East 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 on August 29, 1892; 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 reelected in the fall of 1924, 1926, and 1928; Member of Con- gress since 1930; New York address, 511 Fifth Avenue. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW York CouNntyY: 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; Director General of the United States Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; member 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 A venus, 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 Twentieth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1930), 150,523. VITO MARCANTONIO, Republican, of New York City; married Miriam Sanders; born December 10, 1902, New York City; attended New York City public schools; graduate of De Witt Clinton High School, New York University Law School, with degree of bachelor of laws; admitted to the bar of the State of New York, June 1926; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; New York office address, no. 20 Vesey Street, New York City. 78 Congressional Daireclory NEW YORK TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEW YORK 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-fifth 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, New York City; lawyer; member of the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 forty-ninth Street, along Bast One hundred and forty-ninth Street to the East River, thence along the East River, Bronx Kills, and the Harlem River to Jerome A venue, 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 forty-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. EDWARD W.CURLEY, Democrat; address, 276 St. Anns Avenue, Bronx, New York City, N. Y., was born in Easton, Pa.; graduate of public school no. 39, and attended College of the City of New York; married; formerly engaged in building industry for 25 years; was president of the Stanley Hoist & Machine Co., New York City (dealers in builders’ and contractors’ machinery and equip- ment); was elected member of the board of aldermen of the city of New York in the year 1915 and served continuously for 10 consecutive terms from January 1, 1916, up to November 5, 1935; was elected by a plurality of 23,096 votes to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on November 5, 1935, to fill the unexpired term caused by the death of Hon. Anthony J. Griffin, receiving 32,334 votes, and Victor Santini, Republican, receiving 9,238 votes. 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. CHARLES A. BUCKLEY, Democrat, of the Bronx, was born in New York City, June 23, 1890; was educated in the schools of the Bronx; married, and has two children; engaged in business in New York City for 20 years as a builder and contractor; elected for three terms to the board of aldermen of New York City, 1918-23; resigned in his third term to accept appointment as State tax appraiser for the State of New York, serving 5% years; appointed city chamberlain of the city of New York on January 3, 1929, and served until his resignation on October 8, 1933; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 109,319 votes; Isaac F. Becker, Republican, receiving 31,028 votes; and Samuel Orr, Socialist, receiving 14,333 votes. NEW YORK Biographical 79 TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BroNxX 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. WEgSTCHESTER 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTiES: Rockland and Westchester, except the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1930), 352,210. CHARLES D. MILLARD, Republican, of Tarrytown, Westchester County, . Y.,, was born in Tarrytown, N. Y.; 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 Greenburg; Republican State committeeman from the fourth assembly district of West- chester County; married Miss Ethel Lee Williams, of New York City, July 15, 1902; widower; one daughter, Ethel Lee Millard; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. Ll DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam (3 counties). Population HAMILTON FISH, Jr., Republican, was born at Garrison, N. Y., on Decem- ber 7, 1888; graduated from Harvard in 3 years, at the age of 20, with a cum laude degree; captain Harvard football team, selected by Walter Camp as an All-American for 2 years; served three terms in the New York Assembly, 1914-186, as a Progressive follower of Theodore Roosevelt; served throughout the World War, being a company commander of the Fifteenth New York Volunteers, later known as the Three Hundred and Sixty-ninth Regiment of Infantry; took part in the Battle of Champagne, July 15, 1918, and awarded the French Croix de Guerre and the American Silver Star for gallantry in action; served as major of Infantry in Fourth Division of the Army of Occupation and graduated from the Army General Staff College of the American Expeditionary Force; now holds rank of colonel in the Officers Reserve Corps; served as chairman of the sub- committee at the first American Legion convention, in 1919, that wrote the preamble to the American Legion constitution; appointed chairman of Advisory Committee on Veterans Preference by President Coolidge in 1928; appointed chairman of a special House Committee to Investigate Communist Activities in the United States in 1930; member of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the National Grange, Farm Bureau Federation, Lions Club, and numerous fraternal organizations; married in 1921, to Grace, daughter of Alfred Chapin, former Democratic. mayor of Brooklyn, N. Y., and they have two children; was elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress to fill a vacancy; reelected to the Sixty- seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third Congresses (being one of the few Members of Congress to run ahead of President Coolidge in 1924 and of President Hoover in 1928), and to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 19,5657 votes from President Roosevelt's home district, an increase over the last election. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: 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, 1902-16; became owner of lumber company of J. H. Goodwin & 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, Coxsackie Hose Company No. 3, Firemen’s Benefit Association, 80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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 Heermance Memorial Library; married Miss Eva M. Jeune, and they have a son and a daughter, John H. and Jean E.; elected to Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—A1LBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER County: City of Troy, wards 1to4 and 6 to 12. Population (1930), 252,280. PARKER CORNING, Democrat, of Albany, N. Y.; married; is a manu- facturer; was elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy- fourth. Congress. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENSSELAER County: City of Troy, wards 5 and 13 to 17. Population (1930), 223,424. WILLIAM D. THOMAS, Republican, of Hoosick Falls, Rensselaer County, N. Y.; born in Middle Granville, N. Y.; graduated from the Middle Granville High School; received the degree of Ph. G. from Union College, Schenectady, N. Y.; pharmacist; proprietor of the Thomas Pharmacy in Hoosick Falls; direc- tor of the Permanent Savings and Loan Association of Hoosick Falls and director [ of the Peoples First National Bank; town clerk of the town of Hoosick, 1917-25; member of the New York State Legislature, second district, 1925 and 1926; Rensselaer County treasurer, 1927-33; chairman of the Republican county com- mittee, Rensselaer County, 1927 to the present time; married to Carolyn G. Haffner, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and they have one daughter, Lillian H.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on January 30, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. James S. Parker, deceased, by a majority over John J. Nyhoff, Democratic Ec nominee, and Coleman B. Cheney, Socialist, of more than 9,000 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress over Buell Brayton, Democrat, and Coleman B. Cheney, by approximately 19,000 votes. i THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Schenectady (4 counties). | Population (1930), 235,586. FRANK CROWTHER, Republican, Schenectady, N. Y.; born in Liverpool, | England, Jaly 10, 1870; D. M. D., Harvard Dental College, 1898; New Jersey | State Assembly, 1905-7; Board of Equalization for Middlesex County, 1907-10; president Common Council of Schenectady, N.Y., 1917-18; elected to the Sixty- sixth and each succeeding Congress; member of Ways and Means Committee. 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, graduatedin 1894; LL. D., 1929; married Miss Sara L. Merrick, of Gouverneur, N. Y.; two daughters— Helen L. and Sara Louise; director Northern New York Trust Co., at Watertown, N. Y.; director Agricultural Insurance Co., 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; delegate from Thirty-first Con- gressional District to Republican National Conventions 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; elected Minority Leader, House of Representa- tives, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, and Oswego (4 counties). Population (1930), 216,456. FRANCIS D. CULKIN, of Oswego, Republican; lawyer; married; elected to the Seventieth and each succeeding Congress. NEW YORK Biographical | 81 THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1930), 262,769. FRED J. SISSON, Democrat, of Whitesboro, Oneida County, N. Y., was born March 31, 1879; educated in the public schools of Unadilla; graduated from Hamilton College in 1904; lawyer; married Miss Grace McCormick in 1912 and they have 3 daughters and 2 sons; member of Oneida County Bar Asso- ciation, New York State Bar Association, Democratic Club of Oneida County, Masonic Club of Whitesboro, Izaak Walton League, Utica Fish and Game Pro- tective Association, and New York State Fish, Game, and Forest League; was corporation counsel of Utica in 1914; member of the Board of Education of Whitesboro, N. Y., from 1925 to 1933, when he retired, after being president of the board for 5 years; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; member of Banking and Currency Committee. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego (4 counties). Population (1930), 269,560. BERT LORD, Republican, of Afton, Chenango County, N. Y.; born in Broome County, N. Y.; attended the public schools and the Afton Union School and Academy at Afton, N. Y.; engaged in lumbering and mercantile pursuits, and is at present engaged in agricultural pursuits; served as supervisor for the town of Afton, 1905-15; member of the New York Assembly, 1915-22 and 1924-29; served as motor-vehicle commissioner for the State of New York, 1921- 23; member of the New York Senate, 1929-35; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving a majority of 18,500 votes over his Democratic opponent. -THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounmEs: Cortland and Onondaga (2 counties). Population (1930), 23,315. 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, 1917-19; married in 1912 Emily W. Shonk, of Plymouth, Pa.; one son, John S.; elected to the Seventieth and succeeding 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-fourth. THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouxTIiES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1930), 237,230. W. STERLING COLE, Republican, of Bath, N. Y.; born April 18, 1904, at Painted Post, N. Y.; A. B., Colgate University, 1925; LL. B., Albany Law School of Union University, 1929; practicing attorney at Bath; married Miss M. Eliza- beth Thomas, of Corning, N. Y., and they have two sons— William S. and Thomas E.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiv- ing 48,964 votes, to 28,979 votes for Julian P. Bretz, Democrat. THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MoONROE COUNTY: The towns of Brighton, Greece, Henrietta, Iron- dequoit, 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 P. B. DUFFY, Democrat, of Rochester, N. Y.; born at Rochester, Monroe County, N. Y., November 25, 1878; B. A., Georgetown University, 1901; LL. B., Harvard University Law School, 1904, and in same year admitted to New York State bar; lawyer; served as a member of the board of education of the public schools, city of Rochester, from fall of 1904 until February 1, 1932; ap- pointed by Governor Lehman to the New York State Alcoholic Beverage Con- trol Board, and served on that board from April 17, 1933, until December 31, 1934; elected November 6, 1934, to Seventy-fourth Congress. 30063°—74-2—1ST ED——6 rE ERLE. 82 Congressional Drrectory NEW YORK THIRTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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 Uni- versity 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 Liv- ingston 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 ¥. Wagner, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FORTIETH DISTRICT.—NIAGARA COUNTY. 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 Buffalo schools, Lawrenceville Acad- emy, 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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 Williamsville High School and the Niagara University; married Caroline A. Kibler, of Buffalo, N. Y., November 19, 1919; children—David L. and Paul F.; elected supervisor of the town of Amherst in 1929, and reelected in 1931; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 11. 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, 1914-17; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy- third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth 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 district school, Sheridan, N. Y., Silver Creek High School, Silver Creek, N. Y., and NORTH CAROLINA Biographical 83 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means. 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 board of agriculture, 1896-1900; studied law under Prof. S. FF. 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, 1913-21; 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; home, Asheville, N. C.; educated in the public schools of Asheville and at the University of North Carolina, at which latter institution he served as captain of the varsity track team, member of the varsity football team, and associate editor of the university's weekly newspaper; served as prosecuting attorney of the fifteenth judicial district of North Carolina for a period of 4 years, and at that time was the first Democratic prosecuting attorney ever elected in his district; has traveled extensively and is the author of two travel books, namely, Wanderlust and Gypsy Trails; Presi- dential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1928; president of the Roosevelt Motor Clubs of America in 1932; Methodist; member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity and also an active member of the Loyal Order of Moose, Junior Order of the United American Mechanics, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; vice president of the American Automobile Association; was nominated for the United States Senate on July 2, 1932, receiving the largest majority ever given a candidate for major office in a Democratic primary in North Carolina; elected on November 8, 1932, to the United States Senate to serve for a short term expiring March 3, 1933, and on the same day, November 8, 1932, was elected to the United States Senate for the full term expiring in 1939. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, 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, 1903-6; University of North Caro- lina, 1906-8; law school, University of North Carolina, 1911-12; admitted to the bar February 1912; chairman Democratic executive committee, Beaufort County, 1912-25; county attorney, Beaufort County, 1912-25; State senator, 1917 and 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- 25; appointed by Governor Gardner on June 17, 1931, as a member of the Con- stitutional Commission of North Carolina; delegate at large to the Democratic National Convention in 1932; chairman Democratic State Convention in 1930 and in 1934; elected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 84 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 to the Sixty-eighth Congress at a special election held November 6, 1923, only 1 vote being cast against him; the third member of the same family 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, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carteret, Craven, Duplin, Jones, Onslow, Pamlico, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1930), 226,465. GRAHAM ARTHUR BARDEN, Democrat, of New Bern, N. C., was born in Turkey Township, Sampson County, on September 25, 1896, educated in Sampson County public schools and Pender County public schools; moved to Burgaw, Pender County, N. C., in 1908; served in United States Navy during the World War; graduated from the University of North Carolina with LL. B. degree in 1920: licensed to practice law August 23, 1920; taught school in New Bern High School 1 year; served three terms as judge of county court of Craven County, N. C.; represented Craven County in North Carolina General Assembly in 1933; married to Miss Agnes Foy, of New Bern, N. C., and they have one son—Graham Arthur Barden, Jr., and one daughter, Agnes Foy Barden; was elected to Seventy-fourth Congress from the Third District over W. B. Rouse, Republican, by a vote of 20,218 to 9,922. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). Population (1930), 322,346. HAROLD DUNBAR COOLEY, Democrat, of Nashville, N. C., son of the late R. A. P. Cooley and Hattie Davis Cooley; born July 26, 1897; attended the public schools in Nash County, and completed education at University of North Carolina and Yale University; licensed to practice law in February 1918; presi- dent Nash County Bar Association, 1933; Presidential elector in 1932; entered the Naval Aviation Flying Corps during the World War; member of Junior Order United American Mechanics, Phi Delta Theta fraternity, and Phi Delta - Phi national law fraternity; member and deacon of Baptist Church; married Miss Madeline Strickland in 1923, and is father of 2 children—1 son, Roger A. P. Cooley, 2d, and 1 daughter, Hattie Davis Cooley; elected to the Seventy-third Congress July 7, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Edward W. Pou, deceased, the dean of Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (7 counties). Population (1930), 293,799. FRANKLIN WILLS HANCOCK, Jgr., 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 NORTH CAROLINA Biographical 85 Osborn Landis, 1917, and is father of 7 children—4 boys and 3 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 oH Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population (1930), 263,517. WILLIAM BRADLEY UMSTEAD, Democrat, of Durham, N. C.; born 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 American Expeditionary Forces; studied law at Duke University, 1919-21; prosecuting attorney of Durham County recorders court, 1922-26; solicitor of the tenth judicial district, 1927-33; married Miss Merle Davis, of Rutherford County, N. C., in 1929; member of the Methodist Church; was elected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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.; lawyer; educated at Davidson (N. C.) College and University of North Carolina; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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; mayor of Thomasville, 1925-29; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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 livestock raiser by occupation; appointed member of the board of agriculture of North Carolina in 1903, serving in same position for 6 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress, carrying each and all counties of the district; chairman of Committee on Ways and Means, Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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, 1913-16; nominated as senator for the general assembly by the Democratic Party, 1916, but withdrew on account of military service on the Mexican border; major, Field Artillery, 1917-19, American Expeditionary Forces; married Miss Bessie Lewis, Dallas, N. C., 1911; two children—Frances McKean and Alfred Lewis; member of patriotic and fraternal organizations, and of bar associations; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy- second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress from the Tenth Congressional District. 86 Congressional Dzirectory NORTH DAKOTA ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, { a DieDowslh Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Population ’ ) . 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 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; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by more than 25,000 majority; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, by approximately 17,000 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, Maine, 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 (Mrs. Frazier died January 14, 1935) ; there are five children—Unie (Mrs. Emerson C. Church), Versie, Vernon, Willis, and Lucille; 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 endorsed for Governor by the Nonpartisan League and elected on the Republican ticket; reelected Governor in 1918 and again in 1920; in March 1922 was endorsed by the Nonpartisan League for United States Senator and nominated on the Republican ticket in the primaries and elected November 7, 1922; reelected November 6, 1928, and November 6, 1934. 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 and defeated; appointed to 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. USHER L. BURDICK, Republican, of Bismarck, N. Dak.; born near Owa- tonna, Minn., February 21, 1879, son of Ozias Warren Burdick, of Vermont, and Lucy Farnum Burdick, of New York; moved with his parents to Dakota Territory in 1882, and was raised in a farming community bordering on the Fort Totten Sioux Indian Reservation, and understands the Sioux language; graduated from the State normal school at Mayville, N. Dak., in 1900; married Emma C. Rass- mussen in 1901, both entering the University of Minnesota immediately there- after; both graduated from the university in 1904; was a member of the Minnesota football teams of 1903 and 1904, playing right end, during which time Minne- sota was the champion team of the Big Ten; started the practice of law at Munich, N. Dak., in 1904, and was also credit manager for the First National Bank of Munich; elected to the State legislature in 1907, and again in 1909, and OHIO Biographical 87 that year became speaker of the house, at that time the youngest speaker in the United States; elected Lieutenant Governor in 1911, and became judge of the senate in the impeachment proceedings brought against District Judge John F. Cowan, the first and only impeachment trial ever held in the State; elected State’s attorney in Williams County in 1912 and remained there as prosecutor or special prosecutor for several years; appointed assistant United States district attorney in 1929 and remained in that office until 1932, when he resigned to enter the race for Congressman at large from North Dakota; defeated in that election, but was successful in the election of 1934 and became a Member of the Seventy-fourth Congress; always independent in politics, being a member of the Nonpartisan League of North Dakota; supported Franklin D. Roosevelt for President against Herbert Hoover; has three children—Quentin Northrop Bur- dick (A. B., LL. B.), attorney at Fargo; Eugene Allan Burdick (A. B., LL. B.), attorney at Williston, N. Dak.; and Eileen Rosemary Burdick, a student of law at the University of Minnesota; holds the degrees of Ph. B. and LL. B. and has written many books on western history, including The Last Battle of the Sioux, and The Indians’ Own Story of the Custer Battle; supported the President in his fight for the utilities bill and the Guffey coal bill, but voted to override his veto on the bonus bill; lives on a farm in Maryland but has not missed a day of the first session of the Seventy-fourth Congress; quickly interested in the affairs of poor people and believes the rich can take care of themselves; believes we have the best Government on earth, but that it has been and still is controlled by special privilege; his energy and ability while in Congress will be used to restore this Government to the people for whom it exists. WILLIAM LEMKE, Nonpartisan, 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, 1917-21; chairman Republican State central committee, 1916-20; attorney general of North Dakota, 1921; had charge of drafting the laws establishing the industrial program in North Dakota; has been connected with practically 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses as a Representative at large. OHIO (Population (1930), 6,646,697) SENATORS 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 M. A. 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; married Mrs. Helen Graham Robbins at New York City, March 31, 1934; engaged in the practice of law; elected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses (1911-15); dele- gate to Democratic National Conventions at Baltimore in 1912, at St. Louis in 1916, and at Chicago in 1932; 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. VIC DONAHEY, Democrat, of Columbus, Ohio (50 West Broad Street); born in Cadwallader, Ohio, on July 7, 1873; Presbyterian ancestry; five genera- tions born in Ohio; common-school education; president Motorists Mutual 88 Congressional Directory OHIO Insurance Co.; director Ohio National Bank, Columbus, Ohio; member Inter- national Typographical Union; member of the Fourth Ohio Constitutional Convention, 1912; auditor of State, 1913-21; Governor of Ohio, three consecutive terms, 1923-29; married to Miss Mary Edith Harvey, of Dover, Ohio, on Janu- ary 5, 1897, and they have 10 children, all married except a daughter, Miss Marion, who is a student in Marjorie Webster School for Girls, Washington, D. C., and a son, Vie, Jr., who is studying law at Ohio State University; they have nine grandchildren, all of whom, with their respective parents, reside in Ohio; their sons and daughters-in-law are: Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Donahey, who, with their sons, Jack and Billy, reside in Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. John W. Donahey, who reside in Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Hal Donahey, of Lake View; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Donahey, of Huntsville; and Mr. and Mrs. James Donahey, who, with their daughters, Victoria and Carol, are residents of Columbus; their sons-in-law and daughters are: Mr. and Mrs. James W. Huffman, of Columbus, and daughter Margaret; Mr. and Mrs. Park G. Ogden, who, with their children, Park G., Jr., Eddie, Don, and Emily, live in Zanesville; and Dr. and Mrs. James Brownlee Johnson, of Newark; elected United States Senator on Novem- ber 6, 1934, for the term expiring January 3, 1941, carrying every congressional district in the State. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 6,646,697. STEPHEN M. YOUNG, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio; born on a farm in Ohio, May 4, 1889; son of the late Judge Stephen M. Young, of Norwalk; trial lawyer; attended Kenyon and Adelbert Colleges and Western Reserve University Law School; received degrees LL. B. from Western Reserve University Law School and master of civil law (honorary) from Kenyon College; served two terms in the General Assembly of Ohio, 1913-17; chief assistant prosecuting attorney of Cuyahoga County, 1919-20; Democratic nominee for attorney general of Ohio in 1922; member of the Chio Commission on Unemployment Insurance in 1931-32; served in National Guard on Mexican border in 1916 and in Field Artillery in 1918; married and has three children. Represented Ohio as Congress- man at large in the Seventy-third Congress. [One vacancy (at large).] FIRST DISTRICT.—HAMILTON 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, IL, 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, S, 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 terms as member of the Cincinnati Board of Education, 1921-29; attended first officers’ training camp, Plattsburg, May 1917; commissioned first lieuten- ant, later captain; instructor Heavy Artillery School, Fort Monroe; overseas in command of Battery B, Forty-sixth Artillery; later in command of Third Battalion of that regiment; on detached service with American Relief Administration under Herbert Hoover, January to June 1919, in Poland and Lithuania; married, August 15, 1917, Ellen West Rollins, of Boston, Mass. ; three children; Member Seventy -seoond and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth ongress. OHIO Biographical 89 SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON County: City of Cincinnati, ward 7, precincts A and C; ward 10, precinets I, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts , N, P, Q, and V; ward 15, precincts 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, L, and M; 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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, Bruce, and Eleanor; 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 and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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 and served during the World War; served two terms as prosecuting attorney of Mercer County, Ohio, January 1921 to January 1925; married Florence Root, of Milwaukee, Wis., September 2, 1930; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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); member Henry County and Ohio State Bar Associations; married February 8,1917,to Miss Florence Fichter, of Lawrence- burg, Ind., and they have two children—Charles Kniffin and Robert Kniffin; elected to Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: 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 1819, after having _been called for military service at Camp Sherman in the fall of 1918; principal of New Vienna High School, 1819-20; superintendent of schools, New Vienna, 1920-22; graduated from Wittenberg College, 1923, with degree of master of arts; principal of Hillsboro High School, 1923-28; at present is farming in Fairfield Township, Highland County, Ohio; married March 26, 1921, to Mary 4 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, B. P. O. E., and Methodist Episcopal Church. Has the dis- tinction of beingthe first Democrat ever elected to Congress from the Sixth District as now constituted; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses; member of Committee on Agriculture. : 90 Congressional Directory OHIO SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Clark, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, Logan, Madison, Union, and Warren (9 counties). Population (1930), 286,374. 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 4 years; elected clerk of courts, Greene County, Obio, for two terms, 1909-13; served two terms in the Ohio State Senate, 1925-28; was chairman of the Greene County Republican organization for 12 years, 1920-32; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a greatly increased majority. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTtieEs: 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, Seventieth, and Seventy-third Congresses, and again elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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; re- ceived 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 Asso- ciations; 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 Congo) reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; member Judiciary ommittee. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 to Miss Mabel Wynne; 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, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; member of Ways and Means Committee. ELEVENTH BDISTRICT.—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 and farmer; elected prosecuting attorney, Perry County, 1916; served two terms; married Flora E. Lewis, of Cadiz, Ohio, and has four children—Mell G., Jr., Max L., Linda Lou, and Ned; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by an overwhelming vote, defeating Renick W. Dunlap, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture under Presidents Coolidge and Hoover. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CountY: Franklin. Population (1930), 361,055. ARTHUR P. LAMNECK, Democrat, of Columbus, Ohio; business man; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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, OHIO Biographical : 91 1903-9; judge, common pleas court, Eric County, Ohio, 1925-31; married Maude Nelles; two daughters—Mrs. Wade Wenton Dauch and Mrs. James Bennet Howe; and granddaughters, Mary Lois Dauch and Ann Dauch; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DRISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit (4 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 525,696. : DOW W. HARTER, Democrat, of Akron, Ohio, was born there and educated in the public schools; graduated from Akron High School and the University of Michigan; an active lawyer in Akron for 20 years; first assistant prosecuting attorney of Summit County, 1914-16; member of General Assembly of Ohio; member of Protestant Episcopal Church; married and has two sons; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Guernsey, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Wash- ington (6 counties). Population (1930), 198,291. ROBERT THOMPSON SECREST, Democrat, of Caldwell, Ohio, was born January 22, 1904, in Noble County, near Senecaville, the son 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, 1926-30; 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 and one son—Nancy Ann, Mary Jane, and Robert Thompson, Jr.; 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 6 counties in the same election; member of the following committees: Flood Control, Library, Mines and Mining, and Roads; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawas, 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 5 years to newspaper reporting for Canton newspapers; special student in Adelbert College of Western Reserve University, at Cleveland, Ohio, 1909-11; graduate of Georgetown Law School, Washington, D. C,, 1916; admitted to the bar of Ohio, January 1917 and since then a prac- ticing 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, Columbiana, and Mahoning Counties; reporter for the United Press in the House of Representatives Press Gallery, 1915-16; member of the Canton Park Commission for 12 years; member of First Reformed Church, of Canton, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress over C. B. McClintock, Republican, by a majority of 13,964; member of Committee on Appropriations. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Ashland, Coshocton, Delaware, Knox, Licking, and Rich- land (6 counties). Population (1930), 237,061. WILLIAM A. ASHBROOK, Democrat, of Johnstown, Ohio, was born in Johns- town, Ohio, July 1, 1867; was married on November 25, 1920, to Marie G. Swank, of Bellville, Ohio, and they have five children— William A., Jr., 13 years; Lucy Marie, 12 years; Leah Abbie, 10 years; John Milan, 7 years; and James Howard, 5 years; is a publisher, banker, and farmer; resigned from the Seventy-seventh General Assembly of Ohio when elected to the Sixtieth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty- sixth Congresses, and defeated in the Harding landslide of 1920 by 123 votes; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 7,372 votes, his total vote being 49,214. 92 Congressional Dzrectory 0HIO 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, 1921-25; probate judge of Belmont County, 1925-33; 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, 8 years old; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, re- ceiving 55,438 votes, his Republican opponent, Frank Murphy, receiving 55,010 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 9,548 votes. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; is a member of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—City oF 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 L. 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 Cleve- land, November 1923, and served as judge for 8 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; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, November 8, 1932, receiving 52,738 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934, receiving 50,611 votes, his Republican opponent, Joseph Cassidy, receiving 21,952 votes. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF CLEVELAND: Ward 5, precincts A to E, G to L, and N to TU; 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- cincts A to LL 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 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. OKLAHOMA Biographical 93 TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Geauga, Lake, and that part of Cuyahoga County outside of 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; 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, 1923-28; delegate to Republican National Con- ~ vention, 1928; elected to Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 DePauw 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, 1910-13; 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. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 2,396,040. WILL ROGERS, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, Okla., was born at Bessie, Oklahoma Territory (now Oklahoma), December 12, 1898; received B. S. degree in government and B. A. degree in English from Central Teachers’ College, Edmond, and M. S. degree in education from Oklahoma University, Norman; is a school teacher by profession; was engaged in educational work in Oklahoma for 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 Miss Chloe Gorden, also a teacher, and they have one daughter—Nell; member of Baptist Church; Woodman, Mason, and member of Eastern Star; member of 94 Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA Oklahoma Farmers’ Union, Oklahoma Memorial Association (historical), and Red Red Rose (educator’s fraternal organization); Chairman of Committee on Indian Affairs, House of Representatives; elected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving more than twice as many votes as all his opponents combined. 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, 1911-15, 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, 1919-23, 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 and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskogee, Okmulgee, Se- quoyah, and Wagoner (8 counties). Population (1930), 238,281. JACK NICHOLS, Democrat, of Eufaula, Okla.; born in Joplin, Mo., in 1896; educated in the public schools there and in Colorado Springs, Colo., and the teachers’ college at Emporia, Kans.; studied law in the office of his brother, Clark Nichols, and was admitted to the bar upon examination in 1926 and has practiced law as partner of his brother under the firm name of Clark and Jack Nichols since; reported for duty at the First Officers’ Training Camp, Fort Logan H. Roots, Little Rock, on May 14, 1917, but failed of commission; thereafter served with the Nineteenth Infantry in the Regular Army, being stationed af Camp Travis, Tex.; honorably discharged on March 27, 1919; has been active in the American Legion and State League of Young Democrats; never before held or sought public office; married Marion Young, of Eufaula, Okla., on March 30, 1921, and to this union was born one daughter, Nina Jean, who is now 12 years old; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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, 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, and Bryan Counties in 1918 for a term of 4 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 adviser 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., 1923-26; defeated Charles D. Carter in the primary of 1926 and elected to the Seventieth Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-first Con- gress by 17,661 majority, to the Seventy-second Congress, by a majority of 30,226, and to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 48,865; reelected to the Sruaiplonrth Congress; grand master of I. O. O. F. for State of Oklahoma, —35. OKLAHOMA Biographical 95 FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounNmEs: Coal, Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Pottawatomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1930), 360,468. 'P. L. GASSAWAY, Democrat, of Coalgate, Coal County, Okla., was born in Waco, Tex., August 30, 1885, the son of Rev. B. F. and Elizabeth Caroline Gassaway; admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma June 14, 1919; moved to Fort Sill, Okla. (then Indian Territory), in the early nineties; was appointed county judge of Coal County in 1923; elected county attorney in 1924; elected district judge of the twenty-sixth judicial district in 1926 and 1930; married Miss Lillian Fooshee, of Coalgate, Okla., October 30, 1920, and they have three children—Betty Jo, age 12, Peggy Jane, age 10, and Jim, age 7; member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, all Masonic bodies, and Farmer's Union; elected to Seventy-fourth Congress in 1934, defeating James S. Davidson, Republican nominee, with a vote of 47,178 for Gassaway against 19,875 for Davidson; home is on TX ranch, near Coalgate, Okla. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne (7 counties). Population (1930), 376,738. ; JOSH LEE, Democrat, of Norman, Okla.; son of Dr. Thomas Jefferson and Josie (Fowler) Lee; born in Childersburg, Ala., January 23, 1892, christened Joshua, and later given the middle name of Bryan, after the Great Commoner; the family moved from Alabama to Pauls Valley, Okla. (then Indian Territory); at the opening of the western strip in 1901, Dr. Lee’s pioneering spirit moved the family to a farm in Kiowa County, 3 miles west of Hobart; attended the public schools of Hobart and Rocky, Okla., Oklahoma Baptist University at Shawnee, and the University of Oklahoma at Norman, graduating from the latter institu- tion in 1917, with an A. B. degree, having specialized in English and history; though almost entirely self-supporting throughout his college career, he engaged in forensics and won the national collegiate oratorical championship in 1916; enlisting as a private in the One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Infantry, Thirty- fourth (Sandstorm) Division, following his graduation, spent 14 months in the service, including 10 months overseas; upon returning from the war, he was made head of the public-speaking department at the University of Oklahoma, and held that position until beginning his campaign for Congress; also holds an M. A. degree in political science from Columbia University, New York City, and an LL. B. degree from Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; is an author, is widely known as a lecturer and public speaker, and owns and operates a ranch in western Oklahoma; married Louise Gerlach, of Woodward, Okla., January 17, 1923, and they have two children—Robert Joshua, 11, and Mary Louise, 4 years old; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 58,322 votes to 18.640 for Paul Huston, his Republican opponent. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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; three daughters, Jean, Joan and Janelle; 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 two terms, 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; first vice president Thirty-sixth Division Association; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beckham, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa, Roger Mills, Tillman, and Washita (11 counties). Population (1930), 240,944. SAM C. MASSINGALE, Democrat, of Cordell, Okla.; born at Quitman, Miss., August 2, 1870; received education from the public schools and university of that State; came to Fort Worth, Tex., when 21 years old, and studied law; in 1898 served as private in Company D, Second Texas Infantry, in the Spanish-American War; moved to Cordell in 1900 and opened law office, and has practiced law since 96 Congressional Directory OREGON that time; in 1902 he served as a member of the Territorial Council; elected as Representative from the Seventh District of Oklahoma to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Garfield, Grant, Harper, Kay, Major, Noble, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (12 counties). Population (1930), 224,067. PHIL FERGUSON, Democrat, of Woodward, Okla., was born at Wellington, Kans., on August 15, 1903; graduated from the University of Kansas in 1926, receiving an A. B. degree; married Martha Sharon in 1928, and they have one daughter—Sharon, 5 years of age; immediately after graduation he moved to a ranch in Woodward County, Okla., and has been an active farmer and cattleman since that time; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 40,288 votes, defeating T. J. Sargent, Republican, who received 30,019 votes, and J. H. Ameringer, Socialist, who received 550 votes; he is the second Democrat to represent this district in Congress, succeeding E. W. Marland, who was elected Governor of Oklahoma on November 6, 1934. 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, 1908-13; received degree of doctor of laws from Willamette 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 Do 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, 1913-16; State senator, 1917; served in World War August 1917 to March 1919; member of Sixty-fifth Artillery after September 1, 1918; married, Decem- ber 12, 1911, to Frieda Roesch, of Pendleton, Oreg., and has two children— Mrs. Ralph T. McElvenny 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, Lane, 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 public schools, Uni- versity of Oregon, and Stanford University; A. B., Columbia University, New York, 1909; engaged for a time in newspaper work; LL. B., Willamette Uni- versity, 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 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 three daughters—Frances Anne, Dorothy May, and Beverly Jane; elected to the Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses. ~ PENNSYLVANIA 3 Biographical 97 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, I11., 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; attended Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., 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 farms; in Oregon State Senate two terms, 1902-6 and 1916-20, with special interest in legislation on roads, labor, and education; Governor of Oregon, 1923-27; Demo- cratic national committeemar from Oregon, 1932-36; member of Board of Regents of Oregon State College, 1905-27; 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, Republi- can; 5,133 for Hugh E. Brady, Independent; 1,258 for O. D. Teel, Socialist; and 937 for P. F. Schnur, Socialist-Labor; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 29,221 votes, against 21,255 for Jay H. Upton, Republican, and 1,034 for O. D. Teel, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CountyY: Multnomah. Population (1930), 338,241. WILLIAM A. EKWALL, Republican, of Portland, Oreg.; born at Ludington, Mich., June 14, 1887; moved to California in 1893, and to Portland, Oreg., in ° 1906, where he has resided continuously since, except for a few months’ service as a private in the Infantry during the World War, spent at Camp Pike, Ark.; graduated from the Oregon Law School, Portland, Oreg., in 1912, with LL. B. degree; admitted to Oregon bar in 1912; practiced law as member of firm of Senn, Ekwall & Recken until appointed municipal judge of Portland, Oreg., in 1922, serving as such until etected judge of the circuit court, fourth judicial district (Multnomah County), department 8, in 1926; reelected in 1932, serving as circuit judge when elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; married to Lina Moser, of Portland, Oreg., in 1915, and they have two daughters—Joyce, aged 15 years, and Jacqueline, aged 7 years. PENNSYLVANIA (Population (1930), 9,631,350) SENATORS 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; is married and has five children. JOSEPH F. GUFFEY, Democrat, Pittsburgh, Pa., unmarried. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Ciry 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 had two daughters, Mrs. William A. Clementson, 2d, and Harriet, deceased; 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, 1891-94; 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, 1916-20; was chairman of the Republican city committee, 1916-19; Member Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 30063°—74—2—1ST ED——1T A 98 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA SEdoNy DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 7 to 10, 24, 27, 30, 36, and 44. Population (1930), WILLIAM HENRY WILSON, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.:. born in Philadelphia, December 6, 1877; graduated from University of Pennsylvania Law School, Philadelphia, Pa., in 1898; married Florence, daughter of Harry Klauder, of Philadelphia, in 1902, and they have one daughter—Mrs. Victor T. Milward; admitted to bar of Philadelphia in 1899; is a member of the firm of Wilson & McAdams, 811 Finance Building, Philadelphia; assistant city solici- tor, 1900-1909; member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1913-15; director of public safety, Philadelphia, 1916-20; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 44,478 votes, and James MecGranery, Democrat, receiving 36,212 votes. THIRD DISTRICT.—CIrY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 11, 12, 13 14, 16 to 20 25, 31, 37. and 45. Popula- tion (1930), 298,461. CLARE GERALD FENERTY, Republican, of Philadelphia; born and edu- cated in Philadelphia; graduate of St. Joseph’s College, degree of bachelor of arts; graduate of law school, University of Pennsylvania, degree of bachelor of laws; veteran of World War, serving with the United States Navy in France, 1917-18; now a senior lieutenant in United States Naval Reserve; member of law faculty of the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, for 5 years; appointed by court as member of Philadelphia Board of Law Examiners, 1928 to present; assistant district attorney, 1928-35; married (1934) Miss Miriam Elizabeth Loughran, daughter of P. F. Loughran, Esq., of Hazleton, Pa.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, having a substantial majority over the combined vote of the Democratic candidate and the candidate of the Industrial Recovery Party, the former Republican Member of Congress from this district. : FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 15, 28, 29, 32, 38, and 47. Population (1930), 74,376. J. BURRWOOD DALY, Democrat, of Philadelphia; was born in Philadelphia, Pa.; graduate of La Salle College (A. B.); graduate of University of Pennsylvania (L. B.); master of arts and doctor of laws (La Salle College); assistant city solicitor of Philadelphia for 12 years; member of the faculty of La Salle College; member of the Philadelphia bar; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 385 votes, being the first Democrat ever elected from the Fourth Congressional District of Pennsylvania. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CitY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 23, 33, 35, 41, and 43. Population (1930), 269,564. - FRANK J. G. DORSEY, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born April 26, 1891, in Philadelphia, Pa., having lived all his life in the district which he represents: educated in the Philadelphia public schools, graduating from the Northeast High School; for 5 years associated with the Keystone Watch Case Co. as assayer; entered University of Pennsylvania in 1913, graduating from its Wharton School of Finance and Commerce with honors in 1917, receiving degree of B.S. in economics; member of Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary fraternity; captain University of Pennsylvania track team, 1917; assistant in finance, University of Pennsylvania, 1916-17; at outbreak of World War enlisted as private, and was discharged April 1919 as lieutenant; member of American Legion; associated since the World War with Henry Disston & Sons, Inc.; director of Northeast National Bank, Philadelphia, and of several building and loan associations; married to Cecelia M. A. Ward in 1920, and they have one daughter—Cecelia Marie; elected to Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 50,650 votes, and his opponent, James J. Connolly, Republican, receiving 45,287. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Ci1Y oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 34, 40, and 46. Population (1930), 291,720. MICHAEL J. STACK, Democrat, of Philadelphia, was born in Ireland; educated at St. Joseph’s College, Philadelphia, Pa., and St. Mary’s University, Baltimore, Md., receiving the degree of A.B. from the latter; served in France with. the Ninetieth Division of the American Expeditionary Forces; swas wounded in battle, decorated with Order of Purple Heart; active member of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; after the war, PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 99 returned to Philadelphia and engaged in his present occupation, the real estate business; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, as a Representative from the Sixth Congressional District, receiving 50,961 votes, and his opponent, Robert Davis, Republican, 48,467 votes. Skyy DISTRICT.—CIity OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 21, 22, 42, 49, and 50. Population (1930), 83,310. 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; presi- dent of the twenty-second sectional school board of Philadelphia for 3 years; member of city council of Philadelphia, 1910-15; elected to the Sixty-fourth and each succeeding Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTY: Delaware. Population (1930), 280,264. JAMES WOLFENDEN, Republican, of Upper Darby, was born in Carding- ton, Delaware County, Pa.; elected to the Seventieth Congress; reelected to the succeeding Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bucks and Lehigh (2 counties). Population (1930), 269,620. OLIVER W. FREY, Democrat, of Allentown; born in Richland Township, Bucks County, Pa., September 7, 1890; married, June 28, 1928, to Jessie M. Straub; educated in the public schools of Allentown, Lehigh County, Pa.; grad- uated from William and Mary Academy in 1912, and from William and Mary College in 1915 with an A. B. degree; then entered the law school of the University of Pennsylvania and studied there until the outbreak of the World War; entered United States Army in April 1917, and was honorably discharged as a commis- sioned officer in June 1919; reentered the law school of the University of Penn- sylvania and was graduated in June 1920 with an LL. B. degree; began the practice of law in Allentown immediately after graduation and has been practicing in that city since; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 7, 1933, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Henry W. Watson; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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, 1912-23; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. ELEVENTH BDISTRICT.—CounNtY: 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress with- out opposition; appointed as majority whip. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—County: Luzerne. Population (1930), 445,109. C. MURRAY TURPIN, Republican, born March 4, 1878; native, resident of Kingston, Pa.; graduate Kingston High School; Wyoming Seminary, depart- ment of business; and University of Pennsylvania (D. D. 8.); prior to enter- 100 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA ing 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth 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 Arnts Fishing Club, United Sportsmen of Pennsylvania, Izaak Walton League, 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, Sons of Union Veterans, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Fraternal Order of Eagles, Loyal Order of Moose, Patriotic Order Sons of America, Veteran Firemen’s Association, Junior Order United American Me- chanics, and United Spanish War Veterans; served two terms as president of Kingston Business Men’s Association; honorary member of the following organi- zations: Rural Letter Carriers Association, Patriotic Order of Americans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Roma, (Italian) Citizens Club, Polish Falcons Club, Adams County (Pa.) Veterans’ Association, Daughters of America, and of Lavina Derr Tent, Daughters of Union Veterans; Distinguished Service Certificate, American Legion; associate life member Home Association, American Legion, Post 395; 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 children—Dorothy, Charles, Margaret, and Gertrude. rh DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population 1930), 364,009. JAMES H. GILDEA, Democrat, of Coaldale, Pa.; editor and publisher of the Coaldale Observer; born at Coaldale on October 21, 1890, son of Dennis C. and Marjorie (Rodgers) Gildea; educated in the public schools at Coaldale; graduate class of 1905; founded the Observer on September 10, 1910; married on November 10, 1915, to Genevieve Gallagher, and they have six children—Marjorie, a student at Immaculata College, James, Jr., Kathleen, Robert, John, and Daniel; lifelong Democrat, the Observer being for years the only Democratic newspaper in Schuylkill County; received American Legion Distinguished Service Certificate March 19, 1930, for community service and service to the Legion; chairman of Coaldale Relief Society, 1930-33; chairman of equalization committee Panther Valley miners, and through successful leadership in workers’ drive for equaliza- tion was practically drafted into congressional race, winning by a majority of 4,725 votes in a strongly Republican district over David W. Bechtel, who polled 49,5684 votes, as against Gildea’s 54,309. 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, 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 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 participated 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 three children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a plurality of 20,000 votes. PENNSYLVANIA b 1ographical 101 FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Pike, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1930), 205,084. C. ELMER DIETRICH, Democrat, of Tunkhannock, Pa., was born in Tunk- hannock, Wyoming County, Pa., July 30, 1889; attended the public schools and the Tunkhannock High School; was graduated from the Wyoming Seminary at Kingston, Pa., in 1907; motion-picture theater owner, memorial business, and farmer and stock raiser; served as prothonotary and clerk of the courts of Wyo- ming County, 1920-35; delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1932; member of the Masonic Order, Irem Temple Shrine, Methodist Church, and Rotary Club; director of the Wyoming Valley Motor Club; married Laura M. Middleton in 1909, and they have three children—Charles E., Jr., age 24; George, age 23; and Helen, age 19; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 39,566 votes, and L. T. McFadden, Republican, receiving 38,905 votes. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Cameron, Clinton, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, and Tioga (6 counties). Population (1930), 235,574. ROBERT F. RICH, Republican, of Woolrich, Clinton County, 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, secretary, and treasurer of the Chatham Water Co., of Woolrich; director and treasurer of the Pearce Manufacturing Co., Latrobe, Pa.; director and secre- tary 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; trustee of Lock Haven Hospital; thirty-third degree Mason; delegate to the Republican National Convention, 1924; elected a Member of the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Montgomery. Population (1930), 265,804. J. WILLIAM DITTER, Republican, of Ambler, Montgomery County, Pa.; graduated Temple University Law School; member of Montgomery County and Pennsylvania Bar Associations; married; two children; elected to the Seventy- third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: 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 4 years in the Pennsylvania State Senate; was State water supply commissioner and deputy secretary of the Commonwealth; is author of important legislation in Pennsyl- vania; introduced old age pension law in the House in 1916; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty- seventh, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 Elizabethtown, 102 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA 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 & Co.’s retail clothing stores in Harrisburg; married Miss Lena Erb, of Palmyra, Pa.; 1 son and 1 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clarion, Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (6 coun- ties). Population (1930), 277,067. D. J. DRISCOLL, Democrat, St. Marys, Pa.; born at North Lawrence, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., but has lived in Elk County, Pa., since 1890; principal of St. Marys High School for 4 years; admitted to the bar on April 22, 1898, and the same afternoon enlisted as a private for service in the Spanish-American War; served in the Sixteenth Pennsylvania Infantry under General Miles in Puerto Rico; discharged as second lieutenant and entered the Pennsylvania National Guard as a private and served 3 years, holding two commissions in that organiza- tion; served 23 years as member of Democratic State committee, and as chairman of Democratic State committee managed campaign of 1905 which resulted in the election of the only Democratic State treasurer chosen in Pennsylvania in last 50 years; only elective office hitherto held was school director, to which he was | first chosen 30 years ago; has been for 25 years president of St. Marys School Board; represented his congressional district in Democratic National Conventions of 1916, 1920, 1924, and 1928; appointed by President Wilson in his second administration as United States attorney for western district of Pennsylvania; member of Pennsylvania Bar Association, American Bar Association, United Spanish War Veterans, and Veterans of Foreign Wars; senior member of firm of Driscoll, Gregory & Coppolo, attorneys of St. Marys, Pa.; married to Miss Elizabeth Biglan, of St. Marys, Pa., and they have two daughters; elected to Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 48,245 votes; Leon H. Gavin, Republican, 40,080; Robert G. Burnham, Prohibitionist, 2,550; Robert S. Stewart, Socialist, 762; member of Banking and Currency Committee. 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, 1928-33; during the World War was in the air service of the Navy; married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 13,320. 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; married and has five children; elected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. TWENTY THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blair, Centre, and Clearfield (3 counties). Population 1930), ,861. DON GINGERY, Democrat, of Clearfield, Pa., was born in Woodland, Bradford Township, Clearfield County, Pa.; attended the public schools of Clearfield, Pa., Mercersburg Academy, Mercersburg, Pa., and Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio; served one term as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives; member of the Democratic State committee and of the State executive committee, and served as county chairman of Clearfield County; served in National Guard of Pennsylvania, with the rank of captain; married in 1912 to Anna Leavy, and they have four children—Don, Jr., Sarah, Mary Louise, and Hugh; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 40,991 votes, J. Banks Kurtz, Republican, 34,520 votes, and George Hartman, Socialist, 1,834 votes. PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 103 TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 Teachers College; principal of schools at Stoyestown, Rockwood, and Berlin, Somerset County, 1901-6; attended Harvard University and Columbia University summer sessions; principal of Perry Township Union High School, 1906-12; married and has one daughter; western Pennsylvania district manager of The Macmillan Co., educational publishers, 1912-32; member of Board of Education of Perry Township, Pa., and secretary of County School Directors Association, 1922-32; member of National Commission of One Hundred for Study and Survey of Rural Schools in the United States, 1922-24; legislative representative for Pennsylvania school directors in Harrisburg during sessions of State legislature, 1921-23; founder and organizer of the Pennsylvania Inter- High School Literary, Debate, and Musical League; elected a Representative to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 12,100. 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, 1909-11, and Pennsylvania State College, 1911-15; 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 Novem- ber 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; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 38,769 Democratic and 353 Socialist votes, Albert S. Sickman, Republican, receiving 25,435 votes. Ty DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaver, Butler, and Lawrence (3 counties). Population 1930), 326,800. CHARLES R. ECKERT, Democrat, of Beaver, Pa.; born at Pittsburgh, Pa., January 20, 1868; moved to Beaver County, Pa., in 1868, and was reared on a farm; educated in the public schools, Piersols Academy, and Geneva College; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and practiced at Beaver since 1894; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. TWENTY-SEVENTH PISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 coun- ties). Population (1930), 409,953. JOSEPH GRAY, Democrat, of Spangler, Pa.; business address, Barnesboro, Pa.; attorney at law; exhibitor; Spanish-American War veteran; native of Cambria County, Pa.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Westmoreland. Population (1930), 294,995. WILLIAM MARKLE BERLIN, Democrat, of Greensburg, Pa.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crawford and Erie (2 counties). Population (1930), 238,257. CHARLES N. CROSBY, Democrat, of Meadville, Pa.; elected to the Sev- enty-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 104 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA 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 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; during the World War served in the quartermaster division, in Washington, D. C.; returned to Pittsburgh after the war and continued in the steel business as treasurer of the Woodings 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; 2,653 for Sarah Z. Limbach, Socialist; 1,159 for Robert Hervey, Prohibition; and 585 for Edward A. Glenn, Peoples; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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. JAMES LELAND QUINN, Democrat, of Braddock, Pa., editor and publisher; member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1932; married; 4 children—3 daughters and 1 son; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 44,711 votes, and Clyde Kelly, Republican, receiv- ing 38,984 votes. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 6, 9 to 11, and 15. Population (1930), 213,060. THEODORE L. MORITZ, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was born in Toledo, Ohio, February 10, 1892; graduated from Dayton University in 1913 and from Duquesne University Law School in 1923; engaged in the practice of law in Pittsburgh, Pa.; married Agnes M. Stevenson, of Uniontown, Pa.; served as secretary to Mayor William N. MecNair, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 24,275 votes, and defeating the incumbent, Michael J. Muldowney, who received 19,134 votes. 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 with the degrees of A. B. and LL. B.; is an attorney at law, engaged in the general practice of law; elected as a Member of the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected as a Member of the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, by a vote of 72,584, his nearest opponent having a vote of 1,573, the total vote cast being 76,252. 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, McKees Rocks, Mount Oliver, Munhall, Oakdale, Rosslyn Farms, Thornburg, West Elizabeth, West Homestead, 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, RHODE ISLAND Brographical 105 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 a broker with the Birmingham Tire 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on the Democratic and Republican tickets. 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; trustee of the Rhode Island School of Design, of Providence, R. I., and member of the board of trustees of Brown University, of Providence; elected No- vember 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. PETER G. GERRY, Democrat, of Warwick, born September 18, 1879; Harvard S. B. 1901; lawyer; married; elected to representative council of N ewport in 1911; delegate to Democratic National Conventions, 1912, 1916, and 1932; elected a Member of the House of Representatives in the Sixty-third Congress ; elected to the United States Senate in 1916 for the term commencing March 4, 1917; re- elected in 1922 for the term ending March 3, 1929; elected Democratic national committeeman in 1932; again elected to the United States Senate in 1934 for the term ending January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bristol and Newport. PROVIDENCE COUNTY: City of Providence, representative districts, 1to 7; cities of Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket; towns of Cumberland, East Providence, and Lincoln. Population (1930), 341,016. CHARLES FRANCIS RISK, Republican, 924 Smithfield Avenue, Saylesville, R. I.; born in Central Falls, R. I., August 19, 1897; LL. B., Georgetown University Law School, 1922; lawyer; probate judge, Central Falls, R. I., 1929 to 1931; justice, Eleventh District Court of Rhode Island, 1932 to 1935; private, United States Army, World War; married; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on August 6, 1935, to fill the vacancy caused by resignation of Francis B. Condon, receiving 48,947 votes, Antonio Prince, Democrat, receiving 35,670 votes, and Isaac Moses, Independent, receiving 706 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Kent and Washington. PROVIDENCE COUNTY: City of Providence, representative districts, 8 to 25; city of Cranston; towns of Burrillville, Foster, Glocester, J ohnson, 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, 1929-32; member of Narragansett Council, K. of C.; life member, B. P. O. ., Westerly Lodge, No. 678; American Legion; Westerly Yacht Club; Harbour Club; South County League; Westerly Dental Society; Democratic Club; Member of the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by nearly 15,000 majority. 106 Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA SOUTH CAROLINA (Population (1930), 1,738,765) SENATORS ELLISON DuRANT SMITH, Democrat, of Lynchburg, S. C., was born 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 1805; was made field agent and general organizer of this movement, in which capacity he served from January 1605 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 5 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 1911-25; 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; elected to the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress. SECOND BISTRICT.—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 (Detroit, Mich.) ; farmer; proprietor of the Barnes farm; vice president Farmers Warehouse Co. of Norway, 8S. 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 ears; renominated in the Democratic primary with ex-Lieut. Gov. Andrew J. Le and John J. McMahan, insurance commissioner of South Carolina, opposing; reelected to the Sixty-eighth Congress in the general election over SOUTH CAROLINA Biographical 107 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 theSeventieth 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; renominated over Gary Paschal, attorney, and Dr. Daniel R. Sturkie, in primary; reelected to Seventy-fourth 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.; author of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which was passed during the 1933 extra session, containing domestic allotment plan, refinancing farm mortgages, and refinancing drainage districts; 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 co-owner of Anderson Daily Mail and Anderson Daily Independent; World War veteran; elected to the Seventy-third and Seventy- fourth Congresses. 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; is a member of Sons of American Revolution, Sons of Confederacy, American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars; is a Metho- dist, Mason, Odd Fellow, Elk, and Phi Beta Kappa; LL. D., South Carolina Military College (The Citadel), 1935; married Sarah C. McCullough, April 26, 1905, and they have two children. 108 Congressional Darectory SOUTH DAKOTA FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1930), 235,093. JAMES PRIOLEAU RICHARDS, Democrat, of Lancaster, S. C.; 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 county schools of Kershaw County until 17 years of age; attended Clemson College for 2 years 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; defeated two opponents for renomination to Seventy-fourth Congress by vote of 32,613 to 9,926 for both opponents; reelected in general election; volunteered as private at Camp Styx, S. C,, in 1917, a few days after war was declared, and served throughout war in this country and France with Trench Mortar Battery, Head- quarters Company, One hundred and eighteenth Regiment Infantry, Thirtieth Division, as private, corporal, and sergeant, and was commissioned as reserve second lieutenant in February 1919, being discharged 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, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other fraternal organizations. 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 38 to 4 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 University of South Carolina at that age, graduating in 1901 with A. B. degree; taught 1 year as principal in Waverly Graded School, Columbia, S. C.; elected superin- tendent 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 Superintendents Association; for 8 years a member State Democratic executive committee; 4 years county chairman Democratic Party; 10 years city chairman Democratic executive com- mittee; Knight Templar, thirty-second degree Mason, and Shriner; member Junior Order United American Mechanics, Odd Fellows, Elks, Knights of Pythias; Kiwanian; 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- 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SOUTH DAKOTA (Population (1930), 692,849) SENATORS PETER NORBECK, Theodore Roosevelt Republican, of Redfield, S. Dak. 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; Sloated to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930; term expires in 1937. TENNESSEE Biographical 109 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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.; elected a representative in the South Dakota Legislature and served during 1922-23; chairman of the South Dakota Game and Fish Commission, 1927-31; was elected as a Representative to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress, receiving 122,814 votes, and defeating Hon. C. A. Christopher- son, Republican, who received 84,793 votes, and one other candidate. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Armstrong, Bennett, Butte, Corson, Custer, Dewey, Fall River, Gregory, Haakon, Harding, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Lyman, Meade, Mellette, Pennington, Perkins, Sauna Stanley, Todd, Tripp, Washabaugh, Washington, and Ziebach (25 counties). Population 1930), 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 mayor of Rapid City; is editor and publisher; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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; D. C. L., Lincoln Memorial University; lawyer; bachelor; Presbyterian; thirty-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, No- vember 9, 1911, to the Sixty-second Congress; reelected to the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses; nominated as a Democratic candidate for United States Senator in a State-wide primary on November 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 delegate 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; delegate to Democratic National Convention, 1932; elected national committeeman for Tennessee February 23, 1933; renominated and reelected in 1934 for the term expiring January 3, 1941. 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, 1906-8, circuit judge (Chattanooga), 1912-18, and associate justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, 1918-24; appointed 110 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE to the United States Senate on February 28, 1933, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Cordell Hull, and elected on November 6, 1934, by a majority of 150,476 votes. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, an i Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (14 counties). Population ’ H . B[RAZILLA] CARROLL REECE, Republican, Johnson City; born December 22, 1889; reared on farm; member of bar; 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; 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 In- fantry; decorated with Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, and Croix de Guerre with palm, and cited for bravery by Marshal Petain, Generals Pershing, Edwards, Hale, and Colonel Lewis; member, Delta Sigma Pi; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Knox, Loudon, McMinn, Monroe, Morgan, Roane, Scott, and Union (11 counties). Population (1930), 368, 172. J. WILL TAYLOR, Republican, of La Follette, Tenn.; elected to the Sixty- sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy- second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; Republican national committeeman for Tennessee. 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; American delegate to the International Monetary and Economic Conference, London, June 1933. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bedford, Olay, Cannon, Coffee, Cumberland, De Kalb, Fentress, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Rutherford, Smith, and ‘Wilson (18 counties). Population (1930), 292,638. JOHN RIDLEY MITCHELL, Democrat, of Cookeville, was born September 26, 1877, on a farm in Overton County, Tenn.; is a resident of Putnam County; was graduated from Peabody Normal College, Nashville, Tenn., in 1896, and from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., in 1904; is a lawyer by profession; was Presidential elector, Fourth District of Tennessee, in 1904, served as member of State Democratic executive committee for 4 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 8 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; renominated on August 2, 1934, by the Democratic Party, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. -— i I SRE —— Rn AT — TENNESSEE B 1ographacal 11%. 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, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected without opposition to the Seventy-fourth Congress; is Chairman of the Democratic National Congres- sional Committee; Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations in the Seventy- second Congress; elected Majority Leader of the Seventy-third Congress; elected Speaker of the Seventy-fourth 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 Sentinel 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: reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Fayette, Hardeman, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, McNairy, and Madison (11 counties). Population (1930), 240,422. HERRON PEARSON, Democrat, of Jackson, Tenn., was born in Taylor, Tex., July 31, 1890; attended the public schools and was graduated from the Jackson High School in 1906; received A. B. degree from Union University, Jackson, Tenn., in 1910 and B. L. degree from Cumberland University Law School at Lebanon, Tenn., in 1912; engaged in the private practice of law at Jackson, Tenn., since July 1912; served as municipal judge of the city of Jack- son, Tenn., in 1915; elected rotarian and Presidential elector for the Eighth Congressional District in 1912; married Evelyn Pearcy, of Jackson, in 1915; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 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 2 years while in the Army, serving as city attorney for 8 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 com- pany 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 112 Congressional Directory TEXAS 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; unmarried; Mason, Knight Templar, Shriner, Maccabee, Kappa Sig- ma; member of Cumberland Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-first Congress; renominated and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Shelby. Population (1930), 306,482. WALTER CHANDLER, Democrat, of Memphis; born October 5, 1887, at Jackson, Tenn.; educated at Memphis public schools and University of Ten- nessee, LL. B. 1909; attorney at law; assistant district attorney general, 1916; member of the Tennessee House of Representatives in 1917 and the Tennessee Senate in 1921; city attorney of Memphis, 1928-34; president of the Tennessee Bar Association, 1928; member of the general council, American Bar Associa- tion, 1931-35; captain One Hundred and Fourteenth Field Artillery, Thirtieth Division, American Expeditionary Forces; combat service in Toul sector, St. Mihiel offensive, Meuse-Argonne battle, Troyon sector, and Woevre offensive; married Dorothy Wyeth, of Washington, D. C., and they have two children, John Wyeth and Lucia Mary; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 46,363 votes, and being unopposed. TEXAS (Population (1930), 5,824,715) SENATORS MORRIS SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Texarkana; dean of Congress by virtue of having a longer continuous service than that of any other living Member; born at Wheatville, Morris County, Tex., May 28, 1875; 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 October 11, 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; married Miss Lucile Sanderson, of Tex- arkana, December 1, 1909; nominated for United States Senator from Texas at the Democratic 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 legis- lature 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. TOM CONNALLY, Democrat, of Marlin, Falls County, son of Jones and Mary E. Connally; born in McLennan County, Tex., August 19, 1877; A. B., Baylor University; LL. B., University of Texas; enlisted man, Second Regiment Texas Volunteer Infantry, Spanish-American War; member of the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth Texas Legislatures; prosecuting attorney of Falls County, 1906-10; 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; reelected in 1934 for 6 years; captain and adjutant, Twenty-second Infantry Brigade, Eleventh Division, United States Army, 1918. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bowie, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Harrison, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1930), 294,426. 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- TEXAS Biographical s 113 land University, 1916; assistant to prosecuting attorney of Cass County, 1916-17; United States Army, 1917-19; married Miss Merle Connor, of Winnsboro, Tex., February 14, 1919; they have four children—all boys; served 4 years as a member of the Texas Legislature; district attorney for 5 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 privi- leged 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, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton, Orange, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (11 counties). Population (1930), 304,279. MARTIN DIES, Democrat, of Jasper and Orange, Tex.; son of Hon. Martin Dies, deceased, 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 living temporarily on account of the ill health of his father; lived 4 years on farm in Hunt County, and attended Greenville public schools and Wesley College during those 4 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 2 years; moved to Orange on January 1,1922, and became junior member of the firm of Dies, Stephen- son & 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Camp, Gregg, Panola, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood (8 counties). Population (1930), 214,306. MORGAN G. SANDERS, Democrat, of Canton, Tex.; born on a farm in Van Zandt County, 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 prac- tice of law; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, Kaufman, Rains, and Rockwall (7 counties). Population (1930), 257,879. 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 6 years as a member of the Texas Legislature, the last 2 years as speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the Sixty- third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixth-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty- ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—DaALLAs CoUNTY. Population (1930), 325,691. HATTON W. SUMNERS, Democrat, of Dallas, Tex., was elected to the Sixty- third and succeeding Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brazos, Ellis, Freestone, Hill, Leon, Limestone, Navarro, and Robe ertson (8 counties). Population (1930), 288,538. 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- 30063°—T74—-2—1ST ED—— 8 114 Congressional Directory TEXAS trict attorney, thirteenth judicial district, composed of Freestone, Limestone, and Navarro Counties, 1904-10; 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Anderson, Cherokee, Grimes, Henderson, Houston, Madison, Mosizomery: Nacogdoches, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (12 counties). Population (1930), 277,601. NAT PATTON, Democrat, of Crockett, Tex.; born in log cabin at Tadmor, Houston County, Tex., February 26, 1884; son of Frank M. and Bessie Bland Patton; grandparents settled in Nacogdoches County, Tex., in 1828; attended the common schools of Houston County, Tex., and Sam Houston Normal at Huntsville, Tex.; taught in rural and high schools for 12 years; member of the Texas House of Representatives, Thirty-third Legislature; attended the law department of the University of Texas; took State bar examination and admitted to bar in 1918; began practice of law in Crockett, Tex.; served 4 years as county judge of Houston County; member Texas State Senate, Forty-first, Forty-second, and Forty-third Legislatures; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, and resigned from the Texas State Senate on November 11, 1934; married Mattie Taylor, of Houston County, in 1907; four children—Bessie Louise, graduate of University of Texas; Weldon, senior at Sam Houston State Teachers College; Nat, Jr., junior at Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College; Bonnie B., graduate of Crockett High School. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—HARRIS CoUNTY. Population (1930), 359,328. 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 6 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 Federal Land Bank 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; nominated in the Democratic Party primary in July 1934 over 5 opponents, receiving 67 percent of the total vote, and elected in November, receiving 40,400 votes over 2 opponents who received a total of 221 votes; com- mittees, Labor, and World War Veterans Legislation. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Austin, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Galveston, Goliad, Jackson, Lavaca, Matagorda, Victoria, Waller, and Wharton (15 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 323,009. JOSEPH JEFFERSON MANSFIELD, Democrat, of Columbus; was elected to the Sixty-fifth and each succeeding Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bastrop, Blanco, Burleson, Burnet, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washington, and Williamson (10 counties). Population (1930), 264,952. JAMES P. BUCHANAN, Democrat, of Brenham, Tex. . ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bell, Bosque, Coryell, Falls, McLennan, and Milam (6 counties): Population (1930), 261,147. 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 TEXAS Biographical 115 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 farmimg 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, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses; married Miss Mary Watt, of Waco, Tex., in 1907. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (5 counties). Population (1930), 259,424. FRITZ GARLAND LANHAM, Democrat, of Fort Worth, Tex.; born in Weatherford, Tex.; attended Weatherford College, Weatherford, Tex., Vander- bilt 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 sue- cessor to Hon. James C. Wilson, resigned; reelected to the succeeding Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Archer, Baylor, Clay, Cooke, Denton, Foard, Hardeman, Jack, Knox, Montague, Throckmorton, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (15 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 292,579. WILLIAM DODDRIDGE McFARLANE, Democrat, of Graham, Tex.; son of R. W. and Maggie H. McFarlane; World War veteran; married Miss Alma Carl at San Antonio, Tex.; has four children—Mary Ellen, W. D., Jr., Betty Ann, and Bobbie Frances; lawyer; served 4 years in the Texas House of Repre- gentatives, 1923-27, and 4 years in the State senate, 1927-31; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aransas, Atascosa, Bee, Brooks, Comal, De Witt, Duval, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Jim Wells, Karnes, Kenedy, Kleberg, Live Oak, McMullen, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, and Wilson (19 counties). Population (1930), 309,516. 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 vacaney occasioned by the death of Hon. Harry M. Wurzbach; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress without opposition. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cameron, Dimmit, Frio, Hidalgo, Jim Hogg, La Salle, Maver- ick, Medina, Starr, Webb, Willacy, Zapata, and Zavala (13 counties). Population (1930), 283,291. MILTON H. WEST, Democrat, of Brownsville, Tex., was born near Gonzales, Gonzales County, Tex.; was admitted to the bar; married Miss Temple Worley, of San Antonio, Tex., and they have one son—Milton H. West, Jr.; served as dis- trict attorney for the twenty-eighth judicial district of Texas; represented Cameron County in the Texas Legislature, 1930-33; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election to fill the unexpired term of Hon. John N. Garner; re- elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brewster, Crane, Crockett, Culberson, Ector, El Paso, Glass- cock, Hudspeth, Jeff Davis, Loving, Midland, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Reeves, Terrell, Upton, Ward, and Winkler (19 counties). Population (1930), 210,621. 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 4 years; moved to El Paso in 1911; member of State legislature for 4 years, and unanimously elected speaker of house of representatives, thirty-sixth legislature; mayor of El Paso, 1927-31; married and has a son and daughter; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmiEs: Callahan, Comanche, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Jones, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Shackelford, Stephens, and Taylor (12 counties). Population (1930), 238,671. THOMAS LINDSAY BLANTON, Democrat, of Abilene; educated in public schools and University of Texas; district judge 8 years; defeated Hon. J. M. Wagstaff for Taylor County’s congressional candidate in preferential primary, 116 Congressional Directory TEXAS 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 1924; 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 6 candidates, finishing 12 years in Congress on 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 committeeman and later State commander of American Legion, by majority of 23,000 votes; re- elected to Seventy-second Congress in general election November 4, 1930, with~ out opposition; defeated District Attorney Joe H. Jones in Democratic primary July 23, 1932; reelected without opposition November 8, 1932, to the Seventy- third Congress; defeated Carl O. Hamlin, district judge, and Oscar F. Chastain, by a clear majority of 2,096 votes over both opponents in the Democratic primary election on July 28, 1934, carrying all 27 boxes in Chastain’s home county of Eastland, all 30 boxes in Blanton’s home county of Taylor, and 9 of the boxes in Hamlin’s home county of Stephens, being reelected without opposition on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fourth Congress; is a thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason, a Knight Templar, and a life-member Shriner. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Armstrong, Briscoe, Carson, Castro, Childress, Collings- worth, Cottle, Dallam, Deaf Smith, Donley, Gray, Hall, Hansford, Hartley, Hemphill, Hutchinson, Lipscomb, Motley, Moore, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Roberts, Sherman, Swisher, and Wheeler (28 counties). Population (1930), 254,825. 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; member American Legion; elected to the Sixty-fifth and each succeeding Congress. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Andrews, Bailey, Borden, Cochran, Crosby, Dawson, Dickens, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, Hale, Haskell, Hockley, Howard, Kent, King, Lamb, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Mitchell, Scurry, Stonewall, Terry, and Yoakum (25 counties). Population (1930), 254,367. GEORGE H. MAHON, Democrat, of Colorado, Tex.; born in a little village named Mahon, near Homer, La., September 22, 1900, son of J. K. and Lola Willis Mahon; moved to Mitchell County, Tex., in 1908, with his parents and 3 sisters and 4 brothers; reared on a farm; attended rural school in Mitchell County and was graduated from Loraine High School; received B. A. degree from Simmons University in 1924 and LL. B. degree from University of Texas in 1925; attended summer school at the University of Minnesota in 1925; moved to Colorado, Tex., in the fall of 1925; elected county attorney of Mitchell County in 1926; appointed district attorney of the Thirty-second judicial district, com- prising Mitchell, Nolan, Scurry, Howard, and Borden Counties, October 11, 1927; elected district attorney 1928, 1930, 1932, without opposition; married Helen Stevenson, of Loraine, Tex., December 21, 1923, and they have one daughter—Daphne, born May 9, 1927; the Nineteenth Congressional District of Texas was created in 1933, and he announced himself for Congress in the newly created district in 1934; was nominated in the primary by a majority of 16,000 I fading no opponent in the general election to the Seventy-fourth Congress in November. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Bexar. Population (1930), 292,533. MAURY MAVERICK, Democrat, San Antonio, Tex.; eleventh and youngest son of Albert Maverick, San Antonio, and Jane (Maury) Maverick, Charlottes- ville, Va.; grandson of Samuel A. Maverick, pioneer, patriot, and signer of Texas Declaration of Independence, 1836 (see ‘‘maverick’” in dictionary); born ‘October 23, 1895, in San Antonio; educated in public schools, Virginia Military UTAH Biographical 117 Institute, and University of Texas; member of Sigma Chi; admitted to the bar at age of 20; officer in the One Hundred and Fifty-seventh Infantry (First Colorado) ; in France commanded company in the Twenty-eighth Infantry, First Division; wounded October 4, 1918; in hospital until February 7, 1919, dis- charged from Fort Sam Houston; cited for ‘‘gallantry in action and extremely meritorious service’; Silver Star, Purple Heart; at 23 president of the San Antonio Bar Association; engaged in lumber business, forming his own com- pany; past commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; entered politics in 1929 to form the Citizens’ League, opposing the city-county machine, previously unbeatable; elected county tax collector, November 1929, and reelected in 1931; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; married Terrell Louise Dobbs, daughter of William Jackson and Abbie (Davis) Dobbs, Groesbeck, Tex., May 22, 1921; has two children—Maury, Jr., and Terrellita Fontaine; member Episcopal Church, Circus Fans of America, and a charter member and director of the San Antonio Zoological Society. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bandera, Brown, Coke, Coleman, Concho, Edwards, Gilles- pie, Irion, Kendall, Kerr, Kimble, Kinney, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Menard, Mills, Real, Runnels, San Saba, Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Tom Green, Uvalde, and Val Verde (27 counties). Population (1930), 257,732. CHARLES L. SOUTH, Democrat, of Coleman, Tex., was born near Damascus, Washington County, Va., July 22, 1892, the son of Charles E. and Virginia Wright South; moved with his parents to Callahan County, Tex., in 1898, and to Coleman County, Tex., in 1914; attended the public schools and Simmons University, summer schools, several terms; taught school in Coleman County in the public schools, 1914-20; elected superintendent of schools of Coleman County when 28 years of age serving from 1921 to 1925; served as county judge 1925-31; elected district attorney for the thirty-fifth judicial district in 1930 and served in that capacity until 1934; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; married and has two sons. 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 3 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 3 terms, 1 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 6 years; reelected November 1922, November 1928, and again on November 6, 1934, for a term of 6 years. ELBERT DUNCAN THOMAS, Democrat, of Salt Lake City, Utah; born, Salt Lake City, June 17, 1883; A. B. (Utah, 1906), Ph. D. (California, 1924); instructor University of Utah 1913-33; major, Inspector General’s Department, United States Reserve Corps 1918-24; married Edna Harker, 1907; three Co Chiyo, Esther, and Edna Louise; elected to the Senate November 8, 2. 118 Congressional Directory VERMONT 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; lawyer; elected to the Seven- ty-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress with largest majority ever given a Congressman from Utah. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Utah (4 counties). Population (1930) 266,557. 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; has been a member of the board of regents of the University of Utah since 1925; was married to Birda Billings, a native of Provo, Utah, in 1906, and they have 4 children—2 boys and 2 girls; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. VERMONT (Population (1930), 359,611) SENATORS WARREN ROBINSON AUSTIN, Republican, of Burlington, Vt., was born at Highgate Center, Vt., November 12, 1877; graduated from Brigham Academy in 1895, 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 Sec- ond 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, 1907-15; 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 reconstruction 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; reelected to the United States Senate November 6, 1934, for the 6-year term beginning January 3, 1935. : ERNEST WILLARD GIBSON, Republican, of Brattleboro, Vt.; son of William L. and Saville Stowell Gibson; was born in Londonderry, Vt.; educated in the common schools, Black River Academy, and Norwich University; lawyer; served as deputy clerk United States courts; in both branches of Vermont Legisla- ture and president pro tempore of the senate; judge of municipal court; State’s attorney; secretary civil and military affairs; enlisted in the Vermont National Guard in 1899; retired in 1908 with rank of colonel; returned to the service in 1915 as captain of Infantry, and served during the Mexican border trouble and 2 years during the World War; was overseas; colonel of the One Hundred and Seventy-second Regiment, Infantry, from 1921 to 1923; married November 25, 1896, to Grace Fullerton Hadley, deceased; religious preference, Episcopalian, and is trustee of diocese of Vermont; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Stanley C. Wilson on November 21, 1933, and elected to the unexpired term of Senator Dale, January 16, 1934. VIRGINIA Biographical 119 REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 359,611. CHARLES ALBERT PLUMLEY, Republican, of Northfield; born in North- field, Vt., April 14, 1875, son of Frank Plumley, who represented the Second Congressional District in the Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses, and Lavinia Fletcher Plumley; educated in the Northfield graded and high schools, 1892; graduated from Norwich University in 1896, A. B.; A. M. in course; honorary LL. D., Middlebury College and Norwich University; principal of Northfield graded and high schools, 1896-1900; admitted to the Vermont bar in 1903; member of the law firm of Plumley and Plumley; assistant secretary Vermont Senate in 1894; assistant clerk and clerk of the Vermont House of Representatives, 1900-1910; member and speaker of the Vermont House of Rep- resentatives, 1912-15; commissioner of taxes of Vermont, 1912-19; president of Norwich University, 1920-34; secretary, French-Venezuelan Mixed Commission; captain Vermont National Guard; colonel Officers’ Reserve Corps; married Emilie A. Stevens, August 22, 1900, and they have three children—Allan R., Evelyn S., and Fletcher D. P.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on January 16, 1934, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Ernest W. Gibson; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. 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 that city; member of the Virginia Senate, 1899-1903, and the Virginia constitutional convention, 1901-2; 8 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, the University of North Carolina, Yale, Princeton, William and Mary, Wesleyan, and Tufts; 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; declined tender of Secretaryship of Treasury in Cabinet of President Roosevelt in 1933. HARRY FLOOD BYRD, Democrat, of Berryville, Va.; 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 Com- monwealth for the term 1926-30; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. John Garland Pollard on March 4, 1933; elected on November 7, 1933, for the unexpired term of Claude A. Swanson, resigned, and reelected for the full term on November 6, 1934. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spotsylvania, War- wick, Westmoreland, and York. Cities: Fredericksburg, Hampton, and Newport News. Popula- tion (1930), 239,757. 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, Seventy- Hird, 9d Seventy-fourth Congresses; married Miss Mary Putzel, of Newport ews, Va. 120 Congressional Durectory VIRGINIA SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Southampton, and Princess Anne. Cities: Norfolk, Portsmouth, South Norfolk, and Suffolk. Population (1930), 302,715. 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 with French Army, 1916-17, and with Air Service, United States Marine Corps, 1918-19; member of General Assembly of Virginia, for two terms, 1930-32; elected a Representative from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Second District. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Charles City, Chesterfield, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King Wil- ‘ liam, and New Kent. CITiEs: Richmond and Williamsburg. Population (1930), 281,064. 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 2 years; studied law at the University of Virginia, graduating 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 4 years com- mencing January 1, 1898; Governor of Virginia for 4 years and 1 month, begin- ning 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; sometime dean of law school of Richmond College; president American Society for Judicial Settle- ment of International Disputes for year 1917; president American Peace Society for 1920-24; 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, 1930-35; elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Amelia, Appomattox, Brunswick, Buckingham, Cumberland, Din- widdie, Greensville, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Surry, and Sussex. Cities: Hopewell and Petersburg. Population (1930), 242,204. 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, Seven- tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Con- gresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carroll, Charlotte, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, Pittsylvania, and Wythe. CITIES: Danville and Martinsville. Population (1930), 271,794. THOMAS G. BURCH, Democrat, of Martinsville, Henry County, Va.; banker; educated in public schools of county; member State board of agriculture, 1910- 13; member board of visitors, State normal school at Radford, Va., 1913-15; United States marshal, western district of Virginia, 1914-21; member of board of visitors, the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, 1922-31; 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, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alleghany, Bedford, Botetourt, Campbell, Craig, Floyd, Montgomery, ang Zomnoke. Crmies: Clifton Forge, Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1930), 280,708. 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, VIRGINIA Biographical 121 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, 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, and from the Sixth District to the Seventy-fourth Congress; was married in 1905 to Miss Lena Hancock, of Bedford County; has two children—Clifton A., Jr., aged 25 and Martha Anne, aged 19; 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. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Amherst, Augusta, Bath, Clarke, Frederick, Highland, Nelson, Page, Rappahannock, Rockbridge, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren. Cities: Buena Vista, Harrisonburg, Staunton, and Winchester. Population (1930), 242,778. 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; admitted to the bar in 1908; member of State senate for 6 years, 1916-22; Commonwealth’s attorney for Rockbridge County for 6 years, 1922-28; chairman of commis- sion of game and inland fisheries for 6 years, 1926-32; 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 Sev- enty-third Congress on November 8, 1932, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Albemarle, Arlington, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Goochland, Greene, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Madison, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. Cities: Alexandria and Charlottesville. Population (1930), 256,511. 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 1804, 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 to accept appointment on the bench in 1922; during World War served as assistant general counsel to Alien Property Custodian; is president of the Alexandria National Bank; trustee and vice president of National Florence Crittenton Mission; engaged in farming and dairying; 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; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress as a he at large from the State of Virginia; reelected to the Seventy-fourth ongress. : NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Bland, Buchanan, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, and Wise. City: Bristol. Population (1930), 304,320. JOHN W. FLANNAGAN, Jr., Democrat, of Bristol, was born on a farm in Louisa County, Va., February 20, 1885; educated at the public schools in Louisa County and at Washington and Lee University; was graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1907 with LL. B. degree; elected Commonwealth’s attorney for Buchanan County, Va., in 1916; married Frances D. Pruner of Mendota, Washington County, Va., in 1910 and they have 3 children—2 boys and 1 girl; has law office at Clintwood, Va., where he spends a part of his time, and where he still maintains his residence; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Ninth Congressional District. 122 Congressional Directory WASHINGTON WASHINGTON (Population (1930), 1,563,396) SENATORS HOMER 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. LEWIS B. SCHWELLENBACH, Democrat, of Seattle, Wash.; born at Superior, Wis., September 20, 1894; attended the grade school there and the grade and high schools in Spokane, Wash., where the family moved in 1902; graduated from the University of Washington in 1917 and entered the United States Army ;in 1319 began the practice of law in Seattle; elected State commander of the American Legion in 1922; appointed a member of the board of regents of the University of Washington in 1933 and elected president of that board; is a bachelor, residing with his mother; elected to the United States Senate on Novem- ber 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—KitsAp 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. KiNG 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; has been actively engaged in the retail jewelry and optical business for 25 years in the State of Washington; served as president of the Washington State Retail Jewelers’ Association in 1921-22; affiliated with the Blue Lodge, Knights Templars, Order of Vasa S. F. A., Elks, Rotary, Eagles, American Legion, and Forty and Eight; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by an overwhelming majority. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Clark, Cowlitz, Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, Skamania, Thurston, and Wahkiakum (9 counties). Population (1930), 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 17 years; member of the bar of the United States Supreme Court; 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 5 years, and Marian Eleanor, 3 years old; served as municipal judge of Hoquiam, 1914-17; member of Hoquiam City Council, 1926-28; mayor of Hoquiam, 1928- 30; member of Elks, Kiwanis, Eagles, Moose, Red Men, Runeberg, Vasa, Amer- ican Legion, and honorary member John D. Roberts Camp, No. 7, United Spanish War Veterans, Aberdeen, Wash.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, being the first Democrat elected as a Representative from the Third Washington Dis- WEST VIRGINIA B 1ographical 123 trict, and receiving 38,713 votes, to 28,397 for Hon. Albert Johnson, Republican Representative for 20 years; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 48,887 votes, to 21,750 for R. V. Mack, of Aberdeen, Republican; member of the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. 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, I1l., 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; reelected on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fourth Congress by approximately 7,000 majority out of a total of 52,000 votes. 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; judge of superior court, Washington, 7 years; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress at a special election, September 25, 1923, by a majority of 773 votes; reelected to each succeeding Congress with the following majority votes—the Sixty-ninth, 1,029; the Seventieth, 2,374; the Seventy-first, 14,763; the Seventy-second, 28,167; the Seventy-third, no opposi- tion; the Seventy-fourth, 40,504; ranking member Ways and Means Committee; Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; assistant to the Democratic Whip for the fifteenth regional district, comprising Washington, Oregon, and California; member of the Committee on the Judiciary. WEST VIRGINIA (Population (1930), 1,729,205) SENATORS MATTHEW M. NEELY, Democrat, of Fairmont, was born at Grove, Dodd- ridge 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, 1911-13; 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. 124 Congressional Dzirectory WEST VIRGINIA RUSH DEW HOLT, Democrat, of Weston, W. Va., was born at Weston, W. Va., June 19, 1905; single. 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., son of John and Elizabeth (Lumsdon) Ramsay, of New Cumberland, W. Va.; attended the schools of Hancock County, W. Va., and was graduated from the West Vir- ginia 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, 1905-30; served two terms as prosecuting attorney of Brooke County, 1908-12 and 1916-20; 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 Ramsay Phillips, of Parsons, W. Va., and Robert, Jr., a student at West Virginia University; member of the Christian Church and an Odd Fellow; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy- fourth Congress, receiving 52,923 votes, Carl G. Bachmann, Republican, 45,120 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Tucker, and Webster (15 counties), Population (1930), 277,001. . 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 Salem Academy in 1920 and Salem College in 1924; became a member of the editorial staff of the Clarksburg Daily Telegram and was associate editor of the West Virginia Review, at Charleston; head of the department of public speaking and journalism and director of athletics at Davis and Elkins College, 1926-32; during summer of 1929 was a lecturer with Redpath Chautauqua; in 1931 was governor of the Lions Clubs of West Virginia; married February 18, 1933, to Mary Katherine Babb, of Keyser, having one son; member Salem Seventh Day Baptist Church; member of Salem College board of directors; member of the West Virginia State Newspaper Council, the National Press Club, and the Uni- versity Club of Washington; unsuccessful candidate for Congress in 1930, losing by 1,111 votes; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 7,501 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 14,699 votes. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Harrison, Lewis, Nicholas, Ritchie, and Upshur (11 counties). Population (1930), 294,334. ANDREW EDMISTON, Democrat, of Weston, was born in Weston, W. Va., on November 13, 1892; was graduated from Kentucky Military Institute and from West Virginia University; engaged in glass manufacturing and is also editor of the Weston Democrat; during the World War served with the American Expeditionary Forces as second lieutenant, Thirty-ninth Regiment Infantry, Fourth Division; awarded the Distinguished Service Cross; married; elected delegate to the Houston Convention in 1928; State chairman of the Democratic executive committee of West Virginia, 1928-32; member Episcopal Church, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Masonic Order, Loyal Order of Moose, Rotarian, Army and Navy Legion of Valor; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on November 28, 1933, to fill the unexpired term caused by the death of Hon. Lynn S. Hornor, receiving 30,612 votes, and an M. Gore, Republican, 24,871 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth ongress. WISCONSIN Biographical 125 FOURTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Cabell, Jackson, Lincoln, Mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Roane, Tyler, Wayne, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1930), 296,484. 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 bankruptcy 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); 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; again elected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Con- gresses; is a member of the Appropriations Committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Greenbrier, McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Monroe, Summers, and Wyoming (7 counties). Population (1930), 279,342. 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- 10; in professional practice at Bluefield, 1910-16; special legal work in Mexico, 1916-18; engaged since in practice of profession at Bluefield; member of the State senate, 1923-27; married, one son, James Kee; nominated for Congress on the Democratic ticket on May 20, 1932, and elected to the Seventy-third Congress at the ensuing general election, defeating the then incumbent, Hugh Ike Shott, of Bluefield; renominated on the Democratic ticket on August 7, 1934, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of more than 16,000 over his Republican opponent; member of the Christ Episcopal Church, Bluefield; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars; member Elks, Moose, and Pythian organizations. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Boone, Kanawha, Logan, and Raleigh (4 counties). Population (1930), 308,859. ; 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 publishing business, owning and editing the Raleigh Register at Beckley; has been active in politics, and was four times elected mayor of Beckley, being the incumbent 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 president of the Beckley National Exchange Bank; affiliated with the Masons and Elks; Presby- terian Church; elected to the Seventy-first Congress, November 6, 1928, from the Sixth Congressional District of West Virginia, defeating E. T. England, Republi- can, 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, Repub- lican, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 25,524 over Frank C. Burdette, Republican, of Charleston. WISCONSIN (Population (1930), 2,939,006) SENATORS ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE, Jr., Progressive, Madison, Wis.; born Feb- ruary 6, 1895; elected to the United States Senate on September 29, 1925, to fill the unexpired term of his father, Robert M. La Follette; reelected November 126 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN 6, 1928, and again November 6, 1934, the latter total vote being: John M. Calla- han, Democrat, 223,438; Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Progressive, 440,513; John B. Chapple, Republican, 210,569; his term expires 1941. F. RYAN DUFFY, Democrat, was born at Fond du Lac, Wis., June 23, 1888, and lives today 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 Lac, 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. PEPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Green, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (5 counties). Popula= tion (1930), 280,628 THOMAS R. AMLIE, Progressive, of Elkhorn, Wis.; lawyer; born April 17, 1897, in Griggs County, N. Dak., graduated from Cooperstown (N. Dak.) High School; letters and science course at University of North Dakota and University of Minnesota; graduated from University of Wisconsin Law School in 1923, with LL. B.; practiced law in Beloit, Wis., and Elkhorn, Wis., since 1924; past president of Walworth County Bar Association; past commander of American Legion posts of Beloit and Elkhorn; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at a special election held on October 13, 1931, to fill vacancy caused by death of Henry Allen Cooper, of Racine; unsuccessful candidate in the Republican pri- maries in 1932; elected national chairman of the Farmer-Labor Political Federa- tion at the Chicago conference on September 3, 1933; active in the movement for new political alinement; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress as a Progressive. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Columbia, Dane, Dodge, Jefferson, and Waukesha (5 counties), Population (1930), 284,475. HARRY SAUTHOFF, Progressive, of Madison, Dane County, Wis.; born in Madison, Wis., June 3, 1879, son of August and Hermine (Brueggemann) Saut- hoff, both of whom were born in the Province of Hanover, Germany; graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1902, with an A. B. degree; taught school at the Lake Geneva High School and the Northern Illinois State Normal School; during these 4 years of teaching he also coached athletics; later returned to University of Wisconsin to study law, graduating in 1909 with LL. B. degree; married to Alice Thoroughgood Kimball on August 10, 1918; (Mrs. Sauthoff passed away October 10, 1935); district attorney for Dane County, Wis., 1915-19; private secretary to Gov. John J. Blaine, 1921; appointed by Governor Blaine as Wisconsin’s representative at the International Conference between the United States and Canada, and again Wisconsin’s representative to the Mississippi Valley Conference; State senator from twenty-sixth senatorial district, Wisconsin, 1925-29; member of Eagles, Elks, thirty-third degree Mason, Shriner, Moose, Robert Siebecker Unit of Steuben Society, Sons of Veterans of Civil War, Lions, American Bar Association, Wisconsin Bar Association; curator of Wisconsin Historical Society; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a vote of 41,458, his opponents, Charles W. Henney, Democrat, receiving 33,347 votes, and John Gay, Republican, receiving 22,995 votes. ’ THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, La Crosse, Lafayette, Monroe, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon (10 counties). Population (1930), 274, 488. GARDNER R. WITHROW, Progressive, 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 2 years of legal training entered the train service of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincey Railroad Co.; member of the Wisconsin Assembly in 1926-27 and served as State legislative representative for the railroad brotherhoods from 1928 to 1931; elected on November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses. WISCONSIN Brographical 127 FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE CouUNTY: City of Milwaukee, wards 38, 4, 5, 8, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 23, 24, and 27; cities of Cudahy, South Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and West Allis, towns of Franklin, Greenfield, Lake, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa, and village of West Milwaukee. Population (1930), 353,521. RAYMOND J. CANNON, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis.; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, defeating Mayor M. V. Baxter of West Allis, Socialist; City Attorney Laurence Gram of West Allis, La Follette Progressive, and ex- Congressman John C. Schaefer, Republican, also ran; Cannon’s vote was almost as great as all three opponents combined. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUREE 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.; Member of the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CovuNTIES: Calumet, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington, and ‘Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1930), 268,533. MICHAEL K. REILLY, Democrat, of Fond du Lac, Wis.; born in the town of Empire, Fond du Lae County, Wis.; educated in country school, Oshkosh Normal, and University of Wisconsin—college of letters 1894, law 1895; married; member of law firm of Reilly & Cosgrove; Member of the Sixty-third and Sixty- fourth Congresses, 1913-17; 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 and Seventy-fourth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1930), 276,625. GERALD J. BOILEAT, Progressive, 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 with the American Expedition- ary Forces; graduated from Marquette University law school in 1923; 4 years district attorney of Marathon County; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1928; married to Monica McKeon, of Superior, Wis., in 1925, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses as a Progressive Republican, and to the Seventy-fourth Congress as a Progressive. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Mari- nette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1930), 300,734. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER, Progressive, of Appleton; born in the town of Grand Chute, Outagamie County, Wis., October 30, 1877; served in the Sixty- eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, receiving 39,505 votes to 34,397 votes for Gerald F. Clifford, Democrat, and 14,767 votes for L. Herman Waite, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Clark, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau (11 counties). Population (1930), 283,588. MERLIN HULL, Progressive, of Black River Falls, Wis.; lawyer; publisher of the Banner-Journal; district attorney, 1909; served in Wisconsin Assembly from 1909 to 1915; speaker of assembly in 1913; secretary of state for Wisconsin from 1917 to 1921; elected to the Seventy-first Congress from the Seventh District in 1928, by a majority of about 31,000; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Ninth District, receiving 41,969 votes. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ashland, Bayfield, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Lincoln, Oneida, Polk, Price, Rusk, Sawyer, Taylor, Vilas, and Washburn (14 counties). Population (1930), 244,672. B.J. GEHRMANN,;, Progressive; R. F. D., Mellen, Wis.; was born in Germany, February 13, 1880, and was 13 years of age when he came to this country; worked in a Chicago packing plant, attending night school at the same time; moved to Clark County in 1895, where he lived until 1915, when he moved to Ashland County and cleared a farm and engaged in agricultural pursuits 5 miles from Mellen; has been an officer of the American Society of Equity for years, serving as county president and member of the State executive board, and is now president of this farmers’ organization; served as town chairman for 4 years, assessor for 5 years, and school clerk since 1919; elected to the State assembly in 1926 and again in 1930, and to the State senate in 1932; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. 128 Congressional Directory ALASKA WYOMING (Population (1930), 225,565) SENATORS 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, 1919-23; 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. JOSEPH C. O'MAHONEY, Democrat, of Cheyenne, Wyo., a lawyer by profession, was born in Chelsea, Mass., November 5, 1884; educated in the public schools of Cambridge, Mass., Columbia University, New York, and Georgetown Law School, Washington, D. C.; engaged in the newspaper business in Boulder, Colo., December 1908; married Agnes V. O'Leary, June 11, 1913; became city editor Cheyenne State Leader, 1916; appointed secretary to Hon. John B. Kendrick, United States Senator from Wyoming, March 4, 1917; began the practice of law at Cheyenne, 1920; member of Conference on Uniform State Laws, 1925-26; First Assistant Postmaster General, March 6, 1933, to December 31, 1933; appointed by Gov. Leslie A. Miller, on December 18, 1933, to fill the vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the death of Hon. John B. Kendrick; elected November 6, 1934, to both the unexpired term ending January 3, 1935, and the full term ending January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 225,565. PAUL R. GREEVER, Democrat, of Cody, Wyo., was born in Lansing, Kans., September 28, 1891; received early education in public schools of Leavenworth County, Kans.; was graduated from the Leavenworth High School and the University of Kansas Law School, LL. B.; lawyer; mayor of Cody, Wyo., 1930-32; member of the board of trustees of the University of Wyoming; served in Three Hundred and Fourteenth Trench Mortar Battery, Eighty-ninth Division, April 1917 to March 1919; married; one son and one daughter; elected to Seventy- fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 52,607 votes, Charles E, Winter, Republican, receiving 36,874 votes. 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, 1920-22, 1925-32; member of senate, Alaska Territorial Legislature, at biennial sessions of 1923, 1925, 1929, and 1931; married Dorothea Frances Miller at Valdez, Alaska, February 10, 1916, and they have three children, Marie Therese, John Henry, and Anne Lillian, all born in Alaska; elected as a Delegate to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected as a Delegate to the Seventy-fourth Congress without opposition. PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Biographical 129 HAWAII (Population (1930), 368,336) DELEGATE SAMUEL WILDER KING, Republican, of Honolulu, Hawaii, was born in Honolulu, Island of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, December 17, 1886; educated at St. Louis School, Honolulu High School, and the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., graduating with the class of 1910; served in the Navy until December 31, 1924, and resigned to enter business in Honolulu; attained the grade of lieutenant commander while in the naval service; now engaged in the real estate and insurance business in Honolulu; served on various civic and governmental commissions and boards during the past 10 years; member of the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of Honolulu by appointment in 1932 and by election 1933-34; married March 18, 1912, to Pauline N. Evans, and they have five children; elected Delegate to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 31,487 votes, a majority of 1,857 over his Democratic opponent, L. L. McCandless, who received 29,630 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 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 remained in service throughout the Spanish-American War and the Philippine Insurrection, being one of the leaders of the Filipino forces at the Battle of Mabitae, 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 position in the Philippine Constabulary, an organization created for the purpose of maintaining peace, serving 5 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 a 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, September 1932; was appointed Com- missioner by the Governor General of the Philippine Islands to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws which met in the District of Columbia, October 1932; was elected to the constitutional convention from the second district of Laguna in July 1934, and served in this body as chairman of the metropolitan committee; elected Resident Commissioner to the United States March 4, 1923, to March 4, 1926; reelected to March 4, 1929, to March 4, 1932, and reelected August 22, 1934, to serve until after the Philippine Commonwealth Government has been organized and has elected another Resident Commissioner. 30063°—74-2—1sST ED——9 130 Congressional Directory PUERTO RICO FRANCISCO A. DELGADO, Nationalist, of Bulacan, Bulacan, P. I.; born January 25, 1886; lawyer, legislator, political and social leader, clubman, and Shriner; studied in San Juan de Letran and Ateneo de Manila Colleges, and was in the senior classes of Los Angeles and Compton Union High Schools; obtained his LL. B. degree from Indiana University in 1907, and from Yale University in 1908 received the degree of LL. M. (gradus delatus cum laude); was a member of the Theta Nu Epsilon and organizer of the Yale Cosmopolitan Club; practiced with the law firm of Chambers, Pikins, Morse & Davidson, Indianapolis, Ind., having been admitted to the bar in all State courts, the United States District Court of Indiana, and the Supreme Court of the United States; upon his return to Manila was admitted to the Philippine bar and worked with the government as a law clerk and then as chief of the law division of the executive bureau, which position he resigned in 1913, and has been in private practice ever since; member of the law firm of Camus & Delgado; he was the first Filipino to be made an active member of the American Bar Association; was director of the International Bar Association and president of the Philippine Bar Association; in 1915 he married Rosario M. Montenegro, one of the leading social workers in the Philippines, and they have three children—Rosario 18, Conchita 13, and Arturo 6; in 1918 served in the Philippine National Guard and was a member of the National Council of Defense for the Philippines; in June 1931 was elected to the House of Representatives of the Philippine Legislature from the first district of the Province of Bulacan, and was reelected in June 1934; in August 1934 was unanimously elected Resident Commissioner to the United States by the Philippine Legislature. 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 4 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, 1903-6; Justicia, 1914-25; published the first volume of a his- torical sketch of many activities of his life; married in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, in 1902, and has 11 children; elected Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico to the United States Congress for a 4-year term commencing March 4, 1933, 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 italics; Progressives in SMALL cAPs; Farmer-Labor in CAPS] ALABAMA SENATORS Hugo L. Black John H. Bankhead, 2d REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9 1. Frank W. Boykin 4. Sam Hobbs 7. William B. Bankhead 2. Lister Hill 5. Joe Starnes 8. A. H. Carmichael 3. Henry B. Steagall 6. William B. Oliver 9. George Huddleston ARIZONA SENATORS Henry F. Ashurst Carl Hayden REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—Isabella Greenway 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. David D. Terry 3. Claude A. Fuller 6. John L. McClellan CALIFORNIA SENATORS Hiram W. Johnson William Gibbs McAdoo REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 13; Republicans, 7] 1. Clarence F. Lea 8. John J. McGrath 15. John M. Costello 2. Harry L. Englebright 9. Bertrand W. Gearhart 16. John F. Dockweiler 3. Frank H. Buck 10. Henry E. Stubbs 17. Charles J. Colden 4. Florence P. Kahn 11. John S. MecGroarty 18. Byron N. Scott 5. Richard J. Welch 12. John H. Hoeppel 19. Samuel L. Collins 6. Albert E. Carter 13. Charles Kramer 20. George Burnham 7. John H. Tolan 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 Augustine Lonergan Francis T. Maloney REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 2] At large—William M. Citron 1. Herman P. Kopple- 2. William L. Higgins 4. Schuyler Merritt mann 3. James A. Shanley 5. J. Joseph Smith DELAWARE SENATORS Daniel O. Hastings John G. Townsend, Jr. REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large—J. George Stewart 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. Robert A. Green GEORGIA SENATORS Walter F. George Richard B. Russell, Jr. REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10] 1. Hugh Peterson 5. Robert Ramspeck 9. B. Frank Whelchel 2. BE. E. Cox 6. Carl Vinson 10. Paul Brown 3. Bryant T. Castellow 7. Malcolm C. Tarver 4. E. M. Owen 8. Braswell Deen IDAHO SENATORS William E. Borah James P. Pope REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Compton I. White 2. D. Worth Clark €©00 ND UU 09 10 ODO = CORN = HCO ND = 0910 . William T. Schulte 5 . Charles A. Halleck 6 . Samuel B. Pettengill 7. Arthur H. Greenwood 11. William H. Larrabee . James I. Farley 8 State Delegations 135 ILLINOIS SENATORS J. Hamilton Lewis William H. Dieterich REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 19; Republicans, 6; vacant, 2] At large—Martin A. Brennan; [1 vacancy] . Arthur W. Mitchell 10. Ralph E. Church 19. Donald C. Dobbins Raymond S. McKeough 11. Chauncey W. Reed 20. Scott W. Lucas Edward A. Kelly 12. John T. Buckbee 21. Harry H. Mason Harry P. Beam 13. Leo E. Allen 22. Edwin M. Schaefer Adolph J. Sabath 14. Chester Thompson 23. [Vacant] . Thomas J. O’Brien 15. J. Leroy Adair 24. Claude V. Parsons . Leonard W. Schuetz 16. Everett M. Dirksen 25. Kent E. Keller Leo Kocialkowski 17. Leslie C. Arends . James McAndrews 18. James A. Meeks INDIANA SENATORS Frederick Van Nuys Sherman Minton REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 11; Republican, 1] . Glenn Griswold 9. Eugene B. Crowe . Virginia E. Jenckes 10. Finly H. Gray . John W. Boehne, Jr. 12. Louis Ludlow IOWA SENATORS L. J. Dickinson Louis Murphy REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 3] . Edward C. Eicher 4. Fred Biermann 7. Otha D. Wearin . Bernhard M. Jacobsen 5. Lloyd Thurston 8. Fred C. Gilchrist . John W. Gwynne 6. Hubert Utterback 9. Guy M. Gillette KANSAS SENATORS Arthur Capper George McGill REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 4] . William P. Lambertson 4. Randolph Carpenter 7. Clifford R. Hope . U. 8. Guyer 5. John M. Houston . Edward W. Patterson 6. Frank Carlson KENTUCKY SENATORS : Alben W. Barkley M. M. Logan REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8; Republican, 1] . William V. Gregory 4. Edward W. Creal 7. Andrew J. May . Glover H. Cary 5. Brent Spence 8. Fred M. Vinson Emmet O'Neal 6. Virgil Chapman 9. John M. Robsion 136 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA SENATORS John H. Overton [Vacant] REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8] 1. Joachim O. Fernan- 3. Numa F. Montet 6. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr. dez 4. John N. Sandlin 7. René L. DeRouen 2. Paul H. Maloney 5. Riley J. Wilson 8. Cleveland Dear MAINE SENATORS Frederick Hale Wallace H. Whate, Jr. REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republican, 1] | 1. Simon M. Hamlin 2. Edward C. Moran, Jr. 3. Ralph O. Brewster | MARYLAND SENATORS | Millard E. Tydings George L. Radcliffe REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. T. Alan Golds- 3. Vincent L. Palmisano 6. David J. Lewis borough 4. Ambrose J. Kennedy 2. William P. Cole, Jr. 5. Stephen W. Gambrill MASSACHUSETTS SENATORS David I. Walsh Marcus A. Coolidge REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7; Republicans, 8] | | | 1. Allen T. Treadway 7. William P. Connery, 11. John P. Higgins 2. William J. Granfield Jr. 12. John W. McCormack 3. Joseph E. Casey 8. Arthur D. Healey 13. Richard B. Wiggles- 4. Pehr G. Holmes 9. Richard M. Russell 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, 6; Republicans, 11; vacant, 1] 1. George G. Sadowski 7. Jesse P. Wolcott 13. Clarence J. McLeod 2. Earl C. Michener 8. Fred L. Crawford 14. Louis C. Rabaut 3. Verner W. Main. 9. Albert J. Engel 15. John D. Dingell 4. Clare E. Hoffman 10. Roy O. Woodruff 16. John Lesinski 5. Carl E. Mapes 11. Prentiss M. Brown 17. George A. Dondero 6. William W. Blackney 12. Frank E. Hook State Delegations 137 MINNESOTA SENATORS HENRIK SHIPSTEAD [Vacant.] REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 5; Farmer-Labor, 3] 1. August H. Andresen 4. Melvin J. Maas 7. PAUL J. KVALE 2. Elmer J. Ryan 5. Theodore Christianson 8. William A. Pittenger 3. ERNEST LUNDEEN 6. Harold Knutson 9. R. T. BUCKLER MISSISSIPPI SENATORS Pat Harrison Theodore G. Bilbo REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 1. John E. Rankin 4. A. L. Ford 7. Dan R. McGehee 2. Wall Doxey 5. Aubert C. Dunn 3. William M. Whitting- 6. William M. Colmer ton MISSOURI SENATORS Bennett Champ Clark Harry S. Truman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 12; Republican, 1] 1. Milton A. Romjue 6. Reuben T. Wood 11. Thomas C. Hennings, 2. William L. Nelson 7. Dewey Short Jr. 3. Richard M. Duncan 8. Clyde Williams 12. James R. Claiborne 4. C. Jasper Bell 9. Clarence Cannon 13. John J. Cochran 5. Joseph B. Shannon 10. Orville Zimmerman MONTANA SENATORS Burton K. Wheeler James E. Murray REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Joseph P. Monaghan 2. Roy E. Ayers NEBRASKA SENATORS George W. Norris Edward R. Burke REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republican, 1] 1. Henry C. Luckey 3. Karl Stefan 5. Harry B. Coffee 2. Charles F. McLaugh- 4. C. G. Binderup lin 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 W. Warren Barbour A. Harry Moore REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10] Charles A. Wolverton 6. Donald H. McLean 11. Peter A. Cavicchia 1 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. Edward J. Hart 5. Charles A. Eaton 10. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. | NEW MEXICO SENATORS | Carl A. Hatch Dennis Chavez REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—John J. Dempsey | NEW YORK SENATORS Royal S. Copeland Robert F. Wagner | REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 29; Republicans, 16] | At large—Matthew J. Merritt; Caroline O’Day 1. Robert L. Bacon 15. John J. Boylan 30. Frank Crowther 2. William B. Barry 16. John J. O’Connor 31. Bertrand H. Snell 3. Joseph L. Pfeifer 17. Theodore A. Peyser 32. Francis D. Culkin 4. Thomas H. Cullen 18. Martin J. Kennedy 33. Fred J. Sisson 5. Marcellus H. Evans 19. Sol Bloom 34. Bert Lord 6. Andrew L. Somers 20. Vito Marcantonio 35. Clarence E. Hancock 7. John J. Delaney 21. Joseph A. Gavagan 36. John Taber 8. Richard J. Tonry 22. Edward W. Curley 37. W. Sterling Cole 9. Stephen A. Rudd 23. Charles A. Buckley 38. James P. B. Duffy 10. Emanuel Celler 24. James M. Fitzpatrick 39. James W. Wadsworth 11. James A. O’Leary 25. Charles D. Millard 40. Walter G. Andrews 12. Samuel Dickstein 26. Hamalton Fish, Jr." 41. Alfred F. Beiter 13. Christopher D. Sulli- 27. Philip A. Goodwin 42. James M. Mead van 28. Parker Corning 43. Danvel A. Reed 14. William I. Sirovich 29. William D. Thomas 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. Graham A. Barden 7. J. Bayard Clark 11. Zebulon Weaver 4. Harold D. Cooley 8. J. Walter Lambeth 00 ~I Ob Ut Hh OO BO CO DO = NORTH DAKOTA SENATORS Lynn J. Frazier Gerald P. Nye REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Republicans, 2] Usher L. Burdick William Lemke OHIO SENATORS Robert J. Bulkley Vie Donahey REPRESENTATIVES 5 [Democrats, 17; Republicans, 6; vacant, 1] At large—Stephen M. Young; [1 vacancy] . John B. Hollister 9. Warren J. Duffey 17. William A. Ashbrook . William E. Hess 10. Thomas A. Jenkins 18. Lawrence E. Imhoff . Byron B. Harlan 11. Mell G. Underwood 19. John G. Cooper . Frank L. Kloeb 12. Arthur P. Lamneck 20. Martin L. Sweeney . Frank C. Kniffin 13. William L. Fiesinger 21. Robert Crosser . James G. Polk 14. Dow W. Harter 22. Chester C. Bolton L. T. Marshall 15. Robert T. Secrest . Brooks Fletcher 16. William R. Thom OKLAHOMA SENATORS Elmer Thomas Thomas P. Gore REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] At large—Will Rogers . Wesley E. Disney 4. P. L. Gassaway 7. Sam C. Massingale . Jack Nichols 5. Josh Lee 8. Phil Ferguson . Wilburn Cartwright 6. Jed Johnson OREGON SENATORS Charles L. McNary Frederick Steiwer REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 2] . James W. Mott 2. Walter M. Pierce 3. William A. Ekwall 140 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA SENATORS James J. Davis Joseph F. Guffey REPRESENTATIVES Democrats, 23; Republicans, 11] 1. Harry C. Ransley 13. James H. Gildea 24. J. Buell Snyder \ 2. William H. Wilson 14. William E. Richard- 25. Charles I. Faddis 3. Clare G. Fenerty son 26. Charles R. Eckert 4. J. Burrwood Daly 15. C. Elmer Dietrich 27. Joseph Gray 5. Frank J. G. Dorsey 16. Robert F. Rich 28. William M. Berlin 6. Michael J. Stack 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. James L. Quinn 9. Oliver W. Frey 20. D. J. Driscoll 32. Theodore 1.. Moritz 10. J. Roland Kinzer 21. Francis E. Walter 33. Henry Ellenbogen 11. Patrick J. Boland 22. Harry L. Haines 34. Matthew A. Dunn 12. C. Murray Turpin 23. Don Gingery RHODE ISLAND SENATORS Jesse H. Metcalf Peter G. Gerry REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 1; Republicans, 1] 1. Charles F. Risk 2. John M. O’Connell SOUTH CAROLINA SENATORS Ellison D. Smith James F. Byrnes REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. Thomas S. MeMillan 3. John C. Taylor 5. James P. Richards 2. Hampton P. Fulmer 4. John J. McSwain 6. Allard H. Gasque SOUTH DAKOTA SENATORS Peter Norbeck William J. Bulow REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Fred H. Hildebrandt 2. Theo. B. Werner TENNESSEE SENATORS Kenneth McKellar Nathan L. Bachman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7; Republicans, 2] 1. B. Carroll Reece 4. J. R. Mitchell 7. Herron Pearson 2. J. Will Taylor 5. Joseph W. Byrns 8. Jere Cooper 3. Sam D. McReynolds 6. Clarence W. Turner 9. Walter Chandler NO OUR coo Mim State Delegations TEXAS SENATORS Morris Sheppard . Wright Patman Martin Dies . Morgan G. Sanders Sam Rayburn Hatton W. Sumners . Luther A. Johnson Nat Patton William H. King 1. Abe Murdock Warren R. Austin 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 21 . Joe H. Eagle . Joseph J. Mansfield . James P. Buchanan . O. H. Cross . Fritz G. Lanham . W. D. McFarlane . Richard M. Kleberg UTAH SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] VERMONT SENATORS REPRESENTATIVE [Republicans, 1] 141 Tom Connally . Milton H. West . R. Ewing Thomason . Thomas L. Blanton . Marvin Jones . George H. Mahon . Maury Maverick . Charles L. South Elbert D. Thomas 2. J. W. Robinson Ernest W. Gibson At large—Charles A. Plumley Carter Glass . Schuyler Otis Bland . Colgate W. Darden, I. . Andrew J. Montague Homer T. Bone Marion A. Zioncheck . Monrad C. Wallgren 3. 4. VIRGINIA SENATORS Harry Flood Byrd REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] . Patrick H. Drewry . Thomas G. Burch . Clifton A. Woodrum . A. Willis Robertson WASHINGTON SENATORS Lewis B. Schwellenbach REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] Martin F. Smith Knute Hill WEST VIRGINIA SENATORS Matthew M. Neely Robert L.. Ramsay Jennings Rardolph 3. 4. REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] Andrew Edmiston George W. Johnson 8. Howard W. Smith 9. doin W. Flannagan, Tr 5. Samuel B. Hill 6. Wesley Lloyd Rush D. Holt 5. John Kee 6. Joe L. Smith 142 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN SENATORS RoserT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR. F. Ryan Duffy REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Progressives, 7] 1. TroMmas R. AMLIE 4. Raymond J. Cannon 8. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER 2. HARRY SAUTHOFF 5. Thomas O’Malley 9. MerLIN HuLn 3. GarpNER R. Wita- 6. Michael K. Reilly 10. BErnarDp J. GEHR- ROW Democrats. _ 7. GERALD J. BoiLEAU MANN WYOMING SENATORS Robert D. Carey Joseph C. O’ Mahoney REPRESENTATIVE [Democrats, 1] At large—Paul R. Greever ALASKA DELEGATE Anthony J. Dimond HAWAII DELEGATE Samuel W. King PHILIPPINE ISLANDS RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Pedro Guevara Francisco A. Delgado PUERTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Santiago Iglesias CLASSIFICATION SENATE HOUSE 60 I Demoerats. ~~ =. 318 Bepublieans. co. ..... 0 00 23: Hepublicans....... cc coveimme mea 104 Progressives 1: Progressives... caueucns duc 7 Parmer-Labolt rs = = =e = 1 |: Parmer-1Labor-._ oscil i tuzoe 3 Nacant. aT EN Cant. in. ee 3 ALPHABETICAL LIST 143 | ALPHABETICAL LIST Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commzission- ers, showing State and district from which elected, city of residence, and political alinement SENATORS [Democrats i in roman (9); Repuslions, in italics (23); Progressives in SMALL CAPS (1); Farmer-Labor in PS (1); vacant (2); total, 96] Name State City | Adams, Alva B.__.__ ..... ... Colorado. evn emo - Pueblo. Ashurst, Henry FP... oo... Arizona... over Prescott. Austin, Worre B...... oe uveowan= Vermont... Burlington. Bachman, Nathan L...... ..._____ Tennessee... _____ Chattanooga. Bailey, Josiah ' W._ _....-... North Carolina____| Raleigh. Bankhead, Jobn H.,.2d... -....: Alspama: Jasper. Barbour, W. Weorrep. won. on New Jersey... _____ Locust. Barkley, Alben:W.. cco vce Kentucky... ---- Paducah. Bilbo,. Theodore Gece. ove. Mississippi-__--__ Poplarville. Black, Huge bi to oni Alabama. J... Birmingham. Bone, Homer 1... cn. -.. Washington_______ Tacoma. | Borah, Williaa Zl oeiiae i eee Idaho... Boise. | Brown, Fred H .. ... «oo ... New Hampshire.__| Somersworth. Bulkley, Bobert J. .....c..- moi Ohio cat cave -n- Cleveland. Bulow, William J. .ccc i oe South Dakota._____ Beresford. Burke, Edward RB. ....-. ----.. Nebraska... ...... Omaha. Byrd, Harry Flood... - Virginia... Berryville. Bymes, James F..... .. .. ._.... South Carolina____| Spartanburg. Copper; ATT. vcs nr = Kansas... -. Topeka. Caraway, Hattie W.......________ Arkansas... _ Jonesboro. Corey, Bobert Dh... oceans Wyoming... Careyhurst. Chavez, Dennis ..ocr ions .--| New Mexico -..__ Albuquerque. Clark, Bennett Champ__________ Missouri... ----- LaDue Village, St. Louis ; County. Connally, Tom... niwdteminn sens FO he cerannnmn Marlin. Coolidge, Marcus A_____________ Massachusetts _ __| Fitchburg. Copeland, Boyal 8S... .~.i..... NewYork... ... New York City. Costigan, Edward P....— . ...... Colorade. <2. 0 Denver. Couzens, JAMES ann amsmii-s mere m= Michigan... .._..~ Detroit. Doss, JOMES disor namin inn Pennsylvania_____ Pittsburgh. Dickinson, Liew wsimst-innmmuns Toh cacese 2 Algona. Dieterich, William H___________ Jlinolgena- Beardstown. Donahey, Vie ic: oon iio: Ohlo..3eee- ne Huntsville, R. F. D, Dully; B. Byano. cal ii. Wisconsin... Fond du Lac. Fletcher, DuneanU -. ........... Vloridazs. Jacksonville. Traciers Tamm d: avn nd nes North Dakota. ___| Hoople. George, Waller F. oo ooo Georgie was cvines Vienna. Gerry, Peter Go... Rhode Island. ____ Warwick. ibson, Drnestill cee ensnaieeinn Vermont... -- Brattleboro. Glags, Carter... ......o Virginisooe. Lynchburg. Gore, Thomas P...............; Oklahoma. __._._._._. Oklahoma City. Guffey, Joseph ¥... _. _._. _.... 1. Pennsylvania. _ ___ Pittsburgh. Hale, Frederick. -o- —-.= Maine... ~~-- Portland. Harvison, Pat..2.. .......... 1; Mississippi- ~~ Gulfport. 145 30063°—T74—2—1ST ED—— 10 146 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Name State City Hastings, Daniel O...concz- ao 2 Delaware_.._._____ Wilmington. Hateh, Carl A........o fa Lo New Mexico______ Clovis. Hayden, RS ER Eb Avlzond. ..... o.- Phoenix. Holt, Bush D... vee 6-2 etme West Virginia_____ Weston. Johnson, TILTON, Te eee ve mien os California... San Francisco. eyes, Henry W.. .....~. ti King, William ......-...... La ForLerTE, ROBERT M., JR___ Tewis, J, Homilton _...._.._._..____ Vogan, Ml. MM... tm ca Lonergan, Augustine... ............ McAdoo, William Gibbs_________ McCarran, Pat. ...cvev oo eeva Mell, George... dno McKellar, Kenneth_____________ YcNory, Charles Loop ioe Maloney, Framelg, Toniows —~-o 2-00 Metcalf, Jesse Il ean vos 2~onnon Minton, Sherman. ....se vn - Moore; A, Bavey 2. oi ions Murphy, Lome. le Murray, James Bc... .-i = Neely, Matthew M_____________ Norbeck, Pelt cnn panto <= ~~~ = Norris, George 1 Bde bl ear Nye, Gerald... oon uate om =n O'Mahoney, Joseph C._...—-. Overton, John H.+ ~~ _ +a. Pitman, eV .c ose nir= ewe Pope, James Po... cos ii Radelifie, George L......---~-2"-"_. Reynolds, Bobet B__ i. -._"° Robinson, Joseph TT... - =. 1. Russell, Richard B., Jr... __. Schwellenbach, FE Sheppard, SL ee SHIPSTEAD, HENRIK. ... Smith, ion ro... 10 Steiwer, HR I RR Thomas, Elbett D.. ome oe "Thomas, Elmer. - wxwre-+= ~~ = pi Townsend, John CJT ewe Trammell, Park. a= 020 00 Pruman, Harry S..cene-+n-io2 Tydings, Millard B. _.o- 2 5; Vandenberg, Arthur H....________ Van Nuys, Prederick...... 7° Wagner, Robert P......-... > Walsh, David. cneemms-o Wheeler, 1E5ny orl es Meg initiate en White, Walloce Hy Jl ican New Hampshire ___ Yoh con Ee Aa ie Connecticut. __ Calilernia > heson ft . .. Connecticut =.= Rhode Island _ ==>: Lr ell me West Virginia_____ South Dakota_____ Nebraska ~~~ - North Dakota. -_- Wyoming... =.=. Maryland... .. North Carolina.____ Arkangag 30 1 Cleorglae es =.=. 1 ONaRS sed ro Minnesota: ~~ South Carolina____ North Haverhill. Salt Lake City. Madison. Chicago. Bowling Green. Hartford. Los Angeles. Reno. Wichita. Memphis. Salem. Meriden. Providence. New Albany. Jersey City. Dubuque. Butte. Fairmont. Redfield. McCook. Cooperstown. Cheyenne. Alexandria. Tonopah. Boise. Baltimore. Asheville. Little Rock. Winder. Seattle. Texarkana. Miltona. Lynchburg. Portland. Salt Lake City. Medicine Park. Selby ville. Lakeland. Independence. Havre de Grace. Grand Rapids. Indianapolis. New York City. Clinton. Butte. Auburn. | | | | Alphabetical Last REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats in roman (318); Republicans in italics (104); Progressives in SMALL CAPS (7); Farmer-Labor in CAPS (3); vacant (3); total, 435] 147 Dis- . Name Fed] State City Adair; J. Leroyac uid 15a Hllinolg ne... Quincey. Allen, Leo EB. sipt on. 13. illinois. 01... Galena. Avrie, TaoMaAs R__________ 1:{ Wisconsin... ... Elkhorn. Andresen, August Hi ic... 1¥:{*Minnesota.._.... Red Wing. Andrew, A. Piatt. ieee.) 6 | Massachusetts _| Gloucester. Andrews, Walter G___ ______ 40 | New York. ____._ Buffalo. Arends, Leslie Coii..]. 5... 17% =[1linols. oi... Melvin. Ashbrook, William A_______ 17:u0hiot 2... Johnstown. Ayers, Roy BEB. coooi coin. 2:-Montana........ Lewistown. Bacharaeh;: Isdac.sccoli - 2 | New Jersey_____ Atlantic City. Bacon, Bobert Lz dist... 1oliNew York. .... Old Westbury. Bankhead, William B_______ 7::Alabamal... _... Jasper. Barden, Graham A_________ 3 | North Carolina__| New Bern. Barry, William B. cool... 2 | New York... ___ Hollis, Jamaica. Beam, Harry Policicd. c dy imole dn Chicago. Beiter, Alfred F__.___.______ 41 | New York... _.._ Williamsville. Bell, ¢. Jasper. linive dn 4 | Missouri:...... Kansas City. Berlin, William M__________ 28 | Pennsylvania_ __| Greensburg. Biermann, Fred......._..__ ddslowa. i... Decorah. Binderup, C. G. nilicua 4 JiNebrasks....... Minden. Blackney, William W_______ 6: «Michigan... Flint. Bland, Schuyler Otis_______ 1{>Virginia.......... Newport News. Blanton, Thomas L___._____ 17: Texas. ou... Abilene. Bloom, Sol......slluaail. 19:{ New York... ... New York City. Boehne, John W., Jr______._ S Indiana. ll ..... Evansville. BoiLEAU, GERALD: Joi (.. 7. “Wisconsin ___ Wausau. Boland, Patrick Joo... 11 | Pennsylvania___| Scranton. Bolion, Chester Cv... 22, 430hio Load Lyndhurst. Boykin, Prank Wo out... Ld¥Alabama... .... Mobile. Boylan, John J... insili.. 15 | New York._____._ New York City. Brennan, Martin A_________ At Lol llinolet Bloomington. Brewster, RalphiO.L z=... Si Mpine:, “°C ___ Dexter. Brooks, J. Twinglitalids _L 30 | Pennsylvania___| Sewickley. Brown, Paul... a0 10 | Georgia._______._ Elberton. Brown, Prentiss M_________ wi l:Miehigan....._. St. Ignace. Buchanan, James P________ 10: Texad 2: = Brenham. Buek, Frank H..._ _=.:: ... 3 (California... ... Vacaville. Buckbee, John To. uuoil ll... 12:illlinois. =. __ Rockford. BUCKLER, R. TT. =i. a 9 | Minnesota______ Crookston. Buckley, Charles A_________ 23: iNew York. .... New York City. Bulwinkle, Alfred L________ 10 | North Carolina __| Gastonia. Burch, Thomas: G......L. .. 5. | Nirglnin. oo... Martinsville. Burdick, UsbiersLicciouis ...... At L. | North Dakota__| Bismarck. Burnham, George. Jiauioll i. 20. | :California.. ...... Coronado. Byrng, Joseph W.__ciisi i. 5 | Tennessee. _____ Nashville. Caldwell, Millard F________ S{Florida._.L. ._____ Milton. Cannon, Clarence. _________ Ov Missourii.. Elsberry. Cannon, Raymond J_______ 4 | Wisconsin. _.____ Milwaukee. Carlson, Franksiiccl wai... Gi ansas. 0... ... Concordia. Carmichael, A. H____._____ 8 Alabama. ...... Tuscumbia. Carpenter, Randolph_______ dif Ramsas. <._.___. Marion. Carter, Albert BB. lanl 6:| California. ... Oakland. Cartwright, Wilburn________ 3 Oklahoma. =. _.__ McAlester. Cary, Glover Hoo 2 0H LL 2 | Kentucky._____ Owensboro. Casey, Joseph EB. lvaiad. 3 | Massachusetts_ _| Clinton. Castellow, Bryant T________ 3 | Georgia_._____._| Cuthbert. Cavicchia, Peter Adossail... 11 | New Jersey _.___ Newark. Celler, Emanuel ____________ 10 | New York...... Brooklyn. 148 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis- : Name tiot State City Chandler, Walter. ........... 9 | Tennessee. .____ Memphis. Chapman, Virgil.........m-- 6 | Kentueky......... Paris. Christianson, Theodore. —__ _ _ 5 | Minnesota.__.__._ Minneapolis. Church, Bolph Bocce... 10 illinois... Evanston. Citron, William M.....1._.. At L. | Connecticut. -._| Middletown. Claiborne, James R________ 125{e Missouri... . St. Louis. Clark, D. Worth...cool 2i{sldaho. J... . Pocatello. Clark, J. Bayard... ui 7 | North Carolina._| Fayetteville. Cochran, John J.o. oli... 13 Missouri... _... St. Louis. Coffee, Harry Booloodol 5 J. Nebraska....... Chadron. Colden, Charles J___._______ 1724=California..... San Pedro. Cole, William P.,) Jr... 2:fiMaryland........ Glenarm, R. F. D. Cole, W. Stexling....)....0...... 37 | New York____._._ Bath. Collins, Samuel Lc oo00. |... 19 | California. ....... Fullerton. Colmer, William M_________ 6 | Mississippi-____ Pascagoula. Connery, William P., Jr_____ 7 | Massachusetts. | Lynn. Cooley, Harold D._._._._______ 4 | North Carolina_| Nashville. Cooper, Jere. uci... 8 | Tennessee. ____ Dyersburg. Cooper, JohnGus ican |... 19 1 EE Youngstown. Corning, Parker....oo:0..... 28 | New York.______ Albany. Costello, John M......ol.... 15. | California. .....- Hollywood. Cox,- BoB init... 2iGeorgia. .. ._.. Camilla. Cravens, Ben.......odil...... 4 | Arkansas._.___._. Fort Smith. Crovford, Fred Li osu l. .... 8 4: Michigan. .....- Saginaw. Creal, Edward W__________ 4 | Kentucky. ._.... Hodgenville. Crosby, Charles N_._______ 29 | Pennsylvania_.__| Meadville. Crosz, O. H_.. olaaoco dl. 1. Pexas. 2... 1... Waco. Crosser, Robert. oa ll... 2isiOhiol Ll Cleveland. Crowe, Eugene B__________ OrivIndiang..L . .......- Bedford. Crowther, Franke dbo. 1... 30. | New Nork....... Schenectady. Cullin, Francis Dalila... . 32: |New York... _._. Oswego. Cullen, Thomas H.....____ 4 { New York.__.__._ Brooklyn. Cummings, Fred.ooo0il... 2.{=Ceolorado.l. 5... Fort Collins. Curley, Edward Wi. zoll 22 New York. .... New York City. Daly, J. Buarrwood.. coo... 4 | Pennsylvania _ __| Philadelphia. Darden, Colgate W., Jr_____ 2. ¥ivginia lll... Norfolk. Darrow, George P........____. 7 | Pennsylvania _ __| Philadelphia. Dear, Cleveland....._______ 8 1. Louislang.......... Alexandria. Deen, Braswell ...________ Sir Ceorgia........ . --- Alma. Delaney, John Joo. .ou.l 7 “New York. ..... Brooklyn. Dempsey, John J___________|At L. | New Mexico.___| Santa Fe. DeRouen, René Li__________ 7:4 Louigiana....... Ville Platte. Dickstein, Samuel ._._______ 12 | New York. ._._.__ New York City. Dies, Martin... coco... LET BT a EE Jasper and Orange. Dietrich, C. Elmer.o 0 15 | Pennsylvania. __| Tunkhannock. Dingell, John Do goin) |. 15ifsMichiganl.. Detroit. Dirksen, Everett M_ __ ______ 16s: 1llinois..C.... Pekin. Disney, Wesley E__________ 1 | Oklahoma,..__._._._ Tulsa. = Ditler, J. William ooc0zll 17 | Pennsylvania___| Ambler. Dobbins, Donald C_________ 19il-Tlinela. 5... Champaign. Dockweiler, John F________ 16. California... Los Angeles. Dondero, George A__________ 17 d::Miehigani Royal Oak. Dorsey, Frank J. Goll 5 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Doughton, Robert L________ 9 | North Carolina.__| Laurel Springs. Dovirich, Isaac. Hoslball 19 | Pennsylvania___| Harrisburg. Dezey, Wall... .oossusu) 2 | Mississippi-____ Holly Springs. Drewry, Patrick Hoo di{o>Virginia. Cc... Petersburg. Driseoll, D. J... uuldird 20 | Pennsylvania___| St. Marys. Driver, William J..ool.. YufoArkansas........ Osceola. Duffey, Warren J__________ 91pOhies 00 L. Toledo. Duly, James P. B........--- 38 | New York______ Rochester. Alphabetical Last REPRESENTATIVES—Continued 149 Dis- ; ‘ Name irict State City Duncan, Richard M________ Sati-Missouric ec __.... St. Joseph. Dunn, Aubert C. .. ..ov.e- 5 | Mississippi. .._- Meridian. Dunn, Matthew A... _____ 34 | Pennsylvania___| Mount Oliver, Pittsburgh. Bagle,doe Hoi onnninniin nn 8. Texas acc i. Houston. Baion, Charles 4 ov icvin-- 5 | New Jersey_____ Watchung. Eckert, Charles R__________ 26 | Pennsylvania___| Beaver. Edmiston, Andrew._._.______ 3 | West Virginia___| Weston. Eicher, Edward C__.__.______ 1: owas ori. Washington. ELwall, William A... . .--_- 3:iiOregon...... Portland. Ellenbogen, Henry _._._____ 33 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Engel Albert J fc os ios = 9 | Michigan_______ Lake City. Englebright, Harry L._.-____ 2 California... Nevada City. Evans, Marcellus H___.____ 5: New York... ... Brooklyn. Paddis, Charles]. ... nein. 25 | Pennsylvania___| Waynesburg. Farley, James I.....ccer- -- 4d Indiana: Auburn. Fenerty, Clore Go - = corm 3 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Ferguson, Phil... ... 8 | Oklahoma______ Woodward. Fernandez, Joachim O______ 1{ Louisiang_...... New Orleans. Fiesinger, William L________ 13 Ohies.L-... Sandusky. Fish, Hamiliony JT co on 26. i NewaYork Garrison. Fitzpatrick, James M_______ 24 | New York______ New York City. Flannagan, John W., Jr_____ 9. Virginia oe... Bristol. Fletcher, Brooks. _ ..-..-_ 8 :0hieza oo Marion. Focht, Benjamin K_________ 18 | Pennsylvania___| Lewisburg. Bord An l eros 4 | Mississippi-_--_-_ Ackerman. Ford, Thomas Bs: ~~ 14 |; California. - -_. Los Angeles. Prey, Oliver W. cea en—a-~ 9 | Pennsylvania___| Allentown. Fuller, Claude A _...-..-- 3 Arkansas... .... Eureka Springs. Fulmer, Hampton P.......... 2 | South Carolina__| Orangeburg. Gambrill, Stephen W_______ 5:1 Maryland...... Laurel. Gasque, Allard H. ~_..- 1. 6 | South Carolina__| Florence. Casgaway,:P. Lica cameanm 4 | Oklahoma. _____ Coalgate. Gavagan, Joseph A_________ 21: NewYork ..._. New York City. Gearhart, Bertrand W_______ 9.1 California... .... Fresno. GEHRMANN, BERNARD J _____ 10 | Wisconsin_ _____ Mellen, R. F. D. Gifford, Charlies di csivs wisi 15 | Massachusetts. _| Cotuit. Gilchrist, Fred Co ni i S84 Towns... nano. Laurens. Gildea, James H ... .__. _.._. 13 | Pennsylvania___| Coaldale. Gillette, Guy M....... ...... 0 Flowac. ee... Cherokee. Cingery, Don... Suivi. 23 | Pennsylvania. __| Clearfield. Goldsborough, T. Alan______ 1 Maryland... Denton. Goodwin, Philip-A. ......... 27. NewYork... .._. Coxsackie. Granfield, William ore 2 | Massachusetts__| Springfield. Gray, Finly H... sx... 10: Indiana... Connersville. Gray, Joseph. ic oct. 27 | Pennsylvania. __| Spangler. Green, Robert A. ___ =... 2c Ploridasc. 1 Starke. Greenway, Isabella_________ At TT. [cArizonac te. Ajo. Greenwood, Arthur H_______ “| Indisna.c...... Washington. Greever, Paul R=... ~~ | At TL. | Wyoming: _.._ Cody. Gregory, William V_._._._..___ 1 Bentueky..__._. Mayfield Griswold, Glenn... wove ve 5 L-Indlang...c...... Peru. Guyer, U.S: os x =i 2: Kansas: =... | Kansas City. Guynne, John VW... .... 26 Sialowan.. sea. Waterloo. Haines, Harry Loco .ve 22 | Pennsylvania___| Red Lion. Halleck, Charles A... .. = 24:Indiang._ toa. Rensselaer. Hamlin, Simon M0. =. 16:270hie. 02a 5 Canton. Thomas, William D......o-... 29 { New York...... Hoosick Falls. Thomason, R. Bwing......._ 16: Texas . El Paso. Thompson, Chester_________ 14 1 Hinols........-.. Rock Island. Thurston, Lloyd — Si down. Osceola. Tinkham, George Holden _____ 10 | Massachusetts_ _| Boston. Tobey, Charles Wo... 2 | New Hampshire_| Temple. Tolan, John H .......... . _. 7 California... ..-- Oakland. Benry, Richard’ J 84 New York ...... Brooklyn. Treadway, Alden T.. . . ..--. = 1 | Massachusetts._ _ | Stockbridge. Turner, Clarence W________ 6 | Tennessee. _.____ Waverly. Turpin, C- Murray... .- 12 | Pennsylvania. __| Kingston. Umstead, William B________ 6 | North Carolina__| Durham. Underwood, Mell G________ IL -0ho-.. Lo. New Lexington. Utterback, Hubert. ________ Gilowa.. ..... i... Des Moines. Viuson, Carl... ..... .. 6 Georgia... Milledgeville. Vingon, Bred M. 8 Kentucky... Ashland. Wadsworth, James W_______ 39 | New York...... Geneseo. Wallgren, Monrad C_______ 2 | Washington_____ Everett. Waller, Francie EB... ... 21 | Pennsylvania_ __| Easton. Warren, Lindsay: C.___. 1 | North Carolina__| Washington. Yearin,Otha D. .......... 2 Vvlowa, Hastings. Weaver, Zebulon_____._____ 10 | North Carolina__| Asheville. 5 2 5 9 1 White, Compton I. ......._ Clarksfork. Congressional Drirectory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued ; Dis- ; Name init State City Whittington, William M____ 3 | Mississippi-_-___ Greenwood. Wigglesworth, Richard B_____ 13 | Massachusetts. _| Milton. Wilcox, J. Mave 0-0 43Worida-C...L-- West Palm Beach. Williams, Clyde..00 00 Si Missouri... Hillsboro. Wilson, Riley J.0. 2... 5 Louisiana... .___. Ruston. Wilson, William H.____._... 2 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Wirtarow, GARDNER R_____ 3 | Wisconsin. __... La Crosse. Wolcoii, Jesse PL 2)! 7 |°Miechigan..._.... Port Huron. Wolfenden, James 2.220. 8 | Pennsylvania. __| Upper Darby. Wolverton, Charles A________ 1 | New Jersey._.__. Merchantville. Wood, Reuben Tio i... Goi Missouri. Springfield. Woodrufi, Boy Ono 21% 5. 10: "Michigan... ..... Bay City. Woodrum, Clifton A________ 601 Virginia. ......... Roanoke. Young, Stephen M_________ At. Oo. sn Cleveland. Zimmerman, Orville________ 10° Miggouri. .. Kennett. Zioncheck, Marion A_______ 1 | Washington_____ Seattle. DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS : Territory or . Name Title insular possession City Delgado, Francisco A.l___| Res. Com.| Philippine Islands_| Bulacan. Dimond, Anthony J_____ Delegate. | Alaska... __.... Valdez. Guevara, Pedro !________ Res. Com_| Philippine Islands.| Santa Cruz, La- guna. Iglesias, Santiago 2. _____ Res. Com.| Puerto Rico......... Santurce. King, Somuel W.c.'icon Delegate. .| Hawaii... ____.... Honolulu. 1 Nationalist 2 Coalitionist. or TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS Group I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1937 [32 Senators In this group: Democrats, 18; Republicans, 12; vacant, 2] Name Party Residence Bailey, Josiah8Wi tad te oon Bankhead, Jom 524: =~... ~~. -c2---o3 Barbour, WW, Warren 2:2 Lb re Bosh, Willams Bulow, William iy ole de rr Byfnesidatheg ois L08 oon ITO Capber, Arthur 2 = 2d 1 hoor Carey, Bogert Du 2b oo > ood Coolidge Mareus A... o.oo Costigan Bdward P23 voor Couzens, Jamas Hh fo ore Dickingeon sina sos oe rs Close Carers sO a rr Cote Thomas Pot. l beso re bree Hatrison, Pat at I soo ror roe Hastings Ponlel’'Oo- 02 oF oooneroeg Hotell Carb AS te nie errors Revosdlonry Wo i ee rrr Metary Clinzles' le. J 0... oT Meteall;desse Bl oc icin eee Murray, James B.2_ __. ....... . 20 laste Neely. Matthew M.-. ._... . . Norrie, George W. _-.. onion ann Bobingen, Joseph TT... i Buszsell, Richard B., Irs... ol... .. Sheppard, Mortis. o-oo Sa White, Wallace Hl. Jr... cnenee eon FUOPOROPRREOURORODORREOUPRODRRODT Chattanooga, Tenn. Raleigh, N. C. Jasper, Ala. Locust, N. J. Boise, Idaho. Beresford, S. Dak. Spartansburg, S. C. Topeka, Kans. Careyhurst, Wyo. Fitchburg, Mass. Denver, Colo. Detroit, Mich. Algona, Iowa. Lynchburg, Va. Oklahoma City, Okla. Gulfport, Miss. Wilmington, Del. Clovis, N. Mex. North Haverhill, N. H. Chicago, Ill. Bowling Green, Ky. Salem, Oreg. Providence, R. I. Butte, Mont. Fairmont, W. Va. McCook, Nebr. Little Rock, Ark. Winder, Ga. Texarkana, Tex. Auburn, Maine. 1 Appointed by Governor Feb. 28, 1933; elected Nov. 6, 1934. 2 Appointed by Governor Dec. 1, 1931; elected Nov. 8, 1932. 3 Appointed by Governor Oct. 10, 1933; elected Nov. 6, 1934 4 Elected Nov. 6, 1934. 5 Elected Nov. 8, 1932. 155 156 Congressional Directory Group II..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1939 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 27; Republicans, 5] Name Party Residence Adame Alva Bir an 0 se lowe Barkley, Alben W..... lL LU 0d utd Blacks Hugo... oo LEE Bone, Homer Toro ama rin. cobras rosy Browna rede oo 5 BF eel Bulkley, Bobert J.Lo Lola n OQ. PRAT R Caraway, Hottie W.. .......... .o...l0L, Clark, Bennett Champ... ... «woes comes a- Bavigidamestyeoen oJ Wor iE Soni Dieterich, William WH... .o-o 0 oo oo Ena eee ea TU i kena, Pleteher, Dunean I... a. diene cnn George, Walter. a. lee Gibson, Ernest WL, 0 1 Hayden, Carl cv. conte pnd ee Lonergan, Augustine. re 0... McAdoo, William Gibbs... .. novia s Pope, iJametyP. cum uin- n SRA aL Reynold, Robert Re coed cat oedoe ne Smith, Bison sl). acted re mde ee ime em Steiwer, Frederick .- coer torte ee eee Thomas, Tlbertsd o.oo = 0. Thomas, FBIMEL 25 wie ior a eet eee eerie me Pydings, Millard BB ..e i. vz ncdom nin = Van Nuys, Frederick... ot oedema Nagner, Robert B51 wf UU DPE EDUDEREDUDTEP ROYER UODUDDDD Pueblo, Colo. Paducah, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. Tacoma, Wash. Somersworth, N. H. Cleveland, Ohio. Jonesboro, Ark. LaDue Village, St. Louis County, Mo. Pittsburgh, Pa. Beardstown, Ill. Fond du Lae, Wis. Jacksonville, Fla. Vienna, Ga. Brattleboro, Vt. 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. 1 Appointed by governor Nov. 21, 1933; elected Jan. 16, 1934, Terms of Service 157 Group III.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1941 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 24; Republicans, 6; Progressive, 1; Farm-Labor, 1] Name Party Residence Xshurst, Henry B.C ee Austin, Warrew Ro Cl Bilbo, Theodore G- =. - i Burke, Udward Re il Byrd dH arty i RI00d. aa Chaves, Dennis rf PT . Cotmally lem or rt Copeland; Royal 8 cr Denshey i Vie or i Frazier, Lynd nT Clorry, Peter Gio sad sul i Sael0BRRs re -- Culley: Joseph Wr est Hale fhredericlt sr Holi, Bush DL aot Johnson, Hira Wo oo esas King Willing BE oe nk 1s Folleite, Bobert M., Jr... oi. MeRKellar: evmethys == ari 0 Maloney: Braneig or re rn Minton; Sherman oz = fe A ont Moore A Harrys oe dona O: Mahoney, Joseph Ct ro a Bittman eye en ire Badeliffe, Georse Ys. es Schwellenbaehy Lewis B 2-0 ooo...) Shipstead, Honpll tt ce ee naan Townsend Sf John G., Vr. Lr aca rave] Parks ee soni rnteon, Hl rr gS a A sa rnare Vandenbers, Arthur W220 7 oo Walsh, David = eo el er Wheelor, Burton 2 roc ao CROEDOU=mOOOOOOoREY Hd H Qo 0] SURPURLEPOPODDY Prescott, Ariz. Burlington, Vt. Poplarville, Miss. Omaha, Nebr. Berryville, Va. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Marlin, Tex. New York City, N. Y. Huntsville, Ohio, R F.D. Hoople, N. Dak. Warwick, R. I. Pittsburgh, Pa. Portland, Maine. Weston, W. Va. San Francisco, Calif. Salt Lake City, Utah. Madison, Wis. Memphis, Tenn. Meriden, Conn. New Albany, Ind. Jersey City, N. J. Cheyenne, Wyo. Tonopah, Nev. Baltimore, Md. Seattle, Wash. Miltona, Minn. Selbyville, Del. Lakeland, Fla. Independence, Mo. Grand Rapids, Mich. Clinton, Mass. Butte, Mont. 1 Appointed by governor May 11, 1935. 158 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS Beginnin Rank Namo State Bh ee 11 Borah, WilllamE.. ....|. ._. _ Idaho... ac. Mar. 4, 1907 9 [Fletcher, Bunean Weg oof «0 Florida... z= TO Be A SN South Carolina______ nto. 4, 1909 8 TAshurst, Henry 0... ..L _.. .. Arizona. von ipa Mar. 27, 1912 Pittman, Revo. ©. © .... Nevada: Lai... ewe ; fy Mornin ed Er fan. 29,1013 NorrisGeorge. W. or ecteneanaa Nebraska. be vutvvm 5 [Reet Jogeply Poe oot: 10 Arkansas. = o-oo f Mar. 4.9913 Hale, Frederiel.t 1... Maine 0. fac aius Kine, William. roa Btahs. edema 8 McKellar, Kenneth_.._..__._______ Tennessee... _. Mar. 4,1917 Trammell, Parkd 4 = Florida =o iia 7 Johnson, Hiram W_........_._.. California... tnwnms Mar. 16, 1917 8 |. McNary, Charles L.L............. OFOZON.. - Ans reeis ob Dec. 18, 1918 Capper, Arthut. cp loon Ransas. oe iii he 9 fri, OERE BLEE AR Miseigsipploe ~~~ 2 fa 4, 1919 Reyes, Henry. W....ncrmin na New Hamsphire__.___ 10 | Glass, Carter... ceive Virginia. 5 oo Abii Feb. 2,1920 11 | Norbeck, Peter ii. wa-ad oo South Dakota_______ Mar. 4,1921 12 | George, Wallop PB... cowie Georgia... unt cin we Nov. 22, 1922 13 Couzens, JAMES... nvg-vnte Michigan... d-vnes Nov. 29, 1922 Copeland, Boyal 8S. ........_... New York... 0h ites Frazier Lynd... ez-o-mui-o- North Dakota... .-_. 5 Shipstead, Henrik... o-oo eee. Minnesota... -.——- ~~ L028 Wheeler, Burton XK... Montana. - 5 ----—= 15.1 Metcalf, Jesse Hl... no. no -- Rhode Island... ...-2. Nov. 5, 1924 16 | La Follette, Robert M., Jr______ Wisconsin... 3.220. Sept. 30, 1925 17 | Nye, Gerald P-......c..0ceen.-. North Dakota____.__ Nov. 14, 1925 18 Walsh, David L.2. cove oe em Massachusetts_ _ ____ Dec. 6, 1926 Barkley, Alben \W...con nunc Kentucky. 2: ands ) Black, Hugo Liste vote cee Alabamy.. - Ltr dee Hayden, Carl. o. cz Arizona... ic ce-innn 19 [ Steiwer, Frederick... ____ Oregon...- -3L-w-toxs Mar. 4, 1927 Thomas, Eimer rc Oklahoma. =~ ~~" _~-- Pydings, Millavd B=, Maryland. ___.___ pes (Wacner, Robert B.C. New York... . ._. J 20 { Vandenberg, Arthur H_...__...... Michigan... = Mar. 31, 1928 21 | Hastings, Daniel O..-- ---. - — Delaware... ---~-<- Dec. 10, 1928 Connally, Tom... 1 i... esas. 22 i 8 Jom QG., Jr... Delaware... -- | ar 41020 Bulkley, Robert J... «name OMG. ent c oa iw 23 cn Robert D......2 2-1. Wyoming... ~~~-- Dec. 1, 1930 MeGill, Ceorge.........-co-vaaniiz Roneas. o.oo 24 Davis, James J. on ese on Pennsylvania_______ Dec. 2, 1930 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 159 CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Rank Namo te’ | Beggt Bailey, Josiah W.iiieagat North Carolina______ Bankhead, John H,,72d:i022. Alabama. JL. ui0 0 Bulow, William J......08Y South Dakota... __.._ Byrnes, James FF... __.._______. South Carolina______ Coolidge, Marcus’ A____..__.___._. Massachusetts. _ ____ Costigan, Edward P____._______ Coloradot iotais oF 25 | Dickinson, L. J... ashe) © Towa... aedada Mer, | 4, 1931 Core, Thomas Pos nad. Oklahoma... sae 2 Lewis, J. Hamilton to aid © Illinois. .{ sumacl) of Logan, M. M___ soins oad Kentauckyo oa. Neely, Matthew M.5____________ West Virginia_______ White, Wallace H., Jr... _...| Maine... Loud 26.:{: Austin, Warren: Rooiy oo)... | Vermont... 2 Joo Apr. 1,1931 27 | Caraway, Hattie W......... .. Arkansas’ ____. Nov. 13, 1931 28 | Barbour, W..- Warren's... _..__.- New Jersey_________ Dee. 1,1931 29 | Reynolds, Robert R__________.__ North Carolina______ Dee. 5, 1932 30=l Russell, Richard Bi, dr? 5 (Georgia. I= Jan. 12, 1933 31: | Clark, Bennett Champ... 5... = Missoust. ..... i. Feb. 4, 1933 (Adams, Alva. BY... Colorado... -... Bachman, Nathanl.%.-__ : Tennessee... Bone, Homer T..0uc. ai ot A Washington... ... Brown, Pred H.. iu... 5.3 New Hampshire_____ Byrd, Harry Floods.........8. Virginia... 0... Dieterich, William H.._.._..._._.. Tlinels. .. 0... Dully;elP-Ryan. oa. i Wisconsin... .-__ 32 | Lonergan, Augustine__.________ Connecticut _Z" Mar. 4, 1933 McAdoo, William Gibbs________ California. =. =: MeCarran, Pate: Vie 200 Nevada =... 1 Murphy, Louis. - Zeca. .0 TOWH..c5 rican naan d Overion, Jom HJ 2. Louisiana: . Pope, James P-_ vuoi. Jo 0 Idaho "ce ooiai. Thomas, Elbert: D--.. Hah oo... Won Nuys, Fredericks 7° Indiana. 20. a ol oo i Hateh, Carl A Goa 0 New Mexico... ¢ Oct. 10, 1933 84 | Gibson, Ernest WB ___...____.: Vermont. c-cone a Nov. 21, 1933 35 | O'Mahoney, Joseph C.22_________ Wyoming... ....... Jan. 1,1934 361 Murray, James B28... . ..... Montonn....c...--.. Nov. 7,1934 3 Mr. Gore also served in the Senate from Dec. 11, 1907, to Mar. 3, 1921. 4 Mr. Lewis also served in the Senate from Mar. 26, 1913, to Mar. 3, 1919. 5 Mr. Neely also served in tlie Senate from Mar. 4, 1923, to Mar. 3, 1929. 8 Appointed Dec. 1, 1931, and elected Nov. 8, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator Dwight W. Morrow. 7 Elected Nov. 8, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator William J. Harris. 8 Mr. Adams also served in the Senate from May 17, 1923, to Nov. 30, 1924. 9 Appointed Feb. 28, 1933, and elected Nov. 6, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Cordell Hull. 10 Appointed Oct. 10, 1933, and elected Nov. 6, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Sam G. Bratton. 11 Appointed Nov. 21, 1933, and elected Jan. 16, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Porter H. Dale. 12 Appointed Dec. 18, 1933, and elected Nov. 6, 1934, to fill the unexpired term of Senator John B.Kendrick; also elected on the same day for the full term ending Jan. 3, 1941. 13 Elected Nov. 6, 1934, to fill unexpired term of Senator Thomas J. Walsh. 160 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Beginning of Rank Name State Bt 1 RT [Bilbo, Theodore G.o: diced nnn Mississippi. C. coial. Burke, ldward RB. .--..iif | __ Nebraska -dcl fo. Donahey, Vie...onatl iducde soir Olle. fl. fo dese iti. Gerry, Peter Gl... 0 oven i. Rhode Island. _.____ Cufiey, JogephP..clnwii- oo - Pennsylvania. ______ 37 i Maloney, Francis Toioolc Donn Connecticut... ____ Jan. 3,1935 Minton, Sherman... ew Indiana. .i.J. 0.000 Moore, A. Harry. £06080 ve New Jersey... i. iol. Radcliffe, George Loo wna Maryland) ooo lL Schwellenbach, Lewis Bo________ Washington....-~ .-5.. Truman, Harry SLC Loi swe Missouri iL uol lil 38 | Chavez, Dennis 2... uli Ll Low. New Mexico. _______ May 11, 1935 39. Holt, Bush DX... uid bie West Virginia... _____ June 21, 1935 14 Mr. Gerry also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1917, to Mar. 3, 1929. 15 Appointed May 11, 1935, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Bronson Cutting. 16 Sworn in June 21, 1935. Terms of Service 161 CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE [*Elected to fill a vacancy; resigned; {unseated by contested election] 30063°—T74—2—1ST ED—— 11 Name State Dl Congresses (inclusive) Bo ak 15 terms, consecutive Sabath, Adolph J........ ....- 6 00thto 74th... Mar. 4, 1907 1/4 terms, consecutive Byrns, Joseph W________ Tenn _ _ 5 | 8lstto/ 74th... d.. Mar. 4, 1909 Taylor; Edward T.. J: Colo_.__ 4 | 6lstto 74th... __:. Mar. 4, 1909 13 terms, consecutive Doughton, Robert L_____ WNiCo: 9 62dito 74th. -_..-__ Mar. 4, 1911 12 terms, consecutive Buchanan, James P______ Mox....| | 10 | #63d to 74th... i. Apr. 5,1913 Mapes, Carl E_________. Mich. _ 51 63dto7the: Mar. 4, 1913 Montague, Andrew J_____ Va iid 3[63dto 74th. one. Mar. 4, 1913 Bayburn, Sami. _....] Pexis 4 63dito7dth. Mar. 4, 1913 “Sumners, Hatton W______ Tex. i 5 1 63dt0i 74th co 0.0 Mar. 4, 1913 Treadway, Allen T_______ Mass_ _ LE63dito74th Mar. 4 1913 Vinsoh, Carl... 0. 0 Ca... 6[-*63d- to 74th..." Nov. 38,1914 11 terms, consecutive Bacharach, Isaac________ N.J:r 2 Giihteo7dth = Mar. 4, 1915 Cooper, John @... ....... Ohio.....|. 119 64th to. 74th. ...._. Mar. 4, 1915 Darrow, George P_______ Phe 7 | 64th to. 74th satis Mar. 4, 1915 Huddleston, George______ Ala. ... 9 | 64th to 74th_____._. Mar. 4, 1915 Lehlbach, Frederick B.CILf N. J. L0[ 12 | 64thito 74th... % Mar. 4, 1915 Oliver, William B________ Ala dL 6 (64th io'7dth_____..! Mar. 4, 1915 Snell, Bertrand H...__.._ NOY | 131 | #64th to 74th = fi Nov. 2,1915 Steagall, Henry B________ Ala l.. 3 | 64th to 74th________ Mar. 4, 1915 Tinkham, George Holden_| Mass__| 10 | 64th to 74th________ Mar. 4, 1915 Wilson, Riley J... Ta. .C.0 5 | 64th to 74th___._____ Mar. 4, 1915 10 terms, consecutive Bankhead, William B____| Ala____ 7: i6bthiio74th on. Mar. 4, 1917 Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ Vah-.ce 1¢ |: %65th 10 74th. .- July 2,1918 Blanton, Thomas L.___._._ Tex_...| 17 | 65th to *71st and | May 20, 1930 72d to 74th. Jones; Marvin. +... n= Pex. ...| 13 65ihlo 74th. --- Mar. 4, 1917 Knutson, Harold li laad Minn _ _ 61) 65thito 74th 0. 58 Mar. 4, 1917 Lea, Clarence F__ __._.___ Calif___ 151 :65th to" 74th... 95: Mar. 4, 1917 Mansfield, Joseph J______ Tex ii. 9 | 66thite 74th. _----__ Mar. 4, 1917 Sullivan, Christopher D_._| N.Y._.| 13 [| 65thto 74th. ....... Mar. 4, 1917 162 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Congressional Directory Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) nh Tl 10 terms, not consecutive Crosser, Robert... ...... Ohio.__| 21 | 63d to 65th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 74th. 9 terms, consecutive Crowther, Frank_________ N.Y...| 1304 66thioT7dth Mar. 4, 1919 Cullen, Thomas H_______ N-Y... 4 | 66th to 74th________ Mar. 4, 1919 Drewry, Patrick H___ Ys. 4 | *66th to 74th_______ Apr. 27,1920 Fish, Hamilton, Jr... N.Y: 26 { *66thdto 74th... Nov. 2,1920 Lanham, Fritz CG... Mex 00 12 | *66thite 74th... Apr. 19, 1919 Mead, James M_________ N-Y_ 42] 66th to 74th = = Mar. 4, 1919 Ronsley, Harry C_..... Pa. 1 { *66th {o 74the unis Nov. 2,1920 Reed, Daniel A _._._ N.Y | 43 66thtoZath Mar. 4, 1919 Baylor, J.-Will_ _._..__& Tenn _ _ 2 | 66thto74th = x Mar. 4,1919 9 terms, not consecutive Focht, Benjamin K______ Pa. bo 18 | 60th to 62d, 64th to | Mar. 4, 1933 67th, 73d, and 74th. Merritt, Schuyler__.______ Conn___ 4 | *65th to 71st, 73d, | Mar. 4, 1933 and 74th. Romjue, Milton A_______ Mo: ;.& 1 | 65th, 66th, and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 74th. Sears, William J..._..__4: Fla____|At L.| 64th to 70th, 73d, | Mar. 4, 1933 and 74th. Weaver, Zebulon________ N.C___| 10 | {65th to 70th and | Mar. 4, 1931 72d to 74th. Woodruff," Roy C------12 Mich__| 10 | 63d and 67th to 74th_| Mar. 4, 1921 8 terms, consecutive Andrew, A. Piatt________ Mass. _ 6; | *67th to 74th i... a Sept. 27, 1921 Driver, William J________ Ark. Lil 1 | 67th to74th........ J. Mar. 4, 1921 Fulmer, Hampton P_____ S+Cira 2: 67ihito74th Mar. 4, 1921 Gifford, Charles L._ ______ Mass...| 15 | *67th to 74th. ______ Nov. 7, 1922 Goldsborough, T. Alan___| Md____ 1: | 67th to74thal iat on Mar. 4, 1921 MeSwain, John J... .. S..Cd:i 4 | 67th to. 74th... _____ Mar. 4, 1921 Parks, Tilman B......... Ark... 74 8Tth to 7th... Mar. 4, 1921 Perkins, Randolph_______ N.J 7 | 67th lo 74th 2° 0 Mar. 4, 1921 Bankin, Jon KE... ..... Miss__ 1167th to 74th. ..... Mar. 4, 1921 Sanders, Morgan G______ Tex = S| O6/thto7dth — _____ Mar. 4, 1921 Sandlin, John N_-.----_ i haga 4 | 67thto'74th________ Mar. 4, 1921 8 terms, not consecutive Ashbrook, William A_____ Ohio___| 17 | 60th to 66th and 74th_| Jan. 3, 1935 McLeod, Clarence J______ Mich. _| 13 | *66th and 68th to | Mar. 4, 1923 74th. Michener, Earl C________ Mich ._ _ 2 | 66th to 72d and 74th_| Jan. 3, 1935 Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued 163 Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) Sn ingot 7 terms, consecutive Bacon, Robert L...._._____ NoY.L LH.68th to 74th... Mar. 4, 1923 Bloom, Selif NSY.oop 19 | *6Sthdo 74th... ova Mar. 4, 1923 Boylan, Johmn'J...........-5 NoXY..2p 15 68th todth... 1 Mar. 4,1923 Cannon, Clarence. ._____ Mo. ..L 9 ( 68th to 74th________ Mar. 4, 1923 Celler, Emanuel. _______ NoYoop 10 | 68th -to4th. 3 Mar. 4, 1923 Connery, William P., Jr. Mass__| 7 [68thto 74th... _. Mar. 4, 1923 Corning, Parker... NOY Lp 28 | 63thite! 74th oi Mar. 4,1923 Dickstein, Samuel. _ _ ____ N.Y... 12 6SihtoT4h ~~. Mar. 4, 1923 Gambrill, Stephen W_____ Md... 5: | *68th to 74thoi oan Nov. 4, 1924 Gasque, Allard H..______ 8.0. 1 Gi] GSthy to Tath-----.c. Mar. 4, 1923 Greenwood, Arthur H____| Ind____ 7 | 6Sthlo 74th... Mar. 4, 1923 Lister... Ala. 2 ZeSthto7dth, Aug. 14, 1923 Hill, Samuel B__________ Wash. _ 5 | ®68thito 74th... Sept. 25, 1923 Johnson, Luther A... ___. Tex. (.. 6 { 63th to 74th... ..-.. Mar. 4, 1923 Kerr, JohnH. _ 0.3 5. N-CiiJp 2] *6Sthdo 7ath.._--.. Nov. 6,1923 McReynolds, Sam D_____ Tenn] 3 | 68thio 74th... _._ Mar. 4, 1923 O’Connor, John J__.______ N.XY..f 16 | *6Sth-to 74th... .: |"Nov.v 6,1023 Seger, George N_________ NTL 81 63thto 74th... _.... Mar. 4, 1923 Taber, John... ._ 3.200. N.Y..[) 36 | 68th to: 74th... ..._ 2. Mar. 4, 1923 Underwood, Mell G______ Ohio.-f 11 | 65thto74th..._.. ... Mar. 4, 1923 Woodrum, Clifton A_____ Va... 6 16th ito 74th. ~ =. Mar. 4, 1923 "7 terms, mot consecutive Bulwinkle, Alfred L______ N.C___| 10 | 67th to 70th, and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 74th. Eagle, Joe lH...) Tex____.| 8 | 63dto66thand *72d | Jan. 28, 1933 to 74th. McAndrews, James... ____ Tid od 9.1 57th, 58th, 63d to { Jan. 38,1935 66th, and 74th. Reece,’ B. Carroll... 0... Tenn __ 1 | 67th to 71st, 73d, | Mar. 4, 1933 : and 74th. Robsion, John M _. .... __ Kyo Lol 9 { 66th to 171st, and | Jan. 3, 1935 74th. 6 terms, consecutive Carter, Albert E........... Calif... 6 | 69thile 74h... ...... Mar. 4, 1925 Cochran, John J... 33 Mo....} 13 | *69thto 74th_._.__. Nov. 2, 1926 Co, W. Bitr. oo 50 Gai lly 2 | 60th ie74th.. = Mar. 4, 1925 Eaton, Charles A________ NoJosu 5 | 60thto 74th... L Mar. 4, 1925 Englebright, Harry L____| Calif___ 2 69h to 74th.......... Aug. 31, 1926 Green, Robert A_________ Plo... 2 60th to 74th. oo: Mar. 4, 1925 Jenkins, Thomas A_____._ Ohio_...{ 10 | 69%thieo74th_.. ____ Mar. 4,1925 Kahn, Florence P________ Calif ___ 4 | *69th to 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1925 McMillan, Thomas S_____ S.C... 1 [69h toh. ...oaaa Mar. 4, 1925 Martin, Joseph W.,Jr____| Mass __| 14 | 69th to 74th________ Mar. 4,1925 164 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Congressional Directory Name State Die Congresses (inclusive) Ae 6 terms, consecutive—con. Norton, Mary T............ N..J. 22 13 | 69hto 74th... _. Mar. 4, 1925 Rogers, Edith Nourse. ___| Mass __ 5 | *69th to 74th. ______ June 30, 1925 Somers, Andrew L_______ No¥X is 6il 60th{o74th.......... Mar. 4,1925 Thurston, Lloyd... .._... Towa.___ 5 69%hiei74th. _.___ Mar. 4,1925 Warren, Lindsay C______ N.C..; 1H:69%thdo 74th... Mar. 4,1925 Weleh, Richard J... Calif___ 5 | *69th to 74th_..__.. Aug. 31, 1926 Whittington, William M__| Miss___ 35 69thdo THh..uun as Mar. 4, 1925 6 terms, not consecutive Guyer; U.S... i Kans__| 2 | *68th and 70th to | Mar. 4, 1927 74th. Lewis, David Joo .______ Md____ 6 | 62d to 64th and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 74th. Nelson, William L_______ Mo. zd 2 | 66th, 69th to 72d, | Jan. 3, 1935 and 74th. Reilly, Michael K________ Wisdic, 6 | 63d, 64th, and *71st | Nov. 4, 1930 to 74th. Schneider, George J______ Wis____ 8 | 68th to 72d and 74th_| Jan. 3, 1935 Vinson, Fred M._ _.__..... Ky... 8 | *68th to 70th and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 74th. 5 terms, consecutive Buekbee, John T. ....... TH. 5. 12° 70th to 74th. o.oo. Mar. 4, 1927 Cartwright, Wilburn_____ Okla___ 8: 70th to7ath. ... .L5. Mar. 4,1927 Culkin, Francis D.......... N.Y: | 32 *othto74th........ Nov. 6, 1928 DeRouen, René L_______ Laci Lz 1 7 [| ¥70thto 74th... Aug. 23, 1927 Douirich, Isaac H....... Pat ix 19 70th to 74th... Mar. 4, 1927 Fitzpatrick, James M..._['N. Yi..| 24 | 70th to 74th. ___.... Mar. 4, 1927 Gregory, William V______ Ky. ad. TE %thio74h Mar. 4, 1927 Hancock, Clarence E_____ N. Yi: 35 | *70th-to' 74th... iL Nov. 8, 1927 Hope, Clifford B..._...: Kans - 7 70th to 74h. Mar. 4, 1927 Johnson, Jed- i... ai. Okla__._ 6 | 70th to 74th. _._ =: Mar. 4, 1927 MeCormack, John W....| Mass: | 112 | ¥70th to 74th... Nov. 6, 1928 Palmisano, Vincent L____| Md____ 3 | 70th to 74th________ Mar. 4, 1927 Sirovieh, William I_.___.. N.Y. | {14 | 70hio744h. ....... Mar. 4, 1927 Tarver, Malcolm C______ Gai..il 7 | 70thite 74th... Mar. 4, 1927 Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Mass__| 13 | *70th to 74th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolfenden, James_ _ _____ Pa... io 8 ( *70th to 74th __._____ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolverton, Charles A____| N. J___ 1 |. 70thto 74th... A Mar. 4, 1927 b terms, not consecutive Andresen, August H_____ Minn__ 1 | 69th to 72d and 74th_| Jan. 3, 1935 Chapman, Virgil _________ Ky: 540 6 | 69th, 70th, and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 74th. SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Terms of Service 165 Name Ds Congresses (inclusive) BE 5 terms, not consecutive— continued Cravens, Ben_. 4 | 60th to 62d, 73d and | Mar. 4, 1933 74th. Gray, Pinly HH... ois 10 | 62d to 64th, 73d and | Mar. 4, 1933 74th. 4 terms, consecutive Bolton, Chester C_______ 224 71st to 74th... LA - Mar. 4, 1929 Clark, J. Bayard.......... ~~ - 7 | 71st to 74th... Mar. 4, 1929 Cooper, Jere... mw www S/ Megtio 74th... Mar. 4, 1929 Grogs, O Haid... o oy 1% i 7ist to 74th... ... 22 Mar. 4, 1929 Doxey, Walls... co on mv mo 2. Tish to. Mth... ii Mar. 4, 1929 Fuller, Claude A_..___.__ S34 7st to 74th. ..... 0 -- Mar. 4, 1929 Gavagan, Joseph A______ 21 | *7lst to 4th... uz. Nov. 5, 1929 Granfield, William J_____ 2. *lst.to 74th.......__- Feb. 11, 1930 Haneoek, Frank... 5. ist to 74th... ......-- Nov. 4,1930 Hartley, Fred A., Jr... 10x! Tlgt to: 74th... .---- Mar. 4, 1929 Hess, Willam B...cx-vm-- 2] 71st to. 7410... : Mar. 4, 1929 Kennedy, Martin J._..___ 18 | *71st lo 74th... ... 2 Mar. 11, 1930 Kinzer, J. Boland... .. 10, *7ist tod 4th... Jan. 28, 1930 Kvale Policia coe oem - 7) ¥7lst.10. 74th. ov... Oct. 16, 1929 Lambertson, William P___ hel 7Tlst to fdth.... Mar. 4,1929 Ludlow, Louis... cc... 12 [ 71st 30 74th... 4 Mar. 4, 1929 Montet, Numa FF... .__. 3 | ist tofi4th.... 5 ux Aug. 6,1929 Parsons, Claude V_______ 24. *7ist lo 74h. oc Nov. 4, 1930 Potman, Wright... Ld Tist to 7dth. ..... Mar. 4,1929 Ramspeck, Robert.______ 5} lesbo 74th... x Oct. 2,1929 Rieh, Robert ¥.... 164 *7ist to 74th... o.. Nov. 4, 1930 Smithadocelie. 6. Tig to 74h... ..00 Mar. 4, 1929 Turpin, C.. Murray... 12. Vlas lo gdh... June 4, 1929 4 terms, not consecutive Cole, William P., Jr______ 2 | 70th and 72d to 74th_| Mar. 4, 1931 Delaney, Jolin J......... 7 | *65th and *72d to | Nov. 38,1931 74th. Fletcher, Brooks... 8 | 69th, 70th, 73d, and | Mar. 4, 1933 74th. Maag, Melvin J... 4 | 70th to 72d and 74th_| Jan. 3, 1935 Martin, Johm/ALL: © 3 | 61st, 62d, 73d, and | Mar. 4, 1933 74th. Rogers, William N.....__ 1 | 68th and *72d to | Jan. 5, 1932 74th. Williams, Clyde. .._____ 8 | 70th and 72d to 74th_| Mar. 4, 1931 3 terms, consecutive Andrews, Walter G______ 40 | T2408 hE cannes Mar. 4, 1931 Beam, Horry Poon... 4:4 72d 40:7 4th L . . ... Mar. 4, 1931 166 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Congressional Directory Name State Dis- Congresses (inclusive) Beginning of trict present service 3 terms, consecutive—con. Boehne, John W., Jr_____ Ind: 8 572d to:74th.......--- Mar. 4, 1931 Boileau, Gerald J... ..... Wis... 7 "72dt0i 74h... Mar. 4, 1931 Boland, Patrice J... Paz can 1.45 72d to 74h... Mar. 4, 1931 Burch, Thomas C...........| Va... 51#72dto 74th.......... Mar. 4, 1931 Cary, Glover H{..... ..... Ky.... 2 72d to 4th... cine Mar. 4, 1931 Castellow, Bryant T_____ Co: % gad to 74th... .- Nov. 8, 1932 Cavicchia, Peter A_______ NST = dp 72d 0 F4th = 2c Mar. 4, 1931 Crowe, Eugene B________ Ind’ 22 0: | 72440 73th src? Mar. 4, 1931 Dies, Martin: ...oooual Tex. = 2 72d to%dh. nn Mar. 4, 1931 Disney, Wesley E________ Okla___ Yi 72dtoT4th. nn Mar. 4, 1931 Fernandez, Joachim O____| La_____ EE 72dt0: 74th. ix Mar. 4, 1931 Fiesinger, William L_____ Ohio.“ {* 13 | 72dito 74th. ~~ —* Mar. 4, 1931 Flannagan, John W., Jr___| Va_____ o~. 12d to dthe os 0. 1 Mar. 4, 1931 Gilchrist, Fred C...- 1° Towa___ 8) 72d te 7ath 5. Mar. 4, 1931 Griswold, Glenn... Ind... 5 272d toydth. Mar. 4, 1931 Haines, Harry 1... -:-of Ply da 2% 72dito 7th... 2x Mar. 4, 1931 Harlan, Byron B....---: Ohio___ 8 [672d 4007 dth Ti Mar. 4, 1931 Holligter, John B...----. Ohio BY *R2dto' 74th cL Nov. 3, 1931 Holmes, Pehr' CG. .- ==. Mass _ _ 472d to W4th... ool Mar. 4, 1931 Jacobsen, Bernhard M___| Towa___ 2 72440 Th ono Mar. 4, 1931 Keller, Kent’ BE. --.--:-:c2 TH 2 co 25 | 724 tof 74th. ~~ Mar. 4, 1931 Kelly, Edward A________ 23 dg 3 72d te'7ith ~~~ Mar. 4, 1931 Kennedy, Ambrose J_____ Md 41 *72d to 74th... ~~ Nov. 8, 1931 Kleberg, Richard M______ Tex 2 134° 572d to athens]. Nov. 24, 1932 Knifin, Frank C.-..-. -1“Ohio."" 5 {772d to" 74th. is Mar. 4, 1931 Lambeth, J. Walter______ NC S$ "72dtoTdth. Mar. 4, 1931 Lamneck, Arthur P______ Ohio" | 121 72d to74th. ~~ Mar. 4, 1931 Larrabee, William H_____ Ind. Li" iY F72d'te 7aith... 2k Mar. 4, 1931 Maloney, Paul H- 0... fats 272d t074th. Mar. 4,1931 May, Andrew J... .ccncn-- Kye 7 i2d to 74h. or Mar. 4, 1931 Millard, Charles D....... N.Y... =25 7 72dto74th.___. _.. Mar. 4, 1931 Millers John’. . Lo 0. Ark... 2 72d to 74th... lu. Mar. 4, 1931 Mitchell, John Ro... .._. Tenn iii 4 i 72d40 74h. nei Mar. 4, 1931 Pettengill, Samuel B_____ Indl. 3 | 72dto74th. Mar. 4, 1931 Polk, Jameg G....0c oa. Ohio___ 6 [72d toi7dth... one Mar. 4, 1931 Rudd, Stephen A__._._... N.Y... 9 ?ay2dto74ih........ Mar. 4, 1931 Schuetz, Leonard W____. Moti % 72d t094h.... ....-- Mar. 4, 1931 Shannon, Joseph B_______ Mo... 5 | 72d tol74th.. Mar. 4, 1931 Smith, Howard W___.__._ Vaio. 8S P72dtodth.. Mar. 4, 1931 Spence, Brent. _______._._. Ry. =k 5 (72d to 74th. ......C Mar. 4, 1931 Sutphin, William H______ N.Jo. S| 72dto 74th... Mar. 4, 1931 Sweeney, Martin Li______ Ohio.’ 20 | *72d toi74th........ Nov. 38,1931 Thomason, R. Ewing_____ Tex ...| 161 7T2dte 74th. .-. Mar. 4, 1931 Withrow, Gardner R_____ Wis... 3 [72d to 74th. --_. Mar. 4, 1931 Wolcott, Jesse Poooeemo- Mich _ . “i 72d to V4lh... oi Mar. 4, 1931 Terms of Service 167 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Diss Congresses (inclusive) Gor 3 terms, not consecutive Johnson, George W______ W.Va__ 4 | 68th, 73d, and 74th__| Mar. 4, 1933 Lundeen, Ernest_________ Minn _ _ 3 | 65th, 73d, and 74th__| Mar. 4, 1933 Pittenger, William A_____ Minn _ _ 8 | 71st, 72d, and 74th__| Jan. 3,1935 Turner, Clarence W______ Tenn___ 6 | *67th, 73d, and 74th_| Mar. 4, 1933 2 terms, consecutive Adair, J. Leroy........i- Tie ius 5 -73dcand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Allen, Leo:H. .........00US Tee fu 13 |73dand' 74th... 0 Mar. 4, 1933 Ayers, Roy B........ 0010 Mont__ 2 78diand: 74th. JL Lo Mar. 4, 1933 Beiter, Alfred F.___.._..: Na¥Yo.) 41 [-73dand 74th... .... Mar. 4, 1933 Berlin, William M_______ Pa... 28 | 73d and’ 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Biermann, Pred. ....... 0. Towa___ 4 | 73d and 74th. ._____ Mar. 4, 1933 Brennan, Martin A______ es. ue Atl, | 73d and 74th... Mar. 4,1933 Brooks, J. Twing........ 0. Po Jil 30 |"73diand 74th... ...- Mar. 4, 1933 Brown, Paul... iJ} Ga: | 10 | 278d and 74th. July 15,1933 Brown, Prentiss M_______ Mich_..{ {11 [773d and 74th... -- Mar. 4, 1933 Buck FrankH.........00 Calif ___ 3 "73d. andi74ih.. ...... 00 Mar. 4, 1933 Burnham, George._..__._ Calif ..] 20 [73d and 74th. ooo. Mar. 4, 1933 Caldwell, Millard F______ Pla i 3| 73d and 74th_._...._. Mar. 4, 1933 Cannon, Raymond J_____ Wis___. 4 iA73dand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Carmichael, A. H..__.._. Ala___: 8 | *73d'and 74th... Nov. 14, 1933 Carpenter, Randolph_____ Kans___ 4 73d and’ 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Christianson, Theodore_._._| Minn. 5 {73diand 74th... .... Mar. 4, 1933 Claiborne, James R______ Mo....l 12 [73d and 74th... .._.10. Mar. 4, 1933 Colden, Charles J________ Calif... 171. 73dand 74th... .. Mar. 4, 1933 Collins, Samuel Li________ Calif_...| 19 | 73d and 74th.______. Mar. 4, 1933 Colmer, William M.______ Miss_.. 6|73dand 74th......... Mar. 4, 1933 Cooley, Harold D........ ReCiol 4 1 *73d and 74th... July 7,1934 Crosby, Charles N_______ Pas Ll 29 | 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Cummings, Fred_________ Colo.__ 2! 73d and 74th... 1: Mar. 4, 1933 Darden, Colgate W., Jr.__| Va____. 2 | 73dand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Dear, Cleveland. _..____ Ii 1 S| 73dtandi7dth........... Mar. 4, 1933 Deen, Braswell... ........... Gas. Ll 8| 73d and 74th... ._.__. Mar. 4, 1933 Dingell, Jon D..._.._...H Michi: 15 {73d and 74th... .. : Mar. 4, 1933 Dirksen, Everett M______ i SET 16 [73d and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Ditter, JuWilliam......... 2 Pa bis 17 | 73d and 74th......... Mar. 4, 1933 Dobbins, Donald C..____ | RT 19 {| 73d and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Dockweiler, John F______ Calif___| 16 | 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4,1933 Dondero, George A______ Mich} 17 | 73d and! 74th_._._... 2 Mar. 4, 1933 Duffey, Warren J_._._._._ Ohio___ 0 i:73d and 74th......... Mar. 4, 1933 Duncan, Richard M______ Mo: 3 1:73dand 74th... .... = Mar. 4, 1933 Dunn, Matthew A_______ Pac... 34 | 73dand 74th... _.__ Mar. 4, 1933 Edmiston, Andrew._______ W. Va_ 3| *73d and 74th...._.__ Nov. 28, 1933 Eicher, Edward C_______ Towa___ 1 {734 andiV4th......5.: Mar. 4, 1933 Ellenbogen, Henry._______ Pa... 33i| 73d andi 74th... ....._ Mar. 4, 1933 PFaddis, Charles I......._ Pa.:... 25.) 73d and 74th... 00 Mar. 4, 1933 168 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Congressional Directory Name State Du: Congresses (inclusive) Repanp. 2 terms, consecutive—con. Farley, James 1. LJ... Ind. 4 (73d and 74th___ 3: Mar. 4, 1933 Ford, Thomas FF... Du. Calif ___| 14 | 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Brey, Oliver W..c. il Lo Po. lo 0 | *73dand 74th. o.= Nov. 7, 1933 Gillette, Guy M_________ Towa___ 9 | 73d and 74th______._ Mar. 4, 1933 Goodwin, Philip A_______ NY: | 27 | 73dandi7dth.- Mar. 4, 1933 Greenway, Isabella_______ Ariz. __|JAtL.| *73d and 74th. uc. Oct. 3,1933 Harter, Dow W........... Ohjo...1 141 73d and 7th... Mar. 4, 1933 Healey, Arthur D________ Mass _ _ 8 78dand 74th... Mar. 4,1933 Higgins, William L_______ Conn. Z| 73d and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Hildebrandt, Fred H_____ S. Dak. 1 | 73dand 74th... .... Mar. 4, 1933 iL Rnateld oo. iid Wash __ 4 | 73d and 74th... Mar. 4,1933 Hoeppel, John H________ Calif_..| 12:{ 73d and:V4th... .._ Mar. 4, 1933 Imhoff, Lawrence E_._____ Ohio... | 18 | 78diand 74th... 3 Mar. 4, 1933 Jenckes, Virginia E______ Inde 6 {73d and 74th. _.___._ Mar. 4,1933 Reo, John. ht... iid W. Va_ | 78d and 74th... ... 00 Mar. 4,1933 Kenney, Edward A______ N. J... 9| 738d and 74th. _.._.__ Mar. 4, 1933 Kloeb, Frank IL..........L. Ohio___ 4d | 73diand 74th... Wi: Mar. 4, 1933 Kocialkowski, Leo_______ hE ETR 8 | 7T3dand 74th... ... Mar. 4, 1933 Kopplemann, Herman P__| Conn. _ 1 | 73d andi74th.__..... Mar. 4,1933 Kramer, Charles__.__._____ Calif. | (18 | 73d and 74th___3__: Mar. 4,1933 Lemke, William_.___._____ N. Dak.[At L.| 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Lesingki, John... ...... 0. Miehiol 16 | 78d and 74th... = Mar. 4, 1933 Lewis, Lawrence._________ Colo___ 1 | 73deand 74th. Solis Mar. 4,1933 Lloyd, Wesley__._________ Wash .__ 6 | 73d and 74th. ______ Mar. 4, 1933 McFarlane, W. D________ Tex-io.| 13| 73d and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 McGrath, John J. _______ Calif ___ 8 | 73dand 74th... ...__ Mar. 4, 1933 McLean, Donald H______ NJ 6 73d and:74th........ Mar. 4, 1933 Marshall, LAT... 00 Ohio. __ % | 73dand 4th... ... 2 Mar. 4, 1933 Meeks, James A_________ ls Li 18 | 73d and 74th... Mar. 4,1933 Monaghan, Joseph P_____ Mont. _ EL 73d andi74th.- = Mar. 4, 1933 Moran, Edward C., Jr____| Me____ 2 | 73d. and:74th. .. = Mar. 4, 1933 Mott, iJames W..__.......0l Oreg._-_ Y{ Y3dand 74th... lo Mar. 4, 1933 Murdock, Abe___________ Utah __ 1 {| 73d andi 74th... 5 Mar. 4, 1933 O’Brien, Thomas J_______ 11528800 6 | 73d andi74th.._... Mar. 4, 1933 O’Connell, John M_______ Bb hi 2 | 73dand 74th... L Mar. 4, 1933 O’Malley, Thomas. ._._____ Wis____ 5 73d and 74th. i. Mar. 4, 1933 Owen B. Mo... ..:00 Ga... 4 | 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Peterson, J. Hardin. ._.__ Flag hi 18 | 78d.andi74th. i; Mar. 4, 1933 Peyser, Theodore A______ NoXLy 17, 78dandi74th.. oo. Mar. 4, 1933 Pierce, Walter M________ Oreg___ 2 | 73diand 74th... . = Mar. 4, 1933 Plumley, Charles A_ _____ Vi hos AtL.| *73d and 74th______ Jan. 16, 1934 Powers, D. Lane_________ NJ i 4 | 738d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Ramsay, Robert L_______ W. Va_ | 73dandi74th.... 2.2 Mar. 4, 1933 Randolph, Jennings______ W.Va. | 2 | 73diand 74th... 2:2 Mar. 4, 1933 Richards, James P_______ SAC. LL] | 5 [73dandi 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Richardson, William E___| Pa_____ 14: 73d and 74th... 1: Mar. 4, 1933 Robertson, A. Willis_ ____ Vad... 7-1 73d and 74th... _.. Mar. 4, 1933 Terms of Service 169 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Pi Congresses (inclusive) Lon 2 terms, consecutive—con. Robinson; J: "W...-.-c.-- Utah... 2.1 73d'and 74th. ....-- Mar. 4, 1933 Bogers, Will. ....ccaucu- Okla___|AtL.| 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Sadowski, George G______ Mich _ _ 1{ 73d and 74th. ...... Mar. 4, 1933 Sanders, Jared Y., Jr.__.__ La.ilr 6 | *73d'and 74th. ..- May 1,1934 Schaefer, Edwin M______ IH} ONCE 22 | 73d and 74th. _._.._. Mar. 4, 1933 Schulte, William T_______ Ind. C. 1 [| 73dand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Scrugham, James G._____ Nev___[AtL.| 78d and 74th__._____ Mar. 4, 1933 Secrest, Robert T.....__. Ohio_..! 15 | 73d and 74th. ...__. Mar., 4,1933 Sisson, Fred J...-couooxc- N.Y... 33 | 73dand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Smith, Martin P........- Wash__ 3 | 73dand 74th. ...... Mar.: 4, 1933 Snyder, J. Buell _________ Pa.ii 24 | 73d and 74th. ..._._. Mar.’ 4, 1933 Stubbs, Henry Bo... = Calif... 10 | 73d and 74th....-... Mar. 4, 1933 Taylor, JoinC. cw. oxex 8.0... 8} 73d and 74th....... Mar. 4, 1933 Terry, David Downe Ark____ 5 | *73d and 74th______ Dec. 19, 1933 Thom, William R.......-- Ohio... 16 | 73d°'and 74th... .._. Mar. 4,1933 Thomas, William D_____. N.Y. -| 290) *73d and 74th...... Jan. 30, 1934 Thompson, Chester______ 4 SE 14 { 78d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Tobey, Charles W._______ NH. 2 | 73d-and 74th... _.. Mar. 4, 1933 Umstead, William B_____ N.C._f 6] 73dand 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Wadsworth, James W____| N.Y__| 39 | 73d and 74th______. Mar. 4, 1933 Wallgren, Monrad C_____ Wash__{ 2 | 73d and 74th_._-___ Mar. 4, 1933 Walter, Francis E________ Pa lio) 21. | 73dsand 74th... ... Mar. 4, 1933 Wearin, Otha D___.__._. Yowa__.| ‘7 | 73dand 74th. ...._._: Mar. 4, 1933 Werner, Theo. B_________ S. Dak. 2 | 73d and 74th. ____.__ Mar. 4,1933 West, Milton H. . ..... - Tex Z|: 15 | *73d'and 74th... ... Apr. 22,1933 White, Compton I_______ Idaho. _ 1.| 73d'and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 Wilcox, J. Mark... Plali 4 | 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4,1933 Wood, Reuben T________ Mol =. 6 | 73dand 74th... .- Mar. 4,1933 Young, Stephen M_______ Ohio_.__[AtL.| 73d and 74th_______ Mar. 4, 1933 Zioncheck, Marion A_____ Wash __ 1 | 73d'and 74th... Mar. 4, 1933 2 terms, not consecutive Amlie, Thomas R__._.___ Wis... 1 | #72d and 74th... ... Jan.: 73,1985 Hull, Merlin... Wis____ 9 | 7lst and 74th._____. Jan. 3,1935 Short, Dewey... .....-.. Melis: 7 | 7istand 74th. _._..__ Jan. 3, 1935 1 term Arends, Leslie C_________ Mooi: 17 | 74th. conn Jan. 3, 1935 Barden, Graham A_______ N.C... 3 | iTatho ib ol 2000 Jan. 38,1935 Barry, William B______.__ NY: 2 HL nn Nov. 5, 1935 Bell, C. Jasper.-=...-.:-:: Mol... 4 V74hEL os Jan. 38,1935 Binderup; C. Gace -cc-a- Nebr___ 4 74 oon Jan. 3, 1935 Blackney, William W_____ Mich __ 6 | THN Local Jan. 3, 1935 Boykin, Frank W_______._ Alal ll) 1 [#8 oo July 30, 1935 Brewster, Ralph O_____.. Maine - Silr7dth,. io ios Jan. 3,1935 170 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) Ll 1 term—continued Buckler, B..T. oo nail Minn. _ 9 dhe ve Jan... 3,1935 Buckley, Charles A______ Nays 128 4a7dthayer Jan. 3, 1935 Burdick, Usher L....._..: N-DRak ALL. | 74h © 3 Jan. 3,1935 Carlson, Frank... .....0.: Kans __ 6 Wath 3: _J..7 Jan. 3,1935 Casey, Joseph BE. ........ 0. Mass __ Se TE la EE Jan. 3, 1935 Chandler, Walter________ Tenn __ SEER hn Se I Jan. 3,1935 Chureh, Ralph E_..... Hf SEE 104 7dthacis it yo. Jan. . 3,1935 Citron, William M_______ Connie ATd. [7atheate tL... FB. Jan.. 3,1935 Clark, D.. Worth...... Idaho._._ 2 EEE Jan. 3,1935 Coffee, Harry B.....-- 2.- Nebr_._._ B ffAthsg eno Jan.i 5 3; 1935 Cole, W. Sterling... NaXb.o| (37 [74th g 0... Jan. 3,1935 Costello, John MM... iL Califo 118 (1 74thy. Oo. Jan. 3,1935 Crawford, Fred L..___.__ Mich 8 (Wdthy oo. Jan. 3, 1935 Creal, Edward W________ Ry fas d Path. i... .... cf Nov.i 51935 Curley, Edward W_______ Non 122 Mh. One a Nov. 5, 1935 | Daly, J. Burrwood._______ Pa.biss 4 (Tl fl oe Jan. 3, 1935 | Dempsey, John J________ N-Mex AGL. (74th. oo... ies Jan. 3, 1935 Dietrich, C. Elmer_______ Ba. bo GE BE ey 1 SS 1 Jan. 3, 1935 Dorsey, Frank J. G______ Poa 5.23 Si Fdthigath. GO aon Jan. 3,1935 Driscoll, BA... did Pao. ios 20 [Fath aes Ur aa Jan. 3, 1935 Duffy, James P. B......J.. Nec: 38 [Hath ich... Dba Jan. . 3,1935 | | Dunn, Aubert C........c:5 Miss_-_ 5 dh 0... Jan. 3, 1935 | Eckert, Charles R_______ Pais: 20 | 74th ad fae Jan. 3, 1935 Ekwall, William A_______ Oreg._-- 3 dh. 2. -E Jan. 3, 1935 Engel, Albert J__________ Mich___ 9 Fda Tie... TC Jan. 3, 1935 Evans, Marcellus H______ Ne XLoo Bigdihan tin. La Jan. ; 3,1935 | Fenerty, Clare G________ Pas tox 31h Jan. 3,1935 Perguson,:Phil. ..........J:L Okla... SVi7dth 3... ___m. Jan. 3,1935 | FordpA. Lis. 4. Misia tivation 50. Jan. 3,1935 | Cagsaway, BP. 1... 4: Okla___ 4 Tifdth 2 i nas Jan. 3, 1935 Gearhart, Bertrand W____; Calif___ 9YWath.. i... ...... Jan. 3, 1935 Gehrmanmn; Bernard J... Wig......] 10 [7dth 0 ooo ene Jan. 3,1935 | Gildea, James H........ .. Pa... 13 (arthe ian... Jan. 3, 1935 | Gingery, Don. ..c...mosinis Pause 23 | Vath. zt... ... iL. Jan. 3,1935 Gray; Joseph... lis] Pa. suis 27 | iVdthaer in. Jan. 3,1935 | Greever, Paul R_________ Wyo ALL i Tathesg iit. aa Jan. 3,1935 Gwynne, John W________ Towa... |=3 (Td Toit Jan. 3,1935 | Halleck, Charles A_______ nd lio em Jan. 29, 1935 il Hamlin, Simon: M......... Maine _ 174th. i. Jan. 3, 1935 : | Hart, Edward J... ____. NeJool ie limon... on Jan. 3, 1935 Hennings, Thomas C., Jr. Mogiooliidl {74th oc... 4... Jan. 3,1935 Higgins, John P_________ Massss| | 81 (Taio... a, Jan. 3,1935 : Hebps, Samy_._.--.........-. Alagacc 4 7h ln Jan. 3,1935 | Hoffman, Clare E________ Mich. - 4 The ea. il Jan.;:..3,1935 Hook, Frank B_..__.. ... Michic| 32 74hiLr oJ exci Jan. 3,1935 | Houston, John M._______ Ropgae 95 [ihe in BL Jan. 38,1935 Terms of Service 171 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVE—Continued Name State Ds Congresses (inclusive) Leni 1 term—continued Lee, Josh Doin 0 uo GL, rt Re es ‘Jan, 3, 1985 Lordy Berl... 1 Noose 104 78 Nd Toots Jan. ° 3,1935 Tueas, Scott W..._....... mo... rh Jan. 3,1935 Luckey, Henry C________ Nebr___ TPN. LS a] Jan. 3 1935 McClellan, John 1... Ark... FH poi Ste 2 Fini Jan. 3,1935 McGehee, Dan R_______. Miss... y 23 Pe 21 1 PH ol NR ol A ET Jan. 3,1935 MecGroarty, John S______ Calife |. (V1308th roo 20 530 Jan. 3,1935 McKeough, Raymond S__| IIl_____ 2 LYath_ UDOT Jan. 3,1935 McLaughlin, Charles F___| Nebr___ Visa a Ie, Jan. '3,1935 Main, Verner W________._ Mich... RE | i Si Dec. 17,1935 Mahon, George H______.. Tex 1 00 li74th Jan. 3, 1935 Marcantonio, Vito. ______ NEY. 201 ath... a... Jan. 3.1935 Mason, Harey H=- ~ — _ we TE Jan. 3, 1935 Massingale, Sam C_______ Okla... ya Ey LT DIRE Sl a Jan. 3,1935 Maverick, Maury..______ Tex pba 20x(674th ana Jan. 38,1935 Merritt, Matthew J______ NY Mtl Vath oa Jan. 3,1935 Mitchell, Arthur W______ 11] iti Li the er oer Jan. 3,1935 Moritz, Theodore L______ | BLT. be of mnt Jan. 3, 1935 Nichols, Jack... conn. Okla....1 {| eld Sooner 5 Theos Jan. 3, 1935 O'Day, Caroline. ....o.0 0 N.Y. (At LPyath 20, hot 2 Jan. 3,1935 Oleary, James A... ....--. NE Jan. 3,1935 : O’Neal, Emmet._.....____ Ri Th. Len oni Shen Jan. 3, 1935 Patterson, Edward W____| Kans. _ Buh. Le ian Jan. 38,1935 Patton, Nat... 0. C003 Tex yl 7h. Jan. 3,1935 Pearson; Wervon..... Tenn... TAT. Jan. 3, 1935 Peterson, Hugh... ... G5... Li 74th. aa Jan. 3,1935 Pfeifer, Joseph Lica oi Ne:Vor. So Tath, Jan. 3,1935 Quinn, James Lo ous... Pod 31 Tah... Jan. ‘3, 1935 Babaut, louis C..___. Mich | 147th Jan. 38,1935 p Reed, Chauncey W______ 1) eg a 110 TN en on of ile Brie Jan. 3, 1935 Bisk, Charles 7... R.I = Yah. ae Aug. 6,1935 Russell, Richard M______ Mass - EC Ce ELE Jan. 3, 1935 Byon, Elwierd_ =... Minn. _ CE ER ee pe Jan. 3, 1935 Sautheff; Harry... nn Wis... ATH RI aE Jan. 38,1935 Scott, Byron NN... Calif .olealS 474th sy... <-....- Jan. 38,1935 Shanley, James A_._. .... Com -- SIE 1 Denier sey Jan. 3, 1935 Smith, J. Joseph... Conn. _ DE TH ae Jan. 3, 1935 South, Charles L._ _.____.._ Tex... | 27480. oe an Jan. 38,1935 Stack, Michael J..__..... Pa... EE BR RE Jan. 3, 1935 : Starnes, Joe. o......L..0. Als Sieh eT, OL 0 Jan. 38,1935 Stefan, Wael. 220. Nebr... SE TMh Jan. 3, 1935 b Stewart, J. George_______ Pel (AGL. i 78th. Jan. 3, 1935 Tolan, Johm BH. _ _..... Coll. 7 {74th _ Jan. 3, 1935 Tonry, Richard J. i... NaYs.. SE Tt le Jan. 3, 1935 Utterback, Hubert ______ Towa... Gb 7ath ne oo. Jan. 3, 1935 Whelchel, B. Frank______ On... QE 7Mh. Jan. 3,1935 Wilson, William H_______ Boa. -- Ey LE eR Jan. 3, 1935 Zimmerman, Orville______ Mo....] 10: 74th. Jan. 3, 1935 172 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) aungol TERRITORIAL DELEGATES Dimond, Anthony J______ Alaska_|_____ Sand Tah Mar. 4, 1933 King, Samuel W...__.__.. Hawaii |... he A Jan. 3,1935 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Delgado, Francisco A_____ Pr. ld 74 TL ae Sra Jan. 3, 1935 Guevara, Pedro... ..... Pil. cules 68th to74th_.._____ Mar. 4, 1923 Iglesias, Santiago________ PR cliidns 73d and 74th... ..... Mar. 4, 1933 COMMITTEES STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE [Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics; Progressives in SMALL cAPS; Farmer-Labor in CAPS] Agriculture and Forestry Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. George McGill, of Kansas. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. William J. Bulow, of South Dakota. Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas. Louis Murphy, of Iowa. James P. Pope, of Idaho. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. A. Harry Moore, of New Jersey. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, of Washington. 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. HUNBI SHIPSTEAD, of Minne- sota. Appropriations Carter Glass, of Virginia. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Royal S. Copeland, of New York. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. 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. John H. Overton, of Louisiana. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, of Wyoming. William Gibbs McAdoo, of California. Harry S. Truman, of Missouri. 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. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. John G. Townsend, Jr., of Delaware. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee. John G. Townsend, Jr., of Delaware. Banking and Currency 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, 2d, of Alabama. William Gibbs McAdoo, of California. Alva B. Adams, of Colorado. Francis T. Maloney, of Connecticut. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. John G. Townsend, Jr., of Delaware. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. James Couzens, of Michigan. Frederick Stetwer, of Oregon. 173 174 Congressional Directory 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. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota. Claims Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina. Park Trammell, of Florida. Hugo L. Black, of Alabama. Marcus A. Coolidge, of Massachusetts. M. M. Logan, of Kentucky. Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, of Washing- ton. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. John G. Townsend, Jr., of Delaware. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. Commerce Royal S. Copeland, of New York. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. 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. Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Vic Donahey, of Ohio. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Francis T. Maloney, of Connecticut. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. District of 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, 2d, of Alabama. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. 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. James E. Murray, of Montana. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Wallace H. Whate, Jr., of Maine. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. Columbia Arthur Capper, of Kansas. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. James Couzens, of Michigan. and Labor William E. Borah, of Idaho. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. RosErT M. LA FOoLLETTE, JR., of Wis- consin. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. Vie Donahey, of Ohio. Rush D. Holt. of West Virginia. Enrolled Bills Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas. Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan, Commattees of the Senate 175 Expenditures in the Executive Departments J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. Robert F. Wagner, of New York. Frederick Van Nuys, of Indiana. Danzel O. Hastings, of Delaware. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. 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. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut. Hugo L. Black, of Alabama. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. James Couzens, of Michigan. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. Roserr M. LA FoiLETTE, JR. Of Wisconsin. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. 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 FF. 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. Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio. James E. Murray, of Montana. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. Rosertr M. La FoirLETTE, JR., Of Wisconsin. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, of Minne- sota. Immigration Marcus A Coolidge, of Massachusetts. William H. King, of Utah. Royal S. Copeland, of New York. George McGill, of Kansas. Richard B. Russell, Jr., of Georgia. Francis T. Maloney, of Connecticut. A. Harry Moore, of New Jersey. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, of Washing- ton. Rush D. Holt, of West Virginia. Indian Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. William J. Bulow, of South Dakota. Marcus A. Coolidge, of Massachusetts. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. HE Th C. O'Mahoney, of Wyoming. Vie Donahey, of Ohio. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, of Minne- sota. Affairs Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota. RoserT M. LA ForLLeETTE, JR., Of Wisconsin. Frederick Stetwer, of Oregon. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. 176 Congressional Directory Interoceanic Canals Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Park Trammell, of Florida. Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri. F. Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. Interstate Commerce Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. 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. Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire. Homer T. Bone, of Washington. Vie Donahey, of Ohio. Sherman Minton, of Indiana. A. Harry Moore, of New Jersey. Harry S. Truman, of Missouri. James Couzens, of Michigan. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. Danzel O. Hastings, of Delaware. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, of Minne- sota. Irrigation and Reclamation Alva B. Adams, of Colorado. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. James P. Pope, of Idaho. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. John H. Overton, of Louisiana. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. John G. Townsend, Jr., of Delaware. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. Judiciary Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. William H. King, of Utah. Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. Frederick Van Nuys, of Indiana. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. M. M. Logan, of Kentucky. William H. Dieterich, of Illinois. George McGill, of Kansas. - Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska. William E. Borah, of Idaho. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Danzel O. Hastings, of Delaware. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. Library Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. A. Harry Moore, of New Jersey. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. Commattees of the Senate 177 Manufactures Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. 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. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. ROBERT La ForverTe, JR. of Wisconsin. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. Military Affairs 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 Kentuck y. Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina. Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee. F. Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin. Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. Sherman Minton, of Indiana. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, of Washington. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota. 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. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Rush D. Hage of West Virginia. Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. 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. Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Rush D. Holt, of West Virginia. Frederick Hale, of Maine. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Patents William Gibbs McAdoo, of California. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Park Trammell, of Florida. Homer T. Bone, of Washington. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. 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. Sherman Minton, of Indiana. 30063°—74—-2—1ST ED—— 12 Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota. HENRIK SHiestEAD, of Minnesota. 178 Congressional Directory Post Offices and Post Roads Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Park Trammell, of Florida. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. 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. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. James E. Murray, of Montana. Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Rush D. Holt, of West Virginia. Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota. RoBErRT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR., of Wis- consin. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. Printing Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Hugo L. Black, of Alabama. Harry S. Truman, of Missouri. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. ; Privileges and Elections Walter F. George, of Georgia. William H. King, of Utah. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. 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. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Sherman Minton, of Indiana. Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota. 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. Francis T. Maloney, of Connecticut. Harry S. Truman, of Missouri. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Public Lands Robert F. Wagner, of New York. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Alva B. Adams, of Colorado. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, of Wyoming. Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado. James E. Murray, of Montana. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. ; Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey. HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, of Minnesota. and Surveys Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota. Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon. Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming. Commattees of the Senate 179 Rules Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Royal S. Copeland, of New York. Pat Harrison, of Mississippi. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Hugo L. Black, of Alabama. Alva B. Adams, of Colorado. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. 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. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. William Gibbs McAdoo, of California. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Frederick Hale, of Maine. Frederick Stetwer, of Oregon. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Insular Affairs Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota. Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont. SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE 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 Wildlife Resources (Room 400, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 1139) Chairman.—[Vacant.] Vice chairman.—Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota. Bennett Champ Clark, Senator from Missouri. Josiah W. Bailey, Senator from North Carolina. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Wallace H. White, Jr., Senator from Maine. Secretary.—Carl D. Shoemaker. ® Select Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions on the Mississippi Flood Control Project Chatrman.—Robert F. Wagner, Senator from New York. [Vacant.] Gerald P. Nye, Senator from North Dakota. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptcy Proceedings and the Administration of Justice in United States Courts Chasrman.— William Gibbs McAdoo, Senator from California. Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. Pat McCarran, Senator from Nevada. Warren R. Austin, Senator from Vermont. Wallace H. White, Jr., Senator from Maine. 180 Congressional Directory Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry Chairman.— Gerald P. Nye, Senator from North Dakota. James P. Pope, Senator from Idaho. Homer T. Bone, Senator from Washington. Bennett Champ Clark, Senator from Missouri. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Secretary.—Stephen Raushenbush. Special Committee to Investigate Abuses at Shiloh National Park Chatrman.— Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. John H. Bankhead, 2d, Senator from Alabama. Lynn J. Frazier, Senator from North Dakota. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures Chairman.—James F. Byrnes, Senator from South Carolina. Edward P. Costigan, Senator from Colorado. William H. Dieterich, Senator from Illinois. William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho. Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire. Clerk.—Cassie Connor. Special Committee to Investigate Drogucilon, Transportation, and Marketing of ool Chairman.—Alva B. Adams, Senator from Colorado. Carl A. Hatch, Senator from New Mexico. James E. Murray, Senator from Montana. Frederick Steiwer, Senator from Oregon. Robert D. Carey, Senator from Wyoming. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands under Resolution of April 1, 1935 Chairman.— Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. William H. King, Senator from Utah. Robert R. Reynolds, Senator from North Carolina. Jesse H. Metcalf, Senator from Rhode Island. Ernest W. Gibson, Senator from Vermont. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States Chairman.—Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada. Robert F. Wagner, Senator from New York. Alva B. Adams, Senator from Colorado. George W. Norris, Senator from Nebraska. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota. Senate Special Silver Committee (Room 461 Senate Office Building) Chairman.—Xey Pittman, Senator from Nevada. William H. King, Senator from Utah. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Secretary.—James A. White. i Committees of the Senate 181 Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activities Chairman.—Hugo L. Black, Senator from Alabama. Sherman Minton, Senator from Indiana. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Senator from Washington. Lynn J. Frazier, Senator from North Dakota. Ernest W. Gibson, Senator from Vermont. MEETING DAYS OF SENATE COMMITTEES (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman) Agriculture and Forestry. iio 00 0 08 0M alin, Thursday. Banking and Curreneyfliii:: SHE on Ut S08 Tuesday. Claims... eo BOHG DAS BOABL DICH Wednesday. Commerce = rcorcssenca aa ti OL LL QIHINEICE, Wednesday. Judiciary... SH0NENOKES0 JOIERL Monday. Military Affairs... 22000 LL SOQURIRIIGS | Friday Naval AGING. ....c owe mmm i ie SIE ANS o'er First and third Tuesday. ASSIGNMENTS ASOURSTES Sw _ nn } AUSTIN. .S.i 0 Trubaoiing BACEMAN. BATERY SE os BANKHEAD ce ius Banpoun:. ooo Denil BARKLEY oa ane 182 OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Public Lands and Surveys. Rules. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool, chair- man. Judiciary, chairman. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands and Surveys. District of Columbia. Immigration. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptey Proceedings and the Administra- tion of Justice in United States Courts. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Commerce. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Claims, chairman. Commerce. Finance. Post Offices and Post Roads. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Special Committee to Investigate Abuses at Shiloh National Park. Interoceanic Canals. Library. Manufactures. Military Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. Library, chairman. Banking and Currency. Finance. Interstate Commerce. BYRNES Senate Commatiee Assignments 183 Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. District of Columbia. Library. Claims. Education and Labor. Finance. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Printing. Rules. Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts, chairman. Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activ- ities, chairman. Interstate Commerce. Naval Affairs. Patents. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures. Special Silver Committee. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Manufactures, chairman. Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Civil Service, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Post Offices and Post Roads. Claims. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Post Offices and Post Roads. Civil Service. Finance. Naval Affairs. Rules. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Post Offices and Post Roads. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures, chairman. 184 Congressional Directory CAPPER, inne mm ansims nn Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. District of Columbia. Finance. Foreign Relations. CABAWAY on nn nm Enrolled Bills, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Library. CABBY... noire Appropriations. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. CAVES erase Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. ARK nmi ane Commerce. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. CONNALLY .. on ov eo iiss Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Finance. Foreign Relations. Privileges and Elections. COOLIDA nim mms me Immigration, chairman. Appropriations. Claims. Indian Affairs. Military Affairs. COPIA ND. are ely Commerce, chairman. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Immigration. Rules. COSTTOAN . ccm cain mmrs Banking and Currency. Finance. Manufactures. Public Lands and Surveys. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures. COUIEN ~~ n mnie Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Finance. Interstate Commerce. DAVIE. aia Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Senate Committee Assignments 185 DICKINSON o5 wim ABEL Appropriations. Military Affairs. Printing. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rules. Dicmprwon. Civil Service. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Naval Affairs. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures. DONATEY. ean Commerce. Education and Labor. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Dome Saar Foreign Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. RIUCIER. a ea Banking and Currency, chairman. Commerce. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Printing. PBAYIIR. nena Agriculture and Forestry. Civil Service. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Special Committee to Investigate Abuses at Shiloh National Park. Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activ- ities. GEORGE... mm oe mo TRS Privileges and Elections, chairman. Civil Service. Finance. Foreign Relations. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. Genny. Finance. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. BABSON «coo im nn oe Bit Sl Service. laims. Commerce. Library. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activ- ities. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands. CUASE. omnes Appropriations, chairman. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. 186 Congressional Directory ORE een Interoceanic Canals, chairman. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Finance. Privileges and Elections. QUERY. i ee Commerce. | Finance. { Manufactures. Mines and Mining. SLE. ria a Appropriations. Naval Affairs. Rules. HewnisoN... Finance, chairman. Foreign Relations. Rules. HASTINGS... ionamin Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. HATCH. ani Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands and Surveys. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. HAYDEN. vo av-enimmnaones Printing, chairman. Appropriations. Mines and Mining. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. Seve Education and Labor. Immigration. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. JONSON. avr nme Commerce. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Irrigation and Reclamation. Naval Affairs. Privileges and Elections. a SS al Appropriations. Finance. Immigration, Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Select Committee on Investigation of Campaign Expenditures. BRING rine mn nmin ee BS District of Columbia, chairman. Finance. Immigration. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands. Special Silver Committee. Senate Committee Assignments 187 La Porawmvre. ool Education and Labor. Finance. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Manufactures. Post Offices and Post Roads. ews. a Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chair- man. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Rules. Ou earner Mines and Mining, chairman. Civil Service. Claims. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. LORERGAN. 0. Enrolled Bills. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Pensions. MeAveo. 0... Patents, chairman. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptey Proceedings and the Administration of Justice in United States Courts, chairman. McCapuaw 2273 Appropriations. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptey Proceedings and the Administration of Justice in United States Courts. MoGua........cnvneinnaas Pensions, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Immigration. Judiciary. Naval Affairs. Mosman... cea Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service. Library. Rules. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Abuses at Shiloh National Park, chairman. MeNany..... ieee Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Manufactures. Mines and Mining. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. Special Silver Committee. 188 Congressional Directory MALONEY. is Banking and Currency. Commerce. Immigration. Public Buildings and Grounds. Merearw._ L508 Education and Labor. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands. INO edna mae Interstate Commerce. : Military Affairs. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activ- ities. : MOORE... ic. rch Agriculture and Forestry. Immigration. Interstate Commerce. Library. MERPRY. aoe aa Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Education and Labor. Munuay Co ee Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. NERY cand tim Spree Rules, chairman. Civil Service. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. NoegBRer. .... nr. oo. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Library. Public Lands and Surveys. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. INOBRIB. oncom mmm Agriculture and Forestry. Judiciary. Patents. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. Na ee aa Appropriations. Commerce. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands and Surveys. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry, chairman. Select Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions on the Mississippi Flood Control Project. Senate Commialtee Assignments 189 CM amonmy. ooo GY ERPON. a PiTTMAN_ ROBINSON Russwny.. shou ScHWEBLLENBACH. _._______ SHEPPARD Appropriations. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Manufactures. Foreign Relations, chairman. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands and Surveys. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. Special Silver Committee, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Foreign Relations. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Banking and Currency. Commerce. Library. Patents. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Military Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands. Foreign Relations. Rules. Territories and Insular Affairs. Appropriations. Immigration. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Immigration. Military Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Lobbying Activ- ities. Military Affairs, chairman. Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Manufactures. 190 Congressional Directory SHIPSTEAD......———_______ Agriculture and Forestry. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Interstate Commerce. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Syren... Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Patents. Privileges and Elections. SIMIWER. .. .o cweaee meas Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Rules. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. TroMAS of Oklahoma______ Indian Affairs, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Library. Special Silver Committee. Traomas of Utah............ Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Pensions. TOWNSEND.....-- nen Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Banking and Currency. Claims. Irrigation and Reclamation. I RAMMBLY.. nlm im Naval Affairs, chairman. Claims. Education and Labor. Interoceanic Canals. Patents. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. I RMAN. onan Appropriations. Interstate Commerce. Printing. Public Buildings and Grounds. BYDINGS. nea Territories and Insular Affairs, chairman. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special Committee to Investigate the Government of the Virgin Islands, chairman. VANDENBERG...vvcmwnn- Commerce. Enrolled Bills. Foreign Relations. Printing. Rules. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special Committee on Investigation of the Muni- tions Industry. Senate Commattee Assignments 191 Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptcy Proceedings and the Adminis- tration of Justice in United States Courts. Public Lands and Surveys, chairman. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Special Committee on Survey of Land and Water Policies of the United States. Special Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions on the Mississippi Flood Control Project, chair- man. Education and Labor, chairman. Finance. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Printing. Public Buildings and Grounds. Interstate Commerce, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Pensions. Territories and Insular Affairs. Civil Service. Claims. Commerce. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Patents. Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts. Special Committee to Investigate Receivership and Bankruptcy Proceedings and the Administration of Justice in United States Courts. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE [Democrats in roman; Republicansin italics Progressives in SMALL CAPS; Farmer-Labor in CAPS] Accounts Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina. John J. Cochran, of Missouri. Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio. Charles Kramer, of California. Joe Starnes, of Alabama. Nat Patton, of Texas. A. L. Ford, of Mississippi. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., of Louisiana. James Wolfenden, of Pennsylvania. 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. John R. Mitchell, of Tennessee. 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. Walter M. Pierce, of Oregon. Fred Biermann, of Iowa. E. M. Owen, of Georgia. Harold D. Cooley, of North Carolina. William L. Nelson, of Missouri. Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Harry B. Coffee, of Nebraska. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. GERALD J. BoiLEAU, of Wisconsin. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Santiago Iglesias, of Puerto Rico. Clifford R. Hope, of Kansas. J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania. Fred C. Gilchrist, of Iowa. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. L. T. Marshall, of Ohio. Philip A. Goodwin, of New York. August H. Andresen, of Minnesota. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Appropriations James P. Buchanan, of Texas. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. William B. Oliver, of Alabama. John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana. Clarence Cannon, of Missouri. Clifton A. Woodrum, of Virginia. John J. Boylan, of New York. Tilman B. Parks, of Arkansas. Louis Ludlow, of Indiana. William J. Granfield, of Massachusetts. Thomas L. Blanton, of Texas. Thomas S. McMillan, of South Caro- lina. Glover H. Cary, of Kentucky. Bernhard M. Jacobsen, of Iowa. Malcolm C. Tarver, of Georgia. Jed Johnson, of Oklahoma. J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania. William B. Umstead, of North Caro- lina. William R. Thom, of Ohio. Marion A. Zioncheck, of Washington. John F. Dockweiler, of California. Edward C. Moran, Jr., of Maine. James McAndrews, of Illinois. Emmet O’Neal, of Kentucky. George W. Johnson, of West Virginia. James G. Scrugham, of Nevada. James M. Fitzpatrick, of New York. 192 John Taber, of New York. Robert L. Bacon, of New York. Richard B. Wigglesworth, of Massachu- setts. Clarence J. McLeod, of Michigan. Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa. Florence P. Kahn, of California. John T. Buckbee, of Illinois. Chester C. Bolton, of Ohio. William P. Lambertson, of Kansas. D. Lane Powers, of New Jersey. J. William Ditter, of Pennsylvania. Commuttees of the House 193 Banking and Currency Henry B. Steagall, of Alabama. T. Alan Goldsborough, of Maryland. Michael K. Reilly, of Wisconsin. Frank Hancock, of North Carolina. Clyde Williams, of Missouri. 0. H. Cross, of Texas. Brent Spence, of Kentucky. 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. Martin J. Kennedy, ot New York. I'homas F. Ford, of California. Paul Brown, of Georgia. Richard M. Russell, of Massachusetts. D. J. Driscoll, of Pennsylvania. D. Worth Clark, of Idaho. John B. Hollister, of Ohio. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. Peter A. Cavicchia, of New Jersey. Hamilton Fish, Jr., of New York. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Clare G. Fenerty, of Pennsylvania. Census William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. William L. Fiesinger, of Ohio. Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio. Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana. Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania. William M. Colmer, of Mississippi. Henry Ellenbogen, of Pennsylvania. Joseph L. Pfeifer, of New York. George H. Mahon, of Texas. Phil Ferguson, of Oklahoma. Theodore L. Moritz, of Pennsylvania. ET. BUCKLER, of Minnesota. 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 Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia. William I. Sirovich, of New York. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Virginia E. Jenckes, of Indiana. Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana. Harry H. Mason, of Illinois. Herron Pearson, of Tennessee. C. Elmer Dietrich, of Pennsylvania. Josh Lee, of Oklahoma. George H. Mahon, of Texas. John H. Tolan, of California. Aubert C. Dunn, of Mississippi. Joe Starnes, of Alabama. MERLIN Hori, of Wisconsin. 30063°—T74—2—1sT ED———13 Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Vito Marcantonio, of New York. Charles A. Halleck, of Indiana. 194 Congresstonal Directory Claims Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland. Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia. Samuel Dickstein, of New York. Martin F. Smith, of Washington. John M. Houston, of Kansas. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. J. Burrwood Daly, of Pennsylvania. Elmer J. Ryan, of Minnesota. Jack Nichols, of Oklahoma. Marcellus H. Evans, of New York. Charles L. South, of Texas. John H. Tolan, of California. Michael J. Stack, of Pennsylvania. U. S. Guyer, of Kansas. George N. Seger, of New Jersey. William A. Pittenger, of Minnesota. John W. Gwynne, of Towa. William A. Ekwall, of Oregon. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. Coinage, Weights, and Measures Andrew L. Somers, of New York. John J. Cochran, of Missouri. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. William IL. Fiesinger, of Ohio. Compton I. White, of Idaho. Abe Murdock, of Utah. William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania. Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois. Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio. Will Rogers, of Oklahoma. Knute Hill, of Washington. Charles L. South, of Texas. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. TroMmAs R. Amrik, of Wisconsin. Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. Theodore Christzanson, of Minnesota. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Albert J. Engel, of Michigan. William H. Wilson, of Pennsylvania. Disposition of Executive Papers Charles J. Colden, of California. | Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. District of Columbia Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Vincent L. Palmisano, of Maryland. Wright Patman, of Texas. Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Virginia E. Jenckes, of Indiana. Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota. Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas. Henry Ellenbogen, of Pennsylvania. William T. Schulte, of Indiana. Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri. James L. Quinn, of Pennsylvania. Jack Nichols, of Oklahoma. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. MEerLIN HULL, of Wisconsin. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Dewey Short, of Missouri. Ralph O. Brewster, of Maine. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Clare G. Fenerty, of Pennsylvania. W. Sterling Cole, of New York. Commattees of the House 195 Education Vincent I. Palmisano, of Maryland. René L. DeRouen, of Louisiana. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio. Braswell Deen, of Georgia. William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Richard J. Tonry, of New York. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. A. L. Ford, of Mississippi. Theodore IL. Moritz, of Pennsylvania. Josh Lee, of Oklahoma. Raymond S. McKeough, of Illinois. Albert E. Carter, of California. L. T. Marshall, of Ohio. George A. Dondero, of Michigan. W. Sterling Cole, of New York. John W. Gwynne, of Iowa. Karl Stefan, of Nebraska. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio. Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois. . James R. Claiborne, of Missouri. Caroline O’Day, of New York. Joseph Gray, of Pennsylvania. Richard J. Tonry, of New York. Phil Ferguson, of Oklahoma. C. Elmer Dietrich, of Pennsylvania. Theodore Christianson, of Minnesota. George Holden Tinkham, of Massachue- setts. Thomas A. Jenkins, of Ohio. George A. Dondero, of Michigan. Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. Elections No. 1 Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana. Milton H. West, of Texas. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Sam C. Massingale, of Oklahoma. Herron Pearson, of Tennessee. John B. Hollister, of Ohio. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York, Samuel L. Collins, of California. Elections No. 2 Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York. Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. George H. Mahon, of Texas. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. U. 8. Guyer, of Kansas. Charles D. Millard, of New York. Francis D. Culkin, of New York. Elections No. 3 John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. Alfred F. Beiter, of New York. John H. Tolan, of California. Aubert C. Dunn, of Mississippi. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. Enrolled Bills Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois. Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania. Caroline O’Day, of New York. Charles A. Eaton, of New Jersey. August H. Andresen, of Minnesota. 196 Congressional Directory 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. Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. James L. Quinn, of Pennsylvania. John M. Houston, of Kansas. Simon M. Hamlin, of Maine. James A. O’Leary, of New York. Aubert C. Dunn, of Mississippi. Raymond S. McKeough, of Illinois. Don Gingery, of Pennsylvania. MeruiN Horr, of Wisconsin. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. John B. Hollister, of Ohio. Philip A. Goodwin, of New York. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. Flood Control Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. Glenn Griswold, of Indiana. Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana. Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa. Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington. Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio. Robert A. Green, of Florida. Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois. Milton H. West, of Texas. James L. Quinn, of Pennsylvania. Phil Ferguson, of Oklahoma. John S. McGroarty, of California. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. BernarD J. GEHRMANN, of Wisconsin. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Harry L. Englebright, of California. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. 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. Frank L. Kloeb, of Ohio. Millard F. Caldwell, of Florida. William E. Richardson, of Pennsyl- vania,. John Kee, of West Virginia. Guy M. Gillette, of Towa. Martin A. Brennan, of Illinois. Lawrence E. Imhoff, of Ohio. Oliver W. Frey, of Pennsylvania. James P. Richards, of South Carolina. Thomas C. Hennings, Jr., of Missouri. James A. Shanley, of Connecticut. Hamalton Fish, Jr., of New York. Joseph W. Martin, Jr., of Massachu- setts. Charles A. Eaton, of New Jersey. George Holden Tinkham, of Massachu- setts. Leo E. Allen, of Illinois. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. Theodore Christianson, of Minnesota. Committees of the House 197 Immigration and Naturalization Samuel Dickstein, of New York. John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio. Vincent L. Palmisano, of Maryland. William M. Colmer, of Mississippi. William T. Schulte, of Indiana. Charles Kramer, of California. Milton H. West, of Texas. John Lesinski, of Michigan. Caroline O’Day, of New York. James H. Gildea, of Pennsylvania. Joe Starnes, of Alabama. A. L. Ford, of Mississippi. J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee. Charles D. Millard, of New York. Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. William L. Higgins, of Connecticut. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. William W. Blackney, of Michigan. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Indian Affairs Will Rogers, of Oklahoma. Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma. Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia. Samuel Dickstein, of New York. Roy E. Ayers, of Montana. Thomas O’ Malley, of Wisconsin. Henry E. Stubbs, of California. Knute Hill, of Washington. Abe Murdock, of Utah. Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota. Isabella Greenway, of Arizona. Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas. John S. McGroarty, of California. Elmer J. Ryan, of Minnesota. BERNARD J. GEHRMANN, of Wisconsin. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Fred C. Gilchrist, of Iowa. Samuel L. Collins, of California. Isaac H. Doulrich, of Pennsylvania. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. J. George Stewart, of Delaware. Usher L. Burdick, of North Dakota. Insular Affairs Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois. Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia. Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. Henry Ellenbogen, of Pennsylvania. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., of Louisiana. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. Elmer J. Ryan, of Minnesota. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. Sam C. Massingale, of Oklahoma. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. George H. Mahon, of Texas. Don Gingery, of Pennsylvania. John J. Dempsey, of New Mexico. HARRY SavurHOFF, of Wisconsin. Santiago Iglesias, of Puerto Rico. Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa. Richard J. Welch, of California. Bert Lord, of New York. W. Sterling Cole, of New York. Karl Stefan, of Nebraska. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. 198 Congressional Directory 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. 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. Edward A. Kenney, of New Jersey. George G. Sadowski, of Michigan. Joseph P. Monaghan, of Montana. John A. Martin, of Colorado. Edward C. Eicher, of Iowa. Theodore A. Peyser, of New York. Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois. David D. Terry, of Arkansas. 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. James W, Wadsworth, of New York. Invalid Pensions Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio. Andrew L. Somers, of New York Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia. Kent E. Keller, of Illinois. John Lesinski, of Michigan. Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington. Harry H. Mason, of Illinois. Joseph Gray, of Pennsylvania. Joseph L. Pfeifer, of New York. C. G. Binderup, of Nebraska. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. R. T. BUCKLER, of Minnesota. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER, of Wisconsin. Charles D. Millard, of New York. Albert E. Carter, of California. William L. Higgins, of Connecticut. Usher L. Burdick, of North Dakota. Ralph O. Brewster, of Maine. Leslie C. Arends, of Illinois. Irrigation and Reclamation Compton I. White, of Idaho. Allard H. Gasque, of South Carolina. Roy E. Ayers, of Montana. Knute Hill, of Washington. Henry E. Stubbs, of California. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota. Milton H. West, of Texas. Isabella Greenway, of Arizona. Herron Pearson, of Tennessee. Paul R. Greever, of Wyoming. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Charles L. South, of Texas. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. John J. Dempsey, of New Mexico. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. William E. Hess, of Ohio. J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania. William A. Ekwall, of Oregon. Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. Commuattees of the House 199 Judiciary Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Andrew J. Montague, of Virginia. Emanuel Celler, of New York. William V. Gregory, of Kentucky. Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. John E. Miller, of Arkansas. Arthur D. Healey, of Massachusetts. Warren J. Duffey, of Ohio. Wesley Lloyd, of Washington. J. Leroy Adair, of Illinois. Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia. Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania. P. L. Gassaway, of Oklahoma. Walter Chandler, of Tennessee. Hubert Utterback, of Iowa. James P. B. Duffy, of New York. Charles F. McLaughlin, of Nebraska. William M. Citron, of Connecticut. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. U. 8. Guyer, of Kansas. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. William E. Hess, of Ohio. Earl C. Michener, of Michigan. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. William H. Wilson, of Pennsylvania. Labor William P. Connery, Jr., of Massachu- setts. Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia. Glenn Griswold, of Indiana. Kent E. Keller, of Illinois. Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania. Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. John Lesinski, of Michigan. Joe H. Eagle, of Texas. Marcellus H. Evans, of New York. James H. Gildea, of Pennsylvania. Aubert C. Dunn, of Mississippi. ERNEST LUNDEEN, of Minnesota. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER, of Wisconsin. Santiago Iglesias, of Puerto Rico. Richard J. Welch, of California. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. William P. Lambertson, of Kansas. Clifford R. Hope, of Kansas. Vito Marcantonio, of New York. Library Kent E. Keller, of Illinois. Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts. Bert Lord, of New York. Memorials Simon M. Hamlin, of Maine. Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. | Frank Crowther, of New York. Merchant Marine and Fisheries Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. William I. Sirovich, of New York. Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia. Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland. Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania. Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington. A. H. Carmichael, of Alabama. Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina. Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. Simon M. Hamlin, of Maine. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. James A. O'Leary, of New York. Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Richard J. Welch, of California. Francis D. Culkin, of New York. Ralph O. Brewster, of Maine. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. 200 Congressional Directory Military Affairs John J. McSwain, of South Carolina. Lister Hill, of Alabama. Numa F. Montet, of Louisiana. Andrew J. May, of Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, of Texas. William N. Rogers, of New Hampshire. Dow W. Harter, of Ohio. Charles I. Faddis, of Pennsylvania. Clarence W. Turner, of Tennessee. Andrew Edmiston, of West Virginia. Edwin M. Schaefer, of Illinois. J. Joseph Smith, of Connecticut. Matthew J. Merritt, of New York. Maury Maverick, of Texas. Frank J. G. Dorsey, of Pennsylvania. John M. Costello, of California. J. Mark Wilcox, of Florida. PAUL J. KVALE, of Minnesota. Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania. Walter G. Andrews, of New York. Donald H. McLean, of New Jersey. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont. Samuel L. Collins, of California. Dewey Short, of Missouri. Leslie C. Arends, of Illinois. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Mines and Mining Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia. Andrew L. Somers, of New York. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. Virginia E. Jenckes, of Indiana. Abe Murdock, of Utah. William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Will Rogers, of Oklahoma. Alfred F. Beiter, of New York. Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio. Harry H. Mason, of Illinois. Elmer J. Ryan, of Minnesota. Paul R. Greever, of Wyoming. Don Gingery, of Pennsylvania. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER, of Wisconsin. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Harry L. Englebright, of California. C. Murray Turpin, of Pennsylvania. L. T. Marshall, of Ohio. William A. Pittenger, of Minnesota. Dewey Short, of Missouri. 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 M. O’Connell, of Rhode Island. Stephen M. Young, of Ohio. Byron N. Scott, of California. Joseph E. Casey, of Massachusetts. George P. Darrow, of Pennsylvania. A. Piatt Andrew, of Massachusetts. Charles D. Millard, of New York. George Burnham, of California. William L. Higgins, of Connecticut. Melvin J. Maas, of Minnesota. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Committees of the House 201 Patents William I. Sirovich, of New York. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. Braswell Deen, of Georgia. Thomas O’ Malley, of Wisconsin. Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania. Charles J. Colden, of California. Charles Kramer, of California. J. Burrwood Daly, of Pennsylvania. RT BUCKLER, of Minnesota. TaoMASs R. AMLIE, of Wisconsin. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. Clarence J. McLeod, of Michigan. Fred. A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. Leslie C. Arends, of Illinois. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Charles F. Risk, of Rhode Island. Pensions Allard H. Gasque, of South Carolina. Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin. Martin F. Smith, of Washington. John H. Hoeppel, of California. Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri. A. H. Carmichael, of Alabama. Raymond S. McKeough, of Illinois. Michael J. Stack, of Pennsylvania. Josh Lee, of Oklahoma. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. Nat Patton, of Texas. James A. O’Leary, of New York. HARRY SauTHOFF, of Wisconsin. Walter G. Andrews, of New York. Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. Melvin J. Maas, of Minnesota. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. Charles A. Halleck, of Indiana. Charles F. Risk, of Rhode Island. Post Office and Post Roads James M. Mead, of New York. Milton A. Romjue, of Missouri. Harry L. Haines, of Pennsylvania. Thomas G. Burch, of Virginia. Martin L. Sweeney, of Ohio. John C. Taylor, of South Carolina. Donald C. Dobbins, of Illinois. Fred H. Hildebrandt, of South Dakota. A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. John P. Higgins, of Massachusetts. Arthur W. Mitchell, of Illinois. Henry C. Luckey, of Nebraska. B. Frank Whelchel, of Georgia. Edward W. Patterson, of Kansas. Sam Hobbs, of Alabama. GARDNER R. WiTtarow, of Wisconsin. Isaac H. Doutrich, of Pennsylvania. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. Philip A. Goodwin, of New York. John T. Buckbee, of Illinois. William D. Thomas, of New York. William A. Pittenger, of Minnesota. Albert J. Engel, of Michigan. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Printing J. Walter Lambeth, of North Carolina. Richard J. Tonry, of New York. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. 202 Congressional Directory Public Buildings and Grounds Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., of Louisiana. John M. Houston, of Kansas. A. L. Ford, of Mississippi. Michael J. Stack, of Pennsylvania. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Phil Ferguson, of Oklahoma. John H. Tolan, of California. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. TaoMAs R. Amrik, of Wisconsin. J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee. Pehr G. Holmes, of Massachusetts. William D. Thomas, of New York. George Burnham, of California. Willsam W. Blackney, of Michigan. Karl Stefan, of Nebraska. Public Lands René I.. DeRouen, of Louisiana. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Roy E. Ayers, of Montana. Knute Hill, of Washington. Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa. Compton I. White, of Idaho. Henry E. Stubbs, of California. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Isabella Greenway, of Arizona. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. John J. Dempsey, of New Mexico. Sam C. Massingale, of Oklahoma. Paul R. Greever, of Wyoming. John S. McGroarty, of California. Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Harry L. Englebright, of California. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. James W. Molt, of Oregon. William Lemke, of North Dakota. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. Revision of the Laws Raymond J. Cannon. of Wisconsin. William P. Connery, Jr., of Massachu- setts. Samuel Dickstein, of New York. James R. Claiborne, of Missouri. Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania. Marcellus H. Evans, of New York. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. Earl C. Michener, of Michigan. John M. Robston, of Kentucky. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Rivers and Harbors Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York. René L. DeRouen, of Louisiana. William L. Fiesinger, of Ohio. Robert A. Green, of Florida. Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois. William M. Colmer, of Mississippi. Charles J. Colden, of California. Alfred F. Beiter, of New York. Martin F. Smith, of Washington. William T. Schulte, of Indiana. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. Jack Nichols, of Oklahoma. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Charles R. Eckert, of Pennsylvania. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Raymond S. McKeough, of Illinois. J. Burrwood Daly, of Pennsylvania. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. George N. Seger, of New Jersey. Albert E. Carter, of California. Francis D. Culkin, of New York. Chester C. Bolton, of Ohio. George A. Dondero, of Michigan. J. George Stewart, of Delaware. William A. Ekwall, of Oregon. Commuttees of the House 203 Roads Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma. Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina. William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. Wright Patman, of Texas. Thomas O’ Malley, of Wisconsin. Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. A. H. Carmichael, of Alabama. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. John L.. McClellan, of Arkansas. Nat Patton, of Texas. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. BeErNARD J. GEHRMANN, of Wisconsin. C. Murray Turpin, of Pennsylvania. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. James W. Mott, of Oregon. John W. Gwynne, of Towa. Bert Lord, of New York. Rules 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. J. Bayard Clark, of North Carolina. Martin Dies, of Texas. Byron B. Harlan, of Ohio. Lawrence Lewis, of Colorado. Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania. Joseph W. Martin, Jr., of Massachu- setts. ; Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan. Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Territories Robert A. Green, of Florida. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana. Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois. Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin. Thomas O’Malley, of Wisconsin. Charles R. Eckert, of Pennsylvania. C. G. Binderup, of Nebraska. C. Elmer Dietrich, of Pennsylvania. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. John J. Dempsey, of New Mexico. Jack Nichols, of Oklahoma. Nat Patton, of Texas. Joseph L. Pfeifer, of New York. ERNEST LUNDEEN, of Minnesota. Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska. Harry L. Englebright, of California. James W. Mott, of Oregon. Walter G. Andrews, of New York. Vito Marcantonio, of New York. William W. Blackney, of Michigan. Usher L. Burdick, of North Dakota. Samuel W. King, of Hawaii. War Claims John H. Hoeppel, of California. Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York. Alfred F. Beiter, of New York. Braswell Deen, of Georgia. Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri. Thomas O’Malley, of Wisconsin. C. G. Binderup, of Nebraska. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Theodore F. Moritz, of Pennsylvania. Sam C. Massingale, of Oklahoma. James H. Gildea, of Pennsylvania. Simon M. Hamlin, of Maine. GEORGE J. SCHNEIDER, of Wisconsin. Peter A. Cavicchia, of New Jersey. Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. William D. Thomas, of New York. A. Piatt Andrew, of Massachusetts. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. 204 Congressional Directory Ways and Means Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. 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. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. Fred M. Vinson, of Kentucky. Jere Cooper, of Tennessee. John W. Boehne, Jr., of Indiana. Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas. Wesley E. Disney, of Oklahoma. Arthur P. Lamneck, of Ohio. Frank H. Buck, of California. Richard M. Duncan, of Missouri. Chester Thompson, of Illinois. J. Twing Brooks, of Pennsylvania. John D. Dingell, of Michigan. Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts. Isaac Bacharach, of New Jersey. Frank Crowther, of New York. Harold Knutson, of Minnesota. Danzel A. Reed, of New York. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. Thomas A. Jenkins, of Ohio. World War Veterans’ Legislation John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. William P. Connery, Jr., of Massachu- setts. Wright Patman, of Texas. Glenn Griswold, of Indiana. Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas. John H. Hoeppel, of California. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., of Louisiana. Joe Starnes, of Alabama. Joseph Gray, of Pennsylvania. Herron Pearson, of Tennessee. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. Josh Lee, of Oklahoma. John M. Houston, of Kansas. Joe H. Eagle, of Texas. Harry SaurnHOFF, of Wisconsin. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont. Albert J. Engel, of Michigan. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Charles A. Halleck, of Indiana. Charles F. Risk, of Rhode Island. SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources Chairman.—A. Willis Robertson, Representative from Virginia. Marvin Jones, Representative from Texas. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia. Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee. Lindsay C. Warren, Representative from North Carolina. Frank H. Buck, Representative from California. William M. Berlin, Representative from Pennsylvania. Claude V. Parsons, Representative from Illinois. Fred H. Hildebrandt, Representative from South Dakota. James P. Richards, Representative from South Carolina. Albert E. Carter, Representative from California. Charles D. Millard, Representative from New York. Chester C. Bolton, Representative from Ohio. August H. Andresen, Representative from Minnesota. Leo E. Allen, Representative from Illinois. Clerk.—J. Frank Stratton. Commattees of the House 205 Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bondholders’ Reorganizations Chairman.—Adolph J. Sabath, Representative from Illinois. Vice chairman.—Claude A. Fuller, Representative from Arkansas. Thomas O’ Malley, Representative from Wisconsin. Martin J. Kennedy, Representative from New York. Francis D. Culkin, Representative from New York. Everett M. Dirksen, Representative from Illinois. [Vacancy.] Special Investigating Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents Chaitrman.— William I. Sirovich, Representative from New York. Counsel. —W. D. McFarlane, Representative from Texas. Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. Braswell Deen, Representative from Georgia. Thomas O’ Malley, Representative from Wisconsin. Matthew A. Dunn, Representative from Pennsylvania. Charles J. Colden, Representative from California. Charles Kramer, Representative from California. J. Burrwood Daly, Representative from Pennsylvania. Randolph Perkins, Representative from New Jersey. Clarence J. McLeod, Representative from Michigan. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., Representative from New Jersey. Leslie C. Arends, ‘Representative from Illinois. Ralph E. Church, Representative from Illinois. Charles F. Risk, Representative from Rhode Island. R. T. Buckler, Representative from Minnesota. Thomas R. Amlie, Representative from Wisconsin. Economic advisors.—Charles A. Welsh, Jr., and Joseph Borkin. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures Chairman.— William J. Granfield, Representative from Massachusetts. J. Mark Wilcox, Representative from Florida. William R. Thom, Representative from Ohio. Lawrence Lewis, Representative from Colorado. Graham A. Barden, Representative from North Carolina. Frederick R. Lehlbach, Representative from New Jersey. Clarence E. Hancock, Representative from New York. Clerk.—E. 1. Bemis. Special Committee Investigating American Retail Federation and Trade Prac- tices of Big Scale Wholesale and Retail Buying and Selling Organizations and Their Associations Chairman.— Wright Patman, Representative from Texas. Sol Bloom, Representative from New York. John F. Dockweiler, Representative from California. Scott W. Lucas, Representative from Illinois. Gerald J. Boileau, Representative from Wisconsin. Donald H. McLean, Representative from New Jersey. W. Sterling Cole, Representative from New York. Clerk.—Rowan Howard. MEETING DAYS OF HOUSE COMMITTEES (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman) Clalme. aac rena eeEa Era puoi Friday. Immigration-and Naturalization =... _.n._. Wednesday and on call. Irrigation and Reclamation 2 8 SI in om oo Thursday. JUICY. cvs iiin ag E CADHABUIAL Tuesday and Thursday. Military Aflalrs, ae gO Tuesday. Post Officeand Post Roads. 0 i ns Tuesday when called. Public. Buildings and Crounds.... =. SFr Wednesday. ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES ANDRESEN ANDREW of Massachusetts ANDREWS of New York____ Avewbs, oo RalOd 1 206 TO COMMITTEES Judiciary. Accounts. Foreign Affairs. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. Agriculture. Enrolled Bills. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Naval Affairs. War Claims. Military Affairs. Pensions. Territories. Invalid Pensions. Military Affairs. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. Post Office and Post Roads. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Majority Leader. Education. Library. Rivers and Harbors. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. Agriculture. Elections No. 3. Mines and Mining. Rivers and Harbors. War Claims. Elections No. 1. Insular Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. Mines and Mining. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. House Commiulttee Assignments 207 BronMaANN-. oo... Agriculture. BinpEpur. Lilt Invalid Pensions. Territories. War Claims. BrACKREY Immigration and Naturalization. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. Beawos Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. BrANTON. Appropriations. Broom... oe Foreign Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. Bomuwn. . __ooliieing Ways and Means. BowwAtr Agriculture. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. BOIAND pag Naval Affairs. BottoN- Appropriations. Rivers and Harbors. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. : Bowery. BOYLAN. .-iaaruncnnaanan Appropriations. BReNNAN. a Foreign Affairs. BREWER. aa District of Columbia. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BROOKS... -. ai Ways and Means. Brown of Georgia. _______ Banking and Currency. Brown of Michigan_______ Banking and Currency. BUCHANAN. oan enmnn ens Appropriations, chairman. BER... eae Ways and Means. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. BUeEBEE. .... eave Appropriations. Post Office and Post Roads. Boewime. Census. Invalid Pensions. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. BUuerRLEY ane Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. World War Veterans’ Legislation. BuLwiNkLE....2L 000. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Boro. oe Post Office and Post Roads. BuRpick_ . -_... _BPUIaE0N Indian Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Territories. BURNEAM: or Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. ByaNs.. Jui sland 2aus Speaker. i. | 208 Congressional Directory Ciwvowerr,. 0. Foreign Affairs. | CANNON of Missouri_______ Appropriations. Cannon of Wisconsin______ Revision of the Laws, chairman. Elections No. 2. Pensions. Territories. CART SON: oon in i Claims. Flood Control. Pensions. Capwemaen.. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Roads. Canemnven District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Indian Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. es Education. Invalid Pensions. | Rivers and Harbors. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Canewmtawr. Roads, chairman. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. CARY vee Appropriations. hs SR Ce I SH Naval Affairs. Cagerviow. ........ ._.; Foreign Affairs. CaviconiA... no... Banking and Currency. War Claims. CELLER. eve oe ep dis iD Judiciary. CHANDLER evn cms 3 Judiciary. CuasrvaN......oncevean Interstate and Foreign Commerce. OHRISTIANSON..... em Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- | sentatives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. CruURrcwr._ 10. J0ilailiang Naval Affairs. Patents. Revision of the Laws. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. BRON anaes Judiciary. CLAIBORNE. coe Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Revision of the Laws. Cuark of Ydahe............ Banking and Currency. CrAgk of North Carolina__ Rules. CocapaNn-....... rman Expenditures in the Executive Departments, | chairman. Accounts. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. COFFE ==. ov iiiiniin Agriculture. | CoLpEN.......o.. Ld Disposition of Executive Papers, chairman. Patents. Rivers and Harbors. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. House Commattee Assignments 209 Cour of Maryland. ....... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Coun of New York......._. District of Columbia. Education. Insular Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. COLLINS of Ohl l= Census. Elections No. 1. Indian Affairs. Military Affairs. CIOTMER te Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Rivers and Harbors. CoNNERY. ... 0. aaa Labor, chairman. Revision of the Laws. World War Veterans’ Legislation. BOOLEY so nse iomainne Agriculture. CooreeofOhio....... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. CoorEer of Tennessee__ ____ Ways and Means. CoENING Interstate and Foreign Commerce. COSTE LNG. ara Military Affairs. OB OX ras ns Rules. Coavews 0... 5... Elections No. 3. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Mines and Mining. Public Buildings and Grounds. CRAWEORD soz omnesiisizsis Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. Copp iuuEs. Sen Crogey _... .... .... Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. Cross... an Banking and Currency. Croggami Ul ou... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. ROW... srt stb cae irs Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. Cuovenmn...... .. Memorials. Ways and Means. Cotrid.. .......... BOE Elections No. 2. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rivers and Harbors. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. CurnEN.. 5 toablesd, sold Ways and Means. Coysnvas... Co = Agriculture. CupLEy:. oa a DALY ones ae he abi Claims. Patents. Rivers and Harbors. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. 30063°—T4—2—1ST ED—— 14 © EEE. 210 Congressional Directory DARDEN... .. ous) Naval Affairs. Damnow. 0 Sol aaa Naval Affairs. Papo Hinton Lo Elections No. 1, chairman. Census. Civil Service. Flood Control. DERN eee Education. Patents. War Claims. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. LANNY. Naval Affairs. DRLGADOS ov vos ses ada DEMPSEY... Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Territories. \ DER OVEN. nee eerme= Public Lands, chairman. Education. Rivers and Harbors. Drensrmive nee Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Claims. | Indian Affairs. | Revision of the Laws. | nh me ae eee Rules. DIBTRICH, et ene Civil Service. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Territories. | DIMOND owe = emit ii oe Agriculture. Indian Affairs. : I Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. : Rivers and Harbors. Territories. DINGELL... oman Ways and Means. PmeseN. LL Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. PINT Trewin 8 Ways and Means. DITERCE oom ini Appropriations. DOBBINS. Post Office and Post Roads. DOocEWmILER. . ..... SU I1208 Appropriations. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. BONDEBO.. innit Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Rivers and Harbors. DORSEY... and Military Affairs. DOUGHTON. onc iin Ways and Means, chairman. DOUTRICH en Indian Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. | | | ER aiiiaiw-.-L a aaa House Committee Assignments 211 Poxuy Bob oe Agriculture. DrewRY. 5. a Naval Affairs. IDI TIULE I Fl Fi inh oon med Be Banking and Currency. DRIVERY ott ants oni Rules. BDurrex of Ohio... = Judiciary. Dvurry of New York. _____ Judiciary. DUNCAN Snr ae Ways and Means. Dun~N of Mississippi... __ Civil Service. Elections No. 3. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor. Dunn of Pennsylvania_____ Census. Labor. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. BNepmses. oo Labor. : World War Veterans’ Legislation. |S Edad betas nd Enrolled Bills. Foreign Affairs. Beppe. oo ane Rivers and Harbors. Territories. EDMISTON rms ys or Military Affairs. Prommms 00000008] Siting Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BEAL LE i Claims. Irrigation and Reclamation. Rivers and Harbors. EILBENBOGEN. coco ioe CONSE District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. ENGEL... LL 0300012 201 Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Post Office and Post Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation. ENGLEBRIGET.. a. 5 Flood Control. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Territories. VANE. Claims. Labor. Revision of the Laws. BADDIS..... oo a sone ain MUiary Affairs, MSNEnY. Banking and Currency. Texuney.... Borin Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. ERGUSON. ee Census. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Flood Control. Public Buildings and Grounds. FERNANDEZ... ...... Naval Affairs. Pimsweesn.........-........ Census Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Rivers and Harbors. 212 Congressional Directory Brewer, .. oo 000 Banking and Currency. Foreign Affairs. LTR 5) ih te eae hy Appropriations. FrANNAGAN. Agriculture. FiercmeR. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress, chairman. Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. BOCHT.... avi niin mons Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. War Claims. Forp of California... ._._._. Banking and Currency. Forp of Mississippi. ._____ Accounts. Education. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Buildings and Grounds. (hn i RS NEA a A Foreign Affairs. Punrew.. ..... .;olielsds Ways and Means. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. BUBEMER. of io on Agriculture. CAMBRILY:. _c- - Naval Affairs. Gasaume. oo trl Pensions, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Irrigation and Reclamation. Gassaway. 0. 0d Judiciary. GavaganN... . Elections No. 2, chairman. Rivers and Harbors. War Claims. CUABIHADY.. vow nna Disposition of Executive Papers. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Irrigation and Reclamation. GUIRMANN. Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Roads. CHEPORD. . cen inm Banking and Currency. Elections No. 3. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. CILCHBIN. ome ee Agriculture. Indian Affairs. Guppy Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. War Claims. GILLETTE. a. Foreign Affairs. CingERY... . . ..........% Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. Mines and Mining. GOLDSBOROUGH..— ~~ ____ Banking and Currency. CoopwiN.........ccc oa rea Agriculture. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Post Roads. House Committee Assignments 213 Hancock of New York. ___ Hancock of North Carolina. ARAN aro raart Fisnvews. =. oo Hazmimyo: ioabhivent sal Appropriations. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Invalid Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Territories, chairman. Flood Control. Rivers and Harbors. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Rules. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Labor. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Claims. Elections No. 2. Judiciary. Claims. Education. Roads. Post Office and Post Roads. Civil Service. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Memorials, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 1 Judiciary. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. Banking and Currency. Rules. Fducation. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Military Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. Patents. Post Office and Post Roads. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. 214 Hicains of Connecticut____ Congressional Directory Hiceins of Massachusetts._ HiiDRBRANDY eee Hil. of Alabama. =~. Hiir, K., of Washington___ Hiwry, S. B., of Washington. HomrMaN: ooo Hortvwver. Se ene eae stalends JACOBBEN. aaa JeNckEes of Indiana_______ JeNEINs of Ohio. _._.__..: JornsoN of Oklahoma. ____ JoanNsoN of Texas Judiciary. Foreign Affairs. Census. Irrigation and Reclamation. | Judiciary. Immigration and Naturalization. | Invalid Pensions. | Naval Affairs. ! Post Office and Post Roads. Post Office and Post Roads. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Military Affairs. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Ways and Means. Post Office and Post Roads. War Claims, chairman. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Banking and Currency. Elections No. 1. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Agriculture. Agriculture. Labor. Claims. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Public Buildings and Grounds. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Civil Service. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Agriculture. Insular Affairs. Labor. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Civil Service. District of Columbia. Mines and Mining. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. House Committee Assignments 215 JorNsoN of West Virginia__ Appropriations. JONBE,. Lae. vw abv am nh Agriculture, chairman. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Rann. ...... .. secsesll Appropriations. ee a Sl Se Foreign Affairs. NE eee Ee Library, chairman. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Rey. oa Interstate and Foreign Commerce. KenNEDY of Maryland... _. Claims, chairman. District of Columbia. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. KenNEDY of New York___. Banking and Currency. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. RONNEY.. co anrncinnaass Interstate and Foreign Commerce. CERREALY oo Gin Elections No. 3, chairman. Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Buildings and Grounds. Coma Agriculture. Immigration and Naturalization. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Public Lands. Territories. KINSER urns Agriculture. Census. Irrigation and Reclamation. UI ET Ea MA A Agriculture. Boone. a. Foreign Affairs. Kaew. aba Naval Affairs. Byomgon 0 Ways and Means. KoOIATROWSKL. Lo ein Insular Affairs, chairman. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Flood Control. KorPreMANYN... ne Banking and Currency. Rupaven.. . . ...... .cobk Accounts. Immigration and Naturalization. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. Kviarm.. [oon piisisnl. 2200. Military Affairs. LaveenWSoN. Appropriations. Labor. PAMBETH. = Printing, chairman. Foreign Affairs. LAMNEBOR_ Sl SW Lois... Ways and Means. 216 Congressional Directory NTs ep ss Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. Yssrapew. Census, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. Insular Affairs. Imaof California. - Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Tye of Oklahoma... ______ Civil Service. Education. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Yemymaor til ae Civil Service. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rules. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. ToME®m fu ameseaaen’) Census. Public lands. ErINeRY aaa Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Lewis of Colorado________ Rules. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. Lewis of Maryland ______ Ways and Means. ROY DE ait nai Judiciary. Yoerpos: 0 Insular Affairs. Library. Roads. wens... Agriculture. Elections No. 2. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. LueREY... Post Office and Post Roads. LODLOW. . eiininn oman Appropriations. I UNDREN one ib Labor. Territories. MCANDREWS.. oni Appropriations. McCrwream.. - cxonoasrs Elections No. 2. Flood Control. Irrigation and Reclamation. Roads. McCoOBMACK cn naiih sau Ways and Means. McPasuaNy. 0... Naval Affairs. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. MeGenre..__...........- ~ Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. MaeGravw orc oo Naval Affairs. House Committee Assignments 217 Me@Groazry Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. MeKrouaH........ —niecern Education. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. MclavemuIN... eee Judiciary. MeEEAN..« rons Accounts. Military Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation. Melivop. Appropriations. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. MeMurnaN. onan Appropriations. McRuyNoips..... ana Foreign Affairs, chairman. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. MOSWAIN. convener cannann Military Affairs, chairman. Mame nr sn ee Naval Affairs. Pensions. Maton... Census. Civil Service. Elections No. 2. Insular Affairs. Many. MALONEY... a... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Mansion... Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. MArES. 0. at Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rules. MARCANTONIO.. . . BS HAH Civil Service. Labor. Territories. Mansmars. .....sosaauno) Agriculture. Education. Mines and Mining. MAarTIN of Colorado_______ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. MAarTIN of Massachusetts. Foreign Affairs. Rules. Masene a= Civil Service. Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. MASSINGALE.......... 220002800 Elections No. 1. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. War Claims. Mavenioe............. Military Affairs. En TAS Cee Military Affairs. Blmkn to Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. MBEER. 0.28 15 a0 a bmi ms Banking and Currency. MEerrITT of Connecticut. __ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. MzgrriTT of New York_____ Military Affairs. 218 Congressional Directory MICEERER. hae MinrAwpe. a UE 8 PL a Ae A om A Ren 4 MirceELL of Illinois_______ MitcHELL of Tennessee____ NORTON iim @PueN. QC ONNBLL. nnn OQ CONNOR .. .. . sosedumaly Judiciary. Revision of the Laws. Elections No. 2. Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. Naval Affairs. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Appropriations. Census. Education. War Claims. Public Lands. Roads. Territories. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Agriculture. Claims. District of Columbia. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. District of Columbia, chairman. Labor. Memorials. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Naval Affairs. Rules, chairman. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Enrolled Bills. Immigration and Naturalization. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Appropriations. Indian Affairs. Patents. Roads. Territories. War Claims. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. = PAPMAN. = ran District of Columbia. House Committee Assignments 219 ONmav elon. Appropriations. 1 aesnandui dite Seivastiin Agriculture. BATMISANG. cnn nrmen= Education, chairman. District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Pimms. ene Appropriations. DAREONS. oa ee Enrolled Bills, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Special Committee to Investigate American Retail Federation, chairman. ParrpRsoN. cone i Post Office and Post Roads. PanveN-. To staat Accounts. Pensions. Roads. Territories. PEARSON. 1 one raat Civil Service. Elections No. 1. Irrigation and Reclamation. World War Veterans’ Legislation. NITE EY Ae Sn Be Dy Elections No. 3. Judiciary. Patents. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. PeTERsoN of Florida. _.____ Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. PETERSON of Georgia______ Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Territories. PET ENGI. re erie Interstate and Foreign Commerce. | STE te sh bbe oe. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Bhi peel amber ao tind Census. Invalid Pensions. Territories. Pyro... Agriculture. PIUENGER. cove ~~ 515 Claims. Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. PUBMUEY. oo vn wisn Military Affairs. War Claims. World War Veterans’ Legislation. OLR. ashen Agriculture. Powers... Appropriations. 220 Congressional Directory RAMSAY en Bavspree. ROBERUSON. =~ ROBWNSON--~ = BoBSIoON. .— a RocErs of Massachusetts_ _ Rogers of New Hampshire. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Education. Insular Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. Judiciary. Civil Service, chairman. Claims. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Civil Service. District of Columbia. Labor. Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation, chairman. Census. Territories. Military Affairs. Rules. Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Ways and Means. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Printing. Public Lands. Foreign Affairs. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Foreign Affairs. Patents. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents. Post Office and Post Roads. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources, chairman. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Roads. Judiciary. Revision of the Laws. Civil Service. Foreign Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Military Affairs. House Commattee Assignments 221 Rogers of Oklahoma.______ Indian Affairs, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Mines and Mining. ROMITEL:. on cviciairns Post Office and Post Roads. Rup Ol. oii mui Foreign Affairs. Eine SE CE Banking and Currency. Byay. occa. S000 Claims. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Mines and Mining. Same. eee a Rules. Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bond- holders’ Reorganizations, chairman. SapowsgEIIIEN0 A01iagar Interstate and Foreign Commerce. SANDERS of Louisiana______ Accounts. Insular Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Sawprngsof Texas... Ways and Means. SaNDIeN. a Appropriations. SAUTROYY a Insular Affairs. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Seusepen oo Military Affairs. SCHNEIDER... .. .. maiialzies Invalid Pensions. Labor. Mines and Mining. War Claims. CHUB Soi cn ommnemne tn Naval Affairs. Senor... District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Rivers and Harbors. DEORE eC Naval Affairs. SeRUaAM ch Appropriations. INTE a Naval Affairs. Shenugy. on ort Flood Control. Library. Mines and Mining. Roads. Searm. Claims. Rivers and Harbors. Swawtmy sa Foreign Affairs. SEANRON. Naval Affairs. Smomy. oo. Ba Distriet of Columbia. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Swmevicn Patents, chairman. Civil Service. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Special Committee on Cross Licensing and Pooling of Patents, chairman. 222 Congressional Directory TN ARR SA TN | Banking and Currency. Smita of Connecticut ______ Military Affairs. Smren of Virginia... . oie Rules. Smita of Washington______ Claims. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. Smita of West Virginia. ___ Mines and Mining, chairman. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions Sonipiaan iia Es Minority Floor Leader. DNYDER. . oaerieir anid Appropriations. SOMERS... ome Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman, Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. SOUT. a ahi Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Irrigation and Reclamation. Lili ER Slee eee Banking and Currency. en ee Be Claims. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. StanNes. SoU00 ooo TC Accounts. Civil Service. Immigration and Naturalization. World War Veterans’ Legislation. SEAGATT ea Banking and Currency, chairman. SEEN ee Education. Insular Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. STEWART... eidseils Indian Affairs. Rivers and Harbors. BURBS. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. SULIIVaAN. Ways and Means. SUVNERS. Judiciary, chairman. SETeHIN. ol ol Naval Affairs. SWoeNEY.. Post Office and Post Roads. Ee a ee Appropriations. TanveR. Appropriations. TavLor of Colorado... Appropriations. TavLoR of South Carolina__ Post Office and Post Roads. TAyLOR of Tennessee______ Immigration and Naturalization. Public Buildings and Grounds. EI THES i Se ene a Ce Interstate and Foreign Commerce. OL a a ea py Appropriations. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. House Commattee Assignments 223 UNDERWOOD Vinson of Georgia Vinson of Kentucky WADSWORTH Post Office and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. Military Affairs. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Insular Affairs. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. Agriculture. Civil Service. Flood Control. Civil Service. Claims. Elections No. 3. Public Buildings and Grounds. Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Printing. Library. Ways and Means. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Roads. Appropriations. Invalid Pensions, chairman. Accounts. Immigration and Naturalization. Judiciary. Naval Affairs, chairman. Ways and Means. Elections No. 3. ; Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Lands. Flood Control. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Roads. Judiciary. Accounts, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Roads. Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Flood Control. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. 224 Congressional Directory WeAvER. oe... URED Judiciary. Wanom o_o i ian Insular Affairs. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. WERNER... District of Columbia. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Namen. us Jooiuior. Guy Elections No. 1. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Irrigation and Reclamation. Woprcaprn.- Post Office and Post Roads. Woes... Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Public Lands. WHITTINGTON... cee im Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Roads. WIGGLESWORTH ..________ Appropriations. Witecox.. Military Affairs. Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex- penditures. MWmaygsme Banking and Currency. WiLsoN of Louisiana.______ Flood Control, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Pensions. WiLson of Pennsylvania___ Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Judiciary. Wonrew. Post Office and Post Roads. Woieorr... cei Banking and Currency. Revision of the Laws. Roads. WOLPENDEN...— woe nsnnm Accounts. "Interstate and Foreign Commerce. WoiveRToON... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. MOODY. District of Columbia. Labor. Pensions. War Claims. WW OCODRUP vor mom min Ways and Means. WOODRUM.......sw « salsa Appropriations. YOUNG: io iin msi Naval Affairs. ZIMMERMAN... Flood Control. Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation. Roads. ZioNcaECcE... Appropriations. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds Chairman.—John N. Garner, Vice President of the United States. Joseph W. Byrns, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States. Pon Connally, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and rounds. Henry W. Keyes, Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Charles L. McNary, Minority 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 (Office, Room 130-A, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 1175) James F. Byrnes, Senator from South Carolina. Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. John G. Townsend, Jr., Senator from Delaware. 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. Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota. Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Commission in Centrol of the House Office Building Chairman.—Joseph W. Byrns, Speaker of the House of Representatives. John J. O’Connor, Representative from New York. Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey. Assistant a J. Bourke, 1789 Lanier Place. (Phone, COlumbia 3013. United States Supreme Court Building Commission Charrman.—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. 30063°—74-2—1sT ED—— 15 295 226 Congressional Directory Jeint Committee on Printing (Office, Capitol Building, ground floor, west center. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 29) Chairman.—Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida. Vice chairman.—J. Walter Lambeth, Representative from North Carolina. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Richard J. Tonry, Representative from New York. Robert F. Rich, Representative from Pennsylvania. Clerk.— Ansel Wold, The Maryland Courts. Assistant clerk.—Evelyn Hicks, The Schuyler Arms. Inspector of paper and material (Government Printing Office).—James M. Cath- cart, 27 Bryant Street NE. Joint Committee on the Library Chatrman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota. W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey. Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois. Graham A. Barden, Representative from North Carolina. Robert T. Secrest, Representative from Ohio. Bert Lord, Representative from New York. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Clerk.—Laura MacArthur, Valley Vista Apartments. Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation (Office, Room 1336, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 290) Chairman.—Pat Harrison, Senator from Mississippi. Vice chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. William H. King, Senator from Utah. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. James Couzens, Senator from Michigan. Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire. Samuel B. Hill, Representative from Washington. Thomas H. Cullen, Representative from New York. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey. Secretary.— Bryant C. Brown, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. Chief of staff.—Lovell H. Parker, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Assistant chief of staff.—Gaston D. Chesteen, 2515 Thirteenth Street. Counsel.—Colin F. Stam, 3940 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase. Technical assistants.—Lynn L. Stratton, 6403 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Carl A. Phillipps, 1348 Jefferson Street; Ewell Bartlett, 1458 Columbia Road. Auditor—Walter L. Tucker, National Press Club. Biastseivns Allen T. Akin, 3616 Connecticut Avenue; Walter L. Price, Lee ouse. Attorney.— William L. Wallace, 2400 Thirteenth Street. Legal assistant.— Weaver Myers, 211 Delaware Avenue. National Forest Reservation Commission (Room 5009, South Building, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Phone, DIstrict 6350, Branch 702) 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. Roy O. Woodruff, Representative from Michigan. Secretary.—John E, Burch, 8504 Maple Avenue, Silver Spring, Md, Commasstons and Joint Committees 227 The Interparliamentary Union OFFICERS President.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Vice presidents.—Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee; Andrew iis Montague, Representative from Virginia; Wallace H. White, Senator from aine. 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.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Albert E. Carter, Representative from California. William Bacon Oliver, Representative from Alabama. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas. Millard Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. A. Piatt Andrew, Representative from Massachusetts. Robert L. Bacon, Representative from New York. Everett McKinley Dirksen, Representative from Illinois. The United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission (Room 524, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 1078) DIRECTOR Sol Bloom, Representative from New York, room 524, House Office Building, Washington, D. C Migratory Bird Conservation Commission Chairman.— 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. Chester C. Bolton, Representative from Ohio. Secretary.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, Bureau of Biological Survey. Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission Chazrman.—John J. Boylan, Representative from New York. Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah. Augustine Lonergan, Senator from Connecticut. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. Francis D. Culkin, Representative from New York. Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, Under Secretary of the Treasury. Hollins N. Randolph. Joseph P. Tumulty. Stuart G. Gibboney. Dr. George J. Ryan. Dr. Fiske Kimball. Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza Commission Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Nathan L. Bachman, Senator from Tennessee. Daniel O. Hastings, Senator from Delaware. Joseph W. Byrns, Representative from Tennessee. J. Will Taylor, Representative from Tennessee. 228 Congressional Directory George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission Chairman.—[Vacancy.] Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. Wallace H. White, Jr., Senator from Maine. Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois. Arthur H. Greenwood, Representative from Indiana. Chester C. Bolton, Representative from Ohio. 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.; D. Frank Culbertson, Vincennes, Ind.; Frank C. Ball, Muncie, Ind.; James A. Woodburn, Ann Arbor, Mich. Eaecutive secretary. —Simeon D. Fess, Yellow Springs, Ohio. Board of Visitors to the Military Academy Morris Sheppard, Senator from Texas. Marcus A. Coolidge, Senator from Massachusetts. Robert R. Reynolds, Senator from North Carolina. F. Ryan Duffy, Senator from Wisconsin. Robert D. Carey, Senator from Wyoming. W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey. John J. McSwain, Representative from South Carolina. Lister Hill, Representative from Alabama. Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. ‘Charles I. Faddis, Representative from Pennsylvania. Charles A. Plumley, Representative from Vermont. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Dewey Short, Representative from Missouri. L. C. Arends, Representative from Illinois. Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy George McGill, Senator from Kansas. Richard B. Russell, Jr., Senator from Georgia. Jesse H. Metcalf, Senator from Rhode Island. Park Trammell, Senator from Florida, ex officio. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia. Alfred L. Bulwinkle, Representative from North Carolina, William P. Cole, Jr., Representative from Maryland. John H. Tolan, Representative from California. Daniel A. Reed, Representative from New York. U. S. Guyer, Representative from Kansas. United States Roanoke Colony Commission Chairman.—Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas. Vice chatrman.— 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. Commassions and Joint Commattees 229 Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Chatrman.—[Vacant.] Vice chairman.—David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. John W. Boehne, Jr., Representative from Indiana. John Taber, Representative from New York. [Vacant, 5.] Secretary.— Bingham W. Mathias. United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission Chatrman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Vice chairman.— Dr. Charles E. Merriam. Executive commiittee.—Luther Ely Smith (chairman), Newton D. Baker, William Allen White, William T. Kemper, J. Lionberger Davis. Members: Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. James J. Davis, Senator from Pennsylvania. John N. Sandlin, Representative from Louisiana. Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois. Lloyd Thurston, Representative from Iowa. Gen. Jefferson Randolph Kean. Amon G. Carter. Matthew Woll. United States Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission Chairman.— The President of the United States. Vice chairman.—Henry F. Ashurst, Senator from Arizona. Director General.—Sol Bloom, Representative from New York. Members: John N. Garner, VicePresident of the United States. Joseph W. Byrns, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas. Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho. Charles L. MeN ary, Senator from Oregon. Charles F. McLaughlin, Representative from Nebraska. Frank J. G. Dorsey, Representative from Pennsylvania. George P. Darrow, Representative from Pennsylvania. John Taber, Representative from New York. [Five Presidential Commissioners to be appointed.] STATISTICAL INFORMATION 231 STATISTICAL SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Congress Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ong sion ning journment |in days of the Senate 1 of Representatives Ist. oasis 1 | Mar. 4,17892| Sept. 29, 1789 210 | Jechn Langdon,® of | Frederick A. C. Muh- New Hampshire. lenberg, of Pennsyl- vania. 2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 6751 BR he Se SC th Lanett en 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 BR |r co RE ra SR Rin 2d 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. 1} on 4 1| Dec. 2,1793 | June 9,1794 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. Hh. ine 1| Dec. 7,1795 | June 1,1796 iy LINER | I IPO Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire. 2 | Dee. 5,1796 | Mar. 3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania. 5th... 5. 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.¢ Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts. 3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3,1799 91 | John Laurence, of New York. James Ross, of Penn- sylvania. Lh) IA 1 | Dee. 2,1799 | May 14,1800 164 | Samuel Livermore, of | Theodore Sedgwick, New Hampshire. of Massachusetts. Uriah Tracy, of Con- necticut. 2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John E. Howard, of Maryland. James Hillhouse, of Connecticut. hagas 1| Dec. 7,1801 | 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 aad 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27, 1804 163 Jos Brows, of Ken- Do. ucky. Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 38,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee. 1) nt 1| Dee. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. Maryland. 2! Dec. 1,1806 ! Mar. 3,1807 Lt SE 0 non 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 year * * * 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 Mar. 4, 1789. Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Con- gress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in Decems- ber. 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. 3 Elected to count the vote for President and Vice President, which was done Apr. 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for the first time. John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. 4 Elected Speaker pro tempore for Apr. 20, 1798, and again for May 28, 1798. 233 234 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Conaress Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House g sion ning journment [in days of the Senate of Representatives 10th. 1 | Oct. 16,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 182 | Samuel Smith, of | Joseph B. Varnum, Maryland. of Massachusetts, 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 Siebatn R. Bradley, of Vermont. John Milledge, of Georgia. the 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28,1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Do. Pennsylvania. 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1, 1810 156 | John Qaillard, of South Carolina. 3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 Jojn Zw of Ken- uc op hereh 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 Willa H. Crawford, | Henry Cry, of Ken- of Georgia. tucky. 2 | Nov. 21812 | Mar. 3,1813 1 ed a os | ovke JH other 2 1 1| May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 CAAA a Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18, 1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. 3 | Sept. 19, 1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Gaillard, of | Langdon Cheves,’ of South Carolina. South Carolina. TYE) paki 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 Rc 40.20 doepur a Lo Bony Clay, of Ken- ucky. 2 [ Dec... 21316" | Mar. 3, 1817 02 lire ne do...o leon pein. oth a 1| Dec. 11,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 Hie do Do. 2 | Nov. 16, 1818 | Mar. 3, 1819 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia. ethe oa 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John QGaillard, of Do. South Carolina. 2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 38,1821 TH Laden doa John W. Taylor,t of New York. 7th 1 | Dec. 83,1821 | May 8, 1822 TTA dose conden Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 A tara CE ruinal ideality wh 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 I re ER Hoy Clay, of Ken= ucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 BS irre oe tg ts BE 10th fr ee 1 | Dec. 5,1825 | May 22, 1826 169 | Nathaniel Macon, of | John , le, of Ni Con Carolina. New Y 2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 ORs yao Jie Oth 1 | Dec. 38,1827 | Mar. 26, 1828 175 Tad Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 83,1829 ol 7 do en C1 EY i oy 1| Dec. 7,1829 | May 31, 1830 ir Ee Se ee Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3,1831 88 Lion ‘Waller Taze- well, of Virginia. 218 Lipp 1| Dec. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 225 do... Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. rh Le 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- | J chs Bell,” of T'ennes- ginia see. oaths 1 | Dec. 7,1835 | July 4,1836 211 William R. King, of | James K. Polk, of Alabama. Tennessee. 2 | Dec. 51836 | Mar. 8,837 gfe dora savin eof hy 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 13,1837 A es TR ree Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 09,1838 bb Jad hope dor en 3 | Dec. 38,1838 | Mar. 83,1839 fn dos abel a 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 37. 1840 LTH ee doc id Robert M. T'. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 71840 | Mar. 83,1841 B7ATH yu Min gave th... 1 | May 81,1841 | Sept. 13, 1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, | John bie 22 of Ken- of New Jersey. tucky 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina. 3 | Dec. b5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 80-1 sow do0iacan adders OSth eases 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 196. [=== doind ca. sian se John W. Jones, of Vir- } ginia. 2 | Dec. 21844 | Mar. 3,1845 TR EI TT, 20th 1 | Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10, 1846 253 David R. Atchison, of | John W. Davis, of In- Missouri. diana. 2 | Dec. 71846 | Mar. 3,1847 $Tefer on dos mathe. bu 0th oe. 1| Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14, 1848 254 loc QOLicinmii vn vues Aa Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 00. Voinn QO bata adi Jono lst en 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30, 1850 302 William R. King; of | Howell Cobk, of Geor- Alabama. gia. 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar. 3,1851 4 Ee 40. 200i sili siden 5 Elected Speaker, Jan. 8 Elected Speaker Nov. 19, 1814, 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 7 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. Statistical SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued 235 c os Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ongr sion ning journment [in days of the Senate of Representatives 20a a 1| Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 275 | William R. King, of | Linn Boyd, of Ken- Alabama, tucky. 2 | Dec: 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 88 lous A050. age as Do. 0 Enema 1| Dec. 5,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 | David R. Atchison, of Missouri. 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- iana. Lewis Cass, of Michi- gan. th... 1 | Dec. 83,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- | Nathaniel P. Banks, diana. of Massachusetts. 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30, 1856 i [1 RG | (ER Re 38 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 | James M. Mason, of Virginia. Thomas J. Rusk, of Texas. sth... 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 88]. (1 LER s Ee ei 6th —..._.- 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 202: 1:2 oe do. -| William Pennington, Jesse D. "Bright, “of of New Jersey. Indiana. 2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 Soloman Foot, of Ver- mont. dh. 1| July 4,1861 | Aug. 6,1861 pL Beata AO a Gealusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17, 1862 br BS doi tenses 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 Olin LF i SS sth oo 1| Dec. 7,1863 | July 4, 1864 200.1. do. -| Schuyler Colfax, of Daniel Clark, “of New Indiana. Hampshire. 2 | Dec. b5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 80. fe a do_ Sotho: 1 | Dec. 4,1865 | July 28;1866 237 Lafayette S. “Foster, of Do. Connecticut. 2 | Dec. 3,1866 | Mar. 3, 1867 91 | Benjamin F. Wade, of Ohio. oth... 1 | Mar. 4,18678 Dec. 2,1867 by Ss doi 5 cerca. Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1867¢ Nov. 10, 1868 845: i [rr mo ro 3 | Dec. 17,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 87 |= d0-eeee oo _..___| Theodore M. Pome- roy, of New York. CH RE 1 | Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 10, 1869 38 | Henry B. Anthony, | James G. Blaine, of of Rhode Island. Maine. 2 | Dec. 6,1869 | July 15,1870 222 la doo) ac ar 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 ESN Sar en LY a 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | Apr. 20,1871 48 | Henry B. Anthony, Do. of Rhode Island. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10, 1872 160]... Pcrramr-toztinsen: 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3,1873 02k Imai Sent [Ts a CTE 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23,1874 204 Mattos H. Carpen- Do. ter, of ‘Wisconsin. 2 | Dec. 7,1874 | Mar. 3,1875 fis nn Date Sil alc, Hones B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. Miho 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15, 1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael C. Kerr,!! of Michigan. Indiana. Samuel S. Cox,12 of New York, pro tem- pore. Milton Saylor,13 of Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3, 1877 90: Oris ane Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. a5th.. coos 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 FS ENR Cmte noth bt = SO Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20, 1878 200 | Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 Legis do. Stared 46th: oh 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1, 1879 106 Allon) & “Thurman, Do. 0 io. 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16, 1880 0 ee Lae We EEA SR 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 he en Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. 8 There were recesses in fs session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 2 ¢ There were recesses in Sins 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. 17, May 12, June 19. 13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 236 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Coniress Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House g sion ning journment [in days of the Senate oi Representatives C701 Om 1 | Dec. 5,1881 | Aug. 8, 1882 247 | David Davis, of Illi- | J wi ren 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 8 (aeons Or root {John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 11,1884 | Mar. 3, 1885 08 jeune oho. 48th... . 1| Dec. 7,1835 | Aug. b5,1886 242 JoNTg “Sherman, of Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3, 1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. Sothe.....a- 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 IY do Gerri Re elvlts Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 3,1889 OME dol oan dn Olst........ 1 | Dec. 2,1889 [ Oct. 1,1890 304 |..... doisagiet. Thongs B. Reed, of aine. 2 | Dec. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson, ~ of Nebraska. 0.5 hs J 1| Dec. 7,1891 | Aug. 5,1892 251. 1-2 doichmtdies os Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Bem 1] Aug. 17,1893 | Nov. 3,1893 80 il rr 0 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28,1894 SL 3 | Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 3,1895 97 Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Date. 1 | Dec. 2,1895 | June 11, 1896 193 | William P. Frye, of | Thomas B. Reed, of Maine Maine. 2 | Dec. 17,1896 | Mar. 3,1897 $7 an Senet SEI © a 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24, 1897 14 RHEE dO 2 tome mh Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8, 1898 b41 ive werd ll Truro Bibel ni 3 | Dec. 5,1898 | Mar. 3,1899 i iL dos hy HA TO 1 | Dec. 4,1899 | June A 1900 1 LT A0ing. nieces io David B. Henderson, of Towa. 2 | Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 3 FEA pr RE HY ee 1 | Dec. 2,1901 | July 1,1902 LA Se i he EE Re Do. 2 | Dee. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 03 dG; Sesion. So BSth.L_ sie 1 | Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 7,1903 0 TEE eh EE Sd G. Cannon, of inois. 2 | Dec. 17,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 144 5 dob t 3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 38,1905 80, 25 ED RET Ane 8 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30, 1906 00,5 nee Bed dil Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3, 1907 1] fel it QOL. id sedbdus. 1 60th. oie 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30, 1908 181 (=. doi idni se Do. 2 | Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 3,1909 8 elses 2 "i rim Re 3 Gist... 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 dd at do. crohgi alee 1 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 202d do isadeoea: ts 1. 3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 89 [A hppa? DOLercantl sl SOQ 1| Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 141) Gobir cone.n. Champ Clark, of Mis- souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,!’ Brandegee,1¢ Curtis,” Gallinger,18 Lodge.1? 83 Dec. 2,1912' Mar. 3,1913 92 | Bacon,20 Gallinger 21___ TE pn lin 1| Apr. 7,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, of Do. Arkansas. 2 | Dec. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 oS irra SU of 3 | Dec. 7,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 RE. 09 ae nl RE LE Raid 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8,1916 Sales do. 5x4. gees. 5a Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. 65th... 1] Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 188.) QOs oh BERR 2m Bre Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21,1918 854 [meme 0 eeagu al nll. 3 | Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 92 i do. zs io... Oth aca ia 1 | May 19, 1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, of Towa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 1,1919 | June 5, 1920 189 tng G0.cerd guar a. LL 3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 Lo A he (i (ime SR EE 14 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr. 27, 1911. 15 Blected to serve Jan. 11-17, Mar. 11-12, Apr. 8, May 10, May 30 to June 1 and 3, June 13 to July 5, Aug. 1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, 18 Elected to serve May 25, 1912. 17 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. 18 lected 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. 2 Elected 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, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913, 22 Died Oct. 1, 1916. Statistical SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued 237 fo os Ses- | Date of begin- | Date of ad- |Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ONgress | sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives 67th cos. 1| Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23, 1921 227 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, i of Iowa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22, 1922 025 do. Bh imal 3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4,1922 15-E = BT rae DR dL 4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 3,1923 005 = dos. oid ose 8th. od 1| Dec. 3,1923 | June 17,1924 188°. I. Te ed i Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 3,1925 O5|o= 2 doi 2 cis: 69th... i 1| Dec. 7,1925 | July 83,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth, New Hampshire. of Ohio. 2 | Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 SS lo... ne hE ri oth... ......- 1 | Dec. 5,1927 | May 29, 1928 1 ERE dost LCT Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1928 | Mar. 3,1929 glo dod ns Lia visti 2 1 | Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22,1929 Ay Re TE PE em RINE Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 3,1930 214. 1.8 dos... 0... 5... 3 | Dec. 1,1930 | Mar. 3,1931 OF AoE a od ln 1 | Dec. 17,1931 | July 16,1932 223 | aaa doc as y. Bing J ohn N. Garner, of exas. 2 | Dec. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 $a. c. Ao tea 73d. dun 1 | Mar. 9,1933 | June 15,1933 99 | Key Pittman_____..____ Hoary T. Rainey, of inois. 2 | Jan. 3,1934 | June 18,1934 1870.5... Ee (i SEE 1 ath to. 2 1| Jan. 3,1935 | Aug. 26, 1935 2361 0 ihn daa mannts Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee. Al Tani: +s 3,010360). Lo oi OL nat LE dosh nit aid: 23 Died Aug. 19, 1934. SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE Date of beginning Date of adjournment Tuesday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, Mar. 4 Briday; Mor 4. 0. ort nese aidionen Wednesday, Mar. 4 Monday, M Wednesday, Mar. 4 Thursday Monday, Friday, Mop-d..n.. cr LoL iso Loe on... Monday, Mar. 4 Monday, June 8 Saturday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, July 17 Satorday, Mor. 4. cig. tay nh tn oa Monday, Mar 4d. ois, mh Cd aii Brida, Marcador ee 0.0. — 8... Wednesday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 4.___ -| Thursday, Mar. 4._ Saturday, Mar. 4d... ce eg ia Monday, A Wednesday, Mar. 4 Monday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar 4..couul nad. balaush sda daioog Marid. vase SI Nk passin sadness Mar. A orn da A aR EPR ELE Thursday, Mar. 8. a oa Saturday, Mar. 4 Thursday Tuesday, Monday, Mar. 5.___ Friday, Mar. 4......... Wednesday, Mar. 4 Monday, Mar. 4 Monday, July 7 Friday, Mar. 4. Monday, Mar. 4. Friday, June 26. Saturday, Mar. 4. Thursday, July 19. Thursday, Mar. 5. Thursday, Tuesday, Monday, Wednesday, Mar. 9. Tuesday, Mar. 17, -| Friday, Mar. 10. Monday, Mar. 15. _| Thursday, Mar. 20. Friday, Mar. 23. Thursday, Mar. 13. Monday, Apr. 11. Saturday, Mar. 14. Wednesday, June 16. Thursday, Mar. 10. Thursday, June 28. Thursday, Mar. 28. Saturday, Mar. 14. Saturday, Mar. 11. Saturday, Apr. 20. Thursday, Apr. 22. Saturday, May 27. Wednesday, Mar. 26. Wednesday, Mar. 24. Saturday, Mar. 17. Friday, May 20. Saturday, Oct. 29. Thursday, Apr. 2. Tuesday, Apr. 2. Friday, Apr. 15. Wednesday, Mar. 10. Saturday, Mar. 9. Thursday, Mar. 19. Saturday, Mar. 18. Saturday, Mar. 6. -| Monday, Mar. 17. Friday, Mar. 16. Tuesday, Mar. 15, Wednesday, Mar. 18. Tuesday, Mar. 5. Monday, July 21. Monday, Mar, 6. Mar. 6. Mar. 7 Mar. 4. 238 Congressional Dzrectory REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT mela lor for of Nor | [Bf Lop dor a Lf ta 4 3 [=] (5) =) TH oo (2 S12 eo Se Cote 2 So S To | OF 2 State ESICR (CECE (|C8 (C878 28 [C8 C8 C8 sn 58 su lER Hy | g—- P= =k] ot ER Ww = —r | gu|$S~ Slgdu wa |e IS] Lo} 2 [=| pre} f=] f=! tol= BCS] Hon loo RAR Sa beg he e |g |% (FH pic SHS e OQ S ~ s) — MH > 2p = 5) 2 B ~ i = OR KH |p |B |& |= |B |e |R |g |B RB |B-(& Alabama. call. crceaengafons 1 3 7 7 6 8 8 9 9. 10 9 Arizona. rental ASE OEE on Cae Laat Ea 1 1 Arkansas.) coal a coalen id LI lenge Bal 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 7 California. olan. [--awsfinlar] He meme 2 2 3 4 6 7 81 11 20 Colorado... an a [nema meer es ei a a SOE Sl i J 2 3 4 4 Connecticut-o_._._._. 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 MelaWware. coo inee 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 An nee 6 Sie BCI Letina] Dadi beatin GH EERE 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 5 BOOIZIY .. cv meg as 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 9-204 01 | 31 12 10 (ET srs URS ent iw fd oped estore] Luin +! «domed 0 A LAS FERIA fn +114 dol pli «0S BLT ed 1 1 1 2 2 TNoIBaE].. A. BL an |e vie fm minim freind 1 1 3 7 oil L14trea9: | 206) 22'(" 25.|. 27 27 Indiana... kewl Cl ee, 1 3 EQ Sp IE eS 13 13 12 rie ERNE I 0 a 2 ofr Tetloig| wf dx WW] 11 9 Fansasih doin ee wale des ALS LS By 1 3 7 8 8 8 7 Kentucky. -- 13 10: 10 oi 10 11 21 Var 1 9 LoRiSlans. ....cn oe heme 1 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 8 Maine: dowel cae fan d 7 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 3 Marylando-ooue lo. 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 Massachusetts. ........ S14 70 A 130 12000 10. 0-11: = d0aRed E125) 13 0 14 | 16 15 HR RE I el Men og nh on iii] fi be a TL 1 3 4 6 OFRTTS 12 12:0 13 17 ID OIA PRS vi Pe len mr mein es say | BEERIICY at 100, 2 2 3 5 7 9 10 9 Viisstssipploc ae a 1) 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 8 7 VISSOURE oe en mrt op fm Los Yo 1 2 5 7 gl 13. 147 151 16] 16 13 TER En 1 pt SAR C0 id © ll J {Bt 0 Et ERE REA FBLC S000 WE Te BE SRG 1 1 1 2 2 IN sla Boh Si ee (CR ro BR DE EN LE Lele 1 1 3 6 6 6 5 Nevada mores bee il sd mie sli hed ef ene op mp pope 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 New Hampshire_.._.__ 3 4 5 6 6 5 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 9 New Jersey... 4 5 5 7 7 S110 12 14 ENR ET Ee IR LA nid] red Et Wien AR FERRE LARP EE STEER RFU TEI CI Bret) IER I 1 New York.__.._. 31 | 33.( 34, 341 37 | 43 45 North Carolina 7 8 9 91 10| 10 11 North Dakotas. cial os lal create ca iia] cso aalonsod ntl TRIG £2 1 1 2 3 2 10... oe SEEN 195920 «21 -21-4--21-|-- 22 24 QERIahomas. Jr ARM OG alae) 2 i fermi Serial Vs 2 So] 2d [Hed ES mn Lens 5 8 9 (B12 Ui lege ag SRR WAC aa (0 Se eevee ll SSR SAY Fie il J po [ 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 Pennsylvania... ___ 81.13] 18 |--23-[ 26 --28.[ 243525 \|aia4i[07¢ [28 (30 {--32-| - 36 34 Rhode Island_._.___.___. 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 South Carolina. _______ 5 6 8 9 77 6 4 5 7 7 7 7 6 South Daketall. ls 0 Jerre lianeal arama ac oie SL SE SRG 2 2 2 2 3 2 Tennessee... i i202 1 3 6 9. {--13:-- 114-10 8| 10| 10 10| 10 | 10 9 i Wht een SO Cop SORRRE ab (o My BEe Ee] IS ol] AA a] PR 2 2 4 6 11 13 16 18 21 THE) rn LG Fe] LE ee Fe IE Lh Bp Le 1 1 2 2 Vermont i... iu ae ils 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 Virginia. >. . 2020 o.oo 10 [19 22-|- 254-221. 21 (15 «13 «1X Ok -10-)-- 30+] -~10-|: «10 9 Washingtonte 2800. on S000 2 lool feelers ates fe i TEAR 200 1 2 3 5 6 West: Virgina lo oot 0 Lodo oe dia iii nss rman aol lS 3 4 4 5 6 6 Wisconsin... fu T8000 ono een fens afer a dss 2 3 6 8 94( 10] 11 | 11 10 Wyoming... Jf ue 80 HNEO A. erin ad isan Sp EE I 1 1 1 1 1 Potal ti 0 SILO 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, 1. Second—Ohio, 1. hird—Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1; Towa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1. Eighth—Illinois, 1; Towa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ohio, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 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. NoreE.—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. = mmm——— 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. ARCHBALD, 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 VOTES FOR SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES IN 1930, 1932, AND 1934 [The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. ompiled from official statistics] VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS Vote Total vote State 1930 1932 1934 cast in 1934 Democrat | Republican| Democrat Republican] Democrat [Republican Alabama... ... 150, 985 1100, 952 209, 614 BA a de eee em me Dr a Ann EE RR Ne i IE 74, 310 35, 737 67, 648 24, 075 2 93, 920 Arkansas... ..l..... 141,006] JJ aig od 187, 994 vo BE HE nent of pete peng TU Sn et im sea California.}. .. = -sjgsaant ALof0ll 0 ( Se Ios : 8 ors 3108, 748 | 41,946,572 | 22,058, 940 Colorado... 180, 028 137, 487 1 226, 516 198, 519 |Join orp rr Connecticut... __j__.. 35 css al un Sr 282, 327 278, 061 265, 552 247, 623 513, 175 39, 279 7, 665 Delaware... ogee I Ai carat 45,771 52,829 2.99, 166 HAL EE BS ERNE THEI See Sed ; iy oy ER 131, 7800 em mon 5 2 132, 025 Georgia... 50, 502 ov rst tn FREE Ere LICRUIRRRAT Tah dhe ide £1 Fa af A fdahos . ... .ou.. 36, 162 94, 938 103, 020 Var yi EEN Tt i 25 10 JERR a dT Ke i Bs SR ineiss: =v 1, 432, 216 687, 469 1, 670, 466 (ie ake high SEER SHS EEE RT RES SE Te ER I SE SE en IE eG EE 870, 056 61, 750 758, 801 700,103 | 21,474,612 Jowh: zo... coab 235, 186 Bar 613 538, 422 8399, 0200 C.J a a a 5 288, 889 276, 833 Kansas... Si dleie a Fd kal EEA Es Ra AR A 7 5 Kentucky... { a DO S10 SAT fit WD i SE Ae LLL ELD. Louisiana... =z. 130,586 Hh. £ win L cies: 249, 189... loo Hcl dd btn Nablun Co th Soda A, Maine-> .-....... 56, 559 inet ad ele cheat Ha IE Sl 138, 573 139, 773 3 278, 768 Magyland a See A D0 293, 389 138, 536 264, 279 197, 643 2471,112 Massachusetts.---- 651, 939 580,220 fo mi a Se 852, 776 536, 692 | 21,435,932 Michicon.......... 169, 757 034,577 |omnbs ie ocbalrec sun. ne 573, 574 626,017 | 21,219,734 Minnesota... 282, 018 030620 Jo mem sn Ta 294, 757 9 503,379 | 21,009,457 Mississippi------- EBL SAR LE ee bh ed pA Die BL 000... , 609 np RA IE RR Re 1, 017, 046 575, 174 787,110 524,954 | 21,321,876 8 116, 965 77, 307 2196, 051 Montana... 106, 274 66, 724 | moomoo § 142, 823 58.519 | 2203, 626 2 0 281, 421 217, 106 498, 527 Nebraska..._-.--- 172,795 247, 118 |e eof \ 305,958 237,126 2 553, 255 SRI REG EOI AR iS SNE 21, 398 19, 706 27, 581 14, 273 242,755 New Hampshire... 52, 284 ; 72,225 98, 766 OB.040 10 «Scaled Lohan a ad New Jersey... iE LANG } 795,511 | 741,734 | 785,971 | 554,483 | 21,357,409 : 4 881, 934 66, 956 2149, 637 New Mexico... 69, 362 48,6000 Coc iL Ts fem 74, 944 76, 228 3 151, 862 NeweYiorkes oo choo aa 2, 532, 905 x ah i 2, 046, 377 1, 363, 440 | 23,932, 601 ; 5484, 048 , North Carolina._.| 324, 393 210, 761 $ 485, 133 Ee Ee en Sonn Pakola isha daianiines 65, 612 172, 796 104, 477 151, 205 2 259, 607 Ohler... 31, 046, 610 864, 039 1, 293, 175 1, 126, 832 1, 276, 206 839, 068 | 22,128,843 Orlow nw 5, 838 232, 589 426, 130 El i Sal Oregon... 66, 028 137, 231 137, 237 LE ES ee Pennsylvania_____ 523,338 | 51, 462, 186 14] 200, 760 [11 1,375, 489 1, 494, 010 1,366, 872 | 2 2,942, 275 Rhode Island.____ 109, 687 112, ee Gee 140, 700 105, 545 2 246, 313 South Carolina. __ I I BE ee Se le 104, 472 Va Qa sins Wn nl Se a South Dakota. .__. 106, 317 99, 595 125,731 a i ee Tennessee { 7144, 019 49, 554 «8200, 249 12 49, 773 250, 022 Fe 154, 131 FRR Bil Acts ete et ea 195,430 110, 401 2 308, 274 Rexas. . oi oh. 266, 550 BOOZE ee Ss SI 439, 375 12, 895 2? 454, 408 Wiehe... re A a na All 116, 889 86, 046 95, 931 82, 154 2 180, 792 Vermonters: renlnnsl ven Bl henna. 60, 455 74, 319 63, 632 67, 146 2131, 552 Virginia. ...ci5. 2 112, 002 E28, 0000 ah. ca SED I 109, 963 30, 289 2144, 772 Washington os... lds Lami em 365, 939 197, 450 302, 606 168, 994 2 496, 688 ‘West Virginia. ___ 342, 437 00, 427 (2 SRS RE 349, 882 281, 756 2 634, 571 Wisconsin .o- sasiol oanisas. saat Ba ay 610, 236 387, 668 vi 438 13 440, 513 2 921, 949 : 29, 904 742,726 0 53, 288 37,492 2 04, 684 Wyoming... { 30, 259 43, 626 } Ee DR { 53, 806 40, 819 3 05, 026 1Tndependent vote. 2 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 3 Socialist vote. 4 Combined vote of Republicans, Democrats, Progressives, and Commonwealths. 5 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1933. 6 Includes Liberal-Republican vote. 7 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1931. 8 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1937. date received 210,569 votes. ® Total Farmer-Labor vote; the Republican can- didate received 200,083 votes. 10 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1935. 11 3 ,708 Liberal Party votes are included in this tota 12 Nonpartisan vote. 13 Total Progressive vote; the Republican candi- 7A ORC a Am TATA Statistical 241 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES in 1930 Vote cast in 1932 Vote cast in 1934 State and Voto State and State and Total vote district, district, district, Sipe old appor-| per,. | Repub- || 2€W 8PDOI-| yoo. | Repub- || R8W 8PPOI-| nemo. | Repub- 1934 tionment crat lican tionment crat lican tionment crat lican Ala.: Ala.: Ala.: EAE pnp 16,3301. 00.5... NESSIE R ae, 20,0675] 0.0 sydd... 13, 076 139 13,115 2]. 22.8301L. C0. 2a. 28, 250 1,118 qi. 18, 502{ 0b. 18, 592 Sac... 13,398. C 0s 1% Fa 20, 959 1 8410s... 13, 101.0. 13, 191 Arh =n 13, 502 2.6, 209 Ath. ea 20, 960 4,016 ath.ll... 14, 728 2, 086 16, 914 Bh 1820. 5th...... 24, 783 6, 135 Sthit.. . 22, 035 7, 282 29, 317 HH he 9:430]. 6th i _. 15,206. =2-:.2 6ih-.---- 12,342). Lo. 12, 342 Th tees 18, 932 12, 062 hiss 21, 322 7, 699 he... 22,001] 25,361 27, 362 Sthe ce 18570]... thi il. 404 Sthuz). B81 il 13, 817 Oth 24,484) 25,750 Sth... 31, 539 3, 701 Hhic...- 19, 317 832 3 20, 335 1G. .: 14, 388 8, 009 Ariz.: Ariz.: Ariz.: At large 82342 0... Atlarge.| 75,469] 29,710 Atlarge.| 65,914] 28,283] 396,044 Ark.: Ark.: : rk.: YA 10,103, Of... 18052 08,0701... Ist... 20, 155] se 20, 136 Tie 13562 Bi qh 93) 85y(i 1,005 2dill rn 18, 629 duis. 228000. 01.00. odie 20,337 0.00 adic... 17,362] 10,158 27, 521 AheS- 19,004) 20.0.0. 4thili... 30,443]... .... 4th 1... 19,820 i 19, 822 Sthies. tS - 21,800 0.0. Sthi..... 27, 940 2, 926 Sth... .. 20, 200 ol co 20, 209 Gh: 18, A270 a de a 6thit...| 33,4231 oi... 6th... .. 19,078 sl 19, 078 Tihs. 15 R00. 2. Tihih... 30, 360]: 005. nae 13, 887 613 14, 500 Calif. Calif.: Calif.: distil... 466,703. So... 15) He WEE 4173,400[ 5. TE 498,661] ©& 6,698 3 105,405 obs HILT TR Age 6 35, 941 duit Lue sinan. 643, 146 2d. ENA 766, 370 3 66, 373 Bday. 8 26, 785| 943,336 Salli. 61, 694 46, 887 adil... 65, 566| ‘0 56,222] 3 122, 956 ? yr ro Ce) EDO ri 6 47, 397 Athi... 511,603] 667,425 ath i... 46, 871 50,491 8105, 222 I he ER CR Lo 6 59, 853 FA En PI rl 6 67, 349 8thews..f 15,933| 789, 751 95, 684 oth 6 110, 190 ON 6 75, 528 Oth. Holl as 148, 180 8 48, 259 74 RELY id FY BATE 679,041 Tehiak. 32, 365 45, 944 tho... 51,9 47,414 399,419 os A a EE 6 93, 377 Sthill... 65, 455 49, 487 Sthi..... n107,325|....._ 3107, 423 1p 1 SIR RRS ee 182, 176 oth... 50, 125 31, 209 Oth li (ore 677, 650 377, 682 doth... 54, 231] 162, 502 10th... 50, 390 40, 794 10th: ..... 68, 475 37,860] 3106, 351 Pgh v0 08, 6 124, 092 1ith-.... 38, 240 57, 739 1th... 66, 999 56, 350] 8 125, 196 126hts. 43,122 40, 674 12th... 52, 595 51,216 3103, 857 13th. 65, 261 53, 449 13th: .. 83, 384 27,993 3133, 575 14th... 47, 368 35, 598 Tdth.s. 52, 761 33, 945 391, 468! 15th. 57, 518 67, 390 15th... 2 67, 247 65, 858) 8133, 161! i6th.. = 70, 333 57, 718 loth. ¢ 4119,332) i 3 120, 800 17th... 50, 720 26, 868 17th... 60, 045 20, 508 3 85, 376 18th... 48, 179 33, 817 18th... 52, 377 40, 179 303,074 19th... 51, 796 56, 889 19th. 912,301 697,119] 3109, 602 20th_.___ 43, 304 43, 757 20th. ui 12 46, 957 51, 682 3 98, 647 Colo.: Colo.: Colo.: Isfiars 38,152] 39,907 Shot 70,826] 56, 601 Ist.2t. 59,744) 34,073] 3 106,611 diab 37, 760 55, 099 2a. 63, 399 56, 516 2d..hE 64, 719 49,142] 3115, 791 EO AE 35, 744 55, 170 Bd ii. 59, 882 57, 793 3d. 73, 281 39, 763] 8114, 233 gthr i... 34, 536 7 051 hii... 40, 736 20, 993 dthe 5: 39, 747 17, 234 3 59, 063 Conn Conn Conn ASBi 51, 551( 22:50, 877 Ist.._.__.| 72,807 70,920 Stits... 74,784) 59,240 3137, 258 2d init... 33,029) 37,801 did. 45,0011 45,232 2d. 43,8161 44,899 3 90, 544 Sd... 40, 269| 45,329 3d. 57,881] 55,254 Sddie 55,804) 52,832 8114, 527 Juhi... 50, 769 49, 209 4thiil.... 64, 268 71, 670 Hh 45, 835 54,178] 8122,778 Sthell t_. 32, 584 33, 302 Sthilt = 42, 054 42, 132 Sphaii 42, 594 38, 547 3 82, 933 1 : At large.| 282,464 284,490 At large 263, 794) 249, 146 512, 940 Del.: z 3 Al large. 38,801 48,493 2 large.| 51,698) 48,841 a large.| 45,927) 52,468 3 98, 857 Fla.: Ne a3 Asta bee 24,792] 11,819 Ish... 61,381 19, 010, Ast... 42,051 Luts: 8 42, 086 2 sso C1080; al 2d hs 20, 21a 2d. AS, AO iia 313,741 8d... LL 700 ca. oan Sduiah. 28208 AT a 3diib... 16,740) Sri oie 316, 793 dohu.is.. 40,422... ....... 4thi.a. 86,1101) 4th ii. 39,286] sas 3 59, 479 a At large.| 186,284 61,300 Atlarge. | 125,263. *___:_ 3 125, 346 al CY 2 dsbsa i... dB dstiag. 24, 429 1,726 lstels. 5,802) uate SE 5,392 7} BAS RIB a odin... ody V1 BERR RL HOS 24.8. 3,000 Laide 3, 369 vp REE Say oe 4009) 4, 501-2 Li. 4, 501 Other. 7, 080 ccc ry Othiie 24, 673 5, 898 oth _ 8401 a. 8,491 10th: -... 260) ac ne loth... 23,911 10th... 8, 1201300. 8,129 th: 7, 343 1, 631 12th: 2,444) ___.... Idaho: Idaho Idaho ists... 18, 657 34, 527 1steiis.... 42,784 32, 545 sbi. 42, 223 25, 969 68, 192 Hr eat 27, 004 46, 342 ne Ani 4, 58, 138 46, 273 ho TRG 54, 547 37, 200 94, 747 dst. occ... 16, 747 23,719 stil... 26, 959 33, 672 Ist.i 27, 963 24, 829 52, 792 VRRERES 63, 341 76, 665 2d. 102, 099] 113, 447 bs i Ce 104, 479 81, 034 185, 513 Bde... 83, 028 59, 644 8d mt. 120, 093 95, 282 Sd ek 122, 109 70, 328 192, 437 qth => 36, 736 16, 192 dhe... 53, 722 18, 659 athif 53, 448 14, 401 67, 849 Sth. 21, 460 10, 816 Sth... 30, 747 12, 254 Sthivi-. 29, 107 10, 923 340,172 6th: 120, 408 59, 052 6thizs... 164, 187 95, 637 6this. 148, 645 77, 462 226, 107 he 111, 525 90, 844 Zihic. . .. 190, 446| 134, 801 this 185, 658| 104, 079] 3 290, 284 Sthee 13 15, 394| 13 16, 565 Sthid... 30, 147 11, 625 Sthivy. 27, 682 9, 671 37, 353 Othe. fea 24, 028 thie. 36, 596 40, 253 ofthis 36, 949 28, 663 65, 612 10th: =. 70, 621 72, 938 10th... 100, 449| 101, 671 10th... 94, 993) 100, 161 195, 154 Hihr oe 33, 169 56, 957 Tithe. 80, 862, 82, 195 thx. 68, 74 69, 469 138, 217 12th. 17, 497 55, 754 Toth. 57, 578 65, 122 Ith 46, 111 57,126] 3 103,241 18th: =. 11, 937 28, 113 13th-=. = 34, 917 44, 655 13th __ 26, 427 40, 423 3 66, 854 Tdthesz.- 27, 59 36, 370 14th: 50, 277 43, 082 14th... 44, 965 39, 330 84, 205 15th... { Danan 0 \ uh. 55,730] 42,255] 15th... 48,682 40,035] 388,719 j6th:z. 32, 692 36, 572, 16th... 44, 802 67, 949 16tht 31, 044 58, 716 89, 760 17th.t.2.- 19, 711 27, 696 17thi=_. 43, 198 37, 594 17th 33, 621 36, 552 70,173 Rthez_ 29, 012 38,102) * 18th... _. 58, 483 44, 787 18th -. 48, 791 44, 617 393, 770 19th: 35, 310 43, 794 19th... 72, 366 53, 151 19th. 59, 179 50, 571 109, 750 20thir .... 37, 537 20, 262 20th... .. 48, 612 27, 540 0th tb. .. 39, 761 30, 085 69, 846 2st... 46, 058 34, 521 AL AE 66, 213 44, 430 sti 49, 825 47, 330 397,729 20d 48, 281 47,715 2d: 88, 151 49, 965 22d 62, 161 48, 285| 3 110, 452 28d... 49, 11 ; 29, 291 0 bs 64, 551 35, 885 Bd 51, 712 41, 520 93, 232 24th_____ to } 24th_____ 43,107 30,175|| 24th.____ 30,442] 36,801] 76,333 ’ ’ o5thz: 38, 796 34, 927 a5thiz 64, 286 43, 580 25the::-- 55, 824 45,955] 3101, 794 At large 890, 327|1, 062, 606 Atlarge._|1, 675, 274|1, 421, 221 Atlarge_|1, 507, 714/1, 201, 382| 3 2, 750, 336 i at large 975, 422 991, 083 f A large. (1, 655, 147|1, 406, 771 i Al large.|1, 459, 890|1, 112, 802| 3 2, 602, 200 nd.: nd.: nd.: Ist ecee 46, 836 40, 015 Ist.ilal.. 45,473 42, 575 Isto.) 44, 983 38, 531 384,011 2d moi. 52, 452 35, 689 ri BR ie 73, 357 61,897 2d... 61, 610 72, 552] 3 134,653 8dr... 45, 070 44, 808 8d... 67, 686 52, 965 8d._2... 5, 283 52,410( 3109, 063 dthior a. 46, 396 34, 856 4h... 73, 198 56, 602 4th... 58, 625 54,510] 3 113,417 Sthor.... 43, 355 40, 919 S5thoo... 70, 698 59, 904 Sthot... 68, 079 56,420) 3 125,934 6th 40, 803 37, 969 6thic. i. 74, 527 64, 081 6th... 67, 521 67,138 3 135, 504 Tthotii.. 87, 777 53, 822 hist... 78, 356 59, 949 thal... 73, 324 67,987] 3 142,469 Stho-o. 44, 194 44, 203 Sth tt. 83, 396 48, 031 Sth 75, 268 56,470, 3 132,282 Others. 43, 346 43, 681 ofthis. 76, 157 55, 868 Hho 68, 329 62,403) 3 131,100 10thocs_ 47, 057 53, 702 10th: .- 68, 974 63, 398 10th. 64, 939 60,693) 3 126,214 Paths. 41, 823 39,771 Tth=.. 67, 871 57, 006 13th. 61,476 50,350 3 113,049 12th: 39, 488 43, 286 i12¢h.. 70, 128 61, 241 12th: 60, 358 47,134) 3108, 611 13th... 62, 609 59, 361 Towa: Towa Towa: 1 Ml es 15, 538 27, 053 Ist. .5oi. 55, 378 46, 738 1st. 48, 544 39, 047 3 88, 134 ods... 30, 008 24,113 Vr 1 71,914 50, 636 1 Be 60, 654 34, 153 3 96, 300 des... 15, 908 27, 098 8dr: 48, 939 47,776 84... 35, 159 42, 063 3 82, 469 4th. .... 20, 236 29, 224 4th... 62, 598 42, 207 4th... 49, 504 43, 794 3 95, 020 Sth: .. 19, 931 23, 221 Sthit... 51, 732 51, 909 5th... 48, 949 54,699 3104, 639 thor z.. 16, 811 25, 875 6thzx 43, 891 56, 962 6th =. 50, 828 46, 074 397, 561 tn oa 11, 372 36, 715 thi =3. 57, 803 44, 925 7th 222 51, 395 47, 508 98, 903 Sth... 26, 373 27, 960 Sthizi = 41,772 47, 834 Sth-=1__. 40, 434 45, 875 3 87, 559 Othe... 20, 587 27, 873 Othe... 61, 755 50, 796 Hh. 58, 598 32, 639 3 95, 668 10th: 17, 540 34,911 Tich_ ..- 13, 382 37, 659 Kans.: Kans. Kans. Re ee 53,790| ist... 34,244) 59,241) 1st... 43,205] 66,203] 109,498 29d 37, 991 49, 844 dois 56, 805 60, 902 ols Renton 59, 698 60,401 3121, 582 dL Cl 37, 807 42, 106 8a 44, 910 52, 881 fh ed 51, 793 49, 710{ 3103, 531 dth: 21, 933 30, 840 ath == 5, 246 44, 621 dth oor 50, 309 45, 346 95, 655 5th.-..." 28, 971 33, 871 Bthizr: i: 65, 713 23,176 th. 49, 610 31, 511 3 87,000 6thoz iL 24, 975 40, 132 8th... 62, 818 50, 242, 6th. 2 = 60, 028 62,824 3 122, 912 th. 33, 627 52, 858 th: 47, 418 59, 269 th 53, 104 63, 952 17, 056 Sth... =% 57,173 19, 325 ; 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 13 Election contested; Democrat declared elected. 14 To fill vacancy. Statistical 243 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Vote cast in 1930 in 19 Vote cast in 1934 State and aes State and Vato oast ines State and ore "Total vote Gigi district, district, castin 0d appor=| nem, | Repub- || B8W PPO" | pyar. | Repub- || BW 8PPOI-| 1am. | Repub- 1934 tionment crat lican tionment crat lican tionment crat lican RY.: Ky.: Ky.: iste... 24,02 ee aot Atlarge.| 575,191] 391,868| Ist.__._. 18,895) 12,008 30, 903 gaiLs.. Zi } Atlarge.| 574,270 301,674| 2d... 18,410] 155,188 5 24,528 FA SP 25,9810 Son At large | 574,189] 390, 982 gd ra... 48, 664 36, 922 3 86, 598 an... 30, 910 28, 220 At large.| 574,079] 390,739 4th... 25, 669 23, 644 49, 313 5th ..-. 16 1, 306. 61, 832 Atlarge.| 573,750] 390,474 Sthi...... 24, 666 11, 576 3 37,862 Oth... 31, 520 18, 891 Atlarge.| 573,505] 390,370 6the..... 34, 641 23, 070 57,711 hh. 33, 402 24, 380 Atlarge.| 573,269] 390,148 yr Fe oe 35, 642 31, 799 67, 441 Sth... 25, 688 19, 023 At large.| 573,257 390,041 gthoi x 35, 288 24, 358 59, 646 Ophde.. 42, 671 28, 850 At large._| 573,024] 389,950 othe... 12, 736 42, 741 55, 477 0th... 27, 159 24, 172 1lth-_.. 24,716] 48, 535 La.: La.: La.: stl... 30, 629 1, 335 Istcinnan 48. 784leac on. 1efdes.... 45,678] cee 345,714 od. 30, 739 872 Ws... 50,327 os or. Mai. LEST Un ER 3 45, 806 ri {3 Ls te 8 So or b: 15 BEAT, 18,340020=. oo. gd... 12,6861 nna 12, 636 4th... 18330. = 4h... 26,2620. niu 4h... ... 14,6800 2 14, 680 Sth... 1068) Bth__2... LTE EE LL oth... 1 Eo HER 14, 158 6th... ... 15,5240 ee SLL Gthe x... 25,2381 00 sion. Othe... 19,8377 0 ea 19, 377 hes... 0,208] oo this... 04,233 Ls. tal... thei... 16,528) 0 16, 528 Sth. ..z.... 12,383) ox. jon. Sth... .. 2564 n cx Den) Sth. i... 7203 in al... 17, 213 Maine Maine Maine Ist... 14, 741 23, 434 i E14 Sen 39,356] 41,112 sted. 48, 235 46, 635 304, 877 wr BAA 18, 943 24, 330 dices... 44, 490 40, 703 diss. 52, 491 46, 200 3 98, 693 8d 13, 948 25, 109 3dzia.... 34, 520 34, 226 dei... 41,710 44, 024 85, 734 an_..... 7, 839 15, 199 Md.: Md.: Md.: 180. cz. 34, 553 25, 792 Istace-—- 39,471 21, 387 dst3t.... 41, 627 23, 378 65, 005 os Le Loe 79, 963 54,914 Aix... 87, 841 42, 740 oq 75, 244 51,303] 3 130,464 dco 28, 633 24, 170 3d si. 0 34, ont 11, 370 ado tl.. 27, 988 13, 042 342 181 46,781 = Tan TA ee 49,471 26,661|| 4th_.____ { a6 463| "22, 231||) 4D------| 37,006 24,162 362,582 Shit... - 40, 315 21, 463 Sth... .. 42, 329 17, 835 Btheo.. 39, 734 24, 364 364,713 Gehet....—- 42, 526 36, 815 6th... 49, 126 34, 989 6tho.. 45, 605 44, 244 3 90, 685 Mass. Mass. Mass. Igbo c- = 33, 934 41, 334 I1si5es 44, 191 56, 767 Istoar 35, 061 51, 046 3 88, 638 3 re 46, 432 37, 247 Mmm 52, 346 47, 920 2 [Cots 47, 894 42, 495 3 93, 465 51 Llp 27, 568 36, 620 10 47, 632 50, 617 8d...oiL. 46, 830 46, 572 93, 402 4thenez-- 35, 661 42, 996 dithae: 46, 081 56, 408 4th... .. 38, 934 54, 601 3 95, 041 Bilee oo 25, 742 50, 541 Sth... 49, 788 74, 459 jth oo... 46, 124 75,754] 38121, 879 Bhat 15, 683 50, 814 6th... 31,416 65, 728 Gih.bl. je El 64, 610 3 64, 619 7H A 45, 521 21, 821 Thee... 61, 591 44, 331 thoi... 62, 666 40,988 3 106, 126 Sth oi 44, 031 57, 428 Sthoua. 50, 266] 48, 080 Sthol... 53, 581 37, 873 91, 454 Sth 39, 948 41, 040 Othil.... 56, 425 61, 178 hie 60, 141 54, 198 114, 339 10th... - 33, 218 4, 815 10th... =. 40, 099 60, 926 160 hais Jo. os] 6 84, 244 3 84, 275 Lith... 23, 739 40, 417 11th... 45, 343 7, 583 ilthto 46,383... 346, 407 12h... 50, 894 15, 422 12th. 22 69, 994 25, 995 12the 1a. 78, 783 16, 370 95, 153 13th. -... 43, 800 55,470 13the....... 45, 964 64, 589 13th)... 48, 624 58, 331 106, 955 14th. «... 42, 307 56, 803 14th... 39, 259 51, 680 14th.:. .. 38, 325 46, 411 84, 736 5th... 20, 780 37, 100 15th. zz. 36, 556 53, 066 15th... 38, 336 46, 445 3 87, 066 d6th..... 17, 467 39, 953 Mich.: Mich Mich Isto sa 8, 758 44, 021 i ERE 51, 620 21, 764 Istiosis 40, 054 19, 194 3 60, 877 od ee 29, 979 41,478 od. 51, 592| 49, 257 29.230 .. 38,972! 40,119 379, 990 0 Ep 14, 737 36, 190 dia 46, 093 49, 383 84.42. 32,928 41, 587 375,578 4th. =... 17, 953 34, 980 4th... 46, 927 42, 931 4theis 31, 646 45, 224 377,729 Ohh oe 17 420 31, 297 5th..=... 48, 686 52, 870 BEhiiy. 37, 847 39, 682 378, 510 Cth. 50,221| 124,797 thas... 55, 478 45, 818 6th. = .. 41, 100 42,424 3 83, 817 75h. 2, 534 42, 256 7th ic... 38, 738 51,974 thio 27, 690 42, 857 371,494 Shc.» 18, 838 38, 891 Sth... 53, 959 45, 263 Sth... 35, 945 40, 333 378,324 Nhs. 10, 462 31, 318 Otho... 40, 200 36, 434 Othiil 30, 513 33, 222 3 63, 944 10th: =... 8, 345 31, 033 10thes. 32,376] 38,937 10th. 24, 526 36, 719 3 61, 697 10 NE Ba 34, 971 ther... 39, 261 37,311 ithe. 39, 293 32, 460 371,754 12th... 17.703 36, 907 12the. 26, 925 48, 014 126he. == 37, 298 34, 281 371,759 13th... 9, 575) 39, 064 13th. .2-- 43, 374 50, 437 13th... 25, 869 35, 879 3 63, 290 4th... 53, 789 50, 491 d4th..... 45, 301 26, 006 372, 844 15th. = 52, 376 49, 801 15th... 4: 40, 119 32, 011 373,725 16th. x 43, 369 36, 174 16thos.- 32, 269 27, 487 3 61, 236 : 17thee. 44, 325 51, 918 17th: _ 29, 250 35, 562 3 66, 120 Minn Minn.: 18 Minn. dst 19 24, 357 45, 330 At large._|19 388, 616|______.___ Isbaith. 29, 581 51,099] 3109, 718 1 od 19 33, 092/ 38,431 At large. |!° 380,444| ________ dian 43,677] 1° 37,663] 3 117,308 8 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 6 Republican and Democratic candidate. 14 To fill vacancy. 15 Vote cast for Prohibitionist candidate. 16 Vote cast for Social-Labor candidate. 17 Vote cast for Workers’ Party candidate. 18 Tn Minnesota there were 32 candidates of vari- ous political parties running at large, hence the total vote of only the 9 successful candidates is shown. 19 Vote cast for Farmer-Labor candidate. 244 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932 Vote cast in 1934 State and ° State and State and T t voi distriet, district, district, gal Yo ie 01d aDPOI- | nem. | Repub- || BREW 8PPOI-| 1hemo. | Repub- || B8W PPO" peme. | Repub- 1934 tionment | “o.o¢ lican || tlomment | “op lican | tiomment | oo lican Minn.-con. Minn.-con. Minn.-con. Sdos. 10 21, 118 35, 704 At large_|19361,724| ________ 3d... 10 59, 097 28,637 3110, 922 dh. 19 16, 180 48, 633 At large_|19350,455|_ ________ 4th: ... 19 30, 354 37,933] 31083, 086 5th... 32, 215 55, 502 Atlarge = _... 337, 110 Stho.-_..t 19 42, 322 45,875 3 116,835 Sched. 19 19, 461 44, 058 Atlarge.| 321,949|_________ 6this-_.. 10 46, 346 56, 642 3 122, 560 Zh... 19 58, 334 13, 506 At large. _.321, 092 this... 44, 762| 19 65, 261 110, 023 Sthx%... 19 29, 001 55, 802 Atlarge_(19317,109|_________ Sthis.... 2 25, 386 39, 513] 3110, 599 Oth... 2 32, 874 37, 531 Atlarge. | 0.0... --313, 221 this. ... 1941, 822 27, 522 304, 554 oth... 19 37,182 38, 391 iss.: Miss. 10,540) C00 ist... a A 6, 825 no 2 Sy a 5.721 13,5620. oui 8d. 3086 3, 586 O72 Jaz and 4th... 80517 oso 8, 051 19,1281 n=. 5th... 9,4) 9,412 oo esl 6th... 9.002 9,002 Sa gthic Me 14, 730 Mo.: -|1, 013, 824] 609, 268 Istiaiis 2 52, 273 42, 513 305, 468 -|1, 004, 170| 603, 345, 23 LL 59, 567| 41,916] 3101,695 1, 002, 557) 589, 615 Sd... 61, 548 39,953] 3101, 585 1, 000, 218| 589, 272 Athi 82, 995 18,368 3101, 557 97,642 588, 647|| S5th______ 96,798 17,889] 3114,777 997, 448| 588, 246 6th =... 58,902| 47,769] 3106, 987 996, 969| 586, 165 hl... 57, 446 65,211) 3123,311 995, 676] 585, 840 Sth....z- 54, 006 45, 354 99, 360 995, 002| 584, 356 oth: =. 41, 514 24, 380 3 66, 525 994, 569| 582, 662 10th... 42, 865 29, 949 373, 644 994, 123| 582, 324 th: .- 59, 119 44,693] 3104,819 988, 200 589, 205 12th... 70, 754 66, 108] 3138, 650 981, 847 580, 495 13thes 60, 198 31, 165 391, 958 Mont istosis. 39, 166 29, 793 Ista. .... 51, 159 33, 333 Astor. = 55, 877 25, 567 3 82, 366 ES Re 45, 438 52, 943 LE 64, 103 53, 890 os 79, 856 33,703] 3114,373 Nebr.: Nebr. Nebr. isto... 34, 662 19, 589 stil... 63, 022 43, 653 3 EA Sa "55, 897 45, 058) 3 105, 617 od voa.. 33, 276 34, 114 2d. 0g. 51, 728 44, 209 Seite 46, 790, 36, 743 3 86, 399 od Las... 53, 221 23, 599 3d.0... 74, 207 32, 954 8d. 52, 261 72, 374 124, 635 dthio.:.. 35, 812 28, 196 4thi..... 53, 713 38, 938 ath)... 69, 275] 49, 357 118, 632 Sthez:... 34, 915 27, 932 Sthiad.-- 53, 586 49, 200 Sth 55, 709 49,161 3 107, 033 on ASE 24, 519 85, 766 = ev.: ev.. ev.: aL large - 15,343] 18,279 Al large.| 24,979 16,133 al large-| 29,691] 11,992 41, 683 FER 29, 166 37, 570 Isto... 50,306, 47, 639 gp tes 48, 568 41,425 3 90, 085 2d Le 23, 157 34, 253 dial... 44, 459 50, 156 1 ERE 37,122 42, 706 3 80, 128 N.J.: N.J.: N.7J.: Isto. ..: 19, 486 78, 019 Ish io=2 54, 701 89, 816 Ist... 48, 770 81,634) 3 133,410 PU ag rn 17, 125 67, 729 oq. iii: 35, 257 60, 963 A Baa Pha 48, 743 49, 824 3 98,793 8d in. 57,911 54, 889 61, 253 58, 217 80-2: 58, 670 53,170] 3112,371 4tha. .... 28,330 39,019 4th... 40, 705 51, 794 dth.rs 36, 326 48, 760 3 86, 014 Sth... 33, 851 65, 178 5th... .- 1, 964 60, 713 Sth >: 50, 395 54,938) 3106,313 6thos 4... 55, 283 72, 868 6thi 47, 938 65, 653 6th. 45, 581 51, 528 3 98, 146 Zthivs 29, 879 35, 636 thio... 47, 688 52, 003 Thi oc 43, 771 47, 083 391, 699 Stho.-.-. 43, 195 44, 038 Sth. 0. - 50, 759 50, 997 Sthia 37,119 45,123 3 84,138 Othi. 5... 20, 497 24,312 Othi.... 53, 822 52, 932 Othilvl. 54, 941 44,704 3100, 652 10th: =... 21, 539 44, 435 10th.;... 41, 901 53, 316 10th. =... 35, 261 40, 205 376,003 1th: ..... 44, 691 16, 087 1lihil.... 6, 5401 47,495 Tithe... 33, 631 34, 110 3 68, 251 12th. +... 53, 565 16, 715 12th... 40, 746) 54, 783 12th... 32, 546 39, 817 373,355 8th... 78,779] 27,964 18thi.... 73, 342 26, 447) 3100, 175 1dths:. .. 77, 519 24, 448 Mths... 77,020 21, 081 3.99, 087 N. Mex.: N. Mex.: N. Mex.: Ab large. 65, 194 51, 655 ALY large. 94, 764 52, 905 At { large. 76, 833 70,659] 3 148, 268 Isto... 64, 172 96, 390 Ista... 121,909, 153,435 i Saeil 93, 794] 20127,082| 3 239,918 2d. 110, 081 45, 651 dea. 172, 512 68, 525 140, 520 48,306] 3 222,407 8d... 20, 525 5, 159 8d..ciol. 33, 750 , 799 26, 738 8,179 3 40, 374 4th... 25, 935 5,713 4th... 39, 56! 7,429 5 8, 935 3 44, 447 Sth. .5. 35, 580 18, 150 Sth... 51, 932 24, 814 41, 154 19, 010 369, 201 6the_ o. 46, 681 29, 862 thai 81,011 42, 221 70, 164 30, 67 3127, 522 othe. =. 22, 387 8, 884 the , 088 9, 696 28, 945 9, 897 347,121 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 16 Vote cast for Socialist-Labor candidate. 19 Vote cast for Farmer-Labor candidate. % Republican and Law Preservation candidate. Statistical 245 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Vote cast in 1930 in 193 i 2tste and ote ¢ n Sine and Vote cast in 2 Siniocnd Vote cast in 1934 er district, district, district, Dua. Tow 0d apPOI-| yom. | Repub- || B8W 3PPOI-| Demo. | Repub- || B8W 28PPOI-| 1am. | Repub- 1934 tionment | “o.,¢ lican || tiomment | “oot lican | tionment | “oop lican N.Y.—con N. Y.—con N. Y.—con Sth at 80, 119 36, 421 Sth... 140, 853 49,471 Sth.:.... 111, 247 44,423| 3209, 582 Hho 48, 065 27, 698 Oh a 69, 634 38, 047 Othe... .. 56, 617 30,462| 3 102,268 10th... 2 23, 711 11, 532, 10th... .. 36, 460 14, 167 10th:...... 31,193 14, 770 3 56, 349 qth 37, 148 13, 856 ith _..L 50, 418 20, 323 1th... ... 36, 393 15, 595 3 66, 358 2d... 14, 327 2, 663 12eht. 4 21, 248 2, 068 I2th...... 14, 895 3, 029 3 20, 702 3th. 13, 034 3, 192 15th: + 21, 939 2, 513 3th. 13, 090 3,828 3 20, 220 14th... 12,431] 87,793 ath ot 20, 668 9, 651 4th... 15, 437 9, 744 3 32, 080 15th... 21, 758 4,377 15th. = 30, 112 5, 987 156th 23, 482 4,726 3 31, 594 16th. .--. 20, 707 7, 081 q6th_ =. 29, 485 12, 449 16th... .- 22, 528 9, 735 3 37,734 7th... 19, 218 19, 913 7th... 36, 397 29, 776 170h=.....- 29, 338 22, 688 3 59, 531 Sth..." 22,131 5, 288 ASth...... 30, 245 7,997 12th... 23, 480 8, 832 337,067 19th... 35, 322 14,919 19th... _- 57, 400 21, 758 19th... 42,614 18, 612 372, 856 20th... 8, 709 10, 606 20th... 16, 447 15, 227 20th... 12, 836 13, 083 3 29, 590 ist... 42, 468 24, 202 21st... 67, 583 28, 955 Shs. on 62, 042 23,534) 8 101,878 22d. 25, 198 7, 060 130} iA 38, 172 8, 768 29d =. 28, 535 9, 162 4 45, 909 ood... 93, 426 27, 456 od. FE 131, 852 31, 753 23d... 109, 319 31,028) 38 192, 755 Moh: 79, 917 48, 154 24th. _. 128, 881 65, 189 Ath... ... 104, 652 51, 535] © 194, 179 25th... 34, 940 51, 332 5th: 63, 345 80, 909 o5th. = 49, 469 63, 782 123, 286 20th... 2 26, 545 46, 082 26th... 43, 174 61, 687 26th... .. 31, 292| 21 50, 849 3 87,022 oth. 35, 574 41, 423 24h... 46, 154 52, 099 oth... .. 37, 295 46, 924 3 88, 689 3th... 74, 386 40, 628 23th... 89, 096 47, 706 28th... 89, 511 36,117, ¢ 130,473 20th... 35, 316 51, 341 29th_ 2 46, 935 65, 359 29h... 38, 054 56, 401 100, 090 S0th_-~ 31, 567 36, 190 oth. ~__ 42, 632 55, 981 S0thls-—__ 39, 048 42, 740 3 86, 710 ish... 21, 811 36, 308 AE 35, 153 47, 937 Bist... 26, 308 43, 942 375, 635 ody... 20, 905 43, 625 0 li 34, 199 56, 654 Sod... 22, 959| 20 49, 055 379, 249 Sod. 22 39, 340 39, 810 ad... 53, 427 52, 398 HT I 45, 831 45, 579 397,977 84th... 23, 968 51, 460 34th... .. 44,174 58, 735 S4th..... 32, 075 50, 528 3 88, 725 35th... 44, 336 63, 955 3th... 60, 376 79, 345 Sath..=_ = 50, 599 65, 732| 8 125,017 soth 23, 763 43, 132 36th... _.. 36, 648 58, 484 36th... .. 27, 129 45, 431 376, 458 Sith. ...- 28, 723 44,374 Sb. 48, 048 55, 305 37th... 28, 979 48, 964 3 86, 064 38th___.. 37, 500 50, 083 S3th..._. 58, 775 64, 003 a3th-. 64, 434| 20 50, 066] 3 123, 944 I 29, 610 40, 069 39th_.._. 33,567 50, 855 59th... 36, 658 49,915 301, 829 40th... 27, 268 61, 333 40th... | 54, 363 92, 929 40th_____ 50, 532 69, 353] 8 131, 534 dist 25, 861 26, 995 dist 3 45, 120 43, 743 4186: .. 45, 830 33, 793 3 85, 841 49d: 33, 195 16, 072 4-1 51, 516 30, 230 42d... 49, 251 26, 036 379,932 43d... .. 14, 755) 38,913 43d... 3 34, 561 55, 988 43d... 22, 856 42, 513 3 72,289 At large_|2, 363, 627|1, 756, 343 At large_|1, 978, 680|1, 417, 271| 3 3, 613, 983 N.C Ab large_|2, 333, 787|1, 740, 325 Al large_|1, 952, 9391, 387, 460| 3 3, 550, 460 N.C. CL: 6 Isto. J7, 0851-00 00 Ist... -.. 32, 790 3,313 Igba0L 11, 786 1, 637 13, 423 Chass 15, 987 1,124 oda 34, 325 1,430 deer 41820. i... 11, 329 dug, 20, 197 10, 215 Sd 30, 395 11, 146 ods 20, 218 9, 922 30, 140 dtha 25,724 9, 339 4th. 51, 103 16, 129 dthic) 29, 431 13, 507 42, 938 Sth rod 54, 277 34, 259 Shh. 40, 825 17, 326 Bthine 2822 28, 221 6the 20, 786 , 348 8th. = 38, 074 18, 093 6th... 21, 241 9, 543 30, 784 hy 38, 229 26, 583 oh 35,416 8, 657 7th... 17,774 4,747 22, 521 Sth 44, 068 29, 307 Sth eee 49, 584 26, 260 Sth... .. 35, 794 25, 974 61, 768 Oth... 44, 159 37,911 Oth. .... 51, 145 29,421 Shoee.... 44,780 32,171 76, 951 10th. 52, 964 41, 224 0th. 63, 776 43, 067 10th... 43, 483 37, 820 81, 303 Ththe. 64,667, 39,182 litho... 56, 199 38, 117 94, 316 N. Dak N. Dak N. Dak.: Isto = 14, 208 41, 698 At large. 72,659 144,339 At large. 85, 771) 144,605] 3 277,979 A EL 25, 780 34, 063 At large. 71,695 135,339 At large. 79,338| 114,841 3 195, 269 sda 12,296 50,917 Ohio: Ohio: Ohio: SEY. 2 -- 46, 974 50, 481 | Ey nde 55, 416 66, 018 Ist. io... 42,723 53, 985 96, 708 ods" 45, 761 46, 347 2d 57, 258 58, 971 od: oo. 41, 701 51, 171 92, 872 Sd. 62, 107 60, 249 dat. 85, 069 66, 107 3d. 0.2 67, 695 56,480] 38 126,192 Afb 37, 673 43,104 dthooeie. 59, 003 49, 100 dthe so... 48, 613 41, 504 90, 117 Sthiy 2. 29, 117 27,497 Sth-ee-- 44, 433 29, 605 5th..-... 34, 249 27,423 61, 672 othe... 37,158] 33, 300. 6th. ..... 50, 913 39, 668 Ochs 42, 340 38, 538| 3 81,190 ha 39, 142 50, 595 oh. 57, 715 65, 064 uh 43, 226 56, 453 99, 679 Shh c= 33, 906 35, 663 Stile 45, 930 41, 234 Sth... 39, 466 36, 112 75, 578 Sth: 36, 375 49, 498 Ohi |... 56,755 54, 078 Sth... 61, 037 35, 732 3 97,963 0th... 19, 157 31, 836 10th_.... 29, 027 41, 654 10th... .. 26, 278 36, 824 63, 102 ithe: ~ 37, 887 21, 339 {ith ... | 44, 380 26, 075 ish 36, 020 26, 723 62, 743 oh. 59, 330] 43, 840 12th _.... | 63,135 62, 704 12th..... 63, 396, 50, 386 113,782 f3uh. 38, 067 35,199 3th. | 56,070 39, 122 Sth. 43, 617 35, 889 3 80, 270 Hath... 60, 951 61, 628 14th 3... | 93,057 78, 852 14th... 65, 152 63, 274] 8 132,775 15th _.. 33, 968 35, 611 15theco.. 50, 313 38, 113 15tho Dit 42, 722 33, 950 76, 672 doth: 47, 237 51,113 16th_.::c 67, 670 63, 609 16th... 59, 354 45, 390 104, 744 17th... J 45, 633 43, 197 17ths. JL! 55, 296 51, 601 76h. 1:0 49, 211 41, 954 91, 165 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 5 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. 20 Republican and Law Preservation candidate. 21 Republican, Socialist, and Law Preservation candidate. 22 Democratic and Socialist candidate. 246 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued t t in 1930 ||. Vot t in 19 in 1934 Sito and Vote cast in State and ote cast in 1932 Bite and Vote cast in 1 cites district, —————— || ‘district, district, al Yolo old appor- = _ || new appor- - _ || new appor- : 3 | tionment Dns Renal tionment Doma Bopuh tionment Pea Bepub 1934 : | Ohio—con. Ohio—con. Ohio—con. isth-:... 30,815 47,096 18th 5s 56, 562) 56,010 18th____| 49,160{ 39, 642 88, 802 ) 19th: .... 40,960 53, 996 10th... 65,024) 79, 534 19th ____ 52,023] 56,200, 3 109,761 20th: 42,123] 13,824 20th... 52,933 1 650) 20th... ... 50, 611] 21, 952 374, 558 | 2st... 30,722)" 29,081 20st. ..[-40, 436]. - 25, 527 2st... .: 47, 540] 25, 253 374,477 At large_|1, 206, 6311, 109, 562 At large.|1, 061, 857| 905, 233| 3 1, 981, 089 24d"... 55,868 91, 222 22d 98, 427| 141, 296 22d_____| 88,551] 99,535 3191,075 | At large. Yr 200, 946 1 102, 567 ob large. 1, 050, 089 871, 432| 3 1, 935, 329 | kla. 41,902] 41,642 81,080 46,472 iste... 61,470] 39,085 3102, 241 31,003 19,464 46,710 19, 567 2d. cL 40, 210] 24, 001 3 64, 620 39, 943 9, 721 59, 090 10, 225 dan 50, 435 14, 202 3 65, 568 42,885] 18,616 61,867 20, 069 dthee. 47,178) 19, 875 3 69, 839 | 38, 225 26, 943 64, 303 35, 785 Sthec-- 58, 322 18, 640 378,135 k 35,969] 14, 233 53,869] 14, 048 thee... 37,567) 15, 567 3 55,927 29, 828 8, 298 43, 809 8, 756 theo... J 35, 210 8, 214 3 46, 315 22, 784 35, 027 51,404] 31,677 Sthec.... 40, 228 30, 019 370, 842 467, 644 171, 415 on large_| 354, 542 162, 991 3 530, 356 reg.: \ 44,810] 55, 855 60, 066] 82,443 180e i 51,473] 67,286) 3 134,988 13, 061 ] 30,219] 25,169 2d 29,221 21,255 3 51, 510 49,316] 35,483 74,397| 40, 650 2 Bic... 41,152 43,900{ 23 106,902 a 14,918] 57,382 28 4, 933] 24 65, 508 istic ooo 41,733| 46, 039 3 88,371 6, 084 34, 387 24 27, 571] 24 42, 233 2d... 36, 212 44, 478 3 81, 292 6,921| 38,346 37, 487| 24 53, 064 gm 48,141 53, 512| 3 102,944 E 11, 084] 41, 549 36,198] 43, 086 Ath. ..i 45,901| 45,526 392,450 | 17, 182] 57, 501 24 36, 240( 24 49, 516 Shoe. 50, 650] 45, 287 397, 036 | 14 51, 732| 61, 822 21,004] 66,799 2 40, 441| 24 44, 834 } éth...... 50,977) 48,308 100, 322 17,860, 61, 573 35,006] 62, 031 Thiol 50,207 56,990 3 108,176 20, 443 84, 521 32, 139| 24 70, 177 Sth... 43, 426 60, 139] 3 105, 228 23,375] 63, 286 37,490 40, 726 Oth 4 40,494 38,427 380, 711 9, 547 32, 455 24 36, 841| 24 62, 682 10th... 42, 540] 25 58, 773] 3 102, 042 262,004. __. 469, 684| 15 3, 005 Tithe... 476, 568 151,185 378,075 24 38, 938 _| 24 55,650 57,377 2th... 56, 554] 60,608 3 117,910 { 26 3, 968| 24 47, 344 15 5, 055| 6 95, 771 Bh... 54,309] 49,584] 3108491 | 44 546] 29, 164 29,386] 22, 898 14th. 439,134] 519,871 361,794 | 10, oi ot 29, o 62,935) 24 71,345 15th... 39, 566| 25 38, 905 3 78,906 1 14 32, 393 { 10,719] 32, 964 } 24, 671| 24 46, 044 16the.... ... 32, 435| 25 38, 758 373,099 19, 324| 31, 247 24 32, 707| 24 59, 694 17th... 37,541] 50, 149 3 89, 284 26, 370| 14 38, 584 18,389 39,116 10,230] 28.749 } 18th... .. 30, 320| 25 37, 992 68, 312 16, 685| 64, 345 37,752] 59,120 19th... ... 48, 743| 62,576] 38 113,526 | 24 16, 740| 24 20, 361 38, 799] 24 43, 222 20th-.... 48, 245 40, 050 3 91, 607 | 10, 045 25, 619 > 39, 996 34, 189 Ast. 27 41, 789 28, 520 371, 252 | 27,943] 22,716 24 47 656] 32, 966 nts 49, 629] 39, 719 3 90, 957 11,954] 28,916 33, 950] 24 35, 342 p27 mE 41, 088| 25 34, 627 378,425 13, 5811 28, 279 31, 144] 24 26, 095 24h... 43, 530) 25 31, 904 376, 011 11,910, 2¢ 27, 561 36, 781| 24 27, 351 25th... 239,122) 25,436 3 65, 905 Lo 24 50, 858 38, 402| 24 45, 029 26th_____| 52,243] 24 35,302 3 88, 360 11, 200 42, 47 42, 763| 24 52, 886 wth... 59, 891] 24 49, 005( 2 110, 094 14,953) 36, 367 24 43, 619| 2432, 177 23th... 463,262 152,576 3 68,413 20, 470 24, 511 24 30, 106] 24 27, 949 20th..... 32, 530 28, 292 3 62, 019 | 27,621) 28, 503 35,126] 24 35, 045 30th_____| 40,864] 24 34,412 376, 527 | 15, 022 = oa 28 6, 031| 24 68, 924 Blistes.. 44,711} 24 38, 984 3 85,422 { RET a 5, 7,204 36.355 } 324. 18, 986| 24 24, 785 32d... 24,275 19,134 3 55, 618 | 51,727| 24 47,187 33d._____| 2435,612| 30,076 38d... 472,584) 21,573 376, 252 1703) 24 29, 074 Sth... 24 40, 651| 24 36, 101 34th_____| 472,215] 295,474 3 80, 986 7,005 31,172 8 han 24 46, 172 RIx R: 1: ] 29, 341 39, 712 Ist... 70, 429 55, 940 Isto 70, 518 49, 087 119, 605 J 33,164] 40,037 ode. 72,971] 59,993 od... 69,765] 55,191) 3 124,957 pi 43,429| 33,387 43,463! 33,605 1Vote cast for Communist candidate. 23 Vote cast for Fair Play Party candidate. ? 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 24 Combined vote received for candidate from 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. various parties. | 4 Democratic and Republican candidate. 26 Republican and Prohibitionist candidate. | 5 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. 26 Vote cast for United Party candidate. | 6 Republican and Democratic candidate. 27 Democratic and Prohibitionist candidate. 14 To fill a vacancy. 28 Vote cast for Repeal Party candidate. 15 Vote cast for Prohibitionist candidate. * 29 Vote cast for Lincoln Fair Deal Party candi- 22 Democratic and Socialist candidate. date. Statistical VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued 247 in 193! Vote cast in 1932 Vote cast in 1934 3 State and Nota easiain1958 State and State and Total voto district, district, district, cast in old appor-| 14. | Repub- || RW 8PPOI"| peo. | Repub- [| REW 8PPOI-| nyam,. | Repub- 1934 tionment | “ot ih tionment | “op lican | tiomment | Zo. ¢ lican 84C.; 830s: Isteciiaic 2,080 Godan nas sbi. a 14, 415 616 4,264 99 4, 363 en 2.140 nas. coat 18, 699 401 3,518 29 3, 547 7, Th pm OA vari Ha BE Sd 2 19, 286 159 3, 830 25 3, 855 qth... 3685000 0... 4th... 23, 041 382 4, 681 27, 4,708 Sthtzs ole Ta. Sthioi__ 15, 046 235 2, 645) 35 2, 680 Gthees 1,881 sitios. 6thz_%.. 14, 159 194 2, 983 20 3,003 hes 1,372 ne ust S. Dak S. Dak Ista... 27,451 41, 151 Ist hus..2 110, 047 92, 062 122, 814 84,783] 3209, 935 odie... 34, 245 38, 195 2d... 36, 839 29, 066 35, 496 32, 124 67, 620 Sdia.. 21, 473 27, 083 Tenn. Tenn. latinos. 30 20, 893 18, 239 | Et a 30 27, 888 30, 366 13, 708 22, 156 3 38, 985 quel. 30 13, 355 17, 840 oda... 22, 818 32, 460 9, 740 25, 729 3 43, 824 SAng fog py 10:1 TH Re SE NR dell 28, 778 1, 252 21, 559 14, 38 35, 946 dha deic 15,260) 80.00... 4thit. J 30, 580 5, 882 26, 064 7, 182, 33, 246 Sth... 11, 792 1, 032 Sthill 33, 833 4, 066 26, 356/ een 26, 856 6th 13, 879 2 990 6th... 3 15, 779 3,915 16,5102). neers 16, 102 wihoioin 138,927] or zcaw. Ther 2 20, 294 5, 485 15,808) . toc... 15, 808 Sthot.... 14,024] cas ios Sthii _- 19, 871 2, 307 1853 BB OL ER 18, 112 Gtheeo. 17,979) Sic ssve. Hh.....s 38, 001 2, 953 46, 363]. - emnna== 46, 363 10th... 23, 746 995 Tex.: Tex.: Aste Sn 9, 160 515 gtd 3 : 30, 854 776 18,608. io 18, 608 doe Sn 14, 286! 2 vane EEE 51, 999 2, 522 16,628... ccs. 16, 628 BQ. lak LOD Aamo ol 15 RAEI 28, 20 14,700)... iow. 14, 790 dhe: Cues 9, 385 1, 189 4th... 23, 404 1,171 16,084 :-oimre 16, 684 Bthes. 9, 924 1, 344 Bie 52, 598 4, 539 A, 302. cic 27, 302 6thiin Lue 12,396} uaa -in Otho. 020 ie 16, 2040... uo. e. 16, 294 helo. Ne LTIRASE REE 7th. za 29, 361 1, 421 18063). . ewes 18, 063 Sth ola. 12) 877 | micnneas Sthe. 0. 57, 882 5, 005 40, 400]. caauue 40, 400 9th... 15, 855 2, 239 4] fl RR 36, 522 1, 240 2 OY foe m em es m ens 23, 257 10th... 12,7801. iain qoth__. = O01 2D mine nn es 19,306). . coae—— 19, 306 dilithe. Sot 10,38) esuaanny 1th i = 38, 186 1, 247 20,383]... aenee 20, 383 12th: owe 846] an ts 19th 41, 151 2, 968 24,980 ........ 24, 989 136th =. 12, 840 1,257 13th = B86 mires 21,005). cee 21, 005 Tdthe wos 18, 707 27, 206 T4th_____ 69, 471 6, 456 y S10). me mm 26, 276 15th... 20, 733 6, 016 15th... 44, 318 7, 362 20, 102 20, 102 6th... 18, 915 3, 581 16th... .. 49,068... 11, 063 11, 063 d7th. cx. 1 U9 5 wre 7th. 42:0581. olan. 17, 266 17, 266 18th... 26, 697 1, 934 18¢h. .... 78, 226 3, 245 23, 202 23, 202 At large 798, 647 63, 579 20, 169 20, 169 At large 798, 545 60, 905 17, 810 17, 810 Atlarge. 794, 240 60, 060 26, 093 26, 093 Utah: Utah: Ista ; = 4 % 45, 875 88. 47,774 44, 827 55, 800 29, 878 3 86, 601 ] , 915 35, 349 : 3 2 ph ca \ 33 618 35, 106 re re 62, 400 46, 919 58, 175 34, 007 93, 376 Ista... 18, 205 25, 170 At large. 47, 591 86, 194 54, 967 73,809] 3129, 725 Ode 5, 536 23, 904 Va.: Va.: St. aes 27,324 2 705 Atlarge.| 206,631 92, 586 7,637 5 406 38,352 od. 12, 297 14, 678 Atlarge._| 205,133 84, 464 11, 102 3, 321 3 14, 581 BG ei 2 6,134 2 853 Atlarge.| 204,372] 82,450 9, 738 2,129 312,104 dh... ro 4,200... ee Atlarge_| 204, 069 81, 909 7, 850 5329 3 R, 406 Sth. Tr Ie ae Atlarge.| 203,727 81, 015 11,964) 21,168 313, 567 Bh c.ue 5: 979 canines Atlarge_| 203,023 78, 622 10, 738 5, 060 315, 994 thao. 13, 951 9, 934 Atlarge 202, 800| 2 43, 936 14, 903 6, 562 321,810 Sth. voi. 11, 201 2, 742 Atlarge.| 202,759] 243,202 14, 191 3, 583 3 18, 009 Oth oy 32, 802 26, 244 Atlarge.| 201,474] 216,504 20, 532 12, 355 3 35, 348 10the=_-5 7, 229 2 620 10th 31___| 31 23, A ee Wash.: Wash.: 195 ores 32, 365 43, 998 Isto. 80, 665 62, 283 68, 395 38,350, 3118, 550 a Ree wim gs 10 3,428 47, 679 La 49, 002 30, 780 50, 486 23, 638 375,344 173 pe im wid a er 63, 451 Ba se 38, 71 28, 397 48, 887 21, 750 70, 637 dha anes ame 35, 917 HN inn 41, 708 32, 360 35, 702 27, 637 63, 339 Sth. 43, 059 14, 892 Sth... 73,0411 52 403 58, 901 18, 397 77, 298 Ww. ¥ W a NE 44, 573 32, 760 52, 314 21, 883 74,197 + Va.: Va. Isto... 34, 368 43, 919 18th 58, 060 55, 023 52, 714 45, 442 3 08,917 24 ae 34, 968 36, 079 5 BEE 55, 556 48, 055 54, 531 30, 832 3.94, 731 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 8 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. 14 To fill vacancy. 19 Vote cast for Farmer-Labor candidate. 30 Vote cast for Independent Republican candi- date 31 Special election in the tenth district to fill a vacancy in the Seventy-second Congress. 248 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932 Vot i * State and 9 State and i State and Blgeanipiniteg Total vor gine, district, district, oa yo 2 01d appoI- | 1am. | Repub- || BW 8PPOI"| Teme. | Repub- || REW 8PPOI-| yom. Repub- 1934 tionment crat lican tionment crat lican tionment crat lican ‘W.Va.—con. ‘W.Va.—con. W.Va.-con. 3d... 2 7 2 iy yi 3d 52,287 45,274 3d... 54,885 46,978] 3102, 343 Ae { 35,649 41, 455 } 4th... 62, 848 56, 993 ahs. 60,684) 59,013] 3 120,313 5th... 41,162) 44,978 Sthis.... 61, 277) = 56,355 Sth... 54,659] 38, 599 3 93, 489 Goh... 80, 828 61, 876 6this 102, 896 79, 470 6th... 67, 671 42,147) 3110, 153 Wis.: Wis.: Wis.: {1 322 101] 46,272 Ast sas 48,003] 50, 874 186. ckzes 33 32,397) 28,459 3 86, 628 2d 14,780( 37, 081 7 a A 63,001] 47, 193 2d. ml 33, 347| 33 41, 458 3 99, 269 dios... 322 219] 43,184 3d... 38, 646] 59, 535 3d... 33 47,311] 25,851 3 90, 841 dibvs...... 520,789 26,763 4th... 61,058) 33, 609 athe 33,886] 19, 840 3 87,903 Sth -- 526,357] 27,533 Sth. 57,294] 32, 559 Sth... 32,931] 623,334 304,993 6th a2) on 50,055 38,708 6th 34,664] 9 28,477] 3 81,066 hE 25,625] 24,985 for" ’ ’ fr ’ ) ’ tho... 8 5,606) 31,530 this 46,737] 49, 322 whos... 24, 871] 33 41, 321 3 85, 210 Sth... 7,927, 30,045 Sthis 53,414) 51,887 Sth... 34, 397| 33 39, 505 390,173 Othe. ese oo 0 43, 080 Othii.... 39, 874| 52, 680 oth. .... 20, 828| 33 42, 422 3 85, 574 10th... 15940! 35,804 10th... 33,448 49, 764 10th... 33 29,397| 24,850 3 83,317 hE 43, 004 Wyo.: Wyo.: Wyo.: At large. 24, 519 44, 890 At large. 43, 056 44, 816 Atlarge. 53, 288 37,492 391, 383 DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Vote Territory or island 1930 1932 1934 Sad possession in 1934 Republi- Republi- Republi- Democrat an Democrat Sh Democrat oan Alaska: Delegate at Large... ._____ 5, 349 5, 645 9, 949 3, 820 8,306 (cin... 8, 396 Hawaii: Delegate at Large._.________ 19, 568 22, 223 29, 431 27,017 29, 630 31, 487 61,117 Puerto Rico: Resident Commissioner (year term). suoonean lV ooaae. oan ono. 34:904.602 350087,011 |. .on noi. ees rian 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 32 Vote cast for Independent Democratic candi- 5 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. ate. 8 Vote cast for another Republican candidate. 33 Vote cast for Progressive candidate. 14 To fill vacancy. 3¢ Coalition of Union-Republican and Socialist 15 Vote cast for Prohibitionist candidate. Parties. 35 Liberal Party vote. Statistical GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES 249 State and Terri- : Poli- |Term of] Expiration tory Capital Governor tics |service| of term | S8lary STATE Years Alabama. ....:.. Montgomery.._.__ Bibb Graves..ccszabad samen D. 4 | Jan. 1939 |! $6,000 Arizona. oo ..iic Phoenix... ..3 r. B. B. Moeur.. 220i. D. 2 | Jan. 1937 6, 000 Arkansas... ..co. Little Rock..____. J. Marion Futrell___________ D. 2 | Jan, 1937 | 16,000 California_________ Sacramento. ._____ Frank F. Merriam__________ R. 4 | Jan. 1939 | 210,000 Colorado. _._._._. Denver. iid nnz Ed. C. Johnson.cooi oo. 3 D. 2 | Jan, 1937 , 000 Connecticut... Hartford... 5....2 Wilbur L., Cross......L. 000 D. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 35,000 elaware_________ Doverii i000 i 2 Clayton Douglass Buck_____ R. 4 | Jan. 1937 | 47,500 Florida... oo ..cus Tallahassee. _____ David Sholtz_ ....oioll. liz D. 4 | Jan. 1937 | 59,000 Georgia.o_-o_ coo Atlanta. son oy Eugene Talmadge--.-.—_._____ D. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 57,500 Ydsho. zo. 3c sxc Boise rr noel i. = C. Ben Rossoosilil 2d had D. 2 | Jan. 1937 5, 000 Minois.....-o. 2:0 Springfield________ Henry Horner. ....-=u.. 1 D. 4 | Jan. 1937 | 612,000 Indiana... .....2:2 Indianapolis. _____ Paul V. McNutt... D. 4 | Jan. 1937 | 78,000 IOWA... cu nd pin Des Moines. _____ Clyde L. Herring __________ D. 2 | Jan. 1937 7, 500 Konsas.. on. oxi ‘PopekaL har oom Alfred M. Landon____ HR. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 85,000 Kentucky Frankfortiii. io... A. B. Chandler... D. 4 | Dec. 1939 | 66,500 Louisiana. _ Baton Rouge... Oscar K. Allen__ D. 4 | May 1936 | 67, 500 Maine o_o Augusta sao i. - Louis J, Brann... oC. 113 D. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 65,000 Maryland Annapolis_..c = Harry W. NiceZio.o0t dia: R. 4 | Jan. 1939 4, 500 Massachusetts..._.| Boston.___________ James M. Curley... __..._ D. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 10,000 Michigan_________ Lansing. occ Frank D. Fitzgerald. _...__.. R. 2 | Jan. 1937 , 000 Minnesota. _.______ t. Paul caer k= Floyd B. Olson... sci: F-L. 2 | Jan. 1937 | 87,000 Mississippi-.____. Jackson. ane t..z ugh White... tall] us D. 4 | Jan., 1940 | 67, 500 Missouri... :.. Jefferson City._____ Guy B. Parkeioz:lUl J. soil D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 65,000 Montana... QlOnA.. ii ean Elmer E. Holt (acting). .___ D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 57,500 Nebraska... Lineoln. cet -o.. 3 Roy L.Cochran_........___ D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 66,000 Nevada... __... Carson City..____. Richard Kirman, Sr...____. D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 97,000 New Hampshire. | Concord__________ H. Styles Bridges._....____ R. 2 | Jan., 1937 5,000 New Jersey._._._.. Prenton. 256L 4...» Harold G. Hoffman._._____ R. 3 | Jan., 1938 [10 20, 000 New Mexico. ._._. Santa Fe.......... Clyde Tingley_-_3..2. Lt. ic: D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 1 5,000 New York. ______._ Albany: oo. Herbert H. Lehman________ D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 525, 000 North Carolina_.__| Raleigh___________ J. C. B. Ehringhaus...... ..- D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 610,000 North Dakota.___| Bismarck...._.____ Walter Welford (acting)_.__| R. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 64,000 Ohio... cv. m3 Columbus..__..._. Martin L. Davey... __.__. D. 2! Jan., 1937 8, 400 Oklahoma. ______. Oklahoma City.._| E. W. Marland___._________ D. 4 | Jan., 1939 | 66,500 oregon... c-.. oe: alem... aie oo Charles H. Martin__________ D. 4 | Jan., 1939 7, 500 Pennsylvania. ____ Harrisburg. _______ George Earle... __. D. 4 | Jan., 1939 | 518, 000 Rhode Island.___. Providence.._____ Theodore F. Green___.______ D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 12 8,000 South Carolina._..| Columbia_________ Olin D. Johnston_.._______. D. 4 | Jan., 1939 | 67,500 South Dakota.__ Plerre.. ..Suat.b- = Tom Berry.......coouall. iu D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 63,000 Tennessee. ___.____ Nashville. _._._____ i D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 64,000 roxas... oanaaa ASH ing D. 2 | Jan., 1937 | 64,000 Utah... 25:00. Salt Lake City____ D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 36,000 Vermont_____ Montpelier R. 2 | Jan., 1937 5,000 Virginia. ____ Richmond... _.__ D. 4 | Jan., 1938 | 10,000 Washington Olympin.t ..... - D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 66,000 West Virginia_____ Charleston... _____ . Kum D. 4 | Mar.,1937 8, 000 Wisconsin... .-- Madison... Philip F. 2 Follette........_ Prog 2 | Jan., 1937 | 67,500 Wyoming. __~ Cheyenne... Yeslio A. Milley _........ ... D. 4 | Jan., 1939 | 56,500 TERRITORY 13 Aloka oo Jomean. =. John WW. Trey. eee Indefinite. | 6 10, 000 HWowall... Honoluli............. Joseph B. Poindexter... . |... |[ceceae=- Indefinite.| 10,000 ISLAND POSSES- SION 13 Puerto Rico_._____ Sanduan.......-. Blanton Winship. = | = __ | Indefinite. | 3 10, 000 Virgin Islands_.___ St. Thomas_...... Paul VM Pearson: = or nla Indefinite. 1 With $1,000 additional for mansion rent or general upkeep. 3 Also use of executive mansion and $10,000 for support of mansion for 2-year period. 8 Also traveling expenses for official duties. 4 Also contingent fund of $2,500. 5 Also use of executive mansion. 6 Also use of executive mansion and expenses for upkeep. 7 Also use of executive mansion and $8,000 for maintenance of mansion. 8 Also contingent fund of $2,400 per year. 9 $3,000 appropriated annually for mansion maintenance. . 10 Executive mansion at Sea Girt during encampment; $15,000 for expenses. 11 Also use of executive mansion and $5,000 contingent fund. 12 No executive mansion; nominal appropriation for expenses. 18 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. 250 Congressional Drrectory PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS President Vice President Service Congress George Washington___.________ John Adams. . oo. in ees Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1, 2, 3, 4. JohniAdams.__ -:=5 oo... Thomas Jefferson____._______ Mar 4 1797-Mar. 83,1801 | 5, 6. Thom JofRersona:l........_... Asron. Burr. Zoo 1 Cl Mea. 4 1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7, 8. LE TY I we Se George Clinton..._.__________| Mar 4 1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9, 10. James Satins 870s pe SE George Clinton 1.___________ Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11, 12. O.=S80r sabes 5 Elbridge Gerry 2.___________ Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13, 14. James Monroe... ...__. Daniel D. Tompkins........ Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 38,1825 | 15, 16, 17, 18; John Quincy Adams._._________ John C. Calhoun. 0... [0 Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 3,1829 1:20; Andrew Jackson... __________ John C. Calhoun 8__________ Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, 22 Po. i ea Martin Van Buren._________ Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23, 24 Martin Van'Buren......._..__. Richard M. Johnson._______ Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3,1841 | 25, 26 William Henry Harrison. ____._ John Tyler... 0. 305 03 Mar. 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. Jon Pylon. Na he eed BEAL Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27, 28 James K. Polk. ol 0. .... George M. Dallas_____._____ Mar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30 Zachary Taylor z .5.. 1... Millard Fillmore... ____. Mar. b5,1849-July 9,1850 | 31. Millard BHImoreat. be een DEA July 10, 1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31, 32. Franklin Pierce... .. William R. King 4__________ Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,18567 | 33, 34. James Buchanan. ____________ John OC. Breckinridge ______ Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35, 36. Abraham Lincoln... .........__ Hannibal Hamlin___________ Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 3,1865 | 37, 38 Poi nn i Andrew Johnson____________ Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. Andrew Johmson cl. 8. nen ARLES SE RT Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3, 1869 | 39, 40 Wlysses SiGrante. =... -... Schuyler Colfax. --.._..__.. Mar. 4,1869-Mar. 3,1873 ! 41, 42 Post. phi Henry Wilsons... 0. Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3,1877 | 43, 44 Rutherford B. Hayes. ._______ William A, Wheeler_________ Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45, 46 James A. Garfield.__..._...... Chester A. Arthur. ._._____ Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19, 1881 | 47. Chester AAT... ld pabnc cen amnant ato means Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. 3, 1885 | 47, 48 Grover Cleveland _____________ Thomas A. Hendricks 6_____ Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3,1889 | 49, 50 Benjamin Harrison ___________ Levi P.. Morton. 10. 0 02 Mar. 4,18890-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52 Grover Cleveland. ____________ Adlai E. Stevenson. ._______. Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 3,1897 | 53, 54 Willhm MecKinley....5-......- Garret A. Hobart 7__________ Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 3,1901 | 55, 56 ARR RE CL ES aS es Theodore Roosevelt_________| Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. Theodors Roosevelt. 2. oll enamel Raha a ak SSL Sept. 14,1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57, 58 patel 18. Charles W. Fairbanks Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60 Wiliam HaTaftoss Joti Lo James S. Sherman 8____ ____ Mar. 4,1909-Mar. 3,1913 +02; Woodrow Wilson.___._.____.____ Thomas R. Marshall ________ Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 3,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. Warren G. Harding. ___________ Calvin Coolidge_.___________ Mar. 4,1921-Aug. 2,1923 | 67. Galvin CO0HAgeL Be EAL heme maR eT A ee A he Aug. 3,1923-Mar. 3,1925 | 68. FR Charles G. Dawes_..._____.._| Mar. 4,1925-Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70. Heroes C.5Hoover...>-.---.- Charles Curtis fo 2000 00 Mar. 4,1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72. Franklin D. Roosevelt_____.___ John'N. Garner... __ Mar. 4,1933- 73, 74. 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. 8 Died Nov. 22, 1875. 6 Died Nov. 25, 1885. 7 Died Nov. 21, 1899. 8 Died Oct. 30, 1912, THE CAPITOL 251 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, 921 Nineteenth Street. Assistant clerk to the President of the Senate.—Josephine A. Sterling, 1313 North Herndon Street, Clarendon, Va. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE President pro tempore of the Senate.—XKey Pittman, 2620 Foxhall Road. © CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Z¢ Barney Thorne Phillips, D. D., LL. D., 2224 R Street (phone, NOrth 0364). ° OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY EDWIN ALEXANDER HALSEY, Secretary of the Senate (1324 Ingraham Street, phone, GEorgia 2175), son of Don Peters and Sarah (Daniel) Halsey, 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 PolytechnicyInstitute; was appointed colonel on the staff of Gov. William H. Mann, of Virginia, in 1910, and subsequently served on the staff of Gov. Henry C. 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, I1l.,, in 1932; has served continuously as an employee 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. Cheef clerk and reading clerk.—John C. Crockett, United States Senate. Principal and bill clerk.—John M. Gatling, 229 B Street NE. 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, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Journal clerk and parliamentarian.—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. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Anna D. Hurwitz, 612 Otis Place. Keeper of stationery.—Harold Scarborough, The Preston, Baltimore, Md. Assistant keeper of stationery.—Andrew J. Kramer, 305 Longfellow Street. Librartan.— Ruskin McArdle, The Cecil. First assistant librarian.—W. G. Lieuallen, 1634 Hobart Street. Assistant librarian.—Robert Baldridge, Jr., 208 First Street SE. Assistants wn library.—Harold Hantz, 2705 Woodley Place; C. A. Crawford, Jr., 1916 Sixteenth Street. Superintendent of document room.—John W. Lambert, 1351 Juniper Street. 253 254 Congressional Directory Assistants in document room.—Copher Howell, 107 E Street SE.; Theron W. Marshall, 5 Fourth Street NE. Clerks.—Peter M. Wilson, 1767 Church Street; George W. Boyd, 914 Twenty- second Street; Ben T. Logan, United States Senate; Darrell St. Claire, 110 Maryland Avenue NE.; W. A. Rousseau, 115 Fifth Street SE.; Louise Cabell, Hotel Raleigh; Kelly Turner, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Lloyd N. Mosbarger, 13 Seventh Street SE.; Howard H. Thomas, 2829 Twenty- seventh Street; Robert M. Flynn, 1812 R. Street; J. L. Aston, 1643 Hobart Street; Warren C. Jefferds, 110 B Street NE.; Wesley Dierberger, Keystone Apartments. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, C. Alfred Lawton, 2311 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerks, J. William Bradford, Jr., 1733 Twentieth Street; Mary G. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Pearl Murray, 1800 I Street; Anna B. Pierce; Isobel S. Lawton, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Appropriations.—Clerk, Kennedy F. Rea, Methodist Building, 100 Maryland Avenue NE., apartment 400; assistant clerks, Everard f. Smith, 3321 Rittenhouse Street; J. W. Rixey Smith, Route 1, Vienna, Va.; Elizabeth D. Pettit, Hotel Claridge; J. W. Somerville, Clarendon, Va.; Jennie D. McDaniel, Bellevue Hotel; John Storey Cleghorn, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; du Val Deion, 2530 Q Street; Helen Cooper Fox, Fort Ward Heights, Alexan- ria, Va. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.—Clerk, Cassie Connor, 2521 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerks, Ben Scott Whaley, 2755 Macomb Street, apartment 106; Loretta Connor, 2521 Connecticut Avenue; Sadie T. Obie, 1673 Park Road, apartment 31; Ruby Kizer, 1730 Massachusetts venue. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, William L. Hill; acting clerk, R. H. Sparkman, 608 F Street NE. Civil Service—Clerk, William J. Bulow, Jr., 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Clatms.—Clerk, 8. J. Parham, Jr., 1915 I Street; assistant clerks, Harry B. Straight, 7 Ross Street, Cottage City, Md.; Mavis Smith, The Evangeline Hotel; Estelle Hilliard, 1615 New Hampshire Avenue; Novella H. Capps, The Roosevelt Hotel; Mary Maxwell Allen, 1615 New Hampshire Avenue. Commerce.—Clerk, Grace McEldowney, 2440 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, M. J. Lum; Katherine E. Dill, 201 Second Street NE.; Roger Williamson, 1901 K Street; Davetta M. Pudifin, 900 Nineteenth Street; Jane A. Walter, 4302 Fessenden Street; Ross C. Mell, 2000 Sixteenth Street. Conference Majority of the Senate.—Clerk, Joe R. Brewer, 1722 Nineteenth Street; assistant clerks, Joe T. Robinson, Jr., 3620 Sixteenth Street; Pearl Hendricks, 100 Maryland Avenue NE.; John H. Anders, 1819 G Street; Janice Dilday. Conference Minority of the Senate.—Clerk, Helen K. Kiefer, 403 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerks, Jessie C. Allen, 3359 Quesada Street; Mary M. Bradley, 828 Gist Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Grace C. Town- send, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; George Smith, 2427 M Street. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Max K. Kimball. Education and Labor.—Clerk, James T. Clark. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Garrett Whiteside, 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway; assistant clerks, Pat Pendleton, Senate Court Apartments; Martha Delle Hathcock, Methodist Building; Sue Jones, 2400 Second Street NE. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Joseph C. Mason, 4728 Thirty- second Street North, Clarendon, Va.; assistant clerks, Helen B. Thompson, 6110 Broad Branch Road; Vivien T. Harman, 8606 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Marjorie De La Mater, 3330 Seventeenth Street. Finance.—Clerk, Felton M. Johnston, 4514 Connecticut Avenue; special assist- ant, Catherine Blanton, The Altamont; assistant clerks, Pauline Smith, Continental Hotel; C. B. Hamilton, 1026 Fifteenth Street; Carrie Lee Conner, 120 C Street NE.; Catherine Hardwick, 2423 E Street; majority expert, ; Inessenger, Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Edward J. Trenwith, 728 Houston Street, Silver Spring, Md.; assistant clerks, Walter C. Lamb, Hotel Harris; James A White, 3100 Connecticut Avenue; George H. Seward, 5112 6) Avenue; messenger, C. C. Patterson, 1365 Florida Avenue NE. onnecticut Officers of the Senate 255 Immigration.—Clerk, Daniel F. O’Connell, Wardman Park Hotel; assistant clerks, Mary L. Michael, 1739 I Street; Mrs. G. M. Moore, 442 Senate Office Building; Joanna E. O’Connor, 2303 First Street. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, M. E. Pool, 6228 Colorado Avenue; assistant clerks, S. Sturgeon, 120 C Street NE.; V. M. Smith, 3100 Connecticut Avenue; D. Goad, 2620 Sixteenth Street; E. Durant, 1838 Connecticut Avenue. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, ; acting clerk, M. Lenore Flint, 5130 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerks, Florence N. Torrey, 4937 Brandywine Street; Eloise Porter, 3543 Sixteenth Street; Martha T. Sims, Wyoming Apartments, 2022 Columbia Road. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Maude W. Mitchell, 210 East Clifton Terrace; assistant clerks, Joe Wright; Celia Arnold, 4912 Third Street; Ruth Lacklen, 1458 Columbia Road; J. H. Brooks; Ruth Adair; Virginia Worden, 1707 Columbia Road. Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, R. F. Camalier, 5401 Thirty-second Street; assistant clerks, Nellie D. McSherry, 3607 New Hampshire Avenue; Bertha H. Morlan, Continental Hotel; T. Harold Scott, 923 Kennedy Street. Judiciary.—Clerk, Maurice H. Lanman, 610 Rittenhouse Street; assistant clerks, Mary E. Haardt, 184 Sixth Street SW.; Dix W. Price; Theresa Ryan; Lucy Fair. Library.—Clerk, L.. M. Brower; assistant clerks, Flo Bratten, 143 East North Avenue, Baltimore, Md.; Dorothy Duffey, 128 Webster Street; James Johnson, 1709 New Hampshire Avenue. Manufactures.—Clerk, Herbert G. Pillen, 511 Webster Street; assistant clerks, Mary Garney, 1900 F Street; Alice D. Jones, 2620 Thirteenth Street; Mary M. Key, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Victor Russell, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant clerks, D. Roland Potter, 124 Third Street NE.; Consuelo R. Potter, 124 Third Street NE.; Walter I. Smalley, 1928 Thirty-seventh Street; Cecil H. Tolbert, 1510 Twenty-third Street SE.; Jane E. Glosson, 325 Maryland Avenue NE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Frances Settle, 3024 Q Street; assistant clerks, Marian Fortune, 2717 Quarry Road; B. DeMunbrum; Frances H. Carroll, 3024 Q Street; Vernon Richardson, 454 Senate Office Building. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Ed Ahearn, The Burlington; assistant clerks, Josiah Ferris, Jr., Maryland Courts; David G. Click, 1812 R Street; G. R. Baker; Daisye Trammell. Patents.—Clerk, Vera Ward, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue; Reid R. Briggs, 1800 Queens Lane, Clarendon, Va.; Eleanor Golden, Brookings Institution; Dulce Kirkelie, 1750 Sixteenth Street; Kathleen Warren, apartment 401, 3220 Seventeenth Street. Pensions.—Clerk, Richard M. Long, 5039 Conduit Road; law examiner, William A. Folger, 1435 Fairmont Street; assistant clerks, D. C. Campbell, 236 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Hedwig Brinkman, 1910 Biltmore Street. Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, D. W. McKellar, 120 C Street NE.; assistant clerks, Janice Tuchfeld, 120 C Street NE.; Frances Wilson, The Commodore; William M. Fry, 1236 Eleventh Street; Alex Susong, 1720 Kilbourne Place; Margauch English, 1020 Sixteenth Street; Ward Hudgins, 315 First Street Printing.—Clerk, Paul Roca, 2817 Connecticut Avenue. Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Christie Bell Kennedy, apartment 318, Harvard Hall, 1650 Harvard Street (phone, COlumbia 4123); Queen Holden Pagan, Ambassador Apartments; Pauline Ellison Riehl, 5425 Connecticut Avenue; Thad MecDaniel, 1715 Q Street; assistant clerk in charge, J. C. McAuliffe, 653 East Capitol Street, apartment 201. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Robert M. Jackson, Dodge Hotel. Public Lands and Surveys.—Clerk, Leon H. Keyserling, 2019 O Street; assistant clerks, Minna L. Ruppert, 1825 Hamlin Street NE.; Maurine Mulliner, 1912 Sunderland Place; Helen M. Adams, 4718 Fifteenth Street; Helen G. Whiting, 3022 Wisconsin Avenue. Rules.—Clerk, A. R. Huyett, 1224 North Carolina Avenue NE.; assistant clerks, Radle Herndon; R. C. Miller; Alta Hoskins; Evelyn C. Nolan. Territories and Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Corinne Barger; assistant clerks, M. V. Dolbey, Madge Foulks Barnett, M. Myrtle Moore, Irene E. Briel, Era V. Barger, Jane Leeke. 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; was elected Sergeant at Arms of the Senate March 9, 1933. Secretary to the Majority.—Leslie L. Biffle, The Westchester (phone, CLeveland 3). Secretary fo the Minority.—Carl A. Loeffler, 1758 Kenyon Street (phone, ADams 0512). Assistant Secretary to the Majority.— Walker Totty, The Jefferson, 1200 Sixteenth Street (phone, DIstrict 4704). 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). Messenger at card door—John R. Perry, 1370 East Capitol Street. Messengers acting as assistant doorkeepers.—R. Mark Dunahoo, 1610 Sixteenth Street; John B. Dufault, 2428 Sixteenth Street. POST OFFICE Postmaster.—Jack W. Gates, 1701 Hoban Road (phone, EMerson 8124). Assistant postmaster.—Joe S. Morris, Plaza Hotel. Chief clerk.—Russell D. Altman, 1817 Queens Lane, Colonial Village, Clarendon, Va. Money order and registry clerk.— Thomas O. Mathews, 1812 K Street, apartment 206. FOLDING ROOM Foreman.—John W. Deards, Fontanet Courts (phone, COlumbia 0336). OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, | Fred A. Carlson, 2020 Plymouth Chevy Chase, Md. Street. Percy E. Budlong, 1308 Gallatin Street. | Assistant.—Edward V. Murphy, 3539 Daniel B. Lloyd, Glenn Dale, Md. R Street. John D. Rhodes, 1427 Madison Street. | Congressional Record messenger.— Wil- James R. Wick, 3672 Park Place. liam Madden, 1316 East Capitol Street (phone, LIncoln 2496-J). OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 161, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 958) Legislative counsel.—Charles F. Boots, 9316 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. (phone, SHepherd 3802). Assistant counsels.—Henry G. Wood, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. (phone, LIncoln 5336—W); Stephen E. Rice, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue, apartment 54 (phone, NOrth 6143). Law assistants.—R. Winton Elliott, 1722 Twenty-first Street (phone, NOrth 8364); Charles S. Murphy, 3021 Rodman Street (phone, CLeveland 6661). Clerk.—Earl Pryor, Tuxedo, Md. (phone, DIstrict 1118). Assistant clerk.—Irving Gordon, 421 Madison Avenue, Riverdale, Md. (phone, Hyattsville 1009). LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES Senator Secretary Secretary’s address Adams (Colo)... “Fi CF Ashurst (Ariz.)_.___ .... Austin (VE) oa Uc Bachman (Tenn.)______ Bailey: (NC) .00 0 Bankhead (Ala.)____.___ Barbour (N. J.) 2 2 Barkley?(Kyl ta oa = Bilbo(Miss.) Black (Algal) 2 220 0 Bone (Wash.) _________._ Borah (Idaho) Brown (N. Hy... Bulkley (Ohio)202 x 3: Bulow (8: Dak.)- x & 07 Burke (Nebr). ________ Byrd (Vays 70:00 Byrnes (8-CL) Fo 20 = Capper (Kans.) ________ Caraway (Ark.)._______ Carey (Wyo)Yiol- _8 Chavez (N. Mex.)______ J Clark (Mo). Connzlly (Tex)... Coolidge (Mass.) --—____ Copeland (N.Y). =.= _ Costigan (Colo.)....-___ Couzens (Mich.).______ Davia (Pa) tn Je 2 Dickinson (Towa) _______ Dieterich (MILY. = ____° Donahey (Ohio) ________ Duffy (Wie) _. .... oa Fletcher (Flay Silico = Frazier (N. Dak.) ______ George (Ca.) 12220 Cerry (R.1.).. .... Gibson (Vit) =e cic i} Claggi(Va).. Lo ns Core:(Okla):..........o GuBley (Pa): oi. -. Halee(Me.) o-oo... Harrison (Miss.)-______ Hastings (Del.)-.___.. Hatch (N. Mex.) _..__.. Hayden (Ariz)... Holt (W.Va). toa Johnson (Calif)... ... Keyes (NH... -. Ring (Utah)... ........- R. F. Camalier = _.'. Maurice H. Lanman___ Charles A. Webb______ Lucey R.Carter______.__ Ss. Parham, Jr... .. Charles B. Crow______ George R. Dye________ Herbert G. Pillen______ William J. Bulow, Jr___ Homer H. Gruenther___ Hervey E. Dameron___ Cassie Connor _______ William H. Souders___._ Garrett Whiteside_____ Francis J. Bon: «_—- oe L. Martidez-._____ Ed. S. Villmoare, Jr____ Robert M. Jackson____ Daniel F. O’Connell_ __ Grace McEldowney.___ Lee F. Johnson________ John Carson__________ Frank XK. Boal. Harry ODay 78 4 0 Ruth-Kslthoff [112001 Lela E. Leeth_________ Herbert C. Schmidt____ William L. Hill: 00. Robert Larson________ Christie Belle Kennedy _ James A. Byrne_______ Consuelo B. Northrop_ J. W. Rixey Smith_____ M. Lenore Flint (act- ing). Richard H. Bailey, Jr__ Rodney E. Marshall _ _ _ Catherine Blanton_____ M. Hayes Wilson______ Keith W. Edwards____ J. B.Cavin__......... Buena Berry__________ Mary A. Connor. _____ Charles C. Wright_____ Max K. Kimball _______ 30063°—T74-2—1sT ED———17 5401 Thirty-second Street. 610 Rittenhouse Street. 1432 Ames Place NE. The Bellevue. 1915 I Street. 102 Sunnyside Road, Silver Spring, Md. Woodley Park Towers. 511 Webster Street. The LaSalle. 2521 Connecticut Avenue. 1717 G Street. 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway. 221 B Street NE. The Carlton. Dodge Hotel. The Wardman Park. 2440 Sixteenth Street. 605 North Jackson Street, Clarendon, Va. 16 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 4200 Eighteenth Street. The Broadmoor. 124 Senate Office Building. 1434 Harvard Street. 1650 Harvard Street. The Continental. The Methodist Building. 5130 Connecticut Avenue. 1439 Fairmont Street. 110 Maryland Avenue NE. 1901 Wyoming Avenue. The Continental. 1406 Meridian Place. The Martinique. 353 Senate Office Building: 257 258 Congressional Directory LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES—Continued Senator Secretary Secretary’s address La Follette (Wis.)______ Lewis (RLY... ooo LogoanedWy ) Lo inlionad. Lonergan (Conn.)______ MeAdoor(Calif.)_ 7 MeCarran (Nev.)______ McGill (Kans.) _________ McKellar (Tenn.)______ McNary (Oreg.) ...—-___ Maloney (Conn.)....... Metcalf (Bi 1.) onan Minton (Ind)... Moore (N. J)... .. Murphy (Iowa) Murray (Mont.)..._____ Neely (W. Va.) _____ Norbeck (S. Dak.) ______ Norris (Nebr.) .._______ Nye (N. Dak.) oli=22) O’Mahoney (Wyo.)_____ Overton 0a.) _........ Pittman (Nev.) www a Pope (Idaho) Radeliffe (Md.)......core~-- Reynolds (N. C.).._____ Robinson (Ark.)e.iiz.0 = Russell (Ga.). Joti oak Schwellenbach (Wash.) __ Sheppard (Tex.).__..____ Shipstead (Minn.)______ Smith (8. CF. toast Steiwer (Oreg.) --_-_____ Thomas (Okla).z. ... a2 Thomas (Utah) Townsend (Del.) _______ Trammell (Fla.) Truman (Mo.).uoa-it-5 Tydingsd{Md,) i cxa24 Vandenberg (Mich.)_ ___ Van Nuys (Ind.) - Wagner (N.Y. eoeo Il i Walsh (Mass.) _________ Wheeler (Mont.) _______ White (Maine)... Grace Lyneh.. ._._.. Joseph C. Mason______ Frances E. Settle______ Robert L. Jefferys_____ Vera Warde ooo 20 Hazel D. Smith_._ Richard M. long. ...-. Deon W. MeKellar_____ Helen K. Kiefer. _:: -. Catherine M. Flynn ___ Russell M. Arundel__ __ James C. Penman______ John O'Brien..... i... Sylvia M. Kaufmann _ _ OJ. Regnier oo. ao. Aletha R. Huyett_____ Julian W. Blount: _ John P. Robertson_____ Douglas H. McArthur _ Julian B. Snow_______._ Mary M. Donlin______ Edward J. Trenwith___ Ralph W. Olmstead____ Bertha C. Joseph______ Wesley E. McDonald _ _ Joe R. Brewer. ______._ Leeman Anderson_____ Victor Russell =: _=¢ __ Wilson C. Hefner______ C. Alfred Lawton______ Doris Swayze Bounds. _ MH. Pool i. =o 3 Earl B. Wixecey._______ Paul L. Townsend _____ Bd. Ahearn 5.03 Victor R. Messall______ Corinne Barger__ ____._ Alfred J. Loda_ _______ Ben Stern. co Xf Sona Leon H. Keyserling._ __ James T. Clark. -__ Maude W. Mitchell____ 1817 Monroe Street. 4728 Thirty-second Street, North, Clarendon, Va. 3024 Q Street. 1916 Newton Street NE. The Alban Towers. 107 Senate Office Building. 5039 Conduit Road. 120 C Street NE. 403 Takoma Avenue, koma Park, Md. 4323 Twelfth Place NE. 4310 Cathedral Avenue. The Southbrook Courts. Ta- Senate Office Building. 1224 North Carolina Ave- nue NE. Tilden Gardens. Takoma Park, Md. 2719 Woodley Place. 728 Houston Street, Silver Spring, Md. 327 Senate Office Building. The Washington. 200 Massachusetts Avenue. 3111 W Place SE. The Woodward. The Somerset. 3220 Connecticut Avenue. 1334 Thirtieth Street. The Burlington. The Kennedy-Warren. 5425 Connecticut Avenue. 3221 Connecticut Auenue. 2019 O Street. 210 East Clifton Terrace. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE (Phone, N Ational 3120) OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER The Speaker.—Joseph W. Byrns. Secretary to the Speaker.— Margaret McLean Robertson. Clerks to the Speaker —Betty McLean, Mary Clyde Hassell, Imolin F. Herndon, Mary Wilson Hodgson. SPEAKER’S TABLE Parliamentarian.— Lewis Deschler, 101 Lucas Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Parliamentartan.— 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.— William B. Bankhead. Clerk.—Margaret Patterson. Assistant clerk. —Custis L. Robins. Legislative clerk.—Carter Manasco. OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER Floor leader.—B. H. Snell, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Secretary.—E. A. Gridley. Clerk.—Maud A. Reed, Stratford Hotel. Assistant clerk.—Jessie B. Gordon. OFFICE OF THE CLERK SOUTH TRIMBLE, Clerk of the House of Representatives (10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md.), 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 Representatives in the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and again elected Clerk of the National House of Repre- sentatives in the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, and Seventy-fourth Congresses. Property custodian.— William F. Ochsenreiter, 429 Quincy Street. Assistant custodians.—Irene McCallan, The Bellevue; C. A. Rapee. Journal clerk.—Louis Sirkey, The Mayflower. 259 260 Congressional Directory Reading clerks.—A. E. Chaffee, 311 Maryland Avenue NE.; Patrick J. Haltigan, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Tally clerk.—Hans Jurgensen, Jr., 1435 Spring Road. Chief bill clerk.— William J. McDermott, Jr., 1372 Randolph Street. Disbursing clerk.—J. C. Shanks. File clerk.—Charles Dailey, 123 C Street SE. Enrolling clerk.—Matthew J. Rippon, The Loudoun. Stationery clerk.—Humphrey S. Shaw. Lebrarian.—W. Perry Miller, 236 Massachusetts Avenue NE. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS Sergeant at Arms.—Kenneth Romney, Wardman Park Hotel. Cashier.—Harry Pillen, 511 Webster Street. Assistant cashier.—John Oberholser, 232 Sixth Street SE. » Book psopers Howard L. Savage, Raleigh Hotel: Frank J. Mahoney, Chastleton otel. Deputy Sergeant at Arms.— Warren Hatcher. Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of pairs.—John O. Snyder. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER Pocrrne of the House of Representatives.—Joseph J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth treet. Chief pages—T. V. Martindale; John W. McCabe, 1210 Twelfth Street. Messengers.—A. R. Lamneck; D. J. McCormack; Leo McCoy; Gus Duffy; J. M. Parkhill; Gene Latimer, Jr.; Donald Fischer; George H. Burns; J. D. Stephens; Marion S. Lee; Robert Fennell; H. C. Sanders; R. K. Thomson; Richard R. Ray; H. B. Montgomery; Carroll Keach; David Mauser. Messengers on the soldiers’ roll.—John T. Ryan, 759 Seventh Street SE.; Elnathan Meade, 503 H Street; George McKean; William I Early; W. H. Young, American University Campus; H. L. Drewry; John C. Truax; F. J. Young; Edward L. Weickert, Jr.; H. J. Goodnow; H. B. Moulton. Majority manager of telephones.—C. H. Emerson, 3900 Connecticut Avenue. Minority manager of telephones.— Michael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street. Chief of janitors.—Stephen J. Paul, Bellevue Hotel (phone, MEtropolitan 0900). FOLDING ROOM Superintendent.—Roy W. Williams, 331 Maryland Avenue NE. Chef clerk.—Harold L. Briggs, 23 Second Street NE. Clerks—Lloyd L. Brown, 5402 Third Street; Harlie F. Clark, 220 Third Street SE.; Clarence W. Knerr, 1717 G Street. Foreman.—Joseph H. Callahan, 1401 Fairmount Street. DOCUMENT ROOM Bo A. Lewis, 115 Second Street NE. (Phone, LIncoln. 4902-W. Assistant superintendent.— Edward J. McLaughlin, Hotel Grafton. Clerk.—Cecil L. Royce, 119 Second Street NE. Assistants.—Robert L. Wiley, 5904 Fourth Street; W. G. Caudill, jr., 314 East Capitol Street; Charles M. Brooks, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; James P. O’Brien, 1736 G Street; Frank B. Godfrey, 1801 D Street SE.; O. E. Cox, 2308 Ashmead Place; L. F. Langhorst, 813 East Capitol Street; Joe Under- wood, 2819 Connecticut Avenue; Woodrow Weaver, 3917 Wisconsin venue. Miscellaneous Officials = 08 SPECIAL AND MINORITY EMPLOYEES 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; Frank W. Collier, 418 Seventh Street NE. (phone, LIncoln 0507); James P. Griffin; Florence A. Donnelly. CAUCUS ROOMS Majority messenger.— Robert R. Gallagher. Minority messenger.— Marshall W. Pickering. OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER POST OFFICE IN OLD HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Postmaster.—Finis E. Scott, 5323 Reno Road. Assistant.—T. L. Garland, 2910 P Street SE. Registry, stamp, and money-order clerks—John J. Keegan, 1418 M Street; Frank Bartos, 1100 Twelfth Street. Night clerk.—P. B. Kennedy, 104 C Street SE. Special mail clerks.—Marion J. Shuffler, 1706 R Street; George Poniatowski, 310 First Street NE. : Mazl distributors.—Day clerks: William L. Callender, 1835 K Street; Magee Gab- bert, 42 Independence Avenue SW. Night clerks: W. Moseley Miller, 240 First Street SE.; John Shields, 247 Delaware Avenue SW. MISCELLANEOUS Delivery and collection messengers.—Eugene Houchins, Eugene Gosnell, W. A. Long, jr., Wayne D. Kniffin, Carl Lutz, Milo T. Palmer, C. C. Crowley, H. Gordon Johnson, Casimir Rutkowski, Floyd Parrish, John H. Shouse, Thomas F. Murray, Thain Farley, C. Willard Ashley, Robey M. Bates, Charles N. Saunders, Alfred F. Gregory, Paul Skowronek, Albert C. Borghi, William M. Whelan, Jr., William E. Starr, James P. Dugan, Elmer Gray, Claude T. Hogan, Lewis R. Lang, James R. Cravens, Robert H. Walker, Alfred Stanley. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL Clerk in charge.—Robert C. Whayne, Jr., 101 Second Street, NE. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Clerk in charge.—Rice A. Ingram, 1919 Calvert Street. Assistants.—Leo Raskowski, 1330 Massachusetts Avenue; E. E. Dillon, 1809 Kenilworth Avenue NE. Foreman of mail platforms.—Frank R. Monroe, Alexandria, Va. CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES Accounts.—Clerk, Leonora B. Kelley, 2807 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerk, Eva H. Bonner. Agriculture.—Clerk, Katherine Wheeler, Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerk, Altavene Clark. Appropriations.—Clerk, Marcellus C. Sheild, 3 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase. Md.; assistant clerks, John C. Pugh, Stoneleigh Court; 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, 6115 Utah Avenue; Robert P. Williams, 3216 Klingle Road; H. E. Reeves, The Kennedy-Warren; messenger, James P. Burch, George Washington Inn. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, J. T. Crawford; assistant clerk, Annewille McKinnon. Census.—Clerk, Earl J. Cox. Civil Service—Clerk, Thomas L. Camp. Claims.—Clerk, Evelyn V. Costin, 1802 West Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md.; assistant clerk, Robert E. Mitchell, Jr., 5333 Forty-second Street. 262 C ongressional Darectory Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, William K. Gallagher, 1767 Q Street. Disposition of Executive Papers.—Clerk, Abbie Bel Colden. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Isabel Horton, 3033 P Street; assistant clerk, Marion McDonagh, 2660 Woodley Road; secretary, Lily F. Darcy, Wakefield Hall. Ediralioprrtiion, Carmelita M. Finnan, 1701 East Federal Street, Baltimore, Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—Clerk, Edward Carl Wrede, Senate Hotel. Elections No. 1.—Clerk, Lee Wilson, Jr. Elections No. 2.—Clerk, William L. Schneider. Elections No. 3.—Clerk, Etta Dunn. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry V. Hesselman, 1514 House Office Building. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Frank Karsten. Flood Control.—Clerk, Byron B. Cann, The La Salle, apartment 1028, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Foreign Affairs.—Clerk, I. R. Barnes, No. 23 Capital Vista Apartments; assistant clerk, Lucille Schilling, No. 111 Capitol Towers Apartments. Immigration and Naturalization.—Clerk, F. P. Randolph, 446 Old House Office Building; assistant clerk, Sidney Scharlin. Indian Affarrs.—Clerk, William Howard Payne, apartment 4, 1509 Twenty-fifth Street SE.; assistant clerk, Donald B. Jones, 218 Second Street SE. Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Hortense Mobley. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, Silver Spring, Md.; assistant clerks, Helen Fleming, 1761 Massachusetts Avenue; William Capiael, Jr., 1410 Twenty-first Street; C. W. Aston, 2623 Connecticut venue. Invalid Pensions.—Clerk, Bingham W. Mathias, 2009 Evarts Street NE.; assistants, G. H. Butt, Dorothy Helm; examiners, George L. Rodgers, Jr., and Michael J. MecGirr. I raging and Reclamation.—Clerk, Edward C. Hall, 4377 Lee Highway, Cherry- ale, Va. Judiciary.—Clerk, Elmore Whitehurst, 240 First Street SE. Labor.— Clerk, Mary B. Cronin, 5601 Nevada Avenue. Library.—Clerk, Grace K. Cooper. Memorials.—Clerk, Evelyn Field Hamlin. Mecha Marine and Fisheries.—Clerk, J. W. Gulick, Jr., 2131 Massachusetts venue. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Kenneth Anderson, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assist- ant clerk, A. E. Sloan. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Charles J. Farrington, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, E. Julian Peacock; assistant clerk, Robert H. Harper. Patents.—Clerk, E. F. Naulty. Pensions.—Clerk, Deck Sligh, 1301 Rhode Island Avenue; assistant clerk, Louise Siena, 217 Second Street SE.; law examiner, Fred R. Miller, 5903 Fourth treet. Post Office and Post Roads.—Clerk, Claire L. Keefe, 2525 Ontario Road; assistant clerk, Alicia M. Hellrigel, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. Printing.—Clerk, M. J. Sink. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Albert W. Woods, 245 House Office Build- ing; assistant clerk, Wingate H. Lucas, DuPont Circle Apartments. Public Lands.—Clerk, Alvin F. DeRouen. Revision of the Laws.—Clerk, Bronk Hibner, Cavalier Hotel. Rivers and Harbors.—Clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road. Roads.—Clerk, Lawton Beasley; assistant clerk, Charlotte R. Curry. Rules.—Clerk, Mary Thompson. Territories.—Clerk, Floyd Green. War Claims.—Clerk, Virginia Whitson; assistant clerk, Roy F. Parker. Ways and Means.—Clerk, E. W. G. Huffman, George Washington Inn; assistant clerk, Marion Y. McCanless, apartment 215, Stoneleigh Court, Connecticut Avenue; minority clerk, Leslie M. Rapp, 609 Harvard Hall. World War Veterans’ Legislation.—Clerk, Ida Rowan, Hotel Stratford; assistant clerk, Robert B. Ellison, 419 Farragut Street. Miscellaneous Officials - 263 OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES Reuel Small, 521 Butternut Street. Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. H. B. Weaver, 1346 Ingraham Street. W. L. Fenstermacher, 19 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Roy L. Whitman 4820 Linnean Avenue. F. S. Milberg, 3229 Oliver Street. 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; Howard Butterworth, 1701 Park Road; J. Bruce MacArthur; Paul J. Plant, 1842 California Street (phone, NOrth 4320-M). 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, 2425 First Street. Albert Schneider, 7516 Fourteenth Street. OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 159, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 592) Legislative counsel.—Middleton Beaman, 12 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, Wlsconsin 4628.) Assistant counsel.—Allan H. Perley, 3636 Van Ness Street. (Phone, CLeveland 2492.) John O’Brien, 1713 R Street. (Phone, DEcatur 0751.) Eugene J. fo 9413 Glenridge Road, Silver Spring, Md. (Phone, SHepherd 1806—-W. Law assistant.—Gerald D. Morgan, 3112 N Street. (Phone, WEst 2118.) Clerk.—C. Breck Parkman, 4314 Third Street. (Phone, ADams 4507-W.) Hytrin iit Austin Brannen, 632 E Street NE. (Phone, LIncoln 5107. MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, N Ational 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 3120, Branches 95, 125, and 940) Architect.—David Lynn, 3700 Quebec Street. (Phone, CLeveland 5724.) Assistant architect.—Horace D. Rouzer, 3519 Porter Street. (Phone, CLeveland 1257.) Chief clerk and art curator.—Charles E. Fairman, 325 U Street. (Phone, NOrth, 5444.) Clerk.—D. J. Mott, 647 East Capitol Street. (Phone, ATlantic 5549-W.) Supervising engineer.— Arthur E. Cook, The Roosevelt. (Phone, DEcatur 0800.) Civil engineer — August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street. (Phone, EMerson, 5730). Engineer in charge (House wing). —Charles R. Torbert, 492 G Street SW. (Phone, MEtropolitan 0188.) 264 Congressional Directory Engineer in charge (Senate wing) —Richard H. Gay, 1341 Oak Street. (Phone, COlumbia 5224). Landscape gardener.—William A. Frederick, 1206 Kennedy Street. (Phone, GEorgia 3868). Chief engineer (power plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. (Phone, Kensington 110.) Electrical engineer.—R. D. Holcomb, The Olympia. (Phone, COlumbia 2710-W.) SENATE OFFICE BUILDING (Office at Room 219. Phone, Branch 138) Custodian.— Thomas L. Younger, 2319 South Inge Street, Aurora Hills, Alex- andria, Va. (Phone, WAInut 8582-W.) Assistant custodian.—James J. Dunn. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS (Office on second floor, northwest corner. Phones, Branches 142 and 143) Superintendent —Edward Brown, 1722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Virginia. (Phone, WAInut 8416-J.) Assistant superintendent.—Frank Clarkson, 806 Broad Street, West Falls Church, Va. 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, Edward G. Dorsey. CAPITOL POLICE (Office in lower west terrace, Room 3, Capitol. Phone, captain, NAtional 3120, Branch 1051; secretary, N Ational 3120, Branch 102) Captain.— William S. Orthman, Commodore Hotel (phone, NAtional 1664). Secretary to captain.—J. Donal Earl, 1437 Taylor Street (phone, COlumbia 0107). Special officer—James H. Rogers, 1912 G Street (phone, MEtropolitan 1142). Lieutenants—Roy W. Brown, 638 East Capitol Street (phone, LIncoln 4102); E. J. Breen, 214 Second Street SE. (phone, LIncoln 2799-J); James Conlon, 138 B Street NE. (phone, ATlantic 3846); Walter H. Hunt, 638 East Capitol Street (phone, LIncoln 4102); Robert W. James, 1725 Lanier Place (phone, ADams 3722—-W); Joseph O’Driscoll, 4214 Twelfth Street NE. (phone, NOrth 5858-J); Leonard J. Wegman, 640 East Capitol Street (phone, LIncoln 3582). Sergeants —Roy B. Henderson, 324 Maryland Avenue NE. (phone LIncoln 1388-W); Orville Loeffler, 1601 R Street (phone, DEcatur 0979); Vincent R. Murphy, 238 Maryland Avenue NE. (phone, LIncoln 4893-J); John L. Smith, 1601 R Street (phone, DEcatur 0979) ; Ben. R. Craig, 1909 'H Street (phone, MEtropolitan 1996); Martin R. Waldron, Jr., 3206 Wisconsin Avenue (phone, EMerson 6480). RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE (Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, Branch 260) Ticket ts W. Owings, 2603 North Capitol Street. (Phone, POtomac 0087. In charge Capitol ticket office—P. H. McClune, 1123 Fern Street. (Phone, GEorgia 3114.) TELEGRAPH OFFICES WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. (Phones: Senate wing, Branch 87; Senate Office Building, 1111; House wing, Branch 251; House Office Building, 317; House Office Building, 1059 and 1060) In charge at Senate Office Building.—W. R. McConnell, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, COlumbia 3843-W.) In charge at Senate wing of Capitol.—Edith B. Frank, 1424 Harvard Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0408.) NY Mascellaneous Officials 265 In charge at House Office Building.—H. G. Royce, 208 Farragut Street, apart- ment 202. (Phone, ADams 2457-W.) In charge at New House Office Building.—Joseph G. Corona, 614 Pennsylvania Avenue SE., apartment 2. (Phone, ATlantic 2933-R.) POSTAL TELEGRAPH-CABLE CO. (Phones: Senate wing, Branch 86; Senate Office Fading 929 and 1112; House Office Building, 208 and 310 In charge at Senate Office Building.—John C. Eskridge, 3179 Eighteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 5462.) 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.) UNITED STATES VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION CONTACT OFFICES (House Office Building, room 354, Branch 295; Senate Office Building, room 308, Branch 948) In charge.—Earle D. Chesney, 2002 P Street. (Phone, NOrth 0106.) Senate Office Building.—Margaret B. Dawson, Evaline C. Livengood. House Office Butlding.—Agnes M. Richardy, Elfie C. Carlson. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS (Capitol Hill. Phone, NAtional 2727) Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street. Chief Assistant Librarian.— Frederick W. Ashley, Stanton Manor. In charge of reference work.— William Adams Slade, 3425 Ordway Street. Executive assistant.—Allen R. Boyd, The Farnsboro. Secretary.—Jessica L. Farnum, 5801 Fourteenth Street. Superinicaden of reading room.— Martin A. Roberts, 2841 St. Paul Street, Balti- more, . 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. Seren for the blind.—Maude G. Nichols (in charge), 2821 Twenty-seventh treet. 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, Catalog.—Julian Leavitt, Ednor, Md. Cataloging, classification, and bibliography.—Charles Martel, consultant, 316 D Street SE. Classification.—Clarence W. Perley, 2805 Adams Mill Road. Goopa aise cataloging and classtfication.— David J. Haykin, 415 Delafield ace. Documents.—James B. Childs, 1325 Jackson Street NE. Fine arts.—Leicester B. Holland, Library of Congress. Legislative reference.—George J. Schulz (in charge), Oakton, Va. Mail and delivery.—Samuel M. Croft, 1839 Monroe Street NE. Manuscripts.—J. Franklin Jameson, 2231 Q Street. Maps and charts.—Lawrence Martin, 3215 R Street. Music.—Oliver Strunk, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. ST ey W. Hummel, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase Gardens, d Periodical.—Henry S. Parsons, 3719 Van Ness Street. Semitic.—Israel Schapiro, 1820 Clydesdale Place. Slavic.—Nicholas R. Rodionoff, 3039 Macomb Street. Smithsonian.— Frederick E. Brasch, 732 Rittenhouse Street. Union catalogs.— Ernest Kletsch, director, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Law Librarian.—John T. Vance, Jr., 16 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. European representative.—Jose Meyer. Consultant in bibliography and research.— Ernest C. Richardson, The Continental. 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 tn philosophy.— William Alexander Hammond, The Fairfax. Consultant in political science and public administration.— William F. Willoughby. Consultant in science.—Harry Walter Tyler, The Ontario. Honorary consultant in classical literature.—Harold N. Fowler, 2205 California Street. Honorary consultant in sociology.—Joseph Mayer, 744 Jackson Place. Honorary consultant in Chinese history and culture.—Kiang K‘ang-hu. 267 268 Congressional Directory 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 Ricci, compiler and editor. William Jerome Wilson, administrative assistant, Corcoran Courts, 401 Twenty-third Street. Copyright Office: Register—William L. Brown, The Ontario. Assistant register.—Richard C. De Wolf, The Portner. Library Building (custody and maintenance): Superintendent of butlding.— William C. Bond, 6007 Broad Branch Road. 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.”’] Chaitrman.—Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2447 Kalorama Road. Secretary.—Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress, 2025 O Street. Senator Alben William Barkley, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library, 3102 Cleveland Avenue. Mrs. Eugene Meyer, 1624 Crescent Place. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE (Corner North Capitol and G Streets. Phone, DIstrict 6840) Public Printer.—Augustus E. Giegengack, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy Public Printer.—George Ortleb, Annapolis Hotel. Assistant to the Public Printer.—Miss Jo Coffin, 419 Fourth Street. Chief clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 1250 E Street NE. Production manager.—Edward M. Nevils, 8512 Cedar Street, Silver Spring, Md. Night production manager.— Edward A. Huse, 3431 South Dakota Avenue NE. Superintendent of planning.— William A. Mitchell, 1311 Lawrence Street NE. Superintendent of printing.—Howell K. Stephens, 2712 Tenth Street NE. Superintendent of presswork.—Bert E. Bair, 3610 Seventeenth Street NE. Superintendent of binding.—Joseph Duffy, 1220 Lawrence Street NE. Superintendent of platemaking.—John A. McLean, 4523 Kansas Avenue. Superintendent of accounts (budget officer).—Russell H. Herrell, Westchester Apartments. Purchasing agent.—Ernest E. Emerson, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Superintendent of documents.—Alton P. Tisdel, 2842 Twenty-eighth Street. Liaison officer—Dr. George C. Havenner, 1745 Minnesota Avenue SE. Mechanical superintendent.— Alfred E. Hanson, 3424 Quebec Street. Technical director.— Morris S. Kantrowitz, 741 Madison Street. 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, 2017 Newton Street NE. Congressional Record clerk (Capitol).— William A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street. BOTANIC GARDEN (West of the Capitol Grounds) Acting director.—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol, 3700 Quebec Street. (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, Branch 125; home, CLeveland 5724.) Assistant director— Wilmer J. Paget, 5828 Fourth Street. (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, Branch 268; home, GEorgia 4556.) Chief Clerk.—Emily Haydon, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. 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 31% 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 known as the Powhatans, whose council house was then located at the foot of the 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. 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 legislative 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. 269 270 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 former 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, ete., 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 cornerstone 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 58.8 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, - Ll e———— Capitol Building 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 Theodore Roosevelt participated. The building was completed and occupied January 10, 1908. A subsequent change in the basis of congressional represen- tation 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 body, 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 Street NE., 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, with steam lines extended to serve the new House Office Building, the Supreme Court Building, the Annex to the Library of Congress, and the relocated Botanic Garden. Under legislation contained in authorization act of January 10, 1929, and in the urgent deficiency bill of March 4, 1929, provisions were made for a new House Office Building, to be located on the west side of New Jersey Avenue (opposite the first House Office Building). This building was completed and ready for beneficial occupancy April 20, 1933. It contains 251 2-room suites, 16 committee rooms; each suite and committee room being provided with a storeroom. Eight floors are occupied by Members; the basement and subbasement by shops and mechanics needed for the proper maintenance of the building. HOUSE SENATE fu get : id Tongs, Td OY La EH 1 ] 1 ———————— § 1 a ad Lad ed Te ad I 3 23 fi BASEMENT AND TERRACE CLG R4019940( (01028824610) ST —aT LST—G-FL—089008 HOUSE WING TERRACE Room. 1. Dynamo room. 2. Schoolroom for page boys. 3. Dynamo room. 5. Dynamo room. 4,6. 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’s shop. BASEMENT 33. Engineer’s office. 35, 39. Elevators. 37. Kitchen. BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL MAIN BUILDING SENATE SIDE Room. 21, 23, 25, 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, 1, 5. 7 9. 8, il. 13. 15, 19. 20. 33, 35, 37. 39, 43. 4, 6. 3. Captain of police. Architect’s drafting room. 10, 12, 14. Storage rooms. 16, 17, 18. Janitor’s rooms, Electrician’s storeroom. Men’s toilet. BASEMENT 34. Secretary’s file rooms. 47. Elevators. 41. Engineer’s rooms. Kitchen, bugpping jondo) [4 69 | 68 J py 7 VLC El J V7: | 78379) 280 1 23 | LN Emm ny = wo SL 5 9 82 oJ 99 7 4B 2 CEE md bmp emf A lRe f i Fil sR 2 a pm a et met i ! =~ GROUND FLOOR flu0300.4%(] 10UOL8S2UBUO)) HOUSE WING Room, 1. Rest room (Congresswomen). 2, 3. Subcommittee on Appropriations. 4, 5, 24. Hon. Joseph W. Byrns. 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. Joint Committee on Printing. 68. Senator Thomas of Oklahoma. 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 Bachman. 81. 82. 83. Senators’ barber shop. 84, 85, 86. 87. Congressional Law Library. 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme Court room. 89, 90, 91. Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 92, 97, 101. 93. Annex office, post office. 94, 96. Railroad ticket office. 95, 102, 103. House disbursing office. 99. Enrolling Clerk. 100. Clerk’s storeroom. 104, 105, 106, Assistant Property Custodian. SENATE WING Room. 35, 67. Majority Leader. 36, 37, 38. Committee on Appropriations, 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 42, 46. Senator Trammell. 43, 58. Senators Townsend 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, burping 1012dv) 81 Hall of Representatives PRINCIPAL FLOOR RI [28 oh 249 § 25 23 a3 ; 3 / 3 : Senate ar Chamber . 30 32 = Ter ES 35 iin oleae i i , = 0 Sho le: 37 34! Vi a 409904] 10U028S2461U0)) HOUSE WING Room. 1, 2, 3, 4. Committee on Appropriations. 5. Consultation room for Members. 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. Senate disbursing office. 47, 48, 49. 50. 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. Formerly the Senate Chamber and later the Supreme Court. 64, 65. Speaker’s private office. [3] SENATE WING Room. 21. Office of the Secretary. 22. Executive clerk. 23. 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. 331, 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, burpping 101d) LLZ § 7 1 | Hall of I): Sorte Representstives.y : A ; hemody : Chamber. GALLERY FLOOR fl0192.40( oU0ISSIUBUO)) GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL 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. 18, 19. Committee on Commerce. 11, 12. Committee on Rules. 31, 32, 33. Senate document room. 20, 21, 22, 26. 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. Ladies’ retiring room. 15. Elevator. 36, 37. House document room. 25. Committee on Privileges and Elections. 39. Clock-repair room. 27. Elevator, 40, Senate document room. 41, 42. Senate Majority Whip, 43, 44, 45. 46. 47. Senator Wagner. 48, Senator Smith. 49, 50. Hon. Patrick J. Boland (Democratic Whip). 51. 52, 53, 54. House Committee on Indian Affairs. 56, 57. Hon, Clifton A, Woodrunz. burpping jondn) 6.8 SOUTHERN LOBBY 082 EASTERN LOBBY WESTERN LOBBY © fi10302.43(] 10U018S2.45U0)) E.C. Executive Clerk. V.P Vice President D. . Secretary Ni L.C. Legislative Clerk. J.C. Journal Clerk, to the Minority. ® A . Secretary to the Majority R. . Official Reporters. C.C. Chief Clerk. : Sec. Secretary. SENATORS’ LOBBY Sgt. Sergeant at Arms. § {vice PRESIDENT , Le § ROOM | | ( THE MARBLE ROOM 1 PRESIDI NTS RECEPTION ROOM CARD DOOR . Adams, Alva B., Colorado. . Ashurst, Henry F., Arizona. . Austin, Warren R., Vermont. . Bachman, Nathan L., Tennessee. . Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. . Bankhead, John H., Alabama. . Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey. . Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. . Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. . Black, Hugo L., Alabama. . Bone, Homer T., Washington. . Borah, William E., Idaho. . Brown, Fred H., New Hampshire. . Bulkley, Robert J., Ohio. . Bulow, William J., South Dakota. . Burke, Edward R., Nebraska. . Byrd, Harry F., Virginia. . Byrnes, James F., South Carolina. . Capper, Arthur, Kansas. . Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas. . Carey, Robert D., Wyoming. . Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. . Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri. . Connally, Tom, Texas. 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 EDWIN A. HALSEY, Secretary CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms REV. DR. Z&BARNEY THORNE PHILLIPS, Chaplain 60. 15. 75. Coolidge, Marcus A., Massachusetts. Copeland, Royal S., New York. Costigan, Edward P., Colorado. . Couzens, James, Michigan. . Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. . Dickinson, L. J., Iowa. . Dieterich, William H., Illinois. . Donahey, Vie, Ohio. . Duffy, F. Ryan, Wisconsin. . Fletcher, Duncan U., Florida. . Frazier, Lynn J., North Dakota. . George, Walter F., Georgia. . Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. . Gibson, Ernest W., Vermont. . (lass, Carter, Virginia. . Gore, Thomas P., Oklahoma. Gufley, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. . Hale, Frederick, Maine. . Harrison, Pat, Mississippi. . Hastings, Daniel O., Delaware. . Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. . Hayden, Carl, Arizona. . Holt, Rush D., West Virginia. . Johnson, Hiram W., California. 8. 12. 48. . Lewis, J. Hamilton, Illinois. . Logan, M. M., Kentucky. . Lonergan, Augustine, Connecticut. . McAdoo, William G., California. . McCarran, Patrick, Nevada. . McGill, George, Kansas. . McKellar, Kenneth D., Tennessee. . McNary, Charles L., Oregon. . Maloney, Francis T., Connecticut. . Metcalf, Jesse H., Rhode Island. . Minton, Sherman, Indiana. . Moore, A. Harry, New Jersey. . Murphy, Louis, Iowa. . Murray, James E., Montana. . Neely, Matthew M., West Virginia. . Norbeck, Peter, South Dakota. . Norris, George W., Nebraska. . Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Overton, John H., Louisiana. . Pittman, Key, Nevada. Keyes, Henry W., New Hampshire. King, William H., Utah. La Follette, Robert M., Jr., Wisconsin. LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary for the Majority CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority 42. 91. 19. 10. 40. 87. 30. 50. 32. 23. 66. 55. 46. 52. 93. 54. 24. 64. 57. 69. 16. 45. 17. 1; Pope, James P., Idaho. Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina. Robinson, Joseph T., Arkansas. Russell, Richard B., Jr., Georgia. Schwellenbach, Lewis B., Washington. Sheppard, Morris, Texas. Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina Steiwer, Frederick, Oregon. Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. Townsend, John G., Jr., Delaware. Trammell, Park, Florida. Truman, Harry S., Missouri. Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana. Wagner, Robert F., New York. Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. burpping 10pdp) 183 BLT TT] TT (1106! [TTT @ 1 f ] I RE-SEATING OF PRESENT HALL OF REPRESENTATIVES G84G fa0p0048(] J0U018824610)) TELEPHONES 283 ROOMS AND TELEPHONES SENATORS [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N Ational 3120] Office building Capitol | Name Chairmanship Room [Phone Location Phone ADAMBS co 259 1 1155 | Trrlsation®and ®Reelama--|. cf rl realeeieas tion. ! ASHURST nr 109 896 | Judiciary..............«._._| Ground floor, northwest 156 corner. | AUSTIN oo RE ee ptt RS iL mot ab flied mpm ot is | BACHMAN. Siw: BOL 4 880. fe ne RR ae BAILEY. Jamies Jainsk a er | BANKHEAD... via. 231 Bl AR rr en en ih en a Sia BARBOUR........00 0. 255 a ra I a hd a lm em as BARE EY cor es 437 HE By Ey etter dessins Se LL nh Comte fod ogi ge | 057 BBO os 127 fda EE ar Sr re Ls Eo Eh php emg 459 EE rt oe a DONT za ce canine 329 ES Se es PO Le LEE ed Silene abies a BORA. onan 139 ef LE Ph bebe el ERI Sosy Ue ee mesa ee BRO No ninnnsnnanes 244 A RE a a BULL EY ica 313 LE SE Ey ne LTO ETL Et oft nl eS HA Apo om oe I BUILOW cis aazaa 452 a EO Ea Ee a Fe etd Hogs tess crossing, DAA rpg told Boi LU EI iit dite ST 241 ee bb peg fogged Epis SO pri tos. siooseprifgiiiie os Yo ls BYEDa anaes 204 Ee ia ol snob fool Wobt ASAI Tl Seis teens sprigs ani BYRNES. cocina 360 852--Contingent- Expenses: ol 0. Lo I a es CAPPER aaa 23 206 dE Et foo oimfmpnging lio eter Lis Bors ey (A Bogs giao ppg od no CARAWAY..... 2 304 93 Enrolled Bills re A et CAREY ers 260 OL CHAVEZ, a i507 AS. 2 iy pm en En mm ee A CLARE. rie rinssa 352 BA run ane CONNAILY 100 5580 453 060 =Public< Buildings “and |e et ads on eal a Grounds. COOLIDGE 5 442 167 > Immigration sos sr sr rr | ena COPELAND: 128570 315 96" *Clommerce....o- S2 S200. Gallery floor, northwest corner. 121 COSTIGAN. ras 355 RO eae COVEN one 417 OR ent od I I eres ht no SCR Ee YAVIS bee 307 Dr em | Beat is DICKINSON san 240 Es Lp fe oped fo) Spf Sab SE SEE i fa DIETRICH: 20 fan 413 opm hr PG rE pr Bei os Soe Do mi 3 pb rio] Fo DONAHEY- vie 359 TD nr nm em a eS Re Rl ee Se DOREY. asa 124 0 rd Rn sa ee es PLETCHER . oraioiass 337 176 |*Bapnldngand-Camreney sos dT Fe ns ee PRATIER. S000 2004 462 A uk Be AT er PN AI GEORGE nas 342 317 “Privileges-and Blections il. cic cadena nora n nin]onanin: BEBRY. co hnrrntsns 404 Dn em me es ins aE eer Tote GIBSON. Lo nssinsnnsns Ee RE rant dy omit Eales Shes NEE omens Somme i | lo GLASE . Lcooconsmnsns 358 182: {-Appropriations..._.-%. 010° Ground floor, west side_..__._ 61 GORE... uo loiefo 125 185+ Interoseanic Canale rd ae Lo aa ee GUFERY . Soa tesan as 321 Bo 13 UA ERE SR, LT 121 TL hd i mp i ARM] SE SAN bet SEED AS Re Soy es) KTR HARRISON... -occacaas 217 186-1 -Pinanece.. wanes ]eans dn sa rian a Ra seas % HASTINGS. ioiaaaa 409 ee es Tans RRs A St SSE DE eg Sh 285 286 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room (Phone Location Phone TPATCH ac niiiiomne ns 348 Lt EIR de aR cl a SO be eR Le A A La HAYDEN oncom 131 EE Id LA I i EE a SR Se en bh Hot oooao o TAL EE UN ee a Re ae eS el RL JON ON ee erin oo Delores wl mmm ts Sm SE im wal Ses Old building, ground floor, 36 northwest corner. REYES. aauiincnanss 205 a ntl Lm SO Se Ste i 111 £11 of Manes KING eas 353 171 | District of Columbia... Senate floor, east side__.__.___ 113 LA POLLETTE. ...._-. 254 YAIND Sr Re I SR SERRE a Te aL Se LL A 111 050: Expenditures Inthe Exec. |i. . code anen sere savs nemo e melons ma utive Departments. TogAN: 454 9656: Minesand Mining. ett aa. dao ot ot LONERGAN. _.._.__._. 347 TE roi fi] ROR agi 1 LL Si Smee EL | 4121 MCADOO... 211 UTA TRA Te Sree eM LS See Seri OA Sn ame Se in Re Nei MCCARRAN. ._.__... 107 ea By Le pe Bf Te EER Re Rt LE McAnL..... coo 245 S13 Ponslons: ...covesrsrneecsiling BER en ab dtl oh domme ene SETI E MCRELIAR.. oo 221 191 | Post Offices and Post | Senate floor, southeast corner. 34 Roads. MCENARY as 333 80 | Minority Leader. _______ Gallery floor, west side. ...._._|--._._ MATONEY....0ooi nue NE Le a Ce RL SS EUR Rs | Sa Cf 2 METCALY ...ccovaonas 262 re ee eh ie La A SE SE Sea © MINTON- aes muss 444 Lr SIE Senn SE lea a ly a REE BRS Re iE TY MOORE ase mane 2 hy SRLS ER Se I Be ea HL ER Re ld ee Dd a MURPHY... ae 252 RB No a po ime 4 Wes DO nie bs 2 0 MURRAY... ...... 432 RS Se Se ae a DO es Re tenet kx NEEL acai nin 423 829 Bes... seeder [Ee Ant Re web BA was anh damit ne EA NORBEEE....- 802. 140 | oon nae RB ERE in RE EAR denn mk wm i A BE NORRIS... ceivninnen 405 ES Se a Ee ee Lr Re CS ER le INET AEE 332 Es ea He EN an En ST dea Be TT he EER Eel ee) O’MAHONEY...___... 232 BA a ra RE EPA RAE A BBE A BA an | ERTS OVERTON....... canoe 458 ART nl Ramet LL LT PIIVAN..avairns anes 461 78 | Foreign Relations.___._____ Ground floor, east side. _._____ 101 POPE... ivan 327 E11 ME RS eee eee ee nS Teen OF NORTE, aT BADCLIEF ceuue rer 133 iT IB Cee eet ee I TL a RR Sree RI, BEYNOLDS......cvovree Lr RE 1 HR ee el eC is Aha a ais SE ei 1 ROBINSON... cove 209 835 | Majority Leader. _._______ Ground floor, southwest corner.| ______ RUSSELL... venom © 441 B07 os en ee Er a wR i eR Ee SCHWELLENBACH..___ 429 a I a Ph Mv C ont 8. 0 et SOR tL {4 Voy tia SHEPPARD. ..........- 253 174 | Military Affairs. _..._..__ Senate floor, northwest corner. 155 SHIPSTEAD. oan 460 I eA CPt Lali als BRT AT SN Ci Fol) BMITH. ea vsimiinine 325 183 "Agriculture and Forestry... mr couse crac emma mee nee men | See tm £ SITEIWER 410 RE RE Be Bem Sed ee % THOMAS (OKla.)._____ 326 867 | Indian ATAINS.. cannons Biden di Ben mim nme we BA RII TaOMAS (Utah). _____ 341 1 TE SE el he Tr SS SEED RR Rn SR VEO Ue + OSU IR We Tt hf LL TOWNSEND... cio 447 BOB Voi hh nmin EE A EEA TPRAMMELL......... on 215 180 Naval Aare i vcloe ot Bi wn dC anh mene h en eet I PRUMAN. even 248 a be LB Se | RE RRR RL PYDINGS. caveman 227 199 | Territories and Insular | Gallery floor, southeast corner | ______ Affairs. VANDENBERG...___.__ 443 es RN ea ms a ae ae VANNUYS...... .... 428 a a A A i 7 oie SORES TL WAGNER... uri sucinwis 226 960. Public Lands and Surveys. -s-- duet on 50a om ieam remem me ell WALSH. ovine 433 166 | Education and Labor. .... Old library space, Senate floor, 57 west side. WHEELER... 421 | 1137 | Interstate Commerce... Gallery floor, west side... __ 100 WHITE... cere 411 BIB |. oi inc dwn rn py EE Cd ST LS ee Rooms and Telephones 287 REPRESENTATIVES [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N Ational 3120] Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room (Phone Location Phone ADAIR to a 1715 7 gt rnd ISR etn NE] es SOs Slap Sad ed en 0 ADLER rr ress 1328 1 Fg weed Uy Sea ue i RR eel ute lal males dplee ni nn en AMI re rr 125 0 ee ee Ym re Ee SL LL cele cere? wine rd Ee ANDRESEN. oon. 409 Fy EE ES SE [atl Want: LT te Se LB ANDREW (Mass.)-_.__ 1526 a mn nn re AA Yn he pi BR SS te a ANDREWS (N. Y.)____| 1406 EE ier SSRIs a Sat] Mi Asse lanl eileen al nD ARENDS. ors 116 | rm i et rhe i a eR ee en Se ween ASHBROOK. =. o 1610 CAL ll ni SSSR CRs sel Sh] TRE Shen ons SEGRE EE I i i a AY ERs 457 771 i MSs gY SR SR Ie J ad a Oe SRI Sect rain aio on BACHARACH... 1433 £7 et DSR a CEE SR Sl Se IGE ae Ts sin ele 0 BACON 1035 BOB en A a aE he LC ee pel BANKHEAD. ......... 1211 406 | Majority Leader. __.._..___ House floor, south corridor_.... 1329 BARDEN rims 222 a ori ri st eA LL es ee ee ton RTE oy BANTRY La dr lan nae A em a re A eR 1 SETA Ba rei Rl 1237 Cir ate MS CRSESEREN RRS Rey Tn Rs AES I ese Len BEMER. Lf 253 Fer B15 2 Beemer spas Laas Se Be | el be SIE TLL VTE 15H a eR 315 BL ad SSRSO end FL I SOG SRR Res BERLIN... oo 121 A le om i ms em mm eo A AB Be ee = I SA LE BIERMANN. 137 Es DIRS GE BRE Ea el Sat Ll BOBS SIRE ple Bn aan BINDERUP. auras 119 1 BILACENEY ove me ms 310 £5.11 Bi in, Osea A See Ss Re STR SER RR i Biss 217 578 Loni Marine and x TET 219 579 Fisheries. Te a lat Fr a BLANTON. renee 257 ne el ae ee i ee CS BLOOM zoom ian 1528 ir; tl DER SEES Le a LCG SEGRE SR Bey BOEANE:..ovnre== 1503 7+: 4 1 KSEE RSE a EL Sr BOA... nie 1711 LR a RB BOIAND eo Joi fr MAJOIty WD. «coven Se 20 er BOLTON I... oo mameaess 1535 LS BOYKIN... oe ammw EE bP a i a i as BOYLAN . = esata 1527 71 Ree Re ee aie Lr a rr ER Se en BRENNAN. ..reenae- 337 3B Di BREWSTER... ....c02n- 252 Fo Se Se es ee Ls SEW Sr ER en BROORT eee niimin 1337 7 51 2 ee See ea | Te Ee Te nee BRowN(Ga.).....---- 210 de Ee hr BrowN (Mich.).._.___ Tes EERE Ie Seas ee RS I Me a 215 BUCHANAN... ... 1114 632 | Appropriations_.._._____._ House floor, west corridor... 353 1017 BUCK eee cminnis 221 0 A RE Se I Se A ee Te NR UE BUCKRER......- one 1506 FO hms i mmm se nnn na i BT eh Yr a BUCKLED: ove eat 142 (17 OR eH SR Rt SO] RR YT i ie ai i Se BUCKLEY... cmwewnwnmmms 436 ASIBNR ann im SER EM Ee BE ee Ie CL ae A] ee BULWINELE .. ._... 1313 vr Ein seen ce el Te Sa ms aad bn 3 BURCH. 1 nema 1707 i150 DE Sen a] BS ST TR I SRS BUBDICK one ine mn 444 SC a Se i Se a BURNHAM. ...cviviine 1009 5 HB A es SR Tn RS I IRE BYRNE ine wa on TL Ser Ei Pi Si LI 1 Minh QE 0 LT YER 282 a ET Ra AAI EE on. eae 204 CAT DWELL ~ «ov ioe 103 2 RE NEE SR SE El 0 TS J Mee J SIRS cpl CANNON (Mo.).______ 1714 42 BE IE BN i a RT GA a 5 TRE IO CANNON (Wis)... 130 400-1 Revision of the Laws. cule. aay. a a naea CARTON. onions 134 7 I El ME eS RS SR DR I TU IER a en CARMICHAEL... pT Hh 72 IN RR SOR eri Se CR TH Li Se JET SRR a LD CARPENTER. aren 1216 1 i en St I i 2 a 3 SSR See ah CARTER |. eee 1125 FH ES ce a rl a UT SR Spin SS CARTWRIGHT - _ =e 1011 he Roaas Es a rid pris Ae me A A p S e 288 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone CARY. covwmsdamisans 1502 min ion Sg Bn Fon SRS re ee SE ER a BT CASEY. oil UH EERE ER SEs BA pe SIR STE LE antenna sees ind | Shel CASTELIOW...- =. 458 I Er a a lk Te ata IS iene em A CAVICCHIAL eas 1430 LOHR ea eae Sl el ad a Pelee heen Bas tue Ld TT GERRI A eee 1524 VR Ere i Rn SS i el eet TS Be SEL Sei etd etl TT CHANDLER. evans 123 3 el et ARE AS A nigh ES Bt ce eis oR iene ny OL IRIE, CHAPMAN. 2 0 1B hU a LR a PER SR SOR TE ene sein de an BY LIE i Rn ng CHRISTIANSON. _______ 1422 es er re a a aaa CHURCH. .-- == 218 Cv Meee manne ado Sieninat bis IB will i, Sond al Sea a Lal RA BST BUBON.-o loca 434 7 fe ansaid bad nal one ie binec eb umer lo SSE AERintl Sith i ads CLAIBORNE. —~.-----: 321 FU BEE SE Gemeinde ddl! los sellin it Tle Sele fe unt fH elk Le CrARK (Idaho)... ._._ 238 AN bs Renn nian en neat E00 SORES SRIBIRG Ten une sn ERE en CLARE (IN. GC.) r= 1236 ZEB een se a SER RA ol SRR IO ad ee ROR Cot AT: i 303 | 1004 [ops in the Exec- || SE RET 304 580 utive Departments. ES Daa COFFEE. a 441 BB 234 || Disposition of Useless Ex- GOLDEN: sasmensiznnnee 27 1 554 } ecutive Papers. | Se SER Sl Tse ra Core Ma)... ox 1541 00 eer eh eed ee Corn AN. V). == 405 Ee ee ro CoLpINg. — oa 1525 A | COLMER. rrr 206 BE oo ey 417 CONNERY.. --------- 429 443 [Labor gout aprieralA I 888 CREE CM hao COOLEY. oa ies 419 a Sb aieint KL it Say dei Hoes SAE on BE ont otal erates Farin nia COOPER (Ohio)___.____ 1235 7 i et ee es ei Sm EL Seon cal Sl EAE rs ae LE TE COOPER (Tenn.)______ 1512 ATi asta atti a perm bier tots LESS TOR Sissi SEER Ee CORNING oan 1429 Th Dini vo foo cusitinge nt fo shan gat Sd | ER SLA [he ies gk rare UN COSTELLO rer 418 BO a hn ey SE aa eee re (D5 par opr 1104 200 ora a a ee teal GA CAVERNS. 1427 FT a a ae a ea CRAWFORD... 1008 rr Ee CREAT. ooo ian 341 eR fe ah CROSBY. aiaasme 1030 Re a le CROBS: eon 1323 or rr oe CROSSER. ~~ -o.s 1130 el CROWE- ood 1123 a a a En el le CROWTHER... 1108 PE (Spon ppg a i ge ME i Ea) ily Te Br na Re, Eee [SER CULKIN. oo 1305 LE Te TE ie rt Lite DS teh, RL Ba PS RT 0 7 Ground floor, room 70.___.____ 261 CUMMINGS... ______ 334 SV Det ee an RE pas rion) iS Cnn eli del og i RR Se Currey... 229 Ol he a me a heey DALY. sn sill 1628 LE Ti pms doses elon rpg LSE. Brae SA pation Se Rng Be) LE DARDEN... ..--uziiis 342 Dm ra DARROW...-ccocoscis 1111 Rr men rE DEAR. leciiaininss 1509 501-1 lentiong Nor Erm a ee DEEN ociacsunssic 111 TL eh on oot Ae rte) ers TES Sheen, SE, ee a phd FT DELANEY... vioiaac 1716 tt om ict AGE, PR, WE er yall pod Voi DELGADO. csi cnicns 1026 id erly: Fei dad Sion Aosta ee 3 UL, DEMPSEY connroursans 411 OD i ar Er we rr i 328 x DEROUREN. overs { G43 ie Public Lands. scones Sans a an SS a aL 329 233 DICE [ 445 488 ma and Natu- er | 446 | 456 | ralization. EE aki Sd met a TE a Pa 1121 ep ion popppopig om ty) shins is obs Jot Ee Pp gilt Sie DIETRICH. aceaeacasass 1722 EE demerger get og Cal ME ERE, sl ose, 5. filo Je Ego aed TC DIMOND. ---vecrssssss 455 Bl rn ro a nr a rm eas i ee eb ml SE DINGELL. .uawsnssscee 1618 B27 an mm Ama a le dO a hem | PDIBESEN. cvean nme 209 7h TE ve RL ne Tan TUL RRR LC Ss AL DISNEY 2 onnninens 1221 0 TR a A Ae Se a Ra fate: IBIS | Re hI | Sn Sp ele CSR le DILIER iis innes 1420 sk EEE aE Ce ER Ee ee Se ree ER EE Rooms and Telephones 289 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room |Phone Location Phone DOBBIRS.—. eer elas SE EE CER aE DOCKWEILER. ______.. 1741 A van iran RA ed vn ws Wn SE SE DONDERO.........—---- 204 IGT Bl ee me ne ie ~ DR [0 | RRR BC Ea FS Hh DORSEY: ici ais, 322 BRD him mmm am i rs a A i A Ao rari EE BY I OE DOUGETON ~~... =... is 7 ways Cy FE TT ie Dn eh A Sp ment Beet por 219 DOUIRICH . coco. 1405 Bl ie nn rr Ne BE os A DE Bde nee ee HE Es] DOXEY ws... 1726 (hha EE NER Ce rte A MRE ER fe BOL SOBER LT La DREWRY... . ....--- 1124 (LF I eae ne ol 11 TERRE a CECH Sea e DRISCOLL... canine 333 LF Ba An iE Tae ene Ree eset IC NE Bu 1 LE 0 A Ie BRINE TREY Te DRIVER soar oon 1210 io Pe ae rE ne ee Lu pL LAE 1 RS SRS a] DUFEEY (Ohio)... I E08 LEER LER do eT DUrEY (N.Y) 323 [117 Gl pote Sette dn rE Ebi go MEd eee LR ESOL eee tu] 0: Si DUNCAN iat 1010 iil Boy Dee em sessui 2 SRSRBDTE 18 1 FT BpEReRERlaIt RL Slit DUNN (Miss). -..-. 1023 105 EAE ETL PR RL CRO SE EL J SL mls of td Se ee IN UN (Ee ES DURN(Pa.Y. ii 106 BTL ili sdsgrandin aromas crim ntR R BEE Sone ol nd A NII EAE YATE Aa 205 PORE EI DER SECRECY ne MERE Rep TE BATON Sail 1229 EE FE pe i i yee dios ssid LRH fh LA: Jose to notes mm Ran 0 J BCRERT tro oo. 344 72 CR ne le a Nm eel RCO SEY fe 31 FONE Seti el 0 BDMISTON vo --rov-=-2- 1338 EE a re ee ee iat 1] Sey 0 SN ERE, RICHER. veo 131 pL En Teens aise nee Il oan gd a ais SRR BREWALYL... .. ....._. 302 be Efe a mn satiate IF Cee | Sie ARR LIRR ELLENBOGEN___._._._. 1712 LYE EAE pet a Shea ep nL eae i Ov TR RRR eRe Ral ENGEL. eae ae 138 ? bE Ei Een seem oe as Be Be SERRE WL 8 LH TT ENGLEBRIGHT. .______ 1122 286 | Minority Whip. _.________ Basement floor, room 31_______ 278 ANS cai 1519 CEE Re SI el Je pe Toa Be § (Torani L 0 $0 RL ADDIS. oon 1507 LY EE Sane ele EE I ieat B00 TR RO Sli Ty SL BARLEY... wccines=- 102 LR I LE i Ss Aan] ba ie + ey ATR OL TSE J BENERTY none 240 B80 ae ies POR RL dens HIE PERGUSON...onvv umn 104 ILI RAs Se Le seem ete ol en BO TB Sale BERNANDEZ. oo ove 1027 7 TIER a mn Ee [ey he 0 ae ne eS LS RR FIESINGER..._________ 1031 A ose a Rete TRINH Baebes asian ae Rd Sn es 1 Lem pe PP re 1424 Er EO i EE NEUAS § 4 es SI RONCHI |e © LY) FITZPATRICK cov 1233 nL Rn el pa fe NTR Bp a GL Rt SRE TL DA GT FLANNAGAN. ......___ 1331 FLL EE Se Se en Sl SAS RL nase a ea 312 399 || Election of President, Vice a 314 735 | President, etc. | oan RED ST EO OCH crcain noe 355 8 i Er i RR FARR Lh denen HE AAA Forp (Calif.y. _.___... 320 FL Ro Se pe eats Po ll A alin boo 1 alld Bi 8 So SSRI yD Ll PORD (Miss:)......... 317 vin RE Ma ti ee iste TL 0 CS de abs TE SERRE el BRE ecto. onan 136 HL EER SE ee Se Sates el le em on YY TEs Sr ER Eee Be SL BULLER: oe 1407 TI Er Sa ee enn bd Salen OF CB SE TE (ee BULMER. coven 1321 Bal ie re a Se OR rad SL LL rr se EA CGAMBRINT cove ooo 1132 B20 | ats Sinn ml SEL od MED CoE CE BI fe GASQUE. > bo 2 [Pensions Anite pmaeise ke TIES Same n EE EE RR Sr GASSAWAY.. 1607 OG 3 alta as mm hs PR ew iB Leen Bs 2 REI ZANE GAVAGAN .. ........ 1214 588-1 Elections NO. 2.cri mf umnb ii SIS LCA LOBE GEARHARY. oo 341 yy Lip Fas Ene Saree ae SI en KIT 0 Te 0 RA a eS EUR i GEHRMANN.... __.... 420 FEM E ae nies teste neni ETE VL ies TRS Gli meso ee GIPTEORD 7. cococmressn 1208 i PAE Pr TE Ae Se endl Tn (a i) THES RT | GILCHRISY oo weve ern 1117 Baral in mn ah EEE = BSE a BIIDES cnr 422 7. TRE Ts ib ey pi prea RE] sent mb SCENE CORO RNREP RE | See GUI. 133 ia veins ius doula deta 0 £5) TC {REI dae Gates Loan GINGERY sss. 1038 Bs eS EAR oe 1 Bs Los ye GOLDSBOROUGH..____ 1131 Th et Ss eR mee ran bel £8 CSR 1 he ENR | ap GOODWIN... ae 1640 rv i od ee enteral al Ly Te LL a DERE es GRANFIEILD. inion 1234 V7 AE Ee hrs A Sie En) De ok i OF LF Sg SORE Sh i AR 4X 1 8 nd GrRAY(Ind.)....—..--- 353 ro En Senden eee weil hin 1 Da R97 BE SPREE GR = 1 yr GRAY (Pa). co 224 P53 18 ERE URSARRRCHEESIORt WL» © cfproln ea C0 BERR) Iran de LE] In OR RE li 1 1 30063°—T74—-2—18T ED——19 290 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room (Phone Location Phone GREEN 1230 oo | reritortes SEEEpLae ao ie hat sll ae Saudia RSM Ln GREENWAY...ccvurve 348 Bl ne eee IER AME inn CIS GREENWOOD. ______._. 1110 A he DE sh RE rr AR GREBVER.. ooo. Hi oa en en Het sa i eat al BL BR SER nL An GREGORY. eevee 1505 FEI, I SARE EN a AL 4 0 x ie 8 a SSE mi A BR RISWOLD.. —cncecunems 1418 7 a HVE Sa le ie ei dle all TT LY SOE See | cp ar E GUBVABRA' occu 1204 mat a cr me em a TAR RAS ia Tt i EA BUIBRL ..usvmannn 201 FOES eS me eee li Be ay 0 Re EEE RE on 08 GWYNNE. ....cnaeeeaa 425 DB lcm in ses om moss mo oo A i rr | EES TRATNES. oo caccaainanns 007 OD i rr em nt LHR nner A HALLER. caadah 220 iE EE eC I I LL ERC GR LO fy a BN Se Bl ERAMEIN. oo -E I | A BST LER Vie at alent = ues waite ine nl si) HANCOCE (N. YX.) -e-- 1228 GRR Eike eis Tate OT SR el lle 0 Se Oe (| WR SED BL Hy Ge SS HANCOCK (N. C.)_____ 1119 (oni BE Es EE a BR Ee BSS Me Pee oth 00s HABIAN. ©. i... EAE SR LITA BS bn Rt SR Se lel RE RN Se OF Ee Re Pe RL BART. ins me 423 BT a sl ir nm em fr B on be tn i 0 RU rt ER HARTER voc uuiasznn mi 1641 yr EEC PRR Ce ee et Le Sie HO BROCE Se LT HARTLEY. oias-icnnis 1724 F401 el Sr Bae ee ee Te LE IR ESE a le LU HEALEY: ca 1713 ov. In VE SUC Se Sh SUR I ee Ae el LE A RR 8 GR LS HENNINGS...occinn nn 408 rir 1 Sl El Oe MI pam So CRE RAR CER a Pee tL LE 1ST ne SI 1531 2.7 OE Ee rN bn SES ER Lal or DB re LTT HicGIiNs (Conn.)..... 1025 Ci FEE CERES RE ee EIR i 0) 7 SO SS rE a HIGGINS (Mass.) 1516 vi 7 SEE ER ee ete le aie SH NER ME I Ne TE SR EE CR HILDEBRANDT ___._____ 417 7H ER Br Se Bee WE] RR SRG el Le URE Ee DE Hin (Ala). 1428 ris DRE FRI NI CORE ee ions I LR Ree Er DL Hil, XK. (Wash.)...... 1404 (Lr BS CO Re TE EG hE Re RE EE Bap HiLL, S. B. (Wash.)..| 1209 47 a I See ee! I ee TT rR a HOBBS... ors 1508 fle PEE SO A Ne ro ed NR AL ie 6 LSI SR EE en AL HOEPPEY,.. = cuu 413 pe [war LOATH RLS EL Ie was ee eee. tl HOFFMAN. ii... 1218 FOB oo nnn mn a ba a a ie SE nh SR A SB A |r ST HOLLISTER =o nee 1032 or BT A IE OE Le ie 1 NF ee SU RE CLE TEE ee Re a 1238 (LM Se RR AS CT JO 0 1 SI REE IE CR RR ad hcl LT US HOOK rane 1423 or SRR EIR CLE ead ITCRA TR IR ERS eel 2 A 8 Se CN LL Se HorPE- +2. 1314 RR Le eee DIR Te ca HE Re Sa SR lel DI Houston: = im 2 1620 BB i Gn RR fe Bt ws RR RS Hn TE HUDDLESTON. _____._. 1329 2 1 Cr PER ee Se Le ie 1 rE oh +R SR Dee HE HOE on 7% SI 3 rt ER Sn EE PD I Su Ee 8 Ya fk Oe EER nS TL TGYESIAS. =n... 433 IE Ee LS LIC TI Cn A ESRF LS 18 Goo epi he TMHOFY onions 1116 a Be Se Re] Ppl Ci a S20 DE JACOBSEN... 135 hr SR ee GO ESN JE I i © RR OE ee SR JENCEES (Ind.)-_..... 401 BBO Jo chr in a i rae ph eb wR SR Be) JENKINS (Ohio) ______ 1128 EL SE Te a Cr I LR ae a JOHNSON (Okla.) _____ 1106 > 5 eg at AAR SE RN SR 0 re ol Le JOHNSON (Tex.)__.__. 1207 B50) nti eae DI Lo a nn eS HE BEE JOHNSON (W. Va.)___| 212 4G nan BHOERG RL RS heen HEA LE TONES. 1 ovine 1324 po | agricutture. PETE MUR weil CE Re BRAUN. Loman 1518 1 mle mom emma A wn 8 AE be eT nn ROAD © ES IGT Hn eh AN 1626 LL Fd A abe rh Sr EE Ce SL Pe BRE SR 8 SO CREE RIES DRL SLE KELLER... ove 1536 Sry [Library i ae rk En aA i ho A a Tn le 414 BELLY civ ovconmin em 235 FE I 5 gy rn BI SUE WILLY SRE I NE RE A i LL 1441 455 . KENNEDY (Md.)..._. 396 637 Jctams ES i Be ST mS on KENNEDY (N. Y.).__.| 1708 hn aE nm Ae Re a IESE se rine AA PEW AE BERREY iat 1317 GI adrianna BS re Be Ra cena Con DUAN CAS 1A nn wets, in 1501 590.1 Blections: No. 8. crnsvciaalestsliB sn SOS LL lai canon an JIT 00 Rooms and Telephones 291 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone RING en csoeorcnnerens 140 st Ns Br fo SUS I ali hol EE nee = HL SRC SER FE KINZER oi 1213 15 of IR Ne RE seers te fe Celis el GE SRE Tn Fn KIEBERG. -ooaeoean 1322 B68). iabco dec Funai BINION hie neem BLOBR.L. i as 1605 7) +1 EN HO BE one a Se ee PRR Be LE § Reel i BNIEFIN oo ocnanneaas 1118 7.11 71 I TO ee mh np ne lh BL hem vl IER eRe RBNUTSON. oo cocneue 1212 7341 NEU aR a PRA EL | Ae © ARE WAR TS ee ny De KOCIALEOWSKEI. ____.__ 1606 LL] EE CR sb be Sp wb Pon Chel Se 2 RLS LR Oh Sie LEE LD KOPPLEMANN._._______ 421 7217. 15 FI ls Rue EC i th Mela SIRE 1 SB Re ey LG KRAMER... cuca 1718 00. cn re WY Sr A wa ea YE hat RVAILR 1709 bE Le Pn ee EI IR ER ee EEL LAMBERTSON._._..__. 254 B01 cm a i a A SB re ht im A SASL RT DAME niin nanan ius Salad Mubldiall sllielens nad { 248 1048 JAMNECE. ... cccunea 1225 17 3 BF Pn Te A Sens Se! ne 1s SRE 0 Hl SUNIL 0 Tas 243 | 561 [Ess Buildings . and [) 08: | hel Loo... JEG CrrTeNTTYYer 245 | 1025 Grounds. TER TESTERS Teg LARRABEE... =~... 1414 | a Bin rl manenianeassehbidne New asoel Shell SIRT SRE LEA(CalifY. 1224 TE EE RR lS ME LS SOME Be SEC LEE(ORs).. 1629 BO nin vinnie nas aa eR CR rh a RR TE LERIBACH.. 1103 LE RE SE ra ey Sl Te BR 30 Le SO EE LE EMER. oo... 1226 BR rr i Le IL TRS a SS Ln Skit Ln Cnet LESINSRI Te 1024 3 BR RB ER Ea Ll LEWIS (Colo.)-...-..- 404 AB de ER a a ea a rE EE Lewis (Md.)._____.___ 309 B87 Vo taal baa Sn ee Es BRIT fran LLoyp. =... oo 1510 Ey PE gl rte NER LEE LE Sl SL ae ese ee nL LORD. oh sis 1005 A439 ee sr ns nee BER OA a a LUCAS... 1632 B70 esta tric smite ait a SI a RB LUCKEY oo oan 339 B78 | sitinidrasa amt esata a BIT oR BE Ey I BET LODLOW..-ccoooooiis 432 1 EE ee RCL SI PUR LLY Sime sh pee en ES LUNDEEN____________ 1022 EB Ey A Te SE Rilord [isl Ca ind 10 SSE SERRE DE LT MCANDREWS_._______ 233 1 Hl EEE I I eS Rr EL Se eS SRE Ed SS RE EL MCCLELLAN... 1029 TO2 |:ccomnsi sini sn nolan RBI pT a Re a MCCORMACK .__.____.. 1727 FO8 doe ot abn ER A NE i ERE MCT ARLANE..--. 1710 AOD: monibnasiane eto Satins PR MIRE LAE McOENEE..... .... 319 vi BE CS SL i wen 0] ARE MES LL fh Se SAR fe SELL MeGRaT 223 BOY foci ovr nar er ee a RC MCGROARTY . oo... 437 A as ea a Re re eR a, McKEOUGH........-: 1006 LE et hm Tm lo! Ethr (0 5 8 ie 08 14 = Sy ee OL og LL MCLAUGHLIN. _______ 110 2 I eT eS ene Dn RRL LS ERS Se ty ol Lr MCLEAN... 1729 bE SR eS Ee hha MeLEOD. ooo 1327 088 els eee ee BR BRE os a EE AT MCMILIaAN 1107 402.3 EE ne EEE EL ean iT TE MCREYNOLDS... Foreign Aflairs.. ....... Gallery floor, west corridor.___ 230 1309 | 341 is : MCESWAIN. ....o.- io 51a. Milllary-Afaire. ooo. lana ibe ET ra alas 1310 619 MAAS. ae 427 A a i iin san a TE a i ee ean NIE NE MAROON... a 459 I Eh EAR CL CE BB es 1 SSR eee Caen LS MAING GL. ori fi her i re rat ra aR GRE ee IRR ED MALONEY. oooannaaas 1028 [1 Er i CRE SONI LR Oe i 0) mete bb LL Lot MANSFIELD ....cceee 1304 1 [Rivers ITE TE A Thain MPU Ceci IRENE Seis ioe IV APES. i crvsnnniass 1705 EE ene EL SE RR len at hi MARCANTONIO..______ 124 1 hep Es Li iis, © Le Ll MARSHALL: .cccaane-- 407 SO a ee ar saan NR EE aaa tes MARTIN (Colo.)..__.. 460 397 | mersioanaaniey nT GUE ERR a a ee MARTIN (Mass)... 1112 hygienic rere ie re Dl BEE nies eR DERE Le MASON... 1627 I ER ee Hes Ea | ee Ee Tl 1 MASSINGALE «coo 234 re I EE TE SR STAR eS Tin uta Ww me Semen BC re YRS | IN MAVERICE...~ccav-cnee 101 Ly EP Et 5h Teas] ed AD Sint | On -_iH=.vr th, Er A i. a 292 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room (Phone Location Phone 10 BG TR Se Se 1318 CE a Mm DRT ET J hid Lt oe 213 eos NADL. aia { 670: (ry Post:Officeand Post Roads-|. 2.00 tim oo oscaanan lila 5 215 253 MEERS. 1540 Ee] Be Ee SR RR ra LT ee Sn a RE BRO a nS MERRITT (Conn.).___ 105 LR | a BR RNC © A Ca ay MERRIRVU (NEY... =. 208 SE EE RE A pe tn DL MICHERER ae 1416 BOB Liisi sess atane sale de LR IG inne wun SAGAR MIEARD oo 1020 FTV AE EE a te i en] (RE Pers Ee BY Be pre 8 MILLER... ai 1413 ZG IER eo oe A A TL A 8 SR WT MireHELL (TH.)......-. 141 TOT N sdosizavssasisisasasmsnanealiod RBs BN Ls Lis nas saan BURR Ral 5s. MircHELL (Tenn.)._._| 203 BAB or a pn ie Ae A a EA BA A Ss a ARN a2 MONOGHAN cece 443 SLT wea al FREE SR Re RE MONTAGUE cae scission 1532 BPD formic me or msm ras ras i ms mts tm le Sim mle Bs An br En A EIEN MONTE Carr 1417 480] Crit copa cc BLOF A060: Co a Tie Con canta saa MORAN es 207 EL ee tL ET HL rr MORMIZE. Sai 1622 a ee Te NO 451 EE EL rr MURDOCK: eee a 249 pl gl Ee PRE SE RR SH SR Ct Re EL Le NELSON ann eas 225 MRE Se Ee Re BE SL RRR A EAR Ee mL, NICHOLS ncn ane 1004 EERE ET Ee Ee I RE ERE 2 BR SE er eS a NORION- ern 4 jor [District OL COUIIDIA. .. oo ile hmm me re cb es OD BIEN sone ah a 231 AV Vesa mise sini santana bie sn 2 A butane HEEL GT CONNELL. vives 1219 Pa PE rT ee RDN PR ER a EE ee Dn] OB ON NOR Er a 123 EER SE a A GRR oF EEE Lo i Eee 308 OD AY naan 440 bb BP De SE Ree od RT oC BRE 2 ER CE Ee nel] DR PEARY... 108 iL JA Wi ime tee ore LS CES 4b Re I Se TY DL OLIVER. inns 1203 Fi Br bee be Re SECS BR RS EL ERE Se OIMALLEY vo inanncnn 232 {I pt Be ee ee TP Se LAI QNEAD cmon 424 Ge i me A AE br SE OWEN: ores 211 vp! pl BEES SRS Se Se i SR 0 i RRR ee he T PATMISANG....c..coece ee 1511 330 Bdueabion ---cocococaicsdli- lal an BBL boc Lo TRIER TH Sn ee As 1307 vo Ee PARSONS. So oo. oo. 1514 530° Barolled Bills. ..oooo on ainfeasi filo Lo BIN china LA ARAA GS DATMAN 1133 be Rd Lh EE PATTERSON. oi 1016 Ed Sn ee Ee BE SS I a PATON: 216 E00 BE re ee Stes mei A meme A Rs Go BRIE SS © IEE PE LS SR PEARSON. ooo Ca Ba le DEE Ce er ST on Em rs BI 1 wb A | ANE RE PERKINS. oon nos nma 259 880 [—asiinianss iio nnrana al tenileane ditt ona dun staan np dia ln Odd PETERSON (Fla.)__._..; 1616 I hd rn rn LS Rw Be a nA RE PETERSON (Ga.)_____. 325 CY i EEE TC Ee LL PETTENGILL o.oo ae 127 AO ns sas Ln ia SRE wn we Sma wn ER RR A Sr PEYSER I... och bows 1504 LHR EE ee TE i EN LLL Re Ree Se EER Se LER PEEWERE So. 1021 A PIEREE sas 202 {0 EE iE a LT ie Eh Rn PITENGER . —o . .. 244 RE A Re re es PLUMEEY. oii 402 Fo Pork. i... i. 1206 Ea ET ER EEE SE De ei Lr i ven POWERS. cnr naanad 1440 Be tr ERR Pa men mm rm me SR ER SE eh eR OUINN ciesessensacstn 403 20) MR Eb Ee BE Ce LE i SEER” LRA RE ARERR a | LE RABAT sian 1227 ES RS SS eh nn BAMBAY - 1513 Yh Ea Cee I CER Be IE SS a BAMEPECE vies ip po Jevn Service. ooooe eee LL RANDOLPH ovum 331 OD ar ae sem mmo i on Rr min mr pope He A ARIE i Bo AR SA DCAD Pinas [ 356 | 336 ||World War Veterans’ Leg- | Pd Se Een | 858 | 758 || islation. ANE TTRE S HETRER AN SY tas 1109 BIO ido an pre sna en BL SRR Ls psa a 1332 460 |]Interstate and Foreign BAY BURN-=2iinllos { 1334 221 } Commerce. SRE ESE a ee ys Rooms and Telephones 293 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Cap tol Name : Chairmanship Room [Phone Location Phone REECE acc ines 1522 (71.0 0 in SF Nam Bln Cnn | Bein ds © 11 Si ot 0 BE IRI Sg LT 1 BREED)... a. 117 PERS Candee nL IE | Geis 0 8 BRIS Renan 1 SL REED (N.Y). civ 1202 Li 1B NE SEC Re wl A eae Jessi BRR 1 Des RENLY beanie 357 00 at an aie SE A BER he rn ata RAS ITH a dis eT 1330 BD ee cd Sd rei EE vi RR bre RE NR RICHARDS aniooe 109 a BERL YH aA RICHARDSON... 1421 RR ES EE Cn Le ES Le JBL 0 LS RR RR IS 2 RISK tooo 143 ATURE SSeS emi he 0 DER TL Ce Ese ee ROBERTSON. ccvnovr-n 450 Pay BERR REE reel na le Somme ea BERR SRE REISE RoBiNsoN (Utah)_._.| 316 704 FS a ARR Si a Er NO SRE I Wee 8 4 WT 81 Sal ROMER, Ls RoBSION (Ky.)-ceeooo 107 CT EE a Sm eRe PRT 5 le U6 | SER RRR 8 1h ROGERS (Mass.) --- 1725 TO | aa aR CBRE a STR RoGERs (N. H.)._.... 1339 DUES aE e e Sl de olise BL ERE Eee Rell Rocers (Okla)... |... Tw ht Bs Bd Boy ol oes ROMIUR. ooo cocoons 1306 517 De Sl se Ln, ety ws il BE 1% 1 SR SM Sp Urs 7 0 | a ae 1533 cbr Ean Se ei een © + oboe S STIRS ERE Eee TL fe RUSSELL. ccna ninnness A580 LIB Yo de er i Le AN oo Em EAR RY ES Dh BAN. acorn 349 6:27: Td oper Sepa Cea el ee Ma jenn oe 2 1 JRE BT VER Sh SIRIRRe a 0 © es SABBATH I. oo nanos 1136 1 rns ed fo Sep Lm Coed ie £3 Sm tVSoms meme aossn ae sl dn SADOWSKI: eran 1239 bE ee sealed ennhatmenil bat 1 5 wen al 7 00 SSB alte ban 0 SANDERS (La.)....... 1p. EE LL es ees Sh ae na Re Taek in SANDERS (Tex.)._.... 1317 LIE BE ei aa een abe till TR dl) SRECERE Re nll SANDLIN oceans 1101 12 3 1 Ne Sh oem Ee L ELRGke 1 1) Vga Bvt 8 EGR G08 0 ds AO iV SS J 3 Lp 0 SAUTHOFE... = 120 BOO ad a ST a a BR Ta ae SCHARF ER nos ane 1520 by fi EE SR ETE IE See SR Lei in 1 See on fl SCHNEIDER waar z esse 415 EI WE Set SNE RE MTSE GRE SS Slatin dey SCHURTZ. naam 1706 re AE INE ERR a Ie aS RE dee SCHULLER... cee-aiie 1018 Phe RORS Ee am eam e , Tonien ITS SRL RDN SCOTTY... nana 126 [vis 1 hein Bn sme ae win ane ao) Ie, CARE [IR eels Sele ei ee ad nm SCRUGHAM.... __..... 1223 DD er ee An mere AA aE rn Dw SE SEARS. ass 307 1 ERS eee RR ee BE an Rai Tl SEGRE oo 250 7111 le SC en es eae Ba Tee By +L See OF, 1 40 Sn Re ee a BEGRR. 1431 a a a a mes mm pm DR EL a ee ml] CRA SHANIEY. 318 7 Re Sl es SRL Be em DARE | BE BRE Cd SHANNON. 1408 i ae OBE BRL LS TE SOB iain as 335 72 LE Ba LD eh am i Mit iy 4 SRR ER CER IR SIBOVICH aoe 1015 600. | Patents aisast ine siniiadeni B08 = THE |e EER SISSON. -. 452 vin hes SEE SRST Eee ane Leni ami SS UY SIR Ae te ail se Svita (Conn.)......... 438 UL RR th ee en te) IS I, ue LE RAN © Ln LL SMITH (V8.) cies 301 BOL reams a BE EE Le ROL Smite (Wash.) 1034 UF EEE lee ine Sn See ESE Su Ts rs SEE Svrre (W. Va.) ...... 1401 585 Minesand Mining... loot BE 00 ct eens EE AT MR i a Ee, ae ST Minority Leader... ______ House floor, room 58. ________ ! es SNYDER... cocaine 1013 ER De Es bo ee he pui) BEC 99 1 LLRs IF | 8 SEC Mati 00D BOWERS 112 224 oe Weights, and ot ieee 115 441 Measures. jst fa fo aie 8 0 alta x Nt BOUT: loans 439 7% 4 NEC, She CNCeee Sai RT eer caiets Lie 5 | Bs iE 7 IE Ree LL Lh SPENCE. reeves 1415 Eli Bl ERE Irina es De aie Ee 2 1 IEEE ite eee en en el ie ny STACK a as 1631 1 5 EERE Sa Sr NR oS Rr ON) (NER tr |) Seapets 0 0 a SUMMER ES, 0 STARNES..... oldIus, 442 TEES BE Se LAMB Rn I! Le SHE Sp ENE eee, pn STEAGALL. ocr 1301 218. | Bankingand Currency....|..... 8. J 00 la.P dl STEPAN of oo ahs 305 BOB] cl mm A te FE TE sm 2 re er ES I STEWARY 352 nui Seas ie Di ee EIR Se BEE ORE SS IUBBS. 7 ein 308 OE enh bee ae Es A se Ee mC ES SULLIVAN. ..co ono 1432 HR re ER a ae i Se ee SUMNERS......o noi mm on bb adiclary a Ground floor, room 71.________ 1033 SUTPHIN. ocean 1308 ha pn mons eS a a ee te HE SIS Me Ss SRE a Tr SWEENEY ...cun-emnnnn 1409 7 a Er Eo I TE I CS he Als Sn om Beso SL A 294 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone ABER evi mses 1126 EOE a Re SE Sl Sea eee Co NE Re eae Be ET PARVERE ene 1134 HLT A em eR ie SRR CWE oT SEL 5 3 SER A ea (20h 0 RAY LOR NC OI0. Yu in oms oo os le fo ee ie he I Old library space, ground floor 236 TAYLOR (S. C.)..o-- 453 CE ER Re Sa Ie lL eee CC Sy Se NE ER ae Le RET TAYLOR (Tenn.)____._. 258 Crriasaieaeiiane Re Been i Ne 00 UL a Ree Re Se IPEREY ob cin simi {EEE BREE BR ie SE nd Cn Ea i La Se tt PHIM oi vi doin mss 324 BG re ee BRE CL JOBE erie EE A HOMAS. ivi ROBO: TOO re mee R&B Ln ne rr ee RT "PHOMASON. ovo voce 1740 Bl coe est ee a DR A i ER RR BE Th Aah THOMPSON... ooo 1419 (rR PE SR Sel CNR Be Ae TUE Ss ni 8 ni GR |: = SB gs bf St HURSTON even ee 1231 OLE eRe Cee INE en Ie a OED SR TU ah INRHAM. Joie 256 SAS RY ASE en BO TE A Si Rats ROBEY uti coronene 1033 eh et eh EE i A CR TPOLAN oat oom 410 rr Eee ea So es, SS El Ee PONBY vero inven on 118 hv hE een ea a Ee SR SS Rl a a TL b BREADWAY.....c.n comme 1436 TUR) RE a Ce Re ee Ee ne INR I Ee EL CL f DUBNER wwii ne cinns 1515 roi en RE OR Le SE RR Ie LER Se RUBIN. can smmmassnmms 1730 BD i ne eed DEE tm wh AI et SR BE RE SE UMSTEAD. .....cnnnrenew 1215 Ce es Le or) Lr 10055 UNDERWOOD. ___.__._ Li fo Javatia {ECE Hiei sed ls (diet Sens stain Sis asenegitn nd Bala Lace UN IERBACE. cee 145 67100 bE Sr ES eee SR es SL Se OE ST Tg LE Ln 311 217 ViNsoN (Ga.)......... { REE FN ye CE IE SE SL SR ee An 313 593 VINSON (RY.) = ucu- 1201 br re i eS Oe Ke DNL Re PN NU go Se RR Pe Be RL WADSWORTH... coon 241 Fo 1 i TEE Ch Mate oie be ER TO Ben A a WATTGREN.. oo... 1608 rei TERE Ee ae Ne Ld Tae y NWATRR SS 1316 ea See a See Sl eC Le ; ; 242 NT Le ed Seni) TEAS AcconmiE Ground floor, main corridor -- 264 WEARIN.......cannuanns 139 "Le a ee RI SE Er WEAVER. o.oo 1115 ABA NSE Menten nina tamale ne A ne ee SE Es WELCH ono ene: 1127 TELS I Ae meee a i 1 EE 1 SE ee Be WERNER. o.oo oon 1019 br See ER VRC TT DORR ee of DRY Sl) Cll TRE ee EY VEY i nnareean 1521 1 SS EE aR Se ee el A Ds DS SE SRE a Le WHELCHEL. «nun EH bE NATTY De 351 628 | Irrigationand Reclamations|-- _.-- _. — 0. ola WHITTINGTON. _ ______ 1105 LoL ee ten a IO YE WIGGLESWORTH. _____ rate EE Ee te De ee en DRIER he WILCOX «ori tions om ioe 340 (a ae see Ee a a ee Re I I p WILLIAMS. -.... 1217 ria A CE el Ce Cen 1 SR Ee Lh WisoN(Ta.).-——---=: > 00 Blood Control--- -- —--f------mo-oee eee e es WILsON(PS.) 242 pena iss nanea iu minonaine Sand ls Sins Se EE WITHROW. ovens 1120 ee a el LE RS LL WOLCOT vee 1222 asd). VL has eiduiaW ausainlYil BSR CS BIE a ii eras WOLFENDEN._.___.____ 1113 Fv al afd SERRE Sl Bae 1 LSS OR TD SRE So on RE a REI VW OLVERTON.. oo 251 Lr TE Gal DER en eras tl Re | SR Sane eR WII 239 BBall mab CE BENE Le fen eB . WOODRUFF. ..ccnwmmes 1717 TS ie ee een el BD Ee En Lem er ERR ee RV OODRIIM. of adm ll me eri ee cee Gallery floor, west corridor... 284 ROUNGaeeonnsinicsmn 1320 al Ge iT op A eae TL Tol a Je DE 1 SR LSS Sf ie ee RM £1) 2 0 5 \ ZIMMERMAN. _________ 426 ETE Sl Seas ees GE Tl BL Dm BL BE me ln SS ZIONCHECE Loci 1609 OBE RR re a i rs Sl ARE NE 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-Pacific Exposition, 1915; overseer of Harvard University, 1918-1924; Episcopalian; president of the Georgia Warm Springs 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; Asheville 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, National Press, Army and Navy, Washington, Burning Tree, and Columbia Country Clubs. Residence, 3106 Thirty-fourth Street. 297 298 Congressional Dzrectory WHITE HOUSE 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 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, Burn- ing Tree, Columbia Country, and Manor. Residence, 7704 Morningside Drive. 1 MARGUERITE A. LE HAND, personal secretary. Residence, the White ouse. RUDOLPH FORSTER, executive clerk in charge of White House executive offices, Wardman Park Hotel. MAURICE C. LATTA, executive clerk, 2836 Twenty-seventh Street. MEMBERS OF THE CABINET CorperL HuuL, of Tennessee, Secretary of State, Carlton Hotel. HENRY MORGANTHATU, Jr., of New York, Secretary of the Treasury, 2201 R Street. GrorGE H. DERN, of Utah, Secretary of War, 3330 Stephenson Place. Homer S. Cummings, of Connecticut, Attorney General, 2700 Tilden Street. James A. FarLey, of New York, Postmaster General, Mayflower Hotel. CLAUDE A. SwaNsoN, of Virginia, Secretary of the Navy, 2136 R Street. Harorp L. Ickes, of Illinois, Secretary of the Interior, Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md Henry A. WALLACE, of Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture, Wardman Park Hotel. Des C. Roper, of South Carolina, Secretary of Commerce, 3001 Woodland rive. Frances Perkins, of New York, Secretary of Labor, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. STATE Executive Departments 299 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; chairman of the American delegation to the Monetary and Economic Conference, London, May 25, 1933; chairman of the American delegation to the Seventh International Conference of American States, Montevideo, Uruguay, November 3, 1933. Under Secretary of State— William Phillips, 2211 Thirtieth Street. Assistant Secretary.— Wilbur J. Carr, 2300 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant Secretary.—R. Walton Moore, Fairfax, Va. Assistant Secretary.—Francis B. Sayre, 3436 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant Secretary.—Sumner Welles, Oxon Hill, Md. Legal adviser.—Green H. Hackworth, 3714 Morrison Street. Assistant to the Secretary.— Harry A. McBride, 3000 Tilden Street. Special assistant to the Secretary.—James Clement Dunn, 27 Observatory Circle. Feats assistant to the Secretary.— Hugh S. Cumming, Jr., 2219 California treet. Assistant to the Under Secretary.—Charles E. Bohlen, 1625 Sixteenth Street. Executive assistant to Assistant Secretary.— Keith Merrill, 2535 Belmont Road. Ce clerk and administrative assistant.—Clinton E. MacEachran, 1405 Girard treet. Assistant to the chief clerk and administrative assistant and chief of the appointment section.—P. F. Allen, Alta Vista, Bethesda, Md. Board of examiners for the Foreign Service— Wilbur J. Carr, Thomas M. Wilson, Sumner Welles, R. Walton Moore, Lawson A. Moyer. Board of Foreign Service personnel.— Wilbur J. Carr, Assistant Secretary of State, chairman; Sumner Welles, R. Walton Moore. Division of Foreign Service personnel.—Chief, Thomas M. Wilson, 3326 Reservoir oad. Foreign Service Officers’ Training School.—Director, Lowell C. Pinkerton, 2219 EY Street. Division of far eastern affairs: Chief —Stanley K. Hornbeck, 2138 California Street. Assistant chiefs.—Maxwell M. Hamilton, Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va.; Stuart J. Fuller, 3210 Rodman Street. Division of Latin American affairs: Chief —Laurence Duggan, McLean, Va. Assistant chiefs—Joseph F. McGurk, 2145 California Street; Willard L. Beaulae, 300 North St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Division of western European affairs: Chief —James Clement Dunn, 27 Observatory Circle. Assistant chiefs—John Dewey Hickerson, 3314 Ross Place; Paul Trauger Culbertson, 5315 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md. Division of near eastern affairs: Chief—Wallace S. Murray, 1868 Columbia Road. Assistant chiefs—Paul H. Alling, 611 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va.; Maynard B. Barnes, 2231 Bancroft Place. Division of Mexican affairs: Chief —Edward L. Reed, 2220 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant chief.—Richard C. Tanis, 3 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Division of eastern European affairs: Chief —Robert F. Kelley, 2200 Nineteenth Street. Assistant chief —Earl L. Packer, 1415 Van Buren Street. 300 Congressional Directory STATE Office of the economic adviser.—Economic adviser, Herbert Feis, 1529 Twenty- DInEh Sivect: assistant economic adviser, Frederick Livesey, 1026 Sixteenth reet. Passport division: Chief —Ruth B. Shipley, 5508 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant chiefs.—John J. Scanlan, 4517 Fifteenth Street; F. Virginia Alex- ander, Conard Apartments. Office of the historical adviser: Historical adviser—Hunter Miller, 3100 Dumbarton Avenue. Assistant historical adviser.—Mahlon Fay Perkins, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Geographer.—S. W. Boggs, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of research and publication: Chief.—Cyril Wynne, 3410 Newark Street. Assistant chief.—E. Wilder Spaulding, 1518 Forty-fourth Street. Librarian.— Martha L. Gericke, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue. Editor of the Territorial papers.—Clarence E. Carter, 2920 Twenty-eighth Street. Division of current information: Chief —Michael J. McDermott, 2210 North Capitol Street. Assistant chief.—David McK. Key, 2407 California Street. 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.—Richard Southgate, 2406 Kalorama Road. Assistant chief.—Julius C. Holmes, 2323 Wyoming Avenue. Ceremonial officer—Charles Lee Cooke, 1410 M Street. Treaty division: Chiref.—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 —John Farr Simmons, 1025 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant chief.—Eliot B. Coulter, 2327 Twentieth Street. Bureau of accounts: Chief. — William MecNeir, 1844 Monroe Street. Assistant chief.—George B. Stambaugh, 3833 Fourteenth Street. Translating bureau.—Chief, Emerson B. Christie, 3236 McKinley Street. Office oficoordination and review: Chief —Margaret M. Hanna, 1529 Varnum Street. Assistant chief.—Blanche Rule Halla, Westchester Apartments. Foreign Service buildings office.— Assistant chief (acting), Robert J. Phillips, 108 East Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Consular commercial office: Chief —James J. Murphy, Jr., 1261 New Hampshire Avenue. Division of trade agreements: Chief —Henry ¥. Grady, the Racquet Club. Assistant chiefs—Harry C. Hawkins, 12 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Henry L. Deimel, Jr., 3710 S Street. Office of arms and munitions control: Chief.—Joseph C. Green, 10 Quincey Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chief.—Charles W. Yost, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Assistants to the legal adviser.—Jacob A. Metzger, 1831 Belmont Road; Joseph R. Baker, 41 Baltimore Street, Kensington, Md.; Ralph W. 8. Hill, 3327 N Street; Richard W. Flournoy, Jr., 3122 P Street; William R. Vallance, 3016 Forty-third Street; Bert L. Hunt, 4707 Connecticut Avenue; Frank X, Ward, 1431 Thirty-third Street; D. A. McDougal, LaSalle Apartments; . Anna A. O’Neill, 1326 New Hampshire Avenue; Herbert B. Collins, 1820 Monroe Street; Joseph B. Matre, 1111 Summerfield Road, Silver Spring, Md.; E. Russell Lutz, 3605 York Avenue, Clarendon, Va.; James O. Murdock, 1824 Twenty-third Street; Ber edict M. English, 3217 Foxall Road; Ray- mund T. Yingling, Portland Hotel; Frederick M. Diven, 8707 Nortonia Road, Baltimore, Md.; John Maktos, 1343 Clifton Street; Marjorie M. Whiteman, 1812 K Street; Johr S. Dickey, 2301 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va.; Ethel L. Lawrence, 2928 Porter Street; Walter E. Pelton, 5521 Colorado Avenue; Durward V. Sandifer, 118 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park; George Stephens Knight, Dupont Circle Apartments. TREASURY Executive Departments 301 DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 6400) HENRY MORGENTHATU, Jr., of Hopewell Junction, N. Y., son of Henry and Josephine (Sykes) Morgenthau; born in New York City, May 11, 1891; educated at Exeter Academy and at Cornell University; married Elinor Fatman, of New York City, on April 17, 1916; children—Henry, Robert Morris, and Joan; in 1929 he was named by Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, of New York, chairman of the Governor's Agricultural Advisory Commission; in January 1931 appointed conservation commissioner of the State of New York; chairman, Federal Farm Board, from March 5, 1933, to May 27, 1933, when he became Governor of the Farm Credit Administration; appointed Under Secretary and Acting Secretary of the Treasury, November 17, 1933; appointed Secretary of the Treasury, January 1, 1934, and confirmed by the Senate January 8, 1934; ex-officio member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; director of Reconstruction Finance Corporation; member National Emergency Council; Director General U. S. Railroad Administration; in charge of liquidation of War Finance Corpora- tion; member Foreign Service Buildings Commission; member board of trustees, Smithsonian Institution; member central committee, American Red Cross; member of Board of Trustees, Postal Savings System; member National Archives Council; chairman Central Statistical Committee. Assistants to the Secretary: Henrietta S. Klotz, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. John Kieley, 1821 Wyoming Avenue. The Under Secretary.— Thomas J. Coolidge, 3263 N Street. General counsel for the Department of the Treasury.—Herman Oliphant, Bay Ridge, Annapolis, Md. Assistants: John G. Harlan, 5625 Rock Creek Ford Road. Clarence V. Opper, 3609 Livingston Street. Alanson W. Willcox, The Lodge, Treetop, R. F. D. No. 5, Bethesda, Md. Robert H. Jackson (Internal Revenue), The Wardman Park. Clayton E. Turney, 1126 Sixteenth Street. Clinton M. Hester, The Dresden Apartments. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Engraving and Printing and Mint Service.— Lawrence Wood Robert, Jr., The Mayflower. Assistant.—H. R. Sheppard, 503 Maple Ridge Road, Battery Park, Md. Technical adviser.—W. c Cram, Jr., 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, and Narcotics.—Stephen B. Gibbons, The Willard Hotel. Assistant.—Frank C. Rose, 6305 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Public Health.—Josephine Roche, 1727 H Street. Assistant.— Mary E. Switzer, 5521 Colorado Avenue. : Administrative assistant to the Secretary.— William H. McReynolds, 1413 Buchanan Street. Assistant.—W. N. Thompson, 2922 Cortland Place. Special assistants to the Secretary: Herbert E. Gaston, 3604 Davis Street. D. W. Bell, 3322 Seventeenth Street. Peter Grimm, 2601 Thirtieth Street. Beriah M. Thompson, 2258 Cathedral Avenue. LeRoy Barton, 2145 C Street. Harold N. Graves, 6926 Ninth Street. Cyril B. Upham, The Westchester. Chester T. Crowell, 2510 Q Street. Technical assistants to the Secretary.—Archie Lochhead, The Racquet Club; Harris F. Mires, 5545 Potomac Avenue. Consulting chemist.—Herbert J. Wollner, The Westchester. Consulting experts.—James William Bryan, 3038 Dumbarton Avenue; Edwin B. Fussell, 15 Chapman Street, Alexandria, Va. Special staff assistant.—Charles R. Schoeneman, 2006 Klingle Road. Fechniod! assistant to administrative assistant.—E. R. Ballinger, 4821 Sixteenth treet. Director of Research and Statistics.—George C. Haas, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Assistants: Lawrence H. Seltzer, 2943 McKinley Street. Harry D. White, 1314 Kalmia Street. 302 Congressional Directory TREASURY Director of Research and Statistics—Assistants—Continued. Aubrey S. McLeod, 105 Northview Place, Alexandria, Va. Aaron Director, 1716 N Street. Russel R. Reagh (Government actuary), 2438 Monroe Street. Secret Service.—W. H. Moran, 1841 Columbia Road. i E. Harper, 200 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Printing.—L. C. Spangler, 821 Twenty-third Street, South, Virginia Highlands, Alexandria, Va. Correspondence.—Gabrielle E. Forbush, 2023 O Street. OFFICE OF CHIEF CLERK AND SUPERINTENDENT (Treasury Building) Chief clerk and superintendent.—F. A. Birgfeld, 3338 Seventeenth Street. Assistant chief clerk.—S. H. Marks, 3544 Thirteenth Street. PUBLIC DEBT SERVICE Commassioner.— William S. Broughton, 1819 Q Street. Assistant commasstoner.— Edwin L. Kilby, 7106 Ninth Street. Deputy commissioner.—Rene W. Barr, 900 Nineteenth Street. Register of the Treasury.—W. W. Durbin, The Pentilly, 1812 K Street. Assistant Register.—Byrd Leavell, 2151 California Street. Chief, division of loans and currency.— Marvin Wesley, 2204 First Street. Cheef, division of accounts and audit.—M. R. Loafman, 5408 Nebraska Avenue. Chief, division of paper custody.—M. A. Emerson, 3057 Porter Street. COMMISSIONER OF ACCOUNTS AND DEPOSITS (Treasury Building) Commissioner.—E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. Assistant commissioner.— Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue. Chief, division of bookkeeping and warrants.—Joseph Greenberg, 717 Princeton Place. Chief disbursing officer.—Guy F. Allen, 556 Varnum Street. Chief, division of deposits.—E. D. Batchelder, 1208 Crittenden Street. OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY (Treasury Building) Compiroller.—J. F. T. O’Connor, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy comptrollers.—F. G. Awalt, 2923 Thirty-fourth Street; E. H. Gough, 5830 Chevy Chase Parkway; Gibbs Lyons, 3733 R Street. Chief clerk.—George R. Marble, 218 Adams Street NE. Secretary to the comptroller.—C. A. Poole, 504 Wakefield Hall, 2101 New Hamp- shire Avenue. OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES (Treasury Building) Treasurer.— William Alexander Julian, Westchester Apartment. Assistant Treasurer.— Marion Banister, Dupont Circle Apartment. Executive assistant.—G. O. Barnes, 914 Kearney Street NE. Cashier—Harry H. Hulbirt, 3244 Patterson Street. Chief clerk.—Louis P. Allen, 1203 Floral Street. NATIONAL BANK REDEMPTION AGENCY Superintendent.— Michael E. Slindee, The Iroquois. Assistant superintendent.—B. C. Gardner, 615 Lexington Place NE. BUREAU OF CUSTOMS (Washington Building, Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue. Phone, N Ational 6400) Commassioner.—James H. Moyle, 1629 Columbia. Road. Assistant commissioner.— Frank Dow, 6405 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief counsel.—Eli Frank, Jr., 2205 South Avenue, Baltimore, Md. TL r———— CTRL —— | ———— TREASURY Executive Departments 303 Assistants chief counsel: Frank J. Murphy, 426 Irving Street. H. A. Hayward, 125 Villa Road, Clarendon, Va. Depry Commis Customs Agency Service.—Thomas J. Gorman, 1730 Irving ree Assistant deputy commissioner, Customs Agency Service—Carroll Gray, 5334 Thirty-second Street. BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 5050) Commissioner.—QGuy T. Helvering, The Mayflower. Assistant to the Commsissioner.— Milton E. Carter. Special deputy commissioner.—Eldon P. King, 3821 Fulton Street. Deputy commissioners.—D. Spencer Bliss, 923 East Capitol Street; George J. Schoeneman, 1361 Locust Road; Charles T. Russell, 3021 Forty-fifth Street; Stewart Berkshire, 3807 Benton Street. Assistant general counsel.—Robert H. Jackson, The Wardman Park. Chzef, intelligence unit.— Elmer L. Irey, 3800 Twentieth Street NE. Head, personnel division.—George S. Paull, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Head, administrative division.— Frederick 1 Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road, Chevy Chase. FEDERAL ALCOHOL ADMINISTRATION (Department of Justice Building, Tenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, N Ational 6400) Administrator.—Franklin C. Hoyt, 2342 Massachusetts Avenue. Associate administrator.—Harris E. Willingham, care of University Club, 900 Fifteenth Street. General counsel.—Phillip E. Buck, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va. Deputy administrator.—John E. O’N eill, 2 Williams Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy administrator (enforcement division) —John L. Huntington, 8407 Cedar Street, Silver Spring, Md. Head, permit division.—H. C. Flanery, 1013 Montana Avenue NE. Public relations counsel.— David Rankin Barbee, 4304 Thirty-seventh Street. Head, statistics and reports division.—[Vacant.] BUREAU OF THE MINT (Treasury Building) Director.—Nellie Tayloe Ross, The Mayflower. Assistant director—Mary M. O’Reilly, Hay-Adams House. BUREAU OF NARCOTICS (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone NAtional 6400) Commissioner of narcotics.—H. J. Anslinger, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy commissioner of narcotics.— Will S. Wood, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. 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 (Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 5710) Surgeon General.—Hugh S. Cumming, 2219 California Street. Assistant Surgeons General—W. F. Draper, 4710 Twenty-fifth Street, North, Lyonhurst, Va.; L. R. Thompson, 17 West Virginia Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; F. A. Carmela, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; W. L. Treadway, Manor Club, R. F. D. No. 4, Rockville, Md.; Clifford E. Waller, 1103 West High- land "Drive, Woodside, Md.; S. L. Christian, 3611 Kanawha Street; R. C. Williams, 6 Aspen Street, "Chevy Chase, Md.; R. A. Vonderlehr, 1862 Mintwood Place. Chief clerk.—Daniel Masterson, 1305 Kearney Street NE. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH Director.— Medical Director George W. McCoy, 2618 Garfield Street. 304 Congressional Directory TREASURY THE COAST GUARD (Wilkins Building, 1512-14 H Street. Phone, NAtional 6400) Comision) Rens Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, 6410 Beechwood Drive, Chevy ase, : Assistant commandant.—Capt. L. C. Covell, Coast Guard Headquarters. Head of finance diviston.—Commander R. R. Waesche, 5544 Thirtieth Place. Inspector in chief —Capt. P. W. Lauriat, 1618 North Harvard Street, Lyon Village, Va. Acting engineer in chief.—Commander (E.) H. F. Johnson, 115 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Supply officer—Commander W. J. Keester, 3378 Stevenson Place, Chevy Chase. Public relations officer.—Lt. Commander L. W. Perkins, 3316 Rowland Place. Head of personnel diviston.—Capt. T. G. Crapster, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Pay and allowances officer.—W. H. Webb, 4440 Ord Street, NE., Kenilworth, D. C. PROCUREMENT DIVISION (Federal Warehouse, Ninth and D Sireets SW. Phone, NAtional 4650) Dire = Rear Admiral Christian Joy Peoples (SC) U. S. Navy, 3420 Garfield treet. Branch of Public Works: Assistant director.—W. E. Reynolds, The Westchester. Assistant to assistant director.—L. C. Martin, 8509 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Superiinig architect.—L. A. Simon, The Portsmouth, 1735 New Hampshire venue. Supervising engineer.—Neal A. Melick, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Branch of supply: Assistant director—H. BE. Collins, The Westchester. Assistant to assistant director.—Robert LeFevre, 112 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Aarinisipiias assistant.—W. N. Rehlaender, 4811 Middlesex Lane, Edgemoor, d. CUSTOMHOUSE (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phone, WEst 0243-0244) Deputy collector in charge.—Charles R. Lewis, 3216 Thirteenth Street. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET (In the Treasury Department, but under the immediate direction of the President) (Treasury Building) Acting director—Daniel W. Bell, 3322 Seventeenth Street. Assistant director.—John N. Edy, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Administrative assistant.—Charles H. Fullaway, 704 Dorset Avenue, Kenwood, Assistants to the director—F. J. Bailey, 2223 Hall Place; Charles L. Dasher, 114 Summerfield Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Melvin Jones, 3800 Fourteenth Street; John L. Keddy, 2243 North Glebe Road, Cherrydale, Va.; J. H. Mackey, 1717 Varnum Street; Henry N. Wiseman, 1331 Jefferson Street. Acting chief, division of research and investigation.—Paul N. Peck, 1718 Twenty- second Street. Chief of division of estimates.—F. J. Lawton, 1816 Varnum Street NE. Counsel.—J. L. Carr, 1601 Argonne Place. Secretary to the director.—Marie A. Johnston, 2926 Porter Street. FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION (Arlington Building. Phone, NAtional 6740) Chairman.— Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs, 4100 Cathedral Avenue. — Executive Departments 305 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”, 8333 Stephenson Place), was born in Dodge County, Nebr., September 8, 1872; graduated from Fremont (Nebraska) Normal College i in 1888 and attended the University of Nebraska in 1893-94; began mining in Utah in 1894; treasurer Mercur Gold Mining & 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, 1915-23; member State council of defense, World War; Governor of Utah two terms, 1925-32; 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, Woodlawn, R. F. D. No. 1, Alexandria, Va. Executive to the Assistant Secretary of War.—Col. Earl McFarland, 2540 * Massachusetts Avenue. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of War.—Kate Buckingham, 412 Eleventh Street NE. Admipising assistant and chief clerk.—John W. Martyn, 2901 Thirty-fourth treet. Executive assistant to the Secretary of War.—Oliver J. Grimes, Woodley Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place. Clerk to the Secretary.—John W. Schott, 1011 Montana Avenue NE. Private secretary.— Martha E. McPherson, 405 Upshur Street. Aon chief clerk.—Frank M. Hoadley, 28 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, d Chefs of division: Cwilian personnel.— William D. Searle, 1866 Wyoming Avenue. Coordination and record.— Mary S. Nixon, 2100 Nineteenth Street. Postal station.—James G. McFadden, 2001 Sixteenth Street. Printing and advertising.—Henry C. Lehmann, 1334 Valley Place SE. Supply.—Frank B. Bourn, 3777 Oliver Street. Accounts,—Edwin M, Lawton, 1143 Twenty-fourth Street. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF (State, War, and Navy Building) Chief of Staff.—Gen. Malin Craig, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff—Maj. Gen. George S. Simonds, 2022 Columbia Road. Assistant Chief of Staff G—1 (Personnel).—[Vacant.] In charge of G-2 (Military Intelligence).—Brig. Gen. Harry E. Knight, 2612 Woodley Place. Assistant Chief of Staff G—-3 (Operations and Training).— Brig. Gen. John H. Hughes, 1801 K Street, apartment 302. Assistant Chief of Staff G—4 (Supply) .—Brig. Gen. Charles S. Lincoln, 3900 Cathe- dral Avenue (711-A Westchester Apartments). Assistant Chief of Staff W. P. D. (War Plans Division).—Brig. Gen. Stanley D. Embick, 2118 Wyoming Avenue. Secretary of the General Staff.—Lt. Col. Robert L. Eichelberger, 2928 Twenty= eighth Street. Chief clerk.—Herbert F. Statesir, 3015 South Dakota Avenue NE. 30063°—T74—-2—1sT ED—— 20 306 Congressional Directory WAR OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CAVALRY (Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief —Maj. Gen. Leon B. Kromer, Army and Navy Club. Ezecutive.—Col. Alexander M. Miller, Jr., 1869 Wyoming Avenue. 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. Upton Birnie, Jr., 3106 N Street. Ezxecutive.—Col. Lesley J. McNair, 1421 North Twelfth Street, Rosslyn, Va. Chief clerk.—Master Sergt. Fred Lind, 109 West Luray Avenue, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF COAST ARTILLERY (Munitions Building, rooms 3020, 3022, and 3212) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Harry L. Steele, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Ezeculive.—Col. Henry T. Burgin, Shoreham Hotel. 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. J. B. Woolnough, 3900 Connecticut Avenue. Chief clerk.—Master Sergt. Howard B. Rumsey, 4632 Fifteenth Street North, Ballston, Va. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS (Room 2024, Munitions Building, Constitution Avenue and Twentieth Street. Phone, NA tional 2520 Branch 1097) Chief of Chaplains.—Chaplain Alva J. Brasted, 1220 Floral Street. Ezxecuiive officer —Chapiain Edwin Burling, 205 Corcoran Courts. Personnel officer.—Chaplain Walter H. Paschal, 1118 Fifteenth Street. Administrative assistant.—Augustus S. Goodyear, 1422 Buchanan Street. ® OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL (Room 252, Department of State Building) The Adjutant General.—[Vacant.] Assistant The Adjutant General.—Brig. Gen. Edgar T. Conley, Silver Spring, Md. Executive officer.—Col. David Y. Beckham, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Administratie assistant.—Jesse H. Powell, 2238 Hall Place. Deputy adminisirative assistant.—Leon B. Hord, 3121 Adams Mill Road. - WAR Executive Departments 307 OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL (Room 1062, Munitions Building) The Inspector General.—[Vacant.] Ezecutive—Col. R. C. Humber, Army and Navy Club, Seventeenth and I Streets. Inspections division.—Col. Thorne Strayer, 2837 Twenty-ninth Street. Investigations division.—Lt. Col. Leo J. Ahern, Army and Navy Club. Money accounts diviston.—Lt. Col. J. L. Parkinson, The Calverton Apartments, 1673 Columbia Road. Chief clerk.—B. H. Simmons, 1339 Kenyon Street. ‘OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL (Otis Building, 810 Eighteenth Street) The Jods Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. Arthur W. Brown, 3133 Connecticut venue. Assistant.—Col. Hugh C. Smith, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Ld Robert W. Brown, 4910 North Rock Springs Road, Cherrydale, a Chief, military affairs section.—Col. Allen W. Gullion, 2123 California Street. Chief, military justice section.—Lt. Col. John A. Smith, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, contracts and reservations section.—Maj. Henry R. Bitzing, 112 Holly venue, Takoma Park, Md. Sheets claims and bonds section.—Lt. Col. Walter M. Krimbill, 3745 McKinley treet. : Chief, patent section.—Lt. Col. Frank W. Halliday, 1342 Somerset Place. : Chairman, board of review (courts martial)—Lt. Col. Theodore Hall, 2141 Wyoming 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. L. H. Bash, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Executive officer—Col. Richard H. Jordan, 3040 Dumbarton Avenue. Chief, supply division.—Brig. Gen. William R. Gibson, The Shoreham Hotel. Executive officer.— Col. Clifford L. Corbin, 2148 Wyoming Avenue. - Chief, transportation division.— Brig. Gen. Henry Gibbins, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Chl construction diviston.—Brig. Gen. Patrick W. Guiney, The Kennedy~ arren. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. Hugo E. Pitz, 1347 Somerset Place. Chief clerk.—F. M. Cunley, 1003 Varnum Street NE. 308 Congressional Directory WAR 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—Maj. 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. Lewis S. Morey, 1661 Crescent Place. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL (Munitions Building) Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. Charles R. Reynolds, The Dresden. Executive officer.—Maj. Albert S. Dabney, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Chief clerk.—R. Harry Brooke, 1324 Massachusetts Avenue. ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY (Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.) Librarian.—Maj. Edgar E. Hume, 3015 Dumbarton Avenue. Curator, Museum.—Maj. Raymond O. Dart, 7100 Chestnut Street. ARMY MEDICAL CENTER, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Georgia Avenue and Butternut Street) Commanding officer, Army Medical Center, and commandant, Medical Department Professional Service Schools.—Col. Wallace De Witt, Army Medical Center. Assistant commandant, Medical Department Professional Service Schools, and reroh Army Medical School.—Col. Joseph F. Siler, 2713 Thirty-fourth lace. wr Executive officer, Army Medical Center.—Lieut. Col. John W. Meehan, Army Medical Center. Adjutant, Army Medical Center.—Capt. Clifford H. Perry, 419 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Commanding officer, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Col. Wallace De Witt, Army Medical Center. Consultant in Surgery.—Col. William L. Keller, United States Army (retired), 2930 Foxhall Road. Executive officer, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Col. James C. Magee, Army Medical Center. Adjutant, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Capt. Herbert N. Dean, 1317 Ritten- house Street. : Director, Army Dental School.—Col. Robert H. Mills, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Army Veterinary School.—Lieut. Col. Jean R. Underwood, 4700 Con- necticut Avenue. Secretary, Medical Department Professional Service Schools.— Lieut. Col. William W. Vaughan, Army Medical Center. GENERAL DISPENSARY, UNITED STATES ARMY (Munitions Building) Commanding officer.—Col. Alexander Murray, 329 Mansion Drive, Colonial Park, Alexandria, Va. Es CA WAR Executive Departments 309 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS (Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief — Maj. Gen. Edward M. Markham, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. Asptsiant hief of Engineers—Brig. Gen. George B. Pillsbury, 2216 Wyoming venue. Sonim in charge of the military division.—Col. Warren T. Hannum, 2312 Tracy lace. Assistant in charge of the river and harbor section.—Lt. Col. Glen E. Edgerton, 005 Thirty-second Street. Assistant in charge of finance division.—Lt. Col. Francis K. Newcomer, 2334 Nineteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Claude Lindsey, 201 Quackenbos Street. BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS (Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue) Resident member.—Col. Wildurr Willing, 9 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Members.— Brig. Gen. George B. Pillsbury, 2216 Wyoming Avenue; Col. Earl I. Brown, 1415 Central National Bank Building, Richmond, Va.; Col. George R. Spalding, 1708 Maritime Exchange Building, 80 Broad Street, New York, N. Y.; Col. Elliott J. Dent, 332 Post Office Building, Baltimore, Md.; Col. Max C. Tyler, 419 Federal Building, Cleveland, Ohio; Lt. Col. Glen E, Edgerton, 3005 Thirty-second Street. Executive secretary.—J. Ben Walker, 1757 K Street. Chief statistician.—W. E. Graves, Walter Heights, McLean, Va. Administrative assistant.—Harry L. Freer, 4912 Forty-first Street. UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE (Room 1068 Navy Building. Phone, N Ational 2520, Branch 1746) In charge—Maj. Robert G. Guyer, 3011 Forty-fifth Street; assistant, Capt. Frank O. Bowman, 5906 Dalecarlia Place. Administrative assistant.—S. 1.. Duryee, 129 Sixth Street NE. MISSISSIPPI RIVER COMMISSION (Vicksburg, Miss.) President.— Brig. Gen. Harley B. Ferguson. Members.—Col. Ernest Graves (retired), Col. Francis B. Wilby, Edward Flad, Leo O. Colbert, Harry N. Pharr, Albert L. Culbertson. Secretary.—Maj. Raymond G. Moses. Administrative assistant.—R. N. Duffy. CALIFORNIA DEBRIS COMMISSION (San Francisco, Calif.) Members—Col. Thomas H. Jackson, Lt. Col. Lincoln B. Chambers, Maj. Elroy S. J. Irvine. Administrative assistant.— Arthur A. Crofts. 310 Congressional Directory WAR OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE (Munitions Building) Chief—Maj. Gen. W. H. Tschappat, Great Falls Street and Kirby Road, East Falls Church, Va. Assistants.—Brig. Gen. H. W. Schull, 3900 Cathedral Avenue; Brig. Gen. E. M. Shinkle, 3810 Reno Road; Col. J. E. Munroe, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. Chas. A. Walker, 2801 Thirty-eighth Street. Chief clerk.—Colin E. McRae, 1626 Webster Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief—Maj. Gen. James B. Allison, The Kennedy-Warren, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Executive officer.—Col. Dawson Olmstead, 3911 Livingston Street. Civilian assistant.—Edward Barnett, 1214 Longfellow Street. 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. Assistant Chief of the Air Corps.—Brig. Gen. O. Westover, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Clerk.—John J. Mullaney, The Cavalier Hotel. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Director of aircraft production.—Brig. Gen. O. Westover, 3133 Connecticut Avenue BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS (Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief of Bureau.—Brig. Gen. Creed F. Cox. Assistants to chief of bureau.—Col. Donald C. McDonald, 4434 Q Street; Lieut. Col. Edward A. Stockton, ir., 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Chief clerk.—J. F. Welch, 15621 Trinidad Avenue NE. GOVERNMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES ! (Headquarters, Manila) United States High Commaissioner.—Frank Murphy. President of the Commonwealth.— Manuel L. Quezon. Vice President of the Commonwealth.—Sergio Osmeiia. 1 The government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines was inaugurated November 15, 1935, under the act of Congress (Public, No. 127, 73d Cong.) approved March 24, 1984. — WAR Executive Departments DOMINICAN CUSTOMS RECEIVERSHIP (Headquarters, Santo Domingo City) General receiver of customs.— William E. Pulliam. Deputy general receiver—Norman L. Orme. NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU (Munitions Building) Chief —Maj. Gen. George E. Leach, Hotel Roosevelt, 2101 Sixteenth Street. Ezxecutive.—Col. Edgar A. Fry, 2349 Ashmead Place. 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.—Lieut. Col. R. G. Ditto, 1723 I Street. Chief clerk—Guy B. Tippens, 4604 Asbury Place. THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE (Washington, D. C.) Commandant.—{Vacant.] Assistant commandant.—Col. Walter S. Grant, Cavalry. Executive officer—Maj. William F. Freehoff, Infantry. Chief clerk.—A. B. Neal, 640 K Street. THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE (Munitions Building) Director. —Col. Harry B. Jordan, Ordnance, 3019 N Street. 311 Executive officer.—Capt. George R. Burgess, Coast Artillery, 2548 Massachusetts Avenue Chief clerk. 2 Ruin B. Connell, 16 Sherman Circle. 312 Congressional Directory JUSTICE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Constitution Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets. . Phone, NAtional 0185) HOMER CUMMINGS, of Connecticut, Attorney General (2700 Tilden Street) ; born in Chicago, April 30, 1870, son of Uriah C. and Audie (Schuyler) Stillé Cummings; Ph. B., Yale University, 1891, and LL. B., 1893; married Cecilia Waterbury, daughter of the late William Warren Waterbury; ‘admitted to Connecticut bar in 1893 and practiced at Stamford until March 4, 1933; member of New York bar; admitted to practice in Supreme Court ‘of the United States and a large number of Federal district courts; mayor of Stamford for three terms—1900-1901, 1901-2, and 1904-6; corporation counsel, 1908-12; 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, 1913-19; chairman, February 26, 1919, to July 1920); candidate 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, 1903-9; member of Connecticut State Council of Defense, 1917; chairman of committee on State prison conditions, 1930; member American Bar Association since 1909; appointed Attorney General March 4, 1933; clubs: Metropolitan and National Democratic (New York), Suburban and Woodway Country (Stamford), University, Congressional Coun- try, Manor Golf and Country, and National Press (Washington, D. C.); Tuember of First Congregational Church, Stamford; home, Greenwich, Conn. Solicitor General.—Stanley F. Reed, Mayflower Hotel. Acting assistant to the Attorney General.—Brien M cMahon, The Hay-Adams House. Assistant Attorneys General.—John Dickinson, 1200 Sixteenth Street; Frank J. Wideman, 3232 Woodley Road; Joseph’ B. Keenan, 10 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; James W. Morris, 2700 Connecticut Avenue; Harry Ww. Blair, 4767 Indian Lane. Assistant Attorney General, Division of Customs.—Joseph R. Jackson, 201 Varick Street, New York City. Assistant Solicitor General. —Golden W. Bell, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Executive assistant to the Attorney General. — Ugo Carusi, 4100 Forty-ninth Street. Administrative assistant to the Attorney General.—Charles E. Stewart, The Argonne. id Federal Bureau of Investigation.—J. Edgar Hoover, 413 Seward Square Assistant directors, Federal Bureau of Investigation.—Harold Nathan, Francis Scott Key Apartments; Clyde A. Tolson, The Westchester. Admanistrative officer, Taxes and Penalties Unit.—J oseph Lawrence, 3000 Connect- icut Avenue. Assistant director, Taxes and Penalties Unit.—Harry B. DeAtley, 3317 Seven- teenth Street. Digediary Bureau of Prisons. —-Sanford Bates, 101 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Assistant directors, Bureau of Prisons.—William T. Hammack, The Argonne; James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Bureau of War Risk Latigation. — will G. Beardslee, 2809 Ontario Road. Director, Alien Property Bureau.— Urey Woodson, Hamilton Hotel. Director of information.—Robert M. Gates, Woodley Park Towers. Board of parole: Members— Arthur D. Wood, The Westchester, Cathedral Avenue. Charles Whelan, Harrington Hotel. T. Webber Wilson, Annapolis Hotel. Chief clerk.—Harvey Donaldson, Blackstone Hotel. General agent.—Herbert J. McClure, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. doses ohicel clerk and appointment clerk.—Chailes B. Sornborger, 1857 Newton treet. Chief, division of records.—Robert M. Moore, 523 Florida Avenue NE. Chief, division of supplies and printing.—John F Holland, 414 Cumberland Avenue, Somerset, Md. Librarian.—George Kearney, Somerset House. Attorney in charge of pardons.—James A. Finch, 3625 Davenport Street. POST OFFICE Executive Departments 313 POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Twelfth and Thirteenth 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., 1912-19; 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, 1918-29; 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 2 years, afterwards being elected chairman in October 1930, and reelected in April 1932, for a term of 2 years; reelected September 1934, Buffalo; elected chairman of the Democratic National Committee in Chicago on July 2, 1932; member of Rockland County Society of New York; Knights of Columbus, Haver- straw Council; Order of Red Men, Stony Point, N. Y.; Benevolent and Pro- tective Order of Elks (P. E. R.), Haverstraw, N. Y., also president New York State Elks Association, 1924-25; Rockland County Democratic Club; National and Osceola Democratic Clubs of New York Sp 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 Wash- ington, D. C.; Fraternal Order of Eagles; holds the following honorary degrees: D. C. L., University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., 1933; LL. D., Canisius College, Buffalo, N.Y., 1934; LL. D., Manhattan College, New York City, 1934; LL. D., John Marshall College of Law, Jersey City, N. J., 1934; LL. D., Niagara University, Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1935; D.C. L., Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tenn., 1935. Executive assistant to the Postmaster General.—Ambrose O’Connell, Post Office Department. Secretary to the Postmaster General.—William J. Bray, 1650 Harvard Street. Yous assistant to the Postmaster General.—J. Austin Latimer, 4830 Sixteenth treet. dmg assistant to the Postmaster General.—William C. Lyons, Mayflower otel. Chief clerk.—Owen A. Keen, 3233 Pershing Drive, Clarendon, Va. Assistant chief clerk and personnel officer—Audus T. Davis, 939 North Kenmore Street, Clarendon, Va. ; Disbursing clerk.—Arthur E. Martin, 5324 Forty-first Street. Purchasing agent.—Harrison Parkman, Capitol Park Hotel. Assistant purchasing agent.—Alfred H. Keim, 1628 Nicholson Street. Solicitor—Karl A. Crowley, The Mayflower. : Assistant to the solicitor.— Walter E. Kelly, 1426 M Street. Assistant solicitor.—Paul D. Page, Jr., 2150 Pennsylvania Avenue. Assistant attorneys.—Calvin W. Hassell, 219 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Thomas J. Murray, Raleigh Hotel; Harold F. Jones, 1364 Iris Street; Peter J. Connolly, 1332 Massachusetts Avenue; William C. O’Brien, 4514 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Stewart E. Blassingham, 206 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Abraham B. Keefer, 2028 First Street; John J. Gregory, 4416 New Hampshire Avenue; George H. Schoolmeester, 717 Van Buren Street; George F. Breen, 5425 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Inspector—Kildroy P. Aldrich, The Kennedy, Warren. Assistant chief tnspector.—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 FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL First Assistant Postmaster General.— William W. Howes, Mayflower Hotel. Deputy First Assistant.—Vincent C. Burke, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. 314 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Assistant Deputy First Assistant and chief clerk.—Charles C. Wenrich, 1349 Quincy Street. ; Division of Post Office Service: Spr eenaaia—Clinton B. Uttley, 758 Silver Spring Avenue, Silver Spring, Assistant superintendents.—Frank H. Ellis, 758 Silver Spring Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Alonzo M. Thomas, 2112 F Street; Henry C. Wyman, 3149 Nineteenth Street; Lafayette G. Buehler, 311 Twelfth Street NE.; Thomas : ; O Halloran, 4301 Ridge Road SE.; Max Kohrn, 1916 Seventeenth reet. Division of postmasters: Superintendent.— William J. Dixon, Continental Hotel. Assistant superintendents.—Norman R. Grant, 128 Webster Street; J. Martin Scranage, 1709 Rhode Island Avenue. Division of dead letters and dead parcel post: Superintendent.—Burton G. Cowles, 3918 Illinois Avenue. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Harllee Branch, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy api Assistant.—Jesse M. Donaldson, 3031 Sedgwick Street, apart- ment 101. Assistant Deputy Second Assistant and chief clerk.—James A. Faithful, 1215 Alabama Avenue SE. Division of railway adjustments: Superintendent.— Albert E. Barr, 4604 Thirtieth Street. Assistant superintendents.— William E. Triem, 1626 Hobart Street; William Beck, Garrett Park, Md. Division of International Postal Service: Director—John E. Lamiell, 1115 Twelfth Street. © Assistant directors—George H. Grayson, 2721 Ontario Road; Stewart M. Weber, Benning Station, D. C. Division of Railway Mail Service: General superintendent.—Stephen A. Cisler, Capitol Park Hotel. Assistant general superintendent.— Walker S. Martin, 1826 Kilbourne Place. Assistant superintendent.—Ernest L. Loving, 1335 East Capitol Street. Assistant superintendent, star route section.—[Vacant.] Division of Air Mail Service: Superintendent.—Charles P. Graddick, 2308 Ashmead Place. Assistant superintendent.—J. W. Sutherin, 3724 Northampton Street. Division of rural mails: Superintendent.—Edward B. Teagle, Jr., Annapolis Hotel. Assistant superintendent.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street. OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Clinton B. Eilenberger, Raleigh Hotel. Deputy Third Assistant.—Roy M. North, 2501 Calvert Street. Assistant Deputy Third Assistant and chief clerk.—Harry E. Stine, 1208 Glen Ross Road, Silver Spring, Md. Superintendents of divisions: Finance.—George Grubbs, 311 Madison Street. Money orders.—Charles E. Matthews, 1302 Madison Street; chief clerk, J. Ford, 1800 K Street. Classification.—Nelson B. Wentzel, 1630 Nicholson Street. Stamps.—Robert E. Fellers, 4431 Fifth Street. Registered mails.—John A. King, 16 West Maple Street, Alexandria, Va. Postal Savings.—Benjamin F. Cain, Hotel Roosevelt; assistant superintend- ent, William T. S. Rollins, 3514 Kastern Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. Coy ascertainment.— Aubrey H. Clayton, Chalfonte Apartment, 1601 Argonne lace. Parcel Post.—Director, John A. Brennan, 1886 Monroe Street; assistant director, Jesse C. Harraman, 3500 Fourteenth Street. POST OFFICE Fxecutive Departments 315 OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Fourth Assistant Postmaster General.—Smith W. Purdum, 8 Ralston Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Deputy Fourth Assistant.—Frank J. Buckley, 4705 Eighth Street. Assistant Deputy Fourth Assistant and chief clerk.—Louis Y. de Zychlinsgki, 1701 Park Road. Division of engineering and research: Superintendent.— Wrightson Chambers, Continental-Hotel. Assistant superintendent.—Merrill Vaughn, 3011 Twenty-fifth Street NE. Division of post-office quarters: Superintendent.—Joseph F. Betterly, 5004 Mooreland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant superintendents.—Charles H. Carle, 4612 Eighth Street; Harry A. : Spins: 2811 Thirty-eighth Street; Harold E. Richardson, Seat Pleasant, d. Division of motor-vehicle service: Superintendent.—A. G. Biedenweg, 3701 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant superintendent.—Arthur R. Gehman, 8 Hamilton Street NE., Brent- wood, Md. Division of building operations and supplies: Director—Harrison Parkman, Capitol Park Hotel. Equipment and supplies branch: Assistant director—[Vacancy.] Maintenance branch: 1 Assistant director—Fred C. Cornwell, 5914 Second Street. ¢ Manufacturing and repair branch: Assistant director—John B..Cady, 7064 Eastern Avenue, Takoma Park. Division of topography: Topographer.— Arthur S. Page, 118 B Street NE. Division of traffic: Traffic manager.—James R. Murphy, 745 Varnum Street. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Comptroller and budget officer.— William L. Slattery, 64 St. Paul Street, Ken- sington, Md. Assistant and chief clerk.—John J. Haggerty, Berwyn, Md. Ezpert accountant.—Lewis M. Bartlett, 4511 Argyle Terrace. wvision of retirement records: Assistant superintendent.—Floyd L. Yarnall, 3133 Chestnut Street NE. 316 Congressional Directory | NAVY 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 i 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 Daniel 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. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Henry L. Roosevelt, 3023 Q Street. Chief clerk.—William D. Bergman, 2526 Seventeenth Street. See k[svaninn to the Secretary of the Navy.—Archibald Oden, 3718 Veazey reet. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Helen G. O’Neill, Alban Towers, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Budget clerk and assistant chief clerk.—Roy H. Moses, The Valley Vista, 2032 Belmont Road. Chia oo appointment division.—Charles Piozet, 82 Franklin Avenue, Hyattsville, Chief 0) division of records.—Charles T. Ogle, 3740 Benton Street. OFFICERS ON DUTY IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY AND THE ASSISTANT BECRETARY OF THE NAVY Budget officer.—Capt. H. F. Kimmel, 2826 Twenty-seventh Street. Pine of shore establishments.—Rear Admiral H. E. Lackey, 2708 Thirty-fifth ace. ig od of the Naval Petroleum Reserves.—Capt. H. A. Stuart, 3808 Kanawha treet. Naval Aide to Secretary.—Capt. F. J. Fletcher, 1715 N Street. Be jis to the Assistant Secretary.—Lieut. Commander Jerauld Wright, 3028 treet. Marine Aide to the Assistant Secretary.—Maj. John W. Thomason, Jr., U. 8. M. C., 4920 Indian Lane. ISLAND GOVERNMENTS Capt. Bruce L. Canaga, 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. NAVY Executive Departments 317 AMERICAN SAMOA Capt. Otto C. Dowling, 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 H. Standley, Naval Observatory, Thirty-fourth Street and Massachusetts Avenue. Aide to the Admairal.—Lieut. Arthur D. Ayrault, 9302 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Chief of Naval Operations.—Rear Admiral J. K. Taussig, 2540 Mas- sachusetts Avenue. Technical Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations (room 2616) .—Capt. Stanford C. Hooper, 4425 Garfield Street. Chief clerk.—John T. Cuthbert, 1228 Fifteenth Street. War plans division (room 2064).—Rear Admiral William S. Pye, 2817 Woodley oad. : Central division (room 2068).—Capt. Bruce L. Canaga, 3938 Morrison Street. Ship movements division (room 2601).—Capt. Julius C. Townsend, 2540 Massa- chusetts Avenue. I willing division (room 2706).—Capt. William D. Puleston, 2434 Belmont oad. Commu nication division (room 2622). —Capt. Gilbert J. Roweliff, 3009 Thirty- second Street. a division (room 2604). —Capt. Allen B. Reed, 3101 Woodley oad. Naval districts division (room 2066).—Capt. Neil E. Nichols, 3614 Fulton Street. Inspection division (room 3628): President.—Rear Admiral John D. Wainwright, 1 Riggs Court, Dupont Circle. Recorder.—Commander Howard B. Berry, 213 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Fleet training division (room 2803).—Rear Admiral Manley H. Simons, 2910 Ordway Street. None, records and library (room 2726).—Capt. Dudley W. Knox, 1868 Columbia oad. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION (Room 3057, Navy Department Building) (For answers to questions concerning officers of the Regular Navy, call DIstrict 2900, Branch 63; for officers of the Naval Reserve, call DIstrict 2900, Branch 652; for answers to questions concerning midshipmen 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 Adolphus Andrews, 2200 Kalorama Road. Assistant to bureau.—Capt. C. W. Nimitz, 34 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase. Gia Clerk.—Edward Henkel, 1901 North Gleve Road, Waverly Hills, Ballston, a. Officer personnel division (room 8084). Director, Capt. Alexander Sharp, 1545 Thirty-fifth Street. Enlisted personnel division (room 3066).—Director, Capt. R. Jacobs, 3928 McKinley Street. Naval Reserve division (room 8076).— Director, Capt. William O. Spears, 4331 Blagden Avenue. Frasning division (room 8612).— Director, Capt. Louis P. Davis, 3926 McKinley treet. Transportation division (room 3607).—Officer in charge, Commander James B. Rutter, 7118 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Naval Academy division (room 3077) —Head, Leonard Draper, Riverside Apart- ments. Registrar (room 38914). —Franklin J. Schuyler, 1218 Glenn Ross Road, North Woodside, Md. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE (Room 1026, Navy Department Building) Hydrographer.—Capt. L. R. Leahy, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. Chief clerk.—A. F. Bogue, 1358 Meridian Place. 318 Congressional Directory NAVY NAVAL OBSERVATORY (Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 2723) Superintendent.—Capt. J. F. Hellweg, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. latin to the superintendent.—Capt. Andrew S. Hickey, 1608 New Hampshire venue. Chief clerk.—J. E. Dickey, 3601 Thirty-fourth Street. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (Room 2403, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Admiral Norman M. Smith, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 2400 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant to chief of bureau.— Commander Greer A. Duncan, Corps of Civil Engi- neers, 2501 Calvert Street, apartment 304. Chief clerk.—E. W. Whitehorne, 713 Nineteenth Street. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (Room 3147, Navy Department Building) Chief—Rear Admiral H. R. Stark, The Shoreham, 2500 Calvert Street. Asszstant to chief of bureau.—Capt. R. M. Brainard, 3501 Davis Street. 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, West- moreland Apartments, 2122 California Street. Chief clerk.—Henry C. Brunner, 4611 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF ENGINEERING (Room 2006, Navy Department Building) Chief. —Engineer in Chief, Rear Admiral Harold G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road. Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. C. A. Jones, 3104 Cathedral Avenue. Chief clerk.—Augustus C. Wrenn, 407 Rock Creek Church Road. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS (Room 1003, Navy Department Building) Chief —Rear Admiral Charles Conard, Paymaster General of the Navy, 2310 California Street. Assistant to the Paymaster General.—Capt. Henry de F. Mel, Supply Corps, 3517 Rodman Street. Special assistant.—Clyde Reed, 4326 Eighteenth Street. wilian assistant.— Kirk Holmes, 1813 Newton Street. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (Room 1078, Navy Department Building) Chief —Rear Admiral P. S. Rossiter, Surgeon General, United States Navy, 619 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. : Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. O. J. Mink, Medical Corps, 1 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk.—W. S. Douglass. 3210 Nineteenth Street. NAVY Executive Departments 319 BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS (Room 2923, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, 2919 Forty-third Street. Assistant chief. —Capt. F. R. McCrary, 3102 Cathedral Avenue. 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 C. C. Bloch, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Commander T. L. Gatch, 3031 Macomb Street (phone, CLeveland 5515). " Aide to Judge Advocate General.—Lt. Comdr. Colin Campbell, 1230 Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington County, Va. (phone, WAInut 7602). NAVAL CONSULTING BOARD (Room 2616, Navy Department Building) Secretary.—Thomas Robins, 13 Park Row, New York City. Terni officer—Capt. Stanford C. Hooper, room 2616, Navy Department ildin Wgcns COMPENSATION BOARD (Room 3249, Navy Department Building) Senior member.—Rear Admiral R. M. Watt, Construction Corps, room 1003, New Customhouse, Philadelphia, Pa. Members.—Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, Construction Corps; Rear Admiral Harold G. Bowen; Capt. William McEntee, Construction Corps; and Com- mander J. A. Byrne, Supply Corps. Auditor.—Charles M. Eichelberger, 360 Jenifer Street. GENERAL BOARD (Room 2743, Navy Department Building) Chairman.—Rear Admiral Frank H. Clark, The Dresden. Rear Admirals W. R. Sexton, The Benedick; J. W. Greenslade, 3325 Rowland ‘Place; A. W. Johnson, 2137 R Street; Capt. M. K. Metcalf, 3212 Klingle Road; Commander R. O. Glover, Westchester Apartments. Secretary. ~_ Commander Ellis S. Stone, 1520 Thirty-third Street. Chef clerk.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS AND NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) (Room 2644, Navy Department Building) Prestdent.—Rear Admiral John B. Dennis, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (Reom 2649, Navy Department Building) Prestdent.—Rear Admiral Adolphus E. Watson, 2335 Ashmead Place. Recorder— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD (Room 2644, Navy Department Building) Prestdent.—Rear Admiral John B. Dennis, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE. NAVAL DISPENSARY (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building) Commanding officer.—Capt. Benj. H. Dorsey, Medical Corps. NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360) Commandant and superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear Admiral Joseph R. Defrees, United States Navy. 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. S. C. Rowan, United States Navy. Sentor inspector.—Capt. W. L. Friedell. Aide to commandant.—Lieut. Commander L. S. Perry, United States Navy. 320 Congressional Directory NAVY NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER (Twenty-third and E Streets) Commanding officer.—Capt. Ulys R. Webb, Medical Corps, 1811 Lamont Breet. NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL (Twenty-third and E Streets) Commanding officer—Capt. Harold W. Smith, Medical Corps, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. NAVAL HOSPITAL (Foot of Twenty-fourth Street) Commanding officer.—[Vacant.] ATTENDANCE ON OFFICERS Lieut. Commander William P. Mull, Medical Corps, 3519 Rodman Street. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School) President.—Capt. Harold W. Smith, Medical Corps, The Westchester, 4000 Cathe- dral Avenue. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School) President.—Capt. Harold W. Smith, Medical Corps, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS (Navy Department Building, third floor. Phone, DIstrici 2900) MAJOR GENERAL COMMANDANT’S OFFICE Commandant.—Maj. Gen. John H. Russell, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. ; Assistant to commandant.—Maj. Gen. Louis McC. Little, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Director of operations and training.—Col. Ralph S. Keyser, 106 Oak Street, Falls Church, Va. erin Corps Reserve section.—Brig. Gen. Richard P. Williams, 1026 Sixteenth treet. Personnel section.—Col. John Marston, 2219 California Street. : Public relations section.—Lt. Col. Joseph C. Fegan, 3420 Sixteenth Street. Special assistant to commandant.—Charles A. Ketcham, Hyattsville, Md. ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT Adjutant and inspector.— Brig. Gen. David D. Porter, 1819 Nineteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Charles L. Snell, 1719 K Street. 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, 2200 Nineteenth Street. Chef clerk.—Samuel F. Birthright, 726 Highland Drive, Woodside Park, Md. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MARINE CORPS) (Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, Lincoln 1230) President.—Brig. Gen. Frederic L. Bradman, 2922 Forty-fifth Street. Recorder.—Maj. Omar T. Pheiffer, 6009 Twenty-second Street North, East Falls Church, Va. MARINE BARRACKS (Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, Lincoln 1230) Commanding.—Lt. Col. Thomas S. Clarke. INTERIOR Executive Departments 321 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR (Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880) HAROLD L. ICKES, of Winnetka, I11., Secretary of the Interior, Hayes Manor, Manor Road, Chevy Chase Lake, Md., 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—MTrs. 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., 1912-14; chairman of the Illinois Progressive State Committee, 1914-16; 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 Conven- tion 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 Expeditionary 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. Under Secretary.—Charles West, 110 Maryland Avenue NE, First Assistant Secretary.— Theodore A. Walters, The Roosevelt Hotel. Assistant Secretary.—Oscar L. Chapman, The Kennedy-Warren. Personal assistant to the Secretary.— Harry Slattery, 2208 Cathedral Avenue. Admisisi give assistant and budget officer—Ebert K. Burlew, 2904 Eighteenth treet. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Fred L. Marx, 2121 New York Avenue. Chief clerk—Floyd E. Dotson, 5843 Potomac Avenue. Solicitor—Nathan R. Margold, East Falls Church, Va. Board of appeals—Frederick Bernays Wiener, 2214 Cathedral Avenue; John H. Thomas, 900 Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Director, division of territories and island possessions.—Dr. Ernest Henry Gruening, in care of Department of Interior. Director of grazing.—Farrington R. Carpenter, Cosmos Club. Executive secretary, United States Board of Geographical Names.—George C. Martin. Director of investigations.— Louis R. Glavis, Wardman Park Hotel. Director of information.—Stuart Godwin, 3944 Morrison Street. Chiefs of division: Classification.—John Harvey, 1416 Shepherd Street. #LD Poin, mail, and files—Mrs. J. Atwood Maulding, 1514 Seventeenth treet. Purchasing officer.— Walter B. Fry, 4513 Iowa Avenue. Miscellaneous service.—Frank C. Updike, 2755 Macomb Street. GENERAL LAND OFFICE (Interior Department Building. Phone, District 1820) Commissioner.—Fred W. Johnson, The Northumberland. Assistant commissioner. — Antoinette Funk, 2116 Kalorama Road. Assistant to the commissioner.—C. A. Obenchain, Chatham Courts. Recorder —Evelyn S. Adams. 30063°—T74—-2—18T ED———21 322 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Chefs of division: 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. Mail and files—Thomas H. Jamison, Seabrook, Md. Mineral.—Perry L. Keefer, 225 Holly Avenue, Tacoma Park, Md. Patents.—Ralph S. Clinton, 2802 Thirteenth Street NE. Posting and tract records.—Elmer 1. Baldwin, 3734 Benton Street. Reclamation and land grant.—Andrew Markhus, 1430 Chapin Street Surveys.—Clinton G. Tudor, 437 Hamilton Street. BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS (Hurley-Wright Building. Phone, DIstrict 2800) Commiassioner.—John Collier, 209 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant commissioner.— William Zimmerman, Jr., 802 Rock Springs Drive, Clarendon, Va. Chief counsel.—John R. T. Reeves, 3807 Fulton Street. Finance officer.—Samuel M. Dodd, Jr., 4371 Lee Highway, Cherrydale, Va. Assistant finance officer.—E. J. Armstrong, 301 Jackson Place, Jefferson Park, Va. Assistant to the commissioner (property). —Arthur C. Monahan, 3700 Thirteenth Street NE. Assistant to the commassioner.—Mary G. McGair, 1737 H Street, apartment 5. Special adviser on social economic polictes— Ward Shepard, 104 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the commasstoner.—Fred H. Daiker, 140 Tennessee Avenue NE. Director of employment and personnel.—Ernest R. Burton, 206 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Field representative—W. V. Woehlke, 207 First Street NE. Field representative—Floyd W. La Rouche, 130 B Street NE. Education division: Acting director—A. C. Monahan, 3700 Thirteenth Street NE. Assistant director.—Mary Stewart, Wardman Park Hotel. Assistant director.—Paul L. Fickinger, 2909 Thirteenth Street NE. Health division: Director—Dr. Jas. G. Townsend, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Assistant director.—Dr. Lawrence W. White, 1708 Webster Street. Agricultural extension and industry division: Director—A. C. Cooley, 7912 Beech Drive. Assistant to the director—H. W. Shipe, Falls Church, Va. Forestry division: Director—Robert Marshall, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to the director.—L. D. Arnold, 5330 Colorado Avenue. Irrigation division: Direcion Alnor L. Wathen, Westchester Apartments, 4000 Cathedral: venue. Assistant director (field).—Herbert V. Clotts, 751 South Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, Calif. Land division: Director.—J. M. Stewart, 4200 Tenth Street NE. Director of I. E. C. W.—D. E. Murphy, McLean, Va. OFFICE OF EDUCATION (Hurley- Wright Building, Eighteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Dlstrict 1820) Commisstoner.—John W. Studebaker, The Shoreham. Assistant commissioner.—Bess Goodykoontz, The Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Assistant commissioner for vocational education.—John C. Wright, 5624 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Chief clerk.—{Vacant.] Private secretary to the commissioner.—Mabel H. Smith, 815 Eighteenth Street. Chiefs of division: Research and investigation.—Consultants: J. F. Rogers, 2041 Rosemont Avenue; M. M. Proffitt, 3209 Tennyson Street; D. Segel, 2440 Sixteenth Street. . Higher education.—F. J. Kelly, Westchester Apartments. . American school systems.—W. S. Deffenbaugh, 519 Butternut Street. Comparative education.—J. F. Abel, 2025 H Street. : . Special problems.—Katherine M. Cook, 405 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. . Statistical. —E. M. Foster, 315 Channing Street NE. AO oe [$) INTERIOR Executive Departments 323 Chiefs of division.—Continued. Editorial—W. D. Boutwell, 3254 O Street. Library.—Sabra W. Vought, Riverside Apartments. Service.—L. R. Alderman, Annapolis Hotel. Agricultural education service—J. A. Linke, 4324 Argyle Terrace. Troon and industrial education service.—Frank Cushman, 4217 Thirty-eighth treet. Home, economics education service.—Florence Fallgatter (acting), 4000 Cathedral venue. Commercial education service.—Earl W. Barnhart, 2557 Thirty-fifth Street. Vocational rehabilitation service—John Aubel Kratz, 4302 Springdale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Bea, a statistical service (vocational education).—John Cummings, 3029 reet. FEDERAL BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION (Hurley- Wright Building, Eighteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Dlstrict 8388) Chazrman.—The Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, Department of Labor Building, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. The Secretary of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace, The Wardman Park. The Secretary of Commerce, Daniel C. Roper, 3001 Woodland Drive. The Commissioner of Education, John W. Studebaker, The Shoreham. Henry Ohl, representative of labor. Clarence Poe, representative of agricultural interests. Lincoln Filene, representative of manufacturing and commercial interests. (This board acts in an advisory capacity to the Commissioner of Education in matters relating to vocational education and rehabilitation.) GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880) Director.—W. C. Mendenhall, 9 East Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative geologist.—J. D. Sears, 209 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chaef clerk.—Ronne C. Shelsé, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Geologic branch.—G. F. Loughlin, chief geologist, 3214 Northampton Street. Wei resources branch.—N. C. Grover, chief hydraulic engineer, 1442 Belmont treet. Topegrapise branch.—J. G. Staack, chief topographic engineer, 1520 Webster treet. Conservation branch.—Herman Stabler, chief engineer, 2700 Connecticut Avenue. Alaskan branch.—Philip S. Smith, chief Alaskan geologist, 3249 Newark Street. Engraving divistion.—C. H. Birdseye, 22 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, division of distribution.—Jule E, André, 2710 Nineteenth Street North, Lyon Village, Va. Librarian.— Guy E. Mitchell. BUREAU OF RECLAMATION (New Post Office Building, Thirteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 1820) Commissioner.—Elwood Mead, 1661 Crescent Place. Assistant to the commissioner.—M. A. Schnurr, 1340 Quincy Street. Chief engineer.—R. F. Walter, United States Customhouse, Denver, Colo. General supervisor of operation and maintenance.—George O. Sanford, Kenesaw Apartments, Sixteenth and Irving Streets. Chiefs of division: Accounts.— William F. Kubach, 1349 Sheridan Street. Emergency conservation work.—D. S. Stuver, 4044 Fessenden Street. Engineering.—John C. Page, 518 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Mail and files.—Jesse W. Myer, Wakefield Hall. Public relations.—M. A. Schnurr, 1340 Quincy Street. Chief clerk.—Charles N. McCulloch, 1827 K Street Secretary to the commissioner.— Mary E. Gallagher, Cavalier Hotel. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Director.—Arno B. Cammerer., 4664 Twenty-fifth Street, North, Cherrydale, Va. Associate director.—A. E. Demaray, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant directors: Branch of operations.—Hillory A. Tolson, 1332 Farragut Street. Branch of lands and use.—George A. Moskey, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. 324 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Assistant directors—Continued. Branch of research and eduwcation.—Dr. H. C. Bryant, 2907 Rittenhouse Street. gre of planning and State cooperation.—Conrad L. Wirth, 5444 Nevada venue. Branch of buildings.—Charles A. Peters, Jr., 4891 Potomac Avenue. Branch of historic sites and buildings.— Verne E. Chatelain (acting), 5521 Colo- rado Avenue. Editor in chief.—Isabelle F. Story, 1910 K Street. Chief clerk.—Ronald M. Holmes, 4518 Davenport Street. Branch of engineering: Grd ima A. Kittredge, 409 Underwood Building, San Francisco, alif. Bey chief engineer.—Oliver G. Taylor, 6313 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Branch of plans and design: Chief architect.—Thomas C. Vint, 4411 Greenwich Parkway. Deputy chief architect.—William G. Carnes, 425 Underwood Building, San Francisco, Calif. Branch of forestry: Chief —John D. Coffman, 5704 Nebraska Avenue. National Capital parks—C. Marshall Finnan, superintendent, 220 Prospect Street, Friendship Heights, Md. BUREAU OF MINES (900 F Street. Phone, DIstrict 7123) Director.—John W. Finch, 4 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the director. —Joseph H. Hedges, 3820 Van Ness Street. Chief clerk.—John D. Secrest, 108 Spa Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md. TECHNOLOGIC BRANCH Chief of branch and chief engineer, mechanical division.—Ozni P. Hood, 1831 Irving Street. Chief engineer, experiment stations division.—Arno C. Fieldner, P. O. box 296, Alexandria, Va. > Acting chief engineer, explosives division.—Ozni P. Hood, 1831 Irving Street. Chief engineer, metallurgical division.—Reginald S. Dean, 6000 Thirty-fourth Place. Acting chief engineer, mining division.—Charles F. Jackson, 6802 Brookeville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief engineer, petroleum and natural gas division.—Roscoe A. Cattell, 7717 Fourteenth Street. ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS BRANCH Chief of branch and head, coal economics division.—James W. Furness, 2301 Con- necticut Avenue. Chief economist, mineral resources and statistics division.—Oscar E. Kiessling, Falls Church, Va., Route No. 1. Chief engineer, metals and nonmetals division.—Paul M. Tyler, 1817 Thirty- seventh Street. Chief economist, foreign mineral service division.—Joseph S. McGrath, 3227 Adams Mill Road. Acting chief economist, petroleum economics division.— George R. Hopkins, 4803 Davenport Street. HEALTH AND SAFETY BRANCH Chief of branch and chief engineer, safety division.—Daniel Harrington, 3153 Nineteenth Street. ADMINISTRATIVE BRANCH Chief of branch.—Joseph H. Hedges, 3820 Van Ness Street. Chief engineer, information division.—John A. Davis, 1616 Sixteenth Street. OFFICE OF CHIEF MINING ENGINEER Engineer.—George S. Rice, P. O. box 296, Alexandria, Va. INTERIOR Executive Departments 325 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. 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. Réntgenologist.—B. Price Hurst, M. D. Pathologist.—George W. Adams, M. D. Chief clerk.—Frederick D. Henry. HOWARD UNIVERSITY (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, POtomac 4001) Patron ex officico—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Chairman, board of trustees.—T. L. Hungate, S. M. 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.—Edward W. Griffin, Juneau, Alaska. Disbursing officer.—Charles E. Naghel, Juneau, Alaska. Governor of Hawaii.—Joseph B. Poindexter, Honolulu, Hawaii. iia of Hawait and special disbursing agent.— Arthur A. Greene, Honolulu, awaii. Governor of Virgin Islands.—Lawrence W. Cramer, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Commissioner of finance.—Morris F. de Castro, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Governor of Puerto Rico.—Blanton Winship. Commissioner of education of Puerto Rico.—Jose Padin, THE ALASKA RAILROAD General manager.—Otto F. Ohlson, Anchorage, Alaska. Examiner of accounts.—J. J. Delaney, 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.—A. R. Sessions, Anchorage, Alaska. ; Special disbursing agent.—Alfred G. Balls, Anchorage, Alaska. Special represeniative-agent.—Harold W. Snell, Suite 321-322, 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Office of chief clerk, Department of Intertor.—Room 6105, 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, Room 441, Federal Office Building, Seattle, Wash. 326 Congressional Directory INTERIOR ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION Ex officio commissioner in charge of work.—John W. Troy, Governor of Alaska, Juneau, Alaska. Chief engineer.—lke P. Taylor, Juneau, Alaska. Assistant chief engineer—Hawley W. Sterling, Juneau, Alaska. Chief clerk.—G. H. Skinner, Juneau, Alaska. OIL ADMINISTRATION Admanasirator.—Harold L. Ickes (Secretary of the Interior), Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md THE PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD (1729 New York Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 1324) Chairman.—[Vacant.] Members.—Norman L. Meyers, 1239 Thirtieth Street; E. B. Swanson, 2512 Q Street; Dr. John W. Frey, 4423 Q Street. * Administrative assistant.—Samuel Goodacre, 2210 Cathedral Avenue. THE PETROLEUM LABOR POLICY BOARD (1729 New York Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 1324) Chairman.—[Vacant.] Member.— Dr. John A. Lapp, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. * Acts for both Petroleum Administrative Board and Petroleum Labor Policy Board. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 327 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) 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, lowa; 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 March 4, 1933; published America Must hoose, Statesmanship and Religion, and New Frontiers (all in 1934); member of National Forest Reservation Commission, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Commission on Grain Futures, National Archives Council, National Emergency Council, United States Texas Centennial Commission. : Under Secretary.—Rexford G. Tugwell, 1731 Hoban Road. : Flatts Secretary.— Milburn L. Wilson, 21 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, d Assistants to the Secretary.—Paul H. Appleby, 713 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md., James D. Le Cron, 4401 Q Street; Milo R. Perkins, 5601 Edgemore Lane, Bethesda, Md. Economic adviser—Mordecai Ezekiel, 530 River Road, Bethesda, Md. Private secretary to the Secretary.— Mary Huss, 326 Fifth Street SE. Assistants to the Under Secretary.—F. P. Bartlett, 5 Riggs Court; Grace E. Falke, 1514 Thirty-fourth Street. Secretary to the Under Secretary.—Faye M. Bailey, 2331 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Roy F. Hendrickson, Silver Spring, Md. Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.— Margaret C. Patten, 1954 Columbia Road. Special assistant to the Secretary.—Julien N. Friant, 1326 Hemlock Street. Director of extension work.—C. W. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of personnel. —W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Director of finance and budget officer.—W. A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Director of information.—M. S. Eisenhower, 511 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Solicitor—Mastin G. White, 1616 Sixteenth Street. Chief, division of operation and real estate officer—Joseph Haley, 1613 North Fill- more Street, Lyon Village, Va. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, District 6350) Director—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Assistant to the Director—B. B. Hackett, 3214 First Street, North, Clarendon, Va. Chief division of appoiniments.—P. L. Gladmon, 1332 Fairmont Street. Classification manager.—L. L. Evans, 3639 Warren Street. Chief investigator.—C, T. Forster, 904 Maryland Avenue NE. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE (The Mall ,between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Director and budget officer.—W. A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Assistant director—W. R. Fuchs, 2817 Thirty-ninth Street. Administrative assistants.—W. L. Miller, 6500 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. E. Hughes, 2700 Brentwood Road NE. Assistant to the director (in charge of Unijorm Project System).— Edmund Stephens, 3421 Twenty-first Road, North, Cherrydale, Va. 328 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Chief of division of— Accounts—W. G. Raake, Rhode Island Gardens, Third Street and Rhode Island Avenue NE. Bureau accounting service—F. E. Singleton, La Salle Apartments, 1028 Con- necticut Avenue. Estimates and reports.—E. H. Bradley, 1222 B Street SE. Purchase, sales, and traffic—A. McC. Ashley, 5 West Melrose Street, Chevy ; Chase, Md. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone DIstrict 6350) Solicitor.—Mastin G. White, 1616 Sixteenth Street. Assistant solicitor.—C. W. Boyle, 816 C Street NE. Administrative assistant.—LaVantia M. Sampson, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Chief of division of — Food and drugs, insecticides and fungicides, Federal seed, tea inspection, naval stores, virus-serum control, meat inspection, Federal import milk, Federal grup poison, and compilation of laws.—Patrick D. Cronin, 1945 Calvert reet. National forests, grain futures, cotton futures, grain standards, cotton standards, Federal warehouse, excess wool profits, farm products inspection, produce agency, standard container, packers and stockyards, perishable agricultural commodities.—Fred Lees, 3105 Garfield Street. Animal and plant quarantine, Federal-atd roads, twenty-eight hour law, bee f imports, and agricultural colleges and experiment stations.—Thomas G. Shearman, 3823 Cathedral Avenue. Wildlife conservation, claims, fiscal, personnel, leases, contracts, patents, and | acquisition of lands other than for national forests.—J. P. Wenchel, 6805 | Sixth Street. deguisiizon of lands for national forests.— Arthur H. McConville, 1868 Columbia oad. getionbinrgd Adjustment Administration.—J. P. Wenchel (acting), 6805 Sixth treet. i g DIVISION OF OPERATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chief, division of operation, and real estate officer.—Joseph Haley, 1613 North | Fillmore Street, Lyon Village, Va. Assistant chief —Edwin C. Estes, Oak Place, Bethesda, Md. OFFICE OF INFORMATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Director.—M. S. Eisenhower, 511 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant director—John R. Fleming, 216 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 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, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 1661 Crescent Place. Associate librarian.—Emma B. Hawks, 2520 Fourteenth Street. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS (South Building, Fourteenth Sireet and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief —James T. Jardine, 4334 P Street. Chief, division of insular stations.—James T. Jardine (acting), 4334 P Street. Associate in experiment station administration.—W. H. Beal, 1852 Park Road. Editor, Experiment Station Record —Howard L. Knight, 1420 Buchanan Street. EXTENSION SERVICE \ (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) ( Director.—C. W. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant director.—C. B. Smith, 1 Montgomery Street, Takoma Park, Md. Business manager.— Mark M. Thayer, Corcoran Courts. Chief of division of — Cooperative extension.—C. B. Smith, 1 Montgomery Street, Takoma Park, Md. Motion pictures.—Raymond Evans, Bladensburg, Md Exhibits.—J, W, Hiscox, 3414 Twentieth Street NE. Re i Es CA A A en AM hs ret OA RGA AGRICULTURE Bxecutive Departments 329 AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Administrator.—Chester C. Davis, 6308 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Administrators.—W. F. Callander, 1417 Van Buren Street; A. D. Sted- man, 15 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Assistants to Adminasirator—T. Weed Harvey (in charge of business management), 1378 Taylor Street; William E. Byrd, Jr., 118 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. Manager of cotton pool.—Oscar Johnston, Mayflower Hotel. INFORMATION DIVISION Director—A. D. Stedman, 15 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant director (acting) —Fred W. Henshaw, 329 Willard Avenue. Chiefs of sections: Press.—Sam B. Bledsoe, 1116 Summerfield Road, Silver Spring, Md. Correspondence, records, and printing.—Paul R. Preston, 1910 Kalorama Road. Field information (acting).—V. E. Bundy, 301 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Regional contact.—Reuben Brigham, Ashton, Md. PROGRAM PLANNING DIVISION Director (acting). —F. F. Elliott, 6807 Forty-seventh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chiefs of sections: Production planning (acting).—O. V. Wells, Valley Vista Apartments, 2032 Belmont Road and Ashmead Place. Agricultural rehabilitattion.—J. Phil Campbell, 2121 New York Avenue. Agricultural-industrial relations.—L. H. Bean, 2271 North Upton Street, Cherrydale, Va. Replacement crops.—Joseph F. Cox, 8602 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. FINANCE DIVISION Director— Ward M. Buckles, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Comptroller—John B. Payne, 19 Baltimore Boulevard, Brentwood, Md. Chiefs of sections: Budget.—F. Grafton Smith, Alban Towers, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Ways and means (acting.)—C. C. Farrington, 421 Peabody Street. Commodity credit.—{Vacant.] CONSUMERS’ COUNSEL DIVISION Consumers’ counsel.—Donald Montgomery, Falls Church, Va. LIVESTOCK AND FEED GRAINS DIVISION Director—G. B. Thorne, 4714 North Twenty-sixth Street, Cherrydale, Va. Chiefs of sections: Corn and hogs.—C. R. Wickard, Wakefield Hall, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Cattle and sheep.—Harry Petrie, 3709 South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. : Poultry—W. D. Termohlen, 4831 Thirty-sixth Street, apartment 406. Barley and grain sorghums.—{Vacant.] : GRAINS DIVISION Director—George E. Farrell, 422 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chiefs of sections: Wheat (acting) .—C. C. Conser, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Rye and flax (acting).—A. H. Benton, Glen Echo, Md. Grain marketing.—A. J. S. Weaver, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. COTTON DIVISION Director—Cully A. Cobb, 1100 Twentieth Street, South Virginia Highlands, Alexandria, Va. he director—Wofford B. Camp, 2721 Arlington Ridge Road, Alexandria, a. MARKETING AND MARKETING AGREEMENTS DIVISION Director.—J. W. Tapp, 4550 Klingle Street. Assistant director—B. A. Holt, 1017 Barton Street, Cherrydale, Va. Chiefs of sections: General crops.—Porter R. Taylor, 6403 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Dairy—E. W. Gaumnitz, 4010 North Twenty-fifth Street, Cherrydale, Va. 330 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Cheifs of sections.— Continued. Cotton marketing.—Lawrence Myers, 230 Prospect Place, Friendship Heights, Md. Field investigation (acting). —H. J. Besley, 1105 K Street. Import and export.—L. R. Edminster, 4409 Klingle Street. ; Commodities purchase—Frank Baker, 312 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. TOBACCO, SUGAR, RICE, PEANUTS, AND POTATOES DIVISION Dzrector—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md. Assistant directors—H. B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street; W. G. Finn, 821 Quackenbos Street. ; Chiefs of sections: Tobacco (acting) — William Collins, 18 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Sugar (acting).—Joshua Bernhardt, 116 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase Md. Rice.—Charles G. Miller, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. Peanut (in charge).—W. A. Minor, 509 Rittenhouse Street. Potato.—A. E. Mercker, 1443 Lawrence Street NE. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS (Scuth Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chzef —Albert G. Black, 5705 Chevy Chase Parkway, Chevy Chase. Assistant chief.—C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street. Assistant chief —FEric Englund, R. F. D. No. 4, Rockville, Md. Business manager.—F. J. Hughes, 1412 Euclid Street. Librarian.—Mary G. Lacy, 3407 Thirty-fourth Place. Chief of division of— : Agricultural finance—FEric Englund, R. F. D. No. 4, Rockville, Md. Cotton.— Arthur W. Palmer, 100 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ei and Los ieh estimates.—Joseph A. Becker, 220 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma, ark, ; - Dairy and poultry products.—Roy C. Potts, 210 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Farm management and costs.—C. L. Holmes, 110 Virginia Avenue, Jefferson - Park, Alexandria, Va. Farm population and rural life.—Carl C. Taylor, 1606 North Adams Street, Clarendon, Va. Foreign agricultural service—Ieslie A. Wheeler, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Fruits and vegetables.—Wells A. Sherman, R. F. D. 1, McLean, Va. Grain.—E. C. Parker, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Hay, feed, and seed.—W. A. Wheeler, 5616 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Information.—S. W. Mendum (acting), 214 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Land economics.—L. C. Gray, 119 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Livestock, meats, and wool.—Charles V. Whalin, 12 University Road, College Heights, Hyattsville, Md. Marketing research.—F.V. Waugh, 410 Greene Avenue, Aurora Hills, Va. Sia and historical research.—0O. C. Stine, 6345 Western Avenue, Chevy hase. Warehousing.—H. S. Yohe, 402 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Tobacco section.—Charles E. Gage, Falls Church, Va. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief.—S. H. McCrory, 6811 Sixth Street. Assistant chief.—George R. Boyd, 2946 Northampton Street. 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, 3162 Key Boulevard, Lyon Village, Va. Structures.— Wallace Ashby, 7137 Seventh Street. Plans and service..—M. C. Betts, 437 Cedar Street. Editorial and information.—R. D. Marsden, 6305 Broad Branch Road, Chevy Chase, Md BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chief —John R. Mohler, 1620 Hobart Street. Assistant chief—A. W. Milter, 6817 Piney Branch Road. Chiefs of— Lidig husbandry diviston.—H. C. McPhee, 3407 Otis Street, Mount Rainier, d. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 331 Chiefs of —Continued. Biochemic division.—R. M. Chapin, 2039 Park Road. Field inspection division.—G. W. Pope, 1340 Meridian Place. Meat inspection division.—A. J. Pistor, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Packers and stockyards division.— Directed by assistant chief of bureau. Pathological diviston.—H. W. Schoening, 56504 Nebraska Avenue. Tick eradication and special diseases dwiston.—W. M. MacKellar, 6100 Thir- teenth Street. Tuberculosis eradication division.—A. E. Wight, 112 C Street SE. Virus-serum control division.—D. 1. Skidmore, 4452 Volta Place. Zoological division.— Maurice C. Hall, 6314 Thirty-third Street. Superintendent of experiment station.—W. E. Cotton, Bethesda, Md. BELTSVILLE RESEARCH CENTER (Beltsville, Prince Georges County, Md. Phone, GReenwood 1410) Director.—H. A. Nelson, Beltsville, Md. Chief, division of operations.—T. A. Fennell, Beltsville, Md. Chief, division of office management.—F. R. Ellis, 1627 Massachusetts Avenue. BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief.—Ira N. Gabrielson, 2426 Washington Boulevard, Clarendon, Va. Associate chief —W. C. Henderson, 8 Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of dwision of— Administration.—W. R. Dillon, 1032 Quebec Place. Public relations.—H. P. Sheldon, 118 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Wildlife research.—W. B. Bell, 803 Rittenhouse Street. Migrainmys waterfowl.—J. Clark Salyer, 2d, 411 Takoma Avenue, Takoma ark, Md. Land acquisition.— Rudolph Dieffenbach, 18 Argyle Avenue, Garrett Park, Md. Game management.—Stanley P. Young, 2114 Bancroft Street. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY AND SOILS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief —Henry G. Knight, 4436 Q Street. Assistant chief. —W. W. Skinner, 6 Knowles Avenue, Kensington, Md. Assistant to the chief—A. G. Rice, 2626 Glebe Road, Clarendon, Va. Supervisor of research.—C. A. Browne, 3408 Lowell Street. Advisor in soil science.—A. G. McCall, College Park, Md. Chef of dimsion of— Carbohydrate research.—H. S. Paine, 6401 Beechwood Drive, Chevy-Chase, Md. Chemical engineering research.—D. J. Price, 701 Whittier Street. Fertilizer research.—C. H. Kunsman, 3647 Veazey Street. Food research.—F. C. Blanck, 5510 Thirty-ninth Street. Industrial farm products research.—H. T. Herrick, Apartment 444, The Chastle- ton. Naval stores research.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md. Protein and nutrition research.—D. B. Jones, 401 Twenty-third Street. Soil chemistry and physics research.—H. G. Byers, The Ontario. Soil survey.—C. E. Kellogg, 805 Twenty-sixth Street, South, Aurora Hills, Alex- andria, Va. BUREAU OF DAIRY INDUSTRY (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief —O. 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, 610 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Dairy engineer.—Karl E. Parks, 2417 North Capitol Street. Chief of division of— Dairy research laboratories.—Lore A. Rogers, 3635 S Street. : beige caltle breeding, feeding, and management.—Roy R. Graves, Kensington, Market-milk investigations.— Ernest Kelly, 323 Elm Avenue, Takoma Park Md. Dairy herd improvement investigations.—J. C. McDowell, 1416 Allison Street. 332 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief.—Lee A. Strong, 3821 Veazey Street. Assistant chief.—S. A. Rohwer, 3103 Key Boulevard, Clarendon, Va. Asistant chief.—Avery S. Hoyt, 250 Farragut Street. Business manager.—F. H. Spencer, 58 Franklin Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Chief of division of— Fruit ensects.—D. L. Van Dine, Woodley Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place. Japanese and Asiatic beetles.—C. H. Hadley, Haddonfield, N. J. Mexican fruit fly control.—P. A. Hoidale, 503 Rio Grande National Life Build- ing, Harlingen, Tex. Date scale eradicatton.—B. L. Boyden, room 6, First National Bank Building, Indio, Calif. Enforcement of Japanese beetle, gypsy moth, and brown-tail moth quarantines; European corn borer certification; Dutch elm disease control.—L. H. Worthley, New Westchester County Building, White Plains, N. Y. Forest tnsects.—F. C. Craighead, 5301 Forty-first Street. Gypsy and brown-tatl moth control.—A. TF. Burgess, 20 Sanderson Street, Green- . field, Mass. Plant disease control.—S. B. Fracker, 3716 Ingomar Street. Cereal and forage insects.—P. N. Annand, 611 Larcom Lane, Cherrydale, Va. Truck crop and garden insects—W. H. White, Engel Terrace and University Lane, College Park, Md. Cotton insects.—R. W. Harned, 2017 H Street. Pink bollworm and thurberia weevil control.—R. E. McDonald, 521 Avenue A, San Antonio, Tex. Bee culture.—J. I. Hambleton, 402 Warwick Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Insects affecting man and animals.—F. C. Bishopp, 8014 Saratoga Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Insect identification.—C.F. W. Muesebeck, 111 Jackson Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Insect pest survey and information.—J. A. Hyslop, Silver Spring, Md. Foreign parasite introduction.—C. P. Clausen, Woodley Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place. Control investigations.—Lon A. Hawkins, 3332 Nineteenth Street. Insecticides.—R. C. Roark, 7 Logan Circle. Foreign plant quarantines.—E. R. Sasscer, 9 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Donasin pions quarantines.—B. M. Gaddis, North Albermarle Street, Franklin ark, Va FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Twelfth and C Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chief.— W. G. Campbell, 910 Grant Road, Livingstone Heights, Cherrydale, Va. Assistant chief —P. B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Sorta to the chief.—F. B. Linton, 222 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. ief of— Interstate diviston.—C. W. Crawford, 4839 Rock Spring Road, Clarendon, Va. Import division.—A. E. Taylor, 1828 Kenyon Street. Division of State cooperation.—W. S. Frisbie, 1718 Irving Street. Food division.—W. B. White, 4629 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Insecticide division.—C. C. McDonnell, 122 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Microanalytical division.—B. J. Howard, 1212 Decatur Street. Division of pharmacology.—E. E. Nelson, 4946 Rock Spring Road, Clarendon, Va. Vitamin division.—E. M. Nelson, 1830 Jackson Street NE. Naval stores division.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md. Color certification section.—H. 'T. Herrick, The Chastleton, Sixteenth and R Streets. FOREST SERVICE (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6910) Chief. —F. A. Silcox, 310 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Associate chief.—Earle H. Clapp, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chief —E. A. Sherman, 4103 Military Road. Assistant chief —Earl W. Loveridge, 1650 Harvard Street. Assistant to the chief—R. F. Hammatt, 3410 Quesada Street. Division of fiscal control.—H. I. Loving, 5336 Forty-first Street. iy 7X AGRICULTURE - Executive Departments 333 Assistant chiefs in charge of— National forests.—C. M. Granger, Box 124 River Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of fire control and improvements.—Roy Headley, 4117 Fessenden Street. Division of timber management.—E. KE. Carter, 3213 Nineteenth Street. Division of range management.—C. E. Rachford, 510 Vacation Lane, Lee Heights, Cherrydale, Va. Division of recreation and londs.—[Vacant.] Division of engineering.—T. W. Norcross, 407 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of wildlife management.—H. L. Shantz. State and private forests.—HKarl W. Tinker. Division of State forest purchase and regulation.—[Vacant.] rn of private timberland cooperation.—B. F. Heintzleman, LaFayette otel. Division of State cooperation.—A. B. Hastings, 79 Connecticut Avenue, Ken- sington, Md. (acting). Research.—R. E. Marsh, 5222 Chevy Chase Parkway (acting). Division of stlvics. — Edward N. Munns, 4700 Blagden Terrace. Division of forest economics.—R. E. Marsh, 5222 Chevy Chase Parkway, Chevy Chase, D. C. Division of range research.—W. R. Chapline, 3802 Albemarle Street. Division of forest products.—H. S. Betts, 118 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Operations and information.—Earl W. Loveridge, 1650 Harvard Street ( (acting). Division of operations.—Henry Wold, 4618 Thirty-eighth Street (acting). Division of information and education. —George A. Duthie, 1816 North Ken- more Street, Cherrydale, Va. (acting). Division of personnel management.—Peter Keplinger, 3824 Harrison Street. Land acquisitton.—L. F. Kneipp, 3525 Davenport Street. Division of land use planning.—H. A. Foster, 2108 R Street (acting). | Division of land acquisition.— Earle 8. Peirce, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. B Emergency conservation work.—F¥red Morrell, 1925 Sixteenth Street. (Head- | quarters, 930 F Street; phone, District 6910.) Eastern Region (Victor Building, 724 Ninth Street. Phone DIstrict, 1027): Regional forester—R. M. Evans, The Westmoreland. GRAIN FUTURES ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chief —J. W. T. Duvel, 1225 Decatur Street. Assistant chief.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood Street. Assistant chief investigator.—R. R. Kauffman, 6417 Western Avenue. Senior marketing specialist.—T. D. Hammatt, 1830 R Street. Administrative assistant.— Albert Strack, 1603 Newton Street NE. BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, District 6350) Chief.—Louise Stanley, 3228 Macomb Street. Adminastrative assistant.—Lennah Curtiss Zens, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of division of— Economics. —Day Monroe, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Textiles and clothing.—Ruth O’Brien, 1219 Hamilton Street. Foods and nutrition.— Louise Stanley, 3223 Macomb Street. Informaiion.—Ruth Van Deman, 3502 Thirtieth Street. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350) Chief.—Frederick D. Richey, 106 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chief.—E. C. Auchter, Franklin Avenue, College Park, Md. Assistant chief —M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Business manager.—H. E. Allanson, 124 Chestnut Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Arlington experiment farm.—E. C. Butterfield, Rosslyn, Va. Experimental greenhouses.—J. W. Byrnes, 149 V Street NE. Head of division of— Cereal crops and diseases.—M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Cotton and other fiber crops and diseases. H.W. Barre, 401 Twenty-third Street. 334 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Head of division of—Continued. Drug and related plants.—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Dry land agriculture.—C. E. Leighty, 2831 North Franklin Road, Clarendon, Va. Forage crops and diseases.—P. V. Cardon, 1626 Argonne Place. Forest pathology.—Haven Metcalf, 1223 Vermont Avenue. Fruit and vegetable crops and diseases.—E. C. Auchter, Franklin Avenue, College Park, Md. Genetics and biophysics.—G. N. Collins, Lanham, Md. Mycology and disease survey.—H. A. Edson, 3810 Fourth Street. National Arboretum.—F. V. Coville (acting director), 1836 California Street. Nematology.—G. Steiner, 3843 Twenty-ninth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Plant exploration and iniroduction.—B. Y. Morrison, 116 Chestnut Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. ; Seed investigations.— Edgar Brown, Lanham, Md. by tnvestigations.—Oswald Schreiner, 21 Primrose Street, Chevy ase, ; Soil microbiology.—Charles Thom, 1703 Twenty-first Street. Sugar plant tnvestigations.—E. W. Brandes, 3404 Fulton Street. Tobacco and plant nutrition.—W. W. Garner, 1367 Parkwood Place. Western irrigation agriculture—C. S. Scofield, Lanham, Md. BUREAU OF PUBLIC ROADS (Willard Building, 515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 5960) Chief —Thomas H. MacDonald, 4911 Moorland Lane, Battery Park, Md. Chief engineer.—P. St. J. Wilson, Woodley Apartments, 1851 Columbia Road. Executive assistant.—Carrie L. Fuller, The Allies Inn. Chief of division of— : Highway transport.—E. W. James, 6412 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Construction.—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.—O. 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. District engineers in charge.— : Road construction tn National parks.—H. J. Spelman, Falls Church, Va. Highway District No. 10 (headquarters, Washington, D. C.).—V. M. Peirce, 2415 Twentieth Street. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE (Standard Oil Building, Second Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NA tional 2954) Chief —H. H. Bennett, 3033 Albemarle Street. Associate chief —W. C. Lowdermilk, Cosmos Club. Assistant chief —Henry D. Abbot, 1919 Sixteenth Street. Conservation operations.—C. B. Manifold, 6443 Barnaby Street. Cooperative relations and planning—D. S. Myer, 6309 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant to chief —C. W. Collier, Alexandria, Va. Technical assistant to chief —R. A. Winston, 1954 Columbia Road. Liaison officer (Emergency conservation work).—J. G. Lindley, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Chef of section of— Conservation nurseries.—C. R. Enlow, Silver Spring, Md. Conservation surveys.—Glenn L. Fuller, 1650 Harvard Street. Agronomy.— Walter V. Kell, 4212 Third Street (acting). Engineering.—T. B. Chambers, 2428 Twentieth Street. Conservation practices.—E. J. Utz, 1725 Queens Lane, Clarendon, Va. Erosion tnvestigations.—R. V. Allison, Belmont and Ashmead Place. Sedimentation studies—Henry M. Eakin, 2308 Ashmead Place. Watershed hydrologic studies.—C. E. Ramser, 416 Fifth Street. Climatic and physiographic studies.—C. W. Thornthwaite, Columbian Building, 416 Fifth Street. Personnel management.—Roy W. Kelly, 402 Elm Street. Information.—G. A. Barnes, 914 Kearney Street NE. Fiscal —G. G. Smith, 1702 Summit Place. Procurement.—Shane MacCarthy, 1332 Longfellow Street. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 335 WEATHER BUREAU (Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, POtomac 4300) Chief — Willis R. Gregg, 37 Sycamore Street, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant chief.—Charles C. Clark, 21 West Trving 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, 1340 Jefferson 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.— Delbert M. Little, 3527 Porter Street. Instrument.—Benjamin C. Kadel, Route 1, East Falls Church, Va. Marine.—Willard F, McDonald, 3324 Second Road, North, Clarendon, Va. ADVISORY COUNCIL OF THE NATIONAL ARBORETUM Chairman.— Frederic A. Delano, 2244 S Street, Washington, D. C. Henry S. Graves, New en, Conn. Vernon Kellogg, ‘National Research Council, Washington, D. C. Harlan P. Kelsey, East Boxford, Mass. John C. Merriam, Carnegie Institution, Washington, D. C. Frederick Law Olmsted, Brookline, Mass. Mrs. Harold I. 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. 336 Congressional Directory COMMERCE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Constitution Avenue and E Street. Phone, DIstrict 2200) ; - ; DANIEL CALHOUN ROPER, Secretary of Commerce; born in Marlboro County, S. C., April 1, 1867; son of John Wesley and Henrietta V. (McLaurin) Roper; A. B., Duke University, Durham, N. C.; 1888; LL. B., National Univer- sity, Washington, D. C., 1901; LL. D., Tusculum College, 1927; LL. D., National University, Washington, D. C., 1933; M. B. A., Bryant-Stratton College, Provi- dence, R. I., 1933; L. H. D., Rollins College, Winter Park, Fla., 1934; married Lou McKenzie, of Scotland County, N. C., December 25, 1889; children—May (Mrs. D. R. Coker), James H., Daniel C., Grace H. (Mrs. Frank Bohn), John W., Harry McK., Richard Fred.; member South Carolina House of Representatives, 1892-94; clerk, United States Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce, 1893-96; expert special agent, United States Census Bureau, 1900-10; clerk, Ways and Means Committee, House of Representatives, 1911-13; First Assistant Postmaster General, March 14, 1913-August 1, 1916; chairman, Organization Bureau, Woodrow Wilson campaign, 1916; vice chairman, United States Tariff Commission, March 22—September 25, 1917; Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1917-20; head of law firm of Roper, Hagerman, Hurrey, Parks and Dudley, 1921-32; Secretary of Commerce since March 4, 1933; 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; member, American Bar Association; member, General Conference Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1930; member, Sixth Ecumenical Conference, 1931; member, Board of Education, Washington, D. C., 1932; member, Smithsonian Institution, Federal Oil Conservation Board, United States Council of National Defense, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Foreign Service Buildings Commission, Migra- tory Bird Conservation Commission, Foreign Trade Zones Board, National Archives Council; trustee, Duke University; member, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa; Methodist; Mason (thirty-second degree), Shriner. Clubs: Chevy Chase (Md.); University (Washington, D. C.); National Press Club (Washington, D. C.). Author of The United States Post Office, 1917. Address, Commerce Building, Washington, D. C.; home address, 3001 Woodland Drive, Washington, D. C Assistant Secretary.—Ernest G. Draper, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant Secretary.—J. M. Johnson, Shoreham Hotel. gem iaisinise assistant to the Secretary.—Malcolm Kerlin, 5615 Thirty-third treet. Assistant to the Secretary.—Chester H. McCall, The Chastleton. Transportation assistant.—Labert St. Clair, College Park, Md. Secretary to the Secretary.—Margie G. Renn, The Chastleton. Solicitor—South Trimble, Jr., 3111 Macomb Street. Assistant solicitor.—James J. O'Hara, 1475 Girard Street. Assistant to the solicitor—E. T. Quigley, 3800 Fourteenth Street. Chief clerk and superintendent.—E. W. Libbey, 15 R Street NE. Chief of division of— Accounts.—Charles E. Molster, 1237 Lawrence Street NE. Appointments.—Edw. J. Gardner. Publications.—Thomas F. McKeon, 1352 Otis Place; assistant chief, Charles Barton, 1925 Sixteenth Street. : Purchases and sales.— Walter S. Erwin, 753 Quebec Place. Librarian.—Charlotte L. Carmody, 514 Nineteenth Street. BUREAU OF AIR COMMERCE Director of air commerce.—Eugene L. Vidal, The Broadmoor. Assistant director.—J. Carroll Cone, 1661 Crescent Place. Assistant director—Rex Martin, 1650 Harvard Street. Chief, administrative section.—Donald Bartlett, 1817 Plymouth Street. Chief, aeronautic information section.—F. R. Neely, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, airline inspection service—R. W. Schroeder, 124 Wood Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, airport, mapping, marking section.—John S. Wynne, Alban Towers. Chief, development section.—John H. Geisse, 3350 Tennyson Street. Chief, general inspection service—Joe T. Shumate, 401 Twenty-third Street. Chief, manufacturing inspection service.—L. V. Kerber, 1511 Forty-fourth Street. COMMERCE Executive Departments 337 BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Director.— William L. Austin, 1412 Delafield Place. Assistant director.—Dr. Stuart A. Rice, 4817 Twenty-fifth Street, North, Cherry- dale, Va. Executive assistant to the director.—Oliver C. Short, 520 Hopkins Avenue, College Park, Md. Assistant to director.—Margaret A. Patch, 1807 R Street. Acting wilh to director—Mary A. Foley, 1501 North Caroline Street, Balti- more, Md. Chief clerk.— Arthur J. Hirsch, 1505 Spring Place. Personnel officer.—Emily I. Farnum, 5801 Fourteenth Street. Supervisor, field work.—Emmons K. Ellsworth, 4922 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chef statisticians: Statistical research.—Dr. Joseph A. Hill, 8 Logan Circle. Agriculture.—Zellmer R. Pettet, Chancellor Apartments, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Cotton and otls.—Harvey J. Zimmerman, 1517 Varnum Street. Territorial, tnsular, and foreign statistics. —Starke M. Grogan, The Sherman. Financial statistics of States and cities—Lemuel A. Carruthers, acting chief statistician, 4600 Thirtieth Street. Manufactures.—LeVerne Beales, 4124 Fifth Street. Population.—Dr. Leon E. Truesdell, 3429 Ordway Street. Vital statisiics.—Dr. Halbert L. Dunn, 1819 K Street. Religious statistics, general information, and records.—Dr. Timothy F. Murphy, Calverton Apartments, Columbia and Quarry Roads. : Special tabulations.-—Thomas J. Fitzgerald, 3434 Brown Street. Business.—Fred A. Gosnell, 1006 Livingstone Avenue, Livingstone Heights, Va. Gongrapker-sellnrence E. Batschelet, 2220 Military Road, Cherrydale, Va. xperts: Occupations.—Dr. Alba M. Edwards, 2522 Twelfth Street. Negro statistics.—Charles E. Hall, 617 U Street. Printing.—Christopher M. Zepp, 1926 Newton Street NE. Machine tabulation.—George B. Wetzel, 5600 Thirty-ninth Street. Mechanical laboratory.—Robert Duncan, acting expert, 2712 Wisconsin Avenue. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE Director.—Alexander V. Dye. Assistant directors.—~ William E. Dunn, 9600 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md.; Nathanael H. Engle, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief statistician.—Clyde R. Chambers, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. hi pL assistant.— Wharton Moore, 7625 Georgetown Road, Bethesda, Administrative divisions and chiefs: Accounting.—Harvey W. Haun, 746 Newton Place. Correspondence.—Royal H. Brasel, 3832 Garfield Street. Current tnformation.—[Vacant.] District office.—Robert Sevey, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Drafting, photographic, and exhibits.— Nicholas Eckhardt, Jr., 1212 Holly Street. Editorial. —Griffith Evans, 67 Observatory Circle. Files.—William F. Smith, Roosevelt Hotel. Foreign service—Lacey C. Zapf, 3417 Quebec Street. Personnel records.—Alice I. Macdonald, 2013 New Hampshire Avenue. Economic divisions and chiefs: Commercial intelligence. —Frank R. Eldridge, 3617 Ordway Street. Commercial laws.—Guerra Everett, 2562 Thirty-sixth Street. Economic research.—Roy G. Blakey, 2723 Ontario Road. Finance.—Grosvenor M. Jones, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Foreign tariffs.—Henry Chalmers, 5385 Forty-third Street. Pn trade statistics.—Ernest A. Tupper, 4809 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Foreign trade zones board.—Thomas E. Lyons, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Marketing research and service— Wilford L. White, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Negro affairs.—Eugene Kinckle Jones, 654 Girard Street. Regional information.—Louis Domeratzky, McLean, Va. Transportation.—Thomas E. Lyons, acting chief, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. 30063°—74-2—1ST ED—— 22 338 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Industrial divisions and chiefs: Automotive-aeronautics trade—Howard S. Welch, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chemical.—Charles C. Concannon, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Electrical.—Andrew W. Cruse, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Foodstuffs.—Fletcher H. Rawls, 32 Prince George Avenue, Kensington, Md. Forest products.—Phillips A. Hayward, 4809 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Leather and rubber.—Everett G. Holt, acting chief, 2308 North Capitol Street. Machinery.— William H. Myer, acting chief, 3512 Newark Street. Metals and minerals.—Ralph L. Harding, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Specialties—motion picture.— Thomas Burke, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Textile.—Edward T. Pickard, 3029 O Street. Tobacco.—Benjamin D. Hill, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS (Connecticut Avenue and Upton Street. Phone, CLeveland 1720) Director.—Lyman J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street. Assistant director (research and testing).—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Asean; director (commercial standardization).—A. S. McAllister, 3100 Highland ace. : 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, Kirke 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.—P. H. Walker, acting chief, 2950 Newark Street. Mechanics and sound.—H. L. Dryden, 2020 Pierce Mill Road. 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. ; Trade standards.—1I. J. Fairchild, 3707 Thirty-fourth Street. Codes and specifications.—A. S. McAllister, 3100 Highland Place. Officc.—Henry D. Hubbard, 112 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Plant.—0O. L. Britt, 6209 Thirtieth Street, Chevy Chase. Shops.—O0. G. Lange, 3702 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase. BUREAU OF FISHERIES Commissioner.—Frank T. Bell, University Club, Fifteenth and I Streets. Deputy commissioner.—Charles E. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md Chief clerk.—Flossie White, The Woodside, 1900 H Street. Chiefs of divisions: Alaska service.—Ward T. Bower, 3603 Quesada Street. Fish culture—Glen C. Leach, 5710 First Street. Fishery industries.—Reginald H. Fiedler, 7100 Eighth Street. Inquiry respecting food fishes.— Elmer Higgins, 3222 Oliver Street. Law enforcement.—Talbott Denmead, 2830 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. Director of aquarium.—Fred G. Orsinger, 16 Evarts Street NE. Editor.—Clifford F. Mayne, 2207 Evarts Street NE. Publications.— Barbara Aller, 1427 Chapin Street. BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES Commassioner.—Harold D. King, 4540 Dexter Road. Deputy commissioner.—C. A. Park, 5126 Nebraska Avenue. Chief engineer—Ralph R. Tinkham, 6312 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Superintendent of naval construction—Edward C. Gillette, 1706 Surrey Lane, Foxhall Village. : Chief, signal division.—Irving L. Gill, 5427 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, structural and architectural division.—G. B. Skinner, 237 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Administrative assistant.— Walter P. Harman, 16 Poplar Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief clerk.—Charles J. Ludwig, Jr., 819 Jefferson Street. COMMERCE Executive Departments 339 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.—L. O. Colbert, 4408 Twenty-ninth Street. Tides and currents.—Paul C. Whitney, 2935 Twenty-eighth Street. 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 Director.—Joseph B. Weaver, Somerset House Apartments. Assistant director.— Arthur J. Tyrer, The Montello, 1901 Columbia Road. Administrative assistant.—James E. Davidson, 1621 T Street. Private secretary to the director—Edward Winkler, 2025 I Street. Technical load line adviser.— Laurens Prior, 4415 Volta Place. Adjuster of measurements.—W. L. Turner, East Falls Church, Va. Chaef investigator.— Frederick L. Adams, 1812 K Street. Chief, shipping service—Charles W. Sanders, 1763 Columbia Road. Senior navigation officer—H. McCoy Jones, 1908 Belmont Road. Chief, Tonnage Division.—Glen R. Warner, 2121 New York Avenue. Survey board.—Capt. Halert C. Shepheard, 401 Twenty-third Street; James W. Wilson, 4616 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Caryl H. Roundy, 5619 Third Street. Board of supervising tnspectors.— William Fisher, San Francisco, Calif.; George Fried, New York, N. Y.; Eugene Carlson, Norfolk, Va.; Harry Layfield, St. Louis, Mo.; Oscar G. Haines, Boston,” Mass.; Edward Maurer, Louis- ville, Ky.; Francis Wm. J. Buchner, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Alvin A. Morrison, Cleveland, Ohio; Cecil N. Bean, New Orleans, La.; Jesse E. Murry, Seattle, Wash. PATENT OFFICE Commissioner.—Conway P. Coe, 10 East Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md. First assistant commisstoner.—Richard Spencer, Great Falls Road, McLean, Va. Assistant commasstoners.—Bryan M. Battey, 2101 Connecticut Avenue; Leslie Frazer, 8914 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Administrative assistant.—Grattan Kerans, 1305 Kennedy Street. Solicitor—Robert F. Whitehead, 1524 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief clerk.—James A. Brearley, 325 Second Street SE. Acting assistant chief clerk.—C. E. Tomlin, 306 Mansion Drive, Colonial Park, Alexandria, Va. 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, 6214 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; 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. Law examiners.—W. W. Cochran, 2814 Franklin Street NE.; Howard S. Miller, 1355 Locust Road. 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.; Fred M. Hopkins, 3805 Gramercy Street; Vernon I. Richard (acting), 4811 W Street. Examiners of interferences.—H. I. Houston, 227 Park Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; J. H. Carnes, 1657 Thirty-first Street; I. P. Disney, 3526 Quebec Street; Harold H. Jacobs, 2908 New Mexico Avenue. Classification examiner.— Charles H. Pierce, 1612 Forty-fourth Street. UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD BUREAU (Merchant Marine Building. Phone DIstrict 2200) Director.—J. C. Peacock, 12 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant director.—H. R. Amory, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to director.—S. D. Schell, The Montello. 340 Congressional Directory COMMERCE _ Chief, division of regulation.—H. S. Brown, 1921 Kalorama Road. Chief, division of traffic.—F. G. Frieser, Wardman Park Hotel. Chzef, division of shipping research.—A. H. Haag, 3702 Ingomar Street. Acting chief, division of loans and sales.—D. S. Brierley, 10 South Beechwood Avenue, Catonsville, Md. Special disbursing clerk.—C. D. Gibbons, 3827 Fulton Street. UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD MERCHANT FLEET CORPORATION (Merchant Marine Building. Phone, District 2200) TRUSTEES J. C. Peacock, chairman; Otto Praeger, vice chairman; South Trimble, Jr., Huntington T. Morse, C. D. Gibbons, L. D. Staver, ¥. G. Frieser. EXECUTIVE OFFICIALS President.—J. C. Peacock, 12 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice president and secretary.—S. D. Schell, The Montello. Special assistant to president.—Otto Praeger, 2322 Twentieth Street. Treasurer—C. D. Gibbons, 3827 Fulton Street. General comptroller.—1L. D. Staver, 3531 R Street. Chief, division of operations.—Huntington T. Morse, The Racquet Club. Chief, division of insurance.—B. K. Ogden, 3518 Newark Street. S— | — LABOR Executive Departments 341 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR (Department of Labor Building, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 8472) FRANCES PERKINS, of New York, Secretary of Labor (Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue); 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, 1912-1913; executive director New York Council of Organization for War Service, 1917-1919; commissioner New York State Industrial Commission, 1919-1921; director Council on Immigrant 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 Association, 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 Experiment under the Workmen’s Compensation Jurisdiction (1921). Appointed Secretary of Labor, March 4, 1933. Admanistrative Assistant to the Secretary of Labor.—Frances Jurkowitz, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Office of the Assistant Secretary: The Assistant Secretary.—Edward F. McGrady, Fourteenth Street and Con- stitution Avenue. Prive secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Anna V. Moynihan, 125 Madison treet. : Office of the Second Assistant Secretary: Second Assistant Secretary.—[Vacancy.] Private secretary to the Second Assistant Secretary.—[Vacancy.] Executive assistant to the Secretary.— Turner W. Battle, Dupont Circle Apartments. Assistant to the Secretary.— Richardson Saunders, 2737 Devonshire Place. Office of the Solicitor: Solicitor.—[Vacancy.] Assistant Solicitor.— Albert E. Reitzel, 1630 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Solicitor.—Gerard D. Reilly, 1355 Euclid Street. Office of the chief clerk: Chief clerk.—Samuel J. Gompers, 2517 North Capitol Street. Chief accouniant.—John R. Demorest, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, division of publications and supplies—Benjamin R. Sherwood, 3720 Thirty-first Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Appointment clerk.—Robert C. Starr, Clarendon, Va. Librarian.—Laura A. Thompson, The Ontario. UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE Director of conciliation.—Hugh L. Kerwin, 632 A Street SE. Administrative assistant.—E. J. Cunningham, 3808 Windom Place. DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS Director.—Verne A. Zimmer, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Assistant director.—Clara M. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS Commissioner of Labor Statistics.—Isador Lubin, Chesterbrook Farm, Chesterbrook, Va. Assistant commaissioner.—[Vacancy.] Chief economist.—A. F. Hinrichs, 3311 Porter Street. Chaef statistician.—Sidney W. Wilcox, 103 Arlington Avenue, Barcroft, Va. Chief editor—Hugh S. Hanna, 2562 University Place. Administrative officer—Henry J. Fitzgerald, 4432 Volta Place. 342 Congressional Directory LABOR IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization.—Daniel W. MacCormack, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization.—Edward J. Shaugh- nessy, 2614 University Place. Bevery commassioner—Field service—Irving F. Wixon, 1703 Rhode Island venue. Deputy commaissioner—Legal.—Thomas B. Shoemaker, 2924 Newark Street. Assistant to commissioner—F1iscal, personnel, and statistics.—W. H. Wagner, 37 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. ghssisii to commissioner— Adminisiratiwve.—Henry B. Hazard, 18 Rhode Island venue. Chief administrative officer— Warrants.—W. W. Brown, 2145 C Street. Chief administrative officer— Registry and naturalization.—J. Henry Wagner, 1909 North Capitol Street. CHILDREN’S BUREAU Chief —Xatharine F. Lenroot, The Woodward, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant chief.—Dr. Martha M. Eliot, 1815 Forty-fifth Street. Directors of divisions: Research in child development.—Dr. Ethel C. Dunham, 1815 Forty-fifth Street. Social service.—Agnes K. Hanna, The Riverside, 2145 C Street. Delinquency.—Hester B. Crutcher. Statistical. —Dr. Elizabeth C. Tandy, 1241 Thirtieth Street. Social statistics.—Dr. Emma, A. Winslow, 1921 Kalorama Road. Industrial.—Beatrice McConnell, Hammond Courts, Thirtieth and Q Streets. Editorial.—Isabelle Mott Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. WOMEN’S BUREAU Director—Mary Anderson, 212 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant director.— Bertha Nienburg, 6808 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Director.—W. Frank Persons, Powhatan Hotel. Associate director in charge of operations.—Mary LaDame, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Associate director in charge of standards and research.—Dr. Wm. H. Stead, 3019 * Forty-fourth Street. Assistant director in charge of business administration.—John H. Zabel, 1837 Monroe Street. Associate director of National Reemployment Service— Walter Burr, 5420 Con- necticut Avenue. Administrative assistant for Veterans’ Placement Service.—O. D. Hollenbeck, 3612 Albemarle Street. Administrative assistant for farm placement.—Lincoln McConnell, 1200 Sixteenth Street. UNITED STATES HOUSING CORPORATION President.—Turner W. Battle, Dupont Circle Apartments. Vice president and secretary.—Thomas W. O’Brien, 1845 Calvert Street. INDEPENDENT OFFICES AND ESTABLISHMENTS CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION (Offices, Seventh and F Streets. Phones, NAtional 0072 and 0075) Complutonss—Prondent, Harry B. Mitchell, 117 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, d Mrs. Lucille Foster McMillin (Mrs. Benton MeMillin), 2400 Sixteenth Street. Leonard D. White, 6310 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md Chief examiner.—L. A. Moyer, 3600 Patterson Street, Chevy Chase. Assistant chief examiner and budget officer—XKenneth C. Vipond, 3332 Seven- i teenth Street. | Cost accountant and assistant budget officer.—Cecil E. Custer, 3267 Van | Hazen Street. | Assistant chief examiner (field).—J. H. Weiss, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. | Executive assistant to the commaissioners.— William C. Hull, East Falls Church, Va. Clerk in charge, information office.—Helen A. Chase, Chatham Courts, 1707 | Columbia Road. A Personnel officer—C. C. Hathaway, Twentieth and East Lynn Streets, Alex- andria, Va. Director of scientific research in personnel and administration.—L. J. O’Rourke, | 3506 Patterson Street, Chevy Chase. Medical officer.—Dr. Arthur R. Butler, Newington, Fairfax County, Va. Chief of examining division.—James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue. Assistant chief.—Frederick W. Brown, Kensington, Md. Chuef of clerical examining section.— Laura L. Tracy, 2200 Nineteenth Street. Chief of certification section.—B. A. Brande, 121 Third Street NE. Chief of Geptieation 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. Actuary.— Laurence A. Baldwin, 226 West Lanvale Street, Baltimore, Md. 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 personnel classification division.—Ismar Baruch, 3708 Brandywine Street. Assistant chief.—Joseph L. Spilman, 918 Kennedy Street. Chief of investigations division.—Henry A. Hesse, 510 A Street SE. Assistant chief.—Henry T. Richards, 161 Kentucky Avenue SE. Chief of accounts and maintenance division.—Henry G. Porter, Bay Ridge, Md. 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 section.— Edward L. Bennett, 1280 Neal Street NE. | Assistant chief—Amy A. Harradon, 1234 Hamilton Street. UNITED STATES EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION (Old Land Office Building, Seventh and E Streets. Phone, NAtional 7177) Commassioners: Mrs. Jewell W. Swofford, chairman, 1703 New York Avenue. | Harry Bassett, Hamilton Hotel. John M. Morin, 1360 Madison Street. Secretary.— William McCauley, West Falls Church, Va. Chief counsel.—Z. Lewis Dalby, 1615 Longfellow Street. Medical director.—Paul M. Stewart, 2210 Wyoming Avenue. Chief, claims division.— William R. Carpenter, 1822 Kenyon Street. Chief, accounting division—Bessie O. Reed, All States Hotel. Deputy commissioner, District of Columbia workmen’s compensation act.—R. J. Hoage, 321 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 2s 344 Congressional Directory GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE (General Accounting Office Building, Fifth and F Streets. Phone, DlIstrict 8465) Comptroller General of the United States.—J. R. McCarl, The Shoreham. Special assistant to the Comptroller General.—Frances R. Montgomery, The Lega- tion Apartments. Serrery to the Comptroller General.—Dorothy B. Perkins, 1511 Twenty-second treet. Assistant to the Comptroller General (executive officer).—J. L. Baity, The Shoreham. Assistant Comptroller General of the United States.—Richard N. Elliott, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Secretary to the Assistant Comptroller General.—Lillabelle Gebert, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. 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.; Robert A. Tron, 2416 Observatory Place. Counsels.—Charles M. Galloway, 2015 Belmont Road; O. R. McGuire, 224 Virginia Avenue, Clarendon, Va. Chief of investigations.—S. B. Tulloss, Vienna, Va. Assistant chief of tnvestigations.—R. H. Slaughter, 7100 Hampden Lane, Green- wich Forest, Bethesda, Md. : Attorney-conferee.—F. L.Yates, Tilden Gardens. Chief clerk.—Reed F. Martin, 6818 Ninth Street. Chief of personnel—W. W. Richardson, 3600 Twentieth Street NE. Chiefs and assistant chiefs of division: Claims.—Chief, David Neumann, 6 Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant chief, A. B. Thomas, 613 Hamilton Street. Accounting and bookkeeping.—Chief, J. Darlington Denit, 4218 Reno Road; assistant chiefs, George T. Montgomery, 5420 Connecticut Avenue; Fred A. Seaman, 1626 P Street. Audit—Chief, E. W. Bell, 3525 Davenport Street; assistant chief, John C. Nevitt, 717 Ninth Street NE. Post Office Department.—Chief, Charles H. Cooper, 954 Rock Spring Road, Clarendon, Va.; assistant chief, R. S. Tower, 1673 Columbia Road. Records.—Chief, Vernon R. Durst, 3911 Twentieth Street NE.; assistant chief, Pascal D, Fallon, 401 Webster Street. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION (Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7460) Chairman.— (The chairmanship rotates annually according to seniority. Com- missioner Hugh M. Tate is chairman for the year 1935.) Balthasar H. Meyer, 3327 P Street. Clyde B. Aitchison, 1929 S Street. Joseph B. Eastman, 2266 Cathedral Avenue. Frank McManamy, 3825 Huntington 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. Carroll Miller, 2340 Kalorama Road. Walter M. W. Splawn, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Marion M. Caskie, 4343 Cathedral Avenue. Secretary.— George B. McGinty, 3030 Forty-fourth Street. Assistant secretary.—T. A. Gillis, 407 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the secretary.—James L. Murphy, 1716 Lanier Place. Chief clerk and personnel officer—John B. Switzer, 619 Whittier Street. Chief, section of audits and accounts.—Guy L. Seaman, 207 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Purchasing agent.—A. H. Laird, Jr., 5521 Colorado Avenue. Librarian.—Leroy S. Boyd, Arlington P. O., Va. Director of accounts.— Alexander Wylie, 5806 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of air mail.—Norman B. Haley, 401 Ontario Apartments. Independent Offices and Establishments 345 Director of finance.—Oliver E. Sweet, 7619 Thirteenth Street. Chzef examainer.— Ulysses Butler, 1419 Longfellow Street. Chief, bureau of informal cases.—Arja Morgan, 425 Manor Place. Director, bureau of inquiry.— William H. Bonneville, 204 Spring Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief counsel.—Daniel W. Knowlton, 1829 Phelps Place. Motor carriers.—John L. Rogers, 45 T Street NE. Chief, bureau of locomotive inspection.—John M. Hall, 7605 Morningside Drive. Director, bureau of safety.—W. J. Patterson, 3916 Legation 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 (Interstate Commerce Commission Building. Phone, NAtional 7940) Director general.—Henry Morgenthau, Jr., 2201 R Street. Assistant director general.— Wallace B. Robinson, 6000 Third Street. Comptroller.—0O. Thacker, The Monmouth. Treasurer.—R. C. Dunlap, 3900 Fourteenth Street. BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM (Washington Building, Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue. Phone NAtional 6400) Chairman.— Marriner S. Eccles, The Shoreham Hotel. (Private secretary, VaLois Egbert, Roosevelt Hotel.) Vice chairman.—J. J. Thomas, 3512 Rittenhouse Street. (Private secretary, Margaret E. Farrar, 2001 Sixteenth Street.) Charles S. Hamlin, The Hay-Adams House. (Private secretary, Margaret L. Nagle, 3931 Jenifer Street.) Adolph C. Miller, 2230 S Street. (Private secretary, L. G. Ficks, 707 Mount Vernon Place.) George R. James, 4917 Rockwood Parkway. (Private secretary, C. S. Brad- ley, 1801 Sixteenth Street.) M. S. Szymezak, The Chastleton. (Private secretary, A. M. Stone, 1400 Good Hope Road SE.) Ex-officco members: Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2201 R Street. J. F. T. O’Connor, Comptroller of the Currency, The Shoreham Hotel. Secretary.— Chester Morrill, 3908 Ingomar Street. Assistant secretary.—J. C. Noell, 3045 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant secretary.— Liston P. Bethea, 3930 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant secretary.—S. R. Carpenter, 6440 Barnaby Street. General counsel.—Walter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Road. Assistant general counsel.—George B. Vest, 3015 Albemarle Street. Assistant general counsel.—B. Magruder Wingfield, 3433 Thirty-fourth Street. Chief, division of examinations.—Leo H. Paulger, 2836 Chesapeake Street. Assistant chief.—R. F. Leonard, The Westchester. Assistant chief—C. E. Cagle, 815 Eighteenth Street. Federal reserve examiner.—Frank J. Drinnen, room 640, Shoreham Building. Director, division of research and statistics. —E. A. Goldenweiser, 5914 Cedar Park- way, Chevy Chase, Md. hogtony director—Lauchlin Currie, 6408 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, d. Assistant director.—Woodlief Thomas, 26 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chel, division of bank operations.—E. L. Smead, 216 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, d Assistant chief.—J. R. Van Fossen, 2711 Wisconsin Avenue. Assistant chief.—J. E. Horbett, 4440 Faraday Place. Chief, division of security loans.—Carl E. Parry, The Westchester. Assistant chief.—Philip E. Bradley, 5608 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, division of Federal reserve issue and redemption.—L. G. Copeland, 6112 Third Street. Fiscal agent.—Oliver E. Foulk, 1530 Spring Place. Deputy fiscal agent.—Josephine E. Lally, The Portner. 346 Congressional Directory WAR FINANCE CORPORATION (IN LIQUIDATION) (Room 376 Treasury Building. Phone, NAtional 6400) Henry W. Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury (in charge of liquidation), 2201 R Street. Liquidating committee: Chairman.—D. W. Bell, 3322 Seventeenth Street. Member —E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Street. General counsel.—[Vacant.] Secretary and treasurer.—W. T. Heffelfinger, 319 Eleventh Street SW. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (2001 Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7720) COMMISSIONERS Chairman.—Charles H. March, The Shoreham Hotel. (The chairmanship rotates annually according to seniority.) | Garland S. Ferguson, Jr., The Dresden. Ewin L. Davis, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. W. A. Ayres, Wardman Park Hotel. R. E. Freer, 1 Carvel Circle, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, The Westchester. Assistant to the chairman.—Joe L. Baker, 7200 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. LEGAL Chief counsel.—William T. Kelley, The Westchester. Assistant chief counsels.—Martin A. Morrison, 1327 Gallatin Street; Richard P. Whiteley, 2229 Bancroft Place. Chief examiner.—James A. Horton, Tilden Gardens. Assistant chief examiners.—Ishmael Burton, 1313 Lawrence Street NE.; Joseph E. Sheehy, 1650 Harvard Street. Chief trial examiner— Web Woodfill, 1901 Columbia Road. Assistant chief trial examiner.—F. C. Baggarly, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Director, trade practice conferences.—George McCorkle, The Albemarle. Chairman, special board of investigation.—E. J. Adams, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, export trade section.—Ellen L. Love, 3748 McKinley Street. ECONOMIC Chief economist.—Francis Walker, 2848 McGill Terrace. Assistant chief economists.—W. H. S. Stevens, 3900 Cathedral Avenue; William H. England, 1344 Iris Street. Chief accountant.—LeClaire Hoover, 1700 T Street. Chief statistician.—G. A. Stephens, 3518 Northampton Street. PUBLIC RELATIONS AND EDITORIAL SERVICE Under the direction of the assistant to the chairman Editorial assistant.—Shirley D. Mayers, 3513 S Street. ADMINISTRATIVE Assistant secretary.—C. G. Duganne, 1801 Calvert Street. Accounts and personnel, chief.—Andrew N. Ross, 1343 Sheridan Street. Docket, chief.—J. W. Karsner, 5232 Seventh Street. Librartan.—Howard R. Eliason, 1314 Columbia Road. Mail and files, chief. —William H. Galbraith, 3408 Tenth Street NE. Publications, chief—Harold B. Stamm, 117 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Stenographic, chief.—Joseph E. Haugh, 60 Shepherd Street, Hyattsville, Md. Supplies, chief.—Sam F. Shrout, 125 Boliver Street, Clarendon, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 347 UNITED STATES TARIFF COMMISSION (01d Land Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3947) Chairman.—Robert L. O’Brien, of Massachusetts, The Highlands. Vice chairman.— Thomas Walker Page, of Virginia, The Shoreham Hotel. Commissioners: ; Edgar B. Brossard, of Utah, The Roosevelt Hotel. Oscar B. Ryder, of Virginia, 102 Johnson Place, Alexandria, Va. Raymond B. Stevens, of New Hampshire, 2852 Ontario Road. Secretary.—Sidney Morgan, 2126 Connecticut Avenue. Chief economist.—E. Dana Durand, 3613 Norton Place. Director of research.—A. M. Fox, 3002 P Street. Assistant directors of research.—George P. Comer, 53 Columbia Avenue, Hyatts- ville, Md.; Mark A. Smith, 3711 Thirty-fifth Street; Benjamin B. Wallace, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE. Executive secretary of the planning and reviewing committee—Eben M. Whit- comb, 4 Toll House Road, Silver Spring, Md. General counsel.—Charles E. McNabb, 3215 McKinley Street. Secretary to the chairman.—Adele Thode Jameson, 4550 Connecticut Avenue, Chiefs of research divisions and sections: Divisions: Economics.—A. M. Fox, 3002 P Street. Lely niiongd relations.—Benjamin B. Wallace, 3112 South Dakota Avenue Agricultural. —0. A. Juve, 3001 McKinley Street. Ceramics.— Frederick L. Koch, 1613 Harvard Street Chemical.—Dexter North, The Westchester. Lumber and paper.—Franklin H. Smith, 633 Ingraham Street. Metals.—F. Morton Leonard, 3016 Tilden Street. Sundries.—Louis S. Ballif, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Textiles.—W. A. Graham Clark, 3712 Morrison Street. Sections: Accounting.—Howard F. Barker, 3625 Lowell Street. Statistical. —Arthur E. Woody (acting), 5100 Sherrier Place. Editorial.—Martha W. Williams, 2401 Calvert Street. Administrative officer—L. W. Moore, 3219 Morrison Street. Docket clerk.—Edna V. Connolly, 1430 Belmont Street. Finance section.—Franklin C. Getzendanner, Rockville, Md. Personnel section.— Frances H. Simon (acting), 7707 Twelfth Street. Librarian.—Cornelia Notz, 7000 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Officer in charge of New York office.—H. H. Waters, 712 Customhouse, New York City. UNITED STATES BOARD OF TAX APPEALS Office, Constitution Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phones, NAtional 5771 to 5775) Chairman.—Eugene Black, 5206 Colorado Avenue. Members: Charles P. Smith, 3817 Kanawha Street. John M. Sternhagen, 3328 O Street. Charles M. Trammell, 3915 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Logan Morris, 3601 Van Ness Street. C. Rogers Arundell, 4930 Quebec Street. Ernest H. Van Fossan, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. J. Edgar Murdock, 3232 Garfield Street. Stephen J. McMahon, The Westchester. Herbert F. Seawell, Raleigh Hotel. Annabel Matthews, 3041 Sedgwick Street. J. Russell Leech, 3506 Macomb Street. Bolon B. Turner. Arthur J. Mellott, 31 Monroe Street, Alexandria, Va. William W. Arnold, The Wardman Park. [One vacancy.] Secretary.—Robert C. Tracy, 1338 Hemlock Street. Clerk.—Bertus D. Gamble, Garrett Park, Md. Reporter.—Mabel M. Owen, 1435 N Street. RR Eas 348 Congressional Directory FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION (1003 K Street. Phone, District 0122) Commissioners: Chairman.—Frank R. MecNinch, 408 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Vice chairman.—Basil Manly, 1855 Irving Street. Herbert J. Drane, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Claude L. Draper, 3056 Porter Street. Clyde L. Seavey, Alban Towers. Secretary.— Goodrich W. Lineweaver, 3701 Massachusetts Avenue. General counsel.—Oswald Ryan, The Cavalier, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Chief engineer.—Roger B. McWhorter, 3624 Davis Street. Solicitor.—Dozier A. DeVane, 3422 Thirty-sixth Street. Chief accountant.— William V. King, 530 Dittmar Road, Cherrydale, Va. Assistant secretary.—Leon M. Fuquay, Clifton Terrace Apartments. Administrative assistant.— Earl F. Sechrest, 820 Marietta Place. Director, National Power Survey.— Thomas R. Tate, 6018 Utah Avenue. Director, National Rate Survey.— William E. Mosher, 2633 Fifteenth Street. Executive assistant, National Power Survey.—Ralph W. Martin, The Kennedy- Warren, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION (Federal Housing Administration Building, Vermont Avenue and K Street. Phone, NAtional 5061) Administrator.—Stewart McDonald, Carlton Hotel. Assistant administrator.— Arthur Walsh, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy administrator.—Robert M. Catharine, The Westchester. Deputy administrator.— William D. Flanders, Wardman Park Hotel. le to the administrator in charge of publicity.—Robert B. Smith, 8 Albemarle treet. Assistant to the admanistrator.—B. J. Flynn, Willard Hotel. Special assistant to the administrator.—George Neville, Broadmoor Apartments. Ebel of field division.—L. R. Gignilliat, Jr., 30 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, d General counsel.—Abner H. Ferguson, 3815 Huntington Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director low-cost housing division and chief of the technical section, mortgage insur- ance diviston.— Miles L. Colean, 1508 Forty-fourth Street. Chief of the underwriting section.—Frederick M. Babcock, 15 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of division of economics and statistics.—Dr. Ernest M. Fisher, 4 Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Comptroller.—Theodore B. Nickson, 2316 North Upton Street, Cherrydale, Va. VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION (Arlington Building) Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs.—Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Administrator, medical and domiciliary care, construction, and supplies.— George E. Ijams, 3201 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Assistant Administrator, pensions.—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. Solicitor.—James T. Brady, 4210 Thirty-eighth Street. Chairman, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.—John G. Pollard, The Presidential. Medical director—Charles M. Griffith, M. D., 1752 Irving Street. Director of National Homes.—Bynum Cash, The Powhatan Hotel. Director of construction.—Louis H. Tripp, 3721 Fulton Street. Director of supplies.—John D. Cutter, 1016 Sixteenth Street. Director of widows’ and dependents’ claims service.—Elden L. Bailey, 1449 Girard Street. Director of veterans’ claims service.—George E. Brown, 1631 Euclid Street. Director of finance.—Harold V. Stirling, 5005 Fourteenth Street. Director of insurance.—Horace L. McCoy, 24 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Independent Offices and Establishments 349 as officer and chief of statistics.—Samuel M. Moore, Jr., 2716 Wisconsin venue. Vice chairman, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.—Robert L. Jarnagin, 4525 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Members, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.—Lemuel Bolles, The Mirimar; Frank L. Bowman, 1800 Eye Street; Laura S. Brown, 1673 Columbia Road; William G. Cassels, 6443 Western Avenue; Ralph L. Chambers, 4217 Thirty-seventh Street; Fred H. Clark, 3610 Gwynn Oak Avenue, Baltimore, Md.; Sam H Coile, 4707 Connecticut Avenue; Charles D. Collins, 1016 Sixteenth Street; Samuel T. Conkling, 1703 Surrey Lane; Bartholomew J. Connolly, 3811 Van Ness Street; Otto G. Elble, 1650 Harvard Street; John C. Fischer, The Jefferson; Ovid C. Foote, 5112 Connecticut Avenue; L. B. Foster, 1757 K Street; Charles D. Fox, Hotel Burlington; Pleasant D. Gold, 4619 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Lucy S. Howorth, Roosevelt Hotel; William A. Kehoe, 5304 Seventh Street; William C. Menton, The Chastleton; William N. Morell, 4824 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Md.; John A. Nelson, 1725 Seventeenth Street; Frank G. Reagan, 4700 Connecticut Avenue; Joseph E. Rowe, 2807 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md.; Harry M. Seydel, 7611 Four- teenth Street; Burke H. Sinclair, Stoneleigh Courts; Addison T. Smith, 1629 Columbia Road; Daniel E. Smith, The Jefferson; William B. Stacom, The Presidential; Carroll L. Stewart, 7611 Fourteenth Street; Elmer E, Studley, The University Club. NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD (Department of Justice Building, Ninth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 8460) Members: William M. Leiserson, chairman, 3210 Thirty-fourth Street. James W. Carmalt, Martinique Hotel. Otto S. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. Secretary.—George A. Cook, 1620 Fuller Street. Assistant secretary.— Mitchel D. Lewis, 6040 Daniel Road. Chief, technical and statistical division.—Harrison H. Reed, 8403 Cedar Street, Silver Spring, Md. Mediators.—Robert F. Cole, room 1730, Department of Justice Building; John W. Walsh, The Lee House; William F. Mitchell, Jr., room 1730, Department of Justice Building; G. Wallace W. Hanger, 1504 Delafield Place; Patrick D. Harvey, room 1730, Department of Justice Building; James C. Clark, room 1730, Department of Justice Building. THE PANAMA CANAL (1435 K Street. Phone, NAtional 4294) General purchasing officer and chief of office.—A. L. Flint, Friendship Heights, Chevy Chase Station, Washington, D. C. Assistant comptroller and legal adviser.—H. A. A. Smith, 300 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief clerk, purchasing department.—E. D. Anderson, 2901 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to the chief of office.—E. E. Weise, 1346 Jefferson Street. ON THE ISTHMUS Governor of the Panama Canal.—Col. Julian L. Schley, United States Army, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. Engineer of maintenance.—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. Malin Craig, Fort Myer, Va. The Deputy Chief of Staff, Army, Maj. Gen. George S. Simonds, The Wyoming. The Assistant Chief of Staff, War Plans Division, Army, Brig. Gen. S. D. Embick, 2118 Wyoming Avenue. The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral W. H. Standley, Naval Observatory. The Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, Rear Admiral J. K. Taussig, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. The Director, War Plans Division, Office of Naval Operations, Rear Admiral W. S. Pye, 2817 Woodley Road. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. LS 350 Congressional Directory THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD (Room 3638, Navy Department Building. Phone, District 2900, Branch 230) The Chief of Air Corps, Army, Maj. Gen. B. D. Foulois, The Shoreham. 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, Lt. Col. Isaac Spalding, 2806 Thirty-ninth Street. The Chief of Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, 2919 Forty-third Street. The Chief of Planning Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Commander A. D. Bernhard, 1619 New Hampshire Avenue. Member of War Plans Division, Naval Operations, Navy, Commander P. L. Carroll, 3148 Wisconsin Avenue. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 2900, Branch 126) Army members: The chief of budget and legislative planning branch, and four other officers of the budget advisory committee of the War Department: Col. Adna R. Chaffee (Cav.), 1868 Columbia Road. Lieut. Col. Harvey D. Higley (F.A.), G.S., 17 Mount Vernon Avenue, Arlington, Va. Enis Col. Frederick W. Browne (F. D.), 4608 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Lieut. Col. B. C. Dunn (C. E.), 2400 Sixteenth Street. Maj. R. K. Sutherland (Inf.), G. S., The Wyoming. Navy members: Assistant budget officer, Capt. E. G. Allen, 2301 Connecticut Avenue. Dire? central division, Naval Operations, Capt. B. L. Canaga, 3938 Morrison reet. Director fleet maintenance division, Naval Operations, Capt. A. B. Reed, 3101 Woodley Road. Assistant director shore establishment division, Capt. H. L. Wyman, 3612 Newark Street. Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Capt. H. deF. Mel, 3517 Rodman Street. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Aléxandria, Va. UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE (Room 2546, Munitions Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1419) 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. Harry B. Jordan, O. D., United States Army. 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, Dr. Lyman J. Briggs, Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois (United States Army), Willis Ray Gregg, Harry F. Guggenheim, Rear Admiral Ernest J. King (United States Navy), Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, William P. MacCracken, Jr., Brig. Gen. Augustine W. Robins (United States Army), Eugene L. Vidal, Edward P. Warner, Commander Ralph D. Weyer- bacher (United States Navy), Dr. Orville Wright. Director of aeronautical research.—Dr. George W. Lewis, 6502 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.—John F. Victory, 5§ Sherman Circle. Assistant secretary.—Edward H. Chamberlin, Alexandria, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 351 BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT (Map Information Office, Room 6206, Interior Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 1820, Branch 248) Chairman.—[Vacant.] Vice chatrman.—E. C. Bebb, Federal Power Commission. Secretary.—J. H. Wheat, United States Geological Survey. MIXED CLAIMS COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND GERMANY (Department of State, Room 592. Phones: American agent, DIstrict 4510, branch 354; 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 commissioner.—Chandler P. Anderson, 1618 Twenty-first Street. German commassioner.— Dr. Victor L. F. H. Huecking, Wardman Park Hotel. American agent.—Robert W. Bonynge, 2400 Sixteenth Street. German agent.—Dr. Richard Paulig, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. CLAIMS CONVENTIONS, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO GENERAL CLAIMS ARBITRATION (Investment Building, 1511 K Street. Phone, DIstrict 3367) Coping a) appointed by the United States.—Oscar W. Underwood, Jr., Barr uilding. Commassioner appointed by the United Mexican States.—G. Fernandez MacGregor, Mexico, D. F. Agent for the United States.—Bert L. Hunt. Assistant agents for the United States.—E. Russell Lutz, Benedict M. English. Agent for Mexico—Oscar Rabasa, Mexico, D. F. SPECIAL MEXICAN CLAIMS COMMISSION (428 Barr Building, 910 Seventeenth Street. Phone, DIstrict 5623) Chairman—Edgar E. Witt. Commissioners.—Darrell T. Lane and James H. Sinclair. Chief counsel.—Edgar Turlington. Secretary.— Edith McDowell Levy. THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION (Department of Justice Building. Phones, DIstrict 3733 and 3734) UNITED STATES SECTION Chairman.—Hon. A. O. Stanley, Henderson, Ky. Hon. John H. Bartlett, Portsmouth, N. H. Hon. Eugene Lorton, Tulsa, Okla. Secretary.—George W. Reik, Washington, D. C. CANADIAN SECTION Chairman.—Hon. Charles A. Magrath, Ottawa, Ontario. ‘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. 352 Congressional Directory 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, DIstrict 2200, Branch 791) UNITED STATES SECTION Commassioner.— Thomas Riggs, 2550 Massachusetts Avenue. Engineer to the commasston.—Jesse Hill, 3415 Porter Street. Secretary.—Edgar A. Klapp, 2025 I Street. CANADIAN SECTION Commissioner.— Noel J. Ogilvie, Ottawa, Canada. Engineer to the commzission.—John A. Pounder, Ottawa, Canada. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO AMERICAN SECTION (Offices, 627 First National Bank Building, El Paso, Tex.) Commiassioner.— Lawrence M. Lawson. Consulting engineer.—Culver M. Ainsworth. Counsel and acting secretary.—H. J. S. Devries. Assistant secretary and chief clerk.—M. B. Moore. MEXICAN SECTION (Offices, 212 Lerdo Avenue, Juarez, Mexico. Post-office address, Box 14, El Paso, Tex.) Boundary commissioner.— Armando Santacruz, Jr. Water commissioner.—Gustavo P. Serrano. Consulting engineer.—Joaquin C. Bustamante. Secretary.—José Herndndez Ojeda. Assistant secretary and translator—H. G. de Partearroyo. INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Headquarters office, 2725 Montlake Boulevard, Seattle, Wash.) American members— Frank T. Bell, 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, NAtional 2520) Incorporator.—The Secretary of War. President—Chatrman of the board.—Maj. Gen. T. Q. Ashburn, United States Army, 1827 Phelps Place. (Branch 1881.) Assistant to the president.—I. KE. Schroeder, apartment 401, The Albemarle, 1700 T Street. (Branch 1535.) Secretary-treasurer.—Guy Bartley, 600 North Kenmore Street, Clarendon, Va. (Branch 1089.) Chief clerk.—J. W. Jenkinson, 1530 Upshur Street. (Branch 2378.) FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS COMMISSION Chairman.—Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee. Cordell Hull, Secretary of State. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., 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. Independent Offices and Establishments 353 NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION (Office, New Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1477) Chairman.—Frederic A. Delano, 2400 Sixteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Members: Maj. Gen. Edward M. Markham, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, Fairfax Hotel, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. ia] Col. D. I. Sultan, Engineer Commissioner, District of Columbia, 2036 O treet. F. A. Silcox, chief, Forest Service, 310 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. 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, 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. Arno B. Cammerer, Director National Park Service, Interior Department, vice Staff: John Nolen, Jr., director of planning, 3134 P Street. T. S. Settle, secretary, 3715 Van Ness Street. Norman C. Brown, associate land purchasing officer and appraiser, 1673 Columbia Road. T. C. Jeffers, landscape architect, 6620 Sixth Street. THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS (Navy Department Building. Phone, District 2900, Branch 919) Chairman.—Charles Moore, of Detroit, Mich. Vice chairman.—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. Charles A. Coolidge, Boston, Mass. Secretary and administrative officer.—H. P. Caemmerer, 29 Seaton Place. WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY (Organized 1833; 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. Office, Department of Justice Building (phone, N Ational 0185). Herbert Putnam; Rt. Rev. James E. Freeman; Frederic A. Delano; George E. Hamilton; Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d; Robert Walton Moore; Logan Hay; Gilbert H. Grosvenor; Cloyd Heck Marvin; Maj. Gen. Omar Bundy; Rear Admiral Walter R. Gherardi; Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson; Mark Sullivan. 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 officer.— Depot Quartermaster of the Army in Washington. 30063°—74—2—1ST ED—— 23 fl | 354 Congressional Directory AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION (Created by Public Law 534, 67th Cong., Mar. 4, 1923) (Room 6314, Commerce Building. Phone, District 2200, Branch 515) Chairman.—Gen. John J. Pershing, Carlton Hotel. Vice chairman.—Robert G. Woodside, county controller’s office, Pittsburgh, Pa: David A. Reed, 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.—Lt. Col. X. H. Price, Corps of Engineers, United States Army. Executive assistant.—James E. Mangum, The Cavalier, 3510 Fourteenth 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. 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: Administrative assistant to the secretary.—H. W. Dorsey, Hyattsville, Md. Reeamn and administrative accountant.—Nicholas W. Dorsey, 1521 Thirty-first treet. : Editor— Webster P. True, Falls Church, Va. Librarian.— 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; Henry Morgenthau, Jr., 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. 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; Charles L. McNary, Member of the Senate; T. Alan Goldsborough, Member of the House of Representatives; Charles L. Gifford, Member of the House of Representa- tives; Clarence Cannon, Member of the House of Representatives; Frederic A. Delano, citizen of Washington, D. C.; John C. Merriam, citizen of Washington, D. C.; R. Walton Moore, citizen of Virginia (Fairfax); Robert W. Bingham, citizen of Kentucky (Louisville); Augustus P. Loring, citizen of Massachusetts (Boston). Executive committee.—Frederic A. Delano, John C. Merriam, R. Walton Moore, GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER DIRECTION OF SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION NATIONAL MUSEUM SE secretary in charge.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma ark, Md. Associate director—John E. Graf, 1935 Parkside Drive. Head curators.— Leonhard Stejneger, 1472 Belmont Street; R. S. Bassler, The Ontario; C. W. Mitman, 4408 Klingle Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 355 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 (Office in Smithsonian Building) Chief —M. W. Stirling, 2119 Plymouth Street. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES Secretary in charge.—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street. Chaef 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, 1642 Jonquil Street. DIVISION OF RADIATION AND ORGANISMS (Supported by Smithsonian private funds) Director.—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant er S. Johnston, 5 Beach Street, College Heights, Hyatts- ville, Md NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (Constitution Avenue and Twenty-first Street. Phone, DIstrict 2614) President.—F¥rank R. Lillie, National Academy of Sciences. Vice president.—Arthur L. Day, 2801 Upton Street. Foreign secretary.— Thomas H. Morgan, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. Home secretary.— Frederick E. Wright, 2134 Wyoming Avenue, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.— Arthur Keith, 2210 Twentieth Street, Washington, D. C. Executive secretary.—Paul Brockett, 3303 Highland Place, Cleveland Park, D. C. NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL Chairman.—Frank R. Lillie, National Academy of Sciences. a secretary.— Albert L. Barrows, National Research Council, Washington, D.C. PAN AMERICAN UNION (Formerly International Bureau of the American Republics) (Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone, NAtional 6635) Director general.—L. S. Rowe, Pan American Annex. Assistant director.—E. Gil Borges, 3939 Morrison Street. Counselor.— William Manger, 1744 C Street. Foreign-irade adviser.— William A. Reid, The Ontario. 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 division.—Elsie Brown, Alexandria, Va., R. F. D. No. 2. ha assistant.—Enrique Coronado, 2601 Sixteenth Street, North Clarendon, a. Chief, division of intellectual cooperation.—Concha Romero James, 1713 H Street. Chief, division of statistics.— Matilda Phillips, The Mendota. fsa ER 356 Congressional Directory Chief, division of travel.—José Tercero, 5331 Nebraska Avenue. Assistant to the director general.—Anne L. O'Connell, The Wardman Park. Portuguese translator.—Annie D. Marchant, The Portner. Superintendent of buildings and grounds.—Harry Burkholder, Clarendon, Va. Chaef mail clerk.—George F. Hirschman, 615 Park Road. GOVERNING BOARD Chairman.—Cordell Hull, Secretary of State of the United States, The Carlton. Vice peli A. Espil, ambassador of Argentina, 1600 New Hampshire venue. Enrique Finot, minister of Bolivia, The Mayflower Hotel. Oswaldo Aranha, ambassador of Brazil, 3000 Massachusetts Avenue. Manuel Truceco, ambassador of Chile, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue. Miguel Lépez Pumarejo, minister of Colombia, Hill Building. Guillermo Patterson y de Jduregui, ambassador of Cuba, 2630 Sixteenth Street. Emilio Garcia Godoy, chargé d’affaires of the Dominican Republic, 2633 Six- teenth Street. Manuel Gonzélez-Zeledén, minister of Costa Rica, Cathedral Mansions Center. Colén Eloy Alfaro, minister of Ecuador, The Mayflower Hotel. Héctor David Castro, minister of El Salvador, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Adridn Recinos, minister of Guatemala, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Albert Blanchet, minister of Haiti, 1818 Q Street. Julian R. Céceres, chargé d’affaires of Honduras, The Wardman Park. Francisco Castillo Ndjera, ambassador of Mexico, 2829 Sixteenth Street. Henri De Bayle, chargé d’affaires of Nicaragua, 1711 New Hampshire Avenue. Ricardo J. Alfaro, minister of Panama, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue. Enrique Bordenave, minister of Paraguay, The Wardman Park. Manuel de Freyre y Santander, ambassador of Peru, 1300 Sixteenth Street. José Richling, minister of Uruguay, The Carlton Hotel. Pedro Manuel Arcaya, minister of Venezuela, 1333 Sixteenth Street. 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. G. Ardoz Alfaro, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 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.—Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz Solddn, Lima, Peru. Alternate.—Dr. Carlos Monge, Lima, Peru. Secretary.— Dr. Justo F. Gonzdlez, Montevideo, Uruguay. Alternate—Dr. Rafael Schiaffino, Montevideo, Uruguay. Members directing council.—Dr. Solén Niiiez F., San José, Costa Rica; Dr. Francisco de P. Miranda, Mexico, D. F., Mexico; Dr. C. Diez del Ciervo, Caracas, Venezuela; Dr. Waldemar E. Coutts, Santiago, Chile. Alternates.—Dr. Rubén Urafia, San José, Costa Rica; Dr. Miguel E. Bustamante, Mexico, D. F., Mexico; Dr. J. R. Risquez, Caracas, Venezuela; Dr. Victor Grossi, Santiago, Chile. Provisional President of the Tenth Pan American Sanitary Conference.—Dr. Jorge Bejarano, Bogota, Colombia. Scientific editor—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, Palo Alto, Calif.; Charles Evans Hughes, Washington, D. C. Chairman.—Cary T. Grayson, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.—T. Jefferson Coolidge, Treasury Department, Washington, D. C. Counselor.—Stanley F. Reed, Justice Department, Washington, D. C Secretary.— Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, D. C. Independent Offices and Establishments 357 CENTRAL COMMITTER Cary T. Grayson, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C.; William Phillips, Under Secretary of State, State Department, Washington, D. C.; T. Jefferson Coolidge, Under Secretary of the Treasury, Treasury Department, Wash- ington, D. C.; Maj. Gen. Charles R. Reynolds, Surgeon General, United States Army, War Department, Washington, D. C.; Rear Admiral Perceval S. Rossiter, Surgeon General, United States Navy, Navy Department, Washington, D. C.; Stanley F. Reed, Solicitor General of the United States, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. August Belmont, 1115 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Cornelius N. Bliss, 1 Wall Street, New York, N. Y.; Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P. Street, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Locust Valley, N. Y.; William Fortune, Indianapolis, Ind.; Samuel Knight, Balfour Building, San Francisco, Calif.; Gustavus D. Pope, Ford Building, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Henry R. Rea, Sewickley, Pa.; George E. Scott, American Steel Foundries, Michigan Boulevard, Chicago, Ill.; Henry Upson Sims, Birmingham, Ala.; Alfred E. Smith, Empire State Building, New York, N. Y.; Eliot Wadsworth, 180 Marlborough Street, Boston, Mass. GENERAL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Chairman.—Cary T. Grayson, 3825 Wisconsin Avenue. Vice chairman in charge of domestic operations.—James L. Fieser, 5009 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Vice chairman in charge of insular and foreign operations.— Ernest P. Bicknell, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Vice chairman in charge of finance.—James XK. McClintock, 5420 Connecticut Avenue, Washington, D. C. Assistant to vice chairman.—DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Manager Eastern area, Washington, D. C.—Richard F. Allen, 912 Nineteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Manager Midwestern area, St. Louts, 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 chairman.—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. Direrior g accouniing.—Howard J. Simons, 4910 Arkansas Avenue, Washington, Director, disaster relief —Robert E. Bondy, 7010 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Director, Junior Red Cross.—Dr. Thomas W. Gosling, 3311 Cathedral Avenue, Washington, D. C. Director, firsts ped 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 Dire volunteer service—Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, Dzrector, war service—Don C. Smith, 3615 Chesapeake Street, Washington, D. C. THE CONGRESSIONAL CLUB (2001 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, NOrth 9184) [Incorporated by act of Congress approved May 30, 1908. Membership composed of women in official life] OFFICERS, 1935 AND 1936 President.—Mrs. William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. Vice presidents.— Mrs. Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado; Mrs. Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas; Mrs. Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina; Mrs. Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania; [vacancy]. Recording secretary.— Mrs. Arthur H. Greenwood, of Indiana. Corresponding secretary.— Mrs. Brent Spence, of Kentucky. 358 Congressional Directory Treasurer.—Mrs. Edward F. Burke, of Nebraska. Chairman of: Membership committee.—Mrs. S. Otis Bland, of Virginia. Entertainment committee—Mrs. Tilman B. Parks, of Arkansas. House committee.—Mrs. Guy M. Gillette, of Iowa. Finance committee—Mrs. Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan. Press committee.— Mrs. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Printing commitiee.—Mrs. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. Book committee—Mrs. Thomas F. Ford, of California. Building fund trustees.— Mrs. James A. Frear, of Wisconsin. Cook book committee.—Mrs. Theodore B. Werner, of South Dakota. Emergency committee.—Mrs. Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. Evening card committee—Mrs. Harry L. Englebright, of California. Dance committee.—Mrs. Richard Duncan, of Missouri. Matinee card committee.—Mrs. Frank C. Kniffin, of Ohio. Hostess committee— Mrs. Glenn Griswold, of Indiana. Hospitality commiitee.—Mrs. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Revision of constitution and bylaws.—Mrs. George W. Johnson, of West Virginia. Associate members.— Mrs. Thomas H. Wadden, of District of Columbia. Parliamentartan.—Mrs. Charles J. Colden, of California. Histortan.—Mrs. Herbert J. Drane, of Florida. UNITED STATES SOLDIERS’ HOME (Regular Army) BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS (United States Soldiers’ Home. Phone, ADams 9100) Maj. Gen. Henry P. McCain (retired), governor of the home. Maj. Gen. Frederick W. Coleman, Chief of Finance. Maj. Gen. , The Adjutant General. Maj. Gen. Edward M. Markham, Chief of Engineers. Maj. Gen. Arthur W. Brown, the Judge Advocate General. Maj. Gen. Louis H. Bash, the Quartermaster General. Maj. Gen. Charles R. Reynolds, the Surgeon General. Col. John P. Wade (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. John P. Wade (retired). Chief surgeon.—Col. Arthur M. Whaley, Medical Corps, United States Army. Quartermaster and purchasing officer.—Col, David S. Stanley (retired). 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; Benjamin K. Focht, Representative from Pennsyl- vania; Theodore W. Noyes, Frederic A. Delano, Julius Garfinckel, and H. C. Newcomer, citizens of the District of Columbia; Ernest G. Draper, citizen of New York; 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, 1429 I Street. Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. Independent Offices and Establishments 359 COLUMBIA HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN (Twenty-fifth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, POtomac 4210) President.—Capt. Chester H. Wells, U. S. N. (retired). First vice president.— George H. Myers, 730 Fifteenth Street. Second vice president.—Paul E. Lesh. Treasurer— Wayne Kendrick, Rust Building. Directors.—Alva B. Adams, Senator from Colorado; Mary T. Norton, Repre- sentative from New Jersey; Florence P. Kahn, Representative from Cali- fornia; Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming, S. F. Taliaferro, Rabbi Abram Simon, Mrs. Barry Mohun, Mrs. Reeve Lewis, Robert V. Fleming, Commissioner George E. Allen, Norman W. Oyster, Clark G. Diamond, Powell Browning, Surg. Gen. Charles Reynolds, Joseph H. Himes, Irwin S. Porter, Maj. Gen. Merritt W. Ireland, Henry P. Blair, Admiral Perceval Sherer Rossiter, Capt. W. W. Galbraith, U. S. N. (retired), and Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro and Mrs. George E. Allen, citizens of the District of Columbia; the presi- dents and the treasurer; Dr. Prentiss Willson and Dr. E. W. Titus, ex officio. Superintendent and secretary.—P. M. Ashburn, M. D., Colonel, U. S. A. (retired), NATIONAL TRAINING SCHOOL FOR BOYS (Bladensburg Road. Phone, Lincoln 0197) Consulting trustees.—W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey; Sam C. Massingale, Representative from Oklahoma. Board of trustees—Warren F. Martin, president, Metropolitan Club (phone, NAtional 7500); Robert V. Fleming, Riggs National Bank (phone, N Ational 5600) ; Sanford Bates, Department of Justice (phone, NAtional 0185); D. J. Callahan, Woodward Building (phone, NAtional 4620); Oscar L. Chapman, Department of Interior (phone, DIstrict 1820); Mark L. Bristol, 1900 Q Street (phone, NOrth 0151); Charles Warren, Mills Building (phone, NAtional 6086); Melvin C. Hazen, ex-officio member, Municipal Building (phone, NAtional 6000). Secretary and treasurer.—E. T. Hiser (phone, LIncoln 0197). Superintendent.—Claude D. Jones (phone, LIncoln 0197). RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION (1825 H Street. Phone, DIstrict 4911) Board of directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Mayflower Hotel. (Assistant, William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road.) Director ex officco.—Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2447 Kalorama Road (or, in his absence, Thomas J. Coolidge, the Under Secretary of the Treasury, The Carlton Hotel). Directors: Charles B. Henderson, 2507 Massachusetts Avenue. (Assistant, Frank H. Barnett, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.) C. B. Merriam, Shoreham Hotel. (Assistant, James A. Hoyt, 1707 Colum- bia Road.) Frederic H. Taber, Hay-Adams House. (Assistant, Lloyd Hoeltzel, 903 Sixteenth Street.) Hubert D. Stephens, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. (Assistant, Thomas E. Pegram, 3525 Davenport Street.) Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Hay-Adams House. (Assistant, John H. Tanner, 2440 Sixteenth Street.) Secretary.—George R. Cooksey, 3340 Sixteenth Street. Assistant secretaries.—Ronald H. Allen, Racquet Club; Alexander B. Galt, 2219 California Street; Alfred T. Hobson, 1610 K Street. Assistant to the secretary.— Matthias W, Knarr, 5130 Connecticut Avenue. 360 Congressional Directory General counsel.—James B. Alley, 1530 Thirtieth Street. Solicitor—Max O’Rell Truitt, 3124 Woodley Road. Assistant general counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street; Russel Snodgrass, Tree Tops, R. F. D. No. 5, Bethesda, Md. Counsel.—Cassius M. Clay, 113 South St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va.; Thomas G. Corcoran, 3238 R Street; Clifford J. Durr, Seminary Hill, Alex- andria, Va.; William C. Fitts, 2312 Ashmead Place; Claude E. Hamilton, Jr., 1553 Forty-fourth Street; Frank W. Kuehl, 2039 New Hampshire Avenue; - Reginald S. Laughlin, Mayflower Hotel; Samuel H. Sabin, 2122 California Street; W. R. Satterfield, Roosevelt Hotel; Tyre Taylor, 3200 Rodman Street. Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurers.—David B. Griffin, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Harry L. Sullivan, 4435 Thirty-eighth Street; Willard E. Unzicker, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Jerome T. Kelley, 901 University Parkway, Baltimore, Md. Assistant to the directors.— Lynn P. Talley, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Special assistants.—Ben Johnson, 3640 Sixteenth Street; Earl B. Schwulst, 2707 Thirty-fourth Place. 3 . Examining division: Chief —John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street. Assistant chiefs.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue; H. J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street; C. H. W. Mandeville, Shoreham Hotel; M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel; John W. Slacks, 5201 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; W. C. Ribenack, 1739 N Street; J. C. Wilson, 3632 Windom Place; Joel R. Parrish, 3047 Porter Street. Bank relations section— Administrative assistant.—James F. Herson, West- chester Apartments. Agency division: Chief —R. A. Brownell, Westchester Apartments. Assistant chief—R. J. Taylor, Argonne Apartments. Railroad division: Chief examiner.—J. W. Barriger, 3d, 3611 Fulton Street. Self-liguidating division: Chief engineer.— Morton Macartney, Falls Church, Va. Drainage, levee, and irrigation division: Chief. —Emil Schram, 1333 Jonquil Street. Financial adviser.—Frank J. Keenan, 1514 Webster Street. tn to the directors—Information and personnel.—Norman W. Baxter, 2914 P treet. Statistical and economic division: Chief.—David C. Elliott, Westchester Apartments. Assistant chief.—John H. Chase, 3627 Chesapeake Street. Auditing division: Chief —Rubert J. Lindquist, 6306 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chiefs.—J. P. Grantham, 2811 Beechwood Circle, Cherrydale, Va.; Charles A. Smith, 3314 Military Road. Chins clerk.—Frank T. Tracy, 2501 South Hayes Street, Aurora Hills, Alexandria, a. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK BOARD (Post Office Department Building, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Building) . Chairman.—John H. Fahey, The Shoreham. Vice chairman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.— William F. Stevenson, Broadmoor Apartments; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; H. E. Hoagland, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Governor, Federal Home Loan Bank System.—Preston Delano, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Secretary to the board.—R. L. Nagle, 1932 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant secretary.— Harry Caulsen, 3221 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to the chairman.—Ormond E. Loomis, 4224 Thirty-eighth Street. Deputy to the vice chairman.—J. M. Rountree, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to William F. Stevenson, member of the board.—Judson V. Matthews, Broadmoor Apartments. . Independent Offices and Hstablishments 361 Deputy to Fred W. Catlett, member of the board.— Walter D. Shultz, Hotel Roose- 1t velt. Deputy to H. E. Hoagland, member of the board.—D. J. Hornberger, Kennedy- Warren Apartments. General counsel.—Horace Russell, 3812 Kanawha Street. Associate general counsel.—James R. Frazer, 4518 Ridge Street, Chevy Chase, Md. fn adviser to the board and budget officer.—Floyd Augustine, 1237 Thirtieth treet. Comptroller.—R. Reyburn Burklin, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chairman, Review Committee.—Oscar R. Kreutz, 4634 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Chief examiner.—Paul A. Warner, 3602 Quesada Street. Director of personnel.—Raymond R. Zimmerman, Stoneleigh Court. Public relatrons adviser.—George Dock, Jr., 3231 Klingle Road. Editor of publications.—John R. Ellingston, 513 North Washington Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Director of information.— Theodore Tiller, 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. Director of research and statistics.—Spurgeon Bell, 1830 Phelps Place. General manager, savings and loan division.—J. Arthur Younger, Bellhaven, Alexandria, Va. HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION (Post Office Department Building, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Building, and Standard Oil Building) Board of directors: Chairman.—John H. Fahey, Hotel Shoreham. Vice chairman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.—William F. Stevenson, Broadmoor Apartments; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; H. E. Hoagland, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Secretary to the board.—R. L. Nagle, 1932 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant secretary.— Harold R. Townsend, 2212 Branch Avenue SE. Assistants to the chairman.—Ormond ¥E. Loomis, 4224 Thirty-eighth Street; John W. Childress, 2200 Twentieth Street. Executive assistant to the chairman and the general manager.—John M. Hager, 3110 Woodland Drive. Deputy to vice chairman.—J. M. Rountree, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to William F. Stevenson, member of the board.—Judson V. Matthews, Broadmoor Apartments. Deputy to Fred W. Catlett, member of the board.— Walter D. Shultz, Hotel Roosevelt. Deputy to H. E. Hoagland, member of the board.—D. J. Hornberger, Kennedy- Warren Apartments. General counsel.—Horace Russell, 3812 Kanawha Street. Associate general counsel.—O. B. Taylor, 1016 Sixteenth Street. Financial adviser to the board and budget officer—Floyd Augustine, 1237 Thirtieth Street. Director of personnel.—Raymond R. Zimmerman, Stoneleigh Court. Executive assistant, personnel department.—John C. Shover, 3816 Calvert Street. Public relations adviser.—George Dock, Jr., 3231 Klingle Road. Editor of publications.—John R. Ellingston, 513 North Washington Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Director of information.— Theodore Tiller, 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. Auditor—Fred F. Lovell, 1636 Nicholson Street. Director of research and statistics.—Spurgeon Bell, 1830 Phelps Place. Manager, adjustment department.—Fount Wade Williams (acting), 4700 Connecti- cut Avenue. : General manager.—Charles A. Jones, 3821 Gramercy Street. Deputy general managers.—Paul J. Frizzell, 3626 S Street; Alfred S. R. Wilson, 1901 Wyoming Avenue; Harold Lee, 217 Gibbon Street, Alexandria, Va.; Charles F. Cotter, Hotel Raleigh. Deputy to the general manager.—Donald H. McNeal, 3041 Sedgwick Street. Assistant general managers: District No. 1 (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont).—Charles E. Tilton, Dresden Apartments. District No. 2 (Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia).—Charles S. Robb, 2318 California Street. re _ i 362 Congressional Directory Assistant general managers—Continued. District No. 3 (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Puerto Rico).—Tom H. Semple, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. District No. 4 (Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin).—Carey Winston (acting), 3133 Connecticut Avenue. District No. 5 (Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Texas).—Ray L. Lamb, 3426 Seventeenth Street. District No. 6 (Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Territory of Hawaii, and Territory of Alaska).— William F. Penniman, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Comptroller—R. D. Andrews, 4405 Eighteenth Street. Treasurer.— Patrick J. Maloney, Alban Towers Apartments. Chief appraiser.—Leonard Downie (acting), 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Director of reconditioning.—George A. Nelson, 1861 Wyoming Avenue. Architectural adviser.—Pierre Blouke, Westchester Apartments. Manager, loan review division.—Ivan D. Carson, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Regional managers: Region No. 1-A (Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont) .—Michael H. Sullivan (acting), North Station Industrial Building, 150 Causeway Street, Boston, Mass. Region No. 1-B (New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut).— Merrill Hunt, McGraw-Hill Building, 330 West Forty-second Street, New York, N. Y. Region No. 2-A (Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia).—James H. Gilman, Equitable Building, Calvert and Fayette Streets, Baltimore, Md. Region No. 2-B (Ohio and West Virginia).—C. Stott Noble, Bell Telephone Building, 209 West Seventh Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Region No. 3-A (Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Puerto Rico).—Hugh B. Fleece, John Silvey Building, Marietta and Spring Streets, Atlanta, Ga. Region No. 3—B (Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee) .— Lewis Burnett, Sterick Building, Memphis, Tenn. Region No. /—A (Illinois and Wisconsin) .—Charles W. Collins, 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Ill. Region No. 4—B (Indiana and Michigan).—Harry C. Peiker, First National Bank Building, Cadillac Square and Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Region No. 5—A (North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Colorado, Ne- braska, Iowa, and Kansas).—Ivor S. MacFarlane, Woodmen of the World Building, Omaha, Nebr. Region No. 6—B (New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas).—Joseph R. Smith, Delis Cotton Exchange Building, St. Paul and San Jacinto Streets, Dallas, ex. Region No. 6 (Arizona, California, Territory of Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Territory of Alaska).— James F. Twohy, Liverpool and London and Globe Building, 444 California Street, San Francisco, Calif. State managers: Alabama.—E. H. Wrenn, Jr., Education Building, 517 North Twenty-second Street, Birmingham. Arizona.—Sidney B. Moeur, Professional Building, 15 East Monroe Street, Phoenix. Arkansas.—R. F. Milwee, Donaghey Building, Seventh and Main Streets, Little Rock. California.—W. O. Miles, R. A. Rowan Building, 139-141 West Fifth Street, Los Angeles. Gobordo ~Join Lynch, Insurance Building, Fourteenth and Champa Streets, enver. Connecticut.— Thomas H. Hickey, Hall of Records Building, 200 Orange Street, New Haven. Delaware.—Thomas B. Young, Delaware Trust Building, Ninth and Market Streets, Wilmington. District of Columbia.— William E. Foster (acting), New Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Building, First and Indiana Avenue, Washington. Florine Richard E. Knight, Graham Building, 100 West Forsyth Street, Jack- sonville. Independent Offices and Establishments 363 State managers—Continued. Georgy rol nk A. Holden, Lullwater Building, 441 West Peachtree Street, : anta. z dap. C. Wilburn, Capitol Securities Building, 119 North Eighth Street, oise. Illinots.—Henry G. Zander, Jr., 215 West Wacker Drive, Chicago. Indiana.—E. Kirk McKinney, Peoples Bank Building, 136 East Market Street, Indianapolis. Iowa.—H. Hawley Van Evera, Old Federal Building, West Fifth and Court Streets, Des Moines. Kansas —Charles R. Cravens, New England Building, 501 Kansas Avenue, opeka. Kentucky.—John F. Davis, Kentucky Home Life Insurance Building, 229-233 South Fifth Street, Louisville. Loutsiana.—Paul B. Habans, Louisiana Bank Building, Camp and Gravier Streets, New Orleans. Maine.—Basil B. Ames, Kamber Building, 478-480 Congress Street, Portland. Maryland.—David Stiefel, 301 New Post Office Building, Baltimore. Massachusetts.—Daniel J. LeHand, North Station Industrial Building, 150 Causeway Street, Boston. Michigan.—John B. Dew (acting), 840 New Federal Building, Detroit. Minnesota.—John T. McCarthy (special representative in charge), Bremer Arcade Building, St. Paul. Mississippi.— Wiley A. Blair, New Merchants Bank Building, 208-210 East Capital Street, Jackson. SS C. Vandover, 903 Buder Building, Seventh and Market Streets, t. Louis. ; Montana.—E. C. Carruth, Strain Building, Fourth Street and Central Avenue, Great Falls. HA B. Robertson, World Herald Building, 1502 Farnam Street, maha. Nevada.—James H. Bradshaw, Jr. (State service supervisor), 9 Virginia Arcade Building, Reno. New Hampshire—Charles E. Bartlett, First National Bank Building, 1028 Elm Street, Manchester. New Jersey.—John R. M. O’Connor, Globe Indemnity Building, 20 Washington Place, Newark. New Mexico.— Edward C. Robertson, 105 Federal Building, corner Fifth Street and Gold Avenue, Albuquerque. New York.— Vincent Dailey, Empire State Building, 350 Fifth Avenue, New York City. North Carolina.—Thomas Clay Abernethy, Post Office Building, Salisbury. North Dakota.—F. W. McLean, Federal Building, Fargo. Ohio.—Henry G. Brunner, Old Post Office Building, Columbus. Oklahoma.—John F. Mahr, Perrine Building, First and Robinson Streets, Oklahoma City. s Oregon.—Frank B. Upshaw, Post Office Building, Northwest Broadway and Glisan Streets, Portland. Pennsylvania.—J. S. Baughman, Schaff Building, Fifteenth and Race Streets, Philadelphia. Rhode Island.—Tom Howick, Belcher and Loomis Building, 130 West Ex- change Street, Providence. South Carolina.—Donald S. Matheson, Central Union Bank Building, Main and Washington Streets, Columbia. South Dakota.—Almer O. Steensland, Federal Building, Sioux Falls. Tennessee.— Charles H. Litterer, Nashville Trust Building, Nashville. Texas.—James Shaw (manager of Division No. 1), City National Bank Build- ing, Dallas. Brady W. Steele (manager of Division No. 2), Kirby Building, Houston. Earl W. Jamison (manager of Division No. 3), Frost National Bank Building, San Antonio. Linh, F. Fowles, 915 Boston Building, 247 South Main Street, Salt Lake ity. Vermont.—Park H. Pollard, 310-312 New Post Office Building, Rutland. Virginia.—John J. Wicker, Jr., Richmond Trust Building, Seventh and Main Streets, Richmond. Washington.—A. C. Newell, 448 Dexter Horton Building, Seattle. 364 Congressional Directory State managers—Continued. West Virginia.—Walter V. Ross, Morrison Building, 815 Quarrier Street, Charleston. Wisconsin.—J. R. McQuillan, First Bank of Wisconsin, 1 West Main Street, Madison. Wyoming.—Bayard C. Wilson, Federal Building, Casper. Alaska.— Under supervision A. C. Newell, Washington State manager, 448 Dexter Horton Building, Seattle. Haware.—H. J. Hoffman (special representative in charge), Federal Building, Honolulu. i Rico.—A. E. Hutchison (Territorial manager), 20 Tetuan Street, San uan. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION (Post Office Department Building) Board of trustees: Chairman.—John H. Fahey, Hotel Shoreham. Vice chatrman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.— William F. Stevenson, Broadmoor Apartments; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; H. E. Hoagland, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. General manager.—Nugent Fallon, Hay-Adams House. Secretary to the board.—R. L. Nagle, 1932 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant secretaries.—Harry Caulsen, 3221 Connecticut Avenue; Harold R. Townsend, 2212 Branch Avenue SE. Assistant to the chairman.—Ormond E. Loomis, 4224 Thirty-eighth Street. General counsel.—Horace Russell, 3812 Kanawha Street. Associate general counsel.—Emery J. Woodall, 3711 Ingomar Street. Financial adviser to the board and budget officer.—Floyd Augustine, 1237 Thirtieth Street. Treasurer.—John Byrns, 121 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief examiner.—Paul A. Warner, 3602 Quesada Street. Director of personnel.—Raymond R. Zimmerman, Stoneleigh Court. Director of research and statistics.—Spurgeon Bell, 1830 Phelps Place. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY (Wilson Dam, Ala.; Washington office, Temporary Building F'; Knoxville office, New Sprankle Building; Chattanooga office, Old Post Office Building; Birmingham office, 606 First National Bank Building) Directors: Arthur E. Morgan, chairman of the board, Knoxville. Harcourt A. Morgan, Knoxville. David E. Lilienthal, Knoxville. Coordinator.—John B. Blandford, Jr., Knoxville. Manager, Muscle Shoals properties.—John L. Neely, Jr., Wilson Dam. Norris town manager.—J. W. Bradner, Jr., Norris, Tenn. Washington representative.— Marguerite Owen, Washington, D. C. MANAGEMENT SERVICES Finance division: Comptroller.— Frank J. Carr, Knoxville. Treasurer.— Mrs. F. D. Goodrich, Knoxville. Information division: Director—W. L. Sturdevant, Knoxville. Washington representative.—G. O. Gillingham, Washington, D. C. Technical librarian.—Harry Bauer, Knoxville. Land acquisition division: Director.—John I. Snyder, Knoxville. Legal division: General solicitor.—James L. Fly, Knoxville. Chief clerk.—James A. Barr, Knoxville. Materials division: Director of purchases.—C. H. Garity, Knoxville. Personnel division: Director.—Floyd W: Reeves, Knoxville. Assistant director—Gordon R. Clapp, Knoxville. Director of employment.—Carl L. Richey, Knoxville. ja oy fa, Independent Offices and Establishments PLANNING AND DEMONSTRATION SERVICES Agricultural division: Chief —J. C. McAmis, Knoxville. Forestry division: Director and chief forester—E. C. M. Richards, Knoxville. Agricultural-industries division: Chief. —W. R. Woolrich, Knoxville. Land planning and housing division: Director.—FEarle S. Draper, Knoxville. Social and economic division: Director.—Floyd W. Reeves, Knoxville. ELECTRICITY DEPARTMENT Chief electrical engineer.—Llewellyn Evans, Chattanooga. Assistant chief electrical engineer—A. H. Sullivan, Chattanooga. Engineer of design and construction.—W. W. Woodruff, Chattanooga. Rate engineer—Edward Falck, Chattanooga. ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENTS Chief engineer.— Arthur E. Morgan, Knoxville. Assistant chief engineer.—Carl A. Bock, Knoxville. Chief water control planning engineer.—S. M. Woodward, Knoxville. Supervising construction engineer.— Theodore B. Parker, Knoxville. General construction superintendent.—Ross White, Knoxville. Construction plant engineer.—A. J. Ackerman, Knoxville. Chief geologist.—Edwin C. Eckel, Knoxville. Construction engineer, Norris Dam.— Barton M. Jones, Norris, Tenn. 365 Acting construction superintendent, Norris Dam.—F. C. Schlemmer, Norris, Tenn. Construction engineer, Wheeler Dam.—W. M. Hall, Joe Wheeler Dam, Ala. Corsi) sation superintendent, Wheeler Dam.—George P. Jessup, Joe Wheeler Dam, la Project engineer, Pickwick Landing Dam.—A. L. Pauls, Pickwick Dam, Tenn. Acting construction engineer, Pickwick Landing Dam.—Robert F. Olds, Pickwick Dam, Tenn. Construction superintendent, Pickwick Landing Dam.—L. H. Huntley, Pickwick Dam, Tenn. Construction engineer, Chickamauga project.—Lee G. Warren. Construction engineer, Guniersville project.—Verne Gongwer. Acting project engineer, Hiwassee project.—C. E. Blee. FERTILIZER DEPARTMENT Chief chemical engineer.—~Harry A. Curtis, Knoxville. Superintendent fertilizer manufacturing division.—A. M. Miller, Wilson Dam, Ala. ELECTRIC HOME AND FARM AUTHORITY (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, District 0145) President.—[Vacancy.] Vice president.—George R. Cooksey, 3340 Sixteenth Street. Trustees.—Gladding B. Coit, 3900 Connecticut Avenue; Morris L. Cooke, Hay-Adams House; Thomas G. Corcoran, 3238 R Street; Sam Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue; Morton Macartney, Falls Church, Va.; John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street; Emil Schram, 1333 Jonquil Street; Max O’Rell Truitt, 3124 Woodley Road. Secretary.—A. T. Hobson, 1610 K Street. Treasurer.— William A. Weaver, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. General counsel.—Abram Hewitt, Montana Hall, White Post, Va. General manager.—James M. Boyle, The Cosmos Club. Commercial manager.—George D. Munger, 3769 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase. 366 Congressional Directory RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION (2000 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, POtomac 4990) Administrator.—Morris L. Cooke, The Hay-Adams House. Special assistant to the admanistrator.— Willard E. Herring, Wardman Park Hotel. Personal assistant to the adminzstrator.—Perry R. Taylor, 1916 G Street. Private secretary to the adminisirator.—Margaret Rutherford McKim, 1739 N Street. General counsel.—Vincent D. Nicholson, 9119 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant general counsel.—Thomas E. O’Callaghan, 1410 L Street. Chief engineer.— Melvin O. Swanson, Tilden Gardens. Chief of projects initiation section.—L. A. Sears, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Director of information and research.—M. L. Ramsay, 331 Tennyson Street. Chaef of information section.—Kendall Foss, 2315 Tracy Place. Chief of development section.—Boyd Fisher, McLean, Va. Chef of utilization sectton.—Emily R. KneuBuhl, Powhatan Hotel. Chief of research and statistical section.—Foster Adams, 2023 Belmont Road. Personnel director.—Russell Cook, 4227 Thirty-seventh Street. Director of finance.—Joseph F. Marion, 2007 F Street. Chief clerk and procurement officer.—0O. K. Inderlied, 816 E Street NE. Chief accountant.—Paul Cockrill, London-Hall Apartments. RESETTLEMENT ADMINISTRATION (Fourteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 6350, Branch 315) Administrator.—Rexford Guy Tugwell, 1731 Hoban Road. Assistant administrators—W. W. Alexander, Cosmos Club; C. B. Baldwin, 4411 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Jos. L. Dailey, 1362 Somerset Place; Lewis C. Gray, 119 Wooten Avenue, Friendship Heights; Carl C. Taylor, 1606 North Adams Street, Clarendon, Va.; John S. Lansill, 2450 Belmont Road; E. E. Agger, Wardman Park Hotel. Executive assistant.—Grace E. Falke, 1514 Thirty-fourth Street. Special assistants to the adminisirator.—F. P. Bartlett, 5 Riggs Court; Lawrence I. Hewes, Jr., 1732 Rhode Street, Clarendon, Va.; George S. Mitchell, 1732 Rhode Street, Clarendon, Va. Director of rehabilitation division.—Paul V. Maris, 1803 North Edgewood Street, Clarendon, Va. Director of resettlement division.— Walter E. Packard. Drrector of construction diviston.—Frank Schmitt, Wardman Park Hotel. Darector of finance diviston.—Max J. Wasserman, 1422 Longfellow Street. Director of personnel division.— Winston B. Stephens, 6504 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of investigation division.—Arthur C. Bachrach, 1819 Ingleside Terrace. Director of information division.—John F. Carter, 2130 Leroy Place. Director of labor relations division.— Mercer G. Evans, The Fairfax. Director of procedure division.— Warren Bruner, 1511 Twenty-second Street. Darector of special skills division.—Adrian J. Dornbush, 2011 I Street. Director of works progress and reports division.—F. J. Sette, Stoneleigh Court, Connecticut Avenue and L Street. General counsel, legal division.—Lee Pressman, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Business manager, business management diviston.—Arthur B. Thatcher, 4116 Military Road. NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION (1340 G Street. Phone, District 0330) Executive director.—Aubrey Williams, 3508 Lowell Street. Assistant executive director.—Richard R. Brown, 1321 Holly Street. Chairman executive committee.—Josephine Roche, 1727 H Street. Chairman advisory commitiee.—Charles W. Taussig, 120 Wall Street, New York City (Washington Address, Carlton Hotel). pe RA Independent Offices and Establishments 367 FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION (1300 E Street. Phone, District 1050) Governor.—W. I. Myers, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Deputy governor.—F. F. Hill, 3413 Quesada Street. Deputy governor.—A. T. Esgate, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Executive officer —Herbert Emmerich, 407 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. General counsel.—Peyton R. Evans, 3000 Forty-fourth Place. : Land bank commaissioner.—Albert S. Goss, 425 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Conparaiine bank commisstoner.— Francis W. Peck, The Lee House, Fifteenth and treets. Production credit commaissioner.—S. M. Garwood, 4516 Thirtieth Street. Intermediate credit commaissioner.— George M. Brennan, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant director, emergency crop and feed loan section.—Philip G. Murphy, 2700 Connecticut Avenue. Acting director, regional agricultural credit division.—C. C. Jacobsen, 3133 Connec- ticut Avenue. Director, Federal credit union section.—C. R. Orchard, 5506 Fourteenth Street. Comptroller.—Earl H. LeMasters, 3721 Massachusetts Avenue. Dzrector of information.—Edwy B. Reid, 712 Spring Street, Silver Spring, Md. Cheef examiner.— Martin J. Fox, 1841 Columbia Road. FEDERAL EMERGENCY ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC WORKS : (Interior Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 1820) Administrator—Harold L. Ickes (Secretary of the Interior), Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Administrator—Horatio B. Hackett, Wardman Park Hotel. Executive officer.—J. J. Madigan, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.. Executive assistants: Marion Beers, 1900 F Street. E. W. Clark, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. Arthur W. Copp, 6200 Broad Branch Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Harry D. Deutschbein, 1612 K Street. Leona B. Graham, 1625 Sixteenth Street. John Herrick, 216 Braddock Road, Alexandria, Va. Harold D. Hynds, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. A. H. Martin, Jr., 12 Woodlane, Country Club Hills, Cherrydale, Va. Division directors: Accounts.—Charles J. Maxey, chief accountant, 1629 Columbia Road. Economics and statistics.—B. L. Padgett (acting), 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Engineering.—J. G. Gholston, 1819 G. Street. Finance.—B. W. Thoron, 2900 N Street. Housing.—A. R. Clas, Wardman Park Hotel. Inspection.—H. A. Gray, 2118 Bancroft Place. Investigations.—Louis R. Glavis, Valley Vista Apartments. Legal.—Edward H. Foley, Jr., The Westchester Apartments. Power.—Clark Foreman, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Projects.—Fred E. Schnepfe, 1613 Harvard Street. Transportation loans.—Frank C. Wright, Carlton Hotel. Director of employment.—Edgar F. Puryear, 5205 Colorado Avenue. Dzrector of press relations.—Michael W. Straus, 3319 Rowland Place. Chairman, labor board of review.— Lindsay Rogers, Cosmos Club. General solicitor—Lloyd H. Landau, Shoreham Hotel. General counsel, National Power Policy Committee.—Benjamin V. Cohen, 3238 R Street. STATE DIRECTORS Alabama.—Henry S. Geismer (acting), 20 Commerce Street, Montgomery. Arizona—Howard S. Reed (acting), Professional Building, Phoenix. Arkansas.—Alexander Allaire (acting), Rector Building, Little Rock. California.—A. D. Wilder (acting), 805 Washington Building, Los Angeles. Colorado.—George M. Bull (acting), Midland Savings Building, Denver. Connecticut,—William J. Farley, State Capitol Building, Hartford. 368 Congressional Directory Delaware.—See Maryland. niin ames KE. Cotton (acting), Barnett National Bank Building, Jackson- ville. Si i . Houstoun Johnston (acting), Citizens & Southern Bank Building, tlanta. Idaho.—J. Vernon Otter, Noble Building, Boise. Illinois.—C. H. Bauer, 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago. Indiana.—Forrest M. Logan (acting), 130 East Washington Building, Indian- apolis. Towa.—P. Frank Hopkins (acting), Federal Court Building, Des Moines. Kansas.—Ray E. Lawrence (acting), New England Building, Topeka. Kentucky.— George H. Sager, Jr. (acting), Republic Building, Louisville. Louisiana.—Orloff Henry (acting), Masonic Temple, New Orleans. Maine.—See New Hampshire. Maryland.—Abel Wolman (acting), Court Square Building, Baltimore. Massachusetts.—[Vacancy.] Post Office and Court House Building, Boston. Michigan.— Mortimer E. Cooley (acting), Fisher Building, Detroit. Minnesota.—Robert A. Radford (acting), Uptown Post Office and Federal Courts Building, St. Paul. Mississippi.—Horace S. Stansel (acting), Edwards Hotel, Jackson. Yom M. Spann (acting), Buder Building, Seventh and Market Streets, t. Louis. Montana.—V. H. Walsh (acting), Montana Building, Helena. Nebraska.—John Latenser, Jr. (acting), Federal Office Building, Omaha. Nevada.—J. L. Vandiver (acting), Gazette Building, Reno. New ample areld J. Lockwood (acting), New Hampshire Bank Building, oncord. New Jersey.—Cornelius C. Vermeule, Jr. (acting), Industrial Building, 1060 Broad Street, Newark. New Mexico—Edward H. Oakley, Post Office Building, Santa Fe. New York.—Arthur S. Tuttle (acting), 2 Lafayette Street, New York City. North Carolina.—Herman G. Baity (acting), Philips Hall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. North Dakota.—H. C. Knudsen (acting), Prince Hotel Building, Bismarck. Ohio.—L. A. Boulay (acting), New Post Office Building, Columbus. Oklahoma.—Philip S. Donnell (acting), Federal Building, Oklahoma City. Oregon.—Claude C. Hockley (acting), Failing Building, Portland. ; Pennsylvania.— William H. Gravell (acting), 100 Market Street, Harrisburg. Rhode Island.—See Connecticut. South Carolina.—J. L. M. Irby (acting), National Loan and Exchange Bank Building, Columbia. South Dakota.— William F. Cochrane (acting), Schubert Building, Pierre. Tennessee.—Kenneth Markwell (acting), American Trust Building, Nashville. Texas.—Julian Montgomery (acting), Electric Building, Fort Worth. Utah.— Richard A. Hart (acting), Boston Building, Salt Lake City. Vermont.—See New Hampshire. Virginia.—James A. Anderson (acting), Richmond Trust Building, Richmond. Wenkligion, 2, R. Hoffman (acting), Administration Building, State Capitol, lympia. West Virginia.—M. Lindsay O’Neale (acting), Capitol Building, Charleston. Wisconsin.—A. Lawrie Kurtz (acting), 312 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee. Wyoming.—Francis C. Williams (acting), Federal Building, Cheyenne. PUBLIC WORKS REPRESENTATIVES Alaska.—Gov. J. W. Troy, Juneau. Hawair.—Maj. Ralph G. Barrows, Federal Building, Honolulu. Puerto Rico.—R. C. Hardman, Gonzales Padin Building, San Juan. Virgin Islands.—Lawrence W. Cramer, St. Thomas. STATE ENGINEER INSPECTORS Alabama.—[Vacancy.] Federal Building, Montgomery. Arizona.—See California. Arkansas.—A. W. George, Jr., Rector Building, Little Rock. California.—O. E. Carr, David Hewes Building, San Francisco. Colorado.—Frank M. Keller, Midland Savings Building, Denver. Connecticut,—Frank J. Carew, State Capitol, Hartford. | Independent Offices and Establishments 369 | Delaware.—See Maryland. | Florida.—[Vacancy.] Barnett National Bank Building, Jacksonville. Georgia.—Howard T. Cole, Citizens and Southern Bank Building, Atlanta. | Idaho.—See Montana. | Illinois.—Garland L. Rounds, 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago. | Indiana.—Donald Graham, 130 East Washington Building, Indianapolis. | Towa.—[Vacancy.] Federal Court Building, Des Moines. | Kansas.—Royden E. Reed, Federal Building, Topeka. Kentucky.—Harry A. Wortham, Republic Building, Louisville. Louisiana.—See Arkansas. Maine.—See New Hampshire. Maryland.—H. S. Shryock, Court Square Building, Baltimore. Massachusetts.—J. Arthur Garrod, Post Office and Court House Building, Boston. Michigan.—Milo F. Ohr, Fisher Building, Detroit. Mpmmeln Jom Stewart, Uptown Post Office and Federal Courts Building, t. Paul. Mississippi.—See Arkansas. Mimi et hnriey C. Allen, Buder Building, Seventh and Market Streets, St. ouis. Montana.— Martin E. Kelly, Federal Building, Helena. Nebraska.—Jos. D. Evans, Federal Office Building, Omaha. | Nevada.—See California. New Hampshire.—Hughlett J. Daougherty, Phenix Hotel Building, Concord. New Jersey.—[Vacancy.] 1060 Broad Street, Newark. New Mexico.—See Texas. New York.—M. E. Gilmore, 2 Lafayette Street, New York City. North Carolina.—[Vacancy.] United States Post Office, Raleigh. North Dakota.—See Minnesota. Ohio.—John B. deHamel, New Post Office Building, Columbus. | | | Oklahoma.—[Vacancy.] Key Building, Oklahoma City. Oregon.—Ray H. Corey, Journal Building, Portland. Pennsylvania.—John L. M. Yardley, 100 Market Street, Harrisburg. i Rhode Island.—See Connecticut. South Carolina.—L. P. Slattery, 1118% Taylor Street, Columbia. South Dakota.—See Nebraska. Tennessee—[Vacancy.] Bennie-Dillon Building, Nashville. Texas.—G. C. Street, Jr., Electric Building, Fort Worth. Utah.—See Colorado. Vermont.—See New Hampshire. Virginia.— Kenneth L. Black, Richmond Trust Building, Richmond. Washington.—[Vacancy.] United States Post Office, Seattle. West Vairginia.—George H. Bayles, Capitol Building, Charleston. Wisconsin.—Charles T. Watson, 312 East Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee. Wyoming, —See Colorado. . DISTRICT PROJECT AUDITORS District No. 1.—George C. Lidecker, 2 Lafayette Street, New York City. District No. 2—Roscoe C. Doyle, 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Ill. District No. 3.—FEugene C. Welsh, 114 Uptown Federal Building, St. Paul, Minn. Biswes No. 4.—Paul D. Hammacher, 127 United States Custom House, Denver, olo. Disirict No. 6—Henry R. Munson, room 400, Civic Center Auditorium, San Francisco, Calif. District No. 6.—Floyd A. Villa, 503 Federal Building, Dallas, Tex. District No. 7.—Paulus I. Granquist, 509 Interstate Building, Kansas City, Mo. District No. 8.—Tracy S. Newton, Sr., 843 Citizens and Southern National Bank Building, Atlanta, Ga. District No. 9.—Earl B. Sanders, 1020 Richmond Trust Building, Richmond, Va. SPECIAL AGENTS IN CHARGE Region No. 1.—Dayvid J. Barry, 10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass. Region No. 2—Robert C. Chapman, 304 Subtreasury Building, Wall and Nassau Streets, New York City, N. Y. Region No. 3—S. Norman Moe, 20 North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Ill. 30063°—T74—2—1ST ED——24 370 Congressional Directory poy No. 4—C. Raymond Wire, 113 Uptown Post Office Building, St. Paul, inn. Region No. 5—Henry J. Winters, 616 Post Office Building, Portland, Oreg. Region No. 6.—W. Bruce Murray, 1404 Hewes Building, San Francisco, Calif. Region No. 7.—Virgil P. Wallace, 404-408 Federal Building, Dallas, Tex. Region No. 8.—Carlton G. Schenken, 529 New Post Office Building, 315 West Pershing Road, Kansas City, Mo. Regn No. 9.—Edward S. Ragsdale, 421-22 New Post Office Building, Atlanta, a. Bevin Ye 10.—A. D. Bailey, Jr., room 3121, Interior Building, Washington, CENTRAL STATISTICAL COMMITTEE (Established by Public 219, 74th Cong., approved July 25, 1935, to supervise activities of the Central Statistical Board) The Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of Agriculture. The Secretary of Commerce. The Secretary of Labor. CENTRAL STATISTICAL BOARD (Established by Executive Order No. 6225, July 27, 1933. Powers and duties redefined by ‘Executive Orders No. 6700, May 4, 1934, and No. 7003, Apr. 8 1935. Reorganization under terms of an act of Congress approved July 25, 1935 (Public, No. 219, 74th Cong.), will begin Jan. 1, 1936) (Room 7028 Commerce Building. Phone, DIstrict 1474) Acting chatrman.—Stuart A. Rice, Assistant Director, Bureau of the Census, 4817 Twenty-fifth Street, North, Cherrydale, Va. Designated members. £ Oscar E. Kiessling, chief economist, Mineral Resources and Economies Divi- sion, Bureau of Mines, Department of the Interior. Mordecai Ezekiel, economic adviser to the Secretary of Agriculture (Louis H. Bean, economic adviser to the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, alternate). E. G. Draper, Assistant Secretary of Commerce (E. A. Tupper, chief, Division of Foreign Trade Statistics, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce, alternate). Isador Lubin, Commissioner of Labor Statistics, Department of Labor (Sidney Wilcox, chief statistician, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Labor, alternate). E. A. Goldenweiser, director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Woodlief Thomas, assistant director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, alternate). L. C. Marshall, director, Division of Review, National Recovery Administra- tion (W. J. Maguire, chief, Statistics Section, Division of Review, National Recovery Administration, alternate). Meredith B. Givens, executive secretary, Committee on Government Statistics and Information Services. Elected members: E. Dana Durand, chief economist, Tariff Commission. Corrington Gill, director of research and statistics, Federal Emergency Relief Administration; assistant administrator, Works Progress Administration. George C. Haas, director of research and statistics for the Treasury, Treasury Department. Max O. Lorenz, director of statistics, Interstate Commerce Commission. W. H. S. Stevens, assistant chief economist, Economics Division, Federal Trade Commission. 0. C. Stine, chief, Division of Statistical and Historical Research, Bureau of Agricultural Economics, Department of Agriculture. Leonard D. White, commissioner, Civil Service Commission. Acting executive secretary.— William J. Carson, Cosmos Club. Assistant secretary and principal research assistant—Edward R. Gray, 1424 Chapin Street. Assistant executive officer—Roger W. Jones, 1654 Euclid Street. Independent Offices and Hstablishments 371 OFFICE OF FEDERAL COORDINATOR OF TRANSPORTATION (Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Eighteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7460) Roce Coordinator of Transportation.—Joseph B. Eastman, 2266 Cathedral venue. Executive assistant.—Allen W. Hagerty, 4001 Harrison Street. Secretary to the Coordinator.—F. B. Livingstone, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Counsel.—Leslie Craven, Cosmos Club. Executive and traffic assistant.—Charles E. Bell, 2839 Allendale Place. Codirectors, section of transportation.—Joseph L. White, 515 Twentieth Street; John C. Emery, 1819 G Street. Director, Si of car pooling.—N. D. Ballantine, 735-B, Westchester Apart- ments. Dzrector, section of property and equipment.—R. L. Lockwood, Powhatan Hotel. Director, section of labor relations.—O. S. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. FEDERAL EMERGENCY RELIEF ADMINISTRATION (Walker-Johnson Building, 1734 New York Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 0330) Admanistrator—Harry L. Hopkins, The Kennedy-Warren. Secretary to the Administrator—XKathryn Godwin, 3944 Morrison Street. Assistant Administrators: Aubrey Williams, 2807 Thirty-fifth Street. Jacob Baker, 1900 F Street. Corrington Gill, 2630 Adams Mill Road. Lawrence Westbrook, Northumberland Apartments. Ellen S. Woodward, Wardman Park Hotel. CL a M. Milford, 305 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Chief Clerk.—Harry L. Kinnear, Vienna, Va. FEDERAL SURPLUS RELIEF CORPORATION (Temporary Building No. 2, 1900 D Street. Phone, DIstrict 0330) President.—Harry L. Hopkins, Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, The Kennedy-Warren. Vice i A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, Wardman Park otel. Treasurer—Harold 1.. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, Carlton Hotel. Secretary.— Kathryn Godwin, 3944 Morrison Street. General counsel.—Jerome N. Frank, 1511 Twenty-eighth Street. Assistant to the President.—Jacob Baker, 1900 F Street. Director.—William I. Myers, Governor, Farm Credit Administration, Westchester Apartments, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Director of procurement.—Lt. Comdr. Alfred B. Clark, U. S. N., 803 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of distribution.— William L. Nunn, 1365 Geranium Street. Prey of information.—Morton M. Milford, 305 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, d. WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION (Walker-Johnson Building 1734 New York Avenue. Phone DIstrict 0330) Administrator—Harry L. Hopkins, The Kennedy-Warren. Secretary to the Administrator—Kathryn Godwin, 3944 Morrison Street. Assistant Administrators: - Aubrey Williams, 2807 Thirty-fifth Street. Corrington Gill, 2630 Adams Mill Road. Lawrence Westbrook, Northumberland Apartments. Jacob Baker, 1900 F Street. Ellen S. Woodward, Wardman Park Hotel. Special assistant to the Administrator.—Morton M. Milford, 305 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General counsel.—Lee Pressman, Cathedral Mansions. Counsel.— William E. Linden, 1501 W Street SE. Chief Clerk.—Harry L. Kinnear, Vienna, Va. 372 Congressional Directory EMERGENCY CONSERVATION WORK (Post Office Department Building. Phone, District 2900) Director—Robert Fechner, Burlington Hotel. Assistant Directors: James J. McEntee, Burlington Hotel. Charles H. Taylor, 423 Irving Street. Assistant to the Director—Guy D. McKinney, 4412 Lowell Street, Wesley Heights. Special counsel.—Raymond B. Dickey, 1702 Kilbourne Place. Secretary to the Director.—Clara B. Holbrook, 606 Indian Springs Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Clerk.—Addie A. Hughes, 4400 Dexter Street. NATIONAL RECOVERY ADMINISTRATION (Commerce Building. Phone, District 2811) Acting Administrator.—L. J. Martin, Janneys Lane, Alexandria, Va. Assistant to the Administrator to represent labor.—George L. Berry, Willard Hotel. Executive officer—A. C. C. Hill, Jr., 106 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Control officer—M. Creditor, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Legal coordinator.—L. M. C. Smith, 2132 Bancroft Place. Leeds adviser to executive officer and control officer.— Melvin Sims, 4000 Cathedral venue. ADVISORY COUNCIL Chairman.— Walton H. Hamilton, 1719 I Street. Members: Emily Newell Blair, 4767 Indian Lane. Charles Edison, Mayflower Hotel. Howell Cheney, Hay-Adams House. William Green, Hamilton Hotel. Philip Murray, Carlton Hotel. Executive secretary.—Edwin B. George, 506 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. DIVISION OF REVIEW Director.—L. C. Marshall, 2800 Ontario Road. Assistant Director.—James E. Hughes, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Administrative Section.—E. M. Jeffrey, 1760 Euclid Street. Division legal coordinator.—Angus R. Shannon, Jr., 822 Richmond Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Sections: Coordinator, N. R. A. Organizalion Studies Section and Code Administration Studies Section.—W. W. Bardsley, 3003 N Street. Section attorney.—D. L. Boland, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Coordinator, Trade Practice Studies Section.—~Corwin D. Edwards, 1717 Twentieth Street. Section attorney.—George J. Feldman, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Copii, Labor Studies Section.—A. Howard Myers, 3259 Van Hazen treet. Section attorney.—Melvin Sims, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Coerdintin, Industry Studies Section.—M. D. Vincent, 1025 Connecticut venue. Section attorney.—Robert S. Denvir, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Industrial adviser.— Walter White, 3132 O Street. Coordinator, Special Studies Section.—Guy G. Gamble, Cavalier Hotel. Coordinator, Foreign Trade Studies.—Harold D. Gresham. Chief, Statistics Section.—W. J. Maguire, 2063 Park Road. Secon attorney, legal research.—George W. Kretzinger, 1135 Sixteenth treet. Independent Offices and Establishments 373 DIVISION OF BUSINESS COOPERATION Director—Leighton H. Peebles, 6407 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Executive assistant.—Clarence H. Osthagen, 1312 N Street. Division legal adviser.—Allen Moore, 3817 Cathedral Avenue. Sections: Director, Industry Section I.—Beverly Ober, 325 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Director, Industry Section II.—A. Heath Onthank, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Industry Section 11I.—Walter Mangum, Army and Navy Club. Director, Industry Section I1V.—H. C. Carr, Woodley Park Towers. Director, Industry Section V.—W. P. Farnsworth, Westchester Apartments. CONSUMERS’ DIVISION Director.— Walton H. Hamilton, 1719 I Street. Digi legal adviser.—James F. Pinckney, 109 Brookside Drive, Chevy Chase, d Chzef, Editorial and Publications Section.—Mark Adams, 610 Madison Street. Chief, County Council Sectton.— Marion Hayes, 927 Seventeenth Street. Chief, Research Section.—Irene Till, 1702 Seventeenth Street. DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATION Executive assistant.—J. H. Wootton, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Accounting Sectton.—Jon I. Taylor, 5130 Connecticut Avenue. Cheef, Personnel Section.—Charles A. McKeand, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. Budget Officer.— William Bennett, 820 Connecticut Avenue. Cheef, Maintenance and Property Sectton.—H. H. Howell, 1915 Calvert Street. Chief, Central Records Section.—H. Rose, 1722 Nineteenth Street. Chief, Pay Roll Section.—A. H. Bass, 3025 W Street SE. Chief, Publications Section.—S. R. Kramer, 1507 White Place SE. FIELD DIVISION Division administrator.—W. M. Galvin, 6508 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Regional directors: Region I.—Merton L. Emerson, Boston, Mass. Region II.—Anna M. Rosenberg, New York City, N. Y. Region I11.—G. R. Parker, 1915 Sixteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Region 1V.—W. L. Mitchell, Atlanta, Ga. Region V.—Benedict Crowell, Cleveland, Ohio. Region VI.—C. F. Rumely, Chicago, Ill. Region VII.—A. F. Cook, Omaha, Nebr. Region VIII.—Ernest L. Tutt, Dallas, Tex.. Region I X.—Donald Renshaw, San Francisco, Calif. Division legal adviser.—Irwin Geiger, 2800 Ontario Road, Washington, D. C. GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS DIVISION Division administrator.—Frank Healy, Cordova Apartments. Assistant division administrator.—George V. Johnson, Blackstone Hotel. Division legal adviser.— Thomas W. O’Hara, 2920 Ontario Road. PUBLIC INFORMATION Director.—Marshall Coles, 2015 Hillyer Place. COORDINATOR FOR INDUSTRIAL COOPERATION Coordinator.—George L. Berry, Willard Hotel. Liaison and administrative officer— Walter G. Hooke, 1910 Kalorama Road. Assistant coordinator.—Sullivan Jones, Hay-Adams House. Assistant coordinator for labor.—Edward J. Tracy, 4520 Connecticut Avenue. 374 Congressional Directory FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION (National Press Building. Phone, District 1240) Chairman.—Leo T. Crowley, Mayflower Hotel. Directors. peas L. Goldsborough, Tudor Arms Apartment, Baltimore, Md.; J. F. T. O’Connor, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant to chairman.—W. R. Milford, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to J. F. T. O’Connor.—M. 5% Diggs, 2927 Forty-fourth Street. General counsel.—L. E. Birdzell, 1733 Kalmia Road. Auditor—H. W. Riley, Valley Vista Apartments. Fiscal agent.—W. G. Loeffler, Congressional Club. Chief, dwiston of examinations.—John G. Nichols, 1607 Forty-fourth Street. Chief, new and closed bank division.—A. H. Dudley, 839 West University Park- way, Baltimore, Md. Zi division of research and statistics.— Mortimer J. Fox, Jr., 2601 Thirtieth treet. THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY COUNCIL (Room 500 Commercial National Bank Building. Phone, District 2370) The President of the United States. The Secretary of State. The Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of War The Attorney General. The Postmaster General. The Secretary of the Navy. The Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary of Agriculture. The Secretary of Commerce. The Secretary of Labor. The Acting Director of the Budget. Col. Louis McH. Howe, Secretary to the President, The White House. Logos Wood Robert, Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, The May- ower. Chester C. Davis, Administrator of Agricultural Adjustment, 6308 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Harry L. Hopkins, Administrator of Federal Emergency Relief, The Kennedy- Warren. Joseph B. Eastman, Federal Coordinator of Transportation, 2266 Cathedral Avenue. W. I. Myers, Governor of the Farm Credit Administration, The Westchester Apartments. Jesse H. Jones, Chairman of the Board of the Reconstruction Finance Corpo- ration, The Mayflower. John H. Fahey, Chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, The Shore- h am. Arthur E. Morgan, Chairman of the Board of the Tennessee Valley Authority, Norris, Tenn. Ro Fechner, Director of Emergency Conservation Work, The Burlington otel. Ewin L. Davis, Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. Judge Franklin Chase Hoyt, Chairman, Federal Alcohol Administration, 2342 Massachusetts Avenue. Stewart McDonald, Federal Housing Administrator, Carlton Hotel. , President, Export-Import Banks of Washington, D. C. Leo i Crowle: Chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Mayflower otel. Frank R. McNinch, Chairman, Federal Power Commission, 408 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Anning S. Prall, Chairman, Federal Communications Commission, The Shore- ham. Joseph P. Kennedy, Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission, Marwood, Rockville, Md. Independent Offices and Establishments 375 Marriner S. Eccles, Governor, Federal Reserve Board, 3010 Cleveland Avenue. Lyle T. Alverson, Acting Executive Director. Laurence J. Martin, Acting Administrator, National Recovery Administration. Roxio G. Tugwell, Administrator, Resettlement Administration, 1731 Hoban oad. Morris L. Cooke, Administrator, Rural Electrification, The Hay-Adams. Walton H. Hamilton, Adviser on Consumers’ Problems. Stuart A. Rice, Acting Chairman, Central Statistical Board, 4817 Twenty-fifth Street, North, Cherrydale, Va. Bos M. Tate, Chairman, Interstate Commerce Commission, 3221 Macomb treet. ¥ John G. Winant, Chairman, Social Security Board. Private Secretary to the Executive Director.—William F. Cronin, Calverton Apart- ments. Admanistrative assistant and general counsel.—Fred A. Ironside, Jr., 107 Glebe Road, Ballston, Va. Executive assistant.—Eugene S. Leggett, 3024 Macomb Street. Chief clerk.—Elizabeth M. Presley, 1900 F Street. UNITED STATES INFORMATION SERVICE Section of National Emergency Council (1423 F Street. Phones, DIstrict 4030 and 2370) Chief —Harriet M. Root, 1900 H Street. COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (1825 H Street. Phone, DIstrict 4911) President.—Lynn P. Talley, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. First vice president.—Oscar Johnston, Scott, Miss. Second vice president.—J. E. Wells, Jr., 1704 Kalmia Road. Treasurer.—G. E. Rathell, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant treasurer.—Guy G. Chase, 1824 Belmont Road. Secretary and general counsel.—John D. Goodloe, 3725 S Street. Assistant secretary.—Samuel H. Sabin, 2122 California Street. Directors.—Henry A. Wallace, Wardman Park Hotel; W. I. Myers, Westchester Apartments; J. E. Wells, Jr., 1704 Kalmia Road; Stanley Reed, Mayflower Hotel; Lynn P. Talley, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue; E. B. Schwulst, 2707 Thirty-fourth Place; Oscar Johnston, Scott, Miss.; Ward M. Buckles, 4707 Lg Avenue; Chester C. Davis, 6308 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy ase, : SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (1778 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, District 3633) Commassioners: Chatrman.—James M. Landis, Braddock, No. 2, Alexandria, Va. George C. Mathews, 2938 Macomb Street. Robert E. Healy, 3031 Sedgwick Place. J. D. Ross, Carlton Hotel. Administrative coordinator.—Joseph R. Sheehan, Wardman Park Hotel. Director of research diviston.—Paul P. Gourrich, Westchester Apartments. Economic adviser to Commission.— Kemper Simpson, 1837 M Street. Chief of special studies.—Willis J. Ballinger, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Director of employment research.—Ward Perrott, Rock Spring Drive, Country Club Hills, Clarendon, Va. : Supervisor of study on protective and reorganization committees.— William O. Douglas, 286 Livingston Street, New Haven, Conn. Supervisor of information research.—Edwin A. Sheridan, 1405 Russel Road, Alexandria, Va. Supervisor of regional administration.—H. Bartlett Benedict, 3611 Lowell Street. Chaef, public utilities finance section.—W. C. Gilman, 1320 Montague Street. Assistant chief, public utilities finance section.— William M. Hickey, 8 Hickory Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 376 Congressional Directory GENERAL COUNSEL'S OFFICE General counsel.—John J. Burns, 3238 R Street. Assistant general counsels.—Allen E. Throop, 800 Washington Avenue, Aurora Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Harold H. Neff, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue; Stuart Guthrie, 3238 R Street. REGISTRATION DIVISION Director—Baldwin B. Bane, 1739 N Street. Assistant directors.—Ernest W. Ramspeck, 3446 Connecticut Avenue; Robert E. McKellar, 1616 Sixteenth Street; Carman G. Blough, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. TRADING AND EXCHANGE DIVISION Director.—David Saperstein, 5 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant director.—¥rank J. Meehan, Mayflower Hotel. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Secretary.— Francis P. Brassor, 4608 Nottingham Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Budget and accounting, chief —William F. Murphy, 1402 L Street. Docket, mail and files, chief. —Edward L. Payne, 411 Oglethorpe Street. Service, chief.—Hastings P. Avery, 1543 Forty-fourth Street. Stenographic, chief—Rosemary R. C. Logsdon, 1418 M Street. Librarian.— Lucile Donovan, 1801 K Street. FOREIGN-TRADE ZONES BOARD (Room 6847, Commerce Building. Phone, District 2200, Branch 2348) Chairman.— Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury. George H. Dern, Secretary of War. Executive secretary.— Thomas E. Lyons, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES (The National Archives Building. Phone, DIstrict 0525) Archivist of the United States.—R. D. W. Connor, Wardman Park Hotel. Seem to the Archivist—Marjory B. Terrell, Gordon Hotel, 916 Sixteenth treet. Director of Archival Service.—Dorsey W. Hyde, Jr., 3406 O Street. Director of publications.—Solon J. Buck, 5316 Twenty-eighth Street. Administrative secretary.— Thad Page, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Executive officer—Collas G. Harris, 1707 Twenty-first Street. Assistant administrative secretary.—James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street. Assistant director of archival service—Marcus W. Price, 2235 Q Street. Chef, division of accessions.— Thomas M. Owen, Jr., 3133 Oliver Street. Chief, division of repair and preservation.—Arthur E. Kimberly, 3342 Mount Pleasant Street. Chief, division of classification.—Roscoe R. Hill, 4929 Butterworth Place. Chief, division of cataloging.—John R. Russell, The Racquet Club, 1135 Six- teenth Street. Chief, division of purchase and supply.—Frank P. Wilson, 25 Glendale Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Chaef, division of personnel and pay roll.—Allen F. Jones, 822 Delafield Place. Chief, division of photographic reproduction and research.—Vernon D. Tate, Maryland Courts, Ninth and E Streets NE. Chief, division of reference.—Nelson Vance Russell, 4702 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, division of research.—Percy S. Flippin, 6225 Thirtieth Street. Chief, division of motion pictures and sound recordings.—John G. Bradley, 4808 Seventh Street. Dererjor, division of the Federal Register.—Bernard R. Kennedy, 3901 Connecticut venue. Independent Offices and Establishments 377 NATIONAL RESOURCES COMMITTEE (Interior Building. Phone, DIstrict 1820) Chairman.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, 4880 Glenbrook Road, Spring Valley. Members.—Frederic A. Delano, vice chairman, 2244 S Street. George H. Dern, Secretary of War, 3301 Rittenhouse Street. Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, Wardman Park Hotel. Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce, 3001 Woodland Drive. Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, 1712 G Street. Hoy L. Hopkins, Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, The Kennedy- arren. Dr. C. E. Merriam, of Chicago, 111. Dr. Wesley C. Mitchell, of New York City. Advisory committee.—Frederic A. Delano, vice chairman of the committee and chairman of the advisory committee. Dr. Charles E. Merriam. Dr. Wesley C. Mitchell. Executive officer.—Charles W. Eliot, 2d, 2501 Foxhall Road. Assistant executive officer—Harold Merrill, 5710 Broad Branch Road. Administrative assistant.—G. C. Dickens, 3427 Thirteenth Street. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON SECOND EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON, D. C. (910 Seventeenth Street. Phone, NAtional 6840) President.—[Vacant.] Vice presidents—Wayne C. Taylor, 5101 Tilden Street; Charles E. Stuart, The Kennedy-Warren, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. General counsel and secretary.— Warren Lee Pierson, 2907 N Street. Treasurer.— Lynn P. Talley, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant treasurer.—David B. Griffin, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Board of trustees: Chairman.—R. Walton Moore, Assistant Secretary of State, Fairfax, Va. Members: Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce, 3001 Woodland Drive. R. Walton Moore, Assistant Secretary of State, Fairfax, Va. , President of Export-Import Banks. James B. Alley, General Counsel, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1530 Thirtieth Street. Thomas J. Coolidge, Under Secretary of the Treasury, 3263 N Street. Lynn P. Talley, assistant to the directors, Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Chester C. Davis, Administrator, Agricultural Adjustment Administration, 6308 Connecticut Avenue. Robert F. Kelley, Chief of the Division of Eastern European Affairs, Depart- ment of State, 2200 Nineteenth Street. Harold H. Neff, Assistant General Counsel, Securities and Exchange Com- mission, Alban Towers, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. *Ernest G. Draper, Assistant Secretary of Commerce, Shoreham Hotel. *Wayne C. Taylor, Vice President, Export-Import Bank, 5101 Tilden Street. ALLEY DWELLING AUTHORITY FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (Room 4120, New Post Office Building. Phone, DIstrict 5360, Branches 680 and 681) Chairman.— Melvin C. Hazen, president of the Board of Commissioners, District of Columbia. Arno B. Cammerer, executive officer, National Capital Park and Planning Commission. 22 Clas, Director of Housing, Federal Emergency Administration of Public orks. Executive officer—John Ihlder, 2811 P Street. Administrative assistant.—James Ring, 1615 Kenyon Street. *Trustee of Export-Import Bank only. 378 Congressional Directory FEDERAL PRISON INDUSTRIES, INC. (Department of Justice Building) (Corporation authorized by Act of Congress, approved June 23, 1934, and created by Executive Order No. 6917 of Dec. 11, 1934) Officers and directors: President.—Sanford Bates, Director, Bureau of Prisons, United States De- partment of Justice, Washington, D.C Vice president.—John B Miller, National Cooperative Council, 1731 I Street, Washington, D. C. Dr. ML. Brittain, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Sam A. Lewisohn, 61 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Thomas A. Rickert, United Garment Workers of America, Bible House, New York, N. Y. Commissioner of Prison Industries.—James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.—Ralph J. LaVallee, 314 Rittenhouse Street, Washington, D. C. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (1010 ¥exmont Avenue. Phone, NAtional 9716) Chairman.—J. Warren Madden, 2145 G Street. Members.—Edwin S. Smith, Alexandria, Va.; John M. Carmody, 2101 Connect- icut Avenue. General counsel.—Charles Fahy, 3816 Military Road. Secretary.—Benedict Wolf, Woodley Park Towers. Assistant secretary.— Mrs. B. M. Stern, 3344 P Street. PUERTO RICO RECONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATION (Munsey Trust Building, 1329 E Street. Phone, NAtional 2082) Admanistrator—Ernest H. Gruening, The Highlands Apartment. Assistants to the Administrator—Robert B. Watson, 1719 H Street; Harry L. Hall, Argonne Apartments. Dzrector of finance.—E. E. Glover, 2922 First Road North, Clarendon, Va. Assistant directors of finance—F. EK. Cristofane, 1628 Columbia Road; Ww. 7. Banse, Westchester Apartments. General counsel.—F. M. Shea, 1526 Eighteenth Street. Assistant general counsel.—Alexander B. Hawes, 1640 Twenty-first Street. RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, DIstrict 5787) Chairman.— Murray W. Latimer, 15 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. (Private secretary [vacant].) James A. Dailey. (Private secretary [vacant].) Lee M. Eddy, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue, apartment 609. (Private secretary, Kathryn B. Wells, 1301 Massachusetts Avenue, apartment 404.) Secretary.—[Vacant.] Director, bureau of claims and investigations.—[Vacant.] Director, bureau of accounts and deposits.—[Vacant.] Assistant actuary.—Joseph B. Glenn, 1111 H Street. Administrative assistant.— Alfred P. Johnson, 314 Upshur Street (phone, ADams 4687-W). Independent Offices and Establishments 379 FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION (New Post Office Building, Pennsylvania Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phone, DIstrict 1654) COMMISSIONERS Chairman.— Anning S. Prall, The Shoreham Hotel. Vice chairman.—Irvin Stewart, Corcoran Apartments. Eugene O. Sykes, 3202 Cleveland Avenue. Thad H. Brown, 1633 Van Buren Street. Paul A. Walker, 1724 Lamont Street. Norman 8S. Case, 1661 Crescent Place. George Henry Payne, Metropolitan Club. Secretary.—Herbert L. Pettey, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. LAW DEPARTMENT General counsel.—Hampson Gary, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Assistant general counsel, Radio-Broadcast.—George B. Porter, 104 West Under- wood Street. Assistant general counsel, Telegraph.—Carl F. Arnold, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant general counsel, Telephone.—Frank Roberson, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Chief engineer.—T. A. M. Craven, 1524 Forty-fourth Street. : Broadcast section, chief. —A. D. Ring, 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. Telegraph section, chief—E. K. Jett, 6305 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Telephone section, chief.—[Vacancy.] Field section, chief.—W. D. Terrell, 909 Barton Avenue, Cherrydale, Va. International section, chief.—Gerald C. Gross, Oakcrest, Alexandria, Va. ACCOUNTING, STATISTICAL, AND TARIFF DEPARTMENT Chief accountant.—W. J. Norfleet, 506 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md. hate chief. accountant and executive officer.—Riley A. Gwynn, 4228 Ellicott treet. Assistant chief accountant.—Henry M. Long, 829 Quincy Street. Assistant chief accountant.—[Vacancy.] DIRECTORS Broadcast division.—John F. Killeen, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. Telegraph division.—Robert T. Bartley, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Telephone division.—A. G. Patterson, The Westchester Apartments. EXAMINING DEPARTMENT Chief examiner.—Davis G. Arnold, 1661 Crescent Place. Acting assistant chief examiner.—P. F. Seward, 4021 Illinois Avenue. ADMINISTRATIVE Assistant secretary.—John B. Reynolds, 5436 Thirty-second Street. Press section, chief—G. F. Wisner, 601 Indian Spring Drive, Silver Spring, Md. License section, chief.—W. P. Massing, 6233 Thirty-first Street. Audits and accounts, chief.—L. A. Corridon, 1909 Nineteenth Street. Docket section, chief —Mary Belle Anthony, 815 Eighteenth Street. Mail and files, chief —XKelley Griffith, 233 West Howell Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Supplies, chief—Theodore Gates, 608 Ingraham Street. SOCIAL SECURITY BOARD (Labor Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 6450) Chairman.—John G. Winant, 1411 Thirty-fourth Street. Arthur J. Altmeyer, 3250 Cleveland Avenue. Vincent M. Miles, 3601 Idaho Avenue. Executive director—Frank Bane, Powhatan Hotel. Coordinator.— Henry P. Seidemann, Ontario Apartments. Chief counsel.—Thomas H. Eliot, 1532 Thirty-third Street. - JUDICIARY 381 JUDICIARY SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES (1 First Street NE. Phone, NAtional 5321-40) 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, Penrsylvania 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 383 hit bi i i { | j 384 Congressional Directory in 1881; LL. D., De Pauw, 1911, Cincinnati and Yale, 1927, Wyoming, 1933; Charleston, 1935; practiced his profession at Marion, Ind., until 1884, and sub- sequently at Cheyenne, Wyo., where 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 Har- rison in 1889, and by election was continued as chief justice on the admission of the Territory as a State in 1890, but soon resigned to resume private prac- tice; 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 Depart- ment of the Interior, and served in that position until 1903; was professor of equity pleading and practice 1897-1903, 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 there until 1872; then went to Kurope, where he remained until 1875; attended Annen Real Schule in Dresden, Saxony, 1873-75; attended Harvard Law School 1875-78. 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 nominated an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Wilson on Jennozy Re 1916, was confirmed by the Senate June 1, 1916, and took his seat une 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 was born March 17, 1866, in the township 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 385 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; Dartmouth, University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania, 1934; honorary D. C. L., Syracuse University, 1928; member International Academy of Comparative Law since 1923; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1933; trustee of Amherst College and of Folger Shakespeare Library, 1933; 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 lec- tured on law in Columbia Law School 1899-1902, 1910-1923; adjunct professor of law 1903; severed his university connection 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 & Crom- well, 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 West Vincent Township, Chester County, Pa., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Phila- delphia, Pa., May 2, 1875; graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, A. B., with honors, 1895; member Phi Beta Kappa honorary fraternity; LL. B., summa cum laude, 1898; married Elizabeth Caldwell Rogers, June 15, 1904; one child, Elizabeth Rogers Roberts; began practice at Philadelphia in 1898, and continu- ously practiced there until June, 1930; first assistant district attorney of Phila- delphia County, 1901-1904; fellow, instructor, assistant professor, and professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, 1898-1918; honorary degree LL. D., Beaver College (1925), Ursinus College (1926), University of Pennsylvania (1929), Lafayette College (1930), Pennsylvania Military College (1931), Dickin- son College (1931), Trinity College (1931), Williams College (1933), Princeton University (1934); member board of directors of city trusts of the city of Phila- delphia, 1920-1930; trustee Jefferson Medical College, 1921-1926; director, Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, Franklin Fire Insurance Co. of Philadelphia, Real Estate-Land Title and Trust Co. of Philadelphia, Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania, and American Telephone and Telegraph Co.; member American Philosophical Society; member Council of American Law Institute; 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 President 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, 30063°—74-2—1sT ED—— 25 386 Congressional Dzrectory 1928; St. Lawrence University, Williams College, Princeton University, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, 1932; University of Chicago, Brown University, 1933; L. H. D., Yeshiva College, 1935; Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; 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 yeni lectures), 1928; Law and Literature, and other essays and addresses, RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the } designates those whose daughters accompany them] *Mr. Chief Justice Hughes, 2223 R Street. Mr. Justice Van Devanter, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Mr. Justice McReynolds, 2400 Sixteenth Street. *Mr. Justice Brandeis, 2205 California Street. *t Mr. Justice Sutherland, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. *+ Mr. Justice Butler, 1229 Nineteenth Street. *Mr. Justice Stone, 2340 Wyoming Avenue. *t 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, 3122 Q Street. Reporter.—Ernest Knaebel, 3707 Morrison Street. CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS OF THE UNITED STATES First judicial circuit.—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, Maine; James M. Morton, Jr., New Bedford, Mass. Second judicial circust.—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 circust.—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.— Rufus E. Foster, New Orleans, La.; Samuel H. Sibley, New Orleans, La.; Joseph C. Hutcheson, Jr., Houston, Tex. [Vacancy.] 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.; Julian W. Mack, New York, N. Y.; Charles C, Simons, Detroit. Mich. ; Florence E. Allen, Cleveland, Ohio. Judiciary 387 Seventh judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Van Devanter. Districts of Indiana, northern Illinois, eastern Illinois, southern Illinois, eastern Wisconsin, and western Wisconsin. Circuit judges.—Samuel Alschuler, Chicago, Ill.; Evan A. Evans, Madison, Wis.; William M. Sparks, Indianapolis, Ind.; Louis Fitzhenry, Peoria, Ill. Eighth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Butler. Districts of Minnesota, northern Iowa, southern Iowa, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern Arkansas, western Arkansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Circuit judges.—XKimbrough Stone, Kansas City, Mo.; John B. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Archibald K. Gardner, Huron, S. Dak.; Joseph W. Wood- rough, Omaha, Nebr.; Charles B. Faris, St. Louis, Mo. Ninth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Sutherland. Districts of northern California, southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, eastern Washington, foie Washington, Idaho, Arizona, and Territories of Alaska and awalii. Circuit judges.—Curtis D. Wilbur, San Francisco, Calif.; Francis A. Gar- recht, Spokane, Wash.; William Denman, San Francisco, Calif.; Clifton Mathew, Phoenix, Ariz.; and Bert Haney, Portland, Oreg. 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 L. Phillips, Denver, go Geo. T. McDermott, Topeka, Kans.; Sam G. Bratton, Albuquerque, . Mex. UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA : (Court of Appeals Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, NA tional 4624) GEORGE EWING MARTIN, chief justice, was born in Lancaster, Ohio, November 23, 1857; was graduated from Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio, - with degree of A. B., in 1877, LL. D. (honorary), 1917; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1883, and commenced practice in Lancaster, Ohio; served as common pleas judge seventh judicial district, Ohio, 1904-11; in 1911 was appointed associate judge United States Court of Customs Appeals by President Taft, and in 1923 was appointed presiding judge by President Harding; in 1924 was appointed chief justice United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Coolidge. CHARLES H. ROBB, associate justice, was admitted to the bar in Vermont in 1892; served as solicitor for Post Office Department during investigations of 1903-4; Assistant Attorney General of the United States 1904-6; has been an associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia since 1906. JOSIAH ALEXANDER VAN ORSDEL, associate justice, was born in Lawrence County, Pa., November 17, 1860; was graduated from Westminster College in 1885; studied. law in New Castle, Pa., was admitted to the bar in Nebraska, and commenced practice in Cheyenne, Wyo., in 1891; was married in that year to Miss Kate Barnum, of Blue Springs, Nebr.; elected prosecuting attorney of Laramie County, Wyo., in 1892; elected to the Legislature of Wyo- ming in 1894; appointed by the Governor in 1895 as chairman of a commission to compile, revise, and codify the laws of Wyoming, the work of this commission resulting in the Revised Statutes of Wyoming in 1899; served as attorney general of Wyoming 1897-1905, when he was appointed by the Governor to fill a vacancy on the supreme court of the State caused by the death of Chief Justice Knight; was appointed by the American Bar Association delegate to the International Congress of Lawyers and Jurists held in St. Louis, Mo., in 1903; appointed by President Roosevelt as Assistant Attorney General of the United States in 1906; appointed to his present position and entered upon the duties of his office Decem- ber 13, 1907; the honorary degree of LL. D. was conferred by Grove City College in 1908 and by Westminster College in 1912. 388 Congressional Directory D. LAWRENCE GRONER, associate justice, was born in Norfolk, Va., September 6, 1873; educated at Washington and Lee University and the Univer- sity of Virginia; commenced practice in Norfolk, Va., in 1894; appointed United States attorney, eastern district of Virginia, 1910; member State council of defense of Virginia, 1917; appointed judge of the United States District Court, eastern district of Virginia, May, 1921; appointed judge of the United States Court of Appeals, Washington, February, 1931; Phi Beta Kappa, University of Virginia; LL. D. Washington and Lee University, National University. HAROLD M. STEPHENS, associate justice; born at Crete, Nebr., March 6, 1886, son of Frank B. and Lunette (Stebbins) Stephens; educated at University of Utah, 1904-1906; Cornell University, 1907-1909; Harvard Law School, 1910- 1913, 1931-1933; University of California, 1930-1931; degrees—A. B., Cornell, 1909; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1913; S.J. D., Harvard Law School, 1932; married Virginia Adelle Bush, of Salt Lake City, Utah, August 6, 1912; admitted to Utah bar 1912, and began practice in Salt Lake City; assistant prosecuting attorney, Salt Lake County, 1915-1917; judge third judicial district court, Utah, 1917-1921; member Cheney, Jensen, Holman and Stephens, Salt Lake City, 1921-1928; Martineau and Stephens, Los Angeles, 1928; member grievance com- mittee Utah State Bar Association, 1922-1923; member code commission to revise Utah laws, 1928; acting associate director American College of Surgeons, 1921; president Salt Lake City Community Clinic and Dispensary, 1923-1928; author Administrative Tribunals and the Rules of Evidence; appointed by Presi- dent Roosevelt Assistant Attorney General, United States Department of Justice, June 14, 1933; The Assistant to the Attorney General, July 5, 1935; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Roosevelt July 23, 1935; confirmed by the Senate July 24, 1935; entered upon the duties of that office October 7, 1935. RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { those whose daughters accompany them] *Chief Justice George E. Martin, 1661 Crescent Place. *t Associate Justice Charles H. Robb, The Rochambeau. * Associate Justice Josiah A. Van Orsdel, Hotel Roosevelt. *11 Associate Justice D. Lawrence Groner, 2600 Thirty-first Street. *Associate Justice Harold M. Stephens, Wardman Park Hotel. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Clerk.—Henry W. Hodges, 2208 Q Street. Deputy clerk.—Moncure Burke, 3009 Whitehaven Street (formerly W Street). 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 public 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. OSCAR E. BLAND, judge, of Linton, Ind., was 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, was 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. Judicrary 389 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 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; resigned September 30, 1935; honorary degree of LL.D., George Washington University, Temple University, and Northern Ohio University; 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 those whose daughters accompany them] *t Presiding Judge William J. Graham, 7114 Alaska Avenue. *tJudge Oscar E. Bland, 2950 Macomb Street. *tJudge Charles S. Hatfield, 4335 Cathedral Avenue: *Judge 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, Continental Hotel. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES (Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street. Phone, DIstrict 0642) FENTON WHITLOCK BOOTH, chief justice; born in Marshall, I1l., 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, Illinois; admitted to the bar in 1892 and practiced at Marshall, Ill., as a member of the firm of Golden, Scholfield & Booth; appointed judge, Court of Claims, March 17, 1905, and chief justice, April 23, 1928. WILLIAM RAYMOND GREEN, judge, of Council Bluffs, Towa, 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. Author of The Theory and Practice of Modern Taxation, Tariff Facts and Falla- cies, and articles on public and governmental matters in Saturday Evening Post and other publications. 390 Congressional Directory 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; appointed special attorney, Treasury Department, 1921; 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; elected chairman of the Board, April 1927; reelected chairman, April 1929; appointed judge of the Court of Claims by President Hoover, November 6, 1929. THOMAS S. WILLIAMS, judge, Louisville, Ill.; born February 14, 1872; admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Illinois, November 1896; member of the Illinois Legislature 1898-1900; member of Congress from the Twenty-fourth District of Illinois, March 1915 to November 1929; appointed member of the United States Court of Claims by President Hoover, November 1, 1929; is married and has three children—Harold S., practicing attorney at Taylorville, Ill.; Ruth (Mrs. Paul Hansen), Washington, D. C.; and Alice (Mrs. Oscar M. Browne, Jr.), Bremerton, Wash. 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 Sixty-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] *1 Chief Justice Fenton W. Booth, 1752 Lamont Street. tJudge William R. Green, 2400 Sixteenth Street. *Judge Benjamin H. Littleton, The Northumberland. *tJudge Thomas S. Williams, 3414 Garfield Street. Judge Richard S. Whaley, The Shoreham. RETIRED Chief Justice Edward K. Campbell, The Dresden. Judge Samuel Jordan Graham, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. 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. COMMISSIONERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS Israel M. Foster, The Ontario. Hayner H. Gordon, 1755 Lamont Street. Ewart W. Hobbs, box 5414, Seat Pleasant, Md. Richard H. Akers, Garrett Park, Md. C. William Ramseyer, 3505 Davis Street. Clyde A. Norton, 512 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. Judiciary 391 UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT (201 Varick Street, New York City. Phone, Walker 5-9030) CHARLES P. McCLELLAND, presiding judge; born in Scotland Decem- ber 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, Iowa, 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; author “The U. S. Customs Court’’, American Bar Association Journal, June and July, 1933, and ‘‘Judicial Review in Customs Taxation”, Lawyer and Banker and Central Law Journal, September, October, November, and December 1933. WILLIAM J. TILSON, 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, qualifying March 17, 1928. GENEVIEVE R. CLINE, judge; born in Warren, Ohio; educated at Warren High School, Spencerian Commercial College, Cleveland, Oberlin College; LL. B., Baldwin Wallace College. 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, and entered upon the duties of that office October 6, 1930; 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; district 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, 1915-32; 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. 392 Congressional Directory WILLIAM J. KEEFE, judge; born in Clinton, Iowa, November 17, 1873; State University of Iowa, LL. B., 1894; admitted to Iowa bar and Federal courts in 1895, and practiced law in Clinton, Iowa, 1895-1933; county attorney of Clinton County three terms; appointed judge United States Customs Court by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT Clerk.—John W. Dale. Marshal and deputy clerk.— William H. Tietgen. Deputy marshal.—Frank P. Miller. SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (United States Courthouse. Phone, DIstrict 2854; clerk’s office, DIstrict 2854) Chief Justice.—Alfred A. Wheat, Mayflower Hotel. Associate justices: Jennings Bailey, 4713 Colorado Avenue. 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.) Gr E. Cunningham, 2704 Cathedral Avenue. (Office phone, DIstrict 2854. Chief probation officer—Joseph Y. Reeves, 5607 Thirty-ninth Street. (Office phone, DIstrict 2854.) UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE (United States Courthouse. Phone, District 2854) United States marshal.—John B. Colpoys, 2963 McKinley Street. Chief deputy marshal.—Thomas E. Ott, Presidential Apartment, 1026 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 2537.) 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.— Leslie C. Garnett, 21 East Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary to the United States attorney, District of Columbia.—Eloise Reese, 230 North St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant United States attorneys, District of Columbia: David A. Pine, 1625 Nicholson Street. Harry L. Underwood, 2800 Ontario Road. John W. Fihelly, 1737 H Street. George E. McNeil, 1438 Iris Street. David A. Hart, 3708 Jenifer Street. Karl Kindleberger, 3721 Windom Place. John J. Wilson, 2737 Devonshire Place. Charles B. Murray, 5417 Kansas Avenue. Isadore I. Goldstein, 973 Randolph Street. Cecil R. Heflin, 2100 Nineteenth Street. Henry A. Schweinhaut, 2229 Bancroft Place. Samuel F. Beach, 1836 Thirty-fourth Street. Roger Robb, 112 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Louis L.. Whitestone, 205 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Clinton D. Vernon, 2067 Park Road. Allen J. Krouse, 606 Quintana Place. William Hitz, Jr., Dresden Apartments. Eugene Carusi, 1755 Eighteenth Street. Arthur B. Caldwell, The Corcoran Court Apartments. Arthur J. McLaughlin, 1515 Fifteenth Street. “ee Judiciary 393 Special assistants to the Untied States Attorney.—Walter M. Shea, 1422 Van Buren Street; Matthew C. Cary, 4418 Fourteenth Street NE.; Richard R. Horner, 1804 Second Street. Chief clerk.—John C. Conliff, Jr., The Westchester Apartments. Clerks.—Margaret D. Weber, 502 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Md.; Elizabeth R. Magruder, 1605 N. Danville Street, Lyon Village, Va.; W. R. Stitely, 1360 Columbia Road; Ethel Braswell, 1730 Sixteenth Street; John J. O’Leary, 33 S Street; Charles J. Crogan, 733 Twenty-fifth Street, South, Alexandria, Va.; Paul C. Albus, 1524 Allison Street; Margaret V. Carr, 4305 Thirteenth Street NE.; Mamie C. Copp, 1681 Thirty-fifth Street; Stephen P. Haycock, 1824 Belmont Road; John B. Nesbitt, 1601 Argonne Street; Albert Goldstein, 2013 New Hampshire Avenue; Euphrosine A. Rippley, 1747 Eighteenth Street; Orrice L. Murdock, 2544 Seventeenth Street. Members of Metropolitan Police Department assigned to United States attorney’s (Fe los S. Weber, 504 E Street; Allan B. Baker, 17 Massachusetts venue. Messengers.—Luther Ross, Vista, Md.; Hugh W. Harvey, 627 Harvard Street; Howard V. Wilkes, 1205 Columbia Road. MUNICIPAL COURT (467 C Street. Phone, NAtional 6000) Presiding judge.—George C. Aukam, 1821 Irving Street. Judges: Robert E. Mattingly, 5411 Forty-second Street. Ellen K. Raedy, 1407 Delafield Place. (Phone, GEorgia 8560.) Armond W. Scott, 1922 Eleventh Street. (Phone, NOrth 2519.) Nathan Cayton, 2948 Macomb Street. Clerk.—Blanche Neff, 6407 Third Street. POLICE COURT (Sixth and D Streets. Phones, NAtional 6990 and 6991) Presiding judge.—Gus. A. Schuldt, 3300 Sixteenth Street. Judges: John P. McMahon, 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 olerk.— William A. Norgren, Riverdale, Md. JUVENILE COURT (472 Indiana Avenue. Phones, District 5739 and NA tional 6000) Judge.—Fay L. Bentley, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Clerk.—Augusta Spaulding, 1423 Madison Street. . Deputy clerk.— Virginia Breckinridge, apartment 202, 2551 Seventeenth Street. Director of social work.—Louise McGuire, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT (United States Courthouse. Phone, NAtional 2840) Register and clerk.—Theodore Cogswell, 1004 New Hampshire Avenue. es Deputies.— Victor S. Mersch, 6806 Forty-fourth Street; Melvin J. Marques, 430 Turner Street, Chevy Chase, Md. RECORDER OF DEEDS (Century Building, 412 Fifth Street. Phone, District 0672) Recorder of deeds.— William J. Thompkins, 1321 R Street. Deputy recorder of deeds.— Margaret M. Killeen, 2726 Connecticut Avenue. Second deputy recorder of deeds.—Rignald B. Grady, 4808 Brandywine Street. Secretary.— Romeo W. Horad, 1736 Vermont Avenue. Chief clerk.—Catherine F. Downing, 1155 Fourth Street NE. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 395 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 percent 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 out 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. (8S. Doc. 247, 64th Cong., 1st sess., p. 23.) This was a considerable sum as compared with the average annual income of the 397 398 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., Doc. 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 L’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 ousting to be in force in the parts of the District ceded by the respective States. I 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 re 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 distinct 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 ~~ - ar - District Government 395 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 elected by the people. The District had a Delegate in Congress until March 4, 1875. 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 So ument 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 detailed 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 fort 15 Jone 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 400 Congressional Dzrectory 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 1936 $5,700,000 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 providing 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. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 6000) Commissioner.— Melvin C. Hazen (president of the board), 1829 Sixteenth Street. Private secretary.— Ralph A. Norton, 1416 Chapin Street. Commissioner.—George E. Allen, Wardman Park Hotel. Private secretary.— Marion V. Andrews, 2227 Twentieth Street. Engineer Commissioner—Col. Dan I. Sultan, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 2036 O Street. Private secretary.—Irving Bryan, 811 Quincey Street. Assistants to Engineer Commissioner.— Capt. Howard F. Clark, 3394 Stuyvesant Place; Capt. Hoel S. Bishop, Jr., 2905 Twenty-ninth Street; Capt. Robert E. York, 2830 Twenty-seventh Street. Secretary to the board.—Roland M. Brennan, 1711 Otis Street NE. DISTRICT OFFICERS 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, 3359 Quesada Street; L.S. Johnson, 6111 Utah Avenue; Daniel H. Edwards, 1446 Parkwood Place; Lloyd F. Gaines, 5000 Thirteenth Street; H. D. Scantlin, 29 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Board of assistant assessors of personal property.— Augustus Willige, 3815 Upton Street; Edward B. Fletcher, 3120 Thirty-eighth Street; Herbert L. Davis, 1859 Newton Street. Special assessment clerk.—Benjamin F. Adams, 3717 Morrison Street. Awuditor.—Daniel J. Donovan, 2924 Cortland Place. Principal assistant auditor.— Arthur R. Pilkerton, 5231 Chevy Chase Parkway. Second assistant auditor.—Simon McKimmie, 903 Allison Street. - id assistant auditor.— William G. Wilding, 46 Franklin Street NE. oards: Accountancy.— Wayne Kendrick, chairman, Rust Building; C. Vaughan Darby, secretary, Potomac Electric Power Building, Room 912; William Gordon Buchanan, treasurer, Tower Building. Alcoholic beverage control—George W. Offutt, chairman, 3433 Wisconsin Avenue; Agnes K. Mason, member, 1738 M Street; Isaac Gans, member, Towa Apartments, Thirteenth and O Streets; Maj. Jerome E. Johnstone, chief inspector, 1700 T Street; William P. Meredith, executive secretary, 2446 Kalorama Road; Margaret H. Davis, confidential secretary, 1829 Six- teenth Street. : 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. Boxing Commasston.— Kenneth N. Parkinson, Tower Building; Fred A. Buch- holz, 1411 Pennsylvania Avenue; Major and Superintendent of Police Ernest W. Brown. Dental examiners—Dr. Henry Osborne, president, Farragut Building, 1726 I Street; Dr. C. Willard Camalier, secretary, 1726 I Street. Education (Thirteenth and K Streets) .— Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, president, 5500 Thirty-third Street; Henry Gilligan, vice president, 2304 First Street; Charles B. Degges, secretary, Kennedy-Warren; 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 superin- tendent in charge of business affairs, 5829 Chevy Chase Parkway; assistant superintendents of schools: R. L. Haycock, 1606 Longfellow Street; Miss Jessie La Salle, 6304 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md.; Miss Bertie Backus, 5510 Nebraska Avenue; A. K. Savoy, 217 T Street; Dr. Howard H. Long, 1112 Girard Street. an veterinary medicine.—John R. Mohler, president, 1620 Hobart treet. 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.—Emily Kreb, president; Mrs. Bertha E. McAfee-Seering, secretary-treasurer, 1746 K Street. 30063°—74-2—1ST ED——26 401 402 Congressional Dzirectory Boards—Continued. i ar % 220 - Optometry.—Dr. Harry Roller, president, 1320 F Street; M. Luther Dicus, secretary, 1319 F Street. Parole.—Wilbur LaRoe, Jr., Investment Building; Dr. Emmett J. Scott, Howard University; Frank R. Jelleff, 2439 Wyoming Avenue; Hugh F. Rivers, secretary. Pharmacy.—Augustus C. Taylor, president, 1733 Upshur Street; W. T. Kerfoot, Jr., secretary, Seventh and I Streets. Plumbing.—Robert J. Barrett, prosdert, 14 Grant Circle; Samuel Tapp, sec- retary, 1516 Newton Street NE. Public Library (Eighth and XK Streets).—Theodore W. Noyes, president, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue; Wendell P. Stafford, vice president, 1661 Crescent Place; George F. Bowerman, librarian, 305-H Tilden Gardens; Clara W. Herbert, assistant librarian, 3407 Thirty-fourth Place; Helen L. Cavanagh, chief clerk and assistant to librarian, 2804 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Public welfare.—Frederick W. McReynolds, chairman; Elwood Street, director of public welfare, 1727 Hoban Road; Paul L. Kirby, assistant director of Dubie welfare; Miss A. Patricia Morss, chief child welfare division; Miss mma L. Davies, supervisor, division of home care for dependent children; Dr. R. F. Tobin, medical officer. Trustees, National Training School for Boys.—Claude D. Jones, superintendent. Unemployment compensation.—Commissioners of the District of Columbia, ex- officio members; Daniel J. Callahan, Woodward Building; John Locher, 916 G Street; executive officer, John A. Marshall, 3407 O Street. Collector of taxes.—C. M. Towers, 1626 Montague Street. Deputy collector of taxes.—S. B. Lyddane, 3100 Connecticut Avenue: Coroner.—Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, §22 Eleventh Street NE. 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; Thomas M. Rives, superintendent, jail; Arthur L. Petitt, superintendent, workhouse; W. L. Peak, superintendent, reformatory. Purchasing officer—M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Principal assistant purchasing officer.—Melville D. Lindsay, 6819 Fifth Street. Deputy purchasing officer.—J. T. Kennedy, 743 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Superintendents of— hildren’s Tuberculosis Sanatorium.—Dr. Daniel L. Finucane, Glenn Dale, Md. Home for Aged and Infirm.—Frank B. Haskell, Blue Plains. District Training School.—Dr. James Lewald, Laurel, Md. Industrial Home School (white) .—Earle W. Cassie, 2453 Wisconsin Avenue. Industrial Home School (colored). —Wendell P. Tucker, Blue Plains. Insurance.—John A. Marshall, 3407 O street. ; Deputies.—C. F. Creighton, 705 Houston Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Charles . Conner, Ashton, Md. Actuary.— Arthur O. Wise, 1312 Holly Street. License bureau.— Wade H. Coombs, 1341 Thirtieth Street. Municipal lodging house.—Henry A. Koch, 310 Third Street: National Training School for Girls.—Lottie R. Richardson. Playgrounds.—Sibyl Baker, 3100 Newark Street. Recewving Home for Children.—Grady H. Leonard, 816 Potomac Avenue SE. Temporary Home for Soldiers and Sailors.—T. A. Hudlow, 921 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Tr dercuinnts Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur Streets).—Dr. Joseph Winthrop eabody. Weights, measures, and markets.—George M. Roberts, 1816 Monroe Street: Veterinary surgeon.—D. E. Buckingham, 2115 Fourteenth Street. Zoning commission.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Archi- tect of the Capitol, and the Director of the National Park Service. Executive officer, Hugh P. Oram, District Building. CORPORATION COUNSEL’S OFFICE Corporation counsel.—E. Barrett Prettyman, 37 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase Md. (Secretary, Ruth N. Thompson, 1441 Spring Road.) Principal assistant corporation counsel.—Vernon E. West, 23 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant corporation counsel for public utility matters.—Hinman D. Folsom, 4607 Asbury Place. District Government 403 Assistant corporation counsels.— Walter L. Fowler, 1360 Mapleview Place SE.; Elwood H. Seal, 4842 Sixteenth Street; Edward W. Thomas, 3404 Garrison Street; William H. Wahly, 3031 Sedgwick Street; Chester H. Gray, 2707 Adams Mill Road; Rice Hooe, 2038 Thirty-seventh Street; T. Gillespie Walsh, 4312 Thirteenth Place NE.; Edward M. Curran, 1650 Harvard Street; Stanley DeNeale, 1507 Decatur Street; Mae Helm, 1327 Sixteenth Street; George Darrell Neilson, 1771 Massachusetts Avenue; Raymond Sparks, 4407 Klingle Street; Edward M. Welliver, 1667 Monroe Street; James W. Lauderdale, 1424 Webster Street. Chief clerk.—Adam A. Giebel, 3170 Eighteenth Street. Inspector of claims.—Edward S. Dawson, 1426 Monroe Street. ENGINEER DEPARTMENT Chief clerk.—G. W. Pearson, 2001 Lawrence Street NE. Assistant superintendent District Building.—E. P. Brooke, 1343 Thirtieth Street. Engineer in charge of D. C. repair shop.— William A. Draper, 325 A Street SE. Municipal architect.—Nathan C. Wyeth, 2915 Forty-fourth Street. 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, 6233 Utah Avenue. Superintendent trees and parking.—Clifford Lanham, 4210 Alabama Avenue SE. Surveyor—Edward A. Dent, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Director of inspection.—Hugh P. Oram, 3610 Quebec Street. Chief electrical inspector.—J. S. Zebley, 1115 Orren Street NE. Inspector of buildings.—John W. Oehmann, 1253 Lawrence Street NE. Inspector of plumbing.—Alfred R. McGonegal, 817 North Irving Street, Clarendon, Va. Inspector of steam boilers.—P. M. Greenlaw, 1616 Twenty-second Street SE. Director of sanitary engineering.—J. B. Gordon, 3241 R Street. Engineer of sewers.—A. D. Black, 1523 Twenty-second Street. Supervisor of city refuse—Thomas L. Costigan, Chatham Courts, 1707 Columbia 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. Chief clerk.—Edward Towers, 2921 Pennsylvania Avenue SE., apartment 204 FIRE DEPARTMENT Chief engineer—Charles E. Schrom, 1314 Maryland Avenue NE. Deputies.—John Carrington, 1526 East Capitol Street; Andrew C. Buscher, 3550 Warder Street. Battalion chief engineers.—Charles W. Gill, 332 Allison Street; C. A. Wells, 5220 Fifth Street; John B. Watt, 3620 Sixteenth Street; Joseph B. Simms, 3633 Van Ness Street; Thomas B. Stanton, 2201 K Street; Benjamin W. Weaver, 1308 Massachusetts Avenue SE.; Edward O’Connor, 1436 Meridian Street; Edward R. Pierce, 5605 Thirty-second Street; John R. Groves, 102 Eighth Street NE.; Logan L. Woolard, 919 E Street SE.; Albert S. Haight, 604 Fifth Street NE.; Stephen T. Porter, 1149 New Hampshire Avenue; Twy- man S. Jones, 818 Longfellow Street; Harry B. Barker, 4114 Garrison Sols George W. Smith, 1860 Columbia Road; John B. Lyon, 4313 Second treet. Fire marshal.—Calvin G. Lauber, 5509 Nebraska Avenue. Superintendent of machinery.—Otto E. Fearn, 821 Maryland Avenue NE. HEALTH DEPARTMENT Health officer—Dr. George C. Ruhland, 2708 Thirty-sixth Street. Assistant health officer.—Dr. Daniel L. Seckinger. 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 sanitary inspector.—J. Frank Butts, 3507 T Street. Chief food inspector.—Dr. Reid R. Ashworth, 3533 Hertford Place. 404 Congressional - Directory Health officer—Continued. Chief of bureau of vital statistics. ag oseph B. Irvine, 1426 M Street. 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. Chief medical and sanitary inspector of schools.—Dr. Joseph A. Murphy, 7 Observatory Circle. Director, child hygiene service.—Dr. Hugh J. Davis, 1841 Wyoming Avenue. Poundmaster.— Walter R. Smith, 7015 Ninth Street. METROPOLITAN POLICE Major and superintendent.—Ernest W. Brown, 2911 O 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, 1444 Monroe Street; Inspector William G. Stott, 529 Seventh Street SE.; Inspector W. E. Holmes, 910 Webster Street. First Police District. —Inspector E. J. Kelly, 1016 Sixteenth Street NW. Second Police District.—Inspector J. F. Beckett, 729 Kennedy Street. 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. F. Y. Williamson, 3619 Legation Street; Dr. J. A. Reed, 3309 Thirty-fifth Street; Dr. Virginius Dabney, 1633 Connecticut Avenue; Dr. W. Warren Sager, 4330 Klingle Street. Harbor master.—Lieut. W. H. Carlin, 417 Quincy Street. Women’s bureau.— Acting captain, Rhoda J. Milliken, 3315 N Street. PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION Commassioner.—Riley E. Elgen, chairman, 2022 Klingle Road. (Private secre- tary, Mrs. Naomi H. Hetzel, 815 Eighteenth Street, Apartment 306.) Commissioner.— Richmond B. Keech, vice chairman, 2746 Woodley Road. (Pri- vate secretary, Miss Sarah E. Wilson, 504 Oglethorpe Street.) Commassioner.—Col. Dan. I. Sultan, Corps of Engineers, U.S. A., 2036 O Street. People’s counsel.— William A. Roberts, 4440 Lowell Street. Executive secretary.—James L. Martin, 4502 Watkins Avenue, Bethesda, Md. General counsel.—E. Barrett Prettyman, 37 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant corporation counsel.—H. D. Folsom, 4607 Asbury Place. Chief accountant.—B. M. Bachman, 4429 Lowell Street. Chief engineer—Fred A. Sager, 3808 Kanawha Street. Inspector of gas and meters.—Elwin A. Potter, 4425 Yuma Street. Chief clerk.—E, J, Milligan, 717 Twenty-first Street. District Government 405 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 E. Shilling, 1226 Orren Street NE. Appointment clerk.— Larsen Swain, 3314 Eighteenth Street NE. Bookkeeper.—Edgar Church, 637 Franklin Street NE. Examiners of stations.—Charles F. Knockey, 4960 Brandywine Street; Arthur E. Dean, 501 Twelfth Street NE.; Albert C. Jeffries, 2012 Perry Street NE. Physician.— Aaron W. Martin, Beltsville, Md. Assistant postmaster—W. H. Haycock, 4300 Cathedral Avenue. Postal cashier.—J. W. Quick, 227 T Street NE. Assistant postal cashiers.—T. R. Talbert, 324 Emerson Street; George C. Bondurant, 1421 Locust Road. - Money-order cashier.—Philip Otterback, 3519 Quesada Street. Assistant money-order cashiers—M. W. 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; Sidney G. Bursley, 5425 Connecticut Avenue; Luke Thompson, 809 Glebe Road, Clarendon, Va.; Basil Sillers, 1355 Kalmia Street; John J. Downey, The Augusta; Joseph Donovan, 1616 Webster Street; Frank M. Sommerkamp, Jr. 3316 Eighteenth Street NE. Assistant superintendent of mails in 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. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of registry section.—Staley M. Clarke, 8 Defense Highway, Decatur Heights, Md. te superintendent of mails tn charge of supplies— William W. Day, 1311 treet. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of special-delivery section.— William M. Clark, 3900 Fourteenth Street. Superintendent of motor vehicles—Douglas B. Horne, 409 Rock Creek Church Road. = Classified stations Station Superintendent Location ANACOSII0. i orcas means H.B.Moon-...-- cone 1320 Good Hope Road SE. ATCC enemas nase Pl. loonmrd. ooo... §520 Connecticut Avenue. AInglon oan Mrs. J. O. Waison........... Arlington, Va. Benjamin Franklin. __._.._. George LL. Tait... oni an Post Office Department Building. Benning =. hanson J. L. Wise 514 Minnesota Avenue NE. Bethesda --| B. F. Greenstreet Bethesda, Md. Brightwood J. L. Wolfe 5921 Georgia Avenue. Brookland. . L. E. Barnard Twelfth and Newton Streets NE. Central... W. P. Robey... 1418 I Street. Cherrydale._. -{ D.T. Johnson. . Cherrydale, Va. Chevy Chase C. R. Hurley 5908 Connecticut Avenue. Clarendon P. C. Bischoff 64 East Wilson Boulevard. Columbia Road R. 8. Ashford 1771 Columbia Road. Connecticut Avenue G. W. Harrison 1220 Connecticut Avenue. I AR Ld ER i i Let R. M. Harper Land Office Building. riendship.. o.oo H.-McCuen............. = 4511 Wisconsin Avenue. AE Rtreet. — -..-eerereanenne 3... Belfeld. .............5 Woodward & Lothrop Store. GOArZOlOW. onc eee mers B,J. Conidy.. niin 1215 Thirty-first Street. He Serecl a W. TP. Wilkinson... 2.5. 800 H Street NE. MIdCHY. ee muninunn Henry IP, Brown. ....cewen-- 1408 Fourteenth Street. Navy Department... BoB Ward oii Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue (Navy Building). Northeast... o.oo BR. W.Van Fossen........-- 703 Maryland Avenue NE. Pare Rondo as Chas. A. Duncan, Jr... 1413 Park Road. Potworth. oo neninnnanmas R. McDonald 4211 Ninth Street. Somthesst.. ovina E. W. Gosnell 408 Eighth Street SE. Southwest =... aicinicen Aubrey L. Maus. 416 Seventh Street SW. A. G. Turner. 301 Cedar Street. B. L. Smith_.. 1802 Twentieth Street. -{ D. D. Burns. United States Treasury. Thos. R. ----} 17 Florida Avenue NE. Herbert E. Riley............ 1438 U Street. SS. W.Trunnel.............: 1751 Pennsylvania Avenue. BW. Turner... nanan 2211 Rhode Island Avenue NE. OFFICIAL DUTIES 407 OFFICIAL DUTIES DEPARTMENT OF STATE SECRETARY OF STATE The Secretary of State, who is the highest ranking Cabinet member, is charged under the direction of the President, with the conduct of negotiations of whatever character relating to the foreign affairs of the United States, and has charge of the correspondence with the diplomatic and consular representatives of the United States and with the representatives of foreign powers accredited to the United States. The Secretary of State grants and issues passports to nationals of the United States. Exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his office. he Secretary of State prescribes, promulgates, and ad- ministers regulations under treaties and laws governing international traffic in arms. He has custody of the seal of the United States, of records relating to Presidential electors, and of the originals of all acts and resolutions of Congress, Executive orders, proclamations, and treaties to which the United States is a party. He certifies the adoption of amendments to the Constitution of the United States. He publishes the acts and resolutions of Congress, Executive orders, proclamations, territorial papers, treaties and other international acts g the United States, and papers relating to the foreign relations of the United tates. 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 Serviee 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 Board of Foreign Service Personnel, the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service, and the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Board. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with such duties as may be assigned to him by the Secrefary of State. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with economic, financial, tariff, and general trade questions and such other duties as may be assigned to him by the Secretary of State. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with Latin American questions and such other duties as may be assigned to him 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, 409 410 Congressional Directory STATE 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- 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 AND ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Is charged with the general supervision of the clerical personnel and messenger service of the Department; supervision over the property of the Department; expenditures of appropriations for salaries and contingent expenses of the Depart- ment and the preparaticn of annual budget estimates therefor; office space; authentications; custody of the seal of the United States and of the seal of the Department; classification of positions; efficiency ratings; operation of coordinat- ing service for the translation of documents for all departments and agencies of the Government; miscellaneous matters; supervision over Appointment, Steno- graphic, Mail, Supply, and Equipment and Repair Sections, and the emergency room. BOARD OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL The duties of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, under Executive Order No. 5642 of June 8, 1931, are: To submit to the Secretary of State for approval lists of Foreign Service officers in which all Foreign Service officers shall be graded in accordance with their relative efficiency and value to the Service; to recommend promotions in the Foreign Service, and to furnish the Secretary of State with list of Foreign Service officers who have demonstrated special capacity for pro- motion to the grade of minister; to submit to the Secretary of State for his approval and for transmission thereafter to the President, the names of those officers and employees of the Department of State who, after 5 years of continuous service in an executive or quasi-executive position, are recommended for appoint- ment by transfer to the position of Foreign Service officer; to submit to the Secretary of State the names of those Foreign Service officers who are recom- mended 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; to consider controversies and delinquencies among the Service personnel and to recommend to * the Secretary of State appropriate disciplinary action where required; 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; to collect, collate, and record pertinent data relating to Foreign Service personnel; to keep the efficiency records of all Foreign Service officers and em- ployees; to hold strictly confidential all personnel records of the Foreign Service, and to reveal no papers, documents, data, or reports relating thereto, except to the Secretary of State and to the members of the Personnel Board; to keep the 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; to attend, through the personnel officers assigned to the division, the meetings of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel when so directed. STATE Official Duties 411 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 suc- cessfully 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 Person- nel, one Foreign Service officer assigned for duty in the Division of Foreign Per- sonnel, and the director of the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School. DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Has general charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with China, Japan, and Siam, and (in conjunction with the Division of Western European Affairs and other interested divisions) with the Far Eastern possessions and territories of European nations and the foreign- controlled islands of the Pacific not included therein, and of such matters as con- cern this Department in relation to the American-controlled islands of the Pacific and to the Far East in general; and has charge of such matters as concern this Department in relation to the control of the traffic in narcotic drugs. DIVISION OF LATIN AMERICAN AFFAIRS Has 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 Has 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 Has 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, Iran, Iraq, Palestine and Trans- Jordan, Rumania, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and other countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria and the Lebanon, Turkey, and Yugoslavia. DIVISION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS Has general charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Mexico. DIVISION OF EASTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Has general charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Estonia, Finland, Free City of Danzig, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 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. DIVISION OF TRADE AGREEMENTS Carries out the provisions of the act entitled “An Act to Amend the Tariff Act of 19307’, approved June 12, 1934, insofar as they relate to the Department of State, and performs such other duties as may from time to time be assigned to it by the Secretary of State. 412 Congressional Durectory STATE OFFICE OF ARMS AND MUNITIONS CONTROL Is charged with the registration of manufacturers, exporters, importers of arti- cles proclaimed by the President to be arms, ammunition, and implements of war, the export or import of which without a license would be a violation of any law of the United States; the issuance of licenses for the exportation or importation of arms, ammunition, and implements of war under such regulations as may be promulgated by the Secretary of State; such supervision of international traffic in arms, ammunition, and implements of war as falls within the jurisdiction of the Secretary of State under treaties and statutes. PASSPORT DIVISION Is charged with the examination and adjudication of applications for passports and for registration in consulates of the United States as American citizens; issu- ance of passports; issuance of instructions on passport matters to the executives of the several insular possessions; supervision over the Department’s pass- port agencies in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Boston; direction of clerks of courts in passport matters; correspondence regarding citizenship, pass- ports, registration, and right to protection while abroad; issuance of letters of introduction. OFFICE OF THE HISTORICAL ADVISER Gives advice and submits recommendations to the Secretary of State on his- torical and constitutional questions and matters of policy relating to current questions before the Department; is charged with the editing and compilation of the Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States, and of other publications; has supervision of the work of the geographer of the Department; has custody of the archives of the Department up to August 15, 1906, the originals of all treaties to which the United States is a party, the originals of all acts and resolutions of Congress, Executive orders, proclamations, and amendments to the Constitution; has custody of all records involving the preparation of the certifi- cate of the Secretary of State proclaiming that an amendment is a part of the Constitution and of all records relating to Presidential electors. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION Is charged with the editing and compilation of Foreign Relations of the United States, the session laws, Statutes at Large, Executive orders, and proclamations; with the preparation, custody, and distribution of all publications issued by the Department with the exception of those publications which are prepared in the office of the historical adviser; has supervision of the library of the Department, of the work of the editor of the Territorial Papers of the United States, and of all matters relating to printing and binding and the submitting of recommenda- tions concerning the allocation of the printing and binding fund. DIVISION OF CURRENT INFORMATION Is charged with preparation of news items for the press; receiving and reply- ing to inquiries from newspaper correspondents; preparation and distribution to officials of the Department and the Foreign Service of daily press summaries and special articles; furnishing them with press bulletins, copies of texts, and general information bearing upon foreign relations. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE ADMINISTRATION Is charged with the general administration of the Foreign Service, including matters of appropriations and expenditures, rentals, equipment and supplies, or- ganizations, instruction of diplomatic and consular officers, ete.; correspondence relating to the foregoing and to customs courtesies and free entry, letters rogatory, decoration of American citizens by foreign governments, international exchange of publications, diplomatic pouch service between the United States and foreign 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, etc, STATE Official Dutres 413 DIVISION OF PROTOCOL ‘AND CONFERENCES Is charged with presentation to the President of ambassadors and ministers accredited to this Government; with correspondence concerning their accepta- bility to this Government: and of correspondence concerning acceptability to for- eign governments of like officers of the United States; with questions regarding the rights and immunities in the United States of representatives of foreign gov- ernments; with arrangements for all ceremonials of a national or international character in the United States or participated in by the United States abroad; with the entertainment and protection of distinguished foreign visitors; with questions concerning customs and other courtesies to foreign officials and dis- tinguished visitors to the United States as well as to American officials abroad; with making arrangements for the visits of foreign naval vessels, foreign military organizations, and other matters of ceremonial in connection with the White House and the Department of State; with the preparation of the Diplomatic List; with questions concerning medals and decorations conferred by foreign governments upon military, naval, or civil officers of the United States; with the preparation of communications from the President to heads of foreign states; with the obtaining of permission for American aviators to make flights in foreign countries and for foreign aviators to make flights in the United States; with ar- rangements for international conferences, congresses, expositions, and conven- tions, in which the United States is to participate, at home or abroad, and in cooperation with other branches of the Government and interested persons and organizations, determining the extent and character of that participation; with supervision of the fulfillment of the international obligations of the United States with respect to membership in and expenditures for international treaty com- missions, committees, bureaus, and other organizations. TREATY DIVISION Is 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; performing the duties of a Secretariat for all treaties of which the United States is the depositary; and with performing such other duties as may be assigned by the Secretary of State. 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; the drafting of 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. 414 Congressional Directory STATE VISA DIVISION Is charged with matters connected with the administration of the immigration laws insofar as they concern the Department of State and its officers abroad in their function of controlling abroad the entry of aliens into the United States. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Is charged with the keeping of all accounts of the Department and of the For- eign 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. TRANSLATING BUREAU Is 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; translation or summarizing of letters and documents from foreign countries on departmental business; occasional translation of official communications into foreign languages; the critical exam- ination of drafts of foreign texts of bilingual or multilingual treaties to which the United States is a party in order to bring about the closest possible adjustment to each other of the foreign and English texts; such services as the bureau may be in a position to render in connection with international eonferences. 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 before signing; submits the correspondence to the appropriate officers for signature; maintains a current ready-reference file of correspondence and an index of diplomatic precedents; keeps all offices of the Department advised of any pertinent information concerning the correspondence of the Department, as well as of changes in forms of address or changes in the accepted style of cor- respondence. The mailing section of this office is charged with the dating and mailing of Department mail, with the certification of copies for the official records, and with answering inquiries concerning or furnishing information from its records for the use of the Department. FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS OFFICE Is 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. Has charge of programs of expenditures, with the approval of the budget officer of the Department, for the acquisition, construction, alteration, or furnish- ing 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. Transmits to the field the telegraphic and written instructions of the Secretary of Commerce to commercial attachés and trade commissioners of the Department of Commerce as well as the forwarding of the reports and correspondence pre- pared by these officers in the field to the Department of Commerce. The review TREASURY + Officzal Dutzes 415 of this correspondence for the purpose of coordinating questions of policy involved and the dissemination to interested divisions of the Department of State of such economic material submitted by commercial attachés and trade commissioners 23 RAY be of interest in connection with the general policy of the Department of ate. + vrs THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT The following is an outline of the administrative organization of the Treasury Department, showing the various branches 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: 1. General Counsel for the Treasury. 2. Bureau of Internal Revenue— (a) Alcohol Tax Unit. 3. Federal Alcohol Administration. 4. Procurement Division— (a) Public Works Branch. : (b) Branch of Supply. 5. Secret Service Division. 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. : (¢) Division of disbursement. (d) Section of surety bonds. 3. Commissioner of the public debt— (a) Division of loans and currency. a Office of the Register of the Treasury. (¢) Division of public debt accounts and audit. (d) Division of paper custody. 4. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. 5. Office of the Treasurer of the United States. 6. Division of Research and Statistics— : (a) Government Actuary. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Engraving and Printing and Mint Service: : 1. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. 2. Bureau of the Mint. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, and Narcotics: 1. Bureau of Customs. 2. United States Coast Guard. 3. Bureau of Narcotics. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Public Health. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Chief Clerk of the department. 2. Division of appointments. 3. Division of printing. 4. Secretary’s correspondence division. 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 keeping 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 of public buildings and the procurement, warehousing, and distribution of property, supplies, etc.; the coinage and printing of money; the administration of the Coast Guard, the Industrial Alcohol, Narcotics, Public Health, 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 member of the Board of Governors 416 Congressional Directory TREASURY of the Federal Reserve System; ex-officio member, board of directors, Recon- struction Finance Corporation; member, National Emergency Council; member of the board of trustees, Postal Savings System; member of the board of trustees, Smithsonian Institution; member, Foreign Service Buildings Commission; Director General of Railroads; member, National Archives Council; and :chair- man, Central Statistical Committee. 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 supervision of the finances and the general supervision of matters relating to the fiscal bureaus, offices, and divisions. The bureaus, offices, and divisions under immediate control of the Under Secre- tary are shown in the preceding outline of the administrative organization of the Department. ; 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 GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY To the general counsel is assigned the general supervision of the legal staffs in all branches of the Department. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Engraving and Printing and Mint Service is assigned the general supervision of matters pertaining to those activities as shown in the preceding outline of the administrative organization of the Department. : To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, and Narcotics is assigned the general supervision of those respective activities. To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Public Health is assigned the general supervision of the Public Health Service. THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY To the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary is assigned all matters of ad- ministration, including personnel and Budget matters, and the supervision of the office of the chief clerk, the division of appointments, the division of sup- ply, and the Secretary’s correspondence division. : THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, OFFICES UNDER THE IMMEDIATE SUPERVISION OF GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY The general counsel is the chief law officer of the department, is in charge of all of its legal activities, and performs such duties relating thereto as may be prescribed by the Secretary or required by law. BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has general supervision of the assess- ment and collection of all internal-revenue taxes, taxes under the agricultural adjustment act, and other miscellaneous taxing acts of Congress; the enforce- ment of internal-revenue laws; and the preparation and distribution of instruc- tions, regulations, forms, blanks, stamps, etc. An annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury covering the activities of this service is made by the commis- sioner. 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, and alcohol tax unit. The commissioner and miscellaneous unit includes the immediate office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the assistant to the commissioner, the office of the special deputy commissioner, the technical staff, the intelligence unit, personnel division, administrative division, training division, and public relations division. TREASURY Official Duties 417 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. This unit also administers the taxing provisions of Title IX of the social security act, approved August 14, 1935. The miscellaneous tax unit is charged with the administration of all internal- revenue tax laws except income and profits taxes, and alcohol taxes, and is also responsible for adjusting and closing cases involving repealed miscellaneous internal-revenue taxes. This unit is also charged with the administration of taxes imposed under Title I of the agricultural adjustment act; and taxes imposed by the cotton act of April 21, 1934, the silver purchase act of June 19, 1934, the tobacco taxing act of June 28, "1934, "Title VIII of the social security act, approved August 14, 1935, the bituminous coal conservation act of 1935, approved August 30, 1935, and the railroad pension act, approved August 29, 1935. 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 in the Internal Revenue Bureau and Service. It also issues stamps to collectors of internal revenue. The alcohol tax unit is charged with the administration of the internal-revenue laws relating to supervision of production and warehousing, and the tax payment of distilled spirits, alcohol, wines, fermented liquors, cereal beverages, and de- natured alcohol. This unit is also charged with the duty of detecting and prosecuting persons violating the statutes relating to these articles. There are three main divisions of the field service, as follows: The collection service, the field audit service, and the supervisory field service of alcohol tax unit. 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 inspection service. FEDERAL ALCOHOL ADMINISTRATION The Federal Alcohol Administration was created by an Act of Congress, ap- proved August 29, 1935, entitled ‘Federal Alcohol Administration Act’ (Public, No. 401, 74th Cong. ):¢ ‘to further protect the revenue derived from distilled spirits, wine, and malt beverages, to regulate interstate and foreign commerce and enforce the postal laws with respect thereto, to enforce the twenty-first amendment, and for other purposes.” It is organized as a division of the Treasury Department and is headed by an Administrator who is appointed by the President and con- firmed by the Senate. It is the duty of the Administrator to enforce the provisions of the act which prohibit exclusive outlets, ‘‘tied houses’’, commercial bribery, and consignment or conditional sales; to promulgate and enforce regulations relating to misbrand- ing and advertising of distilled spirits, wine, and malt beverages; to enforce the provisions of the act prohibiting the sale of distilled spirits in bulk, except to certain qualified persons; and to prevent the combination through interlocking directorates of business enterprises engaged in the production, importation, or distribution of distilled spirits, wine, or malt beverages, where such combinations tend to burden interstate commerce. The act requires that all distillers and rectifiers of distilled spirits, producers and blenders of wine, and importers and wholesalers of distilled spirits, wine, and malt beverages secure permits authorizing them to engage in such operations. The Administrator is charged with the duty of issuing permits to properly quali- fied persons, and is given the authority to revoke or suspend such permits for violation of any of their conditions, which include compliance with the provisions of the act, with the twenty-first amendment, and with all other Federal laws relating to distilled spirits, wine, and malt beverages. Violators of the statute, including brewers who are not required to hold permits, are subject to criminal prosecution and imposition of the penalties provided. It is the Administrator’s purpose, through use of the authority conferred upon him by the act, to minimize, insofar as may be possible, the social evils generally associated with the produc- tion and sale of distilled spirits, wine, and malt beverages. An annual report is made to Congress by the Administrator at the beginning of eack regular session. g 30063°—T4—-2-—1sT ED——27 418 Congressional Directory TREASURY PROCUREMENT DIVISION Branch of Supply.~—The Branch of Supply is charged with the determination of policies and methods of procurement, warehousing, and distribution of Govern- ment property, facilities, structures, improvements, machinery, equipment, stores, and supplies; the performance of all activities incident to the purchase in definite quantities of those supplies for which requirements can be anticipated and con- solidated; to contract for those supplies of the departments and establishments for which requirements cannot be consolidated in definite quantity purchase but for which common contracts can be made with advantage to the Government; to receive, warehouse, and distribute to the departments and establishments supplies maintained as stock items in the Federal Warehouse. In addition to these definite purchasing and warehousing functions, the Branch of Supply is responsible for: (a) The preparation and maintenance of the Federal Standard Stock Catalog. (b) The preparation and distribution of Federal specifications. (¢) The coordination of all matters pertaining to contract forms and general policies pertaining to contract procedure. (d) The coordination of the Government’s freight, express, and other traffic activities within the continental limits of the United States. (e¢) The coordination of the activities of the Federal Government connected with real estate or interest therein within the continental limits of the United States, except Alaska, as relate to the procurement thereof, whether for perma- nent or temporary use, the occupancy of rented space by any department or establishment, and the disposal of Government-owned real estate. (f) The coordination and supervision of the disposition of surplus property in Washington and in the field and of property seized by the Government when turned over to the Procurement Division by competent authority, and by order of the Secretary has control of the procurement, loan, transfer, or disposal of forfeited motor vehicles by any activity of the Treasury Department. (9) The performance of all activities incident to the acquisition, assignment, and disposal of all motor equipment of the Treasury Department and the main- tenance, repair, and garaging of such equipment of the Treasury Department located in the District of Columbia. (h) The procurement, storage, and distribution of fuel (coal, coke, charcoal, fuel oil, wood, ete.) to all Federal and District Government buildings and estab- lishments (except the Washington Navy Yard) in and adjacent to the District of Columbia. (7) Acting as general liaison office between the Government activities and the National Recovery Administration in matters arising from the application of Executive Order No. 6646, and performing similar service to the Petroleum Administrative Board in eennection with enforcement of the Oil Code. (7) Supervision of 140 Federal business associations in the larger cities of the United States actively functioning as agencies of the Director of Procurement for the purpose of promoting cooperation among local Federal activities, with the object of effecting economies and increasing efficiency in the transaction of routine business of the Government, as well as assisting the Procurement Divi- sion in specific projects assigned them. Public Works Branch.—The Public Works Branch of the Procurement Divi- sion on October 16, 1933, assumed the duties of the former Office of the Super- vising Architect in accordance with the provisions of Executive Order No. 6166, dated June 10, 1933. Under the Procurement Division, the functions of the Public Works Branch are to collect and prepare for submission to Congress data and estimates for public building projects; to acquire land for public building sites; to prepare plans and specifications, and estimates for public building construction and to take bids and award contracts therefor; to supervise the construction, remodeling, extension, ete., of public buildings; to repair all public buildings formerly under control of the Treasury Department which were transferred to the custody of the Post Office and Interior Departments under Executive Order No. 6166; and to operate, repair, equip, and maintain all public buildings in the custody of the Treasury Department outside of the District of Columbia. 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 credit act, the war finance corporation act, section 704 of the World War adjusted compensation act, and TREASURY Official Duties 419 * 4 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. 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 disbursements, 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 depart- ment 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 deposits of gold certificates in gold certifi- cate fund for credit 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 commissioner 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 Secretary is responsible, other than those related to public debt operations. Pursuant to section II (a) of Executive Order No. 7034, dated May 6, 1935, the commissioner has supervision over the procedure for the maintenance of the system of accounts and disbursements under the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935. 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. Maintains budgetary accounts relating to apportionments and obligations of funds pertaining to ali departments and establishments of the Government, including governmental corporations operating on public funds, pursuant to the provisions of the Executive order of July 27, 1933. Tn 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 disbursement was created under the Executive order (No. 6166) of June 10, 1933, which provided that the function of disbursement of moneys of the United States exercised by any agency of the Government is transferred to the Treasury Department and consolidated in that division. The function of disbursement of moneys of the United States in the various departments and agencies in Washington has been taken over and consolidated in this division. Regional disbursing offices have been established in the several Federal reserve dis- tricts for the purpose of performing the disbursing function outside of Washington. 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. 420 Congressional Directory 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 running to the Government except those for post-office employees and for certain officials of Federal courts. PUBLIC DEBT SERVICE The public debt service, under the Commissioner of the Public Debt, is charged with the conduct of transactions in public debt and paper currency issues of the United States. As agent it also handles the public debt issues of the Philippine and Puerto Rican Governments, and the securities of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation and the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, and the consolidated Federal farm loan bonds. In addition to the office of the Commissioner, the service includes the division of loans and currency, the office of the Register of he, Frenmry, the division of paper custody, and the division of accounts and audit. New security tssues.— When a new issue of public debt securities is to be offered for subscription, the public debt service prepares the necessary documents inci- dent to the offering, and directs the handling of subscriptions for and allotments of the securities to be issued. The division of loans and currency is the issuing branch. It receives securities from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, makes original issues, and thereafter conducts exchanges, transfers, conversions, and replacements. It maintains ac- counts with holders of registered bonds, and prepares checks for payment of interest thereon. It audits redeemed United States paper currency and mutilated work of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The office of the Register of the Treasury is the retiring branch. This office receives, examines, and has custody of securities retired for any account, including paid interest coupons. 9 The service is charged with the procurement of distinctive paper required for printing currency and public debt securities and for other purposes, and in con- nection with its manufacture maintains a field force at the mills of the contractors. The division of paper custody receives the distinctive paper from contractors, and issues it to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing as required. The division of accounts and audit maintains administrative control accounts over all transactions with which the public debt service is charged, and related transactions conducted by the office of the Treasurer of the United States, and by the Federal reserve banks acting in their capacities as fiscal agents of the United States. Similar accounts are maintained over transactions in distinctive and nondistinctive paper used in printing public debt and other securities, cur- rency, stamps, etc. It also makes administrative examinations and audits of transactions so conducted and the securities involved. It maintains control ac- counts over reserve stocks of currency, and conducts administrative examinations and physical audits of such stocks, cash balances in the several divisions of the Treasurer’s office, and collateral securities held in trust by the Treasurer. OFFICE 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. 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, TREASURY Official Duties 421 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 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. OFFICE OF DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS The director of research and statistics, in the Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, exercises direct authority over and responsibility for the conduct of the economic research and the production, analysis, and publication of statistics in all branches of the Treasury Department. The director is also chief of the division of research and statistics, in the Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, which performs a combined economic research, actuarial, and statistical service function for the Treasury. ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF PUBLIC HEALTH, OFFICE 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, lec- tures, and correspondence. Through the division the department enforces the act of July 1, 1902, to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analogous products, including arsphenamine. The division 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- 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 enfry in the United States and its insular possessions. The activities of the division of domestic quarantine include the following: (1) enforcement of the Interstate Quarantine Regulations, with special reference to the control of water supplies used on interstate carriers and the sanitation of shellfish shipped in interstate commerce; (2) assistance to State and local health authorities in the enforcement of State and local laws and regulations; (3) co- operation with State health authorities in preventing the spread of epidemic diseases, including (a) plague suppressive measures; (b) activities for the eradica- 422 Congressional Directory TREASURY tion of trachoma; (¢) control of psittacosis infection among psittacine birds; (4) assistance to State health departments in developing and improving local health service including (a) studies of health organization in cities and counties, and (b) assistance in the organization of full-time rural health units; (5) cooperation with other establishments of the Federal Government in matters pertaining to public health engineering and sanitation; (6) annual conference of State and Territorial Health Officers with the Surgeon General. The division of sanitary reports and statistics collects and publishes informa- tion 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 attends to matters relating to personnel and the maintenance of per- sonnel records; convenes boards for the examination or discipline of medical officers and other personnel; is responsible for all bookkeeping and accounting in gonnestion 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. Clinical and laboratory studies are conducted which pertain especially to the cause, treatment, prevalence, and prevention of syphilis and gonorrhea and are carried on both independently and in cooperation with other agencies. Among numerous cooperative activities may be included educational and informative measures and the study and insti- tution of effective programs directed against the venereal diseases. 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. ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING AND MINT SERVICE, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING This bureau designs, engraves, and prints for the Government, United States securities; United States and national-bank currency; Federal reserve notes and Federal reserve bank notes; Federal farm loan and joint-stock land bank bonds; revenue, customs, and postage stamps; Government checks; checks and other securities for the Emergency Relief Administration; and many other classes of engraved work for governmental use. It performs a similar function, as author- josa by the Bureau of Insular Affairs, for the insular possessions of the Govern- ment. 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, TREASURY Official Duties 423 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. ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF CUSTOMS, COAST GUARD, 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 August 24, 1912. (19 U. 8S. C.,, 1.) The act approved March 3, 1927, created the Bureau of Customs and the office of commissioner of customs. Under the authority of that act the Secretary of the Treasury has conferred upon the Com- missioner of Customs, subject to the general supervision and direction of the Secretary, the powers and duties in regard to the importation and entry of mer- chandise 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 and enforcement of the customs laws, including the prevention of smuggling of all contraband such as narcotics. It is further charged with certain duties under the Foreign Trade Zones Act (19 U. S. C., Chap. 1A, 1934 ed.), and Collectors of Customs are field officers of the Department of Commerce in the enforcement of the navigation and shipping laws. The customs agency service, which operates as a part of the Customs Service, is an investigative service. 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 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; 424 Congressional Directory TREASURY 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. . (c) 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; office of aviation; 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 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. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK The chief clerk and superintendent, under the direction of the Secretary through his administrative assistant, is hare with the enforcement of depart- mental regulations of a general nature. e is superintendent of Treasury buildings in the District of Columbia, except the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and has custody of sites for proposed public buildings in Washington. The chief clerk has administrative jurisdiction of the contingent appropriation and other miscellaneous appropriations, as well as the appropriations for Gov- ernment exhibits at various expositions. He has the custody of the completed records and files of the Secretary’s office and of the Treasury seal, and handles requests for certified copies of official papers. He is chairman of the personnel committee of the Treasury and classification officer for the department, and has general supervision of the assignment of annual efficiency ratings of the Treasury personnel. In addition to the duties described above, the chief clerk has charge of the unassigned business of the Secretary’s office. 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 PRINTING The division of printing transacts all of the Department’s printing and binding business with the Government Printing Office. This involves the placing of all TREASURY Official Duties 425 orders, the handling of ‘all inquiries regarding deliveries, estimates of cost, copy, proof, instructions, and the auditing of vouchers covering payments in connection therewith. It is charged with the editing and preparation of weekly Treasury Decisions under Customs, -Internal Revenue, Narcotics, and other laws; the preparation of semiannual bound volumes thereof and the maintaining of a mailing list for their distribution. It is charged also with the responsibility of authorizing engraving work done by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for all Departments and establishments unless money, bonds, or stamps are involved; control over newspaper and periodical advertising for the Department; binding, in the Treasury Building, confidential Department records; and the warehousing and distribution of blank books and forms for Washington and field offices of the Department. Appropriations to the Department for purchases of stationery supplies and for printing and binding are under its administrative control. CORRESPONDENCE DIVISION This division maintains control of all secretarial mail, including contracts with all branches of the department in connection with official correspondence, both incoming and outgoing; prepares letters for the signature of the Secretary and routes others to the proper officials; has charge of the stenographic pool for the Secretary’s office; performs such special duties as are assigned from time to time. . 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 estimates 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 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. By Public Resolution No. 57, approved May 11, 1922, the authority to approve the use of printing and binding appropriations for the printing of journals, maga~ zines, periodicals, and similar publications is conferred upon the Director of the Bureau of the Budget and by section 16 of Executive Order No. 6166, dated June 10, 1933, there is transferred to him the function of making, waiving, and modifying apportionments of appropriations as required by the provisions of section 665, title 31, United States Code. FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION (Reports through Director of the Bureau of the Budget) Composed of the Administrator of 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. Elizabeths 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, 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 426 Congressional Directory WAR hospitalization activities of the several departments and establishments, with a view to increasing the usefulness and efficiency of the several organizations 80 as to achieve the maximum of service and economy in operation, maintenance, and betterments; (b) 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 additional facilities, and the standardization and utilization of supplies. 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, 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 N iagara Control Board. 2 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. 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- WAR Official Duties 427 ‘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; clemency cases in litigation or remission of sentence by courts-martial; matters relating to 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. 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 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. As prescribed by section 5 of the National Defense Act, as amended by the act of June 15, 1933, it formulates all policies and regulations affecting: (1) The organization and distribution of the National Guard of the United States, and the organization, distribution, and training of the National Guard, through committees to which are added an equal number of officers of the National Guard of the United States. (2) The organization, distribution, training, appointment, assignment, promo- tion, and discharge of members of the Officers’ Reserve Corps, the Organized Reserves, and the Enlisted Reserve Corps, through committees to which are added an equal number of officers from the Officers’ Reserve Corps. 428 Congressional Directory WAR (8) When: such policies. or: regulations affect all three components the com- mittees eonsist of an equal representation from the Regular Army, the National Guard of the United States, and the Officers’ Reserve Corps. : 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 S. 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- tribution; the custody of the General Staff map 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 ollege 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 I - - - WAR Official Duties 429 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 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- I I > | 430 Congressional Directory WAR | ployment, instruction, and training of his arm, and to the eare 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 i 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 targets, the controlled submarine mine systems, the sound-ranging installations in harbor defense, and the Antiaircraft Artillery. 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 —TAL a” pr — WAR = Offictal Duties 431 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- migsioned 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. 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 National Guard Bureau, officers of the Regular Army of the United States and a part of the Military Establishment. The Chief of the National Guard Bureau is appointed by selection from lists of present and former National Guard officers who hold commissions in the National Guard of the United States. 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 cfficers 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 Enlisted Reserve Corps, and the Reserve Officers’ Training 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- 432 Congressional Directory WAR 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 arms and services 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; recruit depots and recruiting stations; remount purchasing and breeding bead- quarters; the disciplinary barracks; and military prisoners in United States penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kans.; ungarrisoned posts; national cemeteries under War Department jurisdiction; United States Army transports, cable boats, mine planters, and harbor boats; unserviceable property; money accounts of all disbursing officers of the Army and property and disbursing officers of the National Guard; Soldiers’ Home, District of Columbia; the National Guard as required by the act of June 3, 1916; also makes such special investigations and such annual inspections of troops as may be ordered, and conducts 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 Départment 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 func- 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 WAR Officzal Dutzes 433 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- chased 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 ied by such branches. (Sec. 9, act June 3, 1916, as amended by act June 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. Supply division.—Has charge of all duties pertaining to the procurement, storage, and distribution of supplies; purchase of 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). Has supervision over all matters pertaining to national cemeteries, including interments, disinterments, furnishing Government head- stones, and disposition of remains of officers, enlisted men, and civilian employees of the United States Army who die while on active duty. Transportation divistion.—Is charged with the transportation of the Army by land and water. Administrative 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 train- ing; general control over appropriations; in charge of matters relating to legis- lation; prepares proposed orders, circulars, regulations, bulletins, and similar papers for publication; compiles and prepares history of Quartermaster General's Office. 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 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 tactical unit containing other than Engineer troops. The duties 30063°—74—-2—1ST ED——28 434 Congressional Drrectory WAR of the Corps of Engineers comprise reconnoitering and surveying for military pur- poses, including the laying out of camps in any theater of military operations; the preparation, reproduction, and distribution of military maps of the United States and its possessions, including cooperation with other Government and private mapping agencies; participation in the selection and acquisition of sites for military defenses, and preparation of plans and estimates therefor; construec- tion and repair of fortifications and their accessories, including structures for submarine mine systems, procurement, installation and maintenance of search- lights and electric power and lighting systems; construction of fire-control struec- tures, 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; military bridges; water supply of troops in the field ; examination of routes of communica- tion for supplies and for military movements; and all general construction and road work, including maintenance and repair (except telegraph and telephone lines), and the construction, operation, and maintenance of all railways, utilities, ferries, canal boats, or other means of water transportation within a theater of military operations. It collects, arranges, and preserves all correspondence, reports, memoirs, estimates, plans, drawings, and models which concern or relate in any way to the several duties above enumerated. The Corps of Engineers is also charged with the development, procurement, storage, and issue of certain classes of military supplies and equipment. The Chief of Engineers, under the direction of the Secretary of War, is charged with the supervision of all Federal investigations and improvements of river and harbor and other waterways except as otherwise specifically provided by act of Congress. The duties include: The execution of work ordered by Congress for the improvements of rivers and harbors and other waterways; examinations and surveys; administration and enforcement of laws for the protection and preserva- tion of navigable waters; the establishments of harborlines and anchorage grounds; regulations for the use, administration, and navigation of waterways and for the operation of drawbridges; the removal of wrecks and other obstructions to naviga- tion; approval of plans for bsidges and dams; issuance of permits for structures, and for dredging, dumping, or other work in navigable waterways; investigation and supervision in cooperation with the Federal Power Commission of power projects affecting navigable waters; supervision of operations affecting the scenic beauty and grandeur of Niagara Falls; surveying and charting the Great Lakes; reclamation and development of Anacostia River and Flats, D. C.; maintenance and repair of the Washington Aqueduct, the water supply of Washington, D. C.; and the preparation of reports and studies for agencies charged with the admin- istration of relief programs with respect to improvements on streams and water- ways throughout the United States, including general consulting services for the Works Progress Administration. 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 and flood-control 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 Committee on Commerce of the Senate or of the Committees on Rivers and Harbors or Flood Control of the House of Representatives, in the same manner to examine and report through the Chief of Engineers upon any examinations, surveys, or projects for the improvement of navigation on rivers and harbors or relating to flood control. In its investigations the Board gives consideration to all engineering, commercial, navigation, and economic questions involved in de- termining 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 de- termine their adequacy under the provisions of section 1 of the River and Harbor Act of March 2, 1919; advising and assisting local port authorities in planning the layout and equipment of terminal facilities; and the designing of floating plant for use in the prosecution of projects for river and harbor improvement. The Board is engaged on the investigations authorized by the Transportation Act of 1920, with a view to the promotion of water transportation, and the investiga- tions of ports authorized by the Merchant Marine Act to be made in cooperation with the Shipping Board Bureau of the Department of Commerce. Its duties also include the compilation, publication, and distribution of useful statistics, data, and information concerning ports and water transportation. WAR Official Duties 435 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 National Guard of the United States of America. The Ordnance Department performs all the tech- nical engineering work necessary to investigate and construct experimental ord- nance matériel for the adoption by the Army; prepares the necessary regulations for proof, inspection, storing, and for maintaining this matériel, as well as the detailed information necessary for the manufacture of munitions, for inspection of them, and for maintaining reserves prescribed by higher authority. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER The Chief Signal Officer has immediate charge, under the direction of the Secretary of War, of the development, procurement, storage, and issue of all equipment and supplies for the Army signal communications; the coordination of the training of the personnel assigned to signal duties; the transmission of messages for the Army, by radio or otherwise; the direction of the Signal Corps of the Army and the control of the officers and enlisted men and employees thereof; the installation, maintenance, and operation of military cables, telegraph and telephone lines, radio, and meteorological apparatus and stations not excepted by regulations; the preparation, publication, revision, storage, account- ing, and distribution of all codes and ciphers required by the Army, and in time of war the interception of enemy radio and wire traffic, the goniometric location of enemy radio stations, the solution of intercepted enemy code and cipher messages, and laboratory arrangements for the employment and detection of secret inks; the supervision, coordination, and standardization of all radio oper- ations of the Army, including the assignment of frequencies, call signs, and schedules for fixed stations; all still and motion photography not specifically assigned to other arms or services; and all other duties pertaining to military signal communications. 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, and maintaining all aircraft, aircraft engines, and aircraft equipment for the Army, including airships, balloons, and airplanes, all appliances and facilities necessary to the operation and maintenance of said aircraft; of installing and maintaining all radio apparatus and signaling systems within the Air Corps activities; of establishing, maintaining, and operating all flying fields, aviation stations, repair and supply depots, exempted stations, etec.; training officers, flying cadets, enlisted men of the Air Corps, and candidates for aviation service in matters pertaining to military aviation; and with the technical inspections of aircraft and accessories and the preparation of the budget. 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 are subject to War Department jurisdiction at the present time. The Bureau is charged with the formulation and communication to the United States High Commissioner to the Philippine Islands for his action or for presenta- tion to the authorities of the government of the Commonwealth of the Philip- pines, 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 insular matters presented by the United States High Commissioner which require his action or should be brought to his attention, or should be presented by him to the President. It makes studies of varied questions such as those regarding legislation, financial matters, tariffs, trade relations, commercial and industrial possibilities, navigation, and other subjects relating to the Philippine Islands, and assists the United States High Commissioner by handling and presenting to the Secretary of War adminis- trative matters as they arise. It assists in preparing for submission to Congress such proposed legislation affecting the insular possessions under Department jurisdiction as may receive the approval of the Secretary of War and in the pres- 436 Congressional Dzrectory WAR entation 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 information regarding matters pertaining to the Philippine Islands. It supervises the agencies charged with the purchase in the United States and shipment of supplies and equipment for the insular govern- ment, United States High Commissioner, and Dominican Customs Receivership. It is the channel through which official correspondence pertaining to the Philip- pine Islands and the Dominican Customs Receivership is transmitted to and from the United States. It is the Federal agency which handles, under the direction of the Secretary of War, all Philippine and Dominican Customs Re- ceivership matters requiring contact with other Federal agencies. It performs other functions in the nature of assistance to the United States High Commis- sioner, including those incident to appointments and to expenditures of funds on behalf of his office. 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 include matters relating to the second occupation of Cuba (1906-09), Panama Canal (1904 and 1905), and the Haitian customs receivership (1920-24). 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. NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU The National Guard 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 organization, armament, 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 active National Guard not in Federal service, the inactive National Guard, 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, bureau, or branch of the War Department, and which shall not operate to divest any bureau, division, or branch 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 at Fort Humphreys, 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 JUSTICE Offictal Duties 437 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 CUMMINGS) The Attorney General is the head of the Department of Justice (see sec. 346, R. 8S.) 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. The duties of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Assistant Attorneys General, the Director of Investigation, and the Director of the Bureau of Prisons are performed under the direction of the Attorney General. (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 (STANLEY S. REED) 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 may conduct and argue any case in which the United 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 Govern- ment 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. ACTING ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (BRIEN M’MAHON) The Assistant to the Attorney General 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 - pertaining thereto when not otherwise fixed by law; also promotions and demo- tions both in the department and the field, as well as other general administrative matters; of legislation, and civil service matters, including Federal Employees Compensation and Retirement Acts, Pensions, ete., also briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, and special assign- ments by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (JOHN DICKINSON) This assistant has special charge of all suits and other matters arising under the Sherman and Clayton Acts and other antitrust matters. In addition he has, under current assignment, charge of matters relating to the Federal Trade Commission act, the stockyards act, the radio act, the national recovery act, and the agricultural adjustment act, the securities act (except crimes), the grain futures act, labor matters (including the Railway Labor Act of 1926), suits to set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and general matters and statutes affecting interstate commerce. He has charge also of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, and of special assignments by the Attorney General, 438 Congressional Directory JUSTICE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (FRANK J. WIDEMAN) This assistant has charge of the prosecution and defense of civil suits relating to taxes (except customs) and of appellate proceedings in connection therewith, including briefs and arguments on appeals from the Board of Tax Appeals; also of the enforcement of tax liens and of mandamus, injunctions, criminal proceed- ings, and general matters relating to taxes. He also has charge of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, and of special assignments by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (JOSEPH B. KEENAN) This assistant has charge of criminal cases generally, including matters involv- ing criminal practice and procedure, such as questions concerning indictments, grand juries, search warrants, passports, alien enemies, extradition, etc.; also cases involving crimes on the high seas, crimes arising under the national bank act and under the naturalization laws, and generally directs district attorneys with respect of the conduct of criminal cases. He also has charge of the administration and enforcement of the laws relating to alcoholic beverages, of kidnapping and racketeering cases, and of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (JAMES W. MORRIS) This assistant has charge of all civil suits and claims for and against the Govern- ment not otherwise specially assigned, patents and copyrights, cases arising out of war transactions, civil-bankruptcy matters, civil proceedings under the national bank act, admiralty and shipping matters, as well as alien property claims and litigation. He also has charge of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on EaSenment by the Solicitor General, and of special assignments by the Attorney eneral. : ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (HARRY W. BLAIR) This assistant has charge of matters relating to public lands and condemnation of lands, titles to lands, forest reserves, reclamation and irrigation projects, and the conservation of natural resources, Indian lands and affairs (including suits in the Court of Claims) except crimes; also matters affecting the Pueblo Lands Board and the rent commission. He also has charge of insular and territorial affairs except those specifically assigned, other than criminal, and of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, as well as matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (JOSEPH R. JACKSON) This assistant has charge of protecting the interests of the Government in matters of reappraisement and classification of imported goods, and all litigation incident thereto. He also has charge of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, and of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT SOLICITOR GENERAL (GOLDEN W. BELL) The Assistant Solicitor General appears for and represents the Government in such cases as may be designated by the Solicitor General and performs such addi- tional duties as may be required of him by the Attorney General. He Las charge for the Attorney General of the preparation, review, and revision of opinions and, as to their form and legality, of Executive orders submitted to him by direction of the President, and also acts for the Attorney General upon offers in compromise of judgments and other claims existing against or in favor of the Government up to a certain limit, in addition to performing such other duties as may be assigned to him by the Attorney General. DIRECTOR FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (J. EDGAR HOOVER) The Director of Investigation has general charge of the investigation of offenses against the laws of the United States, except counterfeiting, narcotics, and other matters not within the jurisdiction of the Department of Justice; of the acquisi- tion, collection, classification, preservation, and exchange of criminal identifica- tion records; and of such investigations regarding official matters under the control of the Department of Justice and the Department of State as may be directed by the Attorney General. He also has charge of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. POST OFFICE Offictal Dutzes 439 TAXES AND PENALTIES UNIT (JOSEPH LAWRENCE) The Administrator has supervision of the review and determination of internal- revenue taxes, filing of suits, compromises, preparation of bankruptcy claims, petitions for remissions of forfeitures, and other relevant civil matters arising under the National Prohibition Act, prior to repeal, and associated revenue laws. Other duties include the review and preliminary determination of compromises and remission claims of a civil or criminal nature growing out of current viola- tions of internal liquor revenue statutes. He is also charged with special assign- ments of similar character by the Attorney General or his first assistant. DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF PRISONS (SANFORD BATES) The Director of the Bureau of Prisons has general supervision of Federal penal institutions and prisoners, and of prison contracts and matters arising under the Prooziion law. He also has charge of special assignments by the Attorney eneral. There is in the Bureau a Board of Parole of three members appointed directly by the Attorney General, whose sole duties are to grant and revoke paroles of Federal prisoners. DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF WAR RISK LITIGATION (WILL G. BEARDSLEE) Under the direction of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Director of the Bureau of War Risk Litigation has charge of war-risk insurance (civil) exclu- sive of claims in favor of the Government, and, generally, of all matters arising under the World War Veterans’ Act and kindred statutes. He also has charge of special assignments by the Attorney General. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (CHARLES E. STEWART) Under the direction of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Adminis- trative Assistant has in charge all administrative and organization matters of the Department including those relating to the United States attorneys, marshals, and other field offices. He has immediate direction over the administrative offices of the Department including: The Office of the Chief Clerk (Harvey C. Donaldson) to whom is assigned supervision of the clerical and subclerical forces of the Department (exclusive of the Federal Bureau of Investigation), the enforcement of general departmental regulations, the designation of space requirements for court activities in Federal buildings throughout the country, and who, through the office of the Appoint- ment Clerk (Charles B. Sornborger), maintains complete personnel records and governs the minor administrative offices of the Department. The Office of the General Agent (Herbert J. McClure), to whom is assigned budget, accounting, and audicing matters. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT POSTMASTER GENERAL The Postmaster General is the executive head of the Postal Service. He appoints all officers and employees under his supervision, except 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 duties assigned to him 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 and maintenance of public property located in the Depart- ment building; the advertising of the Department; the supervision of requisitions entailing expenditure of the appropriations for the departmental service; the con- sideration of requisitions for the printing and binding required in the Department 440 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE 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 and other postal publications; the miscellaneous corre- spondence and files of the Department; matters affecting the proper administra- tion 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 classification division of the Civil Service Commission. 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 con- tracts of the Department; 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 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; with the determination of legal questions arising from the Govern- ment’s monopoly of the carriage of letters; 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, air-mail contractors, 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 con- nection with reviews of such orders by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. CHIEF INSPECTOR The chief inspector is charged with the duty of keeping the Postmaster-General and his assistants advised as to the condition and needs of the entire Postal Service. POST OFFICE Officral Dutres 441 He is charged with the selection, government, and assignment to duty of post- office inspectors in charge, post-office inspectors and clerks at division head- quarters. He authorizes and directs all investigations by inspectors and generally supervises the business of the post-office inspection service. He also has juris- diction in all matters relating to depredations upon the mails, both domestic and international, and losses therein; reported violations of the postal laws such as the alleged use of the mails in schemes to defraud and in the promotion of lotteries; violations of the private express statutes (Government monopoly of the trans- portation of letter mail) ; mailing of explosives, poisons, firearms, and of letters of extortion containing threats to injure the reputation of any person, or to accuse him of a crime; forgery of money orders; mailing of obscene, scurrilous, and other matter prohibited transmission in the mails, and complaints of the interception of and tampering with the mails. He supervises the development of evidence and the preparation for prosecution of criminal offenses arising in connection with the operation of the postal service. He is charged with the custody of money and property collected or received by inspectors, and with the restoration thereof to the United States or to the public, as their interests shall appear. He is charged also with the consideration of miscellaneous complaints against the service rendered at post offices of the second, third, and fourth classes. Administrative matters such as charges against postal employees of all classes (except inspectors and clerks at division headquarters), and the establishment of or changes in rural or star routes should be addressed to the proper bureau of the Department, and if an investigation by an inspector is necessary, such bureau will make re- quest therefor on the chief inspector. Applications for permission to take the examination for the position of post office inspector and correspondence in con- nection with the appointment, promotion, and the character of service rendered by inspectors should be addressed to the chief inspector. 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 dead letters 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. 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 442 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE 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; 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 the air mail service to and from foreign countries; international transit statistical operations; sea post service; Navy mail service; the negotiation and preparation of postal conventions (except those relative to the money-order system) with foreign countries and the regula- tions for their execution, as well as the consideration of questions arising under them and the preparation of all correspondence in connection therewith. Rarlway 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 insofar as the Postal Service is concerned; the supervision of expenditures for the transportation of domestic air mail and the preparation of orders, rules and regulations governing the same based on the law; the administrative audit of reports concerning the performance of service; certification of accounts for payment and preparation for proper deduction all cases of nonperformance; imposition of fines for delin- quencies and failures; and the preparation of all correspondence affecting the domestic air-mail service. Rural mail service.—The consideration of all matters pertaining to the rural- delivery service, and the appointment and discipline of rural carriers. 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 annual statements of their ownership, circulation, etec., and the instruec- " POST OFFICE Official Duties 443 tion of postmasters relative thereto; also the use of penalty envelopes, the frank- ing privilege, and the limit of weight and size of mail matter. Stamps.—The supervision of the manufacture and issuance to postmasters of postage stamps, stamp books, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, postal cards, postal-savings stamps, and migratory bird hunting 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 redemption 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; the administrative examination of accounts of postmasters and other fiscal agents of the system; the supervision of the sale of United States savings bonds at post offices, including the administrative examination of postmasters’ accounts and settlement with the Treasury Depart- ment for bonds sold. 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 practicability of devices and inventions for use in the Postal Service. Division of traffic.—Relative to shipment of freight, express, drayage, crating, routing, and billing shipments of equipment, material, and supplies for the department and 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. Motor-vehicle service—The authorization, operation, and maintenance of the Government-owned motor-vehicle 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, etc.; 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 of parcel-post zone keys. Building operations and supplies.— The preparation of specifications for equip- ment and supplies for the Postal Service, and the custody, distribution, and transportation of such equipment and supplies; the distribution of parcel-post zone keys; the maintenance of a record of expenditures for equipment and supplies 444 Congressional Directory NAVY by appropriations; the manufacture and repair of mail bags and other mail containers and attachments, mail locks, keys, chains, tools, dies, etec.; the issuance of letter-box locks, mail keys, key chains, etc., to postmasters and other officials entitled thereto, and the maintenance of a record thereof; and the operation and maintenance of Federal buildings under the administration of the Post Office Department; the procurement and distribution of supplies therefor; the appoint- ment and supervision of personnel necessary for the maintenance of these buildings. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS The comptroller of the Post Office Department, in charge of the bureau of accounts, receives and makes the administrative examination of all postal and money-order accounts of postmasters of the first and second class; states the general revenues and expenditures as part of the administrative duties formerly performed by the auditor for the Post Office Department; also prepares monthly, quarterly, and annual financial statements from the accounts of postmasters, warrant payments, and the account of the disbursing officer, which comprises the total revenue and expenditure which are in the control of the Post Office Department. Maintains the bookkeeping system from these records (with the exception of Postal Savings) from which the general statistics and the special reports for the information of the Postmaster General are obtained. As budget officer the comptroller prepares the departmental estimates and such supplemental and deficiency estimates as may be required. Provides the contact between the Bureau of the Budget and the Post Office Department. The comptroller also has supervision of the division of retirement records, which maintains an individual record of deductions from salaries for each em- ployee of the Post Office Department and the Postal Service who is eligible for 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. (This position has been unfilled since June 1, 1932.) 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 the appropriations ‘Contingent, Navy,” ‘Contingent Ex- penses, Navy Department,” and ‘Printing and Binding,” and partial super- vision over expenditures from the appropriation ‘Miscellaneous Expenses’’; 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 insular possessions of the United States which are under naval administration. These possessions at the present time comprise Guam and American Samoa. NAVY Official Dutres 445 OFFICE OF CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS The Chief of Naval Operations is an officer on the active list of the Navy appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, from among the officers of the line of the Navy not below the grade of captain, for a period of 4 years. While so serving, the Chief of Naval Operations has the rank and title of admiral, to take rank next after the admiral of the Navy. The Chief of Naval Operations shall, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, be charged with the operations of the fleet and with the preparation and readiness of plans for its use in war (act of Mar. 3, 1915). The duties of the Chief of Naval Operations shall include the direction of the Office of Naval Intelligence and the Division of Fleet Training; the operation of the Communication Service, of naval districts, of vessels assigned to the Naval Reserve, and of mines and mining; the operations of the Marine Corps, except when operating with the Army or on other detached duty by order of the Presi- dent, and the operations of Coast Guard vessels when operating with the Navy; and the direction of all strategic and tactical matters, organization of the fleet, maneuvers, gunnery exercises, drills and exercises, and the training of the fleet for war. He shall so coordinate 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. He shall keep all bureaus and offices of the Navy Department informed in regard to action within their cognizance that is at any time necessary or desirable to improve the war efficiency of the fleet, and shall arrange for the coordination of effort of his office and of the bureaus and other offices of the Navy Department in relation thereto. He shall, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, direct the move- ments and operations of vessels of the Navy, including the time of their assign- ment for docking, repairs, and alterations, and shall prepare schedules and issue orders in regard thereto. He shall keep records of service of fleets, squadrons, and ships. He shall advise the Secretary in regard to the military features and design of all new ships and as to any alterations of a ship which may affect her military value; as to the location, capacity, and protection of navy yards and naval sta- tions, including all features which affect their military value; also, as to matters pertaining to fuel reservations and depots, the location of radio stations, visual signal stations, reserves of ordnance and ammunition, fuel, stores, and other supplies of whatever nature, with a view to meeting effectively the demands of the fleet. He shall advise the Secretary of the Navy on all business of the department in regard to insular governments and foreign relations, and all correspondence in regard to these matters shall be presented for the Secretary’s action through his office. He is charged with the preparation, revision, and record of regulations for the government of the Navy, general orders, tactical instructions, drill books (except such as are issued by the Bureau of Navigation for the individual instruction of officers and enlisted men), signal codes, and cipher codes. In preparing and maintaining in readiness plans for the use of the fleet in war, he shall freely consult with and have the advice and assistance of the various bureaus, boards, and offices of the Department and the Marine Corps Head- quarters in matters coming under their cognizance. After the approval of any given war plans by the Secretary it shall be the duty of the Chief of Naval Opera- tions 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 and their maintenance in constant readiness. In carrying out his duties he shall utilize the facilities of the appropriate bureaus and offices of the Navy Department. The Chief of Naval Operations shall from time to time witness the operations of the fleet as an observer. : 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.) 446 Congressional Directory NAVY 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. 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. 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; liaison with State Department regarding 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 Shore Station Development Board. Three or more officers of the War Plans Division are detailed for Navy membership of the Joint Army and Navy Planning Commit- tee, an agency of the Joint Board. 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. (8) 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. (6) 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 NAVY Offictal Dutzes 447 United States. It maintains 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. In time of war the Office of Naval Intelligence has 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 communications in any manner whatsoever, except those relating 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. FLEET MAINTENANCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Fleet Maintenance Division advises the Chief of Naval Operations on material matters afloat affecting the efficiency of the fleet 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 central 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. The Shore Establishment Section is charged with matters pertaining to shore- station development, including the acquisition and disposal of shore properties. 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 Fleet Maintenance Division of the Office 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, chemical-warfare, and communications training of the fleet. (b) Coordinating study, research, and experiment in all bureaus pertaining to fleet training. (¢) 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. 448 Congressional Directory NAVY (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. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION The Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, was created by the act of July 5, 1862. 1. (a) The Bureau of Navigation, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for the procurement, education, training, discipline, and distribution of officers and enlisted personnel of the Navy, including the Naval Reserve and the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, except the professional education of officers, nurses, and enlisted men of the Medical Department. (b) It is charged with the supply of ships’ navigational outfits, including instruments, and with their maintenance and repair, except those specifically assigned to other cognizance; with ocean and lake surveys; with the collection of foreign surveys; with the publication and supply of charts, sailing directions, and nautical works, and the collection and dissemination of all nautical, hydro- graphic, and meteorological information to ships and aircraft; with pilotage; and with libraries. (¢) It is charged with the upkeep and operation of the following and with their repairs: Naval Academy, Postgraduate School, Naval War College, Schools for the training of enlisted men, Training stations, Naval Home, Naval Observatory, Hydrographic Office, and with the direction of receiving ships and stations. 2. It shall issue, record, and enforce the orders of the Secretary of the Navy to the individual officers of the Navy and of the Naval Reserve. 3. It shall have under its direction recruiting stations, and shall supervise the enlistment and discharge of all enlisted persons. . 4. It shall have under its direction the organization and administration of the Naval Reserve, and shall provide for the mobilization of all these Reserves. 5. It shall have cognizance of transportation for all naval personnel except the Marine Corps. 6. It shall establish the complements and allowances of ships. 7. It shall keep the records of service of all officers and men, and shall prepare an annual Navy Register for publication. 8. It shall be charged with all matters pertaining to application for appoint- ments and commissions in the Navy and with the preparation of such appoint- ments and commissions for signature. 9. It shall be charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all regulations governing uniforms, and with the distribution of general orders and regulations. 10. Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments shall be submitted by this Bureau for the action of the Secretary of the Navy. The records of all general courts martial and courts of inquiry involving the personnel of the Navy shall, before final action, be referred to this Bureau for comment and recom- mendation as to disciplinary features. 11. It shall receive all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. 12. It shall be charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding naval ceremonies and naval etiquette. 13. It shall be charged with the supervision of the welfare and recreational activities of the Naval Service except those under the cognizance of the Marine Corps. NAVAL OBSERVATORY, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION The Naval Observatory at Washington, D. C., broadcasts time signals twenty times daily. Signals are broadcast at every hour except 9 a. m., 11 a. m., 9 p. m., and 11 p. m. 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 NAVY Official Duties 449 may have use for them 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 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 inspec- tion of navigational, aeronautical, and aerological instruments for the ships and aircraft of the Navy is performed at the Naval Observatory. The Naval Observatory maintains continuous observations for absolute positions of the fundamental stars, and the independent determination, by observations 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 Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac and improving the tables of the planets, moon, and stars. The Nautical Almanac Office 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. One of the many scientific duties of the Naval Observatory is the determination and promulgation of information in connection with all solar and lunar eclipses. For many years it has been the practice to distribute pamphlets containing all of the astronomical data in connection with coming total solar eclipses. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION The Hydrographic Office is charged with the execution of 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 is charged with the publication and supply of United States coastal aviation charts; naval air pilots; aviation charts and publications for special naval purposes; as well as the collection and dissemination of timely information which will contribute to the safe navigation of aircraft over sea and coastal routes. 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 30063°—74—2—1ST ED——29 450 Congressional Drirectory NAVY 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. THE BUREAU OF ORDNANCE The Bureau of Ordnance, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for the design, manufacture, procurement, mainte- nance, issue, and efficiency of all offensive and defensive arms and armament (including armor, torpedoes, mines, depth charges, pyrotechnics, bombs, ammuni- tion, war explosives, war chemicals) and, except as specifically assigned to other cognizance, optical and other devices and material for the control of guns, torpe- does, and bombs. It is charged with the upkeep and operation of the following naval ordnance establishments and with their repairs, except as excluded in Article 484: (a) Naval gun factories. (b) Naval ordnance plants. (¢) Naval torpedo stations. (d) Naval proving grounds. (e) Naval powder factories. (f) Naval ammunition depots. (9) Naval magazines on shore. (h) Naval mine depots. ] When not prescribed by the United States Navy Regulations, specific assign- ment of cognizance will be as stated in the Bureau of Ordnance Manual. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR The duties of the Bureau of Construction and Repair comprise the responsibility for the general design, structural strength, stability and seaworthiness of ships of the Navy except airships, responsibility for all that relates to the details of designing, building, fitting and repairing of hulls of vessels, district craft (except those of the Bureau of Yards and Docks) and small boats, and the provision and installation of permanent fittings; and, except as specifically assigned to other cognizance, auxiliaries, appliances and articles of equipage on its approved allow- ance list, preparation of preliminary plans, approximate data, or both, showing the designs of new ships in accordance with the military characteristics recom- mended by the General Board and approved by the Secretary of the Navy; prepa- ration of final designs of new vessels in consultation with other bureaus. It provides shipkeepers for the care of vessels and district craft (except those of the Bureau of Yards and Docks) not in commission. It is responsible for the provision of facilities and arrangements for salvage of vessels. It has administrative supervision of the dry docking of all vessels and district craft and of the operating and cleaning of dry docks and marine railways. It is charged with the design, development and procurement of materials and appliances for defense against gas attacks except as specifically assigned to other cognizance; diving gear and experimental diving units and respiratory protective devices; paravanes and mine-sweeping gear. It is charged with the upkeep and operation of the experimental model basin and wind tunnel and the materials laboratory, navy yard, New York (joint cognizance with the Bureau of Engineering), and with such repairs as are under cognizance of the bureau. 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 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 NAVY Official Dutres 451 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 the following: Gyrocompass and anemometer equipment (Bureau of Navigation), fire-control instruments (Bureau of Ordnance), galley ranges and ovens (Bureau of Construction and Repair), and motors and control Soplimnosy used to operate machinery under the specific cognizance of other ureaus. 3. It is charged with the design, manufacture, installation, and maintenance of all radio and sound equipage, ashore and afloat, including all appliances used by the Naval Communication Service, except such material as is assigned to other cognizance. 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, Anacostia, D. C., the Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md., the Naval Boiler Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., and jointly with the Bureau of Construction and Repair of the material laboratory, navy yard, New York, 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, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for the maintenance of the health of the Navy, for the care of the sick and injured, for the custody and preservation of the records, accounts, and properties under its cognizance and pertaining to its duties, and for the professional education and training of officers, nurses, and men of the Medical Department. It is charged with the management and control of all naval hospitals, medical supply depots, medical laboratories, the Naval Medical Center, and of all tech- nical schools established for the education or training of members of the Medical Corps, Dental Corps, Nurse Corps, and Hospital Corps, and with their upkeep and operation. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall provide for inspection of the sani- tary condition of the Navy, and shall recommend with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service; it shall advise with 452 Congressional Directory NAVY the department and other bureaus in reference to the sanitary features of ships under construction and in commission, regarding berthing, ventilation, and loca- tion of quarters for the care and treatment of the sick and injured; of the provi- sions for the care of wounded in battle; and, in the case of shore stations, with 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 also advise concerning matters pertaining to clothing and food, to water supplies used for drinking, cooking, and bathing purposes, and to drainage and disposal of wastes, 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, and shall adopt for use all such devices or procedures as may be developed in the sciences of medicine and surgery as will in any way tend to an increase in military efficiency. It shall be the duty of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery to provide for the physical examination of officers, nurses, 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; and it shall pass upon the competency, from a professional standpoint, of all men of the Hospital Corps for enlistment, enrollment, and promotion by means of examination conducted under its supervision or by such forms as it may prescribe. ‘The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall recommend to the Bureau of Navigation the complement of Medical Department personnel for hospitals and hospital ships, and shall recommend and have information as to the assignment and duties of medical officers, dental officers, and Hospital Corps men. It shall be charged with the administration of the Nurse Corps, and shall have power to ig and remove all nurses, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the avy. It shall require for and 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; and shall have charge of the civilian force employed at naval hospitals, medical supply depots, medical laboratories, the Naval Medical Center, and at all technical schools for the education or training of Medical Department personnel. It shall approve the design of hospital ships insofar as relates to their efficiency for the care of the sick and wounded, and shall provide for the organization and administration of the medical department of such vessels. The arrangements for care, transportation, and burial of the dead shall be under the jurisdiction and control of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS The duties of the Bureau of Supplies-and Accounts comprise all that relates to the purchase (including the preparation and distribution of schedules, 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 fae- 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. NAVY Official Duties 453 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- ion 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 Bureau of Aeronautics is charged with matters pertaining to naval aero- nautics as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy (sec. 8, act of Congress, July 12, 1921). The Bureau of Aeronautics, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for all that relates to the design, construction, fitting out, testing, repair, and alteration of naval and Marine Corps aircraft and, except as specifically assigned to other cognizance, instruments, equipment, and accessories pertaining thereto. It provides aircraft in accordance with approved operating plans. It is charged with the upkeep and operation of all aeronautic shore establish- ments of the Navy and Marine Corps, exclusive of aircraft operations, and with their repairs, within the capacity of the force employed. It makes recommendations covering all aeronautic matters as to operations, personnel, and material to the appropriate bureaus and offices of the Navy De- partment and the Headquarters, Marine Corps. When not prescribed by the United States Navy Regulations, specific assign- ment of cognizance is as stated in the Manual 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 relating thereto 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, boards for the selection of officers for promotion, boards for the examination of officers for retirement and promotion in the naval service, and boards for the examination of candidates for appointment as officers in the naval service other than mid- shipmen; to prepare charges and specifications for courts-martial and the neces- sary orders convening courts-martial in cases where such courts are ordered by the Secretary of the Navy; to prepare court-martial orders promulgating the final action of the reviewing authority in general courts-martial cases, except those of enlisted men convened by officers other than the Secretary of the Navy; to prepare the necessary orders convening courts of inquiry and boards for the examination of officers for promotion and retirement, for the selection of officers for promotion, for the examination of all candidates for appointment as officers in the naval service other than midshipmen, and in the Naval Reserve, 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 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 Office; proceedings in the civil courts by or against the Government or its officers; preparation of advertisements, proposals, and contracts; insurance; 454 Congressional Directory INTERIOR patents; the sufficiency of official, contract, and other bonds and guarantees; claims by or against the Government; and to conduct the correspondence re- specting the foregoing duties, including the preparation for submission to the Attorney General of all questions which the Secretary of the Navy may direct to be 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. No oral or informal opinions shall be rendered by the Office of the Judge Advo- cate General of the Navy. Formal opinions or decisions in writing shall be rendered only when directed by the Secretary of the Navy, and such opinions or decisions shall be the basis of official action by any bureau or office or officer of the Navy Department or Marine Corps only after the approval of such opinion or decision by the Secretary of the Navy. HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS The Major General Commandant of the Marine Corps, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for the procurement, discharge, education, training, discipline, and distribution of officers and enlisted personnel of the Marine Corps, including the Marine Corps Reserve, and the administration and general efficiency of the Marine Corps and of the Marine Corps Reserve. 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; transpor- i 2 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, etec.; 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, etec., 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 busi- ness relating to the General Land Office, Bureau of Reclamation, Geological Survey, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Office of Education, National Park Service, Bureau of Mines, Division of Grazing Control, Division of Investigations, and Division of Territories and Island Possessions (see Executive Order of May 29, 1934), and certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. By authority of the President, the Secretary of the Interior has general supervision over the Government railroad in the Territory of Alaska. INTERIOR Official Duties 455 He exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. Executive order of February 27, 1931, placed the administration of the government of the Virgin Islands under his supervision. Executive order of May 29, 1934, transferred to the Department of the Interior all functions of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, Department of War, pertaining to or connected with the administration of the government of Puerto Rico. He was designated cus- todian of the records and files of the United States Fuel Administration 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. Executive order of April 17, 1934, transferred the functions of the United States Geographic Board to the Depart- ment of the Interior. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the adjust- ment of claims filed under the War Minerals Relief Act (sec. 5, act of Mar. 2, 1919, 40 Stat. 1274) for losses incurred in producing or preparing to produce manga- nese, chrome, pyrites, or tungsten during the war, and with the supervision of all matters pertaining to the Alaska Road Commission. The Bureau of Mines was transferred from the Department of Commerce to the Department of the Interior by direction of the President in Executive order of February 22, 1934. Under the National Industrial Recovery Act, as extended, the Secretary of the Interior acts for the President in connection with all matters authorized by that act relating to the petroleum industry. As Administrator for the Petroleum Industry, the Secretary of the Interior functions through the Petroleum Admin- istrative Board and Petroleum Labor Policy Board. By Executive Order No. 6979, dated February 28, 1935, the President desig- nated the Secretary of the Interior as his agent to execute all powers and functions vested in him by the act of February 22, 1935 (Public No. 14, 74th Cong.), known as the Connally Oil Act. For the purpose of administering this act, the Secre- tary established Federal Tender Board No. 1 and Federal Petroleum Agency No. 1 for the east Texas oil field. By Executive Order No. 6198, dated July 8, 1933, the Secretary was designated Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works to administer Title IT of the National Industrial Recovery Act, which includes Public Works Projects. 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 June 10, 1933, transferred the functions and personnel of the following agences to the Department of the Interior: Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission, Public Buildings Commission, Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, National Memorial Commission, Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission, and the Federal Board for Vocational Education. Secretary Ickes is a member of the following bodies: National Forest Reservation Commission, member. Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, member. Smithsonian Institution, member. National Resources Committee, chairman. Industrial Emergency Committee, member. National Emergency Council, member. Federal Surplus Relief Corporation, treasurer. Virgin Islands Co., member, board of directors. Advisory Council for the Government of the Virgin Islands, member. United States Council of National Defense, member. Howard University, patron ex-officio. Planning Committee on Mineral Policy, member. National Power Policy Committee, chairman. Interdepartmental Loan Committee, member. UNDER SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The position of Under Secretary was established by the act of May 9, 1935 (Public No. 53, 74th Cong.). This official assists the secretary in administra- tive matters of the department and in his absence serves as acting secretary. The under secretary has general supervision over the administration of the petroleum industry. FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The First Assistant Secretary has general supervision over matters concerning the General Land Office, the Bureau of Reclamation, the Geological Survey, Bureau of Mines. His duties relate to the administration and enforcement of 456 Congressional Drrectory INTERIOR the laws enacted by Congress affecting these activities. He also considers pro- posed legislation relating to matters under his supervision. Duties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus are assigned to him from time to time. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Assistant Secretary has general supervision over all matters concerning the Office of Indian Affairs, Office of Education, National Park Service, St. Elizabeths Hospital, Freedmen’s Hospital, Howard University, Columbia Institution for the Deaf, the Division of Territories and Island Possessions; admission, disbarment, and restoration of attorneys and agents to practice before department and bu- reaus thereof. 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 appropri- ations, ete. 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 regulations of the department, and has administrative supervision of the buildings occupied by the department. Has general supervision of expenditures for printing and binding, contingent, and other departmental appropriations, including stationery and postage on mail addressed to postal-union countries. Handles accounts and related correspondence for United States disbursing agents in Alaska, Hawaii, and the Virgin Islands; 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; is contact officer for the Department in matters relating to the Division of Disbursements, Treasury Department, and the General Accounting Office; handles various other miscellaneous matters of the Secretary’s Office not otherwise assigned; is delegated by the Secretary to sign a portion of the official papers and documents ordinarily signed by the Assistant Secretary during the latter’s absence. 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 claims relating thereto, the granting of railroad and other rights-of-way, easements, the issuance of patents for lands, and with furnishing certified copies of land patents and of 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 has, under direction of the Secretary of the Interior, management of all Indian affairs and of all matters arising out of Indian relations. This includes the economic development of the Indian, both tribally and as an individual; the organization of Indian tribes, including credit organizations; Indian education in boarding schools, day schools, and community centers operated by the Government, and in public schools and other nongovern- mental institutions; the health, medical, and sanitation activities; the land pro- gram, involving land acquisition and adjustment, tribal enrollment, land sales, and contracts; forestry, involving forest management, fire protection, grazing; the furtherance of an agricultural extension program; irrigation, both construec- tion and maintenance and operation; the construction and upkeep of buildings at field units, and the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges on Indian lands; Indian emergency conservation work and other emergency activ- ities; also the health and educational program, for 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, INTERIOR Official Dutzes 457 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 and the acts relating to cooperation with the States and Territories for the pro- motion of vocational education and rehabilitation. 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 commissioner is a member of the Fed- eral Board for Vocational Education, of the Commission on Licensure to Practice the Healing Art in the District of Columbia, and of the executive committee of the National Youth Administration. 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, 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 latter act expired on June 30, 1934, but an act approved May 21, 1934, authorized an appropriation of $3,000,000 for each of the fiscal years 1935, 1936, and 1937 for the further development of vocational education to be used in equal amounts for instruction in agricultural subjects, home economics subjects, and trade and industrial education subjects. 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 allotments is authorized upon condition that for each dollar of Federal money expended 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 were of a twofold character: On the one hand, as representative of the Government the Federal Board cooperated with State boards for vocational education in pro- moting vocational education; and, on the other, as a research agency it was re- quired 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 examined 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- proved plans found to be in conformity with the provisions and purposes of the act. It ascertained annually whether the several States were using or were pre- pared to use the money received by them in accordance with the provisions of the Statute and each year it certified to the Secretary of the Treasury the States which complied with the provisions of the act, together with the amount which each State was entitled to receive. It was expressly required to make studies, investi- gations, 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 fields of agricultural, trade and industrial, home economics, and commercial a large part of the work of the 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 was 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 was required to ascertain annually whether the States are properly using Federal funds and 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 was entitled to receive. To 458 5 ongressional Directory INTERIOR aid the States, the Federal Board was authorized to make studies and investiga- tions of the vocational rehabilitation of disabled persons and their placement in suitable or gainful occupations. Acts authorizing continuation of appropriations for this purpose were approved June 5, 1924, June 9, 1930, and June 30, 1932 (effective July 1, 1933). The Social Security Act, approved August 14, 1935, provides for a considerable increase in the funds to be paid to the States for vocational rehabilitation. 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 urpose. : Under Executive order of June 10, 1933, the functions of the Federal Board for Vocational Education were transferred to the Department of the Interior, and the Board acts in an advisory capacity without compensation. These functions were assigned to the Commissioner of Education on October 10, 1933. 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 and surface and underground waters, and in classifying the public lands and supervising the engineering phases of mineral leasing. COMMISSIONER OF RECLAMATION The Commissioner, under supervision of the Secretary of the Interior, is charged with the responsibility for the operation of all branches of the Bureau, including investigation of irrigation resources; preparation of plans, construction, operation, and maintenance of irrigation projects, including power development; administra- tion of funds provided for under the reclamation laws; the settlement and im- provement of irrigated lands; the repayment of sums due from irrigators; and the investigation of reclamation and farm development projects outside of the arid region of the United States. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, administers the National Park System in accordance with the act of August 25, 1916, as amended; the act of June 8, 1906; the Executive Order of August 10, 1933; and the act of August 21, 1935; formulates policies and directs protective work from standpoint of preservation and utilization and enjoyment of visitors; directs construction from engineering, architectural and landscape viewpoints, including sanitation facil- ities; directs public educational service in natural sciences, history, and archeol- ogy, and provides for museum developments; and is responsible for creation and organization of new national parks, monuments, historic sites and buildings, and other areas. The director is charged with direct supervision of the emergency conservation work on Federal and State park lands. DIRECTOR OF THE 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, AGRICULTURE Official Dutres 459 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 manufacture, distribution, storage, use, or possession of all explosives and their ingredients: : 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 special repre- sentative 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 division of territories and island possessions. 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. 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 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY The Secretary of Agriculture is charged with the work of promoting agriculture in its broadest sense. He exercises general supervision and control over the affairs of the department and formulates and establishes the general policies to be pursued by its various branches. The Under Secretary and Assistant Secretary act for the Secretary in his absence and assist in the general direction of the work of the department. DIRECTORS Each of the directors, of extension work, personnel, finance, 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. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL This office has general direction and supervision of the personnel, salary classification, organization, and related operations of the department as a whole. 460 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE It conducts the business of the department with the Civil Service Commission and, where personnel matters are concerned, with other agencies doing business with the Department of Agriculture. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE This office exercises general oversight and supervision of the budget, fiscal, purchasing, accounting, and related work of the department. It conducts the business of the department with the Bureau of the Budget, the General Account- ing Office, the Treasury Department, the Appropriations Committees, and other departments and agencies of the Government doing business with the Depart- ment of Agriculture. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR The solicitor is the legal adviser of the Secretary and the heads of the several branches of the department. He directs and supervises all law work of the department. DIVISION OF OPERATION This division is responsible for the management of the buildings and other facilities occupied or used by the Department of Agriculture in the District of Columbia, the telephone and telegraph service, the mails and files, and post office, and the motor-truck and other service units. The chief of the Division of Operation also acts as real-estate officer of the department and as personnel and administrative officer for the internal operation of the Office of the Secretary. 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 380 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 265,000 volumes on agriculture, the related sciences, and economics, exclusive of the collections in the Weather Bureau library, which comprise approximately 50,000 volumes. It receives currently approximately 4,500 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, Bankhead-Jones, and supplementary acts for the support of State and Territorial agricultural experiment stations in the several AGRICULTURE Offictal Duties 461 States and in Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, and has immediate supervision of the experiment stations of the Department of Agriculture in Hawaii and Puerto Rico. It examines in detail the work and expenditures of the State experiment stations to ascertain whether the Federal funds for their support are used and accounted for in accordance with the Federal acts and rulings, and gives such advice and assistance and furnishes such pertinent information as it is thought will best promote the efficiency of the stations and the effective coordination of the . work of the department with that of the stations. The office reports annually on the work and expenditures of the experiment stations, as required by law, and issues Experiment Station Record, which gives a comprehensive current review of progress and results of scientific research, by the stations and other agencies, relating to improvement of agriculture and rural life. 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. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ADMINISTRATION The Agricultural Adjustment Administration is established within the Depart- ment of Agriculture to carry out the provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, approved May 12, 1933. This Act expresses the policy of Congress to estab- lish and maintain such balance between the production of agricultural commodi- ties and the demand for them and to provide such marketing conditions for these commodities as will restore the purchasing power of agricultural goods to the level which it held during the years 1909-1914. For protection of consumers the act specifies that its provisions shall not be construed as authorizing an increase in the percentage of the consumers’ retail expenditures which is returned to farmers above that received in the years 1909-1914. Adjustment measures provided for in the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, are: (1) Adjustment in acreage or production of basic agricultural com- modities under voluntary contracts between producers and the Secretary of Agriculture, with rental and benefit payments made for individual adjustments; (2) payments for removal of surpluses from ordinary channels of trade and for expansion of domestic and foreign markets; (3) payments for production under domestic allotment; (4) tax programs designed to restrict the volume of marketing of certain agricultural commodities; (5) acquisition of commodities under a plan for holding reserves of certain food, feed, and fiber crops to tide over periods of shortage and protect both farmers and consumers from undue price fluctuations; (6) provisions for attaining normal and stable marketing conditions for basic or nonbasic crops in interstate commerce through marketing agreements and orders, the use of orders, however, being restricted to definite commodities. To finance adjustment measures funds are available from processing and compensatory taxes, special appropriations, and customs receipts. Processing taxes may be levied and benefit payments made for adjusting only basic com- modities. Such commodities as specified by the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, are wheat, rye, flax, barley, cotton, field corn, grain sorghums, hogs, cattle, rice, potatoes, tobacco, peanuts, sugar beets, sugarcane, and milk and its products. Production control programs of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration encourage beneficial use of land taken out of production of surplus crops through planting such land to erosion-preventing and soil-building crops. 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; 462 Congressional Durectory AGRICULTURE 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 livestock products, dairy and poultry products, grain, hay, feed, seed, cotton, 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 inspection service is available in many of the principal producing areas and receiving centers on fruits and vegetables, hay, beans, 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, perishable agricultural com- modities act, and the tobacco inspection act, and the administration of the warehouse act. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING The Bureau of Agricultural Engineering conducts investigations of farm irrigation, farm drainage, 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; land-clearing methods; rearrangement of field boundaries for effective use of farming machinery; me- chanical 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. The bureau gives supervision to the Civilian Conservation Corps camps working on the maintenance of drainage improvements in organized drainage enterprises. 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. BELTSVILLE RESEARCH CENTER The administrative organization of the Beltsville Research Center provides for the general supervision of the entire plant and the development and operation of the common facilities required by the organizations of the department engaged in fundamental agricultural research. The director of the center serves as the ni of the Secretary of Agriculture and the chicfs of the respective ureaus. Seven bureaus of the Department of Agriculture and two bureaus of the De- partment of Commerce are represented. These include the Bureau of Animal Industry— Animal Disease Experiment Station, Division of Animal Husbandry (beef-cattle, dual-purpose cattle, goat, horse, nutrition, poultry, sheep, and swine investigations), Division of Pathology, and Division of Zoology; Bureau of Biological Survey; Bureau of Dairy Industry; Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine—Dbee-culture investigations, control investigations, fruit insect in- vestigations, insecticide investigations, insects affecting man and animals, and truck-crop and garden insects investigation; Food and Drug Administration— Insecticide Control Section; Forest Service; and Bureau of Plant Industry— horticultural station and the plant-introduction garden (at Bell, Md.). The Department of Commerce activities include the National Bureau of Standards (radio section) and the Bureau of Air Commerce (emergency landing field). AGRICULTURE Official Dutres 463 BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY The Bureau of Biological Survey, the wildlife service of the Federal Govern- - ment, engages in research relating to the habits, economic status, and diseases of birds and other wild animals, including studies in the propagation of fur and game species; it acquires and maintains refuges for migratory birds and other forms of the native fauna; conducts work in game management, including control of injurious species; and administers laws for the conservation of vertebrate wildlife (exceptifishes). Its work is undertaken in the interest of agriculture, horticulture, stock raising, forestry, and recreation, and to meet the natural requirements of the wildlife itself. The Bureau maintains fur-animal experiment stations and cooperates with fur farmersinimproving methods of production of fur animalsin captivity and develops and demonstrates improved practices in rabbit raising; it studies the propagation of game birds, conducts research in wildlife disease control, and makes investi- gations for improving the reindeer industry in Alaska and the reestablishment of musk oxen in the Territory. Through a corps of land-valuation engineers, surveyors, and negotiators the Bureau is engaged in refuge acquisition in a recently intensified program of res- toration of migratory waterfowl. It maintains more than 100 refuges in the United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for the protection of birds and of game and other mammals, and, under regional directors, conducts educational and investigational work in the enforcement of laws for wildlife conservation and develops more effective methods for the control of stock-killing wild animals, destructive rodents, and injurious birds, cooperating with State and other organizations. Regulatory work is performed by the Bureau in administration of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, the Migratory Bird Conservation Act, the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act, and, through the Alaska Game Commission, the Alaska Game Law. Other laws administered are for the protection of animals and prop- erty in wildlife reservations and for the prevention of illegal interstate shipment and importation from abroad of wild animals and birds. 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 investigations. (1) Under research and technology is grouped the work relating to the applica- tion 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 physio- logical effects on the human organism; experiments on the utilization of agricul- tural and other raw materials for coloring, medicinal, and technical purposes; development of improved processes in the production of rosin and turpentine; and development of means to prevent farm fires and dust explosions. (2) The soil work of the Bureau includes the classification and mapping of the soils of the United States, studies of the agricultural value of soils, their charac- teristics in relation to productiveness, their origin and development, and their chemical and mechanical compositions. (8) The fertilizer work involves the study 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 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. 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- 464 C ongresstonal Directory AGRICULTURE 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 enforcement of regulatory laws pertaining to the sanitary inspection of renovated-butter factories and the inspection and certification of dairy products intended for export. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE The Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine is concerned with investi- gations on insects and their economic relations; the development and application of methods for their eradication or control; the carrying out, in cooperation with the States, of necessary work to prevent the spread and to control or eradicate insect pests and plant diseases that have gained more or less limited foothold in the United States; and the utilization of those species that are beneficial. These activities include investigations on and direction of control campaigns against the species injurious to agriculture, horticulture, and arboriculture; investigations on the species affecting the health of man and animals, or infesting human habitations or injurious to industries; the culture and use of honeybees and bee- keeping practices; investigations on the natural enemies of insects and plant pests and the possibility of using these as aids for control; the taxonomy, anatomy, physiology, and responses of insects; chemical and other problems relating to the composition, action, and application of insecticides; and the development of methods of manufacturing insecticides and materials used with them. To aid in carrying out these assignments and to protect agriculture from plant pests and diseases, the bureau is responsible for the enforcement of the following acts and restrictive orders promulgated thereunder: The plant quarantine act of 1912, as amended; the insect pest act of 1905; the act of 1922 governing the importation of adult honeybees; the act providing for the Mexican border inspection and control service; the act providing for export certification to meet sanitary requirements of foreign countries for plants and plant products; the termined inspection act of 1915 (in cooperation with the Post Office Depart- ment). 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, Caustic Poison Act, and Filled-Milk 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. 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 163,000,000 acres of Government-owned land and approximately one-third 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. Recreational oppor- tunities are developed and maintained; scientific management is applied to the development and maintenance of its wildlife resources. Provision is made for many other forms of national-forest land use under regulation, Systematic AGRICULTURE Official Dutres 465 protection is provided against fire and other destructive agencies. Supervision is | given to the emergency relief work performed on the national forests by the I Civilian Conservation Corps and the Emergency Relief Administration. Gen- eral supervision is given to the emergency conservation work on State and private | lands. ii 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. BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS The Bureau of Home Economics conducts scientific studies of consumer problems, including foods and nutrition, economics, textiles and clothing, and housing and equipment. It supplies information to various Government agencies | wanting data on consumption of various commodities in the home and assists | in the establishment of policies governing the use of these commodities. It furnishes the homemaker results of its scientific research through bulletins, magazine articles and press releases, radio talks, and exhibits. 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 INDUSTRY The activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry are devoted to plant research and related problems. They include experiments in the improvement of plants so as to increase their yield, quality, and resistance to diseases and insect pests, together with fundamental research on the laws of inheritance looking to the establishment of the soundest procedures in plant breeding; the introduction and testing of promising seeds and plants from foreign countries; investigations of the methods of cultivation and allied operations, such as spraying to protect from important diseases, making for economical and profitable production of field, | fruit, vegetable, and ornamental plants, together with studies of the physiology, A morphology, and cytology necessary to an adequate understanding of the rela- tion between environment and cultivation on the one hand and yield and quality on the other; fundamental studies of the relation of the crops to the soil, including materials and methods making for successful fertilizer practice and the function of microorganisms in soil fertility and crop production; investigations seeking to establish the best methods of storing plant products in warehouse or during trans- portation in order to insure maximum final quality and minimum loss and expense during storage and marketing. The regulatory activities of the bureau are lim- ited to the enforcement of the Federal Seed Act and the control of quality of plant and soil inoculants. : : In addition to the experimental activities of the bureau at the Arlington (Va.)" Experiment Farm, which is immediately adjacent to the District of Columbia, and at the Beltsville Research Center, in nearby Maryland, the bureau operates field stations or laboratories in practically all the major cropping regions of the United States, a majority of its activities being in direct cooperation with the State agricultural experiment stations. Land in the District of Columbia has been acquired by the bureau on which to establish and maintain the National Arboretum. 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 30063°—T4—-2—1ST ED——30 466 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 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. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE The Soil Conservation Service is concerned with the propagation of those land-use and land-treatment methods in agriculture which will effect control of soil erosion, conserve moisture, curtail sedimentation of stream beds and reser- voirs, minimize the hazard of flood, and, in general, prevent the deterioration of productive lands and attendant evils. The approach to these broad objectives involves three distinct phases of activity: (1) The conduct of soil erosion control demonstrations on agricultural land in cooperation with farmers and the actual treatment of land to control erosion in areas owned or controlled by the Federal Government. (2) The conduct of research and survey activities necessary to provide a con- tinuing development of scientific knowledge regarding soil erosion and related subjects and the technique of erosion control. (3) In cooperation with the State extension services, colleges of agriculture, and other agricultural agencies, the development, organization, and direction of State and local effort in the field of soil conservation. Demonstration activities are conducted in selected watershed areas, both on private and public land. On private land the voluntary cooperation of individual farmers within the selected demonstration area is secured through the medium of a cooperative agreement, under which the farmer agrees to submit his land to the use and treatment involved in a complete erosion-control and soil-conservation program devised by technicians of the Soil Conservation Service, to furnish as much as possible of the labor, material, and equipment required to complete the work, and to carry out the program for a period of 5 years. The Service in return agrees to devise a plan specifically applicable to the land of the cooperating farmer and to furnish such supplementary labor, material, and equipment as may be necessary. Demonstration areas on private land involve an aggregate of approximately 7,000,000 acres. In addition, land-treatment work is under way on approxi- mately 40,000,000 acres of land publicly owned or controlled in the Southwest. Research activities include the operation of erosion-control experiment stations, scientific investigations to determine the relationship between erosion and sedimentation of stream beds and reservoirs, comparative watershed studies to determine the relationship between treated and untreated areas and the respective effects upon stream discharge and flood flows, and climatic and physiographic studies. ; : Survey work involves the mapping in detail of all demonstration areas to determine not only the extent of erosion but such related factors as slope, soil type, and current land-use practices. The development and organization of State and local effort involves the formation of voluntary erosion-control associations, conservancy districts, and similar entities in the States and their political subdivisions, with a view to the creation of a system of legally constituted agencies qualified to assume major responsibility for control of erosion on private lands, under direction and with the assistance of the Federal government. In addition to these activities, the Service directs 500 Civilian Conservation Corps camps in erosion-control work, both on private and public land. 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. 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- COMMERCE | Officral Duties 467 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, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE The Secretary of Commerce is charged with the work of promoting the commerce of the United States and its 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 con- nected therewith; the making of coast and geodetic surveys; the collecting of statistics relating to foreign and domestic commerce; the inspection of steamboats, and the enforcement of laws relating thereto for the protection of life and property; the supervision of the fisheries as administered by the Federal Government; the supervision and control of the Alaskan fur-seal, salmon, and other fisheries; the jurisdiction over merchant vessels, their registry, licensing, measurement, entry, clearance, transfers, movement of their cargoes and passengers, and laws relating thereto, and to seamen of the United States; the custody, construction, mainte- nance, 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 establishment and maintenance of aids to air navigation, the licensing of air pilots, and the inspection and registration of commercial aircraft; the supervision of the Patent Office; the administration of the acts of Congress to encourage, develop, and create a merchant marine and to regulate carriers by water engaged in the foreign and interstate commerce of the United States; the supervision of the functions of the United States Merchant Fleet Corporation, and the formulation (in conjunction with the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Treasury) of regulations for the enforcement of the food and drugs act of 1906 and the insecticide act of 1910. He has power to call upon other departments for statistical data obtained by them. 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 (ERNEST G. DRAPER) Under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, the Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary or may be required by law. To him is assigned the general supervision and direction of the Bureaus of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Standards, Fisheries, and Census, and the Patent Office. In the absence of the Secretary, he acts as head of the department. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF COMMERCE (J. M. JOHNSON) Under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, the Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary or may be required y law. To him is assigned the general supervision and direction of the Bureau of Air Commerce, the Lighthouse Service, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection, and the Shipping Board Bureau and the United States Merchant Fleet Corporation. SOLICITOR The solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department of Commerce, and his duties are to act as legal adviser to the Secretary of Commerce and the chiefs of the various bureaus, and to render opinions on questions of law arising in the course of business in the department. He prepares and examines all contracts 468 Congressional Directory COMMERCE and bonds entered into or required by the department, and has charge of the preparation of all legal papers to which the department is a party. He also renders such legal service in connection with matters arising in the administrative work as may be required of him by the Secretary. 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 Bosretary, he may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and ocuments. r—————— DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS The chief of the division of accounts is charged with the duty of preparing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Depart- ! ment of Commerce to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations; the prepa- ration 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- i 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, 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 approves all vouchers in payment for the publish- ing work of the department, keeps a record of all obligations and expenditures in connection therewith, and conducts the correspondence it entails. 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 department outside of Washington, and of the keeping of detailed accounts of all expenditures from the appropriation for contingent expenses of the department. He receives, verifies, and preserves the 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 AIR COMMERCE The Bureau of Air Commerce 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. A Cr a a A eS RN COMMERCE Offictal Duties 469 Among other things, it includes the establishment and maintenance of civil air- ways and their equipment with intermediate landing fields, beacon lights, signal and radio apparatus, and other aids to air navigation; the establishment of air trafficrules; 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 serv- ice on airways; the charting of airways, and the publication of air maps; the pro- motion of air commerce, industry, and trade; the conduct of scientific research and development work tending to the improvement of facilities for air naviga- tion, airplanes, and motors; the examination and rating of civilian schools giving instruction in flying; and the rating of airports as to suitability, and for the en- couragement of the establishment and maintenance of airports by municipalities. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS The Bureau of the Census takes the decennial census of the United States, which in 1930 covered population, agriculture, manufactures, mining, distribu- tion, and unemployment. It takes a census of manufactures every 2 years; censuses of agriculture and of electrical industries—covering electric light and power plants, electric railways, telephones, and telegraphs—every 5 years; and censuses of churches or religious bodies, of the dependent, defective,and delinquent classes in institutions, and of financial statistics of State and local governments every 10 years. With funds supplied by the Relief Administration Act the Bureau is now (in 1936) taking a census of business corresponding to the census of business taken in 1934 and to the census of distribution which was taken in 1930 as a part of the decennial census. It collects annually statistics of births, deaths, marriages, and divorces; financial statistics of States and of cities having a population of 100,000 or over; statistics of prisoners in State prisons and reformatories, and of patients in hospitals for mental disease and in institutions for epileptics and feebleminded.. At monthly or more frequent intervals it publishes statistics of cotton ginned, imported, exported, consumed, and held; also statistics relating to cottonseed and its products. It also collects monthly or quarterly data regarding the pro- duction or supply of many other commodities, including boots and shoes, cloth- ing, wool, animal and vegetable fats and oils, etc., and compiles from various sources current data regarding production, orders, shipments, stocks, etc., for numerous lines of trade and industry, together with other available information indicating the trend of business conditions. 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 insofar 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- tics 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 34 foreign countries. These are in charge of commercial attachés, and in countries where there is no American diplomatic mission, trade commissioners are in charge. Reports on trade conditions and prospects are received from these sources and 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. 470 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Industrial 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 a division devoted to problems of domestic commerce. The Economic Research Division reports on general statistical problems per- taining to domestic economic relationships, issues Survey of Current Business and the Statistical Abstract of the United States; prepares part I of the World Economic Review, treating of the United States; conducts continuous studies on the national income, debts—individual, business, and governmental. 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 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. The Regional Division furnishes basic information on the economic conditions and broad commercial problems, and disseminates information obtained from the foreign representatives of the bureau and also of the State Department. Statistical information with respect to United States imports and exports is received by the bureau 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 bankruptcy proceed- ings, powers of attorney, the protesting of drafts, the legal aspects of construction enterprises, agency agreements, standardization of bills of exchange, etc. 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. NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS The National Bureau of Standards was established by act of Congress ap- proved March 3, 1901. Its functions are the development, construction, custody, EOC CE el et Re A Ase” LS SN ees RE AAS COMMERCE | Official Dutres 471 and maintenance of reference and working standards and their intercomparison, improvement, 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 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. The following are typical examples of work now in progress: 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 manu- facturing processes; promotion of economy and efficiency in automotive trans- portation by land and air through investigations of the basic principles under- lying the design, performance, operation, and testing of automotive power plants; development of color standards and methods of color measurement; investiga- tion and standardization of methods and instruments used in radio communi- cation; investigation of principles of sound transmission and absorption and their application; preparation, analysis, and certification of the composition of tech- nical materials, either of typical composition or of high purity, for checking the accuracy of scientific and industrial analysis and for testing measuring instru- ments; 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 certain fibrous materials, as, for example, cornstalks, now largely wasted; development of stand- ards of quality and methods of measurement of textiles, paper, leather, rubber, and tests of paint, 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 deter- mination 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 equipment 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 simpli- fication of varieties of products; solution of problems in connection with standards for public utilities, such as gas, electric light and power, telephone, and electric railway services; technical cooperation with manufacturers upon fundamental 472 Congressional Directory COMMERCE research to promote industrial development and to assist in the permanent establishment of new American industries; the standardization of mechanical appliances; and the investigation of problems of flowing water in rivers, canals, and pipes, and of the design of hydraulic structures. 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 largemouth and smallmouth 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 and radiobeacon charts giving information regarding aids to navigation maintained by the Lighthouse Service; it publishes each week, jointly with the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Notices to Mariners, giving the changes in lights, buoys, ete.; it also issues broadcasts and local notices. UNITED STATES COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with (1) the survey of the coasts of the United States and its possessions, to insure the safe navigation of coastal and intracoastal waters; (2) the determination of geographical positions and elevations in the interior of the country, to coordinate the coastal surveys and provide a framework for mapping and other engineering work; (3) the study of tides and currents, to furnish datum planes to engineers and tide and current tables to mariners; (4) the compilation of aeronautical charts, to meet the needs of the pilots of aircraft; (5) observations of the earth’s magnetism in all parts of the country, to furnish magnetic information essential to the mariner, aviator, land surveyor, radio engineer and others; and (6) seismological observations and investigations, to supply data required in designing structures to reduce the earthquake hazard. These duties require hydrographic, topographic, and aerial-photographic surveys along the coasts, including the rivers to the head of tidewater, for deter- mining the depths of the waters and the configuration of the adjacent land; tide and current observations, for use as a basis for future predictions; base measure- ments; determination of latitudes, longitudes, and azimuths by astronomical observations, triangulation, and traverse; determination of elevations by spirit leveling or by vertical angles; magnetic surveys in all parts of the country, including the operation of magnetic observatories; the operation of instruments recording building vibrations and strong earthquake motions, and cooperation with non-Federal agencies engaged in this work; and gravity measurements throughout the country. The results of these surveys and studies are analyzed in the Washington office and published as nautical and aeronautical charts; annual tables of predicted tides and currents; charts showing magnetic declination; annual lists of United States earthquakes; publications of geographic positions and elevations; Coast Pilots; Notice to Mariners (jointly with Bureau of Lighthouses); and as annual and special publications covering all of its other activities, including compre- hensive manuals prescribing the methods which obtain for its various classes of surveying. COMMERCE | Official Duties 473 BUREAU OF NAVIGATION AND STEAMBOAT INSPECTION The Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection is charged with general superintendence of the commercial marine and merchant seamen of the United States, except so far as supervision is lodged with other officers of the Govern- ment, 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 admeasurement, letters, and numbers of vessels, and with the final decision of questions concerning the collection and refund of tonnage taxes. It is em- powered to change the names of vessels, and prepares annually a list of vessels of the United States. It also investigates the operation of the laws relative to navigation and annually reports to the Secretary of Commerce such particulars as may 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 in- curred 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 Technical Division conducts studies on compartmentation and stability for vessels in intact and damaged condition; and examines structural plans of ships with reference to increasing safety of life at sea. The bureau is further 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 blueprints or drawings of water-tube and coil boilers used in vessels of the American merchant marine are passed upon by the board of supervising inspectors, while designs of marine boilers of other types are passed upon by the local inspectors having original jurisdiction. All material subject to tensile strain used in the construction of marine boilers is required to be tested by an inspector of the Service, so that not only is the material but the design of a boiler under the closest scrutiny. The inspectors of hulls look after the examina- tion of the hulls of vessels and of life-saving equipment such as life preservers, lifeboats, life rafts, davits, ete., and once at least in each year vessels of the American merchant marine are required by law to be inspected. 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 of officers, a very high standard is maintained. The bureau also is required by law to certificate the able seamen who form the crew of merchant vessels, and the inspectors of the Service, together with other Government officers especially detailed for that purpose, also certifi- cate the lifeboat men. Not the least important of the work of the local in- spectors is the investigation of violations of the steamboat inspection laws. In such instances the boards of local inspectors have quasi-judicial authority, and these boards have conferred upon them the authority and the right to suspend or revoke the licenses of officers who have been found guilty of violating these laws, negligence, inattention to duty, etc. The local inspectors report on all marine casualties occuring within their jurisdiction and these reports are analyzed in Washington with a view to the reduction of such casualties. The traveling inspectors of the Service, in addition to following up vessel inspections made by local inspectors, conduct stability tests of the larger class of passenger and ferry vessels. The patrol fleet of the Bureau is charged with the inspection of small craft, under the Motor Boat Law, to see that they comply with its provisions as to numbering, life preservers, fog horns, lights, pilot rules, ete. 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. 474 Congressional Directory COMMERCE UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD BUREAU By Executive order dated June 10, 1933, the functions and duties of the United States Shipping Board, including those over and in respect to the United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation, were transferred to the Department of Commerce, and are administered through the United States Shipping Board Bureau. 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 commerce of the United States with its territories and possessions and with foreign countries; to regulate carriers by water engaged in the foreign and interstate commerce of the United States, and for other purposes,” generally known as the shipping act, 1916. By the shipping act, 1916, regulatory powers were given to 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 furnish- ing wharfage, dock, warehouse, or other terminal facilities in connection with common carriers by water. These powers are principally in relation to rates, fares, charges, and practices. Carriers in interstate commerce subject to juris- diction are required to file their maximum rates, fares, and charges, and after approval thereof, to keep such rates, fares, and charges open to public inspection. The act gives quasi-judicial authority to receive and determine complaints of ship- pers, 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, including orders directing the payment of money in reparation for violation of its regulatory provisions. An important regulatory power is the approval, disapproval, or modification of agreement entered into between carriers subject to the act respecting cooperative working arrangements. Approval of such agreements exempts the parties thereto from the operation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, Wilson Tariff Act, Clayton Act, and supplementary acts and amendments directed at monopolies in restraint of trade. The act expressly provides that the jurisdiction is not concurrent with the Interstate Commerce Commission over transportation agencies within the latter’s jurisdiction, and that its provisions do not apply to intrastate commerce. The bureau is empowered to investigate the action of foreign governments with respect to privileges afforded and burdens imposed on vessels of the United States, and to make a report of the result of such investigations. The President is authorized to secure by diplomatic action equal privileges for United States vessels. The bureau conducts all investigations and makes appropriate recommenda- tions to the Secretary of Commerce with respect to matters arising under section 9 of the shipping act, 1916, as amended, relating to the sale, transfer, or mortgage, and chartering of vessels documented under the laws of the United States to persons not citizens of the United States, and the transfer of such vessels to foreign registry or flag. The bureau also conducts investigations and makes appropri- ate recommendations in connection with the surrender of marine documents of vessels covered by preferred mortgages, under the ship mortgage act, 1920. The bureau 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 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 more complete control was granted 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 COMMERCE Offictal Dutzes 475 following language the general merchant marine policy to be followed 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 mer- chant marine, and, insofar as may not be inconsistent with the express pro- visions 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.” General conditions to govern the disposition of vessel property of the United States both to citizens of the United States and to aliens are set forth, and vessels may be sold to aliens only when, after diligent effort, it has been unable to sell to American citizens. These provisions are further amended by the merchant marine act, 1928. Other duties 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 control of the Government to responsible citizens of the United States who will agree to maintain such lines under such terms as may be deemed 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 law gives 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 consider appropriate under existing law in case the investigations discloses 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 development of such ports. To recondition and keep in suitable repair and operate until sold all vessels, either directly or through the United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation. 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 development of the terminal facilities acquired by the President by or under the act entitled ‘An act making appropriations to supply urgent deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1918, and prior fiscal years, on account of war expenses, and for other purposes,” approved March 28, 1918. To make all necessary rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of the act, with authority to request the head of any department, board, bureau, or agency of the Government to suspend, modify, or annul rules or regulations affecting shipping in the foreign trade, except such rules or regulations relating to the Public Health Service, the Consular Service, and the Steamboat Inspec- tion 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 regula- tions affecting the Public Health Service, the Consular Service, and the Steam- boat 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 476 Congressional Directory COMMERCE 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 establishment of adequate steamship service at reasonable rates to accommodate the commerce and passenger travel of such islands, but if such adequate shipping service is not established by February, 1922, the President is directed to extend the period within which such service may be established for such time as may be necessary therefor. 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 22, 1928. Under this legislation the policy and primary purpose declared in section 1 of the merchant marine act, 1920, are reaffirmed. The Shipping Board was 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. The board was 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 was 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 replace- ments 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, was further amended to authorize the setting aside from revenues from sales, including proceeds of securities, consisting of notes, letters of credit, or evidences of debt taken for deferred payments of purchase money from sales until the amounts thus set aside from time to time aggregate $125,- 000,000, 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. Authority was granted to use the fund in making loans to persons, citizens of the United States, on terms to be prescribed for the purpose of construction, reconditioning, remodeling, or improve- ment 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, 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 than 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 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 but not less than 5% percent per annum; while being constructed, equipped, reconditioned, remodeled, or improved and/or during any period in which operated in foreign trade, the rate shall be as fixed but the interest rate shall not be less than 3% percent per annum. The lowest rate of interest shall not be granted for the construction, equipping, reconditioning, remodeling, or improvement of any vessel for the foreign trade unless it is contracted that such vessel upon com- pletion 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 there shall be collected the differ- ence between the low rate of interest charged and 5% percent per annum during the period of construction, equipping, reconditioning, remodeling, or improve- ment. Authority is granted to prescribe rules for determining the amount of interest payable. (The foregoing is as amended by act approved Feb. 2, 1931.) By Joint Resolution approved April 16, 1934, authority was granted to extend the benefits of the Act for fishing vessels of the type which could be economically converted into auxiliary naval vessels. The bureau is directed to supervise the construction and equipment of vessels and see that a preferred mortgage is properly recorded, and that adequate protec- tion is provided to properly protect the repayment of the full amount of the loan, COMMERCE | Official Duties 477 as well as insure the adequacy of the protection of the vessel and the security of the Government’s equity in the vessel property. This act further provides that all mails of the United States shall, where practicable, be carried on American-built vessels documented under the laws of | the United States. The Postmaster General is directed to certify what ocean- mail routes should be established and maintained 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, etc., to provide adequate postal service. | | The bureau 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 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 compensation which may be awarded under the contracts for carrying the mail. ] The insurance fund, authorized by section 10 of the merchant marine act, : 1920, as amended, provides that there may be created, out of insurance premiums | and revenue from operations and sales, and maintained and administered, sepa- rate insurance funds, which may be used to insure in whole or in part against haz- ards 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 bureau; 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. 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 have been paid; (2) vessels in respect to which an ocean-mail contract is made—at any time during the period for which the contract is made. In case such vessel 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 com- pensation 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 directed an investigation to 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 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 to determine the size, type, speed, and other require- ments of vessels to be so employed, and, if necessary, Government vessels shall be operated on such lines until business has so developed that such vessels may be sold on satisfactory terms, services maintained, ete. By the intercoastal shipping act, 1933, enacted March 3, 1933, additional regulatory functions were created. 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 bureau 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 for good cause changes may be allowed upon shorter notice. Suspension power is vested 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 478 Congressional Directory LABOR 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 incorpo- rated 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 ship- ping act, 1916. The name of the corporation was changed under the independent 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 Secretary of Commerce 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 ex- ercise 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 as provided for in the by-laws consist of a presi- dent, one or more vice presidents, 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, were used for the construction by contract of steel, wood, composite, and concrete vessels for overseas commerce and for the com- pletion of steel vessels over 2,500 tons deadweight capacity requisitioned by direction of the United States Shipping Board on August 3, 1917, and for the operation of vessels on essential trade routes. By the emergency shipping fund provision of the urgent deficiencies appropria- tion act approved June 15, 1917, as amended by an act approved April 22, 1918, and by an act approved November 4, 1918, certain extensive war powers in con- nection with the construction, requisition, and operation of vessels were conferred on the President and by him by Executive orders of various dates conferred on the corporation. The merchant marine act, 1920, transferred all the powers and authorities thus delegated to the corporation to the United States Shipping Board, which was authorized to perform such of its duties as it deemed advisable through or by the corporation as its agent. All such control and ownership was by Executive order dated June 10, 1933, transferred to the Secretary of Commerce, effective August 10, 1933. In accordance with the authority granted by section 35 of the merchant marine act, 1920, the Shipping Board, by resolutions adopted from time to time, con- ferred certain general powers on the corporation, under which the corporation acted as the administrative agent of the United States Shipping Board, repre- senting the United States of America. The Secretary of Commerce by formal order reaffirmed such delegation of authority, except as it may be modified. The actual physical operations and management of the United States owned vessels is assigned to various managing operators under a contractual relationship and terminal properties are leased under competitive bid contracts, the Merchant Fleet Corporation exercising close administrative supervision and performing such maintenance and repair work as remains the obligation of the owner of the vessels and properties. The corporation is controlled and directed by the board of trustees under general policies approved by the Director, Shipping Board Bureau, and the Secretary of Commerce. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR THE SECRETARY OF LABOR 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- LABOR : Offictal Dutzes 479 ment. The Secretary has power under the law to act as mediator and to appoint -commissioners of conciliation in labor disputes whenever in the Secretary’s judg- ment the interests of industrial peace may require it to be done. The Secretary 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 may seem wise. The Secretary’s duties also comprise the gathering and publication of information regarding labor interest and labor controversies in this and other countries; the supervision of the immi- gration of aliens, and the enforcement of the laws relating thereto, and to the exclusion of Chinese; the direction of the administration of the naturalization laws, the direction of the work of investigating all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life, and to cause to be published such results of these in- vestigations as may seem 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 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 may be deemed necessary, and to report annually to Congress upon the work of the Department of Labor. 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. ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY OF LABOR The assistants to the Secretary perform such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary. : SOLICITOR 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 acquired by said department; to assist in the drafting of departmental regulations and bills affecting the activi- ties of the department; to supervise the predetermination of prevailing rates of wages on Federal contracts pursuant to the Davis-Bacon law; and to render such legal services as may be required in connection with the administrative work of the department. 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. 480 Congressional Directory LABOR DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS To develop desirable labor standards in industrial practice, labor Jaw adminis- tration and labor legislation; to make specific recommendations concerning methods and measures designed to improve the working conditions and the economic position of wage earners; in so doing to make directly available to interested organizations and persons the existing resources of the Department of Labor and pertinent material obtainable from public or private sources. CHIEF CLERK The chief clerk is charged with the general supervision of the clerks of the department; the interpretation of the general regulations of the department; the superintendency of all buildings occupied by the department in the District of Columbia; general supervision in connection with expenditures from the appropri- ations for contingent expenses, printing and binding, and rents; and the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail. LIBRARIAN The duties of the librarian are to obtain and circulate currently to the staffs of the different bureaus such books and periodicals as they need in their investi- gations, to supply reference material and bibliographical assistance in connection with special inquiries, to prepare selected annotated bibliographies on special subjects, and to aid students of labor problems through reading-room service and correspondence. CHIEF ACCOUNTANT The chief accountant is charged with the responsibility of maintaining the system of accounting instituted by the General Accounting Office. He prepares requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Depart- ment of Labor. He has charge of the issuing, recording, and accounting for Gov- ernment requests for transportation; the audit of all pay rolls and vouchers for transportation and telegraph service, and the recording and depositing of all collections of immigration and naturalization receipts. He assists the budget officer in the preparation of annual and deficiency estimates for appropriations. 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. 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; the general supervision of printing, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. All blank books and blank forms and the printed stationery used by 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, 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 of the department supplied from the contingent appropriation, and examines and reports on the semiannual property returns of all 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, py which may happen to interfere with the welfare of the people of the several ates. LABOR Official Duties 481 It publishes 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. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE Under the act of March 3, 1933 (Public, No. 428, 47 Stat. 1517), and the : Executive order, issued pursuant to the statute, dated June 10, 1933 (6166/sec. 14), the Immigration and Naturalization Service was formed through the consoli- dation of the former Bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization, effective August 10, 1933. The functions of the consolidated service are the administration of the laws relating to the admission, exclusion, and deportation of aliens, and the naturaliza- tion of aliens lawfully resident in the United States; to investigate alleged viola- tions of said laws, and when prosecution is deemed advisable to submit evidence for that purpose to the appropriate United States district attorneys. Under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906, naturalization jurisdiction was conferred upon certain specified United States and State courts. The service exercises administrative supervision over the clerks of these courts in naturaliza- tion matters, and requires an accounting for all naturalization fees collected by them. Through its field officers, located in various cities in the United States, the Service investigates the qualifications of candidates for citizenship and repre- sents the Government at the hearings of petitions for naturalization. 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. Under the Social Security Act of 1935 the Children’s Bureau was given responsi- bility for administration of parts 1, 2, and 3 of title V of the act, containing pro- visions for maternal and child-health services, services for crippled children, and child-welfare services. 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 United States Employment Service was established by an act “To provide for the establishment of a national employment system and for cooperation with the States in the promotion of such system, and for other purposes,” approved June 6, 1933 (48 Stat. 113). The Employment Service which existed in the Department of Labor was abolished, effective September 6, 1933, by the provisions of this act, although many of its functions were redefined and continued. The provinces and duties of the United States Employment Service as outlined in this act are: To promote and develop a national system of employment offices 30063°—T4—2—1sT ED——381 482 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS for men, women, and juniors who are legally qualified to engage in gainful occupa- tions; to maintain a veterans’ service to be devoted to securing employment for veterans; to maintain a farm placement service; to maintain a public employment service for the District of Columbia; to assist in establishing and maintaining systems of public employment offices in the several States and political subdivi- sions thereof; to assist in coordinating the public employment offices throughout "the country and in increasing their usefulness by prescribing minimum standards of efficiency and promoting uniformity in their administrative and statistical procedure; to furnish and publish information as to opportunities for employ- ment; and to maintain a system of clearing labor between the several States. Passage of the Social Security Act imposes heavy responsibilities upon the public employment offices of this country. Section 3803 (a) requires that unem- ployment compensation shall be paid ‘‘solely through public employment offices in the State or such other agencies as the Board may approve.” 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 oi general authority over the forms and style of Congressional printing and inding. The CoNGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, memorial addresses on deceased Senators and Members, statue proceedings, and similar publications are compiled and prepared 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes : 483 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 Sta 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. 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 United 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 collection 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, Mount Montezuma, near Calama, Chile, and Mount St. Katherine, Sinai Penin- sula, Egypt. 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. 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 484 s Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, numismatic, 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. 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, the collection was brought to Washington on April 30, 1933, and is now on exhibition in the National Gallery. A considerable addition was made by Mr. Gellatly in August 1930 to his original gift. 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. DIVISION OF RADIATION AND ORGANISMS (Supported by Smithsonian private funds) The Division of Radiation and Organisms 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. 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. 1ts 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 485 programs for the International Conferences of the American States known as the Pan American Conferences, and is custodian of their archives. Its library, known as the Columbus Memorial Library, contains 85,000 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 C 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, the sixth confer- ence, which met at Habana, Cuba, in 1928, and the seventh conference, held at Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1933, considerably enlarged the functions 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 account- 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, ete., which have been finally adjusted, and coun- tersigns all warrants authorized by law to be signed by the Secretary of the Treasury. 486 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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, papers, or records, except those pertaining to certain funds for purposes of intercourse or treaty with foreign nations, of all departments and establishments for the purpose of securing from time to time information regarding the powers, duties, activities, organization, financial transactions, and methods of business of their respective offices. It is also his duty to furnish to the Bureau of the Budget such information relating to 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, as nearly as the conditions of good administration will warrant, the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classi- fied service, the making of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, an apportionment of appointments in the departments at Washington among the States and Territories, and a period of probation before absolute ap- pointment. It prohibits the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules, and forbids, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, the solicitation by any person in the service of the United States of con- tributions to be used for political purposes from persons in such service, or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government building. The retirement act of May 22, 1920, as amended, places under the commission the ai administration of that act. It also administers the Canal Zone retire- ment act. 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, 1935, there were 719,440 officers and employees in the Federal execu- tive civil service. Of this number 103,453 were employed in the District of Columbia. On June 30, 1935, there were 455,264 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 4,500. The members of these boards are detailed from other branches of the service. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1935, the commission examined 466, 288 applicants, and 40,725 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 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. MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 487 CHIEF EXAMINER Serves as the chief technical and executive officer of the commission; plans, directs, controls, and is responsible for the technical and administrative work of the various divisions, field offices, and local boards of examiners, and the com- mission’s business and fiscal operations; serves as the principal consultant to the commissioners and formulates and develops matters of policy, interpretation, and procedure. 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; answers inquiries concerning vacancies, relative standing, and prospect of appointment. 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 reinstatement, transfer, and change of status; administers all phases of the retirement law; 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 fingerprints. 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. Passes upon reductions and separations in connection with efficiency ratings and reductions in force in the departmental service. 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. 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, ee 488 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPONDENCE DIVISION Answers inquiries made by mail, giving general information about examina- tions; maintains central files for all divisions; receives and distributes incoming communications. 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 National Park Service; 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; the transportation act, 1920; the emergency railroad transportation act, 1933, and the motor carrier act, 1935. The number of commissioners was increased under the act of June 29, 1906, to 7 members; under the act of August 9, 1917, to 9 members; and under the 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 motor carrier act, 1935, was added to the Interstate Commerce Act as part II thereof and will be separately described later. The interstate commerce act, part I, 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, 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 continuous 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 trans- portation of persons or property. 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, 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 advan- tage, preference, or prejudice as between persons or localities in intrastate com- merce on the one hand and interstate or foreign commerce on the other hand, or any undue, unreasonable, 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 its 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 489 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, and if the joint rates, the divisions of which are in issue, were themselves prescribed pursuant to a finding or order of the commission. The commission is also author- ized to require carriers subject to the act to construct switch connections with lateral branch lines of railroads and private sidetracks. The act forbids the construction of new, and the abandonment of old, lines of railroad without commission approval, excepting ‘‘spur, industrial, team, switching, or side tracks, located or to be located wholly within one State.” 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 june- tion 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 regula- tion of the commission, the carrier or carriers so diverting the traffic are jointly and severally liable to the carrier deprived of its right to participate in the haul of the 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. It requires the commission to prepare and adopt, as soon as practicable, a plan for the consolidation of railway properties of the continental United States into a limited number of systems. It permits the carriers, with commission approval, to merge as well as con- solidate their properties, or any part thereof, and to purchase, lease, or contract to operate the properties, or any part thereof, of other carriers, or acquire stock control of other carriers; a noncarrier corporation may acquire stock control of one or more carriers, and when so authorized by the commission such noncarrier corporations are to be considered and treated as carriers subject to the act for the purposes of its provisions relating to reports, accounts, and issuance of securities. The act authorizes a consolidation of four express companies, and relieves carriers, when permission is so granted, from the restraints of the anti- trust laws so far as may be necessary to effect such consolidations. 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 if on or before expiration of the two-year period of limitation in subdivision (b) or of the three-year period of limitation in subdivision (c¢) a carrier subject to this act begins action under subdivision (a) for recovery of charges in respect of the same transportation service or, without beginning action, collects charges in respect of that service, said period of limitation shall be extended to include 90 days from the time such action is begun or such charges are collected by the carrier. The act also provides that a cause of action against the carrier shall be 490 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 transpor- tation act of 1920 the statute was amended to provide that an order of the com- mission 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. y 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, 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 amendment of February 28, 1920, the commission was directed to prescribe, for carriers subject to the act, the classes of property for which depreciation charges may be included in operating expenses and the percentages of depreciation chargeable for each such class of property, with authority to modify such classes and per- centages so prescribed when deemed necessary. 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 act of March 4, 1927, the maximum period during which the commission may suspend the operation of proposed schedules is fixed at not more than seven months, and it is provided that if the pro- ceeding 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. 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 such ex- tension will neither exclude, prevent, nor reduce competition on the route by water. 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. | MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 491 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, etc., contrary to the provisions of the commission’s orders or grants of authority. By the act approved August 18, 1922, the commission is required to direct, after notice and hearing, each carrier by rail, subject to this act, to issue at such offices as may be prescribed by the commission interchangeable mileage or scrip coupon tickets. The commission may in its discretion except from the 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. The amended act further provides for the issuance of through export bills of lading by every common carrier by water in foreign commerce, 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. An act approved February 28, 1933, amends section 17 so as to authorize the commission to assign certain of its duties to an individual commissioner or to a board composed of employees. An act approved March 3, 1933, as amended by an act approved August 27, 1935, amends the bankruptey act by providing for proceedings for the reorgani- zation of railroads, which proceedings may be instituted either by a petition of a railroad, filed in the appropriate Federal court, stating that the carrier is ¢‘insol- vent or unable to meet its debts as they mature and that it desires to effect a reorganization’, or by the filing of a similar petition, after Commission approval, by the creditors of a railroad whose claim aggregates not less than 5 percent of itsindebtedness. Many duties are imposed upon the Commission by these amend- 492 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS atory acts, including the approval, after hearing, of plans of reorganization, the regulation of protective committees, the ratification of the selection of trustees, and the fixing of maximum allowances, expenses, and attorneys’ fees for the trustees, their counsel, or organization managers, or others entitled thereto. The Emergency Railroad Transportation Act, 1933, provides for the termination of proceedings for recapture of excess income, and substitutes a new rule of rate making, under which the Commission is required to give due consideration to the effect of rates on the movement of traffic; to the need in the public interest of adequate and efficient railroad transportation service at the lowest cost consistent with the furnishing of such service; and to the need of revenues sufficient to en- able carriers under honest, economical, and efficient management to provide such service. By an act approved May 29, 1928, any person, firm, or corporation engaged in conducting a common-carrier service upon the Mississippi and Warrior Rivers or tributaries thereof, may apply to and obtain from the Commission a certificate of public convenience and necessity, providing for such service. Thereupon the Com- mission may, by order, direct all connecting common carriers to join with such water carrier in through routes and joint rates. In such order, the Commission is to fix the reasonable minimum differentials between all-rail rates and joint rates in connection with the water service, which are to apply until changed by order of the Commission. If the carriers involved are unable to agree upon equitable divisions of the joint differential rates, the Commission is authorized to determine the reasonable divisions thereof. The Air Mail Act, approved June 12, 1934, and amended August 14, 1935, con- fers upon the Commission certain jurisdiction over air transportation. The Commission is directed, among other things, to fix and determine by order, as soon as practicable and from time to time, the fair and reasonable rates of com- pensation for the transportation of air mail by airplane and the service connected therewith, which determination is to be made for each air-mail route, after notice and hearing; to review annually the rates of compensation being paid in order to ascertain whether any unreasonable profits are accruing to air-mail carriers; to make a report to Congress respecting the necessity for increase on specified routes in the maximum rate fixed by the act; to require reports on free transpor- tation furnished by the air-mail carriers; and to pass upon unfair practices and competitive services of the air-mail carriers as well as extension and abandonment of their service. The statute details matters to be considered by the Commission in determining and fixing the rates for air-mail transportation, and in ascertain- ing what constitutes unreasonable profits. Under the Motor Carrier Act, 1935, (part II of the Interstate Commerce Act), the Commission is charged with the duty of regulating common carriers by motor vehicle, contract carriers by motor vehicle, private carriers of property by motor vehicle, and transportation brokers, who engage in interstate or foreign commerce. The regulation of private carriers of property by motor vehicle is confined to rea- sonable requirements to promote safety of operation, including qualifications and maximum hours of service of employees and standards of equipment, to be estab- lished by the Commission if need therefor is found. Authority from the Commission to do business is required in the form of certifi- cates of public convenience and necessity for common carriers, permits for con- tract carriers, and licenses for transportation brokers. Such certificates, permits, and licenses may be suspended, revoked, or changed by the Commission after notice and hearing for willful violation of the act or of any lawful order, rule, or regulation of the Commission of any term, condition, or limitation of any such certificate, permit, or license. Consolidations, mergers, leases, and operating agreements of such carriers require prior approval of the Commission, to be granted if it finds consistency with the public interest in respect thereto. Issuance of securities by any such carrier likewise requires approval of the Commission, if the value of the securities to be issued together with the value of the securities outstanding exceed $500,000. Common carriers are required to establish just and reasonable rates and fares, and to file tariffs thereof with the Commission. The authority of the Commission over rates is not that of initiation in the first instance, but of regulation. It may suspend a rate, and after hearing, and upon proper findings, may prescribe a law- ful rate. It also has jurisdiction over divisions of rates and fares as between joint carriers and other related matters. The Commission is directed in determining the justness of any rate to take into consideration the elements of the inherent advantages of motor transportation, the effect of rates upon traffic movement by motor carriers, the need in the public interest of adequate and efficient transporta- MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 493 tion service by such carriers, at the lowest cost consistent with the furnishing of such service, and to the need of sufficient revenues to enable such carriers to pro- vide such service under honest, economical, and efficient management. The Commission may not consider good will, earning power, or certificate value in rate determination. Common carriers of passengers are required to establish through routes and joint rates with other such carriers; and, if they choose, may make such arrangements with common carriers by rail or water. In the case of common carriers of property by motor, the establishment of joint rates and through routes is optional with the carrier. Contract carriers must file schedules, or in the discretion of the Commission, their transportation contracts, showing their minimum charges, below which they are directed not to go, either directly or indirectly. If the Commission finds after hearing that any charge made by a contract carrier contravenes the policy of the act, it may prescribe a minimum charge in an amount found necessary or desirable in the public interest and to promote that policy. All motor carriers must comply with the rules and regulations of the Commission concerning security for public protection. This may take the form of insurance, surety bonds, qualifications as a self-insurer, or some other form of security insur- ing against injury or death resulting from negligent operation or for loss or damage to property of others. Cargo insurance, or its equivalent, may be required of common carriers of property in the discretion of the Commission. The Commission may require annual, periodical, or special reports from motor carriers, and the submission of true copies of traffic contracts between any such carrier and any other carrier. It may prescribe the forms of accounts, records, and memoranda of such carriers, and has the right of inspection of such records and of the premises of such carriers. The provisions of part I apply to receipts and bills of lading of such carriers. As to common carriers by motor vehicle, the Commission, in addition to the general powers above mentioned, may establish reasonable requirements with respect to continuous and adequate service, transportation of baggage and express, uniform systems of accounts, records and reports, preservation of records, qualifica- tions and maximum hours of service of employees, and safety of operation and equipment. As to contract carriers, the Commission may also establish reasonable require- ments with respect to uniform systems of accounts, records and reports, preserva- tion of records, qualifications and maximum hours of service of employees, and safety of operation and equipment. The Commission, by rules and regulations, may require the display of identifica- tion plates upon each motor vehicle operated by such carriers. An investigation by the Commission is authorized of the need for Federal regu- lation of the sizes and weights of motor vehicles and combinations of motor vehicles. 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. 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 insofar 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 felony for a president or other specified officers to misappropriate a carrier’s 494 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 Ccon- 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. Railway Mail Service pay act.—The act making appropriations for the service of the Post Office Department, approved July 28, 1916, empowers the commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the 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 driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system. The act directs the commission to lodge with the proper district attorneys information of such violations as may come to its knowledge. The act of March 2, 1903, amended this act so as to make its 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. 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 amendatory acts approved March 4, 1915, June 7, 1924, and June 27, 1930, the powers of the commission to inspect and to prescribe standards of safety for locomotive boilers and appurtenances thereto was extended to include ‘‘all parts and appurtenances of the locomotive and tender.” MISCELLANEOUS : Officral Duties 495 Block signal and automatic train-conirol 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. Housing standards act.—This act, approved June 27, 1934, was enacted for the purpose of encouraging improvement in housing standards ‘and conditions, and authorizes the commission, by order, to permit carriers subject to the act to give Todicod rates for the transportation of commodities hauled under the provisions of the act. Railroad retirement act.— This act, approved August 29, 1935, creates a Railroad Retirement Board of three members, and it directs the commission, upon request of the board or upon complaint of any party interested, to determine after hearing whether any line of railroad operated by electric power, is in fact a street, inter- urban, or suburban electric railway, exempt from the terms of the act. Railroad labor act. —By act approved June 21, 1934, a National Railroad Adjustment Board and a National Mediation Board, to provide for the prompt disposition of disputes between carriers and their employees, is provided for, and by the terms of the act, the commission is directed, upon request of the board or upon complaint of any interested party, to determine after hearing whether any line of railroad operated by electric power is a street, interurban, or suburban electric railway, exempt from the provisions of the act. NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD The National Mediation Board was organized under the provisions of Public Act No. 442, Seventy-third Congress, approved June 21, 1934, 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’. Itisan independent agency in the executive branch of the Government and is composed of three 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 working conditions, and to settle all disputes whether arising out of the applica- tion 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, Divan by the carriers and by the employees thereof interested in the lispute. The act also provides that representatives for the purpose of the act shall be designated by the respective parties. The Mediation Board investigates and certifies disputes arising among a carrier’s employees as to who are the repre- sentatives designated and authorized in accordance with the requirements of the act. The Board may take a secret ballot of the employees involved or utilize any other appropriate method of ascertaining the names of the representatives. The act established the National Railroad Adjustment Board, composed of 36 members, 18 of whom are selected by the carriers and 18 by such labor organ- izations as have been or may be organized in accordance with section 2 of the act. The Adjustment Board, located at Chicago, Ill., was created to handle disputes 496 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS growing out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agree- ments concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions. The Adjustment Board is divided into four divisions, as outlined in section 3 (h) of the act. The parties, or either party, to a dispute may invoke the services of the Na- tional Mediation Board in any of the following cases: (a) A dispute covering changes in rates of pay, rules, or working conditions not adjusted by the parties in conference; (b) any other dispute not referable to the National Railroad y chi ment Board and not adjusted in conference between the parties or where confer- ences are refused. The Mediation Board may proffer its services in case any labor emergency is found by it to exist at any time. 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 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 Mediation Board 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 arbitra- tors during a period stipulated in the act, it shall be the duty of the Mediation Board 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 Mediation Board, 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 Mediation Board, threaten substantially to interrupt interstate commerce to a degree such as to deprive any section of the country of essential transportation service, the Mediation Board 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 Mediation Board makes an annual report to Congress of its activities and of the activities of each of the four divisions of the National Railroad Adjustment Board. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM The Federal Reserve System was established pursuant to authority contained in the act of December 23, 1913, known as the Federal Reserve Act, the purposes of which, as stated in the preamble, are ‘To provide for the establishment of Federal Reserve banks, to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of redis- counting commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes.” The system comprises the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, which exercises supervisory func- tions, the Federal Advisory Council, which acts in an advisory capacity to the Board of Governors, the Federal Open Market Committee, the 12 Federal Reserve banks situated in different sections of the United States, and the member banks, which include all national banks in the United States and such State banks and trust companies as have voluntarily applied to the Board of Governors for membership and have been admitted to the system. The Federal Reserve banks are located in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco. There are also in operation 25 branches and 2 agencies of the Federal Reserve banks, all of which are located in other cities of the United States, except 1 agency in Havana, Cuba. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 497 The capital stock of the Federal Reserve banks is entirely owned by the mem- ber banks and may not be transferred or hypothecated. “Every national bank in existence in the United States at the time of the establishment of the Federal Reserve System was required to subscribe to the capital stock of the Federal Re- serve bank of its district in an amount equal to 6 percent of the subscribing bank’s capital and surplus. A like amount of Federal Reserve bank stock must be subscribed for by every national bank in the United States organized since that time and by every State bank or trust company (except mutual savings banks) upon becoming a member of the Federal Reserve System; and, when a member bank increases or decreases its capital or surplus, it is required to alter its holdings of Federal Reserve bank stock in the same proportion. A mutual savings bank which is admitted to membership in the Federal Reserve System must subscribe for Federal Reserve bank stock in an amount equal to six-tenths of 1 per centum of its total deposit liabilities; and thereafter such subscription must be adjusted semiannually on the same percentage basis. One-half of the subscription of each member bank must be fully paid and the remainder is subject to call by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; but call for payment of the remainder has not been made. After all necessary expenses of a Federal Reserve bank have been paid or pro- vided for, its stockholding member banks are entitled to receive an annual divi- dend of 6 percent on the paid-in capital stock, which dividend is cumulative. After these dividend claims have been fully met, the net earnings are paid into the surplus fund of the Federal Reserve bank. Federal Reserve banks, including the capital stock and surplus therein and the income derived therefrom, are exempt from Federal, State, and local taxation, except taxes upon real estate. The board of directors of each Federal Reserve bank is composed of nine members, equally divided into three classes, designated class A, class B, and class C. Directors of class A are representative of the stockholding member banks. Directors of class B must be actively engaged in their district in commerce, agri- culture, or some other industrial pursuit, and may not be officers, directors, or employees of any bank. Class ol directors may not be officers, directors, em- ployees, or stockholders of any bank. The six class A and B directors are elected by the stockholding member banks, while the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System appoints the three class C directors. The term of office of each director is 3 years, so arranged that the term of one director of each class expires each year. One of the class C directors appointed by the Board is designated as chairman of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve bank and as Federal Reserve agent, and in the latter capacity he is required to maintain a local office of the Board on the premises of the Federal Reserve bank. Another class C director is appointed by the Board as deputy chairman. After March 1, 1936, each Federal Reserve bank will have as its chief executive officer a president, appointed every 5 years by its board of directors, with the approval of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. There will also be a first vice president, appointed in the same manner and for the same term. 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, industrial, and agricultural transactions, and short-term paper secured by obligations of the United States ; to make advances to their member banks upon their promissory notes for periods not exceeding 90 days upon the security of paper eligible for discount or purchase and for periods not exceeding 15 days upon the security of obligations of the United States and certain other securities; to make advances upon security satisfactory to the Federal Reserve banks to member banks for periods not exceeding 4 months at a rate of interest at least one-half of 1 percent higher than that applicable to discounts and advances of the kinds mentioned above; in certain exceptional circumstances and under certain prescribed conditions, to make advances to groups of member banks; under certain prescribed conditions, to grant credit accommodations to furnish working capital for established industrial or commer- cial businesses for periods not exceeding 5 years, either through the medium of financing institutions or, in exceptional circumstances, directly to such businesses, and to make commitments with respect to the granting of such accommodations; in unusual and exigent circumstances when authority has been granted by at least five members of the Board of Governors, to discount for individuals, part- nerships, or corporations, under certain prescribed conditions, notes, drafts, and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities made eligible for discount for member 30063°—74—-2—1ST ED——32 498 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS banks; to make advances to individuals, partnerships, or corporations upon their promissory notes secured by direct obligations of the United States for periods not exceeding 90 days; to purchase and sell in the open market bankers’ accept- ances and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities eligible for discount, obligations of the United States, and certain other securities; to 1eceive and hold on deposit the reserve balances of member banks; to issue Federal Reserve notes and Federal Reserve bank notes; to act as clearing houses and as collecting agents for their member banks, and under certain conditions 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 functions specified in the Federal Reserve Act. Federal Reserve notes are a first and paramount lien on all the assets of the Federal Reserve banks through which they are issued and are also obligations of the United States. They are issued against the security of gold certificates and of commercial and agricultural paper discounted or purchased by Federal Reserve banks, and, until March 3, 1937, when authorized by the Board of Governors, may also be secured by direct obligations of the United States. Every Federal Reserve bank is required to maintain reserves in gold certificates of not less than 40 percent against its Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation and is also required to maintain reserves in gold certificates or lawful money of not less than 35 percent against its deposits. Federal Reserve bank notes are the obligations of the Federal Reserve bank procuring them and are redeemable in lawful money of the United States on presentation at the United States Treasury or at the bank of issue. They may be issued against the security of direct obligations of the United States in an amount equal to the face value of such obligations and against the security of notes, drafts, bills of exchange, or bankers’ acceptances in an amount equal to not more than 90 percent of the estimated value thereof. Each Federal Reserve bank must maintain on deposit in the Treasury of the United States in lawful money a redemption fund equal to 5 percent of its liability on Federal Reserve bank notes in actual circulation, or such other amount as may be required by the Treasurer of the United States with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, and is required to pay a tax of one-fourth of 1 percent each half year upon the average amount of its Federal Reserve bank notes in circulation. No such Federal Reserve bank notes may be issued after the President shall have declared by proclamation that the emergency recognized by him in his proclamation of March 6, 1933, has terminated. Broad supervisory powers are vested in the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System which has its offices in Washington. After February 1, 1936, the Board of Governors will be composed of seven members appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. In selecting these seven members, the President is required to have due regard to a fair representation of the financial, agricultural, industrial, and commercial interests, and geograph- ical divisions of the country. No two members may be from the same Federal Reserve district. Among the more important duties of the Board of Governors is the review and determination of discount rates charged by the Federal Reserve banks on their discounts and advances. After March 1, 1936, each member of the Board of Governors will also be a member of the Federal Open Market Committee whose membership, in addition, will include five representatives of the Federal Reserve banks, each such representative being elected annually by the boards of directors of certain specified Federal Reserve banks. After March 1, 1936, open-market operations of the Federal Reserve banks will be conducted under regulations adopted by the committee with a view to accommodating commerce and business and with regard to their bearing upon the general credit situation of the country; and no Federal Reserve bank may engage or decline to engage in open-market operations except in accordance with the directions of and regulations adopted by the committee. In connection with its supervision of Federal Reserve banks the Board of Governors is also authorized to make examinations of such banks; to require state- ments and reports from such banks; to require the establishment or discontinu- ance of branches of such banks; to supervise the issue and retirement of Federal Reserve notes; and to exercise special supervision over all relationships and trans- actions of the Federal Reserve banks with foreign banks or bankers. For the purpose of preventing the excessive use of credit for the purchase or carrying of securities, the Board of Governors is authorized to regulate the amount of credit that may be initially extended and subsequently maintained on any security (with certain exceptions) registered on a national securities exchange. MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutres 499 Certain other powers have been conferred upon the Board which are likewise designed to enable it to prevent an undue diversion of funds into speculative operations. The Board of Governors also passes on the admission of State banks and trust companies to membership in the Federal Reserve System and on the termi- nation of membership of such banks; it has the power to examine member banks and affiliates of member banks; it receives condition reports from State member banks and their affiliates; it limits by regulation the rate of interest which may be paid by member banks on time and savings deposits; it is authorized, in its discretion, to issue voting permits to holding-company affiliates of member banks entitling them to vote the stock of such banks at any or all meetings of share- holders of the member bank; it may issue general regulations permitting inter- locking relationships in certain circumstances between member banks and or- ganizations dealing in securities or, under the Clayton Antitrust Act, between member banks and other banks; it has the power to remove officers and directors of a member bank for continued violations of law or unsafe or unsound practices in conducting the business of such bank; it may, in its discretion, suspend member banks from the use of the credit facilities of the Federal Reserve System, for making undue use of bank credit for speculative purposes or for any other purpose inconsistent with the maintenance of sound credit conditions; it may, within certain limitations and in order to prevent injurious credit expansion or con- traction, change the requirements as to reserves to be maintained by member banks against deposits; it passes on applications of State member banks to establish out-of-town branches; 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 depend- encies or insular possessions of the United States, or to invest in the stock of banks or corporations engaged in international or foreign banking; and it super- vises the organization and activities of corporations organized under Federal law to engage in international or foreign banking. Another function of the Board is the operation of a settlement fund, by which balances due to and from the various Federal Reserve banks arising out of their own transactions or transactions of their member banks or of the United States Government are settled in Washing- ton through telegraphic transfer of funds without physical shipments of currency. In exercising its supervisory functions over the Federal Reserve banks and member banks, the Board of Governors promulgates regulations, pursuant to authority granted by the law, 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. The Board keeps a complete record of all action taken by it and by the Federal Open Market Committee on any question of policy, and in the annual report which it makes to the Speaker of the House of Representatives fcr the information of Congress as required by law, it includes a full account of all such action and also a copy of the records required to be kept in that con- nection. The Federal Advisory Council acts in an advisory capacity, conferring with the Board of Governors on general business conditions and making recommenda- tions concerning matters within the Board’s jurisdiction and the general affairs of the Federal Reserve System. The Council is composed of 12 members, 1 from each Federal Reserve district being selected annually by the board of direc- tors of the Federal Reserve bank of the district. The Council is required to meet in Washington at least four times each year, and oftener if called by the Board of Governors. 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). 500 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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.” 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 commerce, and if it shall appear to the commission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of the public, it shall issue and serve upon such person, partnership, or corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect. Provision is made for hearings and the taking of testimony. If the commission shall then be of the opinion that the method of competition in question is prohibited by this act, it shall issue and cause to be served upon the person or organization against whom complaint is made an order to cease and desist from such unfair method of competition. 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 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, or by dismissal of the charges. 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. Stipulations and agreements are not entered into in those cases where a fraudulent business is concerned, 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 stipulations and agreements are published. 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 other order terminating or closing the case. 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 prof- fered 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. Investigation in the preliminary stages is the function of the chief examiner’s office. Procedure and internal organization of the commission, and methods of com- petition condemned by the commission under section 5, are set forth in detail in its annual reports. 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. The commission also makes investigations on its own initiative under these powers, as in the instances of MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 501 inquiries into the subjects of resale price maintenance and the price bases used bv manufacturers and distributors in quoting and selling articles and commodities. 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 Congress, and, at the request of the Attorney General, to make such investiga- tions and recommendations for changes in the corporation’s methods so as to conform to the law. Inquiries under way include those dealing with electric and gas utility corpora- tions, textiles, milk industry, price bases, and agricultural income. 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 I'ederal Trade Commission act the functions of the commission are both legal and economic. The legal functions include prevention of unfair compeiition and of violation of the Clayton Act. Investi- gatory funclions include economic studies of domestic industry and interstate and foreign commecce. 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. (3) Acquisition by one corporation of the share capital of another corporation engaged in commerce, or acquisition by one corpcration of the share capital of two or more corporations engaged in commerce, where the effect, in either case, may be to substantially lessen competition between the acquiring and acquired companies, or 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 502 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. TRADE PRACTICE CONFERENCES The trade practice conference procedure, under the statutory authority of the Federal Trade Commission Act, affords a means by which members of an industry may voluntarily agree and cooperate in establishing standards of fair trade practices and eliminating unfair methods of competition, trade abuses, and evils prevailing in an industry. Since termination of the National Recovery Administration codes, the President has, by Executive Order No. 7192, of September 26, 1935, delegated to the Commission all his authority under the National Industrial Recovery Act, as extended, to approve trade practice provisions of voluntary agreements under such Act. Thus two courses are open to industry under Federal Trade Commis- sion procedure for voluntary cooperation and agreement in establishing ethical business standards and eliminating unfair methods of competition or trade abuses. In both the trade practice conference procedure under the Federal Trade Commission Act and the voluntary agreement under the National Indus- trial Recovery Act, as extended, the functions and purposes are similar and substantially occupy, within the law, the field covered by the trade practice provisions of the former National Recovery Administration codes. Voluntary agreements under the National Industrial Recovery Act, as ex- tended, must contain labor provisions. These need not be included under the trade practice conference procedure. Voluntary agreements under the National Industrial Recovery Act require Commission approval as to trade practice pro- visions and Presidential approval as to labor provisions. Commission approval only is required in the case of a trade practice conference. Voluntary agreements carry certain stated exemptions from the antitrust laws, applying only to labor Provisions and to such trade practice provisions as do not offend against existing aw. Rules established for an industry under the trade practice conference procedure are classified into two groups. In group I are placed all rules which proscribe practices that are illegal as constituting unfair methods of competition or which otherwise offend against laws administered by the Commission. A greater part of the rules fall into this group, and the Commission has jurisdiction to enforce them regardless of whether the offender has signed the agreement or otherwise agreed to abide thereby. In group II are placed rules relating to practices which are not illegal per se, but which the industry deems desirable and which are not contrary to the public interest. Compliance with group II rules is obtained mainly through agreement and voluntary cooperation among the industry members. FALSE AND MISLEADING ADVERTISING CASES ~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, broadcasting stations, and advertising agents in such cases have the privilege of dealing directly with the board with a view to reaching an agreement that will dispose of the issues involved and obviate the 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 misleading 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. MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 503 Publishers, broadcasting stations and advertising agents are accorded the privilege of being omitted from any formal proceedings by disclaiming any in- terest in the subject matter and agreeing by stipulation to abide by the provi- sions of any cease and desist order that may be issued against the advertiser or by the terms of any stipulation between the advertiser and the Commission. 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. Mr. Woodin resigned February 7, 1934, and Mr. Henry Morgenthau, jr., 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 Secrctary 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 act of February 26, 1926 (Public, No. 20, 69th Cong.). The act of February 26, 1926, which continued the board, confined the mem- bership to 16, who are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. 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 504 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS of the twelfth year. 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. The membership of the board is divided into 16 divisions of one member each for the hearing of proceedings. 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 aie 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 United States Court of Appeals for 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 United States Court of Appeals for 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 United States Court of Appeals for 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 United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia; (d) in the case of an agreement between the com- missioner and the taxpayer, then by the circuit court of appeals for the circuit, or vhe United States Court of Appeals for 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 applicable 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 505 AGRICULTURAL CREDITS By act approved August 24, 1921, commonly known as the agricultural credit act of 1921, the corporation’s powers were further 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 lebruary 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, 1928, 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, January 26, 1934, and March 1, 1935, the corporation paid into the Treasury all moneys belonging to it which, in the opinion of the Secretary of the Ireasury, were not required for carrying on and completing 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 percent bonds which matured on April 1, 1920. All but $10,000 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. 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, 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 designated 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 506 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS or by either of said committees or by either branch of the Congress; and to report its activities annually to the Congress. 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. (8) 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. 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 Sinbad 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- 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 jos 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 SCE ANEOTS Official Duties 507 ‘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 Com- mission constitutes 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 findirgs, 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. The Agricultural Adjustment Act as amended (sec. 31 of Public, No. 320, 74th Cong., approved Aug. 24, 1935) contains the following section affecting the Tariff Commission: ‘IMPORTS “Sec. 22. (a) Whenever the President has reason to believe that any one or more articles are being imported into the United States under such conditions and in sufficient quantities as to render or tend to render ineffective or materially interfcre with any program or operation undertaken, or to reduce substantially the amount of any product processed in the United States from any commodity subject to and with respect to which an adjustment program is in operation, under this title, he shall cause an immediate investigation to be made by the United States Tariff Commission, which shall give precedence to investigations under this section to determine such facts. Such investigation shall be made after due notice and opportunity for hearing to interested parties and shall be conducted subject to such regulations as the President shall specify.” On the basis of such an investigation and report to him of the findings and recommendations made in connection therewith, the President may by proclama- tion impose limitations on the total quantities of articles imported: ¢“ Provided, That no limitation shall be imposed on the total quantity of any article which may be imported from any country which reduces such permissible total quantity to less than 50 per centum of the average annual quantity of such article which was imported from such country during the period from July 1, 1928, to June 30, 1933, both dates inclusive. ““(¢) No import restriction proclaimed by the President under this section nor any revocation, suspension, or modification thereof shall become effective until fifteen days after the date of such proclamation, revocation, suspension, or modification. “(d) Any decision of the President as to facts under this section shall be final.” After further investigation and report by the Tariff Commission, the President may suspend or modify any such proclamation, whenever he finds that the changed circumstances require it. No investigation has yet been made by the Tariff Commission under the provisions of the foregoing section 22 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act as amended. Preparation has been made, however, to make such investigations whenever occasion arises. The trade agreements act of June 12, 1934, assigned new work to the Tariff Commission by naming the Commission as a source of information and advice for the President in conducting reciprocal trade negotiations. The Commission, in cooperation with the Department of State and other agencies is engaged on the investigations and analyses required for the commodities under discussion on general questions that enter into these negotiations such as import quotas, exchange control, operation of preferential tariffs and most-favored-nation treaties, and others of similar character. In practice, the Commission has found 508 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS that its regular organization for the collection of tariff information can be brought into use in connection with numerous phases of trade-agreement work. An Executive Committee for Coordinating Commercial Policy was set up by the President on November 11, 1933. On that committee three commissioners sit as members. All matters involving foreign commercial relationships, includ- ing tariff matters in their final form, pass before this committee for review and judgment. Two other important administration committees deal with aspects of the reci- procity program, and on each of these the Tariff Commission is represented. One is designated the Trade Agreements Committee, the other the Committee on Reciprocity Information. Under the Trade Agreements Committee numerous country committees, commodity committees, and special committees pursue assigned studies and projects, and on each of these committees the Tariff Com- mission is represented. The Committee on Reciprocity Information is an interdepartmental body set up by Executive order to receive, analyze, and pass on to the Committee for Co- ordinating Commercial Policy the views of agriculture, industry, commerce, and the general public on tariff concessions and reciprocal trade negotiations. Thomas Walker Page, vice chairman of the Tariff Commission, is chairman of the Com- mittee on Reciprocity Information. The Commission also assists the committee in all its work, furnishes facilities for technical and administrative work, and makes its hearing room available for the public hearings of the committee. The Tariff Commission is also engaged from time to time in cooperative tasks for other governmental departments and agencies, especially in dealing with general economic and tariff problems. UNITED STATES EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION The United States Employees’ Compensation Commission was created by the act of Congress approved September 7, 1916 (U. S. C., title 5, ch. 15). This act 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 policemen, and offi- cers 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 miscon- duct 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. This compensation law, subject to certain modifi- cation limiting the measure of benefits, has been made applicable to enrollees in the Civilian Conservation Corps, employees of the Civil Works Administration and personnel employed as civil employees of the United States on projects financed by funds provided by the Federal Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935. 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. The maximum monthly compensation for persons employed on work- relief projects is $25. Payment shall be made for partial disability equal to 66%4 per cent of the dif- ference between the employee’s monthly pay and his earning capacity after the disability. Employees on work-relief projects are entitled to compensation in accordance with a special schedule covering specific injuries. 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- 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 509 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 crews 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 selt-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 payment, and certify records upon appeal to the courts. Appeal to the Federal courts 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 receive 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 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. 510 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 and dependents of deceased veterans of all wars, and soldiers and dependents of deceased soldiers who served in the Military and Naval Establishments of the United States during peace time, provided for by the various acts of Congress. These laws include, in addition to pensions, benefits in the form of Government insurance, military and naval insurance, adjusted compensation, emergency officers’ retirement pay for veterans of the World War, and hospital and domi- ciliary care for veterans of all wars. Regional offices, or combined regional offices and hospitals and/or homes, are located in each State, with the exception of Delaware, to facilitate the granting of benefits provided for veterans. The Veterans’ Administration maintains and operates 80 facilities providing hospitalization or domiciliary care for all veterans admitted thereto. NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics was established by act of Congress approved March 3, 1915 (U. S. 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 (in- cluding a representative of the Bureau of Air Commerce, Department of Com- merce) who are “acquainted with the needs of aeronautical science, either civil or military, or skilled in aeronautical engineering or its allied sciences.” All the members serve as such 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, prepare programs of fundamental research in aeronautics. In order that research pro- grams may be of maximum value, provision is made to keep the subcommittees 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 the results of fundamental committee researches and 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, MISCELLANEOUS ~~ Offictal Duties 511 Briefly, the general functions of this committee may be stated as follows: 1. Coordinate the research needs of aviation, civil and military. 2. Prevent duplication in the field of aeronautical research. 3. Conduct under unified control of committee in one central Government laboratory fundamental aeronautical research, including: (a) Confidential researches for the Army and Navy on which they rely for supremacy of American military aviation. (b) Fundamental researches to increase safety and economy of operation of aircraft, military and civil. 4. Advise War, Navy, and Commerce Departments and the aviation industry as to the latest research information. 5. Consider merits of aeronautical inventions submitted by the public to any agency of the Government. 6. On request of the President, the Congress, or any executive department to advise upon any special problem in aeronautics which may be referred to it. The committee conducts at Langley Field, Va., a well-equipped aeronautical research laboratory known as the Langley Memorial Aeronautical I aboratory, comprising 12 structures and a research staff of 250 employees. There, under ideal conditions, are combined facilities for laboratory investigations and for researches on aircraft in flight. The War, Navy, and Commerce Departments have uniformly extended this activity every desired cooperation. 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 uestions which are now pending between the United States and the Dominion of a 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 jurisdic- 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 512 Congressional Dairectory MISCELLANEOUS 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 binding 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 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 Ocean, with the exception of the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Length, 2,697 miles. Articles I, II, 1I1, 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 merked 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 tne 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 ES MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 513 on that portion of the frontier between the United States of America and the United Mexican States 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, 1905, and 1933, growing out of changes in the beds of, or works constructed 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 and other engineering problems along the international boundary, are also submitted to the joint commission upon concurrence between the respective Governments through an exchange of notes. The commission is empowered to suspend the construction of works of any character along the Rio Grande and Colorado Rivers that contravene existing treaties; erect and maintain monuments along the water boundary; make necessary surveys of changes brought by force of current in both rivers caused by avulsion, accretion, or erosion; mark and elimi- nate bancos caused by such changes; survey, place, and maintain monuments on all international bridges between the two countries. The commission is author- ized 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. If both commissioners agree to a decision their judgment shall be binding on both Governments, unless one of them shall disapprove it within one month from the date it shall have been pronounced. By the provisions of the treaty of 1933 the commission was charged with the direction and inspection of the construction, and with the subsequent maintenance of the Rio Grande Rectification Project in the El Paso-Juarez Valley. The United States 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. In addition to the development and analysis of general data pertaining to the extent of beneficial use of international waters, there are operated by the commission, over some 1,500 miles of the Rio Grande, its tributaries and diversions, 54 stream-gaging stations embracing the measure- ment 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 nearly one-half of the pertinent drainage area in Mexico between those points. Congressional concurrence in the development of this interna- tional data is found in the provisions of the act approved August 19, 1935 (Public, No. 286, 74th Cong.). Statutory provision is also made by this act for the conduct by the American Commissioner of technical and other investigations relating to the defining, demarkation, fencing, or monumentation of the land and water boundary; and the construction of fences, monuments, and other demarkation of the boundary line as well as sewer and water systems and other enumerated structures crossing the international border. The act further embraces statutory authority and administrative provisions for the construction, operation, and maintenance of } treaty and other boundary projects. 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 i 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. 30063°—T74—-2—1ST ED——33 i i | 4 514 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION (Duties and functions, revised to October 7, 1935) STATUTORY Creation and authority.—Under the Federal Water Power Act of June 10, 1920 (41 Stat. 1063, 16 U. S. C. 791-823) the Federal Power Commission was originally composed of the Secretaries of War, Interior, and Agriculture. It was reor- ganized on December 22, 1930, under the act of June 23, 1930 (46 Stat. 797), with five full-time commissioners appointed by the President. Its duties were enlarged under Title II of the Public Utility Act of 1935, approved August 26, 1935, to include jurisdiction, not only over water-power projects on navigable streams or affecting the interests of interstate commn.erce, or upon public lands as previously provided, but also over the interstate movement of electric energy and the short title of the act was changed to ‘‘Federal Power Act.” WATER-POWER DEVELOPMENT Purpose of original act.—The Federal Water Power Act of 1920 represents a declared policy of the Congress to provide for the improvement of navigation through the development of water power on streams subject to Federal jurisdic- tion or on public lands by private and governmental agencies acting under licenses issued by the Commission. Licenses so issued are subject to conditions prescribed by the act to promote navigation and to conserve water-power re- sources for the public oy and at the same time aid in safeguarding consumers against exorbitant charges by licensees for generated power. Recapture of water-power projects—An important provision of the act relating to water-power projects reserves to the United States, under what is commonly called the ‘‘recapture’ provision, or to any State or municipality designated by the Commission, the right to take over any licensed project at the expiration of the license period upon payment to the licensee of the net investment, not to exceed the then fair value in the project involved. To insure the preservation of the recapture option and the rights relating to it, as well as to make certain the protection provided for the consuming public, the statute requires the Com- mission to determine the actual legitimate original cost of projects constructed under license, additions and betterments thereto, and, in case of projects con- structed prior to license under preexisting authority, to determine their fair value as of the date of license or determination. Provision is made for a reduction of the net investment and consequently of the recapture base, which is also the rate base under the statute for Federal purposes, by the creation of amortization reserves accumulated in excess of a specified reasonable rate of return. In this connection the Commission also prescribes and enforces a system of accounts to be maintained by licensees. Only limited authority over rates, services, and securities.—Those licensees which are interstate public utility companies come under the provisions of Part II of the Federal Power Act relating to all interstate public-utility companies. The Commission’s authority over the rates, services, and securities of other licensees, their customers and subsidiaries is very limited under Part I of the Federal Power Act. It may regulate the rates, services, and securities of such licensees and purchasers of power from such licensees for the purpose of resale when they are engaged in intrastate business only where the State involved has no duly constituted regulatory agency for the purpose. Reservation of power rights.—The Commission is authorized to determine whether the value of the lands of the United States reserved for power purposes will be injured or destroyed for purposes of power development by location, entry, or selection under the public land laws, with reservation of power rights to the United States. Determines value of power.—The Commission determines the value of power available at Government dams, and the advisability of its development for public purposes. Annual rental charges fixed.—Annual rental charges are fixed by the Com- mission in licenses for reimbursement of the cost of the administration of the water-power provisions of the Act and for recompensing the United States for the use of its lands and other property. Charge for annual benefits determined.—In cases where a licensee or other power developer benefits directly from a headwater improvement of another licensee, a permittee, or of the United States, the Commission determines the proper share of the annual charges for interest, maintenance, and depreciation MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 515 on such headwater improvement which must be paid by the lower power developer benefited. ; Investigation of power resources.—The Commission is authorized to conduct general investigations of power resources and of their relation to interstate and foreign commerce, and of the power industry and its relation to other industries, cooperating with State and National agencies in its investigations, and to publish the results of its work in special and annual reports. INTERSTATE TRANSMISSION OF ELECTRIC ENERGY Aid to State regulation.—The Public Utility Act of 1935 discloses an intent on the part of Congress to return to local control and management the electric industry, which has been very largely centralized through holding company control, and as a result thereof, in many respects removed from adequate State regulation. Title IT, which is cited as the Federal Power Act and which embraces wholly new legislation in Parts II and III thereof, discloses the policy of Congress to extend Federal regulation to those matters which cannot be regulated by the States, and also exerts Federal authority to strengthen and assist the States in the exercise of their regulatory powers. The Federal Power Act, in addition to amending the Federal Water Power Act of 1920, in order to clarify certain features, confers upon the Federal Power Commission numerous additional functions, some of the most important of which are as follows: Jurisdiction as to service and rates.—It delegates to the Commission jurisdiction over the transmission of electric energy in interstate commerce, the sale of electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce, the exportation of electric energy to foreign countries and over all public utilities owning or operating facilities used for the transmission or sale of such energy, authorizes the Commission to pass upon issuance of securities and the purchase, sale of consolidation of properties by public utilities subject to its jurisdiction. Authorizes the Commission to investigate the rates and charges for electric energy transmitted in interstate commerce to ascertain whether such rates and charges are fair and reasonable, and, as to wholesale charges, if, after investigation, found to be unfair or unreasonable, to fix fair and reasonable charges. System of accounts for utilities—It authorizes the Commission to prescribe a system of accounts for public utilities subject to its jurisdiction; the method of accruing depreciation; to examine the books and records of such utilities; and to require such periodic and special reports as deemed necessary for the administra- tion of the Act. Cost of utility property— Rate base.—It authorizes the Commission, in connection with public utilities subject to its jurisdiction, to investigate and ascertain the actual legitimate cost of their property, the depreciation therein, and, when found necessary for rate-making purposes, other facts which bear upon the determina- tion of such cost, depreciation, and the fair value of such property. System of accounts for Federal agencies.—It authorizes the Commission to pre- scribe the system of accounts for all agencies of the Federal Government engaged in the generation, transmission, and sale of electric energy for ultimate distribution to the public. Regional districts.—Directs the Commission to divide the country into regional power districts for the purpose of assuring an abundant supply of electric energy at the most economical cost throughout the United States. General powers of tnvestigation.—It authorizes the Commission to carry on work similar to that of the National Power Survey in collecting information regarding power resources and requirements of the United States, and to publish annual and periodic reports concerning the generation, transmission, distribution, and sale of electric energy however produced throughout the United States and its possessions, and to secure and keep current information regarding the ownership operation, management, and control of all facilities for such generation, trans- mission, distribution and sale; the capacity and output thereof and the relation- ship between the two; the cost of generation, transmission, and distribution and the rates, charges, contracts, etc., of every electric utility company in the United States and its possessions whether or not otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission. Enforcement provisions.—The Commission is authorized to hold hearings on its own initiative or on the complaint of any State commission, municipality, or utility, and to bring action in the proper District Court of the United States against any person or persons about to engage in any acts or practices which will constitute a violation of the provisions of the Act, or of any rule, regulation, or order of the Commission. 516 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS State cooperation.—The Act also authorizes the Commission to cooperate with State public utility commissions to establish joint boards consisting of a repre- sentative from each of the several States involved, to conduct hearings, and pro- vides for the furnishing of any information that will be of assistance in State regulation of electric utilities, and to make available to the State commissions its trained rate, engineering, and accounting staffs as witnesses in hearings con- ducted by State commissions. DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY Under section 8 of an Act approved August 31, 1935, amending the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, the Commission is directed to prescribe a system of ac- counts to be maintained by the Tennessee Valley Authority Board, this system to be similar to the system of accounts prescribed by the Commission for public i utilities. | Under section 9 of the amended Act a new section designated as section 15 (a) is added to the Tennessee Valley Authority Act. This new section 15 (a) au- thorizes the T.V. A. Corporation to issue bonds not to exceed in the aggregate $50,000,000 outstanding at any one time in order to obtain funds to carry out the provisions of section 7 of the amendatory Act under which the T. V. A. Board ‘‘is authorized to advise and cooperate with and assist, by extending credit for a period of not exceeding 5 years to, States, Counties, municipalities and non- profit organizations situated within transmission distance from any dam where such power is generated by the Corporation in acquiring, improving, and operat- ing (a) existing distribution facilities and incidental works, including generating plants; and (b) interconnecting transn_ ission lines; or in acquiring any interest { in such facilities, incidental works, and lines.” No bonds may be issued under section 15 (a) for the perforrance of any proposed contract negotiated by the T. V. A. Corporation under the authority of section 7 of the amendatory Act, until the proposed contract has been submitted to and approved by the Federal Power Commission. SPECIAL DUTIES In addition to the duties prescribed by statute, the Commission has been conducting special studies and surveys affecting the electric industry and the public, reports on which have been, or are being, prepared for submission to the President and the Congress. | NATIONAL POWER SURVEY | Work of the National Power Survey has teen under authority as follows: | Executive Order No. 6251, approved August 19, 1933, providing for a Nation- { wide survey of power resources, the present and future markets for electricity, | and methods of balancing power supply and demand. Senate Resolution No. 80, approved May 29, 1933, directing a survey of the cost of distributing electricity. Under the provisions of the aforementioned Executive order the Commission, through the National Power Survey, prepared an Interim Report which was trans- mitted to the President under date of March 22, 1935. Additional and more detailed surveys and studies in connection with national Dower problems are now being made, and reports thereon will be released as com- pleted: (a) Holding companies which own and operate electric utilities, showing the gran Syed by each holding company group. (In cooperation with Electric Rate urvey. (b) Power requirements of electric railways and electric-steam railroads. (¢) Rural electrification in United States. (d) Industrial power survey of United States. | (e) Chemical, electrochemical, and electrometallurgical power requirements. / (f) Cost of distributing electricity. (9) Interconnection and coordination of power facilities. (h) Relation of coal and other fuels to hydroelectric development. i (2) Undeveloped water resources, with feasible sites classified on an economic asis. (7) Power resources and markets In each of seven regions into which the United States has been divided. (k) Location of large-scale steam-electric power plants. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 517 ELECTRIC RATE SURVEY Under Public Resolution No. 18 (Senate Joint Resolution No. 74) approved April 14, 1934, the Electric Rate Survey has conducted a Nation-wide study of electric rates and kindred subjects. Two reports have been made to Congress, as follows: (a) Rate Series No. 1.—A preliminary report on domestic and residential rates in cities of a population of 50,000 or more. (b) Rate Series No. 2.—Reports on residential and domestic rates in cities and towns in each of the 48 States and the District of Columbia. Reports in process of printing for early release are: (a) Analysis of typical bills in residential service by States and geographic divisions. (b) Glossary of important rate and power terms. Studies have been made and reports are in course of preparation for printing on the following subjects: : 1. Electric appliance merchandising. 2. Operations, finances, and rates of municipal electric utilities. 3. Typical bills and line extension construction costs for rural electric service. 4. Typical bills for commercial and industrial service, special contracts, and State reports. 5. Holding companies (in connection with national power survey). 6. Trends of typical bills and of electric consumption in residential service. ; 7. Analytical studies of rate schedules, including promotional rates and uni- ormity. 8. History of electric rates, rate-making practices, sources of power, principal characteristics of utilities, and other statistics. 9. Survey of cost of electricity to Federal institutions and establishments. Under Senate Resolution No. 123, approved May 1, 1935, a survey is being made of the restraining crders issued by courts in connection with proposed municipal or other publicly owned electric light and power plants, the cost of proceedings, and loss to the public therefrom. 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 advice is asked for by that officer. That officer now uniformly consults the com- mission regarding details 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 518 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, 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 Columbia 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 National Park Service 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 (¢) 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 MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 519 for changes in the existing highway plan. Paragraph (d) vested the new 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 Eoumbia for use by the commission in accelerating park purchases within the istrict. 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 the 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 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 council 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 Americar 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, approved 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. AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION The American Battle Monuments Commission was created by act of Con- gress approved March 4, 1923. It derives its authority from this and sub- sequent acts and Executive orders (U.S. C., title 36, ch. 8; 48 Stat., pp. 284-285; Executive Orders Nos. 6614 and 6690). The principal duties of the Commission are: (1) To commemorate the services of the American forces in Europe during the World War by the erection of suitable memorials, by the preparation and publication of historical information, and in other ways; (2) to administer and maintain the American national cemeteries and memorials in Europe; and (3) to exercise control over the erection of memorials in Europe by American citizens, States, municipalities, or associations. The Commission’s construction program, which is now practically complete, includes the following: (a) The erection of a memorial chapel in each of the 8 520 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS American cemeteries in Europe and the construction of service buildings, care- takers’ houses, and masonry walls at the cemeteries where needed; (b) the improve- ment of the landscaping in these cemeteries; (¢) the erection of 11 memorials out- side of the cemeteries; (d) the placing of 2 bronze memorial tablets; and (e¢) the erection of a limited number of road signs showing directions to the American cemeteries and memorials in Europe. The Commission is responsible for the administration, supervision, and main- tenance of the national cemeteries in Europe, containing the graves of 30,890 Sree dead, and of the chapels and other memorial features referred to above. The Commission has prepared and published A Guide to the American Battle Fields in Europe. This book, profusely illustrated, and containing numerous maps and charts, gives an account of America’s part in the World War and includes detailed itineraries of battlefield tours. The first edition of this book, 20,000 copies, was sold by the Government Printing Office within 9 months after publication. A new edition is being prepared for publication during 1936. Other historical data, covering operations of American divisions during the World War, have been prepared by the Commission and will be published during 1936. The Commission has taken numerous photographs showing the terrain of the various battlefields where American forces were engaged during the World War. These photographs, when assembled, will be of wide interest and of great value to historians. Under agreements with the French and Belgian Governments, no World War memorials may be erected in those countries by Americans without the advance approval of the American Battle Monuments Commission. Although many reasons make it apparent that the number of such memorials should be restricted, the Commission’s policy does not prevent it from approving such memorials if they are utilitarian in nature and meet other required standards. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION The Federal Communications Commission was created by an act of Congress approved June 19, 1934. The commission is composed of seven commissioners and is divided into three divisions, viz: Broadcast, telegraph, and telephone. The duties of each division have to do with the regulation of interstate and foreign commerce in communication by wire and radio in their respective fields. The commission is assisted by three directors, one for each division, a secretary of the whole commission, a general counsel, and chief engineer. The commission and divisions, when necessary, hold hearings on applications for facilities under its jurisdiction. Upon enactment, into law of the Communications Act, the Federal Radio Com- mission was abolished and its records and property transferred to the Federal Communications Commission. Also, all duties, powers, and functions of the Interstate Commerce Commission under the act of August 7, 1888 (25 Stat. 382), relating to operation of telegraph lines by railroad and telegraph companies granted Government aid in the construction of their lines, are hereby imposed upon and vested in the commission: Provided, That such transfer of duties, powers, and functions shall not be construed to affect the duties, powers, functions, or jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission under, or to interfere with or prevent the enforcement of, the Interstate Commerce Act and all acts amenda- tory thereof or supplemental thereto. All duties, powers, and functions of the Postmaster General with respect to telegraph companies and telegraph lines under any existing provision of law are hereby imposed upon and vested in the commission. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES This court was established by act of Congress February 24, 1855 (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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 521 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 act 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. 522 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. 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. RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was created by ‘“An act to provide emergency financing facilities for financial institutions, to aid in financing agricul- ture, commerce, and industry, and for other purposes”, approved January 22, 1932. This basic law, however, was amended, and the corporation’s powers were increased and the scope of its operations extended by subsequent legislation. By the act approved January 31, 1935, the functions of the corporation were extended until February 1, 1937, or such earlier date as the President may fix by proclamation. ORGANIZATION The corporation was organized on February 2, 1932. It will have succession for a period of 10 years from January 22, 1932, unless sconer dissolved by an act of Congress. Its management 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 corporation functions through a principal office at Washington and loan agencies established in cities throughout the United States. In addition, the corporation has a special representative and custodian at San Juan, P. The Federal reserve banks act as depositories, custodians, and fiscal agents for the corporation. Since there is no Federal reserve bank in Puerto Rico, the insular treasurer at San Juan acts as cnstodian. The funds of the corporation are kept on deposit. with the Treasurer of the United States. MISCELLANEOUS Offical Duties 523 LOANS TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND RAILROADS Pursuant to the provisions of section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion Act, as amended, the corporation is authorized to make loans, on full and adequate security and 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, organized under the laws of any State, the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the United States, including loans secured by the assets of any bank, savings bank, or building and loan association that is closed, or in process of liquidation, to aid in the reorganization or liquida- ion thereof, upon application of the receiver or liquidating agent of such insti- ution. Under the same section of law, as amended, the corporation, with the approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission, including approval of the price to be paid, may, to aid in the financing, reorganization, consolidation, maintenance, or construction thereof, purchase for itself, or for account of a railroad obligated thereon, the obligations of railroads engaged in interstate commerce, including equipment-trust certificates, or guarantee the payment of the principal of, and/or interest on, such obligations, including equipment-trust certificates, or, when, in the opinion of the corporation, funds are not available on reasonable terms from private channels, make loans, upon full and adequate security, to such railroads or to receivers or trustees thereof for the aforesaid purposes. In the case of loans to or the purchase or guarantee of obligations, including equipment-trust certificates, of railroads not in receivership or trusteeship, the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion shall, in connection with its approval thereof, also certify that such railroad, on the basis of present or prospective earnings, may reasonably be expected to meet its fixed charges, without a reduction thereof through judicial reorganiza- tion, except that such certificate shall not be required in case of such loans made for the maintenance of, or purchase of equipment for, such railroads. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, provides that in respect of loans or renewals or extensions of loans or purchases of obligations under section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, to or of railroads, the corporation may require as a condition of making any such loan or renewal or extension for a period longer than 5 years, or purchasing any such obligation maturing later than 5 years from the date of purchase by the corporation, that such arrangements be made for the reduction or amortization of the indebtedness of the railroad, either in whole or in part, as may be approved by the corporation after the prior approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Section 4 of an act approved June 10, 1933, provides that the corporation shall not make, renew, or extend any loan under the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion Act, as amended, or under the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932: (1) If at the time of making, renewing, or extending such loan any officer, director, or employee of the applicant is receiving compensation at a rate in excess of what appears reasonable to the corporation; and (2) unless at such time the applicant agrees to the satisfaction of the corporation not to increase the compensation of any of its officers, directors, or employees to any amount in excess of what appears reasonable to the corporation while such loan is outstanding and unpaid. Section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, provides further that in no case shall the aggregate amount of advances made thereunder to any one corporation and its subsidiary or affiliated organizations exceed at any one time 2% percent of the authorized capital stock of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, plus the aggregate amount of bonds authorized to be outstanding when the capital stock is fully subscribed. Such limitation, however, does not apply to advances to receivers or other liquidating agents of closed banks when made for the purpose of liquidation or reorganization. SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR PREFERRED STOCK OF NATIONAL OR STATE BANKS OR TRUST COMPANIES, LOANS SECURED BY SUCH STOCK AS COLLATERAL, OR PURCHASES OF CAPITAL NOTES OR DEBENTURES OF STATE BANKS OR TRUST COMPANIES Pursuant to the provisions of section 304 of an act approved March 9, 1933, as amended, the corporation is authorized to subscribe for preferred stock, exempt from double liability, in any National or State bank or trust company, upon the request of the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the President. The corporation also is authorized to make loans secured by the preferred stock of 524 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS National or State banks or trust companies as collateral, upon the request of the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the President. In any case in which a State bank or trust company is not permitted, under the laws of the State in which it is located, to issue preferred stock exempt from double liability, or if such laws permit such issue of preferred stock only by unanimous consent of stockholders, the corporation is authorized to purchase the legally issued capital notes or debentures of such State bank or trust company. SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR PREFERRED STOCK AND PURCHASES OF CAPITAL NOTES, ETC., OF INSURANCE COMPANIES, AND LOANS SECURED BY SUCH STOCK OR NOTES, ETC., i AS COLLATERAL Pursuant to the provisions of an act approved June 10, 1933, as amended, the corporation is authorized, upon the request of the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the President, to subscribe for preferred stock of any class, exempt from assessment or additional liability, in any insurance company of any State of the United States which is in need of funds for capital purposes either in connection with the organization of such company or otherwise, or to make loans secured by such stock as collateral. In the event that any such insurance company shall be incorporated under the laws of any State which does not permit it to issue preferred stock exempt from assessment or additional liability, or if such laws permit such issue of preferred stock only by unanimous consent of stockholders, or upon notice of more than 20 days, or if the insurance company is a mutual organization without capital stock, the corporation is authorized, for the purposes indicated above, to pur- chase the legally issued capital notes of such insurance company, or, if the com- pany is a mutual organization without capital stock, such other form or forms of indebtedness as the laws of the State under which such company is organized permit, or to make loans secured by such notes or such other form or forms of indebtedness as collateral, which may be subordinated in whole or in part or to any degree to claims of other creditors. The corporation may not subscribe for any such preferred stock or purchase any such capital notes or make loans upon such stock or notes of any applicant insurance company: (1) If at the time of such subscription, purchase, or loan, any officer, director, or employee of the applicant is receiving total compensa- tion, including any salary, fee, bonus, commission, or other payment, direct or indirect, in money or otherwise, for personal services, in a sum in excess of $17,500 per annum from the applicant and/or any of its affiliates; and (2) unless at such time the applicant agrees to the satisfaction of the corporation not to increase the compensation of any of its officers, directors, or employees, except with the consent of the corporation and in no event to an amount exceeding $17,500 per annum, so long as preferred stock or capital notes, ete., are held by the corporation. The total amount of loans outstanding, preferred stock subscribed for, and capital notes and such other form or forms of indebtedness purchased and held by the corporation pursuant to the aforesaid provisions of law relating to insurance companies may not exceed $75,000,000 at any one time. SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR OR LOANS UPON NONASSESSABLE STOCK, PURCHASES OF CAPI- TAL NOTES OR DEBENTURES OF NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATIONS, MORTGAGE LOAN COMPANIES, TRUST COMPANIES, SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS, AND OTHER SIMILAR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS To assist in the establishment of a normal mortgage market, the corporation, pursuant to section 5c of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, may, with the approval of the President, subscribe for or make loans upon non- assessable stock of any class of any national mortgage association organized under title IIT of the National Housing Act and of any mortgage loan company, trust company, savings and loan association, or similar financial institution now or hereafter incorporated under the laws of the United States, or of any State, or of the District of Columbia, the principal business of which institution is that of making loans upon mortgages, deeds of trust, or other instruments con- veying, or constituting a lien upon, real estate or any interest therein. In any case in which, under the laws of its incorporation such financial institution is not permitted to issue nonassessable stock, the corporation may purchase the legally issued capital notes or debentures thereof. The total face amount of loans outstanding, nonassessable stock subscribed for, and capital notes and debentures purchased and held by the corporation may not exceed $100,000,000 at any one time. That MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutres 525 LOANS TO INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL BUSINESS DIRECT, OR IN CONJUNCTION WITH BANKS AND OTHER LENDING INSTITUTIONS For the purpose of maintaining and increasing the employment of labor, when credit at prevailing bank rates for the character of loans applied for is not otherwise available at banks, the corporation is authorized, pursuant to the pro- visions of section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, to make loans to any industrial or commercial business, which shall include the fishing industry, and to any institution, now or hereafter established, financing principally the sale of electrical, plumbing, or air conditioning appliances or equip- ment or other household appliances, both urban and rural. Such loans shall, in the opinion of the board of directors of the corporation, be so secured as reason- ably to assure repayment of the loans, may be made directly, or in cooperation with banks or other lending institutions, or by the purchase of participations, shall mature not later than January 31, 1945, shall be made only when deemed to offer reasonable assurance of continued or increased employment of labor, shall be made only when, in the opinion of the board of directors of the corporation, the borrower is solvent, shall not exceed $300,000,000 in aggregate amount at any one time outstanding, and shall be subject to such terms, conditions, and re- strictions as the board of directors of the corporation may determine. LOANS TO OR FOR THE BENEFIT OF CERTAIN AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT DIS- TRICTS, ETC., TO REDUCE AND REFINANCE OUTSTANDING INDEBTEDNESS, ETC. Section 36 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, as amended, authorizes the corporation to make loans, not to exceed $125,000,000 in the aggregate, to or for the benefit of drainage districts, levee districts, levee and drainage districts, irrigation districts, and similar districts, mutual nonprofit companies and incorporated water users’ associations duly organized under the laws of any State and to or for the benefit of political subdivisions of States, which prior to May 12, 1933 (the date on which the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933 became law), have completed economically sound projects devoted chiefly to the improvement of land for agricultural purposes. Such loans shall be made for the following purposes: 1. To enable an applicant to reduce and refinance its outstanding indebtedness incurred in connection with its project; 2. To enable an applicant (irrespective of whether or not it has any outstand- ing indebtedness) to purchase or otherwise acquire in connection with its project, storage reservoirs, or dams or sites therefor or additional water rights or canals, ditches, or rights-of-way for the conduct of water or other works or appurte- - nances necessary for the delivery of water. Such loans shall only be made, however, if such purchase or acquisition is not intended to bring additional lands into production; 3. To enable an applicant, to whom a loan has been authorized for any of the purposes mentioned above, to make such repairs and necessary extensions or improvements to its project, as are necessary or desirable for the proper functioning of its project or for the further assurance of its ability to repay such loan. Such loans shall only be made, however, if such repairs and necessary extensions or improvements are not designed to bring new lands into production; and shall be subject, with certain exceptions, to the same terms and conditions as loans under section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended. LOANS UPON OR PURCHASE OF THE ASSETS OF CLOSED BANKS Section 5e (a) of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, authorizes the corporation to make loans upon or purchase the assets, or any portion thereof, of any bank, savings bank, or trust company, which has been closed on or after December 31, 1929, and prior to January 1, 1934, and the affairs of which have not been fully liquidated or wound up, upon such terms and conditions as the corporation may by regulations prescribe. This section also makes provision for loans upon or purchase by the corporation of the assets, or any portion thereof, of closed banks which have been trusteed or are otherwise held for the benefit of depositors or depositors and others. MINING LOANS Pursuant to section 14 of the act approved June 19, 1934, as amended, the corporation is authorized and empowered to make loans upon sufficient security to recognized and established corporations, individuals, and partnerships engaged 526 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS in the business of mining, milling, or smelting ores. The corporation is authorized and empowered also to make loans to corporations, individuals, and partnerships engaged in the development of a quartz ledge, or vein, or other ore body, or placer deposit, containing gold, silver, or tin, or gold and silver, when, in the opinion of the corporation, there is sufficient reason to believe that, through the use of such loan in the development of a lode, ledge, or vein, or mineral deposit, or placer gravel deposit, there will be developed a sufficient quantity of ore, or placer deposits of a sufficient value to pay a profit upon mining operations. Not to exceed $20,000 shall be loaned to any corporation, individual, or partnership, for such development purposes. A sum not to exceed $10,000,000 may be allocated or made available for such development loans. LOANS TO MANAGING AGENCIES OF FARMERS’ COOPERATIVE MINERAL RIGHTS POOLS Pursuant to the provisions of section 13 of the act approved June 19, 1934, the corporation is authorized to make loans upon full and adequate security, based on mineral acreage, to recognized and established incorporated managing agencies of farmers’ cooperative mineral rights pools for the purpose of defraying the cost of organizing such pools. LOANS TO OR FOR THE BENEFIT OF PUBLIC-SCHOOL DISTRICTS OR OTHER PUBLIC- SCHOOL AUTHORITIES Pursuant to the provisions of section 1 of the act of Congress approved August 24, 1935, the corporation is authorized to make loans to or for the benefit of tax-supported public-school districts or other similar public-school authorities in charge of public schools organized pursuant to the laws of the several States, Territories, and the District of Columbia for the purpose of enabling any such district or authority which, or any State, municipality, or other public body which is authorized to incur indebtedness for the benefit of public schools, to reduce and refinance outstanding indebtedness or obligations which have been incurred prior to August 24, 1935, for the purpose of financing the construction, operation, and/or maintenance of public-school facilities. Loans may also be made to enable applicants, to whom refinancing loans have been authorized, to make such repairs and necessary extensions or improvements to the public-school facilities on account cf which the indebtedness refinanced was incurred as are necessary or desirable for the further assurance of the ability of the applicants to repay such refinancing loans. LOANS TO THE FISHING INDUSTRY By section 15 of the act approved June 19, 1934, the corporation is authorized to make loans under section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, to any person, association, or corporation organized under the laws of any State, the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, or Puerto Rico, for the purpose of financing the production, storage, handling, packing, processing, gaTrying and/or orderly marketing of fish of American fisheries and/or products thereof. LOANS TO NONPROFIT CORPORATIONS FOR THE REPAIR OF DAMAGES CAUSED BY FLOODS OR OTHER CATASTROPHES Pursuant to the provisions of the act approved April 13, 1934, as amended, the corporation is authorized to make loans, upon terms and conditions specified therein and not to exceed $5,000,000 in the aggregate, to nonprofit corporations, with or without capital stock, organized for the purpose of financing the acquisi- tion of home or building sites in replacement of sites formerly occupied by build- ings where such sites are declared by public authority to be unsafe by reason of flood, danger of flood, or earthquake, and for the purpose of financing the repair or construction of buildings or structures, or water, irrigation, gas, electric, sewer, drainage, flood-control, communication, or transportation systems, damaged or destroyed by earthquake, conflagration, tornado, cyclone, or flood in the vears 1933, 1934, 1935, and 1936, and deemed by the corporation to be economically useful or necessary. LOANS FOR THE CARRYING AND ORDERLY MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL COMMOD- ITIES AND LIVESTOCK 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 Dutzes 527 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. All such loans are required to be fully and adequately secured. SELF-LIQUIDATING LOANS UNDER SECTION 201 (A) OF THE EMERGENCY RELIEF AND CONSTRUCTION ACT OF 1932, AS AMENDED The power of the corporation to make self-liquidating loans or contracts, etc., under section 201 (a) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, was terminated at the close of June 26, 1933, pursuant to the provisions of section 301 of the National Industrial Recovery Act, which created the Fed- eral Emergency Administration of Public Works. The functions of the corpo- ration in this field were superseded by the functions of that Administration. Sec- tion 301 of the National Industrial Recovery Act provides, however, that the corporation may issue funds to a borrower under section 201 (a) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, prior to January 23, 1939, under the terms of any agreement or any commitment to bid upon or purchase bonds entered into with such borrower pursuant to an application approved prior to the date of termination of the power of the corporation to approve applications under such section. Section 301 of the National Industrial Recovery Act, as amended by the act approved June 19, 1934, provides that in connection with any loan or contract or any commitment to make a loan entered into by the corporation prior to June 26, 1933, to aid in financing part or all of the construction cost of projects pursuant to the provisions of section 201 (a) (1) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, the corporation may make such further loans and con- tracts, subject to all the terms and conditions set forth in the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, for the completion of any such project, or for improvements, additions, extensions, or equipment which are necessary or desirable for the proper functioning of any such project, or which will materially increase the assurance that the borrower will be able to repay the entire invest- ment of the corporation in such project, including such improvements, additions, extensions, or equipment. Section 11 of the act approved January 31, 1935, provides that in all cases where the corporation shall hold any bonds or other evidences of indebtedness of any borrower under section 201 (a) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, whether heretofore or hereafter acquired, and such borrower shall be able and willing to substitute or cause to be substituted therefor any other bonds or other evidences of indebtedness, whether of the same or longer maturities or otherwise differing, which, in the judgment of the corporation, are more desirable than those so held, the corporation is authorized to accept such bonds or other evidences of indebtedness, in exchange and substitution for such bonds or other evidences of indebtedness so held by it, upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon with such borrower at the time of, or in contemplation of, such exchange and substitution. LOANS FOR THE EXPORTATION OF AGRICULTURAL OR OTHER PRODUCTS Under section 5a of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, the corporation is authorized, subject to specified limitations, to accept drafts and bills of exchange drawn upon it, 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 countries. 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 cannot be financed in the normal course of commerce, in order that such surpluses may not have a depressing effect upon current prices of such products; but it is stipulated that no such sales shall be financed by the corporation if, in its judgment, such sales will affect adversely the world markets for such products, and that no such loan may 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. OTHER LOANS AND ADVANCES UNDER SECTION 5 OF THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT, AS AMENDED The corporation is authorized to make loans under section 5 of the Reconstruec- tion Finance Corporation Act, as amended, upon full and adequate security to 528 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS any State insurance fund established or created by the laws of any State (includ- ing Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico), for the purpose of paying or insuring payment of compensation to injured workmen and those disabled as a result of disease contracted in the course of their employment, or to their dependents; to any fund created by any State (including Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico), for the purpose of insuring the repayment of deposits of public moneys of such State, or any of its political subdivisions, in banks or depositories qualified under the law of such State to receive such deposits; to parties to any marketing agree- ment entered into by the Secretary of Agriculture with processors, producers, associations of producers, and others engaged in the handling of any agricultural commodity or product thereof, only with respect to such handling, however, as is in the current of interstate or foreign commerce or which directly burdens, ob- structs, or affects, interstate or foreign commerce in such commodity or product thereof, for the purpose of carrying out any such agreement, as authorized by section 8b of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended; processors or dis- tributors of agricultural commodities for the payment of processing and com- pensating taxes and taxes on floor stocks levied pursuant to the provisions of title I of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, as authorized by section 19 (¢) thereof. LOANS AND ADVANCES TO THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE Under the provisions of section 5 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, the corporation is authorized and directed 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 Govern- ment, 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. LOANS TO RECEIVERS APPOINTED UNDER SECTION 29 OF THE FEDERAL FARM LOAN ACT, AS AMENDED, OR BY A UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT Section 27 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, as amended, author- izes the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, with the approval of the Land Bank Commissioner, to make loans to any receiver appointed pursuant to section 29 of the Federal Farm Loan Act, as amended, or to 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. LOANS TO THE CORPORATION OF FOREIGN SECURITY HOLDERS The Corporation of Foreign Bondholders Act, 1933, which is not to take effect until the President finds that such action is in the public interest and by proclama- tion so declares, creates a body corporate with the name ‘‘ Corporation of Foreign Security Holders’ for the purpose of protecting, conserving, and advancing the interests of the holders of foreign securities in default. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is authorized to loan not to exceed $75,000 for the use of the Corporation of Foreign Security Holders. ADVANCES TO THE RECLAMATION FUND Section 37 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933 authorizes the corporation, upon request of the Secretary of the Interior, to advance funds to the reclamation fund created by the act of June 17, 1902, not exceeding $5,000,000 for the completion of projects or divisions of projects now under construction, or projects approved and authorized. PURCHASE OF MARKETABLE SECURITIES FROM THE FEDERAL EMERGENCY ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC WORKS The corporation is authorized, pursuant to the provisions of title II of the Emergency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, to purchase marketable securities, satisfactory to the corporation, acquired or to be acquired by the Federal Emer- gency Administration of Public Works. The amount that the corporation may have invested at any one time in such securities shall not exceed $250,000,000. PURCHASE OF DEBENTURES OR OBLIGATIONS OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Section 5e (b) of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, authorizes the corporation to purchase at par value such debentures or other obligations of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as are authorized to AREY TR SE. NRE re RUS. AKER, MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutzes 529 be issued under subsection (0) of section 12B of the Federal Reserve Act, as amended, upon the request of the board of directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, whenever in the judgment of said board additional funds are required for insurance purposes. The corporation may not purchase or hold at any time said debentures or other obligations in excess of $250,000,000 par value. FUNDS OF RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ALLOCATED AND MADE AVAIL- ABLE -TO OTHER GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE AND FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION Under section 2 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, the corpora- tion was authorized to allocate and make available to the Secretary of Agriculture a certain part of its funds in order to enable the Secretary to make loans to farmers for crop-production purposes during 1932. Pursuant to the provisions of section 201 (e) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, the corporation paid for the capital stock of the regional agricultural credit corporations, created by it under such section 201 (e), 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. By the act approved February 4, 1933, the authority of the Secretary of Agriculture was extended with respect to the use of funds allocated and made available to him by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation so as to enable him to make loans, within certain limitations, to farmers during 1933. The funds made available and allocated under the foregoing provisions of law were transferred to and vested in the Farm Credit Administration by the Execu- tive order of March 27, 1933, and to the Governor of the Farm Credit Adminis- tration by section § of the Farm Credit Act of 1933, as amended. LAND BANK COMMISSIONER The corporation is authorized, under section 30 (a) of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, as amended, to make available to the Land Bank Commis- sioner the sum of $100,000,000, to be used for a period not exceeding 4 years from the date of the enactment of such act, i. e., May 12, 1933, for the purpose of making loans to joint-stock land banks. 3 Under section 32 of the same act, the corporation is authorized also to allocate and make available to the Land Bank Commissioner the sum of $200,000,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be used for the purpose of making loans to farmers. By section 3, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation Act, the funds and proceeds thereof made available to the Land Bank Commissioner under section 32 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, and the mortgages taken by the Commissioner and the credit instruments secured thereby were transferred to the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation as capital of that corpo- ration. X : FEDERAL EMERGENCY RELIEF ADMINISTRATOR Section 2 (a) of the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933 authorized the cor- poration to make available not to exceed $500,000,000, for expenditure in accord- ance with the terms stated in the act, upon certification by the Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, for the purpose of furnishing relief to needy and distressed eople. » Pursuant to the provisions of Title II, Emergency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, not exceeding $500,000,000 in the aggregate of any savings or unobli- gated balances in funds of the corporation may, in the discretion of the President, be transferred and applied to the purposes of the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933 and/or Title II of the National Industrial Recovery Act. FUNDS MADE AVAILABLE FOR THE PURPOSES OF THE EMERGENCY RELIEF APPROPRIATION ACT OF 1935 Under section 1 of the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935, not ex- ceeding $500,000,000 in the aggregate of any savings or unobligated balances in funds of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, are immediately available and remain available until June 30, 1937, to be used in the diseretion and under the direction of the President for the purposes of the Emergency Relief Appropri- ation Act of 1935. FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATOR Section 4 of the National Housing Act provides that the corporation shall make available to the Federal Housing Administrator such funds as he may deem necessary for the purposes of carrying out the provisions of Titles I, 1I, and III of such act. 30063°—T74—2—1ST ED———34 530 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY Section 6 (f) of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act amended the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act to provide thas $125,000,000, or as much thereof as may be necessary for the purpose, be allocated and made available by the cor- poration to the Secretary of the Treasury in order to enable him to pay for the capital stock of Federal Home Loan banks subscribed for by the United States. Section 4 (b) of the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933 authorizes and directs the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to allocate and make available to the Secre- tary of the Treasury the sum of $200,000,000, or so much thereof as may be neces- sary, in order to enable him to make payments for subscriptions for the capital stock of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, created by such act. FUNDS OF THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION CAPITAL STOCK The capital stock of the corporation was fixed by section 2 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act at $500,000,000, all of which was subscribed by the Secretary of the Treasury on behalf of the Government of the United States on February 2, 1932. The entire capital stock has been paid in by the Secretary of the Treasury and is held by 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, its notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations in an amount aggre- gating not more than six and three-fifths times its subscribed capital stock. However, the National Industrial Recovery Act, which terminated the power of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to make loans or contracts to finance self-liquidating projects, etc., under the provisions of section 201 (a) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, provides that the amount of notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation is authorized to have outstanding at any one time is decreased $400,000,000. On the other hand, the amount of notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations which the corporation is authorized to issue and have outstanding at any one time is increased by the provisions of other laws, as follows: (a) By an amount not to exceed $125,000,000, in order to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to make payments for subscriptions for capital stock of the Federal Home Loan Banks, as provided in section 6 (f) of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. (b) By such amount as may be necessary— (1) To enable the corporation to subscribe for preferred stock of National or State banks or trust companies, to make loans secured by such stock as collateral, and to purchase capital notes or debentures of State banks or trust companies, as provided by section 304 of an act approved March 9, 1933, as amended. (2) To enable the corporation to make loans to the Secretary of Agriculture upon cotton in his possession or control, as provided by section 5 of the Agricul- tural Adjustment Act, as amended. (8) To provide funds for the Federal Housing Administrator to enable him to carry out the provisions of titles I, II, and IIT of the National Housing Act, as provided by section 4 of said act. (¢) By an amount not to exceed $75,000,000 to enable the corporation to sub- scribe for preferred stock, to purchase capital notes of insurance companies, and to make loans secured by such stock or notes as collateral, as provided by the act approved June 10, 1933, as amended. (d) By $500,000,000 to enable the Federal Emergency Relief Administrator to make grants to States and Territories (including Alaska, Hawaii, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico) and the District of Columbia to aid in meeting the costs of furnishing relief and work relief and in relieving the hardship and suffer- ing caused by unemployment, as provided by the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933; and to make such expenditures, not to exceed $350,000, as are necessary to carry out the provisions thereof. : (e) By $300,000,000 in order to provide funds for allocation to the Land Bank Commissioner for the purpose of making loans to joint-stock land banks and to farmers, as provided by the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, as amended, and for the purpose of providing capital for the Federal Farm Mortgage Cor- poration, pursuant to section 3, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation Act. MISCELLANEOUS Officral Dutzes 531 (f) By an smount not to exceed $200,000,000 in order to provide funds for allocation to the Secretary of the Treasury for the purpose of making payments for subscriptions for the capital stock of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, as provided by section 4 (b) of the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933. (9) By $850,000,000, as provided by section 3 of the act approved January 20, 1934 (h) By an amount not to exceed $250,000,000 at any one time for the purchase at par value of debentures and other obligations of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as provided by section 5e (b) of the Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration Act, as amended. (z) By an amount not to exceed $250,000,000 at any one time for the purchase of marketable securities acquired or to be acquired by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works, as provided by title II of the Emergency Appro- priation Act, fiscal year 1935. (3) A face amount not to exceed $100,000,000 at any one time outstanding, to enable the corporation to subscribe for or make loans upon nonassessable stock of any class of any national mortgage association organized under title III of the National Housing Act and of any mortgage loan company, trust company, savings and loan association, or other similar institution, and to purchase capital notes or debentures of such financial institutions. Lection 13 of the act approved January 31, 1935, provides that, notwithstanding any other provision of law, the corporation is authorized and empowered to use as general funds all receipts arising from the sale or retirement of any of the stock, notes, bonds, or other securities acquired by it pursuant to any provision of law. Notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations issued by the corporation, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, are to mature not more than 5 years from their respective dates of issue, to be redeemable at the option of the corporation before maturity in such manner as may be stipulated in such obliga- tions, and to bear such rate or rates of interest as may be determined by the corporation. The corporation, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treas- ury, also may sell on a discount basis short-term obligations payable at maturity without interest. The law provides that the notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations of the corporation shall be fully and unconditionally guaranteed both as to interest and principal by the United States and such guaranty shall be expressed on the face thereof. The Secretary of the Treasury, in his discretion, is authorized to purchase any obligations of the corporation which may be issued pursuant to the provisions of the law, and may, at any time, sell any of the obligations of the corporation acquired by him. He is further authorized, at the request of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, to market for the corpora- tion its notes, debentures, bonds, and other such obligations, using therefor all the facilities of the Treasury Department authorized by law for the marketing of obligations of the United States. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, also provides that any and all notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations issued by the corporation shall be exempt both as to principal and interest from all taxation (except surtaxes, estate, inheritance, and gift taxes) at any time imposed by the United States, by any Territory, dependency, or ie thereof, or by any State, county, municipality, or local taxing authority. REGIONAL AGRICULTURAL CREDIT CORPORATIONS An Executive order issued on March 27, 1933, effective on May 27, 1933, transferred the management and functions, records, equipment, and personnel of the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to the jurisdiction and control of the Farm Credit Administration. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation will continue to pay all expenses in- curred in connection with the operations of these corporations, and to rediscount paper for them, as provided in section 201 (e¢) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932. FUNDS FOR RELIEF OF DESTITUTION The power of the corporation to make funds available to States and Terri- tories under section 1 of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932 for the relief of destitution was terminated at the close of June 1, 1933, pursuant to section 2 (¢) of the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933, which created the Federal Emergency Relief Administration. 532 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS REPORTS QUARTERLY REPORTS Section 15 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act provides that the corporation shall make and publish a report quarterly of its operations to the Congress stating the aggregate loans made to each of the classes of borrowers provided for and the number of borrowers by States (including the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico) in each class. The law further provides that the statement shall show the assets and liabilities of the corpora- tion and the names and compensation of all persons employed by the corporation whose compensation exceeds $400 per month. MONTHLY REPORTS Under section 201 (b) of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, the corporation is required to submit monthly to the President and to the Senate and the House of Representatives (or the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House of Representatives, if those bodies are not in session) a report of its activities and expenditures under the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act and under section 201 of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, together with a statement showing the names of the borrowers to whom loans and advances were made, and the amount and rate of interest involved in each case. 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, I'ederal Farm Loan Bureau, : Reglondl Agricultural Credit Corporations of the Reconstruction Finance orporation, 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. The order became effective May 27, 1933. In the Farm Credit Administration the operations of the Federal land banks, the national farm loan associations, and the joint stock land banks (including the joint stock land banks in receivership) are under the supervision of the Land Bank Commissioner, while the Federal intermediate credit banks are under the supervision of the Intermediate Credit Commissioner. The Farm Credit Ad- ministration is authorized to make such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, and to exercise such incidental powers as it deems necessary or requisite to fulfill its duties and carry out the purposes of the Federal Farm Loan Act and the applicable provisions of the Agricultural Credits Act of 1923, the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, and the Farm Credit Acts of 1933 and 1935. The Farm Credit Act of 1933 authorized the formation of production credit corporations and associations, and of banks for cooperatives. The production credit corporations and associations are under supervision of the Production Credit Commissioner, and the banks for cooperatives are under the supervision of the Cooperative Bank Commissioner. Under the President’s Executive order of March 27, 1933, the administration of emergency crop loans was transferred from the Department of Agriculture to the Farm Credit Administration. The act of Congress approved February 20, 1935, authorized the sum of $60,000,000 to he appropriated for use in making such loans during 1935. The Production Credit Commissioner has been given the responsibility of supervising this fund. Emergency crop loans were made from the $60,000,000 appropriation only to those applicants who did not have security acceptable to any other lending agencies. If a farmer applicant had adequate security, he was eligible to receive credit for production purposes from a local production credit association created under the Farm Credit Act of 1933. The Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation was created by an act of Congress, approved January 31, 1934, to aid in financing the lending operations of the Federal land banks, particularly the farm debt refinancing program begun in the spring of 1933. The corporation has its principal office in Washington, D.C, and is managed by a board of directors consisting of the Governor of the Farm Credit Administration, who is chairman of the hoard; the Secretary of the Treas- ury or a Treasury officer designated by him; and the Land Bank Commissioner. MISCELLANEOUS Ufficeal Duties 533 To carry out its purposes of assisting in financing lending operations through the Federal land banks, the corporation is authorized to issue bonds and have outstanding at any one time a total of not more than $2,000,000,000 of such bonds. These bonds are guaranteed fully and unconditionally as to principal and interest by the Government of the United States and the guaranty is ex- pressed on the face of the bonds. The Corporation has a capital of $200,000,000, and its resources include the consolidated bonds of the Federal land banks taken in exchange for the Corporation’s bonds, and the farm mortgages accepted by the Land Bank Commissioner. All assets of the Corporation, of course, will be available for the payment of the bonds. The Governor of the Farm Credit Administration is authorized to charter and supervise Federal credit unions, cooperative associations which may be organized in accordance with the Federal Credit Union Act for the purpose of promoting thrift among their members and providing a source of credit for provident or productive purposes. : The continental United States is divided into 12 Federal land bank districts. In each district there is a Federal land bank, a Federal intermediate credit bank, a production credit corporation, and a bank for cooperatives. All four district institutions are located in the same city and have the same directors. Each separate organization has its own officers. In order to coordinate the activities of these four credit agencies, the directors serve in another capacity as the ¢ Council of the Farm Credit Administration’’ of the district. An executive called the ‘general agent’ is responsible for carry- ing out the coordination of day-to-day activities, having supervision over cer- tain personnel and facilities, with the authority to direct the legal, accounting, informational, statistical, and field activities of the agencies. The district offices, with the States served by each, are as follows: Springfield, Mass.—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey. Balttmore, Md.—Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. Columbia, S. C.—North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Louisville, Ky.— Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, and Ohio. New Orleans, La.— Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. St. Louis, Mo.—Illinois, Missouri, and Arkansas. St. Paul, Minn.—North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. Omaha, Nebr.—South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, and Iowa. Wichita, Kans.—Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and New Mexico. Houston, Tex.— Texas. Oakland, Calif —California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. Spokane, Wash.—Washington, Montana, Oregon, and Idaho. Puerto Rico is included in the Baltimore district and Hawaii in the Oakland district. 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.” The Federal Emergency Relief Administration also administers the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation. WORK PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION The Works Progress Administration was created by Presidential Executive Order, May 6, 1935, under the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935, approved April 8, 1935 (Public Res. No. 11, 74th Cong.—an act to “Provide relief, work relief and to increase employment by providing for useful projects * * *7) The Works Progress Administration is responsible to the President for the “honest, efficient, speedy, and coordinated execution of the Works Pro- gram as a whole, and for the execution of that program in such manner as to move from the relief rolls to work on such projects or in private employment the maximum number of persons in the shortest time possible.” 534 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS CENTRAL STATISTICAL BOARD The Central Statistical Board was established by Executive Order No. 6225, July 27, 1933, “to formulate standards for and to effect coordination of the statistical services of the Federal Government incident to the purposes * ‘ * of the National Industrial Recovery Act.” Under Executive Orders No. e100 and No. 7003 the Board’s powers are redefined, and it is authorized to concern itself with both Fedeial and non-Federal statistical services which are useful for got ing out the purposes of the National Industrial Recovery Act. By an act ongress approved July 25, 1935 (Public, No. 219, 74th. Cong.) the Board is oii orized to plan and promote the improvement, development, and coordination of, and the elimination of duplication in, statistical services carried on by or subject to the supervision of the Federal Government, and, so far as may be practicable, of other statistical services in the United States. The duties of the Board are: (1) To improve the accuracy and adequacy of available information and to promote the development of new information when needed. (2) To promote the comparability of data gathered by different agencies and to encourage the use of information available from various sources in the inter- preting of statistics. (3) To discourage unnecessary inquiries and unnecessary duplications in the solicitation of information, and to promote economy in the organization and conduct of the statistical services of the Federal Government. The Board performs these duties through the following activities: (1) Review and advice upon plans for the collection and tabulation of data. (2) Review and advice upon statistical publications and releases of the Federal Government. (3) Investigations of (a) the methods employed by +15 various statistical agencies and (b) the organization of any phase of statistical work common to two or more of the various Federal statistical agencies. (4) Assistance in planning and developing new services needed to fill important gaps in available information. (5) Preparation of information designed to keep the various Federal statistical agencies in touch with one another. (6) Preparation of an annual report to be transmitted to the President for transmittal to Congress. FEDERAL EMERGENCY ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC WORKS The Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works was created by the act of Congress approved June 16, 1933. (Public, No. 67, 73d Cong.) The act provides for construction of certain useful public works and the creation of an Administration of Public Works to carry out this program authorized in Title II of the act. The duties of the Public Works Administration may be summarized as follows: 1. To prepare a comprehensive program of public works which shall include the construction, repair, and improvement of public parks and highways, public build- ings, publicly owned instrumentalities, and facilities; conservation and develop- ment of natural resources; any project of a public character normally carried on directly by public authority or with public aid to serve the interests of the general public; construction and reconstruction, alteration, repair under public regulations or control of low-cost housing and slum-clearance projects; any project of any character heretofore eligible for loans under subsection (a) of section 201 of Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended. 2. To construct, finance or aid in the construction or financing of any public- works project included in this program. 3. To supervise the construction of approved projects coming within the above- mentioned program. 4. To be responsible for the enforcement of the provisions of Title II of the act as related to such projects. NATIONAL RECOVERY ADMINISTRATION The National Receovery Administration, created under Title I of the National Industrial Recovery Act, approved on June 16, 1933 (Public, No. 67, 73rd Cong.), was amended by Senate Joint Resolution 113, approved June 14, 1935 (Public MISCELLANEOUS Officzal Dutres 535 Res. No. 26, 74th Cong.). The act as amended has been changed in several important aspects. All provisions of Title I of such act delegating power to the President to approve, prescribe, or enforce codes of fair competition are repealed. The exemption from the antitrust laws contained in section 5 of Title I has been limited to extend only to agreements and actions putting into effect the require- ments of section 7 (a) and labor provisions; and prohibiting unfair competitive practices, now illegal under the antitrust laws or the Federal Trade Commission Act, as amended. In reorganizing the National Recovery Administration to carry out the objec- tives under the amended act, the National Industrial Recovery Board was ter- minated and the office of Administrator established to exercise the functions of such Board. A Division of Review was created to report upon the experience of trades and industries previously subject to codes of fair competition, to study the effect of such codes upon trade, industrial and labor conditions, and other related matters, and to make such reports and studies available for the protection and promotion of the public interest. The Division of Business Cooperation was established to aid in the voluntary maintenance by trade and industrial groups of standards of fair competition, in the elimination of unfair competition, in the employment of labor or in trade practices, and in maintaining sources of informa- tion and records of experience useful to the work of the Division of Review. An Advisory Council was created to aid the National Recovery Administration. There was created a Coordinator for Industrial Cooperation to supervise, subject to the direction of the President, conferences of representatives of industry, labor, and consumers, for consideration of the best means of accelerating industrial recovery and eliminating unemployment and maintaining business and labor standards and to receive from the Federal Trade Commission, after consideration by the National Recovery Administration, agreements prohibiting unfair competi- tive practices which have been approved by the Federal Trade Commission and presenting to the President such agreements as require the President’s approval. The act shall cease to be in effect and the agencies established thereunder shall cease to exist on April 1, 1936, or sooner if the President shall by proclamation, or the Congress shall by joint resolution declare, that the emergency recognized by the act has ended. COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION Commodity Credit Corporation was organized on October 17, 1933, pursuant to the President’s Executive Order No. 6340, dated October 16, 1933. The capital stock is fixed at $3,000,000 and is owned jointly by the Secretary of Agriculture and the governor of the Farm Credit Administration for the use and benefit of the United States. Its affairs are managed by a board of nine directors, chosen by the stockholders. 5 Commodity Credit Corporation is essentially a lending institution. Under its charter, the corporation is empowered to buy, hold, sell, lend upon, or otherwise deal in commodities, agricultural or otherwise. Under its bylaws the corporation is permitted to deal only in such commodities as are designated from time to time by the President. Its policy is to make loans only upon agricultural commodities with respect to which the Agricultural Adjustment Administration has a general plan or program of production control. FOREIGN-TRADE ZONES BOARD The Foreign-Trade Zones Board was created by an act of Congress approved June 18, 1934. The board is composed of the Secretary of Commerce, chairman, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Secretary of War. Its duties are (1), after careful analysis of applications and investigations, to issue permits to public and private corporations for the privilege of establishing, operating, and maintaining foreign-trade zones in ports of entry of the United States for the purpose of expediting and encouraging foreign commerce, and (2) to administer the law governing the operation of such zones. Foreign-trade zones as contemplated in the present act are designed primarily in the interest of our reexport trade. Within the zone, which is a segregated, enclosed, and policed area, commodities are substantially free from usual customs regulations, and a considerable degree of freedom is allowed in the handling of such goods within the zone, as, for example, repacking, re-sorting, mixing, and other types of manipulation; it should be noted that exhibiting and manufacturing are not permitted within the zone. 536 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON SECOND EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON, D. C. Export-Import Bank of Washington is a banking corporation organized under the Code of the District of Columbia pursuant to Executive order of the President of the United States, dated February 2, 1934. The initial capital stock was fixed at $11,000,000. Common capital stock in the amount of $1,000,000 is held by the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Commerce, and the individual members of the board of trustees for the use and benefit of the United States. Preferred capital stock in the amount of $10,000,000 is owned by Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The affairs of the bank are managed by a board of 11 trustees. Second Export-Import Bank of Washington, D. C., is a banking corporation organized under the Code of the District of Columbia pursuant to an Executive order of the President of the United States, dated March 9, 1934. The initial capital stock was fixed at $2,750,000. Common capital stock in the amount of $250,000 is held by the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Commerce, and the individual members of the board of trustrees for the use and benefit of the United States. Preferred capital stock in the amount of $2,500,000 has been retired. The affairs of the bank are managed by a board of nine trustees. Except for pending business, future activities will be confined to transactions with Export- Import Bank of Washington. The banks are agencies established by the President of the United States to effectuate the policy of Congress as declared in section 1 of title I of the National Industrial Recovery Act. The specific object and purpose for which they were formed is to aid in financing and to facilitate exports and imports and the exchange of commodities between the United States and any of its territories and insular possessions and any foreign country or the agencies or nationals thereof. The Seventy-fourth Congress, by the enactment of Public No. 1, continued the Export-Import Banks as agencies of the United States until June 16, 1937, or such earlier date as may be fixed by the President by Executive order. ALLEY DWELLING AUTHORITY FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA The Alley Dwelling Authority is entrusted with the duty of ridding Washington of its inhabited alleys. This involves reclamation and redevelopment. The Authority was established under the terms of the District of Columbia Alley Dwelling Act, approved June 12, 1934 (Public, No. 307, 73d Cong.), and Executive Order No. 6868, October 9, 1934. The Executive order designated the following- named officials as the Authority to carry out the provisions of the act: The chairman of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the executive officer of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission, and the Director of Housing of the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works. Under the terms of the alley dwelling act, the Authority is empowered to acquire real property in squares containing inhabited alleys; to replat any land so acquired, and to install sewers, water mains, and street lights thereon; to demolish, move, or alter any structures thereon and to erect such structures as are deemed advisable; to rent, lease, maintain, equip, manage, exchange, sell, or convey any such lands or structures under such terms and conditions as the Authority may determine. The Authority may transfer to the District government for public uses any land so acquired on payment to the Authority of the reasonable value of the property. The Authority also may make loans to limited dividend corporations and to home owners to enable them to acquire and develop sites on the property. The Authority may acquire property through condemnation proceedings, either under the method provided by law for the acquisition of land in the Dis- trict of Columbia for the use of the United States or under the plan embraced in the Code of Laws of the District of Columbia (sections 1608-1610, inclusive) with reference to alleys and minor streets. : For the purposes of the act, the Authority may borrow funds from individuals or private corporations on the security of property and assets acquired under the act. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 537 THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES The National Archives was created by the National Archives Act (Public, No. 432, 73d Cong., approved June 19, 1934). This act imposes two major objectives upon The National Archives: (1) The concentration and preservation in the National Archives Building of all inactive archives of the Government of the United States of such administra- tive value or historical interest that they must be preserved over a long period of years, or permanently. (2) The administration of such archives so as to facilitate their use in the business of the Government and in the service of scholarship. To enable the Archivist to attain these two major objectives, the National Archives Act places under his charge and superintendence ¢‘ All archives or records belonging to the Government of the United States (legislative, executive, judicial, and other) ”’, which shall be approved by the National Archives Council for trans- fer to the National Archives Building, and requires him to perform the following duties and functions: (1) To appoint all persons to be employed in The National Archives, except those with salaries of $5,000 or over, who are to be appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. (2) To inspect and appraise, personally or by deputy, the archives of any agency of the United States Government, whatsoever and wheresoever located. (3) To requisition for transfer to, and to store and preserve in the National Archives Building all archives or records approved for such transfer by the Na- tional Archives Council. (4) To make regulations for the arrangement, custody, use, and withdrawal of materials deposited with The National Archives. (6) To exercise immediate custody over and control of the National Archives Building and such other buildings, grounds, and equipment as may hereafter become a part of The National Archives (except as otherwise provided by law), and their contents. (6) To serve as Chairman of the National Historical Publications Commission in making plans, estimates, and recommendations for such historical works and collections of sources as seem appropriate for publication and/or otherwise record- ing at public expense. (7) To serve as a member of the National Archives Council which is charged with the duty of defining what classes of material shall be transferred from the several agencies of the Government to the National Archives Building, and to make regulations governing such transfer. (8) To provide for the acceptance, storage, and preservation of motion-picture films and sound recordings pertaining to and illustrative of the history of the United States and to maintain a projecting room for showing such films and reproducing such sound recordings for historical purposes and study. (9) To make recommendations to Congress regarding the disposal of papers and other documents among the archives and records of the Government which appear to have no permanent value or historical interest. (10) To direct the expenditure of all appropriations for the maintenance of the National Archives Building and for the administration of the collections and other expenses of The National Archives, the National Histcrical Publications Commission, and the Federal Register. NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS COMMISSION The National Historical Publications Commission was created by the act which established The National Archives (Public, No. 432, 73d Cong., approved June 19, 1934). The membership of the commission consists of the Archivist of the United States, who is its chairman; the historical adviser of the Department of State; the chief of the bistorical section of the War Department, General Staff; the superintendent of naval records in the Navy Department; the chief of the division of manuscripts in the Library of Congress; and two members of the American Historical Association appointed by the president thereof from among those persons who are or have been members of the executive council of the said association. The duties of the National Historical Publications Commission are to make plans, estimates, and recommendations for such historical works and collections of sources as seem appropriate for publication and/or otherwise recording at the public expense, it being provided by the act that the preparation and publication 538 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS of annual and special reports on the archives and records of the Government, guides, inventory lists, catalogs, and other instruments facilitating the use of the collections shall have precedence over detailed calendars and textual repro- ductions. The act requires that the commission shall meet at least once a year and that the members thereof shall serve without compensation except repay- ment of expenses actually incurred in attending meetings of the Commission. NATIONAL ARCHIVES COUNCIL The National Archives Council was established by the act which created The National Archives (Public No. 432, 73d Cong., approved June 19, 1934). It is composed of the Secretaries of each of the executive departments of the Government (o1 an alternate from each department to be named by the Secretary thereof), the Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Library, the Chairman of the House Committee on the Library, the Librarian of Congress, the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and the Archivist of the United States. The act creating the National Archives Council provides that the Council shall define the classes of material which shall be transferred to the National Archives Building and establish regulations governing such transfer; and shall have power to advise the Archivist in respect to regulations governing the disposition and use of the archives and records transferred to his custody. DIVISION OF THE FEDERAL REGISTER (DIRECTOR, BERNARD R. KENNEDY; ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, CLIFTON A. WOODRUM, JR.) Under the provisions of Public No. 220, 74th Congress, known as the Federal Register Act, the Archivist of the United States is required: (1) To establish and direct the work of a division in The National Archives, charged with the custody and, together with the Public Printer, with the prompt and uniform printing and distribution of the documents required or authorized to be published in the Federal Register. (2) To provide for the permanent filing and for public inspection of all such documents. (8) To serve as chairman of the permanent Administrative Committee estab- lished by the Federal Register Act which is charged with the duty of prescribing, win the President’s approval, regulations for carrying out the provisions of the ct. The Director of the Division, who is appointed by the President and who acts under the general direction of the Archivist of the United States, is charged with the responsibility of performing the following duties and functions: (1) To prepare for printing the documents required or authorized to be pub- lished in the Federal Register, to furnish copies thereof to the Public Printer for publication, and to index the contents of the daily issues of the Federal Register. (2) Providing for the orderly acceptance and filing of the documents required to be transmitted from the various Federal agencies. (8) Certifying the day and hour of filing on the original and duplicate originals or certified copies of each document. (4) Custody of all documents required or authorized to be so filed by the Fed- eral Register Act. (5) Making one copy of all such documents immediately available for public ingpection. (6) Preparing each document for publication. (7) Indexing the contents of the daily issues of the Federal Register. (8) Transmitting promptly upon receipt one duplicate original or certified copy to the Government Printing Office for printing in the Federal Register. (9) Serving as secretary of the administrative committee created by section 6 of the Federal Register Act. (10) Preparing for submission to the President the report of the Administrative Committee on such documents as have been filed with the Division by the various Federal agencies as required by Section 11 of the Federal Register Act. (11) Editing and indexing such of the documents referred to above as the President shall authorize to be published in a special issue of the Federal Register. (12) Each Federal agency is required to prepare and file with the permanent administrative committee a complete compilation of all documents which have been issued or promulgated prior to the date documents are required or authorized by the Federal Register Act to be published in the Federal Register and which are still in force and effect and relied upon by the issuing agency as authority for, or invoked or used by it in the discharge of, any of its functions or activities. The MISCELLANEOUS Officzal Dutzes 539 committee is required to report with respect thereto to the President, who shall de- termine which of such documents have general applicability and legal effect and shall authorize the publication thereof in a special or supplemental edition or issue of the Federal Register. FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION The Federal Housing Administration was established by an act of Congress : approved June 27,1934. The National Housing Act has five titles: (I) Housing Renovation and Modernization; (II) Mutual Mortgage Insurance; (III) National Mortgage Associations; (IV) Insurance of Savings and Loan Accounts; (V) Miscellaneous, consisting chiefly of amendments to the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, the Farm Credit Act of 1933, the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, and the Interstate Commerce Act. There is no provision for the lending or expenditure of any Government money in the act except for administrative purposes and the insurance of loans made by private lending institutions. The Administrator has direct charge of administering titles I, II, and III of the act. Title IV is administered by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation under direction of a board of trustees whose members are the members of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Under provisions of the act the President was authorized to create the Federal Housing Administration, all the power of which shall be exercised by the Federal Housing Administrator, appointed for a term of 4 years by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. Under title I the Administrator is authorized to insure financial institutions which are approved by him as eligible for credit insurance against losses which they may sustain and purchases of obligations representing loans made after June 27, 1934, and before April 1, 1936, when the organic act expires, for the purpose of financing alterations, repairs, and improvements upon real property. The insurance for any institution is limited to not more than 20 percent of the total amount of the loans. The total liability which may be incurred by the Administrator for this purpose is limited to not more than $200,000,000, a sum sufficient to insure $1,000,000,000 of loans. Under title II the Administrator is authorized to insure mortgages obtained either for financing new home construction or for refinancing old mortgages on individual homes. To be eligible for insurance the transaction must be consid- ered as economically sound, and the principal obligation of a mortgage on an individual home must not exceed $16,000, or 80 percent of the appraised value of the property as of the date the mortgage is executed. Low-cost housing projects are provided for in section 207 of title II, which reads: ‘‘The Administrator may also insure first mortgages, other than mortgages defined in section 201 (a) of this title, covering property held by Federal or State instrumentalities, private limited dividend corporations, or municipal corporate instrumentalities of one or more States, formed for the purpose of providing housing for persons of low income which are regulated or restricted by law or by the Administrator as to rents, charges, capital structure, rate of return, or methods of operation. Such mortgages shall contain terms, conditions, and provisions satisfactory to the Administrator, but need not conform to the eligibility require- ments of section 203. Subject to the right of the Administrator to impose a premium charge in excess of, or less than, the amount specified for mortgages defined in section 201 (a), the provisions of sections 204 and 205 shall be applicable to mortgages insured under this section: Provided, That the insurance with respect to any low-cost housing project shall not exceed $10,000,000.” The principal obligation or mortgages on individual homes and low-cost hous- ing projects existing prior to June 27, 1934, and insured under this title, is lim- ited to $1,000,000,000. The principal obligation or mortgages on individual homes and low-cost housing projects for construction after June 27, 1934, and insured under this title, is limited to a like amount. Under rules promulgated by the Administrator operative builders are empow- ered to operate under this act. The Administrator does not lend the money on the mortgage, but insures the mortgage when presented by the mortgagee, which must be an institution hav- ing succession and approved by the Administrator. Under title III the Administrator is authorized to provide for the establish- ment of national mortgage associations, which shall be authorized to purchase and sell first mortgages and such other first liens as are commonly given to secure 540 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS advances on real estate held in fee simple or under a lease for not less than 99 years, under the laws of the State in which the real estate is located, together with the credit instruments, if any, secured thereby, such mortgages not to exceed 80 per centum of the appraised value of the property as of the date the mortgage is purchased, and to borrow money for such purposes through the issu- ance of notes, bonds, debentures, or other such obligations. Each such asso- ciation shall have a capital stock of a par value of not less than $5,000,000 subscribed for at not less than par and paid in full in cash or in Government securities. These associations shall be under the direct supervision of the Administrator. FEDERAL PRISON INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED The Federal Prison Industries Corporation was authorized by act of Congress, approved June 23, 1934 (Public, No. 461), and created by Executive Order No. 6917 of December 11, 1934. It manages and operates all industrial enterprises in Federal penal and, correctional institutions. Its board of directors is charged by law with the duty of determining in what manner and to what extent industrial operations shall be carried on in Federal penal and correctional institutions and is required to diversify so far as practicable prison industrial operations and so operate the prison shops that no single private industry shall be forced to bear an undue burden of competition from the products of the prison work shops. The corporation is governed by a board of directors of five persons—a representa- tive of industry, a representative of labor, a representative of agriculture, a representative of retailers and consumers, and a representative of the Attorney General. They serve at the will of the President and without compensation. The principal office of the corporation is in the city of Washington, with branch offices at the several penal and correctional institutions. The officers of the corporation are a president, a vice president, a secretary, and a commissioner of industries. The commissioner of industries is the acting executive officer of the corporation... The products of the industries are transferred only to other Govern- ment departments and agencies at current market prices. No goods or articles made in the Federal penal and correctional system are sold to the public. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION Creation and authority.—The Rural Electrification Administration was created by Executive Order No. 7037, dated May 11, 1935, under authority of the Emerg- ency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935 (Public Res. No. 11, 74th Cong., approved April 8, 1935). Purpose.—The purpose of the Rural Electrification Administration is to initi- ate, formulate, administer, and supervise a program of approved projects with respect to the generation, transmission, and distribution of electric energy in rural areas. : SOCIAL SECURITY BOARD The Social Security Board was established under the provisions of title VII of the Social Security Act (Public 271, 74th Cong.) approved August 14, 1935. The Social Security Board was established to carry out the duties authorized under the Social Security Act, and to study and make recommendations as to the most effective methods of providing economic security through social insurance. The board is composed of three members, appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, not more than two of whom may be of one political party. The President designates the chairman of the board. The board approves State plans for old-age assistance, aid to dependent children, and blind assistance, which meet the requirements of the act, and makes grants to States with such approved plans. The board also approves State unemployment compensation laws which meet the requirements of the act. Contributions by employers to such approved un- employment compensation laws will be allowed credit against a Federal tax. The board also makes grants to such States with approved laws to cover their cost of administration. It will also administer title IT of the Social Security Act dealing with Federal old-age benefits beginning in 1942. FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATIVES [Those having ladies with them are marked with * for wife, t for daughter, and [| for other ladies] ALBANIA (Office of the legation, Mayflower Hotel. Phone, NAtional 4345) Mr. Faik Konitza, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, NAtional 4845.) ARGENTINA (Office of the embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street; phone, NOrth 0852. Office of finance, 1806 Corcoran Street; phone, DEcatur 1100) *Sefior Don Felipe A. Espil, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1600 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 0247.) Sefior Don Juan M. Garcia Montero, first secretary of embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street. (Phone, COlumbia 5013.) Sefior Don Héctor Diaz Leguizamén, first secretary of embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street. (Phone, NOrth 0852.) *Commander Horacio M. Smith, naval attaché, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlumbia 2000.) Sefior Don Ricardo J. Siri, second secretary of embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street. (Phone, COlumbia 5013.) Sefior Don Carlos Garcia-Mata, commercial attaché, 1806 Corcoran Street. (Phone, NOrth 0852.) *Sefior Don C. Alonso Irigoyen, financial attaché, Warrenton, Va. Sefior Don Erasto M. Villa, attaché of embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street. (Phone, NOrth 0852.) AUSTRIA (Office of the legation, 2343 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 1274) *t Mr. Edgar L. G. Prochnik, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2343 DE clic Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 2474.) BELGIUM (Office of the embassy, 1777 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 1286 and 1287) *Count Robert van der Straten-Ponthoz, ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary, 1780 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 2846.) *His Highness Prince Eugéne de Ligne, counselor of embassy, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlumbia, 2000.) (Princess de Ligne absent.) *Mr. Raoul Grenade, commercial counselor. Baron Antoine Beyens, second secretary of embassy, 1603 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 0338.) *Mr. Gérard Walravens, attaché of embassy, 2116 Kalorama Road. (Phone, NOrth 1822.) BOLIVIA (Office of the legation, Room 609, Hill Building. Phone, NAtional 0812) *Sefior Dr. Don Enrique Finot, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.) *||Sefior Don Enrique S. de Lozada, first secretary of legation, Alban Towers. (Phone, CLeveland 0287.) BRAZIL (Office of the embassy, 3007 Whitehaven Street. Phones, POtomac 1034 and 1035) *Mr. Oswaldo Aranha, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 3000 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phones, POtomac 2466 and 2467.) *Mr. C. de Freitas-Valle, minister plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy, 3000 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phones, POtomac 2466 and 2467.) (Madame de Freitas-Valle absent.) *tCommander Oscar F. Coutinho, naval attaché, 3007 Whitehaven Street. (Phone, POtomac 1034.) Mr. Decio de Moura, second secretary, 2231 Bancroft Place. (Phone, DEcatur 0434.) *Mr. J. E. de Sousa Freitas, second secretary, 1629 Columbia Road. (Phone, ADams 4431.) Mr. Paulo G. Hasslocher, commercial attaché, 3518 Quesada Street. (Phone, EMerson 8886.) (Madame Hasslocher absent.) *Mr. Fernando Lobo, attaché, Roosevelt Hotel. oh 544 Congressional Directory BULGARIA (Office of the legation, 2881 Woodland Drive. Phone, COlumbia 2300) *Mr. Stoyan Petroff Tchomakoff, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary, 2881 Woodland Drive. (Phone, ADams 3782.) CANADA (Office of the legation, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 0971) *The Honorable William Duncan Herridge, K. C., D. 8. O.. M. C., envoy extraor- dinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 0971.) (Absent.) (Mrs. Herridge absent.) *Mr. Hume Wrong, counselor and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 9 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, WIsconsin 1527.) * Mr. has Mahoney, first secretary, 3510 Garfield Street. (Phone, EMer- 80n « : *Mr. E. D’Arcy McGreer, second secretary, 15 Washington Street, Kensington, Md. (Phone, Kensington 344.) *Mr. Ronald Maecdonnell, third secretary, 1862 Mintwood Place. (Phone, COlumbia 7436.) : CHILE (Office of the embassy, 2154 Florida Avenue; phone, NOrth 0747. Office of commercial attaché, 120 Broadway, New York City; phone, Rector 2-8680) t11/|Sefior Don Manuel Trucco, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 8662.) *Sefior Don Benjamin Cohen, counselor of embassy, Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.) *Sefior Don Mario Rodriguez, first secretary, 2154 Florida Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 0747.) (Absent.) (Sefiora de Rodriguez absent.) Seirior Don Fernando Illanes Benitez, second secretary, 2154 Florida Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 0747.) *1tSefior Don Carlos Campbell del C., commercial attaché, Fairfax Hotel. (Phone, POtomac 4480.) *Sefior Don Carlos H. Lee, commercial attaché. *Sefior Don Ernesto Guzmén Donoso, attaché. CHINA (Office of the embassy, 2001 Nineteenth Street; phone, POtomac 1328, Office of military attaché, 5317 Sixteenth Street; phone, GEorgia 4851) *+Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Nine- teenth and Vernon Streets. (Phone, NOrth 6842.) (Mrs. Sze absent.) *Mr. Pung nual counselor of embassy, 3312 Highland Place. *Col. i ing Chow, military attaché, 5317 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, GEorgia 4851. : *Mr. Wei-Shiu Lao, first secretary. (Mrs. Lao absent.) Mr. Tswen-ling Tsui, second secretary. Mr. Pei-Chih Huang, second secretary. Mr. Chia Tsing Sze, attaché. *Mr. Jen Chao Shieh, attaché. (Absent.) *Mr. Tsung-Ying Ku, attaché. (Mrs. Ku absent.) Mz. Jen Zien Huang, attaché. : COLOMBIA (Office of the legation, 2306 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 2746) *t1Sefior Don Miguel Lépez Pumarejo, envoy extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2306 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 3353.) *Sefior Don Juan A. Calvo, commercial attaché, Alban Towers. (Phone, EMerson 3751.) Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 545 COSTA RICA (Office of the legation, Cathedral Mansions, Center. Phone, COlumbia 2773) *tSefior Don Manuel Gonzélez-Zeledén, minister resident, Cathedral Mansions, Center. (Phone, ADams 4800.) (Sefiorita Gonzélez absent.) CUBA (Office of the embassy, 2630 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 7984) [l|Sefior Dr. Guillermo Patterson y de Jduregui, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2630 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7938.) *Sefior Dr. José T. Bar6n, counselor of embassy, 1629 Columbia Road. (Phone, ADams 6202.) Sefior Dr. Carlos Blanco, first secretary of embassy, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.) *Sefior Dr. Raul Maestri, second secretary of embassy, 1629 Columbia Road. (Phone, COlumbia 3050.) (Absent.) (Sefiora de Maestri absent.) *Sefior Dr. Alberto Mux6, second secretary, 1654 Columbia Road. (Phone, COlumbia 10457.) (Sefiora de Muxé absent.) *Maj. Felipe Munilla, military attaché, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, CO- lumbia, 7200.) *Sefior Don Juan Bruno Zayas, commercial attaché, 1401 Fairmont Street. (Phone, ADams 8464.) (Seiiora de Zayas absent.) *Sefior Don Emilio N. Robaina, agricultural attaché, 1631 Euclid Street. *Sefior Dr. Enrique Patterson, third secretary, 2630 Sixteenth Street. CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Office of the legation, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 9402) *tDr. Ferdinand Veverka, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 4621.) (Madame Veverka and Mademoiselle Veverka absent.) Dr. Josef Némecdek, counselor of legation, 1603 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 0338.) Mr. Otaker Kabelad, first secretary of legation, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 9402.) * Ne ey Broz, first 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.) (Madame Wadsted absent.) Mr. Hialmar Collin, counselor of legation, 2230 California Street. (Phone, DZEcatur 2686.) Mr. Erik Wedel-Heinen, attaché, Dupont Circle Apartments. (Phone, DEcatur 6201.) (Absent.) Mr. Constantin Brun, honorary counselor of legation, 1605 Twenty-second Street. (Phone, NOrth 3052.) DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (Office of the legation, 2633 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 6745. Office of commercial attaché, 45 West Eighty-first Street, New York City) Andres Pasporiza, appointed minister. *Sefior Don Emilio Garcia Godoy, first secretary, 1925 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, DEecatur 2347.) (Seiiora de Garcia Godoy absent.) *Sefior Don Homero Espaillat Brache, second secretary, 2633 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 2741.) *Sefior Don Plinio B. Pina Chevalier, commercial attaché. ECUADOR (Office of the legation, Barr Building. Phone, NAtional 8954) *Sefior Capitén Col6n Eloy Alfaro, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary, Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.) *Sefior Dr. Don Manuel Cabeza de Vaca, counselor, 4100 Thirteenth Street NE. (Phone, POtomac 0632.) Sefior Dr. Don Eduardo Salazar, financial counselor. . Seiior Don Manuel Crespo, attaché, Dupont Circle Apartments. (Phone, DEcatur 6201.) 30063°—74-2—1ST ED——385 546 Congressional Directory EGYPT (Office of the legation, 2301 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 6020) *Mr. Mohamed Amine Youssef, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary, 2301 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 6021.) Nicolas Kahlil Bey, first secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0 . 7200.) Mr. André Cattaui, third secretary, 1611 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 1372.) Dr. Hussein Chawky, attaché, Alban Towers. (Phone, CLeveland 6400.) EL SALVADOR (Office of the legation, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 5786) *||Sefior Dr. Don Hector David Castro, envoy extraordinary and minister pleni- potentiary, 5630 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, GEorgia 6818.) (Absent.) *Sefior Don Roberto D. Meléndez, first secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 3800 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, COlumbia 1304.) (Seiiora de Meléndez absent.) ESTONIA (Office of the consulate general, 18 West Ninety-fourth Street, New York City) Mr. Charles Kuusik, acting consul general of Estonia in New York City in charge of legation. FINLAND (Office of the legation, 1709 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 0556 and 0557) *Mr. Eero Jarnefelt, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1709 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 0556.) *Dr. Sigurd von Numers, secretary of legation, Alban Towers. (Phone, CLeve- land 4612.) FRANCE (Office of the embassy, 1601 V Street; phones, DEcatur 2036, 2037, and 2038. Office of the military attaché, The Argonne; phone, ADams 5700. Office of air attaché, 2214 Wyoming Avenue; phone, NOrth 8706. Office of the naval attaché, The Argonne; phone, ADams 4362. Office of commercial attaché, Maison Francaise, Rockefeller Center, New York City; phone, COlumbus 5-1165. Office of financial attaché, room 3811, 20 Exchange Place, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-4323) *+ Mr. André de Laboulaye, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2460 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 2787.) Mr. { As Hons counselor of embassy, 2017 S Street. (Phone, DEcatur 6034.) sent. *Capt. Louis Sablé, naval attaché, 3306 O Street. (Phone, WEst 0518.) *Lieut. Col. Emmanuel Lombard, military attaché, 3006 Thirty-second Street. (Phone, EMerson 1680.) *Maj. Norbert Champsaur, air attaché, 2214 Wyoming Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 8706.) *¥Mr. Maurice Garreau-Dombasle, commercial attaché. *Mr. Jean Appert, financial attaché. Mr. Roger Gaucheron, first secretary of embassy, 2905 Thirty-fourth Street. (Phone, EMerson 3852.) Mr. Claude de Boisanger, second secretary of embassy, 1804 R Street. (Phone, POtomac 2647.) *Count Pierre de Leusse, third secretary of embassy, The Anchorage. *Mr. Charles Saint, attaché of embassy, 1601 V Street. GERMANY (Office of the embassy, 1439 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, DIstrict 4500. Office of commercial attaché, Whitehall Buildings, 17 Battery Place, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-6584) Herr Hans Luther, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1435 Massa- chusetts Avenue. *Herr Rudolf Leitner, counselor of embassy, 3105 Thirty-sixth Street. (Phone, EMerson 6536.) Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 547 *tLieut. Gen. Friedrich von Boetticher, military and air attaché, 3203 R Street. (Phone, WEst 1138.) (Friulein von Boetticher absent.) Rear Admiral Robert Witthoeft-Emden, naval attaché, 1700 Surrey Lane, Fox- hall Village. (Phone, EMerson 0762.) Herr Ernst Wilhelm Meyer, first secretary, 1439 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DIstriet 4500.) Gi ipa first secretary, 3203 Cleveland Avenue. (Phone, CLeve- and 1491. Count Rudolf Strachwitz, second secretary, 2807 Thirty-fifth Street. (Phone, EMerson 0454.) Hod Paulig, third secretary, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 006. *Herr Gustav Struve, third secretary, 214 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, Wisconsin 4241.) (Absent.) (Frau Struve absent.) *Herr Richard Sallet, attaché, 2801 Brandywine Street. (Phone, CLeveland 7317.) *Herr Walther Becker, commercial attaché. 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.) *Capt. F. C. Bradley, R. N., naval attaché, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 6121.) *Col. W. W. Torr, D. S. O.,, M. C., military attaché, 2374 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 2942.) Group Capt. T. E. B. Howe, A. F. C., R. A. F., air attaché, Shoreham Hotel. *Mr. H. 0. Chalkley, C. M. G., C. B. E., commercial counselor of embassy, 3010 Cleveland Avenue. (Phone, ADams 3479. *Mr. T. K. Bewley, financial counselor, 2425 California Street. (Phone, NOrth 3453.) Mr. Philip Mainwaring Broadmead, M. C., first secretary, 2237 Bancroft Place. (Phone, DEcatur 4561.) *Maj. Henry Frank Heywood, M. C., commercial secretary, 2608 Thirty-sixth Place. (Phone, EMerson 0286.) Mr. Philip Broad, second secretary. *Commander A. L. P. Mark-Wardlaw, R. N., assistant naval attaché, 3225 High- land Place. (Phone, CLeveland 6536.) The Hon. W. N. McG. Hogg, third secretary, 84 Kalorama Circle. (Phone, NOrth 2602.) *Mr. Leander McCormick-Goodhart, O. B. E., V. D., commercial secretary, “Langley Park”, Silver Spring, Md. (Phone, SHepherd 2552.) *Mr. H. H. Sims, attaché, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlumbia 2000.) Mr. Benjamin Plunket, attaché, 84 Kalorama Circle. (Phone, NOrth 2602.) GREECE (Office of the legation, 1520 Twentieth Street. Phone, NOrth 3168) Mr. Demetrios Sicilianos, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1520 Twentieth Street. (Phone, POtomac 1609.) Mr. Nicholas G. Lély, first secretary and chargé d’affaires ad interim, May- flower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.) 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 Enrique Lépez-Herrarte, secretary, Woodley Park Towers. (Phone, COlumbia 3047.) Seiior Don Francisco Palomo, attaché, 1614 Eighteenth Street. 548 So Congressional Directory HAITI (Office of the legation, 1818 Q Street. Phone, NOrth 9256) *1||Mr. Albert Blanchet, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1818 Q Street. (Phone, NOrth 9256.) Mr. Jacques Carmeleau-Antoine, secretary of legation, 1711 S Street. (Phone, NOrth 9256.) HONDURAS (Office of the legation, Wardman Park Hotel. Phone, COlumbia 2000) *Sefior Dr. Don Miguel Paz Baraona, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- a! Wardman Park Hotel. (Absent.) (Sefiora de Paz Baraona absent. *Sefior Dr. Don Julian R. Caceres, first secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, COlumbia 10241.) Beno Dr. Don Gonzalo Carias C., second secretary of legation, Wardman Park otel. HUNGARY (Office of the legation, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Phones, NOrth 0516 and 0517) *¥Mr. John Pélenyi, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1704 Eighteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 2300.) Mr. Anthony de Baldsy, counselor of legation, 1631 Euclid Street. (Phone, ADams 3461.) Lieut. Col. Zoltén de Algya-Pap, military attaché, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Baron Pall Sot, secretary of legation, 2633 Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlum- ia : 3 IRAN (Office of the legation, 2315 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 4202) *Ghaffar Djalal, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2315 Massa- chusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 7478.) *Hossein Ghods, second secretary of legation, 2315 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 420%.) Mahmoud Taher, attaché, 1818 Riggs Place. (Phone, NOrth 7565.) IRISH FREE STATE (Office of the legation, 1800 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, NOrth 9612) *Mr. Michael MacWhite, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Shoreham Hotel. *1Mr. Robert Brennan, secretary of legation, 3602 Newark Street. (Phone, EMerson 8793.) ITALY (Offices of the embassy and of military, naval, and air attachés, 1601 Fuller Street; phone, ADams 6300. Office of commercial attaché, 4 Whitehall Street, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-1532) Signor Augusto Rosso, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2700 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 2815.) *Marquis Alberto Rossi Longhi, counselor of embassy, 2435 Tracy Place. (Phone, POtomac 2035.) *Lieut. Col. Vincenzo Coppola, air and military attaché, 3226 Woodley Road. (Phone, EMerson 6463.) *Commander don Umberto Cugia Marquis of Sant’Orsola, naval attaché, 4447 Hawthorne Street. (Phone, EMerson 4122.) *Signor Romolo Angelone, commercial attaché. Signor Bartolomeo Migone, first secretary of embassy, 3300 Newark Street. (Phone, CLeveland 2280.) : *Signor Eugenio Bonardelli, counselor for emigration, 24 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, WIsconsin 5395.) Nobile Benedetto Capomazza, secretary of embassy, 3300 Newark Street. (Phone, CLeveland 2280.) *Count Guerino Roberti, secretary of embassy, Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.) , JH hy IP Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 549 JAPAN (Office of the embassy, 2514 Magsachusetts Avenue; phones, DEcatur 0716 and 0717. Office of military attaché, 2219 California Street; phone, POtomac 4800. Office of naval attaché, Alban Towers; phone, lana 8500. Office of commercial secretary, 500 Fifth Avenue, New York City; phone, CHickering © 4-0137 *Mr. Hirosi Saito, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2514 Massa- chusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 6221.) *Mr. Seijiro Yoshizawa, counselor, 2733 Thirty-fifth Street. (Phone, EMerson 4063. *Col. Kenji Matsumoto, I. J. A., military attaché, 11 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, Wsconsin 2398.) Capt. Tamon Yamaguchi, I. J. N., naval attaché, Alban Towers. (Phone CLeveland 8500.) *Mr. Toker Mowe first secretary, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, CLeve- land 7793 *Mr. Katsuo Okazaki, second secretary, Alban Towers. (Phone, CLeveland 0109.) dio Kawahara, third secretary, Tilden Gardens. (Phone, EMerson 535 *Mr. Tsuneo Hayama, third secretary, Tilden Gardens. (Bons: EMerson 2316.) Commander Bunjiro Yamaguchi, I. J. N., assistant naval attaché. Lieut. Commander Eiitiroo Zyoo, I.:d. N., assistant naval attaché, 2805 Thirty- fifth Street. (Phone, EMerson 2826. ) Mr. Toyoji Inouye, commercial secretary. Maj. Yasuyuki Miyoshi, I. J. A., assistant military attaché, 6214 Fourteenth Street. (Phone, GEorgia 842 3421. ) Capt. Yasuto Nakayama, Street. (Phone, GEorgia rod) Mr. Yujiro Iseki, attaché, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, EMerson 4035.) Bit LL Yamamoto, attaché, 3501 Morrison Street. (Phone, CLeveland 458 *Mr. Otoshiro Kuroda, attaché, 4515 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 6378.) Mr. Toru Nakagawa, attaché, 3629 Jocelyn Street. (Phone, CLeveland 4193.) Mz. Jiro Takase, attaché, 9514 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, Decatur 0716.) Mr. Toshio Sasaki, attaché, 3804 Jenifer Street. (Phone, Cleveling 2034.) Mr. Tadahisa Matsudaira, attaché. ; assistant military attaché, 1412 Kennedy i LATVIA (Office of the legation, 2400 Sixteenth Street) *Dr. Alfred Bilmanis, envoy extraordinary and minister Plenipotentiary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Mrs. Bilmanis absent.) LITHUANIA (Office of the legation, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Phone, ADams 5860) *Mr. Povilas Zadeikis, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2622 Sixteenth Street. (Mrs. Zadeikis absent.) Dr. Mikas Bagdonas, secretary of legation, 2811 Cathedral Avenue. MEXICO (Office of the embassy, 2829 Sixteenth Street. Phones, COlumbia 4914 and 4915) *|||[Sefior Dr. Don Francisco Castillo N4jera, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2829 Sixteenth Street. *Sefior Don Luis Quintanilla, counselor of embassy, The Northumberland. (Phone, NOrth 3280.) *Brig. Gen. Juan F. Azcdrate Pino, military attach, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, CLeveland 0860.) Sefior Professor Don Daniel Cosio Villegas, financial counselor. (Absent.) (Sefiora de Cosio Villegas absent.) *1Sefior Dr. Don Salvador Martinez Mercado, first secretary, 1629 Columbia Road. (Phone, ADams 7628.) *Sefior Dr. Don Rafael Fuentes, first secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.) 550 Congressional Directory *Sefior Don Francisco Vizquez-Treserra, second secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.) Sefior Lic. Don Juan Manuel Torrea, second secretary. [[Sefior Don Alfredo Garduiio Pombo, third secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.) *Capt. Eduardo Hiittich Palmer, assistant military attaché, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.) NETHERLANDS (Office of the legation, 1470 Euclid Street. Phones, COlumbia 1630, 1631, and 1632) *1Jonkheer H. M. van Haersma de With, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2535 Fifteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 0364.) (Absent.) Mao van Haersma de With and Mademoiselle van Haersma de With absent. *Baron van Breugel Douglas, counselor of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 2228 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 5222.) *Mr. B. Kleijn Molekamp, commercial counselor, 3416 P Street. (Phone, WEst 1153.) Jonkheer a M. van der Wyck, secretary, 1470 Euclid Street. (Phone, COlum- bia 1630. Mr. J. J. H. Seelen, assistant agricultural attaché, 1470 Euclid Street. (Phone, COlumbia 1630.) 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. (Phone, NOrth 4020.) Sefior Dr. Don Fernando Sacasa, second secretary. NORWAY (Office of the legation, 3401 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, CLeveland 3203) *Mr. Wilhelm Munthe de Morgenstierne, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 3401 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 8020.) Mr. Einar Lgdrup, secretary of legation, 3819 Military Road. (Phone, CLeve- land 5304.) Mr. Yio Irgens, secretary of legation, 1705 Hoban Road. (Phone, EMerson 93. PANAMA (Office of the legation, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, POtomac 3780) *tSefior Dr. Ricardo J. Alfaro, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 3780.) *Sefior Don Juan B. Chevalier, secretary of legation, 2929 Twenty-eighth Street. (Phone, ADams 8393.) Beto Luis R. Alfaro, attaché, 800 Eighteenth Street. (Phone, NAtional PARAGUAY (Office of the legation, Wardman Park Hotel. Phone, COlumbia 2000) *Sefior Dr. Don Enrique Bordenave, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary, Wardman Park Hotel. PERU (Office of the embassy, 1300 Sixteenth Street. Phone, POtomac 3404) Seiior Don Manuel de Freyre y Santander, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1601 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 1677.) *Dr. Juan Mendoza Almenara, counselor of embassy, 3129 Oliver Street. (Phone, CLeveland 7611.) Brig. Gen. Don César de la Fuente, military attaché. *Capt. Juan Althaus, naval attaché. (Sefiora de Althaus absent.) ~_ erm 7 A e——— Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 551 POLAND (Office of the embassy, 2640 Sixteenth Street; phones, ADams 3800, 3801, and 3802. Office of the financial counselor, 41 Broad Street, New York City; phone, Hanover 2-4581) Mr. Stanislaw Patek, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2640 Sixteenth Street. = (Phone, ADams 3800.) (Absent.) *Mr. Wladyslaw Sokolowski, counselor of embassy and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 1816 Twenty-fourth Street. (Phone, DEcatur 2534.) Mr. Janusz Zoltowski, financial counselor. (Absent.) Mr. Edward Kulikowski, second secretary, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlumbia 2000.) Mr. Edward Weintal, attaché, 1336 Nineteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 4888.) PORTUGAL (Office of the legation, Wardman Park Hotel. Phone, COlumbia 1643) *tDr. Jodo Antonio de Bianchi, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary, Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. Jodo de Deus Ramos, secretary, Shoreham Hotel. RUMANIA (Office of the legation, 1601 Twenty-third Street; phone, POtomac 4747. Office of financial counselor, 1601 Twenty-third Street; phone, POtomac 3117) Mr. Charles A. Davila, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1607 Twenty-third Street. (Phone, NOrth 7242.) (Absent.) *Mr. Radu Florescu, counselor of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 2818 Thirty-sixth Place. (Phone, EMerson 7788.) *Mr. George Boncesco, financial counselor of legation, Broadmoor Apartments. (Phone, CLeveland 6900.) *Dr. Andrei Popovici, secretary of legation, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, EMerson 8037.) Mr. Laurence Bungardeanu, attaché, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 3883.) *Mr. Emanuel H. Dimitriu, assistant financial counselor, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue, (Phone, CLeveland 7944.) SIAM (Office of the legation, 2300 Kalorama Road. Phone, NOrth 1849) *Phya Abhibal Rajamaitri, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2300 Kalorama Road. (Phone, NOrth 1849.) Luang ania Bhakdi, third secretary, 2300 Kalorama Road. (Phone, DEca- tur 5977. Mr. Snga ; ilkamhaeng, third secretary, 2300 Kalorama Road. (Phone, DEcatur 5977. SPAIN (Office of the embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 0190 and 019i. Office of commercial attaché, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phone, COlumbia 9636) *Sefior Don Luis Calder6n, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2801 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0252.) (Absent.) (Seiora de Cal- derén absent.) *Sefior Don Luis M. de Yrujo, minister plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy, and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 1818 Twenty-fourth Street. (Phone, POtomac 6268.) 7 Seiior Don Luis de Olivares, first secretary of embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0190.) Sefior Don Ramén Padilla y de Satrustegui, second secretary of embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0190.) 552 Congressional Directory Maj. José Vidal, military attaché, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, EMerson 2651.) *Maj. Ramén Franco-Bahamonde, air attaché, Roosevelt Hotel. (Absent.) (Sefiora de Franco-Bahamonde absent.) *Sefior Don Miguel Echegaray y Romea, agricultural attaché, 3303 Cleveland Avenue. (Phone, EMerson 2986.) Sefior Don Juan Terrasa, commercial attaché, Shoreham Hotel. (Phone, ADams 0700.) (Absent.) SWEDEN (Office of the legation, 2230 California Street. Phone, NOrth 1044) *tMr. W. Bostrom, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2249 R Street. (Phone, NOrth 2020.) (Miss Bostrom absent.) *tBaron Johan Beck-Friis, counselor of legation, 2804 Thirty-fourth Place. (Phone, CLeveland 8027.) *Mr. Per Wijkman, commercial counselor of legation, 1705 Hoban Road. (Phone, EMerson 2693.) (Absent.) (Madame Wijkman absent.) Mr. Stig M. A. Unger, attaché, 1705 Hoban Road. (Phone, EMerson 2693.) SWITZERLAND (Office of the legation, 2013 Hillyer Place. Phone, NOrth 1815) *Mr. Marc Peter, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 6 Kalorama Circle. (Phone, DEcatur 5858.) Mr. Louis H. Micheli, counselor of legation, 2013 Hillyer Place. (Phone, NOrth 1815.) ; ; Mr. Ernest Schlatter, attaché, No. 1 Riggs Court. (Phone, POtomac 3646.) TURKEY (Office of the embassy, 1606 Twenty-third Street. Phone, NOrth 0811) *Mr. Mehmet Miinir Ertegiin, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1606 Twenty-third Street. Mr. a Muzaffer Yesim, commercial counselor, 1606 Twenty-third Street. bsent.) Mr. Ibrahim Seyfullah, secretary of embassy, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 2417.) Mr. Husein Nizamettin, secretary of embassy, 1606 Twenty-third Street. UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA (Office of the legation, 2125 Leroy Place. Phone, POtomac 3471) *Mr. Ralph William Close, K. C., envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary, 1521 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 1814.) *Mr. Johannes N. Theron, secretary of legation, 3016 Tilden Street. (Phone, CLeveland 8433.) *Mr. Johan K. Uys, attaché, 3100 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, COlumbia 2145.) UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Office of the embassy, 1119 Sixteenth Street; phones, NAtional 7550, 7551, and 7552. Office of military attaché, 3512 Garfield Street; phone, CLeveland 3116. Office of naval attaché, 3404 Garfield Street; phone, EMerson 7326) *Mr. Alexander Antonovich Troyanovsky, ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary, 1125 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NAtional 7550.) (Absent.) *Mr. Boris E. Skvirsky, counselor of embassy and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 1125 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NAtional 7550.) *Mr. Vladimir Alexandrovich Burzin, military attaché, 3512 Garfield Street. (Phone, CLeveland 3116.) *Mr. Paul Yurevich Oras, naval attaché, 3404 Garfield Street. (Phone, EMerson 7326.) (Absent.) *Mr. omy Gokhman, second secretary, 1410 M Street. (Phone, DIstrict 1712.) *Mr. Vladimir Mikhailovich Begunov, assistant military attaché, 1915 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, DEcatur 2753.) Mr. Alexander Mikhailovich Yakimichev, assistant naval attaché, 1915 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 8767.) *Mr. (roger Grigoriev, attaché, 1107 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 1586. Ri ,—-S BR as Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 553 URUGUAY (Office of the legation, Room 819, 1010 Vermont Avenue. Phone, MEtropolitan 0831) *Mr. J. Richling, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Carlton Hotel. (Phone, MEtropolitan 2626.) (Madame Richling absent.) Mr. J. Varela, jr., attaché. (Absent.) Mr. Enrique Caroselli, attaché. VENEZUELA (Office of the legation, 1534 O Street. Phone, POtomac 0673) *||Sefior Dr. Don Pedro Manuel Arcaya, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1333 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 4963.) Sefior Don Luis Churién, counselor of legation, Chastleton Hotel. Sefior Don Pedro Rivero, secretary of legation, Jefferson Apartments. (Phone, DIstrict 4704.) : *Sefior Don Claudio Urrutia, attaché. (Absent.) (Sefiora de Urrutia absent.) Sefior Dr. Don César A. D4vila, commercial attaché. (Absent.) YUGOSLAVIA : (Office of the legation, 1520 Sixteenth Street. Phone, POtomac 0492) *Mr. Constantin Fotitch, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1520 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, POtomac 0492.) Mr. Bojidar P. Stoianovitch, counselor of legation, 1520 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, POtomac 0492.) a ; Dr. Ivan Frange§, secretary of legation, 127 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. (Phone, Alexandria 1942.) *Mr. Gordon Gordon-Smith, attaché, Dupont Circle Apartments. (Phone, DEcatur 6201.) FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES 555 —— r pee A _ TTI, Te 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.....c--~--= ARGENTINA Mobile, Ala. _c.:....:cuu Los Angeles, Calif__. San Francisco, Calif-____ Washington, D. C...__. Jacksonville, Fla_.__..__ Pensacola, Fla... .-.... Tampa, Ely... 0. -=---5i- Savannah, Ga...-......C Chicago, Il.veen-2et nia New Orleans, La_._.___. Baltimore, Md.__._____. Boston, Mass. oc... Detroit, Mich........... Gulfport, Miss... 8t:: Louis, Mo-.......oenw New York, N. Y_.______ Cleveland, Ohio.._.__... Portland, Oreg.._.._.__. Philadelphia, Pa._...... Manly, P. 1 oc renemiz-- San Juan, PoB. a eucees Charleston, S. C.._.___. Houston, Te%....cern=--= Port Arthur, Tex....... Newport News, Va__.___ Seattle, Wash___________ AUSTRIA Los Angeles, Calif_______ Panama, Canal Zone..__ Chicago, MN. ....... ....c Baltimore, Md.......... St. Lonis, Mo... ......_. George N. Prifti, consul. ..oooceeene G. Russell Ladd, vice consul___.._____ Enrique C. Niese honorary consul... Jorge M. Amuchastegui- o-oo Erasto M. Villa, acting consul_........ 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_______ Tomas Hogg Peralta Ramos, vice con- sul. Antonio Ashby, vice consul... Juan Connor, vice consul... Joss J. McLean, vice consul... Samuel Fitzpatrick, vice consul._.._.. Carlos Augusto Simpson, vice consul... Ramon Hureta y Ferrer, vice consul. . Conrado Traverso, consul general... Martin Luis Drago, consul............ Arturo G. Fauzon, vice consul...._... L. W. Hartman, vice consul...._ - Ernesto C. Uriburu, consul... ______._.__ José Florentino Fernandez, honorary consul. Lope Bello, vice consul ________.______. A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul. Walter A. Evans, vice consul. ________ Christopher Stephen Flanagan, vice consul. H. C. Leslie, vice consul... _...._.__. John P. Hausman, vice consul......_. Friedrich Waller, honorary consul.-.... August Jacobs-Kantstein, honorary consul. Michael F. Girten, honorary consul general. Charles William Galloway, honorary consul. Wilder Lucas, honorary consul__.__._.. Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyo- ming, and the Philippine Islands. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wis- consin. 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, OL 20 Rico, and the Virgin Islands. io. New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Philippine Islands. Puerto Rico. Washington. Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. For Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Min- nesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Maryland and Delaware. Arkansas and Missouri. 557 558 Congressional Directory AUSTRIA—BELGIUM Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction AUSTRIA—continued New York, N. Y-.-._--- Friedrich Fischerauer, consul general _| Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, Cleveland, Ohio ____ San Juan, P. R...- BELGIUM Birmingham, Ala. ______ Mobile, Aly... nmeneeee- Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif-____ Pensacola, Fla. ......_.__ TIMP, Fla..-aaeinae- Atlanta, Ga...--_ Savannah, Ga Honolulu, Hawaii.._____ Chicago ll... ooo Moline, al Viktor F. J. Tlach, honorary consul general. J. D. Stubbe, honorary consul..____.___ V. G. Nesbit, consul (honorary) ..-_-_. AN IY a ea Ch. Winsel, consul (honorary)...._--- Br. Sqynagve, in charge of consul gen- eral. F. Seynaeve, vice consul. ____..__._____ J. Henriquez, consul. cere isan aeaas J. Mignolet, consul (honorary) ..__--_- A.J. Rosenthall, consul... _........... H. Ton Greene, vice consul (honor- ary). A. van Eepoel, vice consul. ......____ H. L. De Give, consul (honorary)... A Thesmar; consnl. ..----ooi-cocicaes V. Lappe, consul (honorary)... ——— consul general .._________ Emile Rosier, vice consul. ____________ John Cyrille Vermeren, vice consul (honorary). Ed. Andries, vice consul (honorary)--- Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and ‘West Virginia. Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. In Alabama the counties of Bibb, Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Clay, Cleburne, Colbert, Cullman, De Kalb, Etowah, Fayette, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Lamar, Laudecr- dale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madi- son, Marion, Marshall, Morgan, Pickens, Randolph, St. Clair, Shelby, Talladega, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. Alabama (except that part comprised in the jurisdiction of the consulate at Birmingham). Arizona and southern California. Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Hawaii. Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyo- ming. : For the counties of Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Duval, Flagler, Gilchrist, Nassau, Putnam, St. Johns, Seminole, Union, and Volusia. In Florida the counties of Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, Dade, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando, Highlands, Hills- borough, Indian River, Lake, Lce, Levy, Manatee, Marion, Martin, Monroe, Okeechobee, Orange, Osce- ola, Palm Beach, Pasco, Pinellas. Polk, St. Lucie, Sarasota, and Sumter. Georgia, except southeastern Georgia. In Georgia the counties of Appling, Berrien, Brooks, Bryan, Bullock, Burke, Camden, Clinch, Coffee, Col- quitt, Charlton, Chatham, Colums= bia, Decatur, Dodge, Dooly, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, 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. Illinois (except the Moline consular district) and Indiana. 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 the 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. WP ae. I oe —————T— EE ia OY CL a Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States 559 BELGIUM Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction BELGIUM—continued Louisville, Ky... cca. New Orleans, La... ... Baltimore, Md.....__... Boston, Mass. .caemer-- Detroit, Mich....... nme Minneapolis, Minn._... Kansas City, Mo... 8¢..Lounis, Mo...::.....mma New York, N. ¥.......- Cincinnati, Ohio... Cleveland, Ohio......_.. Portland, Oreg.-e-o—-.._ Philadelphia, Pa........ Pittsburgh, Pa.cceeeo_. Manila, P. J. ......nc nc Puerto Rico (Habana, Mayaguez, \ Lo RES Ponce, P.R.L..ollill. Charleston, 8. C........ Galveston, Tex ......... Houston, Tex.....o..-.. Norfolk and Newport News, Va. Richmond, Va.......... Virgin Islands (Habana, Cuba). 8t. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash__......... Green Bay, Wis......-.. Sevier Bonnie, consul. ____________.__. F. Gobert, consul general. - cocoa. H. Dabezies, consul (honorary). ....... J. G. Whiteley, consul (honorary)-.... G. H. Toole, consul (honorary)... P. Boeye, consul (honorar7)_..._..._.. O. E. Safford, consul (honorary). ..... P. C. Constant, consul (honorary)... M. Seguin, consul (honorary)... -..-..- J. Mali, consul (honorary)... Charles Hallaert, consul... ......._...__ A. D. Castellini, consul... .__....__... E. E. Stearns, consul (honorary)...... —— CONS es te i ema ons 3. H. Labbé, vice consul (honorary)... J. Leroux, consul (honorary) ..-.--.--- R. Dereume, consul (honorary)....... H. Vander Straeten, consul general..__ M. Verlinden, consul. ________________ ———— consul general .__________ O. F. Bravo, vice consul __.__...._._.. J. Oppenheimer, vice consul...._.__._. M. I. Saldana, consul (honorary)...... G. N. Mann, consul (honorary)...._.. M. H. Royston, consul (honorary)... R. C. Patterson, consul (honorary).... RA. Hogler, console once tl 00 Tio Fred E. Nolting, consul (honorary)... , consul general........... DV... Bertin, consul-202. 500 U0 200 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) and Tennessee. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Delaware and Maryland. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Vermont. Michigan. - Minnesota. Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, So 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, Mifllin, Mon- roe, Montgomery, Montour, Nor- thampton, 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, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jeflerson, 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. Also for Oklahoma. Newport News and Norfolk. Virginia and West Virginia. Possessions of the United States in the ‘West Indies. St. Croix, 8t. John, and 8t. Thomas. Washington. Wisconsin, 560 Congressional Directory BOLIVIA—BULGARIA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction BOLIVIA Mobile, Als....xeurunnms Los Angeles, Calif__.__._ Sar Diego, Calif... .....| ——— ——— San Francisco, Calif-.._. Panama, Canal Zone...- Hartford, Conn_._.....__ Chicago, Ill Dubuque, Iowa... New Orleans, La._._____ Baltimore, Md.-.-- a Boston, Mass. Detroit, Mich____ Kansas City, Mo....___ 8t. Louis, Mo.-...------- New York, N, Yoocaao-- Cincinnati, Ohio........ Philadelphia, Pa... - anila, SanJusn, BP. B.cc. cave Providence, R. I... Nozfolls, Na... cmemnii- Seattle, Wash__.._...._. BRAZIL Los Angeles, Calif.._.__ San Francisco, Calif----_ Panama, Canal Zone.._- Savannah, Ga...cae..._. Honolulu, Hawaii...____| Chicago, Tex. nnsnnmaes New Orleans, La_....._. Baltimore, Md..caaaao-. Boston, Mass..-cocoaaa- New York, N. Y__....__ Philadelphia, Pa... Charleston, 8. C Galveston, Tex..... Port Arthur, Tex....... Norfolk,Va. ee oe St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash.....--~v-== BULGARIA Washington, D. C.._.__. New York, N. Y T 2 McGonigal, honorary vice con- sul. COnSL at Jorge Eduardo Boyd, honorary consul general. Nardo Pennisi Spina, honorary consul. 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. 5 CONSUL... Sota R 0s 5 Edwin R. Heath, honorary consul... Arnold George Stifel, honorary consul. Walter Decker, consul general.....____ J. Arturo Arguedas, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo Wurlitzer, honorary vice con- sul. 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). Mario Santos,consnl....cee mao 2oL.. Carlos Fernandes, vice consul......... Jorge Arias Feroud, honorary consul... Pedro Ernesto Arias Icasa, honorary vice consul. : CONS es Henrique Oswaldo de Miranda, hon- orary vice consul. Antonio Daniel Castro, consul (hon- orary). Annibal de S8aboia Lima, consul. ..___ Albert Joseph Meserow, vice consul. - Jayme de Brito, consul. _..___._._______ Edison Ramos Nogueira, vice consul. Pablo Alegre, honorary vice consul... Jayme Mackay de Almeida, consul (honorary). Pedro M. de Almeida, vice consul (honorary). Luis Pereira Ferreira de Faro, Jro__.___ Adolpho de Camargo Neves, consul. - Pedro Neves de Paula Leite, consul... Manoel Bento Casado, vice consul... A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul. José Faus Esteve, honorary vice consul. E. H. Ivey, consular agent____________ Christofer Stephen Flanagan, hon- orary vice consul. Emmett Irwin Welch, consular agent... Francisco Bezerra de Menezes, consul. Rosario Carlo Ruggieri, vice consul-__ , consul F. B. Carter, vice consul (honorary). Carlyle S. Baer, honorary consul... Constantine Pop-Attanassoff, in charge of consulate. Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Ore- gon, Utah, Washington, and Wyo- ming, and the Philippine Islands, Florida and Georgia. Hawaii. Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas, and American possessions in the Antilles. Delaware and Maryland. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Pennsylvania and New Jersey. North Carolina, South Carolina, Vir- ginia, and West Virginia. United States. Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States CHILE—COLOMBIA 561 Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction CHILE Los Angeles, Calif_._____ San Diego, Calif._..____ San Francisco, Calif.____ Canal Zone...en-aaa-=- Miomi, Bln... cea Honolulu, Hawaii... Chicago, Il New Orleans, La_.__.____ Baltimore, Md Boston, Mass.._-- Detroit, Mich_..__.____._. Now-York, N. Y-.cocci: Cincinnati, Ohio__...__. Philadelphia, Pa________ San Juan, P. R..-——---- Noroll, V8. ono ne Seattle, Wash___________ CHINA Los Angeles, Calif___.___ San Francisco, Calif-.-__ Panama, Canal Zone... Honolulu, Hawaii_._____ Chicage, N-.-.--o----- New Orleans, Lac... New York, N.Y ........ Portland, Oreg......---- Manilla, P41. Caan Houston, Tex... —-_ Norlolls,; V8... Seattle, Wash______....__ COLOMBIA Los Angeles, Calif_____.. Pasadena, Calif. .__..... San Francisco, Calif ____ Miami; Bla = 0........ Pampa, Fla... ..cceecune- Baltimore, Md_......... Boston, Mass... St Louis; Mo.._.o...... New York, NoiY.occon-- Philadelphia, Pa........ Ponce, PB... San Juan, P. R Galveston, Tex Houston, ‘Tex. .o-cnemme Seattle, Wash. __________ 30063°—T74-2—1ST ED. Arturo Rios Talavera, consul....___... Mauricio Herschel, honorary consul... Arturo Bascuiidn E., consul general___ Nolo Illanes Pefiafiel, honorary con- sul. , consul general... ___. Francis I. Kelly, honorary consul... J. W. Waldron, consul (honorary)... M. H. Ehlert, consul (honorary)._..._. Fernando Dahmen, consul (honorary). Manuel Sigren, honorary consul_______ Salvador Dinamarca, honorary consul. Bruno B. Thannheimer, honorary consul. Alfonso Grez V., consul general Patricio Smart Fabres, consul._.______ Herndn Romero Cordero, honorary consul. Enrique Bustos, honorary consul... Francisco Pefia, consul (honorary). .._. Manuel Moreno Lajaiia, honorary consul. Filipo L. de Hostos, honorary consul. = orally) EEE SR Carlos Grant Benavente, honorary consul. Yi-Seng S. Kiang, vice consul. .__._.__. Chao-Chin Huang, consul general. ___ —, qonsul general... _. King-chau Mui, consul..____.._______._ Robert Tschu-Kwong Kah, consul general. Chi-Shau Lee, vice consul____________. Tsune-chi Yii, consul general Moy Back Hin, consul. ._......__.... Tsoong Tung Dunn, consul general. ___ Tsinlon Ouang, vice consul____________ ——, vice consul..__._________ Z1 Ying Yoh, constal..-ooceszenineaat = Te-ming Yeh, vice consul Luis A. Marifio Ariza, consul_________ Panlo A. Manotos, honorary vice con- sul. Luciano Restrepo, honorary consul Alvaro Rebolledo, consul general Oscar Gomez, consul. ___._____________ Miguel Samper Herrera, vice consul... Rodolfo Azuero, consul general Agustin Calvo, acting consul__________ Earl C. Moore, honorary vice consul.__ Diego José Fallon, honorary consul. Luis Borrero M., consul general Gilberto Garrido, consul ——e ee CONSUL Enrique Naranjo Martinez, honorary consul. Macedonio Romero, honorary consul... Gabriel Garcés, consul general Manuel Archila, vice consul Rafael Navia, vice consul .____________ Salvador Iglesias, vice consul Octavio Diaz Valenzuela, consul (hon- orary). Francisco Valiente, honorary consul... M. Benitez Florez, honorary consul... J. Al Torregrossa, honorary vice consul. T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul... United States. Ohio. ‘Washington and Oregon. Canal Zone. Philippine Islands. District of Los Angeles. Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. For the Canal Zone. : Alabama, Florida, and Georgia. Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, and ‘Wyoming. Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Xen- tucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mis- souri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Vermont. United States and the following spe- cial jurisdiction: Connecticut, Dela- ware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsyl- . Vania, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Carlos Garcia Prada, consul (honorary). 36 562 Congressional Directory COSTA RICA—CUBA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction COSTA RICA Mobile, Als... Bernard H. Eichold, honorary consul.| * Hollywood, Calif__..____ Los Angeles, Calif_______ Pasadena, Calif oor. San Francisco, Calif_____ Balboa, Canal Zone._.___ Cristobal, Canal Zone.__. Denver, Colo... New Haven, Conn._____ Miami, Fla... ocr Atlanta; Ga... Chieago, MM. orc o noe Dubuque, Towa. ._.____ Lawrence, Kans..._.____. Wichita, Xans........... New Orleans, La-.______ Baltimore, Md._-------- Boston, Mass. cio ~~ Detroit, Mich.-..-——---- Rochester, Minn.__.____ St. Paul, Minn... Kansas City, Mo__.____ St. Louis, Mo....----.... Newark, N. J._._. New York, N.Y. ...--- Toledo,'Ohlo.........0 Oklahoma City, Okla___ Philadelphia, Pa..._.___. Philippine Islands__.___ San Juan, PR .......... Brownsville, Tex_._.____ Galveston, Tex....._.____ Houston, Tex......msom- Newport News, Va_____ Noriolk, Vo... ow aap bint. St. Thomas, Islands. Seattle, Wash___________ Milwaukee, Wis__..____ CUBA Mobile, Ala......c.con iene Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif._ .__ Washington, D. C...... John Field Povedano, honorary consul. Arturo Pallais, Jr., honorary consul. Luis Zeledon Castro, vice consul. _____ Fernando Iglesias, honorary consul general. Juan Anino, honorary consul.__.________ Fernando Flores Banuet, honorary vice consul. Luis de San Simén y Ortega, consul (honorary). Enrique Pucci Paoli, consul (honorary) - Alfonso Segura Panguaga, honorary consul. Julio Brenes, honorary consul_________ Antonio Aben de Almar, honorary consul general. Gonzalo J. Gallegos Flores, honorary consul. Bernard Price, honorary vice consul. __ Harold E. Rucavado, consul general (honorary). Berthold Singer, honorary consul-_____ Guillermo Valiente Lara, honorary vice consul. E. F. Lusch, honorary consul .....____ José Maria Osma de Aysa, honorary consul. Joaquin Angulo, honorary vice consul. John Marshall Quintero, honorary consul general. Venancio Garcia Alvarado, honorary vice consul. Willig A. Riordan, consul (honor- ary). Claudio J. Loria, honorary consul.____ Hermann Carmiol Borbon, honorary vice consul. José Joaquin Vargas Calvo, honorary consul. Otoniel Flores, honorary consul_______ Miguel Flores Trejos, honorary consul. , consul Charles Barrows, honorary vice consul. J eh. Hadley, honorary consul gen- eral. Alfonso Salazar, honorary consul...__. Juan M. Jiménez, consul general. .____ Emilio E. Piza, honorary vice consul. Felipe Molina Larios, honorary consul. J. Z. Werby, honorary consul. ________ Carlos G. Perez, honorary consul _.____ Eduardo Azuola Aubert, honorary vice consul. ERE T. Fernandez, honorary con- sul. Francisco Ramirez de Arellano, hon- orary consul. Ramon Fournier, honorary vice con- sul. Gustavo Vera, honorary consul_.._____ L. W. Reed, honorary consul__..______ Clarence A. Miller, honorary consul__. Claudio Rodriguez Arce, honorary consul. Harry Reyner, honorary consul....___ George Levy, honorary consul_________ Robert A. White, honorary consul.___. Edward J. Menge, vice consul (hon- orary). Andrés Jiménez y Ruz, consul________ Reon Martin y Arencibia, vice con- sul. Oscar Presmanes y Fernindez, consul. J asl oaquin Zarza y Herndndez, con- sul. Miguel Cornide, acting consul....._.. Canal Zone, from Balboa to and ex- cluding Gatun. Louisiana. Kansas City, Mo., and the State of Kansas. : Alabama and Tennessee. Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington, ju- risdiction includes the honorary con- sulate in Los Angeles. District of Columbia. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 563 CUBA—CZECHOSLOVAKIA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction CUBA—continued Jacksonville, Fla_______. Key West, Fla___...____ Miami; Fla... ...-._ 00 Tampa. Fla. coo Savannah, Ga_.-..___-_. Chicago, WM... 1 Louisville, Ky aan. New Orleans, La________ Baltimore, Md_.________ Boston, Mass. .....----- Detroit, Mich... _L... Pascagoula, Miss_—._.._. Kansas City, Mo..-._.. St. Louis, Mo... New York, No Yor Cincinnati, Ohio. ...._.: Philadelphia, Paco. Moanin, P. J... eee SansToan, POR ones Chattanooga, Tenn...._. Galveston, Texan... Noriolk, Vo.coerimmno=e St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash__.._...... CZECHOSLOVAKIA Los Angeles, Calif ___.___ San Francisco, Calif... Julio Rodriguez Embil, consul... Berardo Rodriguez Valdés, consul.-___ Eduardo Herndndez y D’Abrigeon, consul. Oscar Rene Morales y del Campo, vice consul. José A. Gregory, consul ______________ Reinaldo Fernindez Rebull, vice consul. Domingo J. Milord y Vazquez, consul: Manuel Velazquez y Blanco, vice consul. Ursulo J. Dobal y de la Torre, consul. Eduardo Angles y Paradela, vice consul. René Dechard y de la Torriente, vice consul. Eduardo L. Desvernine, consul._.__.___ Juan Bautista Severo Condom y Bo- horques, consul. Ignacio Algarra y Mendivil, consul... José R. Cabrera y Bequer, consular agent (honorary). Eduardo L. Sanchez y del Castillo, consul. Armando Ledn y Valdés, consul__.._. Pablo Suérez y Roig, consul general... sul. José Francisco Cordova y Gomez, consul. : > Antonio de Souza y Carvajal, vice con- sul. Matias Taboada y Suarez, vice consul._ Rodolfo G. Betancourt y Pairol, vice consul, Manuel Hevia y de los Reyes Gavilan, consul. Antonio Bruzén y Rodriguez, consul. . Andrés Soriana y Roxas, consular agent. Gaspar Betancourt y Aguero, consul. _ Nain Lliraldi y Hernandez, vice con- sul. Luis Castillo Barroso, consul__________ Eduardo Patterson y de Jauregui, consul. César A. consul. J eu Alvarez y Betancourt, vice con- sul. Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miller, honorary consul. Calixto Garcia Becerra, consul. .._____ Barranco y Fernéndez, Felix B. Janovsky, consul (honorary). . Erwin Ladislav Chloupek, consul.__._ In Florida the counties of Duval, Nas- sau, St. Johns, Flagler, Volusia, Marion, Levy, Alachua, Putnam, Olay, Bradford, Baker, Columbia, Hamilton, Suwanee, Lafayette, Tay- lor, Madison, and Jefferson. For Georgia. In Florida the counties of Broward, Dade, Lee, Monroe, and Palm Beach. 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, Iow North Dakota, South Dakota, an Montana. Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas; jurisdiction includes the honorary consulate in Pascagoula, Miss. 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, Ky., and Detroit, Mich. Pennsylvania, and in New Jersey the counties of Burlington, Ocean, Cam- den, Atlantic, Cape May, Cumber- land, 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. Southern California and Arizona. Northern California, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Hawaii. 564 Congressional Directory : CZECHOSLOVAKIA—DENMARK Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction CZECHOSLOVAKIA—CON. e820) I. os cneaenis Jaroslav Smetanka, consul general... __. Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, New Orleans, La.._..... Minneapolis, Minn_..___ Kansas City, Mo... New York, N.Y Cleveland, Ohio... ..... Philadelphia, Pa... ...... Pittsburgh, Pa... een Manila, P. 1. omens Houston, Tex. =. >-~~.. Seattle, Washy..........ncrem 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 Mobi, Alo. o..vnnias Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif.____ Colon, Canal Zone._____._ Panama, Canal Zone.____ Denver, Colo... Pampa, Blas. -acaaal ‘West Palm Beach, Fla___ Savannah, Ga............ Honolulu, Hawaii.______ Chicago, Tl. 7. eee New Orleans, La........ Baltimore, Md ..eoeo.___ Boston, Mass... Detroit, Mich...........- Minneapolis, Minn_____ St. Louis, Mo. Omaha, Nebr. _.....- New York,’ N. Vee Gordon Boswell, consul... ___ Charles Edward Proschek, honorary consul. Alexandre Rieger, honorary consul...__ Jindrich Starch, consul general ________ Jaroslav Gardavsky, consul____________ Charles Robinson Toothaker, honor- ary consul. Antonin Kratochvile, acting consul..__ Leo Schnurmacher, honorary consul. _ _ Charles Julius Hollub, 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 C. Hansen, vice consul (honor- ary). Harry B. Roberts, vice consul (hon- orary). A. S. Andersen, vice consul (honorary). Aage Georg Schroder, vice consul (honorary). Robert Benjamin Booth, consul (hon- orary). Reimund Baumann, consul___________ Ingemann Olsen, consul (honorary)... Hos A. Koppel, vice consul (honor- ary). Niels Hjalmar Larsen, vice consul (honorary). Aage Emanuel Olsen, (honorary). Andrew Nissen Johnson, vice consul (honorary). Chicago consulate has charge______.____ John Holst, viceconsul..............-__ Georg Bech, consul general _____.______ Homi Ingemann Moller, vice con- sul. vice consul Wisconsin, and Wyoming, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, and Tennessee. ig North Dakota, and Mon- ana. 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, West Virginia, Ala- bama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Ten- nessee, and Texas. Philippine Islands. Alaska, Oregon, and Washington. Alabama. Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, and Oregon. Canal Zone. Do. Colorado. 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 Virginia, El ln Foreign Consular Officers in the United States DENMARK—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 565 Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction DENMARE—continued Grand Forks, N. Dak... Cleveland, Ohio.._.._.._. Portland, Orez.........- Philadelphia, Pa_.._..._ Manila, P.1.cuac.. a. Mayaguez, P. R........ Ponce, P. R Son Yuan, P.R.......... Charleston, S. C._...._. Brookings, S. Dak...__. Galveston, Tex .....__.. Houston, TeX. aeons .- Port Arthur, Tex_______ Salt Lake City, Utah____ Newport News, Va__.___ Norfolle, Va. ...cooae oo St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash............. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Mobile, Als... ........ Los Angeles, Calif ___.____ San Francisco, Calif_____ Cristobal, Canal Zone. _ Panama, Canal Zone.___ Denver, Colo _......___ Jacksonville, Fla____.____ Migmi, Pls. ..ceoinae-.- TamDa,: Flo... cuemeeenids Chieaga, NI... ... Dubuque, Iowa..__.__.. Lake Charles, La______. New Orleans, La_...___. Baltimore, Md-......... Boston, Mass.....___... Kansas City, Mo_..._._ Newark, No Joona. Brooklyn, N.Y ..-.---- New Yor, No. Vo nnennwn Philadelphia, Pa____._.__ Manila, PT... Agundills, P. RR... Arecibo, P. R__ i. Casas, Po. R.on nna Guanic; P. Roa en Guayama, P.B......... Humaeao, P. B.......-. Mayaguez, P. R........ Bones, PR... coo: San Juan, P. Reece — vice consul... __...._.. Niels Anthon Christensen, vice con- sul (honorary). Sherman Harkson, vice consul (hon- orary). Ludvig Theodor Brehm, vice consul (honorary). Gerrit Pieter Datema, consul (hon- orary). Enrique Gomez, in charge of consulate. 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 Biehl, vice consul (honorary). Edmond Peter Pincofis, vice consul (honorary). N. M. Nielsen, vice consul (honorary). Hans Marius Hansen Lund, vice consul (honorary). V. D. Andersen, acting vice consul (honorary). Walter Knox, vice consul (honorary)-.- Axel Ovesen Thage, consul. __________ Mogens Grove Bildsde, acting consul. T. G. McGonigal, vice consul. _...___. José S. Saenz y Macho, honorary con- sul. John Barneson, honorary consul.._.__. William Fisher, honorary vice consul _ H. J. Henriquez, honorary vice consul. . M. de J. Quijano, honorary consul general. Mauricio Benjamin Fidanque, hon- orary consul. René Rodriguez, honorary consul. _.__ Fre ern COONS)... wore in ws ism wi ie José M. Pichardo, consul... ooo... A. Perper, honorary vice consul-.._._. Lewis H. Hill, Jr., honorary consul... Javier H. Cerecedo, honorary consul.. James T. Case, honorary vice consul. . — consul... oo... G. P. Hannan, honorary consul. ___.__ Adriano Mejia, consul... ____.____ Alfredo Blanco, honorary vice consul. Julius F. Sandrock, honorary consul. - Max L. Glazer, honorary consul_______ Victor M. Hinojosa, honorary consul. _ Hannibal Viti Mariani, honorary con- sul. Arturo Kennedy, honorary vice consul. Rafael Espaillat de la Mota, consul general. Roberto D. Abrahams, honorary con- sul. John. W. Hartzell, honorary vice con- sul. Buenaventura de Erquiaga Palacios, honorary consul. Eduardo Fronteras, vice consul______. Eugenio Lefranc, honorary consul.____ —— ——, consul. Raul Comme Fernandez, consul-__..... —— ——, vice consul. _________________ —— ——, vice consul __________________ Peregrino Lopez, honorary consul.__. Felix Matos Bernier, honorary consul. Carlos M. Petterne Alomar, honorary vice consul. Federico Llaverias, consul general... Frank J. Richardson, honorary vice consul. North Dakota. Oregon. Pennsylvania. Puerto Rico. South Carolina. Utah. Virgin Islands. Alaska and Washington. Canal Zone. United States. Puerto Rico. 566 Congressional Directory DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—EL SALVADOR Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction DOMINICAN REPUBLIC— continued. Fort Worth, Tex... Galveston, TeX. ooo Houston, Tex. .......... Port Arthur, Tex... Newport News, Va_____ St. Croix, Virgin Islands. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. ECUADOR Mobile, Ala...=-... Los Angeles, Calif .....__ San Francisco, Calif-_.__ Colon, Canal Zone._.._. Panama, Canal Zone--__ Chicago, WV... _- Dubuque, Jowa_-----__ New Orleans, La-- = St. Lonis, Mo-.._---~-.-- New York, NoY.....00 Portland, Oreg.__-.._..__ Pittsburgh, Pa... Monila, Poo. La 3 LL San'Jusn, P. Bocce Houston, TeX... Notiolk, Va... een Seattle, Wash. __.__.___.___ EGYPT San Francisco, Calif__.__ New-York, N. Y........ EL SALVADOR Mobile, Als...............- Los Angeles, Calif__.____ San Francisco, Calif_____ Ghicaco, dll ..>2 22. Boston, Mass Philadelphia, Pa________ Philippine Islands, Ma- nila. Jack Danciger, honorary consul._._____ J. A. Torregrosa, honorary consul. .... T. L. Evans, honorary consul _________ Fernando Pro, honorary consul_______ Harry Keitz, honorary consul__________ — —— viceconsul_________________. Emile A. Berne, honorary consul_______ J. Docey Souffront, honorary vice con- sul, T. G. McGonigal, honorary vice con- sul. Jorge Navarro Rojas, honorary vice consul. Ulpiano Borja Perez, consul general ____ Benjamin Mosquera A., honorary vice consul. Ricaurte Zaval, honorary consul_.___. , consul general .__________ Charles S. Dewey, honorary consul__- Walter Pytlowany, honorary vice consul. R. W. Clewell, honorary vice consul - - Francisco Banda C., consul general__._ J. N. Spangler, honorary vice consul. _ Sixto Duran Ballén, consul general __. A "R. Vejar, viceconsyl.- 0. 0 Swphen Q. Hayes, honorary vice con- sul. Hodenien Perez y Perez, honorary con- sul. Fernando L.. Gonzélez, honorary vice consul. Jorge Luis Pérez, consul... __________ T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul_.__ Arthur O. Humphreys, honorary vice consul. Gustavo Ycaza Cucaldn, consul. _____ Aly Fouad Toulba, consul. --..o..___ Henri Wassef Semeika, consul.....__.. Benjamin T'oomar, honorary consul. __ Roberto E. Tracey, honorary consul... Jorge: Ramirez, consul. >. _______ *_ Herman Lopez, vice consul ___________ Ernesto A. Boyd, honorary consul. ___ Eduardo Kay, honorary consul ________ William B. Lawton, honorary consul... Max Henry Ehlert, honorary consul. - José Francisco Morales, consul. __..___ TATE snr NTC Re Francisco Alvarado Gallegos, consul general. Nicholas Pedroso, honorary consul.._. Jorge Hipsley, honorary vice consul___ paul Perez Rosales, honorary con- sul. Arizona, Arkansas, California, Oolo- 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. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 567 EL SALVADOR—FRANCE Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction EL SALVADOR—contd. Sani Juan, PR. o...o José Hernédndez Usera, honorary consul. Brownsville, Tex_..____. Gustavo Vera, honorary consul........ Seattle, Wash_...__..__. tne M011 1:1 1 | EO eRe Washington. ESTONIA Los Angeles, Calif... San Francisco, Calif... Chicago, Hl... cave New Orleans, La....___. New York City, N. Y_._ ETHIOPIA New York City, N. Y._ FINLAND San Francisco, Calif... Canal Zone... -ccaeee-- Chicago, I... oc... Beston, Mass..:.. oo. Calumet, Mich... Detroit, Mich____.___.._ Marquette, Mich.___.__. Duluth, Minn.......... New-York, N, V....cun- Ashtabula, Ohio_.__.... Astoria, Orep... ...-...... Philadelphia, Pa__._____ Son Jun, PB. BR. .—--—-- Aberdeen, Wash. ._..._. Seattle, Wash. _______.__. FRANCE Birmingham, Ala.__.__. Mobile, Ala... ana Los Angeles, Calif__.____ San Diego, Calif......... Reginald Birdsall Olds, honorary vice consul. Walter E. Hettman, honorary consul. . Clifton Clark Coldren, honorary con- sul. Gaylord Clarke Whipple, honorary vice consul. N. O. Pedrick, consul (honorary) ..... , consul general. _____._____ Charles Kuusik, vice consul _.__.______ John H. Shaw, honorary consul Gen- eral. 2 Jarl Arthur Lindférs, vice consul (honorary). Ramon Arias-Feraud, jr., consul (hon- orary). Elmer A. Forsberg, consul (honorary) OscarHayskar, vice consul (honorary). yivieg'eonsula. CU0n 0 Oils Jacob Uitti, honorary vice consul...__.. George H. Heideman, honorary vice consul, John Lammi, vice consul (honorary). ._ Eino Aapo Aaltio, 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). Karl Adolf Friedrich Steffens, hon- orary consul. 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__.__.__. In California the counties of Fresno, Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura. United States. Connecticut, Delaware, District ot Columbia, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont, 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 Hampe shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Michigan counties of Baraga, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, and Ontonagon. Lower Peninsula of Michigan, Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, The Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennes- see, and Wisconsin. United States and its dependencies. Kentucky and Ohio. Oregon. For the counties of Grays Harbor, Pacific, and Wahkiakum. 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. 568 Congressional Directory FRANCE—GERMANY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction FRANCE—continued San Francisco, Calif_.... Colon, Canal Zone... ___ Panama, Canal Zone... Denver, COl0-cao__.____ Miami, Fla... ..o0.- : Pensacola, Fla.___.______ Poampn, Bla......coonieas Atlanta, Ga. ...L........ Savannah, Ga____.______ Honolulu, Hawaii..__.__ @hicarco, I....coenevent Indianapolis, Ind....._.. Louisville, K Lafayette Charles, La. New Orleans, La...__.___ Baltimore, Md......____ Boston, Mass... cveenra- Detroit, Mich... 3. oie. Duluth, Minn:. ..z....- Minneapolis, Minn..____ Kansas City, Mo_______ St. Louis, Me........... Omaha, Nebr______.____._ Buffalo, N.Y .........--- New York, N. Y...__._. Cincinnati, Ohio..______ Cleveland, Ohio....__.__ Poledo, Ohio... - ~~. Portland, Oreg..........-. Philadelphia, Pa_.._____ Pittsburzh, Pa... ....cnm- Monila, P.1........... Mayaguez, P. R________ Bonet, B- RB... ...cowau- Galveston, Tex... _____ Houston, Tox ow rw mums! San Antonio, Tex. ...__ Norfolk, Newport News, and Portsmouth, Va. St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Seattle, Wash___au___._. Milwaukee, Wis... .__ GERMANY Mobile, Alg.ceeeeecnnaa Joseph Marie Yves Méric de Bellefon, consul general. Charles Pierre Jean Frangois Lucien Breffort, consul. 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... Bowman Elder, consular agent......._ James G. O’Brien, consular agent... Francois Vavasseur Mouton, consular agent. CONSUL coisas nanan... John Phelps, consular agent___._.....__ Henri Abel Bergeron, consul__________ Maxime Rainguet, consular agent..___ Julien Romieux, consular agent... ____. Edouard Hinman Sirich, consular agent. Paul Arthur Boulanger, consular agent Marc Francois Eugéne Seguin, con- sular agent. Auguste Borglum, consular agent_____ Paul Joseph Speyser, consular agent___ Charles Hippolyte Marie de Ferry de Fontnouvelle, consul. Jean ten Have, consular agent...._____ Albert Younglove Meriam, consular agent. Stuart Alexander Baxter, consular agent. Alfred Herman, consular agent________ Emile Marcel 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. Harold Alwyn Mouzon, agent. Georges A. A. Perrot, consular agent _.. consular Jean Marie Romagny, consular agent. P. A. Drouilhet, consular agent______. Georges Pierre Ferdinand Jouine, con- sular agent. Alexander Octave Prosper Jouffray, consular agent. Georges Joseph Fossier, agent. Cyril Daniel, consular agent. _....._.. consular Pierre Lefebvre, consular agent_...____ Riordan Hugues, consular agent...._._ Walter Hermann Zingelmann, hon- orary consul, California (except the consular district of Los Angeles), Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Connecticut, New Jersey (except the counties of Camden and Gloucester), New York, and Vermont. Delaware, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and for the cities of Camden and Gloucester in New Jersey. Philippine Islands. Puerto Rico. / Alabama, Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 569 GERMANY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction GERMANY—continued Los Angeles, Calif... San Francisco, Calif... Balboa, Canal Zone. __.. Colon, Canal Zone...._. Denver, Colo... .c.coxua- Jacksonville, Fla. _.._.__ Savannah, Ga... Honolulu, Hawaii..__.._ Chicago, MM. ........... Louisville, Kyo cuee-- New Orleans, La..______ Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass... -- Detroit, Mich... Kansas City, Mo... St. Lois, Me. caainuiz-5 Buflalog Ne Yc caiie New York, N.Y. Cleveland, Ohio_...._... Portland, Oreg._........ Philadelphia, Pa__._..._ Pittsburgh, Pa...ccnon- Manila, P.-Y. _. ..-co-l Aguadilla, P.B_........ Ban Juan, Pv B.teceee-x George Gyssling, consul... ooo. Gustav Heuser, consul general ..______ August Ponschab, vice consul___..____ Ernst Neumann, eonsul (honorary)... ‘Walter Scharpp, consul (honorary)... William Godel, consul (honorary)..___ Ernst Steinke, consul (honorary)... Julius Carl Schwarz, consul (honorary). Rolf Jaeger, consul general... Robert ¥. Lange, consul... ______. Wilhelm Tannenberg, vice consul... Arthur E. Mueller, vice consul (hon- orary). Ernst Wendler, consul. .............__. Frederick F. Schneider, in charge of consulate. Kurt von Tippelskirch, consul general. Fritz Hailer, consul (honorary)__.____. ny J. Wilde, vice consul (honor- ary). Reinold Freytag, consul... oooeoan Alexander F. Chapin, in charge of consulate. Johannes Borchers, consul general... Albert Mueller, consul... __.__.___. Friedhelm Driiger, vice consul. _______ Hans-Ulrich Granow, vice consul_____ ‘Walther Hinrichs, consul......._.___.. Robert Clostermann, consul (hon- orary). Arno Paul Mowitz, consul (honorary). Reginald Arthur Nicholas Hillyer, vice consul. John E. Loibl, vice consul (honorary). Joachim Schulze, consul... _...__.._._ Georg Sanders, vice consul (honorary). Friedrich Schomburg, in charge of consulate. 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 except the counties south of Levy, Marion, and Volusia Coun- ties. Georgia. Hlinois, 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 ity. Arkansas, Kansas, Kentucky, Mis- souri, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. In New York the counties of Allegany, Cattaraugus, 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). 570 Congressional Directory GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction GERMANY—continued Galveston, Tex... San Antonio, Tex_._.____ Tutuila (Sydney, Aus- tralia). Tutuila (Wellington, New Zealand). Newport News-Nor- folk, Va. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash____....___ GREAT BRITAIN Mobile, Ala......0.l 00 Douglas Arig. az. 2 Los Angeles, Calif.______ San Francisco, OCalif_..__ Colon, Canal Zone. ..... Panama, Canal Zone..._ Washington, D. C..___. Jacksonville, Fla......__ Miami Fla... nail Savannah, Ga... ....... Honolulu, Hawaii......_ Chieago, Maocat. ool New Orleans, La....__._ Baltimore, MA..ceeo.._. Boston, Mass. ...cneen- Detroit, Mich........._ Julius W. Jockusch, consul (honorary) - ceonsukil ni oi0 Lalli ul Rudolf Asmis, consul general _________ ‘Wilhelm Penseler, consul (honorary) - - Leopold Marshall von Schilling, vice consul (honorary). L. M. Monsanto, consular agent (hon- orary). Adolf‘ Reichel, consul.....cveveenmemena- John Ritchie Macpherson, vice consul. Alexander Baird, jr., vice consul (hon- orary). Francis Edward Evans, consul_.______ George Wellington Irving, vice consul (honorary). Arthur Harry Tandy, vice consul.____ Archibald Campbell Charlton, consul general. Cyril Hubert Cane, consul..__._.._____ Eivion Hugh Davies, vice consul ...____ Wilfred Gruffydd Rhys Howell, vice onsul. ; James Dalton Murray, acting vice consul. Thomas Emanuel Kavanagh Cormac, proconsul. Roger John Peter Sedgwick, acting vice consul. Frederick Edward Fox Adam, consul general. Cyril Frank Wilton Andrews, consul__ Alan Meredith Williams, acting vice consul. John Campbell Thomson, consul-...._ ‘Walter Mucklow, consul (honorary) ___ J. HH. Bland, proconsul-......____._ Lewis a Oates, vice consul (hon- orar Kenneth James Macarthur White, consul. Herbert George Goodfellow Fray, vice consul (honorary). William Percy Whitford Turner, con- sul. William Henry Baird, vice consul (honorary). Lewis Edward Bernays, consul general. Robert: Boss, consul. co c.-onioeaan. John Anthony Thwaites, acting vice consul. Robert Mendel Kohan, consul general. William Percy Taylor Nurse, vice consul (honorary). Henry Arthur Hobson, consul..______ George Payne, vice consul (honorary). Hugh Alexander Ford, consul general. James Arthur Brannen, vice consul (honorary). Arthur Oliver Bray, acting vice consul. Leglie Charles Hughes Hallett, consul. Albert Rendle Stone, vice consul...__ 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 Sicioetay 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, Obispo, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura, and the State of Arizona. California (except the counties included in the jurisdiction of the consulate at Los Angeles), Nevada, and Utah. Canal Zons. Canal Zona. North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Hawaii. Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mis- sissippi. Maryland, Virginia, and West Vir- ginia. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Michigan and Ohio. Forewgn Consular Officers in the United States 571 GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction GREAT BRITAIN—contd. St. Louis, Mo..u.uizun.z New York, N. Y__..__._ Cincinnati, Ohi0........ Philadelphia, Pa______.. Pittsburgh, Pa... ov. Cohn, P. Teoma oncsnein Pavan, Pol cca aan Boilo, P. X00 00200000 Tegaspl, PoE - 0200010 Manila, P. 1. i.e Zarnonags, Mindanao, Pallas Pex. . aera ara Galveston, Tex.ocueo... Norfolk, Va. nna Frederiksted, Virgin Is- lands. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash______..... GREECE San Francisco, Calif..... Denver, Colon. .merumen . Horace Edgar Bowle, consul. __...._.. Gerald Campbell, consul general ._____ Hart Henry Gerald Shepherd, con- soi Moncaster Ley Mitcheson, con- John Eric Maclean Carvell, consul... Eric Arthur Gleugh, gonent: Alexander Swinton Paterson, vice con- sul. Daniel Francis Horseman Brickell, vice consul. Walter - Fancourt Bell, acting vice consul. Joseph Stanton Goodreds, acting vice consul (honorary). David Loinaz, acting vice consul (hon- orary). Roger Bentham Stevens, vice consul. _ Richard Harold Fawcett Smith, acting vice consul (honorary). Peter Scott Stephens, acting vice consul. Walter Frederick James, proconsul_._. ‘Walter Macleod, vice consul (honorary).- Frederick Watson, consul general... . F. W. Andrews, vice consul.__..__.. Oliver Smalley, consul (honorary)... Fred . Kennedy, acting vice consul (honorary). Guy ood, vice consul (hon- orar George ‘Blacklock Gibson, acting vice consul. William Cunningham Naismith, act- ing vice consul (honorary). Beonge Agnew Main, acting vice con- sul. James Andrew Lees, acting vice consul (honorary) David Cassels Brown, acting vice con- sul (honorary). Thomas Joseph Harrington, consul general. Linton Harry Foulds, consul_.._._____ John David McLaren, acting vice consul (honorary). Fernando Miguel Toro, vice consul (honorary). Ari Henry Noble, consul (honor- ary Maurice West Guinness, vice consul (honorary). Hugo Norton Dixon, vice consul (hon- orary). Thomas L. Hudson, acting vice con- sul. Frederick William Paris, consul.._____ N Alpes Liddall, vice consul (honor- ary). James Guthrie, consul (honorary) bei Joseph Todd Mulvenny, vice consul... Miles Merwin, vice consul (honorary). Eric Howard Thomas, acting consul - Francis Joseph Patron, consul_.....___ Bernard Pelly, consul (honorary) _.__.. Apostolos Macheras, consul general... Nikias Calogeras, vice constl-ccvvnrnn. Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Ken- tucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, Ten- Tomes and the city of East St. Louis, 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. Philippine Islands. Puerto Rico. New Mexico and Texas. Islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas. Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and the Territory of Alaska. 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, 572 Congressional Directory GREECE—HAITI Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction GREECE—continued Washington, D. C_..__. Chicago, TIL. 0 THO Cd Boston, Mass. .....ooeema New York, N. Yoon Cleveland, Ohio.....____ GUATEMALA Mobile; Alg.. t.. cvs Los Angeles, Calif. ...___ San Diego, Calif... .. San Francisco, Calif._.__ San Pedro, Calif_...__._ Balboa, Canal Zone... __ Cristobal, Canal Zone.._ Miami, Bla... .........; A ST yl We CRs el ie Chieage, Hl... on cae- ne Louisville, Ky...-..no. New Orleans, La_.___.___ Baltimore, Md.........: Boston, Mass. .....cvo.: Gulfport, Miss... New York, N. Y-.-----: Winston-Salem, N. C___ Philadelphia, Pa____..__ Manila, Philippine Is- lands. SanJoon, 2. RB... —. Providence, B. 1........ Charleston, S. C._______ Brownsville, Tex__.______ Dallas, Tex... a Houston, TeX.....--.xx St. Thomas, Virgin Ic- lands. Seattle, Wash. _.__...... HAITI Mobile, Ala...0........ 5 San Francisco, Calif.___. Balboa, Canal Zone_____ Cristobal, Canal Zone.___ Everglades, Fla_________ Miami, Flas. 000 Tampa, Bla Us: LUS0, Honolulu, Hawaii_______ Lake Charles, La....... John Yanneés, consul general .._________ Pericles Polyvios, consul ._._.__.______ Panos Tringhetas, consul... ________ Nicholas Tserepsis, consul general_____ C. N. Vilos, acting vice consul... W. Steber, jr., honorary consul.._._____ Paul Otto Tobeler, honorary consul. __ y ViCOiCOnSUl..... Felipe Marquez, consul general _______ Anghsio Castillo Lara, honorary con- sul. , consular agent_..._____.__ Tomas Arias, honorary consul ._______ Tomas Arias, jr., honorary vice consul. Manuel F. Castillo G., honorary vice consul. Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. .__ W. F. Ives, honorary consul __________ Octavio Barrios Solis, honorary con- sul general. : > CONSAL. oe aa Rodrigo Anzueto, consul general ______ John A. MeclIsaac, honorary consul... William A. Mosman, honorary consul. . viesiconsul... coco... Leonardo Lara G., consul general... Héctor Giron Zirion, vice consul._..___ Arthur M. Strauss, honorary vice consul. Corlos Vére, consul... . 22 r 9. CODBUN iii, oes bmi imino svicoconsul ey Frank Oliver Willy, honorary consul. _ Robert Burgher, vice consul (honorary) T. L. Evans, honorary consul _________ — ———, CONSUL Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. _____ Richard Murray, honorary consul... B. C. Bremer, honorary consul________ Max R. Stempel, consul_______________ Alfred Joseph,iconsuls..222ui Carl Pryer, honorary consul.._________ Alden Freeman, honorary consul gen- eral. Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. ___ William F. Yves, honorary consul_.___ Robert W. Shingle, consul. ___________ Glen A, Broussard, honorary consul... 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 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, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Maryland. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Vermont. Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Mary- land, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, New Jersey, New York, North QOarolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Is- land, South Carolina, Vermont, Vir- ginia, and West Virginia. Washington. | Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 573 HAITI-HUNGARY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction HAITI—continued New Orleans, La________ Boston, Mass. ......._.. Manchester, N. H______ Newark, N. Jo... New York, N.-¥._ Chester, Pa... Philadelphia, Pa________ Mayaguez, P. R._______ Ponce, P. R Santoan, DP. B....o. Galveston, Tex___.______.. Houston, ‘Tex.....-—-c---~ Port Arthur, Tex_.____.. Newport News, Va.____ St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. HONDURAS Mobile. Ala. oc vimana Los Angeles, Calif. __.____ San Francisco, Calif... Balboa, Canal Zone_____ Cristobal, Canal Zone... Miami, Fla .. -o-n-=c=- Kansas City, Kans_.-._. New Orleans, La_...___. Baltimore, MAeevcae-- Boston, Mass. .—---rea-- Detroit, Mich... Kansas City, Mo. --.___ Si. Younis, Mo _---—-- Jersey City, N. Joceeeoe New York, N. Yoo. Philadelphia, Pa_------- San Juan, P. R Galveston, Tex Houston, Tex.--cccan--- Port Arthur, Tex-....-- HUNGARY Los Angeles, Calif ____.__ Denver, Colo --o--... Washington, D. C_..... Ohieago, DM. .ce-anaaae New: York, N. Yu-auaa Cleveland, Ohio. -coaa-- Louis de Delva, consul general ________ Frank Laraque, consul... 25 N. 4. Carrie, vice consul...c........c.. A. Preston Clark, consul... ._.___.. Francis R. Clark, vice consul ..._____._ TNH Eee Victor de la Fuente, consular agent..__ Charles B. Vincent, consul general. __. Emmanuel Gation, vice consul___.____ William Ward, jr., honorary vice con- sul. Jules Louis Elson, honorary consul_._. seonsul. or cio Blas C. Silva, vice consul... Charles Vére, consul... ooo 22220 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... T. G. McQGonigal, honorary consul... Viconts Machado Valle, honorary con- sul. Alejandro Lopez, consul general .__._. Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul. Ramon Garcia de Paredes, jr., honor- ary vice consul. E. Carles, honorary consul... L. Lee, honorary consul. oo B. W. Humphrey, honorary consul. ._ Roger G. Pizzati, honorary consul_____ A. A. Braschi, honorary consul general. Bertil Korling, honorary vice consul. _ , consul general ___.________ Vicente Williams, consul general _____ rr eee, @ Paul G. Shiple Manuel Lopez Callejas, consul._______ peonsul. men aie Roman Bogran, consul general. ______._ Joaquin Alvarado, jr., honorary consul. Juan Bermudez Sanchez, honorary vice consul. José Torregrosa, honorary consul._____ Guillermo Scheel Collier, honorary consul. T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul_._. R. E. McInnis, honorary consul-..._.. Francis Proiszl, deputy consular agent. Coloman Jonas, honorary vice consul. Louis Alexy, consul general_...._._.._. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Lou- isiana. New Jersey. Jurisdiction includes Orange County. Virgin Islands. Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, and Ten- nessee. Missouri. Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Ne- vada, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and ‘Wyoming. The legation of Hungary in Washing- ton has charge of consular matters in the District of Columbia and in the Canal Zone. 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. 574 Congressional Directory IRAN—ITALY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction IRAN Washington, D. C...... Chicago, TH... ees New York City, N. Y.. 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, TW... remem Boston, Mass = ---- New Yorks oie ITALY Birmingham, Ala..__._. Los Angeles, Calif. ...._. Sacramento, Calif__._._.. San Francisco, Calif.____ Stockton, Calif....e..... Denver, Colo. nama Trinidad, Colo... ..000 artford, Conn......... New Haven, Conn......_ Wilmington, Del........ Pensacola, Fla. cceeeaa._ sulate. Hussein Gadime, consul.__.____________ Matthew Murphy, consul. ooo... Daniel J. McGrath, 'consul.______.__"_ Percy Galwey Foley, consul. _._.______ Leo di McCauley, consul gen- eral. Sean Nuanan, consul.ooac oo 2.02000 John Mary Conway, vice consul______ Brendan MacCarthy O’Riordan, vice consul. Giuseppe Firpo, acting vice consul..__ Ernesto Arrighi, vice consul..__..___._ Vittorio Panattoni, consular agent----- Giuseppe Renzetti, consul general..__. Antonio Sanfelice dei Marchesi di Montefiore, vice consul. Enrico Alverte Mazzera, consular agent. Luigi Gabriele Asinari Sigray di San Marzano, consul. Michele Albi, consular agent... ...——___ , consular agent. __._______ Pasquale de Cicco, acting vice consul. Carmine Vignola, consular agent_______ Pietro Luigi Rosasco, consular agent. Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and ‘Wyoming. Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Geor- gia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsyl- vania, South Carolina, 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, Mont- 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, California, and Nevada. In California direct jurisdiction over the counties of Alameda, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Fresno, Glenn, Humboldt, Inyo, Kings, Lake, Las- sen, Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Men- docino, Merced, Modoc, Monterey, Napa, San Benito, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Trinity, Tulare, and Yolo. 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. In Pennsylvania the 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. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 575 ITALY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction ITALY—continued Pampa, Fla. .......0.... Savannah, Ga.....-.-.-. Honolulu, Hawaii.._____ Chicago, ll... .on-viee. nd Springfield, Ill. camemeoao Indianapolis, Ind._._____ Frontenac, Kans_._.___. Louisville, Ky... _..._.._ New Orleans, La._______ Portland, Maine________ Baltimore, Md...._.___. Boston, Mass. occa Lawrence, Mass_...._.. Springfield, Mass._.___.. Detroit, Mich... ....- St. Paul, Minn.........c Vicksburg, Miss. ._._..... St.Louis, Mo.:c 5. uk Butte, Mont__...__.___. Omaha, Nebr. __________ Reno, Neve. ...... Paterson, N. J... Trenton, N. J..oo.. alu Fillippo F. Licata, acting consular agent. Giuseppe Cafiero, consular agent.._._. ‘W. P. W. Turner, acting consul._______ Mario Carosi, consul general. _.___.____ Giuseppe Dall’Agnel, vice consul-____ , consular agent. moe... Vincenzo Lapenta, consular agent...__ Raffaele Purgatorio, consular agent. ___ Alfonso Facchetti Guiglia, consular agent. Ludovico Censi, consul. ______________ Antonino Vinti, vice consul__________. , consular agent... _____ Antonio Cuturi,consul....._...__._ __.. Guido Segre, consul general. __________ Silvio Vitale, honorary vice consul_____ Ottavio d’Amato, acting consular agent. , consular agent. _________. Enrico Guastone Belcredi, vice consul . Attilio Castigliano, consular agent. _.__ Andrea Bucci, consular agent......_._ Renato Citarelli, consul __.____________ Pietro Amabile Notti, consular agent. Vincenzo Chiodo, consular agent.______ Antonio Miniggio, consular agent_____ Carlo De Franchis, vice consul_..____. Ricco Matteo, consular agent. ..__..._ Felice Ronca, consular agent. cave. In Florida the counties of Alachua, Baker, Bay, Bradford, Broward, Charlotte, Citrus, Clay, Collier, Co- lumbia, Dade, De Soto, 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 Géorgia. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wis- consin. Direct jurisdiction over the counties of Boone, Bureau, Carroll, Cook, De Kalb, Du Page, Jo Daviess, Kane, Kankalee, Kendall, Lake, Lee, McHenry, Ogle, Stephenson, Vermilion, Whiteside, Will, and ‘Winnebago. 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. Kansas. Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, and Texas. Maine. Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. In Massachusetts the counties of Essex and Middlesex. In Massachusetts the counties of Berkshire, Barnstable, Dukes, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, and Plymouth. Direct jurisdiction over Michigan. Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Okla- homa, and Tennessee. Montana. Nebraska. Direct jurisdiction over Nevada. In New Jersey the counties of Essex, Hudson, Morris, Union, and Warren. 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 Somerset. 576 Congressional Directory ITALY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction ITALY—continued Albany, N. Yo. io oi... Buffalo, N. Y..... New York, N. Yauco Rochester, N. Y___._.__ Syracuse, N. Y......... Yonkers, N. Y.....ad.i. Akron, Ohio......c..i.. Cincinnati, Ohio-_...... Cleveland, Ohio_._______ Columbus, Ohio. .._____ Lorain, Ohio: .ncvwen-- Steubenville, Ohio....__ Youngstown, Ohio______ McAlester, Okla__.______ Portland, Oreg....:o col Johnstown, Pa___.__.____ Philadelphia, Pa.._..___ Pittsburgh, Pace... Germano Placido Bacecelli, consular agent. Rocco Spano, acting vice consul. ______ Gaetano Vecchiotti, consul general ____ Umberto Caradossi, vice consul _______ ——, viceconsul_______________ Guido Colonna dei Principi di Paliano, vice consul. Count Giovanni Revedin dei Mar- chesi di San Martino, vice consul. Cesare Sconfietti, consular agent. _____ Corrado Armieri, acting consular agent. Giuseppe Brancucei, consular agent _-.. Enrico Gullia, consular agent_._.._.__ Leo Pera, acting consular agent. ._____ Romeo Montecchi, consul_.___________ Francesco Cipriano, consular agent. . __ , consular agent. .maman.__ Attilio Serafini, consular agent_..._.___ , consular agent___...______ Giovanni Tua, acting consular agent .__ , consular agent___________ Angelo V. Jannelli, consular agent __ __ Giovanni Maria Pio Margotti, consul general. Chevalier Armando Salati, honorary vice consul. Andrea Ferrero, vice consul. ___._.__. In New York the counties of Albany, . Clinton, Columbia, Delaware, Es- sex, Franklin, Fulton, Greens, 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. Can, New Jersey, and New ork, 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, Wocd, and Wyandot. 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 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, Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 577 ITAL Y Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction ITALY—continued Scranton, Pa... = Fortunato Tiscar, consular agent.___.__ Areelbn, P. HB... .... , consular agent Mayaguez, P.B...oo..c Giacomo Antonio Caino, consular agent. Ponce Pe Be. oanci antes , consular agent... ___._. San Juan, BP. B..moeee eee Ciro. Malatrasi, consul............_. Rs Manila PB. 1. =i Rinaldo Pietro Staurenghi, acting consul. Providence, R.Y1........ , Vice consul ool ly Fort Worth, T'ex......._ Attilio Ortolani, consular agent____.__. Houston, TeX...-n-cemus Pietro Scardino, acting vice consul. .... 30063°—74-2—1ST ED—237 In Pennsylvania the counties of Brad- ford, Carbon, Columbia, Dauphin, Lackawanna, Lehigh, Luzerne, Ly- coming, Monroe, Montour, North- ampton, Northumberland, Pike, Sullivan, Schuylkill, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wyoming. 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, Rob- erts, 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. 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. 578 Congressional Directory ITALY—LATVIA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction ITALY—continued Salt Lake City, Utah. _. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Norfolk, Va. io. Liv.lhL Seattle, Wash_.......... Spokane, Wash._..__.... Milwaukee, Wis... JAPANESE EMPIRE Mobile, Ala... Juneau, Alasksa........... Los Angeles, Calif__.___. San Francisco, Calif_.__. Panama, Canal Zone.____ Honolulu, Hawaii_______ Chicago, Hl.0-..00 00]... New Orleans, La.__.___. Boston, Mass... ........ Sto Lonis, Moos oo. New York, N.:Y........ Portland, Oreg.......... Philadelphia, Pa._....... Davao; PL iwi aio... Manila PT. coal. SaniJuan, PoR.ls. J nied Galveston, TexX........._ Seattle, Wash__.._._____ LATVIA Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif_____ Honolulu, Hawaii_______ Chicago, Ill Indianapolis, Ind___.____ New Orleans, La_...____ Boston, Mass. .......... StalLouis; Mo... ..c.2.. New York, N.-Y....... Cleveland, Ohio________ Portland, Oreg.. [lL . co. Fortunato Anselmo, consular agent... Isidro de Lungo, in charge of consu- late. Rosario Carlo Ruggieri, acting con- sular agent. : Francesco Parenti, consul..._....____. Giuseppe A. Albi, acting consular agent. Angelo Cerminara, consular agent_____ Henry H. Clark, honorary consul___.. Emery Valentine, honorary consul____ Tomokazu Hori, consul... ______.. Shu Tomii, consul general ____________ Yorigoshi Saita, vice consul.___._______ Teijiro Tamura, consul general. _ Sadao Iguchi, consul... __.__ ak Yuki Sato, vice consul (acting consul). Ria Ely Danielson, honorary con- sul. CY HE | Baa En KeniTsurami,consul.. 0 = J. Franklin McFadden, honorary con- sul. Toyoji Kaneko, vice consul (acting consul). Kiyoshi Uchiyama, consul general____ Asisclo Markuach, honorary consul. __ J. H. Langben, honorary consul Issaku Okamoto, consul... ____ Leo E. Anderson, vice consul (honor- ary). Harry Willard Glensor, consul (honor- ary). —, vice consul __________.___ August Bontoux, consul (honorary)... Edward W. Hunter, 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). John M. Oolon, ConsStl...cevewesenwer - Utah. Virgin Islands. Virginia. Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Idaho and the eastern counties of Wash- ington. 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. Alaska, Montana, and Washington; and the counties of Boise, Bonner, Custer, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, 1omni, Nez Perce, and Shoshone in aho. 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. Hawaii. Illinois, Towa, Minnesota, Nebrasks, 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, Oregon, Foreign Consular Officers in the United States LATVIA—MEXICO 579 Residence Names and rank Jurisdiction LATVIA—continued Philadelphia, Pa_.______ Pittsburgh, Pa._..--:. = Manila, BP. I. ccn--uds Son Juan, P. B.-em=-1=- Memphis, Tenn. _....___ Galveston, Tex. .....__ Norfolk, Va. moet Seattle, Wash___________ Milwaukee, Wis...__._._ LIBERIA Mobiles Alf.....d sin -r== San Francisco, Calif_--.. Chicago, Ill... ccwnmasn New Orleans, La._______ Baltimore, Md. ..____ St. Louis, M0. .% ..ee—m== Jersey City, N. Jeunes Alb New York, N. Y...—---- Philadelphia, Pa__.___.. Manila, P. I.coc-tatmnns Galveston, Tex. .ooae-- LITHUANIA Bhiea20, Tl ven namronmyme Now. York, N. Y---com-m LUXEMBOURG San Francisco, Calif..___ Washington, D. C__.___ Chicago, Te. oie.osal Minneapolis, Minn_._..__ New York, N. Y_____._. Redfield, S. Dak_______. MEXICO Mobile, Ala__..._.....__ Douglas, Ariz. even 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). George W. Lovejoy, consul..._________ — ——— consul. _______________ Richard E. Westbrooks, consul... _.___ L. H. Reynolds, vice consul.._________ Ernest Lyon, consul general ___________ Hutchins Inge, consi... eee oo... ert W. Minick, vice consul.....__. ‘Walter F. Walker, consul ._______._.____ E. B. Merrill, vice consul... Helena S. Haines, consul___.______.____. Robert C. Moon, vice consul..___..____ R. Summers, consul J. BR. Gibson; conti. cecaanaenmmnenn Antanas Kalvaitis, consul... ___.____ Polivas Zadeikis, consul general _______ Petras Dauzvardis, vice consul... .___._ Prosper Reiter, consul... ooo... Prosper Reiter, jr., vice consul. _._____ Cornelius Jacoby, consul... ..__.___. John Marsch, honorary consul general __ Eugene Huss, vice consul Jean Baptiste Merkels, vice consul... , consul Othon Raths, vice consul... William H. Hamilton, honorary con- sul general. Harry Krombach, honorary consul____ Cornelius Staudt, honorary vice con- sul. Peary Daubenfeld, consul. ........._._ ? I ERR Francisco B. Salazar, consul __.._._____ 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. Tennesses. Texas. Virginia. ‘Washington. Wisconsin. Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Califor- nia, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indi- ana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Loui- siana, 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, Osborn Station, Warren, Tombstone, Bisbee, Lowell, Don Luis, Fairbank, Dragoon, St. David, Gleeson, Courtland, Benson, and Fort Huachuca, 580 Congressional Directory MEXICO Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction MEXICO—continued Naeo Ariz. ila Nogales, "Ariz... 0.00 Phoenix, Ariz... ....--- THeson, Ariz... nol Yuma, Ariz. oii. Calexico, Calif... Los Angeles, Calif_..._.__ Monterey, Calif... San Bernardino, Calif... San Diego, Calif. ._._.__ San Francisco, Calif_____ Colon, Canal Zone._..__ Panama, Canal Zone____ Denver, Colo __._______ Pampa, Blas... Honolulu, Hawaii_______ Shicago, MH... Tonisvillo, Ky... ........ New Orleans, La.aae ee CONSUILC IU SEL EI Leopoldo Diaz, vice consul.___..___.___ Joel S. Quiiiones, vice consul__________ Ignacio Gaxiola Peralta, consul.._____ . Tomas Morlet, vice consul. _______ Efrain G. Dominguez, vice consul ____ Asa Frank Post, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo S. Salazar, consul_____________ Carlos Elias, vice consul _ ____.________ Ricardo G. Hill, consul. ....... .......-- Manuel Aguilar y. Vazquez del Mer- cado, vice consul. Cosme Hinojosa, jr., vice consul__._____ Ernesto A. Romero, vice consul_______ Ignacio L. Batiza, consul... Luis: ¥. Castro; consul --2 17-0 Joaquin Terrazas, consul _____________ Francisco del Arco, consul general ____ Edmundo Gonzalez, consul___________ Antonio L. Schmidt, vice consul-_____ Guillermo D. Edgard, vice consul_____ Silvio Salazar, honorary consul________ Juan Manuel Salazar, honorary vice consul. : Nabor Séenz Rubio, honorary consul.__ Ricardo Sainz Rubio, honorary vice consul. ——, consul Rafael Ruesga, honorary consul. ______ , consul Eugenio Pesqueira, consul. ___________ Alejandro Elias Cass, vice consul______ Gabriel G. Romo, honorary consul____ Edmundo L. Aragon, consul. __.__.___ Municipalities of Naco, Osborn Sta- tion, Warren, Tombston, Bisbee, Lowell, Don Luis, Fairbank, Dra- goon, St. David, Gleeson, 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 Yavapai. Pima County. Imperial County, Calif.,, and Yuma, County, Ariz., except the city of Yuma. In California the counties of Los angeles, Orange, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. In California the counties of Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, Mono, Monterey, San Ben- ito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz, Stanislaus, Tulare, and Tuolumne. In COalifornia the counties of Inyo, Riverside, and San Bernardino. 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, Modoe, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacra- mento, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo, and Yuba. For that part of the Canal Zone be- tween the Atlantic Ocean and a point known as Gorgona. Canal Zone from Panama City to Gor- gona. Colorado and Wyoming. Florida. In Illinois the counties of Adams, Boone, Brown, Bureau, Carrol, Cass, Champaign, Christian, Clark, Coles, Cock, 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 Upper Michigan Peninsula, in- cluding the counties of Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Goge- bie, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menom- inee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft. Kentucky. Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, Tennessee, and Alabama, ex- cept Mobile County, Foreign Consular Officers in the United States MEXICO 581 Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction MEXICO—continued Baltimore, Md_.....___. Boston, Mass. Detroit, Mich. Kansas City, MOa-o--.. St. Louis, Mo. Albuquerque, N. Mex... Buffalo, N. Y_ New York, N. Toledo, Ohio... Ferien Oklahoma City, Okla___ Portland, Oreg Alfredo Bafios Coutreras, vice consul.__ Alfred R. Shrigley, honorary consul___ JogsiTontes B. consul... ManueliPier, consul... ceceianaa oe German Meade Fierro, consul.__.______ Joaquin Lopez Gardufio, honorary consul. : : Manuel C. Garcia, honorary vice con- sul. Leon L. Lancaster, honorary consul... __ Eduardo Villasefior, consul general____ Enrique L. Elizondo, consul___________ Edmundo Gonzalez, consul. __________ Elias Colunga, vice consul. ___________ Ernesto Laveaga, vice consul ___..______ Guillermo Grimm, honorary consul..___ Luis Perez Abreu, consul FEONSAITSIINET). ns 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, Jeflerson, Lake, Lawrence, Lucas, Mahoning, Medina, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskin- gum, Noble, Perry, Portage, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas, Washington, and Wayne). Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota. In Missouri the counties of Andrew, Atchison, Barton, Barry, Bates, Buchanan, Caldwell, Cass, Cedar, Clay, Clinton, Dade, De Kalb, Gentry, Henry, Holt, Jackson, Jasper, Johnson, Lafayette, Law- rence, McDonald, Newton, Noda- way, Platte, Ray, St. Clair, Vernon, and Worth. In Missouri the counties of Adair, Audrain, Benton, Bollinger, Boone, Butler, Callaway, Camden, Cape Giradeau, Carter, Carroll, Chariton, Christian, Clark, Cole, Cooper, Crawford, Dallas, Daviess, Dent, Douglas, Dunklin, Franklin, Gasco- nade, Greene, (Grundy, Harrison, Hickory, Howard, Howell, Iron, Jefferson, Knox, Laclede, Lewis, Linn, Lincoln, Livingston, Macon, Madison, Maries, Marion, Mercer, Miller, Mississippi, Moniteau, Monte= 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. Connecticut. In New Jersey the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somer- set, Sussex, Union, and Warren. New York, except counties of Erie and Niagara. Indirect jurisdiction over consulates at Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Norfolk, Philadel- phia, Pittsburgh, Providence, and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Lucas County, Ohio. Oklahoma. Portland. 582 Congressional Directory MEXICO Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction MEXICO—continued Philadelphia, Pa__-.-._. Pittsburgh, Pa..coucol Manila, P.lovaiv. co Ponce, Ps Baildon San Juan, P.-B. -- ==. Providence, R. I..______ Beaumont, Tex. .o._-... Brownsville, TeXoamon.__ Corpus Christi, Tex... Dallas, Tex...» ooo Del Rio, Mex.cui. lamin Eagle Pass, Tex......._. 2 CONSARY. covenant D0 Antun J. Guina, honorary consul--.-._ Alfredo. Cormelo Casas, honorary consul. Antonio Corretjer, honorary consul____ Santiago B. Alidez, honorary consul. _._ Edgard L. Burchell, honorary consul.__ W. D. Gordon, honorary consul.._____ —_— consul... TTI EE Samuel J. Trevifio, consul .___________ 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. 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. Departments of Aguadilla, Arecibo, Mayaguez, and Ponce. Departments of Guayama, Humacao, and San Juan and the U. S. posses- sions in the Lesser Antilles. Rhode Island. Beaumont, and the counties of An- gelina, Chambers, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Orange, Sa- bine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler. Counties of Brooks, Cameron, Jim Wells, Kenedy, Kleberg, and Willacy. Nueces and San Patricio Counties. In Texas the counties of Anderson, Archer, Armstrong, Baylor, Bosque, Bowie, Briscoe, Callahan, Camp, Cass, Cherokee, Childress, Clay, Collin, Collingsworth, Comanche, Cooke, Coryell, Cottle, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Dickens, Donley, Eastland, Ellis, Erath, Falls, Fannin, Foard, Franklin, Freestone, Gray- son, Gregg, Hall, Hamilton, Harde- man, Harrison, Haskell, Henderson, Hill, Hood, Hopkins, Hunt, Jack, Johnson, Jones, Kaufman, Xent, King, Knox, Lamar, Limestone, Marion, McLennan, Montague, Morris, Motley, Navarro, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker, Rains, Red River, Rockwall, Rusk, Shackelford, Smith, Somervell, Stephens, Stone- wall, Tarrant, Throckmorton, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, Wood, and Young. In Texas the counties of Orockett, Sutton, Terrell, and Val Verde. In Texas the counties of Dimmit, Ed- wards, Kinney, Maverick, Uvalde, and Zavala. J | Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 583 MEXICO—NETHERLANDS Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction MEXICO—continued EliPaso, Tex. anns Aurelio L. Gallardo G., consul general | In Arizona the counties of Graham and Galveston, Tex_...._____ Houston, Tex.........-.. 1.87600, ToX...ccnmrannun MeAllen, Tex... oo... Presidio, Tex. .ca-usdaid. San Antonio, Tex. ...._. Zapata, TexX..waiouuc i Salt Lake City, Utah ___ Norfolk, Va......cavuai on St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash______._____ Milwaukee, Wis..._____ MONACO San Francisco, Calif _.____ Chicago, 11. .0 Los oii Boston, Mass... New York, N. Y......L. NETHERLANDS Mobile, All... eenene Los Angeles, Calif.___.___ Salvador Bafios Contreras, consul __._. Jestis Gutiérrez, vice consul __________ Lamberto H. Obregon, vice consul____ Juan E. Richer, consul... _. Ricardo Garcia, vice consul ___________ Bernardo Chavez, consul__.__________ 5 Gustavo Garza Lopez, consul._.______ Carlos Elias, vice consul... ...___. Rafael de la Colina, consul general. _._ Lauro Izaguirre, consul __ Efrain G. Dominguez, vice consul...._ Javier Osornio, vice consul. ooo. Rafael San Miguel, honorary consul.._ ‘Hermenegildo Robles, consul._..__.____ Bruce Austin, honorary consul _______. George Levi, honorary consul _________ W. P. Lawson, honorary consul_______ E. P. Kirby Hade, honorary consul.__ Roger Bocqueraz, consul (honorary). ns yeonsul... iongy alia a Charles F. Flamand, consul (honorary). Paul Fuller, consul general (honorary). L. K. Van Leer, vice consul (honorary). A. Hartog, consul (honorary). _..____.___ Greenlee. In New Mexico, the coun- ties of Catron, Colfax, Curry, Cha- ves, De Baca, Dona Ana, Eddy, Grant, Guadalupe, Harding, Hidal- 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, ILips- 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, Reagan, Run- nels, Sterling, Tom Green, and Upton. In T'exas 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, McCOol- loch, Mason, Medina, Menard, Milam, Mills, Real, San Saba, Schleicher, Travis, Williamson, and Wilson. Indirect jurisdiction over the consulates at Brownsville, Oor- pus Christi, Dallas, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, Houston, Laredo, Oklahoma City, and the consular 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. Alabama. Arizona and that part of California south of Inyo, Kern, and San Luis Obispo Counties, except the counties of Imperial and San Diego, 584 Congressional Directory NETHERLANDS—NICARAGUA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction NETHERLANDS—contd. San Diego, Calif. _._____ San Francisco, Calif____. Cristobal, Canal Zone... Panama, Canal Zone___.. Denver, Colo___._.____. Jacksonville, Fla________ Pensacola, Fla_.______.. amps, Fla 12 0r J J. Savannah, Ga... ...._.. Honolulu, Hawaii._____. Chicago, N¥.J....0000 00 Indianapolis, Ind. ______ Orange City, Jowa.______ New Orleans, La________ Baltimore, Md__________ Boston, Mass... oo. _- Detroit, Mich___.______._. Grand Rapids, Mich____ Minneapolis, Minn_____ Guliport, Miss... .... Kansas City, Mo.___.___ St.Louis; Mo. oibizerd NewYork, N..¥........ Portland, Oreg.__________ Philadelphia, Pa__.______ Cebu, Po I...0uuii. Haile, Pade... Lal. oil Manila, P. Yoo nanll Mayaguez, P. R___._____ Ponce, P. R San Juan, P.R_L.il Charleston, S. C______._ Galveston, Tex..._...... Port Arthur, Tex... San Antonio, Tex______. Salt Lake City, Utah... Newport News, Va______ Nariolk, Va......c..... St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash... _...... NICARAGUA Mobile, Ala. Joo iol Calexico, Calif... J. J. van Eizenga, vice consul (hon- orary). H. A. van Coenen Torchiana, consul general (honorary). E. F. R. de Lanoy, consul Julio A. Salas, consul (honorary)...._. D. M. Sasso, consul general (honorary). G. J. Rollandet, vice consul (honorary). Carlton C. Arnow, acting vice consul... W. 8S. McKenzie Oerting, vice consul (honorary). R.vanJ net Blinck, vice consul (honorary). Clarence S. Chance, acting vice consul.- C. A. Mackintosh, consul (honorary) - J. Vennema, consul general (honorary) - A. P. van den Burch, consul... --.. —— consul. G. Klay, vice consul (honorary) ._.___ A. Terkuhle, consul (honorary).______ J. M. Bikbergen, honorary consul.____ H.J. E. van Oosten, consul (honorary). William G. Bryant, consul (honorary). . Ray, vice consul (honorary). Jacob Steketee, consul (honorary)..._. J Qin Steketee, vice consul (honor- ary). L. C. Wilten, vice consul (honorary). A. O. Thompson, vice consul (hon- orary). William A. Hannon, consul (honorary). H. ter Braak, consul (honorary).._..__ W. P. Montyn, consul general ________ A. J. D. Steenstra-Touissaint, vice consul. George Powell, vice consul (honorary). P. J. Groenendaal, consul (honorary)... Guy Walford, acting vice consul-_____ Francis Wallace Pelling, acting vice consul (honorary). iB. Heybroek, consul... .ccovevanaai T. Bremer, vice consul (honorary). _._ O. F. Bravo, vice consul (honorary)-__ P. J. Armstrong, vice consul (hon- orary). Alberti Lee, consul... __._.. ——— consul... ________.______ R.J. McDonough, consul (honorary). - E. A. Bunge, consul (honorary)....__. Bertil Korling, honorary vice consul. B. Tiemersma, vice consul (honor- ary). E. D. J. Luening, vice consul (honor- ary). 3.2. Dekker,;eonsul. oo. ok Emile A. Berne, acting consul A. van der Spek, vice consul (honorary). , consul a ers Re Arturo Pallais, jr., honorary vice con- Long Beach, Calif.._.... 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, Maryland, and West Vir- ginia. 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- oma. 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 Isiands. ‘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. Texas (except Galveston and suburbs). Utah. City of Newport News. North Carolina and Virginia (except city of Newport News). St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas. ‘Washington and Alaska. sul. Jorge Heinsch, honorary consul....... Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 085 NICARAGUA—NORWAY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction NICARAGUA—continued Los Angeles, Calif _______ Sacramento Calif _______. San:Diego, Calif... ...--- San Francisco, Calif..._- Cristobal, Canal Zone... Panama, ‘Oanal Zone... Miami, fla: =... _......- St. Petersburg, Pla... Fama Tilsen ms ns Chicago, 11. ......-oill0. New Orleans, La_..._.__ Baltimore, Md....._____ Boston, Mass. ..nouve-.- Minneapolis, Minn. ____ Kansas City, Mo_______ St. L.ouis,Mo..=---...- Jersey City, N. J__..._._ AIAN Y, IN. Y..on-oonao New York, N. Y__....__ Syracuse, N.Y ..-—2 21% (San Francisco) Oregon. Philadelphia, Pa________ Manila, P.Jocweemncande Corpus Christi, Tex... Galveston, Tex._..._____ Houston, Tex... wv Port Arthur, Tex... San Antonio, Tex_______ Newport News, Va_.___. Richmond, Va... NORWAY Mobile, Als.......cunecur Juneau, Alaska.___. - 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..oae.-... Pensacola, Fla. oo... Tampa, Bla. oc... Savannah, Ga. ......___ Honolulu, Hawaii_..____ Chicago, IN... eee Arturo Pallais, honorary consul. ._____ José Argiiello, honorary consul. _______ Julio César Juarez, consul (honorary) - Domingo Salinas, consul general ______ Teresa Argiiello Tefel, honorary vice consul. Roberto gh! honorary consul-_ Frends M. iy honorary vice con- Berthold Singer, consul general _._____ Julio Castro, consul general _ __.___.____ mee QONSAY oD J. M.. Almeida, honorary consul.______ José Guerrero, honorary consul._._____ CONS Ea 0 aif on ret meee, GOB ee LL LL — ‘yicoconsul.... i. ..__. Gunnar Fromen, honorary consul_.___ Timoteo Vaca Seydel, consul general. _ Serapio Ocampo, honorary vice consul. Heberto Lacayo, honorary consul. ._ _. Enrique Klinghoffer, honorary vice consul. , consul general. __________ Yoon Guerrero Potter, consul gen- eral. Rafael Deshon, honorary consul_______ Trinidad Eugenio Lacayo, honorary consul general. Vicente L. Legarda, honorary vice consul. Arturo Padilla, honorary consul__._____ Jobe L. O’Brien, honorary consul... T. L. Evans, honorary consul_________ —, consul Irma Tefel de Im honorary vice consul. Thomas Alden Provence, vice consul (honorary). _| Herbert Lionel Faulkner, vice consul. Andy O. Nelson, vice consul (hon- orar John Engebretsen, vice consyl (hon- orary). Saal Steckmest, consul..____________ Andreas Bjolstad, vice consul. _._.____ Thomas Jacome, vice consul (honor- ary). ——t eee QODSU LL Nathaniel Barnett Borden, vice con- sul (honorary). Jason Curry Outler, vice consul (hon- orary). Charles Sigsbee Lowe, vice consul (honorary). John Edmund Toulmin, vice consul (honorary). Barton Hewitt Smith, vice consul (honorary). Reidar Arnljot Trosdal, vice consul (honorary). Victor Cotta Schoenberg, consul (honorary). Olof Bernts, consul..........ceceeeeeee 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. i 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, Kev West, Mi- ami, and Tampa). Tampa. Georgia. Hawaii. Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Mis- souri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Tens nessee, and Wisconsin. Err eee 586 Congresstonal Directory NORWAY—PANAMA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction NORWAY—continued Decorah, Iowa... Trond Stabo, vice consul (honorary)..| Iowa. New Orleans, La... Walter Frederick Jahncke, vice con- | Louisiana. | sul (honorary). Portland, Maine... ..... Seneca Arthur Paul, vice consul | Maine. (honorary). Baltimore, Md........... Joel M. Cloud, vice consul (honorary).| Maryland. Boston, Mass. -ceveacuan Georg Tausan Vedeler, vice consul | Massachusetts. (honorary). Detroit, Mich........... Carl Bromstad Moe, vice consul (hon- | Michigan. Gulfport, Miss........... St.Louis, Mo........... Billings, Mont.....noa-s Newark, N. J... Albany, NY a New York. N. Y........ Niagara Falls, N. Y.._.. Wilmington, N. O...__. Grand Forks, N. Dak.__. Cleveland, Ohio... Portland, Orez......n-- Philadelphia, Pa__.._.._ Cebu, BP... Manila, P.I oe San Juan, P.B_....... Charleston, S. C........ Sioux Falls, S. Dak_.__. Galveston, Tex.......... Houston, Tex... Port Arthur, Tex... Salt Lake City, Utah___ Newport News, Va______ Norfolls, Va... .oo0.0. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- ands. Port Townsend, Wash __ Seattle, Wash______.__.__ Milwaukee, Wis__.____.._ PANAMA Birmingham, Ala._____. Mobile, Ala Berkeley, Calif_.._.____. Glendale, Calif-_____.___ Long Beach, Calif.______ orary). Engebreth Hagbarth Hobe, consul (honorary). Harry (Halfdan) Eberhardt, vice con- sul (honorary) Olus John Dedeaux, vice consul (hon- orary). » Vie constloces wivmwnind. Christian Rostad Hansen, vice consul (honorary). , viceconstl......cwmsesses Donald G. Kibbey, vice consul (hon- orary). Rolf Asbjorn Christensen, consul gen- eral. Siqurd Cyr Klingenberg, vice consul. . Olaf Tostrup, vice consul..cmneeeeoa-- Job Morten August Stillesen, vice consul (honorary). John D. Corbett, vice consul (honor- ary). nga Ar Andreas Berg, vice consul on Hans Glad. Block, vice consul (honor- J 2h Chester Calhoun, in charge of vice consulate. Ta». Slovarp, vice consul (honor- ary). Mathias Moe, vice consul (honorary). Guy Walford, vice consul. __._________ Thorbjérn. Miiller Holmsen, consul (honorary). William Edward Alexander Lee, con- sul (honorary). James Doar Lucas, vice consul (hon- orary). Niels ver 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, vice consul (honorary). Einar Beyer, consul (honorary) ce... Christen Stang Andersen, vice consul (honorary). Olaf I. Rove, vice consul (honorary). . ones E. Posey, honorary consul._.... A. H. Diaz, vice consul (honorary)... Gonzalo Sosa Dutari, consul (honor- ry). J i] A. Barrelier, honorary vice consul. Alfredo O. Boyd, honorary consul.._. Enrique Halphen, honorary consul... 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 587 Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction PANAMA—continued Los Angeles, Calif _______ Monrovia, Calif .._._..___ Oakland, Calif... -—-_-_ Pasadena, Calif... San Diego, Calif. _.___. San Fernando, Calif ____ San Francisco, Calif_.___ Santa Barbara, Calif____ Denver, Colo... Washington, D. C______ Jacksonville, Fla____.___. Miami, Flo. naa Chicago, Ill. ______ Dubuque, Iowa Lexington, Ky... mon--- New Orleans, La___.____ Baltimore, Md.-.....---- Boston, Mass.....-~----- Detroit, Mich__..___.____ Guliport, Miss... .——--- St. Louis and Kansas City, Mo. Silver City, N. Mex_____ New York, N. Y.....__. Chorloite, N.C... o—- Cincinnati, Ohio..______ Philadelphia, Pa Pitisburzh, Pa... Manila, P.L.......... Aguadifla;P.R._........ Avecibo, B-B_oa Mayaguez, P. R________ Ponee, P. RB... == SanJaan, P.R....-a-- Providence, R. I________ Dallas, Tox... cu... onan Fort-Worth, Tex......-. Galveston, Tex.......... Houston, Tex. ....-—--= Port Arthur, Tex... Hampton Roads, Va____ Newport News, Va______ Norfolk, Va... 2 St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Puget Sound, Wash_____ Seattle, Wash___________ PARAGUAY Mobile, Als......... cos Los Angeles, Calif _______ Adolfo de la Guardia, honorary consul. Eduardo de 1a Guardia, consul (honor- ary). ; Roberto Van Hoorde, honorary vice consul. Julio Valdés, consul... _._._______ Agustin Alberto de la Guardia, honor- | ary vice consul. Salvador C. Navarro, honorary consul. Eric Sao Barham, consul (honor- ary). Gerald Harcourt Morrice, vice consul (honorary). Ernesto Valencia, consul (honorary) - - Medardo Villarreal, consul general. ___ Ovidio Sosa, honorary vice consul_____ José Agustin Arango, honorary consul. Edwin L. Apperson, consul (honor- ary). Luis R. Alfaro, honorary consul..__._. Emilio Carles, honorary consul___.____ B. Howard Brown, honorary consul... consul. Loos. anual TF. M. Traynor, honorary consul.__.___ John Ashley Jones, consul (honorary)... A Bert W. Caldwell, honorary consul___. John Rider Wallis, consul (honorary). George Hamilton, consul (honorary). - Ernesto Brin, consul general __________ Dario Felix Ballina, honorary vice consul. Ricardo Martinelli, honorary consul.__ William F. Volmerhaus, vice consul (honorary). Antonio José Sucre, consul (honorary). Alfred R. Shrigley, vice consul (honor- ary). Louis James Rosenberg, consul (hon- orary). Max Rowland, honorary consul_______ Joseph 8. 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 Arosemens Pinilla, consul (hen- orary). Thomés J. Owens, consul (honorary)... L. W. Hartman, consul (honorary)___. Carlos Berguido, jr., consul (honorary). Jorge E. Amador, honorary consul. .__ E. C. Ross, consul (honorary).-._.___._.. Jorge Silva y Sapia, consul (honorary)- Vicente Barletta, honorary consul_____ Enrique Gomez, honorary vice consul... Edelmiro Huertas Zayas, honorary consul. Luis Brau, consul (honorary). ._-..._. José Lopez Garcia, honorary consul. - _ Robert Burgher, consul (honorary)... John A. Prather, honorary vice consul. L. T. Rogers, consul (honorary)_.__.... R. L. O’Brien, consul (honorary).-..... 8. W. Heald, consul... coo. oozed W. H. Gilliland, consul (honorary)... Paul Richman, honorary vice consul. . W. E. Barrett, honorary vice consul. _ Armando Carles, honorary consul_____ Isaac Parewensky, consul (honorary)-- Mauricio S. Sasso, honorary vice consul ~vicsieconsul.. oo. oo. Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. .____ Elliott G. Rickarby, vice consul._..._. Harry A. dae-English, consul._..____. 588 Congressional Directory PARAGUAY—POCLAND Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction PARAGUAY—continued San Diego, Calif _...____ San Francisco, Calif_____ Jacksonville, Fla__._____ Chicago, Mc... oo Indianapolis, Ind_...__.. New Orleans, La__._____ Baltimore, Md........-. Boston, Mass... -. Detroit, Mich... ........ Kansas City, Mo___.__.. St.Louis, Mo. - Newark, N. J... New York, N. Y-......- Cincinnati, Ohio________ Portland, Oreg........... Manila, P. I Newport News, Va_____ Norioll, Va... Richmond, Va... Seattle, Wash._.._____.._. PERSIA (See Iran) PERU Los Angeles, Calif.....__ San Diego, Calif... San Francisco, Calif_____ J Colon, Canal Zone... Cristobal, Canal Zone... Panama, Canal Zone___. Honolulu, Hawaii__._.__ Chicago, Ill New Orleans, La_.______ Baltimore, Md... Boston, Mass... . Detroit, Mich... _... Buffalo, N. Y New. York, N.Y... ..-- Toledo, Ohio... Portland, Oreg--.. Philadelphia, Pa________ Manila, P. I Mayaguez, P. R_..___.. San Juan, P. BR. ....co.. Houston, Tex... .... San Antonio, Tex_______ Newport News, Va____. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash............. POLAND Chicago, TN. ivacaaaan Richard N. Thompson, consul (hon- orary). Roberto H. Vorfeld, consul__._____..__ Juan D. Vickers, vice consul. .________ Fred W. Allen, honorary consul_______ Carleton B. McCulloch, consul. ______ James Lloveras, consul... _._._______ Thomas E. Barrett, jr., consul... __._. Jerome A. Petitti, consul... __ s.viceteonsul. 0 U0 0 00 F. L. Phillips, vice consul... ._..... yw. viceieonsull aio: CL — Vico consul... ... William Wallace White, consul general. Philip de Ronde, consul Edmund Dill Scotti, vice consul ______ Irwin F. Westheimer, vice consul. ___. Howard L. White, honorary consul... Juan J. Russell, consal................. ,:Vice consul. oo Lillo Consul... Dili THIGH Manuel Antonio Calderon, honorary consul. Nestor Michelena Mfstiga, honorary vice consul. Santiago R. Deza, honorary consul.___ Fernando Berckemeyer, consul general. Josef Sigall, honorary vice consul ______ consul non Slo at Enrique Vallarino, consul. _ _..________ Enrique Garcia Bedoya, hecnorary consul general. L. A. R. Gaspar, honorary consul.____ , consul Oscar Vasquez Benavides, consul. ____ Juan de Dios Martinez Galdino, honorary consul. Max von Klock y Cordel, honorary consul. Oscar Freyre, consul Rex W. Wells, honorary consul________ Eduardo Sarmiento C., consul. __._____ Oscar Freundt, consul Antonio Melion y Pavia, honcrary consul. Guillermo H. Moscoso, honorary vice consul. Emiliano Mendez Fernandez, honor- ary consul. Ricardo Villafranea, honorary consul... T. P. Host, honorary vice consul__.__. George Levi, consul (honorary) .__.... Enrique D. Tovary R.,consul._...____ Waclaw Gawronski, consul general... United States. Norfolk and Newport News. Canal Zone, except Cristobal. Hawaii. Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Delaware and Maryland. United States. Pennsylvania. Texas. Jurisdiction includes Norfolk. ‘Washington. Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colo- 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, and Wyoming; Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 589 POLAND—RUMANIA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction POLAND—continued New York, N. Voeerenr Pittsburgh, Pa...--.~--+ PORTUGAL San Francisco, Calif_____ Panama, Canal Zone... Tamng, FTIR... noemeenns Honolulu, Hawaii_._.____ Chicago, TH --. .. .. New Orleans, La_.______ Baltimore, Md......---- Boston, Mass. ._......._ Fall River, Mass..._____ New Bedford, Mass_._._ New York, N. Y_._____. Philadelphia, Pa________ Manfls, PoYi 0k SansJuan, PR. ....L00 Providence, R. I._______ Galveston, Tex. ._....__. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. RUMANIA San Francisco, Calif_____ Chicago, TH]. convenes Sylvester Gruszka, consul general _____ vigsrconsalaliy oo 0 lL Karol Ripa, consul general. ____._._._.. Francisco de Pina Arago e Costa, consul. G. Armas do Amaral, vice consul (honorary). —— ——— consul. _______________ Leo Francis Pallardy, vice consul (honorary). Alberto Alves De Araujo, consul (honorary). Joaquim Maia Aguas, consul _________ J. Leonard Herron, vice consul.______. Luiz da Costa Carvalho, consul (hon- orary). Jodo Francisco dos Santos, Jr., vice consul. Adelbert W. Mears, vice consul (hon- orary). Jose do Sacramento Xara Brasil Rodrigues, consul. 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). Victor Eduardo Verdades de Faria, consul general. José de Saavedra de Figueiredo, vice consul (honorary). Jodo de Aragio Barros, deputy consul... Camilo Camara, consul (honorary)... John W. Ferrier, consul (honorary). __ Dionisio Trigo, consul (honorary) ..._. José Agostinho De Oliveira, vice con- sul (honorary). Robert O’Brien, consul (honorary)... Donato Alvarez Assis, vice consul_____ M. E. Trepuk, consul (honorary)..... Dimitrie Dem. Dimancescu, consul. __ , consul general___________ 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. 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. Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash- ington. Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, ‘Wisconsin, and Wyoming. 590 Congressional Directory RUMANIA—SPAIN Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction RUMANIA—continued New York, N. Yaaaan.-. Cleveland, Ohio.____.__._ Philadelphia, Pa.....__. SALVADOR (See El Salvador.) SAN MARINO NewYork, N.Y. a0.08l SIAM San Francisco, Calif__... Chicago, Il: i. _-.- Boston, Mass........ewn-a New York, N. Ye. even Philadelphia, Pa._._._.____ Manila, Pio... 000 Seattle, Wosh............. SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUB-~ LICS, UNION OF San Francisco, Calif_____ Washington, D. C____.. New York, N:Y.uo. a0. SPAIN Mobile, Ala.....-......... Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif._.__ San Leandro, Calif______ Colon, Canal Zone______ Panama, Canal Zone... New London, Conn... Jacksonville, Fla________ Key West, Fla... Pensacola, Fla... oz... T. Tileston Wells, (honorary). Carol Tarcauanu, vice consul. ......_. consul general George Anagnostache, vice consul___._ Mihail Marian, consul (honorary)..... Ercole H. Locatelli, consul general_.__ Angelo Flavio Guido, vice consul._._.. Martin J. Dinkelspiel, consul (hon- orary). John W. Dinkelspiel, vice consul (honorary). Nathan William MacChesney, consul general (honorary). Arthur Messenger Beale, consul (honorary). Charles W. Atwater, consul general (honorary). Wille E. Goodman, consul (honor- ary). E. A. Perkins, consul (honorary). ..... Stanley Arthur Griffiths, consul (hon- orary). Moisey Grigorevich Galkovich, consul general. Nikolai Valerianovich Aliavdin, vice consul. Gregory Ilyich Gokhman, consul ______ Jean Joseph Lvovich Arens, consul general, Peter Davidovich Gusev, vice consul.__ Boris Petrovich Roumiantsev, vice consul. Juan Llorca y Marti, honorary vice consul. ; Alejandro Torres, honorary vice con- sul. Alvaro de Aguilar y Goméz Acebo, consul general. Enrique Carlos de la Casa y Garcia Calamarte, consul. Marcos Gracia Palacio, honorary con- sular agent. Antonio Rodriguez Martin, honorary vice consul. Francisco Andrade Polanco, honorary consul. Pedro Colonge Gareia, vice consul._.__ Juan Arenzana y Chinchilla, consul general. Santiago Ruiz Tabanera, vice consul. _. Francisco Pifiol Giro, consular agent (honorary). Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul__. Feliciano Castro Verde, honorary vice consul. J. Garriga, honorary vice consul____._. 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. Supervisory jurisdiction over Chi- cago and San Francisco districts. Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Virginia. Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyo- ming, and Territory of Hawaii. Alabama, Arkansas, District of Colum- bia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vir- ginia, West Virginia, and Wash- ington. Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indi- ana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massa-~ chusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis« souri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Da- kota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and ‘Wisconsin. Alabama. In California the counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego. Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Wash- ington, Wyoming, Alaska and Hawaii. Canal Zone from Cristobal to San Pablo, inclusive. Cristobal. Canal Zone (except the Colon district). New London, Conn. Duval and Nassau Counties, Fla. Monroe County, Fla. Escambia County, Fla. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 591 SPAIN Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction SPAIN—continued Pampa, Flac. nai Savannah, Ga... Honolulu, Hawaii_._____ Chicago, Tl. oon uns New Orleans, La________ Baltimore, Md...-_----_: Boston, Mass... Detroit, Mich._____._____ Gulfport, Miss. ............ St. Louis, Mo... ... New-York, N.Y... -—- Portland, Oreg._~_.____ Philadelphia, Pa..._____ Pittsburgh, Pa.........__ Yegaspl, P, J.coc ovine TCE, Pil wr mops mie Manila, P. LF... Tugueczarae, BP. 1 Zamboanga, P. I... ..__. Aguadills, P. B......... Arecibo, P.R........oca.. Humacse, P. B.ovvrem-- Mayaguez, P. R..._.__. Ponce Po Race San Joan, P. B.....new- H:- Pas0, Tox... vena Pablo de Ubarriy Soriano, consul______ Antonio Flores Garcia, honorary vice consul. Angel M. Dunn, honorary vice consul. Irving Otis Pecker, vice consul (hon- orary). Sebastian Romero Radigales, consul... Max Enry Ehlert, honorary vice con- sul. Luis Careaga y Echevarria, consul. ___ Jaime Ramoneda Cuch, vice consul. __ Aurelio T. Schiaffino, honorary vice consul. Cesareo de Garavilla y Alverdi, hon- orary vice consul. Lazaro Bartolome Queralt, honorary vice consul. Eduardo Ferndndez Alonso, honorary vice consul. José Alvarez Hernandez, vice consul (honorary). Antonio de la Cruz Marin, consul general. Mariano Angel Silvela y de Tordesil- las, 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. Jenaro de Membiela y Porto, honorary vice consul. Fernando Reguera y Frias, in charge of consulate. Joaquin Zuluaga Garteizgogeascoa, honorary consular agent. Luis Soler de Cornella, consular agent (honorary). Miguel Espinos y Bosch, consul general. Andrés Rodriguez Ramon, vice consul_ Enrique Zobel y de Ayala, honorary vice consul. José Maria Hernandez, consular agent. Marcelino Lozano Lopez, honorary consular agent. Higinio Ferreira y 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 Melia y Ferrer, honorary vice consul. : Luis Arino y Cenzano, consul general. Jacinto Ventosa Arauz, vice consul... Dionisio Trigo Marcos, honorary vice consul. Ramiro Diaz Erro, honorary vice consul. Florida, South Carolina, and Georgia. Georgia (except Glynn County). Hawaii. Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken- tucky, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, and Oklahoma. Maryiand and the District of Colum- ia. Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. Michigan. 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, District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Vir- ginia, and in New Jersey the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Glouces- ter, 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, Cebu, Leyte, and Samar. Provinces of Antique, Capiz, Iloilo, 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, Peiiuelas, Salinas, Santa Isabel, and Yauco. Island of Puerto Rico, Vieques Island, and the Virgin Islands. El Paso County, Tex. 592 Congressional Directory SPAIN—SWEDEN Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction SPAIN—continued Galveston, Tex......... Port:Arthur, Tex......... Norfolk: Va... it ia... St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Washes... Jo SWEDEN Mobile, Ala. o.oo... Skagway, Alaska. .___.. Los Angeles, Calif_._____ San Diego, Calif________ San Francisco, Calif. ___ Colon, Canal Zone______ Panama, Canal Zone___. Tampa Pla =... 00 Savannah, Ga._.._.____.. Honolulu, Hawaii..__._. Chicago, Ill New Orleans, La________ Baltimore, Md....._.._.. Boston, Mass. coo Detroit, Mich... ......._ Minneapolis, Minn__.___ Kansas City, Mo___._... Omaha, Nebr......._.__ Buflalo, NY... S000 Jamestown, N. New York, N.Y... Cleveland, Ohio... Portland, Ores.......... Philadelphia, Pa________ Manila, BoY ...... Ponce, PB... SsnJuan,P. B... ..... Galveston, Tex.......... Salt Lake City, Utah_.. Norfolk, Va... .:c0il 0 St. Thomas, Virgin Is- ands. Seattle, Wash... José G. de Gregorio y Arribas, consul. Narcisco Estrada y Vallet, honorary vice consul. Fernando Prd, 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). Edward Anton Rasmusson, vice con- sul (honorary). Peter N. Engblom, vice consul (hon- orary). John Waldo Malmberg, vice consul (honorary). Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, consul _____ Corl arog Emil Lundbéick, vice con- su Julio Abraham Salas, vice consul (honorary). Rudolf Bierman de St. Malo, consul (honorary). William P. Anderson, vice consul_____ Aage Georg Schroder, vice consul (hon- orary). Nils P. Larsen, vice consul (honorary). Oscar Constans Gorgedt Lundquist, consul. Gustaf Bernhard Anderson, vice con- sul (honorary). George Plant, vice consul (honorary). Edgar T. Fell, vice consul (honorary). - Emil Otto Julius Danielsson, vice consul (honorary). Carl Berglund, vice consul (honorary). Carl Fredrik Hellstrom, vice consul... A. Hawkinson, vice consul (honorary). Nils-Erik Gustaf Ekblad, vice consul. Carl Axel Adolf Wollert, vice consul... sviceeonsal. so... C00 Carl Alfred’ Okerlind, vice consul (honorary). Johan Martin Kastengren, consul general. Lennart Rolf Gerhard Arfwedson, vice consul. Ulf Gudman Lorentz Barck-Holst, vice consul. Herman J. Nord, vice consul (hon- orary). Eric Emil Peterson, vice consul (hon- orary). Maurice Hogeland, vice consul (hon- orary). Helge Janson, vice consul. ...._._______ Frank R. Hanson, in charge of con- sulate. Pedro Lotario Armstrong, vice consul. Ernest Yeates, consul (honorary)._.... Robert Richard Prann, vice consul..__ (honorary). Herman Arthur Bornefeld, vice consul (honorary). viceeconsul.............. Hoan Aspegren, vice consul (hon- orar Axel Holst, consul (honorary). ...--.-- Yngve Carl Ivar Lundequist vice consul (honorary). Texas and New Mexico. In Texas the counties of Hardin, Jeffer- son, Liberty, and Orange. Virginia. Virgin Islands. ‘Washington. Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash- ington and for Hawaii. 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. Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Dis- trict of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Mary- land, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Vir- ginia, and West Virginia. Philippine Islands. Island of Puerto Rico. Virgin Islands. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 593 SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction SWITZERLAND Los Angeles, Calif... San Francisco, Calif__.__ Denver, Colo..convena- Washington, D. C....._ Chicago, IN. coomoaneaae New Orleans, La_._..... Kansas City, Mo St.Louis, Mo....... mx New York, N. ¥......-. Cincinnati, Ohio.___.... Philadelphia, Pa_.._.... Pittsburgh, Pa. =i. Manila, P. 0... San Joan, PoR oo. 2- VirzinJslands.....--5--. Seattle, Wash. ooo... TURKEY Chicago, TH. .ouooai anes New Orleans, La... Boston, Mass............ New York, N. Y........ URUGUAY Mobile, Ala...coc--. = Los Angeles, Calif _______ San Diego, Calif. _______ San Francisco, Calif_____ Jacksonville, Fla_._ 3 Pensacola, Fla... “ ramps, Fla.c. .co.ct.ue Chicago, I. cuuvi. uur New Orleans, La..__.... Baltimore, Md_...__..__ Boston, Mass... 30063°—T74-2—1ST ED Otto Wartenweiler, honorary consul... Walter Baumann, in charge of con- sulate. Paul Weiss, consul (honorary) _...... Walter Schmid, in charge of consulate.. Hans Schaerrer, consular agent_.._____ Alfred Aigler, honorary consul. ._...... Victor Nef, consul general..___________ Henry Escher, honorary consul....... Alphonse Biber, in charge of consulate. Maurice Rohrbach, in charge of con- sulate. Frederic Otto Henzi, consular agent.__ Albert Sidler, honorary consul ....__.. Victor Braegger, consular agent. .____. Verner Tobler, in charge of consulate... Borie Singer, honorary consul gen- eral. Charles F. Buck, jr., honorary consul... Georges R. Farnum, honorary consul general. Orhan Halit Bey, consul general. ___.. Juan Llorca Marty, vice consul (hon- orary). Robert E. Tracey, consul (honorary)... Mauricio Herschel, vice consul (hon- orary). Manuel Rivera, consul (honorary). ._.. Joseph Steven Walker, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo Carlos Lebret, consul (hon- orary). Henry L. Lange, consul (honorary)... John Phelps, vice consul (honorary)... William A. Mossman, consul (honor- ary). 38 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 Virginia. Iowa, northern Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and ‘Wyoming. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Caro- im, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and exas. Southern Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, (except the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Mercer, Ocean, and Salem), 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 at New York has charge of Swiss 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 Washington. 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. Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Ten- nessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. New Jersey 594 Congressional Directory URUGUAY—YUGOSLAVIA Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction URUGUAY—continued Kansas City, MO-.ooo--_ Bulle, NY onv-cex New York, No¥. 0. Portland, Oreg............ Philadelphia, Pa.__.__.__ Manila, P. J.Lo 00 Mayaguez, P.B........ Ponce, P.-B.....oi li. Saniduan, PR. Galveston, Tex_..__.____ Port Arthur, Tex. . 12 Norfolk,"Var. = J: 0 Seattle, Wash___________ VENEZUELA Los Angeles, Calif_______ San Francisco, Calif_____ Philadelphia, Pa.....nrx Manila, P. Arecibo, PRC... 0u Mayaguez, P. R_._._____ San Juan, P. R Beaumont, TeX....__.__ Houston, Tox... ........ St. Thomas, Islands Virgin YUGOSLAVIA OChieage, TN. 0... niu New York, N. YVocianas Cleveland, Ohi0...._____ Pittsburgh, Pa. ca... Gabriel Madrid Hernindez, vice con- sul (honorary). Leon L. Lancaster, vice consul (hon- orary). Santiago Rivas, Jr., acting consul gen- eral. Santiago Rivas, Jr., consul... ______. Robert Richling, consul... _._____. John H. Lothrop, vice consul (hon- orary). Alberto Secco Ellauri, consul (honor- ary). Rodolfo Schneckenburger, honorary consul. Guillermo H. Moscoso, vice consul (honorary). Guillermo Cortada, Jr., vice consul___ Manuel Gomez Lopez, consul (hon- orary). 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. _ Manuel Maria Galavis, consul general. Carlos Albert Arismendi, honorary vice consul. Andres Paul, consul general ___________ V. M. Avendafio Lozada, consul. _____ W. F. Ives, honorary consul D. B. Lasseter, in charge of consulate... R. O. Lebret, honorary consul. _______ Diego Matute Ruiz, consul general ___ _| Maurice de Bois, acting consul________ Pedro Rafael Rincones, jr., consul general. Nicolas Veloz, honorary vice consul... Luis Garcia Davila, consul Alberto P. Delfino, honorary consul... OTE esd nies citer is Vicente Barletta, honorary consul... __ J. M. Betancourt Sucre, consulgeneral Carlos H. Parodi, honorary consul.____ Filiberto Galvan, honorary consul...__ Valdemar A. Miller, honorary consul. Djoura Kolombatovitch, consul gen- eral. Vladimir Vurmirovitch, consul________ Ante Pavelich, vice consul.........._. Radoye Jankovitch, consul general___. Ante Pavelich, in charge of consulate general. Michael Cerrezin, honorary vice con- sul. Kosto Unkovich, honorary consul..... United States. Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao. Arizona, California, Colorado, Ne- vada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Canal Zone. County of Hillsborough, Fla. Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia. Puerto Rico. Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colo- rado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Min- nesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Mon- tana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mex- ico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Ore- gon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, ‘Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyo- ming. For the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii and the Philippine Islands. 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 EE —————— 595 FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES [Consular agencies are indicated by an asterisk] AFGHANISTAN—BELGIUM Post Name Office AFGHANISTAN! Rabu as William H. Hornibrook 2________ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. John Campbell White 2_________ Consul general. Edward M.Groths_ ____________ Consul. Joseph G. Groeningerd._________ Consul. loyd EB. Rigesd. i. = Vice consul. ALBANIA I el racer Hugh Gladney Grant. __________ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Cloyee K. Huston... =. it Third secretary (consul). Col. Jerome G. Pillow....__.____ Military attaché. Karl L. Rong Ea er BA Commercial attaché. Erich W. A. Hoffmann. ....._... Vice consul. ARGENTINA B ASR. io Alexander W, Weddell.____.____ Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Raymond EB. Cex.....ccoa First secretary. Eugene M. Hinkle_...._________ Second secretary. Joseph C. Satterthwaite-....___. Second secretary. Capt. Frederick D.Sharp_.____. Military attaché. Comdr. Edmund W. Strother-..| Naval attaché. Alexander Vo Dye... .... i. Commercial attaché. Pal OQ. Nyhms. oo. aa Agricultural attaché. Avra M. Warren _..c....o. onus Consul general. William OC, Burdett............. Consul general. Christian M. Ravndal.____._____| Consul. Hayward CG. Hill. ==. = 3. Vice consul. William C. Trimble. ----| Vice consul. Robert F. Woodward. ._..__._.. Vice consul. E. Allen Lightner, jr. _.__._._.___ Vice consul. Sydney H.Banash_.__.___.____ Vice consul. William E. Copley...--- en ooz Vice consul. James G. Byington_____________ Vice consul. AUSTRIA Vienna ----| George S. Messersmith._.._._.___ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Jomes B,. Young. .... 0.00 First secretary (consul general). Alan'S Rogers... _.... Third secretary. Lt. Col. Martin C. Shallen- | Military attaché. berger. Gardner Richardson... _.._.___. Commercial attaché. 1eys A. France... ....ci-iiaroue Assistant commercial attaché. Ernest Yl. Barrls. o.oo oa Consul general. Reed Paige Clark ooo Consul. Walter J. Linthicum... Vice consul. ThomassR. Black 2... ......... Vice consul. BELGIUM & Brtswely. ne Dave Hennen MOrTiS coo oceo Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary Louis Sussdorf, ir aaa. Counselor of embassy. George P. Waller... o.oo. Second secretary. Miss Frances E. Willis_.________ Third secretary. Robert G. McGregor, jro._______ Third secretary. Lt. Col. Horace H. Fuller.______ Military attaché. Lt. Comdr. John A. Gade_-..-__ Naval attaché. Thomas: I, Hughes _.__... = .c . Commercial attaché. Leigh W. Hunt. :...0 co... Assistant commercial attaché. Walter’ H. Sholes......co....... Consul Manson Gilbert... Vice consul. ANIWEID Coon i innion a eae dJohnmC. Wiley... ac. Consul general. ‘William Hall Beach... Consul. Gerald A. Mokma.____.......... Consul. Leopoldville, Belgian Congo_____ William D. Moreland, jr... Arnold Van Benschoten.._______ Dwight W. Fisher... ~~. i John S. Richardson, jr-t--....-. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. 1 Correspondence on diplomatic business relating to Afghanistan should be addressed to the American Legation, Teheran, Iran; on consular business, to the American Consulate, Karachi, India. 2 Accredited also to Iran. 3 Assigned also to Calcutta, India. 4 Assigned also to Karachi, India. 6 The diplomatic officers here listed are accredited also to Luxemburg. 597 598 | Congressional Directory BOLIVIA—CANADA Post Name Office BOLIVIA RAR OT a ain nnn nm mars Pay A. DesPortes.. =o oeeenas Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. John J. Muecio. on. _.2_ Second secretary (consul). John ©, Shillock, Jf. ---naccon- Third secretary (vice consul). George H. Adams.__________.... Vice consul. BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro ==iaaragh 8. Gibson... ance op= Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Wesley Trost ce iv noe wnm nme Counselor of embassy. Jon MM: Cobol... cca rams Second secretary. Maj. William Sackville. ..__..__ Military attaché. Lt. Richard Francis Whitehead.| Naval attaché. Ralph H. Ackerman............ Commercial attaché. Archie W. Childs... .-__ Assistant commercial attaché, al EE FLL DA UT dif Sena a Consul general. THREE eR Sa NE Consul general. Odin G. Loren.________ Consul. Henry S, Villard. ___.__- -| Consul. Harold B. Minor Consul. Rudo. Cahn... ....... Vice consul. Victor. naomi Robert J. Clarke... Vice consul, TR en LS Consul. | IRI Bn le eds a SR Slots tm Vice consul, a ENS SE ERR £ SL George E. Selizer.....oc-enemne-- Consul. Pernambuco (Recife) _.._____.____ George J. Haering....—.———.—._. Consul. Lawrence BF, Cotie...ovemoannnv Vice consul. Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul.| Reginald S. Castleman._________. Consul, Hermy Si Haines. scenes nse ‘Vice consul. CANADA Ottawa, Ontario... _....__ Calgary, Alberta... __ Edmonton, Alberta______________ Fort William and Port Arthur, Ontario. Halifax, Nova Scotia___________. Fredericton, New Bruns- wick. Hamilton, Ontario... ______ Kingston, Ontario London, Ontario_________________ Moncton, New Brunswick_____. Montreal, Quebec. nnn een Arthur G, Parsloe......ocecosemax Carol BH: Poster irae William E. Flournoy, jr-------- Edward P-NMaffitt cove NOTA ALTNOUL. erm aes Bly B Palmer. ro . memams LaVerne Baldwin... occa Henry M. Bankhead... _._..... Oliver Br Nori. rei nienee Josep Bur es Russell B: Jordan... ..-ca=- Harvey 1. Goodier-. --n-reec- Henry RoDwyer eee George E. Chamberlin____.__.____ Hush Watson, 2 =. Jeeganc= Joseph P. Ragland... co acee- Orlando-B, Massia: mee nnsr Frederick C. Johnson... Adam Beaumont... .-a-rzewon= George C. Cobb______ William A, Bickers... cc... Charles E. B. Payne. ........._. Hedley V, Cooke, it... .cavs- sex Homer M. Byington... Richard Bord... o. cousaies nasi Joseph I. Touchette_______.___..__ Stephen E. C. Kendrick __.....- Edward Anderson, jroo eeeceee-- F. Ridgway Lineaweaver._._.__. 100. P00 ws Jovi ond a dus sldaauawe 34 Consular agent. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary (consul). Third secretary (consul). Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor of legation (consul gen- eral). Third secretary. Commercial attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Consul. Vice consul. District accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Assistant district accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul, Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul generals Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Foreign Service of the United States CANADA—CHINA 599 Post Name Office CANADA—Continued Montreal, Quebec—Continued- JOR BR -Barry. wc sama he Vice consul. Niagara Falls, Ontario. _.________ Quebec, Quebec. oo _._____ Regina, Saskatchewan. _________ St. John, New Brunswick______ St. Stephen, New Brunswick___ Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario__.____ Sydney, Nova Scotia... Toronto, Ontario... __________ Vancouver, British Columbia____ Victoria, British Celumbia______ Windsor, Ontario_______________ Winnipeg, Manitoba.___________ * Kenora, Ontario- 220 Yarmouth, Nova Scotia_________ Santiago... ove ame Ar Antofagasta... CTF Valparaiso. ......oorurnoion cai *Cruz Grande, Coquimbo.._. Pelping. Sess aan Hartwell Johnson... ..__..._ Robert J. Cavanaugh. __________ Henry P. Kiley. oli. 05 Bdward Caflery.. o.oo 000050 Elion M.-Hoeytt2r 00 00 John Randolph... 2200 7 a0 Harvey L. Milbourne___.....___ Johm'S:. Calvert oo... Parl Brennan... 2.20 Egmont C. von Tresckow.____.___ J-Brock-Havron.~ 2. — 0 Cobrge: lL -Bristoar erasing of William, Brown... George L..Tolman. 015 41 Edwin J. Collis_ _.. Francis H. Styles. . Eugene H. Johnson. ..o_.__.7.. Pierredo L.Boal....-C ~~ C0 Damon:C.-Woods.o...co0 0 oC Horatio. Mooers. ot oo 22 i Herbert: Co Bipr.. or 0 "x 02 oo Robert B. Memminger.___._____ SsRoger-Tvlerae, win Manes Frederick A. Bohne...___________ Robert W. Harding...- S12 "200 Jorn IE. Davisti ot or oe Harris N. Cookingham.__________ Samuel 8S. Dickson.co-.-4-. CC William BE, Beitg Elbert G. Mathews... _.______ Carl We Siro cacn Boot i Nelson'P.-Meeks, 2-7 Augustus €; Owen... = = Walter-M=Waolsh 20-2 boot Theodore Jasckel Robert M. Newcomb.____._______ Marshall M. Vance... ___ Hervé J. 1’Heureux....... H. Armistead Smith... Rdwin Carl Kemp. 21 0 tol Harold M. Collins-=o— 2’: Stanley R. Lawson. 2p James R Riddle... 2% Stanley L. Wilkinson_._________ Bupert HH: Moore: =>. 0 Walter H. McKinney.___.._.__.__ Robert Jakes;3@ Cio" wre Hoftman-Philipl 5 er ait Robert M. Scotten........._.___ Winthrop-B-Seotl; ta Robert Mills McClintock. ___.__ Maj. John A. Weeks. ___________ Merwin'L.. Bohan.— ~~ ~~ Haoveld"M-Bandall. C7: dwar A Dow. oo 00 t= John Bi Faust 00 i 00) Camden... Mclain. 0 Samuel A. Mcllhenny, jr _.____ Jom Garvin. te it Renwick S. McNiece......______ Catlos Call cn Prank Nr RBueter: ih aide Nelson T. Johnson________._____ Frank -P. Lockhart. 00.) 2% George R. Merrell, jr..._________ Laurence E. Salisbury__.__..____ Robert Lacy Smyth_______.______ Pal W. Meyer. o-oo: Oliver Edmund Clubb__._______ Cecil BaLyon ori cr 0 James’ K. Penfield... ......... John S. Service... eal nt 6 Assigned also vice consul at Tientsin. Vice consul Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul, Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general; Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. Second secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Consul general. Consul. - Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Consular agent. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. First secretary. Second secretary. Second secretary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Third secretary. Language officer. Language officer. | | 600 Congressional Drrectory CHINA Post Name Office CHIN A—Continued Peiping—Continued oo o- Charles 8, Millet... ......._.2:-- Language officer. Bdwoard BE. Rice. . cot t lines Language officer. Col. Joseph W. Stilwell _________ Military attaché. Comdr. Thomas M; Shock.______ Naval attaché. Julean Arnold... ..-=-3._or ioc Commercial attaché. Maj. Samuel V. Constant__.____ Assistant military attaché. Capt. Charles C. Brown._______ Assistant naval attaché. A. Blond Calder... ti Assistant commercial attaché. Capt. William E. Crist__.__._____ Language officer. Capt. Henry S. Jernigan. _______ Language officer. Capt. Bernard A. Tormey...___ Language officer. Capt. Frank Dorn....-.o=2 =: Language officer. Capt. Frank N. Roberts_.______ Language officer. 1st Lt. Edwin M. Sutherland. ._| Language officer. Lt. (j.g.) Henry T. Jarrell. _____ Language officer. Capt. William L. Bales._______. Language officer. 1st Lt. Bankson T'. Holcomb, jr___| Language officer. 1st Lt: Samuel B. Griffith___._._ Language officer. Nanking office... ccomeaeen Willys B. Peck... i... ---| Counselor of embassy. George Atcheson, jr... ---| Second secretary. Kenneth J. Kearns. ________.____ Third secretary. Douglas Jenkins, jr.7..____._____ Third secretary. ¢ Amoy,Fulden. _.......occcsmees Hosell I. Dick... die 2 ie Consul. Canton, Kwangtung _ ___________ Olarence J. Spiker...--c--=-z-==2 Consul general. Samuel J. Fletcher... ._______ Consul. Augustus'S. Chase... i Consul. Reginald Bragonier, jr--.----__- Vice consul. W. Leonard Parker.........-.2--:- Vice consul. Chefoo, Shantung._______._______ Jo Eloi) Daxion. .. coded ot -dz 3mm Consul. Charles J. Brennan. —.---22---- Vice consul. Foochow, Fukien____________.____ Gordon. Burke .—.--->2.._: = Consul. Hankow, Hupeh _ oo... Paul RD. Josselyn. Cootocn il Consul general. Robert XY. Jarvis. nets Toco Consul. Harry E. Stevens......--..oo---- Consul. Reginald P. Mitchell ._._________ Vice consul. Robert M. Taylor. ..-ov-i === Vice consul. Harold E. Montamat._ ._________ Vice consul. Verne:G. Staten: _ tous: wot. Vice consul. Harbin, Kirin, Manchuria_ _____ Walter’ A. Adams. _-_ =: __.... Consul general. George D. La Mont_____________ Consul. H. Merrell Benninghoff_________ Consul. RalphY. Blake. . orca. =x cc, Vice consul. Mukden, Liaoning, Manchuria__| Joseph W. Ballantine _._________ Consul general. Andrew W. Edson. _.-c---t-::-- Consul. John Davies ijl. eet n itl hams Vice consul. Shanghai, Kiangsu.__ oo... Monnett B. Davis. _._.__ _| Consul general. Richard P. Butrick Consul. Bdwin EF. Stanton... .—a=2-v= Consul. Carl D. Meinhardt Consul. William Clarke Vyse._____-__-_ Consul. Charles 8S. Reed, 2d. ------ ee -- Consul. John'S. Littell. ia oi es oe Consul. James B. Pileher. o_o io Consul. Julius Wadsworth_______________ Vice consul. Everett F. Drumright._...----_. Vice consul. Douglas Jenkins, jr.8. _.__..____. Vice consul. FP. Russell BEngdahl.......__> _.. Vice consul. Tivin Seibert... ....-cxtfo i foe Vice consul. John B. Sawyer... coca. Oo: Vice consul. William R. Lyneh- -..c._t...1- Vice consul. Fhomas'B. Clark. ti-20% 4 Jaze Vice consul. Swatow, Kwangtung_.__________ Trederick W.. Hinke. eee Consul. Tientsin, Hopei____.___.._.....__ John X. Caldwell. ..... =.=: Consul general. David (O. Berger. 2 te itabdas Consul. Whitney Young... fist -23 co Consul. John: B:. Kelcham. oo i z- 04s Consul. Robert 8. Ward... ene Consul. Monree:Bo-Hall..... vee Consul. Stuart Allen. Ou eta I Consul. CeclliBsLyonmt% ar... oem me Vice consul. Lincoln C. Reynolds Vice consul. Walter 8S. Price... -| Vice consul. Alvin E,. Bandy... .5 GS -2z=s= Vice consul. Tsinan, Chantung_ _____...____._ Horace. Smith... co io oi icc Consul. Tsingtao, Kiacchow____.__._______ Samuel SOKObIN........ conte S253 Consul. Carl: 0. Hawthorne: z....u:7--- Vice consul, Yunnanfu, Yunnan_ ____________ Arthur R. Ringwalt......... 5.2.2 Vice consul. 7 Assigned also as vice consul at Shanghai. 9 Assigned also as third secretary at Peiping. 8 Assigned also as third secretary at Nanking. Foreign Service of the Unated States COLOMBIA—DENMARK Post Name Office COLOMBIA ES Bogota oo ei abo oo William Dawsen.-..._--sic. lc Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Winthrop S. Greene--........... Second secretary (consul). Roberi Y. Brown. w..0 20.0. 10 Third secretary (consul). Reginald S. Kazanjian_.._.__.__ Third secretary (vice consul). Col. Nicholas W. Campanole.._| Military attaché. Clarence C. Brooks. ............ Commercial attaché. : Stephen C. Worster-............ Vice consul. Barranquilla. ___________________ Robert Harnden...._...._ a Consul. Gerald CG Jones..... 5. J allo Vice consul. Raymond Phelan... ........ Vice consul. Buenaventura... Bdwin McKee... 0... Vice consul. Cardagena......... Joreoieniona JohmBrandt...c..._ 3 _._..... Vice consul. COSTA RICA SanJost.. Yeo R. Sack. oo Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Gorald A. Drow... vee ner cr Third secretary. Col. Nicholas W. Campanole___| Military attaché. Sohn Bo Holley. ~ 2 rs Consul. Livingston Satterthwaite_______| Vice consul. Port EamSn. oe. ni emas ears Leslie W, Johnson... .c-- Vice consul. CUBA Habana... ea J olerson Caflery. ..c .cweoue ne Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. H. Freeman Matthews__..______ First secretary. HS, Brigg es er Second secretary. Carlos. Warner... ort cares Third secretary. Col. Thomas N. Gimperling.___| Military attaché. Walter J. Donnelly. eco reas- Commercial attaché. Capt. Loyd Van H. Durfee. .... Assistant military attaché. Charles R. Cameron........._.. Consul general. Harold S. Tewell-..-._:. = Consul Sheridan Talbott... __ Consul. Carlton Hurst......con-= Consul. Walter N. Walmsley, jr___ Consul. Pornald D. Bdear Vice consul. Duncan M, White: .__ :. Vice consul. John Ordway. 2. 2 Vice consul. Raoul F. Washington.__________ Vice consul. JohnH Marvini.- =. Vice consul Anne aa Horace J. Dickinson............. Consul. CHCNENELOS. - - ox caw me sais rn Hernan C. Vogenitz...._________ Vice consul. Edward 8, Benet................ Vice consul. A CAIDArIen.. reine Federico Cause. .-------cozcieas Consular agent. *Sagua la Grande... -—.._- Zugene E. JoVa. aeeoerrowe mmm ons Consular agent. Matanzas. _ ooo | Milton Patterson Thompson.____| Vice consul. Nevis atoms ens estar Sackewell earns Vice consul. Santiago... coin aan William P. Blocker... Consul. Albert R. Goodman... Vice consul. Harry We iSO Ye nooner men Vice consul. SN anzapilo earn cae Raoul A, Bertolt Consular agent. CZECHOSLOVAKIA LTTE re PS Se Jepuiler:Wright.. i: Envoy extraordinary and minister DANZIG, FREE CITY OF DENMARK Copenhagen... coocomeaaaan- J. Webb: Benton. — ooo Col. Albert Gilmor....._........ Sam. Woods... ciel Orme WHISON.......cw anise dani JohnH. Bruins. iiuic o..i Kennett F. Potter......il.dou0 Andrew Gilchrist... .coolil. i... J. Domest Ingles). ooo. nanaaal Waldemar J. Gallman.___________ Fred BK. Salter... aac aiamcins Ruth Bryan Owen............. North Winship... tol ....0.000 Maj. Truman Smith. __.._...._. Capt. Benjamin Dutton, jr... Thormod O. Klath...li :...L ..C Capt. Theodore Koenig_._______ Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie..___ Tester Maynard... colic los Laurence W. Taylor. .........._ Erland Giessing..__.-_ o.__-.-- J. Stanford Edwards. ...eeeeeemew plenipotentiary. First secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché Consul general. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor of legation, Military attaché. Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant military attaché for air. Assistant naval attaché. Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. 602 Congressional Durectory DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS Post Name Office DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Santo Domingo... cae =a Romana. ......cv ve emm—- Er EOANCHBT... coven mmm id aA 5 ECUADOR Alexandrina nora an— Port Said... miee EL SALVADOR San Salvador... --c-cnammenema= ESTONIA ETHIOPIA (Abyssinia) Addis Ababa... .......ccoenvens *Djibouti, French Somali Coast. FINLAND Helsingfors...........00 mdi. 20a. FRANCE AND POSSES- SIONS FRANCE BBE tos ram am m— Frederick L. Royt. eee 4, H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld. .._.__. Franklin B. Atwood ..__..___.__. James W. Gantenbein___________ Walter S. Reineck______________ Dudley E. Cyphers. ..._________ Linton. Crook. con lll. als Eugene J. Lieder... __________ J. Enrique Leroux... ..._.. Antonio C. Gonzalez... __........ Edward J. Sparks... ...... Commander George L.. Weyler_ _ Dayle C. McDonough. ____.____ Philip XK. Tattersall. ........ i... Charles E. Dickerson, jr-______. Claude HH. Hall... =... C Arthur Ui. Richards... H. Earle Russell... a. .comecn- Harry L. Troutman... ...cwwzmee- Daniel Gaudin, jr... cvmmwwin—- Horace Remillard... ...--ovn-n- Dr. Frank P. Corrigan... _.___. Dorsey Gassaway Fisher.______. William P. Cochran, jr-_.______. Col. Nicholas W. Campanole.___ Joseph E. Maleady._.__.....__. John Van A. MacMurray 10___._ Felix Cole... teams adorry B. Carlson... cawes mews James E. Henderson... _.._______. Cornelius Van H. Engert_______ Williem M. Cramp..._.....---. Vahram H. Condayan........... 8S. PinkneyiTuek. iui i080 Harold L. Williamson Lewis Clark . Robert English... oor 30) Lt. Col. Horace H. Fuller 10 Accredited also to Latvia and Lithuania. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consular agent. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Naval attaché. Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul, Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Second secretary. Commercial attaché, onsul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Third secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Vice consul, Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor of legation. First secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché, First secretary and consul general. Third secretary (vice consul). Consular agent. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary (consul general). Second secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy (consul gen- eral). Counselor of embassy. First secretary. First secretary. -| Second secretary. Second secretary. .| Second secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Foreign Service of the United States 603 FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS Post Name Office FRANCE AND POSSES- SIONS—Continued FRANCE—continued Paris—Continued..._.__.____._. Bordeaux ECs cis vo iit AE 02 POSSESSIONS Algiers, Algeria. cee *Oran, Algeria... ccovnesn Martinique, French West In- dies. Saigon, French Indochina... St. Pierre-Miquelon...__________ Tahiti, Society Islands, Oceania. Tunis, Tunisia... ..or-meeee=enwe Capt. Augustin T. Bauregard... Henry C. MacLean _.......__._. James F. O'Neill... Ul. i .00. Niels I. Nielson. oven Maj. James A. Lester... Capt. Hayden A. Sears__.____... Capt. Townsend Griffiss. ______. Capt. Julius Augustus Furer.___ Lt. Comdr. Ben H. Wyatt... Lt. Comdr. Theodore E. Chand- ler. Lt. Louis Newcomb Miller__.__. Daniel J. Reagan._._._. ocooao... Lester DeWitt Mallory..._._..._ Robert D. Murphy. ceceee eee Hugh S. Fullerton...s. 00 i. Jo Bdwin: A. PHtt..c oo. 0.0000 George: Toll, colo oll Francis B. Stevens______... Ernest de W. Mayer____________ Taylor W. Gannett. __._._....._ Mare Li. Severe... 0. 0. 0] Jom H..Fuqua.. ccc Laurence J. Daymont_.____.__._ Clifford W. McGlasson.......... David H. Slawson...l:.0.. 00] Worthington E. Hagerman. .____ Jack: S. Willlamss lor 00 LL ras Harold D.. Binley....0 ui. lL. Archibald E. Gray.._.......... Frank Cussans......-. 30d... Roy MeWilliamsi Gro ool cll. Sam Parks. iain. Ld Robert Dickey, jr... .uiio.. 0 James. .G. Carter... ali. Lil Samuel H. Wiley coui rd: Charles B. Perkins._..__.....___. Frederick C. Fairbanks..._....__ Leonard G. Dawson.________.___._ Robert T..Cowan_ local. yl Charles J. Pisar..___ b) Waldo E. Baileyo Uuioll I Ian George P.. Wilson_.iilio7 .i =o John P. Hurley... coal Hil Robert D. Longyear.._____.____ Shisas Morris, Jr. corinne Tyler Thompson.....coovvvevee- Harry M. Donaldson... Eliot Well..onar sea Benjamin M. Hulley__._________ Jack BE. Cocke. .....wam dann ins.. Austin C.oBradye—-. re Charles B. Beylard.._.....__..._ Leonard N. Green. ccveovae.. Robert A. AcCly...oeeoaciine Albert H. Elford... .cnvomiiema V. Harwood Blocker, jr_.___.___ Rudolph A. Schausten._._..._._ Quincey -F. Roberts. ..cv-anvimew- Edwin N. Gunsaulus, jro.._...._. Scudder Mersman.__...._..__.__.. Lawrence S. Armstrong. ......_. L. Pittman Springs... -acneaenas= Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Treasury attaché. Agriculture attaché. Assistant military attaché. Assistant military attaché. Assistant military attaché for air. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Assistant agriculture attaché. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul and language officer. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. District accounting and disbursing officer (consul). Assistant district accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Assistant district accounting and dis bursing officer (vice consul). Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Superintendent of buildings. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consui. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Consular agent. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. 604 Congressional Directory GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. Post Name Office GERMANY DR ERR NE William B. Dodd. .aaaaoa aa Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Ferdinand L.. Mayer-_._._______ Counselor of embassy. FrankiC. Lend Luinnennanns First secretary. Joseph Flak: coo cl ac ocmu de 2 First secretary. Jacob D. Besm..co oa 12 ze Third secretary. Maj. Traoman Smith.c Lo... Military attaché. Capt. Benjamin Dutton, jr.____ Naval attaché. Tioyd-V. Steeressics.. . o 2iritiine Agricultural attaché. Capt. James C. Crockett _______ Assistant military attaché. Capt. Theodore J. Koenig_______ Assistant military attaché for air. Capt. Julius Augustus Furer.___| Assistant naval attaché. Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie-____ Assistant naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. Ben H. Wyatt_____._.| Assistant naval attaché. Doazlas P. Miller. .....-... Assistant commercial attaché. Gordon P:iBoals: suooual. nan. Assistant agricultural attaché. Douglas Jenkins. ...oooi. los Consul general. Raymond H. Gelstooo 822! we Consul. Prescott Childs. .ooicaai tl. J ie. Consul. Archer Woodfordoe init Lol Consul. William W. Adams. tJ Vice consul, Huagh C. Voz... Laellell. Lanls Vice consul. Henry P. Leverich.._... 2.0 oo Vice consul. Casimir T. Zawadzki__________. Vice consul. Cyrus B. Follmero. L....0 oo. oos Vice consul. Bremen. __ =o Walter A. Leonardo: 0 ool Consul. William C. Affeld, jro....._..__. Vice consul. Francis A. Vane......cues il. 0: Vice consul. = f:on:8. Greshame......atiss. ok] Vice consul. Breslan...........oveeeaeeawinsa ddim niniTEo ld: Stephen B. Vaughan_.__________ Vice consul. Cologne................ii8e0000. 5000 Alfred W...Kliefoth......oon Consul. James: Hl, Wright. on... 0.ol Vice consul. Ndward RB. Parker. .... ..oevvmnmm- Vice consul. Dresden. inoinh nase lbius Alfred RB. Thomson... oz Consul general. Frankfort on the Main__________ NA CIOZEE nnn na SE Munich... do GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, BRITISH DOMINIONS BEYOND THE SEAS, INDIA FOBAOM oe evn ian ne Jom FP. Huddleston... Bernard: ¥. Heller... George A. Makinson________.____ Robert W. Heingartner_..______ Sydney B. Redecker____________ JohniG. Erhardt oe oi ii Of Jom J. Melly. sgscis) oi; Erik W. Magnuson. .._.__.___.__. Alan N..Steyne..:i..oo.. 2300 FT. Paul Tenney... 3 _osisul Isc Sabin J. Dalferes Charles M.. Hathaway, jr--._.___ Hugh FE. Ramsay.-ooo.0).. 1 Jue James M. Bowecock._____________ Samuel W. Honaker_____________ James P. Moffitt. coe 2 oo Hugh H. Teller... ai 3 Julius C. Jensen-.cazoc.. i. Sl Ju Robert Worth Bingham... ______ Bay Athorton ee aera Herschel V. Johnson... Hush Millard: Walter T'. Prendergast. __._.._._ Wm. W. Butterworth, jr._.__.___ Hiram Bingham fro te 0 Lt. Col. Raymond E. Lee_._____ Capt. Walter S. Anderson______ Lynn W. Meekins .___. _.- Clifford C. Taylor... Lt. Col. Hayes A. Kroner.._____ Capt. John W. Monahan_______ Capt. Julius Augustus Furer_... Lt. Comdr. Leslie C. Stevens___._ Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie_____ Charles B' Lyon... Lt James Somerville. ______________ Robert Brozer.. ni Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul general Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general, Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. First secretary. First secretary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Agricultural attaché. Assistant military attaché. Assistant military attaché for air Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Consul general. Foreign Service of the Unated States GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. 605 Post Name Office GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.— Continued London—Continued.____..______ Dudley G. Dwyre...... ona Consul. : Chonles CQ. Broy. ..-cuineeoannas Consul. Philip Adamg.........ii..5.e0 ces Consul. Franklin C. Gowen... _.______. Consul. James B. Parks. _...co. 0 cao. Consul. Alfred D. Cameron______________ Consul. RalphiMiller oo 3 Consul. Charles A. Converse... .._.__.___. Vice consul. JohnJ. Coyle. _...conva..iiaaun Vice consul. Belfast, Northern Ireland... Birmingham, England___________ Bradford, England______________ Bristol, England_._ _____________ Cardiff, Wales_..______.. ________ Dundee, Scotland. ____._______.___ Edinburgh, Scotland Glasgow, Scotland... ____.____ Hull, England. _____ Liverpool, England. ____________ Manchester, England_________.. Newcastle-on-Tyne, England___ Plymouth, England. ____________ Sheffield, England______________ Southampton, England__________ OTHER EUROPE Gibraltar... .......... Leics Bombay.....oae.usaiiiniogicn Baraehi.....i einai Madras... tooo. condi. Jou OTHER ASIA Aden, Arabia________ Colombo, Ceylon____ Hong Kong__________ Penang, Straits Settlements. _ Singapore, Straits Se ttlements. _ Lucien Memminger....__...._.. Robert Janz. ........«vsec-totwas George L. Fleming_._____________ Boy W.DBaker. coc 0 ic John PB. Clafley..c. =... 2..c Samuel R. Thompson. Paul CO. Seddiecum..............-, Frederic OC. Fornes, jr... ...._ Julian K. Smedberg..--_ i... .. Charles Roy Nasmith______...____ Bdwin B. Earnest. .-..c- oc... Harry BE. Hawley = = Maurice Pasquet.._._ o_o... T. Leonard Lilliestrom_______.__ NolColnnk = oo 0. Paul Dean Thompson. .__...___ Philip Hollangd.=c-s. 5 ca Vice consul. Consul general Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. “Vice consul. Consul general. Chil. abharde. nin Consul. Bash Walson.. ic... oe Vice consul. 00D. Stargeon =... ....... Consul. Myles Standish. .....c2 3 = Vice consul. aml OC, Squire. ...... cvciseddeas Consul. Merlin BE. Smith. -- Vice consul. Rollin BR. Winslow... ..:o.5 2 Consul. Ered H. Houck. ..aciaazz i ne Vice consul. Walton OC. Ferris... oc --ie aoe Consul. Henry O. Ramsey....w.=:oeawe- Vice consul. Howard K. Travers. .ocooooo-. Consul. EF. Willard Calder......a- oo Wade Blackard-.....-.o- i oan Herbert O. Williams. __.__.______ Manuel J. Codoner____._._._____ W. Perry George... 0 S00 John Campbell White 11________ Edward M. Groth 1____________ Rufus B. Lane, jr....o.ctne John J. Macdonald... -voaie Robert D. Coercion Pred W. Jandrey oii. ll Henry S. Waterman... _....._._ Nathaniel Lancaster, jr...__.___ Theodore J. Hohenthal _________ Charles Ml, Gerrity.........h...... Joseph G. Groeninger!_________._ dloyd BE, Riggs 12. .oc..cn.. Cartis C, Jordan. i_f. 0 5 iC Leland C. Altaffer.. Winfield H. Scott. LyloC. Himmel. oll... Leo. J. Callanan Jo. 0l a. aun Robert L. Buell... 0... 200 George W. Renchard...___..____ Charles L.. Hoover. ......_..._. Louis H. Gourley...-.......00.02 Merritt N. Cootes ooo John CQ. Pools werd idl vig Wilbur Keblinger_____________._. Thomas McEnelly._ ooo. B.- Allen Haden .........o i. Patrick Mallon. cc conow werd 11 Assigned also to Kabul, Afghanistan. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. 606 Congressional Dzirectory GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.— GUATEMALA Post i Name Office GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.— Continued AFRICA Lagos, Nigeria, West Africa_____ Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa_____ AUSTRALIA Adelaide, South Australia. _____ Brisbane, Queensland ___________ Melbourne, Victoria___.__________ Sydney, New South Wales_....__ NEW ZEALAND Wellington... 200 *Christchureh_ US *Punedin... oo a0 Auckland________ hh NEWFOUNDLAND Be JORIS. om aD CENTRAL AMERICA—SOUTH AMERICA—WEST INDIES Barbados, British West Indies__ = Lucia, British West In- es Belize, British Honduras_______ Hamilton, Bermuda_____________ *St. Georges, Bermuda________ Kingston, Jamaica _.._..._________ Nassau, N. P., Bahamas__.______ Trinidad, British West Indies___ *Brighton, Trinidad, British West Indies. *Grenada, British West In- dies. *Paramaribo, Netherland Guiana. GREECE AtHOn.. cov nme EERE I A Te AR Salonika (Thessalonike) _.._._._ GUATEMALA Guatemala........c..coneeaeuiiiid Thomas-A. Hickok... ot. “0 Augustus Ostertag_______________ Robert B. Streeper..____._______ John'B. Keogh... o_o Henry-M. Wolcott... Austin BR. Preston... "_.. John W. Bernard C. Connelly ____________ Balph-H. Hunt 2.0 ote Jay Pierrepont Moffat __________ Albert:-M. Doyle... i... Foster HoKrels oor + 0 George A. Bucklin. _____________ Walter W. Orebaugh____________ HP Beldgeli cra: Loos cons Harman Reeves... =. _ Walter ¥. Boyle. = ~~ ~~ Leonard A. Bachelder___________ Harold B. Quarto. =. —2 Charles C.Sundell.__.__________ Porry IN. Jester. 2 ali Alan GQ. Peler. ooo Edwin Clay Merrell_____________ Frederick Joseph Robertson_____ George Alexander Armstrong.___ Calvin I-Oakes George To Relly or ra one Frank Anderson Henry. ________ Wales W. Signor-________.____.__ Wallace E. Moessner........_._.. Meare de Vertewil..._...___._____ John MeGilehrist. -...oneae James 8. Yawton...o.......L...0 Lincoln MacVeagh..._._._...__. Leland B, Morrisooonoo Lui ail Clayson W. Aldridge Lt. Col, Franklin Langley Whitley. Kori L.. Bonkin_... cunt... Capt. Thomas D. White_.______ Henry A, W.Beeko..l. Llu. Walworth Barbour... _._____._. Donald C. Dunham____________ George V. Allen_.._____ William C. Young___.__ James Hugh Keeley, Jr Donal F, McGonigal .___________ Matthew E. Hanna. __.____..____ Sidney E. O’Donoghue....____. Col. Nicholas W. Campanole___ 0. Gaylord Marsh... ...-.0ootos Chester Kimrey. oc... 22a Consul. Vice consul. onsul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general; Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general Vice consul. Consular agent. Consular agent, Consul. Vice consul. Consul general, Vice consul. Consul. Consular agent, 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 (consul general). Second secretary. - Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant military attaché for air. Consul, Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. -| Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Military attaché. Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul. Foreign Service of the United States HAITI-ITALY 607 Post Name Office HAITI Port-au-Prince... oo ooo _ CR ONGIVes noon Cap Haltien......z.. o_o =.. HONDURAS Tegucigalpa... ooo Teheran... ....wcccemenwmit ease IRAQ (MESOPOTAMIA) Baghdad... cnccmedannandas IRISH FREE STATE Dublin__._ wn George A. Gordon... ..0 Selden Chapin... cocoa... oo Julian L. Pinkerton___________._ C. Burke Blbrick. . carat ia Carl Breuer... ..iciuiiil. Spas 3. “William Woela oon. oz ail Corey F. Wood. occu mtnacus Teo. Koons... nen nma arises Raleigh A. Gibson......__._____ Willard Galbraith. -..c.0..25 = ‘Walter W. Hoffman... __.... Col. Nicholas W. Campanole--- Warren C. Stewart_._..__......_ Edgar L. McGinnis, Jr... Granville Oury-Jackson.___..... Myron H; Schraud cc ceeoaoooo John Flournoy Montgomery... Benjamin Reath Riggs. ........ Garret G. Ackerson, Jr____..___. Lt. Col. Martin C. Shallen- berger. James B. Stewart... .....-_cooii Knowlton V, Hicks................ Overton G. Ellis, Jr........co colle Bronest'V. Poluinik.. co caaeaa Leonard G. Bradford........._.._ William H. Hornibrook 12______. Burton Y. Berry... 0.0.2 Earl Thomas Crain...____.____. Paul Knabenshue..._........... James S. Moose, JToem coos Stanley G. Slavens... Robert L. Hunter. bicod.o. 0. Alvin Mansfield Owsley. ...... James Orr Denby. .oooioi..ol.0 Lt. Col. Raymond E. Lee_...___ Henry H. Balehooo. 0 cn Sidney A. Belovsky._....o_.___._ Poul CO. Hutton, Jr--o0 dol. Bawin:J- Wingo i. aoituu).. Robert A. Tennant_____________ Leslie E. Woods. ocooaaooaooo Robert R. Patterson... ...0 Gerhard Gade... 0 i... Randolph Harrison, Jr___ Col. Jerome G. Pillow....__..____ Capt. Laurance N, McNair... .. Charles A. Livengood._..________ Capt. Thomas D. White._______ Capt. Julius Augustus Furer.___ Lt. Emmet Peter Forrestel...__. Graham H. Kemper... ...... Hiram A. Boucher... 20:2) 0C J. Wesley Jones...oua. 0... 008 Charles Will Wright. .oeeoeneoe Also accredited to Afghanistan. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Second secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Consular agent. Consular agent. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Third secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Consul general, Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Third secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Minister resident and consul general. Third secretary (consul). Third secretary (vice consul). Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary. Military attaché. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. First secretary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché and military attaché or air. Nayal attaché and naval attaché for air. Commercial attaché. Assistant military attaché and assistant military attaché for air. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. 608 Congressional Directory ITALY JAPANESE EMPIRE Post Name Office ITALY—Continued Florence (Firenze)... ______._ Genoa (Genova). —__....._____ Leghorn (Livorno) _ ____.________ Milan (Milane)......________._. Naples (Napoli) cove PMermo 0... cio nae niiaa ne Frleste. 0. oo sruialninailln Turin (Torino)... _______.__ Venice (Venezia)... __________ POSSESSIONS Tripoll, Yahya... Lsoalis JAPANESE EMPIRE Tokyo. Dairen, Manchuria______________ Kobe, Japon... oad ose. ba Nagasaki, Japan. _._.._._____._.____ Nagoya, Japan... ___________ Seoul, Chosen... ___________ Taiheku, Taiwan______.______._.__ Yokohama, Japan________.______ Joseph BE. Haven. [0.0 0.0.00 C Frederick I.. Washbourne___.___ John R.-Puinam.....-.._.-_._ >= George RB. Halil 20 2... John'P "Palmer... 000 0 James R. Wilkinson. ..._..._____ William P. Shockley, Jr... ___.__ George K. Donald... .._._______ BD. Malbot Smith... cee Constance R. Harvey... ______ Frank C. Niccolo iva - John NV" Hamlin.U_ S00 200] Thomas C. Wasson...-.--.... Claude B. Chiperfield...._._.__.__ Homer M. Byington, Jr_...____ Robert C. McCloud... .caaa Marselis C. Parsons, Jr-________ Louis Woodruff Wallner, Jr..___ 2lired Noster... -coivciae. Panld. Reveley-.. o-oo ooo Consul. Vice consul. Consul general Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general, Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Bernard Gotlieb yo. 0 U5 0 Consul. 'PMonroePisher.......-cou-.. Vice consul. Richard B. Haven... _ _.... Consul. Francis B. Moriarty. .__..._____ Vice consul. Francis R. Stewart______________ Consul. Charles I, Terry. « cavnuadnn may Jay Walker east nodatal (34 JO 00 Joseph Cl CreW... wn nnm ons ens Edwin L. Neville Erle R. Dickover.....__.......... Edward S. Crocker, 2d ..________ CabobiGoville.. oil i... Morris N. Hughes.....-.----—v--- George D. Andrews, Jr._._______ Gerald Warner... 0 LL LoL J." Alexis Johnsen...to.. 5. 00.0 Max W. Schmidt o.oo... 00 David K. Caldwell ...coaee eae W. Garland Richardson... ____ Beppo RB. Johansen... ...L. 0. William UG. Yani. eo John K. Emmerson... ________ Lt. Col. William OC. Crane______ Capt. Fred F. Rogers.._-.._.___ Frank S. Willlams_rooo........0 Capt. John Weckerling._...._.__ Lt. Comdr. Ralph Andrew Ofstie. Lt. Ethelbert Watts. ...________ Arthur Garrels.o C01... 0 J. Holbrook Chapman_.___._____ Charles A. Hutchinson.________ Chorles AViCooper. Sir ac a Stuart Edgar Grummon.________ John M. Allisonio-ao 08 Troy. L. Perkins. .... 205.0 000 Howard Donovan......__....____ Kenneth C. Krentz._____________ Walter P. McConaughy_._______ Alvin T. Bowe, Jr... ool 000 Prank A. Schuler, Jr... ........ Leslie Gordon Mayer. __________ Otis W. Rhoades... 20.0... ... CariO.8pamer_-..._.-. Glen W. Bruner oo... 0. Charles H. Stephan._._...._.____ William R. Langdon._____.____.__._ RalphiCory.. 2 wets. A 25 Edward S. Maney ..-----._.____ Richard PF. Boyce Js 0.1L" 22.1 Gregor ©. Meprill. =. __-. Raymond P, Ludden. ...ueee--- Vice consul. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. First secretary. Second secretary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Third secretary. Language officer. Language officer. Language officer. Language officer. Language officer. Language officer. Language officer. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant military attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Foreign Service of the United States LATVIA— MEXICO 609 Post Name Office LATVIA 3 Rgn. a ah aan Rn John Van A. MacMurray 1s______ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Felix Coles. atc ain. ac "v0 Sompsior of legation (Consul Gen- eral). William M. Gwynn... Second secretary (consul). George M:Abbott...ccn-eernr—- Third secretary (consul). Bdward Boge dlr. = =~ Third secretary (vice consul). Maj. William E. Shipp..._...____ Military attaché. A. Dana Hodgdon. ..c---zorarz- Consul (second secretary). Willinm Li Peck Consul (second secretary). Paul Mo Dutke: oc siie cman Vice consul. LIBERIA BoDTovIR.....o ees Lester A sWallon.. «vv. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Carleton A: Wall ccc coun atm: Vice consul. LITHUANIA Baunas.. ol RY John Van A. MacMurray13___.__ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. UI RBI hein SA el Counselor of legation. C. Porter Kuykendall._.________ First secretary (consul). John: FHuabner, 2d... oreo Third secretary (vice consul). Maj. William E. Shipp __..__-_ Military attaché. Basil ¥. Macgowan..__.__.....__ Vice consul. LUXEMBURG 14 Buyemburg.........eececeasaanaaiz Dave Hennen Morris____._____ Envoy extraordinary and minister MEXICO Moxie, DL IF... mene mn ammo AI EID CI br i Chihuahua, Chihuahuva_________ Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua______ Durango, Durango. _____________ Ensenada, Baja California______ Guadalajara, Jalisco... ___.__.._ Guaymas, Sonora... ____________ Matamoros, Tamaulipas Mazatlan, Sinaloa *Los Mochis, Sinaloa Merida, Yucatan Louls’Sussdorff, Jr.t an George Po Wallor. oon Miss Frances E. Willis______.____ Robert G. McGregor, Jr.______. Lelgh W. Hunt. oii evncn cans Josephus Daniels..........c...-. R.Henry'Norweb--.- ... 0. ... JohnH. MacVeagh. William W.. Schott... ooo Stephen E. Aguirre___.___.._._.. Robert Newbegin, 2d_.__.__.____ Lt. Col. Herbert E. Marshburn__ ‘Chomas H.-Leckett-.-.-=7-~can= Thomas D. Bowman Alexander K. Sloan_____________ Julian F. Harrington Yalan GC Dore Fe es Andrew E. Donovan, 2d-__..___ ent Leavitt... or ccm wre atm Toes RSD x van BW hile os oer JohnWilson, Jes. -.c aoe Victor TET olts, . —ozraci- =n Hyman Goldstein JackiD Neal oo Oscar W. Frederickson plenipotentiary. Counselor. Second secretary (consul). Third secretary. Third secretary. Assistant commercial attaché. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. Second secretary. Second secretary. Third secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. District accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Assistant district accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Vice consul. Vice consul. ewistV Boyle. Consul. Tee RaBlohm. . oii. ene, Consul. James GC. Powell, jr... __ Vice consul. George P.Shaw. co Consul. George B. Scherer... __.. Harry KB, Pangsburn... = Role, Baton a snonans WilllamA. Smale. ~~. as G Garzn os ei games A Neel 0 Georce H. Winters." 27 = 7 Noreis'S. Hagelton Charles C. Gidney, jr Alfonso F. Yepis..____ Herndon W. Goforth Henry G. Krausse Charles H. Derry... Roswell C. Beverstoek__________ Harold Frederic Jones_..._._.__. Charles H. Taliaferro. ........... 13 Accredited also to Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. 14 The diplomatic officers here listed are accredited also to Belgium. 30063°—T74—-2—1sT ED——39 Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Vice consul. 610 Congressional Directory MEXICO—NICARAGUA Post Name Office MEXICO—Continued Mexicali, Baja California. ______ Monterrey, Nuevo Leon._________ Negales, Sonora. ooo ____ *Cananea, Sonora... Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas. _____ Piedras Negras, Coahuila_..____ Saltillo, Coahuila____.._.__._..._ San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi. Tampico, Tamaulipas____________ Torreon, Coahuila____.___________ Vera Cruz, Vera Cruz.__________ MONACO 1 NETHERLANDS AND POS- SESSIONS NETHERLANDS PhS EIRghe. aden re omens Amsterdam... Rotterdam. =. eins POSSESSIONS Batavia, Java, Netherland East Indies. Curacao, Netherland West In- dies. Medan, Sumatra, Netherland East Indies. *Paramaribo, Netherland. Guiana (agency under Trinidad). Surabaya, Java, Netherland East Indies. NICARAGUA Manag on SLD Howard A. Bowman.____________ Willys A. Myers.......oeniwicns Thomas H. Robinson___ a Thomas M. Powell... _........ John). O'Keefe... oa...... Jeptha M. Gibbs. oe Romeyn Wormuth_.___________ Charles Todd Lee... __... Arthur’ RB. Willlams. o_o. Edmund B. Montgomery... __ Henry T'. Unverzagh....._....... Clarence E. Macy. occ Thomas J. Maleady.oocoooaceen Nelson RB. Park. o-oo oiaaa Gilbert B. Willson. .-0 nc —- William B. Murray. .- AUStin® C: Brody cease ccomneinee Charles B. Beylard. __.____._____ Maoxwell' BlakelS. coo... Hooker A. Doolittle... .- George D. Hopper..._..___. W. Quincy Stanton._.__ Frederick F. Henrotin Grenville T. Emmet. _ coe... Warden McK. Wilson___...___. Carl A Pisher cea tena- Maj. Truman Smith... _o.... Capt. Benjamin Dutton, jr..___ Jesse F. Van Wickel_..._.___._.. Capt. Theodore J. Koenig_._____ Lt. Comdr. Ben H. Wyatt._____. Capt. Julius Augustus Furer____ Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie_____ Kenneth S. Patton_____.___._____ . Frederik van den Arend_________ EllisA Bennett. Ll _........ Warren M. Chase... .... Walter A. Foote.) coon. vac Albert E. Clattenburg, jr_..____ L. Randolph Hires. oc... Russell M. Brooks. ____________ Courtland Christiani_.._________ Sidney H. Browne. __.._........ William Du B. Thorne._.______ James. S. Lawton... ..--czc. ao... Joel CO. Hudson... nein Arthur Bliss Lane__.._._.....___ Fletcher Warren. _ coon C 16 The officers at Monaco are also assigned to Nice, France. 5 16 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. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Diplomatic agent and consul gen- eral. Second secretary (consul). .| Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary. Second secretary. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant military attaché for air. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary (consul). Foreign Service of the United States NICARAGUA—POLAND 611 Post Name Office NICARAGUA—Continued Managua—Continued eg Guy W, Ray. mmm mm ammm———————— Third secretary (vice consul). *VIatagalps obra Eas-55 Puerto Cabezas_________________ NORWAY Bergen cone nme PALESTINE ForuSAlom. cue mmm meme PANAIIG rir nnn Hm sei Rema i PERSIA PERU Callao-14ma. oon or A eT Eee Cae sNMollendos ree To Be, Sl Bo PHILIPPINE ISLANDS VLE DE REE SVE TYTN, ety SE RAR 1 John Willard Carrigan. _____._. Col. Nicholas W. Campanole. __ Hector C. Adam, Jr... ......... John P. McDermott... ._..__.._ John A. Willey.iocoan i. lou le Eli Taylors cio... .-bizalan iS. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr-___ Jefferson Patterson... .oo.__ Maj. Truman Smith_____ Capt. Benjamin Dutton, Jr...__ Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie... William. Beck... or... Lawrence Higgins_._____________ Walter C. Dowling Brockholst Livingston. ________. Brig A Parking. = = Maurice P. Dunlap... ~..oon--- Joseph Yo Brent. 2-222 2 Andrew G. Lynch... ...-. Albert W.. Scott... ...L las George T. Summerlin___________ Rorlde G, MagVitty. ~~~" Lavette J. TIeXOr.... . oencan ROBCLL Pr JOY Cl cos tm ines Col. Nicholas W. Campanole._ __ Robert G. Glover... -- 7-7 Hory DD. Myers ces eee James Te, Pork, Ce Francis C. Jordan... i:w oo eteme Bindley B. Howard.............. Walter C.. Thurston.aoeee o-oo Douglas Bloods eee Capt. Frederick D. Sharp__.___. Alexander V. Dye... Fred Morris Dearing... __._._____ Louis G. Dreyfus, Jt.....ncmnen- Richard M. de Lambert Commander George L. Weyler__ Jullan™D, Smith. oo een: A CGyrfiCrilley. Harcld BD. Chum. oom Sherburne Dillingham __________ MA Muldrup- Forsyth... .-. -.... Arthie DD. Jakes: = os William G. Rupprecht._______._ Anthony Gembs.-...-... Norman Duanecan.__.o.= = 0 Felipe Farrer =i o> NA Whyte int en Clayton Lane. slain. oo ioni. Thomas H. Bevan. .zail_ 4 sais Marcel E. Malige.._._..._....... C.5Warwick Perkins, Jr....-cne= Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Assistant naval attaché, Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary (consul). Secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor. Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. Second secretary. Naval attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant commercial attachs, Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consular agent. Consular agent. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. First secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché, Consul general, Consul. Consul, 612 Congressional Directory POLAND—SPAIN AND POSSESSIONS Post Name Office POLAND—Continued Warsaw—Qontinued.........__. Bdmund J. Dersg.... 00... 5 Consul. William XK. Ailshie.. 22: 0} Vice consul. John Pu Steonel. Ji lL ul Vice consul. Orray Taft, Jr 0000 2. 0; Vice consul. William F. Basser. =... 0 Vice consul. William R. Morton._____________ Vice consul. Carl: Birkoland.....c.ccxxio'iidz Vice consul. PORTUGAL AND POSSES- SIONS PORTUGAL Lisben a3 Robert Granville Caldwell____.__ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Robert ¥, Fernald. ommeeeic Second secretary. Col. Stephen O. Fuqua. ..._.___ Military attaché. Lt. Comdr. John A. Gade__...__ Naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. Theodore E. Chand- | Assistant naval attaché or. ; Parker W. Buhrman...-........... Consul general. Kenneth S. Stout. .......a. a Vice consul. Daniel V. Anderson_____________ Vice consul. Funchal, Madeira ----| Alexander P. Cruger Consul. ] CD hed ise EE EL Leslie A. Davis_._...__ Consul. 3 William P. Robertson Vice consul. St. Michaels, Azores... ___ Harold -Playter.....wosaras ons Consul. POSSESSIONS Lourenco, Marques, Mozam- | Samuel G. Ebling____________.__ Consul. | bique, Africa. Girvan 8S. Teall tio iL Vice consul. RUMANIA Bucharest =p: Leland Harrisonz.s...c sion nie 2 Enyoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. George Wadsworth______________ Counselor (consul general). Frederick P. Hibbard.___________ First secretary (consul). Sheldon. Mills. .- -— __- Third secretary (consul). FoyD.-Kehler........cc0 cove Third secretary (vice consul). Lt. Col. Franklin Langley | Military attaché. Whitley. Rudolph otizer SRA 5 Vice consul. SAN MARINO V7 San Marino... _._.__.__._._ Joseph EaHaven. .....caeacineews Consul. SIAM | Bangkok... .... ..J000¢ckiia gsi James Marion Baker... coea-. Envoy extraordinary and minister | plenipotentiary. | Arthur I. ower... eee mmnn Second secretary (consul). i H. Gordon Minnigerode_______. Third secretary (vice consul). | Col. Joseph W. Stilwell._..__._. Military attaché. Halvern L.. NOITIS..—ccavncseas Vice consul. 4 | SPAIN AND POSSESSIONS Madrid ——--| Claude Gernade Bowers...-...- Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- | potentiary. \ il Hallett Johnson. ..--on-=memee-= Counselor of embassy. % i Walter H. Schoellkopf...__.____| First secretary. I EricC.Wendelin. ccna... Third secretary. I! Col. Stephen O. Fuqua. ..._._.. Military attaché. fl Capt. Augustin T. Beauregard._| Naval attaché. Albert F.- Nufer = oi rina Commercial attaché. Capt. Townsend Griffiss____..._ Assistant military attaché for air. | I Comdr. Theodore E. Chand- | Assistant naval attaché. er. Julian C. Greenup. Assistant commercial attaché: 5 John D. Johnson... Consul. | Bolard More-..__._.___ Vice consul. Barcelona, Spain. .cceceeeeeeoo. Claude I. Dawson. ....ccceewanw= Consul general. : Lynn W. Franklin Consul f Thomas S. Horn Consul. Daniel M. Braddock... ._....... Consul. | *Parragona, Spain.....ee.... Caesar Franklin Agostini._...... Consular agent. \ Bilbao, Spain... oo. William E. Chapman. ______.... Consul. Owen W. Gaines. -coeecuan Vice consul. Las Palmas, Canary Islands..__. Clifton R. Wharton:z.oli... 0c Consul. William C. George -cooocoecenan Vice consul. Malaga, Spain... ..licccimeaian George M. Graves... _..._..... Consul. William B. Douglass, Jr..__...__. Vice consul. Seville, Spain... ____________ Charles. A. Bay. coiii. 0.25.00 Consul. John B. Ocheltree...ccoeeavana-- Vice consul. 17 The consul at San Marino is also consul at Florence, Italy. Foreign Service of the United States 613 SPAIN AND POSSESSIONS—UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Post Name Office SPAIN AND POSSESSIONS— Continued Tenerife, Canary Islands__._____ Mason ner es Consul. David P. Keenan... oo lovee Vice consul. Valencia, Spain ._____________ Thomas DD, Davis: ere Consul. Milton B- Wells ot Vice consul. Vigo, Spain ar William W. Corcoran...........- Consul. SWEDEN FOC NOM momen es Goteborg d SWITZERLAND Berm ale te Basel IRI be fp pig Sn Geney. Zurich SYRIA TT RL Ae AE eb ep UT TURKEY Istanbul (Constantinople). ._____ Izmir (Smyrna). ooo UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Pretoria, Transvaal ________._._... Capetown, Cape Province ______ Durban, Natal... fer Johannesburg, Transvaal _______ Laurence A. Steinhardt... __ Addison E. Southard. _________. James B. Brown, Jr... .2 ez ox Mal: Truman Smitht:. Capt. Benjamin Dutton, Jr.____ Capt. Theodore J. Koenig.___..__ Lt. Harry Aloysius Guthrie... Boy BE, Br Bower. crn nee I. Kenly Bocon-z.----- co .. Harold Carlson... ona ooz Frithjol ©. Sigmond_-* =. 7 Lloyd D. Yates Hugh R.-Wilson. rec SiANCY TTAWKS cm werner tr oars Samuel Beer. de ns es mee Lt. Col. John Magruder._..______ Gerald Beith... tee or JA. Tuck Sherman... Alfred W. Donegan. ....v--c-=ss Montgomery H. Colladay.__.____ Prentiss’ B. Glibert....-. on Curtis T'. Everett______ Gilson G. Blake, Jr.____ Donald F: Bigelow... ..o-venz= Fdward P. Lawton... James W. Riddleberger..________ Llewellwyn E. Thompson, Jr____ Thomasd.Cole...-- Arthur C. Frost ..oa--i0l o.oo ie Maurice W. Altaffer _______.____ Francis L. Spalding_..__..______ NorrisRediker... aioli 00 Richard D. Gatewood. _...______._ J. Theodore Marriner.________.. Christian T. Steger.co: cl J IU John H. Msadonne.-. tli 0 2a William 8. Barrell_co old cone Easton a. JReleYmersesereonmnss Robert P. Skinner... ooo G. Howland Shaw. ooo _.__._. S. Walter Washington....______ Frederick E. Farnsworth_______ Lt. Col. John A. Crane....____. Julian E..Gillespie. .. wove Joh A. Embry I. oie tri Maxwell K. Moorhead. ________ Howard Elting, Jr......oveewwensi Charles W. Lewis, Jr... Ralph:J. Totten... cc Irving N. Linnel}18. ........ Samuebil. Day... William E. DeCourcy-..___.___ Allan C.:Tavlor.. to John Corrigan... nveemeeen Lompton Berry. ooo Irving Ns Linnell... __c= HughS. Miller:... ecm R. Borden Beams. --...oecmnaeane 18 Assigned also as consul general at Johannesburg. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor (consul general). Third secretary. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Assistant military attaché for air. Assistant naval attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Second secretary. Second secretary. Military attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Vice consul and language officer. Vice consul. Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. Counselor of embassy. Second secretary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Assistant commercial attaché. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Counselor. Commercial attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. 614 Congressional Directory UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS—YUGOSLAVIA Post Name Office UNION OF SOVIET SOCIAL- IST REPUBLICS BIOBCOW..or nmr m mm oe re mers URUGUAY Montevided o-oo VENEZUELA TA Guaira. ann Eres Maraeatbo. ea mln YUGOSLAVIA Belgrade... Zagreb. . William C. Bullitt. cee Harold Shantz... -iz-ocaaac Loy W. Henderson-...-vcocaaaan- AncasY, Ward... oo... George F. Kennan_________._____ Berta’, Rynilioclm......_.......... Elbridge Durbrow. ...._.______ Lt. Col. Philip R. Faymonville_ George CQ MINTY... cee mvs TIHSA. Johnson... .c nadine mais Lee Martray. ve crete 2a Arne. fA. Kock. ovens Philip F.. Cherp..c-.cocvmmetinn.—m Fred’ F. Waller... __ on... Capt. Frederick D. Sharp___..__ Comdr. Edmund W. Strother___ Augustin W. Ferrin...noismeoi- Aubrey E. Lippincott... HH. Bartlett Wells... Meredith Nicholson... ______ Glenn A, ADDOY ..... cimwmmemm——— Col. Nicholas W. Campanocle__. Frederic D. Grab. .cw-e-oz-22-cum GEOLZe OIF. i ms i ie om 5 winrar Albert. H. Cousins, jr.—e—mo-—oc-- Louis B. Mazzeo... = George R. Phelan ooo ____ Charles S. Wilson... aio aea—aoiic Wainwright Abbott. accaeaaas Lt. Col. Franklin Langley Whit- John IL, Calnan nso Salou James E. McKenna_____________ Ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary. First secretary. Second secretary. Second secretary (consul), Second secretary. Third secretary. Third secretary (vice consul). Military attaché. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul, Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary (consul general). Third secretary. Military attaché. Naval attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul, Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Third secretary. Military attaché. Commercial attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. First secretary. Military attaché. Agricultural attaché. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS DETAILED AS INSPECTOR Nathaniel P. Davis J. Klahr Huddle Joseph E. Jacobs FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS ASSIGNED TO THE DEPARTMENT Theodore C. Achilles. oo __.____ Maynard B. BarneS...aeaeoo oo. Willard 1... Beatloe. ccemnae-mc=ns Ralph A. Boernstein..._.._._.___ Charles E.Bohlen__.__ =... __. James C. H. Bonbright_.________ George l,, Brandt... i. Howard Bucknell, jr-...oo----_. Herbert S. Bursley.........— == George H. Butler... oe--= William F. Cavanaugh... _____ Norris B. Chipman PanlC. Daniels... Allan Dawson... seca Eugene H. Dooman ----- —-=v--- OC, Panl Fleicher ..... i c-22 Peter H. A. Flood... ooreemm= Cecil Wayne Gray. ...---oeoean-- Beroard:Gufler........ co .2 2 2 Raymond A. Hare... Landreth M. Harrison. .__...._- Donsld BR, Heath. =o. orca. ve-r Department. | Julius’ C. Holmes... ooo. ooo. Department, ——e- Department. 12David- Me RK. Bey... Department. gl TH HTT A Peed a TT ed Isl) 1 Pre mete) mm PR Department. i Depariment. "Joseph'¥, MeGurk _.... _ ____.. ... Department. -.. Department. | Clinton E. MacEachran____________ Department, ex DPeparrment. > John HH *Morean, ~~ ___ ~~... Department. Department. | David J. D. Myers... co conrmaer Department. tt Department. MyrlS. Myers. = 0. Department. —==- Department. | Joseph E. Newton... _. Department. _..- Department. | Mahlon Fay Perkins________________ Department. _.- Department. | Lowell C. Pinkerton... ..____.___.___ Department. Pepartment. | Edward L. Reed... ooo Department. ___ Department. | Rudolf E. Schoenfeld. . -- Department. --- Department. | Edwin Schoenrich____ Department. --- Department. | John Farr Simmons...-oooo._..____ Department. --- Department. | Edward G. Trueblood...____________ Department, 1 Department. WAHamMm TT. /TUINGY. eon Department, --~ Department. | John Carter Vincent... _____________ Department. === Department. “Edward T.Wolles..........ccnnnnancns Department. Department, David Willlamson. ____.:-..-____.. Department ---- Department. | Thomas M, Wilson «cceecenanncain Department, --- Department. PRESS GALLERIES 5 | { RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXYV 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 whose 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 DiruEcTORY 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. Josep W. BYRNS, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. Taomas L. StToxk=s, : Chairman, Harry B. Gauss, Wirriam K. HUTCHINSON, Witriam P. KENNEDY, Pavr J. McGABAN, Secretary, Standing Commatiee of Correspondents. 617 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 S__..._.__.__ ®*Adams,* Phelps" H..-_.... Aikman, Duncan. ......:u- *Akers, Milburn P_.________ Albright, Robert C_________ * Alford, Theodore C_.___._. Aen npyyser i i a FAlston, Roland. .\....-. = *Anderson, Paul Y__.._._____ Anderson, Robert C._______ *Ardery, William S_.___.___ *Armstrong, B-B., Jr... Arne, Sigrid....J_ oC Ill * Authier, George F____.____ *Bailey, Fred iQ. 0 lll .C.L Baker, Morgan... ....... |*Barkley, Frederick R______ Barkley, Paul... con cuul *Barthelme, George. -....._. {| Bates, Stanley..-"____._____ *Baukhage, Hilmar Robert. *Boaman, Kor... .... *Beal, John B......c.»_ co. Beale, Wil: Jr... *Bean, Rodney... *Beolair, Feliz, Ir..ve.lucic *Bell, Heywood... _._______ *Bell, Samuel W............ *Bell, Ulric... ....... Bend, J. P..ov. onde Benedict, Bertram __________ *Benson, George A_..______. *Bent, Myron EB... - .. ‘Biondi, Leone Fumasoni____ Black, Buby A... ...... *Blinn, Randolph........... *Bloom, Chester A_...____.. :*Boeckel, Richard............ Bonwit, Julia A: i. i o Booth, Windsor... ....- Bowman, Lenwood H_______ *Boyd, Max. canine eeea iBoyle,Johmn.............. - Brockett, I. Boone. Bradshaw, Roberta V_______ *Brandt, Raymond P.______ *Brayman, Harold........... Brewer, Alva.........conaen-- 618 Washington News ... Lt. eee -cxereasemdd-- NOW OLE BI Es resin sma neers a Ea ais Los Angeles Illustrated Daily News and Post Record. GH ST i Rn pe fe a ne he Washington; Posh. ac. costo dn a iiil.oihinie Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times... ASSOCIatead Press. wp wanna nme a te New York Evening Post, Panama Ameri- can, United Features Syndicate, Phila- delphia Record. ASS0CIat Cd Press earn am rar nr St. Louis! Post-Dispatch... ._ ii... .. li... Associated; Press... fact.cur. ious nuns ASSOCIted Press... iodide Sean wari danstirirere ns El Pais, San Juan, Puerto Rico... AssociatedPress... i LL JA UIE Daily News Record (New York), Women’s Wear. Minneapolis Trane. eee rarer nee United Press Associations .......oo oo... rn Ee NR Baltimore Evening Sun... cee eee... 119 Associated Press; ci. ssosenimiiin- on old Cologne Cozetio. i. it. fader cmmewws seal - Washincton Dally News... .oeoreeeeom= United States News Association_____________ Associated Press soo. cioototu roll ASS ate Press. a aaa New York Herald Tribune... ._._._____. Louisville Courier-Journal. _ ________________ Havas News Ageney.....ooc-cieniniuiaina- Editorial Research Reports Minneapolis Journal... ....coeeenena Brooklyn Dally Times... ....-ouea- Stefani Agenee=.). a. ooo Sian nodding Jamestown (N. Y.) Evening Journal, Madi- son (Wis.) State Journal, Green Bay Press- Sage La Democracia (San Juan, By. Daily Northwestern, Oshkosh tis ), Worcester (Mass.) Gazette, Apple- ton (Wis. ) Post-Crescent, La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune. Washindtonimes..... o.oo. a i... Winnipeg Free Press, Regina Leader-Post, Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. Editorial Research Reports. _._...________. Washington Times itl. ooo Washington Post News Service. ____________ Associated Press. oo... Coca eaten ASS00iated PIES. o.oo inn iar aan Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Co., London, England. AssociatedPress... o.oo aeidene North American Newspaper Alliance. _.___._ St. Louis Post-Dispatel......coewevn nanan Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger....____ Washington Herald... cco ncrencaruanenens 1310 Eighteenth Street. 700 Rock Spring Drive, Clarendon, Va. 3005 Ordway Street. 56 Connecticut Avenue, Ken- sington, : 2203 First Street. 2914 Glover Driveway. 3133 Connecticut Avenue. 1525 Twenty-eighth Street. 3434 Oakwood Terrace. 4980 Quebec Street. Roosevelt Hotel. 1910 K Street. 2712 Wisconsin Avenue. 3220 Connecticut Avenue. The Argonne. 1833 Newton Street. or yaaa Street 1827 Park Road. W. Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 2034 T'wentieth Street. Wardman Park Hotel. 633 Lamont Street. 2821 Ordway Street. 2000 R Street. 1435 Shepherd Street. 2324 Tracy Place. 3332 O Street. 118 South Fairfax, Alexan- dria, Va. 3217 Connecticut Avenue. 3803 Alton Place. 3021 Forty-fourth Place. 1314 Eighteenth Street. 1714 Connecticut Avenue. Westchester Apartments. 1524 1. Street. National Press Club. 211% Prince Street, Alexan- dria, Va. 1129 Vermont Avenue. 133 Rucker Avenue, Lyon Village, Va. R. F. D. 4, Rockville, Md, Cavalier Hotel. 1701 Sixteenth Street. 3423 Sixteenh Street. Jefferson Apartments. 1730 H Street. 6370 Thirty-first Place. 3200 P Street. 4955 Quebec Street. 4426 Volta Place. 3700 Massachusetts Avenue — Press Galleries 619 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Brooks, Ned L..nusuiie ont. *Brown, Ashmun N___..___ *Brown, Constantine A_____ *Brown, George Rothwell ___ 2Brown, Horry J. oof ii... *Brown, Robert S_ ______.__ *Brown,swalter.. ao. 0. *Browne, Merwin H________ *Bruner, Felix FP... oo. | Bryant, George B., Jr______ *Buck, Robert M__.__.._.____ *| Buel, Walker S_._.__...__. * Butler, CG, Hilton -.- x: *Buatler, James J. ozo. *Cameron, Donald__________ *Canham, Erwin D_____.___ *Carroll, Raymond G_______ *Chinn, James, E._---.2 *Chipman, Stanley. ________ *Christerson, Melbourne.____ *Clapper, Raymond._______. *Qline, John H-t.-is. ooo. *Oodel, Martin... c...c005. Cole, Gordon H-....--—_..... Cole, Rosamond E_._.....__ *Colller; John B... = izo. *||Collins, Ralph A..__..__.. *Colt, Charles C. _....c.... Conger, Clement E_________ *Connor, Francis J..__..._.. *Connor, Frank W., Jr_____. Conroy, Edward A_________ *Cornell, Douglas B.____.___ *@otten, Felix... cocazince ||Cottrell, Jesse S_ . __ .____. *Covert, John. RB... coo. *Qowan, John P...c..2.5es *Cox, George Howland ..____ *t Craig, Elisabeth May_.___ *Crawford, Kenneth G Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Toledo News-Bee, Columbus Citizen, Akron Times-Press, Youngstown Telegram, Ken- tucky Post. Providence Journal, Providence Bulletin____ Washington Star King Features... sani into dons Led Boise Statesman, Salt Lake Tribune, Spokane Spokesman-Review, Oakland Tribune. Cleveland Press, Toledo News-Bee, Colum- bus Citizen, Akron Times-Press, Youngs- town Telegram, Cincinnati Post, Ken- tucky Post. Winston-Salem Journal, Winston-Salem Sentinel, Greenville News, Greenville Piedmont, Asheville (N. C.) Citizen- Times, Mobile (Ala.) Times. Buffalo Evening News... _.______. Washington Posto. Cos oo uiinsdai Wall Street Journal o-oo cLolod nL Cleveland Plain Dealer... ____.___. Memphis Commercial Appeal _______________ New Britain Herald, Utica Observer Dis- patch, Schenectady Gazette, Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette. Associated Presson... Clo. Dia ll St. Thomas (Ontario) Times-Journal, Strat- ford (Ontario) Beacon Herald. Universal Service Now York Times. 0000 tl 0 lis. New York Journal of Commerce lL Assoelaied Press... ilo 2000 0a St. T.ouis Post-Dispatch... oo... 00... Washingten Stay... Lo Providence Journal, Providence Bulletin____ Associated Pros... ooh aeaiing. Washington Post... 102 _ Jo 00 New York Times... 5 ne lb an ‘Washington Evening Star Radio:News Bureau. so ulgl dooa to Jinis. Pawtucket (R. I.) Times, North Adams (Mass.) Transcript, Stamford (Conn.) Ad- vocate, Lewiston (Maine) Sun. Worcester (Mass.) Gazette, Madison (Wis.) State Journal. Schenectady Union-Star, Oswego (N. 5 Palladium-Times, Glens Falls ( Yi.) Times, Benton Harbor (Mich.) News- Palladium. Baltimore Evening Sun, New Orleans Item- Tribune. few Tribune News Service Central News of America... _.....___. Charlotte Observer, Arizona Daily Star, Anderson (S. C.) Mail, Anderson (S. C.) Independent, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester Times-Union, Wa- tertown ~ .Y.) Daily Times, Troy (N.Y.) Record. Philadelphia Bulletin... soloiiizn id Pittsburgh Sun - Telegraph, Washington, (Pa.) Observer. Christian Science Monitor... _.___.____ Portland (Me.) Evening Express, Portland Press Herald, Charlotte News, Great Falls Tribune. Philadeinon Record, New York Evening ost. 4619 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md, 3903 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 1327 Twenty-first Street. 1809 T'wenty-fourth Street. 6412 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. 4628 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md 1914 Biltmore Street. 3945 Connecticut Avenue. 2900 Connecticut Avenue. 2107 S Street. Mount Vernon Boulevard, Va. 3815 Gramercy Street. 1239 National Press Building. 1514 Seventeenth Street. 1616 Sixteenth Street. 4968 Quebec Street. 4000 Cathedral Avenue. 1318 Quincy Street. 1840 Plymouth Street. 1010 Randolph Street. 1731 P Street. 517 Cumberland Street, Chevy Chase, Md Lyon Village, Va. 114 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. 1441 Spring Road. 209 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 1722 Nineteenth Street. Falls Church, Va. 1726 Massachusetts Avenue. 920 Colorado Building. 1424 R Street. 1424 K Street. 5030 Forty-first Street. Martinique Hotel. 6239 Thirty-third Street. 517 Cameron Street, Alex- ander, Va. 2718 Sixth Street, NE. 1661 Park Road. 1426 N Street. 21 Marion Avenue, McLean, a. 5435 Connecticut Avenue. McReynolds Apartments. 1717 G Street. 1304 Thirtieth Street. 3125 O Street. Capitol Towers. 523 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. 620 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Crowley, Raymond J...... Cullinane, James aoc... Davies, Donald M__________ Davis, Maxine_.._.___.._.__. *Davis, Watson.._.__ *DeCanx, Len. .......- *De Greve, Arthur F *Denny, Ludwell .._________ *Denoyer, Pierre... _...__.. Dickson, OU. Boca. cour *Doherty, William H_______ *Dorris, H *Douthat, James W.____..._. *Doying, George ERR *| Doyle, James F______.__._ * Dudley, Mayo... .......... *Duffield, Eugen S._..._..__ *Dufly, Edward J.......... *Durno, George E___________ IDutcher, Rodney... Earle, Martha i sim Ady, Arch. ce scnvuin-sisa *Edwards, Willard _._._.____ |BEmery, Fred Ac... ---.--- *Engle, J. B *Erhardt, Leslie. o.oo... *Kovin, Morris D.......-..... * Erwin, John:D....0..10.. Essary, Helen. .........c...0.. 1 Essary, J. Fred....o...5.. Field, Carter cociuaaii iii. Binney, Rath... . *Fitzmaurice, Walter_______ *RFitzpatrick, John J..._._.. Fleeson, Doris... cccibin.. *Fleming, Dewey L_.____._. *Hlynm, Alfred ¥ ued. a Flynn, Carroll -...........2. *Flynn, Michael W_________ *Folliard, Edward T.__.____ raote, Mark. ..c..0.00 Ji Pox, Derek. aot cai cna *Francis, Warren B_____.____ Frank, Pat 2 rante, Harry cucu es im tul Frederick, Pauline A________ Friedheim, Eric... ......._.. *Prye, William. co. -.ci.ant Fulton, William.........c oo. Furman, Bess... coupe iio *Gableman, Edwin W..____ *Gardner, Frederick R______ *Garnett, Bart Pa. .onoot Goodwin, B,:8....cuato 0000 *Goodwin, Mark L_._______ Greene, Jerry. -o---.u..... *Groves, Perey. 1. 7. icaoaall *Gridley, Charles Ore Associated Press. aicc ll Joss Lanna Washington Herald.ouoo cl .coo lool] Uo Flint. (Mich.) Journal. - 2: Ssaliziraio: Gary (Ind.) Post-Tribune______. gant Science Service ............ aa Federated Press... United Press Associations... _.___________ Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance.___.___ Petiti Parison = 2 aio issn Universal Serviee. woes dammdin li 0 Universal Service. coool 2oas8 Sains J.) Associated«Presgeaiy ico. casio al Associated Pressy..o.. rinulb Dl ional. Evanston (I11.) News Index... ________.____ Buffalo Courier-ExXpress. «oo ccccooooocmaonn United States News Association_____________ Chicago Tribune News Service ______.._____ Newspaper Enterprise Association Enid (Okla.) Morning News, Enid (Okla.) Daily Eagle. Washington City News Service...._._..__.... Chicago Tribune News Service...______._____ United States News Association... _____ Associated Press... oon li i 00 New York Daily Investment News. ______ Cincinnati Times-Star. oi LL i Loo... Nashville Tennesseean, Knoxville Journal, Memphis Commercial Appeal. Washington Times... Jo. eas soniye, Baltimore TEER Er ee RSPR Lf Bell Syndicate, Boston Herald. ___.___..___. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance________ Universal Service. .....cooacodu. Sill ‘Washington Times... ol goisniieeil. NewYork Dajfly News... oo oceeneees- BaltimoreiSun... ioc ac iin linia. Wall Street Journal, xchange Telegraph Co., London, England. Central News of America. _____________. WashingtoniHerald/.. coon. olu0d Washington: Poste. ono lil sails Grand Rapids Press, Saginaw News, Jack- son Citizen Patriot, Flint Journal, Kala- mazoo Gazette, Bay City Times, Muske- gon Chronicle, Ann Arbor News. United States News Association_____________ Losi Angeles Pimego.... 0 0anl in Soot Washington Herald... oo iio oii. Cincinnath TAGOIer- coer aim wwe Asscclaied Press. cool ioilo a0 oes SLND Chicago Daily Newser _Jlaalaaon AsseciofediPress. o.oo 00 Newark Evening News... __oo__.___ Washington Times... co -eiip. si tiohaia Central News of America... ___.__________.__. Dallas News, Dallas Evening-Journal_______ Associated Press. sodioo J Jind Jniisling? Denver Post, Peoria Star, Moline Dispatch. 220 Spruce Avenue, Takoma Park, . 2022 F Street. 1735 De Sales Street. 1235 Thirty-first Street. 1422 Rhode Island Avenue. 2920 Ontario Road. 1620 Fuller Street. 2231 Bancroft Place. Wardman Park Hotel. 1424 Sixteenth Street. 4462 Reservoir Road. 3434 Oakwood Terrace. 5009 Thirteenth Street. 4219 River Road. 2812 Cortland Place. 3100 Connecticut Avenue. 140 Shepherd Street, Claren- on, Va. 2424 Foxhall Road. 1439 Locust Road. 1752 N Street. ‘Westchester Apartments. Roosevelt Hotel. 8021 Saratoga Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. 5315 Connecticut Avenue. 1616 P Street. Liv No. $3 1che Road, Claren- on 3221 ection Avenue. 4943 Hillbrook Lane. 1835 K Street. 3121 Newark Street. 3121 Newark Street. Corcoran Courts. 818 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Columbia Country Club. 1525 Twenty-eighth Street. 3002 R Street. 4432 Klingle Street. 800 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md 4000 Cathedral Avenue. 3000 Otis Street NE. 1440 Rhode Island Avenue. 5901 Nevada Avenue. 1111 Oak Street, Spring, Md. 3211 Northampton Street. Silver 1830 Phelps Place. 4432 Harrison Street. 110 Greene Avenue, Aurora Hills, Va. 2001 Twenty-eighth Street. 3209 Highland Place. Tilden Hall Apartments. 541 Twenty-first Street. Totraine Apartments. 2712 Wisconsin Avenue. The Ontario. 3100 Connecticut Avenue. 323 South St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. 2900 Connecticut Avenue. 3936 Legation Street. 1922 Sunderland Place. 110 Maryland Avenue NE. 1448 Park Road. 2120 LeRoy Place. The Mendota. Burlington Hotel. 13 Sycamore Avenue, Ta- koma Park, 3 Droskanle Road, "Bethesda, - { p Press Galleries 621 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence 2Qridloy, BR. Li: ound ioan.l *Qriffin, Bulkley S_.......__ *Griffin, Gerald-....ccnveems *Grover, Preston Li *1Groves, Charles S._....... *Haakinson, Edwin B *Hachten, Arthur...._._.._. *Hackett, Ernest...cl.<.-.-: FHndley, Ba. cen nianinas *Hall, Frank Ae ceosin-nraus tHamilton, Charles A_.______ *Hamilton, Tho. J-, Jr.-2=-- *Harkness, Richard Li... ; *Harper, BM. Ba... ooo atin Harris, Ned Brunson. ______ *Harrison, Alfred F......___ *Harsch, Joseph C *Hart, Lee P0o6:.oac— i Hawthrone, Roger. ....._.__ *Hayden, Jay G | Hazard, John W *Heath, Louis Jay.-_----____ *Heinl, Robert D Henderson, Robert E | *tHeiss, A. E Helgesen, Ray.....cecmmmom=m ¥*Helm, William P=... [ *Henle, Raymond Z________ *tHenning, Arthur S_..._.._. *Henry, John C Herrick, Genevieve Forbes... *Hershey, Scott..coconaaii. [Heslep, Charter............ *Higgins, BE. Worth... *Hildebrand, W. A_._______ *Hinton, Harold B...._____. Hoag, Frank S., Jr... \ *Hodges, Panl..-ccoac il. i *Hollander, Richard... ______ *Holmes, George R_________ [| *Holmes, George Sanford.__ ! Horan, Harold J. T_________ *tHornaday, James P_______ ! Hornaday, Mary. _...cc.-__-_ | *Horton, Robert W *Hunler, H.-C...0n.ccee--- *Huntley, Theodore A_.____ *Hurd, C. W. B Hutchinson, William K_____ Huston, LatherA.....-.---. ||[Jamieson, William Edward. Jefferson, Mary F.__________ *Jenking, J. H...ccnt-ot ini. *Jewell, Edmund... ._.._.___ United Press Associations... .....__._._.__ Worcester Post, Brockton Enterprise, New Haven Register, Springfield Union, Pitts- field Eagle, Lynn Item, Hartford Times, Waterbury American, Manchester Union Leader. Baltimore Sum.oJ. ol odanin i aasl LL Montreal Daily Star, Toronto Evening Telegram, Cedar Rapids Gazette, Hamil- ton Herald. NO, W...0. News Service uo. ...oLd...... Binghamton Press, Troy Times... ..._...... Associated Press Owensboro (Ky.) Messenger. ......._...__. ‘Washington News Service. a ee CER Christian Science Monitor, Boston New York Journal of Commerce GENE AR EI Middletown Times Herald, Newburgh Beacon News. United Press Associations... ________. Wabash (Ind.) Plain-Dealer___._____________ Central News of America. ._________________ Traffic World, Chieagoo.. ual soil) | Washington:Herald........ oc... go 2l60 | Syracuse Herald, Kansas City (Mo.) Jour- nal-Post. Biisonrgs Post Gazette, Milwaukee Sen- tinel. Chicago Tribune Press Service... _......____ ‘Washington Evening Star__.__________ North American Newspaper Alliance_______ ASSOCIATEN PrOSB...... crm mom es des eh oe eo Washington News. con meen ne dean dd] United States News Association ......_.._.___ Greensboro Daily News. ooo New York Times Washington N International News Service... _.....__.__.____ Denver Rocky Mountain News, Houston Press, Fort Worth Press. London Daily Express Indionapells News. oo. over neers Christian Science Monitor_.________________ Birmingham Post, Knoxville News-Sentinel, Memphis Press ‘Scimitar. New York Times, a... sul 507 East St. Louis (I11.) Journal, Decatur (I11.) Herald-Review, Champaign-Urbana Cou- rier, Olympia (Wash.) Olympia. Associated Press... ........ 280 JI oEL Washington Times New York Times International News Service New York Times. oven die aaiiaa ore. WashinstonHersld._...._. Baltimore Evening Sun Associated Press Houston Chronicle, New Orleans States, San Antonio (Tex.) Express. Women’s ye ih Nottingham Drive, hevy Chase, Md. 2 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 1227 Hamilton Street. 208 Jefferson Apartments. 1742 Q Street. 918 M Street. 5410 Forty-first Street. 6501 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. 1708 R Street. 4460 Greenwich Parkway. 2006 Columbia Road. 1841 Lamont Street. 2928 P Street. 9 South Oak Street, Claren- don, Va, Park Lane Apartments. 3434 Porter Street. 1641 Thirty-fifth Street. Army and Navy Apartments. 1516 Allison Street. 1812 Thirty-fifth Street. 2324 Twentieth Street. 6300 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md 456 N Street SW. 2400 California Street. 1819 Wyoming Avenue. 3035 Newark Street. Wardman Park. 606 Cecil Avenue, Riverdale, 3434 Oakwood Terrace. 2728 Thirty-second Street. 1900 F Street. 316 Braddock Road, Alexan- dria, Va. 3121 Sixteenth Street. 1735 Kilbourne Place. 3611 S Street. 2721 Adams Mill Road. 1425 Thirty-fourth Street. Dupont Circle Hotel. 3908 Jocelyn Street. 3309 T Street. 1922 I Street. 3930 Connecticut Avenue, Apartment 301 H. 1314 Eighteenth Street. 1327 Hemlock Street. 1327 Hemlock Street. 4043 N Street. 3020 Dumbarton Avenue. 812 Nineteenth Street. 1211 Ridge Road. 6928 Ninth Street. 307 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 1603 Connecticut Avenue. 4613 Rosedale Avenue, Be- thesda, Md 3901 Connecticut Avenue. 1922 Belmont Road. 1319 Rittenhouse Street. 2308 Ashmeade Place. 2901 Connecticut Avenue. 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. 3031 Sedgewick Street. 622 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Johnson, George Mack.____ *Jones, Coleman B__________ Jorgensen, Hanne___________ *Kaorig, Walterii cocdlis. Kelley, RalphJ....cvonee-- *Kelly, Eugene A____________ *Kelly, John Wooo. iotasi i Kendrick, Harrold D_______ *Kennedy, Frank A_________ *tKennedy, William P______ *Kent, Russell.cic.. i io .. *Kenworthy, Carroll H.._.. *{Keyser, Charles P__..__. = *Kezer, Monro....._..._._.. *Kidney, Daniel M.....____ Kilgore, Bernard... *King, James Pq. .0i80- King, Tom WW... ....0l. 55... Kinnear, Isabel ____._._.__.. *Kintner, Robert E_________ *Kirkley, Don J. ic .o00s Kiluckhohn, Frank L_______ *Rnore, Ernst Ac. 20. . Knowles, Horace........__.. Kramer, Kenneth G________ Kreiselman, Lee. _......._. Krieghbaum, Hillier________ *RKroeck, Arthur... 44.5.5. Krug, Thomas Kio 2p coi *Kuriyama, Ohojiro-......_. *Lambert, John T.__._._.__ *Lamm, Lynne M__....___. Laurence, Amory A_._______ *Leaseh, Paal:R... 0. o.... Lehrbas, Tloyd...c.op viii *Le May, Francis M________ || Lewis, Dorothea J_._....__. *Tewis, B. Waooiiuiinntihn *Lewis, Fulton, Jr___.___.___. *Lewis, Sir Willmott_.______ *Lincoln, G. Gould....._._. *Lindley, Ernest K_._____.___ *Linz, Bertram F._..__.._._. *1[| Linz, Clarence Li._._.___. Lyons, 8. Burton. ..._._....__ *MecClellan, Robert. ......__ *McCormick, Bob. _________ *McDonnell, J. Bernard... .. United Press Associations... .._____ New York Herald Tribune... ooooo oo... Newark Evening News... o_o... Newark Evening News. o-oo. Atlanta Constitution, Miami (Fla.) Herald, Sacramento (Calif.) Bee, Fresno (Calif.) Bee, Modesto (Calif.) Bee. Washington Times... .... ou oe lnss ls Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian. oo __._.__ Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette ___________ St. Petersburg (Fla.) Independent, Jackson- ville Journal, Miami Daily News, Tampa Daily Times, Pensacola Journal and News, Orlando Reporter and Sentinel. ‘Washington Star, Boston Herald, Boston Traveler, Springfield Republican, Salem News. Birmingham News, Birmingham Age- Herald, Chattanooga Times. United Press Associations... ._________. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. - caeeeeeoooo- Associated Press. io... Con Lonnluni Ti Indianapolis Times, Evansville (Ind.) Press, Oklahoma City News. Wall Street Journal. ....... cool tuoi ‘Washington Daily News... ______...___ Winnipeg Free Press......... ous. ulti... Bridgeport Times-Star, Holyoke Transcript.. New York Herald Tribune Fort Worth Star Telegram._..____.___ New. York Times. oo... 0004 Central News of America... ......_. dr Houston Chronicle, Shreveport Times, Amarillo News. Wall Street Journal... .......... 200000... Wichita: Beacon. .c.opeatiaui. Asani United Press Associations... _..___. New York Times... cL aioli anallll Jamaica (N, Y.) Daily: Press... 0. U0 The Tokyo Nichi-Nichi, the Osaha Mainichi, Japan. Universal Service. ...coen.boil DOU 00000. Daily Metal Trade, Hollywood (Calif.) Re- porter. Providence Journal, Providence Bulletin..__ Chicago Daily News........c=o2c Je Lisl Associated Press... coon Lili i aiaadinl. ASS0ciated Bross. oo owndih fo 20500000 La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune, Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent. United Press Associations... o_o... Universal Service. Lio. i. coin 0 0. London Times.___. ‘Washington Stariciiii i. soo 2l00ly New York Herald Tribune Heypory Daily News, La Nacion, Buenos ires. New York Journal of Commerce, Newport Daily News. Bufialo Times. ov... 200 0 JUS LL, International News Service... Springfield (Mass.) Daily News_.__.____.__.__ New. York Sun. cou... 200 LL 0 2. R05 Richmond News Leader, Wilmington (Del.) Every Evening, Roanoke Times, Roanoke (Va.) World-News. New York Journal of Commerce. ._......._. ‘Washingten Herald... .......203.00 L000 JY , Washinghon NOWS.............ieals owoa ebony Washington Post: ....-co20ido lo iio. 2121 New York Avenue. 4419 Greenwich Parkway. 110 Maryland Avenue NE. 1 Woodland Terrace, Alex- andria, Va. 1246 National Press Build- ing. 1803 Phelps Place. Alban Towers. 211% Prince Street, Alexan- dria, Va. 1669 Columbia Road. 2405 First Street. 1901 Wyoming Avenue. 1425 Forty-fourth Street. 1620 Decatur Street. 714 Walbrook Avenue, Vir- ginia Highlands, Alexan- dria, Va. 3809 Warren Street. Willard Hotel. 1779 Massachusetts Avenue. 1468 Clifton Street. 200 Raymond Street, Chevy hase, . 1900 Biltmore Street. 3009 Ordway Street. 900 Nineteenth Street. 3405 Fessenden Street. ‘Willard Hotel. Westchester Apartments. Dupont Circle Apartments. Stoneleigh Court. 1244 National Press Building. Westchester Apartments. 2408 California Street. 1800 Q Street. 3911 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, : ‘Wardman Park Hotel. 1526 Mackey Road, Claren- don, Va. 3216 Thirteenth Street. 223 Willow Street, Takoma ark, : 4402 Volta Place. 1605 New Hampshire A venue. 1808 R Street. 1607 Twenty-eighth Street. 5513 Thirteenth Street. 4107 Legation Street. 2111% Prince Street, Alexan- dria, Va. 1812 G Street. 1305 N Street. 1728 Twenty-first Street. 236 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. The Avondale. a is Carolina Avenue 1843 Kalorama Road. 5311 Cathedral Avenue. ) j ] Press Galleries 623 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *McDonough, Stephen [McGahan, Paul J McGill, George W MeGill, Robert. >... ..._. *tMcGowan, P. H McGuire, Donald A *McKee, Oliver, Jr__________ *McKelway, Benjamin M___ *MecLean, Charles Clark____ *McNamee, Michael M., Jr. *MacMahon, Louis A Magruder, Thomas G Malcolmson, Charles *Mallon, Hugh D £Maollon, Panl...._.......... Mallon, Winifred Manly, Chesly....L =. Manning, George H., Jr Manning, Helen May *Marbut, F. B Marshall, C. GG... 0. *Martin, Lorenzo W Mattfeldt, Rudolf .______.__ *Mayl, Edward O..-._..__. *Meiman, Benjamin *Mellett, Lowell Meredith, L. Woo 0 200d, *Metcalfe, James S__________ *Michael, Charles R Miller, J oseph L Miller, Lee Gi... oo... Mitchell, Jonathan__._______ *Mobley, Radford E., Jr___. *Morgan, Cole E____________ Morhart, Frederick H., Jr___ *Morris, Noe Alex: i oii *Mosher, Clinton L *Newberry, A. T...._...... *Newmyer, Arthur G Nixon;/Glenw. oo oo... *OQ’Connell, Dan E *0O’Donnell, John AO LOY, J. Anas Sih *Q’Rourke, John..._... it *0Ogdon, William P *Oliver, D. Harold *Palmer, Ralph D Parke, N..@.. ooo. ln |* Parker, George B......0L | International News Service Assoclated Press... ..... 00 00 nfiii i 0 PhiladelphiaInquirer. 2. 0... Chattanooga (Tenn.) News International News Service. ________________ Columbia State, Charleston Evening Post, Tampa Tribune, Savannah Press, Augus- ta Chronicle, Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald, Lexington Herald Associated Press. ..cccc.oaiflle 0 1 FIL Boston Evening Transcript Washington Star-c..icoo Lo los. New York Times Washington Herald Wall Street Journal... LLL CosOin Philadelphia Record, New York Post Oil City (Pa.) Derrick North American Newspaper Alliance--_____ Now. YorETIMes. cuca iniit dein sie na ie Chicago Tribune News Service______________ Harrisburg News-Patriot, Camden Courier and Post, Toronto Star, Elmira Star- Gazette, Newark Ledger. Newark Leder. oueoie S00 L000 0 Associated Press Tomisvile TMCS. oc aasin in am in dS Frankfurter Zeltung...—caoe ool. International News Service Jewish Daily Forward... 00 i Jl. Washington News, Scripps-Howard News- paper Alliance. International News Service Wall Street Journal New York Times Associated Presg, co0 oil: SLL URUOE Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance Manchester Guardian_.___...________._.______ Akron Beacon Journal, Honolulu Star Bul- letin, Reno Gazette, Rock Island Argus, Omaha World-Herald, Richmond Times Dispatch, Mobile Press Register. United Press Associations United Press Associations Detroli News... oon. mast nib iia il DUniversal:iService. Cua alanis aguas, Indianapolis: News. wr av add 021000. United Press Associations Brooklyn Pally Bagle.eoe Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Savannah Morning News, Charleston News and Courier. Associated Press International News Service Christian Science Monitor International News Service Washington TIDeS coronas Sit am anu United States News Association WASHINGION TIMES. ... ow emma mien on hie ioe New York Daily News New York Times Associnted Press -. nb in... aU Politiken, Copenhagen, Denmark New Orleans Item-Tribune United Press Associations... .._____.____ Philadelphia Record, New York Evening ost. ‘Washington News Patterson, Eleanor M 410 Li, Lee Street, Alex- andria, Va. 1747 Corcoran Street. 1819 G Street. 1611 Wisconsin Avenue. 1746 Lamont Street. Roosevelt Apartments. 1225 Thirtieth Street. 2071 Park Road. Hamilton Hotel. 611 Lawnsdale Street, OCol- mar Manor, Md Clarendon, Va. 904 Fourteenth Street. 1733 Irving Street. 1112 Stratton Road, Silver Spring, Md. 15 or Drive, Belle Haven, 2311 B onnsctions Avenue. Racquet Club. 4909 Thirteenth Street. 4909 Thirteenth Street. 3220 Seventeenth Street. Wardman Park Hotel. 1763 Columbia Road. Hotel Cairo. R. F. D. 5, Anacostia. 4203 Sixteenth Street. 3308 N Street. 1634 Newton Street. Chastleton Hotel. 3224 Cathedral Avenue. 3334 Oakwood Terrace. 523 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. 1832 K Street. Arlington Hotel. 2428 Nineteenth Street. 904-05 Colorado Building. 2123 California Street. 1704 Sixteenth Street. 1742 R Street. 1244 National Press Building. 1918 Biltmore Street. 8707 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. nl West Virginia Avenue Corcoran Apartments. 1113 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va 310 Evarts Street NE. Mayflower Hotel. 1822 I Street. 1513 Spring Place. 800 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. 1718 Newton Street NE. 802 Jefferson Street, Bethes- da, Md. Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va, 6004 Thirty-fourth Place. 3100 R Street. 3800 Fourteenth Street. 5330 Colorado Avenue. 3608 S Street. 1612 KX Street. 1162 National Press Building. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance ‘Washington Herald 1840" Twenty-fourth Street. 15 Dupont Circle. EEE 1624 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Pearl, Philip..i. aon ale. ‘Pearson, Drew... ...i.za... *Pearson, Leon M_____.___._. *Perkins, Fred W.___________ *Pfister, Edward A_._______ Pinkerton, William. ________ *Plummer, H. C Post, Bobert-P.. ooo aie *Powell, R. *Prevost, Clifford A...1.0.. *Price, Byron.....couea. io *Pvyle, Ernest Toccoi-zoon.... *Ragsdale, W. B____._______ *Ralph, Henry Di.vueniaaca. Tynan William R.._____ *Reed, Ronde A J. Baey. econ. Rice, Marger *Richardson, Stanley P_____ *Riley, George D___________ Riley, Nelson J... _.___. *Rippey, Stephens__________ Robb, G Robertson, Ben_.__.________ *Robertson, Nathan W______ *Robinson, Tremain Fisher. *Rochester, Edward S Roddan, E. L *Romm, Viadimir.o.o 0. 150 [[Roosa, Floyd S_.._____.____ Roper, L. Foust. __.________ Routt, Mary Patterson. ____ Ruby, Janel... ni. *Buth, Carl Do ooaccii. *Salisbury, Harrison ________ *Sanders, Kenneth E_______ *Sanger, Richard H_________ *Sartwell, Franklin G.______ *Saunders, Richard E_______ Schloss, Leon ..o. ii 500s, *Schriftgiesser, Karl ________ *Seott, David RB... .. 0.0 *Seott, Owen Loos... oo. *Seerest,; JD .onanaio Us *Sell, RurtiGunn i i. oh *Shaeffer, Chas. P *Shelton, P. WH: 10 [[Sherman, Allan_._.________ *Silber, Fritz... i nal. 0 Shoop, Duke... 000... |IShort, Joseph H.___________. *Shubert, Leonard B________ *|Simms, William Philip. . _ [[Simpson, Kirke L Skinner, Carla... cioi..... Smith, Denys H. H......._. *Smith, Prank: Me...0.c. 00. *Smith, Hal Harrison_.___.__ Smith, Hugh A. McChire._. Universal'Service. .. Ll. coat duimizas i 3 United Features Syndicate... _..___ United Features Syndicate... ._.___..._______ Pittsburgh Press ...o no ciicoruueciiadls. Erie Dally Times (Pa). acai adae i. Associated Press... .......o....c Associated Press. cuin snes valid sii nh a me New-York Times. ©... -oeeits fontamimtie Durham Morning Herald. __________________ Detroit Free Press... .-sato-sodaisutne di Associated Press. ..oiceiam murs dons assim Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance___.____ Associated Press... 0 oads warediaias i. Chicago (I11.) Journal of Commerce. _._.____ ‘Wall Strest-Journal ly oni wlan Dill Chicago Dally News. ..o.ooo foil il li. United Press Associations .._____.__________ ‘Washington Heralds. cf mae vamns diced. Newark Siar-Bagle_ Associated Presa: ai hols anki. Washington Herald. coool asad. Chicago Journal of Commerce. __.._._______. Associated Press. . inoac ll. Soot. Washington Beraldiu.l iti ooo. Associated Press... .. 0. inada named Bridgeport Post-Telegram._________________ Universal Service.coil cond soduid. balinil. Associated Press... ..ou ssn oflanien Associated Press... eoiiles nulisiiinni. Minneapolis Journal tc nos oiled loins. Macon Evening News, Macon Telegraph.___ Universal Service... ........ gasoline. Izvestia, Moscow (U.S. S. R.).oo....____. Universal Serviee.. .. ical iwi lls. Lexington Advertiser-News_________________ Pasadena Star News-Post___________________ Newspaper Enterprise Association__..______ Toledo Blade, Duluth Herald, Toledo Times, Duluth News-Tribune. Washington Tiies.col ciido Lo doamiil... Omaha (Nebr.) Bee News... oocoooaooaoo oo International News Service... ______.....___ Washington Posto. SZ Lei ta SAR Sandusky Star-Journal, Louisville (Ky.) Herald-Post. United States News Association__.__________ WashingionBest.o. Lu. oielnibnl i Lisl. German News Agency, Berlin. ______________ Associated Prescot woos losolineinn. The Financial Times, London_____ United States News Association... ‘Washington Daily News... ._.._. Kansas CIty Star. cc. .t dics aieacocdiasiin Associated Press... ull imal Uialiniail Associated Press... semsil gaiiidse i, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_..____. Associated Press........-oiiil sidan fi. United Press Associations. ......covoeee.. Central News of America. _____._._._.___._.__. Oregon: Journal, Portland... .......-ccocaneea Wheeling Intelligencer, Wheeling News, Parkersburg Sentinel, Fairmont West Virginian, Fairmont Times, Martinsburg Journal, Elkins Intermountain, Welsh News, Hinton News, Point Pleasant Register. London Morning Pest......coeee eevee oiiiiia. 2 Washington Times........coo lanai di. New York Times. cov avaic.lamiagiossl. London Bimes. ioqsiuiiisassioliaugulioi 1650 Harvard Street. 2820 Dumbarton Avenue. 1240 T'wenty-eighth Street. 32 West Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md 1706 F Street. 1812 Thirty-fifth Street. 121 Prince Street, Alexan- dria, Va. 2310 Ashmead Place. Burlington Hotel. 10 Parkside Road, Silver Spring, Md. 3641 nin Street. 2007 O Street. 1208 Gallatin Street. 4561 Cathedral Avenue. ‘Willard Hotel. 3017 P Street. Dupont Circle Apartments. 1620 Fuller Street. Wardman Park Hotel. 1215 Sixteenth Street. 1619 Nineteenth Street. 2127 California Street. Westchester Apartments. 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. 4115 Wisconsin Avenue. 250 Farragut Street. 2205 Eye Street. Stratford Hotel. 116 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 725 Eighteenth Street. 3401 Sixteenth Street. Wardman Park Hotel. 1635 R Street. 2712 Wisconsin Avenue. Cairo Hotel. Mayflower Hotel. 1752 N Street. 3014 Woodland Drive. 1701 Park Road. 1840 California Staeet. 3264 N Street. 31 Michigan Avenue NE. 3618 Porter Street. Argyle Apartments. 7315 Twelfth Street. 208 Massachusetts Avenue 717 Latterner Avenue, Clar- endon, Va. 4959 Chesapeake Street, West Chevy Chase, ; 2321 N. Wakefield Street, Cherrydale, Va. Ontario Apartments. _| 807 Eighteenth Street. 2009 Eye Street. 1527 Eye Street. 3901 Connecticut Avenue. 3413 Oakwood Terrace. Blackstone-Hotel. 2101 Connecticut Avenue. 302 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 406 South Lee Street, Alexan- dria, Va. 1763 Q Street. 3541 R Street. 1650 Harvard Street. 1630~A. Nineteenth Street. 3525 Davenport Street. 1824 Jefferson Place. 1605 New Hampshire Ave- nue, Gi - Press Galleries 625 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Smith, Kingsbury..........- Smith, Leonard ¥F___________ *smith, Ralph. ooo. Smith, Russell... _-...__... *Smith, Stanley H__________ Smith, Virginia Lee_________ *Snure, John... o0.l0 2 0 *Snure, John, Irn. 00. “Speers, Leland C.__________ *Squire, Clark... oo 0. [0 *Stafford, Laurence. ________ *Stansbury, Edward. _______ *Stark, Loulso io ol Steele, Nelson_______________ Stephenson, Francis M_____ *Stern, Max... ..0 0 .Gll10n *Sterner, Charles J__________ Stevens, H.C Bee.. oo Lili aes Moline (I11.) Dispatch (€.)acocomocaacans Montreal: Star (ed. oo ii. iil iucann Muskegon Chronicle (€.)- oo oooonoe National Catholic Welfare Council News Service. Nashville frond ) Tennessean (m., e.)--- Newark (N. J.) Ledger. ____.__ Newark (N. J.) Evening News......_.... Newark (N. J.) Star Eagle (0 SE RU Newburgh-Beacon News (N. Y.)- New Castle (Pa.) News (6.)-ccceuux New Haven (Conn.) Register. ___..___... New Mexico State Tribune, Albu- querque. Ny Orleans (La.) Item-Tribune (e., m., New Orleans (La.) States (€., S.)ceceoo-. New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune (m., Newport (R. 1.) Daily News (€.)caceua-- Newspaper Enterprise Association. ..... New York American. _____.______._._. New York Daily Investment News.._.. New York Daily News. oo ooococmanan New York Daily Worker... o.oo... New York Evening Post... ..... New York Herald Tribune... _.._....... New York Herald Tribune Syndicate... New York Journal of Commerce (m.). .. Duncan Atkman..........-.. Warren B. Francis. ........ OlrledBall.. Lo. ates DavidiR. Scotti... neee-. Ollie M..James:c2.c.......... Lorenzo W. Martin. ._._.____ Bulkley 8. Griffin_.._._._._. Ray Tueker:. tii ol cu Radford E. Mobley... Ruby?A. Black 10... Rosamond E. Cole__.._.____ Jonathan Mitchell... __._..._ Bulkley 8. Griffin_____...___ Charles Brooks Smith... Robert W. Horton_ ....._.... G. Milton Butlers. }....... Frank A. Kennedy. ........ Gladstone Williams_______.. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. Edwin E. Hartrichi......... Raymond Z. Henle._._...... George A. Benson...._...... H. OC. Stevens... iti acu Tremain Fisher Robinson.___ Ned Brunson HarriS........ George F. Authier_ _..______ Radford Mobley. ccoeaaa a Waiter Brown. _ i .cncuin- Gladstone Williams. _..__._. Ralph J. Kelly. _ Zoi Loon Charles 2 Gridley... one BdrsHadley. ..0idiicciciuin Helen May Manning... _.__ Walter Korig.. co... 00 Harry Gilroy... -acaeeouun Hanne Jorgensen._...._.... = Joseph F. Reilly. ceo. James J. Butler. _........_. Arthur C. Wimer ; Bulkley 8. Griffin.___._..___ MaxiStorne oo. Lilt canis J. Pred: Bssary. io .oauess George W. Combs. ._...._.. G. Hunter Osborne......... Bascom Timmons... ....... William Edward Jamieson. Poul Wooton... 2iciitaiia cen Clarence F. Linz__.......... Bertram FP. Linz. iocu...... Jane IL. Ruby... ............ Philip Beart... Look ound Leslie Earhardt. ——-.... John O'Donnell... cc... Doris Fleeson._ __._..._._-... Seymour Waldman. ...._._. Marguerite Young... _......_. Robert S. Allen... ...._...... Kenneth G. Crawford... ._. Charles Malcolmson._._____ CeclliOwen_. C.. L tis lavas Theodore C. Wallen Albert L. Warner.._.... Ernest K. Lindley. ......... John Spure... ii. d aaee Ralph L. Cherry. .....ca.... 8S. Burton Lyons... ....cuaca 920 Colorado Building. 1217 National Press Building. 1211 National Press Building. 1365 National Press Building. 1213 National Press Building. 920 Colorado Building. 6308 Hillcrest = Place, Chevy Chase, Md. 1228 Connecticut Avenue. 1517 H Street. 1517 H Street. 505 Albee Building. 824 National Press Building. 824 National Press Building. 1832 K Street. 920 Colorado Building. 1650 Harvard Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1234 National Press Building. 1669 Columbia Road. 1246 National Press Building. 309 Peoples Life Insurance Build- ing. 1223 National Press Building. 1363 National Press Building. 814 Albee Building. 814 Albee Building. 814 Albee Building. 1226 National Press Building. 721 Albee Building. 505 Albee Building. 1054 National Press Building. 1246 National Press Building. 1246 National Press Building. 1225 National Press Building. 1708 R Street. 927 Colorado Building. 1312 Massachusetts Avenue. 1312 Massachusetts Avenue. 1228 National Press Building. 1223 National Press Building. 903 Colorado Building. 903 Colorado Building. 903 Colorado Building. 1363 National Press Building. 1223 National Press Building. 1223 National Press Building. 1232 National Press Building. 920 Colorado Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 1214 National Press Building. 1214 National Press Building. 1214 National Press Building. 1255 National Press Building. 1255 National Press Building. 1252 National Press Building. 621 Albee Building. 621 Albee Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue, 603 Times-Herald Building. 706 Albee Building. 1380 National Press Building. 1380 National Press Building. 954 National Press Building. 954 National Press Bupging, 1263-65 National Press Building. 1263-65 National Press Building. 1263-65 National Press Building. 1263-65 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1279-85 National Press Building. 1700 I Street. 619 Albee Building. 619 Albee Building. 619 Albee Building. 619 Albee Building, 632 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office NewYork: San (6.) su -diaalitetmmnnnan New York World-Telegram (8.)--------- New York Times (IM.)-cccceaaaaa- Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette (e.) Norfolk Virginian-Pilot (m., 8.)... North Adams (Mass.) Transcript. ..__.. North American Newspaper Alliance... Oaklang TrIDUNSIL Joiunaoat 220i whan ans O1ll City Derrick. o. i covwdo ld 3080 nn Oklahoma City Oklahoman Oklahoma City Times. cocoa Oklahoma News (€.) occa Olympia (Wash.) Olympia.._._...._____ Omaha (Nebr) Beo News. .: Jc: bo... Omaha (Nebr.) World Herald (m.)....... Oregon Journal, Portland (e., 8.) ..__.... Orlando (Fla.) Reporter-Star and Sentinel. Osaka Mainichi (Japan)..._._.___._______. Oswego Palladium-Times______________. Ottawa: Citizen.(m.,0.).2-nc cite nena Owensboro Messenger... _____________._ Panama American: ....o.c. 000i nn. Parkersburg (R. I.) Sentinel ___________. Pasadena Star News-Post_ ooo _._.._.. Pawtucket (R. I.) Times..._____________ Pensacola (Fla.) Journal and News._____ Peoria (I1l.) Evening Star (e.).___.______ Petit: PariSion uc... ween abd nee Philadelphia Bulletin..............._.... Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger.___ Philadelphia Inquirer (m., 8.) _..._____ Philadelphia Record (m.). cee Pittsburgh Ee) Post-Gazette (m.)...._ Pittsburgh (Pa.) Press (e., S Pittsburgh (Pa.) Sun-Telegraph (e.).__.. Pittsfield (Mass.) Eagle. __..___._________ Politiken, Copenhagen, Denmark_____._ Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press. :.5.vnen a. Portland Mana) Evening Express. .__. Portland (Maine) Press Herald (m)_____ Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian.____________ Providence &B 1.) Evening Bulletin____ Providence Pueblo Chieftain (Colo.) o_o... Pueblo (Colo.) Star Journal _____________ Radio. Nows Bureatl.....-cu.vcue in nnnnas Sol. Farshoffi coo f __ Raleigh (N. C.) News and Observer (m.)_| Robert E. Williams_________ Raleioh Times rr occvinii satiate z2..| He. Ba@® Bryant, 2d________ Bonding (Pa) TimeS.coowib.tiner |... Regina Leader-Post. oct ois... Reno (Nev.) Gazette... _____. R euter’s (Litd.), London... _._________ R.1.).Journal..............- Ashm Richmond News-Leader (e.)- -_.______ Phelps H. Adams... Ralph A. Collins_.._..._..___ Edward A. Conroy. ........ Nelson Steele _________...__. Arthur Krock_____._.__ Rodney Bean. _________ Felix Belair, Jr. li... Turner Catledge. Delbert Clark.____.__ Bertram D. Hulen. Charles W. B. Hurd. K. Foster Murray... ..._.. GordonifcCGole..- .......... Daniel M. Kidney._._______ Oscar Lewis Hume.__._______ Richard E. Saunders._....._._ Stanley J:Carroll oc .__._ Radford Mobley. ..._...... Carl:Smitho. 5 co... Chojiro Kuriyama... ___._____ John F. Gollier coo... ..... Erith MacDonald Smith____ Ned Brunson Harris________ Robert 8S. Allen. _______._____ Mary Patterson Routt... Gordon IH. Cole.............. Frank A. Kennedy....______ Charles O. Gridley .._._____. Pierre Denoyer__...__.___.___ JR. Qoverti. socal Harold Brayman____________ Frank WH. Welr.L 200 000 Paul J. McGahan.....__.__. Robert S. Allen. _.__________ Raymond Z. Henle. ________ Fred W. Perkins__...._._____ John P.Cowan..... .._ .... Buckley S. Griffin__________ EmilOpfler.- oc... Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ Elisabeth May Craig_.._____ Elisabeth May Craig.__._____ John:W. Kelly... | ____ un Ni,‘ Brown......... Amory A. Lawrence... ______ Frank S. Hoag, Jr_..____.____ Frank Sy Hoag, Jr ice..---- Martin Codeloe- colt Radford E. Mobley, Jr______ Pl Weir. so 100 A. 1 Munsey Building. 1 Munsey Building. 1 Munsey Building. 1 Munsey BuilCing. 1 Munsey Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 714-717 Albee Building. 1223 National Press Building. 1203 National Press Building. 920 Colorado Building. 1028 Woodward Building. ae, Braddock Road, Alexandria, a. 3200 P Street. 810 Transportation Building. Investment Building. 1255 National Press Building. 1255 National Press Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 920 Colorado Building. 1227 National Press Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 505 Albee Building. 824 Colorado Building. } 1669 Columbia Road. Champlain Building. 1044 National Press Building. 1226 National Press Building. 1244 National Press Building. 1650 Harvard Street. Mayflower Hotel. 920 Colorado Building. 1669 Columbia Road. 1225 National Press Building, 714-717 Albee Building. 1717 G Street. 1201 National Press Building. 1201 National Press Building. 1229 National Press Building. 1263-656 National Press Building. 1263-65 National Press Building. 1363 National Press Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. National Press Club. 920 Colorado Building. 1620 Belmont Street. 309 Peoples Life Insurance Build- ing. Capitol Towers Apartment. Capitol Towers Apartment. 1225 National Press Building. 607-8 Hibbs Building. 607-8 Hibbs Building. 607-8 Hibbs Building, 2201 M Street. 2201 M Street. 870 National Press Building. 870 National Press Building. 1232 National Press Building. 1046 National Press Building. 505 Albee Building. 133 Rucker Avenue, Lyon Vil- - lage, Va. 505 Albee Building. 330 Star Building. 1196 National Press Building. Press Galleries 633 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch ._.__._ Roanoke. Times (mai. coil so inne Roanoke (Va.) World-News__.____._.... Rochester Chronicle and Democrat. _.__ Rochester Times-Union (e.)____________. Rock Island Argus(e)..ccoiviel o...- St. Louis (Mo.) Globe-Democrat (m., S.)._ St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch (e., S.).. St. Paul (Minn.) Dispatch (e.)..__...__. St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press (m.).... St. Petersburg Independent_______._____ St. Thomas (Ontario) Times-Journal____ Sacramento (Calif.) Bee_________._____... Saginaw (Mich.) News (e., 8.) __._..... Salem Evening News... oo coccinana- Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune (m.)._.._____. San Antonio (Tex.) Express (m.).._..__. San Antonio Light Jsesic Jl 10. L.. .. San Diego (Calif.) Sun (e.)-___________.. Sandusky Ou Begister 20 10 co Sandusky (Ohio) Star-Journal___________ San Francisco Daily News (@.).._._._._. San Francisco Examiner... ..__....... Saskatoon Star-Phoenix..... o.oo. .... Savannah (Ga.) Morning News.__..._.. Savannah (Ga.) Press Schenectady (N. Y.) Gazette (m.) _...._. Schenectady-Union-Star_ _ ______________ Science:Serviee. LLL lolol Tian Scranton (Pa.) Times (€.)- ccc oooooooo Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... G. Serippsileague. oor Ui i Seattle (Wash.) Post-Intelligencer_._.... Shreveport (La.) Times (m.). _.__.__... South Bend Tribune. loco 0... Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald______ * Spokane Spokesman-Review (m.)__ - Springfield (Mass.) Daily News Springfield (Mass.) Republican (m.)___. 0) Te Springfield (Mass.) Union (m., Stamford (Conn.) Advocate Stefani Agence (Italy)... .... Stratford (Ontario) Beacon-Herald______ Superior (N. H.) Telegram (e.)..—-_.____ Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald... iio... Tampa (Fla.) Daily Times... ....._.. "Tampa (Fla) Tribunei@m.):czai . .... Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R__.__ Terre Haute (Ind.) S Terre Haute (Ind.) Tribune (e.)_..____... Tokyo Nichi-Nichi (Japan). ____________ Toledo (Ohio) Blade (e.) -___.________ Toledo (Ohio) News-Bee.__________.____. Toledo (Ohio) Times... ____._..___._... Topeka (Kans.) Daily Capital (m.)._._..__ Poronto-Stor. oad alii vt Coa G Toronto Telegrams. Jo. nin Jo... Traffic World, Chicago. - ccccccmcaa oo Troy (N.Y.) Record (m., ©.)-.._. Troy (N.Y.) Times (e.).__.._ 2 Tulsa (Okla.) World (m.)__.__.. United Features Syndicate... United Press Associations. -coocceeae.. Radford E. Mobley, Jr____._ Russell Smithi:. oie nuian Robert M. Tonnes. ..... Jesse S. Cottrell... Jesse S. Cottrell. _______..___ Radford E. Mobley, Jr._____ Charles P. Keyser.____.____. Raymond P. Brandt. .__... Paul Y. Anderson.__._.______ Marquis W. Childs_._._.___. Estelle G. Welsh RO 1 oie Frank A. Kennedy....._.... Raymond G. Carroll________ Gladstone Williams_________ MorkiFoote: goin l i 0. William P. Kennedy.._.._.. ‘Walter D. Warren, Jr______. Harry J. Brown. 223.1... Bascom N. Timmons_.___.. William Edward Jamieson... C..B. Dickson... ..... PH McGowan............ James Ji Butler... laa. John F. Dost Siat i William Photo Simms... RuthiPipney. oli. ...... Walker Stone... .... Ernest: ToPyle io ieee Clark Squire sitial. ..... William H. Doherty. __...... Bascom N. Timmons_...... Horace Knowles. ___________ Russell :Smith_ lo. ...... P. H. McGowan..._... Harry J. Brown.______ William P. Kennedy._ - Walter D. Warren, Jr___.___ John Laranee._ Ju 0l0 William P. Kennedy._...... Walter D. Warren, Jr_____.. Bulkley S. Griffin_.._...._.. Gordon H. Cole.__ 4. ...... Leone Fumasoni Biondi... Raymond G. Carroll Bascom of Timmons. ......-. cCowan....oonn on Ed. Hadl ey oC fontiad id Jesse S. mith. - Charles A. Hamilton... Bascom N. Timmons...___. Robert S. Allen... cee... Drew Pearsonit. szih ILyleC-Wilson_ =... Youistay Heath... ......... 505 Albee Building. 505 Albee Building. 1196 National Press Building. 1196 National Press Building. 1056 National Press Building. 1056 National Press Building. 505 Albee Building. 711 Albee Building. 201 Kellogg Building. 201 Kellogg Building. 201 Kellogg Building. 201 Kellogg Building. 625 Albee Building. 625 Albee Building. 1863 Wyoming Avenue. 4000 Cathedral Avenue. 1246 National Press Building. 927 Colorado Building. Star Building. 1715 Ror Street. 713 Transportation Building. 1255 National Press Building. 1255 National Press Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. National Press Building. National Press Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 603 Times-Herald Building. 133 Rucker Avenue, Lyon Vil- lage, Va. : 1203 National Press Building. 1746 Lamont Street. 1223 National Press Building. Champlain Building. Twenty-first and B Streets. 505 Albee Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. Hamilton Hotel. 603 Times-Herald Building. 1255 National Press Building. 12556 National Press Building. 505 Albee Building. 1746 Lamont Street. -| 713 Transportation Building. Star Building. 1715 Nineteenth Street. 1305 N Street. Star Building. 1715 Nineteenth Street. 920 Colorado Building. 920 Colorado Building. National Press Club. 4000 Cathedral Avenue. 1255 National Press Building. 1410 H Street. 1669 Columbia Road. 1746 Lamont Street. 999 National Press Building. 1397 National Press Building. 608 Albee Building. 1365 National Press Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1365 National Press Building. The Burlington. 1157 National Press Building. 1708 R Street. 706 Earle Building. -| 706 Earle Building. 1136 National Press Building. _| National Press Club. 1255 National Press Building. 1244 National Press Building. 1244 National Press Building. 1244 National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. 634 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED-—Continued Paper represented Name Office United Press Associations—Continued.. United States News Association Universal Service. --occcoeeaoao Utica (N.Y.) Observer-Dispatch (e., S.)- Wall Street Journal Wabash (Ind.) Plain Dealer. ... Washington Evening Star__.____ Washington Herald (m.)....__. Horry W. Frantz. od... J. A. Reichmann_.______.____ Carroll H. Kenworthy. _____ Ronald van Tinowssl.....c. Rilo Gridley. coral i. LL Frederick A. Storm _____.___ DusnetWilsonL:ozell........ George Mack Johnson.___.___ C.M Edward Stansbury... C. Russell Turner, Jr... Richard L. Harkness. .... John R. Beal Harrison Salisbury.__.__._____ Hillier Krieghbaum ________. Carl:Skinner. 0.20. ...... Fred. O.Balloyuoaai........ Joe Alex Morris... .. E. Worth Higgins... __._____ Owon L. Scotti... ...... Fred A. Emery Hilmar ay BORLA... Allan Sherman.______ John W. Taylor MayoiDudley...-.x......... Gloenn-Nizonodaool....eee Derek Fox. t.il... Percy L. Greaves. _ _......_. Pauline A. Frederick_._.____ JohneT'.:Lambert.i.. ........ Thomas Wrigley... Floyd 8S. Reosa.-ii.-.......5 Cole E. Morgan...._.___.__.__ Arthur Hachten._._.___.._____ Fulton'Lewis, Jr... ‘William H. Doherty. __._____ Don M. Ewing Phillip Pearl izai i... Stanley J. Carroll ___________ Cecil B. Dickson.__._....__.. Gene:Robb. Joos... Richard H. Sanger_____._____ James:J.iButler............. Bernard Kilgore.____________ JohnBoyle Lionsci i |... Charles J. Sterner.______.__. Alfred B.Flyom_ io... .... George L. Tarry.. George B. Bryant........... John W. Hazard William R. Raymond.___.__ Charles: C..Coltuacaa........ Richard A. Wright.._....... James S. Metcalfe. _________ Robert D. Heine__._________ G. Gould Lincoln_._.________ Ying P. Romnedy oredr J. A. O’Lea Frederic William Wile....... John Russell Young._._...__ Constantine A. Brown______ Benjamin M. McKelway.._. James E. Chinn._.__________ Jom OC. Henry. osm i i JohnH. Cline: ii): Eleanor M. Patterson_..._. i Michael W. Flynn__________ John T. Lambert ___________ Ray Helgesen_.............. Louis A. MacMahon._.______ James Cullinane..__________ Frank C. Waldrop Arthur Reilly_..__ Alva Brewer. _....i....... National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. National Press Building. 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. 2201 M Street. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 603 Times-Herald Building. 1223 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. 1091 National Press Building. 1091 National Press Building. 1091 National Press Building. 1091 National Press Building. 2400 California 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. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. 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. Press Galleries 635 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office ‘Washington Herald (m)—Continued.... Washington City News Service... Washington Daily News (€.)-_ oo. Washington (Pa.) Observer... ._.__..__ Washington Post (MY. caeeacacanaanae- Washington Post News Service. ...-.... Washington Times (0.)..e-wveeecneaceaen Waterbury (Conn.) American._..___.._. Watertown (IN. Y.) Daily Times.________ Welsh (W.Va) News... ......0- ‘Wheeling (W. Va.) Intelligencer. ________ Wheeling (W. Va.) News Wichita (Kans.) Beacon Wilmington (Del.) Every Evening______ Winnipeg Freo Press... cocceicceunann= NW isconSl NOW onan ins assmm nm ‘Winston-Salem (N. C.) Journal .________ Winston-Salem (N. C.) Sentinel. ________ Women’s Wear Daily (8.)-ccocoicomaoan Worcester (Mass.) Gazette. _..______.__ ‘Worcester (Mass.) Post (.) -ccoeocmanan Youngstown (Ohio) Telegram (e.)----_.. Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator (e.)..... Charles Stevenson. _._.__._.. Anthony Hyde. ............ Pat: Prank. oii. Gustav]. Miller. .......... J. Lacy Reynolds_____.______ Robert McClelland. ....____ A Fr. Fozrison ES ems Ralph D; ks See a trl Martha Strayer... -........ GeorgeiAbell il lL. Robert M. Buck... _........- Charter Heslep.--—- ooo ooneoe Bob MeCormick-__.C.__.__._ Stanley Baitz........_i._..0 James I. King. LL... foods Pritz Biber. or neers Raymond Clapper......_.___ Franklyn Waltman, Jr______ Robert C. Albright__ Felix B, Bruner. ..........m.- Karl Schriftgiesser__.______. Douglas Warrenfels.___._.___ J. Bernard McDonnell._____ J.iD.Seerest. Lo... Us Edward T. Folliard......... Virginia Lee Smith__________ Morgan. Baker cee Henry ©. Thiele: Co .0 OL ‘Windsor Booth. -......oi:l Arthur G. Newmyer.__._._._._ John J. Fitzpatrick._. Dan E. O’Connell. __.______ Franklin G. Sartwell John Smire, Jr. cot. ieees Frank Mo Smith... ceeee- Julia A.'Benwit.. i... ...... JouisE. Whyte............. Helen Essary. ceva Bugene A. Kelly..........-- Randolph Blinn_.____.._..___ Theodore A. Huntley ._______ Bulkley 8. Gritlin.._......... Jesse S. Cottrell ..__________.. Robert M. Lynn............. Tom W.Kinz...........c..: DonM.Bwing_ =. Walter Brown.......cocenwa- Mary F. Jefferson... ..___.___ Buby A. Black... ..- Rosamond E. Cole__________ Bulkley 8. Griffin............ 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 705 National Press Building. 705 National Press Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. National Press Club. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Puilding. 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. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 1317-1321 H Street. 920 Colorado Building. 1136 National Press Building. 1650 Harvard Street. 1650 Harvard Street. 1650 Harvard Street. Westchester Apartments. 1198 National Press Building. 1468 Clifton Street. 133 Rucker Avenue, Lyon Vile lage, Va. 603 Times-Herald Building. 1054 National Press Building. 1054 National Press Building. 6505 Union Trust Building. 505 Union Trust Building. 824 National Press Bnilding. 824 National Press Building. 920 Colorado Building. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1013 Thirteenth Street. 1255 National [Press Building. HOUSE PRESS GALLERY William J. Donaldson, Jr., superintendent, 3730 Brandywine Street. Chester R. Thrift, assistant superintendent, 1218 Thirty-third Street. Anthony P. Demma, 1124 Abbey Place, NE. SENATE PRESS GALLERY William J. Collins, superintendent, 3402 Dent Place. Joseph E. Wills, assistant superintendent, 4621 Forty-third Place. Harold R. Beckley, 4623 Forty-third Place. 636 Congressional Directory "WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION H. M. Van Tine, Secretary Acme Photo Service, 1013 Thirteenth Street. J. A. Nesensohn, manager. Phone, DIstrict 1177. Associated Press Service, Washington Star Building. F. I. Weller, feature photo editor. Phone, DIstrict 1500. Harris & Ewing, 1313 I" Street. Hoyt Barnett, news photo editor. Phone, NAtional 8700. International News Photos, 605 Hearst Building. H. M. Van Tine, manager. Phone, DIstriet 6477. Times Wide World, 725 Albee Building. J. D. Jamieson, manager. Phone, NAtional 9237. Underwood & Underwood, 1230 Connecticut Avenue. Jack Wilson, manager. Phone, DIstrict 4488. Fox Movietone News, 736 Munsey Building. Arthur DeTitta, manager. Phone, DIstrict 6448. : Hearst Metrotone News, M. G. M. Exchange, 1009 New Jersey Avenue. J. C, Brown, manager. Phone, DIstrict 6530. Pathe News, 504 Albee Building. Albert Holland, manager. Phone, NAtional 0147. Paramount News, Paramount Exchange, 1101 North Capitol Street. Robert Denton, manager. Phone, NAtional 7661. Universal Newsreel, Universal Exchange, 924 New Jersey Avenue. James Lyons, manager. Phone, DIstrict 3377. MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS 637 Maps of Congressional Districts ALABAMA (9 districts) \ 5 LAUDERDALE ! ! os - ~ Ni J LIMESTONE { 3 Td é ¥. j wavison g IACRSON [J [3] i H Bi @ LAWRENCE | hae ai Ne by i MORGAN z OF KALS S . MARSHALL 5 ° Cd Oo i vd i "4, i Sp kd WINSTON | STAN. / Kd J cneroxes boemend ~* SLOUNT ses « 0 oa { H | § waxes P. 5 ¥ LT 3 # cLesurne 4 CEFFERSON i : - oor aS PICKENS « FUSCALODSA 4 gg: RANDOLPH ALE SHELBY 3 S = H Re | ¢ ? ow © om yy re - 4 br sun fad sree WW i i) ¢ ¥ . 1 : ance i = 2 i | onamecns &, H I Tmt Ered CHILTON N fd €, nae $ 3 i 5 & e ] . gh ELMORE AUTAUGA 5 “R MACON MARENGD ps Vontzomers AV FE . 3 MONTGOMERY ‘oom o con® ped 3 % i i, BULLOCK 4 ™ § I BS aud Eh So WL $a 3, 4 Yong © mo © Wg, | 2. { A BARBOUR 3 BUTLER i | PIKE ol = 8 § CRENSHAW y § cones § { pd - re gre \ dp J Los / he tat J i ren pnt & gis vs 3 5 COFFEE : oALE i Ll So WH 8 GNSS WYY jo) i COVINGTON 639 i B + =p eww © #5 = on | nN ® £SCAMBIA H 43 House! ] . GENEVA i mee 5 ; ] april 4330 Sonne ™N BALDWIN SCALE X 0 oO Co) 20 MILES Congressional Directory 640 ARIZONA (1 at large) i ] Pl i My, — : I £ ~ % 7 i 2 Nr : ” = N } ES . Qo : : § SE SUSE —- Sv —o———to——o—_ 4 = i ul 0 5 TAI Cliath dhe La — : i i 0 b . z | Nye w—— i « —. — — — Et] | < | i fz > | 18 TERT FONT AT es BRE sr | | 5 ( 4 | L 5% > 2 ; Forme ( ~ | 2 | : Vin : £ i hdd UE | ¢ - 4 Teen + . o any da de] I z ~ x : < z | i i 2 8 rr ] gj . a H s = 8 | i a I | fo 2 el vid pe 4 < / < 8 / a H a =~ J pS / 8 = £ f 3 T—03 LS T—3-F1—. 89008 Ki J ) | < | marion Yn 2AER . i MILLER OARLAND -= SALINE 2 Ban ¢ amen “7 ] § A monroe @ b. d ll PHILLIPS EFFERSON ARKANSAS ANNE = LRESURES tia he ( LINCOLN Thy \, cLeveLanD i DESHA Ko ) BRADLEY aa cHICOT J ASHLEY H en LAWRENCE ] l —— y+ of i SEARCY INNES Ti Ua ; : yy Sons CRAIGNEAD ! -- d nt HA aE i : i JACKSON . VAN BUREN 8 Me a] : POINSETT i J i. Lf { id a + cm + ng JOS omy « =o =! — | | | o : conway / : Bk &, ! CROSS | | : x | CRITTENDEN by; : ) FAULKNER § hei ie do Fir re \ ® 3 streranas | hi id {sre sin mim] § | § PRAIRIE = PULASKI LONOKE | LEE * Little Rock (3014381 L) SVSNVXAaV SPOLYSYT (PU018S24BU0,) Jo sdv pT 79 642 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA (20 districts) sisxiYou MoDOC ND ad a 3 LASSEN { ’ SHASTA i [ 4 \ IS ah Q MARIPOSA V4 ~~. ~ om =e. [4 Tn. [7] Race ————— aad Ac ————— (S30133SIP ¥) oOdvIoTOD S$JOLUSUT ouolssaLbuoy) fo sdv pyr ] \ : 1] l | } l * i i SEDGWICK i 3 p- Rp p—— - H . ! LOGAN MOFFAT | i LARISA } ¢ J 1 ore i : i j pres : i WELD peremowaood. ; ! i NS } | Yt 3 was 5 cme ooo ene es 0 2am 0 Bi i J J i y ee Se en + on,» nu sw 9 ef i ts | | moraan § i ° . ’ pia ! GRAND BOULDER | i i ! RIO BLANCO f } Yr ne se of sii Bi 0 an H Yuma Lew re—- Tn “—- ny i i pr) ¢ ~— ome aan cal . in N W ¥ ADAMS | WASHINGTON | TTY] | Lg \ — > H \f 7 sae Ny S Tay Goreme mg oom ned | GARFIELD l { summit A a ARAPAHOE 1 i Ld os & b ous fous w con 9 ras 0 na ne — ns ce = mn 2 om @ co oem ol nod ~ Y { . . ‘ se ce css i 2 si ire ses 4 SOE iy 8 / l i . . . A PITKIN i ¥ fi DOUALAS 4 ELsEay i | KIT CARSON vd 3 : . sing” 13g CHE) am { 4 MESA | 4 1 rr: em = smn a rn wi . » ou - i ¥ 3 C DELTA | . J _V uincoun ¢ i 1 ? CHAFFEE“ | CHEYENNE ami ase ? GUNNISON: { J Wl o] SE MONTROSE l A FREMONT KIOWA < —- c— 3 "J i SUL WR Ul | QURAY “ome wes Sint olla PUEBLO Wa oo i he 7 y ; SAGUACHE + custer | | . SAN MIGUEL ‘=~ (HINSDALE J SN i 1 | $ p BY saa” Wl. | i BENT | PROWERS es SU ) Y he i OTERO i ¢ DOLORES oan a em fn —- mee LC ‘ . We Err Sa Loni Fr Lf ent]... / : RIO GRANDE | ALAMOSA it Pd / | * LJ H e J | H / { rd J ; yo a Y i BACA MONTEZUMA f~ = LA PLATA | = costa & LAS ANIMAS ! . | ARCHULETA CONEJGS i \ | } : : s : — 9 § { 3 Ee J €¥9 644 Congressional Directory CONNECTICUT (5 districts and 1 at large) l ; i : > \ 2 J g > ! 5 [ : «ose OF § | ox gt 3 5 . | | = + Saves aN g ke § \ petty p>) : 1] £2 pra 4 ~ 2 fo x 8 @ . a 3 ) 5 = g x n § Coan 2 : : X z \ = NS * Tg LITCHFIELD -n “~.) { FAIRFIELD Maps of Congressional Districts DELAWARE (1 at large) NEWCASTLE # Dover KENT 8USSEX 645 646 Congressional Directory FLORIDA (4 districts and 1 at large) ] 7 + HOLMES / | mJ vaoKson \ med WALTON (WASH | 7h QADSDEN f ! NASSAU \ INGTON rgi=< = {Leon >} \ Se HAMILTON *, J MADISON lah ssee y wakuLLA 8 / B PUTNAM lL ) Ps i ALACHUA Ni, fF LEVY 3 os MARION RE BROWARD COLLIER Maps of Congressional Districts 647 GEORGIA (10 districts) J WALKER Gem Ag rR | / Loaroossf ° h¥ rove” : 4 BOAOK p [a { Y= = Ny Pd ry Rasun § MURRAY dial 1 — S Ey £0" ¢ - tl "a its ou udp ff wre § Fi s § cwarrooaa # § GOROON § be! CN al & iseenens) R 7 ¢ eiokens he . -d oso 7 Fras Vem ge nf oawson f~ lo} / oe \ BAnks HART soaLz €LOVD p ? AL o 3 2 PS BARTOW CHEROKEE § consvru / Sono - \ CERT ns - ranl ¢ PoLK > [} crete £ OCONEE ot WILKES. mony rn A A a -{ PAULDING cosa [] HARALSON ff 30 ~~’ Jr AJ WASHINGTON \ ) 8 { 8 i: \ WILKINSON yova-t # ~, SCREVIN - a £ & 1 1 ~~ £ I H wagon J Pi [] PULASKE 000LY DODGE STEWART ] Ss 34 |. < £9 Vd SUMTER -——f = . N wiLcox * —y ty «ad case | y ouiTaan g f=—- id 2 I= manoouen rem Lee Ry oem on Nag of eee ovis E turner ff \ el werna ay ! i al) {| S Ly d : | Clay a Rwin 8 cucnoun GHERTYE 3. WORTH er \ Av 2 wiley : ; oy ~f corset n sacon AL WAYNE 2] bo LY ra > eancy 8 pace ' i D F ry / \ Te — | I Pierce 3 ny } Ga i w l= ' WN scares ) ATKINSON md 8 LL — { aren 8 Mien coLquitt coon \ = = bv BRANTLEY A d ih 1 ema | "Nr TASE 7 bi i : N —- { t, CARIBOU ¢ f= JEROME | & Lo 0 POWER bo inock bh OWYHEE | ay Sie be = CT H * dV H | rwin FALLS } boone [2X v= leer . ! CASSIA : Lod J} LAKE J ! | oneia p : ; x TFRANKLINY | | } | ) Maps of Congressional Districts 649 ILLINOIS (25 districts and 2 at large) ' ~~ JO DAVIESS | 2° jo — w— | — emo OGLE —-43 . 3 Chicago 1.24589, i» PTS.3,6.7.10. 41 TER H = PTS: 36,7 10. & ROC¥ § HENRY MERCER KANKAKEE 5 : Be AG | 1 ¢ 115) gi: TF ; &° 1 y X% } re By 17 1.1L 18. LO FULTON & ! — en oom © nancock] &° 1 S$ MASON / ~ 1 SCHUYLER or LOGAN DEWITT CHAMPAIGN] gm Ps & : { MENARD gees re ADAMS v . [PIATT : 3 dE % % Springfield macon | ( MORGANJ SANGAMON /s DOUGLAS & FE) ¢—H EDGAR (eo) o moma C oemcmmes PIKE \ 5h d 1 “x # : CHRISTIAN L.% co.es } day ie | WS dd . se SHELBY { GREENE 2 3 lame. BERL. | CLARK 2 § i ot ger pA 3S [} & A) 2) \ © o } re & i = 5 vemeeY + oO s FAY 3 i ” Lamon CLINTON i ST. CLAIR] lwasrinaTor PERRY ¢ __Irrankuin =X | i | | i i { i | 650 Congressional Directory INDIANA (12 distriets) v [] é by ° : © sv.ucsern : ELKHART LAGRANGE | STEYR A ponte 1 J (J _— g © am ® aww Cy - ems PORTER 3? NOBLE i 0) KALE [] MARSHALL Lal) | STARKE RS Bom = Deme = xe 8 KxosciusxQ 4 hb : TR BLE dle 4 [3] hd : i f i Alen ® Jaseer 8 PULASK) L] NEWTON I - - oun & oon © a a [} Fr T ] 3 8 i ® og we WHITE rd WELLS i ADAMS BENTON i s : = oa ~k-q CARAOLL <@ % [| : } . HOWARD l GRANT ! 840K , Jay TiwpccANoE se ! } LJ —— DELAWARE g | i RANDOLPH [] 2 Fountain ® . MADISON a ] . ® MONTGOMERY BOONE i HAMILTON 3 “3 breed BS em - co ° Lor GR) LIN SE 30 Yn - i | ) f WAYNE 3 { 3 . of HANCOCK x g 32 rane 0) i HENDRICKS MARION 1 m8 we ] . ' ¥% Indianapolis ¢ meg=e= | ° PUTNAM f i ° fas © Exem @ grea i i RUSK ¢ FAYETTE ] UNION ~ M SHELBY bo : | JOHNSON 3 bh | MORGAN i = i vico fi ® om oof BE ocuar 3 $ FRANKLIN ge 4 od I 4 1% OWEN - wm - 3 i r a » DECATUR fl, mo comp we cos @ ued ] ; p L PR GROWN i panTHOLOMEW { A ° & : o _ MONROE = ° § DEARBORN &, SULLIVAN € £ PLE & ’ i 3 § emer, 4 | * GREENE con ef gama : f & ; ® § JENNINGS 1] boo & [] Oo. 4 mde mee d JACKSON ] oC ey % ) oo ¢ LAWRENCE Oo; Ix all i SWITZERLAND * § JEFFERSON = { ® all PRO 5 # i] KNOX LS DAVIESS § MARTIN ar 4 prt ™, 4 RE; fo” ° [1 ® H ¢ § ! WASHINGTON ©, ad cd 2 h ° ORANGE 5 ks fos 8 CLARK PINE ° § _oveos 5 ® v 2 GiEsoN ° 5 CRAWFORD $ AT i 4 . ° “ a SCALE sus d 1 Re U v 0 0 20 MILES ? | TT af Harrison gud SEHR) H [] 2 3 5 e WARRICK >= bh PERRY VANDER * posty & “ounch 2 SPENCER e Vd ~ Los Ll IONONA CRAWFORD FAYEXTE al | i BUCHANAN i OELAWARE DUBUQUE , - ® I": 4 rad EES " i [ « . i : JACKSON JONES I rn - my « coun & CEN 8 ex me ome @ we © eo J td HARRISON i SHELBY | AUDUBON. [3 ° a 1 . i = 7 AWATTAMIE I cass } ADam SADISON I WARREN i MARION e s ® aun @ = » 3 - wy ° a am A i : : H H \ MitLs I MONTGOMERY I ADAMS UNION | cane | cvs i MONROE Mhmdl SL TTY CEPR J : s 8 RINGGOLD | OECATUR i WAYNE l APPANOOSE s 8 atl WAPELLO EL Qavis Linton $ crom s pode } A 2 R308 i JOH Ld SCOTT H MUSCATINE Louisa -—p = - i - w= 0. Whig 0 | oor i e g OES MOINES am © een @ © bp Lod i van SURED i WN, s LEE (S39143SIP 6) YMOI $201.438Y(J JPU0SSILbU0)) [0 SdD Ji : J SHEVENM ! 8 | i § REPUBLIC 1 orown AW! : i LING g OfeATuR NoRtON © PHILLIPS i SMITH JEWELL WASHINGTON MARSHALL HEMAKA | by nl 2 ! i : A py © Sous» cm > 3 i 1 by tbe whe ARERR Reb 4 i f ATCHISON 'Y Ld * J vo i . N SHERMAN i T ! H oe [] JACKSON i HOMAS MITCHEL! AWATOMIE . ¢ 'SrzRDAN “8 | cranam ROOKS OSBORNE SHEL cLay i bo i 3 ! ! i i sev 7, AA FYANDGTTR e Pa res © com @ ax @ wena + sls 1000 © ums © a, H : 1 Nog" o H mmole Qo @ sods 8 cmp @ pune loon Sums ] Topeka i : 1 OTTAWA m=] - H = 8 € ol SHAWNEE LINCOLN p. waLLACE i LOGAN GOVE i como amen b ARARY. i WABAUNSEE ni h TREGO ELLs fausseLy, . ° DOUGLAS i JOHNSON 2 i he 4 0 DICKINSON fp ern i . , J } SALINE ! a a ES on 0 cm © Sill H i ! H : ELLSWORTH morRIS § f saga I i } ! : i Pa L ] FRANKLIN i Mame QGREELEY § WICH! 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[1] STANTQN | GRANT HASKELL SATA ESET ON NEOSHO | H Kiowa e KINGMAN i WLS i CRAWFORD 13 Sm 0 en @ wm og © wen 0 em 8 ry #0 fo © cxms ® Ere © wm 0 1 eK s 8 Ramet JSSIOUINS ERS | Ld . e | «op El H 3 fro emo omonmedy nut ¢ wn 0 £2: 0 ste be © cao © ws 0 0 | 1 § ° ’ ° freee MORTON 4 STEVENS | SEWARD MEADE i CLARK i BARBER § SUMNER COWLEY hn Mar aR % MONTGOMERY] “ABETTE & cpppokes ! | H 3 Com i PER | cuaurauqua ! s H H H | | H i i pri! 1930 5 1 i SCALE 0 0 20 MILER (s301381P 2) SYSNVH ¢%9 R4030240(] (0U018S24HU0)) (S19113SIP 6) AMdDNLNUX 8290.4)83(] J0U01$S2L6U0,) fo SADT 654 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA (8 districts) i ry : 3 { i 9 3 § ccmsomne UNO \ MOREHOUSE ‘F 7 £4 SyBossierj ) Pah & 2.9 & H 1 = +s € I i = vie LINCOLN famewns? 3 a CAF i ; $¢ Fm I pa r= oua i : ume : CHITA CADDO W. lil H v4 iowLAnD_{ HR BIENVILLE tear 3, ¥ A ¢ MADISON 3 pr? 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J fy’ anne RJ S\ARunoes i \ . % PRINCE J % Annapolis ¥ GEORGES i i! «9 4 : 0 : LY Ja {Canouine eam” TS, te § Y $e TIEN fs , BR > J X i od | 5 it © y 7 "CHARLES {56 J : A \ 3 : ‘1 J WN CORCHESTER f (s391138ID 9) CNVTAAVIN DC. £ WICOMICO €' ST. MARYS £7 DE ER FS 5 Wa [i — »—" \ 3 Wa ed somerseT WORCESTER °, fu0p00.4(] 10U01882.46%0) 999 FRANKLIN \ ) 2 wi PTS. 8, 9, Il pe cHeLsEA |] PT. gy——ad IS T—5—FL—.69008 ~~ J ’, d ® NN J | oY f r WORGEST 4 BERKSHIRE A “ 5 Rtn at nt pi iki 7, § J Bosgon 10, 12, I PT. ry. 4 in 2 # tL. * y/ | ’ i h { ba PS April 1930 ad & PLYMOUTH ee BRISTOL [1] o 0 MILES BARNSTABLE (s9o1SIP ST) SLLASAHOVSSVI $1024SYT JoU0LssaLbU0)) fo sdv Jif LS9 658 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN (17 districts) / 3 fo meet . Coen ] . Gocesio cHorTwA § wenominzz MONT ’ . { mr | omen | LSS, {arena sosooman] aseuaw | bed f:L- LI osczoia [ cuant j oom 7 a te sig | Se joe | SAGINAW H wowrom § casrer | : cane k © 5 x om,90 7715, PTS.1 §13,14,16,17 fF "WAYNE CO. TS. 1 13, 14, 16,17 ass | orvosem | onanon WiLsOALE } | ZL 1 april 1930 By Maps of Congressional Districts MINNESOTA (9 districts) SYSON ROSEAY on a © wo . MARSHALL b] [] © LAKE OF THE WOODS ec we den ——— fe = | | J o> = em © em Tie KOOOMICHING ) \ PENNINGTON \ - coy i= 7 SELTRAMI ) | coon L RED LAKE 4 = —-—— ’ i -@ rd | bh] aoe | Lr [] 0 | 1 H ' axe i POLK 9 £ | i \ 3 bal TASCA H £7. L0Ui9 . he EE § i i [] 3s [3 IH NORMAN J Hanwonen i { \ i { . [ : ¢ H [ me = mm ps Fee ee = fee | T —— | etry — clay i | | pr] oo — ¢ a shoe Jom I1 4 - 3 ta ' Id ATK CARLTON i J crow vara | OTTER TAM a w= we . ‘ Por s ] [] e bem wy - | Ve—em—ed foe si Toop s nce . | ovommson {5d H | xanaseo ] eee ee mS 1 : «eo x 3 \ oewton | 3 H [ STEARNS Yo sam 3 EighsTone, L - — 4 — — » SHERBURNE Bas = wn jcrueact T fi ’ Hy fg or 1° BR § -— ta © ) 2 ems hag Reet KANDIYOM weexen | WRIGHT LY = 2 MM cHepewa s HENNEPIN 2 a LAC QUI PARLE 1] H St. Paul 41 H - “~ ~~ [1] 5 CE season) |_conen MINNEAPOLIS ,3 PT. YELLOW MEDICINE », RENVILLE 3. 5 tt Tg Toi gil» EAD 8 Tr od “~~ SIBLEY ye= — H ——— 9 - LINCOLN § LYON I REDWOOD Seo a § i ci i Es i] [] [A ’ 1] WABASHA oo hem bohe mows Te" a i mS TR | Te 3 ’ ! [p PIPESTONE i MURRAY COTTONWOOD @ DLUE EARTH J WASECA | stare | ooock | { owsres © | WINONA 1 WATONWAN [3 1] ‘ ' 1] ER, SE Ei Lommel pom deg i i ’ s [] neon] wostss ACKSONL po MART rama. emczoonn | wowen | Fnumone HOUSTON [1] H H : i l i “april 1930 659 660 Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI (7 districts) . i . i t ® OE SOTO i 8 gENTON ALCORN i ° ey . ° ; 4 * ; g 3 A { marsHALL i | Teean —'es ano dy H : Ed : & PRENTISS i ° : IIR Eg PANOLA | LAFAVETTE [oni eo i I - i vee i ITAWAMBA ponTOTOC 8 BY ee i i YALOBUSHA TALLAHATCHIE 8 B CALHOUN LEAKE NESHOBA « KEMPER. | ; it wm woh c ee wl n cr i | «om fp om © mm a fe ee 2 ome ; AUDERDALE D WARREN 4 be 0 op SCOTT NEWTON [¥ £ Jackson *y! : HINDS RANKIN q % «soem 00 ct ee em en en = RX a] e ? s a 0) a — REGS sat. 9ASPER CLARKE CLAIBORNE 4 [] | | SIMPSON | H - COPIAN = ' i [/ ') 1 JEFFERSON 9 ¥ H 8 vn en ee ery ve ' i I COVINGTON WAYNE i EER L JONES 8 [] cncoun | EUAWRENCE serrenson™ i Adams © FRANKLIN i 1 3 ¢ -» © cso — ole © cies op EE I : Joy I su fe sbi SOR dy core v waga aig Futon s Lo ’ » 8 9 | i ry A : i i I MARION © LAMAR | & § GREENE \ : WILKINSON H AMITE es PIKE i & 8 perAY i & | | i WALTHALL 2 | i : - a mm fn = t STONE Pn SE Sal ! i i © 5) ) 20 MILES LLL I En i JACKSON HARRISON [] i a= Red UNION : y hoot. LT i MONROE : RG: . GRENADA | el H : He : i oe ol 3 {ly . CLAY Ses hi ; & . WEBSTER ; S SE Po © com © ws] © oo wd go FLOWER : IT ~8 O : j CARROLL [ A H OKkTiBBEHA ° LOWNDES | 3 od : ‘ = $d H | onocTaw \ be = nd mode - de » cemeo ca Cem WASHINGTON Lo « ro mle wt 2 A Ld bi 2 9 pd H hi 4 ATTALA 3 ed inston : NOXUBEE Maps of Congressional Districts MISSOURI (13 districts) KANSAS CITY 4PT.,5PT. 4PT.,6PT] 661 4 igi va suTNAM {eons SOOTUAND =] HARRISON 1 Eri 5 A Eo joes cen © GRUNDY KHOR 4) oaviess OF kare nn LIVINGSTON "acon SHELBY MARION CLINTON ed ) CHARITON MONROE pasts, vd canRoLL -, ~ RAY A. sie oe CLAY J dy — 0 ~~ - As Pas bd Ly > AvpRapy = Res Demo emme SAUNT pd HOWARD a i] 2 LAFAYETTE J T LooL JACKSON “ 2 A soon & o Fe posed] « - coopen CALLAWAY rd reef * sonuson ETH / 1 WARREN | SY. CHARLES : * f—- ! ~ eo sT ous Tid. Xi YIN ptm ey Jetferson City 9 | gt | 1, 13, 12 PT. gam od N joe osage i HENRY MORGAN ! oly 7 ! FRANKLIN 12 PT. aares selon 28 8 > | JEFFERSON Sh TH hc & \ Bi a 87. clan CAMDEN to YY. RORY ’ ORAWFORD § WASMINGTON § - 2 Ninn p= | oHeLPS | £37 aenevieve i PULASKI § Ho Bi [1] . E ceoan ac = ko i r ff 142 rancOis yp, / pany POLK jabily cent rele il eanTon L 1 | i MADISON ' cae fy se moose hy REYNOLDS | [] | Carmanotay Greene waseTen wont Tg t—- i | Nu ~- “ LAWRENCE i Se. § ag \ Za ===" ocumstn % Fa WEwTON : 7 ocouaLas CARTER ER rooms gl SARRY 1 STONE NOowELL fii En \ 10 i \ Mo DONALD i may ozanK i mpLEY k —td 1] April 1830 } ~ frost escaLe 0 © 20 mnes EEE PEMISCOT DUNKLIN ¢99 J T . . . v yi : § r gt DANIELS h LINCOLN 1 QLACIER , | | d J . {. SHERIDAN { SR Lk | ; a a _j FLATHEAD & d 4 / L i lo coe | - \ sed) oR RC NA i f BLAINE r 4 VALLEY . ROOSEVELT ey ~~ Ds : moms my d J PHILLIPS 9 et Sept al UE EE eg SN ei A rd i [] iret | i rE 1 i at WE Ce CHOUTEAU . : i J s1 RICHLAND pod - bY a5 es 1 \ —_— Zz Ll pot sn * MCCONE # om ) ay / pT « ¢ J » Q 3 ie I la 'd a i Bd : ; iy ohne: -=& | GARFIELD Lis at DAWSON E, = cna 3 O . Lb = MISSOULA *~ L, JUDITH ~ & \2 { — = = & \ i BASIN : J i \ i 2 3 oO «2. ¥ | ARIE BH Chee 2S 5 A - te, fh i ¢ ane ay sy [ = 2 5 = Zz 3 ’ ; Neo Sls mnt J i Coo dl ST i MEAGHER |“ | Se { Let + 8 > 8 h Q Fp 8: . ; i X, I Fal MUSSELSHELL : ji rd wz >, i ~if | WATER | % | i va NY j Eaten j FALLON > = s JEFFERSON ! 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JOHNSON o HEMAHA GAGE 8 en, 4 8 PAWNEE g§ RICHARDSON (s3011381p 9) VISVHEIIAN 891.438] (ou01ssa.bu0)) fo sdv py €99 664 DORMS Congressional Directory NEVADA (1 at large) [} i ! | | ¢ HUMBOLDT i : I : - i i. -o ELKO cis i 1 WASHOE ° 7 . ! wos Loy | I PERSHING / \ ! / LR vb a — 7 | ks CED © Gzpo Sm amo GES ® THDS WD © ond | ? LANDER I EUREKA J ! | { | CHURCHILL », / LZ EN : J : i WHITE PINE 57% COT "von Se ( i i £2 + sn > Soom © mm + cn 0 0 aD 0 we J, MINERAL ESMERALDA LINCOLN ® moss WEED 5 GEIS © SCM ® ESTED 6 GmmD o au Maps of Congressional Districts NEW HAMPSHIRE (2 districts) GRAFTON CARROLL \ Nes ‘e BELKNAP. ¢ fo Re . [3 ai \ h \N . { a \. ) : MERRIMACK § ~ 7 1 Concord * A STRAFFORD ZL bY / \, ROCKINGHAM 666 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY (14 districts) HUNTERDON ® BURLINGTON ! CAMDEN ; |W GLOUCESTER = 0 CUMBERLAND RB care mar 4 © °o 0 MILES ) Maps of Congressional Districts NEW MEXICO (1 at large) 667 / \ t ; y i ! [ if i RIO ARRIBA HERCLIRN COLFAX | SAN JUAN i } ] i i $ a i UNION frm cemianiy —. / Tt wi oni wl EE at bate Liomiame =. ve Pil MORA \ — s——. i i a i HARDING ' ! § ON on ¢ nen 0 cn MCKINLEY | SANDOVAL [ ¥% Santa Fe x campen) ! 754A i SAN MIGUEL XN: proms Fries oly i ai By i x= re ———— — etd ees oe) \ eerNALILLO fom omemd ouay | VALENCIA \ 7 Ee oy | cuabaLuee I i GT * TORRANCE Smo ed Sipe Pe WORE, I a f TY Foon . . +4 1 died oEBACA A | og 8 4 | | | i {= 4 ROGSEVELT CATRON : SOCORRO i ¢ fom come | | J | Frat; ! “ neous | 1. 4 re [] © comm) ui ra fo sin so [| CHAVES J even neni dios an ely | i Leememys 7 H {ERRA : : |} 8 : { v comes | \ i 2 } d rd es \ ZG | ! : |e 1 GRANT i ce om i i ] * ~ ol] pte . OTERO i J i | = i Chon ye | £DDY 1 i i DONA ANA | | i o i LUNA 1] | HIDALGO \ L. fore } APRN. I, 1920 hhh ORLEANS] i CATTARAUGUS LEAN HAUTAUQUA] ; : ol 139+ J as rm 7 | Fo) § STEUBEN { i KE | 37. 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SWAIN on z RUTHERFORD on yr Oy A, % Xr —t = “Yuackson fl POLK \ fovcrose ok fe Vi hy JE MOND x HOKE § : y Sp i % UNION i ANSON Lapras ¥ ONSLOW { \ == H pj (s7011STD TT) VNITOUV)D HILUION SCALE 4 0 . 20 MILES MI COLUMBUS nad 2 BRUNSWICK $201.48 JouorssaLbuoy) fo sdo pr 699 670 Congressional Directory NORTH DAKOTA (2 at large) WiLLiams 1 2 corr tm sory oh timate : i : a dane : 5 e —w on om 0 ieee] IS na {ive ranid 8 = 9 2 3 al | = ie =» » » { a] u : Riper : 3 : Ea : : 5 ICD iy g or aponaem ull pe. a } e | : ra TE far 8 2 Jurersss : ¥ Lar y : : — § ail 1 Pid E BR meee i g maa e H H 4 u fe = amd a aad Se an cect af z I ol J : : f oF) ful] | : ar Wadd 8 ia i | : 1 LAS 7 i] 2 3 tL z J 3 E g BY ows gee i : E (7 Sh i ] ’ H ' | | 5 ke PH ee g 7 i Le 4 a if RN = gr eo if Ur £ i En } 4 i x 0 ~ plas § N £ | am © md Ler | | L ’ ’ Sn H L pf i Me KENZIE SLOPE DICKEY #40 INTOSH 20 MILES EMMONS Bowman § — ; April 1930 Maps of Congressional Districts OHIO 671 srown | (22 districts and 2 at large) — T ASHTABULA ES LUCAS § . 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THE SENATE *Kry PrrtMAN, President pro tempore, 2620 Foxhall Road. *Rev. ZEBarNEY T. PHILLIPS, D. D., LL. D., Chaplain of the Senate, 2224 R Street. *Epwin A. HAaLsEY, Secretary, 1324 Ingraham Street. *CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 285, 286) Name Home post office Washington residence Rs Page *+Adams, Alva B......-- Pueblo, Colo... The Wardman Park___| 13 *Aghurst, Henry F_______ Prescott, Ariz_______ 1602 IL St... nes 525 5 *Austin, Warren R_______ Burlington, Vt______ The Mayflower. ____ 118 *Bachman, Nathan L_____ Chattanooga, Tenn__| The Continental ______ 109 *Bailey, Josiah W________ Raleigh, N. C_______ The Mayflower. _._____ 83 *Bankhead, John H., 2d. _| Jasper, Ala__.___..__ 2400 Sixteenth St______ 3 *Barbour, W. Warren.....| Locust, N. J_...__.. 78 Kalorama Circle____| 67 *Barkley, Alben W_______ Paducah, Ky... 3102 Cleveland Ave____| 37 Bilbo, Theodore G_______ Poplarville, Miss_.__{ The Wardman Park___| 56 #Black, Hugo L.......__. Birmingham, Alf iiedr ~~ ~~ th real pre 3 ¥Bone, Homer T.... 5:5 Tacoma, Wash. 2. . dea... ht met rintds aries 122 *Borah, William E_______ Boise, Idaho________ 2101 Connecticut Ave__| 22 Brown, Fred H.. .....-- Somersworth, N, H ik. ema s—n 66 *Bulkley, Robert J _______ Cleveland, Ohio_____ 1901 Wyoming Ave____| 87 *1|| Bulow, William J_____ Beresford, S. Dak___| Stoneleigh Court .____ 108 *i1Burke, Edward R_____ Omaha, Nebr_______ 1901 Wyoming Ave..__| 64 Jor, Harry Flood-....- Berryville, Va......... The Shoreham _~______ 119 *|| Byrnes, James F_______ Spartanburg, S. C.__| The Shoreham._._______ 106 Capper, Arthur. .-.._ Topeka, Kans_______ The Mayflower________ 35 |Caraway, Hattie W_____ Jonesboro, Ark______ 5248 Colorado Ave____| 6 *+Carey, Robert D_______ CareYhural, WYO. tii fore = n= ZB mbar xremrres 128 *Chavez, Dennis_________ Albuquerque, N. Mex... io edi. 71 *||Clark, Bennett Champ__| LaDue Village, St. | 4922 Quebec St. ______ 58 Louis County, Mo. Connally, Tom ......=-c-- Marlin, es. citi = veo Sram Soret 112 *Coolidge, Marcus A_____ Fitchburg, Mass_____ The Shoreham ________ 46 *Copeland, Royal S______ New York City, N. Y_| The Shoreham________ 71 *Costigan, Edward P_____ Denver, Colo_______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 13 *Couzens, James_________ Detroit, Mich_______ 2850 Woodland Drive__| 49 Davis, James J_ _______ Pittsburgh, Pa... .. 3012 MassachusettsAve| 97 = Dickinson, L..J _------- Algona, Iowa_ ______ 2842 Allendale Place_._| 32 *t Dieterich, William H___| Beardstown, Ill_____ The Wardman Park___| 23 #¥Donahey, Vic..-~---~- 35 is ville, Ohio, | The Broadmoor_______ 87 Duly, FP’. Ryan. _ cr zne Fond du Lac, Wis___| 3155 Highland Place___| 126 *|| Fletcher, Duncan U____| Jacksonville, Fla____| 2101 Connecticut Ave_.| 17 irazier, Lyon J. - ~~ -=¢ Hoople, N. Dak_____ 6629 First St.......... co... 86 *George, Walter F_______ Vienna, Ga __-.-....- The Mayflower________ 19 *Gerry, Peter G__ _______ Warwick, R. I______ 2132 R Street... ______ 105 {Gibson, Ernest W_______ Brattleboro, Vt_____ The Wardman Park___| 118 *Clase, Carter... wove Lynchburg, Va... The Raleigh... . <=. 119 *Gore, Thomas P....____ Oklahoma Clty, Okla. 93 693 694 Congressional Directory THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 285, 286) Name Home post office Washington residence li Page ||| Guffey, Joseph F_______ Pittsburgh, Pa... __ 2340 Kalorama Road___| 97 Hale, Prederick.........-. Portland, Maine____| 1001 Sixteenth St______ 42 %=tliHarrison, Pat... _. Gulfport, Miss_____. 2260 Cathedral Ave____| 56 *Hastings, Daniel O______ Wilmington, Del. ___| The Shoreham________ 16 *Hatch, Carl A. oor Clovis, IN. Mesct . aozhoadt 8 open 0a. of 70 #Hayden, Carl... ... . Phoenix, Ariz_. |. eee tena 5 Holt, Bush D...........cs Weston, Wi Val. ooalinoci. van di. A weed 124 *Johnson, Hiram W______ San Francisco, Calif _| 122 Maryland Ave. NE _ 8 *Keyes, Henry W________ North Haverhill, | 111 N. Alfred St., Alex- | 66 N. H. 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______ Chicago, I 280 The Mayflower._______ 23 Yogan, M. M___._ .. _... Bowling Green, Ky__| The Dupont Circle.___| 38 *Lonergan, Augustine____| Hartford, Conn_____ 3107 Macomb St. _.____ 14 *McAdoo, William Gibbs_| Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Shoreham________ 8 *1|| McCarran, Pat_______ Reno, Nev__________ 3614 Morrison St______ 66 *MecGill, George __._____ Wichita, Kans______ The Westchester. _ ____ 35 McKellar, Kenneth_______ Memphis, Tenn_____ The Willard... + 109 *MecNary, Charles L_ ____ Salem, Oreg... nr. rn The Hay-Adams__ ____ 96 Maloney, Francis T______ Meriden, Connor er foo o-oo 70 Schad os 15 *Metcalf, Jesse H________ Providence, Ba TL o-oo * oD Lpirieat 105 *Minton, Sherman.__._____ New Albay, Td a a EO 29 ¥*Moore, A,-Harry.. 2... Jersey City, N. J____| The Shoreham________ 67 Murphy, Tiouis.”.’... "~~ Bubngiies lows Tok oreo HH Pn 33 *Murray, James E_______ Butte Mont: Sf rr 63 *t Neely, Matthew M_____ Fairmont, W. Na... The Willard. _ = 123 *+ Norbeck, Peter. .....__ Pediicld, 8 Poke ea 108 *Norris, George W_______ McCook, Nebr_____._ Woodley Park Towers_| 64 Anos Gerald, P52. - Cooperstown, N. Dak_| 3802 Gramercy St____._ 86 *||||O’ Mahoney, Joseph C_| Cheyenne, Wyo_____ The Wardman Park___| 128 *1{tOverton, John H_____ Alexandria, La______ The Wardman Park___| 40 ¥Pittman, Key 2.0. 1 Tonopah, Nev______ 2620 Foxhall Road____| 65 ¥Pope, Jameg P._ = 2 Boise, Idaho. ______. The Northumberland. _| 22 *Radcliffe, George Li. __ ___ Baltimore, Md: rr | sori iore- Bil bih pi 43 Reynolds, Robert R_____ Asheville, N. C______ The Plaga, ~7 tv’ 83 *Robinson, Joseph T______ Little Rock, Ark_____ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_ 6 Russell," Richard BB. -Jr_-t Winder, Gal )y Foo cox--Z URW oi 19 iSchwellenbach, Lewis B-_| Seattle, Wash. Z| of." c/osiaa Au: 122 *Sheppard, Morris... ._. Texarkana, Tex_ ____ 1814 Nineteenth St____| 112 *Shipstead, Henrik _______ Miltona, Minn_____._ 1113 East Capitol St___| 53 . [|Smith, Ellison D______ Lynchburg, S. C.____ The Wardman Park___| 106 *||Steiwer, Frederick ______ Portland, Oreg______ 78250rehid St_._ ___._ 96 *1{1Thomas, Elbert D____| Salt Lake City, Utah_| 2737 Devonshire Place_| 117 ®*Thomas, Blmer. .. oee-- Medicine Park, Okla_.| 1661 Crescent Place_.__| 93 i Townsend, Joh G., Jr. Selbyville, Del 1% ~~-=--= >= i BOIS ui 74 16 Srammell, Park ~~ Lakeland, Fla..._.__. 2633 Sixteenth St______ 17 SiTruman, Harry 8°. Independence, Mo_.__| The Sedgwick Gardens.| 59 Tydings, Millard E_ ______ Haviede Grace, Md... ~~ Xr 43 *Vandenberg, Arthur H___| Grand Rapids, Mich_.| The Wardman Park___| 49 *Van Nuys, Frederick. .._| Indianapolis, Ind__..| 1901 Wyoming Ave____| 29 Wagner, Robert F________ New York City, N. Y_| The Shoreham ________ 71 Walsh, David tc ares Clinton, Mass_______ The Carlton... 5" = 45 *Wheeler, Burton K______ Butte, Mont_ __.____ 3757 Jocelyn St__._.____ 63 *|| White, Wallace H., Jr_.__| Auburn, Maine______ 2449 Tracy Place. _____ 42 Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES *JosepH W. BYRrNS, Speaker, The Mayflower. *SouTH TriMBLE, Clerk, 10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. *Rev. JAMES SHERA MONTGOMERY, D. *|KenxNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms, The Wardman Park. *tJosErH J. SINNOTT, Doorkeeper, 3527 Thirteenth Street. *|Finis E. Scott, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) 695 D., Chaplain, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Eo Page #Adair, J. leroy... --- Quinney; Jl. ogni). oo .. onda Wie. 1910048 27 Allen, Leo Bolu noni. oil Galena, 111... Cc. 210 Racquet Club... Us 0 26 *Amlie, Thomas R.__.._.. Elkhorn, Wis ooo. 2500s © Jigaigiiel 126 *Andresen, August H_____ Bed Wing, Minnis lo... i038 dag 54 Andrew; A. Piatt... Gloucester, Mass____| Racquet Club_________ 47 Andrews, Walter G_______ Buftalo, NUTVeiio, of |... J. 200000 D000 82 Arends, Leslie C_________ Melvin, TL... 90a The Roosevelt _ ______ 27 *1 +t Ashbrook, William A__| Johnstown, Ohio____| 325 First St. SE_______ 91 ®Ayers, Roy Bualoiois oo, Lewistown, Mont. ___ R03, Massncimsniin Ave.| 63 Bacharach, Isaac... ccc--- Atlantic City, N. J__| The Mayflower________ 68 *}+Bacon, Robert L______ Old: Westbury," N.Y..¥ 18301 -P'St... Gu 00. 3 72 *Bankhead, William:B__. | Jasper, Ala... food |. le dicdanmaid. oon 5 *Barden, Graham A______ New Bern, N.C. |... B00 0, 84 *Barry, William Boo. 20 | Hollis, Jamaiea; N.Y]... cone bte SLES, SOIL 72 ¥Beam, Horry P.-vwcensc= Chieago, TI... 020000 The Wardman Park___| 24 Beiter, Alfred F.._._____. Williamsville, N. Y__| The Hamilton_________ 82 Bell,:C. Jasper... ..-x- Kansas City, Mo. ol. eau bi dl0io le LOK 60 *Berlin, William M_______ Greensburg, Rat cio iil. ve cnn naan ill J3C 103 ¥Biermann, Fred... -cu-u- Decorah, Iowa______ The Raleigh__________ 33 %Binderup, C. Goins ol Minden, Nebr. tial. Joes suai 280), SUT 65 *1Blackney, William W___| Flint, Mich_________ Dodge Hotel __________ 51 *Bland, Schuyler Otis___| Newport News, Va__.| The Highlands________ 119 *{Blanton, Thomas L_____ Abilene, Tex________ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 115 %iBloom, Sol-_.........: New York City, N.Y_| 1930 Columbia Road.__| 77 *Boehne, John W., Jr_____ Evansville, Ind. 0000 0. enon lo DIRT IC 0 31 *Boileau, Gerald J_______ Wausau, Wise ioc. fa B00 TE 127 Boland, Patrick J... ___._ Seranton, Pads 00811 | asvasetaneiieailab 99 *Bolton, Chester C_______ Lyndhurst, Ohio_____ 2301 Wyoming Ave____| 93 *tBoykin, Frank W______ Mobile, Ala_________ The Washington______ 3 Boylan, Jen J... uf 01 New York City, N.Y_| Racquet Club_________ 76 Brennan, Martin A_______ Bloomington, Ill.____ The Roosevelt________ 23 *|| Brewster, Ralph O_____ Dexter, Maine. _____ The Carlton. _________ 43 *+1Brooks, J. Twing______ Sewickley, Pa. 0 lio] Ladin liaeddit S000 104 Brown, Paul 2asonil or Elberton, Gar i0 fl. 30 soe Jal JERE DO, S120 21 241 Brown, Prentiss" M{ 2: St. Ignace, Michi |... 2008 00 Lb JE 52 *||Buchanan, James P____| Brenham, Tex_______ George WashingtonInn_| 114 Buck, FranksH dao ll oil Vacaville, Calif._____ 2120 Kalorama Road. _ 9 *Buckbee, John T.....-.- Rockford, i I i 00s ol. ove wn nn DCD YOR) 60 26 2 iBuckler, RIT wun... Crookston, Minnaiabl. ooo wong] 08 55 Buckley, Charles A_______ New York City, N.Y_; The Shoreham. _______ 78 *+Bulwinkle, Alfred L____| Gastonia, N. C______ The Wardman Park___| 85 %*Bureh, Thomas GC... - Martinsville, Va_____ The Willardo ou S010 120 Burdick, Usher L. ..._ .. Bismarck, N. Dak___| Cheltenham, Md______ 86 *Burnham, George__._____ Coronado, Calif _ ____ The Mayflower________ 12 *Byrns, Joseph W________ Nashville, Tenn_____ The Mayflower._...____ 111 Caldwell, Millard FL il} Milton, Fla__ociclill] ono anddfl si ca. JULY 18 *1Cannon, Clarence______ Elsberry, Mo_______ 122.B St. NB... 61 *Cannon, Raymond J.......]- Milwaukee, Wis Ji 2... o ll dll] 127 *Carlson, Frank_ ________ Concordia, Hans soli | ennai. JOE, LHL 37 Carmichael, A. H________ Tuscumbia, BAe U0 eee om mm BE 10 LL 00 5 ®Carpenter, Randolph. ...| Marion, Kans eCliill .ccanapnmendam.dlilll 36 *Carter, Albert E_.______ Oakland, Calif. ___._ 9 696 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office Washington residence Bite Page *Cartwright, Wilburn_____ McAlester, Okla_____ 400 A St. 88... ...... 94 *t11||Cary, Glover H_____ Owensboro, Ky... ]-atai ca baualog Cont. 38 Casey, Joseph E_________ Clinton, Mass_______ The Hay-Adams______ 46 tCastellow, Bryant T_____ Cuthbert, Ga... George Washington Inn | 20 tCavicchia, Peter A______ Newark, N. J.-C The Shoreham. _______ 69 *Celler, Emanuel _________ Brooklyn, N.Y... The Shoreham ________ 75 *Chandler, Walter_______ Memphis, Teneo) vr oo oo voze J nig 112 *+t||Chapman, Virgil ______ Paris, Ky... 0. soulal The Washington______ 39 *Christianson, Theodore. _| Minneapolis, Minn__| _____________________ 54 #*Chureh, Ralph E.....-... Evanston, TWo il ool Loo. mould. sunk 26 Citron, William M_______ Middletown; Connci| o_o. Jdail A was 15 #1Claiborne; James R......| St. Louis,iMo. Joie] ooo coded Vl soon 62 *Clark, D. Worth _______ Pocatello, Idaho_____ The Shoreham ________ 22 *t1Clark, J. Bayard.______ Fayetteville, No Quoc. _ oi ould Siovaddad 85 *Cochran, John J________ St. Louis, Mo....... The Shoreham ________ 62 *Coffee, Harry B.....3 4. Chadron, Nebr....._. The Shoreham... .._.. 65 *1Colden, Charles J______ Sant Pedreg Calif lid. ~oo lio cinnunl. snore 12 *Cole, William P., Jr_____ Clana; Md. BE. Jaichedofl goons 44 Cole, W. Sterling...........- Bath, N. ¥ ese. wolf lle. Co damian). sobs 81 *Collins, Samuel L.......... Fullerton, Calif cillo. The Roosevelt _______ 12 *Colmer, William M______ Pascagoula, Missa ih oe oer BL as 58 *Connery, William P., Jr__| Lynn, Mass_________ 429 House Office Bldg.| 47 *Cooley, Harold D_______ Nashville; Ni Coon fo eee ee isagt 20 84 Cooper, Jere............... Dyersburg, Tenn____| The Washington_______ 111 *Cooper, John G_________ Youngstown, Ohiosss|- iv mo ooo ati Socsas 92 #*Corning, Parker......... Albany, No XY .coboil The Carlton). vad 80 Costello, John M_________ Hollywood, Calif ___| George Washington Inn_| 11 *Cox, YO vali on Camilla, Gar docuvwll .. osidth loool chur 19 Wy Cravens, Ben. l..cli0l Port Smith, Arkoei if. oo SocumidT mstny 7 rawford, Fred L_______ Saginaw, Micha T anil or fiesta 51 Creal, Edward W________ Hodgenville pm Ryoconll oo. oad si cdoi suds 39 +1Crosby, Charles N______ Meadville,iPa. coool oo ooo bladiiiosss 103 Cross, 0. H-...... coc iom Waco, Tex .codaannh ooo culdueigd hin 114 *+||Crosser, Robert_______ Cleveland, Ohio_____ 2440 Sixteenth St______ 92 *Crowe, Eugene B_ ______ Bedford, Ind. oldie dddgasd. oiia: 31 *Crowther, Frank________ Schenectady, N. Y_._| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 80 *} Culkin, Francis D______ Oswego, N. Y_______ 3308 Woodley Place..__| 80 *Cullen, Thomas H______ Brooklyn, N. Y_____ The Shoreham. oo 73 *Cummings, Fred... _. Fort Collins, Colo___| The Roosevelt________ 13 *Curley, Edward W______ New York City, N.Y_| The Roosevelt________ 78 *{ Daly, J. Burrwood._.____ Philadelphia, Pa_.___| The Willard_ _________ 98 %*Darden, Colgate W., Jr... Norfolk, Va. tiedeodfl Loo. Lilsoonel Lhpaadas 120 *Darrow, George P______. Philadelphia, Pavscs The Washington_______ 99 *|| Dear, Cleveland. _ _.___ Alexandria, La__.___ wha doe babdol Sheds 42 *Deen, Braswell _ _ _______ Alma, Go. solidantls fot asa He lwmidond 2% Delaney, John J. Louis al Brooklyn, N:iY wo. The Broadmoor. ______ 74 *11 Dempsey, John J______ Santa Fe, N. Mexi oli. sibbestA Salliinds 71 DeRouen, René L________ Ville: Platte Lacs ill uu cwc eas Tage 42 Dickstein, Samuel ._______ New York City, N.Y_| The Washington______.| 75 *Dies, Martin_ _ _...___._ Jasper and Orange, | 1625 Hobart St________. 113 ex. *Dietrich, C. Elmer______ Tunkhannock, Pa___| The Mayflower______._ 101 2 | Dingell, John D. ig sce Detroit, Mich... 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 53 #¥ Dirksen, Everett M. | Pekin, fll. col nelidf 0 J diiononeail aoa: 27 *Disney, Wesley E_______ Tulsa, Okla_._._._.__ The Shoreham _______._ 94 Ditter, J. William... ..._.. Ambler; Pa oi cuca nm HA nian 101 *Dobbins, Donald C______ Champaign, I..ocolfl.. .. Ldebaail cabo 28 *Dockweiler, John F______ Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Shoreham.._____.._ 11 Members’ Addresses 697 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office Washington residence De Page *t Dondero, George A___.__ Roval Oak, Mich____| The Continental _____.. 53 *PDorsey, Frank J. G__...- Philadelphia, Paris foie orm rr ame BL 98 *tDoughton, Robert L____| Laurel Springs, N. C_| The Wardman Park___| 85 Doutrich, Isaac H....____ Harrisburg, Pai _..¢ The Washington______ 101 #i Doxey, Wall...J...0 od Holly Springs, Miss__| The Capitol Park.______ 57 *Drewry, Patrick H______ Petersburg, Va. ti oy... Ji. coozi adons 120 Driscoll, DJ acorn ie St. Marys, Pa... The Mayflower....___._ 102 *PDriver, William J_______ Osceola, ATK ou ouina oie nm atanall). ony 6 ses MNarrenJ.__.... Toledo, OhlaL. futon zi) mom mmm mms a 52TH. Sonn 90 [lll | Duffy, James P. B____| Rochester, N. Y_____ University Club_______ 81 *Duncan, Richard M_____ St. Joseph, Mo______ The Roosevelt_ _______ 60 *PDunn, Aubert C._______ Meridian, Miss coed doin ie mig de S0lIR 57 *PDunn, Matthew A_____._ Mount:Oliver, Pitta... vv cn Sima ati 104 burgh, Pa 10, JOC) grumibipesitt-a 43 Houston, Tex......- The Raleigh__________ 114 fiion Charles A_____ Watchung, N. J_____ 2400 Sixteenth St______ 68 ckert, Charles R_______ Beaver, Pa... ...... The Washington_ _____ 103 * Edmiston, Andrew. ..... Weston, W. Va______ The Wardman Park___| 124 *{ Eicher, Edward C______ Washington, Iowa___| The Roosevelt________ 33 *Ekwall, William A______ Portland; Oregiz.t. ll... IL haz Jlirecialy 97 *Ellenbogen, Henry... Pittsburgh, ER I RE CUS RE LT i 104 *Engel, Albert J_________ Lake. City, Mich: ai. rnc mma dd nn mm 51 *|| Englebright, Harry L___| Nevada City, Calif__| The Roosevelt________ 8 Evans, Marcellus H- _____ Brooklyn, NPY ai The Mayflower_.___._.___ 73 *PFaddis, Charles I. _..__. Waynesburg; Patel HH odol lene 103 *{Farley, James I________ Auburn, Ind. _....0. The Roosevelt_ _ ______ 30 *Fenerty, Clare G________ Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Raleigh. _________ 98 *Perguson, Phil... o.. = Woodward, OFla,.. 8... 13:8 wsdl 96 *Fernandez, Joachim O___| New Orleans, La____| The Cavalier__._______ 41 %iliesinger, William 1... | Sandusky, Ohio... |. oc 90 #1 Fish, Hamilton, Jr... .- Garrison, N. Y______ 2319 Ashmead Place___| 79 * Fitzpatrick, James M____| New York City, N:Y_| The Roosevelt________ 79 Flannagan, John W;, Ir...| Bristol, Vasa cwucmui]- ron» soguasd. tuataill 121 *Fletcher, Brooks________ Marion, Ohio... Maryland Courts._ ____ 90 *|1| | Focht, Benjamin KX... Lewisburg, Pa ii. crore tubiald 101 Ts ae Ran, CAM Ackerman,iiMiss of... -5-segevue]. Cl 57 *Ford, Thomas F________ Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Roosevelt________ 11 *| ey, Oliver Wo... = Allentown, Pa. volo. ool gianni Gln 99 | Fuller, Claude A______ Eureka Springs, Ark_| The Wardman Park _ 7 *Kulmer, Hampton P_____ Orangeburg, S. C___._| 110 Maryland Ave. NE._| 106 *Gambrill, Stephen W____| Laurel, Md_________ The Shoreham. _______ 45 if | Gasque, Alara H_- Tlorence,S. C.oco nil oom mms Sod d Sul 108 assay, BL... Coalgate, Okla. ini oem mm mm md a 95 Le Joseph A______ New. York City, N. Xl. - - » - or 3 -iziiad 0 02 78 Gearhart, Bertrand W____| Fresno, Calif ________ Racquet Club_________ 10 *Gehrmann, Bernard J__ _ Mellen, Wis., R. F. D_| The Commodore. ____._ 127 *|| Gifford, Charles L_____. Cotuit, Mast... 2 The Roosevelt. _______ 49 #1 Gilchrist, Pred C.... Laurens, Howae ol lod]... Loaadacl. chan 35 *(Cildea, James H._. .. ._: Coaldale, Pai. i. ..0 The Wardman Park___| 100 *Gillette, Guy M________ Cherokee, Towa. dill... A foaebdl cond 35 *tGingery, Don... a Clearfield, Pa_______ 2136 Leroy Place___.___ 102 *tGoldsborough, T. Alan._| Denton, Md________ The Mayflower________ 44 *Goodwin, Philip A______ Coxsackie, N. Y_____ The Mayflower__.______| 79 Granfield, "William J______ Springfield, Mass____| The Wardman Park___| 46 *|| Gray, Finly H....o.u:0 Connersyille, Ind. c.f voce cas ti 31 *Gray, Joseph... viv awn Spangler, Pa... ...] th Te ewetaiosadl ooot 103 *Green, Robert A________ Starke, Flail ceasiilin swum anda cowoiae li 18 Greenway, Isabella_______ Ajo, VR aR lel A AE 6 *Greenwood, Arthur H___| Washington, Ind_ ___|______________________ 31 *Greever, Paul Ro wwe wwe Cody, oh 3S HE ow ie wm A wf 128 698 Congressional Directory HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office Washington residence Boy Page *Gregory, William V_____ Mayfield, Ky....__. The Washington_ _____ 38 *Griswold, Glenn____._____ PerugInd ool 0foit oon S200 STO 30 BCuyer, 1.8... inn Kansas City, Kans__| George WashingtonInn.| 36 *Gwynne, John W_______ Waterloo, Iowa ______ The Roosevelt________ 33 *{||Haines, Harry L______ Red Lion, Pa_______ Sixteenth and L Sts___| 102 *Halleck, Charles A_______ Rensselaer, Ind_ __ __ The Wardman Park___| 30 *|| Hamlin, Simon M______ Popth Portland, | 1441 Clifton St________ 43 aine. *Hancock, Clarence E____| Syracuse, N. Y______ The Mayflower.__.____ 81 Hancock, Frank... Oxford, NC. 0D 00k oo 0 at 84 *tHarlan, Byron B_______ Dayton, Ohio sto) «300 Ske 89 Hart, Bdward J....c. 00. Jersey Clty SNGay Jol nn DI300eL O00 70 *| Harter, Dow W________ Akron, Ohio________ The Shoreham .________ 91 Hartley, Fred A, Jr____... Kearny, NOY. 20d] eal 69 *Healey, Arthur D_______ Somerville, Mass____| The Broadmoor_______ 48 Hennings, Thomas C., Jr__| St. Louis, Mo_______ The Shoreham. _______ 62 *Hess, William E________ Cincinnati, Ohio if] 0 00 vis 89 *Higgins, John P.__..____. Bogton,-Mass. Jol80t) =< dr BO Sd odes 48 Higgins, William L_______ Benth Coventry, 136 BSt "NE... " 15 onn. Hildebrandt, Fred H....| Watertown, 8S. Dak. {| _..__-___-___ "i 109 ¥Hill, Knute... coins Prosser,SWashi Coll or vg nl 123 SBM, Lister. cows Montgomery,” Algal. aut ae 3 *Hill, Samuel B__________ Waterville Wah 02 tes meee 123 *Hobbs, Samo. Lla2 0 00 Selma, Ala__________ The Brighton..." +" 4 *Hoeppel, John H________ Arcadia, Calif _______ Woodley Park Towers.| 10 *Hoffman, Clare E_______ Allegan, Meh lat iene 50 *Hollister, John B________ Cincinnati Ohio) Sts | en 88 *Holmes, Pehr G.......-- Worcester, Mass____| The Roosevelt________ 47 *Hook, Frank EL... ol. Ironwood, Mich_____ 201 Shepherd St., | 52 Chevy Chase, Md. Hope, Clifford R_________ Carden City, Kanes} _ oo il Jo 37 *Houston, John M______._ Newton, Kans______ 3135 Ellicott St... ____ 36 *Huddleston, George. ___._ Birmingham, Ala____ pot M Sisachusests 5 ve. : Bull, Merlin... _----:: Black River Falls,Wis.| 3808 Garrison St______ 127 *Imhoff, Lawrence E____._ St. Clairsville, Ohio__| The Roosevelt_ _______ 92 *{Jacobsen, Bernhard M__| Clinton, Iowa_______ Dodge Hotel ._________ 29 tJenckes, Virginia E______ Terre Haute, Ind____| The Northumberland__| 31 *Jenkins, Thomas A______ Ironton, ORio: sro iiisl | Loo aiid? aii 90 *Johnson, George W______ Parkersburg, W. Va__| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 125 ®*Johnson, Jed... CL J Anadarko, Okla_____ George WashingtonInn.| 95 *Johnson, Luther A______ Corsicans, Tex 0010 ~~ thal an er Da 113 Jones, Marvin... ....i.-- Amarillo, Tex i iifod 1c =r ot 116 Kahn, Florence P_._______ San Francisco, Calif .| The Mayflower________ 9 Mise John_ silt doupohs Bluefield, W. Va____| The Bellevue__________ 125 *|| | Keller, Kent E________ Ava, TIE oir, 00000 4707 Georgia Ave_____ 29 *Kelly, Edward A________ Chicago, Til It TO eu oe 24 Kennedy, Ambrose J_____ Baltimore dl i er a ear 45 *Kennedy, Martin J______ New York City, N. Y.| The Mayflower________ 7 *Kenney, Edward A______ Cliffside Park Ny Ji} 20 2 0 7rer BT 69 #Kerr, JohwH_ 10:0. 00 Warrenton, NC 0 1 | o il iil = r ie 84 *Kinzer, J. Roland_______ Lancaster, Pa_.____. The Washington______ 99 *{Kleberg, Richard M____| Corpus Christi, Tex__| The Shoreham.________ 115 *Kloeb, Frank L_________ Celina, Ohio J 20 0-2 89 #Kniffin, Frank C.......-- Napoleon, Ohio____._ 4817 Thirty-sixth St___| 89 Knutson, Harold...........: St- Cloud, Minho 55 Kocialkowski, Leo________ Chieago, TI... C2180 The Shoreham ________ 25 *|Kopplemann, H. P_____ Hartford, Conn_____ The Mayflower.__.___. 15 *{Kramer, Charles_______ Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Shoreham.________ 11 ¥Rvale, Paul J. cuiucsuse Benson, Minn..._... The Cavalier. come -- 55 Members’ Addresses 699 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office Washington residence bi Page | Lambertson,. William P..| Fairview, Kans. ool vce theme ve mde 36 Lambeth, J. Walter______ Thomasville, N.-C__...}.. LL 2&2 Lid Uinta 85 *t Lamneck, Arthur P____| Columbus, Ohio_____ The Kennedy-Warren__| 90 *Lanham, Fritz G..__.____ Port Worth, Tex scal-. - Hi cdl nD dee 115 *Larrabee, William H____| New Palestine, Ind__.| The Roosevelt________ 32 *Lea, Clarence F_________ Santa Rosa, Calif ____| 110 Maryland Ave. NE. 8 *L00, JORN oh Lh or en Norman, Ola... c.xf. 6 Codie ot 95 *Lehlbach, Frederick R___| Montclair, N. J_____ The Shoreham _ _______ 70 *i Lemke, William________ Fargo, N. Dak_____._ The Pairfax. or... 87 #Lesingki, John... ..c-.~= Dearborn, Mich... sof: --Sa lpi nial op 53 *Lewie, David J... on... .c Cumberland, Md... oof. CC Ld. di at 45 Lewis, Lawrence_________ Denver, Colo... .... The Roosevelt........- 13 #iLloyd, Wesley... __..__ Tacoma, Wash...... The Harvard Hall_____ 123 Ford Bert... lL Coon Afton, iNY tr oo s 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 81 *|| Lucas, Scott W________ Havana TIL. an pn Jud SL ANCHE D0 28 *Luckey, Henry C_______ Linco Nebr oo tile vo... « oo AF errr Hw atsrid 64 *Ludilow, Louis. .--......| Indianapolis, Ind....{ 1822. H St.......00- ait $2 *Lundeen, Ernest ________ Eddins Village, : Mine 1-1 - ~~ coun down mil =xi=¥ 54 neapolis, Minn. *McAndrews, James______ Chicago, Tl care ts = «ok damn nile meds 25 ‘MeClellan, John Li_______ Malvern, Atle ooo L-0 Siae (ou fom es 7 *MecCormack, John W____| Dorchester, Mass__.__| The Washington______ 48 *McFarlane, Ww. Graham, Tex. .....: 2434 Tunlaw Road____| 115 *McGehee, Dan R_______ MeadVille,yMigg ci oo]-- - ~ - « Ff fo cimn bib nuns 58 *t|| McGrath, John J_____ Hillsborough, San... 2 0 J iar. cas 10 Mateo, Calif. ¥|| | McGroarty, John S____| Tujunga, Calif______ George WashingtonInn_| 10 #1MeKeough, Raymond 8. ‘Chicago, Wl. .o0 Cul. oii rh vanes 24 *MeLaughlin, Charles T- | Omaha, Nebr. ooo {ei m ei pir 5 fai 320 64 *|| McLean, Donald H____| Elizabeth, N. J______ The Wardman Park____| 68 *McLeod, Clarence J_____ Detroit, MCh, rue ba Sl di uns 52 *¥MecMillan, Thomas S____| Charleston, S. C_____ 4512 Cathedral Ave____| 106 *| McReynolds, Sam D____| Chattanooga, Tenn__| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 110 *t{MecSwain, John J___ __ Greenville, S. C_____ 3141 Highland Place___| 107 *Maas, Melvin J ___.______ St.Paul, Minn... .= ThePairfay. ees 54 *Mahon, George H_______ ColorHA0ALoR oils ow mm wm Si rt = 116 *Main, Verner W____.____ Baltle'Creek, Mich. of. - 2 iil oi 1. ins 50 %*Maloney, Paul H__.- __- New Orleans, La____| The Wardman Park____| 41 *Mansfield, Joseph J______ Columbus, Tex______ The Wakefield Hall____| 114 *t Mapes, Carl E_________ Grand Rapids, Mich_| 2818 Connecticut Ave__| 51 *Marcantonio, Vito. _ ____ New York City, N.Y.| 1801 Sixteenth St______ 77 Marshall, L. TT... Xenia, Ohio________ The Continental _______ 90 *Martin, John A_________ Pueblo): Coloas oc osamb do oor a ate 14 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____| N dd Attleboro, | Racquet Club_.___..___ 49 ass. *Mason, Harry H________ Pawnee, I11_________ The Continental .______ 28 *tMassingale, Sam C_____ CotdallnOldary ca fe natn er 95 *Maverick, Maury._______ San:Antonio, Pex. sl. Uy beat 116 *May, Andrew J_________ Prestonsbiire, Kye cl ot ri. ri... 39 *Mead, James M________ Bulle, N.Y sentinel bab 38 antl 82 *|| Meeks, James A_ ______ Danville, TW. oul 0. Sali a. ead 27 *Merritt, Matthew J_____ lashing, Ns Ye conn. ooo u 5 oe nuald silotia 71 *t+ Merritt, Schuyler______ Stamford, Conn_____ 2424 Wyoming Ave____| 16 *tMichener, Earl C______ Adrian, Mich. .______ The Roosevelt. _______ 50 Millard, Charles D_______ Tarrytown, N. Y____| The Wardman Park___| 79 Miller, John E..____ coc Seavey, ATR ur coated va aided] 6 *Mitchell, Arthur W_____ Chicago, I. _.....2 1320-R Bt. o dol = suited 24 Mitchell, John R________. Cookeville, Tenn____| The Raleigh__________ 110 ¥*Monaghan, Joseph DP... ..5 Butle, Mont. . oda n monn ceo oii eo ill 63 Montague, Andrew J--..| Richmond, Va. ..:..h.co. air oan il os 120 700 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence *Montet, Numa F_______ *Moran, Edward C., Jr___ * Moritz, Theodore Li_ ____ *Mott, James W_________ * Murdock, Abe... 2." *Nelson, William L_______ #t Nichols, Jack ~~ ll Norton, Mary T______ *(’Brien, Thomas J______ *Q’Connell, John M______ *0)'Connor; John JU. 74 10’ Day, Caroline CL ~ O Leary,’ James'A..' "~~ Giver, William-B--.. Malley, Thomas. _.____._ *Q’Neal, Emmet_________ Owen, B.M _. Palmisano, Vincent L_____ *Parks, Tilman'B._ Parsons, Claude V__..____ *Patman, Wright ____ Patterson, Edward W____ EPationy Nate. *Pearson, Herron________ *{1t1Perkins, Randolph___ *Peterson, Hugh. __. *1 || Peterson, J. Hardin_ _ _ *Pettengill, Samuel B_____ Peyser, Theodore A______ *1 1 Pfeifer, Joseph L______ *Pierce, Walter M_______ Pittenger, William A_____ *Plumley, Charles A______ Polk, James -¢- = *Powers, D. Lane________ *}1{Quinn, James L.__.____ tRabaut, Louis C________ *|| Ramsay, Robert Li_____ *tRamspeck, Robert_____ *|| Randolph, Jennings. _ __ *Rankin, John E *Ransley, Harry C_______ Rayburn,-Sam 1-00 Of *Reece, B. Carroll________ *|| |Reed, Chauncey W____ *YReed, Daniel A________ *Reilly, Michael K_____._ *1tttRich, Robert F_____ *Richards, James P______ *Richardson, William E___ *Risk, Charles ¥_~______. *Robertson, AEWilish o: *1 Robinson, J-W-_---- a bonsian: John M ers, Edith Nourse_____ Bi | Rogers, Will________ Thibodaux, La. = Rockland, Maine____ Pittsburgh, Pa... - Salem, Oreg_ _ __.___ Beaver, Utah_______ Columbia, Mo_ ___._. Eufaula, Okla... Chicago, 1.1 > 0 Westerly, R. I______ ye; NEL that ie West New Brighton, N-Y. Tuscaloosa, Ala_ ____ Milwaukee, Wis_____ Louisville, Ky._._._____ Griffin, Ga 2221s Baltimore, Md______ Camden, Ark_______ Golconda, I. _______ Texarkana, Tex_____ Pittsburg, Kans_____ Crockett, Tex_______ Jackson, Tenn. ____._ Woodeliff Lake, N. J _ Ailey, Ga Lakeland, Fla_______ South Bend, Ind____ New York City, N. Y_ Brooklyn, N.Y... = La Grande, Oreg____ Puluth, Minn__ "= Northfield, Vt___.___ Highland, Ohio______ Trenton; N. J- ~~ Braddeeck, Pa... Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. Follansbee, W. Va___ a] Miss________ Philadelphia, Pa_____ Bonham, Tex. _.____ Johnson City, Tenn_ _ West Chicago, Il1____ Dunkirk, N.Y... Fond du Lac, Wis___ Woolrich, Pa: _. Lancaster, S. C_____ Reading, Pas... _.- Saylesville, R. I_____ Lexington, Va_______ Provo, Utah. ~~ __. Barbourville, Ky ____ Lowell, Mass_______ 6810 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Md. 110 Maryland Ave. NE. George Washington Inn. The Wardman Park___ The Hamilton += The Wardman Park___ The Shoreham >> =. The Roosevelt. _______ The Willard. "George Washington Inn. The Roosevelt_ _______ George Washington Inn _ George Washington Inn. The Shoreham _ _______ The Raleigh... ________ Dodge Hotel... ___.___ The Plazg: 2 Xt oF The Shoreham ________ The Bellevue _________ George Washington Inn_ Woodley Park Towers.__ The Methodist Bidg___ The Mayflower. _._____ The Anchorage________ The Kennedy-Warren_ _ The Capitol Park______ 4707 Connecticut Ave__ 1500 Delafield Place_ __ 1155 Sixteenth St______ Oklahoma City, Okla_! George Washington Inn_ Members’ Addresses 01 | THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294) Name Home post office Washington residence ar Page *Rogers, William N______ Sanbornville, N. H__| The Roosevelt___._____ 66 *|| | Romjue, Milton A....| Macon, Mo... GeorgeWashingtonInn_| 59 *Rudd, Stephen A__..... Brooklyn, N.Y. ol. The Raleighii.__.__..C 74 *Russell Richard M........ Cambridge, Mass____| The Anchorage________ 48 an, Elmer J__________ South’St: Paul, Minn fo .0l 0 C000 0 54 0 ie Sabath, Adolph l...o Chicago, loo 20 200 The Mayflower________ 25 *Sadowski, George G_____ Detroit, Mich_______ The Westchester_ __ ___ 50 *tSanders, Jared Y., Jr___| Baton Rouge, La____| George Washington Inn.| 42 Sanders, Morgan Goi Canton, Tex. ......__ The Continental _______ 113 *Sandlin, John N________ Minden, La_________ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 41 Sauthoff, Harry ool... ._. Madison, "Wig... L000 ool A RETNO TR A 126 *Schaefer, Edwin M______ Belleville, IT1________ The Powhatan. _______ 28 Schneider, George J _______ Appleton, WisUU Lo. oC 127 Schuetz, Leonard W______ Chicago, Tl... C0. The Wardman Park___| 25 *Schulte, William T______ Havwumond, Indi L ou Lol eof SUIS 00 0 30 Ill ||Scott, Byron N_______ Yong Beach, Calif. 2c... .. DT8 ail °F 12 crugham, James G_____ Reno, Nev. CL bli savanna d oO000 2100100 66 *1Sears, William J__._____ Jacksonville, Fla____| George Washington Inn_| 17 *Secrest, Robert T_______ Caldwell,'Ohleit 2a |. 288775 Gl 20000 91 Seger, George N_________ Paggale, N. J. _2illL The Shoreham ________ 69 | Shanley, James A________ New Haven, Conn iol Uo Ly G00 JI aro i 15 Shannon, Joseph B_______ Kansas City, Mo____| The Carlton__. _______ 60 g Short, Dewey_..___.______ Galena, Moll S00 oo cinanad B00 0 200. 61 | Sirovich, William I_______ New York City, N.Y_| The Mayflower________ 76 #1Sisson, Fred J--._. o. Whitesboro, N. Y___| The Wardman Park___| 81 *t||Smith, Howard W_____ Alexandria, Malic lil. oo onan LIU OREN 121 | Smith, J. Joseph_________ Waterbury, Conn____| Racquet Club_________ 16 *Smith, Joo Lol oval: od Beckley, W. Va_____ The Mayflower________ 125 | *|| Smith, Martin .F...---. Hoquiam, Wash_____ 3515 Legation St______ 122 *1Snell, ‘Bertrand H______ Potsdam, N.Y. .... 2400 Sixteenth St______ 80 | *{Snyder, J. Buell. ______ Perryopolis, Pa______| 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 103 *Somers, Andrew L______ Brooklyn, NoiVaoll foo. oon i200 00, 74 *South, Charles Li________ Coleman, Tex: i) 8 ooo 40 02 00000 117 *Spence, Brent clini ion Fort Thomas, Ky___| The Roosevelt________ 39 Stack, Michael J_._______. Philadelphia, Pa. 10 0. ooo 20 S00 INT 20D 98 Starnes, Joe. Hanon sul Guntersville, Ala____| 110 Maryland Ave. NE._ 4 ||Steagall, Henry B_______ Ozark, Ala, C00 ot doco A fro Tal aon 4 “Stefan, Rarl =o. ...... Noriolk, Nebroesio 0-1 =o on 65 Stewart, J. George... _____ Wilmington, Del... foes 5. Sob 00 16 Stubbs, Henry BU... SantadN arin, Ol... contre mmm =n 10 Sullivan, Christopher D __| New York City, N. Y| The Raleigh__________ 76 Sumners, Hatton W______ Dallas, Mex 0. 205 0] 0 Sonar 0 gp Sd Tone 113 *Sutphin, William H_____ Matawan, "NJ... ol... 0g dal ml 68 “Sweeney, Martin LL... o.L| Cleveland, Ohio coo | oc ZC iuaoc oul 92 = Taber, John “io lio. Aaburn, N. Yooo oo, Uf Tl ofvn ol Conmes ons ob 81 *Tarver, Malcolm C______ Da on, Ga. ccc srcola. ae MoU 00 00 San Dunn, William E., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMOTCE « oem eone on eeemmmeee Durand, E. Dana: United States Tariff Commission.__.____. Central Statistical Board... _.._________ Dama W. W., Public Debt Service__._.___ Durr, Clifford 7, Reconstruction Finance Corporation ........ Ji. S DNESe Duress Vernon R., General Accounting Dune Ga A., Forest Service _.____._____ Duvall, William he; House Committee on Appropriations Swede ne MC ER ER) Duvel, J. W. T., Grain Futures Administra- Dye, Alexander V., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce SEA 3X Bes 3 Eakin, Henry M., Soil Conservation Service. Earl, J. Donal, secretary, Capitol Police._____ Early, Stephen, Assistant Secretary to Presi- dent Roosevelt: 13 [fii onan s ani] Early, Wm. I., office of the Doorkeeper- . - __ Eastman, J oseph B.: Interstate Commerce Commission. _.___ The National Emergency Counecil..______ Federal Coordinator of Transportation. _ Eaton, Charles A., Interparliamentary Union. Eceard, August, office of Architect of Capitol. Eccles, "Marriner S.: Board of Governors of the Federal Re- serve System... Cl lll LT The National Emergency Counecil._______ Eckel, E. C., Tennessee Valley Authority...__ Eckhardt, N., Jr., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.....-1.0___ 0.100 Eckstein, Fred A., Senate post office_________ Eddy, Lee M., Railroad Retirement Board... Edgerton, Lt. Col. Glen E., office of the Chiefof Bngineersi.ii.L.. 0. UF tia Edinburg, Frank P., Patent Office__________ Edison, Charles, National Recovery Admin- istrationsaeceons ln andl To. Un Edminster, L. R., Agricultural Adjustment Administration. -Co0a0 C000 0. 10 ia iau Edson, H. A., Bureau of Plant Industry_____ Edwards, Dr. Alba M., Bureau of the Census._ Edwards, Corwin D., National Recovery Administration rea, 0000. L000: Edwards, Daniel H., District Board of As- sistant Assessors of Real Estate ___________ Edwards, John F., Civil Service Commission_ Bi Keith W., secretary to Senator abeh. to. Jol. SANG 2000S Sandon Edy, John N., Bureau of the Budget________ Egbert, Va Lois, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.__________________ Eichelberger, Charles M., Navy Compensa- tion Board. 220 ¥ 20000 20 HOD ADA Eichelberger, Lt. Col. Robert L., War De- partment General Staff_.________..._______ Eilenberger, Clinton B., Third Assistant Postmaster General..........cccacauani.l Eisenhower, M. S.: Office of Secretary of Agriculture. ..__.... Office of Information, Agriculture... Elble, Otto G., Veterans’ Administration... Eldridge, Frank R., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... ____._.__.... Eldridge, M. O., District assistant director of vehielesand traffic... C0 oo lilo ll Elgen, Riley E., Public Utilities Commis- Blom oon Sema aa SRSA SIO TRI LLCO Eliason, Howard R., Federal Trade Com- 1115) 1 WO SE CR Se SE 0 Eliot, Charles W., 2d, National Resources CIOTIRIEUOD o.oo sd dit ass + Se sets SIE Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Children’s Bureau, Department of Labor. cceeeaeacaaamaaaao 0 Individual Index Page Eliot, Thomas H., Social Security Board__._. 379 Ellingston, John R.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board._______ 361 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ______ 361 Elliott, David C., Reconstruction Finance CorpOration: -oirees ins ons vin mns wen sbi 360 Elliott, F. F., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- MINISration... cui cdeicaiasin nnn nbn 329 Elliott, Richard N.: General Accounting Office = oli = By 344 United States Supreme Court Building Commission: co ii iis nt ira 225 Elliott, R. Winton, Senate legislative COUNERl i-inr arr rai nat Ste OY 256 Ellis, F. R., Beltsville Research Center______ 331 Ellis, Frank H., office of the First Assistant Postmaster General. Loo... U0 0 314 Ellison, Robert E., House Committee on World War Veterans’ Legislation__________ 262 Ellsworth, Emmons K., Bureau of the Cen- CE TER A a RI LS SR SE BAS Be 337 Ely, oy Eugene J., office of Chief of Finance. 308 Ely, E. W., Bureau of Standards as ERE 338 Embick, Bric. Gen. S. D War Department Genoa Stafis oat 305 he Joint BoarQ rss ro nrr 349 Emerson, C. H., office of the Doorkeeper.__.__ 260 Emerson, Ernest E., purchasing agent, Gov- ernment Printing Office... era 268 Emerson, M. A., Public Debt Service___._____ 302 Emerson, Merton L., National Recovery Administration or 373 Emery, John C., Office of Federal Coordi- nator of Transportation MS Te SR 371 Emison, Ewing R., George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission. ____________ 228 Emley, W. E., Bureau of Standards. ._______ 338 Emmerich, Herbert, Farm Credit Adminis- OI er shot 367 Emmy, Charles N., District Engineer De- partment A a Ae 403 Bigland, fifi H., Federal Trade Com- TESON a a eae 346 Engle, Nathanael H., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... cove ec eee oie 337 Fagletwighy, Mrs. Harry L., Congressional i English, Benedict M., Claims Conventions, United States and Moxie. oho 351 English, Margaret, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads... ____________ 255 Englund, Eric, Bureau of Agricultural Eco- OIE OE a a em Ee La i 330 Enlow, C. R., Soil Conservation Service..___ 334 Enlows, H. '¥, American National Red CO eo hi pe] 357 Ertegiin, Mehmet Miinir, Turkish Am- DASSAAOL oo ir non smn oil = = SE ~ prin ra 552 Erwin, Walter S., office of Secretary of Com- ITLL Mr RR a deer Si AT Se apes 336 Esgate, A. T., Farm Credit Administration... 367 Eskridge, John C., Postal Telegraph- -Cable Co Ea a Ay I TRE an 265 Espil, Felipe A.: Argentine Ambassador co ooeooo 543 Governing Board, Pan American Union.. 356 Estes, Edwin C., Division of Operation_____ 328 Evans, Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Reve- DUC ie oh atten ibm ba mss En Ed BLL ww So 303 Evans, Griffith, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce... .ceeot--. =. ~wuusti-<= 337 Evans, Joseph D., Federal Emergency mies of Public Works__.________ 369 Evans, L. L., Office of Personnel, Agricul- ture Department... c= tr - oJ Jo enti 327 Evans, Llewellyn, Tennessee Valley Au- ATRL | A Se a dees i Rl wea 365 Evans, Mercer G., Resettlement Adminis- tration: f pester coi abagi Sonal lumenal 366 Evans, Peyton R., Farm Credit Adminis- ration. ois sn an Eee ee SEE RE 367 Evans, Raymond, Extension Service.._...__. 328 Evans, R. M., Forest Service... —.o.--______ 333 Evans, Walter H., judge, United States CustomsiCourl.......-- cuwiised Sbdc tosis: 391 Everett, Guerra, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce. .....=-== -s-textdag it. a 337 Ezekiel, Mordecai: Office of Secretary of Agriculture_._...___ Central Statistical Board... __.._______.__ F Faddis, Charles I., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... - won. UOLL TL Fahey, John H.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board._______ Home Owners’ Loan Corporation_______ Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- poration... oo. iE aA nt The National Emergency Couneil________ Fahy, Charles, National Labor Relations Board... Sitaiiisi cari abana siaol Fair, Lucy, Senate Judiciary Committee ___ Fairbank, H. S., Bureau of Public Roads_.._ Fairchild, I. L., Sen of Standards.____.___ Pasthial] James A., office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General ____________ Falck, Edward, Tennessee Valley Authority. Falke, Grace E.: Office of the Secretary of Agriculture.___ Resettlement Administration. __________ Fallgatter, Florence, Office of Education_____ Fallon, Nugent, Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation:z.. 10 conilli il Fallon, Pascal D., General Accounting Office. Farley, James A.: Postmaster General (biography)..___.___ Member of Smithsonian Institution. ____ The National Emergency Counecil.______ Farley, Thain, House post office__.__________ Farley, William J., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works... pitas Farnsworth, William P., National Recovery Administration... 0h. to oe iaiaa aed Farnum, Emily I., Bureau of the Census... Farnum, Jessica L., secretary, Library of Congress sails ima dons ti aseial unis Fors Margaret E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... Laat. ooie Farrell, George E., Agricultural Adjustment Administration: col cata aun Farrington, C. C., Agricultural Adjustment Administration.co. ote oo dacsoia da Farrington, Charles J., House Committee on Mines and Mining... cooian aaa Fearn, Otto E., District fire department_.___ Fechner, Robert: Emergency Conservation Work. ________ The National Emergency Council .______ Fegan, Lt. Col. Joseph C., headquarters Marine Corps... i os i vo ida mathe Feis, Herbert, office of Secretary of State. .._ Feldman, George J., National Recovery Ad- MINISIEation nh ed oe tt tne Cw mame Fellers, Robert E., office of the Third Assist- ant Postmaster General ——.——._____.... Fellows, Capt. J. H., Bureau of Standards... Fennell, Robert, office of the Doorkeeper_.___ Fennell, 7, -A., "Beltsville Research Center. Fenstermacher, Harvey E., office of Secretary (1 EE TR EC a ES Popstar, W. L., Official Reporter, Wa Abner H., Federal Housing Ad- ministration... co and Ferguson, Garland S., Jr., Federal Trade COMMISSION. oo oooh it mii ber por mE rnb Ferguson, Brig. Gen. Harley B., Mississippi River Commission. ...o-c..z--c2ccasds na Ferris, Josiah, Jr., Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. mo re Fertich, Roscoe, War Minerals Relief_______ Fess, Simeon D. , George Rogers Clark Sesqui- centennial Commission IES Be Fickinger, Paul L., Bureau of Indian Affairs. Ficks, L. G., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve BYSLOM..ccoi rnc ns crin. Fiedler, Reginald H., Bureau of Fisheries... Fieldner, Arno C., Bureau of Mines_...._.._ rigger, James L., American National Red 07 PE A I a R 715 Page 327 370 255 325 228 322 345 716 Congressional Directory Page Filly, John W., United States attorney’s Fa Lincoln, Federal Board for Vocational BAUCATION,... ov ss rman wn nsw Rod ss Finch, James A., office of Attorney General. _ Finch, John W., Bureau of Mines_______..__ Finn, W. G., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration... coool onE ronill Finnan, Carmelita M., House Committee on Edueationag-.... tl con lami ll sad Finnan, C. Marshall, National Park Service. Finot, Enrique: Minister 0k BollViO. careimmmnnmabs us panes Pan. AmerieanUnion.. i. 20.0 C.J... Finucane, Dr. Daniel Leo, Children’s Tuber- enlosis Sanitarium. co aan oc naa Fischer, Donald, office of the Doorkeeper.._.. Fischer, John C., Veterans’ Administration._._ Fish, Hamilton, Jr., Foreign Service Build- ings Commission. i. oc. ian doth) Janis Fisher, Boyd, Rural Electrification Ad- ministration... o..0nbe. oh. Jaina ld Fisher, Charles T., Jr., Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation. Jl 0 lh Loli. aa Fisher, Dr. Ernest M., Federal Housing Ad- ministration... 00 La aid aot nail) Fisher, Lewis H., Civil Service Commission_ Fisher, William, Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection... _____________ Fitts, William C., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. cio lritoxt, LD G0 Fitzgerald, i J., Bureau of Labor Statistics. Simgernd, rim assistant assessor of Dis- ritageriid Thomas J., Bureau of the Census_ Flad, E., "Mississippi River Commission___ Flanders, William D., Federal Housing Ad- ministration... iui. JU 0 Uo nol Tl Eline: H. C., Federal Alcohol Administra- porgtioncl Ll. Cline, Bhisaal mony Fleming, Helen, House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. ______.__.____ Fleming, John R., Office of Information.___. Fleming, Robert V.: National Training School for Boys...___. Columbia Hospital for Women.__________ Fletcher, Duncan U., Chairman Joint Com- mittee’on Printing....LL L200 0 0 Fletcher, E. B., pies of District assessor... Fiicher, Capt. F. , office of Secretary of Flint, i L., the Panama Canal. _.______.._.__ Flint, M. Lenore: Senate Committee on Interoceanic Cn re an Acting secretary to Senator Gore_.______. Flippin, Percy S., The National Archives..__ Florescu, Radu, Rumanian Legation________ Flournoy, Richard W., Jr., office of Secretary Fly, James L., Tennessee Valley Authority. Flynn, B. J., "Federal Housing Administra- URE E a pi bb a, oh op ES BL ST Flynn, Catherine M., secretary to Senator NA ONON ra Bi ST a to for the Sp oie ed Bog Ltr mL SL RE Sl Foley, Edward H., Jr., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works___________ Foley, Mary A., Bureau of the Census. _____ Folger, William A., Senate Committee on Pensions aS A. a i Folson, Hinman D.: District Corporation Counsel..._________ Public Utilities Commission. ......_._.... Folsom, Richard S., Perry’s Victory Memo- rial COMINISSION.. occ os de pine wm wm oeon Foote, Ovid C., Veterans’ Administration... Forbush, Gabrielle E., office of the Secretary of the Treasury ol old coo ili is 00 Ford, J., office of Third Assistant Postmaster Generpl 22200000 0 PND JIGE, aus SPIE Ford, Mrs. Thomas F., Congressional Club. 348 343 360 341 401 367 337 402 404 354 349 302 314 358 Foreman, Clark, Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works... ........oio.: Forster, C. T., Office of Personnel, Agriculture Department. a. ues Soon Si Neat nl Foie, Rudolph, executive clerk, The White Fort, James L., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration i rmmsterrrrecc---EerRatito Fortune, Marian, Senate Committee on Mines and Miningu.e.- noone 2onoeas Cro Por di Rural Electrification Admin- yan. po ee EE SE ee Sa Foster, BE Foster, E. M, Office of Education___________ Foster, Howard C., Assistant Secretary tothe MINOT Y is vin Sonim En ee ee og Eos Sais Foster, L.. B., Veterans’ Administration_____ Foster, William E., Home Owners’ Loan COrDOrAION. .. .ubeatunnsh Somirasassid lo te Fotitch, Constantin, Yugoslavian minister. _ Foulk, Oliver E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve gystem... oe Foulois, Maj. Gen. Benjamin D.: Chief of the Ar COrps......cwanem=isennene- The Aeronautical Board_.____.__________ N stipe] Advisory Committee for Aero- FAA BS En as ee ls se one) Found, WW 5 International Fisheries Com- Fowler, Harold N., Library of Congress.__._ Fowler, Walter L., "assistant District corpora- tloncounsel. aera Fowles, J. F Fox, A. M., United States Tariff Commission. Fox, Charles D., Veterans’ Administration.__ Fox, Helen Cooper, Senate Committee on ADDIODPIAIONS o.com pf mmm ma et oe Bam ee Fox, Maj. Milo P., office of the Chief of En- CITT CEN Re ae alesse SL Crae TLE Ste Fox, Martin J., Farm Credit Administration_ Fox, Mortimer J., Federal Deposit Insurance COPDOLALION 2... is ved stn wr meee at Fracker, S. B., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... uu os fonmessts de Sma Fralich, Herbert, office of the Doorkeeper____ Franco-Bahtamande, Maj. Rdmon, Spanish BINDASEY orem ein fem Emr toms ol le li bn Franges, Dr. Ivan, Yugoslavian Legation ___ Ens Edith B., Western Union Telegraph Frank, Eli, Jr., Bureau of Customs__________ Frank, Freeman E., second assistant to Capi- tol physician Peat Sg sae i a En A ho Frank, Jerome N., Federal Surplus Relief Corporation me end Be Frazer, James R., Federal Home Loan Bank 1 nerd eit Dib mitoEn fus Hack Kiel LF La Frazer, Leslie, Patent Office.________________ Frazier, E. L., office of Secretary of the Senate. Frear, Mrs. James A., Congressional Club___ Frederick, William A., office of Architect of the Capitol ANE ol Ay ATA an et, Maj. William F., Army War Col- Co ERR RT SR Freeman, Rt. Rev. James E., Washington National Monument Society... .___._____ Freer, Harry L., Board of Engineers for Riversand Harbors... o.oo tl 2 Freer, R. E., Federal Trade Commission____ Freitas, J. E. de Sousa, Brazilian Embassy. . Frey, Dr. John W., Petroleum Adminis- ative Board Cl Re a ar Freyre y Santander, Manuel de: Peruvian Ambassador-__.._..____________ Governing Board, Pan American Union_ Friant, Julien N., office of the Secretary of Agricole. oon ii rrr rea Friday, Louis, clerk to the President of the Senate, ih im rnb a aa deal vl BS Fried, George, Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection........o.__....C.il. Friedell, Capt. W. L., navy yard and sta- tion, Washington, D. C Page 367 327 298 360 Individual Index Page Frieser, F. G.: : Shipping Board Bureau. «aecceeaaaacaaoo Merchant Fleet Corporation... __.____. Frisbie, W. S., Food and Drug Administra- Fry, William M., Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post-Roads.. couacis wi nil Fuchs, W. R., office of Budget and Finance. Fuentes, Dr. Rafael, Mexican Embassy. ____ ¥ullaway, Charles H., Bureau of the Budget. Fuller, Carrie L., Bureau of Public Roads... Fuller, Mrs. Claude A., Congressional Club. Fuller, Glenn L., Soil Conservation Service. Fuller, Stuart J., office of the Secretary of Funk, Antoinette, General Land Office Fuquay, Leon M., Federal Power Commis- Furness, James W., Bureau of Mines__._____ Fussell, Edwin B., office of Secretary of the TICASULY.. .. cv. winnie we bu bi We Sent oe bey Lalad) Gabbert, Magee, House post office... Gabrielson, Ira N., Bureau of Biological Sur- Gage, Charles E., Bureau of Agricultural BH CONOMICS. of. fou ones dots bot ope sons Gaines, Lloyd F., office of District assessor. . Galbraith, William H., Federal Trade Com- mission... oar d.co einai Galbraith, Capt. W. W., Columbia Hospital for" WOMEN... oot sounawiodde aastniis messenger ...-....-..- Sl ee rer Gallagher, William K., House Committee on Gamble, Bertus D., Board of Tax Appeals. Gamble, Guy G., National Recovery Ad- MINISIrION. cor ie or onde gaa on a So ci Gans, Isaac, District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board t Garcia-Mata, Carlos, Argentine Embassy___ Gardner, B. C., office of Treasurer of the United States Vice President of the United States (DIOZraphy). ..conwislt soca arnsaath sous President of the Senate... _____________ Chairman of Commission on Enlarging the Capitol. Grounds... .eceoe eee = United States Constitution Sesquicen- terminal Commission. oe or oe Regent of Smithsonian Institution_______ Garner, W. W., Bureau of Plant Industry... Garnett, Leslie C., United States Attorney... Garney, Mary, Senate Committee on Man- nfactures: Sooo cso sl esi 543 358 261 Garrett, Finis J.: > United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). _._________ American Battle Monuments Commis- Garrod, J. A., Federal Emergency Adminis- trationof. Public Werks_.__......__.. == Gartland, Joseph F., office of the Chief Post Office INSPeCiOr. cites vaio eo aie Gary, Hampson, Federal Communications Commission... =. oi. eceindiosnd Gaston, Herbert E., office of Secretary of the Ab TT En eR SS Gatch, Commander T. L., office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy........____ Gates, Jack W., Postmaster of the Senate_._. Gates, Robert M., Department of Justice... Gates, Theodore, Federal Communications Commission... nn mm 2 En as To ii TL Rh SR Sra a Gaucheron, Roger, French Embassy. __.____ Gauges, Joseph G., marshal, United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals_____ Gaumnitz, E. W., Agricultural Adjustment Administration. coro. oo ot etme eds Gavin, J. E., Secretary to Senator Hayden_.. Gay, Howard S., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works... = __-___. Gay, Richard H., office of Architect of the Caplioles ia io oo or. aa i eanwasa lhe oe Gebert, Lillabelle, General Accounting OTCR. i imi sain vem arEe soe ea. Le L Gehman, Arthur R., office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ..__.________ Geiger, Irwin, National Recovery Adminis- tration Sa imino: hee Shes eX Geismer, Harry S., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works______________ Geisse, John H., Bureau of Air Commerce. __ George, A. W., Jr., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works______.________ George, Edwin B., National Recovery Ad- ministrations. cL. 0 L000 Fo LS SHIO WY George, Walter F.: National Forest Reservation Commission. Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. i... ivaansorducdasuas stains on Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs. __ CT Martha L., office of Secretary of LI nS A Bt Getzendanner, Franklin C., United States Tariff Commission... ce. ciacoasie sto tl Gherardi, Rear Admiral W. R., Washington National Monument Society... __._____._ Ghods, Hossein, Iran Legation_._____________ Gholston, J. G., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works_ ____________. Gibbins, Brig. Gen. Henry, office of the Quartermaster General... .._... Gibboney, Stuart G., Thomas Jefferson Me- morial Commission. ...cceieameoae ana Gibbons, C. D.: Shipping Board Bureau... _.._.__.______ Merchant Fleet Corporation______.._____ Gibbons, Stephen B., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. .-iochinaab suivant Gibson, John H., House Committee on Indio Affaires seed. 10d, oo I0r dol Gibson, Brig. Gen. William R., office of the Quartermaster General .___________________ Giebel, Adam A., chief clerk, corporation counsel’soffice. ooo... Joie 0 Giegengack, Augustus E., Public Printer____ Gifford, Charles L., Regent of the Smith- soniani Institution i... ives ooviuunias Gignilliat, L. R., Jr., Federal Housing Ad- mimistration... o_o oa nD ‘Works Progress Administration___.._____ Central Statistical Board... ._....__.. 367 336 226 229 353 548 340 340 301 718 Congressional Directory Gill, Irving L., Bureau of Lighthouses... ___._ Gillette, Edward C., Bureau of Lighthouses_ Gillette, Mrs. Guy M. , Congressional Club._._ Gilligan, Henry, District Board of Educa- aan James H., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ouwesnwinnsnsaisnniannini ns oii Gilman, W. C., Securities and Exchange ComINISSION concn a aon aon samo mmm Gilmore, M. E., Federal Emergency Admin- istrationof Public Works..........c......_ Given, Ralph, judge, police court.___________ Givens, Meredith B., Central Statistical Board de eh a Le An BA Gladmon, P. L., Office of Personnel, Agricul- ture Department... 0.0 C0 lll Glavis, Louis R.: Office of Secretary of the Interior _._____ Federal Emergency Administration of PrbHeW orks. oe Sn Glenn, Joseph B., Railroad Retirement Board aA Glosson, Jane KE., Senate Committee on Military Aflgirg So tru Tee et nat Glover, Charles C., Washington National Monument Solely. noc lane iam nnns ne Glover, E. E., Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration... oo tl nas an nad il Commander R. O., General Board, Gor: Frank B., House document room. _ Godoy, Emilio Garcia: Dominican Republic Legation. _.__.______ Pan American Unjon..co--=--oe eee Gonwi, Kathryn: Federal as Relief Administra- Federal Surplus Relief Corporation-...._ ‘Works Progress Administration._________ Godwin, Stuart, office of Secretary of the 15139 1 eS DER a ER SSeS Patents , al, Goldenweiser, E. A.: Board of Governors of the Federal Re- Serve Systems c.soa-rasadaunail Latean Central Statistical Board Goldsborough, Phillips L., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation... __________ Goldsborough, T. Alan, Regent, Smithsonian Institution... feisgoii waiiearesing Coe; Albert, United States attorney’s Goldstein, Isadore L., United States at- torney 'Sofficy.. ... saan. Sion i nalioLl. Gar: Rudolph L., General Accounting Gompers, Samuel J., Chief Clerk, office of Secretary of L.abor...-2. o.oo. talii_ ile QGonard, George E., navy yard and station.__ Gongwer, Verne, Tennessee Valley Author- EE A mip Ly Ng oe TT LS I dep UR Gonzilez, Dr. Justo F., Pan American Sani- OLY BUIOAH ner on omen PS Oa T0200 Gonzalez-Zeledon, Manuel: Ministeriof Costa Rica... 0 i Jil Governing Board, Pan American Union. Goodacre, Samuel, Petroleum Administra- tive Boal]... oe ooo ooo bil E Goodloe, John D., Commodity Credit Cor- DOTALION. = J i. ici tims camera pi Goodnow, H. J., office of the Doorkeeper.__ Goodrich, Florentine D., Tennessee Valley Authority FEEL SA ER Te aS REE ne she Goodyear, Y isisios S., Office of Chief of Chap. SE Bi Gr 2B S00 369 393 345 370 341 319 545 356 375 260 Goodykoontz, Bess, Office of Education._..___ Gordon, Hayner H., commissioner, Court of CAAIME; = coviuin dn sth S82 TERETE Gordon, Irving, Senate Legislative Counsel. Gordon, J. B., District engineer department. _ Gordon, J essie B., Office of the Minority Tioador of the TLOGES. ..- oiosinnnte angi d Gordon, Peyton, District Supreme Court.__.__ Coron -Smith, Gordon, Yugoslavian Lega- OI) Cid an he Samia pa aL Gorman, Thomas J., Bureau of Customs. ____ Gosling, Dr. Thomas W., American National Red Cross. 2 i tbo iio io lot nak ho Gosnell, Eugene, House post office. _________ Gosnell, Fred A., Bureau of the Census. ____ Goss, A. S., Farm Credit Administration__.__ Gough, E. H., Deputy Comptroller of the Currency Feblaiy CE nea a he Se Gourrich, Cow P., Securities and Exchange Commission a a aE LAE Graddick, Charles P., office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General _.___________ Grady, Henry F., office of Secretary of State a Rignald B., office of Recorder of Graham, Donia Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works. s co: L200 Graham, L. B., Federal Emergency Adminis- tration of Public Works... _______ Graham, Samuel J., judge (retired), Court of Claims 2 ass 30 LEB sor BAL HIN Graham, William J., presiding judge, United States Court of Customs and Patent Ap- peals(blography)...i._... 000 = a8 Granger, C. M., Forest Service_..___________ Granquist, Paulus I., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works___________ Grant, Norman R., office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster General ..._________________ Grant, Lieut. Col. S., 38d, Washington National Monument’ Society Sus AA Grant, Col. Walter S., Army War College____ Grantham, J. P., Reconstruction Finance COT DOE ONS 2 is = as Gravell, William H., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Wiorkal a 211 Shen Grayes, Col. Brnesh Mississippi River Com- mission PreaSULY ns: ia ER ast i Tey Graves, Henry S., Advisory Council of the National Arboretom....._....._.._____... Graves, Roy R., Bureau of Dairy Industry ._.__ Graves, W. E., Board of Engineers for Rivers andsHarbors. 2 Hi02 0 oh Le al Gray, Carroll, Bureau of Customs.___________ Gray, Chester H., assistant District corpora- On CORNER). ss ia a EE de Gray, Edward R., Central Statistical Board... Gray, Elmer, House postioffee. tinea Gray, Howard A., Federal GAT Ad- ministration of Public Workss sta: (c= Gray, L. C.: Bureau of Agricultural Economies____._. Resettlement Administration__._________ Gray, R. B., Bureau of Agricultural Engi- MEETING ih didi ani dah ht ats sn an a Grayson, Cary T.: CRT, American National Red Gravion George H., office of the Second As- sistant Postmaster General. _________._ Green, Floyd, House Committee on Terri- TOT OE I tr et rt err Green, Frank Key, Marshal of United States SDI COULL: fee mm cman a SE men m == Green, Frederick H., messenger to the Speak- OLS TADI0 te cl mpi mt ism ie So Sa mais Green, Joseph C., office of Secretary of State... Green, William, National Recovery Admin- istration. ce musioiasa ll sharal J gualds. No Green, William R., judge, Court of Claims (blography). Ls Anos S aa. Loe iit Luang 388 333 353 311 259 300 ET —— Individual Index Greenberg, Joseph, office of Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits....-ccn-mmmeriman=— Greene, Arthur A.,secretary of Hawaii ANA Greenlaw, P. M., District engineer depart- 11 LL Let a pe eae tA See es Se Gi Rear Admiral J. W., General BAY, NAVY io cman annem mre Greenwood, Arthur H., George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission... _--oo_._-- Gresol, Mrs. Arthur H., Congressional LE A Em Estee a ay A Greenwood, Joe R., House Committee on Minesand Mining. oo lon ta, Gregg, Willis R.: Chief of Weather Bureau. ----—cooou- National Advisory Committee for Aero- £350) HER eset yall a RL LL Gregory, Alfred F., House post office. _._.___ Gregory, John J., office of Postmaster Gen- Grenade, Raoul, Belgian Embassy. _..__.--- Gresham, Harold D., National Recovery Administration. roti saat Ui Te Gridley, E. A., secretary to Minority Floor Griffin, David B.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation... Export-Import Bank. ae Griffin, Edward W., Secretary of Alaska. ... Griffin, J. M.., Coast and Geodetic Survey....- Griffin, James P. > minority-clerk at vio oo Griffin, Dr. Thomas A., Civil Service Com- MERION creer ame dat ras Griffin, William V., Pan American Union.___ Griffith, Charles M., M. D., Veterans’ Ad- office Grifith, Kelley, Federal Communications Commission aaa A ate SHIDO Sain QGrigoriev, Gregory, Soviet Republics Em- BEY eran eC i at be Grim, Y Soier, office of Secretary of the Treas- TA rp gh et ne Cl fl EOLA Grimes, Oliver J., War Department_____._.. Griswold, Mrs. Glenn, Congressional Club... Grogan, Starke M., Bureau of the Census... Groner, D. Lawrence, associate justice, United States Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict of Columbia (biography)... ___.__ Gross, Gerald C., Federal Communications COMMISSION ants aR pT oh i Grossi, Dr. Victor, Pan American Sanitary EAE In Fe pe i LL a es ca Grosvenor, Gilbert H., Washington National Monae) Soelety2 oot Fol BEE Grover, N. C., Geological Survey...._..._.. Grover, O. fp ' Bureau of Public Roads. _.. Grover, John R., District fire department____ Grubbs, George, office of Third Assistant Postmaster General. .~...._ .C__zoiooll Gruening, Dr. Ernest H.: Office of the Secretary of the Interior_____ Puerto Rican Reconstruction Adminis- tration. hac i ne 08a ind Guggenheim, Harry F., National Advisory Committee for Aeéronautics AIRE J Guiney, Brig. Gen. Patrick 'W., office of the Quartermaster General... Gulick, J. W., jr., House Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Pisheries..... i... 00 Gullion, Col. Allen W., office of the Judge Advocate General... .....--ZUii Cill0l0 Guptill, Charles H., House Committee on Elections No. Lt. cio. i cool oondes Guthrie, Stuart, Securities and Exchange Commission. - i... -ses--=-----=-znim Guyer, Mal Robert G., United States Engi- neer Guyer, U. S., Board of Visitors to the Naval A CA0CINY rr ne mre mgmen enn ETen Gwynn, Riley A., Federal Communications COIN ISSION ar cca rin re a =m See at wie Page 302 325 403 319 228 357 262 335 350 261 313 543 Haag, A. H., United States Shipping Board Bureau garth Mary E., Senate Judiciary Com- fang George C.: Office of the “Secretary of the hittin Central Sans) Board... ioiciie anew ., Office of Personnel... Hackett, Bor. ’ Horatio B., Federal Emer- gency "Administration of Public Works... Hackworth, Green H., legal adviser to Secre- OrVIOL BIA. cui vrensnncinrnsrn ner Hadley, C. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine ER rn i Sm Re Hager, John M., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration: iii loss Lar, od oensiasany Hagerty, Allen W., office of Federal Coordi- natoriof ‘Transportation... <..o.lz 0. coe Haggerty, John J., office of the Comptroller, Post Office Department... ......cceccaaaa.. Haight, Albert S., District fire department... Haines, Oscar G., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection... _..... Haley, Joseph, Division of Operation.___... Haley, Norman B., Interstate Commerce ComMMSSION....... meen omens Bite imam Sw Hall, Alvin W., Director Bureau of Engrav- Ingand Printing cocoa ool Hall, Charles E., Bureau of the Census_..__. Hall, Edward C., House Committee on Irri- gation and Reclamation HJ Pi0EE]. Jabinsdd Hall, Harry L., Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration FIRE rR ia vE Sn ral, + He BIT Ae TU try Hall, Percival, president Columbia Institu- tion for the Dea Hall, Lieut. Col. cH ay office of the Judge Advorate Cenoral. oli cen eoboor biota Hall, W. M., Tennessee Valley Authority... Halla, Blanche Rule, office of Department Halliday, Lieut. Col. Frank W., office of the Judge Advocate General __________________ Halsey, Edwin A., Secretary of the Senate. _ lien; Patrick J., reading clerk of the Hambleton, J. I., Bureau of Entomology and Plant: Quarantine ioc soon. Lovo Hamilton, C. B., Senate Committee on Fi- nance Hamilton, Claude E., Jr., Reconstruction Fi- nance‘Corporation...L oo. io. fo fil 0 Jo. Hamilton, George E., Washington National Monument Society... Hamilton, Walton Hale: National Recovery Administration.__... The National Emergency Council_._..__ Hamlet, Rear Admiral Harry G., Com- mandant the Coast Guard. —..___________ Hamlin, Charles S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.__________________ Hamlin, AME bila House Committee on Memos Justin. coin ro hammers ED a EL patios. R Hammatt, T. D., Grain Futures Adminis- tration oa. hin totum 0c d3 So Congress’ hha Sod i med i EEE a SH ESE Sa Hanger, G Board saa esa lle nh dist a nai Hanmacher, Paul D., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works... -....... Hanna, Agnes K., Children’s Bureau-__...._ Hanna, Hugh S., ‘Bureau of Labor Statistics. Hana, Margaret M., office of Secretary of A RAG fa SSE SL TIERRA AT ERR ST 719 Page 340 255 301 370 363 327 307 365 307 253 372 375 312 332 720 Hannum, Col. Warren T., office of Chief of Bnzineers. ots il a Hanson, Alfred E., mechanical superintend- ent Government Printing Office Flanis, Hatold D., office of Secretary of the i) ae RE een en RB Hansson Ralph L., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMNINET08 ideo Fm ome hice Hardman, R. C., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Pablo Works. ee Hardwick, Catherine, Senate Committee on DANCE 0 i ew ih Pome Se SRE Le A RP CRBIIEY ini com oh mm eS AA a te Harman, Vivien T., Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Depart- eS ny eR i a LE Harman, Walter P., Bureau of Lighthouses. Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant’ Quarantine a ea Bl La ST Harper, James E., office of Secretary of Treas- TER a RA a pL Te ed SE TR SE Harper, Robert H., House Committee on Naval Affairs... a. o.oo ioe nae Harr, William R., Washington National Monument Society ee a he Harradon, Amy A., Civil Service Commis- TT Ee pe ah bos Se hn Harraman, Jesse C., office of Third Assistant Postmaster General. cae: ll Siiiiiia.a Harrington, Daniel, Bureau of Mines___..... Harris, Collas G., The National Archives... Harrison, Pat, J oint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation LAA gees i Lae SES Harrison, Robert E. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce Harrison, Robert L., ig of Architect of the Capitol. =. a ae ha ee Harrison, William W., Jr., House Committee on Printing Hath David A., United States attorney’s Fy EU Asa Ee Br SRC Tr BC pl Hart, Richard Ay Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works_..-- Hart, Willard L., chief clerk, Court of Claims. Harvey, Hugh Ww. United States attorney’s Harvey, John, office of Secretary of Interior... Harvey, Patrick D., National Mediation Board Harvey, T. Weed, Agricultural Adjustment Administration oc. oo vem oon Ludo Haskell, Frank B., superintendent, Home for Aged and TAIT. 0 erste cis Hap, Calvin W., office of Postmaster Gen- eralie de Se Hassell, Mary Clyde, Office of the Speaker. _ Hasslocher, Paulo G., Brazilian Embassy. ._ Hastings, A. B., Forest Service... Hastings, Charles H., Library of Congress. - Hastings, ‘Daniel O., ’ Nashville, President’s Plaza Commission. SO as A EE Hatcher, Warren, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of Hotge, - vavv oo wioos ti abidi a sniing Hatfield, Charles S., judge, United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (blography)s zoo ith es staal Hathaway, C. C., Civil Service Commission. Hathcock, Martha Delle, Senate Committee SL Enrolled BIE. oo cree a A, Joseph E., Federal Trade Commis- He H. W., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce EL rahe alee I Cal Havenner, Dr. George C., liaison officer, Gov- ernment Printing Dice oi Hs Harry A., office of Secretary of Hawes, Alexander B., Puerto Rico Recon- struction Administration CY [li tA as hs Hain, Harry C., office of Secretary of ER SE elm More og Page 309 268 253 345 338 368 254 402 301 254 338 368 390 393 321 388 343 Congressional Directory Page Hawkins, Lon A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... coi cacs-trancome Hawks, Emma B., associate librarian, De- partment of Agriculture a Hawley, J. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey... Hay, Logan, Washington National Monu- ment: Sealey. oT an Hayama, Tsuneo, Japanese Embassy... __... Haycock, R. L., District Board of Education. Haycock, Stephen P., United States attor- ney Sollee, oe aaa Haycock, W. H., Washington city post office. Hayden, Carl, Joint Committee on Print- oleh: Edith M., St. Elizabeths Hospital. Haydon, Emily, Botanic Garden... Hayes, Marion, National Recovery Admin- IS a ION i vpn s rpm a Sa em re Hayes, Montrose W., Weather Bureau-.-... Haykin, od 3s Library of CongresS.—aa-- Hayward, H. A , Bureau of Customs.......-. Hayward, Phillips A., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMEree. . - - mo Hazard, Henry B., Immigration and Natu- ralization Servi. ou.ai--mereee=me nn onan Hazen, Melvin C.: Disiriet Commissioner... .--c-======~=== District Zoning Commission... District Unemployment Compensation Board National Training School for BOyS------- Alley Dwelling Authority for the District) of Columbia... nee eunneron Headley, Roy, Forest Service...._o-ccaaaa-a Healy, Frank, National Recovery ry tration so aL a eS Healy, Robert E., Securities and Exchange Commission. Hearst, Sir William H., International Joint Commission damit Le a Heck, N. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey-.-.-- Hedges, J oseph Ha Bs of Mines. ....---= Bopdine, W. T., War Finance Corpora- Heflin, Cecil R., assistant United States attorney Hothe Wiison C., secretary to Senator Suis: - stea Heintzleman, B. F., Forest Service. .———--- Hellman, Florence 5. Library of Congress... Hellrigel, Alicia M., "House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads... PRE Hellweg, Capt. J. F., Naval Observatory-... Helm, Dorothy, House Committee on In- Volld Pensions. cur inr soon ce Sema on nae Helm, ie, assistant District corporation eounsel_ ©... aco -oicoioo oot REVO rie tm mmm A rm mo me Henderson, Charles B., Reconstruction Finance Corporation--.. oc —=-=- mei. Henderson, Roy B., Capitol Police_______.___ Honan, Ww. G, Bureau of Biological urv Hendricks, Pearl, Committee on Conference Majority of the Ty RE NOR A Hendrickson, Roy F., office of Secretary of AgriCOIUre cao mere pe mre i mn me Hepa, Herbert C., office of Secretary of Horas, Edward, Bureau of Navigation al Henry, "Frederick D., Freedmen’s Hospital... Henry, Jules, French Embassy... toi. == Henry, Orloff, Federal Emergency Adminis- tration of Public ‘Works Henshaw, F , Agricultural Adjustment Administration. i Ste Herbert, Clara W., District Public Library-- Herndon, Imolin F., office of the Speaker____ Herndon, Radle, Senate Committee on RUS i creamer mn mt Herrell, Russell H., superintendent of ac- counts and budget officer, Government Printing Office... coe ecommenm memo Herrick, H. T.: Bureau of Chemistry and Soils. come Food and Drug Administration.......-- 226 325 268 339 3 402 259 255 Indivrdual Index 721 Page Herrick, John, Federal Emergency Adminis- tration of Public Works... occa -nomean 367 Herridge, William Duncan, XK. C., D. 8. O., Canadian ministor...oo Cees ecceen 544 Herring, Willard E., Rural Electrification dministration.......c icin oecenninass= 366 Herson, James F., Reconstruction Finance Corporation, a neh a 360 Hert, Mrs. Alvin T., George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission... __._.____.. 228 Hesse, Henry A., Civil Service Commission... 343 Hesselman, Henry V., House Committee on Enrolled Bills... cio oc er annainn 262 Hester, Clinton M., office of Secretary of the I CASULY ois as sens ir Dt om am im Bs 301 Hetzel, Naomi H., secretary Public Utilities Commission nina i al arian 404 Hewes, Lawrence I, Jr., Resettlement Ad- IIIT ION. os nna te vin wn Rie Amd om 366 Hewitt, Abram, Electric Home and Farm Zon aly ap I Sa RE FR Se RR 365 Heywood, Maj. Henry Frank, British Em- bassy Ne 547 Hibner, Bronk, House Committee on Re- visionof athe TawWS i einen 262 Hickerson, John Dewey, office of Secretary of 05 Al Le Hickey, Capt. Andrew S., Naval Observa- nn HT ar Rp Sp es PC ee Sm Hickey, Edward J., office of Secretary of the Bemate. Lo i ann 253 Hickey, Thomas H., Home Owners’ Loan Corporat ON Ee a 362 Hickey, William M., Securities and Ex- change Commission. oc. cee aa 375 Hicks, Evelyn, Joint Committee on Printing, Capitol. cams ans i Raa, 226 Higgins, Elmer, Bureau of Fisheries__.._._.. 338 Higley, Lieut. Col. Harvey D., Joint Econ- oy Beard a ae 350 Hill, A. C. C., Jr., National Recovery Admin- stration oe a 372 Hill, Benjamin D., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... noo nen 338 Hill, F. F., Farm Credit Administration.... 367 Hill, Jesse, International Boundary Commis- sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada.. 352 Hill, John Philip, American Battle Monu- ments Commission == -o = __ =... 354 Hill, Dr. Joseph A., Bureau of the Census_.. 337 Hill, Lister, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. a 228 Hill, Ralph W. S., office of Secretary of State. 300 Hill, Roscoe R., The National Archives.._.. 376 Hill, Samuel B., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Baxation. ccc ci inne 226 Hill, William L.: Secretary to Senator Fletcher... .._____. 257 Senate Committee on Banking and Cur- oH rr pe pr ES a ER ER SU 254 Hiller, Adelbert D., Veterans’ Administra- TE ere eb pa ean By nl See 348 Hilliard, Estelle, Senate Committee on I EE Ee a El Se a LI 254 Himes, Joseph H., Columbia Hospital for OTN sm nin dan an tes Em tm 359 Hines, Brig. Gen. Frank T.: Veterans’ Administration 348 Federal Board of Hospitalization. __._.... 304 Hinrichs, A. F., Bureau of Labor Statistics... 341 Hirsch, Arthur J., Bureau of the Census.... 337 Hirschman, George F., Pan American Union. 356 Hiscox, J. W., Extension Service..._.._...... 328 Hiser, E. T., National Training School for IVE ee EE =iz=z--one- 359 Hitt, Isaac R., judge, police court... _.____.___ 393 Hitz, William, Jr., United States attorney’s Offlee. cana oe An LN aE 392 Hoadley, Frank M., office of Secretary of War. 305 Hoage, R.J., United States Employees’ Com- pensation Commission... ______. 343 Hoagland, H. E.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board.._..__. 360 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation...._.. 361 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation... oaioeoiagn 364 Hobbs, Ewart W., commissioner, Court of Claims. ove or fo Lena. oad anae it 2 390 30063°—T74—2—1 ST ED——46 Page Hobbs, H. W., Board of Engineers for Rivers snd Harbors. oo. Lassa 309 Hobson, Alfred T.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation__._ 359 Electric Home and Farm Authority.___. 365 Hockley, Claude C., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works.._________ 368 Hodges, Henry W., United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia_.__.. 388 Hodson, Mary Wilson, office of the Speaker... 259 Hoeltzel, Lloyd O., Reconstruction Finance Corporation ls. a fo as rn 360 Hoffman, E. R., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works.._._____________. 368 Hoffman, H. J., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- POLALION. oe oC re Ten 364 Hogan, Claude T., House post office Hogg, Hon. U. N. McG., British Embassy... 547 Hoidale, P. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... .._..... Tn = 332 Holbrook, Clara B., Emergency Conservae Hon Work. Ju. Li 372 Holbrook, F. S., Bureau of Standards... __... 338 ment: Service... 0. ll iui aeorE 342 Holmes, C. L., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomles to ion Lona la nee a a 330 Poles Jo in dn Ja nn Uh ee 404 Holt, B. A., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration, SU ON0 Lae el 029 Holt, Everett G., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree....oi oo = 5 338 Holton, D. W., District engineer department. 403 Hood, Ozni P., Bureau of Mines.._...__._.. 324 Hooe, Rice, District assistant corporation coumngel. Cor ESR ea 403 Hooke, Walter G., National Recovery Ad- ministration... se 373 Hooper, Capt. Stanford C.: ce of Naval Operations.........____.. 317 Naval Consulting Board... ___.._._______ 319 Hoover, Herbert, American National Red DO matic os oi Bo i Ps SE re ee a HI 356 SIONY. om et mma a om pm ee a re 346 Hopkins, Fred M., Patent Office...__.___._. 339 Hopkins, George R., Bureau of Mines_...._ 324 OT mle wit mmo oe seme tae i Se SL Me 371 Works Progress Administration. ________ 371 Federal Surplus Relief Corporation....__ 371 The National Emergency Council _______ 374 National Resources Committee _________ 377 OA a Rn ie sent tm a ie 1 EE 306 Hornaday, Dr. F. A., District anatomical BOAR Ce ree a a 401 Homies Stanley K., office of Secretary of ae. 299 Hornberger, D. J.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board._.______ 361 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation._______ 361 Horne, Douglas B., Washington City post rE oe an Nee SA Ce Sh a 405 Horne, William W., office of Secretary of the ON errand el re 253 Horton, Isabel, House Committee on the Districtol Columbia... o-oo. f 262 722 Congressional Directory P Horton, James A., Federal Trade Commis- Hoskins, Alta, Senate Committee on Rules.. Houchins, Eugene, House post office... ...._. Houston, H. I., Patent Office. -._-._—._._.... Howard, B. J., Food and Drug Administra. 117 RE Se SR SE TTC Howard, Rowan, Special Committee to In- vestigate Retail Federation... ooo... Howe, Louis McHenry: Secretary to President Roosevelt. ....... The National Emergency Council _.._... Howe, Group Capt. T. E. B., British Em- SONATE. .newmp- nen cme rss wd gw Ee SATE Howell, H. H., National Recovery Adminis- ration. ili desta mn 3a 28 PL hb ann Howells, John M., Commission of Fine Arts. Howes, William W., First Assistant Post- master General...cocao:il. Jl agli. does Howick, Tom, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora= The National Emergency Council...__._ Huang, Jen Zien, Chinese Embassy. ...-..-- Huang, Pei-Chih, Chinese Embassy__.__._.. Hubbard, Henry D., Bureau of Standards... Hubbard, Henry V., National Capital Park and Planning Commission ___.___..._._.__.. Hudgins, Ward, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads... cio... Hudlow, T. A., Temporary Home for Sol- diers.and Salers. :.-ccousgsi lL i Cla wa ten Huecking, Dr. Victor L. F. H., Mixed Claims Commission... coool VI i de Huffman, E. W. G., House Committee on Waysiand Means. .ioioc. colada. oad 3, Hughes, Addie A., Emergency Conservation Court (biography)... ---oodoiommnn Member Smithsonian Institution. ....-.. Chancellor Smithsonian Institution... American National Red Cross______..._.. United States Supreme Court Building Commission. 2i. laurie seat ab unt ue Hughes, F. J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NOMIC Osc taa BAS e IEEE o Js Jovi dram Hughes, H.J., American National Red Cross. Hughes, James E., National Recovery Ad- ministrationi:-4 Jeon. oniaionctd, dues Hughes, Brig. Gen. John H., War Depart- ment General Staff. .___- Eaadnad Hughes, W. E., Office of Budget and Finance. Hulbirt, Harry H., office of Treasurer of United States oi ive aon amtsisadatvnmms Hull, Cordell: . Secretary of State (biography). -.--.--- Governing Board, Pan American Union. Foreign Service Buildings Commission. Member Smithsonian Institution. ....... The National Emergency Council ___.. Hull, William C., Civil Service Commission. Humber, Col. R. C., Inspector General's OC. —_ 353 Sevey, Robert, Bureau of Foreign and Do- MESTIC COMINEICR. - .. «ooo ms oe mom itm ice 337 Seward, George H., Senate Committee on Forelgn Relations =. ooo tonno=armizama tie 255 Seward, P. F., Federal Communications Com- ET EE) a RR i a) 379 Sexton, Rear Admiral W. R., General Board Of NG er rms or 319 Seydel, Harry M., Veterans’ Administration. 349 Seyfullah, Ibrahim, Turkish Embassy._----_- 552 Shabek, Lucile, House Committee on Bank- ing and Correney..— —o -- — = sec-wm nears 261 Shanks. J. C., office of Clerk of House.--_---_ 260 Shannon, Angus R., jr., National Recovery Administration i reese 372 Shantz, H. L., Forest Service... __._.___ 333 Sharp, Capt. Alexander, Bureau of Naviga- ETL ei mp ns Af, re eh ep RE 317 Shaughnessy, Edward J., Immigration and Naturalization Service... ______ 342 Shaw, Humphrey S., office of Clerk of the OS EE ee TE res 260 Shaw, James, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- PF {1 nae Sie Get an pai Sasa es gigs 363 Shea, F. M.., Puerto Rico Reconstruction Ad- INS A OrT ed ee oe 378 Shea, Walter M., United States attorney’s Ol A ra 393 Shearman, Thomas G., office of the Solicitor._ 328 Sheehan, Joseph R., Securities and Exchange COMMISSION a a remo 375 Sheehy, Joseph E., Federal Trade Commis- ON a a naar 8 346 Sheild, Marcellus C., House Committees on Approprigtions. ozs c_.._t_.---_o o.oo= 261 Sheldon, H. P., Bureau of Biological Survey... 331 Shelsé, Ronne C., Geological Survey ___..__ 323 Shelton, Arthur B., clerk, United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals-.-_ 389 Shepard, Ward, Bureau of Indian Affairs__.._ 322 Shepheard, Capt. Halert C., Bureau of Navi- gation and Steamboat Inspection._________ 339 Sheppard, H. R., office of Secretary of Treas- he ALY oo Ee Co al olin Sheppard, Morris, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy - >> -2b-5f to. = _____-C 228 Sheridan, Edwin A., Securities and Exchange Commission = cious oc sartasas anasto s 375 Sherman, E. A., Forest Service. —--_—___ 332 Sherman, Wells A., Bureau of Agricultural Eeonomies. =o tot w SOL or oe te 02 330 Sherwood, Benjamin R., office of Secretary of Tao ot dua LAS Akane ns 341 Shieh, Jen Chao, Chinese Embassy. .----- 544 Shields, John, House post office_____ [Pehl ote 261 Shilling, Harry E., Washington City post os i a a Shinkle, Brig. Gen. E. M., office of the Chief GL OYdNANGe ridin o ae 310 Ge Pa Individual Index Shipe, H. W., Bureau of Indian Affairs... Shipley, Ruth B., office of Secretary of State. Shoemaker, Carl D: , secretary, Special Senate Committee on Conservation of Wildlife GITIhY Doketimaiei al mein rd ihe Shoemaker, C. W., International Exchanges. Shoemaker, Thomas B., Immigration and N aturalization Service. trae a Se A Se Short, Dewey, Board of Visitors to the Mili- tary Academy 2 Jest Short, Oliver C., Bureau of the Census__._. Shouse, John H., House post office... Shover, John C., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- ETL eRe ve ie i Shrout, Sam F., Federal Trade Commission... Shryock, H. S., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works: c= r= al Shuffler, Marion J., House post office Shultz, Walter D.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board. ...._.. Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ______ Shumate, Joe T'., Bureau of Air Commerce... oianos, Demetrios, Greek Legation: Xr an Silcox, F Chief, Forest RerYic8 or ni numer va National Capital Park and Planning OMNIS ON teense sort ra eb Co IRs am Siler, Col. Joseph F., Army Medical Center... Sillers, Basil, Washington City post office. __ Simmons, B. H., Inspector General’s Office. Simmons, John’ Farr, office of Secretary of Simms, Joseph B., District fire department. _ Simon, Rabbi Abram, Columbia Hospital for SUH eeseslnet satan anita Simon, L. A., Procurement Division AEE Simonds, Maj. Gen. George ‘War Department General Staff. TheJoint Board... ct tatoos Sy Howard J., American National Red Yh bi Smt, A Se A em Simons, Rear Admiral Manley H., Office of Naval Operationse. ooo os i sr Simpson, Kemper, Securities and Exchange Commission ts = =~ e Sims, I. H.,’ British Embassy. ~~ _ 2. --3 Sims, Henry Upson, American National Bed Cross... oa oceanic Canals, BR a i SL ET Sims, Melvin, National Recovery Admin- Stalin A ve a , Sinclair, A. Leftwich, District Supreme 10] FL mph Rm ae LR eh AL fai 5 Sinclair, Burke H., Veterans’ Adminis- VILE DT es he a en ap a hy SRR a Sinclair, James H., Special Mexican Claims Commission. a Singleton, F. E., Office of Budget and Fi- ICE nr on mim AE me El er Sink, M. J., House Committee on Printing. _ Sinnott, J oseph J., Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives EE ER SRR J Siri, Ricardo J., Argentine Embassy... __.__ Sirkey, Louis, journal clerk of the House... Skidmore, D. I., Bureau of Animal Industry_ Skinner, C. A., "Bureau of Standards. _._.___ Skinner, G. B., Bureau of Lighthouses... _._ Skinner, G. H., Alaska Road Commission.___ Skinner, W. W., Bureau of Chemistry and Skowronek, Paul, House post office_.._______ Skvirsky, Boris E., Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy ARS EE Slacks, John W., i Finance BT TT PO rg op ar a Slade, William Adams, Library of Congress. Slater, Nelson, National Recovery Admin- istration. nt one). Cl l7 alanine. Slattery, Harry, Department of the Interior_ Slattery, L. P., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works. _._______...______ Slattery, William L., comptroller of Post flicoDepartment.-........ ou. oon Slaughter, R. H., General Accounting Office. Sligh, Deck, House Committee on Pen- BONE rr at rane AE Slindee, Micha) E., National Bank Redemp- tion Agenc Sloan, A. ES Y Sie Committee on Military Small, Jessie M., office of Official Reporters of Debat RET SR Ly SR GL EA Sl St Small, Reuel, Ofigial Reporter, House- --.-. Smalley, Walter I , Senate Committee on Military AfTairs. ooo oihonst nee Juniata sn Smead, E. L., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. __________________ Rain, Addison T., Veterans’ Administra- Smith, C. B., Department of Agriculture Ex- tension Service: cof tu. foafon tt roils Sain, C. E., International Joint Commis- SION. ensues detail. coudenivet FE coke Smith, Charles A., Reconstruction Finance Corporation A LE 1 fram Pp Smith, Charles P., Board of Tax Appeals... Smith, Daniel E., Veterans’ Administration. Bain, DeWitt, American National Red Sih, Don C., American National Red Smith, Elbert L., Reconstruction Finance Corporation STEERER NR ad Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on Appropriations Pn a LC A Sed Ra Smith, F. Grafton, Agricultural Adjustment Administration a i La ps Smith, Frank D., Office of Information, De- partment of Agriculture. ___..______.___.___ Smith, Franklin H., United States Tariff COMMISSION... mum n mm nba FE Sida dba SE C0 Smith, George, Committee on Conference Minority of the Senate. _____.____________. Smith, George W., District fire department_ Smith, G. G., Soil Conservation Service...... Smith, H. A. A., the Panama Canal... ........ Smith, Capt. Harold W.: Naval Medical School. coo... Boards for Examination of Medical and eee RE eee SR bh ada as TT Smith, Commander Horacio M., Argentine Embas BSSY otis d Aitit wm hrm ti eat Lb Smith, amd W., Thomas Jefferson Memo- rial Commission mi mms rE ERE Smith, Col. Hugh C., office of the Judge Ad- voecate General .w.-oun oils (al fuga 0 Smith, Lond, Senate Committee on Agricul- ture andiBorestry.-ciicoa.. o.oo ni. Smith, Lt. Col. John A., office of the Judge Advocate General oct oii al. Smith, John L., Capitol police_ ______________ Smith, Joseph RB. Home Owners’ Loan Cor- Dolation ere Smith, J. W. Rixey: Secretary to Senator Glass..__._.___.___.. Senate Committee on Appropriations..___ Smith, L. M. C., National Recovery Ad- IINSIPALION oo eons manne mea Smith, Luther E.: George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission... ....0b_T.L- oi _ 1 Smith, Mavis, Senate Committee on Claims. Smith, Rear Admiral Norman M., Chief of Bureau of Yards and Docks_._..___.____.... Smith, Pauline, Senate Committee on Finance... .....obe Glan lo naiolion Smith, Dr. Philip S., Geological Survey_.__. Smith, Robert B., Federal Housing Admin- istration ELISE ata Lc a NDS RR Sd Smith, V. M., Senate Committee on Indian A fairs. 739 Page 262 302 262 263 263 255 345 349 307 257 254 228 229 322 347 254 318 254 323 740 Congressional Directory Soy a A., Congressional Record clerk, Smith, CA CR TR NL PR ie TITTLE RL PR Dn J pS Si Ed Smith, W. F., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce mA me WHT me Snell, B. H.: Minority. Floor Leader... oilil Commission on Enlarging the Capitol s GroundsitoCo Ooi ad DT Le gat, Wy L., headquarters, Marine Snodgrass, Russell, Td TL Finance Corporation... cot A Ha Snow, Julian B., secretary to Senator DP MONONOY ,. wuss ios wm wh wR wats a sion Snyder, J. I., Tennessee Valley Authority... Snyder, John O., office of the Sergeant at Armsiof House. 0. oo. ooo aon a. Sokolowski, Wladyslaw, Polish Embassy... Soldan, Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz, Pan Ameri- can Sanitary Bureau... ..cemnenoaabadl IU Somerville, J. W., Senate Committee on Appropriations. ilo Sills na JUTE Sommerkamp, Frank M., Washington city ri Col. George R., Board of Engineers for Riversand Harbors...c-----z--c00 ot E10 Spalding, Lt. Col. Isaac, the Aeronautical BORE co rr cn tmn Sng SRR EAE A TAT Spangler, L. C., office of the Secretary of the PYORASULY vm = 555 5 mm a mob ald ems Pe 2 Spann, W. M., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works - -..._~______ Sparkman, R. H., Senate Committee on Banking and CurrenCy.-........__._.__.___.. Sparks, Raymond, assistant corporation coansel. Sola TRY LL a aE Spaulding, Atiensis juvenile court__________ Spiny, ¥ . Wilder, office of Secretary of 3 Yee EEE (ah 0 Fon TR LE Spears, Capt. William O., Bureau of Navi- EAtION oan ical BARA SL ABI HI Speir, R. J., official stenographer to House commitlees.._. i... li ceisveciiboadias Spelman, H. J., Bureau of Public Roads.___ Spence, Mrs. Brent, Congressional Club.____ Spencer, F. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant QUArInNUING.. ..... coms eers be cae Spencer, Richard, Patent Office____.____._____ Span, Joseph L., Civil Service Commis- Solon, Walter M. W., Interstate Commerce CommMISSION. Ji. i. ces mad Gwe dh wit Staack, J. G., Geological Survey...____._.__.._ Stabler, Herman, Geological Survey.________ Biocon, William B., Veterans’ Administra- Mae Wendell P., District Public Library. Stam, aq. F., Joint’ Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation.....__...______________ TL Admiral William H.: hief of Naval Operations_____.......... The Yoint Board. . ........onormcvissnen Stanley, Alfred, House post office. _---.__.._. Stanley, A. O., the International Joint Com- Stanley, Col. David 8S., quartermaster, United States Soldiers’ Home. ______..._._. Stanley, Louise, Bureau of Home Economics. Stansel, Horace §S., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works_._____..__ Stanton, T. B., District fire department__.__ Stark, Rear Admiral H. R., Bureau of Ord- EL I a AARC Sa A BIE Starr, Robert C., office of Secretary of Labor. Starr, William E, House post office coeceeao. Page 404 337 259 225 320 325 360 258 364 260 551 Page Statesir, Herbert F., War Department Gen- OS Ey a errr een 305 Staver, L.. D., Merchant Fleet Corporation.. 340 Stead, Dr. William H., United States Em- Ployment- Service. uo tu. tu. eo naam masee 342 Steddom, R. P., Bureau of Animal Industry. 330 Stedman, Alfred D., Agricultural Adjust- ment Administration. - ci. coors 329 Steele, Brady W., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- BOablom. ri mms seman ern of 363 Steele, Maj. Gen. Harry L., office of the Chief of CoastbeArtillery, 2 = as iets 306 Steensland, Almer O., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation atria 363 Stejneger, Leonhard, National Museum._____ 354 Steiner, Gotthold, Bureau of Plant Industry. 334 Stephens, Edmund, office of Budget and Wnonec. Corb Itel Ser Soh idle aL 327 Stephens, G. A., Federal Trade Commission. 346 Stephens, Harold M., associate justice, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biography). ____.__. 388 Stephens, Howell K., superintendent of printing, Government Printing Office. _.___ 268 Stephens, Hubert D., Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation A TE Rl sf Rs 359 Stephens, J. D., office of the Doorkeeper_____ 260 Stephens, Winston B., Resettlement Ad- i Es a er Hi re Fa A ET 366 Sh Josephine A., assistant clerk to the President of the Senate i Pe sha eT 253 Stern, Ben, secretary to Senator Van Nuys... 258 Stern, Mrs. B. M., National Labor Relations Board: -srruonatemanoi mee CFs andre, 378 Sternhagen, John M., Board of Tax Appeals. 374 Stevens, Raymond B., United States Tariff Commissions rn eileen 347 Stevens, W. H. S.: Federal Trade Commission .__..____.... 346 Central Statistical Board... ..._..._.__.. 370 Stevenson, M. W., Washington City post OR Ss a Ed A ae ara Rene 405 Stevenson, William F.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board._...... 360 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ______ 361 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance BITRE A 0 Tama i Sh LS 364 Stewart, Carroll, Veterans’ Administration.. 349 Stewart, Charles E., Department of Justice... 312 Stewart, Irvin, Federal Communications COMMISSION ooo is bent aE = mb id 379 Stewart, J. M., Bureau of Indian Affairs._.. 322 Stewart, John, Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works... ........3 369 Stewart, Mary, Bureau of Indian Affairs_.... 322 Stewart, Paul M., United States Employees’ Compensation Commission. oo... 343 Stiefel, David, Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration Ch a Dr RG hE LR 363 Stine, Harry E., office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General. coo eai tions 314 Stine, 0. C Bureau of Agricultural Economiecs.._.._. 330 Central Statistical Board... ________ 370 Stirling, Hood ¥. Veterans’ Administration. 348 Stirling, M. W , Bureau of American Eth- NOlOE Ya a 355 Stitely, W. R., clerk, United States attor- ney sofflee se an 393 Stockberger, W. W.: Office of Secretary of Agriculture. .._.___. 327 Director of Personnel, Agricultural De- ho AN HL 1 ea i ba eens ognit Haein. "rn 327 Bureau of Plant Industry... ___.__ 334 Stockton, Lieut. Col. ats Jr., Bureau ol Insular ATaIrS. amo a een 310 Stoianovitch,Bojidar, Yugoslavian Legation. 553 Stone, A. M., Federal Reserve Board....__.. 345 Stone, Commander Ellis S., General Board, Navy seisoloo edd nm on oral Lo Is 319 Stone, Harlan F., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography)... _.___.. 385 Story, Isabelle F., National Park Service.... 3824 Stott, Inspector William G., Metropolitan G0) OTE id dsr pb RAR ah 404 Individual Index 741 Page Spada, Count Rudolf, German Em- 2 i Ra Rh A I EB ey ed 54 Strack, Albert, Grain Futures Administra- pls el ae BE Bk een ud 1 333 Straight, Harry B., Senate Committee on LY HE a AN Crh a I il i 254 Straten-Ponthoz, Count Robert van der, Belgian Embassy. 0. Loe 543 Stratton, J. Frank, Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources... 204 Stratton, L. L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. cocoa moves 226 Straus, Michael, Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works... _______. 367 Strayer, Col. Thorne, office of the Inspector General. ieee 307 Street, G. C., Jr., Federal Emergency Ad- ‘ministration of Public Works... oon 369 Strong, Lee A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... - tomers ~=a=aaas 332 Strunk, Oliver, Library of Congress... 267 Struve, Gustav, German Embassy -.----_-._ 547 Stuart, Charles E., Export-Import Bank___. 377 Stuart, Capt. H. A., office of Secretary of the EN A DSA Un ART i el 316 Stuart, W. G., official stenographer to House committees... ---a-. 263 Studebaker, John W.: Officeof Education... 22am eeas mim 322 Federal Board for Vocational Education. 323 Studley, Elmer E., Veterans’ Administration. 349 Sturdevant, W. L., Tennessee Valley Author- LL pA Ee Se Re RR ee 364 EN olde S., Senate Committee on Indian VLG LU Ef Se pee Sr a rR el 255 Stuver, D. S., Bureau of Reclamation_..___. 323 Sullivan, A. H., Tennessee Valley Authority. 365 Sullivan, Harry L., Reconstruction Finance O01 0 re ALE ER eR SNe SR a 360 Sullivan, Jerry B., judge, United States Cus- toms Court'(biography)... o-oo. ane 391 Sullivan, Mark, Washington National Mon- ument Seeley. oo a Teena 353 Sullivan, Michael H., Home Owners’ Loan COTDOTALION oo ciis ns enmsime me Bh rma i 362 Sultan, Lieut. Col. D. I.: National Capital Park and Planning COMMISSION ooh on Emre hai 353 Districi:Commissioner...—--- c= oncane 401 District Zoning Commission... _____._. 402 District Unemployment Compensation LER TE a en ee ti Iepan AT TEE AR 402 Public Utilities Commission... _...___. 404 Susong, Alex, Senate Committee on Post Offices:and Post Roads. .--- = cx 255 Sutherin, J. W., office of Second Assistant Postmaster General.c...- eco ceoe oo 314 Sutherland, George, Associate J sie United States Supreme Court blo TAPhY)c teen 384 Sutherland, Maj. R. oint Economy Board ot amine 350 Swain, Larsen, Washington City post office. 405 Swanson, Claude A.: Secretary of the Navy (biography) ------ 316 Council of National Defense__._______.___ 350 Member of Smithsonian Institution. ____ 354 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Com- ERE phe an i eat Stet lie SRT ve 353 The National Emergency Council _..____ 374 Swanson, E. B., Petroleum Administrative NL TE Rae 326 Swanson, Melvin O., Rural Electrification A AMIS ION i immense =m 366 Swariwous, Egerton, Commission of Fine afi ee oo a wm em em tm wr. Di Ss Oliver E., Interstate Commerce Com- SSIon.. Si Se Sa EE LSE 345 Swigart, Jesse E., Bureau of Engraving and Printing. ios tod in ri maio ada di nbn. 303 Switzer, John B., Interstate Commerce Com- IISRIONY. ir i Eee a i Se a 344 Switzer, Mary E., office of Secretary of the Eb ET EE SP rg St LW, 301 Swofford, Ne Jewell W., Employees’ Com- pensation CommMISSION. —aneweenmrme mmm 343 Sykes, Eugene O., Federal Communications COMMISION ce eran armas =a mmm 379 Sze, Chia Tsing, Chinese Embassy. 544 Page Sze, Sao-Ke Alfred, minister plenipotentiary from Ching..........codudese re snesushla os Szymezak, M. S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 345 T Taber, Frederic H., Reconstruction Finance CorPOTaAtIONc ar usene mann seat deus ths se aoa 359 Taber, John* Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs. __ 229 United States Constitution Sesquicen- tennial Commission =u. ...co0-oacs 299 Taher, Mahmoud, Iran Legation... ......__ 548 Takase, Jiro, Japanese Embassy. -._.... 549 Talbert, T. R., Washington City post office. 405 Taliaferro, Sidney F., Columbia Hospital for WOMEN... i caenerrerss ro tnn dE LEE 359 Taliaferro, Mrs. Sidney F., Columbia Hos- pitalior Women. .........;xceccccesssdeasa 359 Talley, Lynn P.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation.... 360 Commodity Credit Corporation... .... 375 Export-Import Bank... ..._.....: 377 Tandy, Dr. Elizabeth C., Children’s Bureau. 342 Tanis, Richard C., office of Secretary of State. 299 Tanner, John H., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. .....ccoov. oe toad ole witout 359 Tapp, Jesse W., Agricultural Adjustment Administration........-------omnm-ts eit 329 Tapp, Samuel, District Plumbing Board.._. 402 Tate, Hugh M.: Interstate Commerce Commission....... 344 The National Emergency Counecil._.____ 375 Tate, Thomas R., Federal Power Commis- SION. oa os dS ne ant 348 Tate, Vernon D., The National Archives._.. 376 Taussig, Charles W., National Youth Admin- Er A TT 366 Taussig, Rear Admiral J. K.: The Joint, Board: i.e to. id= cndos sn nmmnas 349 Office of Naval Operations_..__.__ oo... 317 raylor, Augustus C., District Pharmacy iE a SR 402 Ton A. E., Food and Drug Administra- A HE eR I DT SS ee 332 Taylor, Carl C.: Bureau of Agricultural Economies... 330 Resettlement Administration._..__._______ 366 Taylor, Charles H., Emergency Conservation nd darian alae Tali a Ea i ae 372 Taylor, Dr. David W., secretary, Advisory Committee for Aeronautics ___..____.______ 350 Taylor, Ike P., Alaska Road Commission... 326 Taylor, Jon I., National Recovery Adminis- ation... at ct oe ms SS ta te or oath 373 Taylor, J. Will: Commission on Enlarging the Capitol OIOUNAS, inns v Dares ie SB pr owl i Bie i 225 Nashville Presidents’ Plaza Commission. 227 Taylor, O. B.,, Home Owners’ Loan Corpo- TALION. Cini nt En dame me Tap moo Se pa ai 361 Taylor, Oliver G., National Park Service... 324 Taylor, Perry R., Rural Electrification Ad- mimsteation.. oc Ee vem 366 Taylor, Porter R., Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Co. o S ara 329 Taylor, Rene J., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ores ec ie nS sem FE ms 360 Taylor, Tyrl, Reconstruction Finance Cor- DOTAtION ol Sesrire L ha 360 Taylor, Wayne C., Export-Import Bank of LE eR RE 377 bets oven Petroff, Bulgarian Lega- BON er Raa or ee Em 544 Teagle, Edward B., Jr., office of Second As- sistant Postmaster General ________________ 314 Tercero, José, Pan American Union__..___.__ 356 Termohlen, W. D., Agricultural Adjustment Administration. ot. nee 329 Terrasa, Juan, Spanish Embassy. ._.-.__ 552 Terrell, Marjory V., The National Archives. 376 Terrell, WD. Federal Communications Commission SA Sa Ean EL Si aie ee Se 379 Thacker, O., United States Railroad Ad- ministration rbot PE re Be 345 Thatcher, Arthur B., Resettlement Admin- FIA I0 Lp ee es sa Cer bela 366 742 Congressional Directory Page Thayer, Mark M., Department of Agricul- ture Extension Service de Go So tn 328 Theron, Johannes N., Union of South Africa ULI AT rE Ne LL AI Sl ACR OY 552 Thom, Charles, Bureau of Plant Industry... 334 Thomas, A. B., General Accounting Office... 344 Thomas, Alonzo M., office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster General ._._________________ 314 Thomas, Edward W., Assistant District Cor- poration Counsel. fo. Jouiviauin anno ans aia 403 Thomas, Elbert D., Thomas Jefferson Me- morial Commission Ea ye ASIC | ETH 227 Thomas, Mrs. Elbert D., Congressional OID eas cnn an bin ss ms die oie bon em wn pi 358 Thomas, Elmer, Joint Committee on the I meee BEA Rl LR a Re 226 Thomas, Howard H., office of Secretary of the Senate. ou cosas coa aos dnsoasnns 254 Thomas, John H., office of Secretary of the Interior ices deacon nos c Past danna tad U1 3008 18 321 Thomas, J. J., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System__________________ 345 Thomas, Nena, Capitol Telephone Ex- change. asd 205 Thomas, Woodlief: Central Statistical Board... —....____. 370 Board of Governors of the Federal Re- SCLVOBYRIOmM. to —oos os 345 Thomason, Maj. John W., office of Secretary OL ANO- NAVY vce c cyanea SI DEE 316 Thomason, R. Ewing, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... ________________ 228 Thompkins, William J., District Recorder of Deoodsu ce. on. a he A a 393 Thompson, Beriah M., office of Secretary of ET NC a 301 Thompson, Bertis B., office of Surgeon Gen- Cr RE TAI Eu 307 Thompson, George F., office of Secretary of ENO IS ENalen bi oa A aa 253 Thompson, Helen B., Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Depart- ra A ES RE ee Ta 254 Thompson, Laura A., office of Secretary of Labor st ofa re wih tm eda 341 Thompson, L. R., Bureau of the Public Health Service... --- cto o-oo 303 Thompson, Luke, Washington City post EL i dep gf ong ryt Cl Mo te 405 Thompson, Mary, House Committee on I ERR rtp fog fof gl top Shot ob 262 Thompson, Oco, office of Secretary of Senate. 253 Thompson, Russell H., Washington City POSE Ofer ran i 405 Thompson, Ruth N., office of District cor- Dorion counsel snare 402 Thompson, W. N., office of Secretary of the reas lry 2 oe 301 Thomson, R. K., office of the Doorkeeper_. 260 Thorne, G. B., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration. Ee A 329 Thornthwaite, C. W., Soil Conservation BOP VICR ir a Se ae 334 Thoron, B. W., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works. 367 Thrift, Chester R., page, House press gallery. 635 Throop, Allen E., Securities and Exchange Comnussione =i or adnan t h, 376 Thurber, William L., Patent Office..._______ 339 Thurston, Lloyd, "Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission s-.......2 ct 20 229 Tioteon, William H., United States Customs Sn Til, 4 National Recovery Administra- HONE E Eee r Er sano me re el 373 Tiller, Theodore: Federal Home Loan Bank Board...____. 361 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation..._..__ 361 Tilson, William J., judge, United States Customs Court (biography) -------ac-oo--- 391 Tilton, Charles E., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration or oi pw ES i TSP wn wm iE 361 Tinker, Earl W., Forest Service._.____.______ 333 Tinkham, Ralph R., Bureau of Lighthouses. 338 Tippens, Guy B., Chemical Warfare Service. 311 Tisdel, Alton P, Superintendent of Docu- ments, Government Printing Office. ....-- 268 Page Titus, Dr. E. W., Columbia Hospital for NY OMe a das aE Es ae es a anus 359 Tobin, Dr. R. F., District Board of Public YO re a a ore inn 402 Tolan, John H., Board of Visitors to the NAVAL ACOAOMY smite mers 228 Tolbert, Cecil H., Senate Committee on Mil- ary A GINs ss i Ts 255 Tolman, R. P., National Gallery of Art__._. 355 Tolson, Clyde A., Department of Justice... 312 Tolson, Hillory A., office of National Park TC or my a 323 Tomlin, CO. E., Patent Office... ....-.- 339 Toms, R. E., Bureau of Public Roads... 334 Tonry, Richard J., Joint Committee on RP Ng mr re ger: a rem 226 Torbert, Saris R., office of Architect of the apit; tol RI Sp i 2 Sg a Sap ih ali 263 Torr, Col. W. W., British Embassy .--__---_- 547 Torrea, Juan Manuel, Mexican Embassy...- 550 Torrey, Florence N., Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals meh Sn ne 255 Totty, Walker, Assistant Secretary to the 1% 0 0 TR LA Tl th coalofibbs iy1e 256 Tower, R. S., General Accounting Office. _.. 344 Towers, C. M., District collector of taxes.... 402 Towers, Edward, District chief clerk of ve- hiclesiand traffie.. la. en er hr mane 403 Townsend, Grace, Committee on Conference Minority of the Senate. ....ceieenenenee=n- 254 Townsend, Dr. James G., Bureau of Indian A IE ares nr priv ame 322 Townsend, John G., Jr., Senate Office Build- Ing Commission. oh trees reenter m 225 Townsend, Harold R.: Home Owners’ Loan Corporation...._.. 361 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- FE I SS bn Se nt edd 364 Townsend, Capt. Julius C., Office of Naval One ONS ah 317 Townsend, Paul L., secretary to Senator IT, CL Uh La i a pi iB ee eh, i) 258 Tracy, Edward J., National Recovery Ad- mimstrallon or Er eadene 373 Tracy, Frank T., Reconstruction Finance COLDOPAION wn Bos winner rn tis seme? 360 Tracy, Laura L., Civil Service Commission.. 343 Ty Bobezs C., secretary, Board of Tax 7M EEE LE hte 2 Ar Rae BO pedis di siti eta) 347 TADpeals- Charles M., Board of Tax Ap- 1 301 Eg is ond Se: AS Regn Bi Spe SE hm fy 347 Trammell, Daisye, Senate Committee on IN AY A IE ane Tanna Em oi 255 Trammell, Park, Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. oo em memvea 228 Treadway, Allen T.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue HEUTE ed pons Si Ws sh ii 226 Commission to Acquire a Site and Addi- tional Buildings for Library of Con- TE NE nie php Th lt IE ig 225 Joint Committee on the Library. ..._.__.. 226 Treadway, Walter L., Bureau of the Public (EEE RT a Ded ent Blended Bi donde s 303 Trent, D. B., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- EEE EAL EE RL ho i psd So og op par 328 Trenwith, E. J.: Secretary to Senator Pittman.__.._____. 258 Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. 255 Trice, J. Mark, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of the Sonate: 256 Triem, William E., office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General. _ .__ccaoao.o 314 Trimble, South, Clerk of the House. .ccaau-- 259 Trimble, South, Jr: Solicitor Department of Commerce. .-.--- 336 Merchant Fleet Corporation... ______.. 340 Tripp, Louis H., Veterans’ Administration.. 343 Troy, John W.: Governor of Alaska... cnenioiiaannnns 325 Alaska Road Commission 326 Federal Emergency Administration of Puble Works. fina i toi ss es 268 Troyanovsky, Alexander Antonovich, Soviet Ropublics'ambassador--.-mmcmcmm ome m=mm=m= 552 Truax, John C., office of the Doorkeeper---__ 260 Indwidual Index Page Trucco, Manuel: Chilean ambassador... .....--accenen canes Governing Board, Pan American Union. True, Webster P., editor, Smithsonian Insti- {TEATS TT Es Bri Cr a Sled LR EW Truesdell, Dr. Leon E., Census Bureau... Truitt, Max O’Rell: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ... Electric Home and Farm Authority._._. Tschappat, Maj. Gen. W. H., Chief of Ord- TENET i ale Cee CI TE Cp Tsui, Tswen-ling, Chinese Embassy. .a--_--- Tuchfeld, Janice, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. ..l.o. ian nina Tucker, W. L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... .....oc i. i a olieoa Tucker, Wendell P., Superintendent District Industrial Home School (colored). .__._...- Tudor, Clinton G., General Land Office .... Tugwell, Rexford G.: Assistant Secretary of Agriculture... Administrator, Resettlement Adminis- POLIO c 00 5h cuir mis Sead im oo oh Sik So The National Emergency Council ___.__. Tulloss, S. B., General Accounting Office... Tumulty, J oseph P., Thomas Memorial TTT 0 EH I ims EL mo np AR as Tupper, Ernest A.: Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com- Central Statistical Board _____.______..._. Turlington, Edgar, Special Mexican Claims HR EERE Re RA Turner, Bolon B., Board of Tax Appeals... Turner, Kelly, office of Secretary of the Senate... arena. duns Turner, W. L., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection... ..cocioni = CT Clayion E., office of Secretary of the Tate ye L., National Recovery Admin- ARR RL SA SER AR Tuttle, Arthur S., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works... ____.__.___. Twony, Sines F., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- POIation. ae. cena ded Tydings, "Niliard E., The Interparliamen- try Union. ie in iinet Tyler, Harry Walter, Library of Congress. -- Tyler, Col. Max C., Board of Engineers for Riversand Harbors... _(..-oc-—--2o. Tyler, Paul M., Bureau of Mines_.___....._. Tyrer, Arthur J., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection... ___..._.. Ummel, J. R., the Alaska Railroad._.._.._..__ Underwood, Harry L., assistant United States attorney. soa i ni i iain. h. Underwood, Joe, House document room... Underwood, Lt. Col. Jean R., Army Medical RTT ere a ie radia Lame dined Ll iam ay Underwood, Oscar W., Jr., Claims Conven- tions, United States and Mexico. _.__.___. Underwood, Thomas L., captain of the guard, Government Printing Office Unger, Stig M. A., Swedish Embassy.._..-. Unzicker, Willard E., Reconstruction Fi- nance Corporation SI Cab EC es Updike, Frank C., office of Secretary of the Interior =r on anna Ee CASTILE Rb Upshaw, Frank B., Home Owners’ Loan BREA UE Ne Ra a Urafia, Dr. Rubén, Pan American Sanitary LT eee nN ie Ra nl ie Urrutia, Claudio, Venezuelan Legation. __._ Uttley, Clinton B., office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster General... _____..... Utz, E. J., Soil Conservation Service... __.- Uys, Johan K., Union of South Africa Lega- 544 356 354 337 360 365 310 544 255 226 373 368 362 227 267 309 324 339 325 392 260 308 351 268 552 360 321 301 363 356 5563 314 334 v Yollanes, William R., office of Secretary of Vance, AEE , Library of Congress... Van Deman, Ruth, Bureau of Home Eco- Vandenberg, Arthur H.: Interparliamentary Union... .._.._.. Joint Committee on Printing____________ van der Wyck, Jonkheer H. M., eas Tiree de a BN en Van Devanter, Willis: Associate Justice United States Supreme Court (biograph United States Supreme Court Building Commission... reonrresnsrrearenesadt Washington National Monument Soci- Van Die. D. L., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine np amr em EERO Sti Vandiver, J. L., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works. ........ -ccesine. Vandover, G. C., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration SE ree Sh Aer oe ERE Se ct Van Duzer, William A., District director of vehicles and traffic. ...c.ce-soeoidanac dane Van Evera, H. Hawley, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation 8 De BE Sot et rm oe A wh Yon Fossan, Ernest H., Board of Tax Ap- Van Fossen, J. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve SYSlom. orice van Haersma de With, Jonkheer H. M., Netherlands Legation... mmo ueeswentwewe Van Nuys, Frederick: Senate Office Building Commission. ____ George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Coubminin Are Sh Ei sr Awa Rea Ee eu vated States Constitution Sesquicen- tennial Commission... .cccinnaionina Van Orsdel, Josiah A., associate justice, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biography) ...._... Van Tine, H. M., secretary White House News Photographers Association. ....__... Varela, J., Jr., Uruguayan Legation Vaughan, Lt. Col. William W., Army Med- Je CONter. .o sets round de Re thts Jonna Vaughn, Merrill, office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. ..... Lococo nvninaocoaa Vézquez-Treserra, Francisco, Mexican Em- Ln ae Pe ee Ga Veitch, F. P.: : Bureau of Chemistry and Soils. «cvoeeeen Food and Drug Administration. ___._.___ Vermeule, Cornelius C., Jr., Federal Emer- gency Administration of Public Works... Vernon, Clinton D., United States attorney’s Vest, George B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... co... deena ri Veverka, Dr. Ferdinand, Czechoslovakian NR EDL ee See er Ea Rs Victory, John F., National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics SR PRE Ia Ml Vidal, Eugene L.: Bureau of Air Commerce... __.__.._.__ National Advisory Committee for Aero- NANCE oo. om orem we Seed reins ne gw Ars Vidal, Maj. José, Spanish Embassy _ __._____ villa, Erasto M., Argentine Embassy... _____ Villa, Floyd A., "Federal a. Admin- istration of Public Works en ER HE DBS Se Villmoare, Ed. S., secretary to Senator Clark. Vincent, M. D., National Recovery Adminis- tration Spyies ee a en AE Academy... Ee Ee rr re TERR ar Vint, Thomas C., National Park Service... Vipond, Kenneth C., Civil Service Commis- 743 Page 267 227 226 636 553 331 332 744 ya Dro, Lt. Gen. Friedrich, German Vora i "A., Bureau of the Public HeallService nite oun naira wnt aa on er Dr. Sigurd, Finnish Lega- Ww alan, Mrs. Thomas H., Congressional Hom Wadstod, Otto, Danish minister.___________. Wadsworth, Eliot, American National Red ‘Waesche, Commander R. R., the Coast UBT.» oss Eo Ps Sie Ss Sn i een ‘Wagner, J. Henry, Immigration and Natural- ization Service... coc cunn 0il NEN ZL ‘Wagner, W. H., Immigration and Naturaliza- tion Servies. ... caoonan lol UH 000 Wahly, William H., assistant District corpo- PAtion Counsel: cui. cocina Hm ‘Wainwright, Rear Admiral John D., Office of Naval Operations... ace cecnnin duncan lai Waldron, Martin R., Jr., Capitol Police..... ‘Walker, Lt. Col. Chas. A., office of the Chief of Ordnance. Fut no eRe Walker, Ernest P., National Zoological Park. ‘Walker, Francis, Federal Trade Commis- ‘Walker, J. Ben, Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors Walker, Dn A., Federal Communications Commission... 00. sl bol loo SEE ‘Walker, P. H., Bureau of ena ma Rt Walker, Robert H., House post office... ‘Wallace, Benjamin B., United States Tariff Commission Wallace, Henry A.: Secretary of Agriculture (biography)..__. Chairman Migratory Bird Conservation Cominiggionti no J oy i Central Statistical Committee. _..._..... Federal Surplus Relief Corporation... Commodity Credit Corporation_______.. The National Emergency Counecil_______ National Resources Committee... ‘Wallace, Virgil P., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works..____________ Wallace, William L., Joint Committee on In- ternal Revenue Taxation _________________ Waller, Clifford E., Bureau of the Public Health'Service. ool. Lt 0 Walravens, Gérard, Belgian Embassy... Won Arthur, Federal Housing Adminis- EE A I St Sl i eh No in Mt So ‘Walsh, David I., Joint Committee on Veter- ‘Walsh, John W., National Mediation Board_ Walsh, T. Gillespie, assistant corporation COUNSOl i a ER Base Walsh, V. H., Federal Emergency Adminis- tration'of Public Werks... 1 > 2 ‘Walter, Jane A., Senate Committees on Com- Walter, R ‘Walters, Theodore A., First Assistant Secre- tary of the Interior a aa ‘Warburton, C. Office of Secretary of Agriculture... .... Director, Extension Service.._._._.._.._.. Ward, Frank X., office of Secretary of State. ‘Ward, Vera: Secretary to Senator McAdoo. -cccmaa-- Senate Committee on Patents.___......_ Warfield, William A., Freedmen’s Hospital ‘Warner, Edward P., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics... ___.____ ‘Warner, Glen R., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection... evo Page 303 546 323 358 545 Congressional Directory Warner, Paul A.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board___._____ Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation 0... 0.0. iOS Warren, Charles, National Training School for BoysUio ld coodin na ha Isl Jha Warren, Kathleen, Senate Committee on Patents 030 L000 00 a dotnnainds ‘Warren, Lee G., Tennessee Valley Authority. ‘Warren, Lindsay C., United States Roanoke Colony Commission oe oot or Wasserman, Max J., Resettlement Adminis- tration... JU Lol JISIG0A TGs J a eh Wathen, Albert L., Bureau of Indian A ffairs__ Watkins, Charles’ L., office of Secretary of Senate. ...... Tor LO onto Divs Watson, Rear Admiral Adolphus E., Naval Examining Board. .-.o--ncioemeaeeaasa bt Watson, Charles T., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works...» 02 nif Watson, Robert B., Puerto Rico Reconstruc- tion Administration RRB BERR Watt, John B., District fire department_____ Watt, Rear Admiral R. M., Compensation nomiegss JL RO. ORE LIROaen Wl URL Weaver, A. J. S., Agricultural Adjustment AQministrofion. cue, mes. ood 0 Lond IIE dig H. B., Official Reporter, House_..___ Weaver, Joseph B., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection BE PERE REAR Weaver, William A., Electric Home and Farm Authority... --.. 00 S00 Jos Weaver, Woodrow, House document room _ Webb, Charles 3 ., secretary to Senator Home Owners’ Loan Corporation________ Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. ccucninercirmpnsanyspmds Jrehh, Capt. Ulys R., Navy Medical Center_ Webb. W. H., the wn Guard..--.-20 Wore Margaret D., United States attor- ney’soffice. 00 0 USE 0 LE k ‘Weber, Stewart M., office of Second Assistant Postmaster General ._______________________ Weber, William, chief clerk, Weather Bureau. Wedel-Heinen, Erik, Danish Legation......_ ‘Wegman, Leonard J., Capitol police..___.___ ‘Weickert, Edward L., Jr., office of the Door- 4 gs SE TOR i elle ER Ril Weightman, R. Hanson, Weather Bureau._._ ‘Weintal, Edward, Polish Embassy... ‘Weise, E. E., office of Panama Canal ______.___ Weiss, J. H., Civil Service Commission_______ Welch, Howard S., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... _-_.______________ Welch, J. F., Bureau of Insular Affairs. ____._ Welles, Sumner, Assistant Secretary of State. Welliver, Edward M., assistant District corporationcounsel...... ooo... 0. Wells, C. A., District fire department. _______ ‘Wells, Capt. Chester H., Columbia Hospital for Women, = oi imcBuns 55 ndoredEnnm Wels 1, E., Jr., Commodity Credit Corpora- Wore: Kathryn B., Railroad Retirement LET Barkeep eS eae eS oh or io Wells, O. V., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- minietration. on ae Welsh, Eugene C., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works. .-...._.—... Wenchel, J. P., office of the Solicitor....._.__ Wenrich, Charles C., office of the First As- sistant Postmaster General... ________ Wentzel, Nelson B., office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General. ._..._--.___ Won Mrs. Theodore B., Congressional AD Re 378 403 369 328 Indwrdual Index Wesley, Marvin, Public Debt Service... West, Charles, Under Secretary of the Inte- rior Department. Caio Got A FE dion West, Vernon E., principal assistant District corporation counsel ‘Westbrook, Lawrence: En Emergency Relief Administra- joni EMV EG eT LSE ‘Works Progress Administration. ._....__ Wes ver, Brig. Gen. Oscar: ° he Aeronautical Board... ___ These of Aircraft Production._________ ‘Wetmore, Alexander: Smithsonian Institution... ..__._.____ National Museam:....._...... 20.0... JIC Wetmore, James A., Acting Supervising Architect of the Treasury... _________ ‘Wetzel, George B., Bureau of the Census_.___ Weyerbacher, Commander Ralph D., Honal Advisory Committee for Aeronau- Wieser Col. Arthur M., United States Sol- diers’ H ‘Whaley, Ben Scott, Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate - SRI TT 20H 300 GLH Whaley, Richard S., judge, Court of Claims (biography Whalin, harios V., Bureau of Agricultural ‘Whayne, Robert C., House post office________ ‘Wheat, Alfred A., chief justice, District Su- preme Court. -— oc ano a iene ‘Wheat, Joseph H., Board of Surveys and Maps of the Federal Government__________ ‘Wheeler, Katherine, House Committee on Agriealinre. oo Li Uo LAGE i ‘Wheeler, Leslie A., Bureau of Agricultural FCOROTHES: ot ceria i niin eee mn ao oe Wheeler, W. A., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NOMICRE corn fain inn asnne Arn sl ada ‘Whelan, Charles, Department of Justice_.--_ Whelan, William M., Jr., House post office... Whitcomb, Eben M., United States Tariff Commission, 0 iu. di ei ‘White, Flossie, Bureau of Fisheries_..__._____ ‘White, Harry D., office of Secretary of the PORE Y oii curs hima ie iw mms ‘White, James A.: Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Senate Special Silver Committee. _____. ‘White, Joseph L., Office of Federal Coordi- nator of Transportation. oC. 00 0 0 ‘White, Dr. Lawrence W., Bureau of Indian EEL Ee EL a Sp pr Sige ‘White, Leonard D.: Civil Service Commission Central Statistical Board. ___-_._..__ ‘White, Mastin G., office of the Solicitor_.._. White, Ross, Tennessee Valley Authority.... White, Wallace H., Jr. : The Interparliamentary WUnlon S00 al George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission... 0 enone White, Walter, National Recovery Admin- SStratlon zo 0s a aes Louie Cian ‘White, William Allen, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... ___._..._ White, William A., M. D., superintendent, St. Elizabeths Hospital... =... zn... Wiis, W. B., Food and Drug Administra- i) ie ae aE etna MS na White, W. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Tid Che © ent LEO LS White, Wilford L., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce EL a UE LA, Whitehead, Robert F., Patent Office... Whitehorne, E. W., chief clerk, Bureau of Yardsand Docks. Lr lL adieu Whitehurst, Elmore, House Committee on the JUGHe aD Yo oo oe a ee ean Wlitopnient, H. C., District engineer depart- Whiteman, Marjorie M., office of Secretary Of State. a a eee 371 371 350 310 354 354 304 337 350 358 254 390 330 261 392 351 337 339 Whiteside, Garrett: Secretary to Senator Caraway Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills..____ ‘Whitestone, Louis L., assistant United States attorney Whiting, Heien G., Senate Committee on Public Lands pnd ‘Survey: Boks atom fon Whitson, Virginia, House Committee on War Claims. colitis. 10 5.0 Whittington, Mrs. William M., Congres- Slomal Clubs LE I a Whyte, C. R., District engineer department... Wick, James R., Official Reporter, Senate____ Wickard, C. R., Agricultural Adjustment Administration. coteimecoiicseaidaild ing Wicker, John J., Jr., Home Owners’ Loan SIRT bn) Ee Se CE ee SRR CURL ‘Wideman, Frank J., Department of Justice__. Wiener, Frederick Bernays, office of Secretary of the Inferior: cl suse dans slinee Wight, A. E., Bureau of Animal Industry... Wijkman, Per, Swedish Legation_.._________ Wilbur, Gene, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce... ----.Sioiiearl Saun 0s ‘Wilburn, C. C., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- porationsuaiii sald Jo) ain i ii Wilby, Col. Francis B., Mississippi River CommisSlon.. oceania anna n ads Wilcox, Sidney W.: Bureau of Labor Statistics... occveeeooo Central Statistical Board... _._.___. Wilder, A. D., Federal Emergency Admin- istration of Public Works... .___..... Wilding, William G., assistant District auditor. ira ad nad I Dhol is Wiley, Robert L.., House document room... Willes Howard V., United States attorney’s officio us onl uma i ian an Wilkinson, F. D., Howard University....._. Wilkinson, Garnet C., District Board of Dduealion. ccc ooaoadeics savas ob oun Willcox, Alanson W., office of the Secretary ol the Treasary. c.count nib iio ‘Williams, Aubrey: Federal Relief Administration.__..._._. National Youth Administration... ‘Works Progress Administration... .____ Williams, Clarence L., office of the chief post- office inspector La erp age Sd LS RE Williams, Fount Wade, Home Owners’ Loan TT TRE £11 A171 Re CI a SD on SR Williams, Francis C., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works_..____.___ Williams, Martha W., United States Tariff Commissions Loita oh. Joi isiiebe hint Williams, R. C., Bureau of the Public Health Serviees Lai oui loiiui nn nS E Williams, Brig. Gen. Richard P., head- quarters Marine Corps. - coo occcecnodooan Williams, Robert P., House Committee on Appropriations hur ello Saiiedadiii an Williams, Roy W., House folding room______ Williams, Thomas S., judge, Court of Claims (blograply)o tiie ics Se alin Liana. Williamson, Dr. F. Y., District police sur- FEONE Sout aa ie SO Williamson, Roger, Senate Committee on COMINOICE: 0 a re Ott Sta HE Willige, Augustus, District board of assistant assessors of real estate. ooo ooo Willingham, Harris E., Federal Alcohol Administration. ooo sect ines a= Wilma William F., Library of Con- Wills, Joseph E., Senate Press Gallery...___. ‘Wilson, Alfred 8. R., Home Owners’ Loan CoTPOTAlION novo mmm mmm oS Em mi Wilson, Bayard C., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. oon ie aes os new mmm eit Wilson, Dr. Prentiss, Columbia Hospital for hes EE a Er a aes Wilson, Frances, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post R Wilson, Frank P., The National Archives_._ 261 260 267 635 255 376 746 ‘Wilson, James W., Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat § Inspection Ian nr rte Wilson, J. C., Reconstruction Finance Cor- Dorion hn Wilson, Lee, Jr., House Committee on Elec- tions No. Wilson, Milburn L., assistant to the Secre- tary of Agriculture. Bvt dL 2 When M. Hayes, secretary to Senator Hast- Wilson, P . St. J., Bureau of Public Roads_- Wien Peter M. ., office of Secretary of Win: Thomas M., State Department_____ Wilson, T'. Webber, ‘Department of Justice.-. Whoa William Jerome, Library of Con- Wo, John G.: Social Security Boayd. stu Barlgausire The National Emergency Council ._..... Wingfield, B. Magruder, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System_____________ Winkler, Edward, Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection. ____________. Winship, Blanton, Governor of Puerto Rico. Winslow, Dr. Emma A., Children’s Bureau. Winston, Carey, Home Owners’ Loan Corpo- CTR OTe ate Sout ans fips 0 Lo a0 Winston, Robert A., Soil Conservation Serv- Vitor, Henry J., Federal Emergency Ad- mgraaon of Public Worksite ol 2. 2 Wire, C. Raymond, Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of PublicWeorks..._ I... Wirth, Conrad L., National Park Service_ ‘Wise, Arthur O., District actuary... ‘Wiseman, Henry N., Bureau of the Budget___ Wisner, G. F., Federal Communications Commission... -. Lar Cl ilanis Witt, Edgar E., Special Mexican Claims COMMISSION nna onnee manson nha ra RAE Witthoeft-Emden, Rear Admiral Robert, Gornan BMDassy... meena om Se ia Wixcey, Earl B., secretary to Senator Thomas of Utah... i a bi ah Baile 5 Tanti, Wixon, Irving F., Immigration and Naturali- gation Servieol LLL Io Uo Sanyal ual ‘Woehlke, W. V., Bureau of Indian Affairs... ‘Wolcott, Clinton L., Patent Office Wold, Ansel, Joint Committee on Printing, Orn Ee Re A Br SEA a TO AT ‘Wold, Henry, Forest Service. oo... LL Spas National Labor Relations Wor 'G. P., Bureau of Agricultural Engi- neeringl Nl io ll Soi TN Ray Woll, RE ihew, Territorial Expansion Me- morial COMMISSION -_- - — moo Wolman, Abel, Federal Emergency Adminis- {ration of PublicWorks........._coolos iio ‘Wollner, Herbert J., office of Secretary of the PICASULY wa on SL 0 TERE SL bah aman ‘Wood, Arthur D., Department of Justice_._-- Wood, Henry G., office of Legislative Coun- sel, ee I ar ae es Wood, John W., United States attorney’s Wood, Will S., Bureau of Narcotics... Woodall, Emery J., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation... .--—.= 35-2722 Woodburn, James A., George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission Bs 7 Sm Bh pu Woodfill, Web, Federal Trade Commission... Woodring, Harry H., The Assistant Secretary Ol War. i. Fr UL enn, Sa Sav. Woodraff, Roy O., National Forest Reserva- tion CoMMISEION save cicadas Woodruff, W. W., Tennessee Valley Author- a Albert W., House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds — Page 342 339 226 333 301 312 256 393 303 346 Congressional Directory Page Woodside, Robert G., American Battle Monuments Commission... cee__ ‘Woodson, Urey, Alien Property Bureau...... ‘Woodward, Ellen S Federal ents Relief Administra- ‘Works Progress Administration. __...__ Woooward, Ray L., Civil Service Commis- Wendy) Arthur E., United States Tariff COMMISSION. «on cw wens Fol Se Sd Woolard, Logan L., District Fire Department. Woolley, Herbert C. M. D., St. Elizabeths Hospitalooo cot Jaaair dh ooo 8 innate baw Non Col. James B., office of Chief of Infant; ny Sani ari ite stem tls Sannann bh ak Wetton, J. H., National Recovery Adminis- ation. San Sd Boa HR reds de be Ln aan Worden, Virginia, Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce... coo... Wortham, Harry A., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public Works hadi en it Worthley, L. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... o-oo. ooo tinnae Wrede, Edward Carl, House Committee on Election of President, ete. ______._._. Wrenn, Augustus C., Bureau of Engineering. Winn, E. H., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- bi Wright, Frank C., Federal Emergency Ad- ministration of Public WOrKS. ... Lc simniane Wright, Frederick E., National Academy of Bolenees oi. LC hie Wright, Henry H., chief clerk, Government Printing OMiee:. ooo saon a srvninvess nals Wright, J. C., Office of Education.__________ Wright, Lt. Commander Jerauld, office of Secretaryof the Navy... i... i. i... ‘Wright, Joseph, Senate Committee on Inter- state I OIITII00: si haan re sons oe sie ing officer a Ep rase ne EE Wright, Dr. Orville, National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronanties. . .-----ccecanmaauan Wrong, Hume, Canadian Legation_.._..._.. Wyatt, Walter, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.__________._____._. Wyein, Nathan C., District engineer depart- TT ARR SB Er he SRR SEE STL Te Wylie, Alexander, Interstate Commerce COMNIISEION..... i i bm Bd hs mei i fe i Wyman, Henry C., office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster General. _________________. ‘Wyman, Capt. H. L., Joint Economy Board. Wynne, Cyril, Office of Secretary of State... ‘Wynne, John S., Bureau of Air Commerce... Y Yaden, James G., Civil Service Commission. Yakimichev, Alexander Mikhailovich, So- viet Republics Embassy... _. Yamaguchi, Commander Bunjiro, Japanese IN DASEY cv = = ms mie he be ELIS LF Yamagnchi, Capt. Tamon, Japanese Em- ASS ends Rader Ae Sm ee SA Re aT Yamamoto, Kiichiro, Japanese Embassy... Yardley, John L. M., Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works... Yarnall, Floyd L., office of Bureau of Ac- COUNTS..cr iim Si eb BS A Smee Yates, F. L., General Accounting Office... Yesim, A. Muzafler, Turkish Embassy.. ---.- Yingling, Raymund T., office of Secretary of DODGE ee York, Capt. Robert E., assistant to Engineer Commissioner, District of Columbia.-.._-. Yoshizawa, Seijiro, Japanese Embassy_._.__. Yost, Charles W., office of Secretary of State. 262 318 350 Indwidual Index Young, F. J., office of the Doorkeeper..._.._. Young, Stanley P., Bureau of Biological SULYEY. sea a Young, Thomas B., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation... sieve esa awn Young, W. H., Younger, J. Arthur, Federal Home Loan BanleBowd. = ca iain Copii] ERR Ie ET el te ee Zadeikis, Povilas, Lithuanian Legation..._._ Zahm, Albert F., Library of Congress. ._..._ Zander, Henry G., Jr., Home Owners’ Loan TD LE de a am Se Zannelli, Augustus, General Land Office. ... Zapf, L. C., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic LTT Te ee ee eal SSR Zayas, Juan Bruno, Cuban Embassy._______. bley, J. S., District engineer department. _ Zens, Lennah Curtiss, Bureau of Home Eco- Zepp, Christopher M., Bureau of the Census. Zimmer, Verne A., Division of Labor Stand- Zimmerman, Harvey J., Bureau of the Cen- BUS. ir a ae Zimmerman, Raymond R.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board_.._.... Home Owners’ Loan Corporation.._..__. Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporalion. iu. oni csr ones Zimmerman, William, Jr., Bureau of Indian Zoltowski, Janusz, Polish Embassy.__.__._____ #yo, Lt. Comdr. Eiitiroo, Japanese Em- Tr hn a eC is En i } i I! i OT Ay EE ET ET pr LN