SR ONGRESSION: Ly, DIRECTORY 77th Congress January | 2 mession G0 Adda 77" CONGRESS, 22: SESSION. sets ves a De 3 cet BEGINNING JANUARY 3.18422, 2%, 1.33%: $3 6 3 is HE — PS 52 oo ¢%e ° SR iee wty 0 coe °e : e%e?® 6 ®g0 » 30 22 0% OFFICIAL HHI CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS FIRST EDITION CORRECTED TO December 19, 1941 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1942 trl A ave » aTPat . oq ® Gn ® » 05Reha °C . . a :] . AH Ges sacs Soribiune "W . ., te oe “_ ® 0* ®, da . a. 8 -* “th 2d ee "! ta : En -e : . “a hy HS . Setar » » eo 28 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING By S. A. LOKEY Office of Congressional Directory, Basement of the Capitol Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 238 unless otherwise indicated All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest = Copies of this publication Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C., may be procured from the U. S. Government Printing at $1.25 per copy (cloth) Office II NOTES The following changes have occured in the membership of the Seventy-seventh Congress since the election of November 5, 1940: Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in SENATORS : Ernest W. Gibson, Jr.l___| July 3, 1940 Ernest WwW. Gibson, Vi = a we ame eT ree June 20, 1940 nr wt ee re {as D. Aiken ; Fos Sade Jan. 10, 1941 Key Pittman Nev. cova Nov.:10,1940 1..... = Berkeley L. Bunker 1.__| Dec. 12,1940 Matthew M. Neely, W. Va Jan. 12,1941 | Joseph Rosier _________ May 14, 1941 John E. Miller, Ark. i _.....2 Mar. 31, 1941 Lloyd Spencer?!_________ Apr. 2,1941 Andrew Jackson Hous-June 2,1941 Morris Sheppard, Tex.c....ic...-9, 1941 ton 1 4 W. Lee O’Daniel 5______ Aug. 4,1941 Pat Harrison, Miss. oo... = June 22, 1941 ames 1_____ 30, {i O. Eastland June 1941 Wall Doxey et. = Sept. 29, 1941 Alva M. Lumpkin 1 7___ July 22,1941 James: EF. Byrnes,:S.1C..__..____. Roger C. Peace 1________ Aug. 6,1941 Burnet R. Maybank 8___ Nov. 51941 Alva B. Adams, Colo. .........-. REPRESENTATIVES Sam C. Massingale, 7th Okla_____ 17,1941 Victor Wickersham _____ Apr. 14, 1941 Kenneth F. Simpson, 17th N. Y___ 25, 1941 Joseph Clark Baldwin___ Mar. 19, 1941 Walter W. Bankhead, 7th Ala____ Carter Manasco__.______ July 3,1941 William D. Byron, 6th Md_______ Katharine E. Byron_.___ June 11, 1941 Colgate W. Darden, Jr.,2d Va____ Winder R. Harris________ Apr. 15,1941 Pius L. Schwert, 42d N. Y_______ John GC. Butler.......... May 5, 1941 Alonzo D. Folger, 5th N. C______ JohnH. Folger... June 20, 1941 M. Michael Edelstein, 14th N. Y_ Arthur G. Klein________ Aug. 17,1941 Stephen Bolles, 1st Wis__________ Sept. 16, 1941 Albert G. Rutherford, 15th Pa___ Dec. 4,1941 Edward T. Taylor, 4th Colo__.__ ‘Wall Doxey, 2d Miss_____.__.-___. Lee E. Geyer, 17th Calif_________ Oct. 11,1941 Lawrence J. Connery, 7th Mass__ Oct. 19,1941 J. Joseph Smith, 5th Conn_______ 1 Appointed by Governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected. 2 Elected Nov. 5, 1940 8 Was reelected for term beginning Jan. 3, 1941. 4 Died June 26, 1941, while serving as an appointee. t Elected June 28, 1941. 6 Elected Sept. 23, 1941. 7” Died Aug. 1, 1941, while serving as an appointee. 8 Elected Sept. 30, 1941. t=NON r—rm vw wv v 1942vv JANUARY JULY Ono ANN Sun| M Tu| W Th| F |Sat|Sun| M |Tu| W|Th| F |Sat Omno~ —AN ~+r—oouwn NOONO — Alm NANO NOONO—QAam FEBRUARY AUGUST NF —0— AN 6 7 20:3 13 14 910 19 | 20 | 21 1 6 17 30 | 31 MARCH SEPTEMBER 1 2 3 Hol Sr. 8 9 1 0 1 12 13 14 6 7 1 5 1 6 1 7 18 19120 | 21 13] 14 22123124 125|26|27|28 2021 29 | 30 | 31 APRIL OCTOBER 6 7 1 13 14 1 16 | 1 19 | 20 | 21 2 23 | 2 5|26|27|28 [2930] 31 MAY NOVEMBER 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 1211813 14 15 16 19120 | 21 19 | 20 | 21 22 | 23 22°12 3 2627 | 28 29 | 30 JUNE DECEMBER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. 8 910 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 5126] 27 | 20 | 21 2212324125126 27 128 | 29 | 30 | 31 Iv N00AN NON — —r—Qalm —— CONTENTS (For List of Individuals A Page Academy of Sciences, National . __________.______ 406 Accounting Office, General. ____.______._________ 402 Accounts, Bureau of (Post Office Department)__ 337 Addressesof-Members... .oiuiiti. bo 803 Adjutant General of the Army, The_.__________ 327 Administrations: Agricultural Adjustment....i af 357 Bonneville Power ct rca mnrneieenEe 352 CivilAeronauties Cate =. 371 Commodity. Exchange... i...i... 360 Barr Credit at oi ade tt cent ea re 361 FArm Security ....ou. a cnsames waswen ahs Sesmas 362 Foderal HOUSING. o.oo. i.e mo nshor 388 space 00d ana Dlg... aceoniaiat cnn. J 397 Rend-Lease. ooo tirSL Te 314 National Y ont... ce dos ch coeats So sun dent sia 396 RE Re a EV Ee 352 RE Ee SanET ET 314 Public. Buildings. . cc... oi aaa di nfm rant 400 Buble Ross. aseomen Canis 400 PUbHC Works. coe th. isd cone R Sa be enawtt-hen 400 Puerto Rico Reconstruction. ___.__________._ 352 Rural Electrification... .aeei se mes antasines 364 Surplus: Marketing... oc. os boca alo: 366 Neterangl. i... = roe be denbhdaiant 417 Contact offices at Capitol... ____._.___. 277 ork Projects. eaeide ats aa 399 Administrative Branch (Mines)_______.___.____. 349 Administrative Division (Treasury)_._______.__. 334 Administrative Office of the United States DIoh ee Le 434 Administrator, Office of the, Federal Works A CONICY sr it bie Bn anti Tai bs 399 Aeronautical Board, the... oo = ci ..oa 379 Aeronautics: Administration, Civil. oo 371 ..oceeecaace5 Board; Civil. rae ate La 3 371 Bureawol. = oo oie oerse 342 National Advisory Committee for... _._._.__.__. 406 Agencies: 3 Federal Loan... dove.snats. Sas 386 denen Federal Security. i. viicasa fT as 395 Federal Works. oossnass@oonnessali 399 vi. ied Agricultural Adjustment Administration. ______ 357 Agricultural Defense Relations, Office of _______ 357 Agricultural Economics, Bureau of. _____._______ Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering, Bureau THEE ee ee Sa i Aaa 358 Agricultural Marketing Service. .._..____________ 359 Agrieultare, Department _c ... 354 of._ DULICS.Of eves it nit soos Bae as SEL Frc Mrs 594 Agricultural Adjustment Administration_____ 357 Agricultural Marketing Service. _....-__..__.__ 359 see Index on p. 815) Agriculture, Department of—Continued. Bureau of— : Agricultural. Economics... ... oi. i-oti iio... Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering____ 358 Animal Industry. aa a 359 Dalry InAuslry a in ani ols are 360 Entomology and Plant Quarantine. __._____ 360 Home Economies... 4 coo iati earns tiin 363 Plantiindusiry-... co re 364 Commodity Credit Corporation. __..__________ 360 Commodity Exchange Administration._______ 360 Extension: Services ns divi cucten uv doriiaoe 356 Farm Credit Administration... _.._.._._._____. 361 Farm Security Administration ._____________ 362 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. ._______ 362 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation___.______ 362 Porest Service: Sood Soca rain 362 FADPARY nits col ead all ent bast ni cena 357 Office of— Agricultural Defense Relations_____________ 357 Budget and Finance o-ootad aa 355 cd CC. CL Activities: «oui ris nesta cite 357 Experiment Stations... coz. vue udm cmain 356 Foreign Agricultural Relations. ____________ 356 Informafiont doe roe ioc or guns 356 Land Use Coordination... coi ia 355 Personnels: oni sour niaud aniline ood 355 Plant and Operations. ...2. Loci cotiooe.on 355 BONGHOL: of rl er cede snip abled abate ois 357 Rural Electrification Administration__________ 364 SoiliConservation: Service... .coeeeeoaenar= 365 Surplus Marketing Administration ._________ 366 Air Accidents, Select Committee to Investigate. 210 Air Corps, Army, Office of the Chief of the______ 331 Aircraft Production, Office of the Director of... 331 Air Forces, Office of the Chief of the Army_____ 331 Alrlineg ticket offen. . o.oo cinninnHee 276 in AlrStation, Naval... Cc c. _.. So ovary 343 Alaskan International Highway Commission____ 235 Alaska Ballvead-. Dod cata se odse 351 ativan Alaska Road Commission... soci to union 352 Alley Dwelling Authority for the District of Columbia. i. Sc oseuady ad oi Siu 379 Dutlesofi.. oc cedinsdalonta. dotstaltde ol 621 Alphabetical list: Delegates and Resident Commissioners_._____ 154 Representatives. .. 0. casein ih snr dit fusion 147 Senators. cin ni ee ere a le SE 145 American Battle Monuments Commission. ____ 379 Dutiesofi. cooreR nea 622 American National Red Cross... o.oo... 380 American Samoa (Island Governments) ._______ 339 Animal: Industry, Buresi of........-o tio 359 Congressional Directory Page Anthracite Emergency Program, Special Com-mittee to Study:the. . ... .. ... .... 210 Apportionment of Representatives by States, ander each census: =o oo a iiooiooenl 258 Arehitect of the Capitol... vu vincdaaa 275 oo. BERATED Se Ree lee 521 Archives Counell, National... oo oo oo ooo 407 Archives, The ...cc.cestat 406 National cnn Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission. 381 Army Air Forces, Office of the Chief of the_____ 331 Army and Navy Munitions Board. ____________ 381 Army Indusirial’'Gollege, ____ the. 332 Army Medical Center... oan sac ml2 00 328 Army Medical Museum and Library... ______ 328 Army War College, the. c=. 332 Art: Preov Gallery of on. oo oo Bole mle wad 414 National Gallery ofc. 0. oe dasa 414 Smithsonian Gallery of. ee meee 415 Arts: Commission-ef ihe =. oa 383 National Collection of Fine... ______ _....._... 414 Assignment of rooms in the Capitol: Basement floor and terrace... ______.__.____ 285 Aallery Hoorn Ss hr ei a 291 Ground floor fad ana t 287 Principal floor 10 i a arena 289 Assignments to committees: Representatives and Delegates... ____________ 211 Senntorsss oo dh TE ha ahr 186 Association, Federal National Mortgage _______ 388 Astrophysieal Observatory... ooo oe 415 Attending physician at the Capitol _____________ 275 Attorney General, biography of ________________ 333 Attorney’s Office, United States. _._____________ 434 Auditorium Commission, Capital ______________ 233 Authority: Alley Dwelling, District of Columbia___._____ 379 Bleetric Bomeand . i. .o..C Farm... 387 Pennessee-Valley oir. oon. i stn 416 United States Housing... vee 401 B Bank Board, Federal Home Loan______________ 389 Bank, Expert-Tmport =. oc eel 391 Battle Monuments Commission, American_____ 379 Beach Bresion-Board. — olin i 329 0.0... Biographies: Attorney-General. co... ool SL Ui ia 333 Clerk of the House of Representatives________ 270 Justices of the— Court of Claims of the United States. ______ 430 Supreme Court of the United States._______ 423 United States Court of Appeals for the District of Colombia .sooca cilia i. 427 United States Court of Customs and Patent Appealgviii iia grin Ube sie 429 United States Customs Court______________ 432 Postmaster-General.. o-ooi ooo 335 President of the United States________________ 311 Secretary of— Agriculture... .. Loy BRO ag ons 354 Commieree 2 a a un 367 Interop. ciaceaeseadna nin dildo 00 346 abot it. Sl 373 Biographies—Continued. Secretary of—Continued. Page NYY ih na Wee 338 BONBLC ou ts wits m wimmam 263 LT Ee eae helo 317 PPCASMLY. odadR 321 se a EA on mo hoe 325 Secretaries to the President. __________________ 311 Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners..__._____._._.__.____ 3 Sergeant at Arms of the House ______________ 271 Sergeant at Arms of the Senate ______________ 266 Vice President of the United States___________ 3 Bituminous Cos Division = 350 Board of Visitors: Coast-Guard-Aeademy r= 1-7 = oowahl os 236 Military ACAACINY -... dinamo manana 236 Naval ACARI rr aaa nt 236 Boards: Aeronambieal tne bn 379 Civil-Aeronawtioss Zi Sa Je on gin bl ey 371 Compensation, Navy... a 342 Defense Communications...0, 0 = 312 Feonomie-Defense. in. no iyima = 315 Reonomy, Joint wana wonoe 405 Engineers for Rivers and Harbors____________ 329 Examination of Dental Officers, Navy________ 344 Examination of Medical Officers, Navy______ 344 Federal Home Loan Bank ___________________ 389 Poreign-Trade Zones a as 402 Goneral, NAVY fori r tnt ies i i ol ae 343 Governors, Federal Reserve System _______.__ 394 Putlesol at Re 655 ‘Hospitalization, Federal: "77 + = = 385 Indian Arts and Crafts. = ir 348 Interior Control'(Navy)...........=" = 343 Investigation and Research—Transportation . 381 Joint the mr als are 404 Library of Congress Trust Fund______________ 279 Maritime Laborerts ra tv 406 Medical Examiners and Naval Examining CMedieal) cre cL 343 Munitions, Army and Navy_________________ 381 National Archives Trust Fund_______________ 407 National Defense Mediation. ________..________ 314 National Labor Relations. ______.______._____ 408 National Mediation: 2 = 408 National Munitions Control__________________ 409 National Resources Planning_________________ 316 Naval‘Consulting Finre Lr 342 Naval Examining (Line) =. ~~ 343 Naval Examining (Marine Corps)._..__..______ 345 NoveliRetiving-ccc 2 0 a) ee 343 Parole (Prisons, uli 334 Treasmryy..-....~~ Railroad. Retirement. c== 411 Regents, Smithsonian Institution. ____________ 414 Social Seounily sR an tan 395 Supply Priorities and Allocations_____________ 315 Surveys and Maps, Federal _-_______________. 385 Tax Appeals, United States. __ =... 382 Putlegol arr a at 622 Vocational Education, Federal Advisory_.._.__ 396 Bond'and Spirits Division = 334 Bonneville Power Administration. _____________ 352 Botanic Garden, United States. __.___._________ 277 Contents VII Page Budget and Finance, Office of ._______._.___.___ 355 Budget, Bureau of the... coila ldo ci. 316 Duties of _____ 4 Simi Building Commission: House Office. oc sal aod sodpoatis ..........sca-233 Senafe OME. vii ve nso ad a Ia 0 OES 233 Buildings Administration, Public... _.____.__ 400 Bureaus: Accounts, Post Office Department. __________ 337 Accounts (Fiscal Service, Treasury). ...-o.._. 323 Aeronautics (INaVY)oueuih oocosa soo. 342 Agricultural Economies... ooo ooo... 358 Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering. ____ 358 American Ethnology. ....cococoiocunaincanan 414 Amal InAustrY. oo. edad. fsurinptinnps 359 Budget. oor iii iE aes Tae 316 IT AE a a a ee TY 368 OIIAren Sii F rtiere 374 Comptroller of the Currency. ooo. 322 Or rr Cr eh 322 Dolly INAUSILY coco caninestnt ona, nid 360 Engravincand Printing...oc ae..- ....= 324 Entomology and Plant Quarantine _.._.____. 360 Foreign and Domestic Commerce. ---.._..._. 368 Home Economics... ....cne---innecinroasdinsis 363 Internal Revenle. ..c.acenescbauinivantnrais 323 Investigation, Federal, Justice _____.._.....__ 333 Tabor Statistics. cee ceo So mmn tetra nnd 374 Marine Inspection and Navigation. .....__.._ 370 Medicine and nen znnmcen=es 342 SUTgerY....co-c.-Mines 349 Nn a eee 324 ET a EE a Se 322 National Guard... ..cimecrnmeanacs=seawnm=r 331 Navigation, Navy.. a 340 Oranonce, NOVY «i imuonaeneenmmanns msn 341 Pan American Sanitary. .— co...... 409 LE TY Ral ELTa aR Gn ee EE 364 Pong a i a RES 334 Public Debt (Fiscal Service, Treasury)-----._ 323 Reclamation ol ese aenoma aaa <--348 Er Ee A A ra EL PE JE RE 342 Standards Nations. aera eo 369 Supplies and Accounts. .eoeeeeeeeemeeeeeeee 342 Travel (Inferior) 7 0 or. ails 349 War Risk litigation 20 2 ra 334 Weather: or damm 371 Women, oo re LU ae te 375 ¥Yords'and Docks armaniam all 341 C Cabinet members, list of. 2H --310 Calendar oa eg I a Bo Rl 1v California Debris Commission _____._____._-_ 330 Canal, The Panama: 2 00 000 rie. 409 Capital Auditorium Commission....o...____ 233 Capitol: Airlinesticket office oo iiucnerc nana 276 Architect of the— Arehitect’s: Office... 0. Coa ol brauiagally 275 House Office Buildings. vce 275 Senate Office Building... 275 Basement floor and terrace of— Assignmentiof rooms Onl... mone ~mmmee io 285 Plagrami of UL CE aE 284 Capitol—Continued. Page Building, history and description of .._....___ 280 Gallery floor of— Assignment of rooms:on. ui oi ie on IE 291 Diagram.of........cactisiosoooiiad 290 tinge Ground floor of— Assignment of roomson._ ___________________ 287 Diagramofl. ..... his ..cosnZaohond 286 Grounds, Commission on Enlarging the______ 233 House Chamber, diagram of ____._____________ 296 Mackay Radio Telegraph Co__._____.______._. 276 Office of— Architect of ....... oo... lilo lis 275 Attending physielan_ oo...20 il ce: 275 Congressional Record... i.coniaiaiecJitics an 275 Officers of the— HOUSE... ... osm drs ii ot bis Waka SS BT i wd BE 270 Senate...... «+263 PoHEOL reas sehen a -275 Principal floor of— Assignment of rooms On «coo ooo. 289 Diagram of ______ _ 288 Railroad ticket office... ....commasebimmommnsmaa 276 Senate Chamber, diagram and seating Ce DT Be OT Ma a BE De ah 292-295 © dR ee ECi he 276 Pelephone exchange. reaieaans 276 Cavalry, Office of the Chief of... _____________ 326 CONUS BUT OO... eee or i a Rn i i i 368 Changes in membership of the Seventy seventh Congress... ol i aed n1 Chaplain of the House of Representatives_______ 270 Chaplainofthe'Senate. ._ .o--ciois 263 . rio Chaplains, Office of the Chiefof ._______________ 326 Chemical Warfare Service, Office of Chief of____ 331 Chemistry and Engineering, Bureau of Agri- ealtural 358 Chief Inspector, Post Office Department_______ 337 Chief of— 751s 0)oT Ren tl mud sient Re bl 331 corinne Army Air Forces a mR RS RS 331 LB as amesiladerkote nia esata Sad De no 326 BLT nT eemesesiaanesar aes Sli edo stn 326 Chemical Warfare Service. _.ocoooee oo. 331 Coa ATI or i neSe na 326 Bngineers 2 areneEne 329 ola AT Ory oo oremem Re meas 326 {EIET,Fr ar i ES, ie adele te Ri 328 BLEU Es os Fh A 326 Or Mace orere me tm 330 Chief Signal Officer, Office of the_._...__._.___. 330 Children’s Bureau: co soso 374 B080GY Circuit Courts of Appeals of the United States__ 426 Clty:pestioffice fics Sums i oS. pois 447 Civil Aeronautics Administration. _.....__.____ 371 Civil Aeronautics Board. ....ceummemeeemnndiinal 371 Civil Service Commission. . ova 382 Dutiesof. 00 a a TI 623 Contact office at Capitol. i... ........_...l. 277 Civil Service System, Special Committee to Investigates file 6. io ani did; 184 Civilian Conservation Corps. -cceeoccccccnao--397 Duties of. all di WL Jon A SRS 668 C. C. C. Activities, Office of (Agriculture)_.._._ 357 Civilian Defense, Office of. ____.-312 VIII Congressional Directory Page Claims, United States Court of ________________ 430 Classification, political, of Congress... ____...____ 142 Clerk, House of Representatives (biography).__.. 270 Clerks to House committees. _______._______.__.__ 273 Clerks to Senate committees... _.______________ 264 Club, the ,_______.--10_nie 384 Congressional 1.10 Coal Division, Bituminous ao ua 1. ianiny= 8 350 Goast and Geodetic Survey... .._c_Uiond] 369 Coast Artillery, Office of the Chief of .__________ 326 Coast Guard Academy, Board of Visitors to the. 236 Coast Guard (Headquarters), Navy____________ 340 Colleges: Army: Indastelnl.. eo a in 20 0S 332 ATI WOT sis vs in BBR LL BIT 5 332 Columbia Hospital for Women _________________ 383 Columbia Institution for the Deaf _____________ 397 Commerce Commission, Interstate. ____________ 404 Commerce, Department of. _ ___________________ 367 10 YEAH me et Se Ere SE 607 Bureau of— Foreign and Domestic Commerce___________ 368 Marine Inspection and Navigation_________ 370 Standards, Nationals. ja. 0-7 1p 369 Phe Census. i eanee 368 Civil Aeronautics Administration__.____._____ 371 Civil Aeronautics Board... ......._. 371 Coast and Geodetic Survey. __________________ 369 Inland Waterways Corporation_______________ 371 National Inventors’ Council ._______________ 372 Patent Ofce a mieten 370 AWARE Dy 1 VY Seis sn a ni i ll 371 Commissions: Aska Bond... a nm mE A 352 Alaskan International Highway. ____________ 235 American Battle Monuments___.____._________ 379 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. __...__.____ 381 Capital Auditor... oo rice dene eos =n 233 CIVIL SOYVICe oarnnn bk we 382 Employees’ Compensation, United States_..._ 384 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds.____._________ 233 Federal Communieations..........oeeeeeene... 385 Bedoral Power... cod or nen mine mt a 393 Bodera Prada... i nem en vr T= RE 398 Eine Aris ........... 383 Goethals Memorial___ =u 202 House Office Building... ...ccenvgaaeiers==> 233 International Boundary— United States, Alaska, and Canada_.._._.___ 403 United States and Mexico... __._._.._.._ 403 International Fisheries, United States and CNA... ies as rm eT wih 403 International Joinb. lion aaouii soi.Lic 403 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries_.._.____ 404 Interstate Commerce... io. i cooioiioasi lt 404 Maritimes cco Cussi vovihaaudbaainudus 405 sade Mental Health... ..... loli cages) skis. 433 Migratory Bird Conservation _______________ 235 Mount Rushmore National Memorial _______. 352 Muhlenberg Bicentennial ______. SB aaboeat od 239 National Capital Park and Planning ________ 408 National Forest Reservation__..______________ 234 National Historical Publications. ____________ 407 Public Utilities, District of Columbia________ 447 Securities and Exchange... ooooooooocooooo__ 411 Commissions—Continued. Page Senate Office Building. emceelo 00 ao 200 Signing of the Constitution, to Acquire a Painting of the... Seigiagay30 Smithsonian Gallery of Art... ___________ Tariff,:United States. li ..-eomuueaeaae1 Territorial Expansion Memorial ______________ Thomas Jefferson, Celebration of the Two- hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of. Thomas Jefferson Memorial ._.__________.____ Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor._______________ Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard 233 Committee assignments: Representatives oun on neem laai ain Bonaiorge rr =rour ia bil ut 2 War a 22aid dal Committees: Aeronautics, National Advisory. __.___________ House— Asslonments te. a re 211 LET TRY hd a ER EY Meeting Qoys ofc Members Of Official stenographers to... ____._______ Select and special = National Power Policy... ocoooae meee On Practice (Treasury). IRE DINT AR estean LE 234 101118 eeRS Reciprocity Information Duties of. _ Select and special— House___. Senate. Senate— Assignments to ms LB rE Meeting days of. 2 185 Membership of _ wt 177 Special and select Commodity Credit Corporation________________ Commodity Exchange Administration_________ Communications Commission, Federal .._______ Company: Metals Reserve. ....oxemnarninbance sweet The! RIC MOEIEAge. oo enone rs ns meenam—— Compensation Board, Navy __._________________ Compensation Commission, Employees’. _.._._ Comptroller General of the United States (General Accounting Office)..._._.______ Comptroller of the Currency _ __.__________._____ Conciliation Service, United States......._._____ Congress: TADIALY Of... co tin wii enn mma Rid S003 Political classification of... _.. Sesslonsiof io... Zosdiilol ui ancsl Congressional: Apportionment, by States..___._______________ Contents Congressional—Continued. Page Delegations; Dy: States. o-oo ii C30= 133 Districts maps ofrVi ah 749 Record, office of, at Capitol............._..____ 275 Conservation Corps, Civilian_____._______._______ 397 Conservation of Wildlife Resources: House, Select Committee... ooo. 209 Senate, Special Committee... _.______ 183 Conservation Service, Soil... .. 365 Consular Offers. ree mri an imam 451 Consalting Board, Navy. =i. ica oo... 342 Continuous service of Senators... ....._________ 160 Coordinator of Information... ooo... 315 Patisserienl 527 Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, Office 1 4] be np gh Se hn Ed Bite SLM 313 Corporation counsel’s office, District of Colum- 1) a bor uae pid a pais dd od Lud da et 445 Corporations: Commodity Credit_.__-c.--. ............ 360 Pofonse Tlomes: rt ree 393 Belenge Plant or a aa 392 Defense SODPPIes cc cro eas 393 Disaster oan ad ei 386 Federal 'Crop'Insurance =... 362 Federal Deposit Insurance... a oo eovveeen 386 Federal Farm Mortgage. ooo _____ 362 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance_________ 390 Home Owners’ Yogn, ~~ =F = tao 389 Inland Waterways sss sacri i oasoaaci 371 Reconstruction Finance. oo oooooee 386 Council: Hederal Ping. evaree EY, 401 National Arehives. o.oo 407 Council of National Defense, United States_____ 312 FETE A eee se SR BB cD fa 524 Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Ned RAS ne ame nena 427 Court OE CIS: te seamen na ee 430 2Biss Dorr fe tn me asa b ata Aetna 627 Court of Impeachment, Senate. ._______________ 249 Courts, Administrative Office of the United LY BRS Ee ibd Els dientl user 434 Courts, District of Columbia: Court of Appeals, United States_.____________ 427 District, United States. cee eo oeoo 433 JUVONIIS. ois tite ind dime Bm aot Boers 2 435 Municipal. ooo toe anh sae man de Beer i dt 435 POOR co minh iis Supats senha ede dS SEEN 435 Courts, United States: Cireuit:Court of i =ia 0 Appeals-...---426 Claims: sac tiane il. os. biudde visasiibt aden 430 COS OMS: ii iii ermine en me BEE U5 432 Customs and Patent Appeals. _______. 429 LAETA A eST SR L Ta 423 Credit Administration, Farm. ____________._____ 361 Credit Corporation, Commodity _ _____________ 360 Crop Insurance Corporation, Federal __________ 362 Currency, Bureau of the Comptroller of the.___ 322 Customhouse (Treasury). -oc... io iioil. 322 Customs and Patent Appeals, United States Court: of esis usicauss toy torial 429 Customs, Bureanof o.oo coo . Siaiiat 322 Customs Court, United States_ _ ._._.._______. 432 D Page Dairy Industry, Bureaw'of 252 0 100)“of 360 Deaf, Columbia Institution for the. ____________ 397 Debates, Official Reporters of: Bonse. er I 274 Benate. i a SHINUIL NU 0RE G0 iciceimrene 267 Defense Board, Economic... -:-=aae | 315 Defense Communications Board... ____________ 312 Putiegiof t-te ior oh RT OT 525 Defense, Council of National’ =~ ape 312 Defense Health and Welfare Services, Office of__ 313 Defense Homes Corporation. __________ 393 Putiegiol 2 ores fowl) en NE A 649 Defense Housing Coordination, Division of _____ 313 Defense Mediation Board, National . __________ 314 Defense Migration, Select Committee Investi- NTT pu mer ot sad Lh A So 210 Defense, Officeof ~~"~~ 312 Civilian =F Defense, Permanent Joint Board on____________ 410 Defense Plant Corporation... ==. 392 DO ea Ol er 648 Defense Program, Special Committee to Investi-CLT emi aint 185 pirate sity Defense Savings Staff (Treasury)... ____ 324 Defense Supplies Corporation__________________ 393 Dales Of 649 Delegates and Resident Commissioners: Alphabetical list... -154 Assignments to committees. __________________ 211 Biographies of en TD 129 List of, with home post offices and Washing- ton'addresses oo. a 814 Rooms and telephones of... _______ 301 Service recordin Congress... oo _______ 174 Votesieastlor. is esl ee 257 Delegations, congressional, by States___________ 133 Dental Officers, Board for Examination, Navy._ 344 Departments: Ny CHER DC kat area de CS Se LC 354 CC OININRrCe er 367 Interior... oo. ee ree 346 JUBHICR. i ain dn anal Blab Ta ess AR 333 PLD So SR ee a a En Sa 373 NOVY is ann re a Ca 338 Post: OMe, sa ma iis slants 335 TE ee a 317 CBSE fib ns rat D Bs hk irmiil fe b in g 321 OY a ha me 325 Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal ________ 386 Description and history of Capitol Building____ 280 Diagram of the— Basement floor and terrace of the Capitol ____ 284 Gallery floor of the Capitol. __.___.____________ 290 Ground floor of the Capitol. ..coee ooo... 286 House'Chamber._ i. = oie. ov anti 296 Principal floor of the Capitol... ...._.___. 288 SenateChamber._......... tees 294-295 .-. Diplomatic and Consular Serviee_._.___.____.___ 451 Director of Aircraft Production, Office of the___ 331 Director of vehicles and traffic, District of Co- Tumble cine ron sinsSard 446 Directory of the Senate... ..........t.zall 293, 295 Disaster Loan Corporation. _______.____...._.... 388 Dutiesiof.... c ol0i Tdi TL paint sain 642 Dispensary, Naval... 0 0 oo oo 343 Congressional Directory Page District Court of the United States for the District of Columbine craacurarnaae 433 Commission on Mental Health -433 District of Columbia: Alley Dwelling Authority. cece eee City post office_._.2-2__-Corporation counsel’s office au 445 Court of Appealsforthe.. ccaac. ia. 427 Director of vehicles and traffic... 446 District Court of the United States for_._.___. 433 Commission on Mental Health_____________ 433 Engineer Department... -..... coe 445 Fire Department. . . . sioe means te mm stein 446 Government a Lai 448 Health Department. i ped -nmrsdsosma ccccitit 446 Juvenile Court... --435 Metropolitan poliee.....comecmonie cane 447 Municipal Congt. outta eae 435 LL A RS 443 Origin and form of government... _.____ 439 PollcorCourt... oii homers m Stn mmm an 435 Public Utilities Commission... ooo._ 447 Recorder of Qetls dl coven mensnrinamsnssan 435 Register of wills and clerk of the probate COUN es as in dominate Sm dm min 5 52 435 Divisions: Administrative (T1eaSUrY). .-eceanenmmenn===—— 334 Bond and SpItHS-nocei career eases 334 Bitnminous Coal. aes ier esr mome msm mm m= 350 Defense Housing Coordination... 313 Bilesiofamcr on tr drm ee Se 525 Labor Standards... meme smee emma —....eeee 374 Monetary Research, Treasury.....________ 322 Press Intelligence (Office of Government Re- DOLE a mh 316 Ba Len hes bee iin basi 528 Procurement, Treasary... i cree 323 PubliciContraels. oa ae 374 Research and Statistics, Treasury... __________ 322 Secret Borie ra a 322 YI LT Wit solos AAAgp gen 323 Territories and Island Possessions. ._.....____ 351 EE h Tot 10] Lt ET nt a ad po 315 Wageand Hour, Labor. tra ea] 374 Document room, House of Representatives ____ 272 ‘Domestic Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and___ 368 Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives.___ 271 Drug and Food Administration... ........._.___ 397 E Economic Defense Board _................... 315 Patiesrofr 2 2s LL Dei a i a 527 Economics and Statistics Branch (Mines). _.... 349 Economy Board, the Joint _ ________________.____ 405 Education, Office of = o-oo .iio nn la 396 Electric Home and Farm Authority _________.___ 387 Puatiesol. iii vanEi oR 641 Electrification Administration, Rural ________.__ 364 Embassies, foreign’ or an aoa 451 Emergency Management, Office for_ ___________ 312 Employees’ Compensation Commission. ______._ 384 1B EAN A Re ER le dh LR al 628 Engineer Department, District of Columbia____ 445 Engineer Office, United States 330 Page Engineering, Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry YE Ln eh LSTR I Dene fT 358 Engineers, Office of the Chief of... __________ 329 Engraving and Printing, Bureau of ____________ 324 Enlarging Capitol Grounds, Commission on... 233 Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Bureau of_. 360 Ethnology, Bureau of American________________ 414 Executive Agencies of the Government, Special Committee to Investigate __._.__________ 184 Executive Office of the President ________.______ 311 PUIos Of oc iliie it iin Game vm em mb 524 Burean of the Budget. i. oceviee one snnninwnmwe 316 Coordinator of Information... ______.____ 315 Council of National Defense, United States___ 312 Economic Defense Board... _______ 315 Liaison Office for Personnel Management_____ 312 National Resources Planning Board __________ 316 Office for Emergency Management. __.________ 312 Defense Communications Board____..______ 312 Division of Defense Housing Coordination_ 313 National Defense Mediation Board __.______ 314 Office of Civilian Defense...............____. 312 Office of Defense Health and Welfare Ser-VICES. ce dE SC 313 Office of Facts and Figures... _...____ 312 Office of Lend-Lease Administrator__.______ 314 Office of Price Administration______..______ 314 Office of Production Management__________ 314 Office of Scientific Research and Develop-JEA Tn Gr Te ME eee le CE 315 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American ADEIYSer nos ese Se 313 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board..__ 315 Transportation Division. ........ coven demew-315 Office of Government Reports.._.._.._.__.______ 316 Division of Press Intelligence... 316 United States Information Service. ......._. 316 The White House Office... ...1c.ccemrarma=n= 311 TE HE OSER SE 312 Secretaries to the President, biographies of__ 311 Experiment Stations, Officeof .-.....__occo__ 356 Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups... 157 Export-Import Bank of Washington___.____.____ 391 Buatles Of. nraera a 647 Extension Service, Agriculture Department..__ 356 F Facts and Figures, Officeof cucu. 312 Farm Authority, Electric Home and._______.____ 387 Farm Credit Administration. __________________ 361 Farm Mortgage Corporation, Federal. _________ 362 Farm Security Administration. _-______________ 362 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu- Cablon. ce re SRE 396 Federal Board of Hospitalization. ._____.________ 385 Duties of. ice cnn ssh nas 630 Federal Board of Surveys and Maps___.o...____ 385 Duties of... 30 00 Lassen 630 Federal Bureau of Investigation. _____.______.___ 333 Federal Communications Commission.._..____. 385 Datles of... ovenSL SN BIE EESIEN 630 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation_ __._._.___ 362 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. _._____ 386 PUtics of. iii vain iupmanitslant bhai 632 Contents Page Federal Expenditures, Joint Committee on Re- duction of Nonessential _________.______ 238 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation___________ 362 Federal Fire Coanell-oo on ooo. Sion 401 Dutiesiof. ic... oic-677 Federal Home Loan Bank Board... 389 DUIS Of ii 0 ae hs ca SB ean bers 644 Federal Housing Administration. _..__..__.____ 388 I Hye a 2 LD ee eS TE 643 Federal Loan Ageney.... ooo iniisoiatidaien, 386 Dutiesof...... neidiisicisnenitions: 633 Defense Homes Corporation. _______._._______ 393 Defense Plant Corporation. _______._._.___.____ 392 Defense Supplies Corporation... .._.....__._._ 393 Disaster Loan Corporation. ____.________.__.__ 388 Electric Home and Farm Authority.__._______ 387 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Federal Home Loan Bank Board__.___._______ 389 Federal Housing Administration. ____________ 388 Federal National Mortgage Association_______ 388 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-. 1 I BRE Ea a ri Se ey 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___..._____ 389 Metals Reserve Company. _______..ceceeeo__ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _.______ 386 Rubber Reserve Company. ceo. 392 The RFC Mortgage Company..____._.___... 388 Federal National Mortgage Association ________ 388 Duties of . oii nin an Sn 642 Federal Power Commission. ..........-2o_ 393 io... Dutiesol......o rae. aagti 649 National Defense Power Unit________________ 394 Federal Prison Industries, Inec.. Justice._______ 334 Federal Register (National Archives) __________ 407 Federal Reserve System, Board of Governors... 394 Duties ofcse cca ann OIA 655 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-HON, canasnsessmintan fH bp a te 690 PRUE. OL. cv avvicnimm dail 153002 647 mendes Federal Security Agency. coco ooooeooooo_. 395 DUES Of cneniaeinsaomnasonidRINSE 658 ioc Sn Civilian Conservation Corps... ._o._.____ 397 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Educa- BOWE visi co ERR aatE Sadintin 396 Food and Drug Administration. _.._.__...___ 397 Preedmen’s Hospital... lolol 398 coo.nag] HowardsUniversity. ou iu Udoll a ait 398 National Youth Administration. _.__________ 396 Public-Health Service... fo sianimhl | 395 National Institute-of Health _________.______ 396 St. Elizabeths Hospital -. 398 Social Security Zo oi Jind Board... 395 United States Office of Education____..._..___ 396 Federal Trade Commission... cceaeoo___ 398 Puatlesofi annie dia 669 Federal Works Agency. ee 399 Duties of....... 20 Sail siasyllems 674 Federal Pive'Counell. oi iionl sinaio 401 Office of the Administrator.______..._____.___ 1399 Public Buildings Administration_____________ 400 Public Roads Administration. ______________ 400 Federal Works Agency—Continued. Page United States Housing Authority. ___________ 401 ‘Work Projects Administration.________________ 399 Field Artillery, Office of the Chief of. ___._____ 326 Finance, Office of the Chief of. ________._________ 328 Finance Corporation, Reconstruetion___________ 386 Fine Arts, of i218:rod 383 Commission Fniee Duties of ._.___ i --625 Five Counell, Federal ii = JO Ho icing J 4 401 Fire Department, District of Columbia_________ 446 First Assistant Postmaster General _____________ 335 Fiscal Affairs of the Government, Special Com- mittee on... Jn 0 00 CIDER DIE TiC 184 Piseal Service, Treasury... _ 2. “i >= 323 Fish and Wildlife Serviee____.______.____________ 350 Floor leaders, House of Representatives. _______ 270 Foldingroom'of the House: ~~. =~ === = 271 Folding room of the Senate. _______._____________ 266 Food and Drug Administration_._.____________ 397 Putiestofi la J 0 oar ne ab dali Bf 669 Foreign Agricultural Relations, Office of ._______ 356 Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of___ 368 Foreign consular officers in the United States____ 465° Foreign diplomatic representatives in the United States... Doi 07 Joo gic iii 451 Foreign Service of the United States____________ 497 Foreign-Trade Zones Board... ._________________ 402 Dblesolc:croarboaiaBRIENESH 678 bun Forest Reservation Commission, National ______ 234 Forest Service. lL c23% HIIR0S 362 o.oo... g0 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ._____.____ 336 Freedmen’s-Hospital. o.oo....00aem o. 398 Freer Gallery of Avbocoon-oo oo i00030s 414 Galleries: q Periodical Press... - 745 |nA Ra CL NE Ee nl 715 Radio Correspondents’. 741 Gallery of Art: TST CoeRee _ 414 INO ONO) a i ii os nn arm mE ee 414 Garden, United States Botanie_________________ 277 Gasoline and Fuel-Oil Shortages, Special Com-mittee to Investigate. ..._._..__________ 185 General Accounting Office_...__...._____________ 402 Duatiesiol o.ooTian adn 679 General Board (Navy) -col ais 343 o-ooie General Counsel for the Treasury, Office of.___ 321 General Dispensary (Army) ooo oni. 329 General Land Office... ... Jeeouner sncidedatna i. 347 General Staff, War Department___.___________ 326 Geological Survey .............ceiseisesmastoat.. 348 Gettysburg Boulevard Commission._._________ 236 Goethals Memorial Commission________________ 402 Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippinesmai Bin once cd neniaivansik 351 Government of the District of Columbia_______ 443 Government Organization: Joint Commitieelonds fi cootioniiniinls 237 Select Committee on (Senate)... _____________ 184 Government Printing Office_.__.____________._._. 277 Government Reports, Office of... .________ 316 Governors of the States and Territories._...__.. 259 Congressional Directory Page Grazing Service______ 350 Guam (Island Governments). ____________.______ 339 H Headquarters Marine Corps... ooo... 344 Health and Safety Branch (Mines). __._________ 349 Health and Welfare Services, Office of Defense.. 313 Health, Commission on Mental ________________ 433 Health Department, District of Columbia______ 446 Health Service, Public. =i o_o. 395 Highway Commission, Alaskan International _ 235 History and description of the Capitol _________ 280 Holmes Devise Committee, Oliver Wendell ____ 238 Home and Farm Authority, Electric. __________ 387 Home Economies, Bureauof...._..___._ ___....__ 363 Home Loan Bank Board, Federal ._____________ 389 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation______________ 389 Dabtegiel oor he a 646 Home post offices of Senators, Representatives, ete., with Washington addresses________ 803 Home, United States Soldiers’._________________ 415 Hospitalization, Federal Board of _ _.___________ 385 Hospitals: Columbia, for oc... coca... 383 Women... Ercedmen’s. . oop fosietl ahs ol Lo 398 Naval... 344 St. Elizabeths_______ 398 Hour and Wage Division 374 House committees: Assignments to__ 211 Clerks to... 273 Meeting days of .________ 210 Membershipiof.. © olivinea 197 i ca Official stenographersitos..___~-:___. _. -274 Select and special 209 House Office Building Commission 233 House of Representatives: Miscellaneous officials 275 Officers of... cae 0 Personnel of: Chaplain.....___ 270 Clerks to committee___ 273 Document room.__ rman O79 Folding room____ -ni20 Majority Leader a i25270 Minority Leader. -270 Office of the— Cleric Lo) T2000. S000 aanim J han 270 Doorkeeper.........0 lL pineal a 271 Legislative counsel . ._____________________ 274 Official Reporters of Debates of .__________ 274 Porllamentarion. .... coon 0000 Inia] 270 Postmaglepr bisuiineDarvaian ony > 272 Sergeant at Ayms. 2 lL noidAlncl 271 Speaker. oi Als 270 Louiednnntgty Stenographers to committees of .____________ 274 Political classifieation ofc Joi. Lionas 142 Special and minority employees. _____________ 272 Housing Administration, Federal_______________ 388 Housing Authority, United States______________ 401 Dutiesof..........sebeletl Joana 677 5300 Housing Coordination, Division of Defense. ___ 313 Howard University: Joos smnbetls nti Jo avi 398 Hydrographic Office (NaVY) omc 341 I Page Immigration and Naturalization Service_._.____ 333 Impeachment trials by the Senate______________ 249 Independent offices, agencies, and establish-ents. oor as ei a 379 Duties of .__ 621 Index, individual. 205 Sis Lac ih on 815 Indian Aflairs, Office of: =. et 347 Indian Arts and Crafts Board __..______________ 348 Individual index __________ -815 Industrial College, Army ___ 332 Infantry, Office of the Chief of _________________ 326 Information, Coordinator of. ___________________ 315 Information, Office of, Agriculture Department_ 356 Information Service (Office of Government Re-porta)... 0. Hrpenn das 316 Duties ofl or ill Sli i a ain 529 Inland Waterways Corporation_____.__________._ 871 Inspector General, Office of the (Army) ________ 327 Institution, Smithsonian S35" [100 413 Inter-American Affairs, Office of the Coordi- nator Of2=2" 7, L100 DID TRI ea 313 Interior Control Board (Navy)... _______.. .. 343 Interior-Department=--iv. 100 0 ve ite 346 Duties of ____. a . 587 Alaska Rallreadi ium oiantsio eon gaiiaug 351 Consolidated Purchasing and Shipping Unit. 351 Alaska Road Commission____________________ 352 Bituminous Coal Division____________________ 350 Bonneville Power Administration. ___________ 352 Bureau of— 5011 Oi Dm Gh sepa Somes LTE TL 349 Administrative Braneh___________________ 350 Economics and Statistics Branch. ________ 349 Health and Safety Branch. _______________ 350 Technologie Braneh. ..__...iooo-oooiioo 349 Reclamation... ~~~ oneness 348 Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 351 Fish and Wildlife Serviee..__. ~~..0 350 General Land Office___ 347 Geologieal Survey... oe eo 348 Grazing Service__________ 350 Indian Arts and Crafts Board. _______________ 348 Mount Rushmore National Memorial Com- mission. ada loan Een sinhd taal 352 National Park Service z 349 National Power Policy Committee. _____.____ 353 Office of Indian Affairs. .iciiocizosoo 347 Office of Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense... cooiiami nad Stina Io iss 352 ON Administration... 8 07 0s -oolesss 352 Petroleum Conservation Division. _________ 352 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. 352 Related activities... aoaoitciecenoo 353 Territorial Officials. or col: won nmi 351 Government of the Commonwealth of the a hr re 351 Travel Bureau, United States. ___.__._____.___ 349 Internal Revenue, Bureauof __________________ 323 Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee.__ 234 International Boundary Commission: United States, Alaska, and Canada___________ 403 Duties. of.....opbiories gn inlet 680 United States and Mexico____________________ 403 Dutiesof _....._ 681 Page Labor, Department of—Continued. Page International Exchanges, Smithsonian _________ 414 International Fisheries Commission, United States and Canada. ____________________ 403 International Highway Commission, Alaskan_. 235 International Joint Commission________________ 403 Duties offs cic. 23800 OO B02 JBL 681 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- myisslont 105 Gn SR 0 ns THAR OIL Jos 404 Interparliamentary Union. _________________.____ 235 Interstate Commerce Commission. _____________ 404 Paties of zo vrs BBEELIEH 682 Inventors’ Council, National .__________________ 372 Investigation and Research—Transportation, Boardeof aman HEED HIE GN JRE 381 Investigation, Federal Bureau of . ______________ 333 Island: Governments... oo... ooo 0 200M 339 J Joint Board on Defense, Permanent____________ 410 Joint: Board; theft dn Glin Ua vis Seating 404 Joint commissions: 3 Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for the Library of Congress... _.___.__.... 233 International. . occ iaca neo JRISEIROEAI 4 403 Joint Committee: On Government Organization. _______________ 237 On Internal Revenue Taxation ______________ 234 Duties of. coor cnanaan Tua HSER HL 521 On Printing... cnet SOLERO 0 234 Duties of uo concn Coo TTEESVIEGO 522 On Reduction of Nonessential Federal Ex-penditures......... Ui DO EEE 238 On:the Library. oo vic oe Jos0H Spin & 234 Duties ol. oo lie bad BI I TIED 523 To Investigate the Adequacy and Use of Phos- phate Resources of the United States._ 237 Joint Economy Board, the. ____________________ 405 Judge Advocate General: TE ee Eo Se Lil 327 NOVY i ra aR A 342 Justice, Departmentof 7. Lh. Tl 0 Us 333 Dutiesol. oS 80 Te) U3e ce miii. 565 AdministrativeDivision.._________10 Ui 334 Bond and Spirits Division. ........... 0000 334 Bureawof Prisons---00 0 00 I 080 Boeardof Parole... os 8000, 334 Bureau of War Risk Litigation________._______ 334 Federal Bureau of Investigation_.____________ 333 Federal Prison Industries, Ine________________ 334 Immigration and Naturalization Service__..__ 333 Justices and officials: Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United States... --c Ll0 ol 427 Courtof Clalme.-o.oo nanan F100 20T00 430 Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, United States 2b Se 00a aR aR 429 Customs-Court: 2 Lip aiarai.aed 0h wis 432 Supreme Court, United States __________.__.___ 423 Juvenile Court... 20m Inna 8 JAGR EES 435 L Labor-Board; Maritime. ili ..cuiceeccnanacan 406 Tabor, Department-of S00 So Baan coo... 373 Duties ofcicoo. Jona uu SIDR OEE 617 Bureau of Labor Statistics. _______________.___ 374 Children’s:Barean:. 374 Conciliation Service, United States_._________ 373 Division of Labor Standards__________________ 374 Division of Public Contracts. ..._.._________ 374 Wageiand Hour Division = t7 -—ta% 374 WOO Buren. a a 375 Labor Relations Board, National _______________ 408 Labor Standards, Divigion'of =>.2 2% 374 -f. Labor Statistics, Bureau of. 2. oi So 27 374 Land:Ofice; General = 0 347 Land Use Coordination, Office of .______________ 355 Legislative Counsel: aa se ea 274 Senate. Tr tr at os 267 Lend-Lease Administration, Office of .__________ 314 Liaison Office for Personnel Management______ 312 1B pia STE det edna sn sam Sas ulin 524 Library, Department of Agriculture. ___________ 357 Library, Franklin D. Roosevelt... _..... .._.__ 408 Library, Joint Committee on the_______________ 234 Library of Congress: Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Addi- tional: Buildings forthe. . ...__... _~— 233 Pevsonnelol ia ci cee ins ng ree 278 Trust Fand-Bogrdc ... vc creer asnsencrnsenss 279 Yoon Agency, Hederal: Coo 386 Loan Corporation, Disaster... _____.____ 388 Loan Corporation, Home Owners’ _____________ 389 Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, ete., with home post offices. __..____._._ 803 M Mackay Radio Telegraph Co. ceo. 276 Majority Leader (House), Office of. __..______ 270 Maps of congressional districts. -ooo. 749 Morine Barracks. ois Banas 345 Marine Corps, Headquarters. __.____.___..____. 344 Marine Inspection and Navigation, Bureau of__ 370 Maritime Commission, United States. .._._.__._. 405 Putlesiol. fo postin snaialed doce 690 Maritime L.abor BoarQ.....cceeceeseaseaaituei-406 Dates of. oi vn enn tutahe Slane ve aR Ee 694 Marketing Administration, Surplus____________ 366 Marketing Service, Agricultural ________________ 359 Marshal’s office, United States. coco coe. 434 Mediation Board, National ._ _ ____ _. __.___. 408 Mediation Board, National Defense. ______.__.. 314 Medical Center, co pos deni oo 344 Navalsocutoo Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Board (Medical)we ain no coos ioas 343 Medical Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 344 Medical School, Naval. : co ou a 344 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of .______________ 342 Meeting days: House committees... lo iatins acrallo 210 Senate committees. ul coiloluenasona(l lou ll 185 Members addresses... cove caves aesbisuitisd. 803 Members of the Cabinet, list of... _.______ 310 Members’ rooms and telephones... oooocooo... 299 Membership: House'committeesi i. colo Luisi. oli 197 Senate committees... dl oll oii Ll... 177 Membership changes of the Seventy-seventh Congress. ..ccocaseabdabany a0 250 II EE EEE XIV Congressional Directory Page Memorial Commissions: Page | Nnitional Guard Bureolisst.sosvsadestl-bossthes 331 Arlington Amphitheater -..ooooooooooooo--381 | National Historical Publications Commission_. 407 General Anthony Wayne. ooo 238 | National Institute of Health _____________.____ 396 | National Inventors’ Couneil..__________._____.__ 372 Mount Rushmore. ooo 352 | National Labor Relations Board. __.______ 408 Thomas Jefferson... oooooooeomoomaooaon 235 | National Mediation Board... —occeeeeeo 408 United States Territorial Expansion. ._._______ 237 Deno i Ets Goethals oe 402 a 698 Mental Health, Commission on... 433 | National Monument Society, Washington______ 419 Merchant Marine, Special Committee to In-National Mortgage Association... .__..__.__ 388 National .___.________ 409 Metals Reserve Company. .-----acemweemannn-x-NRE Mason... vestigate Conditions in the... 184 | Munitions Control Board ee 414 Duties of ooo 648. | National Park Sorviee. foc. iioit irweceas—m=cs 349 Metropolitan police. ooo 447 | National Power Policy Committee. .._._.___.__. 353 Migration, Select Committee Investigating Na-National Research Connell. oz oe coecdens 406 210 | National Resources Planning Board ________._.__. 316 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... __ 235 DUO tional Defense. ooo a, 527 Military Academy, Board of Visitors.___.__..__. 236 | National Youth Administration. momo... 306 Nines, BUrean of. aereirni sarang 349 Dolce: Frewoon 6683 Minority employees (HOUSE) ----wocoocmmaemeao-272 | National Zoological Park. ooo. 414 Minority Leader (House), Office of ——.-----270 | Naturalization Service, Immigration and. ______ 333 Mint, Bureau of the ooo 324 | Naval Academy, Board of Visitors. _._.___.____. 236 Miscellaneous officials of the House_______.._.__-275 | Naval Air Station. _______Sf daira rol 343 Mississippi River Commission. ______._______._. 330 | Naval Consulting Board _ _ ooo 349 Monetary Research, Division of ________________ 322 | Naval DiSpensary o-oo ooo 343 Monument Society, Washington National.__. 419 | Naval Examining Board (Line). _..._.._____. 343 Monuments Commission, American Battle.____ 379 | Naval Examining Board, Marine COrps---—--345 RE RE 344 Mortgage Association, Federal National _.____. I 388 Naval Medical Center. oc oo ii raat 344 Mortgage Company, re Naval Modleal Sohool oseo casiennias 344 Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commis- SOM. ooo eee B82 Naval ODIOIVAIOTY. oieooo aman aat-341 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission___.______ 239 | Naval Operations, Office Of. ooo oomone-330 Research Laboratory... ---ococcooeoeooee 343 Munitions Board, Army and Navy.___..._.._-381 | Naval Retiring Board... seeciucdeadin 343 Munitions Control Board, National. ___________ 409 | Navigation, Bureau of — oo -oooooeooeocoee-340 Museum, National Lig ----414 | Navigation, Bureau of Marine Inspection and__ 370 Navy Department... cooolee 338 N Duties of: ooo oro aitl suai simasnniits 574 Narcotics, Burean ofc ca i U0 LL lille 322 Board for Examination of— National Academy of Sciences... 406 Dental Ofeors. abana i 344 National Municipal Court. 435 | Naval Research Council... ....... 406 Medical Offleers.. i. icee oo oooioiatizmes 344 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 406 Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex-coos dus 694 __._________ 343 Dutiesiof -cnannaanecos al SEL amining Board (Medical). National Archives Council... oon __. 407 Bureau of— National Archives, The. ..... ci. tulo io clo 0 406 ACTONaUtICs.. eh aa 342 BL onl J ii 695 Medicine and Surgery.....---ce=c=ciia-aa--342 Franklin D. Roosevelt Library___.._______.___ 408 Navigntion: Dutiesiol cx 2 te) os un sawa nh basbaass 340 National Archives Couneil.. ooo ___ 407 Hydrographic Office maid National Archives Trust Fund Board..______ 407 Naval Observalory-coven ceoee=cmna arias 341 National Historical Publications Commission. 407 Ordnance i ties reba tea ed AR 341 National Archives Trust Fund Board. _________ 407 Yh a SR 342 National Bureau of Standards... ..._____ 369 Supplies and Accounts. . occ eomccmeaaaae 342 National Capital Park and Planning Commis-Yards and Docks_...__ -341 SION ue sim nn anne Rd A I AE AE 408 Compensation Board... cocina 342 0a DAIL T0500 BRE O00 697 General Board. co cseammo-noms semanas dou 343 National Collection of Fine ArtS_.ccaae_______ 414 Headquarters Marine Corps_._..___________.__ 344 Duliesel-co _____ 344 National Defense Mediation Board. ______._____ 314 Major General Commandant’s Office_______ 344 1000£0 LLL DR hod tt AL 7 SL A 526 Paymaster’s Department... oooeoonan 344 National Defense Migration, Select Committee * Quartermaster’s Department_______________ 344 National Defense, Counecilof.._......_._____>. 312 Adjutant and Inspector’s Department aim National Defense Power Unit_____ cco. ___.__ 394 Island Governments... ..-neoammdcaiac 339 Board......omeanmote. 343 Investigating eGo Lu Sun leue Sau io. 20s 210 Interior Control 02000 Shere Rh ra da SS Edi ve 339 National Defense Program, Special Committee HOBIE. hv oon 2185 Samoa. 88Y National Forest Reservation Commission. _____ 234 Marine Barracks. ccieminmarinmmmebedadiassa 345 National Gallery of Art. eevee namasoizzosli 414 Naval Air Station to Investigate the...loos. American wi 343 Navy Department—Continued. Page | Office of—Continued. Page Naval Consulting Board... ..=2i::(l 342 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _______. 336 Naval Dispensary: -oaz s=ao nl con Bi rant 343 General Counsel for the Treasury. _____._.___._ 321 Naval Examining Board (Line) _-______.__.___ 343 Government S00 lions 316 Reports... Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps)___._ 345 Duties of i i RL Ea 528 Naval-Hospital oi Sir we oetotansi rundliznge Division of Press 344 Intelligence_._____________ 316 Naval Medical Center... _-..__. .giiie... 344 United States Information Service__________ 316 Naval Medical ________________._____ Indian Affajrs. oc...aoiveon 347 School 344 pig) “Naval Research Laboratory. ..._.____.___ san0343 Information, Department of Agriculture... __ 356 Naval Retiving Board... o.oo. oo lotion 343 Inspector General, Army._____________________ 327 Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C__ 343 Judge Advocate General: Office of— ATINY. nemo ios m ae ane eaT Et 31] 327 Judge Advocate General... ooo ___ 342 Navy, oo oliiinaesJas iee hs Inga ne 342 Naval Operations... Coles gslaiillh 339 Land Use Coordination. 0. ;L. 0. Jigs 355 Coast Guard (Headquarters) _____________ 340 Legislative counsel: Related activities. ia iiuasts 345 iiing coicorsicio House... doluslagh saosin ind 274 Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C____ 343 Senate... ...... Ll rEllina daEIe os al 267 Networks, stations, and services represented Lend-Lease Administration. _________________ 314 in Radio Correspondents’ Galleries. ___ 742 Dutiegol.. cio ines a isan RENT 526 Newspapers represented in Press Gallery ._____ 725 Naval Operations. _______._____. _ 339 News Photographers Association, White House. 737 Personnel, Department of Agriculture. _______ 355 Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense . 352 Oo Plant'and-Operationg. 20: oil ivdi wwe 355 Observatory, Astrophysical.._...._...._...__.. 1 re I Office for Emergency Management _____._______ 312 Duties of 596 Duties ofl Sil 00000 ARiatat) Tasepiiind 525 TERE SUL i fe leat shat prictuinds Sond Production Management... __.-" “> ~~ i" 314 Defense Communications Board ____________ 312 Dirtios of 526 Division of Defense Housing Coordinationoo 813i cans Fo ET ass National Defense Mediation Board..__._____ 314 | Provost Marshal General... 322 Office:of Civillan Defenseac: sic. icinos 312 Quartermaster General... 37 Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services. 313 Scientific Research and Development... 315 Officeof Pacisand Figures: 0...... =: 312 Duties Of wooo 526 Office of Lend-Lease Administrator._________ 314 | Second Assistant Postmaster General ._._._____ 335 Office of Price Administration_______________ 314 | Solicitor, Agriculture Department. ._._.______ 357 Office of Production Management__________ _ 314 Surgeon General, Army... 328 Office of Scientific Research and Develop-Third Assistant Postmaster General .________ 336 OL ee i ae 315 | Treasurer of the United States......._....____ 323 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American United States Attorney... 434 Anise me nt gig id United States marshal ________...____ 434 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board. ____ 315 | Office of the Chief of— ‘Transporiation Division... aii oo 3154 Air Corps...____ 331 Office of— Army Afr Borees. iii ood paw ime oo 331 Adjutant General, Army, The______________.. naCavalty. a ey Eee 326 Administrator, Federal Works Agency..._.. 300. Ohaplaing. mene 326 Agricultural Defense Relations__.____________ 357 | Chemical Warfare Service....oo_......._____ 331 Budget and Finance, Agriculture_.._.________ 355.1 Const Artillery... occoo meniils 326 CC CliAelivitionts oc oe SST do ngImeera. a 329 Chief Inspector, Post Office Department......337 |: Field Artillery... 326 Chit BignalOMicer..... io... as 330i Enanee. oi. 3 --328 or Civitan Defense. 50. 7 trio pap dnintey.. on ria ree 326 Dutlesol is. Fos ne 525 OrAnamee 0 os ad ae co 330 Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs________ 313 | Offices, agencies, and establishments_ __________ 379 Dntlesolag SuaaaiaseSue 526 | Officers of 0 the— Defense Health and Welfare Services. ________ 313 Lr A Ea Sn Ul ee en el 270 ution ol coe a a 525 Senate ie LAL Ls TE 263 Director of Aircraft Production. ______________ 331" | Officials, Ternitorial cto tia ao il fosuaiiis 351 Bdueatlon. = oe a ao te 3961 Oil Administration. =...i. 352 | Duflesoliaciniy an 666 | Old-Age Pension System, Special Committee to A Experiment Stations_____ _ 356 Investigate the... Lori soneniana. 185 | Facts and Figures______ -312 | Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee. ____ 238 |Dallesiolate 0 525 | Ordnance, Bureau of, Navy _ ooo 341 | Finance Officer (Army). oveee 328 | Ordnance, Office of Chief of ______________.____ 330 First Assistant Postmaster General .__________ 335 | Origin and form of government of the District Foreign Agricultural Relations. ______________ 356 Columbia eoebiraionin eainit a of 439 Raa XVI Congressional Directory P Page Panaing Canal, The... .-......eciondieio. 409 Pan American Sanitary Bureau... ._..________ 409 DRIES Of. otic so BE ie bra li be al wis 699 Pan American Union. ........oi0oo Jiu din oa. 409 BRR CA nN rT LL 6 699 Park and Planning Commission, National Capi-LIE CR Le rl Se eR RE ON 408 Park Service, .. oo 349 Notional... Parliamentarian (House), Office of the__________ Patent Appeals, United States Court of Cus- Pension System, Special Committee to Investi-gate the Old-Age. as... na. he 185 utiaun Periodical Press Galleries... coon. 745 List of persons entitled to admission__________ 745 Rules governing admission to________________._ 746 Permanent Joint Board on Defense_____________ 410 Dues ef ol As ET 700 Personnel Management, Liaison Office for____. 312 Personnel, Office of, Department of Agriculture. 355 Petroleum Conservation Division (Interior)____ 352 Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense, Ofc of. 0... eens ll ttt bovis awa 352 Philippines, government of the Commonwealth. 351 Phosphate Resources Committee. ______________ 237 Photographers Association, White House News. 737 Physicianat the Capitol, attending... i. 275 Plant and Operations, Office of... co oceeee 355 Plant Industry, Bureaueof...................... 364 Plant Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and.. 360 Police: (Oru Meas i a a Di 275 HITE phd oe ms ea 435 Metropol. ceom nn em 447 Political classification of Congress... _..... 142 LE Ov a ae ai 447 Post Office Department... «ceoono 335 10 Trans he Sa ba CE Office of the Chief Inspector. _______________._._ Second Assistant Postmaster General ______.___ Third Assistant Postmaster General _.________ Postoflicerofithe Senate 0 ri Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. at Capitol __.______ 276 Postmaster General, biography of. _____________ 335 Postmaster ofthe House: 0 0 ni ot 2 272 Power Administration, Bonneville. _________ 352 Power Commission, Federal... ______________ 393 Power Policy Committee, National _ ___________ 353 Practice, Committee on (Treasury) _______.______ 324 President of the Senate_.__. EA pei fob ogi 263 Toro President of the United States, biography of-.__ 311 President pro tempore of the Senate____________ 263 Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Con- gresses coincident with their terms_____ 260 Press Galleries: List of persons entitled to admission to. ______ 715 Newspapers represented in. __________________ 725 Rules governing admission to_______..___.____ 735 Press Intelligence, Division of. _ oo. 316 Price Administration, Office of. _ coco___ 314 Printing, Bureau of Engraving and______..__.___. 324 Page Printing, Joint Committee on_______.____________ 234 Duties of. ....cn PED LNs 522 Printing Office, Government. ______.___________ 277 Prison Industries, Inc., Federal, Justice. _______ 334 Prisons, Bavestpol iui. lan cna an td 334 Probate Court, Register of Wills and Clerk Ct 5 LO St Ae dnt 2 22 8 ged Ll © 435 Processing Tax Board of Review, Treasury_____ 324 Procurement Division, Treasury. ______________ 323 Production Management, Office of .____________ 314 Public Buildings Administration. ______________ 400 niles ol a se ne MY 676 Public Contracts, Division'of _..... 02.0 22% 374 Public Health-Serviee........210i oa? C0. 395 Duties’ef. SuanDIS ase DL 664 Public Roads Administration__________________ 400 Dutiegiel sol chur ins aa ie 676 Public Utilities Commission, District of Co- lombis os} Sirianniie Ginga 447 Public Works Administration. _________________ 400 DPutiesiof inte aon 675 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration____ 352 Q Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and Plant__ 360 Quartermaster General, Office of the (War)_____ 327 R Radio Correspondents’ Galleries________________ 741 List of persons entitled to admission to_______ 741 Networks, stations, and services represented EE irr 742 Rules governing admission to__._...__________ 743 RBallrondy PhetaAlagka re ae aas 351 Railroad Retirement Board... meeee eee 411 DCR Of rr rm 700 Raflroadrticketoffice. =. oil. aa-a 276 Reciprocity Information, Committee for________ 384 Reclamation Bares. eneeer 348 ceretress Reconstruction Administration, Puerto Rico... 352 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _.________ 386 30 LSI PU es aa en Le 633 Recorderofdeeds 2 to l.reea ones 435 Red Cross, American National ..._.____________ 380 RogistoroP Wills Fr eee ae 435 Regular and special sessions of Congress, list of___ 243 Reporters of debate: LS UR ERE ine pst by Ef pp EC Se 274 Fo TE cn es Ge BL 267 Famer Representatives: Alphabetical list of. _____pn Ly 147 Apportioned to the several States under each Census oo. --258 Assignments of, to committees... _._._.______ 211 32 el I sm i eS nl 3 List of, with home post offices and Wash- ingtonaddresses. earn 806 Roomsand'telephonesof..... © _2. 301 Service of, showing Congresses in which it has LETT LR RTE[LL Ld Nee Sm ae pa Se en 163 OL 8 CO OT a Dn ese 251 Research and Statistics, Division of ._-________. 322 Research Laboratory, Naval.................. 343 Reseating plan of the House, diagram of ________ 296 Resident Commissioners and Delegates: Page Alphabeticaldist co. coucaausni goaselud. so 154 Assignment to committees. ___________________ 211 Blographiesiof. = ge Clacdisbieds 129 List of, with home post offices and Washing-tonaddresses. ......_ ioilenl) bl onmihn 814 Rooms and telephonesof __._..._.___.______:__ 301 Service recordin Congress... ...__.._._ __f:onil 174 Votescastifor.. . . . Joealow sabeinanenty od 257 Resources Planning Board, National _________._ 316 REC Mortange Cos... iene 388 Datiesiof.. coin. sedated colagignon, 642 Road Commission, Alaska... Soosoiiiil. 352 Roads Administration, Publiec__________________ 400 Rooms and telephones: Representatives. . o. dus. Jai auih idee dn ea ants 301 Henators i i a Li rr en we Ha SET 299 Roosevelt Library, Franklin D_________________ 408 Rubber Reserve Company.........c.. .cacoaioll 392 Dutlesof. 0. bon oadaereal 648 uiteidl Rules governing admission to— Periodical Press col 746 Galleries. ©...ci Pross Galleries...isl k 0 ad 735 Radio Correspondents’ Galleries _____________ 743 Rural Electrification Administration____________ 364 S St. Blizabeths Hospitals: o.oooas carina niiiy 398 Salmon Fisheries Commission, International Paoifig oto anaes wa ssaizsanLay 404 Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Fed- Ora). i ih sate antl E Bal baci aaid 390 Scientific Research and Development, Office of. 315 Seats of Senators... oo doacuei lounuail 292-295 Second Assistant Postmaster General _________ 335 Secret Service Division... coogio ry 322 nm Secretaries to Senators. oc esas ion 268 soicedi Secretaries to the President, biographies of______ 311 Secretary of— Agriculture, biography of... oo... 354 Commerce, biography ofs. 367 Interiors bilographyof 346 Labor, biography of ...e0_ __oaioiiii acticin 373 Navy, biography of.......... ...stasicogel: 338 Senate, biography of. wooo acon 263 State, biography cot 317 of. __-......cuedsoces. i Treasury, biography. opal 321 of. .Leoooiezutlbo Wor, Diography of reorient 325 Securities and Exchange Commission___________ 411 Duties of cn ea 704 Security Administration, Farm_________________ 362 Security Agency, Federal....coeecammnia 395 Security! Board; Seclalele cil. fio ona. ais 395 Select and special committees: HOUSE... cnn ns ween dE CL DF “aly 209 ST ei Ce Re i 2 183 Selective Service System... ccovo ooo 413 Senate: Chambery: disgramvol. oo. aol Loa sooodizolt 294 Directory. of... coe BSE TE 295 Office Building Commission. ________________ 233 Personnel of— OADM oc iene niente ee i ABE 263 Clerks torcommittees. tuo iaool su nila 264 Foldingroom.: . Boa clos 266 _cosiisisimwaedt 64674°—T7 -2—1st ed Senate—Continued. Personnel of—Continued. Office of the— Page Legislative counsel... ooo.ni Jo Bl 267 President. oasis sei siaannc liaasiglan 263 Secrelary. alsin) Liarnaiaing 263 Sergeant at Arms ooinacnTo and kh 266 Official Reporters of Debates of .____________ 267 Post oflon.o. ommendsmnin nl 266 President proitemporeic. collieian i 263 Secretaries to Senators.._-._ o_o iil... 268 Political classification of... foioi il. oo 142 Special sessions of. fiat auoiin leabseiul 248 Senate committees: Assignmentsto. ooo DIENT HICSS 186 Blerlelibo. fierSD RAI WL 264 Meeting daysef. i iigiiiogiimne J 185 Uo Membership of. 2220: 0 Daal] Juno Bi 177 Special and seleet il Join guiamansJo ‘183 Senators: : Alphabetical Hat ofr tn mim 145 Biographies:efi L250 27000 00 alien sue vx 3 Continuous servigeofi iti i Fr ee lo 160 Expiration of terms of service, by groups. ____ 157 List of, with home post offices and Washing- tonaddressesyiv Tt DLs Sh Renee 803 Rooms and telephones of _.___________________ 299 Hoeretaries for erom 268 Nolesiens or 250 Sergeant at Arms: : House of Representatives, biography of_______ 271 Senate, blography of. = 266 Services: Agricnttural Marketing. ~~. _. 359 Chemical Waylage ic oo = 331 Congeiliation, United States_.-.--_ .____._ _.._ 373 Defense Healthand Welfare... __...___ __ 313 Extension, Agriculture Department. _________ 356 Eisen) Treasures. soo vo Ln ae 323 Pishangd Willdile oo 350 Foreign, United. States. oo = = = =: 497 Poroet Ee et SE 362 RT span be Ra te a 350 Immigration and Naturalization______________ 333 Information, United States. --316 National Barker ma a 349 Publ eal Re ae 395 Soll Conservation... or 0 oO 365 Service and terms in Congress: Delegates____ = 174 Representatives. salads basin. coissioiio 163 Resident Commissioners. .._.______ 10... 174 Senators: Continuous service silo Deel l mapas. 160 Expiration of terms... fo cob Ji. Joie 157 Sessions of Congress, listof.__._____ ..._ ._ ____ 243 Sessions of the Senate, special, list of ____________ 248 Ships, Bureau of... 10005) LCEDil 342 Signal Officer, Office of the Chief ______________ 330 Silver Committee, Senate Special _.____:________ 184 Small Business Enterprises, Special Commit- tee to Study ete. (Senate). _.____________ 184 Small Business, Select Committee on (House)__ 210 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission________ 415 Congressional Directory Page Smithsonian Institution. ___ Ii: oo Lo 413 Duties of... hesebieall-ani lo 706 Board of Regents, personnel of _._____________ 414 Establishment, personnel of __________________ 413 Government bureaus under direction of: -Astrophysical Observatory... _______ 415 Bureau of American Ethnology ._____________ 414 Freer Gallerviof Avbict: 2a ownl oil 414 International Exchanges... ________________ 414 National Collection of Fine Arts____________ 414 National Gallery of Arb 0 cou io icici 414 National Museum. Ji bodisoiizaos. 414 oo National Zoological Park... .__._._____ 414 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission___ 415 Social Security i. 395 Board...oso Duabtiesel oc i ghey 659 Soil Conservation Service... __________________ 365 Soldiers’ Home, United States.._______.___._____ 415 Solicitor, Agriculture Department______________ 357 Speaker of the House of Representatives. ______ 270 Speaker, officeof the ...... o_o. Seti tunidod.io 270 Special and minority employees of the House... 272 Special and select committees: RR EE ae a vl ee 209 Rea a er 183 Special sessions of the Senate, dates of ._________ 248 Standards, National Bureau of. _.______________ 369 State delegations in Congress... ____________ 133 State Department ro oer =o or be aus 317 Ss DRtiestof on ea 529 Related activities... an oe oo oo 320 States and Territories, Governors of the________ 259 Statistiealinformation.— ~~... 243 Statistics, Bureauof labor...___.. 374 Stenographers to House committees. ___________ 274 Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of (Navy)._.____ 342 Supreme Court, United States. _________.___.__ 423 Bilographiesof thejustices. ~~~~ 423 Residences of the justices and officials. _______ 425 Surgeon General of the Army.___________________ 328 Surplus Marketing Administration. ________.___ 366 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board________ 315 Potlegels rr 526 Survey: Goastiand Geodetio: or neers 369 Geologie roc a 348 Surveys and Maps, Federal Board of .__________ 385 System, Selective Service ______________________ 413 T Tariff Commission, United States______________ 415 Duties of...........nam Ina sssoz 708 Tax Appeals, Boardof ~~ © an 382 Tax, Processing, Board of Review._______._._____ 324 Tax Research, Division of... Zit. 1.0 0. % 323 Technologic Branch (Mines). _ ooo..._____ 349 Telegraph offices, Capitol... ____._________._____._ 276 Telephone Exchange, Capitol . __.______________ 276 Tennessee Valley Authority. ____________________ 416 Terms of Senators, expiration of ._______________ 157 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission___ 237 Territorial Officials. oo: oof olderSia 351 Territories and Island Possessions, Division of__ 351 The Adjutant General, Office of ._______________ 327 Third Assistant Postmaster General _________ Thomas Jefferson, Commission for the Celebra-tion of the T'wo-hundredth Anniversary ofithe:Birthiof nooJ SHI XC 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_______ 235 Ticket offices, Capitol: AITNINGS ican ir cnme a ane a EE, 2508 BELTON 276 RAllroad........cowuime2a ISL) IE SERGE EDT] 276 Trade Commission, Federal ._.____.____.___7. 27. 308 Transportation, Board of Investigation and Re-searel. on en BA IRENE 381 ‘Transportation Division...oll 0 315 Dutiegiof... on Salli Hoissitod | 526 Travel Bureau (Interior). foiisiianii °° gras 349 Treasury Department... od 321 _Sif0asbis Duatlesiof. chSTE NO 538 Bureau of— Comptroller of the Curreney.___.___________ 322 Customer voiceLI BTR soa 360 322 Engravingand Printing. 21 324 Internal Revenne. 0. (lo 2nishg ato on 323 Noeotios cower ead BOT 2 BOT 322 The MinturnPinna 280 324 aa Committee on Practiee 22: “iit Uodussiooil J 324 Customhouse. Sis Sip goiasi les fb 322 Defense Savings'Stafl 0 oe 7 324 Division of Monetary Research_______________ 322 Division of Research and Statisties___________ 322 Division of Tax Research_____________________ 323 PiscaliService.. oiriia 1 323 mean Bureautof Accounts sii iin, Tee as or 323 Bureau of the Public Debt...° _ 323 Office of the Treasurer of the United States. 323 Office of General Counsel for the Treasury... 321 Processing Tax Board of Review.____________ 324 ‘Procurement Division...oo 0 © 323 Secret Service Division... 200 00 0 0 20 1 322 Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate___.___ 249 Trust Fund Board, Library of Congress_.______ 279 U Un-American Activities, Special Committee to Investigate... 70 ERS URE A 0 209 Union, Interparliamentary___._________________ 235 Union, Pan-American... i... 8 JOU vE0iG oF 409 United States Territorial Expansion Commis- Cn TE es LE 237 University, Howard Lilo.) Seooinr.a Dos soi 398 Vv Vehicles and traffic, District of Columbia, director of... aealioinoTae | 446 Jedoogw Veterans’ Administration... eee.5] 417 INOS Of. os ona aaa 710 Contact offices at Capitol ____________________ 277 Vice President of United States, biography of... 3 Vice Presidents and the Congresses coincident with theivilerms......Vi ..... Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission_____ 237 Vocational Education, Federal Advisory Board. 396 Votes cast: Delegates and Resident Commissioners_______ Senators and Representatives. _______________ Contents XIX Ww Page Wage and Hour Division 374 War College, Army_____ 332 War Department ~~ 395 Duties of. ....... 550 Army Indusirial ........eee. 332 College. ooo Army Wor Collages. naan 332 Geperal Sal. eaten en 326 National Guard Burean.... cco 331 Office of the— Adintant General...nina denn noi 327 Chief ol ee mimes 326 Cavalry. weeds Chiel ol Chaplaing:. ......c.ine cnn mann ince son 326 Chief of Const Artillery... coo 326 Chief off BNgINGELS... ne snmrr soemma 329 Beach Erosion Board... coe. 329 Board of Engineers, Rivers and Harbors__ 329 California Debris Commission____________ 330 Mississippi River Commission___________ 330 United States Engineer Office. ._____.____ 330 Chiefol Field Avtillery..................___ 326 ChiefofiFinanes. oocoz 328 Office of Finance Officer, United States APINY Ch nl a a 328 Chiat of Infamiry.. © a aiois lb 326 ChiefofOrdnanece._.-. . _._ . _ .... _ 330 ChiefofthoAlr Corps... ao 331 Chief of the Army Air Forces______________. 331 Chief of the Chemical Warfare Service._..__ 331 Officer........... 330 Chief Signal’ oo nll XE Director of Aircraft Produection______._______ 331 Inspector General. 5... oui cciecriiviunan= 327 Judge Advocate General .____________o_._.__ 327 Provost Marshal General _____.__ = 332 Quartermaster General __._______.__________ 327 Secon General. 328 Army Medical Center, Washington______ 328 Army Medical Museum and Library. ___ 328 General Dispensary, United States Army_ 329 Related activities.......oaaii ne 332 Page War Department General Staff... _____ 326 War Risk Litigation, Bureau of .._.___._._______ 334 Washington addresses of Senators, Representa- tives, etc., with home post offices. ______ 803 Washington City postoffiee_ _-= 5 447 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission.____.________.____ 236 Washington National Monument Society ______ 419 Washington Navy Yard and Station___________ 343 Waterways Corporation, Inland ________________ 371 Wayne Memorial Commission, General An- TTT Ea Sl Cae 238 Weather. Bureau... ..-.o00. oo ol Li iain 371 Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol_______ 276 White House Office. or oon 311 Duflenof-Ce he 524 White House News Photographers Association. 737 Membersirepresented. ... coon -eecinananaa-737 Servicestepresented.......... ooo... 739 Wildlife Resources, Select Committee on Con- servation of : : HOUR, ir near nab is en bh me sl ea 209 Sennten. Lo cor a a Ne a 183 Wildlife-Service, Fish and... ____.-:..-_. 350 WomewsBarean .o-.-v Sa 375 Wool, Special Committee to Investigate Pro- duction, Transportation, and Market-MmEol.. oo a 183 Work Projects Administration__________________ 399 Putlestofnd oo 675 ‘Works Administration, Public... ___._.. 400 Works Agency, Federal... cx. oo 0 o> 399 Y Yards and Docks, Bureawof 341 Youth Administration, National . ______________ 396 Z Zoological Paris, National... o.oo. oo. 0. 414 BIOGRAPHICAL* THE VICE PRESIDENT HENRY AGARD WALLACE, Democrat, of Des Moines, Iowa; born on a farm in Adair County, Iowa, October 7, 1888, son of Henry Cantwell Wallace (Secretary of Agriculture, 1921-24) and Carrie May (Brodhead) Wallace, and grandson of Henry Wallace, a member of President Theodore Roosevelt’s Country Life Commission; B. S. A., Iowa State College, 1910; married Ilo Browne, of Indianola, Iowa, May 20, 1914; children—Henry B., Robert B., Jean B.; edito-rial staff of Wallaces’ Farmer, 1910-24; editor, 1924-29 (editor of Wallaces’ Farmer and Iowa Homestead, 1929-33); devised first of corn-hog ratio charts indicating probable course of markets, 1915; author of many publications on agriculture; chairman, Agricultural Round Table, Williamstown, 1927; delegate, International Conference of Agricultural Economists, 1929; experimented with breeding high-yielding strains of corn, 1913-33; appointed Secretary of Agri-culture, March 4, 1933, and served until his resignation on September 5, 1940; elected Vice President of the United States on November 5, 1940, for the term beginning January 20, 1941; member, General Advisory Committee to the State Department on Inter-American Affairs; chairman of the Economic Defense Board; chairman of the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board. ALABAMA (Population (1930), 2,646,248) SENATORS JOHN HOLLIS BANKHEAD, 2d, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Lamar County, Ala., July 8, 1872; attended public schools and was graduated from the University of Alabama, A. B., 1891; Georgetown University Law School, LL. B., 1893; received honorary LL. D. degrees from Alabama Polytechnic Institute and from University of Alabama; S. A. E. fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa; admitted to the bar in 1893; senior member law firm of Bankhead & Bankhead, of which the late Speaker W. B. Bankhead was a member until his election to Congress in 1916; formed partnership with son, W. W. Bankhead, who was elected to Congress in 1940 to succeed his uncle, the late Speaker; married; elected November 4, 1930, to United States Senate; reelected November 3, 1936. LISTER HILL, Democrat, of Montgomery, Ala., where he was born December 29, 1894; was graduated from Starke University School, Montgomery, Ala., in 1911; from University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, Ala., in 1914; from the law school of the University of Alabama in 1915; and from the law school of Columbia University, New York City, in 1916; took a special course at the law school, University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, Mich., in the summer of 1915; honorary LL. D. degree, University of Alabama, 1939, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1939, and National University, 1941; 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; member of Phi Beta Kappa; married Henrietta Fon-taine McCormick, of Eufaula, Ala.; children, Henrietta Fontaine and L. L.; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John R. Tyson; renominated and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-ninth Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses, and served from August 14, 1923, until his resignation on January 11, 1938; appointed to the United States Senate on January 10, 1938, and elected on April 26, 1938, to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. *Biographies are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Congress-men. 3 Congressional Directory ALABAMA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, 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 Armi-stice; was president of the Loyalty League of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana; is a thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Elk, W. O. W., Moose, O. E. S.; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, Lowndes, Montgomery, and Pike (9 counties). Population (1930), 330,677. GEORGE McINVALE GRANT, Democrat, of Troy, Ala., was born in Louis-ville, Ala., July 11, 1897; attended the academic department of the University of Alabama and was graduated with the degree of LL. B. in 1922; is a lawyer by profession; served as county solicitor of Pike County, 1927-38, and as chairman of the Pike County Democratic executive committee, 1927-388; member of the State Democratic executive committee, 1935-38; World War veteran; served as State commander of the American Legion in 1929, and as national secretary of ° the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity in 1922; married Miss Matalie Carter, December 5, 1938, and has one son, George MeclInvale, Jr.; nominated in special Democratic primary on March 11, 1938, and elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election on June 14, 1938, to fill the unexpired term of Congressman Lister Hill, resigned; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses without opposition. 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 nomi-nated 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; is chairman of the Banking and Currency Committee of the House. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: 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; fraternities, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Theta Nu Epsilon, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa, Masonic, and Shrine; lawyer; member, Dallas County, Alabama State, and American Bar Associations, and American Judicature Society; 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 for a term of 6 years, 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; elected March 6, 1936, by the House of Representatives, one of the managers on the part of the House for the impeachment trial of Halsted L. Ritter, then judge of the United States ALABAMA Biographical District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and served as one of such managers in that trial before the Senate of the United States; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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; married to Del Whitaker, 1918, and they have two sons—Joe, Jr., and Paul; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on Novem-ber 6, 1934; reelected to Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bibb, Chilton, Greene, Hale, Perry, Shelby, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa (8 counties). Population (1930), 236,412. PETE JARMAN, Democrat, of Livingston, Ala.; born in Greensboro, Ala., October 31, 1892; graduated from the University of Alabama, A. B. degree, 1913; chief clerk in probate office of Sumter County 1913-17; assistant examiner of accounts of the State of Alabama, 1919-30; secretary of state, 1931-35; assistant State comptroller, 1935-36; member of the State Democratic executive com-mittee, 1927-31; second and first lieutenant in the Three Hundred and Twenty-seventh Infantry during the World War, slightly wounded on the western front; inspector general of Alabama National Guard, with rank of major, 1922-24; division inspector of the Thirty-first Infantry Division, National Guard, with rank of lieutenant colonel, 1924 to 1940; commander of the Alabama Department of the American Legion, 1927-28; married Miss Beryl Bricken on February 25, 1930; president, Alabama Society in Washington; member of board of governors of Jefferson Islands Club; member of the Methodist Church, Masons, Woodmen of the World, Maccabees, Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Military Order of World War, Forty and Eight, and honorary member Kiwanis; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, designated chairman of standing Committee on Memorials immediately; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress, became chairman of the House Committee on Printing and vice chairman of Joint Committee on Printing; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Blount, Cullman, Fayette, Franklin, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Walker, and Winston (9 counties). Population (1930), 256,797. CARTER MANASCO, Democrat, of Jasper, Ala., was born in Townley, Ala., January 3, 1902; attended public schools there and Howard College, Birmingham, Ala., for 2 years; was graduated from the University of Alabama Law School in 1927; began the active practice of law in Jasper, Ala., immediately after gradua-tion; elected to the Alabama House of Representatives from Walker County in 1930 for a 4-year term; secretary to Speaker William B. Bankhead from June 1933 until his death September 15, 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on June 24, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Walter W. Bankhead; Baptist and Mason. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties). Population (1930), 282,241. JOHN J. SPARKMAN, Democrat, of Huntsville, Ala., was born near Hartselle, Morgan County, Ala., December 20, 1899; attended the country schools, Morgan County High School, at Hartselle, and the University of Alabama, at Tuscaloosa, where he received the degrees of A. B. in 1921, LL. B. in 1923, and A. M. in 1924; Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternities; a Mason, Woodman of the World, and Jr. O. U. A. M.; Kiwanian; member American Legion; is a lawyer by profession; was admitted to the bar in 1923 and commenced practice in Hunts-ville, being a member of the firm of Taylor, Richardson & Sparkman, of Huntsville, until he retired upon election to Congress in order to give his full time to his con-gressional duties; was a member of the Students Army Training Corps during the World War; is a lieutenant colonel in the Organized Reserves; married to Miss Ivo Hall, of Albertville, Ala., on June 2, 1923, and they have one daughter—Julia Ann; he, his wife, and daughter are members of the Methodist Church; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of Military Affairs Committee and of Special Committee Investigating National Defense Migration. Congressional Directory ARIZONA NINTH DISTRICT.—County: Jefferson. Population (1930), 431,493. LUTHER PATRICK, Democrat, of Birmingham, Ala., was born in Morgan County, Ala., January 23, 1894; educated in the public and high schools of Cullman County, and the University of Alabama; LL. B., University of Alabama, 1918; special work at Louisiana State University and Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.; admitted to the bar in 1919; served as city attorney of Fairfield, Ala., 1920-22, as assistant attorney general of Alabama, 1927-29, and as assistant United States district attorney in 1934; member of the law firm of Patrick & Appelbaum, Birmingham, Ala.; married Miss Pearl McPherson in 1918, and they have one daughter—Patricia Pearl; World War veteran; writer, lawyer, and radio commentator; Mason and Knight of Pythias; member of Lions International Club and Eagles; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940 ARIZONA (Population (1930), 435,573) SENATORS CARL HAYDEN, Democrat, Phoenix; born Hayden’s Ferry (now Tempe), Ariz., October 2, 1877; educated in public schools of Tempe, Normal School of Arizona, and Stanford University; delegate Democratic National Convention 1904; elected treasurer Maricopa County, 1904, sheriff 1906, reelected 1908; appointed major of Infantry, United States National Army, October 4, 1918; married; elected to Sixty-second and succeeding Congresses through Sixty-ninth; elected to United States Senate 1926; reelected 1932 and 1938. ERNEST W. McFARLAND, Democrat, of Florence, Ariz., was born on a farm near Earlsboro, Okla., October 9, 1894, the son of W. T. and Keziah McFarland, early settlers of the Pottowatomie strip in Oklahoma; received early education in Oklahoma, attending the Earlsboro and Seminole High Schools; graduated from the East Central State Teachers College, Ada, Okla., and taught a country school in Seminole County for 1 year, earning money to attend the University of Okla-homa, from which he received his B. A. degree; schooling was interrupted by the World War; after his discharge from service in the spring of 1919, worked for a short time in the Valley National Bank, Phoenix, and then went to Stanford University, where he received his juris doctor degree in law and master’s degree in political science; admitted to the bar in 1920 and shortly thereafter began his practice of law in Casa Grande, Ariz.; served as assistant attorney general of Arizona for 2 years, as county attorney of Pinal County, Ariz., for 6 years, and for the last 6 years has been judge of the Superior Court of Pinal County, Ariz., having tried cases in every county in the State of Arizona; during private practice of law, represented the San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District and has made an extensive study of irrigation problems and water law; during the time he was on the bench he tried many important water cases involving most of the water rights of Arizona; his wife is Edna Eveland McFarland and he has one daughter, Jewell, 12 igs old; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 435,573. JOHN ROBERT MURDOCK, Democrat, of Tempe, Ariz.; born near Lewis-town, Lewis County, Mo., April 20, 1885; educated in the common schools of Missouri; A. B. degree from the State Teachers College at Kirksville, Mo., in 1912, M. A. degree from the University of Iowa in 1925, did graduate work at the University of California in 1929; for 22 years an instructor in the three institutions of higher learning in Arizona; author of textbooks on history and government used in the public schools of Arizona; 8 years dean of the Arizona State Teachers College at Tempe; married and has three children—a daughter and two sons; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, by an unusually large majority. ARKANSAS Biographical ARKANSAS (Population (1930), 1,854,482) SENATORS 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; reelected in 1938 for the term ending in 1945. LLOYD SPENCER, Democrat, of Hope, Ark.; born in Sarcoxie, Mo., March 27, 1893; moved to Okolona, Ark., at age of 9; married Miss Bun Hays, of Okolona, Ark.; no children; engaged in banking and farming; past president of Arkansas Bankers Association; appointed to the United States Senate on April 1, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John E. Miller, for the term ending January 3, 1943, and took his seat April 2, 1941. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1930), 385,965. EZEKIEL CANDLER GATHINGS, Democrat, of West Memphis, Crittenden County, Ark.; born in Prairie, Monroe County, Miss., November 10, 1903; parents, Melville W. Gathings (born October 11, 1865, in Prairie, Miss., died January 10, 1941), and Virgie]Garner Gathings (born August 13, 1863, in Mayhew, Lowndes County, Miss.); attended Earle (Ark.) High School and University of Alabama; was graduated from Arkansas University Law School with LL. B. degree in 1929; married to Miss Tolise Kirkpatrick on April 6, 1939, and they have one daughter, Tolise Kirkpatrick Gathings, born April 22, 1940; lawyer by profession; member of the State senate, 1935-39; member of the Baptist Church; Mason and Shriner, Order of the Eastern Star, Rotary Club, Young Men’s Business Club, and Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Alpha Delta, and Blue Key fraternities; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Prairie, Randolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties). Population (1930), 218,596. WILBUR D. MILLS, Democrat, of Kensett, Ark., was born in Kensett, Ark., May 24, 1909. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1930), 170,576, CLYDE TAYLOR ELLIS, Democrat, of Bentonville, Benton County Ark.; was born on a farm near Garfield, Benton County, Ark., December 21, 1908; educated in the common schools and the University of Arkansas College of Arts and Sciences and School of Law; was member of the university debate team and winner of Brough debate prize; was 5 years superintendent of schools at Garfield; engaged in the practice of law at Bentonville since 1933; served in Arkansas House of Representatives 1932-34 and in the State senate 1934-88; married in 1931 to Miss Izella Baker; two daughters, Patricia Suzanne and Mary Lynn; defeated Congressman Claude Fuller for election to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1930), 230,259. FADJO CRAVENS, Democrat, of Fort Smith, Ark., where he was born February 15, 1899; educated in public schools of Fort Smith, University of Arkan-sas, University of Pittsburgh, and Washington and Lee University; lawyer; mar-ried Elizabeth Echols, of Fort Smith; two children, Fadjo, Jr., and Katherine Elizabeth Cravens; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election on September 12, 1939, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father, ben Opovans; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member Judiciary ommittee. Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA 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; five children; lawyer by profes-sion; served in the Infantry in World War; member of the Little Rock School Board, and representative in the Arkansas 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 to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on December 19, 1933; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1930), 289,250. WILLIAM FRANK NORRELL, Democrat, of Monticello, Ark., born in Milo, Ark., August 29, 1896; educated in the public schools of Ashley County, Ark.; Arkansas Agricultural and Mechanical College, Monticello, Ark.; College of the Ozarks, Clarksville, Ark.; and Arkansas Law School, Little Rock, Ark.; at-torney at law; elected State senator in 1930 and reelected in 1934; elected presi-dent of the Arkansas State Senate in 1933 by acclamation; reelected by acclama-tion in 1935; in the absence of the Lieutenant Governor and Governor, served on numerous occasions as Governor of Arkansas; served in the military forces of the United States during the World War; married, and has one daughter—Julia Jean Norrell, age 7 years; member and past master, Eureka Lodge No. 40, F. & A. M.; Consistory, Valley of Little Rock, Orient of Arkansas; member and past high priest of R. A. M. No. 115, the Council; honorary member of Order of High Priesthood; charter member and past president Lions Club, Monticello, Ark.; member and deacon in First Baptist Church, Monticello, Ark.; recipient of honor-ary degree of doctor of laws from College of the Ozarks; charter member Joe S. Harris Post No. 2, American Legion, Department of Arkansas; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead, Lafayette, Nevada, Ouachita, and Union (11 counties). Population (1930), 281,173. OREN HARRIS, Democrat, of El Dorado, Ark., was born December 20, 1903, in Hempstead County, Ark., son of Homer and Bettie Lee Harris; educated in public schools of Hempstead County and Prescott High School, Nevada County, Henderson College, Arkadelphia, Clark County, with A. B. degree, and LL. B. degree from Cumberland University Law School; engaged in the practice of law since 1930; deputy prosecuting attorney of Union County, 1933-36; elected prosecuting attorney of the thirteenth judicial circuit, composed of Union, Ouachita, Columbia, and Calhoun Counties, in 1936; reelected in 1938 without opposition; member of the Baptist Church, a Mason, Knights of Pythias, and Lions International Civie Club; married to Miss Ruth Ross, May 9, 1934, and they have one daughter—Carolyn Marie; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. 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 were two sons, both adults—Hiram Warren Johnson, Jr., and Archibald McNeal Johnson; resided in Sacramento until 1902, and then removed to San Francisco; Washington, D. C., address, 122 Maryland Avenue NE.; 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, 1934, and again in 1940. CALIFORNIA Biographical SHERIDAN DOWNEY, Democrat, of Claremont, Calif.; born in Laramie, Wyo., March 11, 1884; graduate, University of Michigan Law School, 1907; lawyer, and author of economic publications; married Miss Helen Symons, of Laramie, Wyo.; five children; elected United States Senator November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Sonoma, Sutter, and Yuba (11 counties). Population (1930), 263,748. CLARENCE FREDERICK LEA, Democrat, of Santa Rosa; born in Lake County, Calif., July 11, 1874; son of James M. and Elizabeth Lea; attended common schools, Lakeport Academy, Stanford University, and law department, University of Denver; admitted to bar, 1898; district attorney of Sonoma County, 1907-17; 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, and thereafter reelected for nine consecutive terms as nominee of both the Democratic and Republican Parties; reelected as the Demo-cratic nominee in 1936 and as the Democratic and Republican nominee in 1938 and 1940; chairman of the Democratic caucus of the Seventy-third Congress; chairman, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, beginning with the Seventy-fifth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (18 counties). Population (1930), 165,595. HARRY LANE ENGLEBRIGHT, Republican, of Nevada City, Calif.; was born in that city January 2, 1884; graduated from the grammar and high schools of Nevada City, Calif., and attended the University of California; is a mining engineer by profession and is actively connected with various mining enterprises in California; from 1911 to 1914 was mineral inspector for the field division of the General Land Office; engineer for the State Conservation Commission of California; he is the son of William F. Englebright, deceased, who represented practically the same district in the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; on December 14, 1912, he was married to Miss Marie Grace Jackson, of Nevada City, Calif.; they have one son, Harry Jackson Englebright; is a member of the American Mining Congress, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and from 1925 to 1926 was great sachem of the Improved Order of Red Men for the State of California; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress at a special election August 31, 1926; reelected to the Seventieth Congress November 2, 1926, to the Seventy-first Congress November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-second Congress November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932, to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fifth Congress November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, without opposition; Republican whip. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Napa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solano, and Yolo (5 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 332,314. FRANK HENRY BUCK, Democrat, of Vacaville, Calif.; born on a ranch near there on September 23, 1887; married and has six 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, but not now engaged in active law practice; fruit grower and farmer; delegate to the Democratic National Conventions, Houston, 1928, Philadelphia, 1936, and Chicago, 1940; chairman of the California Democratic State conventions, Sacramento, 1932, 1936, and 1938; elected to Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 20, 22, 27, and 28. Population (1930), 335,482. THOMAS ROLPH, Republican, of San Francisco, Calif.; born in San Fran-cisco, Calif., January 17, 1885. Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA FIFTH DISTRICT.—CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 21, 23, 24, 25, and 26. Population (1930) 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY OF CONTRA COSTA. ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 13, 14, and 15, Population (1930), 308,897. ’ ALBERT E. CARTER, Republican, Oakland, Calif.; graduated from the University of California; elected to Sixty-ninth and each succeeding Congress. Ey Nit DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, 18, and 19. Population (1930), 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 Deer Lodge County, Mont., 1904-6; moved to Oakland, Calif., in 1914 and practiced law there ever since; member of the State bar of California and Supreme Court of the United States; married and has five children living; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; chairman, Select House Committee Investigating National Defense Migration; member of the Committee on the Judiciary. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Monterey, San Benito, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz (5 counties). Population (1930), 324,972. JOHN Z. ANDERSON, Republican of San Juan Bautista, Calif.; born in Oakland, Calif., March 22, 1904; moved to Santa Cruz, Calif., at the age of 6 months, and to San Jose, Calif., in 1913; completed grammar school and attended San Jose High School; moved to San Juan, Calif., in 1925, and took over job of managing pear ranch, when his father died that same year; was actively engaged in farming until elected to Congress in 1938; married Frances Giffin, of Fresno, Calif., in 1926, and they have three daughters—Jean, age 13, Carol, age 11, and Nancy, age 7; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member of the Committee on Naval Affairs. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNmiEs: Fresno, Kings, Madera, Merced, and Stanislaus (5 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 280,317. BERTRAND W. GEARHART, Republican, of Fresno, was born at Fresno, Calif., on May 31, 1890, the son of John Wesley and Mary Elizabeth (Johnson) in the public schools at Fresno and at the University of Gearhart; educated Southern California, graduating in 1914 with the degree of bachelor of laws; Zeta Psi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; by profession a lawyer, practicing at Fresno; member California State bar; admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court since 1936; assistant district attorney and district attorney of Fresno County, 1917-23; served in the World War from August 1917 to Febru- the United States and in France; a founder of the American ary 1919, in both Legion and a member of the emblem committee which, at the St. Louis Caucus of 1919, selected the now famous insignia of this great patriotic organization; California State commander, 1930-31, and national executive committeeman, 1932-34, of the American Legion; a member of the Sons of the American Revolu- tion, qualifying as a descendant of Capt. Jacob Gearhart, who fought with Gen. George Washington throughout the Revolutionary War; in Congress, the author of the act establishing Armistice Day a national holiday; honorary life member of the United Spanish War Veterans; member of the State athletic commission 1931; member of the board of directors by appointment of Gov. C. C. Young in of the California Veterans’ Home by appointment of Gov. James Rolph in 1932; the 22 delegates to the California Constitutional elected and served as one of Convention of 1933; honorary life member of Sierra Club; member of the National Press, and Army and Navy Clubs of Washington, D. C., and the University-Sequoia, and Elks’ Clubs, of Fresno, Calif.; nominated by both the Republican CALIFORNIA Biographical and Democratic Parties and elected without major party opposition with succes-sively increasing majorities to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of the Committee on Ways and Means. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Kern, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura (5 counties). Population (1930), 309,768. ALFRED J. ELLIOTT, Democrat, of Tulare, Tulare County, Calif., was born on June 1, 1895, at Guinda, Yolo County, Calif.; married Miss Jessie June Soults, August 1, 1914, and they have two children—Esther and I. J.; practical farmer and livestock raiser; secretary-manager, Tulare-Kings Counties Fair, since 1929; chairman, board of supervisors, Tulare County, 1933-37; member of Cali-fornia State Safety Council in 1936; member of California Supervisor Association, State welfare board, in 1935 and 1936; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, special election, May 4, 1937; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population (1930), 264,952. CARL HINSHAW, Republican, of Pasadena, Calif.; born in Chicago, Ill., July 28, 1894; son of William Wade and Anna Williams Hinshaw; educated in Chicago public schools; Valparaiso University, Indiana; Princeton University (degree, civil engineer, 1916); University of Michigan (postgraduate in business administration, 1916-17); enlisted in United States Army, May 8, 1917; served in American Expeditionary Forces, and resigned as captain, Corps of Engineers, September 1919, returning to Chicago; was employed first as a laborer and then progressed to various managerial capacities in automotive manufacturing and sales until 1927; then entered the investment-banking field and was employed to conduct negotiations in reorganization and consolidation of industries; moved to Pasadena, Calif., in February 1929 and entered the real-estate and insurance business; became active in civic affairs and politics; married; two sons; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWELEIH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 49, 50, and 53. Population (1930), JERRY VOORHIS, Democrat, of San Dimas, Calif.; born in Ottawa, Kans., April 6, 1901, son of Charles B. and Nell Smith Voorhis; educated in public schools; was graduated from Yale College in 1923 and received M. ‘A. from Claremont Colleges, California; was factory worker, freight handler, ranch hand, and automobile assembly plant worker; traveled in Germany for Y. M. C. A; married Louise Livingston, of Washington, Iowa, and they have one daughter and two sons; was for 1 year teacher at Allendale Farm School, Lake Villa, Ill., was first director of Dray Cottage Episcopal Home for Boys in State of Wyoming and was from 1928 to 1938 headmaster of Voorhis School for Boys, San Dimas; Calif. (this school, a gift to the State of California by the Voorhis family in 1938, is now a vocational unit of the State Univeristy); elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in November 1936 by a majority of 8,589 votes; reelected to Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of 26,539 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a clear majority of 43,567. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0S ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 52, 54, and 56. Popula- tion (1930), 349,686. CHARLES KRAMER, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; attorney; elected to Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses by largest 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 lit-erary 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, with public ownership and the curbing of special assessments as the issues; in Los Angeles City Council led the successful fight Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA 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; reelected to the Sev-enty-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, by 63,365 votes, to Republican oppo-nent’s 25,497 votes; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, by 66,426 votes, to Republican opponent’s 30,839 votes; reelected to the Sev-enty-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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 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 Sev-enty-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 46, 59, 60, and 61. Population (1930), 296,077. LELAND M. FORD, Republican, of Santa Monica, Calif., was born in Eureka, Nev., March 8, 1893; graduate of public and high schools; studied law at Uni-versity of Arizona; completed special agricultural course at Virginia Polytechnic Institute; studied business administration at Sheldon Science of Business, Chicago, I11., and general real estate and appraisals courses at University of California; later became instructor in real estate at the latter university; employed by Southern Sierras Power Co., Owens Valley, 1910; Southern Pacific Railroad, 1911; trans-ferred to New York City with same company, 1912-13; moved to Los Angeles in 1915 and was employed by the Union Pacific Railroad (old San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake); engagedin business as livestock breeder and farmer at Lynchburg, Va., 1915-19; returned to California in 1919 to engage in real-estate business; active Republican since reaching majority; member Los Angeles County Republican Assembly; past chairman of the sixtieth assembly district and of the Sixteenth Congressional District of the Republican County Central Com-mittee; appointed by Gov. Frank Merriam as supervisor, fourth supervisorial distriet, Los Angeles, and elected supervisor at August 30, 1936, primaries over 14 opponents by more than 5,000 majority; past vice president, American Berkshire Congress, Pure-bred Livestock Association; past president and honorary life member, Santa Monica Bay District Realty Board; chairman appraisal com-mittee, Santa Monica Realty Board, 11 years; member, National Real Estate Association; member, appraisal committee, California Real Estate Association; at one time or another chairman of every committee, Santa Monica Realty Board; director, Santa Monica Realty Board, 14 years; director, California Real Estate Association; past president, Masonic Luncheon Club; member, Royal Arch Masons, Santa Monica; Santa Monica Knights Templar Commandery, No. 61; Al Malaikah Shrine, Santa Monica Bay Shrine Club, Sciots, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Fraternal Order of Eagles; member and director for 10 years, Santa Monica Senior Chamber of Commerce; member, Santa Monica Junior Chamber of Commerce, Inglewood Junior Chamber of Commerce, hon-orary director at large, €alifornia Real Estate Association; American Right of Way Agents Association, Los Angeles County Grand Jury (1935), Santa Moniea Civie Regatta Association, Hollywood Baseball Association, Los Angeles Break-fast Club, Uplifters’ Club, Palos Verdes Golf Club, Lakeside Golf Club, Bel-Air Country Club, Jonathan Club, National Associated Veterans; honorary member, Alonzo Woodbine Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars; married; father of two -children, Leland M., Jr., 24 (married), and Beryl Ford MacKenzie, 20 (married daughter); elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on both the Republican and Democratic tickets with a vote of 97,407 out of total vote cast of 155,161 on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on both Republican and Democratic tickets with a vote of 188,049 out of a total vote cast of 197,434, on November 5, 1940. COLORADO Biographical SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0S ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 66, 67, and 68. Population 1930), 233,674. [Vacant.] EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population (1930), 227,070. WARD JOHNSON, Republican, of Long Beach, Calif.; born in Brighton, Iowa, March 9, 1892; educated in the University of California and the University of Southern California; LL. B. degree; lawyer; married; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; member of the Naval Affairs Committee. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino (3 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 333,598. HARRY R. SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Yucaipa, Calif.; born in Mobile, Ala., January 10, 1883; educated in common schools and university; studied law 3 years; entered transportation department of the Santa Fe Railroad; active committee member of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; thence engaged in copper business in Alaska; traveled in three continents in behalf of business interests; married to Miss Kay Olson, May 24, 1933; developed King’s Beverage and King’s Laboratories Corporations and served as president and general manager of the latter interests until 1934, at which time he retired from active business; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Imperial and San Diego (2 counties). Population (1930), 270,562. EDOUARD VICTOR MICHEL IZAC, Democrat, of San Diego, Calif.; was born in Cresco, Iowa, December 18, 1891; educated in schools of Iowa and Minnesota and was graduated from the United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis, with the class of 1915; served as ensign, lieutenant (junior grade), and senior lieutenant in the Navy on various men-of-war; during the World War for service above and beyond the call of duty was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor and was further decorated by foreign governments; because of wounds received as a prisoner of war in Germany he was forced to retire from active service in 1921, since which time he has engaged in newspaper work and writing; past commander of the D. A. V.; past commander of the American Legion; national aide-de-camp of the V. F. W.; and member of the Legion of Valor; was married in 1915, to Miss Agnes Cabell, daughter of Gen. and Mrs. De R. C. Cabell, United States Army; they have six children—Cabell (Mrs. Robert Melvin Waller), Edouard, Jr., De Rosey Charles, Suzanne, Forrest, and André; was nominee for Congress of Democratic and Progressive Parties in 1934; was elected to Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. COLORADO (Population (1930), 1,085,791) SENATORS EDWIN CARL JOHNSON, Democrat; born in Scandia, Kans., January 1, 1884; raised on a cattle ranch in western Nebraska; homesteaded in north-western Colorado; operated Farmers’ Cooperative Milling Elevator and producebusiness, a farmers cooperative, for 10 years at Craig, Colo.; served four terms inthe Colorado House of Representatives, one term as Lieutenant Governor, and 64674°—T77—2—1st ed 3 Congressional Directory COLORADO two terms as Governor; married to Fern Armitage, Kenesaw, Nebr., in 1907, and they have one daughter—Mrs. Janet Grace Howsam, of La Jara, Colo., and one adopted daughter, Mrs. Henry Arrance, of Denver, Colo.; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. [Vacant.] 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; legal adviser to adjutant general of Colorado, 1917 and part of 1918; member Civil Service Commission of Colorado, 1917-18; private, Field Artillery, and officer candidate, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky., 1918; elected November 8, 1932, to Seventy-third Congress; reelected to Seventy- fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy- sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Douglas, Elbert, Gilpin, Jefferson, Kit Carson, Larimer, Lincoln, Logan, Morgan, Phillips, Sedgwick, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (19 counties). Population (1930), 302,946. WILLIAM 8S. HILL, Republican, of Fort Collins, Colo.; born in Kelly, Kans., January 20, 1886; attended Kansas State Normal and Colorado State College of Agriculture; homesteaded in eastern Colorado; superintendent, Cache la Poudre Consolidated School of Larimer County, Colo., 1919; secretary, Colorado State Farm Bureau, 1923; twice elected to Colorado State Legislature, 1924-26; manager, Standard Mercantile Co., Fort Collins, Colo., since 1927; married in 1907 to Rachel Trower, two children—Alden T. Hill, attorney of Fort Collins, Colo., and Mrs. Marjorie Hunter, of Fort Collins, Colo.; Presbyterian, Elk, Rotarian; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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. J. EDGAR CHENOWETH, Republican, of Trinidad, Colo., where he was born on August 17, 1897, son of Thomas Beaseman and Esther Rebecca Cheno-weth, who were pioneer settlers in southern Colorado from Maryland; educated in Trinidad public schools and graduated from Trinidad High School in 1915; attended the University of Colorado at Boulder, 1915-16; worked for the Colorado & Southern Railroad, Continental Oil Co., and Colorado Supply Co., wholesale grocers, in Trinidad; studied law and was admitted to the bar in Colorado in 1925; served as assistant district attorney for third judicial district from 1929 to 1933; appointed county judge of Las Animas County, Colo., in 1933; elected in 1934 and reelected in 1936, serving until January 1941; was only Republican elected in Las Animas County in elections of 1934 and 1936; elected chairman of the Re-publican State Central Committee of Colorado in 1937 and continued until entering race for Congress; married Ruth Ollevia Crews in 1919 and has four children— William, Wanda, Jack, and James; member of board of trustees of Colorado Woman’s College, Denver; member of board of governors of Colorado Bar Association 1939-41; Baptist, Rotarian, Mason, Eagle; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Archuleta, Chaffee, Delta, Dolores, Eagle, Garfield, Grand, Gunni-son, Hinsdale, Jackson, Lake, La Plata, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Ouray, Park, Pitkin, Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, San Miguel, and Summit (24 counties). Population (1930), 141,542, ROBERT FAY ROCKWELL, Republican, of Paonia, Colo., was born in Cort-land, N. Y., February 11, 1886, the son of L. W. and Elizabeth Rockwell; his father was a prominent retail merchant in Cortland; educated in the public schools of New York; graduated from Hill School at Pottstown, Pa., and from Princeton University; moved to Colorado in 1907 and settled in Paonia, where he has since resided; engaged in cattle raising and has fruit farms; elected to the House of CONNECTICUT Biographical Representatives of Colorado in 1916 and served two. terms; elected to the State Senate of Colorado in 1920; elected to the office of Lieutenant Governor in 1922 and served as Governor for a period of 5 months; again elected to the State senate in 1938 and in 1940; during his legislative career served on many important committees, including labor and industrial relations, mines and mining, agricul-ture, fish and game; president of the Delta County Livestock Association for 20 years; a member of the State board of agriculture since 1933; in 1908 married Aileen Miller, of Bradford, Pa., who is deceased; has two sons; Wilson Miller and Robert F., Jr.; member of the Sons of the American Revolution, Paonia Rotary Club, Episcopal Church, Mason; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on December 9, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Edward T. Taylor, Democrat, who had represented this district con-tinuously since its creation in 1914, and who had previously served as Congress-man at Large for Colorado for 6 years. CONNECTICUT (Population (1930), 1,606,903) SENATORS FRANCIS 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; mayor of Meriden, 1930 to 1933, inclusive; in United States Navy during the World War; on November 8, 1932, was elected a Member of the Seventy-third Congress; on November 6, 1934, was elected a Member of the United States Senate; on November 5, 1940, was reelected a Member of the United States Senate. JOHN A. DANAHER, Republican, of Portland, Conn.; born in Meriden, Conn., January 9, 1899, son of Cornelius J. and Ellen R. Danaher; graduated Yale College, 1920; Yale Law School, ex-1921; lawyer; admitted bar, Connecticut, January 1922; assistant United States attorney, 1922-34; elected secretary of state of Connecticut in 1932; second lieutenant, Field Artillery, 1918; member, American Legion; Sons of Union Veterans, Civil War; Graduates Club of New Haven; University Club of Hartford; of Hemlock Grange, Portland; Knights of Columbus, fourth degree; member of Hartford County of Connecticut, and of New York City Bar Associations; married Dorothy E. King, of Meriden, Conn., February 3, 1921; two sons, John A., Jr., and Robert C., and one daughter, Jeanne; elected United States Senator November 8, 1938, for the term ending in 1945. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 1,606,903. LUCIEN J. MACIORA, Democrat, of New Britain, Conn.; born in New Britain, Conn., August 17, 1902; educated in the elementary schools and high school; after leaving school was engaged in the grocery business with his father in New Britain; married Miss Stella Walegora in 1927, and they have two daughters— Joan and Phyllis; member of the New Britain Common Council from April 1926 to April 1934; was engaged in the furniture and undertaking business, 1928-39; elected a member of General Assembly of Connecticut from New Britain for three terms, serving in the 1931, 1933, and 1935 sessions; appointed chairman of the New Britain Police Board by Mayor Dunn in 1934, and by Mayor Coyle in 1938; at present is connected with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. as special agent; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses; member Banking Congressional Directory DELAWARE and Currency Committee; sponsored Kopplemann resolution for investigation into dairy industry, law providing loans to industry and business, tobacco legis-lation, and Walsh-Kopplemann Flood Rehabilitation Act; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNmiEs: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties). Population (1930), 253,099. WILLIAM J. FITZGERALD, Democrat; was born in Norwich, Conn., March 2, 1887; attended the parochial schools; foundry superintendent; served on the State commission to investigate widow’s aid in 1916; first vice president of Con-necticut State Federation of Labor, 1915-18; served in the State senate, 1931-35; deputy labor commissioner, 1931-36; married Katherine Welch and has one daugh-ter—Marie'Alice; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, and in June 1940 was elected mayor of the city of Norwich; on November 5, 1940, he was elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—NEW HAVEN CouNTY: Towns of Bethany, Branford, Cheshire, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Milford, New Haven, North Branford, North Haven, Orange, Wallingford, West Haven, and Woodbridge. Population (1930), 304,736. JAMES A. SHANLEY, Democrat, of New Haven; born in New Haven, Conn., 1896; New Haven public schools, 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, and they have two children—James A., Jr., and Mary Louise; member of Connecticut bar; 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, 1923-28 ; adju-tant, First Battalion, and company commander, 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, 1931-38; captain, Infantry Reserve since 1935; member of Elks, Moose, Eagles, Knights of St. Patrick, American Society of International Law, Knights of Columbus, and Union League; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress in 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fiftth Congress in 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress in 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in 1940. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Fairfield. Population (1930), 386,702. LE ROY D. DOWNS, Democrat, of South Norwalk, Conn.; born in Danbury, Conn., April 11, 1900; Danbury High School; publisher of the Sentinel, South Norwalk, Conn., daily newspaper; married to Miss Mabel A. Miller, August 21, 1926; one son, William E.; during the World War served in the United States Army; served as member of the Connecticut Veterans’ Home Commission, 1931— 39; member of the veterans’ home building commission, 1931-38; served as city clerk, city of Norwalk, 1933-40; member of American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FIFTH DISTRICT.—LiTcHFIELD COUNTY. NEW HAVEN CouNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Wolcott. Population (1930), 241,269. [Vacant.] DELAWARE (Population (1930), 238,380) SENATORS JAMES H. HUGHES, Democrat, of Dover, Del.; born on a farm near Felton in Kent County, Del., January 14, 1867; educated in the public schools and the Collegiate Institute, Dover, Del., and by private tutors; taught school for 4 years, FLORIDA Biographical beginning at the age of 16; admitted to the bar in 1890; lawyer, farmer, and banker; Methodist Episcopalian; married on August 23, 1905, to Caroline Taylor, of Chester, Pa.; children, Caroline Hughes Martin, Mary Adelaide Hay, and James H. Hughes 3d; served as secretary of state of Delaware, 1897-1901; Presidential elector in 1912; Democratic candidate for Governor in 1916; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. JAMES M. TUNNELL, Democrat, of Georgetown, Sussex County, Del.; lawyer; born in Clarksville, Del., August 2, 1879, son of Henry Maull and Rhoda Elizabeth (Bennett) Tunnell; A. B., Franklin College (now combined with Mus-kingum College, New Concord, Ohio) 1900; married Sarah Ethel Dukes, Novem-ber 10, 1905; children, James Elisha (deceased), James Miller, Robert White; began as teacher, public school, 1903, advancing to principal of Frankford, Selby-ville, and Ocean View schools; admitted to Delaware bar, 1907; member of firm White & Tunnell, 1907-19; Tunnell & Tunnell since 1936; president of Georgetown Trust Co.; chairman, Democratic county committee, Sussex County, 1910-12 and 1914-18; delegate, Democratic National Convention, 1916; Democratic nominee for United States Senator, 1924; chairman, Democratic State committee during campaigns of 1928 and 1930; member of Democratic National Committee since 1930; president board of education, Georgetown special school, 1919-32; Presbyterian; thirty-second degree Mason; Odd Fellow; club, Rehoboth Beach (Del.) Country; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1940, for 6-year term beginning January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 238,380. PHILIP ANDREW TRAYNOR, Democrat, of Wilmington, Del.; born in Wilmington, Del., May 31, 1874, son of Andrew and Elizabeth Traynor; educated in the public schools, Goldey Business College, Wilmington, Del., and University of Delaware, Newark, Del.; graduated from the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia with D. D. S. degree in 1895; former president and treasurer of the Delaware State Dental Society; member since 1918, and president since 1922, of the Dental Examining Board of Delaware; a fellow of the American College of Dentistry, national honor society; a delegate from Delaware Dental Society to the national conventions of National Association of Dental Examiners and American Dental Association since 1933; during World War was dental examiner for exemption board No. 1, and had charge of dental preparedness clinic; member of Chamber of Commerce, Fraternal Order of Eagles, B. P. O. Elks, and Demo-cratic League of Delaware; member of the Orpheus Club of Delaware and served as president; charter member of the Knights of Columbus; member of Kennel Club of Wilmington, and a licensed judge of the American Kennel Club; married Mary A. Doyle, of New York City, in 1900 (deceased); elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, receiving 68,205 votes; Royden C. Caulk, Liberal Democrat, received 2,189 votes; George S. Williams, Republican, received 64,384 votes. FLORIDA (Population (1930), 1,468,211) SENATORS CHARLES O. ANDREWS, Democrat, of Orlando, Fla.; born in Holmes County, Fla., and educated in the common schools of Florida, South Florida Military Institute, and holds diplomas from Florida State Normal, and the University of Florida; captain Company M, First Regiment, Florida National Guard, volunteered for the Spanish-American War and the World War; bill secre-tary of the Florida State Senate; admitted to practice law, Supreme Court of Florida, in 1907; Federal courts, in 1911; judge, Criminal Court, 1910-11; assistant attorney general of Florida, 1912-19; circuit judge, 1919-25; president of the Florida State Bar Association, 1921-22; Florida Supreme Court, 1929-32; member of American, Florida State, and Orange County Bar Associations, Rotary Club, Masons, Florida University Alumni Association, and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity; honorary member the legal fraternity of Phi Delta Phi; elected to the United 18 Congressional Directory FLORIDA States Senate November 3, 1936; renominated in the primary, 1940, and reelected for a 6-year term November 5, 1940; honorary degree, LL. D., Rollins College, 1941; married Miss Margaret Spears, of Tallahassee, and has three sons. CLAUDE PEPPER, Democrat, of Tallahassee, Fla.; born on a farm near Dudleyville, in Chambers County, Ala., September 8, 1900, son of J. W. and L. C. Pepper; married December 29, 1936, to Irene Mildred Webster, of St. Peters-burg, Fla.; common-school education—Camp Hill, Ala.; taught in Dothan public schools before entering college; served in the Students’ Army Training Corps, University of Alabama, October 7 to December 12, 1918; A. B., University of Alabama, 1921; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1924; taught law, University of Arkansas, school year 1924-25; engaged in the general practice of law at Perry, Fla., from 1925 until 1930, and at Tallahassee, Fla., from 1930 until elected to the United States Senate; served in the State house of representatives from Taylor County, session of 1929; member of the State Democratic executive committee, 1928-29; the Florida State Board.of Public Welfare, 1931-32; the Florida State Board of Law Examiners in 1933, and the executive council of the Florida State Bar Association in 1934; member of the American Legion, the American Bar Association, and the Florida State Bar Association; Baptist, Mason, Flk, Ki-wanian; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Alpha; Phi Alpha Delta; delegate to the Interparliamentary Union at the Hague, 1938; chairman of the Florida delegation to the Democratic National Convention in 1940; nominated without opposition in a special primary July 11, 1936, and on November 3, 1936, elected to succeed the late Duncan U. Fletcher in the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected November 8, 1938, for a full term. J REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Charlotte, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando, Highlands, Sishomoug Lee, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, and Sarasota (14 counties). Population (1930), 390,965. 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 League of Municipalities; special counsel for the depart-. ment of agriculture, State of Florida; served in the Navy during the World War; member of the Masonic lodge, Knights Templar, Ancient and Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Knights of Pythias, D. O. K. K., Navy Club (Fort Myers, Fla.), Army and Navy Club (St. Petersburg, Fla.) ; honorary member, Navy Club, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Navy Club, Tampa, Fla.; United States Naval Reserve Officers Association, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the American Legion; Phi Kappa Phi Honor Fraternity, and Phi Alpha Delta; married and has two children—Ann and J. Hardin, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-third Con-gress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Gilchrist, Hamilton, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Nassau, Suwannee, Taylor, and Union (16 counties). Popula- tion (1930), 325,154. ROBERT ALEXIS (LEX) 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 teaching 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; Rotary Club; 1913-15, messenger, Florida House of Repre-sentatives; 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 Houseof Representatives, 1918; elected and GEORGIA Biographical 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 oppo-nent 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-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; married October 6, 1935, to Miss Bessie Lucile Harris, of Gainesville, Fla.; one son, Robert Alexis Green 2d, born June 14, 1938; one daughter, Sandra Lucile Green, born January 14, 1940. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (16 counties). Population (1930), 254,386. "ROBERT L. F. SIKES, Democrat, of Crestview, Fla.; born Sylvester, Ga., June 3, 1906, son of Ben F. and Clara Ford Sikes; farm reared; received bache-lor’s degree, University of Georgia, 1927; master’s, University of Florida, 1929; married Emma Keyes, of Rome, Ga.; two children, Bobby Serrene and William Keyes; publisher; elected chairman, county Democratic executive committee, 1934; served with Democratic National Committee, 1936; elected to Florida State Legislature in 1936 and 1938; member of Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Zeta, Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Sigma, Alpha Gamma Rho, Masons, Knights Templar, Knights of Pythias, Kiwanis, and Junior Chamber of Commerce; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Broward, Collier, Dade, Indian River, Martin, Monroe, Okeecho-bee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie (9 counties). Population (1930), 254,358. PAT CANNON, Democrat, of Miami, Fla.; born in Powder Springs, Ga., May 22, 1904, son of the late J. B. and Emma (Batchelor) Cannon; reared on a farm in Laurens County, S. C.; attended public schools and was graduated from high school in Laurens County; attended Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C., 1921-23, and John B. Stetson University, De Land, Fla., in 1924; was graduated from the University of Miami, Miami, Fla., in 1931, with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar the same year and commenced the practice of law in Miami; married on September 3, 1938, to Miss Marjorie O’Donnell, daughter of the late John and Madge O'Donnell, of McAdoo, Pa.; formerly a member of the House Committee on Naval Affairs, now a member of the Committee on Agriculture; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brevard, Citrus, Flagler, Lake, Marion, Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. Johns, Seminole, Sumter, and Volusia (12 counties). Population (1930), 243,348. JOE HENDRICKS, Democrat, of De Land, Fla.; born in Lake Butler, Union County, Fla.; raised on a farm and attended the rural grammar schools of Union County; was graduated from the Montverde High School in 1925 and from the John B. Stetson University, at De Land, Fla., with A. B. degree in 1930, and LL. B. degree in 1934; served as attorney for the legal tax survey of the State of Florida in 1934; was admitted to the bar in 1934 and commenced practice in De Land, Fla., in 1935; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress without Democratic or Republican opposition; received Democratic nomination in 1940 for the Seventy-seventh Congress without opposition; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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; reelected on November 2, 1926, again on November 8, 1932, and again on November 8, 1938, for the full term ending in 1945; married Lucy Heard, 1903, and has two sons, Heard F. George and Joseph Marcus George. 20 Congressional Directory GEORGIA RICHARD BREVARD RUSSELL, 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 Chi-cago in 1932; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Honorable William J. Harris, and took his seat January 12, 1933, after the expiration of his term as Governor; elected November 3, 1936, to full term ending January 3, 1943. 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., son of William James Peterson (born July 23, 1849, died February 22, 1915) and Catherine Johanna (Calhoun) Peterson (born October 10, 1856, died November 29, 1914); 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; member of the American Legion; president, Georgia State Society of Washington, D. C.; 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 Gen-eral Assembly of Georgia from fifteenth senatorial district, 1931-32; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, and reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; 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.—CoOUNTIES: 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ben Hill, Chattahoochee, Clay, Crisp, Dodge, Dooly, Harris, Hous-ton, Lee, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Peach, Pulaski, Quitman, Randolph, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Taylor, Terrell, Turner, Webster, and Wilcox (24 counties). Population (1930), 339,870. STEPHEN PACE, Democrat, Americus, Ga. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Butts, Carroll, Clayton, Coweta, Fayette, Heard, Henry, Lamar, Meri wesher, Newton, Pike, Spalding, Talbot, Troup, and Upson (15 counties). Population (1930), 261,234. ALBERT SIDNEY CAMP, Democrat, of Newnan, was born in Coweta County, Ga., July 26, 1892, son of William Walker and Ella Leigh Camp, both deceased; educated in the public schools of Newnan and Coweta County and at the University of Georgia, from which he received the bachelor of laws degree; admitted to the bar and has practiced law at Newnan since 1915; chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of Coweta County, Ga., 1915-17; served 2 years in the Army (1917-19) as member of Headquarters Detachment, Eighty-second Division, American Expeditionary Force; delegate to the Democratic GEORGIA Biographical National Convention, New York City, 1924; member of the lower house, General Assembly of Georgia (1923-28) and served as chairman of the judiciary committee, 1927-28; assistant United States attorney, northern district of Georgia, 1934-39; commander of Georgia Department, American Legion, 1933-34; married Miss Sarah Farmer, of Newnan, Ga., November 19, 1925, and they have two children— Albert Sidney Camp, Jr., and Molly Farmer Camp; Mason, Shriner, and Kiwanis; member of the Methodist Church and the American Legion; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on August 1, 1939, at a special election, to fill the un-Sarid term of the late E. M. Owen, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. 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 publie schools of Decatur and Griffin, Ga., and at Donald Fraser School in Decatur; received bachelor of law degree at Atlanta Law School, 1920; doctor of laws degree, Atlanta Law School, 1940; 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; secretary, Democratic caucus, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member, Democratic Con-gressional Campaign Committee. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baldwin, Bibb, Bleckley, Crawford, Glascock, Hancock, Jasper, Jeffer-son, Johnson, Jones, Laurens, Monroe, Putnam, T'wiggs, Washington, and Wilkinson (16 counties). Population (1930), 281,437. CARL VINSON, Democrat, of Milledgeville, was born November 18, 1883, 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 (prosecuting 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, artd Seventy-seventh Congresses from the new Sixth District; chairman, Naval Affairs Com-mittee since December 1931. 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; elected to the Seventieth and each suc-ceeding Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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. JOHN 8. GIBSON, Democrat, of Douglas, Ga.; born in Charlton County, Ga., January 3, 1893, son of William Owen and Julia Anne Gibson; was educated in 22 Congressional Directory IDAHO the common schools of Charlton County, Ga., and studied law through corre-spondence course La Salle Extension University, Chicago, Ill.; admitted to the bar in August, 1922; practiced law in Douglas, Ga., since 1923; elected solicitor of City Court of Douglas oseoting attorney) in 1928; elected solicitor general of the Waycross Judicial Circuit (prosecuting attorney) in 1934, which position he held until elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; married Miss Jimmie Monroe Carmack, daughter of the late W. H. J. and Zackie Harden Carmack, of Vienna, Ga., and they have one son, Marvin McCall Gibson, and three daughters, Blanche Louise Gibson, Anne Harden Gibson, and Mary Gene an is a Mason, Elk, and member of the Junior Order United American echanics. 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, Ga. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clarke, Columbia, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Lincoln, Madison, 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 Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. IDAHO (Population (1930), 445,031) SENATORS 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 and Seventy-fifth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. JOHN THOMAS, Republican, of Gooding, Idaho; born in Phillips County, Kans., on January 4, 1874; settled in Idaho in 1909; for many years has been engaged in livestock business; served as chairman of the Republican State Central Committee of Idaho for four years; was member of the Republican National Committee two terms; was appointed to the Senate June 30, 1928, and elected November 6, 1928, to succeed Senator Frank R. Gooding, deceased, for the term ending March 3, 1933; again appointed to the Senate January 27, 1940, to succeed Senator William E. Borah, deceased, to serve until next general election, November 5, 1940, when he was elected to fill balance of Senator Borah’s unexpired term ending January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Benewah, Boise, Bonner, Boundary, Canyon, Olearwater, 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, ILLINOIS Biographical 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 lumber-ing businesses on his home place at Clarksfork, later becoming interested in mining and as manager of several mining properties; stock raising and agriculture are now receiving the major portion of his attention; married Josephine Elizabeth Bunn, in 1915, and they have two children—Compton I., Jr., and Enid Mary, ages 20 and 18, 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, at Chicago in 1932, and at Philadelphia in 1936; unsuccessful candidate for Representative in Congress in 1930, but on November 8, 1932, was elected to the Seventy-third Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress by over 16,000 votes, and to the Seventy-fifth Congress by a vote of 58,941, his opponent receiving 24,995 votes; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Ada, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Blaine, Bonneville, Butte, Camas, Caribou, Cassia, Clark, Elmore, Franklin, Fremont, Gooding, Jefferson, Jerome, Lincoln, Madison Juin Oneida, Owyhee, Power, Teton, and Twin Falls (25 counties). Population , 255,455. HENRY C. DWORSHAK, Republican, of Burley, Idaho; born in Duluth, Minn., August 29, 1894; educated in the public schools of Duluth; learned printing trade and entered newspaper work; editor and publisher of the Burley Bulletin since 1924; elected president of Idaho Editorial Association in 1931; served in the American Expeditionary Forces; was Idaho commander of the American Legion in 1932; served as governor of the Idaho-Utah district of Rotary International, being installed at convention in Nice, France, in June 1937; married Miss Georgia B. Lowe in 1917, and they have four sons—Henry Irving, Charles L., Ward W., and Calvin G.; Scottish Rite Mason and Shriner; member of Elk and I. O. O. F. lodges ; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. ILLINOIS (Population (1930), 7,630,654) SENATORS 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 LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in 1915; elected State’s attorney of Mason County, Ill., in 1920; 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 unanimously selected for four terms as national judge advocate; delegate to the Democratic National Conventions at Chicago in 1932 and 1940; appointed chairman of the Illinois State Tax Com-mission in January 1933 by Gov. Henry Horner; entered the military service during the World War as a private and was honorably discharged with the com-mission of lieutenant; served continuously 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 1923, and they have one child—Scott W., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; served as chairman of the midwestern division of the Democratic National Committee in the 1940 campaign. C. WAYLAND BROOKS, Republican, of Chicago, was born in West Bureau, I11., son of the Rev. Jonas Gardner Brooks, an ordained minister of the Congre-gational Church, and Ida Nora Bickford Brooks; while Rev. Mr. Brooks held 24 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS pastorates in various cities of Illinois, his son attended ‘public schools of Dixon, Peoria, Kewanee, and Neponset; graduated from Wheaton (Ill.) High School; entered University of Illinois in 1916; enlisted in United States Marine Corps, April 1917, when the United States entered the World War; served in the Sixth Regiment, United States Marines, Second Division, overseas; was decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross, American Navy Cross, and Croix de Guerre; commissioned a second lieutenant in the front line and advanced to first lieutenant in the front line; wounded seven times in action and invalided home; his father and older brother served overseas, the older brother dying in service there; a younger brother also served in the Marine Corps during the war; Wayland returned to University of Illinois after the war and later was graduated from Northwestern University, where he subsequently lectured on Illinois law for 2 years; admitted to bar in 1926; served as assistant State’s attorney for 7 years and was commended by the bar, press, and civie organiza-tions for his aggressive fight against organized crime; as the Republican nominee in 1936 for Governor of Illinois, in the face of the greatest Democratic land-slide in American history, Mr. Brooks polled 105,000 votes more than any other Republican candidate in Illinois in that election; delegate to 1940 Republican National Convention and member of convention resolutions and platform drafting committees; past commander, Marine Post, American Legion; member Army and Navy Legion of Valor; Purple Heart Association; A. F. and A. M.; Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity; Delta Sigma Phi fraternity; Chicago, Illi-nois, and American Bar Associations; Order of Moose; owns and operates farm in La Salle County, Ill.; married Gertrude Ackerly, of St. Joseph, Mo., 1920; has one son, Russell, age 17; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Hamilton Lewis for the term ending January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 7,630,654. STEPHEN A. DAY, Republican, of Evanston, Cook County, Ill., was born in Canton, Ohio, July 13, 1882; attended public schools, Canton, Ohio; University School, Cleveland, Ohio; Asheville School, Asheville, N. C.; graduated, University of Michigan, 1905, B. A.; lawyer; former secretary, Chief Justice Fuller; special counsel, Comptroller of the Currency; author, The Constitutionalist; widower and has five children; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, from the State at large. WILLIAM G. STRATTON, Republican, of Morris, Ill., was born at Ingleside, Il, February 26, 1914, son of William J. and Zula (Van Wormer) Stratton; received B. A. degree from University of Arizona in 1934; married Marion Hook, of Gurnee, I1l., 1934; two daughters, Sandra Jane and Diana Joy; Lions Club, Eagles, Delta Chi fraternity; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on Novem- ber 5, 1940, from the State at large. FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 1; ward 2, precincts 1 to 93 and 96 to 110; ward 4, pre- cincts 1 to 7, 70, and 75; ward 11, precincts 34 and 40 to 54. Population (1930), 142,916. ARTHUR W. MITCHELL, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; lawyer; married; born in Chambers County, Ala., December 22, 1883; attended the public schools, Tuskegee Institute, Ala., where he had the unique distinction of serving as office boy for the late Booker T. Washington, during which time he met many of the outstanding men of the world, among whom were President Eliot, of Harvard College; Andrew Carnegie, the great philanthropist and capitalist; John D. Rockefeller, industrialist; Julius Rosenwald, philanthropist; and scores of others who greatly influenced and strengthened his life; he also attended Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass., and Columbia University, New York City; taught school in the rural sections of Alabama for many years; founded and was presi-dent of the Armstrong Agriculture School, West Butler, Ala.; after teaching school for many years, he engaged in the practice of law in Washington, D. C., and Chicago, Il. ; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, being the first Negro to Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Democrat ever to be elected Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. ILLINOIS B tographical 25 SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 1 to 56 and 68 to 91; ward 4, precincts 8 to 69, 71 to 74, and 76 to 87; wards 5 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 20, that part of precinct 21 east of South Halsted Street, and precincts 22 to 70; ward 10; ward 17, precincts 53, 54, 70, and 71; ward 19, precincts 52, 56, 58, 62, 63, and 75. Population (1930), 577,998. RAYMOND S. McKEOUGH, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill. THIRD DISTRICT.—City or CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 58 to 63; ward 9, that part of precinct 21 west of South Halsted Street; ward 13, precincts 5 to 39, 41 to 46, 48 to 54, 61 to 70, and 72; ward 14, precincts 24 to 42, 50 to 53, and 56; ward 15, precincts 5 to 57 and 59 to 69; ward 16; ward 17, precincts 1 to 52, 55 to 69, and 72 to 78; ward 18; ward 19, precincts 1 to 51, 53 to 55, 57, 59 to 61, and 64 to 74. COOK COUNTY: Townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. Popu-lation (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 30 years; was elected president of the thirty-second ward Demo-cratic 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 18 years, Robert J., age 16 years, and Rosemary, age 9 years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF CHICAGO: Ward 2, precincts 94 and 95; ward 3, precincts 57, 64 to 67, and 92; ward 11, precincts 1 to 33, 35 to 39, and 55 to 59; ward 12; ward 13, precincts 1 to 4, 47, and 60; ward 14, precincts 1 to 23, 43 to 49, 54, and 55; ward 15, precincts 1 to 4, and 58; ward 21, precincts 7 to 11, and 25 to 27; ward 22, that part of precinct 7 lying south of Cermak Road, precincts 18 to 20, 22 to 42, 44 to 46, 51, and 52; ward 25, precincts 31, 37 to 40, and 46. Population (1930), 237,139. HARRY P. BEAM, Democrat, of Chicago, born in Peoria, Ill., November 23, 1892, resided in Chicago since he was 7 years of age; was graduated from high school, St. Ignatius College, and Loyola University; admitted to practice law in the State of Illinois in 1916; enlisted in the United States Navy during the World War; served as commander of the Armour Post, American Legion; served as assistant corporation counsel of the city of Chicago, 1923-27; 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 4 to 14, 18, 25, and 33 to 47; ward 21, precincts 1 to 6, 12 to 24, and 28 to 52; ward 22, that part of precinct 7 north of Cermak Road, and precincts 8 to 13, 21, 49, and 50; ward 24, precincts 13 to 17, 41 to 47, 54, and 55; ward 25, precincts 3, 26 to 30, 32 to 36, 41, and 47. Population (1930), 140,481. ADOLPH J. SABATH, Dean of the House, Democrat, of Chicago; born in Czechoslovakia, April 4, 1866; came to United States in 1881; attended Bryant and Stratton’s Business College of Chicago; engaged in real-estate business; graduated from Chicago College of Law, 1891, and admitted to practice same year; received the degree of LL. B. from Lake Forest University in 1892; practiced law in Chicago until 1895; served as municipal judge and police magistrate in Chicago from that time to 1907; as judge, advocated the municipal court act; was instrumental in abolishing the fee system, establishing the juvenile court, and also the parole system for first offenders; in 1906 had distinction of being nominated for two offices, municipal court judge and Congressman, choosing the latter; first elected to Congress in 1906, and reelected 17 times (18 terms in all); March 4, 1941, marks his thirty-fifth year of continuous service; has served under 7 Presidents (Theodore Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, and Franklin D. Roosevelt) and 9 Speakers (Cannon, Clark, Gillett, Longworth, Garner, Rainey, Byrns, Bankhead, and Rayburn); is the only Member now sitting who was a member of the historic Foreign Affairs Committee of the World War period; aided in movement for recognition of small nations after the war, helping to bring about their independence; served 24 years on Immigration 26 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS and Naturalization Committee, as a member of which he opposed inhuman and harsh immigration measures but supported stringent deportation laws; also served as chairman of Alcohol Liquor Traffic Committee and member of Inter-state and Foreign Commerce Committee; chairman, Select Committee to Inves-tigate Real Estate Bondholders’ Reorganizations; 8 years a member and present chairman of Rules Committee; chairman and member of Democratic Steering Committee of the House; introduced the first workmen’s compensation bill, and for his efforts on behalf of this legislation he received the personal thanks of President Theodore Roosevelt; was the first Member to advocate Federal aid for better highways; among other legislation for the enactment of which he worked unceasingly was parcel post and Securities and Exchange Commission; opposed prohibition and fought for its repeal; introduced, in 1931, first Reconstruction Finance bill; at all times supported labor and all relief legislation; introduced first old-age pension resolution in 1909, also urging enactment of the Social Security Act; for 45 years member of the Cook County Democratic Central Committee, and for 10 years its chairman; delegate to all Democratic National Conventions since 1896; married Miss Mae Ruth Fuerst, December 31, 1917; member of Masons, Elks, Knights of Pythias, and various other social, fraternal, and civic organizations of Chicago. SIXTH DISTRICT.—City or CHICAGO: Ward 13, precincts 40, 55 to 59, 71, and 73; ward 20, precincts 1 to 3; ward 22, precincts 1 to 6, 14 to 17, 43, 47, and 48; ward 23; ward 24, precincts 1 to 12, 18 to 40, 48 to 53, and 51 to 61; ward 25, precincts, 1, 2, 4 to 25, and 42 to 45; ward 27, precincts 1 to 43, 46, 61, 62, and 64 to 68; ward 28, precincts 29, 53 to 55, and 67; ward 29; ward 30, precincts 21 to 66, 68, and 73 to 76; ward 37, precincts 46 to 81 and 85 to 88. Cook CouNTY: Townships of Berwyn, Cicero, Lyons, Oak Park, Pro-viso, River Forest, Riverside, and Stickney. Population (1930), 632,834. ANTON F. MACIEJEWSKI, Democrat, of Cicero, Ill. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF CHICAGO: Ward 26, precincts 1 to 7, 49, and 50; ward 28, precincts 1 to 28, 30 to 52, and 56 to 66; ward 30, precincts 1 to 20, 67, and 69 to 72; ward 31; ward 32, precincts 1 to 21, 48 to 51, 55, and 56; ward 33, precincts 1 to 48, 52 to 61, 63, and 64; wards 34 to 36; ward 37, precincts 1 to 45 and 82 to 84; wards 38 to 40; ward 41, that part of precinct 1 south of Devon Avenue and precincts 2 to 75; ward 45, precinct 1; ward 47, precincts 1 to 18, 74, 75, and 78; ward 50, precincts 52 to 69, 74, and 79 to 81. ‘Cooxk County: Townships of Barrington, Elk Grove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Palatine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling. Population (1930), 889,349. LEONARD W. SCHUETZ, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; married, has one daughter; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 15 to 17, 19 to 24, 26 to 32, and 48 to 51; ward 26, precincts 8 to 48; ward 27, precincts 44, 45, 47 to 60, and 63; ward 32, precincts 22 to 47 and 52 to 54; ward 33, precincts 49 to 51 and 62. Population (1930), 138,216. LEO KOCIALKOWSKI, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago in the district he now represents; educated in private schools, which was supplemented by a business course; was in charge of tax appraisals and delinquent tax collections in the office of the Cook County treasurer for 16 years; elected delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Houston, Tex., in 1928; elected ward com-mitteeman in 1930; appointed assistant to the chief bailiff, Municipal Court of Chicago; reelected ward committeeman in 1932, and also elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ry oF CHICAGO: Ward 42; ward 43, precincts 10 to 44, 47 to 55, and 57 to 59; ward 44, precincts 1 to 45, 57 to 62, and 65 to 72, and 76; ward 46, precincts 12 to 60 and 63 to 78. Population (1930), 209,650. CHARLES S. DEWEY, Republican, of Chicago, Ill., born in Cadiz, Ohio, November 10, 1882; has resided in Chicago from infancy; educated at Chicago public schools, St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H., and Yale University, where he received the bachelor of science degree in 1904; entered real estate business in Chicago; on entrance of United States into the World War volunteered in United States Navy at Great Lakes Naval Training Station; sent to sea on U. S. S. Pennsylvania, transferred to U. S. S. Mississippi, promoted by examination to senior lieutenant and honorably discharged from active service, March 1919; became vice president of the Northern Trust Co. of Chicago; appointed Assistant Secretary of Treasury in charge of fiscal offices by President Calvin Coolidge in ILLINOIS Biographical June 1924; was responsible for redesigning of United States paper currency and reduction in size of the paper bills; national treasurer of the American Red Cross, 1926-27; in November 1927, was appointed American financial adviser to the Polish Government and director of the Bank of Poland, in which capacity he served for 3 years; returned to Chicago in 1931; actively participated in Presi-dential campaigns of 1932 and 1936; served as trustee of the Chicago World’s Fair; is a trustee of the Chicago Historical Society and the International Cham-ber of Commerce; chairman of the Illinois division of the United States Chamber of Commerce; member at large, national council, Boy Scouts of America; mem-ber of American Legion and Sons of American Revolution; member of Episcopal Church; fraternity of Delta Psi; married Suzette deM. Hall, of New York City, in 1905; they have four children—Mrs. Frederick M. Alger, of Detroit, Mich., Charles S., Jr., of Far Hills, N. J., Mrs. Edward Byron Smith, of Lake Forest, I11., and A. Peter Dewey, Washington, D. C.; Republican nominee for Congress from Ninth Distriet in 1938 and while defeated led his party ticket in the district precincts; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—OC1ry oF CHICAGO: Ward 41, that part of precinct 1 north of Devon Avenue; ward 43, precincts 1 to 9, 45, and 46; ward 44, precincts 46 to 56, 63, and 64; ward 45, precincts 2 to 74; ward 46, precincts 1 to 11, 61, and 62; ward 47, precincts 19 to 73, 76, 77, 79 to 84, and 86 to 88; ward 48, precincts 1 to 96 all; ward 49, precincts 1 to 103 all; ward 50, precincts 1 to 51, 70 to 73, 75 to 78, and 82. COOK Townships of Evanston, New Trier, Niles, and Northfield. LAKE CouNTY. Population 930), 577,261. GEORGE A. PADDOCK, Republican, 724 Clinton Place, Evanston; vice president, Rogers & Tracy, Inc., investment bankers, 120 South La Salle Street, Chicago; born March 24, 1885, in Winnetka, Ill.; B. L. degree, University of Virginia, 1906; admitted to the Illinois bar in 1907; attended Plattsburg Camp, 1916; first officers’ training camp at Fort Sheridan, 1917; commissioned captain, later major, Three Hundred and Forty-second Infantry, Eighty-sixth Division; past commander, Evanston Post 42, American Legion; member Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Service Council of Illinois; Evanston member, and treasurer, Cook County Republican central committee; member of Military Order of the Loyal Legion, American Legion, Delta Tau Delta, and Delta Chi; Episcopalian; married and has one son, George A., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress with 199,418 votes to 125,827 for his Democratic opponent. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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, I1l., June 2, 1890; educated in West Chicago public and high schools, Northwestern University, and Webster College of Law; city treasurer of city of West Chicago, 1918-14; during the World War served in the Eighty-sixth Division of the United States Army; was first commander of Naperville Post, No. 43, American Legion, and served as National Garde de la Porte and National Con-ducteur of La Société des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux; elected State’s attorney of Du Page County, Ill., in 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1932; served four terms as secretary of the Du Page County Bar Association and two terms as president of the Illinois State’s Attorneys’ Association; chairman of the Du Page County Republican central committee for 8 years; associated in the practice of law at Wheaton, I1l., with Judge Russell W. Keeney; married to Ella Stegen in 1929 and has two children—Barbara Ann and James William; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of the Committee on the Judiciary and ranking Republican member of the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, De Kalb, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1930), 292,023. NOAH MORGAN MASON, Republican, of Oglesby, Ill.; born in Wales, July 19, 1882; completed high school and college, receiving degree of bachelor of educa-tion; also did graduate work in social science, studying taxation, government, and labor problems; in school work for 33 years as teacher, principal of grade school, and superintendent of schools; member of the State senate, 1930-36; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 28 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside (6 counties). Population (1930), 178,198. LEO ELLWOOD ALLEN, Republican, of Galena, Jo Daviess County, Ill., was born in Elizabeth, Ill., on the 5th day of October 1898; graduate, 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of Rules Com-mittee. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island. and Warren (6 counties). Population (1930), 199,104. ANTON J. JOHNSON, Republican, of Macomb, Ill.; born in Peoria, Ill, October 20, 1878, son of the late Rev. C. W. and Mary Johnson; married Mayme McMurray in 1905; public-school education and short course in dairy manu-facturing at the University of Missouri School of Agriculture; farmer a number of years and engaged in dairy-products manufacturing in the city of Macomb, Ill.; president of Illinois Milk Dealers’ Association, 1931-36, and president of Illinois Dairy Products Association in 1937; member of the Illinois National Guard, 1898-1901, but was not inducted into service for the Spanish-American War; elected on November 8, 1938, to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 213,630. ROBERT BRUCE CHIPERFIELD, Republican, of Canton, Ill.; born in Canton, Ill., November 20, 1899; attended Knox College, Galesburg, Ill; was graduated with an A. B. degree from Harvard College in 1922, and an LL. B. degree from Boston University Law School in 1925; member of American Legion and Forty and Eight; married Miss Catherine Newbern, and they have a son, Robert N., 7 years old, and a daughter, Virginia, 1 year old; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell (6 counties). Population (1930), 253,713. EVERETT McKINLEY DIRKSEN, Republican, of Pekin, Ill.; born at Pekin, I11., January 4, 1896; attended grade and high schools of Pekin and Univer-sity of Minnesota College of Law; served in the United States Army, 1917-19, with 17 months’ overseas service; commissioned from the ranks; member of the bar of the District of Columbia and Illinois; married and has one child, age 13; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—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 commander, county commander, and seventeenth district commander; member of Ford County Farm Bureau; member of board of directors, Illinois Wesleyan University; actively engaged in banking and farming since 1920; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Ver-milion (6 counties). Population (1930), 225,604. JESSIE SUMNER, Republican, of Milford, Ill.; graduate of Girton School, 1916; Smith College, 1920; studied law at University of Chicago, and at Columbia and Oxford Universities; admitted to the bar in 1923; practiced law in Chicago; employed at Chase National Bank, New York City, 1928-29; opened law office at ILLINOIS Biographical home in 1932; entered politics and was defeated in primary for State’s attorney; elected county judge in 1937 to fill unexpired term; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Champaign, Coles, De Witt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1930), 274,137. WILLIAM HOWARD WHEAT, Republican, Methodist, of Rantoul, IIL; born in Kahoka, Mo., son of Rev. Thomas J. Wheat, D. D., and Sarah Martin Wheat; educated in public schools, college, and business college; married Miss Mabel Williams, of Rantoul, Ill., and they have one son—James H. Wheat, attorney at law, of Urbana, Ill.; farmer and banker; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard, Mor-gan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties). Population (1930), 158,262. JAMES M. BARNES, Democrat, of Jacksonville, Ill.; born at Jacksonville, Morgan County, Ill., January 9, 1899; graduated from Illinois College, A. B., 1921; graduated from Harvard Law School, LL. B., 1924; during the World War served with United States Marines in France; elected county judge of Morgan County in 1926 and reelected in 1930; during period of holding office as county judge was elected president of the Illinois County and Probate Judges Associa-tion for two terms; in 1934 retired to private practice; member of Illinois State Bar Association and American Bar Association; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; member of Judiciary Committee. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties). Population (1930), 233,252. EVAN HOWELL, Republican, of Springfield, Ill.; born in Marion, Williamson County, Ill., September 21, 1905, son of Ernest T. and Jo Ella Howell; attended grade and high schools at Villa Grove, Douglas County, Ill.; graduated from the University of Illinois, College of Commerce, with a B. S. degree, in 1927 and the College of Law, with an LL. B. degree, in 1930; elected a member of Beta Gamma Sigma and is also a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi Delta Phi; taught school at Harvard Community High School, McHenry County, Ill.; was a member of the faculty of the College of Commerce, University of Illinois, 1928-30; mem-ber, Officers Reserve Corps; entered practice of law at Springfield, Ill., in 1930; served as referee in bankruptcy, United States District Court, southern district, southern division of Illinois, 1937-41; married to Kathryn Sellers, of Springfield, and they have one daughter—Marilyn, age 4; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1930), 344,666. : EDWIN MARTIN SCHAEFER, Democrat, of Belleville, Ill.; 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 two 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Richland, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1930), 213,567. LAURENCE F. ARNOLD, Democrat, of Newton, Ill.; educated in Newton High School and the University of Chicago; married to Miss Chlora Lane on June 3, 1914; two children—Laurence Lane and Carolee Ellen; member, Illinois House of Representatives, four terms, 1923-27 and 1933-37; delegate, Demo-cratic National Convention at New York, 1924; business, president Peoples State Bank of Newton; elected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed 4 30 Congressional Directory INDIANA TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson, Massae, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). Population (1930), 161,158. JAMES VANDAVEER HEIDINGER, Republican, of Fairfield, Ill., was born on a farm near Mount Erie, Wayne County, Ill., July 17, 1882, where he resided until he was 25 years of age; was educated in the rural schools of Wayne County, I1l., and the Northern Illinois Normal School; after teaching school for 4 years in the rural schools of Wayne County, he attended the Northern Illinois College of Law at Dixon, Ill., graduating in 1908 with a degree of master of laws; was admitted to the Illinois bar in 1908, and since that time has been engaged in the practice of law at Fairfield, Ill.; married to Miss Bessie Summers in 1911, and they have one son—James S. Heidinger; is a Mason and a Shriner; elected county judge of Wayne County in 1914; reelected in 1918 and 1922; delegate to the Repub-lican national convention in 1928; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1930), 258,341. CECIL WILLIAM (RUNT) BISHOP, Republican, of Carterville, Ill.; born on a farm near West Vienna, Johnson County, Ill., June 29, 1890, son of William C. and Belle (Ragsdale) Bishop; educated high school and Union Academy at Anna, I1l.; learned tailoring trade while attending school; worked as coal miner, telephone lineman, professional football, and baseball player and manager; Carterville city clerk 2 terms; 10 years owner Bishop Tailors, Carterville; 10 years postmaster at Carterville; 6 years, 1934-40, special representative of International Association of Lions Clubs in United States, Cuba, Canada, and Mexico; served as secretary, Illinois Postmasters’ Association, 2 years; secretary of Illinois Lions Clubs 5 years; district governor Lions Clubs, southern Illinois, 1 year; married Elizabeth Hutton; one son, Jack Hutton (in United States Coast Guard); clubs: Lions, Rebekahs, I. O. O. F., Elks, Eagles; teacher of young peoples’ class; member, big brothers’ class of Christian Church, Carter-ville; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. Home address: Carterville, Ill. 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. D. from Earlham College, 1898; LL. B. from Indiana Law School, Indianapolis, 1900; began practice of law at Shelbyville, Ind., 1900; prose-cuting 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; reelected November 8, 1938. RAYMOND E. WILLIS, Republican, of Angola, Ind., was born in Waterloo, Ind., August 11, 1875; received A. B. degree from Wabash College in 1896, and honorary degree, A. M., in 1902; newspaper publisher; during the World War served as chairman of the County Council of Defense for Steuben County, Ind.; member, Indiana Legislature, 1919, 1921; governor, Indiana District Rotary Clubs, 1934 and 1935; Congregationalist; Scottish Rite Mason; member of the Columbia Club and the Indiana Society of Chicago; married Mary Adelaide Taylor, of Orland, Ind.; elected United States Senator, November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Lake. Population (1930), 261,310. WILLIAM THEODORE SCHULTE, Democrat, of Hammond, Ind.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. INDIANA Biographical SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Kosciusko, Marshall, Newton, 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 in 1924, and was reelected four times; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on January 29, 1935, reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Elkhart, La Porte, and St. Joseph (3 counties). Population (1930), 289,398. ROBERT A. GRANT, Republican, of South Bend, Ind., was born July 31, 1905, in Marshall County, Ind., spent his boyhood there and at Hamlet in Starke County, Ind.; came to South Bend in 1922, where he finished high school; was graduated from the University of Notre Dame with an A. B. degree in 1928 and with an LL. B. degree in 1930; since then he has been engaged in the practice of law in South Bend; married September 17, 1933, to Margaret A. McLaren of Galien, Mich.; was deputy prosecuting attorney of St. Joseph County 1935-36; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounNTiES: Adams, Allen, De Kalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, Wells, and Whitley (8 counties). Population (1930), 275,523. GEORGE W. GILLIE, Republican, of Fort Wayne, Ind.; born in Berwickshire, Scotland, August 15, 1880; moved to the United States with his parents, who settled in Kankakee, Ill., in 1882, and in Fort Wayne, Allen County, Ind., in 1884; attended public schools and the International Business College; in 1901 completed a course in dairy science and industry at Purdue University; graduated from Ohio State University in 1907, doctor of veterinary medicine; in charge meat and dairy inspection of Allen County, 1908-14; began practice of veterinary medicine in 1914; sheriff of Allen County, 1917-20, 1929-30, and 1935-36: captain in the Reserve Officers’ Corps; Congregational Church, Kiwanis, Scottish Rite, Mizpah Shrine, Moose, Odd Fellows, Modern Woodmen, Y. M. C. A., American Veterinary Association, Indiana State Veterinary Association, and United States Livestock Sanitary Board; married to Grace Merion, of Columbus, Ohio, in 1908; two married daughters; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected on November 2 1949, to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a majority of 22,102 over Frank orbett. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blackford, Clinton, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Jay, Miami, Tipton, and Wabash (9 counties). Population (1930), 258,037. FOREST ARTHUR HARNESS, Republican, of Kokomo, Ind., where he was born, June 24, 1895; son of Oscar Melvin and Elfie Marie (Willits) Harness; LL. B., Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., 1917; married Amy Bernar-dine Rose, of Washington, D. C., August 15, 1917; lawyer; admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in 1917, and admitted to Indiana bar in 1919, and since practiced in Kokomo; admitted to practice be-fore the Supreme Court of the United States in 1933; elected prosecuting attor-ney, Howard County, Ind., in 1920; reelected in 1922; appointed special assistant to Attorney General of United States, February 1, 1931; resigned to resume private practice, July 31, 1935; represented United States in extradition of Samuel Insull from Greece 1933-34; served in World War, April 1917-June 1919; commissioned first lieutenant, Three Hundred and Nineteenth Infantry, Eightieth Division; 1 year overseas; awarded Purple Heart decoration; member, Indiana State and Howard County Bar Associations, American Legion (State commander 1929-30), and Delta Chi; Protestant, Mason, and Elk; member of Kokomo Country Club and Columbia Club (Indianapolis); elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and reelected to the Seventh-seventh Congress. 32 Congressional Directory INDIANA SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Fountain, Hamilton, Hendricks, Montgomery, Parke, Put-nam, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1930), 278,685. NOBLE J. JOHNSON, Republican, of Terre Haute, Vigo County; born at Terre Haute, Ind., August 23, 1887, son of Abraham S. and Ida M. Johnson; attended common and high schools of Terre Haute; married October 16, 1913, to Mercy Chase Broadhurst; has one daughter, Mirium Ruth Johnson; admitted to Indiana bar in December 1911, and engaged in practice of law, with offices at Terre Haute, Ind.; deputy prosecuting attorney in 1917 and 1918; elected prose-cuting attorney for forty-third judicial circuit in 1920; reelected in 1922; nomj-nated for Congress in 1924 without opposition; was elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth and to the Seventy-first Congresses; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Daviess, Gibson, Greene, Johnson, Knox, Martin, Monroe, Morgan, Owen, and Sullivan (11 counties). Population (1930), 283,498. GERALD W. LANDIS, Republican, of Linton, Ind.; born in Bloomfield, Greene County, Ind., February 23, 1895, son of John D. and Netta C. Landis; educated in Linton schools; graduated from Linton High School in 1914, and from Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind., in 1923, with B. S. degree; received M. S. degree from Indiana University, class of 1938; business and law instructor, athletic director of Linton High Schools for 16 years; second lieutenant in United States Army in 1918; married Vera H. Wilson, of Bicknell, Ind., and they have one child—Mary Lou; member of Christian Church; Delta U; thirty-second degree Mason, B. P. O. E., and K. of P.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick (10 counties). Population (1930), 281,724. JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE, Jg., Democrat, of Evansville, Ind.; born March 2, 1895, in that city; 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 and all succeeding 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. EARL WILSON, Republican, of Huron, was born near Huron, Lawrence County, Ind., April 18, 1906; reared on a farm; educated in the Huron Public School; received A. B. and M. S. degrees from Indiana University; diploma from Coyne Electrical School, Chicago, Ill.; attended Purdue University; taught high school in Dubois, White, and Decatur Counties, Ind.; high-school principal in Jackson County, Ind.; member of Vallonia Lions Club; married Elsie Bex; affiliated with the Baptist Church; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Decatur, Delaware, Fayette, Henry, Randolph, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1930), 270,571. RAYMOND SMILEY SPRINGER, Republican, of Connersville, Ind., was born near Dunreith in Rush County, Ind., April 26, 1882; lawyer by profession; graduate of common and high schools; attended Butler University, Indianapolis, Ind.; was graduated from the Indiana Law School at Indianapolis, with degree of LL. B. in 1904; served as judge of the thirty-seventh judicial circuit of Indiana, 1916-22; captain of Infantry in the World War; now a lieutenant colonel of Infantry in the Officers’ Reserve Corps; served as first State commander of the American Legion in Indiana, in 1919-20, and as national executive committeeman from Indiana for the American Legion, 1929-31; was a candidate for Governor of Indiana in 1932 and 1936; married; no children; thirty-second degree Mason; belongs to Elks, Eagles, and Knights of Pythias lodges; member of the Forty and Eight; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. rowa Biographical ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Hancock and Madison. MARION COUNTY: Townships of Frank- lin, Lawrence, Perry, and Warren, and all of Center Township except that part northeast of ward 8 of the city of Indianapolis. City of Indianapolis, wards 1, 2, 9, 10, 16, 17, 18, 22, and 23. Population 1930), 264,926. 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, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—MARION COUNTY: Townships of Decatur, Pike, Washington, and Wayne and that part of Center Township northeast of ward 6 of the city of Indianapolis. City of Indianapolis, wards 3 to 8, 11 to 15, and 19 to 21. Population (1930), 257,233. LOUIS LEON LUDLOW, Democrat, of Indianapolis; born on a farm in Fayette County, Ind.; 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 1918 and for Columbus Dispatch since 1913; author of “From Cornfield to Press Gallery,” an autobiography; “In the Heart of Hoosierland,” a story of the Indi-ana pioneers; ‘Senator Solomon Spiffledink,” a satire on political bunkum; “America Go Bust,” an exposé of governmental bureaucracy; and ‘Hell or Heaven,” a treatise on peace and war proposing a method of war prevention; Methodist; member of Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Delta Chi (national news-paper fraternity) and Society of the Indiana Pioneers; also member and former president of National Press Club, in which capacity he made the address of wel-come to Col. Charles A. Lindbergh on the latter’s return from his epochal flight to Paris; elected to Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; he was the first newspaper correspondent to go directly from the Press Gallery to a seat in Congress; on February 7, 1940, Butler University conferred upon Mr. Ludlow the degree of doctor of laws. IOWA {Population (1930) 2,470,939) SENATORS GUY MARK GILLETTE, Democrat, of Cherokee, Iowa; served as prosecut-ing attorney 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 dur-ing the World War; since World War, engaged in farming; married; has one son 11 years old; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, having a majority of 26,000 votes, and served until his resignation on November 3, 1936, having been elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Louis Murphy, for the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected in 1938 full-term senior Senator. CLYDE LAVERNE HERRING, Democrat, of Des Moines, Iowa; born in Jackson, Mich., May 3, 1879; son of James Gwynn and Stella Mae (Addison) H.; educated in the public schools; married Emma Pearl Spinney, of Mobile, Ala., 34 Congressional Directory 10WA February 7, 1901; children, LaVerne Barlow, Lawrence Winthrop, and Clyde Edsel; rancher, Colorado, 1902-6; moved to Massena, Iowa, in 1906; farmer, 1906-08; in automobile business, Atlantic, Iowa, 1908-10; moved to Des Moines, Iowa, in 1910; president of Herring Motor Co., Herring-Wissler Co.; director of Greater Des Moines Committee; Congregationalist; Democratic nominee for Governor of Iowa in 1920, and for United States Senate in 1922; member of the Democratic National Committee of Iowa, 1924-28; elected Governor of Iowa for 1933-35 term; reelected for 1935-37 term; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Cedar, Des Moines, Henry, Iowa, Jefferson, Johnson, Lee, Louisa, Muscatine, Van Buren, and Washington (11 counties). Population (1930), 251,084. THOMAS ELLSWORTH MARTIN, Republican, of Iowa City, Towa; born in Melrose, Monroe County, Iowa, January 18, 1893; attended country school in Monroe County and grade and high schools in Russell, Towa, 1907-09; attended and graduated Albia High School, Albia, Iowa, 1909-12; A. B. degree, State Uni-versity of Iowa, 1916; juris doctor degree, Law College, State University of Iowa, 1927; Order of Coif; awarded university fellowship by Columbia University for 1927 and 1928; LL. M. degree, Columbia University, 1928; accountant and lawyer; admitted to Iowa bar, 1927, and to United States Supreme Court bar, 1939; member, Johnson County, Iowa State, and American Bar Associations; city solicitor of Towa City, 1933-35; mayor of Iowa City, 1935-37; Republican nom-inee for Railroad Commissioner of Iowa in 1932 and 1934; permanent chairman, Iowa State presidential convention, February 28, 1936; graduate, First Officers Training Camp, Leon Springs, Tex., 1917; commissioned United States Regular Army; served with Thirty-fifth Infantry throughout the war; retired November 10, 1919; assistant professor military science and tactics, University of Iowa, 1921-23; sales analyst, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 1916-17 and 1920-21; married Dorris Jeanette Brownlee, of Waterloo, Iowa, June 5, 1920; children, Richard Coupland and Dorris Brownlee, 2d; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Clinton, Dubuque, Jackson, Jones, Linn, and Scott (6 counties). Population (1930), 302,946. WILLIAM S. JACOBSEN, Democrat, of Clinton, Iowa, was born in that city on January 15, 1887 (son of Bernhard M. Jacobsen, a Member of Congress from 1931 to 1936); was elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, Iowa, 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allamakee, Buchanan, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Dela-ware, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth (12 counties). Population (1930), 240,282. HENRY O. TALLE, Republican, of Decorah, Iowa; born and reared on a farm; by profession an educator in economics and political science; served in the United States Navy during the World War; commissioned as ensign; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Appanoose, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Mahaska td Monroe, Poweshiek, Ringgold, Union, Wapello, and Wayne (14 counties). Population (1930), 271,679 KARL MILES LeCOMPTE, Republican, of Corydon, Iowa, was born in Corydon, Iowa, May 25, 1887; graduated from the Corydon High School in 1905, KANSAS B 1ographical and from the State University of Iowa, in 1909, with a degree of B. A.; publisher of the Corydon Times-Republican since 1910, member of the State senate, 1917-21; served as a private during the World War; was married in 1927 to Miss Dorothy Tye; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 287,229. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: PAUL CUNNINGHAM, Republican, of Des Moines, Iowa; lawyer; born in Indiana County, Pa., son of Robert Harvey and Sarah Jane Cunningham; gradu-ated from the State Normal School, Indiana, Pa., and from the literary and law departments of the University of Michigan; Fort Sheridan Training Camp, 1917; discharged 1919, first lieutenant, Infantry; former captain, Iowa National Guard; former State representative, Polk County, Iowa; member Westminster U. P Church, American Legion, Phi Alpha and Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternities, Ma-sonic bodies, Odd Fellows, Moose, and various civic organizations; married Gail Fry; three children, Paul Harvey, Jr., Edward Plummer, and Harriett Sarah; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. Cass, Fremont, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, Shelby, and Taylor (13 counties). Population (1930), 274,168. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adair, Adams, Audubon, BEN FRANKLIN JENSEN, Republican, of Exira, Iowa; born December 16, 1892, in Marion, Linn County, Iowa, of Danish parentage; attended rural school, Exira High School, and Officers’ Training School; commissioned second lieutenant during the World War; employed by a lumber company 1914-38, yardman, assistant auditor, manager; student of Government science and has devoted much of his life to the problems of the people; past seventh district commander of the American Legion; Mason, Knights of Pythias, Eastern Star, Elk, Eagle; member of Lutheran Church; married Charlotte E. Hadden, of Clearfield, Iowa, and they have one daughter—Betty; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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; LL. B., Iowa University; lawyer; president school board; member lower house in Iowa Legislature and of State senate; Member Seventy-second to Seventy-seventh Congresses inclusive; married; three children. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sage, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties) Population (1930), 308,798. VINCENT F. HARRINGTON, Democrat, of Sioux City, Iowa; born in Sioux City, Iowa, May 16, 1903; educated in the Sioux City schools and Trinity College, and was graduated from Notre Dame University in June 1925 with B. A. degree; instructor in history and economics, and athletic director, University of Portland, Portland, Oreg., 1925-27; financial correspondent and managing agent for Prudential Life Insurance Co., and Continental Mortgage Co., 1927-36; served in three sessions of the Iowa State Senate, 1932-36; nominated for Lieutenant Governor of Iowa on Democratic ticket in June 1936 primary; withdrew to accept convention nomination for Seventy-fifth Congress from the Ninth District to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Representative Guy M. Gillette; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; married, two children. 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 36 Congressional Directory KANSAS 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 pur-chased 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; reelected November 4, 1930; reelected November 3, 1936; married Florence Crawford (deceased), daughter of former Gov. Samuel J. Crawford. CLYDE MARTIN REED, Republican, of Parsons, Kans., was born in Cham-paign County, Ill., October 19, 1871; family moved to Labette County, Kans., in 1875; common school education; taught school 1 year; appointed Railway Mail Service in 1889; served Post Office Department in transportation of mail branch for 28 years, rising through all grades to be field superintendent of divisions at Cleveland and Cincinnati, Ohio, New Orleans, La., Omaha, Nebr., and St. |Paul, Minn.; superintendent, Railway Adjustment Division, Post Office Department, 1908-10; resigned to actively manage and publish the Parsons, Kans., Sun, a daily newspaper, of which he is now editor and publisher; secretary to Gov. Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, in 1919; appointed a member of Kansas Court of Industrial Relations in 1920; appointed chairman of Kansas Public Utilities Commission in 1921, and served to 1924; Governor of Kansas, 1929-31; practiced extensively before Interstate Commerce Commission and State commissions, Middle West; married Minnie E. Hart in 1891, and they have seven children; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTES: 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; member of Kansas House of Representatives, four terms; speaker pro tempore and speaker; 4 years in Kansas Senate; on State board of administration; 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 common schools of Illinois, Iowa, and Kansas, 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; LL. D. from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; 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, 1907-09; 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 Congress 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, to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fifth Congress November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; committee: Judiciary—ranking Republican. Home address: Box 125, Kansas City, Kans. Washington address: Suite 201, House Office Building. Residence: George Washington Inn. KANSAS : Biographical 37 THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Montgomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1930), 265,319. ~ THOMAS D. WINTER, Republican, of Girard, Kans.; born July 7, 1896, at Columbus, Kans.; attended grade schools in Galena and Columbus, Kans.; graduated from high school in Columbus, Kans.; served in the Air Service during the World War; court reporter of the district court of Crawford County, Kans., 1921-27; admitted to practice law in Kansas in 1926; served as assistant county attorney and county attorney of Crawford County, Kans.; commissioner of public utilities of the city of Girard and commissioner of finance and revenue of the city of Girard; engaged in practice of law at Girard, Kans.; married Blanche Gracey, of McCune, Kans., in 1922; two children—Robert and John; member of the various Masonic bodies, the American Legion, and the Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 3 FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chase, Clay, Coffey, Dickinson, Geary, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion, Mos, Osage, Pottawatomie, Riley, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (14 counties). Population (1930), EDWARD H. REES, Republican, of Lyon County, Kans.; born on a farm in Lyon County, Kans.; was a student at the Kansas State Teachers College, of Emporia, Kans.; was admitted to the practice of law in 1915; is married and has one child; member of the Kansas House of Representatives, 1927-33, being majority floor leader, 1931-33; served in the State senate, 1933-35; served as chairman of the Kansas Judiciary Committee, 1935-37; member of the Kansas Judicial Council, 1933-37; is engaged in the general practice of law at Emporia, Kans.; also operates a farm and interested in agriculture; member of the various Masonic bodies, the American Legion, and the Farm Bureau and Grange; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 246,902. - JOHN M. HOUSTON, Democrat, of Wichita, 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 15 years; served two terms as mayor of 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. E. R. Com-mittee for 2 years; elected secretary of the Democratic State central 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 children—Patricia Mary Jane, born March 19, 1922, and Robert Allan, born November 15, 1925; life member Wichita Consistory No. 2, Scottish Rite Masons; life member of Midian Temple Shrine, Wichita, Kans.; elected a Member of the Seventy-fourth Con-gress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Con-gresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cheyenne, Cloud, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Ottawa, Phillips, Rawlins, Republic, Rooks, Russell, a Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (26 counties). Population ¢1930), FRANK CARLSON, Republican, of Concordia, Kans.; farmer-stockman; 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; mémber of the various Masonic bodies and the Baptist Church; married August 26, 1919, and has two children— Eunice Marie, born December 20, 1926, and a foster son, Millard Ross; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on Neher 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, Congressional Directory KENTUCKY 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 and all succeeding 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 ad-mitted 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 prose-cuting 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 succeed-ing Congresses; was chairman State Democratic conventions at Louisville, 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, at Chicago in 1932, and at Philadelphia in 1936, serving as temporary chairman at Chicago and Philadelphia; served as permanent chairman at the Democratic National Convention in 1940; elected to United States Senate from Kentucky for term beginning March 4, 1927; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1933; and reelected for term beginning January 3, 1939; was elected Majority Leader of the Senate in 1937 to succeed the late Senator Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas, which position he still holds. ALBERT BENJAMIN CHANDLER, Democrat, of Versailles, Ky.; born in Corydon, Ky., July 14, 1898, son of J. S. and Callie Chandler; educated in Cory-don High School, Transylvania College (A. B., 1921), Harvard Law School, and University of Kentucky Law School (LL. B., 1924); U. S. Army, 1918; member Pi Kappa Alpha, Lampas, and Book and Bones fraternities; lawyer in Versailles; served as master commissioner of the Woodford Circuit Court, 1930-35; Mason and Shriner; was elected to the State senate from the twenty-second district, November 1929; married Miss Mildred Watkins, November 12, 1925, and they have four children— Marcella, Mildred, A. B., Jr., and Joseph Daniel; member of American Legion, Episcopal Church, Lexington Country Club, Audubon Golf Club of Louisville, Ky., and Ashland Golf Club; elected Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky in November 1931; receiver for Southern Life Insurance Co., 1934; elected Governor November 5, 1935, by the largest vote yet cast for that office; received the honorary degree.of doctor of laws from Transylvania College in 1936 and the University of Kentucky in 1937; holds commission as captain, Judge Advocate General’s Department; appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator M. M. Logan, until the regular election November 1940, at which time he was elected to fill the remaining portion of the unexpired term of Senator Logan which would end January 3, 1943. KENTUCKY Biographical REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Christian, Crittenden, Fulton, Grae Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, McCracken, Marshall, and Trigg (14 counties). Population 1930), 238,189. NOBLE JONES GREGORY, Democrat, of Mayfield, Ky.; born in Mayfield, Ky., August 30, 1897, son of William Jones and Rosa A. (Boyd) Gregory; edu-cated in private and public schools of Mayfield; married to Miss Marion Hale, of Mayfield, on June 22, 1925—one daughter; 19 years’ banking experience as cashier and trust officer of the First National Bank of Mayfield; 15 years’ service in public-school work as secretary-treasurer of Mayfield Board of Education; Presbyterian; member of Elks, Odd Fellows, and other fraternal orders; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, succeeding his brother, the late William Voris Gregory, who had served five terms as Representative from the First Kentucky District; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allen, Butler, Daviess, Edmonson, Henderson, Hopkins, Logan, sn Muhlenberg, Ohio, Simpson, Todd, Union, Warren, and Webster (15 counties). Population 1930), 338,117. BEVERLY MILLS VINCENT, Democrat, of Brownsville, Ky., was born in Brownsville, Ky., March 28, 1890, son of Gillis and Calvernia Vincent; attended Western Kentucky State Teachers College, Bowling Green, Ky., and the Uni-versity of Kentucky, Lexington; was admitted to the Kentucky bar in April 1915, and commenced practice in Brownsville, Ky.; law partner of the late Senator M. M. Logan for 8 years; was married to Miss Stella V. Smith, of Brownsville, Ky., on February 20, 1916; county judge of Edmonson County 1916-18; served in the United States Army during the World War; served as assistant attorney general of Kentucky in 1919 and 1920; member of the State senate 1929-33; presidential elector in 1932; served as attorney general of Kentucky from 1936 until his resignation in March 1937, having been elected to Congress; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, without opposition, on March 2, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Glover H. Cary; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; active member of the American Legion; member of the Committee on Naval Affairs. THIRD DISTRICT.—County: Jefferson. 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., invest-ment securities; married Glessie Morris, and they have two daughters—Lydia and Mary; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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 Congressional Directory KENTUCKY 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—Dalph and James; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Oldham, Pendleton, 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 20; graduated, University of Kentueky, 1918; admitted to practice law, 1917; city attorney, Irvine, Ky., 1918-20; moved law office to Lexington, Ky., 1920, with residence at Paris; 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; Member, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member, Com-mittee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. 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; 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 married to Julia Grace Mayo, daughter of John D. and Anna Mayo, July 17, 1901, and they have three children—OIga, 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; Baptist; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930; reelected to Seventy-third and each succeeding Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: 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. JOE B. BATES, Democrat, of Greenup, Ky.; born at Republican, Ky., Octo-ber 29, 1893, the seventh son of Jesse and Hannah Caudill Bates; educated in the public schools of Knott County, Ky.; the Mountain Training School, Hindman, Ky., and was graduated from Eastern Kentucky State Teachers College, Rich-mond, Ky., in 1916; studied law in the office of Judge R. T. Parsons, Greenup, Ky.; married Miss Virginia Rice of Greenup, Ky., February 10, 1916; two chil-dren—Joseph Rice, 21, and Becky, 19; entered politics in 1921 as candidate for county clerk, and was the first Democrat ever to be elected to that office; served by reelection for 16 years; elected on June 4, 1938, to the Seventy-fifth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Fred M. Vinson; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of 12,000; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a majority of 17,146. LOUISIANA B 1ographical NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTtiES: Bell, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Leslie, McCreary, Monroe, Owsley, Pulaski, Rockecastle, 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, 1928, 1936, and 1940; 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; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by 29,000 majority. Member of Committees on Judiciary, Mines and Mining, Revision of the Laws, and Committee on Committees, in House; married and has two children, John M. Robsion, Jr., and Mrs. Henry Gordon Edmonds, 1500 Delafield Place NW, . LOUISIANA (Population (1930), 2,101,593) SENATORS JOHN HOLMES OVERTON, Democrat, of Alexandria, La.; born at Marks-ville, Avoyelles Parish, La., of the marriage of Judge Thomas Overton and Miss Laura Waddill; graduated from the Louisiana State University, with the degree of A. B., and from Tulane Law School, with the degree of LL. B.; conferred LL. D. by Duquesne University, June 7, 1939; married December 12, 1905, to Miss Ruth Dismukes, of Natchitoches, of which marriage are the following children—MTrs. Edward G. Cailleteau, Ruth, John, and Mary Elizabeth; member of Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Phi fraternities, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Masonic order, Knights Templar, American Bar Association, Sons of the American Revolution, and Society of the Cincinnati; elected May 12, 1931, as Representative from the Eighth Congressional District of Louisiana to fill an unexpired term; elected to the United States Senate November 8, 1932, for the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945, without opposition in either the primary or general election. ALLEN JOSEPH ELLENDER, Democrat, of Houma, La.; born in Montegut, Terrebonne Parish, La., September 24, 1891; lawyer and farmer; graduate of St. Aloysius College, New Orleans, La., and Tulane University of Louisiana, at New Orleans, with degrees of M. A. and LL. B.; married to Miss Helen Calhoun Donnelly; one son—Allen J., Jr.; served in World War; city attorney of Houma, 1913-15; district attorney, Terrebonne Parish, 1915-16; delegate to Constitutional Convention of Louisiana in 1921; member of the house of representatives of Louisiana, 1924-36; floor leader, 1928-32, during administration of the late Huey P. Long, Governor; speaker of the house of representatives, 1932-36; Democratic nominee for United States Senator from Louisiana, and elected without opposition in the general election held on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; Democratic national committeeman from Louisiana, 1939-40. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 3 to 9 and 15. PARISHES: Plaquemines and St. Bernard. Population (1930), 253,548. F. EDWARD HEBERT (pronounced “A-Bear’’), Democrat, of New Orleans, La., was born in New Orleans, La., October 12, 1901; educated in the public and parochial elementary schools, Jesuit High School, and Tulane University of New Orleans; newspaperman on the New Orleans States and New Orleans Times-Picayune; city editor of the New Orleans States, which ‘broke’ the Louisiana scandal on June 9, 1939, and which paper was subsequently awarded the Sigma Delta Chi plaque for “‘courage in journalism’’; political editor and columnist for the Congressional Directory LOUISIANA New Orleans States for many years before appointment as city editor in 1937; colonel on the staff of Gov. James A. Noe of Louisiana, 1936; named by Gov. Sam Houston Jones of Louisiana as his personal representative in Washington, D. C., on May 15, 1940; nominated by the Democratic Party for Congress in the primary of September 10, 1940, over two opponents in the first primary by & vote of 35,029, as compared to 17,266 for the incumbent J. O. Fernandez and 4,735 for Herve Raciviteh; member of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity and served as third national vice president, 1936-39; married to Gladys Bofill on August 1, 1934; one child, Dawn Marie; member of the Catholic Church; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, without opposition. SECOND DISTRICT.—CitY oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 1, 2, 10 to 14, 16 and 17. PARISHES: Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1930), 302,893. HALE BOGGS, Democrat, of New Orleans, La.; born on February 15, 1914; educated in the public and parochial schools of Jefferson Parish, La., and was graduated from Tulane University with B. A. degree in 1935 and LL. B. degree in 1937; member of the bar of New Orleans; member of the Beta Theta Pi, aca-demic fraternity, the Phi Beta Kappa, scholastic fraternity, the New Orleans, Louisiana, and American Bar Associations, and of the Roman Catholic Church; married to Miss Corinne Morrison Claiborne of New Roads and New Orleans, La; two children—Barbara Rowena and Thomas Hale Boggs, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, La Fourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1930), 230,092. JAMES DOMENGEAUX, Democrat, of Lafayette, La., was born in Lafayette, Lafayette Parish, La., January 6, 1907; educated at Mount Carmel Academy, Cathedral High School, and Southwestern Louisiana Institute, Lafayette, La., and obtained his legal education from Loyola University and Tulane University, of New Orleans, La.; commenced the practice of law at Lafayette, La., in 1930, and has practiced continuously since; elected to the Louisiana House of Representa-~ tives in 1940 and served as chairman of the appropriations committee and was one of the administration’s floor leaders; defeated the incumbent Congressman, Robert L. Mouton, in the Democratic primary of September 10, 1940, and defeated the Republican candidate, David W. Pipes, Jr., for election to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; is a Catholic and is single. FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, De Soto, Red River, and Webster (7 parishes). Population (1930), 285,684. OVERTON BROOKS, Democrat, of Shreveport, La., was born at Baton Rouge in East Baton Rouge Parish, La., December 21, 1897; parents, Claude M. Brooks, deceased, and Mrs. Penelope Overton Brooks, living—four sisters and one brother; educated in the schools of East Baton Rouge Parish; enlisted in the United States Army in July 1918 and served in the Sixth Field Artillery, First Regular Army Division, until September 1, 1919, seeing service in France, Belgium, and Germany during this time; graduated from the law school of the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., on April 10, 1923, at which time he began law Shreveport, States practicing at La.; became United Commissioner on Sep-tember 1, 1925, and served as such for 10 years; married Miss Mollie Meriwether on June 1, 1933, and they have one child—Laura Anne; member of the Episcopal Church, Masonic lodge, Elks club, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Shreveport Bar Association, Louisiana State Bar Association, Kiwanis Club, Forty and Eight Organization; elected to Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Con-gresses; renominated to the Seventy-seventh Congress over four opponents and Jorlacked in the general election over Ben Neal, Independent, by vote of 33,704 09. 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. NEWT V. MILLS, Democrat, of Monroe, La.; born in Calhoun, Ouachita Parish, La., September 27, 1899, son of Henry E. and Menervia Sanford Mills; attended public schools of Ouachita Parish, La., Polytechnic Institute, Ruston, La., and Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.; married; served as mem-ber of Electoral College, 1936; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. MAINE Biographical 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.; born in Franklin, St. Mary Parish, La., April 20, 1892; received A. B. degree from the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., in 1912, and was valedictorian of his class; studied law at Washington and Lee University, 1912-13, and at Tulane Univer-sity, New Orleans, La., where he received LL. B. degree in 1914; lawyer; served in the United States Army in the World War, 1917-19, with the American Expe-ditionary Force; served in the State house of representatives from East Baton Rouge, 1928-32; elected to the State senate in 1932; married to Mary Briggs, of Little Rock, Ark., and has one daughter—Mary Elizabeth, who is attending Louisiana State University; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the Sixth Congressional District at a special election held May 1, 1934, to fill vacancy of the Hon. Bolivar E. Kemp; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934. Elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Jef-ferson Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1930), 222,495. VANCE PLAUCHE, Democrat, of Lake Charles, La.; born in Plaucheville, Avoyelles Parish, La., August 25, 1897; attended private and public schools; was graduated from Loyola University, with LL. B. degree, in 1918; served as city attorney of Lake Charles, La., 1928-32, district counsel for the Home Owners Loan Corporation, 1933-35, and secretary for the State civil service commission, 1940; during the World War served as a private, enlisting on June 3, 1918, at Camp Beauregard, La.; went overseas in August 1918 and served in Italy with Base Hospital No. 102; discharged at Camp Shelby, Miss., on May 4, 1919; member of the American Legion, Knights of Columbus, Kiwanis International; member of the Roman Catholic Church; married to Miss Amire Bush, of New Orleans, La., September 24, 1923; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Avoyelles, Grant, La Salle, Natchitoches, Rapides, Sabine, Vernon, and Winn (8 parishes). Population (1930), 225,158. A. LEONARD ALLEN, Democrat, of Winnfield, La., was born in a log cabin near Winnfield, La., January 5, 1891; son of Asa L. Allen and Sophronia Perkins Allen; reared on a small hill farm and received his early education in rural schools; graduated from the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., receiving A. B. degree in 1914; taught in rural schools; principal of the Georgetown High School, 1914-15, and the Verda High School, 1915-17; superintendent of Winn Parish schools, 1917-22; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1922, and has practiced his profession since at Winnfield; married Miss Lottie Mae Thompson in 1915, and they have two sons—Harwell Leonard Allen and Lyndon Blaine Allen; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. MAINE (Population (1930), 797,423) SENATORS WALLACE HUMPHREY WHITE, Jr., Republican, was born at Lewiston, Maine, August 6, 1877; graduated from Bowdoin College; member of the bar of the District of Columbia and of Maine; was elected to the House of Repre-sentatives 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, and reelected in September 1936; was appointed by Presi-dent Coolidge as a delegate of the United States to the Pan American Elec-‘rical Communications Conference in Mexico City in 1924, and by the Secretary of State as a United States delegate to the International Telegraph Confer-ence in Paris in 1925, and as an unofficial observer of the United States at the International Juridical Conference on Wireless Telegraphy, held in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1927; was appointed by the President as a United States delegate to the International Radio Telegraphic Conference in Washington, D. C., in 1927, as chairman of the United States delegation to the International Con-ference on Safety of Life at Sea, held in London, England, in 1929, by the Secre-tary of State as chairman of the United States delegation to the meeting of the 44 Congressional Directory MAINE International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications, held at Copenhagen in 1931, and by the President as chairman of the United States delegation to the International Radio Conference, Cairo, in 1938; is a member of the board of overseers of Bowdoin College; received honorary degrees of LL. D. from Bowdoin College in 1928 and from Bates College in 1938. 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, 1917-18; 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 Maine Legislature, 1921-22; senator 1923-24; Governor of Maine 1925-29; chairman Governors’ conference 1926-27; married Dorothy Foss, of Portland, Maine, April 20, 1915; son, Charles F. Brewster, born May 8, 1916; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on September 10, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on September 14, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on September 12, 1938; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Cumberland, Oxford, Sagadahoc, and York (4 counties). Population (1930), 265,989. JAMES CHURCHILL OLIVER, Republican, of South Portland, Maine; born in South Portland, Maine, August 6, 1895; graduated from Bowdoin Col-lege in 1917, with the degree of bachelor of arts; is engaged in the general insur-ance business in Portland and in the State of Maine; member of the board of aldermen of South Portland, 1932-33; during the World War enlisted in the United States Army as a private, serving from July 1917 to June 1919, when he was discharged as a major of Infantry; married, and has one son—J. Scott Oliver; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on September 14, 1936, receiving 60,512 votes, and Simon M. Hamlin, Democrat, received 44,032 votes; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on September 12, 1938, receiving 57,642 votes and Harold B. Emery, Democrat, received 40,103 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on September 9, 1940, receiving 55,503 votes, and Peter M. MacDonald, Democrat, received 32,018 votes. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Kennebec, Knox, Lincoln, Somerset, and Waldo (7 counties). Population (1930), 264,434. MARGARET CHASE SMITH, Republican, of Skowhegan; born in Skow-hegan, Maine; attended the public schools and was graduated from the Skowhegan High School; taught school; served as business executive for the Maine Telephone & Telegraph Co., Independent Reporter (country newspaper), the Daniel E. Cummings Woolen Co., and the New England Waste Process Co.; secretary to her husband while in Congress; past president, Maine Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs; former treasurer, Congressional Club; member Republican State committee, 1930-36; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held June 3, 1940, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of her husband, the late Representative Clyde H. Smith; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress with a plurality of 25,818. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Aroostook, Hancock, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1930), 267,000. FRANK FELLOWS, Republican, of Bangor, Maine; born in Bucksport, Maine, November 7, 1889; educated in Bucksport schools, East Maine Conference Seminary, University of Maine, and University of Maine Law School; admitted to Maine bar August 1911; appointed clerk, United States District Court for District of Maine, January 12, 1917, resigned September 1920; since in active practice of his profession with brother at Bangor under name of Fellows & Fellows; married June 27, 1910, to Georgie Eleanor Maling, of Brewer, Maine; children— Elizabeth, Oscar, Joan, Raymond, and William; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress on September 9, 1940. MARYLAND Biographical MARYLAND (Population (1930), 1,631,526) SENATORS MILLARD E. TYDINGS, Democrat, Havre de Grace, Md.; born at Havre de Grace, April 6, 1890; married; attorney at law; graduated from University of Maryland 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; reelected 1938. 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 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, member of the executive committee and board of directors of the Fidelity & Deposit Co.; member of the executive committee and board of directors of the Fidelity 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 Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and District of Columbia; member Maryland State Council of Defense, World War; special commissioner to organize war-work records of Maryland; president of Maryland Historical Society; chairman of Maryland Democratic Campaign Committee, 1932 and 1936; author: Governor Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War, 1902; elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, over my opponent, Joseph I. France; reelected on November 5, 1940, receiving 394,239 votes, Harry W. Nice, Republican, receiving 203,912 votes. Home, 12 KEdgevale Road, Roland Park, Baltimore; office, Fidelity Building, Baltimore. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Annes, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1930), 193,658. DAVID J. WARD, Democrat, of Salisbury, Wicomico County, Md., born September 17, 1871, in Wicomico County; attended the public schools; engaged in farming, lumbering, and mercantile business; married November 22, 1897, to Edith Perdue; has two daughters and four sons; member of Maryland House of Delegates 1915-17, which included extraordinary session known as war session; served as chairman of Democratic State central committee of Wicomico County, 1918-26; member of the Maryland Senate 1926-34; reelected November 8, 1938, to Maryland Senate for 4-year term; resigned to accept the nomination by unan-imous vote of the Democratic State central committee of Maryland as party candidate in special election held on June 6, 1939, to fill the vacancy in the Seventy-sixth Congress caused by the resignation of Hon. T. Alan Goldsborough to accept a Federal judgeship; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford. City oF BALTIMORE: Wards and 16; ward 25, precincts 1 to 10; wards 26 to 28. Population (1930), 461,419. WILLIAM PURINGTON COLE, Jr., Democrat, of Towson, 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 engineering in 1910; studied law at the Uni-versity 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, 64674°—77-2—1st ed——05 Congressional Directory MARYLAND Md.; after 11 months’ foreign service discharged with the rank of captain of Infantry; member of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; mem-ber of the Baltimore County, State of Maryland, and American Bar Associations; member of the Board of Regents of the University of Maryland, which is also the State board of agriculture, and Board of Regents of Smithsonian Institution; 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CitYy or BALTIMORE: Wards 1 to 8; ward 18, precincts 8 to 12; ward 22. Population (1930), 203,929. THOMAS D’ALESANDRO, Jr., Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in the city of Baltimore, August 1, 1903, the son of Thomas D’Alesandro, Sr., and Mary Annie (Foppiano) D’Alesandro; Catholic; educated at St. Leo’s Parochial School and Clavert College; engaged in the brokerage and insurance business; president of D’Alesandro-MecCullough Insurance Agency, Ine.; married Miss Annunciata M. Lombardi in September 1928, and they have six sons and one daughter; elected to the State house of delegates in 1926, and reelected in 1930; member of St. Leo’s Holy Name Society; fourth degree, Alhambra, Knights of Columbus; Fraternal Order of Eagles; B. P. O. Elks; Loyal Order of Moose, and Maryland Historical Society; served as general deputy collector of internal revenue, 1933; elected a member of the Baltimore City Council in 1935; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF BALTIMORE: Wards 9 to 14, and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3; wards 19 and 20. Population (1930), 259,467. JOHN AMBROSE MEYER, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born in Baltimore, Md., May 15, 1899; attended the grade schools and Loyola High School; graduated from Loyola College with A. B. and M. A. degrees and from the University of Maryland with LL. B. degree; married Ellen M. Donovan Nagle on February 4, 1924, and they have two children—John Ambrose Meyer, Jr., and Mary Eleanor Meyer; during the World War enlisted in S. A. T. C., Georgetown University, and received honorable discharge from the United States Army; attorney at law; served as associate judge of the traffic court, 1929-35; special assistant city solic-itor, 1939-40; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St. Marys (6 counties). City or BALTIMORE: Ward 18, precincts 4 to 7, 13, and 14; wards 21, 23, and 24, ward 25, precincts 11 to 17. Population (1930), 244,519. LANSDALE G. SASSCER, Democrat, of Upper Marlboro, Md.; born in Upper Marlboro, Md., September 30, 1893, son of late Frederick and Lucy Clagett Sasscer; attended the public schools of Prince Georges County, Central High School of Washington, D. C., and Tome School, Port Deposit, Md.; received LL. B. degree from Dickinson Law School in 1914; served 13 months in active service with the American Expeditionary Forces in France; at the time of his dis-charge held a first lieutenant’s commission; after war resumed practice of law in southern Maryland; married February 15, 1919, to Miss Agnes Coffren, and they have three children—Dolly, Lucy Clagettt and Lansdale G., Jr.; member of the Maryland Senate, 1922-38, serving as chairman of the committee on judicial proceedings, 1927-29, and as majority floor leader, 1931-33; was chosen presi-dent of that body in 1935 and 1937; delegate to the Democratic National Conven-tion in New York in 1924 and at Philadelphia in 1936; served as vice chairman of Governor O’Conor’s committee on reorganization of State government; unanimously designated by the Democratic State Central Committee as party candidate in special election held on February 3, 1939, to fill the vacancy in the Seventy-sixth Congress, caused by the death of Stephen W. Gambrill, receiving 23,816 votes, his Republican opponent, A. Kingsley Love, receiving 5,224; re-elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, receiving 58,232 votes, John N. Torvestad, Republican, receiving 23,807 votes. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 coun-ties). Population (1930), 268,534. KATHARINE EDGAR BYRON, of Williamsport, Md.; born in Detroit, Mich.; attended Westover School, Middlebury, Conn., and Holton Arms School, Washington, D. C.; married William D. Byron, October 6, 1923; served as town MASSACHUSETTS Biographical 47 commissioner, Williamsport, Md.; president, parent teachers association; chair-man, Red Cross flood disaster of 1936; elected at a special election held May 27, 194, to complete the unexpired term of her late husband in the Seventy-seventh ongress. 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, 1932, 1936, and 1940; delegate at large to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, 1917-18; elected as the first Democrat since before the Civil War to the United States Senate, November 5, 1918, to succeed the 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; reelected November 6, 1928; re-ag November 6, 1934; reelected November 5, 1940; his term of office expires in 1947. HENRY CABOT LODGE, Jr., Republican, of Beverly, Mass.; born in Nahant, Mass., July 5, 1902, grandson of the late United States Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and nephew of the late Congressman Augustus P. Gardner; graduate of Harvard College; married Emily Sears, of Beverly, in 1926, and is the father of two boys; Boston Evening Transcript, 1924-25; New York Herald Tribune, 1925-31; member, House and Senate Press Galleries; member, National Press Club; elected Representative to General Court of Massachusetts, 1932 and 1934; elected United States Senator on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, Goshen, Huntington, Mid-dlefield, Pelham, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol and Royalston. Population (1930), 274,703. ALLEN TOWNER TREADWAY, Republican, of Stockbridge; married; one son; Amherst College, A. B., 1886, LL. D., 1934; active member, supreme council, thirty-third degree Scottish Rite, northern Masonic jurisdiction; Knight Tem-plar; Granger; Elk; Royal Arcanum; trustee, Lee Savings Bank; director, New England Fire Insurance Co. and Berkshire Life Insurance Co.; 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-seventh; ranking Republican member of Ways and Means Committee, member of Library Committee, House of Representatives; member of Joint Congressional Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation and Joint Com-mittee to Investigate Nonessential Federal Expenditures. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN County: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Agawam, East Longmeadow, Hampden, Longmeadow, Ludlow, West Springfield, and Wilbraham. HAMP-sHIRE COUNTY: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Easthampton, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield, and South Hadley. Population (1930), 292,066. CHARLES RUSSELL CLASON, Republican, of Springfield, Mass.; born in Gardiner, Maine, September 3, 1890; was graduated from Bates College in 1911; from Georgetown University Law School in 1914; and from Oxford University in 1917; attorney at law; district attorney, western district of Massachusetts, 1927— 30; World War veteran; married to Emma M. Pattillo, of Truro, Nova Scotia; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. | Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS 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-bridge, Templeton, Warren, Webster, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population (1930), 282,230. JOSEPH E. CASEY, Democrat, of Clinton, Mass.; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; married Constance M. Dudley; three children, Jane, John, and Joseph E., Jr. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Ashland and Hopkinton. WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Boylston, Douglas, Grafton, Holden, Hopedale, Mendon, 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, 1913-16; 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 (deceased Oct. 23, 1936); two sons; elected to the Seventy-second Con-gress; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX CouUNTY: 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, Tyngsboro, 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; is now honorary president of Rogers Hall School, Lowell; member of Women’s Overseas League and American Legion Auxiliary; served overseas, 1917; with American Red Cross in care of the disabled, 1918-22; appointed personal representative in care of disabled veterans by President Harding, 1922; reappointed by President Coolidge, 1923, and by President Hoover, March 28, 1929; Presidential elector, 1924; elected to Congress June 30, 1925, to fill vacancy caused by death of hus-band, the late Representative John Jacob Rogers; reelected to the Seventieth, and all succeeding Congresses, including the Seventy-seventh for which she received 120,435 votes to her opponent’s 37,593 votes. 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. GEORGE JOSEPH BATES, Republican, of Salem, Mass., was born in that city on February 25, 1891; married; member of the Massachusetts House of Repre-sentatives, 1918-24; served as mayor of Salem, 1924-37; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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. SurrorLk County: City of Revere and town of Winthrop. Population (1930), 312,956. [Vacant.] 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 MASSACHUSETTS B 1ographical 49 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 F., Arthur D., Jr., Elaine, and Ruth Mary; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member of Ways and Means Committee. 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. THOMAS HOPKINSON ELIOT, Democrat, of Cambridge, Mass., was born in Cambridge, Mass., June 14, 1907; graduate of Harvard College, A. B., 1928, Harvard Law School, LL. B., 1932; lawyer; Assistant Solicitor, United States Department of Labor, 1933-35; general counsel, Social Security Board, 1935-38; regional director, Wage and Hour Division, 1939-40; married Lois A. Jameson, October 10, 1936; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. TENTH DISTRICT.—SUurroLK 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 8, and ward 8, precincts 1 to 9; city of Chelsea. Population (1930), 242,310. THOMAS ALOYSIUS FLAHERTY, Democrat, of Charlestown, Boston; born in Boston, Mass., December 21, 1898; was graduated from the Boston College High School, and at time of election to Congress was a student at the Northeastern University Law School, Boston, Mass.; World War veteran; member of the American Legion; served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1935-37; married Marion C. Reardon, of Charlestown, in 1926; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on December 14, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John P. Higgins; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SUrroLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 6 and 7; ward 8, precincts 10 to 14; wards 13 to 18. Population (1930), 294,272. JOHN W. McCORMACK, Democrat, of Boston; born in South Boston; lawyer; educated in the Boston public schools; admitted to practice law in Mas-sachusetts 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 Con-gress, filling unexpired term of the late James A. Gallivan; Member Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; Majority Leader; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; World War veteran; member Knights of Columbus. 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. PrLymMourH COUNTY: 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 secretary 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 American 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 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN term of the late Hon. Louis A. Frothingham; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BRrisToL 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: T'owns of Holliston and Sherborn. NorroLE 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 Chron-icle, 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 Investigating Com-mittee, 1917; chairman, Massachusetts Republican Legislative Campaign Com-mittee, 1917; Harding-Coolidge Presidential elector, 1920; executive secretary, Republican State committee, 1922-25; delegate at large to Republican National Convention at Cleveland in 1936; permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1940; member of Republican National Committee; elected chairman of the Republican National Committee, July 1940; in 1924, elected Member of the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-seventh; elected Minority Leader, House of Representatives, Seventy-sixth Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket. BRrisToL County: City of New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, and Fairhaven. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Cohasset. PLymouTH COUNTY: Towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marion, Marshfield, Mattapoisett, Middle-borough, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Rockland, Scituate, Wareham, 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 other business; 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-seventh. MICHIGAN (Population (1930), 4,842,325) SENATORS 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, Alma College, and Syracuse University; also honorary D. C. L. from Union Col-lege, New York, and Albion College; editor and publisher of the Grand Rapids Herald until appointment to the United States Senate; author of several books dealing with Alexander Hamilton; in 1912 a member of the Grand Rapids Charter Commission; in 1913 chairman of the Michigan commission which put Zachariah Chandler’s statue in the Washington Capitol; in 1916 and in 1928 was chairman of the Michigan Republican State convention; from 1912 to 1918 member of the Republican State central committee of Michigan; married Hazel H. Whitaker, of Fort Wayne, Ind.; his three children are Arthur, Jr., Barbara, and Elizabeth; appointed to the United States Senate March 31, 1928; elected on November 6, 1928, for the short term and for the long term ending in 1935; reelected for the term ending in 1941 and for the term ending in 1947; Republican nominee for President pro tempore of the Senate, 1932, 1936, and 1941. PRENTISS M. BROWN, Democrat, St. Ignace; born there June 18, 1889, son of James J. and Minnie Brown; educated in the city schools, graduating in 1906; went to Albion College, graduating in 1911 with A. B. degree; a scholarship in political economy attracted him to the University of Illinois in 1911; LL. D., Albion, 1937; in 1914 he returned to St. Ignace and practiced law since; 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 and 1936; trustee of Albion MICHIGAN Biographical College; was chairman of Democratic State conventions of 1924, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1938, and 1940; 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 M., Jr., and Paul W.; member of the Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the full term; appointed to the Senate November 16, 1936, to fill the unexpired term of the late Hon. James Couzens; chairman of the 1938 Democratic senatorial campaign committee; chairman, Special Committee on Taxation of Governmental Securities and Salaries, 1938-40. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Ciry or DETROIT: Wards 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, and 15, and city of Hamtramck. Popula-tion (1930), 380,155. RUDOLPH G. TENEROWICZ, Democrat, of Detroit (Hamtramck), Mich.; born June 14, 1890, Budapest, Austria, of Polish parentage, son of John and Antonette (Gall) Tenerowicz; married Margaret A. McGuire of Detroit, Mich.; children—Marjorie, William, and John Francis; education received in parochial school, Adrian, Pa., St. Cyril and Methodius Seminary, Orchard Lake, Mich.; St. Bonaventure’s College, Allegheny, N. Y.; St. Ignatius College, Chicago, Ill.; graduated in medicine from Loyola University, Chicago, Ill., in 1912; practiced medicine and surgery in Chicago until January 1923; post graduate courses in surgery at Illinois Post Graduate School; moved to Hamtramck, Mich., in 1923 and has practiced medicine and surgery continuously for past 26 years; enlisted in United States Army and commissioned as first lieutenant in Medical Corps in 1917 (World War); honorably discharged December 26, 1918; commissioned cap-tain in Medical Reserve Corps; mayor of city of Hamtramck, Mich. four times; first elected in 1928, reelected in 1930, 1936, and again in April 1938; member of ways and means committee of Wayne County Board of Supervisors for 7 years; former member of Illinois Medical Society, Chicago Medical Society, and Polish Medical Society, Chicago, Ill.; present member of Michigan State Medical Society, Wayne County Medical Society; Polish Doctors and Dentists Society of Detroit; surgical staff of St. Francis Hospital, Hamtramek, Mich.; member of American Legion since its inception; past commander of Henry Bushway Post three times; member of Polish Legion of American Veterans; member Hamtramck Board of Commerce, Hamtramck Exchange Club, Metropolitan Club, Hamtramck Democratic Club, Kosciusko Democratic Club, Michigan Democratic Association; member and former president, Hamtramck Goodfellows; Polish National Alliance; Polish Alliance of America; Polish Union of America, having been national presi-dent in 1914 and reelected in 1916, resigning in 1917 to enlist in World War; member of Maccabees and other organizations; member Last Man Club; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, receiving 71,533 votes; Charles A. Roxborough, Republican, 16,752; Ben Fischer, Socialist, 314; Theodore Grove, Socialist Labor, 60; John Johns, Constitutional Democrat, 286 votes, receiving a majority of 54,781 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, receiving 87,451 votes, a majority of 66,052; Donald Marshall, Republican, 21,399. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Popula-tion (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 had 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 261,506. PAUL W. SHAFER, Republican, Battle Creek, Mich.; born April 27, 1893, at Elkhart, Ind., son of John M. and Sarah C. Shafer; educated in public schools of Three Rivers, Mich., later studying law; newspaper correspondent, editor and publisher from 1914 to 1929; elected municipal justice, Battle Creek, Mich., 1929; reelected 1933; elected to Seventy-fifth Congress November 8, 1933, and to succeeding Congresses; Republican campaign chairman for Calhoun County, 1934; member of Indiana State Militia, 1917 and 1918; past potentate, Saladin Temple Shrine, Grand Rapids, Mich.; thirty-second degree Mason; member Elks lodge and American Federation of Government Employees, A. F. L.; past Congressional Directory MICHIGAN president, Battle Creek Lions Club; past district governor, Lions of Michigan; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars and Rotary Club; member, House Committee on Military Affairs and Committee of the District of Columbia. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1930), 225,111, CLARE E. HOFFMAN, Republican, Allegan, Mich.; born Vicksburg, Pa., September 10, 1875; public schools; Northwestern University Law School; married; elected Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934; reelected Novem-ber 3, 1936, with a plurality of 5,276; reelected November 8, 1938, with a plurality of 15,367; reelected November 5, 1940, with a plurality of 25,224. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Kent and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1930), 295,369. BARTEL J. JONKMAN, Republican, of Grand Rapids, Mich.; born in that city April 28, 1884, the son of John B. and Sarah (Holwerda) Jonkman; educated in the common schools; married Anna Vanden Bosch September 28, 1904, and they have three children—Cecilia, Gwendolyn, and Esther; graduated from the Uni-versity of Michigan in 1914, with degree of LL. B.; prosecuting attorney of Kent County, Mich., four terms, 1929-36; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held February 19, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Genesee, Ingham, and Livingston (3 counties). Population (1930), 347,502. WILLIAM W. BLACKNEY, Republican, of Flint, Mich.; born at Clio, Genesee County, Mich.; educated in the public schools of Genesee County; attended school at Big Rapids, Mich., and Olivet College, Olivet, Mich.; was gradu-ated 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 attor-ney 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, to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. ; SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 was 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, past department com-mander, 1926-27; 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clinton, Gratiot, Ionia, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee (6 counties). Population (1930), 277,224. FRED L. CRAWFORD, Republican, Saginaw, Mich. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benzie, Grand Traverse, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Missaukee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (11 counties). Population (1930), 214,318. ; ALBERT J. ENGEL, Republican, of Muskegon, Mich.; born in New Wash-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; was graduated from Northwestern University MICHIGAN Biographical Law School, 1910, degree of LL. B.; unanimously elected an honorary alumnus by the board of regents of the University of Michigan on the 19th of June 1937; married to Bertha M. Bielby and they have three children—Margaret Ann, age 21 years; Albert Joseph, Jr., age 18 years; and Helen Louise, age 10 years; elected prosecuting attorney of Missaukee County, Mich., in 1916; 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 Wash-ington 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 and succeeding Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alcona, Arenac, Bay, Clare, Crawford, Gladwin, Iosco, Isabella, Mors Midland, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, and Roscommon (14 counties). Population (1930), 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; married. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alger, Alpena, Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Delta, Emmet, Kalkaska, Luce, Mackinac, Menominee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, and Schoolcraft (16 counties). Population (1930), 204,710. FRED BRADLEY, Republican, of Rogers City, Mich.; born in Chicago, Ill., April 12, 1898; attended Rogers City High School and Montclair (N. J.) Academy, and was graduated from Cornell University in 1921 with A. B. degree; married Miss Marcia Marie Hillidge, of Front Royal, Va., November 20, 1922; member, Westminster Presbyterian Church, Kiwanis International, Delta Chi fraternity, American Legion; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 L’Anse, Baraga County, Mich., May 26, 1893; was graduated from I’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 Michigan 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 Distrief; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ty oF DETROIT: Wards 1 to 4, 6, and 8, and Highland Park city. Popu-lation (1930), 354,135. GEORGE D. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born in that city on January 1, 1900; graduated from the University of Detroit in 1921 with the degree of A. B., and in 1924 with the degree of LL. B.; has practiced law in Detroit, Mich., since 1924; married and has three children—George D., Jr., Maureen, and Joan; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—City or DETROIT: Wards 17, 19, and 21 and townships of Gratiot and Grosse Pointe, in Wayne County. Population (1930), 350,212, LOUIS CHARLES RABAUT, Democrat (lawyer), of Grosse Pointe Park, Mich., was born in Detroit, Mich., December 5, 1886, son of Louis A. and Clara Lenau (Reid) Rabaut; attended a parochial school; A. B. degree 1909, Detroit College; LL. B. degree 1912, Detroit College of Law; M. A. degree 1912, University of Detroit; admitted to the bar in 1912; married Stella M. Petz, of Detroit, and they have three sons and six daughters—F. Dermott (S. J.), Marie Celeste (Sister Mary Palmyre I. H. M.), Louis 3d, Mary Jane, Vincent, Carolyn, Joan Marie, Stella, Marie, and Martha; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of Committee on Appropriations. 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 three Congressional Directory MINNESOTA children—John David, Jr., James Victor, and Julé Jane; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the Fifteenth District; reelected each succeeding Congress; member of the Ways and Means Committee and Select Committee on Conserva-tion of Wildlife Resources. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—City 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., January 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 from the age of 4% to 11, and afterward attended the St. Cyril and Methodeusz Seminary in Detroit and the Detroit Business University; married Miss Estelle J. Geisinger, of Dearborn, Mich., June 11, 1938; has five children by previous marriages, Joan, John A., Jr., Maxine, Delphine, and Raymond J., and one child by present marriage, Beverly Jane; since the age of 18 has been extensively engaged in the building and real-estate business in the Detroit area; at the age of 26 he con-structed 4,000 houses, which was the nucleus around which the present city of Hamtramck was built; established the Hamtramck Lumber & Supply Co., and the First State Bank of Hamtramck, now known as the Peoples Wayne County Bank of Hamtramck; later established the Dearborn Lumber & Coal Co., of Dearborn, Mich.; during the World War, and 13 years thereafter, was pres-ident of the Polish Citizens’ Committee of Detroit, which committee was a part of the national organization of which the honorary chairman was Ignace Jan Paderewski; in-1918 was chairman of the committee on arrangements when the first congress of Polish organizations was called in Detroit and assisted in organizing the Polish Army recruited in America and sent to France, which was known as the Haller Army; in 1920 was State commissioner in charge of the sale of Polish bonds; as a reward for his great services he was honored by the Polish Government and presented the Polonia Restituta; member of the Polish Turners’ Club, the Detroit Society Branch of the Polish National Alliance, the Polish Roman Catholic Union, Knights of Columbus, and numerous important political clubs; first to represent the newly created Sixteenth District in the Seventy-third Con-gress; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; has the distinction of being the only Member of Congress from the State of Michigan who is chairman of a standing committee, the Committee on Invalid Pensions; and is also the only Democratic Member of Congress from Michigan who is a member of the Committee on Labor, Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, and Committee on Education. 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 School in 1903, and of the Detroit College of Law, in 1910, with an LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar the same year, since which time he has practiced law; held the following offices: Village clerk of Royal Oak, 1905-6; township treasurer of Royal Oak, 1907-8; village assessor of Royal Oak, 1909; village attorney of Royal Oak, 1911-21; assistant prosecuting attorney for Oakland County, Mich., 1918-19; first mayor, city of Royal Oak, 1921-22; member of the board of education for 18 years; member of Methodist Church, Masonic orders, and Kiwanis International; married to Adele Roegner June 28, 1913, and they have three children—Marion E., Stanton G., and Robert Lincoln; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. MINNESOTA (Population (1930) 2,563,953) SENATORS HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, Republican, of Miltona, Minn., was born in the town-ship of Burbank, Kandiyohi County, Minn., January 8, 1881; elected to the United States Senate in 1922 on the Farmer-Labor ticket with a plurality of 83,539; reelected in 1928, carrying every county in the State with a majority of 325,000 over his Republican opponent; reelected in 1934 with a plurality of 208,632; reelected in 1940 on the Republican ticket, receiving 641,049 votes, carrying 84 out of 87 counties, with a plurality of 330,174 over his nearest opponent. MINNESOTA Bb tographical 59 JOSEPH HURST BALL, Republican, of St. Paul, Minn.; born in Crookston, Minn., November 3, 1905; attended public schools at Crookston and graduated from high school there in 1922; attended Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, for 2 years, the Eau Claire (Wis.) Normal School for 1 semester, and the University of Minnesota for 1 full year; worked for the old Minneapolis Journal as a cub reporter from June 1927 until August 1928, and then spent a year free lancing and writing fiction; married to Miss Elisabeth Robbins, of Minneapolis, on April 28, 1928, and they have three children—Jennifer Ann, born December 10, 1929; Peter Joseph, born August 29, 1932; and Sara Elisabeth, born May 10, 1940; in November 1929 went to work on the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch as a general assignment reporter and rewrite man; in December 1934 was made State political writer for the Pioneer Press and Dispatch and continued in that capac-ity until October 14, 1940, on which date he was appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Harold E. Stassen to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Ernest Lundeen. 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses from the First Congressional District of Minnesota. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Carver, Cottonwood, Dakota, Faribault, Jackson, = Sour, McLeod, Martin, Nicollet, Scott, Sibley, and Watonwan (14 counties). Population (1930), JOSEPH PATRICK O'HARA, Republican, of Glencoe, Minn. ; born in Tipton, Iowa, January 23, 1895; attended the public schools and graduated from the Spirit Lake (Iowa) High School; attended Inns of Court, London, England, and Notre Dame University, Notre Dame, Ind.; graduated from Notre Dame University in 1920, with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in Minnesota in 1921, and began the practice of law at Glencoe, Minn., the same year; served as attorney for various villages, cities, towns, and school districts, and as county attorney, McLeod County, 1934-38; 27 months in the World War; past State commander of the American Legion, Department of Minnesota; member of Minnesota State and American Bar Associations; married Leila Lee White, of Holden, Mo.; three children; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. 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. RICHARD P. GALE, Republican, of Mound, Minn., born in Minneapolis, Minn., October 30, 1900; attended schools in Minneapolis and is a graduate of Yale University; also attended the Minnesota Farm School, University of Minnesota; farmer and small businessman; married and has two sons; member of Minnesota State Legislature, 1939 session, from rural Hennepin County, Minn.; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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-sota; 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; at present a colonel in Marine Corps Reserve, Aviation; was elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—HENNEPIN COUNTY, City of Minneapolis: Ward 4, precincts 3 to 5 and 13 to 28; wards 5 to 8 and 11 to 13. Population (1930), 297,934. OSCAR YOUNGDAHL, Republican, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born in Min-neapolis, October 13, 1893; attended grade and high schools of Minneapolis, and Congressional Directory MINNESOTA Hamline University, St. Paul, Minn., 2 years, received B. A. degree from Gustavus Adolphus, St. Peter, Minn., and LL. B. degree from the Minnesota College of Law; Republican candidate for attorney general in 1936; enlisted in the Navy June 7, 1918, and was discharged in January 1919; practiced law in Minneapolis until elected to Congress; department commander, American Legion, 1931; mar-ried and has a family of four children—two boys and two girls; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, receiving 79,491 votes; Dewey Johnson, Farmer-Labor, 52,289 votes; and LaMoine Dowling, Democrat, 20,720 votes. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Aitkin, Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Kanabec, Meeker, Mille i Rosson, Pine, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (15 counties). Population ’ } , 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. H. CARL ANDERSEN, Republican, of Tyler, Minn.; born in Newcastle, Wash., son of C. C. and Lorena Andersen; family moved to present home farm near Tyler in 1901; married to Miss Martha Elder, of Florence, Ala., and they have two sons—Charles, born October 13, 1930, and Alfred, born December 12, 1938; elected to the Minnesota State Legislature in 1935; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; profession, farmer. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIEs: Carlton, Cook, Itaska, 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 prac-tice 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 21 years, and Dorothy Pittenger, age 13 years; elected to the Seventy-first Congress, November 6, 1928; reelected to the Seventy-second Congress in 1930; 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; defeated on November 3, 1936, for the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected on No-vember 8, 1938, to the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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.; 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.; six children—five daughters and one son; member of Eagles lodge and the Baptist Church; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, receiving 41,822 votes and a plurality in 12 of the 15 counties in the district over Ole O. Sageng, Republican, 27,522 votes, and Martin O. Brandon, Democrat, 25,210 votes; in the election on November 3, 1936, Representative Buckler was elected to his second term in Congress by an increased vote and an increased plurality over 1934; he received a total vote of 48,265, compared to his Republican opponent’s 31,181, and his Democratic opponent’s total of 20,165; Mr. Buckler’s plurality over the Republican nominee, Elmer A. Haugen, was 17,077, about 3,000 votes greater than his plurality 2 years previous; he secured a plurality in 14 of the 15 counties in the district, losing only Otter Tail County, the home county of his two opponents, where he lost to the Republican nominee by 3,180 and defeated the Democratic nominee, Martin MISSISSIPPI B 1ographical 57 0. Brandon, by 2,062; in Mr. Buckler’s home county of Polk he received a plurality over the Republican nominee of 5,516 votes, and a margin of 6,571 over the Democratic candidate; was reelected to his third term by a comfortable margin over his Republican opponent and by 23,592 votes over the Democratic candi-date, carrying 12 of the 15 counties in the district; has the distinction of being the only candidate running in the State of Minnesota carrying the Farmer-Labor label to win election and in face of the fact that the Farmer-Labor candidate for Governor lost the district by approximately 18,000 votes; in 1940 Congressman Buckler was reelected and again holds the distinction of being the only Farmer-Labor Party labeled candidate to win in the State of Minnesota in the 1940 elec-tions; his 4 terms of 2 years each will give him a total of 8 years of Ninth District service which is the second longest in the history of the Ninth Congressional District of Minnesota, only Halvor Steenerson, also of Crookston, serving for a longer period. MISSISSIPPI (Population (1930), 2,009,821) SENATORS! 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, 1908-12; served as Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi, 1912-16, and as Governor, 1916-20 and 1928-32; has two children—Mrs. Jessie Forrest Smith, Gainesville, Fla., and Capt. Theodore G. Bilbo, Jr., Fort Jackson, Columbia, S. C.; 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; nominated for reelection to the United States Senate August 27, 1940, defeating ex-Governor Hugh L. White, wealthy lumber-man of Columbia, Miss., by a vote of 91,334 to 62,641, Governor White carrying only 13 out of the 82 counties of the State; had no opposition in the general election in November. WALL DOXEY, Democrat, of Holly Springs, Miss.; born at Holly Springs» Marshall County, Miss., August 8, 1892; married in 1916 to Miss Myrtle Frances Johnson, of Jackson, Tenn.; one child, Wall Doxey, Jr., born January 11, 1926; member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, Masonic order, Shriners, Elks, Rotarian, Phi Delta Phi (legal fraternity), and Omicron Delta Kappa; 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; admitted to bar in 1914, and has since practiced law at Holly Springs; elected prosecuting attorney of Marshall County in 1915 and reelected without opposition 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; served continuously in Congress as Representative of Second Congressional District of Mississippi until resignation on September 29, 1941, having been elected as United States Senator from Mississippi to succeed the late and lamented Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alcorn, Clay, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tishomingo (10 counties). Population (1930), 241,605. JOHN ELLIOTT RANKIN, Democrat, of Tupelo, Miss.; dean of the Missis-sippi delegation in the House; chairman of the Committee on World War Veter-ans’ Legislation; was born in Itawamba County, Miss., on March 29, 1882, son of 1JAMES OLIVER EASTLAND, Democrat, of Ruleville, Miss.; born in Doddsville, Miss., November 28, 1904; attended the University of Mississippi, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Alabama; moved to Forest, Miss., in 1905 and was reared in Scott County, Miss.; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1927, and commenced practice in Forest, Miss.; also engaged in agricultural pursuits; member of the State house of representatives from Scott County, Miss., 1928-32; moved to Sunflower County, Miss., in 1934; appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Pat Harrison, and served from June 30, 1941, to September 29, 1941, when a duly elected successor qualified. Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI Thomas B. and Modeste Rutledge Rankin; was educated in the common schools, the high school, and the University of Mississippi, graduating from the law depart-ment 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; was a delegate to the Democratic Na-tional Conventions in 1932, 1936, and 1940; has been one of the leaders in the House for the administration’s power policies, and was coauthor with Senator George W. Norris, of Nebraska, of the bill to create the Tennessee Valley Author-ity, 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 every county in his district connected up with the T. V. A. and supplied with electric energy from the T. V. A. at the “yardstick” rates, serving thousands of farm homes with cheap electricity; chairman of the public power bloc in the House and has led the fight for rural electrification; has adopted as his slogan, ‘“Let’s electrify every farm home in America.” SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, Union, and Yalobusha (10 counties). Population (1930), 219,661. JAMIE L. WHITTEN, Democrat, of Charleston, Miss.; born at Cascilla, Miss., April 18, 1910; married to Miss Rebecca Thompson, of Saltillo, Miss., June 20, 1940; member Presbyterian Church, Masonic order, Rotarian, Phi Alpha Delta (legal fraternity) and Beta Theta Pi; educated in the public schools of Cascilla and Charleston, Miss.; attended both literary and law departments of the University of Mississippi, being admitted to the bar in 1932 with the highest average of 39 admitted at that time and has since practiced law at Charleston, Miss. ; served 1 year as school principal, 1930-31; elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1931 at age of 21 and served one session; elected district attorney of the seventeenth district of Mississippi in 1933 at the age of 23; reelected district attorney in 1935 and again in 1939 without opposition; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at the age of 31 years at a special election held 9% November 4, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Wall oxey. 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 in 1898 and in law from the University of Mississippi in 1899; moved to Greenwood, Leflore County, Miss., January 1, 1904; lawyer and cotton grower; married July 20, 1910, to Miss Anna Ward Aven; has three children, all over 21 years of age—Mary Bailey (married to Kenneth Davenport), William Madison, Jr., and Charles Aven; State senator; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-seventh. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Grenada, Mont-gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1930), 184,266. AARON LANE 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; elected district attorney of the fifth circuit court district in 1931; married October 15, 1936, to Miss Gertrude Castellow, of Cuthbert, Ga.; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member Ways and Means Committee. MISSOURI Biographical | 59 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Simpson, and Smith (10 counties). Population (1930), 244,562. ROSS A. COLLINS, Democrat, of Meridian, born April 25, 1880, at Collins-ville, in Lauderdale County, Miss.; preliminary education in city schools of Meridian and, in 1894-95, the Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College; A. B., Kentucky University (now Transylvania University); LL. B., University of Mississippi; LL. D., Transylvania University, 1930; admitted to bar and practiced law at Meridian, 1901-12; married Alfreda Grant, of Meridian, 1904; two children—Jane, aged 24, Melville, aged 20; elected attorney general of Mississippi, 1911; reelected without opposition in 1915; candidate for Governor, 1919; member of the Cosmos Club, Washington, D. C.; honorary member of American Library Association; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress; reelected to Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; candidate for United States Senate in 1934; again elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; candidate for the United States Senate in 1941. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Covington, Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lamar, Lawrence, Marion, Pearl River, Perry, Stone, and Wayne (16 counties), Population (1930), 284,457. WILLIAM MEYERS COLMER, Democrat, of Pascagoula, Miss., was born at Moss Point, Jackson County, Miss.; 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 county attorney of Jackson County, Miss., 1921-27, and as district attorney (Jackson, Harrison, Hancock, Stone, and George Counties, Miss.) from 1928 until his resignation in 1933, having been elected to Congress; during the World War served as a private, and was honorably discharged as regimental sergeant-major; married Miss Ruth Miner, of Lumberton, Miss., to which union three boys were born— Billy, Jr., Jimmy, and Tommy; Mason, Methodist, Elk, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Pike, Rankin, Walthall, Warren, Wilkinson, and Yazoo (15 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 414,301. DAN R. McGEHEE, Democrat, of Meadville, Miss.; 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; practiced 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 (Mrs. F. J. Grady), Dorothy Ann (Mrs. W. M. Scarbrough), Gloria (Mrs. Alfred Bruch), 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 1934; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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, 60 Congressional Directory MISSOURI with LL. B. degree, in 1914; received honorary degree of LL. D. from University of Missouri, Marshall College, Bethany College, and Washington and Lee Uni-versity; trustee, George Washington University and Bethany College; Parliamen-tarian of the United States House of Representatives, 1913-17; attended first officers’ training camp at Fort Myer, Va., in 1917, receiving commission as cap-tain; elected lieutenant colonel, Sixth Regiment Missouri Infantry, and served as lieutenant colonel of that regiment, which later became the One Hundred and Fortieth Regiment United States Infantry, until September 1918; assistant chief of staff, Eighty-eighth Division, from September 1918 to March 1919, and of Thirty-fifth Division, from March 1919 until discharged in May 1919; promoted to colonel of Infantry in March 1919; one of the 17 charter members and an incorporator of the American Legion and chairman of the Paris caucus, which formally organized the Legion; past national commander of the American Legion; past commander of the Thirty-fifth Division Veterans’ Association and ex-president of the National Guard Association of the United States; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; practiced law in St. Louis since discharge from the Army; attended every Demo-cratic 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; delegate at large and chairman of committee on rules and order of business, which reported repeal of two-thirds rule, Philadelphia Convention in 1936; delegate at large and chair-man of the Missouri delegation of the Chicago Convention in 1940; vice chairman of the Democratic regional headquarters at St. Louis in 1928; member of Second Presbyterian Church of St. Louis; member of Masonic and Odd Fellows orders, Missouri Athletic Club, and the St. Louis, Missouri, and American Bar Associa-tions; member of the Board of Regents, Smithsonian Institution; compiler of several manuals on parliamentary law; author of John Quincy Adams—Old Man Eloquent; co-author of Social Studies; married on October 5, 1922, to Miss Miriam Marsh, the daughter of the late Hon. Wilbur Marsh, of Waterloo, Iowa (treasurer of the Democratic National Committee during the Presidential cam-paigns of 1916 and 1920), and they have three sons—Champ, Marsh, and Kim-ball; 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 Governor Guy B. Park, to fill the unexpired term caused by: the resignation of Hon. Harry B. Hawes; reelected in 1938 for the term ending January 3, 1945. 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; reelected, November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947. 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 in Macon County, Mo., and grew to manhood on a farm; received his education in the public school, in the Kirksville State Teachers College, and at the University of Missouri at Columbia, Mo.; received the degree of LL. B., magna cum laude, at the University of Missouri in 1904, where he was graduated with the highest honors of his class; his father, Andrew Jackson Romjue, and his mother, Susan E. (Roan) Romjue, were both Missouri born; he has served 4 years as chairman of the central Democratic committee and has frequently been a delegate to State Democratic conventions; was married to Maude Nickell Thompson on July 11, 1900, and has one son, Lawson Rodney Romjue; was elected to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, and succeeding Congresses including the Seventy-seventh Congress; chairman of Post Office and Post Roads Committee, Seventy-sixth Congress; was the director of organization in the Democratic State head-quarters 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 Con-ference in HEurope, July 8, 1919; member of Baptist Church and following fraternal orders: Masonic (thirty-second degree), Elks, and Woodmen (both Modern Woodmen and Woodmen of the World). MISSOURI : Biographical 61 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 on a farm near Bunceton, Cooper County, Mo.; educated in public schools, Hooper Institute, William Jewell College, and Missouri College of Agriculture; taught school 5 years; later, in addition to farming, was associated with brothers in county newspaper work and engaged in agricultural journalism; 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 agriculture for Missouri, which position he held for 10 years, resigning to become a candidate for Congress; married to Stella Boschert, of Bunceton, Mo., and has one son, Will L., Jr., honor graduate from the School of Law, University of Missouri; farm owner and operator; member Committee on Rules, House of Representatives; author of various agricultural publications; associate editor of The Farmer’s Cyclopedia; honorary member Future Farmers of America, Gamma Sigma Delta Honor Society of Agriculture, Veterans of For-eign Wars, and Spanish-American War Veterans; Baptist; Kiwanian; Member of the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second. Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, DeKalb Gentry, Harrison, Holt, Nodaway, Platte, Ray, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1930), 299,490 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; 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses from the Third District; member Ways and Means Committee; chairman, Democratic caucus. FOURTH DISTRICT.—JACKSON CouNTY: Blue, Brooking, Fort Osage, Prairie, Sni-a-Bar, and Van —Buren Townships. KANSAS City: Wards 9 to 14, and 16. Population (1930), 239,251. CHARLES JASPER BELL, Democrat, of Blue Springs, Mo., was born in Lake City, Colo., in 1885; attended country schools in Jackson County, Mo., Lees Summit (Mo.) Highr School, and the University of Missouri; graduated from Kansas City School of Law in 1913 with degree of LL. B.; lawyer; member of City Council of Kansas City, Mo., 1926-30; represented Kansas City in river conferences in Chicago and St. Louis; one of committee of three to draft admin-istrative code, which now comprises the general law of Kansas City; in 1930 was elected as circuit judge, sixteenth Missouri circuit; resigned from bench in May 1934 and became partner in firm of Mosman, Rogers & Bell, Bryant Building, Kansas City, Mo.; elected as Representative in the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Fourth Missouri District, on November 6, 1934; during that term served as chairman of Special Committee Investigating Old Age Pension Organizations; reelected to Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; chairman of Elections Committee No. 1. 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 Kansas 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 and in 1940; member of the Missouri constitutional convention of 1922-23; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; appointed chairman of the Special Com-mittee to Investigate Government Competition with Private Enterprise; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses from the Fifth District of Missouri. 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 6 Congressional Directory MISSOURI SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Greene, Henry, Johnson, Pettis, Polk, St. Clair, and Vernon (11 counties). Population (1930), 287,786. PHILIP A. BENNETT, Republican, of Springfield, Mo., was born on a farm near Buffalo, Dallas County, Mo., the son of the late Marion F. and Mary J. (O’Bannon) Bennett; was educated in the Buffalo (Mo.) High School; was grad-uated from the Springfield Normal and Business College in 1902; taught school for 2 years; purchased the Buffalo (Mo.) Reflex, which he edited and published for 17 years; served as State senator (nineteenth district), 1921-25, and as Lieutenant Governor of Missouri, 1925-29; married to Miss Bertha Tinsley in 1912, and they have two children— Attorney Marion T. Bennett and Miss Mary Edith Bennett, a teacher at Springfield, Mo.; elder in South Avenue Christian Church, Springficld; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, by a majority of 10,894 votes; first Republican ever elected to represent the Sixth District. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Barry, Christian, Dade, Dallas, Douglas, Howell, Jasper, Lai pense) McDonald, 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 Viec-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 Con-gress from the new Eighth Congressional District; again elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by an increased majority over 1934; served as permanent chairman of the Democratic State convention held at Jefferson City, Mo., on September 13, 1938; is ranking member of the Bank-ing and Currency Committee of the House ot Representatives; was a member of the Temporary National Economic Committee; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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; 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 Democratic 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, Chicago, 1932, Philadelphia, 1936, and Chicago, 1940; 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 and 1939 (published by resolutions of the House), of four editions of the Convention Parliamentary Manual (published, 1928, 1932, 1936, and 1940, by the Democratic National Committee), of Cannon’s Precedents of the House of Representatives (published by law, 1936), and of treatises on parliamentary law in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1929 and 1938, and in the Encyclopaedia Americana, 1940; 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 succeeding Congresses; in State-wide election held November 8, MISSOURI : Biographical 63 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-seventh Congress, leading all State and National tickets in congressional district from Sixty-eighth to Seventy-seventh Congresses, inclu-sive; chairman of the Democratic Steering Committee of the House for the Seventy-seventh Congress; chairman of the Committee on Appropriations; actively engaged in farming since 1917; American Farm Bureau Federation Distinguished Service Award for 1941. : TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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), Masonic fraternity, and Methodist Church; member 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress by a majority of 24,000; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of over 13,000; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a majority of over 18,000; member of Committee on Agriculture. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—City 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 to 4 and 11 to 19; ward 20, precincts 14 to 23; ward 22, precincts 1 to 4; wards 23 and 25; ward 26, precincts 1 to 4, 8 to 15, and 21 to 23. Population (1930), 341,538. JOHN B. SULLIVAN, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo., was born in Sedalia, Pettis County, Mo., October 10, 1897, son of the late Patrick F. and Catherine Rochford Sullivan; graduated from St. Louis University, with A. B. degree, in 1918; member of Students’ Army Training Corps, 1918; received LL. B. degree in 1922, and LL. M. degree in 1923; admitted to the Missouri bar, 1921, and en-gaged in private practice from 1921 to 1936; associate city counselor of St. Louis, 1936-38; secretary to the mayor, city of St. Louis, 1938-40; memberships: Ameri-can Bar Association; St. Louis Bar Association; Missouri Bar Association; Law-yers’ Association of St. Louis, vice president, 1938; American Legion, past adju-tant, past commander, Post No. 1; past judge advocate, Department of Missouri; the Forty and Eight, executive committee, 1931; Delta Sigma Phi; Delta Theta Phi; Jefferson Club, vice president, 1932, president, 1938-39, executive committee, 1940; Smoke Elimination Committee of the city of St. Louis, secretary and lawyer member; City Government Institute, member of executive committee; Municipal Employees Merit and Pension System Committee; Municipal Government Survey Commission; Mayor’s Budget Committee; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, with a plurality of 17,634. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—St. Louis CouNTY. CITY OF ST. Louis: Wards 10 to 13, and 24; ward 28, pre-cinets 1 to 9 and 22 to 31. Population (1930), 425,481. WALTER CHRISTIAN PLOESER, Republican, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo., January 7, 1907; educated in public schools of St. Louis City, St. Louis County, and Casper and Lusk, Wyo., and at City College of Law and Finance at St. Louis; member of the House of Representatives of the Fifty-sixth General Assembly of the Missouri Legislature 1931-32; member of the DeMolay Legion of Honor; Algabil Lodge, No. 544, A. F. and A. M.; Lincoln Council, Junior Order United American Mechanics; St. Louis Chamber of Commerce; Insurance Board of St. Louis; South St. Louis Lions Club; and Noonday Club; founder of the Insurance Institute of Missouri; insurance business, president of Ploeser, Watts & Co. and chairman of the board of Marine Underwriters Corpora-tion, founder of the Young Republican Federation of Missouri and a member of the specially created Republican National Program Committee and chairman of the subcommittee on finance, taxation, and budget for the fifth region, which included the States of Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, North Dakota, and South Dakota; wife is Dorothy Mohrig Ploeser; two daughters, Ann 64 Congressional Directory MONTANA and Sally; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, defeat-ing incumbent Democrat by 18,400 votes, the vote being 127,005 to 108,605; first Republican to represent this Twelfth Missouri District. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—City oF ST. Louis: Wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 3, 6 to 8, 10, and 12; ward 18; ward 19, precincts 5 to 10; ward 20, precincts 1 to 13; ward 21; ward 22, precincts 5 to 35; ward 26, precincts 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; 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; reelected, leading 13 Demo-cratic candidates; candidate for United States Senate, primary August 7, 1934; de-feated by Harry Truman, the vote being Truman 276,850, Cochran 236,105, J. L. Milligan 147,614; following 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; reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; delegate at large to Democratic National Convention, 1928; district delegate, 1932; chairman, Committee on Accounts; member, Select Committee on Conservation of Wild- life Resources, Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Democratic Steering Committee. 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; again reelected in 1940 by the largest vote ever given any candidate for office in the State of Montana. 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., 1906-8; chairman of State advisory board, Montana, P. W. A, 1933; married Miss Viola E. Horgan, of Memphis, Tenn., June 1905; has five sons, James A., William D., Edward E., Howard A., and Charles A., elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Thomas J. Walsh; reelected November 3, 1936, for the term ending in 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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. JEANNETTE RANKIN, Republican, of Missoula, Mont.; elected to the am Congress in 1916 and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November ) 9 . NEBRASKA Biographical SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Big Horn, Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Custer, Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Golden Valley, Hill, Judith Basin, Liberty, Mc- Cone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Petroleum, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Richland, Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland, os, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone National Park. Population (1930), ,688. JAMES FRANCIS O'CONNOR, Democrat, of Livingston, Mont.; born on a farm near California Junction, Iowa; attended public schools and normal school in Jowa; graduated from the University of Nebraska Law School in 1904 with LL. B. degree; profession, lawyer; served as district judge of the sixth judicial district of Montana in 1912; member of the State house of representatives, 1917-18, and served as speaker during the same term; special counsel for the Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D. C., in 1918; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, receiving a majority of 33,390 votes. NEBRASKA (Population (1930), 1,377,963) SENATORS GEORGE W. NORRIS, Independent, of McCook, Nebr.; now in his thirty-ninth consecutive year of service in Congress, House and Senate combined, a longer service than that of any living Member, this service beginning on March 4, 1903; was born on a farm near Clyde, York Township, Sandusky County, Ohio, July 11, 1861, eleventh in a family of 12 children; his early life was spent on this farm; his father died when he was a small child, his only brother was killed in the Civil War, and his mother was left in straitened circumstances; was com-pelled to work out among the neighboring farmers by the day and month during the summer and attended district school during the winter; taught school and earned the money to defray expenses for a higher education; attended Baldwin University, Berea, Ohio, and Valparaiso University; studied law while teaching and graduated from Valparaiso University Law School; was admitted to the bar in 1883; removed to Nebraska in 1885; was three times prosecuting attorney; was elected district judge of fourteenth 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 Con-gresses; was elected to the Senate for the term beginning March 4, 1913; re-elected in 1918, in 1924, in 1930, and in 1936; his present term will expire in 1943. HUGH A. BUTLER, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Missouri Valley, Iowa, February 28, 1878; was graduated from Doane College, Crete, Nebr., in June 1900, with S. B. degree; construction engineer with the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co., 1900-1908; engaged in the flour milling and grain business since 1908; elected to the United States Senate for the term beginning January 3, 1941. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Butler, Cass, Gage, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, Richardson, Saunders, and Seward (11 counties). Population (1930), 269,428. OREN S. COPELAND, Republican, of Lincoln, Nebr., was born on a farm at Huron, S. Dak., March 16, 1887; moved in covered wagon with parents to Pender," Nebr., in 1891; graduated from Pender High School in 1903; attended the Uni-versity of Nebraska 3 years; military training 2 years; engaged in newspaper work 1 year and in the fuel business 27 years; married Miss Iva C. Young, of Lincoln, Nebr., March 16, 1916, and they have one son—Richard E.; elected a city com-missioner, department of public safety, in 1935 for a 2-year term; elected mayor of Lincoln in 1937, and reelected in 1939 and served until March 1, 1940, when he resigned to file for the Republican nomination for Congress; nominated at primary on April 9, 1940, and elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. DD a 66 Congressional Directory NEVADA SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1930), 479. CHARLES F. McLAUGHLIN, Democrat, of Omaha, Nebr.; born at Lincoln, Nebr., June 19, 1887; A. B., University of Nebraska, 1908; LL. B., Columbia University, 1910; admitted to the bar in 1910 and has practiced law in Omaha continuously since that time; special master in chancery in Federal court, 1916-18; delegate to Nebraska State constitutional convention, 1920; president Omaha Bar Association, 1932-33; captain, Three Hundred and Forty-seventh Field Artillery, Ninety-first Division, American Expeditionary Forces; later major, Field Artillery Reserves; married Margaret Bruce, and they have two children—Edward Bruce and Mary Elizabeth; member Omaha, Nebraska State, and American Bar Associa-tions; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-Sn Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of the Judiciary ommittee. 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, Norfolk, Nebr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of Committee on Appropriations. 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. CARL T. CURTIS, Republican, of Minden, Nebr. ; born near Minden, Kearney County, Nebr., March 15, 1905; attended Nebraska Wesleyan and the University of Nebraska; lawyer; married Miss Lois Wylie-Atwater, of Minden, Nebr., June 6, 1931; one daughter, Clara Mae, born April 21, 1936, and one son, Tommy, born December 12, 1939; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, the vote being Carl T. Curtis, 66,966; Ralph Canaday, Democrat, 29,311; Charles G. Binderup, by petition, 19,807. FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Arthur, Banner, Blaine, Box Butte, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Chey-enne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garden, Garfield, Grant, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keyapaha, Kimball, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Rock, Scotts Bluff, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, and Valley (32 counties). Population (1930), 271, 143. 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 25 years has been president of the Coffee Cattle Co., Inc., with exten-sive ranch holdings in northwest Nebraska; owns and operates several farms; built up a successful real-estate and insurance business in Chadron; served as a second lieutenant in the Air Service during the World War; married Katharine Newbranch Douglas, of Omaha, in 1935; Mason, Elk, and a member of the Ameri-can Legion; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, receiving 63,025 votes; A. T. Howard, Republican, receiving 45,548 votes. NEVADA (Population (1930), 91,058) SENATORS 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., 1906-8; 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, NEW HAMPSHIRE Brographical : 67 1631-32; member bar of California, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, and Supreme Court of United States; vice president American Bar Association, 1922-23; author of many legal opinions, leading cases on water, mining, corporation, domestic relations, criminal 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; reelected to the Senate November 8, 1938; legal residence, Reno, Nev. BERKELEY LLOYD BUNKER, Democrat, of Las Vegas, Nev.; born in St. Thomas, Nev., August 12, 1906, son of Martin A. and Helen McNeil Bunker; married to Lucile Whitehead, of Las Vegas, in 1933; in business in Las Vegas since 1934; president, Young Democrats of Nevada, 1938; secretary, Democratic county central committee, Clark County, 1939-40; elected to the assembly of the State legislature in 1936, 1938, and 1940; served as chairman of the ways and means committee of the assembly in 1937, and as speaker in 1939; appointed November 27, 1940, by the Governor of Nevada to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Key Pittman. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 91,058. JAMES GRAVES SCRUGHAM, Democrat, of Reno, Nev., was born at Lexing-ton, Ky., graduated from the University of Kentucky, receiving bachelor and master degrees in engineering; Governor of Nevada, 1923-27; editor and publisher of the Nevada State Journal, 1927-32; served as State engineer, 1919-23; commis-sioned major, United Staies Army, 1917; promoted to rank of lieutenant colonel in 1918; one of the incorporators of the American Legion, 1919; commander of the Ne-vada Department, American Legion, 1919, and national vice commander 1920-21; married; two children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NEW HAMPSHIRE (Population (1930), 465,293) SENATORS STYLES BRIDGES, Republican, of East Concord, N. H.; born in West Pembroke, Maine, September 9, 1898; was graduated from the University of Maine in 1918; received M. A. degree from Dartmouth College in 1935, and LL. D. degrees from the University of Maine and the University of New Hamp-shire in 1935, and from Northeastern University in 1938; former member of the extension staff of the University of New Hampshire; former secretary of the New Hampshire Farm Bureau Federation; former director and secretary of the New Hampshire Investment Co.; formerly secretary and treasurer of the Farm Bureau Automobile Insurance Co.; at present serving as vice president and trustee of the New Hampshire Savings Bank and as treasurer of the Putnam Agricultural Foundation; member of the New Hampshire Public Service Commission, 1930-35; served as Governor of New Hampshire, 1935-37; delegate at large and chairman of the New Hampshire delegation to the Republican National Convention, 1936; delegate at large to the Republican National Convention in 1940; member National Forest Reservation Commission; married Sally Clement and has three sons— Henry Styles, David Clement, and John Fisher Bridges (Mrs. Bridges died in May 1938); elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. CHARLES WILLIAM TOBEY, Republican, of Temple, N. H.; was born at Roxbury, Mass.; 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 and Seventy-fifth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. 68 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY 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. J ARTHUR BYRON JENKS, Republican, of Manchester, N. H.; retired shoe manufacturer; president of the Manchester Morris Plan Bank; married, and has two sons; presented credentials as a Republican Member-elect to the Seventy-fifth Congress, and served from January 3, 1937, to June 9, 1938; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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, Mount 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. FOSTER STEARNS, Republican, of Hancock, N. H., was born in Hull, Mass., July 29, 1881; B. A., Amherst College, 1903; M. A., Harvard University, 1906; Boston College, 1915; married; served in World War; decorated with Silver Star and Purple Heart; member of American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; drafting officer in Department of State, 1920-21; third secretary of embassy attached to United States High Commission in Constantinople, 1921-23; second secretary, American Embassy, Paris, 1923-24; member New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1937-38; Regent, Smithsonian Institution; elected to the Horeniy iva Congress, November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Jongress. NEW JERSEY (Population (1930), 4, 041, 334) SENATORS WILLIAM H. SMATHERS, Democrat, of Margate, N. J.; born on a farm near Waynesville, N. C., January 7, 1891; was graduated from the law school of the University of North Carolina when 19 years of age; was admitted to the bar in 1912 and commenced practice in Atlantic City, N. J.; appointed judge of the common pleas court of Atlantic County in 1922; reappointed in 1923 and 1928 and served until 1933; member of the State supreme court commission, 1923 to date; appointed a special master in chancery in 1924; appointed first assistant attorney general of New Jersey in 1934 and served until 1936; elected a member of the State senate in 1935 and served until sworn into the United States Senate; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; on February 9, 1938, married Mary James Foley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Foley, of Winter Haven, Fla.; has one child by this marriage, son, James Foley Smathers, and five children by previous marriage, Margaret Jayne, Billie Barbara, Mary Josephine, Jay Brady, and Benjamin Franklin. : 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 to the United States Senate on December 1, 1931, by Gov. Morgan F. Larson, and elected on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Dwight W. Morrow for the term ending January 3, 1937; again elected on November 8 1938, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator A. Harry Moore for the term ending January 3, 1941; reelected No-vember 5, 1940, for term ending January 3, 1947, by a popular plurality of 207,601. REPRESENTATIVES IE DISTRICT. Couns: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1930) ’ 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 NEW JERSEY B 1ographical 69 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. (now deceased), daughter of John Knox Donnell and Anna Donnell; there is one child, Donnell Knox Wolver-ton; in 1903 revised and compiled the ordinances of the city of Camden; 1904 to 1906 was assistant city solicitor of Camden; 1906 to 1913 was assistant prosecutor of Camden County; from 1913 to 1914, special assistant attorney general of New Jersey; from 1915 to 1918, member of New Jersey House of Assembly from Camden County; in 1918 was speaker of the New Jersey House of Assembly; 1917 to 1919, a Federal food administrator; in 1920, alternate delegate at large, Republi-can National Convention at Chicago; 1918 to 1923, prosecutor of the pleas of Camden County; member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Patents, and Republican congressional campaign committee; member of Union League of Philadelphia, Pa., Masonic fraternities, Elks, and Moose; elected to the Seventieth Congress in November 1926; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atlantic, Cape May, and Cumberland (3 counties). Population(1930), 224,204. ELMER H. WENE, Democrat, of Vineland, N. J.; owns and operates a baby chick hatchery; born in Hunterdon County, N. J., the son of the late Emanuel S. and Mary J. Wene, nee Kiley; reared on a farm and educated in the public schools of the county; completed a special course in agriculture at Rutgers Uni-versity, New Brunswick, N. J.; lectured on the poultry industry in many of the leading agricultural colleges in the United States; member of the New Jersey State Board of Agriculture, 1925-34, and served as president, 1929-34; served as president of the International Baby Chick Association, 1933, and president of the Cumberland County Board of Agriculture, 1922-36; member of the board of directors of the Newcomb Hospital in Vineland, 1935-36, and was reelected in 1940; president of the Vineland Rotary Club in 1932; president of the Vineland-Landis Township Chamber of Commerce; member of the Methodist Church, Masons, Elks, and Grange; has been active in every Democratic campaign since he became a voter; was elected first as a Member of the Seventy-fifth Congress in 1936; elected a member of the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Cumberland County, N. J., in 1939; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in 1940, defeating the Republican incumbent by carrying two of the three counties in his district in the general election. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Monmouth and Ocean. MIDDLESEX 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., the son of the late James Taylor Sutphin and Charlotte Brown; has resided at Matawan since early childhood, where he attended the Matawan public schools; married Miss Catharine Bonner, and they have two children—Susan and William Taylor; World War veteran; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh 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.. 8., 1921, M. S., 1935; 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, discharged first lieutenant April 1919; served three terms New Jersey State Legislature, 1927-30; elected to Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Morris and Somerset. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Perth Amboy; boroughs of Carteret, Dunnellen, Highland Park, Metuchen, Middlesex, and South Plainfield; town- ships of Piscataway, Raritan, and Woodbridge. Population (1930), 301,726. CHARLES AUBREY EATON, Republican, of Watchung, Somerset County; elected to Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-four th, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth. and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 70 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY SIXTH DISTRICT.—UNION CoUNTY. Population (1930), 305,209. DONALD H. McLEAN, Republican, of Elizabeth, N. J.; born at Paterson, N. J., March 18, 1884; married Edna H. Righter, November 1909; two sons— Donald H. McLean, Jr., and Edward Righter McLean; lawyer, member of the firm of Whittemore, McLean & Hand; appointed page in United States Senate by Vice President Garret A. Hobart, December 1897; private secretary to United States Senator John Kean, of New Jersey, from 1902 to 1911; LL. B., George Washington University, 1906; admitted to practice in District of Colum-bia, New Jersey (counselor), and United States Supreme Court; special master in chancery of New Jersey; supreme court commissioner; assistant prose-cutor of the pleas of Union County, N. J., 1918-23; chairman, Union County Republican committee, and secretary, Republican State committee; elected to the Seventy-third and subsequent Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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. PAgsaic County: Borough of Ringwood and township of West Milford. Population (1930), 259,379. J. PARNELL THOMAS, Republican, of Allendale, N. J.; born in Jersey City, N. J., January 16, 1895; resident of Allendale, N. J., since 1900; graduate of Allendale public school and Ridgewood High School; attended the University of Pennsylvania; is a trustee of the Allendale Public Library and was a former director of the Allendale Building & Loan Association; senior member of Thomas & Godfrey, insurance brokers; during the World War enlisted in the United States Army immediately after declaration of war; saw active service at front line; honorably discharged as captain; past vice commander of Bergen County American Legion; member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected a member of borough council of Allendale in 1925; elected mayor of Allendale in 1926 and re-elected in 1928; was member of the Republican County Committee of Bergen County for 6 years; acted as district director, Emergency Unemployment Relief; elected to the New Jersey House of Assembly in 1935 and reelected in 1936; mar-ried to Amelia Wilson Stiles, of Mount Vernon, N. Y., on January 21, 1921, and they have two sons—J. Parnell Thomas, Jr., and Stiles Thomas; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by an approximate plurality of 38,000 votes; serves on the Military Affairs, Claims, and Dies Committees of the House of Representatives. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PAssaic County: Cities of Clifton, Passaic, and Paterson; boroughs of Blooming-dale, Haledon, Hawthorne, North Haledon, Pompton Lakes, Prospect Park, Totowa, Wanaque, and West Paterson; townships of Little Falls and Wayne. Population (1930), 299,190. GORDON CANFIELD, Republican, of Paterson, N. J.; born in Salamanca, N.Y. April 15, 1898, his parents being Carl A. and Florence A. Canfield; newsboy, reporter, and student in public schools of Binghamton, N. Y.; enlisted in Signal Corps, Regular Army, during World War; reporter for the Passaic (N. J.) Daily News; attended New Jersey Law School at Newark; was graduated in 1926 from National University, Washington, D. C.; member of District of Columbia bar; married Dorothy E. Greenwell, of Washington, D. C., and they have two sons, Carl and Allan; served 17 years on Capitol Hill as secretary to late Representative George N. Seger; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—BERGEN County: City of Englewood, boroughs of Alpine, Bendix, Bergenfield, Bogota, Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Closter, Cresskill, Demarest, Dumont, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Englewood Cliffs, Fairview, Fort Lee, Harrington Park, Hasbrouck Heights, Haworth, Leonia, Little Ferry, Moonachie, New Milford, North Arlington, Northvale, Norwood, Old Tappan, Palisades Park, Ridgefield, Rockleigh, Rutherford, Tenafly, Wallington, and Wood Ridge; townships of Lynd-hurst, Ridgefield Park, and Teaneck. HUDSON CoUNTY: Town of Guttenberg and township of North Bergen. Population (1930), 267,663. FRANK C. OSMERS, Jr., Republican, of Haworth, N. J., was born in Leonia, N. J., December 30, 1907; attended Haworth Grammar School, Hackensack High School, Dumont High School, and was a student at Williams College; occupation, jeweler, gem expert and appraiser; vice president and secretary of the Frank C. Osmers Co., Inc., New York City jewelry firm; Mason and Elk; member of the Haworth Borough Council 1930-34; mayor of Haworth 1935-36; elected NEW JERSEY Biographical 71 to the New Jersey House of Assembly for the first time in 1935; reelected in 1936 and 1937; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a plurality of 21,500 votes, the first Republican to represent this district; has served as a member of the Com-mittees on Education, Insular Affairs, and Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress, Rivers and Harbors, and as a member of the Special Committee Investigating the Interstate Migration of Destitute Citizens; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a plurality of 37,000; now serving as a member of the Committees on Insular Affairs and Rivers and Harbors, and as a member of the Select Committee Investigating National Defense Migration TENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 11, and 15; borough of Glen Ridge; towns of Belleville, Bloomfield, and Nutley. HUDSON OCoUNTY: 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: City of Newark, wards 3, 6, 7, 13, and 14; cities of East Orange, Orange; town of West Orange; village of South Orange. Population (1930), 292,284. ALBERT LINCOLN VREELAND, Republican, of East Orange, N. J., born in East Orange, N. J., July 2, 1901; attended the public schools; was gradu-ated from the Peddie School, Hightstown, N. J., in 1922, the New York Electrical School, New York City, in 1919, and the New Jersey Law School, Newark, N. J., LL. B., in 1925; was admitted to the bar in 1927 and commenced the practice of law in East Orange, N. J.; became a counselor in 1931 and a special master in chancery in 1938; served as an ambulance driver, A. R. C., in 1918 and 1919, and holds the rank of captain, Military Intelligence Reserve, United States Army; assistant city counsel and city prosecutor, East Orange, N. J., 1929-34; served as judge of the recorder’s court of East Orange, 1934-38; member of the Delta Theta Phi law fraternity, the Essex County Bar Association, and the American Bar Association; is an Elk and a Mason; married Helen Aeschbach; two children— Elizabeth L., Peace Junior College, Raleigh, N. C., and James A.; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh 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. ROBERT WINTHROP KEAN, Republican, of Livingston, N. J.; born in Elberon, N. J., September 28, 1893, graduated from St. Mark’s School in 1911 and from Harvard College with the degree of A. B. in 1915; served in the World War with the Second Division, American Expeditionary Forces, as a first lieu-tenant, Fifteenth Field Artillery, and was awarded the Silver Star Medal and the Distinguished Service Cross; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1936; president of the Livingston National Bank since 1927, and partner in the investment house of Kean, Taylor & Co., since 1921; married October 18, 1920, to Elizabeth Stuyvesant Howard, of Hyde Park, N. Y., and they have six children; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HupsoN 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, and always lived in Jersey City, N. J.; widow of Robert F. Norton; elected vice chairman of the State Democratic committee in 1921, served continuously until 1932, when she was elected chairman; in 1923 was the first woman of the Democratic Party to be elected freeholder in Hudson County and in State; in 1924, 1928, 1932, and 1936 elected delegate at large to the Democratic national conventions; in 1924 elected 72 Congressional Directory NEW YORK to the House of Representatives; reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-seventh; 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; Mrs. Norton is the first woman to be elected to Congress from the Democratic Party; the first to be appointed chairman of a congressional committee, the important Committee on the District of Columbia, and now chairman of Committee on Labor; the first woman chairman of a State committee; and introduced the first resolution in Congress to repeal the eighteenth amendment. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—HuDpsoN 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, Democrat, lawyer, Jersey City. NEW MEXICO (Population (1930), 423,317) SENATORS CARL A. HATCH, Democrat, of Clovis, N. Mex.; born at Kirwin, Phillip County, Kans., November 27, 1889; served as assistant attorney general of New Mexico, 1917 and 1918; appointed collector of internal revenue for the district of New Mexico, 1919; appointed district judge of the ninth judicial distriet of the State of New Mexico, January 1, 1923; elected to same office 1924 for 6-year term; resigned as district judge to reenter practice of law, October 1, 1929; chair-man of Democratic State central committee 1930; Presidential elector for New Mexico in 1932; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. A. W. Hocken-hull, October 10, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Hon. Sam G. Bratton; elected to fill out the unexpired term in November 1934; reelected Senator November 3, 1936; married; two children. 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 Imelda Espinosa, November 9, 1911; 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; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Clyde Tingley on May 11, 1935; elected November 3, 1936; reelected November 5, 1940. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 423,317. CLINTON P. ANDERSON, Democrat, of Albuquerque, N. Mex., was born at Centerville, S. Dak., October 23, 1895; was educated at Dakota Wesleyan University and University of Michigan; general insurance business; married, two children; president, Rotary International, 1932-33; treasurer of State of New Mexico, 1933-34; administrator, New Mexico Relief Administration, 1935; field representative, Federal Emergency Relief Administration, 1935-36; chairman and executive director, Unemployment Compensation Commission of New Mexico, 1936-38; managing director, United States Coronado Exposition Commission, 1939-40; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress-on November 5, 1940. NEW YORK (Population (1930), 12,588,066) SENATORS 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, last 8 years as Democratic leader; chairman of the New York State Factory Investigating Commission, 1911-15; Lieutenant Governor, 1914; delegate, New York constitutional conven-tion, 1915; justice of New York Supreme Court, 1919-26; assigned to the appel- NEW YORK Biographical 73 late 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; reelected for the term expiring in 1945; chairman of the National Labor Board, 1933-34; Democratic leader, New York constitutional convention, 1938. 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 son, 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, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, to fill the vacancy for the term ending January 3, 1941, caused by the death of Hon. Royal S. Copeland; subsequently resigned from the Seventy-fifth Congress on December 2, 1938, to assume his duties as Senator on December 3, 1938; reelected to the Senate November 5, 1940. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 12,588,066. MATTHEW J. MERRITT, Democrat, of Malba, Long Island, county of Queens, N. Y.; elected Representative at Large to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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.; Democratic national committeewoman for New York State, 1932; commissioner, State board of social welfare, appointed May 1923 to 1934 (resigned); associate chairman, New York Democratic State Committee, 1921 (still serving); widow; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress as a Representative at Large on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIRST DISTRICT.—NASSAU AND SUFFOLK COUNTIES. QUEENS CouNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at boundary line of Nassau and Queens Counties at Central Avenue, along Central Avenue west to Farmers Avenue, north to junction of Long Island Railroad and Old Country Road, to Fulton Street, west to Bergen Avenue, north to Hillside Avenue, east to Grand Avenue, north to boundary line between third and fourth wards, west to Flushing Creek (the boundary line between second and third wards), north to Strong’s Causeway, east along Strong’s Causeway and boundary line between the second and fourth assembly districts of Queens County, said line being through Ireland Mill Road to Lawrence Avenue, to Bradford Avenue, to Main Street, to Lincoln Street, to Union Avenue, to Whitestone Road, to Eighteenth Street, to the Boulevard, to Long Island Sound; along Long Island Sound and Little Neck Bay to boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties to Central Avenue, the point of beginning. Population (1930), 637,022. 3 LEONARD W. HALL, Republican, of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, N. Y., was born at Oyster Bay Cove, N. Y., October 2, 1900; graduate of Georgetown Law School, with a degree of LL. B., and has been a practicing attorney since his admission to the bar in 1921; served in the New York State Legislature, 1927-28 and 1934-38; became sheriff of Nassau County in 1929, serving a 3-year term; married and has two children; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at Central Ave-nue 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 Coun-ties, northeast and north to Atlantic Avenue, east to Morris Avenue, south to Rockaway Road, south-east 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 bound-ary line to Grand Avenue, south to Hillside Avenue, west to Bergen Avenue, south to Fulton Street, east to Old Country Road, southeast to Farmers Avenue, south to Central Avenue, and southeast to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 776,425. WILLIAM B. BARRY, Democrat, of St. Albans, Queens County, N. Y.; born in Ireland, July 21, 1902, son of Thomas J. Barry and Catherine J. (Hennelly) Barry; resident of Queens County since 5 years of age; education, grammar and high schools; graduated from the New York University, with bachelor of com-mercial science degree, and from New York University Law School, with bachelor of laws degree; married Emily B. LaMude, and has a daughter, Jane, and a son, 74 Congressional Directory NEW YORK Brian; member of the New York State bar; member of district attorney’s staff Queens County, 1933-34; special United States attorney, 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—KiNGs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of East River and North Eleventh Street, thence along North Eleventh Street to Berry Street, to North Twelfth Street, to Union Avenue, to Frost Street, to Lorimer Street, to Broadway, to Walton Street, to Throop Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Harrison Avenue, to Flushing Avenue, to Broadway, to De Kalb Avenue, to Wilson Avenue, to Stanhope Street, to the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line to Newtown Creek; thence through the waters of Newtown Creek to East River; through the waters of the East River to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 187,953. JOSEPH L. PFEIFER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y. FOURTH DISTRICT.—KinGgs 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.—KINGS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Bergen Street and Nevins Street; thence along Nevins Street to Atlantic 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 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. JAMES J. HEFFERNAN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y.; his forefathers were among the Irish pioneers who settled in the lower Manhattan and South Brooklyn before the War of 1812; educated in private and public schools; was graduated from Bryant Stratton College, Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1906, and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1908; awarded the degree of architect by the University of the State of New York in 1929; married and has one daughter; delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1938; member of the New York and Brooklyn Societies of Architects; Council of Registered Architects; Montauk Club; B. P. O. Elks No. 22; Brooklyn Council, No. 60, Knights of Columbus; Old Timers of the K. of C.; Emerald Society; South Brook-lyn Board of Trade; Society of Old Brooklynites; Police Athletic League; Steneck Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Colonel Jacob Rupert Post, Army and Navy Veterans; State committeeman and executive member of the Twelfth Assembly District Regular Democratic Organization; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SIXTH DISTRICT.—KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Lafayette Avenue; thence along Lafayette Avenue to Bedford Avenue, to Dean Street, to New York Avenue, to Park Place, to Nostrand Avenue, to Eastern Park-way, to New York Avenue, to Sterling Street, to Flatbush Avenue or Washington Avenue, to Malbone Street, to Ocean Avenue, to Parkside Avenue, to Parade Place, to Caton Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Ninth Street, to Avenue C 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. NEW YORK Biographical 75 SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of the waters of Buttermilk Channel, East River, and Congress Street; thence along Congress Street to Columbia Street, to Warren Street, to Clinton Street, to Amity Street, to Court Street, to Dean Street, to Boerum Place, to Bergen Street, to Nevins Street, to Atlantic Avenue, to Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Washington Park or Cum-berland Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Spencer Street, to Willoughby Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Flushing Avenue, to Harrison Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Throop Avenue, to Walton Street, to Broadway, to Lorimer Street, to Frost Street, to Union Avenue, to North Twelfth Street, to Berry Street, to North Eleventh Street, to the waters of East River; thence through the waters of East River to the waters of Buttermilk Channel, to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 205,043. JOHN J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; member of Rules Committee. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—KiINGS 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-fiftth 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. DONALD L. O'TOOLE, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in that bor-ough on August 1, 1902; was graduated from St. James Academy and the School of Law of Fordham University; lawyer, specializing in trial work with offices at 32 Court Street, Brooklyn; married and has three children. NINTH DISTRICT.—KINGS AND QUEENS COUNTIES: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning 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 south-erly 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 SE ey, thence westerly and northerly along said line to the point of beginning. Population 1930), ,457. EUGENE J. KEOGH, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; graduate of New York University and Fordham University Law School; lawyer; member of the New York State Assembly, twentieth district, Kings County, in 1936; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—KiINGs COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Flushing Avenue, thence along Flushing Avenue to Broadway; to Hopkinson Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Broadway, to Jamaica Avenue, to Alabama Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Williams Avenue, to Sutter Avenue, to Howard Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Ralph Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Schenectady Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Sumner Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Greene Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 217,015. EMANUEL CELLER; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 6, 1888; attended the public schools; was graduated from the Boys’ High School of Brooklyn, in 1906, from Columbia College, New York City, in 1910, and from the Columbia Uni-versity Law School, New York City, in 1912; admitted to the bar and com-menced practice in New York City in 1912; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress, November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member of the House Commit-tee on the Judiciary; married and has two daughters; home address is 303 McDon-ough Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 76 Congressional Directory NEW YORK ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—RICHMOND 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, along Market Street to Henry Street, to Catherine Street, to East Brcadway, 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 end of 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YoRER CouNtTY: 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, Carleton City Club, and many Jewish welfare and religious organizations, as well as civie, 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW 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. LOUIS J. CAPOZZOLI, Democrat, of New York City, was born on March 6, 1901; educated in New York City grade and high schools; was graduated from Fordham University School of Law in 1922; lawyer; served as an assistant dis-trict attorney of New York County from 1930 to 1937, inclusive; member of the New York State Assembly, second assembly district, New York County, in 1939 and 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; married and has three children. 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. ARTHUR G. KLEIN, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York City, N. Y., in the Fourteenth Congressional District, August 8, 1904; attended the public schools and Washington Square College of New York University, -received the degree of bachelor of laws from New York University Law School in 1926; was admitted to the bar of the State of New York in 1927; was subse-quently admitted to practice in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second / NEW YORK Biographical 77 District, and the United States Supreme Court; was an attorney on the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission for the period from April 4, 1935, to July 8, 1941; now actively engaged in the practice of law in the above-mentioned courts, as senior member of the firm of Klein, Wikler & Gottlieb, 50 Broad Street, New York City; a member of various bar associations and numerous social, reli-gious, fraternal, and charitable organizations; married Mary Goldenkranz on February 22, 1934, and they have one daughter—Susan, born August 28, 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on July 29, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of the late M. Michael Edelstein, his dear friend. 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. MICHAEL JOSEPH KENNEDY, Democrat, of New York City, was born in that city October 25, 1897; served as marshal of the City of New York for 15 years; married; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-se venth Congress; New York office, 1775 Broa dway; president, insurance firm of Michael J. Kennedy, Inc. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: Welfare Island (Blackwells), and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at the East River and East Sixty-third Street and running westerly along East Sixty-third Street to Third 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. WILLIAM TOWNSEND PHEIFFER, Republican, of New York City, N. Y.; born at Purcell, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) July 15, 1898; received LL. B. degree from law school of University of Oklahoma in 1919; practiced law at Sayre, Okla., and Amarillo, Tex., before moving to New York City in February 1939; member of the bars of Oklahoma, Texas,’ and New York; associated with New York City law firm of Beckwith & Van Slyck; member of American Bar Associa-tion and Association of the Bar of the City of New York; former president of Amarillo (Tex.) Bar Association; member of National Republican Club; served in United States Army during World War; past post commander of the American Legion; presently holds commission as captain of Cavalry, United States Army Reserve Corps; unmarried; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. : 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. JOSEPH CLARK BALDWIN, Republican, of New York City; born in New York City, January 11, 1897; graduate St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H., and Harvard University; senior partner, public relations firm, Baldwin, Munson & Mann, 10 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City; enlisted in Navy, April 1917, trans-ferred to Army, January 1918; fought overseas as a private, Machine Gun Com-pany, Three hundred and fifth Infantry; received commission and commanded First Platoon, Machine Gun Company, Thirty-ninth Infantry; officer of the French Legion of Honor; captain, Infantry Reserve; reporter, New York Herald Tribune; associate editor North Westchester Times; president, New York Young Republican Club; New York City alderman, 1929-34; New York State senator, 1934-36; delegate, New York State constitutional convention, 1938; New York City Council, 1937-41; member of the Masonic order, Elks, American Legion, Racquet and Tennis Club, National Republican Club, and Porcellian Club; Episcopalian; married in 1923 to Marthe Guillon-Verne, grandniece of Jules Verne; four children—two boys and two girls; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on March 11, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Kenneth F. Simpson. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed T 78 Congressional Directory NEW YORK EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK CouUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at the East River and East Sixty-third Street, thence westerly along East Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, along Third Avenue to East Seventy-third Street, along East Seventy-third Street to Lexing-ton Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Ninety-ninth Street, along East Ninety-ninth Street to the East River and along the 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 August 29, 1892, in New York City; Mr. Kennedy served as chairman of the local school board from 1918 to 1924; elected a State senator at a special election held in January 1924; was reelected in the fall of 1924, 1926, and 1928; Member of Congress since 1930; New York address, 230 Park Avenue; insurance broker. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at the North River and the west end of West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, east across Riverside Park to West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, to Fifth Avenue, south and across Mount Morris Park to Fifth Avenue, to East One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, south to East One Hundred and Tenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south to East Ninety-ninth Street, west across Central Park to West Ninety-ninth Street and Central Park West, south to West Eighty-sixth Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 259,334. SOL BLOOM, Democrat, of New York City; born in Pekin, Ill., March 9, 1870, real estate and construction business; director, United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission; 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; Eiks; Moose; Red Men; and I. O. B. B.; has one daughter, Vera Bloom; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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 T'wentieth Street, to Park Avenue, south to East One Hundred and Eighteenth Street, east to Second Avenue, south to East One Hundred and Seventeenth Street, east to the East River, to East Ninety-ninth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Tenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Twentieth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1930), 150,523. VITO MARCANTONIO, American Labor, of New York City; born in New York City, December 10, 1902; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; New York City address, 20 Vesey Street. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEw YORK CouUNTY: 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 T'wenty-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 A venue to West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, the point or place of beginning. Population (1930), 381,212. JOSEPH A. GAVAGAN, Democrat; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-first and succeeding Congresses. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—BRONX CouUNTY: 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 East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street to the East River, thence along the East River, Bronx Kills, and the Harlem River to Jerome Avenue, the place of beginning. NEW YORK COUNTY: Begin-ning 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 Hun-dred 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 Avenue, 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. Popu-lation (1930), 210,138. WALTER A. LYNCH, Democrat, of New York City, N. Y.; born in New York City, July 7, 1894; educated in St. Jerome’s Parochial School, Fordham NEW YORK Biographical 79 Preparatory School, Fordham University, and Fordham Law School; lawyer; city magistrate, city of New York; delegate to the New York State constitutional convention, 1938; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BroNx County: City Island, Harts Island, High Island, Hunters Island, Middle Reef Island, Rat Island, T'win Island, The Bluezes, and Chimney Sweep, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at the boundary line between the city of New York and the city of Mount Vernon, along said boundary line to Long Island Sound, along Long Island Sound to the East River, to One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, along East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street to Prospect Avenue, along Prospect Avenue to Freeman Street, along Freeman Street to Southern Boulevard, along Southern Boulevard to Pelham Avenue, along Pelham Avenue to the Bronx River, along the Bronx River to the boundary line between the city of New York and the city of Mount Vernon, the place of beginning. WESTCHESTER COUNTY: Cities of Yonkers and Mount Vernon and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1930), 672,121. JAMES M. FITZPATRICK, Democrat, of New York City (Bronx); was born in West Stockbridge, Mass.; was educated in the public schools; married; engaged in real-estate business; elected to the board of aldermen from the twenty-seventh district, New York City, in 1919, and reelected in 1921, 1923, and 1925; resigned February 28, 1927; was elected to the Seventieth Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Rockland and Westchester, except the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1930), 352,210. RALPH ABERNETHY GAMBLE, Republican, of Larchmont, Westchester County, N. Y., was born in Yankton, S. Dak.; son of the late United States Senator Robert J. and Carrie O. Gamble; educated in public schools and Tome School; Princeton University, Litt. B., 1909; George Washington University Law School, 1909-11; Columbia University Law School, LL. B., 1912; admitted New York bar 1913; member of the law firm of McInnes & Gamble, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York City; married Virginia Nesbitt, of Port Deposit, Md., April 19, 1911, who died March 16, 1937; counsel, town of Mamaroneck, Westchester County, 1918-34; counsel, Larchmont, 1926-28; member, New York State Assembly, second district, Westchester County, 1931-37; chairman of Committee on Taxa-tion, and member of Rules, Judiciary, and Affairs of the City of New York Com-mittees; member New York State Commission for the Chicago World's Fair Centennial Celebration, 1932-34; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 2, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Charles D. Millard; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. Ce TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam (3 counties). Population (1930), 249,589. HAMILTON FISH, Republican, was born at Garrison, N. Y., on December 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, 1914-16, 80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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; awarded the American Silver Star and the French Croix de Guerre for gallantry; 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 subcommittee 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 Society of the Cincinnati, the National Grange, Farm Bureau Federation, 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 all succeeding Congresses. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Columbia, Greene, Schoharie, Sullivan, and Ulster (5 counties). Population (1930), 202,519. LEWIS K. ROCKEFELLER, Republican, of Chatham, Columbia County, N. Y.; born in Schenectady, N. Y., November 25, 1877; educated in public schools of Valatie, and New York College for Teachers; married Miss Clara Bain, of Kinderhook; has a son and daughter; following graduation from college taught school in North Germantown; later was employed in State service for 35 years— serving as an employee in the finance bureau of New York State Department of Public Instruction; as chief accountant, municipal accounts bureau; deputy State tax commissioner in the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance; deputy commissioner of taxation and finance; and assistant to the president of the New York State Tax Commission; was president of Columbia County Agricultural Society for 15 years; past president of New York State Association of County Agricultural Societies; is chairman of Columbia County Republican Committee; past president, Columbia County Association of City of New York; secretary-treasurer New York State Tax Association; member Colum-bia County (N. Y.) Volunteer Firemen’s Association; member National Re-publican Club, Masons, and Elks; a Presbyterian; elected to Seventy-fifth Congress, November 2, 1937, to fill vacancy caused by death of Hon. Philip A. Goodwin; reelected to Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of 21,119 votes, the largest plurality ever given a candidate for Congress from this district; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 1 to 4 and 6 to 12. Population (1930), 252,280. WILLIAM THOMAS BYRNE, Democrat, of Loudonville, Albany County, N. Y.; born in the town of Florida, Montgomery County, N. Y., March 6, 1876; graduate of the Albany grammar school, the Albany high school, and the Albany Law School in 1904, with bachelor of law degree; was admitted to the bar in 1904, and commenced practice in Albany, N. Y.; profession, lawyer; member of the New York Senate, 1923-36; married; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; and reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 5 and 13 to 17. Population (1930), 223,424. E. HAROLD CLUETT, Republican, of Troy, N. Y., was born in that city; graduate of Williams College, 1896, A. B. degree; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Schenectady (4 counties). Population (1930), 235,586. FRANK CROWTHER, Republican, Schenectady, N. Y.; born in Liverpool, England, July 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; elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress in November 1918; reelected to each succeeding Congress; member of Ways and Means Committee and Joint Congressional Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. NEW YORK Biographical 81 THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). Population (1930), 217,300. CLARENCE E. KILBURN, Republican, of Malone, N. Y.; born in Malone, Franklin County, N. Y., April 13, 1893; Cornell University (A. B. 1916); captain of Infantry during World War; married Miss Anne Crooks, of Malone; two sons and one daughter; president, People’s Trust Co. of Malone; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on February 13, 1940, to fill the vacancy Si by the death of Hon. Wallace E. Pierce; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, and Oswego (4 counties). Population (1930), 216,456. FRANCIS D. CULKIN, Oswego, N. Y., Republican; lawyer; married. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1930), 262,769. FRED J. DOUGLAS, Republican, of Utica, N. Y.; born in Clinton, Mass., September 14, 1869; moved to Little Falls, N. Y., with his parents in 1874; attended the public schools and was graduated from the medical department of Dartmouth College in 1895; moved to Utica, N. Y., in 1895 and commenced the practice of medicine; served on the Board of Education of Utica, 1910-20; mayor of Utica, 1922-24; served as commissioner of public safety of Utica, 1928-29; married to Miss Catherine McGrath in 1897, and they have two sons and one daughter—Dr. James G. Douglas, Fred J. Douglas, Jr., and Mrs. Mason F. Sexton; member of the Elks, Masonic lodge, Republican Club of Utica, Utica Medical Society, Oneida County Medical Society, New York State Medical Society, American Medical Society, and a fellow in the American College of Surgeons; unsuccessful candidate for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1934; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress by a majority of 17,312 votes; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of 29,974 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Broome, Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego (4 counties). Population (1930), 269,560. EDWIN ARTHUR HALL, Republican, of Binghamton, was born in Bing-hamton, Broome County, N. Y., February 11, 1909; attended Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., where he served in the R. O. T. C. and was a member of the Chi Phi fraternity; in 1928 married Miss Elizabeth Miller, of Binghamton, and they have four boys and two girls; entered the banking business and became chapter president of the American Institute of Banking; winner of the New York-New England oratorical competition for the A. P. Giannini Foundation prizes in 1935; elected to the Broome County Republican committee, 1935; chosen a delegate to the New York State Republican convention at Albany, 1936; elected to a 4-year term in the City Council of Binghamton in 1937; resigned council seat after his election to the Seventy-sixth Congress in November 1939, by a plurality of 31,000 votes over his Democratic opponent; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in November 1940, by an overwhelming plurality of 53,000 votes; member of the Committee on Agriculture. THIRTY. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cortland and Onondaga (2 counties). Population (1930), 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; one son; elected to the Seventieth and succeeding Congresses; home address, Hills Building, Syracuse, N. Y THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cayuga, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (5 counties). Population (1930), 210,853. : JOHN TABER, Repubiican, 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-seventh. 82 Congressional Directory NEW YORK THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1930), 237,230. W. STERLING COLE, Republican, Bath, N. Y.; Colgate University, Albany Law School; attorney; married. THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MoNROE 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. JOSEPH J. O'BRIEN, Republican, of East Rochester, N. Y.; was born in Rochester, N. Y., October 9, 1897; attended public school; was graduated from SS. Peter and Paul’s Catholic School and the Cathedral High School, both in Rochester, N. Y.; attended St. Jerome’s College, Berlin (now Kitchener), Ontario, Canada, and McGill University, Montreal, Canada; connected with the Mer-chants Dispatch Transportation Co., East Rochester, and the New York Central Railroad Co., as superintendent of construction at Kast Rochester; served as village treasurer, 1932-35, and assessor, 1935-38; during the World War served in the United States Navy, 1917-19; amateur and professional football player and wrestler after the war; married Miss Mildred Erway, of Rochester, October 9, 1924; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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., August 12, 1877; attended St. Mark’s School, Southboro, Mass.; graduated from Yale, 1898; enlisted as private, Battery A, Pennsylvania Field Artillery, and served in Puerto Rico; engaged in livestock and general farming business in Livingston County, N. Y., and later for a period managed a ranch in the Panhandle country of Texas; married Miss Alice Hay, of Washington, D. C., in 1902; elected member of New York Assembly from Living-ston County in 1904 and served 6 years in that body; elected speaker of assembly January 1906, and served 5 years in that office; elected United States Senator from the State of New York November 3, 1914; reelected November 2, 1920; defeated for reelection in 1926; elected to the House of Representatives, Seventy-third Congress, November 8, 1932, from the Thirty-ninth Congressional District; Ropagied to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh ongresses. 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 12. Population (1930), 405,109. WALTER GRESHAM ANDREWS, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y., born July 16, 1889, at Evanston, Ill, attended Buffalo schools, Lawrenceville Academy, and Princeton University; served on Mexican border and in France as major, One Hundred and Seventh United States Infantry, Twenty-seventh Division; wounded in action; awarded D. S. C.; elected to the Seventy-second and succeed-ing Congresses; member Military Affairs Committee. FORTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ERIE COUNTY: The city of Buffalo, ward 5, districts 1 and 2; ward 8; ward 9, districts 1 to 12; wards 10 to 15; ward 26, districts 13 to 15; ward 27; towns of Alden, Amherst, Cheek-towaga, Clarence, Elma, Lancaster, Marilla, and Newstead. Population (1930), 258,163. ALFRED FLORIAN BEITER, Democrat, of Buffalo and Williamsville, N. Y., elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Congresses; assistant to the Secretary of the Interior, 1939-40; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FORTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ERIE COUNTY: Towns of Aurora, Boston, Brant, Colden, Collins, Con-cord, Eden, Evans, Hamburg, Holland, North Collins, Orchard Park, Sardinia, Wales, and West Seneca; the city of Lackawanna; the city of Buffalo, wards 1 to 4; ward 5, districts 3 to 16; wards 6 and 7; ward 9, districts 13 to 15. Population (1930), 248,465. ; JOHN CORNELIUS BUTLER, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in Buffalo, July 2, 1887; played amateur football and baseball with such historic teams as Oakdales and Home Pastimes of Buffalo, and managed municipal championship Maywood team of same city; has been active in behalf of labor for 30 years and held many offices in Local Union No. 1286, International Longshore- NORTH CAROLINA B rographical 83 men’s Association, Grain Elevator Employees, and Local Union No. 41, Inter-national Brotherhood of Electrical Workers; served as electrical superintendent of Marine “A” Elevator when elected to Congress; married and has three sons; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on April 22, 1941. FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 236,880. DANIEL ALDEN REED, Republican, of Dunkirk, N. Y., was born September 15, 1875, at Sheridan, Chautauqua County, N. Y.; educated at district school, Sheridan, N. Y., Silver Creek High School, Silver Creek, N. Y., and Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.; attorney at law; married, and has two children; elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress November 5, 1918; reelected to Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh 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. F. Mordecai, of Trinity College, and in Wake Forest College Law School, 1907-08; 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; reelected in 1936 by vote of 563,768 to 232,968 for Frank C. Patton, opponent. 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 college fraternity; national commander of the legion of the Loyal Order of Moose; member of Junior Order of the United American Mechanics; Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; and Explorer’s Club; 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; reelected in 1938 for the term expiring in 1945. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, arin, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1930), 224,768. HERBERT COVINGTON BONNER, Democrat, of Washington, N. C.; born in Washington, N. C., May 16, 1891; son of Herbert M. and Hannah Hare Bonner; married to Eva Hassell Hackney, of Washington, N. C.; sergeant, Company I, Three Hundred and Twenty-second Infantry; served overseas with the Eighty-first Division during the World War; Episcopalian; Elk; elected November 5, 84 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA 1940, to the Seventy-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Lindsay C. Warren, who resigned to become Comptroller General of the United States; also elected on the above date to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, ,and Wilson (8 counties). Population (1930), 276,795. JOHN HOSEA KERR, Democrat, of Warrenton, was born at Yanceyville, N. C.; son of Capt. John H. Kerr, of the Confederate Army, and Eliza Katherine (Yancey) Kerr; was a student in the celebrated Bingham School and graduated from Wake Forest College, North Carolina, with degree of A. B.; studied law and was admitted to the bar; moved to Warrenton and entered upon the practice of his profession; married Miss Ella Foote, of Warrenton, and they have two sons— John Hosea and James Yancey; elected solicitor of the third district and served 11 years; while solicitor was elected judge of the superior court and served 7 years; while serving on the bench was nominated for Congress to succeed Hon. Claude Kitchin, deceased, and was elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress at a special election held November 6, 1923, only one vote being cast against him; member, Committee on Appropriations; former chairman of Committee on Elec-tions No. 3; trustee, University of North Carolina; member, Democratic steering committee; appointed by President Roosevelt to serve as chairman, United States delegation to the Inter-American Travel Congress, Mexico City, 1941; 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 and each succeeding Congress. 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; member Sigma Chi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; 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 Dis-trict; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 of Nash County, the University of North Carolina, and the law school of Yale University; licensed to practice law in February 1918; served in the Naval Aviation Flying Corps during the World War; Presidential elector in 1932; president, Nash County Bar Association, 1933; member of Junior Order United American Mechanics, Phi Delta Theta fraternity, and Phi Delta Phi national law fraternity; member of Baptist Church; married Miss Madeline Strickland in 1923, and is father of two children—a son, Roger A. P. Cooley 2d, and a 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, Novem-ber 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress, November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (7 counties). Population (1930), 293,799. JOHN HAMLIN FOLGER, Democrat, of Mount Airy; born in Rockford, Surry County, N. C., December 18, 1880; educated in high schools and Guilford College (N. C.); studied law at the University of North Carolina; member of the NORTH CAROLINA Biographical 85 House of Representatives of North Carolina in 1927; State senate in 1931; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on June 14, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his brother, Hon. Alonzo D. Folger. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population(1930), 263,517. CARL THOMAS DURHAM, Democrat, of Chapel Hill, N. C.; born in Bing- ham Township, Orange County, at White Cross, N. C., August 28, 1892, son of C. P. and Delia Lloyd Durham; pharmacist; educated at Manndale Preparatory School in southern Alamance County, N. C., and at the University of North Carolina; served in the United States Navy in 1918; married Miss Margaretl Joe Whitsett, of Guilford County, N. C., December 30, 1918, and they have five children, elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Han- over, and Robeson (7 counties). Population (1930), 268,579. J. BAYARD CLARK, Democrat, of Fayetteville, N. C.; lawyer; born in Elizabethtown, N. C., April 5, 1882; educated at Davidson College and University of North Carolina; licensed to practice law in August 1906; member General Assembly of North Carolina, 1915; presidential elector, 1916; member State judicial conference, 1924 to 1928; member of Presbyterian Church; married Miss Helen Purdie Robinson, June 1908, and. they have four children—Mrs. Julian B. Hutaff, Jerome Bayard Clark, Jr., Heman R. Clark, and Helen Purdie Clark; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy- fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Rich- mond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin (12 counties). Population ¢1930), 316,614. WILLIAM OLIN BURGIN, Demoerat, of Lexington, N. C.; lawyer; mayor of Thomasville, 1906-10; elected to the House of Representatives of North Carolina in 1930; elected to the State senate for the eighteenth district, session of 1932; married Miss Edith Leigh Greer, of Lexington, N. C.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; by a majority of 6,570; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, by a majority of 29,647. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, and Watauga (9 counties). Population (1930), 262,213. ROBERT L. DOUGHTON, Democrat, Laurel Springs, N. C.; farmer by occu- pation; 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 and each succeeding Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by the largest majority ever received, approximately 35,000, carried every county in the district; chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Madison, Meck- lenburg, Mitchell, and Yancey (10 counties). Population (1930), 414,808. A. L. BULWINKLE, Democrat, of Gastonia, N. C.; born April 21, 1883; lawyer; major, One Hundred and Thirteenth Field Artillery, American Expedi- tionary Forces, 1917-19; married Miss Bessie Lewis, Dallas, N. C.; two children— Mrs. E. Grainger Williams and Alfred Lewis; Lutheran; member of patriotic and fraternal organizations and bar associations; elected Sixty-seventh to Seventieth and Seventy-second to Seventy-seventh Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Population(1930), 300,392. ZEBULON WEAVER, Democrat, of Asheville; graduated at Weaver College and studied law at the University of North Carolina; was admitted to bar in Sep- tember 1894, and practiced law in Asheville, N. C.; was elected to House of Representatives 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.; has five children; elected to the Sixty-fifth and each successive Congress, except the Seventy-second Congress, and is now serving his twelfth term. i {| 86 Congressional Directory NORTH DAKOTA NORTH DAKOTA (Population (1930), 680,845) SENATORS 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.; unsuccessful candidate in 1924 in second North Dakota district for Congress; appointed to Senate November 14, 1925; elected in 1926 to short term and long term; reelected in 1932 and 1938 to term ending in 1945. WILLIAM LANGER, Republican (elected with the endorsement of the Non-Partisan League), of Bismarck, N. Dak.; graduate of the law department of the University of North Dakota, in 1906, and of Columbia University, New York City, in 1910; passed the bar examination at the age of 18 and admitted to prac-tice law on his twenty-first birthday; married Lydia Cady, of New York City; children—Emma Bulkley Shaeffer, Lydia Cady, Mary Erskine, Cornelia Lyndon; States attorney of Morton County, N. Dak., 1914-16; attorney general, 1916-20; legal advisor, Council of Defense, World War; on North Dakota campaign com-mittee, Robert M. La Follette for President, each time he was a candidate, and comanager of Hiram Johnson for President committee; Republican nominee for Governor in 1920; Governor of North Dakota, 1933 to July 17, 1934, when he was removed by the Supreme Court of North Dakota; only person ever to be arrested in any English speaking country for filing an affidavit of prejudice against a judge; again Governor from 1937 to 1939; member Sigma Chi fraternity; elected . to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947. : REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 680,845. USHER L. BURDICK, Republican, of Williston, N. Dak.; born in Owatonna, Minn., February 21, 1879; the eighth generation of descendants of Robert Bur-dick, son of Ozias Warren Burdick (7), William (6), Ebenezer (5), Zera (4), Ebenezer (3), Dea-Robert (2), Robert (1); mother was Lucy Farnum; the original home of the Burdick family is in Rhode Island, where the early Burdicks were followers of Roger Williams; the Burdick family were among the early empire builders of Dakota Territory and engaged in farming and livestock business; Usher L. Burdick was raised on Graham’s Island, N. Dak., bordering the Sioux Indian Reservation; graduated from the State normal school at Mayville, N. Dak., in 1900; graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1904, and while there was right end on two championship teams of Minnesota; elected to the State Legislature of North Dakota in 1906; reelected in 1908, and was chosen speaker of the house in 1909; elected Lieutenant Governor in 1911, and State’s attorney in 1913, where as State’s attorney and special prosecutor he served several years; appointed assistant United States attorney of North Dakota in 1930; defeated for Congress in 1932 but elected in 1934, 1936, 1938, and 1940; independent in politics and a member of the Non-Partisan League of North Da-kota; since the League always files its candidates on the Republican ticket he is affiliated with the Republican minority in Congress; author of many books and booklets on western pioneers and Indians, the Story of Fort Buford being the last book published; has three children—Quentin Northrup Burdick, B. A., LL. B., University of Minnesota, practicing law in Fargo, N. Dak.; Eugene Allan Burdick, A. B., LL. B., University of Minnesota, State’s attorney, Williams -County, N. Dak.; Eileen Rosemary Burdick, B. A., University of Minnesota, LL. B., University of Colorado. CHARLES RAYMOND ROBERTSON, Republican, of Bismarck, N. Dak.; born on a farm near Madison, Wis., September 5, 1889, second youngest of six children of William Robertson and wife, the former Janet Mair, both natives of Ayrshire, Scotland; assisted his father on the family grain and stock farm in Columbia County, Wis., while attending grade school at nearby Arlington and high school at Poynette, graduate of Parker College; held executive positions in wholesale and retail department stores in Minneapolis, Winnebago, and Fergus Falls, Minn., and Aberdeen, S. Dak.; copartner in shoe store at Aberdeen and OHIO Biographical department stores in Redfield, S. Dak., and Mandan, N. Dak.; operated con-currently women’s wear stores, under one management, at Valley City, James-town, Wahpeton, and Bismarck, N. Dak.; in recent years has devoted entire time to Bismarck store; married Miss Mary Armstrong, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Armstrong, of Kansas City, Mo., a teacher in the Redfield schools; member Pres-byterian Church, member of all Masonic bodies and a member of the Elks; dele-gate to Republican National Convention held in June 1940 at Philadelphia; elected by Republican State executive committee to fill vacancy for nomination, occasioned by withdrawal of Congressman William Lemke; elected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress as a Representative at Large, receiving in excess of 47,000 more votes than his Democratic opponent. OHIO (Population (1930), 6,646,697) SENATORS ROBERT ALPHONSO TAFT, Republican, of Cincinnati, Ohio; born in Cincinnati, Ohio, September 8, 1889; attended the public schools of Cincinnati and the Taft School, Watertown, Conn.; was graduated from Yale University with B. A. degree in 1910 and from Harvard University with LL. B. degree in 1913; married Martha Wheaton Bowers October 17, 1914; four sons, William Howard, Robert, Jr., Lloyd Bowers, and Horace Dwight; attorney at law; served as assistant counsel for the United States Food Administration, 1917-18, and as counsel for the American Relief Administration in 1919; member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1921-26, and served as speaker in 1926; served in the Ohio Senate, 1931-32; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. HAROLD HITZ BURTON, Republican, of Cleveland, Ohio; born in Jamaica Plain, Mass., June 22, 1888; Bowdoin College, A. B. 1909, LL. D. 1937; Harvard University, LL. B. 1912; Oberlin College, LL. D. 1941; married Selma F. Smith of Newton, Mass.; children: Mrs. H. Charles Weidner, Jr., William S., Deborah, and Robert S.; attorney at law; practiced with Gage, Wilbur & Wachner, Cleve-land, 1912-14; assistant attorney, Utah Power & Light Co., Salt Lake City, Utah, 1914-16; attorney, Idaho Power Co., Boise, Idaho, 1916-17; associated with Day, Day & Wilkin, later Day & Day, Cleveland, 1919-25; member of Cull, Burton & Laughlin, 1925-29; Andrews, Hadden & Burton, 1932-35; lieutenant and later captain, Three Hundred and Sixty-first Infantry, Ninety-first Division, with service in France and Belgium, 1917-19; member, board of education, East Cleveland, Ohio, 1928-29; Ohio House of Representatives, 1929; director of law of Cleveland, 1929-32; mayor of Cleveland, 1935-40; elected to United States Senate November 5, 1940, for term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 6,646,697. GEORGE H. BENDER, Republican, of Cleveland Heights, Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio, September 29, 1896; educated in the public schools and West Commerce High School, Cleveland, Ohio; president, insurance company; editor and publisher, Ohio Republican and National Republican; State senator, Ohio General Assembly, 1920-30; chairman, Republican central committee, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland); married to Edna Eckhardt; two children, Barbara and Virginia; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. STEPHEN M. YOUNG, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio; born on a farm in Huron County, Ohio, May 4, 1889; son of Isabelle W. and the late Judge Stephen M. Young, of Norwalk; lawyer; attended Kenyon and Adelbert Colleges and Western Reserve University Law School; received degrees LL. B. from Western University Law School and master of civil law (honorary) from Kenyon College; 88 Congressional Directory oHIO served two terms in the General Assembly of Ohio, 1913-17; assistant prosecuting attorney of Cuyahoga County, 1917-18; resigned to enter the Army; chief assist-ant prosecuting attorney of Cuyahoga County, 1919-20; member of the Ohio Commission on Unemployment Insurance, 1931-32; served in National Guard on Mexican border in 1916 and in Field Artillery in 1918; member of the Democratic State central committee, Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity, the Cuyahoga County, Ohio State, and American Bar Associations, and member of the American Legion and of Société des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux; represented Ohio as Congressman at Large in the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIRST DISTRICT.—HAMILTON CoUNTY: City of Cincinnati, wards 1 to 6; ward 7, except proces A and C; 8 and 9; ward 10, except precinctsI, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, precinets A, P,'Q,\T, wards and 103 ward 12, precincts x NAHE, Q, zed V; ward 13; ward 14, except precinct Y; ward 15, except precincts A'and B; ward 16, precincts D, G, 0 to X, and Z; ward 23, precinct T; ward 24, precincts A to C and H to J; townships of gas Columbia, Symmes, and all of Millcreek except the city of St. Bernard; all of city of Norwood. Population (1930), 296,533. CHARLES H. ELSTON, Republican, of Cincinnati, Ohio; born in Marietta, Ohio, August 1, 1891; educated in public schools of Marietta and Cincinnati; attorney at law; assistant prosecuting attorney of Hamilton County, Ohio, 1915-22; member of Cincinnati, Ohio State, and American Bar Associations; served in Aviation Service, United States Army, during World War; member of the American Legion and Forty and Eight; served two terms as president of the Hamilton County Republican Club; elected member of Hamilton County Charter Commission in 1934; married August 23, 1920, to Edna G. Kirker; one daughter, Marilyn, 18 years; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, Jo 7, precincts A and C; ward 10, precincts I, X, L, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts AN, P, Q and Vv; ward 15, precincts A and B; ward 16, precincts A to C, E, F, H to J, LtoN, Y, and Z north: wards 17 to 22; ward 23, except precinct T'; ward 24, precincts D to G, and K to M; wards 25 and 26; townships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Lockland, Miami, Springfield, Sycamore, 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, 1922-26; ex-service man; married Stella, Ostendorf in 1927; Member of the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1930), 410,020. GREG JOHN HOLBROCK, Democrat, of Hamilton, Ohio, where he was born, June 21, 1906; attended elementary schools in Hamilton, Ohio; high school and preparatory work in Cincinnati, Ohio; college work at Notre Dame University in South Bend, Ind., and Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio; graduated and received Ph. D. degree; attended Cincinnati Law School, University of Cincinnati, Ohio, graduated in 1932 and received LL. B. degree; lawyer; married; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, and Shelby (6 counties). Population (1930), 236,783. ROBERT FRANKLIN JONES, Republican, of Lima, Ohio; born in. Cairo, Ohio, June 25, 1907, son of J. C. and Josephine Jones; educated Cairo village and Lima central high schools and Ohio Northern University Law School; admitted to the practice of law in 1929; married Miss Ida Marie Spreen, daughter of A. W. and Hetty Spreen, and they have two children, Robert Franklin, Jr. and Jer-aldine; member of the Methodist Church; Allen County prosecuting attorney 1935-39; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. OHIO Biographical 89 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (7 counties). Population (1930), 159,679. CLIFF CLEVENGER, Republican, of Bryan, Ohio; married Miss Georgeanna Tipler, of near Oshkosh, Wis., and they have one son—John; is a thirty-second degree Mason, member of Toledo Consistory, A. A. S. R., Zenobia Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S.; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). Population (1930), 190,828. JACOB E. DAVIS, Democrat, of Waverly, Ohio; born in Beaver Village, Pike County, Ohio, October 31, 1905, son of George Omer and Katheryne Rose Leist Davis; attended Beaver rural schools; graduated from Beaver High School in 1923, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, A. B. degree, 1927, and Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., LL. B. degree, 1930; attorney at law; prosecuting attorney of Pike County two terms; representative in General Assembly of Ohio, two terms; speaker pro tempore and majority floor leader in Ohio House of Repre-sentatives, 1937; common pleas judge, Pike County, 1937-40; married Minnie Eleanor Middleton, of Waverly, Ohio, September 18, 1929; children, Jacob E. Davis 2d and Eleanor Middleton Davis; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Clark, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, Logan, Madison, Union, and Warren (9 counties). Population (1930), 286,374. CLARENCE J. BROWN, Republican, of Blanchester, Ohio; born in Blan-chester July 14, 1893; son of Owen and Ellen B. Brown; graduate of Blanchester High School, and Washington and Lee University Law School; honorary degree from Wilmington College; publisher several country newspapers; president of the Brown Publishing Co.; Lieutenant Governor of Ohio 1919-23; secretary of state of Ohio 1927-33; Republican nominee for Governor of Ohio in 1934; delegate to various Republican National Conventions; married Ethel McKinney July 15, 1916; three children, Betty Jean, Dorothy Lucille, and Clarence J., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, 1940. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford, Hancock, Hardin, Marion, Morrow, and Wyandot (6 counties). Population (1930), 182,329. FREDERICK C. SMITH, Republican, of Marion, Ohio, born in Shanesville, Ohio, July 29, 1884; profession, physician and surgeon, and founded Frederick C. Smith clinic; married, has two sons; elected mayor of Marion in 1935; reelected in 15 ; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Lucas and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1930), 371,818. JOHN F. HUNTER, Democrat, of Toledo, Ohio; served in the World War; past commander of American Legion post and honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; served in the Ohio House of Representatives, ninetieth general assembly, 1933-34; member of the Ohio Senate, representing the thirty-fourth senatorial district in the ninety-first general assembly, 1935-36; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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 in 1924 to Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to all subsequent Congresses; member of Ways and Means Committee. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, and Ross (5 counties). Population (1930), 168,281. HAROLD K. CLAYPOOL, Democrat, of Chillicothe, Ohio; born in Bain-bridge, Ohio, June 2, 1886; publisher; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. I | : | 90 Congressional Directory OHIO TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CounTyY: Franklin. Population (1930), 361,055. JOHN M. VORYS, Republican, of Columbus, Ohio; lawyer; born in Lancaster, Ohio, June 16, 1896; attended public schools in Lancaster and Columbus, Ohio; graduated from Columbus East High School, Yale University (B. A.), Ohio State University (juris doctor); pilot in United States Naval Air Service, over-seas, retiring to inactive service in 1919 with rank of lieutenant, senior grade; teacher in the College of Yale in China, Changsha, China, 1919-20; assistant secretary, American delegation, Conference on Limitation of Armament, Wash-ington, 1921-22; representative from Franklin County in Ohio General Assembly, 1923-24; senator from tenth district in Ohio General Assembly, 1925-26; director of aeronautics of Ohio, 1929-30; member of the law firm of Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease; married Lois West, of Lucknow, India, in 1927; three children— Martin, Jeanny Esther, and Mary; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Erie, Huron, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wood (5 counties). Population (1930), 213,825. ALBERT DAVID BAUMHART, Jr., Republican, of Vermilion, Ohio; born in Vermilion, Erie County, Ohio, June 15, 1908; graduated from the Ohio Uni-versity with A. B. degree in 1930 and with M. A. degree in 1931; publishing house representative; member of the Ohio Senate 1937-40; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—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; former member of General Assembly of Ohio; member of Protestant Episcopal Church; married; two sons; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, to the Seventy-fourth Congress, to the Seventy-fifth Congress, to the Seventy-sixth Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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, Roads, and Invalid Pensions; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (4 counties). Popula-tion (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 Evan-gelical and Reformed Church, of Canton, Ohio; Member of the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress over James J. Seccombe. OHIO Biographical SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ashland, Coshocton, Delaware, Knox, Licking, and Rich-land (6 counties). Population (1930), 237,061. J. HARRY McGREGOR, Republican, of West Lafayette, Ohio; contractor; was born on a farm near Unionport, Ohio, September 30, 1896; graduate of West Lafayette High School; attended West Lafayette College and Oberlin (Ohio) College; during the World War served in the Field Artillery; member of the State house of representatives, 1935-40, and served as minority whip and secretary of the finance committee, 1937-39, and as majority floor leader and speaker pro tempore, 1939-40; married Miss Twila Cox, of Dresden, Ohio, May 29, 1918, and they have two daughters and one son—Mrs. Monroe Horst, Betty Jane, and Harry Laird; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on February 27, 1940, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William A. Ashbrook; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Harrison, and Jefferson (5 counties). Population (1930), 304,411. LAWRENCE E. IMHOFF, Democrat, of St. Clairsville, Ohio; born at Round Bottom, Ohio, December 28, 1895; educated in rural schools, St. Clairsville High School, and Ohio State University Law College; profession, lawyer; LL. B. degree; enlisted and served in the Fifth Regiment, United States Marines, during the World War; wounded in the Second Battle of the Marne; elected clerk of courts, Belmont County, two terms, 1921-25; elected probate judge of Belmont County, two terms, 1925-33; appointed special assistant to the United States Attorney General, April 1, 1939, and resigned March 15, 1940, in compliance with provisions of Hatch Act, to file for Congress; member of all veterans’ organizations and numerous fraternal orders; married Miss Martha Elizabeth Korn, of Wheeling, W. Va., September 1, 1923, and they have one child—Patricia Ann, 15 years of age; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Mahoning, and Trumbull (3 counties). Population (1930), 427,566. MICHAEL JOSEPH KIRWAN, Democrat, of Youngstown, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-fifth and each succeeding Congress. 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 precinet I; and ward 31, except precinct D. Population (1930), 301,964. MARTIN L. SWEENEY, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio; elected to the Sev-enty-second and each succeeding Congress. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF CLEVELAND: Ward 5, except precincts F, M, and V; ward 6; ward 9, precincts I to M, P to Y, and EE; ward 11, precinctsA to E; wards 12 to 16; ward 17, precincts D to Q; ward 18, precincts T, U, and V; ward 19, part of precinct Z; wards 28 and 29; ward 30, precincts A to L and Q and V; 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 Ohio House of Representatives, 1911-12; was elected a member of the fourth Constitutional Convention of Ohio, which con-vened 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a vote of 79,602 for Mr. Crosser to 23,658 for his opponent. Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Geauga, Lake, and that part of Cuyahoga County out-side of the city of Cleveland; the city of Cleveland, ward 9, precincts N, O, Z to DD, and FF to HH; 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 Z; wards 20 and 22; ward 25, part of precinct I; wards 26 and 27; ward 30, precincts M to P, and W to EE; and wards 32 and 33. Population (1930), 633,678. FRANCES P. BOLTON, Republican, of Lyndhurst (suburb of Cleveland), Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio, March 29, 1885; married in 1907; three sons, Charles, Kenyon, and Oliver, and one daughter, Elisabeth, not living; active for many years in public health nursing and nursing education, and other social service, educational, and philanthropic work; trustee of Lakeside Hospitals, East End Community Center, School of Nursing at Western Reserve University, all of Cleveland; honorary member of Army Nursing School Alumni Association, National League of Nursing Education, Association of Collegiate Schools of Nursing; member of National Organization for Public Health Nursing, Advisory Council, National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, National Advisory Council for the Girl Scouts; Vice Regent for Ohio of Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association, which has charge of George Washington’s home; honorary degree, LL. D., Colgate University, 1940; Republican State Central Committeewoman, 1937-40; vice chairman, National Republican Program Committee, 1938-40; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of her husband, Chester C. Bolton, at a special election held on February 27, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. 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.; honorary degree of LL. D. by DePauw University, 1937; honorary degree of J. U. D. by Central Normal College, 1939; 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 convention, 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 Congress; elected to the United States Senate in 1926 and 1932; reelected in 1938 for the term beginning January 3, 1 member of Phi Delta Theta college fraternity; is an Elk, Mason, and hriner. JOSH LEE, Democrat, of Norman, Okla.; born in Childersburg, Ala., January 23, 1892; moved to Pauls Valley, Okla. (then Indian Territory), and in 1901 to farm in Kiowa County; attended the public schools of Hobart and Rocky, Okla., Oklahoma Baptist University, Shawnee, and the University of Oklahoma, earn-ing A. B. degree from latter institution in 1917; served as private in the One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Infantry, Thirty-fourth (Sandstorm) Division in World War; was made head of public speaking department at the University of Oklahoma in 1919; also holds M. A. degree in political science from Columbia University in New York City, and LL. B. degree from Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; married Louise Gerlach, of Woodward, Okla., January 17, 1923; they have two children, Robert Joshua, 17, and Mary Louise, 10; was elected to Seventy-fourth Congress in November 1934; was elected to United States Senate in November 1936. : REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 2,396,040. WILL ROGERS, Democrat, of Oklahoma; was born at Bessie, Oklahoma Territory (now Oklahoma), December 12, 1898; received B. S. degree in govern-ment and B. A. degree in English from Central Teachers’ College, Edmond, and OKLAHOMA Biographical M. BS. 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 could enlist; married Miss Chioe Gorden, also a teacher, and they have one daughter—Nell; member of Baptist Church; Woodman, Mason, Shriner, Knights of Pythias, and member of Eastern Star; member of Oklahoma Farmers’ Union, Oklahoma Memorial Association (his-torical), Red Red Rose (educator’s fraternal organization), Phi Delta Kappa, and Pi Kappa Alpha; chairman of Committee on Indian Affairs, House of Repre-sentatives; elected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress. 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; 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; elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses and reelected to the Seventy-seventh 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 at 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, born March 4, 1922, and a son, Dan, born June 20, 1936; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Atoka, Bryan, Carter, Choctaw, Latimer, Le Flore, Love, McCurtain, 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. degree at University of Oklahoma, at Norman in 1920, with supplementary work in the University of Chicago; profession—teacher, lawyer; admitted to the Oklahoma 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 Oklahoma House of Representatives in 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 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 8 Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA 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 Hon. Charles D. Carter, chairman of the Democratic caucus, in the primary of 1926 and elected to the Seventieth Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-first Congress by 17,651 majority, to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority of 30,226, to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 48,865, to the Seventy-fourth Congress by a majority of 36,233, to the Seventy-fifth Congress by a majority of 43,589, to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a majority of 35,330 and to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a ma-jority of 55,221; grand master of I. O. O. F. for State of Oklahoma, 1934-35; chairman of Committee on Roads. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Coal, Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Potta-watomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1930), 360,468. \ LYLE H. BOREN, Democrat, of Seminole, Okla. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne (7 counties). Population (1930), 376,738. A. 8. MIKE MONRONEY, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, Okla.; born in Oklahoma City, March 2, 1902; educated in the public schools and the University of Oklahoma, B. A., 1924; married; editor of the Oklahoma Daily, and served 5 years as political writer of the Seripps-Howard Oklahoma News in Oklahoma, City; entered the retail furniture business in 1929; served as president of the following: Oklahoma Furniture Association, 1930; Oklahoma University Alumni, 1931; Oklahoma City Retailers Association, 1937 and 1938; Oklahoma City Rotary Club, 1934; cofounder and, from 1927 to 1936, coauthor of the Oklahoma State Press Gridiron; member of Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Delta Chi, and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, King- fisher, and Stephens (9 counties). Population (1930), 263,164. JED JOHNSON, Anadarko, Democrat; born in Ellis County, Tex.; son of La Fayette D. and Evalyn Carlin Johnson; married Miss Beatrice Luginbyhl, Chick- asha, Okla., 1925; three daughters, Jean, Joan, Janelle, and one son, Jed, Jr.; educated at Oklahoma University and I’Université de Clermont, France; served in American Expeditionary Forces as private in Company L, Thirty-sixth Divi-sion; worked in civil service; salesman; editor, 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, repre-senting fifteenth and seventeenth districts; delegate from United States Congress to Twenty-fourth Annual Peace Conference, Interparliamentary Union, Paris, France, 1927; sent to similar world peace conferences at Geneva, Switzerland, 1929, and Paris, 1937; delegate from Oklahoma, Tenth Annual Convention, American Legion, Paris, 1927; first vice president, Thirty-sixth Division Association; chair-man, speakers’ bureau, Democratic National Congressional Committee; member, House Steering Committee; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Beckham, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa,Roger Mills, Tillman, and Washita (11 counties). Population (1930), 240,944. VICTOR WICKERSHAM, Democrat, of Mangum, Okla., was born on a farm near Lone Rock, Baxter County, Ark., February 9, 1906; moved to Mangum, Okla., January 8, 1915; educated in the public schools of Oklahoma; married Miss Jessie Stiles, June 30, 1929, and they have one son and two daughters;served in office of court clerk, Greer County, Okla., 1923-35, and as chief clerkof Board of Affairs of the State of Oklahoma, 1935-36; since that time has been in private business and connected with the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. until April 1, 1941, on which date elected at a special election to the Seventy-seventh Congress for the Seventh District of Oklahoma to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Sam C. Massingale. OREGON Biographical EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Garfield, Grant, Harper, Kay, Major Noble, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (12 counties). Population (1930), 224,067. ROSS RIZLEY, Republican, of Guymon, Okla., was born on a farm near Beaver, Beaver County, Okla., July 5, 1892; educated in the public schools; taught in the rural schools of Beaver County, Okla.; served as deputy register of deeds of Beaver County, 1911-12; was graduated from the University of Kansas City, Kansas City, Mo., in June 1915, with degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar in 1915 and commenced the practice of law in Beaver, Okla. ; elected county attorney of Beaver County in 1918 and served until 1920, when he resigned and moved to Guymon, Okla., to resume the practice of law; married Miss Ruby Seal, of Beaver, on June 18, 1916, and they have seven children—four boys and three girls; served as city attorney of Guymon, 1928-38; member of the State senate, 1931-34; mem-ber of the Methodist Church; Knights of Pythias; a thirty-second degree Mason; member of the State and the American Bar Associations; member of the Guymon Board of Education, 1924-32; Presidential elector, 1928; delegate to Republican National Convention in 1932 and 1936; unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Oklahoma in general election, 1938; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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 Stanford Uni-versity; dean of Willamette College of Law, 1908-13; received degree of doctor of laws from Willamette University, University of Oregon, and Linfield College; by profession a lawyer; associate justice of Oregon Supreme Court, 1913 and 1915; chairman, Republican State central committee, 1916-17; appointed by Governor Withycombe, May 29, 1917, to fill unexpired term of Senator Harry Lane, deceased; term of office expired, general election, November 5, 1918; appointed, December 17, 1918, by Governor Withycombe to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Hon. F. W. Mulkey, who had been elected to fill short term ending March 3, 1919; elected November 5, 1918, for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1919; reelected November 4, 1924, for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1925; reelected November 4; 1930, for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1931; reelected November 3, 1936, for 6-year term beginning January 3, 1937; term expires in 1943; is Minority Leader in the Senate; nominated for Vice President of the United States by the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1940. RUFUS C. HOLMAN, Republican, of Portland, Oreg.; born in Portland, Oreg., October 14, 1877, the youngest of 11 children, son of Charles and Mary (Huntington) Holman, Oregon pioneers, who crossed the Plains in covered wagons in 1852; attended the public schools and graduated as president of the Portland High School class of 1896; then followed a career of farm work, a teacher of a district school, steamboating, bookkeeping, accounting, the engaging in personal business as manufacturer (Davis & Holman and Portland Paper Box Co.), and other manufacturing and financial interests, in some of which he is still active; also operates a fine farm in Clackamas County, Oreg., where he is a breeder of registered Guernsey cattle; on April 15, 1903, he married Miss Gertrude Eleanor Watson, only daughter of Mrs. and the late Judge E. B. Watson, member and chief justice of Oregon’s first supreme court (Mrs. Holman died February 3, 1938) ; has one daughter, Eleanor Watson Holman Burkitt (Mrs. Harold Burkitt), and two grandchildren residing in Portland; during his public career served as member of Portland Charter Commission; as member and chairman, Board of Multnomah, County Commission; chairman, Columbia River Interstate Bridge Commission; president, State Association of County Judges and Commissioners; president, Mount Hood Loop Road Association; director, Portland Library Asso-ciation; vice president, West Side Pacific Highway Association; member of the Port of Portland Commission; and State treasurer of Oregon; in civic activities he has been president and honorary life member of Craftsmen’s Club; president, Multnomah Anglers’ Club; director, American Automobile Association; president, Pacific Coast Association Paper Box Manufacturers; director, Portland Rotary Club; director, Associated Industries of Oregon; honorary member of Oregon Cavemen; president, Stream Purification League of Oregon; is a Mason, a past 96 C ongresstonal Directory PENNSYLVANIA potentate of Al Kader Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine; received the seventh degree of the Patrons of Husbandry in the National Grange; president of Sons and Daughters of Oregon Pioneers; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945. 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 so 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Baker, Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood River, Jeffer-son, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1930), 182,973. WALTER MARCUS PIERCE, Democrat, of near La Grande, Oreg., was born on a farm near Morris, Ill., May 30, 1861; attended country school and Morris Academy; taught school; moved to Oregon in 1883 and taught school and served as county school superintendent and county clerk; operated wheat farms; 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; from 1907 until 1937 operated stock and wheat farms; in Oregon State Senate two terms, 1902-6 and 1916-20, with special in-terest in legislation on roads, labor, and education; Governor of Oregon, 1923-27; Democratic national committeeman from Oregon, 1932-36; member of board of regents of Oregon State College, 1905-27; married Cornelia Marvin, State librarian of Oregon; had six children by former marriage; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; only Democrat ever elected to represent the district. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Multnomah. Population (1930), 338,241. HOMER D. ANGELL, Republican, of Portland, Oreg., son of Thomas and Susan Angell, both of whom were born in New York and moved west to Iowa; in 1852 settled in Oregon, where they resided until their deaths; born on a farm near The Dalles, Oreg., educated in the public schools; B. A. degree, University of Oregon, LL. B. and M. A. degrees, Columbia University, of New York; attorney at law; admitted to practice in the States of New York and Oregon, in the Federal courts, and United States Supreme Court; member of the Oregon Legislature from 1929 to 1938, when he resigned from the State senate, with the exception of one term for which he was not a candidate; married to Mayme Henton; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. PENNSYLVANIA (Population (1930), 9,631,350) SENATORS JAMES JOHN DAVIS, Republican, of Pittsburgh, was born in Tredegar, South Wales, October 27, 1873; his father migrated to Pittsburgh in August 1880, his mother and their six children following him in April 1881; later moved to Sharon, Pa.; attended public schools and Sharon Business College; has received PENNSYLVANIA B 1ographical 97 honorary degree of LL. D. from Bucknell University, Pennsylvania Military Academy, University of Pittsburgh, Drake University, Muhlenberg College, and St. Bonaventure’s Seminary and College; at the age of 12 began working and learning his trade as a puddler in the iron and steel works at Sharon; worked in the iron and steel works at Pittsburgh, and Birmingham, Ala., and later in the steel and tin-plate mills at Elwood, Ind.; joined the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers of America, was elected to various offices therein, and is still a member in good standing; elected city clerk of Elwood in May 1898; elected recorder of Madison County, Ind., in November 1902; joined the Loyal Order of Moose in 1906; in 1907 became director general of the order and still holds that office; chairman Moose War Relief Commission, visiting early in 1918 the military camps of the United States, Great Britain, and Canada, and the American, British, Belgian, French, and Italian war fronts; immediately after the armistice was signed went with the troops into Germany ; visited the battlefields of Belgium, Germany, and that part of France which had been in possession of the Central Powers; after appointment as Secretary of Labor made two trips to Europe and one to South America to study immigration problems and economic conditions; married Jean Rodenbaugh, 1914 (deceased), and has five children—James J., Jr., Jane Elizabeth, Jean Allys, Joan, and Jewel; a member of the Chevy Chase Club of Washington, D. C.; is also a member of the Masons (thirty-third degree), Mystic Shrine, Grotto, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Eagles, Foresters, Protected Home Circle, Knights of the Golden Eagle, Woodmenof the World, Maccabees; honorary member, Delta Sigma Phi, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Spanish War Veterans; appointed by President Harding and took oath of office as Secretary of Labor March 5, 1921; continued throughout the administration of President Coolidge and reappointed by President Hoover March 4, 1929; while Secretary of Labor was Chairman, Federal Board for Vocational Education, mem- ber of the United States Council of National Defense and of the Smithsonian * Institution; elected to the Senate November 4, 1930, resigned as Secretary of Labor on December 2, 1930, and on same day took the oath of office as Senator; reelected to the Senate November 8, 1932; reelected November 8, 1938; his term expires January 3, 1945. JOSEPH F. GUFFEY, Democrat, Pittsburgh, Pa., unmarried. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—O1TY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 1 to 6, 26, 39, and 48. Population (1930), 286,462. LEON SACKS, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born in that city in the first ward, First Congressional District, October 7, 1902; attended the public schools in the first ward, graduating there, and entered the South Philadelphia High School for Boys, which is also in the First Congressional Distriet, and grad-uated in 1919; received degree of bachelor of science in economics from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1923, and a bachelor of law degree from the law school, University of Pennsylvania, in 1926; a practicing attorney in Philadelphia, Pa., since 1926; married, two children; appointed deputy attorney general of Pennsylvania in February 1935 under the administration of Gov. George H. Earle; member of the Democratic State committee, being elected from the first senatorial district of Philadelphia in 1936; member of many local fraternal, beneficial, and social societies; also a member of the McKean Law Club; elected to the Seventy-fiftth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 7 to 10, 24, 27, 80, 386, and 44. Population (1930), 247,068. JAMES P. McGRANERY, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born in that city on July 8, 1895; married Miss Regina T. Clark on November 29, 1939, and they have one son—James Patrick McGranery, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRD Jt oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 to 20, 25, 31, 37, and 45. Population (1930), 298,461. MICHAEL J. BRADLEY, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born in that city on May 24, 1897; educated in the parochial schools; World War veteran, having enlisted in May 1917, and serving overseas in the United States Navy Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA from December 1917 to December 1919; member of the American Legion and Vet-erans of Foreign Wars; married, July 6, 1919, to Emily Angiuli, of Rome, Italy, and they have four children—Raymond, Marian, Catherine, and Edward; en-gaged in investment security and brokerage business from 1923 to 1935; deputy insurance commissioner, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, from July 1, 1935, to January 1, 1937; member, Commercial Telegraphers’ Union; elected to the Sev-enty-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. Wards 15, 28, 29, 32, 38, and 47. Population (1930), 274,376. FOyETH DISTRICT.—CItry OF PHILADELPHIA: PENNSYLVANIA Brographical | 99 EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTY: 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. CHARLES L. GERLACH, Republican, of Allentown, Pa.; born in Bethlehem, Northampton County, Pa., September 14, 1895; married November 16, 1916, to Florence I. Hillegass; educated in public schools of Bethlehem; partner of Allen-town Supply Co., wholesale and retail fuels, burners, and heat conditioners; Republican State committeeman, 1936-37; chairman of organization committee for Republican clubs in Lehigh County; past president of Post L, T. P. A.; member of the Moravian Church; thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Moose, Owl, and Eagle; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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; reelected to the Seventy-second and succeeding Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Lackawanna. Population (1930), 310,397. PATRICK J. BOLAND, Democrat, of Scranton; son of Fanny and Christopher 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 without opposition; appointed as majority whip; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Luzerne. Population (1930), 445,109. J. HAROLD FLANNERY, Democrat, of Pittston, Pa.; born April 19, 1898, at Pittston, Pa.; graduate of Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pa., and Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle, Pa.; admitted to the bar in March 1921; solicitor, Pittston City, 1926-30; Democratic county chairman 1926-28, and assistant district attorney of Luzerne County, 1932-36; honorably discharged from United States Army December 14, 1919; married Anne Allan, October 29, 1929; they have one son—J. Harold Flannery, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population (1930), 364,009. IVOR D. FENTON, Republican, of Mahanoy City (Buck Mountain), Pa., was born in that city, August 3, 1889; received early education in the public schools of Shenandoah and Mahanoy City, and later attended Bucknell Univer-sity at Lewisburg; graduated from Jefferson Medical College at Philadelphia, class of 1912; served interneship at Ashland State Hospital and short time after opened offices in Mahanoy City; married to Theresa Lewis, Mahanoy City, June 23, 1915, and they have three children—Mary, Elizabeth, and Peggy; enlisted in the United States Army Medical Corps and was commissioned a lieutenant, August 8, 1917, rising to the rank of captain; served 20 months (11 months overseas) with the Three Hundred and Fifteenth Infantry of the Seventy-ninth Division; discharged on June 6, 1919, and returned to Mahanoy City to resume medical practice; member of numerous fraternal and civic organizations; past commander and trustee of Post 74, American Legion, Mahanoy City, and surgeon for Hall-Reese Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars; past president of the 100 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA Schuylkill County Medical Society, member of Pennsylvania State Medical Society, member American Medical Association; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTY: Berks. Population (1930), 231,717. GUY L. MOSER, Democrat, of Douglassville, Pa., R. F. D. 2; born in a log house on a farm in Amity Township, Berks County, Pa., son of the late Henry G. and Margaret Sassaman Moser; grandson of the late Judge Augustus S. and Sophia DeTurk Sassaman; grandnephew of the late Judge Henry Gresh and Esther Lorah Moser; a direct lineal descendant, eighth generation, of Isaac DeTurk, emigrant pioneer, coming to America with Rev. Joshua Von Kocherthal, first German Lutheran clergyman emigrating from the Palatinate in 1708, and taking title to land on a patent issued by William Penn, within 7 miles of ancestral homestead; had 12 ancestors to serve in the Revolutionary War; attended rural public school and Keystone State Teachers’ College; farm laborer, painter, paperhanger, and public-school teacher; served 22 years in the classified civil service of the United States—10 years as a railway postal clerk and 12 years as a post-office inspector; resigned and entered investment banking for 5 years; returned to farming; single; unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomina-tion for Congress in 1932 and 1934; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Pike, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1930), 205,084. WILSON D. GILLETTE, Republican, of Towanda, Pa.; born on a farm in Sheshequin, Bradford County, Pa., July 1, 1880; educated in the public schools, ‘the Ulster High School, and Susquehanna Collegiate Institute; married; after leaving the farm clerked in a general store; since 1913 has been engaged as dealer and distributor of automobiles; member of the Methodist Church, Odd Fellows, Masonic bodies, Rotary Club; elected to State house of representatives in 1930; reelected in 1932, 1934, 1936, 1938, and 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on November 4, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Albert G. Rutherford. 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 Julia Trump, of Jersey Shore, Pa., and they have four daughters; educated at Williamsport Dickinson Seminary and Junior College, of which he is president of the board of trustees; Williamsport Commercial College, Williamsport, Pa.; Mer-cersburg Academy, Mercersburg, Pa.; Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., a member of the board of trustees; Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; general manager and treasurer of the Woolrich Woolen Mills; director, secretary, and treasurer of the Chatham Water Co., of Woolrich; director and treasurer of the Pearce Manufacturing Co., Latrobe, Pa.; president of the State Bank of Avis; director of the Lock Haven Trust Co., of Lock Haven; thirty-third degree Mason; delegate to the Republican National Convention, 1924; elected a Member of the Seventy-first and succeeding 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 Congress; reelected to succeeding Congresses; chairman of Republican national congressional committee. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bedford, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties). Population (1930), 198,269. RICHARD M. SIMPSON, Republican, of Huntingdon, Pa., was born August 30, 1900, in Huntingdon, Pa.; attended local schools and the University of Pittsburgh, graduating therefrom in 1923, with an A. B. degree; served during RE B rographical 101 the World War in the Tank Corps at Raleigh, N. C.; member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives representing Huntingdon County for two terms, 1935-37; is married to Grace Metz, and has two daughters—Susan and Barbara; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election held on May 11, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Benjamin K. Focht; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 300,570. JOHN CRAIN KUNKEL, Republican, of Harrisburg, Pa., where he was born July 21, 1898; son of John C. and Louisa Sergeant Kunkel; grandson of John C. Kunkel, a Member of the Thirty-fourth and Thirty-fifth Congresses; and great-grandson of John Sergeant, a Member of Congress for eight terms; attended Harrisburg Academy, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., Yale University, and Harvard Law School; engaged in banking and farming; member of the Episcopal Church, American Legion, Lions Club, and an Elk and Moose; I. O. O. F.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, receiving 77,353 votes, defeating Guy J. Swope, the Democratic incumbent, who received 63,180 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, receiving 74,420 votes, defeating John Smith, Democrat, who received 62,298 votes. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Clarion, Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (6 coun-ties). Population (1930), 277,067. ~~ BENJAMIN JARRETT, Republican, of Farrell, Pa.; born in Sharon, Pa., July 18, 1881; admitted to the bar in 1907; member of the Pennsylvania State Senate, 1911-13; member of the Pennsylvania State Workmen's Compensation Board, 1919-23; married and has two children— Mrs. Dorothy Bintz, Zanesville, Ohio, and Fred Jarrett, Esq., Farrell, Pa.; elected a Member of the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carbon, Monroe, and Northampton (3 counties). Popula-tion (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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses; again elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blair, Centre, and Clearfield (3 counties). Population (1930), 272,861. JAMES E. VAN ZANDT, Republican, of Altoena, Blair County, Pa.; born in Altoona, Pa., December 18, 1898, son of James T. and Kathryn Van Zandt, descendants of pioneer residents of Blair County; married; educated in the public schools of Altoona and Pennsylvania Railroad Apprentice School; enlisted in the United States Navy in April 1917 for duration of World War, being credited with 2 years’ overseas service; at time of discharge he held rating of chief quartermaster; enlisted in United States Naval Reserves in 1919, and is still an active member; being commissioned lieutenant, senior grade, May 22, 1941; employed with Pennsylvania Railroad from 1916 to December 31, 1938, starting as molder apprentice, at Altoona shops, serving in practically every department; member of Masonic fraternity; Mystic Shrine; Royal Order of Jesters; Knights of Pythias; Grange; Fraternal Order of Eagles; Patriotic Order, Sons of America; Blair County Historical Society; Blair County Game, Fish, and Forestry Association; American Legion Post, No. 228; and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, Post No. 3; honorary member of United Spanish War Veterans; twice commander of the Department of Pennsylvania, V. F. W., and three times com- 102 Congressional Durectory PENNSYLVANIA mander in chief of the V. F. W. of the United States; during third term as com-mander in chief, headed goodwill delegation of veterans tour of Orient; served as chairman of V. F. W. national legislative committee from 1936 to 1938, inclusive; now serving as member of national council of administration, V. F. W. of the United States; was elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, receiving 57,027 votes, William Aukerman, Democrat, receiving 44,263 votes. 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Greene and Washington (2 counties). Population (1930), 246,569. CHARLES I. FADDIS, Democrat, of Waynesburg, Pa.; born in Loudonville, 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; American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Loyal Order of Moose; engaged in general contracting, and broker of oil and gas properties; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Beaver, Butler, and Lawrence (3 counties). Population (1930), 326,800. LOUIS E. GRAHAM, Republican, of Beaver, Beaver County, Pa.; born in New Castle, Pa.; was graduated from Washington and Jefferson College in 1901; attorney at law; district attorney of Beaver County, Pa., 1912-24; special deputy attorney general of Pennsylvania, 1924-27; chief legal adviser of former sixth Federal prohibition district, 1927-29; United States attorney for the western dis-trict of Pennsylvania, 1930-34; special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States in Pittsburgh vote fraud cases, 1934-36; single; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 coun-ties). Population (1930), 409,953. HARVE TIBBOTT, Republican, of Ebensburg, Cambria County, Pa.; born May 27, 1885, in Cambria Township, near Ebensburg; public and high school of PENNSYLVANIA Brographical Ebensburg, Pa.; graduate of the University of Pittsburgh; druggist; treasurer of Cambria County, Pa., 1932-35; president of First National Bank of Ebensburg, Pa.; director of Cambria Thrift Corporation; married Eldora Humphreys and has one son, Rowland Humphreys Tibbott; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Westmoreland. Population (1930), 294,995. AUGUSTINE BERNARD KELLEY, Democrat, of Greensburg, Pa.; coal operator; born in New Baltimore, Pa., July 9, 1883, son of Abraham Francis and Mary Elizabeth (Kegg) Kelley; attended parochial and public grade schools and Greensburg (Pa.) High School; entered United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y., in 1904 and due to development of an athletic heart was honorably discharged in 1905; International Correspondence School, mining engineering, 1907-12; Alexander Hamilton Institute, business administration, 1930-33; married Miss Ella Marie Bates, of Scottdale, Pa., June 24, 1913, and they have nine children—A. Regis, Robert V., Richard B., J. Hilary, Paul A., Marcella M., Thérése E., Kathleen A., and James R.; employed as a clerk, coke inspector, superintendent of coal mines, and later became owner and operator of coal mines; receiver of the Fairfield Coal Co., 1923-25; lectured on the regulation of the coal industry, labor problems in the industry, and collective bargaining and unioniza-tion; member of the Greensburg Board of Education, 1935-36; member of the scale committee of the Coal Operators Association of Western Pennsylvania, 1935-39; member of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engi-neers and of the American Mining Congress; life member of the Association of Graduates of the United States Military Academy; member of the Army Ath-letic Association; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford and Erie (2 counties). Population (1930), 238,257. ROBERT LEWIS RODGERS, Republican, of Erie, Pa.; born in El Dorado, Kans., June 2, 1875; upon the death of his mother in 1878 he was reared by his grandparents on a farm in Greene Township near Jamestown, Mercer County, Pa.; attended district school and Fredonia Institute; enlisted in Company K, Fifteenth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, for service in the War with Spain; taught in the district schools and engaged in farming; married Miss Madge E. Cathcart, of Adamsville, Pa., March 20, 1908, and they have one son; moved to Erie, Pa., October 31, 1914, and engaged in the insurance, real-estate, and mortgage business; thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason; previous to election to Congress was for 10 years recorder of Zem Zem Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S.; past president, past secretary, Erie Rotary Club; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress by increased majority. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 21 to 27; boroughs of Aspin-wall, Avalon, Bellevue, Ben Avon, Ben Avon Heights, Blawnox, Bradford Woods, Edgeworth, Emsworth, Etna, Fox Chapel, Glenfield, Haysville, Leetsdale, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Sharpsburg, and West View; townships of Aleppo, Franklin, Hampton, Harmar, Indiana, Killbuck, Leet, McCandless, Marshall, O’Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, and West Deer. Population (1930), 265,235. THOMAS E. SCANLON, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; born in Pittsburgh, Pa., September 18, 1896; attended Forbes School and Duquesne University; employed on Pittsburgh newspapers since 1914; officer of local No. 9, Printing Pressmen’s Union, and delegate to Pittsburgh Central Labor Union; member of Allegheny County Board for the Assessment and Revision of Taxes; saw 1 year’s service in the World War; member of Riverview Post, American Legion; married Eva Marie Matters, January 20, 1920; one child, Edward; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of McKeesport; boroughs of Brackenridge, : Braddock, Chalfant, Cheswick, East McKeesport, East Pittsburgh, Edgewood, Elizabeth, Forest Hills, Glassport, Liberty, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Springdale, Swiss- vale, 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. A SAMUEL ARTHUR WEISS, Democrat, of Glassport, Pa.; born in Krotowocz, Poland, April 15, 1902; emigrated to the United States with his parents in 1903, who settled in Glassport, Pa.; graduated from Duquesne University College, 1925 104 Congressional Directory RHODE ISLAND with degree of B. S. and E., and from Duquesne University Law School, Pitts-burgh, Pa., in 1927 with degree of LL. B.; commenced the practice of law in Pittsburgh, Pa., in 1927; member of the Eastern Intercollegiate Football Officials Association and referees high school and college football games throughout the country; member of the board of directors of Roselia Maternity Hospital and of the athletic council of Duquesne University; member of the Allegheny County, the Pennsylvania, and the American Bar Associations; served in the Pennsylvania Legislature two terms, 1935-39; married Miss Jeannette E. Hoffman on June 30, 1930, and they have two children—Joy Arlene, born December 2, 1935, and James Edgar, born July 25, 1938; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 6, 9 to 11, and 15. Population (1930), 213,060. HERMAN P. EBERHARTER, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was born in that city on April 29, 1892; graduated from the Duquesne University Law School, Pittsburgh, with LL. B. degree in 1925; engaged in the general practice of law since 1925 at Pittsburgh; member of the Pennsylvania House o. Representatives, sessions of 1935-36; veteran of the World War; married; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. Residence: 3408 Parkview Avenue, fourth ward, Pittsburgh, Pa. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 7, 8, 12 to 14, 16 to 20, and 28. Population (1930), 282,119. . JOSEPH A. McARDLE, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; born in Muncie, Ind., June 29, 1903; removed to Pittsburgh, Pa., upon the election of his father, P. J. McArdle, as president of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, with offices in Pittsburgh; educated in parochial schools in Pittsburgh; engaged in the insurance business and, in 1936, was elected a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature in his first race for elective office; married Miss Margaret Corrigan and has one son, Joseph A. McArdle, Jr., and one daughter, Margaret MeArdls ; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 29 to 32; cities of Clairton and Duquesne; boroughs of Brentwood, Bridgeville, Carnegie, Castle Shannon, Coraopolis, Crafton, Dormont, Dravosburg, Greentree, Heidelberg, Homestead, Ingram, McDonald, McKees Rocks, Mount Oliver, Munhall, Oakdale, Rosslyn Farms, Thornburg, West Elizabeth, West Home-stead, and Whitaker; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Collier, Crescent, Findley, Jefferson, Kennedy, Mifflin, Moon, Mount Lebanon, Neville, North Fayette, Robinson, Scott, Snowden, South Fayette, Stowe, and Upper St. Clair. Population (1930), 301,584. JAMES ASSION WRIGHT, Democrat, of Carnegie, Pa.; born in Carnegie, Pa., August 11, 1902; graduated from Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., with an A. B. degree; received legal education at University of Pittsburgh, ob-taining an LL. B. degree of that institution; attorney by profession; assistant county solicitor of the County of Allegheny for the past 5 years; married to Dorothy Nelson Dannals, of Crafton, Pa.; father of three children; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. RHODE ISLAND (Population (1930), 687,497) SENATORS PETER G. GERRY, Democrat, of Warwick; born September 18, 1879; Harvard S. B. 1901; lawyer; married; elected to representative council of Newport in 1911; 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; reelected in 1922 for the term ending March 3, 1929; again elected to the United States Senate in 1934 for the term ending January 3, 1941; reelected in 1940 for the term ending January 3, 1947. RHODE ISLAND B 1ographical 105 THEODORE FRANCIS GREEN, Democrat, of Providence, R. I.; born in Providence, October 2, 1867; educated in private schools and Providence High School; received A. B. degree at Brown University in 1887, and A. M. in 1890; Harvard Law School, 1890-92; Universities of Bonn and Berlin, Germany, 1892-94; admitted to Rhode Island bar in 1892, to United States Circuit Court in 1894, and United States Supreme Court in 1905; engaged in the practice of law at Providence since 1894; instructor in Roman law at Brown University, 1894-97; received a commission as lieutenant during the Spanish-American War and commanded a provisional company of infantry; member of the State house of representatives in 1907; delegate to all National Democratic conventions from 1912 to 1940, inclusive; Presidential elector in 1912; chairman of Democratic State conventions in 1914, 1924, and 1926; during the World War was promi-nent in many patriotic activities; national committeeman from Rhode Island since 1936; elected Governor of Rhode Island in 1932; reelected in 1934 by largest vote ever cast for any candidate for any office in the State; trustee, Butler Hospital, 1900-1919; secretary, Rhode Island branch of American Red Cross, 1911-18—United States delegate to its international convention in 1912; director, Providence Athenaeum, 1898-1901; organizer of the Brown Union and chairman of its board of management, 1903-7; director, National Exchange Bank of Providence, 1904-9; president J. & P. Coats (R. 1.), Inec., 1912-23; officer, director, and receiver of various railroad companies and many other business corporations; chairman, Providence City Plan Commission, 1917-19; president, Morris Plan Bankers Association (National), 1924-27; trustee, Brown University, 1900-1929; at present is member of board of fellows, Brown Univer- sity, since 1929; trustee, Rhode Island School of Design since 1900, and vice president, 1907-39; trustee, Providence Public Library since 1903, and secretary since 1908; chairman, board of directors, Morris Plan Co. of Rhode Island; director, Morris Plan Insurance Society (of New York); member, Council of Legal Education of American Bar Association, 1924-37; member of many educational, philanthropic, and social organizations; fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1933: member Phi Beta Kappa, Psi Upsilon fraternity, and Rheno-Colonia, zu Bonn (Germany); hereditary member, Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Rhode Island; National Grange 7°; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bristol and Newport. PROVIDENCE CouNTY: City of Providence, representative districts, 1 to 7; cities of Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket; towns of Cumberland, East Providence, and Lincoln. Population (1930), 341,016. AIME J. FORAND, Democrat, of Cumberland, R. I.; born in Fall River, Mass., May 23, 1895; attended Magnus Commercial School; took extension course (home) Columbia University; newspaper reporter and branch office manager, 6 years; secretary to Hon. Jeremiah E. O’Connell, Member of Congress, 1929-30, and to Hon. Francis B. Condon, Member of Congress, 1930-35; chief, Rhode Island State division of soldiers’ relief and commandant of the Rhode Island Soldiers’ Home, 1935-36; member of the Rhode Island House of Repre-sentatives, 1923-26; sergeant, first-class, Motor Transport Corps, World War; served in France 12 months; married in 1931 to Gertrude Bedard; elected on November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-fifth Congress, receiving 73,547 votes, against 62,095 votes for Charles F. Risk, Republican; defeated in 1938 by Charles F. Risk, who received 73,381 votes, against 72,482 votes; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, receiving 87,327 votes against 64,517 votes for Charles F. Risk, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Kent and Washington. PROVIDENCE County: City of Providence, representative districts, 8 to 25; city of Cranston; towns of Burrillville, Foster, Glocester, Johnson, North Providence, North Smithfield, Scituate, and Smithfield. Population (1930), 346,481. JOHN EDWARD FOGARTY, Democrat, of Harmony, R. I.; born in Provi-dence, R. I., March 23, 1913; attended La Salle Academy, Providence College; single; member, Knights of Columbus, Elks; president of the Bricklayers Union Ne 1 of Rhode Island; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 940. Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA SOUTH CAROLINA (Population (1930), 1,738,765) SENATORS 2 ELLISON DuRANT SMITH, Democrat, of Lynchb urg, 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 Uniseislly of South Carolina; the next session entered Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C., from which insti-tution he graduated in 1889; was a member of the State legislature from Sumter County, 1896 to 1900; was one of the principal figures in the organization of the Southern Cotton Association at New Orleans in January 1905; was made field agent and general organizer of this movement, in which capacity he served from January 1905 to June 1908; was nominated for United States Senator at the primary election in September 1908, receiving at that time the largest vote ever given for this office in his State, and elected the following November; was re-elected in 1914, 1920, 1926, 1932, and again in 1938; his term of service will expire in 1945; 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; L. D., honorary degree, Wofford College, 1939; member Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; honorary member Phi Beta Kappa; has the honor of being dean of the Democratic Senators; married; 4 children—2 sons and 2 daughters—and 4 grandchildren. BURNET RHETT MAYBANK, Democrat, of Charleston; born in Charleston, S. C., March 7, 1899, son of Joseph and Harriett Lowndes (Rhett) Maybank: attended the public and high schools of Charleston; graduated from Porter Military Academy and from the College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C., with B. 8S. and LL. D. degrees; married Elizabeth deRossett Myers, of Charleston, June 28, 1923; children, Burnet Rhett Maybank, Jr., Roberta M. Maybank, and Elizabeth deRossett Maybank; engaged in the cotton business; alderman, city of Charleston, 1927-31; mayor pro tempore, city of Charleston, 1930; mayor, 1931-38; appointed member of State Advisory Board of South Carolina of Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works in 1932; chairman of South Carolina Public Service Authority, 1934-39; appointed member of board of bank control; served as Governor of South Carolina from January 17, 1939, to Novem-ber 4, 1941; World War veteran; served in South Carolina Naval Militia and United States Navy: transferred to Naval Aviation, July 1938; member of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; Episcopalian; Alpha Tau Omega, Mason, Elk, Junior Order; elected to the United States Senate on September 30, 1941, to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1943, caused by the resig-nation of Hon. James F. Byrnes, and took his seat November 5, 1941. ? ALVA MOORE LUMPKIN, Democrat, of Columbia, S. C.; born in Milledgeville, Baldwin County, Ga., November 13, 1886; moved to Columbia, 8S. C., with his parents in 1898; attended the public schools of Milledgeville, Ga., and Columbia, S. C.; was graduated from the law department of the University of South Carolina at Columbia in 1908; was admitted to the bar the same year and commenced the practice of law in Columbia, S. C.; served as assistant clerk of the State senate, 1906-08; member of the State house of repre-sentatives 1911-13; appointed a member of the Conciliation Commission for Advancement of Peace between the United States and Uruguay in 1914; served as acting assistant attorney general of South Carolina in 1918; member of the State board of pardons in 1922 and 1923; appointed acting associate justice of the State supreme court in 1926 and 1934; served as Federal judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern and Western Districts of South Carolina from May 22, 1939, until his resignation on July 21, 1941; appointed on July 17, 1941, to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James F. Byrnes, and served from July 22, 1941, until his death in Washington, D. C., August 1, 1941. ? ROGER CRAFT PEACE, Democrat, of Greenville, S. C., was born in Greenville, 8. C., May 19, 1899; attended the public schools and was graduated from Furman University, Greenville, S. C., in 1919; reporter on the Greenville News, 1914-19, sporting editor, 1919-20, editor, 1920-24, business manager, 1924-34, and publisher since 1934; during the World War entered the R. O. T. C. at Plattsburg, N. Y., in 1918 and served as instructor in the United States Army at Camp Perry in 1919; president-treasurer of the Greenville News-Piedmont Co. and the Piedmont Realty Corporation; also active in other business and civic corpora-tions; colonel on the staff of Governor Blackwood, 1930-34; trustee of Furman University since 1938; ap-pointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy in the term ending anuary J 3, 1943, caused by thedeath of Hon. Alva M. Lumpkin, who had been appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon; S anes F. Byrnes, and served from August 5, 1941, until November 5, 1941, when a duly elected successor qualified. SOUTH CAROLINA B 1ographical 107 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allendale, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, Dor-chester, Hampton, and Jasper (9 counties). Population (1930), 260,439. L. MENDEL RIVERS, Democrat, of North Charleston, S. C.; born in Gum-ville, Berkeley County, S. C., September 28, 1905; educated in public schools, College of Charleston, and University of South Carolina; admitted to South Carolina bar in 1932; served in the South Carolina Legislature, 1933-36; chairman of Charleston County delegation, 1934-36, and vice chairman of judiciary com-mittee of the State house of representatives, 1934-36; admitted to practice before Supreme Court of United States; president of Young Democratic Clubs of South Carolina, 1935; delegate to Democratic National Convention, 1936; member of Charleston Chapter of Elks, Landmark Lodge of A. F. M., Junior Order of United American Mechanics, Blue Key Honorary Fraternity, Civitan International, and Grace Episcopal Church, Charleston, S. C.; married, has one daughter; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg, Rich-land, 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—Mrs. Charles Gordon Smith (New York City), Mrs. John Benson Sloan (South Carolina), and Mrs. William T. Reed (New York City); farmer; proprietor of the Barnes farm; is a Baptist, Mason, Woodman; member Junior Order United American Mechanics; was elected a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, 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 17 years; renominated in the Democratic primary with ex-Lieut. Gov. Andrew J. Bethea and John J. McMahan, insurance commissioner of South Caro-lina, opposing; reelected to the Sixty-eighth Congress in the general election over J. C. Etheredge, Independent; was nominated to the Sixty-ninth Congress over State Senators L. A. Hutson and Dr. D. M. Crosson, and reelected in the general election without opposition; renominated over Dr. Daniel R. Sturkie and Earnest M. DuPree, retired businessman, in the primary, and elected to the Seventieth Congress without opposition; renominated over Earnest DuPree in the primary, receiving 20,000 votes to his opponent, DuPree’s, 8,000, and reelected to the Seventy-first Congress without opposition; renominated over Dr. Daniel R. Sturkie in the primary, receiving 26,000 votes to his opponent, Sturkie’s, 7,000, and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; renominated over ex-Congressman A. Frank Lever in the primary, receiving 5,000 majority, and reelected to Seventy-third Congress over Dallas A. Gardner, Republican; renominated over Gary Paschal, attorney, and Dr. Daniel R. Sturkie in primary; reelected to Seventy-fourth Congress over Dallas A. Gardner, Republican; renominated in the primary over John Gary Evans Paschal, attorney, receiving 33,500 votes, to his opponent, Paschal’s, 20,000, and reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress over L. A. Black and Sam J. Leaphart, Republicans; renominated in the primary over Andrew Jackson Bethea, one of Henry Ford’s peace delegates to Europe, receiving 42,000 votes to his opponent, Bethea’s, 16,800, and reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress over Sam J. Leaphart, Republican; renominated in the primary over ‘Andy’ J. Bethea, receiving 40,000 votes to his opponent, Bethea’s, 12,000, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress over M. B. Cross, 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; chairman of the Committee on Agriculture and vice chair-man of the Joint Committee on Forestry. 108 Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Abbeville, Anderson, Edgefield, Greenwood, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Pickens, and Saluda (9 counties). Population (1930), 291,053. BUTLERB. HARE, Democrat, of Saluda, son of James and Elizabeth (Black) Hare; born on farm in Edgefield County, 8. C.; received early training in rural ublic schools of State; graduated with A. B., Newberry College, M. A., George ashington University, and LL. B., Georgetown University; taught in public schools of native State for 5 years; secretary to Member of Congress 2 years; special agent in woman and child labor investigation conducted by United States Bureau of Labor in 1908; filled chair of history and economics, Leesville College, South Carolina, 3 years; assistant in agricultural education, editor rural economics, in 1912 and agricultural statistician in United States Department of Agriculture; prepared and outlined plan for system of rural credits in the United States, Senate Document No. 421, Sixty-third Congress; married Miss Kate Etheredge, April 11, 1906; has two children—Robert Hayne and James Butler Hare; lawyer and farmer; admitted to bar and began the practice of law in hishome town, Saluda, S. C., 1915; member South Carolina and American Bar Associations; Mason, Shriner, Lutheran; elected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses from the Second District; did not offer for election he was to the Seventy-third Congress, but voluntarily retired until 1938, when elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress from the Third District; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Popu-lation (1930), 306,346. JOSEPH RALEIGH BRYSON, Democrat, of Greenville, S. C.; was born in Brevard, N. C., January 18, 1893; moved to Greenville, S. C., in 1900; began working at age of 10 and subsequently spent 15 years as worker in textile mills of Greenville; meantime, attended public schools of Greenville and was graduated from Furman University, with B. A. degree, in 1917, and from the University of South Carolina, with LL. B. degree, in 1920; lawyer; volunteered as a private in the World War and served for the duration of the war; member of the South Caro-lina House of Representatives, 1921-24; served in the State senate, 1929-32; married Miss Ruth Rucker, of Swansea, S. C., and they have five children—Joe Bob, Ruth, Billy, David, and Judy; member of the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, and the Baptist Church, thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Woodman, Red Man, Junior, Merrymaker, and United Commercial Traveler; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to serve in Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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; graduate of the University of South Carolina; 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; reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; 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, Headquarters Company, One Hundred and Eighteenth Regiment Infantry, Thirtieth Division, as private, corporal, and sergeant, and was com-missioned 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 sons—Richard Evans and Norman Smith—and one daughter—Jane; member of the Masons, American Legion, and Junior Order United American Mechanics, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other fraternal organizations. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounmEs: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Lee, Marion, Marl-boro, and Williamsburg (9 counties). Population (1930), 307,166. JOHN L. McMILLAN, farmer-lawyer, Democrat, Florence, S. C.; son of the late M. L. and Mary Alice Keith MeMillan, Marion County, S. c; educated Mullins (S. C.) graded and high schools; academic course, University of North Carolina, and completed the Commerce and Finance School, also Law School, at SOUTH DAKOTA Brographical 109 University of South Carolina; served in United States Navy 5 months during World War; married Margaret English, of Mount Pleasant, Tenn., October 1936; member Masons, Elks, and J. O. U. A. M.; member American Legion Post, Florence, S. C., National Blue Key fraternity; elected to Congress in 1938 over five opponents, and reelected over one opponent in 1940 by a majority of 18,000 votes. SOUTH DAKOTA (Population (1930), 692,849) SENATORS 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 city attorney and mayor at Beresford; elected Governor in 1926, and reelected in 1928; elected to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930; reelected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936; term expires in 1943. CHAN GURNEY, Republican, of Yankton, S. Dak.; born in Yankton, S. Dak., May 21, 1896; married Evelyn Bordeno, July 4, 1917; has three children— Elaine, born March 5, 1920; John, born January 19, 1922; and Deloss, born August 21, 1923; served as sergeant in the Thirty-fourth Engineers during the World War; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term beginning January 3, 1939. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aurora, Beadle, Bon Homme, Brookings, Brown, Brule, Buffalo, Campbell, Charles Mix, Clark, Clay, Codington, Davison, Day, Deuel, Douglas, Edmunds, Faulk, Grant, Hamlin, Hand, Hanson, Hughes, Hutchinson, Hyde, Jerauld, Kingsbury, Lake, Lincoln, McCook, McPherson, Marshall, Miner, Minnehaha, Moody, Potter, Roberts, Sanborn, Spink, Sully, Turner, Union, Walworth, and Yankton (44 counties). Population (1930), 524,769. KARL E. MUNDT, Republican, of Madison, S. Dak.; born in Humboldt, S. Dak., June 3, 1900, the only son of F. J. and Rose E. Mundt, pioneer hardware merchants of that community; educated in the public schools of Humboldt, Pierre, and Madison, in South Dakota; A. B. from Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., 1923; A. M. from Columbia University, New York City, 1927; suec-cessively a school teacher and school superintendent in Bryant, S. Dak.; college speech and social science teacher in Eastern State Normal School, Madison, S. Dak.; farm operator and real estate and insurance business; appointed to South Dakota Game and Fish Commission (bipartisan) in 1931 for a 6-year term; one-time national vice president of Izaak Walton League; member of Delta Sigma Rho, Pi Kappa Delta, and Tau Kappa Alpha (honorary societies); cofounder, and holder of membership certificate No. 1 of National Forensic League, of which he is now national president; editor of the Rostrum; associate editor, the Speaker; former editorial writer Outdoor America; past governor, Minnesota-Dakotas Distriet of Kiwanis International; member National Press Club, Washington, D. C.; married in 1924; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a vote of 111,693 to 95,315 for his Democratic opponent; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a vote of 134,928 to 91,874 for his Democratic opponent. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Armstrong, Bennett, Butte, Corson, Custer, Dewey, Fall River, Gregory, Haakon, Harding, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Lyman, Meade, Mellette, Pennington, Perkins, Shannon, Stanley, Todd, Tripp, Washabaugh, Washington, and Ziebach (25 counties). Population(1930), 168,080. FRANCIS CASE, Republican, of Custer, S. Dak.; born in Everly, Iowa, December 9, 1896, son of Rev. and Mrs. Herbert L. Case; came with his parents to Sturgis, S. Dak., in 1909; graduated from Hot Springs High School in 1914, the Dakota Wesleyan University in 1918, with B. A. degree, and the Northwestern University in 1920, with M. A. degree; LL. D., Dakota Wesleyan, 1939; member Pi Kappa Delta, Delta Sigma Rho, Sigma Delta Chi (honorary), and Acacia frater-nities; newspaper editor and publisher; State regents of education, 1931-33; in the World War served in the United States Marine Corps; married to Myrle Graves, of Mitchell, S. Dak., in 1926, and they have one child—Jane Marie, aged 7 years; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress, 34,812 to 32,435; reelected, Seventy-sixth Congress, 41,335 to 25,932; reelected Seventy-seventh Congress, 47,051 to 24,127. 64674 °—T77-2—1st ed 9 110 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE 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 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, November 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, and in the run-off December 15, 1915; 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 Conventions, 1932, 1936, and 1940; elected national committeeman for Tennessee, February 23, 1933; renominated and reelected to the United States Senate in 1934 for the term expiring January 3, 1941; renominated and reelected again for the term expiring January 3, 1947. TOM STEWART, Democrat, of Winchester, Tenn.; born in Dunlap, Tenn., January 11, 1892; educated at Pryor Institute, Emory College, and Cumberland University; member of Methodist Church; Mason; married Helen Turner, of Jasper, Tenn., December 19, 1914; five children—Tom, Betty Ann, Mary Helen, Lawrence F., and Paul Turner; lawyer and district attorney general of eighteenth circuit of Tennessee since September 29, 1923; elected to the United States Senate on November Bachman, for Senator on Jan 8, the uary 1938, term 16, to fill the vacancy caused ending January 3, 1943, 1939. by and the as death sumed of the Nathan duties L. as REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Haw-Se efferson, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1930), BRAZILLA CARROLL REECE, Republican, Johnson City; born at Butler, Tenn., December 22, 1889; reared on farm; member of bar; president, Carter County Bank; Republican national committeeman for Tennessee; served as a member of the Temporary National Economic Committee; educated in Watauga Academy, Carson and Newman College, New York University, and University of London; LL. D., Cumberland University; member, American Economic Asso-ciation, American Statistical Association, American Academy of Political Science, and American, Tennessee, and Federal Bar Associations; 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 Com-merce, Accounts, and Finance in New York University and instructor in economics (day division), 1919-20; enlisted May 1917 and served in the American Expe-tionary Forces October 1917 to July 1919 with the Twenty-sixth Division; commanded Third Battalion, One Hundred and Second Regiment Infantry; decorated with Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Purple Heart, and Croix de Guerre with palm, and cited for bravery by Marshal Pétain, Generals Pershing, Edwards, Hale, and Colonel Lewis; member, Delta Sigma Pi and following clubs—Chevy Chase, Metropolitan, Lotos (N. Y.), Franklin, Johnson City Country, and National Republican; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seven-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Knox, Loudon, McMinn, Monroe, Morgan, Roane, Scott, and Union (11 counties). Population (1930), 368,172. JOHN JENNINGS, Jr., Republican, of Knoxville, Tenn.; born in Jacksboro, Campbell County, Tenn., June 6, 1880, son of John and Julia Jennings; educated in common schools of Campbell County, Tenn., and American Temperance University, Harriman, Tenn. ; was graduated from U. S. Grant University, Athens, TENNESSEE Biographical Tenn., with B. S. degree in 1906; served as county superintendent of public instrue-tion, Campbell County, 1903-4; admitted to the bar in 1903; county attorney of Campbell County, 1911-18; special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1918-19, land title division, national forests; elected judge of the second chancery division of Tennessee (11 counties) in 1918 for a term of 8 years, resigned July 1, 1923, to reenter practice of law in Knoxville; member of law firm of Jennings & O’Neil; married Miss Pearnie E. Hamby, and they have three daughters—Ethel Coykendall, Katherine Van Powell, and Helen; delegate to the Republican National Convention from the Second Congressional District of Tennessee in 1912, and from the State at large in 1936; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on December 30, 1939, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of J. Will Taylor, receiving 16,908 votes to his Democratic opponent’s 11,191 votes; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a majority of 9,611. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Grundy, Hamilton, Marion, Meigs, Polk, Rhea, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (12 counties). Population (1930), 295,760. ESTES KEFAUVER, Democrat, of Chattanooga; son of Robert Cooke and Phedonia Estes Kefauver; born near Madisonville, in Monroe County, Tenn., July 26, 1903; educated in the public schools of Monroe County; received A. B. degree at University of Tennessee in 1924 and LL. B. degree at Yale University in 1927; practiced law at Chattanooga since 1927 as member of the firm of Sizer, Chambliss & Kefauver; was married to Miss Nancy Patterson Pigott, of Glasgow, Scotland; served as commissioner of finance and taxation, State of Tennessee, for 4 months in 1939; mémber of the First Baptist Church of Chattanooga, the Rotary and the Mountain City Clubs, the Kappa Sigma fraternity, and the American and the State Bar Associations; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on September 13, 1939, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Sam ID. McReynolds; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Bedford, Clay, Cannon, Coffee, Cumberland, De Kalb, Fentress, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Rutherford, Smith, and Wilson (18 counties). Population (1930), 292,638. ALBERT ARNOLD GORE, Democrat, of Carthage, Tenn., was born in Granville, Tenn., December 26, 1907, the son of Allen and Margie Gore; reared on a farm, and is now a farmer; received B. S. degree in 1931 from the State Teachers’ College, Murfreesboro, Tenn., and LL. B. degree in 1936 from the night law school of the Nashville (Tenn.) Y. M. C. A.; admitted to the Tennessee bar in 1936, also attended Cumberland University and the University of Tennessee; started his public career as a teacher in a one-room school in Overton County, Tenn.; served as county superintendent of education of Smith County, 1933-37; organizer of Young Democrat clubs in 1932; chairman of the Tennessee Demo-cratic speakers’ bureau for the general elections in 1934 and again in 1936; served as commissioner of labor for the State of Tennessee,1937-38; married Miss Pauline LaFon, April 1937, and they have one daughter; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davidson, Macon, Montgomery, Robertson, Stewart, Sumner, and Trousdale (7 counties). Population (1930), 343,328. JAMES PERCY PRIEST, Democrat, of Nashville; born at Carters Creek, Tenn., April 1, 1900, the son of Harriet Hastings and George Madison Priest; attended the public schools in Maury County, Tenn., and Central High School, Columbia, Tenn.; attended State Teachers College at Murfreesboro, Tenn. George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn., and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville; taught school in Tennessee from 1920 until May 1926; member of editorial staff of the Nashville Tennessean from May 1926 until September 1940; Baptist, a Mason, and a member of the Civitan Club; not married; was elected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress, defeating the incumbent. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cheatham, Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Law-rence, Lewis, Maury, Perry, Wayne, and Williamson (12 counties). Population (1930), 194,915. WIRT COURTNEY, Democrat, of Franklin, Williamson County, Tenn., was born at Franklin, Tenn., September 7, 1889; graduate of Battle Ground Academy, Franklin, Tenn. ; academic and legal education, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; special course on international law, Faculte de Droit, Sorbonne, Paris, France; served as city judge, Franklin, Tenn., 1915-17; enlisted as a private in the One Hundred and Seventeenth Infantry, Thirtieth Division, September 1917, 112 Congressional Directory TEXAS discharged as a first lieutenant after 14 months in France; married Miss Currey Taylor, daughter of Judge Lytton Taylor, of Nashville, December 31, 1919; practiced law, Franklin, Tenn., 1911-32; adjutant general of Tennessee, 1932, and commissioned brigadier general, National Guard; circuit judge and chancellor, seventeenth judicial circuit of Tennessee 1933-39; senior warden and lay reader St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Franklin, Tenn.; Shriner; member of Sigma Chi fraternity, Tennessee and American Bar Associations; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on May 11, 1939, to fill the unexpired term of Clarence W. Turner, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member, Committee on Foreign Affairs; four children, Jane, Wirt, Jr., Richard, and Robin. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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; 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; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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 Division, and served with this regiment throughout period of World War, going through all its engagements in France and Belgium; on July 9, 1918, promoted to captain; discharged from the Army on April 2, 1919, after serving practically 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; unmar-ried; Mason, Knight Templar, Shriner, Maccabee, Kappa Sigma; member of Cumberland Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-first Congress; renomi-nated and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Shelby. Population (1930), 306,482. CLIFFORD DAVIS, Democrat, of Memphis, Tenn.; born November 18, 1897, at Hazlehurst, Miss., son of Odom A. and Jessie Davis; educated in Memphis public schools; received LL. B. degree from the University of Mississippi; attorney at law; city judge of Memphis, 1923-27; vice mayor and commissioner of public safety of Memphis, 1928-40; Baptist, Mason, Shriner; married Miss Carolyn Leigh, of Memphis, and they have three children—Clifford, Jr., Barbara Leigh, and Ray; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress in a special election, February 15, 1940, held to determine the successor of Walter Chandler, who resigned to become mayor of Memphis, Tenn.; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member, Committee on Military Affairs. TEXAS (Population (1930), 5,824,715) SENATORS TOM CONNALLY, Democrat, of Marlin, Falls County, son of Jones and Mary E. Connally; born in McLennan County, Tex.; A. B., LL. D. (honorary), Baylor University; LL. B., University of Texas; enlisted man, Second Regiment TEXAS Biographical Texas Volunteer Infantry, Spanish-American War; captain and adjutant, Twenty-second Infantry Brigade, Eleventh Division, United States Army, 1918; member of the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth Texas Legislatures; prosecuting attorney of Falls County, 1906-10; married Miss Louise Clarkson, 1904; one son—Ben Connally, lawyer, Houston, Tex.; grand chancellor of Texas Knights of Pythias, 1913-14; thirty-third degree Mason; delegate, Democratic National Convention, 1920, and delegate at large in 1932, 1936, and 1940; chairman, Texas delegation, 1936; permanent chairman, Texas Democratic State convention, 1938; served in House of Representatives, Sixty-fiftth through Seventieth Congresses; elected United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1929; reelected in 1934, 1940; committees: Privileges and Elections; Finance; Foreign Relations, chair-man; Judiciary; and Public Buildings and Grounds. WILBERT LEE O’DANIEL, Democrat, of Fort Worth, Tex.; born March 11, 1890, at Malta, Ohio, son of William A. and Alice Ann (Thompson) O’Daniel; reared on large cattle ranch near Arlington, Kans.; educated in public grade and high schools, Arlington, Kans., and business college, Hutchinson, Kans.; married Miss Merle Estella Butcher, of Granada, Colo., and they have three children— Pat, Mike, and Molly; Mason and Shriner; member Christian Church; engaged in flour milling and grain business, 1909 to 1938; was petitioned to run for the office of Governor of Texas by 54,499 Texas citizens and was elected Governor in the 1938 first primary with 573,166 votes, a clear majority over 12 opponents, the first victory of this nature in the history of the State; reelected for second term in the 1940 first primary with 645,646 votes, a clear majority over the 6 opponents; elected to the United States Senate at a special election held June 28, 1941, to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1943, caused by the death of Hon. Morris Sheppard, and took his seat August 4, 1941. 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-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 three children—Connor Wright, age 21 (private, United States Army, enlisted December 10, 1941), James Harold, age 19, and William Neff, age 14 (Eagle Scout); 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; member of Banking and Currency Committee of the House of Representatives; chairman of Select Committee on Small Business, composed of seven Members of the House; is a Baptist; thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason; member of the American Legion, the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, although not privileged to serve overseas during the war by reason of a service-connected disability, and an honorary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; chairman, na delegation in Congress and president of Texas State Society in Washington, SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Angelina, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton, Orange, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (11 counties). Population (1930), 304,279. MARTIN DIES, Democrat, of Orange, Tex.; was elected to the Seventy-second and each succeeding Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Camp, Gregg, Panola, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood (8 counties). Population (1930), 214,306. LINDLEY BECKWORTH, Democrat, of Gilmer, Tex.; born in the South Bouie community, Kaufman County, Tex., June 30, 1913, the son of O. J. Beck-worth and the late Josie Slaughter Beckworth; reared on farm; attended East Texas State Teachers College, Sam Houston State Teachers College, and Southern Methodist University; taught school 8 years; studied law at Baylor University and the University of Texas; was admitted to the bar in 1937; member of the State house of representatives, 1936-38; single; nominated for the Seventy-sixth Congress in the Democratic primary of 1938, defeating the incumbent and three Ofte; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh ongress. 114 Congressional Directory TEXAS 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, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; majority leader, Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; elected Speaker on September 16, 1940, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Speaker, William B. Bankhead, Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected Speaker for the Seventy-seventh Congress on January 3, 1941. FIFTH DISTRICT.—DaA11As 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 Robert-son (8 counties). Population (1930), 288,538. LUTHER A. JOHNSON, Democrat, of Corsicana, Tex.; actively engaged in the private practice of law for 10 years immediately preceding his election to Congress; prior offices held: county attorney of Navarro County and district attorney of the thirteenth judicial district of Texas; has served as delegate to Democratic National Convention and also as chairman of the State Democratic convention of Texas; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress. : : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Anderson, Cherokee, Grimes, Henderson, Houston, Madison, Montgomery, Nacogdoches, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (12 counties). Population (1930), 277,601. NAT PATTON, Democrat, of Crockett, Tex.; elected: to Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses; since last biography he and Mrs. Patton have become grandparents—James Patton LeGory, son of oldest daughter, Mrs. Bessie Louise LeGory, and husband, Mr. Joe Gus LeGory, born at Crockett, Tex., July 12, 1940; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. LeGory, of Crockett, Tex. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—HARRIS CoUNTY. Population (1930), 359,328. ALBERT THOMAS, Democrat, of Houston, Tex., was born in Nacogdoches, Tex., April 12, 1898; A. B. and LL. B. degrees; World War veteran; married; one child; was elected to Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Austin, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Oolorado, 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. LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON, Democrat, of Johnson City, Tex.; B. S. degree, Southwest Texas State Teachers College at San Marcos, in 1930; attended Georgetown Law School, 1935; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress from a field of 10 candidates at a special election held on April 10, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James P. Buchanan, of Brenham, Tex.; nominated in Democratic primary July 23, 1938, without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938; nominated in Democratic primary July 27, 1940, without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, without opposition; candidate to fill vacancy created by death of United States Senator Morris Sheppard; defeated June 28, 1941, by 1,311 votes; married Lady Bird Taylor, November 17, 1934; member, Naval Affairs Committee. TEXAS Biographical ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Bell, Bosque, Coryell, Falls, McLennan, and Milam (6 counties). Population (1930), 261,147. WILLIAM ROBERT (BOB) POAGE, Democrat, of Waco, McLennan County, Tex., was born in that city on December 28, 1899, son of William A. and Helen Conger Poage; spent his childhood and received his first education in Throckmorton County, Tex.; attended Baylor University, the University of Colo-rado, and the University of Texas, receiving his A. B. and LL. B. degrees from Baylor; was admitted to the bar in 1924, and has practiced in Waco since that time; member of the Texas House of Representatives, 1925-29, and of the State senate, 1931-37; member of the American Legion; married Frances L. Cotton, February 14, 1938; was elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in 1936 and reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 suc-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. ED GOSSETT, Democrat, of Wichita Falls, Tex.; born in sawmill camp in Sabine Parish, La., January 27, 1902; reared on farms in Clay and Garza Coun-ties, Tex.; received A. B. degree from the University of Texas in 1924 and LL. B. degree in 1927; practiced law for 11 years in Vernon and Wichita Falls, Tex., prior to election to Congress; served as district attorney of the forty-sixth judicial district 1933-387; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; married Mary Helen Moseley, of Quanah, Tex., on May 20, 1939; a son, Glenn Lee Gossett, born on January 11, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Con-gress on November 5, 1940. 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 vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. Harry M. Wurzbach; and reelected to each succeeding Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cameron, Dimmit, Frio, Hidalgo, J im 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. 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 and each succeeding Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Callahan, Comanche, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Jones, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Shackelford, Stephens, and Taylor (12 counties). Population (1930), 238,671. SAM M. RUSSELL, Democrat, of Stephenville, Erath County, Tex.; grew to manhood on the farm; attended country school and John Tarleton College, Stephenville, Tex.; taught school for 5 years; served as a soldier in the World War; admitted to practice law June 9, 1919; appointed county 116 Congressional Directory UTAH attorney of Erath County July 14, 1919; elected in 1920 and 1922 as county attorney; elected district attorney of the twenty-ninth judicial district in 1924; reelected in 1926; elected judge of the twenty-ninth judicial distriet in 1928; reelected in 1932 and 1936; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress from the Seventeenth Congressional District of Texas, 1940; family consists of wife and two daughters. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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. EUGENE WORLEY, Democrat, Shamrock, Tex.; education, Shamrock public schools, Texas A. & M., and University of Texas School of Law; member Texas Legislature 6 years; married; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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, Colorado City, Tex.; born September 22, 1900, near Haynesville, La., son of J. K. and Lola Willis Mahon; moved to Mitchell County, Tex., 1908; reared on a farm; attended rural school, graduated from Loraine High School; B. A., Simmons University, Abilene, 1924; LL. B., University of Texas, 1925; attended University of Minnesota in 1925; married Helen Stevenson, of Loraine, Tex., 1923; one daughter—Daphne, born 1927; elected county attorney Mitchell County, 1926; appointed district attorney thirty-second judicial district, 1927; elected district attorney 1928, 1930, 1932; elected to Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Bexar. Population (1930), 292,533. PAUL J. KILDAY, Democrat, of San Antonio, Tex.; born in Sabinal, Uvalde County, Tex., March 29, 1900, son of Pat and Mary (Tallant) Kilday; moved with his parents to San Antonio, Tex., in 1904; attended the San Antonio public schools, St. Mary’s parochial school, and St. Mary’s College at San Antonio, Tex.; was graduated from Main Avenue High School and from Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., with LL. B. degree, in 1922; attorney at law; married Miss Cecile Newton, of San Antonio, in 1932, and they have two daugh-ters—Mary Catherine and Betty Ann; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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. UTAH (Population (1930), 507,847) SENATORS ELBERT DUNCAN THOMAS, Democrat, of Salt Lake City, Utah; born, Salt Lake City, June 17, 1883; A. B. (Utah, 1906), Ph. D. (California, 1924), LL. D. (Southern California, 1935), Litt. D. (National, 1937); Oberlaender Award (1934); professor political science, University of Utah; vice president, American Political Science Association; vice president, American Society of International Law; vice chairman, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission; member, American Council of Learned Societies; sometime fellow and visiting professor, University of ‘California; major, Inspector General’s Department (N. G. Utah and U. S. Reserves); president, Japan Mission; member, Carnegie European Conference of American Professors; and member, committee on intellectual cooperation, Interparliamentary Union; married Edna Harker, 1907; three daughters—Chiyo, Esther (Mrs. Wayne C. Grover), and Edna Louise (Mrs. Lawrence L. Hansen); elected to the Senate November 8, 1932; reelected November 8, 1938. VERMONT Biographical ABE MURDOCK, Democrat, of Beaver, Utah; lawyer; served as city attorney and city councilman of Beaver, as county attorney of Beaver County, and as attorney for the Beaver County school district; married Mary V. Yardley, of Beaver; six children— William Orrice, Abram Riggs, Daniel Beck, Jane Elizabeth, Mary Violet, and Cinda; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; renominated by acclamation and reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; renominated by acclamation and reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; renominated without opposition and reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947. 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. WALTER KIEL GRANGER, Democrat, of Cedar City, Utah, was born in St. George, Utah; when 6 years old he moved with his parents to Cedar City, Utah; has since made his home in that community; married; wife, Hazel Dalley Granger; received education in the Iron County public schools and the Branch Agricultural College at Cedar City; while residing in Cedar City, served 3 years as a member of the board of trustees of the Utah State Agricultural Col-lege and served in numerous civic capacities in his home city and in Iron County; served in France with the Eleventh Regiment of Marines as a volunteer during the World War; farmer and livestock man; first gained political recognition as mayor of Cedar City, a position to which he was elected three successive times; then followed three successive elections to the State house of representatives, the first in 1932; in 1935 was chosen speaker of the house; following the close of the 1937 session, was appointed a member of the Public Service Commission of Utah and has served in that capacity since; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940. SHeonD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Utah (4 counties). Population (1930), 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, 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 degree, J. D.; 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 canvention’s . choice for attorney general of the State of Utah; was a member of the board of regents of the University of Utah from 1925 to 1935; was married to Birda Billings, a native of Provo, Utah, in 1606, and they have four children—two boys and two girls; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. 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 and 1940; president Vermont Bar Association, 1923; 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, and November 5, 1940. 118 Congressional Directory VIRGINIA GEORGE DAVID AIKEN, Republican, of Putney, Vt.; born in Dummers-ton, Vt., August 20, 1892; son of Edward W. and Myra Cook Aiken; educated in the common schools of Putney, Vt.; graduated from Brattleboro High School in 1909; honorary degrees, Sec. D., Norwich University, LL. D., University of Vermont; married Miss Beatrice M. Howard; four children, Dorothy Aiken Morse (Mrs. Harry), Marjorie Aiken Cleverley (Mrs. Harry Leighton), Howard Aiken, Barbara Aiken; occupation, farmer; elected town representative in 1931 and 1933; speaker of the house of representatives in 1933; Lieutenant Governor of Vermont in 1935, and Governor of Vermont in 1937 and 1939; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1940, to fill the vacancy for the term ending January 3, 1945, caused by the death of Senator Ernest W. Gibson. 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 irom Norwich University in 1896, A. B.; A. M. in course; honorary LL. D., Middlebury College, Norwich University, and Boston University; principal and superintendent of Northfield graded and high schools, 1896-1900; admitted to the Vermont bar in 1903; member of the late 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 Representatives, 1912-15; commissioner of taxes of Vermont, 1912-19; vice president and president, Northfield National Bank, 1917-34; assistant general counsel and tax attorney, Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 1919-20; 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. (Mrs. Ernest M. Adams), and Fletcher D. P.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election; reading clerk, Republican National Convention, 1936 and 1940; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member, Committee on Appropriations; Assistant Republican Whip, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. VIRGINIA (Population (1930), 2,421,851) SENATORS CARTER GLASS, Democrat, of Lynchburg, was born in that city; educated in private and public schools and in the newspaper business; owns the morning and afternoon papers of that city; elected to 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, the University of North Caro-lina, Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, William and Mary, Wesleyan, Tufts, Columbia, Hamilton, New York University, and Lynchburg College; is a member of Phi Beta Kappa of William and Mary; thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason, Shriner, and Elk; 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 on November 4, 1930, for the term ending in 1937, and again on November 3, 1936, for the term ending in 1943, each time practically without opposition at the primary or the general election; Josunm tender of Secretaryship of Treasury in Cabinet of President Roosevelt in VIRGINIA Biographical HARRY FLOOD BYRD, Democrat, of Berryville, Va.; entered business at age of 15; in 1915 elected to Senate of Virginia, in which he served until he was elected Governor of the Commonwealth 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; reelected November 5, 1940, without opposition in the Democratic primary and without Republican opposition in the general election; newspaper publisher, farmer, and apple grower. 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. CImies: 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-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Con-gresses; married Miss Mary Putzel, of Newport News, Va. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Southampton, and Princess Anne. Cimrs: Norfolk, Portsmouth, South Norfolk, and Suffolk. Population (1930), 302,715. WINDER RUSSELL HARRIS, Democrat, of 719 Maury Place, Norfolk, Va.; born in Wake County (now a part of Raleigh), N. C., December 3, 1888; began newspaper career as sports editor of the Raleigh (N. C.) Times in May 1908; served in succeeding years as sports editor of the Charlotte (N. C.) News; news editor of the Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald; State news editor of the Charlotte (N. C.) Observer; managing editor of Charlotte (N. C.) Evening Chronicle; telegraph editor of the Raleigh News‘ and Observer; manager of the United Press Bureau, Raleigh, N. C.; news editor of the Richmond (Va.) Virginian; news editor of the Newport News (Va.) Times-Herald and the Daily Press; city editor of the Norfolk (Va.) Virginian-Pilot; member of the staff of the Nor-folk Ledger-Dispatch; member of the staff of Universal Service, Washington, D. C., 1918-25, during which period was member of the Press Gallery and travelled as representative of Universal Service with James M. Cox, Democratic nominee for President in 1920, and Senator Robert M. La Follette, Progressive candidate for President in 1924; covered the Republican, Democratic, and Progressive National Conventions in 1924 and travelled as representative of Universal Service with Presidents Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge; assistant secretary of the American delegation to the International Narcotics Congress, held in Geneva, Switzerland, under the auspices of the League of Nations, 1924-25; in August 1925 returned to Norfolk, Va., as managing editor of the Virginian-Pilot, continuing in that capacity until February 28, 1941, when nominated for Congress; past president of Norfolk Rotary Club, Norfolk Com-munity Fund, and Associated Press Association of Virginia; honorary president, Norfolk Forum; member of subcommittee of Virginia Legislative Advisory Council on Jails, Prison Farms, Probation, and Parole in 1939; member Hampton Roads Regional Defense Council, 1940-41; awarded Cosmopolitan Club’s medal for distinguished civic service in 1934, carrying honorary title of first citizen of Norfolk for that year; married Charlotte Lea Meares, of Raleigh, N. C., in 1915; four daughters; Episcopalian; Mason; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on April 8, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Colgate W. Darden, Jr. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Charles City, Chesterfield, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King William, and New Kent. Cities: Richmond and Williamsburg. Population (1930), 281,064. DAVE E. SATTERFIELD, Jr., Democrat, of Richmond; was born in Rich-mond, Va., September 11, 1894; attended the public schools; was graduated from the University of Richmond Law School in 1917; served as commissioned officer in the Naval Flying Corps during the World War; was admitted to the bar in 1916 and commenced practice the same year; served as Commonwealth’s attorney for the city of Richmond, 1922-33; resigned to return to private practice of law; member Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and the Baptist Church; married; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 2, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew J. Montague; reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. : 120 Congressional Directory VIRGINIA 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, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carroll, Charlotte, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, Pittsyl-vania, and Wythe. Crmigs: Danville and Martinsville. Population (1930), 271,794. THOMAS G. BURCH, Democrat, of Martinsville, Henry County, Va.; banker; farmer; 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; chairman, board of directors, Piedmont Trust Bank, Martinsville, Va.; director Bassett Furniture Industries, Bassett, Va.; president, Martinsville Land & Improvement Co., Martinsville, Va.; 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, 1930-31; Mason, K. of P., Elk, I. O. O. F., Red Men; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, November 8, 1932, to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fifth Congress, November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-sixth Congress, November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alleghany, Bedford, Botetourt, Campbell, Craig, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke. CrImies: 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, and was licensed to practice, June 19, 1908; located in Roanoke, and in 1917 was elected Commonwealth’s 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 Democratic 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, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; was married in 1905 to Miss Lena Hancock, of Bedford County; has two children—Clifton A., Jr., and Martha Anne; 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 educated in the public schools of Lynchburg and Rockymount, 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 commission 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 to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Albemarle, Arlington, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Gooch- land, 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.; graduated from Bethel Military Academy in 1901; B. L., University of Virginia in 1903; admitted to the bar in 1904, and practiced law until 1922, when accepted appointment as judge of the corporation court of Alexandria; resigned this position WASHINGTON Biographical 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 order of Elks, Masons, and Odd Fellows; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress as a Member at Large from the State of Virginia; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. 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; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress and to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses from the Ninth Congressional District. WASHINGTON (Population (1930), 1,563,396) SENATORS HOMER TRUETT BONE, Democrat, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in Frank-lin, Ind., January 25, 1883; admitted to bar of State of Washington and became practicing attorney in 1911; continued to practice law in Tacoma until elected United States Senator; general counsel, Port of Tacoma, 1918-32; for several years counsel for organized labor, farm groups, and public and cooperative electric power organizations; representative, Washington State Legislature, session of 1923; elected to United States Senate, 1932; reelected, 1938. 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; World War veteran; commissioned at the Coast Artillery School, Fort Monroe, Va., served with Sixty-third Regiment, Coast Artillery Corps, and later as instructor in heavy field artillery at coast defenses of Puget Sound; 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, Forty and Eight, and Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected a Member of the House of Representatives to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and served from March 4, 1933, until December 19, 1940, when he resigned, having been previously appointed on December 18, 1940, to the United States Senate to fill the unexpired term caused by the resignation of Hon. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, and took his seat in the Senate on December 19, 1940, for the term expiring January 3, 1941; elected to the Senate on November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—KiTsAp CouNTY. KING COUNTY: City of Seattle. Population (1930), 396,359. WARREN G. MAGNUSON, Democrat, of Seattle, Wash., was born in Moor-head, Minn., April 12, 1905; moved to Seattle and entered the University of Washington, graduating from the law school in 1929, entering the practice of law in that year; served as special prosecuting attorney of King County in 1932; 122 Congressional Durectory WASHINGTON elected to the Washington State Legislature and served in the regular and special sessions of 1933; appointed assistant United States district attorney shortly after the end of the special session of the legislature and was elected prosecuting attorney of King County in November 1934, taking office in January 1935; member of the Elks, Eagles, and Moose lodges; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Revenilyesinta Congresses; reelected on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh ongress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clallam, Island, Jefferson, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and Whatcom. KING CouUNTY: 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. HENRY MARTIN JACKSON, Democrat, of Everett, Wash., was born in Everett, Wash., May 31, 1912; attended the Everett public schools and graduated from the Everett High School; attended Stanford University; LL. B., University of Washington Law School, 1935; after being admitted to the bar in 1935, became associated in the practice of law with the law firm of Black & Rucker; elected prosecuting attorney of Snohomish County in 1938; affiliated with the Masons, Elks, Eagles, S. F. A., Sons of Norway, Delta Chi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; member of the Washington State Bar Association; unmarried; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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 20 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 12 years, and Marian Eleanor, 10 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, Grange, Moose, Red Men, Runeberg, Vasa, American Legion, and Forty and Eight, and honorary member John D. Roberts Camp, No. 7, United Spanish War Veterans, Aberdeen, Wash.; member, Wash-ington Athletic Club, Seattle, Wash.; and associate member, National Press Club, Washington, D. C.; director, National Rivers and Harbors Congress 1935-41; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, receiving a majority of 11,829 votes; member of the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; chairman, Pensions Committee, Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh 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.; graduated from Red Wing (Minn.) Seminary and received an LL. B. degree from the law department of Wisconsin University; has resided in Prosser, Wash., since 1911; practiced law, farmed, taught school, and lectured since graduation from college; is a Progressive Democrat; a member of the Masonic fraternity, Eastern Star, and the Grange; served as lecturer of the Washington State Grange, 1922-23 and 1931-32; was a Democratic representative to the State legislature from Benton County in 1927, and reelected with increased majorities in 1928 and 1930; on November 8, 1932, was elected a Representative to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. ; FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, Lincoln, Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Spokane, and Stevens (8 counties). Population (1930), 250,064. CHARLES H. LEAVY, Democrat, of Spokane, Wash., was born on a farm near York, Pa., February 16, 1884; educated in the common schools of Missouri, the Warrensburg (Mo.) Normal School, the Bellingham (Wash.) Normal School, and the Kansas City (Mo.) School of Law; taught 3 years in the public schools of Missouri and 6 years in the State of Washington; was elected prosecuting attorney of Pend Oreille County, Wash., in 1914; reelected in 1916 and served until 1918; appointed by President Wilson as special assistant United States WEST VIRGINIA Biographical : 123 attorney for war work; served in this position 1918 to 1921; Presidential elector in 1924; in 1922 was elected prosecuting attorney of Spokane County, Wash.; served until November 1926; secretary, State Association of Prosecuting Attor-neys, 1923-24; president, same organization, 1925-26; elected judge of the superior court, State of Washington, Spokane County; twice reelected without opposition, serving until elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in November 1936; on August 1, 1912, married Pearl Williams, of Excelsior Springs, Mo.; two sons—Charles Williams and James Irving; member I. O. O. F., F. O. E., K. P., and Spokane Kiwanis Club; chairman, committee on the facilities of the Law Library of Congress, American Bar Association; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; member, Com-mittee on Appropriations assigned to Interior Legislative and Agriculture sub-committees of Committee on Appropriations. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY OF PIERCE. KING CouUNTY: All that part not included in districts 1 and 2. Population (1930), 235,930. JOHN MAIN COFFEE, Democrat, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in that city on January 23, 1897; graduated from the University of Washington, Seattle, Wash., and from Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in which institutions he was active in college politics, captain of varsity debate teams, won his letter in oratory, and was prominent in dramatics; lawyer by profession; served as counsel of the Metropolitan Park District of Tacoma, Tacoma Federation of Improvement Clubs, and of the Washington State Civil Service League; member of the Tacoma Civil Service Commission, 1925-26; secretary of the State advisory board of the National Recovery Administration, 1933-35; Pierce County appraiser and exam-iner for the Washington State inheritance tax and escheat division, 1933-36; has been active before legislative bodies in behalf of liberal and labor legislation; has been aggressive throughout the State as manager and speaker, respectively, in behalf of progressive men and measures; served as a secretary to former United States Senator C. C. Dill, 1923-24; is a member of Alpha Sigma Phi, Sigma Upsi-lon, and Xi Pi, collegiate Greek letter societies, and is also member of the Elks, Eagles, Masonic Lodge, National Grange, Young Men’s Business Club of Tacoma, Yale Club, University Union Club of Tacoma, and Washington State Bar Associa-tion; married Lillian M. Sly, of Yakima, Wash., at Everett, Wash., November 16, 1923; has one child—a son named John M. Coffee, Jr., born November 20, 1928; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; and reelected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses by huge majorities. WEST VIRGINIA (Population (1930), 1,729,205) SENATORS HARLEY MARTIN KILGORE, Democrat, of Beckley, W. Va.; born in Brown, W. Va., January 11, 1893; educated in the public schools; was graduated from West Virginia University in 1914, with degree of LL. B.; attorney at law; served as judge of criminal court, Raleigh County, W. Va., January 1, 1933, until elected . to the United States Senate; during the World War served in the United States Army, May 15, 1917, to March 13, 1920; member of the West Virginia National Guard, October 26, 1921, to December 31, 1940; member Masonic lodge, Elks, Moose, and American Legion, and Delta Tau Delta fraternity; married Lois Lilly, of Bluefield, W. Va.; two children—Robert Martin and Elinor Stuart; elected jo ihe United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending Janu-ary 3, 1947. JOSEPH ROSIER, Democrat of Fairmont; educator; born Wilsonburg, W. Va., January 24, 1870, son of John Wesley and Rebecca (Miller) Rosier; B. Pd., Salem (W. Va.) College, 1895; A. M. from same college, 1915; LL. D., Marshall College, 1933; married Iva Randolph, of Salem, August 14, 1895; children—Nellie (Mrs. Hugh Simpson), Robert, Mary Josephine (Mrs. Herndon Smith); teacher of village school, 1890; principal public schools, Salem, 1891-92; superintendent schools, Harrison County, W. Va., 1893-94; member faculty, Salem College, 1894-96; teacher, State normal school, Glenville, 1896-97; member of faculty, State teachers’ college, Fairmont, 1897-1900; superintendent schools, Fairmont, 1900-15; president, State teachers’ college, Fairmont, since 1915; county food REPRESENTATIVES 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 a farm; educated in the common schools of the. county, and attended Shepherd College State Normal School, Shepherdstown, W. Va.; later entered the Univer-sity of West Virginia and graduated with the degrees of A. B. and LL. B.; began the practice of law in Martinsburg, W. Va., in the law firm composed of former United States Senator Charles J. Faulkner and Col. Stuart W. Walker; later removed to Parkersburg and has practiced there ever since; has served as a member of the board of regents of the State normal school; referee in bankruptey of the United States District Court of West Virginia; general counsel to the West Virginia Public Service Commission; married Mary A. McKendree (daugh-ter 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 Agriculture Committee; again elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; 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, and one daughter, Frances Kee; nominated for Congress on the Democratic ticket on May 20, 1932, and elected to the Seventy-third Congress at the ensuing general election; renominated and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-seventh on November 5, 1940, by 35,000 majority; member of the Christ Episcopal Church, Bluefield; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars; member of Knights of Pythias, Phi Sigma Kappa college fraternity and life member Moose and Elks; member Army and Navy Country Club, Congressional Country Club, and Na-tional Press Club; member of Committee on Foreign Affairs. SIXTH DISTRICT Couns: Boone, Kanawha, Logan, and Raleigh (4 counties). Population (1930), JOE L. SMITH, Democrat, of Beckley, born May 22, 1880, at Marshes (now Glen Daniel), Raleigh County, W. Va.; attended public schools; four times mayor of Beckley; member West Virginia Senate, 1909-13; married Christine Carlson, of Annapolis, Md.; two sons—Joe L., Jr., and Hulett C.; president, Beckley National Bank; Mason and Elk; Presbyterian; elected to Seventy-first Congress (1928) by majority of 228 votes; reelected to Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a majority of 40,165; chairman, Committee on Mines and Mining; member, Insular Affairs, Invalid Pensions, and Indian Affairs Committees. WISCONSIN (Population (1930), 2,939,006) SENATORS ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE, Jr., Progressive, Madison, Wis. ; born February 6, 1895; married Rachel Wilson Young September 17, 1930, has two sons, Joseph Oden and Bronson Cutting; elected to the United States Senate on Septem-ber 29, 1925, to fill the unexpired term of his father, Robert M. La Follette; reelected November 6, 1928; reelected November 6, 1934, and November 5, 1940; his term expires 1946. ALEXANDER WILEY, Republican, of Chippewa Falls, Wis.; born in that city on May 26, 1884; received education at Augsburg College, Minneapolis, Minn., and University of Michigan; LL. B., University of Wisconsin, 1907; lawyer; married May Jenkins, of Chippewa Falls; four children, Elizabeth, 64674°—77-2—1st ed 10 126 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN Marshall, Rosemary, and Winifred; only public office held previously was that of district attorney for Chippewa County, 1909-15; elected to the United States Senate, November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945, the total vote cast being: Duffy, Democrat, 231,976; Ekern, Progressive, 249,209; Blair, Independent Communist, 1,283; Wiley, Republican, 446,770; Chapple, Inde- pendent Townsend Republican, 7,251; Ehrhardt, Independent Socialist Labor, 1,014. REPRESENTATIVES ink DISTRICT Soa Green, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (5 counties). Population 1930), 280,628. LAWRENCE H. SMITH, Republican, of Racine; born in Racine, Wis., Sep-tember 15, 1892; educated in the public schools of Racine, State Teachers’ College, and Marquette University Law School, Milwaukee (LL. B. 1923); served as first lieutenant, Infantry, Thirty-second Division, during World War; department commander, Wisconsin Department, American Legion; national executive com-mitteeman, American Legion; national child welfare, chairman, American Legion; president, Racine County Bar Association; director, Y. M. C. A., Racine; presi-dent, Racine Lions Club; married Eleanor Rowley, of Racine, November 10, 1917; three children, Betty, Alice, and John; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on August 29, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Stephen Bolles. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Columbia, Dane, Dodge, Jefferson, and Waukesha (5 counties). Population (1930), 284,475. HARRY SAUTHOFF, Progressive, 6f 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 Lenore Gilmour; 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 senatoral 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; Member of the Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Congresses; again elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, La Crosse, Lafayette, Monroe, Rich-land, Sauk, and Vernon (10 counties). Population (1930), 274,488. WILLIAM HENRY STEVENSON, Republican, of La Crosse, Wis.; born in Kenosha, Wis., September 23, 1892; his father, Maj. John Stevenson, was an Indian scout, and a close associate of Gen. Charles King, and an associate and friend of Buffalo Bill Cody. Major Stevenson located at La Crosse, Wis., in 1894, where his son, ‘Bill’ Stevenson, peddled papers during his grade and high school days, and cut cord wood with a buck saw to earn expenses to put himself through secondary school; graduated from the Teachers College, La Crosse, Wis., in 1912, the University of Wisconsin, at Madison, in 1919, and received the de-gree of LL. B. from the Law School of the University of Wisconsin in January 1920; married Miss Lulu Belle Buecklin, of Onalaska, Wis., in 1914, and has one married ‘daughter; worked his way through the law college and university after his mar-riage; taught in the high schools of Holmen and Neillsville, Wis., and Madison (Wis.) Central High School; member of the Phi Alpha Delta, law fraternity; took over the law office of Judge Levi H. Bancroft, at Richland Center, Wis., in 1920; appointed circuit court commissioner and divorce counsel of Richland County in 1922; elected district attorney of Richland County, Wis., in 1924; moved to La Crosse, Wis., in 1930; has been associated with A. H. Schubert in the practice of law in La Crosse since 1930; elected district attorney of La Crosse County, Wis., in 1934; reelected in 1936 and 1938, which office he held until Slosiod to Congress; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUEEE COUNTY: City of Milwaukee, wards 3, 4, 5,8,11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 23, 24, and 27; cities of Cudahy, South Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and West Allis, towns of Franklin, Green-Td aks, Bak Creek, and Wauwatosa, and villages of West Milwaukee and Greendale. Population ’ tl S THAD F. WASIELEWSKI, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis.; born in Mil-waukee, Wis., December 2, 1904; son of Dr. Francis S. and Felicia Baranowski Wasielewski; graduate of University of Michigan with a bachelor of arts degree and Marquette University Law School with the degree of doctor of jurisprudence; lawyer; 1940 census supervisor of the fourth district; married Miss Stephanie M.Gorak, of Milwaukee; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; member of ForeignAffairs Committee. 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. LEWIS D. THILL, Republican, of Milwaukee, Wis.; born in Milwaukee, Wis., October 18,1903; B. A. degree, Marquette University; attended Harvard Graduate School; Northwestern University; LL. B. degree, University of Wisconsin; lawyer by profession; member of Milwaukee and Wisconsin Bar Associations; single; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Calumet, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington, and Winne-bago (6 counties). Population (1930), 268,533. FRANK BATEMAN KEEFE, Republican, of Oshkosh, Wis.; born in Winne-conne, Wis., September 23, 1887; graduate of State teachers college; LL. 1B, University of Michigan; attorney at law; served as prosecuting attorney of Winnebago County, Wis., three terms; married Miss Mildred V. Steele, of Ripon, Wis.; two daughters and one son—Mrs. Charles Nolan, Oshkosh, Wis., Mrs. Edwin Rosten, Madison, Wis., and Bateman F. Keefe, Oshkosh, Wis.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1930), 276,625. REID F. MURRAY, Republican, of Ogdensburg, Wis.; born in Ogdensburg, Wis., in 1887; graduate of College of Agriculture, University of Wisconsin, 1916; professor of animal husbandry, agriculture extension of the University of Wis-consin, 1922-27; county agent, Winnebago County; agricultural agent, Northern Pacific Railway Co., 3 years; agricultural agent, First National Bank of Oshkosh, 3 years; married Lyla Hermanson; two sons, Reid Jr., and Hyde; one daughter, Kittie Ann; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoe, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1930), 300,734. JOSHUA LEROY JOHNS, Republican, of Appleton, Wis. ; post office address, Algoma, Wis.; born in town of Eagle, Richland County, Wis., February 27, 1881; attended and graduated from public schools; was graduated from the University of Chattanooga, and from Yale University (Law) in 1907; married Miss Esther Newman, of Algoma, Wis., September 7, 1910; one son, Newman; lawyer, farmer, and businessman; president of Kiwanis International in 1933; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, receiving 33,354 votes, against 29,035 for George J. Schneider, the Progressive incumbent, 28,221 for John E. Cashman, Democrat, and 1,513 for Peter J. Gloudemans, Union; reelected to Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940. 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; served as district attorney; 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 WYOMING (Population (1930), 225,565) SENATORS REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 225,565. PUERTO RICO Biographical 129 ALASKA (Population (1930), 59,278) DELEGATE ANTHONY JOSEPH DIMOND, Democrat, of Valdez, Alaska; born at Palatine Bridge, N. Y., November 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, and reelected at each subsequent biennial election. COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES (Population (July 1, 1935), 13,099,405. Estimated) RESIDENT COMMISSIONER JOAQUIN MIGUEL ELIZALDE, of Manila, P. I.; born in Manila, P. I, August 2, 1896; finished education in England and Switzerland; chairman of the board of directors, Elizalde & Co., Inec., industrialists and financiers, Manila, P. 1.; president of the National Development Co., Manila, and Cebu Portland Cement Co. in 1934; economic advisor to President Manuel L. Quezon in 1937; member of National Economic Council in 1937; chairman of subcommittee on finance, Joint Preparatory Committee on Philippine Affairs in 1937; Philippine envoy to the International Sugar Conference, London, 1936-37; member of Council of State in 1938; at present a major, cavalry reserve, Philippine Army; was appointed Resident Commissioner to the United States on September 29, 1938; appointed by President Manuel Quezon as member of Philippine Cabinet, without portfolio, and member of the Council of State on September 29, 1941. HAWAII (Population (1940 Census), 423,330) 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; member of the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of Honolulu 1932-34; married March 18, 1912, to Pauline N. Evans, and they have five children; elected Delegate to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses, and reelected on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress. PUERTO RICO (Population (1930), 1,543,913) RESIDENT COMMISSIONER BOLIVAR PAGAN, Coalitionist, of San Juan, P. R.; president of the Puerto Rican Federation of Labor; attorney, journalist, and author; born in Guayanilla, P. R., May 16, 1899, son of Emilio Pagdn and Elisa Lucca; grammar education in Adjuntas, P. R., 1912; Ponce High School, Ponce, P. R., 1916; registrar, Uni- Congressional Directory PUERTO RICO versity of Puerto Rico, 1920; bachelor of laws, University of Puerto Rico, 1921: admitted to practice of law before the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, United States District Court for Puerto Rico, United States First Circuit Court of Ap-peals, at Boston, Mass., and the Supreme Court of the United States; judge of Fajardo, P. R., 1922; member of the insular board of elections, 1923-39; city treasurer of San Juan, P. R., 1925-29; acting chairman of the insular board of elec-tions, 1930; associate commissioner of the Public Service Commission of Puerto Rico, 1930-33; treasurer of the Government of the Capital, San Juan, P. R., 1931— 40; senator-at-large of the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico, 1983-40; president pro tempore and majority floor leader of the Senate of Puerto Rico, 1933-40; as senator, was author and sponsor of the universal suffrage act, the State fund work-men’s compensation act, the 8-hour labor act, the insular labor relations act, unem-ployment insurance bill, minimum-wages bill, code of labor bill, and of many other labor and liberal measures of economic and social advancement and welfare; city manager of San Juan, P. R., 1936-37; member of the American Group of the Interparliamentary Union; president of the Institute of Puerto Rican Literature, 1935-40; director, Puerto Rican Academy of History; member of the American Bar Association, the Puerto Rican Bar Association, the Academy of Political Sciences of New York, and the Academy of Political and Social Sciences of Phila-delphia; vice president and acting president of the Athenaeum of Puerto Rico, 1929-30; former member of several political and legislative commissions from Puerto Rico to Washington; honorary vice president of the “House of Spain,” San Juan, P. R.; vice president of the Library Association of Puerto Rico, 1934; hon-orary president, Puerto Rican Statehood Society; member, National Association of State Clubs; editor of the newspaper La Idea, 1917, and the magazine Aurora, 1918, Ponce, P. R.; contributing editor of the daily El Dia, Ponce, P. R., 1918; the daily El Aguila, Ponce, P. R., 1918; the magazine El Carnaval, San Juan, P. R., 1919; the magazine Puerto Rico Ilustrado, San Juan, P. R., 1918-21; the magazine Puerto Rico, 1920; and the daily El Mundo, San Juan, P. R., 1940; awarded first prize insular school literary contest in 1915, and insular literary contest of the Spanish Casino of San Juan, P. R., in 1921; author: America y Otras Paginas, 1922; El Sufragio Femenino, 1924; Ley Municipal Revisada, Anotada y Comentada, 1925; Ideales en Marcha, 1939; Handbook on Puerto Rico, 1940; Puerto Rico in Facts and Figures, 1942; appointed Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico to the United States by Admiral Leahy, Governor of Puerto Rico, on December 26, 1939, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Santiago Iglesias for the term ending January 3, 1941; elected Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico to the United States at the general elections held November 5, 1940, for term ending January 3, 1945. STATE DELEGATIONS (Number which precedes name of Representative designates congressional district. Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics; Progressives in SMALL CAPS; Farmer-Labor in CAPS; Independent in italic CAPS; American Labor in italic SM ALL CAPS] . ALABAMA SENATORS John H. Bankhead 2d Lister Hill REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] 1. Frank W. Boykin 4. Sam Hobbs 7. Carter Manasco 2. George M. Grant 5. Joe Starnes "8. John J. Sparkman 3. Henry B. Steagall 6. Pete Jarman 9. Luther Patrick ARIZONA SENATORS Carl Hayden Ernest W. McFarland REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—John R. Murdock ARKANSAS SENATORS Hattie W. Caraway Lloyd Spencer REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] E. C. Gathings 4. Fadjo Cravens 7. Oren Harris CORDoe . Cl LEC Wilbur D. Mills 5. David D. Terry Clyde T. Ellis 6. W. F. Norrell CALIFORNIA SENATORS Hiram W. Johnson Sheridan Downey REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10; Republicans, 9; vacant, 1] Clarence F. Lea 8. John Z. Anderson 15. John M. Costello Harry L. Englebright 9. Bertrand W. Gearhart 16. Leland M. Ford Frank H. Buck 10. Alfred J. Elliott 17. [Vacant] Thomas Rolph 11. Carl Hinshaw 18. Ward Johnson Richard J. Welch 12. Jerry Voorhis 19. Harry R. Sheppard Albert E. Carter 13. Charles Kramer 20. Ed. V. Izac John H. Tolan 14. Thomas F. Ford 133 134 Congressional Directory BD = COLORADO SENATORS Edwin C. Johnson [Vacant] REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 3] . Lawrence Lewis 3. J. Edgar Chenoweth 4. Robert F. Rockwell . William S. Hill CONNECTICUT SENATORS Francis Maloney John A. Danaher REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5; vacant, 1] At large—Lucien J. Maciora . Herman P. Kopplemann 3. James A. Shanley 5. [Vacant] . William J. Fitzgerald 4. Le Roy D. Downs DELAWARE SENATORS James H. Hughes James M. Tunnell REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—Philip A. Traynor FLORIDA SENATORS Charles O. Andrews Claude Pepper REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5] . J. Hardin Peterson 3. Robert L. F. Sikes 5. Joe Hendricks . Lex Green 4, Pat Cannon GEORGIA SENATORS Walter F. George Richard B. Russell : REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10] . Hugh Peterson 5. Robert Ramspeck 9. B. Frank Whelchel E. E. Cox 6. Carl Vinson 10. Paul Brown . Stephen Pace 7. Malcolm C. Tarver A. Sidney Camp 8. John S. Gibson IDAHO SENATORS D. Worth Clark John Thomas REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republican, 1] 1. Compton I. White 2. Henry C. Dworshak GR=CO=0UU©00NSDD—QO State Delegations ILLINOIS SENATORS Scott W. Lucas C. Wayland Brooks REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 11; Republicans, 16 At large—Stephen A. Day; William G. Stratton . Arthur W. Mitchell 10. George A. Paddock 19. William H. Wheat . Raymond S. McKeough 11. Chauncey W. Reed 20. James M. Barnes Edward A. Kelly 12. Noah M. Mason 21. Evan Howell Harry P. Beam 13. Leo E. Allen 22. Edwin M. Schaefer Adolph J. Sabath 14. Anton J. Johnson 23. Laurence F. Arnold Anton F. Maciejewski 15. Robert B. Chiperfield 24. James V. Heidinger . Leonard W. Schuetz 16. Everett M. Dirksen 25. C. W. (Runt) Bishop Leo Kocialkowski 17. Leslie C. Arends . Charles S. Dewey 18. Jessie Sumner INDIANA SENATORS Frederick Van Nuys Raymond E. Willis REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 8] . William T. Schulte 5. Forest A. Harness 9. Earl Wilson . Charles A. Halleck 6. Noble J. Johnson 10. Raymond S. Springer . Robert A. Grant 7. Gerald W. Landis 11. William H. Larrabee . George W. Gillie 8. John W. Boehne, Jr. 12. Louis Ludlow : IOWA SENATORS Guy M. Gillette Clyde L. Herring REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 7] . Thomas E. Martin 4. Henry O. Talle 7. Ben F. Jensen . William S. Jacobsen 5. Karl M. LeCompte 8. Fred C. Gilchrist . John W. Gwynne 6. Paul Cunningham 9. Vincent F. Harrington KANSAS SENATORS Arthur Capper Clude M. Reed REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 6] . William P. Lambertson 4. Edward H. Rees 7. Clifford R. Hope . U.S. Guyer 5. John M. Houston . Thomas D. Winter 6. Frank Carlson KENTUCKY SENATORS Alben W. Barkley Albert B. Chandler REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8; Republican, 1] 1. Noble J. Gregory 4. Edward W. Creal 7. Andrew J. May . Beverly M. Vincent 5. Brent Spence 8. Joe B. Bates . Emmet O’Neal 6. Virgil Chapman 9. John M. Robsion Go BN LOUISIANA SENATORS John H. Overton Allen J. Ellender REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8] State Delegations MINNESOTA SENATORS Henrik Shipstead Joseph H. Ball REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 8; Farmer-Labor, 1] 1. August H. Andresen 4. Melvin J. Maas 7. H. Carl Andersen 2. Joseph P. O'Hara 5. Oscar Youngdahl 8. William A. Pittenger 3. Richard P. Gale 6. Harold Knutson 9. R. T. BUCKLER MISSISSIPPI SENATORS Theodore G. Bilbo Wall Doxey REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 1. John E. Rankin 4. Aaron Lane Ford 7. Dan R. McGehee 2. Jamie L. Whitten 5. Ross A. Collins 3. William M. Whitting-6. William M. Colmer ton MISSOURI SENATORS Bennett Champ Clark Harry S. Truman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10; Republicans, 3] 1. Milton A. Romjue 6. Philip A. Bennett 11. John B. Sullivan 2. William L. Nelson 7. Dewey Short 12. Walter C. Ploeser 3. Richard M. Duncan 8. Clyde Williams 13. John J. Cochran 4. C. Jasper Bell 9. Clarence Cannon 5. Joseph B. Shannon 10. Orville Zimmerman MONTANA SENATORS Burton K. Wheeler James E. Murray REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republican, 1] 1. Jeannette Rankin 2. James F. O’Connor NEBRASKA SENATORS GEORGE W. NORRIS Hugh A. Butler REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 3] 1. Oren S. Copeland 3. Karl Stefan 5. Harry B. Coffee 2. Charles F. McLaugh-4. Carl T. Curtis lin 138 | Congressional Directory NEVADA SENATORS Pat McCarran Berkeley L. Bunker REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—James G. Scrugham NEW HAMPSHIRE SENATORS Styles Bridges Charles W. Tobey REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. Arthur B. Jenks 2. Foster Stearns NEW JERSEY SENATORS William H. Smathers W. Warren Barbour REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10] 1. Charles A. Wolverton 6. Donald H. McLean 11. Albert L. Vreeland 2. Elmer H. Wene 7. J. Parnell Thomas 12. Robert W. Kean 3. William H. Sutphin 8. Gordon Canfield 13. Mary T. Norton 4. D. Lane Powers 9. Frank C. Osmers, Jr. 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—Clinton P. Anderson NEW YORK SENATORS Robert F. Wagner James M. Mead REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 24; Republicans, 20; American Labor, 1] At large—Matthew J. Merritt; Caroline O’Day 1. Leonard W. Hall 16. William T. Pheiffer 31. Clarence E. Kilburn 2. William B. Barry 17. Joseph Clark Baldwin 32. Francis D. Culkin 3. Joseph L. Pfeifer 18. Martin J. Kennedy 33. Fred J. Douglas 4. Thomas H. Cullen 19. Sol Bloom 34. Edwin Arthur Hall 5. James J. Heffernan 20. ViTo MARCANTONIO 35. Clarence E. Hancock 6. Andrew L. Somers 21. Joseph A. Gavagan 36. John Taber 7. John J. Delaney 22. Walter A. Lynch 37. W. Sterling Cole 8. Donald L. O’Toole 23. Charles A. Buckley 38. Joseph J. O’Brien 9. Eugene J. Keogh 24. James M. Fitzpatrick 39. James W. Wadsworth 10. Emanuel Celler 25. Ralph A. Gamble 40. Walter G. Andrews 11. James A. O'Leary 26. Hamazlton Fish 41. Alfred F. Beiter 12. Samuel Dickstein 27. Lewis K. Rockefeller 42. John C. Buller 13. Louis J. Capozzoli 28. William T. Byrne 43. Daniel A. Reed 14. Arthur G. Klein 29. E. Harold Cluett 15. Michael J. Kennedy 30. Frank Crowther State Delegations PSD rt ~ NORTH CAROLINA SENATORS Josiah W. Bailey Robert R. Reynolds REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 11] Herbert C. Bonner 5. John H. Folger 9. Robert L. Doughton John H. Kerr 6. Carl T. Durham 10. Alfred L. Bulwinkle Graham A. Barden 7. J. Bayard Clark 11. Zebulon Weaver Harold D. Cooley 8. W. O. Burgin NORTH DAKOTA SENATORS Gerald P. Nye William Langer REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Republicans, 2] Usher L. Burdick Charles R. Robertson OHIO SENATORS Robert A. Taft Harold H. Burton REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 12; Republicans, 12] At large—George H. Bender; Stephen M. Young SO ID rt TO. OP CR 155 . Charles H. Elston 9. John F. Hunter 17. J. Harry McGregor William E. Hess 10. Thomas A. Jenkins 18. Lawrence E. Imhoff Greg Holbrock 11. Harold K. Claypool 19. Michael J. Kirwan Robert F. Jones 12. John M. Vorys 20. Martin L. Sweeney Cliff Clevenger 13. A. D. Baumhart, Jr. 21. Robert Crosser Jacob E. Davis 14. Dow W. Harter 22. Frances P. Bolton Clarence J. Brown 15. Robert T. Secrest . Frederick C. Smith 16. William R. Thom OKLAHOMA SENATORS Elmer Thomas Josh Lee REPRESENTATIVES Democrats, 8; Republican, 1] At large— Will Rogers . Wesley E. Disney 4. Lyle H. Boren 7. Victor Wickersham 0010 1 Jack Nichols 5. A. S. Mike Monroney 8. Ross Rizley Wilburn Cartwright 6. Jed Johnson OREGON SENATORS Charles L. McNary Rufus C. Holman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 2] . James W. Mott 2. Walter M. Pierce 3. Homer D. Angell Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA SENATORS James J. Davis Joseph F. Guffey REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 19; Republicans, 15] 1. Leon Sacks 12 . J. Harold Flannery 24. J. Buell Snyder 2. James P. McGranery 13 . Ivor D. Fenton . Charles I. Faddis 3. Michael J. Bradley 14 . Guy L. Moser . Louis E. Graham 4 John Edward 15. Wilson D. Gillette Harve Tibbott Sheridan 16 . Robert F. Rich . Augustine B. Kelley 5. Francis R. Smith 17 . J. William Ditter . Robert L. Rodgers 6. Francis J. Myers 18 . Richard M. Simpson . Thomas E. Scanlon 7. Hugh D. Scott, Jr. 19 . John C. Kunkel . Samuel A. Weiss 8. James Wolfenden 20 . Benjamin Jarrett . Herman P. Eber- 9. Charles L. Gerlach 21 . Francis E. Walter harter 10. J. Roland Kinzer 29 .. Harry L. Haines . Joseph A. McArdle 11. Patrick J. Boland 23 . James E. Van Zandt James A. Wright RHODE ISLAND SENATORS Peter G. Gerry Theodore Francis Green REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Aime J. Forand 2. John E. Fogarty SOUTH CAROLINA SENATORS Ellison D. Smith Burnet R. Maybank REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. L. Mendel Rivers 3. Butler B. Hare 5. James P. Richards 2. Hampton P. Fulmer 4. Joseph R. Bryson 6. John L. McMillan SOUTH DAKOTA SENATORS William J. Bulow Chan Gurney REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2} 1. Karl E. Mundt 2. Francis Case TENNESSEE SENATORS Kenneth McKellar Tom Stewart REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7; Republicans, 2] 1. B. Carroll Reece 4. Albert Gore 7. Herron Pearson 2. John Jennings, Jr. 5. J. Percy Priest 8. Jere Cooper 3. Estes Kefauver 6. Wirt Courtney 9. Clifford Davis State Delegations 141 TEXAS SENATORS Tom Connally W. Lee O’Daniel REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 21] 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.7. Wright Patman 8. Albert Thomas 15. Milton H. West Martin Dies 9. Joseph J. Mansfield 16. R. Ewing Thomason Lindley Beckworth 10. Lyndon B. Johnson 17. Sam M. Russell Sam Rayburn 11. W. R. Poage 18. Eugene Worley Hatton W. Sumners 12. Fritz G. Lanham 19. George H. Mahon Luther A. Johnson 13. Ed Gossett 20. Paul J. Kilday Nat Patton 14. Richard M. Kleberg 21. Charles L. South : | | | | UTAH SENATORS | Elbert D. Thomas Abe Murdock REPRESENTATIVES | [Democrats, 2] 1. Walter K. Granger 2. J. W. Robinson | VERMONT | SENATORS Warren R. Austin George D. Aiken | REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] | At large— Charles A. Plumley | VIRGINIA | ; SENATORS | Carter Glass Harry Flood Byrd | REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] | 1. 2. Schuyler Otis Bland 4. Patrick H. Drewry 7. A. Willis Robertson Winder R. Harris 5. Thomas G. Burch 8. Howard W. Smith | 3. Dave E. Satterfield, Jr. 6. Clifton A. Woodrum 9. John W. Flannagan, Jr. | WASHINGTON | SENATORS | Homer T. Bone Mon C. Wallgren | REPRESENTATIVES | [Democrats, 6] 1. Warren G. Magnuson 3. Martin F. Smith 5. Charles H. Leavy 2. Henry M. Jackson 4. Knute Hill 6. John M. Coffee | | WEST VIRGINIA : SENATORS | Harley M. Kilgore Joseph Rosier I REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] | 1. Robert L. Ramsay 3. Andrew Edmiston 5. John Kee | 2. Jennings Randolph 4. George W. Johnson 6. Joe L. Smith 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 11 | Congressional Directory 9910 WISCONSIN SENATORS RoBeErT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR. Alexander Wiley REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 6; Progressives, 3] . Lawrence H. Smith 5. Lewzs D. Thall 9. MerLIN HuLL HARRY SAUTHOFF 6. Frank B. Keefe 10. BErNArRD J. GEHR-William H. Stevenson 7. Reid F. Murray MANN Thad F. Wasielewski 8. Joshua L. Johns WYOMING SENATORS Joseph C. O’Mahoney H. H. Schwartz REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1] At large— John J. McIntyre ALASKA DELEGATE Anthony J. Dimond COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Joaquin M. Elizalde HAWAII DELEGATE Samuel W. King PUERTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Bolivar Pagén CLASSIFICATION SENATE HOUSE Democrats... © 6 Demoerats. --Republicans... ........ADS 28: Republicans... .... ......._....... Progressive... ............ 1 Progressives. 0... ......-.c..... Independent. .........diciommm lil Farmer-Labor...... oe cuinawe--Vacant. ©. shiecSI dowanl 1| American Labor____________ esky neante. SL Total. 884 96 otal. =~. oo ALPHABETICAL LIST Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commission-ers, showing State and district from which elected, city of residence, and political alinement SENATORS [Democrats in roman (65); Republicans in italics (28); Progressive in SMALL CAPS (1); Independent in italic CAPS Name ° Aiken, George Di Leo Andrews, Charles ©... ......._ Austin Warren’ B20|. .--. Bailey, JoglalWWioL oo. oB00 Ball, Joseph HZ. 220.) ccacaa.a Bankhead, John H., 2d... ......_ Barbour, W. Warten ic... cnn. Barkley, Alben™W.. .. ........: Bilbo, Theodore |... G2.oz. Bone, Homer TL. 220......= Brewster, Rolph'0..__. .-._ Bridges, Styles: 02508 2i{ Brooks, C. Wayland... ©... = Brown, Prentiss M_.._ _..._______ Bulow, Willjlam-Jotiia Bunker, Berkeley L________.____ Burion, Harold HL... 0000 Butler, Hugh A. 29% =... = Byrd, Harry Flood. 2...== -o. Capper, Arthurs loo.ooo. Caraway, Hattie W_____________ Chandler, Albert B.________.____ Chavez, Dennis”. “0002...... Clark, Bennett Champ__________ Clark, D.. Worth >» 200... Connally, Tom. co. naa DanaheryJobn A 078: oo Davis, Jomes Ji P88 Downey, Sheridan’... ....... Doxey, Wall 2101 V3. |... Elender, Allen J20 0... ..o-..0 George, Walter B00 [209 Qerry, Peter 0.030% of. Gillette, Guy oo M./UUIEBSooo Glass, Carter SH G07 0 Green, Theodore Franeis_ ______. Culley, Joseph L__ Fao..._._ Girne, Chan... ee eae Hateh Cave A Hayden, Carl ~~ = Herring, Clyde L._. .......: Hill, ister. oa Holman, Buus. --.....-uz Hughos, James H................. (1); vacant (1); total, 96] State Vermont... ---Florida =... -1---4. Louisiana... Shreveport. Brown, Clarence Jr... 2-1 Zt Ohio. ox.1. Blanchester. Brown, Paul... -ra=tri---10: Georgia... Elberton. Bryson, Joseph Ro... f-----4 | South Carolina__| Greenville. Buck, Frank H .. ...0. 3.| California... Vacaville. BUGKLER, B.T z+. 9 | Minnesota______ Crookston, R. F. D. Buckley, Charles A_________ 23.1 New York... _. New York City. Bulwinkle, Alfred L._______ 10 | North Carolina_| Gastonia. Burch, Thomas CG: ioc ---S.tVirginia.. Martinsville. Burdick, Ushers tome=== At L. | North Dakota__| Williston. Burgin, W-0. _-pei --8 | North Carolina_| Lexington. Butler, JORG wi iris hom = 42 | New York......| Buffalo. Byrne, Willlam, 1. i. 28.:|.:New York... __ Loudonville. Byron, Katharine B__._____ 6.1. Maryland. ..._-Williamsport. Camp, A. Sidney..." ~~. 4: Ceorgia, _ ... Newnan. Canfield, Gordon... drt---8 | New Jersey.____ Paterson. Cannon, Clarence_ _________ 9 Missouri _..... Elsberry. Cannon, Pat: .ceaairt-Ploridacs..._~ Miami. 4 _ Capozzoli; Louis z. -. New J..... 13| York...... New York City. Carlson, Franks ees anis en 6. Kansas: ....... Concordia. Carter, Albert BB... -n-----61 California... Oakland. Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis- Name trict State City Cartwright, Wilburn________ 3 1:Oklshoms.......... McAlester. Case, Droneis bid vows ar: 2 | South Dakota___| Custer. Casey, Joseph Boo..._ 3 | Massachusetts. _| Clinton. Celler, Emanuel-l0 00 00 10 | New York._.__._ Brooklyn. Chapman, VirgilSo ean) 6 | Kentucky... ____ Paris. Chenoweth, J. Edgar. ___ ____ 3 1: Colorado. Lc. Trinidad. Chiperfield, Robert B________ 15° Tinojs. 2 22% ~~~ Canton. Clark, Yi Bayard. >. "5. 7 | North Carolina__| Fayetteville, Clason, Charles B... t.. | .-. 2 | Massachusetts__| Springfield. Claypool, Harold iK* Ohio er. Chillicothe. Clevenger, Clif 5 _ 2 |... SB aOhiol Ci Bryan. Clueit; B. Harold®:' =z"... 29 "New York... ..-Troy. Cochran, John J22 0 13: "Missouri-St. Louis. Coffee, Harry B... 5 | Nebraska_______| Chadron. Coffee, John M =. > 0! 6 | Washington_____ Tacoma. Cole, William P.. Jr... 2 Maryland... Towson. Cole, W. Sterling = 3: oc. 87 |: New York... ..-Bath. Colling; Rosg A... 2 02 2 5" “Mississippi. .-.-Meridian. Colmer, William M_________ 6 | Mississippi_____ Pascagoula. Cooley, Harold D2 0... 4 | North Carolina__| Nashville. Cooper, Jere. ic oo -8 | Tennessee______ Dyersburg. Copeland, Oren. 8. . or... 1" Nebraska... .-Lincoln. Costello, John | 15 | California... ...- M_.-. Hollywood. Courtney, Wirt...... 6 | Tennessee______ Franklin. Cox BE on 2 I Georgia unl Camilla. Cravens, FPadjo..:. .. .. 4 | Arkansas______._ Fort Smith. Crovwford, Fred 'L... . ....... 8 “Michigan. .....-Saginaw. Creal, Bdward W.__. ._.. ... 4 | Kentucky... ___ Hodgenville. Crosser," Robert: 25... 2 y C@hior i Cleveland. Crowthery Frank... 30 | New York______ Schenectady. Culkin, Francis D_ 2. .... 32 |New York... -Oswego. Cullen, Thomas HH... ....-4 | New York...__._ Brooklyn. Cunningham, Paul..___.__.____ 6 Howaiz_== Des Moines. _.. Cortiny Carll Peco 4 | Nebraska_______| Minden. D’ Alessandro, Thomas, Jr____ 3 “Maryland. ..---Baltimore. Davis, Clifford. 2200 9 | Tennessee _____ Memphis. Davis, Jacob. ob * 20 Oho. -i Waverly. Day, Stephen 4-1 =... At Hinols-=. of Evanston. Delaney, Jobn'd 2 i: 7 New York. _..--Brooklyn. Dewey, Charles 8... ....-9 {*Tllinols........-.~ Chicago. Dickstein, Samuel ._________ 12 .{ New York... ..-New York City. Diag, Martin. 2 be 2 i Pexas >. i=: Orange. Dingell, John'D_fi:. 15 { Miehigan.....-=: Detroit. = Dirksen, Everett M -... 16 fllinols.. i Pekin. Disney, Wesley E__________ 1" "Oklahoma... .---Tulsa. Ditier,. J William... ~~... 17 | Pennsylvania___| Ambler. Domengeaux, James________ 8 "Louisiana. .__-Lafayette. Dondero, George A __--_._-_ 17° Michigan. ._.-Royal Oak. Doughton, Robert L_______ : 9 | North Carolina _| Laurel Springs. Douglas, Fred J. so. 2... i. 2° 33. "NewYork... --Utica. Downs, Le Roy Do-iiy i= 4 | Connecticut____| South Norwalk. Drewry, Patrick H-= = . 4] Virginia™ ~~ ---Petersburg. Duncan, Richard M________ 8 Missouri. :::: St. Joseph. Durham, Carl Fo 12 1: 6 | North Carolina _| Chapel Hill. Duworshak, Henry Cc nur izz= >t Idaho. =. 2: Burley. Eoton, Chayles At = i-== 5 | New Jersey._____ Watchung, Plainfield. Eberharter, Herman P______ ~ 32 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Edmiston, Andrew._________ 3 | West Virginia___| Weston. Xliot, Thomas J = 2 1--~ 9 | Massachusetts__| Cambridge. Alphabetical Last REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name triet State City Elliott, Alfred doi... 10 | California. _.____ Tulare. Ellis, Clyde T-al ol... Si Arkansas... Bentonville. Elston, Charlest Hi... 1. [0Ohlos & oides Cincinnati. Engel, Albert J. 30020. uuu 9: {“Miehigan......-Muskegon. Englebright, Harry L________ 2:{< California... ..-Nevada City. FPaddis, Charlesil_ 0 .. 25 | Pennsylvania. ..| Waynesburg. Fellows, Fromk.... Slee.cu 3 die... i. Bangor. Fenton, Ivor: D.853508, vue 13 | Pennsylvania_.__| Mahanoy City. Fish, Hamiljono. oieno -26 | New York______| Garrison. Fitzgerald, William J_______ 2 | Connecticut-__.| Norwich. Fitzpatrick, James M_______ 24 | New York..._... New York City. Flaherty, Thomas A________ 11 | Massachusetts. _| Boston. Flannagan, John W., Jr_____ 9: Virginia... Bristol. Flannery, J. Harold _..____. 12 | Pennsylvania. __| Pittston. Fogarty, JohmiE ae i... 2 | Rhode Island. __| Harmony. Folger, John H_olool ..... 5 | North Carolina__| Mount Airy. Forand, Aimesdii 0 on... 1 | Rhode Island.._| Cumberland. Ford, Aaron Lane________.._ 4 | Mississippi-_----Ackerman. Ford, Leland M_ 30: .... 16 «California. ...... Santa Monica. Ford, Thomas: . ..... 14 | California______ Los Angeles. Fosgi Fulmer, Hampton P________ 2 | South Carolina__| Orangeburg. Gale, Richard Ppl... 3 3 | Minnesota__._..._ Mound. Gamble, Balph AL. ici)... 25 (¢New York. ..... Larchmont. CGathings, BoCaoco a2. as 1 | Arkansas______._ West Memphis. Gavagan, Joseph A_________ 215i:New York. ..... New York City. Gearhart, Bertrand W_______ 9 California. ...---Fresno. GEHRMANN, BERNARD J_____ 10::|>*"Wisconsin_. ..... Mellen, R. F. D. Gerlach, Charles zi... 9 | Pennsylvania___| Allentown. Gibzon, JohmwSs Luo)i... .5 8 ["Georgia..... -.-Douglas. Gifford, Charles Losil. ..... 15 | Massachusetts. _| Cotuit. Gilchrist, Fred Co... ._... SHdedowa. 2... J.... Laurens. Gillette, Wilson Duo... ---15 | Pennsylvania. __| Towanda. Gillie, George W____________ diilndiana. Fort Wayne. Gore, Alberts soo... 4 | Tennessee. ._____ Carthage. Gossett, Bd = sua. |... 13 loéxas: 1... Wichita Falls. Graham, Louis E___________ 26 | Pennsylvania. __| Beaver. Granger, Walter K_________ 1 0tsh-S 0... 4... Cedar City. Grant, George M__.___.___._ 2 «Alabama. ...... Troy. Grant, Robert Azo i200... Schbdndioans. .. South Bend. Green, Lexaoooaiiadl -2p: lorida_ 5... Starke. oo Gregory, Noble J___.._..____ 1 |: Kentucky. .--.-Mayfield. Guyer, U. 8. raed) 1... 2p Kansas... ..... Kansas City. Gwynne, John W_________.__ xdowa. 2b 0... Waterloo. Haines, Harry L._ 2022 i... 22 | Pennsylvania___| Red Lion. Hall, Bdwin Arthurc:c_ 34 | New York _____ Binghamton. Hall, LeonardoWooua2 1: New York. ..... Oyster Bay. sd. Halleck, CharlessA.-0... 2 (Indiana...._ Rensselaer. Hancock, Clarence E________ 35 | New York:____._ Syracuse. Hare, Butler i |. _-3 | South Carolina__| Biavaoa Saluda. Harness, Forest: Aso... 5 |cIndianal ._i.... Kokomo. Harrington, Vincent F______ Qhlowa. 2a. 1... Sioux City. Harris, Orenzso wad 7 |vArkansas. . ..._._ El Dorado. Harris. Winders RL 2... 2: Vifginia.. . +...--Norfolk. Hart, Bdward Joo. 14 | New Jersey._____ Jersey City. Harter, Dow Wuisao ¥H:4Ohio. J... Akron. Hartley, FrediAs ro... ......--10 | New Jersey. ____ Kearny. Healey, Arthur D__________ 8 | Massachusetts. _| Somerville. Hébert, F. Edward. .___.____ 1:| Louisiana. ..... New Orleans. Heffernan, James J...__ 5 iNew York. ....... Brooklyn. 150 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Dis-Statetrict Cit, y Heidinger, James V......... 24 (Ilinolsis......... Fairfield. Hendricks, JOB uno nnmws Sc Florida, ........ De Land. Hess; Willian Bisl vn 2 [Olesen Cincinnati. Hill, Knute. .pboiaii/ mun 4 | Washington_____ Prosser. Hill, William S-obcus. nn 2.|i Colorado... ........ Fort Collins. Hinshaw; Colo cumindl wma 11: f: California. ....... ... Pasadena. Hobbs, Sam. aoa... 4 | Alabama._______ Selma. Hoffman: Clare B..... ..... 4 | Michigan_______ Allegan. Holbroek, Greg. vu... 8 | Oho. iiss... Hamilton. Holmes, Pebr GLuvcecen.nn... 4 | Massachusetts. | Worcester. Hook, Frank E............ 12 (Michigan. ....... Ironwood. Hope, Clifford B..cncil om 7 Ronwas i... . Garden City. Houston, John Mo... ...... O::Ramsay.... ..... Wichita, R. F. D. Howell, Boon.. uuiviiil mum Hui, MertiNvens-t nd 21 Ninoisil.......... 9 | Wisconsin. _____ Springfield. Black River Falls. Hunter, JomiP. oll ....00 9:rOhio, te. Toledo. Imhoff, Lawrence E________ 184 Ohio, Tel... St. Clairsville. 1zae, Bd. Vo coeaimiod.nme 20. |. California... San Diego. Jackson, Henry M________._ 2 | Washington... Everett. Jacobsen, William S________ 2d:lowar loa. Clinton. Jarman, Pete... -..oois..oo 6: Alabama... ..... Livingston. Jarrett, Benjamins. JJ... 20 | Pennsylvania___| Farrell. Jenkins, Thomas A........_..._ 10 Ohio. 2... ).... Ironton. Jenks, A5thur Be. ooecnnnn- 1 | New Hampshire_| Manchester. Jennings, Jot, Jr iced.ax 2 | Tennessee. .._.._._. Knoxville. Jensen, Ben B.. .uicaisiol mn Ydidowan 2... ..._. Exira. Johns, Joshua L.............. 8 | Wisconsin______ Algoma. Johnson, Anton'J oun -...... 4: Mllinoist.._.._. Macomb. Johnson, George W._.________ Johnson, Jed... .iiollak 4 | West Virginia___| 6 | Oklahoma. _____ Parkersburg. Anadarko. ¥ g Johnson, Luther A......... Olean ol... ... Corsicana. Johnson, Lyndon B________._ 10: : Texans ....... Johnson City. Johnson, Noble'J....c....... 6} Indians.......... Terre Haute. Johnson, Ward... ico. ...... 18-|:.Californis.. ........ Long Beach. Jones, Robert Foioiv.inn.nn.. 4 420ho. J... .. Lima. Jonkman, Bariel Jou... ....: 5]: Michigan. ...... Grand Rapids. Keon, Roberi Wi shoo)... 12 | New Jersey_____ Livingston. Kee, Jom... 300... 5 | West Virginia___| Bluefield. Keefe, Frank B.......uuun.... Kefauver, Estes. __._______ 6 | Wisconsin______ 3 | Tennessee. _____ Oshkosh. Chattanooga. Kelley, Augustine B________ 28 | Pennsylvania___| Greensburg. Relly, Edward Ascccz. io... Suliilllinels. 2. Chicago. Kennedy, Martin J_________ 18 iNew York...... New York City. Kennedy, Michael J________ 15 |: New York. ._._._._ New York City. Keogh, Eugene J___________ 9 [New York....... Brooklyn. Kerr, John Boi oeusvl 2 | North Carolina__| Warrenton. Kilburn, Clarence B=... 31 | New York______ Malone. Kilday, Paul Joevrn 20 “Texas 2... .... San Antonio. Kinzer,'J. Roland...oi 10 | Pennsylvania___| Lancaster. Kirwan, Michael J_________ 19: Ohio. 2... Youngstown. Kleberg, Richard M________ 14 pWexan.. . ........ Corpus Christi. Klein, Arthur G1o........... 14 | New York______ New York City. EKwuison, Harold i207..... 6 | Minnesota______| St. Cloud. Kocialkowski, Leo__________ 8S. Hlinols: "o_o... Chicago. Kopplemann, Herman P____ 1 | Connecticut____| Hartford. Kramer, Charles. __..._._.._. 13 | “California. ..... Los Angeles. Kunkel, John Cioacui..... 5i Lambertson, William P____ __ 19 | Pennsylvania___| LifiRansas. ...... Harrisburg. Fairview. Landis, Gerald W_oi:l. ..... 7 [vindiana. oi... Linton. Yanhom, Fritz CG... ¥2' Tons... Fort Worth. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name alii State City Larrabee, William H________ 13: Indisna. 1... New Palestine. Lea, Clarence v i. 18sCalifornia. _... Santa Bo local Rosa. Leavy, Charles H__________ 5 | Washington_____ Spokane. LeCompte, Karl M__________ Sfideown..L .-Corydon. Lesingki, Johmwe alateo_o 16 | Michigan_______ Dearborn. Lewis, Lawrence_._________ if [Colorado i... Denver. Ludlow, Touls. ual... 12/ (*Indianal __ | ._._ Indianapolis. Lyneh, Walter A-__ .___._._.. 22: aNew York... ... New York City. McArdle, Joseph A_________ 33 | Pennsylvania.__| Pittsburgh. McCormack, John W_______ 12 | Massachusetts__| Boston. McGehee, Dan R__________ 7 | Mississippi_____ Meadville. McGranery, James P_______ 2 | Pennsylvania.__| Philadelphia. MeGregor, J. Harrys... 174a0hiol LL jf ..-West Lafayette. MelIntyre, JohnJooal AtL. Wyoming_______ Douglas. 4 | MecKeough, Raymond S_____ 2abdllinoist ho Chicago. McLaughlin, Charles F_____ 2 {Nebraska | __. Omaha. McLean, Donald H_ ________ 6 | New Jersey_____ Elizabeth. McMillan, Joh Luli... 6 | South Carolina__| Florence. Maas, Melvin J ...c 4 | Minnesota______ St. Paul. J scold Maciejewski, Anton F______ 6:lalilinodst -2. Cicero. Maciora, Lucien J__._______ At L. | Connecticut__._._.| New Britain. Magnuson, Warren G_______ 1 | Washington_____ Seattle. Mahon, George H_________. 19 Tesas Ll... Colorado City. Manasco, Carter___________ Zi: Alnbama,.. Jasper. Mansfield, Joseph J.________ Of vPexas LL..._. Columbus. MARCANTONIO, VITO______ 20 | New York______ New York City. Martin, Joseph W., Jr______ 14 | Massachusetts__| North Attleboro. Martin, Thomas E__________ 1 ifilowal & op. Towa City. . Mason, Noah M____________ 12 linoist =. Oglesby. May, Andrew Joo: 7 |: Kentueky....... Prestonsburg. Merritt, Matthew J________ At L. | New York______ Malba (Flushing). Meyer, John Aozoogeii. oC 4 | Maryland. _.____ Baltimore. Michener, Barl Coca... 2 {Michigan _.._._. Adrian. Mills, Newt!'Vooiocbell 5:1} Yoouigiana. ...... Monroe. Mills, Wilbur Dscicll) 2/| Arkansas... Kensett. Mitchell, Arthur W_________ bepclllinoist Chicago. Monroney, A. S. Mike______ 5 | Oklahoma. ____._ Oklahoma City. Moser, Guy L__.Uoya li. a 14 | Pennsylvania___| Douglassville. Moti, James Wi... __._.. 1 Yegon! A Salem. Mundi, Karli By. coe... 1 | South Dakota___| Madison. Murdock, John Rosi... At LigeArizona.. Tempe. Murray, Beid _. .. 7-1 Wiseonsin... Odgensburg. Fiadooi Myers, Francis Joc... 6 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Nelson, William L__________ 2 {Missouri ...... Columbia. Nichols, Jacko iL suis! oo. 2 | Oklahoma.____._. Eufaula. Norrell my WL iB 000 lo... 6! Arkansas. __.._. Monticello. Norton, Mary Pi... 13 | New Jersey.____._ Jersey City. O’Brien, George D_________ 13 | Michigan. _..._.. Detroit. QO’ Brien, Josep J iii... 38 | New York__.____ East Rochester. O'Connor, James B..=. 2:{-Montana___._... Livingston. O'Day, Carolinessall; At L."{"New York._..... Rye. O'Hara, Joseph Pil... 2 | Minnesota__.____ Glencoe. O’Leary, James A__________ 11 | New York______ West New Brighton. Oliver, James C__ uid EleMaine.. SL South Portland. O’Neal, Emmet iol) Lo 3 | Kentucky. ..... Louisville. Osmers, Frapk:QC. Jr. 9 | New Jersey___._._ Haworth. O’Toole, Donald L_________ 8 | New York____.__ Brooklyn. Pace, Stephen.) ola... 3 |“GCeorgia. ....... Americus. Paddock, George 42001... 10:0 Minoist Evanston. Patman, Wrightoon Li __L.... IdaPexag. c .-L.o. Texarkana. 152 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Dis-trict State Cit y Patrick, Lutherol cool... 9 [ Alabama. ._..____ Birmingham. Patton, Nobisodl Pearson, Herron nian oul oo oo ili 7 | Pexasy ood Tennessee. _____ Crockett. Jackson. Peterson, Hugh. _..._.__... 1 sCGebrgin. Loc: Ailey. Peterson, J. Hardin_________ LiliTlorida Lakeland. Pfeifer, Joseph Locooc ooo Saft New York... Brooklyn. Pheiffer, William T-.....___. 16: New York. ..... New York City. Pierce, Walter M___________ 2" (“Oregon ........ La Grande. Pittenger, William A________ 8 | Minnesota_____._ Duluth. Plauché, Vanee_ nil... 7 | Louisiana_______ Lake Charles. Ploeser, Walter C-.............. 12]: Missouri..........- St. Louis. Plumley, Charles A_________ AtL. | Vermont__._____ Northfield. Poage, W. Ro iiioniaii 11 ¢Texas.L....... Waco. Powers, D. Longs iiae nwa. 4 | New Jersey.____._ Trenton. Priest, J. Perey.ouucni duu. 5 | Tennessee. ____._ Nashville. Rabaut, louis Cuil 14 | Michigan_______ Grosse Pointe Park. Ramsay, Robert Li_________ 1 | West Virginia___| Follansbee. Ramspeck, Robert__________ B{:Ceorgia. _..... Atlanta. Randolph, Jennings________ 2 | West Virginia___| Elkins. Rankin, Jeanneilte. .o_. -__-_ ii Montana... Missoula. Bonkin, Jom B.l 1 | Mississippi_____ Tupelo. Rayburn, Sam. Siler... Reece, B. Carrols. oul... 4 1 | exas. LYE. Tennessee. _____ Bonham. Johnson City. Reed, Chauncey W_ .._______ 1: Hlinoly. 0.3L.0 West Chicago. Reed, Dawiel A_.iiniun- 43 | New York_____._ Dunkirk. Bees, Edward H....a0u.cuu-. 4. | "Kansas. ........ Emporia. Bich, BobertiP.... aoe vuni 16 | Pennsylvania ___| Woolrich. Richards, James P_________ Rivers, L. Mendel __________ Bizley, Boss pasion dues 5 1 8 | | | South Carolina__{ South Carolina__| Oklahoma ______ Lancaster. North Charleston. Guymon. Robertson, A. Willis________ Robertson, Charles BR. _______ At 7 1 L. | "Vivginda_ 4. ...o North Dakota_._| Lexington. Bismarck. Robinson, 3. WW.. .- ABE UE SRNE ITE Provo. Robsion, John Mo-ob. 9 | Kentucky._._____ Barbourville. Rockefeller, Lewis K_ .______ 27 «New York... .... Chatham. Rockwell, Robert F...... _... 4 | Colorado..______| Paonia. Rodgers, Robert L___________ 29 | Pennsylvania. __| Erie. Rogers, Edith Nourse________ 5 | Massachusetts__| Lowell. Bogers, Will... ..oalch. naa At L. | Oklahoma. ____._ Oklahoma City. Bolph, Thomas -wuiicll. u..i 4 | California_._.____ San Francisco. Romjue, Milton A_________ 1 pMissouri.. ..... Macon. Russell, Sam Mi .olii.... 19: -Texas... ..acaa Stephenville. Sabath, Adolph J... ____.___ SrjcIliholsy. a. Chicago. Sacks, Leon... incline... 1 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Sanders, Jared Y., Jr_______ 6 | Louisiana_______ Baton Rouge. Sasscer, Lansdale G._______ 5 | Maryland. __.__._ Upper Marlboro. Satterfield, Dave E., Jr_____ Sil Virginiaz =. _.__. Richmond. SavraOPF, HARRY. oll... 2. Wisconsin... Madison. Scanlon, Thomas E_________ 30 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Schaefer, Edwin M_________ 22: Hlinoles... -.L... Belleville. Schuetz, Leonard W________ 7 Minoig_ Li... . Chicago. Schulte, William T_________ Ll:Indianga _.__..__ Hammond. Scott Hugh DoJ asi i... 7 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Serugham, James G__.____.__ At Lo Nevada... ..... Reno. Secrest, Robert T-.________ sO. 2. Caldwell. Shafer, Poul Woncontinnn.- 3 | Michigan_______| Battle Creek. Shanley, James A__________ 3 | Connecticut____| New Haven. Shannon, Joseph B_________ 5] Missouri... ._... Kansas City. Sheppard, Sheridan, Harry R...__._.. John Edward. ____ 19 4 | | California______ Pennsylvania___| Yucaipa. Philadelphia. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name iriot State City Short, Dewey. coluainio...... %:(iMissouri.......... Galena. Sikes, Robert L. F_________ Sailleoridac.... i... Crestview. Simpson, Richard M..__ .___. 18 | Pennsylvania_.__| Huntingdon. Smith, Francis Rooalil2_ 5 | Pennsylvania... _| Philadelphia. Smith, Frederick:Clal S:Ohle =X... Marion. LU | Smith, Howard Wau:© 8: xVirginia. .__ .... Alexandria. Smith, Joe Li... aii). 6 | West Virginia___| Beckley. Smith, Lawrence H. Sich... 24 :Wisconsin..... Racine. Smith, Margaret Chase. _ ____ 2Mdine &. 1... Skowhegan. Smith, Martini Bool... 3 | Washington_____ Hoquiam. Snyder, J. Buell: iol... 24 | Pennsylvania___| Perryopolis. Somers, Andrew L____.______ 6 | New York______ Brooklyn. South, Charles L.._.._..___ 21 exam. SF. Coleman. Sparkman, Johnidaaacl..... 8: Alabams.. ....... Huntsville. Spence, Brent icloidl. 5 | Kentucky....._. Fort Thomas. Springer, Raymond S___.____ 10:4cIndiana. .... Connersville. Starnes, Joe... aiden... SiloAlabama. _...._. Guntersville, Steagall, Henry B.__ Sf Alabama.1 Ozark. Stearns, Foster oes 2 | New Hampshire_| Hancock. Siefan, Karl jonascosncaiis 3 | Nebraska_______| Norfolk. Stevenson, William H_ ______ 3 | Wisconsin.......| La Crosse. Stratton, William G.I. AU Lives...1 Morris. Sullivan, Jom . .:.. lio Missourl. .... J St. Louis. B.._.._ Sumner, Jesste. . «1-verinss 18: Illinois. iir..... Milford. Sumners, Hatton W________ Bf lexag ios iL Dallas. Sutphin, William H__.______ 3 | New Jersey.____ Matawan. Sweeney, Martin L_________ 20--Ohio =o Cleveland. Taber, John. oains onan 36 | New York....._._ Auburn. Tale, Henry Ooodo-22222 4 i Yowa. end Decorah. Tarver, Malcolm C._... =~ Ll Goorin. nner Dalton. Tenerowicz, Rudolph G_____ 1 { "Michigan... Hamtramck, Terry, David D-> o----— 5 Arkansas ___._ Little Rock. Thill Lewis Dorr odin 5={-Wiseonsin.. Milwaukee. Thom, Willllam-BR... 16: Ohl... Canton. Thomas, Alber... Si Texas vo Houston. Thomas, J. Parnell. 7 | New Jersey_____ Allendale. Thomason, R. Ewing_______ 16 eas. Sn El Paso. Tibholl, Harte. weieecnex 27 | Pennsylvania. __| Ebensburg. Tinkham, George Holden____ _ 10 | Massachusetts__| Boston. Tolan, Joh HB... 7 (California... Oakland. Traynor, Phillip A... =. At L. | Delaware_______ Wilmington. Treadway, Allen T2. .... 1 | Massachusetts__| Stockbridge. Van Zandl, James B.__.-. 23 | Pennsylvania___| Altoona. Vincent, Beverly M________ 2 Kentucky Brownsville. Vinson, Carl. =. Sg 6.} Georgia. ....... Milledgeville. VYoorhis, Jerry... one 12 | Californin. .....-San Dimas. Yoryssdohn M-. ........ 12 0hio..—..-. Columbus. Vryeelond, Albert L..__——____ 11 | New Jersey_____ East Orange. Wadsworth, James W_______ 39 | New York__.____ Geneseo. Walter, Pranciec BE... 21 | Pennsylvania___| Easton. Yard, David J... .-.... 1 { Maryland... Salisbury. Wasielewski, Thad F_______ 4 | Wisconsin_ _____ Milwaukee. Weaver, Zebulon. __________ 10 | North Carolina__| Asheville. Weiss, Samuel A___________ 31 | Pennsylvania___| Glassport. Welch: Bichord J. oni 5 Chlifornia._ San Francisco. Wene, Elmer H............ 2 | New Jersey_____ Vineland. West, Milton H... _..... 15 Texan. .-= Brownsville. Wheat, Williom H_.._...__ 19: Tlnols-~~ Rantoul. Whelchel, B, Frank... ... 9 | Georgia... a... Gainesville. White, Compton I.......... Yildaho. Clarksfork. 154 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-. Name bic) State City Whitten, Jamie Luu... ...-2 | Mississippi-__-_ Charleston. Whittington, William M.____ 3 | Mississippi-._._-_ Greenwood. Wickersham, Vietor________ % (Oklahoma. .___._ Mangum. Wigglesworth, Richard B_____ 18 | Massachusetts__.| Milton. Williams, Clyde.o. vo... 8 | Missouri... Hillsboro. Wilson, Borl oii lone... 9 indiang.-.. ..-.. Huron. Winter, Thomas. D.....—.......... S| Wanang......... Girard. . Wolcott, Jesse Pica... 7: Michigan............ Port Huron. Wolfenden, James. . — ———____ 8 | Pennsylvania.__| Upper Darby. Wolverton, Charles A..._. 1 | New Jersey._____ Merchantville. Woodrufl, Boy Ot ticl 10 | Michigan_______ Bay City. Woodrum, Clifton A________ 67 Virginia...... Roanoke. Worley, Eugene____________ I8 tllexas. Shamrock. Wright, JamesiA. iii... 34 | Pennsylvania.___.| Carnegie. Young, Stephen M_________ AL Ohio. la. Cleveland. Youngdahl, Oscar. oc... 5 | Minnesota______ Minneapolis. Zimmerman, Orville_ _______ 10 {| Missouri_._._.... Kennett. DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Commonwealth, Name Title insular possession, City or Territory Dimond, Anthony J_____ Delegate_.| Alaska___________ Valdez. Elizalde, Joaquin M.1____| Res. Com_| Philippines. ______ Manila. King, Samuel Wo vicn--c-Delegate__| Hawaii___________ Honolulu. Pagsin, Bolivar?.....---Res. Com.| Puerto Rico...... San Juan. 1 No political affiliation. 2 Coalitionist. TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS -Crass II..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1943 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 23; Republicans, 8; Independent, 1] Name Party Residence Balleyrdogialn iW ot dee D. Raleigh, N. C. Ball, Joseph Ht on ToT R. St. Paul, Minn. Bankhead doin B24. ~~ =r r--e-~=-D. Jasper, Ala. BrideessBivlag tr errs R. East Concord, N. H. Brooke, C-Wavland 2, ... 5 —Jro-r-rraeees R. Chicago, Ill. Brown, Prentiss...i--~~ 1 D. St. Ignace, Mich. .. Buloy: WAM Je ere cei en moma D. Beresford, S. Dak. Capper, arthur: ot ol. dara IR: Topeka, Kans. Chandler Abert B21. creme D. Versailles, Ky. Doxey Wall ot rareaaa aa D. Holly Springs, Miss. Blender, Mllen d ooo ooo D. Houma, dy... corinne La. ngs, Carer eee IT D. Lynchburg, Va. Green, Theodore Francis... ... = 2 ~~ D. Providence, R. I. Hatch @GaplA tron D. Clovis, N. Mex. Heming,,Clyde: le 2 ~_ 1. ~~ 4 =r D. Des Moines, Iowa. Hughes dames dd 4 err D. Dover, Del. Johnsons dwn. i. D. Craig, Colo. Tin i ae Re naan ll De ies inne D. Norman, Okla. Yodee,; Henry. Cabol, Jr... Jo... R. Beverly, Mass. MeNory Chawles 0 .... ... .L-— R. Salem, Oreg., R. F. D. Maybank Borel RS... = me D. Charleston, S. C. Murray, JANES I .... ced enemaa D. Butte, Mont. NOTRE, George We i... Coa Ind. McCook, Nebr. QO PDonielt W. Leal" 1 5 freemen D. Fort Worth, Tex. Boder Joseph? i D. Fairmont, W. Va. Russell Richard Bs ee D. Winder, Ga. Sehwarte, I: Ho ny D. Casper, Wyo. Smathers, Willim H._..._. ...... .. ...-D. Margate, N. J. Speneer, Tdoyd &-= ean D. Hope, Ark. Stewart, TOMY... mmm senda ns D. Winchester, noses Tenn, Thomas, Jon VW. oon a R. Gooding, Idaho. White, Wallnee H.. Ir... nee R. Auburn, Maine. 1 Appointed by Governor Oct. 14, 1940. 2 Elected Nov. 5, 1940. 8 Appointed by Governor Oct. 9, 1939; elected Nov. 5, 1940. 4 Elected Sept. 23, 1941. 5 Elected Sept. 30, 1941. 6 Elected June 28, 1941. 7 Appointed by Governor Jan. 13, 1941. 8 Elected Nov. 8, 1938. 9 Appointed by Governor Jan. 27, ig elected Nov. 5, 1940. 10 Appointed by Governor Apr. 1, 1941. 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 12 157 Congressional Directory Crass ITI.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1945 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 21; Republicans, Name Party Aiken, Ceorge Dhl. . aaat a R. oooaan Barkley; AlbentWi oi) ialon BN Solr. ‘D. Bone, Homer. B. -.c var cians seats seas ates, Caraway Hatlle W. .. co a al D. Clark, Bennett Champ. 1. ood eo D. Olark. DD. Worth... LO he. ila D. Banaherr John AS een R. Davis, Jamesa) ce cmt ie em RB: Downey, Sheridan ie na i= -aptaees D. George, Walter BF. _ ... i: od oe aol D. Ollette, Guy Ml. ne i= gman D. Ty AR BE Ra il SERA R. Hayden, CoTl. reac sm ts pgmmamas D. HE Lister cm i-ard a D. Holman, Rufus C. , oe-i ocdae one R. LACE, SCOT GY tis ows 4 aim ein ria a 2 ime D. MeCarean, Pat. coc i pw his .con oo D. Nye, Qeralld PP... cea be an R. Overton, JOAN Wo. or ie no D. Pepper, lange... o.oo to pric eeeinran- By, Reed, Civde Mas oo iain =o = -iors diem semi = nis R. Reynolds, RoBeT bai. or. 1 = pp fe =m on om D. Smith Bllicon PD. cover fom h ea D. Taft, Robert A or cao I~ angen= oh alm RB. Thomas, Blbert Dur te eo oa D. Thomas, BlImer. o.oo cad nga mina ma D. Tobey, Charles W.__ odo a bi ooo ous R. Tydinge, MYard Bon 1 immednn ccnsm ans D. Van Nuys, Frederick__._____ ALE RR D. Wadrer, Robert fl. one -t-vsigel~==a-amae D. Wiley, Alexandre: oust ~~ sims mmm oa B. 1 Elected Nov. 5, 1940. 10; vacant 1] Residence Putney, Vt. Paducah, Ky. Tacoma, Wash. Jonesboro, Ark. University City, Mo. Pocatello Idaho. Portland, Conn. Pittsburgh, Pa. Claremont, Calif. Vienna, Ga. Cherokee, Iowa. Yankton, S. Dak. Phoenix, Ariz. Montgomery, Ala. Portland, Oreg. Havana, Ill. Reno, Nev. Cooperstown, N. Dak. Alexandria, La. Tallahassee, Fla. Parsons, Kans. Asheville, N. C. Lynchburg, S. C. Cincinnati, Ohio. Salt Lake City, Utah. Medicine Park, Okla. Temple, N. H. Havre de Grace, Md. Indianapolis, Ind. New York City, N. VY. Chippewa Falls, Wis. Terms of Service Crass IL—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1947 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 21; Republicans, 10; Progressive, 1] Name Party Residence Andrews, Charles O_o _. _ _-.% "= __ iD. Orlando, Fla. Austin Warren RB _.. __ _.— ~. R. Burlington, Vt. Barbour, Wa WaLteh...... ux de cen R. Locust, N. srsnsirars J. Bilbo, Theodore:CG =... D. Poplarville, Miss. BrewstersBalph O. ...o vo oo awe 3 ~ nat B. Dexter, Maine. Bunker, Berkeley ._ col. __ _o D. Las Vegas, Nev. Lt... Burton, Harold Ho, onoad or R. Cleveland, Ohio. Butler, Bush i&. = ar. on. R. Omaha, Nebr. Byrd Harry Blood, ..o0 esc nstor -i 20% D. Berryville, Va. Chaves, Dennis. oo $f eo vie iene D. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Connally Tom]. udev ca ner ie sos tn D. Marlin, Tex. Gerry, Peter Br. sor a ah deat D. Warwick, R. I. Goley, Josep Ma... bce bam manage mers D. Pittsburgh, Pa. Johnson, Hiram W. ..nis moo pae Ee R. San Francisco, Calif. Kilgore, Havley Mo. oon...mmnnani D. Beckley, W. Va. err La TPolielte, Bobert M., Ire... nears Prog. | Madison, Wis. Longer, William 1... conn iim an anh R. Bismarck, N. Dak. MePariandi Ernest iW... -nome spre = 0 Ud or 37 Tueag, Seobb-W_ Somaliaod Minelsur wl lilofi) | Jan. 38, 1939 Beed, Clyde M =... Koneaeee oo Tat, Robert = . A... Ohio... Tobey, Charles W.........:.... New Hampshire_____ Wiley, Alexander_______________ .. Wisconsin... 33.1 Stewart, Tom? .o oucocisno Tennessee_ _ ________ Jan. 16,1939 39 l.Chandler, Albert BS... Rentucky. Oct. 9, 1939 8 Mr. Gerry also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1917, to Mar. 3, 1929. 4 Sworn in Jan. 19, 1937. 8 Sworn in Apr. 15, 1937. 6 Mr. Barbour also served in the Senate from Dec. 1, 1931, to Jan. 3, 1937. " Elected Nov. 8, 1938, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Nathan L. Bachman. 8 Appointed Oct. 9, 1939, and elected Nov. 5, 1940 to fill the unexpired term of Senator M. M. Logan. 162 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF Rank Name 40 | Thomas, John 8. goizeieaill [_. 41 | Ball, Joseph H.W:0lel nluullLo . 42 | Brooks, C. Wayland ¥__________ 43 | Bunker, Berkeley L212... _____ 44 | Wallgren, Mon C.Builossie Brewster, Ralph O.-ooeciil Burton, Harold Hic i a. i. Butler, Hugh A... chill Kilgore, Harley M.......co0 0... 45 [{Langer, William. _____sob McFarland, Ernest W__________ Murdock, AbellzgmablLoo via. Tunnell,: James M cocizing.. Willis, Raymond: Bal ouaii._.___ 46 | Aiken, George D.14_ ________.____ 47 Rogier, Joseph B. _oluso|. a) 48 | Spencer, Lloyd 16. _cucdasio 49 | O'Danjel, W. Lee lasfl 50 | Doxey, Wall 8 _saliovy 51:| Maybank, Burnet R.2® coo. 9 Appointed Jan. 27, 1940, and elected Nov. 5, 1940, to fill Mr. Thomas also served in the Senate from June 30, 1928, State Idaho. a2 wwinnod L Minnesota_..._______ Minoje... = _dooscl Nevada... 2000.2 Washingtonzo os.of Maine... 0. 538004 Ohio. =... Blaustl Nebraskal zo. il.23 West Virginia_______ North Dakota. _...__ Arizona. Jf arl malic Uiah. a. amnion. 2 Delaware... gall ig Indians) siolbood Vermont. 01 Fuss. 8 West Virginia_______ ATEONENG.. « nm Texas. Jods. Tua, Mississippi. JL . 0. 40 South Carolina______ the unexpired term of Senator to Mar. 3, 1933. SENATORS—Continued Beginning of present service Jan. Oct. Nov. Nov. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Apr. Aug. 27, 1940 14, 1940 22, 1940 27, 1940 19, 1940 3, 1941 10, 1941 13, 1941 1, 1941 4, 1941 Sept. 29, 1941 Nov. 5, 1941 William E. Borah 10 Appointed Oct. 14, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Ernest Lundeen. 11 Elected Nov. 5, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of Senator J. Hamilton Lewis. 12 Appointed Nov. 27, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Key Pittman. 13 Appointed Dec. 18, 1940, to fill unexpired term of Senator Lewis B. Schwellenbach; was previously elected on Nov. 5, 1940, for the term commencing on Jan. 3, 1941. 14 Elected Nov. 5, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Ernest W. Gibson. 15 Appointed Jan. 13, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Matthew M. Neely.y 16 Appointed Apr. 1, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of Senator John E. Miller, ho was elected to fill the unexpired term of Senator Joseph T. Robinson. 17 Elected June 28, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Morris Sheppard. 18 Elected Sept. 23, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Pat Harrison. 19 Elected Sept. 30, 1941, to fill the unexpired term of Senator James F. Byrnes. Terms of Service CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE [*Elected to fill a vacancy; fresigned; } unseated by contested election] Name State i * Congresses (inclusive) oi 18 terms, consecutive Sabath, Adolph J________ Fes a3 5 | 60th to 77th. o- Mar. 4, 1907 16 terms, consecutive Doughton, Robert Li_____ NC... 9 62dtoT7th-..-. Mar. 4, 1911 15 terms, consecutive Rayburn, Sam. ......00 Tex 4 | 63d-totiTth ...._.- Mar. 4, 1913 Sumners, Hatton W______ Tex__._. Bl 63d to TTthi oo Mar. 4, 1913 Treadway, Allen T_______ Mass _ _ YT 63dto 77th... Mar. 4, 1913 Vinson, Carl... ......-0. Ga. 6 263d to77th. Nov. 3,1914 14 terms, consecutive Steagall, Henry B________ Alp L1 D3 | 64th to 77th = Mar. 4, 1915 Tinkham, George Holden_| Mass___| 10 | 64th to 77th________ Mar. 4, 1915 18 terms, consecutive Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ Ya. ..... 1 {%5th to 77th... July 2, 1918 Knutson, Harold _______ Minn. _ 6 [65hhto 77th... Mar. 4, 1917 Lea, Clarence F_________ Calf: _ 1 [60thto 77th... Mar. 4, 1917 Mansfield, Joseph J______ Tex. 9 | 60thto 77th Mar. 4, 1917 13 terms, not consecutive Crosser, Robert__________ Ohio___| 21 | 63d to 65th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 77th. 12 terms, consecutive Crowther, Frank_________ NHY | 30 66th to 77th... Mar. 4, 1919 Cullen, Thomas H_______ Ney x 4 | 66thto Th... Mar. 4, 1919 Drewry, Patrick H........". Via, lB 4 | *66th to 77th... Apr. 27,1920 Pish, Hamilton... ......0. NOY: 26] *66thto 77th... Nov. 2, 1920 Lanham, Fritz Gol Tex | 12! 266th {o' 7¢th. Apr. 19, 1919 Reed, Daniel A__________ NYY F 43 [(66thtlo 77th ~~. Mar. 4, 1919 12 terms, not consecutive Romjue, Milton A_______ Mo: 0 1 | 65th, 66th, and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 77th. Weaver, Zebulon_ _______ N.C. .} 10] 165th. to 70th and | Mar. 4, 1931 72d to 77th. Woodruff, Roy O________ Mich___| 10 | 63d and 67th to 77th_| Mar. 4, 1921 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dy Congresses (inclusive) Baa 2 9 terms, not consecutive CQuyer, U8. ... 0.2. Kans___ 2 | *68th and 70th to | Mar. 4, 1927 1... 77th. Nelson, William L_______ Mo. 2 | 66th, 69th to 72d, | Jan. 38,1935 and 74th to 77th. 8 terms, consecutive Cartwright, Wilburn_____ Okla___ Si 70thto77th__-. Mar. 4, 1927 Culkin, Francis D_.____._ NAY. 32 | *70thto 77th... Nov. 6, 1928 Yitzpatrick, James M .__._.I N.Y. _| 24 [| 70th'to 77th. >. Mar. 4, 1927 Hancock, Clarence E_____ N-Y.... 35 *0th'io 77th... Nov. 8, 1927 Hope, Clifford B........:. Kans___ 7 (70th to 77th _-_ Mar. 4, 1927 Johnson, Jed. io... . Okla. | 7Othto 77th... Mar. 4, 1927 MeCormoek, Jom W.... | Mass | 12 | *70th to 77th... Nov. 6, 1928 Tarver, Malcolm C______ 08... 7 | 70thto 77th... Mar. 4, 1927 Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Mass___| 13 | *70th to 77th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolfenden, James__ _____ Pal... S| 0th to 70h. Nov. 6, 1928 Wolverton, Charles A____| N. J___ | 70thto 77th... Mar. 4, 1927 8 terms, mot consecutive Andresen, August H______ Minn _ _ 1 | 69th to 72d and | Jan. 3, 1935 74th to 77th. Chapman, Virgil. .......... Bye... 6 | 69th, 70th, and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 77th. 7 terms, consecutive Clark, J. Bayard... ....[ NC. 7 | eto Th. wooonat Mar. 4, 1929 Cooper, Jere. _....._._..& Tenn___ SIMA to 7th... Mar. 4, 1929 Gavagan, Joseph A______ NIEVITY 12 Pst ie Tih Nov. 5, 1929 Hartley, Fred A., Jr______ Ned 1110 {lst to 7TTh. ones Mar. 4, 1929 Kennedy, Martin J______ NeioXYo.f 118 | lable THR 7. Mar. 11, 1930 Kinzer, JiRoland. ....... Past LE 10.) 1st tei77th. Jan. 28, 1930 Lambertson, William P___| Kans_ _ Ll istito7th .......... Mar. 4, 1929 Judiow, Louds.........0 IndiCl 112 [| TistiteTTth............ Mar. 4, 1929 Patan, Wright....¢ Tex. Li I | 7isttol?7ith. =. 0 Mar. 4, 1929 Ramspeck, Robert_______ Ga LLL 5 | isto 77th... .....L Oct. 2, 1929 Rich, Roberti... _.._ Pag) LL 16: | 27istibo 77th... ] Nov. 4,1930 Smith; Joel. ...........5 W. Va 6. 71st to77th......5 Mar. 4, 0 1929 7 terms, mot consecutive Cole, William P., Jr______ Md ais 2 | 70th and 72d to 77th_| Mar. 4, 1931 Delaney, John J_________ N.Y..| 7: *o5th and’ *724 to {*Nov.' 3 1081 77th. Maas, Melvin J_________ Minn _ _ 4 | 70th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 8, 1935 to 77th. Williams, Clyde_________ Mo. i. 8 | 70th and 72d to 77th_| Mar. 4, 1931 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) i 6 terms, consecutive Andrews, Walter G______ NY... 20 | 2dt0cth._....... Mar. 4, 1931 Beam, Harry Po .. --.. I EE 4 [72d to 77th. Mar. 4, 1931 Boehne, John W., Jr... Tod... 8 2dto. 77th... 5. Mar. 4, 1931 Boland, Patrick J. oea-Pa a I (72d to77th._..--..-Mar. 4, 1931 Burch, Thomas CG...--Na Bl 2dilo77th. co. Mar. 4, 1931 Dies, Martin. _ >... Tox... 2 2dto7th.. Mar. 4, 1931 Disney, Wesley E_______. Okla___ 1 {| 72ddo 97th... crn Mar. 4, 1931 Flannagan, John W., Jr__| Va_____ 9. 72d.t0-4710......... =~ Mar. 4, 1931 Gilchrist, Fred C________ ITowa___ S| 2dl0%7th._ 2s... Mar. 4, 1931 Holmes, Pelir G.. .. ---..-Mass. _ & | 72dd0 07th. = Mar. 4, 1931 Belly, Edward A... JU ee 3 {72d.to: 77th... .... = Mar. 4, 1931 Kleberg, Richard M______ Tex... i14 | 72d 40 77th... Nov. 24, 1931 Larrabee, William H_____ Inde..iq 1k {72d 60.2710... oan oon Mar. 4, 1931 May, Andrew J_________._ Rye 2 | 12d to 77th. ner Mar. 4, 1931 Schuetz, Leonard W____._ £1 SS 7 | 72d to 79th zis Mar. 4, 1931 Shannon, Joseph B_______ Mo._.._. Bil W2dto 7th... Mar. 4, 1931 Smith, Howard W_______ Noo... S| 72d lodith. rs Mar. 4, 1931 Spence, Brent... Ky... Bl 22d to TL... Mar. 4, 1931 Sutphin, William H______ NJ... 81 72d to 7th. suznass Mar. 4, 1931 Sweeney, Martin L_______ OGhio__-| 120 | 272d to 77th... -_--Nov. 3, 1931 Thomason, R. Ewing_____ Tex._.o.| i116 | 72d to/7th._ ___z--. Mar. 4, 1931 Wolcott, Jesse P_________ Mich __ 2 2d to 7th... Mar. 4, 1931 6 terms, mot consecutive Have, Butler B.......=. 2.0... 3 | 69th to 72d, 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 and 77th. Hess, William E________. Ohio___ 2 | 71st to 74th, 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 and 77th. Johnson, George W______ W. Va_ 4 | 68th and 73d to 77th_| Mar. 4, 1933 b terms, consecutive Men;leoBl .......db |} SEE 18i| 73d toPith. LL Mar. 4, 1933 Brown, Pauli... Gail] 10 | *73d to 77th... Lia July 5, 1933 Buck, Frank/H...........d Calif___ Bi) ¥3d:to7iith.. Mar. 4, 1933 Colmer, William M______ Miss. _ 6] 73d te?7th.. 2 Mar. 4, 1933 Cooley, Harold D________ N.C... 4 | *78d10:77th...... 315 July 7, 1934 Dingell, John D__.._._... Mich.ity 158i { 73d to77th... ee. Mar. 4, 1933 Dirksen, Everett M______ at lal 16 {| 73d ?ith. Mar. 4, 1933 Ditter, J. William... .. Pa... Wi PB3dteTith Mar. 4, 1933 Dondero, George A______ Mich. | (17 | 73d to 77th. oudusess Mar. 4, 1933 Duncan, Richard M______ Mo. 3 | 73d 07th. Mar. 4, 1933 Edmiston, Andrew._______ W. Va. 8 | *73d te 7th... 1%... Nov. 28, 1933 Faddis, Charles I________ Paid a5 1 73d toT7th....... oid Mar. 4, 1933 Yord, Thomas PF... .._... Cait.tT. 114 | 73d to:77th..... Mar. 4, 1933 Harter, DowiW..L....oz. OhioZilT 14 73d 77th... Mar. 4, 1933 Healey, Arthur D________ Mass _ -SS 73d 077th. .-Mar. 4, 1933 Hill; Knutesl utiel bl Wash. _ 41 734 tothe Mar. 4, 1933 Terms of Service 167 | SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) a | b terms, consecutive—con. Kee, Johnasl |... cued W. Va_ Bar73d to 77th... ......J- Mar. 4, 1933 | Kocialkowski, Leo. ._____ ty HABER, 8 | 1350 T Thetis Mar. 4, 1933 | Kramer, Charles__._..___ Calite: | 13 | 73d b0i77th............; Mar. 4, 1933 | Lesinski, John... ....... Michi: | 16 [ 78ddo77¢h....._. Mar. 4, 1933 | Lewis, Lawrence_________ Colo... Li 78dto With...5. Mar. 4, 1933 McLean, Donald H______ Nailin 6 73d 77th... ........22 Mar. 4, 1933 Mott, James W__________ Oregii i 4 | 78d40077¢h...._..I. Mar. 4, 1933 Peterson, J. Hardin______ Palio] | a | 78d te tth out Mar. 4, 1933 | Pierce, Walter M________ Oregi]| "2 | "3dtorfrth Mar. 4, 1933 Plumley, Charles A______ Vis oni Atd. | *73d 10 77ih. ...._= Jan. 16, 1934 | Powers, D. Lane_________ Noid 4 | 73dt0 77th... 1... Mar. 4, 1933 Randolph, Jennings______ W. Va_ 2 1 WBdioT7th.. ro... Mar. 4, 1933 Richards, James P_______ 8.C.u. S| ¥3ddo 7th. ._... 5 Mar. 4, 1933 Robertson, A. Willis. ____ Va. 5 7 [73d to.77 th. .........Aon Mar. 4, 1933 Robinson, Jo W.._.. ..d. { Utah. 2 \73die 77th..._ 2 Mar. 4, 1933 Rogers, Will... .vovewe-is Okla. (At). | 73d to 77th... Mar. 4, 1933 | Schaefer, Edwin M______ {1 ERAS 22: | W3d im Th... Si Mar. 4, 1933 | Schulte, William T_______ Ind... | 73d 77th.-....... Mar. 4, 1933 I Scrugham, James G______ Nevioo|AtL. [| 78d 77th...... 50 Mar. ‘4, 1933 | Secrest, Robert T________ Ohio: 15 | 73d.30077th. = Mar. 4, 1933 | Smith, Martin P..._....d. Wash__ | 73d to 77th 2 inoue Mar. 4, 1933 | Snyder, J.Buell oo... C..il Pa... 24 | 73440 77th. i .uiuel Mar. 4, 1933 | Terry, David D.....__i. Arliss 68 | *73dl0 77h... IL Dec. 19, 1933 | Wadsworth, James W...{ N.Y...{ 39:| 73d to 77th... ....... Mar. 4, 1933 { Walter, Francis E________ Pa....: 21 | 3d to7Tth. .... i. Mar. 4, 1933 | West, Milton H. _._____:. Texts] A551 *78dite:7%th..._ Apr. 22, 1933 | White, Compton I_______ Idahorsl A:] 73dto 77th... -..o Mar. 4, 1933 | I 5 terms, not consecutive | | Haines, Harry L__.______ Pais 22 | 72d to 75th and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 | Hull, Merlin. _ if Wis__.__| 9 | 71st and 74th to 77th_| Jan. 3, 1935 | Johnson, Noble J... Ind_.___.| 6 | 69th to 71st, 76th, | Jan. 3, 1939 and 77th. | Pittenger, William A_____ Minn_ _ 8 | 71st, 72d, 74th, 76th, | Jan. 3, 1939 and 77th. Short; Dewey... ib Mo....x 7 | 71st and 74th to 77th_| Jan. 3, 1935 4 terms, consecutive Arends, Leglie CG... ....c NL. eon 17 | 4dhto77th.. Laas Jan. 3, 1935 Barden, Graham A____.__ N:QC::x 8: 74th io 7ith..... oid Jan. 3, 1935 Barry, William B......... N.Y... 2:1 Xathito 77th......- Nov. 5, 1935 Bell, C.. Jasper. .. cv cree Mo____ 4 | 74th to 77th........ Jan. 3, 1935 Boykin, Frank W__...___ Ala... 1 | *74ath to 7th... ...= July 30, 1935 Buckler, Ro. 58 band Minn. _ 9 | 74h to77th_-_..= Jan. 3, 1935 Buckley, Charles A______ N.Y-2o! 23 [ 74thito 77th. =..- Jan. 3, 1935 168 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued State Dis Congresses (inclusive) sBenming Name 4 terms, consecutive—con. Burdick, Usher L------.0 N.Dak_{AtL. | 74th to 77th________ Jan. 3, 1935 Carlson, Frank. -.._.-_:C Kans__ 6 | 74th to 77th________ Jan. 3, 1935 Casey, Joseph E______.__ Mass__ §| 74th to 77th... .-.:% Jan. 3,1935 Coffee, Harry B..o---=:C Nebr __ bil 74thto 77th ---.-_-Jan. 3,1935 Cole, W. Sterling. _______ N.Y. | 37 | 74h to T7th........ Jan. 3, 1935 Costello, John M________ Calif_...] 15 | 7th to 77th...._.._. Jan. 3, 1935 Crawford, Fred L__..____ Mich _. 8 7th to 77th... ---_. Jan. 3, 1935 Creal, Edward W________ Kyl. oo 4 | *74thto 77th...1% Nov. 5, 1935 Engel, Albert J__________ Mich __ 9 | 74thto 77th... ..---= Jan. 3, 1935 Pord, Aaron-Lane..._.-"_ Miss__-4 | 74th to 77th. _______ Jan. 3,1935 Gearhart, Bertrand W____| Calif___ 9 | 74th ito 77th... Jan. 3, 1935 Gehrmann, Bernard J____| Wis____| 10 | 74th to 77th________ Jan. 3, 1935 Gwynne, John W________ Towa___ 3 | 74thto 77th... % Jan. 3, 1935 29, 1935 Halleck, Charles A_______ Ind oo 2 | ®74thto 77th. IL10¢ Jan. Hart, Bdward J. .-----" NoJoAiy 14 | 74h 077th. ove Jan. 3, 1935 Hobbs, Sam’... .-.--=E Ala. il 4 | 74th to 77th________ Jan. 3, 1935 Hoffman, Clare E___-__._ Mich __ 4 | 74th to 77th....C Jan. 3, 1935 Hook, Frank BE... ...-.-% Mich __| 12 | 74th to 77th________ Jan. “3, 1935 Houston, John M________ Kans __ 5 74th to 77th.1 Jan. 3, 1935 McGehee, Dan R________ Miss. __ 7 | 74thito 77th. Jan. 3, 1935 Jan. 3, 1935 MecKeough, Raymond S__| IlI_____ 2 | 74thito’ 77th... McLaughlin, Charles F___| Nebr __ 2 | 74th tel7Tth. Jan. 3,1935 Mahon, George H________ Patil | 19 | THR THD. net Jan. 3,1935 Merritt, Matthew J______ N.Y___|AtL.| 746h to 77th___.._.. Jan. 3, 1935 Mitchell, Arthur W______ ne oe | 74th 4ei77th. ot. E Jan. 3, 1935 3, 1935 Nichols, Jack.....~-1. Okla___ 2 | 7407 th... ol Jan. O’Day, Caroline. _____.._ NOYL HALL. | 74th1to' 77th...LL Jan. 3, 1935 O'Leary, James A_._____._ NoY. 1111 7aihiteo 7th. Jan. 3, 1935 Q'Neal, Emmet... Ry =» 3 | 74th to 77th. 20 iY Jan. -3, 1935 Patton, Nob. .ovnuin=n Tex... TH 7dth to 70th... oo Jan. 3, 1935 Pearson, Herron_________ Tenn __ 7 | 74th 0 77th os. Jan. 3, 1935 Peterson, Hugh...[. _ Ga.___. 1 | 74thEter77ihe coin Jan. 3, 1935 £ Jan. 3, 1935 Pfeifer, Joseph LL... 0". N.Y ..o 8 | 74thHoi TTD ets Rabaut, louis C.........0 Mich. | 14 | 7dthto 77th...-. Jan. 3, 1935 Reed, Chauncey W______ Tl da 11 | 74thito 77th... 28) Jan. 3, 1935 Shanley, James A________ Conn_._ 3 Fathto 77th... Jan. 3, 1935 South, Charles L_ .______ Texiz | | 21 | 7athto 77th... ~~ Jan. 3,1935 3,1935 Starnes, Joe... Ala... 5 7ithteo 7h... Jan. Stefan, Karl boo. oo... Nebr __ 3 | 74th to 77th 2128 Jan. 3, 1935 Tolan, Jom H.C... Calif... 7 hthito 79th. Jan. 3, 1935 Whelchel, B. Frank______ Ga... _. 9 | 74thito 77th. Jan. 3, 1935 Zimmerman, Orville______ Mo._...{ 10 | 74th to 77th wea 20 Jan. 3, 1935 4 terms, not consecutive Beiter, Alfred F._________ N.Y_..| 41 |73d to 75th and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 18 | 73d to 75th and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 Imhoff, Lawrence E______ Ohio___| Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State De Congresses (inclusive) Pane 4 terms, not consecutive— continued Kopplemann, Herman P__| Conn__ 1 | 73d to 75th and 77th_|" Jan. 3, 1941 Ramsay, Robert L.....__. W. Va. 1 | 73d to 75th and 77th_| Jan. 13,1941 Thom; William BR... Ohio...| 16 | 73d to 75th and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 3 terms, consecutive Allen, A. Leonard___.____ Ya. ..c S| 75thito77ih. Jan. 3, 1937 Arnold, Laurence F______ IEE RE ete 23 | 75th bo, 77th. | _... Jan. 3, 1937 Bates, George J... Mass_ -6 | 753thito 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 BatesidoeiB.. on Kyi 8i| *75thito 77th... June 4, 1938 Boren; LyleiH.......... Okla. _: 41) 75th to77th. J. Lb Jan. 3, 1937 Bradley, Michael J_______ Pa. did 3 "thto7th......L-Jan. 3, 1937 Brooks, Overton... Lad. dic 4 75thite 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 Byrne; William TT.....L NoN.i..} 28 | 75thitoi77th. ...... 1x: Jan. 3, 1937 Cage, Francis... ....L S. Dak. 2 | 75th tof 7th... Jl. = Jan. 3, 1937 Clason, Charles BR... .... Mass. _ 2: 75thite 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 Claypool, Harold K______ Ohlo....| {11 | 73th to 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 Cluett; BE. Harold... ...-.-NX... 20] 75th to 77th. oc Jan. 3, 1937 Coffee, John M__________ Wash _ _ 6 | 75th to: 77th. --.. Jan. 3, 1937 Douglas, Fred J.Li5 Las. NOVI] 138 | 75thit077¢h. .. Jie Jan. 3, 1937 Eberharter, Herman P___| Pa_____ 32 75th lo 77th. oo. Jan. 3, 1937 Elliott, Alfred J_________ Calif 10 | *75th to: 77th... 1... May 4, 1937 Flaherty, Thomas A_____ Mass. Lf 111 | *75thteo 77th... .. Dec. 14, 1937 Flannery, J. Harold______ Pot as 12: 75thito 77th...2. Jan. 3, 1937 Gamble, Ralph A._______ N.Y... 25 | 375thide 77th... Nov. 2,1937 Grant, George M________ Ala____ 2 | *75thio 77th. ...... June 14, 1938 Gregory, Noble J________ Kyii.. 1 ¢3thio77th. ....... Jan. 3, 1937 Harrington, Vincent F___| Towa___ 9 75thito 77th 1:2 Jan. 3, 1937 Hendricks, Joe. ________ Fla. dic 5 | 75thite 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 Hunter, John P........¢:& Ohio___ 9 | 75thitot77th. .. 0 Jan. 3, 1937 Tege, Bd. Viet... 83% Califdi:if 20°) 75th toi 77th... Jan. 3, 1937 Jacobsen, William S______ Towa___ 2. 7bthto¥7th. oo. Jan. +3, 1937 Jarman, Pete... dis Ala. iil | 6: 75thto7 7th... .. HL Jan. 3, 1937 Jarrett, Benjamin________ Pa. iat 20) 75th te77th. _ ___"_ Jan. 3, 1937 Jenks Arthur B_ ci... N: Ht 1 | I75thtei 79th. 212 Jan. 3, 1937 Johnson, Lyndon B______ Tex cial 101i] *75thnto 77th... Apr. 10, 1937 Keogh, Eugene J________ N.Y... 9 | Tothaeif7th.. ..... 1-5 Jan. 3, 1937 Kirwan, Michael J_______ Ohiod a} 19 | 75thie 7th... 3: Jan. 3, 1937 Leavy, Charles H________ Wash__ BL 75thio7ith Jan. 3, 1937 McGranery, James P_____ Pas 4:2 2 75th teo-77th.. _..= Jan. 3, 1937 Magnuson, Warren G____| Wash__ I | 75th tol77th Jan. 3, 1937 Mason, Noah M________._ HEROES5 20 12: 76th to 77th __.& vv Jan. 3, 1937 Mills, News Vo_ =...it Las. io 5 | 75thdeo?7ih Jan. 3, 1937 Moser, Guy:L___.._..:2 Pa.2as 14 | I8thte’?ith.. Jan. :3,11937 Murdock, John R________ Ariz AML] 75th. to77th. ......... Jan. 3, 1937 O’Connor, James F______ Mont ._ 2 | 75th... Jan. 3, 1937 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF Name 3 terms, consecuttve—con. Oliver, James C. ..coo -O’Toole, Donald L_______ Pace, Stephen. __________ Patrick, Luther... Poage, Wa RB. ni Rees, Edward H..._...... Rockefeller, Lewis K_____ Sacks, Leoni... ....oenic Satterfield, Dave E., Jr___| Shafer, Paul W..._......0. Sheppard, Harry R._.___ | Simpson, Richard M_____ Sparkman, John J_______ Thomas, Albert__________ Thomas, J. Parnell_______ Vincent, Beverly M______ Voorhis, Jerry... iN 3 terms, not consecutive Blackney, William W____| Marcantonio, Vito_______ Sanders, Jared Y., Jr_____ Saathoff, Harry... «Jl Young, Stephen M_______ 2 terms, consecutive Andersen, H..Carl......... Anderson, John Z......... Angell, Homer D_._.______ Barnes, James M________ Beckworth, Lindley... ____ Bender, George H_ ______ Bolton, Frances P_______ Bonner, Herbert C__.____ Bradley, Fred... Brown, Clarence J_______ Bryson, Joseph R________ Burgin, WiO. 0 Camp, A. Sidney... Cannon, Pat........0 =. Chiperfield, Robert B____| Clevenger, Cliff... ___ Courtney, Wirt... Cravens, Padjo...........J. Curtis; CarleT cee REPRESENTATIVES—Continued State Dis Congresses (inclusive) Bn, Maine _ 1: #bthilo 7th... Jan. 38,1937 N.Y..C 8. | 75thite-77th. Jilin Jan. 3, 1937 CGoni.. S| “bthto 77th... +. Jan. 3, 1937 Ala____ Oil othe 77th... i. Jan. 3,1937 Tex | 1 | 75thiteo Th. oo Jan, 3, ,1937 Kans. 4 [76th to 77th. oii Jan. 3, 1937 NY | 27 %ithito77th._ = Nov. 2, 1937 Pa lc | 7bthitonT7th. ou. Jan. 3, 1937 Va_____ 35 276th tor 7th...22 Nov. 2,1937 Mich. _ 3 | Ith 77th... cau Jan. 3, 1937 Calif... 19 | 75th to 77th... ... Jan. 3, 1937 Pa... C 18 | *75thito’ 77th... oa May 11, 1937 Ala 0. C 8 | 75thte 77th... 10 Jan. 3, 1937 Tex... C S| 15thte7th. al Jan. 3, 1937 NoJi.c 7 75thRo 77th. i. Jan. 3, 1937 Ky. .c 2 | ®75thito 77th. am Mar. 2,1937 Califdic} 12 | 75th oT Tih... -t-Jan. 3, 1937 Mich___ 6 | 74th, 76th, and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1939 N.Y___| 20 | 74th, 76th, and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1939 Taziicy 6 | *¥73d, 74th, and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 Wis____ 2 | 74th, 75th, and 77th_| Jan. 3, 1941 Ohio___| At L.| 73d, 74th, and 77th__| Jan. 3, 1941 Minn _ _ 7 | 76theand 77th. 12 Jan. 3, 1939 Calif ___ 8 | 76th and 77th_____.__| Jan. 3, 1939 Oreg___ 3 | 76thtand 77th. _---Jan. 3, 1939 hi dic 205! 76thiand 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 Tex _... 8 | 76theand 77th... 1 Jan. 3, 1939 Ohio. Z| AtL.| 76th and 77th... .. Jan. 3, 1939 Ohiod.t 22°] *76th and 77th... J. Feb. 27, 1940 N.C... 1 | ¥76th and 77th... : Nov. 5, 1940 Mich __| 11 | 76th and 77th_______ Jan. 38,1939 Ohio___ 7 | 76th and 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 S.C. 4i| 76th'and 77th... --Jan. 3, 1939 Nao Clic 8 | 76th and 77th...____ Jan. 3, 1939 Cal Jl 4 [*76th and 77th..____. Aug. 1, 1939 Pla. Jic 4 | 76thand 77th_-. iL Jan. 3, 1939 TII_____ 15i| 76th and 77h... Jan. 3, 1939 Ohio___ 5 | 76th and 77th... .... Jan. 3, 1939 Tenn _. 6 | *76th and 77th______ May 11, 1939 Arle dic 4 ii *76thand 77th... Sept. 12, 1939 Nebr __ 4 | 76thiand 77th..._ Jan. 3, 1939 Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dy Congresses (inclusive) DEE 2% 2 terms, consecutive—con. D’Alesandro, Thomas, Jr_| Md____ 8B [| 76th.and 77th.a. 2 Jan. 3, 1939 Davis, Clifford... 03 Tenn __ 9 | *76thnd 77th...Xk Feb. 15, 1940 Durham, Carl T.._ L558 N. Co 6 | 76thiand 77th. Jan. 3, 1939 Dworshak, Henry C__.___ Idaho._._ 2 | 76th and 77th oi... Jan. 3, 1939 Ble, «(yde Ta Ark. 3 | 76thvand 77th...)i Jan. 3, 1939 Elston, Charles H________ Ohio... 1 | 76th and 77th_______| Jan. 38, 1939 Yenton, Ivor D....._. .io Pa. 13 | 76th and 77th. Log. Jan. 3, 1939 Ford, Leland M_________ Calif] 16 | 76thiand 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 Gathings, B.C... Jo Ark 0 | 76th and 77th Jan. 3, 1939 Gerlach, Charles L_______ Pas li 9 | 76thvand 77th Jan. 3, 1939 Gillie, George W..........0 Ind.) 4 | 76thand 770h. L100 Jan. 3, 1939 Gore, Albert...__. oo Tenn___ 4 | 76thiand 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 Gossett, Bd... 1... uy Pex oa) 18 | 76th and 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 Craham, Louis BE... Pay. Li 26. | 76th and 77th__ = Jan. 3, 1939 Grant, Robert A_________ Ind... uy 3 | 76thiand 77th... Jan. 3, 1939 Hall, Edwin Arthur______ N.Yi ara Banking and Currency. aide ites ann aie Census, chairman. Civil Service. Invalid Pensions. Library. pe nad alia ad Naval Affairs. Public Lands. Roads. MUNDY... danni Foreign Affairs. Indian Affairs. AM UBDOOR ea Census. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. MUBBAY..... eee Agriculture. Samm ae Education. Patents. Pensions. Revision of the Laws. NMISON. 0 Rules. NICHOLS... Bohinnsis Rules. Select: Investigate Air Accidents, chairman. Se oe aR Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 3. Flood Control. Labor. Mines and Mining. NorTON__ SA Labor, chairman. Memorials. O’Brien of Michigan_.____ Post Office and Post Roads. O’BRIEN © f New York_-_ Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. O’CoNNOR monte Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Territories. Congressional Directory Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chair- man. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Appropriations. Insular Affairs. Rivers and Harbors. Select: Investigating National Defense Migration. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. Insular Affairs. Labor. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Territories. Banking and Currency. Select: Small Business, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Accounts. Pensions. Roads. Territories. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Investigate Air Accidents. PrreErsoN of Florida Census. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Revision of the Laws. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Pererson of Georgia Elections No. 3, chairman. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Territories. Preirer, Joseph L Foreign Affairs. Pueirrer, William T Immigration and Naturalization. War Claims. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Agriculture. Claims. Rivers and Harbors. House Pramout.... cums onnidh Prone ~ .en PLOMLEY erinnis Poxemi ice ai parr uiwens POWHHNE oe cnndne don Primgy.. .. ....zhouost BABA WAMEAY. oi RAMBPRCR ... ccncencennns RANDOLPH... rms ne RANKIN of Mississippi... _ ht ge Sei Ca ean Esa Eli Reems RICHEARDE. .cmme RIVERS: wearin nanan Rrpvwy, a a oo RoBErRTSON of North Da- kota. ~ RoBERTSON of Virginia. _ ___ Commattee Assignments 225 Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation. Patents. Public Lands. Post Office and Post Roads. Territories. Select: Small Business. Appropriations. Elections No. 3. Agriculture. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Post Roads. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 1. ; Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration and Naturalization. Revision of the Laws. Civil Service, chairman. Claims. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. District of Columbia, Civil Service. Labor. Mines and Mining. Roads. chairman. World War Veterans’ Census. Rivers and Harbors. Legislation, chairman. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. Speaker. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Coinage, Weights, Judiciary. and Measures. Ways and Means. Civil Service. Immigration and Naturalization. Appropriations. Printing. Foreign Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Naval Affairs. Agriculture. Irrigation and Pensions. Public Lands. Reclamation. Ways and Means. Select: Conservation man. of Wildlife Resources, chair- 226 Congressional Directory RoBinsonof Utah ccc Rossion of Kentucky._.____ ROCKEFELLER cvs in —mene— RocuwEBLL beaccuisine di & Ropcers of Pennsylvania.__ Rocers of Massachusetts. __ Rocers of Oklahoma _ _____ ~ SCANLON... _anitasidey ScHAEFER of Illinois_ _ _____ Scaumrei2liuiogin Soi J SorureR. Tl ee Public Lands, chairman. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation, Roads. Territories. Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Revision of the Laws. Immigration and Naturalization. Library. Territories. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. Civil Service. Foreign Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Indian Affairs, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. War Claims. Banking and Currency. Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. Claims. District of Columbia. Elections No. 3. Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation. Rules, chairman. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Naval Affairs. Judiciary. Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. War Claims. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Accounts. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration and Naturalization. Rivers and Harbors. Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. House Commattee Assignments SenuomaMm... --.. -Sugwueny. SwiraroflOhlo__--Smita of Pennsylvania._____ Smita of Virginia__________ Smite of Washington. _____ Smite of West Virginia_____ Smita of Wisconsin________ SNYDER rT raha Somwms-. ool Appropriations. Library, chairman. Flood Control. Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. Roads. Distriet of Columbia. Military Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Civil Service, District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Education. Invalid Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. Banking and Currency. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Enrolled Bills. Rules. Pensions, chairman, Education. Indian Affairs. Rivers and Harbors. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Mines and Mining, chairman, Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Invalid Pensions. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Mines and Mining. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Military Affairs. Select: Investigating National Defense Migration. Banking and Currency. Congressional Directory SuMNER of Illinois SuMNERsS of Texas TrOMAS of Texas Judiciary. Appropriations. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Banking and Currency, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. Pensions. Civil Service. Distriet of Columbia. Flood Control. Civil Service. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. Territories. Banking and Currency. Judiciary, chairman. Naval Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Post Office and Post Roads. Appropriations. Census. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration and Naturalization. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations. Accounts. Elections No. 3. Revision of the Laws. Judiciary. Claims. Military Affairs. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Flood Control. War Claims. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. House Commuattee Assignments 229 ROLANE a Senn Judiciary. Select: Investigating National Defense Migration, chairman. TRAYROBE eae Education. Roads. Territories. War Claims. I RTADWAY ines ilild Library. Ways and Means. VAN ZANDE =i... Merchant Marine and Fisheries. World War Veterans’ Legislation. YVaRcERn on irs Naval Affairs. VINgON. SoonlL dla de | Naval Affairs, chairman. Vooruais. 000002 Flood Control. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. NOY ams iar asada Foreign Affairs. VEREBLANDS. L000230 Judiciary. WADSWORTH noea iS Interstate and Foreign Commerce. WALTHER = Cer ate Judiciary. Wann. oe Post Office and Post Roads. WASIBLEWEEL.._ Lull Foreign Affairs. WEAVERIDL AUsonlL XT. Judiciary. WEEE oe al aa Claind] Invalid Pensions. Public Lands. WELCHae Insular Affairs. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. WENT. oa Agriculture. Wu wo nee Ways and Means. WeERAT. Naval Affairs. Wrenemgeli-. Post Office and Post Roads. IE Ea a Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. WHITTEN. nee dne- Post Office and Post Roads. WHITTINGTON. -ove Flood Control, chairman. Yn niles in the Executive Departments. oads. WICKERSHAM en mconn Agriculture. Congressional Directory WiGGLESWORTH Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Flood Control. Public Buildings War Claims. and Grounds. Claims. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Banking Roads. and Currency. Accounts. Naval Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Interstate Patents. and Foreign Commerce. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice President, sentatives in Congress. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. War Claims. and Repre- Elections No. 3. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Election of President, Vice sentatives in Congress. Elections No. 1. Insular Affairs. Territories. War Claims. President, and Repre- Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds Chairman.—Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United States. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States. Francis Maloney, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. W. Warren Barbour, Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Ltr, G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Public Buildings and rounds. Pehr G. Holmes, Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Charles L. McNary, Minority Leader of the United States Senate. Joseph W. Martin, Jr., Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Senate Office Building Commission (Office, Room 130-A, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 1175) Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. [Two vacancies.] Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for the Library of Congress Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Chairman, Senate Committee on the Library. Charles L. McNary, Ranking Minority Member, Senate Committee on the Library. Robert T. Secrest, Chairman, House Committee on the Library. Allen T. Treadway, Ranking Minority Member, House Committee on the Library. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. House Office Building Commission Chairman.—Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Adolph J. Sabath, Representative from Illinois. Clarence E. Hancock, Representative from New York. Capital Auditorium Commission Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, chairman. Fritz G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Pehr G. Holmes, Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Francis Maloney, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. W. Warren Barbour, Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 233 234 Congressional Directory Joint Committee on Printing (Office, Capitol Building, ground floor, west center. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 29) Chairman.—Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Vice chairman.—Pete Jarman, Representative from Alabama. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Joseph H. Ball, Senator from Minnesota. Alfred L. Bulwinkle, Representative from North Carolina. 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).—Paul R. Eaton, 1 Scott Circle. Joint Committee on the Library Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. Hattie W. Caraway, Senator from Arkansas. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Robert T. Secrest, Representative from Ohio. Graham A. Barden, Representative from North Carolina. Guy L. Moser, Representative from Pennsylvania. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Lewis K. Rockefeller, Representative from New York. Clerk.—[Vacant.] Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation (Office, Room 1336, House Office Building. Phone, NA tional 3120, Branch 290) Chairman.— Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. Vice Chairman.— Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. Arthur Capper, Senator from Kansas. Thomas H. Cullen, Representative from New York. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Frank Crowther, Representative from New York. Secretary and attorney.—Bryant C. Brown, 1756 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Staff. —Colin F. Stam, 5516 Cedar Parkway. Assistant chief of staff. —Gaston D. Chesteen, 1601 Argonne Place. Erecuin assistant.—Lynn L. Stratton, 6403 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, d Attorneys.—Weaver Myers, 211 Delaware Avenue; William L. Wallace, 126 C Street NE.; Walter L. Tucker, Harvard Hall Apartments. Statistician.— Walter L. Price, 2407 Fifteenth Street. Technical assistant.—David C. Longinotti, 11 Ridge Road SE. Stenographers and clerks.—Irma Crisler, La Salle Apartments; Hannah K. Steele, 2817 Connecticut Ave. National Forest Reservation Commission (Room 4204, South Building, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142, Branch 3702) President.—Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of War. Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Claude R. Wickard, Secretary of Agriculture. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Styles Bridges, Senator from New Hampshire. William M. Colmer, Representative from Mississippi. Roy O. Woodruff, Representative from Michigan. Secretary.—John E. Burch, 12 Forest Grove Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Commassions and Joint Committees 235 The Interparliamentary Union OFFICERS President.— Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Vice presidents.—John D. Dingell, Representative from Michigan; Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado; James W. Wadsworth, Representative from New York. Treasurer.— Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. Secretary.—Charles A. Eaton, Representative from New Jersey. Permanent executive secretary.—[Vacant.] EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ex officio chatrman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Albert E. Carter, Representative from California. Harold Knutson, Representative from Minnesota. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Dewey Short, Representative from Missouri. [Three vacancies.] Commission to Acquire a Painting of the Signing of the Constitution Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United States. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Secretary.— Arthur E. Cook. Migratory Bird Conservation Commission Chairmon.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Claude R. Wickard, Secretary of Agriculture. Jesse H. Jones, Secretary of Commerce. George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. John J. Cochran, Representative from Missouri. James Wolfenden, Representative from Pennsylvania. Secretary.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, Fish and Wildlife Service. Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission (Room 306, House Office Building) Chairman —Stuart G. Gibboney. Vice chairman.— Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah. Vice chairman.—Charles O. Andrews, Senator from Florida. Vice chairman.—Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Secretary.—Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. Francis D. Culkin, Representative from New York. Thomas Jefferson Coolidge. Joseph P. Tumulty. Dr. George J. Ryan. Dr. Fiske Kimball. Brig. Gen. Jefferson Randolph Kean. Alaskan International Highway Commission Warren G. Magnuson, Representative from Washington. Thomas Riggs, of New York. Ernest H. Gruening, Governor of Alaska. Donald MacDonald, of Alaska. James W. Carey, of Washington. 236 Congressional Directory Commission for Construction of Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Chairman.— Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. Acting chairman.—Thomas H. MacDonald, Commissioner of Public Roads. Henry A. Wallace, Presiding Officer of the Senate. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. John Russell Young, president of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Frederic A. Delano, chairman, National Capital Park and Planning Commission. C. Phelps Dodge. Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Joseph F. Guffey, Senator from Pennsylvania. William P. Cole, Jr., Representative from Maryland. J. Harold Flannery, Representative from Pennsylvania. Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service. Col. Charles W. Kutz, Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia. Board of Visitors to the Military Academy Albert B. Chandler, Senator from Kentucky. Mon C. Wallgren, Senator from Washington. Harley M. Kilgore, Senator from West Virginia. Chan Gurney, Senator from South Dakota. John Thomas, Senator from Idaho. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. [Vacancy.] Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Dow W. Harter, Representative from Ohio. Charles 1. Faddis, Representative from Pennsylvania. J. Buell Snyder, Representative from Pennsylvania. David D. Terry, Representative from Arkansas. Joe Starnes, Representative from Alabama. Walter G. Andrews, Representative from New York, Dewey Short, Representative from Missouri. Leslie C. Arends, Representative from Illinois. D. Lane Powers, Representative from New Jersey. Albert J. Engel, Representative from Michigan. Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts, ex officio. John H. Overton, Senator from Louisiana. Charles O. Andrews, Senator from Florida. Guy M. Gillette, Senator from Iowa. Alexander Wiley, Senator from Wisconsin. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia, ex officio. Robert Ramspeck, Representative from Georgia. William H. Sutphin, Representative from New Jersey. Lansdale G. Sasscer, Representative from Maryland. W. Sterling Cole, Representative from New York. Robert A. Grant, Representative from Indiana. Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy Josiah W. Bailey, Senator from North Carolina, ex officio. Claude Pepper, Senator from Florida. Ralph O. Brewster, Senator from Maine. Carl A. Hatch, Senator from New Mexico. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia, ex officio. Robert Ramspeck, Representative from Georgia. Frank W. Boykin, Representative from Alabama. Francis D. Culkin, Representative from New York. William J. Fitzgerald, Representative from Connecticut. Lewis D. Thill, Representative from Wisconsin. Commassions and Joint Committees 237 United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission Chairman.— Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Vice chairman.—Dr. Charles E. Merriam, Chicago, Ill. Secretary.— Russell Murphy. Executive committee—Luther Ely Smith (chairman), St. Louis, Mo.; William Allen White, Emporia, Kans.; J. Lionberger Davis, St. Louis, Mo. Other members: Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. James J. Davis, Senator from Pennsylvania. [Vacancy.] Thomas D. Winter, Representative from Kansas. [Vacancy.] Gen. Jefferson Randolph Kean, Washington, D. C. Col. James H. Thomson, New Orleans, La. Matthew Woll, New York City, N. Y." Amon G. Carter, Fort Worth, Tex. James T. Kemper, Kansas City, Mo. Joint Committee on Government Organization Chairman.—[Vacant.] Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. [Vacancy.] : Scott W. Lucas, Senator from Illinois. Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. [Vacancy.] John J. Cochran, Representative from Missouri. J. W. Robinson, Representative from Utah. Harry P. Beam, Representative from Illinois. E. E. Cox, Representative from Georgia. William T. Schulte, Representative from Indiana. John Taber, Representative from New York. Charles L. Gifford, Representative from Massachusetts. Everett M. Dirksen, Representative from Illinois. [Vacancy.] : Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 17 238 Congressional Directory Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee Chairman.— Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States. Owen J. Roberts, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Felix Frankfurter, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. : Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts. John W. McCormack, Representative from Massachusetts. Robert T. Secrest, Representative from Ohio. Richard B. Wigglesworth, Representative from Massachusetts. General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission Chairman.—[Vacant.] Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. [Vacancy.] Dow W. Harter, Representative from Ohio. Cliff Clevenger, Representative from Ohio. William Wayne, of Pennsylvania. William A. Kunkel, Jr., of Indiana. Harry G. Hogan, of Indiana. Commission for the Celebration of the Two-hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson Honorary chairman.—Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. Chairman.— Carter Glass, Senator from Virginia. Vice chairman.— Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. Henry A. Wallace, President of the Senate (ex officio). Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives (ex officio). Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. Sol Bloom, Representative from New York. E. E. Cox, Representative from Georgia. Secretary.— Francis D. Culkin, Representative from New York. F. Harold Dubord, of Maine. ; Stuart G. Gibboney, of New York. Lamar Hardy, of New York. Fiske Kimball, of Pennsylvania. Breckinridge Long, of Missouri. John L. Newcomb, of Virginia. Randolph H. Perry, of Virginia. [Vacancy.] Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures Chairman.—Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Vice chairman.— Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. Carter Glass, Senator from Virginia. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Gerald P. Nye, Senator from North Dakota. Thomas H. Cullen, Representative from New York. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Clarence Cannon, Representative from Missouri. Clifton A. Woodrum, Representative from Virginia. John Taber, Representative from New York. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury. Harold D. Smith, Director of the Budget. Commassions and Joint Commattees United States Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. Dr. Frederic H. Knubel, New York City, N. Y. Hon. Prentice Cooper, Nashville, Tenn. Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, Washington, D. C. Dr. Daniel A Poling, Philadelphia, Pa. Henry A. Wallace, President of the Senate. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. James J. Davis, Senator from Pennsylvania. Joseph F. Guffey, Senator from Pennsylvania. Henrik Shipstead, Senator from Minnesota. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Guy L. Moser, Representative from Pennsylvania. Francis E. Walter, Representative from Pennsylvania. J. Roland Kinzer, Representative from Pennsylvania. Charles L. Gerlach, Representative from Pennsylvania. STATISTICAL SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Cotivress 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 1st. oae 1 | Mar. 4,17892 Sept. 29, 1789 210 | John Langdon, of | Frederick A.C. Muh- New Hampshire. lenberg, of Pennsyl- vania. 2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 711 BE ale Cat I BE a i hl 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 Fy TAAES SS i 2d. ai 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. 7) Rapa 1| Dec. 2,1793 | June 09,1794 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. 2 4 Nee 1| Dec. 7,1795 | June 1,1796 Wialo- 2. doz d-gons-orco Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire. 2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. 3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of . Pennsylvania. FE a 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 Mary- Carolina. land.4 Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts. 3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3,1799 91 | John Laurence, of New York. James Ross, of Penn- sylvania. Gtheceee--- 1 | Dec. 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. thoi s...3 1| Dec. 7,1801 {| May 38,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of | Nathaniel Macon, of Georgia. North Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. thio 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27,1804 163 Jonn Brows, of Ken-Do. ucky. Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee. Oth... 1 | Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. . Maryland. 2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 93 {o.oo do oid oi joth.....: 1 | Oct. 26,1807 | Apr. 265, 1808 1820. 4 dors. ios.de vnss Joseph B. Varnum, of assachusetts. 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. John Milledge, of Georgia. 1 Until within recent years the appointment or election of a President pro tempore was held by the Senate 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.” ? 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.” Pur-suant 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 Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress met regularly on the first Monday in December until 1934, when the twentieth amendment to the Constitution became effective, changing the meeting of Congress to Jan. 3. 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. 243 244 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued c Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House Ongress | gion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives ithe 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28, 1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of | Joseph B. Varnum, of Pennsylvania. Massachusetts. : 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1, 1810 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina. 3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 | John Pope, of Ken-ucky. 12th... 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 | William H. Crawford, | Henry Clay, of Ken-of Georgia. tucky. 2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 3I He doslr =o, 18 Bt. 20. 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 rial Eenal el 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,5 of South Carolina. South Carolina. 14 hits any 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 317 Ms IR Howy Clay, of Ken-ucky. 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 RE dot od lo. 5th. 1 | Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 141% of doit 1 tusk h 09 Do. 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3,181 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia. 16th... 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John Gaillard, of Do. South Carolina. 2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 i gd RL otek L Dbii ob 08 John W. Taylor,s of New York. Ih 1 | Dec. 3,1821 | May 8,1822 157 Van dot Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1822°| Mar. 3,1823 2k i ee Gli bam Ba SR SE 18th =: 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27, 1824 FE Ea do: ch Hey Clay, of Ken-ucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 ey BUS Saate 19th: 0d 1 | Dec. 5,1825 | May 22, 1826 169 | Nathaniel Macon, of | John W. Taylor, of North Carolina. New York. 2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 00:1. an Glen TES oth... 1 | Dec. 3,1827 | May 26,1828 175 | Samuel Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 08 (3 I ion CHaie Ries AT hein 1 | Dec. 7,1829 | May 31, 1830 176 ea qo: 1 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3,1831 88 | Littleton Waller Taze-well, of Virginia. 204 Bu ROST 1 | Dec. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 YH doi ron Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2, 1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. ih ees 1 | Dec. 2,1833 | June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do. Mississippi. 2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 | John Tyler, of Vir-| John Bell,” of Tennes-ginia. :hal 1| Dee. 17,1835 | July 41836 211 | William R. King, of | James K. Polk, ofAlabama. Tennessee. 2 | Dec. 5,1836 | Mar. 3,1837 o5th. 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 09,1838 3 | Dec. 3,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 6th. 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 Robert M. T'. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 17,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 Yi He EE i 2th. a 1 | May 31,1841 | Sept. 13, 1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, | John White, of Ken-of New Jersey. tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina. : 3 | Dec. 5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 BOVE Lo qos vib an ut oRth 22a 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 198: -..° de iu or John W. Jones, of Vir-ginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 0D wine el Ae Hh LL 1 | Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10, 1846 253 | David R. Atchison, of | John W. Davis, of In-Missouri. diana. 2 | Dec. 17,1846 | Mar. 3,1847 PR Ea QO rs a 30th......-. 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 i be FO, tet ath naar Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 0. es. AO. ant baat Sista 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30, 1850 302 | William R. King, of | Howell Cobb,of Geor-Alabama. gia. 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar. 3,1851 a 31 pian Seas 330 seis 1 | Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 Lyd sea 0 a ie hep Se ane Ling Boyd, of Ken-ucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 er QO ie nee op t Elected Speaker Jan. 19, 1814, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 8 Elected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. " Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. Congress 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 Statistical 245 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued 88d Lull 1 | Dec. 65,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 | DavidR. Atchison, of { Linn Bord, of Ken- : Missouri. tucky 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- diana. Lewis Cass, of Michi- gan. Sathorn 1 | Dec. 38,1855 | Aug. 18, 1856 260 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- | Nathaniel P. Banks, diana. of Massachusetts. 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30,1856 10clau= dowsiii L882 rs 3 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 | James. M. Mason, of Virginia. Thomas J. Rusk, of Texas. 35th. -- 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¢lm a8 in Bp 1 AT Seth... 1 | Dec. §,1859 | June 25,1860 202. redosinn William Pennington, Jesse DB. Bright, of of New Jersey. Indiana. 2 | Dec. 38,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 | Solomon Foot, of Ver- mont. ath oo 1 | July 4,1861 | Aug. 6,1861 1 qos Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 228 npc 1 dows oo8i0 Cs 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 95 [res do... sth. 1 | Dee. 17,1863 | July 4,1864 2001. = dosel/ 398)1. 3 Schuyler Colfax, of Daniel Clark, of New Indiana. Hampshire: 2 | Dec. b5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 BO0bet doris Sted. s 30th. oti 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. 0th. = 1 | Mar. 4,18678| Dec. 2,1867 274 |_____ dowels... Solid nui Do. 2-| Dec. 2,1867° Nov. 10, 1868 345 |... dosaf Zoi.0 3 | Dec. 7,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 7s dol Theodore M. Pome- roy,10 of New York. 4st. 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 22200 dosell 1.5001.55 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 80x ui is doze i xoor.con 424. oe 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | Apr. 20,1871 oF Tan doscir locos os Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10,1872 190}. 2 dosaci 000s20. x 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3,1873 02:0 dower 0002.3. 8d. 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23, 1874 204 | Matthew H. Carpen- Do. - ter, of Wisconsin. 2 | Dec. 17,1874 | Mar. 38,1875 87 = Gora Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. ath: col 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael C. Kerr, of Michigan. Indiana. Samuel S. Cox,!? of ‘New York, pro tem- pore. Milton Saylor,8 of Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3,1877 90H 2 dosais aiid. 5 Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. ds5th. = * 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 50a 2 dose lor5 ox 1 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20, 1878 2005]: 1 doc. re os 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 0246302 dows Latose oo 46th. te. Jt 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1,1879 106 Allen, 2 Thurman, Do. 0 io. 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16, 1880 199 |_.___ (3 [Tr ES AS 1 Creal MR 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 88 foils docaii Lo ooaia oy d7the.. .. 1 | Dec. 5,1881 | Aug. 8,1882 247 | Thomas F. Bayard, | J. Warren Keifer, of i of Delaware. hio. David Davis, of Illi- nois. : 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. 8 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 21 ® There were recesses in this session from Monday, July 27, to Monies 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 1 day. 11 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 12 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 77, May 12, June 19. 13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4 246 : Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Congress 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 48th. oo... 1| Dec. 3,1883 | July 17,1884 218 | George F. Edmunds, | John G. Carlisle, of of Vermont. Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 9300 dol. > Fifea 40th... 1| Dec. 7,1885 | Aug. 5,1886 242 | J Onn Sherman, of Do. io. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. Sotho feiss 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 321 I. does. oo Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 3,1889 glia 18 doailf 08aih 03 Blast o.. 1 | Dec. 2,1889 | Oct. 1,1890 304 [_____ dolls. Dont a Thomas B. Reed, of 2 | Dec. 1,1890 [ Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson, aine. of Nebraska. 52d til. 1 | Dec. 7,1891 | Aug. 5,1892 281% Qoiiiit sus Charles F. Crisp, of 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Georgia. Tennessee. 534... 2:00 1| Aug. 17,1893 | Nov. 3,1893 80:10 do. 2 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28,1894 20818 vo dO, aasdetanyoo 3 | Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 3,1895 97 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Bath... >. 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 : 55th. ..... 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24, 1897 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8,1898 3 | Dec. 5,1898 | Mar. 3,1899 56th. ..... 1 | Dec. 4,1899 | June 17,1900 David B. Henderson, of Iowa. 2 | Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 LYRE 1| Dec. 2,1901 | July 1, 1902 Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 ph i] 58th. ..-.. 1 | Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 7,1903 Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. 2 | Dec. 17,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,190 oth........ 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30, 1906 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3,1907 Goth... 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30, 1908 Do. 2 | Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 3,190 Gist. one 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 624. ne 1| Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 Champ Olark, of Mis-souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,’ Brandegee,!® Curtis,!” Gallinger,18 Lodge.1? 3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 3,1913 92 | Bacon,30 Gallinger2!___ 63d. 0... 1| Apr. 17,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, of Do. : Arkansas. 2 | Dec. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 82g OE 3 | Dec. 7,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 SE ro AO Gath elo 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8,1916 bry TF dogs. Je in Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. : 65th. = 1| Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 188 sos oo dotted deseaOL Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21, 1918 35470 22 oa = 2abaaeoo 3 | Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 O25: 1 5 doi iz | Guhl e Goth. oi 1 | May 19,1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, of Iowa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 1,1919 | June 5,1920 3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 67th. J... 1| Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23, 1921 Do. 2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22,1922 | . 3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4,1922 4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 3,1923 oth... 1 | Dec. 3,1923 | June 7,1924 Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 3,1925 14 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr. 27, 1911. 15 Elected 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. 16 Elected to serve May 25, 1912. 17 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. 18 Elected to serve Feb. 12-14, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912. 19 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912. 20 Elected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, Jan. 5-18, and Feb. 2-15, 1913. 11 Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913, 2 Died Oct. 1, 1916. Statistical 247 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Congress 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 69th_______ 1| Dec. 7,1925 | July 3,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth, New Hampshire. of Ohio. 2 | Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 88 |... doi. vobuiel.i 70th. ac 1 | Dec. 5,1927 | May 29,1928 ry SRE dost solveasdi... Do. 2 | Dec. 38,1928 | Mar. 3,1929 ol |... dodnanbais1 lst les 1| Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22,1929 222 |. as doy. coos Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 3,1930 24... dos. hadion.... 3 | Dec. 1,1930 | Mar. 3,1931 03 |... doll cohol... i Ra 1| Dee. 7,1931 | July 16,1932 208 vind deol. ceil. John N. Garner, of Texas. : 2 | Dec. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 80 |. _s.2 dog. suelo vi. SE fe 1 | Mar. 9,1933 | June 15,1933 99 | Key Pitman, of Ne- | Henry T. Rainey, vada. of Illinois. 2 | Jan. 3,1934 | June 18,1934 167] 5 doul coined Hh... 1] Jan. 3,1935 | Aug. 26,1935 236: 1... LL SE TR Joseph W. Byrns,? of Tennessee. 2 | Jan. 3,1936 | June 20,1936 William B. Bank- head,? of Alabama. 78th. cl aan 1]| Jan. 5,1937 | Aug. 21,1937 Do. 2 | Nov. 15,1937 | Dec. 21,1937 3 | Jan. 3,1938 | June 16,1938 76th. er 1| Jan. 3,1939 | Aug. 51939 Do.% 2 | Sept. 21,1939 | Nov. 3,1939 3 | Jan. 3,1940 | Jan. 3, 1941 Sam Rayburn,?® of Texas. William H. King,?® of Utah. 3h. te Beth LU Re Se Detieale E Pat Harrison, of Do. Mississippi; Carter Glass, 8 of Virginia. 3 Died Aug. 19, 1934. 2 Died Sept. 15, 1940. 20 Elected Nov. 19, 1940. 24 Died June 4, 1936. 2 Died Nov. 10, 1940, 30 Elected Jan. 6, 1941; died June 22, 1941. 35 Elected June 4, 1936. 28 Elected Sept. 16, 1940. 31 Elected July 10, 1941. Congressional Directory SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE Date of beginning Friday; Mar. de cod bi abel i ow The Monday, Map 4” | Qs TOS REE Monday, Juanes 0 t 4.0 Tuesday, Map. 4...0: YECE 0 Fae oad) Saturday, May. 4... .c... Usk 6 ELD SE Monday, Mar, 4......0 CL iGEEs HE OTE Friday, Maid, 05h 12000 01 Jin ihe Taesday, Mad. do ot Monday, Mar. 5... 81 12° Tuesday, Mar. 4.58... Friday, M. Wednesday, Mar. 4____ Tuesday, June 15. ___._._ __. Pridoy, Magid, 005 © cal ll RHEE ednesday, Mar. 4d... oi" cow Monday, Mar. 4. (00 al gar iany wn =a. iSaturday, Mar, 4 HUD GL a opi tee ed Saturday, Marsa or ieree Sit Monday, Mar. 5. 0 oor en —==-ieVionday, Mar. 4. -| iin Monday, July. 7. + «i b= oper Saturday, Mar. 4 Date of adjournment Friday, Mar. 4. Monday, Mar. 4. Friday, June 26. Saturday, Mar. 4. Thursday, July 19. Thursday, Mar. 5. Thursday, Mar. 6. Tuesday, Mar. 7. Monday, Mar. 4. 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. Statistical 249 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. HALSTED L. RITTER, judge of the United States district court for the southern district of Florida; removed from office; Monday, April 6, 1936, to Friday, April 17, 1936. 250 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS IN 1936, 1938, AND 1940 [The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] Vote State 1936 1938 1940 Loin) vols, Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican Tk me 238,196 35, 358 113, 413 Veit. xr lie arly oR BYTOM: cna ab LR HO 82,714 25, 378 101, 495 39, 657 1141, 731Arkansas... 154,866 27,746 122, 883 CL SNE NEE SS ee 1 i Cr CE a 81,372,314 | 1,126,240 | 366,044 | 3 2,238,800 | 12,713,865 Colorado, oon 200, 376 166, 308 262,786 Roy eh te reo ee BRa 3 252, 426 270, 413 416,740 | 8358,313 | 1 784,067 ‘Delaware... 67,136 rE I ES 68, 20 63,799 | 1134 879 ga } 145, 757 31,035 gos me (oie 1323, 251 Yilsuegn 66, 987 TR dRman Maen ee SE 0 El 128,723 99, 801 81,939 | 7110,614 | 7124, 535 235, 149 1,545,170 | 1,638,162 | 1,542,574 | 72,025,007 | 7 2,045.924 | 14,086,179 bia 788, 386 783, 189 864, 803 070 | 11,760, 245 Gh } 413, 788 410,983 |____ ag ries 417, 873 326, 774 TL a MRR An ERLE) 80 1 A Kentucky... 530, 908 365, 850 346, 735 212, 200 7 Bei i5i | 7401 812 962, 963 Louisiang........--Supt LEHl DR A A aBr 153, 420 IB OR fo 105, 740 150,149 | 1256, 194 Pr a TW eee 357, 245 153, 253 304, 239 203.912 | 1608. 975Massachusetts _. 730, 71 815, Ee 1 0s. 838 838.122 | 11,957,089Michigan... 2 ORCS SRTR LL 30,7 1,053,104 | 12,000,342Minnesota... 3 663, 363 ro ESE * 310,875 641,049 | 11,209, 599 Mississippi..._.--LO asi evn Badia Tasds To ant SA Nod Conk 143, 431A i we a a 757, 587 488, 687 930, 775 886,376 | 11,819,016Montana _______. 12, 769 60,088 |... 17 753 941 240, 694 Nebraska. =... 58, oye Se Dl i ae 247, 6 340, 250 1 596, 891 Nevada, | ha 27,406 19,078 31, 351 20, 488 51, 839 New Hampshire. 99, 195 107, 923 84, 920 100, 0331 Za sr Xitel ox risen ir Sacro New Jersey... 916, 414 740,088 | 5704,159 | © 816,667 823,893 | 1,029,331 | 11,867, 775 New Mexteor.ox [10 OL 08 ee a] 103, 194 81, 257 184, 451 : a 102,438,904 |102, 083, 666 New Yorks. alii hal {Va7407.0% | 25 Osc. Gua |123:274,766 | 2,868,852 | wi haunt 16,403,045 North Carolina. _ 563, 968 233, 009 316, 685 VOI Sauk to jedi qiodens NOB DEO ene fehl Sr okieoe reas 6 112, 007 131,907 | 092, 503 100,647 | 1 264, 101 OlingerOs fe 1,085,792 | 1,255,414 | 1,457,304 | 1,602,498 | 3,059,802 Oklahoma. ______ 403, 107 B00 | a Oregon... 193,822 | 199,332 { 12 IB | AISNE | pine Shee coe seaviviii {A Ane IvaniD [id cblh Elba St Lhasa 1,694,367 | 2,086,931 | 2,069,980 | 1,803,104 | 13,997,020 Rhode Island ____| 149,141 EU SRGLE VL Oe 173,927 141, 401 315, 328 South Carolina___| 113, 696 oy Jaa) JY SRIA South Dakota____| 141,509 135, 461 Hoi FE I ei Tennessee... 273, 208 60,703 | 7194028 772, 008 205, 440 121,790 | 1417,265 Merasii iil L so, 000i 00 Havana. 8, 095 1340 | 11,037,843I A Se Gib al 0 102, 353 81,071°| 155, 4% 91, 931 247, 430 '9 187,150 | 1141491Vermont. fof 38, 673 73,990 { 47.101 93,283 | 1140, 388Virginia. ._______ 244, 518 Da RE le a 274,960 | 1211,159 | 1293 881Woshineton 1...4 371, 535 220, 204 404 718 342, 589 747, 307 West Virginia____ 488, 720 B88, 308 rea 492, 413 381, 806 874, 219 ses BA ie 231,076 416,770 | 13605, 609 553,602 | 11,338 278Wyoming... 53,010 gas. hy eet 65, 022 45, 682 110, 708 1 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 8 Farmer-Labor vote. 2 Vote cast for Prohibition candidate. 9 Independent Republican vote by petition. 3 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more 10 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1941. Also other party endorsements. see footnote 3. 4 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1939. 11 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1945. 5 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1941. 12 Socialist vote. 6 Vote cast for Independent candidate. * 13 Progressive vote. 7 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1943. Statistical 251 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1936, 1938, AND 1940 [The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] Vote cast in 1936 Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 State and district Total vote Demo-Repub-Demo-Repub-Demo-Repub-| cast in 1940 crat lican crat lican crat lican ORS8s lt 25008 (ea 25, 993 5500 a so 33.483... 33, 433 10,080: ce. 22, 906 81 22, 987 11, 115 1,488 24, 870 3,428 28, 298 i TEA IE Sate S SLUG Lt 131, 967 0,240 |-% canara A588) |i... 18, 881 17,903 7,207 27, 696 11, 368 39, 064 30,200: 1 cnarese: 20,020; Vee 29, 020 12, 627 878 39, 660 2342 40, 002 83, 556 20, 502 99, 424 40, 360 139, 784 be Sony LI Be SUE vd Lg EY he 33, 127 EL EEE eR RES 0105 oa 26, 105 yt EERE 21, 060 8, 566 29, 626 20, 272 |. nema 2800017 Loin 28, 999 b5 B0 LT Bene eS 20,007: dn an 36, 067 1002 natens LT i 27,972 Seventh i. ...U. 20, 323 979 16, 1.15 BR i Sa iY 26, 900 lias 26, 994 California: Piste go oust 58, 073 48, 647 373,636 443,320 | 3108, 547 6 5, 647 1111, 306 Seeond. foil lll 351,416 |. 0ncuaioc: TIL A00 nel 371,033 171,040 Third. cribs 2 308 0. as aaa = 3119, 236 58,271 | 3135,461 6 10, 539 1 148, 889 Fourth. __-.==0 3 64, 063 43, 805 3 64, 452 40, 842 361,341 75, 369 1138, 034 I ATR Ln 64 545 382910: | i aaeal 3.91, 868 55,232 | 3119,122 1124, 365 Sixth atials 78,247 | 3103,712 57,015 | 3118, 632 65,426 | 3131, 584 1137, 032 Seventh______..___ 69, 463 46, 647 62, 599 50, 504 72, 838 56, 808 1131, 353 EBighth....._0.-..-378, 557 57, 808 68, 681 84, 084 55,186 | 3148, 180 1153, 536 Ninth = xt. 62,571 3 82, 360 83, 536 OLB ai. 3.99, 708 1.99, 764 Fenth | 108 72,476 31, 700 84,791 41,194 | 3125,845 53,826 1 130, 065 Eleventh... ..__.. 69, 679 54,914 59, 993 68, 712 56,003 | 3170, 504 1177, 306 Twelth._..___..... 62, 034 53, 445 75, 003 40, 457 99, 494 54, 731 1155, 421 Thirteenth 8119, 251 8 6, 946 3.96, 258 344,808 | 3127,167 | 36 36,406 1168, 120 Fourteenth__ 63, 365 25, 497 67, 588 31, 375 73,137 37,939 1113, 882 Fifteenth___ 399,107 44, 559 83, 086 51,483 94, 435 371,667 1168, 155 Sixteenth 90, 986 66, 583 8 32, 863 397,407 ,017 | 38188, 049 1195, 434 Seventeenth ______ 68, 189 24, 981 56, 513 26, 891 75,109 32, 862 1114, 763 Eighteenth________ 61, 415 42, 748 51, 874 52, 216 60, 764 73,932 1136, 106° Nineteenth. _______ 70, 339 59, 071 75, 819 3 66,402 84, 931 75, 495 1160, 571 Twentieth _______ 59, 208 44,925 65, 243 42,710 9, 874 66, 132 1 136, 812 Colorado: Birgt ore 100, 704 41, 754 83, 517 42,758 110, 078 59, 427 1170, 354 Second-....2..2. 66, 420 57,145 65, 448 60, 259 & ge 2 a 1 id 310 i ’ t 1 Bhird....-t32.87 74,013 48,871 72,736 54, 007 { ’ 68, 225 965, 675 133, 900 Fourth... 2) i>. 42,010 22,175 43, 596 24, 805 44,095 30, 126 74, 221 Connecticut Pirst.L....00 0). 101, 766 66, 005 64, 483 3 68, 690 109, 880 392, 980 1.202, 870 Second... Loos. 55, 369 50, 369 45, 056 3 48, 290 63, 021 56, 825 1120, 220 bird. Losnal 77, 295 57, 243 55, 893 3 55, 751 84, 439 373,078 157, 517 Fourth. = 00% 80, 875 67, 768 44, 626 3 61, 660 391,192 90, 239 1185, 699 FHth 0. orev ou 55, 897 39, 230 39, 824 39, 652 62, 783 51, 049 1114, 340 Atlarge.........__ 371, 572 282, 618 250, 013 271, 329 407, 868 365, 851 1782, 593 Delaware: : A large... 0... 65, 485 55, 664 46, 989 60, 661 68, 205 64, 384 1134,778 Florida: Pirsb. cot vnne ne 61, 855 21,215 48,837 1. ee 88, 158 | chemmricons 188, 164 Second... ....c.. A BI0 1 oe 30 , 797 8, 382 77,179 Third: Lei Hr Bp Ld EE OLn HG 0,178 Lhe 30.002 | a 136, 570 Fourth. ....... 46, 854 19, 515 29, 621 6, 705 84, 594 27, 815 1112, 410 Pifth......=o 0G. 42, 939 10, 804 L804 4 Loar 49, 715 16, 214 65, 929 Georgia: YS ei 25,886 1... oat 28, 601 2111 128, 748 Second... oon. 9405. 19, 443 1636 120, 081 Third inion OI La ae Res Sai 22, 882 Fourth-_.i-c..c TY EA Te 05.0001 ponte 25, 609 Pith... Leese 35, 540 4,213 41, 677 47 41,724 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. 5 Vote cast for Communist candidate. 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 8 Vote cast for Prohibition candidate. 3 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more 7 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. other party endorsements. 8 Vote received for candidate by ‘“write-in’’ process. 4 Vote cast for Townsendite candidate. 9 To fill a vacancy. Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1936, 1938, AND 1940—Continued Vote cast in 1936 Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 tant Total vote 2 State and district Demo-| Repub-Demo-| Repub-| Demo-Repub-| castin 1940 crat lican crat lican crat lican Georgia—Con. ; Axio ae Se rd TEI SO fel 4,363 26 21, 966 21 21, 987 Seventh. ......... 28, 972 22,493 BeBe mmr 32, 280 5,062 137,344 Bichth. ........ 24, 695 1, 450 4009 |. LI YF 24, 454 Ninth: Lo .a 24, 353 9,737 8, 934 28 25, 461 4, 651 1.30, 164 Penth. i= gar= 27, ty rE] le mie Suen 9, 044 2 443 18, 291 2 238 118, 530 Idaho: i ek SRR 58, 941 24, 959 48, 318 28, 640 62, 107 37, 999 100, 106 Second... i... 67, 238 43, 834 47,199 54, 527 61, 726 69, 804 131, 530 Illinois: TELE ChB en 35, 376 28, 640 30, 207 26, 396 34, 641 30, 698 1.65, 781 Second. Loos. 163, 198 130, 197 129, 620 108, 483 155, 698 146, 927 302, 625 Phied rE 156, 425 106, 300 127, 597 100, 357 148, 382 141, 768 1.290, 151 Ponrth-tnt 69, 931 16, 591 61, 504 18, 962 74, 977 21, 858 1 96, 836 RTL SS fier | 35,019 10, 252 32, 104 10, 842 35, 637 14, 540 177 50, Sixth. os tet 204, 548 107, 649 154, 818 109, 031 187, 393 146, 253 333, 646 Seventh i ........ 248, 835 158, 755 192, 750 162, 069 229, 161 220, 793 449, 954 Highth-fv. 34, 452 8, 945 31, 823 10, 440 40, 074 11,232 51, 306 Ninth: 1... 2-T 60, 307 41, 587 44, 064 39, 512 49, 816 56, 806 106, 622 Penth. ll... 140, 225 158, 497 102, 234 141, 685 125, 827 199, 418 1.325, 246 Bleventhi ==. 77, 938 99, 027 48, 876 94, 565 70, 581 128, 645 199, 226 Twelith =. oi 58, 263 69, 721 43, 631 67, 326 58, 945 90, 744 1 149, 692 Thirteenth. coo: 37, 346 52, 495 23, 708 45,177 31, 502 65, 698 197, 201 Fourteenth _______ 58, 809 49, 250 41,682 44, 243 55, 451 60, 909 116, 360 Bifleenthy ..__..... 54, 703 53, 531 39, 779 47,703 50, 820 65, 639 116, 459 Sixteenth i... 60, 559 68, 964 35, 081 61,012 57, 567 79, 780 137, 347 Seventeenth ______ 42,071 46, 646 29, 023 45, 235 36, 102 56, 712 92, 814 Eighteenth ___.... 61, 286 52, 668 45, 691 56, 587 56, 744 64, 409 121,153 Nineteenth________ 77, 446 61, 535 55, 956 59, 446 74, 091 75, 933 150, 024 Twentieth ____.__ 48,128 36, 732 37,184 , 907 44,824 41, 806 1.86, 631 Twenty-first __.__ 62, 769 58, 573 52,173 51, 651 63, 740 67, 896 131, 636 Twenty-second.____ 96, 589 66, 960 66, 743 60, 518 98, 162 84, 381 182, 543 Twenty-third .____ 62, 044 50, 354 49, 537 42, 572 64, 072 61, 521 125, 593 Twenty-fourth ___ 45, 740 42, 764 40, 633 38, 889 43, 050 49, 731 92, 781 Twenty-fifth______ 68, 995 59, 101 59, 203 53, 999 67, 891 69, 165 137, 056 Atdarze lo 00... 2,062, 886 | 1, 568, 552 | 1, 572, 870 | 1,472,638 | 1,968,143 | 2, 050,493 } 107980. 583 Athrge i lt 2, 032, 432 i 564, 889 1 560, 283 | 1,456, 529 i 913, 950 | 2, 020, 006 |. isi t 68, 210 34,259 56, 630 46, 370 71, 606 45, 947 1117, 753 68, 318 73, 032 57, 860 79, 304 63, 290 87, 652 150, 942 71, 315 52,462 59, 359 61, 836 70, 208 73,914 144,122 72, 210 58, 519 52, 293 72, 567 58, 157 80, 259 138, 416 70, 854 63, 517 60, 643 73,102 65, 200 78, 691 143, 891 82, 096 66, 942 70, 128 71, 883 73, 499 80, 595 154, 094 81, 901 69, 928 74, 725 78, 146 74, 746 81, 632 156, 378 89, 548 50, 590 76, 780 59, 254 87, 141 69, 761 156, 902 74, 486 62, 714 70, 237 64, 541 69, 227 71, 624 140, 851 73, 547 66, 299 64,176 73,782 71,478 80, 725 152, 203 80, 856 53, 801 65, 646 61, 627 79, 070 73, 867 1152, 944 L Twelfth... 7 510 54, 885 65, 368 56, 319 80, 954 72,174 153, 128 120 116, 160 Second...) Zio... 70, 923 55, 255 48, 1556 47, 535 75,774 69, 298 145, 072 Third hoa Tae 47,391 53, 928 30, 158 45, 541 43,709 65, 425 109, 134 Fourth loo bu 56, 308 51, 805 44, 601 owa: 105170] TeSet Ne 55, 721 53, 474 33, 765 46, 636 46, 040 70, 48, 640 51, 558 66, 691 118, 249 Eith © cola 59, 971 63, 802 43, 452 , 58, 718 66, 940 125, 658 Sixth. 1 Gaur 55, 975 63, 026 37, 056 53, 505 64, 314 70, 707 1 135, 235 Seventh: = ‘61, 398 59, 834 37, 992 54, 922 50, 644 71, 633 122, 277 Righth.. |... 0... 48, 403 56, 076 30, 632 51, 934 46, 597 64, 687 111, 284 it Ninth: hr 63, 995 53, 675 46, 705 46, 366 67, 017 64, 877 131, 894 ansas: : Bist 47,303 66, 158 43, 374 65, 945 41, 375 64, 766 106, 141 Second. . 60, 049 72,038 54, 582 70, 608 62, 787 73, 659 136, 446 Third asia T 55, 541 52, 235 49,117 56, 361 48, 971 60, 381 109, 352 Fourth. =. .... 42,818 51, 732 32, 443 55,419 34, 947 58, 183 92, 130 Tigh pre 62, 501 41, 656 43, 990 43,480 58, 486 52, 901 111, 387 Bizth a... 56, 850 61, 669 40, 466 69, 989 44, 702 69, 627 114, 329 Seventh 0: © 52, 370 66, 553 38, 357 72, 893 42, 518 75, 349 117, 867 Kentucky First 58, 265 22, 757 35, 332 11, 153 I RR 60, 777 Second. -70, 949 39, 887 36, 170 20, 566 ROVE SRE 69, 905 Thir © 85,034 52, 600 57, 227 36, 361 96, 253 64, 053 160, 306 Fourth "54,616 37,979 32,179 22,139 55, 561 39,447 95, 008 Fifth 57, 842 25,011 28, 383 13, 095 51, 954 32, 981 84, 935 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 10 Total vote received by all candidates for 2 elective offices. Statistical 253 Vote cast in 1936 Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 Joil vou State and district Demo-Repub-| Demo-| Repub-| Demo-| Repub-Sn crat lican crat lican crat lican Kentucky—Con. 45, 867 66, 054 53, 581 73, 358 1 126, 940 Siztht dor ae Seventh ==... Fight t-te Ninth: Fear ae 70, 094 40, 366 60, 474 41, 958 48, 771 31, 865 42, 507 67, 199 38, 139 27, 655 39, 006 21, 327 20, 471 24, 337 27, 308 42, 901 74, 463 44,185 61, 881 43,013 48, 700 33, 574 44 736 69, 415 123, 163 77, 759 106, 617 112, 428 Louisiana: Blrst. Liaan Second.l i... Bhird i ars... Fourth______ Eifth_ Tarom Sixth | Lan... Seventh. ut lL... Eighth = 5 Olde 05: 945: 20,605 2652 NEE 84,903 27,503 7X07 [Lo nl |. ul Ae |. sual ol. |. Sn nr RROatR |... 00 LOA (LBL 80,a53 A740 S236" 10, 661 Wedd 12;225 0313 9,088 (Lalit LIL Lure 244 (ena § icatr tl Je alos ©: oll. te I SRE 563026. tan 27, 081 13, 933 33, 704 2 Sy nn ASE “NIE SR See ORBI8 (1....aelie 85004: i... ..eeaene 58, 234 56, 026 41,014 33,713 33, 462 41,173 28, 518 28, 904 - Maine: Birst. Luv a. Second... i Ut. Third tomas 44,106 38, 986 36, 103 60, 565 53, 822 56, 044 40, 103 46, 900 29, 771 57, 642 55,718 51, 485 32,018 31, 334 23, 934 55, 503 57,152 46, 732 . 87, 521 88, 486 70, 666 Maryland: Hirst JL... Second. ili... Third to ones Fourth. teb2h Fifth. oan Sixth Lar08 . 38,705 98, 515 37, 446 46, 132 47,145 53, 504 25, 780 60, 003 23, 941 39, 653 25, 036 40, 823 38, 926 91, 231 29, 891 37,416 46, 678 46, 200 23, 096 44, 699 22, 909 37,126 19, 604 44,734 36, 057 113, 495 38, 540 50, 120 58,418 60, 037 30, 810 59, 223 24, 153 38, 444 23, 857 52, 258 166, 871 173,718 62, 693 88, 564 1.82, 276 1112, 296 Massachusetts frst PEMEE Secondii.i Third “LCar Tourthy ~~ Wifth foe Sixth oma Seventh. ©....... Tighth_ ! 23.30 Ninth _ Segde Penth_.i Jef.0r .L Eleventh _________ Twelfth! 02 20. Thirteenth. _._.___ Fourteenth _______ 52, 342 52, 197 64, 960 56, 770 48, 701 36,171 76, 521 60, 211 61, 582 39, 112 53,129 78,711 54, 576 38, 609 60, 043 57,618 54, 154 61, 624 90, 845 79, 145 51, 009 46, 446 70, 852 74, 251 8, 523 35, 827 76, 793 58, 758 45,397 41,935 58, 600 53, 266 35, 323 27, 967 83, 618 62, 152 68, 258 43, 093 86,030 86, 618 39, 939 43, 876 |. ; 64, 886 68, 106 54, 557 62, 874 104, 912 82, 434 47, 533 50, 711 70, 059 78, 052 D0 B80 25, 678 86, 389 63, 608 54, 634 54, 428 72, 839 60, 988 37, 593 35, 214 89, 966 71,127 81, 523 54, 093 68, 041 97, 588 48, 606 55, 241 72, 750 76, 373 60, 676 70, 542 120, 435 88, 834 52, 701 57,217 74, 922 78, 029 13,176 27, 302 92, 651 65, 780 1137, 387 120, 801 1133, 519 1132, 660 158, 028 124, 048 1 144, 861 1 128, 345 1156, 446 1132, 124 181, 220 124, 890 1.142, 448 121, 021 Fifteenth ll... __. 42, 538 58, 355 Michigan: i 72,713 17, 265 71, 533 16, 752 87, 451 21, 399 1109, 516 50, 238 53, 845 32, 468 58, 921 43,733 72, 235 1116, 027 50, 956 54, 767 29, 832 58, 128 45,138 74,614 1120, 137 44 365 49, 641 33,912 49, 279 40, 443 65, 666 1106, 191 48, 998 49, 860 34, 991 50, 473 56, 172 65, 240 121, 412 72, 556 53, 140 54, 491 66, 612 73, 629 77, 340 1 151, 409 36, 462 54, 693 28, 259 62, 910 39, 416 73, 926 1113, 408 44, 309 45, 379 36, 758 52, 250 43, 297 68, 265 1111, 634 40, 095 40, 675 29, 397 40, 849 39, 667 52, 343 192,074 30, 784 41,997 22, 615 44,818 32, 289 52, 685 185,103 44 528 39, 602 38, 707 40, 904 45, 826 48, 087 194, 045 46, 284 37,714 43, 453 40, 587 47,429 44,733 1.92, 491 63, 479 49,910 48, 443 50, 123 66, 985 55,115 1122, 744 66, 791 41, 130 62, 872 45, 967 80, 463 55,910 136, 373 68, 264 49, 443 57,401 48,429 85, 239 52,131 1137, 722 56, 589 35, 223 49, 101 39, 623 73, 956 51, 276 1125, 756 50, 463 51, 603 39, 784 63, 769 68, 195 82, 809 1151, 310 27, 479 88, 814 1 136, 993 Second. Zo: 47,567 | 11 39,489 53, 258 43,919 57, 673 66, 610 1135, 817 Phird Joo 11 58, 023 40,775 | 11 50, 505 53,442 | 1 50,222 63, 854 1146, 885 Fourth) 1 27,753 60, 980 40, 340 74, 493 S=250 11 48, 039 48,399 | 11 40, 558 60,252 | 132,898 68, 525 1116, 473 58,110 | 1145, 568 67,722 | 1152, 289 79, 491 1152, 500 Fifth: 1 o0ii= 11 67, 349 79, 900 52, 504 84,023 136, 527 Sixth: Usbieah*-11 47,707 55,504 | 136,023 1142 356 65, 958 1130, 110 Seventh! Vioob 11 56, 310 37,190 | 1142, 572 49,394 | Eighth. = ta = 11 69, 788 53,914 | 11 54,381 67,960 | 139,252 74, 521 1137, 618 INInth C32gee C0 11 48, 256 31,181 | u 44, 017 40, 383 | 11 48, 999 48, 324 1112, 830 Mississippi 391 Gk BHR Ea a bn 10850 [tn a 19, 330 BIrst. oo teu ah 19, 208 ChE BE eda 100030 | {-x Ps 16, 939 Second! " = Sidney. P. Osborn... D. 2 | Jan. 1943 , 500 Arkansas.. ....zo2 Little Rock. ______ Homer M. Adkins______.____ D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 26,000 California. _...... Sacramento. ._____ Culbert 1.. Olson...........:--D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 3 10,000 Colorado co => Denver: 25: 17 Ralph L. Carr______ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 5,000 Connecticut... ____ Hartford. 20. 22 Robert A. Hurley... D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 12,000 Delaware... ....... Doverss usei. .g Walter W. Bacon... ....-... R. 4 | Jan. 1945 | ¢ 7,500 Florida. ce emin Tallahassee ______ Spessard L. Holland. _._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 517,500 Georgian v3. 1.20: Adama rl Eugene Talmadge... _____. D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 57,500 Idaho. Lit)112 Bolger ll. lo 3 Chase A, Clark 2201000 D. 2 | Jan. 1943 5,000 Minois. r+ av.200 Springfield _______ Dwight H. Green___________ R. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 312,000 Indiana 1 Indianapolis_ ..___ Henry F. Schricker._.______ D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 38,000 Towa _: cerifue Des Moines_._____ George A. Wilson____._______ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 7, 500 Kansas C0.2 Topeka til J Payno FH. Ratner.....-00 R. 2 | Jan. 1943 5, 000 5 x. Kentucky .--______ Frankfort... -.-= Keen Johnson i c.V. suiaall D. 4 | Dec. 1943 | 510,000 Louisiana... _...._ Baton Rouge......[ Sam H. Jones. _............ D. 4 | May 1944 | 12,000 Maine nas > Augusta oor = Sumner Sewall_____.________ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 55,000 Maryland. _______ Annapolis_._...... Herbert R. O’Conor________ D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 34,500 Massachusetts____| Boston____-____.___ Leverett Saltonstall_________ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 10,000 Michigan_________ Yansing. Murray D. Van Wagoner._.| D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 4 5,000 Minnesota. ______ Sf. Pagl ree Harold E. Stassen_________._ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 7,000 Mississippi_._____ Jackson... ....._ 3 Paul-B. Johnson ii 2350 D. 4 | Jan. 1944 | 37,500 Missouricz. .o--Jefferson City_..__ Forrest 5 Donnall Eat, B. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 35,000 Montana... long. cL am C. Ford... .s-...ones R. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 57,500 Nebraska_____.___ Tinecoln, Si ..5.---Dwight Griswold a R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 57,500 Nevada il ll...0 Carson City_...__. B.P.Capvillesz oon ull D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 37,000 New Hampshire_.| Concord._____._.___ Robert O. Blood...:.-....:L R. 2 | Jan. 1943 5, 000 New Jersey... Trenton. uo Charles Edison...._.___.__.___ D. 3 | Jan. 1944 | 620,000 New Mexico _____ Santa Fe.i __ Jom B-Miles.... Dx 2 | Jan. *1943 | 3 5,000 New York... Li Albany. 00 lL. Herbert H. oT i D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 525,000 North Carolina._.| Raleigh__________. J. Melville Broughton______. D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 310, 500 North Dakota.___| Bismarck ....____ John Moses. =i ..o2 2. D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 54,000 Ohio. ctr0t 1y Columbus... "Jom W.. Bricker. *~__.__" _ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 310, 000 Oklahoma. ._ Oklahoma City...| Leon C. Phillips.._.________ D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 36, 500 Oregon... opis Charles A. Sprague___...___ in. 4 | Jan. 1943 7, 500 Pennsylvania.____ Arthor H. James.........-.. R. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 7.18, 000 Rhode Island_____ J. Howard McGrath________ D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 78,000 South Carolina. J. EB. .. 2il0il D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 37, Harleygiiol, 500 South Dakota____ Harlan J. Bushfield.________ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 33,000 Tennessee... Prentice Cooper_...._._.____ D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 34,000 ‘Texas. 200d| 2 Aus Coke R. Stevenson_________ D. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 512,000 Wiah--h2 200 10H Salt He City.._:| Herbert B. Maw.______.____ D. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 36,000 Vermont... Montpelier_._____. William H. Wills___.________ R. 2 | Jan. 1943 5, 000 Yirzinis..c.i-l Bichmaond i rn Colgate W. Darden, Jr______ D. 4 | Jan. 1946 | 3 10,000 Washington______ Olympia," 2.7 Arthur B. Langlie __.______. R. 4 | Jan. 1945 6, 000 West Virginia_____ ELE 1.0 00 S00 Matthew M. Neely__.______ D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 510,000 Wisconsin. _._.__. Madison. _........ Julius P. oo uunsd R. 2 | Jan. 1943 | 36,000 Hellooooii Wyoming. ._...._ Cheyenne... Nels H. Smith... coweeenss= B. 4 | Jan. 1943 | 28,000 TERRITORY 8 Alagleny 1 TUNCANL emo ig Ernest Gruening_______._____ Indefinite. | 8 10, 000 Hawaii tr 50.ov Honolmu:...2. ...-Joseph B. Poindexter Indefinite. | 10,000 ISLAND POSSES-SION 8 Puerto Rico______ SanJuan__.. Rexford Guy Tugwell. ___ | _-. ff _______ Indefinite. | 7 10, 000 Virgin Islands. _..| Charlotte Amalie.| Charles Harwood. _ _ ______f _..._|.cceeaae Indefinite. 8, 000 1 With $2,400 annually for upkeep of mansion. 2 With $1,000 additional for mansion rent. 3 Also use of executive mansion and certain expenses for upkeep. 4 No executive mansion; nominal appropriation for expenses. 5 Also use of executive mansion. 6 Summer residence at seashore; $15,000 for expenses. 7 Also traveling expenses for official duties. 8 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Congressional Directory PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS [NotE.—The figures indicate the number of different individuals who have served as President and Vice President] President Vice President Service Congress 1 George Washington____..._.. 1 John Adams. ....._.___._ Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4. o.John Adams: ~~ ai. | 2 Thomas Jefferson........ Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5,86. 3 Thomas Jefferson_____.___.___ 3 Aaron Burr... cil... Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 38,1805 | 7,8. 1D [vi SIRRERR FM ORR 4 George Clinton___________ Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9,10. 4 James Madison....aeeeu---. Ra UH Le meSe Mar 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11,12. BL RPSee lh a 5 Elbridge Gerry 8. __..__.. Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13, 14 5‘James Monroe:......ccuen-6 Daniel D. Tompkins_____ Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 3,1825 | 15,16, 17,18. 6 John Quincy Adams._....___ 7 John C. Calhoun_________ Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 3,1829 | 19, 20. 7 Andrew Jackson... _.._...__._ peers [oC IERIE EIENdy Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, 22. aR Poise 080. pr. niial. 8 Martin Van Buren_._____ Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23, 24. 8 Martin Van Buren_._.______ 9 Richard M. Johnson._____ Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3,1841 | 25, 26. 9 William Henry Harrison.___| 10 John Tyler_____.__________ Mar. 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. 108 John PYIer. -Ui oct on ee cm md bag GOT LE C_TIORS Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28. Tames XK. Polk ho: 11 George M. Dallas._______ Mar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30. 12:Zachary: Taylor... ..o.o.--.: 12 Millard Fillmore ________ Mar. 5,1849-July 9,1850 | 31. 13MINar dA TIIMOYe... oven e [ode Loni cnc an SHLEOR 1 LT G50 July 10, 1850-Mar. 3, 1853 | 31, 32. 14 Franklin Pierce... ...._. 13 William R. King 4_______ Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33, 34. 15 James Buchanan____________ 14 John C. Breckinridge....| Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3, 1861 | 35, 36. 16 Abraham Lineoln___________ 15 Hannibal Hamlin________ Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 3,1865 | 37,38. DOr Tao 16 Andrew Johnson_________ Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. cAndrew: JONSON. 0 lla of reaeda L230 Spud Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3,1869 | 39, 40. 18 Ulysses S. Grant... ........ 17 Schuyler Colfax. __._______ Mar. 4,1869-Mar. 38,1873 | 41,42, 1B reg Sil Se 18 Henry Wilson 6__________ Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3, 1877 | 43, 44. 19 Rutherford B. Hayes. _.__..__ 19 William A. Wheeler______ Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45,46. 20 James A. Garfield.__________ 20 Chester A. Arthur_______ Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19, 1881 | 47. Chester A, Avtar ee a Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. "3, 1885 | 47, 48. 22 Grover Oleveland 7._____.__ 21 Thomas A. Hendricks 8..| Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3, 1889 | 49, 50. 23 Benjamin Harrison_...___._| 22 Levi P. Morton__________ Mar. 4,1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. Grover Cleveland 7.________ 23 Adlai E. Stevenson______ Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 83,1897 | 53, 54. 24 William McKinley...______ 24 Garret A. Hobart 8_______ Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 3,1901 | 55, 56. Podtt. ost ol. 25 Theodore Roosevelt. ____ Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14, 1901 | 57. 25 'Thoodore. .. ol a aide a Sept. 14,1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57, 58. Roosevelt... Dosinrook Sop al 26 Charles W. Fairbanks.___{ Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60. 26°William'H. Taft... ......_.. 27 James S. Sherman? _____ Mar. 4,1909-Mar. 3,1913 | 61, 62. 27 Woodrow Wilson. __________ 28 Thomas R. Marshall_____ Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 3,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. 28 Warren G. Harding_________ 29 Calvin Coolidge. _________ Mar. 4,1921-Aug. 2,1923 | 67. 20 Calvin Coolidge. + co tol ba i ol Aug. 3,1923-Mar. 3,1925 | 68. 10 eeeBae il 3 30 Charles G. Dawes_____._. Mar. 4,1925-Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70. 30 Herbert C. Hoover......_-. 31 Charles Curtis......____. Mar. 4,1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72. 31 Franklin D. Roosevelt.___.. 32 John N. Garner__________ Mar. 4,1933-Jan. 20,1941 | 73,74, 75, 76. 3b rian Sable Be 33 Henry A. Wallace_____._. Jan. 20,1941— 77, 78. 1 Died Apr. 20, 1812. 1 Died Nov. 23, 1814. 3 Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senators 4 Died Apr. 18, 1853. 8 Died Nov. 22, 1875. 8 Died Nov. 25, 1885. 7 Terms not consecutive. 8 Died Nov. 21,1899. 9 Died Oct. 30, 1912. THE CAPITOL OFFICERS OF THE SENATE PRESIDENT President of the Senate.—Henry A. Wallace, Wardman Park Hotel. Executive secretary to the President of the Senate.—Harold Young, Mayflower Hotel. Personal secretary to the President of the Semate—Mary Huss, 1657 Thirty-first Street. Clerk to the President of the Senate.— Mildred Eaton, 1437 Rhode Island Avenue. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE President pro tempore of the Senate.— Carter Glass, the Mayflower. CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the Senate.—The Very Reverend ZeBarney Thorne Phillips, D. D., LL. D., S. T. D., Mount St. Alban. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY EDWIN ALEXANDER HALSEY, Secretary of the Senate (3517 Williams-burg Lane, phone, WOodley 6060), 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 Polytechnic Institute; 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 Demo-cratic National Committee in 1928; served as the Sergeant at Arms during the Democratic National Conventions at Houston, Tex., in 1928; at Chicago, Ill., in 1932; at Philadelphia, Pa., in 1936; and at Chicago, Ill., in 1940; has served con-tinuously 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; member, Chevy Chase Club; Alfalfa Club; elected president of the Virginia Society of the District of Columbia, 1937. Chief clerk.—John C. Crockett, United States Senate. Parliamentarian.—Charles L. Watkins, Falkstone Courts. Journal clerk.—Edward J. Hickey, 3263 Beech Street. Astin) journal clerk.— Wesley Dierberger, 107 George Mason Drive, Arlington, a. Legislative clerk.— Emery L. Frazier, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Financial clerk.—Oco Thompson, 6110 Broad Branch Road. Assistant financial clerk.— George F. Thompson, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Chief bookkeeper.—Joseph C. Ellis, 1628 C Street NE. Clerks in disbursing office.—Robert J. Logan, 8700 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md.; John R. Hile, 1446 Belmont Street. Principal clerk.—John M. Gatling, 120 C Street NE. Enrolling clerk.—Robert Baldridge, Jr., 4210 Second Road North, Arlington, Va. Executive clerk.—Lewis W. Bailey, 313 East Capitol Street. Assistant executive clerk.—W. A. Rousseau, United States Senate. Printing clerk.—Guy E. Ives, 221 B Street NE. Assistant printing clerk.—Theron W. Marshall, 1021 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Private secretary to the Secretary.— Anna Hurwitz Monat, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Keeper of stationery.—Harold Scarborough, the Preston, Baltimore, Md. Assistant keeper of stationery.— Andrew J. Kramer, 305 Longfellow Street. 263 264 Congressional Directory Clerks in stationery room.— Warren C. Jefferds, 110 Maryland Avenue NE.; Louise Cabell, 130 B Street NE. Librarian.—Ruskin McArdle, the Cecil. Assistant librarian.—George W. Straubinger, 1521 East Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Superintendent of document room.—John W. Lambert, 1351 Juniper Street. First assistant in document room.—Copher Howell, 1 Third Street NE. Second assistant in document room.— Warren Worth Bailey, 5924 Ninth Street. Clerks in document room.—Donald O. Virdin, 112 Fifth Street NE.; Albert P. Moore, 128 B Street NE.; James Kearney, 128 B Street NE.; Joseph C. Duke, 1778 Lyman Place NE. Clerks.— Clara Dyson Darbie, 3409 Carpenter Street SE.; Don R. Jones, 1737 New Hampshire Avenue; Robert Moore, 3650 Minnesota Avenue SE.; James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, C. Alfred Lawton, 325 Senate Office Building; assistant clerks, E. D. Smith, Jr., Wardman Park Hotel; Pearl Murray, 5311 Eighth Street; Anna B. Pierce; Isobel S. Lawton, 325 Senate Office Building; Charles F. Smith, Wardman Park Hotel; Russell Hollingshead, 1841 Colum-bia Road; Mary Louise Broadway, 1855 Irving Street. Appropriations.—Clerk, Everard H. Smith, 3321 Rittenhouse Street; assistant clerks, J. W. Rixey Smith, Route 1, Vienna, Va.; Cecil H. Tolbert, 104 South Park Drive, Arlington, Va.; Louise S. Joubert, 311 Myrtle Street, Alexandria, Va.; Jennie D. McDaniel, Bellevue Hotel; Mary B. Chris-tian, 17 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va.; Frances B. Hoover, 2008 Brighton Road NE., Avondale; Helen Cooper Fox, Fort Ward Heights, Alexandria, Va.; Ruskin M. Bland, Cavalier Hotel. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.— Clerk, Margaret McMahon, 3200 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, Frances Allen, 3861 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Myra Bedel, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Beatrice Brettman, 5408 First Place; Elizabeth Herbner, 1451 Park Road; Mildred Johnson, 1841 Columbia Road; Macel McGilvery, 2 Eighteenth Street SE. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, Philip Levy, 2228 Observatory Place; assistant clerks, Minna L. Ruppert, 2929 Connecticut Avenue; Mildred Akins; Helen M. Adams, 4704 Dalton Road, Brookdale, Md.; Helene O’Connor, 1421 Whittier Street; Eunice V. Avery, 2515 Thirteenth Street; Mary Hickey, 212 Maryland Avenue NE.; Joseph M. Callahan, 2004 Thirty-eighth Street SE.; Richard Cummins, 1405 Thirty-seventh Street. Civil Service.—Clerk, Ernest J. Thomas, 113 First Street NE.; assistant clerks, Alice Klopstad Andersen, 2120 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; George Georgiades, 145 C Street NE.; Francis G. Dunn, 145 C Street NE. Claims.— Assistant clerks, Harry B. Straight, 7 Ross Street, Cottage City, Md.; C. C. O’Day, 4025 Connecticut Avenue; Betsy Lou Ross, 1812 K Street; Elizabeth S. Otto, 1365 Kennedy Street. Commerce.— Clerk, A. Hand James, Roosevelt Hotel; assistant clerks, Thomas P. Laney, 203 Twentieth Street NE.; Cecil E. Norment, 120 C Street NE.; Ben H. Long, 2034 Sixteenth Street; Estelle Hilliard, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; Annie C. Tucker, 1312 Thirtieth Street; Eloise Porter, 3543 Six-teenth Street; Annie Elizabeth Bailey, 2332 Massachusetts Avenue. Conference Majority of the Senate.—Clerk, J. B. Fowlkes; assistant clerks, Flo. E. Brodin, J. G. Stephenson, James L. Johnson, Catherine Hampson, Wythel . Killen. Conference Minority of the Senate.—Clerk, Helen K. Kiefer, 7805 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerks, Grace C. Townsend, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Mary Louise Morton, 1725 H Street; Mary Greenlee Pope, 627 East Capitol Street; Harriet Bentley, 2019 I Street; George Smith, 2427 M Street; Dorothy F. Winegar, 1817 P Street SE. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Eva B. Adams; assistant clerk, Norman Avansino; counsel, R. F. Camalier. Education and Labor.—Clerk, Earl B. Wixcey, 5316 Reno Road; assistant clerks, G. Ernest Bourne, 2013 Thirty-seventh Street SE.; L. Paul Badger, 2901 Eighteenth Street; L. Clair Nelson, 1301 Vermont Avenue. Officers of the Senate 265 Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Garrett Whiteside, 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway; assistant clerks, Dorothy Caruthers, 115 D Street SE.; Sue Srygley, La Salle Apart-ments; John Wilbourne, 2727 Connecticut Avenue; Mary Ward, 202 East Capitol Street. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Walling Keith, 112 Cameron Road, Falls Church, Va.; assistant clerks, Lillian G. Jones, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Imogene Gilder, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Mildred Willingham, 705 Eighteenth Street. Finance.— Clerk, Christie Belle Kennedy, 2929 Connecticut Avenue; Queen Holden, 3507 McComb Street; Carey Sutliff, 2301 Cathedral Avenue; W. Thad MeDaniel, 3507 McComb Street; Carolyn Glover, 1725 New Hamp-shire Avenue; Betty Irwin Burdette, the Chancelor; Minnie Dunlap, 1631 S Street; Stella E. Davis, 1631 S Street; Sam Oglesby, 2007 Belmont Road; minority expert, Wilbur R. Voigt, 247-B, Senate Office Building. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Roland Young, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; Adaline S Carr, 216 Maryland Avenue NE.; Eleanor Crow Lyons, 1301 Concord Avenue; Edith Parker, 1616 Sixteenth Street: Marion N. Huff, 5800 Nevada Avenue; Katherine Baldridge, Buckingham Apartments; Kathryn Brown, 1650 Harvard Street; Lou Nora Spiller, the Dresden; Hiram Staton, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Immigration.— Clerk, Clara E. Smith; assistant clerks, Margaret S. Appleby, 1820 K Street; Rachel Styles, 3100 Connecticut Avenue; Judith Rambo, 1616 Sixteenth Street; Lawrence M. Thurston, 4419 Illinois Avenue; Cath- erine Fullbright, 2653 Woodley Road. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, M. E. Pool, 326 Senate Office Building; attorney, A. A. Grorud, Maryland Courts NE.; assistant clerks, S. Sturgeon, 120 C Street NE.; Daisy Goad, 326 Senate Office Building; Elizabeth Durant, Carroll Arms Hotel; Joycette Jones, 424 Senate Office Building; Freda Stolper, 209 North Piedmont Street, Arlington, Va.; Jane Boswell, the Dorchester. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Ed. S. Villmoare, Valley Vista Apartments; assistant clerks, Helen Meek, Kennedy-Warren Apartments; Rebul H. Nichols, 442 Senate Office Building; May Timlin, 215 B Street NE.; Kathryn Kidd, Bellevue Hotel; Vera Hulings, 120 Maryland Avenue NE.; Margie Markley, 1012 Urell Place NE. Interstate Commerce.— Clerk, Maude W. Mitchell, 210 East Clifton Terrace; assistant clerks, R. Bailey Stortz, Lee Sheraton Hotel; Celia Arnold, 4912 Third Street; Edward Jarrett, Falls Church, Va.; Jerry B. House, Idylwood, Route 1, East Falls Church, Va.; Alma Lovely, 1925 Biltmore Street; Raymond Bryan, 1811 Biltmore Street. Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Arthur Sartain, 1530 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, Mrs. Douglas Lacy, 127 C Street NE.; Lurlene Poss, 127 G Street NI.; Minnie Moultrie, 110 F Street SE. Judiciary.—Clerk, Ben Stern, 4228 Forty-fifth Street; assistant clerk, Dix. W. Price, 1778 Lyman Place NE. Library.— Elora Chance. : Manufactures.— Clerk, Mary M. Donlin, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerks, Ruth Overton, Wardman Park Hotel; Florence S. Caillouet, 2013 Thirty-seventh Street SE.; Mollie A. Gaumer, 110 Maryland Avenue NE.; Davetta M. Pudifin, 900 Nineteenth Street; R. E. Yellowlees, 1620 Q Street SE.; Mary Elizabeth Overton, Wardman Park Hotel. Military Affarrs.— Clerk, Wesley E. McDonald, 1823 North Glebe Road, Arling-ton, Va.; assistant clerks, Walter I. Smalley, 4535 Klingle Street; Hubert H. Rand, 120 C Street NE.; Mary C. Hoke, Park Lane Apartments; Marguerite E. Watts, 4759 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; Dorcas P. Woodruff, Empire Apartments; Evelyn E. Cordell, 301 Delafield Place. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, R. H. Bailey, Jr., 1439 Fairmont Street; assistant clerks, Emily A. Bradshaw, 4444 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Charles Raleigh Smith; Nora Darnell, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Jeane F. Harkins, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Joseph W. McIntyre; assistant clerk, Margaret E. Gal-lagher, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Patents.— Clerk, R. A. Seelig, 329 Senate Office Building; Viola Markie, 329 Senate Office Building; R. H. Norton, 135 Senate Office Building. Pensions.—Clerk, M. M. Herman, the La Salle; law examiner, Louis J. Mey-erle, 612 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 266 Congressional Directory Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, D. W. McKellar, 120 C Street NE.; assistant clerks, Janice Tuchfeld, 120 C Street NE.; Frances Wilson, Commodore Hotel; William M. Fry, 407 Mason Avenue East, Alexandria, Va.; Alex Susong, 1361 Fairmont Street; Sara Ward, 1631 Euclid Street; James G. Muse, 4135 Alabama Avenue SE.; Ellen Ewing, 1601 Argonne Place. Printing.—Clerk, Minton I. Moore, 1722 Twenty-first Street. Privileges and Elections.— Edward J. Higgins, the Stratford. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Catherine M. Flynn, 4125 Eighteenth Place NE.; assistant clerks, Ann M. Grickis, 1631 Newton Street; Marie Wilson, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Evelyn Mary Thompson, 9111 Crosby Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Marie E. Nagle, 2032 Belmont Road; Gertrude M. Reynolds, 1901 Sixteenth Street; Dorothy H. Janof, 4919 Eighth Street. Public Lands and Surveys.— Clerk, W. H. McMains, 1803 Biltmore Street; assistant clerks, Virginia Flanary, 605 Keefer Place; Oleta Rhinehart, 2000 Connecti--on Avenue; Frances Ortiz, 120 C Street NE.; Dorothy Harvey, 605 Keefer lace. Rules.—Clerk, M. J. Menefee, 209 Senate Office Building. Territories and Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Corinne Barger; assistant clerks, Jane Leeke, Esther C. Quinn, Phillip W. Blake, Anna F. Doyle, Maydell McDar-ment, Agnes Scoular, Margaret Knode, Margaret V. Kettler. 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 and Baylor University; graduated from the law department of Georgetown University, Washington, D. C.; has been continuously connected with Congress for 44 years; served as private secretary to Representative Robert L. Henry, 1897-1903, and to Senator Charles A. Culberson, 1903-23; served also as clerk of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary for 6 years during Democratic control, 1913-19; served as private secretary to Senator Royal S. Copeland, 1923-33; served as a lieutenant colonel on the staff of Govs. Miriam A. Ferguson and James V. Allred of Texas; 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; is a member of the National Press Club, the University Club, and the Washington Golf and Country Club. Secretary to the Majority.— Leslie L. Biffle, the Westchester (phone, WOodley 9153). Secretary to the Minority.—Carl A. Loeffler, 4615 Twenty-ninth Place (phone ORdway 0508). Assistant Secretary to the Majority.— Walker Totty, 3208 Cleveland Avenue (phone, WOodley 1220). 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, 17 Worthington Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. (phone, Wlsconsin 3450). Messenger at card door.—John R. Perry, 1370 East Capitol Street. Assistant doorkeeper.— F. Hider, 2517 Mozart Place.Bert Messengers acting as assistant doorkeepers.—Mark Dunahoo, 1801 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; James M. Johnson, 219 First Street NE.; Joe L. Martinez, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE. POST OFFICE Postmaster—Jack W. Gates, Wardman Park Hotel. Assistant postmaster.— William R. Kavanaugh, 201 Eighth Street NE. Chief clerk.— Willard S. Miller, 1629 Fairlawn Avenue SE. Money order and registry clerk.—Harvie J. Belser, 227 First Street NE. FOLDING ROOM Foreman.—John W. Deards, Fontanet Courts. Officers of the Senate 267 OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, | Herbert N. Budlong, 5032 Glenbrook Chevy Chase, Md. Terrace. Percy E. Budlong, 1308 Gallatin Street. | Assistant.—Edward V. Murphy, 3539 Daniel B. Lloyd, Bowie, Md. R Street. John D. Rhodes, 3535 Williamsburg | Congressional Record messenger.—Placi- Lane. : dino Zagami, 318 Wilson Avenue, Fred A. Carlson, 2020 Plymouth Street. Colmar Manor, Md. (phone, WAr-Gregor Macpherson, 3111 Forty-fourth| field 6903). i Street. OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL | (Room 161, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 958) | l Legislative counsel. —Henry G. Wood, 5001 Jamestown Road, Yorktowne Village, Md : | Assistant counsel.—Stephen E. Rice, 3300 Cameron Mills Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Charles S. Murphy, 905 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md.; John H. Simms, 1434 Somerset Place; Robert W. McMillan, 1501 South Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—Earl Pryor, Tuxedo, Md. Assistant clerk.—Dale E. Isley, 1410 Morse Street NE. LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR Senator Ajken (Vi.). oii 0 Andrews (Fla). ~~ Augtin (Vi) __-..__ Bafley (N.C)... Ball Minn.) >..... Bankhead (Ala.)_______ Barbour, (IN-J.)- Barkley (Ky)... Bilbo: (Mise). --. Bone Wash.) __.._ Brewster (Maine) ______ Bridges (N. .. H.)......-Brooks (TN. ..._ Brown Mich.) __.___ Bulow. (S. Dak)... Bunker (Nev.). au... Burton (Ohio)... Butler, (Nebr)... .-.. Byrd (Vo,)... oi Capper (Kans.)....._._.. Caraway (Ark))....... Chandler (Ky.)......... Chavez (N. Mex.) ____ Clark (Idaho). Clark (Mo). Connally (Tex.).......-Danaher (Conn.).______ Bavie (Pa). Downey (Calif.)_..____ Doxey (Miss) 2. ..---Fllender (Ia.). ...........- Goorge (Ga) .....cs iis Gerry (R. 1)... Gillette (Iowa) Gaga (Va)... Green {RLY oo. Culler: Pa.) 0... Gurney (8S. Dak.)........ Hateh (N. Mex.) _._: Hayden, (Ariz)... .---Herring (Iowa) Oth). Holman (Oreg.) .-.._-_. Hughes (Del.)........ 268 Secretary Jean D. Andrew... OO. T. Swit. Charles A. Webb_______ A. Hand James. Henry N. Somsen, Jr___ Arthur Sartain_________ Albert B. Hermann_____ Edward P. Terry... BA Selig... Frances E. Dustin_____._ Elmer V. Cartledge_____ Joseph C. Mason_______ A. Manning Shaw___.___ Ernest J. Thomas... Florine Maher... _____ Barl B. Havt--~-_-.- William H. Souders_____ Garrett Whiteside______ Walter W. Mulbry_____ Dennis Chavez, Jr_____ = TuwluShank Ed. S. Villmoare, Jr____ ASTEC David Kammerman_ _ _ _ Bdmund B. Erk... Walter-Phair... ..... Andrew S. Scott________ Frank Wurzlow, Jr.._..___ Christie Bell Kennedy._._ James A. Byrne_ _______ Cyril: J. Parr. ...... J. W. Rixey Smith___. Edward J. Higgins______ B.H. Balley, Jr.._.__.. John P. DePagter...--- W. H. McMains________ Pon A. Custin. = SECRETARIES Secretary’s address 257 North Thomas Arlington, Va. The Majestic. 1432 Ames Pl. NE. The Roosevelt. 3215 Macomb St. 1530 16th St. 200 West Leland St., Chase, Md. The Roosevelt. 717 Dale Drive, Spring, Md. 4550 Connecticut Ave. St., Chevy Silver 4728 32d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 2901 Connecticut Ave. 113 1st St. NE. The Pall Mall. 607 King Street Rd., Alex-andria, Va. 2006 Fort Davis St. SE. 200 Massachusetts Ave. 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway. The Highlands. 1911 R St. 2136 Branch Ave. SE. The Valley Vista. 216 Maryland Ave.NE. 1869 Mintwood PI. 6310 Delaware St., Chevy Chase, Md. 3529 Ames St. NE. 305 Maryland Ave. NE. 8405 Woodcliff Court, Silver ‘Spring, Md. 2929 Connecticut Ave. The Continental. 1301 Vermont Ave. 4801 Connecticut Ave. The Stratford. 1439 Fairmont St. 1508 North Lancaster, Ar-lington, Va. 1808 Biltmore St. 1314 Massachusetts Ave. 1620 18th St. 112 Cameron Rd., Falls Church, Va. 313 Cedar Ave., Takoma Park, Md. The Kennedy-Warren. Officers of the Senate Senator Secretary Secretary’s address Johnson (Calif)... Mary A Connor. 2. => 1406 Meridian Pl. Johnsen (Colo). Nancy Chapman._____._. 2127 California St. Kilgore (W.. Va.) Radle Herndon.___.____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE. La Follette (Wis.)o——.__ 1870 Monroe St. Tanger (N. Dak). ____-The Roosevelt. Yee (Okla) i anna Loyd Benefield.. -. ...-. Yodge (Masg.)..... Maxwell M. Rabb______ 4707 Connecticut Ave. Ymeas (I) oe nas Margaret McMahon____ 3200 16th St. McCarran (Nev.)-—____ Eva BiAdams_-.-.__ The Diplomat. McFarland (Ariz.)_____ Wyly Parsons... The Capitol Towers. McKellar (Tenn.)______ Donald W. McKellar__ 120 C St. NE. McNary (Oreg.)------_ Helen K. Kiefer... —... 7805 Takoma Ave., Takoma Park, Md. Maloney (Conn.)______ Catherine M. Flynn____ 4125 18th Pl. NE. Maybank (S. C.)._.--__ Mead (N.Y)... 2 “Clatre 1, Keele -..inn-42 Independence Ave. SW. Murdock (Utah)._._.___ Ray R. Murdock ls... 1201 South Barton St., Ar-lington Village, Arlington, Va. Murray (Mont.)..-____ Charles A. Murray ---_-The Shoreham. Norris: (Nebr). wal John 'P.:Robertson-... 3900 Connecticut Ave. Nye (N. Dalke.y........ Gerald W. Movius______ 3100 Connecticut, Ave. O’Danijel (Tex)... -D. Roland Potter. ____ 1 3d St. NE. O’Mahoney (Wyo.)____ Julian B: Snow: © =: Solowial Village, Arlington, a. Overton a.) Mary M. Donlin_______ 3726 Connecticut Ave. Pepper (Fla)... G. Pierce Wood... The Carroll Arms. Radeliffe (Md.)..—.——-. Berths. C. Joseph... The Washington. Reed (Kansg.)......-Clyde M. Reed, Jr______ The Stoneleigh Court. Reynolds (N.C)... Wesley E. McDonald _.. Rosier (W. Va.).....—-. Eleanor B. Starcher___._._ The Cordova. Russelli(Ga). .» =. Schwartz (Wyo.) .-—_--Marie M. Herman_____.. The La Salle. Shipstead (Minn.)_._.___ Laura 8S Reid "= 3420 Lee Blvd. Arlington, Va. Smathers (NJ)... Edward T. Keeley..____ Smith (8G). = C Alfred Tawton-_ Spencer (Ark.). _._--__ LV. «Twyford... -a-356 Arlington Village, Ar-lington, Va. Stewart (Tenn.) _____-_ Tait (Oho) oa The Carroll Arms. Thomas; (Idaho)... ----Woodley Park Towers. Thomas (Okla.) _ _..___ 6228 Piney Branch Rd. Thomas (Utah)... Fart B. Wizcey.. .--:--5316 Reno Rd. Tobey:(N. H.) vitor a= Helen C. Ramsdell_ ____ Truman {Mo.) rz vuw--Harry H. Vaughan____. 1609 Oakcrest Drive, Alex- andria, Va. Tunnel: (Del)... Edward G. Pollard. ____ Tydings (Md)... --Corinne Barger... 1407 Ingraham St. Vandenberg (Mich.)___ aye H. Vandenberg, The Wardman Park. I. Van Nuys (Ind.)-..___ Ben Stern... 4228 45th St. Wagner (N. Y¥.)..---.: Philiplevy. C/U> il 5609 33d St. Wallgren (Wash.)______ Hugh B, Michell... .. Arlington, Va. Walsh (Mass) _______ Joseph W. Melntyre____ Wheeler (Mont.) ______ Maude W. Mitchell_____ 210 East Clifton Terrace. White (Maine) _ _._____ Ruby C. Hutehinson____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE. Wiley (Wig,) ti Disa” Wilson C. Hefner _______ 3111 W Pl. SE. Willis (Ind.) ok Aijlene Loveland_ .______ 7211 Bradley Blvd., Bethes- da, Md. 64674°—T7T7—2—1st ed 19 OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE (Phone, NA tional 3120) OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER The Speaker.—Sam Rayburn, the Anchorage. Secretary to the Speaker.—Alla Clary, 504 Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant secretary.—Mary Anna Matthews, Hayes Building—Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. Clerks to the Speaker.—Ted Wright, 1761 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va.; Beatrice P. Conlin, 850 North Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va.; Jennie V. Abernathy, 216 Eighth Street NE.; Billy Wilcox, 504 Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va.; H. Ray Roberts, 211 North Trenton Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENTARIAN Parliamentarian.—Lewis Deschler, 101 Lucas Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Parliamentarian.— William T. Roy, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Messenger.— George J. Maurer, 157 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the House—Rev. James Shera Montgomery, D. D., 100 Maryland Avenue NE. OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY LEADER Floor leader—John W. McCormack, Hotel Washington. Secretary.— Eugene T. Kinnaly, 1918 Park Road. Legislative clerk.—John W. Newman. Assistant legislative clerk.—James V. Hartrey. Clerk to Majority Leader.—Joseph F. Feeney. OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER Floor leader.—Joseph W. Martin, Jr., the Hay-Adams House. Secretary.—James N. Milne, 104 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—E. A. Gridley, 3 Brookdale Road. Legislative clerk.—Laura O. Benoit, 3032 N Street. 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 and Sixty- House of Representatives in the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, fifth Congresses, and again elected Clerk of the National House of Representatives in the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses. Journal clerk.—George Taylor, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Reading clerks.—Alney E. Chaffee, 311 Maryland Avenue NE.; Roger M. Callo- way, 2268 Cathedral Avenue. Tally clerk.—Hans Jurgensen, Jr., 2401 Calvert Street. Enrolling clerk.—Evan Taylor. Assistant enrolling clerk.—H. Newlin Megill, 423 Longfellow Street. Disbursing clerk.—J. C. Shanks, 2404 Twenty-first Place NE. File clerk.—James A. Dodd, Cheverly, Md. \ Chief bill clerk.—William J. McDermott, Jr., 1 Anacostia Road SE. Stationery clerk.—Earl E. Dillon, 1809 Kenilworth Avenue SE. Librarian.— Larry Cates, 1525 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Va. Property custodian.—John C. Page, 1313 Twenty-first Street South, Arlington, Assistant custodian.—Irene McCallan. 270 Officers of the House 271 OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS KENNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms (Wardman Park Hotel, phone, HObart 6727); native and citizen of Montana; educated in Montana schools, University of Washington, Seattle, and George Washington University, Wash-ington, D. C.; Kappa Sigma; newspaper reporter and editor in Northwestern States; Washington correspondent; official last six Democratic national con-ventions; Assistant Sergeant at Arms, 1915-17; cashier, Sergeant at Arms office, 1917-30; founder of the Little Congress; married Miss Edna Fullerton, of Toronto, Canada, and they have one son, Kenneth, Jr.; elected Sergeant at Arms of the House in Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses. Cashier.—Harry Pillen, 511 Webster Street. Assistant cashier.—John Oberholser, 232 Sixth Street SE. Bookkeeper.—A. B. Fangmeyer, 4409 Seventh Street. Private secretary.— Caroline Wadden, 2401 Calvert Street. Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of mace.— Warren Hatcher, 230 First Street SE. Pepe) Sergeant at Arms in charge of pairs.—John O. Snyder, 4717 Fifteenth treet. : Special assistant to Sergeant at Arms.—Zeake Johnson, Colonial Village, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER Doone of the House of Representatives.—Joseph J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth treet. Chief pages.— Marion J. Shuffler, 1203 Hamilton Street; John W. McCabe, 1418 M Street. Chief messenger.—Ira D. Walker, 2412 Monroe Street NE. Messengers.—Joseph P. Delaney, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Harry B. Jacobs, 4636 Twelfth Street NE.; Vincent R. Murphy, 212 House Office Building; R. C. Hicks, 3306 Warder Street; W. Moseley Miller, 305 New Jersey Ave-nue SE.; Sterlin H. Denton, 312 Maryland Avenue NE.; Bernard Lally, 60 Hamilton Street; Charles V. Martin, 3800 Garrison Street; David Mauser, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; Connor Patman, 3500 Fourteenth Street; Frank D. Taylor, 128 C Street NE.; Byron Anglin, 1317 House Office Building; Harry H. Burns, 1121 House Office Building; J. L. Bryan, 3120 Twelfth Street SE.; J. Lee Aston, 1643 Hobart Street. Messengers on soldiers’ roll.—Melvin L. Stevens, 327 East Capitol Street; N. Cur-tis Peterson, 1601 R Street; Thomas Onofrio, The Portner Apartments; Charles Ingoldsby, 3713 Thirty-fifth Street; Robert Nisbet, 1216 House Office Building; George O’Brien, 113 B Street SE.; John Rives, 1124 House Office Building; Roy Robertson, 4610 West Virginia Avenue; Bethesda, Md.; Ferd Bryan, 255 House Office Building; Francis C. Notebaert, 1249 Lawrence Street NE.; James C. Davidson, 1277 New Hampshire Avenue, Edward J. Farrell, 207 Third Street SE.; John A. Hunter, 1541 House Office Building. Majority manager of telephones.—C. H. Emerson, 216 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Minority manager of telephones.—Nichael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street. Chief of jamitors—John E. Bennett, 314 East Capitol Street. FOLDING ROOM Superintendent.—Joseph H. Callahan. Secretary.—James G. Simos, 518 Ninth Street NE. Chief clerk.—Harley Clark, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Clerks.—Robert McCue, 1318 Saratoga Avenue NE.; Charles A. Scherer, 2110 Thirty-eighth Street SE.; Howell P. Rasberry. Order clerk.—Gerald T. Dunne, 1419 Thirty-fifth Street. Foreman.—Clinton W. Cowley, Phoenix, Md. Assistant foreman.—Floyd E. Artrip, 206 Twentieth Street NE. Shipping clerk.—D. McDonnell, 2017 Somerset Street, Green Meadows, Md. Speech clerk.—John F. Shaw, 4813 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant speech clerk.— Austin Brunicardi, 914 Massachusetts Avenue. Mail clerks.—T. J. Brennan, 142 Carroll Street SE.; Madison Wilson, 25 Third Street NE.; Walter Skalski, 125 B Street SE.; James Chesnutt, 704 A Street SE.; Ralph Davidson, 21 Third Street NE. Messengers.— Wallace E. Dingus, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Jerome L. Ripley 215 2 rt NE.; Stephen Neely, 320 East Capitol Street; Bert Glenn, 112 treet 272 Congressional Directory DOCUMENT ROOM Superintendent.—Elmer A. Lewis, 115 Second Street NE. Assistant superintendent.—B. H. Ellert. Assistants.—Carl Lutz, 2415 Fourteenth Street NE.; Al T. Griffith, 112 Fifth Street NE.; John W. Cooper, 2439 Good Hope Road SE.; Glenn S. Welsch, 1451 Park Road; Clifford F. Kelly, 214 Second Street SE.; George L. Sichelstiel, 216 Second Street NE.; Julius Tolton, 128 B Street NE.; George MacDonald, 232 First Street SE.; Walter S. Bogdan, 417 Second Street NE. SPECIAL AND MINORITY EMPLOYEES Special clerks to the minority.— William Tyler Page, 220 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; William F. Russell. Minority pair clerk.—M. L. Meletio, 3363 Denver Street SE. Minority employees.—John Andrews, 310 Fifth Street SE.; Frank W. Collier, 418 Seventh Street NE.; James P. Griffin, 305 Maryland Avenue NE. CAUCUS ROOMS Majority messenger.—[Vacant.] Minority messenger.— Marshall W. Pickering, 1002 Douglas Street NE. OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER POST OFFICE IN OLD HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Postmaster.— Finis E. Scott, 5323 Reno Road. Assistant.—T. L. Garland, 1604 Twenty-first Place SE. Registry, stamp, and money-order clerk.—George Poniatowski, 3323 Sixteenth Street. Assistant.—Lorne Johnson, 18 Ninth Street NE. Night stamp clerk.—Paul Sapp, 20 Third Street SE. ° Masl distributors.—Day clerks: Bonner Jennings, 3525 A Street SE. ; Joseph Taylor, 26 Farragut Place. Night clerks: C. C. Crowley, 40 Independence Avenue SW.; Casimir Rutkowski, 1376 Rittenhouse Street. Special mail clerk.—Ralph Price, 527 Tennessee Avenue, Alexandria, Va. . MISCELLANEOUS Delivery and collection messengers.—Robert P. Olson, 1601 R Street; William B. Howard, 124 C Street SE.; L. Odell Lewis, Jr., 2448 Massachusetts Avenue; Charles N. Saunders, 501 Twelfth Street NE.; Raymond F. Conlon, 1114 B Street’ NE.; Irvin T. Quinn, Jr., Alban Towers; Frank Raskowski, 230 First Street SE.; J. C. Kitchings, 238 First Street SE.; Horace Hagenlocker, 704 Longfellow Street; Ausbon M. Cockrell, 314 Maryland Avenue NE.; David B. Bell, 12 Fourth Street SE.; John Cullen, 419 Leland Place; Charles Wilson, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; John Barrett, 139 Eleventh Street NE.; Don G. Haefer, 240 First Street SE.; Walter Vogt, 120 Maryland Avenue NE.; Martin Flannagan, 632 Girard Street NE.; Edward J. Conroy, 121 C Street SE.; Hamilton Briggs, Columbia Road, Landover, Md.; Earl Power, 425 New Jersey Avenue SE.; W. Earl Griffin, 3620 Sixteenth Street; Michael O’Gorman, 410 House Office Building; Bascom S. Damron, 1606 W Street SE.; Sidney Corrin, Jr., the Continental; John J. Lenahan, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Douglas Trail, 128 B Street SE. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL Clerk in charge.— Frederick Stich, 2511 Seminary Drive, Alexandria, Va. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Registry, stamp, and money-order clerk.—Jack Warren, 1435 Sheridan Street. Assistant.—W. H. Johnson, 1601 R Street. Night clerk.— William B. House, 228 First Street SE. Foranom of mail platforms.—Frank R. Monroe, 429 North Coe Street, Alexandria, a. Officers of the House 273 CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES Accounts.—Clerk, Frank M. Karsten, 2010 Fendall Avenue SE. Agriculiure.—Clerk, Katherine Wheeler, 1100 Greenwood Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerk, Wilma Fulmer, 1324 House Office Building. Appropriations.—Clerk, Marcellus C. Sheild, 3 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ; assistant clerks, John C. Pugh, 5527 Fairglen Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; James F. Scanlon, 4207 Twelfth Street NE.; Arthur Orr, 233 North Filmore Street, Arlington, Va.; William A. Duvall, 6523 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Jack K. McFall, 7006 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Robert P. Williams, 3404 Cameron Mill Road, Alexandria, Va.; George Y. Harvey, 16 Clagett Road, University Park, Md.; page, William J. Strachan, 1341 East Capitol Street; messenger, Robert M. Lewis, 411 U Street. ; Banking and Currency.—Clerk, James Douglas Brown, 1333 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerk, Margo Marple, 1445 Ogden Street. Census.—Clerk, Anna B. Sandt, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md., R. D. 2. Civil Service.—Clerk, Thomas IL. Camp, Woodley Park Towers; assistant clerk, Mrs. Willie S. Winter, 2359 Ashmead Place. Claims.—Clerk, Walter R. Lee, 1404 Twenty-first Street; assistant clerk, Martha Crawley, 3816 Davis Place; Donald T. Appell, 2006 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Saul C. Cohen, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Disposition of Executive Papers.—Clerk, Miss Ray E. Moore, Carroll Arms Hotel. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Winifred M. Crosby, 11 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant clerk, Mabel Haller, 3867 Alabama Avenue SE. Education.—Clerk, Earl J. Cox, 1414 House Office Building. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—Clerk, Rilla Schroeder, Forest Glen, Md. Elections No. 1.—Clerk, William Walker, 1954 Columbia Road. Elections No. 2.—Clerk, Mary Shackelford, 1516 House Office Building. Elections No. 3.—Clerk, Joe Underwood, 2817 Connecticut Avenue. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry V. Hesselman, 1517 House Office Building. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Edward V. Curry, Ontario Apartments. Flood Conirol.—Clerk, Doris Boudreau, 227 House Office Building. Foreign Affairs.—Clerk, Boyd Crawford, West Falls Church, Va.; assistant clerk, Louise Dreisonstok, Westchester Apartments. Immigration and Naturalization.—Clerk, Miriam Wydra, 446 House Office Building. Indian ms Clove, William Howard Payne, 2701 Thirty-third Street SE.; assistant clerk, H. G. Bender, 510 A Street SE. Insular Affarrs—Clerk, I. H. Henry, 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, 4730 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; first assistant clerk, F. P. Randolph, 4135 Alabama Avenue SE.; second assistant clerk, Mary L. Michael, 1028 Connecticut Avenue; ere Troe : janitor, Calvin F. Tipton, 127 Fiftieth Street NE. Invalid Pensions.—Clerk, Bingham W. Mathias, 2009 Evarts Street NE.; assist-ant clerk, Estelle M. Corbett, Lombardy Apartments; stenographer, Mary Biel; examiners, L. A. Johnson and Harry E. Edwards. Irrigation and Reclamation.— Clerk, Letitia: Erb, Keystone Apartments. Judiciary.—Clerk, Frank Connell, 2136 Branch Avenue SE.; assistant clerks, yon Sipediey, 204 East Capitol Street; Harmon L. Watkins, 216 Second treet SH. Labor.—Clerk, Lucille McDonagh, Kennedy-Warren Apartments; assistant clerk, Charlotte R. Eldredge, Bellevue Hotel; messenger, Edward C. McGarry. Library.—Clerk, George W. McKean, 3120 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Memorials.—Clerk, James J. Guinea, 1650 Harvard Street. Merchant Marine and Fisheries—Clerk, William C. Tayloe, 322 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerk, Elsie N. Keefer, 5106 Eighth Street. Military Affairs.—Clerk, J. C. Burnette, 16 Third Street NE.; assistant clerk, Julia Watterson, 1509 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Hutton B. Strader, 1608 Fourty-fourth Street. Naval Affairs—Clerk, Robert H. Harper, 4618 Yuma Street; assistant clerk, Martha Elkins, 1509 Sixteenth Street. Patents. : Pensions.—Clerk, Alice B. Norton, 5735 Fourth Street; assistant clerk, Freeda ondvias, 30 T Street NE.; law examiner, Fred R. Miller, 7535 Seventeenth reet. 274 Congressional Directory Post Office and Post Roads.—Clerk, RobertE. Lambert, 7805 Morningside Drive; assistant clerk, Thomas Gilstrap, 20 Third Street SE. Printing.— Clerk, Joe B. Jeffers, Jr., Dodge Hotel. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Albert W. Woods, 245 House Office Building; assistant clerk, Elizabeth Reeves, 6415 Twenty-second Road North, Arlington, Va. Public Lands.—Clerk, C. E. Henderson, 328 House Office Building. Revision of the Laws. Rivers and Harbors.—Clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road; assistant clerk, Alberta Harding, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Roads.—Clerk, Wainwright Bridges, 6817 Georgia Avenue; assistant clerk, Allene Gingles, 1012 House Office Building. Rules.—Clerk, Humphrey .S. Shaw; assistant clerk, Pearl Pribyl. Territories.—Clerk, Freda Lopatin, 2327 Skyland Place SE. War Claims.—Clerk, Myrtle S. Locher. Ways and Means.—Clerk, Barron K. Grier, 110 North George Mason Drive, Buckingham, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks, Marion Y. MecCanless, 1841 Columbia Road; Robert Landreth, 4925 Sherrier Place; assistant clerk and stenographer, Wilhelmina H. Thomas, 106 O Street SW.; minority clerk, Leslie M. Rapp, 416 North Norwood Street, Arlington, Va.; messengers, Sam W. Hardy, 1825 S Street; B. Frank Bomar, 138 W Street. World War Veterans’ Legislation.—Clerk, Ida Rowan, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerk, Edward C. Wrede, 127 C Street NE. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. H. B. Weaver, 8502 Lynnwood Place, Chevy Chase, Md. W. L. Fenstermacher, the Broadmoor. Roy L. Whitman, 4820 Linnean Avenue. F. S. Milberg, 3041 Sedgwick Street. Elmer B. Clark, 604 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Clerk.—Charles H. Parkman, 1003 Taylor Street NE. Assistant clerk.—Paul L. Miller, 1314 S Street SE. Expert transcribers.—Lida H. Dorian, 1712 Sixteenth Street; Jessie M. Small, Burlington Hotel; Charles T. Dulin, 8 U Street; Howard Butterworth, 1701 Park Road; S. W. Williston, 3501 Patterson Street; Paul J. Plant, 1831 Belmont Road. 2 Congressional Record messengers.—Preston L. George, 114 U Street NE. (phone MIchigan 1133); Bjarne J. Sigurdsen, 3409 Brothers Place SE. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES R. J. Speir, 321 Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. W. G. Stuart, 3446 Oakwood Terrace. L. F. Caswell, 7123 Ninth Street. Albert Schneider, 7516 Fourteenth Street. Talma L. Smith, 3548 Brandywine Street. W. R. Graham, 6839 North Washington Boulevard, East Falls Church, Va. Clerk.— William M. Day, Cavalier Hotel. OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 159, House Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 592) Legislative counsel.—Middleton Beaman, 3649 Albemarle Street. Assistant counsel.—Allan H. Perley, 3636 Van Ness Street; Gerald D. Morgan, 3235 R Street; John R. Quine, 1820 Harvard Street. Chief Ait and law clerk.—C. Breck Parkman, 118 Northbrook Lane, Bethesda, Assistant clerk.— William M. Day, Jr., 120 Olin Drive, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. Miscellaneous Officials 275 MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 200) Clerk in charge at the Capitol.—Ralph L. Harris, 627 C Street NE. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL ARCHITECT'S OFFICE (Office in basement of Capitsl. Phone, NAtional 3120, branches 95, 125, 126, and 940) Architect.—David Lynn, 3700 Quebec Street. Assistant architect.—Horace D. Rouzer, 3519 Porter Street. Administrative officer.—Charles A. Henlock, 520 Oneida Place. Supervising engineer.— Arthur E. Cook, Roosevelt Hotel. Civil engineer.August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street. — Engineer in charge (House wing).— Charles R. Torbert, 492 G Street SW. Engineer in charge (Senate wing).— Richard H. Gay, 1341 Oak Street. dtsenpe architect and horticulturist— William A. Frederick, 1206 Kennedy treet. A Chief engineer (power plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. Engineers (power plant).—J. M. Cowell, 1601 G Street SE.; William H. Hall, 112 F Street SE. Electrical engineer—R. D. Holcomb, the Olympia. Elevator engineer.—H. B. Sommer, 160 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Air conditioning engineer.—G. D. Fife, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING (Office at room 219. Phone, branch 138) Custodian.—J. Heywood Bell, Jr., 3217 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant custodian.— Charles E. Alden, 1801 Lamont Street. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS (Office on second floor, northwest corner, Old Building. Phones, branches 142 and 143) Superintendent.— Edward Brown, 1722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant superintendent.—Frank Clarkson, R. F. D. 2, Vienna, Va. OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN (Office on ground floor, Capitol. Phone, branch 305) Medical officer.—Dr. George W. Calver, 3103 Cathedral Avenue. CAPITOL POLICE (Office in lower west terrace, room 3, Capitol. Phones: Captain, NAtional 3120, branch 1051; secretary, NAtional 3120, branch 102) Captain.— William 8S. Orthman, Room 3, United States Capitol Building. Secretaries.—G. E. Keller, 23 Fourth Street NE.; Donald V. Murphy, 1701 ' Sixteenth Street. Special officer.— William Banks, Annapolis, Md. Lieutenants.— Ballinger, 224 First Street SE.; Roy W. Brown, 620 A Street Billy SE.; Harry Gould, 111 Third Street NE.; Earnest R. Hales, 112 Carrol Hill, Md.; Robert W. James, 1613 Harvard Street; Roy Johnson, 231 First Street NE. Sergeants. —Julian J. Anastasio, 115 D Street SE.; Comer Bryant, 115 D Street SE.; Olin Cavness, 123 B Street SE.; Vernon O. Deus, 5 Belford Drive, Takoma Park, Md.; Joseph W. Easton, 417 Twentieth Street NE.; James Etheridge, 110 C Street SE.; James Healy, 304 East Capitol Street; Robert Henry, 5010 Nebraska Avenue; G. Kilroy, 334 Maryland Avenue NE.; Dominic Perry, 3517 East Capitol Street. Desk sergeants.Frank 540 North Linwood Avenue, Baltimore, Md. — Lidinsky, Desk clerk.— William Baker, 1601 R Street. ye 276 Congressional Directory RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE (Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, branch 260) Ticket agent.—Charles W. Owings, 2603 North Capitol Street. In charge Capitol ticket office.—P. H. McClune, 1123 Fern Street. Chief clerk.—Clyde Freed, 613 Lexington Place NE. AIRLINES TICKET OFFICE (Ground floor, House side of Capitol. Phone, branch 1425) Manager.— Charles O. Brahler, 3292 Arcadia Place. TELEGRAPH OFFICES WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. (Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1111 and 28; House Office Building, branches 317 and 573; House Press Gallery, branch 1085) Supaenionions and executive representative.— Bruce R. Allen, 708 Fourteenth treet. Manager Senate Office Building.—Joseph G. Corona, 529 G Street SE. Manager House Office Building.—H. G. Royce, 208 Farragut Street. OFFICES IN THE PRESS GALLERIES Senate gallery.—C. Walter Scherer, manager, northeast corner Senate . wing, third floor of the Capitol; Albert C. Coe, Jr., assistant manager, northeast corner Senate wing, third floor of the Capitol. House gallery.—James O. Mathis, manager, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Senate office press room.— Thomas B. Bowen, manager, 1356 Levis Street NE. POSTAL TELEGRAPH-CABLE CO. (Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1230 and 1231; House Office Building, branches 208 and 310) Superintendent.—Thomas P. Dowd, Senate Office Building. In oh of Senate Office Building and Capitol.—Frank P. Beam, Jr., 1348 Euclid treet. In charge of House Office Building.—Bernice Fallon, 3319 Twelfth Street NE. OFFICES IN THE PRESS GALLERIES Senate gallery.—George W. McDonald, manager; northeast corner Senate wing, third floor of the Capitol. House gallery.—E. H. Rogers, manager, southwest corner House wing, third floor of the Capitol. MACKAY RADIO-TELEGRAPH CO. (Phone, NAtional 6600, extension 12) In charge at Capitol.—Rose M. Chite, Senate Office Building. TELEPHONE EXCHANGE (Office, first floor, west side, New House Office Building) Chief operator in charge—Harriott G. Daley, Brighton Hotel, 2123 California Street (phone, NOrth 4430). : Assistant.— Nena Thomas. Wire chief.—James L. Rhine. Miscellaneous UNITED STATES VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION CONTACT OFFICES (House Office Building, room 354, branches 295 and 1030; Senate Office Building, room 110, branch 948) In charge—Earle D. Chesney, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Senate Office Building.—Margaret B. Dawson, Evaline C. Livengood. House Office Building.—Agnes M. Richardy, Mildred C. Lawler, Mary H. Geary, Mary Allus Lyman, Mabel B. Craft. UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION CONTACT OFFICE (House Office Building, room 248, phone NAtional 3120, branches 225 and 294. Senate Office Building, room 249, phone NA tional 3120, branches 869 and 1293) In charge—Robert L. Bailey, Westchester Apartments. Senate Office Building.—James B. Baugh, Jr., 5606 Forty-second Avenue, Hyatts-ville, Md.; Virginia Ehrenberg, Westchester Apartments. House Office Building.—Gertrude W. Arline, 1 Second Street NE.; Nadine Marr, 1474 Columbia Road; Philip H. Werner, 119 Rock Creek Church Road. BOTANIC GARDEN (West of the Capitol Grounds) Acting Director—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol, 3700 Quebec Street. (Phones, office, N Ational 3120, branch 125; home, CLeveland 5724.) Assistant Director—Wilmer J. Paget, 5828 Fourth Street. (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, branch 267; home, GEorgia 4556.) Chief Clerk.—Philip L. Roof, 7717 Emerson Road, West Lanham Hills, Md. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE (Corner North Capitol and H Streets. Phone, District 6840) Public Printer—Augustus KE. Giegengack, 3016 Tilden Street. Deputy Public Printer.—John J. Deviny, 3571 Brandywine Street. Administrative Assistant to the Public Printer and Director of Personnel.— Russell H. Herrell, Westchester Apartments. Special Assistant to the Public Printer—Paul D. Banning, 3902 Jocelyn Street. Assistant to the Public Printer.—Jo Coffin, 816 Seventeenth Street. Director of i Preston Hipsley, 3132 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Balti- more, : Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 5308 First Street. Production Manager.— William Smith, 215 Emerson Street. hsstaieny Production Manager—Raymond H. Lecraw, 4035 New Hampshire venue. Night Production Manager.— Alfred L. Fleming, 30 Madison Street. Somer njndite; of Planning.—Robert A. Ritter, 8 Clermont Place, Garrett Park, Superintendent of Composition.—James W. Broderick, 1712 Seventeenth Street. Superintendent of Presswork.—Loxlie V. Adams, 8003 Eastern Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Superintendent of Binding.—Thomas G. Maloney, 3614 Seventeenth Street NE. Superintendent of Platemaking.—John A. McLean, 4523 Kansas Avenue. Comptroller—Felix E. Cristofane, 18 South Street, Bladensburg, Md. Director of Purchases—Ernest E. Emerson, 4406 Tuckerman Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Superintendent of Documents.— Alton P. Tisdel, 2842 Twenty-eighth Street. Lasts Afar Mus. Maybelle G. Fickel, 803 Forest Glen Road, Silver Spring, Mechanical Superintendent.— Alfred E. Hanson, 3424 Quebec Street. Technical Director.—Morris S. Kantrowitz, 741 Madison Street. Chief Storekeeper.—Alla G. Stevens, 225 Quackenbos Street. Medical and Sanitary Director.—Charles P. Waite, M. D., 1613 Harvard Street. Captain of Guards.—George L. Kisling, 705 Eighteenth Street. be m oho of the Congressional Record (Capitol).—Ralph L. Harris, 627 C treet . 278 Congressional Directory LIBRARY OF CONGRESS (Capitol Hill. Phone, NAtional 2725) GENERAL ADMINISTRATION Librarian of Congress.— Archibald MacLeish, 1525 Thirty-third Street. Librarian of Congress Emeritus.—Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street. Chief Assistant Librarian.— Luther H. Evans, Director of the Reference Depart- ment, 514 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. : Director of the Processing Department.—L. Quincy Mumford, Westchester Apart-ments. Administrative assistant to the Librarian.—Verner W. Clapp, Director of the Administrative Department, 4 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.— Louise G. Caton, Northbrook Courts. Personnel officer.—Edgar F. Rogers, 3401 Twenty-fourth Street NE. REFERENCE DEPARTMENT Regeionre Librarian.—David Chambers Mearns, 9 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Reference Consultant.— William A. Slade, 3425 Ordway Street. Dwvision of Aeronautics.— Albert Francis Zahm, Chief, Cosmos Club. Division of Bibliography.—Florence S. Hellman, Chief, 2804 Cathedral Avenue. Books for the Adult Blind.—Robert A. Voorus, Chief, 3714 Military Road. Division of Documents.—James B. Childs, Chief, 1325 Jackson Street NE. Division of Fine Arts.— Leicester B. Holland, Chief, Library of Congress. Hispanic Foundation.—Lewis Hanke, Chief, 56 Montrose Avenue, Garrett Park, Nd David Rubio, curator of the Hispanic Collection, 3900 Harewood Road Legislative Reference Service.—Ernest Stacey Griffith, Chief, 1941 Parkside Drive. Congressional reading rooms.—George Heron Milne, 9411 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md., custodian. Division of Manuscripts.—St. George Leakin Sioussat, Chief, La Salle Apartments. Division of Maps.—Lawrence Martin, Chief, 3215 R Street. Division of Music.—Harold Spivacke, Chief, 213 Prospect Place, Friendship Heights, Md. Division of Orientalia.—Arthur W. Hummel, Chief, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase Gardens, Md.; Chu Shih-Chia, chief assistant, Chinese Section, 1 Street SE.; Shio Sakanishi, chief assistant, Japanese Section, 3311 N Street. Division of Periodicals.—Henry S. Parsons, Chief, 3719 Van Ness Street. Photoduplication Service.—George A. Schwegmann, Jr., Chief, 35634 Porter Street. Rare Book Collection.— Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., curator, Shoreham Hotel. Reading Rooms.—Robert C. Gooch, superintendent, 4826 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; Alvin W. Kremer, Keeper of the Collections, 1621 North Green-prier Street, Arlington, Va. Library station at the Capitol.—Harold S. Lincoln, custodian, 736 Easley Street, Silver Spring, Md. Service for the Blind.—Maude G. Nichols, librarian, 5305 Connecticut Avenue. Division of Semitic Literature.—Israel Schapiro, Chief, 1820 Clydesdale Place. Division of Slavic Literature.—Nicholas R. Rodionoff, Chief, 3039 Macomb Street. Smithsonian Division.—Frederick E. Brasch, Chief, Methodist Building; William Lee Corbin, custodian (office at Smithsonian Institution), 3020 Tilden Street. Union Catalog.—George A. Schwegmann, Jr., Chief, 3534 Porter Street. PROCESSING DEPARTMENT Division of Accessions.—John H. Moriarty, Chief, 907 Twenty-third Street South, Arlington, Va. Card Division.—John W. Cronin, Chief, 214 Fifth Street SE. Catalog Preparation and Maintenance.—John L. Nolan, Chief, 21 Rokeby Avenue, Garrett Park, Md. Descriptive Cataloging Division.—Lucile M. Morsch, Chief, 236 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Subject Cataloging Division.— David J. Haykin, Chief, 4958 Brandywine Street. Library of Congress 279 ADMINISTRATIVE DEPARTMENT Accounts Officc—XKenneth N. Ryan, accounts officer, 1214 Ridge Road, Silver Spring, Md. Disbursing Office.— Wade H. Rabbitt, disbursing officer, 3749 Thirty-seventh Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Library Buildings and Grounds.— William C. Bond, superintendent, 6007 Broad Branch Road; Charles E. Ray, chief engineer, 320 Tenth Street NE.; Louis Cogan, electrician, 8328 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Joseph E. Mullaney, captain of the guard, 1345 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Mail and Delivery—Samuel M. Croft, Chief, 4315 Twenty-second Street NE. ii Office.—Frederick A. Blossom, publications officer, 125 Fifth Street N Supply Office.—George W. Morgan, supply officer, Seabrook, Md. LAW LIBRARY Law Librarian.—John T. Vance, 16 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. COPYRIGHT OFFICE ; Bogie of Coyprights.—Clement L. Bouvé, 109 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, d. Assistant Register— William Harvey Wise, 5556 Nebraska Avenue. SPECIAL PROJECTS Proves F, Development of Indic Studies.—Horace I. Poleman, Chief, 303 B Street E Census Library Project.—Jesse H. Shera, supervisor, 1 Beech Street, College Heights, Hyattsville, Md. . Experimental Division of Library Cooperation.— Herbert A. Kellar, director, Raleigh Hotel. Experimental Division for Study of Wartime Communication.—Harold D. Lasswell, Chief, 1835 I Street. Radio Research’ Project.—Philip Cohen, Chief, 2520 Forty-first Street. Special Information Division—Ernest 8. Griffith, Chief, 1941 Parkside Drive. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS TRUST FUND BOARD [A quasi corporation, created by an act of Congress approved March 3, 1925, with perpetual succession and ‘all the usual powers of a trustee,” including the power to ‘‘invest, reinvest, and retain investments,” and, specifically, the authority to ‘‘accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts, bequests, or devises of 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.”] a Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2211 Thirtieth treet. Secretary.— Archibald MacLeish, Librarian of Congress, 1525 Thirty-third Street. Senator Alben William Barkley, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library, 3102 Cleveland Avenue. Mrs. Eugene Meyer, 1624 Crescent Place. Adolph C. Miller, 2230 S Street. CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS THE CAPITOL This building is situated on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the PotomacRiver and covers an area of 153,112 square feet, or approximately 3% acres.Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its width, including ap-proaches, is 350 feet; and its location is described as being in latitude 38°53/20.4"’ north and longitude 77°00’35.7’/ west from Greenwich. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 5% inches. The dome is built of iron, and the aggregate weight of material used in its construction is 8,909,200 pounds. ; The Statue of Freedom surmounting the dome is entirely of bronze and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Thomas Crawford, father of Francis Marion Crawford, the novelist, in Rome, Italy, and the plaster model shipped to this’ country. It was cast in bronze at the shops of Clark Mills, on the Bladensburg Road, not far from the city of Washington. The cost of the bronze casting and the expenses in connection therewith were $20,796.82, and, as the sculptor Crawford was paid $3,000 for the plaster model, the entire cost of the statute was $23,796.82. It was erected and placed in its present position December 2, 1863. SELECTION OF A SITE FOR THE NATIONAL CAPITAL It may seem strange that, in the selection of the 10 miles square for the territory in which the National Capital should find a home, a locality was selected with but a meager population. It may have been the intent to found a capital which should develop its own particular surroundings instead of attempting to conform with conditions then existing. But the principal reason was thé lesson learned from European experiences, where the location of the country’s capital in a large city offered an opportunity for the coercion of legislators by the citizens of the capital. From the inception of the Continental Congress, either through neces- sity or voluntarily, it had moved from Philadelphia to Baltimore, Lancaster, York, Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York City. Philadelphia seems to have been the favorite location, and it was from this city that the Federal Congress,organized in New York City, took up its abode until its removal to Washington in the year 1800. ~ The original 10 miles square was formed from territory donated by Virginiaand Maryland, and the cornerstone was erected and fixed on April 15, 1791, atHunters Point, just south of Alexandria, Va. This area remained intact until$e Joan 1aa0, when the Congress transferred to Virginia the portion furnished v that State. PLANS FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDING Following the selection of a site for the Capital, some little time elapsed beforeadvertisements appeared offering a prize of $500, or a medal of the same value,be awarded for the “most approved plan’ for a Capitol Building. Some 14 plans to were submitted—some writers claim 16—but of these plans none was whollysatisfactory. In October 1792, Dr. William Thornton, a versatile physician ofTortola, West Indies, requested by letter an opportunity to present a plan aswithin the terms of the orginal 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 northsection 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 onthe north and south by rectangular buildings, with a length of 126 feet and width a of 120 feet. The northern wing was the first completed, and in this small buildingthe 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. 280 Capitol Buildings and Grounds 281 BUILDING OF THE CAPITOL In the development of the accepted plans of Dr. William Thornton in the erection of the first unit of the building—the previous 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 1807 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, known as the Oven, commenced the occupancy of this new legislative chamber. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811. A wooden passageway connected the two buildings. This condition existed when the interior of both buildings wasburned 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 1829. 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 now occupied by the United States Supreme Court Building. 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, etc., up to the year 1827, was $2,433,844.13. Following the completion of the old Capitol in 1829 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. This work was prosecuted under the architectural direction of Thomas U. Walter from 1851 to 1865 during his tenure as Architect of the Capitol, and there- after certain uncompleted details were supervised by his successor, Edward Clark, whose term ran from 1865 to 1902. The present House Chamber was occupied for legislative purposes December 16, 1857, and the Senate Chamber January 4, 1859. The addition of the Senate and House wings made the construction of a new dome necessary for the preservation of architectural symmetry. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast iron, completed in 1865. 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 17,376 square feet of skylights, 679 windows, and 550 doorways. The dome receives light through 108 windows, and from the Architects office to the dome there are 365 steps, one for each day of the year. CAPITOL GROUNDS The original Capitol grounds were at one time a part of Cern Abby Manor,and at an early date occupied by a subtribe of the Algonquin Indians known as the Powhatans, whose council house was then located at the foot of the hill. These grounds, part of original reservation 2, were acquired under President Washington’s proclamations of 1790 and 1797, for use as a site for the United States Capitol Building. These proclamations authorized the appropriation of all of reservation 2 which, in its entirety, included the “Capitol Square and the Mall east of Fifteenth Street West.” 282 Congressional Directory Additional ground (squares 687-688) was acquired under appropriations vided by Congress in 1872 and 1873 in order to obtain a better pro- landscape sur- rounding in keeping with the Senate and House wings which had been added to the building since the acquisition of the original site. The purchase of this addi- tional property completed the acquisition of the area known as the old section of the Capitol Grounds, totaling, in all, 58.8 acres. In the immediately ensuing years, under a plan developed by Frederick Law Olmstead of New York, the terraces were built on the north, west, and south sides of the building and the entire grounds developed and improved. During the period 1910-35 the Capitol Grounds were further enlarged and improved by the purchase, annexation, and development of 61.8 additional acres; and the addition of this new area to the 58.8 acres comprising the old grounds section gives a present total grounds area of 120.6 acres. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS OLD BUILDING An increased membership of the Senate and House resulted in a demand foradditional rooms for the accommodation of the Senators and Representatives, 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 cornerstone 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 representation made necessary the building of an additional story. The total cost of the building, including site, furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the House Office Building with the United States Capitol, amounted to $4,860,155. 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. NEW BUILDING Under legislation contained in authorization act of January 10, 1929, and in the urgent deficiency bill of March 4, 1929, provisions were made for an additional House Office Building, to be located on the west side of New Jersey Avenue (opposite the first House Office Building). : The cornerstone was laid June 24, 1932, and the building was completed and ready for beneficial occupancy April 20, 1933. It contains 251 two-room suites, 16 committee rooms, each suite and committee room being provided with a storeroom. Eight floors are occupied by Members; the basement and sub-base-ment by shops and mechanics needed for the proper maintenance of the building. The cost of this building, including site, furnishings, and equipment, was $7,805,705. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING 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, under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, 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 fourth side of the building fronting on First Street NE., this being planned for but not completed. The cornerstone of this building was laid without special exercises on July 81, 1906, and the building was occupied March 5, 1909. In June 1934 the building was completed by the erection of the First Street wing, construction of which was commenced in 1931, togetherwith alterations to the C Street facade, and construction of terraces, balustrades, and approaches. The cost of the completed building, including site, furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the Senate Office Building with the United States Capitol, was $8,429,357. Capitol Buildings and Grounds 283 CAPITOL POWER PLANT 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 ap-propriation of money was not required to secure title. The determining factors leading to the selection of this site were its nearness to the tracks of the Pennsyl-vania 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, which was constructed under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, and completed and placed in operation in 1910, are 244 feet 8 inches by 117 feet, with a height over the boiler room of 81 feet to accommodate the coal bunkers. A later additional building, for accom-modation 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 2 Alphons 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 41% 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. In 1935 Congress authorized the air conditioning of the Capitol, Senate, and House Office Buildings and provided therefore an appropriation of $2,550,000 and, in 1937, an additional amount of $1,672,000, including authorization for construc-tion of a central refrigeration plant to serve the systems. An addition to the power plant building, 123 feet 2 inches long, 79 feet 6 inches wide, with a height of 37 feet 10 inches, was constructed to house the refrigeration plant. This plant was placed in operation May 16, 1938, and was, at that time, the largest central station water-cooling plant ever constructed. Its huge pumps carry chilled water through large supply mains to the four buildings served. The refrigerating capacity of the plant may best be described in terms of the melting of a block of ice 50 feet by 50 feet and the height of a seven-story building every 24 hours. d12F12 1116 810] 12 a Ai i : ql EAER Red ll EY [} ATE 4 I gry Ee ny % Bead a ol EAC i. BASEMENT AND TERRACE fiaop0a.42(] oU01889.46U0)) 788 SENATE WING papers | - . BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING TERRACE SENATE SIDE TERRACE Room. Room. Room. 1. Dynamo room. 21, 23, 25, 27, 29. Architect’s office. 1, 3. Captain of police. 2. Schoolroom for page boys. 5. Architect’s drafting room. HOUSE SIDE 3. Dynamo room. 8, 10, 12, 14. Storage rooms. 5. Dynamo room. 21. Architect’s office. 13. Associated Press. 4, 6. 23, 25. House Committee on Printing. 11, 15, 16, 17, 18. Janitor’s rooms. 7,9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Dynamo rooms, 27. Clerk’s storeroom. 19. Electrician’s storeroom. 12. Janitor’s storeroom. +29. Office of compiler of Congressional Directory. 20. Men’s toilet. 14. Tile room. 31. Hon. Harry L. Englebright (Republican whip), BASEMENT 16. Women’s toilet. 33, 34. Secretary’s file rooms. 18. Repair shop, dynamo room. 35, 47. Elevators. 19, 21. Tinner’s shop. 39, 41. Engineer’s rooms. 20. Men’s toilet. 43. Kitchen. 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. burping 10nd) PO IST—G—LL—oPLOFD 0g fu0900.00(T 10U01889.46U0)) a 62 68 : 78379 dor : 77 . 80 1 | 2 Ep WE RD WR pe ET 1 = 4 i i en ERS ] f [ {102 105 jee i ok Py Ei >e | 45 Bo i= i GROUND FLOOR GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL ; HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING Room, Room. Room. 1. Rest room (Congresswomen). 68. Joint Committee on Printing. : 35, 67. Majority leader, Committee on Library. 2, 3. Subcommittee on Appropriations. 70. Hon. Thomas H. Cullen. 36, 37, 38. Committee on Appropriations. 4, 5, 24. Hon. John W. McCormack. 71. Hon. H. W. Sumners. 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 6, 7, 8. Official Reporters of Debates. 72. 41. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 9. Hon. Sam Rayburn. 74, 75, 76. Dr. George W. Calver. 42, 46. Committee on Education and Labor. 10. 77, 80, 107. Senator Johnson. 43, 53, 63. Committee on Foreign Relations. 11. Parliamentarian. 83. Senators’ barber shop. 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 56, 61, 62. Restaurant. 12, 13. Office of Sergeant at Arms. 87. Congressional Law Library. 51, 60. Elevators. 14, 33. Private dining room (Speaker) 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme 52A. Committee on Enrolled Bills. 15. Barber shop. Court room. 66. Men’s toilet. 16, 23. Committee on Appropriations. 89, 90, 91, 101. Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 68. Women’s toilet. S 17. Clerk’s storeroom. ® 92, 97. = 18, 22, 23. Committee on Accounts. 93. Annex office, post office. A 19. Closets. 94, 96. Railroad ticket office. SQ, 20, 21, 29, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant. 95, 102, 103. House disbursing office. oy 25, 28. Elevators. 99. Enrolling clerk. S 27. Office, House restaurant. 100. Clerk’s storeroom. =. 31. Public restaurant. 104, 105, 106. Assistant property custodian. S xX, S Q HOUSE WING SENATE WING ! A / Senate § Chémber 350A eh ET ISIE OE 6 : of poy c= BEY ~ Joljcaliofl, PRINCIPAL FLOOR fi40192.40( 1PU0188246U0)) PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING Room. Room, Room. 1, 2, 3, 4. Committee on Appropriations. 40, 41. House document room. 21 . Office of the Secretary. 5. Office of the majority leader. 42, 43, 44. Office of the Clerk of the House. 22 . Executive clerk. 6. Closets. 45, 46. Senate disbursing office. 23 . Secretary. 7, 8, 9. Members’ retiring rooms. 49. Sergeant at Armes. 24 . Chief Clerk. 10. Parliamentarian. 53. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. 25 . Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 11, 12, 13, 14. Cloakrooms. . 58, 59. House minority leader. 26 , 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 15. Hon. Robert L. Doughton, Democratic Steering 60, 61, 62. Speaker. 28 . Senators’ lavatory. Committee, Ways and Means. 63. Formerly the Senate Chamberand later the Supreme 29 , 30. Cloakrooms. 16. Library. Court. 31 . The Marble Room. 17, 18. Elevators. 64. House Legislative Counsel. 32 . Room of the Vice President. 19, 20. Speaker. 65. 3 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. Buspping jopdn) 33 14, 35. Elevators. 36 . Official Reporters of Debates. . The Senators’ reception room. . Committee on the District of Columbia. . Office of the Sergeant at Arms. . Room of the President. 68¢ fiu0992.40(T 10U02882.46U0)) HOUSE WING SENATE WING Bt i AE 2 'd 34 ’ tL ves $4 GALLERY FLOOR Room. 1, 2, 3. Committee 4. File room. 5. Committee on 6,7, 8, 9, 10. Press 11, 12. Committee 13. Ladies’ retiring 14. Elevators and 15. Elevator. HOUSE WING on Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Gallery. on Rules. room. Radio Correspondents’ Gallery. GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL MAIN BUILDING Room. 27. Senate library. 28. Senate library—Librarian’s room. 31, 32, 33. Senate document room. 34. Superintendent of the Senate document room. 35. House Journal, tally, and bill clerks. 36, 37. House document room. 39. Clock-repair room. 40. Senate document room, 41, 42. Senate storekeeper. . 49, 50. Hon. Patrick J. Boland (Democratic whip). 52, 53, 54. House Committee on Indian Affairs. 56, 57. Hon. Clifton A. Woodrum. SENATE WING Room. 14. Committee on Rules. 15, 16. Committee on Interstate Commerce. 17. Minority conference room. 18, 19. Committee on Commerce. 20, 21, 22, 26. Press Gallery. ; 23. Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs. 24. Ladies’ retiring room. 25. Secretary to the Majority. 27. Elevator. buzppng jopdn) e rity. R. . Official Reporters. Sgt. Sergeant at Arms. SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER R40300.40( 10U01882.40U0)) SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate CARTER GLASS, President pro tempore of the Senate EDWIN A. HALSEY, Secretary LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary for the Majority CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority JorN C. CROCKETT, Chief Clerk VERY REV. ZE BARNEY THORNE PHILLIPS, Chaplain 1. Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. 25. Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. 50. Glass, Carter, Virginia. 75. Clark, D. Worth, Idaho. 2. Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. 26. La Follette, RobertM., Jr., Wisconsin. 51. Connally, Tom, Texas. 76. Herring, Clyde L., Iowa. 3. Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey. 27. Norris, George W., Nebraska. 52. Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. 77. Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. aQ 78. Maloney, Francis, Connecticut. =) 4. Johnson, Hiram W., California. 28. Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. 53. Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri. 5. Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. 29. Hayden, Carl, Arizona. 54. Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. 79. Chandler, Albert B., Kentucky. = 6. Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. 30. Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. 55. Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. 80. Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. ol 81. Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode Is-~~ 7. Capper, Arthur, Kansas. 31. Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. 56. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. 8. McNary, Charles L., Oregon. 32. Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas. 57. Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. land. oy 9. Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. 33. Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. 58. Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. 82. Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. S 10. McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. 34. Overton, John H., Louisiana. 59. Brown, Prentiss M., Michigan. 83. Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. Ss 11. George, Walter F., Georgia. 35. Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. 60. Gillette, Guy M., Iowa. 84. Hill, Lister, Alabama. Ss 36. Bone, Homer T., Washington. 61. Pepper, Claude, Florida. 85. Hughes, James H., Delaware. 3 12. Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. 13. Wagner, Robert F., New York. 37. Russell, Richard B., Georgia. 62. Murray, James E., Montana. 86. Mead, James M., New York. QQ 14. McCarran, Pat, Nevada. 38. Bulow, William J., South Dakota. 63. Lee, Josh, Oklahoma. 87. Downey, Sheridan, California. 15. Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina. 39. Smathers, William H., New Jersey. 64. Schwartz, H. H., Wyoming. 88. Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. 16. Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana. 40. Bunker, Berkeley L., Nevada. 65. Wallgren, Mon C., Washington. 89. Tunnell, James M., Delaware. Utah. 90. Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. 17. O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. 41. McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. 66. Murdock, Abe, Minnesota. 67. Spencer, Lloyd, Arkansas. 91. Truman, Harry S., Missouri. 18. Andrews, Charles O., Florida. 42. Ball, Joseph H., 92. Guffey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. 19. Lucas, Scott W., Illinois. 43. Thomas, John, Idaho. 68. A., Ohio. 69. Aiken, George D., Vermont. 93. Rosier, Joseph, West Virginia. setts. 45. Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. 70. Langer, William, North Dakota. 94. O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. 20. Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massachu-44. Taft, Robert 21. Holman, Rufus C., Oregon. 46. Danaher, John A., Connecticut. 71. Burton, Harold H., Ohio. 95. Doxey, Wall, Mississippi. 22. Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. 47. Reed, Clyde M., Kansas. 72. Brewster, Ralph O., Maine. 96. Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. 23. White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. 48. Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. 73. Willis, Raymond E., Indiana. 24. Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. 49. Austin, Warren R., Vermont. 74. Butler, Hugh A., Nebraska. €6¢ © buzpping jondn) DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate CARTER GLASS, President pro tempore of the Senate EDWIN A. HALSEY, Secretary LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary for the Majority CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority JOHN CO. CROCKETT, Chief Clerk VERY REV. ZEBARNEY THORNE PHILLIPS, Chaplain . Aiken, George D., Vermont. 51. Connally, Tom, Texas. . Lee, Josh, Oklahoma. . Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. . Andrews, Charles O., Florida. 46. Danaher, John A., Connecticut. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massachu-. Smathers, William H., New Jersey. Austin, Warren R., Vermont. 5. Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. setts. . Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. . Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. 87. Downey, Sheridan, California. . Lucas, Scott W., Illinois. . Spencer, Lloyd, Arkansas. . Ball, Joseph H., Minnesota. 95. Doxey, Wall, Mississippi. . Maloney, Francis, Connecticut. . Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. . Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. 83. Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. . Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. . Taft, Robert A., Ohio. . Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey. 11. George, Walter F., Georgia. . McCarran, Pat, Nevada. . Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. . Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. 56. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. . McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. . Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. . Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. 60. Gillette, Guy M., Iowa. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . Thomas, John, Idaho. . Bone, Homer T'., Washington. 50. Glass, Carter, Virginia. . Mc¢Nary, Charles L., Oregon. . Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. . Brewster, Ralph O., Maine. 81. Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode Is-. Mead, James M., New York, . Truman, Harry S., Missouri. . Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. land. . Murdock, Abe, Utah. . Tunnell, James M., Delaware. . Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. 92. Guffey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. . Murray, James E., Montana, . Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. . Brown, Prentiss M., Michigan. 45. Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. . Norris, George W., Nebraska. . Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. . Bulow, William J., South Dakota. 35. Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. . Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. . Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana. . Bunker, Berkeley L., Nevada. 29. Hayden, Carl, Arizona. . O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. . Wagner, Robert F., New York. . Burton, Harold H., Ohio. 76. Herring, Clyde L., Iowa. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Wallgren, Mon C., Washington. . Butler, Hugh A., Nebraska. 84. Hill, Lister, Alabama. . Overton, John H., Louisiana. . Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. . Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. 21. Holman, Rufus C., Oregon. . Pepper, Claude, Florida. . Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. . Capper, Arthur, Kansas. 85. Hughes, James H., Delaware. . Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. . White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. . Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas. 82. Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. . Reed, Clyde M., Kansas. . Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. . Chandler, Albert B., Kentucky. 4. Johnson, Hiram W., California. . Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina. . Willis, Raymond E., Indiana. . Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. 88. Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. . Rosier, Joseph, West Virginia. . Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri. 26. La Follette, Robert M., Jr., Wisconsin. . Russell, Richard B., Georgia. . Clark, D. Worth, Idaho. 70. Langer, William, North Dakota. . Schwartz, H. H., Wyoming. ROOMS AND TELEPHONES SENATORS [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol A tional 3120] exchange—N Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone 358 1179 355 870 311 811 353 812 Gallery floor, northwest corner. 121 107 1206 217 846 tion. 245 813 205 151 Ground floor, southwest cor- |.______ ner. 127 877 329 177 248 876 145 1225 111 950 455 879 452 107 459 78 125 175 413 896 209 115 206 855 253 193 211 966 204 1201 CLARK ( Idaho)... 244 44 CLARK ( Moy). 442 875 Interoceanic Canals______ CONNALLY =o. 453 969 Foreign Relations________ Ground floor, east side_________ 101 359 947 307 893 362 1142 304 1129 345 815 342 817 404 836 121 168 315 321 182 162 Ground floor, west side________ 61 429 165 241 917 313 989 Privileges and Elections___ 131 882 Printing. .0 oo or 252 843 441 831 Expenditures in the Ex- ecutive Departments. HOLMAN. cone oo 348 178 HUGHES 352 189 300 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued : Office building Capitol Name i Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone JONNBON Call) sr a a een Old building, ground floor, 36 northwest corner. JouNsoN (Colo.)_.___ A Ea rr wre a E KILGORE. ....... 0005 105 84%: lelin dc anlonipl soled camel 4 LA-FPOLLEIME vues 254 OB rm hE ARR pe re rebar LANGER... tote wer 462 SY EE Rt ee i Le SL a a ee ADT Rs Sh 124 ABS Sia, HE oe ae LODGE. nm ianis 141 SLY Sees Readies Sin ah mas ens a ER a LUCAS so 428 933: {Audit and Conirol She |: . 0. 1. ol Contingent Expenses of the Senate. MCCABRRAN = ieee 409 976 | District of Columbia______ Senate floor, east side_._....____ 113 MCEARIAND. one 262 ) bra CAE Ten 2 8 RR LD Se ei TE see MCEKELLABL coda 221 191 | Post Offices and Post | Senate floor, southeast corner. _ 34 Roads. MENABY.. .cverwemae 333 80 | Minority Leader. _________ Gallery floor, west side________|_______ MAIONRY li oi. 854-106 Public Bulldingstdbnd [or = oboLe Grounds. MAYBANE: Cio 454 BR LD RAB Le pe ee | MEADE... =... LIN 1 TY EE Re i a x OY LE SS St MUBDOGCK .cceurnninsas 447 1 ese ea ene bate 0 BR SS ER TS ee INT RT S FB MUBBAY-sence 432 EE dee Be el ERY Se SY ee CRG 0 [eS NOBRIS.. cnccaen 405 Lo SR Eee IR eet es A eS A CEN EO RRR + yp DLE Yh RE ER RE Sa Re 332 128 Fie ee eee Seat riite 1 % D 0 0] ERR RE onaie ea [1 48 (a OO’ DANIB cessbeann== 231 ThE PRA CRT ia SL ial © CS RR eC 0 12 O’MAHONEY..._..... 232 nil BEER ee es ae See Se ee TS OVERTON. -2-cecanwns 458 97. |-Monafactores Sr trial th 0 0 Ral cae aI PEPPER us visnsnnanns 337 Er BE Es Se eS SP SL ea 1 pC Ae RADCLIFFE == «nrnevns 133 dB hi ct ris a Ad A WE ws RE RE SE LT REED ciseiins 423 §£17 FH PES a pate Sa et i i J (la Sl TERREBONNE: Biss REYNOLDS —e-ccc-oo-229 |: 1154 |-Military 5 7 Senate floor, northwest corner. 155 Affairs... ROSIER =: cunaunnines 311, BIEN bv), SL 0 CR RE Se eon mL nL SEE on eee 2 AE RUSSELL cc sansaaionss 410 807-| -ImmigyationEslis USUOTHd] soy | BEL Lene i ARE SCHWARTZ zoueocuzaas 260 Ol ain 2 8 RE H Pensiontocovissnmnnlei SHIPSTEAD. .cz-uanuzes 460 3 PE ee Te ES Seiad In) J Los RR Ue LE Ee Re i SMATHERS. «=: unsuss 255 Sry El aL ee Dn I J SRD aE NI BIER 1 BREE ily SMITE cts ea ce nanaes 325 183. | Agriculture and Poerestry:ii Ted eb co ontulsald SPENCER: .-—.. 20:2 Jo 437 885 finn CLIP BRIG SON el tres RGR HON) STEWART: :coucuae-ucs 259-328 Livia een ab LEON Le ees REALE PAPE seinen 448 LE Tn Sn se EL cme Las Seg | AE LET TraOMAS (Idaho). _.__ 443 EE sR Sp An a BE EY EO a Cn CER a mee £1 | RE THOMAS (Okla.)_.___. 326 867-L-Indian-Affairs... vs -cnnna{op Sutil 5 BOs of Loss J HEORE TaOMAS (Utah) ______ 341 993 | Education and Labor. ____ Ground floor, southwest corner. 41 POBEBY-czzszcueauazes 327 LI0G: fate snnnnnnssnnmenns HRB N+ 508 8 BBh renin ae EOS TS 'PRUMAN ce eensisrasus 240 LVS PR pn LS a Loe Or I RSE HE CE TUNNEL L eee aaaas 347 HT rs pe Sn SS HE ee 2 Sh BE CR a SR a PYDINGS conti 08 227 199 | Territories and Insular | Gallery floor, southeast corner | ______ Affairs. VANDENBERG.._____._ 139 008. |. anaes aha Uist DRE SONA Fr as eseiaiomence cS[RASURS VAN-NUYS::--acusa:s 344 1 =Indiciary.. onal Ground floor, northwest corner._ 156 WAGNER: secessasnsnn 226 060: {-Bankingand Currencyii 4 I 3a J B10 le ROTEL acaaaccenaaL WALLGREN ez 2z aus 444 7 EI Seiten ee ET BE NT DAT Bt I me Ef ag 2h WALSH: o-coesinsasnns 215 166-1 -Naval Affaire. cooaeon-|= BIE C0 S08 cota IHRE WHEELER: ccnecanasa 421 1137 | Interstate Commerce _____ Gallery floor, west side. ______ 100 WHITE. ora 417 810. 4 Solna OT LINIOE | aa WILEY -ccesszscacane 427 iBE RS I A Sg BE PL ELLE ME NE ie Ee TL a WABLIB coc nnveanes as 411 v7 WIG RS Set Re apn Tp LE 0 TE SS a 1 SE Re Rooms and Telephones 301 REPRESENTATIVES [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol A tional 3120] exchange—N Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone ATPLEN (I) se 1234 CYB feeb keke IE RCCL BUTE 1 Seti OS Ds ets ALLENNA). 1025 bd Ha Eee ERR EM He TT ee Ge en LY i ANDERSEN (Minn.)__| 1009 BV DE nb BREE La handy ANDERSON (Calif.)___ RE A RL Er Ee Sa a I I RR SC | Li ANDERSON (N. Mex.)_| 503 LYE IR Es Aen CO en eT SRR CU Se En ANDRESEN (Minn.)__| 1533 £70 10 RR a oS RL AE | SS Ef CEN, 10 ae hep 48 0 ANDREWS. coos 1109 UE RTE Se I a 180 LR oe SCR oT nr A ANGEL sees 1631 ReNL Lee Lo Ady ARENDS: ool 1024 YoU Rr ea a ee RS Se a al TR ABROLD. 2 or 1509 BIO TRI eal BERRI AE ey ron an alie ony BALDWIN... Co 234 HC I Ee eRe Ea a I ERY CS ERE a BARDEN cis 1740 BY i re BE BO oh A I EY BARNES. iissois 1626 7 le BEC ER REPT RU ALISA el LoS Bapmy.. ooo 1327 OBIE Dera as 4S REAL emaael dl oleenal. BATES (KY)... 302 TOT ro mo wm edn i Sale hd DE Be mh BB Lak en ha Ile BATES (Mass). .._... 307 5 AEE ER eR ee a a IL ET I BE a 1 a BAUMHARY. .......... 339 a Ser eee ee es Le I RE LR Rr dy ce BEAM Sa 1237 AE IMemorials. oie to else BECEWORTH. ......... 1609 Vb GEE eR NT aE oe GE Se So rr BEER. co 1416 BB rst mame Ee SE ea SAREE ne ena BELLE Poo aol 21571 1310: Elections NO. 1 ovo vcinoo dona. dopey 0 0 whanary BENDER. uceaouisun 355 BasaED ag aR ie fe veda ry BENNETT... cee eee 335 EE a IT hela Cd Se rp Cr BISHOP....oustos 415 Le Bee I a TR CM Re lo eno BLACKNEY ieee 1218 in EE see Raa RT my OTA BEER E iit { 217 578 || Merchant Marine and } Sivolaesr | ape 5 2% 219 579 Fisherles. «Eg eR BLOOM: zc iors 1235 { = Foreign Affairs... _______ Gallery floor, west corridor. _|230, 560 BOERNE...i a 1112 Pe ee I ILI TIE el VS eB FOSS BOAGH. -cncaeeee 338 A SM OT a Te eS TR BOLAND... vio ceric) cmd pass a Majority whip____________ Gallery floor, room 49_________ 391, 274 Boron...io A521 AAO8Ae, ii at ee BA ABEL ae emmeeslesterety BONNER... 502 TT a a Rn ee pm a Rea PEATE BOREN... ooo 1337 Te es ee Re Je ee DL an BOYRIN. =o 412 dh en Tl i EL re Ta BRADLEY (Mich.)____| 1339 CL SE ee Ta nid EAE CREP any 10 BRADLEY (Pa.)....-= 205 AE Re EE in me ee ma TE BROOKS... ....... 1030 le a li a aR BE he Ode ey BrowN (Ga.)________ 257 Ie le me ie TE ree SETS Brown (Ohio) _______ 1406 4h J ee Rl Bl Sr TNE Eh TE TY So SS Re Li [OS Li BRYSON tz oooto 1616 UY Eee DURA Le Lb eh pela] FETT Sie 6 CS ee lB Bugg = oi 1119 Ly HE SRE ame IE TRE GFT EE IR Se esa BUCKLER (Minn.)____ 142 a EBTT em a aE a Boerrey (NC Vy. oo 0 IR Lahe gy ho lot Buon.wiNRLE: i 1313 LE an ET I 1 le OE RC YR eK BURCH tines 1207 hE eT ee RL heed BTU SE 0 SRL A BURDICR. eae 444 LE a en nC is TE eee ee BuoRQIN.. I... 107 A ne ER ERE Ll Ire 1 TT Ae Seale ame sag FE BomiER. aaa 116 LE I Ee er LE a IT TR Te le nS CL BynNp oo cl dEa i YL BYRON -oo 316 MEE ee Se Tr Rn A an CT ae Eh Un ee RR fee CAMP. arin radian 250 Upbeat hops Lie Sl RE 7 SIS RT TR Slee nm sapien det hd sist CANFIELD: nf -222 EE Ee bn ERT TR by a eee TY a CANNON (Fla.)_______ 1018 Er eS Sa UO See Le ee a CANNON (Mo.)_______ 1714 731 | Appropriations....________ House floor, west corridor_____ 215, 353 CAPOZIONY =o 236 Lr Pe St Cd Da Ton LR CARISON. oa 259 re mR a ee a LT EN Te GR Oe CARTIER. fo 1114 eT eR nt [0 oT RRC I CO ne SD LO PE 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 21 302 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone 1011 413 CARTWRIGHT. oo... { 1012 766 JRoads LE LT Es ST LS Te Se Ee ABE Toniteirs 1029 i1211rE ete ee whe ar re te ne Se Ce ep MCC ror CTABEY or rmcirusmsin 110 REE £1 pt BE Ee re eed KL La a ee CCE CSG aah rire {ETE CETLER. ei ennrrie 1524 7113 IE ES ee ea ol Sa I REE oS DN CHAPMAN... 1bse iE LTE i a Ee Ce it Bp pe ie Si Lp aa Sen SAR LRP a CHENOWETH. ________ 218 CE ft Re PE er en TY Fk ng ln oo SLR SAU Ep a eo Ba Ea Ry CHIPERFIELD. ________ 1713 yp EL EE Ee i EC et Be Gs BR ee es Be Lg CLARE ori hrs 1236 CHES ra el ie LO i eee Ff CLASON . mniaaireindizss 1523 EE Le I el Set CLAYPOOL... rics 1306 1303. fern ra diag aaa SACL TORT an GROMEA CLEVENGER. ____..__._ 305 LIE re pe] Sa ee 7 ER a 1 a AAD CLUE Yee eerir trims 1028 vt et Pre pea bE tL OCRAN carries msn iVe aR amr ly Sr am ACCOUNLS cao ronan Ground floor, main corridor____|242, 264 CorrEE (Nebr.)______ 1529 BOR | isrrorrr rindi ramen a oi LV NGOL LL ARER COFFEE (Wash.)_.___ 1608 BB ra A mm da Kane no ACA PHT ACL Core (Ma... 1535 Ee Ryo PE Aero] LE i iL me 0 SO et RE Cc, a BC CR ES COoLE(N. VY.) oor 1528 FOB [oss rm ssn 2d a tn th dd Sa oe alm ih et oh iho ARAYNG AT COLLING. meen. 1211 21) Freee pee LES HE ee a LS Sl CE SR COLMUR rears 1228 BO ir iar i Sm AB fa spl HARON H-COOLEY recon irnnnins 203 Ly Be ey rr esr eee Ee Loin Le Sl REECE ETRE COOPER arin 1107 YEE RS ee Jad rE MO i ee i ee eR ED LS COPETAND..-i AB -T018-| conchaeSNe VBE seen ata fl COPTTLLO. nde e 1421 bE SR SS CR So Ses or Sh eB Le Bp de Ll Rl COURTNEY... oo }-1318 BRO hs aren Ree ER re OTe COTE nr on hints 1104 eCLE] Fe tall D7 SS ee Es 2 a SE GRAVENS. ... 1220 TAT [2 IRA SOROOTSIE Sent can de CRAWFORD... 1123 [YEN re hee SEE a ee BEER ea ET CREA." eo oa 1541 NOL LY eek nl si vii Uo LSE © SET TURE Bei at ie Ca ne a @BOSSER. 1130 UR ei ee Tl Ll elena © hie ied Dl ret eben Lot CROWTHER. ~~~. 1101 I REE Ee FE Cah Eee cfs Cal Lee BO at CULEIN: —-nsiisiicio: 1305 BBB aaa ER BO ARG Flag san EBO0R CUILEN. oh He SEO JOO I I0UBRN i a ie Ground floor, room 70_________ 261 CUNNINGHAM _._____. 120 BAB | ERE OR Leama cee TOTO G |. rican CURTIS ieesuatin s 1508 Cb EC ut ull of (6 LS SR so SAN Hegre httpd, Li ail D’ALESANDRO_______. 102 BOB | ria BR NOL eas dain i HREOM. Davis (Ohio).__.____. 312 OTN lis ci a ri vr ism tek ABR da ase naen cL HEAT OM. DAVIS (Ronn) sends IBA ANS hon culnnnneene on LV BE L0F8E 0 CdolMy raliaa all DAY iia ete, 125 B83) irri sri pa AI BB es on cL 1) VRIES el DELANEY toc -cacinss 1716 ot ie Lt rd Td fot eee lt CL EA DEWEY cientsnm 133 et Cte eon doch GME Sin Bi Eph op file 1 Bich 1719 1066 3 : DICKSTEIN...__. 445 488 : Si oa 3nd; Natu-} frau ool a iis oo woeval 446 456 2 INES, nn simian 1121 B06 | ee SS Ch SL bes AREA SRA irre HOT DIMOND... vvininm 455 mdLC (oi as, Lo DINGELY oni vn 1618 tb ER A Lr RLSe ph Ld (EEL DIRRSEN.« can unin 209 eee LR DISNEY... ieanininil--1205 LB lt a EL DIMER cis susins 1212 Ehees 0! ELIA ed pg i SL eid mn DOMENGEAUX________ 333 breve iy DONDERO: zzz zcucns 204 tee be od Bl DOUGHTION..........=: { i Te fways and Means... | lst. femmes boss cua ole 219 DOUGLAS. ae sennniins 1222 482 dlc eee h AG CE BRR es eran RIT REMA LD DOWNS. eeeenricnies 105 2 BOR TL BIDE Soa LRT) Wlat ie {lmao DREWRY..... lus Je 1124 O00: focrrantone BEORESTRIOIEA TL dbY og BINE cdaini as (OV PTH DUNCAN seme eeeudzn 1204 FOB: LekmanLOB bathe emns n ADS0T ean A. DUBHAM :-veccceseses 220 FE vy vie Pe PRO EI] BA TL EE Ee ad LT RD | DWORSHAK. ._.__..... 1323 3B Alice nonmnrnnsreana de LESC I PIAL. Lo icosianane JHBETEA Rooms and Telephones 303 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone BATON cee: ootak 1229 BOB lh micne ans amen aamaea) S 0RE faa AYile aTEBERHARTER. __._____ 1622 rake eae ea ME Rear Se ea o LAA EDMISTON. _.......-1329 ELAN Sm nee Tl ae ES ee TeError (Mass). ..._.: 426 BT borin rin nina DL SPRY Fo len BY BLIZAIDE. oc 1605 iaera ERE RENE Se slant EEErvLiorT (Calif.) ._____ 232] 1881 | Disposition of Exeentive |. ou 38 oo lia Papers. TLTIRE; toned siming 1219 IE Bd one eh pr ple i Ts SSR Ate fC 0 Lh nrBISTON-.-°c: 1023 at ne he nena AL ER CRE TE await JTENGEL 1430 SE ee RE ee LEENGLEBRIGHT._______ 1122 286 | Minority whip____________ Basement floor, room 31_______ 278FADDIS oroor aid 1507 A Le en ee aPEILOWS: cor 2-4 224 TD or ert bmn na IR RE Sep oe, an IY gtFENTON. Lo cot 1019 EAL ee ena en RCT SR A LE ee nas NCE 1424 DIE Sl nme dO ten BL 1 Ce epee IEPITZGERALD. —--.o-208 MOT tent eS teen RE DEE TART OTT PITZPATRICK 22 civ 1233 me ee RC aR le CdBLARERTYY. . 0... 1720 ERR Se en nn a aa ee i]FLANNAGAN. ______.___ 1331 BIO este lo ALTER eagle SeFLANNERY. .... 334 meena te Eile LC ay Ta eeeROGARTY roa 233 LL SG sitll Lo 47 © ih 4 Lb pple LLHOLGER... 242 Em Eee a nn ee 8FBORAND. 0. =. 348 rhe seme mt aa he Br a LR Gi aeForp, Leland M_____ 1039 HEE a BT TLForp, Thomas F_____ 320 CHIR CARER ae TE Tee ieee TTForp (Miss... _......_ 1511 Ts ee Soto SRRBE SIE whe ie hana] FULMER: ~~ nas 1324 { 2 JAgricutture sit erie se RRS nil alibi i: asin GALE. oat —daen 425 EO a ehee EeGAMBLE... 1038 ate cee gee) oa omliegaGATHINGS... nono MOR I i tiie BE Re alan GAVAGAN. ous { a oe war LEET Dem encnnest Su bo LonliBat dni Seen Daa Leen 0 GEARHART... =. 1118 eeaT ee a GEHRMANN_ ..________ 1032 Mera ee a I I EFGERLACH. noone 1020 Ee HE dee rn A elyGIBIONee: cu. =] 317 LE ea ne ET REEGIFEORD. 1208 Sr Ee Se ee eh I CER TLCIUCHRIST. 1705 YEE PEC CN Te eT ROE CtRITA Ueee ee 141 CH IER A Ll le TT aOnis. = 1522 ES RE Tn ROREL 401 Ere DCR I Se I a alGOSPEL. 1516 734 | Blections Ne, 2. oT wi oo amendGRAHAM. cur... 1628 A Ae I a Se GRANGER ous. NEES Ee NSS Ce [oa Te TUGranNTi(Ala.)... 424 BY i etal El a wane GRANT (Ind.). ...___ A Ee a NL Ta a sa GREEN... ies ju ut }reritories ined de Wet STG RISE SSE ee pei ne eden nt tae GREGORY. =. 1419 Ee Se eR Ee LGR ee i RdGUYERL 201 LE DE Oe NC Ol RR rT eROOWYNNEa:: oon 1441 132 ioc mmm nina n ena danas ae em Bi 4 BSE LT loadin iE walrvaHAINES.» AUER eee en Ee en oo EE a TC Sn TLR I ae BeHALL, Edwin Arthur.| 1008 rh peel aeb bdndadeimndinsATT IT Gindasibde Lamia linia a B aR TOEHALL, Leonard W____| 1718 HE ee SNS ee TT ee 10 sy ES SEIS TT 3HALLECR: ws. _.. 1007 SL Be SRE le ee BT SE eT Se HANCOCK... oreo 1224 SNE See a LC Tee eeHARB arene 447 A re rrr ee Ea ele a a DYIER HARNESS. 1415 Ee RR a a ER Den NT a eee TT UreHARRINGTON. _______. 1316 B00 J a . o—- 504 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone HARRIS (Ark.)......---. 139 2117 Ee BA er ESS RG FRE CR Re A FT HARRIS (Vm,). 310 £11 I LS Based ee es ed 1 Sn gl BC rt NE Lyi 0 EI nk Eee 453 L227 a 1 SD eC TC i le ee Le SAT 2 LOT ee 1503 TB cnr br AN dO Se CERR ) BLT HARTEEY.. aac 1724 BAR emir rt net Bde OOO. Ja wee SHGRARLIN Hem Eee io. 1721 5% Laminar to noldipoaniCl AAG} RON sa aS) TRO HEBER wi. 340 a SSR TE Se SR Ee ae Th HEFFERNAN So. 411 7! er TU SS Ae Sey RN LR TE AY HEIDINGER. _-..o--o--119 LE Bl SE a HENDRICKS... 1115 rir Sl A SE eR eRe SI I GE se a LG HESS eo dhe bh sient. AOBTAEIBIRA | en SEER TROT IL OSE Nd ne (ITSO Hizr.(Colo). ... 322 1 SR eC Ll XT Hr (Wash.).....-__ | 1228 LR Ne ee I ae a eS SR Ree aR CINSHAW......o ane 1506 TBB. tC rn iia Deir La en HIER Bl HoBBSsa intatny© 1131 BBO cme fre Se nN hn mm me rl oe) BESH HoPEMAN. oe... 1209 ve a a I Lr a Lae HOLBROCK ... = onnaai 303 JOBE: commis at ihn yo Lh Be ne RMA YATES HOLMES. 0.0. 1108 LE Te ee I SR a ER ee gE HOOK oo Bo 1423 fr TH a a er LED HOPES ge. oe 1314 E70 HR SR IE Lr ef RS HOUSTON: arnaan. 1120 EES LO NE IC i I A SE a HOWER Le. oa 123 PL ee ee LT Babe aes oo 403 1 I le IRE HUNTER... 1405 vA RO EER LL PERE mt IMHOBE onan oan 309 BALA Lernerent nL te bo oR BEIION pr CAIRO YZAQEr. oo Le 240 hi TI Ee I a Te LR Ae JACKSON covic mm 323 I EE ee RR Re Ce Se ESO JACOBSEN... 135 Liv a IeeeLa IEE a Eos nS a JARMAN. nianFE Ei Printing. -oeuerccizy tony Basement floor, main corridor. (750, 246 oh FARR Tes ems 238 IE i pa odd JENKINS a 1128 EL a ei be bad a TENS 407 Fo ol SO SO Rs Ba LL BCR JENNINGS. vere 241 YE Ey JORSEN GG ae 124 BIO 2 cunnmanansnonncrsmans ter LORER Locator TREBRAR RS JONSd 439 LB ir di Lt im pind JouNsoN (Calif.) _ .__. 106 rl Lins JoHNsoON (T11.)._______ 1630 LT RL nid JounsoN (Ind.)___.__ 1641 3 i dors) (ti iced JOHNSON (Okla.)_____ 1106 Errand JOHNSON, Luther A__| 1203 a eo ioiu i Ls sed JornsoN, Lyndon B...| 182000 0000 oonos LER REG fd TR) JounsoN (W. Va.)__ 212 emt lq sbi JONES au 101 yy? LB ioe Sree dn od a a JONEMAN. oo cil 1711 hii bi tiated REAR ro 1518 BI idsonansnsnsonieednmarrstool al BBO 1 WBC be a ne REO AR 1 RERteoe 1531 I EE ene oi ri KREERFRLeS oo 421 1% ErLo a Bi Teint fo demsponon KEBAUVER .. .. ...... 206 yh Re CC a a Li BL Ee Tee Keuey(Pa.)........| 417 FL Es NE a PE le a Bepreail). 235 a eC aod bi cies KENNEDY, Martin J_.| 1708 LE hr rbot ho eR BE KENNEDY, Michael J_| 1629 ELee nt alia ReoaHE =. v % Jrovision OF LyWS.. .. oo |= on mina Em merle wm at Yoo 2 2 4 20 BERR gi 1201 EL hl aang 15, Spiga RILBUBN... = 337 Tra a leita Hi hy RODAY i 1513 ET rl I im eoid Sng IG TE EL LL ee 504 Rlirl I ai RINGER reece 1213 ElLL itr namol) Ponies RIRWAN ie cern 1517: 1017 -BEnrolled-Billg.«ciao Van SUG J URBL doce on on dR BRS A Rooms and Telephones 305 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone KrEBRRG.oo. 1322 DAR Sl DL CR ee SR ERE SC nS Ta -.. KIND hein 121 BOB ne ERE Be ce des madi bis sal rN KNUTSON... oo 1111 URE ene Se ase n net ERE I TR A aL KOCIALKOWSKI.______ { a Insalar Afar er EN ie KOPPLEMANN_ ____.__ 1620 I he SN LU SASS BE in eli be LR en iL LY 1741 266 KBAMER. ooo ain { 1015 | 1071 Ebr Ema Sen Teen ID Le eB Sa KUNKEL... 459 Ee ee EE fe hres LAMBERTSON______.__ 254 B00: a re ae LMR MR EG An Site HAE LANDIS, 7. cides 1016 i Pee nS RR en ea Te Bh Teed OF CO SRR el Te I TY Ysa { 243 | 561 ps Buildings and } : Slt bettie 245 | 1025 Grounds. THEE el] Ll LARRABEE... ...vvm---1414 a feducation Fron Se Choa LE CE EL oe A en mr ew SS mG ARE Sf va Los { 1332 528 is and Foreign } SECURE SE See Bai TE ee had Lata SEE 1334 221 Commerce. LEAVY ail 1527 LEBER Se ER SR CT Sm Dl ss lle em ate tl TC LECOMPTE. cee 1709 Ys le) ERR Sm Lene En A ED Lit 1S SER SR ar aT LESINSEL.......o..i-{ a fo Jravaiia Pomalont: il: rede prunit un nn eet nr le re LEWIS. aidan 404 AS bed cased a LR BB aba ne LUDLOW... ia 432 Bab. re ARR LL BE a en BOA LYNCH... onnnmns 229 rE BR LL at Da Lem Le eC A oe MCARDLE... nie 1418 HE he CS PL SL A BRR Ret MCCOBMACE......oovil oo =p Majority Floor Leader..__| Ground floor, west side..____._|282, 499 nlc 1221 629 7 MCGEREE. ....._...__ { 307 637 my. ee fe he pend men bee oe me ena | eee MCGRANERY-..___._. 1225 A Ee SL SS SO OU he MCGREGOR. ~~ 1606 LYASE a ian LC SERS See WS ine Bi Rie TT ad MCINTYRE oo 5 145 a LIRR dg MCKEOUGH.-........... 1006 LL I SER eee IE TS AE fe a i Tl MCLAUGHLIN. _______ 1407 B49 | risesLE Br daa sR hea NR ni les MCLEAN. ove 1729 BOO BR a eee SARE MCMILLAN... 252 EE eS NE BE Cl SR ee el MARS ees 427 AB irre i nl ee BA ah HBR rer ee ER 2 MACIEJEWSKI________ 1410 A a en ee ae RE SRE wnd) gaan MACIOBA.......co cone 126 Se LARA BI ie ee RES MAGNUSON_-____..| 1710 a Ea ae DR LR RL Te em eR MAHON. 0 ee 1210 Yi En en CR Sh La CS Se LL MANASCO-ARIE Ee ie Le mmm mmm mmm mmm mmm mmm | MANSFIELD... 5: 1304 { Jivers rr HE EET0 ene fue Sandel Tha coup alee iil MARCANTONIO._______| 1722 LE ee eee AT Gn Ln See de Li il MARTIN (Iowa)_______ 1033 cE hed Sentara ei hesbe pte aon th 8 TSR TT LR Ll adeeb BY fiend MARTIN (Mass)an lato oo Minority Floor Leader_.__| House floor, room 58__________ 262 MASON... conic 1117 1 I I (es Cn SPT BA en Ue SE Se I SRE Daf Se May. dia { a gor Janiary Affairs... =k Vo MERRITT ooo ra 1238 co YEE BEER er TR OR EI eM EE CIE TR eet ial] Sonsini MEYER... 329 B00 |. iis ein rm ea fe ARE L SE ha ely bere B MICHENER. __________ 1530 Lh Re ee Ee I Eee a ee Le ee i Mis (Ark)... a. LEIHAE BERTIE ati tele rn kee et ieniat ER Een Ure Le ae gies) es rie Mhrs@a.). 1715 er ee tl I co NEEL IT Gu Sn LCL I TL LR MITCHELL. ove 1215 Vi Tl ey rg LE LY SER A eee a ye MONRONEY.__________ 1627 yi he BC Peal EER © les SSR TSR fe fe RIEL Ca MOSER. = > ion { i oo Joensus I IR he Be MOTE aresaiinn 1532 EE a oT suns Re Ree x MOUND. a usnsrann 1010 | 1337 306 Congressional Directory Name MURDOCK. cos MURRAY oi MYBRSE la NELSON. ras ns NICHOLS. ie NORBELL. wee NORTON 2 Fo O’BRIEN (Mich.)_____ O’BrIEN (N.Y. _____ O'CONNOR... ; ODAY eee OHARA oie : LEARY ereecenane OLIVERL. oon ON BAL. women OSMERS. si OROOLE: oie PACE dn PADDOCK. tier PAGAN bown wb PATMANG ssi PATBICE ...cnvnnaiiil38 PATTON soni cnn, PRARSON. oo PETERSON (Fla.) _____ PETERSON (Ga.)______ PFEIFER, Joseph L___| PHEIFFER, William T'_| PIERCE crvnrevsionns PITTENGER. wceases PLAUCHE tie can PEOBSEE. .. Loneeass PLUMLEY.-Laces POAGE Eu dente POWERS... al PRIEST idipancaions RABAUPD. La Yd RAMSAY... i... BAMSPECR........ BRANDOLPH....couui inn : BANEDS(VIS) RANKIN (Mont.).___. TN Office Room 539 423 1021 225 1004 1427 433 2 BO 127 1632 416 { 440 420 1231 { 304 239 1404 357 1230 1726 118 437 1035 1319 1026 1408 1504 1501 1640 441 202 244 331 343 402 1525 1440 143 1227 409 { i 330 345 356 358 112 LI Tra BERCE. oid 1129 Beep: (RlYG a 321 RERDIN.. YY vein 1202 13 n TOE Te A 221 REICH od crn 1330 RICHARDS ewaa ones 1502 RIVERA sarin att TELS fy 0 BRR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued building Capitol Chairmanship — | Phone Location Phone {ri BR ES er I DICE I Sas eR B02 {hres di ft IR RE Ld et AEST AD foto rhino ML TE Ld Lo RETO EN LE ORB inn a eed A BERL BEE es PLIES (Eee Te a Se 0 TE Ne 4 ST ESR 689 Ay PL aBOR. Cor ire AE AROL SIL BL TT CD { 443 BIB Ltn bi dn BL BOR Hin HORI EB EA Fon bn ie eit ae LA rd SARE Ln Bn ol |B A 764 | LL NR SRE BEG 399 (| Election of President, 382 } Vice President, etc. SAT ESSER Le Ln 762 | | Expendituresin the Exec- 580 } utive Departments. Lt Fd fell CRSP Sn ui TO: for binni smn 1 2 Be RS Tn AL B08 BER AY ea } ae elie iin RS Rly J JEL Ee SO es | } J eT | 0 LL ER I ck SRT Ee ee fT 13 eit sad AL Sls sven se BE MRL] 1 ie LL BE SERRE ee ee LES TE eR RE Ee a | eee ae 2 ERE ICE O eae nd To LOE I Lg APIS OL JO TR IER Ly foi] BB3 inlinea ore BRR Ch pene WOU yb pr LN er 0 TR (RN a SR CERES fl 8B BB elim nmin dan al nd on BIE a SAMAR AD GOGH. INS JOR UOMO HIRO IO AR Le Sn RE an Le Ole TEL Rm Ee A eee en Che Le es ape tb a SE 0 om El ae Ll nnannrinanmniia) B08. JL i aah ia LLY SRE A SRE AO EA { ii btections LR i i Ts oll RE any AW: Jord itcrnnnnsinmadmiird| ak ra SIR Xn dn a SHRI A dies J BY BIB. fowl innit dan abd BL, Supine VIITHAI AA ON BAB linnwd BON Lind nnn nb MA TAD | ABB nmin a SON UBER Lo eas ABN BBO. ohn aN br id Bs Amini nsas ih BAAN A i Py Se Sr | PRL a LT Ee Lg (SS B2D |edit]hm wee Sn nn AMR ao QTR I BBL elnnmmnsmmnmnmainsmmnide Bea a IAL ne ART TORY eb hE sn ae BR fe cl Ie Pe rn (28 TPO. Llu msrsiiidvn jon bb cde Id dams nar penn on SBE BA [VE ES Re Re ETC Li 0 BE 3 ee PR er Re eg 2 Ee eRe RUE a ene a | ale STR ig boii Berviee: ia pe eel 652 664-[ yDistrict-of Columbia... foam seas deat casos Oh bY tesandundadnan 279 336 || World War Veterans’ | 758 } Legislation. SLA ES TERR CUETO RR old ry : 5 23 HE rE 05 Te 21117. tote Liles les HE 1 11 sessnnoronRrrsIi sri SPR or SONI CRB Re ERE RR Sn Ce RE Se me eee ERE CS RO vt VESPER SSS NEE VALS CRO CIE a } SC De 1 | SE I House floor, House floor, EO SL LS le | Be 8 TE WL ei) Se TT De Meee ECB 88 rooms 19 and 20_ _ 204 room 60-200 f 460 SR pe Se Re WR Ich Re Jel TEEPE ESE yy EL En | SR I) fe PER 5 10g 5 Ta Ris Sg i © OEY On ia ed | a Lr 8 CTR a TEL SE TY Se a = CYR wh YL Te ep ge PR EAS | I i 1 19 MERA 1111 Bi SYR een | 8 AEH Rooms and Telephones 307 Cy REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone Bm. oo das 111 Lo FE Ia Ca Le Tl ots FC in ie ROBERTSON (N.Dak.) 134 LS EE Le Gh ei PRL OF pe El a (8 EEE To ROBERTSON (Va.)..__| 450 SUE eRee en LUT Sa LL a RE RoBINSON (Utah)... { po Publielands. ......o cf et oh ROBSION (K¥.)-oo —--253 wa H Een eee al a Ee Ee ROCEEFELLER ==. > 1717 Ip30 I he a ee ml Br Ren a TL Ge LT Ch ESRTR PE A BE i] Er CR SR Se i Shield BS OL LS Gh GEE EL 3 RODGERS (Pa.).__-.__ 110 LE Ey aloes ee ee eR EE OL ie BY Se ee ST Ly ROGERS (Mass.)----__ 1725 PL ES ES Se ee I TI Se i Sa ROGERS (Okla) wv rcolinsiann)nasnaas Indian Affofrst 22 2 Gallery floor, room 52. ________ { Mes BOLI erens 108 582 |... rR vin HI ami ed mn mmm ag TET 213 oon ROMIUR: aaa { 670 [Post Officoand Post Roads. |---ccoannevcatomccecannsncas SYRT 215 634 RussEry. ...-cuneae=-342 Ree ET en eS na Rn SCE a ee ne FRR) SABBATH Sore 1136 rib ba LE me ee en Gallery floor, east corridor.___|276, 308 SACKS 3 oe anes 1431 Gall Eas ee Or me TC aise ee TY SANDERS. eae nnmee 1317 Li ene ee eae cy CSA CI SRS EE, SASSCER.. Cinna 456 LL FE Oh el Se nny Li Cie | oe EE, 2 SATTERFIELD. ____._._.. 207 PE Ee er eR dB al TS en SAUTHOF oer 1328 A TR Ne Se I NG ET LS SCANION. cnn 422 4 EH i ese ie ne enna be SI Ras I eS LS SCHAEFER (TIL.)_______ 1520 TER A rye is en Daag oR tne BB OEE SRS STL Te J Demis di am (i et SCHUBNZ la 1413 Te HE Re Ee er RR TE 2 BL als OSS ) Cs hy SCHULTE vic anmaamn 1514 CLS rene a on a inane gan SOOT) no nninnaaan 451 Vi Re EEC ee a LI SC Se a Eee lI SCRUGHAM. once 1223 IE Eee de ne TRE ETT Da BEE Tn SECREST onions 1536 { Ls Juibrary Eto gba pe Spt Mein Sl IER Te oud omniang SHAFER (Mich.)_.____ bh RELLE Ee Ee ee RN Le PRS Ct I WR oT SHANLEY? ceeereen> 1610 LLL I pn nn mean J 1 © Sipestin T esl aise il manne | TL Ya SHANNON. . .cvaean 1110 BD le menssnn eae oe JO SRR BEE i arenas ma SHEPPARD... crvvees 258 VLE Re See ena Fe Sle i 0 TO Me Sen] TT A SHERIDAN. dees 131 LEE EE Se RE Sh ee i i OS ee Mei TT SHORT ioe 1239 7 EEE EE Ce el ee I IEE Ta Dee pe 1 SIZES i... imeninees 1022 EES Seen eat a I BR Tee a ae aaa UE TL SIMPSON... oi. 1417 7 BE A Ce a ee he Cet hs YU C0 ake + damn e L Sos SMITH (Maine) .__.__. ZBL {1360 [Li woeloatl -fmaeandandas |e a0 1 B30 El ieee SmitH (Ohio)... 341 Hah ROC SE lL BE i en shebang Balas] Sura (Pa)... 436 FLEES ree ene an I ee ae seen ies Swite (Va)... 301 B01 al eel a ee [ELE pan NES Coe Smite (Wash.)_.._._. { aie wk Jpensions Sh SUI fir Sneed 2 ent a I DR SmrtH (W. Va.) ____ 1401 535 | Minesand Mining...) di. o0 an surah se SMITH (Wi) _.......| 442 EEE Re a ER I TNR I Dl SIE I Sy SNYDER. ....icccawause 1013 heh EE SR eR Ne Rn] DR RRR Bs a 1 R141 109 224 || Coinage, Weights, and SOMERS: essatinctts { 115 441 Measures. } THE TERI Loe Sour... ee 1526 1 I os Se I Te TL TI ET ON me EL en SPAREMAN. ____...... 1512 Lo REE an a a em Rt LC Ce SS eR Lh SPENCEL.. eo oaae-1307 ReBOL a TL CR hea SPRINGER -.rivamenwn 1519 I De eae al DF eM Le NE a Dr oA STARNES: eas 1505 Fi he SR Ree he AR LL a STEAGALT. o.oo 1301 2138 |: Banking and Currency.....|... Ac. dn dlrs mene esas at aia 30 STEARNS ©. oo 405 10 EE eee En Re Ue BT Ee RE BERANE ain 1017 | Pre Se OS A ee BE TL CR El Ie TE STEVENSON... oeepe-434 LE Rel eee shee Oe oe Le BL RC SE EO SRS JL STRATTON... nates 117 SHE i Soe en ee eB SR Name SULLIVAN. ween SUMNER (IIL) _ ooo SUMNERS (Tex.)---__. LE SWEENEY ...cneee ame MABERE ia AVL vi medics ABER rinse TENEROWICZ. oo oinae TERRY. o.oo 417a 7 ER A ER HOM Lois erica THOMAS (N. J.) ._.__ THOMAS (Tex)... THOMASON... ina. PIBR ONT. ce smrrnnres TINKEAM....... 000.20 TR OLANG. mn rerio TRAYNOR. oe icarc TREADWAY -coarse: VANZANDT. oi: VIRCENTS oo aos vais VINSON. VOORMIS.... cocina 07717 pe SHEE VEBBLAND.... coc WADSWORTH. ________ WALTER. = atone WARD. W ASIELEWSKI. _______ WEAVER... aia li ALAS 1 i CE WELCH Cr. ise WENE LS ere niin WHS Rats ent ninn WHEAT es sewn WHELCHEL...o wien Es Eh WHITTEN. cuvwmsismms Office Room 408 216 346 { 347 1308 1133 1126 TA20:4-1134 1422 1206 1607 324 318 1409 1730 458 256 1216 352 1436 237 1432 { _ 501 460 1712 1031 349 413 325 1125 419 1127 104 1521 223 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued building Capitol Chairmanship | Phone Location Phone 720 |__. Er i rr pr eee: Beene ote SET BO T02% bi bennanonsinnns traghdpnn sea fot WD. SOL COREE 02 HODIRSHGI 680 i68 1 Judiciary lh A A Ground floor, room 71.________ 1022 CVA SS BRR IR Cen Ul | El 80%: = irioevecacsrssenananngena bl SRE ea Wes) Hoa Ge LL a Ee 218280. scvnnpunasemniasanmrnann i iasio alsa Dao on 0 Co ETH NDGH a LE Lier 4248 [=trmbecennunstananbbiaaniansB00 Loon URBAN) HES DOI ln LEE Em I LEDT oa a RR SE Ne LR A i 626; | cdubanineni con abangabione WE N08 8 PUL. essere oo [RERIOS ar Sm a CRG EE ET el Bei peel © ene miei Lt 5025 nt AUREL 350 3 SA de0 TAL S30 flee flats. eo AMANO 58623 ting anon She Sena [IE R00 J] a eT ARTs [ds santos dovanpienmne on: al N00 Po Rel dann an sing ny wl LEBEN a i BOB dec punnnsgnaenansisannsannalbd B00 pL RORL. docoae ens RBHO AS ABO ied ex eonmennpsanunepaainns sash (GU AGS Leann cenn. oa ERO AG O28 comnnanueaunansassasantaraSUL fouas lial MOR onan JRDBBAS a CR I SL 700%] odes an sre rnanonnnadnras senna MR.) SEL tar emaninn ies RENT TAG Naval Afton EE SL LS J | gE ey hin) Lhd OI cd nncnnnrasnananabsesramnasnon beens nos ait L800 0 GU ROC a ai BV lord esc amants mab Rae Er A Br a deme Sw As os MA FETS BN Ye ee i SB SR Sn ee ret LE intel Sabre dL 2 ine ¥ Bema Slain shel ole EEE CT Pr Ee pal Gl BL Ser ll a EL Ld Lyrr tr bo NG os Sl a Ral B55k alt srareosoarraraparnrmnnlial BAG Sin does eee GHATIANS Ee EL i beLo SS ss TH Eon enimeied Kobi EE er Chere Lo Ie Sn I SR EEN LE tL hl il LB a { 351 780 353 676 435 SR 226 | 1000 WHITTINGTON. _______ { 227 | 1001 WICKERSHAM _____.. 138 il WIGGLESWORTH _____ 1728 AAR WILLIAMS... cuonr 1217 re WAN Lo een ensew 438 Offi WINTER...en is 130 00 WorcorD: ~~. 1132 SB WOLFENDEN_ _____.__ 1113 re Jatin and Reclama-} 3 tion. LB BeelerER a ae Lan Sin ts nl Jriooa Control. i YE Dineen libel sano TT Se Se nl EL AE IL SAA LS Eo M2 SR SL CEE ie DLE PEELS aan a A de ater md lla Be el Ll SR Se RE EE LE IE CE All BL BE Ae BC Le EC Sn id) a t nnn i wn mr pepe, BOLL BVA Semen vie ro BRAT WE Lug JARI aI ed he ER A nr ol Camaro BUIDERIAG (Lk ry RA ee AE Er Et eb EH Ln SE lh Ta DLA WOLVERTON...cio 251 Reto se a Me 8 S00 Sanh tend Sept EARL HE ATS ‘W.OODRUFF-..c-===-:= 1103 TO ln a ae Re aes, (dN des Sle oss BRE W.OODBUM -osnpmiansslesddidtlodanlo lon no a ha Gallery floor, west corridor____ WORLEY -ceciinunis 344 O23 na ned tei G1 BOE TL BOE Jas arens anes SHAR ATS WRIGHT ot eacasncs 103 Abel TRTHIO OOE SNR 1 O68 12a irarebaneen codiieIAR YOUNG cnn anae x 308 lLEt 0 ET Ria EO cio SR LEER SE PR) in YOUNGDAH,..-cz-=---457 LE SS Lh CL a i TL GR Ce aE a bh ZIMMERMAN__________ 1540 EE Lor) bot oh Ce A We LL SB £05 Ne LC Ctl fa MEMBERS OF THE CABINET CorpEeLL Hurry, of Tennessee, Secretary of State, Wardman Park Hotel. Henne NY opmeTRan Jr., of New York, Secretary of the Treasury, 2434 Belmont oad. ; Henry L. Stimson, of New York, Secretary of War, 3000 Cathedral Avenue. Francis BiopLE, of Pennsylvania, Attorney General, 1669 Thirty-first Street. Frank C. WALKER, of Pennsylvania, Postmaster General, Wardman Park Hotel. Frank Knox, of Illinois, Secretary of the Navy, Wardman Park Hotel. HaroLp L. Ickes, of Illinois, Secretary of the Interior, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md CLAUDE R. WickARD, of Indiana, Secretary of Agriculture, the Westchester. Jesse H. JonEs, of Texas, Secretary of Commerce, Shoreham Hotel. Frances Perkins, of New York, Secretary of Labor, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. ; 310 EXECUTIVE THE PRESIDENT 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, 1904-7; 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, 1907-10; member of firm of Roosevelt & O’Connor, 1924-33; member of New York Senate, 1910 to March 17, 1913 (resigned); Assistant Secretary of Navy, 1918-20; Demo-cratic 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; member of National Commission, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915; overseer of Harvard University, 1918-24; 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—Febru-ary 1919; member of Naval History Society, New York Historical Society, Holland Society, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa; Mason. Clubs: Harvard, Knickerbocker, Century. Legal residence: Hyde Park, Dutchess County, N. Y. Elected President, November 8, 1932; reelected President, November 3, 1936; reelected President, November 5, 1940. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone NA tional 1414) SECRETARIES 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, 1907-9; city editor, Washington Times, 1909-17; com-mittee on public information and publicity director, United States Navy, as special assistant to Secretary, 1917-21; publicity representative for Mr. Roose-velt’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, 1921-31; business manager and publicity representative of Governor Roosevelt’s Presidential campaign, 1932; appointed Assistant Secretary to President Roosevelt, March 4, 1933; appointed Secretary to the President, July 1, 1937; member of Sigma Chi, National Press, Washington, Burning Tree, and Columbia €ountry Clubs. Residence, 3106 Thirty-fourth Street. STEPHEN EARLY, born, Crozet, Va., August 27, 1889; captain Infantry, A. E. F.; married; Washington staff United Press Associations, 1908-13; Wash-ington staff Associated Press, 1913-17, 1920-27; Assistant Secretary [to the President, March 4, 1933; Secretary to the President, July 1, 1937. Residence, 7704 Morningside Drive. EDWIN MARTIN WATSON, born, Eufaula, Ala., December 10, 1883; appointed to United States Military Academy from Virginia; graduated Febru-ary 1908; married Frances Nash, of Omaha, Nebr., August 31, 1920; appointed military aide to the President June 1933; appointed brigadier general, United States Army, continued as military aide, and Secretary to the President; ap-pointed major general, October 1, 1940. Residence, the Kennedy-Warren. 311 312 C ongressional Dzrectory EXECUTIVE OFFICE Personal secretary.—Marguerite A. LeHand, the White House. Executive clerk in charge of White House executive offices.—Rudolph Forster, Wardman Park Hotel. Executive clerk.—Maurice C. Latta, 315 East Cedar Lane, Bethesda, Md. Administrative assistants.— William H. McReynolds, 4514 Connecticut Avenue; Lonenin Currie, Roosevelt Hotel; Lowell Mellett, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, a. Special assistant to the President.—Harry L. Hopkins, Washington, D. C. Special executive assistant.—Eugene Casey, Gaithersburg, Md. LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone NAtional 1414) Liaison officer.— William H. McReynolds, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE, UNITED STATES 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.— Archivist of the United States (Solon J. Buck). OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Liaison officer.— Wayne Coy, 5215 Watson Street. Assistant liaison officer.—Sidney Sherwood, 3051 N Street. Division of Central Administrative Services: Director.— Dallas Dort, 5074 Lowell Street. Executive assistant.— Shane MacCarthy, 3420 Legation Street. Budget and finance officer.— Jerome Gunther, 4703 Ninth Street. Personnel officer.— Charles E. Mills, 1614 K Street. Chief, Service Operations Division.— William Wright, 4012 Forty-seventh Street. Chief, Investigations Division.— George Gould, Annapolis Hotel. Chief of Field Operations.—John W. Jago, 6432 Thirty-first Place. Director, Division of Information.—Robert W. Horton, 3135 Q Street. Counsel.—Oscar Cox, 2922 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE (Dupont Circle Apartments. Phone, REpublic 5050) Director.—Fiorello H. LaGuardia. Acting Deputy Director.—T. Semmes Walmsley, Chevy Chase Apartments. Deputy Director in Charge of Operations.— Corrington Gill, 2630 Adams Mill Road. Assistant Director in Charge of Participation.— Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the White House. Assistant Director.— Eloise Davison, 333 East Forty-first Street, New York City. Acting Assistant Director.—S. Howard Evans, 4426 Garfield Street. DEFENSE COMMUNICATIONS BOARD (Roem 6107, New Post Office Building. Phone, DIstrict 1654) Chairman.—James Lawrence Fly, 4201 Warren Street. Maj. Gen. Dawson Olmstead, 3911 Livingston Street. Rear Admiral Leigh Noyes, 2312 California Street. Breckinridge Long, Montpelier Manor, Laurel, Md. Herbert E. Gaston, 2928 Forty-fourth Place. OFFICE OF FACTS AND FIGURES (Dupont Circle Apartments. Phone, REpublic 5050) Director.— Archibald MacLeish, 1520 Thirty-third Street. EXECUTIVE OFFICE Executive Departments 313 OFFICE OF DEFENSE HEALTH AND WELFARE SERVICES (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone REpublic 6530) Director.—Paul V. McNutt, Shoreham Hotel. hari Director (Health and Welfare) .—Charles P. Taft, 1688 Thirty-first treet. Assistant Director (Nutrition) ~~ NHlbarn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Assistant Director.—Geoffrey May, 1243 Thirtieth Street. Chairman, Health and Medical Commaittee—Dr. Irvin Abell, 1433 South Third Street, Louisville, Ky. Executive secretary, Health and Medical Committee.—Dr. James A. Cr 304 Cedar Lane, Bethesda, Md. Eecutive assistant.— Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue. Deputy Assistant Director (Nutrition) — William H. Sebrell, 7119 Marion Street, Bethesda, Md. DIVISION OF DEFENSE HOUSING COORDINATION (1600 I Street. Phone, REpublic 5050) Coordinator.—Charles F. Palmer, 1815 Twenty-fourth Street. Assistant Coordinator.—Jacob Crane, 3811 Jenifer Street. Special assistant to Coordinator.—Howard Acton, 4432 Klingle Street. Executive assistant.—Carl Henry Monsees, 5015 V Street. Legal adviser.—Herbert S. Colton, 4524 Walsh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Program supervisor.—Ferdinand Kramer, 2301 Fort Scott Drive South, Arlington, Vv a. Director, Analysis Division.—Samuel J. Dennis, 309 East Columbia Street, Falls Church, Va. Director, Standards Division.— William V. Reed, 1683 Thirty-second Street. Director, Homes Registration Division.—Howard Strong, 4600 Forty-fifth Street. Director, Housing Priorities Section.—James W. Cramer, 7701 Georgia Avenue. Administrative officer.—James W. Abney, 4714 North Eighth Road, Arlington, Va. Management adviser.—M. Allan Snyder, 2320 Nineteenth Street. Temporary shelter adviser.—Carl L. Bradt, 1739 N Street. Information adviser.—Dana Doten, 3328 Nineteenth Street. Racial relations adviser.—Robert R. Taylor, 1754 Massachusetts Avenue. Labor relations adviser.— Virgil L. Bankson, 410 Cedar Street. OFFICE OF THE COORDINATOR OF INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS (Department of Commerce Building. Phone, REpublic 5050) Coordinator.—Nelson A. Rockefeller. Assistant Coordinators.—Carl B. Spaeth, 3109 Woodley Road; Wallace K. Harri-son, 3232 Reservoir Road. Ewecutive director.—John C. McClintock, 1529 Thirty-third Street. Special adviser to the Coordinator. — Enrique de Lozada, 18 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant.—John S. Dickey, 2903 Twenty-ninth Street. Director, Agricultural Division.—Earl N. Bressnan, 120 Whittier Street. Director of Communications.—Don Francisco, Hay-Adams House. Director of Cultural Relations.—John M. Clark, Quaker Lane, R. F. D. 2, Alex-andria, Va. Director of Field Operations.—E. H. Robbins, 4935 Hillbrook Lane. Director, Information Division.—Francis A. Jamieson, 2633 Fifteenth Street. Director, Legal Division.—John E. Lockwood, 3131 O Street. Director, Service Division.— Mills Dean, 2134 Wisconsin Avenue. Chairman, Commercial and Financial Division. —Joseph C. Rovensky, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Chairman, Cultural Relations Division.—Robert G. Caldwell, 50 Tyler Road, Belmont, Mass. Projects manager.—Arthur A. Jones, 1336 Nineteenth Street. Commercial director.—Berent Friele, Marlyn Apartments. Financial director.—Paul Nitze, 3300 O Street. Chief consultants, Press Section. — Duncan Aikman, Washington Hotel; Harry Frantz, 2901 Twenty-eighth Street. Congressional Directory ~~ exmcurive orrion OFFICE OF LEND-LEASE ADMINISTRATION (515 Twenty-second Street. Phone, REpublic 5050) Admanistrator.—E. R. Stettinius, Jr., Shoreham Hotel. Deputy Administrator.—T. B. McCabe, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant Deputy Admainastrator.—Philip Young, 3100 Thirty-fifth Street. Assistant to Deputy Admanistrator.—J. C. Buckley, 2726 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Admanistrators.—J. E. Orchard, 800 South Washington Street, Alex- andria, Va.; William H. Brown, Wardman Park Hotel. General counsel.—Oscar Cox, 2922 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant general counsel.—Joseph Rauh, 2949 Newark Street. Office manager.—G. E. Crammer, 4115 Davis Place. Chief of Statistical Section.—Lt. Col. W. J. Rusch, 532 Twentieth Street. Chief of Accounts Section.—Moore Lynn, 302 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Applications Section.—Helen H. Castle, 1507 Thirtieth Street. NATIONAL DEFENSE MEDIATION BOARD (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Chairman.~—William H. Davis, 130 East Seventy-fourth Street, New York City. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION (Temporary Building D, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 5050) Adminzstrator.—Leon Henderson, 2121 Bancroft Place. Deputy Administrator.—John E. Hamm, Marlyn Apartments. Director, Field Operations.— Frank Bane, Roger Smith Hotel. Associate Administrator tn charge of Consumer Division.—Harriet Elliott, 1634 Street. Jo Admanistrator and Director of Price Division.—J. K. Galbraith, 3207 P treet. General counsel.—C. David Ginsburg, 6370 Thirty-first Place. Director of Transportation.—G. Lloyd Wilson, 474 Gerhard Street, Roxborough, P a. Acting administrative officer.—H. B. Vincent, Jr., 1402 Delafield Place. OFFICE OF PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director General— William S. Knudsen, 2930 Woodland Drive. Associate Director General.—Sidney Hillman, Wardman Park Hotel. Secretary of War.—Henry L. Stimson, 3000 Cathedral Avenue. Secretary of the Navy.—Frank Knox, Wardman Park Hotel. Executive secretary.— Herbert Emmerich, 3710 Davenport Street. General counsel.—John Lord O’Brian, Wardman Park Hotel. Administrative officer—James Gordon Robinson, 7013 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Bureau of Clearance of Defense Industry Advisory Committees.—Si dney J. Weinberg, Shoreham Hotel. Chuef, Bureau of Industrial Conservation.— Lessing J. Rosenwald, Shoreham Hotel. Chief, Bureau of Research and Statistics.—Stacy May, 4949 Hillbrook Lane, Spring Valley. Director, Production Division.—W. H. Harrison, Shoreham Hotel. Director, Purchases Division.—Douglas MacKeachie, Westchester Apartments. Deputy Director, Purchases Division.— Arthur Newhall, Mayflower Hotel. Dzrector, Priorities Division.—Donald M. Nelson, the Broadmoor. Deputy Director, Priorities Division.—-J. S. Knowlson, 2120 Sixteenth Street. fir Director (Policy), Priorities Division.—Blackwell Smith, 4450 Volta Place. Director, Labor Division.—Sidney Hillman, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy Director, Labor Division.—Isador Lubin, 2737 Devonshire Place. Cietonom, Doni on Fair Employment Practice.—Mark F. Ethridge, Louis- ville, Ky. Director, Division of Contract Distribution.—Floyd B. Odlum, Mayflower Hotel. Director, Division of Civilian Supply.—Leon Henderson, 2121 Bancroft Place. EXECUTIVE OFFICE Executive Departments 315 Deputy Director, Division of Civilian Supply.—Joseph L. Weiner, 4905 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md : Director, Materials Division.—W. L. Batt, 2750 Q Street. Deputy Directors, Materials Division.—A. 1. Henderson, 1816 Forty-fifth Street; Philip D. Reed, Shoreham Hotel. SUPPLY PRIORITIES AND ALLOCATIONS BOARD (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Chairman.—Henry A. Wallace, Wardman Park Hotel. Henry L. Stimson, 3000 Cathedral Avenue. Frank Knox, Wardman Park Hotel. William S. Knudsen, 2930 Woodland Drive. Sidney Hillman, Wardman Park Hotel. Leon Henderson, 2121 Bancroft Place. Harry L. Hopkins, Washington, D. C. Executive director.—Donald M. Nelson, the Broadmoor. OFFICE OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT (1530 P Street. Phone, REpublic 5050) Director.—Dr. Vannevar Bush, 4901 Hillbrook Lane. Ges National Defense Research Committee.—Dr. J. B. Co nant, 1530 P treet. Chairman, Committee on Pennsylvania. Executive secretary.—Dr. Medical Research.—Dr. A. N. Irvin Stewart, 3721 Livingston Richards, Street. Unive rsity of TRANSPORTATION DIVISION (Federal Reserve Building. Phone, REpublic 5050) Commassioner.— Ralph Budd, Carlton Hotel. Deputy Commissioner.— W. Fischer, Francis Scott Key Karl Apartments. Executive assistant.—A. Francis Swinburne, 8913 Mohawk Lane, Bethesda, Md. Consultant on Refrigerated Warehousing.—J. Raymond Shoemaker, 110 Ferris Street, Elmira, N. Y. Consultant on Merchandise Warehousing.—Harry D. Crooks, Shoreham Hotel. Consultant on Port Coordination.—George C. Randall, Claridge Hotel. COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION (National Institute of Health Building, Twenty-fifth and E Streets. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Coordinator of Information.— William J. Donovan, 1647 Thirtieth Street. Deputy Coordinators.—Robert Sherwood; James P. Baxter, 3d, 3136 O Street; Atherton Richards, Shoreham Hotel; Elmo B. Roper, Jr., 2 Clifford Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. Liaison officer.— William Kimbel, 125 Grafton Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Executive officer— Thomas G. Early, University Club. ECONOMIC DEFENSE BOARD (2501 Q Street. Phone, REpublic 5050) Chairman.—Vice President of the United States. Secretary of State. Secretary of the Treasury. Secretary of War. Attorney General. Secretary of the Navy. Secretary of Agriculture. Secretary of Commerce. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Executive director.—Milo Perkins, Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Assistant executive director.—Charles B. Rayner, 9700 Bexhill Drive, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Congressional Directory EXECUTIVE OFFICE Assistant Director.—Lt. Col. Royal B. Lord, 38735 Fordham Road. General counsel.—Monroe Oppenheimer, 3113 Northampton Street. Administrative officer—David B. Vaughan, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Chie Dee of Export Control.—Col. F. R. Kerr, 5508 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, BUREAU OF THE BUDGET (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone EXecutive 3300) Director—Harold D. Smith, 3125 North Abingdon Road, Country Club Hills, Arlington, Va. Assistant director.—John B. Blandford, Jr., Hotel Claridge. Assistant director in charge of legislative reference.—F. J. Bailey, 5 Pinehurst Circle.Assistant director in charge of estimates—Leo C. Martin, 3509 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Assistant director in charge of administrative management.—Donald C. Stone, 4921 Tilden Street. Assistant director in charge of statistical standards.—Stuart A. Rice, 2863 Beech- wood Circle, Arlington, Va. Assistant director in charge of fiscal division.—J. Weldon Jones, Hay-Adams House. Consultant, defense projects unit.—Henry M. Waite, 2123 California Street. General counsel —Edward G. Kemp, Hotel Washington. Administrative assistant to the Director.— Frederick J. Lawton, 1816 Varnum Street NE. ; Secretary to the Director—Marie A. Johnston, 2926 Porter Street. NATIONAL RESOURCES PLANNING BOARD (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone EXecutive 3300 or EXecutive 3331) Chairman.—Frederic A. Delano, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Vice chairman.—Dr. Charles E. Merriam, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. Member.— George F. Yantis, West Bay Drive, Olympia, Wash. Advisors.—Henry S. Dennison, Framingham, Mass.; Dr. Beardsley Ruml, 151 West Thirty-fourth Street, New York, N. Y. Director—Charles W. Eliot, 2501 Foxhall Road. Assistant directors.—Thomas C. Blaisdell, Jr., 1231 Thirty-first Street; Ralph J. asin 1516 Twenty-ninth Street; Frank W. Herring, 3219 Quesada treet. Executive officer—Harold Merrill, 5700 Thirty-second Street. OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT REPORTS (Commercial Building, 1405 G Street, Room 500. Phone EXecutive 3300) Director —Lowell Mellett, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Directors.— Katherine C. Blackburn, 221 West Glebe Road, Alexandria, Va.; Addison G. Foster, 1222 Sixteenth Street. Executive officer—Philip C. Hamblet, 1022 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Va Administrative officer.—D. Stanley Mitchell, the Heatherington. ; DIVISION OF PRESS INTELLIGENCE Director.—Charlotte J. Hatton, 221 West Glebe Road, Alexandria, Va. UNITED STATES INFORMATION SERVICE Chief —Harriet M. Root, the Lombardy. STATE Executive Departments DEPARTMENT OF STATE (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, REpublic 5600) CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State (Wardman Park Hotel), was born October2, 1871, in Overton (now Pickett) County, Tenn.; is a citizen of Smith County; wasgraduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.,and is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the lower house of the TennesseeLegislature two terms; served in the Fourth Regiment Tennessee VolunteerInfantry during the Spanish-American War, with the rank of captain; later wasfirst appointed by the Governor and afterward elected judge of the fifth judicialcircuit 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, 1921-24; 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 theAmerican delegation to the Seventh International Conference of AmericanStates, Montevideo, Uruguay, November 3, 1933; member, National Archives Council, 1934, chairman since 1935; chairman of the American delegation to the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace, Buenos Aires, Argen-tina, October 23, 1936; chairman of the American delegation to the Eighth Inter- national Conference of American States, Lima, Peru, November 16, 1938; hon-orary president, Eighth American Scientific Congress, Washington, 1940; delegate,Second Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics, Habana, 1940. ; Under Secretary of State.—Sumner Welles, Oxon Hill, Md. Special assistants to the Under Secretary.—Max W. Thornburg, Shoreham Hotel;Charles Bunn, 2807 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; Emilio G. Collado, 3021 Forty-fifth Street. Assistant to the Under Secretary.—Anna Louise Clarkson, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Liazson officer.—Orme Wilson, 2342 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Secretary of State.—Adolf A. Berle, Jr., 4000 Nebraska Avenue. : Executive assistants to Assistant Secretary.— Fletcher Warren, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; Harold B. Hoskins, 3127 O Street. : Assistant Secretary of State.—Breckinridge Long, Laurel, Md. Assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Carlton Savage, 4451 Volta Place; Leo D. Sturgeon, 10 Calvert Place, Kensington, Md.; James A. White, 2901 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant Secretary of State.—Dean G. Acheson, 2805 P Street. Assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Bernard D. Meltzer, 1708 R Street; JacquesReinstein, 1419 Thirty-sixth Street. ~ Assistant Secretary of State.—G. Howland Shaw, 3326 Reservoir Road. Executive assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Laurence C. Frank, 7415 Lynnhurst Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; William E. DeCourcy, 1511 Twenty-second Street. Legal adviser.—Green H. Hackworth, 3714 Morrison Street. Advisers on Political Relations.—James Clement Dunn, 27 Observatory Circle; Stanley K. Hornbeck, 2139 Wyoming Avenue; Laurence Duggan, 3105Cathedral Avenue. Adviser on International Economic Affairs.—Adviser, Herbert Feis, 1529 Twenty-nih Street; assistant adviser, Leroy D. Stinebower, 4625 Thirty-sixth treet. Assistant to the Secretary of State.—Cecil W. Gray, 1613 Harvard Street. Special assistants to the Secretary.—Leo Pasvolsky, 3641 R Street; Lynn R. Edminster, 4314 Klingle Road; Thomas K. Finletter, 1248 Thirtieth Street; Joseph C. Green, 10 Quincey Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Accounts.—Chief, Donald W. Corrick, 6333 Sixteenth Street; assistantchiefs, Fred R. Young, 6525 First Street; Lloyd C. Mitchell, 6813 Fifth Street. Division of the American Republics.— Acting chief, Philip W. Bonsal, 1301 Twenty-eighth Street; assistant chiefs, Herbert S. Bursley, 3753 Oliver Street;Christian M. Ravndal, 12 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Paul C. Daniels, 1519 Thirty-third Street; George H. Winters, 903 Crescent Drive,Rover Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Walter N. Walmsley, Jr., 2301 Connecticut venue. 64674°—T7-2—1st ed 22 318 Congressional Directory STATE Caribbean Office.—Chief, Coert duBois, 2129 Florida Avenue; assistant chief, John B. Ocheltree, 5041 Macomb Street. Division of Commercial Affairs.—Chief, Raymond H. Geist, 5121 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; assistant chief, Paul T. Meyer, 809 Grandview Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements.—Chief, Harry C. Hawkins, 12 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant chiefs, William A. Fowler, 1642 Thirty-second Street; John C. Ross, 3724 R Street; Robert M. Carr, Wellington Villa, Alexandria, Va. Division of Communications and Records.—Chief, David A. Salmon, 3223 Klingle Road; assistant chiefs, Roger S. Drissel, 512 Oneida Place; Harvey KE. Fenstermacher, 1429 Ames Place NE. : Office of Coordination and Review.—Chief, Blanche Rule Halla, 2131 Yorktown Road; assistant chief, Sarah D. Moore, 1909 Park Road. Division of Cultural Relations.—Chief, Charles A. Thomson, 209 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; assistant chiefs, Richard Pattee, 1626 Argonne Place; John M. Begg, Shoreham Hotel; acting assistant chief, William L. Schurz, 4143 North Twenty-fifth Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Current Information.—Chief, Michael J. McDermott, 1855 Upshur Street; assistant chiefs, Howard Bucknell, Jr., 1207 Duke Street, Alexandria, Ya] Robert T. Pell, 1642 Twenty-first Street; William D. Hassett, the Park ane. Dasison of Defense Materials.—Acting chief, Thomas K. Finletter, 1248 Thirtieth treet. Board of Economic Operation.—Dean G. Acheson, chairman; Adolf A. Berle, Jr., € vice chairman; Herbert Feis, adviser and vice chairman; Leo Pasvolsky; Harry C. Hawkins; Charles Bunn; Thomas K. Finletter; Lynn R. Edminster; John S. Dickey; Frederick Livesey; Emilio G. Collado, executive secretary. Division of European Affairs.—Acting chief, Ray Atherton, 3147 P Street; assistant chiefs, John Hickerson, 3314 Ross Place; Paul T. Culbertson, 5315 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md.; Loy W. Henderson, 3112 Woodley Road; Waldemar J. Gallman, 2931 Cathedral Avenue. Division of Exports and Defense Aid.—Acting chief, Charles Bunn, 2807 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; assistant chiefs, Charles W. Yost, 28 Elliott Road, Westmoreland; Granville O. Woodard, Wardman Park Hotel. Division of Far Eastern Affairs.— Chief, Maxwell M. Hamilton, 318 Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va.; assistant chiefs, Raymond C. Mackay, 1026 Sixteenth Street; Walter A. Adams, 2400 Sixteenth Street; George Atcheson, Jr., 2030 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va.; Robert L. Smyth, Dorchester House. Financial Division.—Chief, Frederick Livesey, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Office of Fiscal and Budget Affairs.— Chief, Ella A. Logsdon, 815 Eighteenth Street; assistant chief, B. Leslie Vipond, Kensington, Md. Division of Foreign Activity Correlation.—Acting chief, George A. Gordon, 1531 New Hampshire Avenue; assistant chief, Fletcher Warren, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; acting assistant chief, Harold B. Hoskins, 3127 O Street. Foreign Funds Control Division.—Chief, Donald Hiss, 2913 N Street; assistant chief, Adrian S. Fisher, 2620 Foxhall Road. Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service.—G. Howland Shaw, chairman; Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Dean G. Acheson, Wayne C. Taylor (Under Secretary of Com-merce), L. A. Wheeler (Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations of the Department of Agriculture), John G. Erhardt, Lawson A. Moyer (Chief Examiner of the Civil Service Commission). Division of Foreign Service Administration.—Chief, Monnett B. Davis, 4927 Sedgwick Street; assistant chiefs, Harry A. Havens, 300 Lynn Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Maynard B. Lundgren, 1026 Fifteenth Street; Francis E. Flaherty, 3615 Fourteenth Street NE. Foreign Service Buildings Commission.—Cordell Hull, Secretary of State; Henry Jesse H. Jones, Secretary of Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury; Commerce; Tom Connally, Senator from Texas; Hiram W. Johnson, Senator from California; Sol Bloom, Representative from New York; Hamilton Fish, Representative from New York; Executive secretary.— Frederick Larkin, Chief, Foreign Service Buildings Office, Department of State. STATE Executive Departments 319 Foreign Service Buildings Office.—Chief, Frederick Larkin, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; assistant chiefs, Leland W. King, Jr., 2305 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, Va.; Irene de Bruyn Robbins, 3242 Woodland Drive. Foreign Service Officers’ Training School.—Director, William C. Burdett, 1868 Columbia Road. Board of Foreign Service Personnel—G. Howland Shaw, chairman; Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Dean G. Acheson, Wayne C. Taylor (Under Secretary of Com-merce), L. A. Wheeler (Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations of the Department of Agriculture). Division of Foreign Service Personnel.—Chief, John G. Erhardt, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant chief, John W. Bailey, Jr., 1516 Thirty-third Street. Office of the Geographer.—Geographer, S. W. Boggs, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ; assistant geographer, Sophia A. Saucerman, the Broadmoor. Division of International Communications.—Chief, Thomas Burke, 3018 Forty-fourth Street; assistant chief, Jesse E. Saugstad, 2021 Massachusetts Avenue. Division of International Conferences.—Chief, Warren Kelchner, 2027 Hillyer Place; assistant chief, Frederick B. Lyon, 3900 Cathedral Avenue; acting assistant chief, Clarke L. Willard, 6613 Thirty-second Street. Division of Near Eastern Affairs.—Chief, Wallace Murray, 1868 Columbia Road; assistant chiefs, Paul H. Alling, 1406 Twenty-ninth Street; Henry 8S. Villard, 3335 Dent Place. . Passport Division.—Chief, Ruth B. Shipley, 5508 Thirty-ninth Street; assistant chiefs, John J. Scanlan, 4517 Fifteenth Street; F. Virginia Alexander, Conrad Apartments. Division of Personnel Supervision and Management.—Director of Personnel, Edward Yardley, 38 Kenilworth Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Assistant Diréctor of Personnel and Chief of the Recruiting and Selection Section, P. F. Allen, Alta Vista, Bethesda, Md. Office of Philippine Affairs.—Chief, John K. Davis, the Highlands; assistant chief, J. Bartlett Richards, 3828 Fulton Street. Division of Protocol—Chief, George T. Summerlin, 1718 H Street; assistant chief, Stanley Woodward, 3005 O Street; ceremonial officer, H. Charles Spruks, 4429 Volta Place. Division of Research and Publication.—Chief, E. Wilder Spaulding, 6600 Thirty-second Place; assistant chief, Bryton Barron, Springfield, Va.; librarian, ‘Martha L. Gericke, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue; editor of the Territorial Papers, Clarence E. Carter, 7100 Connecticut Avenue. Special Division.—Chief, Joseph C. Green, 10 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant chief, James H. Keeley, Jr., 3717 Fulton Street; acting assistant chiefs, Frederick van den Arend, 1413 Twenty-ninth Street; Albert E. Clattenburg, Jr., 2907 Rittenhouse Street; Eldred Kuppinger, 1820 Massa-chusetts Avenue. Division of Special Research.—Chief, Leo Pasvolsky, 3641 R Street. Division of Studies and Statistics.—Acting Chief, Lynn R. Edminster, 4314 Klingle Road; assistant chief, Simon G. Hanson, 1020 Nineteenth Street. Translating Bureau.—Chief, Emerson Christie, 3236 McKinley Street; assistant chief, John W. Perkins, 1619 R Street. Central Translating Office.—Chief, Guillermo A. Suro, 1 Scott Circle. Office of the Editor of the Treaties.—Editor, Hunter Miller, Cosmos Club. Treaty Division.—Chief, Charles M. Barnes, 3420 Sixteenth Street; assistant chief, Wallace McClure, 1914 Connecticut Avenue. Visa Division.—Chief, Avra M. Warren, Cordova Apartments; assistant chiefs, Eliot B. Coulter, 1915 Kalorama Road; Julian F. Harrington, 3308 N Street; Robert C. Alexander, 4704 South Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Marjorie Moss, 1709 Lanier Place. . 3 Division of World Trade Intelligence.—Acting Chief, John S. Dickey (detailed from Office of Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs), 2903 Twenty-ninth Street; assistant chief, Francis H. Russell, 906 Mansion Drive, Silver Springs, Md.; acting assistant chief, Philip W. Thayer, 3241 Klingle Road. Assistants to the legal adviser.—Joseph R. Baker; Ralph W. S. Hill, 3327 N Street; Richard W. Flournoy, 111 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; William R. Vallance, 3016 Forty-third Street; Benedict M. English, 3217 Foxhall Road; Frank X. Ward, 1431 Thirty-third Street; D. A. McDougal, La Salle Apart-ments; Raymund T. Yingling, 1759 R Street; Anna A. O’Neill, 1326 New + 320 Congressional Directory STATE Hampshire Avenue; Joseph B. Matré, 1907 Rockwood Road, Montgomery Hill, Md.; Marjorie M. Whiteman, 5021 Glenbrook Road; Frederick M. Diven, 3706 Hillsdale Road, Baltimore, Md.; John Maktos, 705 Eighteenth Street; Durward V. Sandifer, 8304 Oakford Place, Silver Spring, Md.; Walter E. Pelton, 5521 Colorado Avenue; George S. Knight, 3843 Garrison Street; Katherine B. Fite, 1601 Twenty-first Street; John W. Halderman, 404 North Oxford Street, Arlington, Va.; William W. Bishop, Jr., 3104 Nineteenth Street; H. Alberta Colclaser, 5388 Earlston Drive. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION (For list of members, see page 384) NATIONAL MUNITIONS CONTROL BOARD (For list of members, see page 409) TREASURY Executive Departments 321 DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 6400) HENRY MORGENTHAU, Jr., of Hopewell Junction, N. Y. (2434 Belmont Road), 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 and member of the Taconic State Park Commission; in January 1931 appointed conservation commissioner of the State of New York; chairman, Federal Farm Board, from March 5-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; member, Foreign Service Buildings Commission; member, Smithsonian Institution; chairman, board of trustees, endowment fund, American Red Cross; member of board of trustees, Postal Savings System; member, National Archives Council; member, National Park Trust Fund Board; chairman, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board; member, Board of Trustees of the National Gallery of Art; member, Foreign-Trade Zones Board; and member, National Munitions Control Board; managing trustee, Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund. Assistant to the Secretary.— Henrietta S. Klotz, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. * The Under Secretary.— Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramercy Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service.—Herbert E. Gaston, 2928 Forty-fourth Place. Assistant.—Francis C. Rose, 6307 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Secretary.—John L. Sullivan, 4853 Rockwood Parkway. Le Counsel.—Thomas Tarleau, 2907 North Edison Street, Arlington, a. Fiscal Assistant Secretary.—]Vacant.] Executive assistant.— William T. Heffelfinger, 1448 Juniper Street. Administrative assistant to the Secretary.—W. N. Thompson, 2922 Cortland Place. Assistant administrative assistant.—Charles S. Bell, 6317 Woodside Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Special staff assistant.—Charles R. Schoeneman, 2018 Klingle Road. Special assistants to the Secretary.—Harold N. Graves, Cosmos Club; Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md.; John W. Pehle, 8804 Garfield Street, Bethesda, Md.; Ferdinand Kuhn, Jr., 8 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; James L. Houghteling, 2424 Wyoming Avenue; B. M. Edwards, Washington Hotel; Chester I. Barnard, Carlton Hotel; Dave H. Morris, Jr., 1900 Q Street. Technical assistant to the Secretary.—H. Merle Cochran, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Comin of Treasury Agency Services.—Elmer L. Irey, 3800 Twentieth Street N Director of Press Relations.—Charles Schwarz, 14 Glenridge Road, Kensington, Director of Personnel—Theodore F. Wilson, 3617 Twentieth Street, NE. Chief Clerk.—F. A. Birgfeld, 3338 Seventeenth Street. Superintendent of Treasury Buildings.—Danzil A. Right, 1422 A Street SE. Chief of Division of Correspondence—Gabrielle E. Forbush, 3120 N Street. OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY General counsel.—Edward H. Foley, Jr., 10 Thompson Circle. ri counsel for the Bureau of Internal Revenue.—John P. Wenchel, 6805 Sixth treet. Assistants general counsel.—Huntington Cairns, 2219 California Street; Law- rence J. Bernard, 4450 Verplank Place; Bernard Bernstein, 3517 Rittenhouse Street; Norman O. Tietjens, 3306 Cleveland Avenue; Charles L. Kades, 3304 Cleveland Avenue. Assistant to the general counsel.—Joseph J. O’Connell, Jr., the General Scott. 322 Congressional Directory TREASURY General counsel—Continued. Special assistants to the general counsel. —Ernest R. Feidler, 1405 North Wake-field Street, Arlington, Va.; Samuel Klaus, 2737 Devonshire Place; Stephen J. Springarn, 1727 H Street. Chief Covad, Bureau of Customs.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithers-burg, Md. BUREAU OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY Comptroller.—Preston Delano, 2921 O Street. Deputy Comptrollers—C. B. Upham, University Club; L. H. Sedlacek, 2001 Sixteenth Street; R. B. McCandless, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chief National Bank Examiner.—W. P. Folger, the Westchester. Special Disbursing Agent.—J. O. Malott, 302 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Secretary to Comptroller.— Cotter, Connecticut the Alice 5420 Avenue. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS Dircan of Rat, and Statistics.—George C. Haas, 5510 Cedar Parkway, Chevy hase, : Assistant directors.—Henry C. Murphy, 2700 Q Street; Al F. O’Donnell, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street; Russell R. Reagh (Government actuary), 14 Holly Road, Manor Club Estates, Rockville, Md. Assistant to the Director.—Anna M. Michener, 1622 Twenty-ninth Street. Administrative assistant to the Director.— William M. Weir, 2212 I Street. Librarian.— Isabella S. Diamond, 5521 Colorado Avenue. DIVISION OF MONETARY RESEARCH Director of Monetary Research.—Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Directors.—V. Frank Coe, Franklin Park Road, East Falls Church, Va.; Frank A. Southard, 4947 Albemarle Street; Edward M. Bernstein, 3713 W Street. BUREAU OF CUSTOMS (Wilkins Building, 1512 H Street. Phone, NAtional 6400) Commassioner.—W. R. Johnson, 4234 Forty-second Street. Ain Commissioner.— Frank Dow, 6405 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Acting Deputy Commissioner, Tariff Administration.—Glenn H. Griffith, 1333 Hemlock Street. Deputy Commissioner, Investigations and Patrol.—Thomas J. Gorman, 2800 Ontario Road. Depts) Commassioner, Fiscal Administration.—A. Sidney Johnson, 5219 Western venue. Supervisor of appraisers.—Charles Stevenson, 3105 Thirty-fourth Street. Chzef counsel.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. CUSTOMHOUSE (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phones, MIchigan 0243 and 0244) Deputy collector in charge.—Franklin A. M. Shafer, 4504 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. BUREAU OF NARCOTICS (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, N Ational 6400) Commassioner of Narcotics.—H. J. Anslinger, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy Commissioner of Narcotics.— S. Wood, 2800 Woodley Road. Will Assistant to the Commzesstoner.—M. L. Harney, 4325 Verplanck Place. SECRET SERVICE DIVISION Chief —Frank J. Wilson, 2910 Tennyson Street. Assistant Chief. —Joseph E. Murphy, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Staff assistant.—Laurence E. Albert, 4201 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Vv a. : Chief Clerk.—Walter S. Bowen, 1837 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Supervising agent, White House detail. —Edmund W. Starling, the Mayflower. ° TREASURY Executive Departments BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, District 5050) Commassioner.—Guy T. Helvering, the Mayflower. Assistant to the Commissioner— Norman D. Cann, 1526 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Executive Assistant to the Commissioner.—[Vacant.] Special Deputy Commissioner.—Eldon P. King, 3821 Fulton Street. Deputy Commissioners.—D. Spencer Bliss, 923 East Capitol Street; George J. Schoeneman, 1361 Locust Road; Timothy C. Mooney, 5137 Macomb Street; Stewart Berkshire, 4238 Forty-third Street. Special assistant to the Commissioner.—Leone Bruch, the Mayflower. Head, Tegal Staff.—Aubrey R. Marrs, 1422 North Fillmore Street, Arling- ton, Va. Chief, Intelligence Unit.—Elmer L. Irey, 3800 Twentieth Street NE. Head, Administrative Division and budget officer—Frederick I. Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road. Head, Public Relations Diviston.—John L. McGrew, 6500 Utah Avenue. Chief, Recruitment and Selection.—I. Y. Bain, 1102 South Oakcrest Road, Arling- ton, Va. : Chief, Placement and Pay Roll.—George C. Billard, 3260 Van Hazen Street. DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH Director of Tax Research.—Roy Blough, 3243 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director.—Louis Shere, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. FISCAL SERVICE BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Commsissioner.—E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. Assistant commassioners.—R. W. Maxwell, 3352 Upland Terrace; Joseph Green- berg, 7101 Ninth Street. Chief accountant.—A. L. Peterson, 8104 Park Crest Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chef, Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants.—L. L. Collie, 108 West Bellefonte Avenue, Alexandria, Va. : Chief Disbursing Officer.—Guy F. Allen, 556 Varnum Street. Chief, Division of Deposits.—B. M. Mulvihill, 3900 Fourteenth Street. BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT Commissioner.— William S. Broughton, 1819 Q Street. Assistant Commassioner.—Edwin L. Kilby, 7106 Ninth Street. Deputy Commissioner.—Rene W. Barr, 900 Nineteenth Street. Register of the Treasury.—Edward G. Dolan, the Dresden. Assistant Register.—Byrd Leavell, Boston, Culpeper County, Va. Chief of Division of— Loans and Currency.—Marvin Wesley, 6750 Eastern Avenue. Accounts and Audit.—M. R. Loafman, 5408 Nebraska Avenue. Paper Custody.—M. A. Emerson, 3057 Porter Street. Savings Bonds.—Arthur E. Wilson, 807 North Barton Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES Treasurer.— William Alexander Julian, Red Gables, R. F. D., Rockville, Md. Assistant Treasurer.—Marion Banister, Stoneleigh Court. Assistant to the Treasurer.—G. O. Barnes, 608 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative assistant to the Treasurer—Michael E. Slindee, the Iroquois. Cashier.—Harry H. Hulbirt, 3244 Patterson Street. Chief Clerk.—Louis P. Allen, 1203 Floral Street. PROCUREMENT DIVISION (Seventh and D Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 5700) Director —Clifton E. Mack, 6314 Thirty-second Street. Assisi Director—Robert LeFevre, 112 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, d. 324 Congressional Directory TREASURY Asin to the Director—George Landick, Jr., 19 Franklin Street, Kensington, d Administrative assistant to the Director—W. N. Rehlaender, 4811 Middlesex Lane, Edgemoor, Md. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING (Fourteenth and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 5151) Director.— Alvin W. Hall, 1319 Kalmia Road. Assistant Director, administration.—Clark R. Long, 1348 Iris Street. Assistant Director, production.— Thomas F. Slattery, 3825 Beecher Street. BUREAU OF THE MINT Director.—Nellie Tayloe Ross, the Dresden. Assistant Director.—Leland Howard, 3835 Lorcum Lane, Arlington, Va. Administrative officer.—Samuel B. Frantz, 610 Lexington Place NE. Assayer.—Timotby J. Quirk, 3718 Livingston Street. Supervisor, Gold Unit.—Russell Burbank, 4215 Yuma Street. Chief, Silver Unit.—XKenneth Failor, 2126 Connecticut Avenue. DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF (Washington Building, Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue) Executive director.—FEugene W. Sloan, 202 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Field director.—Gale F. Johnston, Washington Hotel. Information director.—Harford Powel, Roger Smith Hotel. COMMITTEE ON PRACTICE (Room 106, Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, NAtional 6400, extension 5017) Chairman.—G. C. Hanna, 1314 Massachusetts Avenue. Members.—W. W. Cook, 25 East Walton Street, Chicago, Ill.; George D. Carring-ton, 89 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Attorney for the Government.—E. B. Van Veen, 131 Locust Avenue, Bethesda, Md. PROCESSING TAX BOARD OF REVIEW (Munsey Building. Phone. NAtional 5585) William Schwartz, chairman, Munsey Building; John W. Edwards, 1617 Hobart Street; Percy S. Crewe, Route 1, Falls Church, Va.; Temple W. Seay, 3118 Forty-fifth Street; Annabel Matthews, 3900 Connecticut Avenue; Bernard D. Hathcock, 5314 New Hampshire Avenue. WAR Executive Departments 325 DEPARTMENT OF WAR (Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone REpublic 6700) HENRY LEWIS STIMSON, of New York, Secretary of War (“Woodley,” 3000 Cathedral Avenue), born in New York City September 21, 1867; son of Lewis Atterbury and Candace (Wheeler) S.; A. B., Yale, 1888; A. M., Harvard, 1889; Harvard Law School, 1889-90; LL. D.; married Mabel Wellington White of New Haven, July 6, 1893; admitted to bar, 1891; became member, firm of Root & Clarke, 1893; Root, Howard, Winthrop & Stimson, 1897; Winthrop & Stimson, 1901; United States attorney, southern district, New York, 1906-9; Republican candidate for Governor of New York, 1910; Secretary of War in Cabinet of President Taft, May 1911-March 5, 1913; ‘delegate at large, New York Constitutional Convention, 1915; special representative of President to Nicaragua, 1927; Governor General, Philippine Islands, 1927-29; Secretary of State in Cabinet of President Hoover, March 1929 to 1933; chairman, American delegation to London Naval Conference, 1930; chairman, American delegation to Disarmament Conference, 1932; major, Judge Advocate, United States Re-serves, June 1917; lieutenant colonel, Three Hundred and Fifth Field Artillery, August 1917; colonel, Thirty-first Field Artillery, August 1918; with A. E. F. in France, December 1917 to August 1918; brigadier general, 1922; Republican; Presbyterian; assumed office of Secretary of War July 10, 1940; president, board of trustees, Phillips Academy International House; member, American, city, and. State bar associations. Home, Huntington, Long Island, N. Y. Under Secretary of War.—Robert P. Patterson, 1545 Thirty-fifth Street. Executive to Under Secretary of War.—Brig. Gen. Harry K. Rutherford, 2101 Connecticut-Avenue. Directors of Branches: Admanistrative—Brig. Gen. A. H. Carter, 2943 Benton Place. Planning.—Brig. Gen. Charles Hines, 2212 Thirty-ninth Place. Production.—Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Hayes, 515 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. io and Contract—Brig. Gen. John W. N. Schulz, 2301 Connecticut venue. Statistics.— Brig. Gen. Leonard P. Ayres, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Expert consultants to Under Secretary of War.—Michael J. Madigan, May-flower Hotel, Byron C. Heacock, Mayflower Hotel; Edward F. McGrady, "30 Madison Street; Harold H. Neff, 3461 Macomb Street. Special assistant to Under Secretary of War.—Howard C. Petersen, 402 North St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Private secretaries to Under Secretary of War.—Lucille Mundy, 815 Eighteenth Street; Esther Rice, 3000 Connecticut Avenue NW. Secretary to Under Secretary of War.—Kate Buckingham, 53 Hamilton Street. Chief Clerk.—Anna Lanigan, 1368 Harvard Street. Assistant Secretary of War.—John J. McCloy, 3303 Volta Place. Executive officer—Lt. Col. Ralph H. Tate, 2825 Bellevue Terrace. Administrative assistant.—John H. Stuecchio, 1900 F Street. Private secretary.—Nancy Zinsser, 1540 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant Secretary of War for Air—Robert A. Lovett, 2346 S Street. Executive officer—Col. St. Clair Streett, 111 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Private secretary.—Ruth B. Haley, 1629 Columbia Road. ltr ishe assistant and Chief Clerk.—John W. Martyn, 2901 Thirty-fourth treet. Special assistants to the Secretary of War.—Julius H. Amberg, 2821 N Street; Harvey H. Bundy, 3306 O Street. Clerk to the Secretary.—John W. Schott, 5631 Third Street. Private secretary.— Martha E. McPherson, 4912 Arkansas Avenue. Personal secretary.—Elizabeth C. Neary, 3108 Hawthorne Street. Assistant Chief Clerk.—James C. Cook, 6803 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Special assistant to administrative assistant.—Frank B. Bourn, 3777 Oliver Street. Chiefs of Division: Director of Civilian Personnel.—A. H. Onthank, 1719 Thirty-seventh Street. Coordination and Record.—L. Frank Nye, 23 V Street NE. Postal Station.—James G. McFadden, 2100 I Street. Printing and Advertising.—Henry C. Lehmann, 1334 Valley Place SE. Procurement and Accounting.—Walla A. Kenyon, 1615 Juniper Street. 326 Congressional Directory WAR WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF (Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief of Staff.—Gen. George C. Marshall, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. William Bryden, Fort Myer, Va. Additional Deputy Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Richard C. Moore, 1868 Columbia Road. Acting Additional Deputy Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Henry H. Arnold, 7119 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—1 (Personnel).—Brig. Gen. Wade H. Haislip, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Acting Assistant Chief of Staff, G—2 (Military Intelligence).—Brig. Gen. Sherman Miles, 1761 N Street. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—3 (Operations and Training).—Brig. Gen. Harry L. Twaddle, 737 Allison Street. Acting Assistant Chief of Staff, G—4 (Supply).—Col. Stephen J. Chamberlin, 3 East Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, ; Acting Assistant Chief of Staff, War Plans Division.—Brig. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. ¢ Secretary of the General Staff.—Col. Walter B. Smith, 4314 Thirty-sixth Street. Chief Clerk.—Herbert F. Statesir, 3015 South Dakota Avenue NE. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CAVALRY (Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief.—Maj. Gen. John K. Herr, 1107 Powhatan Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Ezxecutive—Lt. Col. George I. Smith, 2603 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Chief Clerk.— Master Sgt. Aram Kojassar, 1409 Emerson Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FIELD ARTILLERY (Munitions Building. Phone, N Ational 2520, branch 2127) Chief—Maj. Gen. Robert M. Danford, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Ezxecutive.—Lt. Col. Rex W. Beasley, 4434 Q Street. Chief Clerk.— Master Sgt. Fred Lind, 300 Luray Avenue East, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF COAST ARTILLERY (Munitions Building, rooms 3054, 3052, and 3047) Chief —Maj. Gen. Joseph A. Green, 3503 Woodley Road. Ezxecutive—Lt. Col. Hugh N. Herrick, C. A. C., 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Hartley I. Sanders, 1606 Bass Avenue, Kenilworth, D. C. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF INFANTRY (Temporary Building M, Twenty-sixth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 6700, ; branch 3279) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Ezecutive.—Col. Harry F. Hazlett, 2480 Sixteenth St. Chief Clerk.—Julia Haslett, 1613 Harvard Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS (Room 2316, Building M, Twenty-sixth and C Streets, Phone REpublic 6700, extension 2710) Chief of Chaplains.—Chaplain William R. Arnold, 4833 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Executive.—Chaplain George F. Rixey, 3831 Macomb Street. Executive assistant.—Lt. Col. A. S. Goodyear, A. G. D., 1630 Concord Avenue. Personnel officer—Chaplain John F. Monahan, 3806 Yuma Street. : Planning and training officer.—Chaplain Frank L. Miller, 1920 Thirty-fifth Street. Public relations officer.— Chaplain Joseph O. Ensrud, 804 Grand View Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief clerk.—Bruce Skaggs, 2300 G Street. WAR Executive Departments 327 OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL (Room 1058, Munitions Building) The Adjutant General.—Maj. Gen. Emory S. Adams, 2909 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistants The Adjutant General.—Brig. Gen. James A. Ulio, Stoneleigh Court; Brig. Gen. William V. Carter, 3207 Highland Place; Brig. Gen. William C. Rose, 4508 Hoban Road, Colony Hill. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. William L. Ritter, 5431 Broad Branch Road. Administrative assistant.—Jesse H. Powell, 2238 Hall Place. Deputy administrative assistant.—Leon B. Hord, 3121 Adams Mill Road. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL (Room 723, 2145 C Street) The Inspector General.—Maj. Gen. Virgil L. Peterson, 3025 Woodland Drive. Executive.—Col. Herbert S. Clarkson, Westchester Apartments. Assistant executive.—Capt. George Fox Mott, Governor Shepherd Apartments. Inspections Division.—Col. Robert H. Fletcher, 1921 Twenty-fourth Street. Investigations Division.—Col. Edward C. Hanford, 2928 Twenty-eighth Street. Procurement and Construction Inspections Division.—Col. Leo J. Ahern, Army and Navy Club. Money Accounts Division.—Lt. Col. John W. Mott, 2153 California Street. Miscellaneous Division.—Lt. Col. John L. Parkinson, Kennedy Warren Apart- ments. Special assistant to the Inspector General.—B. H. Simmons, 7701 Georgia Avenue. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL (Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue) The Judge Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, 3717 Fordham Road. Assistants.—Col. Harry A. Auer, 2301 Connecticut Avenue; Col. Fred W. Llewel-lyn, 5504 McKinley Street, Bethesda, Md. Ezecutives.—Lt. Col. J. L. Harbaugh, Jr., 3000 Thirty-ninth Street; Lt. Col. Robert M. Springer, 6416 North Washington Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; Maj. Donald M. Keith, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Military Affairs Section.—Lt. Col. C. B. Mickelwait, 4700 Cortland Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Military Justice Section—Col. Ernest H. Burt, 1741 K Street. Chief, Contracts Section.—Col. Lawrence H. Hedrick, 3714 Woodley Road. Contracts Coordination Officer.—Col. Lawrence H. Hedrick, 3714 Woodley Road. Ciel Military Reservations Section.—Lt. Col. Oscar R. Rand, 4515 Connecticut venue. Chief, Patents Section.—Lt. Col. Francis H. Vanderwerker, 5720 Nebraska Avenue. Chief, War Plans Section.—Col. Archibald King, 1518 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief, Claims and Litigation Section.—Lt. Col. Desmond O’Keefe, 6310 Oakridge Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. : Chairmen, Boards of Review.—Col. Lucius M. Smith, 2230 California Street; Col. Lester S. Hill, Jr., 3051 Idaho Avenue. Chzef Clerk.—Joseph L. Lyons, 1819 G Street. OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL (Railroad Retirement Building, Fourth and D Streets SW.) The Quartermaster General—Maj. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory, 4401 Greenwich Parkway. body Quartermaster General.—Brig. Gen. Frank F. Scowden, the Kennedy-arren. Executive officer—Lt. Col. James C. Longino, Arlington Village, Apt. 242, Arlington, Va. Executive, Civilian Personnel Affairs.—Lt. Col. Harold A. Barnes, the Kennedy-Warren. Chief, General Service Division.—Col. Francis H. Pope, 1868 Columbia Road. Executive officer.— Maj. David G. Paston, 1624 Oak Street. bY 328 Congressional Directory WAR Chief, Planning and Control Division.—Col. Guy I. Rowe, 3205 Morrison Street. Executive officer—Lt. Col. Thomas H. Ramsey, 3003 Thirty-fourth Street. Chief, Military. Personnel and Training Division.—Brig. Gen. Henry D. F. Munni- khuysen, the Dresden. Chief, Civilian Personnel Division.—Lt. Col. Earl L. Lyons, 3619 VanNess Street. Chief, Fiscal Division.—Lt. Col. Edward B. McKinley, 2022 Columbia Road. Chief, Supply Division.—Brig. Gen. Clifford L. Corbin, 2148 Wyoming Avenue. ain officerLt. Col. Owen G. Collins (U. S. Army retired), Wardman Park — otel. Chief, Motor Transport Division.—Col. Herbert J. Lawes (acting chief), Holabird Quartermaster Depot, Baltimore, Md. Executive officer.—Maj. Gustave H. Vogel, 3502 Legation Street. Chief, Construction Division.— Brig. Gen. Brehon B. Somervell, Welcome, Md. Executive officer.—Col. Wilhelm D. Styer, the Kennedy-Warren. Chadds Transportation Division.—Col. Theodore H. Dillon, 2734 Thirty-fourth lace. Executive officer.—Col. Llewellyn W. Oliver, 2715 Thirty-first Place. Chief, Remount Division.—Col. Edwin N. Hardy, 1108 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Memorial Division.—Col. C. C. Reynolds, Westchester Apartments. Chief, Defense Aid Division.—Col. E. Santschi, Jr., 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Depot Division.—Lt. Col. J. W. G. Stephens, the Broadmoor. Chief Clerk.—Fred M. Cunley, 1003 Varnum Street NE. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FINANCE (War Department Annex No. 1, 401 Twenty-third Street) Chief of Finance and Budget Officer for the War Department.—Maj. Gen. H. K. Loughry, Army and Navy Club. Assistant Chief of Finance—Lt. Col. R. P. Hueper, 3009 Seventeenth Street NE. Executive Officer.—1Lt. Col. W. T. Johnson, 1315 Twentieth Street South, Arling- ton, Va. Assistant Budget Officer for the War Department.—Col. Frederick W. Browne (U. S. Army, retired), 4608 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to Chief of Finance.—F. Gwynn Gardiner, 134 Quincy Place NE. Adndnis aig Assistant.—Lloyd Boose, 616 East Thornapple Street, Chevy hase, Md. OFFICE OF FINANCE OFFICER, UNITED STATES ARMY (801 Channing Place NE.) Finance Officer.—Lt. Col. William M. Dixon, 1525 Foxhall Road. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL (Social Security Building, Fourth and C Streets SW.) Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. James C. Magee, 1740 Poplar Lane. Assistant to the Surgeon General.—Brig. Gen. Larry B. McAfee, 5325 Reno Road. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. John A. Rogers, 2230 California Street. Assistant Gceniiee officer—Maj. David E. Liston, 528 Cedar Street, Takoma Park, Md. Chief Clerk.—R. Harry Brooke, 1223 Vermont Avenue. ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY (Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW.) Librarian.—Col. Harold W. Jones, 7610 Seventeenth Street. Curator, Museum.—Lt. Col. James E. Ash, 8403 Dixon Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. ARMY MEDICAL CENTER, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Georgia Avenue and Butternut Street) Commanding General, Army Medical Center, and Commandant, Medical Department Sa Service Schools.—Brig. Gen. Shelley U. Marietta, Army Medical enter. Assistant Commandant, Medical Department Professional Service Schools, and Diente, Army Medical School.—Col. George R. Callender, Army Medical enter. WAR Executive Departments 329 Eman Officer, Army Medical Center.—Lt. Col. Harry A. Bishop, Army Medical enter. Adjutant, Army Medical Center.—Maj. Thomas G. Hester, 1314 Sheridan Street. Commanding Officer, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Brig. Gen. Shelley U. Marietta, Army Medical Center. Consultant in surgery.—Col. William L. Keller, United States Army (retired), 2930 Foxhall Road. Executive Officer, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Lt. Col. S. Munson Corbett, : Army Medical Center. Adjutant, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Capt. Joseph W. Mollaun, 4415 Mont-gomery Avenue, Bethesda, Md. 3 Director, Army Dental School.—Col. Lowell B. Wright, 119 Fillmore Street North, Arlington, Va. Berl Army Veterinary School.—Lt. Col. Ralph B. Stewart, 7542 Fourteenth treet. Secretary, Medical Department Professional Service Schools.—Maj. Don Long-fellow, 1432 Whittier Street. GENERAL DISPENSARY, UNITED STATES ARMY (Central Building, National Institute of Health Group, Twenty-fifth and E Streets) Commanding Officer.—Col. Edward Weidner, 6707 Georgia Avenue. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS (Twenty-first Street and Virginia Avenue) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Eugene Reybold, Wardman Park Hotel. : Assistants to the Chief of Engineers.— Brig. Gen. John J. Kingman, 3024 Cortland Place; Brig. Gen. Thomas M. Robins, the Dresden; Brig. Gen. Clarence L. Sturdevant, the Westchester Apartments. Executive assistant.—Col. David McCoach, Jr., Wardman Park Hotel. Executive officer—Lt. Col. Clarence L. Adcock, 2422 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant in charge of Finance and Accounting Section.—Lt. Col. Earl E. Gesler, 4534 Hawthorne Street. Assistant in charge of the Construction Section.—Lt. Col. John R. Hardin, No. 1, Hunting Cove Place, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief Clerk.—Harry L. Freer, 4912 Forty-first Street. BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS (No. 2 New York Avenue) Resident member.—Col. Earl North, 4413 Volta Place. Members.—Brig. Gen. Thomas M. Robins, the Dresden, Washington, D. C.; Col. Roger G. Powell, 419 Federal Building, Cleveland Ohio; Col. John N. Hodges, 1216 Federal Office Building, 90 Church Street, New York, N. Y.; Col. Charles L. Hall, 1420 Enquirer Building, Cincinnati, Ohio; Col. Malcolm Elliott, 831 United States Courthouse and Customhouse, St. Louis, Mo.; Col. John S. Bragdon, Main and Laurel Streets, Richmond, Va. Freeniing secretary.—J. Ben Walker, 120 Worthington Drive, Yorktown Village, d Chef statistician.—W. E. Graves, 15 Marion Avenue, Walter Heights, McLean, Va. Administrative assistant.—C. L. Benson, 1310 Nineteenth Street. BEACH EROSION BOARD (Dalecarlia Reservation, Little Falls Road) Acting resident member. —Capt. William C. Hall, 3921 Fulton Street. Members.—Col. Earl North, 2 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C.; Lt. Col. Harry B. Vaughan, Jr., 900 Customhouse, Philadelphia, Pa.; Maj. John W. Stewart (U. S. Army, retired), 1213 Federal Building, 90 Church Street, New York, N. Y.; Dean Thorndike Saville, New York University, New York, N.*Y.; Gen. Richard K. Hale, Department of Public Works, Boston, Mass.; Prof. Morrough P. O’Brien, University of California, Berkeley, Calif. Chief Clerk.— Ethyl L. Sweet, 1726 M Street. Ne TRIER 330 Congressional Directory WAR UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE (First and Douglas Streets) In charge—Col. William J. Barden, 2914 P Street. Military assistant.—Capt. Donald A. Phelan, 5906 Dalecarlia Place. Administrative assistant.—S. L. Duryee, 129 Sixth Street NE. MISSISSIPPI RIVER COMMISSION (Vicksburg, Miss.) President.—Brig. Gen. Max C. Tyler. ; Members.—Edward Flad, Col. Ernest Graves, Rear Admiral Leo O. Colbert, Albert L. Culbertson, Harry N. Pharr, Col. Malcolm Elliott. Secretary. —Col. Milo P. Fox. Administrative assistant.—R. N. Duffey. CALIFORNIA DEBRIS COMMISSION (Sacramento, Calif.) Members.—Col. Warren T. Hannum, Col. John R. D. Matheson, Lt. Col. Robert C. Hunter. Administrative assistant.—Elmo A. Brule. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE (Munitions Building) Chief.—Maj. Gen. C. M. Wesson, 1406 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistants.—Maj. Gen. C. T. Harris, Jr., 3220 Cleveland Avenue; Brig. Gen. Earl McFarland, 3911 Livingston Street. Executive officer.—Col. H. C. Minton, the Marlyn Apartments. Chief Clerk.—A. M. Ehrlich, 1308 Randolph Street. Administrative assistant.—Frances Carter Dudley, the All States Hotel. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief Signal Officer.— Maj. Gen. Dawson Olmstead, 3911 Livingston Street. Assistant to Chief Signal Officer and executive offlcer.—Lt. Col. James A. Code, Jr., 3930 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant executive officer.—Lt. Col. Arthur J. Wehr, 4104 Military Road. Civilian Assistant.—James W. Baldwin, 5501 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Administrative Branch.—Lt. Col. Kirke B. Lawton, 1729 Juniper Street. In charge— Civilian Personoel Division.—Maj. Herbert C. Taylor, 712 Park Avenue, Falls Church, Va. : Fiscal Division.—Lt. Col. James T. Watson, Jr. Intelligence Division.—Maj. Charles J. McIntyre, 2336 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. gam Personnel Division.—Lt. Col. Henry L. P. King, 1437 Madison treet. Service Diviston.—Capt. Hilding V. Foreen, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Cita Matériel Branch.—Col. Roger B. Colton, 118 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, d. In charge— Legal Division.—Lt. Col. Conrad E. Snow, 6647 Thirteenth Street. Maintenance Division.—Lt, Col. John M. Heath, Rockville, Md. Plant Division.—Lt. Col. Paul C. Gripper, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Procurement Division.—Lt. Col. Clifford D. Cuny, 3806 Brandywine Street. Research and Development Division.—Lt. Col. Tom C. Rives, 205 Park Road, Alexandria, Va. . Scheduling Division.—Lt: Col. Eugene V. Elder, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Sup and Issue Division.—Lt. Col. Raymond C. Hildreth, 3535 Chesapeake treet. . a SCOR SREE WAR Executive Departments 331 Chief 9 Operations Branch.—Col. Otis K. Sadtler, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. In charge— Air Communications Division.—Lt. Col. Frank C. Meade, 6903 Baltimore Avenue, College Park, Md. Communication Liaison Division.—Maj. Wesley T. Guest, 305 South Irving Street, Arlington, Va. : Coordination and Equipment Division.—Col. Hugh Mitchell, 7007 Hampden Lane, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md. Photographic Division.—Lt. Col. RichardT. Schlosberg, 1501 South Edge-wood Street, Arlington, Va. Signal Intelligence Service.—Lt. Col. Rex W. Minckler, 210 Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Traffic Division.—Lt. Col. Edward F. French, 2737 Devonshire Place. War Loan and Training Division.—Maj. F. H. Lanahan, Jr., 2436 Thirty- ninth Place. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE ARMY AIR FORCES (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief of the Army Air Forces—Maj. Gen. H. H. Arnold, 7119 Hampden Lane, Greenwich Forest, Bethesda, Ma. Chief of the Air Staff —Brig. Gen. Carl Spaatz, 1513 Thirty-third Street. Assistant Chiefs of Air Staff. —Brig. Gen. Ralph P. Cousins, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Brig. Gen. M. F. Scanlon, 2852 McGill Terrace; Col. E. L. Naiden, Thirth-ninth Street and Cathedral Avenue; Col. E. P. Sorensen, 3133 Connecticut Avenue; Lt. Col. H. L. George, Sixteenth and Euclid Streets. Secretary of the Air Staff —Lt. Col. A. W. Vanaman, 2116 Kalorama Road. Air Adjutant General.—Lt. Col. William W. Dick, Thirty-ninth Street and Cathedral Avenue. The Aur Inspector.—Col. E. W. Hill, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Air budget officer.—Col. L. W. Miller, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Wesley D. Gray, 532 Ingraham Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE AIR CORPS (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Chief of the Air Corps.—Maj. Gen. George H. Brett, 5058 Lowell Street. Assistants.—Brig. Gen. G. E. Stratemeyer, the Kennedy-Warren; Brig. Gen. Muir S. Fairchild, Marlyn Apartments. Chaef of the Matériel Division.—Brig. Gen. Oliver P. Echols, 5100 Watson Street. Chief Clerk.—John J. Mullaney, Cavalier Hotel. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION (Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue) Director of Aircraft Production.—Col. Bennett E. Meyers, 2400 Sixteenth Street. NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU (War Department Temporary Building H, Twenty-third and C Streets) Chief —Maj. Gen. John F. Williams, the Westchester. Ezecutive.—Lt. Col. A. V. Winton, the Westchester. Chief Clerk.—Paul M. DeHart, 1426 Massachusetts Avenue SE. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE CHEMICAL WARFARE SERVICE (War Department Temporary Building F, Twenty-third and D Streets) Chief—Mayj. Gen. William N. Porter, 3227 Thirty-third Place. Executive officer—Lt. Col. Charles E. Loucks, 5042 Nebraska Avenue. Administrative Assistant and Chief Clerk.—Guy B. Tippens, 7225 Bradley Boule- vard, Bethesda, Md. 332 Congressional Directory : WAR OFFICE OF THE PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL (Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue) The Provost Marshal General.—Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion, 2737 Devonshire Place. The Deputy Provost Marshal General.—Lt. Col. Archer L. Lerch, 202 High Street, Alexandria, Va. Ezecutive.—Lt. Col. Loren F. Parmley, 211 Buxton Road, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Military Police Division.—Maj. Joseph V. de P. Dillon, 5312 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief, Aliens Diviston.—Maj. Karl R. Bendetson, 136 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Emergency Operations Diviston.—Lt. Col. Homer W. Jones, 121 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, 1 nvestigations Division.—First Lt. William B. Richardson, 216 Quackenbos Street. Chief Clerk.— William W. Knight, Springbank Manor, Route 1, Alexandria, Va. THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE (Washington, D. C.) Acting Commandant.—Lt. Col. Ernest A. Williams, Cavalry. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. Peter J. Lloyd, Infantry. Chief Clerk.— William H. Gaskins, 3110 Thirty-eighth Street. THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE (Social Security Building) Commandant.—Col. Frank Whitehead, U. S. M. C., 5231 Massachusetts Avenue, Montgomery County, Md. Executive officer.—Lt. Col. Frank H, Hastings, Coast Artillery Corps, 3434 Porter Street Chief Cio. —Ruth B. Connell, 16 Sherman Circle. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD \ (For list of members, see page 379) ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISION (For list of members, see page 381) ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (For list of members, see page 381) THE JOINT BOARD (For list of members, see page 404) THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (For list of members, see page 405) UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE (For list of members, see page 312) JUSTICE Executive Departments DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Constitution Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets. Phone REpublic 8200) FRANCIS BIDDLE, of Philadelphia, Pa., Attorney General of the UnitedStates (1669 Thirty-first Street); born May 9, 1886, in Paris, France; son ofAlgernon Sydney and Frances (Robinson) Biddle; student Haverford (Pa.)School and Groton School; B. A. cum laude, Harvard, 1909; LL. B. cum laude,1911; married Katherine Garrison Chapin, of New York, on April 27, 1918 ; chil-dren, Edmund Randolph, Garrison Chapin (deceased); admitted to PennsylvaniaSupreme Court; associate Biddle, Paul & Jayne, Philadelphia; partner Barnes,Biddle & Myers, Philadelphia; special assistant, United States Attorney, easterndistrict Pennsylvania; class C director, Federal Reserve Bank; chief counsel, JointCommittee to Investigate Tennessee Valley Authority; judge, United StatesCircuit Court of Appeals, third circuit, 1938-39; Solicitor General of the UnitedStates, January 1940; admitted to practice before Supreme Court of the United States, 1927; chairman, Philadelphia branch of Foreign Policy Association ; chair-man, National Labor Relations Board; member Governor Pinchot’s Commission on Special Policing in Industry; member, Philadelphia County Board of LawExaminers; member, committee of censors, Philadelphia Bar Association; memberBoard of Public Education, Philadelphia Director, Philadelphia Contributionship for Insurance of House for Loss by Fire; trustee, Twentieth Century Fund (NewYork), Fairmount Park Art Association; Democrat; clubs— Philadelphia, Phila-delphia County, Franklin Inn (Philadelphia), Harvard, Coffee House (New York);author-—Llanfear Pattern, 1927; Solicitor General of the United States fromJanuary 1940 to September 1941 and Attorney General of the United States sinceSeptember 5, 1941. Solicitor General.—Charles Fahy, 3700 Northampton Street. The Assistant to the Attorney General—James H. Rowe, 1662 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant Attorneys General: Thurman W. Arnold, Dower House, McLean, Va. Samuel O. Clark, Jr,, the Broadmoor. Francis M. Shea, The Westchester. Norman M. Littell, 4101 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Wendell Berge, 9508 West Stanhope Road, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Assistant Attorney General, Division of Customs.—Paul P. Rao, 201 Varick Street, New York City. Assistant Solicitor General.—[Vacant.] Executive assistant to the Attorney General.—Ugo Carusi, 3720 Fordham Road. Secretary to the Attorney General.—Evangeline S. Bell, 3317 Cleveland Avenue. Director of Public Relations.—Max Gilfond, 1824 Belmont Road. Pardon attorney.—Daniel M. Lyons, 4237 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant pardon attorney.—Robert H. Turner, 3372 Stuyvesant Place. FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (Phone REpublic 7100) Director.—J. Edgar Hoover, 4936 Thirtieth Place. Assistants to the Director—€lyde A. Tolson, Marlyn Apartments; Edward A. ~ Tamm, 3353 Runnymede Place. Assistant Directors.—Hugh H. Clegg, 2737 Devonshire Place; W. Richard Glavin,606 Woodland Terrace, Jefferson Park, Alexandria, Va.; D. Milton Ladd,1650 Harvard Street; Louis B. Nichols, 321 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va.; Stanley J. Tracy, 918 Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE Sper! assistant to the Attorney General (¢n charge).— Lemuel B. Schofield, Raleigh otel. Associate Commissioner.—Marshall E. Dimock, 415 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Commissioners—Edward J. Shaughnessy, Tilden Gardens; Thomas B.Shoemaker, Skyline Towers; Joseph Savoretti, 1506 North Jefferson Street, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Board of Review.—[Vacant.] Director of Alien Registration.—[Vacant.] Chief of Alien Registration.—Donald R. Perry, 4605 Davidson Drive. 64674°—T7—2—1st ed 23 334 Congressional Directory JUSTIOR BUREAU OF PRISONS Director —James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Assistant Director.—William T. Hammack, the Argonne Chase, Md. Apartments. Members: Arthur D. Wood, the Edward P. Reidy, BOARD OF PAROLE Westchester; T. Webber Wilson, the Annap530 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, olis Md.; Hotel; Parole executive.— Walter K. Urich, 9320 Caroline Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. BUREAU OF WAR RISK LITIGATION Director.—Julius C. Martin, 6520 Western Avenue. BOND AND SPIRITS DIVISION Director.—Joseph Lawrence, R. F. D. 1, Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, Va. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Admanasirative assistant to the Attorney General—Thomas D. Quinn, 3310 Stephenson Place. Assistant administrative assistant.—S. A. Andretta, 137 East Bradley Lane, Chevy : Chase, Md. Chzef Clerk.—Harvey C. Donaldson, Dorchester House. General agent—E. R. Butts, 105 Randolph Avenue East, Alexandria, Va. Sally general agent.—Eugene J. Matchett, 613 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, d Appointment clerk.—Nellie G. Plumley, the Ontario. Chief, Division of Records.—Armando di Girolamo, Montgomery Arms, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Supplies and Printing.—John W. Adler, 1801 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Librartan.— Matthew A. McKavitt, 1623 Monroe Street. FEDERAL PRISON INDUSTRIES, INC. (Department of Justice) (Corporation authorized by act of Congress, approved June 23, 1934, and created by Executive Order No. 6917 of December 11, 1934) Officers and directors: President.—Sanford Bates, Commissioner, State Board of Parole, 80 Center Street, New York, N. Y., representing the Attorney General. Vice president.—Dr. Marion Luther Brittain, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga., representing industry. Sam A. Lewisohn, 61 Broadway, New York, N. Y., representing retailers and consumers. Emil Schram, President, New York Stock Exchange, representing agriculture. [Vacancy.] Commissioner of Prison Industries.—James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street,Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Commissioner of Prison Industries—A. H. Conner, 301 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Commassioner of Prison Industries.—J. S. Barrows, 47 Carroll Avenue,Takoma Park, Md. Industries agent.—R. A. Swadley, 4414 Thirteenth Place NE., Washington, D. C. Secretary.—Ralph J. LaVallee, 314 Rittenhouse Street, Washington, D. C. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL 336 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Division of International Postal Service: Director.—[Vacant.] Assistant Directors.—George H. Grayson, 2721 Ontario Road; Stewart M. Weber, Benning Station, D. C. Division of Railway Adjustments: Superintendent.— William E. Triem, 1626 Hobart Street. Assistant Superintendents.—Charles H. Stephenson, 3424 Thirtieth Street; Harry S. Frankhauser, 3339 Quesada Street. Division of Air Mail Service: Superintendent.—Roy M. Martin, Capitol Park Hotel. : Assistant Superintendent.—Charles M. Knoble, 1421 North Veitch Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Rural Mails: Superintendent.—Joseph E. Cooper, 4437 Brandywine Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street. OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Ramsey S. Black, 1016 Sixteenth Street. Deputy Third Assistant.—Roy M. North, 2501 Calvert Street. Assistant Deputy Third Assistant and Chief Clerk.—Harry E. Stine, 2008 Glen Ross Road, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Finance: Superintendent.— George Grubbs, 311 Madison Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Roy L. Sheridan, 48 Kennedy Street NE. Division of Money Orders: Superintendent.—Charles E. Matthews, 1302 Madison Street. Assistant Superintendent.—J. Ford, 917 Eighteenth Street. Division of Classification: Superintendent.— Nelson B. Wentzel, 1630 Nicholson Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Charles M. Davidson, 9208 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Stamps: Superintendent.—Robert E. Fellers, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Superintendent.—Robert C. King, 1309 Gallatin Street. Division of Registered Mazls: Superintendent.—John A. King, 16 West Maple Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Superintendents.— George W. Parsons, 1616 G Street SE; Walter D. Brown, 3504 Sixteenth Street. Division of Postal Savings: Superintendent.—Benjamin F. Cain, Hotel Roosevelt. Assistant Superintendents.—Charles H. Kocher, 1313 Taylor Street NE; Edward A. Rowell, 404 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Division of Cost Ascertainment: Superintendent.—Aubrey H. Clayton, 523 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of Parcel Post: Director.—John A. Brennan, 1886 Monroe Street. Assistant Director—Jesse C. Harraman, 3500 Fourteenth Street. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Fourth Assistant Postmaster General.— Walter Myers, St. Albans Apartments. Deputy Fourth Assistant.—Francis J. Buckley, 4705 Eighth Street. Assistant Deputy Fourth Assistant and Chief Clerk.—Louis Y. de Zychlinski, 4260 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. 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. Betterley, 5004 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Superintendents.—Charles H. Carle, 4612 Eighth Street; Harry A. Spain 2811 Thirty-eighth Street; Harold E. Richardson, Seat Pleasant, Division of Motor Vehicle Service: Superintendent.—A. G. Biedenweg, 3120 Quesada Street. Assistant i R. Gehman, 8 Hamilton Street NE., Brent- wood, Md. PIS Sh Executive Departments Division of Building Operations and Supplies: Director—Harrison Parkman, Capitol Park Hotel. Equipment and Supplies Branch: Assistant Director.—George W. Trexler, 5245 Nebraska Avenue. Maintenance Branch: vil Director.—Fred C. Cornwell, 9014 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, d. Manufacturing and Repair Branch: Assistant Director.—John B. Cady, 7215 Blair Road. Division of Topography: Topographer.— Arthur S. Page, 1552 Forty-fourth Street. Division of Traffic: Traffic Manager.—James R. Murphy, 745 Varnum Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF INSPECTOR Chief Inspector—XKildroy P. Aldrich, the Kennedy-Warren. Assistant Chief Inspector—Joseph F. Gartland, 1634 Nineteenth Street. General Superintendent.—Roscoe E. Mague, 1812 Newton Street NE. Division of Administrative Investigations: Superintendent.—Paul R. Andrews, 4601 Brandywine Street. Assistant Superintendent.— Walter H. Pilcher, 204 Crestmoor Circle, Wood-moor, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Mail Investigations: Superintendent.—Harold W. Davis, P. O. Box 763, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Superintendent.— Thomas W. Davis, 309 Fifteenth Street NE. Division of Financial Investigations: Sl ns A. Leighton, 628 Silver Spring Avenue, Silver Spring, d Assistant Superintendent.—Joseph M. Cohen, 1337 Randolph Street. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Compiroller and budget officer— William L. Slattery, Glenwood, Md. Assistant comptroller and assistant budget officer—John J. Haggerty, Berwyn, Md. Division of Retirement Records: Superintendent.—Harry E. Conn, 3511 Davenport Street. Division of Postmasters’ Accounts: Superintendent.—Leslie C. Reeley, Hyattsville, Md. Division of Public Building Accounts: Superintendent.—Harry L. Collomb, 813 Sheridan Street. 338 Congressional Directory NAVY DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY (Navy Department Building, Potomac Park, Eighteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7400) FRANK KNOX, Secretary of the Navy (Wardman Park), of Chicago, IlL., was born at Boston, Mass., January 1, 1874; attended public schools in Grand Rapids, Mich., and was graduated from Alma College, Alma, Mich., with the degree of A. B.; was enrolled on June 4, 1898, in the First Regiment, United States Volunteer Cavalry (the Rough Riders) ; participated with them in actions ashore in Cuba; entered the field of journalism after the Spanish-American War and in 1903 was publisher of the Evening News (Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.) ; served as major on staff of Governor of Michigan 1908-10; in 1912 established the Man-chester (N. H.) Leader and later became publisher ‘of Manchester Union Leader; was appointed major on staff of Governor of New Hampshire; served in France during World War as major in the Three Hundred and Third Ammunition Train of Seventy-eighth Division, participating in the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives; was commissioned lieutenant colonel, Officers’ Reserve Staff Corps, on October 15, 1923, and after being transferred to the Field Artillery Reserve was promoted to the rank of colonel in July 1937; was appointed general manager of the Hearst newspapers and publisher of the Hearst Boston papers, American, Daily Advertiser, and Sunday Advertiser; resigned in 1930 and became publisher of Chicago Daily News in August 1931; while in Chicago was trustee of the Century of Progress Exposition, trustee of Armour Institute of Technology, and director of the City National Bank & Trust Co.; from 1911 to 1933 was a member of the Indian Commission; was appointed Secretary of the Navy July 11, 1940. Under Secretary of the Navy.—James V. Forrestal, 2840 Woodland Drive. Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Ralph A. Bard, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Artemus L. Gates, 2629 O Street. Special assistants to the Secretary of the Navy.—Lt. Comdr. Edward A. Hayes, U. S. N. R., 1650 Harvard Street; Joseph W. Powell, Shoreham Hotel; Jerome Doyle, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Confidential assistant to the Secretary.—John H. Dillon, 709 Beverly Drive, Alexan-dria, Va. Special assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Charles F. Detmar, Jr.; the Westchester; Ferol D. Overfelt, 1915 Kalorama Road; John H. Vincent, 513 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va. Special assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy (Procurement Legal Division).— . Struve Hensel, 2723 Dumbarton Place; W. John Kenney, Metropolitan Club; Stuart Scott, 3332 O Street; Richard S. Kyle, 2000 F Street; Patrick H; Hodgson, 19 Vernon Terrace, Alexandria, Va.; William Randall Compton, 1322 Eighteenth Street; William A. Coolidge, Vienna, Va. Special assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Addison Walker, 37 Fort Hunt Road, Belle Haven, Md. Private secretary to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—XKatharine Foley, the West-chester. Baar secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Paula K. Fisher, 2027 Q treet. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Kemna M. Standifer, 1840 Kalorama Road. elle assistant.—Ben Abbott, 305 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, d. Chief Clerk.— William D. Bergman, 3620 Sixteenth Street. Assistant chief clerk.—Joseph S. Davitt, 422 Allison Street. Director of Personnel.—Charles Piozet, 45 Pine Street, College Heights, Md. Assistant Director of Personnel.—Guy McPherson, 329 Shepherd Street. Chief, Division of Records.—Charles M. Baruch, 1343 Rittenhouse Street. OFFICERS ON DUTY IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Administrative officer.—Rear Admiral H. Williams (retired), 1714 Q Street. Budget officer.— Rear Admiral Ezra G. Allen, 2407 California Street. Diyas of Shore Establishments.—Rear Admiral Charles W. Fisher, Hay-Adams ouse. Director of Nawal Petroleum Reserves.—Rear Admiral Harry A. Stuart, 3808 Kanawha Street. NAVY Executive Departments Technical aide to the Secretary of the Navy.—Rear Admiral Harold G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road. Naval aide to the Secretary.—Capt. Frank E. Beatty, 2605 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va. Wend atde to the Under Secretary.—Commander John E. Gingrich, Shoreham otel. Naval aide to the Assistant Secretary—Commander Emmet P. Forrestel, 2023 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va. Naval aide to the Assistant Secretary for Air—Capt. O. B. Hardison, 3005 Thirty-fourth Street. Special duty.—Rear Admiral W. H. Standley (retired); Rear Admiral H. E. Yarnell (retired), Lafayette Hotel. ISLAND GOVERNMENTS Capt. Roscoe E. Schuirmann, U. 8. Navy, room 2070 Navy Department. (Phone, REpublic 7400, branch 2612.) GUAM Capt. George J. McMillin, governor of island and commandant naval station, Guam. Mail address: Agana, Guam. AMERICAN SAMOA Capt. Lawrence Wild, U. S. Navy, governor of islands and commandant naval Noe Tutuila, Samoa. Mail address: Pago Pago, Tutuila, American amoa. OFFICE OF NAVAL OPERATIONS (Room 2064, Navy Department Building) Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral Harold R. Stark, Naval Observatory, Thirty-fourth Street and Massachusetts Avenue. Administrative aide to the Admiral.—Commander Charles Wellborn, Jr., 7203 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Aide to the Admiral.—Lt. Comdr. William R. Smedberg, 3d, 1035 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Naval Operations.—Rear Admiral Royal E. Ingersoll, 3009 Cathedral Avenue. Chief Clerk.—A. Oden, 3718 Veazey Street. War Plans Division (room 2724).—Rear Admiral Richmond K. Turner, 5643 Western Avenue. Central Division (room 2070).—Capt. Roscoe E. Schuirmann, 3420 Porter Street. Radio Liaison Division (room 4811).—Rear Admiral Stanford C. Hooper, 4425 Garfield Street. Intelligence Division (room 3074).—Capt. Theodore S. Wilkinson, 2301 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va. : Naval Records and Library (room 3028, Arlington Annex).—Capt. Dudley W. Knox, 2122 California Street. Communication Division (room 2622).—Rear Admiral Leigh Noyes, 2312 Cali-fornia Street. Inspection Division (room 3621): President.—Rear Admiral John W. Wilcox, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Recorder.—Commander Willard M. Downes, 3317 Runnymede Place. lias in Division (room 2803).—Capt. Willis A. Lee, Jr., 1921 Kalorama oad. Fleet Maintenance Division (room 2616).—Rear Admiral William S. Tarber, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Materials Division (room 4808). —Rear Admiral Andrew C. Pickens, 711 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Naval Districts Division (room 10566).—Rear Admiral Alexander Sharp, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Ship Movements Division (room 2601).—Rear Admiral Roland M. Brainard, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Naval Transportation Service Section (room 2616).— Rear Admiral Sherwoode A. Taffinder, 2921 Cathedral Avenue. 340 Congressional Directory NAVY COAST GUARD (HEADQUARTERS) (Liberty Loan Building, Fourteenth Street and Maine Avenue SW. Phone, N Ational 6400) Commandant.—Rear Admiral Russell R. Waesche, 7005 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Aide to the Commandani.—Lt. Arthur J. Hesford, 22 Fifteenth Street, New Alexandria, Va. Secretary to the Commandant.—Chief Pay Clerk George M. Bailey, 5016 Balti- more Avenue, Green Acres, Md. Administrative assistant.—John P. Myers, Jr., Rockville, Md. Loy officer.—Capt. Edward D. Jones, 105 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, d. Public relations officer.—Commander Ellis Reed-Hill, 307 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. z Assistant Commandant and chief operations officer.—Rear Admiral L. Toumlin Chalker, 3930 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant operations officer—Commander Earl G. Rose, 44 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. : Chief, Merchant Ship Control.—Capt. Wilfred N. Derby, 418 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Communications officer.—Commander Joseph F. Farley, R. F. D. 2, Seminary Road, Alexandria, Va. Intelligence officer.—Lt. Comdr. Frank E. Pollio, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Personnel Division.—Capt. Chester H. Jones, 136 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief, Personnel Division—Commander Norman R. Stiles, 1210 Seneca Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Maritime Service.—Capt. Wilfred N. Derby, 418 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Coast Guard Reserve.—Commander Merlin O’Neill, 6901 Arlington Road, Bethesda, Md. ; Chief medical officer.—Medical Director Carl Michel, United States Public Health Service, 3024 Tilden Street. Engineer in chief and Chief, Matériel Division.—Rear Admiral Harvey F. Johnson, 115 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief, Matériel Division.—Capt. Philip B. Eaton, ‘“Comynholm,” Klingle Road and Porter Street. Chief, Procurement Section.—Capt. John H. Cornell, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. -Chief, Civil Engineering Section.—Capt. Ralph R. Tinkham, 3237 Arcadia Place. Chief, Aviation Engineering Section.—Commander William J. Kossler, 43 Edgewood Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Radio Engineering Sectton.—Commander Irwin L. Gill, 3024 Tilden Street. Chief, Construction and Repair Section.—Lt. Comdr. Rutherford B. Lank, 4417 Windom Place. Chief, Inspection Division.—Capt. Norman B. Hall, 210 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md ii] Finance Diviston.— Commander Frank J. Gorman, 4550 Connecticut venue. Assistant Chief, Finance Division.—Commander John H. Heiner, 5503 Fairglen Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Legal Division.—Kenneth S. Harrison, 5606 Fourteenth Street. General Board.—Capt. Philip F. Roach, Chairman, Wardman Park Hotel. Members.—Capt. Charles A. Park, 5126 Nebraska Avenue; Commander Lloyd V. Kielhorn, 3513 Quebec Street; Commander Henry Coyle, 3041 Sedgwick Street; Lt. Comdr. Irwin B. Steele, 1901 Thirty-seventh Street; Lt. George D. Synon, 3854 North Dittman Road, Arlington, Va. Secretary.—Dr. Clifton P. Clark, 1623 Lanier Place. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION (Room 2028, Navy Department, Arlington Annex) (For answers to questions concerning officers of the Regular Navy, call REpublic 7400, branch 7152; for officers of the Naval Reserve, call REpublic 7400, branch 7251; for answers to questions concerning mid-shipmen, call REpublic 7400, branch 7254; for answers to questions concerning enlisted men of the Navy, call REpublic 7400, branch 7146; for general information call REpublic 7400, branch 7171) Chief.—Rear Admiral Randall Jacobs, 3928 McKinley Street. Aide to Chief of Bureau.—Lt. (Jr. Gr.) H. A. Lamar, N. R., 307 Little Falls Church Road, Falls Church, Va. NAVY Executive Departments Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Capt. J. F. Shafroth, 3404 Garfield Street. Spe assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Capt. R. A. Koch (retired), 826 Connecticut venue. Civilian assistant and Chief Clerk.—Edward Henkel, 1901 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Conny! Division (room 2066).—Commander H. G. Hopwood, 3215 Rittenhouse treet. Chaplain’s Division (room 3068).—Capt. R. D. Workman (Ch. C.), 3843 Living- ston Street. Enlisted Personnel Division (room 2044).—Capt. H. A. Badt, 3626 Windom Place. Identification Division (room 8523).—James H. Taylor, 618 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Naval Academy Division (room 2433).— Leonard Draper, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Naval Reserve Division (room 2052).—Capt. V. D. Chapline, 1671 Madison Street. Officer Personnel Division (room 2715).—Capt. A. S. Carpender, the Westchester. Recruiting and Statistical Division (room 3634).—Capt. F. E. M. Whiting, 18 Forest Hill Road, Belle Haven, Va. Registrar 3 ons 2633) .— Franklin J. Schuyler, 101 North Highland Street, Arling- ton, Va. Training Division (room 3076).—Capt. F. U. Lake (retired), 5439 Nevada Avenue. Transportation Division (room 1028).—Commander J. B. Rutter (retired), 7118 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE (Room 1026, Navy Department Building) Hydrographer.—Capt. G. S. Bryan, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to Hydrographer—Capt. C. C. Todd, Jr., 2740 Thirty-fourth Street. Chief Clerk.—A. F. Bogue, 1358 Meridian Place. NAVAL OBSERVATORY (Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 2723) Superintendent.—Capt. J. F. Hellweg (retired), 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Anstonns to the Superintendent.—Capt. V. K. Coman (retired), 2724 Thirty-fourth treet. Chaef Clerk.—L. Neely, 1406 Twenty-first Street. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (Room 2403, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Admiral Ben Moreell, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 3010 Ellicott Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Commander Lewis B. Combs, Corps of Civil Engineers, 5511 Broad Branch Road. Chief Clerk.—E. A. Peek, care of Bureau of Yards and Docks. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (Room 0036, Navy Department Building) Chief—Rear Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, 3830 Macomb Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Capt. G. B. Davis, 4536 Lowell Street. Chief Clerk.—Harry M. Klee, 716 Taylor Street. Director, Administrative Division.—Capt. C. H. Jones, 6024 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Research and Development Division.—Capt. G. L. Schuyler, 1506 Thirty-fourth Street. ! Director, Financial Division.—Capt. A. G. Zimermann, 2908 Forty-fifth Street. Director, Production Division.—Capt. T. D. Ruddock, Jr., 4437 Klingle Street. Director, Fleet Maintenance Division.—Commander F. H. Dean, 6342 Thirty-second Street. Dicer] Planning and Progress Division.—Capt. Leighton Wood, 3331 Tennyson treet. 342 Congressional Directory NAVY BUREAU OF SHIPS (Room 2006, Navy Department Building) Chief —Rear Admiral Samuel M. Robinson, Manor Club, Norbeck, Md. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Admiral Alexander H. Van Keuren, 103 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant to Chief of Bureau.—A. Brice Biggers, 1379 Sheridan Street. Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Brunner, 4611 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative Division (room 2010).—Rear Admiral Bryson Bruce, 3100 High-- land Place. ; Design Division (room 3020).—Rear Admiral Herbert S. Howard, 2807 Thirty-sixth Place. Shipbuilding Division (room 0020).—Capt. Claud A. Jones, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Maintenance Division (room 2322). —Capt. Edwin G. Kintner, 3005 Thirty-second Street. General Inspector (room 0026).—Capt. Hollis M. Cooley, Wardour, Annapolis, Md. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS (Room 0013, Navy Department Building) Chief —Rear Admiral Ray Spear, Paymaster General of the Navy, 2126 LeRoy Place. Assistant to the Paymaster General.—Capt. Ellsworth H. Van Patten, Supply Corps, 3600 Rittenhouse Street. Civilian assistant.—Jacob H. Hollinger, 315 A Street SE. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (Room 1078, Navy Department Building) Chief. —Rear Admiral Ross T. Melntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy, 3637 Forty-ninth Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Capt. Luther Sheldon, Jr., 3203 Cleveland Avenue. Chief Clerk.—W. S. Douglass, Wellington Villa, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS (Room 2921, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Admiral John H. Towers, 2709 Thirty-fourth Place. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Capt. D. C. Ramsey, 3661 Upton Street. 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 W. B. Woodson, 3222 Woodley Road. Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Capt. T. L. Gatch, 3103 Macomb Street. Aide to Judge Advocate General.—Lt. Comdr. L. H. C. Johnson, Hunter Mill Road, near Oakton, Va. NAVAL CONSULTING BOARD (Room 1515, Navy Department Building) Secretary.— Thomas Robins, 70 Pine Street, room 4400, New York City. Liaison officer.—Capt. James E. Maher, room 1515, Navy Department Building. COMPENSATION BOARD (Navy Department) Senior member.—Rear Admiral Julius A. Furer, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Recorder. —Capt. Roscoe C. Davis (retired), 2122 California Street. Awuditor—Charles M. Eichelberger, 3808 North Vernon Street, Arlington, Va. NAVY Executive Departments 343 GENERAL BOARD (Room 2743, Navy Department Building) Chairman.— Rear Admiral W. R. Sexton, the Benedick. Rear Admirals F. J. Horne, 1661 Crescent Place; C. P. Snyder, 1870 Wyoming Avenue; J. O. Richardson, 2708 Thirty-fiftth Place; G. J. Rowcliff, the Fairfax ; R. S. Holmes, 3051 N Street; Capt. H. L. Pence, the Kennedy-Warren. Secretary.— Capt. J. J. Mahoney, 3726 Livingston Street. Chief Clerk.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. INTERIOR CONTROL BOARD (Room 2810, Navy Department Building) Senior member.— Capt. W. A. Lee, Jr., 1921 Kalorama Road. Recorder.—Lt. Comdr. M. E. Miles, 111 Shadow Road, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md Assistant recorder.—Lt. Comdr. A. B. Leggett, 2406 Fort Scott Drive, Aurora Hills, Arlington, Va. BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS AND NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) (Room 1A-87, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral Benjamin H. Dorsey, 3104 Hawthorne Street. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (LINE) (Roomf§1A-87, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral Andrew C. Pickens, 711 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD (Room 1A-87, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral Benjamin H. Dorsey, 3104 Hawthorne Street. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL DISPENSARY (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building) Commanding officer—Capt. Richard A. Warner, Medical Corps, 3716 Forty-ninth Street. NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear Admiral George Pettengill (retired). Aide to Commandant.—Lt. J. P. Bernard, United States Naval Reserve. Chief Clerk.—George E. Gonard. . Assistant Superintendent, Naval Gun Factory, captain of the yard, ship’s officer, aeronautical officer, and navigation officer.—Capt. C. R. Robinson. Senior inspector.—Capt. D. F. Ducey. Personnel officer.— Commander D. H. Stuart. NAVAL RESEARCH LABORATORY (Bellevue, D. C.) Director—Rear Admiral Harold G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road. NAVAL AIR STATION (Anacostia, D. C.) Commanding officer.— Commander Edward P. Moore, 5019 Sedgewick Street. 344 Congressional Directory NAVY NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER (Twenty-third and E Streets) Commanding officer.—Rear Admiral Charles M. Oman, Medical Corps, 2101 Con-necticut Avenue. NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL (Twenty-third and E Streets) Commanding officer—Capt. Lane, Edgemoor, Md. C. W. O. Bunker, Medical Corps, 5312 Moorland NAVAL HOSPITAL (Foot of Twenty-fourth Street) Commanding officer.—Capt. Robert E. Hoyt, Medical Corps, Naval Hospital. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School) President.—Capt. C. W. O. Bunker, Medical Corps, 5312 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School) President.—Capt. C. W. O. Bunker, Medical Corps, 5312 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS (Navy Building, Arlington Annex. Phone, REpublic}7400) MAJOR GENERAL COMMANDANT’S OFFICE Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. ; Assistant to Commandant.—Brig. Gen. Charles D. Barrett, 213 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Special assistant to Commandant.—Charles A. Ketcham, Hyattsville, Md. Plans and Policies Division.— Director, Col. Allen H. Turnage, 1707 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va. Marine Corps Reserve Division.—Director, Brig. Gen. Ralph S. Keyser (retired), 106 South Oak Street, Falls Church, Va. Personnel Division.— Director, Col. Selden B. Kennedy, 3171 Porter Street. Public Relations Division.— Director Brig. Gen. Robert L. Denig (retired), 1806 South Arlington Ridge Road, Alexandria, Va. ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT Adjutant and inspector.—Brig. Gen. Edward A. Ostermann, Chevy Chase Club, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk.— Troy A. Nubson, 4301 Thirteenth Street NE. QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT Quartermaster.—Brig. Gen. Seth Williams, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Special assistant to Quartermaster.—James W. Burrows, 3719 Warren Street. Chief Clerk.— William E. Springer, 18 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. PAYMASTER’S DEPARTMENT Paymaster.—Brig. Gen. Russell B. Putnam, 4424 Q Street. Chaef Clerk.—Ingrid Jonassen, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. NAVY Executive Departments 345 NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (Navy Building, Arlington Annex. (MARINE CORPS) Phone, REpublic 7400) President.—Col. Recorder.—Col. John Potts (retired), Walter H. Sitz, 3731 Marine Barracks, Eighth Northampton Street. and I Streets SE. (Eighth MARINE and I Streets BARRACKS SE. Phone, LIncoln 1230) Commanding.—Col. John Potts (retired). | RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY THE AERONAUTICAL (For list of members, see BOARD page 379) ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER (For list of members, see page 381) COMMISSION i ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS (For list of members, see page BOARD 381) | (For THE JOINT BOARD list of members, see page 404) | ! THE (For JOINT ECONOMY BOARD list of members, see page 405) UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL (For list of members, see page 312) DEFENSE | | y i 1 346 Congressional Directory INTERIOR DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR ° (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) HAROLD L. ICKES, of Chicago, Ill., Secretary of the Interior, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md., is a lawyer by profession; he was born in Frankstown Town-ship, Blair County, Pa., March 15, 1874; son of Jesse Boone Williams and Martha, Ann (McEwen) Ickes; A. B., University of Chicago, 1897; J. D., cum laude, University of Chicago Law School, 1907; LL. D., Washington and Jefferson Col-lege and Lake Forest College (1933), Berea College, Pennsylvania Military College, Tufts College, and Northwestern University (1934), University of Ala-bama (1935), University of New Mexico (1939); married Anna Wilmarth Thomp-son, 1911, who died August 31, 1935; child, Raymond Wilmarth; married Jane Dahlman, 1938; children, Harold McEwen, Jane; 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 Chicago 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 Convention of 1916, the Republican National Convention of 1920, and the Democratic National Conventions of 1936 and 1940; 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 Force 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 Republican candidate for United States Senator from Illinois in 1926; member of the Roosevelt Memorial Associa-tion and vice president of the Roosevelt Memorial Association of Greater Chicago; member of the National Conservation Committee; member of the board of advisers of the Quetico-Superior Council until 1933; chairman of the People’s Traction League, 1929-30; is a member of the American Bar Association, Illinois Society of S. A. R., Swedish Colonial Society (honorary life), Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Phi, and Pi Gamma Mu (honorary) ; awarded the Louis D. Brandeis Medal for Service to Humanity, 1940; Honorary Chairman, Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign; his clubs are the University (Chicago), Indian Hill (Winnetka), Shawnee Country (Wilmette), Lake Shore Athletic (Chicago), and National Press. Author: The New Democracy, 1934; Back to Work, 1935; America’s House of Lords, 1939; The Third Term Bugaboo, 1940; Not Guilty, 1940; editor, Freedom of the Press Today. He became Secretary of the Interior March 4, 1933. Under Secretary.—John J. Dempsey, Woodley Park Towers. First Assistant Secretary.—Ebert K. Burlew, 2812 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant Secretary.—Oscar L. Chapman, Westchester Apartments. Special assistants to the Secretary.— William H. MeCrillis, Cedar Lane, Bethesda, Md.; James V. McClintie. Assistants to the Secretary.—Saul K. Padover, 1728 Twenty-first Street; Milburn P. Akers, 2511 Q Street. . Assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Land Utilization.—Lee Muck, 29 Eliot Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Secretarial assistant.—May B. Conley, 2737 Devonshire Place. Chief Clerk.—Floyd E. Dotson, 5843 Potomac Avenue. Solicitor—Nathan R. Margold, 2964 Newark Street. Board of Appeals.—Felix S. Cohen, 2121 Observatory Place; William H. Flanery, 5735 Thirteenth Street; Leland O. Graham, 522 North Norwood Street, Arlington, Va. Acting Director, Solid Fuels, Coordination for National Defense.—Howard A. Gray, Ashburn Farm, Ashburn, Va. : Lepsity Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense.—Ralph K. Davies, Shoreham otel. : Acting Director, Bituminous Coal Division.—Dan H. Wheeler, 619 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : General Counsel, National Power Policy Committee.—[Vacant.] Director, Division of Territories and Island Possessions.—Guy J. Swope. Acting Director, Petroleum Conservation Division.—Jack W. Steele. INTERIOR Executive Departments 347 Department Representative, Civilian Conservation Corps Advisory Council.—Conrad L. Wirth, 5447 Forty-second Street. Executive Secretary, United States Board on Geographical Names.— George C. Mar-tin, 3126 Thirty-eighth Street. Director of Investigations.—Dale B. Whiteside, 943 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director of Information.—Michael W. Straus, Linnean Hill, Klingle Road and Porter Street. Director of Personnel.—Mrs. J. Atwood Maulding, 1514 Seventeenth Street. Director of Classification.—John Harvey, Dorchester Apartments. Chiefs of Division: Purchasing.— Walter B. Fry, 4513 Iowa Avenue. Miscellaneous service.—Frank C. Updike, 7721 Fourteenth Street. GENERAL LAND OFFICE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commzssioner.—Fred W. Johnson, the Northumberland. Assistant Commissioner.—Joel David Wolfsohn, 4609 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Branch of Adjudication.— Thomas C. Havell, supervisor, 1203 E Street NE. Branch of Land Planning.—John R. Riggleman, acting supervisor, 30 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chiefs of Divisions: Administrative.—Luther R. King, 607 McNeill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Accounts.—Clarence L. Bullion, 7101 Chatham Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Homestead.— Augustus Zannelli, 209 Cromwell Terrace NE. Indian Lands.— Walter S. Binley, 216 Dearborn Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Land Classification.—Robert K. Coote, 6706 Exeter Road, Bethesda, Md. Mazl and Files.—Thomas H. Jamison, Lanham, Md. Mineral.—Clarence R. Bradshaw, Herndon, Va. Patents.—Ralph S. Clinton, 4302 Third Street. Posting and Tract Records.—Elmer 1. Baldwin, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Reclamation and Land Grant.—Andrew Markhus, 5013 Baltimore Avenue, Friendship Station, D. C. Research and Analysis.—John R. Riggleman, 30 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Surveys.—Clinton G. Tudor, 437 Hamilton Street. ‘OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commassioner.—John Collier, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Commissioner.— William Zimmerman, Jr., 4713 North Rock Spring Road, Arlington, Va. Chief counsel.—John R. T. Reeves, 3807 Fulton Street. Administrative Branch: Acting Chief and budget officer.— William B. Greenwood, Jr., 5311 Massachusetts Avenue. Communaty Services Branch: Acting Chief.—Lucy Wilcox Adams, 101 Earlston Drive, Yorktowne Village, Friendship Station, D. C. Engineering Branch: Acting Chief—Albert L. Wathen, 2201 Military Road North, Arlington, Va. : Planning Branch: Acting Chief.—Joseph C. McCaskill, 125 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Resources Branch: Acting Chief.— Walter V. Woehlke, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Field Representatives.—Floyd W. La Rouche, 4905 Crescent Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Allan G. Harper, 600 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. C. C. C. Indian Division: Director.—Daniel E. Murphy, 5301 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Construction Division: Director.—E. A. Poynton, 1425 Floral Street. Division of Inter-American Cooperation: Director.—Charles W. Collier, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. Education Division: Director.— Willard W. Beatty, 202 North Trenton Street, Arlington, Va. Associate Director.—Paul L. Fickinger, 224 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Gi Dzrector.—Percy W. Danielson, 4312 Second Road North, Arlington, a. 348 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Extension Division: Director.—A. C. Cooley, 7912 West Beach Drive. Assistant Director.—Ralph S. Bristol, 5317 Massachusetts Avenue. om Division: Chief.—Charles B. Emery, 1510 North Edison Street, Arlington, a. Forestry and Grazing: Director.—Leroy D. Arnold, 112 Franklin Street, Kensington,Md. Assistant Director.—John Donald Lamont, 5330 Colorado Avenue. Health Division: ; Director.—Dr. J. R. McGibony, 6710 Forty-sixth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Dr. Lawrence W. White, 1708 Webster Street. Jertangion Division: Acting Director—Clay H. Southworth, the Dorchester ouse. Land Division: Director.—James M. Stewart, 4200 Tenth Street NE. Personnel Division: Personnel Officer.—E. J. Skidmore, 2410 South Fern Street, Arlington, Va. Roads Division: Director.—J. Maughs Brown, 2000 F Street. Soil and Moisture Division: Chief.—William J. Endersbee, 3815 Alton Place. Welfare Division: Acting Director—Fred H. Daiker, 140 Tennessee Avenue NE. ° INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS BOARD (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chairman.—John Collier, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. . Members: Ebert K. Burlew, First Assistant Secretary of the Interior. James W. Young, Rancho Canada, Pena Blanca, N. Mex. Alfred V. Kidder, Carnegie Institution of Washington, and National Research Council, 10 Frisbie Place, Cambridge, Mass. Lorenzo Hubbell, Oraibi, Ariz. General Manager.—René d’Harnoncourt, Chastleton Hotel. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (Interior Building (north). Phone, REpublic 1820) (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) INTERIOR Executive Depaytments 349 Operation and Maintenance Division.—John S. Moore, general supervisor, 910 United States National Bank Building, Denver, Colo. Accounting Diviston.— William F. Kubach, chief accountant, 1349 Sheridan Street. Engineering Division.— Wesley R. Nelson, chief, 3417 Alabama Avenue, Beverly Hill, Alexandria, Va. Information Director.— William E. Warne, 805 Enderby Drive, Alexandria, Va. Civilian Conservation Corps Division.— Alfred R. Golze, supervising engineer, 7819 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief Clerk.—Charles N. McCulloch, LaSalle Apartments. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Jesse W. Myer, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Secretary to the Commissioner.— E. Gallagher, Beverly Plaza Apartments, Mary Alexandria, Va. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director—Newton B. Drury, 3725 Upton Street. Associate Director.—A. E. Demaray, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Operations.—Hillory A. Tolson, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Chief counsel.—George A. Moskey, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Smits of Recreation and Land Planning.—Conrad L. Wirth, 5447 Forty-second treet. Supervisor of Interpretation.—Carl P. Russell, 9719 Bexhill Drive, Kensington, Md. Supervisor of Historic Sites.—Ronald F. Lee, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Chuef of Engineering.—Oliver G. Taylor, 6313 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Planning.—Thomas C. Vint, 607 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Forestry.—John D. Coffman, 7114 Clarendon Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Information.—Isabelle F. Story, 1726 M Street. National Capital Parks, superintendent—Irving C. Root, 6301 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Lond States Travel Bureau, Chief.—W. Bruce Macnamee, 3415 Thirty-fourth treet. UNITED STATES TRAVEL BUREAU (1702 F Street. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chief.—W. Bruce Macnamee, 3415 Thirty-fourth Street. Supervisor, New York field office.—Jay Wingate, 45 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Supervisor, San Francisco field office.—J. L. Bossemeyer, Old Mint Building, San Francisco, Calif. BUREAU OF MINES (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—R. R. Sayers, 607 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Va. Acting assistant to the Director.—C. Edwin Nighman, 4329 Forty-sixth Street. Chief Clerk.—John D. Secrest, 108 Spa Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md. TECHNOLOGIC BRANCH Chief of branch and chief, Coal Division.—Arno C. Fieldner, Cosmos Club. Chzef, Explosives Division.—[Vacant.] Chief, Metallurgical Division.—Reginald S. Dean, 1529 Arlington Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah. Chief, Mining Diviston.—Charles F. Jackson, 6802 Brookeville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Petroleum and Natural Gas Division.—Roscoe A. Cattell, 7717 Fourteenth Street. Chief, Nommetals Division.—Oliver C. Ralston, 6 Claggett Road, University Park, Md. : ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS BRANCH Chief of branch and chief, Metal Economics Division.— Elmer W. Pehrson, 1573 Forty-fourth Street. Chief, Mineral Production and Economics Division.—[Vacant.] Chief, Nonmetal Economics Division.—Paul M. Tyler, 121 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Foreign Minerals Division.—Joseph S. McGrath, 3227 Adams Mill Road. Chief, Petroleum Economics Division.—Alfred G. White, 3733 Kanawha Street. Chief, Coal Economics Division.—F. M. Shore, 1221 Euclid Street. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed——24 350 Congressional Directory INTERIOR HEALTH AND SAFETY BRANCH Chee, of branch and chief, Safety Division.—Daniel Harrington, 3153 Nineteenth Street. Chief, Coal Mine Inspection Division.—John J. V. Forbes, 5820 Darlington Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Chief, Health Division.—Helmuth H. Schrenk, 514 Bigham Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. ADMINISTRATIVE BRANCH Chief of branch.—[Vacant.] Chief, Information Division.—John A. Davis, 1616 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Office Administration Division.—John D. Secrest, 108 Spa Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md. GRAZING SERVICE (Walker Bank Building, Salt Lake City, Uiahy, Thane to Addresses listed below are in Salt Lake ity, Utah Director of Grazing.—R. H. Rutledge, Ambassador Hotel. Assistant Director.—Julian Terrett, University Club. Chief, Branch of Range Management.—A. D. Molohon, 1769 Laird Avenue. Chief, Branch of Range Improvement and Maintenance.—E. R. Greenslet, 1709 Michigan Avenue. Chief, Branch of Operations.—Depue Falck, 1412 Harvard Avenue. Chief of Information.—John Q. Peterson, 1702 East Ninth South. Acting Chief, Branch of Land Acquisition and Conirol.—J. H. Leech, 245 East South Temple Street. Acting Chief Counsel.—H. Byron Mock, Alta Club. (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Liaison Officer.— Archie D. Ryan, 211 Glebe Road, Alexandria, Va. BITUMINOUS COAL DIVISION (Walker Building. Phone, NAtional 4830) Director—Howard A. Gray, Ashburn, Va. Assistant Director—Dan H. Wheeler, 619 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md General counsel.—Arnold Levy, 1508 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Marketing Branch.—Robert A. Magee, 277 Crest Road, Cheverly, Md. Chief, Economics Branch.—George A. Lamb, Wooten Drive, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Trial Examiners Branch.—C. R. Larrabee, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Compliance Coordinator.—Joseph J. Laub, 5713 Fifteenth Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Records Section.—Leo A. Gough, 9302 Saybrook Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. edly Si nk Section.— Walter C. Hand, 4932 Baltimore Avenue, Green cres, Md. Chief, Information Section.—Leonard W. Mosby, 22 Melbourne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (South Agriculture Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—Ira N. Gabrielson, 1708 North Harvard Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director—W. C. Henderson, 8 Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Charles E. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief counsel—Donald J. Chaney, 414 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Chiefs of Divisions: Admanistration.—W. R. Dillon, 1737 Varnum Street. Alaska Fisheries— Ward T. Bower, 6011 Nevada Avenue. Construction and C. C. C. Operations.—H. W. Terhune, 1312 Upshur Street. Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration.—Albert M. Day, 2437 North Quantico Street, Falls Church, Va. Fish Culture.—Glen C. Leach, 5710 First Street. Fishery Biology.— Elmer Higgins, 3222 Oliver Street. INTERIOR Executive Departments Chiefs of Divisions—Continued. Fishery Industries.—R. H. Fiedler, 7100 Eighth Street. Game Management—W. E. Crouch, 6214 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. Land Acquisition.— Rudolph Dieffenbach, 18 Argyle Avenue, Garrett Park, Md. Predator and Rodent Control.—D. D. Green, 1324 Allison Street NE. Public Relations.—H. P. Sheldon, 118 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Ws Refuges.—J. Clark Salyer 2d, 7815 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Wildlife Research.—W. B. Bell, 803 Rittenhouse Street. Director of Aquarium (Commerce Building).—Fred G. Orsinger, 5607 First StreetNE. DIVISION OF TERRITORIES AND ISLAND POSSESSIONS (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—Guy J. Swope. Assistant Director—Ruth Hampton, Westchester Apartments. TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS Governor of Alaska.—Ernest Gruening, Juneau, Alaska. Secretary of Alaska.—Edward L. Bartlett, Juneau, Alaska. Governor of Hawavi.—Joseph B. Poindexter, Honolulu, Hawaii. Heol of Hawaii and special disbursing agent.—Charles M. Hite, Honolulu, Governor of Virgin Islands.—Charles Harwood, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. Government secretary of Virgin Islands.— Robert M. Lovett, Charlotte Amalie, Vv. lL Commissioner of finance.— Morris F. de Castro, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. Governor of Puerto Rico.—Rexford G. Tugwell, San Juan, P. R. Commissioner of education of Puerto Rico.—José M. Gallardo, San Juan, P. R. GOVERNMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES ! (Headquarters, Manila) United States High Commissioner.— Francis B. Sayre. President of the Philippines.—Manuel L. Quezon. Vice President of the Philippines.—Sergio Osmefia. THE ALASKA RAILROAD General manager.—Otto F. Ohlson, Anchorage, Alaska. : Assistant general manager—Harold W. Snell, 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Examiner of accounts.—J. J. Delaney, Anchorage, Alaska. Chief Engineer.—Porter Berryhill, Anchorage, Alaska. General roadmaster.—George W. Colwell, Anchorage, Alaska. Superintendent of transportation.—J. T. Cunningham, Anchorage, Alaska. Superintendent of motive power and equipment.—W. L. Kinsell, Anchorage, Alaska. Superintendent of hotels, commissary, and stores.—D. W. Metzdorf, Anchorage, Alaska. ; Bridge engineer—A. M. Truesdell, Anchorage, Alaska. Chief surgeon.—Dr. P. L. Heitmeyer, Anchorage, Alaska. Chuef clerk.—A. R. Sessions, Anchorage, Alaska. Assistant disbursing clerk.— Alfred G. Balls, Anchorage, Alaska. CONSOLIDATED PURCHASING AND SHIPPING UNIT Purchasing agent and office manager.—J. R. Ummel, Room 431, Federal Office Building, Seattle, Wash. 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, 1934. 352 Congressional Directory INTERIOR ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION Ez officio commissioner in charge of work.—Ernest Gruening, Governor of Alaska, Juneau, Alaska. Chief engineer.—Ike P. Taylor, Juneau, Alaska. Assistant chief engineer.—Hawley W. Sterling, Juneau, Alaska. Chief Clerk.—G. H. Skinner, Juneau, Alaska. PUERTO RICO RECONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator—Guy J. Swope. Assistant Administrator.— H. Fairbank, San Juan, P. Miles R. Head administrative officer.— Guillermo Esteves, San Juan, P. R. General counsel.—Henry A. Hirshberg, Broadmoor Apartments. OIL ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator.—Harold L. Ickes (Secretary of the Interior). PETROLEUM. CONSERVATION DIVISION Acting Director—Jack W. Steele, Kilgore, Tex. Associate Director for Production.—[Vacant.] Associate Director for Refining and Marketing.—[Vacant.] Administrative assistant.—Ray W. Stull, 5733 Colorado Avenue. BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION Administrator.—Paul J. Raver, Rural Route 11, Box 20, Portland, Oreg. OFFICE OF PETROLEUM COORDINATOR FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE Petroleum Coordinator.— Harold L. Ickes, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md. Deputy Petroleum Coordinator.—Ralph K. Davies, Shoreham Hotel. Chief counsel.—J. Howard Marshall, Shoreham Hotel. Hapoiiine officer—Stanley W. Crosthwait, 200 Jackson Avenue, University Park, Conservation Division.—Everette L. DeGolyer, Director, Shoreham Hotel. Foreign Division.— William D. Crampton, consultant, Foreign Shipping, Brighton Hotel; C. Stribling Snodgrass, Assistant Director, 2602 Thirty-sixth Street. Information Division.—Herbert A. Yocom, Director, 2334 Thirteenth Place NE. Marketing Division.—Dr. John W. Frey, Director, 4236 Forty-seventh Street. Production Division.— Robert E. Allen, Director, York House. Bop Division.— Wright W. Gary, Director, 5204 Murray Road, Chevy Chase, Research Division.—Edward B. Swanson, Director, 2512 Q Street. Transportation Division.—Henry A. Gilbert, Director, Shoreham Hotel. MOUNT RUSHMORE NATIONAL MEMORIAL COMMISSION (The Munsey Building. Phone, DIstrict 6088) Chairman.— William McReynolds, Washington, D. C. Vice chairman.— William J. Bulow, Senator from South Dakota. George W. Norris, Senator from Nebraska. John G. Townsend, Jr., Selbyville, Del. Kent Keller, Washington, D. C. Mrs. Isabella Greenway King, Tucson, Ariz. E. F. McDonald, Jr., Chicago, Ill. L. B. Hanna, Fargo, N. Dak. Mrs. Lorine J. Spoonts, Corpus Christi, Tex. William Williamson, Rapid City, S. Dak. George Philip, Rapid City, S. Dak. Secretary.—Russell M. Arundel, 4530 Klingle Road, Washington, D.C. INTERIOR Executive Departments NATIONAL POWER POLICY COMMITTEE (Room 6315, South Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, extension 4125) Chairman.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Vice chairman.—Leland Olds, Chairman, Federal Power Commission. Members: Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, Federal Works Agency. " Edward C. Eicher, Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission. Robert P. Patterson, Under Secretary of War. David E. Lilienthal, Chairman, Tennessee Valley Authority. Paul J. Raver, Administrator, Bonneville Power Administration. Charles B. Henderson, Chairman, Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Harry Slattery, Administrator, Rural Electrification Administration. Acting general counsel.— Abe Fortas. : Executive secretary.—Joel David Wolfsohn. RELATED ACTIVITY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR FEDERAL BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS (For list of members, see page 385) 354 C ongressional Directory AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) CLAUDE R. WICKARD, of Camden, Ind., Secretary of Agriculture (the Westchester); born February 28, 1893, on a Carroll County, Ind., farm that has been in the Wickard family since the 1840’s; married Louise Eckert of Logansport, Ind.,in 1918; children—Betty, Ann; has a background which includes nearly a quarter of a century of active farm operation, a technical training in agriculture and 6% years of administrative work in the Agricultural Adjustment Administration; began farming with his father while still attending high school and continued to be actively interested in the operation of the farm while attending Purdue University; took over complete management of the farm following gradu-ation from Purdue in 1915, where he received a B. S. A. degree; in addition to his farming operations he was associated with Farm Bureau and other cooperative work in Indiana and did part-time work for the Indiana Extension Service; named as a master farmer of Indiana by the midwestern farm magazine, the Prairie Farmer, in 1927, in recognition of his work as a farm leader and the improved methods of farm operation which he practiced; pioneered in the use of soil-building practices on his farm and received gold medals and other State-wide recognition for his success in increasing crop yields and hog production; in 1932 he was elected to the Indiana Senate from the Carroll, Clinton, and White Counties district, a position from which he resigned upon beginning work with the Agricultural Adjustment Administration; Indiana delegate to the National Corn-Hog Con-ference at Des Moines, Iowa, in July, 1933; became Assistant Chief of the Corn-Hog Section of the A. A. A. in August 1933 and Chief of the section in February 1935; became Assistant Director of the North Central Division in October 1936 following the inauguration of the Agricultural Conservation Program in 1936, and Director of the Division in November 1936; as Director of the North Central Division, he stressed farmer-administration of the A. A. A. and was chiefly respon-sible for developing the effective farmer-committeemen set-up which now exists in the Corn Belt; appointed Under Secretary of Agriculture in February 1940; he continues to operate his farm of 380 acres located near Camden, Ind., on a general grain and livestock basis; appointed Secretary of Agriculture September 1940. Under Secretary.—Paul H. Appleby, 3901 Jocelyn Street. Assistant Secretary.— Grover B. Hill, George Mason Road, Falls Church, Va. Assistants to the Secretary.—Samuel B. Bledsoe, 1505 Grace Church Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Carl Hamilton, 400 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va.; Emery E. Jacobs, 367 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; Robert H. Shields, 1254 Thirty-first Street. Chzef, Office of Civilian Conservation Corps Activities.—Fred Morrell, 707 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Economic adviser.— Mordecai Ezekiel, 5008 Yorktown Road, Bethesda, Md. Special adviser—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Catherine L. Loose, 2401 Calvert Street. Secretary to the Under Secretary.—Cleo C. Talbott, 2404 Wagner Street SE. Sperti assistant, office of the Secretary.— Robert M. Moore, 2807 Connecticut venue. Ditertar of Extension Work.—M. L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, d Director of Research.—James T. Jardine, 4334 P Street. Director of Personnel.—T. Roy Reid, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Director of Finance and Budget Officer.—W. A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Land Use Coordinator.—M. S. Eisenhower, 511 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Director of Information.— Morse Salisbury, 517 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations.— Leslie A. Wheeler, 810 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Marketing.—Roy F. Hendrickson, Route 2, Silver Spring, Md. Solicitor.— Mastin G. White, 1623 Lanier Place. Librarian.—Ralph R. Shaw, 330 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Office of Plant and Operations.— Arthur B. Thatcher, 4116 Military Road. Director of Agricultural Defense Relations.—M. Clifford Townsend, 8457 Piney Branch Courts, Silver Spring, Md. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments . 355 OFFICE OF LAND USE COORDINATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Coordinator.—M. S. Eisenhower, 511 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Associate Coordinator.—E. H. Wiecking, RB. F.1D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Executive assistant to the Coordinator.—M. Chandler Redman, 517 South Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. Administrative assistant to the Coordinator.—Ray Miller, 901 North Lincoln Street, Arlington, Va. Survey Coordination.—Carleton P. Barnes, 30 Duvall Drive, Westmoreland Hills, d. Publications and Reports.—J. A. Bird, 1707 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Water Facilities and Farm Forestry Coordination.—G. R. Phillips, 4712 Harrison Street, Ghevy Chase, Md Administrative Coordinatron.—E. M. Rowalt, 912 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. Land Use—Credit Coordination.—B. R. Stauber, 9701 Bexhill Drive, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Land Policy Coordination.—P. A. Taylor, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Flood Control Coordination.—E. J. Utz, 4507 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md. Interdepartmental Coordination.—Julius T. Wendzel, 4525 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director of Personnel.—T. Roy Reid, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Director.—James L. Buckley, 4714 Sheridan Street, Riverdale, Md. Chief, Division of Employment.—Strother B. Herrell, 7114 Seventh Street. Chief, Davila, of Classifications.— William C. Laxton, 7117 Harwick Road, Wood Acres, Chief, Division of Investigations.—C. T. Forster, 904 Maryland Avenue NE. Chief, Division of Organization and Personnel Management.—Maxwell A. DeVoe, 3207 Northampton Street. Chief, Division of Personnel Relations.—[Vacant.] Chief, Division of Training.—S. S. Board, 4836 Conduit Road. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director and Budget Officer.—W. A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Assistant Directors.—W. R. Fuchs, 2817 Thirty-ninth Street; H. A. Nelson, 4631 Brandywine Street. Assistants to Director—A. McC. Ashley, 5 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; J. H. Lynch, 1401 Tuckerman Street; J. J. Somers, 2005 Key Boulevard, Colonial Village, Arlington, Va.; N. L. Munster, 2712 Wisconsin Avenue; H. F. Shambarger, 1760 North Rhodes Street, Colonial Village, Arlington, Va. Chief of Division of— Accounting.—W. R. Fuchs (acting), 2817 Thirty-ninth Street. Estimates and Allotments—R. W. Maycock, 4521 Thirty-second Road North, Arlington, Va. Eo Management.—H. A. Stone, 1051 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Purchase, Sales, and Traffic—S. A. Snyder, 7001 Brookeville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chet, Office of Plant and Operations, and Real Estate Officer.—Arthur B. Thatcher, 4116 Military Road. Assistant Chief.—Jacob M. Schaffer, Box 129, R. F. D. 2, Laurel, Md. Amin to oe Chief.— William T. Wolfrey, Jr., 303 Whitestone Road, Silver pring, Md. Chel Administrative Services Diviston.— Raymond J. Weir, 4239 Benning Road NE. Chzef, Division of Management and Operations, Beltsville Research Center.—Charles Logan, Beltsville Research Center, Beltsville, Md. 356 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Chief, Communications Division.—John 8S. Lucas, 816 Whittier Place. Chief, Motor Transport Division.—H. T. O’Neale, 1724 Thirty-fourth Street. Acting Chief, Real Estate Division.—Joseph Haley, 1613 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Technical Advisory Board.— William K. Knauff, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Members, Technical Advisory Board.—Marshall S. Wright, 2613 South Kent Street, Arlington, Va.; A. G. Galloway, 1206 Holly Street. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief and Director of Research.—James T. Jardine, 4334 P Street. Assistant Chief—R. W. Trullinger, 3115 South Dakota Avenue NE. Assistant Director of Research.—R. Y. Winters, 6609 Thirty-second Street. Assistant to the Chief and Director of Research.—H. K. Smoot, 1831 Belmont Road. Chief, Division of Insular Stations.—James T. Jardine (acting), 4334 P Street. Editor, Experiment Station Record.—Howard L. Knight, 1364 Kalmia Road. EXTENSION SERVICE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Milburn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Reuben Brigham, Ashton, . Assistant to the Director—W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street. ATES Division of Business Administration, Chief —W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street. Assistant Chief.— Christopher S. Tenley, 3053 P Street. Chief, Division of Field Coordination.—H. W. Hochbaum, 7329 Blair Road. In charge, Organization and Planning Section.—[Vacant.] Division of Subject Matter, Chief—J. L. Boatman, 6522 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. In charge, Agricultural and Home Economics Section.—S. P. Lyle, 4435 Daven-port Street. In charge, Economics Section.—H. M. Dixon, 14 Riggs Road NE. Division of Field Studies and Training, Chief. —Meredith C. Wilson, 3005 South Dakota Avenue NE. Division of Extension Information, Chief.—Lester A. Schlup, 4707 Connecticut venue. In charge, Visual Instruction and Editorial Section.—Ralph M. Fulghum, 810 Grand View Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. In on Joton Picture Section.—Raymond Evans, 7 River Road, Bladens-burg, ; In charge, Agricultural Exhibits Section.—J. W. Hiscox, 1820 Upshur Street NE. OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Leslie A. Wheeler, 810 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Donald F. Christy, 4709 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—| Vacant]. Administrative Assistant.— William H. Rohrman, 4515 Towa Avenue. sel, Division of Foreign Agricultural Research.— George B. L. Arner, 504 Aspen treet. Chief, Division of Foreign Crops and Markets.— Arthur W. Palmer, 100 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Division of Latin American Agriculture.—[Vacant.] Bond, Information Section.—J. Clyde Marquis (acting head), 2480 Sixteenth treet. OFFICE OF INFORMATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Morse Salisbury, 517 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Directors of Information.—Keith Himebaugh, Rockville, Md.; Duncan Wall, 9501 Thornhill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Dn to the Director.—Jerome J. Henry, Boulevard Apartments, Alexandria, a. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 357. Chief of Publications.—M. C. Merrill, 800 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief of Press Service—Whitney Tharin, 4522 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, a. Chief of Radio Service—Wallace L. Kadderly, 1801 North Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Business Administration.—E. R. Waymack, 922 North Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va. LIBRARY (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Department librarian.—Ralph R. Shaw, 330 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Department librarian.— Mary G. Lacy, 3407 Thirty-fourth Place. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR (South Building, Independence Avenue between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Solicitor.— Mastin G. White, 1623 Lanier Place. Assistant Solictor—Charles W. Boyle, 816 C Street NE. Staff attorneys.—Ashley Sellers, 1612 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va.; Frederic S. Moise, 7400 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Senior administrative officer—Robert B. Ellis, 816 Chalfonte Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chiefs of Divisions: Agricultural Adjustment Division.—Robert B. Tyler, 122 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Farm Security Diviston.—Clarence I. Blau, 5308 Thirty-ninth Street. Fiscal Diviston.— Harry N. Foss, 1903 Kearney Street NE. Land Policy Division.—Philip M. Glick, Pyle Road, Locust Ridge, Bethesda, Md Regulatory Division.—Fred Lees, 3105 Garfield Street. Surplus Marketing Division.—Earl J. Smith, 3635 Ingomar Street. Title Diviston.—Arthur M. McConville, 1861 Mintwood Place. (1300 E Street. Phone, DIstrict 1050) Associate Solicitor in Charge, Farm Credit Division.—Robert K. McConnaughey, 2936 Woodstock Avenue, Forest Glen, Md. (Longfellow Building, northeast corner Connecticut and Rhode Island Avenues. Phone, DIstrict 1525) Associate Solicitor in Charge, Rural Electrification Division.—Vincent D. Nicholson, 1307 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF C. C. C. ACTIVITIES (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142)’ Chief —Fred Morrell, 707 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief —L. C. Stockdale, 428 North Nelson Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF AGRICULTURAL DEFENSE RELATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone REpublic 4142) Director.—M. Clifford Townsend, 8457 Piney Branch Courts, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Director.—David Meeker, Fairfax, Va. Ch Division of Production.—D. A. Fitzgerald, 5517 Smallwood Drive, Green cres, Chief, Division of Farm Equipment and Supplies.—L. L. Needler, 8410 Piney Branch Courts, Silver Spring, Md Chief, Division of Labor and Rural Industries.—W. J. Rogers, 523 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Transportation and Marketing.—E. O. Mallott, 1301 Fifteenth Street. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—Rudolph M. Evans, 3109 Cameron Mills Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. 358 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Executive assistant to the Administrator.—John B. Wilson, Jr., 5 Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Consumers’ Counsel Division: Director—D. E. Montgomery, 2531 Q Street. East Central Division: Director—W. G. Finn, 821 Quackenbos Street. Information Division: Director—W. H. Darrow, 2440 Sixteenth Street. North Central Division: Director—H. N. Schooler, 4429 North Thirty-eighth Street, Arlington, Va. Northeast Division: Director—A. W. Manchester, 6806 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Southern Division: Director—I. W. Duggan, 3721 Forty-ninth Street. Special Programs Division: Director—H. B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street. Sugar Division: Chief.—Joshua Bernhardt, 6800 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Western Division: Director—N. E: Dodd, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY AND ENGINEERING (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief—Henry G. Knight, 4436 Q Street. Associate Chief—W. W. Skinner, 6 Knowles Aventis, Kensington, Md. Assistant chiefs.—H. T. Herrick, 1701 Sixteenth Street; S. H. McCrory, 6811 Sixth Street; Henry A. Donovan, 4440 Forty-ninth Street. Chief of— Administrative Services Division.—C. A. Wolfe, 119 Varnum Street. Agricultural Chemical Research Division.—H. 8S. Paine, 6401 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chemical Investigations of Allergens in Agricultural Products.—Henry Stevens, 4439 Volta Place. Enzyme Research Laboratory.—A. K. Balls, 3406 Lowell Street. Farm Mechanical Equipment Research Division.—R. B. Gray, 3162 Key Boule- vard, Lyon Village, Arlington, Va. Farm Structures Research Diviston.— Thomas A. H. Miller (Acting Chief), Wide-water, Va. Information Division.—F. L. Teuton, Route No. 2, Anacostia Station, Wash-ington, Mechanical Processing of Farm Products Research Division.—S. H. McCrory (Acting Chief), 6811 Sixth Street. Naval Stores Research Division.—C. F. Speh, 208 Elm Street, Alexandria, Va. Personnel Division.—N. E. Jack (Acting Chief), 326 Channing Street NE. Plans and Service Division.—J. A. Scott, Jr., 1412 Otis Street NE. Proitin and Nutrition Research Division.—D. Breese Jones, 2901 Eighteenth treet. Rural Electrification Research Division.—H. L. Garver (Acting Chief), 101 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Office of the Chief. — Howard R. Tolley, Chief, 212 Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va.; Foster F. Elliott, 121 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Eric Englund, R. F.D. 3 Rockville, Md.; John R. Fleming, 216 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ;Roy. 1. Kimmel, R. F. D. 2, Vienna, Va.; Raymond C. Smith, 3211 North Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va.; Louis H. Bean, 3714 North Randolph Street, Arling-ton, Va.: James O. Babcock, 4917 Rodman Street; Oris V. Wells, 14 Belfield Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Librarian.—Margaret T. Olcott, 5608 First Street South, Arlington, Va. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 359 Head of Division of— Agricultural Finance—Norman J. Wall, 2998 P Street. Economic Information.—Russell Smith, 205 Locust Lane, Alexandria, Va. Farm Management and Costs.—Sherman E. Johnson, 118 North Jackson Street, Arlington, Va. Farm Population and Rural Welfare.—Carl C. Taylor, 5166 Tilden Street. Land Economics.—Maurice M. Kelso, 3615 Calvend Lane, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Marketing and Transportation Research.— William C. Crow (acting head), 3029 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Program Analysis and Development. —Russell S. Kifer (acting head), 335 Balti- more Avenue, Takoma Park, Program Study and Discussion.—Carl Taeusch, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Program Surveys.—Rensis Likert, 6312 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. State and Local Planning. — Bushrod W. Allin, 514 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. Statistical and Historical Research.—Oscar C. Stine, 6345 Western Avenue. AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street. Assistant Chief.—H. E. Reed, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Business manager.—F. J. Hughes, 1705 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant to Chief. —S. R. Newell, 4610 Chesapeake Street. In charge— Agricultural Statistics Division.—W. F. Callander, 1417 Van Buren Street. Business Administration Division.—F. J. Hughes, 1705 Rhode Island Avenue. Cotton Division.—C. H. Robinson, 607 Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. hey and Poultry Division.—Roy C. Potts, 210 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, d. Fruit and Vegetable Division.—W. G. Meal, 3926 Military Road. Grain and Seed Division.—E. J. Murphy, 1719 Crestwood Drive. Insecticide Division.—C. C. McDonnell, 122 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Livestock, Meats and Wool Division. =O Fraser, 4615 Thirty-seventh Street North, Arlington, Va. M arketing Information Division.—M. M. Sandstrom, 926 North Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va Packers and Stockyards Division.—F. W. Miller, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Tobacco Division.—C. E. Gage, 307 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Warehouse Division.—H. S. Yohe, 402 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Naval Stores Section.—V. E. Grotlisch, 9016 Woodland Road, Silver Spring, Md. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —John R. Mohler, 1620 Hobart Street. Assistant chiefs.—A. W. Miller, 6833 Piney Branch Road; H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue; Paul E. Howe, 2823 Twenty-ninth Street. Business manager.—J. R. Cohran, 917 Eighteenth Street. Chiefs of— Animal Husbandry Division.—Hugh C. McPhee, 414 Jackson Avenue, Univer- sity Park, Hyattsville, Md. Animal Nutrition Division.—Paul E. Howe, 2823 Twenty-ninth Street. os Inspection Division.—S. O. Fladness, 2312 South Joyce Street, Arlington, a. Interstate Inspection Division.—A. W. Miller, 6833 Piney Branch Road. Meat Inspection Division.—E. C. Joss, 2520 Fourteenth Street. Pathological Division.—H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue. Tick Eradication and Special Diseases Division.—W. M. MacKellar, 6100 Thirteenth Street. Tuberculosis Eradication Diviston.—A. E. Wight, 112 C Street SE. Virus Serum Control Division.—D. I. Skidmore, 4452 Volta Place. Zoological Division.—Benjamin Schwartz, 2633 Sixteenth Street. Director of Animal Disease Station.— Adolph Eichhorn, Beltsville Research Center, Beltsville, Md. 360 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (South Building, Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142) President.—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. + Vice President.—Carl C. Farrington, 4715 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice President and Secretary.—Samuel H. Sabin, 4140 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Treasurer.—John B. Payne, 19 Baltimore Boulevard, Brentwood, Md. Assistant Treasurers—Guy G. Chase, 1840 Mintwood Place; Frank L. Walston, 1021 Twentieth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretaries—1L. G. Rackley, 1804 Irving Street; Ilene M. Crigler, 113 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Administrative Division.—John B. Payne, 19 Baltimore Boulevard, Brentwood, Md. Director, Cotton Division.—G. E. Rathell, 520 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Md. Acting Director, Economics, Insurance, Warehousing, and Transportation Division.— Geoffrey S. Shepherd, 3511 Davenport Street. Birsear, onera Crops Division.—Lawrence Myers, 230 Prospect Street, Chevy hase, Md. Director, Grain Diviston.— William A. MeArthur, 1303 Braddock Road, Alex-andria, Va. COMMODITY EXCHANGE ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood Street. Associate Chief.—J. W. T. Duvel, 1225 Decatur Street. * Assistant Chief.—Rodger R. Kauffman, 6417 Western Avenue. Apion to the Chief— Walter L. Miller, 6500 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Information officer—R. Corbin Dorsey, 3303 Circle Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Business Manager.—J. W. B. Hiscox, 2105 Brighton Road, Avondale, Md. Chief of Division of— Audits.—John J. Bachmann, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. Contract Markets and Registrations.—Rodney Whitaker, 359 Fairfield Drive, Bethesda, Md. Economic Analysis.—W. Edwards Beach, 3415 Morrison Street. Investigations.— Douglas B. Bagnell, 23 West Grove Drive, Alexandria, Va. Trading Operations.—T. D. Hammatt, Hamilton Hotel. BUREAU OF DAIRY INDUSTRY (South Building, C Street, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chzef.—0O. E. Reed, 4927 Thirtieth Place. Assistant Chief —Ernest Kelly, 1527 East Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to the Chief (adminisiration).—J. M. Kemper, 2231 Newton Street NE. a (ML of Information.—L. S. Richardson, 610 Pickwick Lane, Chevy ase, : Dairy Engineer.—XKarl E. Parks, 1619 R Street. Chief of Division of— Dairy Research Laboratories.—Lore A. Rogers, 3635 S Street. Dairy Gog Breeding, Feeding, and Management.—Roy R. Graves, German-town, Md. Market-Mlk Investigations.— Ernest Kelly, 1527 East Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. : Dairy Herd Improvement Investigations.—J. F. Kendrick, 2506 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. Notion and Physiology.— Charles A. Cary, 4605 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, d. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—P. N. Annand, 2343 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va. Associate Chief.—Avery S. Hoyt, 413 Van Buren Street. Assistant Chiefs.—S. A. Rohwer, 3103 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; F. C. Bishopp, 8014 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md.; F. H. Spencer, 4016 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md.; W. L. Popham, 1201 Varnum Street NE. Acting Business Manager.—B. Connor, 5808 Third Street. ST Executive Departments 361 Chief of Division of— gon Insects.—D. L. Van Dine, 805 Crescent Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, a. Fruatfly Investigations.—A. C. Baker, Laboratorio Entomologico, Apartado Num. 3, Colonia Anahuac, Mexico, D. F. Mexican Fruitfly Control.—P. A. Hoidale, 503 Rio Grande National Life Build-ing, Harlingen, Tex. Enforcement of Japanese Beetle, Gypsy Moth, and Brown-Tail Moth Quarantines; European Corn Borer Certification, Dutch Elm Disease Control.—E. G. Brewer, 266 Glenwood Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. Forest insects.—F. C. Craighead, 5301 Forty-first Street. Gypsy and Brown-Tail Moth Control.—A. F. Burgess, 20 Sanderson Street, Greenfield, Mass. Plant Disease Control.—S. B. Fracker, 3716 Ingomar Street. Cereal and Forage Imsects.—C. M. Packard, 4519 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Truck Crop and Garden Insects.—W. H. White, Engel Terrace and University Lane, College Park, Md. Cotton Insects.—R. W. Harned, 4417 Garfield Street. Pink Bollworm and Thurberia Weevil Control.—R. E. McDonald, 569 Federal Building, San Antonio, Tex. Bee Culture.—J. I. Hambleton, Brookville, Md. Insects Affecting Man and Animals.—E. C. Cushing. Insect Identification.—C. F. W. Muesebeck, 4312 Sheridan Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Insect Pest Survey and Information.—J. A. Hyslop, Silver Spring, Md. (Cameronia Farm). ; Foreign Parasite Introduction.—C. P. Clausen, Woodley Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place. Control Investigations.—Lon A. Hawkins, 3332 Nineteenth Street. Insecticides.—R. C. Roark, 3163 Adams Mill Road. Tote Plant Quarantines.—E. R. Sasscer, 9 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Domestic Plant Quarantines.—B. M. Gaddis, Box 101, Arlington, Va. Cooperative Field Relations.—J. C. Holton, 210-A Main Post Office Building, Memphis, Tenn. FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION (1300 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 4700) Governor.—A. G. Black, 5705 Chevy Chase Parkway. Deputy governors.—C. W. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. H. Droste, 142 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Land Bank commissioner.—W. E. Rhea, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Cooperative Bank commissioner.—Samuel D. Sanders, 4617 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Production credit commaissioner.—C. R. Arnold, 3153 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Intermediate credit commaissioner.— George M. Brennan, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Regional Agricultural Credit Diviston.—C. C. Jacobsen, 4801 Con- necticut Avenue. Director, Federal Credit Union sectton.—C. R. Orchard, 4943 Albemarle Street. Director, Finance and Accounts.—W. J. Snow, Jr., 4 Blackstone Road, West- moreland Hills (Friendship Station, D. C.), Md. Director of Information and Extension.—Edwy B. Reid, 712 Spring Street, Silver Spring, Md. di Mortgage Corporation Service Section.—Harris E. Willingham, University lub. Chief examiner.— Martin J. Fox, 1841 Columbia Road. Chief, Economic and Credit Research Division.—E. C. Johnson, 327 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Cooperative Research and Service Diviston.—T. G. Stitts, 6022 Utah Avenue. Special assistant to the Governor.—Cliff Woodward, Wardman Park Hotel. 362 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE CORPORATION (1300 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 4700) Board of directors: Chairman.— A. G. Black, 5705 Chevy Chase Parkway. Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramercy Street. W. E. Rhea, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. President—A. G. Black, 5705 Chevy Chase Parkway. Executive vice president.—Harris E. Willingham, University Club. Vice president.—John H. Guill, 7507 Twelfth Street. Secretary.— D. C. Carnes, 3620 Yuma Street. Treasurer.—George H. Thomas, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—C. B. Baldwin, 4340 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Administrators—R. W. Hudgens, 414 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; G. S. Mitchell, 15 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; John O. Walker, Seminary Hill, Route 2, Alexandria, Va. Director of Rural Rehabilitation Division.—James G. Maddox, 129 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Director of Resettlement Division.— Mason Barr, Lincoln and Walnut Streets, Falls Church, Va. Director of Tenant Purchase Diviston.—Paul V. Maris, 3166 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director of Investigation Division.—Arthur McLawhon, 5110 Jamestown Circle, Yorktown Village, D. C. ‘Chief consultant of Procedure Division.—Q. G. Brain, 7603 Sixteenth Street. Chief engineer.—John F. Donovan, 2737 Devonshire Place. Chief medical officer.—Dr. R. C. Williams, 6 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief fiscal officer.—G. E. Lukas, 1803 North Quinn Street, Arlington, Va. Chief information officer—John Fischer, 4104 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Gai officer.— William F. Littlejohn, 5500 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, d Chief of Labor Division.—N. Gregory Silvermaster, 5515 Thirtieth Street. Director of Business Management Division.—D. J. Ward, 4330 Montgomery Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Special assistants to the Administrator.—E. G. Arnold, Highland Road, Pine Ridge, Va.; L. H. Hauter, 3408 Garrison Street. FEDERAL CROP INSURANCE CORPORATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Board of directors.—Rudolph M. Evans, chairman, 3109 Cameron Mills Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va.; C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street; B. R. Stauber, 9701 Bexhill Drive, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md Manager.—Leroy K. Smith, 4900 North Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant manager and secretary.— Cecil A. Johnson, 3921 Livingston Street. Assistant to the Manager.—J. Carl Wright, 2815 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. FOREST SERVICE (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Indépendence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—Earle H. Clapp, acting, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Chief —Earle H. Clapp, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—R. E. Marsh, 5222 Chevy Chase Parkway; C. E. Rachford, 4247 North Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. : Assistant to the Chief—R. F. Hammatt, 4703 Cortland Road, Brookdale, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Fiscal Control.—H. I. Loving, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. National Forest Divisions: : C. M. Granger, Assistant Chief, box 1285, River Road, Bethesda, Md. Brgy of Fire Control and Improvements.—Roy Headley, 2934 Chesapeake treet. Division of Timber Management.—E. E. Carter, 3213 Nineteenth Street. Division of Range Management.— Walt L. Dutton, 2651 Sixteenth Street. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments National Forest Divisions—Continued. Division of Recreation and Lands.—John Sieker, 359 North Glebe Road,Arlington, Va. Division of Engineering.—T. W. Norcross, 407 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Wildlife Management.—H. L. Shantz, 2415 Twentieth Street.Watershed Management.—Gordon R. Salmond, 106 West Myrtle Street, Alexandria, Va. Forest Communities.—C. J. Buck, 1530 Sixteenth Street. State and Private Forest Divisions: Assistant Chief.—E. I. Kotok, 1408 Greenbrier Avenue, Arlington, Va. i of State Forestry.—J. A. Fitzwater, 100 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Division of Private Forestry.—Howard Hopkins, 1801 North Hartford Street,Arlington, Va. Division of State Cooperation.—Earl 8. Peirce, 3738 Huntington Street. Forest Research Divisions: C. L. Forsling, Assistant Chief, 3283 Arcadia Place. Division of Forest Management Research.—Irvine T. Haig, 7 West Grove Drive, Alexandria, Va. : Division of Forest Economics.—Richard W. Nelson, 324 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Division of Range Research.—W. R. Chapline, 3802 Albemarle Street. Division of Forest Products.—George W. Trayer, 1200 Russell Road, Alex- andria, Va. Division of Forest Influences.—Edward N. Munns, 1358 Juniper Street. Administrative Management and Information Divisions: Earl W. Loveridge, Assistant Chief, 1650 Harvard Street. Division of Operation.— William P. Kramer, 2700 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va.Division of Information and Education.—Dana Parkinson, 3707 Military oad. Pr of Personnel Management.—Perry A. Thompson, 4318 Thirty-sixth treet. Lands Divisions: L. F. Kneipp, Assistant Chief, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue, Alban Towers.Division of Forest Land Planning.—John R. Camp, 5 Knowles Avenue,Kensington Md. Division of Land Acquisition.—[Vacant.] Civilian Conservation Corps Divisions: Fred Morrell, Assistant Chief, 707 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Coordinating Division.—[Vacant.] Camp Program Division.—Fred J. Murray, acting, Route 1, Vienna, Va. Enrollee Training Division.—H. R. Kylie, acting, 1409 Ingraham Street. Northeastern Timber Salvage Administration: Earle H. Clapp, Administrator, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Admanistrators—Earl S. Peirce, 3738 Huntington Street; E. I. Kotok, 1408 Greenbrier Avenue, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—Louise Stanley, 3228 Macomb Street. Assistant Chief.—Day Monroe, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Administrative assistant.—Lennah Curtiss Zens, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Division of— Family Economics.—Day Monroe, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Textiles and Clothing.—Ruth O’Brien, 1219 Hamilton Street. Foods and Elsa 3909 Road, Nutrition.— Orent-Keiles, Edgewood Baltimore, Md. Housing and Household Equipment.— Lenore E. Sater, 3800 Hamilton Street, Hyattsville, Md. Home Economics Information.—Ruth Van Deman, 3502 Thirtieth Street. 364 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —E. C. Auchter, 4400 Hartwick Road, College Park, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—P. V. Cardon, 1730 Crestwood Drive; M. A. McCall, 209Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; O. C. Magistad, 23 Lanhardt Road, Uni-versity Park, Md. Business Manager.—H. E. Allanson, 7330 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant to Chief —C. E. Schoenhals, 3367 Stephenson Place. 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, 100 Albemarle Street, Westmoreland Hills, D. C. : Drug and Related Plants.—D. M. Crooks, 6910 Wake Forest Drive, Calvert Hills, College Park, Md. Dry Land Agriculture.—C. E. Leighty, 2831 North Franklin Road, Arlington, Va.Forage Gop and Diseases.—O. S. Aamodt, 416 North Thomas Street, Arling- ton, Va. Forest Pathology.—L. M. Hutchins, 1016 Sixteenth Street. Fruit and Vegetable Crops and Diseases.— J. R. Magness, 5 Valley View Avenue, Takoma’ Park, Md. Irrigation Agriculture.—C. S. Scofield, Lanham, Md. Mycology and Disease Survey.—H. A. Edson, 3810 Fourth Street. Nematology.—G. Steiner, 4117 Twenty-ninth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Plant Exploration and Introduction.—B. Y. Morrison, 7820 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Rubber Plant Investigations.—E. W. Brandes, 6310 Ridgewood Avenue, ChevyChase, Md. Soil and Fertilizer Investigations.—R. M. Salter, 4411 Beachwood Road, Hyattsville, Md. Soil Survey.— C. E. Kellogg, 109 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Sugar Plant Investigations.—E. W. Brandes, 6310 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. : Tobacco Investigations.—W. W. Garner, 1367 Parkwood Place. -National Arboretum.— B. Y. Morrison, Acting Director, 7320 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Advisory Council: Frederic A. Delano, chairman, 2400 Sixteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Henry S. Graves, New Haven, Conn. Harlan P. Kelsey, East Boxford, Mass. John C. Merriam, Pasadena, Calif. Mrs. Frank B. Noyes, 2339 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. Frederick Law Olmsted; Brookline, Mass. Mrs. Harold I. Pratt, Glen Cove, Long Island, N. Y. Robert Pyle, West Grove, Pa. Knowles A. Ryerson, Davis, Calif. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION (2000 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, District 1525) Administrator—Harry Slattery, the Broadmoor Apartments. Personal assistant to the Administrator—Elliott Pemberton,R. F. D. 3, Alex-andria, Va. Deputy Administrators.—Robert B. Craig, 2726 Connecticut Avenue; Francis J. Sette, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Consbiny Economist.—Harlow S. Person, 94 Southlawn Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, Consulting Engineer.— Willard E. Herring, Fairfax, Va. Chief, Management Division.— J. Stewart Wilson, R. F. D. 3, Vienna, Va. Chief, Applications and Loans Division.—C. O. Falkenwald, 122 Forest Drive, Catonsville, Md. Chief, Cooperatives’ Operations Division.— C. A. Winder, 4711 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Design and Construction Division.— Guy W. Thaxton, 1805 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE a. Assistant Chief, Research.—Mark L. Nichols, 3309 Stephenson Place.Assistant to the Assistant Chief.—Howard E. Middleton, 603 Great FallsRoad, East Falls Church, Va. Chief of Division of— Climatic and Physiographic.—C. Warren Thornthwaite, 5600 Taylor Road,Riverside, Md. Conservation Economics.—Walter J. Roth, 2146 North Court House Road,Arlington, Va. Conservation Experiment Stations.— Alva E. Brandt, Box 89, Route 3, Vienna, Va. : Farm Drawnage.—Lewis A. Jones, 7131 Chestnut Street.Farm Irrigation.—W. W. McLaughlin, Cosmos Club.Hillculture.—Samue! B. Detwiler, 1028 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va. Hydrologic.—Charles E. Ramser, 4615 Kenmore Drive.Sedimentation Studies.— Gilbert C. Dobson, 1900 F Street. Aol: Chief, Surveys and Project Plans.— Austin L. Patrick, 6229 Thirty-second lace. Chief of Division of— ; Cartographic—Joseph M. Snyder, 6 Lanhardt Road, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Bemmonie Surveys.—Claud F. Clayton, 3519 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, a. Physical Surveys.—Ethan A. Norton, 3600 Livingston Street.Project Plans.—Raymond H. Davis, 1215 : Twenty-sixth Road South, Arling- ton, Va. 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 25 366 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Assn Chief, Technical Operations.—Courtland B. Manifold, 6443 Barnaby treet. Assistant to the Assistant Chief.—John S. Barnes, 1211 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Division of— Agronomy.—Charles R. Enlow, 1576 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Biology.— Ernest G. Holt, 2000 F Street. Engineering.— Thomas B. Chambers, 2030 Allen Place. yi Planning and Management.—N. Robert Bear, 3290 Worthington treet. Forestry.—John F. Preston, 2700 Q Street. Nursery.—Harry A. Gunning, 7511 Thirteenth Street. Range Conservation.—Frederic G. Renner, 6692 Thirty-second Place. SURPLUS MARKETING ADMINISTRATION (South Agriculture Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) (Divisions noted with (*) are located in the Steuart Motor Building, Fifth and K Streets) Alnor ERY F. Hendrickson, Burnt Mills Hills, R. R. D. 2, Silver Spring, Associate Administrator.—Edwin W. Gaumnitz, 4010 North Twenty-fifth Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director of Marketing.—Frederick V. Waugh, 1006 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant admanistrators.—James D. LeCron, 1701 Hoban Road; George M. Reynolds, 728 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant to the Administrator.—John C. Foulis, 4401 Gladwyne Drive, Bethesda, Md Economic adviser—Budd A. Holt, 4838 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Special adviser —Ralph W. Olmstead, 409 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Special assistants to the Administrator.—Leon O. Wolcott, Grassroots, Vienna, Va.; E. Merwyn Rowlands, 11 Thirty-fifth Street, SE. *Chief, Distribution Division.—Charles I. Kunkel, 5411 Harwood Road, Bethesda, Md Chief, Purchase Division.—H. C. Albin, 2608 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Marketing Division.—J. B. Wyckoff, 3252 S Street. Cll Fruit and Vegetable Division.—Porter R. Taylor, 6403 Florida Street, Chevy hase, Md. Chief, Dairy Diviston.—O. M. Reed, 1704 Uhle Street North, Arlington, Va. Cheef, Poultry Diviston.—W. D. Termohlen, 6638 Thirty-second Place. *Cheef, Investigation Division.—Guy L. Hottel, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Transportation Division.—C. B. Bowling, 3216 Military Road. *Chief, Finance Division.—W. B. Robertson, 1308 Eighteenth Street. *Cheef, Audit Division.—D. J. Harrill, 3237 North Rockingham Street, East Falls Church, Va. : Cheef, Information Division.—James B. Hasselman, 5449 Nebraska Avenue. *Chief, Personnel Division.—Frederick C. McMillen, 5802 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. *Chief, Businsss Management Division.— William L. Rice, 2536 Thirty-fourth Street NE. COMMERCE Executive Departments 367 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Senstitution Avenue and E Street. Phone, DIstrict 2200 : JESSE HOLMAN JONES, of Houston, Tex., Secretary of Commerce (Shoreham Hotel, Washington, D. C.); appointed September 19, 1940; was born in Robertson County, Tenn., April 5, 1874; educated in the public schools and has been awarded the degree of LL. D. by Southwestern University, 1925, Southern Methodist Univer-sity, 1927, A. & M. College of Texas, 1936, New York University, 1937, Temple University, 1937, John Brown University, 1938, Oglethorpe University, 1941; married Mary Gibbs, of Mexia, Tex., December 15, 1920; manager, later general manager, M. T. Jones Lumber Co., Dallas, Tex., 1895-1905; organized South Texas Lumber Co., 1902; organized Texas Trust Co., Houston, 1909 (now Bankers Mortgage Co.), of which he was director and chairman of the board until time of resignation, 1932; vice president, Lumberman’s National Bank (now Second National Bank) 1907-15; vice president, Union National Bank, 1910-18; chairman of the board, National Bank of Commerce, Houston, Tex.; owner and publisher of Houston Chronicle; Director, general military relief of the American Red Cross, 1917; member of Red Cross War Council by appointment of President Wilson, 1918; delegate to Red Cross meetings in Paris, Cannes, and Geneva and assisted in organizing League of Red Cross Societies of the World; director of finance, Democratic National Committee, 1924-28; chairman of advisory finance com-mittee, 1928; member, board of directors, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1932-39, chairman, 1933-39; Administrator, Federal Loan Agency, 1939 to date; chairman of executive committee, First and Second Export-Import Banks, Wash-ington, D. C., 1936 to date; member of Newcomen Society; Methodist; trustee of George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville; treasurer, Will Rogers Memorial Commission; awarded regency in the field of finance, 1935, by the Society of Arts and Sciences; director-general, Texas Centennial Celebration, 1926-34; treasurer, Woodrow Wilson birthplace foundation; honorary president, San Jacinto Centennial Association, Houston; clubs, National Democratic Club and Whist Club of New York; National Press, Metropolitan, Alfalfa, Jefferson Island Clubs of Washington, D. C.; also affiliated with the Bohemian Club, San Francisco. : Under Secretary.—Wayne C. Taylor, 1743 Twenty-second Street. Secretary to Under Secretary.— Martha E. Robertson, 1613 Harvard Street. Assistant Secretary.— Robert hh. Hinckley, Mayflower Hotel. Secretary to Assistant Secretary.— Bert T. Oakley, 4306 North Fourth Street, Buckingham, Va. Assistants to the Secretary.— Norman W. Baxter, Carlyn Apartments; Miller C. Foster, 6660 Thirty-second Street; Eugene W. Burgess, 1711 Rhode Island Avenue. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary.—Malcolm Kerlin, 5609 Broad Branch Road. Assistant to Administrative Assistant.—Theron B. Morrow, 2153 California Street. Secretary to the Secretary.—Gladys D. Mikell, 3445 Seventeenth Street. 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. Division of Personnel Supervision and Management: Berio E Ql C. Short, 6902 Wake Forest Drive, Calvert Hills, College Park, d. Assistant Director.—Frances C. Kelley, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief of Division of— Accounts.— Charles E. Molster, 1237 Lawrence Street NE. Publications.— Clifford F. Mayne, 4308 Twenty-first Street NE.; assistant chief, Charles C. Barton, 1621 T Street. Purchases and Sales.— Walter S. Erwin, 5706 Fourteenth Street. Librarian.—Charlotte L. Carmody, 514 Nineteenth Street. \ Congressional Directory COMMERCE BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Director.—James C. Capt, the Westchester. Assistant Directors.—Dr. Vergil D. Reed, 3600 North Abingdon Street, GolfClub Manor, Arlington, Va.; Howard H. McClure, 1901 Columbia Road.Admanistrative assistant to Director.— Dr. Malcolm J. Proudfoot, 6803 Oak Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. : Executive officer—Edward J. Gardner, 340 Madison Street. Assistant to Director.—Margaret A. Patch, 1807 R Street. Chief, Division of Information and Publications.—Frank R. Wilson, 1801 Six- teenth Street. Chief, Division of Administrative Service.— Arthur J. Hirsch, 1505 Spring Place. Chuef, Appointments.—Emily I. Farnum, 5725 Fourteenth Street. Chief, Division of Field Service—Gerald Ryan, 100 Dale Drive, Sligo Park, Silver Spring, Md. Geographer.—Clarence E. Batschelet, 2220 Military Road, Arlington, Va.Chel, Division of Machine Tabulation.—George B. Wetzel, 5600 Thirty-ninth treet. r Chief, Division of Current Manufactures Reports.— Maxwell R. Conklin, 422 Cumberland Avenue, Somerset, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Division of Foreign Trade Statistics.—Bernard Barton, 322 North OxfordStreet, Arlington, Va. Chief Statisticians: Statistical research.—Dr. Calvert L. Dedrick, 6615 Western Avenue. Agriculture.—Zellmer R. Pettet, Chancellor Apartments. Cotton and oils.— Ray Hurley (acting), 269 Marshall Road, Cheverly, Md.State and local government.— Chester E. Rightor, 520 Rolling Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Manufactures.— Thomas J. Fitzgerald, 3434 Brown Street. Population.—Dr. Leon E. Truesdell, 3429 Ordway Street. Vital statistics.—Dr. Halbert L. Dunn, 1734 I Street. Business census.—Fred A. Gosnell, 1239 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Mineral industries.— Dr. Oscar E. Kiessling, Route 1, West Falls Church, Va. Experts: Occupations.—Dr. Alba M. Edwards, 2522 Twelfth Street. Printing.— Christopher M. Zepp, 1926 Newton Street NE. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE Director—Carroll L.. Wilson, the Westchester. Assistant Director.—Grosvenor M. Jones, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Executive assistant to the Director—O. P. Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative assistant to the Director.—John S. Gollins, 4424 Third Street. Liaison officer.— George Wythe, 1325 Twenty-third Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Commercial and Economic Information.— John H. Morse, Holmes Run Road, Falls Church, Va. Commercial Intelligence Unit.—E. E. Schnellbacher, 4540 Warren Street. Publications Unit.—John H. Morse, Holmes Run Road, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Division of Industrial Economy.— Robert F. Martin, 4125 Garrison Street. Construction Unit.—S. Morris Livingston, 8920 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md Copsimngion Materials Unit.— Everett G. Holt, 120 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Durable Goods Unit.—H. B. McCoy, 27 Warner Street, Kensington, Md. Durable Materials Unidt.— Phillips A. Hayward, 4809 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Export-Import Market Information Unit—T. W. Delahanty (Acting Chief), 1806 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Merchandise Unit.— Fletcher H. Rawls, 32 Prospect Street, Kensington, Md. Public Utilities Unit.— Thomas E. Lyons, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Industrial consultants: W. W. Carman, Jr., 4924 Thirtieth Place. Charles C. Concannon, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Nathan D. Golden, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Walter A. Janssen, Occidental Hotel. Lewis M. Lind, 4007 Connecticut Avenue. Paul R. Mattix, 612 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. COMMERCE Executive Departments 369 Chief, Division of International Economy.—James H. Edwards, 2230 California treet. Adviser on Trade Controls.—Perry J. Stevenson, 3506 Quesada Street. American Republics Unit.— William LaVarre, 1135 Sixteenth Street. British Empire Unit.—W. W. Butterworth, Acting Chief, Route 3, Llewellyn Fields, Rockville, Md. Comdinaiot, of International Statistics Unit.— August Maffry, 4919 Upton treet. European Unit.—Louis Domeratzky, McLean, Va. Far Eastern Unit.—Charles K. Moser, 4708 Reno Road. Foreign Laws Adviser—Guerra Everett, 25640 Massachusetts Avenue. International Economics Unit.— Amos KE. Taylor, 1451 Jonquil Street. his Apmis Unit.—H. P. Macgowan, 6 Carvel Road, Westmoreland ills, : Chief, Division of Regional Economy.—C. C. Fichtner, Willard Hotel. Field Service.—Robert Sevey, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Regional Research Unit.— Wilford L. White, 3131 Nebraska Avenue. Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.—M. Joseph Meehan, 810 Dahlia Street. ani Structure and Operations Unit.— Walter F. Crowder, 2121 Virginia | venue. Current Business Analysis Unit.—Charles A. R. Wardwell, 619 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. ; National Economics Unit.— Arthur R. Upgren, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. National Income Unit.—Milton Gilbert, 3517 Rodman Street. Administrative Units: Accounts.—H. W. Haun, 746 Newton Place. Files.— William F. Smith, Roosevelt Hotel. Personnel.—Alice I. Macdonald, 5759 Thirteenth Street. Supply.— Edith O. Hainsworth, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Correspondence.—Royal H. Brasel, 3832 Garfield Street. NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS (Connecticut Avenue and Upton Street. Phone, WOodley 1720) Director.—Lyman J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street. Assistant Director (research and testing).—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Assistant Director (commercial standardization).—A. S. McAllister, 206 East Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of, Division of— Weras and Measures.—H. W. Bearce, 6308 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, d Electricity.—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Heat and Power—H. C. Dickinson, 4629 Thirtieth Street. Optics.—F. J. Bates, 1649 Harvard Street. Chemistry.—G. E. F. Lundell, 402 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Mechanics and Sound.—H. L. Dryden, 2020 Pierce Mill Road. Organic and Fibrous Materials.—W. E. Emley, 3604 Fulton Street. Metallurgy.—H. S. Rawdon, Persimmon Tree Road, Bradley Farm, R. 3. Bethesda, Md. Clay and Silicate Products.—P. H. Bates, 3835 Livingston Street. Simplified Practice.—E. W. Ely, 1725 Juniper Street. Trade Standards.—I1. J. Fairchild, 3707 Thirty-fourth Street. Go and SS pecirinsianasiiy S. McAllister, 206 East Raymond Street, Chevy hase, Md. Office.—D. E. Thomas, 6629 Chestnut Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Plant.—O. L. Britt, 6209 Thirtieth Street. Shops.—W. H. Seaquist, 219 Rittenhouse Street. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY Director—L. O. Colbert, 4408 Twenty-ninth Street. 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. 370 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Chef of Division of— Geodesy.—C. L. Garner, 3400 McKinley Street. Coastal Surveys.— Gilbert T. Rude, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Charts.—F. S. Borden, 3611 Chesapeake Street. Tides and Currents.—Paul C. Whitney, 2935 Twenty-eighth Street. Geomagnetism and Seismology.—N. H. Heck, 3421 Northampton Street. Personnel and Accounts.—R. F. Luce, 4511 Klingle Street. Instruments.—D. L. Parkhurst, 4602 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF MARINE INSPECTION AND NAVIGATION Director.—Commander Richard 8S. Field, Redland Road, Norbeck, Rockville, Md. Special assistant to the Director.—Stewart Lindsay, Caves Road, Owings Mills, Md Assistant Directors.—Halert C. Shepheard, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; Henry E. Sweet, 4700 South Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. Technical assistant to the Director.—James R. Harrison, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Privale secretary to the Director.—Eleanora M. Russell, 607 Taylor Street. Administrative assistant.—James E. Davidson, 1621 T Street. Chief, Ship Personnel Division.—Charles W. Sanders, 227 North Oakland Avenue, Arlington, Va. Board of Supervising Inspectors.—William Fisher, San Francisco, Calif.; George Fried, New York, N. Y.; Eugene Carlson, Norfolk, Va.; Robert E. Coombs, Cincinnati, Ohio; Charles M. Lyons, Boston, Mass.; John F. Oettl, New Orleans, La.; Earl B. Hull, Cleveland, Ohio. United States Shipping Commissioners.—John J. Daly, New York, N. Y.; Leroy E. Kuhns, Seattle, Wash.; John B. Lindhe, New Orleans, La.; Stuart H. Waring, San Francisco, Calif.; Leo F. O’Brien, Boston, Mass.; Robert H. Farinholt, Philadelphia, Pa.; Elmer T. Hedrick, Baltimore, Md.; Charles W. Matson, Galveston, Tex.; Julius Engell, Norfolk, Va.; David A. Butler, Providence, R. I.; Reginald G. Dobbin, Mobile, Ala.; Frank C. Wiatt, Newport News, Va.; Allen L. Woodruff, San Pedro, Calif.; Harold C. Jones, Portland, Oreg.; Thomas J. Ellison, Honolulu, Hawaii. PATENT OFFICE Commissioner.—Conway P. Coe, 10 East Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md. First Assistant Commassioner.— Leslie Frazer, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Commissioners.—Henry Van Arsdale, the Westchester; Conder C.Henry, 4322 Argyle Terrace. Administrative assistant.—Grattan Kerans, 1305 Kennedy Street. Solicitor.—W. W. Cochran, 4358 Argyle Terrace. Chief Clerk.—James A. Brearley, 325 Second Street SE. Assistant Chief Clerk.—C. E. Tomlin, 306 Mansion Drive, Colonial Park, Alexandria, Va. Examiners in chief—E. Landers, 8918 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md.; William L. Thurber, 3617 Quesada Street; 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; Charles H. Shaffer, 3443 Oakwood Terrace; Floyd J. Porter, 124 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Law examiners—Howard S. Miller, 1355 Locust Road; E. L. Reynolds, 425 Wil-lard Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; C. W. Moore, 1351 Kalmia Street. Supervisors.—Fred M. Hopkins, Kennedy-Warren Apartments; Vernon I. Rich-ard, 4811 W Street; W. M. Adams, 208 Spruce Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; H. Barker, 1210 Thirty-fourth Street SE.; Mark Taylor, 1705 Newton Street NE.; E. F. Klinge, 9005 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. Ezaminers of interferences.—H. I. Houston, 227 Park Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; J. H. Carnes, 1657 Thirty-first Street; W. E. Waite, 1316 Iris Street; Harold H. Jacobs, 5014 Glenbrook Terrace; Philip I. Heyman, 7107 Ninth Street; Arturo Y. Casanova, Jr., 7915 Thirteenth Street. : Classification examiner.—M. L. Whitney, 3387 Stuyvesant Place. COMMERCE Executive Departments 371 INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION (St. Louis, Mo.) Incorporator—The Secretary of Commerce. President— Chairman of the board.—Chester C. Thompson, 1330 Boatmen’s Bank Building, St. Louis, Mo. Vice president.—John S. Powell, 7725 Belfast Street, New Orleans, La. Administrative assistant.— Aubrey C. Mills, 75657 Byron Place, Clayton, Mo. Secretary-treasurer.—Guy Bartley, 530 North Union Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. WEATHER BUREAU (Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, MIchigan 3200) Chief —Francis W. Reichelderfer, 3837 Garrison Street. — Assistant Chief, Technical Services.—Charles C. Clark, 21 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief, Scientific Services.—C. G. Rossby. Executive Assistant, Scientific Services—Charles F. Sarle, 412 Jackson Place, Alexandria, Va. Seri Assistant for Technical Services—Delbert M. Little, 5325 Chevy Chase arkway. Special Assistant for Organization.—W. F. McDonald, 6 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Business Administration.— William Weber, 2032 Belmont Road. Chief, Division of Personnel.—C. G. Swain, 4714 Harrison Street. Investigative and Service Divisions and Chiefs: Synoptic Reports and Forecasts.—Ivan R. Tannehill, 4635 Warren Street. Extended Weather Forecasts.— Charles L. Mitchell, 1340 Jefferson Street. Special Service Coordinators.— Merrill Bernard, 217 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md.; R. Hanson Weightman, 5914 Wisconsin Avenue. : Climate and Crop Weather.—Joseph B. Kincer, 4112 Fessenden Street. Station Operations.—Joseph R. Lloyd, 1228 Emerson Street. Instrument.— William R. Thickstun, 1101 Euclid Street. Library.—Robert C. Aldredge, 1208 Eighteenth Street. wy and Meteorological Consultant.—Edgar W. Woolard, 1232 Thirtieth treet. CIVIL AERONAUTICS ADMINISTRATION Adminestrator of Civil Aeronautics—Donald H. Connolly, 3514 Macomb Street. Deputy Administrator—Charles I. Stanton, 1709 North Harvard Street, Arlington, Va Assistant to the Administrator—Lucius D. Clay, 3900 Connecticut Avenue. Executive officer.—Arlin E. Stockburger, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Information and Statistics Director.—Roscoe Wright, 1862 Mintwood Place. Chzef counsel and Director of Compliance.—Richard E. Elwell, 5101 Macomb Street. Director of Safety Regulation.—A. S. Koch, 3 Cleave Drive, Falls Church, Va. Drrector of Airports—C. B. Donaldson (acting), 5510 First Street. Director of Civilian Pilot Training.—John P. Morris, 1600 Sixteenth Street. Director of Federal Airways.— Thomas B. Bourne, Millington, Md. Regional manager at large.—Howard F. Rough, 2501 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Manager, Washington National Airport.—John Groves, 313 Wolfe Street, Alex-andria, Va. CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD Members: Chairman.—Harllee Branch, the Kennedy-Warren. Vice chairman.—Edward Warner, 3312 N Street. Oswald Ryan, 3239 Klingle Road. G. Grant Mason, Jr., 1513 Twenty-eighth Street. George P. Baker, 2200 R Street. Secretary.—Darwin Charles Brown, 1006 New Hampshire Avenue. General counsel.—L. Welch Pogue, 116 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Economic Bureau.—Raymond W. Stough, 711 Norway Drive, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Safety Bureau.—Jerome Lederer, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Congressional Directory COMMERCE NATIONAL INVENTORS’ COUNCIL Chairman.—Charles F. Kettering. Vice chatrman.— Thomas Midgley, Jr. Secretary.—Lawrence Langner. Members: George Baekeland, Rear Admiral H. G. Bowen, Conway P. Coe,William D. Coolidge, Watson Davis, Frederick M. Feiker, Webster N. Jones,Brig. Gen. Earl McFarland, Fin Sparre, Maj. Gen. W. H. Tschappat,Orville Wright, Fred Zeder. Director of Staff.—Thomas R. Taylor, 3905 Jocelyn Street. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE 374 Congressional Directory LABOR DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS Director.—Verne A. Zimmer, 1745 Upshur Street. Assistant Director.— Clara M. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. Chief safety engineer.— William T. Cameron, 1600 Foxhall Road. Chief of apprenticeship.— William F. Patterson, 2737 Devonshire Place. DIVISION OF PUBLIC CONTRACTS Administrator.—L. Metcalfe Walling, 2429 Chain Bridge Road. Assistant Administrator.William R. MeComb, 1601 Caton — Place. Public Contracts Board.—Robert N. Campbell, Army and Navy Club. Chiefs of Sections: Ezxamining.— William B. Grogan, 3317 Runnymede Place. Investigations.— Ralph J. Fogg, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Research.—John H. Klingenfeld, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Statistical and Information.—Alyre J. Gallant, 1401 Tuckerman Street. WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION Administrator.—[Vacant.] Deputy Administrator.—Baird Snyder, 3d, 8 Blackistone Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Assistant to the Administrator.—James F. King, 3801 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrator in Charge of Information.—Harold D. Jacobs, Shoreham Hotel. Business manager.—James HE. Dodson, 1309 Trinidad Avenue NE. Directors of branches: Hearings.— Merle D. Vincent, 515 Twentieth Street. Industry Committee.—Burton E. Oppenheim, 1527 Thirty-third Street. Research and Statistics.—Thomas W. Holland, 200 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF LAROR STATISTICS Commassioner of Labor Statistics.—Isador Lubin, 2737 Devonshire Place. Acting Commissioner.—A. F. Hinrichs, 3214 Newark Street. Chiefs of branches: Employment and Occupational Outlook.—Donald H. Davenport, 3212 Klingle oad. Working Conditions and Industrial Relations.—N. Arnold Tolles, 3412 Quebec Street. Prices and Cost of Living.—Aryness Joy Wickens, Vienna, Va. Business Management.—Henry J. Fitzgerald, 5210 Western Avenue. Editorial and Research.—Hugh S. Hanna, 2522 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Chief statistician.—Sidney W. Wilcox, 909 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. CHILDREN’S BUREAU Chief —Katharine F. Lenroot, the Kennedy-Warren. Associate chief.—Dr. Martha M. Eliot, 1815 Forty-fifth Street. Assistant to the Chief.—Charles I. Schottland, 2806 Cameron Mills Road, Alex- andria, Va. Directors of divisions: Research in Child Development.—Dr. Katherine Bain, 3604 Porter Street. Social Service—Agnes K. Hanna, 2445 Fifteenth Street. Child Guidance.— Elsa Castendyck, 5001 V Street. Statistical. —Dr. Jacob Yerushalmy, 4610 Chestnut Street, Bethesda, Md. Industrial.—Beatrice McConnell, Hammond Court. Editorial.—Isabelle Mott Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Health Services.—Dr. Edwin F. Daily, 4926 Albemarle Street. Child Welfare—Mary Irene Atkinson, 1835 K Street. Public Health Nursing.—Naomi Deutsch, 3667 McKinley Street. Medical Social Work.—Edith M. Baker, 2222 Q Street. WOMEN’S BUREAU Director.—Mary Anderson, 528 Seventeenth Street. Assistant Director.—Bertha M. Nienburg, 6808 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.Administrative assistant.— Anne Larrabee, 528 Seventeenth Street. Directors of divisions: Editorial.—Elizabeth A. Hyde, 1760 Euclid Street. Research.—Mary Elizabeth Pidgeon, 3420 Sixteenth Street. Public Information.—Mary V. Robinson, 2032 Belmont Road. Statistical.—Isadore Spring, 1713 I Street. Minimum Wage.— Louise Stitt, Wardman Park Hotel. Supervisors of field investigations: Caroline Manning, Women’s Bureau. Ethel Erickson, Women’s Bureau. INDEPENDENT OFFICES, AGENCIES, AND ESTABLISHMENTS AERONAUTICAL BOARD, THE (Room 4842, Navy Department Building. Phone, REpublic 7400, branch 230) The Chief of the Army Air Forces, Maj. Gen. H. H. Arnold, 7119 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. The Chief of Air Corps, Army, Maj. Gen. G. H. Brett, 5058 Lowell Street. Member of War Plans Division, General Staff, Army, Lt. Col. R. C. Jacobs, Jr., 3507 Idaho Avenue. The Chief of Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Rear Admiral J. H. Towers, 2709 Thirty-fourth Place. The Head of Plans Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Capt. R. E. Davison, 3735 Van Ness Street. Member of War Plans Division, Naval Operations, Navy, Lt. Comdr. R. W. Morse, 3611 Thirty-fourth Street. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. ALLEY DWELLING AUTHORITY FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE (Room 1202, 1300 E Street. Phone, REpublic 3201) Chairman.—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Vice chairman.—John Russell Young, President of the Board of Commissioners, District of Columbia. John Nolen, Jr., director of planning, National Capital Park and Planning Commission. Executive officer.—John Ihlder, 2811 P Street. Administrative officer.—James Ring, 3334 Seventeenth Street. AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION (Created by Public Law 534, 67th Cong., March 4, 1923) (Room 1408, New Post Office Department 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. Finis J. Garrett, 3550 Springland Lane. D. John Markey, Frederick, Md. Mrs. Cora W. Baker, Roland Park Apartments, Baltimore, Md. Leslie L. Biffle, the Westchester. Acting secretary.—James E. Mangum, the Cavalier, 3510 Fourteenth Street. 379 380 Congressional Directory AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS (Seventeenth Street, between D and E Streets. Phone, REpublic 8300) NATIONAL : OFFICERS President.—Franklin D. Roosevelt. Vice presidents.—Herbert Hoover, Palo Alto, Calif.; Charles Evans Hughes, Washington, D. C. Chairman.— Norman H. Davis, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.—Daniel W. Bell, Washington, D. C. Counselor.—Francis Biddle, Justice Department, Washington, D. C. Secretary.— Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, D. C. CENTRAL COMMITTEE Norman H. Davis, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C.; Sumner Welles, Under Secretary of State, Washington, D. C.; Daniel W. Bell, Under Secretary of the Treasury, Washington, D. C.; Maj. Gen. James C. Magee, Surgeon General. United States Army, War Department, Washington, D. C.; Rear Admiral Ross T Meclntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy, Navy Department, Washington, D. C.; Francis Biddle, Attorney General of the United States, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. August Belmont, 1115 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Locust Valley, N. Y.; James B. Forgan, First National Bank of Chicago, Chicago. Ill.; William Fortune, Indianapolis, Ind.; George L. Harrison, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Gurney Newlin, 1020 Edison Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; Gustavus D. Pope, Ford Building, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Dwight F. Davis, 2145 Decatur Place, Washington, D. C.; Henry Upson Sims, Birmingham, Ala.; Eliot Wadsworth, 180 Marlborough Street, Boston, Mass.; Lloyd B. Wilson, 725 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. GENERAL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Chairman.— Norman H. Davis, American Red Cross, Seventeenth and D Streets, Washington, D. C. Legal adviser—H. J. Hughes, Brooklandville, Baltimore County, Md. Director, Public Information.—G. Stewart Brown, 3041 N Street. Vice chairman in charge of domestic operations.—James L. Fieser, 5009 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Director of Domestic Operations.—DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edgemoor Lane, Be-thesda, Md. Acting manager, Eastern area.— William Carl Hunt, 515 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Manager, Midwestern area.— William M. Baxter, Jr., 1709 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Manager, Pacific area.—A. L. Schafer, Civie Auditorium, San Francisco, Calif. Admanistrator, Services to the Armed Forces.—Robert E. Bondy, 7010 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistant to the Vice Chairman.—Charles F. Ernst, 2122 California Street. Bieri Roll Call—Howard Bonham, 3167 Nineteenth Street North, Arling- ton, Va. Director, Personnel.—J. Blaine Gwin, 1610 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. General supply officer. —George C. Smith, 1812 K Street. Vice chairman in charge of finance.—James K. McClintock, 1717 Twentieth Street. Director of accounting.—Howard J. Simons, 4910 Arkansas Avenue. Vice chairman in charge of insular and foreign operations.—[Vacant.] Assistant to vice chairman.—1L. M. Mitchell, 2710 Beechwood Place, Arlington, Va. DIRECTORS OF SERVICES Disaster relief. —DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. First aid, water safety, and accident prevention.—Harold F. Enlows, 2753 Brandy-wine Street. Junior Red Cross.—James T. Nicholson, 2914 Forty-fifth Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 381 Medical and health.— Albert McCown, M. D., 714 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. Blood donor.—G. Canby Robinson, M. D., 4712 Keswick Road, Baltimore, Md. Nutrition.—Melva B. Bakkie, 2445 Fifteenth Street. Nursing.—Mary Beard, Manor Club, Rockville, Md. Services to the Armed Forces.—Robert E. Bondy (Administrator), 7010 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Home service—John P. Sanderson, 401 High Street, Alexandria, Va. Military and Naval Welfare.—Don C. Smith, 3615 Chesapeake Street. Volunteer special services.— Mrs, Dwight F. Davis, 2145 Decatur Place. War relief production.—Colin Herrle, 19 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. * ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION (Act of March 4, 1921, created the commission to make recommendations for inscriptions, entombment, etc.) Chairman.—Secretary of War. Secretary of the Navy. Executive and disbursing officer—Commanding officer Washington Quarter-master Depot. ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (Room 6118, War Department Building) The Under Secretary of War, Robert P. Patterson, 1545 Thirty-fifth Street. The Under Secretary of the Navy, James V. Forrestal, 2840 Woodland Drive. Executive commatiee: Army members.—The executive, office of the Under Secretary of War, Brig. Gen. H. K. Rutherford, United States Army, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. The Director of the Planning Branch, office of the Under Secretary of War, Brig. Gen. Charles Hines, United States Army, the Fairfax. Member of Supply Division (G—4), War Department General Staff, Col. Albert W. Waldron, United States Army. Navy members.—Shore Establishments Division, Assistant Secretary’s office, Capt. E. D. Almy, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Director, Materials Division, Office of the Chief of Naval Opera-tions, Capt. A. B. Anderson, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Chief of War Plans Division, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Capt. V. H. Wheeler, 308 King Street Road, Alexandria, Va. Secretary.— Brig. Gen. Charles Hines, United States Army, the Fairfax. Com-mander L. B. Scott (retired), United States Navy, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. ] BOARD OF INVESTIGATION AND RESEARCH— TRANSPORTATION (Third floor, Dupont Circle Building. Phone, ADams 0140) (Established under the Transportation Act of 1940) Chairman.— Nelson Lee Smith, Lafayette Hotel. Vice chairman.—Robert E. Webb, 2401 Calvert Street. Member.—C. E. Childe, New Colonial Hotel. General counsel.—Talcott M. Banks, Jr., Washington Hotel. Secretary.— Truman C. Bigham, 1901 Columbia Road. Administrative officer.— Lewis H. Guenther, 4348 River Road. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed——26 CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION i _ yy a nn, Independent Offices and Establishments 383 Chef of Communications Division.— William L. Quaid, 1430 V Street SE. Assistant chief.—June K. Lawson, 2219 Perry Street NE. Chief of Examining Division.—W. A. McCoy, 3016 McKinley Street. Assistant chiefs.—Coleman F. Cook, 101 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md.; Ernest A. Stocking, 616 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Va. Promotion officer.—James C. O’Brien, 3823 North Chesterbrook Road, Arlington a. Chzef of Information and Recruiting Division.— Carson C. Hathaway, 403 Hamilton Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. : Assistant chief.—Amy A. Harradon, 1234 Hamilton Street. Chief of Investigations Diviston.—James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue. Associate chief. —William H. McMillen, 7611 Georgia Avenue. Assistant chiefs.—Henry T. Richards, 2210 Taylor Street NE.; Joseph C. Welch, ak i Street; E. Newton Steely, 7506 Princeton Street, College ark, Md. ; holy of Personnel Classification Division.—Ismar Baruch, 3708 Brandywine treet. Associate chief.—Joseph L. Spilman, 3235 Rittenhouse Street. Chief of Retirement Division.—Lewis H. Fisher, 1223 Girard Street NE. Assistant chief—Maude V. Carter, 1624 Hobart Street. Actuary.—Laurence A. Baldwin, 3010 P Street. Chief of Service Record Division.— Vivian Carlson, the Westchester. Assistant chiefs.—David S. Davison, 5733 Third Place; Ethel W. Burgess, 3412 Texas Avenue SE. Chief oF Statistical Division.— Archie C. Edwards, 3341 Massachusetts Avenue SE. COLUMBIA HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN (Twenty-fifth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, DUpont 7171) President.—Capt. Chester H. Wells (U. S. Navy, retired). First vice president.—Paul E. Lesh, 1422 F Street. Second vice president.—[Vacant.] Treasurer.— Wayne Kendrick, Rust Building. Assistant treasurer.—Clark G. Diamond. Second assistant treasurer.—Hugh Cumming, Jr. Directors.—George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland; Mary T. Norton, Representative from New Jersey; John M. Robsion, Representative from Kentucky; Mrs. Barry Mohun, Mrs. Reeve Lewis, Clark G. Diamond, Powell Browning, Surg. Gen. James C. Magee, U. S. Army; Surg. Gen. Ross T Meclntire, U. S. Navy; Irwin S. Porter, Maj. Gen. Merritt W. Ireland (U. S. Army, retired); Henry P. Blair, Milton King, Hugh Cumming, Jr., Mrs. George E. Allen, Page Hufty, Reeve Lewis, Jr., Sidney L. Hechinger, Frederick M. Bradley, R. A. Van Orsdel, Corcoran Thom, Jr., Dr. E. W. Titus, Dr. Prentiss Willson, Charles H. Tompkins, George O. Vass, Spencer Gordon, Guy Mason. Superintendent and secretary.—N. L. McDiarmid, M. D., colonel (U. S. Army, retired). COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS (Interior Department Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, branch 2097) Chairman.—Gilmore D. Clarke, White Plains, N. Y. William F. Lamb, New York City. Edward Bruce, Washington, D. C. Paul P. Cret, Philadelphia, Pa. John A. Holabird, Chicago, Ill. Henry V. Poor, 3d, New City, N. Y. Ralph Stackpole, San Francisco, Calif. Secretary and administrative officer—H. P. Caemmerer, 701 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. 384 Congressional Directory Members: Oscar B. Ryder, Chairman, 602 Johnson Place, Alexandria, Va., Vice Chairman of the United States Tariff Commission. Harry C. Hawkins, Clifton, Va., Chief, Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements, Department of State. Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md., Director of Monetary Research, Treasury Department. Grosvenor M. Jones, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue, Assistant Director, Bureauof Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce.George B. L. Arner, 532 Aspen Street, Chief, Division of Foreign AgriculturalResearch, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agri-culture. Edward A. Foley, University Club, Principal Agricultural Economist, Depart-ment of Agriculture. Executive secretary.—Felton M. Johnston, 4718 Albemarle Street. CONGRESSIONAL CLUB, THE (2001 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, DUpont 9215) President.—Mrs. John Taber, of New York. Vice presidents—Mrs. Morris Sheppard, of Texas; Mrs. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont; Mrs. Dow W. Harter, of Ohio; Mrs. Herron Pearson, of Tennessee; Mrs. Homer D. Angell, of Oregon. Recording Secretary.—Mrs. Harry B. Coffee, of Nebraska. Corresponding secretary.— Mrs. John Sparkman, of Alabama.Treasurer.—Mrs. Charles R. Clason, of Massachusetts. Chairman of: Membership committee—Mrs. Emmet O'Neal, of Kentucky. Entertainment committee— Mrs. William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. House committee.—Mrs. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Finance committee.—Mrs. Francis D. Culkin, of New York. Press committee.—Mrs. Karl M. LeCompte, of Iowa. Printing committee.— Mrs. Foster Stearns, of New Hampshire. Book committee.—Mrs. Lewis K. Rockefeller, of New York. Cookbook committee.— Ross Collins, of Mrs. Mississippi. Evening card committee.—Mrs. August Andresen, of Minnesota. Dance committee—Mrs. Harry L. Englebright, of California.Matinee card commitiee.—Mrs. Joseph O’Brien, of New York.Hospitality committee.—Mrs. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan.Hostess committee.—Mrs. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana.Parliamentarian.— Mrs. Daniel A. Reed, of New York. Historian.— Mrs. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Chairman of Associate Members.— Vivian Vestal, of Indiana. Commassioners: Mrs. Jewell W. Swofford, chairman, 1703 New York Avenue. John M. Morin, 1726 Massachusetts Avenue. John J. Keegan, 1826 Biltmore Street. Secretary.— William McCauley, West Falls Church, Va. Chief counsel.—Z. Lewis Dalby, 1615 Longfellow Street. Medical director.—Franklin J. Halpin, 4616 Twenty-ninth Place. Chief, Claims Division.— William R. Carpenter, 1822 Kenyon Street. Chief, Accounting Division.—Bessie O. Reed, All States Hotel. Chief, Emergency Claims Division.— Daniel M. Goodacre, 6156 Thirty-first Street. Deputy Commissioner, District of Columbia Workmen's Compensation Aci.—Frank A. Cardillo, 3932 Morrison Street. RI ALA ES EER, _ TT. Independent Offices and Establishments 385 FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION (Arlington Building. Phone, District 6110) Chairman.—Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs. Members: Maj. Gen. James C. Magee, the Surgeon General of the Army. Rear Admiral Ross T McIntire, the Surgeon General of the Navy. Dr. Thomas Parran, the Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service. Dr. Winfred Overholser, superintendent, St. Elizabeths Hospital. Charles Fahy, the Solicitor General of the United States. Col. George E. Ijams, Assistant Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs. Gen. George H. Wood, special consultant, Veterans’ Administration. Secretary.— Loretta H. Ryan. FEDERAL BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS (Room 7208, Interior Department Building, North. Phone, REpublic 1820, branch 3748) Chairman.—T. W. Norcross, United States Forest Service. Vice chairman.—J. G. Staack, Geological Survey. Secretary.—W. H. Gill, Geological Survey. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION (New Post Office Building, Pennsylvania Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phone, DIstrict 1654) Commissioners: Chairman.—James Lawrence Fly, 4511 Cathedral Avenue. Paul A. Walker, 4301 Forty-third Street. Norman 8. Case, 4706 Seventeenth Street. George Henry Payne, Metropolitan Club. T. A. M. Craven, Langley, Va. Ray C. Wakefield, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Clifford J. Durr, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va. Secretary.—T. J. Slowie, 805 Quackenbos Street. Director of information.—George O. Gillingham, 1322 Madison Street. LAW DEPARTMENT General counsel.—Telford Taylor, 218 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant general counsel. —Benedict P. Cottone, Ravenwood, Sleepy Hollow Road, Falls Church, Va.; Thomas E. Harris, 1233 Thirtieth Street; Lucien Hilmer, 1812 Thirty-fifth Street. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Chief engineer —E. K. Jett, 6305 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chief engineers.—Andrew Cruse, 1901 Wyoming Avenue; E. M. Webster, 3200 Porter Street; Gerald C. Gross, 4543 Grant Road. Field Lisson, Chief —W. D. Terrell, 4760 North Twenty-fourth Road, Arling- ton, Va. International Division, Chief.—Philip F. Siling, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Technical Information Division, Chief —Lynde P. Wheeler, 2325 Twentieth Street. ACCOUNTING, STATISTICAL, AND TARIFF DEPARTMENT Chief Accountant.—W. J. Norfleet, 506 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md. don Chief Accountant.—Hugo Reyer, 6737 Pomander Lane, Chevy Chase, d. ADMINISTRATIVE Chief, License Division.—W. P. Massing, 6233 Thirty-first Street. Chief, Service Division.—N. F. Cureton, 1410 M Street. Chief, Records Diviston.— Walter S. Davis, 801 Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. 386 Congressional Directory Chairman.—Leo T. Crowley, Mayflower Hotel. Directors.—Phillips L. Goldsborough, Tudor Arms Apartment, Baltimore, Md.:Preston Delano, the Hay-Adams House. Secretary to chairman.— Beryl Roberts, 1707 New Hampshire Avenue. Assistant to Phillips L. Goldsborough.— Albert G. Towers, Tudor Arms Apartment,Baltimore, Md. . Counsel.—Francis C. Brown, 520 River Road, Bethesda, Md.; James E. Mark- ham, 1335 Hemlock Street. Chief, Division of Examination.—John G. Nichols, 1424 Sixteenth Street.Controller and Director of Personnel. —Henry W. Riley, 3633 Van Ness Street. Chief, Division of Ligquidation.—Fred C. Kellogg, Mayflower Hotel.Supervising liquidator, Division of Liquidation.— C. Lafayette Hotel. Edw. Tefft,Supervising claim agent, Division of Liquidation.—Dorsey W. Lynch, 309 North Thomas Street, Buckingham, Arlington, Va. Sepericlny accountant, Division of Liquidation—H. R. Burling, 2304 Fortieth treet. Fiscal agent.—W. G. Loeffler, 3225 Military Road. Auditor—Mark A. Heck, 617 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Va.Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.—Donald S. Thompson, 10 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk.—Henry T. Ivey, 1900 F Street. Secretary.—E. F. Downey, 4470 Dexter Street. FEDERAL LOAN AGENCY RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION Board of directors: Chairman.—Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Executive O3s ivi to the chairman, John D. Goodloe, 102 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, d. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. (Assistant, Stanley T. Crossland, 6112 Thirty-second Place.) Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. [Vacaney.] Secretary.—Ronald H. Allen, University Club. Acting secretary.— Alfred T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place. Assistant secretaries.—Alexander B. Galt, 2219 California Street; Minot C.Mulligan, 713 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va.; Leo Nielson, 8322 Six-teenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to the secretary.— Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place.General counsel.—Claude E. Hamilton, Jr., 3122 Tennyson Street.Assistant general counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street ; Harvey J.Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place; Hans A. Klagsbrunn, 3420 Q Street; -Russell L. Snodgrass, 2351 Ashmead Place; C. M. Wright, Manor Park,Rockville, P. O., Md. Independent Offices and Establishments 387 Special counsel.—William C. Fitts, 2320 Ashmead Place. Counsel.—Edward Edelman, 2226 Observatory Place; John C. Erickson, 1735 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va.; William Meade Fletcher, Jr., 1518 Thirty-first Street; Nathan H. Glueck, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street; George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Frank W. Kuehl, 3709, Ingomar Street; Schuyler W. Livingston, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va.; M. A. McLaughlin, Jr., 5914 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md.; George B. Stoner, 1620 Twenty-second Street; Samuel M. Weinstein, 3915 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Robert G. Wilson, 16 Winston Drive, Bethesda, Md. Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurers.—David B. Griffin, 6 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md.; Harry L. Sullivan, 3326 Stephenson Place; Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Dneptyei Street; Jerome T. Kelley, 901 University Parkway, Baltimore, d Assistant to the directors.—Lynn P. Talley, 25640 Massachusetts Avenue. Special assistants to the board of directors.— William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road; Frank C. Wright, 811 Vermont Avenue; George F. Buskie, 2311 Connecticut Avenue; Charles A. Jones, 3821 Gramercy Street; Joseph J. Rice, Mayflower Hotel. Examining Division: Chief.—M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. Assistant Chiefs.— Albert E. Bassett, 2900 Brandywine Street; Thomas H. Davis, 2230 California Street; W. J. Johnson, Marlyn Apartments; W. C. Ribenack, 1739 N Street; Frank T. Ronan, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; W. E. Stroud, 3101 Thirty-fourth Street; R. J. Taylor, 2820 Thirty-sixth Place. Agency Division: Chief —R. A. Brownell, Westchester Apartments. Assistant Chief.—T. T. Perkins, Hillandale, Md. Railroad Division: Chief.— William W. Sullivan, Wardman Park Hotel, Self-liquidating Division: Chief—Morton Macartney, 4267 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Dr nrige and Irrigation Section, Chief.—Albert L. Strong, 4514 Connecticut venue. Engineering Section, Chief.— Walter L. Drager, 4914 Sedgwick Street. Mining Section, Chief —John E. Norton, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Finance Section, Chief —Edward T. Stein, 133 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md : Statistical and Economic Division: Chief.—David C. Elliott, 4616 Brookview Drive, Westhaven, Md. Assistant Chief —John H. Chase, 200 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Information: Chief.— William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. Division of Personnel: Chief.—Donald S. Dawson, 2017 O Street. Auditing Division: Chief Auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. Assistant Chief Auditor—H. R. Stroberg, 2325 Fifteenth Street. Chief Clerk and Building Superintendent.—Frank T. Tracy, 2501 South Hayes Street, Arlington, Va. ELECTRIC HOME AND FARM AUTHORITY (Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, 101 Indiana Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) President.—A. T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place. Trustees.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street; John D. Goodloe, 102 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, Md.; A. T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place; Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue; Morton Macartney, 4267 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va.; Harry L. Sullivan, 3326 Stephenson Place. Gerard bie shee gunn A. Suppler, 1020 Woodside Parkway, Silver pring, . Secretary.—Leo Nielson, 8322 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant secretary.—Harrison H. Turner, 814 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant treasurer.—Claude J. Parnell, 1206 Hemlock Street. Counsel.—Lamar P. Cox, 1703 K Street. Commercial manager.—Henry D. Brite, 523 Ashford Road, Silver Spring, Md. Credit manager.—Carl T. Rose, 7806 Boston Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. 388 Congressional Directory ~ THE RFC MORTGAGE COMPANY (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: President —George B. Williams, 2645 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Vice president.—Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street.Vice president.—M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. [Vacaney.] Secretary.—Edward J. Singer, 2755 Macomb Street. Assistant secretary.—Harry L. Babbit, 605 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va.General counsel.—George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.Assistant general counsel.—Matthew A. McLaughlin, Jr., 5914 Wilson Lane,Bethesda, Md.; Paul C. Akin, 8312 Carey Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurer.— Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. : Chief auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. Chief Clerk.—Frank T. Tracy, 2501 South Hayes Street, Arlington, Va. DISASTER LOAN CORPORATION (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Managing directors: Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Albert L. Strong, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.—Minot, C. Mulligan, 713 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant secretary.—Merle A. Crandall, 2409 North Upton Street, Arlington,Va. : Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue.Assistant treasurer.— David B. Griffin, 6 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md.General counsel. —Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place.Assistant general counsel.—Robert G. Wilson, 16 Winston Drive, Bethesda, Md. ; FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Vice president.—Claude E. Hamilton, Jr., 3122 Tennyson Street.Vice president and general counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street.William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. Robert V. Fleming, Riggs National Bank. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. [Vacaney.] Ghaic general counsel.—Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, d FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION (Federal Housing Administration Building, Vermont Avenue and K Street. Phone, REpublic 8360) Independent Offices and Establishments 389 Director of Underwriting.—Curt Mack, ‘“Fourstairs,” Route 1, Vienna, Va. Deputy administrators (mutual mortgage insurance): Zone I.—John A. Sheridan, 1317 Vermont Street North, Arlington, Va. Zone II.—John G. Rouse, 403 Somerset Road, Baltimore, Md. Zone ITI.—Kent R. Mullikin, 209 Patuxent Road, Laurel, Md. Zone IV.—Lawson M. Watts, Westchester Apartments. Zone V.—Franklin D. Richards, Lee Sheraton Hotel. Bel, of the Research and Statistics Division.—Shirley K. Hart, 1026 Sixteenth treet. Executive assistant and budget officer.— Wesley Zane, Shoreham Hotel. Comptroller.— Theodore B. Nickson, 2316 North Upton Street, Arlington, Va. Director of the Technical Division.—Howard P. Vermilya, 3034 Q Street. Director of Land Planning Division.—Seward H. Mott, 4727 Thirtieth Street. Assistant to the administrator.—R. Winton Elliott, 2517 Thirty-ninth Street. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK BOARD (Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, First Street and Indiana Avenue) Chairman.—John H. Fahey, Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building. Vice chairman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.—Franklin W. Hancock, Jr., Continental Hotel; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; W. H. Husband, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Assistant to the Board.—Ormond E. Loomis, 1861 Wyoming Avenue. Executive assistant to the chairman.—John M. Hager, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy to board member.—Carey Winston, 3438 Thirty-fourth Place. Governor, Federal Home Loan Bank System.—James Twohy, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy Governor.— William F. Penniman, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant Governor.—David Ford, 3041 Sedgwick Street. Secretary to the Board.—J. Francis Moore, 3525 Davenport Terrace. Assistant secretaries.— Harry Caulsen, 2901 Eighteenth Street; Howard F. Sedg- wick, 905 Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. General counsel.—Col. Harold Lee, 5 Forest Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Associate general counsel—Ernest K. Neumann, 4408 Brandywine Street; Kenneth G. Heisler, 3511 Davenport Street. Financial adviser.—F. X. Pavesich, 1422 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Comptroller.—R. Reyburn Burklin, 5721 Western Avenue. Chairman, Review Committee—Nathan V. Morgan (acting), 6123 Utah Avenue. Chief examiner.— Verne C. Bonesteel, 3020 Tilden Street. Director of personnel—George R. Hulverson, 6000 Thirteenth Place. Diverior of public relations—Howard F. Vickery (acting), 3007 Connecticut venue. Editor, Federal Home Loan Bank Review.—Leo Grebler, 3313 Ordway Street. Director of information.—Theodore Tiller, 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. -Direcor of research and statistics.—Clifford C. Boyd (acting), 2332 Thirty-ninth treet. HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION (Washington office: Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, First Street and Indiana Avenue. New York City office: 2 Park Avenue) Board of directors: Chairman.—John H. Fahey, Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building. Vice chairman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.—Franklin W. Hancock, Jr., Continental Hotel; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; W. H. Husband, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Assistant to the Board —Ormond E. Loomis, 1861 Wyoming Avenue. Executive assistant to the chairman.—John M. Hager, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to the chairman.—John W. Childress, 2200 Twentieth Street. Deputy to board member —Carey Winston, 3438 Thirty-fourth Place. General manager —Charles F. Cotter, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Deputy general managers—Ivan D. Carson, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Donald H. McNeal, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.; E. E. Wendell, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Assistant to the general manager—Thomas L. Peyton, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. ¥. Secretary.—J. Francis Moore, 3525 Davenport Terrace. Assistant secretaries.—Harry Caulsen, 2901 Eighteenth Street; Howard F. Sedg- wick, 905 Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. 390 Congressional Directory General counsel.—Col. Harold Lee, 5 Forest Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Associate general counsel.—John B. Murphy, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Assistant general counsel.— Neal L. Thompson, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Matthew Gault, 1422 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Financial adviser.—F. X. Pavesich, 1422 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Director of personnel.—George R. Hulverson, 6000 Thirteenth Place. Poe of public relations—Howard F. Vickery (acting), 3007 Connecticut venue, Director of information.— Theodore Tiller, 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. Auditor—Fred F. Lovell, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Dratior of research and statistics.—Clifford C. Boyd (acting), 2332 Thirty-ninth treet. : Comptroller.—R. D. Andrews, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Treasurer.— Patrick J. Maloney, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Appraisal Section, Chief.—Asa B. Groves, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Recon ining Section, Chief—G. Lloyd Preacher, 2 Park Avenue, New York, REGIONAL OFFICES Regional managers: Region No. 1 (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont).— Merrill Hunt, 270 Broad-way, New York City, 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, Cincinnati & Span Bell Telephone Building, 209 West Seventh Street, Cincinnati, hio. Region No. 3—A (Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Puerto Rico).—Homer A. McNeely (acting), John Silvey Building, Mari-etta and Spring Streets, Atlanta, Ga. Region No. 3—B (Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee).—Paul E. Vardeman, Sterick Building, Memphis, Tenn. Region No. /—A (Illinois and Wisconsin).—Charles W. Collins, the Merchandise Mart, 336 North Wells Street, Chicago, Ill. Region No. /,—B (Indiana and Michigan).—Sylvester J. Christie, National Bank Building, Cadillac Square and Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Region No. 6—A (North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, and Kansas).—C. Russell Cravens, Woodmen of the World Building, Omaha, Nebr. Region No. 5—B (New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas).—Joseph R. Smith, Dallas Cotton Exchange Building, St. Paul and San Jacinto Streets, Dallas, Tex. Region No. 6 (Arizona, California, Territory of Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Territory of Alaska).— Robert R. Rennie, Pacific Building, 821 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif. State managers: Indiana.— Robert M. Collier, Occidental Building, southeast corner Washington and Illinois Streets, Indianapolis. M Gs ackuselie Dani] J. Le Hand, Park Square Building., 31 St. James Avenue, oston. Missoni in. C. Vandover, Old Customhouse, Eighth and Olive Streets, t. Louis. New Jersey.—John R. M. O’Connor, Globe Indemnity Building, 20 Washington Place, Newark. Pennsylvania.—J. S. Baughman, Widener Building, Juniper and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia. : Wisconsin.—Federal Building, 517 East Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee; legal department only. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION (Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, First Street and Indiana Avenue) Board of trustees: y Chairman.—John H. Fahey, Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building. Vice chatrman.—T. D. Webb, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Members.— Franklin W. Hancock, Jr., Continental Hotel; Fred W. Catlett, Westchester Apartments; W. H. Husband, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Independent Offices and Establishments 391 Assistant to the Board.—Ormond E. Loomis, 1861 Wyoming Avenue. Executive assistant to the chairman.—John M. Hager, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy to Board member.—Carey Winston, 3438 Thirty-fourth Place. General manager.—Oscar R. Kreutz, 6401 Thirty-second Street. Deputy general manager.—Corwin A. Fergus, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.—J. Francis Moore, 3525 Davenport Terrace. Assistant secretaries.—Harry Caulsen, 2901 Eighteenth Street; Howard F. Sedg-wick, 905 Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. General counsel.—Col. Harold Lee, 5 Forest Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Assistant general counsel.—Robert B. Jacoby, Westchester Apartments. Financial adviser.—F. X. Pavesich, 1422 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Chief examiner.— Verne C. Bonesteel, 3020 Tilden Street. Director of personnel.—George R. Hulverson, 6000 Thirteenth Place. Blin of research and statistics.—Clifford C. Boyd (acting), 2332 Thirty-ninth treet. Bivecior of public relations.—Howard F. Vickery (acting), 3007 Connecticut venue. Auditor.—Fred F. Lovell, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Comptroller.—R. Reyburn Burklin, 5721 Western Avenue. Assistant comptroller.—Charles K. Berlin, 6747 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) President.— Warren Lee Pierson, Shoreham Hotel. Vice president.—W. D. Whittemore, Westchester Apartments. Solicitor.—Hampson Gary, La Salle Apartments. Secretary.— Hawthorne Arey, 3 West Saul Road, Kensington, Md. Assistant sceretary.—J. C. Futrelle, 4828 Woodway Lane. Treasurer—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurer.—David B. Griffin 6 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. Members, board of trustees: Jesse H. Jones, Administrator, Federal Loan Agency, Shoreham Hotel. Warren Lee Pierson, president, Export-Import Bank, Shoreham Hotel. Charles B. Henderson, chairman, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1524 Thirty-third Street. : : Harry D. White, Director of Monetary Research, Treasury Department, 6810 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Russell L. Snodgrass, assistant general counsel, Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration, 2351 Ashmead Place. Henry A. Mulligan, treasurer, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. W. J. Johnson, assistant chief, Examining Division, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Leslie A. Wheeler, director, Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture, 810 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Assistant Secretary of State, 4000 Nebraska Avenue. W. L. Clayton, Deputy Administrator, Federal Loan Agency, 2839 Woodland Drive. [Vacancy.] METALS RESERVE COMPANY (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chatrman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. [Vacaney.] President.—Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Vice president.—G. Temple Bridgman, Hay-Adams House. 392 Congressional Directory RUBBER RESERVE COMPANY DEFENSE PLANT CORPORATION Board of directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Claude E. Hamilton, Jr., 3122 Tennyson Street. John W. Snyder, the General Scott, 1 Scott Circle.Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. [Vacancy.] President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue.Executive vice president.—John W. Snyder, the General Scott, 1 Scott Circle. Secretary.— Alfred T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place.Assistant secretaries.—Leo Nielson, 8322 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md.;Harrison H. Turner, 814 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va. Treasurer.—Harry L. Sullivan, 3326 Stephenson Place.Assistant treasurer—G. H. Connerat, 5516 Thirty-ninth Street.General counsel.—Hans A. Klagsbrunn, 3420 Q Street.Assistant general counsel.—Schuyler W. Livingston, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Independent Offices and Establishments 393 DEFENSE SUPPLIES CORPORATION (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Sam H. Husbands, 56309 Nevada Avenue. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. [Vacancy.] President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Vice presidents.—M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel; John D. Goodloe, 102 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, Md.; George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; William A. M. ‘Burden, 1224 Thirtieth Street; William Barclay Harding, -1804 Forty-fifth Street. Secretary.— Ronald H. Allen, University Club. deling secretary.— Dudley H. Digges, 1541 North Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, d Aratotons secretary.— Merle A. Crandall, 2409 North Upton Street, Arlington, a. Treasurer.— Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant treasurer.—Henry N. Bassett, 3925 Fulton Street. General counsel.—George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant general counsel.—George B. Stoner, 1620 Twenty-second Street; Edward M. Weld, 2905 Q Street. Chief auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. DEFENSE HOMES CORPORATION (Federal Loan Agency Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. EXecutive 3111) Dzirectors: William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Sam H. Husbands, 56309 Nevada Avenue. M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. George B. Williams, 2645 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va.; Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Vice Drasioeni, —George B. Williams, 2645 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va.; M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. Secretary.— Dudley fi. Digges, 1541 North Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant secretaries.—Harry L. Babbit, 605 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va.; Edward J. Singer, 2755 Macomb Street. Treasurer.—James W. Considine, 4334 Thirty-sixth Street. Assistant treasurer.—J. C. Windham, 1437 Rhode Island Avenue. General counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Assistant general coumse —Matthew A. McLaughlin, Jr., 5914 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. Auditor in charge—W. A. Moyer, 824 Sheridan Street. Chief Clerk.—Frank T. Tracy, 2501 South Hayes Street, Arlington, Va. FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION (1800 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, District 0122) Commassioners: Chairman.—Leland Olds, 6601 Brookeville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice chairman.—Claude L. Draper, 3056 Porter, Street. Basil Manly, 5059 Sedgwick Street. John W. Scott, 3505 Macomb Street. Clyde L. Seavey, Alban Towers. Secretary.—Leon M. Fuquay, 4007 Connecticut Avenue. 394 Congressional Directory Bureau of Law: General counsel.—Richard J. Connor, 9423 Thornhill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Bureau of Water Power: Chief of Bureau.—John C. Beebe, 4624 North Twenty-fourth Street, Arlington, Va. Bureau of Electrical Engineering: Chief of Bureau.— Thomas R. Tate, 2126 York-town Road. Bureau of Accounts, Finance and Rates: Chief of Bureau.—Charles W. Smith, Park Avenue, Halethorpe, Baltimore, Md. Chaef, Division of Accounts.— Walter E. Baker, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Division of Finance and Statistics.—E. G. Craig, Sleepy Hollow Road, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Division of Rates and Research.—H. Zinder, 5307 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Division of Original Cost.—M. W. Van Scoyoe, 411 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief engineer.—Roger B. McWhorter, 3624 Davis Street. Chief trial examiner.—Frank A. Hampton, 2700 Q Street. Chief, Publications Diviston.—Calvin Dold, 3500 Cameron Mills Road, Alexan- dria, Va. Chaef, Information Diviston.—John W. Jenkins, 315 A Street NE. Director of Personnel.—H. M. Thomas, Chastleton Hotel. Budget and fiscal officer.— Earl F. Sechrest, R. F. D. 2, Gaithersburg, Md. Regional offices: New York, N. Y.—Parcel Post Building, 341 Ninth Avenue. Baltimore, Md.—Baltimore Trust Building, 10 Light Street. Chicago, Ill.—United States Custom House, 610 South Canal Street. Atlanta, Ga.—10 Forsyth Street Building. Fort Worth, Tex.— Neil P. Anderson Building, Seventh and Lamar Streets. San Francisco, Calif.— Phelan Building, Market and O’Farrell Streets. NATIONAL DEFENSE POWER UNIT Principal officer in charge of National Defense phases.— Leland Olds. Director.—Thomas R. Tate. Assistant Director, in charge of regional offices.—E. Robert de Luccia. Chief, Power Requirements Section.—E. G. Craig. Chief, Power Supply Section.— George H. Buck. Assistant Chief, Power Supply Section.— Frank L. Weaver. . Chief, Liaison Section.—Richard J. Connor. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM, BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE (Federal Reserve Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1100) Chairman.— Marriner S. Eccles, the Shoreham Hotel. Private secretary.—Va Lois Egbert, Wardman Park Hotel. Vice chairman.—Ronald Ransom, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Private secretary.— Anne I. Cotten, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. M. S. Szymezak, Wardman Park Hotel. Private secretary.—A. M. Stone, 1300 Maple View Place SE. John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street. Private secretary.— Alvin C. Walters, 4413 Fifth Street. Ernest G. Draper, 2527 Belmont Road. Private secretary.—Margaret E. Rauber, 1921 Kalorama Road. Assistant to the chairman.— Lawrence Clayton, 4808 Seventeenth Street. Special assistant to the chairman.— Elliott Thurston, 1804 Forty-fifth Street. Secretary.— Chester Morrill, 3908 Ingomar Street. Assistant secretaries.— Liston P. Bethea, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; S. R. Carpenter, 2738 McKinley Street; F. A. Nelson, 4436 Yuma St. General counsel.—Walter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Road. Assistant general counsel—J. P. Dreibelbis, the Shoreham; George B. Vest, 5005 Linnean Avenue; B. Magruder Wingfield, 3433 Thirty-fourth Street. Director, Division of Research and Statistics.—E. A. Goldenweiser, 5914 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant director, Division of Research and Statistics.— Woodlief Thomas, 26 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY (Social Security Building. Phone, REpublic 6530) Administrator.— ‘Paul V. McNutt, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant Administrator.— Watson B. Miller, 4101 Fordham Road,Assistants to the Administrator—Mary E. Switzer, 5521 Colorado Avenue; James A. Drain, Stoneleigh Courts; Alvin Roseman, 3416 Porter Street.Darector of Research.— Thomas J. Woofter, Jr., 4318 Warren Street.Durector of Information.— Jesse O. Irvin, 4534 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.Executive assistant to the Administrator.— Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue. Director of Personnel.—Robert M. Barnett, 6509 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Budget officer.—Leo L. Miller, 2845 Northampton Street. Chief Clerk.—Harold Dotterer, 306 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General counsel.—Jack B. Tate, 4432 Q Street. Associate general counsel.—[Vacant.] Assistant general counsel.—Darrell T. Lane, 5704 Nebraska Avenue; Leonard J. Calhoun, 6 Fontaine Street, Alexandria, Va.; Robert P. Bingham, 4554Klingle Street; Bernice Lotwin, 303 Roosevelt Street, Bethesda, Md. SOCIAL SECURITY BOARD (1712 G Street. Phone, DIstrict 2812) Board members.— Arthur J. Altmeyer, chairman, 4613 Rock Spring Road, Arling-ton, Va.; George E. Bigge, 5131 Massachusetts Avenue; Ellen S. Woodward,Westchester Apartments. | Executive director.—Oscar M. Powell, Westchester Apartments. | Assistant executive director— William L. Mitchell, 6669 Barnaby Street.Director, Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance.—John J. Corson, 3601 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Bureau of Public Assistance.—Jane M. Hoey, 1200 Sixteenth Street.Director, Bureau of Employment Security.—Ewan Clague, 3821 Woodley Road.Director, Bureau of Research and Statistics.—I. S. Falk, 41 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Bureau Accounts Audits.— J. 3224 of and Leonard Wilbert, Military Road. Director, Informational Service.—Max Stern, 2762 Chain Bridge Road. Aen consultant.— William R. Williamson, 3400 Fairhill Drive, Anacostia, D Chairman, Appeals Council. —Joseph E. McElvain, 4615 Brandywine Street. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE (Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 6530) Surgeon General.—Thomas Parran, 3734 Oliver Street. Assistant to the Surgeon General— Warren F. Draper, 4710 North Twenty-fifth Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Surgeons General.—M. C. Guthrie, 15 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.;Lawrence Kolb, 6645 Thirty-second Street; Paul M. Stewart, 2210 WyomingAvenue; R. P. Sandidge, 6649 Thirty-second Street; J. W. Mountin, 3637Brandywine Street; E. R. Coffey, 3361 Rittenhouse Street; R. A. Vonderlehr,1862 Mintwood Place. Chief Clerk and administrative officer.— Daniel Masterson, 1305 Kearney Street NE. 396 Congressional Directory NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH Director.— Assistant Surg. Gen. L.. R. Thompson, 12 North Drive, Bethesda, Md. UNITED STATES OFFICE OF EDUCATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commassioner.—John W. Studebaker, the Shoreham. Assistant Commassioner.—Bess Goodykoontz, 531 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Commissioner for Vocational Education.—John C. Wright, 5624 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Commissioner.—C. F. Klinefelter, 3733 Veazey Street. Chief Clerk.—Marie E. Schutt, 1721 North Quincey Street, Arlington, Va. Private secretary to the Commissioner.—Marjorie S. Scott, 5611 Madison Street, Bethesda, Md. Chiefs of Divisions.—Consultants: M. M. Proffitt, 3209 Tennyson Street; David Segel, 1420 North Johnson Street, Arlington, Va. American School Systems Division. kV. Deftenbaugh, 519 Butternut Street. Higher Education Division.—F. J. Kelly, Westchester Apartments. Comparative Education Division.—J. F. Abel, 2025 H Street. Special Problems Division.— Katherine M. Cook, 405 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. Statistical Division.—X. M. Foster, 4506 Garrison Street. Radio, Publications and Exhibits.—W. D. Boutwell, 3254 O Street. Editor in Chief —Olga A. Jones, the Kennedy-Warren. Library.—Sabra W. Vought, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Library Service Division.—Ralph M. Dunbar, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Executive assistant in amily Education.— Ronald V. Billington, 1601 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va. Consultants in Vocational Education.—James R. Coxen, 1 Edgehill Drive, Alex-andria, Va.; Clarence E. Rakestraw, 3900 Connecticut Avenue; Rall I. Grigsby, 4733 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Agricultural Education Service.—W. T. Spanton, 3227 Vista Street NE. chi and Industrial Education Service.—1. S. Hawkins, 4718 Forty-sixth treet. Home Economics Education Service.—Edna P. Amidon, 1708 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va Business Education Service—B. Frank Kyker, route 3, Vienna, Va. Occupational Information and Guidance Service.—Harry A. Jager, 3238 Arcadia Place. Research and Statistical Service (vocational education).—G. M. Ruch, 4225 Forty-third Street. Vocational Rehabilitation Division.— Director, John Aubel Kratz, 4302 Spring-dale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Civilian Conservation Corps Camp Education.—Director, Howard W. Oxley, Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Va. FEDERAL ADVISORY BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chairman.—Clarence Poe, representative of agricultural interests. The Secretary of Agriculture, Claude R. Wickard, the Westchester. The Secretary of Commerce, Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. The Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, Department of Labor Building. The Commissioner of Education, John W. Studebaker, the Shoreham. Robert Watt, representative of labor. Paul H. Nystrom, 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.) NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION (2145 C Street. Phone, REpublic 6530) Administrator.—Williams, 5107 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Aubrey Deputy Administrator.— Dillard B. Lasseter, Wellington Villa and Mount Vernon Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 397 Director, Personnel Office.—Richard W. Bunch, 2720 Wisconsin Avenue. Direlor, Division of Finance and Statisttcs.— Vernon D. Northrop, 3197 Porter treet. Director, Work Projects Division.—John H. Lasher, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Director, Information Officc.—Norman Kuhne, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Director, Health Office.—Dr. C. E. Rice, 6500 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Office of Negro Affairs—Mary M. Bethune, 1812 Ninth Street. Bisetion, Soong Work Divigion.—George C. Mann, 1123 Taylor Avenue, River- ale, ; ® : Director, Youth Personnel ston.— Mary H. S. Hayes, 1507 Thirty-third Street. Chairman, Advisory Committee.—Charles W. Taussig, 120 Wall Street, New York City (Washington address, Carlton Hotel). CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS (Otis Building, 810 Eighteenth Street. Phone REpublic 6530) Director.—James J. McEntee, Fairfax Hotel. Assistant Director (executive).—Charles H. Taylor, 1506 Van Buren Street. Assistant Director (adminisirative).— Henry L. Caravati, the General Scott. Secretary to the Director—Ruth H. McGehee, 4818 Norch Third Street, Arlington, Va. Acting chief clerk.—Richard K. McKey, 211 North Trenton Street, Arlington, Va. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Twelfth and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Commissioner.—W. G. Campbell, 4801 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Asian Commissioner.—P. B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Principal technical adviser.—Charles W. Crawford, 4844 Old Dominion Drive, Arlington, Va. : Chief Food and Drug Inspector.—George P. Larrick, 4841 Thirtieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Aerio to the Commaissioner.—F. B. Linton, 222 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, d Chief of— 7 le Division.—L. D. Elliott, North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Import Division.— Arthur Stengel (acting), 3125 Cleveland Avenue. Division of State Cooperation.—W. S. Frisbie, 1718 Irving Street. Bacteriological Diviston.—A. C. Hunter, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. Cosmetic Diviston.— Dan Dahle (acting), 416 Auburn Street, Takoma Park, Md. Drug Divistion.— Robert P. Herwick, 4801 Connecticut Avenue, Food Division.—W. B. White, 4629 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Microanalytical Division.—B. J. Howard, 1212 Decatur Street. Drgssson of Pharmacology.—H. O. Calvery, 47 West Baltimore Street, Kensing- ton, Md. Vitamin Division.—E. M. Nelson, 1830 Jackson Street NE. 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.— Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah; Sol Bloom, Representative from New York; Louis E. Graham, Representative from Pennsylvania; Theodore W. Noyes, Frederic A. Delano, and H. C. Newcomer, citizens of the District of Columbia; Ernest G. Draper, citizen of Connecticut; Nathan Poole, Addison T. Smith, citizens of the District of Columbia; the president and the secretary of the institution. Secretary.—Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, 1748 Lamont Street. Treasurer.— Nathan Poole, 1710 I Street. Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. 64674°—77-2—1st ed 27 398 Congressional Directory FREEDMEN’S HOSPITAL (Sixth and Bryant Streets. Phone, MIchigan 6262) Director in chief —T. Edward Jones, M. D. Assistant director of adminisiration.—Lawrence W. Jackson, M. D. Associate medical officer—Bruce K. Bailey, M. D Rontgenologist.—James L. Martin, M. D. Pathologist.—George W. Adams, M. D. Director of Nurses.—Rheva A. Speaks. Chief Clerk.—Grace S. Jackson. 4 ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL (Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, LIncoln 1426) . Superintendent.Winfred Overholser, M. D. — Assistant to Superintendent.—Monie Sanger. First assistant physician.—Riley H. Guthrie, M. D. Chief Clerk.—Paul M. Lehman. Superintendent of Nurses.—Edith M. Haydon, R. N. Personal assistant to the Superintendent.— Arnold W. Barbour. HOWARD UNIVERSITY (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, DUpont 6100) FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (Constitution Avenue at Sixth Street. Phone, NAtional 8206) Commissioners: |Chairman.— William A. Ayres, the Kennedy-Warren. (The chairmanship rotates annually according to seniority.) ;Garland 8S. Ferguson, the Wyoming Apartments. | Charles H. March, the Shoreham. \ Ewin L. Davis, 2150 Wyoming Avenue. : Robert E. Freer, 116 Woodlawn Avenue, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, 126 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Chairman.—M. A. White, 4801 Connecticut Avenue.Economic adviser to the Commission.— Willis J. Ballinger, 202 North Trenton Street, Arlington, Va. Chief counsel. —William T. Kelley, 306 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant chief counsel. —Martin A. Morrison, 1327 Gallatin Street; Richard P.Whiteley, 2915 Woodland Drive; Walter B. Wooden, 4510 Amherst Road,College Park, Md.; Joseph J. Smith, Jr., 1030 South Twenty-sixth Street, Arlington, Va. Chief examiner.—James A. Horton, 3016 Tilden Street. Assistant chief examiners.—Ishmael Burton, 1313 Lawrence Street N .; Joseph E. Sheehy, 1650 Harvard Street. : Chef trial examiner.—Web Woodfill, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Assistant chief trial ezaminer.—F. C. Baggarly, 2915 Connecticut Avenue.Director, Trade Practice Conferences.—Henry Miller, 7600 Morningside Drive.Assistant director.— William B. Snow, Jr., Cordova Apartments. Director, Radio and Periodical Division.—PGad B. Morehouse, 9419 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. int director—William F. Davidson, 6404 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, d Director, Medical Advisory Diviston.—Dr. James J. Durrett, 1661 Crescent Place. Chief, Export Trade Section.—Ellen L. Love, 3748 McKinley Street. Chief economist.— William H. England, 1344 Iris Street. Chief accountant.— Arthur E. Lundvall, 3710 Greenmount Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Chief statistician.—G. A. Stephens, 3518 Northampton Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 399 Assistant secretaries.—Joe L. Evins, 6621 Piney Branch Road; Andrew N. Ross, 1343 Sheridan Street. Chief, Docket Section.—J. W. Karsner, 5232 Seventh Street. Chief, Legal Research Section.—Richard S. Ely, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Budget and Finance Section.—Robert C. Dalrymple, 5408 Harwood Road, Bethesda, Md. : Chief, Personnel Section.—Harold L. Corey, 933 L Street. Librarian.—Howard R. Eliason, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Mail and Files Section.— William H. Galbraith, 3408 Tenth Street NE. Chief, Publications Section.—H. B. Stamm, 117 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Clots Sienog amide Section.—Joseph E. Haugh, 4014 Kennedy Street, Hyattsville, Chief, Supply and Service Section.— Huber Frear, McLean, Va. BRANCH OFFICES OF THE COMMISSION New York.—Rolf H. Kielland, attorney in charge, 45 Broadway. Chicago.— William F. Dinnen, attorney in charge, 433 West Van Buren Street. San Francisco.—Clarence T. Sadler, attorney in charge, 548 Federal Office Building. Seattle.— Henry M. White, attorney in charge, 801 Federal Building. New Orleans.— William B. Lott, attorney in charge, 321 Federal Office Building. FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY (Interior Building, North. Phone, REpublic 7337) OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Administrator.— Philip B. Fleming, 1705 Hoban Road. Secretary to the Administrator.—Leona L. Kempainen, 1660 Lanier Place. Executive assistant and budget officer.—John N. Edy, 6960 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md General counsel.— Alan Johnstone, the Marlyn Apartments. Director of Engineering Management.— George D. Babcock, 2223 H Street. Director of Research and Statistics.—Foster Adams, 2023 Belmont Road. Director of Information—M. L. Ramsay, 4836 Rock Spring Road, Arlington, Va. Director of Personnel.—A. J. Sarré, 2941 Northampton Street. Pree of Imvestigations.—G. H. Butler, 425 Hamilton Avenue, Silver Spring, d Dzrector of Defense Housing Division.—Clark Foreman, 5056 Conduit Road. Director of Mutual Ownership Defense Housing Division.— Lawrence Westbrook, 1911 R Street. : Director of Defense Public Works Division—M. E. Gilmore, 1633 Van Buren Street. Special Assistant on Labor Relations—Ray C. Kirkpatrick, Westchester Apart- ments. ; Consultant on Public Works Planning.—Jacob Baker, 1900 F Street. Special Assistant to the Administrator.—Edgar F. Puryear, Silver Spring, Md. WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION (Walker-Johnson Building, 1734 New York Avenue. Phone, District 2310) Commissioner.— Howard O. Hunter, Hay-Adams House. Secretary to the Commaissioner.— Margaret Ross, 1812 G Street. Deputy Commissioner.—F. H. Dryden, Cambridge Arms Apartment, Baltimore, Md Special Assistant.—Burton E. Palmer, R. F. D. 3, Bethesda, Md. Director, Division of Information.—Earl Minderman, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Chief, Press Information Section.— Truman T. Felt, 4808 Chevy Chase Boule- vard, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Division of Investigation.—Roger J. Bounds, R. F. D. 3, Bethesda, Md. Director, Division of Statistics.— Malcolm B. Catlin, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Division of Research.—Howard B. Myers, 103 Cleave Drive, Falls Church, Va. General Counsel.William Linden, 1501 W Street — SE. Economic Advisor.—Arthur E. Burns, 6521 Thirty-second Street. 400 Congressional Directory Assistant Commissioner, Division of Operations.—R. L. MacDougall, Stoneleigh Court Apartments. Chief Engineer, Engineering Division.—Perry A. Fellows, 1937 Thirth-eighth Street. Assistant Chief Engineer, Engineering Division.—O. K. Yeager, Skyline Towers. Director, Project Control Division.—Arthur D. Morrell, 4834 Davenport Street. Director, Public Work Reserve.—Arthur D. Morrell, 4834 Davenport Street. Assistant Commissioner, Division of Community Service Programs.—Florence Kerr, Marlyn Apartments. ; Executive Assistant.—Jay du Von, R. F. D. 1, Manassas, Va. Assistant Commissioner, Division of Employment.—Malcolm J. Miller, 3505 Springland Lane. Assistant Commissioner, Division of Reemployment and Training.—Fred R. Rauch, Woodley Park Towers. Assistant Director.—Bruce Uthus, 6118 Forty-third Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Commissioner, Division of Finance—Walter H. Brummett, Jr., 4405 Bywood Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Director.—Richard Ball, 5415 Falls Road Terrace, Baltimore, Md. Assistant Commissioner, Division of Administration.—Paul Edwards, the West-chester. PUBLIC WORKS ADMINISTRATION (North Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1860) Commissioner of Public Works.—M. E. Gilmore, 1633 Van Buren Street. Executive officer.—J. J. Madigan, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. General counsel. —George W. Meuth, 2828 North Hampton Street. Executive assistant.—Fred E. Schnepfe, Westchester Apartments. Division Directors: Accounts.— Albin J. Plant (chief project accountant), 318 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. Engineering.—Garland L. Rounds, 4625 North Thirty-seventh Street, Arling- ton, Va. ] Finance.— William C. Denny, 1624 Underwood Street. Legal.— (See General counsel.) Power.—Douglas G. Wright (acting), 4929 Western Avenue. Projects and Statistics.—Pere F. Seward, 7400 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Chairman, Board of Labor Review.— Lindsay Rogers, Cosmos Club. PW A Representative for Puerto Rico.—Ricardo Skerrett, Jr. (acting), Banco Popular Building, San Juan, P. R. The regional offices of the Public Works Administration have been closed. All inquiries should be addressed to the Commissioner of Public Works. | PUBLIC ROADS ADMINISTRATION (Willard Building, 515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 5960) Commissioner.—Thomas H. MacDonald, Cosmos Club. Chzef of Division of— Highway Transport.—H. E. Hilts, 1914 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Construction.—H. K. Bishop, the Shoreham. Tests.—E. F. Kelley, 6409 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Control.—C. D. Curtiss, 10 West Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Laws and Coniracts.—L. E. Boykin, 2825 Albemarle Street. Information.—H. S. Fairbank, 2041 East Thirty-second Street, Baltimore, Md. Road and Bridge Design—R. E. Toms, 20 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Inter-American, Regional Office —E. W. James, 6412 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md District engineer tn charge of road construction in national forests and national parks.—H. J. Spelman, Falls Church, Va. District engineer, District 10.—C. E. Swain, 6813 Exeter Road, Bethesda, Md. PUBLIC BUILDINGS ADMINISTRATION (Seventh and D Streets SW.) Commissioner of Public Buildings.—W. E. Reynolds, the Westchester. Supervising architect.—W. G. Noll (acting), 3437 Fourteenth Street. Supervising engineer.—Neal A. Melick, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Independent Offices and Establishments 401 Fiscal manager.—E. R. Witman, 1435 Kennedy Street. Chief of Planning and Space Control.—C. J. Guthridge, 5724 Ninth Street North, Arlington, Va. Office manager.—J. H. Schaefer, 4502 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. Buildings manager.—Charles A. Peters, 4892 Conduit Road. Chief of Section of Fine Arts.—Edward Bruce, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. FEDERAL FIRE COUNCIL (Room 718, Public Buildings Administration. Phone, DIstrict 5700, branch 400) Governing Body: W. E. Reynolds, Commissioner of Public Buildings, Federal Works Agency, the Westchester Apartment. Maj. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory, the Quartermaster General, United StatesArmy, 4401 Greenwich Parkway. Walter Myers, the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Post Office Depart-ment, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. Rear Admiral Ben Moreell, Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks, United States Navy, 3010 Ellicott Street. Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service, Department of the Interior, 3725 Upton Street. Lyman J. Briggs, Director, National Bureau of Standards, Department of Commerce, 3208 Newark Street. Solon J. Buck, the Archivist of the United States, The National Archives, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Officers: dis Chairman.—W. E. Reynolds, Commissioner of Public Buildings, Federal WorksAgency. Vir dhmaniets. E. Demaray, Associate Director, National Park Service, the Department of the Interior, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.— Walton C. Clark, engineer assistant, Public Buildings Adminis-tration, Federal Works Agency, 3904 Legation Street. UNITED STATES HOUSING AUTHORITY (North Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1860) Administrator.— Nathan Straus, Shoreham Hotel. Secretary to the Administrator— Minerva Wylie, 1901 Columbia Road. Erect assistant to the Administrator—M. Marion Beers, 1528 Connecticut venue. Deputy Administrator and general counsel.—Leon H. Keyserling, 3234 N Street. First Assistant Administrator.—[Vacant.] Assistant Administrator for Development.— William P. Seaver, Lee Sheraton Hotel.Assistant Administrator for Management.—Lee F. Johnson, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. Chief economist—Warren Jay Vinton, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Executive officer.—Thomas M. Hall, 201 North Piedmont Street, Arlington, Va.Director of Budget and Planning.—Richard A. Spencer, 6802 Exfair Road, Bethesda, Md. Director of Construction Division.—H. Lyle Campbell, 7 East Blackthorn Street,Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Defense Housing.— Henri L. J. deSibour, 8 East-West Highway,Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Finance and Accounts Division.—Samuel J. Elson, 3165 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director of Information Division.—Charles E. V. Prins, 4752 Reservoir Road.Director of Labor Relations Division.—Walter V. Price, 1801 Sixteenth Street.Director of Land Division.—H. Tudor Morsell, 6317 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate general counsel.—David L. Krooth, 3121 Quebec Place. Director of Operations and Maintenance Division.—[Vacant.] Acting Director of Personnel Division.—Joseph A. Short, 3100 Connecticut Avenue.Director of Project Planning Division.—Gilbert L. Rodier, 4515 Ellicott Street.Special Assistant in Charge of Racial Relations.—Frank S. Horne, 709 Eleventh Street NE. Director of Research and Statistics Division.—James W. Routh, 2511 Q Street.Bl of Rural Housing.—Rudolph Nedved, 410 South Lee Street, Alexandria, a. ol 402 Congressional Directory E—— Director of Technical Division.— Albert C. Shire, 3015 Dumbarton Avenue. Director of Tenant Relations Division.—[Vacant.] Director of Office Service Division.—T. J. Carolan, 1545 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Special Assistant to the Administrator. wham S. Inglish, 20 Third Street SE. FOREIGN-TRADE ZONES BOARD (Room 2034, Commerce Building. Phone, DIstrict 2200, branch 2348) Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Secretary of Commerce. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury. Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of War. Executive secretary.— Thomas E. Lyons, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE (General Accounting Office Building, Fifth and F Streets. Phone, DIstrict 8465) Comptroller General of the United States.—Lindsay C. Warren, 3300 Stuyvesant Place. Special and confidential assistant to the Comptroller General.—Leonora B. Kelley, 1829 Parkside Drive. Secretary to the Comptroller General.—Cassie L. Wolfe, 3420 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Comptroller General of the United States. — Richard N. Elliott, 3315 Ste-phenson Place. Secretary to the Assistant Comptroller General.—Lillabelle Gebert, 211 Delaware Avenue SW, Assistant to the Comptroller General (executive officer).—J. L. Baity, the Shoreham. Second assistant to the Comptroller General.—Dudley W. Bagley, Roosevelt Hotel. Attorney-conferee.—F. L. Yates, 4628 Reservoir Road, Charles M. Galloway, 2015 Belmont Road. | General counsel.—John C. McFarland, 6706 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. | Assistant general counsel.—George A. Ninas, R. D., Gaithersburg, Md.; Robert | A. Tron, 4333 Forty-sixth Street; Harrell O. Hoagland, 5923 Wilson Lane, | Bethesda, Md. Chief of I noestigations. —S. B. Tulloss, Lorton, Va. Assistant Chief of Investigations.—R. H. Slaughter, 7100 Hampden Lane, Green- wich Forest, Bethesda, Md. Chief Clerk. — Reed F. Martin, 6818 Ninth Street. Dzrector of Personnel. _ Thomas A. McNamara, 429 Decatur Street. Chiefs and assistant chiefs of diwisions: Claims.— Chief, David Neumann, 6 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant chief, A. B. Thomas, 3713 Yuma Street. Accounting and Bookkeeping. —Chief, J. Darlington Denit, 4218 Reno Road; assistant chiefs, George T. Montgomery, 5420 Connecticut Avenue; Fred Al Seaman, 1626 P Street. Audit. — Chief, E. W. Bell, 3525 Davenport Street; assistant chiefs, W. W. Richardson, 3600 Twentieth Street NE., John DeW. Johnson, 1703 North Harvard Street, Arlington, Va. Postal Accounts.— Chief, Charles H. Cooper, 4957 Rock Spring Road, Arling-ton, Va.; assistant chief, R. S. Tower, 1673 Columbia Road. Reconciliation and Clearance. —Chief, Vernon R. Durst, 3911 Twentieth Street NE.; assistant chiefs, Pascal D. Fallon, 5502 Fourth Street ; L. A. Jones, Herndon, Va. GOETHALS MEMORIAL COMMISSION (Room 274, State, War, and Navy Building) Chairman.—Gen. John J. Pershing. Vice chairman.—Col. John Callan O’Laughlin, 1701 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, HObart 6477. Members: , Senator from Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virgin, Maj. Gen. Julian L. ‘Schley, United States Army. Brig. Gen. R. E. Wood, United States Army (retired), Chicago, Ill. [Vacancy.] Independent Offices and Establishments 403 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: Commissioner.— Thomas Riggs, 1910 S Street. Engineer to the Commission.—Jesse Hill, 3415 Porter Street. Secretary.— Edgar A. Klapp, 2025 I Street. Canadian Section: Commissioner.—Noel J. Ogilvie, Ottawa, Canada. Engineer to the Commission.—George H. McCallum, Ottawa, Canada. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO UNITED STATES SECTION (Offices, 627 First National Bank Building, El Paso, Tex.) Commissioner.— Lawrence M. Lawson. Consulting engineer.— Culver M. Ainsworth. Senior engineer.—Joseph L. Burkholder. Counsel.—F. B. Clayton. Secretary and Chief Clerk.—M. B. Moore. Assistant secretary.—G. C. Robinson. MEXICAN SECTION ‘ (Offices, 212 Lerdo Avenue, Juarez, Mexico. Post-office address, Box 14, El Paso, Tex.) Commassioner.— Rafael Fernandez MacGregor. Consulting engineer, boundaries.—Joaquin C. Bustamante. | Consulting engineer, waters.—Jesus Franco Urias. Secretary.—José Herndndez Ojeda. Assistant secretary and translator.—H. G. de Partearroyo. INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Headquarters office, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.) American members— Charles E. Jackson, Assistant Director, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D. C. Edward W. Allen, secretary, Northern Life Tower, Seattle, Wash. Canadian members— L. W. Patmore, chairman, 504 Central Building, Victoria, British Columbia. A. J. Whitmore, Department of Fisheries, Ottawa, Canada. INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION, THE (Washington Loan and Trust Building. Phones, DIstrict 3733 and 3734) United States Section: Chairman.—A. O. Stanley, Henderson, Ky. Roger B. McWhorter. Secretary.—Jesse B. Ellis, Elsberry, Mo. Canadian Section: Chairman.—Charles Stewart, Ottawa, Outario. J. E. Perrault, Montreal, Canada. Secretary. — Lawrence J. Burpee, Ottawa, Ontario. 404 Congressional Directory INTERNATIONAL PACIFIC SALMON FISHERIES COMMISSION (Headquarters office, Dominion Building, New Westminster, British Columbia) American members— Charles E. Jackson, Assistant Director, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D. C. B. M. Brennan, chairman, director of the State Department of Fisheries of the State of Washington, Seattle, Wash. Edward W. Allen, attorney, Seattle, Wash. Canadian members— A. J. Whitmore, Department of Fisheries, Ottawa, Canada. Tom Reid, seerctary, Member of the Canadian Parliament, New Westminster, British Columbia. A. L. Hager, president of the Canadian Fishing Co., Ltd., Vancouver, British Columbia. : INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION (Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7460) Chairman.—Joseph B. Eastman, 2266 Cathedral Avenue (for the 3-year period July 1, 1939, to June 30, 1942). Clyde B. Aitchison, 1929 S Street. Claude R. Porter, Wardman Park Hotel. William E. Lee, 5622 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md. Charles D. Mahaffie, 3012 O Street. Carroll Miller, 2929 Benton Place. Walter M. W. Splawn, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. John L. Rogers, 45 T Street NE. J. Haden Alldredge, 3352 Tennyson Street. William J. Patterson, 3916 Legation Street. J. Monroe Johnson, the Shoreham. Secretary.—W. P. Bartel, 2932 Davenport Street. . Assistant secretary.— George W. Laird, 5427 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. Assistant to the secretary.—James 1. Murphy, 1716 Lanier Place. Chief, Section of Audits and Accounts.—Guy L. Seaman, 207 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. : Ped Purchasing agent.—A. H. Laird, Jr., 55621 Colorado Avenue. Librarian.—Mildred R. Senior, 900 Nineteenth Street. Director of Accounts.—C. D. Crandall, 1613 Harvard Street. Director of Finance.—Oliver E. Sweet, 7619 Thirteenth Street. Chief examiner.— Ulysses Butler, 1419 Longfellow Street. Chief of Informal Cases.—Arja Morgan, 425 Manor Place. Director of Inquiry.— William H. Bonneville, 124 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief counsel.—Daniel W. Knowlton, 1829 Phelps Place. Director of Locomotive Inspection.—John M. Hall, 7605 Morningside Drive. Director of Motor Carriers.—W. Y. Blanning, 3308 Maud Street. Director of Personnel.—John B. Switzer, 619 Whittier Street. Director of Safety.—Shirley N. Mills, 3911 Legation Street. Director of Service.—C. C. Wall, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Director of Statistics.—Max O. Lorenz, 3510 Porter Street. Director of Traffic—W. V. Hardie, apartment 301, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Director of Valuation.—E. 1. Lewis, 3099 Q Street. Director of Water Carriers.—George E. Talmage, Jr., 4720 Blagden Terrage. JOINT BOARD, THE (Room 2003, Munitions Building. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 2459) The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral H. R. Stark, Admiral’s House, Naval Observatory. The Chief of Staff, Army, Gen. G. C. Marshall, Fort Myer, Va. The Deputy Chief of Staff, Army, Maj. Gen. William Bryden, Fort Myer, Va. JOINT ECONOMY BOARD, THE (Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, REpublic 7400, 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. C. G. Helmick, 3705 Thirty-third Place. Col. Frederick W. Browne (retired), 4608 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Col. G. P. Baldwin (Infantry), G. S. C., Fairfax Hotel. Lt. Col. George L. Eberle (Infantry), G. S. C., 3910 Yuma Street. Maj. Gerson K. Heiss, 3407 Quebec Street. Navy members: : Assistant budget officer, Capt. Alfred P. H. Tawressy, 2305 South Pierce Street, Arlington, Va. Director Central Divisiofi, Naval Operations, Capt. R. E. Schuirmann, 3420 Porter Street. ; Director Fleet Maintenance Division, Naval Operations, Capt. W. S. Farber, the Kennedy-Warren. Shore Establishments Division, Capt. R. W. Schumann (8S. C.), 3654 Upton Street. Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Capt. Frank T. Watrous (S. C.), 3235 Macomb Street. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. MARITIME COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (Room 4854, Commerce Department Building. Phone, REpublic 6620, branches 36 and 37) Chairman.—Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, U. S. Navy (retired), 2500 Massa-chusetts Avenue. Vice chairman.—Thomas M. Woodward, 3044 P Street. Howard L. Vickery, 4420 Dexter Street. Edward Macauley, 3508 Prospect Avenue. John M. Carmody, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.— William Creighton Peet, Jr., 2620 Dumbarton Avenue. Executive Director.—S. D. Schell, 1901 Columbia Road. General counsel. —Carl F. Farbach, 2925 Glover Driveway. Director, Division of Finance.—R. E. Anderson, 3922 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Division of Regulation.—Ralph H. Hallett, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Director, Division of Operations and Traffic.—Gerald H. Helmbold, 3138 Q Street. Director, Technical Division.—J. Li. Bates, 23 Bryant Street. Director, Maintenance and Repairs Division.—D. S. Brierley, Westchester Apart- ments. : Director, Division of Insurance.—B. K. Ogden, 3518 Newark Street. Director, Division of Maritime Persomnel.—D. S. Ring, 4622 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. : Director, Division of Maritime Promotion and Information.—Mark O’Dea, 1558 Thirty-fourth Street. Director, Division of Personnel Supervision and Management.—Guy KE. Needham, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Examiner, Examining Division.—D. E. Lawrence, 6302 Oakridge Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Division of Training.— Telfair Knight, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. TT NY WE i i 406 : Congressional Directory Director, Construction Division.—J. E. Schmeltzer, 4420 Brandywine Street. Director, Division of Economics and Statistics.—Henry L. Deimel, Jr., 4414 Macomb Street. Director, Division of Purchase and Supply.—Frank E. Hickey, 312 Fifth Street SE. Director, Trial Boards.— Walter E. Thau, 9143 Sligo Park Creek, Silver Spring, Md Director, Division of Emergency Shipping.—H. Harris Robson, Shoreham Hotel. MARITIME LABOR BOARD (924 New York Avenue. Phone, REpublic 1747) Members: Robert W. Bruere, chairman, 2119 Bancroft Place. Louis Bloch,4957 Hurst Terrace. Claude E. Seehorn, Broadmoor Apartments. Assistant to the chairman.— Madeline B. Roulfs, 3709 Legation Street. Senior economist.—Dorothy M. Sells, 912 Nineteenth Street. NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (Constitution Avenue and Twenty-first Street. Phone, EXecutive 8100) President.—Frank B. Jewett, National Academy of Sciences. Vice President.—Isaiah Bowman, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Foreign secretary.—L. J. Henderson, Morgan Hall, Soldiers’ Field, Boston, Mass. Home secretary.—Frederick E. Wright, 2134 Wyoming Avenue, Washington, D. C. en ed . C. Hunsaker, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, ass. Executive secretary.—Paul Brockett, 3303 Highland Place, Cleveland Park, D. C. NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL Chairman.—Ross G. Harrison, National Research Council. Executive secretary.— Albert L. Barrows, National Research Council. Assistant secretary.—Robert B. Jacobs, National Research Council. NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS (1500 New Hampshire Avenue, Phone Navy Dept. or NAtional 5212) Chairman.—Dr. Jerome C. Hunsaker, Army and Navy Club. Viee chairman.—Dr. George J. Mead, P. O. Box 296, West Hartford, Conn. Dr. Charles G. Abbot, Maj. Gen. Henry H. Arnold (U. S. Army), Maj. Gen. George H. Brett (U. S. Army), Dr. Lyman J. Briggs, Dr. Vannevar Bush, Col. Donald H. Connolly, Dr. William F. Durand, Hon. Robert H. Hinckley, Capt. Sydney M. Kraus (U.S. Navy), Dr. Francis W. Reichelderfer, Rear Ad-miral John H. Towers (U.S. Navy), Dr. Edward Warner, Dr. Orville Wright. Director of Aeronautical Research.—Dr. George W. Lewis, 6502 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Coordinator of Research.—S. Paul Johnston, 2918 Glover Driveway. Secretary.—John F. Victory, 2107 Plymouth Circle. Siig secretary.— Edward H. Chamberlin, 2612 South Kent Street, Arlington, a. NATIONAL ARCHIVES, THE (The National Archives Building. Phone, DIstrict 0525) Archivist of the United States.—Solon J. Buck, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Secretary to the Archivist.—Marjory B. Terrell, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. Director of Archival Service—Dorsey W. Hyde, Jr., 3122 N Street. Assistant Director of Archival Service.—Marcus W. "Price, 16 East Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative secretary. —Thad Page, 3203 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Assistant administrative secretary.—|Vacant.] Director of Research and Publications.—Herbert E. Angel (acting), Route 3, Bethesda, Md. Executive officer. —Collas G. Harris, R. F. D., Vienna, Va. Federal Register, Division of: Director—Bernard R. Kennedy, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Principal editor.—John R. Kennedy, 4519 Nebraska Avenue. Chiefs of Professional Divisions: Agriculture Department Archives.—Theodore R. Schellenberg, 2637 North Military Road, Arlington, Va. ; Commerce Department Archives.—Arthur H. Leavitt, McLean, Va. Independent Agencies Archives.—Percy S. Flippin, 6158 Thirty-first Place.Interior Department Archives.—Oliver W. Holmes, 6700 Fourth Street.Justice Department Archives.—Frank D. McAlister, 6699 Thirty-second Place. Labor Reveriuen Archives.—Paul Lewinson, 1718 Army-Navy Drive, Arling- ton, Va. Leyistiing Archives.— Chief, D. McAlister, 6699 Acting Frank Thirty-second lace. Maps and Charts.—W. L. G. Joerg, 6302 Ridge Drive, Brookmont, Md.Joss Pictures and Sound Recordings.—John G. Bradley, 4500 Seventeenth treet. Navy Depisimng Archives.—Nelson M. Blake, 5705 Baltimore Avenue, Hyatts-ville, Md. : Photographic Archives and Research.—Vernon D. Tate, 1502 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Post Office Department Archives.—Acting Chief, Arthur H. Leavitt, McLean, Va. Reference.—Philip M. Hamer, River Road, Route 3, Bethesda, Md. Repair and Preservation.—Arthur E. Kimberly, 3331 Mount Pleasant Street. State Department Archives—Roscoe R. Hill, Chief, 4500 Forty-seventh Street.Treasury Department Archives.—W. R. Willoughby, 214 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md Verney Administration Archives—Thomas M. Owen, Jr., 3901 Connecticut venue. . War Department Archives—Dallas D. Irvine, 1525 Twenty-eighth Street SE.Chiefs of Administrative Divisions: Building Management and Service.—Charles J. Streeter, 3819 Cathedral Avenue.Finance and Accounts.— Allen F. Jones, 1661 North Longfellow Street, Arling-ton, Va. Mail and Files.— Virginia M. Wolfe, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Personnel and Pay Roll.—Robert D. Hubbard, R. F. D. 1, East Falls Church, Va. Printing and Processing.—Harry M. Forker, 3314 Seventeenth Street NE. Purchase and Supply.—Frank P. Wilson, 33 West Glendale Avenue, Alexandria, Ya NATIONAL ARCHIVES COUNCIL (Phone, DIstrict 0525, extension 443) Chairman.—The Secretary of State. Vice chairman.—The Archivist of the United States. Members.—The Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary : of War, the Attorney General of the United States, 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 Chair-man 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, the Archivist of the United States. Secretary.—Thad Page, Administrative Secretary of The National Archives. NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS COMMISSION (Phone, District 0525, extension 314) Members.—The Archivist of the United States (chairman); the Historical Adviser of the Department of State; the Chief of the Historical 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; Dumas Malone, member of the American Historical Association; Charles A. Beard, member of the American Historical Association. Secretary. —Herbert E. Angel, Acting Director of Research and Publications of The National Archives. NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARD (Phone District 0525, extension 211) Members.—The Archivist of the United States (Chairman); the Chairmen of the Senate and the House Committees on the Library. 408 Congressional Directory FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY (Hyde Park, N. Y., under the administration of the Archivist of the United States) Archivist of the United States.—Solon J. Buck, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Director.—Fred W. Shipman, Hyde Park, N. Y. Secretary to the Director.—Alma A. Van Curan, Hyde Park, N. Y. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION (Office, New Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, branch 2101) Chairman.—Frederic A. Delano, 2400 Sixteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Executive officer —Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service, 3725 Upton Street. Maj. Gen. Eugene Reybold, Chief of Engineers, United States Army, Wardman Park Hotel. : Col. Charles W. Kutz, Engineer Commissioner, District of Columbia, 2028 Allison Place. ra H. Clapp, acting chief, Forest Service, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, d. Pat McCarran, chairman, Senate Committee on the District of Columbia, 4711 Blagden Avenue. Jennings Randolph, chairman, House Committee on the District of Columbia, 4608 Reservoir Road. Henry V. Hubbard, care of Olmsted Bros., Brookline, Mass. J. C. Nichols, 310 Ward Parkway, Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. 5 William A. Delano, 126 East Thirty-eighth Street, New York, N. Y. taff: John Nolen, Jr., director of planning, 1916 S 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. Max S. Wehrly, city planner, 631 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (Shoreham Building. Phone, NAtional 9716) Chairman.—H. A. Millis, 1726 Massachusetts Avenue. Members.— William M. Leiserson, 3210 Thirty-fourth Street; Gerard D. Reilly, 1615 Thirty-Fourth Street. : Executive secretary.— Beatrice M. Stern, 2762 Chain Bridge Road. General counsel.—Robert B. Watts, 8318 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Associate general counsel.—Laurence A. Knapp, 2619 O Street. Assistant general counsel.—Ernest A. Gross, 4300 Brandywine Street; Malcolm Halliday, 1556 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md.; Mortimer - Kollender, 701 Tenth Street, New Alexandria, Va. Director of Field Diviston.—G. L. Patterson, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Chief trial examiner.—George O. Pratt, 4895 Potomac Avenue. Director of Personnel.—J. C. Shover, 1506 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Information.— Malcolm Ross, Route 1, Vienna, Va. Chzef Clerk.—Herbert R. Glaser, 124 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD (2018 Interior Building, North, Eighteenth and F Streets. Phone, NAtional 8460) Members: David J. Lewis, chairman. ~ George A. Cook, 3200 Sixteenth Street. Otto S. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. Secretary.— Robert F. Cole, 4919 Westway Drive, Crestview, Md. Assistant secretary.— Mitchel D. Lewis, 6040 Oregon Avenue. Mediators (2018 Interior Bldg., North).—Thomas E. Bickers, Otto F. Carpenter, Ross J. Foran, Patrick D. Harvey, James P. Kiernan, William F. Mitchell, Jr., John F. Murray, J. Joseph Noonan, Wallace S. Rupp, Eugene C. Thomp-son, John W. Walsh, Ralph B. Bronson. Independent Offices and Establishments 409 NATIONAL MUNITIONS CONTROL BOARD (Room 360, Department of State Building. Phone, REpublic 5600, branch 148) Chairman.—The Secretary of State. The Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of War. The Secretary of the Navy. The Secretary of Commerce. Executive secretary.—Joseph C. Green, Department of State, 10 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. PANAMA CANAL, THE (1435 K Street. Phone, REpublic 6700) Chief of office and general purchasing officer— B. F. Burdick, 1016 North Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant chief of office and assistant general purchasing officer.— J. C. Hughes, 9308 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to the chief of office.—F. B. Heimer, Berwyn, Md. Chief Clerk, Purchasing Department.—E. D. Anderson, 2901 Sixteenth Street. ON THE ISTHMUS Governor of the Panama Canal.—Brig. Gen. Glen E. Edgerton, United States Army, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. : maintenance.— J. States Engineer of Col. C. Mehaffey, United Army, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU (Formerly International Sanitary Bureau) (Pan American Building, Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone, NAtional 6635) Director.—Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming (retired), United States Public Health Service, 2219 California Street. Assistant Director.—Dr. Edward C. Ernst, 3212 Wisconsin Avenue. Secretary and editor.—Dr. Aristides A. Moll, 3702 Military Road. Vice Director.—Dr. Jodo de Barros Barreto, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Counselors.—Dr. Miguel Sussini, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Dr. Antonio Peiia Chavarrfa, San José, Costa Rica. Members directing council.—Dr. Atilio Macchiavello, Santiago, Chile; Dr. Luis Manuel Debayle, Managua, Nicaragua; Dr. A. L. Briceiio Rossi, Caracas, Venezuela; Dr. Dagoberto Gonzélez, Lima, Peri; Dr. Manuel Martinez B4ez, México, D. F.; Dr. Pedro Machado, Habana, Cuba; Dr. Juan Antonio Montalvédn, Guayaquil, Ecuador. Honorary members.—Dr. Jorge Bejarano, Bogotd, Colombia; Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz Sold4n, Lima, Pert; Dr. Justo F. Gonzédlez, Montevideo, Uruguay; Dr. Luis Gaitdn, Guatemala. Traveling representatives.— Dr. John D. Long, Dr. John R. Murdock, Dr. Anthony Donovan, and Dr. Henry Hanson. Sanitary engineers.— Edward D. Hopkins and Walter N. Dashiell. 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.—Pedro de Alba, Ponce de Leén Apartments. Counselor.— William Manger, 1744 C Street. Foreign Trade Adviser.—Silvino da Silva, Park Central Apartments. Chief Clerk.— William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street. 410 Congressional Directory: Librarian.—Charles E. Babcock, Vienna, Va. Chief, Division of Accounts.— Lowell Curtiss, 709 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chaef, Division of Agricultural José L. Colom, 2100 Connecticut Cooperation.— Avenue. Chef, Editorial Division.— Elsie Brown, 910 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Editorial assistant.— Enrique Coronado, 2601 Sixteenth Street, North Arlington, a. Acting Chief, Division of Financial and Economic Information.— Paul R. Kelbaugh, 4963 Butterworth Place. Chief, Division of Intellectual Cooperation.—Concha Romero James, 1609 Thirty- fourth Street. Chief, Juridical Diviston.— William Sanders, 2 Potomac Court, Alexandria, Va. Chuef, Division of Music.—Charles Seeger, 10001 Dallas Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Printing.—H. C. Snodgrass, 6505 Barnaby Street. Chef, Division of Statistics.—Julian G. Zier, 1915 Kalorama Road. Chief, Division of Travel.— Francisco J. Herndndez, 1803 Biltmore Street. Chief, Division of Labor and Social Information.— Ernesto Galarza, 1620 South Highland Avenue, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Director General.—Anne L. O'Connell, the Wardman Park. Secretary to the Assistant Director.—Julia MacLean, 1739 I Street. Superintendent of buildings and grounds.—Harry Burkholder, 2602 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. Chief mail clerk.—George F. Hirschman, 402 Kennedy Street. GOVERNING BOARD Chairman.— Cordell Hull, Secretary of State of the United States, the Wardman Park. Vice chairman.— Di6égenes Escalante, Ambassador of Venezuela, 2443 Massachu- setts Avenue. : Felipe A. Espil, Ambassador of Argentina, 1600 New Hampshire Avenue. Luis Fernando Guachalla, Minister of Bolivia, 2200 Kalorama Road. Carlos Martins, Ambassador of Brazil, 3000 Massachusetts Avenue. Rodolfo Michels, Ambassador of Chile, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue. Gabriel Turbay, Ambassador of Colombia, 1520 Twentieth Street. Luis Fernandez, Minister of Costa Rica, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Aurelio F. Concheso, Ambassador of Cuba, 2630 Sixteenth Street. J. ih Troncoso, Minister of the Dominican Republic, 2101 Connecticut venue. Colén Eloy Alfaro, Ambassador of Ecuador, Mayflower Hotel. Hector David Castro, Minister of El Salvador, 3232 Ellicott Street. Adridn Recinos, Minister of Guatemala, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Fernand Dennis, Minister of Haiti, 5017 Sixteenth Street. Julidn R. C4ceres, Minister of Honduras, 2611 Woodley Place. Francisco Castillo N4jera, Ambassador of Mexico, 2829 Sixteenth Street. Leén De Bayle, Minister of Nicaragua, 1521 New Hampshire Avenue. Ernesto Jaen Guardia, Ambassador of Panama, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue. Juan José Soler, Minister of Paraguay, Wardman Park Hotel. Manuel de Freyre y Santander, Ambassador of Peru, 1601 Massachusetts Avenue. Juan Carlos Blanco, Ambassador of Uruguay, Mayflower Hotel. "PERMANENT JOINT BOARD ON DEFENSE UNITED STATES SECTION Chairman.—Fiorello H. LaGuardia (president, United States Conference of Mayors), City Hall, New York City. Secretary.—John D. Hickerson (Assistant Chief, Division of European Affairs, State Department), 3314 Ross Place. Members.—Maj. Gen. Stanley D. Embick (United States Army), 3701 Thirty-third Place; Capt. Harry W. Hill (United States Navy), 3344 Runnymede Place; Capt. Forrest P. Sherman (United States Navy), 4611 Kenmore Drive; Lt. Col. Clayton Bissell (United States Army), 1200 South Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 411 CANADIAN SECTION Chairman.—O. M. Biggar, K. C., 197 Clemow, Ottawa. Secretary—Hugh L. Keenleyside (counselor, Department of External Affairs), 31 Madawaska Drive, Ottawa. Members.—Air Commodore A. A. L. Cuffe (Air member, Air Staff, Royal Canadian Air Force), Windsor Arms Apartments, Argyle Avenue, Ottawa; Brig. Maurice A. Pope (Assistant Chief of General Staff), 369 Daly Avenue, Ottawa; Commodore H. E. Reid (Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff), 185 Wurtemburg Street, Ottawa; Brig. G. P. Vanier (Military District Headquarters, Quebec), 7560 Gouin Boulevard West, Cartierville, Quebec. RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD (1918 Tenth Street. Phone, REpublic 1780) Members: : Chairman.— Murray W. Latimer, 2911 Albemarle Street. M. R. Reed, 105 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Lee M. Eddy, 3311 Rittenhouse Street. Secretary of the board.—John C. Davidson, 1761 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Administrative assistant to chairman.— Alice M. Demerjian, 3 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to Mr. Reed.— Warren M. Huff, Clifton, Va. Assistant to Mr. Eddy.— Kathryn B. Wells, 1841 Columbia Road. Special Assistant to Mr. Eddy.—A. Russell Brainerd, 1365 Kennedy Street. General counsel.— Lester P. Schoene, Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Va. Controller.—Glendon J. Mowitt, 8 Franklin Street, Kensington, Md. Director of Research.—A. G. Silverman, 2325 Fifteenth Street. Chief inspector.— Walter Matscheck, 4701 Forty-eighth Street. Director of Employment and Claims.— William A. Murphy, 5466 Thirtieth Street. Director of Retirement Claims.—Marcus E. Lynch, 3519 Albemarle Street. Director of Wage and Service Records.— Robert H. LaMotte, 405 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Office manager.— Ludo C. Pickett, 2025 Park Road. : Chairman, Appeals Council.—Frank Hursey, 332 North Piedmont Street, Arlington, Va. : Regional offices: \ New York, N. Y., 341 Ninth Avenue; R. R. McCurry, director. Cleveland, Ohio, 1100 Chester Avenue; Patrick ¥. Murphy, director. Chicago, I11., 205 West Monroe Street; Carlton Hayward, director. Atlanta, Ga., 32 Peachtree Street; Leon L. Wheeless, director. Minneapolis, Minn., 123 East Grant Street; Harris G. Pett, director. Kansas City, Mo., 30 Union Station Plaza; H. Sorenson, director. Dallas, Tex., 422 United States Terminal Annex Building; F. E. Fleener, director. Denver, Colo., 1706 Welton Street; Frank H. Stapleton, director. Seattle, Wash., Textile Tower Building, Seventh Avenue and Olive Way; E. G. Turpin, director. San Francisco, Calif., 49 Fourth Street; W. J. Macklin, acting director. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (1778 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone DIstrict 3633) Commaissioners: ; Chairman.— Edward C. Eicher, 12 Wilton Road, Alexandria, Va. Robert E. Healy, 3031 Sedgwick Street. Sumner T. Pike, 2000 F Street. Ganson Purcell, 1607 Twenty-eighth Street. Edmund Burke, Jr., 403 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary and Director of Administrative Division.—Francis P. Brassor, 4608 Not-tingham Drive, Chevy Chase. Md. Executive assistant to the Chairman.—Edwin A. Sheridan, 317 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief accountant.— William W. Werntz, 104 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Supervisor of information research.— William T. Raymond, 4440 Reservoir Road. 412 Congressional Directory LEGAL DIVISION REGISTRATION DIVISION Director.—Baldwin B. Bane, 1739 N Street. Assistant directors.—Ernest W. Ramspeck, 2915 Twenty-eighth Street; Robert E.McKellar, 1616 Sixteenth Street; Andrew J. Cavanaugh, 6131 Utah Avenue;Byron D. Woodside, Haymarket, Va. Assistant to the director.— Andrew Jackson, 1 Scott Circle.Chief, Oil and Gas Unit.—Herbert S. French, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. TRADING AND EXCHANGE DIVISION Director.—James A. Treanor, Jr., 3314 Quesada Street. Assistant directors.—Francis T. Greene, Warrenton, Va.; Raymond W. Goldsmith,3754 Jocelyn Street; Walter C. Louchheim, Jr., 2824 O Street; Olga M.Steig, 1200 South Oakcrest Road, Arlington, Va. PUBLIC UTILITIES DIVISION REORGANIZATION DIVISION INVESTMENT COMPANY DIVISION ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION REGIONAL ADMINISTRATORS Independent Offices and Establishments 413 SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM (Twenty-first and C Streets. REpublic 5500) Director —Brig. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, 5425 Thirty-first Street. Deputy directors.—ILt. Col. Carlton S. Dargusch, 5240 Reno Road; Lt. Col. Chauncey G. Parker, Jr., United States Marine Corps, 3314 O Street. Chairman, Planning Council—Col. John D. Langston, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Assogiens chairman, Planning Council.—Col. Victor J. O’Kelliher, 3825 Fulton treet. General counsel.—Maj. Edward S. Shattuck, 1660 Lanier Place. Public relations officer —Maj. Ernest M. Culligan, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Legislative officer—Capt. Francis V. Keesling, Jr., 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Associate legislative officer—Lt. Comdr. David S. H. Howard, United States Naval Reserves, 3051 Idaho Avenue. ; Executive assistant to the Director.—Maj. Campbell Johnson, 1125 Columbia Road. Liaison officer, War Department.—Col. H. F. Wanvig, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Liaison officer, Navy Department—Capt. B. S. Killmaster, United States Navy, 1230 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Liaison officer, Marine Corps.—Col. Shaler Ladd, United States Marine Corps, 5600 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Occupational advisor—Lt. Col. Joseph F. Battley, 2315 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. Division Chiefs: Appointments and Personnel Division.—Lt. Col. George A. Bonnet, 2929 Con- necticut Avenue. Camp Operations Division.—Lt. Col. Lewis F. Kosch, 5460 Thirtieth Place. Communications and Records Division.— Maj. Daniel O. Omer, 3616 Oval Drive, Alexandria, Va. Field Division.—Maj. Gareth N. Brainerd, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. Fopomes and Supply Division.—Maj. Joseph B. Mitchell, 1020 Nineteenth treet. Hordguaniers Division.— Maj. William Hart, 8905 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, d Manpower Division.— Maj. George H. Baker, 420 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. : Medical Division.—Dr. Leonard G. Rowntree, Willard Hotel. Reemployment Division.—Col. Lewis Sanders, 1911 R Street. Research and Statistics Division.— Kenneth H. McGill (acting), 415 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION (The Mall. Phone, NA tional 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, 4107 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Presse and administrative accountant.—Nicholas W. Dorsey, 1521 Thirty-first treet. Chief, Editorial Division.— Webster P. True, Falls Church, Va. Librarian.— William L. Corbin, Tilden Gardens. THE ESTABLISHMENT Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States; Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United States; Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States; Cordell Hull, Secretary of State; Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury; Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of War; Francis Biddle, Attorney General; Frank C. Walker, Postmaster General; Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy; Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior; Claude R. Wickard, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse H. Jones, Secretary of Commerce; Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor. 64674°—T7-2—1st ed— 28 414 Congressional Directory BOARD OF REGENTS Chancellor, Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States; Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United States; Charles L. McNary, Member of the Senate; Alben W. Barkley, Member of the Senate; Bennett Champ Clark, Member of the Senate; Clarence Cannon, Member of the House of Representatives; William P. Cole, Jr., Member of the House of Representa-tives; Foster Stearns, Member of the House of Representatives; Frederic A. Delano, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Vannevar Bush, citizen of Wash-ington, D. C.; Roland S. Morris, citizen of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia);. Harvey N. Davis, citizen of New Jersey (Hoboken); Arthur H. Compton, citizen of Illinois (Chicago), Frederic C. Walcott, citizen of Connecticut (Norfolk). Executive committee.— Frederic A. Delano, Vannevar Bush. GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER DIRECTION OF SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION NATIONAL MUSEUM Assistant vad in charge.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, z Associate director—John E. Graf, 2035 Parkside Drive. Head curators.—Leonhard Stejneger, 1472 Belmont Street; R. S. Bassler, the Ontario; C. W. Mitman, 2831 Forty-ninth Street; Frank M. Setzler, 4219 Forty-ninth Street. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART (Constitution Avenue between Fourth and Seventh Streets, Phone, REpublic 4215) Board of trustees.—Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States, chairman; Cordell Hull, Secretary of State; Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury; Charles G. Abbot, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; David K. E. Bruce; Ferdinand Lammot Belin; Duncan Phillips; Samuel H. Kress; Joseph E. Widener. President.—David K. E. Bruce, 716 Jackson Place. Vice president.— Ferdinand Lammot Belin, 16238 Twenty-eighth Street. Secretary-treasurer and general counsel.—Donald D. Shepard, 716 Jackson Place Director.—David E. Finley, 3318 O Street. - Administrator.—Harry A. McBride, 3000 Tilden Street. Chief Curator.—John Walker, 2806 N Street. Assistant director.— Macgill James, 1228 Thirtieth Street. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS Acting director.—R. P. Tolman, 3451 Mount Pleasant Street. FREER GALLERY OF ART Director.—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. 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. Independent Offices and Establishments 415 ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY Director—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant director, Division of Astrophysical Research.—Il.oyal B. Aldrich, 1642 Jonquil Street. Assistant director, Division of Radiation and Organisms.—Earl S. Johnston, 4409 Beechwood Road, College Heights, Hyattsville, Md. . SMITHSONIAN GALLERY OF ART COMMISSION [Authorized by Public Resolution No. 95, 75th Cong., approved May 17, 1938] Charles G. Abbot, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Edward Bruce, designated by the Secretary of the Treasury. Frederic A. Delano, chairman of the National Park and Planning Commission. Gilmore D. Clarke, chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts. Alben W. Barkley, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library. Robert T. Secrest, chairman of the Committee on the Library of the House. Charles L. Borie, Jr., chairman of the Art Commission of the Smithsonian Institution. SOLDIERS’ HOME, UNITED STATES (Regular Army) BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS (United States Soldiers’ Home. Phone, RAndolpk 9100) Maj. Gen. Frederick W. Coleman (retired), governor of the home. Maj. Gen. Emory S. Adams, The Adjutant General. Maj. Gen. James C. Magee, the Surgeon General. Maj. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory, the Quartermaster General. Maj. Gen. Howard K. Loughry, Chief of Finance. Maj. Gen. Eugene Reybold, Chief of Engineers. Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, the Judge Advocate General. Col. Clark Lynn (retired), secretary of the board. OFFICERS OF THE HOME (Residing at the home. Phone, RAndolph 9100) Governor.—Maj. Gen. Frederick W. Coleman (retired). Deputy Governor.—Col. Matt C. Bristol (retired). Secretary-treasurer.—Col. Claire R. Bennett (retired). Chief surgeon.—Col. Henry F. Pipes, Medical Corps, United States Army. Quartermaster and purchasing officer.—Brig. Gen. A. Owen Seaman (retired). Utility officer.— Col. Clark Lynn (retired). TARIFF COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (Tariff Commission Building, Eighth and E Streets. Phone, N Ational 3947) Chatrman.—Raymond B. Stevens, of New Hampshire, 4020 Arkansas Avenue. Vice chairman.—Oscar B. Ryder, of Virginia, 602 Johnson Place, Alexandria, Va. Commissioners: Edgar B. Brossard, of Utah, 1629 Columbia Road. E. Dana Durand, of Minnesota, 3613 Norton Place. [Two vacancies.] Secretary.—Sidney Morgan, 3719 Morrison Street (on military duty). Acting secretary.—Eben M. Whitcomb, 9210 Kingsbury Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant secretary.—Lawrence W. Moore, 1657 Thirty-first Street. Chairman of Planning and Reviewing Committee.— Mark A. Smith, 3711 Thirty- fifth Street. Vice chairman of Planning and Reviewing Committee and Chief of Economics Division.—Howard S. Piquet, 2209 Yorktown Road. Director of Investigation.—Eben M. Whitcomb, 9210 Kingsbury Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Technical Service—Louis S. Ballif, 4302 Forty-seventh Street. Special adviser on International Trade Policies.—Benjamin B. Wallace, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE. : 416 Congressional Directory General counsel.—Edwin G. Martin, Relay, Md. Secretary to the chairman.—Agnes M. O’Neill, 3100 Connecticut Avenue. Chiefs of Research Divisions: : Agricultural A. 3001 McKinley Street. —O. Juve, Ceramics.—Frederick L. Koch, 1613 Harvard Street. Chemical.—James H. Hibben, 14 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Eeconomics.—Howard S. Piquet, 2209 Yorktown Road. Lumber and paper.—Franklin H. Smith, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Metals.—F. Morton Leonard, 3016 Tilden Street. Sundries—Ralph A. Wells (acting), 9317 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md. Textiles.—W. A. Graham Clark, 3712 Morrison Street. Accounting.—Howard F. Barker, 3611 Thirty-fifth Street. Distribution and markets.—Robert C. King, 1205 North Nash Street, Arlington, Va. Statistical. —Arthur E. Woody, 5100 Sherrier Place. Editorial Section.—Martha W. Williams, 3711 Military Road. Docket clerk.—Edna V. Connolly, 1430 Belmont Street. Personnel Section.—Frances H. Simon, 7707 Twelfth Street. Librarian.—Cornelia Notz, 7000 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Graphic Section.—A. J. T. Meurer, 2124 I Street. Maals, Files, and Publications Section.—W. H. Olsen, 4211 Eighth Street. Stenographic Section.—Mae M. Riddle, 1841 Columbia Road. Chief, New York office.—S. W. Pitts, 513 Customhouse, New York City. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY (Wilson Dam, Ala.; Washington office, Woodward Building; Knoxville office, New Sprankle Building; Chattanooga office, Old Post Office Building) OFFICE OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS Directors: David E. Lilienthal, chairman of the Board, Knoxville. Harcourt A. Morgan, vice chairman, Knoxville. James P. Pope, Knoxville. General counsel and secretary to the corporation.— William C. Fitts, Jr., Knoxville. OFFICE OF THE GENERAL MANAGER General manager.—Gordon R. Clapp, Knoxville. Director of information.—W. L. Sturdevant, Knoxville. Chief budget officer.—Paul W. Ager, Knoxville. Assistants to the general manager.—William J. Hayes, Knoxville; Robert E. Ses- sions, Knoxville. Washington representative—Marguerite Owen, Washington. MANAGEMENT SERVICE DEPARTMENTS Personnel Department: Director of personnel.—Arthur S. Jandrey, Knoxville. Chief of Employment Division.— George Slover, Knoxville. Finance Department: Comptroller.—E. A. Sunstrom, Knoxville. Treasurer.—H. K. Robinson, Knoxville. Legal Department: General counsel.— William C. Fitts, Jr., Knoxville. Materials Department: a Director of materials.—C. H. Garity, Knoxville. Land Acquisition Department: Director of land acquisition.—John I. Snyder, Chattanooga. Office Service Department: Director of office service.—Charles E. Lex, Jr., Knoxville. Chief engineer. —T. B. Parker, Knoxville. General office engineer.—Harry Wiersema, Knoxville. Water Control Planning Department: Chief water control planning engineer.—Sherman M. Woodward, Knoxville. Independent Offices and Establishments 417 Design Department: Chief design engineer.—G. R. Rich, Knoxville. Construction Department: : Chief construction Project manager, Project manager, Project manager, Project manager, Project manager, engineer.—A. L. Pauls, Knoxville. Watts Bar project.—F. C. Schlemmer, Watts Bar Dam. Fort Loudoun project.—C. E. Blee, Lenoir City, Tenn. Cherokee project.—L. G. Warren, Jefferson City, Tenn. Hiwassee projects.—G. K. Leonard, Apalachia, Tenn. Kentucky project.—G. P. Jessup, Gilbertsville, Ky. Construction engineer (Pickwick and Wilson).—A. M. Komora, Wilson Dam. DEPARTMENTS FOR WATER-POWER UTILIZATION Manager of power.—J. A. Krug, Knoxville. Assistant to the manager of power.—G. O. Wessenauer, Knoxville. Chief power engineer.— Merrill De Merit, Chattanooga. General office engineer. —A. H. Sullivan, Chattanooga. -Power Utilization Department: Director.— Walton Seymour, Knoxville. Power Engineering and Construction Department: Director.—W. W. Woodruff, Chattanooga. Power Operations Department: Director—C. L. Karr, Chattanooga. DEPARTMENTS FOR WATER CONTROL Chief conservation engineer.—Neil Bass, Agricultural Relations Department: Director—J. C. McAmis, Knoxville. Forestry Relations Department: Director.— Willis M. Baker, Norris, Chemical Engineering Department: Director.—A. M. Miller, Wilson Dam. Knoxville. Tenn. REGIONAL SURVEY AND DEMONSTRATION Regional Studies Department: Director—H. K. Menhinick, Knoxville. Health and Safety Department: Director of health.—E. L. Bishop, Chattanooga. -Reservoir Property Management Department: Director.—L. N. Allen, Knoxville. Commerce Department: Director.—John P. Ferris, Knoxville. ON THE LAND DEPARTMENTS VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION (Arlington Building) glug of Veterans’ Affairs.—Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, 4900 Glenbrook oad. Secretary to Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs.— Augusta W. Landis, 3118 New Mexico Avenue. Assistant Administrator, medical and domiciliary care, construction, and supplies.— George E. Ijams, 3201 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Assistant Administrator, compensation Stuyvesant Place. Assistant Administrator, finance and Crestwood Drive. Executive assistant to the Administrator 1520 Forty-fourth Street. Bugoed officer and chief of statistics.—S. M. treet. Chief, Budget Diviston.—Earle R. Overton, 424 ton, Va. Chief, Beneficiary Statistics Division.—Mary Baltimore, Md. ; and pensions.—Omer W. Clark, 3357 insurance.—Harold W. Breining, 1724 of Veterans’ Affairs.— Adelbert D. Hiller, Moore, Jr., 2717 Thirty-eighth North Norwood Street, Arling- A. Coyne, 707 Dryden Drive, 418 Congressional Directory Acting Chief, Administrative Statistics Division.—Paul H. Madigan, 2027 Lanier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Director of personnel.—G. Henderson Sweet, 6805 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md Assistant director of personnel.— Marion BE. Pollock, 5312 Reno Road. Chief, Employment and Recruitment Division.— Newton S. Lingamfelter, 7301 Alaska Avenue. Chuef, Personnel Relations, Training and Placement Division.—Harry W. Farmer, 705 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of regulations and procedure.— Luther E. Ellis, 1621 Montague Street. Ch investigation.—John R. Galbraith, 6203 Stratford Road, Chevy Chase, Chief Clerk.— William C. Black, 4317 Eighth Street. Chief of contact.—Samuel Rose, 4604 Ninth Street. Solicitor.—Edward E. Odom, 3131 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant solicitor.—George P. Hughes, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. Legislative counsel.—Guy H. Birdsall, 4301 Verplank Place. Chairman, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.—Robert L. Jarnagin, 4525 Stanford’ Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice chairman, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.— William B. Stacom, 1734 P Street. Associate members.—Laura S. Brown, 2200 Nineteenth Street; Dr. Bernie R. Caldwell, General Scott Apartments; Ralph L. Chambers, 4217 Thirty-seventh Street; Dr. Fred H. Clark, 3610 Gwynn Oak Avenue, Baltimore, Md.; Sam H. Coile, 4701 Connecticut Avenue; Bartholomew J. Connolly, Jr., 3856 Beecher Street; Otto G. Elble, 4920 Jamestown Road, Yorktown Village, Md.; LeRoy B. Foster, 4323 Sixteenth Street; Charles D. Fox, Hotel Bur-lington; Pleasant D. Gold, 8371 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Lucy S. Howorth (Mrs. J. M.), 1112 Sixteenth Street; William A. Kehoe, 5304 Seventh Street; Dr. John M. Ladd, 5375 Nevada Avenue; William C. Menton, 3831 Garfield Street; William N. Morell, 4824 Montgomery Lane, Edgemoor, Md.; Dr. John A. Nelson, 1725 Seventeenth Street; Frank G. Reagan, 4700 Connecticut Avenue; William J. Sears; Harry M. Seydel, 7611 Fourteenth Street; Col. Burke H. Sinclair, 1800 I Street; Addison T. Smith, 1852 Columbia Road; Daniel E. Smith, 1200 Sixteenth Street, the Jefferson; Mrs. Carroll L. Stewart, 1112 Sixteenth Street. Medical Director.—Dr. Charles M. Griffith, 1327 Kalmia Road. Chief, General Medical Division.—Dr. Edwin J. Rose, 4701 Cortland Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Neuropsychiatric Division.—Dr. John A. Pringle, 27 White Oak Road, Calvert Hills, College Park, Md. : Chief, Out-patient and Authorization Division.—Dr. Calvin D. Todd, 5200 Western Avenue, Brookdale, Md. Chief, Tuberculosis Division.—Dr. Roy A. Wolford, 5259 Nebraska Avenue. Chief, Post-Graduate Instruction and Medical Research Division.—Dr. Hugo Mella, 1335 Ingraham Street. Chairman, Central Committee on Waivers and Forfeitures.—Clifford L. Johnson, 15 South Street, Bladensburg, Md. Director, Construction Service.—Louis H. Tripp, 3721 Fulton Street. Chief, Maintenance and Operation Division.—Herbert W. Gardner, 29 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chzef, Technical Diviston.— William R. Talbott, 122 South Van Buren Street, Rockville, Md. Director, Dependents’ Claims Service.—Eldon L. Bailey, 1449 Girard Street. Chief, Adjudicating Division.—Raymond J. Hinton, 1314 Hemlock Street. Director) Finance Service. —Harold V. Stirling, 6400 Valley Place, Chevy Chase, d Chuef, Accounting Division.— William H. Holmes, 3810 Beecher Street. Chief, Control and Adjusted Compensation Accounts Division.—Kilgo C. Baxter, 803 Emerson Street. Chief, Premium Accounts and Collection Division.—Judson Carey Dale, 5401 Thirty-ninth Street. Director, Insurance Service—Horace L. McCoy, 24 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Cliéel Actuarial and Insurance Policy Division.—Carl A. Zoller, Jr., 4352 Forest ane. Independent Offices and Establishments 419 Insurance Service—Continued. Chief, Insurance Claims Council.—Harley H. Milks, 3115 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. . Chief, Life Insurance Claims Division.—Frederick B. Simms, 520 Buchanan Street. Director, National Homes Service.—Carl A. Neves, 3724 Davenport Street. -Chief, Admanistrative Division.—Fred W. Franke, 4011 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Admissions and Operation Division.—[Vacant.] Director, Supply Service—Raymond C. Kidd, 6125 Thirty-third Street, Chief, Procurement Division.— Andrew J. Harrison, 708 Wayne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chi Property and Contract Division.—Robinson E. Adkins, 7542 Twelfth treet. Director, Veterans’ Claims Service.—George E. Brown, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Chairman, Rating Schedule Board.—Robert B. Teachout, 4410 Volta Place. Chief, Claims Division.—James E. Loggins, 3502 Patterson Street. Chief, Field Supervision Division.—Henry Q. Brooks, 1000 Upshur Street NE. WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY (Organized 1833; chartered 1859; acts of Congress August 2, 1876, October 2, 1888) President ex offictco.—Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. Vice presidents ex officio.— The governors of the several States. First vice president.—Frederic A. Delano. Second vice president.—Harlan F. Stone. Members: Herbert Putnam; Rt. Rev. James E. Freeman; George E. Hamilton; Brig. Gen. U. 8S. Grant, 3d; Logan Hay; Gilbert H. Grosvenor; Cloyd Heck Moran Mark Sullivan; John Spalding Flannery; Charles C. Glover, Jr.; HarryA Garfield; John Stewart Bryan; Chester Wells; Charles Warren. Treasurer.— Theodore W. Noyes, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue. Secretary.— William R. Harr, 36 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Office, 1644 Department of Justice Building (phone, N'Ational 0185). JUDICIARY SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES (1 First Street NE. Phone, NAtional 5321) HARLAN F. STONE, of New York City, Chief Justice 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, receiv-ing LL. B., 1898; honorary LL. D., 1925; honorary LL. D., Yale University, 1924; Williams College, 1925; George Washington University, 1927; Harvard Uni-versity; 1931; Dartmouth College, University of Michigan, University of Pennsyl-vania, 1934; University of Chicago, 1938; Oberlin College, 1939; Kenyon College, 1940; 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; member American Philosophical Society, 1939; honorary member, Society of Public Teachers of Law, London, 1939;honorary bencher of Lincoln’s Inn, 1941; 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 lectured on law in Columbia Law School, 1899-1902; 1910-23; adjunct professor of law, 1903; severed his university connection and devoted him- self exclusively to practice, 1905-10; Kent professor of law and dean of Columbia Law School, 1910-23; resigned 1923 and became member of law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City; appointed Attorney General of the United States, April 7, 1924; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Coolidge January 5, 1925; confirmed by the Senate February 5, 1925, and entered upon the duties of that office on March 2, 1925; served as Associate Justice until July 3, 1941, on which date he took the oath of office of Chief Justice of the United States, having been appointed to that position by President Roosevelt on June 12 and confirmed by the Senate on June 27, 1941; took his seat on October 6, 1941. OWEN J. ROBERTS, of West Vincent Township, Chester County, Pa., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, 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. HUGO LAFAYETTE BLACK, of Birmingham, Ala., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; was nominated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on August 12, 1937, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; confirmed by the Senate on August 17, 1937, and took his seat on October 4, 1937. STANLEY FORMAN REED, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born in Mason County, Ky., December 31, 1884; A. B., Kentucky Wesleyan College, 1902; A. B., Yale, 1906 (Bennett prize); LL. D., 1938; LL.D., Columbia University, 1940; University of Kentucky, 1940; Kentucky Wesleyan College, 1941; studied law at University of Virginia, Columbia University, and University of Paris; married Winifred Elgin, of Maysville, Ky.; has two sons, John A. and Stanley Forman, Jr.; general practice Maysville and Ashland, Ky., 423 424 Congressional Directory 1910-29; member General Assembly of Kentucky, 1912-16; American Legion; American Law Institute; counselor and member, executive committee, American Red Cross, 1935-38; general counsel, Federal Farm Board, 1929-32; general counsel, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, December 1932 to March 1935; Solicitor General of the United States, March 23, 1935, to January 31, 1938; chairman, President’s Committee on Civil Service Improvement, 1939; nominated Associate ‘Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt January 15, 1938; confirmed January 25, 1938, and took his seat January 31, 1938. FELIX FRANKFURTER, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born in Vienna, Austria, November 15, 1882; brought to the United States in 1894; A. B., College of the City of New York, 1902.11. .B., Harvard, 1906; D. C. 4 University of Oxford, 1939; LL. D., ‘Amherst, 1940; assistant United States attorney, southern district of New York, 1906— 10; law officer, Bureau of Insular Affairs, War Department, 1911-14; professor at Harvard Law School, 1914-39; George Eastman visiting professor, Oxford University, 1933-34; major and judge advocate, Officers’ Reserve Corps, United States Army; assistant to the Secretary of War; secretary and counsel to the President’s Media-tion Commission; assistant to the Secretary of Labor; chairman of War Labor, Policies Board, June 1918; declined Governor Ely’s nomination to Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, June 1932; author: The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927; The Business of the Supreme Court (with James M. Landis), 1928; The Labor Injunction (with Nathan Greene), 1930; The Public and Its Government, 1930; The Commerce Clause Under Marshall, Taney, and Waite, 1937; Mr. Justice Holmes and the Supreme Court, 1939; editor: Cases Under the Interstate Commerce Act, 1915 (2d edition, 1922); Criminal Justice in Cleveland (with Roscoe Pound), 1922; Mr. Justice Holmes, 1931; Cases on Federal Jurisdiction (with Wilbur G. Katz), 1931; Cases on Administrative Law (with J. Forrester Davison), 1931; Mr. Justice Brandeis, 1932; Cases on Federal Jurisdiction (with Harry Shulman), 1937; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt January 5, 1939; confirmed January 17, 1939, and took his seat January 30, 1939. WILLIAM ORVILLE DOUGLAS, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born at Maine, Minn., on October 16, 1898; graduated from Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., A. B., 1920, and from Columbia University Law School, LL. B., 1925; honorary M. ‘AL Yale University, 1932; honorary LL. D., Whitman College, 1938, Wesleyan, 1940; instructor in Yakima High School, Yakima, Wash., 1920-22; practiced law in New York City, 1925-27; lecturer in law and professor of law, Columbia Law School, 1925-28; professor of law, Yale Law School, 1928-39; special advisor to bankruptey investigation, New York City, 1929; collaborated with United States Department of Commerce in bankruptey studies, 1929-32; director, bankruptcy studies, Institute of Human Relations, Yale University, 1929-32; secretary to Committee on the Study of Business of the Federal Courts made for the National Commission of Law Ob-servance and Enforcement, 1930-32; director, protective committee study, Securities and Exchange Commission, 1934-36; member of the Securities and Exchange Commission, on leave of absence from Yale Law School, 1936-39; chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, September 1937 to April 1939; nominated Associate. Justice of the United States Supreme Court by Presi-dent Roosevelt, March 20, 1939; confirmed by the Senate, April 4, 1939, and took his seat April 17, 1939. FRANK MURPHY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born at Harbor Beach, Mich., April 13, 1890, son of John T. and Mary (Brennan) Murphy; University of Michigan, LL.B., 1914; graduate studies at Lincoln’s Inn, London, and Trinity College, Dublin, 1919; honorary LL.D., University of Santo Tomas, Manila, P. I., 1934; Fordham University, 1935; University of Philippines, and Loyola University, Los Angeles, 1936; University of Detroit (Michigan) and Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, 1937; St. Johns University, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1938; New Mexico State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, Louisiana State University, St. Bonaventure College (New York), Judiciary 425 University of Michigan, John Marshall College, and St. Joseph’s College, Phila-delphia, 1939; Tulane University of Louisiana, 1941; admitted to Michigan bar, 1914; law clerk with Monaghan & Monaghan, Detroit, and night law school teacher, 1914-17; first lieutenant and captain of Infantry, American Expedi-tionary Forces, serving also with Army of Occupation, German Rhineland; chief assistant, United States district attorney, Detroit, 1919-20; in private practice, 1920-23; instructor in law, University of Detroit, 1922-27; elected judge, recorder’s court, Detroit, 1923, reelected in 1929; elected mayor of Detroit, 1930, and re-elected in 1932; chosen president of United States Association of Mayors, 1933; appointed Governor General of Philippine Islands, 1933, and United States High Commissioner to Philippines in 1935; elected Governor of Michigan, November 1936; appointed Attorney General of the United States, January 1, 1939; nomi-nated by President Roosevelt, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, January 4, 1940; confirmed by the Senate, January 16, 1940; took his seat February 5, 1940. JAMES FRANCIS BYRNES, of Spartanburg, S. C.; served as Representative in Congress from Second Congressional District, 1911-25; in 1925 retired from Congress and began practice of law at Spartanburg; elected to United States Senate November 4, 1930, and reelected November 3, 1936; was nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court by President Roosevelt on June 12, 1941, and took his seat October 6, 1941. ROBERT H. JACKSON, of Jamestown, N. Y., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born February 13, 1892, in Spring Creek, Pa.; son of William Eldred and Angelina (Houghwout) Jackson; married Irene Gerhardt, of Albany, N. Y.; children, William Eldred and Mary Margaret; confirmed as Solicitor General of the United States March 4, 1938; confirmed as Attorney General of the United States January 16, 1940; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt June 12, 1941; confirmed July 7, 1941, and took his seat October 6, 1941. RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] *Mr. Chief Justice Stone, 2340 Wyoming Avenue. *Mr. Justice Roberts, 1401 Thirty-first Street. : *Mr. Justice Black, 619 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. *Mr. Justice Reed, the Mayflower. *Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1511 Thirtieth Street. - *Mr. Justice Douglas, Silver Spring, Md. Mr. Justice Murphy, the Washington. *Mr. Justice Byrnes, Shoreham Hotel. *Mr. Justice Jackson, McLean, Va. *Mr. Chief Justice Hughes (retired), 2223 R Street. Mr. Justice McReynolds (retired), 2400 Sixteenth Street. *Mr. Justice Sutherland (retired), 2029 Connecticut Avenue. Ps a; 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; Harold B. Willey, 3214 North Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Marshal.—Thomas E. Waggaman, 903 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Reporter.—Ernest Knaebel, 3707 Morrison Street. Librarian.—Oscar D. Clarke, 3034 Newark Street. 426 Congressional Directory UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS District of Columbia judicial circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Stone. District of Columbia. Chief justice.—D. Lawrence Groner. Associate justices.—Harold M. Stephens, Justin Miller, Fred M. Viuson, Henry W. Edgerton, Wiley Rutledge, Washington, D. C. First judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Frankfurter. Districts of Maine, New Hamp-shire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico. Circuit judges.— Calvert Magruder, Boston, Mass.; John C. Mahoney, Providence, R. I.; Peter Woodbury, Concord, and Manchester, N. H Second judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Jackson. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, northern New York, southern New York, eastern New York, and western New York. Circuit judges.— Learned Hand, New York, N. Y.; Thomas W. Swan, New Haven, Conn.; Augustus N. Hand, New York, N. Y.; Harrie Brigham Chase, Brattleboro, Vt.; Charles E. Clark, New Haven, Conn.; Jerome N. Frank, New York, N. Y. ! Third judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Roberts. Distriets of New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, middle Pennsylvania, western Pennsylvania, Delaware, and the Virgin Islands. Circuit judges.—John Biggs, Jr., Wilmington, Del.; William Clark, Trenton, N. J.; Albert Branson Maris, Philadelphia, Pa.; Charles Alvin Jones, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Herbert F. Goodrich, Philadelphia, Pa. Fourth judicial circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Stone. 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.; Morris A. Soper, Baltimore, Md.; Armistead M. Dobie, Charlottesville, Va. Fifth judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Black. Districts of northern Georgia, south-ern Georgia, middle Georgia, northern Florida, southern Florida, northern Alabama, middle Alabama, southern Alabama, northern Mississippi, 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, Atlanta, Ga.; Joseph C. Hutcheson, Jr., Houston, Tex.; Edwin R. Holmes, New Orleans, La.; Leon McCord, Montgomery, Ala. Sixth judicial circutt.—Mr. Justice Reed. Districts of northern Ohio, southern Ohio, eastern Michigan, western Michigan, eastern Kentucky, western Ken-tucky, eastern Tennessee, middle Tennessee, and western Tennessee. Circuit judges.— Xenophon Hicks, Knoxville, Tenn.; Charles C. Simons, Detroit, Mich.; Florence E. Allen, Cleveland, Ohio; Elwood Hamilton, Louisville, Ky.; John D. Martin, Memphis, Tenn.; Thomas F. McAllister, Grand Rapids, Mich. Seventh judicial circust.—Mr. Justice Byrnes. Districts of Indiana, northern Illinois, eastern Illinois, southern Illinois, eastern Wisconsin, and western Wisconsin. = Circuit judges.—Evan A. Evans, Madison and Baraboo, Wis.; William M. Sparks, Indianapolis, Ind.; J. Earl Major, Springfield, Ill.; Sherman Minton, New Albany, Ind.; Otto Kerner, Chicago, Ill. Eighth judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Murphy. Districts of Minnesota, northern Iowa, southern Iowa, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern Arkansas, western Arkansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Circuit Jjudges.— Kimbrough Stone, Kansas City, Mo.; John B. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Archibald K. Gardner, Aberdeen and Huron, S. Dak.; Joseph W. Woodrough, Omaha, Nebr.; Seth Thomas, Fort Dodge, Iowa; Harvey M. Johnsen, Kansas City, Mo. (Vacancy, new position.) Ninth judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Douglas. Districts of northern California,south-ern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, eastern Washington, western Wash-ington, Idaho, Arizona, Territories of Alaska and Hawaii, and China. Circuit judges.—Curtis D. Wilbur, San Francisco, Calif.; Francis A. Garrecht, Spokane, Wash.; William Denman, San Francisco, Calif.; Clifton Mathews, San Fran-cisco, Calif.; Bert E. Haney, Portland, Oreg.; Albert Lee Stephens, Los Angeles, Calif.; William Healy, Boise, Idaho. Tenth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Murphy. Districts of Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, western Oklahoma, northern Oklahoma, and New Mexico. Circuit judges.—Orie L. Phillips, Denver, Colo; Sam G. Bratton, Albuquerque, N. Mex.; Walter A. Huxman, Topeka, Kans.; Alfred P. Murrah, Oklahoma City, Okla. Judiciary | 4927 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (U. S. Court of Appeals Building, southeast corner Fifth and E Streets. Phone, REpublic 3811) D. LAWRENCE GRONER, chief justice, was born in Norfolk, Va., September 6, 1873; educated at Washington and Lee University and the University 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 in Crete, Nebr., March 6, 1886, son of Frank B. and Lunette (Stebbins) Stephens; educated at University of Utah, 1904-6; Cornell University, 1907-9; Harvard Law School, 1910-13, 1931-33; University of California, 1930-31; degrees—A. B., Cornell, 1909; LL. B. Harvard Law School, 1913; S. J. D., Harvard Law School, 1932, LL. D. (honor-ary), Georgetown University, 1939; 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, 1915-17; judge third judicial district court, Utah, 1917-21; member Cheney, Jensen, Holman & Stephens, Salt Lake City, 1921-28; Martineau & Stephens, Los Angeles, 1928; member grievance committee Utah State Bar Association, 1922-23; member code commission to revise Utah laws, 1928; director, American Judica-ture Society; acting associate director American College of Surgeons, 1921; president Salt Lake City Community Clinic and Dispensary, 1923-28; author Administrative Tribunals and the Rules of Evidence; appointed by President Roosevelt Assistant Attorney General of the United States, 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. JUSTIN MILLER, of Los Angeles, Calif., associate justice; born in Crescent City, Calif., November 17, 1888; A. B., Stanford University, 1911; LL. B. Uni-versity of Montana. 1913; J. D., Stanford University, 1914; D. C. L., Yale University 1934; honorary LL. D., University of Montana, 1941; engaged in gen-eral practice of law, in California, 1914-21; district attorney, Kings County, Calif., 1915-18; attorney and executive officer California State Commission of Immigra-tion and Housing, 1919-21; professor of law, University of Oregon, 1921-23; University of Minnesota, 1923-26; University of California, 1926-27; dean, School of Law, University of Southern California, 1927-30; dean, School of Law, Duke University, 1930-35; special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1934-36; member of the United States Board of Tax Appeals from January to August 1937; member of the American Bar Association (chairman of its Section of Criminal Law, 1927-37); member of the Federal Bar Association (president, 1935-37); member of the North Carolina Bar Association, and chair-man of its Committee on Uniform Laws, 1932-34; member of the California State Bar, from its organization to date; member of the Los Angeles Bar Association, 1927-30, and chairman of its Committee on Juvenile Courts; life member of American Law Institute; member of American Judicature Society: member of Phi Beta Kappa, Order of the Coif, Phi Delta Phi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Delta Chi, Sigma Nu Phi; author of Miller on Criminal Law and articles in various legal periodicals; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the Senate in August 1937. FRED M. VINSON, associate justice; born in Louisa, Lawrence County, Ky., January 22, 1890, son of James and Virginia (Ferguson) Vinson; A. B., 1909; LL. B,, 1911; LL. D., 1938, Centre College, Danville, Ky.; member Ye Rounde 428 Congressional Directory Table; Phi Delta Theta, Centre College; engaged in the general practice of law at Louisa, Ky., 1911-30, and thereafter at Ashland, Ky.; member Kentucky State Bar Association and the American Bar Association; member the American Legion; commonwealth attorney, thirty-second judicial district of Kentucky, 1921-24; Member of the House of Representatives of the United States in the Sixty-eighth through the Seventy-fifth (excluding the Seventy-first) Congresses; member Select and Joint Committees on Government Organization; member Ways and Means Committee, House of Representatives, in the Seventy-second through the Seventy-fifth Congresses until May 12, 1938, on which date resigned to enter upon the duties of the office of associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. HENRY WHITE EDGERTON, associate justice; born in Rush Center, Kans., October 20, 1888; University of Wisconsin, 1905-7; A. B., Cornell University, 1910; law school of the University of Paris, 1910-11; LL. B., Harvard, 1914; practiced in Boston, Mass.; member of law faculties of George Washington University (1921-29), University of Chicago (1928-29), and Cornell University (1916-18, 1929-38); special assistant to the Attorney General, 1934-35; author of articles in legal periodicals; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Roosevelt November 26, 1937; confirmed by the Senate December 9, 1937; assumed duties February 1, 1938. WILEY RUTLEDGE, associate justice; born in Cloverport, Ky., July 20, 1894; attended Maryville College (Tenn.); University of Wisconsin, A. B., 1914; Indiana University School of Law; University of Colorado, LL. B., 1922; LL. D., 1940; taught in high schools, Bloomington and Connersville, Ind., Albuquerque, N. Mex., and Boulder, Colo., 1915-22; associated with the law firm of Goss, Kimbrough & Hutchinson, Boulder, Colo., 1922-24; member of law faculties, University of Colorado, 1924-26; Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., 1926-35; the State University of Iowa, 1935-39; also dean, School of Law, Washington University, 1930-35; College of Law, the State University of Iowa, 1935-39; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the Dis-trict of Columbia by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the Senate in April 1939; assumed duties May 2, 1939; member National Conference of Commis-sioners on Uniform State Laws, from Missouri, 1931-35; from Iowa, 1936—. - RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t those whose daughters accompany them] *+ Chief Justice D. Lawrence Groner, 2406 Massachusetts Avenue. * Associate Justice Harold M. Stephens, Wardman Park Hotel. *t Associate Justice Justin Miller, Wardman Park Hotel. *Associate Justice Fred M. Vinson, Wardman Park Hotel. * Associate Justice Henry White Edgerton, Ontario Apartments. *t Associate Justice Wiley Rutledge, 4928 Indian Lane. RETIRED *Chief Justice George E. Martin, 1661 Crescent Place. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Clerk.—Joseph W. Stewart, 1301 Vermont Avenue. Deputy Clerk.—C. Newell Atkinson, Cabin John Park, Md., R. D. 3. Marshal.—George F. De Venny, 1609 Kennedy Place. Reporter.—Harvey T. Reid, 810 Thirteenth Street. Judiciary 429 UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS (Internal Revenue Building. Phone, N Ational 4696) FINIS JAMES GARRETT, presiding 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 insti-tution 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—Mrs. B. G. Koehler, of Geneva, Nebr., and Burns Garrett, of Dresden, Tenn.; 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; appointed presiding judge by dont Roosevelt December 1, 1937, and took the oath of office December 9, 1937. 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. IRVINE L. LENROOT, judge, 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, 1901-7; 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 Sep-tember 30, 1935; honorary degree of LL. D., George Washington University, Temple University, and Northern Ohio University; appointed judge of the United rates Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Hoover on May 17, 929. JOSEPH RAYMOND JACKSON, judge, of New York City, was born in Albany, N. Y., August 30, 1880, son of Michael J. and Alice (Birmingham) Jackson; educated in the common schools and was graduated from Manhattan College, New York City, in June 1900 with the degree of A. B.; in June 1930 received honorary degree LL.D. from the same college; married Josephine Kelley, of Butte, Mont., June 30, 1902; admitted to the bar of the State of Montana in 1907; practiced in Butte, Mont.; county attorney, Silver Bow County, Mont., . 1917-20; judge, second judicial district court of Montana, 1920-25; commis-sioner of the Supreme Court of Montana in 1922; president, Montana State 64674°—77-2—1st ed———29 430 Congressional Directory Bar Association in 1925; practiced law, New York City, 1925-34; appointed by President Roosevelt as Assistant Attorney General of the United States, June 1934; nominated judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Roosevelt November 29, 1937; confirmed by the Senate December 9, 1937; entered upon the duties of that office December 15, 1937. RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t those whose daughters accompany them] *Presiding Judge Finis J. Garrett, 3550 Springland Lane. *tJudge Oscar E. Bland, 2950 Macomb Street. *tJudge Charles S. Hatfield, 4335 Cathedral Avenue. *iJudge Irvine L. Lenroot, the Kennedy-Warren. *Judge Joseph R. Jackson, Westchester 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. McWherter, Continental Hotel. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES (Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street. Phone, DIstrict 0642) RICHARD SMITH WHALEY, chief justice; 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 suzcessive 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 (1913-15), First South Carolina District; reelected to Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-sixth Congresses (1915-21); chairman, Rent Commission of the District of Columbia, 1923-25; commissioner, Court of Claims, 1925-30; judge of Court of Claims, June 4, 1930; chief justice of United States Court of Claims, June 27, 1939. BENJAMIN H. LITTLETON, judge, of Nashville, Tenn., born in Weatherford, Tex., in 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 a member of the United States Board of Tax Ap-peals, 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; commissioned judge of the Court of Claims, November 6, 1929. SAMUEL ESTILL WHITAKER, judge; born in Winchester, Tenn., Septem-ber 25, 1886; son of Madison Newton and Florence Jarrett (Griffin) Whitaker; student Winchester (Tenn.) Normal College, 1902-5; University of Virginia, 1905-6; LL. B., University of Chattanooga, 1909; married Lillian Nelson Cham-bliss, daughter of Justice and Mrs. Alexander W. Chambliss, of Chattanooga, June 30, 1913; children, Nelson Chambliss (Mrs. Paul Campbell, Jr.) and Samuel Estill, Jr.; admitted to Tennessee bar in 1909, and began practice in Chattanooga; served as captain of Cavalry, later Field Artillery, United States Army, 1917-19; attorney, United States Department of Justice, 1919-20; attorney, Bureau of Internal Revenue, 1920; in private practice of law in Chattanooga 1921-37; city attorney, Chattanooga, 1923; member of firm of Whitaker & Whitaker, 1924-37; mayor of Riverview, Tenn., 1925-29; employed from time to time as special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1933-37; Assistant Attorney General of the United States, 1937-39; appointed judge, United States Court of Claims, July 13, 1939. Judiciary 431 MARVIN JONES, judge, was born near Valley View, in Cooke County, Tex., son of Horace King and Dosia (Hawkins) Jones; was graduated from South-western University, Georgetown, Tex., with A. B. degree, and from University ofTexas with LL. B. degree; was appointed chairman of the board of legal examinersfor the seventh supreme judicial district of Texas; member American Legion;elected to the Sixty-fifth and to each succeeding Congress to and including theSeventy-sixth; chairman House Committee on Agriculture December 1931 to November 20, 1940; appointed judge of United States Court of Claims April 9,1940; confirmed by United States Senate April 10, 1940; assumed duties of that office: November 20, 1940. JOSEPH WARREN MADDEN, judge; born at Damascus, Stephenson County, Ill., January 17, 1890; son of William J. and Elizabeth Dickey (Murdaugh) Madden; country school; Freeport (I11.) High School; Northern Illinois State Nor-mal School, De Kalb, Ill. ; University of Illinois, A. B., 1911; University of Chicago,J. D., 1914; married Margaret Bell Liddell, of McAlester, Okla., 1913; children,Mary Esther (Mrs. David Persinger), Joseph Warren, Jr., Robert Liddell,Margaret Elizabeth, Murdaugh Stuart; admitted to bar of Illinois, 1914; Ohio,1918; West Virginia, 1922; Pennsylvania, 1927; professor of law, University ofOklahoma, 1914-16; Ohio State University, 1917-21; University of Pittsburgh,1927-37; visiting professor of law, University of Chicago, North Carolina, Cornell, and Stanford Universities; dean of Law School, West Virginia Uni, versity, 192127; practiced law in Illinois and part time in Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsyl-vania; adviser to Reporters in Property and Torts Restatements, American Law Institute; author treatise on domestic relations, case book on domestic relations,co-author case book on property; special assistant to Attorney General of the United States, 1920; member of Governor’s Commission on Private Policing inIndustry in Pennsylvania, 1933-34; chairman National Labor Relations Board,1935-40; commissioned judge Court of Claims, January 8, 1941. Chief Justice Richard S. Whaley, the Shoreham. *Judge Benjamin H. Littleton, the Dodge. *tJudge Samuel E. Whitaker, 2920 Forty-fourth Place. Judge Marvin Jones, George Washington Inn. *1tJudge J. Warren Madden, McLean, Va. RETIRED Chief Justice Fenton W. Booth, Indianapolis, Ind. Judge Samuel Jordan Graham, Metropolitan Club. Judge William R. Green, Roger Smith Hotel. OFFICERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS Chief Clerk.—Willard L. Hart, Bowie, Md. Assistant clerk.—John W. Taylor, 4619 Van Ness Street. Bailiff. —Jerry J. Marcotte, 4502 Watkins Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Secretary to court.—Walter H. Moling, 1791 Lanier Place. Auditor and reporter.—James A. Hoyt, 3611 Van Ness Street. COMMISSIONERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS Israel M. Foster, 3717 Ingomar Street. Hayner H. Gordon, 1755 Lamont Street. Ewart W. Hobbs, box 5478, Seat Pleasant, Md. Richard H. Akers, 7008 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. ~ C. William Ramseyer, The Westchester. Melville D. Church, 1825 Q Street. Herbert E. Gyles, 2480 Sixteenth Street. 432 Congressional Directory UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT (201 Varick Street, New York City. Phone, W Alker 5-9030) WEBSTER J. OLIVER, presiding judge; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January 14, 1888; son of William P. and Frances L. (Fortune) O.; LL. B. St. Lawrence Uni-versity (Brooklyn Law School), 1911; LL. D., St. Lawrence University, 1941; married Genevieve M. Carlin, June 27, 1917; one son, Robert W.; buyer for Oliver Bros., Inec., hardware, machinery, New York and Pittsburgh, 1902-11; admitted to New York bar 1911; member of the firm of Oliver & McNevin; later member of the firm of Leubuscher, Kayser & Oliver; appointed special United States attorney 1935; appointed Assistant Attorney General in Charge of Customs, 1938; appointed judge, United States Customs Court, 1940, by President Roose-velt; designated by him as presiding judge on June 24, 1940; served as captain, Ordnance Reserve Corps, 1917-19; Democrat, Roman Catholic, Knight of Columbus. Home address, 1338 East Twenty-fourth Street, Brooklyn. 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; 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 on a farm near Sacramento, Ky., April 9, 1877; attended Valparaiso University, Indiana, 1896, B. S., Bowling Green College, Ky., 1898; admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1899; prosecuting attorney of McLean County, Ky., 1902-6; practiced law at Madisonville, Ky., 1906-30; Member of Congress from Kentucky, 1915-30; 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. 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 Cus-toms Court by President Hoover July 8, 1932, resigning from Congress to accept appointment; married and has four children—two sons and two daughters. 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. Judiciary 433 THOMAS J. WALKER, judge; born in Plymouth, Pa., March 25, 1877; admitted to practice January 1902, Butte, Mont.; elected county attorney, Silver Bow County, Mont., for two terms, 1908-12; State Senator, Silver Bow County, four terms, 1921-34; appointed judge, United States Customs Court, June 1940 by President Roosevelt. [Two vacancies.] OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT Clerk.—John W. Dale. Marshal and deputy clerk.— William H. Tietgen. Deputy marshal.—Frank P. Miller. DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR 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, Alban Towers. Jesse C. Adkins, Ontario Apartments, No. 601. Oscar R. Luhring, 3601 Connecticut Avenue, apartment 710. James M. Proctor, 4615 Linnean Avenue. F. Dickinson Letts, 3500 Garfield Street. Daniel W. O’Donoghue, 2303 California Street. Bolitha J. Laws, 7 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. T. Alan Goldsborough, Mayflower Hotel. James W. Morris, Westchester Apartments. David A. Pine, 1625 Nicholson Street. Matthew F. McGuire, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Auditor.—A. Leftwich Sinclair, the Westchester. (Office phone, NAtional 0103.) Clerk.—Charles E. Stewart, 1629 Columbia Road. (Office phone, DIstrict 2854.) Chief probation officer.—Joseph Y. Reeves, 5607 Thirty-ninth Street. (Office phone, DIstrict 2854.) COMMISSION ON MENTAL HEALTH (Municipal Court Building. Phones, REpublic 1208 and REpublic 4575) Chairman.—Thomas Gillespie Walsh (lawyer member), 4312 Thirteenth Place NE Alternate.—Frederick A. Thuee (lawyer member), Investment Building. Physicians (Psychiatrists): : Roger S. Cohen, M. D., 3767 Oliver Street (serving in U. 8. Navy). Paul J. Ewerhardt, M. D., 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Walter Freeman, M. D., 4501 Linnean Avenue. Bernard S. French, M. D., 1726 M Street. Elmer Klein, M. D., 6634 Barnaby Street (serving in U. S. Navy). Albert E. Marland, M. D., 1216 Sixteenth Street. Antoine Schneider, M. D., 1216 Otis Street NE. Hyman D. Shapiro, M. D., 4218 Sixteenth Street. -Bzecutive secretary.— Louis P. Stumph, 925 I Street. Clerk.—Catherine V. Crawford, 816 E Street NE. 434 C ongressional Directory ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES COURTS (Supreme Court Building, 1 First Street NE. Phone N Ational 5321) Director—Henry P. Chandler, 3525 Edmunds Street. Secretary to the Director.— Louise V. Cooper, 2301 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Director.— Elmore Whitehurst, 2914 W Street SE. Secretary to the Assistant Director.—Louise E. Allen, 2000 F Street. Chief, Division of Procedural Studies and Will Shafroth, 30 Statistics.— East Woodbine, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Probation.—Richard A. Chappell, 5362 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief Auditor.—Melville La Marche, 8 Barney Circle 3K, Budget and accounting officer.—Royal E. Jackson, 6114 Fourteenth Street. Service officer.— John F. Holland, Elgin Lane, Bannockburn Heights, Bethesda, Md. Personnel officer.—Catherine Waddle, 2111 Massachusetts Avenue. | UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE | | (United States Courthouse. Phone, District 2854) United States marshal.—John B. Colpoys, 2963 McKinley Street. Chief deputy marshal.—C. Michael Kearney, 2808 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va. | UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE (United States Courthouse. Phones, N Ational 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139) | Inge States attorney, District of Columbia.— Edward M. Curran, 6607 Western venue. Secretary to the United States attorney, District of Columbia.— Margaret V. Carr, 4305 Thirteenth Street NE. Assistant United States attorneys, District of Columbia: | John W. Fihelly, 1737 H Street. ! George E. McNeil, 1438 Iris Street. Charles B. Murray, 5417 Kansas Avenue. Cecil R. Heflin, 9 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Va. Arthur J. McLaughlin, 1115 Massachusetts Avenue. Allen J. Krouse, 606 Quintana Place. William Hitz, Jr., 1604 Carey Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Bernard Margolius, 5333 Twenty-eighth Street. Dennis McCarthy, 1750 Harvard Street. John B. Diamond, 3427 Chesapeake Street. Bernard J. Long, 4837 Reservoir Road. John H. Mitchell, 3809 W Street SE. John L. Laskey, 108 West Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Grace B. Stiles, 4018 Thirteenth Street NE. Brewster H. Marshall, 3201 Thirty-sixth Street. Evan T. Davis, 4020 Tenth Street NE. John Lewis Smith, Jr., 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Maurice Francis McInerney, 2719 Connecticut Avenue. Stephen C. Miller, 1507 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. John C. Conliff, Jr., the Westchester. Richard R. Horner, 1804 Second Street. Chief Clerk.—John J. O'Leary, 33 S Street. Division of Investigation.— Detective Sgt. Joseph W. Shimon, 3230 South Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; Detective Eldon F. Hawley, 35 Swann Road SE.; Arthur G. Keene, 1445 Park Road; Walter N. Cook, 5926 Thirteenth Place; Martin J. Meenehan, 1222 Euclid Street. Judiciary 435 Clerks.— Margaret D. Weber, 502 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Md.; Wilmer R. Stitely, 1408 Harvard Street; Charles J. Crogan, 2321 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va.; Elizabeth R. Magruder, 1605 North Danville Street, Arling-ton, Va.; Ethel A. Braswell, 705 Eighteenth Street; Euphrosine A. Rippley, 1923 Park Road; Alice M. McElroy, 1527 Upshur Street; James S. Gardiner, Rockville, Md., R. F. D. No. 1; Leonard L. M. Coster, 4434 Davenport Street; Chester S. Sheppard, 5435 Connecticut Avenue; Katherine C. Serpas, 2123 I Street; Paul Rollins, 4014 North Twenty-first Street, Arlington, Va.; Eugene F. Gallagher, 1735 Irving Street; Earle D. Goss, 9510 Singleton Drive, Bethesda, Md.; Verne R. Kilgallon, 2002 Tuckerman Street, Green Meadows, Md.; Kathryn Kowalski, 1606 Kearney Street NE. Member of Metropolitan Police Department assigned to United States attorney’s office.—Allan B. Baker, Park Lane Apartments. Messengers.— Luther Ross, Vista, Md.; Hugh W. Harvey, 1020 Fairmont Street; Howard V. Wilkes, 558 Twenty-third Place NE. MUNICIPAL COURT (Fourth and E Streets. REpublic 4575) Judges: Robert E. Mattingly, 5411 Forty-second Street. Nathan Cayton, 2948 Macomb Street. Armond W. Scott, 1922 Eleventh Street. Ellen K. Raedy, 1407 Delafield Place. Clerk.—Blanche Neff, 6407 Third Street. POLICE COURT (Fifth and F Streets. Phones, N Ational 6990 and 6991) Presiding judge.—John P. McMahon, Argonne Apartments, 1629 Columbia Road. Judges: Walter J. Casey, the Westchester. Hobart Newman, 4702 Reservoir Road. George D. Neilson, 3423 Porter Street. Clerk.— Walter F. Bramhall, 1236 Potomac Street. Chief deputy clerk.— William A. Norgren, Riverdale, Md. Chief Loan officer.—Joseph N. Sanford, 5522 Smallwood Drive, Green Acres, d. JUVENILE COURT (400 E Street. Phones, REpublic 5432 and N Ational 6000) Judge.—Fay L. Bentley, 3412 Q Street. Clerk.—Hilda R. Reagle, 3150 Sixteenth Street. Director, social work.—Genevieve Gabower, 2111 Massachusetts 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. Deputies.— Victor S. Mersch, 3615 Quesada 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, M. D., 1913 S Street. Deputy recorder of deeds.— Margaret M. Killeen, 2726 Connecticut Avenue. Second deputy recorder of deeds.—Felix H. Payne, Jr., 3221 Thirteenth Street NE. Secretary.— Elsie Austin, 143 W Street. Chief Clerk.—Catherine F. Downing, 5125 North Capitol Street. Private secretary.— Elizabeth B. Briggs, 1712 Second Street. Personnel officer.—Leonard G. Hyman, 1451 Corcoran Street. 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 permament 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 (S. Doc. 247, 64th Cong., 1st sess., p. 23). This was a considerable sum as compared with the average annual income of the 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 remain 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. 439 440 Congressional Directory 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 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 i charge of three commissioners selected by the President and subject to his irection. When the Government establishment was moved in 1800 there existed within the 10 miles square two municipal corporations; the corporation of the city of Alexandria, incorporated by Virginia; and the corporation of the city of George-town, incorporated by Maryland. The act of February 27, 1801, was the first legislation by Congress for the government of the District of Columbia following the removal to the permanent seat of government. While this act failed to set up a complete local government, it declared all of the laws of the States of Maryland and Virginia as then existing to be in force in the parts of the District ceded by the respective States. It created two counties, Washington County being the area outside of the cities of Washington and Georgetown on the Maryland side of the river and Alexandria County being the area beyond the limits of the city of Alexandria on the Virginia side of the river. It also created the circuit court, the office of marshal of the District, the office of United States attorney for the District, justices of the peace i) the ve counties, a register of wills, and a judge of the orphan’s court (2 tat. 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 of 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 2 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 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. This legislative assembly consisted of a District Government 441 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 eouncil 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 8-years, until June 20, 1874, when Con-gress 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 gov-ernment 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 3 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 3 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 a bs Los 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 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 percent from the revenues of the District of Columbia and 40 percent by the United States and this provision was repealed by act of Congress approved May 16, 1938. For several years this 442 Congressional Directory 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 1939, $5,000,000 by the United States, and for the fiscal year 1942, $6,000,000 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 18 percent of the total District budget, while the money raised through local taxa-tion represents approximately from 78 to 82 percent. 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 GOVERNMENT (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 6000) Commisstoner.—John Russell Young (president of the Board), 1834 Jefferson Place. Private Secretary.— Elizabeth Ramey, 2000 Sixteenth Street. Commasstoner.— Mason, Apartments. Guy Westchester Private Secretary.— Anne W. Davidge, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. Engineer Commissioner.——Col. Charles W. Kutz, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 2028 Allen Place. Private secretary.— Francis L. Timmons, Jr., 3210 Wheeler Road SE. Assistant to Engineer Commassioner.—Lt. Col. Beverly C. Snow, 4400 P Street. Secretary to the Board.—G. M. Thornett, 4610 Fourth Street. Assistant to Secretary.—Ralph A. Norton, 3115 Patterson Place. DISTRICT OFFICERS Assessor.— Edward A. Dent, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy assessor.— Byers M. Bachman, 4429 Lowell Street. Assistant assessor.— M. C. Fitzgerald, Cavalier Hotel. : ‘Board of Assistant Assessors of Real Estate.— Benjamin F. Adams, 3717 Morrison Street; L. S. Johnson, 6111 Utah Avenue; Lloyd F. Gaines, Clifton Terrace; H. D. Scantlin, 29 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Fred F. Graham, 3422 Oliver Street. Board of Assistant Assessors of Personal Property.— Charles A. Russell, 1341 Montague Street; A. B. Evans, 5448 Nebraska Avenue. Special assessment clerk.— Lauris N. Sherburne, Vienna, Va. Awuditor.— Arthur R. Pilkerton, 4645 Alton Place. Principal assistant auditor.— Robert L. Mudd, 329 Longfellow Street. Assistant auditor.— Clarence B. Whaley, 2612 Garfield Street. Budget Officer.— Walter L. Fowler, 1360 Maple View Place SE. Deputy budget officer.— William G. Wilding, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Retirement Sectton.— Franklin P. Lepson, College Park, Md. Saceiony of District Personnel Board.— Victor A. Howard, 6103 Fourth Street. Boards: Accountancy.— Wayne Kendrick, president, Rust Building; C. Vaughan Darby, secretary, 1010 Vermont Avenue; S. Frank Levy, treasurer, Earle Building. Alcoholic Beverage Control.—Thomas Ellis Lodge, chairman, 4900 Forty-seventh Street; Mrs. Agnes K. Mason, member, 2202 Kalorama Road; William P. Meredith, member, 2123 California Street; Margaret H. Davis, executive secretary, the Shoreham; Herbert K. Schollenberger, chief inspector, 3409 Twenty-ninth Street. Anatomical.—Dr. F. A. Hornaday, secretary-treasurer, the Mayflower. Architects, Examiner, and Registrars of.—L. M. Leisenring, president, 1777 Church Street; Robert F. Beresford, secretary, 810 Eighteenth Street. Barber examiners.—Saviour Sidotti, president, 2214 Fourth Street NE.; Richard R. Atkinson, vice president, 412 Tenth Street; Tony J. Durso, secretary-treasurer, 2903 Tenth Street NE. Boxing Commsission.— Thomas P. Morgan, Jr., chairman, Southern Building; Claude W. Owen, 2321 Fourth Street NE.; Lt. John J. Agnew; Lt. Col. . Harvey L. Miller, secretary, 4417 Brandywine Street. Cosmetology.—Eileen Desmond Schmid, president, 1840 Park Road; Elenora Jackson, treasurer, 2800 Dumbarton Avenue; Roselia B. Shaw, secretary, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Dental Examiners.—Dr.Charles T. Bassett, president, 1726 I Street; Dr. Harold B. Hertford, secretary, 1726 I Street. Education (13th and K Sts.).—Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, president, 5500 Thirty-third Street; Robert A. Maurer, vice president, 2029 Park Road; Elise Z. Watkins, secretary, 1800 Birch Drive; Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superin-tendent of schools, 3117 Forty-fifth Street; Robert L. Haycock, first assistant superintendent, 1606 Longfellow Street; Dr. Carroll R. Reed, first assistant superintendent, 9300 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Jere J. Crane, first assistant superintendent in charge of business affairs, 5829 Chevy Chase Parkway; Dr. Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant superintendent, 406 U Street; Assistant superintendents of schools, Dr. Chester W. Holmes, 809 Chalfonte Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Lawson J. Cantrell, 6101 Utah Avenue; Jessie LaSalle, 6304 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md.; Adel-bert W. Heinmiller (in charge of school budget), 6601 Fourteenth Street; A. K. Savoy, 217 T Street; Dr. Howard H. Long, 1112 Girard Street. 444 Congressional Directory Boards—Continued. Examiners, Veterinary Medicine.—John R. Mohler, president, 1620 Hobart Street; Irving M. Cashell, Secretary, 2128 L Street. Healing Art Commassion on Licensure to Practice.—President, Board of Com-missioners, District of Columbia; United States Commissioner of Education; United States distriet attorney for District of Columbia; superintendent of public schools, District of Columbia; health officer, District of Columbia (secretary-treasurer). Minimum Wage.—Mrs. William Kittle, 3131 Military Road; John E. Laskey, 1657 Park Road; Fred S. Walker, 760 Rock Creek Church Road; Eunice Broyles. secretary, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Nurses’ Examining.—Ashby Taylor, president, Children’s Hospital; M. Cordelia Cowan, secretary-treasurer, 1746 K Street. Optometry.—Dr. Lewis H. Kraskin, president, Washington Loan and Trust Building; Dr. M. Luther Dicus, secretary, La Salle Apartments. Parole.—Frank R. Jelleff, chairman, 2439 Wyoming Avenue; Wilbur LaRoe, Jr., Investment Building; Maj. Campbell C. Johnson, 1125 Columbia Road; Hugh F. Rivers, executive secretary, 4071 New Municipal Building. Podiatry Examiners.—Dr. Edward E. Thompson, 705 Twelfth Street; Dr. Sot C. Schutz, 605 Fourteenth Street; Dr. George R. Stilson, Mayflower otel. Pharmacy.— Augustus C. Taylor, president, 1733 Upshur Street; L. F. Bradley, secretary, 701 Maryland Avenue NE. ; Plumbing.—Elmon J. Ewing, president, 2129 I Street; John A. Bronzonie, secretary, 5405 Second Street. Public Library (8th and K Sts.).—Theodore W. Noyes, president, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue; Wendell P. Stafford, vice president, 1661 Crescent Place; Clara W. Herbert, librarian, 3407 Thirty-fourth Place; Ralph A. Beals, assistant librarian, 2220 Twentieth Street; Helen L. Cavanagh, administra-tive assistant, 200 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Public Welfare.—Frederick W. McReynolds, chairman; Conrad Van Hyning, director, 119 Jefferson Street, Falls Church, Va.; Gay B. Shepperson, principal, assistant director of public welfare; Paul L. Kirby, assistant director of public welfare; A. Patricia Morss, superintendent, foster care service; A. Madorah Donahue, superintendent, protective service; Morris Zelditeh, superintendent, public assistance services. Real Estate Commission.—Edward A. Dent, chairman; Harold E. Doyle, 738 Fifteenth Street; Aubrey St. C. Wardwell, Woodward Building; John A. Petty, secretary, 6225 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Tax Appeals.—Jo. V. Morgan, 5620 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md. Unemployment Compensation.—Commissioners of the District of Columbia, ex officio members; Daniel J. Callahan, Woodward Building; John Locher, 1211-A Connecticut Avenue; executive officer, John A. Marshall, 1937 Thirty-ninth Street. Zoning Adjustment.—John Nolen, Jr., 1916 S Street; Harry Blake, 1720 Taylor Street; Theodore I. Coe, 1741 New York Avenue; Culver B. Chamberlain, 2737 Cathedral Avenue; Robert O. Clouser, 306 Ashby Street, Alexandria, Va. Collector of tazes.—Guy W. Pearson, 4025 Nineteenth Street NE. Deputy collector of tares.—George H. Kidwell, 629 G Street SW. Coroner.—Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, 522 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. Penal institutions.—Ray L. Huff, general superintendent; Thomas M. Rives, superintendent, jail; Arthur L. Petitt, superintendent, workhouse; Claude O. Botkin, superintendent, reformatory. Poundmaster.—Frank B. Marks, 617 Bennington Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Purchasing officer.—Roland M. Brennan, 1023 Varnum Street NE. Principal assistant purchasing officer.— Melville D. Lindsay, 6819 Fifth Street. Deputy purchasing officer.—J. T. Kennedy, 930 Emerson Street. Recreation, Acting Coordinator of —Milo F. Christiansen, Allies Inn. Superintendents of— Home for Aged and Infirm.—Otto J. Cass. Blue Plains. District Training School.—Dr. James Lewald, Laurel, Md. Industrial Home School (white).—Daniel F. Ahern, 2453 Wisconsin Avenue. Industrial Home School (colored).— Wendell P. Tucker, Blue Plains. District Government -445 Superintendents of —Continued. Insurance.—Albert F. Jordan, 117 West Mason Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Deputies.—C. F. Creighton, 723 Dartmouth Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Charles E. Conner, Ashton, Md. Examiner and life insurance actuary.—Arthur O. Wise, 5508 First Street NE. Special examiner.—Richard P. Cope, 209 Peabody Street. License bureau.— Wade H. Coombs, 1336 Thirty-first Street. Municipal lodging house.—Henry A. Koch, 458 C Street. Noon Training School for Girls.—Rachel H. Galloway, 5300 Loughborough oad. : Receiving Home for Children.—Grady H. Leonard, 816 Potomac Avenue SE. Temporary Home for Soldiers and Sailors.—T. A. Hudlow, 921 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Weights, measures, and markets.—George M. Roberts, 1816 Monroe Street. Veterinary surgeon.—D. E. Buckingham, 2115 Fourteenth Street. Zoning Commassion.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Archi- tect of the Capitol, and the Director of the National Park Service. Execu-tive officer [vacant]. CORPORATION COUNSEL'S OFFICE Corporation counsel. —Richmond B. Keech, 2746 Woodley Place. Secretary.— Elizabeth Bunten, 7325 Blair Road. Principal assistant corporation counsel.—Vernon E. West, 23 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant corporation counsel for public-utility matters.—Lloyd B. Harri-son, 6249 Thirtieth Street. Assistant corporation counsels.—Chester H. Gray, 6420 Thirty-first Street; Glenn Simmon, 1347 Connecticut Avenue; William H. Wahly, 3031 Sedg-wick Street; Matthias Mahorner, Jr., 6401 Western Avenue; Oliver Gasch, 1753 P Street; James W. Lauderdale, 1424 Webster Street; Stanley De-Neale, 1507 Decatur Street; Edward W. Thomas, 3404 Garrison Street; John O’Dea, 3901 Seventeenth Street NE.; Milton D. Korman, 1445 Otis Place; Ralph D. Quinter, Jr., 4526 Avondale Street, Bethesda, Md.; Irving Bryan, 811 Quincy Street; Lee F. Dante, 3527 Runnymede Place; Glen A. Wilkinson, 1720 Hobart Street; William C. Martin, Jr., 1101 Fifteenth Street; Fred J. Icenhower, 3712 Jenifer Street; John Nesbitt, 806 Woodside Park-way, Silver Spring, Md.; William §S. Abell, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; William W. Dent, 1900 F Street. Chief Clerk.—Adam A. Giebel, 2815 Woodley Road. Inspector of claims.—Edward S. Dawson, 1316 Juniper Street. ENGINEER DEPARTMENT Chief clerk.—Porter M. Lumpkins, 3747 W Street. Director of construction.—Lt. Col. B. C. Snow, 4400 P Street. Municipal architect.—Nathan C. Wyeth, 2915 Forty-fourth Street. Superintendent District buildings.—E. P. Brooke, 3714 Calvert Street. Engineer in charge of D. C. repair shop.— William A. Draper, 325 A Street SE. Surveyor.— Francis F. Healy, 1435 Taylor 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, 1760 Euclid Street ‘Engineer of streets.—J. N. Robertson, 5727 Fifth Street. Sie deionans municipal garage and shops.—Charles N. Emmons, 6233 Utah venue. Superintendent trees and parking.—Clifford Lanham, 4210 Alabama Avenue SE. . Diveiion of inspection and inspector of buildings.—Robert H. Davis, 4836 Albemarle treet. Chaef electrical inspector.—J. S. Zebley, 1115 Orren Street NE. Chief engineer, Division of Smoke Regulation and Boiler Inspection.—H. Kenneth Kugel, 3825 Morrison Street. Inspector of plumbing.—Samuel Tapp, 1516 Newton Street NE. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed 30 446 Congressional Directory Director of sanitary engineering.—J. B. Gordon, 3241 R Street. Engineer of sewers.—A. D. Black, 1523 Twenty-second Street. Supervisor of city refuse— William A. Xanten, 3355 Military Road. Superintendent water division.— Humphrey Beckett, Lanham, Md. Superintendent sewage treatment plant.—Elwood Johnson, Locust Terrace, Blue Plains, D. C. Superintendent public convenience stations.—J. H. Dick, 602 Girard Street NE, DIRECTOR OF VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC Director of vehicles and traffic— William A. Van Duzer, 2640 Forty-fourth Street. First assistant.—M. O. Eldridge, 1789 Lanier Place. Admanistrative assistant.— George Curtis Shinn, 7110 Seventh Street. Chief clerk.—Edward Towers, 4118 Tenth Street NE. Supervising inspector—Charles W. Reed, 1313 Irving Street. FIRE DEPARTMENT Chief engineer. i T. Porter, 4320 Forty-sixth Street. Deputies.—Benjamin W. Weaver, 1806 Potomac Avenue SE.; Andrew C. Buscher, 3550 Warder Street. Battalion chief engineers—Frank G. Berry, 222 Eighth Street SE.; John B. Watt, 3620 Sixteenth Street; Joseph B. Simms, 1823 North Monroe Street, Cherrydale, Va.; Thomas B. Stanton, 2201 K Street; Joseph W. Allan, 639 South Carolina Avenue SE.; Edward O’Connor, 1436 Meridian Street; John R. Groves, 102 Eighth Street NE.; ; Logan L. Woolard, 919 E Street SE; Owen R. Moxley, 121 R Street NE.; J Clement Murphy, 645 Hamilton Street. Frederick M. Edwards, 1715 North Oak Street, Arlington, Va.; John B. Lyon, 6506 Fifth Street; William R. Lusby, 1226 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Joseph A. Mayhew, 1811 Kearney Street NE.; John L. Werheim, 1411 Penn-sylvania Avenue. Fire marshal.—Calvin G. Lauber, 5509 Nebraska Avenue. Superintendent of machinery. — Otto E. Fearn, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Executive officer.—C. S. Peterson, 1013 Hamlin Street NE. HEALTH DEPARTMENT Health officer—George C. Ruhland, M. D., 1875 Plymouth Street. Assistant health officer.— Daniel L. Seckinger, M. D., 4923 Sedgwick Street. Chief Clerk.— Arthur G. Cole, 4121 Seventh Street. Director, Bureau of Preventable Diseases.—James G. Cumming, M. D., 2801 Thirty-fourth Place. Director, Bureau of Sanitation.—J. Frank Butts, 3507 T Street. Director, Bureau of Food Inspection.—Reid R. Ashworth, D. V. S., 3533 Hertford Place. Director, Bureau of Vital Statistics.—Joseph B. Irvine, LL. M., 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. Director, Medical and Sanitary Inspection of Schools.—Joseph A. Murphy, M. D., 75 Observatory Circle. Director, Maternal and Infant Welfare.—Ella Oppenheimer, M. D., 3031 Newark Street. : Medical Director of Maternity.—J. Bay Jacobs, M. D., 1801 I Street. Director, Social Hygiene.—[Vacant.] ‘Director, Child Hygiene Service.—Hugh J. Davis, M. D., 1841 Wyoming Avenue. Director, Bureau of Tuberculosis.—A. Barklie Coulter, M. D., 2117 LeRoy Place. Director, Bureau of Nursing.—Josephine Pittman Prescott, 5327 Second Street. Nutritionist.—Elizabeth O. Grant, Olney, Md. . Director, Public Health Instruction.— Melvin P. Isaminger, Dr. P. H., 4300 River Road. Director, Permit Bureau.—Richard F. Tobin, M. D., 122 Eleventh Street SE. Epidemiologist.—Carl C. Dauer, M. D., 3515 Livingston Street. Superintendent, Gallinger Hospital. — Edgar A. Bocock, M. D., Gallinger Hospital. Superintendent, Tuberculosis Sanatoria, Glenn Dale, Md.—Daniel L. Finucane, M. D., Glenn Dale, Md. Medical analyst—Douglas N. West, 1608 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Social Service—|[Vacant.] District Government METROPOLITAN POLICE Major and Superintendent.—Edward J. Kelly, 1290 Kalmia Road. Detective headquarters.— Assistant superintendent, Richard H. Mansfield, Cheverly, Md Traffic Bureau.— Inspector Arthur E. Miller, 7804 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md. « Police Headquarters.— Assistant superintendent, Harvey G. Callahan, 4018 Twenty-first Street NE.; Inspector Milton D. Smith, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; Inspector Clarence Talley, R. F. D. 1, McLean, Va. First police district.—Inspector J. F. Beckett, 729 Kennedy Street. Second police district.—Inspector Ira E. Keck, 6019 Utah Avenue. Third police district.—Inspector Maurice Collins, 1416 Montague Street. Chief, also Property, clerk.—Capt. L. R. Beall, 1213 Ingraham Street. Police surgeons.—Dr. James A. O’Keeffe, 4500 Sixteenth Street; Dr. D. L. Borden, 2910 Woodland Drive; Dr. F. Y. Williamson, 3619 Legation Street; Dr. J. A. Reed, 3309 Thirty-fifth Street; Dr. G. Louis Weller, Jr., 2933 Cathedral Avenue; Dr. W. Warren Sager, 4428 Edmonds Street; Dr. Benjamin . Dean, Jr., 3221 Patterson Street; Dr. Hugh O. House, 1224 Connecticut venue. Harbor master.—Lt. W. H. Carlin, 6317 Thirty-second Street. Women’s Bureau.— Capt. Rhoda J. Milliken, 3315 N Street. PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION Commzissioners: Gregory Hankin, chairman, 2009 Park Road. [Vacancy.] Col. Charles W. Kutz, Corps of Engineers (U. S. Army), 2028 Allen Place. Executive secretary.—E. J. Milligan, Clinton, Md. General counsel.—Richmond B. Keech, 2746 Woodley Road. Special assistant corporation counsel.—Lloyd B. Harrison, 6249 Thirtieth Street. Chief accountant.—V. A. McElfresh, 704 Roeder Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief engineer.—Fred A. Sager, 3901 Livingston Street. Inspector of gas and meters.—Elwin A. Potter, 4425 Yuma Street. Chief Clerk.—N. H. Hetzel, 815 Eighteenth Street. WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE (Corner Massachusetts Avenue and North Capitol Street. Phone, District 7272) Postmaster.—Vincent C. Burke, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant postmasters.—John W. Quick, 230 Rhode Island Avenue NE.; Sidney G. Bursley, 5130 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary to the postmaster and appointment clerk.—Larsen Swain, 4005 Eighth Street NE. Goa) superintendent and assistant custodian.— William W. Day, 1301 Vermont venue. Bookkeeper.— William C. Furr, 1318 C Street NE. Assistant cashier in charge of station eraminers.—Edgar Church, 9101 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Station examiners.—Arthur E. Dean, 501 Twelfth Street NE.; Albert C. Jeffries, 4208 Twelfth Place NE.; Harry J. Hunt, Jr., 910 Quincy Street. Physician.—Aaron W. Martin, Beltsville, Md. Postal cashier.—T. R. Talbert, 324 Emerson Street. Assistant postal cashiers.—George C. Bondurant, 1421 Locust Road; Fielder J. Lynn, 4508 Yuma Street; Charles A. Duncan, Jr., 629 Hamilton Street. Money-order cashier.—Morton W. Stevenson, 1736 Columbia Road. Assistant money-order cashiers.—Joseph A. Griffith, University Park, Md.; Harry E. Shilling, 1226 Orren Street NE.; Charles Siebert, 3272 Arcadia Place. Superintendent of mails.—W. Gordon Bell, 206 East Luray Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Senior assistant superintendent of mails.—John J. Downey, 4401 Fifth Street. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of carriers.—Russell H. Thompson, 3105 Twenty-fourth Street NE. 448 Congressional Directory Superintendent of mails—Continued. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of registry.—Staley M. Clarke, 312Defense Highway, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of inquiry.— William C. Gilbert,4210 Seventh Street. : Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of special delivery.— William M.Clark, 7936 Orchid Street. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of United States official mail and messenger service.—Joseph Donovan, 1616 Webster Street. Assistant superintendents of mails.—Herbert E. Riley, 5020 Wisconsin Avenue; Frank M. Sommerkamp, Jr., 3616 Twentieth Street NE.: Vernon B. Dodge,4018 Illinois Avenue; Luther F. Fowkes, 213 Ingraham Street; Basil Sillers,1355 Kalmia Road; Luke Thompson, 3416 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; William D. Hanback, 1912 H Street; Walter J. Royer, 5607 Second Street; Everett M. Pershing, 3614 Twentieth Street NE. Superintendent of motor vehicles.—Douglas B. Horne, 409 Rock Creek Church Road. Classified stations FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES 449 FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATIVES [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the f designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the [| designates those having other ladies with them] ARGENTINA Office of the Embassy, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone NOrth 4900, 4901, and 4902. Office of finance, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone DEcatur 1100. Office of naval attaché, 1302 Eighteenth Street; phone DE-catur 0888. Office of commercial counselor, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone DEcatur 4853) *Sefior Don Felipe A. Espil, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Seiior Don Rodolfo Garcia Arias, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. *Capt. Alberto D. Brunet, naval and air attaché. *Col. Antonio Parodi, military attaché. *Sefior Don Carlos A. Pardo, first secretary of embassy. *Senor Don Adolfo Scilingo, first secretary of embassy. *Lt. Col. Alfredo Paladino, air attaché. Sefior Guillermo Uriburu, second secretary. Seftor Don Jorge Escalante Posse, second secretary of embassy Seiior Don C. Alonso Irigoyen, financial counselor. Sefior Don Anselmo M. Viacava, commercial counselor. Seftor Don Miguel E. Quirno-Lavalle, commercial counselor. *Sefior Don Jorge L. Sola, agricultural attaché. AUSTRALIA (Office of the Legation, 3117 Woodland Drive, phone, EMerson 4900) *The Right Honorable Richard G. Casey, D. S. O., M. C., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Alan S. Watt, first secretary. *Commander D. H. Harries, R. A. N., naval attaché. Mr. Peter R. Heydon, second secretary. *Mr. G. H. Munro, attaché. Mr. John M. McMillan, third secretary. BELGIUM (Office of the Embassy, 1715 Twenty-second Street; phones, DEcatur 1286 and 1287. Office of commercial counselor, Rockefeller Center, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York City; phone, Columbus 5-4515) *1 Count Robert van der Straten-Ponthoz, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. *Baron Hervé de Gruben, counselor of embassy. *Baron Joseph van der Elst, counselor. Mr. Jacques de Thier, first secretary. *Mr. F. Seynaeve, assistant commercial attaché. *Mr. Charles Léonard, assistant agricultural attaché. BOLIVIA (Office of the Legation, Investment Building, Fifteenth and K Streets. Phone, REpublic 1481) *Sefior Dr. Don Luis Fernando Guachalla, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Rail Diez de Medina, counselor. : *||Sefior Don Carlos Dorado Chopitea, first secretary. *(Col. Oscar Moscoso, military attaché. *Senor Sixto L. Ballesteros, commercial attaché. ol 452 Congressional Directory BRAZIL (Office of the Embassy, 3007 Whitehaven Street; phones, Michigan 6634 and 6635. Office of financial counselor, Room 3313, Chrysler Building, New York City. Office of financial attaché, 120 Wall Street, New York City; phone, Whitehall 4-1578) ; *Mr. Carlos Martins, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Arno Konder, Minister Plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy. *Brig. Gen. Amaro Soares Bittencourt, military attaché. *Mr. Oscar Bormann, financial counselor. *Mr. Walder Sarmanho, commercial counselor. *Mr. Eurico Penteado, financial attaché. *Mr. A. C. de Alencastro-Guimaries, first secretary. *Lt. Col. Armado de Souza e Mello Ararigboia, air attaché. *Commander Edmundo Jorddo Amorim do Valle, naval attaché. *Lt. Col. Stenio Caio de Albuquerque Lima, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Hugo Gouthier, second secretary. Mr. Fernando Saboia de Medeiros, second secretary. *Mr. Josias Ledo, second secretary. Mr. Paulo Frées da Cruz, agricultural attaché. BULGARIA (State of war declared by Bulgaria December 13, 1941) CANADA (Office of the Legation, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, DEcatur 0971. Office of naval attaché, mili= tary attaché, and air attaché, 2134 Leroy Place; phone, DEcatur 0971) *Mr. Leighton McCarthy, K. C., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. *Mr. Hume Wrong, minister counselor. *t Mr. Merchant Mahoney, C. B. E., counselor. *Commodore Victor G. Brodeur, R. C. N., naval attaché. *Brig. H. F. G. Letson, M. C., E. D., military attaché. Air Commodore G. V. Walsh, M. B. E., air attaché. Mr. J. E. Coyne, financial attaché. *Mr. H. A. Scott, commercial attaché. *Mr. Paul Reading, attaché. Mr. George Magann, attaché. *Mr. Hector Allard, second secretary. *Mr. Ronald Maecdonnell, second secretary. *Lt. Comdr. J. G. Mackinlay, M. C., R. C. N. V. R., assistant naval attaché. Maj. C. M. Drury, assistant military attaché. *Wing Commander J. G. Bryans, assistant air attaché. *Mr. Jean Chapdelaine, third secretary. CHILE (Office of the Embassy, 2154 Florida Avenue. Phones, NOrth 0746, 0747, and 0748) *{Sefior Don Rodolfo Michels, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Higinio Gonzalez, commercial counselor of embassy. *Senor Don Mario Rodriguez, first secretary of embassy. *Capt. Carlos Cortés, naval attaché. *Group Capt. Rafael Sdenz, air attaché, Sefior Don Abelardo Silva, secretary of embassy. Sefior Don Alejandro Bertrand, secretary of embassy. Seftor Don Fausto Soto, secretary of embassy. *|| Lt. Col. Guillermo Lopez-Larrain, military attaché. *Lt. Col. Guillermo Marin, assistant military attaché. *Sefior Don Ernesto Guzmén Donoso, attaché. CHINA (Office of the Embassy, 2001 Nineteenth Street; phones, Michigan 3350 and 3351. Office of military attaché, 3404 Fulton Street; phone WQodley 3399) Dr. Hu Shih, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Liu Chieh, counselor of embassy. *Maj. Gen. Chu Shih-ming, military attaché. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 453 * Dr. Kan Lee, commercial counselor. Mr. Tswen-ling Tsui, first secretary. *Mr. Kien-wen Yu, second secretary. Absent. *Maj. Sin-ju Pu Hsiao, third secretary. Mr. Ching-Kien Hsieh, third secretary. Mr. Chia-Chen Clarence Chu, attaché. *Mr. Kung-Shou Wang, attaché. *Mr. Jen Zien Huang, attaché. *Mr. Victor Kwonglee Kwong, attaché. *Mr. An Fu, attaché. Mr. Chan Chung-yuan, attaché. COLOMBIA (Office of the Embassy, 1520 Twentieth Street. Phone, DEcatur 2746) Sefior Dr. Gabriel Turbay, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Alberto Vargas Narifio, first secretary of embassy. Seftor Don José Camacho-Lorenzana, second secretary of embassy. Col. Miguel J. Neira, military attaché. *Sefior Diego Mejia, commercial attaché. COSTA RICA (Office of the Legation, 2400 Sixteenth St. Phone, DUpont 3001) *{Sefior Dr. Don Luis Ferndndez, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-tiary. *Dr. Hector Beeche, secretary of legation. Senior Don Victor Manuel Iglesias, commercial attaché. Dr. Fernando A. Fournier, attaché. CUBA (Office of the Embassy, 2630 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 7984) *Sefior Dr. Aurelio F. Concheso, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. José T. Barén, minister counselor of embassy. Sefior Dr. Vicente Valdés Rodriguez, counselor of embassy. Seiior Dr. Alberto Muxé, first secretary of embassy. *Sefior Dr. Raoul Herrera-Arango, second secretary of embassy. *Maj. Felipe Munilla, military and air attaché. *Lt. Cmdr. Rolando Peldez, naval attaché. *Sefior Dr. Nicolds Rivero, third secretary. *Sefior José Raul Capablanca, commercial attaché. Sefiorita Consuelo Batista, attaché. Sefior José Maria de Lasa, attaché. *Sefior Teodoro Santiesteban, agricultural attaché. Senor Jorge Alonso, attaché. CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Office of the Legation, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone NOrth 3300 and 3301) *Mr. Vladimir Hurban, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Dr. Karel Cervenka, first secretary of legation. Col. Oldfich Spaniel, military and air attaché. *Dr. Vladimir Palic, attaché of legation. Mr. Josef V. Polodna, attaché of legation. Lt. Col. Alexander Hess, assistant military and air attaché. DENMARK (Office of the Legation, 2343 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DUpont 3283) *Mr. Henrik de Kauffmann, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary *Mr. Carl A. C. Brun, counselor of legation. Mr. Constantin Brun, honorary counselor of legation. Mr. Povl Bang-Jensen, attaché. 454 Congressional Directory DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (Office of the Legation, 2101 Connecticut Avenue; phone, Michigan 2161. Office of commercial ceun-selor, Hotel Ansonia, Broadway at Seventy-third Street, New York City) *Sefior Dr. J. M. Troncoso, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Julio Vega Batlle, first secretary. *Sefior Don Plinio B. Pina Chevalier, commercial counselor. Senior Dr. Porfirio Herrera, second secretary. Sefior Dr. Horacio Vicioso, second secretary. ECUADOR (Office of the Embassy, Barr Building. Phone, N Ational 8954) *|||Sefior Capitdn Colén Eloy Alfaro, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. 4 Sefior Dr. Don Eduardo Salazar, counselor. Sefior Dr. L. Neftali Ponce, first secretary. *Sefior Don Emilio A. Maulme, commercial counselor. *Sefior Dr. José A. Correa, second secretary. EGYPT ! (Office of the Legation, 2301 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, Michigan 6020 and 6021) *Mabmoud Hassan Bey, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Anis Azer, commercial counselor. *Mr. Ali Foad Toulba, first secretary. *Dr. Mounir Bahgat, agricultural attaché. Mr. Anwar Niazi, attaché. Mr. Mohamed Sirag-el-Din, commercial attaché. *Mr. Hassan Hosny, attaché. ; EL SALVADOR (Office of the Legation, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 7100) *iSefior Dr. Don Hector David Castro, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister | Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don Carlos Adalberto Alfaro, first secretary of legation. *Sefior Dr. Don Felipe Vega-G6émez, attaché. ESTONIA (Office of the Consulate General, 9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City) *Mr. Johannes Kaiv, acting consul general of Estonia in New York City, in charge of legation. FINLAND (Office of the Legation, 2144 Wyoming Avenue. Phone HObart 0556) *Mr. Hjalmar J. Procopé, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Urho Toivola, counselor of legation. *Mr. Risto Solanko, counselor of legation. Col. Per Zilliacus, military attaché. *Mr. Erkki Mikkola, secretary of legation. Mr. Goddert Wrede, attaché. : FRANCE (Office of the Embassy, 2129 Wyoming Avenue; phone, MIchigan 7424. Office of commercial attaché, Maison Francaise, Rockefeller Center, New York City; phone, Columbus 5-1165. Office of financial attaché, 20 Exchange Place, New York City; phone, Whitehall 4-7900) Mr. Gaston Henry-Haye, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Brig. Gen. Auguste Bonavita, military attaché. ; *Mr. Guillaume Georges-Picot, counselor of embassy. *Mr. Robert Lacour-Gayet, financial attaché. *Commander Denis de Bourgoing, naval attaché. Col. Paul Jacquin, air attaché. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 455 *Mr. Francois de Panafieu, counselor of embassy. *Mr. Leon Marchal, counselor of embassy. Mr. Georges Bertrand-Vigne, counselor of embassy. *Baron James Baeyens, first secretary of embassy. *Mr. Charles Lucet, second secretary of embassy. *Mr. Charles Brousse, attaché. *Capt. Bruno Daru, assistant military attaché. *Tt. Charles-Henri de Lévis Mirepoix, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Michel Dorance, assistant air attaché. Mr. Etienne Burin des Roziers, attaché. GERMANY (State of war declared by Germany December 11, 1941) GREAT BRITAIN (Office of the Embassy, 3100 Massachusetts Avenue. Chancery Annex, 2433 Massachussetts Avenue, Phone, both offices, HObart 1340) *The Right Honorable the Viscount Halifax, K. G., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Sir R. I. Campbell, K. C. M. G., C. B., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary Mr. N. Hall, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Rear Admiral H. Pott, M. V. O., naval attaché. *Col. R. L. Benson, D. S. O., M. V. O., M. C,, military attaché. Air Commodore H. N. Thornton, M. B. E., air attaché. *Sir Owen Chalkley, K. C. M. G., C. B. E., commercial counselor of embassy. Mr. R. J. Stopford, financial counselor. *Mr. S. L. Childs, counselor. *Mr. F. R. Hoyer Millar, C. M. G., C. V. O., counselor. *Mr. A. K. Helm, C. B. E., counselor. *Mr. A. D. Marris, counselor. *Mr. Redvers Opie, counselor. *Mr. W. G. Hayter, first secretary. Mr. R. Keith Jopson, O. B. E., commercial secretary. *Mr. J. P. Summerscale, commercial secretary. Mr. J. G. Foster, first secretary. *Mr. G. F. Thorold, first secretary. Mr. E. Wyndham White, first secretary. *Mr. A. S. Calvert, first secretary. 1.4. Col. Harry Blake-Tyler, first secretary. *Mr. R. E. Barclay, second secretary. Mr. A. C. E. Malcolm, second secretary. Mr. J. L. Reed, second secretary. *Sir Anthony Rumbold, Bt., second secretary. *Commander W. S. Jameson, R. N., assistant naval attaché. Commander C. R. L. Parry, R. N., assistant naval attaché. Commander J. P. W. Furse, R. N. assistant naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. C. C. Martell, assistant naval attaché. *It. Comdr. R. M. Smeeton, R. N., assistant naval attaché. Lt. P. H. B. Otway-Smithers, R. N. V. R., assistant naval attaché. Maj. R. A. F. Williams, assistant military attaché. *Wing Commander D. F. Anderson, D. F. C., assistant air attaché. Brig. C. L. Lindemann, D. S. O., assistant air attaché. Mr. J. D. Murray, second secretary. *Mr. J. S. Dent, second secretary. *Mr. H. W. Auburn, second secretary. *Mr. R. F. Batty, second secretary. *Mr. W. Ritchie, second secretary. Mr. R. V. Palin, second secretary. Mr. Quintin Bridge, second secretary. Mr. R. G. Etherington-Smith, third secretary. *Mr. C. T. Crowe, third secretary. Mr. W. Godfrey, commercial secretary. Mr. R. Reid-Adam, commercial secretary. *Mr. A. C. Frost, third secretary. 456 Congressional Directory *Mr. E. L. Westropp, third secretary. *Mr. Humphrey O. Clarke, third secretary. *Mr. Leander McCormick-Goodhart, O. B. E., V. D., attaché. Mr. Benjamin Plunket, M. V. O., attaché. Mr. William Gray Elmslie, attaché. -Mr. J. O. T. Underwood, attaché. *Maj. R. M. Stewart Richardson, M. C., attaché. GREECE (Office of the Legation, 2221 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, NOrth 3168. Office of the commercial counselor, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, Room 1820, New York City; phone, Circle 7-6753) *Mr. Cimon P. Diamantopoulos, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. : *Mr. George S. Depasta, minister-counselor. *Capt. Alfred Leontopoulos, naval attaché. Col. Sophocles E. Veniselos, military attaché. *Mr. Philon A. Philon, first secretary. Mr. Spiro Tsami, commercial counselor. GUATEMALA (Office of the Legation, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Phone, DEcatur 2240) Sefior Dr. Don Adrian Recinos, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-tiary. Sefior Dr. Don Enrique Lépez-Herrarte, first secretary. HAITI (Office of the Legation, 5017 Sixteenth Street. Phone, GEorgia 4407) *Fernand Dennis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Elie Garcia, secretary of legation. *Maj. Roche B. Laroche, military attaché. HONDURAS (Office of the Legation, 2611 Woodley Place. Phone, ADams 2811) *¥Sefior Dr. Don Julian R. Caceres, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. HUNGARY (Severance of diplomatic relations December 11, 1941; state of war declared by Hungary December 13, 1941) ICELAND (Office of the Legation, 3839 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, WOodley 5600) *Mr. Thor Thors, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. IRAN (Office of the Legation, 2315 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 4202) Mr. Mohammed Schayesteh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. H. Hadjeb-Davallou, first secretary of legation. *Mr. Abdol-Ahad Yekta, second secretary of legation. *Maj. Hassan Aktarzendi, assistant military attaché. IRELAND (Office of the Legation, 2310 Tracy Place. Phones, NOrth 4400 and 0479) *tMr. Robert Brennan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Sean Nunan, counselor. Mr. Denis Devlin, secretary of legation. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 457 ITALY (State of war declared by Italy December 11, 1941) JAPAN (State of war declared by Japan December 7, 1941, United States time) LATVIA (Office of the Legation, 4704 Seventeenth Street. Phone, T Aylor 1437) *Dr. Alfred Bilmanis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Anatol Dinbergs, attaché. LITHUANIA (Office of the Legation, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Phone, ADams 5860) *Mr. Povilas Zadeikis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. LUXEMBURG (Office of the Legation, 2200 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, MIchigan 3857) *Mr. Hugues Le Gallais, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. MEXICO (Office of the Embassy, 2829 Sixteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 3781, 3782, and 3783. Office of financial attaché, 70 Pine Street, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-3196) *||Sefior Dr. Don Francisco Castillo Né4jera, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Sefior Dr. Don Luis Quintanilla, Minister Plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy. *tSefior Don Armando C. Amador, counselor of embassy. *Col. Cristébal Guzmédn Cédrdenas, military attaché. *Sefior Dr. Don Roberto Cérdova, legal counselor. *Sefior Dr. Don Antonio Espinosa de los Monteros, financial counselor. Sefior Don Rafael Nieto, first secretary. *||Commander Manuel Zermefio, M. N., naval attaché. *Sefior Don Salvador Duhart, second secretary. *Sefior Don Justo Sierra, second secretary. tSefiora Maria V. Chapoy, second secretary. *Sefior Don Emilio Calderén Puig, third secretary. *Sefior Don Miguel Pefialoza, third secretary. *Sefior Don Eugenio de Anzorena, third secretary. *||Lt. Col. P. A. José Pérez Allende, assistant military attaché for air. *Maj. Radl de Zaldo, assistant military attaché. Lt. Francisco Castillo N4jera, Jr., assistant military attaché. *Sefior Don Manuel Rodriguez de San Miguel, attaché. Sefior Don José M. Tapia, attaché. Sefior Don Francisco Plancarte Haro, attaché. Sefior Don Carlos Sdnchez Mejorada, Jr., attaché. *Sefior Don Jestis Gutiérrez Lugo, financial attaché. *Sefior Ing. Don Gonzalo Blanco Macias, agricultural attaché. *Sefior Don Angel Quijano Loyo, assistant financial attaché. NETHERLANDS (Office of the Legation, 1470 Euclid Street. Phones, COlumbia 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 4553, and 7427) *Dr. A. Loudon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Baron W. van Boetzelaer, minister counselor. *Count W. van Rechteren Limpurg, counselor of legation. *Mr. B. Kleijn Molekamp, commercial counselor of legation. *+Capt. J. E. Meijer Ranneft, R. N. N., naval attaché. *7Col. F. G. L. Weijerman. military attaché. 458 Congressional Directory *Mr. Ch. J. H. Daubanton, commercial counselor of legation. *Dr. H. R. van Houten, first secretary of legation. *Dr. H. N. Boon, second secretary of legation. *Mr. L. A. H. Peters, agricultural attaché. *Dr. H. Riemens, commercial secretary. *Mr. H. S. Hallo, commercial secretary. *Mr. Willem Adams, commercial secretary. Dr. G. E. Mellema, commercial secretary. *Jonkheer G. C. D. Hooft Graafland, commercial secretary. Mr. Th. F. Valck Lucassen, attaché of legation. NICARAGUA (Office of the Legation, 1521 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, DUpont 3263) ¥Sefior Dr. Don Le6n De Bayle, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. NORWAY (Office of the Legation, 3401 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, ORdway 1000) *Mr. Wilhelm Munthe de Morgenstierne, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Jorgen Galbe, counselor of legation. Col. Oscar Klingenberg, military attaché. *Commodore Per Askim, naval attaché. Lt. Col. A. D. Dahl, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Aage Bryn, first secretary of legation. *Mr. André Dedekam, first secretary of legation. Commander Kristian Ostby, air attaché. Mr. Torfinn Oftedal, second secretary *Mr. A. Bredo Stabell, second secretary. *||Mr. Lars Christensen, financial counselor. Mr. Hans Bull @vrevik, commercial counselor, *Mr. Ole Colbjgrnsen, financial counselor. Mr. Erling Sverdrup, attaché. Mr. Tor Stokke, attaché. PANAMA (Office of the Embassy, 1536 Eighteenth Street. Phone, MIchigan 3780) Sefior Don Ernesto Jaén Guardia, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Eduardo A. Chiari, Jr., counselor of embassy. *Sefior Don Max Heurtematte, first secretary. *Sefior Don Juan Ramén Vallarino, second secretary. Sefiorita Anita Ramirez-Duque, attaché. PARAGUAY (Office of the Legation, Room 300K, Wardman Park Hotel; phone, COlumbia 5200) *Sefior Dr. Don Juan José Soler, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. PERU (Office of the Embassy, 1300 Sixteenth Street; phone, HObart 3404. Office of the commercial counselor, 1010 Vermont Avenue: phone, NAtional 7880) Sefior Don Manuel de Freyre y Santander, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don Juan I. Elguera, counselor of embassy. *t Capt. Enrique Labarthe, naval attaché. *Lt. Col. Jorge Sarmiento, military attaché. *Sefior Don Juan Chavez, commercial counselor. *Sefior Carlos Mackehenie y de la Fuente, second secretary of embassy. *Sefior Francisco Pardo de Zela, Jr., assistant commercial attaché. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 459 POLAND (Office of the Embassy, 2640 Sixteenth Street; phones, ADams 3800, 3801, and 3802. Office of the financial counselor, 14 Wall Street, New York City; phone, Rector 2-0582. Office of the military attaché, 2633 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 3330) *Mr. Jan Ciechanowski, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Michal Kwapiszewski, Minister Plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy. Mr. Jan Drohojowski, counselor of embassy. Col. Wlodzimierz Onacewicz, military and air attaché. Mr. Janusz Zoltowski, financial counselor. *Count Jerzy Lasocki, second secretary. Mr. George Wendolowski, second secretary. *Maj. Stefan Dobrowolski, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Stefan Poradzewski, attaché. PORTUGAL (Office of the Legation, Wardman Park Hotel. Phones, COlumbia 1643 and 1644) *t||Dr. Jodo Antonio de Bianchi, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-tiary. *Dr. Vasco Vieira Garin, first secretary. Dr. Eduardo A. Bacelar Machado, second secretary. *Dr. Jodo R. Simoé&s Affra, second secretary. Mr. Pedro P. Bon de Sousa, attaché. RUMANIA (State of war declared by Rumania December 11, 1941) SPAIN (Office of the Embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 0190 and 0191. Office of the commer-cial attaché, 1629 Columbia Road; phone COlumbia 7661) *Sefior Don Juan Francisco de Cérdenas, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni-potentiary. Sefior Don Juan G. de Molina, Marques de Fontana, Minister counselor. Sefior Don Eduardo M. Danis, Minister-attaché. Sefior Don Luis de Silva, Marques de Zahara, first secretary. Sefior Don Joaquin Rodriguez de Gortazar, second secretary. *Lt. Col. Manuel de la Sierra, air attaché. *Sefior Miguel de Echegaray, agricultural attaché. *Sefior Don José Nuiiez, commercial attaché. SWEDEN (Office of the Legation, 2247 R Street; phones, NOrth 1047, 1048, and 1049. Office of the financial coun-selor, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York City, N. Y.; phone, Circle 6=5822, Office of the military attaché, 2006 Columbia Road; phone, NOrth 2137) *Mr. W. Bostrom, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Folke Wennerberg, counselor. Mr. Harry Eriksson, commercial counselor. *Mr. H. T. Magnusson, financial counselor. *Mr. Tor Hugo Wistrand, counselor. *Mr. Sven Dahlman, first secretary. *Capt. Karl Wessel, military attaché. Mr. Gosta Brunnstrom, second secretary. Mr. Ake Sjo6lin, attaché. Mr. Jens Malling, attaché. *It. Curt Wennberg, assistant military attaché. Mr. Lennart Petri, attaché. *Mr. P. R. Hichens Bergstrom, attaché. SWITZERLAND (Office of the Legation, 2900 Cathedral Avenue. Phone, HObart 1815) * Mr. Charles Bruggmann, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Eduard Feer, counselor of legation. Mr. Fritz Real, attaché. 460 Congressional Directory THAILAND (Office of the Legation, 2300 Kalorama Road. Phone, NOrth 1849) *Mom Rajawongse Seni Pramoj, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. *Lt. Col. Mom Luang Kharb Kunjara, military and air attaché. Luang Dithakar Bhakdi, second secretary. *Mr. Ananta Chintakananda, third secretary. TURKEY (Office of the Embassy, 1606 Twenty-third Street; phone, NOrth 6400. Office of commercial attaché, 80 Broad Street, New York City; phones, Bowling Green 9-8916 and 9-8917) *Mr. Mehmet Miinir Ertegiin, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Orhan H. Erol, counselor of embassy. *Maj. Tekin Ariburun, air attaché. *Maj. Cemal Aydinalp, military attaché. *Mr. Orhan Kutlu, second secretary of embassy. Dr. Ziibeyir Aker, third secretary of embassy. Mr. Huldi F. Sarhan, commercial attaché. UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA (Office of the Legation, 3101 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, MIchigan 3471) *Mr. Ralph William Close, K. C., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. Mr. Robert Webster, secretary of legation. Brig. J. Holthouse, O. B. E., air and military attaché. *Mr. A. T. Brennan, commercial counselor. *Mr. J. R. Jordaan, secretary of legation. *Maj. J. D. de Villiers Rademan, assistant air and military attaché. *Mr. J. A. Siegruhn, commercial attaché. *Dr. W. C. Naudé, attaché. Mr. H. H. Woodward, attaché. *Mr. J. E. Bruce, attaché. UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Office of the Embassy, 1119 Sixteenth Street. Phones, NAtional 7550, 7551, and 7552) *Mr. Maxim Litvinoff, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Andrei A. Gromyko, counselor. Mr. Dmitri S. Chuvakhin, first secretary. Capt. Ivan A. Yegorichev, naval attaché. *Col. Ilia M. Saraev, assistant military attaché. *Col. Pavel Fedorovich Berezin, assistant military attaché for air. *Mr. Vladimir I. Bazykin, second secretary. *Mr. Fedor S. Novikov, second secretary. *Maj. Pavel I. Barayeyv, assistant military attaché. *Maj. Constantine I. Ovchinnikov, assistant military attaché for air. *Commander Nicolai A. Skriagin, assistant naval attaché. *Mr. Anatoli L. Timofeev, third secretary *Mr. Pavel S. Shirmanov, attaché. *Mr. Anton N. Fedotov, attaché. *Mr. Victor D. Kallistratov, attaché. URUGUAY (Office of the Embassy, Suite 820, 1010 Vermont Avenue. Phone, MEtropolitan 0831) *Dr. Juan Carlos Blanco, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Col. Hugo Molins, military attaché. *Lt. Col. Medardo Farias, military attaché for air. *Commander Mario Collazo Pittaluga, naval attaché. *Commander Julio C. Poussin, naval attaché for air. Sefior Mario F. Giucei, second secretary. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 461 VENEZUELA (Office of the Embassy, 2445 Massachusetts Avenue; phones, Michigan 7400 and 7401. Office of the com- mercial counselor, 2445 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, MlIchigan 7587) Yoder Dr Don Diégenes Escalante, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-entiary. Seftor Don Arturo Lares, counselor of embassy. *tSefior Don Luis Coll-Pardo, commercial counselor. *Col. Juan Jones-Parra, military attaché. *Sefior Dr. Luis E. Gémez Ruiz, first secretary. *Sefior Don Juan Lecuna, second secretary. *Sefior Federico de Legérburu, assistant commercial counselor. YUGOSLAVIA (Office of the Legation, 1520 Sixteenth Street. Phone, HObart 3492) *Mr. Constantin Fotitch, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Dr. Vladimir Ryb4¥, counselor of legation. *Mr. Radoye Nikoliteh, counselor of legation. Lt. Col. Zivojin Radoychich, military and air attaché. Mr. Rastko Petrovich, first secretary of legation. Mr. Spasoye Yefremovich, first secretary of legation. Dr. Bozidar Sarieh, third secretary of legation. *Mr. Bogdan Raditsa, attaché. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed 31 FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES AFGHANISTAN—BELGIUM [NorE.—The word ‘honorary’ preceding a title indicates that the officer was so designated in his exequatur; appearing in parentheses after a title, it indicates that the officer is serving in an honorary capacity, although not so designated in his exequatur] State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction AFGHANISTAN —.__......_- ARGENTINA ‘Alabama: Mobile... citroen California: Los Angeles... ._._.__._. San Francisco. -... cee —cm=s- 4 hs py an EE eReeR endria Maryland: Baltimore... Massachusetts: Boston_._______________ Michigan: Detroit. =~ Mississippi; Gulfport. co -——___.-New York: New York City... .__.--__ Oregon Portland er __-oiboaes? Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico: San Juan... -2z-—zz-: South Carolina: Charleston ___________ Povas: Houston cone Sanaa POLL API ee er Virgicia: Norfolk en Washington: Seattle... ...--..___.. BELGIUM Alabama: Mobile | to California: Los Angeles. .-...--~--.->__ San Franeiso.. i= —-=- The Embassy and consulates of the Republic of Turkey in the United States are charged with the protection of Afghan in-terests in the United States. Luis J. Chretienneau, vice consul. Gilbert Russell Ladd, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama. Emilio Loscano Tegui, consul. Enrique C. Niese, honorary consul. Martin Luis Drago, consul. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Utah. Ramon Ureta, vice consul (honorary). For Florida. J. Harris Pierpont, vice consul (honorary). L. N. Dantzler, Jr., vice consul (honorary). William H. Morrell, vice consul (honorary). For Georgia. Alejandro del Carril, consul. Juan Carlos Weidemann, vice consul (honorary). For Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Lorenzo A. Servente, consul general. Manuel Gonzalez Durand, consul. Antonio Ashby, honorary consul. For Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, and Washington. Carlos A. Quiros, consul. Alfonso Romulo Zabala, consul. Cyril E. Shelvey, vice consul (honorary). For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Samuel Fitzpatrick, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan and Ohio. Carlos Augusto Simpson, vice consul (honorary). For Mississippi. Conrado Traverso, consul general. Rodolfo Martinez Pita, consul. Roberto J. Carman, consul. Carlos Alfredo Casal, consul. : For the United States except the New Orleans consular district. L. W. Hartman, vice consul (honorary). Ernesto C. Uriburu, consul. For Pennsylvania. José P. Fernandez, vice consul (honorary). For the Philippine Islands. Sergio Ramirez de Arellano, vice consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul (honorary). For South Carolina. Walter A. Evans, vice consul (honorary). Christopher Stephen Flanagan, vice consul (honorary). William Holmes Davis, vice consul (honorary). John P. Hausman, vice consul (honorary). For Washington. A. Tellier, consul (honorary). For Alabama. Charles Winsel, consul (honorary). For Arizona and southern California. L. Genis, consul general. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii. 465 466 Congressional Directory BELGIUM State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction BELGIUM—continued Canal Zone.» cos mer n sis nas n Colorado: Denver too... aaa. Florida: Jacksonville. Georgia: Atlanta. 2. -l.-.0TnSoil Savannah. oo ceena.eonle Hawaii: Honolulu Hlinols: Chicago. «tc eeavemioanr== Kentucky: Louisville. ______ RO RE Louisiana: New Orleans... _..__.______ Maryland: Baltimore__ __ ___._________ Massachusetts: Boston-_______________ Michigan: Detroit...ft lz. = Minnesota: Minneapolis_._____________ New York: New York City___.._....___ Ohio; Cincinnati. cot erie eww Cleveland... cen ne aad Oregon: Portland... .cocnvecrmnargne J. Henriquéz, consul (honorary). J. P. Constantine, consul (honorary). For Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming. A.J. Rosenthal, consul (honorary). For the counties of Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Duval, Flagler, Gilchrist, Nassau, Putnam, St. Johns, Seminole, Union, and Volusia. H. Hilton-Green, vice consul (honorary). A. van Eepoel, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Citrus, Col-lier, Dade, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Indian River, Lake, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Marion, Martin, Monroe, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, St. Lucie, Sarasota, and Sumter. H. L. De Give, consul (honorary)_. For Georgia (except southeastern Georgia). A. Thesmar, consul (honorary). For the counties of Appling, Berrien, Brooks, Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Camden, Charlton, Chatham, Clinch, Coffee, Col-quitt, Columbia, Decatur, Dodge, Dooly, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, Glascock, Glynn, Hancock, Houston, Irwin, Jeffer-son, Johnson, Laurens, Liberty, Lowndes, McDuffie, McIn-tosh, Mitchell, Montgomery, Pierce, Pulaski, Richmond, Screven, Tattnall, Telfair, Thomas, T'wiggs, Ware, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Wilcox, Wilkinson, and Worth. For South Carolina. V. Lappe, consul (honorary). Emile Rosier, consul general. John Cyrille Vermeren, vice consul (honorary). For the States of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Ed. Andries, vice consul (honorary). For the Illinois counties of Adams, Brown, Bureau, Calhoun, Fulton, Hancock, Henderson, Henry, Knox, McDonough, Mercer, Peoria, Pike, Rock Island, Schuyler, Stark, and Warren. For the Iowa counties of Adair, Adams, Appa-noose, Cass, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Des Moines, Fremont, Henry, Jefferson, Johnson, Keokuk, Lee, Louisa, Lucas, Madison, Mahaska, Marion, Mills, Monroe, Montgomery, Muscatine, Page, Pottawattamie, Ringgold, Scott, Taylor, Union, Van Buren, Wapello, Warren, Washington, and Wayne. Sevier Bonnie, consul (honorary). For Kentucky (except the counties of Boone, Campbell, and Kenton) and Tennessee. A. Remés, consul general. H. Dabezies, consul (honorary). For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis-sissippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. J. G. Whiteley, consul (honorary). For Delaware and Maryland. G. H. Toole, consul (honorary). For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. P. Boeye, consul (honorary). For Michigan. O. E. Safford, consul (honorary). For Minnesota. \ Charles Hallaert, consul general. For Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, Maine, North Carolina, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia, and Vermont. A. D. Castellini, consul (honorary). For the Kentucky counties of Boone, Campbell, and Kenton. For the Ohio counties of Adams, Athens, Brown, Butler, Clark, Clermont, Clinton, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Gallia, Greene, Hamilton, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Madison, Meigs, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Preble, Ross, Scioto, Vinton, Warren, and Washington. E. E. Stearns, consul (honorary). For the northern counties of Ohio. A. Herman, vice consul (honorary). For Idaho and Oregon. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 467 State and residence BELGIUM—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh 20 Ci 00000 Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: Mayagliez.__..-.-_--__:_. SanJoan. oo ok Texas: Galveston... ..._._.. a rahe Honstonizs, oooh lh ra ni Virginia: Norfolk. = i re a Richmond... .. r oor soca5 Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie______ Washington: Seattle ooo. ouoenneeais Wisconsin: Green’ Bay. uuceeeecin. BOLIVIA California: LosiAngeles.. ...........0._ San Francisco: .---voveanins Canal Zone: Panaméi, Panama_________ THinois:2Chicagei ro. oa. Louisiana: New Orleans.__ ___.._.._.___ Massachusetts: Boston. ____.._...__.... MissouriSt.-Tounis oo New Jersey: Ridgewood. __.___________ New York: New York City_____._._____ Oregon=Portlond.-2... one Cinvnniad Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh... Washington: Seattle. = "7 "22 BRAZIL California: Los Angeles... _____...._. San: Francisco...oe-otn ooo Canal Zone: Panamé, Panama._________ BELGIUM—BRAZIL Name, rank, and jurisdiction J. Leroux, consul (honorary). For the counties of Adams, Bedford, Berks, Blair, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Chester, Clinton, Columbia, Cum-berland, Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Nor-thampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike, Potter, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York. R. Dereume, consul (honorary). For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Law-rence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset, Venango, Warren, ‘Washington, and Westmoreland. H. Vander Straeten, consul general. M. Verlinden, consul (honorary). For the Philippine Islands. O. F. Bravo, vice consul (honorary). For the Department of Aguadilla and Mayagiiez. M. I. Saldana, consul (honorary). : For the Departments of Arecibo, Bayamo6n, Guayama, Humacao, and Ponce, and the island of Vieques. M. Baudoux, consul (honorary). For the counties of Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Galves-ton, Jackson, Jefferson, Matagorda, Orange, and Victoria. R. C. Patterson, consul (honorary). For Oklahoma and Texas (except the Texas counties of Aransas, Bee, “Brazoria, Brooks, Calhoun, Cameron, Chambers, Duval, Galveston, Goliad, Hidalgo, Jackson, Jefferson, Jim Hogg, Jim Wells, Kenedy, Kleberg, Live Oak, Matagorda, McMullen, Nueces, Orange, Refugio, San Patricio, Starr, Victoria, Webb, Willacy, and Zapata. R. T. Hasler, consul (honorary). For Newport News and Norfolk. For North Carolina. Fred E. Nolting, consul (honorary). For Virginia and West Virginia. D. V. Bornn, consul (honorary). For St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas. Amaury Auzias de Turenne, acting consul. For Washington. M. J. Heynen, consul (honorary). For Wisconsin. Duke N. Banks, honorary consul. Jorge Guardia Berdecio, honorary vice consul. , consul general. Federico Ostrid Reyes, consul. Casimiro Alvarez, honorary consul. Jorge Eduardo Boyd, honorary consul general. Carlos Mendez, consul. Gustavo Guerrero, honorary consul. Mrs. Marie Aline Z. de Blanco, honorary vice consul. William Henri Irish, honorary consul. Arnold George Stifel, honorary consul. Adolfo Giinther, honorary consul. For New Jersey. Teddy Hartmann, consul general. Jaime Gutiérrez-Guerra, consul. J. Arturo Arguedas, honorary vice consul. Huarcar Velarde, honorary consul. A. N. Cleven, honorary consul. Israel Torrico, honorary consul. Raul Bopp, consul. Alfredo de Almeida Sa, vice consul. Anibal de Saboia Lima, consul general. Sergio de Lima y Silva, consul. Carlos Fernandes, vice consul (honorary). For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Jorge Arias Feroud, honorary consul. Pedro Ernesto Arias Icaza, honorary vice consul. Congressional Directory BRAZIL—CHILE State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction BRAZIL—continued Ploplday Miami. 00 of 0 rd. Georgia: Savannghoe. oi oo 0 TMinois: Chicago coco aza i855 Louisiana: New Orleans______________. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ South Carolina, Charleston_____________ Rexas: Dallags a Washington: Seattle... ......... BULGARIA ae soniin CHILE California: Long Beach________________ Los Angeleg 5° Cov oom San Diego. oo so reali San Franeiseo. i iirc San Pedro. co orEEN Hawaii; Honolulu. ._-Ji Tinols; Chicago... 0 oo= ¢ Louisiana: New Orleans. .___._________ Maryland: Baltimore. .2 ~~ “8 New Jersey: Jersey City... _.______ José Castano Bueno Horta, Jr., consul. Adolpho Justo Bezerra de Menezes, vice consul (honorary). For Georgia and Florida. Henrique Oswaldo de Miranda, honorary vice consul. For Florida and Georgia. Egydio da Cémara Souza, consul. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Pedro de Alcantara Nabuco de Abreu Filho, consul. Joo Gracie Lampreia, vice consul. Arnaldo Vasconcellos, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis-sippi, and Tennessee. For United States possessions in the Caribbean Sea. Armando Fleury de Barros, honorary consul. Pablo Alegre, honorary vice consul. For Delaware and Maryland. Ildefonso Falco, consul. Antonio Malva Gomes, vice consul (honorary). Oscar Corréa, consul general. Jorge Maciel da Costa Leite, consul. Sotero Cosme, vice consul. Jose Jobim, vice consul. : For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. David Barbosa Lage Moretzsohn, consul. Jodo Josetti, Jr., vice consul. Ruy Vianna Bandeira, vice consul. For Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul (honorary). J. Kirby Mcdonough, honorary consul. Carlos Meissner, Jr., consul. Nivaldo Carneiro Telles Ferreira, vice consul. For Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. José Luis Fernandes, honorary consul. Christofer Stephen Flanagan, honorary vice consul. Emmett Irwin Welch, consular agent. Jodo Antonio Rodrigues Martins, consul. Rosario Carlo Ruggieri, vice consul. Pedro Fernando Machado Polzin, vice consul. For North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Robert C. Bullwinkel, vice consul (honorary). State of war declared by Bulgaria Dec. 13, 1941. Mrs. Guillermina Adriasola de Morales, consul. For Long Beach. Manuel E. Hiibner Richardson, consul general. Javier Urrutia Valdés, consul. Guillermo Atria Ramirez, consul. For Arizona, Colorado, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Hawaii. Mauricio Herschel, honorary consul. For San Diego County. Mario Illanes Peiiafiel, consul. For central and northern California, Colorado, Utah, and Nevada. Rafael Elizalde MacClure, consul. Frederik A. Schaefer, honorary consul. For the Hawaiian Islands. M. H. Ehlert, consul (honorary). For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wis-consin. Carlos Grant Benavente, consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Guillermo Brown Guerra, consul. For the District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Enrique Gacitua Aquilera, consul. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 469 State and residence CHILE—continued New York: Newburgh. _________....... New York City... =o: Ohio: Cinciomati-i. 0 Coo.ooo = Oregon: Portland... : SITTER rr Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. _______ Puerto Rico: San Juan... __Ilrs-us Washington: Seattle_.._.__ __-_._._.._ California: Los Angeles coca vacacanua San Francisco. i: wzaucci. Hawail: Honolul. or ranean Nlinois:-Chicago. oo o.oo-—-Lizs0s Louisiana: New Orleans__.______.__._. New York: New York City.___...__--__ Oregon: Portland... -..iitozze e Philippine Islands: Manila____._______ Texas: Houston... Lace oiic:2 Washington: Seattle. oi ....cc..ui.uc COLOMBIA California: Tos'Angeles.-.. .o.—._... San Francisco. .o....-...¢ Canal Zone: Balboa. ._ cc. Cristobal BE Maryland; Baltimore... ......G.oco. Massachusetts: Boston________________ Missouri: St. Louis... feu aiavnce New Jersey: Newark _ ___._.__.._...____ New York: New York City_____.....__ CHILE—COLOMBIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Louis E. Figueroa y Navarro, consul. Anibal Jara Letelier, consul general. For the United States. Enrique Bustos Arredondo, consul. Luis Morand Dumas, consul. Manuel Arellano Marin, consul. Fernando Illanes Benitez, consul. Francisco Pefa, consul (honorary). Daniel Fuentes Gormaz, in charge of consulate. For Ohio. Lawrence Walter Hartman, consular agent. Manuel Moreno Lajafia, honorary consul. For Camden, New Jersey. For Delaware and Pennsylvania. Filipo L. de Hostos, honorary consul. For Puerto Rico. Fernando Dahmen, consul. Alfonso Prieto Basadre, consul. For Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming. Tse-chang Kent Chang, consul. Chih Tsing Feng, consul general. Shiao Wen-Liang, vice consul. Chan Ying-Wing, vice consul. Sien-yung Yu, vice consul. King-chau Mui, consul general. Ying Yu Huang, consul. Li Chia Hsiang, vice consul. Chang-Lok Chen, consul general. Gung Hsing Wang, vice consul. Tsune-chi Yii, consul general. Hsin Yu Lu, consul. Cheng Pao-nan, vice consul. Wei-hsien Tsung, vice consul. Silwing Pei-Chiu Au, consul. Shang-Chi Su, vice consul. Clarence Kuangson Young, consul general. For the Philippine Islands. Pao-Kong Chu, consul. Tsin Lon Ouang, vice consul. Yi-Seng Kiang, consul. Tsu-Ying Ch’eh, deputy consul. Manuel Maria Muiloz Obando, consul. Luis Alfonso Londofio, honorary vice consul. Alfredo J. de Leon, consul general. Marcel Gutiérrez, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington. Ignacio Ortiz Lozano, consul general. For the Canal Zone from Balboa to Gamboa. Jorge Wills Pradilla, consul general. For the Canal Zone from Cristobal to Gatun. Augusto Tono de la Espriella, consul. For Alabama, Florida, and Georgia. Earle C. Moore, honorary vice consul. Diego José Fallon, consul. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Luis C. Nieto, consul general. Eduardo Gallego Gutiérrez, vice consul. Maria Camargo, vice consul. For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Ten-nessee, and Texas. Luis Carlos Lopez, consul. Eduardo Gémez Durén, consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Macedonio Romero, honorary consul. Hernando de Medinacelli, honorary consul. Abel Cruz Santos, consul general. Alfredo Lozano Agudelo, consul general. Eduardo Gamba Escallon, vice consul. Alvardo Rebolledo, vice consul. Bernardo Santa-Coloma, vice consul. Jorge Ramirez Garviria, honorary vice consul. £ For the United States and the following special jurisdiction: Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. SoeLa 470 Congressional Directory COLOMBIA—COSTA RICA State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction COLOMBIA—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Philippine Islands: Manila ___________ Puerto RBieoz Ponce... COSTA RICA Alabama: Mobile... ioe. lionoh California: Berkeley... o.oo Hollywood... ..o ool Los Angeles. .... ooo Canal Zone: Balbo... «eeeo Cristébal..... olaL i Colorado: Denver...1 .. Connecticut: New Haven______________ Delaware: Wilmington... ._________ Flogida: Miami... Maryland: Baltimore -________________ Massachusetts: Boston_..______________ Michigan: Detroft......---...... =F Minnesota: Rochester... ..._.._.._____.__ Pandan Lalla fl Missouri: Kansas City... Leesan 1 New Jersey: Newark..._.______________ New York: New York City____________ North Carolina: Charlotte. ._.________ Oklahoma: Oklahoma City____________ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico:SanJaan._.-___._ 1 Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ____ Washington: Seattle. ....... ues: Wisconsin: Milwaukee_________________ Octavio Diaz Valenzuela, consul. Angel Elizalde, consul (honorary). Francisco Valiente, honorary consul. Juan Antonio Irazusta, consul (honorary). J. Al Torregrossa, honorary vice consul. Harold del Castillo, honorary consul. Waldemar A. Miller, honorary consul. For the Virgin Islands. Bernard H. Eichold, honorary consul. Nicolas Meyer, honorary vice consul. John Field Povedano, honorary consul. Sidney Field, honorary consul. José Pablo Quiros, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo Castro Wassmer, honorary vice consul. Ricardo Casorla, honorary consul. Luis Zeledon Castro, vice consul (honorary). Jorge Cardona, honorary consul. Carlos Francisco Jinesta, honorary vice consul. Arturo Ferndndez Ardon, consul general. Enrique Allen de la Cruz, honorary consul. Fernando Flores Banuet, honorary vice consul. Walter Fernandez Pacheco, honorary vice consul. Vinicio Ferndndez Pacheco, honorary vice consul. Juan Davila Solera, honorary consul general. For the Canal Zone. Enrique Pucci Paoli, consul (honorary). Alfonso Segura Panguaga, honorary consul. Julio Brenes, honorary consul. Roberto Gomez, honorary consul. Alberto Sasso, vice honorary consul. Gonzalo J. Gallegos, honorary consul general. Antonio Abén de Almar, honorary consul. Harold E. Rucavado, consul general (honorary). Berthold Singer, honorary consul. Guillermo Valiente Lara, honorary vice consul. Bernardo Vargas Canalias, honorary vice consul. E. F. Lusch, honorary consul. José Maria Osma de Aysa, honorary consul. Joaquin Angulo, honorary vice consul. Claudio Antonio Volio Guardia, honorary vice consul. Radko E. Nufiez, honorary vice consul. John Marshall Quintero, honorary consul general. Venancio Garcia Alvarado, honorary vice consul. For Louisiana. William A. Riordan, consul (honorary). Carl E. Brown, vice consul. Claudio J. Loria, honorary consul. Eduardo Azuola, honorary vice consul. Jorge Vargas Méndez, honorary consul. Otoniel Flores, honorary consul. Miguel Flores Trejos, honorary consul. Charles Barrows, vice honorary consul. For Kansas and for Kansas City, Mo. John M. Hadley, honorary consul general. Luis Alberto Salazar Cespedes, honorary consul. Javier Cortés Ferndndez, consul general. Guillermo Segreda Castro, honorary consul. Felipe Molina Larios, honorary consul. Guillermo Rojas Allen, honorary consul. Carlos G. Perez, honorary. consul. Juan Elizalde, honorary consul. Ramon Fournier, honorary consul general. Jorge Fornier Chacon, honorary vice consul. For Puerto Rico. Gustavo Vera, honorary consul. Joaquin Figuls, honorary consul. Leroy W. Reed, Jr., honorary consul. Carl G. Stearns, honorary consul. Gonzalo J. Valenzuela, honorary consul. Claudio Rodriguez Arce, honorary consul. James A. McCarthy, acting consul. With jurisdiction also in Newport News. George Levy, honorary consul. William D. White, honorary consul. Mariano Coronado, honorary vice consul. Edward J. Menge, vice consul (honorary). Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 471 CUBA State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction CUBA i Alabama: Mobile. =...0c 00.20 Eduardo Mayea, consul. For Alabama. California: Los Angeles... ____________. Oscar Presmanes y Fernandez, consul. For the counties of Fresno, Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Monterey, Orange, Riverside, San Benito, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura. San Franciseoo.o.ooo. ol Calixto Garcia Becerra, consul general. For the California counties of Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Eldo-rado, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Mendocino, Merced, Modoc, Mono, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Francisco, ‘San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tuolumne, Yolo, and Yuba. For Nevada. District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Jose A. Sera y Serrano, consul general. Miguel Cornide y Salvi, consul. Miss Patricia Mencia y de Armas, vice consul. Federico E. de Graw y Marquez Sterling, vice consul. For the District of Columbia. Florida: Jacksonville... ______._._____ Julio Rodriguez Embil, consul. Enrique Heymann y de la Gandara, vice consul. For the counties of Alachua, Baker, Bay, Bradford, Calhoun, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Fiagler, Franklin, Gadsden, Gilchrist, Gulf, Hamilton, Holmes, Jackson, Jeffer-son, Lafayette, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Okaloosa, Putnam, St. Johns, Santa Rosa, Suwan-hee) Taylor, Union, Volusia, Wakulla, Walton, and Wash-ington. Berardo Rodriguez Valdés, consul. For Monroe County. Eduardo Hernandez y D’Abrigeon, consul. Oscar Rene Morales y del Campo, consul. Alberto de la Campa y Roff, vice consul. Alberto Gonzalez Sali, vice consul. For the counties of Broward, Collier, Dads, Hendry, Martin, and Palm Beach. Juan M. de la Puente y Lopez, consul. Miguel Angel Entenza y Averhoff, consul. For the counties of Brevard, Charlotte, Citrus, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Indian River, Lake, Lee, Manatee, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, St. Lucie, Sarasota, Seminole, and Sumter. Georgia: Savannah...oilo oo ———, consul. oo —— Carlos Tornis y Tamayo, vice consul. Minels;:Chicages 3. —docoali suioi. Ignacio Algarra y Mendivil, consul. Antonio R. Montané Laredo, vice consul. For Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Kentucky: Louisville. .........consuiis Angel Pérez y Hernidndez, consul. For Kentucky. Louisiana: New Orleans. . ......._.___ Manuel Velazquez y Blanco, consul. Rafael Nieto y Cortadellas, consul. Manuel Mariano Escalona y Almeida, consul. Carlos Marquez y Loret de Mola, consul. Francisco Batet y Rivas, vice consul. For Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma. Juris-iction includes the honorary consulate at Pascagoula, Miss. Maryland: Baltimore Eugenio Castillo Borges, consul. For Delaware and Maryland. Massachusetts: Boston. ___.________.___ Antonio Bruzén y Rodrigues, consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Mississippi; Pascagoula... oo... José R. Cabrera y Bequer, consular agent (honorary). Missouri; Kansas City... cco il Eduardo L. Sanchez y del Castillo, consul. For Colorado, Kansas, Montana, and Wyoming. For the Missouri counties of Andrew, Atchison, Bates, Buchanan, Caldwell, Carroll, Cass, Clay, Clinton, De Kalb, Gentry, Henry, Holt, Jackson, Johnson, Lafayette, Nodaway, Pettis, Platte, Ray, St. Clair, Saline, Vernon, and Worth. St. Louls........... Roc E Miss Sofia Dihigo y Llanos, consul. Carlos Roloff Acosta, vice consul. For Iowa, Missouri (except the Kansas City consular district), Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. New York: New York City_.__._.______. Roberto Hernandez y Garcia, consul general. Cayetano de Quesada y Socarras, consul. José Francisco Cordova y Gomez, consul. Eduardo Portales y Calas, consul. Juan Manuel del Collado y Fuentes, consul. Antonio de Souza y Carvajal, consul. Alfredo Hernandez y Valdés, consul. 472 Congressional Directory CUBA—DANTZIG, FREE CITY OF State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction CUBA—continued New York: New York City—Con.___._ North Carolina: Winston-Salem _______ Ohio: Cincinnati. 5 obo wo Oregon: Portland Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico; San Juan... i. :. Tennessee: Chattanooga. _______.___._____ Texas; (alveston. wren looms 3 Virginia; Norfolk ctail solniis tin Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie______ Washington: Seattle........__i. i... CZECHOSLOVAKIA Californias: Tos Angeles. = .: San Francisco. o.oo oiis Tlineis; Ohieagos: oo. Lrsnnoh anor Louisiana: New Orleans_ _.____________ Maryland: Baltimore...coo i Minnesota: Minneapolis. _________._____ Missouri: Sti Loulsss rs ousipiais= Ohio: Cleveland. fuze oli] Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh... coesil Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Abelardo A. Leon Blanco, counsul. Matias Taboada y Suarez, vice consul. Rodolfo G. Betancourt y Pairol, vice consul. Octavio Laredo Caturla, vice consul. Celestino Fernandez y Santana, vice consul. José M. Fernandez del Riego, vice consul. Ernesto de Blanck y Martin, vice consul. José Maria Rodriguez Pow, vice consul. For New York. For the New Jersey counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren. For the United States. Juan Miranda y Suéirez, honorary consular agent. For North Carolina. Luis Perdomo y Fernéndez, consul. Carlos Gonzalez Pereza, vice consul. For Indiana and Ohio. Jurisdiction includes the honorary consulates at Detroit, Mich., and Louisville, Ky. Ernesto Luis y Fuentes, consular agent. , consul general. Nicolas E. Meneses y Comas, consul. Ignacio R. Weber y Fabian, consul. For Pennsylvania. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. Andrés Soriano y Roxas, consular agent (honorary). For the Philippine Islands. , consul. Justo A. Proenza, vice consul. For Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Jurisdiction includes the honorary consulate at Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands. José Miguel Ribas y Villaverde, consul. For Tennessee. Eduardo Patterson y de Jauregui, consul. José Tarrida y Victori, vice consul. For Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Adolfo del Castillo y Llanes, consul. For Virginia and West Virginia. Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miller, honorary consul. —_— , consul. Adalberto Valdés Miranda, vice consul. For Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Felix B. Janovsky, consul (honorary). For Arizona and southern California. Erwin Ladislav Chloupek, consul (honorary). For northern California, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Hawaii. Antonin Holy, consul general. For Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Gordon Boswell, consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee. Josef M. Vondragek acting consular agent. For Maryland and Virginia. Charles Edward Proschek, honorary consul. For Minnesota, Montana, and North Dakota. Hynek Dostél, consul. For Kansas and Missouri. For the Illinois counties of Madison, Monroe, and St. Clair. Karel Hudee, acting consul general. For Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and the Virgin Islands. Jaroslav Gardavsky, consul. For Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio. Charles Robinson Toothaker, honorary consul. For Delaware and eastern Pennsylvania. Jan Papéanek, consul. : For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Leo Schnurmacher, honorary consul. Norbert W. Schmelkes, acting counsul. For the Philippine Islands. Charles Julius Hollub, consul. For New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Chester J. Chastek, consul (honorary). For Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. : The diplomatic and consular representatives of Poland have charge, in the United States, of the interests of the Free City of Danzig. Forexgn Consular Officers in the United States 473 DENMARK—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction DENMARK Alabama: Mobile...inl sea California: Los Angeles. ..__..___..____ San Francisco...Lous.ons0 Canal Zone: Colon, Panama... ___.._.. Panamé, Panama_________ Colorado: Denver... cRElE coo.SUL Florida: Tampa... ooo Peuisays West Palm Beach Georgia: Savannah. _______ Hawaii: Honoluhr- Lo iiisusdossald Illinois: Chicago Louisiana: New Orleans_._...__________ Maryland: Baltimore... ---a-cacc.cnit Massachusetts: Boston... ______ Michigan: Detroif--..-aesauee coat Minnesota: Minneapolis. —.oooo..__._. Nebraska: Omaha... 10700 New York: New York City...________. North Dakota: Fargo... ciccaon OnioeOleveland.. = tai ail Oregon: Portland... -......l2co.0 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_.___________ Puerto Rico: Mayagiliez________________ San Juanuiog Steen nhl Houston... Iosoas ames Utah: Salt Lake Cityocevasnois ois DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Alabama: Mobile, cic disciool California: Los Angeles... ..._.__.. San Francisco. .-meememeeee- Canal Zone: Cristobal... ___...._. Panam4, Panama._________ Colorado; Denver... .....o-eseesnamns Neander Douglas Cunningham, vice consul (honorary). Ryan Asger Grut, vice consul (honorary). Axel Caspar Frederik Sporon-Fiedler, consul. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Wash-ington (except the city of Seattle). Colman Sasso, consul (honorary). For the Canal Zone. Samuel Levy Maduro, consul (honorary). For the Canal Zone. Wolf C. Hansen, vice consul (honorary). For Colorado. Paul Walter Petersen, vice consul (honorary). A. S. Andersen, vice consul (honorary). Aage Georg Schroder, vice consul (honorary). Robert Benjamin Booth, consul (honorary). For Hawaii. Reimund Baumann, consul. For Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-tucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah, ‘Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Ingemann Olsen, consul (honorary). For New Orleans. Holger Bloch Jespersen, acting vice consul. For Maryland. Theodore von Rosenvinge, vice consul (honorary). George (Peter) Everson, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan. Andrew Nissen Johnson, vice consul (honorary). For Minnesota. John Holst, vice consul (honorary). For Nebraska. Georg Bech, consul general. Adam T. Tscherning, vice consul. Erik Julius Theodor Wedel-Heinen, vice consul. For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana (except the city and port of New Orleans), Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsyl-vania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia. Walter Peter Christensen, vice consul (honorary). Niels Anthon Christensen, vice consul (honorary) Sherman Harkson, vice consul (honorary). For Oregon. Ludvig Theodor Brehm, vice consul (honorary). Niels Nicolaj Therkelsen Nyborg, consul (honorary). Jose Oscar Bravo, vice consul (honorary). Frantz Adolf Charles Hastrup, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. Hans Wilhelm Bagger, vice consul (honorary). Christian Larsen, vice consul (honorary). Svend H. Hansen, vice consul (honorary). Hans William Rasmussen, vice consul (honorary). Christian Otto Jensen, vice consul (honorary). For Utah. V. D. Andersen, acting vice consul (honorary). Walter Knox, vice consul (honorary). Hjalmar Bang, consul (honorary). For the Virgin Islands. Mogens Grove Bildsge, consul (honorary). For Seattle and Alaska. T. G. McGonigal, honorary consul. Ismael Avilés, honorary consul. Rafael Compros Perez, consul general. William Fisher, honorary consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, and ‘Wyoming. H. J. Henriquez, honorary vice cousul. For the Canal Zone. M. de J. Quijano, honorary consul general. René Rodriguez, honorary consul. Porfirio Herrera Béez, consul. Emilio Zeller, consul. José Maria Nouel Simpson, consul. Lewis H. Hill, Jr., honorary consul. Congressional Directory DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—EL SALVADOR State and residence DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—continued Nlinois; Chicago...isi Clan on Louisiana: Lake Charles. ______________ New Orleans. [0 isso: Maryland: Baltimore... i. Massachusetts: Boston Minnesota: Rochester. ____.____________ Missoarl: Kansas City. =.= New Jersey: West New York_________. New York: New York City..__.________ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: Aguadilla___..______..____ Arcelbo oa Texas: Fort Worth coo ir ean Galveston. woes 3oniis ECUADOR Alabama: Mobile... ewanLuge California: JosiAngeles. San Diegescicsd Denia anil i San Franeiseo-cos cool: Florida: Miami: Srisaendics New York: New York City____._...._.__ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__._________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: San Juan. -.....__l ...___-Texast Houston ti abs Virginia; Norfolk im Ccecmamoioo) Washington: Seattle. __________________ EGYPT California: San Francisco. _____________ EL SALVADOR California: Los Angeles. _______________ San Francisco... 020s Name, rank, and jurisdiction Rafael A. Espaillat, consul. Javier H. Cerecedo, honorary consul. James T. Case, honorary vice consul. @G. P. Hannan, honorary consul. Joaquin Salazar, Jr., consul. Rafael Faxas Valdés, consul. Max L. Glazer, honorary consul. Rafael Izquierdo, honorary consul. Victor M. Hinojosa, honorary consul. Walter Seth Kipnis, honorary consul. For New Jersey. José Enrique Aybar, consul general. : For Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Vir- ginia, and Wisconsin. Luis E. Despradel, consul. Roberto D. Abrahams, honorary consul. John W. Hartzell, honorary vice consul. Juan P. Pellicer, honorary consul. José J. Zamora, honorary vice consul. Andrés Leon Martinez, consul. Enloe L. Lowry, honorary vice consul. Manuel Pagin Esmoris, honorary consul. Homero Henriquez, consul. Lorenzo Loubriel, consul (honorary). Carlos M. Petterne Alomar, honorary vice consul. M. M. Morillo, consul general. Miguel Such, honorary consul. Frank J. Richardson, honorary vice consul. For Puerto Rico. Jack Danciger, honorary consul. J. A. Torregrosa, honorary consul. Fernando Pro, honorary consul. Emile A. Berne, honorary consul. J. Percy Soufifront, honorary vice consul. Francis E. Townsend, honorary vice consul, T. G. McGonigal, honorary consul. José A. Bacquero C., honorary vice consul. José Maria Plaza Lasso, consul. Jorge Carrera Andrade, consul general. John A. Cleveland, honorary consul. Hernéno Pallares Zaldumbide, consul general. José R. Bafios, honorary vice consul. Sixto Duran Ballén, consul general. Armando Pesantes Garcia, vice consul. Reginald Chutter, honorary vice consul. 5 Federico Perez y Perez, honorary consul. Fernando L. Gonzalez, honorary vice consul. José Ignacio Burbano, consul. Arthur C. Humphreys, honorary vice consul. Jorge Luis Pérez, consul. For Tacoma and Portland (Oregon). Mohamed Sadek Abou Khadra, consul general. For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebras-ka, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Hawaii. Hussein Chawky, consul general. _ For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Mary-land, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Hamp-shire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Arturo Dominguez Araujo, consul. Ernesto W. Maury, vice consul. Jorge Ramirez, consul general. Miguel Antonio Serrano, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States 475 EL State and residence EL SALVADOR—continued CanalZone ou i iodioaiebo rene oo Colorado: Denver...-._ __ = IMinois: Chicago... io... o_o Louisiana: New Orleans__...._________ New York: New York City____._______ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ___________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico: San Juan... __._______ ESTONIA California: Los Angeles. ___._.._.______ San Francisco... .L.aoocl Louisiana: NewOrleans________________ New York: New York City. ___________ ETHIOPIA New York: New York City__._._.___.__ FINLAND California: San Francisco. _-.__________ Mlinois: Chicago... 0300, Louisiana: New Orleans_______.___.._. Massachusetts: BOSLON. sian Michigan: Calumet. [....coicoamannnil Detroit ns ol Marquette... . econao Minnesota: Duluth New York: New York City____.___._.. Ohio: Ashtabula Oregon; Astoria: cots. lilo ociivadioy Puerto Rico: Sap Juan... oa... Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ___._ Washington: Seattle... --i-azec-coi-. SALVADOR—FINLAND Name, rank, and jurisdiction Roberto Boyd, consul general. Eduardo Kay, honorary consul. David Maxwell Weil, consul (honorary). José Francisco Morales, consul. Francisco Alvarado Gallegos, consul general. Miguel Angel Magafia, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas. Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Nicolas Pedroso, honorary consul. Manuel Pérez Rosales, honorary consul. José Hernandez Usera, honorary consul. Claude P. Hilliard, consul (honorary). Roland Roggenbrod, consul (honorary). Luis Rodriguez, consul. Reginald Birdsall Olds, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Fresno, Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura. Walter E. Hettman, honorary consul. N. O. Pedrick, consul (honorary). , consul general. Johannes Kaiv, consul. For the United States. John H. Shaw, honorary consul general. Jarl Arthur Lindfors, consul (honorary). For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. For Hawaii and other insular possessions of the United States in the Pacific Ocean. Elmer A. Forsberg, consul (honorary). Ernest Lester Knuti, vice consul (honorary). For Illinois and Indiana. Andrew J. Higgins, consul (honorary). For New Orleans. Robert E. Peabody, honorary consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Jacob Uitti, honorary vice consul. -For the counties of Baraga, Gogebiec, Houghton, Iron, Ke-weenaw, and Ontonagon. George H. Heideman, consul (honorary). For the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. John Lammi, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Alger, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Taice, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, and Schoolcraft. Oscar Johannes Larson, consul (honorary). For Arkansas, Jowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Torsten Oskar Vahervuori, consul general. Alexander Amatus Thesleff, acting vice consul. George E. Ervast, vice consul (honorary). For the United States and dependencies. Paul Josef Collander, honorary vice consul. For Kentucky and Ohio. E. E. Pajunen, honorary vice consul. For. Oregon. For the Washington counties of Grays Harbor, Pacific, and Wahkiakum. Karl Adolf Friedrich Steffens, honorary consul. Hjalmar Bang, honorary consul. For the Virgin Islands. Alarik Wilhelm Quist, consul (honorary). For Washington (except the counties of Grays Harbor, Pacific, and Wahkiakum). For Alaska. Congressional Directory FRANCE—GREAT BRITAIN State and residence FRANCE Alabama: ‘Birmingham.....eememeeaaand 0 DIE. ns eanaa California: Los Angeles. _ cee San Dogo: och ie San Francisco. .comeeecmeu-- Georgia: Atlanta Savannah _.......... = THinois: ChicagoL. .. on enone doomn stot Indiana: Indianapolis... ... 0. oa. Kentucky: Louisvillel i. 1. 0100s Louisiana: Lafayette-Lake Charles_____ New Orleans. ......... 00000 Maryland: Baltimore: .-. covet Massachusetts: Boston. -coo. Michigan: Detrolb. .. ..ccnciencanenee-Missouri; Kansas City...eee St. Loomis... Losin. New York: Buffalo... ...co. 000). Cleveland i csiiususnananied Oregon: Portland... Leichman} Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburghioea.l..ao0ie Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico: Ponee......o.oi. 4108 Seam Jaom... oid mninndl South Carolina: Charleston____________ Texas: Beaumont and Port Arthur. ___ Galveston... _cowiaalpoe: bl Virginia: Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Newport News. Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. _____ Wisconsin: Milwaukee_____.___________ Name, rank, and jurisdiction Simon Klotz, consular agent. Jules Brana, consular agent. Ismael Georges Achard, consul. For the California counties of Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. For Arizona and New Mexico. Lucien Bouvet, consular agent. Claude Same Thomas Rapha#l Bréart de Boisanger, consul general. For California (except the consular district of Los Angeles), Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washing-ton, Wyoming, and Alaska and Hawaii. Pierre Lefebre, acting consul. For the Canal Zone. André Fiot, vice consul. For the District of Columbia and Maryland George Westerby Howe, consular agent. Ernest W. Monrose, consular agent. Charles Loridans, consular agent. Frank W. Spencer, consular agent. Raymond Camille Emile Imbault-Huart, consul. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and ‘Wisconsin. Bowman Elder, consular agent. James 3. O’Brien, consular agent. Patrick E. Mouton, consular agent. Jean Ferdinand Albert Marie Delalande, consul general. For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis-sippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Joseph Ambroise Girard, consular agent. For Maryland. Francois Joseph Louis Ferdinand Briere, consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Maxime Rainguet, consular agent. William Schaerrer, consular agent (honorary). Hugues Brussel, consular agent. Paul Joseph Speyser, consular agent. Armand Marie Jacques d’ Aumale, consul general. For Connecticut, New Jersey (except the cities of Camden and Gloucester), and New York. Jean ten Have, consular agent. 2 Albert Younglove Meriam, consular agent. Alfred Herman, consular agent. Patrick Marie Edmond James Gustave Adrien Coppinger, consul. ¢ For Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and for the New Jersey cities of Camden and Gloucester. Louis Charles Celestin, consular agent. Louis Charles Marie Le Roch, consul. For the Philippine Islands Antoine Quilichini, consular agent (honorary). Christian Henri Marie Belle, consul. For Puerto Rico. Harold Alwyn Mouzon, consular agent. Georges A. A. Perrot, consular agent. P. A. Drouilhet, consular agent. Georges Pierre Ferdinand Jouine, consular agent. Alexander Octave Prosper Jouffray, consular agent. Pierre Schmitz, consular agent. Cyril Daniel, consular agent. Hugh Riordan, consular agent (honorary). All German consular offices in the United States were closed on } or before July 10, 1941, by direction of the President. \ John Ritchie Macpherson, vice consul (honorary). Erich Arthur Cleugh, consul. George Wellington Irving, vice consul. Alastair George Maitland, vice consul. Leonard Gibson Holliday, vice consul. Matthew John Vincent Blood-Smyth, vice consul. For Arizona. For the California counties of Imperial, Kern, Los Angeles, San Luis Obispo, Orange, Riverside, San Ber-nardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. : Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 477 State and residence GREAT BRITAIN—continued California: San Francisco..._.._..--.-__ Canal Zone: Colon, Panama___________ Panam4, Panama______.__ District of Columbia: Washington___._ Florida: Jacksonville coon ooo. 0 TRamMDR. yo. Sogaiynm raste Tass Georgia: Savannah...1 . 5 Hawali::HonolWlu. oo. oo... -0o0 0 Tlinois: Chicago... cee eeemee memes Louisiana: New Orleans. . .cceecceaaaa- Maryland: Baltimore. .......-coo.0. Massachusetts: Boston... ..___ Michigan: Detroit... oui conn .o Missouri: St.-Lonis. uu.a. cava New York: New York City____..._.___ GREAT BRITAIN Name, rank, and jurisdiction G. A. Fisher, consul general. John Chevalier O'Dwyer, consul. Walter Hollis Adams, vice consul. Terence Willcocks Garvey, vice consul. For California (except the counties included in the jurisdiction of the consulate at Los Angeles), Nevada, and Utah. Lawrence Barnett, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. Charles Edward Schuter Dodd, consul general. Douglas Gerald Rydings, consul. John Herbert Dickinson, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. John Campbell Thomson, consul. For the District of Columbia. James Alexander Milne Majoribanks, consul. Dudley Francis Preece Williams, vice consul. For Florida east of the Apalachicola River. For Georgia and South Carolina. Lewis Arthur Oates, vice consul (honorary). Michael Anthony Moyse Robb, vice consul. Herbert George Goodfellow Fray, vice consul (honorary). Glyn Lloyd Roberts, vice consul. Frank Arnold Wallis, consul. Harry Lewis Dawson, vice consul. For Hawaii. Lewis Edward Bernays, consul general. Robert Ross, consul. John Cyril Donnelly, vice consul. John Roland Kay, vice consul. : John Amory Forrest Gethin, acting vice consul. For Illinois (except East St. Louis), Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and ‘Wyoming. David John Rodgers, consul general. Arthur Edward Yapp, consul. William Percy Taylor Nurse, vice consul. For Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee, and for the Florida counties of Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Wash-ington. John William Taylor, consul. Joseph Todd Mulvenny, vice consul. John Gabriel Tahourdin, vice consul. For Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, Hugh Alexander Ford, consul general. Albert Spencer Calvert, consul. R. B. Boyd Tollinton, acting consul. Gerald Frazer Tyrell, vice consul. James Arthur Brannen, vice consul. Evelyn Basil Boothby, vice consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Cyril Hubert Cane, consul. Arthur Oliver Bray, vice consul. Frederick Martyn Meech, vice consul. Leslie Hammersley Williams, vice consul. For Michigan and Ohio. Hugh Charles McClelland, consul. William Milne Guthrie, vice consul. Gerald Thomas Corley Smith, vice consul. For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Okla- homa, and the city of East St. Louis, Ill. Godfrey Digby Napier Haggard, consul general. Leonard Haines Leach, consul. Arthur Harry Tandy, consul. Charles Howard Ellis, consul. Robert Fisher, consul. Wilfred Hansford Gallienne, consul. Malcolm Siborne Henderson, vice consul. Roger John Peter Sedgwick, vice consul. Peter Pares, vice consul. Francis Bryan Anthony Rundall, vice consul. Joseph Stanton Goodreds, acting vice consul. David Loinaz, acting vice consul. Richard Harold Fawcett Smith, acting vice consul. ‘Walter Crowhurst Hacon, acting vice consul. Roger William Jackling, acting vice consul. Thomas Brimelow, acting vice consul. Walter Frederick J ames, proconsul. For Connecticut, New Jersey (except the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem), and New York. 64674°—T77—2—1st ed——32 478 Congressional Directory GREAT BRITAIN—GUATEMALA State and residence GREAT BRITAIN—continued North Carolina: Wilmington___________ Ohio::Cleveland. oo... Jiesum ie Oregon: Portland... _osoiuishicoo Pacific Ocean: (Tonga) Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Legaspi. dois: Manila. «00507 PuertoRicorSanJuan.....-: __.._ South Carolina: Charleston____________ Texas; Galvestoni -co-w:tolz ooioi ii Houston... cevibnd ins] GREECE California: San Francisco______________. District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Nlinois: Chicago... Joes, Louisiana: New Orleans________________ Massachusetts: Boston________________. Oakland. joo iin iniine Name, rank, and jurisdiction George Frederick Todd, vice consul. Storer P. Ware, vice consul. Ernest James Bisiker, vice consul. James McDonald, consul. Arthur Leopold Armstrong, consul. For the islands under United States possession in the Pacific Ocean south of the Equator. Laurence Milner Robinson, consul general. Theodore Harold Fox, vice consul. James Mark Walsh, vice consul. For Delaware and Pennsylvania. For the New J ersey counties of Atlantie, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. Oliver Smalley, consul. Alexander McQuaker Galbraith, vice consul (honorary). Guy Walford, vice consul. Alexander Abercrombie Brown, vice consul (honorary). E. J. L. Phillips, vice consul. Alexander James Tyre, acting vice consul. David Cassels Brown, vice consul. Stanley Wyatt Smith, consul general. Lionel Harry Whittall, consul. Peter Scott Stephens, acting consul. Ronald Agnew Finlay, vice consul. Cyril Gascoigne Oxley-Brennan, vice consul. For the Philippine Islands. Arthur Henry Noble, consul. For Puerto Rico. Harald de Courcy Harston, vice consul. Stewart Hunter Evans, vice consul (honorary). Harald Ernest Slaymaker, consul. Leslie Bland Dufton, vice consul. For New Mexico and Texas. Francis Gibson McEwan, vice consul. James Guthrie, consul. Miles Merwin, vice consul. Eric Howard Thomas, consul. Eltran Vernon Cancryn, acting consul. For the islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas. Harold Couch Swan, consul. Francis Justinian Pelly, vice consul. Alfred Edward Jones, vice consul. For Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Elias Picheon, consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, Washington, and the Hawaiian Islands. Supervisory jurisdiction over Alaska, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. The Legation of Greece at Washington has consular jurisdiction over the District of Columbia and the adjoining section of Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. Demetrios Benetatos, consul general. For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Supervisory jurisdiction over Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-tucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota. William Helis, consul (honorary). For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Alexis Liatis, acting consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Nicholas Lély, consul general. For Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and the adjoining section of Pennsylvania, including Philadelphia. Super-visory jurisdiction over Virginia. W. Steber, Jr., honorary consul. Robert E. Tracy, honorary consul. Manuel M. Morales, honorary vice consul. Carlos Ubico, consul general. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Tomas Arias, honorary consul. For the Pacific part of the Canal Zone. Humberto Leignadier, honorary consul. Manuel F. Castillo, honorary vice consul. Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. For the southern part of Florida. Francis M. Sack, honorary consul. Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States 479 GUATEMALA—HONDURAS State and residence GUATEMALA—continued Tlinois: Chicago... ...citaoods Louisiana: New Orleans. _____________.. Maryland: Baltimore... ._____. Massachusetts: Boston_________________ Missouri: St. Louis... =i lila New York: New York City. _...c...___ Oregon: Portland... oo. _L8ii tial 05d Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila. __.________ Puerto Rico: SanJuan._____2. __._0 Texas: Brownsville. .....oocvec-lorne— 20TH DURE RE eae HAITI AlnbamaiMebile ool. oOo ol California, San Francisco... Canal Zone: Balboa......omeaaoosoo00 Cristdbal od. lus ] Beach. Minois: “Elmhurst: i lo. 000 110 Louisiana: Lake Charles______..________ New Orleans... ooo... Maryland: Baltimore. ____-__-__>_---_ Massachusetts: Boston__________.______ New Jersey: Newark ___________________ New York: New York City___._________ Pennsylvania: Chester_____________.____ Philadelphia____________ Puerto Rico: Ponce HONDURAS California: Los Angeles_ coco... San Francisco. -vvemvecneuna-Cansl' Zone: ai0o1 Balbog....occaeon-Florida: Jacksonville... Iinels: Chicago. cor enna Louisiana: New Orleans__..__._.__.__..._ Name, rank, and jurisdiction Octavio Barrios Solfs, consul general. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Felix Estrada Orantes, consul general. For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Ken-tucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Ten-nessee, and Texas. Jean A. Maurer, consul (honorary). For Maryland. William A. Mosman, honorary consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Frederic Lawson Niemeyer, honorary consul. For Kansas, Kentucky, and Missouri. , consul general. For Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia. Lawrence Walter Hartman, honorary consul. For Oregon. Gordon B. Okum, honorary consul. For Pennsylvania. José Garcia Alonso, honorary consul. Edelmiro Martinez Rivera, honorary consul. For Puerto Rico. C. P. Hilliard, honorary consul. Robert Burgher, honorary consul. Ballard Burgher, honorary vice consul. Richard M. Bazzanella, honorary vice consul, T. L. Evans, honorary consul. Adolfo Braeons, honorary consul. For Washington. Richard Murray, honorary consul. B. C. Bremer, honorary consul. Max R. Stempel, consul. Alfred Joseph, consul general. Manuel José Castillo Galvez, honorary vice consul. Carl Pryer, honorary consul. Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. William F. Ives, honorary consul. James H. Richmond, honorary consul. Glen A. Broussard, honorary consul. Louis de Delva, consul general. Frank Laraque, consul. N. U. Carrié, vice consul. For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana, Maurice B. Carlin, honorary consul. Francis R. Clark, honorary consul. Victor de la Fuente, consular agent. For New Jersey. Rulx Léon, consul general. Emmanuel Gation, vice consul. Yves Verna, vice consul. William Ward, Jr., honorary vice consul, Jules Louis Elson, honorary consul. Blas C. Silva, vice consul. Victor Vere, honorary consul. J. A. Torregrossa, honorary consul. T. L. Evans, honorary consul. Arthur S. Kahn, vice consul. Jurisdiction includes Orange County. Harry Reyner, honorary consul. R. W. Weiss, honorary consul. Cyril Daniel, consul general. Philip Gomez, honorary vice consul. For the Virgin Islands. Robert E. Tracy, honorary consul. Harold White, honorary vice consul. José Maria Albir, honorary consul general. Manuel F. Morales, vice consul. Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul. E. Carles, honorary consul. L. Lee, honorary consul. Fernando Alvarado, honorary consul. Edward Davis, honorary consul. Vicente Williams, consul general. For Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee. 480 Congressional Directory State and residence HONDURAS—continued Maryland: Baltimore. ...-..ousatanon Massachusetts: Boston aaa... Michigan: Detroit New York: New York City... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Puerto Rico: SanJuan.....__.__.____._ Texas: Brownsville Galveston Houston Port Arthur San Antonio HUNGARY... eemnmont ICELAND New York: New York City... IRAN District of Columbia: Washington..._. New York: New York City... IRELAND California: San Francisco Illinois: Chicago Massachusetts: Boston New York: New York City _...___.____ LATVIA California: Los Angeles District of Columbia: Washington Illinois: Chicago Indiana: Indianapolis... ...-aiouiacns Louisiana: New Orleans. _..__________ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Pittsburgh Puerto Rico: San Juan. ...... cao. Washington: Seattle HONDURAS—LATVIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Ramon Santamaria, honorary consul. José Augusto Rodriguez U., consul. Saul R. Levin, honorary consul. Gonzalo Carias C., consul general. Joaquin Alvarado, Jr., honorary consul. Juan Bermitdez Sanchez, honorary consul general. C. P. Hilliard, honorary consul. José Torregrossa, honorary consul. , Consul. T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul. R. E. McInnis, honorary consul. Bertil Korling, honorary vice consul. Relations severed Dec. 11, 1941; state of war declared by Hungary Dec. 13, 1941. Agnar Kl. Jonsson, acting consul general. _ For the United States and possessions, the Philippine Islands, and the Canal Zone. The Legation of Iran at Washington has charge of Iranian con-sular interests in the United States. Hussein Navab, consul. Matthew Murphy, consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Daniel J. McGrath, consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. Brendan MacC. O’Riordan, consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Leo Thomas McCauley, consul general. Garth Healy, consul. Patrick Hughes, vice consul. Joseph Desmond Brennan, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. All Italian consular offices in the United States were closed on or before July 10, 1941, by direction of the President. Recognition of Japanese consular officers was terminated by the passage, on Dec. 8, 1941, of a congessional resolution recogniz-ing the existence of a state of war between the United States and Japan. ¢ Leo E. Anderson, vice consul (honorary). For the California counties of Imperial, Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. For Arizona and New Mexico. : Alfred Bilmanis, consul general. For the United States and possessions, the Canal Zone, and the Philippine Islands. August Bontoux, consul (honorary). For Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Edward W. Hunter, consul (honorary). For Indiana. August Edward Pradillo, consul (honorary). For Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. John Hemphill, consul (honorary). sain For Pennsylvania, except the Pittsburgh consular district. John Joseph Neville Gorrell, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Clarion, Crawford, Erie, Fayette, Greene, Lawson, Mercer, Venango, Washington, and Westmoreland. or West Virginia. Ricardo Ramon Pesquera, vice consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. Hans Cron, consul (honorary). For Washington. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 481 State and residence LIBERIA California: Los Angeles. --cccceeceeeaao Minols Chicago. i inet Louisiana: New Orleans. _._..__._______ New York: New York City._.___._._.__ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ___.__.____ Texas: Galveston. ...._oioi coool Port Arthur. suis salons LITHUANIA California: Los Angeles. _....... Fiabe Jinois: Chicago... iemecenmearsanseesetz Massachusetts: Boston. _._. ocoooo___ New York: New York City_ccaooo-__ LUXEMBURG District of Columbia: Washington.____ Illinois: Chicago... weaimmsss=ans===i=s Minnesota: Minneapolis. oc ocacccaeao New York: New York City._..cocoo_-. South Dakota; Redfield... ..o_____ MEXICO Alabama: Mobile:oe oi. oon Arizona: Douglas. ..j...cceeaiocoiasnns NOZAleS. io cuuit nbn nnn amas Phoenix ......cocfituan TUCSON cio linn wiv wm bw California: Calexien...-c-csu-aicamenac- Fresno LIBERIA—MEXICO Name, rank, and jurisdiction Hugh E. McBeth, consul (honorary). Richard E. Westbrooks, consul (honorary). J. A. Hardin, consul. Walter F. Walker, consul general. Miss Carolyn Viola Johnson, vice consul. Helena S. Haines, consul (honorary). J. R. Gibson, consul (honorary). Mack H. Hanna, Jr., consul. Julius J. Bielskis, honorary consul. Petras Dauzvardis, consul. For Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisi, ana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Mon-tana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota-Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Anthony Oswald Shallna, honorary consul. Jonas Budrys, consul general. . Vytautas StaSinekas, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Canal Zone, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Cornelius Jacoby, consul (honorary). For Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. John Marsch, honorary consul general. Eugene Huss, vice consul (honorary). William Capesius, honorary vice consul. For Illinois, indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin. ———, consul. Othon. Raths, vice consul (honorary). For Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. William H. Hamilton, honorary consul general. Cornelius Staudt, honorary vice consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Perry Daubenfeld, consul (honorary). For Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota. Juan E. Petit, honorary consul. For Mobile County. Ernesto Laveaga, consul. For Cochise County (except Benson, Bisbee, Cochise, Court -land, Don Luis, Dragoon, Fairbank, Fort Huachuca, Glee-son, Lowell, Naco, Osborn Station, St. David, Tombstone, and Warren). ———, consul José Maria Arredondo, vice consul. For Benson, Bisbee, Courtland, Don Luis, Dragoon, Fair-bank, Fort Huachuca, Gleeson, Lowell, Naco, Osborn, St. David, Tombstone, and Warren, in Cochise County. Hermolao E. Torres, consul. Alejandro Elias Cass, vice consul. For Santa Cruz County. Morelos Gonzélez, vice consul. For the counties of Apache, Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mohave Navajo, Pinal, and Yavapai. Raul G. Dominguez, consul. Angel Tellez, vice consul. For Pima County. José Maria Gutiérrez, consul. Ignacio A. Pesqueira, vice consul. For the Arizona county of Yuma and the California county of Imperial. Eugenio Aza, consul. Eu genio V. Pesqueira, vice consul. For the counties of Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced, Mono, Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz, Stanislaus, Tulare, and Tuolumne. Congressional Directory MEXICO State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction MEXICO—continued California: Los Angeles... _._...._._. San Bernardino... _-_... San Diego... 320s FT, San‘ Praneiseo............i. Pensacola J. ali i0 i S805] TAMPA... o.oo mimmaa tsar ob Tilinois: Chieago ro ol 200080000 Kentucky: louisville..._ 10: ... Louisiana: New Orleans______ AM 13 ELA Massachusetts: Boston_________.._.____ Rodolfo Salazar, consul. Carlos Grimm, vice consul. Fernando Ruedo, vice consul. Patricio de Guerrero Osio, vice consul. Enrique R. Ballesteros, vice consul. Ernesto A. Romero, vice consul. Adolfo dela Huerta, Jr., honorary vice consul. For the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. Edmundo Gonzalez, consul. For Inyo, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties. José Antonio Couttolenc, consul. Fidencio Soria B., vice consul. For San Diego County. Enrique Calderon Rodriguez, consul general. Antonio L. Schmidt, consul. Gregorio Gomez Cardenas, consul. Esteban Walker Jacquier, vice consul. Alberto Andrade, vice consul. For the California counties of Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Eldo-rado, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Mendo-cino, Modoc, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Tehama, .. Trinity, Yolo, and Yuba. For Nevada and Hawaii. Silvio Salazar, honorary consul. Juan Manuel Salazar, honorary vice consul. For that part of the Canal Zone between the Atlantic Ocean and a point known as Gorgona. Gonzalo Obregon, consul For Colorado and Wyoming. The Embassy of Mexico at Washington has consular jurisdiction in the District of Columbia and Maryland. Consul. Vice consul. For Florida except the city of Tampa and counties of Bay, Escambia, Holmes, Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Washington. Vicente Ruesga, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Bay, Escambia, Holmes, Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Washington. Rafael Ruesga, honorary consul. Ricardo G. Hill, consul general. Carlos Palacios Roji, consul. Cosme Hinojosa, jr, consul. Emilio Almada, vice consul. For the Illinois counties of Adams, Boone, Brown, Bureau," Carroll, Cass, Champaign, Christian, Clark, Coles, Cook, Crawford, Cumberland, De Kalb, De Witt, Douglas, Du Page, Edgar, Effingham, Ford, Fulton, Grundy, Hancock, Henderson, Henry, Iroquois, Jasper, Jo Daviess, Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, Knox, Lake, La Salle, Lee, Living-ston, Logan, Macon, Marshall, Mason, McDonough, McHenry, McLean, Menard, Mercer, Montgomery, Mor-gan, Moultrie, Ogle, Peoria, Piatt, Pike, Putnam, Rock Island, Sangamon, Schuyler, Scott, Shelby, Stark, Stephen-son, Tazewell, Vermilion, Warren, Whiteside, Will, Winne-bago, and Woodford. For Indiana, Iowa, the upper penin-sula of Michigan (including the counties of Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft), Minnesota, and Wisconsin (except the county of Milwaukee). Gabriel G. Romo, honorary consul. For Jefferson County. Rafael Jiménez Castro, consul. Rail Reyes Spindola, vice consul. José Yzurieta Roman, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi. For the Florida counties of Bay, Escambia, Holmes, Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Washington. Alfred R. Shrigley, Jr., honorary consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States State and residence MEXICO—continued Michigan: Detroit. 22m .--vnvuwasas Missouri: Kansas City... occcacaaaaao Missouri St. bonis. i. oo. oi Ll New Mexico: Albuquerque. .cccaa---- NewYork: Buffalo. . = 0. ereeee— New York City.......0:0.0 Ohig:iCleveland...i--f==-ii etna n sans Oklahoma: Oklahoma City... _.._____ Oregon: Portland --___......ccanrcnn---Pennsylvania: Philadelphia... MEXICO Name, rank, and jurisdiction Adolfo G. Dominguez, consul. : For Michigan (except the upper peninsula), and for the Ohio counties of Adams, Allen, Auglaize, Brown, Butler, Cham-paign, Clark, Clermont, Clinton, Crawford, Darke, Defiance, Delaware, Erie, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Fulton, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Hardin, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Huron, Jackson, Knox, Licking, Logan, Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Marion, Mercer, Miami, Montgomery, Morrow, Ottawa, Paulding, Pickaway, Pike, Preble, Putnam, Rich-land, Ross, Sandusky, Scioto, Seneca, Shelby, Union, Van Wert, Vinton, Warren, Williams, Wood, and Wyandot. Joel S. Quifiones, consul. For Kansas. For the Missouri counties of Andrew, Atchison, Barry, Barton, Bates, Buchanan, Caldwell, Cass, Cedar, Clay, Clinton, Dade, DeKalb, Gentry, Henry, Holt, Jackson, Jasper, Johnson, Lafayette, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, Nodaway, Platte, Ray, St. Clair, Vernon, and Worth. For Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Luis Ferndndez McGregor; consul. For Kentucky (except Jefferson County) and Tennessee. For the Illinois counties of Alexander, Bond, Calhoun, Clay, Clinton, Edwards, Fayette, Franklin, Gallatin, Greene, Hamilton, Hardin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jersey, Johnson, Lawrence, Macoupin, Madison, Marion, Massac, Monroe, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Richland, St. Clair, Saline, Union, Wabash, Washington, Wayne, White, and Wil-liamson. For the Missouri counties of Adair, Audrain, Benton, Bollinger, Boone, Butler, Callaway, Camden, Cape Girardeau, Carroll, Carter, Chariton, Christian, Clark, Cole, Cooper, Crawford, Dallas, Daviess, Dent, Douglas, Dunklin, Franklin, Gasconade, Greene, Grundy, Harrison, Hickory, Howard, Howell, Iron, Jefferson, Knox, Laclede, Lewis, Lincoln, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Madison, Maries, Marion, Mercer, Miller, Mississippi, Moniteau, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, New Madrid, Oregon, Osage, Ozark, Perry, Pettis, Phelps, Pike, Polk, Pulaski, Putnam, Ralls, Randolph, Reynolds, Ripley, St. Charles, St. Francois, St. Louis (including the city of St. Louis), Ste. Genevieve, Saline, Schuyler, Scotland, Scott, Shannon, Shelby, Stod-dard, Stone, Sullivan, Taney, Texas, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Webster, and Wright. , consul. Victor Manuel Pesqueira, vice consul. For the counties of Bernalillo, Catron, Colfax, Curry, De Baca, Guadalupe, Harding, McKinley, Mora, Quay, Rio Arriba, Roosevelt, Sandoval, San Juan, San Miguel, Santa Fe, Socorro, Taos, Torrance, Union, and Valencia. Leon L. Lancaster, honorary consul. For Erie and Niagara Counties. Rafael de la Colina, consul general. Juan E. Richer, consul. Rafael Nieto, consul. J. Jestis Camarena, vice consul. Alfredo Bafios Contreras, vice consul. Julian Séenz Hinojosa, vice consul. Miss Francisca Celis, vice consul. Luis G. Ibarguen, vice consul. Jorge de la Vega, vice consul. For Connecticut. For the New Jersey counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren. For New York (except the counties of Erie and Niagara). In-direct jurisdiction over the consulates at Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Norfolk, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Provi-dence, and Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands. ; Carlos Baudonin Hernéndez, honorary consul. For Cuyahoga County. Bernardo Blanco, consul. , vice consul. For Oklahoma. Victor Tafel M., honorary consul. For Oregon. 3 Gustavo Ortiz Hernan, consul. , vice consul. For Delaware. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantic, Bur-lington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. For the Pennsylvania counties of Adams, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Chester, Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin, Ful-ton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadel-phia, Pike, Potter, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehan-na, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York. Congressional Directory MEXICO State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction MEXICO—continued Pennsylvania; Pittsburgh. __.__.__.... Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto:Rico; San Juan. : ..oooouiouii Dallas__ AEs Del Blosil J. fui Sliionn Roagle Pass... poltpyl BEPase: ocr red Galveston: ~ oo Houston... .......... 2000 Antun J. Guina, honorary consul. For the Pennsylvania counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Bea-ver, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset, Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland. For the Ohio counties of Ashland, Ashtabula, Athens, Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Gallia, Geauga, Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes, Jefferson, Lake, Lawrence, Mahoning, Medina, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Perry, Portage, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas, Washington, and Wayne. For West Virginia. Alfredo Carmelo Casas, honorary consul. Manuel Pales, Jr., in charge of consulate. For Puerto Rico. Edgar L. Burchell, honorary consul. For Rhode Island. Santiago A. Campbell, vice consul. For the counties of Brewster, Crane, Jeff Davis, Pecos, Presidio, and Upton. Miguel G. Calderén, consul. For Travis County. Francisco Torres Pérez, consul. Ernesto E. Cotaz, vice consul. . For the counties of Brooks, Cameron, Kenedy, and Willacy. Lamberto H. Obregon, consul. For the counties of Aransas, Bee, Calhoun, Goliad, Jim Wells, Kleberg, Live Oak, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, and Victoria. Luis Perez Abreu, consul. For 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, Grayson, Gregg, Hall, Hamilton, Hardeman, Harrison, Haskell, Henderson, Hill, Hood, Hopkins, Hunt, Jack, Johnson, Jones, Kaufman, Kent, King, Knox, Lamar, Limestone, Marion, McLennan, Montague, Morris, Motley, Navarro, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker, Rains, Red River, Rockwall, Rusk, Shackelford, Smith, Somervell, Stephens, Stonewall, Tarrant, Throckmorton, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, Wood, and Young. Enrique L. Elizondo, consul. Patricio de Guerro Osio, vice consul. For the counties of Coke, Crockett, Glasscock, Irion, Reagan, Runnels, Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Terrell, Tom Green, and Val Verde. Francisco Polin Tapia, consul. For the counties of Dimmit, Edwards, Kinney, Maverick, Uvalde, and Zavala. Raul Michel, consul general. Elias Colunga, consul. M. Tomés Morlet, consul. Roberto S. Urrea, vice consul. For the Arizona counties of Graham and Greenlee. For the New Mexico counties of Chaves, Dona Ana, Eddy, Grant, Hidalgo, Lea, Lincoln, Luna, Otero, and Sierra. For the Texas counties of Andrews, Bailey, Borden, Carson, Castro, Cochran, Crosby, Culberson, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Ector, El Paso, Fisher, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, Gray, Hale, Hansford, Hartley, Hemphill, Hockley, Howard, Hudspeth, Hutchinson, Lamb, Lipscomb, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Midland, Mitchell, Moore, Nolan, Ochiltree, Old-ham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Sherman, Swisher, Taylor, Terry, Ward, Wheeler, Winkler, and Yoakum. Angel Cano del Castillo, consul. For the counties of Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Jefferson, and Orange. ’ Luis L. Duplan, consul. Ernesto Zorilla Herrera, vice consul. For the counties of Angelina, Austin, Brazos, Burleson, Colo-rado, Fort Bend, Grimes, Hardin, Harris, Houston, J ackson, Jasper, Lavaca, Lee, Leon, Liberty, Madison, Matagorda, Montgomery, Nacogdoches, Polk, Robertson, San Augustine, San Jacinto, Shelby, Trinity, Tyler, Walker, Waller, Wash-ington, and Wharton. Javier Osornio Camarena, consul. Ricardo Garcia, vice consul. Alberto Gordillo, vice consul. Papins congiies of Duval, Jim Hogg, La Salle, McMullen, and ebb. Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States 485 MEXICO—NETHERLANDS State and residence MEXICO—continued Texas: McAllon...... cove oo divmaaizis SAN ANLONO: oom mime mod Zapata. i nim R Utah; Salt Lake City. io. oo Virginia: Neorfolker o_o. 1 i000.0a Washington: Seattle. __________________ Wisconsin: Milwaukee _.__..._.___...__ MONACO California: San Francisco Florida: Miami? -rr. New York: New York City___________. NETHERLANDS San: Diego... ooo nicolasa z San Francisco....c...._-.1: Canal Zone: Colon, Panama Cristébal eee on Panam, Panama Colorado: Denver Iowa: Orange City Louisiana: New Orleans Maryland: Baltimore ~ Massachusetts: Boston Michigan: Detroit Name, rank, and jurisdiction Lauro Izaguirre, consul. Reynaldo Jauregui Serrano, vice consul. For the counties of Hidalgo and Starr. Francisco de P. Jimenez, consul general. Manuel Aguilar, consul. Ernesto Martinez Trejo, consul. Eliseo Ruiz Russels, vice consul. For the counties of Atascosa, Bandera, Bastrop, Bell, Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Coleman, Comal, Con-cho, DeWitt, Fayette, Frio, Gillespie, Gonzales, Guada-lupe, Hays, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kimble, Lampasas, Llano, Mason, McCulloch, Medina, Menard, Milam, Mills, Real, San Saba, Williamson, and Wilson. Indirect juris-diction over the consulates at Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, Houston, Laredo, Oklahoma City, and the consular agencies at Galveston, and McAllen. Rafael San Miguel, honorary consul. For Zapata County. — consul. For Idaho, Montana, and Utah. Joseph Claireborne Davis, honorary consul. For North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. John P. Hausman, honorary consul. For Washington and Alaska. E. P. Kirby Hade, honorary consul. For Milwaukee County. Roger Bocqueraz, consul (honorary). Harvey Carl Wheeler, consul (honorary). Paul Fuller, consul general (honorary). Paul A. Boulo, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama. A. Hartog, consul (honorary). For Arizona. For California south of the counties of Inyo, Kern, and San Luis Obispo (except the counties of Imperial and San Diego). A. B. van Leer, vice consul (honorary). For Imperial and San Diego Counties. ‘W. P. Montijn, consul general. E. F. R. de Lanoy, consul (honorary). L. E. M. Van Rijckevorsel, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Alaska, R. Rijkens, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. Julio A. Salas, consul (honorary). D. M. Sasso, consul general (honorary). Allen Redeker, vice consul (honorary). For Colorado and New Mexico. C. C. Arnow, vice consul (honorary). For Florida east of the Apalachicola River. W. S. McKenzie Oerting, vice consul (honorary). For Florida west of the Apalachicola River. Roy W. Masters, acting vice consul. For Tampa and its environs. Aage C. Schroder, acting vice consul (honorary). For Georgia. C. A. Mackintosh, consul (honorary). For the Hawaiian Islands. J. I. Noest, consul general. A. P.van der Burch, consul (honorary). For Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. T. E. Klay, vice consul (honorary). For Towa. A. Terkuhle, consul (honorary). For Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi. For Florida west of the Apalachicola River. L. Bisschop, consul (honorary). For Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. T. K. Hebert, acting consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. William G. Bryant, consul (honorary). Charles H. Ray, vice consul (honorary). For Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne Counties. 486 Congressional Directory NETHERLANDS—NICARAGUA State and residence NETHERLANDS—continued Michigan: Grand Rapids. .___________. Minnesota: Minneapolis. ______________ Missouri: Kansas City__.._._..___._..__ SteVouls.. ool. odie 0 New Jersey: Paterson...______........__ New York: New York City_____.______ Oregon: Portland... =... Coco) Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Cebu_..__.___.______ Neilo....cLi opi]. Utah: SaltiLake: City -o=riccl Jo001 Virginia: Newport News_______________ Norfolk... iosdsod, ot Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. .____ ‘Washington: Seattle. __._______________ NICARAGUA California: Long Beach_____._____.____ Los Angeles. ________._.__.___ Sacramento... uous San Diego...2} San Francisco... ...- District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Miami in oudaslidf 2. Minols: Chicago: =: Toye Louisiana: New Orleans. . _____________ Maryland: Baltimore oii cil ol Michigan: Detroit... 7 1. Missouri: St. Louis... Juv asi lo Name, rank, and jurisdiction Jacob Steketee, consul (honorary). John Steketee, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan (except Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne Counties). L. C. Wilten, consul (honorary). D. Baars, vice consul (honorary). For Minnesota. ’ William A. Hannon, consul (honorary). For Iowa and Kansas. For Missouri west of 93° longitude. For Nebraska and Oklahoma. Fred C. Eberle, consul (honorary). For Arkansas and Kentucky. For Missouri east of 93° longi-tude. For Tennessee. P. Hofstra, vice consul. For the counties of Passaic, Bergen, Morris, and Essex. J. A. Schuurman, consul general. L. A. Gastmann, consul general. A. Fournée, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachu-setts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virgina. George Powell, vice consul (honorary). For Oregon. P. J. Groenendaal, consul (honorary). For Pennsylvania. Guy Walford, vice consul (honorary). For the island of Cebu. E. J. Lacey Phillips, acting vice consul (honorary). For the island or Panay. W. Huender, consul general. P. J. Eekhout, vice consul. For the Philippine Islands. O. F. Bravo, vice consul (honorary). For the west coast of Puerto Rico. Jaime Salicrup Annexy, vice consul (honorary). For the south coast of Puerto Rico. Albert E. Lee, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. J. van de Erve, Sr., consul. For Florida east of the Apalachicola River. For Georgia and South Carolina. R. J. McDonough, consul (honorary). For Galveston and suburbs. E. A. Bunge, consul (honorary). For Texas (except Galveston and suburbs). B. Tiemersma, vice consul (honorary). For Utah. E. D. J. Luening, vice consul (honorary). For Newport News. Pieter Bisschop, acting consul. For North Carolina and Virginia (except Newport News). Emile A. Berne, consul (honorary). For St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas. A. van der Spek, consul (honorary). For Idaho, Montana, Washington, and Alaska. Francisco Alvarado Granizo, consul (honorary). Rail Lacayo L., consul (honorary). Arturo Pallais, Jr., vice consul (honorary). James A. Kenyon, consul (honorary). Julio César Juérez, consul (honorary). Juan José Martinez Lacayo, consul general. Silvio F. Pellas, vice consul (honorary). For California. Roberto Feuillebois, honorary consul. Mrs. Elsa de Pallais, consul general. For the Canal Zone. Mrs. Enid Eder Perkins, vice consul (honorary). Luis Downing, consul (honorary). Aurelio Andrés Gonzélez, consul (honorary). Berthold Singer, consul general (honorary). Luis G. Bravo, consul general. For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Perrin H. Long, consul (honorary). José Guerrero, honorary consul. Arthur D. Sullivan, consul (honorary). Luis Mena Solorzano, consul general. For Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Heberto Lacayo, honorary consul. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States NICARAGUA—NORWAY State and residence NICARAGUA—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila__.__________ Puerto Rieo: San Juan C= Texas: Brownsville... wooo riilooet. Corpus:Christi-— =. > = Dallas. residedaids hos Galveston... ......Craouonalitig San Antonio. o.oo sani NORWAY Alabama: Moble co lL tuo torr So Alaska: JUNC. ovementas California: Los Angeles and San Pedro. San Dede... ae San Franelseo... > >. Canal Zone: Ancon and Balboa. _._____ Cristobal... Jinn re, District of Columbia: Washington._____ Florida: Jacksonville... ._-=->c-_C.ll.C Key West... -.coiaiiae: Pensacola... ....ilnoolanidan Georgia: Savannah... _...... Hawalir Honolulu......- == inois: Chicago... .o--nmme~=eegmanmmn Towa: Decorah... ecesenasias Louisiana: New Orleans x Maine: Portland o... .... rnin Jiliisi Maryland: Baltimore. ..c..... Massachusetts: Boston 21 Michigan: Detroit... ..Looi 2oio22000 Minnesotaz:iSt. Paul..._.o..oiC o_o Mississippi; Gulfport. co _-iu2 on Missouriz St. Louis. Co. ooo Montana: Lewistown... i ..-—Z....._ New York: Albany... ... 200s 200s New York City.......-2-.= Name, rank, and jurisdiction Rafael Deshon, consul general. Desiderio Antonio Roman y Vega, vice consul (honorary). Carlos Gelano, consul. Constantino Garcia, consul (honorary). Leslie Mauldin, vice consul (honorary). Arturo Padilla, honorary consul. William K. St. Claire, consul general (honorary). Joaquin Elizondo, vice consul (honorary). Robert L. O’Brien, honorary consul. Alonso S. Perales, consul general (honorary). Thomas Alden Provence, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama. Herbert Lionel Faulkner, vice consul (honorary). For Alaska. Erling Sundt Bent, vice consul. Roy E. Hegg, vice consul (honorary). For San Diego. Sigurd Steckmest, consul general. Wilhelm Fegth, vice consul. Ditlef Knudson, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mex- ico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Alaska. Clifford Payne, acting consul. Alan Neave Dodd, consul. For the Canal Zone except Ancon and Balboa. The Legation of Norway has general supervision over consular matters throughout the United States. . Jason Curry Outler, vice consul (honorary). For Fernandina and Jacksonville. Charles Sigsbee Lowe, vice consul (honorary). For Key West and Miami. John Edmund Toulmin, vice consul (honorary). For Florida (except the ports of Fernandina, Jacksonville, Key West, Miami, and Tampa). Barton Hewitt Smith, vice consul (honorary). For Tampa. Reidar Arnljot Trosdal, vice consul (honorary). For Georgia. Victor Cotta Schoenberg, consul (honorary). For Hawaii. Sigurd Maseng, consul. Alexander Berg, vice consul. For Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Trond Stabo, vice consul (honorary). For Iowa. Walter Frederick Jahncke, consul (honorary). For Louisiana. Seneca Arthur Paul, vice consul (honorary). For Maine. Joel M.. Cloud, consul (honorary). Cyril T. Klingenberg, honorary vice consul. For Maryland. Bjarne Ursin, consul (honorary). For Massachusetts. Carl Bromstad Moe, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan. : Arne Fremmegaard, acting consul. Harry (Halfdan) vice consul (honorary). Eberhardt, For Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Olus John Dedeaux, vice consul (honorary). For Mississippi. : Leif Johan Sverdrup, vice consul. For Missouri. Oscar M. Ulsaker, vice consul (honorary). For Montana. Donald G. Kibbey, vice consul (honorary). Rolf Asbjorn Christensen, consul general. Sigurd Syr Klingenberg, vice consul. Oluf Tostrup, vice consul. Jorgen Magnus Finne-Gronn, vice consul. Einar Ulstrup, vice consul. : For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Congressional Directory NORWAY—PANAMA State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction NORWAY—continued New York: Niagara Falls______________ North Carolina: Wilmington___________ North Dakota: Farge. .o.i-Siaita,i Ohio: Cleveland i. (G00tia hrs Utah? Salt Take City...00. 00. Virginia: Newport News___._...______ Norfolk. cossuiol, Siig Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie_______ Washington: Seattle. __.____.____.____. Wisconsin: Milwaukee _.______._______ PANAMA Alabama: Birmingham... 0 California: Los Angeles... ________ Ban Diese ..ccneona-anit: San Francisco... ________ District of Columbia: Washington_.____ Hloridac Miami. ..-2 Di Georgia: Atlanta... Deiiooosiy wmnn Hiinolsy Chieago =. oo = lows: Dubuque»...1930 . Louisiana: New Orleans... __.________. North Carolina; Charlotte______________ Oregon: Portland. 0. 7 ov Veen Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ___________ Bjarne Klaussen, vice consul (honorary). For Niagara Falls. William Gillies Broadfoot, vice consul (honorary). For North Carolina. Albert Idan Johnson, vice consul (honorary). For North Dakota. Joseph Chester Calhoun, vice consul (honorary). For Ohio. Emil P. Slovarp, vice consul (honorary). For Oregon. Mathias Moe, consul (honorary). For Pennsylvania. Guy Walford, vice consul (honorary). Edwin James Lacey Phillips, vice consul (honorary). Thorbjorn Miiller Holmsen, consul (honorary). Sven Hurum, vice consul (honorary).. For the Philippine Islands. Edward Alexander Lee, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. James Doar Lucas, vice consul (honorary). For South Carolina. Niels Oliver Monserud, vice consul (honorary). For South Dakota. John W. Focke, vice consul (honorary). For Texas (except Port Arthur and Sabine Pass). Jesse Newton Rayzor, vice consul (honorary). ( William Murray McCoy, vice consul. For Port Arthur and Sabine Pass. Nels Mettome, vice consul (honorary). For Utah. T. Parker Host, vice consul (honorary). For Newport News. Anders Williams, consul (honorary). For Virginia (except Newport News). Carl Gustav Thiele, consul (honorary). Einar Beyer, consul (honorary). Christen Anderson Stang, vice consul (honorary). For Washington. George Bernhardt Skogmo, vice consul (honorary). For Wisconsin. Clyde E. Posey, honorary consul. Ernesto Bellino, consul. Alcides Gonzales, honorary vice consul. Carlos de Diego, honorary consul. José Baldomero Calvo, consul. Eric George Barham, honorary consul. Alberto Alemén, consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Ne-vada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyo-ming. Miguel Moreno, Jr., honorary consul. B. Howard Brown, consul general. F. M. Traynor, honorary consul. John Ashley Jones, honorary consul. Bert W. Caldwell, honorary consul. John Rider Wallis, consul (honorary). Manuel Felipe Rodriguez, consul general. Dario Felix Ballina, honorary vice consul. For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisi-ana, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Tennessee. Ricardo Martinelli, honorary consul. William F. Volmerhaus, vice consul (honorary). Alfred R. Shrigley, Jr., honorary vice consul. Louis James Rosenberg, consul (honorary). Gabriel Guizado, honorary consul. Joseph 8S. Ergas, honorary consul. Ernesto de la Ossa, consul. : Roberto de la Guardia, consul general. Guillermo Féabrega, Vice consul. ; Gail For Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Vir-ginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Edwin L. Jones, honorary consul. L. W. Hartman, consul (honorary). Carlos Berguido, Jr., consul (honorary). Carlos Berguido, honorary vice consul. Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States State and residence PANAMA—continued Philippine Islands: Manila_____.._____. Puerto Rico: = Aguadilla_....._.______ Arecibo. PONG vie noins Rhode Island: Providence ______.___-_-__ Tennessee: Nashville... ooo... Texas: Brownsville :-.\ 0 oo ooo20 Bl Paso oi faaial saudi dis Galveston. lL aden). oil lus. Houston ot adnman non Ss PARAGUAY Alabama: Mobile. clococizfio Join. California: Los Angeles. _________.._____ San Diego. gai itola San Francisco TES rd IE A Canal Zone: Cristébal_.... cool ore: TNinois; Chicagoss Lon. c8aiilio 2 hie Indiana: Indianapolis. = 22... Louisiana: New Orleans_______._______. Maryland: Baltimore. = 22... co... Massachusetts: Boston Missouri: Pages ery Ohio: Cineinnatl. eve eeo-------22102L2 Oregon: Portland. _._--c.oo...acol. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ___________ Texas Austin. 23 uiud al) io. Washington: Seattle... PERSIA (See Iran) PERU California: Los Angeles _______________ San. Francisco...50200 Canal Zone: Colon, Panama... i. ---C Cristbal-. itoio..0 Panamé4, Panama_________ Florida: Miami. ool 0. S000. 000 0 Hawail: Honolulg.... oo. 0 lion. Tlinois: Chi€ago.. ~~ -=-=-re—e-tens Louisiana: New Orleans. o-oo. .___.___ Maryland: Baltimore cco __ Massachusetts: Boston... Missouri: St. Louis : New York: New York City.____________ Oregon: Portland Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ____________ Philippine Islands: Manila. ___________ Puerto Rico: Mayagiiez____.-_-________ Sonmdusn. cai Texas: Houston. 2.00 lo oo Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie______ Washington; Sealitle.. oo ii... PANAMA—PERU Name, rank, and jurisdiction E. M. Grimm, honorary consul. Jorge Silva y Tapia, consul (honorary). Vicente Barletta, honorary consul. Enrique Gomez, honorary vice consul. Edelmiro Huertas Zayas, honorary consul. Luis Brau, consul (honorary). José Lap Garcia, honorary consul. Lewis C. Cassidy, honorary consul. Miguel Gomez Hugeunin, honorary consul. Victores Prieto, honorary consul. R. L. O’Brien, consul (honorary). S. W. Heald, consul (honorary). Armando Carles, honorary consul. For Newport News and Norfolk. Isaac Parewensky, consul (honorary). Mauricio S. Sasso, honorary Vice consul. Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul Herbert C. Brown, honorary vice consul. Harry A. dae-English, consul. Harold Allan Binnard, acting consul. Richard N. Thompson, consul (honorary). Abraham P. Nasatir, honorary vice consul. Roberto Wilkinson, honorary consul. Juan Brin, Jr., consul. For the Canal Zone. Fred W. Allen, honorary consul. Carleton B. McCulloch, consul. Francisco Banda C., honorary consul. Thomas E. Barrett, Jr., consul (honorary). Jerome A. Petitti, consul (honorary). F. L. Phillips, vice consul (honorary). Charles L. Lippert, consul (honorary). William Wallace White, consul general. Edmund Dill Scotti, vice consul. For the United States. Irwin F. Westheimer, vice consul (honorary). Howard L. White, honorary consul. Henry P. Pilgert, honorary consul. Juan Pedretti, honorary vice consul. John D. Hudson, honorary consul. Max de la Fuente, consul. J. Fernando Berckemeyer Pazos, consul general. For California. Fernandez Rodriguez Pastor, consul. Oscar Pinedo del Aguila, consul. Emilio Ortiz de Zevallos, consul general. For the Canal Zone. Leland Hizer, honorary consul. L. A. R. Gaspar, honorary consul. For Hawaii. Federico Elguera Diez Canseco, consul general. Antonio Picasso Panizo, consul general. For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Carlos A. Mackehenie, consul. For Delaware and Maryland. Guillermo Garrido Lecea y Frias, consul. Wendell W. Moore, honorary consul. Francisco Pardo de Zela, consul general. Oscar Freyre, consul. Luis Santellana Raygada, consul. For the United States. Eduardo Sarmiento C., consul. José Varela Arias, consul. For Pennsylvania. Antonio Melian y Pavia, honorary consul. Guillermo H. Moscoso, honorary consul. Antonio Franco Guerra, honorary consul. For the American possessions in the Lesser Antilles. Clarence A. Miller, honorary consul. For Texas. George Levi, consul (honorary). Eduardo Espantoso, consul. For Washington. Congressional Directory State and residence POLAND California: Los Angeles... _________. Canal Zone: Colon, Panama. _.__._._._. HMlinois: Chicago. ..... sil Losin. Louisiana: New Orleans_.___________.__ New York: New York City____________ Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh_____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ PORTUGAL California: San Francisco... ____________ Florida: Tampa.............. tories Hawaii: Honolua...non onc. Jinois;: Chicago. eieenonnenin Louisiana: New Orleans_________.._____ Maryland; Baltimore. -.._-.....__.. Massachusetts; Boston................... Fall River."= New Bedford__________ New York: New York City____________ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ SALVADOR (See El Salvador) SAN MARINO New York: New York City_.._.._______ POLAND—SIAM Name, rank, and jurisdiction Lech Niemojowski, honorary consul. For California. Luis Fernando Prada, honorary consul. For the Canal Zone. Karol Ripa, consul general. Aleksander Moc, vice consul. For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philip-pine Islands. Joseph P. Henican, Jr. honorary consul. For Louisiana. Sylwin Strakaecz, consul general. For the Pennsylvania counties of Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Columbia, Delaware, Lackawanna, Lan-caster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Monroe, Montgomery, Northampton, Philadelphia, Pike, Schuylkill, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming. For Alabama, Con-necticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hamp-shire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, and Virginia. Heliodor Sztark, consul general. For Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee, and West Virginia. For the Pennsylvania counties of Adams, Allegheny, Arm-strong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Crawford, Cumberland, Dauphin, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Franklin, Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jefferson, Juniata, Lawrence, Lycoming, McKean, Mercer, Mifflin, Montour, Northum-berland, Perry, Potter, Snyder, Somerset, Tioga, Union, Venango, Warren, Washington, Westmoreland, and York. Frederic Zuellig, honorary consul. For the Philippine Islands. Euclides Goulart da Costa, consul. G. Armas do Amaral, vice consul (honorary). For San Francisco and its consular district. Leo Francis Pallardy, vice consul (honorary). Alberto Alves de Aratjo, consul (honorary). , consul. J. Leonard Herron, vice consul (honorary). Luiz da Costa Carvalho, consul (honorary). Jodo Francisco dos Santos, Jr., vice consul (honorary). Adelbert W. Mears, vice consul (honorary). Manuel Cardoso de Sousa Pinto, consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Manuel Caetano-Pereira, vice consul (honorary). For Fall River and its consular district. Vasco Antunes Villela, consul (honorary). For New Bedford and its consular district. José Luis Archer, consul general. José Saavedra de Figueiredo, vice consul (honorary). For all the States except California, Connecticut, Maine, Mas-sachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. Camilo Camara, consul (honorary). For Philadelphia and its consular district. Angelo da Costa Carvalho, consul (honorary). Carlos Maria da Luz Nunes, vice consul (honorary). For the Philippine Islands. Dionisio Trigo, consul (honorary). Robert O’Brien, consul (honorary). Donato Alvarez Assis, vice consul (honorary). M. E. Trepuk, consul (honorary). The exequaturs of all Rumanian consular officers in the United States were canceled by the President on July 29; 1941. Ercole H. Locatelli, consul general (honorary). Angelo Flavio Guidi, vice consul (honorary). SIAM (See Thailand) Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 491 State and residence SPAIN Xlabama: Mobile... ooo coo ooo California; ‘San Francisco. .....-.——---- Canal Zone: Cristébal. _____-_-__- __1% Panama: Panama. = i el Florida: Jacksonville... _.__... _.__.. ) TinolsChiengo: 0. oad ss sou i hhs Louisiana: New Orleans. ._....._.__._. New York: New York City... _..____. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_.__________ Philippine Islands: Cebu_______.______ Manila. D5 2221 Puerto Rico: San Juan. =...iT 7.00 Texas: Houston... -...... 25201 00H Port Arthur... ... 1220 Gin Washington: Seattle. _. __.-.. .......-. SWEDEN Alabama: Mobile______ eat Tro Alaska: Shavway. =. ol ei ca California: Loos Angeles_________________ Sane Depo. i a San Francisco: Canal Zone: Colon, Panama___________ Panam4, Panama_________ Florida: Jacksonville... __.._ Georginy Savannah“ L_ . ._ _l_ _-_ HawalizHonelohy 2 =. nol CICA = ir sens nama eEE Louisiana: New Orleans______.__________ Maryland: Baltimore. 2... coe --- Massachusetts: Boston... .........._... Michigans Petroita so. Minnesota: Minneapolis. ______________ Missouri: KansasCity.com. Nobraska: Omaha >..._~_ _ SPAIN—SWEDEN Name, rank, and jurisdiction J. Llorca Marty, honorary vice consul. For Alabama. Francisco de Amat y Torres, consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, and Alaska and Hawaii. Pedro Calonge Garcia, vice consul (honorary). Carlos Arcos y Cuadra, consul general. For the Canal Zone. Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Duval, Nassau, and St. Johns in Florida. For the Georgia counties of Brantley, Bryan, Camden, Charlton, Chatham, Effingham, Glynn, Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Pierce, and Wayne. Francisco Arango y de los Hoyos, honorary vice consul. For Georgia and South Carolina; for Florida except the counties of Bay, Broward, Calhoun, Collier, Dade, Duval, Escambia, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Monroe, Nassau, Okaloosa, Palm Beach, St. Johns, Santa Rosa, Walton, and Washington. Manuel Martin Gonzalez, consul. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. José Maria Garay y Garay, consul. Julio Altabés Yus, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. For Escambia County in Florida. Miguel Espinos y Bosch, consul general. For the continental limits of the United States and the Terri-tories of Alaska and Hawaii. Andres Iglesias y Velayos, consul. For Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. For Georgia and Florida except Escambia County. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Mercer, Morris, Ocean, Salem, Somerset, and Warren. Silviano Cermefio, honorary consul. José del Castafio Cardona, consul general. For the Philippine Islands and the Island of Guam. Mariano Amoedo Galarmendi, consul general. For Culebra, Puerto Rico, Vieques, and the Virgin Islands. José Faus, in charge of consulate. Paul Jorge Verduzeo Hill, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Angelina, Harding, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Sabine, St. Augus-tine, Shelby, and Tyler. John Wesley Dolby, honorary vice consul. For Oregon and Washington. Herbert Clarence Brown, vice consul. Edward Anton Rasmusson, vice consul (honorary). Walter G. Danielson, vice consul (honorary). John Waldo Malmberg, vice consul (honorary). Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, consul. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wash- ington, Alaska, and Hawaii. Julio Abraham Salas, vice consul (honorary). Hans Vilhelm Axel Elliott, consul (honorary). Carl Axel Harald Janson, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. Richard Henrik Laftman, vice consul (honorary). Aage Georg Schroder, vice consul (honorary). Gustav Wilhelm Olson, vice consul. For Hawaii. Gosta Oldenburg, consul. Gustaf Bernhard Anderson, vice consul (honorary). For Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. For Alabama, Louisi-ana, Mississippi, and Texas, except their coast line. George Plant, vice consul (honorary). Edgar T. Fell, vice consul (honorary). William Otis Tydings,’ acting vice consul (honorary). Albert Olof Wilson, vice consul (honorary). Carl Berglund, vice consul (honorary). Carl Fredrik Hellstrom, vice consul. For Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota. A. Hawkinson, vice consul (honorary). Axel Carl Richard Swenson, vice consul (honorary). For Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Okla-homa, and Wyoming. Congressional Directory SWEDEN—SWITZERLAND State and residence SWEDEN—continued New York: Jamestown. __......_ New York City... Ohio: Cleveland... tn io...iaitn-Oregon: Portland: =... ii Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. _________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Texas: Galveston. o-ooov od Virginian: Norfolk... coc cf oricninzs-Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ______ Washington: Seattle. ....ceecorveuns SWITZERLAND California: Los Angeles... oo... San Francisco. .--vovaenes a Maryland: Baltimore... 0000 Massachusetts: Boston_________________ Missouri: Kansas City... °° St. Lonig:t oi a es Name, rank, and jurisdiction Carl Alfred Okerlind, vice consul (honorary). Johan Martin Kastengren, consul general. Victor Emanuel Lindholm, vice consul. Claes Cecil Carbonnier, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro-lina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Ten-nessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and the coast of Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Einar G. Carlson, vice consul (honorary). Eric Emil Peterson, vice consul (honorary). Maurice Hogeland, vice consul (honorary). Helge A. Janson, consul. For the Philippine Islands. Luis Alberto Ferre, vice consul (honorary). Robert Richard Prann, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. Herman Arthur Bornefeld, vice consul (honorary). Herman Aspegren, vice consul (honorary). Herbert Ernest Lockhart, consul (honorary). For the Virgin Islands. Yngve Carl Ivar Lundequist, vice consul (honorary). Otto Wartenweiler, honorary consul. For Arizona and New Mexico. For the California counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. Paul Frossard, consul general. For the California counties of Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Eldo-rado, Fresno, Glenn, Humboldt, Inyo, Kern, Kings, Lake, Lassen, Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Mendocino, Merced, Modoe, Mono, Monterey, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Benito, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Luis Obispo, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tulare, Tuolumne, Yolo, and Yuba. For Nevada, Utah, and the Territory of Hawaii. William Charles Weiss, consular agent. The Legation of Switzerland in Washington has charge of con-sular matters in the District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. , consul. Ulrich Beusch, vice consul. For northern Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Albert Greutert, acting consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis-Sesion, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and exas. J. F. Schneider, consular agent._ Georges Henri Barrel, consular agent (honorary). Hans Schaerrer, consular agent (honorary). Alfred Aigler, honorary consul. For Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. For the Illinois counties of Alexander, Bond, Calhoun, Clay, Clinton, Crawford, Edwards, Effingham, Fayette, Franklin, Gallatin, Greene, Hamilton, Hardin, Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Jersey, Johnson, Lawrence, Macoupin, Madison, Marion, Massae, Monroe, Montgomery, Perry, Pike, Pope, Pulaski, Ran-dolph, Richland, St. Clair, Saline, Scott, Union, Wabash, Washington, Wayne, White, and Williamson. Robert Kuoch, consular agent (honorary). Victor Nef, consul general. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. For New Jersey (except the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Mercer, Ocean, and Salem). For Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Alphonse Biber, in charge of consulate. For Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. Karl Anton Walder, consular agent (honorary). Maurice Rohrbach, in charge of consulate. For Delaware, New Jersey, (except the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren), and Penn-sylvania. Frederic Otto Henzi, consular agent (honorary). Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States 493 : SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY State and residence SWITZERLAND—continued Philippine Islands: Manila_ _________.__ Puerto Rico: San Juan oooir Utah: Salt loke City. o_o... Virgin Islands ‘Washington: Seattle... ______________ THAILAND (SIAM) California: San Francisco... ..___.. Hinois: Chicago. Loi 0otion 00 Massachusetts: Boston. _______________ New York: New York City._._.....___ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila___________. Washington: Seattle... ____...... TURKEY Minois: Chicago... IEC 03I0 Massachusetts: Boston_________________ New York: New York City _..._.____._ UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA New York: New York City... __.___.. UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS California: Los Angeles San Francisco New York: New York City.___.._______ URUGUAY Alabama: Mobile. o.oo. ios ats California: Hollywood...= Los Angeles San Diego. San Francisco. o.oo. vas Florida: Pensaeola.om i +. ool ATITbr Be Ea eRe Minois: Chicago. i o.oo.aii Louisiana: New Orleans__ _______._____ Maryland: Baltimore Massachusetts: Boston... —____ 64674°—T7T7—2—1st ed 33 Name, rank, and jurisdiction Albert Sidler, honorary consul. Victor Braegger, consular agent (honorary). J. Glauser, consular agent. The consulate general at New York has charge of Swiss consular matters in the Virgin Islands. Verner Tobler, in charge of consulate. For Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska Martin J. Dinkelspiel, consul (honorary). John W. Dinkelspiel, vice consul (honorary). Nathan William MacChesney, consul general (honorary). Arthur Messenger Beale, consul (honorary). Charles W. Atwater, consul general (honorary). William E. Goodman, consul (honorary). Eugene Arthur Perkins, honorary consul general. Alfonso Ponce Enrile, honorary vice consul. Stanley Arthur Griffiths, consu ] (honorary). Berthold Singer, honorary consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne-braska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wy-oming. Georges R. Farnum, honorary consul general. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Mehmed Ali Yiikselen, consul general. Salih Beheet Samuray, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Ken-tucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, + Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia. Emil Frank Horn, consul. Theodore Hewitson, vice consul. Harold Langmead Taylor Taswell, vice consul. Nikolai I. Belov, acting vice consul. For the counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. Alexandre Alexandrovitch Skorukov, consul general. Nikolai Ivanovich Belov, vice consul. For Arizona, California (except the Los Angeles consular district), Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Hawaii. Victor Alexeievitch Fediuchine, consul general. Peter Davidovich Gusev, vice consul. Alexander Papushin, vice consul. Dmitri Ivanovich Zaikin, vice consul. Pavel Panteleevich Klarin, vice consul. Jakob Mironovich Lomakin, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Juan Llorca Marty, vice consul (honorary). Carlos Barbé, honorary vice consul. Robert E. Tracey, consul (honorary). Mauricio Herschel, vice consul (honorary). Albert Scott, consular agent. Vicente J. Vidal, vice consul (honorary). Joseph Steven Walker, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo Carlos Lebret, consul (honorary). eran , consul. Edgar H. Morrice, Jr., consular agent. Edmundo Novoa, consul (honorary). John Phelps, vice consul (honorary). William A. Mossman, consul (honorary). Th 494 Congressional Directory URUGUAY—YUGOSLAVIA State and residence URUGUAY—eontinued New Yorke: Buffalot 0... «Seis New York City Oregon: Portland... boone 0 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia _.__________ Puerto Rico: SanJuan... © Texas; Galveston... on Losisctana Port Arthur seve cond semanas Virginia: Nopfollr o.oo ooo nena Washington: Seattle ................. _ VENEZUELA California: Los Angeles. .__._________._ San Franeiseou.ed. tooo: Canal Zone: Colon, Panama___________ Florida: Miamiecbocn sinuint ooauzd on Louisiana: New Orleans _______________ Maryland: Baltimore. -. ... .......o.. Missouri: St.Louis 2... (oi... New York: New York City..___..___.__ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: Arecibo... ......... Mayagilez: 7 Semdnan. 7 Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie_______ YUGOSLAVIA Minois: Chicago. = . Louisiana: New Orleans________________ New York: New York City. ______.____. Ohio: Clevelande oo ac. tr ia Oregon: AASIOTIR oe Jot oo tateroi Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh____.________.__ Name, rank, and jurisdiction Leon L. Lancaster, vice consul (honorary). Santiago Rivas, Jr., acting consul general. Santiago Rivas, Jr., consul. Robert Richling, consul. For the United States. John H. Lothrop, vice consul (honorary). Eduardo Iglesias, honorary consul. Manuel Gomez Lopez, consul (honorary). For Arecibo, Bayamo6n, and Humacao. Enrique Schroeder, vice consul (honorary). Fernando Pré, vice consul (honorary). E. J. Rudgard Wigg, vice consul (honorary). | Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. Alberto Posse Rivas, consul. Antonio Casas Briceflo, consul general. Leopoldo Garcia Maldonado, consul general. Carlos Alberto Arismendi, honorary vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Vicente Alamo Y barra, consul general. For the Canal Zone. V. M. Avendafio Lozada, consul. José Rafael Velasco Y., consul general. For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Okla-homa, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia. German Solis, consul. Rafael Roman Dévila Delgado, consul. Francisco J. Parra, consul general. Nicolas Veloz, honorary vice consul. Asdrubal Urdaneta, vice consul. José D. Citraro C., honorary consul. Alberto P. Defino, honorary consul. Eugenio Lefranc, in charge of consulate. | Thomas Boothby, in charge of consulate. Bernardo Suérez, consul general. For Puerto Rico. Valdemar A. Miller, honorary consul. Petar Cabri¢, consul general. For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Alaska, | Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. | Basile Rusovic, honorary consul. Dragomir Stanoyevitch, consul general. : | Oscar Gavrilovich, consul. For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachu-setts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and the Virgin Islands. James Mally, honorary consul. Frank Franciscovich, honorary consul. Kosto Unkovich, honorary consul. FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS (C)—Consulate. (L)—Legation. (CA)—Consular agency. (MA)—Office of military attaché. (CQ3)—Consulate general. (NA)—Office of naval attaché. (DA & DO)—Distriet accounting and disburs-(T A)—Office of treasury attaché. ing office. (VC)—Vice consulate. (E)—Embassy. AFGHANISTAN—AUSTRALIA Post Name and office AFGHANISTAN 1 Louis G. Dreyfus, Jr., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. James S. Moose, Jr., second secretary. George R. Merrell? consul general. Clarence E. Macy, ? consul. ARGENTINA Buenos Alreg’ (BY = cr Ello Norman Armour, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Edward L. Reed, counselor. Thomas L. Hughes, commercial attaché. Paul O. Nyhus, agricultural attaché. Richard Ford, consul. George R. Canty, assistant commercial attaché. Harold M. Randall, assistant commercial attaché. Sheldon Thomas, second secretary. James W. Gantenbein, second secretary. Eric C. Wendelin, second secretary. R. Horton Henry, second secretary; consul. Joe D. Walstrom, assistant commercial attaché. Edward P. Maffitt, third secretary. Hiram Bingham, Ir. vice consul. Leslie W. Johnson, vice consul. Herbert V. Olds, vice consul. Sydney H. Banash, vice consul. Clifton P. English, vice consul. William E. Copley, vice consul. Arthur J. Romero, vice consul. Burford K. Isaacs, Jr., vice consul. Alfred W. Wells, vice consul. (MA &ENAY cavemanla. Col. John W. Lang, military attaché and military attaché for air. Capt. William D. Brereton, Jr., naval attache. and naval attaché for air. Lt. Col. Phillip B. Shotwell, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. John W. Thomason, Jr., assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Comdr. Robert S. Burgher, assistant naval attaché. Ensign Anthony D. Duke, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Bahia Blanca (VQ)... Soci sonia. Robert E. Wilson, vice consul. AUSTRALIA Canberra, Australian Capital Terri-Nelson T. Johnson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- tory (L) potentiary. John R. Minter, first secretary. Randolph A. Kidder, 4 third secretary. OIA © NAY iit oaite bie sn diated Col. Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, military attaché. Conds. Lewis D. Causey, ret., naval attaché and naval attaché or air. 1st Lt. Robert Odell, assistant military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Malcolm Mackenzie, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Donald R. McLennan, Jr., assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. 1 Diplomatic officers here listed are accredited also to Iran; resident in Tehran. Correspondence on diplo-matic business relating to Afghanistan should be addressed to “The American Minister, Tehran, Iran’; on f consular business, to “The American Consul, Karachi, India.” % 2 Assigned also to, and resident in, Calcutta, India. 3 Assigned also to, and resident in, Karachi, India. 4 Assigned also as vice consul at Sydney. | 497 | Congressional Directory AUSTRALIA—BRAZIL Post Name and office AUSTRALIA—continued Adelaide, South Australia (C)__________ Charles A. Hutchinson, consul. Brisbane, Queensland (C) Joseph P. Ragland, consul. Melbourne, Victoria (CC). noi ee Erle R. Dickover, consul general. Fred W. Jandrey, vice consul. Ralph H. Hunt, vice consul. Perth, Western Australia (C)___..._-__ Mason Turner, consul. * Sydney, New South Wales (CG) ...—---Ely E. Palmer, consul general. Lacey C. Zapf, consul. Charles H. Derry, consul. ‘Wilson C. Flake, consul. Henry B. Day, consul. Randolph A. Kidder,’ vice consul. Richard H. Hawkins, Jr., vice consul. Lyle C. Himmel, vice consul. BELGIUM AND POSSESSIONS Belgium:6 Brussels (Bruxelles) (BE) _.__________ Anthony J. Drexel Biddle,” Jr., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,” counselor of embassy. Carmel Offie,” third secretary. Consular offices in Belgium closed. Africa: Léopoldville, Belgian Congo (C)_--Patrick Mallon,8 consul. BOLIVIA LaPaz(ly) suitees SE casas Extraordinary Minister nnn Douglas Jenkins, Envoy and Pleni- potentiary. Allan Dawson, second secretary (consul). Carlos C. Hall, second secretary (consul). John C. Pool, third secretary (vice consul). Charles R. Burrows, third secretary (vice consul). Lt. Col. Clarence W. Bennett, military attaché. Capt. Irving Eugene Roberts, assistant military attaché. Allan Dawson, consul (second secretary). Carlos C. Hall, consul (second secretary). John C. Pool, vice consul (third secretary). Charles R. Burrows, vice consul (third secretary). J. Allard Gasque, vice consul. BRAZIL Riode Janeiro (BB). .......cocomesamee=s Jefferson Caffery, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. John F. Simmons, conselor of embassy; consul general. Walter J. Donnelly, commercial attaché. Erwin P. Keeler, agricultural attaché. Archie W. Childs, assistant commercial attaché. Prescott Childs, second secretary; consul. Edward D. McLaughlin, second secretary; consul. Randolph Harrison, Jr., second secretary; consul. Frederick J. Cunningham, third secretary; vice consul. Elvin Seibert, third secretary; vice consul. Ivan B. White, third secretary; vice consul. Philip P. Williams, third secretary; vice consul. Elim O’Shaughnessy, third secretary; vice consul. Rudolf E. Cahn, vice consul. Charles Will Wright, vice consul. Frederick H. Weaver, vice consul. Robert F. Corrigan, vice consul. (MA & NAY. a nneains on Edwin L. Sibert, military attaché and military attaché or air. Rear Admiral Augustin T. Beauregard, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. : Capt. James R. Hughes, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Lloyd H. Gomes, assistant military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Charles H. K. Miller, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Francis B. Risser, assistant naval attaché. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Claybrook B. Cottingham, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Thomas D. Spencer, assistant naval attaché. Ensign Harold M. Midkiff, assistant naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Com. Edmund E. Brady, assistant naval attaché. : Lt. Edward J. Lanigan, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Victoria, Espirito Santo (VO)___.___ Percy G. Kemp, vice consul. 5 Assigned also as third. secretary at Canberra. 6 Government of Belgium established in England. 3 : 7 Accredited also to the Governments of Poland, Norway, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Greece, established in England. 8 Assigned also to French Equatorial Africa and the Cameroons (French mandate). Foreign Service of the United States Post BRAZIL—continued Bahia (S&o Salvador) (C)_ _______._._._.._ Florianbpolis (CY... io.cil fF2 Natal (C) oo aac asia Parad (Belo) (QC): = oad Manos (VC) a0 0 c0ik S80 Luiz, Maranhfo (CA). __.______ Pernambuco (Recife) (C)______________ Fortaleza (Ceard) (VC)Y___________. Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul (C)___ Rio Grande (CA)... 000012 Santos (CY. = aEnE So Palo (CRY.-a oie anamnisnnn Curitiba, Parang (VOY. _...Loil0 0 BULGARIA... 2000 00 CANADA Ottawa, Ontario (1). --cnvueuenme-aiiiil MA ENA). oid MDA&EDO).-lod h Calgary, Alberta (CY. oi milicae Edmonton, Alberta (CY)...=: Fort William and Port Arthur, On- tario (OC). Halifax, Nova Scotia (CQ)._.__.________ Fredericton, New Brunswick (VC). Hamilton, Ontario (C).----=5asessics Montreal, Quebec (CQ) BRAZIL CANADA Name and office Reginald S. Castleman, consul. Robert Jakes, 3d, vice consul. Reginald S. Kazanjian, vice consul. Harold Sims, vice consul. Jay Walker, consul. Parker T'. Hart, vice consul. Hubert Maness, vice consul. Wiley T. Clay. consular agent. Walter J. Linthicum, consul. Robert Bruce Harley, vice consul. William Preston Rambo, vice consul. Daniel M. Braddock, consul. V. Harwood Blocker, vice consul. Joseph Ashbrook, consular agent. Arthur G. Parsloe, vice consul. Cecil M. P. Cross, consul general. Robert Janz, consul. John Hubner, 2d, vice consul. Francis C. Jordan, vice consul. Roger L. Heacock, vice consul. Jesse Milton Orme, vice consul. State of war declared by Bulgaria Dec. 13, 1941. Jay Pierrepont Moffat! Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Henry M. Bankhead, commercial attaché. Joseph W. Ballantine, consul general. Clifford C. Taylor, agricultural attaché. Oliver B. North, assistant commercial attaché. Lewis Clark, second secretary; consul. Avery F. Peterson, second secretary; consul. J. Graham Parsons, third secretary; vice consul. Miss Katherine E. O’Connor, third secretary; vice consul. Russell B. Jordan, vice consul. Lt. Col. John 8. Gullet, military attaché and military attaché for air. Comdr. Edmund W. Strother, retired, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Maj. Francis J. Graling, assistant military attaché. Capt. Harry D. McHenry, assistant naval attaché. Comdr. Cummings L. Lothrop, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Robert D. Huntington, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Julius Fleischmann, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Gregory S. McIntosh, assistant naval attaché, and assistant naval attaché for air. George = Minor, district accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Oscar W. Fredrickson, assistant district accounting and disburs- ing officer (vice consul). . Charles W. Allen, vice consul. George L. Tolman, vice consul. Harvey T. Goodier, consul. Edwin Carl Kemp, consul general. Samuel R. Thompson, consul. B. Miles Hammond, vice consul. (Gray Bream, vice consul. James M. Gilchrist, Jr., vice consul. Edwin N. Gunsaulus, vice consul. Frederick C. Johnson, vice consul. Clay Merrell, vice consul. Homer M. Byington, consul general. George Tait, consul. Joseph I. Touchette, consul. Andrew G. Lynch, consul. Coldwell S. Johnston, consul. Frederick E. Farnsworth, vice consul. David H. Henry, 2d, vice consul. Oscar C. Holder, vice consul. Richard A. Poole, vice consul. George F. Bogardus, vice consul. John R. Barry, vice consul. Stanley T. Hayes, vice consul. James E. Callahan, vice consul. 9 This office performs no visa or citizenship services. 10 Accredited also to the Government of Luxembourg, established in Canada. 500 Congressional Directory Post CANADA—continued Niagara Falls, Ontario (C)____________. Quebec, Quebec (OC)...-=. Regina, Saskatchewan (C)___._______._. St. John, New Brunswick (C)___._____. St. Stephen, New Brunswick (C)._.__. Sarnia, Ontario (C). lou’ oo Toronto, Ontario (CR)... --..-22% Vancouver, British Columbia (CG)__..| Victoria, British Columbia (C)____._____ Windsor, Ontario (C)....—o--~--—c-—-- ‘Winnipeg, Manitoba (CG) _..._________ Kenora, Ontario (CA)... 00a... Yarmouth, Nova Seotia (C)........_.... Santiago (BY... oom tll (MA & NA). -ooinonainne mi nD Punta Arenas (Magallanes) (VC) | Valdivia (VIO) co Yd.2.0000 CANADA—CHILE Name and office Lynn W. Franklin, consul. William L. Blue, vice consul. William H. Brown, vice consul. William B. Murray, vice consul. Frank C. Niccoll, vice consul. Rollin R. Winslow, consul. Herbert F. N. Schmitt, vice consul. Adam Beaumont, vice consul. Robert W. Heingartner, consul. Paul H. Demille, vice consul. Thomas D. Davis, consul. Dudley E. Cyphers, vice consul. George L. Brist, vice consul. Charles E. B. Payne, vice consul. North Winship, consul general. Samuel H. Day, consul. ‘Warwick Perkins, consul. Easton T'. Kelsey, vice consul. Ralph N. Clough, vice consul. Thomas P. Dillon, vice consul. Frederick A. Bohne, vice consul. Robert William Harding, vice consul. Elton Maynard Hoyt, vice consul. Wallace E. Moessner, vice consul. Paul C. Seddicum, vice consul. Wylie G. Borum, vice consul. Paul R. Josselyn, consul general. Robert Y. Jarvis, consul. Walter S. Reineck, consul. Thomas H. Robinson, consul. John L. Bankhead, vice consul. Alden M. Haupt, Vice consul. Charles W. Smith, vice consul. Nelson P. Meeks, vice consul. Augustus C. Owen, vice consul. Walter M. Walsh, vice consul. Reed Paige Clark, consul. Eugene H. Johnson, vice consul. George K. Donald, consul general. Sidney A. Belovsky, consul. Harold Shullaw, vice consul. F. Lester Sutton, vice consul. H. Armistead Smith, vice consul. Charles C. Sundell, vice consul. Alfred W. Klieforth, consul general. George Gregg Fuller, consul. Montgomery H. Colladay, consul. Leys A. France, consul. Wilfred V. MacDonald, vice consul. W. Paul O’Neill, Jr., vice consul. Bernard F. Heiler, vice consul. Rupert H. Moore, const:lar agent. Ralph A. Boernstein, consul. Charles H. Taliaferro, vice consul. Claude G. Bowers, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. Donald R. Heath, first secretary. H. Coit MacLean, commercial attaché. Dayle C. McDonough, first secretary; consul general. Clarence C. Brooks, first secretary. Sheldon T. Mills, second secretary. John B. Faust, second secretary; consul. Archibald E. Gray, second secretary; consul. Cecil B. Lyon, second secretary. Charles F. Knox, Jr., assistant commercial attaché. Miss Minedee McLean, vice consul. Camden L. McLain, vice consul. Joseph A. Frisz, vice consul. Robert W. Weise, Jr., vice consul. -Col. Lester D. Baker, military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Dwight H. Day, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Capt. O’Neill XK. Kane, assistant military attaché. Lt. Robert T. Waid, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Roy L. Malcolm, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Kenneth S. Barker, vice consul. Samuel A. Mcllhenny, Jr., vice consul. ¢ This office performs no visa or citizenship services. Foreign Serviceof the United States 501 CHILE—COLOMBIA Post Name and office CHILE—continued Antofagasta (Cit i George H. Adams, vice consul. Valparaiso (C).-..0odecJo Lo) Joseph F. Burt, consul. cs Frederick L. Royt, vice consul. Warren C. Stewart, vice consul. Cruz Grande, Coquimbo (CA)____ Frank T. Rueter, consular agent. CHINA Chungking (BB). oe Ui oLl ool. Clarence E. Gauss, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. John Carter Vincent, first secretary. John J. MacDonald, second secretary. John S. Service, third secretary. Boies C. Hart, Jr., third secretary. (MA SENAY: aan 5% Col. William Mayer, military attaché and military attaché or air. Mar James Marshall McHugh, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Lt. Col. David D. Barrett, assistant military attaché. Maj. Frederick P. Munson, assistant military attaché. Maj. Richard A. Grussendorf, military air attaché. Maj. Reynolds Condon, assistant military attaché. Maj. Stuart Wood, assistant military attaché. Capt. Edwin M. Cahill, assistant military attaché. Capt. Paul L. Freeman, Jr., assistant military attaché. Capt. Edward J. McNally, assistant military attaché. Capt. Albert F. Metze, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Robert R. DeWolfe, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Franklin R. Fette, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Kunming (Yiinnanfu), Yunnan (C).___ Troy L. Perkins, consul. Stephen C. Brown, vice consul. Consular offices in Japanese-occupied territory closed. : COLOMBIA Bogota (BY... 2i-2ac i ose mvannaa at Spruille Braden, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Merwin L. Bohan, commercial attaché. George C. Howard, second secretary; consul. Gerald Keith, second secretary; consul. Garret G. Ackerson, Jr., second secretary; consul. Barry T. Benson, second secretary; consul. Daniel V. Anderson, third secretary; vice consul. Andrew E. Donovan, 2d, third secretary; vice consul. R. Kenneth Oakley, third secretary; vice consul. Alfred H. Lovell, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. James S. Triolo, vice consul. Granville Oury-Jackson, vice consul. Glenn R. McCarty, Jr., vice consul. Dwight Hightower, vice consul. Wells Stabler, vice consul. (MA&ENA) ainda Col. Carl H. Strong, military attaché and military attaché for air. Lt. Col. Byron F. Johnson, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Alvin R. Luedecke, assistant military attaché and assistant military attaché for air. 1st Lt. Wesley P. Cox, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Roger Willock, assistant naval attaché. Ensign Joseph C. Fox, assistant naval attaché. Maj. Woodson F. Hocker, assistant military attaché. Barranquilla (CG). oiioo ota Nelson R. Park, consul. Richard B. Mudge, vice consul. Girvan Teall, vice consul. Henry Dearborn, vice consul. Riochacha(VO) voit Lewis E. Leonard, vice consul. Cali(C) yy i en i Arthur R. Williams, consul. Fernando Terrassa, vice consul. Ralph W. Johns, Jr., vice consul. Buenaventura (CA)...= Grosvenor A. Blood, consular agent. Cartagena (C0.nn Herndon W. Goforth, consul. ae nd John F. Frank, vice consul. Medellin (BC). oe aetna Vernon L. Fluharty, vice consul. Henry T. Unverzagt, vice consul. | C. Langdon Harriss, vice consul. 9 This office performs no visa or citizenship services. | | 502 Congressional Directory COSTA RICA—DENMARK Post COSTA RICA San Jos@ilL) fa (MEA NAY a Port Limon (Cy = = = Habano(B). oon ooo. simaeiaen (MA & NAY i ul Antilla (CY... iesesusnid conuiomaiis Clenfuegos (C).co vinassas oi varii-Caibarien (CA): ooo vovasanaicds Sagua la Grande (CA) Matanzas (C) Nuevitag{C) ao. ooo ni nndibisbagdon Santiago de Cuba (CY... Looe io Manzanillo (CA)... dco CZECHOSLOVAKIA Praha CL) 1S Tails pais ce Jaren Jie DENMARK Copenhagen (K6benhavn) (L)_________ Consulate general at Copenhagen closed. Greenland: Godthaab (CY... iinet Accredited also to the Governments Greece, established in England. Name and office Arthur Bliss Lane, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Leslie E. Reed, first secretary; consul general. Charles L. Luedtke, agricultural attaché. H. Gordon Minnigerode, third secretary; vice consul. S. Roger Tyler, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Ben Zweig, vice consul. Lt. Col. Eduardo Andino, military attaché. Capt. Frank M. June, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Justin C. Tobias, assistant naval attaché. Aubrey Lee Welch, Jr., Vice consul. George S. Messersmith, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. Ellis O Briggs, first secretary. Albert F. Nufer, commercial attaché. Sidney E. O’ Donoghue, second secretary. Charles H. Ducoté, assistant commercial attaché. Ralph Miller, second secretary. Robert P. Joyce, second secretary. et. Robert E. Cummings, military attaché and military attaché or air. Maj. Hayne D. Boyden, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Lt. Einar T. Anderson, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign William McBride Love, assistant naval a¥fachs and assistant naval attaché for air. Maj. William E. Boone, assistant military attaché. Harold S. Tewell, consul. George R. Hukill, consul. Kennett F. Potter, consul. F. Ridgway I.ineaweaver, vice consul. Hugh F. Ramsay, consul. Joseph E. Newton, vice consul. Thomas S. Campen, vice consul. John P. Hoover, vice consul. William A. Crawford, vice consul. Caspar D. Green, vice consul. Juan de Zengotita, vice consul. Robert H. McBride, vice consul. John H. Marvin, vice consul. Raoul F. Washington, vice consul. Thomas J. Cole, vice consul. Arthur D. Jukes, vice consul. Horace J. Dickinson, consul. Hernan C. Vogenitz, vice consul. Federico Causo, consular agent. Eugene E. Jova, consular agent. Edward S. Benet, vice consul. Milton Patterson Thompson, vice consul. Harry W. Story, vice consul. Raoul A. Bertot, consular agent. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,” Envoy Extraordinary and Min- ister Plenipotentiary. Rudolf Schoenfeld,’ first secretary. Carmel Offie,” third secretary. Ray Atherton,!? Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. Mahlon Fay Perkins, counselor of legation. Hugh Millard, first secretary. Julian B. Foster, commercial attaché. Miss Elizabeth Humes, second secretary. R. Borden Reams, second secretary. James K. Penfield, consul. George Lybrook West, Jr., vice consul. of Poland, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia, and 11 Government of Czechoslovakia established in England. 12 Now in the United States on consultation. Foreign Service of the United States DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—ESTONIA Post DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Ciudad Trujillo. 02. iol. La (MEA &NAY: isin acnesald LaRomana (CA) lois agig,. ECUADOR Quito tL). aT OIA & NAY... Bilseiieaioe Guayaquil (CQ)... Lil liaiacaoadd SIT TE BY Ie Cl BRR (MA ENA): ._.. oo 3% Alexandria (GC). ue rena Port: Sald (Caan ines EL SALVADOR San Salvador (L)._ ab (MA & NA)___ ESTONIA Tallinn) (elosedyes ou oo = 2. Name and office Robert M. Scotten, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Edward P. Lawton, second secretary; consul. Halleck L. Rose, second secretary; consul. Edward Anderson, third secretary; consul. William Belton, third secretary; vice consul. Don V. Catlett, vice consul. John Z. Williams, vice consul. Theodore S. Orme, vice consul. Lt. Col. David R. Kerr, military attaché. Capt. John A. Butler, naval attaché. Eugene J. Lieder, consular agent. Boaz Long, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Howard H. Tewksbury, commercial attaché. Charles L. Luedtke, agricultural attaché. Gerald A. Drew, second secretary; consul. Harry C. Reed, vice consul. Alexander Heard, vice consul. Ls Col. Gilbert Procter, military attaché and military attaché or air. 3 Comdr. Alvord J. Greenacre, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Capt. Byron Clark Brown, retired, assistant military attaché. Capt. Wyndham K. White, assistant military attaché. Lt. Elvyn J. Beall, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Charles K. Ludewig, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Alfred T. Nester, consul general. Cyril L. F. Thiel, consul. Philip K. Tattersall, vice consul. Jack G. Dwyre, vice consul. Philip G. Cottell, vice consul. Alexander C. Kirk,!3 Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Joseph E. Jacobs, counselor of legation; consul general. Karl L. Rankin, commercial attaché. John A. Embry, assistant commercial attaché. Raymond A. Hare,18 second secretary; consul. Albert W. Scott, second secretary; consul. Norris B. Chipman, second secretary; consul. Francis L. Spalding, third secretary; vice consul. George Lewis Jones, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Evan M. Wilson, third secretary; vice consul. Edward A. Dow, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Lt. Col. Bonner F. Fellers, military attaché. May; William A. Eddy, retired, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Maj. Florimond DuS. Duke, assistant military attaché. Maj. Harold F. Mericle, assistant military attaché. Maj. Max H. Gooler, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Gwen G. Atkinson, assistant military attaché. Ensign Henry Hotchkiss, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Joe Ahee, assistant military attaché. Maj. Hugh P. Adams, assistant military attaché. C. Paul Fletcher, consul. Daniel Gaudin, Jr., vice consul. Peter K. Constan, vice consul. Benjamin Reath Riggs, consul. John P. Squire, vice consul. Robert Frazer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Gerhard Gade, second secretary; consul. Overton G. Ellis, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Joseph E. Maleady, vice consul. Le Col. James H. Marsh, military attaché and military attaché or air. Capt. Frank M. June, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Justin C. Tobias, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Guillermo Moscos, Jr., assistant military attaché. 13 Accredited also to Saudi Arabia; resident at Cairo. Congressional Directory FINLAND—FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS Helsinki Post FINLAND (Helsingfors) (L) (MA & NA) FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS France: Vichy (E) (MA, NA;& TAY csicae 0d Lyon (C) Marseille (C) Nice (C) Consular offices in pied France closed. Possessions: 16 Algiers, Algeria (CQ) German-occu- Dakar, Senegal, French West Africa (C). Martinique, French West Indies (C). Nouméa, New Caledonia (VC) Saigon, French Indochina (C) St. Pierre-Miquelon (C) Tahiti, Society Islands, Oceania (©). 14 Temporarily. 15 Assigned also to Monaco. 16 The consular officers at Léopoldville, the Cameroons (French mandate). Name and office H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Harry E. Carlson, first secretary; consul. Robert Mills McClintock, third secretary; vice consul. Lewis E. Gleeck, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Lawrence W. von Hellens, vice consul. Lt. Col. George E. Huthsteiner, military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Walter L. Heiberg, retired, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Lt. Comdr. Henry J. White, assistant naval attaché and assist-“ant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Stanley W. Lipski, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Admiral William D. Leahy, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. S. Pinkney Tuck, counselor. Robert D. Murphy, counselor of embassy. Daniel J. Reagan, commercial attaché. Curtis T. Everett, first secretary. Douglas MacArthur, 2d, third secretary. Woodruff Wallner, third secretary. Tyler Thompson, third secretary. a Col. Robert A. Schow, military attaché and military attaché or air. Coma Abel C. J. Sabalot, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Bernard Wait, treasury attaché. Maj. Robert W. Raynsford, assistant military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Frederick S. Allen, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Marshall M. Vance, consul. Dale W. Maher, consul. Miss Constance R. Harvey, vice consul. Clark E. Husted, Jr., vice consul. George D. Whittinghill, vice consul. Hugh 8. Fullerton, consul general. Harry F. Hawley,!4 consul. William L. Peck, consul. Harry M. Donaldson, vice consul. Lee D. Randall, vice consul. George McM. Godley, 2d, vice consul. Albert George, vice consul. Leonard G. Bradford, vice consul. Walter Linton Paul C. Horace Walter Charles Basil F. W. Wiley, vice consul. Crook, vice consul. Betts, vice consul. Remillard,!5 consul. W. Orebaugh, vice B. Beylard,!5 vice Macgowan,!5 vice Felix Cole, consul general. consul. consul. consul. Orray Taft, Jr., vice consul. John H. Boyd, vice consul. Ridgway B. Knight, vice consul. John C. Knox, vice consul. Leland L. Rounds, vice consul. Fayette J. Flexer, consul. Franklin Canfield, vice consul. Donald A. Dumont, vice consul. Marcel E. Malige, consul. Robert McDonald Sheehan, vice consul. Karl deG. MacVitty, consul. (Japanese-occupied territory.) Maurice Richard George Scudder Belgian Pasquet, consul. M. de Lambert, consul. C. Cobb, vice consul. Mersman, vice consul. Congo, are assigned also to French Equatorial Africa and Foreign Service of the United States 505 | FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS—GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. | Post Name and office FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS —continued Possessions—Continued Tananarive, Madagascar (C)_______ James G. Carter, consul general. Tunis, Tunisia (Cy... coo 5s Hooker A. Doolittle, consul. ! L. Pittman Springs, vice consul. | John E. Utter, vice consul. | | Harry A. Woodruff, vice consul. GERMANY... ooo. iaihinl State of war declared by Germany Dec. 11, 1941. | GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRE-LAND, BRITISH DOMINIONS BEYOND | THE SEAS, INDIA Great Britain—Northern Ireland: London (EY... oo John G. Winant, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-| tentiary. H. Freeman Matthews, counselor. | Lloyd V. Steere, agricultural attaché. Harold Shantz, first secretary. Don C. Bliss, Jr., acting commercial attaché. James Somerville, assistant commercial attaché. Alan N. Steyne, second secretary; consul. Glenn A. Abbey, second secretary; consul. James E. Brown, Jr., second secretary; consul. Ware Adams, second secretary; consul. C. Grant Isaacs, second secretary; consul Dorsey Gassaway Fisher, second secretary; consul. Alton T. Murray, assistant agricultural attaché. Robert D. Coe, second secretary; consul. Paul J. Reveley, third secretary; vice consul. .John Peabody Palmer, third secretary; vice consul. Henry E. Stebbins, third secretary; vice consul. Waldo E. Bailey, third secretary; vice consul. Jacob D. Beam, third secretary; vice consul. Mulford A. Colebrook, third secretary; vice consul. John Ordway, third secretary; vice consul. Fred K. Salter, third secretary; vice consul. Donald B. Calder, third secretary; vice consul. Richard A. Johnson, third secretary; vice consul. ' John J. Coyle, vice consul. John F. Claffey, vice consul. F. Willard Calder, vice consul. William Leslie Schultz, vice consul. (MAGNA) eee Brig. Gen. Raymond E. Lee, military attaché. Brig. Gen. Ralph Royce, military air attaché. Capt. Charles A. Lockwood, naval attaché. Comdr. Ralph A. Ofstie, naval air attaché and assistant naval attaché. Col. Carl L. Marriott, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. Samuel A. Greenwell, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. G. Bryan Conrad, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. Arthur J. McChrystal, ret., assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. James L. Hatcher, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. Charles M. Cummings, assistant military air attaché. Lt. Col. William Q. Jeffords, Jr., assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. G. DeFreest Larner, assistant military air attaché. Lt. Col. Robert A. McClure, assistant military attaché. Maj. Thomas J. Wells, assistant military attaché. Maj. William S. Biddle, assistant military attaché. Maj. William Peyton Campbell, assistant military attaché. Maj. John P. Sparks, assistant military air attaché. Capt. Milton M. Turner, assistant military air attaché. Capt. John L. Horner, Jr., assistant military attaché. Capt. Henry G. Learnard, Jr., assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Frederick C. Lough, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Francis D. Conner, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Warren D. Shear, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Manning Jacob, assistant military attaché. Comdr. Vaughn Bailey, ret., assistant naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. Irwin L. V. Norman, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. John H. Leppert, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Comdr. William H. Leahy, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Alfred Warner Eyer, assistant naval attaché. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) John B. Kackley, assistant naval attaché. | Belfast, Northern Ireland (C)..____ John Randolph, consul. : Gerald G. Jones, vice consul. Birmingham, England (C)____.____ James R. Wilkinson, consul. Bradford, England (C).__.____.______ Joseph G. Groeninger, consul. John Belfort Keogh, vice consul. | Congressional Directory GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. Post Name and office GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—continued Great Britain—Northern Ireland—Con. Bristol, England (C) Roy W. Baker, consul. | Cardiff, Wales (C) Richard S. Huestis, consul. ! Edinburgh, Scotland (C) Charles Roy Nasmith, consul. | Julian K. Smedberg, vice consul. Glasgow, Scotland (C) Parker W. Buhrman, consul general. Howard A. Bowman, consul. Donal F. McGonigal, vice consul. J. Stanford Edwards, vice consul. Liverpool, England (CO) Philip Holland, consul general. Charles J. Pisar, consul. Hugh Watson, vice consul. Manchester, England (C)__________ George Alexander Armstrong, consul. Henry O. Ramsey, vice consul. Newcastle-on-Tyne, England (C)__ Harold Playter, consul. Plymouth, England (C) Henry M. Wolcott, consul. Fred H. Houck, vice consul. Southampton, England (C)________ Other Europe: Gibraltar (C) 17 Malta (C) Frank Anderson Henry, consul. India: New Delhi Thomas M. Wilson,!8 commissioner. Norris S. Haselton, secretary to the commissioner. Lampton Berry, secretary to the commissioner. George R. Merrell,!? consul general. Clayton Lane, consul. Harvey Lee Milbourne, consul. Carl E. Christopherson, consul. Roy E. B. Bower, consul. Edmund A. Gullion, vice consul. Adrian B. Colquitt, vice consul. Bombay (C) Howard Donovan, consul. James T. Scott, consul Archer Woodford,20 consul. Hedley V. Cooke, Jr.,20 consul. G. Wallace La Rue,20 vice consul. Ray L. Thurston, vice consul. Joseph J. Wagner,? vice consul. Karachi (C) C. Porter Kuykendall, consul. Clarence E. Macy, consul. Myles Standish, vice consul. Madras (C) Charles H. Heisler, consul. Nicholas Feld, vice consul. Other Asia: Aden, Arabia (C) Clare H. Timberlake,2! consul. Colombo, Ceylon (C) George M. Graves, consul. George M. Abbott, consul. Wallace W. Stuart, vice consul. Hong Kong (CQ) Addison E. Southard,?? consul general. John H. Bruins,?? consul. Robert 8. Ward, consul. Frederic C. Fornes, Jr., consul. Walter W. Hoffmann, vice consul. Robert W. Rinden, vice consul. Alfred T. Wellborn, vice consul. Robert C. Coudray, vice consul. Penang, Straits Settlements (C)____ Robert B. Streeper, consul. Rangoon, Burma (CG) Austin C. Brady, consul general. Lester L. Schnare, consul general. M. Williams Blake, vice consul. Martin J. Hillenbrand, vice consul. Singapore, Straits Settlements Kenneth S. Patton, consul general. (CQ). Clayson W. Aldridge, consul. Robert 1. Buell, consul. Winfield H. Scott, consul. Harold D. Robison, consul. Maurice M. Bernbaum, vice consul. Charles O. Thompson, vice consul. Robert Grinnell, vice consul. Perry Ellis, vice consul. 17 Closed temporarily. Refer consular matters to Malaga, Spain. 18 With the personal rank of minister. 19 Assigned also to Kabul, Afghanistan 20 Assigned also to Portuguese possessions in India. 21 Assigned also to French Somali Coast and dependencies. 22 Assigned also to Macau. Foreign Service of the United States GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—HAITI Post GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—continued Africa: Lagos, Nigeria, West Africa (C)____. Freetown, Sierra Leone (CA)_._ Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa (C)__. New Zealand: Wellington (CG)... aaa Christchurch (CA)..cnveeeocne-Puncdin (CA). ae-eiie coriot Avekland (OC)... rai Fiji Islands: Sava, Fiji Islands (VC). ..t-.-Newfoundland: Bt. Johns (CR) oder Other America: Anions, Leeward Islands, B. W. I. Barbados, B. W.1. (C).._.._______. St. Lucia, BW, 1. (CA). 200 Belize, British Honduras (C)___ ___ Georgetown, British Guiana (C)_.. Hamilton, Bermuda (C)___________ St. George’s, Bermuda (CA)___._ Kingston, Jamaica, B. W. I. (C)__. Nassau, N. P., Bahamas (C)______. Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, B. W. I. (0). Brighton, Trinidad, B. W. I. (CA). GREECE #2 Athens (Athena) (LL)...oo. Consular offices in Greece closed. GUATEMALA Guatemala: (LY) = ri saat MAGNA). HAITI Name and office 'W. Stratton Anderson, Jr., vice consul. William L. Krieg, vice consul. Christian XK. Nielsen, consular agent. E. Talbot Smith, consul. Willard Quincy Stanton, consul. Joseph Palmer, 2d, vice consul. Raymona E. Cox, consul general. Basil D. Dahl, consul. Robert English, consul. John Evarts Horner, vice consul. H. P. Bridge, consular agent. Harman Reeves, consular agent. Hiram A. Boucher, consul. Leonard A. Bachelder, vice consul. Wainwright Abbott, consul. George D. Hopper, consul general. Fred E. Waller, vice consul. Paul F. Du Vivier, vice consul. Charles H. Stephan, vice consul. Frank A. Schuler, Jr., vice consul. Ilo C. Funk, consul. William H. Christensen, vice consul. Alan G. Peter, consular agent. Culver Gidden, vice consul. Stuart Allen, consul. Carlton Hurst, vice consul. Robert C. Bates, vice consul. William H. Beck, consul general. Hector C. Adam, Jr., vice consul. Edwin W. Martin, vice consul. Frederick Joseph Robertson, consular agent. John H. Lord, consul. George F. Kelly, vice consul. John W. Dye, consul. John H. E. McAndrews, vice consul. Claude H. Hall, Jr., consul. Edward L. Freers, vice consul. Merlin E. Smith, vice consul. Mare de Verteuil, consular agent. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,2 Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,? first secretary. Carmel Offie,?¢ third secretary. Fay A. Des Portes, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Dudley G. Dwyre, first secretary. William E. Dunn, commercial attaché. William C. Affeld, Jr., third secretary. 5 Col. James H. Marsh, military attaché and military attaché or air. Capt. Frank M. June, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Justin C. Tobias, assistant naval attaché. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Allison Dunham, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Ivan I. Smith, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Harold L. Williamson, consul general. Miss Kathleen Molesworth, vice consul. Chester H. Kimrey, vice consul. Charles P. McVicker, vice consul. John Campbell White, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Edward J. Sparks, second secretary; consul. Vinton Chapin, second secretary; consul. Reginald P. Mitchell, third secretary; vice consul. 3 Government of Greece now established outside Greece. # Accredited also to the Governments of Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia, established in England. Congressional Directory HAITI—LIECHTENSTEIN, PRINCIPALITY OF Post HAITI—continued Port au Prince (L)—Continued (NA) Cap Haitlen (CA)... .....ccccene-Gonaives (CA) HONDURAS Meguelgalpa (lL). oe i nen (MA & NA) HE OAL DY saern Ea Puerto Cortes (C) HUNGARY. ncnwani samme ICELAND IRAN Mehran (LY ooo finials ANIA). i io dnnme ss aia Ro CY a a ana a Tabriz (CC). a Se Rey AQ Bagh@ad (LY...inna aem Ames ls IRELAND Dublin (Baile Atha Cliath) (L)________ Co ITALY AND POSSESSIONS JAPANESE EMPIRE LATVIA Riga etelosed) LIBERIA Monrovia (L) LIECHTENSTEIN, PRINCIPALITY OF Vaduz (CQ) Name and office Glion Curtis, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Robert S. Folsom, vice consul. Henry P. Kiley, vice consul. Manson Gilbert, vice consul. Maj. Hayne D. Boyden, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Robert Leslie Pettigrew, consular agent. J. William Woél, consular agent. John D. Erwin, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister plenipoten- tiary. g Albert H. Cousins, Jr., second secretary; consul. Richard D. Gatewood, third secretary; vice consul. Lt. Col. Thomas A. Austin, Jr., military attaché. Capt. Frank M. June, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Justin C. Tobias, assistant naval attaché. Wymberley DeR. Coerr. vice consul. Kenneth W. Vittetoe, vice consul. Julian L. Nugent, Jr., vice consul. | William Frank Lebus, Jr., vice consul. Severance of diplomatic relations Dec. 11, 1941; state of war de-clared by Hungary Dec. 13, 1941. : Lincoln MacVeagh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Maynard B. Barnes, first secretary; consul. H. Bartlett Wells, third secretary; vice consul. Arnlioth G. Heltberg, vice consul. Louis G. Dreyfus, Jr.,2s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. James S. Moose, Jr.,2? second secretary (consul). Harold B. Minor, second secretary (consul). A. David Fritzlan, third secretary; (vice consul). Capt. John G. Ondrick, military attaché. James S. Moose, Jr., consul (second secretary). Harold B. Minor, consul (second secretary). A. David Fritzlan, vice consul (third secretary). Bertel E. Kuniholm, consul. Paul Knabenshue,? minister resident and consul general. William S. Farrell, second secretary; consul. Gordon H. Mattison, third secretary; vice consul. David Gray, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten- tiary. Earl L. Packer, first secretary. Francis H. Styles, second secretary (consul). Maj. John W. Wofford, military attaché. Francis H. Styles, consul (second secretary). Stephen E. C. Kendrick, consul. Paul Dean Thompson, vice consul. Charles M. Gerrity, vice consul. Robert A. Tennant, consular agent. William A. Smale, consul. Francis A. Lane, vice consul. State of war declared by Italy Dec. 11, 1941. State of war declared by Japan Dec. 7, 1941 (U. S. time). Lester A. Walton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. William C. George, vice consul. James B. Stewart,?” consul general. 25 Accredited also to Afghanistan; resident at Tehran. 2% Foreign Service officer, receiving compensation as such, appointed to act as minister resident and consul general pursuant to sec. 24 of an act of Congress approved Feb. 23, 1931. Assigned also to, and resident in, Ziirich, Switzerland. Foreign Service of the United States LITHUANIA—MEXICO Post LITHUANIA Kaunas (L) (closed). LUXEMBOURG 28 Luxembourg (B= om Poi Consular office closed. MEXICO ‘México, DF. (BY. oi. lune on (MA & NAY. alonnmduginn nen DAE DO). ren Acapulco de Juérez, Guerrero (VC). Agua Prieta, Sonora (C).......... Lice Chihuahua, Chihuahua (C)_.__________ Ciudad Juérez, Chihuahua (C).__....___. Coatzacoalcos (Puerto México), Vera- cruz (C). Durango, Durango (QC)... 222. Guadalajara, Jalisco (C) Manzanillo, Colima (VC) ________ Guaymas, Senora .... (CG)... 1: La Paz, Baja California (VC) 9.____ Matamoros, Tamaulipas (C)_______.___ Name and office Jay Pierrepont Moffat, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. ———, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Joseph F. McGurk, counselor of embassy. George P. Shaw, first secretary; consul. Walter A. Adams, first secretary. Thomas H. Lockett, commercial attaché. Lester De Witt Mallory, agricultural attaché. Harold D. Finley, first secretary; consul. Charles A. Bay, first secretary; consul. Raleigh A. Gibson, first secretary; consul. Maurice L. Stafford, second secretary; consul. Edward G. Trueblood, second secretary; consul. Morris N. Hughes, second secretary; consul. Guy W. Ray, second secretary; vice consul. John Willard Carrigan, third secretary; vice consul. William C. Trimble, third secretary; vice consul. Robert G. MeGregor, Jr., second secretary; consul. William K. Ailshie, third secretary; vice consul. Forrest K. Geerken, third secretary; vice consul. J. Jefferson Jones, 3d, third secretary; vice consul. Ernest V. Siracusa, third secretary; vice consul. James P. Speer, 2d, third secretary; vice consul. Kenneth A. Byrns, third secretary; vice consul. Robert J. Cavanaugh, vice consul. Guy W. Ray, second secretary; vice consul. Marc L. Severe, vice consul. James C. Powell, Jr., vice consul. W. John Wilson, Jr., vice consul. Louis B. Mazzeo, vice consul. Col. Gordon H. McCoy, military attaché. Comdr. James P. Conover, Jr., retired, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Maj. Egon R. Tausch, assistant military attaché. Maj. Clarence S. Howe, assistant military attaché. Comdr. Andrew Crinkley, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. : Capt. Earl S. Piper, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Harold P. Braman, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Frederick E. Leek, assistant naval attaché. Victor H. Loftus, district accounting and disbursing officer (vice consul). Hag V. Newell, assistant district accounting and disbursing officer. J. Brock Havron, vice consul. Walter L. Smith, vice consul. Raymond Phelan, vice consul. Lee R. Blohm, consul. Robert K. Peyton, vice consul. William P. Blocker, consul general. Owen W. Gaines, vice consul. John H. Burns, vice consul. Lubert O. Sanderhoff, vice consul. Harry K. Pangburn, vice consul. T. Leonard Lilliestrom, vice consul. Sabin J. Dalferes, vice consul. Stephen C. Worster, vice consul. Earl Wilbert Eaton, vice consul. John J. Meily, consul. James A. Noel, vice consul. Henry A. Hoyt, vice consul. Henry T. Dwyer, vice consul. Eugene T. Turley, vice consul. Ernest E. Evans, consul. Henry G. Krausse, vice consul. Edward S. Parker, vice consul. 9 This office performs no visa or citizenship services. 28 Government of Luxembourg established in Canada. 20 A ceredited also to Canada. 64674°—T7—2—1st ed 34 Congressional Directory MEXICO—NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS Post Name and office MEXICO—continued Mazatlan, Sinaloa (C) Rufus H. Lane, Jr., consul. William R. Morton, vice consul. Mérida, Yucatan (C) Wales W. Signor, consul. William Raymond Wood, vice consul. Mexicali, Baja California (C) Horatio Mooers, consul. Stephen E. Augirre, consul. Willys A. Myers, vice consul. Monterrey, Nuevo Leon (C) Henry 8. Waterman, consul. David LeBreton, Jr., vice consul. Herbert W. Carlson, vice consul. H. Claremont Moses, vice consul. Robert H. Macy, vice consul. Nogales, Sonora (C) Lawrence S. Armstrong, consul. Byron White, vice consul. Thomas M. Powell, vice consul. Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas (C) Bernard Gotlieb, consul. Odin G. Loren, consul. Walter W. Birge, Jr., vice consul. Elias G. Garza, vice consul. John L. Calnan, vice consul. Piedras Negras, Coahuila (C) Gilbert R. Willson, consul. Harcld C. Wood, vice consul. San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi (C)____ Myron H. Schraud, vice consul. Tampico, Tamaulipas (C) Harold M. Collins, consul. John G. Oliver, vice consul. Francis M. Withney, vice consul. Tijuana, Baja California (C) Gerald A. Mokma, consul. John A. Calhoun, vice consul. Oscar C. Harper, vice consul. Alfonso F. Yepis, vice consul. Torreén, Coahuila (GC)... _.oo__...i.. Julian L. Pinkerton, consul. William L. Brewster, vice consul. Veracruz, Veracruz (C) Howard F. Withey, consul. Robert F. Hale, vice consul. James R. Riddle, vice consul. MONACO Monaco (Cc oo aon Horace Remillard, consul. Charles B. Beylard,® vice consul. Basil F. Macgowan,3 vice consul. MOROCCO Tangier (Tanger) (L) , diplomatic agent and consul general. J. Rives Childs, first secretary; consul. John C. Shillock, Jr., second secretary; consul. Paul E. Geier, vice consul. Maj. William C. Bentley, military attaché. H. Earle Russell, consul general. Russell M. Brooks, consul. Ernest de W. Mayer, vice consul. Philip H. Bagby, vice consul. Sidney L. Bartlett, vice consul. David W. King, vice consul. W. Stafford Reid, vice consul. Frederic Paul Culbert, vice consul. Kenneth Pendar, vice consul. NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS Netherlands: 81 The Hague (’s Gravenhage) (L)____ Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,” Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,’ first secretary. Carmel Offie,” third secretary. Consular offices in Netherlands closed. Possessions: Batavia, Java, Netherlands Indies Walter A. Foote, consul general. (CG). Jesse F. Van Wickel, consul. Paul S. Guinn, consul. E. Edward Schefer, vice consul. Paul Paddock, vice consul. V. Lansing Collins, 2d, vice consul. 7 Accredited also to the Governments of Poland, Belgium, Norway, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Greece established in England. 30 Assigned also to, and resident in, Nice, France." 31 Government of the Netherlands established in England. Foreign Service of the United States NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS—PERU Post NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS—CON. Possessions—Continued. Curagao, West Indies (C)._._____.. ATuba (CA mss sai mime bomaas Medan, Sumatra, Netherlands Indies (C). Paramaribo, Surinam (C)__________ Surabaya (Soerabaja), Java, Neth-erlands Indies (C). NICARAGUA Managaa (ll) th cal i Lani (MA&NAY. oo... Jas yl Matagalpa (CA)... 2. ...___.2 NORWAY 32 Oslo: QA). oo fo rea ar em Consular offices in Norway closed. PALESTINE AND TRANS-JORDAN Jerusalem (CRY. 5 ol PANAMA Panam (BB)... oie piondeiite ttiopminas (MA & NAY. aot nrntntviniaws CORY nent.Sinema dh — Colon (CO)... ion oitwitadobee PARAGUAY ASUNCION (Ya) fi ciel mnnaes ma CMA) asi sh vias nn ma SEL 3 PERU img (BE)... SE Me ety " Accredited also to the Governments Greece established in England. 32 Government of Norway established in Name and office John F. Huddleston, consul. Jones R. Trowbridge, vice consul. Harold Arthur McCormick, consular agent. John B. Ketcham, consul. Carl F. Norden, vice consul. James S. Lawton, vice consul. Thomas S. Horn, consul. Courtland Christiani, vice consul. Pierre de L. Boal, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Edward B. Lawson, commercial attaché. William P. Cochran, Jr., second secretary; consul. William E. Flournoy, Jr., second secretary; consul. Elbert G. Mathews, third secretary; vice consul. Alvin T. Rowe, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. William W. Marvel, vice consul. Lt. Col. Eduardo Andino, military attaché. Capt. Frank M. June, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Justin C. Tobias, assistant naval attaché. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Allison Dunham, assistant naval attaché and assist- ant naval attaché for air. John A. Willey, consular agent. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,” Envoy Extraordinary and Minis- ter Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,’ first secretary. Carmel Offie,” third secretary. Lowell C. Pinkerton, consul general. Christian T. Steger, consul. Aubrey E. Lippincott, vice consul. Richard W. Byrd, vice consul. Edward w. Blatchford, vice consul. Edwin C. Wilson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. John J. Muccio, first secretary. Ashley B. Sowell, commercial attaché. Charles L. Luedtke, agricultural attaché. George D. Andrews, second secretary (consul). Heyward G. Hill, second secretary (consul). Harold E. Montamat, third secretary (vice consul). John Goodyear, third secretary (vice consul). Lt. Col. Eduardo Ardino, military attaché. Lt. Col. Byron F. Johnson, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. George D. Andrews, consul (second secretary). Heyward G. Hill, consul (second secretary). Harold E. Montamat, vice consul (third secretary). John Goodyear, vice consul (third secretary). Stuart W. Rockwell, vice consul. George R. Bingham, vice consul. William H. Bruns, vice consul. James E. Parks, consul. William W. Walker, vice consul. Wesley Frost, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. Edmund B. Montgomery, first secretary; consul. George D. Henderson, third secretary; vice consul. Davis A. Guttman, vice consul. Lt. Col. Thomas F. Van Natta, 3d, military attaché and military attaché for air. Capt. William M. Adams, assistant military attaché. R. Henry Norweb, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. Jefferson Patterson, first secretary; consul. of Poland, Belgium, Norway, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and England. 512 Congressional Directory PERU—PORTUGAL AND POSSESSIONS Post Name and office PERU—continued Lima (B)—Continued................... Julian C. Greenup, commercial attaché. George H. Butler, first secretary. Richard F. Boyce, second secretary; consul. Milton K. Wells, third secretary; vice consul. Bernard C. Connelly, third secretary; vice consul. Rolland Welch, third secretary; vice consul. William P. Snow, third secretary; vice consul. David M. Clark, third secretary; vice consul. Hartwell Johnson, third secretary; vice consul. Anthony Gembs, vice consul. Kenneth B. Wasson, vice consul. Clayton J. Clawson, vice consul. MA & NAY. co od iaiane dani Lt Col. Uzal G. Ent, military attaché and military attaché for air. Li Comdr. Willard R. Gaines, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Maj. Woodson F. Hocker, assistant military attaché. Lt. William E. Embry, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Carroll G. Quinn, assistant naval attaché. La Oroya (CA) Norman Duncan, consular agent. Mollendo (CA)... coon vention.na Felipe Ferrer M., consular agent. Salaverry (CA). buns fulnonts Jacob Reznik, consular loses agent. PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Manila (C)38-oo ardea Thomas A. Hickok, consul. Paul P. Steintorf, consul. Charles H. Whitaker, vice consul. Erich W. A. Hoffmann, vice consul. POLAND 3 Warsaw (Warszawa) (B) _...ooocoeonan Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,” Ambassador Extarordinary and Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,” counselor of embassy. Carmel Office,’ third secretary. Consulate general at Warsaw closed. PORTUGAL AND POSSESSIONS Portugal: Lisbon (Lisboa) (1). --ivuvcrcenvsos Bert Fish, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Frederick P. Hibbard, counselor of legation. Henry P. Leverich, third secretary. C. Burke Elbrick, third secretary. William O. Boswell, third secretary. (VIA SUNAYL Sacul aid 00 Lt. Col. William E. Shipp, military attaché. Capt. Paulus P. Powell, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. 1st Lt. Charles P. Babcock, assistant military attaché. Lt. Charles Kintzing Post, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Donald D. Johnson, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Theodore Rousseau, Jr., assistant naval attaché. Samuel H. Wiley, consul general. Hervé J. L'Heureux, consul. J. Winsor Ives, consul. George E. Miller, vice consul Marselis O. Parsons, Jr., vice consul. William H. Cordell, vice consul. Scott Lyon, vice consul. Reinhard W. Lamprecht, vice consul. Albert John Cope, Jr., vice consul. Carroll C. Parry, vice consul. Worthington E. Hagerman, vice consul. S80 Vicente (St. Vincent), Charles James Kolinski, vice consul. Cape Verde Islands (VC).? Funchal, Madeira (C) Foster H. Kreis, vice consul. Horta, Fayal, Azores (C)-_..____... William B. Douglass, Jr., vice consul. Oporto (Porto) (GC)... acs Leo J. Callanan, consul. William P. Robertson, vice consul. Ponta Delgada, S80 Miguel (St. Leonard G. Dawson, consul. Michael), Azores (C). Manual J. Codoner, vice consul. 7 Accredited also to the Governments of Belgium, Norway,{the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Greece, established in England. ® This office performs no visa or citizenship services. : 33 Activities of the consulate are limited to immigration and trade-promotion work. : 34 Government of Poland established in England. Foreign Service of the United States PORTUGAL AND POSSESSIONS—SWEDEN Post Name and office PORTUGAL AND POSSESSIONS—CON. Possessions:33 ; Lourenco Marques, Mozambique, Austin R. Preston, consul. Africa (C). Macau (CGY. B ih eas Addison E. Southard,” consul general. John H. Bruins,’ consul. RUMANIA. .o bet cisosends State of war declared by Rumania Dec. 11, 1941. SAUDI ARABIA, KINGDOM OF 33 HAda (UY... ee ans Alexander C. Kirk,8 Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Raymond A. Hare, second secretary. Madtid (BE)... on enauiie a Alexander W. Weddell, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. Willard L. Beaulac, counselor of embassy; consul general. Ralph H. Ackerman, commercial attaché. Robert F. Fernald, second secretary; consul. John H. Morgan, second secretary; consul. Miss Frances E. Willis, second secretary; consul. Du Wayne G. Clark, assistant commercial attaché. Earl T. Crain, third secretary; vice consul. Charles Gilbert, vice consul. (MAGNA). oe oa aon] Lt. Col. Howard Eager, military attaché. Maj. Frederick Dorsey Stephens, assistant military attaché. Major Thomas H. Young, assistant military attaché. Lt. Onnie P. Lattu, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Charles Kintzing Post, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Donald D. Johnson, assistant naval attaché and as-sistant naval attaché for air. Ensign Theodore Rousseau, Jr., assistant naval attaché. Barcelona (CQ) 3 3 Arthur C. Frost, consul general. Thomas McEnelly, consul Jule B. Smith, consul. Willard Galbraith, consul Thomas J. Cory, vice consul. Temple Wanamaker, Jr., vice consul. Bilbao (CY... JET) en te ta) John S. Calvert, consul. T. Monroe Fisher, vice consul. Las Palmas de Gran Canals, Canary Clifton R. Wharton, consul. Islands (C). Malaga (GY Bil J a eal Francis B. Moriarty, vice consul. Seville fC). > ch ir] John N. Hamlin, consul. Harold M. Granata, vice consul. Tenerife, Canary Islands (C) __.._______ Richard B. Haven, consul. James M. Bowcock, vice consul. Valencia dC) rr Sheridan Talbott, consul. Vigo (CY. rama ba George J. Haering, oo aeons consul. Curtis C. Jordan, consul Leon L. Cowles, vice consul. Delano McKelvey, vice consul. SWEDEN Stockholm (1)... oc sad S00 ies Herchel O. Johnson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Thormod O. Klath, commercial attaché. Winthrop S. Greene, second secretary; consul. S. Walter Washington, second secretary; consul. Douglas Jenkins, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Fritz A. M. Alfsen, assistant commercial attaché; vice consul. Harold Carlson, vice consul. Frithjof C. Sigmond, vice consul. MA SENAY Lt. Col. Hugh B. Waddell, military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Walter L. Heiberg, retired, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Lt. Comdr. Henry J. White, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. 35 Consular officers in Bombay, India, are assigned also to Portuguese possessions in India. 36 Correspondence on consular business relating to Macau should be addressed to “The American Consul General, Hong Kong. 87 Assigned also ‘and resident in, Hong Kong. 38 Officers here listed are accredited also to Egypt, resident at Cairo. Correspondence on diplomatic busi- ness relating to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia should be addressed to ‘“T'he American Minister, Cairo, Egypt.” C ongresstonal Directory | SWEDEN—UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Post SWEDEN-—continued Stockholm (L)—(M A & N A)—Continued Goteborg (CY. vas aaa SWITZERLAND Bern CL). os dan ve eos Basel (Co... itive ws ne windedtodas Geneva (CY Fit lees npg Zilch (CR) ov = feprnge ~wdieseest SYRIA AND LEBANON Beirut, Lebanon (CQ). ..........c. THAILAND (SIAM) 40 Bangkok (TL) nave ordinate ts (MIA NA a TURKEY Ankara (B48. nT (MA & NA): oe itasmeassttvn Istanbul (Constantinople) (CG) _______ Izmir Smyrna) (CY ir iziiai: UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Pretoria, Transvaal (Lo. .vnaea. od OMA& NAY. 2510 oo bseoinla 3 Assigned also to the Principality of 40 As of Dec. 14, 1941. 41 Office of Embassy also at Istanbul. Name and office Lt. Comdr. Arthur H. Graubart, assistant naval attaché. Lt. Onnie P. Lattu, assistant naval attaché. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Stanley W. Lipski, assistant naval attaché and assist- ant naval attaché for air. William W. Corcoran, consul. Stanley R. Lawson, vice consul. Leland Harrison, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. J. Klahr Huddle, counselor of legation. Donald F. Bigelow, second secretary. ‘Warren M. Chase, second secretary. John H. Madonne, second secretary (consul). Lt. Col. Barnwell R. Legge, military attaché. John H. Madonne, consul (second secretary). J. A. Tuck Sherman, vice consul. Buford G. Rogers, vice consul. Walter H. Sholes, consul general. John A. Lehrs, vice consul. Thomas R. Flack, vice consul. Paul C. Squire, consul. Howard Elting, Jr., vice consul. Frank Cussans, vice consul. James B. Stewart,% consul general. Maurice W. Altaffer, consul. Phil H. Hubbard, consul. Robert T. Cowan, vice consul. Bolard More, vice consul. Eugene Nabel, vice consul. Julius C. Jensen, vice consul. Cornelius Van H. Engert, consul general. William M. Gwynn, consul. William Witman, 2d, vice consul. William J. Porter, vice consul. Willys R. Peck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. J. Holbrook Chapman, second secretary; consul. Harland B. Clark, third secretary; vice consul. Thomas S. Estes, vice consul. Maj. Clarence E. Jackson, military attaché. Comdr. Armit C. Thomas, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. John Van A. MacMurray, Ambassador Extraordinary and “e Plenipotentiary. Robert F. Kelley, counselor of embassy. Joseph C. Satterthwaite, first secretary. Harry L. Troutman, second secretary. Robert Newbegin, second secretary. Earle C. Taylor, assistant commercial attaché. Lt. Col. Walter L. Kluss, military attaché. Come Richard B. Tuggle, naval attaché and naval attaché or air. Maj. Demas T. Craw, assistant military attaché for air. Maj. James C. Fry, assistant military attaché. Samuel W. Honaker, consul general. William N. Fraleigh, vice consul. Ellis A. Johnson, vice consul. Samuel G. Ebling, consul. Leo J. Keena, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten- tiary. Lucien Memminger, first secretary. Lynn W. Meekins, commercial attaché. Lt. Col. Breckinridge A. Day, military attaché. Comdr. Arthur W. Sears, retired, naval attache and naval at- taché for air. Liechtenstein. | Foreign Service of the Unated States UNION OF Post UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA—continued Pretoria, Transvaal (L)—(MA & NA)— Con. £ Capetown, Cape Province (CG) __._--- Purban, Natali(C)._...-oC... i= Johannesburg, Transvaal (CG) _____._. Port Elizabeth, Cape Province (C)____. UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS MoSeOW. (BIE oi ee renin amram (MA &NAY. ----decenmcenarl-2os ViadivostoR (CB)... ooaeee=o--- URUGUAY Montevideo (BY... o-oo (MAES NA). oc cromeemennnnaates VENEZUELA Caracas (Ey) eeambo mann: SOUTH AFRICA—VENEZUELA Name and office Maj. Sterling L. Larrabee, assistant military attaché. Lt. John F. McKiernan, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Hugh H. Watson, consul general. Arthur L. Richards, vice consul. Roland K. Beyer, vice consul. John Corrigan, consul. Robert C. Strong, vice consul. Thomas D. Bowman, consul general. William H. Beach, consul. William P. Wright, consul. Frederick P. Latimer, Jr., consul. Robert A. Acly, consul. : John S. Richardson, Jr., consul. Laurence A. Steinhardt, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. Walter Thurston, minister; counselor of embassy. Charles E. Dickerson, Jr., first secretary; consul. Llewellyn E. Thompson, Jr., second secretary; consul. Charles W. Thayer, third secretary; vice consul. @G. Frederick Reinhardt, third secretary; vice consul. Edwin L. Smith, vice consul. Lt. Col. Ivan D. Yeaton, military attaché. Maj. Joseph A. Michela, assistant military attaché. Capt. Richard Park, Jr., assistant military attaché. Capt. Robert E. McCabe, assistant military attaché. Capt. James O. Boswell, assistant military attaché. 1st Lit. John R. Alison, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Hubert Zemke, assistant military attaché. Col. Raphael Griffin, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Comdr. Ronald H. Allen, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. Samuel B. Frankel, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Lt. George D. Roullard, assistant naval attaché and assistant naval attaché for air. Angus I. Ward, consul general. Donald H. Nichols, vice consul. William Dawson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. Selden Chapin, first secretary; consul. Robert G. Glover, commercial attaché. Robert Y. Brown, second secretary; consul. Shiras Morris, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Reginald Bragonier, Jr., third secretary; vice consul. Robert B. Memminger, third secretary; vice consul. Richard H. Post, third secretary; vice consul. Lt. Col. John A. Weeks, military attaché and military attaché for air. Comdr. Frank Loftin, retired, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Capt. Walter E. Sewell, assistant military attaché. Lt. Comdr. Albert Benjamin, assistant naval attaché and assist- ant naval attaché for air. Lt. (Jr. Gr.) Jesse G. Haydock, Jr., assistant naval attaché. Frank P. Corrigan, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-tentiary. Joseph Flack, counselor of embassy. Osborn S. Watson, commercial attaché. Thomas J. Maleady, second secretary. Archibald R. Randolph, assistant commercial attaché. Sherburne Dillingham, third secretary. : Lt. Col. Clarence C. Clendenen, military attaché and military attaché for air. Lt. Comdr. Fitzhugh Lee, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Capt. James L. Worthington, assistant military attaché. 1st Lt. Junius W. Dennison, Jr., asst. military attaché and asst. military attaché for air. ; Lt. Jr. Gr.) Frank G. Belcher, assistant naval attaché and asst. naval attaché for air. Ensign Homer Brett, Jr., assistant naval attaché and asst. naval attaché for air. 516 Congressional Directory VENEZUELA—YUGOSLAVIA Port Name and office VENEZUELA—continued Caracas (C) James P. Moffitt, consul. Roswell C. Beverstock, vice consul. Jack B. Neathery, vice consul. George R. Phelan, vice consul. La Guaira(VC)....... Seas Carl Breuer, vice consul. Poot Je la Cruz, Anzoategui Terry B. Sanders, Jr., vice consul. ( Z Min) (OC) Renwick S. Mc¢Niece, consul. Charles C. Gidney, Jr., vice consul. Robert G. Wesson, vice consul. YUGOSLAVIA 42 Belgrade (Beograd) (IL)... ____________ Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.,” Envoy Extraordinary and Min- ister Plenipotentiary. Rudolf E. Schoenfeld,’ first secretary. Carmel Offie,” third secretary. (MAGNA). oo Capt. L. N. McNair, naval attaché and naval attaché for air. Consular offices in Yugoslavia closed. 7 Accredited also to the Governments of Poland, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, Czechoslovakia, and Greece, established in England. ¢ This office performs no visa or citizenship service. 42 Government of Yugoslavia established in England. 517 Foreign Service of the United States Name Rank at last post Name Rank at last post Achilles, Theodore C___ Allen, George V_.______ Atcheson, George, Jr___ Bacon, J. Kenly... Baldwin, LaVerne. ___. Barnes, William_______ Belovsky, Sidney A.1__ Benton, Russell W_____ Bernbaum, Maurice Bower, Roy E. B.1_____ Brown, Aaron S________ Broy, Charles C.2_______ Bucknell, Howard, Jr-. Burdett, William C____ Bursley, Herbert S_____ Busser, William F_____ Butterworth, William W., Jr. Byington, Homer M., I Cabot, John:M. ~.__._ Cannon, Cavendish W_ Chiperfield, Claude B.1. Clattenburg, Albert E., Jr. Cochran, H. Merle_____ Colquitt, Adrain B.l.__ Daniels, Paul C Davies, John, Jr_______ Davis, Jom BK. Davis, Monnett B_____ DeCourcy, William E _ Dick, Hasell H Dorsz, Edmund J.1_____ Doyle, Albert M_______ duBois, Coeert..-= Emmerson, John K.1__ Erhardt, John G....._- Fales, Herbert P_______ Ferris, Walton C_______ Fletcher, C. Paul ._____ Foster, Andrew B__.___ Foster, Carol H ..____-Foz, Homers. -_—.__.-: Foess, John C__...--._- * Gallman, Waldemar J__ Geist, Raymond H_____ George, W. Perry______ Goold, Herbert S_______ Gordon, Bartley P_____ Gordon, George A.2____ Gray, Cecil Wayne____ Groth, Edward M_____ Grummon, Stuart E___ Hadraba, Theodore J _ _ Hrmoad, Ogden H., r Harrington, Julian F___ Henderson, James E___ Henderson, Loy W_____ Hicks, Knowlton V____ Higgs, L. Randolph... Hohenthal, Theodore J.2 Hudson, Joel C Hulley, Benjamin M___ Third secretary. Third secretary and con- sul. Second secretary. Second secretary and con- sul. Second secretary and con-sul. Third secretary and vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Counselor of embassy and consul general. Counselor of embassy and consul general. First secretary. Vice consul. Second secretary. Second secretary and con- sul. Second secretary. Second secretary and con- sul. Thi secretary and con-ul. Consul. First secretary. Vice consul. Second secretary. Vice consul. Consul general. First secretary and consul general. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul. Consul general. Third secretary. First secretary and con- sul general. Vice consul. Second secretary and con- sul. Consul. . Third secretary and vice consul. Consul general. Assistant commercial at- taché. Vice consul. Consul. First secretary and consul. Consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Minister. Second secretary. Consul. First secretary. Assistant trade commis- sioner. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. First secretary. Consul. Third secretary and vice consul. Vice consul. Second secretary and con- sul. Second secretary and con-sul. Hunt, leichW_....___ Hurley, John P._-___-. Huston, Cloyce K______ Hutton, Paul C._.._._-Jernegan, John D______ Jester, Perry N..-__.... Johnson, Hallett _______ Jones, J. Wesley. __.... Keeley, James Hugh, Jr. Kohler, Foy D-........ Lancaster, Nathaniel, Yr. Langdon, William R.__ Lewis, Charles W., Jr__ Lightner, E. Allen______ Macatee, Robert B_____ Maney Edward S______ McKenna, James E___. McKinney, Walter H__ McMillin, Stewart E_ _ Melby, John Frémont _ Moreland, William D., Jr. Morris, Leland B______ Newton, Joseph E.1_ __ Nielsen, Orsen N_______ Oakes, Calvin Hawley. Ocheltree, John B______ Page, Edward, Jro_____ Parker, W. Leonard._._ Plitt, Edwin’ A______ Ravndal, Christian M _ Reber, Samuel .________ Renchard, George W___ Richards, J. Bartlett___ Riddleberger, James W. Satterthwaite, Living- ston. Scherer, George F______ Schmidt, Max W______ Schoenrich, Edwin_____ Smith, Donald W______ Smyth, Robert Lacy.__ Stevens, Francis Bow- den. Stone, Joan FF _.__..__.. Strom, Carl W__.___._ Sturgeon, Leo D.______ Thomson, Alfred R.1___ van den Arend, Fred- erik. Vyse, William Clarke.__ Wailes, Edward T_____ ‘Waller, George P.1.___ Wamsley Walter N., IT Warren, Avra M_______ Warren, Fletcher __.___ Wasson, Thomas C____ Wiley, John C.2._______ Williamson, David_____ Wilson, Orme... __.___- Wilson, Warden McK _ Winters, George H_____ Woodward, Robert F__ Wright, James H__..__. Young, James B.._-._.. Young, Whitney .______ Second secretary and con-sul. Consul general. Second secretary and con-sul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Counselor of legation and consul general. Consul. Consul. Third secretary and con-sul. Consul. Consul. Second secretary and con-sul. Third secretary and vice consul. First secretary and con- Consul. Third secretary. Vice consul. Counselor. Vice consul. First secretary. Consul. Consul. Third secretary and con- sul. Vice consul. Second secretary and con- sul. Second secretary and con- sul. . Second secretary. Third secretary and vice consul. Trade commissioner. Second secretary. Vice consul. Vice consul. Third secretary. Second secretary and con- sul. Assistant commercial at- taché. First secretary. Third secretary. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Second secretary. Consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Consul. Minister. Second secretary. Counselor of embassy. First secretary. Consul. Vice consul. Second secretary and con- sul. Consul general. Consul. 2 Under provisions of the act of Apr. 1, 1941. 1 Temporarily. 518 Congressional Directory Coville, Cabot..... Office of the High Com-Salisbury, Laurence E _ Office of the High Com- missioner, Manila.l missioner, Manila. Minneman, Paul G____ Dept. Agriculture. 1 Act of Aug. 7, 1939. Davis, Nathaniel P_________ Consul general. Hosmer, Charles Bridgham_| Consul general. Ferguson, C. Vaughan, Jr__ Vice consul. Tuthill, John W_____ Vice consul. Getsinger, Ralph C________ Vice consul. Vice consul. Gnade, Richard Bo. _ Vice consul. Vice consul. Vice consul. MeSweeney, John M_______ Vice consul. Ross, Claude G Vice consul. Rossow, Robert, Jr_________ Vice consul. Vice consul. Viee consul. OFFICIAL DUTIES LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL The Architect of the Capitol, acting as an agent of the Congress, has charge of the structural and mechanical care of the United States Capitol Building, together with arrangements in cooperation with the proper authorities, for cere-monies and ceremonials held in the building and on the grounds; is responsible for the care, maintenance, and improvement of the Capitol Grounds, the old and newly enlarged areas comprising approximately 120.6 acres, as well as the care of the grounds, walks, and driveways about the buildings in the legislative group; has the structural and mechanical care of the Library of Congress Buildings, United States Supreme Court Building, Courthouse of the District of Columbia, Court of Appeals Building, Court of Claims Buildings, and Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-In Asylum; is responsible for the operation of the House of Representatives Restaurant. In addition to these activities, the duties and responsibilities of the Architect include the following: Under the direction and approval of the House Office Building Commission, the structural, mechanical, and domestic care and maintenance of the House Office Buildings, including the maintenance and operation of the mechanical equipment, and the care, maintenance, and operation of the Capitol power plant, which supplies heat, light, power, and air conditioning refrigeration for the Capitol, Senate and House Office Buildings, heat, light, and power for the Library of Congress Buildings, United States Botanic Garden, United States Supreme Court Building, and the legislative garage, and steam heat for the Government Printing Office and Washington City Post Office; Under the direction and approval of the Senate Committee on Rules, approval of structural changes at the Senate Office Building. Subject to the joint action of the Vice President of the United States and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the jurisdiction and control including the care and maintenance of the legislative garage. In addition to these maintenance and repair activities, the Architect of the Capitol is charged with the planning and construction of such buildings as may be committed to his care by Congress from time to time. Over and above these functions, the Architect of the Capitol serves as a mem-ber. of the Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for the Library of Congress, of the Commission for the Enlarging of the Capitol Grounds, of the District of Columbia Zoning Commission, of the Alley Dwelling Authority, and of the Commission to Acquire a Painting of the Signing of the Constitution, and is a Member of the Capitol Police Board. JOINT COMMITTEE ON INTERNAL REVENUE TAXATION The Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation was established in 1926 under section 1203 of the Revenue Act of 1926. This section is codified in chapters 47 and 48 of the Internal Revenue Code. The duties imposed upon the committee by statute are as follows: (1) To investigate the operation and effects of the Federal system of internal-revenue taxes. (2) To investigate the administration of such taxes by the Bureau of Internal Revenue or any executive department, establishment, or agency charged with their administration. or 522 Congressional Directory LEGISLATIVE BRANCH (3) To make such other investigations in respect of such system of taxes as the Joint Committee may deem necessary. (4) To investigate measures and methods for the simplification of such taxes, particularly the income tax. (5) To publish from time to time for public examination and analysis proposed measures and methods for the simplification of such taxes; and (6) To report from time to time to the Committee on Finance and the Com-mittee on Ways and Means and, in its discretion, to the Senate or the House of Representatives, or both, the results of its investigations, together with such recommendations as it may deem advisable. To the above, section 710 of the Revenue Act of 1928 added the duty of exam-ining refunds in excess of $75,000 of income, war-profits, excess-profits, estate, and gift taxes and of making annual reports thereof to the Congress. A similar provi-sion had theretofore been enacted in the first deficiency act, fiscal year 1927, approved February 28, 1927 (44 Stat. 1254). Section 3777 of the Internal Revenue Code, derived from section 710 of the Revenue Act of 1928, reads as follows: “Src. 3777. Reports of refunds and credits in excess of $75,000. “(a) By Commissioner to Joint Committee.—No refund or eredit of any income, war-profits, excess-profits, estate, or gift tax in excess of $75,000 shall be made until after the expiration of 30 days from the date upon which a report giving the name of the person to whom the refund or credit is to be made, the amount of such refund or credit, and a summary of the facts and the decision of the Com-missioner is submitted to the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. “(b) By Joint Committee to Congress.—A report to Congress shall be made annually by such committee of such refunds and credits, including the names of all persons and corporations to whom amounts are credited or payments are made, together with the amounts credited or paid to each.” The statute confers upon the Joint Committee certain powers necessary for the performance of its duties. The committee is composed of 10 members, of whom 5 are members of the Committee on Finance and 5 of the Committee on Ways and Means. The Com-mittee on Finance and the Committee on Ways and Means each elects its member-ship on the Joint Committee, 3 from the majority and 2 from the minority party. It has been the custom to elect ranking members. The committee was organized in 1926 and functions with the aid of a permanent staff. It is the custom of the Joint Committee to elect a chairman and vice chair-man annually, alternating these offices between the chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means and the chairman of the Committee on Finance. 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 apis general authority over the forms and style of congressional printing and inding. The CoNGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, memorial addresses on deceased Senators and Members, statute 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 subse-quent editions after 2 years from date of original order must receive its approval. LEGISLATIVE BRANCH Official Duties 523 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 cannot 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 publi-cation 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 procure under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing in accordance with the act approved January 12, 1895, and furnish, on requisition, envelopes (not including envelopes printed in the course of manufacture) in common use by two or more departments, establishments, or services of the Government in the District of Columbia. The Public Printer is required by law to advertise for bids for material, other than paper, under the direction of the committee, and to make a return to it on all such contracts awarded by him. The committee may authorize the Public Printer to make certain open-market purchases of material, and, by resolution, it has required him to obtain its approval on all purchases of machinery and equipment in excess of $1,000 in any one instance. Maps and illustration plates for Government publications are purchased under : the direction of the committee whenever the probable cost exceeds $1,200; or, whenever the exigencies of the public service do not justify advertisement, the committee may authorize immediate contracts for lithographing and engraving. Printing for the Patent Office is required by law to be done under such regula- tions and conditions as the committee may prescribe. Section 11 of the Legislative Appropriation Act for 1920 requires all printing, binding, and blank-book work for the Government to be done at the Govern- ment Printing Office, except such classes of work as shall be deemed by the Joint Committee on Printing to be urgent or necessary to have done elsewhere than in the District of Columbia for the exclusive use of any field service outside of said District. ! JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE LIBRARY The Joint Committee on the Library was established by law; in 1809 the two Houses by concurrent action supplemented the law, and in 1843 recognized it by joint rule. The joint rules having ceased to exist in 1876, the rules of the House recognized the committee in 1880. In 1902 a law increased the membership of the committee to five in each House. : The statutes confer on the joint committee certain executive functions, such as the acceptance or purchase of works of art for the Capitol, the assignment of the same to such place in the Capitol as they may deem suitable, and control of the Botanic Garden, and provide that its powers shall reside in the Senate por- tion in the recess after the expiration of a Congress. Aside from the executive functions of the joint committee, the House branch exercises functions as a standing committee of the House, and has a jurisdiction covering construction and care of the building of the Library of Congress, man- agement of the Library, purchase of books and manuscripts, erection of monu- ments to the memory of individuals, and in some instances on battlefields, and the removal of the remains of distinguished persons. The general affairs of the Smithsonian Institution and the incorporation of similar institutions are also within the jurisdiction of the House branch of the committee. Neither the joint committee nor the House branch reports appropriation bills. EXECUTIVE BRANCH EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Under authority of the Reorganization Act of 1939 and in accordance with the President’s Reorganization Plans No. I and No. II, the Executive Office of the President comprises the following major divisions: The White House Office, Bureau of the Budget, National Resources Planning Board, Office of Govern-ment Reports, Liaison Office for Personnel Management, and Office for Emergency Management. Executive Order No. 8248 of September 8, 1939, established the divisions and defined their functions. THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE The functions and duties of the White House Office, as defined in Executive Order No. 8248 of September 8, 1939, are as follows: In general, to serve the President in an intimate capacity in the performance of the many detailed activities incident to his immediate office. To that end, the White House Office shall be composed of the following principal subdivisions, with particular functions and duties as indicated: (a) The Secretaries to the President.—To facilitate and maintain quick and easy communication with the Congress, the individual Members of the Congress, the heads of executive departments and agencies, the press, the radio, and the general public. : (d) The executive clerk.—To provide for the orderly handling of documents and correspondence within the White House Office, and to organize and supervise all clerical services and procedure relating thereto. : (¢) The administrative assistants to the President.—To assist the President in such matters as he may direct, and at the specific request of the President, to get information and to condense and summarize it for his use. These adminis-trative assistants shall be personal aides to the President and shall have no au-thority over anyone in any department or agency, including the Executive Office of the President, other than the personnel assigned to their immediate office. In no event shall the administrative assistants be interposed between the Presi-dent and the head of any department or agency, or between the President and any one of the divisions in the Executive Office of the President. LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT The Liaison Office for Personnel Management assists the President in the execu-tion of the duties imposed upon him by the Constitution and by legislation with respect to personnel management and in maintaining closer contact with all Federal departments and agencies in their relation to personnel-management policies. COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE, UNITED STATES The Council of National Defense, composed of the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary of Commerce, and the Secretary of Labor, was charged by the act of August 29, 1916, among other things with the ‘coordination of industries and resources for the national security and welfare’”’ and with the “creation of relations which will render possible in time of need the immediate concentration and utilization of the resources of the Nation.” The act creating the Council author-ized the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense. The Council functioned actively until 1921. On May 29, 1940, the President approved rules and regulations adopted by the reestablished Council for the conduct of its work. The Advisory Commission was also reestablished. The functions of its seven divisions, Industrial Production, Industrial Materials, Employment, Farm Products, Price Stabilization, Trans-portation, and Consumer Protection, are now being performed by agencies -coordinated through the Office for Emergency Management. 524 EXECUTIVE OFFICE Official Duties 525 OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT The Office for Emergency Management was established by administrative order of May 25, 1940, in accordance with section I (6) of Executive Order No. 8248, which provides that there shall be, ‘in the event of a national emergency, or threat of a national emergency, such office for emergency management as the President shall determine.” The functions of the Office are to (a) assist the President in the clearance of information with respect to measures necessitated by the threatened emergency; (b) maintain liaison between the President and the national defense agencies for the purpose of securing maximum utilization and coordination of agencies and facilities in meeting the threatened emergency; and (¢) perform such additional duties as the President may direct. In accordance with Executive Orders No. 8629 of January 7, and No. 8632 of January 11, 1941, and the administrative order of January 7, 1941, the status and -functions of the Office for Emergency Management were further defined. The Office assists and advises the President in the discharge of extraordinary responsibilities imposed upon him by any emergency arising out of war, the threat of war, flood, drought, or other condition threatening the public peace or safety. OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE The Office of Civilian Defense was established by Executive Order No. 8757 on May 20, 1941, to coordinate Federal, State, and local civilian defense relationships. Its duties include planning and carrying out programs designed to protect civilian life and property in event of emergency, and promoting activities designed to sustain the national morale. It also provides opportunites for constructive civilian participation in the defense program. The Division of State and Local Cooperation, created by the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense on August 5, 1940, has been embodied in the Office of Civilian Defense. DEFENSE COMMUNICATIONS BOARD The Defense Communications Board was established by Executive Order No. 8546 of September 24, 1940, to coordinate the relation of all branches of ecom-munication to the national defense. Planning embraces common carriers such as commercial radiotelephone and radiotelegraph, as well as other telephone, telegraph, and cable facilities and radio broadcasting. OFFICE OF FACTS AND FIGURES The Office of Facts and Figures was established by Executive Order No. 8922, of October 24, 1941, to ‘formulate programs designed to facilitate a widespread and accurate understanding of the status and progress of the national defense efforts and of the defense policies and activities of the Government; and advise with the several departments and agencies of the Government concerning the dissemination of such defense information.” OFFICE OF DEFENSE HEALTH AND WELFARE SERVICES Executive Order No. 8890, of September 3, 1941, established the Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services, which supersedes the Office of the Co-ordinator of Health, Welfare, and Related Defense Activities, set up by the Council of National Defense on November 28, 1940. The Office serves as the center for coordination of health and welfare services available through Federal and other agencies, both public and private, to meet the needs of localities arising from the defense program and for the coordination of such services for the Nation as a whole during the emergency. DIVISION OF DEFENSE HOUSING COORDINATION The Division of Defense Housing Coordination was established by Executive Order No. 8632 of January 11, 1941, to maintain liaison between the departments and establishments of the Government and other public or private agencies to facilitate proper coordination of, and economy and efficiency in, the provision of housing facilities essential to the national defense. 64674°—T77-2—1st ed—35 526 Congressional Directory EXECUTIVE OFFICE OFFICE OF THE COORDINATOR OF INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS Executive Order No. 8840, of July 30, 1941, established the Office of the Co- ordinator of Inter-American Affairs to serve as the center for the coordination of the cultural and commercial relations of the Nation affecting hemisphe redefense. The Office exercises and performs all powers and functions heretofore vested in the Office for Coordination of Commercial and Cultural Relations Between the American Republics, established by order of the Council of National Defense on August 16, 1940. OFFICE OF LEND-LEASE ADMINISTRATION Executive Order No. 8926, of October 28, 1941, established the Office of Lend- Lease Administration. The order authorizes the Administrator to exercise any power conferred upon the President by the Lend-Lease Act and by the Defense Aid Supplemental Appropriation Acts, 1941 and 1942, with respect to any nation whose defense the President shall have found to be vital to the defense of the United States: “Provided, That the master agreement with each nation receiving lend-lease aid, setting forth the general terms and conditions under which such nation is receiving such aid, shall continue to be negotiated by the State Depart- ment, with the advice of the Economic Defense Board and the Lend-Lease Ad- ministration.” Executive Order 8751, of May 2, 1941, establishing the Divisionof Defense Aid Reports was revoked by the order establishing the Office of Lend-Lease Administration. NATIONAL DEFENSE MEDIATION BOARD The National Defense Mediation Board was created in the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order No. 8716 of March 19, 1941. Labor disputes referred to the Mediation Board whenever the Secretary of Labor certifies that a controversy has arisen which “threatens to burden or obstruct the production or transportation of equipment or materials essential to national defense.” The order excluded from this provision any dispute that comes within the purview of the Railway Labor Act. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION The Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply was created by Execu-tive Order No. 8734, of April 11, 1941. Executive Order No. 8875, of August 28, 1941, transferred to the Office of Production Management the Civilian Allocation Division and changed the name of the agency to Office of Price Administration. The major responsibilities of the Office are maintenance of relative price stability and protection of consumer interests. OFFICE OF PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT The Office of Production Management was established by Executive Order No. 8629, of January 7, 1941, to increase production for the national defense through mobilization of national resources and industrial facilities of the Nation. Under the Office are the Division of Production, the Division of Purchases, the Division of Priorities, the Labor Division, the Contract Distribution Division, the Division of Civilian Supply, and the Materials Division. SUPPLY PRIORITIES AND ALLOCATIONS BOARD Executive Order No. 8875, of August 28, 1941, established the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board to assure unity of policy and coordinated consideration of all relevant factors involved in the supply and allocation of materials and com-modites among the various phases of the Defense Program and competing civilian demands. OFFICE OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT The Office of Scientific Research and Development was created by Executive Order No. 8807, of June 28, 1941, for the purpose of assuring adequate provision for research on scientific and medical problems relating to the national defense. TRANSPORTATION DIVISION Established as a division of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense, May 21, 1940, the Transportation Division continues to function as adivision under the Office for Emergency Management. The Division cooperates EXECUTIVE OFFICE Official Duties 527 with all branches of the Government in seeing that adequate transportation facilities in the various forms are provided at all times to take care of the defense requirements. COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION The position of Coordinator of Information was established by the President on July 11, 1941. The Coordinator was authorized ‘‘to collect and analyze all in-formation and data which may bear upon national security; to correlate such information and data, and to make such information and data available to the President and to such departments and officials of the Government as the Presi-dent may determine; and to carry out, when requested by the President, such supplementary activities as may facilitate the securing of information important for national security not now available to the Government.” ECONOMIC DEFENSE BOARD The Economic Defense Board was established by Executive Order No. 8839, of July 30, 1941, “for the purpose of developing and coordinating policies, plans, and programs designed to protect and strengthen the international economic relations of the United States in the interest of national defense.” Under authority of Executive Order No. 8900, of September 15, 1941, the Board assumed the duties heretofore vested in the Administrator of Export Control. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET + The Bureau of the Budget was created by the Budget and Accounting Act of June 10, 1921. Prior to its transfer to the Executive Office of the President, by Reorganization Plan No. I under authority of the Reorganization Act of 1939, the Bureau was in the Treasury Department but under the immediate direction of the President. Under -Reorganization Plan No. I, the Central Statistical Board and its functions, as well as those of the Central Statistical Committee, which was abolished, were transferred to the Bureau of the Budget. The functions of the Bureau are: 1. To assist the President in the preparation of the Budget and the formulation of the fiscal program of the Government. 2. To supervise and control the administration of the Budget. ~ 3. To conduct research in the development of improved plans of adminis-trative management and to advise the executive departments and agencies of the Government with respect to improved administrative organization and practice. 4. To aid the President to bring about more efficient and economical conduct of Government service. 5. To assist the President by clearing and coordinating departmental advice on proposed legislation and by making recommendations as to Presidential action on legislative enactments. 6. To assist in the consideration and clearance and, where necessary, in the preparation of proposed Executive orders and proclamations. 7. To plan and promote the improvement, development, and coordination of Federal and other statistical services. 8. To keep the President informed of the progress of activities by agencies of the Government with respect to work proposed, work actually initiated, and work completed, together with the relative timing of work between the several agencies of the Government. The Director of the Bureau of the Budget is vested with authority to make, waive, or modify apportionments of appropriations, and to approve the use of printing and binding appropriations for the printing of publications. NATIONAL RESOURCES PLANNING BOARD Provision for the creation of the National Resources Planning Board was made by the President’s Reorganization Plan No. I, effective July 1, 1939, pursuant to the Reorganization Act of 1939. Plan No. I abolished the National Resources Committee and the Federal Employment Stabilization Office in the Department of Commerce and transferred their functions to the new Board. The former National Resources Committee was the successor to the National Resources Board, which, in turn, succeeded the National Planning Board of the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works. 528 Congressional Directory EXECUTIVE OFFICE The functions of the Board are: 1. To collect, prepare, and make available to the President such plans, data, and information as may be helpful to a planned development and use of national resources, and related subjects referred to it by the President, and to recommend to the President and the Congress long-time plans and programs for the wise use and fullest development of such resources. 2. To advise the President from time to time of the trend of employment and business activity, and of the existence or approach of periods of business depression and unemployment in the United States or in any substantial portion thereof; and to recommend measures leading to the improvement and stabilization of economic conditions. 3. To collect information concerning advance construction plans and estimates by all Federal agencies, the States, municipalities, and other public and private agencies, and to list for the President and the Congress all proposed public works in the order of their relative importance with respect to (a) the greatest good to the greatest number of people, (b) the emergency necessities of the Nation, and 5) the social, economic, and cultural advancement of the people of the United tates. 4. To receive and record all proposed Federal projects involving the acquisition of land (including transfer of land jurisdiction) and land-research projects, and, in an advisory capacity, to provide the agencies concerned ‘with such information or data as may be pertinent to the projects. 5. To consult and cooperate with agencies of the Federal Government, with the States and municipalities or agencies thereof, and with any public or private planning or research agencies or institutions, in carrying out any of its duties and functions, aud to act as a clearing house and means of coordination for planning activities, linking together various levels and fields of planning. Through nine field offices, under the direction of regional chairmen and coun- selors, the National Resources Planning Board cooperates with 42 State planning boards and with regional or other planning agencies. _ In connection with the defense program, the Board is cooperating with the Office of Production Management on studies of industrial location, and with State planning agencies and defense councils on community planning where new plants or cantonments have created special problems for local adjustment. A roster of scientific and specialized personnel is being prepared by the Board in cooperation with the Civil Service Commission. The Board is concentrating its attention on the post-defense period with a view to developing advance plans and programs for necessary readjustments and new improvements after the defense program. OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT REPORTS The Office of Government Reports is an administrative unit created pursuant to the President’s Reorganization Plan No. II, effective July 1, 1939. The office replaced the National Emergency Council, which was abolished by Reorganization Plan No. II. The act of June 9, 1941 (Public Law 107, 77th Cong.), sets forth the functions and authorizes an annual appropriation for the Office of Govern-ment Reports. It assists the President in dealing with special problems requiring the clearance of information between the Federal Government and State and local governments and private institutions. It keeps the President currently informed of the opinions, desires, and complaints of citizens and groups of citizens and of State and local governments with respect to the work of Federal agencies. It reports to the President, on the basis of the information it has obtained, possible ways and means of reducing the cost of the operation of the Government. . It collects and distributes information concerning the purposes and activities of executive departments and agencies for the use of Congress, administrative officials, and the public. DIVISION OF PRESS INTELLIGENCE The Division of Press Intelligence was established in August 1933 as a division of the National Recovery Administration in order to provide Government officials with a prompt and comprehensive press service. On July 10, 1935, it became a division of the National Emergency Council. It makes available to Members of Congress and Federal officials a daily bulletin presenting news and editorial discussion of governmental, economic, and related subjects compiled from a list of 350 newspapers; a weekly report comprising STATE Official Dutres 529 abstracts of articles and editorials relating to public affairs; a daily newspaper-clipping service; and a special daily service involving requests for research and reports gathered from the permanent files of newspaper clippings. UNITED STATES INFORMATION SERVICE The United States Information Service was established in March 1934 as a division of the National Emergency Council, to function as a central clearing house for information on all phases of governmental activity. It serves both the Government and the general public by furnishing, upon request, factual informa-tion on the structure and operations of the various Federal departments and agencies and by directing inquiries into proper channels. It compiles and publishes the United States Government Manual, a reference book of factual information concerning the functions and organization of Government agencies. 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 prescribes, promulgates, and administers regulations under treaties and laws governing international traffic in arms. He has cus-tody of the seal of the United States, of current records relating to presidential electors, and of the originals of acts and resolutions of Congress subsequent to the Sixty-seventh Congress, and treaties, conventions, and other international agreements of the United States subsequent to August 14, 1906, and proclamations thereof by the President. He certifies the adoption of amendments to the Con-stitution of the United States. He publishes the acts and resolutions of Con-gress, Territorial papers, treaties and other international acts of the United States, and papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States. UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE The Under Secretary of State is, the principal assistant to the Secretary of State in the discharge of his various functions, aiding in the formulation and execution of the foreign policy of the Government and the reception of repre-sentatives of foreign governments and in other work of a highly responsible char-acter. He gives especial attention to political relations with foreign governments. In the absence of the Secretary of State he becomes Acting Secretary of State. The Liaison Office serves as a part of the secretariat of the Liaison Committee composed of the Chief of Staff, Chief of Naval Operations, and the Under Secre-tary of State; is responsible for the coordination of communications between the Department of State and the War and Navy Departments; is also called upon to perform such other duties as may be determined by the Under Secretary of State. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with coordination of financial ques- tions with questions of major policy; with general supervision of Canadian affairs and affairs relating to Greenland; and with general supervision of certain divisions of the Department. 5 One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with coordination of matters relat-ing to the formulation and execution of foreign policies assigned to him by the Secretary of State; general liaison work with the Senate and the House of Repre-sentatives and general representation of the Department of State at hearings before congressional committees, excepting the legislative activities relating to the duties and administrative functions of the Assistant Secretary and Budget Officer; general supervision of certain divisions of the Department; and general supervision, under the direction of the Secretary of State, of work relating to special problems arising out of international armed conflicts and of affairs relating to international fisheries. a30 Congressional Directory STATE One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with coordination of commercial and economic questions with questions of major policy; and with general super-vision of certain divisions of the Department. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the administration of the Department of State and of the Foreign Service and with supervision of matters relating to personnel and management; is fiscal and budget officer of the Depart-ment, 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; 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; is chairman of the efficiency rating committee; and is charged with general supervision of certain divisions of the Department. OFFICE OF THE LEGAL ADVISER Charged, under the Secretary of State, with the responsibility of handling all matters of a legal character. ADVISERS ON POLITICAL RELATIONS The Advisers on Political Relations are charged, under the Secretary of State and the Under Secretary, with the supervision of such divisions having general charge of relations with foreign states as may be assigned to them, and with giving advice and assistance in connection with special questions in the fields of foreign policy and diplomatic action and performing other duties of a supervisory or advisory nature. ADVISER ON INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC AFFAIRS Is charged, under the Secretary of State, with analytical and advisory duties in regard to the economic relations between this Government and foreign govern-ments, assisting in the formulation of policy, unifying and coordinating action on economic matters within the Department, and acting as liaison between the Department of State and other branches of the Government on international economic matters falling within the field of joint interest and authority of several branches. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS Is charged with the general supervision of all disbursing officers under the Department; with the maintenance of all accounts of the Department in Wash-ington, of the Foreign Service, of international commissions, congresses, and conferences, and of revenues and trust funds; the administrative examination, audit, and approval of all accounts; the improvement and revision of accounting methods and procedure; the preparation of correspondence and regulations in regard thereto; the recording of all fiscal transactions; the preparation of pay rolls, financial reports, and statistics for the administrative officers of the Department; the preparation of the report to the Congress for the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund; the handling of transportation matters affecting the Depart-ment and the Foreign Service; the preparation of all travel authorizations and related instructions for officers of the Department and the Foreign Service; main-taining liaison with the General Accounting Office and the Treasury Department in regard to matters relating to accounts and accounting problems; and with performing such other duties as may be assigned by the Assistant Secretary of State in charge of administration. DIVISION OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS Has charge of relations with Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela, and with inter-American organizations. CARIBBEAN OFFICE Assists in the preparation and interpretation of treaties and agreements in the Caribbean area; supervises the formulation of regulations and procedure neces-sary for the fulfillment of such treaties and agreements; collaborates with other departments and agencies, particularly those having jurisdiction in the fields of BTATE Official Duties 931 labor, agriculture, housing, health, education, finance, trade relations, and tariffs; and cooperates with other economic, educational, and labor agencies and foreign missions in Washington. The activities of the Office are subject to the review of the Division of the American Republics and the Division of European Affairs. DIVISION OF COMMERCIAL AFFAIRS Is charged with the direction of the activities of the Foreign Service which pertain to the protection and promotion of American commercial and agricultural interests abroad (except those functions now vested in other divisions and offices of the Department with respect to matters of protection) and the distribution of information submitted by the Foreign Service on these subjects and on economic developments abroad to the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture and to such other governmental departments and agencies as may appropriately receive it; the commenting upon, censoring, and grading of reports and other information submitted by the Foreign Service on commercial, agricultural, and economic matters; and the maintenance of liaison within the seope of its functions between the Department of State and the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture and other governmental departments and agencies. Officers of the Department of Commerce and the Department of Agriculture serve, respectively, as liaison officers for those Departments under the terms of Reorganization Plan No. II as authorized by the Reorganization Act of April 3, 1939. : DIVISION OF COMMERCIAL POLICY AND AGREEMENTS Charged with the formulation, negotiation, and administration of all commercial treaties and agreements having to do with the international commercial relations of the United States, as well as matters of tariff, general trade, and other questions relating to the international commercial pelicy of the country; and, as a com-ponent part of the Board of Economic Operations, with general responsibility for the Department’s contacts with regard to the negotiation, interpretation, and enforcement of the terms of commercial treaties and agreements and problems relating to American foreign commerce. 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- duet 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 records of the Department; the custody of the records of international conferences, con- gresses, 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 docu- ments 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. OFFICE OF COORDINATION AND REVIEW Reviews all outgoing diplomatic, consular, and other correspondence; ecoordi-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 the 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. DIVISION OF CULTURAL RELATIONS Has general charge of official international activities of the Department with respect to cultural relations, embracing the exchange of professors, teachers, and students; cooperation in the field of music, art. literature, and other intellectual 532 Congressional Directory STATE and cultural attainments; the formulation and distribution of libraries of represent-ative works of the United States and suitable translations thereof; the prepara-tions for and management of the participation by this Government in international expositions in this field; supervision of participation by this Government in inter-national radio broadcasts; encouragement of a closer relationship between un-official organizations of this and of foreign governments engaged in cultural and intellectual activities; and, generally, the dissemination abroad of the representa-tive intellectual and cultural works of the United States and the improvement and broadening of the scope of our cultural relations with other countries. DIVISION OF CURRENT INFORMATION Charged with maintaining liaison between the Department and the domestic and foreign press, the radio, news reels, and all agencies of the Government con-cerned with the collection and dissemination of information in which the Depart-ment has an interest; preparing and distributing to officials of the Department and the Foreign Service daily press summaries and press clippings; disseminating information regarding the activities and policies of the Department and of the Government generally to American representatives abroad; furnishing officials of the Department and the Foreign Service with press bulletins, copies of texts, and general information bearing upon foreign relations. DIVISION OF DEFENSE MATERIALS Charged with responsibility, in collaboration with the interested divisions and offices of the Department, for the formulation and execution of policies in the field of defense materials; and, with the Adviser on International Economic Affairs, for the establishment and maintenance of effective liaison with other interested departments and agencies of the Government concerned in these matters. This Division is a component part of the Board of Economic Operations. BOARD OF ECONOMIC OPERATIONS Charged with assisting in the formulation of policies in connection with the economic defense of the United States, coordinating the activities of the various divisions of which the Board is composed, and maintaining effective liaison with other interested departments and agencies of the Government. OFFICE OF THE EDITOR OF THE TREATIES Is charged, under the Secretary of State, with the compilation and editing of the publication Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America, and with the giving of advice and the submission of recommendations to the Secre-tary of State on certain historical and constitutional questions. DIVISION OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Has charge of relations with Albania, Australia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Free City of Danzig, Germany, Great Britain (including British territories and possessions except India, and those in Africa), Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Ru-mania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Union of South Africa, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Yugoslavia, European possessions in the Far East in conjunc-tion with the Division of Far Eastern Affairs, and with international organizations in Europe. DIVISION OF EXPORTS AND DEFENSE AID Charged with responsibility for all matters of foreign policy involved in the administration of the Export Control Act, the Lend-Lease Act, the acts of June 28, 1940 and May 31, 1941 (so far as priorities or allocations for export are con-cerned), section 12 of the Neutrality Act, the Helium Act, and the Tin Plate Scrap Act; and for collaboration, through the Board of Economic Operations, with the geographical and other divisions concerning the formulation and coordination . of policy; and for establishing and maintaining effective liaison with other depart-ments and agencies of the Government that are concerned with the administration of the above-mentioned acts. STATE Official Dutres 933 DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Has general charge of relations with China, Japan, and Thailand and (in con-. junction with the Division of European Affairs and other interested divisions) with the possessions and territories of European nations in the Far East, as well as the foreign-controlled islands of the Pacific not included therein, and of such matters as concern the Department in relation to American-controlled islands of the Pacific, in particular (in conjunction with the Office of Philippine Affairs) of such matters as concern the Department in relation to the Philippine Islands, and to the Far East in general. This Division also has charge of matters which relate to international cooperation to suppress the abuse of narcotic drugs, performing the various duties imposed by statutes and arising from treaty obligations. FINANCIAL DIVISION Charged with responsibility for foreign policy in financial matters other than foreign-funds control; and for establishing and maintaining liaison with other interested departments and agencies of the Government. The Division shall ‘serve as a component part of the Board of Economie Operations. OFFICE OF FISCAL AND BUDGET AFFAIRS The Office of Fiscal and Budget Affairs is responsible, under the Assistant Secretary of State in charge of administration, for the allotment, apportionment, and control of expenditures of appropriations of the Department of State and its activities; for the direction and supervision of the estimates of appropriations, the coordination thereof, and justification before the Bureau of the Budget and the Congress; for matters relating to legislative provisions and bills; for the compilation of miscellaneous data for the Bureau of the Budget and the Congress; and for special assignments of varied character coming within the purview of the work of this office. DIVISION OF FOREIGN ACTIVITY CORRELATION Is charged with the conduct and correlation of such foreign activities and opera-tions as the Secretary of State may direct, and with such other functions as may be assigned to it by the Secretary. FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL DIVISION Charged with responsibility in all matters of foreign policy involving foreign-funds control, including the application of the President’s proclamation of July 17, 1941, to those whose names appear in the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked N ationals; and in establishing and maintaining liaison with other interested depart-ments and agencies of the Government. The Division serves as a component part of the Board of Economic Operations, and in regard to problems directly related to general financial policies it shall work in coordination with the Financial Division. 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, organizations, instruction of diplomatic and consular officers, ete.; correspondence relating to the foregoing and to customs courtesies, letters rogatory, diplomatic pouch service between the United States and foreign countries, and the designa-tion of military and naval attachés; whereabouts and welfare of Americans abroad; settlement of estates of deceased Americans in foreign countries, con-sular protection of American interests and, other than commerce, the general work of consular offices, such as quarantine, notarial acts, protection of the customs revenues, etc.; supervision over the Department’s despatch agencies in New York, New Orleans, and San Francisco. 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. 534 Congressional Directory STATE - FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS’ TRAINING SCHOOL The Foreign Service Officers’ Training School is maintained in the Department of State for the instruction of new appointees to the Foreign Service. Only those persons who have successfully passed the examination for the position of Foreign Service officer are admitted to the school. It is under the direction of the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Board which is composed of the members of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, one Foreign Service officer assigned for duty in the Division of Foreign Service Personnel, and the Director of the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School. BOARD OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL The Board of Foreign Service Personnel is composed of not more than three Assistant Secretaries of State designated by the Secretary of State, one of whom shall be the Assistant Secretary of State having supervision over the Division of Foreign Service Personnel, who shall be chairman. In addition, by the pro- visions of Executive Order No. 8185, of June 29, 1939, one officer of the Depart- ment of Commerce and one officer of the Department of Agriculture are members of the Personnel Board, sitting as members of the Board only when matters of interest to their respective Departments are under consideration. 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 lists 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 determine, for submission to the Secretary of State after considering recom-mendations 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 authorized officials; 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. OFFICE OF THE GEOGRAPHER This office furnishes advice and information on geographical phases of current questions, such as international boundaries, territorial waters, and geographic names; makes studies of the geographical aspects of problems in international relations; maintains the Department’s collection of maps, atlases, and gazetteers; and compiles and drafts maps and charts required by the Department. STATE Official Duties 535 DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS Is charged with the initiation of the policy action of the Department and with the elaboration and carrying into effect of comprehensive and coordinated pro-grams of activities involved in the international aspects of aviation, radio, motion pictures, telegraph, cable, and shipping; assisting in the preparation and interpre-tation of treaties in this field; drafting or reviewing of correspondence with foreign governments and their missions in this country, American diplomatic and consular officers, Government departments, and all other correspondence pertaining to international communications activities; maintenance of liaison with other Government departments and agencies in international communications matters falling within the field of joint interest and authority; and collaboration with foreign missions in Washington. E DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES Is charged with arrangements for international conferences, congresses, ex-positions, and conventions 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, determination of the extent and character of that participation; supervision of the fulfillment of the international obligations of the United States with respect to membership in and expenditures for interna- tional treaty commissions, committees, bureaus, and other organizations; prepara- tion of the Department’s annual publication covering these activities. DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Has charge of relations with Afghanistan, Burma, Greece, India; Iran, Iraq, Palestine and Trans-Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria and Lebanon, Turkey, Egypt, Liberia, all other independent countries on the African continent except the Union of South Africa, and all colonies, protectorates, and mandated territories in Africa, excluding Algeria. PASSPORT DIVISION Is charged with the administration of the Neutrality Act as it concerns the travel of American citizens; with determining the eligibility to receive passports or to be registered as citizens or nationals of the United States in American consulates of persons who claim to be American citizens, citizens of Puerto Rico, citizens of the Virgin Islands, citizens of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, or inhabi-tants of the Canal Zone, Guam, or American Samoa, owing permanent allegiance to the United States; prevention and detection of fraud in passport matters; preparation of cases involving fraud for prosecution in the courts; issuance of passports; issuance of instructions to American diplomatic and consular officers concerning matters relating to nationality, passports, registrations, and the pro-tection of American nationals in foreign countries, the release of persons inducted into foreign military service, refund of taxes imposed for failure to perform mili-tary service, the preparation of reports of births of American citizens abroad and reports of marriages; the administration of passport work performed by the executive officers of American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and by the United States High Commissioner to the Philippine Islands; super-vision of the passport agencies in New York, Boston, Chicago, and San Francisco; direction of clerks of courts in the United States with regard to passport matters; issuance of letters introducing American nationals to diplomatic and consular officers of the United States. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT Is charged, under the Secretary of State and the Assistant Secretary of State and budget officer, with the development and administration of the personnel programs prescribed by Executive Order No. 7916. Supervises the functions of appointment, assignment, classification, service rating, and training of employees in the Department of State, exclusive of the Foreign Service; supervises the establishment of means for the hearing of grievances of employees, and presents appropriate recommendations for the settlement thereof to the Secretary of State; makes recommendations to the Assistant Secretary of State and budget officer with respect to expenditures for personnel; and supervises the maintenance and service functions of the Department. Has custody of the seal of the United States. The Director of Personnel is a member of the Council of Personnel 536 Congressional Directory STATE Administration; liaison officer with the Civil Service Commission, the Central Statistical Board, and with other executive departments, establishments, and agencies of the Government in all matters relating to the functions of his Division; and contact officer with exposition commissions. OFFICE OF PHILIPPINE AFFAIRS Carries out, under the Secretaries, the provisions, so far as they relate to the Department of State, of the act entitled ‘“An act to provide for the complete independence of the Philippine Islands, to provide for the adoption of a constitu-tion and a form of government for the Philippine Islands, and for other purposes,” approved March 24, 1934, and, in conjunction with other interested divisions, especially the Division of Far Kastern Affairs, has general charge of such other matters as concern the Department of State in relation to the Philippine Islands. DIVISION OF PROTOCOL Is charged with presentation to the President of ambassadors and ministers accredited to this Government; correspondence concerning their acceptability to this Government and correspondence concerning the acceptability to foreign governments of like officers of the United States; questions regarding rights and immunities in the United States of representatives of foreign governments; ar-rangements for all ceremonials of a national or international character in the United States or participated in by the United States abroad; arrangements for and protection of distinguished foreign visitors; questions concerning customs and other courtesies to foreign officials and distinguished visitors to the United States as well as to American officials abroad; making arrangements for the visits of foreign naval vessels and foreign military organizations to the United States, the visits of American naval vessels and military organizations abroad; matters of ceremonial in connection with the White House and the Department of State; preparation of the Diplomatic List; maintenance of a record of all officers and employees of foreign governments in the United States and its possessions; preparation of exequaturs, certificates of recognition, and notes granting pro-visional recognition to foreign consular officers in the United States, and corre-spondence relating thereto; questions concerning the medals and decorations conferred by foreign governments upon officers of the United States; and prepara-tion of communications from the President to the heads of foreign states. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION Prepares memorandums and reports involving research on historical, geograph-ical, and political questions; compiles and edits the Foreign Relations of the United States, the Statutes at Large, the Territorial Papers, the Department of State Bulletin, and other publications of the Department; maintains the library of the Department; passes upon applications by scholars to consult the records of the Department; maintains liaison with The National Archives; has custody of and distributes the Department’s publications and processed material; deals with questions involving the international exchange of publications; prepares the printing and binding estimates and the recommendations for allocation of such funds; codifies regulatory documents promulgated by the Department; furnishes Department officials with information regarding status of legislation; and repre-sents the Department on National Historical Publications Commission and National Archives Council. SPECIAL DIVISION ! Is charged with the handling of special problems arising out of the disturbed conditions abroad, such as aiding in the repatriation of American citizens, the representation of the interests of other governments taken over by this Govern-ment, liaison with the American Red Cross, the functions undertaken by this Government on the request of belligerents, and, under existing international conventions, on behalf of their nationals held as prisoners of war, and such other related problems as may be assigned by the Secretary of State. DIVISION OF SPECIAL RESEARCH Conducts special studies in the field of foreign affairs; analyzes developments and conditions arising out of present disturbed international relations; and collab-orates in this field with other Government agencies. 1 This is a temporary division set up for the duration of the present war. STATE Officral Duties 537 DIVISION OF STUDIES AND STATISTICS Charged with responsibility, in collaboration with the interested divisions and offices of the Department, for the preparation of current studies, analyses, and statistical data needed by the Board of Economic Operations, or any of its com-ponent divisions, in connection with matters relating to policy considerations or national-defense activities. TRANSLATING BUREAU Is charged with the translation of communications addressed to the President by heads of foreign states; the translation of diplomatic notes and annexed docu-ments, laws and regulations, treaties between foreign countries, proceedings at international conferences, letters and documents from foreign countries on departmental business, and miscellaneous material referred by the White House; occasional translations of the Department’s communications ¢nfo foreign lan-guages; the critical examination of foreign texts of draft treaties to which the United States is to be a party with a view to the closest adjustment thereof to the English text; interpreting, translating, and drafting in connection with inter-national conferences. The Chief of the Translating Bureau acts as linguistic adviser to the Department. : CENTRAL TRANSLATING OFFICE Has general charge, under the Under Secretary of State, of translating from English for distribution in the other American republics certain publications of this Government, such as those of an educational, scientific, and technical char-acter and those relating to public health, commerce, and conservation; is respon-sible, in cooperation with Divisions and Offices of the Department of State and the Interdepartmental Committee on Cooperation with the American Republics, for the initiation and formulation of policy with respect to the adaptability of publications for distribution; and has general charge of the administration of programs adopted for the distribution of translated material. 3 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, conven-tions, 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; maintaining 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. VISA DIVISION Charged, within the scope of the authority of the Department of State, with the coordination of, and supervision over, activities relating to alien visa control; with the assembling and examination of all information necessary to determine the admissibility of aliens into the United States in the interests of public safety; with making appropriate recommendations to American Foreign Service officers for their final consideration concerning individual visa applicants; and with the control of immigration quotas. ; - 938 Congressional Directory TREASURY DIVISION OF WORLD TRADE INTELLIGENCE Charged with the handling of the activities and problems envisaged in the President’s proclamation of July 17, 1941, relating to trade with aliens whose interests are inimical to the United States. This division is a component part of the Board of Economic Operations and functions under the general supervision of an Assistant Secretary of State and in close collaboration with the Division of Commercial Affairs and other divisions and offices concerned. 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. (a) Legal Division. The Under Secretary of the Treasury: 1. Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency. 2. Director of Research and Statistics: (a) Division of Research and Statistics. 3. Director of Monetary Research: (a) Division of Monetary Research. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service: 1. Bureau of Customs. 2. Bureau of Narcotics. 3. Secret Service Division. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Internal Revenue: 1. Bureau of Internal Revenue. 2. Director of Tax Research. (a) Division of Tax Research. 3. Office of the Legislative Counsel, in charge of revenue matters. Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury: 1. The Finances. 2. Bureau of Accounts: (a) Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants. (b) Division of Disbursement. (¢) Division of Deposits. (d) Section of Surety Bonds. (e) Section of Investments. (f) Emergency Accounting Organization. 3. Bureau of the Public Debt: (a) Division of Loans and Currency. (b) Office of the Register of the Treasury. (¢) Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit. (d) Division of Paper Custody. (e) Division of Savings Bonds. 4. Office of the Treasurer of the United States. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Procurement Division. 2. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. 3. Bureau of the Mint. 4. Defense Savings Staff. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Foreign Funds Control. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Chief Clerk of the Department. 2. Director of Personnel: (a) Division of Personnel. 3. Secretary’s Correspondence Division. 4. Office of Superintendent of Treasury Buildings. 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 TREASURY Official Dutres 539 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 determines policies and methods of procurement, ware-housing, and distribution of property, supplies, etc.; the coinage and printing of money; the administration of the Industrial Alcohol, Narcotics, and Secret Services; and furnishes generally such information as may be required by either branch of Congress on matters pertaining to the foregoing. He is a member of the board of trustees, Postal Savings System; member of the Smithsonian Insti-tution; member, Foreign Service Buildings Commission; member, National Archives Council; chairman, board of trustees, Endowment Fund, American Red Cross; member, National Park Trust Fund Board; chairman, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board; member, board of trustees of the National Gallery of Art; member, Foreign-Trade Zones Board; and member, National Munitions Control Board; managing trustee, Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund. 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 Fiscal Assistant Secretary acts as Secretary. In the absence of the Secretary, the Under Secretary, and the Fiscal Assistant Secretary, the senior Assistant Secre-tary present acts as Secretary, and in the absence of all of these officers, the general counsel for the Treasury acts as Secretary. THE UNDER SECRETARY To the Under Secretary is assigned the supervision of the Bureau of the Comp-troller of the Currency, the Division of Research and Statistics and the Division of Monetary Research. The Under Secretary, in the event of a vacancy in the Office of the Fiscal Assistant Secretary, acts as Fiscal Assistant Secretary and performs all duties and functions assigned to that office. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service is assigned the general supervision of those respective activities. To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Internal Revenue is assigned the supervision of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, the Division of Tax Research, and the office of the Legislative Counsel, in charge of revenue matters. To the Fiscal Assistant Secretary are assigned matters relating to the finances, and the supervision of the Fiscal Service established in the Treasury effective June 30, 1940, pursuant to Reorganization Plan No. III, and composed of the Bureau of Accounts, Bureau of the Public Debt, Office of the Treasurer of the United States, and the various divisions subject to their jurisdiction. He main-tains contacts with the departments, boards, corporations, and other branches of the Government with respect to their financial operations and the coordination of such operations with those of the Treasury, and represents the Secretary in such contacts in a liaison capacity, keeping the Secretary fully informed at all times. He also has supervision of the preparation of periodical estimates of the future cash position of the Treasury for use of the Department in connection with its financing and the preparation of calls for the withdrawal of funds in special depositaries to meet current expenditures; directs the transfer of governmental funds between the Federal Reserve banks when necessary; and directs fiscal agency functions in general, including deposits of gold certificates in the gold certificate fund for credit with the Federal Reserve banks. 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 ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY To the assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Procurement, Engraving and Printing, Mint, and Defense Savings Staff is assigned the general supervision of the Procurement Division, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the Bureau of the Mint, and the Defense Savings Staff. To the assistant to the Secretary in charge of the Foreign Funds Control is assigned the administration of the Executive orders with respect to foreign funds. 540 Congressional Directory TREASURY THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY To the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary is assigned all matters of administration, including personnel and Budget matters, and the supervision of the Office of the Chief Clerk, the Office of the Director of Personnel, and the Division of Personnel, the Secretary’s Correspondence Division, and the Office of Superintendent of Treasury Buildings. THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, OFFICE UNDER THE IMMEDIATE SUPERVISION OF OFFICE 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. THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF BUREAU 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. 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 Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and sits regularly with the Board. 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. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS The Division of Research and Statistics in the Office of the Secretary serves as a research staff for the Secretary and other Treasury officials on matters relating to fiscal operations and policies, the estimated volume of future revenues, actuarial considerations involved in certain Treasury functions, and various general eco-nomic problems arising in connection with Treasury activities. DIVISION OF MONETARY RESEARCH The Division of Monetary Research in the Office of the Secretary was estab-lished on March 25, 1938. The Division provides information, economic anal-yses, and recommendations for the use of the Secretary of the Treasury and other Treasury officials to assist in the formulation and execution of the monetary policies of the Department in connection with the stabilization fund and other operations under the Gold Reserve and the Silver Purchase Acts. Analysés are made pertaining to gold and silver; the flow of capital funds into and out of the United States; the position of the dollar in relation to foreign currencies; mone-tary, banking, and fiscal policies of foreign countries; exchange and trade restric-tions abroad; foreign funds control; economic defense; and similar problems. Analyses are also prepared relating to the customs activities of the Department and to the duties of the Secretary of the Treasury under the Tariff Act and on other matters pertaining to international trade, including the trade-agreement program. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF CUSTOMS, NARCOTICS, AND SECRET SERVICE, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF CUSTOMS SERVICE During Colonial days each Colony and under the Articles of Confederation each State administered its own customs service and fixed the rates of duty. The Federal Customs Service was created under the Constitution by the fifth TREASURY Official Duties 941 act of the First Congress, approved July 31, 1789. The act of August 24, 1912, authorized the President to reorganize the Customs Service, abolish ports, and abolish or consolidate districts, and under this authority the present form of field organization was effected by the President’s message to Congress of March 3, 1913. The act of August 1, 1914, authorizes the President to rearrange the several customs collection districts, abolish ports of entry, and establish new ports as may appear necessary from time to time, with a limitation that neither the total number of districts nor the total number of ports shall exceed the num- ber which existed on the date of the passage of that act. The reorganization act, approved March 3, 1927, authorized the creation of a Bureau of Customs under a Commissioner of Customs. Under the authority of that act, the Secretary of the Treasury has conferred upon the Commissioner of Customs, subject to the general supervision and direction of the Secretary, the powers and duties relating to the importation and entry of merchandise into or the exportation of merchandise from the United States vested in or imposed upon the Secretary of the Treasury by the Tariff Act of 1930 or any other law, with the exception that certain classes of regulations and decisions shall be ap-proved by the Secretary. Under this delegation of authority from the Secretary of the Treasury, the Commissioner of Customs has general authority for the -administration of the Customs Service and the conduct of customs business, prescribing customs practice and procedure, and the supervision of the assess-ment and collection of customs duties, certain taxes, and miscellaneous receipts. The office of the Commissioner of Customs directs and controls the functioning of the Customs Service throughout (1) the 46 customs collection districts, into which the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico have been divided, with a collector of customs in charge of each; (2) the 7 comptroller districts to which the 46 customs collection districts have been allocated, with a comptroller of customs in charge of each; (3) the 15 customs agency districts—10 in the United States and 5 in foreign countries; and (4) the 3 border patrol dis-tricts established on the Canadian and Mexican borders. The principal functions of the Customs Service are to enter and clear vessels; supervise the discharge of cargo; ascertain the quantities of imported merchandise, appraise and classify such merchandise, and assess and collect the duties thereon; control the customs warehousing of imported merchandise; enforce customs and other laws by patrolling the international borders and inspecting international traffic by vessel, highway, railway, and air; review protests against the payment of duties; determine and certify for payment the amount of draw-back due upon the exportation of articles manufactured or produced from duty-paid or tax-paid imports; prevent the smuggling of contraband merchandise and the release of prohibited articles; prevent and detect undervaluations and frauds on the cus-toms revenue; apprehend violators of the customs laws; enforce the antidumping act, the neutrality laws, and perform certain duties under the Foreign Trade Zones Act. : Customs officers carefully examine shipping documents covering merchandise intended for exportation, as well as the merchandise itself, to insure compliance with the act of July 2, 1940, relating to the control of certain exports; Executive Order No. 8389, as amended, relating to the control of certain transactions in foreign exchange and foreign-owned property; and to insure compliance with all neutrality laws of the United States. Customs officers act as field officers of the Department of Commerce in the enforcement of the navigation and shipping laws, and in this capacity admeasure and document vessels of the United States; collect navigation fines and fees, and tonnage taxes; exclude from the coastwise trade all foreign vessels and vessels registered under the Panama Canal Act; aid in the enforcement of steamboat inspection and navigation laws, the laws relating to the carriage of immigrant passengers, and the laws pertaining to the safety of vessels at sea; issue seamen’s certificates of citizenship; and compile statistics of commerce and navigation. The Customs Service also cooperates with other services in the Treasury Depart-ment and other executive departments and branches of the Government in the collection of taxes, fees and other charges, and in the enforcement of preventive, sanitary, and other laws under their respective administrations relating princi-pally to persons and articles coming into this country and in some cases to -articles sent out of the country. 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 Har-64674°—T7—2—1st ed 36 542 Congressional Directory. TREASURY rison Narcotic Act, the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, and related statutes, includ-ing 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 (including the Federal marihuana law), 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 manu-factured therefrom under the law and regulations. An annual report is made to Congress which also serves the purpose of the special report heretofore pre-pared in the Bureau on behalf of the Government for transmittal through the State Department to the nations signatory to the International Drug Conventions of 1912 and 1931. SECRET SERVICE DIVISION This division, under the Chief of Secret Service, is charged with the protection of the President of the United States, his family, and the President-elect at all times and under all conditions. The White House police force is also under the control and supervision of the Chief of the Secret Service. A major function of the Secret Service is the detection, arrest, and delivery to the marshal having jurisdiction of persons engaged in counterfeiting, forging, or altering of any of the obligations or other securities, as well as the coins, of the United States or of foreign governments. A staff of trained investigators is maintained for the purposes described above and to investigate violations of the Federal Farm Loan Act, Federal Farm Credit Act of 1935, War Finance Corporation Act, section 704 of the World War Adjusted Compensation Act, Gold Reserve Act of 1934, offenses against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation named in section 12-B of the Banking Act of 1935 and covered by paragraphs (s) to (x), inclusive (sec. 264, title 12, U. 8. C.), counterfeiting of Government transportation requests (act of December 11, 1926), and of liquor revenue stamps in violation of the Liquor Taxing Act of 1934, forgery of Government checks, thefts of Government property, investigations to establish responsibility of bidders on Government contracts, losses of insured shipments of Government securities, and certain investigations in connection with the Work Projects Administration. In addition, other crimes against the laws of the United States relating to the Treasury Department and the several branches of the public service under its control are investigated by the Secret Service, as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct. A uniformed force safeguards the paper currency and other Government securities and obligations during the process of manufacture at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, its transportation to other Government departments in Washington, and in the vaults of the money-handling divisions of the Treasury Department. The force also assists in the enforcement of the rules and regulations of the Department, and has police powers of arrest within the Treasury Buildings and on Government property. An agent of the Secret Service is detailed to supervise this uniformed force. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF INTERNAL REVENUE, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has general supervision of the assess- -ment and collection of all internal-revenue taxes and other miscellaneous taxing acts of Congress; the enforcement of internal-revenue laws; and the preparation and distribution of instructions, regulations, forms, blanks, stamps, etc. An annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury covering the activities of this service is made by the Commissioner. For the purpose of efficient and effective administration of the internal-revenue laws the duties of the Bureau are assigned to various units as follows: Commis-sioner 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 TREASURY Official Duties 543 Office of the Special Deputy Commissioner, the Technical Staff, the Intelligence Unit, Personnel Division, Administrative Division, Training Division, and Public Relations Division. The Income Tax Unit is the agency of the Bureau of Internal Revenue for administering the Federal income and profits tax provisions of the revenue laws. Its duties are to prepare regulations for the administration of such provisions; to receive, audit, and verify the returns covering such taxes; to review and dispose of claims for refund, and to compile statistics from these returns. This unit also Siministers section 501 (title III) of the Revenue Act of 1936, Unjust Enrichment ax. The Miscellaneous Tax Unit is charged with the administration of all internal-revenue tax laws except income and profits taxes, employment 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 admin-istration of taxes imposed under the Silver Purchase Act of June 19, 1934, the Bituminous Coal Act of 1937, approved April 26, 1937, the Sugar Act of 1937, approved September 1, 1937, the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, approved August 2, 1937; the National Firearms Act, approved June 26, 1934, the Federal Firearms Act, approved June 30, 1938, and the tax imposed on hydraulic mining under the act of March 1, 1893, as amended June 19, 1934. 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 administration of the laws relating to employment taxes; and 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 laws relating to the manufacture, warehousing and distribution of spirituous liquors, wines, fermented liquors, and industrial alcohol; the determination, assertion, and assessment of taxes and penalties on liquors; the inquiry and investigation relative to the filing of returns for occupational and commodity taxes; the regulation of the manufacture and use of liquor bottles and the chemical analysis of liquors and numerous other products to determine their taxable status. It administers the provisions of the Federal Alcohol Administration Act relating to the regulation of interstate and foreign commerce in distilled spirits, wines, and malt beverages, and the labeling and advertising thereof. It is also charged with theinvestiga-tion, detection and prevention of willful and fraudulent violations of internal-revenue laws relating to liquors. - There are four main divisions of the Field Service, as follows: The Collection Service, the Field Audit Service, the Supervisory Field Service of Alcohol Tax Unit, and Field Divisions of the Technical Staff. < In addition to the four aforementioned major field activities, there are the following field forces whose activities are supervised from Washington: Intelli-gence Agents, Supervisors of Accounts and Collections, Miscellaneous and Sales Tax Agents, and Field Inspection Service. DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH The Division of Tax Research analyzes taxes and tax systems and prepares studies on the economic aspects of tax matters for the use of the Secretary, the Under Secretary, and other Treasury officials and, upon request, for the Congres-sional Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. The Division is respon-sible for the assembly and publication of all statistical information pertaining to Federal taxation and in this connection exercises general supervision over the work of the Statistical Section of the Income Tax Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL, IN CHARGE OF REVENUE MATTERS The Office of the Legislative Counsel, in charge of revenue matters, assists the Secretary, the Under Secretary, and the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Internal Revenue in planning and coordinating the Treasury Department’s legislative program respecting the internal revenue, and in representing the Department on such matters before the appropriate congressional committees. The Office assists in the consideration of the legal aspects of Treasury regulations and rulings dealing with the interpretation of internal-revenue laws. 544 Congressional Directory TREASURY THE FISCAL ASSISTANT SECRETARY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF FISCAL SERVICE BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS (Formerly Office of Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits) Government Reorganization Plan No. III, submitted to the Congress by the President on April 2, 1940, and made effective on June 30, 1940, by Public Reso- lution No. 75, Seventy-sixth Congress, approved June 4, 1940, provided for the establishment, as part of the Fiscal Service of the Treasury Department, of a Bureau of Accounts with a Commissioner of Accounts at its head. It transferred to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary, to be exercised under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury and through the Commissioner of Accounts, all functions vested in the Under Secretary and any Assistant Secretary of the Treasury pertaining to supervision of the administration of the accounting functions and activities in the Treasury Department and all its bureaus, divisions, and offices, and all functions vested in any other officer or employee of the Treasury Department of authorizing the installation, maintenance, revision, and elimination of accounting records, reports, and procedure. Under Executive Order No. 8512, dated August 13, 1940, the Treasury Depart- ment is required to prepare financial reports with respect to the financial condition and operations of the Government for the information and use of the President and the Bureau of the Budget; to establish and maintain a complete system of central accounts for the entire Government; and to establish, subject to the approval of the Director, Bureau of the Budget, uniform terminology, classifica- tions, and standards in connection with such financial reports for the use and: guidance of all departments and establishments. Regulation No. 1, effective July 1, 1941, relates to apportionments and reports on status of appropriations. The Bureau of Accounts consists of the office of the Commissioner of Accounts, the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants, the Division of Disbursement, the Division of Deposits, the Section of Surety Bonds, the Section of Investments, the Budget Section, and the Emergency Relief Accounting Organization. The Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants was created by the act of July 31, 1894 (28 Stat. 208; U. 8S. Code, title 5, sec. 255). Prior to that time it was known as the Division of Warrants, Estimates and Appropriations. Section 1, para- graph (3) of the Third Plan on Government Reorganization provides that “the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants and its functions are transferred to the Bureau of Accounts.” The act of 1894 provides that upon the books of this Division shall be kept all accounts of receipts and expenditures of public money, except postal. The same act requires the Secretary of the Treasury to lay annually before Congress a combined statement of the receipts and expenditures of the Government, classify- ing the receipts, wherever practicable, by ports, districts, and States, and the expenditures under each separate head of appropriation. The Division, in the name of the Secretary of the Treasury, issues all warrants ‘on the Treasurer of the United States; makes analyses of acts of Congress carry- ing appropriations and maintains the necessary appropriation accounts on its ledgers; issues warrants for placing disbursing funds to the credit of disbursing officers, for the payment by the Treasury of claims settled by the General Account- ing Office, and for covering into the Treasury the revenues and receipts of the Government; and compiles and publishes an annual digest of the appropriations made by Congress. The Division of Disbursement was created under Executive Order No. 6166 of June 10, 1933, which provided that the function of disbursement of money of the United States exercised by any agency of the Government is transferred to the Treasury Department and consolidated in that division. The military serv- ices of the War and Navy Departments were exempted from Executive Order No. 6166 by Executive Order No. 6728 of May 29, 1934. The function of disburse- ment of moneys of the United States in the other executive departments and agencies in Washington and in the field, has been taken over and consolidated in this Division with the exception of the Postal Service and United States marshals which were exempted from Executive Order No. 6166 by Reorganization Plan No. IV, dated April 11, 1940. Twenty regional offices have been established in the several Federal Reserve districts and five offices outside the continental limits of the United States and in Alaska for the purpose of performing the disbursing functions outside Washington for the regular departments and agencies. During July and August 1941, the various State disbursing offices established to disburse emergency relief funds were consolidated with the regional offices. TREASURY Official Dutres -545 The Division of Deposits is charged with the administration of all matters pertaining to designation and supervision of Government depositaries and the deposit of Government funds in such depositaries; i. e., the Federal Reserve banks, member bank depositaries, and special depositaries under the Liberty Loan Acts, foreign depositaries, Territorial depositaries, Federal land banks, and the Philippine treasury; matters pertaining to the qualification of Federal savings and loan associations and Federal credit unions as fiscal agents of the United States under Treasury Circular 568; matters pertaining to the designation and regulation of Issuing Agents for the sale and issue of United States Defense ‘Savings Bonds, Series E; and matters pertaining to the functions of the Treasury under the Government Losses in Shipment Act. The Section of Surety Bonds is responsible for analyzing the financial state- ments of surety companies authorized to transact business with the United States. It determines the underwriting qualifications of surety companies; audits their quarterly financial statements; makes examinations into their financial condition at the home offices wherever necessary; and performs other duties to determine whether the companies observe the requirements of existing law and regulations of the Treasury. The section has custody of all fidelity bonds in favor of the United States, with a few exceptions, and notifies the accounting offices of the receipt and filing of such official bonds. The section examines and approves as to corporate surety all fidelity and surety bonds taken by Treasury officers, except customs bonds filed in the field, and also examines and approves as to cor- porate surety the fidelity and surety bonds accepted by practically all of the executive departments and establishments in Washington. The Section of Investments keeps the accounts and supervises collections of railroad obligations owned by the United States, which are in the custody of the Treasury; 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 relating to awards under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, under the Claims Agreement of October 25, 1924, between the United States and Turkey, and under the act of April 10, 1935, covering claims against the Republic of Mexico; handles matters relating to investment accounts under control of the Secretary of the Treasury, including investments held in the Government Life Insurance Fund, the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund, States Unemployment Trust Fund, Rail- road Retirement Account, and Railroad Unemployment Insurance Account, and handles matters relating to the custody of investments and securities held by the Treasurer of the United States and the Federal Reserve banks for which the Secretary of the Treasury is responsible, other than those related to public debt operations. It also maintains accounts and handles matters relating to the purchase of silver under the Silver Purchase Act of 1934. . The Budget Section, in part, constitutes the operating staff of the budget officer of the Department, coordinating departmental estimates of appropriations, justifications, and reports and performing related duties in accordance with the requirements of the budget officer, Treasury Department; performs similar duties for the Commissioner of Accounts, has administration of special deposit accounts of the Secretary of the Treasury, which cover alien property trust funds in the Treasury, offers in compromise under the provisions of section 3469 of the Revised Statutes, Philippine trust funds held in interest-bearing accounts, and accounts pertaining to withheld foreign check payments. The Emergency Relief Accounting Organization was established pursuant to Executive Order No. 7034, dated May 6, 1935, as supplemented and amended to account for funds appropriated by the several emergency relief appropriation acts, to provide financial and accounting information for the governmental agencies concerned and to make a complete report to the Congress concerning expenditures made and obligations incurred by classes and amounts. To perform this work, separate accounts offices were set up in the several States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. During the period between July and October 1941 the various States accounts offices were consolidated into twenty regional offices. The Office of the Director General of Railroads was abolished effective July 1, 1939, pursuant to section 2 (b) of the President’s Reorganization Plan No. II and its functions and duties transferred to the Secretary of the Treasury. The Fiscal Assistant Secretary, the Commissioner of Accounts, and the Assistant Commissioners of Accounts have been designated to perform on behalf of the «Secretary of the Treasury the duties and functions of the former Director General of Railroads. 546 Congressional Directory TREASURY BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT The Bureau of the Public Debt, 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. It also is charged with the procurement of distinctive paper required for printing currency and public debt securities of the United States. As agent, the Bureau also conducts transactions in the interest-bearing issues of the Philippine and Puerto Rican Governments, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, the Federal Housing Administration, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the Commodity Credit Corporation, the United States Housing Authority; and in the consolidated issues of the Federal farm-loan banks. The Bureau organization consists of the Office of the Commissioner, the Division of Loans and Currency, the Office of the Register of the Treasury, the Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit, the Division of Savings Bonds, and the Division of Paper Custody. Office of the Commissioner.— a new issue of public debt securities is to When be offered for subscription, the Office of the Commissioner prepares the necessary documents incident to the offering, directs the handling of subscriptions for and allotments of the securities to be issued. General supervision is exercised over the conduct of transactions in such securities after issue, either by the divisions of the Bureau.in Washington, or by Federal Reserve banks, fiscal agents of the ~ United States. Division of Loans and Currency.— This division is the issuing branch. It is charged with the receipt and custody of new securities, and their issuance, directly or to the Federal Reserve banks; with the conduct of transactions in the outstand-ing debt including exchanges, transfers, conversions, maintenance of registered accounts, and the issuing of checks for interest thereon; and with the verification of canceled redeemed United States paper currency, and mutilated work from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. : Office of the Register of the Treasury.— This office is the retiring branch. It is charged with the receipt of all paid or redeemed or exchanged public-debt securities, including interest coupons, canceled and retired on any account, and from any sources whatever, their audit, verification, and custody. Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit.—This division maintains adminis-trative control accounts over all transactions with which the Bureau of the Public Debt 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, currency, stamps, ete. It also makes administrative examinations and audits of transactions so conducted and the securities involved. It maintains control accounts 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. Division of Paper Custody.— This division is charged with the receipt, count, custody, and issue of all distinctive paper used for production of securities and currency by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. In connection with the manufacture of distinctive paper, a small field force is maintained at the mills of the contractors. Division of Savings Bonds.— This division is charged with the maintenance of the mailing lists for savings bond publicity literature, and with periodic mailings. The Division compiles statistics, and conducts the regular purchase plan program. The division carries on a large correspondence with the investing public in connec-tion with the sale, registration, and safekeeping of savings bonds. 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 SSS TREASURY Official Duties 547 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 certificate 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 on obligations the principal and interest of which are fully guaranteed by the United States, for payment of principal and interest on bonds of the Puerto Rican and Philippe 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 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 six divisions: Accounting Division, Cash Division, Currency Redemption Division, Division of Chief Clerk, Division of General Accounts, and Division of Securities. | THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF PROCUREMENT, ENGRAVING AND It PRINTING, MINT, AND DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF | PROCUREMENT DIVISION The Procurement Division was created in the Treasury Department by Execu- | tive Order No. 6166, dated June 10, 1933, pursuant to the act of March 3, 1933 (47 Stat. 1517). In establishing the Procurement Division under this authority, it was organized into two major activities, the Branch of Public Buildings and the Branch of Supply. Under the President’s Reorganization Plan No. I, effective | July 1, 1939, the Branch of Public Buildings of the Procurement Division became a part of the Federal Works Agency. The Branch of Supply was continued as the Procurement Division. I The Procurement Division is responsible for the determination of policies and | methods of procurement, warehousing, and distribution of property, facilities, improvements, machinery, equipment, stores, and supplies for all Federal estab- lishments; and, with the exception of the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps, is directed to undertake the performance of procurement of all materials, supplies, | and equipment for use either at the seat of the government or in the field for all existing Government agencies and such agencies hereafter created. The Proeurement Division— (a) Contracts for supplies, materials, and services for the benefit of all govern- mental agencies; also, makes purchases in definite quantities of supplies and materials for certain departments and independent establishments, and procures, pursuant to the act of June 7, 1939, Public, 117, stocks of materials for stockpile purposes for use in case of a national emergency or in time of war; and super- vises the transportation, maintenance, rotation, and storage of materials so acquired. The Procurement Division performs special purchase services. For example, at the present time it is purchasing agricultural, industrial, and other commodities for nations subject to the Lend-Lease Act; clothing, medical supplies, ete., for the American Red Cross for refugee relief abroad; and fixtures and house- hold equipment for national defense housing. (b) Receives, warehouses, and issues supplies maintained as stock items in the Procurement Division warehouse; also, procures stores and distributes fuel (coal, charcoal, fuel oil, wood, ete.) to all Federal and District Government build- ings and establishments (except the Washington Navy Yard) in and adjacent to the District of Columbia. (¢c) Prepares Federal and Procurement Division specifications for commodities used by the Federal Government and issues amendments and revisions thereto as necessary. (d) Prepares and maintains the Federal Standard Stock Catalog. (e) Coordinates and supervises the disposition of surplus property in Washing- ton and in the field and the disposition of property seized and forfeited under the Federal Alcohol Act and the Liquor Law Repeal and Enforcement Act of 1935 and firearms seized and forfeited under the National Firearms Act. (f) Repairs, services, and garages automotive equipment of the Treasury Department located in the District of Columbia and, upon request, performs similar service for other establishments. (9) Repairs and services typewriting machines of the various Government departments and the independent establishments in the District of Columbia including such work for the Government of the District of Columbia. Congressional Directory TREASURY BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING This Bureau designs, engraves, and prints for the Government, United States currency, bonds, notes, bills, and certificates; Federal Reserve notes; Federalfarm loan, joint-stock land bank, consolidated Federal farm loan and Federalfarm mortgage bonds; Home Owners’ Loan Corporation bonds; revenue, customs, and postage stamps; Government, including Emergency Relief Administration, checks; and many other classes of engraved work for governmental use. It per-forms a similar function for the insular possessions of the Government. BUREAU OF THE MINT The Director of the Mint has general supervision of the mints, assay offices, and bullion depositories of the United States; prescribes the rules, subject to approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, for the business transactions of the mints and assay offices, receives daily reports on the operations of the field institutions, directs the coinage to be executed, reviews the accounts, authorizes expenditures, superintends the annual settlements of the several institutions, and makes special examinations of them when deemed necessary. Appointments, removals, and transfers in the mints, assay offices, and bullion depositories are subject to approval of the Director of the Mint. 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 purposes; makes an annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury, covering 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. The Director is responsible for all gold and silver assets of the Government which are in custody of the mint. DEFENSE SAVINGS STAFF This Staff is charged with the promotional and sales activities relating to United States savings bonds, savings stamps, and other Government securities upon which publicity efforts may be centered. THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL, OFFICE UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL The Foreign Funds Control was established in April 1940. Pursuant to section 5 (b) of the act of October 6, 1917 (40 Stat. 411), as amended, Executive Order No. 8389 was issued by the President on April 10, 1940. This order, as amended, prohibits, except as specifically authorized by rulings, instructions, licenses, or otherwise, certain transactions involving property in which a foreign country designated therein or any national thereof has, on or since the effective date of the order, had any interest. The freezing control brings all financial and trade transactions in which certain foreign interests are involved under the control of the Government and imposes heavy penalties upon persons failing to comply therewith. The control is de-signed, among other things, to prevent the use of the financial facilities of the United States in ways harmful to national defense and other American interests, to prevent the liquidation in the United States of assets looted by duress or conquest, and to curb subversive activities in the United States. Since April 10, 1940, the control has been extended to the property of Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Rumania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Greece, Albania, Andorra, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Danzig, Finland, Germany, Italy, Liechtenstein, Poland, Portugal, San Marino, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, China, and Japan. Simultaneously with the issuance of Executive Order No. 8785 on June 14, 1941, amending Executive Order No. 8389, as amended, the President approved regu­ RRR BRRRRSNBBESSNSBDSSSSSBSBSSj,jjh»}y}}Cnmm—m——m—_——,—,,,., TREASURY Official Duties 549 lations ordering. a census of all foreign-owned property in the United States. This census relates not only to property in the United States belonging to coun-tries and nationals subject to ‘freezing’ control, but also to all other foreign countries as well. Reports of this property are filed on Form TFR-300, as provided in the regulations. In addition, the regulations set up a procedure for the filing of applications for licenses to engage in transactions covered by the order. These applications are filed with the Treasury Department through various Federal Reserve banks and the Governors and high commissioners of the Territories and possessions of the United States. THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK The Chief Clerk enforces the general regulations of the Department and has administrative jurisdiction of the contingent appropriation and other miscellane-| ous appropriations and expenditures therefrom, including the purchase and issue | of miscellaneous supplies and equipment. He has supervision of the several service units including the telephone section, the telegraph section, the duplicating section, and the motor messengers and chauffeurs. He handles for the Department cases arising under the Federal Compensation Act, and is contact officer for the translation of foreign mail, both departmental and interdepartmental. He has custody of the completed records and files of the Secretary’s office and the Treasury seal, and handles requests for certified copies of official papers, making the certification thereof. He has supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of mail; the care of vehicles under the office of the Secretary; the receipt and distribution of all documents; and is responsible for the accounting, auditing, and maintenance of records pertaining to ordnance lent Treasury officials, both in the District of Columbia and in the field, by the War Department. i The Chief Clerk also has charge of the unassigned business of the Secretary’s office. | ® PERSONNEL DIVISION | The Personnel Division has supervision of personnel operations affecting the whole Department, which include personnel actions, employee relations, position classification, service ratings, and a placement service. It acts as the Depart-| ment’s liaison office with the Civil Service Commission, the Council of Personnel | Administration, and other Government offices where personnel matters are concerned. I CORRESPONDENCE DIVISION | This Division maintains control of all secretarial mail, including contacts with all branches of the Deparument in connection with official correspondence, both incoming and outgoing, maintains a complete card record of incoming Secretarial | mail, prepares certain 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. | OFFICE OF SUPERINTENDENT OF TREASURY BUILDINGS The Superintendent of Treasury Buildings is charged with direct responsibility for the maintenance and operation of all Treasury buildings in the District of | Columbia except the buildings of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. COMMITTEE ON PRACTICE The Committee,on Practice receives applications for admission to practice before ‘the Treasury Department and for licenses authorizing the holders to act as f customhouse brokers. The committee passes upon such applications, enrolls | applicants to practice before the Department, and issues licenses to applicants who show that they are qualified to act as customhouse brokers. The com-mittee conducts hearings in disbarment proceedings, on complaints filed by the attorney for the Government as the representative of the Department before l the committee, and makes recommendations to the Secretary. Collectors of customs may initiate proceedings for the suspension or revocation of licenses | issued to customhouse brokers. The records of such proceedings are referred to the committee for review and recommendation to the Secretary. | 550 Congressional Directory WAR PROCESSING TAX BOARD OF REVIEW The Board of Review is a quasi-judicial body in the Treasury Department (independent of other bureaus and divisions in the Department) established pursuant to the provisions of section 906 of the Revenue Act of 1936. The Board has jurisdiction in proceedings under such section to review the allowance or disallowance of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of claims for refund of any amount paid or collected as processing tax under the Agricultural Adjustment Act. The Secretary of the Treasury appoints the members of the Board and assigns to it such personnel as may be necessary to perform its functions. 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 examinations, surveys, and economic studies of harbors and streams for the formulation 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 monu-ments 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 Niagara Control Board. He is responsible for the defense, maintenance, care, and operation of the Panama Canal. This responsibility requires that he not only provide for the transit of ships from one ocean to the other but also for their repair, fueling, supplies, and foodstuffs, and the care and hospitalization of ships’ personnel and passengers. The organization under his charge has supervision over public health, quarantine, and immigration service, customs, post offices, police and fire protection, hydrographic and meteorological observations, steamboat inspec-tion, aids to navigation, construction and maintenance of roads, streets, water supply, and sewers. . 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 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. RR RRRRRRRRRRRBRBBSSiinBiiimmmZDGESSSSSS: WAR Officral Duties 551 THE UNDER SECRETARY OF WAR The Under 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 wartime 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. The purchase and contract branch of his office deals with all matters relating to supervision of procurement of supplies in time of peace; the planning branch is responsible for plans for wartime procurement of supplies and for industrial mobilization planning; the production branch supervises accomplishment of procurement programs; the statistics branch collects, analyzes, compiles and dis-tributes essential primary data covering priority control and coordination of procurement programs; the administrative branch coordinates the administrative functions of all branches of the office; other matters are acted upon by members of his executive staff. He supervises the Army Industrial College. | He is the Army member of the Army and Navy Munitions Board, the Navy [| member of that Board being the Under Secretary of the Navy. | ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Assists the Secretary of War in directing the administration of the Department | and Panama Canal. I Is chief executive officer of the Department and has administrative direction | of the divisions of the Office of the Secretary of War. I 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. I 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 Nationin 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 552 Congressional Directory WAR ajpenad 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. (83) When such policies or regulations affect all three components the com-mittees consist 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: Per-sonnel Division (First Division) ; Military Intelligence Division (Second Division); Operations and Training Division (Third Division); Supply Division (Fourth Division); War Plans Division. For the first four divisions, the abbreviations G-1, G2, G-3, G4, 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 abbre-viation 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 manpower; 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 train-ing of the Army of the United States, the National Guard, and Organized Re-serves; location of units of the Regular Army and Organized Reserves; all drill and service regulations, field service regulations, and General Staff manuals; Se WAR Official Dutres 553 special-service schools and general-service schools, including the Army War Col- lege 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 De- partment General Staff which relate to the supply of the Army and with the preparation of basic supply plans. It is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of activities concerning distribution, storage, and issue of supplies; transportation by land and water, including ports of embarkation and their necessary auxiliaries; traffic control; tables of equip- ment, the quantities and types of military supplies required for the use of the Army and essential to the military program; inventions; leasing of War Depart- ment facilities and issuing of revocable licenses; hospitalization and evacuation of men and animals, including such agencies or parts of agencies as may be wholly devoted to hospital and medical relief work; distribution and movement of sup- ply, technical, and labor troops not employed as combat units; property responsi- bility and accountability; the determination and statement of plans and policies governing the preparation of estimates for funds for military purposes and prior- ities pertaining thereto, and, when necessary, with the restatement of such pri- orities, 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 necessitat- ing the use of troops in the national defense; the initial strategical deployment; actual operations in the theater of war; consultation with G-8 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 fur- nish the nucleus of the General Staff personnel for each of the General Staff divi- sions 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, including units of his arm of the Reserve | Officers’ Training Corps, as he may consider advisable. He confers with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, training and instruction, equipment, and general administration | and efficiency of the personnel and the 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 serviee 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 i 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. | 554 Congressional Directory WAR OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FIELD ARTILLERY The Chief of Field Artillery is under the supervision of the Chief of Staff in all matters relating to his arm. He furnishes the Chief of Staff information and advice on all questions affecting his particular arm. He exercises direct super-vision and control of the special service schools and the special boards of his arm. He formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of his arm in accordance with the War Department doctrine which requires that the Army be trained for offensive combat. He prepares the necessary publications relating to the em-ployment, instruction, and training of his arm, and to the care and use of matériel and equipment which, after being submitted to The Adjutant General and approved by the Secretary of War, are distributed by The Adjutant General to the service for its information and guidance. He cooperates with the chiefs of supply services in developing the armament and equipment of his arm. He submits to The Adjutant General such recommendations as to armament and equipment as are necessary; recommendations as to the organizations of units of his arm; recommendations as to the training and instruction of units of his arm, including such units of his arm of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, as he may consider advisable. He confers with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, training and instrue-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, 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 informa-tion 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, Submarine Mine Depot, and the Barrage Balloon Training Center. He exercises direct supervision and control over training at the Coast Artillery Replacement Training Centers. He formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of Coast Artillery in accordance with the War Department doctrine. He prepares the necessary manuals, training literature, 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 organiza-tion and assignment of units of Coast Artillery, including those of the National Guard and Organized Reserves. He confers with the proper agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, mobilization, train-ing, equipment, instruction, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and organization of the Coast Artillery, including similar units of the National Guard, Organized Reserves, and Coast Artillery units of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. He advises and cooperates with The Adjutant General, the Assistant Chief of Staff, G—1 Section, General Staff, on the appointment, assignment, transfer, and detail of officers of the Coast Artillery Corps and warrant officers, Army Mine Planter Service; and classifies officers of the Coast Artillery Corps according to efficiency pursuant to methods prescribed by the Secretary of War. He consolidates estimates for seacoast defense funds prepared in co-operation with the services, is primarily responsible for their oral presentation; and makes recommendations as to the expenditure of such funds. He is respon-sible for preparation and defense of estimates pertaining to the appropriation “Instruction in Coast Artillery activities.” He is responsible for collating and disseminating military intelligence information pertaining to the Coast Artillery. Under the 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 makes recommendations as to the character, amount and location of sea-coast armament and fire control installa-tions therefor. The Coast Artillery Corps is charged with manning the artillery i : Official Duties = 555 primarily designed for fire upon naval targets, the controlled submarine mine systems, the underwater listening posts in harbor defense, the antiaircraft artillery, and barrage balloons. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF INFANTRY 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 coordinationand 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 alsoinclude 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. Hepromulgates such office circulars of professional nature as may be helpful tochaplains 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 competentadvice to the Chief of Staff in matters of religious and moral nature in the Army. MILITARY BUREAUS OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL THE INSPECTOR GENERAL’S DEPARTMENT The Inspector General’s Department, besides the Inspector General, who holds the rank of major general, is composed of officers detailed from the various arms and services, who are designated as inspectors general, and is an instrumentality placed at the disposal of the Secretary of War to assist him in the administration of the War Department and the Army of the United States. The mission of the Inspector General’s Department is to inquire into and report upon all matters which affect the efficiency and economy of the Army of the United States and to make such inspections, investigations and reports as may be prescribed by law or WAR Official Duties 557 directed by the Secretary of War. The department assists commanders and other members and employees of the Military Establishment in the performance of their duties by supplying information when appropriate, recognizing and reporting meritorious econduet and performance of duty, and by suggesting ways and means to improve conditions. The sphere of inquiry of the department includes every branch of military affairs, except where specifically limited in Army Regulations or in orders. More specifically, the Inspector General, with his assistants, is charged with the inspec-tion of headquarters of higher echelons of the field forces, and of corps areas and departments; the reception, replacement, training and maneuver centers; the United States Military Academy; the service schools; garrisoned posts and com-mands; general hospitals; armories and arsenals; ports of embarkation, United States Army transports, harbor boats, mine planters and cable ships; general, area and service depots; proving grounds and experimental stations; recruit depots; recruiting stations; remount purchasing and breeding headquarters; the dis-ciplinary barracks and military prisoners in the United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kans.; ungarrisoned posts; national cemeteries under War Depart-ment jurisdiction; unserviceable property; money accounts of all disbursing officers of the Army and property and disbursing officers of the National Guard; the Soldiers’ Home, District of Columbia; the National Guard, as required by the act of June 3, 1916. In general, his Department conducts inspections of all com-mands and other activities of the Army, and makes such annual and special inspections and such special investigations as may be ordered, with the objects of promoting efficiency and economy, to observe and report upon the state of morale and discipline, condition and preparedness of commands, and other activities to fulfill their respective missions, to determine whether or not law and regulations are being complied with, and to report upon the general, economic and adminis-trative efficiency of Army activities. Because of the specialized nature of inspections relating to procurement activi-ties and construction operation on a cost-plus-a-fixed-fee basis throughout the Army, the bulk of this class of inspections is also allocated to the Office of the Inspector General. The department is not charged with plans for, or decisions regarding, projects involving acquirement of supplies and expenditures of funds, and its function of inspection is not operative prior to the initiation of such projects, nor is the department charged with inspection of commodities or products delivered to the War Department under contract. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL The Judge Advocate General is the official legal adviser of the Secretary of War, the Chief of Staff, the War Department and its bureaus, and the entire Military Establishment. He advises concerning the legal correctness of military administration, including disciplinary action, matters affecting the rights and mutual relationship of the personnel of the Army, and the financial, contractual, and other business affairs of the War Department and the Army. The funec-tions of the Judge Advocate General’s Department include not only those of the Judge Advocate General and of his office in Washington but also those of judge advocates serving as staff officers at the headquarters of Army, corps-area, department, corps, division, and separate brigade commanders, and at the headquarters of other officers exercising general court-martial jurisdiction. OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL The Quartermaster General, under the authority of the Secretary of War, shall be charged with the purchase and procurement for the Army of all supplies of standard manufacture and of all supplies common to two or more branches but not with the purchase or the procurement of special or technical articles to be used or issued exclusively by other supply departments; with the direction of all work pertaining to the construction, maintenance, and repair of buildings, structures, and utilities other than fortifications connected with the Army; with the storage and issue of supplies; with the operation of utilities; with the acquisition of all real estate and the issue of licenses in connection with Gov-ernment reservations; with the transportation of the Army by land and water, including the transportation of troops and supplies by mechanical or animal means; with the furnishing of means of transportation of all classes and kinds required by the Army; and with such other duties not otherwise assigned by law as the Secretary of War may prescribe: Provided, That special and technical 64674°—177-2—1st ed——-37 558 Congressional Directory WAR 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 becharged with the storage and issue of property pertaining thereto: Providedfurther, That utilities pertaining exclusively to any branch of the Army may be ind by such branches (sec. 9, act June 3, 1916, as amended by act June4, 1920). Executive Officer.—Is charged with all matters ordinarily assigned to an execu- tive officer, and in addition is charged with those matters which pertain exclusively to office management. Executive, Civilian Personnel Affairs.—Is charged with the formulation and administration of all matters of policy relating to the appointment, assignment, classification, efficiency, promotion, training, and separation of all civilian em-ployees of the Quartermaster Corps. General Service Division.—Handles all administrative matters of general nature not assigned elsewhere; supervises inspections of Quartermaster plants and indus-trial plants manufacturing Quartermaster items; performs normal military in-telligence functions for the Quartermaster Corps; disseminates information con-cerning the Quartermaster Corps and supervises public relations activities ofQuartermaster installations; controls preparation of War Department circulars,bulletins and Army Regulations insofar as the Quartermaster Corps is concerned, and all publications of the Office of the Quartermaster General except office orders.Planning and Control Division.—Is charged with all matters pertaining to warplans, procurement planning and requirements; controls and expedites procure-ments, assembles and compiles general statistical data, administrative review ofSom and claims; furnishes legal counsel for the Office of the Quartermaster eneral. Military Personnel and Training Division.—Is charged with all matters pertain-ing to military personnel including procurement, allotment, assignment and training of Quartermaster Corps personnel. Civilian Personnel Division.—Handles all matters pertaining to civilian per-sonnel of the field including procurement, assignment, transfer, promotion, separ-ation, and classification of Quartermaster Corps civilian personnel. Fiscal Division.—Supervises and coordinates the estimates of the Office of theQuartermaster General; maintains appropriation accounts; coordinates all matters relating to new legislation. Supply Division.—Is charged with all duties pertaining to the procurement, storage, and distribution of supplies. Motor Transport Division.—Is responsible for planning, developing, design, procurement, maintenance, storage, and issue of wheeled motor vehicles of the Army used for transportation of personnel and cargo. : Construction Diviston.—Is charged with the construction, maintenance, andrepair of all buildings, structures, and utilities of the Army (other than permanent fortifications). Remount Division.—Supervises and directs the purchase and issue of horses and mules; controls operation of remount depots and stations; directs and controls all animal breeding operations. Memorial Division.—Has supervision over all matters pertaining to national cemeteries, including interments; furnishes Government headstones and disposition of remains of officers, enlisted men, and civilian employees of the Army who die while on active duty. : Transportation Division.—Coordinates and directs all matters affecting the furnishing of all means of transportation for the Army by land, water, and air(except Army-owned motor and animal drawn) including the transportation of troops and supplies. Defense Aid Division.—Is responsible for the general control and supervision of defense aid activities pertaining to the Quartermaster Corps. Depot Division.—Is responsible for initiating and developing policies, methods and procedures on general depot administration; warehousing methods and construction and expansion programs for depots. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FINANCE The Chief of Finance is charged with the disbursement of all funds of theWar 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. WAR Official Duties 559 The Chief of Finance is the budget officer for the War Department and in this capacity is charged with the preparation of estimates for the War Depart-ment. The Chief of Finance is charged with duties as the fiscal agent of the Director, Civilian Conservation Corps, in carrying out the provisions of the act estab-lishing the Civilian Conservation Corps, and as the fiscal, disbursing, and account-ing agent of the Director of Selective Service in carrying out the provisions of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940. 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, which includes the Medical Corps, the Dental Corps, the Veter-inary Corps, the Medical Administrative Corps, the Sanitary Corps, and the Army Nurse Corps; 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; and the instruction and control of the enlisted force of the Medical Department. The Army Medical Museum, the Army Medical Library, and the named 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, 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, and with the tech-nical and military training of Engineer personnel. The duties of the Corps of Engineers comprise reconnoitering and surveying for military purposes, includ-ing 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; construction and repair of fortifications and their accessories, including structures for submarine mine systems; procurement, installation, and maintenance of searchlights and electric power and lighting systems; construction of fire-control structures, and the main-tenance pertaining to such latter systems which involves struetural 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 communication for sup-plies 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 for naviga-tion, flood control, power development, and other purposes, of rivers and har-bors and other waterways except as otherwise specifically provided by act of Congress. The duties include: The execution of works ordered by Congress for the improvement of rivers and harbors and other waterways for navigation, flood control, and power development; examinations and surveys for navigation, flood control, power development, beach erosion and shore protection, inter-oceanic canals, and other purposes; administration and enforcement of laws for the protection and preservation of navigable waters; the establishment of harbor lines and anchorage grounds; regulations for the use, administration, and naviga-tion of waterways and for the operation of drawbridges; the removal of wrecks and other obstructions to navigation; approval of plans for bridges 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 560 Congressional Directory WAR Washington, D. C.; the preparation of reports and studies for agencies charged with the administration of relief programs with respect to improvements on streams and waterways throughout the United States; general consulting services and construction of works for the Public Works Administration, the Work Projects Administration, the Civil Aeronautics Administration, and the Air Corps; and the construction of allocated works required to carry out the national defense program. 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 deter-mine 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 lay-out and equipment of terminal facilities; and the designing of floating plant for use in the prosecution of projects for river and harbor improvement. Its duties also include the compilation, publication, and distribution of useful statistics, data, and information concerning ports and water transportation. The Board has been carrying out the directives of section 500 of the Transportation Act, approved February 28, 1920, by making studies of the ports of the United States. These reports have been prepared and published in cooperation with the United States Maritime Commission, as directed by section 8 of the Merchant Marine Act, ap-proved June 5, 1920. This cooperative work has been suspended during the nation-al emergency, and the reports in abbreviated form are being prepared only for the use of the defense agencies. BEACH EROSION BOARD The Beach Erosion Board is a permanent body created by the River and Harbor Act of July 3, 1930. The policy of the United States and the duties of the Secre-tary of War and the Board, with respect to Beach Erosion Board matters, was further prescribed by the act of June 26, 1936. This Board is authorized through the Chief of Engineers to cause investigations and studies to be made in coopera-tion with the proper agencies of the States on the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts, and of the Territories, with a view to devising effective means of preventing erosion of the shores of coastal and lake waters by waves and currents. The Board is also charged with the duty of making investigations with a view to deter-mining the most suitable methods of beach protection and restoring of beaches in different localities and to advise the States, counties, municipalities, or individuals of the proper location for recreational facilities and to publish from time to time such useful data and information concerning the protection of beaches as the Board may deem to be of value to the people of the United States. All requests for cooperative investigations are referred to the Board for consideration and recommendation. The act of June 26, 1936, requires the Board to report on (a) the advisability of adopting the project, (b) what Federal interest, if any, is in-volved in the proposed improvement, and (¢) what share of the expense, if any, should be borne by the United States. 5 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 ammunition, 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 WAR Officral Duties 561 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, issue, and repair of signal communication and meteorological equipment and supplies; the devel- opment, procurement, storage, and issue of all electrical apparatus associated with direction finding for determining the location of radio stations, aircraft, and marine craft and of all the electrical apparatus associated with range finding; the preparation, publication, revision, storage, accounting, 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 installation, maintenance, and operation of all military signal communication systems and equipment, including military cable, telephone and telegraph lines, radio appa- ratus and stations, except the routine maintenance and operation of fixed fire- control communication systems and fixed airways and airdrome control systems and radio aids to air navigation, and the installation, maintenance, and opera- tion of temporary systems used by combat troops in field operations, as pro- vided in existing regulations over which he will exercise general supervision only; the transmission of messages for the Army by telegraph, radio, or otherwise; the direction of the Signal Corps and the control of the officers, enlisted men, and employees attached thereto; the coordination of the training of the personnel assigned to signal duties; the general supervision, coordination, and standardiza-tion of all radio operations of the Army, and the enforcement of regulations concerning the same; the assignment of call letters, radio frequencies, power, type of emission, and schedules for all Army radio stations; all photographic and cinematographic work of the Army not specifically assigned to other arms and services and all other duties pertaining to military signal communications. Assistant to Chief Signal Officer.—Is adviser and principal assistant to the Chief Signal Officer; assists the Chief Signal Officer in the formulation of policies and supervises their application and operation; exercises staff supervision over the Executive Control Division and the executive office; and performs suzh other duties as may be assigned to him by the Chief Signal Officer. Executive officer.—Directs and is responsible for the performance of the duties assigned to the executive office; and performs such other duties as may be assigned to him by the Chief Signal Officer or the assistant to the Chief Signal Officer. Civilian assistant officer.—Acts for the Chief Signal Officer, assistant to the Chief Signal Officer, or executive officer in a consultant’s capacity on official matters pertaining to administrative functions; and, in general, acts as office manager. Administrative branch.—Is responsible to the Chief Signal Officer for the formu-lation of policies pertaining to and the supervision over the several divisions of the administrative branch charged with the preparation and defense of budget estimates; the preparation of expenditure programs; administration of military and civilian personnel; operation of mail and records system; promulgation of regulations, orders, etc.; general office service functions; digest and dissemination of intelligence reports; public relations functions; and performs such other ad-ministrative duties as are not otherwise specifically assigned. Civilian Personnel Division.— Exercises administrative control of the procure-ment, appointment, assignment, transfer, classification, promotion, travel, and separation of civilian personnel in the departmental service and the Signal Corps service at large; and related duties. Fiscal Division.—Is responsible for the preparation of all budgets and their justification and assists or represents the Chief Signal Officer in their defense before the proper administrative and budget authorities and congressional com-mittees; maintains liaison with branches and other divisions of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, Chief of Finance, the War Department budget officer, the War Department General Staff, Budget Advisory Committee, the General Council, and Bureau of the Budget; and performs related duties. Intelligence Division.—Is charged, in general, with those duties which pertain to the collection, evaluation, and dissemination of military information to the Signal Corps; the handling of military attaché reports, Military Intelligence 562 Congressional Directory WAR Division (War Department General Staff), and Office, Naval Intelligence reports, tentative lessons, intelligence bulletins, and such other information as may be of interest to the Signal Corps, without duplicating the G—2 distribution of such documents; and performs related duties. Military Personnel Division.— Exercises staff supervision over the administra- tion, morale, organization and movements of the Signal Corps Regular Army and the Signal Corps Reserve and the such other Signal personnel that is part of the Army of the United States; prepares recommendations on matters pertaining to the appointment, assignment, promotion, demotion, transfer, retirement, and discharge of Signal Corps military personnel; and performs related duties. Service Division.— Performs service and security functions for all divisions of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer; receives, distributes, and dispatches all mail, messages, and other communications; is responsible for matters related to the operation of the reproduction plant and the allocation of office space; and super- vises the assignment and duties of messengers and laborers. Matériel Branch.—Is responsible to the Chief Signal Officer for the research, development, procurement, inspection, planning, plant protection, storage, issue, maintenance, and legal functions of the Signal Corps; and maintenance of liaison with the War Department General Staff, the Under Secretary of War, and with the Assistant Secretary of War on procurement matters. Legal Division.—Gives legal advice and counsel upon request as to the proper application and interpretation of common law, statute, Army Regulations, and other directives of higher authority, to the Chief of Branch, to the officers in charge of divisions, and to their subordinate officers. This function is not that of an independent legal authority within the Signal Corps but is strictly subordinate to the functions of The Judge Advocate General as the official legal adviser of the Chief Signal Officer. It is the duty of the Legal Division to make the necessary preliminary determination as to each question raised, whether the question can be safely answered within the Division, or whether the circumstances require an authoritative opinion of The Judge Advocate General, or, through him, a decision of the Comptroller General. Maintenance Division.— Exercises staff supervision over Signal Corps repair services and shops. Plant Division.—Is responsible for all engineering activities in connection with fixed plant; contracts for leased plant, equipment, nonpersonal communication service and lines as directed by the Operations Branch and performs related duties. Procurement Division.—Exercises staff supervision over the procurement of Signal Corps equipment and supplies; supervises the operation of the Signal Corps procurement districts; supervises and coordinates the contractual rela-tions of the Signal Corps with commercial agencies, except such as pertain to commercial telephone, telegraph, radio, and cable service; directs the inspection of the Signal Corps equipment and supplies by decentralized Signal Corps procure-ment districts and other offices; maintains an Industrial Contact Section to inter-view or consult with representatives of business firms on all matters pertaining to the procurement of matériel and related subjects; and performs related duties. Research and Development Division.— Exercises staff supervision over the Signal Corps laboratories and the aircraft radio laboratory and through these laborator-ies: Conducts research and carries on development work of the Signal Corps in the field; provides models of new types of equipment for service test; prepares specifications and drawings for quantity production; supplies trained personnel for production inspection of the more intricate type of equipment; maintains liaison with other branches and divisions of this office, other arms and services, the War Department General Staff, other governmental agencies, and commercial organizations; and performs related duties. Scheduling Division.— Prepares purchase requests including time objectives on all items and components thereof included on approved expenditure programs; maintains contact with representatives of the various foreign governments that have been certified for defense aid; issues instructions relative to the transfer of property to foreign governments; and performs related duties. Storage and Issue Division.— Supervises, coordinates, and controls the storage and issue of Signal Corps equipment and supplies; maintains a record of all Signal Corps stores stocked in depots, and of all stores purchased for depot stocks or for issue; determines the nature and extent of reserve stocks and designates their place of storage; and performs related duties. Operations Branch.—Is responsible to the Chief Signal Officer for the formula-tion of policies pertaining to and the supervision of the activities of the several divisions of the operations branch charged with the preparation of war plans WAR Offictal Duties 563 and the plans for the Aircraft Warning Service; operation of communications systems, including the Army radio net, the War Department Message Center, the Alaska communications system, and the Army amateur radio system; photog-raphy; the procurement and assignment of radio frequencies and related duties; and cryptanalysis. Air Communications Division.— Exercises staff supervision over the training of Signal Corps troops on duty with the Army Air Forces and over the operation of such Signal Corps training facilities as may be established for the Army Air Forces; maintains liaison with other divisions of the office; other arms and services, War Department General Staff, G. H. Q., the Navy, and with The Adjutant General’s Office on training and other matters pertaining to Signal Corps units on duty with the Army Air Forces; and performs related duties. Communication Liaison Division.— Exercises administrative and executive supervision involved in the procurement, exchange, processing, coordination, assignment or release of radio frequencies required for all Army radio installations including those for fixed stations and for field tactical units; and performs related duties. Coordination and Equipment Division.—Recommends the necessary types of signal communication equipment; exercises staff supervision of the determination of military and technical characteristics, and the use of signal communication equipment; and performs related duties. 2 Photographic Division.— Exercises staff supervision over the photographic ac-tivities of the Signal Corps including the procurement, production, storage, filing and distribution of still and motion pictures for training and historical purposes; supervises the Signal Corps photographic laboratory; and performs related duties. Signal Intelligence Service.—1Is charged with preparation, revision, and printing of all codes, ciphers and publications related thereto; storage, issue and account-ing for all registered secret and confidential codes, ciphers and cipher devices and publications pertaining thereto; coordination with the Procurement Division in the storage and issue of nonsecret and nonconfidential codes, ciphers, and cipher devices and publications pertaining thereto; coordination with the Research and Development Division in the development of cipher devices, cipher machines, and relating apparatus and of special equipment for Signal Intelligence troops; supervision of the Signal Intelligence School and of the operation of the second Signal Service Company. Traffic Division.—Performs those duties pertaining to traffie, including minor maintenance and expansion of fixed plants at posts, camps, and stations; super-vises the operation of the War Department Message Center; and performs related duties. War Plans and Training Division.— Exercises staff supervision over the train-ing of Signal Corps troops with the ground forces, the operation of Signal Corps schools, Signal Corps Replacement Centers, Signal Corps Officers Candidate Schools, and other Signal Corps training agencies and activities, except such activities as are devoted to the training of specialists for Signal Corps units in the Army Air Forces; supervises the preparation and arranges for publication and dis- tribution of all training and technical literature concerning tactical Signal Corps equipment in the ground forces and the training and operations of Signal Corps troops in the ground forces; and performs related duties. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ARMY AIR FORCES The Chief of the Army Air Forces is charged with duties more specifically set forth in the new Army Regulation 95-5. Under the Secretary of War and the Assistant Secretary of War for Air, he controls the activities of the Air Force Combat Command and of the Air Corps; the preparation of plans pertaining thereto; the supervision and coordination of training of all other air units, and the inspection essential to the fulfillment of these duties; the determination of require-ments of the Army Air Forces with respect to personnel, matériel, equipment, supplies, and facilities; the preparation of necessary plans for the development, organization, equipment, training, tactical operations, supply and maintenance thereof, including oversea garrisons and task forces for theaters of operations, and the assignment of personnel and matériel thereto; the determination of the Army Air Forces’ financial requirements and the control and supervision of funds appropriated for this purpose. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE AIR CORPS+¢ The Chief of the Air Corps is the chief of a combat and procurement branch of the Army, the personnel of which are the principal component of the Army 564 Congressional Directory WAR Air Force. The agencies and service troops of the Chief of the Air Corps form the service element of the Army Air Force, and he is charged with the following duties, which he discharges pursuant to the policies, directives, and instructions issued by the Commanding General of the Army Air Force: (a) The supervision, unless otherwise delegated, of all activities in connection with research, development, procurement, storage, supply, maintenance, and final disposition of military aircraft, used in connection therewith (except for items which are specifically charged to other agencies of the War Department) including technical inspection and the issuance of pertinent technical instructions. (b) Determination of the Army Air Force's requirements in equipment. facili-ties, and other matériel supplied by other arms and services for installation in military aircraft, or for use in connection therewith; and passing upon the design, specifications, and performance tests thereof; installing the same and maintaining such portion thereof as is not required to be maintained by the arm or service which supplied it. (¢) Providing the War Department with the basis for requirements of personnel, equipment, and stores to be furnished by other arms and services to the Army Air Force. (d) Preparation of estimates for the Army Air Force’s appropriations and such control and supervision of funds so appropriated, as may be delegated. (e) Preparation of proposals and recommendations for conducting the design competitions authorized by section 10 of the act of July 2, 1926 (44 Stat. 784; 10 U. S. C. 310; M. L., 1939, sec. 1942). (f) Preparation of plans governing the constructions of stations of the Army Air Force. (9) Training of personnel in primary, basic, and advanced pilot functions and specialized nonpilot functions of combat crews, and in all duties involving the care, supply, and maintenance of aeronautical matériel, whether aircraft or equipment and facilities installed thereon or used in connection therewith, and the establishment, operation, and maintenance ot schools and allied facilities essential thereto. (h) Recommendations to the Chief of the Army Air Force relative to tables of organization of all elements of the Air Corps. (7) The command and control of all Air Corps stations and all personnel, units, and installations thereon, including station complement personnel and activities. 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 PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL The Provost Marshal General is a member of the special staff of the Chief of Staff. It is the responsibility of the Provost Marshal General to furnish the Chief of Staff with information and advice on all matters relating to the military police, prepare necessary military police portion of War Department plans and regulations relative to organization, personnel and operations; prepare the regula-tions governing the establishment and operation of war prison barracks and enclosures for enemy aliens and prisoners of war and the care and treatment of interned prisoners of war; conducts investigations of crimes involving military personnel; operates War Department plans for use of Federal troops in cases of domestic disorders, disasters relief and similar emergencies. The functions of the Office of the Provost Marshal General include not only those of the Provost 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 smokeand 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 Presi-dent may from time to time prescribe. THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE The Army War College, located at 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. In addition it supervises the activities of the Historical Section, formerly a branch of the War Department General Staff. THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE The Army Industrial College is one of the three general service schools of the Army. It is located in the Social Security Building, Washington, D. C. It operates under supervision of the Under Secretary of War, pursuant to section5a of the National Defense Act. Its mission is the training of officers for the procurement of munitions in the event of war and in the preparation of plans for the mobilization of matériel and industrial organizations essential to wartimeneeds. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ATTORNEY GENERAL (FRANCIS BIDDLE) The Attorney General is the head of the Department of Justice (see sec. 346 R. S.) and as such is the chief law officer of the Federal Government. He repre-sents the United States in legal matters generally and gives advice and opinions when requested by the President or by the heads of the executive departments. He appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of exceptionalgravity and importance, exercises general superintendence and direction overUnited States district attorneys and marshals in the various judicial districts of the United States, and provides special counsel for the United States in casesof exceptional importance or when the character of the interests involved requiressuch action. The duties of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Assistant AttorneysGeneral, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Director of theBureau of Prisons, and of the heads of the other major divisions and bureaus are performed under the direction of the Attorney General. (See sec. 354, R. S., as amended by act of Feb. 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 (CHARLES FAHY) 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- 566 Congressional Directory JUSTICE 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. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (JAMES H. ROWE) The Assistant to the Attorney General handles presidential appointments and legislation in which the Department is interested and, in addition, special legal and administrative matters; is liaison officer between the Attorney General and the Congress and other departments and agencies of the Government; has super-vision 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, etc., also briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General; also briefs and special assignments by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (THURMAN W. ARNOLD) This assistant has special charge of all suits and other matters relating to and arising under the Sherman and Clayton Acts and acts with antitrust provisions. In addition he has, under current assignment, charge of matters relating to and arising under the Capper-Volstead Act, Federal Trade Commission Act, Interstate Commerce Act, Packers and Stockyards Act, Commodity Exchange Act, Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, Produce Agency Act, Agricul-tural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, Sugar Act, 1937, Connally Act, Federal Communications Act, Railway Labor Act, Securities Act of 1933, Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Motor Carrier Act, 1935, Anti-Racketeering Act (in conjunction with antitrust violations), Emer-gency Relief Appropriation Acts, Federal Water Power Act, Railroad Retire-ment Act, National Labor Relations Act, Tobacco Inspection Act, Bituminous Coal Act of 1937, Public Utility Holding Company Act, 1935, Federal Alcohol Administration Act, and Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. 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. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (SAMUEL O. CLARK, JR.) 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 (FRANCIS M. SHEA) This assistant has charge of all civil suits and claims for and against the Govern-ment or its officers not otherwise specially assigned, patents and copyrights, cases arising out of war transactions, civil-bankruptey 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 assignment by the Solicitor General, and of special assignments by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (NORMAN M. LITTELL) 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. He also has charge of insular and terri-torial 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. JUSTICE Official Duties 567 ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (WENDELL BERGE) This assistant has charge of criminal cases generally, including matters relating to criminal practice and procedure, indictments, grand jury proceedings, search warrants, removal proceedings, extradition, etc., and generally directs District Attorneys with respect to the conduet of criminal cases and the enforcement of Federal statutes such as counterfeiting and forgery; customs; espionage; firearms; food, drugs, and cosmetics; gold hoarding; internal revenue liquor laws; larceny and theft; national banking and bankruptey; immigration and naturaliza-tion; narcotics; neutrality; passport; postal; and racketeering laws; the White Slave Traffic Act; the securities acts; the Alien Enemy Act; crimes on the high seas and government reservations; etc. This assistant also handles all problems and supervises all prosecutions involving infringements of civil rights, including interference with the ballot, peonage, the Hatch Act, and conspiracy to violate the National Labor Relations Act; has charge of legal matters pertaining to prisons and parole; 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 ATTORNEY GENERAL (PAUL P. RAO) 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 (VACANT) 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 has 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. ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS (DANIEL M. LYONS) Under the direction of the Attorney General, the attorney in charge of pardons has charge of all applications for Executive clemency except those of the Army and Navy. He conducts all correspondence, initiates investigations, and makes reports and recommendations to the Attorney General with respect thereto. He has charge of such other matters as may be specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. DIRECTOR, FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (J. EDGAR HOOVER) The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation has general charge of the investigation of offenses against the laws of the United States, except counter-feiting, narcotics, and other matters not within the jurisdiction of the Depart-ment of Justice; of the acquisition, collection, classification, preservation, and exchange of criminal identification records; and of such investigations regarding official matters under the control of the Department of Justice and the Depart-ment of State as may be directed by the Attorney General. He also has charge of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (LEMUEL B. SCHOFIELD, IN CHARGE) 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 consolidation of the former Bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization, effective August 10, 1933. On June 14, 1940, under Reorganization Plan No. V (5 F. R. 2132, June 5, 1940), the Service and its functions were transferred to the Depart-ment of Justice, to be administered under the direction and supervision of the Attorney General. All functions and powers of the Secretary of Labor relating te the administration of the Immigration and Naturalization Service and its 568 Congressional Directory JUSTICE functions or to the administration of the immigration and naturalization laws were transferred by such plan to the Attorney General. The functions of the Service are the administration of the laws relating to the admission, exclusion, and deportation of aliens, the registration and fingerprinting of aliens, and the naturalization of aliens lawfully resident in the United States; the investigation of alleged violations of said laws, and when prosecution is deemed advisable, the submission of evidence for that purpose to the appropriate United States district attorneys. The primary function of the Immigration Border Patrol, which operates as a part of the immigration force, is to detect and prevent the smuggling and surreptitious entry of aliens into the United States in violation of the immigration laws, and to apprehend smugglers of aliens and aliens who have effected unlawful entry. Under the provisions of the Nationality Act of 1940 (Public, No. 853, 76th, Cong.), naturalization jurisdiction was conferred upon certain specified United States and State courts. The Service exercises administrative supervision over the clerks of these courts in naturalization matters, requiring an accounting for all naturalization fees collected by them, and cooperates with the public schools in the education of applicants for naturalization for their citizenship duties and re-sponsibilities. Through its field officers, located in various cities in the United States, the Service investigates the qualifications of candidates for citizenship and represents the Government at the hearings of petitions for naturalization. DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF PRISONS (JAMES V. BENNETT) The Director of the Bureau of Prisons has general charge of the administration of the Federal Government’s penal and correctional activities. He is vested with the control and management of all Federal penal and correctional institutions save those maintained by the Army and Navy, and has the responsibility for providing suitable quarters for the safekeeping, care, protection, instruction, and discipline of all persons charged with or convicted of offenses against the United States. He is charged with specific administrative responsibility with reference to the Federal parole system and probation in the United States courts. He also has charge of special assignments by the Attorney General. . BOARD OF PAROLE The Board of Parole consists 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 (JULIUS C. MARTIN) Under the direction of The Assistant to the Attorney General, the Director ot the Bureau of War Risk Litigation has charge of war-risk insurance matters (civil) exclusive 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. DIRECTOR, BOND AND SPIRITS DIVISION (JOSEPH LAWRENCE) The Director 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; the review and preliminary determination of criminal compromises and civil claims growing out of current violations of internal revenue liquor statutes; the supervision of the collection on forfeited bail bonds and judgments and fines in SETI cases, and other special assignments of a similar character by the Attorney eneral. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (THOMAS D. QUINN) The administrative assistant to the Attorney General directs the Administra-tive Division of the Department of Justice, which handles all administrative and organization matters, including those relating to United States attorneys, mar-shals, and other field officers except matters of policy which are under the super-vision of the Assistant to the Attorney General. He supervises the Division of Accounts, office of the Chief Clerk, the appointment clerk’s office, the Division of Records, the Supply Division, and the Statistical Division. He directs all POST OFFICE Officral Dutres 569 budget, accounting, and auditing matters; controls expenditures from all appro-priations of the Department and approves all financial transactions; he directs the examination of field and judicial offices and the compilation of statistics for the Department; supervises the appointment of clerical and subelerical forces of the Department, exclusive of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and all personnel matters regarding civil-service employees; has charge of the enforcement of general departmental regulations, the designation of space requirements through-out the country, and the handling of all fiscal matters and business operations of the Department of Justice. FEDERAL PRISON INDUSTRIES, INC. 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. Under the general direction and supervision of the Attorney General 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 workshops. The Corporation is governed by a board of directors of five persons—a representa-tive of labor, a representative of industry, 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 Prison Industries. The Commissioner of Prison Industries is the acting executive officer of the Corporation. The products of the industries are sold only to other Government departments and agencies at current market prices. No goods or articles made in the Federal penal and correctional system are sold to the public. 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 is the executive head of Postal Savings and exofficio chairman of the board of trustees. CHIEF CLERK AND DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL The Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel of the Post Office Department ischarged with the general superintendence and assignment of the clerical and sub-clerical forces of the Department; the care and maintenance of public property located in the Department building; the advertising of the Department; the super-vision of requisitions entailing expenditure of the appropriations for the depart-mental service; the consideration of requisitions for the printing and bindingrequired in the Department and Service; the receipt and inspection of blanks required in the Department; the supervision of receipt and inspection of suppliesfor the Department and Service delivered in Washington; superintendence of thepublication and distribution of the Official Postal Guide and other postal publica-tions; the miscellaneous correspondence and files of the Department; mattersaffecting the proper administration of the civil-service rules and regulations and the execution of the provisions of the Reclassification, the Retirement, and theEmployees’ Compensation Acts. The Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel isthe liaison officer between the Department and the Classification Division of theCivil Service Commission. PURCHASING AGENT The Purchasing Agent supervises the purchase of all supplies for the Post Office Department proper and for all branches of the Postal Service He reviews 570 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE all requisitions and authorizations for supplies and, if proper, approves them. He passes upon all emergency purchases made locally by the field service. He determines the sufficiency and propriety of all specifications for supplies; prepares the advertisements and forms for proposals necessary to 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 upon the construction of the postal laws and regulations, or otherwise, in the course of business in the Postal Service; 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 prepa-ration and presentation of the Department’s cases in proceedings before the Interstate Commerce Commission for the determination by the Commission of the basis for adjustment of railroad mail pay and the fixing of fair and reasonable rates for the transportation of the mails and for services in connection therewith by railroads and urban and interurban electric railway common carriers, and in other matters of petition by the Postmaster General to the Commission; the representation of the Postmaster General in hearings before the Department on orders changing the mode of transporting periodical mail matter in connection with reviews of such orders by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia; 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 General 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 of correspondence with the Comptroller General, the Department of Justice, and other Departments, and 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 pardon for crimes committed against the postal laws which may be referred to the Department; with the preparation and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster General of all appeals to him from the heads of the offices of the Department depending upon questions of law; with the determining of questions as to the delivery of mail the ownership of which is in dispute; with the consideration of cases relating to lotteries and the misuse of the mails in furtherance of schemes to defraud the public; with the eonsideration of all questions relating to the mailability of alleged indecent, obscene, scurrilous, defamatory, or extortionate matter; with determining the legal acceptability of securities offered by banks to secure postal savings deposits; with the examining and, when necessary, drafting of all contracts of the Depart-ment; with the handling of legal questions arising from the application of the private express statutes (Government monopoly of carrying letters); with the legal work incident to the enforcement of those provisions of the espionage law which concern the Post Office Department; assembling data and coordinating action leading ultimately to the preparation of reports upon proposed legislation affecting the Postal Establishment, and with such other duties as may from time to time be required by the Postmaster General. FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL The First Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions to which are assigned the duties specified: The Division of Post Office Service.—The computing for annual adjustment of salaries of postmasters at Presidential offices, the organization and management of post offices of the first and second classes; the establishment of contract sta-tions, the appointment, disciplining, and fixing salaries of assistant postmasters, supervisory officers, clerks, special clerks, watchmen, messengers, laborers, print-ers, mechanics, and skilled laborers, .and of city and village letter carriers; the establishment, maintenance, supervision, and extension of city and village deliv-ery and collection service; allowances for clerk hire at first-, second-, and third- POST OFFICE Official Duties a71 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 unmailable 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 disposition; the verification and allowance of claims for credit by postmasters for postage-due stamps affixed to undelivered matter; the examination and for-warding 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 enclosures; 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 Mail Service—The supervision of all matters relative to the establish- ment of and changes in the Railway Mail Service, the handling of mail matter in transit, appointment of railway postal clerks, the personnel of the Railway Mail Service, the preparation for mailing and admission of matter to the mails which from its form or character would be liable to injure the mails or the persons of postal employees, the distribution to the Postal Service of mail pouches and sacks and mail-pouch locks, the distribution and dispatch of mails, and damage and delays to mails; also relative to Star Route Service (except in Alaska), and high- way post office service. International Postal Service.—The supervision of the International Postal Service, including questions involving the negotiation, conclusion, and inter-pretation of postal (except money order) conventions and agreements; postage rates, conditions of admissibility and classification of mail for foreign countries, as well as the international parcel post; the sea-post service; the international air mail service; the distribution, dispatch, and transportation of international mails and parcel post; the management of the international registry, insured and collect-on-delivery services and the adjustment of indemnity claims in connection with international mail; the designation and instruction of Navy mail clerks; the recall and change of address of international mail; and the preparation of general cor-respondence with foreign countries. Railway Adjustments.—The supervision of expenditures for the transportation of mails on railroad, electric-ear, mail-messenger, powerboat, and Alaskan star routes, and the preparation of authorizations, orders, rules, and regulations governing the same, based on the law and the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission; the administrative audit of reports concerning the performance of service of the classes above stated; the certification of accounts for payment, and the preparation for proper deductions of all cases of nonperformance; the imposi-tion of fines for delinquencies and failures, and the preparation of all correspond-ence affecting these services. Air Mail Service.—Supervision of all matters within the jurisdiction of the Post Office Department pertaining to the operation of the domestic air mail service; the designation and preparation of air mail schedules and the preparation of orders authorizing air mail service and changes therein on all domestic routes; the examination of regular and special reports covering the performance of service; the preparation of orders relating to deductions for the nonperformance of service or other delinquencies on the part of earriers; the preparation of monthly state-ments to the General Accounting Office of the amounts found upon administrative examination to be due carriers for the performance of service; the compilation of various statistics, and the supervision and conduct of the domestic Air Mail Service generally; the preparation of all correspondence in connection therewith. Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Rural Mail Service—The supervision of all matters pertaining to the Rural Mail Service, including establishment of and changes in rural delivery routes, the appointment and discipline of rural carriers, and the establishment of rural stations. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL s 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 Researck.—The design and construction of buildings so far as the operation of the post-office service is concerned; the lay-out 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, easing, and equipment of quarters for post offices of the first, second, and third classes, and stations thereof (except those located in Federal buildings; the leasing of quarters for the Railway Mail POST OFFICE Official Duties 573 Service; the leasing and equipment of post-office garages, and the fixing of allow- ances 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 by appropriations; the manufacture and repair of mail bags and other mail containers and attachments, mail locks, keys, chains, tools, dies, etc. ; 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. CHIEF INSPECTOR The Chief Inspector is charged with the duty of keeping the Postmaster Generaland his assistants advised as to the condition and needs of the entire Postal Service.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 is charged with the coordination and supervision of plans and arrangements for the handling of the President’s mail while he is traveling and advising with White House officials on matters connected therewith. He is likewise charged with the coordination of plans and arrangements for the handling of Army mail by the Post Office Depart-ment in the event of an emergency and advising with the War Department on matters connected therewith. He also has jurisdiction 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 inschemes to defraud and in the promotion of lotteries; violations of the private express statutes (Government monopoly of the transportation of letter mail) ; mailing of explosives, poisons, firearms, intoxicants, 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 and postal-savings certificates; mailing of obscene, scurrilous, and other matter prohibited transmission in the mails, and complaintsof the interception of and tampering with the mails. He supervises the develop-ment of evidence and the preparation for prosecution of criminal offenses arising in connection with the operation of the Postal Service and considers claims for payment of rewards for the detection, arrest, and conviction of post-office burglars, robbers, highway mail robbers, and mailers of bombs. 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 renderedat 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 request therefor on the Chief Inspector. Applications for permission to take the examination for the position of post-office inspector and the corre-spondence in connection with the appointment, promotion, and the character of service rendered by inspectors should be addressed to the Chief Inspector. 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 38 574 Congressional Directory NAVY BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS The Comptroller of the Post Office Department is in charge of the Bureau of Accounts, created in the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, and directed by the law to receive and make the administrative examination of all accounts and vouchers within the jurisdiction of the Post Office Department. Reviews the income and expenditure of all third-and fourth-class post offices through summary reports from the central accounting post offices; states the general revenues and expenditures as part of the administrative duties formerly performed by the auditor for the Post Office Department in accordance with the law; also prepares monthly, quarterly, and annual financial statements from the accounts of post- masters, warrant payments, and the account of the disbursing officer, which comprises the revenue and expenditure in the control of the Bureau of Accounts; maintains the bookkeeping system from these records from which the general statistics and the special reports for the information of the Postmaster General are obtained. As budget officer the Comptroller consolidates the departmental estimates and such supplemental and deficiency estimates as may be required. 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 THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Secretary of the Navy has the general superintendence of construction, manning, armament, equipment, maintenance, and employment of vessels of war and performs such other duties as the President, who is Commander in Chief, may direct. Has cognizance of the following: Commissioned and enlisted personnel; the Budget; the Joint Board; the General Board; Naval Petroleum Reserves; legislation (policy) ; public relations; and technical aide (Naval Research Laboratory). THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Under Secretary of the Navy performs such duties as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy or are required by law and is next in succession to the Secretary of the Navy during his absence or disability or in the event of a temporary vacancy in that office. Has cognizance of the following: Liaison with depart-ments and industrial agencies other than the Budget, Army, material and labor; legal matters (routine legislation); Judge Advocate General; contracts; tax questions; Compensation Board; Naval Examining Board; Naval Retiring Board; and Board of Medical Examiners. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Assistant Secretary of the Navy has the general administrative control of the material activities of all shore establishments of the Navy and performs such additional duties as the Secretary may direct or as are required by law. Has cognizance of the following: Shore Establishments Division; civil employees; labor liaison; Shore Stations Development Board; Army and Navy Munitions Board; and the Chief Clerk’s office. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR AIR The Assistant Secretary of the Navy for 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. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT The Administrative Assistant assists the Secretary of the Navy and the Admin-istrative Officer in directing the administration of the Navy Department, including the Headquarters, United States Marine Corps. Under the general direction of the Administrative Officer, he has administrative control over the civilian force and responsibility for the general business operations of the Department. He conducts surveys of administrative procedure, methods NAVY Official Duties 575 and standards, and makes recommendations looking toward efficient management of all activities pertaining to personnel supervision, space control, and the various service sections of the Department, including communications, mail, equipment, supplies, duplicating, records, security, transportation, and cafeteria. CHIEF CLERK The Chief Clerk assists in administration of the civilian force and business operations of the Department; is responsible for enforcement of departmental regulations; has supervision of the various divisions of the Secretary’s office, including the Navy Department garage; has control of expenditures from appro- priations “Printing and Binding,” “Contingent Expenses, Navy Department,” “Salaries, Office of the Secretary,” “Contingent, Navy,” and other appropria- tions for operation of the Secretary’s office; has custody of the records and files of the Secretary’s office, and supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the official mail. He signs requisitions on the Treasury Department for all funds for the Navy Department and the naval service and such official mail as the Secretary of the Navy may direct. He is a member of the Department Wage Board of Review, which considers and determines rates of wages for supervisory artisans, artisans, and other civilian workmen in the field service of the Navy Department and the United States Marine Corps engaged in ship construction and repair and other industrial and maintenance work. He performs such other duties as may be required by the Secretary of the Navy. SHORE ESTABLISHMENTS DIVISION Established by General Order No. 68 of September 6, 1921, to conduct, under the immediate supervision of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the depart-mental administration of navy yards and naval stations. The following activi-ties of navy yards and stations are under its cognizance: administration, organiza-tion, and management; civilian personnel and labor, and all matters pertaining thereto, including the maintenance of high morale; recommendations for comple-ments of officers; buildings, grounds, shops, power plants, service lines, and rolling stock; plants, machine tools, equipment and appliances; manufactures and manufacturing processes; cost analysis in connection with the determination of economy and efficiency; coordinating the assignment of available funds, coordi-nating the assignment of work on vessels made available for work at yards and stations by the Chief of Naval Operations, and coordinating other work assigned to yards and stations in accordance with their abilities, with a view of maintain-ing stable labor conditions consistent with the military needs of the fleet; inspec-tions of navy yards and naval stations; coordinating the above activities and functions with the war plans and fleet operating schedules. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT The Director of the Division of Personnel Supervision and Management supervises the functions of appointment, assignment, classification, promotion, service rating, transfer, and the training of civil personnel of the Navy Depart-ment and its field service; supervises the establishment of means for the hearing of grievances of employees and presents appropriate recommendation for the settlement thereof; administers regulations regarding removals, retirements, leaves of absence, etec.; makes recommendation to the departmental budget officer with respect to estimates and expenditures for eivil personnel; serves as a member of the Council of Personnel Administration; acts as liaison officer in civil person-nel matters between the Department and the Civil Service Commission and per-forms such other functions as may be prescribed by the Assistant Secretary of the Navy. THE TECHNICAL AIDE TO THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Is senior member of the Navy Department Council for Research. Acts as administrator of the Office of Inventions. Establishes contact between persons submitting ideas and inventions and the appropriate bureaus in cases where such ideas and inventions may be of value. Supervises the work of the Naval Reserves assigned to naval research. Establishes contact and maintains close cooperation with leading commercial laboratories. 576 Congressional Directory NAVY Is liaison member for the Navy Department with the National Research Council through the Navy Department Advisory Committee for Research. Is Navy Department Member of the National Defense Research Committee and the National Inventors’ Council. Is Director, Naval Research Laboratory. OFFICE OF ISLAND GOVERNMENTS This office, administered by a division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, assists the Secretary in his supervision of the governments of Guam, American Samoa, and other United States possessions under naval administration. 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 is charged by the act of March 3, 1915, with the operations of the fleet and with the preparation and readiness of plans for its use in war. The Chief of Naval Operations is the senior Navy member of the Joint Army and Navy Board. The duties of the Chief of Naval Operations 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; 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 coordinates all repairs and alterations to vessels and the supply of personnel and material thereto so as to insure at all times the maximum readiness of the fleet for war. He keeps 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 arranges for the coordination of effort of his office and of the bureaus and other offices of the Navy Department in rela-tion thereto. He directs the movements and operations of vessels of the Navy, including the time of their assignment for docking, directs repairs and alterations, and prepares schedules and issues orders in regard thereto. He keeps records of service of fleets, squadrons, and ships. He advises 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 stations, including all features which affect their military value; also, as to matters pertain-ing to fuel reservations and depots, the location of radio stations, visual signal stations, reserves of ordnance and ammunition, fuel stores, and other supplies of whatsoever nature, with a view to meeting effectively the demands of the fleet. He advises the Secretary of the Navy on all business of the Department in regard to insular governments and foreign relations. All correspondence in regard to these matters is presented for the Secretary’s action through the office of the Chief of Naval Operations. 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 freely consults with and has the advice and assistance of the various bureaus, boards, and offices of the Department and the Marine Corps Headquarters in matters coming under their cognizance. After the approval of any given war plans by the Secretary it is the duty of the Chief of Naval Operations to assign to the bureaus, boards, and offices such parts thereof as may be needed for the NAVY Official Duties 577 intelligent carrying out of their respective duties in regard to such plans and their maintenance in constant readiness. In carrying out his duties he utilizes the facilities of the appropriate bureaus and offices of the Navy Department. The Chief of Naval Operations from time to time witnesses 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 Mar. 3, 1915, and Feb. 11, 1927). 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 case of the death, resignation, absence, or sickness of the Chief of Naval Operations, the Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations, unless otherwise directed by the President, performs 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. The Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations is a member of the Joint Army and Navy Board. 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 Army and Navy Board. Three or more officers of the War Plans Division are detailed for Navy membership of the Joint Army and Navy Planning Committee, an agency of the Joint Army and Navy 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. One officer of the War Plans Division is assigned as a member of the Shore Station Development Board. CENTRAL DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS This division of the office of the Chief of Naval Operations has cognizance of the following: (a) Organization. (b) Budget matters, legislation, Navy Regulations and General Orders, bureau manuals, 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) 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. RADIO LIAISON DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Radio Liaison Division represents the Navy Department in matters of communication legislation, and matters under the Federal Communications Commission and other offices and departments of the Government concerning frequency assignments and matters affecting naval radio technique, and at inter-departmental conferences, when such does not pertain exclusively to or directly involve purely naval communications. Represents the Navy Department at, and in preparation for, international com-munication conferences, and on Interdepartmental Radio Advisory Committee. The director of this division is the Naval Operations representative on the National Research Council. 578 Congressional Directory NAVY INTELLIGENCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Intelligence Division is charged with the collection and classification 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, and keeps in close touch with all naval activities, both in and out of the Navy Department. It cooperates with the other executive depart-ments of the Government in discovering persons engaged in activities against the United States. It maintains all naval attachés and naval observers abroad and is the official channel of communications for all foreign naval attachés in the United States. It collaborates with other Navy Department bureaus and offices in the matter of naval missions and advisers to the various American republics. In time of peace the Office of Naval Intelligence is charged with the preparation for censorship of international 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, naval records of historical value. COMMUNICATION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS 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. INSPECTION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS (Board of Inspection and Survey) 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. 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. (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. FLEET MAINTENANCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Director, Fleet Maintenance Division, is charged with and is responsible to the Chief of Naval Operations for: i Anticipating the material needs of the service and advising the Chief of Naval Operations accordingly. The coordination of the efforts of the material bureaus, the forces afloat, and the navy yards in the maintenance of the material readiness of the fleet. The regulation of maintenance work to meet the approved plans and operating orders for all naval vessels. The Director of the Fleet Maintenance Division is senior member of the Disiries Craft Development Board and is a member of the Shore Station Develop-ment Board. NAVY Officzal Duties 579 MATERIALS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS Coordinates Navy Department activities with other Government agencies engaged in directing the mobilization and utilization of national material resources in the present emergency, with particular reference to emergency defense agencies. It coordinates Navy Department activities included in the above with similar activities of the War Department through the Army and Navy Munitions Board. 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 plansfor 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 otherGovernment departments. The Shore Establishment Section is charged with matters pertaining to shore-station development, including the acquisition and disposal of shore properties. SHIP MOVEMENTS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Director of Ship Movements Division is responsible to the Chief of Naval Operations for: (a) The organization assignment and operating plans of the United States Naval Forces in accordance with the policy of the Navy Department. (b) The coordination, within the Office of Naval Operations, of the United States Fleet employment plans, and the movements of all naval craft. (¢) The preparation of the annual fuel estimates for all naval forces and theallocation of this fuel to vessels. @ The coordination and preparation of all Training Cruises made in naval craft. (e) The assignment of home ports. (f). The operation of the Naval Supply and Transportation Services and general cognizance of the Joint Merchant Vessels Board. (9). The preparation and dissemination of appropriate information pertinent tothe above. COAST GUARD The United States Coast Guard, pursuant to the act of January 28, 1915, as amended, is a military service and constitutes a branch of the land and naval forces of the United States at all times. It represents, in its historical develop-ment from 1790, an amalgamation into one united service of the activities of the old Revenue Cutter Service, the Life-Saving Service, and the Lighthouse Service. Its function as the Federal maritime police embraces enforcement of law, saving and protecting life and property, and safeguarding navigation on the high seas and navigable waters of the United States, and preparedness for national defense. More specifically the duties of the Coast Guard are as follows: (a) The prevention, detection, and suppression of violations of the laws of the United States on the high seas and navigable waters of the United States, its territories and possessions; securing the collection of duties imposed on articles imported into the United States; the enforcement of navigation laws; the enforce-ment of neutrality laws and regulations; the enforcement of the rules and regula-tions governing the anchorage and movements of vessels under the Espionage Act, including prevention of sabotage to shipping, locks and dams, and waterfront property belonging to plants engaged in production of national defense materials; supervision over the lading and discharge of explosives and dangerous cargo by vessels in the interest of safety to life and ‘property in our harbors and adjacent jurisdictional waters; the enforcement of the Oil Pollution Act; the patrol and enforcement of provisions of conventions into which the United States has entered into with other nations, such as the patrol in the waters frequented by the seal and the sea otter, a patrol for the preservation of the halibut fisheries of Northern Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea, and the enforcement of the provisions of the act giving effect to the convention for the regulation of whaling. (b) Affording aid to distressed mariners; the saving of life and property from shipwreck; the construction, operation, maintenance, repair, illumination, and inspection of aids to navigation; the enforcement of the regulations to promote the safety of life on navigable waters during regattas and marine parades, patrol-ling the trans-Atlantic steamship lanes endangered by icebergs, extending medical 580 Congressional Directory NAVY and surgical aid to the erews of American vessels engaged in deep-sea fisheries; rescuing lives and property and distributing food and clothing to marooned people during flood times on the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers and their tributaries; the collection of statistics of marine disasters; the investigation of circumstances connected with shipwreck attended with loss of life, with a view of ascertaining the cause of the disaster; the destruction of derelicts; the training of citizens of the United States to serve as licensed and unlicensed personnel on American merchant vessels; administration of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, a voluntary organization of owners of motorboats and yachts. (¢) The Coast Guard is a military service, constituting a branch of the land and naval forces of the United States, operating pursuant to law under the Treasury Department in time of peace and as a part of the Navy in time of war or whenever the President shall so direct. Executive Order No. 8929, dated November 1, 1941, prescribed that the Coast Guard shall operate from that date, until further orders, as a part of the Navy. To assist the Commandant, who is charged by law with the administration of the Coast Guard, there are established at Headquarters: Divisions of Operations, Personnel, Engineering and Matériel, Inspection, Finance, and Legal, and the Permanent Board. A report, covering the activities of the Coast Guard, is published annually. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION 1. (a) The Bureau of Navigation 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 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, hydrographic, and meterological information to ships and aircraft; and with libraries. (¢) It is charged with the upkeep and operation of the following, and with their repair: 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 issues, records, and enforces the orders of the Secretary of the Navy to the individual officers of the Navy and of the Naval Reserve. 3. It has under its direction recruiting stations, and supervises the enlistment and discharge of all enlisted persons. 4. It has under its direction the organization and administration of the Naval Reserve, and provides for the mobilization of all these Reserves. & 5. It has cognizance of transportation for all naval personnel except the Marine orps. 6. It establishes the complements and allowances of ships. 7. It keeps the records of service of all officers and men, and prepares an annual Navy Register for publication. 8. It is charged with all matters pertaining to application for appointments and commissions in the Navy and with the preparation of such appointments and commissions for signature. 9. It is charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all regu-lations governing uniforms, and with the distribution of general orders and regulations. 10. Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments are submitted by this Bureau for the action of the Secretary of the Navy. The records of all gen-eral courts martial and courts of inquiry involving the personnel of the Navy are, before final action, referred to this Bureau for comment and recommendation as to disciplinary features. 11. It receives all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. NAVY Official Duties 581 12. It is charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding naval ceremonies and naval etiquette. 13. It is 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 24 times daily. Signals are broadcast every hour. 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, scientific workers, and mining and petroleum engineers for the determination of position, measurement of gravity, and radio frequencies and other purposes re-quiring exact time. In order to meet the needs of all who may have use for them, a number of different frequencies are used in broadcasting the signals via the naval radio station at Annapolis, Md. Six 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 upkeep, repair, inspection, supply, and distribution of designated navigational, aeronautical, and aerological instruments and their spare parts for the ships and aircraft of the Navy is performed at the Naval Observatory. The Naval Observatory maintains continuous observations for absolute posi-tions of the fundamental stars, and the independent determination, by obser-vations 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 Ameri-can Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac and improving the tables of the planets, moon, and stars. Information is also furnished to foreign countries in accordance with international agreement, The Nautical Almanac Office of the Naval Observatory computes and prepares for publication the American Ephemeris and its supplements, the American Air Almanac and the Nautical Almanac. 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 International Hydrographic Bureau, Monaco, and (through branch hydro- graphic offices and sales agents) with mariners and the general public. The Hydrographic Office is charged with the publication and supply of 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. 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 naval public works, such as drydocks, marine railways, 582 Congressional Directory NAVY 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 control over repairs to public works and provides for general mainte- nance, except at the naval proving grounds, 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 land transportation, such as locomotives, locomotive cranes, cars, derricks, shears, motor trucks, and all vehicles, horses, teams, and necessary operators and teamsters in the navy yards and naval stations. It provides the furniture for all buildings (except at ordnance stations, hospitals, the Naval Academy, and marine posts). It has custody of all naval real estate not in active use. 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 is charged with and responsible for the design, manu-facture, procurement, maintenance, issue, and efficiency of all offensive and de-fensive arms and armanent (including armor, torpedoes, mines, depth charges, pyrotechnics, bombs, ammunition, war explosives, war chemicals, and defensive “nets, buoys, and net appliances) 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, within the capacity of the force employed: (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. (z) Naval net depots. BUREAU OF SHIPS The Bureau of Ships is charged with and responsible for the general design, structural strength, stability, and seaworthiness of all ships of the Navy, except airships. It is responsible for the preparation of preliminary plans, approximate data, or both, showing the designs of new ships in accordance with the military char- acteristics recommended by the General Board and approved by the Secretary of the Navy, and for the preparation of final designs of new vessels in consultation with other bureaus. It is charged with and responsible for all that relates to details of designing, building, fitting-out, repairing, and altering of hulls, permanent fittings, and main machinery including its related equipment used for propulsion of naval vessels, district craft (except those of the Bureau of Yards and Docks), and small boats. It has similar responsibility in connection with auxiliary machinery not asso- ciated with propulsion equipment, including all pumps, distilling apparatus, refrigerating apparatus, air-conditioning apparatus, steering gear, anchor wind- lass, deck machinery, air compressors, heating systems, and piping systems. It has cognizance of all that relates to electric generating sets and storage batteries; the generation and distribution of electric power on board ships for all purposes; all means of interior communication; all electrical methods of signaling, internal and external; all other electrical apparatus on board ship, except fire-control instruments and motors and control appliances used to oper- ate machinery under the specific cognizance of other bureaus; and all appliances and articles of equipage on its approved allowance list. NAVY Official Duties 583 It is charged with the design, manufacture, installation, and maintenance of all radio and sound equipage, for shore and afloat, including all appliances used by the Naval Communication Service, except such material as is assigned to other cognizance. It provides shipkeepers for the care of vessels and district craft (except those of the Bureau of Yards and Docks) not in commission. The Bureau is responsible for the provision of facilities and arrangements for salvaging of vessels. It has administrative supervision of the drydocking of all vessels and district craft and of the operating and cleaning of drydocks 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; for diving gear and experimental diving units, respiratory protective devices, paravanes, and mine-sweeping gear. It inspects all fuel for the fleet. It prepares specifications and recommenda-tions 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. It prepares specifications and prescribes tests for material, equipment, and machinery under its cognizance. It is represented on many of the national standardization and engineering bodies, and on the various Federal specifications committees. The Bureau has supervision and control of the David Taylor Model Basin, Carderock, Md.; the United States Naval Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md.; the Naval Boiler Laboratory, Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa.; the Materials Testing Laboratory, Navy Yard, New York, N. Y.; the Testing Laboratory, Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa.; the Materials Testing Laboratory, Munhall, Pa.; the Rubber Testing Laboratory, Navy Yard, Mare Island, Calif.; and navy yard laboratories located in the Boston, Mass., Norfolk, Va., Charles-ton, S. C., and Mare Island, Calif., Navy Yards. These activities are employed for conducting necessary tests and investigations to obtain suitable apparatus and material for naval purposes. It maintains in the field, offices of supervisors of shipbuilding, and inspectors of machinery, who are directly under the administrative control of the Bureau of Ships; and also maintains jointly with the Bureau of Ordnance and Bureau of Aeronautics the offices of the inspectors of naval material. In the offices of super-visors of shipbuilding and inspectors of machinery a force of trained naval and civilian experts is maintained for the inspection of machinery and materials generally entering into the construction of new vessels; this force interprets and enforces strict compliance with the specifications and other contractual obliga-tions for the construction of vessels as regards characteristics of materials used and the method of installation of completed 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 Estab-lishment. These offices are available to and frequently used by other Federal departments for the inspection of material purchased for Government use. It nominates to the Bureau of Navigation specially qualified officers for engi-neering duty at sea and on shore, including those for duty as supervisors of ship-building, inspectors of machinery, and inspectors of naval material. It compiles and issues instructions for the care, operation, and maintenance of material, equipment, and machinery under its cognizance and prepares and issues bulletins of official information on these subjects. The Bureau of Ships has supervision and control over the appropriation, “Maintenance, Bureau of Ships,” “Increase and replacement of naval vessels, construction and machinery,” “Naval emergency fund,” and, together with the Bureau of Ordnance, has joint supervision and control over the appropriation ‘Alterations, naval vessels.” BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery 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. 584 Congressional Directory NAVY 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 provides for inspection of the sanitary condition of the Navy, and recommends with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service; it advises with the Department and other bureaus in reference to the sanitary features of ships under construction and in commission, regarding berthing, ventilation, and location of quarters for the care and treatment of the sick and injured; provisions 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 also advises con- cerning 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 safeguards the personnel by the employ- ment 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 adopts for use all such devices or procedures devei- oped in the sciences of medicine and surgery as will in any way increase military efficiency. It is 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 only those whose physical condition is such as to maintain or improve the military efficiency of the service if admitted or retained therein; it passes upon the competency, from a professional standpoint, of all men of the Hospital Corps for enlistment, enrollment, and promotion by means of examinations conducted under its supervision or by such forms as it may prescribe. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery recommends to the Bureau of Navigation the complement of Medical Department personnel for hospitals and hospital ships, and also recommends and has information as to the assignment and duties of medical officers, dental officers, and Hospital Corps men. It is charged with the administration of the Nurse Corps, and has power to appoint and remove all nurses, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Navy. It requires for and has control of the preparation, reeeption, storage, care, custody, transfer, and issue of all supplies of every kind used in the Medical Department for its own purposes; and has charge of the civilian force employed at naval hos- pitals, medical supply depots, medical laboratories, the Naval Medical Center, and at all technical schools for the education or training of Medical Department personnel. It approves the design of hospital ships in relation to their efficiency for the care of the sick and wounded, and provides for the organization and administration of the medical department of such vessels. The arrangements for care, transportation, and burial of the dead are under the jurisdiction and control of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS The Bureau of Supplies and Accounts is charged with and responsible for the procurement, purchase, receipt, custody, warehousing, issue, and shipment of all supplies, fuel, and other materials for the Navy, except supplies for the Marine Corps, and except the procurement of certain special items of ordnance material, and the storage and issue of medical stores, ammunition, projectiles, mines, and explosives. It has control of the Naval Supply Account Fund, the Naval Working Fund, the Clothing and Small Stores Fund, and the stocks procured from these funds. It has charge of the upkeep and operation of the Naval Clothing Factory and the coffee-roasting plants. It exercises administrative supervision over fuel plants, commissary activities, supply depots, and storehouses at navy yards and stations. It authorizes and has cognizance over the transportation of Navy property and household effects of Navy personnel. It has charge of the procurement of cargoes and the loading and discharging of supply ships, colliers, and tankers, and when necessary, charters merchant vessels for the transportation of supplies. It handles the sale of condemned, salvaged, and scrap materials, and of con-demned vessels. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY 586 Congressional Directory NAVY these contracts. All public building and service contracts are approved and reviewed as to form, and claims arising thereunder are reviewed. The Judge Advocate General approves and retains on file all insurance policies, effects settlement thereunder, and passes on legal matters relative thereto. He handles matters in valuation, purchase, sale, rentals, permits, and licenses relating to real estate, legal matters relating to petroleum reserves, condemnation proceed- ings, and defense of suits involving real estate, compromising settlements on war property, reviews and files muniments of title, adjusts claims for injury to private property through damage by Government automobiles, disposal of surplus material, and sales of vessels. The Office of the Judge Advocate General acts in the interest of the Govern- ment and of inventors by securing letters patent on a large number of inventions made yearly by personnel of the Naval Establishment. It is a further function of this office to investigate the scope and validity of patents either in connection with allegations of infringement or in connection with offers of assignments or licenses to determine their value to the Government. Cooperation is furnished the Department of Justice in gathering evidence for use in connection with the defense of suits relating to patents in the Court of Claims. Copyrights and trade-marks are also handled. Formal opinions or decisions in writing are rendered upon request, and such opinions or decisions are 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 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 their administration and general efficiency. The ‘headquarters is organized as the office of the Major General Commandant and three staff departments. In the office of the Major General Commandant— The assistant to the Major General Commandant is his principal assist- ant and adviser; performs the duties of a chief of staff and assists in coordi- nating the work of the several departments and divisions at Marine Corps Headquarters; conducts the business of the office of the Major General Commandant in the latter’s absence. The director of plans and policies has cognizance of military intelligence, education, operations, training, matériel, and aviation. The director of personnel has supervision over assignments and com- plements of officers and enlisted men. The director of Marine Corps Reserve has supervision over the procure- ment, training, organization, promotion, and distribution of officers and enlisted men of the Marine Corps Reserve. The adjutant and inspector has general supervision of claims of officers and enlisted men, courts martial, courts of inquiry, investigations, ete.; historical archives; inspections; post exchanges; appointment, examination, promotion, reduction, and retirement of commissioned and warrant officers; military records; procurement of officers and recruiting; target practice; discharges; promotion and reduction of noncommissioned officers; casualties; insignia. The paymaster has supervision of questions relating to pay, allowances, bonus, gratuities, mileage, travel expenses, allotments, insurance, ete., to officers and enlisted men; deficiency and other estimates for pay, ete. The quartermaster has supervision of matters relating to the purchase of military supplies for the Marine Corps, including subsistence, construction material, and labor; pays all expenses of the corps except those pertaining to paymaster’s department; has jurisdiction over quarters, barracks, and other public buildings provided for officers and enlisted men, and repairs, alterations, and improvements thereto; vehicles for the transportation of troops and supplies; public animals and their equipment; furnishes means of transportation for movement of troops; prints and issues blank forms for the Marine Corps. INTERIOR Official Duties 587 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to the General Land Office, Bureau of Reclamation, Geological Survey, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service, Bureau of Mines, Fish and Wildlife Service, Bituminous Coal Division, Grazing Service, Division of Investi-gations, Division of Territories and Island Possessions (see Executive orderof May 29, 1934), the Bonneville Project (act of Aug. 20, 1937, Public, No. 329, 75th Cong.), Petroleum and Solid Fuels Coordination for National Defense, the Commission to investigate the financial, economic, and other conditions of the various United States and Indian reclamation projects (act of Aug. 21, 1937, Public, No. 331, 75th Cong.). By authority of the President, the Secretary of‘the Interior has general supervision over the Government railroad in the Territory of Alaska. He exercises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. Executive order of February 27, 1931, placed the admin-istration of the government of the Virgin Islands under his supervision. Executiveorder 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. Under the Reorgani-zation Act of April 3, 1939, the Bureau of Insular Affairs of the War Department and its functions were transferred to the Department of the Interior, effectiveJuly 1, 1939. Executive order of November 14, 1936, placed the administrative acts of the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration under the control and supervision of the Secretary of the He was designated Interior. custodian of therecords 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 ofSeptember 13, 1923. Executive order of April 17, 1934, transferred the functionsof the United States Geographic Board to the Department of the Interior. The Secretary of the Interior is charged 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 February22, 1934. The act of April 26, 1937 (Public, No. 48, 75th Cong.), established in the Department of the Interior a National Bituminous Coal Commission to regulateinterstate commerce in bituminous coal, and for other purposes. Pursuant to the Reorganization Act of April 3, 1939, and the President’s Plan No. II, the functions of the Commission were transferred to the Secretary of the Interior tobe administered as a Division, effective July 1, 1939. The Bituminous Coal Division was established as of that date. ’ By Executive Order No. 6979, dated February 28, 1935, and by Executive Order No. 7756, dated December 1, 1937, the President designated the Secretary of the Interior as his agent to execute all powers and functions vested in the President, except those vested in him by section 4, by the act of February 22,1935 (49 Stat. 30), generally known as the Connally Act, as amended by the act approved June 14, 1937 (50 Stat. 257) and the act approved June 29, 1939(53 Stat. 927). Pursuant thereto, the Secretary of the Interior exercises those powers and functions through the Petroleum Conservation Division. The President designated the Secretary of the Interior as Petroleum Coordina-tor for National Defense on May 28, 1941, and to act as solid fuels coordinator for National Defense on November 5, 1941. 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). Execu-tive order of June 10, 1933, transferred the functions and personnel of the followingagencies to the Department of the Interior: Arlington Memorial Bridge Com-mission, 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. Pursuant to the Reorganization Act of April 3, 1939, and the President’s Plan No. I, the Federal Board for Vocational Education was transferred with theOffice of Education to the Federal Security Agency and the Branch of Buildings TURE (public buildings) to the Federal Works Agency, both effective July , 1939. 588 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Under the Reorganization Act and the President’s Plan No. IT the following agencies were transferred to the Department of the Interior effective July 1, 1939: Functions of National Bituminous Coal Commission and functions of Consumers’ Counsel, Bureau of Insular Affairs from War Department, Bureau of Fisheries from Department of Commerce, Bureau of Biological Survey from Department of Agriculture, and Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission. The Consumers’ Counsel office was transferred from the Department by the act of April 11, 1941 (Public Law 34,77th Congress), and established as an inde-pendent agency known as the Office of the Bituminous Coal Consumers’ Counsel. Secretary Ickes is a member of the following bodies: National Forest Reservation Commission, member. Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, chairman. Smithsonian Institution, member. Virgin Islands Co., chairman, board of directors. United States Council of National Defense, member. Planning Committee on Mineral Policy, member. National Power Policy Committee, chairman. District of Columbia Permanent System of Highways Commission, member. Capital Auditorium Commission, chairman. National Archives Council, member. Committee on National Land Problems, member. Board of Directors of Canal Zone Biological Area, member. UNDER SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The position of Under Secretary was established by the act of May 9, 1935 (49 Stat. 176, 177). Under the present assignment of bureaus and divisions, the heads of the following report to him directly: National Park Service; Bureau of Reclama-tion; Grazing Service; Bituminous Coal Division; Petroleum Conservation Divi-sion; and Division of Territories and Island Possessions. His duties relate to the administration of these bureaus and divisions and to the other bureaus and divisions of the Department when he acts for the First Assistant Secretary or the Assistant Secretary. FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The First Assistant Secretary, under the supervision of the Secretary, is the general administrative secretary of the Department. He is also budget officer for the Department and has general supervision over personnel and fiscal admin-istration, the Civilian Conservation Corps program of the Department, and the Office of Land Utilization. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Assistant Secretary has general supervision over all matters concerning the Office of Indian Affairs, General Land Office, Geological Survey, Bureau of Mines, Fish and Wildlife Service, and the United States Board on Geographic Names; admission, disbarment, and restoration of attorneys and agents to practice before the Department and bureaus thereof. The Assistant Secretary also has jurisdiction over matters of a miscellaneous character, such as the approval of the pay roll of the Secretary’s Office and the signing of contracts under the contingent and stationery appropriations, ete. Duties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus are assigned to him from time to time. CHIEF CLERK The Chief Clerk is charged with the enforcement of departmental regulations of a general nature and has administrative supervision over the buildings occupied by the Department; has control of expenditures for contingent, printing and bind-ing, and other departmental appropriations; purchasing, duplicating, telephones, dispensary, mail and files, and motor vehicle service; custodian of the seal of the Department; admissions 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, the General Accounting Office, and the Office of Government Reports; signs such official mail as the Secretary of the Interior may direct, and handles various other miscellaneous matters of the Secretary’s Office not otherwise assigned. INTERIOR Official Duties 589 OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR The Solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department. Responsible to him are an immediate staff of assistants and the chief legal officers of the various bureaus of the Department, together with their staffs. The Solicitor is the chief legal adviser to the Secretary of the Interior and to other administrative officers of the Department. He has cognizance of all matters involving Executive orders, contracts, permits, leases and patents affect-ing the public lands and appurtenant waters of the United States or other public properties or affairs entrusted to the Department, all adjudications affecting Indian estates and all ordinances of territories, insular possessions and Indian tribes. He reviews all regulations issued by the Department or by any of its bureaus. He drafts or advises in the drafting of all legislation sponsored by the Department or its bureaus and all reports on proposed legislation referred to the Department by the Congress or the President for report. He passes upon the title to lands acquired by the Department for national parks, public power projects, irrigation projects, Indian reservations and other purposes. The Solicitor is in charge of all interests of the Department in litigation. He is charged with the defense of certain suits involving the legality of action by the Secretary of the Interior, and the handling, on behalf of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, of all appeals to the Supreme Court from judgments of the insular courts. In all other matters involving public lands, irrigation projects, power development, Indians and Indian property and the territories and insular posses-sions of the United States, the office of the Solicitor examines evidence, prepares cases, drafts pleadings and briefs, and otherwise cooperates with the Department of Justice in the conduct of litigation. The Solicitor of the Department renders formal opinions, at the request of the Secretary of the Interior, on important legal questions arising in the administra-tion of the work of the Department. He considers and recommends the appro-priate disposition of appeals from decisions of the General Land Office, the Grazing Service and other agencies of the Department charged with responsibility for quasi-judicial hearings, claims for damage to property of the United States in the custody of the Department, and claims against the Government for damage arising from operations of the Department. He conducts administrative hearings in other matters referred by the Secretary of the Interior. COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE The Commissioner of the General Land Office is charged with the survey, classification, management, leasing, and disposition of the public lands; adjudi-cation of various kinds of applications filed under the public land laws; adjust-ment of conflicting claims; granting of railroad and other rights-of-way and ease-ments; issuance of patents for lands; furnishing of certified copies of land patents, plats, and other records. In national forests executes all laws relating to survey-ing, prospecting, locating, appropriating, entering, reconveying, or patenting of public lands and the granting of rights-of-way. 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 and relief of the Indian, both tribally and as an individual; the organization of Indian tribes, in-cluding credit organizations; Indian education in boarding schools, day schools, and community centers operated by the Government, and in public schools and other nongovernmental institutions; the health, medical, and sanitation activities; the land program, 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 construction and maintenance and operation; the construction and upkeep of buildings at field units; the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges on Indian lands; Indian emergency conservation work and other emergency activities; also health, education, and other activities in behalf of the natives of Alaska. INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS BOARD The Indian Arts and Crafts Board was created by the act of Congress approved August 27, 1935, and is composed of five members appointed by the Secretary of the Interior. Executive officers and other personnel are employed by the Board. 64674°—T77-2—I1st ed 39 590 Congressional Directory INTERIOR: The function of the Board is ‘‘to promote the economic welfare of the Indian tribes and the Indian wards of the Government through the development of Indian arts and crafts and the expansion of the market for the products of Indian art and craftsmanship.” Broad powers are given the Board in the execution of this function, among which are the powers to engage in marketing and technical research, to engage in experimentation, to correlate activities of various govern-mental and private agencies in the field, to create Government trade-marks of genuineness and quality for Indian products, to establish standards and regula-tions for the use of such trade-marks, to license groups or individuals to use them, and to charge a fee for their use. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY The organic act of the Geological Survey, approved on March 3, 1879 (20 Stat. 377), established the office of Director of the Geological Survey under the Interior Department. Under this act it is provided that the Director shall have the direction of the Geological Survey, the classification of the public lands, and the examination of the geological structure and the mineral resources and products of the national domain. In conformity with its organic act and later legislation the Geological Survey is engaged in the preparation and publication of reports upon the geology and mineral resources of the United States and Alaska, in the investigation of strategic and deficient minerals in Latin America, and in the chemical and physical research incident to this work; in the preparation, pub-lication, and sale of topographic maps of the United States and its dependencies; in investigating and reporting upon water resources, both surface and under-ground; in classifying the public lands as to their mineral and power value and in supervising the technical phases of mineral leasing on lands in which the title to the mineral resources remains in the United States. COMMISSIONER, BUREAU OF RECLAMATION The Bureau of Reclamation was established as an agency of the Federal Govern-ment under the Department of the Interior by the Reclamation Act of June 17, 1902. This act provided for the “reclamation fund’’ from the sale of public lands “to be used in the examination and survey for and the construction and main-tenance of irrigation works for the storage, diversion, and development of waters for the reclamation of arid and semiarid lands in the States and Territories * % kx 2 Ag gecretions from the sale of public land diminished the fund has been augmented by receipts from oil and mineral royalties and supplemented by direct appropriations from the General Treasury. The Commissioner, under the supervision of the Secretary, is in administrative charge of all the activities of the Bureau of Reclamation, including preliminary surveys and investigations of proposed projects, the preparation of plans, the construction of irrigation works; power development, the administration of funds provided for reclamation, the operation and maintenance of completed projects, the settlement and development of project areas, and repayments from irrigation districts and water users associations of the cost of the construction works allocated to irrigation. 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 June 10, 1933; the act of August 21, 1935; and the act of June 23, 1936; formulates policies and directs protective work from standpoint of preservation and utilization and enjoyment by visitors; directs construction from engineering, architectural, and landscape viewpoints, including sanitation facilities, directs public interpretive service in natural sciences, history, and archeology, and provides for museum developments; maintains the Executive mansion and grounds; supervises the annual estimates and expenditures of Commission of Fine Arts; and is responsible for the investigation of national park, monument, and historic site, and military park projects. The Director is charged with supervision over the Civilian Conservation Corps work on Federal and State park lands. He also is Executive officer of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission and is a member of the D. C. Zoning Commission and of various other commissions and committees. INTERIOR Offictal Duties 591 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 improvements of method in the produe-tion of petroleum and natural gas; and other inquiries and technological investi-gations pertinent to such industries. He has charge of tests and analyses of ores, coals, lignites, and other mineral fuel substances belonging to or for use of the United States; has charge of the collection of statistics on mineral resources and economic studies of metals and minerals produced or consumed in the United States and of statistical and other economic information pertaining to world production, distribution, and consumption of all mineral commodities; 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 and the issuance of licenses covering the sale, possession, and use of platinum, iridium, and palla-dium and compounds thereof. Under the provisions of section 7 (a) of the Stra-tegic Materials Act, approved June 7, 1939 (53 Stat. 812), he is directed to investigate the extent and mode of occurrence, the development, mining, prepara-tion, treatment, and utilization of ores and other mineral substances found in the United States or its Territories or insular possessions, which are essential to the common defense or the industrial needs of the United States and the quantities or grades of which are inadequate from known domestic sources, in order to develop domestic sources of supply, and to determine the extent and quality of deposits of such minerals, the most suitable methods of mining and beneficiating them, and the cost at which the minerals or metals may be produced. Under the pro-visions of the Coal Mine Inspection Act of May 7, 1941 (Public Law 49, 77th Cong.), he is authorized and empowered to make or cause to be made annual or necessary inspections and investigations in certain types of coal mines, for the purpose of obtaining information relative to health and safety conditions in such mines and of disseminating information concerning them with a view to reducing accident occurrence and ill health among those employed in coal mining. GRAZING SERVICE The Director of Grazing inaugurates and carries out plans and policies under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior for the conservation, development, and management of the Federal range (142,000,000 acres) and additional lands administered in cooperation with the Federal and State agencies and private individuals as required by the Taylor Grazing Act of June 28, 1934, as amended. Directs the classification of public lands in grazing districts for the purpose of determining their agricultural suitability and recommends their disposition under existing law. Directs a program of rehabilitation of the natural resources and stabilization of the livestock industry consistent with policies formulated in the public interest and in a manner designed to benefit and harmonize the view-points of interested associations, individuals, and agencies concerned with the use of the public range. Activities pertain principally to the States of Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Wyoming, and are administered through 10 grazing regions, subdivided into 57 grazing districts. State regions are administered by regional graziers and each grazing district is under the supervision of a district grazier who has advice and counsel of an advisory board of local stockmen. The Director is charged with the supervision of Civilian Conservation Corps work on Federal range and the control of 22,000 permits involving range use by 12,000,000 livestock. Inaugu- rates cooperative agreements, with State and Federal agencies, local associa- tions, societies, groups, and individuals and directs the analytical study of the range to determine carrying capacities and preserve and improve the water, soil, forage, wildlife, and other resources, and preserve antiquities, in the further-ance of the above program. BITUMINOUS COAL DIVISION The Bituminous Coal Division under the charge of a director administers the provisions of the Bituminous Coal Act of 1937 (except that the power to appoint and fix the compensation of personnel and to make contracts for personal services 592 Congressional Directory INTERIOR is exercised by the office of the Secretary of the Interior). The purposes of the act are to conserve the bituminous coal resources of the United States; to stabilize the bituminous coal mining industry; to promote interstate commerce in bitumi- nous coal; to promulgate a bituminous coal code; and to study and report upon the problems confronting the bituminous coal industry. As provided by the act, a bituminous coal code was promulgated on June 21, 1937. It contains provisions dealing with fair trade practices in the industry and also empowers the Division to establish minimum and maximum prices for all bituminous coals moving in commerce subject to the act. Further authority is conferred upon the Division to prescribe due and reasonable discounts to be made by code members to purchasers of coal for resale under conditions set forth in the act. To provide statistical data required for administration of the law, the Division is directed to establish for each district a statistical bureau to receive reports from producers and make necessary compilations therefrom. Section 9 (a) of the act sets forth the public policy of the United States on employer-employee relations in the bituminous coal industry and the Division is authorized to hold hearings on complaints for the purpose of determining whether coal producers are complying with the provisions of the section and the policy of the act, and, upon the finding of noncompliance, is directed to proceed to secure cancellation of contracts with the United States or any of its agencies involving coal from mines of offending producers. In addition to authority to require producers of coal to furnish information needed in the administration of the act, the Division is empowered to require producers to maintain uniform standards of accounting and is also directed to make detailed studies of various phases of the bituminous coal industry. Vol- untary cooperative associations formed by coal producers for the marketing of coal, commonly known as marketing agencies, are brought under the jurisdiction of the Division and are required to be organized and to function in accordance with regulations for which definite standards are laid down in the act. The Division is vested with authority to file complaints with the Interstate Commerce Commission with respect to rates, charges, tariffs, and practices relating to the transportation of coal, to prosecute the same, and to intervene in any proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission affecting the interests of the bituminous coal industry. The Bituminous Coal Act of 1937 by its terms was limited in operation to a period of 4 years from April 26, 1937, the date of its enactment. However, by Public Law No. 34, Seventy-seventh Congress, First Session, approved April 11, 1941, the effectiveness of the provisions of the act was extended 2 years to April 26, 1943. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE The functions of the Fish and Wildlife Service are concerned with the con-servation of the Nation’s natural resources in the field of vertebrate wildlife, including the land and water mammals and birds and the fishes, reptiles, and amphibians, and also shellfishes and crustaceans. Research is undertaken to learn the habits, needs, and economic utilization of the various forms and the re-sults are published and otherwise made available for practical application in fishery and wildlife management, including preservation and restoration in natural habitat; propagation, as of birds, fur animals, and fishes, under controlled condi-tions; demonstrations and cooperation in local suppression of injurious species; and protection and restoration by conservation-law administration. The 13 divisions of this agency are concerned with (1) business administration; (2) wildlife research; (3) fishery biology; (4) Federal aid to States in wildlife restoration; (5) land acquisitions; (6) wildlife refuge administration and manage-ment; (7) construction and C. C. C. operations; (8) game management and con-servation-law enforcement; (9) fishery industries; (10) fish culture; (11) Alaska fisheries; (12) predator and rodent control; and (13) public relations, in the dis-semination of information developed through research and management and to facilitate law enforcement by acquainting the public with the nature and need of regulatory action. Most of the field work other than research is conducted throughout the United States and Alaska by a regional organization under six regional directors. The Fish and Wildlife Service was formed on June 30, 1940, by consolidation of the former Bureaus of Fisheries and Biological Survey, both of which were trans-ferred to the Department of the Interior on July 1, 1939—the Bureau of Fisheries, which was established in 1871, from the Department of Commerce; and the Biological Survey, established in 1885, from the Department of Agriculture. INTERIOR Officral Duties 993 Both bureaus were originally established for research purposes, and in the course of years both had been charged with work associated with the management of the resources in their respective fields and with conservation-law enforcement. Laws administered by the consolidated agency include the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, the Migratory Bird Conservation Act, and the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act, which were passed to carry out treaty obligations with Canada and Mexico; the Bald Eagle Act; laws regulating interstate transportation of black bass, prohibiting illegal shipments in interstate commerce of bodies or parts of bodies of wild animals, and regulating importations of foreign species of wild birds and mammals; the Federal Aid to Wildlife Restoration Act; the Fisheries Cooperative Marketing Act; laws for the conservation under international agree-ments of sea otters, fur seals, walruses, and sea lions, and part of the Whaling Treaty Act; and laws for the maintenance of the fish, fur, and game resources of Alaska, and for the protection of wildlife and property on national wildlife refuges. The fishery functions of the Service involve the promotion of trade and commerce in fishery products, as well as the conservation of fishery resources. This includes the inquiry into the causes of fluctuations in abundance of food fishes in the lakes, rivers, and coastal waters of the United States, the development of methods of husbanding these resources, including improvements in methods of fish culture and investigation of important fisheries of the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts, with a view to determining the condition of these resources; the propagation and dis-tribution of food fishes; the rescuing of fishes from overflowed lands and the distribution of such fishes to suitable waters; the study of the methods of the fisheries and of the preservation, utilization, and merchandising of fishery products; the collection and compilation of statistics of the fisheries; and the protection and conservation of the salmon and other fisheries of Alaska. The Service is responsible for the administration of the fur-seal herd of the Pribilof Islands and the care of the natives of these islands. Through the agency of the Alaska Game Commission it also regulates hunting and trapping in the Territory, for the protection of big-game and fur mammals and of game and other birds. 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 at Seattle, Wash., and a freight, passenger, and general business office at 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Reports and miscellaneous correspondence in relation to the railroad are handled in the Division of Terri-tories 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. 594 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 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. OFFICE OF PETROLEUM COORDINATOR FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE The Office of Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense was created to carry out the functions and duties delegated by the President in his letter of May 28, 1941, to the Secretary of the Interior. The President designated the Secretary of the Interior as Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense and directed that he coordinate existing Federal authority over oil and gas to insure that the supply of petroleum and its products is accommodated to the needs of the Nation and the National Defense Program. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY The Department of Agriculture is charged by law with acquiring and diffusing among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture, in the most general and comprehensive sense of the term. In addition to conducting research and extension work, the Department administers numerous Federal laws relating to agricultural adjustment, conservation and land use, flood control, farm tenancy and rural rehabilitation, farm credit, crop insur- ance, rural electrification, marketing and distribution of agricultural products, regulation of interstate commerce in food, fiber, and related products, protection and management of the national forests, and other phases of agriculture. The Secretary of Agriculture exercises general supervision and control over the affairs of the Department and formulates and establishes general policies to be pursued by its various branches. The general administrative staff of the Depart-ment under the office of the Secretary includes, in addition to the Secretary’s immediate office, the offices of the Under Secretary and Assistant Secretary, the office of Land Use Coordination, Information, Personnel, Budget and Finance, Plant and Operations, Research (Office of Experiment Stations), and Foreign Agricultural Relations, the Office of the Director of Marketing, the Office of the Solicitor, the Library, the Extension Service, and the Office of Agricultural Defense Relations. The Under Secretary and the Assistant Secretary act for the Secretary in his absence and assist in policy formation and in public and official contacts. The heads of the respective offices above mentioned report directly to the Secretary and each has general supervision over the work of the Department of the type which the title of the office implies. In the office of the Secretary, the Agricultural Program Board reviews, evaluates, and makes recommendations to the Secretary on the plans and programs developed by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics in the light of administrative feasibility and practicability, the interests of farmers and the general public, and the over-all needs of the Department. The Land Use Coordinator serves as chairman of the board, the membership of which includes the Chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, the heads of the agencies administering the action programs of the Department, and members of the Secretary’s staff. The Administrative Council is concerned with problems of over-all coordination and administrative management. The Under Secretary is chairman of the council, which includes the Directors of Finance, Personnel, Research, Extension Work, Information, and Marketing, the Solicitor, and the Land Use Coordinator. OFFICE OF LAND USE COORDINATION The Office of Land Use Coordination directs the coordination of land-use activities as they relate to the work of the Department as a whole, including the integration of land policies and the clearance of land acquisition projects; the establishment of uniform standards for surveys relating to land use and the correla-tion of survey projects; the coordination of credit policies and programs; coordi-nation of the Department’s farm forestry program; the formulation of policies relating to water utilization, water conservation, and water facilities programs, and the coordination of the Department’s flood-control program; the coordi- AGRICULTURE Official Duties 995 nation of administrative and procedural phases of the land-use programs; in-tegration of the Department’s land-use programs with those of State agencies. The Office cooperates with the Director of Research and chiefs of bureaus in coordinating land-use research with the survey and detailed planning work of the action agencies and also cooperates with heads of action agencies in coordinating basic land-use policies and programs. On behalf of the Secretary, staff members of the Office represent the Department on the National Resources Planning Board and in other interdepartmental activities relating to land use. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL The Office of Personnel has primary responsibility for the personnel program of the Department as a whole. It has general direction and supervision of organization, position classification, recruitment, placement, training, safety work, discipline, and related problems. The Office represents the Department in its relations with the Civil Service Commission and, where personnel matters are concerned, with other agencies. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE The Office of Budget and Finance, under the supervision of the Director of Finance, who is also the budget officer of the Department, is responsible for the financial affairs of the Department. Through its own staff and through coordina-tion of bureau financial administration, the Office directs and supervises budgeting, accounting, purchasing, and related functions. The Office represents the Depart-ment before the Bureau of the Budget, the General Accounting Office, the Treasury ‘Department, the Appropriations Committees of the Congress, and other Federal and non-Federal agencies in the conduct of the financial business of the Depart- ment. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS The Office of Plant and Operations is responsible for the planning, initiation, and development of the operational activities of the Department in connection with housing departmental activities both in Washington and the field, communi-cations services, technical advisory service where engineering principles are in-volved in the operation and maintenance of equipment, motor transport service for the Department in Washington; management and operational functions at the Beltsville Research Center, including the maintenance of a central mechanical and repair shop, tilling land, planting and harvesting crops, operating a central sewage disposal plant, furnishing electrical energy, telephone, janitor, motor-truck, and other related services; the administrative functions of the office of the Secretary, and advises the Secretary on all matters involving the above types of activities throughout the Department. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS The Office of Experiment Stations administers the funds for research in agri-culture and rural life made available to the experiment stations of the States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico through annual congressional appropriations under the provisions of the Hatch, Adams, and Purnell Acts, title I of the Bankhead-Jones Act of June 30, 1935, and the supplementary acts. In adminis-tering these Federal grants the Office evaluates and approves new and revised research proposals, reviews and approves annual programs and budget allotments, and examines, in the field, the work and expenditures. An annual report on the work and expenditures of the stations is published, as required by law. The general administrative direction and supervision of the experiment station of the Department of Agriculture in Puerto Rico is a responsibility of the Office. The Office promotes cooperation in the planning and coordination of research both within the Department of Agriculture, among the experiment stations, and between the Department and the stations through advisory relationships and supervisory activities which include the examination and approval of formal memoranda of understanding covering cooperative research. It collects and dis-seminates information designed to enhance the productiveness and soundness of agricultural research programs including the publication of Experiment Station Record which reviews current progress and results of the research of the experi-ment stations and other agencies. ; The Chief of the Office and Director of Research is responsible for the adminis-tration of the Special Research Fund of the Department including the planning Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE and coordination of the nine laboratories established in major agricultural regions and the special research projects of the Department under this fund which is authorized by the Bankhead-Jones Act. The Chief of the Office, as Director of Research, with the cooperation of the bureaus involved, is responsible for the planning and coordination of the programs of the four regional research labora-tories authorized by section 202 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938. EXTENSION SERVICE The Extension Service aids in making available the results of research and investigation in agriculture and home economics to those who can put the informa-tion into practice. It coordinates the extension activities of the bureaus of the Department and of the State agricultural colleges and deals with emergency situations involving Department assistance to farmers. It represents the Depart-ment in the conduct of cooperative extension work in agriculture and home economics by the State agricultural colleges and the Department under the Smith-Lever, Capper-Ketcham, Bankhead-Jones, and supplementary acts of Congress. Each of the 48 States, and the Territories of Hawaii and Alaska and Puerto Rico, has a director of extension who represents jointly the Department and the State agricultural college in the administration of extension work. In each State the organization consists of a State administrative and supervisory staff, with head-quarters in most cases at the State agricultural college, and county agricultural agents, county home demonstration agents, and county club agents, who have their offices usually at the county seats. The distinguishing feature of extension teaching is the field demonstration, although other educational methods are also utilized to teach the best farm and home practices to farm men, women, boys, and girls. The Extension Service also has charge of the Department’s activity in the preparation, distribution, and display of agricultural exhibits and motion pictures. OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS The Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations is responsible for the collection, through the Foreign Service of the United States, the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, and other sources, of information on foreign agricultural production, foreign markets, foreign trade and related matters of significance to American agriculture, and the dissemination of this information. A limited number of commodity specialists is available for investigation of foreign market conditions affecting particular groups of American agricultural products, including studies of competitive foreign production. The Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations coordinates the relations of the Department of Agriculture in respect to foreign trade and allied problems and policies with the Department of State and other Departments and agencies of the Government, and with foreign governments and private agencies. OFFICE OF INFORMATION The Office of Information supervises the expenditure of the appropriations for printing and binding for the Department; supervises all editing, illustrating, printing, and distribution of publications; and maintains an Addressing, Dupli-cating, and Mailing Section to serve the various bureaus of the Department. The Office prepares special Department reports and serves as a departmental clearing house for information prepared for the press as a result of the research, regulatory, conservation, service, and action programs of the Department; it correlates information on the results of specialized work in diverse lines, and presents facts in forms most practical for use by farmers and the general public. The Office also furnishes daily, through radio stations in all parts of the United States, authentic information of practical use to farmers and others concerning the discoveries made by the Department and the farm practices recommended by it; and answers by radio questions in all fields of agriculture and home economics. LIBRARY The Department library, with its branch libraries in the various bureaus, contains approximately 350,000 volumes on agriculture and the related sciences, technology, and economics, and receives currently 5,000 periodicals. A list of the periodicals currently received in the library has been published as Miscella-neous Publication No. 245. AGRICULTURE Official Dutres | 597 The dictionary card catalog of the main library, containing more than a half million cards, is a record of the book resources of the whole Department. It is supplemented by several extensive special indexes 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. A series of bibliographical contributions is issued by the library in mimeographed form, and a separate series of Agricultural Economics Bibliographies is issued by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics library. A brief list of the more important accessions to the library is contained in the mimeographed series, Agricultural Library Notes, issued monthly by the library. In addition, the following lists are issued currently by branch libraries in the various bureaus: Agricultural Economics Literature (Bureau of Agricultural Economics library), Current Liter-ature in Agricultural Engineering (Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engi-neering library), Cotton Literature (Division of Cotton Marketing library, Agricultural Marketing Service), Entomology Current Literature (Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine library), Forestry Current Literature (Forest Service library), Plant Science Literature (Bureau of Plant Industry library), and Soil Conservation Literature (Soil Conservation Service library). OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR The Office of the Solicitor is the law office of the Department. The law requires that “the legal work of the Department of Agriculture shall be performed under the supervision and direction of the Solicitor” (5 U. S. C., sec. 518). The Solicitor and the attorneys of his office advise the Secretary and other administrative officials on legal problems in connection with Department activi-ties. They assist in the preparation of proposed legislative bills, administrative rules and regulations, orders, and proclamations. They provide the Secretary and other officials of the Department with legal opinions relative to the applica-tion of statutes, Executive orders, and administrative rules and regulations. The Solicitor’s Office also takes part in drafting, examining, and construing contracts, deeds, mortgages, leases, and other documents. It approves the organization of cooperative associations, soil conservation districts, and similar instrumentalities, and assists in determining their eligibility for participation in Department programs. Other activities of the Office include the examination of evidence to determine whether there have been violations of acts administered by the Department. In proper cases, the Solicitor recommends prosecution to the Attorney General. Pleadings and briefs in civil and criminal cases involving the Department and laws administered by it are prepared by the Office, which cooperates with the Department of Justice in handling such litigation in the lower and appellate courts. The Solicitor’s Office represents the Department as counsel at hearings before the Secretary. The Office handles contacts on legal matters with other State and Federal governmental agencies. It conducts administrative hearings in: reparation and similar proceedings, and issues tentative findings, conclusions, and orders with respect thereto, under the various acts administered by the Department. The Office of the Solicitor also prosecutes, for employees of the Department, applications for patents on inventions which are to be used in departmental work. It examines the titles to lands authorized for purchase by the Department or on which loans may be made by the Department. The Office considers and recom-mends the appropriate disposition of claims for damage to property of the United States in the custody of the Department and of claims against the Government for damage arising from operations of the Department. OFFICE OF C. C. C. ACTIVITIES The Office of C. C. C. Activities has general Department-wide responsibility for the administration of C. C. C. programs carried on by the several bureaus, including the coordination of these activities into a unified program; general oversight of C. C. C. matters pertaining to finance, budget, equipment, personnel, location of camps, ete.; and responsibility for the coordination and integration of C. C. C. activities with other programs of the Department. The Chief of the Office of C. C. C. Activities is also designated as the Secretary’s representative on the Advisory Council of the Director of the Civilian Conservation Corps. 598 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE OFFICE OF AGRICULTURAL DEFENSE RELATIONS The Office of Agricultural Defense Relations is a planning, advisory, and liaison office set up within the Department of Agriculture to serve and represent the Nation’s farmers in the over-all defense program. The office was established at the request of the President, who transferred to the Secretary of Agriculture on May 5, 1941, the following functions which were previously assigned to the Division of Agriculture of the National Defense Advisory Commission: Serve as a clearing house to bring into common focus the consideration of agricultural needs and problems as they relate to the defense program; facilitate the coordination of defense operations carried on by the various bureaus and agencies of the Department of Agriculture; assist the Secretary in the Maintenance of effective channels of communication between the Department of Agriculture and the several agencies of the Office for Emergency Management, the Depart-ments of War, Navy, and other defense agencies, with respect to problems of procurement, production, priorities, price, and other activities involving agricul-tural considerations; assist in planning of adjustments in the agricultural program in order to meet defense needs. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF MARKETING The Director of Marketing, serving as a general staff officer and as personal representative of the Secretary, is responsible for the coordination of marketing, distribution, and regulatory work of the agencies and general programs of the Department interdepartmentally and in relation to State governments and their agencies. The position of Director of Marketing was created by order of the Secretary of Agriculture on January 19, 1940, to take over certain duties and Thonstivilies previously handled by the Director of Marketing and Regulatory ork. The agencies of the Department which have functions affected by the work of the Director of Marketing are the surplus Marketing Administration, the Agricul-tural Marketing Service, the Sugar Division of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, the Commodity Credit Corporation, the Bureau of Home Eco-nomics, the Commodity Exchange Administration, the Bureau of Animal In-dustry, the Bureau of Dairy Industry, the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, and the Forest Service. The Director of Marketing also has responsi-bility with respect to general problems in the marketing field which may involve agencies of the Department not listed herein. The Consumers’ Counsel Division is administered under the general supervision and direction of the Director of Marketing. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ADMINISTRATION The Agricultural Adjustment Administration is established within the Depart-ment of Agriculture to carry out certain provisions of the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act, of the Sugar Act of 1937, of the Agricultural Adjust-ment Act of 1938, and related legislation. Local farmer committees, elected from among their own number by producers cooperating in the program, are in charge of the field administration of all phases of the A. A. A. program, including com-modity loans and crop insurance on wheat, that are made available through the Commodity Credit Corporation and the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, respectively. : The national A. A. A. program has three primary objectives: The maintenance of the Ever-Normal Granary, by which producers and consumers are assured of abundant supplies and emergency reserves of farm products at fair prices; con-servation of the Nation’s soil resources; and assistance to farmers in obtaining a fair share of the national income. To accomplish these purposes, the program provides for the following methods: (1) National acreage goals for major crops that encourage plantings in line with domestic demand, foreign markets, and ample reserves; (2) payments to producers who adopt specific soil-building practices on their individual farms, or who increase the proportion of their land devoted to crops which restore and conserve the fer-tility of the soil; (3) parity payments to supplement conservation payments, when prices for basic farm products are low and when funds are appropriated, to help producers obtain returns nearer parity levels; (4) loans on crops to enable producers to carry over supplies from years of unusually large production for market in years of crop shortage; (5) marketing quotas on cotton, corn, wheat, rice, peanuts, and tobacco, to stabilize marketing in years of excess crop production, when approved by \ AGRICULTURE Official Duties 599 producers voting in a referendum; and (6) crop insurance on wheat and, beginning with the 1942 crop, on cotton, to offset possible crop failure. Under the sugar program, the Secretary of Agriculture is required to estimate annually the sugar needs of American consumers and to allot the estimated quan-tity among the various areas, domestic and foreign, supplying this market. It also provides for payments to domestic sugar-cane and sugar-beet producers who qualify under provisions of the program. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY AND ENGINEERING The Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering is a research organiza-tion engaged in investigations and experiments in the fields of chemistry, physics, engineering, and other sciences with the object of improving agriculture and developing new and wider industrial uses for agricultural products. The Bureau is engaged in investigations concerning the technology, manufac-ture, utilization, and preservation, including freezing, of agricultural products and byproducts. Its scientists conduct biological, chemical, physical, microscopial, and technological investigations of foods, feeds, drugs, and substances used in the manufacture thereof, including studies of their physiological effects on the human organism. They perform experiments on the utilization of agricultural raw mate-rials for industrial purposes and on the development of improved processes in the production of rosin and turpentine. The four Regional Laboratories for Research on Utilization of Farm Products are engaged on studies of the principal surplus crops in each of the four major farm producing areas of the country for the purpose of developing new and wider industrial uses thereof. The Northern Regional Research Laboratory, located in Peoria, Ill., is engaged on studies of corn, wheat, and agricultural wastes; the Southern Regional Research Laboratory at New Orleans, on studies of cotton, peanuts, and sweetpotatoes; the Eastern Regional Research Laboratory at Wynd-moor, Pa., near Philadelphia, on studies of tobacco, apples, potatoes, milk prod-ucts, vegetables, hides, skins, tanning materials and leather, and animal fats and oils, and the Western Regional Research Laboratory at Albany, Calif., near San Francisco, on studies of fruits, vegetables, potatoes, wheat, alfalfa, and poultry products and byproducts. The Bureau conducts investigations of farm machinery, farm buildings, rural electrification, and other engineering phases of agriculture. These investigations deal with mechanical equipment for producing and processing farm products, including seedbed preparation, planting, cultivating and harvesting, fertilizer placement, hay drying, cotton ginning, fiber flax processing machinery, and control of insect pests. They also cover the planning and construction of farm buildings, including heating, lighting, insulation, sanitation, and water supply for farmhouses, crop storages, and animal shelters, and facilities for the transporta-tion and storage of perishable fruits and vegetables. Service is rendered other bureaus of the Department in the design and con-struction of structures outside the District of Columbia and in the purchase of engineering equipment. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS The Bureau of Agricultural Economics is the general program planning agency of the Department. Under a general memorandum of understanding the Bureau cooperates with the operating agencies of the Department in developing a unified general program that encompasses land use, conservation, production adjust-ment, farm tenancy, rural rehabilitation, marketing service and regulatory work, and other authorized activities. The Bureau cooperates in the development of land-use planning, working in county and State with farmers, trained technicians, and representatives of appropriate State and Federal agencies. This phase of the Bureau’s work aids in the coordination at the local level of the various national and local agricul-tural programs and aids in securing the' participation of the rural people in developing plans for the solution of agricultural problems. The Bureau is also the Department’s research agency in the field of agricultural economics. It conducts research and statistical analyses relative to agricultural production, distribution, land utilization, and conservation in their broad aspects. This work includes studies of farm management and practice, utilization of farm and food products, purchasing of farm supplies, farm population and rural life, farm labor, farm finance, insurance and taxation, and adjustments in production 600 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE to probable demand for the different farm and food products. It covers also economic research on land ownership and values, costs, prices, and income in their relation to agriculture, including causes of their variations and trends. AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE The Agricultural Marketing Service is a service and regulatory agency con-cerned with the various phases of marketing farm products. Its five broad fields of service are: (1) The collection and dissemination of crop and livestock produc-tion information, and other agricultural statistics; (2) the daily reporting of marketing information from terminal markets, shipping points, and producing sections; (3) standardization, inspection, and grading of farm products and a number of food products; (4) research and demonstration in standardization, grading, preparation for market, and other related phases of marketing; and (5) the administration of market service and regulatory statutes. Estimates of acreage, yield, production, farm utilization, sales, and stocks are reported for more than 100 crops. Timely information is provided on the progress of all major crops during the growing season. Current reports also are issued on livestock production, milk and egg production and consumption, on cotton grade and staple statistics, on prices received and paid by farmers, on farm wages and farm labor, ete. Market information is collected and disseminated daily on movement, supplies, quality, and prices of livestock, meats, wool, fruits, vegetables, dairy and poultry products, grains, cotton, tobacco, and miscellaneous products. Much of the infor-mation is gathered and released at terminal markets and transmitted over a leased-wire system to other markets widely scattered over the country. During the heavyshipping season for a number of commodities, temporary field stations are maintained in major producing areas. The official standards developed by the Service provide an understandable and uniform yardstick for measuring gradations in quality of farm and food products. Some of these standards, such as for grain and cotton, are mandatory if the products are sold by grade and are shipped in interstate or foreign com-merce. For most of the other commodities, the use of the official standards is permissive. An inspection service is available in many of the principal producing and receiv-ing centers of the country for grains, fruits and vegetables, meats and meat products, cotton, tobacco, hay, beans, butter, cheese, eggs, and poultry. Manda-tory and free inspection of tobacco is provided at more than 80 designated auction markets. Free cotton classification is provided, on request, to groups of pro-ducers organized for the improvement of their cotton. As a basis for these services, research is conducted on standardization and inspection, packing, packaging, labeling, transporting, storing, market reporting, and crop and livestock estimating. Laboratory, studies include milling and baking tests with grains, spinning and ginning tests with various types and grades of cotton, wool shrinkage tests, etc. Demonstrations and schools are held among the growers and consumers for the purpose of acquainting them with the grades for individual commodities and with the marketing practices that help to maintain high quality. The various activities of the Service involve the administration of a number of specific laws: United States Grain Standards Act, United States Warehouse Act, United States Cotton Futures Act, United States Standard Container Acts, Federal Seed Act, Dairy Exports Act, Packers and Stockyards Act, United States Cotton Standards Act, Produce Agency Act, Cotton Grade and Staple Statistics Act, Wool Standards Act, Tobacco Stocks and Standards Act, Perishable Agri-cultural Commodities Act, Export Apple and Pear Act, Tobacco Inspection Act, Insecticide Act, Naval Stores Act, Peanut Statistics Act, Tobacco Seed and Plant Exportation Act. 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 the feeding and breeding of animals and the improvement of their products. 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, and the Virus-Serum-Toxin Act. AGRICULTURE Officzal Dutzes 601 COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION Commodity Credit Corporation is essentially a lending institution making loans principally to producers of farm commodities. Such loans are designed to protect and increase farm income, to stabilize farm prices, and to assure adequate supplies of farm products. Under its charter, the Corporation is empowered, among other things, to buy and sell, lend upon, or otherwise deal in commodities, agricultural or otherwise. The Commodity Credit Corporation has made loans on barley, butter, corn, cotton, dates, figs, flaxseed, grain sorghums, hops, mohair, peanuts, pecans, prunes, raisins, rye, soybeans, tobacco, turpentine and rosin, wheat, and wool. All loans made by the Corporation have been secured by commodities pledged as collateral under either warehouse receipts or chattel mortgages. Under the provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, as amended, loans are mandatory, under certain conditions, on five commodities, namely, cotton, corn, rice, tobacco, and wheat. On these commodities the rate of the loan for 1941 crops is set at 85 percent of parity price. Loans are prohibited on any of these five commodities with respect to which a vote has been taken on marketing quotas and has failed to be approved by a required two-thirds majority. Commodity Credit Corporation was created as an agency of the United States, under the laws of the State of Delaware, on October 17, 1933, pursuant to Ex-ecutive Order No. 6340, dated October 16, 1933. It has an authorized and paid-in capital of $100,000,000. Under the act of March 8, 1938, as amended, the Corporation is authorized, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, to issue and have outstanding at any one time, bonds, notes, debentures, and other similar obligations in an aggregate amount not to exceed $2,650,000,000. COMMODITY EXCHANGE ADMINISTRATION The Commodity Exchange Administration provides Federal supervision of futures trading in agricultural commodities on 18 licensed markets. Under the Commodity Exchange Act, the following commodities are subject to supervision: Wheat, cotton, rice, corn, oats, barley, rye, flaxseed, grain sorghums, millfeeds, butter, eggs, Irish potatoes, wool tops, fats and oils, cottonseed, cottonseed meal, peanuts, soybeans, and soybean meal. Exchanges conducting futures markets in any of these commodities are required to qualify under the act and be designated as contract markets by the Secretary of Agriculture. The Commodity Exchange Administration maintains continuous and syste-matic surveillance of futures trading in supervised commodities to: (1) Prevent e - manipulation and corners, and excessive speculation causing unreasonable and unnatural price fluctuations; (2) prevent the dissemination of false or misleading crop and market information affecting prices; (3) prevent cheating, fraud, and deceit in connection with the execution of customers’ orders; (4) insure proper handling by commission firms of customers’ funds; and (5) prevent bucketing and fictitious transactions. Futures commission merchants and floor brokers handling orders for others are required to register annually. Reports are compiled and released daily showing the volume of trading and amount of open contracts in various commodities; complaints are investigated; and general studies of the operations of the markets are made and published from time to time for the information of Congress and the general public. The Administration cooperates with other governmental agencies in obtaining factual data and in providing information in connection with supply and demand factors affecting prices. BUREAU OF DAIRY INDUSTRY The Bureau of Dairy Industry conducts research in the breeding, feeding, and management of dairy cattle to improve the milk-producing efficiency of dairy cows. It conducts investigations of the energy requirements of rations of dairy cattle, the effect of different levels of protein upon milk yield and composition, the vitamin A requirements of dairy cattle for growth and for normal production and reproduction, and the effect of various levels of vitamin A on the nutritive value of milk. It cooperates with the State dairy extension services in the establishment of improved dairy practices through the operation of dairy-herd-improvement associations, and it maintains and analyzes production records of all cows in dairy-herd-improvement association herds for the purpose of identifying dairy sires and determining their breeding value. The Bureau conducts scientific studies to develop sanitary methods of handling milk on the farm, in transit, and in dairy plants, and to promote efficiency in 602 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE dairy-plant equipment, arrangement, and operation. It studies the bacteriology and chemistry of milk and its products to improve present methods and to develop new methods of manufacturing, transporting, and storing milk products. It has supervision of the sanitary inspection of renovated-butter factories. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE The Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine carries on investigations on insects, gives advice on how to control or use them, cooperates with State and local agencies to control and prevent the spread of injurious insects and plant diseases, advises the Secretary of Agriculture on matters relating to plant quar- antines, and is responsible for the enforcement of Federal plant quarantines and regulatory orders to prevent the introduction into or spread within the United States of injurious insect pests and plant diseases. The research it does on insects includes studies on their classification, anatomy, physiology, habits, and responses under normal and artificial conditions. The investigations are conducted to develop information on how insects which are injurious to agriculture, forestry, animals, or annoy or injure man or destroy his possessions may be eliminated or controlled. This involves research on chemicals or other substances that may be used to prevent, destroy, attract, repel, or mitigate insects which infest vegetation, attack or annoy animals, or may be present in households or any environment whatsoever, including the study of problems relating to the composition, action, and application of such materials and the development of methods for their manufacture and use. Investigations are made on diseases and natural enemies of insects to determine ways of utilizing those which may aid in the control of injurious insect pests. Studies are made on the culture and use of honeybees and of beekeeping practices. Under general and special authorization and in cooperation with State and local agencies, the Bureau carries on operations to eradicate, suppress, or control incipient outbreaks of insect pests and plant diseases, including those which may have gained a more or less limited foothold within the United States. It cooperates with State and local agencies in combating insects or plant diseases which occur in emergency outbreaks which unless controlled would cause extreme losses over wide areas within their normal distribution. It cooperates with agencies of the Federal Government responsible for the management of lands under control of the United States in operations to combat insects and plant pests. To prevent the entry or spread within the United States of injurious plant pests and diseases it enforces quarantines and restrictive orders, issued under authority provided in various acts of Congress, which prohibit or regulate the importation or interstate movement of injurious insects and of plants and plant products that may introduce or spread plant pests or diseases new to or not widely prevalent within the United States. To carry out this work it regulates and inspects the entry into the United States of railway cars and other vehicles, freight, express, and baggage from Mexico and when necessary cleans or disinfects them. It inspects at ports of entry plants and plant products that may be brought to the United States in compliance with plant quarantine regulations. The Bureau inspects plants and plant products offered for export and certifies to shippers and interested parties such products in accordance with the sanitary requirements of the country to which they may be exported. FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION The Farm Credit Administration provides a coordinated credit system which at all times makes available to farmers and stockmen and their cooperative organizations both long-term and short-term credit. It was created by an Execu-tive order effective May 27, 1933, which provided for the consolidation within this one organization of the powers and functions of all Federal agencies dealing primarily with agricultural credit. In July 1939 the Farm Credit Administration became a part of the Department of Agriculture. The United States is divided into 12 Farm Credit districts. In each district are four major credit units located in one central office. These are: 1. A Federal land bank which makes long-term mortgage loans through local national farm loan associations. Several thousand of these associations serve all parts of the Nation. 2. A production credit corporation which has partly capitalized and which supervises local production credit associations. Approximately 525 production credit associations are located at convenient points throughout the United States. 3. A district bank for cooperatives which makes loans to farmer cooperatives. AGRICULTURE Official Dutzes 603 4. A Federal intermediate credit bank which acts as a bank of discount in supplying short-term funds required by production credit associations, bank for cooperatives, and other financial institutions for loans to farmers and farmers’ cooperatives. Each unit of the Farm Credit Administration serves a distinct purpose. The local associations make and service loans, the district institutions supervise and provide funds, and the Washington office supervises and coordinates the work of the entire system. A Central Bank for Cooperatives, located in Washington, D. C., makes loans to large regional or national cooperatives and assists district banks for cooperatives in handling large loans. The Cooperative Research and Service Division of the Farm Credit Administration conducts research studies and service activities relating to problems of farmers’ cooperatives. Some additional functions are performed by the Farm Credit Administration. These include the making of emergency crop and feed loans from funds appro-priated by Congress. The Farm Credit Administration also is liquidating the business of the regional agricultural credit corporations and of the joint stock land banks. The making of Land Bank Commissioner loans from funds made available by the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation may also be considered a temporary function, since these loans may be made under existing laws only until June 1, 1942. The Farm Credit Administration also charters and super-vises Federal credit unions, which are cooperative thrift and loan associations formed by both urban and rural groups. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION The Farm Security Administration was established in 1937 to carry out the programs of the United States Department of Agriculture designed to help low-income farm families. The rural rehabilitation phase of these programs includes advancement of funds to farm families, who are unable to secure adequate credit from any other source, upon the basis of farm and home management plans ac-companied by technical guidance and, where necessary, by equitable adjustment of debts. The Farm Security Administration also carries out those provisions of the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act (approved in 1937) which made possible a program of long-term loans to farm tenants, sharecroppers, or farm laborers to assist them in becoming farm owners. The Farm Security Administration is also responsible for the resettlement projects previously administered by the Resettle-ment Administration and other agencies. FEDERAL CROP INSURANCE CORPORATION The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation offers insurance against all natural crop hazards to the wheat and cotton farmers of the Nation, guaranteeing them 50 percent or 75 percent of their average yield. Premiums are based in part on the crop loss experience of the insured farm and in part on the crop loss experience of the county in which the farm is located. Each subsequent year actual pro- —_—— duction figures for the individual farm are incorporated into the average yield and premium rate to keep the insurance on a sound actuarial basis. The Corporation guarantees only yield, not price. Both premiums and indemnities are computed in units of the commodity insured. The applicant for insurance signs a com-modity note for the premium, which matures about harvesttime. Payments on the note made on the basis of the cash equivalent price are immediately converted into units of the commodity insured and held in storage as reserves against liabili-ties under crop insurance contracts written by the Corporation. When losses occur, indemnities are paid in units of the commodity insured or sufficient reserves of that commodity are sold and the indemnities are paid on the basis of the cash equivalent price. The Corporation was created by the Federal Crop Insurance Act (title V of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, approved February 16, 1938) as a non-profit Corporation with capital stock of $100,000,000. The original act authorized crop insurance for wheat only, although it provided that research should be done on the feasibility of extending crop insurance to other agricultural commodities. On June 21, 1941, the act was amended to extend crop insurance to cotton. The headquarters office of the Corporation is in Washington, D. C. Branch Offices for the wheat crop insurance program are located in the following cities: Kansas City, Mo.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Chicago, Ill.; Spokane, Wash.; and Rich-mond, Va. Branch offices for the cotton crop insurance program are located in Dallas, Tex., and Birmingham, Ala. The field work in the various States and counties is carried on through the State and county agricultural eonservation committees. 604 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE FOREST SERVICE Gongress has designated the Forest Service as the agency of the Federal Govern- ment specifically responsible for protecting, developing, and administering certain public lands and their living resources. But one part of the job of the Forest Service has to do with forest land in private ownership, for Congress has also authorized it to help States and farm, industrial, and other owners to protect and develop such of their lands as are more valuable in forest growth than as plowland. Broadly, responsibilities of the Forest Service are: (1) To initiate and apply, locally and nationally, action programs in the interest of public welfare and help with action programs initiated by county, State, and Federal agencies; (2) to protect, develop, and administer in the public interest the national-forest system and its resources, products, values, and services; (3) to conduct research in prob-lems involving protection, development, management, renewal, and continuous use of all resources, products, values, and services of forest lands; (4) to make research and administrative findings and results available to individuals, indus-tries, and public and private agencies generally. The national-forest system comprises 177,497,531 acres of Government land. On these public properties forestry methods are applied in growing and harvesting timber. Grazing by livestock and big game is scientifically regulated. Sustained and, where possible, increased yields of timber, forage, and wildlife are obtained. Water from protected watersheds is used in the country and in cities for domestic, agricultural, and industrial purposes. Simple, democratic, and inexpensive forms of recreation are encouraged. Under management to assure replacement, pro-vision is also made for many other forms of land and resource use. In research, in national-forest administration, and in initiating and applying action programs the Forest Service works in close cooperation with other branches and bureaus of the Department; is guided by the Department’s basic purpose of establishing and maintaining such sound land-and-resource management and use as will help build and maintain communities and local and national social and economic structures. Northeastern Timber Salvage Administration.—The hurricane of September 1938 throughout the New England area brought unprecedented disaster to the forests and woodlands of that region, without regard to boundaries or ownership. In the neighborhood of 2 billion feet of standing timber was blown down. The Northeastern Timber Salvage Administration, an operating division of Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation officially administered by the Forest Service, purchased a substantial portion of this wind-thrown timber; stored it in water or otherwise and is sawing it into lumber or other forms of fabrication, and marketing the timber products. BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS The Bureau of Home Economics conducts research to determine ways of ime proving the well-being of the Nation’s families. The research of the Bureau falls into several broad fields: (1) Foods and nutrition—Facts needed by homemakers, dietitians, and nutrition workers are determined and assembled through studies of food values, of the nutritive needs of the human body, and of methods of food preparation and preservation, including the effect of such methods on the nutritive value of foods. (2) Family economics—Research is conducted to obtain information on the living standards of families at different income levels. These data are used in comparing actual conditions with accepted standards of ade-quacy and in developing recommendations for the improvement of living stand-ards. (3) Textiles and clothing—Information is developed to make possible more effective utilization of textile fibers for clothing and household purposes, and to help consumers make more intelligent textile purchases on the retail market. (4) Housing and household equipment—These studies form the basis for the preparation of buying guides and bulletins to aid consumers in the intelligent selection, operation, and care of household equipment. Work on housing is directed toward the development of minimum desirable standards for room sizes, storage space, and work centers that will not sacrifice efficiency or standards of family living. Ter Research results are made available through technical and popular bulletins, radio talks, and exhibits. The Bureau works closely with the Extension Service, Farm Security Administration, the Office of Education, and the Civilian Defense agencies in their programs of educating homemakers toward improving dietary habits and ways of spending, and otherwise using their resources more effectively in family living. AGRICULTURE Official Dutzes 605 BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY The activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry include investigations of soils, fertilizers, and plants, principally those of economic importance. Soils investigations center around the relationship between the soil and cropsthat grow in it. This involves a study of soils from the standpoint of their origin and their classification into main groups, of which there are more than 8,000 types. The job of classifying all of the agricultural soils of the United States—done in cooperation with State agricultural experiment stations—is now about half com- pleted and the work is being pushed as fast as possible. In addition the work with soils includes studies of their basic physical and chemical properties, studies of the microscopic plant and animal life in the soil and its effect on crops, methods of cultivation, crop rotations, and studies of mate- rials that are added to the soil to make it more productive. The latter may include certain crops that are grown to be plowed into the soil, animal manure, lime, or commercial fertilizers. The fertilizer investigations also seek more efficient ‘methods of manufacture and more effective ways of using these materials. Research with plants is concerned chiefly with reducing the hazards of produc-tion and improving the quality of all crops. One of the principal ways of doing this is by breeding new strains or varieties that are resistant to diseases, insects, heat, drought, or cold. Representatives of the Bureau have visited most foreign countries and brought back thousands of plants that have been useful here, either in their original form or as breeding material. Other important work with plants includes studies of weed control and of methods of planting, harvesting, transportation, and storage of crop plants. Efforts to control diseases involve studies or organisms that cause the disease, their life histories, and a knowledge of how they are spread to new territory. With this information it is often possible to work out some practical control meas- ure such as seed treatment, spraying, or dusting. The regulatory activities of the Bureau are limited to the control of quality of plant and soil inoculants. In addition to the experimental activities of the Bureau at the United States horticultural station at the Beltsville Research Center, 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. The development of the National Arboretum was established under the act of March 4, 1927 (Public, No. 799, 69th Cong.), and funds for its operation are appropriated through the Bureau of Plant Industry. Pursuant to authority contained in this act, the Secretary of Agriculture created the Advisory Council of the National Arboretum. The council makes recommendations concerning the establishment and maintenance of the National Arboretum for purposes of research and education regarding tree and plant life. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION The Rural Electrification Administration is charged with extending electric service to farms and other rural users without such service. As the principal direct means of accomplishing this, the Rural Electrification Administration lends money to local groups organized under State laws, in most cases farmers’ coop-eratives and other nonprofit organizations accorded preference in the act, for construction and operation of electrical power-distribution systems in unserved areas. In a few cases loans are made for power-generating facilities also. These loans are amortized over a 25-year period from revenues from sales of electric power. Supplementary loans are made to line-construction borrowers, to provide funds to relend to their individual members to finance installations of wiring, plumbing, and some categories of electric farm and home equipment. In addition to this lending program, the Administration conducts educational activities directed toward increasing the cost-reducing and income-producing use of electric power on farms, and toward making electricity a vital force in rural communities. The Administration has no regional offices, all contacts being made through Washington. However, a number of engineers, auditors, examiners, and elec-trification advisers are kept in field work, visiting the more than 800 borrowers’ systems. : The Rural Electrification Administration was created by Executive Order No. 7037 on May 11, 1935, as an independent agency under the Emergency Relief Act of that year. On October 16, 1936, the Rural Electrification Administration Act, approved May 20, 1936, became effective and the Administration became a 64674°—T7T7—2—1st ed 40 606 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE permanent agency with a 10-year program outlined by the Congress. On July 1, 1939, it became a part of the Department of Agriculture under terms of the President’s Second Reorganization Plan. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE The Soil Conservation Service assists soil conservation districts organized under State law in planning and applying farm programs for erosion control and improved land use. It conducts soil conservation demonstration projects in cooperation with farmers of selected areas, and carries on farm forestry projects to demonstrate the value of sound woodland management. The Service also supervises the technical activities of Civilian Conservation Corps camps assigned to erosion control and farm drainage work. A program of submarginal land purchase, including the development for more beneficial uses of the purchased land, is administered by the Service. The Service also helps land operators in selected areas of the 17 Western States in the construction and installation of water facilities needed for better land use. Surveys are made by the Service as a basis for planning and field operations both in soil conservation and upstream flood control. To improve conservation opera-tions on the land, the Service conducts scientific investigations of soil conserva-tion, irrigation, and farm drainage problems in major agricultural regions. Nurseries for the propagation and production of erosion-resistant plants are operated by the Service. SURPLUS MARKETING ADMINISTRATION The Surplus Marketing Administration, established June 30, 1940, pursuant to the President’s Reorganization Plan No. III, represents a consolidation of the administrative functions and responsibilities in connection with marketing agreement and surplus removal programs previously vested in the Division of Marketing and Marketing Agreements of the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis-tration and the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation. Marketing agreement programs are authorized by the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937 to establish orderly marketing conditions for agricultural commodities and to improve returns to producers by regulating the flow of farm products to the market. The programs operate through marketing agreements and orders issued by the Secretary of Agriculture after certain conditions of ap-proval by producers and handlers have been met. Surplus removal programs authorized by section 32, Public, No. 320, and by related legislation, are designed to increase domestic consumption of agricultural surpluses and to encourage exportation of domestic farm products. Under the export encouragement programs, contracts are entered into with exporters to pay an indemnity for the marketing of domestic products in foreign countries based upon the difference between the domestic and the world price. The diver-sion of domestic supplies to new outlets and byproducts is encouraged by contracts with various marketing organizations in which the Secretary of Agriculture agrees to pay these organizations an indemnity for diverting commodities to néw uses or to byproducts based upon the difference between the purchase price of the com-modity and the sales price to the new outlet. These programs are developed and administered by the Fruit and Vegetable, the Dairy, the Poultry, and the Marketing Divisions. Diversion of surplus agricultural commodities to needy families is accomplished by means of the food and cotton stamp plans and by the purchase and direct distribution to relief agencies of surplus agricultural commodities. The operation of these plans is supervised and conducted by the Distribution Division, and the Purchase Division. A new and important function of the Surplus Marketing Administration is its role of agent for the purchase, storage, processing, and domestic shipment of all agricultural commodities being purchased for export under authority of the Lease-Lend Act. Although the powers and functions heretofore exercised by the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation as a result of legislative authority were consolidated with the functions and responsibilities of the Division of Marketing and Marketing Agreements and assigned to the Surplus Marketing Administration, the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation still exercises certain powers and functions authorized by its charter. These activities include the northeastern timber salvage operations and all operations of the Corporation resulting from loans to the Corporation for the removal of surplus commodities or the encouragement of exportation. COMMERCE Official Duties 607 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE The Secretary of Commerce is charged with the work of promoting the com-merce of the United States and its manufacturing, shipping, and transportation interests. His duties also comprise the taking of the census and the collection and publication of statistical information connected therewith; the making of coast and geodetic surveys; the collecting of statistics relating to foreign and domestic commerce; the inspection of steamships, and the enforcement of laws relating thereto for the protection of life and property; the jurisdiction over mer-chant vessels, their registry, licensing, measurement, entry, clearance, transfer, movement of their cargoes and passengers, and laws relating thereto, and to sea-men of the United States; the custody, construction, maintenance, and application of standards of weights and measurements; the gathering and supplying of infor-mation regarding industries and markets for the fostering of manufacturing; supervision of the issuance of patents and the registration of trade-marks, the promotion and development of air commerce, the establishment and maintenance of aids to air navigation, the certification of airmen, the inspection and registra-tion of aircraft, the enforcement of rules and regulations issued pursuant to the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938; supervision of the issuance of weather forecasts and warnings for the benefit of agriculture, commerce, and navigation, including weather service for aviation, and the publication of climatic statistics; develop-ment of inland waterway transportation, and supervision of the operation of Government-owned barge lines and other functions concerning these activities and related subjects. The Secretary of Commerce is chairman of the Foreign-Trade Zones Board, ex officio general chairman of the Business Advisory Council for the Department of Commerce, ex officio general chairman of the Aeronautical Advisory Council, and a member of the following: Board of directors of the Textile Foundation, Council of National Defense, Economic Defense Board, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Smithsonian Institution, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Foreign Service Buildings Commission, National Munitions Control Board, Export-Import Bank of Washington; National Archives Council, Commodity Exchange Commission, and the Committee on Cooperation with American Republics. The Secretary of Commerce is authorized 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 Presi-dent 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. UNDER SECRETARY OF COMMERCE Under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, the Under Secretary per-forms such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary or may be required by law. He exercises general supervision and direction over the Bureau of the Census, the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, the Inland Waterways Corporation, the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, the Patent Office, and the National Bureau of Standards. In the absence of the Secretary he acts as the head of the Department. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF COMMERCE 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. He exercises general supervision and direction over the Civil Aero-nautics Administration, the Weather Bureau, and the Coast and Geodetic Survey. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secretary, he serves as head of the Department. 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, the Under Secre-tary, the Assistant Secretary, and the chiefs of the various bureaus. THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY As the chief executive officer of the Department the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary has the responsibility for all matters of administration, including personnel and budget matters, and for coordinating the functions of the various 608 Congressional Directory COMMERCE bureaus of the Department. He has supervision of the office of the Chief Clerk, the Division of Personnel Supervision and Management, the Division of Publica-tions, the Division of Purchases and Sales, and the Division of Accounts. rd CHIEF CLERK As 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 Depart-ment, enforces the general regulations 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 transmis-sion of the mail; the custody of the Department’s seal and the records and files of the Secretary’s office; the answering of calls from Congress and elsewhere for copies of papers and records; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office not otherwise assigned. During the temporary absence of the Secretary, the Under Secretary, and the Assistant Secretary he may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and documents. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT The Director of the Division of Personnel Supervision and Management is charged with the supervision of the functions of appointment, assignment, serv-ice rating, and training of employees; the initiation and supervision of programs of personnel training and management including the establishment of a system of service ratings for departmental and field forces; the direction of programs of employee relations; the establishment of means for the hearing of grievances of employees and presenting appropriate recommendations for the settlement thereof to the Secretary; serves as a member of the Council of Personnel Administration; acts as liaison officer in personnel matters between the Department and the Civil Service Commission; makes recommendations to the departmental budget officer with respect to estimates and expenditures for personal services; establishes and administers an equitable system of promotions and transfers; administers the regulations regarding removals, classification, retirement, and leaves of absence; conducts correspondence and prepares recommendations connected with appli-cations for positions, and performs such other functions as may be prescribed by the Secretary. 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 De-partment of Commerce to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relat-ing to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations; the preparation of official bonds and custody of records pertaining thereto; and the general accounting of the Department. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS The Chief of the Division of Publications is charged with the conduct of all business the Department transacts with the Government Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. The advertising done by the Department is in his charge. He also approves all vouchers in payment for the publishing 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 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 Depart-ment 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 appropriation, and examines and reports on the property returns of all other bureaus and services. COMMERCE Official Dutzes 609 BUREAU OF THE CENSUS The Bureau of the Census collects and publishes data on the characteristics and activities of the people of the United States in the fields of population, housing, agriculture, manufactures, business, mineral industries, vital statistics, State and local governments, cotton and oils, religious bodies, foreign trade, and other sub- jects. The data collected is basic to the work of public agencies, business, and re- search groups, as well as others, and is extensively used as primary source material. From the information gathered by the Bureau of the Census, a factual record of conditions in the United States can be constructed. The decennial census includes most of the subjects mentioned above. Many of these inquiries are also conducted at more frequent intervals. The first decennial census of population was taken in 1790 and repeated every 10 years thereafter. The Sixteenth Decennial Population Census (1940) deter- mined the number of people classified not only by such basic items as age, sex, color or race, marital status, place of birth, and farm residence, but also data on such subjects as education, migration, employment status, occupations, and wage and salary income were collected. The first census of housing, taken together with the census of population in 1940, enumerated the number of occupied and vacant dwelling units and such characteristics of these units as value or rent, occupancy status, number of rooms, facilities and equipment, utilities, and mort- gage data, and the type of structure, exterior material, and year built. The Bureau’s files of original population census records provide legally accept- able evidence concerning age and other personal data. Records of these facts in the census are obtainable only at the request of the person concerned when needed for such purposes as obtaining old-age pensions, annuities, passports, ete. In the field of agriculture a census is taken every 5 years. The characteristics enumerated for each farm include tenure, acreage, values, farm employment, and facilities, with detailed information on livestock and crops. Once every 10 years censuses of irrigation and drainage enterprises are taken. Statistics on cotton ginned, imported, exported, consumed and held are issued currently. Other related reports cover cottonseed products and vegetable and animal fats and oils. A census of manufactures is taken biennially, every fifth one coinciding with the decennial census. The data gathered include information concerning the loca-tion of the plant, legal form of organization, persons employed, salaries and wages, cost of materials and fuel, inventory, and the quantity and value of products made. A census of mineral industries is taken as a part of the decennial census. Current manufactures reports are issued annually, quarterly, and monthly. Special canvasses are made for national defense offices that use the Bureau of the Census as a statistical service agency. The technical staff of the Bureau acts in an advisory capacity for many defense offices which have their statistical inquiries edited, coded, or tabulated by the Bureau of the Census. The census of business is a regular part of the decennial census. Censuses of business were taken, also, for 1933 and 1935. Retail, wholesale, service, and construction establishments are covered by this inquiry. A special report on sales finance companies was issued in 1940. Statistics on current business are reported monthly for both retail and wholesale trade. From transcripts of the certificates of registered births and deaths, the Bureau compiles vital statistics, which it publishes annually. Regular reports are also made on patients in hospitals for mental disease, in institutions for feeble-minded and epileptics, prisoners in State prisons and reformatories, and judicial criminal statistics. Marriage and divorce statistics are being collected for the Sixteenth Decennial Census period. The Bureau also issues annual reports giving financial data for States and for cities of 100,000 population or more. Every 10 years a census of wealth, public debt, and taxation is taken, covering all governmental units. A quarterly survey is made of employees and pay rolls in State and local government units. Tax collections, State and local government debt, and proposals voted upon in State and city elections are also reported. A municipal reference service, which is a central depository and clearing house of information on State and municipal government, is maintained for the use of Federal, State, and local officials and research agencies. Statistical information on United States imports and exports by commodities, countries of origin and destination, and customs districts, is compiled and pub-lished by the Bureau on the basis of information contained in export and import documents received from Collectors of Customs. i The Statistical Abstract of the United States, published annually by the Bureau, is the standard reference book on Government statistics. The statistical 610 Congressional Directory COMMERCE information in the Abstract is selected from publications and special reports of all governmental agencies and is assembled in the one volume. Because the Bureau has this vast amount of basic data, special studies are constantly in progress for specific purposes. Research utilizing these data is conducted along with research in the techniques involved in conducting the world’s largest statistical surveys. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE The Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce is charged with the promotion and development of foreign and domestic commerce of the United States. It serves to interpret American business to the federal government and government to business. In keeping with changing world conditions, and in order to provide better service in the defense emergency, the Bureau was completely reorganized during the early part of 1941. The present alignment comprises five major divisions, whose duties are to supply business with all available data essential to the sound conduct of trade at home and abroad. In the defense emergency, stress is being placed on assisting the Nation’s leaders, in both industry and Government, in formulating immediate as well as long-range plans. Division of Research and Statistics.—This Division analyzes the economic life of the Nation in its broad aspects as a basis for the general aims and objectives of Bureau activities. It studies all facts pertinent to the current state of the commerce of the Nation, including the whole complex flow of funds between “buyers and sellers; evaluates the national income, establishes and maintains the Nation’s balance sheets and trade records, and conducts periodic reviews useful alike to business executives and Government officials. Division of Industrial Economy.— This Division acts as a clearing house for the exchange of facts between the Bureau and industry, dealing with all phases of business, both at home and abroad. It conducts economic and statistical studies along lines of practical reality, making each important industry’s experience avail-able to all industries and to the Government, particularly those agencies directly connected with defense activities, both military and economic. It serves as economic counsel to industry and industrial counsel to the Government. One segment of this Division, the Export-Import Market Information Unit, acts as liaison between the American foreign trader and his clients in foreign countries, supplying detailed information as to demand in individual markets for specific commodities. Division of International Economy.— This Division provides the Government, exporters, and importers with information and guidance on foreign economic and commercial affairs and on foreign national policies affecting commerce. It funec-tions on a regional basis according to the primary regions of politico-economic influence in the world and reports where and how the economics of these regions are moving and how their movements affect our own affairs. It also analyzes and appraises our own balance of international transactions. This Division is re-sponsible for the guidance necessary in the collection of factual material by the Foreign Service of the Department of State for study and analysis in the Bureau, Division of Regional Economy.— This Division directs continuous contact with the Nation’s principal economic areas through a field force operating from strate-gically located offices and through cooperative research stations. . The field force is staffed with practical business specialists, backed at Washington by a research unit which concentrates on special regional problems. The Division assists local business units, through its regional offices, with facts and expert counsel, and pro-vides other branches of the Bureau as well as other Government departments, particularly those agencies concerned with the defense emergency, with a con-tinuous flow of regional data and observations helpful in the conduet of an orderly economy. Division of Commercial and Economic Information.— Division determines This the format of published material; edits, publishes, and distributes, to Govern-ment and business, enlightening and timely information developed by the various divisions of the Bureau and by the Foreign Service Officers of the Department of State. It also acts as a medium through which certain commercial and economic information developed in other Bureaus of the Department clears to the public. To better serve the business community, all periodicals and publications of the Bureau have been streamlined and condensed; these contain a wide variety of statistical” and factual material presented in concise form, helpful to business generally, and particularly to small businesses that do not have the research resources often available to larger organizations. COMMERCE Official Dutres 611 The Bureau continues to bring specific foreign-trade opportunities to the attention of businessmen throughout the United States and its Territories and possessions and has available detailed facts regarding more than 600,000 indivi- dual foreign firms, including prospective buyers and agents. It makes studies of foreign transportation and communications and furnishes information to shippers regarding freight rates and facilities to enable them to route shipments economi- cally and advantageously. The Bureau facilitates also the amicable adjustment of commercial disputes and misunderstandings arising between foreign traders in the United States and their clients in foreign countries. It aids in the protection abroad of American industrial property, such as trade-marks and patents. It investigates world stocks of raw materials and is constantly in touch with the course of price trends of commodities of international trade. Foreign businessmen visiting the United States are aided by the Bureau in establishing suitable contacts with proper American firms. Still another of the Bureau’s functions involves activities in administering the China Trade Act, a law authorizing the creation of and assistance to corporations engaged in the China trade. NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS The National Bureau of Standards was established by act of Congress approved March 3, 1901. Its functions are the development, construction, custody, 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 under certain conditions (as in tests involving comparison with the national standards), 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. It cooperates with tax-supported purchasing agencies, industries, and national organ-izations in developing specifications and facilitating their use; it encourages the application of the latest developments in the utilization and standardization of building materials and in the development of engineering and safety codes, simplified practice recommendations, and commercial standards of quality and performance. ‘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 performance 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 the manu-facturer, distributor, retailer, and consumer. To establish standards of practice the Bureau collates data and formulates 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: Determination of the absolute values of the electrical units; testing of electrical measuring instru-ments, transformers, insulators, and power transmission equipment, particularly at high voltages; determination of the performance of electric batteries; studies of the magnetic properties of new alloys; surveys to determine the corrosive action of soils on buried pipe lines; 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 and other large scales used principally for interstate shipments; investigations of methods of high temperature measurements and temperature control in manufacturing processes; promotion of economy and efficiency in 612 Congressional Directory COMMERCE automotive transportation by land and air through investigations of the basic principles underlying the design, performance, operation, and testing of auto-motive power plants; development of color standards and methods of color meas-urement; studies of basic factors underlying distance range of radio signals, dissemination of national standards of frequency, and investigation and standard-ization of methods and instruments used in radio communication; investigation of principles of sound transmission and absorption and their application; prepara-tion, analysis, and certification of the composition of technical materials, either of typical composition or of high purity, for checking the accuracy of scientific and industrial analysis and for testing measuring instruments; investigation of the fire resistance of building materials; determination of the properties of stone, clays, cement, and other structural materials, and the formulation of building codes and researches to promote, improve, and make possible less expensive building construction; development of improved standards for dental materials; investigations of methods for the control of active acidity in industrial processes, development of standards of quality and methods of measurement of textiles, paper, leather, rubber, and organic plastics; 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 determination of physical constants and properties of materials and the behavior of structures under load; determina-tion of technical specifications for all grades of sugars, involving their standard-ization and methods of manufacture, and study of technical problems relating to the collection of revenue on sugars; investigation of radium, radium com-pounds, and other radioactive materials; calibration of X-ray dosage meters, and the development of standard specifications for X-ray equipment and for the operation of X-ray machines; formulation of standards of performance for instru-ments, equipment, tools, and other devices, development of test methods to insure compliance with specifications, and simplification of varieties of products; solution of problems in connection with standards for public utilities, such as gas, electric light and power; technical cooperation with manufacturers upon fundamental 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, preparation of recommended plumbing requirements for use by the Government and experiments with models of hydraulic structures. 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) observa-tions of tides and currents, to furnish datum planes to engineers and tide and current tables to mariners; (4) the compilation and publishing of nautical charts to meet the needs of marine commerce; (5) the compilation and publishing of aeronautical charts for use in air navigation; (6) observations of the earth’s mag-netism in all parts of the country, to furnish magnetic information essential to the mariner, aviator, land surveyor, radio engineer and others; and (7) seismological observations and investigations, to supply data required in designing structures to reduce the earthquake hazard. These duties require hydrographie, topographic, and air-photographic surveys along the coasts, including the rivers to the head of tidewater, for determining the depths of the waters and the configuration of the adjacent land, tide observa-tions for determination of basic datum planes for elevations and for prediction of high and low waters in tide tables; current observations for determining water movements and for prediction of slacks and strengths in current tables; base measurements; determination of latitudes, longitudes, and azimuths by astro-nomical 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 measure-ments throughout the country. BUREAU OF MARINE INSPECTION AND NAVIGATION The Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, comprising the adminis- trative office at Washington, D. C., 7 offices of supervising inspectors, 48 officesof local inspectors and their assistants, and 15 shipping commissioners throughoutthe United States, its Territories and possessions, is charged with the adminis-tration and enforcement of all navigation and marine inspection laws and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder. Resident with the administration office in Washington is the Law Enforcement and Review Division, charged with vessel penalties and fines, casualty investiga-tion review, motorboat fines and penalties, and the patrol fleet. The determination of violations and the assessment of penalties, the operationof the patrol fleet and the review of casualty investigations as carried on by theA, B, and C marine investigation boards are all handled through this Division.The Technical Division, headed by the technical assistant to the Director and composed of naval architects, marine and electrical engineers, together withtheir draftsmen and necessary assistants, examines for approval all plans covering arrangement details and equipment concerning the design and construction of new vessels, repairs and alterations to existing vessels, the approval of the designand construction of boilers and unfired pressure vessels, and the approval of fire protection and detection installations; supervises the assignment and carryinginto effect the acts of Congress relating to the placing of load lines on vessels; and sonnel. They the admeasurement of vessels to determine the gross and net tonnages. The Ship Personnel Division, with its 14 offices of shipping commissioners in the field, handles the records of the licensed officers and certificated ship per- sign the crew members on and off the ships, witness the paying off of crew, and administer assistance to the ship’s personnel as required by law. Changes in the law, with respect to ship’s personnel, has placed directly uponthe Bureau the work of classifying such personnel below the grade of licensedofficers, providing for such examinations as are necessary and authorized by statutes to insure that proper qualifications are held by men who seek employ-ment in the merchant marine, the preparation of forms of certificates and con- tinuous discharge books now required by law to be issued to seamen, and setting up and maintaining a special division in the Bureau for the purpose of keeping the records of seamen in accordance with statutory requirements. The Vessel Inspection Division at Washington, D. C., prepares uniform exami-nation questions for licensed officers and rates the examination papers of pro-spective applicants for original licenses or raises in grades; supervises the Field Inspection Service. Included therein are principal traveling inspectors who under the direction of the Director, make frequent visits to the field in the interest of securing a high degree of uniformity in the applying of the general rules and regulations. They perform reinspections on vessels, investigate reported defi-ciencies, and conduct fire drills and lifeboat drills on board ship. They carry on investigations under the direction of the Director upon all matters concerningthe regulations and sit as members of marine investigation boards in the investi-gations and trials relating to marine casualties. The supervising inspectors are field division heads charged with the duty of establishing such rules and regulations, subject to the approval by the Secretaryof Commerce, that may be necessary to put into effect the laws of Congress for safety to life and protection of property in the operation of ships. They also watch over all of the territory assigned to them, visit, confer with, and examine, into the doings of the local boards of inspectors, within their assigned districts,instruct the local boards in the proper performance of their duties, and, with theprincipal traveling inspectors, sit on the marine investigation boards in the investigations and trials relating to marine casualties. Located throughout the United States are resident inspectors and assistant inspectors especially detailed to test and supervise, at the mills of manufacturers, all material used in the construction of boilers and unfired pressure vessels todetermine their physical characteristics for approval or rejection, according tothe test determinations. 614 Congressional Directory COMMERCE The local and assistant inspectors throughout the United States, its Territories and possessions, carry out the inspections of vessels annually and quarterly, reinspections, and drydock examinations to insure safety to passengers and crews and the efficiency of machinery and equipment required for safe navigation. Foreign passenger vessels calling at United States ports are regularly inspected and certificated by the local boards of inspectors. These inspectors also conduct at regular quarterly infervals fire drills and lifesaving drills on these foreign ves- sels and examine into the condition of the lifesaving and fire-fighting equipment on board. The local boards of inspectors inspect and examine tank vessels and barges for the carrying of liquid cargoes in bulk, and of dangerous cargoes. They conduct fire drills and lifesaving drills on all types of vessels at quarterly intervals. They issue to all vessels annually certificates of inspection, stating thereon the number of officers and crew necessary for the safe navigation of the vessel, the number of passengers allowed to be carried, the route or waters over which the vessel may operate, the life-saving and fire-fighting equipment necessary, and the steam pressure allowed carried on the boilers. They conduct examinations and issue licenses to masters, mates, pilots, and engineers and carry into effect the laws, rules, and regulations on board ship for the safety to life and the protection of property. The Bureau also maintains and operates a patrol fleet which is charged with the duty of making special inspections of vessels of all classes to see that the requirements of law are being complied with, and to report all instances involving any violation of law or failure to comply with the Bureau’s requirements to the Director for submission to collectors of customs for the imposing of such penalties as may be determined by the Secretary of Commerce. 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. INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION The Inland Waterways Corporation is charged with the development of national inland waterway transportation under the Transportation Act of 1920 and Publie, No. 185, Sixty-eighth Congress, approved June 3, 1924, as amended by Publie, No. 601, Seventieth Congress, approved May 29, 1928. By virtue of Reorganization Plan No. II issued pursuant to the Reorganization Act of 1939, approved April 3, 1939, the direction and supervision of the Corporation was transferred, effective July 1, 1939, from the Secretary of War to the Secretary of Commerce. The Corporation operates barge lines on several important water routes. It is charged with investigating types of floating and terminal equipment suitable for various waterways and operates such equipment. It is required to establish tariff and interchange arrangements between rail and water carriers, and to promote and encourage waterway traffic, and otherwise function generally as the official Government inland waterways transportation agency. 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 and its possessions. CIVIL AERONAUTICS AUTHORITY The Civil Aeronautics Authority was created by the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, approved June 23, 1938, ‘“to promote the development and safety and to provide for the regulation of civil aeronautics.” As originally established it was composed of the five-member Authority, the Administrator, and the three-member Air Safety Board. COMMERCE Official Duties 615 By Reorganization Plans Nos. III and IV, effective June 30, 1940, issued pur-suant to the Reorganization Act of 1939, the name of the five-member Authority was changed to the Civil Aeronautics Board and certain of its functions were transferred to the Administrator. The offices of the members of the Air Safety Board were abolished and the functions of the Air Safety Board were transferred to the Civil Aeronautics Board. The Civil Aeronautics Board, the Administrator, and their functions were transferred to the Department of Commerce, with the proviso that the Board shall exercise its functions of rule-making, adjudication, and investigation, independently of the Secretary of Commerce. The plans further provided that the Administrator of Civil Aeronautics, whose functions shall be administered under the direction and supervision of the Secretary of Commerce, and the Civil Aeronautics Board shall constitute the Civil Aeronautics Authority. However, the Civil Aeronautics Authority performs no functions, all of its responsibilities being discharged by either the Civil Aeronautics Administra-tion or the Civil Aeronautics Board. CIVIL AERONAUTICS ADMINISTRATION The Administrator of Civil Aeronautics is appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The organization through which the Administrator exercises his functions was designated as the Civil Aeronautics Administration by Departmental Order No. 52 of the Secretary of Commerce. POWERS AND DUTIES OF ADMINISTRATOR In accordance with the provisions of the Civil Aeronautics Act, as amended, the Administrator is empowered and directed to encourage and foster the develop-ment of civil aeronautics and air commerce in the United States and abroad, and to make plans for the orderly development of and to encourage the establishment of civil airways, landing areas, and other air navigation facilities, and to exercise the functions vested in the Civil Aeronautics Authority by the Civilian Pilot Training Act of 1939, the functions of aircraft registration and of safety regulation described in titles V and VI of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 (except the functions of prescribing safety standards, rules, and regulations and of suspend-ing and revoking certificates after hearing); the function provided for by section 1101 of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938. ACTIVITIES Safety regulation.—This involves the issuance of airman, aircraft, and air carrier operating certificates, air navigation facility and air agency ratings, and other aeronautical documents; maintenance of records of persons and things subject to regulation; issuance of permits for operation of foreign civil aircraft into and within the United States; investigation incident to certificate denials, suspension, revocation, and penalties; enforcement of rules and regulations; conformity of aircraft engineering data with airworthiness requirements; examination and inspection of interstate, overseas, and foreign scheduled air carrier operations; examination of persons and material for rating and certification; issuance of emergency suspension of safety certificates; compromise of civil penalties; issu-ance of regulations requiring notice with respect to hazards to air commerce; recommendations to the Civil Aeronautics Board of proposed standards, rules and regulations designed to promote safety in air commerce. Statistics and information.— Collection and dissemination of information relative to civil aeronautics; compilation and publication of statistics and other data pertinent to the development of air commerce and the aeronautical industry; compilation and distribution to airmen and other interested persons of current information pertaining to airports and air navigation facilities on civil airways. Federal airways.—This activity involves the preparation of plans for aids to air navigation, obtaining sites therefor, negotiation of contracts for electric, telephone, and other utility services, planning and supervision of construction of navigational aids, radio engineering of a nonexperimental type, and maintenance of navigational aids, supervision of airway communications, teletype circuits, radio frequency allocations, supervision of air traffic control, procedures, techniques, operations stations. Conducts research and special studies in perfecting a program of long-range development of civil aeronautics; air transport operations studies, including pilot and crew efficiency, passenger comfort and safety, and ground control; studies in power plant accessories, and instrument development, with particular emphasis on radio air navigation facilities; and lends technical assistance in the development of airports. 616 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Civilian pilot tratning.—The supervision of the Civilian Pilot Training Program, formerly conducted by the Civil Aeronautics Authority pursuant to the provisions of the Civilian Pilot Training Act of 1939, was transferred to the Administrator by Reorganization Plan III. Over 25,000 new pilots pledged to military service are being trained in the program this year, in addition to nearly 5,000 being prepared for instructorships in the defense program. Development of landing areas—In the interest of national defense the Ad-ministrator is charged with the duty of constructing, improving, and repairing public airports and other public landing areas in the United States and its Terri-tories and possessions, as determined by him, with the approval of a board com-posed of the Secretary of War, Secretary of the Navy, and Secretary of Commerce, to be necessary for national defense. Washington National Airport.—The Administrator has control over, and respon-sibility for, the care, operation, maintenance, and protection of the Washington National Airport located at Gravelly Point, together with the power to make and amend such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary in the operation of this airport. The Administrator is also empowered to lease, upon such terms as he may deem necessary, space or property within or upon the airport for pur-poses essential or appropriate to the operation of the airport. CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD The Civil Aeronautics Board, which performs its functions independently of the Secretary of Commerce, is composed of five members, appointed by the President with the approval of the Senate, one of whom is annually designated by the President as chairman and another as vice chairman. The first appointees are named for 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 years, their successors to be named for 6 years. Not more than three members may be of the same political party. POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE BOARD It is the responsibility of the Civil Aeronautics Board to exercise the functions of rule-making, adjudication, and investigation as outlined in the declaration of policy found in section 2 of the Civil Aeronautics Act directing consideration of “the following, among other things, as being in the public interest and in accord-ance with the public convenience and necessity: “(a) The encouragement and development of an air-transportation system properly adapted to the present and future needs of the foreign and domestic commerce of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national defense; “(b) The regulation of air transportation in such manner as to recognize and preserve the inherent advantages of, assure the highest degree of safety in, and foster sound economic conditions in, such transportation, and to improve relations between, and coordinate transportation by, air carriers; “(¢) The promotion of adequate, economical, and efficient service by air carriers at reasonable charges, without unjust discriminations, undue preference or advantages, or unfair or destructive competitive practices; “(d) Competition to the extent necessary to assure the sound development of an air-transportation system adapted to the needs of the foreign and domestic 0 of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national defense; an ““(e¢) The regulation of air commerce in such manner as to best promote its development and safety.” ACTIVITIES Economic regulation.— Board, among other things, issues certificates of The public convenience and necessity to air carriers and permits to foreign air carriers; receives tariffs filed by air carriers; prescribes rates of compensation for the carriage of mail; and regulates accounts, records and reports, mergers, loans and financial aid, methods of competition, and interlocking relationships. Safety regulation.—The Board prescribes safety standards, rules, and regulations and has the power to suspend and revoke safety certificates after hearing. Accident prevention.— Board makes rules on notification and report The of accidents involving aircraft; investigates such accidents and reports the facts, circumstances, and probable causes; makes its reports and recommendations public in such manner as it deems to be in the public interest; investigates com-plaints; and conducts special studies and investigations to reduce aircraft accidents and prevent their recurrence. LABOR Officral Duties 617 NATIONAL INVENTORS COUNCIL The National Inventors Council acts as a central Government clearing-house for inventions and inventive ideas submitted as a contribution to the national defense program. The Council’s primary functions are: (1) Encouraging the public to submit inventions or inventive ideas of defensive value; (2) prompt evaluation of these inventions by a staff of engineers and by a system of technical committees so that useful ideas may be promptly placed in the hands of the proper military and naval bureaus. Close liaison arrangements are maintained with all service branches of the Army and Navy in order that prompt and complete technical consideration can be given to all suggestions received. 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-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 promulgation and super-vision of the enforcement of certain maximum hour, minimum wage, child labor, safety and health stipulations in connection with Government supply contracts; 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. : : 618 Congressional Directory LABOR 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. DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS To develop desirable labor standards in industrial practice, labor law 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. DIVISION OF PUBLIC CONTRACTS It administers Public Act No. 846 (Walsh-Healey Act), Seventy-fourth Con-gress, approved June 30, 1936, which requires Government supply contracts to contain certain maximum hour, minimum wage, child labor, safety, and health stipulations, and charges the Secretary of Labor with the duty of promulgating these standards and supervising their enforcement. The Division is headed by an administrator and contains a public contracts board which holds hearings to determine minimum wages, the imposition of penalties, and other quasi-judicial matters arising under the act. WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION Under the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (act of June 25, 1938, Public, No. 718, 75th Cong.) this Division was established in the Department of Labor to enforce the wage and hour provisions of the act. The Division is headed by an Administrator appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. Its duties are to see that employers engaged in inter-state commerce or producing goods for interstate commerce conform to the wage and hour standards. It is authorized to enjoin manufacturers who do not meet these standards from shipping goods in interstate or foreign commerce. Employ-ers subject to the statute must conform to a maximum workweek of not more than 44 hours the first year of its operation, 42 hours the second year, and 40 hours thereafter, and must pay minimum wages of not less than 25 cents an hour the first year and not less than 30 cents an hour the next 6 years. During the interim the Administrator is authorized to appoint industry committees in which employers, labor, and the public are to be represented. These committees have authority to recommend higher minimum wages for their respective indus-tries, provided such rate does not exceed 40 cents an hour. These recommenda-tions have the effect of law if approved by the Administrator. 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 LABOR ; Officral Duties 619 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 investiga-tions, 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. DIVISION OF BUDGETS AND ACCOUNTS The Chief, Division of Budgets and Accounts, supervises the establishment and maintenance of the central control accounts maintained in the Division, and the auditing, transportation control, and budget record operations conducted by the Division. He assists in planning, organizing, and coordinating all financial activities and procedures of the Department, including accounting, auditing, and budgetary activities of the bureaus of the Department. DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL The Director of Personnel is in charge of all matters relating to personnel within the Department of Labor. He is the liaison officer for the Department with the ‘Civil Service Commission, and with other departments and agencies of the Government on matters relating to personnel administration. 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 or 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 statutory functions of the Bureau of Labor Statistics are ‘‘to acquire and diffuse 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 relation to capital, the hours of labor, the earnings of laboring men and women, and the means of promoting their material, social, intellectual, and moral prosperity.” Other specific continuing duties have been added from time to time by acts or resolutions of Congress, by Executive order, and by the Secretary of Labor. The Bureau makes and publishes current reports, usually on a monthly basis, on employment, pay rolls, earnings, and hours of labor in manufacturing, trade, public service, building construction, and other industries; union wages; indus-trial accidents and accident rates; labor turn-over; industrial disputes; wholesale and retail prices; and changes in cost of living of workingmen’s families in the principal cities of the United States. Federal and State legislation and court decisions affecting labor are closely followed, and digests and analyses thereof published. Special studies are made from time to time on the wage situation in particular industries, on productivity of labor, on consumers’ cooperation, and on a large number of other subjects bearing on the welfare of labor. Dissemination of the information acquired by the Bureau in the discharge of its duties is through the publication of special bulletins on specific subjects and through the Monthly Labor Review and Labor Information Bulletin. 620 Congressional Directory LABOR 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. INDEPENDENT OFFICES, AGENCIES, AND ESTABLISHMENTS ALLEY DWELLING AUTHORITY FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE The Alley Dwelling Authority is the public housing agency for the District of Columbia. As such, it reclaims slums and provides dwellings for families of low income whose housing needs are not adequately met by private enterprise. The Authority also may act when properly designated, to provide dwellings for the families of workers whose services are needed in Washington in the interests of the national defense. The Authority was established under the terms of the District of Columbia Alley Dwelling Act, approved June 12, 1934 (48 Stat. 930); amendments to this act were approved on June 25, 1938 (Public Law No. 733, 75th Cong.). Members of the Authority were designated, and their duties generally out- lined, in Executive Order No. 6868, October 9, 1934, which was amended by Executive Order No. 7784-A, January 5, 1938, and by Executive Order No. 8033, dated January 11, 1939. The Authority consists of the chairman of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Architect of the Capitol, and the director of planning of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission. The Authority’s operations originally were restricted to squares containing inhabited alleys, so that these hidden communities—the characteristic slums of Washington—could be eliminated and their sites reclaimed. Amendments to the Alley Dwelling Act enlarge the alley slum reclamation program and permit the Authority to acquire sites in the District elsewhere than in “alley’’ squares, for the purpose of providing dwellings for persons or families substantially equal in number to those whose houses the Authority may demolish. ; The amendments to the act were necessitated by the Authority’s past and prospective demolitions of slum dwellings on sites unsuitable for residential redevelopment. In such instances, the Authority has reclaimed the cleared sites for nonresidential uses in harmony with the character of their neighborhoods; but a serious housing shortage would be caused if the Authority were unable to build compensatory housing in other areas. The Authority may acquire sites by purchase, gift, or condemnation. It is authorized to replat land so acquired, to install public services, and to make such use of the sites as may be necessary; to lease, rent, maintain, equip, manage, exchange, sell, or convey any of its holdings—land or buildings—for such amounts and on such terms and conditions as it may determine. The Authority may transfer to the Federal Government or the District gov-ernment for public use any of its holdings on the payment to the Authority of their reasonable value. The Authority also may make loans to limited-dividend corporations or to home owners to enable them to acquire and develop sites on the property. For the purposes of slum reclamation, the Authority is empowered to borrow an aggregate of $5,000,000 from the Treasury of the United States in five equal annual installments, beginning with the fiscal year 1939, such loans to bear interest at the going Federal rate. The Authority also may accept gifts of money from private sources, and may borrow funds from individuals or private corporations on the security of property and assets acquired under the act. The act also permits the Authority to receive financial assistance from the United States Housing Authority to construct low-rent housing projects in accordance with the provisions of the United States Housing Act of 1937. In addition to the foregoing, the United States Housing Act authorizes the President to make allocations of United States Housing Authority funds to the Alley Dwelling Authority for the purposes of the District of Columbia Alley Dwelling Act. 64674°—77-2—1gst ed——41 621 622 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION The American Battle Monuments Commission was created by act of Congress approved March 4, 1923. It derives its authority from this and subsequent 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 completed, included the following: (a) The erection of a memorial chapel in each of the 8 American ceme-teries in Europe and the construction of service buildings, caretakers’ houses, and masonry walls at the cemeteries where needed; (b) the improvement of the landscaping in these cemeteries; (c) the erection of 11 memorials outside of the cemeteries; and (d) the placing of 2 bronze memorial tablets. The Commission is responsible for the administration, supervision, and main-tenance of the national cemeteries in Europe, containing the graves of 30,907 American dead, and of the chapels and other memorial features referred to above. The Commission has prepared and published a book entitled ‘“American Armies and Battlefields in Europe.” This book, which was issued in April 1939, is a revision and elaboration of “A Guide to the American Battlefields in Europe” published by the Commission in 1927. It is the result of many years’ effort and is a combined guide to the American World War battlefields in Europe and a concise history and reference work covering the activities of the American forces overseas during the period 1917-19. The book has 547 pages and is profusely illustrated, containing 561 official photographs from American, German, and Allied sources, 120 small maps and sketches, of which 27 are in color, 9 colored insert maps and charts, and 3 large-scale colored maps covering the operations of American divisions in the Aisne-Marne, St. Mihiel, and Meuse-Argonne offensives. It is being sold by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., and by bookstores at $2.75 a copy. Qther historical data are now in preparation, covering operations of American divisions during the World War. It is planned to publish these data during 1942. 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. BOARD OF TAX APPEALS, UNITED STATES The Board of Tax Appeals was created by the Revenue Act of 1924 (Public, No. 176, 68th Cong., June 2, 1924), and continued by the Revenue Act of 1926 (Public, No. 20, 69th Cong., Feb. 26, 1926), and chapter 5, Internal Revenue Code. It is an independent agency in the executive branch of the Government, with principal office at Washington. Its function is to determine, after hearing, whether there is a deficiency or an overpayment, where deficiencies have been determined by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in income, profits, estate, gift, and unjust enrichment taxes, and personal holding company surtaxes; to adjudicate controversies relating to excess profits on Navy contracts and Army aircraft contracts and to review the action of the Commissioner in deficiency and refund cases founded on claims of abnormalities under excess profits tax statutes. Proceedings are public and are conducted judicially, in accordance with its rulesof practice and the rules of evidence applicable in the courts of equity of the District of Columbia. A fee of $10 is prescribed for the filing of a petition. Hearings are held at Wash-ington and, for the convenience of taxpayers, at other places within the United States. Practice is limited to practitioners enrolled under the rules. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND 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 ofthe various divisions, field offices, and local boards of examiners, and the Com-mission’s business and fiscal operations; serves as the principal consultant to theCommissioners and formulates and develops matters of policy, interpretation, and procedure. 624 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS EXAMINING DIVISION Prepares announcements of examinations; prepares examinations; receives, records and passes on applications; arranges for and supervises the holding of assembled examinations; rates examinations and issues notices of ratings; main-tains records of ratings; maintains registers of eligibles and issues certifications for appointment; passes on qualifications necessary for persons proposed for pro-motion, transfer, reinstatement and status classification; supervises the com-petitive promotion system in the classified service and maintains and administers the National Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnel as a joint project with the National Resources Planning Board. SERVICE RECORD DIVISION Maintains service records of permanent employees in the executive civil service; acts on cases of reinstatement, transfer, and change of status; acts in cases of violation of the civil-service law or rules by administrative officers or employees. RETIREMENT DIVISION Administers all civil retirement systems under the Commission’s jurisdiction involving the granting of annuities, refund of employees’ contributions in cases of separation from the service or death, the maintenance and control of retirement accounts, and the preparation of actuarial data required for the proper operation of the retirement acts. STATISTICAL DIVISION : Compiles, analyzes, and prepares statistical reports on personnel, administra-tive, and other matters pertaining to Government employment, and performs the machine-tabulation work of the Commission. 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. BOARD OF APPEALS AND REVIEWS Has appellate jurisdiction in all matters pending before the Commission. Reviews the record and passes upon the merit of appeals from ratings in all 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. BUDGET AND PLANNING DIVISION Has charge of the over-all planning activities, conduct of all budgetary matters, and the responsibility for the correlation of the various planning programs of the Commission. INFORMATION AND RECRUITING DIVISION Prepares and revises all information material; prepares newspaper releases;edits forms and examination announcements; conduets programs for recruitmentof applicants; prepares eorrespondence on pending examinations and topics ofgonspal civil-service interest; maintains public information rooms; handles publicrelations. 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 andSoyer a period of 4 years each, and until their successors are appointed and ualified. g 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 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.” 626 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. The creation of the National Commission of Fine Arts in 1910 was the outcome of the Senate Park Commission of 1901, which presented plans for the development of the park system of the District of Columbia and the location of future Govern-ment buildings and memorials. These plans of 1901 were based on the plan of the National Capital prepared by Pierre Charles L’Enfant in 1792 under the direction of President Washington. The Commission of Fine Arts has been guided by the fundamental plan of 1901, which aims to secure the progressive development of Washington as the well-ordered, unified, and grand capital of a great nation. The height, color, and design of private buildings facing public buildings and public parks in certain mapped areas in the District of Columbia are subject to the advice of the Commission, as provided in the act of May 16, 1930, known as the Shipstead-Luce Act. The advice of the Commission of Fine Arts must be requested in the selection of lands to be acquired, under the act of Congress approved June 6, 1924, as amended, by the National Capital Park and Planning Commission for the park, parkway, and playground system in the District of Columbia and adjacent areas in Maryland and Virginia. In the will of Charles L. Freer, giving the Smithsonian Institution the building for the Freer Gallery, together with his collections of far eastern art, and an endowment for the increase thereof, it is stipulated that purchases shall have the approval of the National Commission of Fine Arts. The Congress in various legislation has required the advice of the Commission on the design and location of special monuments, memorials, and other works of commemorative art. : COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION The Committee for Reciprocity Information was created by Executive order in June 1934 to carry out the provisions of section 4 of the act entitled “Promotion of Foreign Trade,” under which the President is authorized to enter into trade agreements with foreign countries. This section provides that before any foreign-trade agreement is concluded public notice of the negotiations shall be given in order that any interested person may have the opportunity of presenting his views to the President or to such agency as the President may designate. The President designated the Committee for Reciprocity Information as the body to receive the views of interested parties. This Committee is composed of representatives from those Government departments or agencies concerned with the operation of the Trade Agreements Act. Its chairman is one of the members of the Committee and is named by the Executive Committee on Commercial Policy. Under the rules promulgated by the Committee for Reciprocity Information, those wishing to present information or requests for consideration in connection which the same was referred to said court. Section 5, act of March 4, 1915 (38 Stat. 996), provides: ‘““That from and afterthe passage and approval of this act the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims shall 628 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. 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. EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION, UNITED STATES 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 officers and enlisted men of the Naval Reserve, the Coast Guard Reserve, and members of the Officers’ Reserve Corps and of the Enlisted Reserve Corps of the Army on authorized training duty in time of peace, who sustain personal injuries while in the performance of their duties, but no compensation is paid if the injury is caused by the willful misconduct of the employee or by his intention to bring about the injury or death of himself or of another, or if intoxication of the injured employee is the proximate cause of the injury or death. To obtain the medical and hospital treatment, the employee shall be sent to the nearest United States medical officer or hospital, but if this is not practicable, to the nearest physician or hospital designated by the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, or when neither of these is available, to the nearest physician or hospital. ; The monthly compensation for total disability shall not be more than $116.66 nor less than $58.33, unless the employee’s monthly pay is less than the latter amount, in which case his compensation shall be the full amount of his monthly pay. Beneficiaries receiving compensation under an award for permanent total disability, which renders them so helpless as to require the constant services of an attendant, may receive additional compensation at a rate not in excess of $50 per month. The maximum monthly compensation for persons employed on work-relief projects was increased from $25 to $30 on June 29, 1937, and to $50 on June 21, 1938. Payment shall be made for partial disability equal to 662%; percent 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 dependent widower, to 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 1 year. By Executive orders the administration of the Compensation Act so far as it relates to the Panama Canal employees and employees of the Alaska Railroad has MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 629 been placed under the heads of those organizations. Decisions of the manager of the Alaska Railroad are subject to review by the Commission upon appeal. The act approved September 7, 1916, subject to certain modifications limiting the measure of benefits, has been made applicable to enrollees in the Civilian Conservation Corps, employees of the Civil Works Administration, personnel employed as civil employees of the United States on projects financed by funds provided by the Federal Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935, and sub-sequent Emergency Relief Appropriation Acts, and certain persons receiving assistance from the National Youth Administration. The law, as applied to relief employments, authorizes the payment of compensation benefits only for the effects of traumatic injury. The monthly compensation in such cases is limited to a maximum of $50, and the total amount that may be paid for dis-ability and death in any individual case is $4,000. The Commission also administers the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, approved March 4, 1927. This act covers employees in private industries engaged in maritime employment on the navigable waters of the United States (including drydocks) 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 mem-bers 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 self-insurance authorized by the Commission. A heavy penalty is provided for failure to secure compensation. A severe penalty is also provided for the employing of any stevedoring firm which does not present a certificate of compliance. The Commission is required to make the rules and regulations under this act, prescribe forms, establish compensation districts, and appoint and assign Deputy Commissioners to such districts. The Deputy Commissioners are required to issue certificates of complianee 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 Commi ssioner 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 Distriet 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. By the act approved August 16, 1941, the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, with certain modifications, has been made applicable in respect to the injury or death of “any employee engaged in any employment at any military, air, or naval base acquired after January 1, 1940, by the United States from any foreign government or lands occupied or used by the United 630 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS States for military or naval purposes in any Territory or possession outside the continental United States, including Alaska, Guantanamo, and the Philippine Islands, but excluding the Canal Zone, irrespective of the place where the injury or death occurs.” © The effect of the act of August 16, 1941, is to provide work-men’s compensation coverage under a Federal law for all employments in con-nection with construction work at national defense bases outside the continental United States. In the administration of this act the Commission is authorized to establish compensation districts to include any areas to which the act appl.es, and to assign personnel to administer the law locally within such districts. FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION It is the duty of the Board to give consideration to, and make recommenda-tions on, questions which may arise concerning the proper coordination of the Federal hospital facilities, with particular reference to (a) the use of existing facilities and (b) the construction of additional facilities. The Board acts upon matters relating to hospitalization in so far as they per-tain to the Federal Government when such matters are referred to it either by the President, the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, the head of any Gov-ernment agency, or the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs. ! FEDERAL BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS The Board of Surveys and Maps was constituted by Executive order of December 30, 1919, to coordinate the activities of the various map-making agencies of the Government. Amendatory Executive order of January 4, 1936, designates it as the Federal Board of Surveys and Maps, and extends its advisory powers to include independent establishments as well as executive departments. The various executive departments and independent establishments are requested to make full use of the Board as an advisory body and to furnish all available information and data called for by the Board. Meetings are held at stated intervals, to which representatives of the map-using public are invited for the purpose of conference and advice. A Map Information Office has been estab-lished under the Board in the Geological Survey for the purpose of collecting, classifying, and furnishing to the public information concerning all map, survey, and aerial photographic data available in the various Government agencies and elsewhere. : FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION The Federal Communications Commission was created by an act of Congress approved June 19, 1934, as subsequently amended, for the purpose of regulating interstate and foreign commerce in communication by wire and radio so as to make available, so far as possible, to all people of the United States a rapid, efficient, Nation-wide, and world-wide wire and radio communication service with adequate facilities at reasonable charges, for the purpose of the national defense, for the purpose of promoting safety of life and property through the use of wire and radio communication, and for the purpose of securing a more effective execution of this policy by centralizing authority theretofore granted by law to several agencies and by granting additional authority with respect to interstate and foreign commerce in wire and radio communication. The Commission exercises functions previously vested in the Federal Radio Commission, which was abolished by the Communications Act; certain functions previously exercised by the Interstate Commerce Commission with respect to telegraph operation; powers formerly exercised by the Postmaster General with respect to Government telegraph rates; and powers formerly exercised by the State Department under the Cable Landing License Act. The powers of the Commission extend beyond those previously vested in these other agencies in the communications field. The powers conferred by the Communications Act also include authority for the Commission to exercise additional powers derived under many international agreements relating to communications. The Commission is composed of seven members and funetions as a unit. The Commission makes all important policy determinations and directly supervises all activities of the staff. From time to time committees of the Commission, con-sisting usually of three members, are delegated to make special studies and super­ MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 631 vise particular undertakings. The performance of specified functions is delegated to individual commissioners, to the Administrative Board, consisting of heads of departments, and to the heads of certain departments as individuals. The staff organization consists of the following departments: Accounting, Statistical, and Tariff Department (chief accountant), whose fune-tions include matters of accounting regulation, compilation and analysis of statistics, and tariff analysis and regulations. Engineering Department (chief engineer), whose functions include the engi-neering phases of broadcast, common carrier, and private and ship service regula-tion and enforcement; international and interdepartmental matters; supervision of the field staff; and technical engineering information and research. Law Department (general counsel), whose functions include the legal phases of radio licensing and of common carrier regulation; conduct of investigations; administration (including legislation, rule-making, and international matters) and litigation before the courts. Secretary’s office (secretary of the Commission), which has charge of all matters of internal administration. Title I of the. Communications Act contains provisions defining the purposes of the statute, fixing the terms and compensation of Commissioners, and conferring general powers. The statute provides that with certain exceptions employees of the Commission shall be appointed subject to the provisions of the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923. Title II applies to all common carriers engaged in interstate or foreign com-munication by wire or radio. The act specifically provides that persons engaged in radio broadcasting shall not be deemed common carriers. Common carriers are required by title II to furnish communication service upon reasonable request, to establish physical connections with other carriers, to establish through routes and charges and the divisions thereof, and to establish and provide facilities. All charges and practices are required to be just and reasonable, and it is declared unlawful for any carrier to make unjust or unreasonable discriminations or to extend undue or unreasonable preferences or advantages in connection with com-munication service. Carriers are required to publish and file with the Commission tariffs for all charges showing the practices affecting such charges. The Commis-sion is given powers to hold hearings as to the lawfulness of charges, to suspend tariffs, and to prescribe just and reasonable rates. Persons claiming to suffer damages as a result of action by common carriers subject to the act may make complaint to the Commission, and the Commission is required to investigate such complaints and may make an award of damages. Carriers are required to file their contracts with the Commission. Persons seeking to hold office in more than one carrier company subject to the act must obtain the Commission’s consent. The Commission has power to make valuations of carrier property, to make in-quiries into management, to require the filingof annual reports, to prescribe systems of account; to authorize consolidations of telephone companies, and to authorize extensions of lines. Title III contains provisions relating to radio and is divided into two parts. Part I contains provisions respecting radio licensing and regulation. The pur-pose of the act is declared to be to maintain the control by the United States over all channels of interstate and foreign radio transmission; and to provide for the use of such channels, but not the ownership thereof, by persons for limited periods of time, under licenses granted by Federal authority. It is made unlawful for any person to operate any apparatus for the transmission of energy or communi-cations or signals by radio within any State, Territory or possession when the effects of such use extend beyond the borders thereof, or upon vessels or aircraft of the United States, except in accordance with a license issued by the Commis-sion. The statute requires that the operation of radio transmitting apparatus -shall be carried on only by persons holding operators’ licenses issued by the Commission. The radio license requirements do not apply to the Philippine Islands or to the Canal Zone. The Commission does not have jurisdiction with respect to radio stations belonging to and operated by the United States which may use such frequencies as may be assigned by the President. The Commission is authorized to classify radio stations, prescribe the nature of their service, assign frequencies, and make regulations to carry out the purposes of the act. It also has authority to revoke or modify licenses. Broadcast licenses may not be for a longer term than 3 years, and the Commission rules and regu-lations provide for a 1-year term for such licenses. With a few minor exceptions, the statute provides that no license shall be issued unless a permit for the construction of the station has first been issued. Appli-cations for construction permits and licenses must be in writing and sworn to by 632 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS the applicant. The act contains provisions against the holding of licenses by aliens, foreign corporations, representatives of foreign governments, domestic corporations in which an alien is an officer or director or in which an alien owns or votes more than one-fifth of the stock, or by any person whose license has been revoked by a court for violation of the antitrust laws. The standard governing the granting of licenses is public interest, convenience, or necessity. If the Commission is able to determine from an examination of an application that public interest, convenience, or necessity would be servedby a grant thereof, it is required to grant such application without a hearing. If it can-not so determine, it must afford the applicant notice and opportunity to be heard. The act prohibits assignment of licenses and transfer of control of licensee cor-porations except upon written consent of the Commission. The statute provides that if the person who is a legally qualified candidate for public office is permitted to use a broadcast station, equal opportunity shall be afforded to all other candidates for that office in the use of the broadcast station. The broadcasting of information concerning lotteries, gift enterprises, and similar schemes, and the utterance of obscene, indecent, or profane language by means of radio are prohibited. The act provides that the Commission shall have no power of censorship over radio communications. Part II of title III requires the use of radio for safety purposes on board certain classes of ships of the United States and also confers powers on the Commission to carry out the provisions of the Safety of Life at Sea Convention (London, 1929). Title IV contains procedural and administrative provisions. It confers juris-diction on three-judge district courts to enforce, enjoin, set aside, annul, or suspend any order of the Commission under the act (except any order granting or refusing an application for a construction permit for a radio station, or for a radio station license, or for renewal of an existing radio station license, or for modification of an existing radio station license, or suspending a radio operator’s license.) Orders so excepted are subject to review by appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, by the applicant whose application is denied, by any other person aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected by the action of the Commission granting or refusing an application, or by a radio operator whose license is suspended. The Commission is also given power to make investigations on its own motion and to issue subpenas and to receive depositions. The statute provides for cooperation by the Commission with State commissions with respect to common carrier matters. Title V contains penal and forfeiture provisions. In general violations of the statute are punishable by a fine of not more than $10,000 or imprisonment for not more than 2 years, or both. Violation of a rule of the Commission is punish-able by a fine of not more than $500 for each day during which the offense occurs. Forfeitures are recoverable in United States courts and the Commission is given powers in certain cases to remit and mitigate forfeitures. : Title VI prohibits the unauthorized interception and publication of communica-tions. During the continuance of a war in which the United States is engaged, or upon proclamation by the President that there exists war or a threat of war, or a state of public peril or disaster, or other national emergency, special powers are conferred upon the President in connection with communications. FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was organized under authority of the Banking Act of 1933, approved by the President on June 16, 1933 (Public, No. 66, 73d Cong.). This act was amended by Public, No. 362, approved June 16, 1934 (73d Cong.) ; by Public Resolution No. 38, approved June 28, 1935 (74th Cong.); by the Banking Act of 1935, approved August 23, 1935 (Public, No. 305, 74th Cong.); and by Public Resolution No. 83, approved April 21, 1936 (74th Cong.). The management of the Corporation is vested in a board of directors of three members, two of whom are appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, the third member being the Comptroller of the Currency. The capital stock of the Corporation, according to the requirements of law, is as follows: The Treasury of the United States has subscribed $150,000,000. Each Federal Reserve bank has subscribed to stock in an amount equal to one-half of the surplus of such bank on January 1, 1933, the total amount of such subscription being $139,299,556.99. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 633 The chief function of the Corporation is to insure the deposits of all banks which are entitled to the benefits of insurance under the law, to the extent of $5,000 for each depositor. All national banks and all Federal Reserve member banks are insured under the law, and any bank located in the States of the United States and the District of Columbia which is not a member of the Federal Reserve System, may become insured upon application to and examination by the Corporation, and approval by the board of directors. The benefits of insur-ance are also extended to banks in Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. The creation of an insurance reserve is provided for through annual assessment at the rate of one-twelfth of 1 percent upon the average deposits, less authorized deductions, of each insured bank. A second function of the Corporation is to act as receiver for insured banks which fail. The Corporation is appointed receiver for all national banks which fail and may be appointed receiver for closed insured State banks if such appoint-ment is tendered by the State banking authority and is permitted by State law. Upon the closing of an insured bank, the Corporation immediately assumes the insured deposit liability of the closed bank and makes available the funds needed to discharge such liability. For this purpose the Corporation may, if it finds that it is advisable, organize a new national bank. The claim of each insured depositor is paid upon assignment to the Corporation by him of all rights to dividends and recovers on account, and to the extent of his insured deposit. Further, the Corporation may make loans secured by assets of an open or closed insured bank, or may purchase such assets, or may guarantee any other insured bank against loss by reason of its assuming the liabilities of another open or closed insured bank, whenever, in the judgment of the board of directors, such action will reduce the risk or avert threatened loss to the Corporation and facilitate a merger or consolidation of an insured bank with another insured bank. Of the 14,950 operating banks in the United States and possessions on December 31, 1940, deposits in 13,495 banks, including 53 mutual savings banks, were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. As of that date 6,486 banks, members of the Federal Reserve System, had been automatically admitted to membership, and 6,956 nonmember banks, other than mutual savings banks, had made application and had been accepted for membership. FEDERAL LOAN AGENCY The Federal Loan Administrator, head of the Federal Loan Agency, supervises the administration, and is responsible for the coordination of the functions and activities of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Electric Home and Farm Authority, The RFC Mortgage Company, Disaster Loan Corporation, Federal National Mortgage Association, Federal Home Loan Bank Board, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Federal Housing Administration, Export-Import Bank of Washington, Metals Reserve Company, Rubber Reserve Company, Defense Plant Corporation, Defense Supplies Corporation, and Defense Homes Corporation. 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 (or otherwise affected) by subsequent legislation. The Corporation may perform all functions it is authorized to perform under law until the close of business January 22, 1947, or such earlier date as the President may authorize. ORGANIZATION The Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was organized February 2, 1932, will have succession for a period of 15 years from January 22, 1932, unless sooner dissolved by an act of Congress.” Its management is vested in a board of directors consisting of five persons 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 Sorparation has special representatives at Salt Lake City, Utah, and San Juan, 634 C ongressional Daurectory MISCELLANEOUS 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 custodian. The funds of the Corporation are kept on deposit with the Treasurer of the United States. LOANS UNDER SECTION 5 OF THE RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION ACT, AS AMENDED TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, STATE INSURANCE FUNDS, 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-tion thereof, upon application of the receiver or liquidating agent of such institu-tion; any State insurance fund established or created by the laws of any State (including 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; and 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. 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 or of receivers or trustees thereof, including equipment-trust certificates, or guarantee the pay-ment of the principal of, and/or interest on, such obligations, including equip-ment-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 obli-gations, including equipment-trust certificates, of railroads not in receivership or trusteeship, the Interstate Commerce Commission shall, in connection with its approval thereof, also certify that such railroad, on the basis of present and pro-spective earnings, may reasonably be expected to meet its fixed charges, without a reduction thereof through judicial reorganization, except that such certificate shall not be required in case of such loans, purchases, or guaranties made for the maintenance of, or purchase of equipment for, such railroads. The total amount of loans and commitments to railroads, receivers, and trustees, and purchases and guaranties of obligations of railroads, under section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, may not exceed $500,000,000 at any one time in addition to loans and commitments made prior to January 31, 1935, and renewals of loans and commitments so made. TO THE FISHING INDUSTRY Section 15 of the act of Congress approved June 19, 1934, authorizes the Cor-poration to make loans under section 5 of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora-tion 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, process-ing, carrying and/or orderly marketing of fish of American fisheries and/or prod-ucts thereof. No loans or advances may be made under section 5 upon foreign securities or foreign acceptances as collateral or for the purpose of assisting in the carrying or liquidation of such foreign securities and foreign acceptances. : MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 635 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 the 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 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 S8TOCK OR NOTES, ETC., AS COLLATERAL Pursuant to the provisions of the 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 IOAN 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 5¢ 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 | H | : 636 Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS under title III 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 such loans outstanding, nonassessable stock sub-scribed for, and capital notes and debentures purchased and held by the Corpora-tion may not exceed $100,000,000 at any one time. AID IN THE NATIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM In order to aid the Government of the United States in its national defense program, the Corporation is authorized, pursuant to section 5d of the Recon- struction Finance Corporation Act, as amended. To make loans to, or, when requested by the Federal Loan Administrator with the approval of the President, purchase the capital stock of, any corporation (a) for the purpose of producing, acquiring, and carrying strategic and critical materials as defined by the President, and (b) for plant construction, expansion and equipment, and working capital, to be used by the corporation in the manu-facture of equipment and supplies necessary to the national defense, on such terms and conditions and with such maturities as the Corporation may determine. When requested by the Federal Loan Administrator, with the approval of the President, to create or organize, at any time prior to July 1, 1943, a corporation or corporations, with power (a) to produce, acquire, carry, sell, or otherwise deal in strategic and critical materials as defined by the President; (b) to purchase and lease land, purchase, lease, build, and expand plants, and purchase and produce equipment, facilities, machinery, materials, and supplies for the manufacture of strategic and critical materials, arms, ammunition, and implements of war, any other articles, equipment, facilities, and supplies necessary to the national defense, and such other articles, equipment, supplies, and materials as may be required in the manufacture or use of any of the foregoing or otherwise necessary in con-nection therewith; (c¢) to lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of such land, plants, facilities, and machinery to others to engage in such manufacture; (d) to engage in such manufacture itself, if the President finds that it is necessary for a Govern-ment agency to engage in such manufacture; (e¢) to produce, lease, purchase, or otherwise acquire railroad equipment (including rolling stock), and commercial aircraft, and parts, equipment, facilities, and supplies necessary in connection with such railroad equipment and aircraft, and to lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of the same; (f) to purchase, lease, build, expand, or otherwise acquire facilities for the training of aviators and to operate or lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of such facilities to others to engage in such training; and (g9) to take such other action as the President and the Federal Loan Administrator may deem necessary to expedite the national-defense program, but the aggregate amount of the funds of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation which may be outstanding at any one time for carrying out this clause (g) shall not exceed $200,000,000. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation may make loans to, or purchase the capital stock of, any such corporation for any purpose within the powers of the corporation as above set forth related to the national-defense program, on such terms and conditions as the Corporation may determine. When requested by the Federal Loan Administrator, with the approval of the President, and subject to such conditions and limitations as may be set forth in such request, to make loans, notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, to any foreign governments, to their central banks, or to any person, commission, association, corporation, or bank acting for or on behalf of such government, for the purpose of achieving the maximum dollar exchange value in the United States for the securities or property of any such government, central bank, person, commission, association, corporation, or bank. Such loans may be made only upon the security of bonds, debentures, stocks, or other such obligations of (a) the Government of the United States or any State, municipality, or political subdivision of any State, or (b) any private corporation organized under the laws of the United States or any State. Any corporation created or organized by the Reconstruction Finance Corpora-tion under the preceding paragraph is also authorized, with the approval of the President, to make payments against the purchase price to be paid for strategic MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 637 and critical materials in advance of the delivery of such materials. Whenever practicable, the Corporation may require the payments so made to be used for purchases of raw or manufactured agricultural commodities to be exported from the United States. LOANS TO PUBLIC AGENCIES AND TO BUSINESS ENTERPRISES For the purpose of maintaining and promoting the economic stability of the country or encouraging the employment of labor, the Corporation is authorized and empowered, pursuant to section 5d, Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, under such terms, conditions, and restrictions as the Corpora-tion may determine, to make loans to, or contracts with, States, municipalities, and political subdivisions of States, with public agencies and instrumentalities of one or more States, municipalities, and political subdivisions of States, and with public corporations, boards, and commissions, to aid in financing projects authorized under Federal, State, or municipal law, such loans or contracts to be made through the purchase of their securities, or otherwise, and for such pur-pose the Corporation is authorized to bid for such securities. The Corporation is further authorized and empowered to purchase the securities and obligations of, and to make loans to, any business enterprise when capital or credit, at pre-vailing rates for the character of loan applied for, is not otherwise available. All such purchases of securities and obligations and all such loans shall be, in the opinion of the board of directors, of such sound value, or so secured, as reason-ably to assure retirement or repayment; may be made or effected either directly or in cooperation with banks or other lending institutions through agreements to participate or by the purchase of participations, or otherwise; shall be made only when, in the opinion of the board of directors, the business enterprise is solvent; and shall be made under such terms, conditions, and restrictions as the Corporation may determine. In carrying out the provisions of this section, the Corporation may purchase securities and obligations and may make loans, with such maturities as the Corporation may determine, notwithstanding any other provision of law. 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 or Territory and to or for the benefit of political subdivisions of States and Territories which have or propose to purchase or otherwise acquire projects or portions thereof devoted chiefly to the improvement of lands 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 which has or proposes to purchase or otherwise acquire projects or portions thereof devoted chiefly to the improvement of lands for agricultural purposes, to purchase, acquire, construct, or complete such a project or any part thereof or to purchase or acquire additional drainage, levee, or irrigation works, or property, rights, or appurtenances in connection therewith, and to repair, extend, or improve any such project or make such additions thereto as are consonant with or necessary or desirable for the proper functioning thereof or for the further assurance of the ability of the borrower to repay its loan. Such loans. shall not permit additional or new land to be brought into production outside of the present boundaries of any established or reorganized irrigation district; 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 64674°—77-2—I1st ed 42 638 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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, or any strategic or critical mineral which in the opinion of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation would be of value to the United States in time of war, 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 or gravel deposit, there will be developed a sufficient quantity of ore, or placer de-posits of a sufficient value to pay a profit upon mining operations. Not to exceed $20,000 shall be lent to any corporation, individual, or partnership, for such development purposes; except that not in excess of $40,000 in the aggregate may be loaned to any corporation, individual, or partnership for such purposes, if such corporation, individual, or partnership has expended funds previously ob-tained from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation for such purposes in such manner as to justify an additional loan for such 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, in an aggregate amount not exceeding $10,000,000, 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 indebt-edness 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 exten-sions or improvements to the public-school facilities on account of 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 FOR THE CARRYING AND ORDERLY MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES 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 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. LOANS AND PURCHASES TO AID IN FINANCING ROAD PROJECTS Section 12, Federal Highway Act of 1940, approved September 5, 1940, pro-vides that the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, pursuant to its authority under existing law and subject to all the terms and conditions thereof, is author-ized to cooperate with States to finance, or to aid in financing, the acquisition of MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 639 real property or interests in property (any such acquisition being called a ‘‘right-of-way’’) necessary or desirable for road projects eligible for Federal aid under the Federal Highway Act, as amended and supplemented. . Every loan or purchase of securities by Reconstruction Finance Corporation to finance or to aid in financing the acquisition of a right-of-way, as defined in this section, shall hereafter be made only after approval of the project (including the plans, administration, and financing thereof) by the highway department of the State and by the Public Roads Administration of the Federal Works Agency LOANS AND ADVANCES TO THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE FOR FARM TENANTS, RURAL ELECTRIFICATION, AND FARM REHABILITATION Under the Department of Agriculture Appropriation Act, 1942, approved July 1, 1941, the Secretary of Agriculture may borrow from the Reconstruction Finance : Corporation, and the Corporation is authorized and directed to lend him (a) $50,000,000 for loans in accordance with title I of the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, approved July 22, 1937 (7 U. S. C. 1000-1006), and (b) $100,000,000 for loans in accordance with sections 3, 4, and 5, and the purchase of property in accordance with section 7 of the Rural Electrification Act of May 20, 1936, as amended (7 U. S. C. 901-914). In order to furnish the Secretary of Agriculture with additional funds for the purpose of making rural rehabilitation loans to needy farmers, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, pursuant to the aforementioned law, is authorized and directed, until June 30, 1942, to make advances to the Secretary of Agriculture upon his request in an aggregate amount of not to exceed $120,000,000. LOANS FOR THE EXPORTATION OF AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES Under section 5a of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, the Corpora-tion is authorized, subject to specified limitations, to accept drafts and bills of exchange drawn upon it, which grow out of transactions involving the exporta-tion of agricultural or other products actually sold or transported for sale subse-quent 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 prod-ucts; 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. OTHER LOANS AND 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-ized the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to make loans to any receiver ap-pointed pursuant to section 29 of the Federal Farm Loan Act, as amended, and 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; and such receivers are authorized to borrow from the Corporation with the approval of the Land Bank Commissioner. PURCHASE OF MARKETABLE SECURITIES FROM THE FEDERAL EMERGENCY ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC WORKS The Corporation is authorized, pursuant to the provisions of the Emergency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, to purchase marketable securities, satisfactory to the Corporation, acquired or to be acquired by the Federal Emergency Admin-istration of Public Works. The amount that the Corporation may have invested at any one time in such securities shall not exceed $400,000,000. 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 640 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration may not purchase or hold at any time said debentures or other obligations in excess of $250,000,000 par value. 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 Corporation is authorized to issue notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations. Such notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations issued by the Corporation 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 obligations, and to bear such rate or rates of interest as may be determined by the Corporation. Such obligations may mature subsequent to the period of succession of the Corporation. The Cor-poration, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, 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 pur-chase 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 Corporation 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 also provides that any and all notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations issued by the Cor-poration 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 possession thereof, or by any State, county, municipality, or local taxing authority. 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. MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 641 ELECTRIC HOME AND FARM AUTHORITY Electric Home and Farm Authority (capitalization $850,000) is a credit agency incorporated under the laws of the District of Columbia, August 1, 1935, to suc-ceed Electric Home and Farm Authority, Inc. (a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, January 17, 1934, pursuant to Executive Order No. 6514, issued under authority of the act of June 16, 1933, Public, No. 67, 73d Cong.). The Delaware Corporation has been dissolved. By Executive Order No. 7139, dated August 12, 1935, Electric Home and Farm Authority was desig-nated as an agency of the United States. Public, No. 484, Seventy-fourth Con-gress, approved March 31, 1936, continued the Electric Home and Farm Authority as an agency of the United States until February 1, 1937; Public, No. 2, Seventy-fifth Congress, approved January 26, 1937, continued its functions until June 30, 1939; Public No. 2, Seventy-sixth Congress, approved March 4, 1939, authorized continuation until June 30, 1941; and Public, No. 108, Seventy-seventh Congress, approved June 10, 1941, authorized the extension of the Authority as an agency of the United States until January 22, 1947, or such earlier date as may be fixed by the President by Executive Order. Under the President’s Reorganization Plan No. I, the Authority was grouped in the Federal Loan Agency. The purpose of the Authority as stated in its certificate of incorporation, as amended, is “to aid in the distribution, sale, and installation of electrical and gas apparatus, equipment, and appliances.” The Authority accomplishes its pur-pose by financing the purchase of domestic electric and gas appliances and electrical wiring for homes and farms. The property and business of the Authority are managed by a board of trustees. The administrative officers of the Authority are directly responsible to the Board of Trustees. Electric Home and Farm Authority finances the retail purchase of domestic electric and gas equipment for customers of utilities which have agreed to bill and collect installment payments along with regular service bills. Credit is extended to the consumer through the purchase of conditional sale contracts and chattel mortgages from approved dealers, and notes from approved electrical contractors. Three general types of equipment are financed: (1) Domestic and farm electric appliances; (2) domestic gas appliances; and (3) household and farm electric wiring. The specific types of appliances which the Authority finances are as follows: Electric.—Refrigerators, ranges, water heaters, water pumps, conversion oil burners, coal stokers, self-contained room coolers, milk coolers, frozen food cabi- nets, cream separators, electric motors, milking machines, feed grinders, washers, clothes dryers, ironers, space heaters, dishwashers, waste disposal units, attic ventilating fans, vacuum cleaners, and radios. Gas.—Ranges, refrigerators, furnaces, boilers, conversion burners, ironers, water heaters, and circulating heaters. In compliance with the maximum terms established by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, which became effective September 1, 1941, pur- chasers are allowed 18 months to pay for most major appliances. The maxi- mum periods of financing other equipment are as follows: Milk coolers and cream separators, 30 months; motors, clothes dryers, feed grinders, and milking machines, 24 months. Electrical wiring installations may be financed over a maximum period of 18 months. A minimum cash down payment of 20 percent is required on refrigerators, ranges, self-contained room coolers, frozen food cabinets, washers, ironers, vacuum cleaners, dishwashers, radios, electric space heaters, and gas circulating heaters. A minimum cash dowwn payment of 15 percent is required on the following: water heaters, furnaces, boilers, gas conversion burners, coal stokers, conversion oil burners, water pumps, waste disposal units, attic ventilating fans, feed grinders, and milking machines. Cash down payments on the appliances listed above are to be computed after deducting any trade-in allowance from the retail selling price. Milk coolers, cream separators, motors, clothes dryers and electrical wiring installations require a minimum down payment of 10 percent. For manufacturers to have their appliances listed as eligible for financing by the Authority, they must show that the appliances are suitable as to quality, size, and price to meet the needs of families of average or low income. The availability of EHFA financing services for any one or more of the three general types of equipment mentioned above in a particular area depends upon whether or not the electric or gas utility, rendering service in that area through 642 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS a central distribution system, has entered into the necessary agreement or agree- ments with the Authority. Only utilities which are cooperating with the Authority in the financing of electric appliance sales may use the wiring financing plan. THE RFC MORTGAGE COMPANY Public Act No. 1 of the Seventy-fourth Congress authorizes the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, with the approval of the President, to “subscribe for or make loans upon the 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 financial institution * * *7” Pursuant to this authority the Reconstruction Finance Corporation has sub- seribed for $25,000,000 of the capital stock of The RFC Mortgage Company, which was organized under the laws of Maryland on March 14, 1935. The general purpose of the company is to aid in the reestablishment of a normal market for sound mortgages on income-producing urban property, such as apart- ment houses, hotels, and business and office buildings, when credit is not other- wise available on reasonable terms and when the net income from the property, after payment of taxes, insurance, and operating costs, is sufficient to pay interest and the required amortization. The principal office of the company is in Washington, D. C., and it operates in all the States and Territories of the United States. Its business is handled through agents whose offices are located in the various loan agencies of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The activities of the company can be classified into the following major groups: (1) When financing is necessary and cannot be obtained upon reasonable rates and terms, the company considers applications for loans, on a sound basis, secured by first mortgages on urban, income-producing properties, such as apart-ment houses, hotels, business and office buildings, if the net income from the property, after the payment of taxes, insurance, and operating expenses, is sufficient to pay interest charges and the required amortization of the loan. These loans are chiefly for refinancing and aiding in the reorganization of distressed real property. (2) The company also gives consideration to applications for loans to finance new construction, provided there is an economic need for such construction, the mortgagor’s investment in the completed project will be substantial in relation to the amount of the loan requested, and his resources and experience are sufficient to indicate that the property can be operated on a sound basis. (3) The company also considers applications for loans to distressed holders of first mortgage real-estate bonds and certificates upon the security of their notes secured by such bonds and certificates, provided sufficient information is available to the company to enable it to determine that the income of the property securing the bonds or certificates is sufficient to warrant the loan. Loans will not be made to holders of such bonds or certificates who acquired them for speculative purposes. (4) The company also purchases mortgages insured under title VI and section 208, title II of the National Housing Act, as amended, and title I, class 3 loans, provided such mortgages meet the eligibility requirements of the company. DISASTER LOAN CORPORATION The Disaster Loan Corporation was created by act of Congress approved February 11, 1937. Organization.—The Corporation was organized February 15, 1937, and will have succession until dissolved by act of Congress. It is managed by officers and agents appointed by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, under rules and regulations prescribed by the Board of Directors of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. It functions through a principal office at Washington and agents located in the loan agencies of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Functions.—The function of the Disaster Loan Corporation is to make, upon such terms and conditions and in such manner as it may prescribe, such loans as it may determine to be necessary or appropriate because of floods or other catas-pes occurring during the period between January 1, 1936, and January 22, 1947. FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION The association was organized and established on February 10, 1938, pursuant to the provisions of Title III of the National Housing Act, as amended, under the MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 643 name of The National Mortgage Association of Washington. Its name was sub-sequently changed to Federal National Mortgage Association. The association has a paid-in capital of $10,000,000 and a paid-in surplus of $1,000,000. Its capital stock is owned by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The associa-tion functions through a principal office in Washington, D. C., and agents located in the loan agencies of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and is managed by a board of directors. The principal functions of the association are: (1) The purchase at par and accrued interest of mortgages, other than farm mortgages, insured subsequent to January 1, 1937, by the Federal Housing Ad-ministrator under section 203 of the National Housing Act, as amended, which encumber small homes constructed subsequent to January 1, 1936, and otherwise meet the association’s requirements. Such mortgages are purchased from institu-tions which have been approved as mortgagees by the Federal Housing Adminis-trator (except institutions approved by the Administrator on the basis of their loan correspondent relationship with an approved mortgagee pursuant to the provisions of section I, subsection 4 (¢) (2) of said Administrator’s rules), and which have a net worth satisfactory to the association; and (2) To make loans, or to purchase loans, secured by first mortgages insured under section 207 of the National Housing Act, as amended. Applications for such loans, or applications to purchase such loans, must be submitted to the association prior to the beginning of the construction of the proposed housing project. Pursuant to section 302 of Title III of the National Housing Act, as amended, each national mortgage association may have outstanding at any time notes, bonds, debentures, or other such obligations in an aggregate amount not to exceed (1) 20 times the amount of its paid-up capital and surplus, and in no event to exceed (2) the current unpaid principal of insured mortgages held plus its cash and the amortized value of its investments in bonds or other obligations of the United States, or in bonds or other obligations guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United States. The National Housing Act, as amended, further provides that any such notes, bonds, debentures, or other obligations shall be exempt, both as to principal and interest, from all taxation (except surtaxes, estate, inheritance, and gift taxes), now or hereafter imposed by any Territory, depend-ency, or possession of the United States, or by any State, county, municipality, or local taxing authority. Notes, bonds, or other obligations issued by the Asso-ciationon and after March 1,1941, are subject to Federal taxation tothe same extent as Divas obligations, by virtue of the Public Debt Act of 1941, approved February 19, 1941. FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION The Federal Housing Administration was established by an act of Congress approved June 27, 1934. The National Housing Act has six titles: (I) Housing Renovation and Modernization; (II) Mortgage Insurance; (III) National Mort- gage Associations; (IV) Insurance of Savings and Loan Accounts; (V) Miscella- neous, consisting chiefly of amendments to the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, the Farm Credit Act of 1933, the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, the Federal Reserve Act, and the Interstate Commerce Act; (VI) Defense Housing Insurance. There is no provision in the act for the lending or expenditure by the Federal Housing Administration of any Government funds except for administrative pur- poses, but only for the insurance of loans made by private lending institutions. The Administrator has direct charge of administering titles I, II, ITI, and VI of the act. Title IV is administered by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation under direction of a board of trustees consisting of the members of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. : Under the provisions of the act the President was authorized to create the Federal Housing Administration, all the powers 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 against loss up to 10 percent of the total amount of insured loans made for the purpose of financing alterations, repairs, and improvements upon real estate or for erection of new structures. The maximum amount of any such loan is $5,000. New structure loans are secured by mortgages and all loans must comply with certain requirements as to interest rate, maturity, and periodic payment. A pre- mium of one-half of 1 percent is charged the lender on new residential structure loans and three-fourths of 1 percent on other title I loans. The authority granted under this title expires July 1, 1943. 644 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Under title II, the Administrator is authorized to insure mortgages given to secure loans on real estate made by private lending institutions properly approved by the Administrator as mortgagees. Mortgages submitted for insurance under section 203 of this title must be upon dwellings designed for not more than four families, must not exceed $16,000 or 80 percent of the appraised value of the property; except that mortgages upon newly constructed single-family owner- occupied dwellings may be up to 90 percent of the appraised value, provided the amount of the mortgage does not exceed $5,400, or may be up to 90 percent of the first $6,000 of the appraised value and 80 percent of the balance of such value, provided the amount of the mortgage does not exceed $8,600. Mortgages insured under this section carry a maximum interest rate of 41% percent and provide for a mortgage insurance premium of one-half of 1 percent on reducing balances. In addition to the insurance of mortgages on individual homes, provision is made under section 207 for the insurance of mortgages on apartment houses or groups of single or multifamily houses in amounts up to $5,000,000. Such mort- gages are limited to 80 percent of the estimated value of the property when pro- posed improvements are complete, but in no event may a mortgage insured under this section exceed the estimated cost of completed physical improvements. These mortgages carry a maximum of 4%-percent interest and an insurance premium of one-half of 1 percent on reducing balances. Strict regulation of the mortgagor is maintained by the Administrator in connection with mortgages insured under section 207, and the insurance may cover advances made during the progress of construction. The aggregate amount of principal obligations of all mortgages insured under title IT of the act and outstanding at any one time shall not exceed $5,000,000,000. The Administrator does not lend the money on the mortgage but is authorized to insure the mortgage when presented by the mortgagee, which must be an institution approved by the Administrator. Under title ITI, if the Administrator is of the opinion that the establishment of such an association is desirable to provide a market for mortgages insured under title IT and is in the public interest, he is authorized to provide for the establish-ment of national mortgage associations which may make real-estate loans accepted for insurance or insured under title II of the act; purchase, service, or sell any mortgages or partial interest therein which are insured under title II or title VI of the act; purchase, service, or sell uninsured first mortgages and such other liens as are commonly given under the laws of the State, District, or Territory in which the real estate is located, provided such mortgage does not exceed 60 percent of the appraised value of the property as of the date the mortgage is purchased by the association. Title VI creates a defense housing insurance fund, not to exceed $10,000,000, under which the Administrator may insure mortgages on dwellings for not more than four families in areas in which the President finds an acute shortage of housing exists or impends which would impede defense activities. The aggregate amount of principal obligations of all mortgages insured under this title may not exceed $300,000,000. The principal amount of a mortgage may not exceed 90 percent of appraised value or $4,000 for a single-family dwelling, $6,000 for a two-family dwelling, $8,000 for a three-family, and $10,500 for a four-family dwelling. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK BOARD The Federal Home I.oan Bank Board is an administrative and regulatory body created under the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, approved July 22, 1932, which act was amended by the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, approved June 13, 1933; by the National Housing Act, approved June 27, 1934; together with amendatory acts of Congress approved April 27, 1934, and May 28, 1935. Generally its duties are to regulate the Federal home loan banks established by the Board pursuant to the Federal Home Loan Bank Act;to charter and regulate Federal savings and loan associations; to administer the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation; and to operate the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-tion. The unifying purpose of the agencies under the Board is to encourage savings, to provide or stimulate sound and economical home financing, and to protect home ownership. The Federal Home Loan Bank Board is composed of five members appointed by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the Senate, the chairman being designated by the President. On July 1, 1939, Reorgani-zation Plan No. I became effective, grouping the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, and the Federal Savings and Loan MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 645 Insurance Corporation with certain other Government agencies under the Federal Loan Agency. The expenses of the Bank Board are paid by assessments against the Federal home loan banks, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- poration, and the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM The Federal Home Loan Bank System was created by authority of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, approved July 22, 1932, as amended. The System was established to provide a credit reserve for the thrift and home-financing institutions of the United States. ; The 12 Federal home loan banks are located in Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Winston-Salem, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Chicago, Des Moines, Little Rock, Topeka, Portland (Oreg.), and Los Angeles. Fach bank has 12 directors, 4 appointed by the Bank Board to serve for 4 years, and 8 elected by the member institutions to serve for 2 years. Pursuant to the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, the bank board has divided all the member institutions into 3 classes—A, B, and C—which groups represent: A, the large; B, the medium-sized; and C, the small-sized member institutions, the size to be determined according to the aggregate unpaid principal of the member’s home mortgage loans. Each of these classes elects 2 of the 8 directors, who in order to qualify must be officers or direc-tors of member institutions in the class selecting them. The remaining 2 directors are elected by all the member institutions without regard to classes. The capital stock of the Federal home loan banks is subscribed by institutions which have been admitted into membership except $124,741,000 of such stock which was originally subscribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. The original stock subscription for each member institution is an amount equal to 1 percent of the aggregate of the unpaid principal of the subscriber’s home mortgage loans, but not less than $500. A Federal home loan bank may obtain other funds through deposits accepted from member institutions, deposits from other Federal home loan banks and from the United States and its instrumentalities, by dis-counting loans with other Federal home loan banks, and by borrowing money, including the issuance of bonds, debentures, and other obligations. Any building and loan association, savings and loan association, cooperative bank, homestead association, insurance company, or savings bank is eligible to become a member of a Federal home loan bank if such institution is (1) duly organized under the laws of any State or of the United States, (2) is subject to inspection and regulation under the banking laws or under similar laws of the State or of the United States, and (3) makes such home mortgage loans as, in the judgment of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, are long-term loans (and, in the case of a savings bank, if, in the judgment of the Bank Board, its time deposits warrant its making such loans). No institution is eligible to become a member of a Federal home loan bank if, in the judgment of the Bank Board its financial condition is such that advances may not safely be made to such institution, or the character of its management, or its home-financing policy is inconsistent with sound and economical home financing or the purposes of the act. The Bank Board passes upon admissions to membership and the removal or withdrawal of these institutions from the Bank System. The Bank Board may promulgate such rules, regulations, and orders as shall be necessary from time to time to carry out the purposes of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. Federal home loan banks grant both short-and long-term loans to their member institutions. The total amount of loans outstanding to any one member can at no time exceed 12 times the amount paid in by the member for outstanding capital stock held by it. The schedule of interest rates charged by the banks to members must be approved by the Bank Board. The banks do not grant loans to individuals. The Federal home loan banks also may make loans to non-member mortgagees approved under title IT of the National Housing Act upon the security of mortgages insured under title II of that act, subject to regulations issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Each bank may issue bonds, debentures, or other obligations when permitted by the Bank Board. Funds of this character are at present being raised through the sale of consolidated debentures. Consolidated debentures, which are the joint and several obligations of all the banks, may be issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board not in excess of five times the total paid-in capital of all the Federal home loan banks when no assets of any of these banks are pledged as security for any debt or subject to any lien. When no consolidated debentures are outstanding, or in order to refund all outstanding consolidated debentures, the Bank Board may issue consolidated Federal home loan bank bonds which will be the joint and several obligations of all the banks. The Federal home loan banks are self-sustaining and do not require nor receive appropriations from Government funds. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS Federal savings and loan associations were provided for by section 5 of the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, approved June 13, 1933, as amended by acts of Congress approved April 27, 1934, May 28, 1935, and August 10, 1939. These associations are chartered by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to provide local mutual thrift institutions in which the public may invest its funds and may obtain sound and economical home financing. Federal savings and loan associations can be organized anywhere in the United States or its territories upon a petition by citizens for a charter, or by appli- cation of State-chartered members of the Federal home loan banks for per- mission to convert into Federal savings and loan associations. The Bank Board, however, before it can grant a charter must find that the incorporators are of good character and are responsible, that there is a need for the particular insti- tution in its community, that the institution will, in all probability, be useful and successful, and that its incorporation will not unduly damage properly conducted existing thrift and home-financing institutions. Supervision of these institutions is exercised through the 12 Federal home loan banks in accordance with regulations promulgated by the bank board. Each Federal savings and loan association upon its incorporation automatically becomes a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank System and it must obtain insurance of its investors’ accounts by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Such associations raise their capital only in the form of payments on share accounts. They may not accept deposits from the public and may not issue certificates of indebtedness except for borrowed money, when authorized by regulations of the Bank Board. These Federal associations lend their funds primarily upon the security of amortized first mortgages on homes or combination home and business properties located within 50 miles of their home offices. HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was created by the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, approved June 13, 1933. The provisions of the original act creating the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation have been amended by the National Housing Act, approved June 27, 1934, and by acts of Congress approved April 27, 1934, May 28, 1935, and August 11, 1939. The Corporation is under the direction of a board of directors composed of the members of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. The Corporation has a capital stock, fully paid for by the Secretary of the Treas-ury, totaling $200,000,000, and was authorized to issue bonds in an aggregate amount not to exceed $4,750,000,000. None of such bonds could have a maturity later than 1952. The general purpose of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was to refinance existing home mortgages of distressed home owners by exchanging its bonds for such mortgages, which were then rewritten by the Corporation. Loans could be made only to those who were unable to procure needed financing through normal channels. Loans were made on the security of dwellings for not more than four families valued at not more than $20,000 and occupied by the owners or held by them as their homesteads. The Corporation could lend up to 80 percent of the appraised value of each property, but in no case could lend more than $14,000. In accordance with the Home Owners’ Loan Act, the Corporation terminated its lending activities on June 12, 1936. In accordance with the original act of June 13, 1933, all loans of the Corporation were written for a term not to exceed 15 years. On August 11, 1939, the Home Owners’ Loan Act was amended to permit the Corporation to extend its loans to a maximum of 25 years where it considers that the borrower’s circumstances and the condition of the security justify such an extension. On September 7, 1939, the Corporation made provision to accept, until further notice, interest at the rate of 4} percent per annum on all payments due on and after October 16, 1939, on the indebtedness of home owners to the Corporation arising from any loan, advance, or sale of property. On all purchase-money obligations taken on or after October 1, 1939, in connection with the sale of real MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 647 property by the Corporation, interest is to be charged at the 4%-percent rate until otherwise directed by the board. In addition, the Corporation is authorized to purchase obligations of the Fed-eral home loan banks, shares of Federal savings and loan associations, and sharés and other securities of other qualified applying institutions which are members of the Federal home loan banks or whose accounts are insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. The maximum amount the Corpora-tion may expend for such purposes is a total of $300,000,000. An additional $100,000,000 of the Corporation’s authorized bond issue has been used for the purchase of the entire capital stock of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Although the amount which the Corporation may spend for ad-ministrative expenditures is fixed pursuant to an authorization by Congress, all the money expended by the Corporation is paid out of its funds and in no part from regular governmental funds. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation was created by title IV of the National Housing Act, approved June 27, 1934. The original law was amended by acts of Congress approved May 28, 1935, and February 3, 1938. The Insurance Corporation was created to insure the safety of savings in insti-tutions of the savings and loan type. It was placed under the direction of a board of trustees composed of the members of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. By law the capital of the Corporation, in the amount of $100,000,000, was obtained by sale of its stock to the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. Funds for operating expenses and reserves are obtained from premiums paid by insured institutions, earnings from investments, and admission fees paid by insured associations. The Corporation insures repurchasable (withdrawable) share accounts, deposits, and investment certificates only. Each insured investor is insured up to the value of his investment and credited earnings not in excess of $5,000. Each insured institution pays an annual premium charge of one-eighth of 1 percent of the total amount of all insured accounts plus any creditor obligations. Institu-tions now applying for insurance are required to pay an admission fee, in addition to the annual premium for insurance, based on the amount of the Corporation’s reserves. When the reserve fund of the Corporation equals 5 percent of the total amount of the insured accounts and creditor obligations of all insured institutions, the regular premiums will be suspended unless and until the reserve fund falls below 5 percent. : Insurance may be terminated by the Insurance Corporation for violation by an insured institution of any provision of the National Housing Act applicable to insurance of accounts, or the regulations of, or agreements with, the Corporation, provided for in the law. Insurance of accounts can be voluntarily terminated by an insured institution upon adequate notice of its intention to the Corporation and to its members. In the event an insured institution is taken over for liquidation by properly constituted authority, the Corporation is required to make available to the holders of insured accounts either a new insured account of equal amount in a going insured institution, or, at the option of the insured investor, not in excess of 10 percent of his account in cash and the remainder in non-interest-bearing deben-tures payable one-half within 1 year and the other half within 3 years from the date the insured institution was taken over for liquidation. The total amount of insurance payable to any member or investor, however, may not exceed $5,000. If any institution which is taken over for liquidation is a Federal savings and loan association, the Insurance Corporation must serve as conservator or receiver, and, in the event the insured institution is incorporated under the laws of any of the States, the services of the Insurance Corporation as conservator, receiver, or other legal custodian are tendered to the parent State. In order to prevent a default in an insured institution or in order to restore an insured institution in default to normal operation as an insured institution, the Corporation is authorized, in its discretion, to make loans to, purchase the assets of, or make contributions to, the insured institution. The Insurance Corpora-tion, however, in such cases may not contribute an amount in excess of that which the Corporation finds to be reasonably necessary to save the expense of liquidating such institution. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON Export-Import Bank of Washington is a banking corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia pursuant to Executive order of the President /{ 648 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS of the United States, dated February 2, 1934. The capital stock is fixed at $175,000,000. 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 $174,000,000 is owned by Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The affairs of the bank are managed by a board of 11 trustees, and the bank is authorized to continue as an agency of the United States until January 22, 1947, or such earlier date as may be fixed by the President by Executive order. The bank was established 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. By Public, No. 792, Seventy-sixth Congress, approved Sep-tember 26, 1940, the bank is authorized to make loans to develop the resources, stabilize the economies, and assist in the orderly marketing of the products of the countries of the Western Hemisphere. METALS RESERVE COMPANY Organization.— Metals Reserve Company was created by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on June 28, 1940, pursuant to authority of section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, with a capital of $5,000,000. It is managed by a board of directors, appointed by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and by officers and agents appointed by the Company. The principal office of the Company is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.—The purpose of the Company is to acquire and earry a reserve supply of critical and strategic materials, in connection with the National Defense Program. RUBBER RESERVE COMPANY Organization.—Rubber Reserve Company was created by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on June 28, 1940, pursuant to authority of section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, with a capital of $5,000,000. The Company is managed by a board of directors, appointed by the Recon-struction Finance Corporation, and by officers and agents appointed by the Company. The principal office of the Company is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.—The purpose of the Company is to acquire and carry a reserve supply of crude rubber, to aid in the national defense program. In order to ac celerate the accumulation of such reserve supply of rubber and to facilitate the-distribution of rubber to the manufacturing industry both for defense and for commercial requirements, the Company on June 23, 1941, became the sole buyer of rubber exported to the United States from the Far East. Acting in pursu-ance of this objective and in accordance with consumption programs established by the Office of Production Management and the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply, the Company subsequently established a central distribu-tion system to meet the current needs of the rubber industry. DEFENSE PLANT CORPORATION Organization.—Defense Plant Corporation was created by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on August 22, 1940, pursuant to authority of section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, with an authorized capital of $5,000,000. It is managed by a board of directors, appointed by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and by officers and agents appointed by the Corporation. The principal office of the Corporation is located in Washington, D. C Functions.— purposes of the Corporation are (a) to buy, sell, acquire, store, The carry, import, export, produce, process, manufacture, and market strategic and critical materials as defined by the President of the United States; and to pur-chase, lease, construct, or otherwise acquire, and to use, or arrange for the use by others of, such land, buildings, plants, machinery, equipment, and facilities as may be necessary or appropriate in connection therewith; (b) to purchase, lease, or otherwise acquire real estate and interests in real estate, to purchase, lease or otherwise acquire and to build and expand plants and facilities, and to purchase, lease, produce, or otherwise acquire and to repair, rebuild, and alter equipment, supplies, and machinery, for the manufacture of arms, ammunition, and imple-ments of war; (¢) to use, lease, license, or otherwise arrange for the use by others of such real estate, plants, facilities, equipment, supplies, and machinery, for the manufacture of arms, ammunition, and implements of war and the production of equipment, supplies, and machinery usable in such manufacture; and (d) if the MISCELLANEOUS Officral Dutres 649 President of the United States finds that it is necessary for the Corporation to engage in the manufacture of arms, ammunition, and implements of war, to engage in such manufacture itself. DEFENSE SUPPLIES CORPORATION Organization —Defense Supplies Corporation was created by the Reconstruc-tion Finance Corporation on August 29, 1940, pursuant to authority of Section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, with a capital of $5,000,000. It is managed by a board of Directors, appointed by the Re-construction Finance Corporation, and by officers and agents appointed by the Cor-poration. The principal office of the Corporation is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.—The purpose of the Corporation is to produce, acquire, carry, sell, or otherwise deal in strategic and critical materials and supplies; to purchase and lease land; to engage in the manufacture of arms, ammunition, and implements of war; to produce, lease, purchase, or otherwise acquire railroad equipment and commercial aircraft, and to lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of same; to acquire facilities for the training of aviators, and to take such further action as the Presi-dent and the Federal Loan Administrator deem necessary to expedite the national defense program. DEFENSE HOMES CORPORATION Organization.— Defense Homes Corporation was incorporated pursuant to the laws of the State of Maryland on October 23, 1940, with an authorized capital of $10,000,000 divided into 100,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, subscribed for and purchased by the Federal Loan Administrator with funds allocated by the President pursuant to a letter dated October 18, 1940, from the President to the Secretary of the Treasury. Such stock is not transferable. The principal busi-ness office of the Corporation is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.— Corporation will provide homes in areas of extensive defense The activities including training bases for the Army and Navy, where such homes are necessary and, so far as can be determined, will constitute a permanent part of the communities. FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION Creation and authority.—As created under the Federal Water Power Act of June 10, 1920 (41 Stat. 1063, 16 U. 8S. C. 791-823), the Federal Power Commission was originally composed of the Secretaries of War, Interior, and Agriculture. It was reorganized 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 IT of the Public Utility Act of 1935, approved August 26, 1935 (49 Stat. 838, 16 U. S. C. 791-825r), to include jurisdiction, not only over water power projects on navigable streams or affecting the interests of interstate or foreign commerce, or upon public lands, as previously provided, but also over the interstate movement of electric energy. The short title of the act was changed to Federal Power Act. The provisions of the Federal Water Power Act, amended for clarification of certain features, appear as part I of the Federal Power Act, while the new provisions relating to interstate movement of electric energy are set forth in part II. Part III contains certain general adminis- trative provisions applicable to matters arising under both parts I and II. The authority of the Commission was further extended by the Tennessee Valley Authority Act (48 Stat. 58), as amended in 1935 (49 Stat. 1028), the Bonneville Project Act (50 Stat. 720), the Fort Peck Project Act (52 Stat. 403), Ie Le Control Act of 1938 (52 Stat. 1215), and the Natural Gas Act (52 tat. 821). Purpose of part I.—Part I represents the declared policy of Congress to provide for the development and improvement of navigation and the development, transmission, and utilization of power on streams subject to Federal jurisdiction, upon lands of the United States, and at Government dams, by private and public agencies acting under licenses issued by the Commission. Such licenses may be issued only after satisfactory evidence has been submitted that the applicant has complied with the requirements of specified State laws; and if the navigable capacity of any navigable waters of the United States will be affected, only upon the approval of the plans for the project by the Chief of Engineers and the Sec- retary of War; or if a reservation is affected, only upon such conditions as the Secretary of the Department under whose supervision it falls shall deem necessary for its adequate protection and utilization. 650 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Licenses so issued are subject to the following conditions: To effectuate the foregoing policies; to protect reservations of the United States; to adapt each project to a comprehensive plan for improving or developing a waterway or waterways for interstate or foreign commerce, for the improvement and utilization of water power, and for other beneficial uses, including recreational purposes; to reimburse the United States for the cost of administration of part I of the act and to recompense it for the use of lands; to expropriate excessive profits until the States shall make provision for their prevention or expropriation; to provide for the payment of assessments for benefits from headwater improvements; to give the United States the option to recapture licensed projects at the expiration of the licenses; to obtain the maintenance and operation of navigation facilities and fishways; and to provide for reasonable regulation of rates, services, and security issues of parties involved, in the absence of State regulation. The act also provides for investigations of unlicensed projects subject to Federal regulation and the issuance of orders in the public interest to conserve and utilize navigation and water power resources. Purpose of part II.—Part II of the Federal Power Act embodies a comprehen-sive scheme for the regulation of electric utilities engaged in interstate commerce. The policy is. to extend Federal regulation to matters which cannot be regulated by the States and also to exert Federal authority to strengthen and assist the States in the exercise of their regulatory powers. In general, the regulatory provisions of the act apply to persons owning and operating facilities for the transmissionof electric energy in interstate commerce or for the sale of electric energy at wholesale in interstate commerce, with certain exceptions—for example, facilities used in local distribution. Provision is made for the encouragement of voluntary interconnection and coordination of facilities; for compulsory inter-connections under certain circumstances; for authorizing transmission of electric energy from the United States to a foreign country when it will not impair the sufficiency of electric supply within the United States or impede or tend to impede coordination of facilities; for the approval of the transfer of assets, under certain conditions, involving companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission; for the approval of the issuance of long-term securities in accordance with specified standards, and for the scrutiny of the issuance of short-term securities, involving companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission where the companies are not organized and operating in a State under the laws of which its security issues are regulated by a State Commission. Further provisions apply to the charging of just, reasonable, nondiseriminatory and nonpreferential rates in connection with the transmission or sale of electric energy subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission; and for the furnishing of proper, adequate, and sufficient service in the interstate transmission or sale of electric energy. Part I11.—Part III requires approval of the holding of interlocking positions in the companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, in security under-writing companies, and in electrical equipment supply companies when neither public nor private interests will be adversely affected thereby. The Tennessee Valley Authority Act, the Bonneville Project Act, and the Fort Peck Project Act provide for the creation of various Government hydroelectric power projects, each of which is subject, in various phases of its operations, to the supervision and authority of the Commission. The Natural Gas Act is intended to regulate those engaged in the transportation of natural gas in interstate commerce or the sale in interstate commerce of such gas for resale for ultimate public consumption for domestic, commercial, industrial, or any other use. The policy of Congress in this connection is to extend Federal regulation to certain phases of the business of transporting and selling natural gas for ultimate distribution to the public which cannot be regulated by the States, also to assert Federal authority to strengthen and assist the States in the exercise of their regulatory powers. Provision is made for control over the exportation and im-portation of natural gas; for control over rates and charges; determination of the cost of production or transportation of natural gas and ascertainment of cost of property of natural gas companies engaged in interstate commerce; extension of facilities and abandonment of service by natural gas companies; investigation of compacts proposed to Congress by two or more States dealing with the conservation, production, transportation, or distribution of natural gas; establishment of joint boards representing States affected in any particular matter; and for furnishing necessary reports and information. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 651 The Flood Control Act of 1938, in providing for the erection of certain flood-control projects, gives to the Commission authority over the power project phases of such construction. Organization.—The Commission is composed of five members, one of whom is elected chairman, and another vice chairman. The commissioners are assisted by a group of trial examiners in the matter of presiding at and conducting hear-ings. The principal administrative subdivisions in the Commission are the Office of Secretary, which coordinates activities of all bureaus and divisions; the Budget and Fiscal Officer, who manages and coordinates business operations; the Director of Personnel, who handles personnel matters; and the Publications Division, which is responsible for issuance and distribution of public reports relating to the Commission’s activities. The Commission’s technical staff is subdivided into the Bureau of Law, which advises the Commission on all legal questions; the Bureau of Electrical Engineering, which supervises the engineering phases of the Com-mission’s activities; the Bureau of Water Power, which supervises matters in connection with licensed projects, flood control, and river basin studies; and the Bureau of Accounts, Finance, and Rates which supervises the preparation of systems of accounts, auditing and accounting, inquiries into existing rates and charges, and similar work. ACTIVITIES— FEDERAL POWER ACT Declarations of intention.— Upon the filing of declarations of intention to con-struct project works on streams or their parts, other than those defined as naviga-ble waters, and over which Congress has jurisdiction, the Commission makes investigations and adopts findings as to whether the interests of interstate or foreign commerce would be affected by the proposed construction. Preliminary permits.—Upon applications filed, the Commission, in proper cases, issues preliminary permits and renewals for the purpose of maintaining priority of application for a license for a total of not more than 3 years. Licenses.— Upon application, the Commission, in proper cases, issues licenses and amendments thereto, approves their transfer, and fixes and collects annual charges for them. Recapture of licensed projects.—The Commission determines the actual legiti-mate original cost of projects constructed under license. The proportion of surplus earnings in excess of a specified reasonable rate or return is determined by the Commission and is to be held until the termination of the license or to be applied from time to time in reduction of the net investment of the licensee, which is to be paid by the United States in the event of recapture. It fixes the amount of such specified rate of return. The Commission prescribes and enforces a system of accounts to be maintained by licensees. Rates, services, and securities of licensees.— Licensees and their customers and subsidiaries which are interstate public utility companies are subject to the pro-visions of part II. The Commission, under part II, has jurisdiction over the transmission of electrical energy in interstate commerce and over the sale of electrical energy at wholesale in interstate commerce. This part provides for close cooperation with State agencies with respect to the rates and services of electric utilities. Headwater benefits.—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 equitable part of the annual charges for interest, maintenance, and depreciation to be paid to the owner thereof by the lower power developer benefited. Reservations of United States lands for power purposes.— Upon application, the Commission determines whether the value of lands of the United States reserved for power purposes from entry, location, or other disposal, will be injured or destroyed for the purposes of power development by location, entry, or selection under the public land laws and, in the event of a favorable determination, so notifies the Secretary of the Interior, who then declares such lands open to loca-tion, entry, or selection in accordance with the provisions of the act. Investigations of water-power resources.—The Commission conducts general investigations of water-power resources and their relation to interstate and foreign commerce, and of the water-power industry and its relation to other industries, cooperating with State and national agencies in its investigations and publishing the results of its work in special and annual reports. Authorizations and orders under parts II and III.—In accordance with pro-visions of parts II and III of the Federal Power Act, the Commission receives 652 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS and passes on applications for compulsory interconnections; authorizes and approves the sale, lease, merger, or consolidation of facilities or purchase of secu- rities; and authorizes the issue of securities or assumption of obligation or liability as guarantor, endorser, surety, or otherwise, in respect to any security of another person. The Commission receives and considers reports of the issue or renewal of, or assumption of liability on, short-term notes or drafts. It also receives and considers schedules of rates and charges concerning transmission or sale of electric energy subject to its jurisdiction and conducts inquiries into the lawfulness of rates and service, and in connection therewith may suspend the operation of new rate schedules for a limited period of time. Upon complaint, it investigates rates and charges involved in any transmission or sale subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or service rendered, and may issue orders prescribing the rates, charges, or service. Regional districts.—For the purpose of assuring an abundant supply of electric energy throughout the United States with the greatest possible economy and with regard to the proper utilization and conservation of natural resources, the Com-mission has tentatively divided the country into regional distriets for the voluntary interconnection and coordination of facilities for the generation, transmission, and sale of electric energy, and has so informed all State commissions and other inter-ested parties, whose views and recommendations on the subject are invited. State cooperation.—For the purpose of facilitating cooperation with State com-missions in accordance with the provisions of the act authorizing the establishment of joint boards composed of representatives of the States affected, and authorizing conferences with State commissions, the Commission has adopted a cooperative procedure of a flexible nature with provision for special procedure in particular cases. Uniform system of accounts.—The Commission has prescribed a uniform system of accounts for public utilities subject to its jurisdiction and for its licensees. Reports to the Commaission.—The Commission prescribes, receives, and compiles data from periodical reports as follows: 1. Anrual reports, rendered by every electric utility, setting forth complete financial and statistical data as to assets, liabilities, revenues, generating capacity, number of consumers, and similar information. 2. Power system reports rendered by every electric utility system, setting forth information with respect to generating and transmission facilities, load, and load characteristics. 3. Monthly and annual reports containing such information as production of electricity for public use, fuel consumed, stocks of fuel on hand, and energy actually transferred across State lines. These reports are also rendered by electric railways, electrified steam railroads, and certain industries that sell to public utilities for resale to the public. 4. Annual reports as to all water-wheel installations over 100 horsepower in-stalled capacity, showing ownership, location, and hydraulic characteristics. Special reports are prescribed, received, and compiled from time to time, as, for example, reports on areas served by each electric utility. Enforcement of Federal Power Act.—Upon complaint or on its own initiative, the Commission conducts investigations with respect to possible violations of the Federal Power Act or of any license, rule, regulation, or order thereunder. It either refers court proceedings under the act to the Attorney General or is repre-sented by its own attorneys. Recommendations to Congress.—The Commission conducts investigations to secure information to serve as a basis for recommending to Congress further legis-lation concerning the matters to which the Federal Power Act relates. Reports by the Commission.—The Commission publishes annual reports to Con-gress; annual reports of electric rates throughout the United States, and a National Electric Rate Book; Statistics of Electric Utilities, monthly reports of production of electric energy in the United States, and annual reports of electric power sta-tistics covering production and generating capacity. In addition, special reports on power matters are published from time to time. NATIONAL DEFENSE DUTIES Authority under present acts.—In addition to its peacetime functions, the Com-mission, under the Federal Power Act, has authority: 1. To investigate the entire operation of the power industry and, more particu-larly, the capacity and output of all facilities for the generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity in relation to the national defense (sec. 311). MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 653 ® 2. During the continuance of any war in which the United States is engaged, or whenever the Commission determines that an emergency exists by reason of a sudden increase in the demand for electric energy, or shortage of electric energy or of facilities for the generation of electric energy, or other causes, either upon its own motion or upon complaint, with or without notice, hearing or report, to require by order such temporary connections of facilities and such generation, delivery, interchange, or transmission of electric energy as in its judgment will best meet the emergency and serve the public interest (sec. 202 (¢)). The act also provides that the United States may take over and operate any licensed hydroelectric project upon a written order of the President stating that the safety of the United States demands it “for the purpose of manufacturing nitrates, explosives or munitions of war, or for any other purpose involving the safety of the United States’ (see. 16). Under the Natural Gas Act the Commission has power to order natural-gas companies to extend their transportation facilities or connect with local distrib-utors of gas upon certain findings that such action is desirable in the public interest, and that the natural-gas company involved is not subject to undue burden or impairment of service (sec. 7 (a)). Direction of the President.—The President, in a letter to the Chairman of the Federal Power Commission, dated June 14, 1940, gave written instructions to the Commission directing it to survey defense power needs and, in cooperation with other Government agencies, work out plans to protect the power supply against hostile acts. Pursuant to the President’s letter, and in order to carry out promptly the instructions contained therein, the Commission, at a special meeting on June 15, 1940, authorized its Chairman to organize the staff for national-defense duties. Under authority of the Federal Power Act, a specially qualified National Defense Power Unit was set up within the organization to survey defense-power needs and provision for meeting those needs, and to cooperate with the National Power Policy Committee and the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense in assuring an adequate and dependable power supply in case of emergency. NATIONAL DEFENSE POWER UNIT The Director’s office.—This office supervises the investigation and the prepara-tion of reports. It coordinates the work of the various sections and directs the national-defense work of the regional offices, including the maintenance of the necessary field contacts with the utility systems and industrial plants throughout the country. Power Requirements Section.—Composed of a load analysis branch and statistical branch, this section is responsible for the preparation of forms and the compilation of returns. It maintains current information on the power requirements of vital industries, on the loads of utility systems,on orders for generating equipment, and on existing stocks of transmission and distribution equipment. It translates the national-defense orders of the War and Navy Departments and other Govern-ment agencies into demands for power. From its compilations, this section makes estimates of prospective utility loads. Power Supply Section.—The adequacy of power supply for national defense is checked by this section. It makes plans to meet any shortages that may exist or be anticipated. In cooperation with the utility industry, it plans for the most economical use of existing steam and hydro capacity, and for the curtailment of less essential loads. Where necessary, it requests the utilities to make intercon-nections between systems and with industries, and to construet additional gener-ating capacity. Where utilities are unable or unwilling to undertake such con-struction, it prepares recommendations to the President as to the arrangements necessary to finance and construct the facilities. This section also assists equip-ment manufacturers to arrange priorities in delivering generating equipment, and requests them to keep supplies of transmission and distribution equipment at an adequate level. Liaison Section.—This section maintains contacts with the War and Navy Departments and other Government agencies concerned with national-defense orders. It keeps the other sections apprised of the activities of such Government agencies. It cooperates with the utilities and with other Government agencies to protect the facilities required for an adequate power supply against sabotage and other hostile acts. Regional offices.—In a number of industrial centers the regional offices carry out the field work of the National Defense Unit. They maintain constant contacts 64674°—T77—2—1st ed——43 654 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS with the utility systems and vital industries in their area. By local contacts, they assist the Power Requirements Section to secure current information on power needs, the Power Supply Section to carry out its plans to insure an adequate power supply, and the Liaison Section to make arrangements for protection of power facilities against sabotage. Cooperation with the National Power Policy Committee and the Council of National Defense.—The staff of the Commission does most of the technical work of the National Power Policy Committee, which superseded the National Defense Power Committee, by direction of the President in his letter to the Secretary of the Interior dated October 13, 1939. In its national-defense work the Federal Power Commission cooperates with the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense. The chairman of the Federal Power Commission serves on a power subcommittee to counsel the Advisory Commission on questions involving electric power. NATURAL GAS ACT Exportation or importation of natural gas.— After 6 months from the date on which the act took effect, exportations from the United States to a foreign country or importations from a foreign country to the United States must be authorized by the Commission, when found to be consistent with the public interest. Control over rates and charges.—Natural gas companies are required to file schedules showing the rates charged for any transportation or sale subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, and may not change such rates or charges without its approval. The Commission may order changes in rates, but may not order an increase in the rate charged by any natural gas company unless the increase is embodied in a new schedule filed by the company. Cost of property.—The Commission is authorized to ascertain the actual legiti-mate cost of the property of every natural gas company and the depreciation in such property. Extension of facilities; abandonment of service.—The Commission may order a natural gas company to extend or improve its transportation facilities and to establish physical connection of its transportation facilities with the facilities of, or sell natural gas to, any persons or municipalities engaged, or legally authorized to engage, in the local distribution of natural or artificial gas to the public, if the Commission finds that no undue burden will be placed upon the natural gas com-pany. In ordering such an extension of facilities, the Commission may not impair the ability of the company to render adequate service to its customers. Natural gas companies may not abandon interstate facilities or service without the approval of the Commission, and cannot extend their facilities without securing a certificate of public convenience and necessity from the Commission. In issuing such certificates, the Commission is required to give due consideration to the applicant’s ability to render and maintain adequate service at rates lower than those prevailing in the territory to be served. State compacts.—The Commission is required to report to Congress information in connection with any compacts proposed by two or more States dealing with the conservation, production, transportation, or distribution of natural gas. Joint boards.—Provision is made for the creation of boards representing any States which may be concerned in connection with any matter coming before the Commission, and full cooperation is available to State commissions. Officials dealing in securities.—Personal profit by an official or director of a natural gas company through the negotiation, hypothecation, or sale of any security issued by the company is unlawful. Uniform system of accounts.—The Commission has prescribed a uniform system of accounts, effective January 1, 1940, for natural gas companies subject to the provisions of the Natural Gas Act, which covers accounting details of the property of such companies for the production, transportation, or sale of natural gas. Incidental powers.— The Commission may require such reports as may be neces-sary in the administration of the act. In general, it is given administrative powers similar to those provided in the Federal Power Act. DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH ISSUANCE OF PRESIDENTIAL PERMITS - Pursuant to Executive Order No. 8202, the Commission is directed to receive applications for the issuance of permits for the construction, operation, mainte-nance, or connection at the borders of the United States, of facilities for the trans-mission of electric energy, and for the transportation of natural gas, between the United States and foreign countries, and, after obtaining the recommendations of DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH TVA DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH BONNEVILLE DAM DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH FORT PECK DAM FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 656 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS five representatives of the Federal Reserve Banks, which directs the System’s open market operations; the 12 Federal Reserve Banks situated in different sections of the United States; the Federal Advisory Council, which acts in an advisory capacity to the Board of Governors; and about 6,500 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 mem-bership and have been admitted to the System. Broad supervisory powers are vested in the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, which has its offices in Washington. The Board of Governors is composed of seven members appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. In selecting these seven members, the President is re-quired to have due regard to a fair representation of the financial, agricultural, industrial, and commercial interests, and geographical divisions of the country. No two members may be from the same Federal Reserve district. Each member of the Board of Governors is also a member of the Federal Open Market Committee, whose membership, in addition, includes five representatives of the Federal Reserve Banks, each such representative being elected annually by the boards of directors of certain specified Federal Reserve Banks. Open-market operations of the Federal Reserve Banks are 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 direction of and regulations adopted by the committee. The Board of Governors may, within certain limitations and in order to prevent injurious credit expansion or contraction, change the requirements as to reserves to be maintained by member banks against deposits. 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. 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 is also authorized to prescribe regulations with respect to extensions of instalment credit, particularly credit for the purpose of purchasing consumers’ durable goods. Another duty of the Board of Governors is the review and determination of discount rates charged by the Federal Reserve Banks on their discounts and advances. : 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. 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 passes on appli-cations 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 dependencies or insular possessions of the United States, or MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutzes 657 to invest in the stock of banks or corporations engaged in international or foreignbanking; and it supervises the organization and activities of corporations or-ganized under Federal law to engage in international or foreign banking. Anotherfunction of the Board is the operation of a settlement fund, by which balances dueto and from the various Federal Reserve Banks arising ouf of their own trans-actions or transactions of their member banks or of the United States Govern-ment are settled in Washington through telegraphic transfer of funds withoutphysical shipments of currency.In exercising its supervisory functions over the Federal Reserve Banks andmember banks, the Board of Governors promulgates regulations, pursuant toauthority granted by the law, governing certain of the above-mentioned activitiesof Federal Reserve Banks and member banks. To meet its expenses and to paythe salaries of its members and its employees, the Board makes semiannualassessments 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 andby the Federal Open Market Committee on any question of policy, and in theannual report which it makes to the Speaker of the House of Representatives for the information of Congress as required by law, it includes a full account of allsuch action and also a copy of the records required to be kept in that connection.The Board and the Federal Reserve Banks and their branches render servicesrelating to financial information, ete., to the War and Navy Departments andthe Office of Production Management. The System also renders assistance tomember banks, nonmember banks, and other financing institutions in aiding concerns engaged in defense work to obtain whatever financial assistance isnecessary in order to enable them to finance successfully the performance of their defense contracts.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 24 branches and 1agency of the Federal Reserve Banks, all of which are located in other cities ofthe United States. 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 bankin existence in the United States at the time of the establishment of the FederalReserve 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’spaid-up capital and surplus. A like amount of Federal Reserve Bank stock mustbe subscribed for by every national bank in the United States organized sincethat time and by every State bank or trust company (except mutual savings banks) upon becoming a member of the Federal Reserve System; and, when amember bank increases or decreases its capital or surplus, it is required to alterits holdings of Federal Reserve Bank stock in the same proportion. A mutualsavings bank which is admitted to membership in the Federal Reserve Systemmust subscribe for Federal Reserve bank stock in an amount equal to six-tenthsof 1 per centum of its total deposit liabilities; and thereafter such subscription must be adjusted semiannually on the same percentage basis. One-half of thesubscription of each member bank must be fully paid and the remainder is subjectto 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 intothe surplus fund of the Federal Reserve Bank. In case of liquidation or dissolu- tion of a Federal Reserve Bank, any surplus remaining after payment of all debts,dividends, and the par value of its capital stock becomes the property of the United States Government. Federal Reserve Banks, including the capital stockand 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 ninemembers, equally divided into three classes, designated class A, class B, andclass 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, oremployees of any bank. Class C directors may not be officers, directors, em-ployees, or stockholders of any bank. The six class A and B directors are electedby the stockholding member banks, while the Board of Governors of the Federal 658 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 ap-pointed by the Board as deputy chairman. Fach Federal Reserve Bank has as its chief executive officer a president ap-pointed for a term of 5 years by its board of directors with the approval of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. There is also 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, or 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 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’ acecept-ances and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities eligible for discount, obligations of the United States, and certain other securities; to receive 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 June 30, 1943, 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. 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 2) Washington at least four times each year, and oftener if called by the Board of OVernors. FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY The Federal Security Agency was created by Executive order of the President, dated April 25, 1939, putting into effect the President’s First Plan“on Govern-ment Reorganization in accordance with the provisions of the Reorganization MISCELLANEOUS Official Dulres 659 Act of 1939. The agencies grouped in the Federal Security Agency under the First Plan are the Social Security Board, the United States Employment Service, the Office of Education, the Public Health Service, the National Youth Adminis-tration, and the Civilian Conservation Corps. The Second Plan on Government Reorganization transferred to the Federal Security Agency for administration in the Office of Education, the Film and Radio Services of the National Emergency Council. It also transferred to the Federal Security Agency Government par-ticipation in the work of the American Printing House for the Blind. The fourth plan on Government reorganization transferred to the Federal Security Agency the Food and Drug Administration from the Department of Agriculture, and St. Elizabeths Hospital, Freedmen’s Hospital, Howard University, and Columbia Institution for the Deaf from the Department of the Interior. The Federal Security Agency was established to carry out the purposes of the ‘Reorganization Act of 1939 which were: (1) To reduce expenditures; (2) to in-crease efficiency; (3) to consolidate agencies according to major purposes; (4) to reduce the number of agencies by consolidating those having similar functions and by abolishing such as may not be necessary; (5) to eliminate overlapping and duplication of effort. Grouped in the Federal Security Agency are those agencies of the Government, the major purposes of which are to promote social and eco-nomic security, educational opportunity, and the health of the citizens of the Nation. The affairs of the Federal Security Agency are under the direction and super-vision of the Federal Security Administrator. He is assisted by the assistant administrator, who acts as Administrator in his absence, and by a staff of admin-istrative, special, and technical assistants who assist in the activities and correla-tion of the different units of the Agency, the functions of which are given below. SOCIAL SECURITY BOARD The Social Security Board was established to administer provisions of the Social Security Act relating to old-age assistance, aid to dependent children, aid to the blind, unemployment compensation, and old-age (now old-age and survivors) insurance, and to study and make recommendations as to the most effective methods of providing economic security through social insurance, and as to related legislation and administrative policy. The Board receives its authority under the provisions of title VII of the Social Security Act (49 Stat. 620), approved August 14, 1935. Various modifications of the act were provided in the Social Security Amendments of 1939 (Public, No. 379, 76th Cong.) approved August 10, 1939, Under the Reorganization Act of 1939 (Public, No. 19, 76th Cong.) and Reorgani-zation Plan No. I, the Social Security Board was made a part of the Federal Secu-rity Agency, and the functions of the United States Employment Service set up by the Wagner-Peyser Act (Public, No. 30, 73rd Cong.) were consolidated with the unemployment compensation functions of the Board. The Board is composed of three members—not more than two of whom may be of one political party—appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The President designates the chairman of the Board. Judicial and policy-making functions under the Social Security Act and the Wag-ner-Peyser Act are exercised by the Board, under the direction and supervision of the Federal Security Administrator, while administrative functions are vested in an Executive Director who is directly responsible to the Board. Bureaus and offices and a field service comprising regional, territorial, and field offices have been established by the Board to carry out its functions under the Social Security Act. Veterans placement and farm placement offices in the various States, and a public employment service for the District of Columbia, are maintained pursuant to the Wagner-Peyser Act. Operating bureaus are the Bureau of Old-age and Survivors Insurance, the Bureau of Public Assistance, and the Bureau of Employment Secu-rity. Service bureaus and offices are the Bureau of Accounts and Audits, the -Bureau of Research and Statistics, the Informational Service, and the Office of the Actuary. The Office of Appeals Council provides means for review of old-age and survivors insurance claims. OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Within the Office of the Executive Director are centered the administrative and executive duties of the Board. The Executive Director has general super-vision and direction of the work of the several bureaus and offices together with the immediate supervision and direetion of the regional and territorial offices. The Executive Director is also charged with the following duties pertaining to Board 660 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS programs: Coordinating Federal-State relations, and providing an advisory service with respect to the establishment and maintenance of State merit systems of personnel administration. The Office of the Executive Director is also responsible for servicing the Board and its bureaus and offices with respect to procurement of supplies and equip-ment, selecting quarters and allotting space, furnishing centralized stenographic and typing assistance, maintaining centralized files and records, preparing travel orders, itineraries, vouchers, and other business operations. It receives and dis-tributes incoming mail, forwards outgoing mail and telegrams, and answers inquiries not requiring the special attention of other bureaus or offices of the Board. It conducts personnel training classes covering the basic substantive phases of the Board’s work. The library of the Board is a part of this office. BUREAU OF OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE The Federal old-age and survivors insurance system, established by title II of the Social Security Act as amended, provides the following types of monthly benefits payable by the Federal Government: Primary insurance benefits to aged (65 or over), retired wage earners; wife’s insurance benefits to the aged wives of individuals receiving primary insurance benefits; child’s insurance bene-fits to the dependent children (under 18) of individuals receiving primary insur-ance benefits and to the dependent children of deceased wage earners; widow’s insurance benefits to the aged widows of wage earners; widow’s current insurance benefits to widows who are caring for one or more children of a deceased wage earner; and parent’s insurance benefits to the aged, dependent parents of deceased wage earners. Lump-sum death payments may be granted, where no monthly insurance benefits are available, to certain survivors or to individuals entitled on account of the payment of burial expenses of deceased wage earners. The purpose of this program is to give protection to industrial and commercial wage earners and their families against loss of income due to the old age or death of the wage earner. This program is administered entirely by the Federal Government and should not be confused with old-age assistance or other social security programs in which the States participate in the administration. The provisions of the original old-age insurance plan became effective January 1, 1937. By the end of 1941, it is estimated that close to 60 million social security account numbers will have been issued and that about 50 million individuals will have received wages for employment covered by this plan. Benefits under the amended program began in January 1940. Benefits are based upon wages received in employment covered under the program. The total of the monthly benefits based on one individual’s wages range from $10 to $85. : This title is administered by the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, which is the largest organization unit of the Social Security Board. This Bureau is responsible for the establishment and maintenance of individual accounts in which are recorded the amounts of reported wages. It is responsible for de-termining eligibility for benefits, for computing the amounts of benefits, and for making certifications to the Secretary of the Treasury, as Managing Trustee of the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund, for payment of benefits. The Bureau conducts such actuarial and administrative studies as are necessary to its functions of administering title II; it also supplies, from its wage and claims records, statistical data necessary to the Board in analyzing and supervising the old-age and survivors insurance provisions of the Social Security Act. Contact with the public is maintained through almost 500 field offices located in all parts of the United States. These offices furnish advice to wage earners and to employers as to their rights and obligations under the program, and offer assistance in the preparation and presentation of claims under title II. The field organization brings the Federal old-age and survivors insurance plan close to the people who are affected by it, and thus helps to assure adequate, efficient, and economical operation of the plan. BUREAU OF PUBLIC ASSISTANCE This Bureau is concerned with the administration of grants to the States for old-age assistance, aid to dependent children, and aid to the blind under the provisions of titles I, IV, and X of the Social Security Act. The Bureau of Public Assistance, in cooperation with the Office of the General Counsel of the Federal Security Agency, analyzes State administrative plans for these types of aid and recommends such plans to the Board for approval if they conform to certain standards established by the act, relating to procedure, ad- MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 661 ministration, and eligibility requirements. It also reviews amendments to approved plans, submitted by States in accordance with new developments in State programs, and recommends the amount of Federal grants-in-aid to be certified by the Board. Title I authorizes grants-in-aid to States for assistance to needy aged indi- viduals. States having approved old-age assistance plans receive from the Federal Government an amount equal to the sum expended by the States and their local governmental units for old-age assistance, up to a combined Federal- State total of $40 a month for each needy individual 65 years of age or over who is not an inmate of a public institution. In addition, the Federal Government grants to States an amount equal to 5 percent of the sum paid to the State for old-age assistance, which may be used by the State for administrative expenses or for old-age assistance or for both purposes. Title IV provides for Federal grants to States having approved plans for aid to dependent children deprived of a parent’s support and maintained in their own homes or in the homes of certain close relatives. These States receive an amount equal to one-half of the sums expended by them and their local govern-mental units under such plans, except that Federal funds may not be used for that part of payments in excess of $18 a month for the first child and $12 for each additional child in the same home. Title X authorizes grants to States having approved plans for furnishing finan-cial assistance to the needy blind. These grants equal one-half of the total expenditures for aid to the needy blind of the States and their local units, except that Federal funds may not be used for that part of individual monthly payments which exceeds $40. State payments to needy blind persons who are in public institutions are not matched from Federal funds. The Federal Government also grants to the States one-half the necessary costs of the administration of State plans for aid to the blind. The Bureau of Public Assistance advises States concerning the preparation of State public-assistance plans and periodically reviews the operation of approved plans to insure continuing conformity to the provisions of the Social Security Act. It provides a technical consultative service to the States with regard to the administration of public assistance, including such matters as administrative organization, policies and procedures, fiscal operations, staff training, and the coordination of old-age assistance, aid to the blind, and aid to dependent children. The Bureau also serves as a clearing house for the exchange of public-assistance information and experience among the States. The Bureau has the duty of collecting and analyzing reports on public and private assistance submitted by States and localities; of collating data on public assistance under the Social Security Act with data relating to other assistance programs; and of providing consultation service to State and local public-welfare agencies concerning statistical reports required by the Board and other statistical and research activities relating to public assistance, general relief, and allied programs. BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY Under Reorganization Plan No. I, authorized by the Reorganization Act of 1939, the functions of the United States Employment Service were consolidated with the unemployment compensation functions of the Social Security Board. The combined functions are administered in the Social Security Board through the Bureau of Employment Security. The Social Security Act, in title III, makes provision for Federal cooperation with States establishing systems of unemployment compensation. Grants for administration are authorized to be made to those States which have unemploy-ment compensation laws approved by the Board under section 1603 of the Internal Revenue Code and which meet the conditions prescribed in title III. These requirements include making records available to the Railroad Retirement Board and affording reasonable cooperation with every agency of the United States charged with the administration of any unemployment insurance law. The Bureau is also responsible for determining that State laws have adequate provision for proper methods of administration necessary to insure prompt payment of benefits when due. The grants are designed to enable the States to meet the cost of proper and efficient administration of their unemployment compensation programs. : The Internal Revenue Code, in subchapter C of chapter 9, levies a Federal tax on employers of eight or more. The Social Security Board is authorized therein to approve State unemployment compensation laws which fulfill certain conditions and include provision for depositing, to the credit of the State, all contributions, 662 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS upon collection, in the unemployment trust fund of the United States. Such approval will permit employers making contributions to State unemployment funds under approved State laws to obtain credit up to a maximum of 90 percent against the Federal tax. Within the same maximum limitations, employers may receive credit also with respect to reduced rates of contributions under State laws which permit such reductions under conditions which are found by the Social Security Board to comply with the provisions of section 1602 of the Internal Revenue Code. The Bureau aids the States, on request, in the preparation of unemployment compensation laws, amendments thereto, and rules and regulations to implement such laws. After a State law is passed and submitted to the Board, the Bureau analyzes the new law to determine whether it meets the requirements of sub-chapter C of chapter 9 of the Internal Revenue Code. Prior to certifying grants under title III, the Board must find that the State law meets the conditions prescribed in that title. The board is required also, when it finds that in the administration of a State law there is a denial of benefits to a substantial number of persons or a failure to comply substantially with the provisions which are required to be included in the State law, to withhold grants until it is satisfied there is no longer such denial or failure to comply. The law provides for reasonable notice and opportunity for hearing prior to such determination. Under the terms of the Wagner-Peyser Act and Reorganization Plan No. I, authorized by the Reorganization Act of 1939, the Social Security Board is directed to promote and develop a national system of employment offices for men, women, and juniors who are legally qualified to engage in gainful occupation; to main-tain 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 subdivisions 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 employment; and to maintain a system of clearing labor between the several States. Under the Wagner-Peyser Act the Board also is directed to apportion among the several States amounts made available by Congress for the purpose of mateh-ing amounts made available by States and their local subdivisions for the mainte-nance of public employment offices as a part of a State-controlled system. Prior to certifying any amount for payment to a State, the Board is required to approve detailed State plans for carrying out the provisions of the Wagner-Peyser Act within the State. Payments made to States under the Wagner-Peyser Act for the maintenance of their public-employment systems are supplemented by amounts granted under title III of the Social Security Act for the purpose of financing additional services performed by public-employment offices in connec-tion with the operations of the unemployment-compensation program. The Bureau maintains a technical staff to advise with States and the State agencies on problems of organization and administration of State unemployment-compensation laws, including questions of general policy, claims procedure, deposit of funds, expenditure of funds, statistical reports, reports to public-works "agencies, reciprocal agreements among States, and form of reports, as well as to carry out the functions outlined above and set forth in the Wagner-Peyser Act. To aid the Board in performing the duties imposed upon it under section 702 of the Social Security Act, the Bureau staff assists in research and the formulation of recommendations as to the most effective method of providing economic insurance. This Bureau is the medium through which certain national-defense responsi-bilities assigned to the Social Security Board are being carried on. The Office of Production Management has designated the United States Employment Service as the official recruitment agency for defense workers. The Office of Production Management has explained to all defense contractors the necessity of their using the service to recruit workers and of refraining from labor scouting or advertising without first clearing with the local employment office on the need for such action. Likewise, all workers are urged to register with the local office and make full use of its services. The major defense responsibilities relate to assistance in the efficient mobilization of manpower for expanding industries and in the collection of information regarding significant developments in the labor market. Through-out the facilities of the Federal-State system of public employment offices, com- MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 663 prised of over 1,500 full-time and 3,000 part-time offices, the following methods are being used to carry out the responsibilities: intensification of clearance of labor facilities; provision for periodic reports of labor needs by industries, available labor supply and actual placements in selective defense occupations; determina-tion of training needs; referral of trainees for vocational training and placement of them upon completion of training; analysis of occupations and formulation of selective techniques-to assist national-defense agencies in meeting occupational problems. In addition, the Bureau has appointed 12 regional labor supply officers who have been designated by the Office of Production Management to act as chairmen of 12 regional labor supply committees established by that agency. These committees are responsible for dealing collectively with the problems of labor recruitment, training and placement, and seeing that all the facilities of Government, labor, and industry are brought to bear on the problem of assuring an adequate supply of workers. : BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS AND AUDITS The Bureau of Accounts and Audits is responsible for the conduct of budgetary, accounting, financial reporting, auditing and fiscal advisory functions relating to the departmental and field activities of the Board. This Bureau conducts audits of State public-assistance agencies to determine what amounts of assistance pay-ments and administrative expenses are matchable from a fiscal standpoint with Federal funds, whether the share of the Federal Government in any recoveries is accurately reported, and whether any deficiencies exist in fiscal administration. It reviews the fiscal aspects of State public-assistance plans, and also reviews requests for grants and State expenditure reports to determine the continuing fiscal adequacy of such plans, the fiscal capacity of States to match grants, and that adjustments required by the Social Security Act have been made. It fur-nishes constructive accounting services to State public-assistance agencies involv-ing the establishment of accounts, accounting procedures and forms, budgetary methods, fiscal administrative standards and procedures, financial reporting and internal auditing. In the field of the Board’s responsibility for unemployment compensation and employment service, it conducts audits of administrative expend-itures of State employment security agencies to determine their compliance with the terms of budgets approved by the Board and with Federal and State laws, policies, regulations, and standards. It is responsible for the preparation of budget estimates and justifications for the Social Security Board, and for the keeping of a continuous budgetary control over its expenditures. It maintains the Board’s system of accounts covering all funds collectedor disbursed. Liaison contacts with other Federal departments or establishments on the fiscal opera-tions of the Board are usually conducted by this Bureau which is also charged with the receipt, safeguarding, and deposit of funds collected. The preaudit and certification for payment of vouchers for the administrative expenses of the Board and the furnishing of advisory services to its bureaus on budget, accounting, and fiscal matters are further duties of this Bureau. BUREAU OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS The Bureau of Research and Statistics conducts research concerning factors causing economic insecurity, the adequacy of existing social-security measures, and problems connected with the accommodation of the Federal and State social-security programs to different population groups and different needs, and provides analyses of proposals for development of these programs. In this con-nection it is charged with the development of new fields of study in social security such as health and disability insurance and the provision of medical care, arising out of the Board’s responsibility under section 702 of the Social Security Act. Research and statistical activities beyond the immediate fields of the operating programs of the Board dealt with by the Bureau include the over-all financial and economic aspects of the social-security program and the characteristics or effects of the interrelations of Board programs and other social insurance and welfare programs. The Bureau maintains a continuing review of the research and statis-tical programs of the several bureaus and offices of the Board concerning their adequacy and their integration into a total research program. Accordingly the Bureau of Research and Statistics has certain responsibilities in connection with the review of research and statistical materials proposed for duplication, and of instructions with respect to programs of regular statistical reporting to the Board. This Bureau is responsible for the Board’s official monthly publication, the Social Security Bulletin, the Annual Report of the Board, and various other Board publications of a professional and technical character. 664 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATIONAL SERVICE The Informational Service is responsible for the dissemination of information as to the provisions of the Social Security Act and the Wagner-Peyser Act which are administered by the Board, and the public’s rights, benefits, and responsi-bilities under these provisions. This program is conducted through publications of the Board, and through other channels of public information and education. The Informational Service advises the Board and its executive staff concerning matters of public information and public relations. It also advises and assists State agencies administering public assistance, unemployment compensation, and employment service legislation in the planning and execution of their informa-tional programs. : OFFICE OF THE ACTUARY The Board maintains an actuarial consultant and adviser to the Board with respect to technical actuarial analysis on a long-range basis of all data pertaining to population, employment, wages, and other subjects which are necessary for the Board in planning its operations under the Social Security Act and in considering proposals concerning the social-security program. -OFFICE OF APPEALS COUNCIL The Office of Appeals Council provides a means for hearing and review with respect to claims for old-age and survivors’ insurance under title II of the Social Security Act, as amended. This Office consists of the 3 members of the Council, 12 regional referees, and a consulting referee. The Office is independent of the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, which makes the original determina-tions with respect to claims. OTHER SERVICES Legal services are provided to the Board by the Office of the General Counsel of the Federal Security Agency. These services include legal advice to.the Board, the Executive Director, the directors of the operating bureaus, and the regional directors concerning proposed and enacted unemployment-compensation laws, public-assistance laws and plans, and all legal aspects of the old-age and survivors’ insurance program. The Office of the General Counsel cooperates with the De-partment of Justice in litigation involving the Social Security Act and with States in litigation involving State laws enacted to carry out the terms of the act. It also renders legal advice to the Board and to its bureaus and offices with respect to the legal aspects of methods proposed for providing social security. Personnel services for the Board are provided by the Division of Personnel Supervision and Management of the Federal Security Agency. REGIONAL OFFICES The Social Security Board has established 12 regional offices for the purpose of maintaining close relationships with the cooperating States and of supervising the work of the representatives of the various bureaus and offices of the Board located within each regional area. Fach regional director is a representative of the Board in his region and is responsible to the Executive Director for relations between the Board and the States within his region. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE The headquarters of the 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 Zeno to the Administrator, Federal Security Agency, on the activities of the ervice. The National Institute of Health is the research division of the Public Health Service, and conducts the scientific investigations of the Service. Through the Institute, the Department enforces the act of July 1, 1902, to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analogous products, including arsphenamine. The National Cancer Institute, created by act of August 5, 1937, functions as one of the divisions of the National Institute of Health. 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- MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 665 American Sanitary Code and the International Sanitary Convention of Paris, 1926, International Sanitary Convention for Aerial Navigation, and supervises the medical examination of intending immigrants conducted at certain American consulates abroad and at ports of entry in the United States and its insular possessions. The activities of the Division of States Relations 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 sanita-tion of shellfish shipped in interstate commerce; (2) assistance to State and local health authorities in the enforcement of State and local laws and regulations; (8) cooperation with the State health authorities in preventing the spread of epidemic diseases; (4) assistance to State health departments in the development and maintenance of adequate public-health services, including training of per-sonnel as authorized under title VI of the Social Security Act; (5) assistance to State and local health departments in the maintenance of health and sanitation services in extra-cantonment and industrial areas pertinent to national defense; (6) cooperation with other establishments of the Federal Government in matters pertaining to public-health engineering and sanitation; (7) 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. It cooperates with the State, local, and volunteer health agencies to extend health informational services throughout the United States. Through the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief, hospital and out-patient treatment is given at 26 marine hospitals and 120 other relief stations to legal beneficiaries who are chiefly seamen from American merchant vessels, Coast Guard personnel, patients of the Veterans’ Administration, of the Employees’ Compensation Commission, immigrants, and persons afflicted with leprosy. Physical examinations are made for the Civil Service Commission, Employees’ Compensation Commission, shipping commissioners, and other Government agencies. The Division of Personnel and Accounts attends to matters relating to per-sonnel and the maintenance of personnel records; convenes boards for the exam-ination or discipline of medical officers and other personnel; is responsible for all bookkeeping and accounting in connection with 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 (8) to control and prevent the spread of these diseases in interstate traffic. The amendment of May 24, 1938, to this act authorizes the Public Health Service to make grants-in-aid to the States, including the District of Columbia, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and Hawaii, for the purpose of developing venereal-disease-control programs in health departments throughout the country. Clinical and laboratory investigations and field studies pertaining to the control of syphilis, gonorrhea, and other venereal diseases are conducted both independently and in cooperation with other agencies. The Division of Mental Hygiene (formerly the Narcotics Division—name changed by act of June 14, 1930) is charged with the responsibility of administer-ing the two hospitals for the treatment of drug addicts; 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; 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); and cooperating with State officials in development and improvement of facilities for the care of the mentally ill. The Chief Clerk and Administrative Officer has supervision of clerical personnel, office quarters and space assignments, the Public Health Service library, official files and records, mail, supplies of stationery to headquarters and field service, printing and binding for entire service, and procurement, of office equipment for headquarters. 666 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS UNITED STATES OFFICE OF EDUCATION The Commissioner of Education has charge of the Office of Education, which was established by an act of Congress in 1867 ‘‘for the purpose of collecting such statistics and facts as shall show the condition and progress of education in the several States and Territories, and of diffusing such information respecting the organization and management of schools and school systems, and methods of teaching, as shall aid the people of the United States in the establishment and maintenance of efficient school systems, and otherwise promote the cause of education throughout the country.” Additional duties have been placed upon the Office of Education in accordance with provisions in later acts of Congress and with executive regulations made under the same. Responsibilities are undertaken for all phases and all levels of education, from the beginning grades through the university, and relate to such major functions as are described below: 1. Administration, under the direction of the Federal Security Administrator, of laws of Congress.—This responsibility includes: (a) The supervision of expend-itures of funds appropriated by Congress for land-grant colleges by the act of 1862 (first Morrill Act) donating lands for colleges of agriculture and the me-chanic arts, the act of 1890 (second Morrill Act) for the further endowment of land-grant colleges, the Nelson amendment of 1907, still further endowing the land-grant colleges, and the Bankhead-Jones Act of 1935, title IT (sec. 22), provid-ing for the more complete endowment and support of land-grant colleges. The Federal Security Administrator is required annually to ascertain and to certify to the Secretary of the Treasury as to each State and Territory whether it is entitled to receive its share of the annual appropriations. To do this it is necessary to collect and compile for each institution information on expenditures and the pur-poses for which they were made. (b) The inspection of Howard University and the issuance of a report on the same. Acts of Congress require that the Univer-sity be inspected by the Office of Education at least once each year and that an annual report making a full exhibit of the affairs of the University shall be pre-sented to Congress each year in the report of the Office of Education. (¢) The planning and supervision of educational programs in all Civilian Conservation Corps camps and the appointment of all educational directors for the camps. (d) The administration of Federal vocational education laws. 2. Educational research and investigation.—(a) Studies of current problems in all phases and at all levels of education regularly carried on by specialists in various fields of education. (b) Biennial surveys of education, including both statistical and descriptive forms of information on the status of education in all fields. (¢) Surveys in definite phases of education authorized by special appro-priations of Congress. (d) Library research work as a regular function of the Office, by special authorization of Congress. (e) Projects and demonstrations carried on by allotments made to the Federal Security Agency, Office of Educa-tion, from special funds appropriated by Congress. 3. Field services.—(a) Surveys of State and local school systems and of educa-tional institutions. (b) Cooperative studies with representatives of educational systems and organizations. (¢) Services on educational committees and through conference groups. (d) Participation in programs of educational organizations. (e) Advisory services to school officials. (f) Advisory and informational services to other Government agencies. 4. Library service—The library of more than a quarter million volumes, together with charts, maps, and other forms of materials on educational data, provides facilities for study to a large number who come to its reference rooms and to larger numbers who have books made available to them through a system * of interlibrary loans. 5. Publications and their distribution.—The Office, by means of its appropria-tion for printing, publishes bulletins, pamphlets, and other forms of materials for distribution through a limited free stock and a sales stock. Carefully selected mailing lists are prepared for the free copies. The Office also publishes amonthly journal, School Life, covering educational practices and current problems. The Federal Board for Vocational Education was created by act of Congress approved February 23, 1917 (Smith-Hughes Act). This act makes continuing appropriations to be expended in the States under State plans for the promotion of vocational education. For the fiscal year 1917-18 the amount appropriated was $1,660,000, and the appropriation increased each year until in 1925-26 it reached $7,167,000, which sum was provided annually thereafter. An act approved February 5, 1929 (George-Reed Act), authorized an additional appro-priation of $250,000 for agriculture and $250,000 for home economics for the fiscal year 1930, and for each year thereafter, for 4 years, a sum exceeding by MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes $250,000 the appropriation of the preceding year for the promotion of vocational education in each of these two fields. This act expired on June 30, 1934, but an act approved May 21, 1934 (George-Ellzey Act), authorized an appropriation of $3,084,603 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 George-Ellzey Act expired June 30, 1937, but an act approved June 8, 1936 (George-Deen Act), authorized an appropriation of $14,483,000 for the further development of vocational education in the States and Territories; $12,175,000 of which is to be used in equal amounts for voca-tional education in agriculture, trade and industry, and home economics; $1,254,-000 for vocational education and the training of teachers in the distributive occupations; and $1,054,000 for the training of teachers, supervisors, and directors of agricultural, trade and industrial, and home-economies subjects. The money appropriated under these acts is to be allotted to the States on the basis of rural, farm, nonfarm, urban, or total population as designated in the acts, for the promotion of vocational education in agriculture, trades and industries, home economics, and the distributive occupations, and for the preparation of teachers of vocational subjects. Utilization of allotments under the first three acts 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. Under the George-Deen Act, States and Territories partici-pating in the grants are required to match only 50 percent of these grants for the first 5 years in which the act is operative or until June 30, 1942, this matching percentage being increased by 10 percent annually thereafter until it reaches 100 percent beginning July 1, 1946. 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, investigations, and reports dealing with occupational processes and educational requirements for workers and apprentices, and with problems of administration of vocational schools and of courses of instruction in vocational subjects, in the several fields of agricultural, trade and industrial, home economics, and commer- cial employment. The Federal Board for Vocational Education was designated as the adminis-trative 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 as-certain annually whether the States are properly using Federal funds and to certify, on or before the 1st 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 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, June 30, 1932, June 6, 1936 (effective July 1, 1937), and August 14, 1935. The Social Security Act Amendments of 1939, approved August 10, 1939, authorizes increased appropria-tions 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 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS a provision of the Social Security Act, authorizes an additional allotment to Hawaii. 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 amending act approved April 17, 1937, authorized an increased appropriation for this work. An act of March 3, 1931, extended the Vocational Education and Rehabilitation Acts to the island of Puerto Rico, and authorized annual appropriations for this purpose. An amendment of August 14, 1939, through a provision of the Social Security Act, provides that effective July 1, 1940, Puerto Rico shall share in the allotments of funds on the same basis as the States. An act of June 20, 1936, authorized the operation of stands in Federal build-ings by blind persons, to enlarge the economic opportunities of the blind, and for other purposes. Under Executive order of June 10, 1933, the functions of the Federal Board for Vocational Education were transferred to the Department of the Interior. These functions were assigned to the Commissioner of Education on October 10, 1933, and established as the vocational division of the Office of Education. The Board now acts in an advisory capacity without compensation. Civilian Conservation Corps camp education.—On December 7, 1933, the Presi-dent approved a plan for an educational program in the Civilian Conservation Corps camps. Under this plan, the Office of Education, acting in an advisory capacity to the War Department, is responsible for the selection and appointment of corps area, district, and camp educational advisers, and recommends to the Secretary of War the outlines of instruction, teaching procedures, and types of teaching material for use in the camps. Under authority of Public Law 146, Seventy-seventh Congress, first session, the Office of Education cooperates with the several State boards for vocational education and with degree-granting colleges and universities in the furtherance of the education and training of defense workers as follows: appropriations for this purpose. An amendment of August 14, 1939, through of less than college grade through (a) courses supplementary to employment in occupations essential to national defense, and (b) preemployment and refresher courses for workers with some previous occupational experience who are preparing for such occupations selected from 1. Tt assists the States to organize and conduct vocational courses the public employment office registers. 2. Tt assists the States in the selection of new or used equipment for purchase, rental, or other acquisition, and rental of space when needed in providing voca-tional courses described in paragraph 1 above and paragraph 3 below. 3. Tt assists the States in the organization and conduct of vocational courses and related or other necessary instruction for out-of-school rural and nonrural youth. 4. Tt assists the States in the organization and conduct of vocational courses and related or other necessary instruction for young persons employed on work projects of the National Youth Administration. 5. It cooperates with degree-granting colleges and universities in providing short courses of college grade designed to meet the shortage of engineers, chemists, defense. physicists, and production supervisors in fields essential to the national NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION graduate schools. : CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 669 Executive order named Robert Fechner Director of the Civilian Conservation Corps and directed the Secretaries of War, Interior, Agriculture, and Labor to cooperate in launching and operating the new youth-conservation program. The act of June 28, 1937 (Public, No. 163, 75th Cong.), extended the life of the Corps until midnight, June 30, 1940. This act, in turn, was amended August 7, 1939, to continue the authorized life of the Corps through June 30, 1943. On July 1, 1939, the C. C. C., which had previously operated as an independent government agency, became a part of the Federal Security Agency, created by the President under the Reorganization Act of 1939; on March 5, 1940, James J. McEntee was named Director of the Civilian Conservation Corps. The general program and objectives of the C. C. C. have continued unchanged since its establishment. The purpose of the Civilian Conservation Corps is to provide employment, as well as vocational training, for youthful citizens of the United States who are unemployed and in need of employment, and to a limited extent for war veterans and Indians, through the performance of useful public work in connection with the conservation and development of the natural resources of the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico. = Following enactment of the act of June 28, 1937, extending the life of the Civilian Conservation Corps, President Roosevelt issued Executive Orders Nos. 7677—A, dated July 26, 1937, and 7717, dated September 29, 1937, to provide for the con-tinued cooperation in the administration of the C. C. C. of existing Federal departments. Under these Executive orders the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture, and the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs were requested to cooperate with the Director of the Civilian Conservation Corps in carrying out the purposes of the act. The Director is assisted by officers of these departments and by a staff of administrative, special and technical assistants. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION The Food and Drug Administration enforces the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, Tea Act, Import Milk Act, Caustic Poison Act, Filled Milk Act, and Section 10A of the Food and Drugs Act of 1906. 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, and cosmetics, and honest manu-facturers against unfair competition with such goods. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION The Federal Trade Commission was created by an act of Congress approved September 26, 1914, in which the powers and duties of the Commission were defined. The Commission is an administrative tribunal with its five members appointed for a term of 7 years each by the President of the United States with the approval of the Senate. No more than three of its members may be of the same political party. Further powers are conferred upon this Commission by Public, No. 447, Seventy-fifth Congress, third session, “An act to amend the act creating the Fed-eral Trade Commission, to define its powers and duties, and for other purposes,” approved March 21, 1938 (Wheeler-Lea Act); by “An act to supplement existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies, and for other purposes,” ap-proved October 15, 1914 (Clayton Act), and by Public, No. 692, a Congress, approved June 19, 1936, amending section 2 of said act of October 15, 1914 (Robinson-Patman Act); by “An act to promote export trade, and for other purposes,” approved April 10, 1918 (Webb-Pomerene Export Trade Act); and by Public, No. 850, Seventy-sixth Congress, third session, approved October 14, 1940 (Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939). FUNCTIONS AND PROCEDURE OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION UNDER STATUTES WHICH IT ADMINISTERS The Federal Trade Commission Act.—Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act provides that ‘unfair methods of competition in commerce, and unfair or 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 44 670 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are hereby declared unlawful” and em-powers and directs the Commission to prevent ‘‘persons, partnerships, or corpo-rations, except banks, common carriers subject to the acts to regulate commerce, air carriers and foreign air carriers subject to the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, and persons, partnerships, or corporations subject to the Packers’ and Stockyard Act, 1921, except as provided in section 406 (b) of said act, from using unfair methods of competition in commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce.’ The Commission is empowered and directed whenever it shall have reason to believe that any such person, partnership, or corporation has been or is using any unfair method of competition in commerce or any unfair or deceptive act or prac-tice 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, to issue and serve upon such person, partnership, or corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect. Provision is made for hearings, the taking of testimony and oral argu-ment before the Commission upon request therefor. If the Commission shall then be of the opinion that the method of competition or the act or practice 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 its findings of fact and an order to cease and desist from such unfair method of competition or such unfair or deceptive act or practice. Provision is made for petition to a circuit court of appeals of the United States, within any ecircuit where the method of competition or the act or practice in question was used or where such person, partnership, or corporation resides or carries on business, within 60 days from the date of the service of such order to modify or set aside such order of the Commission. Upon such petition the court has power to affirm, modify, or set aside such order, and to enforce the same to the extent that such order is affirmed. An order of the Commission to cease and desist becomes final upon the expiration of the time allowed for filing a petition for review, if no such petition has been duly filed within such time; and, in case peti-tion for review has been duly filed within the time allowed, the order of the Com-mission becomes final when the time for filing petition for certiorari has expired after such order has been affirmed or modified by a circuit court of appeals and no such petition has been filed, or, if certiorari has been granted, at such time as the decision has been affirmed by the Supreme Court. Generally a letter to the Commission stating the employment of unfair practices by some concern is sufficient to institute the Commission’s consideration of a pro-ceeding. If the letter clearly discloses that nothing is charged within the juris-diction of the Commission, it is filed without further action. If it appears, how-ever, that there may have been such a violation 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, or by closing the file without action, or by dismissal of the charges, as required by the facts of the particular ease and by the public interest. In cases where stipulations are authorized voluntary agreements are entered into between the Commission and the individual or concern named. Such stipu-lations recite the particular offense or violation charged and include an agreement to cease and desist from the practice in question. Stipulations are extended by the Commission as a matter of privilege and not of right, in instances where formal action appears unnecessary within the public interest. All such stipulations are a part of the public records of the Commission and digests thereof are published. It is the policy of the Commission not to thus dispose of matters involving intent to defraud or mislead; false advertisement of food, drugs, devices, or cosmetics which may be injurious to health; suppression or restraint of competition through conspiracy or monopolistic practices; violations of the Clayton Aet; or where the Commission is of the opinion that such procedure will not be effective in preventing continued use of the unlawful method, act, or practice. 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 order dismissing 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 proffered before a member of the trial examiner’s division, who is charged with passing upon the testimony and evidence and with other details incident to the trial of the case. Procedure and internal organization of the Commission, and methods of com-petition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices condemned by the Commission, are set forth in detail in its annual report. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 671 Section 6 of the act empowers the Commission to gather and compile informa-tion concerning, and to investigate from time to time, the organization, business conduct, practices, and management of corporations engaged in commerce, except banks and common carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce, and vest the Commission with authority to require reports and answers to specific questions in the compilation of such information in the public interest. Under this section the Commission derives its authority for conducting general economic investigations into the business practices of industry throughout the country. Under such authority 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 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 investigations and recommendations for changes in the corporation’s methods so as to conform to the law. Inquiries presently under way or just completed include: Production cost accounting methods and practices.—An investigation planned to disclose facts as to the extent to which plants in the various manufacturing industries do, or do not, record, classify, allocate, and compile production costs in such manner as to determine, for each description of product separately, the production cost per unit of product, and, where such is done, the variety of methods used and the soundness thereof in relation to underlying principles. Mass food distributors.—This inquiry undertakes to make a comparison of savings in costs of selling and delivering certain foods in large quantities, particu-larly when delivered to the buyer’s warehouse, and the concessions in price made to the buyer on such sales. Corporation reports.—The Commission is engaged in the periodic collection of annual or special reports of corporations engaged in interstate commerce (except banks and common carriers) in accordance with section 6 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. The reports are published at frequent intervals, the first appearing during October 1940. They have presented significant facts regarding business condi-tions and financial results of the more important corporations operating in many industries, without disclosing the business statistics of any individual corporation. As of June 30, 1941, the Commission had prepared 76 industrial corporation reports covering operations in 1939. These reports included the combined operations of 780 corporations with an average total investment, after deduction of reported appreciation of assets, aggregating $28,138,187,401; with total sales amounting to $24,932,624,668; and a combined current net profit, after deduction of interest and all taxes, amounting to $2,127,475,966. The aggregate sales for the 780 corporations represented approximately 63.7 percent of the total value of products shown by the reports of Bureau of the Census for the corresponding industry groups. 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. NATIONAL DEFENSE Cost finding and priority orders.—Under the authority of section 6 the Com-mission has been functioning as a Federal cost-finding agency in the present emergency, as it functioned during the first World War, such work being per-formed largely at the present time for the Office of Price Administration and to some extent for the Office of Production Management. The Commission, in addition to its cost-finding work, has also made a legal investigation at the request of the Office of Production Management with respect to alleged violation of priority orders in one of the largest and most important industries furnishing defense materials. 672 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Price administration commattee and other representation.— Under the terms of the President’s Executive Order No. 8734, of April 11, 1941, the Commission is represented by its chairman on the Price Administration Committee of the Office of Price Administration. It is similarly represented under Executive Order No. 8839, of July 30, 1941, on the Economic Defense Board, and is also represented by its chairman on the defense Petroleum Coordinator’s Committee. Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense.— Different members of the Commission’s staff have been serving in recent months on the following committees of said Advisory Commission, namely, Inter-Departmental Con-ference Committee on National Food Resources; Subcommittee of Inter-De-partmental Conference Committee on Planning and Procedure; and Food Distri-bution Committee, including Warehousing and Transportation. Section 7 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 ordersof the Commission to testify, produce evidence, or file reports, as required. FUNCTIONS OF THE COMMISSION, BOTH LEGAL AND ECONOMIC It will be seen that under the Federal Trade Commission Act the functions of the Commission are both legal and economic. The legal functions include pre-vention of unfair competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices and of certain violations of the Clayton and other acts. Economic functions include general investigations and economic studies of domestic industry and interstate and foreign commerce. The Wheeler-Lea Act.—This act amended sections 1, 4, and 5 of the original Federal Trade Commission Act, broadened and extended the Commission’s juris-diction over false advertising with respect to food, drugs, devices, and cosmetics, and added sections 12 to 18, inclusive, to the Federal Trade Commission Act. Section 5, as amended, provides that ‘unfair methods of competition in com-merce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are hereby declared unlawful.” The section also was amended by provision that a cease and desist order of the Commission shall become final 60 days after the date of service of such order, unless an appeal from such order is taken to a circuit court of appeals before that time praying that the order of the Commission be set aside; by pro-visions definitely fixing the time when orders from which appeals have been taken shall become final, and by providing that ‘“any person, partnership, or corporation who violates an order of the Commission to cease and desist after it has become final, and while such order is in effect, shall forfeit and pay to the United States a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 for each violation, which shall accrue to the United States and may be recovered by a civil action brought by the United States. Section 12 makes unlawful the dissemination or the causing of the dissemination of any false advertisement ‘by United States mails, or in commerce by any means, for the purpose of inducing, or which is likely to induce, directly or indi-rectly, the purchase of food, drugs, devices, or cosmetics; or by any means, for the purpose of inducing, or which is likely to induce, directly or indirectly, the purchase in commerce of any food, drugs, devices, or cosmetics.”” It also pro-vides that the dissemination or the causing of the dissemination of any such false advertisement shall be an unfair or deceptive act in commerce within the meaning of section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. Section 13 authorizes the Commission to apply to any district court of the United States or in the United States Court of any territory for a temporary in-junction to enjoin the dissemination or the causing of the dissemination of any false advertisement of food, drugs, devices, or cosmetics whenever it has reason to believe that such injunction, pending final action upon a complaint issued by the Commission under section 5, would be to the interest of the public. Section 14 provides that any person, partnership, or corporation violating any provision of section 12 (a) shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by fine and imprisonment if the use of the commodity so advertised may be injurious to health because of results from such use under the conditions prescribed in the advertisement thereof, or under such conditions as are customary or usual, or if such violation is with intent to defraud or mislead. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 673 Section 15 defines the term ‘‘false advertisement’ and also defines “food,” “drug,” “devices,” and ‘‘cosmetics.” Section 16 provides that whenever the Commission has reason to believe that any person, partnership, or corporation is liable to the penalty under section 14 or under subsection (I) of section 5, it shall certify the facts to the Attorney General, whose duty it shall be to cause appropriate proceedings to be brought for the enforcement of the provisions of such section or subsection. Sections 17 and 18 are formal provisions containing the usual statutory separability clause and designation of the Act for citation purposes. The Clayton Act.—The Commission is vested with jurisdiction with respect to sections 2, 3, 7, and 8 of the Clayton Act. Procedure under this act is, with some exceptions, identical with procedure under the Federal Trade Commission Act. Section 2 of the Clayton Act, as amended, declares that it shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce, either directly or indirectly to discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality, where such commodities are sold for use, consumption, or resale within the United States or any territory thereof, or the District of Columbia, where the effect of such discrimination may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition. This section outlaws discriminations in price, services, and facilities and prohibits the payment or receipt of certain brokerage fees and allowances or other com-pensations, with certain limitations and statutory exceptions provided. Section 3 prohibits, in certain cases, so-called tying contracts, or contracts whereby, as a condition of sale or lease, the seller or lessor exacts from the pur-chaser 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 agree-ment may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce. Section 7 prohibits acquisition by one corporation of the share capital of another corporation engaged in commerce, or acquisition by one corporation 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. Section 8 prohibits 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 asso-ciations, trust companies, and common carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce, if such corporations are or have been competitors, so that the elimina-tion of competition by agreement between them would constitute a violation of any of the provisions of any of the antitrust laws. The Export Trade Act.—This law permits the formation of export combines or associations which are required to file with the Federal Trade Commission copies of their organization papers and current reports as to their operation. Under the terms of the act, such a group shall be engaged solely in export trade, and shall not restrain the trade of a domestic competitor, artificially or intentionally enhance or depress prices in this country, or substantially lessen competition or otherwise restrain trade within the United States. The Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939.—This act was approved by the Presi-dent October 14, 1940, and became effective July 14, 1941. The administration of the act is committed to the Commission, which is authorized to make rules and regulations thereunder. The purpose of the act is ‘‘to protect producers, manu-facturers, distributors, and consumers from the unrevealed presence of substitutes and mixtures in spun, woven, knitted, felted, or otherwise manufactured wool products, and for other purposes.” Wool products coming under the act will be required to be labeled to reveal their true fiber content and, in accordance with defined classifications, to show the percentage of ‘‘wool,” “reprocessed wool,” “reused wool,” and other fiber contained in the product, also to reveal the per-centage of any nonfibrous loading, filling, or adulterating matter which may be present in the goods. Misbranding, embracing deceptive labeling and failure to label properly, is prohibited. Specific provisions are set out at length in the statute as to how and by whom the products are to be labeled and the respective respon-sibility of manufacturers, distributors, and dealers in relation thereto. In case of violation, the Commission is authorized, through its regular procedure, to issue cease and desist orders. Under specific authority the Commission is empowered to petition an appropriate United States District Court for an injunction to 674 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS restrain the sale and shipment of misbranded wool products, and is further em-powered to invoke the aid of the courts in condemnation proceedings involving merchandise misbranded under the terms of the act. Willful violations are pun-ishable as misdemeanors and may be reported to the Attorney General for prosecution. TRADE PRACTICE CONFERENCE WORK OF THE COMMISSION The trade practice conferenceis a procedure of the Commission having for its purpose the elimination of unfair and illegal practices through cooperative means by members of an industry under the guidance and supervision of the Commission. Fair trade practice rules are set up under this procedure and provide for the pre- vention of various unfair methods of competition, unfair or deceptive acts or practices or other illegal trade practices. There may also be included in the rules provisions for otherwise fostering and promoting fair competitive conditions and ethical standards of business conduct in harmony with the public interest. Such trade practice conference work of the Commission was instituted in 1919. By 1926 the work had grown to such importance that the Commission established what is now known as the Division of Trade Practice Conferences. The procedure constitutes one of the several means for carrying out the Com- mission’s function of keeping trade and industry free from harmful practices proscribed by the statutes which the Commission administers. Rules established for an industry under the trade practice conference procedure are classified into two groups. In group I are placed all rules which prosecribe practices that are illegal as constituting unfair methods of competition or unfair or deceptive acts or practices or that are otherwise objectionable under laws admin- istered by the Commission. A greater part of the rules fall into this group, and the Commission has jurisdiction to prevent the use in commerce of the illegal trade practices proscribed therein regardless of whether the offender has signed or agreed to abide by the rules. In group II are placed rules for the establishment of prac- tices which the industry deems desirable and which are not contrary to the public interest. Infraction of rules of this class are not illegal per se. Compliance with such group II rules is obtained mainly through agreement and voluntary coopera- tion among the industry members. FALSE AND MISLEADING ADVERTISING CASES For the purpose of effecting a more direct and expeditious method of handling certain cases involving false and misleading advertising, violative of the provisions of the Federal Trade Commission Act, as amended, the Commission established its Radio and Periodical Division. Through this Division, advertisers, publishers, broadcasting stations, and advertising agencies are accorded the privilege of dealing directly with the Director, with a view to reaching an agreement in such cases as are appropriate for negotiating a stipulation, thereby disposing of the issues involved and obviating the necessity of formal trial. By this procedure the advertisers are afforded an opportunity informally to present for consideration such evidence relating to the advertising claims ques-tioned by the Commission as they may care to submit, with a view to determining whether or not a revision of their advertising is required, and to stipulate the discontinuance of any representations which, after a consideration of all the evi-dence, are determined to be false or misleading. 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; expensive litigation both to the advertisers and the Government is thereby avoided. FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY The Federal Works Agency was created by the first plan for Government reor-ganization submitted to Congress by the President on April 25, 1939, under authority of the Reorganization Act of 1939, and began to function as an agency of the Federal Government on July 1, 1939. Five organizations, previously operating either as independent establishments or as parts of departments, were brought together under FWA. These organiza-tions were: The Work Projects Administration (WPA), formerly the Works Progress Administration (with the exception of the National Youth Administra-tion) ; the Public Works Administration (PWA), formerly the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works; the Public Roads Administration (PRA), formerly the Bureau of Public Roads in the Department of Agriculture; the United States Housing Authority (USHA), formerly in the Interior Department; MISCELLANEOUS ; Official Duties | 675 and the Public Buildings Administration (PBA), in which was combined the Branch of Public Buildings, Procurement Division, Treasury Department, and the Branch of Buildings Management, National Park Service, Interior Depart-ment. Four of the administrations are headed by Commissioners. The United States Housing Authority is headed by an Administrator. All of the agencies grouped in the Federal Works Agency deal with public works not incidental to the regular work of other Government departments, and all except the Public Buildings Administration administer Federal grants or loans to State and local governments or other agencies for construction purposes. All deal with construction practices and standards. In connection with the defense program, the Federal Works Administrator is authorized, under Public, No. 849 and Public Resolution No. 106, Seventy-sixth Congress, third session, to provide housing for persons engaged in national defense activities and their families, working through the Federal Works Agency, other Federal agencies, and any local public agency. In connection with the national-defense program, the Federal Works Adminis-trator. is authorized under the act of October 14, 1940 (54 Stat. 1125), as amended, to provide housing for persons engaged in national-defense activities and their families whenever the President shall find that an acute shortage of housing exists or impends which would impede such national-defense activities and that such housing would not be provided by private capital when needed. He is also authorized under the act of June 28, 1941 (55 Stat. 361), to undertake public works necessary for carrying on community life substantially expanded by the national-defense program or to make loans or grants or both to public and private agencies therefor; whenever the President finds that in any area or locality an acute shortage of public works or equipment for public works necessary to the health, safety or welfare of persons engaged in national-defense activities exists or impends which would impede national-defense activities and that such public works or equipment cannot otherwise be provided when needed or could not otherwise be provided when needed or could not be provided without the imposition of an increased excessive tax burden or excessive increases in the debt limit of the taxing or borrowing authority in which such shortage exists. WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION The Work Projects 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 * *% ¥) a5 the Works Progress Administration. Under the President’s first plan on Government reorganization submitted to Congress on April 25, 1939, under the terms of the Reorganization Act of 1939, the Works Progress Adminis-tration was incorporated in the Federal Works Agency under the name of Work Projects Administration. PUBLIC WORKS ADMINISTRATION The Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works was created under the act of Congress approved June 16, 1933 (Public, No. 67, 73d Cong.), and was extended until June 30, 1937, by the act of Congress approved April 8, 1935 (Public Res. 11, 74th Cong.). Its life was further extended until July 1, 1939, by the Public Works Administration ExtensionAct of 1937 (Public Res. 47, 75th Cong.), approved June 29, 1937; to June 30, 1941, by the Public Works Administration Appropriation Act of 1938 (Public Res. 122, 75th Cong.), ap-proved June 21, 1938, as amended by the Second Deficiency Appropriation Act, 1940 (Public, No. 668, 76th Cong.), approved June 27, 1940; and to June 30, 1942, by the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1942 (Public Law 28, 77th Cong.), approved April 5, 1941. The Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works was made part of the Federal Works Agency, under the shorter name of Public Works Administration, by Reorganization Plan No. I transmitted by the Presi-dent to the Congress on April 25, 1939, pursuant to the provisions of the Reorgan-ization Act of 1939 (Public, No. 19, 76th Cong.), approved April 3, 1939. The functions of the Public Works Administration may be summarized as follows: (1) To make allotments to finance Federal projects; (2) to make loans or grants, or both, to non-Federal public bodies to aid in financing the construction of useful public works; and (3) to construct and lease projects, with or without the privilege of purchase, to public bodies. Nore.—No funds are now available for new projects. 676 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS PUBLIC ROADS ADMINISTRATION The Public Roads Administration is the principal road-building agency of the Federal Government. It administers Federal funds authorized to aid the States in improving the Federal-aid system and its extensions through cities, secondary roads, and elimination of hazards at grade crossings. It cooperates with the War and Navy Departments in the study of defense highway needs and administers special funds for defense road construction. It also cooperates with other agencies in improving roads in national forests, national parks, and in other Federal areas. In order that funds may be properly expended it conducts research into highway design, construction, and economics. PUBLIC BUILDINGS ADMINISTRATION The Public Buildings Administration was established as a part of the Federal Works Agency under the provisions of Reorganization Plan No. I, Section 303, pursuant to the provisions of the Reorganization Act of 1939, approved April 3, 1939. Prior to July 1, 1939, the component parts of the Public Buildings Administration operated as units of the Procurement Division in the Treasury Department and of the National Park Service in the Department of the Interior. Under the first Reorganization plan the Public Buildings Branch of the Procure- ment Division, the Branch of Buildings Management of the National Park Service (except its functions relating to monuments and memorials), and the functions of the National Park Service in the District of Columbia in connection with the general assignment of space, the selection of sites for public buildings, and the determination of the priority in which the construction or enlargement of public buildings shall be undertaken, were consolidated in the Public Buildings Administration of the Federal Works Agency under the Commissioner of Public Buildings. The Public Buildings Administration is responsible for the administrative, technical, and clerical functions incident to the design, construction, maintenance, and repair of Federal buildings. Participation of the Public Buildings Administration in the national defense program embraces the design and construction of defense housing projects as- signed to the Administration and of other Federal buildings the use of which is anticipated to be for the period of the emergency. The work of the Administration is directed by the Commissioner of Public Buildings. Operating directly under the Commissioner and responsible for the detailed technical, clerical, and administrative functions are: Office of the Buildings Manager.— Operates, maintains, and protects all build-ings under the jurisdiction of the Administration for such purposes; determines the need of and arranges for the repair and preservation of buildings, including leased properties, operated by the Administration in the District of Columbia; performs all moving operations of Government agencies into, out of, or within buildings operated, maintained, and protected by the Administration. Office of the Fiscal Manager.— Collects and prepares for submission to the Bureau of the Budget and the Congress data and estimates for the construction and repair of Federal buildings and for the general administrative expenses of the Administration; acts on a joint committee with representatives of the Post Office Department in the selection of sites for public buildings outside the Dis-trict of Columbia; determines the sufficiency and applicability of appropriated funds in conneetion with contracts and changes thereof and for other purposes; effects final settlement of contracts; administers leasing and sale of surplus real estate; maintains an inventory of Government-owned real estate. Office of the Office Manager.— Duplicates specifications and drawings for construe-tion and repair work; advertises for bids; forwards bidding material to prospective bidders and others interested and opens and distributes bids when received; pro-cures and distributes office supplies; supervises (1) mail and files of Public Build-ings Administration, (2) all duplicating work including mimeograph, multilith, blueprinting, photostating, and photography, (3) information service, (4) relief and telegraph rooms, (5) clearance of surplus furniture for all constituent units of the Federal Works Agency, including transfer of furniture between units, (6) allotment of space available for occupancy by the Public Buildings Administra-tion. Office of Planning and Space Control.— Collects preplanning data for use in the determination of building projects within and outside the District of Columbia; makes recommendation on the assignment of space in new and existing buildings throughout the country; administers rental and lease contracts; administers the MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 677 acquisition of space on rental basis for all Federal activities in the District of Columbia, and for the collective housing of Federal agencies in single buildings outside the District of Columbia. Office of the Supervising Architect.—Prepares preliminary sketches and estimates leading to the establishment of a program of Federal building construction; responsible for the architectural and engineering design; conducts activities re-quired for the development of tentative drawings, cabinet sketches, working drawings and specifications for all projects authorized under the various Federal building programs and for defense housing projects assigned to the Administration. Office of the Supervising Engineer.—Prepares and forwards contract documents for execution; controls dates of issuance of notices to proceed; manages contracts and supervises contractors’ operations for the construction of defense housing projects assigned to the Administration and for construction, reconstruction, extension, and remodeling of public buildings under jurisdiction of the Administra-tion, except those operated by it in the District of Columbia; makes site surveys; collaborates with other offices of the Administration as necessary or desirable. Section of Fine Arts.—Conducts activities required for the sculptural and mural decoration of buildings under the jurisdiction of the Administration. FEDERAL FIRE COUNCIL The Federal Fire Council was organized in April 1930 by collective action of Government departments and establishments and established by Executive Order No. 7397 of June 20, 1936, as an official advisory agency in matters relating to the protection of Federal employees and property from fire. By Executive Order No. 8194 of July 6, 1939, it was placed under the jurisdiction of the Federal Works Agency. ° The council is authorized to develop standards, procedures, and forms, and, on request, to conduct surveys or such other investigations as may be necessary to determine what measures should be taken to safeguard life and property from the hazards of fire, including review of plans for new construction. The council is also authorized to make such independent studies of Federal buildings and property as it may deem desirable from the standpoint of fire protection, and to maintain a record of fire losses on Government property. The membership of the council consists of such officers or employees of the various departments and establishments of the Federal Government and of the District of Columbia as are designated by the respective heads thereof. These are organized into standing committees concerned with matters such as fire-hazard surveys, requirements for fire-protection equipment, establishment of fire-loss prevention procedures and organizations within Government establishments, development of inspection forms, manuals, and fire-resistance standards for new construction, protection of records, and fire-loss statistics. Reports of surveys and other committee actions are submitted for adoption at periodic meetings of the council. Reports and recommendations involving mat-ters of general policy are subject to the approval of the governing body. These reports and other informative material are distributed to the membership, to the heads of bureaus and establishments, and to other interested Federal, State, and city officials. A manual covering the general subject of fire-loss prevention has been issued together with a fire report and self-inspection forms, the latter for use within departments and establishments in connection with inspections. UNITED STATES HOUSING AUTHORITY The United States Housing Authority was created by the United States Housing Act of 1937. Originally in the Department of the Interior, the United States Housing Authority was transferred to the Federal Works Agency on July 1, 1939, under the President’s First Plan of Government Reorganization. Low-rent housing and slum-clearance activities—The USHA was created to assist the several States and their political subdivisions to remedy the unsafe and insanitary housing conditions and the acute shortage of decent, safe, and sanitary dwellings for families of low income, in rural or urban communities, that are injurious to the health, safety, and morals of the citizens of the Nation, and to alleviate present and recurring unemployment. Thus, the USHA-aided program calls for the initiation, by local public housing agencies created under State law, of projects for slum clearance and for providing decent, safe, and sanitary housing for families of low income who cannot afford to pay enough to cause private enterprise in their locality to build an adequate supply of decent, 678 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS safe, and sanitary dwellings for their use. Such projects are owned and operated by the local public agencies. Under the act each project must include the elimi-nation of a slum dwelling for every new dwelling provided by the project. The USHA extends two types of financial assistance to the local public housing agencies for their low-rent housing and slum-clearance projects. First, in connec-tion with the development of such projects, it makes loans to these agencies to finance not more than 90 percent of project cost. Second, in connection with the operation of the project, it makes annual contributions so that rentals may be reduced to levels which families in the lowest income group can afford to pay. The act requires that both types of USHA financial assistance be supplemented by similar local assistance. Thus, at least 10 percent of project cost must be financed through local capital participation. Also, the local community must supplement the USHA annual contribution with a contribution of its own equal to at least 20 percent of the USHA contribution. The USHA also provides the local housing agencies with technical assistance, and advice on the establishment of standards and instructions, with respect to their low-rent housing and slum-clearance projects. Defense housing activities.—Title II of Public No. 671, Seventy-sixth Congress, approved June 28, 1940, authorizes the USHA to use funds available to it under the act to undertake directly or to cooperate with and assist the War and Navy Departments and local housing agencies in providing housing necessary to the national defense program (and which would not otherwise be provided) for per-sons, and their families, engaged in national defense activities. This includes both military and naval personnel and workers engaged in industries connected with and essential to the national defense program. The USHA was further authorized to revise contracts for low-rent housing and slum-clearance projects entered into under the United States Housing Act so that such projects could be used for defense purposes. In addition, the USHA (together with local public housing agencies) has, on assignment from the Federal Works Administrator, planned and supervised the construction of many defense housing projects under the Lanham Act (Public, No. 849, 76th Cong.). 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. Within the foreign-trade 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, resorting, mixing, and other types of manipu-lation; it should be noted that exhibiting and manufacturing are not permitted within the zone. On January 30, 1936, the Board issued a grant to the municipality of New York permitting the establishment and operation of a foreign-trade zone at Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. This zone was placed in operation on February 1, 1937, and comprises a water area of approximately 66 acres, including 18 acres occupied by five piers, and an adjacent upland of about 26 acres, a total of approximately 92 acres. It is maintained within a land and water barrier with a total length of about 8,375 lineal feet and constantly policed by United States customs guards. A partial list of manipulations now performed in the New York Foreign-Trade Zone include: Labeling and repacking canned food products; splitting, skinning, polishing, and rebagging Chinese peas; cleaning, grading, and rebagging chick peas and mustard seed; cleaning and drying crude drugs; drying, ridging, culling, and bagging Brazil nuts; mixing, cleaning, sampling, and rebagging tungsten ore; maturing and sampling leaf tobacco. Disturbed international shipping conditions have resulted in the extended use of the zone for the transshipment of many Latin American products, as well as those from other world areas. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 679 On September 22, 1937, the Alabama State Docks Commission was authorized to establish and operate a foreign-trade zone at Mobile, Ala. This zone, which was opened on July 21, 1938, was voluntarily closed shortly thereafter and the grant canceled by the Board. Applications for permits to establish and operate foreign-trade zones in several other ports of entry are now pending before the Board. 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 accounting in the several departments and establishments, and for the administrative examina- tion of fiscal officers’ accounts and claims, reporting to Congress upon the ade- quacy 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 per- formed by them, when specially designated therefor by the Comptroller General, having the same force and effect as though performed by the Comptroller Gen- eral in person. He makes such rules and regulations as may be necessary for carrying on the work of the General Accounting Office, including those for the admission of attorneys to practice before it, and furnishes, under the seal of said Office for use as evidence, copies of records from books and proceedings thereof in accordance with sections 882 and 886 of the Revised Statutes. : Upon the application of disbursing officers, the head of any executive depart- ment or other independent establishment not under any of the executive depart- ments, 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 counter- signs all warrants authorized by law to be signed by the Secretary of the Treasury. It is also the duty of the Comptroller General to investigate at the seat of government or elsewhere all matters relating to the receipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and to make recommendations to the President, when requested by him, and to Congress concerning legislation necessary to facilitate the prompt and accurate rendition and settlement of accounts, and concerning such other matters as he may deem advisable in regard to the receipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and economy or efficiency in public expenditures. He makes investigations for Congress as to revenue, appropriations, and expenditures, furnishing assistants from his office to Congress for that purpose, and specially reports to Congress every expenditure or contract made by any department or establishment in any year in violation of law. He also reports to Congress upon the adequacy and effectiveness of departmental inspection of the offices and accounts of fiscal officers, and, in accordance with law, has access to and examines any books, documents, papers, or records, except those pertaining to certain funds for purposes of intercourse or treaty with foreign nations, of all departments and establishments, for the purpose of securing from time to time information regarding the powers, duties, activities, organization, financial transactions, and methods of business of their respective offices. It is also his duty to furnish to the Bureau of the Budget such information relating to expenditures and accounting as it may request from time to time. 680 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED : STATES, ALASKA, AND CANADA (For defining, marking, and maintaining the boundary between the United States, Alaska, and Canada) The International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada, was created under the provisions of the several boundary treaties between the United States and Great Britain, for the purpose of defining, marking, and maintaining the demarcation of the international boundary line between the United States and Canada and between Alaska and Canada, as follows: 1. Southeastern Alaska, or the boundary between Alaska and British Columbia. Length, 893 miles. Article VI of the convention between the United States and Great Britain, providing for the settlement of questions between the two countries with respect to the boundary line between the Territory of Alaska and the British possessions in North America, signed at Washington, January 24, 1903, stipulated that when the high contracting parties shall have received the decision of the tribunal upon the questions submitted as provided in the foregoing articles, which decision shall be final and 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 Wash-ington, 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. 38. The United States and Canada boundary from the Atlantic to the Pacific Doon. with the exception of the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Length, 2,697 miles. Articles I, II, III, V, VI, VII, and VIII, of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, entitled “Canadian International Boundary,” signed at Washington, April 11, 1908, stipulated that each of the high contracting parties shall appoint without delay an expert geographer or surveyor as Commissioner, and the Commissioners so appointed shall jointly execute the necessary surveys, repair existing boundary marks, erect additional boundary marks, and lay down the boundary line in accordance with the existing treaties upon quadruplicate sets of accurate modern charts, prepared or adopted by them for that purpose, and that said charts so marked shall be filed with each Government, and said Commissioners shall also prepare, in duplicate, and file with each Government a joint report or reports, describing in detail the course of the boundary so marked by them, and the character and location of the several monuments and boundary marks and ranges marking it. 4. Article IV of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain in respect to Canada, signed at Washington, February 24, 1925, which provides for the maintenance of an effective boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Dominion of Canada, author-izes and directs the Commissioners appointed under the provisions of the treaty of April 11, 1908, to inspect the various portions of the boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Domin-ion of Canada at such times as they shall deem necessary; to repair all damaged monuments and buoys; to relocate and rebuild monuments which have been destroyed; to keep the boundary vistas open; to move boundary monuments to new sites and establish such additional monuments and buoys as they shall deem desirable; to maintain at all times an effective boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Dominion 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. MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 681 INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO The International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico, was created pursuant to the provisions of the treaty concluded March 1, 1889, with exclusive jurisdiction to examine and decide all differences or questions arising on that portion of the frontier between the United States of America and the United Mexican States where for a distance of 1,210 miles the Rio Grande, and for a dis-tance of 20 miles the Colorado River form the boundary line as originally estab-lished 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 con-structed in, these rivers, or any other cause affecting the boundary line. Matters pertaining to the practical location and monumentation of the overland boundary of 675 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 contra-vene 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 eliminate bancos caused by such changes; survey, place, and maintain monuments on all international bridges between the two countries. The Commission is authorized to call for papers of information relative to boundary matters from either country; hold meetings at any point questions may arise; summon witnesses and take testimony. If both Commissioners agree to a decision, their judgment shall be binding on both Governments, unless one of them shall disapprove it within 1 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 United States section of the Commission, over some 1,500 miles of the Rio Grande, its tributaries and diversions, 54 stream-gaging stations embracing the measurement of the run-off from over 55,000 square miles of the drainage area of the Rio Grande within the United States between Fort Quitman, Tex., and the Gulf of Mexico, and nearly one-half of the pertinent drainage area in Mexico between those points. Congressional concurrence in the development of these international 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, demarcation, fencing, or monumentation of the land and water boundary; and the construction of fences, monuments, and other demarcation 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. INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION, THE 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 ques-tions which are now pending between the United States and the Dominion of Canada involving the rights, obligations, or interests of either in relation to the other or to the inhabitants of the other, along their common frontier, and to make provision for the adjustment and settlement of all such questions as may hereafter arise.” 682 Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS The Commission consists of six members, three appointed by the President ofthe United States and three appointed by His Majesty on recommendation of the Government of Canada. It was organized in 1911, adopted rules of pro- cedure, and established permanent offices in Washington and Ottawa. It hasjurisdiction over all cases involvingthe use or obstruction or diversion of bound-ary 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 frontierthat 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 arisingbetween the high contracting parties involving the rights, obligations, or interestsof 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 UnitedStates 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 measure-ment and apportionment from time to time of the waters of the St. Mary andMilk Rivers and their tributaries, these rivers lying partly in Montana and partlyin Alberta and Saskatchewan, and being largely used for irrigation purposes in both countries. : INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION The original act to regulate commerce, approved February 4, 1887, provided for a commission consisting of five members. By various amendatory and 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-ElkinsAct 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; the Motor Carrier Act, 1935; and the Transportation Act, 1940. The num-ber 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, an assistant secretary, a chief counsel,and such attorneys, examiners, special agents, and clerks as are necessary to the proper performance of its duties. Jurisdiction over motor carriers was conferred upon the Commission by theMotor Carrier Act, 1935, by the addition of part II of the Interstate CommerceAct, and over water carriers by the Transportation Act of 1940, by the addition of part III thereof. Each of these parts 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, orDistrict of the United States to any other State, Territory, or District of theUnited States, or to any foreign country, and to common carriers engaged in inter-state transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad (or partly byrailroad and partly by water when both are used under a common control, manage- ment, or arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment); also to expresscompanies and sleeping-car companies, to bridges, ferries, car floats and lighters, used by carriers subject to part I, and all terminal and transportation facilities “used or necessary in the interstate transportation 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, regu-lation, or practice made or imposed by any State authority, the authorities of the MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 683 State or States interested must be notified of the hearings in such cases, and the Commission may. confer and hold joint hearings with the authorities of the interested States. If, after hearing, the Commission finds such rate, fare, charge, classification, regulation, or practice causes undue or unreasonable advantage, preference, or prejudice as between persons or localities in intrastate commerce on the one hand and interstate or foreign commerce on the other hand, or any undue, unreasonable, or unjust discrimination against interstate or foreign com-merce 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 Interstate Commerce Act prohibits any carrier subject to part I, and any water carrier subject to part III, from charging 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 rate than the aggregate of the intermediate rates subject to the act. It is pro-vided, however, that the Commission may, in special cases, after investigation, authorize carriers to charge less for longer than for shorter distances, and from time to time prescribe the extent to which such carriers may be relieved, subject, however, to the further proviso that in so doing the Commission shall not permit the establishment of any charge to or from the more distant point that is not reasonably compensatory. Insofar as carriers by railroad are concerned, the Commission is precluded from granting relief under the fourth section to carriers by railroad, or other carriers subject to part I, because of merely potential water competition not actually in existence. The Commission is authorized to require rail 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 equitable divisions of such rates, and it may require readjustment of such divisions -if it finds they have been unjust, unreasonable, or inequitable in the past, 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 rail carriers subject to the act to construct switch connections with lateral branch lines of railroads and private sidetracks. Part I of the act forbids the construction of new, and the abandonment of old, lines of railroad without Commission approval, except ‘‘spur, industrial, team, switching, or sidetracks, -located or to be located wholly within one State.” Part I of 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, and gives the Commission authority over the routing of traffic after it arrives at the terminus or a junction point of a carrier and is to be there delivered to another carrier in cases where routing instructions have not been given by the shipper. Where diversion of routed freight occurs which is not in compliance with an order, rule, or regulation of the Commission, the carrier or carriers so diverting the traffic are jointly and severally liable to the carrier deprived of its right to participate in the haul of the 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 for any common carrier subject to part I, II, or III the pooling or division of traffic, or of service, or of gross or net earnings, or of any portion thereof. 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 nonecarrier 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 relieves carriers, when permission is so granted, from the restraints of the antitrust laws so far as may be necessary to effect such consoli-dations. In all cases of consolidations, mergers, unifications, ete., of carriers by railroad subject to the act, the Commission must impose conditions that are fair and equitable to protect the interests of the railroad employees affected. 684 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 to award reparation to injured shippers. The Interstate Commerce Act also provides that actions at law by carriers to recover their charges shall be begun within 2 years from the time the cause of action accrues and not thereafter, and that complaints seeking reparation shall be instituted within 2 years from the time the cause of action accrues, except that if on or before expiration of the 2-year period of limitation in subdivision (b) or of the 2-year period of limitation in subdivision (¢) a carrier subject to this act begins action 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 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 Transportation Act of 1920 the statute was amended to provide that an order of the Commission shall con-tinue in force until ils further order, or for a specified period of time, according as shall be prescribed in the order, unless modified or set aside by the Com-mission, or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. Carriers are required to publish and file rates, rules, and regulations applying to interstate traffic and are prohibited from engaging in interstate transportation unless such rates, rules, and regulations are published and filed. Severe penalties are provided in the statute for failure to observe the rates and regulations as shown in the published tariffs. By the act of May 29, 1917, as amended on February 28, 1920, the Commission is given extensive jurisdiction over the use, control, supply, movement, distribu-tion, exchange, interchange, and return of locomotives, cars, and other vehicles, including special types of equipment and the supply of trains. The Commission may inquire into the management of the business of all com-mon carriers subject to the provisions of the act, 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 amendments of February 28, 1920, and September 18, 1940, the Commission was directed to prescribe, for carriers subject to parts I and III of 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 percentages 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, with respect to rail carriers. By the act of March 4, 1927, the maximum period during which the Commission may suspend the opera-tion of proposed schedules is fixed at not more than 7 months, and it is provided that if the proceeding upon suspension is not concluded within that time the proposed schedule shall go into effect at the end of such period, but that the Commission may require the rail 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 such 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, amended by the Transportation Act of 1940, 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 by railroad or per-son controlling, controlled by, or under common control with such a carrier to own, lease, operate, control, or have any interest in any competing carrier by water. Jurisdiction is conferred upon the Commission to determine questions of fact as to competition, after full hearing, on the application of any railroad company or other carrier and to extend beyond July 1, 1914, the time during which such ownership or operation of vessels plying elsewhere than through the Panama Canal may continue, when it is found to be in the interest of the public MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 685 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, and to determine to what traffic and in connection with what vessels, and upon what terms and conditions propor- tional, or maximum, or minimum, or maximum and minimum proportional 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 property owned or used by every common carrier subject to the provisions of part I of the act, except street, sub- urban, or interurban electric railways not operated as a part of a general steam railroad system of transportation. Section 19 (a) was amended on June 16, 1933, by the Emergency Railroad Transportation Act, which provides that the Commission shall keep informed of current changes in the property, its condition, use, the investment therein, its cost and values, and related matters, in order to enable it to revise and correct its basic valuations and underlying data as needed. 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, and by the Transportation Act of 1940 it is provided that where the loss, damage, or injury occurs while the property is in the custody of a carrier by water, the liability of such carrier shall be determined by the bill of lading of the carrier by water and 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. : Part I of the act as amended February 28, 1920, prohibits a carrier from issuing securities or from assuming obligations or liabilities as lessor, lessee, guarantor, indorser, surety, or otherwise, in respect. of the securities of others from and after 120 days after the provision takes effect, except after having been authorized by the Commission so to do; prescribes the conditions under which the Commission may grant authorities to the carriers; the form and contents of applications which shall be made to the Commission for such purposes; provides for the giving of notice by the Commission of such applications to the Governor of each State in which the applicant carrier operates; for hearings by the Commission in respect of such applications; that carriers may issue certificates and assume obligations or liabilities without obtaining authority other than that of the Commission, and for the issuance by the carrier without the consent of the Commission of short-term notes in limited amounts, reports of which are, however, required to be filed with the Commission. It is further provided that nothing in the act shall be construed to imply any guaranty or obligation as to such securities on the part of the United States. Part I of 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, ‘attorneys, or agents of carriers who knowingly assent to or concur in the issuance of securities, ete., contrary to the provisions of the Commission’s orders or grants of authority. 64674°—TT7—2—1st ed——45 686 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. This section was further amended on September 18, 1940, with respect to the assignment of duties to individual Commissioners, divisions of the Commission, and boards of employees, subject to a right of review of such decisions, by the entire Commission or appropriate appellate divisions thereof. 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 its indebtedness. Many duties are imposed upon the Commission by these amend-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. By amendment of June 22, 1938, the bankruptcy law was further amended to provide that any commission created by any law of the United States or of any State having regulatory jurisdiction over a public-utility corporation should have submitted to it a plan approved and given opportunity to suggest amendments or offer objections to the plan, and after approval of the plan such corporation shall comply with the provisions of the plan and orders relative thereto, including procuring of authorization, approval, or consent of such commissions. The Emergency Railroad Transportation Act, 1933, provides for the termina-tion 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 inter-est of adequate and efficient railroad transportation service at the lowest cost con-sistent with the furnishing of such service; and to the need of revenues sufficient to enable carriers under honest, economical, and efficient management to provide guch service. The Transportation Act of 1940 contained a new declaration of policy providing for fair and impartial regulation of all modes of transportation subject to the act, so administered as to recognize and preserve the inherent advantages of each; to promote safe, adequate, economical, and efficient service and foster sound economic conditions in transportation and among the several carriers; to encourage the establishment and maintenance of reasonable charges for transportation services, without unjust discriminations, undue preferences, or advantages, or unfair or destructive competitive practices; to cooperate with the several States and the duly authorized officials thereof; and to encourage fair wages and equitable working conditions—all to the end of developing, coordinat-ing, and preserving a national transportation system by water, highway, and rail, as well as other means, adequate to meet the needs of the commerce of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national defense. All of the provisions of this act shall be administered and enforced with a view to carrying out the above declaration of policy. By the Civil Aeronautics Act, approved June 23, 1938, the Commission’s jurisdic-tion over air transportation was transferred to the Civil Aeronautics Authority, except that orders made by the Commission in proceedings instituted before it, either prior or subsequent to said June 23, are to be controlled by the act of June 12, 1934, as amended by act of August 14, 1935, until changed by the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Under said act of June 23, 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority and the Inter-state Commerce Commission are required to direct their respective chairmen to designate, from time to time, a like number of members of each to act as a joint board to consider and pass upon matters relating to through service and joint rates, fares, or charges of air carriers and other carriers, in accordance with power conferred upon said Authority by the Civil Aeronautics Act. : By an act approved July 5, 1937, section 22 of said part I was further amended to authorize a carrier to transport a totally blind person accompanied by a guide or seeing-eye dog or other guide dog specially trained and educated for that pur-pose at the usual and ordinary fare charged to one person. By an act approved August 25, 1937, section 22 of said part I was so amended as to authorize carriers subject to said part to accord reduced rates for the trans-portation of property to or from any section of the country with the object of MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 687 providing relief in case of earthquake, flood, fire, famine, drought, epidemic, pes-tilence, or other calamitous visitation or disaster, if such reduced rates have first been authorized by order of the Commission. : By act of April 26, 1937, the Bituminous Coal Act authorizes complaints to the Interstate Commerce Commission as to rates, tariffs, charges, practices, relating to transportation of coal. By section 201 (a) of the act of February 16, 1938, the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to institute and prosecute before the Commission complaints con-cerning charges, etc., pertaining to the transportation of farm products, and when like complaints are filed by parties other than the Secretary the Commission is required to give him notice concerning the fact and accord him an opportunity to be heard in the premises. Under the Motor Carrier Act, 1935 (part II of the Interstate Commerce Act), as amended June 29, 1938, and September 18, 1940, 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 reasonable requirements to promote safety of operation, including qualifications and maximum hours of serv-ice of employees and standards of equipment, to be established 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, or of any term, condition, or limitation of any such certificate, permit, or license. Similar authority was conferred upon the Commission with respect to common and contract carriers by water by the Transportation Act of 1940. Such provisions are contained in part III of the Interstate Commerce Act. 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 preseribe 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 each form of transportation, the effect of rates upon traffic move-ment, the need in the public interest of adequate and efficient transportation service by such carriers, at the lowest cost consistent with the furnishing of such service, and the need of sufficient revenues to enable such carriers to provide such service under honest, economical, and efficient management, ete., as contained in the declaration of policy, heretofore set out. The Commission may not consider goodwill, 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 arrange-ments 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 carriers. 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 water 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 inspec-tion of such records and of the premises of such carriers. 688 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, qualifi-cations 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 identifi- cation plates upon each motor vehicle operated by such carriers. An investigation by the Commission is authorized of the need for Federal regu-ton of the sizes and weights of motor vehicles and combinations of motor vehicles. Part III of the Interstate Commerce Act, approved September 18, 1940, gives the Commission extensive authority over common carriers and contract carriers by water, quite similar to its authority over motor vehicle common and contract carriers, above discussed. The act in part III permits the Commission to make numerous exemptions from its provisions, such as bulk carriers on the Great Lakes who can transport bulk commodities so cheaply that they cannot be said to compete with other forms of transportation, and also permits exemptions where necessary to permit United States carriers to compete on equal terms with their foreign competitors. Equality of regulation between competing forms of transportation, insofar as it was possible to achieve this equality, was the purpose of this legislation. 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 approved October 22, 1913, provided that the Commerce Court should be abol-ished 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 enforce 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 pro-hibits, with certain exceptions, carriers from discriminating between purchasers in sales of commodities, and from making leases or sales of commodities and from acquiring stock or capital of other corporations 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 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 contract for con-struction 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. MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 689 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 Appli- ance 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 grabirons or handholds in the ends and sides of each car ; and that locomotive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be equipped with a power driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system. The act directs the Commission to lodge with the proper district attorneys infor- mation 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 en- gaged 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 authority in making investigations of all accidents resulting to persons 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 InterstateCommerce 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 without requiring a man to go under such locomotive. Penalties are provided for violations of this act. Transportation of Explosives Act.—The act of May 30, 1908, as amended by actapproved March 4, 1921, directed the Interstate Commerce Commission to makeregulations for the safe transportation of explosives and dangerous articles by common carriers engaged in interstate commerce. Penalties are provided for violations of such regulations. By act approved October 9, 1940, jurisdiction over transportation by common carriers by water of explosives and other danger- ous articles was transferred to the Secretary of Commerce, effective April 9, 1941. Jurisdiction in the Commission with respect to requirements on shippers of such articles by common carriers by water was undisturbed. Locomotive and Boiler Inspection Acts.—The act of February 17, 1911, confersjurisdiction 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.” : Block signal and automatic train-control 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 testsof 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 aceord-ance with the provisions of joint resolution approved June 30, 1916, and Sundry J 690 : Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 an act approved August 26, 1937, section 26 of part I of the Interstate Commerce Act, changed to section 25 by the Transportation Act of 1940, was so amended as to authorize the Commission to require any carrier by railroad sub-ject to that part (including any terminal or station company), and any receiver or any other individual or body, when in the possession of the business of a carrier subject to the section, to install the block-signal system, interlocking, automatic similar appliances, methods and systems intended to promote the safety of rail-road operation, which comply with specifications and requirements prescribed by the Commission, upon the whole or any part of its railroad, and thereafter to make such changes in the requirements, and in requirements concerning pertinent re-ports and records of the carriers, as the Commission might find necessary. Railroad Retirement Act.—This act, approved August 29, 1935, as amended by the act of June 24, 1937, creates a Railroad Retirement Board of three mem-bers, 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, interurban, 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. By an act approved June 14, 1937, as further amended on June 29, 1939, the act of February 22, 1935, was so amended as to continue until June 30, 1942, the prohibition against making shipments of petroleum and its products in inter-state or foreign commerce, produced in violation of State law. By the Carriers Taxing Act, approved June 29, 1937, which provides for the payment of excise taxes by certain carriers and the payment of income taxes by the carriers’ employees, but does not apply to either street, suburban, or inter-urban electric railways, unless such railways are operated as parts of general steam-railroad systems of transportation, the Interstate Commerce Commission is authorized and directed, upon request of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, or upon complaint of any party interested, to determine, after hearing, whether any line operated by electric power falls within the terms of said exception. Under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act, approved June 25, 1938, the Commission is required to determine after hearing whether any line operated by electric power falls within the terms of the exemption proviso included in section 1 (a) of that act, when requested to do so by the Railroad Retirement Board or in a complaint filed by an interested party. MARITIME COMMISSION, UNITED STATES The United States Maritime Commission was created by the Merchant Marine Act, 1936, approved June 29, 1936 (49 Stat. 1985), which is entitled ‘‘An act to further the development and maintenance of an adequate and well-balanced American merchant marine, to promote the commerce of the United States, to aid in the national defense, to repeal certain former legislation, and for other pur-poses.” The Commission is an independent establishment of the executive branch of the Government, charged with the determination and administration of certain governmental financial aids to private citizens for the construction and operation of vessels in the commerce of the United States. It also exercises other business functions. In addition to its business functions, the Commission possesses regu-latory powers over common carriers in the foreign water-borne commerce of the United States and over persons carrying on the business of forwarding or furnish= ing terminal facilities in connection with the common carriers by water. The act directs that the Commission shall be composed of five members, ap-pointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The chairman is desig-nated by the President. The Commission may elect one of its members as vice chairman and is authorized to appoint and fix the salaries of a secretary, a general counsel, and other officials and employees.. MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 691 The terms of office of the Commissioners first appointed are fixed at 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 years, but their successors are to be appointed for terms of 6 years. Three Commissioners were appointed and took office on September 26, 1936. A full Commission was appointed and took office on April 16, 1937. By the terms of the act, the United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Cor- poration was dissolved and all its records, books, papers, and property were taken over by the Commission. Likewise, all money, notes, bonds, mortgages, con- tracts, lands, vessels, terminals, property, and interests of every kind, owned by the United States and controlled by the Department of Commerce as the successor to the powers and functions of the former Shipping Board, were transferred to the Commission by the act. Ocean mail contracts made by the Postmaster General were terminated effective June 30, 1937. The holder of any such contract was authorized to file an applica- tion with the Commission to adjust and settle all the rights of the parties under the contract, subject to appeal by the Attorney General. Under the act the Commission, as successor to the powers and functions orig- inally vested in the United States Shipping Board and later transferred by Execu- tive Order No. 6166, issued on June 10, 1933, to the Department of Commerce, possesses all the powers and functions delegated in the Shipping Act, 1916, as amended, the Merchant Marine Act, 1920, as amended, and the Intercoastal Ship- ping Act, 1933, as amended. The Commission’s powers have been extended or clarified by acts of Congress on several occasions since enactment of the Merchant Marine Act, 1936. General acts amendatory of the 1936 act were passed by Congress in 1938 (Public, No. 705, 75th Cong., 3d sess.) and in 1939 (Public, No. 259, 76th Cong., 1st sess.). Several other acts covering special subjects have been passed for the purpose of modifying or supplementing the 1936 act. The duties of the Commission include the investigation and determination of the ocean services, routes, and lines from points in the United States to foreign markets essential for the development and maintenance of the foreign commerce of the United States and the determination of what additions and replacements of the American merchant marine are required to create an adequate and well- balanced merchant fleet to provide shipping service on all routes essential for the flow of the foreign commerce of the United States, the vessels to be so designed- as to be capable of serving as naval or military auxiliaries in time of war or na- tional emergency; and investigation of other maritime problems arising under the act. To aid a citizen of the United States in the construction of a new vessel to be used on a service, route, or line in the foreign commerce of the United States determined to be essential, the Commission is empowered to have the vessel constructed in a shipyard in the United States, to pay such construction cost, and to sell the vessel to the applicant for an amount equal to the estimated cost of the construction of the vessel if it were constructed in a foreign shipyard. The plans and specifications are required to be approved by the Secretary of the Navy, the Commission being directed to cooperate with the Navy Department as to national-defense needs and the adaptation of the merchant fleet to national-defense requirements. The difference between the cost of constructing the vessel in the United States and the estimated cost of constructing the vessel in a foreign shipyard is termed a construction-differential subsidy, but in no case may such subsidy exceed 50 percent of the cost of the vessel. Under temporary emergency legislation the Commission is authorized to make the determinations of estimated foreign costs on the basis of the conditions existing during the period prior to September 3, 1939. The applicant is required to pay 25 percent of the price at which a vessel is sold to the applicant, and the balance, payable in 20 years at 3}s-percent interest per annum, must be secured by a first preferred mortgage upon the vessel. Aid may be extended to any citizen of the United States in the construction of a new vessel to be operated in the foreign or domestic trade (excepting vessels engaged solely in the transportation of property on inland rivers and canals exclusively), in cases where no construction-differential subsidy is to be allowed, although the Commission is authorized to pay the cost of any national-defense features incorporated in such new vessels. The applicant is required, in case the vessel has a gross tonnage of 3,500 or more tons and a speed of 16 knots or more, to pay not less than 12% per centum of the cost of the vessel, and in case of a vessel of less tonnage or less speed, not less than 25 per centum of the cost of the vessel; and the balance, payable in 20 years at 3l%-percent interest per annum, must be secured by a first preferred mortgage and otherwise as the Commission may direct. 692 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS If it is found that the national policy declared in the act and the building program contemplated by the act cannot be realized within a reasonable time, after approval by the President, the Commission may have new vessels con-structed and old ones reconditioned. Vessels transferred to the Commission and being operated in foreign commerce may be temporarily operated by the Com-mission for its account by private operators. All vessels transferred to or other-wise acquired by the Commission may be chartered or sold. Charters under the Merchant Marine Act, 1936, are restricted to bareboat charters. The Commission is empowered to grant an operating-differential subsidy to aid a citizen of the United States in the operation of a vessel to be used in an essential service, route, or line in the foreign commerce of the United States. The operating-differential subsidy, which is intended to place the proposed operations of such vessels on a parity with those of foreign competitors, is the excess of the cost of items of operating expense in which it is found the applicant is at a sub-stantial disadvantage in competition with foreign vessels over the estimated cost of the same items of expense if the vessel were operated under registry of a foreign country whose vessels are substantial competitors of the vessels covered by the contract. Certain reserve funds are required to be set up by the vessel operators, and no operating-differential subsidy may be paid for coastwise or intercoastal vessel operations. ; The Commission is authorized (under the 1939 amendments to the act) to acquire any obsolete vessel or vessels not less than 17 years old, which have been owned by citizens of the United States for at least 3 years prior to the date of such acquisition, in exchange for credit on the purchase of a new vessel or vessels from the Commission or on a new vessel or vessels constructed in a domestic shipyard and documented under the laws of the United States. The allowance is to be the fair and reasonable value of the old vessel as determined by the Com-mission after consideration of the scrap value, the depreciated value, and the market value for operation. The Commission administers, under regulations issued in conjunction with the Treasury Department, construction reserve funds established by American ship- owners who may deposit therein proceeds from the sales of vessels and earnings from operations of vessels, for use in the construction or acquisition of new ves- sels. Any deposits so used which represent gain on the sale of a vessel are ex- empt from the taxes on capital gain, but the tax basis of the new vessel will be reduced by the amount of such gain not taxed on the sale. During a national emergency proclaimed by the President, or whenever the President proclaims that the security of the national defense makes it advisable, the Commission may terminate charters on vessels owned by the Commission, and may requisition any vessel or other watercraft owned by citizens of the United States, or under construction in the United States, subject to provisions for the payment of just compensation. Vessels or property acquired by the Commission under the power of requisition may, upon approval by the President, be trans- ferred to other Government departments or agencies. The Commission regulates the sales to aliens, and the transfer to foreign registry, -of vessels owned in whole or in part by citizens of the United States and docu-mented under the laws of the United States. The 1938 amendments added a new title to the act which provides for a Federal ship mortgage insurance fund to be administered by the Commission. Under authority conferred by this new title the Commission may, upon application of a mortgagee, insure mortgages on all types of passenger and cargo vessels, tugs, towboats, barges, dredges, and fishing vessels, owned by citizens of the United States. To be eligible for such insurance the mortgage must be to secure a new loan or advance to aid in the construction, reconstruction, or reconditioning of a craft and the amount of the mortgage insured may not exceed 75 percent of the cost of such new construction, reconstruction, or reconditioning. The premium charge for the mortgage insurance is fixed by the Commission but shall not be less than one-half of 1 percent per annum nor more than 1 percent per annum of the amount of the mortgage obligation outstanding at any time. The premium charge is to be paid by the mortgagee. ; The Commission is directed to investigate employment and wage conditions in ocean shipping and to incorporate in contracts for operating-differential subsidies minimum-manning scales, minimum-wage scales, and reasonable working conditions for all officers and crews employed on vessels receiving an operating differential subsidy. All licensed officers of vessels documented under the laws of the United States must be citizens of the United States, and the act contains provisions in respect to the citizenship of members of crews of subsidized vessels. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 693 Citizenship requirements of officers and crews are enforced by the Secretary of Commerce. The Commission is authorized, through the United States Maritime Service, a voluntary organization established under the 1938 amendments, to provide for the training of American citizens to serve as licensed and unlicensed personnel on American merchant marine vessels. The Commission is authorized to provide for the training of cadets on Government-owned and subsidized vessels and on other vessels and in shipyards, plants, and industrial and educational organiza- tions, both governmental and private. The Commission also prescribes, conduets and supervises extension and correspondence courses for the benefit of the mer- chant marine personnel and of cadets, upon application for such training. The Commission has jurisdiction over State marine schools operated under the act of March 4, 1911, as amended. Such schools, formerly under the juris- diction of the Secretary of the Navy, are operated in California, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New York. The Commission is authorized to examine, in- spect, rate, and certify schools in the United States offering to persons quartered on board any vessel instruction for service in the merchant marine. The regulatory powers possessed by the Commission extend to all common carriers by water engaged in foreign commerce of the United States and to all persons carrying on the business of forwarding or furnishing wharfage, dock, ware-house, or other terminal facilities in connection with common carriers by water. These powers are principally in relation to rates, fares, charges, regulations, and practices. The Commission possesses quasi-judicial authority to receive and deter-mine complaints of shippers, passengers, and others alleging unreasonableness or unjust discrimination by common carriers by water and others subject to its regu-latory authority and the method for the enforcement of orders of the Commission, including orders directing the payment of money in reparation for violation of statutory provisions, as prescribed in the Shipping Acts. An important regulatory power vested in the Commission is the approval, disapproval, or modification of agreements entered into between common carriers by water subject to its juris-diction respecting cooperative working arrangements. The Commission’s approval of such agreements, commonly referred to as conference agreements, excepts the parties thereto from the operation of the Sherman Antitrust Act, Wilson Tariff Act, Clayton Act, and supplementary acts and amendments directed at monopolies in restraint of trade. The Commission’s authority has been modified or amplified in connection with the present European war and the national-defense program. The Commission has authority, expiring not later than March 10, 1942, to provide marine war-risk insurance and reinsurance and marine reinsurance when necessary for the protection of American ships, cargoes thereon, and crews thereof. The Commission is authorized temporarily to dispose of over-age vessels held by it, notwithstanding certain restrictions of law, for operation in either domestic or foreign trade. The Commission is authorized to make adjustments of ship mortgage indebted-ness to the United States and make arrangements for the maintenance of vessels in cases where the vessels involved cannot by reason of the Neutrality Act of 1939 or considerations of national defense be operated in their assigned services. Until June 30, 1942, notwithstanding certain restrictions of law, persons engaged upon work covered by Commission contracts for the construction, alteration, or repair of vessels may be employed more than 8 hours in any 1 day on condition that the prescribed overtime compensation is paid. Certain funds are available to the Commission for housing projects in or near industrial plants engaged in Commission activities. The Commission is carrying out a greatly expanded ship construction program, which includes the construction of a large number of cargo ships for use in time of emergency in carrying the commerce of the United States, known as the Liberty Fleet, the construction of vessels with lend-lease funds, including ships of the Liberty Fleet type, tankers, and vessels of the 1936 act standard C types, and the construction at an accelerated pace of vessels under the Commission’s long-range 500-ship program. Vessels constructed with lend-lease funds are subject to transfer for defense-aid purposes and other vessels constructed under recent appropriations and authorizations may be leased for defense-aid purposes. The Commission is also engaged in the establishment or expansion of facilities for the construction of these ships and the production of materials therefor. The Commission has been placed on a parity with the War and Navy Depart-ments with respect to preferences for delivery of materials under contracts or orders deemed necessary by the President for the defense of the United States. 694 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Until June 30, 1942, the Commission may in carrying out the 1936 act negotiate construction contracts without competitive bidding, adjust outstanding construc-tion contracts, and negotiate charters of Commission-owned vessels without competitive bidding and without regard to certain other requirements of the 1936 act. The expanded activities of the Commission with respect to transportation problems arising in connection with the European war and national defense are carried on through a new division, the Division of Emergency Shipping, which is responsible for handling emergency transportation problems, maintaining liaison with other Government agencies in connection with ocean transportation, and supervising sales, charters, transfers, requisitions; and other transactions in respect of vessel tonnage in connection with emergency transportation. The Commission is authorized (until June 30, 1942) to purchase or requisition, at the direction of the President, foreign vessels lying idle in waters of the United States which are necessary to the national defense, with compensation to be determined pursuant to the just-compensation provisions of the 1936 act and paid from lend-lease funds. The Commission is also authorized to charter or purchase any vessel, domestic or foreign, for the purpose of providing additional vessels for the transportation of foreign commerce of the United States or goods essential to the national defense. The Commission may (until June 30, 1942) repair, operate, charter, and pro-vide insurance for requisitioned foreign vessels and other vessels purchased, chartered, or otherwise acquired by the Commission. The Commission administers a system of priorities in merchant vessel trans-portation by means of ship warrants and makes provision for priorities with respect to the importation of strategic and critical materials, the transportation of materials requisitioned by defense agencies, and transportation of essential defense materials. Warrant holders enter into undertakings with the Commis-sion with respect to trades, voyages, classes of cargo, and fair and reasonable maximum rates of hire; and such holders are entitled to certain preferences with respect to the use of facilities for shipping at ports and terminals. This program under existing law will terminate June 30, 1943. The President of the United States has requested the chairman of the Com-mission to advise and aid the President with respect to the coordination of facili-ties for ocean transportation, and particularly to assist the Office of Production Management in expediting shipment of essential materials. The chairman of the Commission is the Chief, Shipbuilding Section, Office of Production Manage-. ment. A member of the Commission’s staff is designated to serve with the Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board in connection with defense problems involving ocean shipping. ; ; MARITIME LABOR BOARD The Maritime Labor Board was created by Title X, Merchant Marine Act, 1936, as amended June 23, 1938, by Public Act 705, Seventy-fifth Congress, third session. Title X was extended on June 23, 1941, by Public Act 124, Seventy-seventh Congress, first session. : : The Board was originally established to encourage maritime employers and employees to make and maintain written collective agreements; to settle dis-putes in order to avoid interruptions to water-borne commerce; to receive and file all contracts between employers and employees in the maritime and related industries; to prepare for presentation to the President and to the Congressby March 1, 1940, a comprehensive plan for the establishment of a permanent Fed-eral policy for the amicable adjustment of all disputes between maritime em-ployers and employees and for the stabilization of maritime labor relations; as far as may be, to secure through its mediatory efforts agreement between maritime employers and employees upon the plan it is required to submit. By Public Act 124, Title X was extended for 1 year, but the mediatory duties of the Board and its duty to encourage maritime employers and employees to make and maintain written collective agreements were abolished. NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics was established by act of Congress approved March 3, 1915, and the membership increased from 12 to 15 by act approved March 2, 1929 (U. S. C., title 50, sec. 151). Its member-ship is appointed by the President and consists of two representatives each of MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 695 the War and Navy Departments from the offices in charge of military and naval aeronautics, two representatives of the Civil Aeronautics Authority (Civil Aero-nautics Act of 1938), one representative each of the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Weather Bureau, and the National Bureau of Standards, together with six additional persons 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 the 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. Applied research is also con-ducted to answer immediate and pressing problems in military and civil aero-nautics. In order that research programs may be of maximum value, provision is made to keep the subcommittees informed as far as possible as to aeronautical researches conducted by 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. 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 major Government labora-tories fundamental aeronautical research, including: (a) Confidential researches for the Army and Navy on which current designs of aircraft of ever-improving performance are based. (b) Fundamental researches to increase safety and economy of operation of aircraft, military and civil. 4. Advise the War and Navy Departments, Civil Aeronautics Authority, 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. Advise upon any special problem in aeronautics which may be referred to it by the President, the Congress, or any executive department. The Committee conducts at Langley Field, Va., a well-equipped aeronautical research laboratory known as the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, comprising 25 structures and a research staff of 1,050 employees. There, under ideal conditions, are combined facilities for laboratory investigations and for researches on aircraft in flight. Seven units of the committee’s second major research station, known as the Ames Aeronautical Laboratory, at Moffett Field, Calif., employing 300 people, have so far been constructed and placed in operation. Additional research facilities are under construction there and at a third major research station, located at Cleveland, Ohio, to be devoted to aircraft engine research. NATIONAL ARCHIVES, THE The National Archives of the United States was created by the National Archives Act (48 Stat. 1122-1124; 40 U. S. C. ch. 2A), and the duties and respon-sibilities of the Archivist are prescribed by said act, as amended; by the Federal Register Act (49 Stat. 500-503; U. S. C., Supp. V, title 44, ch. 8A), as amended; by the act to provide for the establishment and maintenance of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library and for other purposes, approved July 18, 1939 (53 Stat. 1062-1066); by the act to provide for the disposition of certain records of the United States Government, approved August 5, 1939 (53 Stat. 1219-1221); by the act to provide for the disposition of certain photographed records of the United States, approved September 24, 1940 (54 Stat. 958); and by the act to i National Archives Trust Fund Board, approved July 9, 1941 (55 tat. 581). These acts impose nine major functions upon the Archivist: (1) The concentration and preservation in the National Archives Building of guch noncurrent records of the Government of the United States as have per-manent administrative value or historical interest. 696 Congressional Directory -+ wmisceLLaNEoUS (2) The administration of such records so as to facilitate their use in the busi-ness of the Government and in the service of scholarship. (3) The acceptance from non-Government sources, the storage, and the pres-ervation of motion-picture films and sound recordings pertaining to and illus-trative of the history of the United States, and the maintenance of a projecting room for showing such films and reproducing such sound recordings for historical purposes and study. (4) The examination, appraisal, and reporting to Congress, with the approval of the National Archives Council, of lists of records reported by various Govern-ment agencies as having been photographed in accordance with law or as having no permanent value or historical interest to the United States Government. (5) The preservation of all Presidential proclamations and Executive orders and of rules and regulations issued by Federal agencies, and the publication in the Peder] Register of all such documents having general applicability and legal effect. (6) The codification every fifth year of all Presidential proclamations and Executive orders and of rules and regulations issued by Federal agencies that 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, and, when so authorized by the President, the preparation of such codification for publication in special editions of the Federal Register. (7) The submitting to Congress of the recommendations of the National His-torical Publications Commission, created by the National Archives Act with the Archivist as chairman and charged with the duty of making 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. (8) The administration of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. (9) The authorization of the disbursement of money in the National Archives Trust Fund. NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS COMMISSION The National Historical Publications Commission was created by the act which established The National Archives (48 Stat. 1122-1124). 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 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 repayment 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 (48 Stat. 1122-1124). 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. NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARD The National Archives Trust Fund Board was created by the act of July 9, 1941 (55 Stat. 581), which authorizes the Board to accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts or bequests of money, securities, or other personal property, for the benefit of or in connection with The National Archives, its collections, or its services, as may be approved by the Board. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY The Franklin D. Roosevelt Library was created by the act approved July 18, 1939 (53 Stat. 1062-1066). Its purposes, as prescribed by said act, are to preserve and administer such collections of historical material as shall be donated to it by Franklin D. Roosevelt and such historical books related to and other historical material contemporary with and related to the historical material donated by MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 697 Franklin D. Roosevelt that may be acquired from other sources by gift, purchase, or loan. The duties of the Archivist of the United States, as set forth in the act estab-lishing the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, in addition to accepting for, and in the name of, the United States from Franklin D. Roosevelt a site consisting of approximately 12 acres of his Hyde Park estate, a building, or buildings, to be erected thereon by the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Inec., and such collections of historical material as shall be donated by Franklin D. Roosevelt, are: (1) To serve as ex officio member and chairman of the board of trustees of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library; : (2) To disburse funds held in trust by the board in the purchase of equipment, in the preparation and publication of guides, inventories, calendars, and textual reproductions of material in the said Library, and in the purchase of historical material for said Library; (8) To have immediate custody and control of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, and such other buildings, grounds, and equipment, as may from time to time become a part thereof, and their contents (except as the same is vested by law in the Commissioner of Public Buildings); (4) To appoint and prescribe the duties of such officers and employees, includ-ing clerical assistance for the board, as may be necessary for the execution of the functions vested in him by law; (5) To prescribe regulations governing the custody, arrangement, protection, and use of material acquired by the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library; and (6) To make to the Congress, at the beginning of each regular session, a report for the preceding fiscal year as to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, such report to include a detailed statement of all accessions, all dispositions of historical material, and all receipts and expenditures on account of the said Library. 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 Wash-ington, and to provide for the comprehensive, systematic, and continuous develop-ment of the park, parkway, and playground system of the National Capital. The Director of National Park Service is executive 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 6 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 comprehensive, consistent, and coordinated plan for the National Capital and its environs, which plan shall include recommendations to the proper executive authorities as to traffic and transportation, plats and subdivisions; highways, parks, and parkways; school and library sites; playgrounds; drainage, sewer, and water supply; housing, building, and zoning regulations; public and private buildings; bridges and water fronts; commerce and industry; and other proper elements of city and regional planning. Paragraph (c) transfers to this Commission the power previously vested in the highway commission, namely, the approval or revision of the recommendations of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia for changes in the existing highway plan. Paragraph (d) vested the 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 Colum for use by the Commission in accelerating park purchases within the istrict. 698 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, respectively, by the carriers and by the employees thereof interested in the dispute. The Railway Labor Act also applies to every common carrier by air engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, and every carrier by air transporting mail for or under contract with the United States Government, and every air pilot or other person who performs any work as an employee or subordinate official of such carrier or carriers, subject to its or their continuing authority to supervise and direct the manner of rendition of his service. 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 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 National 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 Ad-justment Board and not adjusted in conference between the parties or where conferences 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 un-successful 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 MISCELLANEOUS Offical Duties 699 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 oard. 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 grants and obtains fellowships both from its own funds and from funds obtained from other sources for Latin American graduates in medicine and allied sciences. It also publishes in four 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 necessary personnel, including an assistant director, secretary, 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 American Sanitary Code and the Pan American Sanitary Conferences. The Bureau is supported by a fund contributed by all the American Republics in proportion to their populations. Address all correspondence to the Director, Pan American Sanitary Bureau, Washington, D. C. 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 na-tion annually paying that part of the budget of expenses which its population bears to the total population of all the Republics. Its general control is vested in a governing board made up of the diplomatic representatives in Washington of all the Latin-American Governments and the Secretary of State of the United States. Its executive officers are a director general and an assistant director, elected by the board. They in turn are assisted by a trained staff of editors, statisticians, compilers, trade experts, translators, librarians, and clerks. It is strictly international in its scope, purpose, and control, and each nation has 700 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS equal authority in its administration. Its activities and facilities include the following: Publication in English, Spanish, Portuguese, with separate editions, of an illustrated monthly bulletin, which is the record of the progress of all the Republics; publication of handbooks, descriptive pamphlets, commercial state-ments, maps, and special reports relating to each country; correspondence covering all phases of pan-American activities; distribution of every variety of information helpful in the promotion of pan-American commerce, acquaintance, cooperation, and solidarity of interests. It also sets the date and prepares the programs for the International Conferences of the American States, known as the Pan American Conferences, and is custodian of their archives. Its library, known as the Columbus Memorial Library, contains 105,000 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; the seventh conference, held at Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1933, and the eighth conference, held at Lima, Peru, in 1938, considerably enlarged the functions of the Pan American Union. All com-munications should be addressed to the Director General, Pan American Union, Washington, D. C. PERMANENT JOINT BOARD ON DEFENSE The Permanent Joint Board on Defense was set up by the United States and Canada for the purpose of undertaking studies relating to sea, land, and air prob-lems, including personnel and matériel, in connection with the defense of the United States and Canada. RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD, THE Creation, authority, and purpose.—The Railroad Retirement Board was estab-lished by the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935 (49 Stat. 967), approved August 29, 1935, which, as amended by part I of the act of June 24, 1937 (50 Stat. 307), is cited as the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937. Additional responsibility is de-rived from the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act (52 Stat. 1094), approved June 25, 1938, as amended by the act approved June 20, 1939 (Public, No. 141, 76th Cong.) and by act approved October 10, 1940 (Public, No. 833, 76th Cong., 3d sess.), and from Public Resolution No. 102, Seventy-sixth Congress, Third Session. Under the authority of these acts, the Board administers two re-lated social insurance systems—one for the payment of annuities to aged or dis-abled railroad employees or benefits with respect to their deaths in certain cases, and pensions to former railroad pensioners, and the other for the payment of un-employment insurance benefits to railroad employees who become unemployed. The retirement and unemployment insurance acts cover employees (other than those engaged in the physical operation of mining coal) of any carrier by railroad, express company, or sleeping-car company, subject to part I of the Interstate Commerce Act (with the exception of certain electric lines), and companies owned or controlled by or under common control with one or more of them and perform-ing any service (except casual, trucking, and mining coal) in connection with the transportation of passengers or property by railroad; employees of associations, MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutres 701 bureaus, and agencies controlled and maintained by carrier or carrier subsidiary employers and engaged in the performance of services in connection with or inci-dental to transportation by railroad; and employees of railway labor organizations national in scope and organized in accordance with the Railway Labor Act, their State and national legislative committees, and their insurance departments. Employees of local lodges and divisions of railway labor organizations and employee representatives are under certain circumstances covered by the retire-ment acts but not by the Unemployment Insurance Act. Organization.— Board is composed of three members appointed by the The President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate—one upon recom-mendation of representatives of employees, one upon recommendation of repre-sentatives of carriers, and one, the chairman, without designated recommendations. The Board is organized so as to integrate the duties imposed by the retirement and insurance acts. The administrative organization is divided into two branches, the staff branch in which are centered the service functions, and the operations branch. The chairman serves ex officio as chief executive officer and, as such, is responsible for the proper performance, in conformity with the policies and the rules of the Board, of all the functions and the exercise of all powers residing in the Board, except such as are reserved by the Board. The Secretary of the Board maintains all the official records of the Board, drafts precedent orders, interprets rules and orders, and acts as the Board’s examiner on appeals by applicants from decisions of the Appeals Council. The heads of the bureaus in the staff branch report, and are administratively responsible, directly to the chief executive officer. The staff branch embraces four bureaus: General Control, Law, Research and Information, and Audits and Investigations. : The director of unemployment insurance is also the coordinator of operations. Under the administrative direction of the chief executive officer, he is responsible for the supervision and direction of the operations branch. Included in this branch are the Bureau of Employment and Claims, the Bureau of Wage and Service Records, and the Bureau of Administrative Services. The functions of the Bureau of Employment and Claims in Washington are divided between three divisions—Retirement Claims, Clearance and Coordination, and Employment Service. Claims for annuities and death benefits under the Railroad Retirement Acts are adjudicated in the Division of Retirement Claims. The Division of Clearance and Coordination is the coordinating center of the nation-wide system for servicing the Unemployment Insurance Act, the primary operations of which, including the adjudication of claims and their certification for payment, are placed in ten regional offices. An auxiliary administrative service is performed, under contract and for an agreed compensation, by covered employers who designate certain of their employees to receive unemployment insurance claims and regis-trations and forward them through a higher placed employee to the appropriate regional office of the Board. The Division of Employment Service operates an employment service for the railroad industry. Employment offices are part of the organization of each regional office and function in close coordination with the operations involving the receipt and processing of unemployment insurance claims. RAILROAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1937 Annusities.—To receive an annuity, an individual who is otherwise qualified must either (1) be 65 or more years of age or (2) have completed 30 years of creditable service and be totally and permanently disabled for regular employ-ment for hire, or (3) be 60 years of age and either (a) have completed 30 years of creditable service or (b) if he has less than 30 years of creditable service, be totally and permanently disabled for regular employment for hire (under either (a) or (b), however, the monthly annuity is less than would be payable at age 65 by ¥go for each calendar month that the individual is under age 65 at the time his annuity begins to accrue). The amounts of the monthly annuities are computed by mul-tiplying the number of ‘‘years of service’’ by the sum of the following percentages of the average monthly compensation: 2 percent of the first $50; 1% percent of the next $100, and 1 percent of the next $150. In computing the average monthly compensation, no part of any month’s compensation in excess of $300 is recognized. The average monthly compensation used for years of creditable service prior to 1937 is the average earned by an individual in the calendar months included in his years of service in the years 1924-31 (except when in the judgment of the Board the service during 1924-31 is insufficient to constitute a fair and equitable basis). All service subsequent to December 31, 1936, is included 64674°—77—2—1st ed——46 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS and if the total number of years of such service is less than 30, then, for individuals who were on August 29, 1935, in the active service of, or in an employment rela- tion to, an employer under the act, or who were on that date employee representa-tives, the years of service prior to January 1, 1937, may be included but not so as to make the total years of service exceed 30. : Provision is also made for minimum annuities to individuals who are em-ployees under the act at age 65 and who have 20 years of service. The minimum annuity based on average compensation of $50 or more, is $40 a month; if themonthly compensation is less than $50, the annuity is 80 percent of such com-pensation except that if such 80 percent is less than $20, the annuity is $20 or the same amount as the monthly compensation, whichever is less. Annuities are payable on the first of each month for each preceding month, but an annuity does not accrue for the calendar month in which an annuitant dies. Joint and survivor annuities.—Under certain prescribed conditions a joint and survivor annuity may be elected instead of a single-life annuity. A joint and survivor annuity. involves a reduced annuity to the annuitant during life and, after the death of the annuitant, a survivor annuity to the surviving spouse during life. The amounts of the two annuities are such that their combined actuarial value is the same as the actuarial value of the single-life annuity that would otherwise be payable. An election of a joint and survivor annuity, once made, is irrevocable, except that it may become inoperative under certain ¢ircum- stances, including the death of the employee or the spouse before the annuity begins to accrue. A survivor annuity accrues from the first day of the month in which the employee-annuitant dies. Death benefits.—Provision is made for the payment of death benefits under certain conditions to designated survivors, or to the legal representatives of the deceased, with respect to the death of individuals who were employees after December 31, 1936. The amount payable as death benefit is an amount equal to 4 percent of the total compensation of the deceased earned as an employee (excluding earnings in excess of $300 in any one calendar month) after December 31, 1936, less the amount of annuities paid or accrued to the employee or to a surviving spouse, or to both. Pensions.—Section 6 of the act provides that beginning July 1, 1937, each individual then on the pension or gratuity roll of an employer by reason of his employment, who was also on such roll on March 1, 1937, shall be paid on July 1, 1937, and on the first day of each calendar month thereafter, a pension at the same rate as the pension or gratuity granted to him by the employer without diminution by reason of any general reduction or readjustment made subsequent to December 31, 1930, but such pension shall not exceed $120 a month. Persons on such pension rolls who were, on July 1, 1937, eligible for annuities, were not entitled to receive pensions after the pension payments due on October 1, 1937, but may receive annuities upon filing applications. Source of annuities, pensions, and death benefits.—The act created an account in the Treasury of the United States known as the Railroad Retirement Account and authorized the appropriation to the account in each fiscal year of an amount actuarially determined by the Board to be sufficient as a premium to provide for the payment of all annuities, pensions, and death benefits under the Railroad Retirement Acts of 1935 and 1937. That part of the premium which is not im-mediately required for the payment of annuities, pensions, and death benefits is invested in obligations of or guaranteed by the United States to bear interest at the rate of 3 percent per annum. The Carriers Taxing Act of 1937 (50 Stat. 435), approved June 29, 1937, levies an income tax on the covered employees and an excise tax on the covered em-ployers, with respect to so much of the compensation paid by employers to em-ployees as is not in excess of $300 for any calendar month. The rate of tax on employees, as well as that on employers, started at 23; percent in 1937 and is to increase by % percent every 3 years until it reaches the maximum of 3% percent, effective beginning in 1949. The taxes are collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue and are paid into the Treasury of the United States as internal-revenue collections. THE RAILROAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1935 The claims of individuals (and the claims of spouses and next of kin of such individuals) who relinquished their rights to return to service and became eligible for annuities before the enactment of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 are adjudicated under the act of 1935; however, individuals who did not become MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 703 eligible before June 24, 1937, for annuities under the act of 1935 (whether they relinquished rights before or after June 24, 1937), but who would have been eligible under the act of 1937 if that act had been in force from and after August 29, 1935, may receive annuities under the act of 1937, but their annuities may not begin before June 24, 1937. The death benefit under the 1935 act is a monthly payment for 12 months, each payment being equal to one-half the annuity which an individual was receiving or was entitled to receive at the time of his death. The benefit is payableto the widow or widower or, if there be neither, to the dependent next of kin; payments begin with the month in which death occurred. RAILROAD UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE ACT Effective date.—The original act, as amended June 20, 1939, became effective on July 1, 1939, both with respect to the payment of benefits and the collection of contributions. The amendments to the act approved October 10, 1940, be-came effective, with minor exceptions, on November 1, 1940, and the following discussion covers the provisions of the act as thus amended. Exclusive coverage—The act makes exclusive provision for the payment of unemployment benefits based upon the employment covered by the act. How-ever, the Board may enter into agreements with State agencies for the payment of benefits to individuals who perform services covered by either or both the railroad and the respective State acts. Benefit basis.— Benefits within the uniform benefit year beginning July 1 of each year are payable on the basis of earnings (excluding that in excess of $300 in one month) in covered employment in the calendar year, termed the ‘‘base year,” preceding the beginning of the benefit year. To be eligible for benefits in any benefit year, an individual must have earned at least $150 in covered em-ployment in the corresponding base year. Benefits are payable with respect to days of unemployment in periods—termed registration periods—of 14 days, except that if an employee changes his place of registration, he begins a new registration period with the first day for which he registers at an employment office other than the one at which he last registered. Benefits are not payable in a benefit year until an individual has had a registration period of 7 or more days of unemployment. When he has had such registration period, benefits are payable therefor for all days of unemployment in excess of 7, and, thereafter, benefits are payable for each day of unemployment in excess of 4 in any regis-tration period beginning in the same benefit year. A day of unemployment is a day on which an individual is able to work and is available for work and with respect to which (1) he has earned no ‘‘remuneration’’ as defined in the Act, and (2) he has registered at an employment office as required by regulations prescribed by the Board. Disqualifications.—Days of unemployment of any individual do not include any day in any period with respect to which period the Board finds that he is receiving or has received payments under the Railroad Retirement Acts, insurance benefits under title II of the Social Security Act, or payments for similar purposes under any other act of Congress, or unemployment benefits under an unemploy-ment compensation law of any State or of the United States other than this act except that, if the payments, other than unemployment benefits, under such other acts are less than the payments which would otherwise be payable under this act, this restriction does not apply to the payment of the difference under this act. Individuals are disqualified for varying numbers of days for several reasons, including leaving work voluntarily without good cause, refusing to accept suitable work offered, failing without good cause to comply with directions of the Board to apply for suitable work or to report to an employment office, and knowingly making or aiding in making a fraudulent claim for benefits. Furthermore, with respect to any individual, days of unemployment do not include any Sunday or holiday or two or more such successive days unless such day is, or days are, immediately preceded and if the registration period does not end with such day or days, also followed by a day of unemployment. Benefit scale—The daily benefit rate is scaled from $1.75 to $4 according to the total amount of earnings in the base year. As benefits are payable for a maximum of 10 days in a registration period of 14 days, the maximum benefits for any such period vary from 10 times $1.75 to 10 times $4, or from $17.50 to $40, according to base-year earnings. The maximum amount of benefits payable in a benefit year is 100 times the daily benefit rate, or from $175 to $400. 704 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Columns I and II of the following table show, respectively, the several com-pensation ranges in the base year and the resulting daily benefit rates, as set forth in the act. Columns III and IV show, respectively, the maximum benefits pay-able with respect to a registration period of 14 days and a benefit year. Maximum benefits pay-; able in a— Total compensation in base year Dally bine: Registra-| ponon¢ tion period r of 14 days yen I II ITI Iv Tn S00.008 ae es nH mare rr As $1.75 $17. 50 $175. 00 $200° 60 $474.90 silos wir D nar vd a a eT I 2.00 20. 00 200. 00 $475:t0. 8740. 90:0 5 Lo ibn hsm Sun v8 an] SLL 2. 25 22. 50 225.00 370040899900 oma ta a anti ane ha 2. 50 25. 00 250. 00 S000 10-80, 200.00 ri ia ran ee rE nn br re A 3.00 30.00 300. 00 $1300:T0 $1.,800:007 00 bb A a TRE a 3. 50 35.00 350. 00 $1,600 andover_.__:.___... DLO SBR LE MR BT SG ST 4.00 40.00 400. 00 Source of benefits and administrative expenses.—To support the unemployment-insurance system, the act levies on covered employers a contribution, which is collected by the Railroad Retirement Board, equal to 3 percent of the compensa-tion, excluding any excess over $300 a month, payable to an employee. Of the proceeds, 90 percent is credited, for the payment of benefits, to a special account designated as the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Account, maintained in the Unemployment Trust Fund established by section 904 of the Social Security Act. The remaining 10 percent is deposited, to meet the expenses of adminis-tering the act, in a special fund designated as the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Administration Fund. Under the act, transfers have been and are being made to the Railroad Unem-ployment Insurance Account from the State accounts maintained in the Unem-ployment Trust Fund of (a) a share of the balance in the State-pooled funds as of June 30, 1939, equal to the ratio of contributions from employers and em-ployees covered by the act to total contributions collected and credited to such fund as of that date; (b) balances in reserve accounts of covered employers as of June 30, 1939; and (¢) all contributions from covered employers and employees collected in the second half of 1939. Similarly, the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Administration Fund is credited with the amounts collected or collectible by the Treasury under title IX of the Social Security Act from covered em-ployers with respect to the calendar years 1936, 1937, 1938, and the first half of 1939, less certain amounts. Also, there is transferred to the Railroad Unem-ployment Insurance Account so much of the balance of the Railroad Unemploy-ment Insurance Administration Fund as of June 30 of each year as is in excess of $6,000,000. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Creation and The Securities and Exchange Commission was created authority.— under its organic act, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Public, No. 291, 73d Cong.), approved June 6, 1934, for the purpose of administering that act and the Securities Act of 1933, which was previously administered by the Federal Trade Commission. The scope of the duties and powers of the Commission was enlarged through the passage of subsequent legislative enactments, namely, the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 (Public, No. 333, 74th Cong.), approved August 26, 1935; chapter X of the bankruptey act, as amended by the Chandler Act (Public, No. 696, 75th Cong.), approved June 22, 1938; the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 (Public, No. 253, 76th Cong.), approved August 3, 1939; the Invest-ment Company Act of 1940 (title I, Public, No. 768, 76th Cong.), approved August 22, 1940; and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (title II, Public, No. 768, 76th Cong.), approved August 22, 1940. Functions of the Commassion.—The functions of the Commission generally embrace the following five categories: Supervision of registration of security issues, qualification of trust indentures covering particular types of security issues, and suppression of fraudulent practices in the sale of securities under the MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 705 Securities Act of 1933 and the Trust Indenture Act of 1939; supervision and regulation of transactions and trading in outstanding securities, both on the stock exchanges and the over-the-counter markets, as provided by the Securities Ex-change Act of 1934; regulation of public utility holding companies as provided in the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935; preparation and submission to the courts of advisory reports on plans of reorganization, and participation as a party in corporate reorganizations under chapter X of the bankruptcy act, as amended; and the registration and regulation of investment companies and invest-ment advisers under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Objectives of the Securities Act of 1933.—The Securities Act of 1933 is designed to compel full and fair disclosure to investors of material facts regarding securities publicly offered and sold in interstate commerce or through the mails. Its pro-visions are also designed to prevent fraud in the sale of securities. Issuers of securities to be publicly offered and sold in interstate commerce are required to file registration statements with the Commission. These registration statements are required to contain specified information, including financial statements, cer-tain exhibits, and the form of prospectus proposed to be used in selling the securities. These registration statements are available for public inspection. Objectives of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.—The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is designed to eliminate manipulation and other abuses in the securities markets; to make available currently to the investing public sufficient information regarding the affairs and financial condition of the corporations whose securities are traded in the securities markets to enable the investor to act intelligently in making or retaining his investments and in exercising his rights as a security holder; and to prevent the diversion into security transactions of a disproportionate amount of the Nation’s credit resources. Objectives of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.—The Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 is designed to eliminate abuses and to provide a greater degree of protection for investors and consumers in the field of public utility holding company finance and operation. In addition to requiring full and fair disclosure of financial transactions, the act provides for Commission supervision of security transactions by holding companies and subsidiaries; supervision of acquisitions of securities, utility assets, and other interests by hold-ing companies and their subsidiaries; and supervision of dividend payments, solicitation of proxies, intercompany loans, and the making of service, sales, and construction contracts. The act also calls for simplification of uneconomic holding company structures. Objectives of the provisions of chapter X of the bankruptcy act, as amended, relating to the Securities and Exchange Commission.—Chapter X of the bankruptey act, as amended, which chapter supersedes section 77B of that act, affords the appro-priate machinery for the reorganization of corporations (other than railroads) in the Federal courts under the bankruptcy act. The Commission’s duties under the chapter are, first, at the request or with the approval of the court, to act as a participant in proceedings thereunder in order to provide independent, expert assistance on matters arising in such proceedings. Second, the Commission is empowered to prepare, for the benefit of the courts and investors, advisory reports on plans of reorganization submitted in such proceedings. Objectives of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939.— Briefly, the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, which adds a new title (title III) to the act of May 27, 1933, as amended, (title I of which is the Securities Act of 1933), requires that bonds, notes, debentures, and similar securities publicly offered for sale, sold, or delivered after sale through the mails or in interstate commerce, except as specifically exempted by the act, be issued under an indenture which meets the requirements of the act and has been duly qualified with the Commission. The provisions of those two acts are so integrated that registration pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 of such securities to be issued under a trust indenture shall not be permitted to become effective unless the indenture conforms to the specific statutory requirements expressed in the Trust Indenture Act of 1939. The indenture is automatically ‘‘qualified” when registration becomes effective as to the securities themselves. Objectives of the Investment Company Act of 1940.—The Investment Company Act of 1940 provides for the registration and regulation of investment companies. Investment companies, unless exempted, or unless registered as provided in the act, are forbidden to conduct their activities through use of the mails or instru-mentalities of interstate commerce. Registration of investment companies becomes effective upon the filing with the Commission of notifications of registra-tion. Complete forms of registration statements ‘are required to be filed by 706 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS registered investment companies. These registration statements are required to contain certain specified information, which includes information with respect to the business affiliations and experience of the officers and directors of the com-panies. Annual and special reports are required to be filed for the purpose of keeping reasonably current the data contained in these registration statements. The act also contains certain prohibitions and regulatory provisions applicable to registered investment companies. Objectives of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.—The Investment Advisers Act of 1940 provides for the registration and regulation of investment .advisers. Investment advisers, except as specifically exempted by the act, who make use of the mails or instrumentalities of interstate commerce in connection with the investment advisory business are required to register by filing with the Com-mission applications for registration containing certain specified information. The administrative machinery for registration under this act is similar to that provided in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for the registration of over-the-counter brokers and dealers. Information available to the public.—Information contained in registration statements, prospectuses, applications, reports, and other public documents, filed pursuant to the provisions of the acts administered by the Commission is available for inspection in the public reference room of the Washington office of the Com-mission. Photocopies of such public information may be procured at nomi-nal rates from the Washington office only. Public reference rooms are also maintained in the New York and Chicago regional offices, where a great deal of in-formation relating to securities registered on exchanges is available for examination by the public. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, THE 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. The ‘“‘increase of knowledge’ the Institution accomplishes through researches in many branches of science and through scientific exploration in all parts of the world. Much of the research is now conducted in the laboratories and offices of the several bureaus listed below that originated from the early work of the Insti-tution and are administered by it. The “diffusion of knowledge’ is carried on through several series of publica-tions based on its researches and collections, through its museum and art gallery exhibits, and through an extensive correspondence. . 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 860,000 volumes, pamphlets, and charts. GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 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, archaeology, ethnology, and physical MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 707 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, historic airplanes of Langley, Wright, and Curtiss, Lindbergh’s “Spirit of St. Louis,” and Wiley Post’s “Winnie Mae.” NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART The National Gallery of Art is a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution created by joint resolution of Congress approved March 24, 1937, as a result of Andrew W. Mellon’s gift to the Nation of his art collection and a monumental gallery building. The above act accepting Mr. Mellon’s gift provided that the art col-lections already in possession of the Smithsonian Institution and theretofore designated the National Gallery of Art should thereafter be known as the National Collection of Fine Arts. The National Gallery of Art is administered for the Smithsonian Institution, in which title is vested, by a board of trustees (nine in number). Briefly, the collection which Mr. Mellon had been over 40 years in bringing together consists of 126 paintings and 24 pieces of sculpture, including some of the best examples of the work of the great masters of the Italian, Flemish, Dutch, Spanish, and English schools. The important Dreyfus collection of Renaissance sculpture was obtained by Mr. Mellon as well as large bronzes by Sansovino and Giovanni da Bologna. He also acquired a number of portraits by distinguished American painters, such as Gilbert Stuart, Copley, West, Sully, and others. On July 14, 1939, a further important gift to the National Gallery of Art was announced, that of the Samuel H. Kress collection of 375 Italian paintings and 18 pieces of sculpture. Nearly all of the important painters of the Italian school, from the middle of the thirteenth through the eighteenth centuries, are repre-sented in the Kress collection. Thus the gallery already has some 600 examples of the world’s finest works of art. On March 15, 1941, another gift of over 300 important prints given to the National Gallery by Miss Ellen T. Bullard and three anonymous donors was announced. The National Gallery building, designed by the late John Russell Pope, was completed in December 1940 on the site on the north side of the Mall between Fourth and Seventh Streets. It was accepted by the President in dedicatory exercises on March 17, 1941, and was opened to the public on the following day. NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS The National Collection of Fine Arts is the depository for those portions of the national collections now in the custody of the Smithsonian Institution, relating to the fine arts, including principally paintings and sculpture. It con-tains 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; the William T. Evans collection of paintings by contemporary American artists; and the gift of Mr. John Gellatly, of New York, made in June 1929, of his notable art collection, containing more than 150 pictures by eminent American and foreign artists, large collections of glass, jewels, oriental specimens, antique furniture, and other valu-able and interesting material. By the terms of the gift, the collection was brought to Washington on April 30, 1933. A considerable addition was made by Mr. Gellatly in August 1930 to his original gift. The Freer Gallery of Art 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, etc., 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. 708 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE The International Exchange Service is the agency of the United States Govern-ment for the exchange of scientific, literary, and governmental publications with foreign governments, institutions, and investigators. It receives and dispatches about 700,000 pounds of printed matter annually. 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 3,000 animals. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY The Division of Astrophysical Research investigates solar radiation and other solar phenomena. The work of this observatory is carried on partly in Washing-ton, D. C., and partly at stations on Mount Wilson and Table Mountain, in California; Mount Montezuma, near Calama, Chile; and Burro Mountain near Tyrone, N. Mex. 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. TARIFF COMMISSION, UNITED STATES The Tariff Commission is an independent establishment of the Government created by the provisions of title VII of the Revenue Act of September 8, 1916. The creation of the Tariff Commission was prompted by a realization of the need of an independent organization to supply the President, the Congress, inter-ested committees in both Houses of Congress, and the public with factual infor-mation on which to base tariff and trade policies of the United States, and to act, wherever needed, in an advisory capacity, particularly in technical matters relating to tariff legislation. The Tariff Acts of 1922 and 1930 reenacted provisions similar to those in the Organic Act, and thus continue the Commission’s primary function which is to act as a fact-finding agency. These two tariff acts assigned additional duties to the Commission, notably under the so-called flexible tariff provisions constituting section 315 of the act of 1922 and section 336 of the act of 1930. The Trade Agreements Act approved June 12, 1934, provides that before a trade agreement is concluded the President shall seek information and advice thereon from the Tariff Commission. MEMBERSHIP AND ORGANIZATION The membership consists of six commissioners appointed by the President with the consent of the Senate. These appointments are for 6 years, one term ex-piring each year. No more than three members may be of one political party. The principal office is in Washington and an office is also maintained in the custom house at the port of New York. The Commission has a seal which is judicially noticed. The staff consists of the secretary, who is appointed by the Commission, a planning and reviewing committee, economists, commodity and technical experts, accountants, and a clerical force. GENERAL FUNCTIONS General powers and duties (sec. 332).—The powers conferred upon the Commis-sion under section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and the duties imposed there-under are as follows: (1) To investigate the administration and fiscal and industrial effects of the customs laws of the United States and in general the operation of such laws, including their relation to the Federal revenues and the industries and labor of MISCELLANEOUS : Official Dutzes 709 the country; 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; and questions relating to the arrange-ment of the schedules of the tariff act and the classifications of the articles under the schedules. (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; and organizations and arrangements in Europe similar to the Paris Economy Pact. (83) To investigate the volume of importations compared with domestic pro- (4) To ascertain, whenever practicable, conversion costs and costs of production in the United States and in the principal producing centers of the United States; to ascertain similar costs in foreign countries for comparison with costs obtained in the United States whenever in the opinion of the Commission foreign costs are necessary and can be reasonably obtained; and to ascertain other data affecting competition between domestic and imported articles in the principal markets of the United States. (5) To select and describe articles representative of the classes and the kinds of articles imported into the United States and similar or comparable 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 manufac-turing centers of the United States. duction and consumption and conditions, causes, and effects of competition between foreign industries and those of the United States including dumping and costs of production. SPECIAL FUNCTIONS 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 or orders of exclusion from entry by Presidential proclamation under specified conditions, within stated limitations, and in accordance with the legisla-tive principles defined in those sections, all such Executive actions require previous investigation by the Tariff Commission. Tariff adjustments (sec. 336).—Section 336 provides that the Commission, under such reasonable procedure, rules, and regulations as it may deem necessary, shall investigate the differences in the cost of production of any domestic article and of any like or similar foreign article in the principal competing country 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 percent, of the statutory rate (including any necessary change in classification) as the investi-gation may show to be necessary to equalize such differences. If the Commission shall find, however, that a 50-percent increase in an ad valorem rate of duty will not equalize the ascertained differences, it shall so state in its report to the Presi-dent and shall specify therein such ad valorem rate based upon the American selling price, as elsewhere defined in the act, of the domestic article as the investi-gation may show to be necessary to equalize such difference; no such rate, however, may exceed the statutory rate nor may any such rate be decreased by more than 50 percent. Any specified increase or decrease of a rate or change in valuation 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 elements 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 to hold hearings in the course of its investigations under section 336, to give reasonable public notice thereof and to afford reasonable opportunity for parties interested to be present, to produce evidence, and to be heard at such hearings. Unfair practices in import trade (sec. 337).—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 impor-tation. When the findings and recommendations of the Commission, upon its 710 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS investigation, justify the President in doing so, he is authorized to exclude such articles from entry into the United States, the exclusion to remain in effect until otherwise ordered by the President. The testimony in every investigation under the provisions of this section is required to be reduced to writing, and with the findings of the Commission 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. Discrimination against United States trade (sec. 338).—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, in any one of several ways specified in the section. The Commission is required to report to the President with its recommendations any such discrimi-nations which it may find to exist, and the President is authorized to specify and declare upon articles wholly or in part the growth or product of any such discrim-inating country such new and additional duties as will offset such burdens, or he may exclude from importation articles from such country. Such new or addi-tional duties, may, however, not exceed 50 percent ad valorem. The Trade Agreements Act.—Section 350 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended June 12, 1934, assigned new work to the Tariff Commission by naming it a source of information and advice for the President in conducting reciprocal trade negoti-ations. The special function of the Commission with respect to such negotiations is to supply facts regarding possible concessions by the United States. In eoop-eration with the Department of State and other agencies of the Government, it also analyzes data on all commodities under consideration, and appraises the effect of import quotas, exchange controls, preferential tariffs, and other trade restrictions of foreign countries as they relate to these negotiations. In practice, the Commission has found that its regular organization for the collection of tariff information can be utilized for the numerous phases of trade-agreement work. The Commission is represented on various interdepartmental committees concerned with the reciprocal trade agreements program. Import control section of Agricultural Adjustment Act.—Section 22 of the Agri-cultural Adjustment Act of 1933, as amended (49 Stat. 773, sec. 31; 49 Stat. 1152, see. 5; 50 Stat. 246, sec. 1; 54 Stat. 17), authorizes the President to direct the Tariff Commission to make an investigation when he has reason to believe that articles are being imported into the United States under such conditions and in sufficient quantities to render ineffective, or to interfere materially with, a program of benefits to agriculture under several laws and he has authority on the basis of its report to limit the imports of the article if found necessary by imposing either quantitative limitations or import fees. Cooperation with other agencies (sec. 334).—Section 334 provides that the Com-mission shall in appropriate matters act in conjunction and cooperation with the Treasury Department, the Department of Commerce, the Federal Trade Com-mission, or any other departments, or independent establishments of the Govern-ment. Cooperation with other Government departments has always been an important part of the Commission’s work. In recent months a large and increas-ing part of the facilities and personnel of the Commission have been utilized under this provision, in furnishing information, technical advice, and other assistance to the defense agencies. 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 711 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’ Admin-istration 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 hospital and domiciliary facilities. The Veterans’ Administration is responsible for extending relief to veterans and dependents of deceased veterans of all wars, and persons and dependents of deceased persons who served in the Military and Naval Establishments of the United States during other than a period of war, provided for by the various acts of Congress. These laws include, in addition to pensions, benefits in the form of Government insurance, adjusted compensation and emergency officers’ retirement pay for veterans of the World War, and hospital and domiciliary care. 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 91 facilities providing hospitalization or domiciliary care for all veterans admitted thereto. PRESS GALLERIES WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] Name Paper represented Residence United States News Association__________.___ 1725 New Hampshire Ave. NCW. Yor SU. nad 4605 North Rock Spring Rd., Arlington, Va. NY ashinoton Post a eng 5509 Glenwood Rd., Be-thesda, Md. * Alford, Theodore O..ocooaeo. Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times______ 1347 Connecticut Ave. | Allen, Robert'S... co... United Feature Syndicate, Philadelphia 1525 28th St. Record. *Alston, Roland. -= .......... 2331 Skyland Pl. SE. Andrews, Berl So 2480 16th St. *Arbogast, W. PB. o..ch. 225 East Mason Ave., Alex- andria, Va * Atchison, John'C. eevee. The Argonne. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 800 Lay Drive, Alex-andria, Va. 30 Cedar Lene, Falls Church,V: *Baird, Joseph FH. 2i 0! Overseas News Agency, Inc... ooo. 1900 F St. *Bancroft, Griffing, Jr___.___. International News Service. _ ooo o_o_____ 1421 Massachusetts Ave. *Barcella, Ernest L_._________ United Press Associations... ...... 607 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. *|Barkley, Frederick R.__.___ New York Times aon 3 Armatt Drive, Bethesda, d., R.F.D.3 | *Barkley, Pauli CL S000 Associated Press... ll Eis 1323 North Vernon St., Ar- lington, Va. Barry, Roberf td 08 Co Philadelphialnqmirer __-__ ot rt esc National Press Bldg. Batchelder, Henry D._._._.___ Houston Chronicle, Youngstown Vindicator. 2959 Tilden St. *Bauman, Karl A SSOCIOlo PIORS.. eae iss na srs Re nant 215 Noa 16th St., Arling- on, Va. [| Beach, Clarke. ..._-ccoaee_.. Associated Press... 6327 Meadow Lane, Chevy hase, Md.| *Benl, Johtt Rebs United Press Associations. __________________ 1435 Shepherd St. I Beale, WL Tyatadt thee ASSOCIoter Pros en 2324 Tracy Pl. * Beall Tack. Funivd anh. New York Herald Tribune 4801 Quebec St. *Beardwood, Jack B_________ ASSOcIlol Press x Sraa ar oh 2413 Good Hope Rd. SE. *Beatty, Morgan BE a Associated Prossereas 2 Wop Rd., Silver Spring, Bell, Brian. = FleCoan ASSOCel Press aa 4641 North Rock Spring Rd., Arlington, Va. Bell; Tackle ee Associated Press. _.___ 4137 Henderson Rd. , Arling- ton, Va. New York Herald Tribune_.________________ 3803 Alton Pl. Louisville Courier-Journal. _________________ 3021 44th Pl. Editorial Research Reports. ._____.__.______ 1714 Connecticut Ave. |B emertio "Earl EE pd, Associated Pross oF one 23 Lauer Court, Silver Spring, Md. *Birkenhead, Walter J.....__ New Yori HeraldI'ribune_ "= 1 ~~ 1 1358 Kennedy St. Bnei, Otis is Washington Times-Herald. ______._._._______ 7906 Blair Court, Silver Spring, Md. United Press Associations... __.__._______ ye ee St., Alexandria, *Blake, Harrison... ~~ = = Cleveland News. -0 20 ila 1501 "5th J *Blanck, Roy Gs-= 1 Associated Press__________ 100 B St. N *Bloom, Chester A., Sr.______ Winnipeg Free Press, Regina Leader-Post, 3919 4th St. "North, Arling- Star-Phoenix, Halifax Herald, Lethbridge ton, Va. Herald (Canada), Toronto Evening Tele-gram. *Boeckel, Richard... ....__ Editorial Research Reports_.__._.___Z_______ R. F. D. 4, Rockville, Md. *Bolles, Blair = ooo ooo Washington Star, bt uwa oH 1338 20th St. Associated Press. 2 2r oi ora ne a) Rd. I MO Une eineea 2242 49th St. 3Pors, Joseph'A............ 602 A Pitass riorald Bldg. 4119 North Henderson Rd., Arlington, Va. Boyle, WX oa United Press Associations. _......._......_.. 1846 16th St. *Bramley, Eric Harrisburg Telegraph. Auburn Garden, Alexan-dria, Va. 715 Le EM a LE he Ei Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Brandt, Raymond P_.______ *Brayman, Hayold v2. *Brecht, Raymond Cg sis Brewer, Alva: meee Brightman,:8..C.... oc dees *Bronner, Milton.........-.c.. *Brooks, Ned. ..:. 0 2 =: *Brown, Ashmun N__________ *Brown, Constantine A______ *Brown, George Rothwell ____ *Brown, Harry J... ic: *Brown, Sevellon, 3d______.___ *Browne, Merwin H *Bryant, George B., Jr._____. Bryant, William C_.__.._..... Buchalter, Helen. .........._. Buck, Robert M__._._._.____ *1Buel, Walker S___ ooo... Buergelin, Charles W *Burch, John T *Butler, James Y . . ....%. -... Byrns, Chester J., Jr... ... *Carroll, Raymond G__._____ Carson, Lee. saz our... *Carter. John Franklin___.__. *Catledge, W. Turner. .__.... *Chaney, Rex Ms ~cai.l. Chiang, Joseph. ood. Chinigo, Michael ._._________ *Cherry, Ralph Lo... _......__. *Childs, Marquis W.__.....___ *Chinn, James E___......._.. *Christerson, Melbourne._._.._ *Clapper, Raymond. _________ *IClark, Delbert... o--aiiveun *Cline, John H *Codel, Martin_..-...::. *Cole, Gordon H *Collier, NN. Rex. oii. anv. *ICollins, Ralph A: _........ *Combs, George W___________ *Conlin, Paul A *Clonnor,. Francis J... += cc... Conroy, Edward A___..______ *Constantine, Arthur______.___ *Cooper, H. B. ...o0t. coos... *Coppenbarger, Howard L_._ *Corn, Herbert F *Cornell, Douglas B_____.._.. *Cotten, Felix... occa... *Cottrell, Jesse S. occcamaaan-- *Cowan, John RARE Paper represented St.Louis Pest-Dispateh.....-......_......~. Chicago Sun, Houston Chronicle__.. Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. ___._.._______ Washington Times-Herald._..._...___...___ Louisville Courier-Journal . _________________ Newspaper Enterprise Association____.______ Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Colum- bus Citizen, Kentucky Post. Providence: Jonrnal.... conve ineans adi dnani= En Tn A pd i a King FeaturesSyndicate _....._.._ ....._.. Salt Lake Tribune, Spokane Spokesman- Review. Providence Evening Bulletin. _.___________ Buffalo Evening News________.__ RENE WallStreet Journal ..i ee cae aec ase nanr Wall Street JOULNAL. .c.-cwemmmeionbenE nb sme Washington Daily News... o.oo... ‘Washington Daily News... coco... Cleveland Plain Dealer. . aco comaacaeea. International News Service_ —....___.__..__ ‘Washington Daily News... oc... New Britain Herald, Utica Observer-Dis- patch, Schenectady Gazette, Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette, Newark (N. J.) Ledger, Long Island Star Journal, Nassau Daily Review-Star. Dally News Beécord......-ono anol St. Thomas (Ontario) Times-Journal, Sel. ford (Ontario) Beacon-Herald, British United Press, Ltd, International News Service_ _..___._._________ Bell Syndicate. .......cceemiiouimedemmnsiak-Gh UA eS a United Press Associations... sovevevesa. Chinese Nationalist Daily... occa. International News Service —..--oooooo New York Journal of Commerce. -ccoc...... St. Toulg Post=Dispateh--- 1... ol. Washington Star... aaa lL Associated Press. oeEa Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance..._._.._ Now York Dimes... ear bt emai ity ‘Washington Evening Star... .___.. Radio News Bureaw. = ---c.-.... United States News Association. _.-_-.o..__. Washington Evening Star. _-_..-__-.__._._L_ New YOrE Sui. oeeeemele abs Baltimore Evening Sun_..._._ Washington Times-Herald LB TF Aa ei ee New Yorke Sun. > oo. oc. oo casio International News Service __. _.occcaoaoo___ Associated Press. ...o......cbenedeenebndden. Washington Dally News.............oa..c..c. Washington Siar... :-wceaes ~msori-hot tan. Associated Press...bende mmia ceid ate Charlotte Observer, Arizona Daily Star, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Roch-ester Times-Union, Watertown (N. Y.) Daily Times, Troy (N. Y.) Record, Nash-ville (Tenn.) Banner, Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader. Anderson (S. C.) Independent, Charlotte Observer, Knoxville (Tenn.) Journal. ioe alate Sinker yn it dda Cah Se pest Philadelphia Bulletin... ..cvre-remea=inss-ra Tri-State News Service (Pa.) _occooceonaooo 78: hE Bh ee a a a Sr Residence 4955 Quebec St. 4426 Volta Pl. 13 West Maple St., Alexan-dria, Va. Dupont Circle Apartments. Blackstone Hotel. Dodge Hotel. 4614 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 3809 Kanawha St. 1327 21st St. 1809 24th St. 6412 Ridgewood Amc, Chevy Chase, Md. 5404 39th St. 4711 Albemarle St. 129 North Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. 321 George Mason Drive. 1709 H St 2009 South Arlington Rd., Arlington, Va. 3815 Gramercy St. 2000 16th St. 5015 46th St. 241 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 1834 Columbia Rd. 4000 Cathedral Ave. Mayflower Hotel. 2130 Le Roy Pl. 2206 Wyoming Ave. Buckingham Apartments. Sherman Apts. 3033 16th St. 1141 North Stuart St., Arlington, Va. 501 Dorset Ave., Chevy ase, Md. 1700 North Calvert St., Arlington, Va 1441 Spring Rd. 3125 Chain Bridge Rd. 4741 Reservoir Rd. Falls Church, Va. 2701 32d St. 6366 Ridge Drive. 4774 Old Dominion Drive, North Arlington, Va. 5030 41st St. 6239 33d St. 850 North Woodrow St., Arlington, Va. 4517 45th St. 1426 N St. Lee House. Westminster Hotel. 5616 13th St. 6504 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 401 Fairfield Drive, Be-thesda, Md. cL ed Blvd., Arlington, 2509 Powhatan St., Arling-ton, Va. 2509 Powhatan St., Arling- ton, Va. 1431 33d St. 1717 G St. ‘West Falls Church, Va. 306 Prince St., Alexandria, Va. Onandago Rd., Glen Echo, Md. Press Galleries 717 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence tCraig, Elisabeth May.__._.-_ *Cramer,John'F............ *Crawford, Kenneth G_______ *Crowley, Raymond J._______ *Crowther, Rodney... __..___ *Cullen, George. .-...-...-... Cullinane, Yeo PB. 0... *Cunningham, M. FP. __._.... *Daniel, James MC... ._ | Davidson, Orlando___.______ Mavis, J. Wel oo... *Davis, Watson_____.__.__._.. *De Greve, Arthur F_________ *Dennis, Frank Li. lo... Cl... *Denny, Ludwell.___________. Dervan, Sidney L______._..__ De Vore, Robert T_._________ De Wolf, Oliver W__ *Dickson, C. B_____ = *Dinwoodey, Dean___________ *Dixon, Georges . 1/7.Ji... Donahue, Elizabeth __________ Donnelley, Dixon_____.__.____ Dorris, Henry NC... ...... *Douthat, James W_____.___. *Drummond, J. Roscoe_._.... Dryden, W. Arthur, Jr_______ *Duffield, Eugene S__.___.____ *Dufly, Charles G-.._........ *Durno, George E____________ *Rasley, I. T., ro... .... *Eddy, *Egan, Charleg EB. .._____. Ellis, Charles H., Jr_..______._ Elliston, H *Ervin, Morris D.............. *Erwin, Robert A............ *{Essary, J. Fred... ._.... HEgsary, Helen: 0... .C... *Evans, Edward A __.________ *Faron, Hamilton W_________ *Pay, BltonC....c...a= 0 *Fernsler, David__._. tt. *Feeley, Stephen V__________ Field, Carter-... U.....oinn. *Finney, Nat Si... 0... Pinney, Ruth oii li. *Fisher, John M. 1... ...... | Fitzgerald, Joseph R.o_...... Fleeson, Doris.___. = *Fleisher, Wilfrid_____________ Fleming, Dewey L___________ 64674°—T77-2—1st Portland Press Herald, Portland (Maine) Evening Express, Kennebec (Maine) Jour- nal, Waterville (Maine) Sentinel. Washington Daily News. «ooo coccmecceeeeee Associated Press... oii ii ie nina Baltimere Evening Sun... Ci. lia... Associated Pression Lewiston. Tribune (Idaho)... ..._._.. ‘Washington Daily News______.__________.__ Washington Daily News. oo ccoocomoaan Associated Press_____ WashingtonPost....c. ill alll... i ps-Howard Newspaper Alliance._____._ orrespondencia de Puerto Rico.._.____. Sr LAS Fann Lah MESS tae Associated Press. to 0 LUNIEL ChicagoiSun. ioc.Ul Sui 1-6 Worthington Drive. lio 717 North Carolina Ave: SE. Presidential Gardens, Alex-andria, Va. 16 West "Walnut St., Alex-andria, Va. 2021 Lanier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. National Press Building. LL 16th St., Silver Spring, d. 4906 Westway Drive, Crest-w, Md. 2512 Q St. Presidential Gardens, Alex-phan: Va. 2531 Q 1811 North Key Blvd., Ar-lington, Va; 1422 Rhode Island Ave. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 3125 Nebraska Ave. 3031 Sedgwick St. 3759 McKinley St. 1760 Rhodes St., Arlington, Va. 7908 16th St. United States News Association New York Dally News..oo. L. ai0zesn Louisville Courier-Journal . ___________.______ Washington Daily News. _____.__._.....l.... New-York Times... oo roo ah Associated Press... Lio lo 0 Sia ‘Washington Times-Herald _________._________ International News Service. ____._.________ Associated Pressoc i... oil i Washington City News Service. _____.______ United Press Associations. __________________ Newspaper Enterprise Association__________ Washington Times-Herald ._____.____________ Chicago Tribune Press Service... Washington:Post........ S500 ia Southan Newspapers of Canada yo States News Association Rody Mountoes C.) Telegram, Salisbury N. C.) Evening Post, Hickory (N.C. Skat Greensboro (N. C.) Daily News, Durham (N. C.) Herald-Sun, Evansville Courier Journal. Baltimore: Su... Age Lo, o-oowail ‘Washington Times-Herald_________________. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance____.__. Associated Press... ic. i Ci ill... Associated: Press. oi IE ee Sn Rn SE SR Buffalo Courier-Express Bell. Syndicate... cari fii aL Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune, Des Moines Register and Tribune. Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune, San Fran- cisco Daily News. Chicago Tribune Press Service Washington Daily News____________ New York Daily News____._______ “ New York Herald Tribune___________.__.... Baltimore Sun________ RR ed 47 6306 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Willard Hotel. 2733 O St. 1228 13th St. 1630 Fuller St. 605 Bonifant St., Silver Spring, Md. 2021 Belmont Rd. 5005 North 25th Rd., Ar-lington, Va. Great Falls St., East Falls Church, Va. 4622 43d PI. 1439 Locust Rd. 1406 Crestwood Drive, Alex- andria, Va. 4402 Chesapeake St. 1738 Wisconsin Ave. 2828 Albemarle St. 3834 Beecher St. 8719 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring. Md. 1718 Connecticut Ave. 373 North Glebe Rd., Ar-lington, Va. 1313 28th St. ‘Wardman Park Hotel. 2 5315 Connecticut Ave. 150 Exeter Rd., Bethesda, Md. 4943 Hillbrook Lane. Clifton Terrace East. 3121 Newark St. 3121 Newark St. 1868 Columbia Rd. 424 Edgewood Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 801 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md 4749 Reservoir Rd. Washington Hotel. Columbia Counfiy Club, Chevy Chase, Md. 3900 Connecticut Ave. 1525 28th St. 1530 16th St. 1201 13th St. 3016 Cortland Pl. 2320 Tracy Pl. Roosevelt Hotel. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Flynn, Alfred B._.____: *Blynn, Bdward P -____ '_ *Flynn, Michael W__________ *Folliard, Edward T_________ Foote, Dorthea Scudder Doeg_ *Foote, Morkes.k unio... |Pox:Derek. 2.0 0]. 0050. 0. *Pox, Joseph A... oi i Francis, Lorania K___________ *Francis, Warren B__._______ *Frandsen, Julius, Jr_________ Free, Joes. Lolnnliadl *Friendly, Alfred__.__________ *Pries Elmer. Poul iol... *Trye, William's necnois5 *Gableman, Edwin W________ (Gasch, Marie Manning_______ George, As sl G08 Redooaca *Qillan,; James 600 Jacobo© Goode, William o__._ 0... *Qoodwin, Harold S__________ Gordon, Evelyn._____________ *Gordon, Gerald D...._....___ *Grant, Ben. J., *Graves, Aubrey: Aso. 200 1 *Green, Albert Lo. __._.__.___ Green, Paul 8. aunts... *Green, Sterling F____________ *Grefe, Charles A ____........ [|Gregory, Nicholas P___..____ *QGridley, Charles O__________ *Griffin, Bulkley. ..........._ *Griffin, Gerald. ............. Griffin, Isabel Kinnear_______ *Qross, Gerald G............ *Giross, Richard, Jr... _._ *Grover, John 8 *Qroves, Charles S___________ *Haakinson, Edwin B________ *Hachten, Arthur... >... *Hadley, Edward. -..0.2.|. Hagan, Thomas W.__________ *Haley, Pope ... A....._... *Hall, Frank A... .......%. tHamilton, Charles A________ *Hamilton, Thomas J________ Hancock, Virginia____________ *Harkness, Richard L________ *Harrison, Joseph G__.._____. *Haslet, Charles C..___.__.___ *Hayden, Jay G.....convn.ee *Hazard,John'W............. *Heoath, BAwin J... 0 eeea... Heiman, Beatrice. ___...._____ *Heinl, Robert D............. Paper represented Wall Street Journal onocavair oo 2 New York Post Washington Times-Herald._________________ Washington Post... 0 ooo. Newark Evening News... ______. 2% |; 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_____________ Washington Evening Star___________________ Tog Angeles Times... 0 ooo: den ilmali0 Tog Angeles: Times. oc = cope 0 United Press Associations __________________ Chicago Sun... oui ae or? nocaiin 07 International News Service... ______________ Washington Post Columbus Dispatch... ooit = hon ASSOC] POs... . vevrunomee name mn Bell Syndicate: cod wun 2 Lasiatl coanivanly United Press Associations. __.________._______ International News Service. ________________ Baltimore Evening San... oi ooo 070 | Washington Daily News_____________._._____ Washington City News Service. .___________ Associated Press. owas Uiinil main LL ‘Washington Daily News_____.______________ New York Journal of Commerce ‘Washington City News Service. ____________ Associated Proggooat conf levaiianiatel1 Asbury: Parki(N. J.) Press...|; New York Herald Tribune__________________ GhieagoBIM anni Bosiae. aE Hartford Times, Springfield Union, Worces-ter Gazette, Brockton Enterprise, New Haven Register, Waterbury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Holyoke Tran-seript-Telegram, Pittsfield Eagle. Baltimore'Sum:. col .o0 Sn acama Springfield Union, Brockton Enterprise, Taunton Gazette. Washington Post... .....-ca mw. loaf1 Wall Street Journalooooo oo oon colon Montreal Star, News Chronicle, London, England. Miami Dally. News... Lauerinnst Associated Press... oun... J N. C. W. C. News Service Binghamton Press... oonrooioieiali0 New York Times _| Madison (Wis.) State Journal_______________ Philadelphia Inquirer... oo... __ Christian Science Monitor... .ooooeeo______ Gallipolis (oni) Daily Tribune, Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette. Telegraph Agency, U.S. S. R_________.______ ‘Wabash (Ind.) Plain-Dealer_________._______ Associated Pressi.nao. scininoil caanin Fort Wayne (Ind.) News-Sentinel, Mec-Keesport (Pa.) Daily News, Rome (N. iY.) Sentinel. Residence 3000 Otis St. NE. 6327 Western Ave. 6120 Broad Branch Rd. 2659 Connecticut A ve. 2117 Leroy PI. 3211 Northampton St. 515 20th St. 1351 Montague St. 2808 McKinley Pl. 2808 McKinley PI. 3900 Cathedral Ave. 4005 Davis PI. Alban Towers. 1645 31st St. 1326 34th St. 1753 P St. 6517 32d St. 1830 I St. 2023 Luzerne Ave.,4 Silver Spring, Md 2511 Q St. 1214 National Press Bldg. 2139 Wyoming Ave. R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. 5700 ‘Wyngate Drive, Be-thesda, M 2410 South Inge St., Ar- lington, Va. 532 20th St. 315 South Edgewood St., Arlington, Va. 3904 Edmunds St. 726 National Press Bldg. 1701 16th St. 3 Brookdale Rd., Bethesda, Md. 200 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md. 111 Primrose 8t., Chevy ase, v : 200 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md. 2410 Tunlaw Rd. 4834 Reservoir Rd. Severna Park, Severna, Md. 1742 Q St. 4930 Sherrier Pl. 5410 41st St. 1708 R St. Mayflower Hotel. Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va. 3619 Fordham Rd. 2006 Columbia Rd. 600 20th St. " Prince St., Alexandria, a. 2911 N St. as Queen St., Alexandria, a. 46103d St. North, Arlington, a. 2324 20th St. 1908 South Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington, Va. 1841 16th St. 2801 Adams Mill Rd. 2400 California St. 3922 Livingsion Rd. ,Hyatts- ville, Md. " 2319 King Pl. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name / *Helss, AcE: cool ol. *Helm, William P__._._______ *Henle, Raymond Z_.________ *tHenning, Arthur S_________ *Henry, Jom C..i2. lo Henry, John. cis isi. *Hermann, Arthur F____.____ Hickok, RobertiC. zoo *Hightower, John M_________ *Higgins, E. Worth..--.____.. *Hildebrand, W. A__________. *Hinton, Harold:B._:__ 2... .. *Hirsch, Sol'S: .. —ce¥ao. |[Holleman, Emmit C________ Holmes, Kathleen Sexton_____ *Hopkins, Herbert S_________ Hornaday, Mary... .. cco... *Horner, Garnett D......__. Hottelet, Richard C_.._.______ Houghton, Jean A____________ Hudgins, Lucrece >: 2-5... Huidekoper, Page Caroline___ *Hulen, Bertram D....____.. *Hume, Oscar Lewis. ._.___._ Humphreys, Robert .__._____ Huntley, Theodore A________ *Hurd, Charles W. B_________ Hutchinson, William K______ *Husted, Walter... --—_.. *Huston, Luther A___________ *Hyde, Henry M____.__-_.._.. Hynes, Betty. -Ceceen-Imlay, Virginia: 0.050. *Ingraham, H.R... .o.orto. *Jacobs, Max H.._.--:ioi Jager, Betsy. o. oa-. aa. James, Jean io ooocai iL. *Jamieson, Edward... _..___ *JTanssen, Otto G._..._:--.-. 2Jarreit, Henry oo ic 28. Jefferson, Mary F____________ *Johnson, George Mack______ *Jones, Alexander F__________ *Jones, Carter Brooke. _______ *Jones, Coleman B__.._..__.. sKarig, Walter -2 =o.._.. *Kassewilz, Jack... 3. *Kelly, Francis - J...2... *Kelly,John'W.__o uc = *Kennedy, Frank A__________ *Kennedy, William P________ Renney, NT .oo lu *Kent, rank R., Jr ___-5:0> *Kenworthy, Carroll H_______ *Ridd, George... _i=-co... *Kidney, Daniel M_______._. Killeen, Kathryne_________..__ *Kilpatrick, Carroll. ____._____ King, John B. io inci a- Kinney, William A___________ Paper represented Traffic World, Chicagor lino vetan United States News Association. ____________ Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Toledo Blade_.___ Chicago Tribune Press Service ._.__________. Washington Evening Star. o_o. International News Service... _____ International News Service. _ oo. Washington City News Service. _____ Associated Press. occ oiint Coos _| United States News Association Greensboro Daily News... ccammaneee New York imes. ono ica. Reuters. ol asainnnd ene New-York Times... cad. fa ius. Jackson (Miss.) Daily News. -ocococeemooo Washington Times-Herald Christian Science Monitor... cccocemaaaaa-Washington Star. ai errant United Press Associations. o-ioi.i cio. Dally News Record. ii toio......ooikn Assoelated Press...al oa pai Washington Times-Herald. eee New. York Times... 28a vant son nitL.. Hollywood Reporter... ==ts-loo. coo International News Service... ______:_.._ Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Detroit Times. _ New York mes: -. hn idicaiosioa. International News Service. ooooo__--United States News Association ______._____ New York Times... sos mioalo coud Baltimore Evening Sun... co oooaaa ‘Washington Times-Herald _________.________ Madison (Wis.) State Journal, Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent, La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune, Green Bay (Wis.), Press-Gazette. Associated Press i. coi soiliaan. Houston Posts = uaa ai ace ice nnn Wichita Beacon. oi.an-ao f-buiiiiiio Columbus (Ohio) Dispateh.. ____._____ Houston Chronicle, New Orleans States, San Antonio (Tex.) Express, Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Nashville Tennesseean. United Press Associations -. cn.-.--United States News Association _______.____ Womens Wear ner riemmmenenan-United Press Associations. cocoa = Washington Post... “stessoil... Washington Evening Star. occa New York Herald Tribune. oc cocoooo-. Newark Evening News. _ oo coooocmccdanaao Washington Times-Herald Associated Pross. ......ouiciosliancl. East Oregonian (Oreg.y. coo.ooo St. Petersburg (Fla.) Independent, Jackson-ville Journal, Pensacola Journal and News, Tampa Morning Tribune, Orlando Sen-tinel and Reporter Star, Panama City News-Herald. Washington Star, Springfield (Mass.) Re-publican, Springfield (Mass.) Daily News. Baltimore Morning Sun. ___.___._____...____. Baltimore Morning Sun._________._.._i______ United Press Associations. ._____ .___. .___.. United Press Associations... .i______.__. Indianapolis Times, Evansville (Ind.) Press, Knoxville News-Sentinal. Houston:Chronielez= aii...at. —— Birmingham News and Age-Herald, York-shire (England) Post. Dallas News... anim eedecmnanans Associated Press. oi ce i Residence 3035 Newark St. 6111 44th Ave., Riverdale, d. 3434 Oakwood Terrace. 2728 32d St. 5451 42d St. 1808 I St. 607 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 2022 16th St. 2553 3d St., Arlington, Va. 3611 S St. 2721 Adams Mill Rd. 1425 34th St. 3903 5th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 3220 Connecticut Ave. 3930 Connecticut Ave. 2525 Ontario Rd. 1327 Hemlock St. Clifton Terrace Apts. 1535 34th St. 1505 Emerson St. 1714 N St. 1606 20th St. 3020 Dumbarton Ave. Presidential Apts. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. Box 1177 Bradley Blvd. Bethesda, Md. 4818 Woodway Lane. 1603 Connecticut Ave. 426 South Lee St., Alex- andria, Va. Hollow Hill, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. Brighton Hotel. 1320 31st St. 3935 Livingston St. 7303 Piney Branch Rd., Takoma Park, Md. West Falls Church, Va. George Washington Inn. 107 Sunnyside Rd., Silver Spring, 2 4822 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 120 C St. NE. 2921 Olive Ave. 1731 20th St. 5 2010 North Upton 8t., Arlington, Va. 4640 Garfield St. 1418 N St. 4419 Greenwich Parkway. Seminary Hill, Alexandria, a. 1437 Somerset Pl. 3914 5th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. Alban Towers. 1413 Crittenden St. 2405 1st St. 5538 Johnson Ave., Be- thesda, Md. 1351 28th St. 1425 44th St. Finn’s Lane, Md. 2121 R St. 2146 Florida Ave. 1660 Lanier Pl. Presidential Gardens, Alex-andria, Va. 2100 16th St. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF Name Kirby, Bobert Wo... _._..____. AR Iaw, Spencer... venus *Rlein, Sandor'S.. To... *Kluckhohn, Frank L________ *Kluttz, Jerry. io no *Knebel, Fletcher. ______._____ *RKneeland, Harold. > -.. Knowlton, Robert A__________ *Rrafsur, SS. 1.4 *Ryock, Arthur... ..... *Tahey, Edwin A... .... *Laidlaw, Albert H.________. *Lamm, Lynne M___________ *Lander, William H__________ ER Mya oo i leach, Poul Roll= 0 lear, John... 2... i oi... Lehrbas, Lloyd. *Lewis, Herbert ............ *Lewis, Sir Willmott. ________ *Lincoln, CG. Gould...__ *Lindley, Ernest K..____.__._ siLinz, Bertram P......_..___. *Lippmann, Walter. _________ *1.oftus, Joseph’ A... ....... Loranee, John... 0... Lord, Frank Bu... o..... *Lucey, Charles T____________ *Lu, David *T,yman, Carson ¥_..._..... *Lynn, Robert M.-L. ..... sT,yon, Gideon:A 50.00 1... McClure, William K_________ *McCord, Robert, Bi... *McCullough, John M_______ *McDonough, Stephen, J., Jr_ *McQGaffin, J. Marr__________ *McKelway, Benjamin M____ McLaughlin, Patrick H______ *McNamara, Thomas________ *McNamee, Michael M______ McNeil, Marshall. __________ *MacCormacg, John___________ *Macfarlan, W.. J.5C Mahoney, Haynes R., Jr_____ *Magruder, Milton E________ Mallon, Paul... Mallon, Winifred... _.._.___ *Manly, Chesly.____..________ *Manning, George H., Jr.____ *Marque, Gaston E_.________ Moaorryst, Baek... nae Martin, Georges H_____.______ *Martin, Lorenzo W_________ *Martin, Ovid Mason, Robert:S. = iit... THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Paper represented Residence International News Service. ______sak. 3123 Rittenhouse St. Greenville (S. C.) News, Winston-Salem 325 Franklin St. NE. (N. C.) Journal. United Press’ Associations... _._.._....____. 320 Le Blond Ave., Chev- erly, Md. New York!/Timess guido dig ca.. 3112 N laid. St. Washington Post. 0. CL. oli aii 3705 Lorcom Lane, Arling-ton, Va. 528 Ashford Rd. Silver Spring, Md Washington Daily News... 2... 1314 Massachusetts Ave. United Press Associations... ._..... ___ 2549 Waterside Drive. Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R_________ Lee Sheraton Hotel. WalliStreoti Journal. 200 Baw A Blvd., Arlington, ool. Key a. Now York TImes. oa nen wmanmiaaas 3206 P St. Chicago Dally News... o-oo. i. 2812 Ordway St. Washington Daily News. ......._....0 _..... 3603 24th St. NE. Dally Metal Trade: oi. aaa 2408 California Sf. United Press Associations ________..________ 3825 5th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. Dally Worker (NL YV). oneairaa ll 1439 Euclid St. Dally. Worker dN. Y.) olos i aa i abl 1439 Euclid St. New. Yorke Times... ai. LE josion Drive, Cheverly, Chicago Dally News. .....0 ooh. on 3024 Tilden St. Associated Press io Soauss aonbinld Annapolis Hotel. Associated: Press. 0. Fi 0. 00800 Wardman Park Hotel, St. Paul Dispatch and Pioneer Press._______ Mayflower Hotel. London Times. ____ 2356 Massachusetts Ave. Washington Star 123 Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Washington Post, Des Moines Register, 1814 19th St. and Tribune. Newport Dally News... ....... 3220 Worthington St. New York Herald Tribune Syndicate___.____ 1525 35th St. Associated Press... iii li nil. 406 Delafield PI. Springfield (Mass.) Daily News_____._______ 1305 N St. AlexandrisGazeite. Cc... 1630 R St. 532 20th St. New York World-Telegram_________________ Ashton, Md. Central News Agency of China_ _________.___ Care of Chinese Embassy. Associated Press o--0i. i ili. 3107 Circle Hill Rd., Alex- andria, Va. Richmond News Leader... ..._.___ 1227 New Hampshire Ave. Washington Star sit Uo cali ss 209 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md United Press Associations... ______._._________ 1914 Connecticut Ave. Jersey Observers. Ll laaai 3411 Brown St. Philadelphia Inquirer... icon anil National Press Bldg. AsgoclatediPross. | oi liaati aE Buckingham Community, Arlington, Va. Omaha World-Herald. ©... =... ....: 0... 2805 Valley Drive, Alexan- dria, Va. Philadelphia Inquirer... .........___. The Portner. United Press Associations_____________ 5604 14th St. . Washington Star.sini: 2071 Park 20 Rd. International News Service 1756 Q St. Philadelphia Record... coo caodae 1237 Raum St. NE. New York Journal of Commerce. ___._______ 25 River Rd., Rosslyn, Va. El Paso Herald-Post., Fort Worth Press, By Road, Silver Spring, Houston Press, New York Times EIR oF BRC LE 2120 Bancroft Pl. Ageoeintod Profs. soo iaeo imide iis ana 3120 4th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. International News Service... __________ 1803 19th St. United Press Associations _____._.__...____ 4631 Verplanck Pl. King Features Syndicate ___________________-Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. 2311 Connecticut Ave. 2 Blackthorn Rd. Chevy Chase, Md. Harrisburg News-Patriot, Camden Courier sols 2 Ave., Silver Spring, and Post, Elmira Star-Gazette, Newark Ledger, Long Island Star Journal, Nassau Daily Review-Star. Wall Street Journal oo Lloon to Great Falls Rd., Falls Church, Va. International News Service. ________________ 017 18th St. °° Basler Nachrichten (Switzerland)._______.__ 1708 New Hampshire Ave. Louisville Imes. Ds ae i ahd 1763 Columbia Rd. Associated Press. ci col eae 3109 North Military Rd., Arlington, Va. | 452 Newton St. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Mehrtens, George W________ *Mercer, Charles E___________ *Meredith, L. W Merrill, Anthony ¥F__________ Mickel;:Merlin.............. *Miller; Ben 3. oi oo. Miller, Gustav J.____.________ Miller, Hope Ridings_________ *Miller, Tee Gino.2 *Minifie, James W___.________ *Mobley, Radford E., Jr_____ *Moody, Blair oo rot... *Moore, Payton.coi. Sac Morgan, Ben MM... ~~ *Morgan, Cole E *Morris, Georgeemman cee... *Morris, John PDaioi so *Moulden, Bay. :t-oi... *Mowrer, Edgar A_____..____ *Mullen, G. Frederick_______ *Murphy, William C., Jr____. *Mylander, W.H:... =... Neal, Fred Wil cuss... *Neal, William lL 8S..._._ *Needham, William__________ *Nessly, William V___________ Newman, Blanche F_________ Newman, Edwin_____________ *Newmyer, Arthur G________ *Nixon, Robert Goo... .2.. Norris: JohnGr. zc 5 = *Nover. Barnet: JC __. O’Brien, J. Patrick_____ et *O’Donnell, John 0 1:8© *O Leary, J. Aooon i *O’Neal, Sam A_______ as *O’Neill, Thomas M __ Si *O’Rourke, John: Si... *Qliver, D. Harold. _________. *QOrtiz-Echague, Fernando____ *Page, Robertson. oc. 2.1. Park, Margaret. > sao. *j Parker, George B.__________ *Parrish, Wayne W._________ *Pasley, Fred -asty i vas Pasley, Virginia...... Patterson, Eleanor M________ *Pattie, J. Delton: 2. oc... *Peacock, W.'T carinaoo. Pearson, DIeW......o.. ili... *Pearson, Leon M____________ *Peck, Phillipsi¥..ooc.oi 5 *Perkins, Bertram J__________ *Perkins, Fred WW... ... *Perimeter, Irving. = if *Perry, Glen Li. uoiln..... *Peters, C. Brooks. to. *Peters, Mason... o..t.l i. Petersen, Carl so dice.o.. ai *Pharo, Eugene__ to... Pinkerton, William__________ *Prevost, Clifford A... *Purcell, John K Pusey, Merlo: J... New York Journal of Commerce_____________ WashingtemPostocoiouilsy Sonnieme a oo International News Service. ________________ Orlando (Fla.) Daily Newspapers_.______.___ Associated Press. sooo Cuan Lo Baltimore Evening Sun_____________________ Washington Times-Herald.___.___._._____.__ Washington Pest .t. i oat duisnae Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. ______ New York Herald Tribune. _________________ Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald, Honolul Star Bulletin. Detroit News toi ebay. cots alii, ‘Washington Times-Herald__________________ King Features Syndicate ._.__ wt Se Commercial Appeal (Memphis) ooo... Washington Postae: cn cil cos nad Chicago Journal of Commerce_________._____._ Chicago Dally: Newsla'| co od ior ol United Press Associations-Z oii?wiv Philadelphia Inquirer... ...... Toledo (Ohio) Blade, Pittsburgh Post- Gazette, Toledo Times. WallStreet Journal coo onesats International News Service. _.___.___.__.____ Associated Press. oc omnmuinii eGo i WashingtoniPost....ciolioiian i. ial New:York-Suniao url Bonnie.. o.. Washington Times-Herald oo... International News Service_ ____.____._____._ WashingtoniPoste is i o. Ulannlone Baltimore Evening Sun. 2 “leo cesta ol Washington Post. .....ooacoats oslo... Philadelphin Inqairer..oo..tooo til. Associated Press siaas J. leet lanadad| New York Daily News.coooi ioc t Washington Star... owl idk Stalouis Star-Times.oo Laas Baltimore Evening Sun. o-ooiia io. Washington Daily News. __________ AssociatedPress... ~=ok iba mindy La:Nacioni(Buenos Afres). > "1 Hartford Times, Worcester Gazette, Stam- ford (Conn.) Advocate. Sanford (Fla.) Herald, Stuart (Fla.) Daily News, Daytona Beach News-Journal. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance .______ Harrisburg Telegraph New York News. icigogatfoi di said © New York Daily Newscivo o cooaulln-Washington Times-Herald Daily Traffic World Associated Press: i sean’ Fain iioiooac4 United Features Syndicate United Features Syndicate _________________ International News Service Daily News Record Pittsburgh Press Associated Press New. York Sun. = a New York Times_ Washington Times-Herald United Press Associations... _____.________. Washington Post Associated Press. colic —o eos Detroit Free Press, Akron Beacon Journal, Miami Herald. New York News Washington Post ~~~ sesnec 1 R. F. D. 1, Lanham Park, Md. 1733 N St. 506 East Capitol St. 1731 28th St. SE. 3932 4th St., Arlington, Va. National Press Bldg. Queens Chapel Rd. and District Line, Md. 3118 16th St. 3618 Prospect Ave. 1417 31st St. 3608 S St. 4835 Linnean Ave. 3932 North 4th St., Arling-ton, Va. 2123 California St. 2123 California St. Etowah Farm, Harwood, Md. (R. F. D.). 6323 Luzon Ave. 1830 R St. } 1409 30th St. Franklin Park, E. Falls Church, Va. 3606 Van Ness St. 202 Baltimore Ave., West Gate, Md. 2100 19th St. 4714 Albemarle St. 203 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 518 Concord Ave. 1530 Rhode Island Ave. 1341 New Hampshire Ave. Mayflower Hotel. 3700 Massachusetts Ave. “4 North 25th, Arlington, a. 1214 National Press Bldg. 2737 Devonshire Fl. 3 West Underwood St. Chevy Chase, Md. Westminster Hotel. 3016 Cortland PI. 1222 Quincy St. NE. 5124 45th St. 1214 National Press Bldg. 2219 California St. 6004 34th Pl. 2070 Belmont Rd. 3024 Porter St. 1548 34th St. 1840 24th St. 1814 24th St. 3016 Cortland PI. 3016 Courtland Pl. 15 Dupont Circle. Sandy Spring, Md. 228 North Edgewood St., Arlington, Va. 2820 Dumbarton Ave. 3432 Newark St. 807 North Jackson, Arling-ton, Va. 1634 32d St. 32 West Underwood St., Chevy Chase, Md. 249 Ingraham St. 1380 Peabody St. 715 Albee Bldg. 403 Luray Ave., Alexandria, Va. 1750 Church St. 1713 37th St. 330 Star Bldg. 6360 31st PI. 737 North Nelson Rd., Ar-lington, Va. 9 Albemarle St., West-moreland Hills, Md. 722 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Pyle, Brnest TT... 5..0n.... Rachlis, Bugene.____.._...... Ragsdale, Eleanor W_________ *Ragsdale, Wilmott___.____.___ *PRalph, Henty' DD _-_.__ *Reedy, George E., Jr. ______ *Reichmann, John A_.__..___ Rendell, Richard____ Reuben, Robert E........._.. *Reynolds, J. Lacey.......... *Reynolds, Thomas F_______. Ridder, Walter .......... *Riley, Qeorze D...._......... *Bing, William E.___.__..... *Rippey, Stephens___________ *Riseling, John J. W.......... *Robb, Gene S.....o......... Roberts, Chalmers M_ *Robertson, Nathan W_______ *Robichaud, Gerard A_______ Robinson, G. O., Jr *Robinson, L.. Noble.._..__._.. *Robinson, Tremain F_______ *tRochester, Edward S_______ *Ross, Charles G [[Runyon, Damon, Jr___. % *Ryan, Edward B_..__...__. Sadler, Christine... ..._..._ Sakelladrides, Achilles N_____ [|[Sanders, Kenneth E_________ *gandahl, Clifford... ._....... *Sanderson, J. F [[Schaefle, Louis J oo... *Scheleen, Josephi@C............. Schleider, Leonard. _._.__.____ *Scott, David R *8cott, Owen l.......ceeenen-*Shackford, RB. H......-....... Shapiro, Lionel 8. B__.....___ *Sharpe, H *Shelton, Arthur Bu... _____ *Shepley, James. _ ___.._...___ *Shollenberger, Lewis W__.___ *Shoop, Duke. 0. oe... *Short, Joseph Hc... . ||Shubert, Leonard B_________ Silberberg, William *1Simms, William Philip_____ Simonds, James G....__..._.. *Singleton, Alexander H______ *Slater, Harold Paper represented Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance________ International News Service_ ________.________ Newspaper Enterprise Association. _________ Wall Street Journal Oil City(Pa.) Derrick. ii sia © Philadelphia Inquirer oss voiod Washington Times-Herald.____.____________ International News Service _ _____.._______ United Press Associations. coo “ii a0 United Press Associations. .....vcoeeaeae Chicago Times.________ New York Times Nashville Tennesseean, Fort Worth (Tex.) Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Jackson (Tenn.) Sun, New Bedford Standard Times. ChicageiSumeise, geil too imig lo St. Paul Pioneer Press & Dispatch _________ Washington Times-Herald_______._________._ Washington Times-Herald__._.______________ Bridgeport Post-Telegram _ _________________ Washinglon'Poste -. oso ooo Dailoo New York Journal American... ___________ PM [United Press Associations.........o..0.. Commercial Appeal United States News Association_____________ Houston Chronicle, Arkansas Democrat, Shreveport Times, Nashville Tennesseean. Macon Evening News, Macon Telegraph___ St. Louis Post=Dispateh_..__...__..__._.... Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald ________ New York Journal of Commerce. ___________ International News Service. ___.__________.__ Washington. Posto. ob 00d ar Washington Post. 20s aor Lotil 1 National Herald (Greek)... _.______ Associated Press..co. cin oil ia Associated Press... fil Loi onl oo. Cangding Press... indo lide wo nidwo McClure Newspaper Syndicate... _________ Dally Trafic World... oo... _..... International News Serviee_________________ Sandusky Star-Journal, Sandusky Register. _ United States News Association _..______.__ United Press Associations... __._________ The Gazette (Montreal, Canada). _.___.__.___ United Press Associations... ______________._ Baltimore Evening Sun Loa... United Press Associations... ._._.__ United Press Associations... ________ Kansas City Star Chicago Sun. 2 ikl en Sea ST 2 ASSOCIAted Press. over -neoe —eiam nee Philadelphia Record. = o-oo... Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance._______ New York Herald Tribune... ___._..______ Associated Press...oo iii ial oi. ASSOCIOLEU Pros... uuse busine n eminem International News Service... ccoooooea_. Wall:Strect: Journal or. 2.0. hii oS Oregon Journal, Portland... _....__. .._. Wheeling Intelligencer, Wheeling News, Parkersburg Sentinel, Fairmont West Virginian, Fairmont Times, Martinsburg Journal, Elkins Intermountain, Welsh News, Hinton: News, Point Pleasant Register. Residence 1013 13th St. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 924 14th St. 924 14th St. 4561 Cathedral Ave. National Press Bldg. Franklin Park Hotel. 2032 North Stafford St., Arlington, Va. 2480 16th St. 201 South Fairfax St., Alexandria, Va. George Washington Inn. 1647 34th St. 1731 New Hampshire Ave. 5006 Ventnor Rd., Friend- ship Station, Md. 5032 41st St. 625 Albee Bldg. 3316 Rittenhouse St. 1370 Rittenhouse St. 6408 31st PI. 3608 Park Pl. 2600 16th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 2715 0 St. 6 West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, 5 2115 37th St. Commodore Hotel. 3001 44th Pl. Mohican Rd. Station A. 3401 16th St. 117 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, : 1301 15th St. 2800 Woodley Rd. 1919 19th St. 2445 15th St. Be Prince St., Alexandria, a. 337 17th St. NE. 2 515 K St. 525 Tomes Ave., Alex-andria, Va. 2805 Rittenhouse St. 1412 Kennedy St. 321 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 1742 Irving St. 5314 16th Rd., North Arling-ton, Va. 2001 Plymouth St. 2014 Tunlaw Rd. Ambassador Hotel. 1445 Otis Pl. 1214 National Press Bldg. 4619 Rosedale Ave., Bethes-da, Md. James Garfield Apartments, Alexandria, Va. 3901 Connecticut Ave. 3407 Gilden Drive, Alex-andria, Va. 2033 Florida Ave. 2339 40th Pl. 2101 Sogneciions Ave. 3108 P 302 Leland 8t., Chevy 1411 N. Vernon St., Arling-ton 2441 "oth St. 3541 R St. 1650 Harvard St. Press Galleries 723 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Smith, Denys H. H.-._____ *Smith, Frank: M oo... *Smith, Hal Harrison________ Smith, Hugh A. McClure_._. *Smith, Joseph Kingsbury___. *Smith, Merriman. ____.._.... *Swith, Ralph. aco *Smith, Stanley H_ _.__.._____ *Sourwine, Julien G___.__.___ *Southwick, Rodney L_______ *Spear, Willlam R__....__.__ Springer, Betty Lou__.___.____ *Stafford, Lawrence... _.___.. Starnes, Richard... __ *Steele, Jom Tsoi. Stephenson, Malvina_________ *Sterner, Charles J.___._____. *Stevenson, Charles. _______.. »Stewart, Charles:P o.oo... *Stewart, G. Wi, Jr... *Stewart, Russel H...______. *Stinnett, Jack *Stokes, Dillard ic oc =n... *Stokes, Richard L___________ Stokes, Thomas I. ....____ *Stone, Walker..o. 2... [|Strayer, Martha... _...____. *Strebig, James J ............ sStrout, Richard'L. =... *Stantz, AaB oot a *Sullivan, Mark... [0.00 [|Suter, John Tio fs *Sweinhart, Henry L_________ sTPaishoff; Sol =. 0. 0... *"Talburt, HE. M v2 0.15. Talty, Edward B *Parry, G.L... *Tatarian, Roger Taylor; Joha Wi oo i... *Thistlethwaite, Mark________ *'Phompson, HoQO ie Thompson, Margaret E______ *Thornbarg; Dick... .._.... *Timmons, Bascom N________ *Troth, tte FO ei London Daily Telegraph and Morning Post. Washington Times-Herald._........_________ New YorkiTimes: 0 o.oo a aaa. London Times oe i oie a International News Service... _______ United Press Associations -.__.______.___.__ Atlanta Journaleo LB 0 tS DSR Traffic World, Chieago........ccononramnaartae Sioux City (Towa) Journal, St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press, Altoona Mirror, Davenport (Iowa) Democrat, Alton (Ill.) Telegraph, Fall River (Mass.) Herald News, Shreve-port Journal, Palm Beach Post-Times. Associated Press. 0. ood 0s Associated Bresso bn Philadelphia Record...io 0 0 0 a Grand Rapids Press, Muskegon Chronicle, Jackson Citizen Patriot, Ann Arbor News, Flint Journal, Bay City Times, Saginaw News, Kalamazoo Gazette. New Yorkies: io 00 sooo iil ooo os ‘Washington Daily News. __.__.___._________ United States nig cio L News..._....Cor United Press Associations... Oklahoma Cily Times...210. IL Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Oey . ‘Washington Daily News. ooo... Central Press Association... .......coancaae United Press Associations... ococcaooooe ‘Washington Daily News___.__________._..__. Associated Press. lo ni 0d on Dallas Journal, Austin Daily Tribune, Cedar Rapids Gazette. Washington Post... oc.o rl. le blac Io St. Louis Post-Dispateh._-.._-_ _....__..__. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance ___.___ Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_.._____ Chicago: Tribane oc. hii of Kansas City Kansan, Topeka Daily Capital-Washington Daily News... ._____________ Associnted Press. oi. Lotro Golan a Christian Science Monitor..._._._ Associated Press. io. lui oo ui So. New York Herald-Tribune Syndicate ..____ Associated Press. fo 0 Joo odin ira aa. Charleston (8. C.) News and Courier, Spar- tanburg (8S. C.) Herald-Journal, Wil- mington (N. C.) Star-News. Havas News Agency...oi 2. RadioNews Bureau... =... Zi... Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance .._____ Beaumont (Tex.) Enterprise... _.____.__ New-York DallyNews..........._......... United Press Associations... United States News Association ____________ Indianapolis News, Fort Wayne Journal- Gazette, Terre Haute Tribune. United Press Associations... ._.«........ Detroit Free Press, Akron Beacon Journal, Miami Herald. Cincinnati Post, Cleveland Press, Colum-bus Citizen, Kentucky Post. Chicago Sun, Houston Chronicle, San An-tonio Express, Dallas Times Herald, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Nash-ville Tennesseean, Shreveport Times, New Orleans States, Arkansas Democrat, Youngstown Vindicator. Telegraph Agency of the U. S. S. R_________ Chicago Tribune Press Service... __._____ International News Service. __.ocooooooooo-o New-York imess ti iene 1630-A 19th St. 3206 1st Rd., Arlington, Va. 1824 Jefferson Pl. 1605 New Hampshire Ave. 1922 I St. 205 North Piedmont St., Arlington, Va. Mayflower Hotel. 6680 32d PI. 1608 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. 2909 Dumbarton Ave. 1611 31st St. 1605 New Hampshire Ave. 398 Tennessee Ave., Alex- andria, Va. 1921 Kalorama Rd. 524 Park Rd. 1113 Seminary Rd., Silver Spring, Md 3034 P St. Plaza Hotel. 4210 North Washington Blvd., Arlington, Va. 500 I St. NE. 2407 Leslie Ave., Alexan- dria, Va. 190 Eo Blvd., Arlington, a. 2807 Connecticut Ave. 2900 Connecticut Ave. George Washington Inn. 3917 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 4521 Lowell St 2019 Hillyer PI. 1911 F St. 1728 Allison St. NE. The Burlington. 1421 Massachusetts Ave. a 16th St., Silver Spring, ILE Garfield St. R. F. D. 1, Arlington, Va. 2146 Wyoming Ave. 4119 Connecticut Ave. 102 B St. NE 1638 R St. 4545 Linnean Ave. 100 Kennedy Drive, Ken- wood, 3511 Davenport St. 1836 Calvert St. 1525 East Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Bradley Blvd. at West-Loven Blvd., Bethesda, d. 200 Holly Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 5924 31st Pl. 1807 13th St. SE. 4119 Davis PL 1316 30th St. 4805 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, 3 5705 Nevada Ave. 1429 Columbia Rd. 4900 Western Ave. 724 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Tucker, Bay... iuniiii i Tufty, Esther Van Wagoner... Turcott, Jack oomaose tor. surner, ©. Russell, Jr... ‘Turner, Richard L........_.. Umstead, William I. __._.____. *Vaccaro, Ernest B___________ *Van Devander, Charles. __ __ *Villieras de Longfief, Henri. *Vineent, Jack. co... *Waldrop, Frank O.......... * Walsh, Burke... ooo... Ward, Chester C....._.._____ *Ward WPaule. ool i *|Warner, James E___________ *Warren, Carl *Warren, Ernest G__._________ *Waters, George. o--io-vie-*W atkins, Charles D__.__._____ Watkins, Everett C.._._____ *Watson, Mark S *Webb, Arthur. __ *Werner, *West, AlburnD.___-__._ _-__ Weller, Frank Loo io 000 Welsh, Estelle G-..........> Werner, Dougald____________ *Wheaton, Warren W________ *Whitney, Robert F ____.____ Williams, Gladstone__________ Williams, Sara’ Orr. ..0 *Willoughby, Jesse D________ *Wilson, Lyle C *Wilson, Richard L___________ *Wimer, Arthur @ =.= 5; *Wood, Lewis... oi eur. «Wooton, Paulos f moe © *Worcester, Charles A *Wright, James Li. __ Yeager, Phil B wont foi *Young, Donald A... .-..... *Young, Ralph... sa. *Youngstrm, Lyle P....____. Yost, Paull M suai. soar oo. *Zimmerman, William E_____ McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ____________ Michigan League of Home Dailies, Lansing (Mich.) State Journal, Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press, Battle Creek (Mich.) In-quirer-News. New York Dolly News... United Press Associations: cue. oiolil Associated Pregg. vo, ole iain Lo. International News Service... _oooooooooo_ Associoteq Press. iii aoa i cai ilol New-York Post: of oo oii cassbeatin.oon Havas News Aseney a. oo. oon lui 02 International News Service _.______________. Washington Times-Herald___________ ade N.C. W. 0 NewsService..........oon.... Providence Journal...0... _..... New York Dally News: 2: > «uel Associated Press ‘Washington Times-Herald._. _.._____.________ Associated Progsess roasnioe fin it Indianapolis Star, Terre Haute Star Baltimore Sun cui oe dane nia Daily Herald (London). Associated Press... i. i... Associated Press... co nm ioiiae Associnted Press... Ji tic iaiiginll St. Louis Post-Dispateh-_._ =. __........_. United Press Associations... ________..______ Chicago SUN. 7.6 Seo nnndis somali New Yorke Times): soa ool sens Atlanta Constitution, Fresno (Calif.) Bee, Modesto (Calif.) Bee, Sacramento Bee. Augusta Herald, Athens (Ga.) Banner Herald : Annapolis Evening Capital. _._.___.__________ United Press Associations. _.__...._.__. 0. Des Moines Register and Tribune, Minne-apolis Star-Journal and Tribune. Hartford Courant, New Castle News________ New York Times... ooo. | ool oo) 0. New Orleans Times-Picayune_______________ Washington City News Service. ._..________ Buffalo BveningNews: == ~~ 4. Cleveland News, Madison (Wis.) Capitol- Times, Rock Island Argus, Scranton Times, Tucson Daily Citizen, Mitchell (S. Dak.) Republic. Associated Prose. oo 00 Salil nail; Davenport Times, Waterloo (Towa) Daily Courier, AssociatedPress cn oa, o onal LL Associated Press. tn. oanan bi Sui International News Service__._______.__.____ 6308 Hillcrest Pl., Chevy Chase, 207 North Royal St., Alex-andria, Va. National Press Bldg. Arlington Village, Arling-ton, Va. 3417 P St. 1401 12th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 7701 Eastern Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 411 Hillwood Ave., Falls Church, Va. oo South 14th, Arlington, 1116 Locust Grove Rd. Silver Spring, Md. 1924 35th St. 1013 Upshur St. NE. 3626 Prospect Ave. 4711 Hunt Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. 4424 Harrison St. Raleigh Hotel. 4336 River Rd. °' 5324 Kansas Ave. 4302 Sheridan St., Univer-sity Park, Md. Northumberland Apts. National Press Bldg. Willard Hotel. 2848 28th St. 815 18th St. 2445 15th St. Arlington bil Va. 330 Star B 117 Ym Bla Drive, Chevy Chase, . 701 19th St_ Columbia Country Club. East Falls Church, Va. 1919 Massachusetts Ave. 3834 Beecher St. 5307 Worthington Drive. 2336 Massachusetts Ave. Wilson Lane, Bethesda, d. 130 [East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 2559 Waterside Drive. 3016 Tilden St. 5031 1st St. 3115 44th St. 2730 Wisconsin Ave. 2327 South Inge St., Arling-ton, Va. 1758 Q St. 1301 Som. Rd., Silver Spring, Md 4608 Drexel ‘Rd., College Park, Md. 1317 Emerson St. NE. Zon, Henry Zoo. ivaiaias Pedorated Press icv sa idlie mea: 1613 P St. conti NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN PRESS GALLERIES (Phones: House Press Gallery, N Ational 2437; Senate Press Gallery, N Ational 0618) [NoTE.—e., evening; m., morning; S., Sunday] Paper represented Name Office Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal _ _.__________ Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune___.._____ Alexandria Gazettes... oc. a Altoona Mirror. tt a Alton (I. Pelegraph = cocoain AmarilloNews. > To Anderson (8. C.) independent ei Si Anderson (S. C.) M Ann Arbor (Mich.) Ms (Yisrael Annapolis Evening Capital ________________ Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent (€.)----.___ Arizona Dally Star =. Arkansas Democrat (€., Su) cocoon Asbury Parle N.Y Press... ASEoCIated Press. ae crinaereneas Clifford A, Prevost... Radford E. Mobley___._.____ Margaret E. Thompson_____ Ruth Pinney. == Frank B. Tord :---Julien G. Sourwine__________ Julien G. Sourwine_____.____ Bascom N. Timmons_._____ Mary James Cottrell ________ Mary James Cottrell ________ MorkBoote = > ..-Lawrence Stafford. _________ Jesse D. Willoughby ________ Virginialmlay =... 2. Jesse S. Cottrell ____________ Tremaine F. Robinson______ Charles A. Grefe______._____. Brian:Bell = -1... En Kirke L. Simpson______.____ John Lo Snter i coi noes Chas, DD. Watkins: zed 5x J.-B. Engle ales a ais W.-L Beale, Ir i. i. EBlton'C. Pay. .. ........; Kenneth Sanders.._._.__.____ Ernest G. Warren. —-Douglas Cornell... .... Roland*Alston. ............. William FoPrye ool Carson F. Lyman. .— =: Stephen J. McDonough, Jr_. HR. Ingraham:=-= == / Raymond J. Crowley. _._____ Paul’Barkley— + ~~ "== Ponald A. Young--::z: =: Edwin B. Haakinson_______ John M. Hightower_________ Pope A: Holey-o © a0 os JosephA. Loftns. = = =" Rodney L. Southwick_______ W.-M, Peacock Padi Weir: ~~ > ~~ Irving Perlmeter____________ Morgan M. Beatty __________ Ovid A. Martin____ Roy Q. Blanch =~. 0 David Fernsler -=... 1221 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1630 R St. 1700 I St. 1700 T St. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 906 and 927 Colorado Bldg. 906 and 927 Colorado Bldg. 511 11th St 825 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 726 National Press Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. 725 — . . 726 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Associated Press—Continued______________ Athens Atlanta Atlanta Augusta (Ga.) Banner-Herald. _____________ (Ga) Constitution... .. (Ga.) Journal (e., 8) Herald Baltimore (Md.) News-Post_______________ Baltimore (Md.) Sun (m.) Beaumont (Tex.) Enterprise_______________ BollSyndiente.. =o. 00 alee Birmingham (Ala.) Post (e.) Boston (Mass.) Globe (m., 6.).______.______ Boston (Mass) Post. -oF 10" iF Camden (N. J.) Courier and Post (m., e.)_ Canadian Press Charleston (8. C.) News and Courier______ Charlotte (N. C.) Observer (m.)__________ Chattanooga Free Press_________.______i_. Chicago (Ill.) Daily News (6.)---—c—-._._. Name Jagk LaBelle. ..:0 James. J, Strebig_ ~~~ Clarke Beaeh J. Tio 711 W. P. Arbogast... ..__. Ernest B. Vaccaro. _________ William R. Spear___________ Lyle F. Youngstrom________ Merlin Mickel. ............; Ruth Baldwin Cowan______ Ao Stunt John'S. Grover...__ William A. Kinney_________ Jack Stinnett ~l ooi AlbuenD. West... Walter R. Bottcher_ ________ TLloydLehrbas. ~~= = Francis J. Kelly W. .Maciarlan. >. J. Patrick OBrien... William Needham _________| Sterling PF. Green... Clifford Sandahl._.______. _ Lucrece Hudgins. ___________ Jack B. Beardwood _________ O. 8B. Werner ..~ ~~~ Alexander Singleton_________ Oliver W. De Wolf__________ John Lear ~o i. cr wal Sara Orr Williams___________ Gladstone Williams_________ RalphSmith. .-.-___ Sara Orr Williams___________ George W. Stimpson________ George W. Combs____ Es Henry M. Hyde... BenH Miller....... Arthas L,, Shelton... __: Howard M. Norton___ Louis Azrael. ________ _| Dewey L. Fleming. _________ J MredBssary.. Gerald Griffin... (0.0.0... Frank BR. Kent, Jr... NaT.-Kenney... Georges H. Martin__________ Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. Marlo. Foole ora ii. o. . Rdward B. Talty. ___..__ Carter Field Carroll Kilpatrick___________ Carroll Kilpatrick___________ Henry Ehrliche :_ _= "\ Stephens Rippey._.___ Raymond G. Carroll Bulkley: Griffin...__ Stephen V. Feeley _________ James TL. __. Wright... Merwin H. Browne_________ George H. Manning, Jr_____ J. F. Sanderson George W. Stimpson________ David Tw or Mary James Cottrell ________ Bascom N. Timmons_____._ Paul Bulegehcic:= 2 Edgar A. Mowrer__:_______. Edwin A. Lahey_._.________ Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star 1109 1246 Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. 16th St. National Office Press Bldg. 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 602 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 1214 1708 1256 906, 906, 1059 1252 1210 1210 1054 1054 1013 311 305 1233 1232 4000 1233 1228 1207 1207 1376 Mayflower Hotel. 1109 16th St. 726 National Press Bldg. 1214 National Press Bldg. Bldg, Bldg. Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. T'imes-Herald Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. New Hampshire Ave. National Press Bldg. 927 Colorado Bldg. 927 Colorado Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Club. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. 13th St. Evening Star Bldg. Post Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. Cathedral Ave. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 726 National Press Bldg. Care of Chinese Embassy. ho 128 1230 1230 1255 901 901 901 Leslie Ave., Alexandria, a. B St. NE. National National National Colorado Colorado Colorado Press Press Press Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Press Galleries -NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Chicago Journal of Commerce. ___._____.._ Chicago SumQuooise ls tll oad Chicagoi'Times. conn call onl gals Chicago (111.) Tribune Press Service... Chinese Nationalist Daily. ___.__________. Christian Science Monitor, Boston. _______ Cincinnati (Ohio) Enquirer (m.).______... Cincinnati (Ohio) Post (e.)-......__.... Cincinnati (Ohio) Times-Star (e.)___.___._._ Cleveland: News co.) cnn ds Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer (m.).._____ Cleveland (Ohio) Press (8.) -.-occceeeanan Columbus (Ohio) Citizen (e.)-ooo. Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch... occceeaa-. Commercial Appeal (Memphis)___._._.... Daily Herald (London) ___________________. Dally Metal Trade (e.). i a... cidanadl Daily News Record (New York) (m.)..... PallasJournal o.oo. coi vineaa. Pallas (Tex) News. (Tn.)o coi... ivunacanse Dallas (Tex.) Times-Herald (e., 8.) _.___.. Davenport (Iowa) Democrat. _____________ Davenport ‘Times... 0 no eaiae Daytona Beach News-Journal___________.. Des Mons (Iowa) Register and Tribune m.,e.). Detroit (Mich.) Free Press_____________... Detroit (Mich.) News (€., 8.) cee cccccanes Detroit (Mich) Times... sore vvvinnnaaa PDuluth Herald... = mana Durham (N. C.) Herald-Sun______________ East Oregonian (Oreg.). coerceaian Editorial Research Reports______________._ Elkins (W. Va.) Intermountain___________ Elmira (N. Y.) Star-Gazette (e.)__________ El Paso (Tex.) Herald-Post (e.)_.___.____.. Evansville (Ind.) Courier Journal (m., e.)_ Evansville (Ind.) Press (e., S.)_____._______ Exchange Telegraph Co. (Ltd.), London, England. Fairmont West Virginian. _________..____... Fairmont Times... oor ao aaa fin Fall River (Mass.) Herald-News__________ Fedoraled Press. oo in washmninn Flint (Mich.) Journal (e., S.)_ cee. Fort Wayne (Ind.) Journal Gazette (m.).. Fort Wayne (Ind.) Sentinel. __.__.._____.... Ray Moulder... _-.. =. Bascom N. Timmons_______ Turner Catledge.___________ Harold Brayman..._........ Francis J.'Connor............ Jomesi Breer... Charles O. Gridley_...._...__ Thomas F. Reynolds_.______ Joseph: HL. Short, Jr... Warren W. Wheaton________ Richard Rendell. ______.____ Arthur Henning... ........ Chesly Manly... ..... Willard Edwards. _......_.. Walter Trohan...........~~ Jom M. Pisher...........—.. ‘William C. Strand, Jr___._.. Joseph “Chiang... J. Roscoe Drummond.______. Richard1.;Strout........... Mary Hornaday... ....._.. Joseph G. Harrison________. Edwin W. Gableman_______ Ned:Brooks:.. i...oa 0 DickiThornbarg............c Morris D.Ervin_.......... Ned:Brooks.... o.ooeae Dick Thornburg.......cccu- JeamJames eo Lo ocoaaaaiae FimeriPaPrics =... George Morris... ........ G.-0.. Robinson, Jr... Arthar Webb: ......-...-Lynne M. Lamm__________. John:O.:Atehison........... Jean A. Houghton_________.__ Chester J. Byrns, Jr_________ Bertram J. Perkins_.._...._. George W. Stimpson.____.___ John:EB. Kingt —-... Bascom N. Timmons. _._... Julien G. Sourwine_ ________ Ralph Young.» ...-Margaret Pork... Richard L. Wilson__________ NatiS:Fimney...—.-.. Ernest K. Lindley. _________ Clifford A. Prevost _________ Radford E. Mobley, Jr______ Margaret E. Thompson_____ Jay GB. Hayden... = Blair Moody... CC Theodore A. Huntley_______ Alfred D. Stedman__________ Alfred D. Stedman__________ Robert A; Erwin _..—.-... JomW.RKelly:. = 7 Richard Boeckel____________ George H. Manning, Jr_____ Marshall MeNeil._________._ Robert A. ~~. Brwin__..7. Daniel M. Kidney. _________ Charles J. Sterner__._________ Charles Brooks Smith_______ Charles Brooks Smith_______ Julien Sourwine____._________ Henry Zonetoii] io Mark Yeote i i... ....... Peoples Life Insurance Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. Sherman Apts. 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. 1387 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1393 National Press Bldg. 505 Albee Bldg. 611 Albee Bldg. 611 Albee Bldg. 611 Albee Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 107 Sunnyside Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Raleigh Hotel. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. ‘Willard Hotel. 1050 National Press Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 726 National Press Bldg. 620 Albee Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1700 I St. 2215 Washington Circle. P. O. Box 762. 1265 National Press Bldg. 1265 National Press Bldg. 1265 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 904 Colorado Bldg. 904 Colorado Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 625 Albee Bldg. 625 Albee Bldg. 726 Star Bldg. 1225 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1650 Harvard St. 1376 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 726 Star Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1091 National Press Bldg. 1650 Harvard St. 1650 Harvard St. 1700 I St. 856 National Press Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. 1700 I St. 728 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Fort Worth (Tex.) Star Telegram ._________ Forth Worth (Tex.) Press (0.) -cceececcnea- Fresno (Calif.) Bee Gallipolis (Ohio) Daily Tribune____.__.__.___ Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press (8.). _._._____ Greensboro (N. C.) Daily News (m.)______ Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette __________ Greenville (S. C.) News (m.) __________.___ Harrisburg (Pa.) Newsi(e.)-Loe... Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot mm.) ooo Harrisburg (Pa.) Telegraph. .__.......... Hartford (Conn.) Courant (m.)_.___._._____ Hartford (Conn.):Times: o..... coeannt.2 Havas News AgenCy iii. ennennandn Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette ________________ Hickory (N..C:Record--oo:.. Hinton (W.Va. News. ..io.nn00 a. Hollywood: Reporter... _=.f_.______2.0% Holyoke (Mass.) Transcript-Telegram____ Honolulu Star-Bulletin’ 230... _____. Houston (Tex.) Chronicle (e., 8.) ______ Hoaston-Post. hos. Jokl coiiaans Houston (Tex) Presse)... .._-Indianapolis (Ind.) News (e.)_-___ x Indianapolis (Ind.) Star__________ i Indianapolis (Ind.) Times (€.) --cccueee-International News Service... ccoeeeo.. Jackson City (Mich.) Patriot (e., 8.) _.__-._ Jackson (Miss.) Daily News_ _____________ Jockson' (Tenn) L.. Sun...=.= Jacksonville (Fla.) Journal ________________ Jersey Observer Kalamazoo (Mich.) Gazette (e., Borin Kansas:Oity Kansan (e.,:S.):0 ....o...i..2 Kansas City Star (e.) Times (DY) Kennebec (Maine) Journal. .______________ Kentucky Post ee ef oe me em me tm mn nm mm Bascom N. Timmons. ______ Edward Jamieson___________ J-Tacey Reynolds... _-_. Marshall McNeil ____....__. BdwinJ. Heath... ......-. Mark Foote. _.____.. Lawrence Stafford _ A. Hildebrand __. -| RobertiA. Brwin............. Vircinladmlay ea Spencer Klaw=i vo. George H. Manning, Jr.__.. George H. Manning, Jr___.. Wayne W.. Parrish... BricBramloy: =... Arthor CG. Wimer_ Bulkley'Griffin_.. >... Robertson'Page. ........... Henri Villiereas de Lonfief. _ Henry L. Sweinhart________ Edwin J. Heath. ...ovcenn Oscar Hume -.F __.-o33 Bulkley Griffin...rns Radford E. Mobley, Jr_____ Bascom N. Timmons_______ Edward Jamieson___________ Harold Brayman_.____._____ Henry D. Batchelder___._.. Kathryne Killeen. __________ Marshall McNeil ._____ Mark Thistlethwaite. = Everett C. Watkins_____.____ Daniel M. Kidney __.___._._ William K. Hutchinson_____ Robert Humphreys. ..______ PhillipiG. Reed. ........-.. Willlam'S. Neal... George BE. Durno-..... Joseph Kingsbury Smith__ Harold Slater. 00 ...... (2 Erie'Friedheim cee Arthur Hachten............- JackVincentl: oo. aaa Damon Runyon, Jr_________ Marie Manning Gasch______ Tee Corson oon Griffing Bancroft, Jr________ William E. Zimmerman_____ JosephAsBors.. .......... Arthur F. Hermann........_. Arthur Constantine _________ Haynes R. Mahoney, Jr____ Buck Marryalt-Michael Chinigo_____ William J. Goode % _| Phillips. Peck eae Felix Cotten: dein Johnenry La William I. Umstead .___.___ Charles W. Buergelin_______ Eugene Rachtis_______.__.__.. Leonard Schleider___________ William Dryden..___....._. Robert W.. Kirby ~~ :.L2 Patrick McLaughlin____.____ Mark Boole 22.0... 5 Lawrence Stafford _________ Kathleen Sexton Holmes. ___ J. Lacey Reynolds_________._ Frank A. Kennedy...rr Robert E. McCord ____._____ ClifeSiratton i oh. nis Theodore C. Alford __________ Duke'Shoop: io.2h Elisabeth os Oralg. eee Ned Brooks... ........... 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1246 National Press Bldg. 1300 National Press Bldg, 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 927 Colorado Bldg. 623 Albee Bldg. 726 Star Bldg 825 Albee Bldg. 1054 National Press Bldg. 1376 National Press Bldg. 1376 National Press Bldg. 300 American Bldg. 300 American Bldg. 1232 National Press Bldg. 1233 National Press Bldg. 1233 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1300 National Press Bldg. 726 Star Bldg. 1650 Harvard St. 231 Bond Bldg. 1233 National rons Bldg. 505 Albee Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 223 Kellogg Bldg. 1013 13th St. 608 Albee Bldg. 1397 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 T'imes-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 3930 Connecticut Ave. 1253-1255 National Press 1413 Crittenden St 1700 I St. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. The Burlington. 610 Albee Bldg. 610 Albee Bldg. 1233 National Brom Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office King Features Syndicate ____._____________ 730 Jackson Pl. 730 Jackson PI. George Rothwell Brown____ Times-Herald Bldg. Cole E. Morgan_____________ Times-Herald Bldg. Knoxville (Tenn): Joarnal =..._ ___ Mary Jane Cottrell .________ 1230 National Press Bldg. __. Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel (e., S.). Daniel M. Kidney.__________ 1013 13th St. La Correspondencia de Puerto Rico_______ Sidney L. Dervan__.________ 3759 McKinley St. La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune (e., S.)_.________ Virgintadmlay. 825 Albee Bldg. La Nacion (Buenos Aires). _______________ Fernando Ortiz-Echague____ 1420 New York Ave. Lansing (Mich.) State Journal ____________ Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ 1357 National Press Bldg. Lewiston Tribune (Idaho)... __________... M. F. Cunningham________. 2512 Q St. Lopod Daily Telegraph and Morning Denys H. H. Smith... 1630A 19th St. ost. London Times: Lon oo .. Sir Willmott Lewis__________ 1605 Hampshire Ave. Tardis New Hugh A. McClure Smith___ 1605 New Hampshire Ave. London News Chronicle (England)._.______ Edward Hadley___._________ 1708 R St. Long Island Star-Journal__________________ James JY. Butler ~~ 1376 National Press Bldg. George H. Manning_________ 1376 National Press Bldg. Los Angeles (Calif.) Times (m.)_.___. etding Warren B. Francis__________ 1217 National Press Bldg. 1217-1219 National Press Bldg. Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal _ _________ 1213 National Press Bldg, 1213 National Press Bldg. S.C. Brichtman_ ~~~. 1213 National Press Bldg. Louisville (Ry.YTimesiis J. oc... Lorenzo W. Martin_________ 1025 National Press Bldg. Lynn (Mass) Tey ost = 000 = mug Bulkley Griffin: __.:. 1233 National Press Bldg. McClure Newspaper Syndicate ___________ Ray-Tucker-@. ~~ 6308 Hillcrest Pl, Chevy Chase, Md. McKeesport (Pa.) Daily News___________. John J. Heimburger_________ 1700 I St. Macon (Ga.) Evening News Edward S. Rochester________ 1311 G St. Macon Telegraph 2: it: foo 3% Edward S. Rochester________ 1311 G St. Madison (Wis.) Capital Times____________ Pill Yeager ois Coo 0 505 Albee Bldg. Madison (Wis.) State Journal (e., S.)______ VirginiaImlay. _____._._. 825 Albee Bldg. Virginia Hancock. ._....____. 825 Albee Bldg. Manchester (IN. H.) Union Leader.__._____ Jesse: SiCotirell. =: 1230 National Press Bldg. Martinsburg (W. Va.) Journal ____________ Charles Brooks Smith_______ 1650 Harvard St. Memphis (Tenn.) Press-Scimitar (e.)_____. 1013 13th St. Miami (Fla.) Daily News. ..._..__.._..... Thomas'W. Hogan..._. Mayflower Hotel. Miami (Fla) Herald(m.y =: Clifford A. Prevost_________. 1221 National Press Bldg. Radford E. Mobley, Jr______ 1221 National Press Bldg. Margaret E. Thompson_____ 1221 National Press Bldg. Michigan League of Home Dailies________. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty._ 1256 National Press Bldg. Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune Richard: L. Wilson... _____ 1265 National Press Bldg. (m.,’e., S.). Minneapolis Tribune iG. 2 T... . .c.. NatS. Finney. 5... 1265 National Press Bldg. Mitchell (S. Dak.) Republic. ______________ PhiliVenger 8:2.=. 505 Albee Bidg. Mobile (Ala.) Press-Register_ _____________ Radford Mobley .___________ 505 Albee Bldg. Modesto (Calif.)! Bees dt. _. . ..n...i Gladstone Williams_________ 1246 National Press Bldg. Montreal Dajly:Star oi: 2 =30 0. o_ .. Edward Hadley_.___________ 1708 R St. Montreal Gazette” =. 0. 1%... Lionel S. B. Shapiro_______. Ambassador Hotel. Muskegon Chronicle (e.).._ _.________._..._ Mark Foote 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. National Catholic Welfare Conference 1312 Massachusetts Ave. News Service. 1312 Massachusetts Ave. National Herald (Greek). _________________ 337 17th St. Nashville (Tenn.) Banner____________._____ 1230 National Press Bldg. Nashville (Tenn.) Tennesseean (m., e.)____ 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. J. Lacey Reynolds____._____ 1255 National Press Bldg. Tremaine F. Robinson______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Nassau Daily Review Star.________________ James J. Butler... ..... 1376 National Press Bldg. George H. Manning_________ 1376 National Press Bldg. Newark (N.J) Ledger: oi. __......0 George H. Manning_________ 1376 National Press Bldg. JamesJ. Butler. ........= 1376 National Press Bldg. Newark (N. J.) Evening News____________ Walter Xarjg-903 Colorado Bldg. Dorothea Scudder Doeg 903 Colorado Bldg. Foote. New Britain (Conn.) Herald (e.).__.___.__ James. Butler... .......... 1376 National Press Bldg. New Castle (Pa.) News (e.).______________ Arthur C. Wimer 1232 National Press Bldg. New Haven (Conn.) Register ____________ Bulkley Griffin. _....._.-... 1233 National Press Bldg. New Mexico State Tribune, Albuquerque. Ruth ¥inmey=: =.= = 1013 13th St. New Orleans (La.) Item-Tribune (e., m., TY. Fred Bssary.. ............ 1214 National Press Bldg. New Orleans (La.) States (e., S.)____._____ Bascom Timmons.__________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson___________ 1255 National Press Bldg. New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune (m., PaulWooton:-. ..__...__..-1252 National Press Bldg. Newport (R. I.) Daily News (e.)._____.__ Bertram FP. Linz... .__. 621 Albee Bldg. Newspaper Enterprise Association ________ PeferEdson_t . -_.. . __.. 1013 13th St. Milton Bronner._.._........ 1013 13th St. Eleanor W. Ragsdale _______ 1013 13th St. New York Daily News. ___ cocoa. John O’Donnell. 1290 National Press Bldg. DorisFleeson.._ ~..... __.. 1290 National Press Bldg. Pred Pasley =... ool 1290 National Press Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office New York Daily News—Continued_______ New York Dally Worker =... __. New York Herald Tribune... _____..._... New. Youle Posh. torr en ry New York Sum (ey... = ais i 0 sos New York (m.y-o.co Times i New York World-Telegram (e.).___._______ Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette (6.)_._______ Oil City Derrick Oklahoma City Times Omaha World-Herald:-Co. Parkersburg (W. Va.) Sentinel ____________ Pensacola (Fla.) Journal and News________ Philadelphia Bulletin s-22 = Philadelphia Inquirer (m., 8.) _________ Philadelphia Record (m., 8.) ________ Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gazette (m.)_______. Pittsburgh (Pa.) Press (e., 8)... ._.. George Dixons: ~~ VirginiaPasley.. ~~" "°° Carl Warren. (2 | 5 5 is Adam lapim.. © i Byvalapineis"01 21 Bert: Andrews... NT Nicholas P. Gregory. _______ Jeo P.. Cullinane... Wilirid Bleicher.°° Mark Sulllvan.. ~~" Walter Lippman_____.______ Gene Bobhl-5...1 Palphl, Cherry... ~~ George W. Mehrtens________ Hobart Rowen... .. Michael M. McNamee, Jr __ Albert IniGreen ~~. Charles Van Devander.____. Edward P.Flynn_________ Phelps. H. Adams. _....__ Blanche F. Newman_____.__ Glen Perry li: i = Ralph A. Collins_.____ =. Edward A. Conroy ...______ ArthariKyoekt | = =o) Frederick R. Barkley .._____ Detbert:Clark. =. _ _ Henry N. Dorris. ___ = ~~ Bertram D. Hulen__________ William H. Lawrence. ______ Winifred Mallon____________ Hol H.Smithe: Youlg Sark: io Robert F., Whitney __._______ Lewis Woo James B. Reston_____ Charles P. Trussell 4 Charles B. Egan. =. Thomas J. Hamilton________ CO. Brooks Peters... Charles T. Lucey. _.________. James J, Butler ~~. Henry D. Ralph... Malvina Stephenson. ______-J.Marr MeGafliin_..._______ Carl'Smith. oy Anthony F. Merrill _________ Frank A. Kennedy. ________ Joseph H. Baird... Julien Seurwine © ~~ Frank A. Kennedy. ________ Charles Brooks Smith_______ Raymond Q.: Brecht... ... William C. Murphy, Jr_____ Paull. MeGsahan.. Charles I. Ellis, Jr-_.o... Robert Barey: == oo Paul W. Ramsey... -John M. McCullough_______ Robert:'S. Allen. Betty Lou Springer. ________ William: Silberberg _________ Raymond Z. Henle.________ W.H Mylasnder _ -7 Fred W. Perking i? 1290 National Press Bldg. 1290 National Press Bldg. 1290 National Press Bldg. 1290 National Press Bldg. 1290 National Press Bldg. 1290 National Press Bldg. 954 National Press Bldg. 954 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg, 1624 H St. 1525 35th St. 729 15th St. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg.1367 National Press Bldg.” 1367 National Press Bldg. 643 Munsey Bldg. 643 Munsey Bldg. 643 Munsey Bldg. 643 Munsey Bldg. 643 Munsey Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 1376 National Press Bldg. 1224 National Press Bldg. 1259 National Press Bldg. 950 National Press Bldg. 824 Colorado Bldg. 1731 28th St. SE. 1413 Crittenden St. 1059 National Press Bldg. 1700 I Street. 1413 Crittenden St. 1650 Harvard St. 1413 Crittenden St. 1277 National Press Bldg. 1277 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Theodore A. Huntley. ______ 1230 National Press Bldg. Buckley QGriffin________ -| 1233 National Press Bldg. Kenneth G. Crawford. 975 National Press Bldg. Nathan W. Robertson. _____ 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. Point:Pleasant Register... ci. _..... 1650 Harvard St. Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press_________.__..._. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 1357 National Press Bldg. Portland (Maine) Evening Express____.____ Elisabeth May Craig.____.__ 1233 National Press Bldg. Portland (Maine) Press Herald (m.)_______ Elisabeth May Craig________ 1233 National Press Bldg. Providence (R. I.) Evening Bulletin______ Sevellon Brown 3d __________ 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. Providence (R.1.)Journal =... ......... 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. James E. Warner_______._.. 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. RadioNews Bureau. .c.ao............. Mortin Godel... oc. 870 National Press Bldg. SolaTalsheftes 2. = 870 National Press Bldg. Raleigh (N. C.) News and Observer (m.)._ Carroll Kilpatrick ___________ 1054 National Press Bldg. Reuter’s (Ltd.), London, England _________ Sol:S.Hirseh--..~c ._ 832 National Press Bldg. Richmond News-Leader (e.)___._.____.___.__ Robert M. Lynn... .... 1277 New Hampshire Ave. Rochester Chronicle and Democrat __._____ Jesse 8S. Cottrell... ...... 1230 National Press Bldg. Rochester Times-Union (€.). ooo —o___ Jesse: S. Cottrell... __.. 1230 National Press Bldg. Rock Island Argus (0) io i. oo. 50 PhilYeager. a: 505 Albee Bldg. Rocky Mount (N. C.) Telegram ______.... 726 Star Bldg. Rome (N=Y.) Sentinel =o... John J. Heimburger_________ 1700 I St. St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press___________... Julien G. Sourwine__.___..... 1700 I St. St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch (e., S.)_----Raymond P. Brandt.__..._. 201 Kellogg Bldg. Marquis W. Childs. ___._____ 201 Kellogg Bldg. Richard 1., Stokes... ....... 201 Kellogg Bldg. Estelle G. Welsh________._._ 201 Kellogg Bldg. Charles G. Ross__ 201 Kellogg Bldg. St. Louis Star-Times ice... 0... oo... 1250 National Press Bldg, St. Paul (Minn.) Dispatch (e.)____._.__.___ 625 Albee Bldg. St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press (m.)___.__._ 625 Albee Bldg. St. Petersburg Independent. ______________ Frank A. Kennedy__._______ 1413 Crittenden St. \ St. Thomas (Ontario) Times-Journal ______ Raymond G. Carroll ._...... 4000 Cathedral Ave. Sacramento (Calif.) Bee __.._______._____._. Gladstone Williams_______._ 1246 National Press Bldg, Saginaw (Mich.) News (e.,S.). _________..._ MorkkFoote..-io. =... 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. Lawrence Stafford _________ 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. Salisbury (N. C.) Evening Post____________ Robert A. Brwin____.___.... 726 Star Bldg. Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune (m.)___.__.____. Harry: J-Brown— -. -..... 713 Transportation Bldg. San Antonio (Tex.) Express (m.) _.__.... Bascom N. Timmons. __.... 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson. __________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Sandusky (Ohio) Register _________________ David R. Scott... .... National Press Bldg. Sandusky (Ohio) Star-Journal ___________. PavidR. Scott... National Press Bldg. Sanford (Fla.Y Herald ui i. ooo Morgaret Park... ......... P. 0. Box 762. San Francisco Daily News (€.) _. _ocoooooo Ruth Binney.... 1013 13th St. : Schenectady (N. Y.) Gazette (m.)..._..___. James J. Butler............-1376 National Press Bldg. Seclence Service -o. Lill ns Sool LL BOO Watson'Davis._............. 21st and B Sts. Seranton (Pa.) Times (e.). i cea. Phil ¥Yeageriot -.. _ _._ 505 Albee Bldg. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... G. B. Parker 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Raymond Clapper__________ 1013 13th St. Thomas L. Stokes_.______.._ 1013 13th St. Ernest T. Pyle____ 5 1013 13th St. H. M. Talburt___ 1013 13th St Ludwell Denny_____.___._.. 1013 13th St. Shreveport Journal Ll. cc... . Julien Sourwine_____________ 1700 I Street. Shreveport (La.) Times (m.). _____..____.. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. Sioux City (Iewa) Journal _______________. J 1700 I St. Southern Newspapers of Canada. .__..___. Willard Hotel. Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald-Journal _______ 102 B St. NE. Spokane Spokesman-Review (m.)._.___._.__ Horry J. Brown..... 713 Transportation Bldg. Springfield (Mass.) Daily News___________ William P. Kennedy ________ Star Bldg. . 1305 Springfield (Mass.) Republican (m.)_..__. William P. Kennedy. _____._ Star Bldg. Springfield (Mass.) Union (m.,e.)____._._. Bulkley Griffin..._......... 1233 National Press Bldg. Stamford (Conn.) Advocate_______________ Robertson Page... ........ 1233 National Press Bldg. Stratford (Ontario) Beacon-Herald _ __.____ Raymond G. Carroll _______ 4000 Cathedral Ave. Stuart (Fla.) Daily News_..______________: Mergaret Parke...... P. O. Box 762. Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald______. John Xlorance:..... ... N St. A.D 1301 15th St. Tampa Morning Tribune______._______._. Frank A. Kennedy.______.. 1413 Crittenden St. Telegraph Agency of the U. 8. S. R_______ Laurence Todd. ............ 999 National Press Bldg. Beatrice Heiman____________ 999 National Press Bldg. SSS. Yralsar 999 National Press Bldg. Terre Hante Andy Star. 5c oeozenenn Everett C. Watkins______._. 1397 National Press Bldg. Terre Haute (Ind.) Tribune (e.)-Mark Thistlethwaite______._ 608 Albee Bldg. Toledo (Ohio) Blade (.)--cccccoocacacaz Raymond Z. Henle_________ 1280 National Press Bldg. ‘W.H. Mylander. ........... 1280 National Press Bldg. Toledo (OhioY Times. 2 cairaciit Reymond Z. Henle_________ 1280 National Press Bldg. W.H.Mylander._.....-.--1280 National Press Bldg. Topeka (Kans.) Daily Capital (m.)._._._._. CHE Stratton ..-c. o-ia-The Burlington. Toronto Evening Telegram _____________... Chester Bloom... =~ National Press ...-. Club. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Office Traffic World, Chicago. _.______ Tri-State News Service (Pa.)__-Troy (N. Y.) Record (m.,e.).__ Troy (N. Y.) Pimesi(e): 2. Tucson Daily Citizen _.......... Tulsa (Okla.) World (m.)_._____ United Features Syndicate___.. United Press Associations. _.__. United States News Association Utica (N. Y.) Observer-Dispatch Wall Street Journal Wabash (Ind.) Plain Dealer___ Joseph C. Scheleen._ John P. Cowan.___ Jesse 8. Cottrell ........._._ JesselS. Cottrell ............ Phil BiiYeager: ........2008 Bascom N. Timmons. _._____ J. Lacey Reynolds__________ Robert 8S. Allen. ............ Drew Pearson. ...........-Leon M, Pearson... cca... LyleiC.:Wilson. ......._. .. Julius Frandsen, Jr_________ HAW. Sharpe: ..........coou Carroll H. Kenworthy ______ Arthur F. De Greve. _______ George Mack Johnson_._____ C. Russell Turner, Jr. ______ John B.Beale: 3 FrediO. Balley.......... cane Sanders. Klein | G. W. Stewart, Jr... Julius C. Edelstein__________ Milton E. Magruder________ RoH. Shackiord.. ..._: Gerard Robichaud. _________ Otto GG. = Janssen... James Shepley _____ William H. Lander__.._____ Dayton Moores... Samuel love... .......__._ George Kidd... ...... H.:0) Thompson. _......... Carl Petersen_d |. ........ Lewis W. Shollenberger_____ William K. Me¢Clure________ Charles P. MecIntosh________ Jom. Steele". ©..._.. Roger Taiarian. .._._ -o.. Dougald Werner. ___________ G. Frederick Mullen________ Robert E. Reuben__________ Edwin Neuman_____________ George S. Wells, 2d___._____ Buby: Black: Wed. Boylessra. RexM. Chaney... Owen. Seott E. Worth Higgins __.____... Dean Dinwoodey._....__..__ Fred. A. Emery... Derek Fox_______ Owen L. Scott___ p John W. . Taylor...i=. Gordon H-Cole: .... Alfred D. Stedman__________ Willlom P..Helm.______. Hemvy Jawretts: (e., S.)__ James J. Butlep. ro Eugene Duffield. __.._______ Charles J. Sterner___________ Alfred FP. Flynn: __.... George B. Bryant___________ Kenneth Kramer. __________ Kermit: V.-Sloan_._ _______ Richard Gress-t ~~ ~~ William C. Bryant___.____.___ Leigh S. Plummer... ~~ Fred W. Nealsz {. —~ Wilmott Ragsdale____.______ Gaston E. Marque__________ Robert D. Heinl"~ 7" 1023 Earle Bldg. 1023 Earle Bldg. 1023 Earle Bldg. 1023 Earle Bldg. National Press Club. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 505 Albee Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1265 National Press Bldg. 1265 National Press Bldg, 3432 Newark St. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. 2201 St. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 2400 California St. Press Galleries 733 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office hington Tvening Star ...c-ceceeeee---G. Gould Lincoln... _____-_--1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Washing 2 William P. Kennedy_..___.. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. AGO Leary oo. aaa 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Constantine A. Brown__.___ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Benjamin M. McKelway___| 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. James E. Chinn_ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. John FL. Cline: 2... ooo. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. N-iRex Collier... 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Joseph A. fox... oc 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Herbert B.Corn_.....-o... 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Gideon A. Lyon... 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. BlairiBollesiliziloooio 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. oo Garnett D. Horner __________ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Carter Brooke Jones_ _______ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Washington City News Service_..._.____._ Arch Bady La 705 National Press Bldg. Gerald DD. Gordon... 705 National Press Bldg. Charles A. Worcester... 705 National Press Bldg. PauliS.:Green. i... 1... 705 National Press Bldg. ’ Robert CO. Hickok........_.. 705 National Press Bldg. Washington Daily News (0.) oc occeeeoooo__ John T. O’Rourke........... 1013 13th St. ” Martha Strayer... —....-. 1013 13th St. Evelyn Gordon... -...... 1013 13th St. Robert M.Buek...._.._..... 1013 13th St. Joseph Robert Fitzgerald.__| 1013 13th St. John'T. Burch... ._.___ 1013 13th St. Harold Kneeland... _.__.___ 1013 13th St. Doni Craig. looseros 1013 13th St. Charles Stevenson__________| 1013 13th St. Howard L. Coppenbarger-__| 1013 13th St. Orlando Davidson. _________ 1013 13th St. Richard Starnes_._____.._.__. 1013 13th St. Dixon Donnelley. ........_. 1013 13th St. Aubrey A. Graves. ._.....__ 1013 13th St. James M. Daniel. ___________ 1013 13th St. Albert H. Laidlaw. ......... 1013 13th St. Russell H. Stewart__________ 1013 13th St. Helen Buchalter..._.__...___ 1013 13th St. John F. Cramer. ....._.__ 1013 13th St. Washington Post (I., 8.) cacaaceaaaanaoi. Robert C. Albright____._____ Post Bldg. Alexander F. Jones_.._..____ Post Bldg. JohmJ. W. Risecling_ Post Bldg. Edward T. Folliard.________ Post Bldg. Hope Ridings Miller________ Post Bldg. Frank Dennis... .....-.. Post Bldg. William V. Nessly_ _.__..___ Post Bldg. Gerald @. Gross... Post Bldg. Christine Sadler-....._..._.. Post Bldg. Barnet Nover............... Post Bldg. John GQ. Norris -._-......._.. Post Bldg. Ernest K. Lindley....__.._. Post Bldg. Edward F. Ryan_____._____ Post Bldg. Merlo). Pusey... Post Bldg. Alfred Friendly ____________. Post Bldg. HEugene' Phare. ...ceeeanot Post Bldg. H.B.Elliston..-">... Post Bldg. John DD, Moris... Post Bldg. Jerry Klute... ... --| Post Bldg. Robert T. De Vore____ --|* Post Bldg. Charles E. Mercer. _________ Post Bldg. Dillard Stokes. =... Post Bldg. Washington Times-Herald_._....._.__..__ Eleanor Patterson... ________ 1317-1321 H St. Michael W. Flynn__________ 1317-1321 H St Charles G. Duffy... 1317-1321 H St. Arthur G. Newmyer________ 1317-1321 H St. Frank C. Waldrop... Za. 1317-1321 H St. Alva Brewer... ies 1317-1321 H St. Prank Smith...... 1317-1321 H St. Gustav Miller............... 1317-1321 H St. Mason Peters. .......omemnue-1317-1321 H St. Otis Black 4 0 1317-1321 H St. Helen Essory_ ._ © ...a....: 1317-1321 H St. George D. Riley. =~. 1317-1321 H St. Betty Hynes. ~~~... 1317-1321 H St. Fraser Edwards...___ 1317-1321 H St. Joseph I. Bante. 1317-1321 H St. Herbert Hopkins. 1317-1321 H St. WilliamE. Ring ~_~-1317-1321 H St. Paul A. Conlin... =: 1317-1321 H St. Chambers M. Roberts. __._._ 1317-1321 H St. Ben M. Morgan... 3 1317-1321 H St. | Marshall W. Baggett ______ 1317-1321 H St. fl George Waters. _____________ 1317-1321 H St. Jack Kassewitz.._____..___._ 1317-1321 H St. | Page Caroline Huidekoper__! 1317-1321 H St. 64674°—T7-2—1st ed 48 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Waterbury (Conn.) American. _______.____ Bulkley Griffin 1233 National Press Bldg. Waterloo (Iowa) Daily Courier_____________ Ralph Youngs. ..C.._..__.. 2215 Washington Circle. Watertown ( N. Y.) Daily, Times Jesse S. Cottrell _____________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Waterville (Maine) Sentinel Elisabeth May Craig. ______. 1233 National Press Bldg. Welsh (W.Va) News. __o-ohecr oo Charles Brooks Smith 1650 Harvard St. Wheeling (W. Va.) Intelligencer Charles Brooks Smith 1650 Harvard St. Wheeling (W. Va.) News Charles Brooks Smith 1650 Harvard St. Wichita Beacon. =i. ts cil inns Betsy Jagerveesio George Washington Inn. Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News Edward Jamieson___________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times_.______._____.. Bascom N. Timmons. ______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Wilmington (N. C.) Star-News Howard Suttle 102 B St. NE. Winston-Salem Journal Spencer Klaw 1054 National Press Bldg. Winnipeg Free Press. -.—co National Press Club. Women’s Wear Daily (e.) ooo. John«Q, Atchison..... 501 Union Trust Bldg. Mary F. Jefferson 501 Union Trust Bldg. Worcester (Mass.) Gazette Bulkley Griffin... ..... 1233 National Press Bldg. Robertson'Page. =i... 1233 National Press Bldg. Yorkshire (England). Post ~—-..__..... Carroll: Kilpatrick =. ..... 1054 National Press Bldg. Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator (e.)..______ Bascom N. Timmons 1255 National Press Bldg. Henry D. Batcheler 1255 National Press Bldg. HOUSE PRESS GALLERY William J. Donaldson, Jr., superintendent, 3730 Brandywine Street. Chester R. Thrift, 1218 Thirty-third Street, and Anthony P. Demma, 5037 Kansas Avenue, assistant superintendents. SENATE PRESS GALLERY Harold R. Beckley, superintendent, 7 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Joseph E. Wills, 2113 North Eighteenth Street, Arlington, Va., and Alfred T. Newberry, 4016 Tenth Street NE., assistant superintendents. Press Galleries 735 RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Press Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXV of the House of Represent-atives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule IV 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 DIRECTORY shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to telegraphic correspondence for daily newspapers or news-paper associations requiring telegraphic service. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges | of the galleries. 5. The Press Galleries shall be under the control of the standing committee of correspondents, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. Approved. Sam RAYBURN, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. STANDING COMMITTEE CORRESPONDENTS Wirrtiam S. NEAL, Chairman JERRY A. O’LEARY, Secretary | Dewey L. FLEMING GEORGE W. STIMPSON NED BROOKS WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION (Press Room, White House. Phone, REpublic 2121) MEMBERS REPRESENTED [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] Name Abbott, Bugenel, = _ co... * Adams, Robert Neal ________ *Atking, Ollie i= ico. *Baker, Elwood A: i __ *Balteell, Jo. ie. deanna *Beall, William GC... _ *Benson, Norton XK ....cxoua--*Bills, Thomas. 3-=: oo. 1.0 *Bordas, Walter... ..___ *Bowman, Guy Dr ...: ___ *Brockhurst, Robert BronLo Brown, J.C-i=-c =: *Burruss, Randolph M Cancellare, Frank E_ *Chinn, Augustus C. Churchill, G. W_____ *Clark, Robert B____ *Clover, Robert M__ *Curtis, Rexx. «tu... *Del Vecchio, Charles *Denton, Robert H__ *Desfor, Max......-. *DiJoseph, John M__ *Dorsey, George M__ Shue Enna FE dt bf. el *Piking, Timothy H..._____.. Ellis; Arthur... *Esper, Hency M.__—_ *Forsythe, William J sae Gates, Robert F_____ *CGiaylin, George B-__._. Glick, Leonard H____ *Goodwin, Harry E._ Sen *Gorry, Charles P___ *Qorry, William J___ *Graham, George Li. _________ *Greenberg, Hyman. *Griffin, Henry. = *Harris, George W--._...___: Howland, Wess_____ *Jamieson, Joseph D_________ *Johnson, Hugo OC___ *Jones, Howard......_____ es *Kalec, George L____ *Kelley, Thomas W_ Kellogg, Steven... *Knell, Charles A____ Biome n *Lanigan, Maurice F Representing— Associated Press Photos... ci. 0 ol Underwood & Underwood __________________ ‘Washington Daily News. __._________._..._.. Washington Evening Star__________._._____.__ Pathe News Ine. = = oes Washington Dally News cic_. ._ ___ International News Photos__........_._____. M-G-M Newsofthe Day._____.__._____ _| International News Photos Associated Press Photos M-G-M News of the Day ‘Washington Post Acme Newspictures, Ine._._____.____.______ Washington Evening Star Associated Press Photos. Harris & Ewing... a Washington Post Paramount News, Inc Associated Press Photos Reni News Photos died bai Pathe News, Tne. Jo on tou 2 100 Associated Press Photos WashinglonPestee Utes coc 0 ‘Washington Times-Herald Department of Agriculture _________________ ‘Washington Times-Herald. .__.__._._._______ Acme Newspietures, Ine... Washington Times-Herald Washington Pest...aii aE = Associated Press Photos Universal Newsreel, Inc_____________________ Depariment of Interior: occ ooo 3 Associated Press Photos... ooo... _ HoamplS &Bwing.o.. Lar Washington Times-Herald Wide World Photos Paramount News, Inc Acme Newspictures, Inc Washington Times-Herald Washington Post Chicago Sun International News Photos Acme Newspictares, Ine... ooo.____ Residence 8300 Oakford Pl., Silver Spring, Md. 1733 N St. 1800 Fort Davis St. NE, 329 17th St. SE. 2459 Tunlaw Rd. 1530 Rhode Island Ave. NE. 2901 18th St. 5302 River Rd. 25 Overbrook Rd., Fairfax, Va. 4842 1st St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 4306 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. Broadmoor, 3601 Connecti-cut Ave. 7801 13th St. 3115 Mount Pleasant St. 3606 3d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 330 Star Bldg. 5533 Manning Drive, Be-thesda, Md. 2331 40th St. 3646 New Hampshire Ave. 806 Princeton Pl. 1332 Locust Rd. 7436 Georgia Ave. 1739 Allison St. NE. 1359 Kalmia Rd. Logan Hotel. 765 Princeton Pl. 4501 19th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 3150 16th St. 2416 10th St. NE. 1512 Montana Ave. NE. 1825 New Hampshire Ave. 3617 S St. 322 North Oxford St., Ar-lington, Va. 4354 North Henderson Rd., Arlington, Va. Commodore Hotel. 5031 7th Pl. 16-B Ridge Rd., Greenbelt, d. 3107 Woodland Drive. 2821 14th St. 8504 Garfield St., Bethesda, Md. : 1506 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md. : 908 Ellsworth Drive, Silver Spring, Md. : 25 Ralston St., Hyattsville, Md 604 Erie Ave. Takoma Park, Md. 2821 14th St. 209 P St. SW. 1220 Allison St. NE. 737 ~J(Wh)co Congressional Directory MEMBERS REPRESENTED—Continued Name Representing— Residence *Lyons, James ©. _...-. ____. *Maeck, Charles J... “5° *Marsland, Joseph E_________ *May, Andrew J... ~~ *MecAvoy, Thomas D.._...... *McNamara, James H._______ *Miller; Bagh... *Muaeller, Jom GC... = *Muto, Anthony: J. i. 0 i *Olth, Alfred J...... O’Halloran, Thomas J.,Jr_.___ * Pridgeon, Irwiny. _............ *Pringle, Chester YL... Puslis, John... *Riordan, Daniel E..________. *Rollins, Byron He. 2-5... *Rous, John *Routt, Francis R..... 0... *Routt, Randolph J.________. *Rubel, Laurence E__________ Schlossenberg, Irving_________ *Seoft, Arthur EB. :. _. *Shere, Jock... Ld ano *Skadding, George R_________ *Smith, Wiliam Joo 22 0 *Tankersley, Garvin E_______ *Thompson, F. Irving... ..... *Thompson, John S__________ *TondvayJohn Al. lo... Proup, OB. io a Tugander, Harry. oo. *Van Tine, Harry M_________ Wentworth, Brandon________ 4801 Connecticut Ave. 7816 Aberdeen Rd., Bradley Woods, Bethesda, Md. 3 Warren Drive, Falls Church, Va. 1903 37th St. 3306 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Va. 10210 Pierce Drive, Silver Spring, Md Washington? Postatr r= cr ~rit users 4409 Yuma St. ‘Washington Evening Star 635 Farragut St. Movietonews, Inc 4 Radcliff Rd., Bellehaven, Alexandria, Va. Paramount News, Inc 5439 30th PI. Hopis& Bwing odo ene 1001 Ridge Rd. SE. Washington Evening Star 6147 30th St. Acme Newspictures, Inc 7327 Georgia Ave. Associated PressPhotos..-0. ~ 1st St. ov. 5700 Pathe News, Ine cis 2 ~ 07 Ss palionie 2608 Highway, Arling- ii ie ton, Wide-World Photos. = 0a 2 t= 4421 aterworth Pl. ‘Washington Times-Herald 3500 14th St. Washington Evening Star 1015 Flower Ave., Takoma Park, Washington Evening Star 303 Lexington Drive, Wood- moor, Silver Spring, Md. Underwood & Underwood 4508 17th St. Washington Posgboit L tiie ema rem atr =~ 20 14th St. N International News Photos 4221 15th st North, Arling- ton, Va. International News Photos_________________ 3517 East ‘Capitol St. Associated PressPhotos. —-ion nish ia 2816 McKinley Pl. Yide WorldPhotos:_--. =: > = 4513 17th St. NE. Washington Times-Herald_.________________ 1727 N. Huntington St. International News Photos 6002 32d St. Acme Newspictures, Inc 702 9th St. SE. Movietonews, Ine; coi immoil 200 Rhode Island Ave. NE. ‘Washington Evening Star 9909 Rogart Rd., Silver Spring, Md. : rR Hotel. 1527 Park Rd. Pathe News; Ine... ocd 1530 16th St. Associated Press Photos 2329 Fairlawn Ave. SE. Wilkinson Photos 3030 North Quincy St., Arlington, Va. Movietonews, Inc 7% Ohestan) St., Bethesda, Washington Times-Herald 4415 49th St. Federal Works Agency 1734 A St. SE. News Photographers’ Association SERVICES REPRESENTED Service Name Office STILL PICTURE SERVICE Acme Newspictures, Ine _ ._...._______ George R. Gaylin, manager_______ 1013 13th St. John'S. ‘Thompson... -ovoeea-1013 13th St. Maurice F. Lanigan_ _ ...__..__.._ 1013 13th St. Frank E. Cancellare_......_._.... 1013 13th St. Chester L. Pringle 1013 13th St. Howarddones: 5. 1013 13th St. Associated Press Photos. aco... G. W. Churchill, manager________ 330 Star Bldg. George BR. Skadding_ = ___. 330 Star Bldg. Herbert XK. White. 7... oo. 330 Star Bldg. Timothy H. Elkins 330 Star Bldg. Hemy Griffins oa 330 Star Bldg. Robert M. vee ncn nan. 330 Star CloVer..caon Bldg. TS BL rr HpCa ER 330 Star Bldg. Chanles P. Gory. oe ae 330 Star Bldg. Williom.J. Corry. ove 330 Star Bldg. Cuy D. Bowman._ _ 330 Star Bldg. Eugene]. Abbott...... __.. Star Bldg. __ 330 John Paslis....o.-.. 330 Star Bldg. 0 Barris EWING... aeet i emma Andrew J. May, manager 1313 F' St. George W. Harris 1313 F St. Thomas J. O’Halloran, Jr____ 1313 F St. Rexx Curtis...= F St.~~ 1313 International News Photos. ._...o...____ Joseph E. Marsland, manager____ 1317-1321 H St. Harry M. NaonTine: —... 1317-1321 H St. VF. Irving’ Thompson... .......... 1317-1321 H St. Walter-Bordas. oi 0 1317-1321 H St. Arthur E. Scott 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. Underwood & Underwood. _..__...__._ Laurence E. Rubel, manager 1538 Connecticut Ave. Robert Neal Adams_______________ 1538 Connecticut Ave. Wide World Photos... Joseph D. Jamieson, manager_____ 330 Star Bldg. William J. Smith 330 Star Bldg. Byron H. Rollins 330 Star Bldg. NEWSREEL SERVICE Fox Movietonews, Inc. _ ooo. Anthony Muto, manager___.______ 736 Munsey Bldg. John A. Tondra 736 Munsey Bldg. EB. M,. Williarng ri mre 736 Munsey Bldg. M-G-M News ofthe Day... J..C. Brown, manager... .... 1005 New Jersey Ave. Charles J. Mack 1005 New Jersey Ave. Thomas 8. Bills ~~ > 1005 New Jersey Ave. Paramount News, Ine... Robert H. Denton, manager 306 H St. Hugo C. Johnson 306 H St. Alfred yd; Oth ~~ 306 H St. Pathe News, Ine" =~ eae George M. Dorsey, manager_ _____ 504 Albee Bldg. Brandon Wentworth 504 Albee Bldg. Jo DaBailzell a 504 Albee Bldg. Universal Newsreel, Inc____________ a James E. Lyons, manager_________ 913 New Jersey Ave. Horry Baeander.. >." ~~ _@ 913 New Jersey Ave. George L. Graham 913 New Jersey Ave. NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENT Washington Daily News. ._____________ William C. Beall 1013 13th St. Ollie Atkins... ~~ ors 1013 13th St. Washington Post Hugh Miller, manager____________ Post Bldg. Harry BE. Goodwin...__.. Post Bldg. Arthur Ellis Post Bldg. Charles DelVeechio_ Post Bldg. Randolph M. Burruss.. -...........-Post Bldg. Irving Schlossenberg______________ Post Bldg. Thomas W. Kelley...= Post Bldg. Washington Evening Star ____._________ Irwin Pridgeon, manager. _________ Star Bldg. John. CooMmellor ~~ oy Star Bldg. Elwood A. Boker... eevee Star Bldg. Franeis:R. Routt... ..eeoreen=a-Star Bldg. 740 Congressional Directory SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Service Name Office Washington Evening Star—Continued..| Randolph J. Routt________________ Star Bldg. Augustus ©, Chinnor oseais Star Bldg. OB Tron... Saas Star Bldg. Washington Times-Herald__.____________ Garvin E. Tankersley, Sr., pie-| 1317-1321 H St. ture editor. Jom, Rens... 1317-1321 H St. Georze lL. Kalee..—......_._ _.._.. 1317-1321 H St. Leonard Hi. Glick: 1317-1321 H St. Jack Wilsonoo gd his 1317-1321 H St. Robert BF. Gates... o.oo. 1317-1321 H St. Wess Howland: i ______ 1317-1321 H St. James H, MeNamara_ _.________.__ 1317-1321 H St. Henry M. Esper..._... 1317-1321 H St. Robert: B. Clark... 1317-1321 H St. OFFICERS OF THE WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION Harry E. GoopwiN, President TromAs S. Binus, Secretary-treasurer Executive Committee RoserT H. DENTON GrorGE R. GayLiN CHARLES J. Mack RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the } designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] Name Representing— Residence *Baukhage, H. B.__o-. 20 *Blair, Frank S., Jr---ce--- Brooks, Bobert T.1...coceuen--Chesnut, Gertrude V__._._.__ *Compton, Walter. _.__._____ Cook, Doni...2.005 =o *Cousing, Peter *||[|Coyle, William Enders____ Cronan, Madeline Ensign.__.__ *Crowley, James G__.________ *Daly, J ohn Charles, Jr... Deihl, Bobert.. ic: nid *Dennis, Albert N *Eaton, Richard >... Frederick, Pauline___________. [| Gillis; Ann *Goad, Rex *CGlodwin, Earl. __....oo...... Harding, Josn.......L 00.0.0 Hatton,idean. Li oi... ae *Hurlbut, James W_____...___ *Joachim, Phillip N. __...-.. Karr David... *Knode, Thomas E_________.__ *Teitch, Albert Co. _______ *1ewis, Fulton,Jr... oo. os McCarthy, Clifford G.1_.._.__ McCormick, Stephen J.1______ *Meclver, Ernest D., Jr_______ [Mason, Mary... (ones *Moore, Robert E. Lee____.__ *Morrison, Fred W_________.. *Neol, William _............. Norman, John___._.......... *Peterson, Ralph H._________ *Pickens, William H._____.___ *Rash, Bryson. ...... -| *Reed, Macon, Jr____._ FT Rockwell, Dorothy C *Rogers, Edwin I,.........._ *Sevareld, Eviecc oonia *Shawn, Bred... reenmets *Smith, Carleton D.............. Stick: Davide... inane *Tully, Francis W.,Jr___..___ *Tuttlc;FrederieB.. ........ *Warner, Albert Li.oanaaea-- National Broadeasting Go: _._...._._.... Mutual Broadcasting System _.____. coo. Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ Transradio Press Services =i: emit Mutual Broadcasting System. _______.._.___ Transradio Press Service... WMAL—The Evening Star Station________ Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ Mutual Broadcasting System __________._.____ Columbia Broadcasting System_______.._.___ Mutual Broadcasting System _________.._.___ Columbia Broadcasting System____..__._.___ Mutual Broadcasting System _ _________...__ Baukhage Radio Associates... coo... Columbia Broadcasting System _______.._____ Columbia Broadcasting System -| Transradio Press Service: ceo ii. National Broadcasting Co_____________.____. National Broadeasting Co... vee e Mutual Broadcasting System... ...._.___ Columbia Broadcasting System _______.___.. Columbia Broadcasting System..______._.____ Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ Transradio’PressService. . ....... cvemmem- Mutual Broadeasting System. ____.._______. Columbia Broadcasting System__.___________ National Broadeasting Co. ....cvvvcvcmeen. Transradio Press Service. cocooncnnen ce Transradio PressiService.. .coceevecweansenms National Broadcasting Co Tronsradio. Press Service... .....cceenneanmme National Broadcasting Co -| Transradio Press Service. ...._...__ National Broadcasting Co ransradio Press Service... .cereeenenecwe— Transradio Press Service... ocoocccomaeaa_. National Broadeasting Co... cea Columbia Broadcasting System _._.__._.__.___ National BroadeastingCo. eeeoo 2 National Broadeasting Co...st Mutual Broadcasting System______________ Yankee Network (Boston) .._____.________._ '‘Pransradio PressiServiee _ . cccecana-. 1735 New Hampshire Ave. a Lee Blvd., Arlington, a. 1830 K St. 25 Ralston Ave., Hyatts-ville, Md. 2032 Belmont Rd. 1343 Girard St. Arlington Village, Arling-ton, Va. 7708 Chicago Ave., Silver Spring, Md 4334 Montgomery Ave., Bethesda, Md. 3332 Volta Pl. 5425 Connecticut Ave. 1018 Vermont Ave. 34 New York Ave. NE. 3051 Idaho Ave. 1731 20th St. 1630 16th St. 916 16th, St. mn Prince St., Alexandria, a. 1850 Mintwood PI. 1727 Massachusetts Ave. 1332 Massachusetts Ave. 100 North Trenton St., Ar-lington, Va. 220 North Thomas St., Arlington, Va. The Raleigh. 5513 Redford Rd., Green Acres, Md Earle Bldg. 4402 Volta Pl. 2300 South Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington, Va. 713 26th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 1301 15th St. 1916 R St. 309 Cameron St., Alexan. dria, Va. 132 Carroll Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 2100 19th St. 2519 Connecticut Ave. 2940 28th St. 1708 North Uhle St., Arling-ton, Va. 1409 16th St. 1230 New Hampshire Ave. R..F. 1, East Falls Church, Va. 625 Jefferson St. 6304 Oak Ridge Ave, Chevy Chase, Md. 4707 DeRussey Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. 2926 Tennyson St. 1325 16th St. 2364 Skyland Pl. SE. Clifton Terrace Apartments, East. ; 3320 University Ave. On leave of absence during service in the armed forces of the United States. Congressional Directory NETWORKS, STATIONS, AND SERVICES REPRESENTED (Phones: Capitol switchboard extensions, House Gallery, 1410 and 1411; Senate Gallery, 1263 and 1264) Network, station, or service Name Office Baukhage Radio Associates. __.._.....-.._-Pauline Frederick 1343 H St. Columbia Broadcasting System Albert L. Warner 856 Earle Bldg. John Charles Daly, Jr 857 Earle Bldg. Albert N. Dennis 858 Earle Bldg. Paul Glynn 807 Earle Bldg. Ann Gillis 856 Earle Bldg. 858 Earle Bldg. 854 Earle Bldg. Ernest D. McIver, Jr 854 Earle Bldg. ErieSevareid...... -....... 856 Earle Bldg. Mutual Broadcasting System Falton Lewis, Jr..._.. St. Frank 8S, Blair, Jr... _....... Robert T. Brooks! Walter Compton. _-7... Madeline Ensign Cronan___ 1627 K St. James G. Crowley 1627 K St. Robert Deihl 1627 K St. 1627 K St. 1627 K St. Stephen J. McCormick. ___ 1627 KX St. David Stick =" 1627 K St. National Broadcasting Co H. R. Baukhage 724 14th St. Peter-Cousins 724 14th St. Earl: Godwin oc: coin 724 14th St. Joan Harding... -724 14th St. Phillip N. Joachim 724 14th St. Thomas E. Knode 724 14th St. Mary Mason 724 14th St. William Neel ot ool 724 14th St. Ralph H. Peterson. 724 14th St. Bryson: Rashi oo .oooiviia 724 14th St. Edwin L. Rogers 724 14th St. Fred Shawn 724 14th St. 724 14th St. Transradio Press Service. . oc cccacecancana-1256 National Press Bldg. 1256 National Press Bldg. 1256 National Press Bldg. Don Cooks. root. in 1256 National Press Bldg. David-Karr. occ ei 1256 National Press Bldg. Clifford G. McCarthy! 1256 National Press Bldg. Robert E. Lee Moore 1256 National Press Bldg. John Norman_________ 1256 National Press Bldg. William H. Pickens 1256 National Press Bldg. Macon Reed, Jr____ 1256 National Press Bldg. Dorothy C. Rockwell 1256 National Press Bldg. Frederic B. Tuttle. _________ 1256 National Press Bldg. WMAL—The Evening Star station William Enders Coyle______ 438 Star Bldg. Yankee Network (Boston) Francis W. Tully, Jr 1215 National Press Bldg. 1 On leave of absence during service in the armed forces of the United States. HOUSE RADIO GALLERY Robert M. Menaugh, superintendent, 322 Second Street NE. Harmon Burns, Jr., assistant, 2813 Quarry Road. SENATE RADIO GALLERY D. Harold McGrath, superintendent, 3533 East Capitol Street. William Vaughan, assistant, 3024 Q Street. Radro Galleries RULES GOVERNING RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Radio Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXYV of the House of Represent-atives, as amended, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule IV, as amended, for the regulation of the Senate wing of the Capitol. -Applicants shall state in writing the names of all radio stations, systems, or news-gathering organizations by which they are employed and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any. Applicants shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims or the promotion of legislation pending before Congress, the Departments, or the independent agencies, and that they will not become so employed without resigning from the galleries. They shall further declare that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department or independent agency of the Government, or by any foreign govern-ment or representative thereof; that they are not engaged in any lobbying activ-ities; that they do not and will not, directly or indirectly, furnish special informa-tion to any organization, individual, or group of individuals for the influencing of prices on any commodity or stock exchange; that they will not do so during the time they retain membership in the galleries. Holders of visitors’ ecards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to all the restrictions of this paragraph. 2. It shall be prerequisite to membership that the radio station, system, or news-gathering agency which the applicant represents shall certify in writing to the Radio Correspondents’ Association that the applicant conforms to the regu-lations of paragraph 1. 3. The applications required by paragraph 1 shall be authenticated in a man-ner that shall be satisfactory to the executive committee of the Radio Correspond- “ents’ Association, who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide news gatherers and/or reporters of reputable standingin their business who represent radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies engaged primarily in serving radio stations or systems. It shall be the duty of the executive com-mittee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association to report, at their discretion, violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker or to the Senate Com-mittee on Rules, and, pending action thereon, the offending individual may be suspended. 4. Persons engaged in other occupations, whose chief attention is not given to the gathering or reporting of news for radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies primarily serving radio stations or systems, shall not be entitled to admis-sion to the Radio Gallery. The Radio Correspondents’ List in the CoNGRES-s1oNAL DirEcTORY shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to the gathering and reporting of news for radio stations and systems engaged in the daily dissemination of news, and of representatives of news-gathering agencies engaged in the daily service of news to such radio stations or systems. 5. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. - 6. The radio galleries shall be under the control of the executive committee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. Approved. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. Harry F. Byrbp, Chairman, Senate Commatiee on Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ ASSOCIATION H. R. BAukHAGE, Chairman FrEp W. Morrison, Vice chairman Fuvuron Lewis, Jr., Secretary (acting) Francis W. Torry, Jr., Treasurer ALBERT L. WARNER, Member ex officio PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives accompany them] Name Representing— Office “Bain, Lois aii of LU To: *Bealtty,J.. Frank. ii... * Belair, Felix, Jr... c.--*Browne, J. Donald *Burns, Warren W.__._.__._.. “Butler, James J. ; [-..-.. *Codel, Martin. = =: *Colborn, Robert.-7. => *Crider, John. ti.20 Davis, Richard J. .-.o-. oo. *Densony'John: oo =. *Doying, George E., Jr___.___ Pield,iCarter: =: I. 0 Fitzgerald, Frederick M______ *Fitzmaurice, Walter_________ *FitzSimmonds, Ann L______ *Freeman, Herbert C., Jr_____ *Poos; Irvin Do ovo Gilpin, Tewie V_..> a Ce lo *La Ban, Richard K *Lamm, Lynne M___ Tang, Will gcc = *Lindley, Ernest K_. -' = *Lockett, Edward B_________ *McAndrew, William R *McCormick, Robert K______ *McCune, Wesley ____________ *MeGee, Saul. *McNaughton, Frank________ MacGonnigle, George *Manning, George H *Martin, Edward H._______._ *Maury, Magruder G *Maynard, Crosby Mls, A. Pr *Moflett, In: W Oudine, Johm A... ..i... *Ragsdale, W. Br.= *Ralph, Henry’ DD _-"= ~~ *Redmond, Pauline *Redmond, Wilfrid *Rippey, Stephens Rixey, Iilian *Sandifer, T.N____ *Sherrod, Robert *Stark, J. C aishofl, Sel c= = 0 * Pat, Trager J National Petroleum News_______...._______ 803 National Press Bldg. Broadcasting Magazine... 870 National Press Bldg. ny 815 15th St. Chilton Pablications: meas omenno 1061 National Press Bldg. National Petroleum News_________._________ 803 National Press Bldg. Hditor-and Publisher... ni National Press Bldg. ...ilccuicaan 1376 Broadcasting Magazine. _ ooo 870 National Press Bldg. Engineering News-Record... ooo. 1252 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 1227 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1252 National Press Bldg. op Magazife ce da ane nh i 870 National Press Bldg. Newsweek. oof. ow ooo adn me Lens 1227 National Press Bldg. The Packer, National Provisioner_..._______ 517 11th St. SW Newsweek _____ CE RR A a RR RE 1227 National Press Bldg. Business Week... .ooioiieitn neniior-1252 National Press enn Bldg. 874 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 1227 National Press Bldg. BAIboard sos. Sih tee de sea dea 3901 Connecticut Ave. RaW EAC nn ie Antes National Press Bldg. Ltda 1081 National Petroleum News_____..__._.__..___ 803 National Press Bldg. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1050 National Press Bldg. 821 15th St. 1227 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. Hii bas Magazine: oo eat 870 National Press Bldg. Colliers Weekly: lean 815 15th St. ER re Tp 1227 National Press Bldg. 1224 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 1227 National Press Bldg. 1376 National Press Bldg. Busliess Week 20 0 iJ 8 1252 National Press Bldg. ConstroctionDally_ oo. iii aa 1252 Bpiiomal Press Bldg. OA ame Eee en Bp a ant 821 15th S Advertising Age = C0 oo a 1226 National Press Bldg. BholMoni Age: a aa 1061 National Press Bldg. Newsweek... -.__._.-____. 1227 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 815 15th St. Oil, Pant, and Drug Reporter, Oil and Gas 1224 National Press Bldg. J ournal. Haire'Publieations® ..._..._...—_. 1203 National Press Bldg. .... Hare Publications. ==. ce... 1203 National Press or. Bldg. i EL ah Se nehe 1232 National Press Bldg. Tim 815 15th St. Penton Publications. _.____ 1050 National Press Bldg. Tim 815 MeGraw-Hill Publications? . 2. 00 I 1252 National Press Bldg. Newsweak Lo Li ad bili nnn 1227 National Press Bldg. MecGraw-Hill Publications. .-cmeeeceeee 1252 National Press Bldg. 870 National Press Bldg. 1081 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. nes Publications. oirin aman 12033 National Press Bldg. The American Banker... =... nna. 1410 American Aviation Dally... __.___ 1317 F St. McGraw-Hill Publications. .-.cvvenememn-= 1252 National Press Bldg. 745 746 Congressional Directory RULES GOVERNING PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Periodical Press Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXV of the House of Representatives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule IV 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 eards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to the restrictions of this rule. 2. The applications required by rule 1 shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the executive committee of the Periodical Correspondents’ Association who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide and accredited resident correspondents, news gatherers, or reporters of repu-table standing who represent one or more periodicals which regularly publish a substantial volume of news material of either general or of an economic, industrial, technical, or trade character, published for profit and supported chiefly by adver-tising, and owned and operated independently of any industry, business, association, or institution; and it shall be the duty of the executive 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 the gathering or reporting of news for periodicals requiring such continuous service shall not be entitled to admission to the Periodical Press Galleries. The Periodical Correspondents’ list in the CoNGREssIONAL DIRECTORY shall be alist only of persons whose chief attention is given to such service for news periodicals as described in rule 2, except that admission shall not be denied if his other work is enon as to make him eligible to the Press Galleries or Radio Correspondents’ alleries. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 5. The Periodical Press Galleries shall be under the control of an executive committee elected by members of the Periodical Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Repre-sentatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives, Harry F. BYRD, Chairman, Senate Committee on;Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Henry D. Raver, Chairman Pauvr Wooton, Secretary RoBERT SHERROD Ernest LINDLEY L. W. MorreTT Maps of Congressional Districts ALABAMA (9 districts) LAUDERDALE LIMESTONE | MADISON JACKSON [i cov gr € pe 8 io & > FRANKLIN 2 HAL 5 MAR E KALE MARION WINSTON CULLMAN LAMAR WALKER > FAYETTE ; & 7 A > S Q 5 I g ICKENS CLAYRRANDOLPH TALLAPOOSA |CHAMBERS jg J acon RU. SSELL CHOCTAW BULLOCK : CLARKE PIKE BARBOUR 8 MONROE 2 WASHINGTON . RENSHAW, } HENRY foe DALE COVINGTON HOUSTON ; ESCAMBIA mal { BALOWIN GENEVA MOBILE x o SCALE 10 STATUTE MILES 20 3c 40 s0 64674°—T7-2—1st ed——49 750 Congressional Directory ARIZONA (1 at large) YAVAPA/ YUMA MARICOPA GRAHAM PIMA COCHISE SCALE ~-STATUTE MILES CC ae eS —— o 20 “0 60 SANTA CRUZ BENTON CARROLL BOONE MARION |BAXTER WB FULTON RANDOLPH CLAY WASHINGTON on! 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GARRETT ALLEGANY WASHINGTON 6 (FREDERICK CARROLL HARFORD 2 BALTIMORE Me CECIL BALTIMORE CITY 3,4, 2 PT, 5 PT. o SCALE 0 -STATUTE 20 MILES 30 40 W/ICOMICO prea WORCES 2 > TER4 ) Y (S30113SID9)ANVIA4dVINfiu0120.00(10U018824610)) BERKSHIRE FRANKLIN WORCESTER MIDDLESEX : } 50sTON 10,12, 9 PT, 11 PT. = SCALE-STATUTE MILES o 5 nr 5 20 25 QT)SLLASNHOVSSVIA (S7011ISIP sdo prfo (ouoissaubuo;)$301.48 768 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN (17 districts) -[OTSEGO] MONTMOR] ALPENA Cal ft ryt (HALKASHARCRAWFD |0SCODA (oH GRD TRAV MANIS |WEXFORD |MISSAUKERIROSCOM. |0GEMAW |10SCO ! 51 0 | | LAKE OSCEOLA |CLARE GLADWIN Hi | AuRON BAY (NEWAYGOMECOSTA |ISABELLA |MIDLAND TUSCOLA|SANILAC SCALE -STATUTE MILES hemes — ———. ; MONTCALM |GRATIOT | SAGINAW 7 0 © 20 3 40 50 8 PEER GENZSEE ALE STCLAIR /ONIA CLINTON |SHIAWA 6 ANLAND MACOMB jp BARRY WEATON WINGHAM |LIVINGST! 17 VAN BUREN GQTALAMA |CALHOUN JACKSON WASHTENAW 3 2 WAYNE CASS I BRANCH | HILLSDALERLENAWEE {MONROE DETROIT 15, PTS. 1 "13, 14, 16, 17 PTS. 1,13, 14. 16 17 & <3, > “Rp Maps of Congressional Districts MINNES OTA (9 districts) U5) 2 ] SCALESTATUTE MILES - NITTSON ROSEAY 0 5 45 \ MARSHA = . “ | KOOCHICHING J ST LOUIS ror PENNINGTON =z) | RED LAKE ZN) TRAM | Lic TASCA | ¢ 8 | F Saorman MANN. s TF I WB rvBaaro |CASS | CLAY BECKER AITKIN [crowwine CARLTON WILKIN OTTERTAIL PINE | GRANT |DOUGLAS MORRISON PS NANA ] | 0d 13R,vi oN eC STEVENS | POPE STEARNS T Eom SEENTON |§ 16 STONE 3 HERBURNE| a, SWIFT > Toh (~> a EN EN ar gad » WASH, 4 | | %, CHIPPEWA a m Tp wer! | WEBSTER | WRIGHT § GREENE SHANNON & § vasPER Warne fo = [cawrence 7 ¥ 0 NEWTON CHRISTIAN DOUGLAS HOWALL CARTER Fons UTLER 8ARRY OREGON STODDARD 3 TANEY TAT RIPLEY % MFOONALD Wen mami \PEMISCOT | & 4H COLN FLATHE, 40 jeedcren TOOLE rm BLAINE PHILLIPS VALLEY DANIELS SHER JDAN 3 SANDERS rovocd TETON bY 15 y I3 CHOUTEAU ROOSEVELT RICHLAND ; ; GALLATIN BPARK WHEATLAND SWEET GRASS MUSSELSHELL 33n] Q<5Q B/G HORN POWDER RIVER & x:3 32 FALLON CARTER = S 2oi (va)&% ac © S p= 3Hig a ~ sp Ga h.8 QL R pi ., -Nl Ry CARBON 0 SCALE-STATUTE MILES 15 JO iH 4560 28 SCALE -STATUTE MILES = sess o 0 20 30 40 S10UX SHERIDAN CHERRY HEYAPAHA Borp 8, %os,, [ROCK fou! 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(S3011ISID ©)VISVU4GIN $0248] JouU08S2UHU0)) fO SAD JA 774 Congressional Directory NEVADA (1 at large) WASHOE |HUMBOLOT ELKO | | PERSHIN LANDER | EUREKA | WHITE PINE CHURCHILL NYE LINCOLN | ESMERALDA CLARK o SCALE 25 ~ STATUTE 50 MILES 75 3 100 Maps of Congressional Districts NEW HAMPSHIRE (2 districts) CO0s SCALE-STATUTE MILES 10 20 30 40 ARROLL BELKNAP STRAFFORD CHESHIRE HILLSBORO 776 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY (14 districts) SCALE -STATUTE MILES Maps of Congressional Districts (1 at large) SAN JUAN c RIO ARRIBA TAOS COLFAX UNION H—— MSKINLEY SANDOVAL Mora HARDING y SAN MIGUEL QUAY VALENCIA BERNALILLO GUADALUPE TORRANCE : CURRY CATRON SOCORRO DE BACA | LINCOLN ROOSEVELT CHAVES SIERRA OTERO GRANT EDDY DONA ANA LUNA SCALE-STATUTE MILES 0 20 40 60 80 HIDALGO 8LL MYOOX MIN 31 | EE WYOMING ) 35] %h ALLEGANY Boal] { \ CORTLAND § NSpr CHENANGO BROOME SCALE~STATUTE oD n 0 MILES © » 12 TO 25 21, 22 PT,11 11 3 TO 8,10, 9 2,1PT,9 PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. A V. 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CLEVE. 2s YNE CASE GeE® PAM o \CL TRAN: + RICH) > Ss, nS O,2 a NH SCALE -STATUTE MILES NA C 15 30 45 600s & RUNSWIC (S39119SIP TT) VNITOdVD HLIONSIOLUSUT [oU0LssaLbuo)) fo sd pr SCALE ~STATUTE MILES J oo {== o 20 40 60 80 S DIVIDE RENVILLE | BOTTINEAY ROLETTE |TOWNER | CAVALIER PEMBINA WILLIAMS M-> S3 S = adQS > < MORTON HETTINGER GRANT EMMONS LOGAN LAMOURE RANSOM RICHLAND /s10UX Bowman ADAMS MEINTOSH DICKEY SARGENT Maps of Congressional Districts OHIO (22 districts and 2 at large) _. = CLEVELAND [AS WILLIAMS | FULTON HENRY TRUMBULL DEFIANCE 5 PORTAGE PAULDING INA\SUMMIT Meo PUTNAM HANCOCK 1 4 pagon ING VAN WERT CRAWFORD RICHL D WAYNE NARS ALLEN COLUMBIANA HARDIN 1 6 : MERCER CARROLL TEE AUGLAIZE o SHELBY INION 1 COSHOCTON DEL . & HARRISON] & DARKE 4 & & A N CHAMPAIGN LICKING MIAMT RINSE MUSKINGUM oe BELMONT FRANKLIN CLARK 7 >S 1 5 PREBLE [MoNTGO, Ls 1 2 FAIRFIELD| PERRY x MONROE Regal ¥ PICKAWAY BLE Moran |FAYETTE 1 1 BUTLER WARREN CLINTON HOCKING WASHING TON Ross ATHENS (AY VINTON, HAMILTON ot CLERMT MEIGS PIKE achson 1 0 ADAMS GALLIA BROWN 6 SCO70 SCALE STATUTE MILES "0 20 LAWRENCE 64674°—T77-2—1st ed 51 CIMARRON: TEXAS BEAVER HARPER f ELLIS \ WOODS 8 ; ALFALFA|GRANT GARFIELD MAJOR KAY |NOBLE OSAGE 2 [x fn 3 HER xSl 5 2 DEL ROGERS |MAYES SCALE 0 10 -STATUTE MILES 20 30 40 50 WOODWARD DEWEY 9 3 CUSTER3IN $Q i BECKRAmM [WASHITA GREER \ KIOWA 23 3 JACKSON COMANCHE 3 $© SPEER LOGAN PAYNE LINCOLN : OKLAHOM. 5 = IN wZI 3 2 NBS ?3 IN NQ SR 4 83 y GARVIN S 2IN WN CREEKHTULSA KMUL OKFUSKE HUGHES ©3 3 n coarfi< maCHERO. 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ZAWRENCE HAAKON HUGHES PENNINGTON CUSTER FALL RIVER JACKSON WASHINGTON | WASHA BAUGH BENNETT SHANNON | JONES MELLETTE 7000 Tw 0 prac RULE GREGOR |JErAULD I) SCALE -STATUTE MILES 20 +0 €0 80 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE (9 districts) { STEWAR ROBERTSON, INENRY i 3 9Q { 7 35 SCALE = STATUTE MILES 3 2 Ie g 0 (0 20 30 40 50 S : 3 FRANKLINIMARION Maps of Congressional Districts TEXAS (21 districts) DALLAM |SHER.| HANS.|OCHIL| LIPS. HARTLEY |MOORE |HUTCH.|ROB'TS| HEMP. OLDHAM |POTTER|CARSOM GRAY | WHEE. D.SMITH |RAND | ARM. | DON. |cOLTH] Li WISH] BRIS. [HALL 5 BALY| LAMB | HALE |FLOYORMOT. [COTTR 2 3 <0, pu) /C) Arp MH 3 WM NE AMAR 2 DICK. | KING RhNOX ARCH. BS "aypy FAN 1 eons [COCH{HOCK |LUBB. |CROS ZL ~ ACK UN Ld TIT. : s rico iN 4A oP" | xl als c4° [GARZA|KENT [STONE [/1ASHK@THROC|YOUN WiseloenT @ VOAK|TERY [LYNN ’ 0) A UP: 2 4 [STEPH] PALO. PARK. | TARRRDAL TT ES GAINES NO |DAWS.| BORD) SCURBFISHERJONES|SHACK = SM 717160 . 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JUAN WASHING TON KANE Maps of Congressional Districts VERMONT (1 at large) 007 FRANKLIN ORLEANS ESSEX RUTLAND BENNINGTON inp, 2 SCALE STATUTE MILES [4 5 0 5 20 SCALE-STATUTE MILES [mm eee 0 Jo 20 30 40 0 #o, 77 DINWIDDIE |BRUNSW/ 6) (S3011ISTD VINIDYAIA fu020.42(] J0U01882.46U0)) OKANOGAN CHELAN GRAYS HARBOR KING GRANT YAKIMA FRANKLIN SHAMANIA KLICKITAT SCALE -STATUTE MILES o 0 20 30 40 SO NOLDNIHSVAM $200.498%(] 1PU018s2.L6U0,) [0 SAD PI SCALE -STATUTE MILES 0 20 40 dN CB a a SS ta i A Maps of Congressional Districts 795 WISCONSIN (10 districts) Py e+ JD) A a pM DOUGLAS SCALE STATUTE MILES TN a0 20 “0 fo ASHLAND IRON Vieqs WASHBURN | SAWYER 11 “op, N PRICE | REST “Mee pu 1 0 |oneroa POLK | ? 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[1] 52 ed 64674°—T77-2—1st Maps of Congressional Districts COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES (1 Resident Commissioner) fis010042(T (0U0SSOU6UO)) (IOUOISSTIITIO)) JUIPISOY T) 00I¥4 OoLIyANd \ - = ~ \ Hy [2 @® Arecibo E 7 po) CATANO San Juan Aguadilla > S ® < © > i] ie. : <2 v 1SABELAY ©15 I] (narivio ~ \ , % | Manaii ® 'U If* )) VEGA AIA ° = A ¢ MIR \ 6 94 on Catano 2 VEGA ° — ms nd Sa PA SN Rio bY,a: RE ° 4 *, ¢ oo i ’ Q CULEBRA 1S. 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WALLACE, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate, the Wardman Park. *CARTER GLAss, President pro tempore, the Mayflower. *Epwin A. HALsEY, Secretary, 3517 Williamsburg Lane. *CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeantat Arms, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. *The Very Reverend ZEBArRNEY T. PrILuips, D. D., LL. D., S. T. D., Chaplain of the Senate, Mount St. Albans. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-300) Name *Aiken, George D_______._ *Andrews, Charles O_____ *Austin, Warren R_______ *t11Bailey, Josiah W_____ *Ball, Joseph H.____.._._. *Bankhead, John H., 2d.__| Barbour, W. Warren. _ ____ *Barkley, Alben W_______ Bilbo, Theodore G._______| *Bone, Homer T_________ *|| Brewster, Ralph O_____ Bridges, Stylesicucll od oa *Brooks,C. Wayland_____ = Brown, PrentissiM. {ll *Bulow, William J_______ *Bunker, Berkeley L_____ *Burton, Harold H... J_ 0 Butler, Hugh A: oo).05 *Byrd, Harry Flood._.___ Capper, Arthuryo_ v2 oC Caraway, Hattie W______ *ttChandler, Albert B_.__| *1| || Chavez, Dennis______ *||Clark, Bennett Champ__| *[Clark, D. Worth.______ Connally, Tom. dc. iL *Danaher, John A________ tttDavis, James J_______ *Downey, Sheridan_______ Hi) Walla)10 *||[Ellender. Allen J______ Home post office Putney, Vi. dai Orlando, Fla 1 55. Burlington, Vitio0 Raleigh, N. C_______ St.: Paul, Minn.olallu Jasper, Ala_________ Locust, N, JJioae 0001 Paducah, Ky coc. Poplarville, Miss____| Tacoma] Washo iL x00 Dexter, Maine______ East Concord, N. H__| Chicago, Too oi sls ‘Washington residence Loy Page George Washington Inn_| 118 3511 The 2332 3215 2311 2801 3102 The Albemarle St_____ 17 Shoreham ________ 117 Massachusetts 83 Ave_| Macomb St... 0. 55 Connecticut Ave_ _ 3 31st St ioaL HC 68 Cleveland Ave____| 38 Capitol Towers_.__| 57 |. O00 JOULE 121 The Mayflower_ ______ 44 The Hay-Adams______ 67 The Westchester_ _____ 23 St. Ignace/ Miehitig]... 307000 SEH 50 Beresford, S. Dak___| Las Vegas, Nev_____ Cleveland, Ohio_____ Omaha, Nebr_______ Berryville, Va_______ Topeka, Kans_______ Jonesboro, Ark______ Versailles, Ky_______ Albuquerque, N.Mex_| University City, Mo_| Pocatello, Idaho_____ Marlin, Bex. 208.114 Portland, Conn_____ Pittsburgh, Pa______ Claremont, Calif Guidi Holly Springs, Miss__| Houma, Yas iooo000 Stoneleigh Court______ 109 416 North Oakland St., 67 Arlington, Va. The The The The 5248 The 1911 4922 4314 The 6348 3012 Dodge. iain io 87 Hay-Adams.______ 65 Shoreham ________ 119 Mayflower________ 35 Colorado Ave____ 7 Mayflower. _______ 38 R St____________ 72 Quebec St_______ 59 Cathedral Ave____| 22 La Salle__________| 112 31st PI... _______ 15 MassachusettsAve.| 96 on J 03 CHIBI19 9 The Capitol Park______ 57 2633 16th:St. oo 0 lL 41 Congressional Directory THE SENATE—Continued (For office rcoms and telephones, see pp. 299-300) Name *George, Walter F_______ ECerrym Rotor Ge corresra =r *QGillette, Guy M_________ *Qlags, Carter L994. 2 Green, Theodore Francis_| lll Guffey, Joseph F_______ *Gurney, Chan__________ *Hatch, Carl A Shas *Hayden, Carl... i... | |Herring, Clyde L_______ HM, Listers Juin zalaln Holman, Bulus €._.._.J: * I | Hughes, James Hoon *tJohnson, Edwin C______ *Johnson, Hiram W______ *+ Kilgore, Horley M_-*La Follette, Robert M., Jr_| *11|| Langer, William______ I Fy *Lodee, Henry Cobol, Jr... #Luaeas, Seott*Wo en EiMecCarran, Polo = *McFarland, Ernest W___| McKellar, Kenneth_______ *McNary, Charles L_____| *t Maloney. Franeis______ *Maybank, Burnet R.____ *| Mead, James M_______ *+ Murdock, Abe___._____ *Murray, James E__.____.. *Norris, George W_______ #Nve, Gerald P._loiin)ad *(Q’ Daniel, W. Lee_______ *||O0’ Mahoney, Joseph C._| *1t||Overton, John H.____ *Pepper, Claude. ________ *Radecliffe, George L______ *Reed, Clyde M____.____ *Reynolds, Robert R_____ *Rosier, Joseph. oi izoilzi. Russell, Richard B_______ *+Schwartz, H. H._..0_.4 *Shipstead, Henrik______ *tSmathers, William H___| *||]|[|Smith, Ellison D_____ *Spencer, Lloyd__________ vet Stewart, Tom... L104 *Taft, Robert At. Hl)his *tThomas, Elbert D_.____ *Thomas, Elmers. i-1g2 *Thomas, John ic onl *Tobey, Charles W_______ rman, Harry 8S. 7) 5d *¥|'Tunnell, James M______ *Tydings, Millard E______ Home post office Washington residence ar Page Vienna, Ga... io The Mayflower________ 19 Warwiek, Rol. oo.o0 2300-8 St. sar curr zo 104 Cherokee, Towsoo "> S60 Sth St > 33 Lynchburg, Va_.i 1 The Mayflower________ 118 Providence, R. I_____ University Club_._____ 105 Pittsburgh, Pa______ 2929 Benton Pl_______ 97 Yankton 'S’: Dak 100: Roa07PBEhoSE: 81 Deana. 109 Clovis, N. Mex______ The Carroll Arms_____ 72 Phoenis GARI ARS |... ciiicaucii. ul 6 Des Moines, Iowa___| The Mayflower________ 33 Montgomery, Ala___| 2540 Massachusetts 3 ve. Portland, Oreg______ 3012324 18.2 L dr Huts 95 DoverpiPDel i lcC finlandA yiw 16 yaaa Craig, 'Coleiu ls in iu The Carroll Arms_____ 13 San Francisco, Calif__| 122 Maryland Ave. NE_ 8 Beckley, W. Va_____ 4849 Upton St________ 123 Madison, Wis_______ 5200 Manning P1______ 125 Bismarck, N. Dak___| The Roosevelt________ 86 Noman, Okla... boomerrm 92 Beverly Mange... | .L __..... o . .= .C-47 Havana TEE ema The Wardman Park___| 23 Reno, Nev.covvuuos 4711 Blagden Ave_____ 66 Florence, Ariz_______| 4404 Windom PI_____. 6 Memphis, Tenn_____ The Mayflower. _______ 110 Salem, Oreg., R. F. D.| The Mayflower________ 95 Meriden, Conn____ _._ The Willardeawadldi 15 Charleston, S. C_____ 2420 16th Stoo. aliad] 106 Buffalo, N.1Y-iuc9-33515 Legation Stews. 73 Beaver, Utah_______ The Majestic... __.___ 117 Butte, Mont_ 4. s-usc The Shoreham ________ 64 McCook, Nebr__.___ The Dodge. sadil ysl 65 Cooperstown, N.Dak_| The Westchester. _____ 86 Fort Worth, Tex____| The Washington_______| 113 Cheyenne, Wyo_____ The Wardman Park___| 128 Alexandria, La_._____ The Wardman Park___| 41 Tallahassee, Fla_____ 1661 Crescent P1______ 18 Baltimore, Md. _____ The Shoreham _ _______ 45 Parsons, Kans______ Stoneleigh Court______ 36 Asheville,IN.:Cuc/ call. _ J wslalendwil 83 Fairmont, W. Va____| The Methodist Bog. 123 Winder, Ga_____..__ The Mayflower_______ 20 Casper, Wyo_______. 3325 Runnymede Pl___| 128 Miltona, Minn ._____ 1113 East Capitol St___| 54 Margate, N. J______ The Mayflower________ 68 Lynchburg, S. C____| The Wardman Park___| 106 Hope, Arkl collie 100 Maryland Ave. NE. 7 Winchester, Tenn. _ _| 6312 Beechwood Drive, | 110 ; Chevy Chase, Md. Cincinnati, Ohio_____ 1688 31st Sten if_ 1 i 87 Salt Lake City, Utah_| 3200 16th~St___.______ 116 Medicine Park, Okla_| 1661 Crescent P1______ 92 Gooding, Idaho. ____ The Carroll Arms_____ 22 Temple, N: Hoo. ooo The Dodgesiinads. voi 67 Independence, Mo___| 4701 Connecticut Ave__| 60 Georgetown, Del____| Army and Navy Club__| 17 Havre de Grace, Md_! 2440 Kalorama Rd____| 45 Members’ Addresses THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-300) Name Home post office Washington residence *Vandenberg, Arthur H___ *Van Nuys, Frederick.___ Grand Rapids, Mich_ Indianapolis, Ind____ The Wardman Vienmaa Vann Park ._ __ Sau Wagner, Robert F________ New York City, N. Y._ The Shoreham... _:_ *Wallgren, Mon C_______ Everett, Wash Walsh, David VL... Clinton, Mass *Wheeler, Burton K______ Butte, Mont 3757 Jocelyn St... _. *White, *Wiley, Wallace H., Jr____ Alexander________ Auburn, Maine Chippewa Falls, Wis_ 2449 The Tracy PI. ______. Westchester_ _____ *|| Willis, Raymond E_____ 411 Senate Office Bldg__ Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Sam RAYBURN, Speaker, 1900 Q Street. *|||| |ISouTH TRIMBLE, Clerk, 10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. *KENNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms, the Wardman Park. *oserm J. SinnorT, Doorkeeper, 3527 Thirteenth Street. *|Finis E. ScorrT, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road. *|Ruv. JAMES SHERA MonTtcoMERY, D. D., Chaplain, 100 Maryland Avenue NE, (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name Home post office Washington residence *Allen, A. Leonard_______ Allen, Leo B17 000.07051 *Andersen, H. Carl_______ *Anderson, Clinton P_____ #Anderson, John Z._.....__ *Andresen, August H_____ Andrews, Walter G_______ *Angell, Homer'D........ Arends, Leslie C. —._..... *t Arnold, Laurence F_____ *Baldwin, Joseph €lark___ Barden, Graham A Barnes, Jameg Mo -*Barry, William’ B__.. tBates, George J *t Bates, JoeB. | Baumhbhart, A.D. Jr... *Beam, Harry P Beckworth, Lindley______ *Belter, Allred TP. *t3Bell; €. Jasper... *1{ Bender, George H_____ #7Bennett, Philip A... *Bishop, C. W. (Runt)... *Blackney, William W____ *Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ FBloom, Spl EF oo ot *Boehne, John W., Jr_____ Boggs, Hale = 0 *+Boland, Patrice J... Bolton, Frances P_.._____ *Bonner, Herbert C______ *Boren, Lyle HH. _.. | *Boykin, Frank W.._._ ___ *Bradley, Fred _.___.___ *11Bradley, Michael J___-*Brooks, Overton... *1++Brown, Clarence J_____ x Brown, Paul. ooo *1+Bryson, Joseph R______ Buck, Frank BH. _._..___; 2tiBuckler, B. 0... Buckley, Charles A_______ *Bulwinkle, Alfred L______ %*Burch, Thomas G--.._ Burdick, Usher L... ..--. Burgin; WO 2 --c *Butler, John C=... Byrne, William T________ Winnfield, La_______ Galena, Jl: oC 500i Tyler, Minn_L_.2i0 Albuquerque, N. Mex. San Juan Bautista, alif. Red Wing, Minn____ Buffalo, N.Y... Portland, Oreg... Melvin, TH---_ Newton, TH New York City, N.Y__ New Bern, N. C____ Jacksonville, I11_ ____ St. Albans, N. ¥Y-.. Salem, Mass. _______ Greenup, Ky... Vermilion, Ohio_____ Chicage, ll. = Gilmer, Pex. Williamsville, N. Y__ Blue Springs, Mo____ Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Springfield, Mo_____ Carterville, Tl __ Bling, Mich. =~. Newport News, Va___ New York City, N.Y. Evansville, Ind______ New Orleans, La_ ___ Scranton, Pa =... Lyndhurst, Ohio____ Washington, N. C___ Seminole, Okla______ Mobile, Ala... Rogers City, Mich___ Philadelphia, Pa_____ Shreveport, La______ Blanchester, Ohio_ __ Elberton, Ga. 5. Greenville, S. C_____ Vacaville, Calif______ Crookston, Minn. B.D New York City, N.Y. Gastonia, N. C Martinsville, Va. io. Williston, N. Dak_ __ Lexington, N. C__L_. Buffalo, N.Y Loudonville, N. Y___ 1529 28th St. SE______ University Club_______ 1650. Harvard St______ 7650 Bradley ‘Biva. Bethesda, Md. 5509 Grove St. , Chevy Chase, Md. 2121 Virginia Ave_____ The Roosevelt _._._.__._: The Mayflower________ 3525 Woodley Rd_____ George Washington Inn_ The General Scott. ____ The Majestic... .... 315 House Office Bldg. The Mayflower. _______ George Washington Inn_ 1833 41st Pl. SE 4550 Connecticut Ave__ 8016 Tilden'St +...= The Mayflower________ 2301 Wyoming Ave____ The Roosevelt. _____ The Westchester. _ ____ 2101 Connecticut Ave__ 4121 Argyle Terrace.___ Sedgwick Gardens_____ The Alban Towers_____ The Alban Towers_____ 220 1st, St. SE... The Wardman Park__ _ The Willard: LL Cheltenham, Md.______ The Wardman Park___ Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name Byron, Katharine E______ *Camp, "A. Sidneyosll il *Canfield, Gordon________ *1Cannon, Clarence. _____ *Cannon, Pat: oallidl a *Capozzoli, Louis J._.__.. *Carlson, Frank oo. Carter, Albert Boo...2. *|| Cartwright, Wilburn____| *Case, Francisco oo. *Casey, Joseph E________ *t+Celler, Emanuel ________ Chapman, Virgil. loz) a *tChenoweth, J. Edgar___| *||Chiperfield, Robert: B...{ Clark, J. Bayard... *Clason, Charles R_______ *Claypool, Harold K_____ *Clevenger, Cliff_________ *Cluett, E. Harold_______ Cochran, John Jo 0. © *1Coffee, Harry B________ *Coffee, JohniM: 0.0) Cole, William P., Jr______ *Cole, W. Sterling________ %#Collins, Boss. A... *Colmer, William M______ *1||||Cooley, Harold D____| pooper, Jere. Uoliooion.) | *Copeland, Oren S_______ ||[Costello, John M_______ *1Courtney, Wirt. _______ Cox, BE. B._sosigiodca *1||Cravens, Fadjo_______ *Crawford, Fred Li. ______ *Creal, Edward W_______ *||Crosser, Robert________ *Crowther, Frank________ *+Culkin, Francis D______ *Cullen, Thomas H_______ *Cunningham, Paul______ %*Curtis, Carl: vouic J *D)’ Alesandroyi Thomas, Jr.| *¥| Davis, Clifford.ul.. cu: EDavis, Jacob Bo oiosi a |Day, Stephen A_________ elaney, John J__________ *Dewey, Charles S_______ Dickstein, Samuel ________ Dies, Martine iit fyi) bl *Dingell, John D...0..C ol *Dirksen, Everett M_____ *Disney, Wesley E_.______| Ditter, J. William ________ Domengeaux, James______ *[IDondero, George A____!| Home post office Washington residence i Williamsport, Md___| 8117 Woodley Rd_____ Page 46 Newnan, Ga._______ The Washington House_| 20 Paterson, N. J... iL 535 Tennessee Ave. NE_| 70 Flsberry, Mou anol ol oo 62 Miami, Fla, doco 0 dint dx 19 cupid New Yorke City No¥ lien J... NM baadaiflaap 76 Concordia, Kans____| 3635 Alabama Ave. SE_| 37 Oakland, Calif. cor Lo Lol sara cdaien 10 McAlester, Okla_____ 400 A St. SB. al) gal 93 Custer, 8. Dak._._..i 3049 Foxhall Rd____._| 109 Clinton, Mass_______| 3218 Newark St_______ 48 Brooklyn, N. Y._._._.. The Mayflower________ 75 Paris, Ky __oaicleoN0JC rmeihnd aod 40 Trinidad, Colo______ 3611 34th St_...___. __ 14 Canton, Il._______. 1 Raymond St., Chevy 28 Chase, Md. Fayetteville, NivQolahil io oii wn Tb abyi) 85 Springfield, Mass____| The Broadmoor_______ 47 Chillicothe, Ohio____| 3500 14th St__________ 89 Bryan, Ohio. _______ The Jefferson_________ 89 roy, NY advan 2400 16th 8toival) ob) 80 St. Louis, Mo._._... The Shoreham ________ 64 Chadron, Nebr______ The Shoreham ________ 66 Tacoma, Wash______ The Kennedy-Warren__| 123 Towson, Md = slows . J gilli blatessii 45 Bath N. Yili a 1606 44th St__________ 82 Meridian, Miss______ 2714 36th St__________ 59 Paseagoula, Miss. olofifl La. 90 odol ggssg 59 Nashville, N. C_____ 20383 28thiSt Lo 84 Dyersburg, Tenn____| The Washington.______ 112 Lincoln, Nebr... ii: 1600 16th Sti ral of 65 Hollywood, Calif____| 2737 Devonshire P1____| 12 Franklin Tenn oo 111 ood.pigiunnedy Camilla, Ga____-___| The Wardman Park___| 20 Fort Smith, Ark_____ 4735 Woodway Lane___ 7 Saginaw, Michudagaghl) 0.8 soidinall jon 52 Hodgenville, Ky_____ GeorgeWashington Inn_| 39 Cleveland, Ohioustioifuloo 008 Balad | ol 91 Schenectady, N. Y__| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 80 Oswego, N.Y... ... The Hamilton © © _ 81 Brooklyn, N. YY... = The Shoreham ________ 74 Des Moines, Iowa___| The Metropolitan_____ 35 Minden, Nebr.______ 109 Worthington Drive, 66 (Friendship Station, D..C.). Baltimore, Md... |. cS olhubbeisnc, 46 Memphis, Tenn _____ 4611 Butterworth P1___| 112 Waverly, Ohio. Lo... 0) hadl daiyl 89 cooiufl Evanston, HY. cui The Hightowers_______ 24 Brooklyn, No N eT aohd lo 8 opaoad 75 Chieago, Ill unlis 214 1st St. SE... zoel 26 NewYork City, 1h 0... 76 N.Y. |. nine... . Orange, Tex________ 1625 Hobart 86. fol ii: 113 Detroit, Mich... 57s "110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 53 Pekin, INL cbil)gel The Mayflower________ 28 Tulsa, Okla______.___. 1026. 16th Stu. csiun) 93 Ambler, iPaq. iil dufod tl ois cob dial 100 Lafayette, La_..._.. The Shoreham... ..____ 42 Royal Oak, Mich____! The Continental ______ 54 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence *tDoughton, Robert L____ *|||| | Douglas, Fred J______ Downs, Le Roy D________ *Drewry, Patrick H______ *Dunecan, Richard M_____ *tfDurham, Carl T___.___ *Dworshak, Henry C_____ *||| Eaton, Charles A______ *HEberharter, Herman P___ Edmiston, Andrew_______ *Eliot, Thomas H________ *[| Elliott, Alfred iJ. caui. #le, Clyde Toy oc *Flston, Charles H_______ *tEngel, Albert J________ *Englebright, Harry L____ *7¥addis, Charles T_______ Fellows, Frank__._____._.___ *tiFenton, Ivor D__.____ *1 Fish, Hamilton__._._._. *1|||| Fitzgerald, William J_ isn James M___ *| Flaherty, Thomas A__ __ *Flannagan, John W., Jr__ *Flannery, J. Harold. ____ Fogarty, John Ke iclo ilo Folger, John Hiz lui! 0 *Forand, Aime J._.___.__. *Ford, Aaron Lane_______ *Pord, Leland Mooi. *Ford, Thomas PF...i *|| Fulmer, Hampton P____ *QGale, Richard Pl.oli nae Gamble, Ralph A... _.___ %*CGathings, B. Ch dizaild Gavagan, Joseph A_______ ||Gearhart, Bertrand W___ Gehrmann, Bernard J.____ *Gerlach, Charles Li______ *Gibson, John Soil) 1] *QGifford, Charles L_______ %1Gilehrist, Fred C.......... *Gillette, Wilson D_______ *Gillie, George W________ *Gore, Albert... ...ii.l] *Qogsett, Bd. 32 wedi |Graham, Louis E________ *QGranger, Walter K______ *QGrant, George M________ *Grant, Robert A... Laurel Springs, N. C_ Utica, N. Y South Norwalk, Conn. Petersburg, Va______ St. Joseph, Mo______ Chapel Hill, N. C__._ Burley, Idaho____.__ Watchung, Plain- field, N. J. Pittsburgh, Pa______ Weston, W. Va______ Cambridge, Mass____ Tulare, Calif... Bentonville, Ark____ Cincinnati, Ohio_____ Muskegon, Mich____ Nevada City, Calif._ Waynesburg, Pa_____ Bangor, Maine______ Mahanoy City, Pa___ Garrison, N. Norwich, Conn______ New York City, N.Y__ Boston, Mass_______ Bristol,aVal clus: Pittston, Pad sliicde Harmony; R. Toucavs Mount Airy, N. C_.__ Cumberland, R.I____ Ackerman, Miss_____ Santa Monica, Calif _ Los Angeles, Calif _ __ Orangeburg, S. C Mound, Minn_______ Larchmont, N. Y____ West Memphis, Ark. New York City, N. Y_ Fresno, Calif ________ Mellen, Wis., R. F. D_ Allentown, Pa_______ Douglas, Ga... .... Cotuit, Mass. ____..¢ Laurens, Iowa______ Towanda, Pa_ icici es Fort Wayne, Ind____ Carthage, Tenn_____ Wichita Falls, Tex___ Beaver, Palull ual Cedar City, Utah____ Troy, Ala. =O an South Bend, Ind____ 706 North Tazewell St., Arlington, Va. The Carroll Arms_____ Seminary Hill, Alex- andria, Va. The: Carroll Arms... 3429 Carpenter St. SE__ The Wardman Park___ 1440 Taylor St________ The Roosevelt...J. _ The Mayflower_______._ 3000 Connecticut Ave__ The Westchester_ _____ 2929 Connecticut Ave__ 2956 Davenport St____ The Shoreham. 1 1 _ The Roosevelt _______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_ 3226 Klingle Rd_______ The General Scott. ____ : 154 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. The Commodore_ _____ The: Continental... 220 Holly Ave., Ta- koma Park, Md. Cosmos Club.iollilzi } 2109 Fort Davis St. SE_ 203 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. 2431 Good Hope Rd. SE. The Dodge... snob lg The Carroll Arms_____ 4801 Connecticut Ave__ Bo Pennsylvania Ave. E. Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name *Green, Lox... jolgloelod Gregory, Noble Jalon wyery U.i8uin 2 ual 058 snl John W sostaed *Haines, Harry Lio.oi2od Hall, Edwin Arthur______ *Hall, Leonard W________ *Halleck, Charles A______ *Hancock, Clarence E____| Hare, Butler Bl i .J0441 *Harness, Forest A_______ *Harrington, Vincent F___| *Harrls, Oren.oucbood aid {Harris, Winder BR... ... Hart, Edward 00 Ji...ol “Harter, Dow W._...0_ Hartley, Fred A., Jr______ *Healey, Arthur Do... 2... *Hébert, F. Edward______ *tHeffernan, James J_____ *Heidinger, James V______ Hendricks, Joes. .iaodiod *Hess, William E________ PHIL Knuteoo uousil ad =H, William: 8 _ 7 12) *Hinshaw, Carl... ___.. %1Hobbs, Sam.aus oui. od *Hoffman, Clare E_ ______ Holbrock, Greg__________ Holmes, Pehr G__________ *Hook, Frank BE... 00 #Hope, Clifford R....._.. *t Houston, John M______ *Howell, Evan___________ *Hull, Merlings. Loiioslloo Hunter, John BF. L. i. *Imhoff, Lawrence E_____ zac, Bd: Voc salad0 Jackson, Henry M______._ Jacobsen, William S_____ 2Jarman, Pele...7 l.. a *t || Jarrett, Benjamin_____ *Jenkins, Thomas A______ *Jenks, Arthur B_________ *tJennings, John, Jr______ %7Jensen, Ben a0 Foc?7 2Johns, Joshua Lo... .__-*Johnson, Anton J_______ *Johnson, George W______ %*t1 | Johnson, os ie Home post office Washington residence oie : Page Starke, Pla. cocaizzo The Shoreham... co... 18 Mayfield, Ky_______ 2401 Calvert St_______ 39 Kansas City, Kans__| George Washington Inn_| 36 Waterloo, Jowal gaull belgozoio 34 Red Lion, Padi: ax han Md., R. F. | 101 Binghamton, N. Y___| 4431 Ellicott St_______ 81 Oyster Bay, N. Y_._| The Wardman Park___| 73 Rensselaer, Ind_____ 3810 49th St. co _ol 31 Syracuse, N. Y______ The Kennedy-Warren__| 81 Saluds, 8: Guodocoas The Dodge innuii wall 108 Kokomo, Ind _ unis The Kennedy-Warren__| 31 Sioux City, lowa____| 3614 Morrison St______ 35 El Dorado, Ark_____ Woodley Park Towers.__ 8 Norfolk, Va. oo iioo: The Capitol Park______ 119 Jersey City, NJ Fioaill LH andolus 72 coop Akron, Ohio _2:as] The Shoreham ________ 90 Kearny, iNaoJwiagb. oof. onllillian val 71 Somerville, Mass____| The Winthrop House. _| 48 New Orleans, La____| 105 West Maple St., 41 Alexandria, Va. Brooklyn, N. ¥. lc The Roosevelt________ 74 Fairfield sT0_ L050. The Roosevelt _______ 30 Deland, Bla. soeaidlioiieadiddeuasts Ul 19 Cincinnati, Ohiosliin fl © suena soemmaloan 88 Prosser, Wash_______ Vienna, Va., R. F. D___| 122 Fort Collins, Colo___ Na Fort Davis St. 14 Pasadena, Calif _____ 9600 Jones Mill Rd., 11 Chevy Chase, Md. Selma, sAln ool Jeali Loo nd Brot aed 4 Allegan, Mich_______| The Methodist Bldg___| 52 Hamilton, Ohio_ ____ Bet Pennsylvania Ave. | 88 Worcester, Mass____ ey 9 fontsylianis 48 ve . Ironwood, Mich_____ 4708 Drummond Ave., 53 Po Chevy Chase, Garden City, Kans_ _ EL § Re St... 138 Wichita, Kans_ _____ The Cavalier. _._______ 37 Springfield, Il. _____ 123 House Office Bldg__| 29 Black River Falls, | 3808 Garrison St______ 127 is. Toledo, Ohloce iia vou sorandl dovonbell 89 St. Clairsville, Ohio__| The Northumberland__| 91 San Diego, Calif_____ 2923 Cathedral Ave____| 13 Everett, Wash. .....[ Sle ove Saslinaionin 122 Clinton, Towa_______ 2756 Macomb St______ 34 Livingston, Ala_____ The Burlington. ....... 5 Farrell, Pa...i "The Boosevelb io. ui. 101 Ironton, Ohio_.o.-:c The Dodgeli..oaliil/n 89 Manchester, N. H___| The Broadmoor_______ 68 Knoxville, Tenn_____ The Roosevelt________ 110 Exira, Towa. lll oqo The Washington House_| 35 Algoma, Wis________ The: Marlyn. caau.l.sos 127 Macomb, Tl. 0. slic The Northumberland. _| 28 Parkersburg, W. Va_| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 125 Anadarko, Okla_____ George Washington Inn_| 94 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued ‘(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name *Johnson, Luther A______ *|||[Johnson, Lyndon B____| *tJohnson, Noble J_______ ol Johnson, Ward________ *||||Jones, Robert F_______ *Jonkman, Bartel J__.___. *tKean, Robert W_______ #7 Kee, John. ouuloallof *Keefe, Frank B.._._..__. *Kefauver, Estes_________ *iKelley, Augustine B____| Kelly, Edward A_________ *Kennedy, Martin J______ *Kennedy, Michael J_____ Keogh, Eugene J_________ *Rerr, John ll... ..... *tKilburn, Clarence E____| PRilday, Pando." *Kinzer, J.: Roland. 2d Kirwan, Michael J_______ ®1jKleberg Richard: MiL * Kien Arthur-Guaall of Knutson, Haroldzogoo o_o Kocialkowski, Leo________ *|| | Kopplemann, Herman P_| *| | [|| Kramer, Charles_____ Kunkel;iJohn Civil £15 *Lambertson,/ William PLO Landis, Gerald W________ *Lanham, Fritz G_._.____. *Larrabee, William H_____ *Lea, Clarence Fo. .__. *Leavy, Charles H_______ *|| LeCompte, Karl M_____ *Lesinski, John. _________ Lewis, Lawrence_________ *Ludiow, Louis... ... Jild Lynch, Walter A_________ *McArdle, Joseph A_____._ *McCormack, John W____| *1[ [|| McGehee, Dan R___| MecGranery, James P_____ *tMcGregor, J. Harry____| *MeclIntyre, John J_______ *tMcKeough, Raymond 8. *tMcLaughlin, Charles F_| *McLean, Donald H______ *||||Me Millan, John L_____ *Maas, Melvin J_________ *Maciejewski, Anton F____| Maciora, Lucien J_ _______ Magnuson, Warren G_____ *t Mahon, George H______ Manasco, Carter. _______._ | Home post office Corsicana, Tex______ Johnson’ City, Tex._..| Terre Haute, Ind____| Long Beach, Calif ___| Lima, Ohio. collha Grand Rapids, Mich_| Livingston, N. J_____ Bluefield, W. Va____| Oshkosh, Wis_______ Chattanooga, Tenn_.| Greensburg, Pa_____ Chicago, Il __ouuuic New York City, N. Y_| New York City, N. Y_| Brooklyn, N.. Y:lloli: Warrenton, N. C..__| Malone, N. Y_______ San Antonio, Tex____| Lancaster, Pa_______ Youngstown, Ohio___| Washington residence hu Page The LaSalle... xo. uo 114 Woodley Park Towers__| 114 2929 Connecticut Ave__| 32 The Broadmoor_______ 13 The Alban Towers_____ 88 The Methodist Bldg___| 52 2201: RB Stirling pitt 71 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 125 The Dorchester House_| 127 The Somerset ________ 111 The Alban Towers_____ 103 3200 16thiSta210'. 2a 25 The Mayflower_._______ 78 The Mayflower_._______ v7 The Mayflower________ 75 The Willard__________ 84 The Hay-Adams_ _____ 81 3507 Albemarle St_____| 116 The Shoreham _ _______ 99 The Carroll Arms_____ 91 Corpus Christi, Tex. |. Lb. o.oo oo 115 New York City, NoYoifl St. Cloud, Minn_____ Chicago, I. nln Hartford, Conn_____ Los Angeles, Calif ___| Harrisburg, Pa______ RPairview, Kans ubooofl o.oommel nol 76 225 The The The ysl oo B-St. NEL 152060 56 Shoreham ________ 26 Mayflower. _____ . 15 Mayflower. ______ 11 New Hampshire | 101 ve. Loo ooodie) 36 gods TindongInd boo. [90 aneniieis 32 Aes Fort Worth, Tex____| New Palestine, Ind__| Santa Rosa, Calif ____| Spokane, Wash______ Corydon, Towa______ Dearborn, Mich_____ Denver, Colo_._.___. Indianapolis, Ind: New-York City, No'¥al)_ Pittsburgh, Pa______ Boston, Mass_.______| Meadville, Miss_____ Philadelphia, Pa_____ West Lafayette, Ohio. Douglas, Wyo_______ “Chicago, zo! cosoif) Omaha, Nebr_______ Elizabeth, NaJ_ loi Florence, S.:C___..0: St. Paul, Minn______ Cicero, I11__________ New Britain, /Comnogid. Seattle, Wash_______ Colorado City, Tex__| Jagper, Ala _oalo The Wardman Park___| 115 The Roosevelt. _______ 33 110 Maryland Ave.NE_ 9 Woodley Park Towers_| 122 The Wardman Park___| 384 300 Jackson St., Alex-54 andria, Va. The Roosevelt________ 14 111822. H St... ivy. © 33 [oobioliil 78 Jl J) The Mayflower________ 104 The Washington______ 49 The Capitol Park______ 59 The Mayflower_______ 97 Vans Village, 37th 91 ‘St. . 4519 Cheltenham Drive,| 128 Bethesda, Md. J... 2 aed qonds 25 The St. Albans________ 66 The Wardman Park___| 70 5903:-4th Stop| ani 108 1505 Dale Drive, Silver 55 Spring, Md. The Lee Sheraton. ____ 26 .. _.o.cileulbel= 15 The Shoreham ________ 121 The Alban Towers_____ 116 5 Members’ Addresses 811 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) am Home e post offi Washi residencei : raphy Name post office hington Biog [||| Mansfield, Joseph J____| Columbus, Tex______ Wakefield Hall _ _______ Page 114 Marcantonio, Vito________ New York City, Noi | oF. oo: a0 oo 78Martin, Joseph W., Jr____ Nogh Attleboro, | The Hay-Adams_ _____ 50ass. ;*|| Martin, Thomas E__ ___ Iowa City, Iowa_____ 2103 Fort Davis St. SE_| 34*Mason, Noah M________ Oglesby, Il_________ The Baronetu:ocal gio 27*[May, Andrew J________ Prestonburg, Ky____| The Roosevelt________ 40*Merritt, Matthew J_____ Volos (Flushing), | The Mayflower________| 73 *tMeyer, John A_________ Baltimore, WU. vespusdl) [© Md.) Joa... 46*||Michener, Earl C______ Adrian, Mich... .. The Wardman Park___| 51Mills, Newt Vi. oooil5; Monroe, La. xii The Continental _______ 42*Mills, Wilbur Dz_301_11 Kensett, Ark________ 2701 Connecticut Ave.__ 7 *Mitchell, Arthur W______ Chicago, INS. duiilonl, i. o. Bormeloll foil 24 *Monroney, A. S. Mike____| Oklahoma City, Okla_| 2475 Kalorama Rd____| 94Moser, Guy L_... J... 1c: Douglassville, Pa., | George Washington | 100 R.F.D. Inn.*ttMott, James W_______ Salem, Oreg_ _______ University Club_______ 96tMundt, Karl &.__._. Madison, S. Dak.___| The Capitol Towers___| 109*Murdock, John R_______ Tempe, (Ariz. Lveaield. |... 3H ealaed roads 6*Murray, Reid 3 Ogdensburg, Wisovead o.oo 1 avwnido 127 F....... 0Myers, Francis J_________ Philadelphia, Pacis. coo I ool Juiiad 98*|| Nelson, William L______ Columbia, Mo_ _____ 1353 Hamilton St___ __ 61%Nichols, Jack...= Eufaula, Okla_______ Ban Worthington 93rive.*Norrell, W. Fo... i Monticello, Ark_____ 4531 Nebraska Ave_ ___ 8Norton, Mary T.i-oii oo: Jersey City, N. J____| The Kennedy-Warren__| 71*Q’Brien, George D______ Detroit, Mich_______ 4904 Bayard Blvd., 53Crestview, Md. .*Q’ Brien, Joseph J_______ East Rochester, N.Y_| The Alban Towers. ___ 82O’Connor, James F_______ Livingston, Mont____| 1632 House Office Bldg_| 65O’Day, Caroline. __._..._ N.Y eo oon © 73 Bye, ciicihabanlifS *Q’Hara, Joseph P___.___ Glencoe, Minn.iL coda. oo xl 7 Laval _wdy 55*t|/O’Leary, James A_____ Wess Hew Brighton; soioes .....-ialabszed 76 *Oliver, James C......_.. Bomih Portland, | 3821 WSt. SE... ... 44aine.*11O’Neal, Emmet_______ Louisville, Ky_______ The Roosevelt _______ 39Osmers, Frank C., Jr_____ Haworth, N. J______ University Club_______ 70O’Toole, Donald L_______ Brooklyn, N. ¥._:.. 2222 1 StU! heinf ob 75*7|| Pace, Stephen_ _______ Americus, Ga... ..u The Methodist Bldg___| 20*Paddock, George A______ Evanston, II1_______ The Wardman Park ___| 27*Patman, Wrighto. oul. Texarkana, Tex_____ The Cavalier_...t .db:113*|| Patrick, Luther. _.____._ Birmingham, Ala____| The Burlington_______ 6*1{ Patton, Nat... ..iaifg Crockett, Tex..... .. George Washington Inn_| 114 *|| Pearson, Herron......oq Jackson, Tenn______ 1301 16th St.o.2l sol 112%Peterson, Hugh i... io: Alley, Ga. wii) cui 2901 Connecticut Ave__| 20*tPeterson, J. Hardin... __ Lakeland, Fla_______ George WashingtonInn_| 18*t 1 Pfeifer, Joseph L______ Brooklyn, N. Y_____ The Raleigh. . ..__.._ 74Pheiffer, William T.....ic New York City, N.Y... The Carlton_ 2..._ i: 77*Pjerce, Walter M________ La Grande, Oreg.....{ The Dodge_ .._......__ 96 *1 Pittenger, William A___| Duluth, Minn_______| 244 House Office Bldg__| 56*Plauché, Vance__________ Lake Charles, La____| The Alban Towers_____ 43*Ploeser, Walter C_______ St. Louis, Mo_... 1301 Russell Rd., Alex-63andria, Va.*Plumley, Charles A______ Northfield, Vt_______| 2929 Connecticut Ave__| 118 *Poage, \W.: Rive. vuow Waco, Tex. ooicag. 2309 Skyland P1. SE___| 115*Powers, D. Lane________ Trenton, N. J... The Shoreham ________ 69Priest, J. Perey... ii... ' Nashville, Tenn____._ The Fairfax. fol © 111 812 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) -Name *tRabaut, Louis C__._ i... *Ramsay, Robert L______ *+tRamspeck, Robert_____ *|| Randolph, Jennings____| ||Rankin, Jeannette_______ *t Rankin, John: Basuallof Rayburn, Samawolivsddof *Reece, B. Carroll... . *Reed, Chauncey W______ *+Reed, Daniel Aoi o_o. *Rees, Edward H________ *t1|/|| Rich, Robert F_____ *Richards, James P_____._ *|| Rivers, I. Mendel______ Rizley, Ross. Lill) wiicoyi Robertson, A. Willis______ Robertson, Charles R_____ *| || Robinson, J. W_______ *||Robsion, John M_______ *Rockefeller, Lewis K____| Rockwell: Robert PJ 1] Rodgers, Robert L_______ Rogers, Edith Nourse_____ *Rogers; Will 3 Dosing]of #Rolph, Thomas. iil.LU *Romjue, Milton A_______ *+t||Russell, Sam M______ *||Sabath, Adolph J______ #Sacks, Jeon uc. diad *+Sanders, Jared Y., Jr___| %¥{Sasscer,. Lansdale G. ..| Satterfield, Dave E., Jr___| *Sauthoff, Harry...__. I *1||||Seanlon, Thomas E___| *Schaefer, Edwin M______ Schuetz, Leonard W______ Schulte, William T_______ *Scott, Hugh D., Jr. _.___ Scrugham, James G______ *Secrest, Robert T_______ Shafer: Paul Wiican ogi *Shanley, James A_______ Shannon, Joseph B_______| *Sheppard, Harry R______ Sheridan, John Edward___| *||Short, Dewey__________ *Sikes, Robert L. F______ *Simpson, Richard M_____ *||Smith, Francis R.______ *Smith, Frederick C______ *||Smith, Howard W______ *Smith, Joe-L ..c81i81 2 *1+Smith, Lawrence H____!| Home post office Washingtong residence raphyBiog p esiden Page Gone Pointe Park, | The Bellevue_________ 5 ich. Follansbee, W. Va___| George Washington Inn.| 124 Atlanta, Ga. ........ The Broadmoor... ___._. 21 Elkins, W. Va_______ 4608 Reservoir Rd_____| 124 Missoula, Mont_____ 2220 20th St. landaa 64 Tupelo, Miss claoli 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 57 Bonham, ‘Tex. _..io 1900-Q Strac lial 41] 114 Johnson City, Tenn__| 3900 Connecticut Ave__| 110 West Chicago, Ill____| 2009 Glen Ross Rd., 27 esr Silver Spring, Md. Dunkirk, NaY.aquic The Roosevelt_ 0... 83 Emporia, Kans______ 1801-16th St. uilisdl2 37 Woolrich, Pal iia. 4674 Garfield St_______ 100 Lancaster, S. C_____ The Continental _______ 108 op] Charleston,| 3127 Adams Mill Rd_._| 107 Guymon, Okla______ 6140-316. Pluie, lio 95 Lexington; Va ooo ochoodl Dad 120 aoathall ahs Bismarck, N. Dak___| The Roosevelt________ 86 Provo, Utah lciagoly The Wardman Park___{ 117 Barbourville, Ky____| 1500 Delafield P1______ 41 Chatham, N. Y_____ The Wardman Park___| 80 (Paonia, Celoll .colalild Li. van asl glu 14 Brie Pa. uns... The Continental ______ 103 Lowell, Mass_______ The Shoreham. _.____._ 48 Oklahoma City, Okla_| George Washington Inn_| 92 San Francisco, Calif | The Shoreham ________ 9 Maeon, Mouo-...... George Washington Inn_| 60 Stephenville, Tex____| 2817 Q St. SE________ | 115 Chiecago,oTll_Jiaizoiiy The Mayflower_._.___._.__.| 25 Philadelphia, Pa_____ 1431 House Office Bldg_| 97 Baton Rouge, La____| 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 43 Upper Marlboro, Md. |. J 220i, i801 __..... 46 Richmond, Va_.____ The Mayflower...__.___| 119 Madison, Wis_______ 5230 Chevy Chase | 126 Parkway. Pittsburgh, Pa______ The Carroll Arms_____ 103 Belleville, Ill________ The Roger Smith______ 29 Chieago, Tl... ilogu 2121 Virginia Ave_____ 26 Hammond IndU2Ioafl.ss S0HHHIS Joos 990 30 Philadelphia, Pa coal.83002 200d 98 coo Reno, Nev. _silaias The Westchester_ _ ____ 67 Caldwell, Ohio______ 1001 East Capitol St___| 90 Battle Creek, Mich__| The Methodist Bldg___| 51 New Haven, Conn___| 3802 Alton P1.________ 16 Kansas City, Mo____| The Willard _ ________ 61 Yucaipa, Calif ______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 13 Philadelphia, Pa_____ 322 2d St. NE__.....] 98 Galena, Mo_________ 2301 Connecticut Ave__| 62 Crestview, Fla______ 935 South 26th St., 19 Arlington, Va. Huntingdon, Pa_____ 4908 Western Ave., | 100 Chevy Chase, Md. Philadelphia, Pa....tfiadfbooatan J. coe 0 98 Marion, Ohio_______ The Marlyn_ _ ________ 89 Alexandria, Va______ 204 West Walnut St., | 120 Alexandria, Va. Beckley, W. Va_____ The Mayflower________ 125 Racine, Wis_ ______._ The General Scott____._ 126 Members’ Addresses 813 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name Home post office Washington residence iy Page Smith, Margaret Chase___| Skowhegan, Maine __| The Wardman Park_ _ 44 *Smith, Martin F________ Hoquiam, Wash_____ 5504 Grove St., Chevy | 122 Chase, Md. *Snyder, J. Buell... __o. Perryopolis, Pa______ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 102 *1+Somers, Andrew L______ Brooklyn, N. YU, ui. The Annapolis_____.__ 74 *South, Charles Li... 0. Coleman, Tex... The Skyland.-. 116 *+Sparkman, John J______ Huntsville, Ala______ The Broadmoor_______ 5 *Spence, Brent. _._...__2_['Fort Thomas, Ky... The Roosevelt... _. _.. 40 *||Springer, Raymond S___| Connersville, Ind____| 3339 Stephenson PI____| 32 *Starnes, Joes olla ors Cuntersville Alara, fo Toul1 ol 5 alin (|Steagall, Henry B_______ Ozark, Ala... The Wardman Park__ _ 4 *Stearns, Foster_ 5..._. Hancock, N.H__-=. The Mayflower_______._ 68 *Stefan, Karl...if: Norfolk, Nebr. _ © The Mayflower________| . 66 *Stevenson, William H____| La Crosse, Wis______ George Washington Inn | 126 *Stratton, William G_____| Morris, II__________ 601 Woodlawn Terrace, 24 Alexandria, Va. . *||||[Sullivan, John B_____ St. Louis, Mo... 22.2 The Shoreham... . 63 Sumner, Jessie. _____._____ Milford, Tl: pola oo. . F O10 (Hi 28 Sumners, Hatton W______ Dallas, Tex. 220101 The Shoreham ________ 114 Sutphin, William H______ Matawan, NJ. oopear hernias 69 *Sweeney, Martin L______ Cleveland, Ohio_____ The Shoreham ________ 91 ¥Taber, John oii lL Auburn, NUYULE 2590 The Dorchester House _| 81 Talle, Henry QO: nioio..ol Decorah, Iowa. _____ 1420 House Office Bldg_| 34 *|| Tarver, Malcolm C_____ Dalton, Gall Jools 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 21 *tTenerowicz, Rudolph G_| Hamtramck, Mich___| The Majestic. ________ 51 "ery. David D.__... ~~ Little Rock, Ark____| 100 Maryland Ave. NE_ 8 Thil Jew D_._-0 7:2: Milwaukee, Wis_____ 1607 House Office Bldg_| 127 | Thom, William R..._.____ Canton, Ohio. 2250 The Capitol Park__.._.| 90 *Thomas, Albert. _..... Houston, Tex... Woodley Park Towers__| 114 *Thomas, J. Parnell____._ Allendale, N. J... __ 4636. Garfield St__ ..... 70 *Thomason, R. Ewing____| El Paso, Tex________ The Kennedy-Warren__| 115 #¥Tibbott, Harveraoo.of Ebensburg, Pa__.____ The Baronet! ‘oiisce 102 Tinkham, George Holden_.| Boston, Mass_______ 1025 Vermont Ave_____ 49 ¥Polon, John HH. —__. --1.0akland, Calif... _ The Dorchester House_| 10 Traynor, Philip. A... ...-z Wilmington, Del____| 904 North Wayne St., 17 ; Arlington, Va. *| Treadway, Allen T_____ Stockbridge, Mass___| 2490 Tracy Pl_________ 47 Van Zandt, James E______ AONE, 3-0. eal or. BE to pael GLE 101 *Vincent, Beverly M_____ Brownsville, Ky._____ The Capitol Towers____| 39 *Vingon, Carls’ Milledgeville, Ga____| 4 Primrose St., Chevy 21 Chase, Md. *Voorhis, Jerry. .--_. _ San Dimas, Calif __ _| 3307 Carolina Pl., Alex-| 11 andria, Va. *Vorys, Joon MM. -._.. Columbus, Ohio_____ 3454 Newark St_______ 90 *Vreeland, Albert L______ East Orange, N. J___| 8318 16th St., Silver 71 Spring, Md. *Wadsworth, James W____| Geneseo, N. Y______ 3263 N'Si-. -o-82 Walter, Francis E________ aston, Pa; tooo oli iionannn. 101 ol “Ward, David J.~ Salisbury, Md_______ George Washington Inn_| 45 *|| Wasielewski, Thad F___| Milwaukee, Wis_____ 2800 Woodley Rd______ 127 | Weaver, Zebulon________ Asheville, N. C______ 4619 Hunt Ave., Chevy | 85 : Chase, Md. Weiss, Samuel A__________ Glnsgport, Pa... ..-The Hightower_._._____| 103 *Weleh, Richard J... San Francisco, Calif__| The Roosevelt________ 10 Wene, Blmer Hl. ._. Vineland, N. J______ The Occidental... -{ “69 West, Millon HH. .. Brownsville, Tex____| The Hamilton_____.____ 115 *||'Wheat, William H______ Rantoul, 1... The Wardman Park___| 29 Whelchel, B. Frank_______ Gainesville, Ga... | en anaes 22 64674°—77-2—1st ed——>53 814 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 301-308) Name *1 White, Compton I._____ *Whitten, Jamie L_______ *Whittington, Wm. M____| *Wickersham, Vietor_ ____ *Wigglesworth, Richard B.{ *Williams, Clyde..... 2Wilson, Earl... social Winter, Thomas DD. ...... *| || Wolcott, Jesse P______ Wolfenden, James___ _____ Wolverton, Charles A_____ *Woodruff, Roy O________ Woodrum, Clifton A______ *Worley, Eugene_________ Home post office Clarksfork, Idaho___| Charleston, Miss____| Greenwood, Miss____| Mangum, Okla______ Milton, Mass. o_o) Hillsboro, Mo_______ Haron, Indo io oo: Girard, Kans... _.._ Port Huron, Mich___| Upper Darby; Pay aji Merchantville, N. J__| Bay City, Mich __ Boanoke, Vall -hentifd Shamrock, Tex_____ | #3 Wright, James: A»...5.1 Carnegie, Pa elo *|Young, Stephen M_____ Cleveland, Ohio_____| Youngdahl, Osecar________ Minneapolis, Minn__| *Zimmerman, Orville. ____ Kennett, Mo________| DELEGATES *tDimond, Anthony J_.___| Valdez, Alaska______ *King, Samuel W________ Honolulu, Hawaii___.| Washington residence ie Page 608 Nox Carolina, 2 Ave. SE. 2501 Calvert St_______ 58 The Wardman Park___| 58 2811 Hillerest Drive 94 SE. J ool Jisuus 49 The Roosevelt. _._____. 62 The Washington House_| 32 George Washington Inn_| 37 109 East Thornapple | 52 St., Chevy Chase, Md. 22 failg guar 99 Army and Navy Club__.| 68 20 New Hampshire 53 ve. tr = ris rpamadin Hy114120 369 North Glebe Rd., | 116 Arlington, Va. 1 deel 3008 104 1921 Kalorama Rd____| 87 The General Scott___ 55 The Roosevelt________ 63 1868 Columbia Rd_____ 129 The Roosevelt________ 129 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS *Elizalde, Joaquin M_____ ManilasP. T._" The Shoreham .________ 129 *Pagdn, Bolivar, 0 San Juan, PR" The Roosevelt... _..-.__| 129 | INDIVIDUAL INDEX (For list of members of Congress, with their addresses, see pp. 803-814) A Page Aamodt, O. S., Bureau of Plant Industry._..___ 364 Abbot, 6. G.: Director, Astrophysical Observatory. .....-_-415 International Exchanges. .:. ocr oct riersam 414 National Advisory Committee for Aeronau-Begud Desla aati ep et aba 406 National Archives Couneil. _.._ 407 National: Gallery of Af mms cecce-'vcmommad 414 Secretary, Smithsonian Institution ___.______ 413 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission______ 415 Abbott, Henry D., Soil Conservation Service... 365 Abbott, Ben, Office of Secretary of the Navy__.. 338 Abel, J. F., Office of Education... 396 Abell, Dr. Tryin, Office of Defense Health and Welfare BOEVIOR. LC tous Fils to won eil crsmrer 313 a William S., Assistant Corporation Coun-i Alnity. Jennie V., Office of the Speaker____. 270 Abney, James W., Division of Defense Housing Coordination. ii. i. ti Sain bictact 313 Acheson, Dean G.: J Assistant Secretary of State__..________________ 317 Board of Economic Operation________________ 318 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service__. 318 Board of Foreign Service Personnel ._________ 319 Acton, Howard, Division of Defense Housing Coordination. doo. casos i. SoranJn 313 Adair, Ruth, Senate Committee on Interstate Comunerce.-....... 0 ou RJ ianidil 265 Adams, Benjamin F., District Assessor’s Office. 443 Adams, Emory S.: The Adjutant ___. 95100 327 General... United States Soldiers’ Home... ______________ 415 Adams, Eva B., secretary to Senator McCarran_ 269 Senate Committee on the District of Colum- § 5 0 nln 1 BB Le ne Tn PRL RL SER OI 264 Adams, Foster, Federal Works Agency _________ 399 Adams, Dr. George W., Freedmen’s Hospital __ 398 Adams, Helen M., Senate Committee on Bank- ing and Currency Finn gal OR Lonel Seti A 264 Adams, Loxlie V., Government Printing Office. 277 Adams, Lucy Wilcox, Office of Indian Affairs.__ 347 Adams, W. M., Patent Office: i000 Dinil 370 Adams, Walter A., Division of Far Eastern Affairs ECR i ne ee EE ar ea 318 Adams, Willem, Netherlands Legation_________ 458 Adcock, Lt. Col. Clarence L., Office of the Chief of Engineers. LU Gniai dn 329 2-500 aii Adkins, Jesse C., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of:Columbia = fi Sh ital 2 Srila uy 433 Adkins, Robinson E., Veterans’ Administra- ER a ee A i he 419 Adler, John W., Administrative Division_______ 334 Affra, Dr. Jodo R. Simoés, Portuguese Legation_ 459 Ager, Paul W., Tennessee Valley Authority._._ 416 Agnew, Lt. John J., District Boxing Commis- sion 4 Ao Dariel F., Superintendent, District Industrial Home School white)... 444 Ahern, Col. Leo J., Office of the Inspector Gen-eral at me i Lr AE AE a AY ARRAN] 327 Aikman, Duncan, Office of the Coordinator of International Affairs...U5 313 Ainsworth, Culver M., International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. 403 Aitchison, Clyde B., Interstate Commerce Comilstlon or hr amp 404 Aker, Dr. Ziibeyir, Turkish Embassy_____._.____ 460 Akers, Milburn P., Office of Secretary of the FILENY a ii smells ad hat 2s IL edi 346 Akin, Paul C., the RFC Mortgage Company__ 388 Akins, Mildred, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency i ie a Re 264 Aktarzendi, Maj. Hassan, Iran Legation________ 456 Alba, Pedro de, Pan American Union... 409 Albert, Laurence E., Secret Service Division___ 322 Albin “H.-C, Surplus Marketing Administra- tion Ce rs ER TE a ee 366 Albuquerque, Lima, Lt. Col. Stenio Caiode, Brazilian Embassy ode LE 452 Alden, Charles E., assistant custodian, Senate Office Buflding —.-= Sra Sees ek 275 Aldredge, Robert C., Weather Bureau__________ 371 Aldrich, Kildroy Pr. chief post office inspector... 337 Aldrich, Loyal B. , Astrophysical Observatory... 415 ‘Alencastro-Guimardes, AEC Ades Brazilian ETH] 8770 fet py A ih et Hh 452 Alexander, F. Virginia, Passport Division= 2" 319 Alexander, Robert C., Visa Division. ___.______ 319 Alfaro, Capitan Colén Eloy: Ambassador from Ecuador... TE 454 Governing Board, Pan American Union _____ 410 Alfaro, Carlos Adalberto, El Salvadoran Lega- Gon a adn haa HE pia 454 Allan, Joseph W., District Fire Department____ 446 Allanson, HH. n., Bureau of Plant Industry. ____ 364 Allard, Hector, Canadian Legation t= Bias 452 Alldredge, J. Haden, Interstate Commerce Commission. oa % Fr iili b, poi nee a) 404 Allen, Bruce R., Western Union Telegraph Co_ 276 Allen, Edward W.: “International Fisheries Commission t=" :'7C © 403 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-miggion. Unt Ser Ale ha nan nn 404 Allen, Rear Admiral Ezra G., Office of Secretary of theN NAVY oe ie I ERS Hans 338 Allen, Frances, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. _________ 264 Allen, Mrs. George E., Columbia Hospital for Oa Ey a HE a 383 Allen, Guy F., Bureau of Accounts _.__________ 323 Allen, LEN, Pennessee Valley Authority. 417 Allen, Louis P., Office of Treasurer of the United States mn me wl LER SLR i 323 Allen, Louise E., Administrative Office of the Unipd States: Courts’ 200. (Hii 30 Fat To 434 Allen,P. F., Division of Personnel Supervision and Management SR A Ee See Sa 319 Allen, RobertE., Office of Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense Lon00h: 43 352 LOE Allen, Ronald H.: Defense Supplies Corporation. __._____________ 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation... ______ 386 Allin, Bushrod W., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomies. GUC THUR SEaG i Sng wl 359 Al am H., Division of Near Eastern Allred, an H., Securities and Exchange Com-mission (E000 ia RE 8 anise ln 2 Lid Almy, Capt. E. D., Army and Navy Munitions Bogrdis: fool riimth EGE T01 JHEaS 381 Alonso, Jorge, Cuban Embassy _________________ 453 Altmeyer, Arthur J., Social Security Board_____ 395 Amador, ‘Armando e., Mexican Embassy. ___ 457 815 816 Congressional Directory Page Page Amberg, Julius H., Office of Secretary of War __ 325 Ambrose, Harold F., Office of the Postmaster Generali. Lod te oll isin pie it a ee 335 Amidon, Edna P., Office of Education_________ 396 Amorim do Valle, Commander Edmundo Jor- dio, Brazilian Embassy. rio 452 Anastasio, Julian J., Capitol police_____________ 275 Andersen, Mrs. Alice Klopstad, Senate Com- mittee on Civil Service. tei corvga... 264 Anderson, Capt. A. B., Army and Navy Muni- tong Boards 20 |. r, 7 To re 381 Anderson, Charles R., Civil Service Com- MISSION. LIL Lous dnp... mat inal bac dn 82 Anderson, Wing Comdr. D. F., British Embassy. ce ae a 455 Anderson, BE. D., Panama Canal...__. 409 Anderson, Mary, Director, Women’s Bureau__ 375 Anderson, R. E., Maritime Commission___._____ 405 André, Jule E., Geological Survey______________ 348 Andresen, Mrs. August, Congressional Club__ 384 Andretta, S. A., Administrative Division______ 334 Andrew, Jean D., secretary to Senator Aiken__ 268 Andrews, Charles O.: Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 235 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy ______ 236 Andrews, John, minority clerk ________________ 272 Andrews, Paul R., Office of the Chief Inspector. 337 Andrews, R. D., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- Homi Lol. Lode tii TR ar i hl 390 Andrews, Walter G., Board of Visitors to Mili- try Academy CCa 236 Angel, Herbert E.: National Archives... J... i. oc = a 406 National Historical Publications Commission. 407 Angell, Mrs. Homer D., Congressional Club__ 384 Anglin, Byron, Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 Annand, P. N., Bureau of Entomology and Plant:Quasantine... oo... onl. al 360 Anslinger, H.. J., Commissioner of Narcotics___ 322 Anzorena, Eugenio de, Mexican Embassy____ 457 Appell, Donald T. House Committee on CIE. oy re a ani 40 273 Appleby, Paul H., Under Secretary of Agricul-LY putin Se WE Lh ER a Eat 354 ADDS. S. Margaret, Senate Committee on Immigration. .av. oud vhs. or i Em 265 Ararigboia, Lt. Col. Armado de Souza e Mello, Brazilian Embassy. oo can coro fdr lo 452 Arend, Frederick van den, Special Division____ 319 Arends, Leslie C., Board of Visitors to the Mili- ory ACAACINY Do no Tr eh 236 Arey, Hawthorne, Export-Import Bank of WASHINGLON 5 cit ore a £8 hahah.ts aid Loran 391 Arias, Rodolfo Garcia, Argentine Embassy____ 451 Ariburun, Maj. Tekin, Turkish Embassy..____ 460 Arline, Gertrude, United States Civil Service Commission Contact Office. ________ 277 Arner, George B. L.: Committee for Reciprocity Information_______ 384 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations. _____ 356 Arnold, Celia, Senate Committee on Interstate COMINCICE. cid cnet oh waa 2 265 sabatoOL Arnold, C. R., Farm Credit Administration____ 361 Arnold, E. G., Farm Security Administration__ 362 Arnold, Maj. Gen. H. H Acronantieal Boards cai toi.naa Bs 379 or Chief of the Army Air Forees_____________.____ 331 National Advisory Committee for Aero- 53 GL DE RE Ll Dek Bete Se 406 The Joint Board... cc vo. oo8un aE o rob 405 War Department General Staff_______________ 326 Arnold, Leroy D., Office of Indian Affairs______ 348 Arnold, Thurman W., Department of Justice.. 333 Arnold, William R., Chief of Chaplains, Army_ 326 Arnold, William W., Board of Tax Appeals.__ 382 Artrip, Floyd E., House folding room__.________ 271 Arundel, Russell M., Mount Rushmore Na- tional Memorial Commission. ______________ 352 Arundell, C. Rogers, Board of Tax Appeals.___ 382 Ash, Lt. Col. James E., Army Medical Museum. 328 Ashley, A. McC., Office of Budget and Finance_ 355 Ashworth, Dr. Reid R., District Health Depart- ment... i sassdentd se detY angst ae 446 Askim, Commodore Per, Norwegian Legation__ 458 Aston, J. Lee, Office of the Doorkeeper________ 271 Atcheson, George, Jr., Division of Far Eastern Affalng bdo Tor hana 318 Atherton, Ray, Division of European Affairs . 318 Atkinson, C. Newell, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia sansa bare 428 Atkinson, Mary Irene, Children’s Bureau..__. 374 Atkinson, Richard R., District barber examiner. 443 Auburn, H. w., British Embassy cio. iL 455 Auchter, B.C. "Bureau of Plant Industry______ 364 Auer, Col. Harry A., Office of the Judge Advo- eterGeneraliery ew © 0 0 i 327 Austin, Elsie, recorder of deeds office. ________ 435 ‘Avansino, Norman, Senate Committee on the Districtol Columbia =o. -264 Avery, Eunice V., Senate Committee on Bank- ing and Currency thrall Cae elk dl 264 Avery, Hastings P., Securities and Exchange Commission of ihbant Fovingl7 412 Aydinalp, Maj. Cemal, Turkish Embassy__._ 460 Ayres, Brig. Gen. Leonard P., Office of the Under Secretary of Waar...= #0 325 -:% Ayres, William A., Federal Trade Commission_ 398 Azer, Anis, Egyptian Legation_____.___... 454 ..[ B Babbit, Harry L.: Defense Homes Corporation __________________ 393 Federal National Mortgage Association. _____ 388 The RFC Mortgage Company _______________ 388 Babcock, Charles E., Pan American Union_____ 409 Babcock, George D. Federal Works Agency. 399 Babcock, James O., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomics. Jil Gai 358 UALSpial] Bachman, Byers M., Office of District Assessor.. 443 Bachman, Marie, secrotary to Senator Herring__ 268 Bachmann, J ohn J., Commodity Exchange Admintstration oo li it ae 360 Badger, L. Paul, Senate Committee on Educa- tion-and Labor... ...... .. n-Seles? 264 Badt, Capt. H. A., Bureau of Navigation __.__ 341 Baekeland, George, National Inventors’ Council. 372 Baeyens, Baron James, French Embassy _______ 455 Béez, Dr. Manuel Martinez, Pan American Sanitary Buresmaiois os ol fo ST ine 409 Baggarly, F. C., Federal Trade Commission____ 398 Bagley, Dudley W., General Accounting Office. 402 Bagnell, Douglas B, Commodity Exchange AQTUIRISIation. eee 360 Bahgat, Dr. Mounir, Egyptian Legation. ______ 454 Bailey, Annie Elizabeth, Senate Committee on OMINGLeR....... ....... levakalidiesealnd=o Bailey, Dr. Bruce K., Freedmen’s Hos jinlas 2 398 Bailey, Eldon L. , Veterans’ Administration____ 418 Bailey, F. J., Bureau of the Budget________._____ 316 Bailey, George M., the Coast Guard... ___..-340 Bailey, Jennings, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbigsais aera Shean. TF Jal ty on 433 Bailey, John W., Jr., Division of Foreign Service Personnels d::in ln lv To suionodande 319 Bailey, Josiah W., Board of Visitors to the Soast is Guard Seti SE re RR i Vd Tp Dh Bailoy, R. H.;:Jr.: Secretary to Senator Gulley in dar aat asd 268 Senate Committee on Mines and Mining_____ 265 Bailey, Robert L.: Civil Service Commission____________________ 382 Civil Service Commission contact office ____-277 Bailey, Warren Worth, Office of the Secretary ofthe Senate. 71: 00 cc io mt Ry 264 Bain, I. Y., Bureau of Internal Revenue________ 323 Bain, Dr. Katherine, Children’s Bureau_.______ 374 Baity, J. L., General Accounting Office._____.__ 402 Baker, A. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant UATANLING oo ono on alle a HE 361 Baker, Allan B., United States attorney’s office. 435 Baker, Cora W., American Battle Monuments Commission x ds = ams ati Te oh 379 Baker, Edith M., Children’s Bureau___________ 374 Baker, Maj. George H., Selective Service Sys-7h ieeeee tn a saa Baker, George P., Civil Aeronautics Board ____ 371 Baker, Jacob, Federal Works Agency...__ 399 Baker, J oseph R., assistant to the legal ad viser__ 319 Baker, Walter E., Federal Power Commission_. 394 Baker, William, Capitol Poller 00> == 275 Baker, Willis M. , Tennessee Valley Authority. 417 Indwidual Index Bakkie, Melva B., American Red Cross _._____ 381 Baldridge, Katherine, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Jiao a 0d o.oo 265 Baldridge, Robert, Jr., Office of Secretary of the “5 6 Baldwin, C. B., Farm Security Adminisiopion: a Baldwin, Elmer I., General Land Office... ____ 347 Baldwin, Col. G. P., Joint Economy Board _ 405 Baldwin, Laurence A. Civil Service Commis-A RETR ass Ren Cn Bad ay as La DRIAL 38 Bol James W., Office of the Chief Signal Officer REE ME SRE TU RTT 33 Ball, Joseph H., Joint Committee on Printing__ 234 Ball, Richard, Work Projects Administration__ 400 Ballesteros, Sixto L., Bolivian Legation_________ 451 Ballif, Louis S. , Tariff Commission. _________.__ 415 Ballinger, Billy, CapitoliPolices oi alien 275 Ballinger, Willis J., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Ballou, Dr. Frank 'W., superintendent, District Balls, Alfred G., The Alaska Railroad _________ 351 Balls, A. K., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering i co Coznnnaii nonztion 358 Bane, Baldwin B., Securities and Exchange Commission ia ool), 7 bein. gudas: 412 Bane, Frank, Office of Price Administration____ 314 Bang-Jensen, Povl, Danish Legation___________ 453 Banister, Marion, Assistant Treasurer of the United States Jysnns 323 esha,dds Banks, Talcott M., Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation_.________________ 381 Banks, William, Capitol Police__._____.__.__.___ 275 Bankson, Virgil L., Division of Defense Housing Coordination: oi Sia Joi aan t300T 313 Banning, Paul D., special assistant to the Public Printer. wooo. A yyseii lod BL 00 277 Barayev, Maj. Pavel I., Soviet Socialist Re- publesiEmbassy. baud auznt oT onal 460 Barbour, Arnold wo. St. Elizabeths Hospital__ 398 Barbour, W. Warren: Capital Auditorium Commission_____________ 233 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Groundsiternzal. intra) Jno). hl ding 33 Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission___ 237 Barclay, R. E., British Embassy._.__._____.___._ 455 Bard, Ralph A., Assistant Secretary of the Navy_ 338 Bad Shel A., Joint Committee on the Aint esnips Sa da bn 234 Barden, Col. WilliamJ., United States Engineer ¥, WEE paren TUS RLL, oor als Rr JRRTER SO IN TR W 0 Sl Soriano: Secretary to Senator T'ydings_________________ 269 Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Afalrgrs Lava ie Loni or ined, ly 66 Barker, H., Patent Office... 0.2 ig50aky 370 ....... Barker, Howard F., Tariff Commission________ 416 Barkley, Alben W.: Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson__ 238 Interparliamentary Union.____________.______ 235 Joint Committee on Government Organiza- Homito. oon 30008600 seasonal 237 J ol Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- VOM he hae em ie STIDEIL. 34 Joint Committee on the Library _____________ 234 Joint Committee to Acquire a Site and Addi- tional Buildings for the Library of Congress. 233 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board. ______ 279 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission. ______ 239 National Archives Couneil .______________.__._ 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board. _______ 407 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 414 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission______ 415 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 Barnard, Chester I., Office of the Secretary of the TICASHULY nieved SB SLLOR naar DEL 321 dination. .... Bled iiin J ang if alading, 355 Barnes, Charles M., Treaty Division. __________ 319 Barnes, George A., Soil Conservation Service__ 365 Barnes, G. O., Office of the Treasurer of the United States...Syiaiony 0... 323 Barnes, Lt. Col. Harold A., Office of the Quarter-master General...lo cuniEinn 7. 327 Barnes, John S., Soil Conservation Service. ____ 366 Barnett, Robert M., Federal Security Agency... 395 Baron, Dr. José T., Cuban Embassy. ..________ 453 Barr, Hugh W., United States Supreme Court.. 425 Page Barr, Mason, Farm Security Administration___ 362 Barr, Rene W., Bureau of the Public Debt_____ 323 Barre, H. W., Bureau of Plant Industry________ 364 Barreto, Dr. Joo de Barros, Pan American San- Hary'Burewrr ooo. 301 iE JIL Giese 409 Barrett, Brig. Gen. Charles D., Headquarters Marine Corps. ob DUEGIASL 344 .cUioufy Barrett, John, House post office. ______________ 272 Barron, Bryton, Division of Research and Pub- Yeation, Jl A0 380 agin ll ad DABS 1) Barrows, Albert L., National Research Council. 406 Barrows, J. S., Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 334 Barrows, Leland, Soil Conservation Service.___ 365 Bartel, W. P., Interstate Commerce Commis- glon. GLEN0 a Sn SIT ORE 0 GE 404 Bartelt, E. F., Bureau of Accounts__.___________ 323 Bartlett, Edward L., Secretary of Alaska_______ 351 Bartley, Guy, Inland Waterways Corporation._ oo Barton, Bernard, Burean oftheCenSus.__._______ Pkg, EA BE RSS Sa SR 367 Born harks M., Office of Secretary of the Navy od be SEC A nh SY TT TAF 338 Baruch, Ismar, Civil Service Commission. ______ 383 Bashore, Harry W., Bureau of Reclamation____ 348 Bass, Neil, Tennessee Valley Authority. _______ 417 Bassett, Albert E., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration LliiTion [Hof Rota nL Vet DIA 387 Bassett, Dr. Charles T'., District Board of Dental XOTITOLS. «ons smn eons So SHORE, 443 Bassett, Henry N., Defense Supplies Corpora- don. oo CULE ena Fa FE A 93 Bassler, R. S., National Museum._______________ 414 Bates, F. J., National Bureau of Standards_____ 369 Bates, J. L., Maritime Commission____________ 405 Bates, P. H., National Bureau of Standards____ 369 Bates, Sanford, Federal Prison Industries, Inc._ 334 Batista, Consuelo, Cuban Embassy _________.___ 453 Batlle, Dr. Julio Vega, Dominican Legation____ 454 Batschelet, Clarence E., Bureau of the Census__ 368 Batt, W. L., Office of Production Management__ 315 Battley, Lt. Col. Joseph F., Selective Service System. Fospai aoitiai aie aE 413 Batty, R. P., British Embassy...50} 455 Baugh, James B., Jr.: Civil Service Commission__________.__________ 382 Civil Service Commission contact office______ 277 Baughman, J. S., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- font i Je 2 Gui SURI a De IT 0 90 Baxter, James P., Coordinator of Information__ 315 Baxter, Kilgo C., Veterans’ Administration____ 418 Baxter, Norman W., Office of Secretary of Com- TRY ERs: IRD as ARIAT WI Sah Rai 367 Baxter, William M., Jr., American Red Cross__ 380 Bazykin, Vladimir I., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy... 2000 nb ot enes-Lago awn. 460 Beach, W. Edwards, Commodity Exchange Administrations 10. 2 DEBTORTOE 360 007 10 Beall, Capt. L. R., Metropolitan Police. _______ 447 Beals, Ralph iy District Public Library_______ 444 Beam, FrankP., Jr., Postal Telegraph-Cable C 276 Beam, Harry P., Joint Committee on Govern-ment Organization CU 01 : gt ior VIUaa07 237 Beaman, Middleton, House Legislative Coun- Bear, N. Robert, Soil Conservation Service.____ 366 Bearce, H. W., National Bureau of Standards__ 369 Beard, Charles A., National Historical Publica- tions Commission yy iL 407 Beard, Mary, American Red Cross_____________ 381 Beasley, Lt. Col. Rex W., Office of the Chief of Pield Avtilleryit Tail OJDOSSDIST 326 Deal, Ca Frank E., Office of Secretary or ONAVY. i tui ati ree an TEER Beatty, Willard W., Office of Indian Affairs____ 307 Beck, W. C., Jr.: Metals Reserve Company... 500sou 0s 392 Rubber Reserve Company. ___._____._____.__ 392 Beckett, Humphrey, District Engineer Depart- ment... 0. cheap 00000 TNGERNET 44 Beckett, InspectorJ. F., Metropolitan Police___ 447 Beckley, Harold R., Senate Press Gallery. _____ 734 Bedel, Myra, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses... ________ 264 818 Congressional Directory Page Beebe, John C., Federal Power Commission_._ 394 Beeche, Dr. Hector, Costa Rican Legation. ____ 453 Beers, M.. Marion, Housing Authority__________ 401 Begg, John M., Division of Cultural Relations. 318 Bejarano, Dr. Jorge, Pan American Sanitary Bureal danas. ho abuui cada aint wad oss 409 Belin, Ferdinand L., National Gallery of Art__ 414 Belly Shares S., Office of Secretary of the Treas- SE Pet Sl Ee 321 Bell, it B., House postoffice_.._._.._:.... 272 Bell, Daniel W.: Atnerienn Red Cross. i-oo io ioobo i mises 380 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ______.__ 362 Under Secretary of the Treasury______________ 321 Bell, Evangeline S., Office of the Attorney Gen- eral Tectiassi NEE sabe 333 BC Bell, E. W., General Accounting Office. ________ 402 Bell, J. Heywood, Jr., custodian, Senate Office Building. ass gia Ns5iuiicidiT its Sian 275 Bell, W. B., Fish and Wildlife Service _________ 351 Bell, W. Gordon, Washington City post office. 447 Belmont, Mrs. August, American Red Cross___ 380 Belser, Sh J, Senate postoffice...___ st. 266 Bender, H . G., House Committee on Indian ATSINS. oodunlit sn bone i Saas alls 273 Bendetson, Maj. Karl R., Office of the Provost Marshall. General. coca lols oui iti ia 332 Benefield, Lloyd, secretary to Senator Lee______ 269 Bennett, ol, Claire R., United States Soldiers’ H 4 Bennett, Sefveh H., Soil Conservation Service... 365 Bennett, James V.: Bareat] Of PrISONS. cou iv. huseiin tien tot alin 334 Federal Prison Industries, Ine________________ 334 Bennett, John E., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 271 Benoit, Laura O., Office of the Minority Leader. 270 Benson, C. L., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harborside cuvior i. slows alu 329 Benson, Col. R. L., British Embassy._.________ 455 Bentley, Fay L., judge, juvenile court__________ 435 Bentley, Harriet, Committee on Conference Minority of theSenate..........__.._._.._._ 264 Berdan, Elsie, District Nurses’ Examining Board Boron Robert F., secretary, District examin-ers and registrars of. architeets :.......iu. 443 Berezin, Col. Pavel Fedorovich, Soviet Socialist Republics BmMbassy. i ceuall 2 Ll. monabiy 460 Berge, Wendell, he Attorney General .___ 333 Bergman, William D., Office of Secretary of the:Novyegecoai i tusaeada 07% sediS sais 338 Bergstrom, P. R. Hichens, Swedish Embassy_. 459 Berkshire, Stewart, Internal Revenue Bureau. 323 Berle, Adolf A., Jr Assistant Secretary of State_._.__._____________ 317 Board of Economic Operation______.__________ 318 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 318 Board of Foreign Service Personnel _________ 319 Export-Import Bank of Washington _______._ 391 Berlin, Charles K., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation... =... Urge ii ig 07 “al. 444 Castendyck, Elsa, Children’s Bureau__________ 374 Castle, Helen H., Office of Lend-Lease Adminis- rablon sr ea 314 Castro, Hector David: Governing Board, Pan American Union____._ 410 Minister of El Salvador. ____._________________ 454 Castro, Morris F. de, Commissioner of Finance, VirginTelandgzfeiite Te 5 oes awd 351 Caswell, L. F., official stenographer to House committees. toi) ln ina ely rai 274 Cates, Larry, librarian of the House____________ 270 Catlett, Fred W.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board_____________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-Hon. Co Ne 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 389 Catlin, Malcolm B., Work Projects Administra- fon SIs Trii Ga Ty fatal oF ny 399 Caton, Louise G., Library of Congress. ________ 278 Cattell, Roscoe A., Bureau of Mines. __________ 349 Caulsen, Harry: Federal Home Loan Bank Board_____________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- Won. oo.oox ooo CA TRIEROTTNG 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation_ ___________ 389 Cavanagh, Helen L., District Public Library. __ 444 Cavanaugh, Andrew J., Securities and Ex- chance Commission 2% o> 0 «i 412 Cavness, Olin, Capitolpolice.. 275 Cayton, Nathan, municipal court__.____________ 435 Cervenka, Dr. Karl, Czechoslovakian Legation_ 453 Chafiee, Alney E., reading clerk of House______ 270 Chalker, Rear Admiral L. Toumlin, Coast Guards nl a maa a 340 Chamberlain, Culver B., District Zoning Ad-justment Board 44 Chamberlin, Edward H., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. ________________ 406 Chamberlin, Stephen J., War Department General Staff feo bah yi i TH 2 doa 326 Chambers, Ralph L., Veterans’ Administration_ 41 Chambers, Robert: Page Buareawiof Customs...fate 0 lie 8 322 Office of General Counsel of the Treasury. ___ 322 Chambers, Thomas B., Soil Conservation Serv-Yop nd bonmin ln haat CL Bslastee ial 366 Chambers, Wrightson, Office of Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General 1.0. 2:07 000 336 Chance, Elora, Senate Committee on the Tibrary sor SRI hn Gt SL age 265 Chandler, Albert B., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. 2 i ois noo)ii 236 Chandler, Henry P., Administrative Office of the United States Courts.____________ SE 434 Chaney, Donald J., Fish and Wildlife Service __ 350 Chapdelaine, Jean, Canadian Legation_________ 452 Chapline, Capt. V. D., Bureau of Navigation__ 341 Chapline, W. R., Forest Service________________ 363 Chapman, Nancy, secretary to Senator Johnson of Colorado. jo slr ol 1] dade it! oo 269 Chapman, Oscar L., Assistant Secretary of the Interior sosu liao l Ho otuanein a awil 346 Chapoy, Maria V., Mexican Embassy_________ 457 Chappell, Richard A., Administrative Office of the United States Courts-ii oiiir oo 434 Charles, Philipp L., Securities and Exchange Commission 100. U0 soul. os aulidannadt 412 Chase, Guy G., Commodity Credit Corporation. 360 Chase, John H., Reconstruction Finance Cor- DOIBHION. Sten ai bas AAAS GED 387 Chavarria, Dr. Antonio Pefia, Pan American Sanitary: Bureau 12 Jo J moi nity 409 Chavez, Dennis, Jr., secretary to Senator Chaveziizull {naar iar Plhisdil 10 Dey 268 Chavez, Juan, Peruvian Embassy_._____________ 458 Cheadle, J. Kennard, Bureau of Reclamation___ 348 Chesney, Earle D., Veterans’ Administration contacl-offices cor, ue DlRe RG 277 Chesnutt, James, House folding room __._______ 271 Chesteen, Gaston D., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation ____________ 05075234 Chevalier, Plinio B. Pina, Dominican Repub- liedlegationtionty Jo fmt J 4 Dleadl ol 454 Chiari, Eduardo A., Panamanian Embassy ____ 458 Chieh, Liu, Embassy...__~ 452 Chinese ___ Childe, C. E., Board of Investigation and Re-search—Transportation 3 Childress, John W., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-LEE LR La Se 389 Childs, James B., Reference Department, Li- Dray ol Congress ar 278 Childs, 8S. L.., British’ Embassy} =~ >" = 455 Chintakananda, Ananta, Thai Legation _______ 460 Chopitea, Carlos Dorado, Bolivian Legation___ 451 Chite, Rose M., Mackay Radio-Telegraph Co__ 276 Christensen, Lars, Norwegian Legation________ 458 Christian, Mary B., Senate Appropriations COMINILIRe... oer, soi nds ee dine Je 264 Christiansen, Milo F., acting District recrea-tional coordindtor... co.Ch L NET 444 Christie, Emerson, Translating Bureau... _____ 319 Christie, Sylvester J., Home Owners’ Loan COrDOPALION of 5 ities EO frre cap boil A 2 ia 390 Christy, Donald F., Office of Foreign Agri-cultural Relatlonsscoi on coi dofent oo 356 Chu, Chia-Chen Clarence, Chinese Embassy__ 453 Chung-yuan, Chan, Chinese Embassy_________ 453 Church, Edgar, Washington city post office___ 447 Church, Melville D., commissioner, Court of Qlatms, ih. Sond vam atl ai od 431 Chuvakhim, Dmitri S., Soviet Socialist Re-publics, Embassy... soot sur ane on 460 Ciechanowski, Jan, Ambassador of Poland _____ 459 Clague, Ewan, Social Security Board___________ 95 Clapp, Earle H.: ForestiServiesl 2. cl io Fy od Sd vy 362 National Capital Park and Planning Com-misslon. Joi fale oa anid 408 Clapp, Gordon R., Tennessee Valley Authority. 416 Clapp, Verner W., Library of Congress.________ 278 Clark, Bennett Champ, Regent, Smithsonian Institution. .._ J 0c os Fooaioiey Seni: 414 Clark, Charles C., Weather Bureau____________ 371 Clark, Dr. Clifton P., Coast Guard. ___________ 340 Clark, Elmer B., Official Reporter, House_.____ 274 Clark, Dr. Fred H., Veterans’ Administration__ 418 Individual Index Page Clark, Harley, House folding room _________.___ 271 Clark, John M., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... .._..._______.._. 313 Clark, Omer W., Veterans’ Administration ____ 417 i Fomine 0., Jr., Assistant Attorney Gen- Sodrweninl) JY dain ants Bill rice 333 Clark. rs A. Graham, Tariff Commission______ 416 Clark, Walton C., Federal Fire Council. 401 Clark, William M. , Washington city post office. 448 Clarke, Gilmore D.: Commission:ofsFine Arts...oieiouil soo J 383 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission. _.___ 415 Clarke, Humphrey O., British Embassy____.___ 456 Clarke, Oscar D., United States Supreme Court. 425 Clarke, Staley M., Washington city post office... 448 Clarkson, Anna Louise, Office of the Secretary of Clarkson, Frank, assistant superintendent, House Office Buildings Ap 275 Clarkson, Col. Herbert S., Office of the Inspector General... 0. chien aba tea 327 Clary, Alla, secretary to the Speaker___________ 270 Clason, Mrs. Charles R., the Congressional LE EIol TI CL 384 Chto Albert E. Special Division_______ 319 Clausen, C. P., Bureau of Entomology and Plant QUArANTINe cpu IL roids Gon mast ith 361 Clay, Lucius D., Civil Aeronautics Administra-HON st pilidaie: bob -oh wiv aihlicu es 371 Shenstone Clayton, Aubrey H., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General... oun oii il ion. 336 Clayton Claud F., Soil Conservation Service. _ 365 Clayton, F. B, International Boundary Com- mission, United States and Mexico. ________ 403. Clayton, Lawrence, Board of Governors of the Federal floseive System... oc. muasniat 394 Clayton, W. Export-Wd, Bank of Washington__________ 391 Federal 1.0an-AgeNCy... ci... il easel.cose 386 Clegg, Hugh H., Federal Bureau of Investiga-BION. al) ema bE mals AoE. wee 333 Clevenger, Cliff, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission... trie 239 —.cc--L.it Clift, James W.., Patent Offices; -:-: omne 370 Cline, Genevieve R., judge, Customs Court (BIoZrADNYY is 5a BATE fh rte Lh ais Bede tiaE 432 Clinton, Ralph S., General Land Office. .______ 347 Close, Ralph William K. C., Union of South Africa MINSler trees tal 460 Clouser, Robert O., Zoning Adjustment Board. 444 Cochran, H. Merle, Office of Secretary of the ddBETESae a 321 Cochran, John J.: Joint Committee on Government Organiza-TE CR eT Ee eR 237 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 235 Cochran, W. W., Patent Office-—....._.o-._.-. 370 Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House.___ 274 Cockrell, Ausbon M., House post office. ______ 272 Code, Lt. Col. James A., Jr., Office of the Chief Siena Officer... aegteirer 330 Coe, Conway P.: Commissioner of Patents..............._ 370 National Inventors’ Couneil..__.___.______._ 372 Coe, Theodore I., District Board of Zoning Ad- BIE cr Lon te a ts 444 Coe, V. Frank, Division of Monetary Research_ 322 Coffee, Mrs. Harry B., Congressional Club_____ 384 Coffey, E. R., Public Health Service... _.______ 395 Coffin, Jo, assistant to the Public Printer. _____ 277 Coffman, John D., National Park Service. _____ 349 Cogan, Louis, ‘Administrative Department, Library of Congress Tamra aly san nd rand 279 Cogswell, Theodore, Office of Register of Wills_ 435 Cohee, Melville H., Soil Conservation Service._ 365 Cohen, Felix S., Office of Secretary of the Inte- RSE LOIRE Ie Ne en RE 46 Colin Joseph M., Office of the Chief Post Office INSDOCIOL. soil pm Sot Ste oh dar ar 337 Cohen, Philip, Special Projects, I.ibrary of CONgress ois eat a avi 279 Cohen, Dr. Roger S., Commission on Mental Hygiene: re ade et a 433 Cohen, Saul C., House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures... 27. Cohran, J. R., Bureau of Animal Industry _____ 359 Coile, San H., | Veterans’ Administration________ 41 Colbert, L. O., Coast and Geodetic Survey__.___ 369 Colbert, Rear Admiral Leo O., Mississippj River Commissioning.oneniuh 20 Tepnide 230 J. Colbjgrnsen, Ole, Norwegian Legation__________ 458 Colclaser, H. Alberta, assistant to the legal ad- Wiser. funn lo uaenindd 3 320 uwolesndillshin Cole, Arthur G., District Health Department _. 446 Cole, Robert F., National Mediation Board.___ 408 Cole, William P., Jr.: Commission for Construction of Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard. . 236 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. _______ 414 Cole, W. Sterling, Board of Visitors to the Naval ACAdemY Lonirei i Sarat ded his bs 236 Coleman, Maj. Gen. Frederick W., United States: Soldiers’ Home... ior. oo oro 2b 415 Coleman, John F., Defense Plant Corporation. 392 Collado, Emilio G.: Board of Economic ODerations. . ia ue urnraiii 318 Office of the Secretary of State..__.___.._______ 317 Collie, L.. L.., Bureau of Accounts...5 323 Collier, Charles W., Office of Indian Affairs.__. 347 Collier, Frank W., minority glory. oo oo ov Tr 272 Collier, John: Indian Arts and Crafts Board... ______._______ 348 Office of Indian Affairs. . ieee io ou oz 347 Collier, Robert M., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration LD ts deni em Eh bh en a BE ~ Seas mind 390 Collins, Charles W., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-DOLEEIONL Go i palit at tt Sa re 390 Collins, John S., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-te Commerce... coco Lon tious mun 368 Collins, Maurice: Federal Security AZONCY. ol ee 395 Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services. 313 Collins, Lt. Col. Owen G., Office of the Quarter- master: General i ooo gooseUd 328 Collins, Mrs. Ross, Congressional Club________ 384 Coll-Pardo, Luis, Venezuelan Embassy_..______ 461 Collomb, Harry L., Bureau of Accounts. _______ 337 Colmer, William M., National Forest Reserva- tion Commissions fo. LFus aon 234 Colom, José L., Pan American Union__________ 410 Colpoys, John B., United States marshal ______ 434 Colton, Herbert S., Division of Defense Housing Coordination... oo. 2 is orare 313 Colton, Col. Roger B., Office of the Chief Signal (ho PERSE Sa ES keh Ds EE Sed 30 Colvin, Howard T'., Conciliation Service______ 373 Colwell, George W., The Alaska Railroad._____ 351 Colwell, H. Ross, Conciliation Service________.__ 373 Coman, Capt. V. K., Naval Observatory_______ 341 Combs, Commander Lewis B., Bureau of Yards and Docks. orl D800 HE BEG BIG 41 Compton, Arthur H., Regent, Smithsonian In-stitaulon. 20: C000 0a Gol on TATE i Compton, Ri Randall, Office of Secretary OLNAVY obs som pon reanaice ceases ele L000 338 Conant, 104 J. B., Office of Scientific Research and Development 315 Concannon, Charles C., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce...F loan Cot Concheso, Dr. Aurelio F.: AmbassadoroefiCuba i. coi 0 E0L Si 453 Governing board, Pan American Union______ 410 Conklin, Maxwell R., Bureau of the Census.___ 368 Conley; May B., office of Secretary of the In-teplorataiio al too dill vl Dasaull Hal Conliff, John C., Jr., United States attorney’s office... all Zliinus nibol Losin ang Conlin, Beatrice P., Office of the Speaker._..___ 270 Conlon, Raymond F'., House post office. __._____ 272 Conn, Harry E., Bureau of Accounts___________ 337 Connally, Tom: Interparliamentary Union_______._________.__ 235 Foreign Service Buildings Commission. ______ 318 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee._. 238 Connell, Frank, House Committee on the J udiciary Re a ie RT ee IES pa NO 273 Connell, Ruth B., Army Industrial College____ 332 Conner, AH, Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 334 Conner, Charles E., District insurance deputy 445 Connerat, G. H., Defense Plant Corporation___ 392 Connolly, Bartholemew J., Jr., Veterans’ Ad- ministration =...iowa oo 418 824 Congressional Directory Page ' Connolly, Col. Donald H.: Civil Aeronautics Administration. __________ National Advisory Committee for Aero- naubles. Dodie UO Ramin ull JIS Connolly, Edna V., Tariff Commission__._______ 416 Connor, B., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine TER VAT n BRITE ROL A OINGS Fu tl E40 Io ree Connor, Mary A., secretary to Senator Johnson of California... .. cod JED 269 Connor, Richard J., Federal Power Com- Conroy, Edward J., House post office _________ Considine, James Ww. Defense Homes Corporation _________________ 393 Federal National Mortgage Association. ____ 388 Conway, W. H., Extension Service ____________ 356 Cook, Arthur BE. Commission to Acquire a Painting of the Signing of the Constitution. ________________ 235 Office of Architect of the Capitol. ____________ 275 Cook, Coleman F., Civil Service Commission__ 383 Cook, George A., National Mediation Board... 408 Cook, James C., ‘Office of Secretary of War. 325 Cook, Katherine M., Office of Education_______ 396 Cook, Walter N., United States attorney’s office. 423 Cook, W. W., Committee on Practice....__.._. 324 Cooley, A. C., Office of Indian Affairs._________ 348 Cooley, Capt. Hollis M., Bureau of Ships. _____ 342 Ooolidge, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson ‘Memorial Commission. ~~.____. 235 Coolidge, William A., Office of Secretary of the Navirlianmheiaguliobon oly RE i a 338 Co ry Riots alalore ow 9 Coombs, Robert E., Bureau of Marine Inspec-tion and Navigation. .__........__________ 370 Coombs, Wade H., District superintendent of Hotad nmia en a 1 Cooper, CharlesH., General Accounting Office. 402 Cooper, Jere, Joint Committee on Internal Rev- enue Taxation A aN a IRL 9234 Cooper, John W., House document room_______ 272 Cooper, Joseph E., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General CR pa ART LAER 3 Coo on Somes TE ie foe Ofee of Li 434 Cooper, Prentice, Muhlenberg Bicentennial I TE a 939 Coote, Robert K., General Land Office.________ 347 Cope, Richard P., District special examiner ___ 445 Corel Bete 'M., Invalid Pensions Com- Sal a dl id Tas SU 973 Corbet. SE Col. S. Munson, Army Medi] eeeel CL di SR L., Office of g0g Corbin, William L., Smithsonian Institution._. 413 Cordell, Evelyn E.Ee, | Senate Committee on Mili-0s Ory AIOTE. ee tl 6 Qérdova, Dr. Roberto, Mexican Embassy do7 ad al Tr Coins i PR Alor Cornwell, Fred C., Office of Fourth Asvsiant, Postmaster General......... Corona, Joseph G., Western Union Telegraph C Coronado, Enrique, Pan American Union______ oe Correa, Dr. José es Ecuadorian Embassy.___ 454 Corrick, Donald W. Division of Accounts... 317 Corrin, "Sidney, Jr., "House postioffice. ...._... 272 Corson, John Ve Social Security Board. .______ 395 Cortés, Capt. Carlos, Chilean Embassy.....___ 452 Costello, William C.: Defense Homes Corporation _________________ 393 Federal Loan Agency Federal National Mortgage Association _____ Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ______ The RFC Mortgage Company. ___._________ Covel Leonard L. M., United States attorney’s 435 Cotten, vine I., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 000 sesHE 394 Cour) Li Bureau of the Comptroller of the urren Cotter, is F., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration 3 dn tm a Bd GARE, 389 Page Cottone, Benedict P., Federal Communications Commission: wll 10. 00 00 WL quis 8) 385 Coulter, A. Barklie, M. D., District Hoan Department $2 HGR CSR ALLE GE AA) fe AL Coulter, Eliot B., Visa Division... J... J £7) Cousins, Brig. Gen. Ralph P., Office of the Chief of the Army Air Forces 331 Cowan, M. Cordelia, District Nurses’ Bromine, mgiBeoaydi. {..) Ji U0 roe Sama HE a) Cowell, J. M., Office of Architect of the Capitol. oe Cowles, Burton (&., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General ESS Re TERT SAL AR 335 Cowley, Clinton W., House folding room _______ 271 | Cox, E. E.: Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson... 238 | Joint Committee on Government Organiza-BOR cn ay aa i a eee DE ISL 237 Cox, Earl J., House Committee on Education__ 273 Cox, Lamar P., Electric Home and Farm Authority Salil mg Jedi oi ils 387 | Cox, Oscar: Office for Emergency Management ..____.___ 312 | Office of Lend-Lease Administration ___._____ 314 | Coxen, James R., Office of Education ._________ 396 | Coy, Wayne, Office for Emergency Manage- ment J ROE 20 HEIN sd. ofan SHEE E319 | Coyle, Commander Henry, Coast Guard____.__ 340 | Coyne, J.LE., Canadian Legation __ beghl LH 452 Coyne, Mary A., Veterans’ Administration___ 417 | Crabtree, Dr. James A., Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services.....__L__... Eaiha 313 | Craft, yh B., Veterans’ Administration eoniachioffiees it uN US tare be 0K 277 | Craig, E. G., Federal Power Commission _____ 394 Craig, Robert B., Rural Electrification Admin-stration. co __ _ciooli Co fololil Colo 364 Craighead, F. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... o.oo. ._.L.____ 361 id James W., Division of Defense Hous-ingiCoordinadion coc C0 co CC i 313 Cramer, Maj. Gen. Myron O.: a Yio Soldiers Homes SL aE Ct 415 Office of the Judge Advocate General.________ 327 Chm ot E., Office of Lend-Lease Admin-a7 Jetration. i= the abl na onl ER | Crampton, William D., Office of Petroleum Co- ordinator for National Defense. ___._____ --352 | Crandall, C. D., Interstate Commerce Commis-| Son Hi —-o--TA TRLER a 404 an 2 ens oN 7 isaster Loan Corporation... 388 | Defense Supplies Corporation 393 Crane, Jacob, Division of Defense Housing c Conmymation, Ast Board or Ddneation oe = rane, Jere J., District Board o ucation.____ | Crater, William P., Office of Second Assistant EM i INT 335 Coramission H : 385 CE TE ER CE RR | 0 7ehs, C, Russell, Owners’ Home Loan Gor- Craviord, Boyd, House Committee on Foreign fe ee A ia Ie OTD BITS 2 Fos 7 Ce Cotherine ¥-Jammu ion Mon 5 Crawford, Charles W., Food and Drug Admin- istration Sn an 397 Crawley, Martha, House Committee on Claims. 273 Creighton, C. F., District insurance deputy ____ 445 Cret, Paul P., Commission of Fine Arts________ 383 Crewe, Percy S., Processing Tax Board of Boview ressianyes 324 (0) | Crisler, Irma, Joint Committee on Internal RevenuesTaxationds 22 iy yp Cristofane, Felix E., Comptroller, Government Printing Office Crittenden, E. C., National Bureau of Stand- ALAS Tat a tn, ep hn Ts 369 Crockett, John C., Office of Secretary of Senate_. 263 Croft, Samuel M. | Administrative Department, Library of Congress Seas net sul ANSIIY SS 279 Crogan, Charles J., United States attorney’s office ram a Ln Eo ER Sel CT SR 35 Cronin, John W., Processing Department, Libraryiof*Congress 20.0 Sn ta te of 278 Indwidual Index Page Cronin, William F., Office of the Postmaster TRa ea a 335 Crooks, D. M., Bureau of Plant Industry._.__. 364 Crooks, Harry D., Transportation Division___. 315 Cropley, C. Elmore, clerk, United States Su- preme Court wea ae wi 1 4 oiligr 425 Crosby, Winifred M., House Committee on the PDistrictof Columbia > = mal =... 273 Crossland, Stanley T.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ____.____ 386 Rubber Reserve Company... ___._____...___ 392 Crosthwait, Stanley W., Office of Petroleum Co- ordination for National Defense ___________ 352 Crouch, W. F., Fish and Wildlife Service_.____. 351 Crow, William C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- DOMICE 2 ads don wad Bed conto Raise Jy 359 Crowder, Walter F., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commereei: ini dbnamenil Crowe, C. T.,'British Embassy... couiie Crowley, C. C., House post office Crowley, Leo T., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation... ol. jo seis 386 coguloaloll Crowther, Frank, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. oc cco f aoal went ol 234 Cruse, Andrew, Federal Communications Com-mission... iil cates. BSL aastiitu 85 Cuffe, Air Commodore A. A. L., Permanent Joint Board on Defense. ..___.__._.___.._... 411 Culbertson, Albert L., Mississippi River Com-missions. cos DoE LE nse) 30 Culbertson, Paul T., Division of European Af-FE A LR TLL 318 Culkin, Francis D.: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy-236 Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission ____ 235 Culkin, Mrs. Francis D., Congressional Club .__ 384 Cullen, John, House post office ___._._.________ 272 Cullen, Thomas H.: Joli Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-Pon. oof a Ra a ann 234 Joint ition on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures _._.___________-_._.. 238 Culligan, Capt. Ernest M., Selective Service System... ooiuns Chapsi oil anictal 413 Cumming, Hugh, Jr., Columbia Hospital for [3711 7 Rp fed Se eR RE ET SL Ted 383 Cumming, Surg. Gen. Hugh S. (retired), Pan American Sanitary Bureau_.___________.____ 409 Cumming, Dr. James G., District Health De-partment... Till einai 446 Cummins, Harry A., Office of Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General. ..______._.__________ 336 Cummins, Richard, Senate Committee on Bank-ingand Currency. 0 Llauiscil 264 .do.oienk. Cunley, Fred M., Office of Quartermaster Gen- ye eh VERE ER Sl WET Ca SOR Ls Ee Ln 328 Cunningham, Edward J., Conciliation Service. 373 Cunningham, J...» The ‘Alaska Railroad... 351 Cuny, Lt. Col. Clifford D., Office of the Chief Signal. Officer-i5s. 5 ode. SL Soiead. nllion 330 Cureton, N. F., Federal Communications Com-missiono): edi HoamnhossJali 385 wisi Uf Curran, Edward M., United States attorney_.. 434 Currie, "Lauchlin, administrative assistant to the President... wo teiniim i D0 Tale B00 000 312 Curry, Edward V., House Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments. _. 273 Curtiss, C. D., Public Roads Administration... 400 Curtiss, Lowell, Pan American Union___.______ 410 Cushing, E. d., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. ~~ ul gi 361 Custer, Cecil E., Civil Service Commission. ____ 382 D Dahl, Lt. Col. A. D., Norwegian Legation______ 458 Dahle, Dan, Food and Drug Administration.__ i Dahlman, Sven, Swedish Legation. ____._______ 459 Daiker, Fred H., Office of Indian Affairs_______ 348 Daily, Dr. Edwin F., Children’s Bureau. ______ 374 Dalby, Z. Lewis, Employees, Compensation Commission... wi ecg or il 384 Dale, John 'W.., Customs Court...__. 433 Dale, Judson Carey, Veterans’ Administration. 418 Daley, Harriott G., Capitol telephone exchange 276 Dallinger, Frederick W. ., judge, Customs Court PIOgraDY eee 432 Page Daye; Robert C., Federal Trade Commis-eRe eat an Lr BREA Eh, ad dA RE E61 TR REE 399 Pals. 2 ohn J., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation LORE re ER SAREE Cr EL a 370 Daly, J ohn T., United States Conciliation Serviee: ati Liorde FMogsinals Sal) orc 373 Damron; Bascom S., House post office__._______ 72 Danford, Maj. Gen. Robert M., Chief of Field Artillery 0 0% bode | ten Ae 326 Daniels, Paul C., Division of the American Re-Dublies-ic C0 nese Seller 317 Danielson, Percy W., Office of Indian Affairs__ 347 Danis, Eduardo M., Spanish Embassy_________ 459 Dante, Lee F., assistant District corporation COUNSEL. ois.tata doa aman in) 445 Darbie, Clara Dyson, Office of Secretary of the enale: lucie Soke adalat Gl mille 264 Darby, C. Vaughan, secretary, District Board of Accounting: in soils vl None 443 Dargusch, Lt. Col. Carlton S., Selective Service System: aris, rin coduaide i RE ailiy 413 Darnall, Nora, Senate Committee on Mines and Mining 5th ee tl Bd 133 x LAA CL So IE 1 & SO 265 Darrow, Ww H., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration. TE fn TS I Bag i Eun LAR EERE Sp 358 Daru, Capt. Bruno, French Embassy__________ 455 Dashiell, Walter N., Pan American Sanitary ureau.c. _ashfPa wl rahi La bing all 409 Daubanton, Ch. J. H., Netherlands Legation_. 458 Day Carl C., M. D., District Health Depart- Dalit soenlues bast hier going 46 Ain, Charles G., Special Committee to Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises... __Siiousl wi 185 Davidson, Charles M., Office of the Third As-sistant Postmaster General. ___________.__ 36 Bavenpou, Donald H., Bureau of Labor Statis-VALET RTE ROA (0 abl i fs Fx jo 8 1 Shs | 6 er ha 374 Davegport, Frederick M., Civil Service Com- misslonaaiorl Fl Fanaawile 382 Davidge, Anne W., District Government_______ 443 Davidson, James C., Office of the Doorkeeper__ 27 Davidson, James E., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and Navigation in lm bln SEHPEHPEIITY 370 Davidson, John C., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Davidson, Ralph, House folding room __________ 271 Davidson, William F., Federal Trade Com- misslonsissoodl edi apoio 3 daa boil 98 Davies, Ralph K.: Office of Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense... Joo tia 352 mipbildnelest Office of Secretary of the Interior ____________ 346 Davis, Mrs. Dwight F., American Red Cross___ 380 Davis, Evan T., United States attorney’s office. 434 Davis, Ewin L., Federal Trade Commission____ 398 Davis, Capt. G. B., Bureau of Ordnance._______ 41 Davis, Harold W., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector... otisue UIE 337 Davis, Harvey N., Regent, Smithsonian Insti- UO. cal t8 Caled a inlet nd 414 Davis, Dr. Hugh J., District Health Depart- ment... aliesrar enind 446 anneallevi Davis, James J.: Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission_ 237 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission. ______ 239 Davis, J. Lionberger, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... oo. ou i. aonll 237 Davis, John A., Bureau of Mines________.______ 350 Davis, John F., Securities and Exchange Com- ISSION ec ir Sie een 412 Davis, John K., Office of Philippine Affairs_.___ 319 Davis, Margaret H., District Alcoholic Bever- age Control Te eel JU 443 Davis, Monnett B., Division of Foreign Service Administration. oon EHD 318 Davis, Norman H., American Red Cross_.._.__ 380 Davis, Raymond TH ., Soil Conservation Service. 365 Davis, Robert H., District Engineer Depart- ment aaa Sa aa PION) GEER 445 Davis, Capt. Roscoe C., Compensation Board__ 342 Davis, Stella E. , Senate Committee on Finance. 265 Davis, Thomas H., Reconstruction Finance Corporation: «vinTE WE STE 387 Davis, Thomas W., Office of the Chief Post Office TNSPBCIOL ..-oo mao roe rar mre EE arts 337 Davis, Walter S., Federal Communications CoO arene nam Sr 385 Congressional Directory 826 Page Page Davis, Watson, N ational Inventors’ Council __ 372 Denny William C., Public Works Administra-Davis, William H., National Defense Media-ae SOR SA EI aa LT 400 tion Board iil Lai a, Bi 314 Dent, Edward A.: Davison, David S., Civil Service Commission__ 383 District A AN SA en Ho SS 443 Davison, Eloise, Office of Civilian Defense. ____ 312 District Real Estate Commission. __________ 444 Davison, Mrs. Henry P., American Red Cross... 330 Dent, J.:S., British Embassy..« = tochis oe 455 Davison, Capt. R. E., the Aeronautical Board... 379 Dent, William W., Corporation Counsel’s Davitt, Joseph S., Office of Secretary of the SEN debt ARS ER EEN ES Ea I 445 Navy C3 RR SEN RR CA ATs LR Lh 338 Donon ‘Steriin H., Office of the Doorkeeper___ 271 Paras Donald S., Reconstruction Finance DePagter, John P. secretary to Senator Gurney 268 Corporation REO RI A ARR Ts] 387 Depasta, George S, Greek Legation. ___________ 456 Dawson, Edward S., Corporation Counsel’s i Derby, Capt. Willfred N., Coast Guard. _.!: Ce Lami (UUs EL Ee Deschler, Lewis, Parliamentarian of the House. Dawson, Margaret B., Veterans’ Administra-deSibour, Henri L., Jr., United States Housing tion contact offices... oo io ila l a oEnins 277 Authority fie i eld ps sd Ra et NER 401 Day, Albert M., Fish and Wildlife Service_____ 350 Detmar, ie F., Jr., Office of the Secretary Day, William M., Official Stenographers to ofthe Navy. 0 B800G. 5 SHR FoF 338 House Committees... oo. coi fos J) 03 274 Detwiler, SamuelB., Soil Conservation Service. 365 Day, William M., Jr., Office of the House Legis-Deus, Vernon 0. Capitol Pollged titi hii 275 IndiveCoungeliil shud 3 0 3 05 kr 274 Deutsch, Naomi, Children’s Bureau... _.__.____ 374 Day, William W., Washington city post office. 447 De Venny, George F., Court of Appeals for the Dean, Arthur E., Washington city post office__. 447 District of Columbia... 0. Co alain. 428 Dean, Dr. Benjamin F., Jr., District police Deviny, John J., Deputy Public Printer ______ 277 SUIZeONIE 301 0. Daas odo aod UH 447 Devlin, Denis, Trish Legation S70 Baa i olanns 456 Dean, Commander F. H., Bureau of Ordnance__ 341 DeVoe, Maxwell A., Office of Personnel _______ 355 Dean, Mills, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-d’ Harnoncourt, Rens, Indian Arts and Crafts American Affadygcil oo nD LLL 313 Boardidoo rf of “at sik oF 348 deahoragny Dean, Reginald S., Bureau of Mines__..________ 349 Diamantopoulos, Cimon P., Greek Minister __ 456 Deards, John W., Senate folding room__________ 266 Disgond 4 Clark G., Columbia Hospital for De Bayle, Dr. Loon: opisi BE TET OIC CHa 383 Governing Board, Pan American Union._____ 410 Diamond, abel S., Division of Research and Minister of N icaragua 73 Le Rh 0 eS EM RIE Ga 458 . Seis RS Sm Sr A Rt ir i SRT 322 Debayle, Dr. Luis Manuel, Pan American Sani-tr Bure... co consi ta adi Bre pele 409 280.0. 03800) depp die OUST 434 DeCourcy, William E., Office of the Secretary Dick, > District Engineer Department ___ 446 of State. i. Bon nt minaretTHR 317 Dick, Lt. Col. William W., Office of the Chief Dedekam, André, Norwegian Legation_________ 458 of the Army Air Poreel, oDels id 331 Dedrick, Dr. Calvert L., Bureau of the Census. 368 Dickey, John S.: Deffenbaugh, W. S., Office of Education. ______ 396 Board of Economic Operation... SSSR ie 318 DeGolyer, Everette L., Office of Petroleum Co-Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American ordinator for National Defense _________._____ 352 Aang a RE aS 313 DeHart, Paul M., National Guard Bureau_____ 331 Division of World Trade Intelligence ______ 319 Deimel, Henry L., Jr., United States Maritime Dickinson, H. C., National Bureau of Standards_ 369 Commission... ...o.l Sh EEE, DHE Jo] 406 Dicus, Dr. Luther, secretary, District Delahanty, T. W., Bureau of Foreign and Do-Optometry Board... oo. (GE 444 mestic Commeree; itu 2uigl, fIig 1 nas 368 Dieck, C. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey_._____ 369 Delaney, J. J., The Alaska Railroad.__________. 351 Diefenbach, "Rudolph: Delaney, Joseph P., Office of the Doorkeeper___ 271 Fish and Wildlife Service pte Aa 351 Delano, Frederic A.: Migratory Bird Conservation Commission__. 235 Board of Regents, Smithsonian Institution___ 414 Dierberger, Wesley, Office of Secretary of the Burean of Plant Industry... .....-...iiiel 364 Senate. ei Lu iS SBR 263 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Digges, Dudley H.: National Capital Park and Planning Com-Defense Homes Corporation. ~ Ursa anion 393 missiones iio da dain anid, Loos 408 Defense Supplies Corporation________________ 393 National Resources Planning Board____ _____ 316 Dilli, Reginald C., deputy clerk, United States Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission______ 415 Supreme Court. L110 GoD SOT Trang 425 ‘Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg pn a E., Office of the Clerk of the Boulevard. .Commisgion__..._._.____io i 236 Washington National Monument Society._.. 419 Delano, Preston: Nav Comptroller of the Currency. ________________ 322 Dillon, “Nai. Joseph V. de P., Office of the Pro-Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation_______ 386 vost Marshal General_____ 332 Delano, William A., National Capital Park and Dillon, Col. Theodore H., Office of the Quarter-Planning Commission... ooo. i 0 aie 408 master Caneraly cl S13 HLL ois Dg 328 Demaray, A. E.: Federal Fire Council. ______.._____________ 401 Bimock. Marshall E., Immigration and Natu-National Park Lo 0 349 Service... 01. ¥ iia Service...) raligation 00 1. Bhs cE DeMerit, Merrill, Tennessee Valley Authority. 417 Dinbergs, Anatol, Latvian Legation____________ 457 Demerjian, Alice M., Railroad Retirement Dingell, John D., Interparliamentary Union____ 235 Boar. cin hie es a sa EEA 11 Dingus, Wallace E., House folding room._______ 271 Demma, Anthony ik House Press Gallery_____ 734 Dinnen, William F., Federal Trade Commis-Deore JohnR., Office of the Secretary of BION nt hor whens SA DESL) EBL 399 AR A SARIS LSC ME TE ER 373 Dirksen, Everett M., Joint Committee on Gov-: Detiae John J., Under Secretary of the In-Organization... .__ ernment _-.-_..... 237 TITOE dr ad a A Ek a te NES CA Disney, Richard L., Board of Tax Appeals_____ 382 DeNeale, Stanley, assistant District corporation Diven, Frederick M., assistant to the legal ad-counsel. in nr Sy rl Er Denig, Brig. Gen. Robert L., Headquarters Dixon, H. M., Extension Service_______________ Marine TY Eaa rr hn 1: 344 Dixon, William J., Office of the First Assistant Denit, J. From, General Accounting Office. 402 Postmaster General o-oo 335 Dennis, Fernand: Dixon, Lt. Col. William M., Office of the Chief Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 of BInance. en 328 Ministerof Jail 0 cd tent 456 Dobbin, Reginald G., Bureau of Marine Inspec-Dennis, Samuel J., Division of Defense Housing tionand Navieation.-=.=+ 1 = 370 CIOOTAINEION to a a : Dobbins, Roy W., Office of the Second Assistant Dennison, Henry S., National Resources Plan-Postmaster General RRs Lh a a si 335 ning Wohrd Tol Tr oR An 316 Dobrowolski, Maj. Stefan, Polish Embassy____ 459 i i A A lr li MAMA Indwidual Index 827 Page Page Dobson, Gilbert C., Soil Conservation Service. 365 Dodd, James A., Office of the Clerk of the House. 270 Dodd, N. E., Agricultural Adjustment Admin- istration vanmbicnii eine, 8h Lad 358 Dodge, C. Phelps, Washington-Lincoln Memo- rial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission _ 236 Dodge, Vernon B., Washington City post office. 448 Dodson, James E., Wage and Hour Division___ 374 Dolan, Edward G, Bureau of the Public Debt. 323 Dold, Calvin, Federal Power Commission. _____ 394 Domeratzky, Louis, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce...ooo. td 369 o.oo Donahue, A. Madorah, District Board of Public Welfare Assen ld ann a 444 Donaldson, C. B., Civil Aeronautics Adminis-tration: cralciing uli Jo gail. 8 Jaded 2 371 Donaldson, Harvey C., Administrative Divi-gon isa ios Co ann rad 334 ooanilaeiead Donaldson, Jesse M., Office of First Assistant Postmaster:General. coolioliso io 335 Donaldson, William J., Jr., superintendent House! Press Gallery: [roi 0 Dosa lo 734 Donlin, Mary M.: Secretary to Senator Overton_________________ 269 Senate Committee on Manufactures. ____._____ 265 Donoso, Ernesto Guzman, Chilean Embassy... 452 Donovan, Dr. Anthony, Pan American Sanitary Bureaus ceolwatl Jello Foal lL nies 409 Donovan, Henry A., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering________________ 358 Donovan, John F., Farm Security Administra- Jonzzalalia pathol JoealBity 3 wsluul lo rw 362 Donovan, Joseph, Washington city post office. 448 Donovan, Lucile, Securities and Exchange Com- vais. i linens slide Adee Lats ingg 412 Donovan, William J., Coordinator of Informa- Hone Mee Tr Lr Lh Siang i 315 Dorance, Lt. Michel, French Embassy. __..____ 455 Dorian, Lida H., Office of Official Reporter of Debate. es Lima re aE A TERR 274 Dorsey, Rear Admiral Benjamin H.: Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex-amining Board (medical) .__________________ 343 Naval Retiring. Board. cence... eno iE 343 Dorsey, H. W.. Smithsonian Institution. _____ 413 Dorsey, Nicholas W., Smithsonian Institution. 413 Dorsey, R. Corbin, Commodity Exchange Ad- ministrations oo. Lal adinl Loans Lansky 360 Dort, Dans) Office for Emergency Manage-FLAT a ek EERE Dl © I IE EE I 312 Doten, Dana, Division of Defense Housing Coordination Eihiparaeh, Jd Dlossli 20 313 Dotson, Floyd E., Interior Department. ._._____ 346 Dotterer, Harold, Federal Security Agency.____ 395 Dougherty, James L.: Defense Homes Corporation Sosbisusband hie 393 Electric Home and Farm Authority... ___ 387 Federal National Mortgage Association ______ 388 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 386 The RFC Mortgage Company ._...____.______ 388 Doughton, Robert L Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax-ation... onda] Carade Domo Bose 234 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal: Expenditures. docilesar 238 Douglas, William O., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography).____ 424 Douglass, W. S., Bureau of Medicine and Sur- Re he a hy eT RE be Le SERS AF Rea td 342 Dow, Frank, Bureau of Customs__._____________ 322 Dowd, Thomas P., Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. 276 Downes, Commander Willard M., Office of Naval Operations. ive.S0T300 339 Downey, E. F., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-poration... elinsoohlIain 386 eT Downey, John J., Washington city post office. 447 Downey, Sheridan, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy WSO 3 ap EN Lad Eres 236 Downing, Catherine F., office of Recorder of Deeds” ciooio ist sounoliainbisag. 435 Doyle, Anna F., Senate Committee on Terri-toriesandInsalay Aflairs. 0. li. dus 266 Doyle, Harold E., District Real Estate Com-misglon.... edlatifotiaelseplia aniasl 44 Doyle, Mrs. Henry Grattan, vice president, Dis-trict: Board of Education i. i oi. 2d. s.liz 443 Doyle, Jerome, Office of Secretary of the Navy. 338 Drager, Walter L.: Defense Plant Corporation amy ei SEER 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Drain, James A., Federal Security Agency.____._ 395 Draper, Claude i Federal Power Commission. 393 Draper, Earle S., Federal Housing Administra- tone fe oo geabope rs snadaals OF 388 taebinard. Draper, Ernest G.: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systemec.t stoma Il domeal oso 394 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Navigation________ 341 Draper, Warren F., Public Health Service._____ 395 Draper, Willan A., District engineer depart- TRE a Ln RRR RP LL RE SF 445 Drom, J. P., Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve. Systeme... x Lael un 394 _coluld Dreisonstok, Louise, House Committee on For-eign Affairs Ea EEE AR 273 Drewry, Patrick H., Virginia (Merrimaec)-Mon-itor Commission: 1» cool So sapisiailac 237 Drissel, Roger S., Division of Communications and Recordsa li. oan. ob nsibd vezies 318 Drohojowski, Jan, Polish Embassy... _________ 459 Droste, W. H., Farm Credit Administration___ 361 Drury, Maj. C. M., Canadian Embassy_.___.___ 452 Drury, Newton B.: District Zoning Commission. ______________._._ 445 Federal Fire:Couneilo vi oo celii li gots 401 National Capital Park and Planning Com- msglonmc: Su usiaiil ad en sleagad de 408 National Park .........ficiaid 349 Service. zs Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ____ ii fori moon: 236 Dryden, F. H., Work Projects Administration. 399 Dryden, H. L., National Bureau of Standards__ 369 du Bois, Coert, Caribbean Office. ______________ 318 Du Bois, Orval L., Securities and Exchange Commission: fueraad Ld all sol ens 412 Dubord, F. Harold, Celebration of the Birth of ThomasJdeflerson. jo oil.fl _2hiss Lo. 238 Ducey, Capt. D. F., navy yard and station, Washington, D.C... dl 343 aageipl2034; Dudley, Frances Carter, Office of the Chief of Ordnaned. ic. LHEle WL ou BL L000 330 Duffey, R. N., Mississippi River Commission. 330 Duggan, I. W., Agricultural Adjustment Ad-IMINIStration. . ive oimcnnree..J GLRY SIOISHN 358 Duggan, Laurence, Adviser on Political Rela-ATT Fe RL eh et EEL me RS A 17 Duhart, Salvador, Mexican Embassy___________ 457 Duke, Joseph C., Office of the Secretary of the Senpte so tu serra coast eo Saunt S00 264 Dulae, Peter, Coast and Geodetic Survey. _____ 369 Dulin, Charles T., Office of Official Reporters of Debates 22H alii og Salis rata bot aed 274 Dunahoo, Mark, Office of the Sergeant at Arms of Senate Ee a nh RE 266 Dunbar, P. B., Food and Drug Administration. 397 Dunbar, Ralph M., Office of Education. ______. 396 Duncan, Charles ¥4 Jr., Washington city post office mir i ee ena 447 Dunlap, Minnie, Senate Committee on Finance. 265 Dunn, Francis G., Senate Committee on Civil Service «ore Bh 264 Dunn, Dr. Halbert L., Bureau of the Census... 368 Dunn, James Clement, Advisor on Political Relations cL. ou or So 317 Dunne, Gerald T., House folding room _________ 271 Durand, E. Dana, Tariff Commission.__._____. 415 Durand, Dr. William F., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Pppsanh ning Tach 406 Durant, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Indian TE er I ae iy et 65 Durr, CliffordJ., Federal Communications Com-mission vba mahal Sl hare tan 385 Durrett, Dr. James J., Federal Trade Commis-glonius canrinend lagna, JE pnaisanl) ol 398 Durso, Tony J., District barber examiner_______ 443 Durst, Vernon R. General Accounting Office. 402 Duryee, 8.0, United States Engineer Office_._ 330 Dustin, Frances E., secretary to Senator Brew-Slers. oo ae aaah) 268 Dutton, Walt L., Forest Service... ________._____ 362 Duvall, William "As House Committee on Ap-propriations Ee rr SE ER OT 273 | : | | | 828 | Congressional Directory Page Duvel, J. W. T., Commodity Exchange Admin-istration I ASE MRR "ys a COREE Re BE AE ND 360 du Von, Jay, Work Projects Administration____ 400 E Early, Stephen, Secretary to President Roose- vell (biography). iio: sobs ning ta 311 Early, Thomas G., Coordinator of Information__ 315 Eastman, Joseph B., Interstate Commerce Commission ot. afr. 50. Dol Bu 00 Sail 404 Easton, Joseph W., Capitol Police___.__________ 275 Eaton, Charles A., Interparliamentary Union... 235 Eaton, Mildred, assistant clerk to the President oftheiSenate. ion you a boa tiom 263 inbound, Eaton, Paul R., Joint Committee on Printing__ 234 Eaton, Capt. Philip B., Coast:Guard soi. 3. 340 Eberle, Lt. Col. George L., Joint Economy Bonrdiors Ly si. hi ah ok en ao SE FL SDE 405 Eccard, August, Office of Architect, Capitol____ 275 Eccles, Marriner S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________________ 394 Echegaray, Miguel de, Spanish Embassy______ 459 Echols, Brig. Gen. Oliver P., Office of the Chief of the Air Corps 331 Eddy, Lee M., Railroad Retirement Board___._ 411 Edleman, Edward, Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration:hi Ll. danasSlip 387 hs BIHIoN. Edgerton, Col. Glen E., Panama Canal ________ 409 Edgerton, Henry W., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biography) ss. «oo Heil int sin] Janae 428 Edinburg, Frank P., Patent Office. ____________ 370 Edminster, Lynn R.: Board of Economic Operation. .___.___________ 318 Division of Studies and Statisties_____________ 319 Office of the Secretary of State________________ 317 Edson, H. A., Bureau of Plant Industry. .___._ 364 Edwards, Dr. Alba M., Bureau of the Census.. 368 Edwards, Archie C., Civil Service Commission. 383 Edwards, Ps M., Office of Secretary of the Treasary. oo. Sine mini ait Sedu Edwards, mpi L., Civil. Service Com-missions.ees te wilt, Sidwell oguaayil sestl 382 Edwards, Frederick M., District Fire Depart-MENG ism nso Sninadaneddeal UES 4 Edwards, Harry E., House Committee on In-valid Pensions 0. 20: oS icad mmetnloive 273 Edwards, James H., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree. co. Lia. vie 0) Edwards, John F., Civil Service Commission... 382 Edwards, John W., Processing Tax Board of Review. onltuy. Ue apt Blane odie) 324 Edwards, Paul, Work Projects Administration. 400 Edy, John N., Federal Works Agency. _______. 399 Egbert, Va Lois, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 394 Ehrenberg, Virginia, Civil Service Commission gonbactofflee: eit opin cnn ann 277 Ehrlich, A. M., Office of the Chief of Ordnance__ 330 Eichelberger, Charles M., Navy Compensation Boapdc oir a Sea a 342 Eicher, Edward C.: National Power Policy Committee. __________ 353 Securities and Exchange Commission_________ 411 Eichhorn, Adolph, Bureau of Animal Industry. 359 Eisenhower, M. S. Office of Land Use Coordi- nafiohice on. oon ull Gen ei 354, 55 Elble, Otto C., Veterans’ Administration______ Elder, Lt. Col. Eugene V., Office of the Chit Signal Ofer oo (tert bl a To LE) Charlotte R., House Committee on Eldridge, M. O., District assistant director it | vehicles and fraffic Ed A Th Elguera, Dr. Juan I., Peruvian Embassy. ______ fr Sie Howard Rr, Federal Trade Commis- Board Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Children’s Bureau, De-partment OELADOr ass bails bho 374 Elkins, Martha, House Committee on Naval ATR ie Lo nienteSn ONT Elliott, David C., Reconstruction Finance Cor-DOYSHONG........ oi mtn SERIE TIO, 387 Page Elliott, Harriet, Office of Price Administration. _ 314 Elliott, Foster F., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomics, Fanta fy 358 blousesTh Elliott, L. D., Food and Drug Administration__ 397 Elliott, Col. Malcolm: Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors___ 329 Mississippi River Commission_______________ 330 Elliott, Richard N., General Accounting Office. 402 Elliott, R. Winton, Federal Housing Adminis- tratiflonuicis Juinde lrrann ele ig LL 389 era Ellis, Jesse B., International Joint Commission. 403 Ellis, Joseph ¢. , Office of Secretary of the Senate. 263 Ellis, Luther E. , Veterans’ Administration. ____ 418 Ellis, Robert 5. Office of the Solicitor...___.____ 357 Ellison, Thomas J., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and Navigation LS esi As Sn 370 Elmslie, William Gray, British Embassy._.___ 456 Elson, Samuel J., Housing Authority ._________ 401 Elst, Joseph van der, Belgian Embassy___.______ 451 Elwell, Richard E., Civil Aeronautics Adminis- RIO Lo Eula mant Shab Laan aan bf SE 371 y, Ely, Richard S., Federal Trade Commission____ 399 Embick, Maj. Gen. Stanley D., Permanent Joint Board on Defense... _...____“©___. 410 Emerson, C. H., Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 Emerson, Ernest E., director of purchases, Gov- ernment. PrintingOffice. 2. o_o.0 277 Emerson, M. A., Bureau of the Public Debt___ 323 Emery, Charles B., Office of Indian affairs_____ 348 Emley, Ww. E., National Bureau of Standards__ 369 Enmerion) Herbert, Office of Production Man- QEOTGI. | Satnd Shu oles in hs me i YS LY 314 by Vio N., District Engineer Depart- EeI ee i a 445 Endersbee William J., Office of Indian Affairs._ 348 Engel, Albert J., Board of Visitors to the Mili- try ACAARINY one hoor i oe ie mob LSE | 236 Engell, Julius, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigaplon ated foaginsa lone Le bie 370 Yenand, William H., Federal Trade Commis- ik Myrs.:i Harry o-L., Consressionsl b Enley: Charles R., Soil Conservation Service_. 366 Enlows, Harold F., American Red Cross. ______ 380 Ensrud, Chaplain Joseph O., Office of the Chief of Chaplaing.. clon lanl Diol Sarg) 326 Erb, Letitia, House Committee on 1rrigation and Reclamation so ious | oaroed fansie 273 Erhardt, John G.: Board ‘of Examiners for the Foreign Service___ 318 Division of Foreign Service Personnel _______ 319 Erickson, Ethel, Women’s Bureau... __________ 374 Erickson, John C., Reconstruction Finance Corporation SIL IBIRALIL 0 ARI EOL LE 387 Eriksson, Harry, Swedish Legation ____________ 459 Erk, Edmund F., secretary to Senator Davis___ 268 Erman, Sadan, Turkish Embassy. _____________ 448 Ernst, Charles F., American Red Cross. ______._ 380 Ernst, Edward C., Pan American Sanitary Se TR ee 409Erol, Orhan H., Turkish Embassy_____________ 460 Ertegiin, MehTnet Miinir, Turkish Ambassa- hn bana Lub aot lapel, A] 460 Pri Walter S., Office of Secretary of Com-THOTO0: contain om staid ia aS Joi 67 Escalante, Dr. Diogenes: Ambassador from Venezuela..________________ 461 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 Espil, Felipe A Argentine Ambassador. ______________________ 451 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 Espinosa de los Monteros, Dr. Antonio, Mexican Embagsy auto Son) lands, JL SNE JJ 457 Esteves, Guillermo, Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration... 8. clo ao olin 352 Etheridge, James, Capitol Police __.___________ 275 Etherington-Smith, R. G., British Embassy... 455 Ethridge, Mark F., Office’ of Production Man- agement i LR a a 314 Individual Index | 829 Page Evans, A. B., District assistant assessor________ 443 Evans, Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Reve- Hes icEsneg Ho sill an onal Lovo Mea ills 323 Evans, John P., Rural Electrification A dminis- tration camel ieiide nos 0h Io Jaane 21n30b Evans, Luther H., Library of Congress_________ 278 Evans, Raymond, Extension Service. __________ 356 Evans, Rudolph M.: Agricultural Adjustment Administration_____ 357 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. ________ 362 Evans, S. Howard, Office of Civilian Defense___ 312 Everett, Guerra, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic:Commeree lo iio ioiins yl slid J 369 Evins, Joe L., Federal Trade Commission______ 399 Ewerhardt, Dr. Paul J., Commission on Mental Health? po 30500 00 uy inlesiiomn') 433 Ewing, Ellen, Senate Committee on Post Offices and>PostrRoadsiadl oii annias 266 Ewing, Elmon J., District Plumbing Board ____ 444 Ezekiel, Mordecai, office of Secretary of Agricul- F Faddis, Charles I., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. 00 sink aii sos: 236 Fahey, John H.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board... _____._____ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- i IE oe Te ELSE RE 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 389 Fahy, Charles: . Federal Board of Hospitalization ____________ 385 Solicitor Generals nisi lous an em Ei os 333 Failor, Kenneth, Bureau of the Mint___________ 324 Fairbank, H. S., Public Roads Administration. 400 Fairbank, Miles H., Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. voasladLi hd 352 oalnll Fairchild, I. J., National Bureau of Standards___ 369 Fairchild, Brig. Gen. Muir S., Office of the Chief ofithe Aly Corps isi. aiaon 0c Sratilivr 331 Faithful, James A., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General. 7 col Ld nal 0.0 IL 335 Falck, Depue, Grazing Service. .____.__________ 350 Falk, .1..S., Social ‘Security Board... ........0... 395 Falkenwald, C. O., Rural Electrification Ad- ministration: ¢ Sid or Deno a3 364 Fallon, Bernice, Postal Telegraph-Cable Co____ 276 Fallon, Pascal D., General Accounting Office___ 402 Fangmeyer, A. B., office of the House Sergeant abt ATMS Go hasnt ant ni A sna ot 271 Farbach, Carl F., Maritime Commission_______ 405 Farber, Capt. W. S., Joint Economy Board____ 405 Farias, Lt. Col. Medardo, Uruguayan Embassy. 460 Farinholt, Robert H., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tionand Navigation...558 _. 370 Farley, Commander Joseph F., Coast Guard___ 340 Farmer, Harry W., Veterans’ Administration__ 417 Farnum, Emily I., Bureau of the Census_._____ 368 Farr, Cyril J., secretary to Senator Gillette_____ 268 Farrell, Edward J., Office of the Doorkeeper____ 271 Farrington, Carl C., Commodity Credit Corpo- BARON pe sn se aan 360 Fearn, Otto E., District Fire Department______ 446 Fedotov, Anton N., Soviet Socialist Republics Bmbassyis nic talabut te S000 Son toa) uel 460 Feeney, Joseph F., office of the Majority Leader. 270 Feer, Eduard, Swiss Legation. ____________.____ 459 Feidler, Ernest R., Office of General Counsel of TO BT Te A AB ee OD ee Te 322 Feiker, Frederick M., National Inventors’ Counellolso 3 fosaball oH peallli fires 372 Feis, Herbert: Adviser on International Economic Affairs__ 317 Board of Economic Operation________________ 318 Fellers, Robert E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster:General... L.i2 o gnonsEE 336 Fenstermacher, Harvey E., Division of Com- municationsand Records ~~ ~~".~~ 318 Fenstermacher, W. L., Official Reporter, House_ 274 Fergus, Corwin A., Federal Savings and Loan Insarance Corporation. = oo = = 301 64674°—77—2—1st ed——54 Page Ferguson, Abner H., Federal Housing Adminis-ations. coe ioe sane BSUS TRIE BST 398 Ferguson, Garland S., Federal Trade Commis-Stone Doli ln Jn i Ra, Tid 98 Fernandez, Luis: Costa Ricon Minisier. -._Jleaiiiog iin 453 Governing board, Pan American Union______ 410 Ferris, John P., Tennessee Valley Authority ___ 417 Fichtner, C. C., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. ...q.dagoialy.Gl igi TH 369 Fickel, Mrs. Maybelle G., liaison officer, Gov- ernment Printing Office... “© [7 7 Fickinger, Paul L., Office of Indian Affairs ____ 347 Fiedler, R. H., Fish and Wildlife Service 351 Field, Commander Richard S., Bureau of Ma- rine Inspection and Navigation_____________ Fieldner, Arno C., Bureau of Mines____________ 349 Fieser, James L.., American Red Cross_.________ 380 Fife, G. D., Office of Architect of the Capitol... 275 Fihelly, John W., United States attorney’s OIG ar nl as mat ts hh LE EE 434 Finley, David E., National Gallery of Art______ 414 Finletter Thomas K.: Board of Economic Operation________________ 318 Division of Defense Materials_________________ 318 Office of the Secretary of State_______________ 317 Finn, W. G., Agricultural Adjustment Adminis-tEationay. andi SV SIH he) 358 Finucane, Dr. Daniel L., superintendent, Chil-dren’s'Sanatoriom. 7 faioboli-Co Spi 446 Fischer, John, Farm Security Administration__ 362 Fischer, Karl W., Transportation Division. ____ 315 Fish, Hamilton, Foreign Service Buildings Com- mission... Tn eran mello ein lin 318 Fisher, Adrian S., Foreign Funds Control Divigion. ..c. i soeabl adi Sa aniniavissdal 318 Fisher, Rear Admiral Charles W., Office of Secretary.of the J = il Navy=iz oid. 338 Fisher, Lewis H., Civil Service Commission____ 383 Fisher, Paula K., Office of the Secretary of the Ive ea eee ea eT 338 Fisher, William, Bureau of Marine Inspection andNavigationao sosieao~oiii™ fF fl oid 370 Fite, Katherine B., assistant to the legal adviser_ 320 Fitts, William C., Reconstruction Finance Cor- 3 Fitzgerald, Henry J., Bureau of Labor Statistics. 374 FitzGerald, J. V., Office of Secretary of Labor__ 373 Fitzgerald, M. C., assistant assessor, District of Columbia... ..... ded Soames “0 5 443 Fitzgerald, Thomas J., Bureau of the Census___ 368 Fitzgerald, William J., Board of Visitors to the Coast Quard -= ii Academy... 236 Fitzwater, J. A., Forest Service... ..__.__._. 363 Flad, Edward, Mississippi River Commission__ 330 Fladness, S. O., Bureau of Animal Industry____ 359 Flaherty, Francis E., Division of Foreign Service Administration =~ Co.ialied 318 Flanary, Virginia, Senate Committee on Public Tandsand Surveys...i nual oo. 266 Flanery, William H., Office of Secretary of the Interiorsnoayiin soiouivianTy:hadtn | endl TF 346 Flannagan, Martin, House post office. ______ 272 Flannery, J. Harold, Commission for Construc- tion of Washington-Lincoln Memorial, Get- tysburg Boulevard so op v0 8 wil 236 Flannery, John Spalding, Washington National Monument Seelety. Sigs.0a TL 419 Fleener, Francis E., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Fleming, Alfred L., Night Production Manager, Government Printing Office. __________ 277 Fleming, John R., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomles di aha Ea LTO AT Rh ad 358 Fleming, Philip B.: Federal Works Administrator__.______________ 399 National Power Policy Committee. __________ 353 Fleming, Robert V., Federal National Mortgage Er CEOn Te 388 Flemming, Arthur S., Civil Service Commis- lon Soo aes tien es el TE 82 Fletcher, Col. Robert H., Office of the Inspector RIT] DR SS Se IR Se a I 327 830 Congressional Directory Page Fletcher, William M., Jr., inn Fi- nance Corporation. OR NE SE Ta 1 387 Flippen, Percy S., National Archives... ______. 4 Flournoy, Richard W., Jr., assistant to the logal adviser. oo oo kn eh ome ans Fly, James Lawrence: Federal Communications Commission._______ 385 Defense Communications Board. ____________ 312 Flynn, Catherine M.: Secretary to Senator Maloney______________._ 269 Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Croands a eeseen i dans bed Lancs gon Fogg, Ralph J., Division of Public Contracts... 374 Foley, Edward A., Committee for Reciprocity Information. ci. . sc hatiod sh SabatoJub 384 Foley, Edward H., Jr., Office of the General Counsel of the Treasury. ..ii cool.wen 321 Foley, Rotarian, Office of the Secretary of the NOwYis..0. ou.50 seasidosd to aallts CL i). 338 Folger, . P., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency. AAR EC Ge TAR ERA RRR SN 0 322 Foran, Ross J., National Mediation Board.____ 408 Forbes, John J. V., Burcau of Mines. __..____._ 350 Forbush, Gabrielle E., Treasury Department._ 321 Ford, David, Federal Home Loan Bank Board__ 389 Ford, J., Office of Third Assistant Ee Central: oop niin). iorala) i Foreen, Capt. Hilding V., Office of the Clit Signal Offeer ioe Lag pSi nl alan) Foreman, Clark, Federal Works Agency.______ 4 Forgan, James Be American Red Cross_.__._.. 380 Forker, Harry M., National Archives. ________. 407 Forrestel, Commander Emmet P., Office of Secretary ofthe Navy... ........ 000000 339 Forrestal, James V.: Under Secretary of the Navy. ....___......_. 338 Army and Navy Munitions Board___._._... 381 Porsling, C. L., Forest Servies Jie] JL. J20000, 363 Forster, C. T., Office of Personnel ._ __. 355 ____.___. Forster, Rudolph, executive clerk, the White House" i a Ts 312 Fortas, Abe, National Power Policy Committee. 353 Fortune, William, American Red Cross... ______ 380 Foss, Harry N., Office of the Solicitor______.___ 357 Foss, Kendall, Rural Electrification Adminis- ser tration Vol on ae san SHOE 365 Toni Addison G., Office of Government Re-: HE BSAA ATI fey er Nie god Bg el 316 Foshan E. M., Office of Education___..______.. 396 Foster, Howard C., assistant secretary to the Minority CAVES SU OER wo I RD 266 Foster, Israel M., commissioner, Court of Claims. couseerng JUD nl oa SHIR 431 Foster, J. G., British 0. 0. 455 Embassy... Foster, LeRoy B., Veterans’ Administration... 418 Yorn Xie C., Office of Secretary of Com- 3 ew rae SP REL LT) 367 Poti "Roger S., Securities and Exchange Com- missionUiioto ) 167 as IGG ERigeL 00 JHE 412 Fotitch, Constantin, Yugoslavian Minister____ 461 Foulis, John C., Surplus Marketing Adminis- tration. voi ROE 366 iranRRS Foulk, O. E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... iii oo 00 395 Fournier, Fernando A., Costa Rican Legation.. 453 Fowkes, Luther BE. Washington city post office. 448 Fowler, Walter L., District Budget Officer ___ 443 Fowler, William A. Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements... ..........._... 318 Fowlkes, J. B., Committee on Conference Ma- jority of the Senate Jy. ioiouiuiusL100 264 Fox, Charles D., Veterans’ Administration.._. 418 Fox, Helen Cooper, Senate Committee on Ap- Dpropriations Slant DLL SL DEE IR 264 Fox, Martin J., Farm Credit Administration._ 561 Fox, Col. Milo P. , Mississippi River Commission. 330 Fracker, S. B., Bureau of Entomology and Plant QUAraNtING. . oc ae rrei samme s MH HLTE ry) 361 Francisco, Don, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs_______.._.__.._..._.. 313 Frank, Laurence C., Office of the Secretary of a a 317 Franke, Fred W., Veterans’ Administration____. 419 Frankfurter, Felix: Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (biography). 22 SDF 57 wat 424 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 238 Page Frankhauser, Harry S., Office of Seeond Assist-ant Postmaster General . ___.___._____.______ 336 Frantz, Harry, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... l_.la.il 313 Frantz, Samuel B., Bureau of the Mint________ 324 Fraser, W. O., Agricultural Marketing Service . 359 Frazer, Leslie, Patent Office. li. oo ioralLod 370 Frazier, Emery L., Office of Secretary of the Senate; tos li did doh ans Jb Lo Iualaniy 263 Frear, Huber, Federal Trade Commission______ 399 Frederick, William A., Office of Architect of the Capltels consol to impish wun iil dts 275 Freed, Clyde, Capitol railroad ticket office_.___ 276 Freeman, Rt. Rev. James E., Washington National Monument Society... ___.____._._ Freeman, Dr. Walter, Commission on Mental Health elo and digo 0d sli us 433 Freer, Harry L., Office of the Chief of Engineers. 329 Freer, Robert E., Federal Trade Commission __ 398 French, Dr. Bernard S., Commission on Meme Health hess erie 1 mo os French, Lt. Col. Edward F., Office of the Gtiet + Signal Officer. Tt 331 o.ooaaa French, Herbert S., Securities and Exchange Cotnmisslon Jo. tu: etoileLo 412 Frey, Dr. John W., Office of Petroleum Coordi-nator for National Defense______________..._.. 352 Freyre y Santander, Manuel de: Governing Board, Pan American Union_.____ 410 Peravian‘Ambasgador.. 00! 4 Fried, George, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation. i. 0 Digit) 5 coanied Friedenson, Julius, Civil Service Commission. _ 382 Frisbie, W. 8., Food and Drug Administration. 397 Friele, Berent, Office of the Coordinator of Inter- AmericaniAfains.~ cool LE ool IE 313 Froes da Cruz, Paulo, Brazilian Embassy... ___. 452 Frost, A. C., British Embassy... ci 455 Fry, Walter B., Office of the Secretary of the Inferior ss wedty Sais. par gd lil 347 Fry, William M., Senate Committee on Post Offices and: Post" Roads. ili... Looousl. Jul 266 Fu, An, Chinese Embassy... .._..._...___ 453 Fuchs, W. R., Office of Budget and Finance... 355 Fulghum, Ralph M., Extension Service. __._____ 356 Fullbright, Catherine, Senate Committee on Immigration SY RRA ER EC AT TY $y ea 265 Fulmer, Wilma, House Committee on Agricul- IES i saetdimer a Jaatel LL Loiiiina 73 Fuquay, Leon M., Federal Power Commission. 393 Furer, Rear Admiral Julius A., Compensation Board oo ioappe rialdiaa li US ae aan 342 Furr, William C., Washington city post office. 447 Farse, J. ~~ % 419 Glueck, Nathan H., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. a i 387 Goad, Daisy, Senate Committee on Indian IL LTME gk 2) AN. 265 Godfrey, W., British Embassy. ~~ = 455 Gold, Pleasant D., Veterans’ Administration__ 418 -Golden, Nathan D., Bureau of Foreign and DomesticCommeree_~.___ ~~~ “°C 368 Goldenweiser, E. A., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ____.________ 394 Goldsborough, Phillips L., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation:.2. =~"#7 oC 386 Goldsborough, T. Alan, associate justice, Dis-trict Court of the United States for the Dis-ictal Columbia or ir ve Na 433 Goldsmith, Raymond W., Securities and Ex- change Commission = t o ee 4 12 Golze, Alfred R., Bureau of Reclamation ______ 349 Gonard, George E., navy yard and station _____ 343 Gonzalez, Dr. Dagoberto, Pan American Sani- TAEY BUReail.. i rita 409 Gonzalez, Higinio, Chilean Embassy. __________ 452 Gonzélez, Dr. Justo F., Pan American Sanitary CTT Ee ST ei eh elias Une 409 Gooch, Robert Charles, Reference Department, Tibraryol Congress: 278 Goodacre, Daniel M., Employees’ Compensa- tion Commission = fF = ie .i ric 384 Goodacre, Samuel, Soil Conservation Service___ 365 Goodloe, John D.: Defense Supplies Corporation. _______________ 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 386 Electric Home and Farm Authority. __._______ 387 Congressional Directory Page Goodwin, Harry E., White House News Pho-tographers’ Association ........ cess. 740 Goodyear, Lt. Col. A. S., Office of Chief of Chaplains: Scena adil sdf a coliatdsh 326 Goodykoontz, Bess, Office of Education________ 396 Gordon, George A., Division of Foreign Activity Correlation 0 aN Meenas 318 Gordon, Hayner H., commissioner, Court of CLAIMS. + oienls Seinl bl mariy, bow 431 Gordon, J. B., District engineer department____ 446 Gordon, Spencer, Columbia Hospital for Women_ 383 Gorman, Commander Frank J., Coast Guard.__ 340 Gorman, Thomas J., Bureau of Customs: = i300 322 Gorin, Joaquin Rodriguez de, Spanish Em- {EER Ih gig tT ry gs SR GR aw LS Es SE RL 59 Goss, Earle Ds, United States attorney’s office. _ Gough, Leo A., ’ Bituminous Coal Division______ Gonld, Georee, Office for Emergency Manage- Gould, pry Capitol Police, ut out cnninmeit. Gouthier, Hugo, Brazilian Embassy_._..._.______ Graf, John E., National Museum ______________ Graff, Fred, Jr., Geological Survey eek 348 Graham, Fred F. District assessor’s office. ____ Graham, Leland 0. Office of Secretary of the Interior Gralla, on E., Columbia Institution for the 431 Gr W. R., official stenographer to House commItleos. on arn altri nll analide cabs 274 Granger, C. M., Forest Service ___._._________.___ 362 Grant, Elizabeth O., District Health Depart- ment 446 Grant, Norman R., Office of the First Assist-ant Postmaster REnoralis. a besmer bottle 335 Grant, RobertA., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy i dE 0 ml 236 Grant, Brig. Gen. Ulysses S., 3d, Washington National Monument Society Gf re Mena tt 19 Graves, Col. Ernest, Mississippi River Com-mission. ool i Ll Yaa id ba dnds 330 Graves, Harold N., Office of Secretaryof the Treasury ---. -w= tase ait 321 n~-soruitbotcied-Graves, Henry S., Bureau of Plant Industry ._.. 364 Graves, Roy R., Bureau of Dairy Industry ___. 360 Graves, W. E., "Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors Es A A LR pe er ET 3 Gray, Cecil W., Office of the Secretary of State.. 317 Gray, Chester 3 assistant District corporation COUNSEL os oo TE um ly mnt Sg rid 445 Gray, Howard A.: Bituminous Coal Division______________.___.. 350 Office of Secretary of the Interior___._________ 346 Gray, James M., Soil Conservation Service_.___ 365 Gray, R. B,, Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering Selon Tel Cy AT RT 358 Gray, Wesley D., Office of the Chief of the Army AT Or CEs oe tir mtr and nn Sa 331 Grayson, George H., Office of the Second Assist- ant Postmaster General. .:. =. coi. 336 Grebler, Leo, Federal Home Loan Bank Board... 389 Green, D. D., Fish and Wildlife Service. _._____ 351 Green, Maj. Gen. Joseph A., Office of the Chief of Coast oo ris in at ATtIery. 3 Green, Joseph C.: National Munitions Control Board ___________ Special assistant to the Secretary of State__.__ Speelal Division: = 0 oe at 319 Green, William, Securities and Exchange Com-mission, a oe a at nt Green, William R., judge (retired), Court of Greenberg, Joseph, Bureau of Accounts. ___.__ Greene, Francis T., Securities and Exchange Chinaa eiadsdealitindb alee dua 4 Greenslet, E. R., Grazing Service. _.__..___.__.. Greenwood, William B., Jr., Office of Indian TA AR Ea al eet oh i Ge i Se 347 Gregory, Maj. Gen. Edmund B.: Federal Fire Comnell. iatcme eres 400 Quartermaster General... =z... 327 United States Soldiers’ Home. __.____._____._ 415 Grest, Edward G., Soil Conservation Service_._ 365 Grickis, Ann M., ‘Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds Ca 26! Page Gridley, E. A., Office of the Minority Leader__ 270 Grier, Barron = House Committee on Ways and Meang. SUS 000050, 0) So ononnsdet 274 Griffin, David B.: Disaster Loan Corporation ttc tdiziat Sion 388 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 387 Griffin, James P., minority clerk______________ 272 Griffin, W. Earl, House post-office... VG 272 Griffin, William’ V., Pan American Union ______ 409 Griffith, AIT. House document room 272 Griffith, Dr. Charles M., Veterans’ Administra- i an BE SS SLL Sh ae A A 18 Griffith, Ernest Stacey, Reference Department, Library of 'Congressiifiaa 5 0 VIC Fig 278 Griffith, Glenn H., Bureau of Customs... _____ 322 Griffith, Joseph A. ’ Washington city post office. 447 Grigsby, Rall 1., Office of Education. _____ 396 Gripper, Lt. Col. Paul C.. Office of the Chief Signal Officers 220 72 “Una cain ios on ml 330 Grogan, William B., Division of Public Con-Poets cco a rn mo Seay BASH pd) 74 Gromyko, Andrei A., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy i nai TSE 0 HL Sti 460 Groner, D. Lawrence, chief justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biog-raphy) ooo aoa nin STE.RR 427 Grored Albert A.: Senate Committee on Indian Affairs 265 Senate Special Silver Committee. ___________ 184 Gross, Ernest A., National Labor Relations Boards’ Yo aah) i HimTW oo 408 Gross, oral C., Federal Communications Commission Jie che “Iodineglo 385 Grosvenor, Gilbert H., Washington National Monument Society 5iid. on 00 fi 419 Grrofich; V. E., Agricultural ey Serv-3 ARGS TIER na ok Slee 47 nay 390 ar John, Civil Aeronautics Administration. 371 Groves, John R., District Fire Department____ 446 Grubbs, George, Office of Third Assistant Post- master General = 0 Zia il 23 JOSainiy 336 Gruben, Hervé de, Belgian Embassy _________. 451 Gruening, Ernest H.: Alaska Road Commission ___________________ 352 Alaskan International Highway Commission. 235 Governor of ‘Alaska’ Z35 181 out SIGRGL2 351 Guachalla, Luis Fernando: Bolivian" Minister-5s 22 te rnin = 451 Governing Board, Pan American Union._____. 410 Guardia, Ernesto Jaen: Ambassadoriof Panama... ooo Loui 458 Governing Board, Pan American Union. _____ 410 Guenther, Lewis H., Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation__________________ 381 Guest, Maj. Wesley T., Office of the. Chief Biemal oo Gufiey, Joseph F.: Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission. ______ 239 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission...a.coci. .L 236 Lo Guill, John H., Federal Farm Mortgage Cor-poration Lo ooo SI cat A tk SLT 362 morlalgaiiensy SOROSANTE 27 a SO Gullion, Maj. Gen. Allen W., The Provost Marshal Generale o>onl Coes a 332 Gunderson, Harvey J.: Disaster .oan Corporation... corc==xsr=-z== 388 Metals Reserve Company... _____._____ 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 386 Gunning, Harry A., Soil Conservation Service--366 Gunther, Jerome, Office for Emergency Man-AOI eerE 312 Gurney, Chan, Board of Visitors to the Military Ne esi ee 236 a Gustin, Don A., Secretary to Senator Hayden.__ 268 Guthridge, C. ye Public Buildings Administra- (7) IER Sa SR CPR ES eT ee 401 Guthrie, M. C., Public Health Service_________ 395 Guthrie, Dr. Riley H., St. Elizabeths Hospital. 398 Gwin, J. Blaine, American Red Cross... 380 Gyles, Herbert E. ., commissioner, Court of aM ee a 431 Indwidual Index ue 833 H Page Page Haas, George O., Division of Research and Statistios, fo shidin can asia SSR ssl 322 Hackworth, Green H., legal adviser to Secretary of State puialn se Kotani tS Sistemasatl 317 Hadjeb-Davallou, H., Iran Legation ___________ 456 Haefer, Don G., House post office. ____________ 272 Hagenlocker, Horace, House post office. ________ 272 Hager, A. L., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission. L.... Lo ol sip 404 Hager, John M.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board_____________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- Fone casio B. & Saatl thovsetbdasnln 391 .Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 389 Haggerty, John J., Bureau of Accounts. ________ 337 Halg, Irvine 'T., Forest Service... oi.dat 363 Hainsworth, Edith O., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. dni 369 asitermnldain) Haislip, Brig. Gen. Wade H., War Department General Staff... foolealocis.gail an 326 BL Halderman, John W., assistant to the legal ad- VISE Dov Lhd dati abs ie en a i Sal 320 Hale, Gen. Richard K., Beach Erosion Board__ 329 Hales, Earnest R., Capitol Police_______________ 275 Haley, Joseph, Office of Plant and Operations__ 356 Haley, Ruth B. , office of the Assistant Secretary OE Warton Aire iesall o eiliit. 325 aint Halifax, the Right Honorable the isons British Ambassacdorzt.... ..-. siluandsuas Hall, Alvin W., Director, Bureau of Blt and Printing Seti orl tale anenti ba kt ug 324 Hall, Col. Charles L., Board of Engineers for Rivers.and Harbors. cool. 0. oo stl saci 329 Hall, John M., Interstate Commerce Commis- SION Cie oo ok ha ih i SE SORBET 404 Hall, N., British. Embassy. . ... cuss.cual 455 Hall, Capt. Norman B., Coast Guard __________ 340 Hall, Percival, president, Columbia Institution fortheDent. : radar co lsiii og 397 sovinuaiis Hall, Thomas M., Housing Authority_.________ 401 Hall, Capt. William C., Beach Erosion Board... 329 Hall, William H., Office of Architect of the Capi Ee aaa rie 275 aehehistiaiealion Halla, UE Rule, Office of Coordination and, VIEW... sneorie woot oo po a Saree Haller, Mabel, House Committee on the Dis. © trot Of COMUMIDIA contretne ter ects or 273 Hallett, Ralph H., Maritime Commission______ 405 Halliday, Malcolm F., National Labor Relations Board. nnd es i 2 a RA Sd a RT 408 Hallo, H, S., Netherlands Legation ____________ 458 Halpin, Franklin J., Employees’ Compensation Commigslon cece ilna chm cent too ty Harbison, J. I., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Eta ies, Br San 361 Hamer, Philip M., National Archives. _________ 407 Hamilion, Carl, Office of Secretary of Agricul-5 tur 54 Hora Claude E., Jr.: Defense Plant Corporation SE 392 Federal National Mortgage Association. _____ 388 Metals Reserve Company... ___.____________ 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 386 Rubber Reserve Company. _ 392 Hamilton, George E., Washington “National Monument Society ARES Sa NT ae di 419 Hamilton, Maxwell M., Division of Far Eastern MT TES Ae er fae 7 olla Sad me 5 Hamilton, T. A., Metals Reserve Company ____ 392 Hamm, John E., Office of Price Administration. 314 Hammack, William T., Bureau of Prisons. _____ 334 Hammatt, R. F., Forest Service... .____.___ 362 Hammatt, T. D., Commodity Exchange Ad- ministration. Hampson, Catherine, Senate Committee on Conference Malority. 0.le l .. 264 Baupion, Frank A., Federal Power Commis-5 sr Sih ay lpi inie fa cel dl bear ena RE I, 04 Hit, Ruth, Division of Territories and Island Possessions se a asia aan 351 Hanback, William D., Washington city post offer Hancock, Clarence E., Commission in Control of the House Office Building... __________ 233 Hancock, Franklin W., Jr.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board _._________. 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- DotaloN. coe ei 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 389 Hand, Walter C., Bituninous Coal Division____ 350 Handfor, Col. Edward C., Office of the Inspector a LS RE 327 Hanke, Lewis, Reference Department, Library of Congress GEaramativma oo hile i ale 278 Hankin, Gregory, Public Utilities Commission_ 447 Hanna, Agnes K., Children’s Bureau__________ 374 Hanna, G. C., Committee on Practice aio | on Hanna, Hugh’ S., Bureau of Labor Statisties____ 374 Hanna, L. B., Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission io. 0. savastou 352 Hannum, Col. Warren T., California Debris Commission tas. vain J oH Sdinil © Zh 330 Hanson, Alfred E., mechanical superintendent, Government Printing Offfeestiis dit pany 2 Hanson, Dr. Henry, Pan American Sanitary Bureall.). fouese. dig. hon ot ase aan adi kar 409 Hanson, Simon G., Division of Studies and rl ER Re A re 319 Harbaugh, Lt. Col. J. S., Jr., Office of the Judge Advocate General. anil. 22 asniat)dia 327 Hardie, W . V., Interstate Commerce Commis- Horie Lt. Col. John R., Office of the Chief of ENEINeorss: Seu. vai dintal: OF ooo teatiy owe 329 Harding, Albers, House Committee on Rivers ANd Harbor was. oot dabeamtdl Toth oF oe 274 Harding, William Barclay, Defense Supplies Corporation. coats: Jv Goon Js cio vo ot 393 Hal, Capt, O. B., Office of Secretary of the INAVN a 8 bts dat tern ors cobra he froma be otros 339 Hardy, Tol. Edwin N., Office of the Quarter-master; Generali.. utoe 0h cefoer.So 328 Hardy, John D., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General ER TIE Se ea 335 Hardy, Lamar, Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Ji efferson A TE NOT iE 238 Hardy, Sam W., House Committee on Ways and 1 EIS i Se SR ee AD a 74 Harkins, Jeane F., Senate Committee on Mines md. MININE 265 Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine SRA OS Ee Oy 361 Harney, M. L., Bureau of Narcotics. ___________ 322 Haro, Francisco Plancarte, Mexican Embassy... 457 Harper, Allan G., Office of Indian Affairs____._ 347 Harper, Robert H., House Committee on Naval A ES te eetpT EE 273 Harper, S. O., Bureau of Reclamation__________ 348 Harr, William R., Washington National Monu- ment Soclely. ce 0 To oa 419 Harradon, Amy As Civil Service Commission__ 383 Harraman, Jesse C., Office of Third Assistant posts General EN nt en 336 ET Le Rl EL Spe IR 3 de NB a 451 Hori, D. J., Surplus Marketing Administra-on | TR i Se a Be Ee a 6 Harrington, Daniel, Bureau of Mines__._.______ 350 Harrington, Julian F., Visa Division___________ 319 Harris, Collas G., National Archives___________ 406 Harris, Maj. Gen. C. T., Jr., Office of the Chief offOrdnanee...... Foa fi ticy 330 Harris, Ralph L., Congressional Record Clerk, Capitol Sombie ad nla dre fean Lif Rian Sys THE 275 Harris, Thomas E., Federal Communications Commission IDI5E. Gn RAEN TEE 385 Harrison, Andrew J., Veterans’ Administration. 419 Harrison, George L., American Red Cross______ 380 Harrison, James R., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tionand Navigation. oo._ oo... 370 Harrison, Kenneth S., the Coast Guard... ____.. 340 Harrison, Lloyd B.: District sd assistant corporation counsel__ 445 Public Utilities Commission_......c.... ...... 447 Harrison, Robert L., Office of Architect of the Capitoloss drei aa oad ai 275 Harrison, Ross G., National Academy of Soionees a 406 Harrison, W. H., Office of Production Manage-ment Be 314 Harrison, Wallace K., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. ooo... 313 Congressional Directory Page Harron, Marion J., Board of Tax Appeals__.___ 382 Hart, Earl E., secretary to Senator Burton. .___ 268 Hal ashing 5 Federal Housing Administra- Tor ht Mt LN Sle SRI I C18 IR LL 389 Hore Willard L., chief clerk, Court of Claims... 431 Hart, Maj. William, Selective Service System... 413 Harter, Dow W.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy_.. 236 General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commis- lon. i. ha a EER I) 1D 239 Harter, Mrs. Dow W., Congressional Club___. Hartrey, James V., ‘Office. of the Majority Leader. opines tio baad LL mpwasdiiiMI Harvey, Dorothy, Senate Committee on Public Lands and Surveys... Saala WB 266 0 Harvey, George Y., House Committee on Ap-proprigtionss ol ETELL GULLIT 73 Harvey Hugh W., United States attorney’s Harvey, John, Office of Secretary of the Interior. 347 Harvey, Patrick D., National Mediation Board. 408 Harvey, Dr. Verne K., Civil Service Commis- slon allie 30. Sordi bond QUILT 002) 382 Harwood, Charles, Governor of Virgin Islands._ 351 Haslett, Julia, Office of the Chief of Infantry... 326 Hassell, Calvin W., Office of Postmaster Gen- eral Pra ei Ol LEAT aR LEE GR aff (een SR CAEL 1s 335 Hasselman, James B., Surplus Marketing Ad-mimistrationtls S0U dE DHS, a0 el ail 366 Hassett, William D., Division of Current In-formation Sa iAtiiin 2 Be Us and abies ile 318 Hastings, Lt. Col. Frank J., Army Industrial College sei 0,_ Jonfiineg Boni sai iy 332 Hatch, Carl A., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy 2. SME 0 Sho Rael 236 Li ann, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of 7i Hou Ah NE ABR UR ee Bt on Mi he Td 2 Hatfiold, ir S., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). = 4 Hunaway: Carson C., Civil Service Commis- 324 genene0 Rl LA ae CE a pe Shi 0 Se 316 Her Joseph E., Federal Trade Commission. Haun, H. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce Lessa si Lan i A Se 369 Hauter, L. H., Farm Security Administration... 362 Havell, "Thomas C., General Land Office._.___-. 347 Havens, Harry A., Division of Foreign Service Administration a 318 Hawkins, Harry C.: Board of Economie Operation. ________._______ 318 Committee for Reciprocity Information. ______ 384 Division of Commercial Policy and Agree- FTE FL i ni Ba Te Ret Se SI Sp pr 318 Hawkins, L. S., Office of Education_________._. 396 Hawkins, Lon A, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Fre I A 361 Hawkins, Paul M ., secretary to Senator Butler__ 268 Hawley, Detective Eldon F., United States at- torney goliee, i asiaa 4 Hawley, J. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey___.__ Hay, Logan, Washington National Monument Sogiel ye i re 19 Hogan Robert L., District Board of Educa- IIE nr) ERT mS et LCE Sen St den hd 443 Hayden, Carl, Joint Committee on Printing._____ 234 Haydon, Edith M. ., superintendent of nurses, St. Blizabeths Hospial ci C-0-0. 3 Hayes, Lt. Comdr. Edward A., Office of the Secretary of the Nav Hayes, Mary H. S., National Youth Adminis-i Ean SR eR i PR Rea Hayes, Brig. Gen. Thomas J., Office of the Under Secretary of War...ivveeoe- cet Hayes, William J., Tennessee Valley Authority. Haykin, David J., Processing Department, Li- brary of Congress er eda Hayter, W. G., British Embassy Hayward, Carlton, Railroad rou Board. Hayward, Phillips A., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce Hazlett, Col. Harry F., Office of the Chief of In-fantry eB NR TE at 3 Page Heacock, Byron C., Office of the Under Secre- I YioL War... iii fii ibe JE SI 325 Headley, Roy, Forest Service._._.__________.____ 362 Healy, Francis F., District Engineer Depart- Healy, James, Capitol Police... ___..__..___.. Healy, ones E., Securities and Exchange Com-4 Heck, Cj A., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration reed AOR LS hy, TARDE) Heck, N. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey_______ Hedrick, Elmer T., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and 0 oul. niioer Navigation... 370 Hedrick, Col. Lawrence H., Office of the Judge Advoeate:General.... 00 L000 SLT dE Heers, William H., Geological Survey__________ Heffelfinger, William T., Office of Secretary of ILRCASULY . o oorsir eri tara 2 Fa. 321 Heflin, Cecil R., United States attorney’s office. Hefner, Wilson C. , secretary to Senator Wiley__ Heimer, P.B: , Panama Canalo thd, Laanni1g 409 Heiner, "Commander John H., Coast Guard____ 340 Heinmiller, Adelbert W., District Board of Ed- ueablony..SLl.0 LL oBI0NO LL Join, Old. Jal 443 Heisler, oh @G., Federal Home Loan Bank Boardir on all mei 89 Heiss, Maj. Gerson XK. the Joint Economy Boardid ui 5 DI800 00 8911807 SID a 405 Heitmeyer, Dr. P. L., The Alaska Railroad _ 351 Heller, Harry, Securities and Exchange Commis- sion RT A aA i Sr en BAG 12 Hellman, Florence S., Reference Department, Library of Congress Gd ad HERTIOVL S080] 278 fioliwes, Capt. J. F., Naval Observatory__.____. 341 Helm,A. K., British Embassy. tetSO di 455 Helmbold, Gerald H., Maritime Commission_. 405 Helmick, Col. C. G., Joint Economy Board____ 405 Helvering, Guy T., ’ Commissioner of Internal Lab i dR i a aba 3 ATe TL Tn Tn eg A LB 315 Honan, Charles B.: Defense Plant Corporation LSRIGTHD0 J 10 SOT 392 Defense Supplies Corporation. _______________ 393 Disaster Loan Corporation... __..__.._____..____ 388 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Federal National Mortgage Association ._____ 388 Metals Reserve Company. ________._______ 391 National Power Policy Committee. ._________ 353 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. __.______ 386 Rubber Reserve Company... _.._____: 392 Henderson, C. E., House Committee on Pub- Re lands oooool io Are 274 Henderson, L. J., National Academy of Sciences. 406 Henderson, Leon: Office of Price Administration..___________.__ 314 Office of Production Management. ___________ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board._____ 315 Henderson, Loy W., Division of European 318 Henderson, W. C., Fish and Wildlife Service_._ 350 Hendrickson, Roy F., Surplus Marketing Ad- ministration So al An pa ae La 354, 366 Henkel, Edward, Bureau of Navigation________ 341 Henlock, Charles A., Office of the Architect or the Capitol ES eR Henry, Conder €., Patent Office. =~. _._____ Henry, I. H,, House Committee on Insular AA IE er en ee ea 273 Henry, Jerome J., Office of Information. _..____ ‘Henry, Robert, Capitol Police... --=--=ctncan-r Henry-Haye, Gaston, French Embassy._.._____ 454 Hensel, = Struve, Office of Secretary of the NOVY oe ior aoiomat es ears de ae a's 338 Herbs Sir W., District Public Library.____ 444 Herbner, Elizabeth, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses._____ 264 Herman, Marie M.: Secretary to Senator Schwartz ______ 269 Senate Committee on Pensions. _____________ 265 Hermann, Albert B., secretary to Senator 5 ET 071 a ph a Ta a a HS Ra | Lot 26 Indwwvidual Index Page Hernandez, Francisco J., Pan American Union_ 410 Herndon, Radle, secretary to Senator Kilgore. _ 269 Herr, Maj. Gen. John K.; Chief of Cavalry _____ 326 Herrell, Russell H., administrative assistant, Government Printing Office. __.____________ 277 Herrell, Strother B., Office of Personnel, Agri- calture Department cc ov Lo oidiooon 355 Herrera, Dr. Porfirio, Dominican Republic_____ 454 Herrera-Arango, Dr. Raoul, Cuban Embassy.__ 453 Herrick, H. T., Bureau of Agricultural Chem- istry and -Engineering... ol... nao 358 Herrick, Lt. Col. Hugh N., Office of the Chief of CoastiAntillery cil ab oben anid dvdoils 326 Herring, Frank W., National Resources Plan-ning Beards: Suse Ain ona TU mal 316 Herring, Willard E., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration Joo S50 Sopeeam0k i 364 Herrle, Colin, American Red Cross___.._....___ 381 Herwick, Robert P., Food and Drug Adminis- trations adding Sal lu 00 0300. aie 397 Hesford, Lt. Arthur J es Si SEniraue 34 gatlonebi ny lo Loo io ada aalianrtpll 453 Hesselman, Henry V., House Committee on Enrolled Bills. o_o. 0 0 ehtgm oni 273 Hester, Maj. Thomas G., Army Medical Center_ 329 Hetzel, N. H., Public Utilities Commission____ 447 Heurtematte, Max, Panamanian Embassy_____ 458 Heydon, Peter R., Australian Legation_________ 451 Heyman, Philip I., Patent Office__.__._________ 370 Hibben, James H., Tariff Commission__________ 415 Hickerson, John D.: Division of European Affairs. ________________ 318 Permanent Joint Board on Defense___________ 410 Hickey, Edward J., Office of Secretary of the Senateins ius aavepto nd 7 al clan dl] 1g 263 Hickey, Frank E., United States Maritime Com-missions, Sale aiid olay lilt 406 Hickey, John P., Securities and Exchange Com-mission¥=idie ysl atk Bn Soi B 0 0 Lh bids 412 Hickey, Mary, Senate Committee on Banking and:-Curreney. osalia aivasyl 264 Hicks, Evelyn, Joint Committee on Printing, Capitola sedi ora amino. lath Lat aud) 234 Hicks, R. C., Office of the Doorkeeper__.________ 271 Hider, Bert F., Office of Sergeant at Arms of Senale os isan i ianel cainllmpdiis 266 Higgins, Edward J.: Secretary to Senator Groen... ...... bol 268 Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections. 266 Higgins, Elmer, Fish and Wildlife Service. ____ 350 Hildreth, Lt. Col. Raymond C., Office of the Chief SignaliOfficerss. coe. oo Coil ail 330 Hie, Jona R., Office of the Secretary of the a A a A dah aE BER E3L 263 HL hat %. W., Office of the Chief of the Army Ar FOTC8 ms fn tition il i i230 331 Hill, George H., Jr.: Defense Supplies Corporation______..._.______ 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 387 The RFC Mortgage Company_ ______________ 388 Hill, Grover B., Assistant Secretary of Agri-eIbre.., hintLa re 3 i 354 ar Hill, Capt. Harry W., Permanent Joint Boda on Defenses to 2 Driasernsl Halls Hill, Jesse, International Boundary Rh sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada___ 403 Hill, Col. Lester S., Jr., Office of the Judge Advoeate Generalas. oi...uouauill o 327 c Hill, Ralph W. S., assistant to the legal adviser. 319 Hill, Roscoe R., National Archives. ____________ 407 Hill, Samuel B., Board of Tax Appeals_________ 382 Hiller, Adelbert D., Veterans’ Administration. 417 Hilliard, Estelle, Senate Committee on Com- FETE ea Mt EE et kl AR ER Ae ST Sn DER 264 Hillman, Sidney: Office of Production Management ____________ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board______ 315 Hilmer, Lucien, Federal Communications Com- mission oC 0 iin deal hh Ladin 5 Hilts, H. E., Public Roads Administration $i 85s: 400 Himebaugh, Keith, Office of Information. _____ 356 Page Hinckley, Robert H.: Assistant Secretary of Commeree__._________ 367 National Advisory Committee on Aeronau-tes ool Lanlaih antl 1 a 406 seangendy. Hines, Brig. Gen. Charles: Army and Navy Munitions Board. __________. 381 Office of the Under Secretary of War_ ________ 325 Hines, Brig. Gen. Frank T.: Federal Board of Hospitalization_____________ 385 Veterans’ Administration... ..L ial fois 417 Hinrichs, A. Ford, Bureau of Labor Statistics__ 374 Hinton, Raymond J., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Hipsley, S. Preston, director of training, Govern- ment: Printing Office. J... 00 siuilinl 277 adil Hirsch, Arthur J., Bureau of the Census________ 368 Hirschman, George F., Pan American Union___ 410 Hirshberg, Henry A., Puerto Rico Reconstruc- tion Administration. i. oo uf Dios 352 Hiscox, J. W., Extension Service__._.___________ 356 Hiscox, J. W. B., Commodity Exchange Ad- ministrationc dif ull ageing inl 360 Hiss, Donald, Foreign Funds Control Division. 318 Hite, Charles M., secretary of Hawaii. ________. 351 Hur, Yam; Jr., United States attorney’s Ee LR SETS RP ey 434 Hot obood Harrell O., General Accounting Offige tacit leiipnin Lo idan boyally a 402 Hobbs, ney W., Court of Claims te ALES HO 431 Hobson, Alfred T Defense Plant mr Sta ee SO 392 Electric Home and Farm Authority _________ 387 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 386 Hobson, Ivan L., Soil Conservation Service.___ 365 Hochbaum, H. W., Extension Service _________ 356 Hodges, Brig. Gen. Courtney H., Office of the Chietiof Infantry iii lau noi ins lato 326 Hodges, Col. John N., Board of Engineers for Riversiandi Harbors, 20.0 tig al Vill 20d 329 Hodgeson, H. H., Geological Survey__._________ 348 Hodgson, Patrick H., Office of Secretary of the hone SRR Ce CR BPR 1 338 Hoey, Jane M., Social Security Board_________" 395 Hogan, Harry G., General Anthony Wve Memorial Commisston. LL. imbue 239 Hoidale, P. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... 10 0 THT I Sa 361 Hoke, Mary C., Senate Committee on EE Aflaivgiol CD0UE. 000 La NE CR Holabird, John A., Commission of Fine Arts___ id Holcomb, BD, Office of Architect of Capitol__ 275 Holcomb, Maj. Gen. Thomas, Marine Corps___ 344 Holden, Queen, Senate Committee on Finance. 265 Holland, John F., Administrative Office of the United States i010 20 434 Courts: rg Holland, Leicester B., Reference Department, Library.ofiCongress. . onl 0 .0agh Lodiiio] 278 Holland, Thomas W., Wage and Hour Division. 374 Hollands, John H., Securities and Exchange Comission. | 20.0 5 0 SUETIa: sol Jus 412 Hollinger, Jacob H., Bureau of Supplies and SCOOUMNES A dics mii mn ie es a I LE 342 Hollingshead, Russell, Senate Committee on Agriculture’and@ Forestry... ...... 264 Holmes, Dr. ChesterW., District Board of Edu- cation aa Yio SN Aart eg Snr es 443 Holmes, Oliver W., National Archives_._....__ 407 Holmes, Pehr G.: Capital Auditorium Commission_.___________ 233 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds... vO INEI pg nstin tl Tali Lah 233 Holmes, Rear Admiral R. S., General Board_. 343 Holmes, William H., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Holt, hina A., Surplus Marketing Administra- tio ih Hi pono np pi A pa ym SS 366 Holt, inbel @G., Soil Conservation Service. ____ 366 Holt, Everett G., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Gommeres. oo oo EE 368 Holthouse, Brig. J., Union of South Africa Lega-31 pgedvon en nent Salm Sen BC 2D Bal Balle 60 Holton, J. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Cer CE SR ES SUR 361 Hooft Graafland, Jonkheer G. C. D., Netherlands Legation... i. a teat einai 458 Hooper, Rear Admiral Stanford C., Office of Naval Operations... sooo oo BE 339 836 Congressional Directory Page Hoover, Frances B., Senate Committee on Ap- proprintionsssu iu) a CII ONS JILTER0 264 Hoover, Herbert, American Red Cross________. 380 Hoover, J. Edgar, Federal Bureau of Investiga- fon. ito aus Sn ARB LIF SIR 3 33 Hopkins, Edward D., Pan American Sanitary Urea. Ted 0 oi an AR yn LR 10 RI 09 Hopkins, Frank J., Soil Conservation Service__ 365 Hopkins, Fred M., Patent Office___._.__._____._ 70 Hopkins, Harry L.: Special Assistant to the President. __._._______ 312 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board.______ 315 Hopkins, Howard, Forest Service _____.________ 363 Hopkins, Isabelle Mott, Children’s Bureau_.___ 374 Hopkins, O. P., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree. suian 0. oon 0 Susi) Bagi ans 368 Hopwood, Commander H. G., Bureau of Navi-gation ij. oo LOREh SD 341 Horbett, J. E., Board of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve System io cio. 21...1.50 395 Hord, Leon B., Office of The Adjutant General. 327 Hornaday, Dr. F. A., District Anatomical . Board... tewsll Lisiuneeof cain SRE 43 Hornbeck, Stanley K., Adviser on Political Relations ro nS an ee er a 17 Horne, Douglas B., Washington city post office. 448 Horne, Rear Admiral F. J., General Board_____ 343 Horne, Frank S., Housing Authority __._________ 401 Horner, Richard R., United States attorney’s office: si. J... Wirevagselmall ueible i 434 Horton, James A., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Horton, Robert W., Office for Emergency Man- agementisl oniiouasangnLule Lad Dal Lode 312 Hoskins, Harold B.: : Office of the Secretary of State ________._______ 317 Division of Foreign Activity Correlation_____ 318 Hosny, Hassan, Egyptian Legation____________ 454 Hottel, Guy L., Surplus Marketing Adminis-tration. casual 0 03. 30. -- lininelendau 366 Houghteling, James L., office of Secretary of th RR CaABULY. oo evi ere i TEA 321 Houghton, Arthur A., Jr., Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress. ___._.._.._____.._ 278 House, Dr. Hugh O., District police surgeon_._._ 447 House, Jerry B., Senate Committee on Inter- state Commeree.. .... .-.:. .. lsaafpeull 265 House, William B., House post office______._____ 272 Houser, John W., Securities and Exchange Commission J. =uiuifognlsBaldy ued 412 Houston; H.i1., PatentiOffice.i-. 15.0. ioe 370 Howard, B. J., Food and Drug Administration. 397 Howard, Lt. Comdr. David S. H., Selective Service System ioe iusiointoapdgl-anal nd 413 Howard, Rear Admiral Herbert S., Bureau of IpSb nt of Shaina tl So Sh vate tha 342 Howard, Leland, Bureau of the Mint___________ 324 Howard, Victor A., District Government______ 443 Howard, William B., House post office.________ 272 Howe, Paul E., Bureau of Animal Industry___. 359 Howell, Copher, Office of Secretary of the Senate... iia LE dead A 264 Howorth, Lucy S., Veterans’ Administration_. 418 Hoyt, Avery S., Bureau of Entomology and Plant:Quarantine oo. if eatincue 360 Hoyt, James A., auditor and reporter, Court of Claims... obit Liga talt cP ns a tidy. sis 431 Hoyt, Capt. Robert E., Naval Hospital._.____. 344 Hsiao, Maj. Sin-ju Pu, Chinese Embassy._._._. 453 Hsieh, Ching-Kien, Chinese Embassy. -453 Huang, Jen Zien, Chinese Embassy Hubbard, Henry F., Civil Service Commission. 382 Hubbard, Henry V., National Capital Park and Planning Commission. -..._____..._.__ 408 Hubbard, Robert D., National Archives______. 407 Hubbell, Lorenzo, Indian Arts and Crafts Board cc. oiige tie seas ae nda Bd ami 348 Hudgens, R. W., Farm Security Administra- EL rE el Ee A RR Sn 362 Hudlow, T. A., Temporary Home for Soldiers Lhe is SESC ee 45 Hueper, Lt. Col. R. P., Office of the Chief of ICE rena 328 Huff, Marion N., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. co uibc reo. cocoa 0 oid eld 265 Huff, Ray L., general superintendent District penalinsiitutions. ...... BQ EDGU LATTE 444 Huff, Warren M., Railroad Retirement Board._. 411 Page Hufty, Page, Columbia Hospital for Women__ 383 Hughes, Charles Evans: AmericaniRed Cross. 200 U0i) BIL LT 380 Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court (retired) woolenIUD] SUE 425 Hughes, Bishop Edwin Holt, Muhlenberg Bi- centennial Commission ________.___________ 239 Hughes, F. J., Agricultural Marketing Service._ 359 Hughes, George P., Veterans’ Administration _ 418 Hughes, H. J., American Red Cross..___._..___ 380 Hughes, J. C., Panama Canal CUI 2.) © = 409 Hughes, Randolph, secretary to Senator Hughes 268 Hulbirt, Harry H., Office of Treasurer of United States ooaunat,. E00 ant BIE S31 323 Hulings, Vera, Senate Committee on Inter-oceanier@anals cls Shia. 0 LEE LIT 265 Hull, Cordell (Secretary of State): Biography of. 2005.) 00s Flaiign nl 2005 317 Economic Defense Board... ooo... 315 Foreign Service Buildings Commission... 318 Governing Board, Pan American Union...... 410 Member, Smithsonian Institution..__________ 413 National Archives Council... __._._.C 407 National Galleryiof Arto... CoinJ ool] 414 National Munitions Control Board. ___.__.____ 409 Hull, Earl B., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Nayigation ci. to ciloai tr claw JJionien 3 Hull, William C., Civil Service Commission.____ 382 Hulverson, George R.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board__.__________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-tion. wesedipdl re dL SLEUTaY aoioaananet 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 390 Hummel, Arthur W., Reference Department, Library of Congress} Liza.dupe iad 278 ti Hungate, T. L., Howard University.._____._____ 398 Hunsaker, J. C., National Academy of Sciences. 406 Hunsaker, Dr. Jerome C., National Advisory ‘Committee on Aeronautics. -._.____________ 406 Hunt, Harry J., Jr., Washington city post office 447 Hunt, Merrill, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- tion Hunt, William Carl, American Red Cross_____._ 380 tration: tt iL IDOE) TTR 399 Hunter, John A., Office of the Doorkeeper_____. 271 Hunter, Lt. Col. Robert C., California Debris Commissiont iS teat und 0. oil) ol Ba 330 Hurban, Vladimir, Czechoslovakian Minister. . 453 Hurley, Ray, Bureau of the Census_...________ 368 Hursey, Frank, Railroad Retirement Board. ___ 411 Husband, W. H.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board _____.________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor-porgtlome iC. LHI OT aod OLS 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 389 Husbands, Sam H.: Defense Homes Corporation... ___...___ 393 Defense Plant Corporation. 0 02 iat. 392 Defense Supplies Corporation. _______________ 393 Electric Home and Farm Authority _-.______ 387 Federal National Mortgage Association _.____ 388 Metals Reserve Company... _.___________ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 386 Rubber Reserve Company... 392 The RFC Mortgage Company... _______.___ 388 Huss, Mary, clerk to the President of the Senate. 263 Hutchins, L. M., Bureau of Plant Industry__._ 364 Hutchinson, Ruby OC., secretary to Senator Whiteuial) ade onaolo. small Halll Jd DAs 269 Hutson, J. B., Commodity Credit Corporation_. 360 Hyde, Dorsey W., Jr., National Archives_______ 406 Hyde, Elizabeth A., Women’s Bureau__________ 374 Hyman, Leonard G., office of Recorder of Deeds. 435 Hyslop, J. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantineli iL. ENEIa0 Dir IT 0 8 361 I Icenhower, Fred J., assistant corporation gounsel...__I0SioSiRtellact] a tn 445 Oo Ickes, Harold L. (Secretary of the Interior): Biographyeof colo Courlois ad. Saku.30 346 Capital Auditorium Commission. ___________ 233 Council of National Defense_.____.___ 312 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 413 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... 235 Individual Index Page Ickes, Harold L. (Secretary of the Interior)—Con. National Archives Council _.._______________. 407 National Forest Reservation Commission.___ 234 National Power Policy Committee. __.________ 353 Oll-Adminigtrator Lalisfasemanzebaa of 352 Peatrolenm Coordinator. cing.0. 5 352 Iglesias, Victor Manuel, Costa Rican Legation__ 453 Ihlder, John, Alley Dwelling Authority. 2.523 379 Ijams, George E.: Federal Board of Hospitalization...» Ud. 385 Veterans’ Administration... __________________ 417 Ingersoll, Rear Admiral Royal E.: Office of Naval Operations. _.______.______.__ 339 TheJointoBoapd i 8. 0 eaiiir. (iroauiay 405 Inglish, Dan S., Housing Authority _.__________ 402 Ingoldshy, Charles J., Office of the Doorkeeper_ 271 Ireland, Maj. Gen. Merritt W., Columbia Hos- pital for-Women. LionsairisRo saond, il 383 Irey, Elmer L., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 321, yan Irigoyen, C. Alonso, Argentine Ambassy._.__.__ 51 Irvin, Jesse O., Federal Security Agency._._.._..__ 395 Irvine, Dallas D.; National Archives. ._________ 407 Irvine, Joseph B., District Health Department. 446 Isaminger, Dr. Melvin P., District Health De- partment. . la Eons I Cori aul ....Lauesiiy 446 Isley, Dale E., office of the Senate Legislative CommaSC I2INEG Ca RG a ERE 6 Tver Sib T., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-poration cacio. or BGs DER AER LE 386 Jack, N. E., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and. Engineering... o_o. cc dianiiint Jackson, Andrew, Securities and Exchange Com- issi ales chaliceini a 41 migglonis th Jackson, Charles E.: Fish:and: Wildlife Services... coli Solu 350 International Fisheries Commission, United Statesand Canada...oiiil. iii. 403 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- mission isin abel del et deal Ln 4 Jackson, Charles F., Bureau of Mines. ____..... 349 Jackson, Elenora, District Cosmetology. ....... 443 Jackson, Grace S., Freedmen’s Hospital ________ 398 Jackson, Joseph R., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography) ________________ 429 J Bove, Dr. Lawrence W., Freedmen’s Hospi-i ti Jackson, Robert H., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography)... _______ 425 Jackson, Royal E., Administrative Office of the United States Courptei:-:-catn time oa 434 Jacobs, Emery E., Office of Secretary of Agri- IAI Eee am esa sl Eel Ly 354 Jacobs, Harold D., Wage and Hour Division. __ 374 Jacobs, Harold H., Patent =~ = _ Office... 370 Jaccbs, Harry B., Office of the Doorkeeper....__ 271 Jacobs, Randall, Bureau of Navigation_________ 340 Jacobs, J. Bay, District Health Department____ 446 Jacobs, Robert B., National Academy of Sci-Aa TE Jacobs, Lt. Col. R. C., Jr., the Asronantionl Board Jacobsen, C. C., Farm Credit Administration. _ on Jacoby, Robert B., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ~~ =. 391 Jacquin, Lt. Col. Paul, French Embassy. __.__ 454 Jager, Harry A Office of Education... 396 Jago, John W., "Office for Emergency Manage-3 EHH ml er aia ORT ee een Se eral 312 James, A. Hand: Secretary to Senator Bailey... _.____________ 268 Senate Committee on Commerce. ___________ 264 James, Concha Romero, Pan American Union._ 410 James, E. W., Public Roads Administration... 400 James, Macgill, National Gallery of Art________ 414 James, Robert W., Capitol Police... _______ 275 Jameson, Commander W. S., British Embassy... 455 Jamieson, Francis A., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs EI ee i 313 Jamison, Thomas H., General Land Office_____ 347 Jandrey, Arthur S., Tennessee Valley Authority 416 Janof, Dorothy H., Senate Committee on Pub- lic Buildings and Grounds.__._ 266 Page Janssen, Walter A., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic mea BRIER Ga ES CNEL 368 tons, | oadnanbentiilaaanlmilosg 354, 356 do Jarman, Pete, Joint Committee on Printing _ 234 Jarnagin, Robert L., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Jarrett, Edward, Senate Committee on Inter- State COTINOI0E: oo fi ie tite fists 265 Jefferds, Warren C., Office of the Secretary of the Senator colo. waiipgs so avy Blab anh 264 Joy Joe B., Jr., House Committee on Print- Jetlory T. C., National Capital Park and Plan- ning Commission IEsaaal (Rae. ad 408 Jeflries, Albert C., Washington city post office__ 447 Jelleft, Frank Bo District Parole Board. .______ 444 Jenkins, John Ww, Federal Power Commission__ 394 Jenks, Christopher M., Securities and Exchange Commissionsds reo Jo JANG SEL 412 Jennings, Bonner, House post office. ___________ 272 Jossm G. P., Tennessee Valley Authority_____ 417 Jett, E. K., Federal Communications Commis- FH AEs Ree SONU RET 385 Jewett, Frank B., National Academy of Sciences. 406 Joerg, W.1.Q. , National Arehivest. itieal 407 Johnson, A. Sidney, Bureau of Customs._______ 322 Johnson, Maj. Campbell, Selective Service Sys- tem Johnson, Maj. Campbell C., District Parole Boar 444 poration oh tid d. Jnl BREE VE TO I SH 362 Johnson, Clifford L., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Johnson, E. C., Farm Credit Administration__. 361 Johnson, Edwin C., Interparliamentary Union. 235 Johnson, Elwood, District sewage treatment____ 446 J Blas, Fred W., commissioner, General Land J a H. Clay, Rubber Reserve Company.__ 392 Johnson, Rear Admiral Harvey F., Coast Guard... iene le 340 Johnson, Hiram W., Foreign Service Buildings Commission: Loosun,)Slaaral oxagor 318 Johnson, James L., Committee on Conference Majority of the Senatercu. foo007 a 264 Johnson, James , Office of the Sergeant at Arms of Senate. Sbunisunci ion Raden ae 266 Johnson, J. Monroe, Interstate Commerce Com-Idsslon cio ton ar GS rl mr ey 4 Johnson, John DeW., General Accounting ha et NE A (Oh POE pe Cet i TCR Johnson, Lee F., Housing Authority_____.______ 401 Johnson, L. S., Office of District Assessor......_ 443 Johnson, Lorne, Hone postioffice.. ileal co 272 Johnson, L. A., House Committee on Invalid Pensions. .coilaaimmtb dba it 1 foes 273 Johnson, Lt. Comdr. L. H. C., Office of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy. _____ 342 Johnson, Mildred, Senate Committee to gual and Control the Contingent Expenses______ Johnson, Mordecai W., Howard University. _ ies J ohnson, Otis B., Federal Trade Commission _ 398 Johnson, Roy, Capitol Poliee i. trl 275 i... Johnson, Sherman E., Bureau of Agricultural Teonomiegl. J los buiondl bof Foi B80 359 Johnson, W. H., House post office______________ 272 J ohnson, Wil: Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation__ _______ 387 Johnson, W. R., Bureau of Customs____________ 322 Johnson, Lt. Col. W. T., Office of the Chief of Binance isi oo oath ofl 1 Stole 328 Johnson, Zeake, Office of the Sergeant at Arms of House ler sel sor oy Johnston, Earl S., Division of Radiation and Organisms > Sotigao ey Fiaa Tt =p pyr 41. Johnston, Felton M., Committee for Reciprocity Information. aw...To oo 384 Johnston, Gale F., Defense Savings Staff_______ 324 Johnston, Marie A., Bureau of the Budget_ ____ 316 Johnston, 8. Paul, National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics. . ove iednm ssh ......... Johnston, V. D., Howard University. ._..._.____ 398 Johnstone, Alan, Federal Works Agency. ____._ 399 Jonassen, Ingrid, Headquarters, Marine Corps. 344 Jones, Allen F., National Archives ....cneeee---407 838 Congressional Directory Page Page Jones, Arthur A., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. coool Falniis. 313 Jones, Capt. Claud A., Bureau of Ships__._.____ 342 Jones, Charles A., Reconstruction Finance Corporation ainsi anual iaainl. sis. em 387 Jones, Capt. C. H. Jones, Bureau of Ordnance. 341 Jones, Capt. Chester H., Coast Guard... ______. 340 Jones, D. Breese, Bureau of Agricultural Chem- istry and ‘Engineeringo. ii .o. J cozio _adov. 358 Jones, Don R. Office of Secretary of Senate ... 264 Jones, Capt. Edward D., Coast Guard__._______ 340 Jones, Edward R., Office of the Second Assistant PostmastesiGenenali-. ug laid DT and 335 Jones, Ernest P., Jr., Federal Housing Adminis-tration favs ietume inane Sp Mani sedi 388 Jones, Grosvenor M.: Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 368 Committee for Reciprocity Information. _____ 384 Jones, Harold C., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigationsdeoo. cod. agian] aus 370 Jones, Col. Harold W., Army Medical Museum. 328 Jones, Lt. Col. Homer W., Office of the Provost Marshal General... o_o. ea ~20E 332 Jones, Jesse H. (Secretary of Commerce): Administrator, Federal Loan Agency.-.__.____ 386 Blography.of sop 20s suvunstl wanda. lotus 367 Council of National Defense... _.____ 312 Economic Defense Board......-ccoeueenaviet 315 Defense Plant Corporation oe iie become 392 Defense Supplies Corporation. _.____________ 393 Export-Import Bank of Washington__.______. 391 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Educa- tomas iainint i ures nen Sapna do tina Foreign Service Buildings Commission__.._--318 Foreign-Trade Zones Board ________________ 402 Inland Waterways Corporation. _ _.__________ 371 Member, Smithsonian Institution _..________ 413 Metals Reserve Company.__.___._. REA A 391 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission_.. 235 National Archives Couneil. .__..____________ 407 National Munitions Control Board-.._.__...__ 409 Rubber Reserve co. lsu 392 Company... Jones J oycette, Senate Committee on Indian drei de wh antinadl aleinde sau dood Jones, J. Weldon, Bureau of the Budget. 316 Jones, L. A., General Accounting Office. .______ 402 Jones, Lewis A., Soil Conservation Service._... 365 Jones, Lillian G., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments. _ 265 Jones, Marvin, judge, Court of Claims (biogra- INSTANCES 22 ie naire erst ola Ee RHR 445 Joseph, Bertha C., secretary to Senator Rad-elie neni Sapa ddo menairnc il Suni 269 Joss, E. C., Bureau of Animal Industry.._...__-359 Joubert, Louise S., Senate Committee on Appro-priatlonse. i veacodd. 0d metssads lon 264 Joyce, Walter E., Defense Plant Corporation... 392 Judy, Howard A., Securities and Exchange Commissions oc bz. io wii mo 412 Julian, William A., Treasurer of the United States. LoL piaio ] otis) vw ISN PIII 323 Jump, W. A., Office of Budget and Finance. 354,355 Jurgensen, Hans, Jr., tally clerk of the House. __ 270 Jurkowitz, Frances, private secretary to the Secretaryof Labor... lo rill 000s Jl 373 Jurney, Chesley W., Sergeant at Arms of the Senate (biography) i vill 2 2100 0.0 266 Fave, O. A., Tariff Commission.....=8lo0o0... 416 K Kadderly, Wallace L., Office of Information____ 357 Kades, Charles L., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury li. tor io sn vgie ols 321 Kaiv, Johannes, Estonian Legation _______ ____ 454 Kallistratov, Victor D., Soviet Socialist Repub- lea Embassy oa. ladleoad ve ar oe 460 Kammerman, David, secretary to Senator Danaher... i on tiniooi um LU Gal E00 0s 268 Kantrowitz, Morris S., technical director, Gov-ernment. Printing:Office. soso00 277 oJ Lo Karr, ©. L., Tennessee Valley Authority ___.___ 417 Karr, Day, Securities and Exchange Commis- SIONS g.L Su ion dn SBI, JRO 412 Karsner, J. W., Federal Trade Commission... 399 Karsten, Frank M., House Committee on Ac- counts... Sis Ia nos Ba tno 1800 27 Kauffman, Rodger R., Commodity Exchange Administration Jeol coi el ain. JiEls 360 Kauffmann, Henrik de, Danish Minister __.____ 453 Kavanaugh, William R., assistant postmaster of the Senateiitod inl sods dl. Saal sail 266 Kean, Brig. Gen. Jefferson Randolph: Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission . 237 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission____. 235 Kearney, C. Michael, United States marshal’s Keck, Inspector Ira E., Metropolitan Police... 447 Keech, Raymond B.: District corporation counsel. o.oo ooooo-445 Public Utilities Commission... ..._...i-c.ot 447 Keefe, Claire L., secretary to Senator Mead. ___ 269 Keefe, William J., judge, Customs Court (biog-TBD do ARE 432 hitmanSR Keefer, Elsie N., House Committee on Merchant Marine and o_o tioiizo0. 273 Fisheries... Keegan, John J., Employees’ Compensation Commisglon. i oon oF tnioo ooo 384 Keeley, Edward T., secretary to Senator Keeley, James H., Jr., Special Division_________ 319 Keene, Arthur G., United States attorney’s ffi Keeney, Philip O., Processing Department, Library..of Congress. wes i. 00 Luanll 278 Keenleyside, Hugh L., Permanent Joint Board onc Defenses ooig 0d. Jiionl 1 eaolla03a0y 411 Keesling, Capt. Francis V., Jr., Selective Service vocate General yi iassocio mdeanil Jindal. 327 Keith, Walling: Secretary toSenator Hill... ol = Sic lll 268 Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments... .....____... 265 Kelchner, Warren, Division of International CONIOTONEas: 20. Lo Simian wy ionith Saito ‘3-319 Kelbaugh, Paul R., Pan American Union__. _ 410 Kellar, Herbert A., Special Projects, Library of CONES se sn a da 279 Keller, G. E., Capitol. Police... ioc oc como. 275 Keller, Kent, Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission... _... coontisn 352 Keller, Col. William L., Army Medical Center__ 329 Kelley, E. F., Public Roads Administration.___ 400 Kelley, Frances C., Office of the Secretary of OEIC I ee a ome mms m= ie 367 Kelley, Jerome T.: : Federal National Mortgage Association____.__ 388 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _______. 387 Kelley, Leonora B., General Accounting Office. 402 Kelley, William T., Federal Trade Commission . 398 Kellogg, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry _____ 364 Kellogg, Fred C., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation rE 386 Kelly, Clifford J., House document room.______ 272 Kelly, Edward J., major and superintendent, Metropolitan-Poliee. ass ee Kelly, Ernest, Bureau of Dairy Industry____.__. 360 Kelly, F. J., Office of Education._______.______. 396 Kelly, Walter E., Office of Postmaster General _ 335 Kelsey, Harlan P., Bureau of Plant Industry.. 364 Kelso, Maurice M., Bureau of Agricultural LO STRA in A aia 359 Kemp, Edward G., Bureau of the Budget ____-316 Kempainen, Leona L., Federal Works Agency 399 Kemper, J. M., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 360 Kemper, James T., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. oc o_o. 237 Individual Index Kendricks, Freeda, House Committee on Pen- I Ta Le ha Rae ee Sete Rs VR an IO 273 Kennedy, Bernard R., National Archives._..__ 407 Kennedy, Christie Bell: Secretary to Senator George... _______ 268 Senate Committee on Finance ________________ 265 Kennedy, John R., the National Archives. __.__ 407 Kennedy, J. T., District Government__________ 444 Kennedy, Col. Selden B., Headquarters Marine OEP ln al nih nan Sls i ey 344 Kennedy, W. M., Securities and Exchange Com-3T EI Cr ee SE SR Se 412 Ry W. John, Office of Secretary of the ow Kenyon, Walla A., Office of the Secretary of ad Retin Grattam, Patent’ Office 02-0 0 370 Kerlin, Malcolm, Office of Secretary of Com- THETGE A Sih rh pe i aelea Ti 367 Kern, John W., Board of Tax Appeals__________ 382 Kern, Walter E., District Engineer Depart- ment Soi dad to hand SEL Boda 445 Kerr, Col. F. R., Economic Defense Board_____ 316 Kerr, Florence, Work Projects Administration__ 400 Ketcham, Charles A., Headquarters Marine a a Re A es 344 Kettering, Charles F., National Inventors’ Connell) cirirat iaiadp iin slat ode 372 Kettler, Margaret V., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs______________ 266 Keyser, Brig. Gen. Ralph S., Headquarters Marine Corps iii inna i FF hatia™wil 344 Keyserling, Leon H., Housing Authority ______ 401 Kidd, Kathryn, Senate Committee on Inter- oceanic:Canalsse ) cone Bl A sepa snd 265 Kidd, Raymond C., Veterans’ Administration. 419 Rida ialired V., Indian Arts and Lig Kiawl, ii H., District deputy collector i, ET SR LS nL LE Sl Se C4 80S ST Lr Kiefer, Helen K.: Committee on Conference Minority of the a ake I le aR ER TT I 264 Secretary to Senator MeNary_ _._______._____ 269 Kielhorn, Commander Lloyd V., Coast Guard__ 340 Kielland, Rolf H., Federal Trade Commission__ 399 Kiernan, James P., National Mediation Board. _ 408 Kiessling, Dr. Oscar E., Bureau of the Census... 368 Kifer, Russell S., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- MOMIESE Co tl Oh a 359 Kilby, Edwin L., Bureau of the Public Debt____ 323 Kilgallon, Verne R., United States attorney’s office uinador A Dh eananos TD mga lly 435 Kilgore, Harley M., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy TARA Ry GR EC al IT 236 Killeen, Margaret M., deputy recorder of deeds. . 435 Killen, Wythel L., Committee on Conference Majorityiofthe Senate Li...... 264 Killmaster, Capt. B. S., Selective Service Sys- 07 ME ee a oA CO LL TE Cg of Bp Fl SRS Vl BARS SU, 413 Kilroy, G., Capitol Police... .L_ai 275 Kimball, Dr. Fiske: Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission ____ 235 Kimbel, William, Office of Coordinator of In- formation: oc ni ri anal) 315 Kimberly, Arthur E., National Archives_______ 407 Kimmel, Roy I., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- mommies wri edu Moon. ual anil 58 Kincer, Joseph B., Weather Bureau.__.._______ 371 Kincheloe, David H., judge, Customs Court (blograplvy)tan8i is SO THE TTY dil 23 432 King, Col. DY vabaid; Office of the Judge Advo- cate General lise Rilo ntl IVEY 1300) 327 King, Eldon P., Bureau of Internal Revenue___. 323 King, Lt. Col. Henry L. P., Office of the Chief Signal Ofer gl son Bik oe A INE STN 330 King, Isabella Greenway, Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission__._________ 352 King, James F., Wage and Hour_______________ 374 King, John A., Office of Third Assistant Post- master Generals: Sik Diab oi LU hen Loa 336 Page King dal W., Jr., Foreign Service Buildings Leland King, , General Land Office. ________ King, Milton, Columbia Hospital for Women__ Hing, |Ropers C., Office of the Postmaster Gen- Ri Com , Tariff Commission. __________4 Kingman, Brig. Gen. John J., Office of the Chief of: Engineers. i. ii oa Lait es idiiriaaila Kinnaly, Eugene T., Office of the Majority . Leader Rneell, Capt. Edwin G., Bureau of Ships_____ Kinzer, J. Roland, Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission Slane Line edn BREE Kirby, Paul L., Board of Public Welfare. ______ Kirkpatrick, Ray C., Federal Works Agency.. Kisling, George Tw % captain of guards, Govern- ment Printing Office Kitchen, C. W.: Chief, Agricultural Marketing Service. Federal Crop Insurance Corporation Kitchings, J. C., House post office. ____________ Kittle, Mrs. William, Minimum Wage Board _ Klagsbrunn, Hans A.: Defense Plant, Corporation... hecaf Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _.______ Klapp, Edgar A., International Boundary Com-mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada._ Klaus, Samuel, Office of General Counsel of the Rreasiiry alse ai oa bus 0 eve A hl Klee, Harry M., Bureau of Ordnance___________ Klein, Alfred, Civil Service Commission. ______._ Klein, — Elmer, Commission on Mental Kline, Robert E., Jr., Securities and Exchange COMBIIION mdreb cet hs eer Klinefelter, C. F., Office of Education__________ Klinge, BE. BF. Patent Office: icici.nove Klingenberg, Col. Oscar, Norwegian Legation. _ Klingenfeld, John H., Division of Public Con- HIE ELIOT he PR I A Rr ai CC I Tag ee LLY Klossner, Howard J.: Defense Homes Corporation. _._.__________._. Defense Plant Corporation. ________ = Defense Supplies Corporation Federal National Mortgage Association_._.____ 388 Metals Reserve Company... ___________ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation ._______ 386 Rubber Reserve Company. __.....__..__._._____ 392 The RFC Mortgage Company... ___._.______ 388 Klotz, Henrietta S., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury. sonia ids Sania Tosa each 321 Knaebel, Ernest, reporter, United States Su-premesConrh. icationOd Lae 425 Knapp, Laurence A., National Labor Relations Board fee 8 Tadarel ose dew adeuniny 408 Knarr, Matthias W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation: chasis.oii Joe idualll. ol 386 Knauft, William K., Office of Plant and Opera- tions a nes ne rae 356 Kneipp, L. -F:, ForestiService.... coo ui. ud 363 Knifflin, Wayne, House post office. _____________ 271 Knight, George S., assistant to the legal adviser. 320 Knight, Henry G., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering _______________ 358 Knight, Howard L., Office of Experiment StatlonSiaea abi plas nl de Sons 356 dbonsaaorlti Knight, Telfair, Maritime Commission_._______ 405 Knight, William W., Office of the Provost Mar- shal Generales oo ovine’ Tales osell coma ve 332 Knoble, Charles M., Office of the Second Assist-ant Postmaster General ___________________ 336 Knode, Margaret, Senate Committee on Terri-tories and Insular Affairs... ___.____. 266 Knowlson, J. S., Office of Production Manage-iesfaietalitin ment... .. J ds be i Sabet Knowlton, Daniel W., Interstate Commerce Commission... .Saleeiore.Joes! Logloo 404 Knox, Capt. Dudley W., Office of Naval Opera-TL EI a an ee Re LE TT 339 Knox, Frank (Secretary of the Navy): Biography of is. cootos lhdaidl Lalas suas 338 Arlingion Memorial Amphithezter Commis-51 Cheng of National Defense ERAN a 1 Uh GT 312 Congressional Directory Page Knox, Frank (Secretary of the Navy)—Con. Economic Defense Board... __--..________-315 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 413 National’ Archives ‘Counell” 0-0.0 407 National Munitions Control Board __._______ 409 Office of Production Management _____..____ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocation Board-.__._ 315 Knubel, Dr. Frederick H., Muhlenberg Bicen-tennial Commission. _....._.. -C20IGE0 20 239 Knudsen, William S.: ; Office of Production Management___.._-_--__ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board -... 315 Knutson, Harold, Interparliamentary Union___ 235 Koch, A. S., Civil Aeronautics Administration 371 Koch, Frederick L., Tariff Commission. _____._ 416 Koch, Capt. R. A., Bureau of Navigation. _____ 341 Koch, Henry A., municipal lodging-house______ 445 Kocher, Charles H., Office of the Third Assist- ant Postmaster General ____..._._______._U. 336 Kohrn, Max, Office of the First Assistant Post-master: General Zio LLUTENT dl ig Kojassar, Master Sergt. Aram, Office of the Chief of Cavalry. i la bot oli cad ch Cob 326 Kolb, Lawrence, Public Health Service _______ 395 Kollender, Mortimer, National Labor Relations Board. oeORATOUIO I TE C OCT 408 Komora, A. M., Tennessee Valley Authority. _ 417 Konder, Arno, Brazilian Embassy. ________.___ 452 Korman, Milton D., District Assistant Corpora- tionCounsgel acura Jo UU Lali ios wl 445 Kosch, Lt. Col. Lewis F., Selective Service System. Lg iio) 0 nani sc TLol 413 Kossler, Commander William J., Coast Guard_-340 Kotok, E. 1.,; Forest Service. adi... 363 Kowalski, Kathryn, United States attorney’s office ol DIE LalEEL 435 Kramer, Andrew J., Office of Secretary of enate. BG Ed 8 A ld a aU 63 Kramer, Ferdinand, Division of Defense Hous-ing Coordination” Jr. 50 Oo 000 C00. 313 Kramer, William P., Forest Service ____________ 363 Kraskin, Dr. Lewis H., Optometry Board _.___ 444 Kratz, John Aubel, Office of Education. _______ 396 Kraus, Capt. Sydney M., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. __-___________ 406 Kremer, Alvin W., Reference Department, Li- brary-of ‘Congress oi ut JBI ilu) 278 Kress, Samuel H., National Gallery of Art______ 414 Kreutz, Oscar R., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. ___.__ tooo. lll 391 Krohr, J. J., District assistant disbursing officer. 444 Krooth, David L., Housing Authority.__._____ 401 Krouse, Allen J., United States attorney’s office. 434 Krug, J. A., Tennessee Valley Authority ______ 417 Kubach, William F., Bureau of Reclamation___ 349 Kuehl, Frank W., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration... i. i ions isa. CEA 387 Kugel, H. Kenneth, District Engineer Depart-445 TPOABOLY --cavnnad sess nsuegsdnsrmeden 321 Kuhne, Norman, National Youth Administra-tom oon i Sail Dehli (Ne 3. JI 397 Kuhns, Leroy E., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation U5. 0. JuEll Ol 370 Kunjara, Lt. Col. Mom Luang Kharb, Thai Tegationt-=. 0. 0 eel SHENG. L308 460 Kunkel, Charles F., Surplus Marketing Admin-istyrationiiizeoitioFanti es Tne Jinn 366 Kunkel, William A., Jr., General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission__.___________ 239 Kuppinger, Eldred, Special Division___________ 319 Kutlu, Orhan, Turkish Embassy____..________ 460 Kutz, Col. Charles W.: Commission for Construction of Washington- Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard._ 236 District Engineer Commissioner_.___________ 443 District Unemployment Compensation Board. 444 District Zoning Commission. ____..____________ 445 National Capital Park and Planning Com- maisslon: cio tus Ls naan RO LE 08 Public Utilities Commission Kwapiszewski, Michal, Polish Embassy____..__ 459 Kwong, Victor Kwonglee, Chinese Embassy... 453 Kyker, B. Frank, Office of Education._____.___ 396 Kyle, Richard, Office of Secretary of the Navy._ 338 Kylie, H. R., Forest Service. Zico cnnvueeen-ne 363 L Page Labarthe, Capt. Enrique, Peruvian Embassy _ 458 Lacour-Gayet, Robert, French Embassy Lacy, Mrs. Douglas, Senate Committee on Irri-gation'and Reclamation. 0.020. © Lay, Mary G., Library, Department of Agricul- LaDame, Mary, Office of Secretary of Labor____ Lays D. Milton, Federal Bureau of Investiga- OYE rae EE RO Se PIE 0S Ladd, Dr. John M., Veterans’ Administration. _ Ladd, Col. Shaler, Selective Service System ____ La Follette, Robert M., Jr.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-tial‘ Federal ._._ %.2M Expenditures... LaGuardia, Fiorello H.: Office of Civilian Defense...-zi--220 i. Permanent Joint Board on Defense___..______ Laird, A. H., Jr., Interstate Commerce Com-misglontzce. Co a ES de Lake, Capt. F. U., Bureau of Navigation_______ Lally, Bernard, Office of the Doorkeeper.______ Lally, Josephine E., Board of Governors of the Pederal Reserve System. 4. sobeoii quay Lamar, Lt. (Jr. Gr.), H. A., Bureau of Naviga-i fanadioll.een. Joined domiaaeel. ch 454 265 357 373 333 413 3 40 LaMarche, Melville, Administrative Office of the United: States! Courts. loi 36d.ul 434 Lamb, George A., Bituminous Coal Division____ 350 Lamb, Robert K., Select Committee Investigat- ing National Defense Migration____________ 210 Lamb, William F., Commission of Fine Arts____ 383 Lambert, John W., Office of Secretary of Senate. 264 Lambert, Robert E., House Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads________________ 274 Lamiell, John E., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General. 200 335 Lamont, John Donald, Office of Indian Affairs__ 348 TLaMotte, Robert H., Railroad Retirement i) 8 emt ieee sls bay i TO LT Be 11 Lamphere, Walter E., Defense Plant Corpora-141 1 Hmm des et San am a a TE Re 4 Lr 392 Lanahan, Maj. ¥. H., Jr., Office of the Chief Signal Officer... 170.) JL LHi 3 ooo) 331 Land, Rear Admiral Emory S., Maritime Com- mmission fo Ein ol Ra By 5 Sa EN ER 405 Landers, E., Patent: Office. .... Siu Clos 370 Landick, George, Jr., Procurement Division. ___ 324 Landis, Augusta W., Veterans’ Administration. 417 Landreth, Robert, House Committee on Ways and Meamg tio 2 odio] 3 Ae RNAS 274 Lane, Chester T., Securities and Exchange Com- misgionzio ary 10 Dsl LD Ru a 412 Lane, Darrell T., Federal Security Agency ___. 395 Laney, Thomas P., Senate Committee on Com- MArGe. Urs ang Je IE A SL el le 264 Langner, Lawrence, National Inventors’ Coun-on ell Eni Ie rn at SA ER RL 3 Langston, Col. John D., Selective Service Sys- eM oe a anid Tetloel) fy wer 413 Lanham, Clifford, District engineer department. 445 Lanham, Fritz G.: Capital Auditorium Commission__.__________ 233 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds... 50. ial loa tiie] 233 Interparliamentary Union._._________________ 235 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 235 Lanigan, Anna, Office of the Under Secretary of War. © snes mal J ISL Es nl Je 325 Lank, Lt. Comdr. Rutherford B., Coast Guard. 340 Lares, Arturo, Venezuelan Embassy___.___.____. 461 Larkin, Frederick: Foreign Service Buildings Office _____________ 319 Foreign Service Buildings Commission..____. 318 Laroche, Maj. Roche B., Haitian Legation. ____ 456 LaRoe, Wilbur, Jr., District Parole Board._____ 444 La Rouche, Floyd W., Office of Indian Affairs... 347 Larrabee, Anne, Women’s Bureau.__._______.__ 374 Larrabee, C. R., Bituminous Coal Division... 350 Larrabee, Mrs. William H., Congressional Club.. 384 Larrick, George P., Food and Drug Administra-+ I er es ES RR 3 Individual Index Lasa, Jose Maria de, Cuban Embassy..___.____ 453 LaSalle, Jessie, District Board of Education.___ 443 Lasher, John H., National Youth Administra- Board. oo. il loa tma IT Ak Sn 444 suinvatienid Laskey, John L., United States attorney’s office. 434 Lasocki, Count Jerzy, Polish Embassy. ________ 459 Lasseter, Dillard B., National Youth Adminis- trablon.. hoo camel eae Jl Sind dea a 396 Lasswell, Harold D., Special Projects, Library of CONGress. c.f. hoil Liddead oof aig 279 Latimer, Murray W., Railroad Retirement 1ry Be ae 411 Latta, Maurice C., executive clerk, the White OUBE. nuaeee AE 312 Laub, Joseph J., Bituminous Coal Division____ 350 Lauber, Calvin G., District Fire Department__ 446 Lauderdale, James W., assistant District cor- mestic: Commerce... Logis: dl onunic ads 69 Lawes, Col. Herbert J., Office of the Quarter- master-General. 7 [oii geiE Sea ot 328 Lawler, Mildred C., Veterans’ Administration comineholiees rn hE ate 277 Lawrence, D. E., Maritime Commission. ______ 405 Lawrence, Joseph, Bond and Spirits Division__ 334 Laws, Bolitha J., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Col- Lawson, June K., Civil Service Commission____ 383 Lawson, Lawrence M., International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. ___ 403 Lawton, C. Alfred: Clerk of Senate Committee on Agriculture and BOLeSinYe oor on dee te BE adi 264 Secretary to Senator Smith___________________ 269 Lawton, David F., Civil Service Commission__ 382 Lawton, Frederick J., Bureau of the Budget____ 316 Lawton, Isobel S., Senate Committee on Agri- caltareand Forestry.... 0. i co 264 Lawton, Lt. Col. Kirke B., Office of the Chief Signal Offer. = or a ae 330 Laxton, William C., Office of Personnel ._______ 355 Layton, Elton J., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. ______________ 273 Leach, Glen C., Fish and Wildlife Service______ 350 Le#o, Josias, Brazilian Embassy _.___.___________ 452 Leatherwood, Mrs. Elmer O., Congressional 5 yr iy anes te ead ie ie Leavell, Byrd, Bureau of the Public Debt______ 323 Leavitt, Arthur H., National Archives. ________ 407 Leavy, Charles H., Joint Committee to Investi- gate the Adequacy and Use of Phosphate Resources of the United States. __._________ 237 LeCompte, Mrs. Karl M., Congressional Club. 384 Lecraw, Raymond H. Government Printing 5 SEEM Scr ns eR ad si CR tin 277 LeCron, James D., Surplus Marketing Admin- I ONE: Ee 6 Lecuna, Juan, Venezuelan Embassy ____________ 461 Lederer, Jerome, Civil Aeronautics Board. _____ 371 Lee, Col. Harold: Federal Home Loan Bank Board ____________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- OT rt enrl Ra 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 390 Lee, Dr. Kan, Chinese Embassy. ______________ 453 Lee, Mary V., Civil Service Commission_______ 382 Lee, Ronald F., National Park Service. _._______ 349 Lee, Walter R., House Committee on Claims___ 273 Lee, William E., Interstate Commerce Commis- SOT A er a 404 Lee, Capt. Willis A., Jr.: Interior Control Board =...“4 =" 343 o Office of Naval Operations___.________________ 339 Leech, J. H., Grazing =~ ~~: 350 Service... Leech, J. Russell, Board of Tax Appeals________ 382 Leedle, Arthur C., secretary to Senator Taft____ 269 Leeke, Jane, Senate Committee on Territories and-Insular Affaing tn i ae 266 Lees, Frank, Office of the Second Assistant Post- master Generales oe on hr Nee 336 Lees, Fred, Office of the Solicitor_______________ 357 LeFevre, Robert, Procurement Division_________ 323 Page Leggett, Lt. Comdr. A. B., Interior Control Board Lenroot, Katharine F., Children’s Bureau... 374 Léonard, Charles, Belgian Embassy. ________ 51 Leonard, F. Morton, Tariff Commission_______ 4 Leonard, Grady H., Receiving Home for Chil- Lepson, Franklin P., District Government____ 443 Lerch, Lt. Col. Archer L., Office of the Provost Marshal Generals. 0... ernicorrer 332 Lesh, Paul E., Columbia Hospital for Women__ 383 Letson, Brig. H. F. G., Canadian Legation______ 452 Levy, Arnold, Bituminous Coal Division._____ 350 Levy, Irving J., Office of Secretary of Labor____ 373 Levy, Philip: Secretary to Senator Wagner_________________ 269 Senate Committee on Banking and Currency. 264 Levy, S. Frank, District board of accountancy.. 443 Lewald, Dr. James, District training school. ___ 444 Lewinson, Paul, National Archives_____________ 407 Lewis, David J., National Mediation Board____ 408 Lewis, Elmer A., House document room_______ 272 Lewis, E. I., Interstate Commerce Commission. 404 Lewis, Dr. George W., National Advisory Com- mittee for;Aeronanties...0oir. oscil. 406 Lewis, L. Odell, Jr., House post office_._._______ 272 Lewis, Mitchel D., National Mediation Board. 408 Lewis, Reeve, Jr., Columbia Hospital for Wome suibiisaun.ann 0 mail 2 383 Lewis, Mrs. Reeve, Columbia Hospital for Women 1o. 2urilo. Sait bh Bren. 383 Lewis, Robert M., House Committee on Appro-prisflonSaisaio. mien ii niiE 273 Lewisohn, Sam A., Federal Prison Industries, COMITIOTOR. ne i ai ER 367 Lidinski, Frank, Capitol Police_________________ 275 Likert, Rensis, Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomen: Sheol ge ie Lf Ee 359 | Lilienthal, David E.: National Power Policy Committee. __________ 353 Tennessee Valley Authority _________._______ 416 Limpurg, Count W. van Rechteren, Netherlands Tegationtl oii eli b av ach diouis 457 Lincoln, Harold S., Reference Department, Li-brary-of Congress. ii... Sos linisl)ans 278 Lind, Master Sergt. Fred, Office of the Chief of Pield Artillery i. fia0 L008 Sau pes Lead 326 Lind, Lewis M., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-tie-Commeree. JL J rE aT ih Li Sams 368 Lindemann, Brig. C. L., D. S. O., British Em-bassy. con sol iERIT SD Cons a a BRITE 455 Linden, William E., Work Projects Adminis-PRON. on tr ead aie Ln BHI 399 Lindhe, John B., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation...Sapa coo 370 Lindsay, Melville D., District assistant pur---chagingieffieer. moe pooci a oo SRE RWI 444 Lindsay, Stewart, Bureau of Marine Inspection and: Navigation... LS 370 Snenerwumiidalins Lingamfelter, Newton S., Veterans’ Administra-i JONES ser Ra he Sl ie be ERR Congressional Directory Page Linton, F. B., Food and Drug Administration_. 397 Liston, Maj. David E., Office of the Surgeon Generali emrnnouo LUI tna TO 328 Littell, Norman M., Assistant Attorney Gen- erali. Clio liinohaieniosagonal CIB Little, Delbert M., Weather Bureau____._______ 371 Littlejohn, William F., Farm Security Adminis- tration eo ii Sait Un py TT NoHT 362 Littleton, Benjamin H., judge, Court of Claims (hlographyd i 20 10 0h UL LC SL bos 30 Litvinoff, Maxim, Soviet Socialist Republics Ambassador UEta HRB TE i Ne Ha 460 Livengood, Evaline C., Veterans’ Administra-tion‘contact offices —-._.-__~-C_l_.____C L275 Livesey, Frederick: Board of Economic Operation. _______________ Financial Division: Jono i ea Thy Bala” Livingston, S. Morris, Bureau of Foreign and DPomestic'Commereel’ 10 tldgobs 368 Livingston, Schuyler W.: Defense Plant'Corporation. .. 0 =. 20 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 387 Llewellyn, Col. Fred W., Office of the Judge ‘Advocate General? rl a0, of Cpl 327 Lloyd, Daniel B., Official Reporter, Senate____ 267 Lloyd, Joseph R., Weather Bureau__._________ 371 Lloyd, Lt. Col. Peter J., Army War College____ Loafman, M. R., Bureau of the Public Debt____ Locher, John, District Unemployment Com- pensation Board. ooo. oo i0 0 Onno SL Locher, Myrtle S., House Committee on War Claims ESL LEIRa TEL Ll, J 20 aie aly 274 Lockwood, John E., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American®Aflairs: -0.0.0.0 olen 313 Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee. __________.______ 2. Lodge, John E., Freer Gallery of Art___________ Lodge, Thomas Ellis, District Alcoholic Bever- age Control Board Loeffler, Carl A., secretary to the Minority _._. Loeffler, W. G., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poradion i Sills iden el Lh 386 Logan, Charles A., Office of Plant and Opera- Loggins, James E., Veterans’ Administration.__ Logsdon, Ella A., Office of Fiscal and Budget Affairs. polio Bog angle Juana sol 318 Logsdon, Rosemary R. C., Securities and Ex-change Commissionuil. 2 ols o0iiu.ull Long, Ben H., Senate Committee on Com- merce ing tl I RELI ian Laui atl ull 2 Bernard J., United States attorney’s = Long, Breckinridge: Assistant Secretary of State... _______ Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. Defense Communications Board _____________ Long, Clark R., Bureau of Engraving and 1530] 0 ee ES LE Ah LE (Lp unas Long, Dr. Howard H., District Board of Edu-ecationieutimizall. Joo pons canal. Ju 443 Long, Dr. John D., Pan American Sanitary Burea coo inateadios 409 ol. DE Longfellow, Maj. Don, Army Medical Center__ 329 Longino, Lt. Col. James C., Office of the Quarter- magteriGeneraly. gossipsiagsnli ites ili 327 Longinotti, David C., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. .oooo_ooooo 234 Loomis, Ormond E.: : Federal Home Loan Bank Board. ..____.____ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- ton: i) tiie eT Je prea Sh aap 2 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____.________ 389 Loose, Catherine L., Office of Secretary of Agri-a erlture: uralaad ee es _ 354 LE Lopatin, Freda, House Committee on Terri-Thre Ercane SR Tn a 274 Je rr Ly A RE RES FT SL 452 Lopez-Herrarte, Dr. Enrique, Guatemalan Legation: oot... i i anders 456 Lord, Lt. Col. Royal B., Economic Defense 316 Page Lott, William B., Federal Trade Commission__ 399 Lotwin, Bernice, Federal Security Agency. .____ 395 Louchheim, Walter C., Jr., Securities and Ex- change'Commission..;......=<... c= 000 412 Loucks, Lt. Col. Charles E., Office of the Chief of the Chemical Warfare Service..____.______ 331 Loudon, Dr. A., Netherlands Legation_________ 457 Loughlin, G. F., Geological Survey_____________ 348 Loughry, Maj. Gen. Howard K.: Office of the Chief of Finance.......__._.______ 28 United States Soldiers’ Home. _______________ 415 Love, Ellen L., Federal Trade Commission____ 398 Loveland, Ailene, secretary to Senator Willis___ 269 Lovely, Alma, Senate Committee on Interstate Comimeree A120 A CIB Ly TUNNELLE 265 Lovell, Fred F.: Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-Ton Hat Bo ahi i a ea DR ihe 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation ___________ 390 Loveridge, Earl W., Forest Service. ____________ 363 Lovett, Robert A., Assistant Secretary of War for Arbo iddy nd eo bn JL Tl ee IRS 325 Lovett, Robert M., Secretary of Virgin Islands. 351 Loving, Ernest L., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General: oon 0 1th oo lo 335 Loving, BH. I., Forest:Serviee_ J Lowdermilk, Walter C., Soil Conservation Service: oak oto. ood on Les I ne 365 Loyo, Angel Quijano, Mexican Embass Lozada, Enrique de, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Aare 313 Lubin, Isador: Bureau of Statistics..."> 374 Labor “7 Office of Production Management ____________ 314 Lucas, John S., Office of Plant and Operations_. 356 Lucas, Scott W., Joint Committee on Govern- ment Organization. Ji, Jo ct ie se oo 87 Lucassen, Th. F. Valck, Netherlands Legation. 458 Luccia, E. Robert de, Federal Power Commis- rT Sb ret SALTO J en At fl 394 Luce, R. F., Coast and Geodetic Survey_______ 370 Lucet, Charles, French Embassy_._______..____ 455 Lugo, Jestis Gutierrez, Mexican Legation_______ 457 Luhring, Oscar R., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District ol Colambiai a 433 Lukas, G. E., Farm Security Administration___ 362 Lumpkins, Porter M., District Engineer De- 0 RTI peicle Tea Ly es pal 445 Lundell, G. E. F., National Bureau of Stand-ARAL hn el otitis op de ramiaT 369 = r Lundgren, Maynard B., Division of Foreign Service Administration. zs. ooo -triioe-aers 318 Lundvall, Arthur E., Federal Trade Commis- IE apres heh yas Spaeth end es 398 Lusby, James R., District disbursing officer____ 444 Lusby, William R., District Fire Department. 446 Lutz, Carl, House document room______________ 272 Lyle; S. P.y Extension Servies._._ __-_______... Lyman, Mary Allus, Veterans’ Administration Contact offices. siren rere onan ee Tse 277 Lynch, Dorsey W., Federal Deposit Insurance COTDOTAtION een ant rin rrR or? 2 ET TET 386 Lynch, Grace, secretary to Senator La Follette_. 269 Lynch, J. H., Office of Budget and Finance... 355 Lynch, Marcus E., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Lynn, Col. Clark, United States Soldiers’ Lynn, David: Architect ofthe Capitol _--...ocn eens 275 Alley Dwelling Authority. -.-..____..____... 369 District Zoning Commission... ..--c.oo_-.-. 445 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds. ratesaera EE 233 TEs Commission to Acquire a Painting of the Signing of the Constitution... _._.._.. Commission to Acquire Site and Additional Buildings for Library. ......g-coceds-vemse 233 Acting Director of Botanic Gardens. _._______ 277 Lynn, Fielder J., Washington city post office... 447 Lynn, Moore, Office of Lend-Lease Administra- ton a EE a Tm 314 Lyon, Frederick B., Division of International COnNIOTeNCes i rr i tenn Ee Sn iE 319 Lyon, John B., District Fire Department. _____ 446 Lyons, Charles M., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation: dates imei 370 ..cemicaoct Page Lyons, Daniel M., Department of Justice. __ 333 Lyons, Lt. Col. Earl L., Office of the Quarter-master General ACTERhy 328 ..______.._.. a Lyons, Eleanor Crow, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations 2 ove © ooo 5 io 265 Lyons, Joseph L., Office of the Judge Advocate General fl 0. ise ot A TH 327 Lyons, Thomas E.: Foreign Trade Zones Board. ______.__________ 402 Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce__ 368 Lyons, William C., administrative assistant to the Postmaster General _____ ~~ _ 335 M McAfee, Brig. Gen. Larry B., Office of the SurgeoniGeneral 5 ile 0 C0 SEED 328 McAlister, Frank D., National Archives.______ 407 McAllister, A. S., National Bureau of Stand- d McAmis, J. C., Tennessee Valley Authority___ 417 McArdle, Ruskin, Office of Secretary of Senate. 264 McArthur, William A., Commodity Credit Corporatlonisais i sil ala 360 oosmesaniat. McBride, Harry A., National Gallery of Art___ 414 McCabe, John W., Office of the Doorkeeper____ 271 McCabe, T. B., Office of Lend-Lease Adminis- trapionei iol nl Sell apianl ni io an 314 McCall, M. A., Bureau of Plant Industry. _____ 364 MeCallan, Irene, Office of Clerk of the House _ 270 McCallum, George H., International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canadas. colznll_ ined al ah weioo diols 403 McCandless, R. B., Bureau of the Comptroller oftheiCuweney) wo il Bias [0G s.eisio 322 MecCanless, Marion Y., House Ways and Means ClomMItieean tor ris Sen ine i 274 McCarran, Pat, National Capital Park and Planning Commission: Jowifi oo 00 408 McCarthy, Dennis, United States attorney’s FRE ahr Sa a i 434 MecCarthy, Leighton, Canadian Minister ____ 452 HomiCommnission =" "= el 384 MeClintic, James V., Office of Secretary of the Tieton. sin cr as ml Slant Pool oy i 346 McClintock, James K., American Red Cross... 380 McClintock, John C., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... _._ ._ 313 3 MecCoach, Col. David, Jr., Office of the Chief ob ngineers. io (0 aan a 329 McComb, William R., Division of Public i Contygers re i a 374 McConnaughey, Robert K., Office of the Oona et 57 McConnell, Beatrice, Children’s Bureau ______ 74 Majority foorleader. = wm rt 1-0 270 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax-ation. TRL: FOAL Ln USF Loni ae 234 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.__ 238 McCormick-Goodhart, Leander, British Em- Passy ses cont EGHATBID YADA] 456 McCown, Albert, American Red Cross.._______ 381 McCoy, H. B., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COTIMBLER. = ov nm om be 2 SH 368 McCoy, Horace L., Veterans’ Administration__ 418 McCoy, W. A, Civil Service Commission. ____ 383 MecCrann, A. Emmett, Securities and Exchange Commission. .oS...o =i. 2. Sines 412 MecCrillis, William H., Office of the Secretary ofithe!Interioy 07... 15.100 Saud 1 346 McCrory, S. H., Bureau of Agricultural Chem- istry and Engineering 2 «loliith 358 McCue, Robert W., House folding room_______ 271 McCulloch, Charles N., Bureau of Reclama- 1 a RET 349 McCurry, R. R., Railroad Retirement Board _ 411 McDaniel, Jennie D., Senate Committee on Appropriations TUF a [fiD Re. RAL NET 264 McDaniel, W. Thad, Senate Committee on IT MRE BCR aa Rr 265 Page McDarment, Maydell, Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs Information... oo. Salil asd Savi hee 18 McDermott, William J., Jr., bill clerk of the OBR desabiea ltl 0 ToL, JpiRein fn i 70 MeDiarmid, Col. N. L., M. D., Columbia Hos-pitalfor Women...". asia’ ° 383 McDonagh, Lucille, House Committee on Labor... ..........eisndoarienll lees 273 McDonald, E. F., Jr., Mount Rushmore Na-tional Memorial Commission.._____________. 352 Mebonaid, George W., Postal Tclegraph-Cable Onsite ne oo co A NL LSS a malo 276 McDonald, R. E., Bureau of Entomology Plant Quarantine. asso Laren 1 TIRE a 61 McDonald, Stewart, Federal Loan Agency.____ 386 McDonald, W. F., Weather Bureau___________ 371 McDonald, Wesley E.: Secretary to Senator Reynolds... ______. 269 Senate Committee on Military Affairs... 285 MeDonnell, C. C., Agricultural Marketing Series. coogi.Same NY neil io 359 MecDonnell, D., House folding room_.__________ 271 McDougal, D. A., assistant to the legal adviser, State Department. se soo ls Tanianl)’ 319. MecElfresh, V. A., Public Utilities Commission. 447 Mekiroy, Alice M., United States attorney’s MecElvain, Joseph E., Social Security Board__ 395 McEntee, James J., Civilian Conservation i a) 397 McFadden, James G., Office of the Secretary of AFi-cd tf Jolegin Sin lial api iid 325 McFall, Jack K., House Committee on Appro-PriqtioNS el. Loghls SEL mnt 0 uid yg 273 McFarland, Brig. Gen. Earl: Office of the Chief of Ordnance_.____________. 330 National Inventors’ Council _________________. 372 McFarland, John C., General Accounting Office 402 Riversand Harbors...00000 quel fo 274 McGibony, Dr. J. R., Office of Indian Aftairs.. 348 MecGill, Kenneth H., Selective Service System . 413 MecGilvery, Macel, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. ___._ 264 McGrady, Edward F., office of the Under Seeretary of War ital oii il Gopsn tal shal 325 McGrath, D. Harold, Senate Radio Gallery._._ 742 McGrath, Joseph S., Bureau of Mines. 349 McGrath, M. J.: Defense Homes Corporation. ._._____._.___.__ 393 Defense Supplies Corporation. ______.______. 303 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 387 he RFC Mortgage Company. _______.___... 5 McInerney, Maurice Francis, United States ttorneyis office. 7 oo i Sill lr ea 434 McIntire, Rear Admiral Ross T.: American Red. Cross. o. 0scho cil 380 Celumbia Hospital for Women__ _____________ 383 Federal Board of Hospitalization. ____.________ 385 Surgeon General, United States Navy._______ 342 Melntyre, Maj. Charles J., Office of the Chief Signal Offord Jtuon llc mali ll alicia 330 MelIntyre, Joseph W.: Secretary to Senator Walsh___________________ 269 Senate Committee on Naval Affairs.__ 265 Melntyre, Marvin H., Secretary to President Roosevelt (biography). __.___. Rohe I 311 MecKavitt, Matthew A., Administrative Divi-a CH CR Ee EL i RY McKean, George W., House Committee on the LADEAEY 2 sis oulttihcnitntin.Snlal Jonniia re 3 273 McKee, John K., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System__________.__.____._ 394 McKellar, Donald W.: Secretary to McKellar...__-_ 269 Senator __. Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post ROS vr niin unin ann SO 66 Congressional Directory Page McKellar, Kenneth: Joint Committee on the Library _____________ 234 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditares. oi cn 0c. ..._.. 238 McKellar, Robert E., Securities and Exchange Commission. hi i. iii, Ta 412 McKey, Richard K., Civilian Conservation: Corns... iheAN Sl sei 397 McKinley, Lt. Col. Edward B., Office of the Quartermaster General .__________.____.__... 328 McLaughlin, Arthur J., United States attor-ney’sioffice. . _aoiwinng daca) Jonni 434 McLaughlin, Matthew A., Jr.: Defense Homes Corporation... ___.______.. 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ______._ 387 The RFC Mortgage Company._._._______.__. 388 McLaughlin, W. W., Soil Conservation Service. 365 McLawhon, Arthur, Farm Security Admin-istration © uosie ain oo LA waa il J Dienots 362 McLean, John A., superintendent of plate- making, Government Printing Office. ______ 277 McMahon, John P., judge, police court_______. 435 McMahon, Margaret: Secretary to Senator Lucas. _________.__..._._ 269 Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses... looouiiog 0 020i 264 McMains, W. H.: Secretary to Senator Hateh__________________. 268 Senate Committee on Public Lands and Sur- yeysesb tmnt tatoo JH ogesal tala 26 McMillan, John M., Australian Legation _______ 451 McMillan, Robert W., Senate Legislative Copmueldnis 200 Tatas Jv SS TR Da 267 McMillen, Frederick C., Surplus Marketing Administration ii) 2 D000 G2 380i, ht 366 McMillen, William H., Civil Service Com- msslon. oo. fo. US HR aii JRE 383 MecMillin, Capt. George J., Governor of Guam__ 339 MeMillin, Lucille F., Civil Service Commission. 382 McNamara, Thomas A., General Accounting Officer iui} Soba os DOon nag 402 McNary, Charles L.: Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Addi-tional Buildings for the Library of Congress. 233 Joint Committee on Government Organiza- Home Toco bras ar ising Gt ARRAY Sale] 237 Joint Committee on the Library. __________ 234 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission__. 235 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. __________ 414 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission____. 235 McNeal, Donald H., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration Balils 0 BIE OtaDa 389 McNeely, Homer A., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation... LO HIO00 J Joligas ily 390 McNeil, George E., United States attorney’s z McPhee, Hugh C., Bureau of Animal Industry. 359 McPherson, Guy, Office of Secretary of the NAVY iirc duis rn AS) BS MLHNIE, 338 MP herson, Martha E., Office of Secretary of a EEE 6 i Ss a ees la Ee Ee 5 McReynolds, James C., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (retired).___ 425 McReynolds, William, Mount Rushmore Na-tional Memorial Commission. ______________ 352 McReynolds, William H.: Administrative assistant to the President_____ 312 Liaison Officer for Personnel Management____ 312 McWherter, W. R., Court of Customs and Patent Appealsitihc. of aallidol 430 JiTe McWhorter, Roger B.: Federal Power Commission. _________________ 394 International Joint Commission... ______ 403 Macartney, Morton: Electric Home and Farm Authority... ____ 387 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Macauley, Edward, Maritime Commission_____ 405 MacCarthy, Shane, Office for Emergency Man-TI ET1oH LE a EI re SRL OLY 312 Page Macchiavello, Dr. Atilio, Pan American Sani-tary: Bareaw jo 30), Cl EE Anko GPG Macdonald, Alice'I., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic'Commereest" ai: 0+ IEE oo MacDonald, Dr. A. Magruder, District coroner. MacDonald, Donald, Alaskan International Highway Commission. >...~~" ~'& MacDonald, George, House document room__ _ MacDonald, Thomas H.: Public Roads Administration. ______________ Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission”...~~" = Macdonnell, Ronald, Canadian Legation MacDougall, R. L., Work Projects Administra- tion : 4 Macgowan, H. P., Bureau of Foreign and DomesticiCommerece.. 7. ..0, lass ioialt 369 MacGregor, Rafael Fernidndez, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico ot Jilin atsbhaaa tl, [3 S. wSiiih 403 Machado, Dr. Eduardo A. Bacelar, Portu-guese Legation. ______ ibe» SOL SF, 459 Machado, Dr. Pedro, Pan American Sanitary aren. Ja Lh Se NL NIN LD 409 Macias, Gonzalo Blanco, Mexican Embassy... 457 Mack, Clifton E., Procurement Division. _._____ 323 Mack, Curt, Federal Housing Administration.. 389 Mackay, Raymond C., Division of Far Eastern Affairs Soll So 22000 JC 900 G0oaL Fal 318 MacKeachie, Douglas, Office of Production Management 202015. DoiDill RGN NTO 314 Mackehenie y de la Fuente, Carlos, Peruvian Embassy... (lL 2 HOO UIN 8 2D an 458 MacKellar, W. M., Bureau of Animal Industry. 359 Mackinlay, Lt. Comdr. J. G., Canadian Lega- OTN oie mits rind mp deb amr ar 2 SS BALLAD 452 Macklin, W. J., Railroad Retirement Board_._ 411 MacLean, Julia, Pan American Union__________ 410 MacLeish, Archibald: Librarion-of CONgress: ur is ois imrgrogs 278 National Archives Counsel. __________________ 407 Office of Facts and Figures... ____________ 12 Macnamee, W. Bruce, United States Travel BUNCOT. rv Seals ry do ra PE ae SY a 349 Macpherson, Gregor, Official Reporter, Senate. 267 Madden, Joseph Warren, Court of Claims (bi- OErADRYIE Jit A eS 431 Maddox, James G., Farm Security Adminis- tration. oi opti tiie dt 362 Madigan, J. J., Public Works Administration__ 400 Madigan, Michael J., office of the Under Secre- tyof Wane lle l oh ods Mon es 325 Madigan, Paul H., Veterans’ Administration__ 418 Maflry, August, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tie:Commeree. i a oo oe 369 Magann, George, Canadian Legation __________ 452 Magee, Maj. Gen. James C.: . American Bed Crass i a 380 Columbia Hospital for Women ___ __ ________ 383 Federal Board of Hospitalization ____________ 385 Surgeon General of the Army. _____.__________ 328 United States Soldiers’ Home. .______________ 415 Magee, Robert A., Bituminous Coal Division._ 350 Magistad, O. C., Bureau of Plant Industry___.. 364 Magness, J. R., Bureau of Plant Industry___.__ 364 Magnuson, Warren G., Alaskan International Hichway Commission...=. .._ 235 Magnusson, H, T., Swedish Legation__________ 459 Magruder, Elizabeth R., United States attor- neysoffice.. o.oobana EAL) 435 Mague, Roscoe E., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector uu anll af oulgdavtle Ande. 337 Mahaffie, Charles D., Interstate Commerce Commission... v.00 neni obadaitot 404 Maher, Florine, secretary to Senator Bunker__.__ 268 Maher, Capt. James E., Naval Consulting Board. io.uilosiodiihe cd-punaih doping 342 Mahoney, Capt. J. J., General Board_._...__._ 343 Mahoney, Merchant, Canadian Legation_______ 452 Mahorner, Matthias, Jr., District assistant cor- poration counsel... nara 445 o.oo ahi Maktos, John, assistant to the legal adviser_____ 320 Malcolm, A. C. E., British Embassy__..______.__ 455 Malling, Jens, Swedish Legation. __._._.________. 459 Mallott, E. O., Office of Agricultural Defense Beltlong ll reirEars PIEUEE 357 Individual Index Page Page Malone, Dumas, the National Historical Pub-lications Commission ooo 407 Maloney, Francis: Capital Auditorium Commission____________. Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Groundsss a RA EER 233 Maloney, Patrick J., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration a A enn a nl BRET 390 Maloney, Thomas G., Superintendent of Bind-ing, Government Printing Office. _______.__ 277 Maiott, J. O., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency. LR ae SFE Se Te ne Ren eee 322 Manchester, A. W., Agricultural Adjustment Administrationoss Joi Lui DEERE 358 Manger, William, Pan American Union________ 409 Mangum, James E., American Battle Monu- ments Commission chem tase WE Set a 379 Manifold, Courtland B., Soil Conservation SY TAIT Shin BAe Ene nab Sn CR ST 366 Manly, Basil, Federal Power Commission_____._ 393 Mann, George C., National Youth Administra- tion IT I de ad SE ENE 397 Mann, William M., National Zoological Park__ 414 Manning, Caroline, Women’s Bureau ______.___ 375 Mansfield, Richard H., Metropolitan police____ 447 March, Charles H., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Marchal, Leon, French Bmbasgy. | oui salts 455 Marcotte, Jerry J., bailiff, Court of Claims-. ._... 431 Margold, Nathan rR, Office of Secretary of the Interior a col. dip SEINE wan ans 346 Moras Bernard, United States Attorney’s FEE rib ne iO a oe or a eS rr SR 434 Maite, Brig. Gen. ShelleyU., Army Medical Center Ee AER LEE AE She 328 Marin, Lt. Col. Guillermo, Chilean Embassy__ 452 Marion, Joseph F., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration. ooo 0nd Sioa atin Wk 365 Maris, Paul V., Farm Security Administration__ 362 Markey, D.J ohn, American Battle Monuments Commissionzesll Jo bona a bal Jiu aitins 379 Markham, James E., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Ea Gl AN EH A ee Ae 386 Markhus, Andrew, General Land Office ______ 347 Markie, Viola, Senate Committee on Patents... 265 Markley, Margie, Senate Committee on Inter-oceanic Canals. io no Lala Yoo ions 265 Marks, Frank B., District poundmaster________ 444 Marland, Dr. Albert E., Commission on Mental Healthuto sgn ic aio uiaiinie ch Lily 433 Marple, Margo, House Committee on Banking and Carteney Lo teres rina El 273 Marques, Melvin J., register of wills office _____ 435 Marquis, J. Clyde, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relnbions: a oo =r la SEN 356 Marr, Nadine, Civil Service Commission Con-tae Office tty nei LL RS 277 Marris, A. D., British Embassy... _L.._. 455 Marrs, Aubrey R., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 323 Marsh, R. E., Torest Service. os oi oes 362 Marshall, Brewster H., United States A ttorney’s office. adios So Halll Cl inl TR 434 Marshall, Gen. George C.: Chislofl Staff, Army... Joa 326 TheJoint Board. .-_ 2 JIE ao SUS 2 404 Marshall, J. Howard, Office of Petroleum Co-ordinator for National Defense___.__________ 352 Marshall, John “A., District Unemployment Compensation Board i. Leia 444 NMagol), Theron W., office of Secretary of the Senne. on] aE Re LTTE Sl 263 Martell, Lt. Comdr. C. C., British Embassy.___ 455 Martin, Aaron WL, Washington city post office__ 447 Martin, Arthur E., office of Postmaster General 335 Martin, Charles V, Office of the Doorkeeper____ 271 Martin, Donald, Senate Committee on Civil Service cae Rae OL ES SE SS a le 264 Martin, Edwin G., Tariff Commission_________ 416 Martin, George i ., office of Secretary of the Taterior 2 200) a i 0 SER LE 347 Martin, George E., retired chief justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia______ 428 Martin, Dr. James L., Freedmen’ s Hospital _.__ 398 Martin, Joseph W., JT. Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds. 233 Minority Leader: 2 100 ii 270 Martin, Julius C., Bureau of War Risk Litiga-TE eo Ay 334 64674°—T77—-2—1st ed Martin, Lawrence, Reference Department, Li- brary.ofiCongresss. oo aniiasy Martin, Leo C., Bureau of the Budget. _ ______ Martin, Reed F, , General Accounting Office____ Martin, Robert’ F., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree. 0 10 an otro. Martin, Roy M., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General. 0 oy iu oii... 336 Martin, William C., Jr., Corporation Counsel’s Ofeliaday oid ma dl 445 aumr Mori Joe L., Office of Sergeant at Arms of omale, ik. hearse Fla BEd TR 266 Martins, Carlos: Ambassador of Brazili ooo 8i 0 nt fo i 452 Governing Board, Pan American Union_______ 410 Martyn, John W., Office of the Secretary of War_ 325 Marvin, Cloyd Heck, Washington National Monament Society iia 0 ciate.Urns 419 Mason, Mrs. Agnes K., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board >. i. Lulccle 443 Mason, G. Grant, Jr., Civil Aeronautics Board._. 371 Mason, Joseph C., secretary to Senator Brooks__ 268 Mason, Guy: Columbia Hospital for Women ___._____._..___ 383 District Commissioneri: = 03 aadanes 443 District Unemployment Compensation Board. 444 District Zoning Commission. oo.a 00 445 Massing, W. P., Federal Communications Com- nisslon. ae Si el ra ed 385 Masterson, Daniel, Public Health Service ______ 395 Matchett, Eugene J., Administrative Division__ 334 Matheson, Col. John R. D., California Debris COMIN rl ia bh lami, 330 Mathias, Bingham W., House Committee on Invalid Pensions... ozo. ol Zi 273 Mathis, James O., Western Union Telegraph Col lo ouing Con 0 ont UR Shee 00S 276 Matré, Joseph B., assistant to the legal adviser__ 320 Matscheck, Walter, Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Matson, Charles w., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and Navigation waa dl 2A OF Cal SIE 370 Matthews, Annabel, Processing Tax Board of Beview. .. ia. io. iil ani eid 324 Motos Charles E., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster Gomera i teu d ibe diss 336 Matthews, Mary Anna, office of the Speaker___ 270 Mattingly, Robert E., judge, municipal court_. 435 Mattix, Paul R., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tie Commerce Ti ete a Sat SE STE I A 368 Maulding, Mrs. J. Atwood, Office of Secretary of thelnterlor i 0: bi nT niin ll Dod 347 Maulme, Emilio A., Ecuadorean Legation______ 454 Maurer, ‘George J. , Thessenger to Speaker’s table. 270 Maurer, Robert A Board of Education _______. 443 Mauser, dr Office of the Doorkeeper_______ 271 Maxwell, R. W., Bureau of Accounts___________ 323 May, iA 7. Board of Visitors to the Mili- tary Academy JR RC 236 May, Geoffrey, Ditice of Defense Health and Wellate Services... oh 313 May, John B., Bureau of Aeronautics. _________ 342 May, Stacy, Office of Production Management. 314 Maycock, R. W., Office of Budget and Finance. 355 Mayhew, Joseph 5 District Fire Department_. 446 Mayne, Clifford Yr Office of the Secretary of Commerce fio ar en aia Bo siedl 367 Mead, Dr. George J., National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics TREN LR eT 406 Meade, Lt. Col. Frank C., Office of the Chief Signal Officer... ooo. Laci iniodosonmai 331 Meal, W. G., Agricultural Marketing Service... 359 Mearns, David Chambers, Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress __.__.___._-.__._. 278 Medes Fernando Saboia de, Brazilian Em- RES a pe gr enna s ne | SR EER Tt SEL pW PERT 452 Medina, Ratl Diez de, Bolivian Legation. _____ 451 Meehan, M. Joseph, Bureau of Foreign and Pomestic'Commeree le. sitio oo. opnil 369 Meek, Helen, Senate Committee on Interoceanic enalgiseiatl ional i Jo asa LH SA Luk 265 Meeker, David, Office of Agricultural Defense Belineaaa 357 Meenehan, Martin J., United States attorney’s office 3 adi dn anil lobed adaleve di nid 434 Megill, H: Nowe assistant enrolling clerk of the House: find sdinioniass inital ail 270 Mehaftey, Col. J. C., the Panama Canal. ..____ 409 846 Congressional Directory Page Page Mehl, J. M., Commodity Exchange Adminis- tration AY aha hah arnt Jo Sey 360 Mejia, Diego, Colombian Embassy __....._.__.__ 453 Mejorads, Carlos Sanchez, Jr., Yiodonn Em- ti Mella, Dr. Hugo, Veterans’ Administration... 418 Mellema, Dr. G. E., Netherlands Legation_____ 458 Mellett, Lowell: Administrative Assistant to the President... 312 Office of Government Reports... _______.____ 316 Mellott, Arthur J., Board of Tax Appeals. _.____ 382 Meltzer, Bernard D., Office of the Secretary of States Lo aut oadiol A San ust ivy 317 Menaugh, Robert M., superintendent, House Radiot@Galleryi.t] oF oii 0 ln 742 Mendenhall, W. C., Geological Survey.____.___. 348 Menefee, M. J.: Secretary to Senator Byrd...__ IL 268 Senate Committee on Rules. ______..______.. 266 Menhinick, H. X., Tennessee Valley Authority. 417 Menton, William C., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Meredith, William P., District Alcoholic Bever-age Control Board lo oii iissnfl 443 Merriam, Dr. Charles E.: National Resources Planning Board. isis ln 316 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 Merriam, John C., Bureau of Plant Industry__ 364 Merrill, Harold, XN ational Resources Planning Board. oaSE EEE 316 Merrill, M.. C., Office of Information... _________ 357 Merritt, Frank C., Court of Customs and Patent Appeals. ni Lied 0) me El 430 Mr Victor S., Office of the Register of Wills 435 Metzdorf, D.W,, "The Alaska Railroad... 351 Meurer, AT T. Tariff Commission_.__........ 416 Meuth, George Ww, Public Works Administra-iran Se SSR TET Ee ST ele 400 Meyer, Mrs. Eugene, Library of Congress Trust PandeBoard. oo... 279 Meyer, Paul T., Division of Commercial Affairs 318 Meyerle, Louis J., Senate Committee on Pen-siopgsesud ST 0 An CLE ap Baki 265 Meyers, Col. Bennett E., Director of Aircraft Production. i... 0 oo lr 331 Michael, Mary L., House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce ______________ 273 Michel, Medical Director Carl, Coast Guard. __ 340 Michels, Rodolfo: AmbassadoroftChile. ir. Soins rill] 452 Governing board, Pan American Union__.____ 410 Michener, Anna M., Division of Research and Statistics Silicon ln fell in, 30 0 LHe 322 Mickelwait, Lt. Col. C. B., Office of the Judge Advocate General. Jil mL ul ......._.. 327 Middleton, Howard X., Soil Conservation tena Te 65 Midgley, Tone Jr., National Inventors’ Counella LoL Coidol iil Ba TON AsEd 72 Mikel) Gladys D., Office of Secretary of Com- STR re RE ST oe OR SUR ee ph HOE ae 367 Mikkola, Erkki, Finnish Legation__.__________ 454 Milberg, F. S., House Reporter of Debates... __ 274 Miles, Commander M. E., Interior Control Boards FUL 200 Lo AEs Mel 343 Miles, Brig. Gen. Sherman, War Department General Staff... SHYING 326 Miles, Vincent M., solicitor for Post Office Pepartmentotio oar leo Sveti ile 335 Milks, Harley H., Veterans’ Administration____ 419 Millar, F. R. Hoyer, British Embassy. ___..____ 455 Miller, Adolph C., Library of Tn Trust FondBoard:. ovine sooroti lial adil 279 Mie, Arthur E., inspector, Metropolitan Po-x nt TU DT Sn TR ET Ea 47 Miller, A. M,, Tennessee Valley Authority ____ 417 Miller, A. Ww. , Bureau of Animal Industry.____ 359 Miller, Carroll, Interstate Commerce Commis-0 eS a anni Eaiding. 4 Miller, Ba W., Agricultural Marketing Service. 359 Miller, Chaplain Frank L., Office of the Chief of Chaplains SA SR ER I ARE er eh AR Ch 1 326 Miller, Frank P., Customs Court... _c:i-:ill 433 Miller, Fred R., House Committee on Pensions 273 Miller, Lt. Col. Tovey L., District Boxing COMISRION. oo aril oinioet Ai 443 Miller, Henry, Federal Trade Commission. ____ 398 Miller, Howard S., Patent Office. _____.________ 370 Miller, Hunter, Office of the Editor of the Treaties ir. viii nase hamrly 319 Miller, Justin, associate justice, Court of Ap- peals for the District of Columbia (biog- raphy Ye SelaDaman Dra re 427 Miller. Leo le Federal Security Agency. _____ 395 Miller, Col. W., Office of the Chief of the Army oy Foredn oo 0... wasceet) 331 Miller, M. E., Metals Reserve Company... __._ 392 Miller, Malcolm J., Work Projects Administra- Hon... Leidll Anitea na siS esa nll Ll ny 400 Miller, Paul L., Official Reporter, House... .__ 274 Miller, Ray, Office of Land Use Coordination. _ 355 Miller, Stephen C., United States attorney’s 01HTE pe a Ep LS ea EE SR 12S 434 Miller, Thomas A. H., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering ESR DL TIRE 358 Miller, Walter L., Commodity Exchange Ad- MiNIBration. owas. tousite vo cbs sa ata i 360 Miller, Watson B., Federal Security Agency... 395 Miller, W. Moseley, Office of the Doorkeeper__. 271 Miller, Willard S., Senate post office... _.______ 266 Milligan, E. J., Public Utilities Commission. __ 447 Milliken, Capt. Rhoda J., Women’s Bureau, Metropolitan Poliee=l10). iL or Lend Blosd 447 Millis, H. A., National Labor Relations Board. 408 Mills, Aubrey C., Inland Waterways Copora- tiJOM: ca hia en aa eS : EE 371 Mas, Gye E., Office for Emergency Man-its BR ae sa te i AR ES) 312 Mills: Shirley N., Interstate Commerce Com-waission: wii toplil canna i isa alan; 404 Milne, Goerge Heron, Reference Department, Library of Congress. ious. 3 ais 278 ogi.Lisl Milne, James N., Office of the Minority Leader. 270 Minckler, Lt. Col. Rex W., Office of the Chief SignaliOficerset | Ioioinin cotta al uic 3 331 Minderaan, Earl, Work Projects Administra-° ton. aaoldo nnd Ln (Wath sed 399 Minion, Lt. Col. H. C., Office of the Chief of Ordnances) ioiiio lalods lo) Sia da) 330 Mirepoix, Lt. Charles-Henri de Lévis, French Bmbagsyieaa sono Joni Silo oils 455 Mitchell, antes L., Weather Bureau...___.____ 371 Mitchell, D. Stanley, Office of Government Re- ports eds NE Ta SE LEC TET CR 316 Mitchell, G. S., Farm Security Administration. 362 Mitchell, Harry B., Civil Service Commission... 382 Mishel Cok Hugh, Office of the Chief Signal thir hem it mat eB SB LS 331 aietel] ooh B., secretary to Senator Wall-ead Sew ee ths an SE A fan] 269 Mitchel, John H., United States Attorney’s & patna Lt dn Ue LJ Ee 43 Mitchell, Maj. Joseph B., Selective Service System... oo Lani Li Sade G Ini 413 Mitchell, Lloyd C., Division of Accounts. ______ S17 Mitchell, I. M., American Red Cross_________. 380 Mitchell, Maude W.: Secretary to Senator Wheeler__.__.___.______ 269 Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce. .. 265 Mitchell, William F., Jr., National Mediation Board FRCRTe AT i Ly Cot TL 4 SORE | £2 hy Spd LT in 408 Mitchell, William L., Social Security Board ____ 395 Mitman, C. W., National Museum_______.______ 414 Mock, H. Byron, Grazing Service________.___.__ 350 Mohler, John R.: Chief, Bureau of Animal Industry ___._.._._____ 359 Examiner, veterinary medicine. _____________ 444 Mohun, Mrs. Barry, Columbia Hospital for Women. =o tiosdisss Siena blames lms 383 Moise, Frederic S., Office of the Solicitor. > B37. Molekamp, B. Kleijn, Netherlands Legation. 13487 Molina, Juan G. de, Spanish Embassy.._______ 459 Moling, Walter H., secretary, Court of Claims _ 431 Molins, Col. Hugo, Uruguayan Embassy _____. 460 Moll, Dr. Aisa A., Pan American Sanitary Burea Sr SRE LG wer Sept SNe) LS pi (ie L 409 Moan, rh Joseph W., Army Medical Cen-ih Molahori A. D., Grazing Service. =o... oul 350 Molster, Charles E., Office of Secretary of Com- CI or a SR SEIT 367 Individual Index Page Monahan, John F., Office of the Chief of Chap-ning. ioeio ouside aust anudaalile vis 326 Monat, Anna Hurwitz, Office of Secretary of the Senate saben] of, bn bain, Si dean 263 Monroe, Day, Bureau of Home Economics__.. 363 Monroe, Frank R., post office in new House Office Bullding lou iad Lian dd be gs 272 Monsees, Carl Henry, Division of Defense Hous-ing Coordination. = ol ooo lo. 313 Montalvan, Dr. Juan Antonio, Pan American Sanitary Burean:co ll ts bool Ll. og 409 Montgomery, D. E., Agricultural Adjustment Administeation.. oo...0 ian. 8a 358 Montgomery, George T., General Accounting Ein Dinan Rent Lt SL TR (SEE LSE 402 Montgomery, Rev. James Shera, D. D., Chap-lainolHouse, . ....ci edit tmnt 270 Mooney, Timothy C., Bureau of Internal Revenue. oo... bh dindi oe saint 323 Moore, Albert P., Office of the Secretary of the Senate Lanslameemnnkh larenai iV anf. rss 264 Moore, C.W., Patent Office...0. 370 Moore, D. T., Jr., Securities and Exchange Commissioncicii 2 4 fu 0 Lo 412 marvel Moore, Commander Edward P., Naval Air Sta-HT TRAE Se Sa aie aD CETTE 343 Moore, J. Francis: Federal Home Loan Bank Board ____________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- poration seviso di dy dL HL 0 feapiineiaan 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation_._.________ 389 Moore, John S., Bureau of Reclamation. ______ 349 Moore, Lawrence W., Tariff Commission______ 415 Moore, M. B., International Boundary Commis- sion; United States and Mexico. ___._________ 403 Moore, Minton I., Senate Committee on Print-INS sien do gel ame 0 sonra Ly 266 Ns Miss Ray E., House Committee on the Disposition of Executive Papers aaeeanisat ATE Moore, Maj. Gen. RichardC., War Department General Stall... .... Jdadeioiec 326 la Moore, Robert, office of Secretary of the Senate. 264 Moore, Robert M., Office of the Secretary of Agnieultore isc oes teciigs 0 Shae lie 354 Moore, S. M., Jr., Veterans’ Administration___ 417 Moore, Sarah D., Office of Coordination and RevieWe.ou sosceph di 33 moaedet aloe 318 Moreell, Real Admiral Ben: Chief of Bureau of Yards and Docks__________ 341 Federal Five Comnefl.._ oooiio 401 Morehouse, PGad B., Federal Trade Commission 398 Morell, William N., Veterans’ Administration__ 418 Morgan, Arja, Interstate Commerce Commission. 404 Morgan, Elonzo T., Patent Office. ___._________ 370 Morgan, George W., Administrative Depart- ment, Library of Congress... ......_..i0.¢ 279 Morgan, Gerald D., Legislative Counsel ______. 274 Morgan, Harcourt A. , Tennessee Valley Author- Morgan, Jo V., District Board of Tax Kppoats % Morgan, Nathan V., Federal Home Loan hE Beard anes asain Jill 389 cofoaiannntd Morgan, Sidney, Tariff Commission_.__________ 415 Morgan, Thomas P., Jr., District Boxing Com- mission vasa arava Lilian ne ld. Lei 443 Morgenthau, Henry, Jr.(Secretary of the Treasury): Blogeaphyviofe Zico a J a0 etalon 321 Teonomic Defense _........2.3] 315 Board .... Foreign Service Buildings Commission ______ 318 Foreign-Trade Zones Board .___.____________ 402 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditares. J. 238 .._....__.. Library of Congress Trust Fund Board_______ 279 Member, Smithsonian Institution ____________ 413 National Archives Council. __________________ 407 National Gallery of Art... on 414 National Munitions Control Board __________ 409 Moriarty, John H., Processing Department, Libraryof Congress... ~... 0 i: 278 Morin, John M., Employees’ Compensation Commission. [foodaga Linh be Morrell, Arthur D., Work Projects Administra-BOT ar sr al EE ee Rane ST 400 Morrell, Fred: Office of Secretary of Agriculture. ____________ 354 Office of. GC. C. C. Activities... ....o.l...0oios 357 BP OLESE BOYYVICE: oon vicio rims emo mt mm shi se cos Si 363 Page Morrill, Chester, Board of Governors of the Fed-eral BeserveiSystem. oc io ois riod Jin 394 Morris, Dave H., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury. 6 Jac SpnndoieanAint IE 321 Morris, James W., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of vis, ohm er FASE NR eR LRT gery ime TH Bn LO 433 B., rho PE LE TR a Wh Se ll 1 414 Morrison, B. Y., Bureau of Plant Industry __._._._ 364 Morrison, Martin A., Federal Trade Commission 398 Morrow, Theron B., Office of Secretary of Com- TRGICR,.. uta iia. VILLvila 367 Morsch, Lucile M., Processing Department, Libraryof.Congrese-2. irooie 278 Morse, John H., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-HeCommeree:-2. pair 368 Siotaralein ‘Morse, Lt. Comdr. R. W., the Aeronautical Boardioei or Jo Gnicroied CE wana Suge 379 Morsell, H. Tudor, Housing Authority _._______ 401 Morss, A. Patricia, chief, District child welfare division. oC 0 nr Seneaiin 444 Morton, Mary Louise, Senate Committee on Conference Minority. ou ssbisidsciniin 264 Mosby, Leonard W., Bituminous Coal Division_ a Moscoso, Col. Oscar, Bolivian Legation________ 451 Moser, Charles K., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce Bhat hide tiebaat ALLL Uy 369 Moser, Guy L . J oint teh onthe Library. oe. i ii 234 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission_______ 239 Moskey, George A., National Park Service_____ 349 Moss, Evelyn, Senate Committee on Patents___ 265 Moss, Marjorie, Visa Division... .._......_. 319 Moit, a George Fox, Office of the Cops Inspector Mott, Lt. “Goi. W., Office of John the Inspector General coo i hed ae 327 Mott, Seward H., Federal Housing Adminis-tration PINE SIR SE SR eT pei a 389 Moultrie, Minnie, Senate Committee on Irriga- tion‘and Reelamation. itt cL. 0 1 265 Mountin, Dr. J. W., Public Health Service_____ 395 Movius, Gerald W., secretary to Senator Nye__. 269 Mowitt, Glendon J., Railroad Retirement Board Ll oa ade en 411 Moxley, Owen R., District Fire Department____ 446 Moyer, Lawson A.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service___._ 318 Civil Service Commission_______.____________ 382 Moyer, W. A., Defense Homes Corporation____ 393 Muck, Lee, Office of Secretary of the Interior__ 346 Mudd, Robert L., assistant District auditor____ 443 Muesebeck, C. F. W., Bureau of Entomology and PlantiQuarantine-._-os oo oo oo 5 361 Nun, Walter W., secretary to Senator Chan- Rar dst sheridan G8 eo Mer iii ode 268 Mulbeey, John J., Office of the Chief of Air Corps 331 Mullaney, J oseph E., Administrative Depart- ment, Library of Congress Ee ne Sei 279 Mulligan, Henry A.: Defense Homes Corporation__________________ 393 Defense Plant Corporation. __________________ 392 Defense Supplies Corporation________________ 393 Disaster Loan Corporation... ocean. 388 Export-Import Bank of Washington_.________ 391 Federal Loan Ageney.. cou oioes eo oo 0 386 Metals Reserve Company. _______.____..______ 391 Rubber Reserve Company... .o_.icsi.__.. 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ____.____ 386 The RFC Mortgage Company. ___________.___ 388 Mulligan, Minot C.: Disaster Loan Corporation... ....c«-..wbema--388 Metals Reserve Company. _____________.__.____ 392 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 386 Rubber Reserve Company. ____.____._______._. 392 Mullikin, Kent R., Federal Housing Adminis- tration I A TE Ea Na 389 Mulvihill, B. M., Bureau of Accounts__________ 323 Mumford, L. Quincy, Library of Congress_____ 278 Mundy, Lucille, Office of the Under Secretary A ee aa 325 Munilla, Maj. Felipe, Cuban Embassy_..______ 453 Munnikhuysen, Brig. Gen. Henry D. F., Office of the Quartermaster General ___.___.______._ 328 848 Congressional Directory Page Munns, Edward N., Forest Service. __.___.____ 363 Munro, G. H., Australian Legation____._______ 451 Munster, N. L., Office of Budget and Finance___ 355 Munthe de Morgenstierne, Wilhélm, Norwegian Legation, sp joul cick oin omin 200080 050 458 Murdock, J. Edgar, Board of Tax Appeals_____ 382 Murdock, Dr. John R., Pan American Sanitary Bureaus ii ll havi As osniinnsiial 409 Ms: Charles S., Office of the Legislative Coumselenin. sugdsl 1.5 267 lounaaiy]anus Murphy, Clement, District Fire Department__ 446 Murphy, Daniel E., Office of Indian Affairs_____ 347 Murphy, Donald V., Capitol police____________ 275 Murphy, E. J., Agricultural Marketing Service. 359 Murphy, Edward V., Assistant Official Re porter, Senaterisict Js cain ladda ngl aan 267 Murphy, Frank, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography) __..__ 424 Murphy, Henry C., Division of Research and Statistles ioc: oo oniidl abn J i 322 Murphy, James L., Interstate Commerce Com- TNISSION. cas anahd Lalo oc iniaigih 404 Murphy, James R., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. i ise vo maiaiiileg 337 Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Senate.__ 267 Murphy, J)ohn B., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration -0L S EE TE pe RIGO ai 390 Murphy, =. Joseph A., District Health Depart- ment. coil a pe tia iO 446 Murphy, Joseph E., Secret Service Division... 322 Murphy, Patrick F., Railroad Retirement Board Job Ll SALESEIN Ds 411 ah Murphy, Russell, United States Territorial Ex-pansion Memorial Commission. ____________ 237 Murphy, Vincent R., Office of the Doorkeeper__ 271 Murphy, William i. Railroad Retirement Weis, Charles B., United States attorney’s office SEee Ao TA a ed 434 Murray, Fred J., Forest Service _______________ 363 Murray, J. D., British Embassy oor iti 455 Murray, John F. National Mediation Board... 408 Murray, Pearl, Senate Committee on Agricul- tare and Borestry rs 264 Murray, Wallace, Division of Near Eastern AMAipge 4 oe ee Ein ais 319 Muse, James G., Senate Committee on Post Offices andiPost Roads. o_o 0 te ts 266 Muxé, Dr. Alberto, Cuban Embassy..___.______ 453 Myer, Dillon S., Soil Conservation Service. ____ 365 Myer, Jesse W., ' Bureau of Reclamation________ 349 Myers, Howard B., Work Projects Adminis- TAtlon ate ee me a eR a 399 Myers, John P., Jr., the Coast Guard__________ 340 Myers, Lawrence, Commodity Credit Corpora- BOI eta ea 60 Myers, Walter: FedemliBire:Coanell = = Fv Fr = 401 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _______ 336 Myers, Weaver, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue axation: 234 N Nabrit, James M., Jr., Howard University_.___ 398 Nagle, Marie E. Senate Committee on li Buildings and Grounds... iio Naiden, Col. E. L., Office of Shs Chief Shae Afr Horeesil usc. tive; ied dado JOiRin 331 Najera, Dr. Francisco Castillo: Ambassador of Mexico... .________________ 457 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 Najera, Lt. Francisco Castillo, Jr., Mexican Embassy Lanta tnd Lu a gia 457 Narifio, Alberto Vargas, Colombian Legation_. 453 N aude, Dr. W. C., Union of South Africa Lega- HONE Ea tpurlag SAT 2 Shh a ih vad uh oa i 460 Noten, Elizabeth C., Office of Secretary of War. 325 Nedved, Rudolph, Housing Authority:.-. =~ 401 Needham, Guy E., Maritime Commission______ 405 Needler, L. L., Office of Agricultural Defense Bolotions vaisa A 357 Li Page Neely, L., Naval Observatory..._._...___.___._. 341 Neely, Stephen, House folding room._________ 271 Neff, Blanche, clerk, municipal court. ________ 435 Neff, Harold =H, office of the Under Secretary St Warso ull abi ih ei ea 325 Neilson, George D., judge, police court________ 435 Neira, Col. Miguel ¥, Colombian Embassy____ 453 Nelson, Donald M.: Office of Production Management ___________ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board. 315 Nelson, BE. M., Food and Drug Administration. 397 Nelson, PA. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System RAL CR SETA EL HEIR Ol 394 Nelson, H. A., Office of Budget and Finance. . 355 Nelson, Dr. John A., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Nelson, L. Clair, Senate Committee on Educa“ E100 S00 LADOT. corerSa li 264 REL Nelson, Richard W., Forest Service... ________ 363 Nelson, Wesley R., Bureau of Reclamation____ 349 Nesbitt, John, assistant corporation counsel. ___ 445 Néumann, David, General Accounting Office 402 Neumann, Ernest K. , Federal Home Loan Bank Board EE CR IE ISR Dg J Re TY 389 Neves, Carl A., Veterans’ Administration _____ 419 Newberry, Alfred T., Senate Press Gallery.___ 734 Newcomb, John L., Celebration of the Birth of Thomas J CHOTION coe ng La 238 Nowoamer H. C., Columbia Institution for the Nowa S. R., Agricultural Marketing Service _ 359 Newhall, Arthur, Office of Production Manage- ment er NE SAE Ea are LRT UE SRE 314 Newlin, Gurney, American Red Cross. _______ 380 Newman, Hobart, judge, police court _..______ 435 Newman, John W., office of the Majority RCE ue 270 Niazi, Anwar, Egyptian Legation______________ 54 N iblack, Donald R. , office of the First Assistant Postmaster General... 335 Nichols, J. C., National Capital Park and Plan- ning Commission. 015 00 408 ............. Nichols, John G., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. aio loi 0 id edna] a 86 Nichols, Louis B., Federal Bureau of Investiga- Hono ao iniinll eantany Jak a0 2 333 Nichols, Mark-L., Soil Conservation Service. _ 365 Nichols, Maude C. Reference Department, hy Vincent D. BLT of the Solicitor___ 357 Nickson, Theodore B. J Federal Housing Admin-ISETREION oe alt Sls ao LS HE 389 Nielson, Leo.: Defense Plant Corporation. jo titeliin 392 Electric Home and Farm Authority._________ 387 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _____ 386 Nienburg, Bertha M., Women’s Bureau. _______ 375 Nieto, Rafael, Mexican Embassy... 7 [i 855 457 Nighman, C. Edwin, Bureau of Mines _______ 349 Nikolitch, Radoye, Yugoslavian Legation _____ 461 Ninas, George A, General Accounting Office___ 402 Nisbet, Robert, Office of the Doorkeeper________ 271 Nitze, "Paul, Office of the Coordinator of Inter- American Afalreclo oo ann Uni Blots, C. Scott, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- BOTL os md mii i iret mR eS ET HAS 4h Noble, John E., District Health Department__ Nolan, John Te Processing Department, but brary of Congress SERRE Lr DR 278 Nolen, John, Jr.: Alley Dwelling Authority: Ci 00 Jo 1010] 379 District Board of Zoning Adjustment_. ______ 444 National Capital Park and Planning Com- mission li aap ir Ta a 408 Noll, W. G., Public Buildings Administration__ 400 Noonan, J. Joseph, National Mediation Board. 408 Norcross, TT. W.: Forest Service (CEE ER fe ee SC Tee 363 Federal Board of Surveys and Maps_.________ 385 Norfleet, W. J., Federal or ianiions : Commission: -o oh She 0 385 facia Bek Morgen, William A., chief deputy clerk, police 435 Indwidual Index Page Norris, George W.: Joint Committee to Investigate the Adequacy and Use of Phosphate Resources of the United Statesar vo ol. a0 Jo 0 rma 237 Mount Rushmore National Memorial Com-missions sof Cw Soin on anni tal ne 352 North, Col. Earl: Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors___ 329 Beach Eroslon®Board-at: =... 0. 329 North, Roy M., Office of Third Assistant Post- master General... sosis low lunes ll Jai 336 Northrop, J. D., Geological Survey_____________ 348 Northrop, Vernon, National Youth Adminis- tration uss Tisai snarn too i Yo aie 397 Norton, Alice B., House Committee on Pen-slonse rm Bol Daiaal bp ivan 73 Norton, Ethan A., Soil Conservation Service___ 365 Norton, John E., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration. rr cL oii ee fen Eas 387 Norton, Mary T., Columbia Hospital for FOE an tis] Sorina ad Maa ui 83 Norton, Ralph A., District Government_______ 443 Norton, R. H., Senate Committee on Patents. _ 265 Notebaert, Francis C., Office of the Doorkeeper. 271 Notz, Cornelia, Tariff Commission. ____________ 416 Novikov, Fedor S., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy er. oni skp SMT 460 Noyes, Mrs. Frank B., Bureau of Plant In-QUST vanesRNa Anan Sng 0 364 Noyes, Rear Admiral Leigh: Defense Communications Board _.____________ 312 Office of Naval Operations... .-.~_____ TH 339 Noyes, Theodore W.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf. __________ 397 District Public Tdbrary.. io...i 444 Washington National Monument Society. ___ 419 Nubson, Troy A., Headquarters, Marine Corps. 344 Nuiiez, José, Spanish Embassy. ________________ 459 Nunan, Sean, Irish Legation i 1 t" 456 Nye, Gerald P., Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _____ 238 Nye, L. Frank, Office of Secretary of War______ 325 Nystron, Paul H., Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education. = 2-1. _~ io. 20: 396 (8) REECE. lehe ee ha ERE 367 Oberholser, John, Office of Sergeant at Arms of HEE eh TMRe i 271 O’Brian, John Lord, Office of Production Man- agement... oi Ai ue eT a 314 O’Brien, George, Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 O’Brien, James C., Civil Service Commission__ 383 O’Brien, Mrs. Joseph, Congressional Club_____ 384 O’Brien, Leo F., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigationtio lt gad hy 370 O’Brien, Prof. Morrough P., Beach Erosion Board... oo 0] Sharan denn dagen 329 O’Brien, Robert H., Securities and Exchange Commission. 20 o0 J0l a min 412 O’Brien, Ruth, Bureau of Home Economics___ 363 Ocheltree, John B., Caribbean Office___________ 318 O’Connell, Ambrose, First Assistant Post- master General. J co Gin aiapy Sie 335 0O’Connell, Anne L., Pan American Union. ____ 410 -O’Connell, Joseph J., Jr., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury Department_______ 321 0O’Connor, Edward, District Fire Department__ 446 O’Connor, Helene, Senate Committee on Bank- ingiand Currency....-=. J iUiERE od 264 O’Connor, John R. M., Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, wi Lui ft ry SEE] 390 Tesi O’Day, C. C., Senate Committee on Claims____ 264 O’Dea, John, District assistant corporation counsel: ati EE RA SaaRi a Sa t 445 trict Court of the United States for the Districtof Columbia 0 433 Page Oettl, John F., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation =U io ob use Eo 370 Oftedal, Torfinn, Norwegian Legation. ________ 458 Ogden, B. K., Maritime Commission__________ 405 O’Gorman, Michael, House post office__________ 272 O’Halloran, Thomas J., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General __ 35 TAOPCE. to i Daas ra 367 Ohlson, Otto F., The Alaska Railroad _________ 351 Ojeda, Jose Hernandez, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. 403 O’Keefe, Lt. Col. Desmond, Office of the Judge Advocate! General io YT Ea 327 O’Keefe, Dr. James A., Metropolitan Police. 447 Sysjony oy ool Seale Diesel 413 O’Laughlin, Col. John Callan, Goethals Memo-rial Commission Beonomiescs cos oun onc. JF 0 SUT 358 Olds, Leland: Federal Power Commission__________________ 393 National Power Policy Committee. __________ O Loy John J., United States attorney’s Office aaa Aaa eS Oliver, Col. Llewellyn W., Office of the Quarter-master General... 1") fo alibioo Oliver, Webster J., presiding judge, Customs Court. (biography)... .__~ v= 432 Olmstead, Maj. Gen. Dawson: Defense Communications Board______________ 312 Office of the Chief Signal Officers. ____________ 330 Olmstead, Ralph W.: Joint Committee to Investigate the Adequacy and use of Phosphate Resources of the United States zi so Gant gan Sor He 237 Surplus Marketing Administration. _________ 366 Olmsted, Frederick Law, Bureau of Plant NAUSIEY =o, nls en Ee aE 364 Olsen, W..H., Tariff Commission. = 0 ~ 7" 416 Olson, Robert P., House post office_____________ 272 O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Joint Committee on Government Organization.._______._ 37 Oman, Rear Admiral Charles M., Naval Medi-eal: Center i ef -Z oh Siu ai 3 44 Omer, Maj. Daniel O., Selective Service System _ 413 Onacewicz, Col. Wlodzimierz, Polish Embassy. 459 O’Neal, Mrs. Emmet, Congressional Club______ 384 O’Neale, H. T., Office of Plant and Operations. 356 O’Neill, Agnes M., Tariff Commission_________ 6 O’Neill, Anna A., assistant to the legal adviser__ 319 0’Neill, Commander Merlin, Coast Guard_____ 340 Onofrio, Thomas, Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 271 Onthank, A. H., Office of the Secretary of War__ 325 Opie, Redvers, British Embassy __. >. =. 5 Oppenheim, Burton E., Wage and Hour Divi-SE TA Salen GeSe al 374 Oppenheimer, Ella, District Health Depart-17111 Ei lee Se ee Sr ae le 46 Oppenheimer, Monroe, Economic Defense JHOT Ee eles dial ie seal Song 316 Opper, Clarence V., Board of Tax Appeals. ____ 382 Orchard, C. R., Farm Credit Administration__ 361 Orchard, J. E., Office of the Lend-Lease Ad-ministration ily SL a er 314 Orent-Keiles, Elsa, Bureau of Home Economics. 363 O’Rourke, L. J., Civil Service Commission_____ 382 Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appropria-ONS. oatsIE ET 273 he Orsinger, Fred G., Fish and Wildlife Service___ 351 Orthman, William S., captain of Capitol Police. 275 Ortiz, Frances, Senate Committee on Public Tandsand Surveys... stein 266 Osmeiia, Sergio, Vice President of the Common-wealth of Philippines...1; 351 the _. Ostby, Commander Kristian, Norwegian Lega-PION. 380.0% Bape i oy Tone le TERT 458 Ostermann, Brig. Gen. Edward A., Head-quarters Marine Corps. Zio7 0 344 Otto, Elizabeth S., Senate Committee on Cliams_ 264 Otway-Smithers, Lt. P. H. B., British Embassy. 455 Congressional Directory Page Ovchinnikov, Maj. Constantine, Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy Overfelt, Ferol D., Ottice of the Secretary of the Navy 338 Overholser, De: Winifred: Federal Board of Hospitalization. ___________ 385 Superintendent, St. Elizabeths Hospital ______ 398 Overton, Earl R., Veterans’ Administration____ 417 Overton, John HH. Board of Visitors to the Naval Aeafemy. gait Sian cp abr 236 Overton, Mary Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Manulaetaressses. i nod La aiidisu 20 265 Overton, Ruth, Senate Committee on Manu- faetnres. checslins sto oni Oh on Ve @vrevik, Hans Bull, Norwegian Legation______ 458 Owen, Claude W. , District Boxing Commission. 443 Owen, Mabel M. ’ Board of Tax Appeals. _.____ 382 Owen, Marguerite, Tennessee Valley Authority. 416 Owen, Thomas M., Jr., National Archives.___. 407 Owings, Cc. W., Capitol railroad ticket office... 276 Oxley, Howard W., Office of Education._..__.. 396 P Packard, C. M., Bureau of Entomology Bnd Plant Quarantine CATER Aa a Padover, Saul K., Office of Secretary of the in Page, Arthur S., Office of Fourth Assistant Post- master General. ---ac eo rrecriazits 337 Page, John C., Bureau of Reclamation. .__.__.__ 348 Page, John C., Office of Clerk of House._._.._.._. 270 Page, Thad: NationaliArchives: 2 lol i uit. 406 National Archives Couneil...._.___....__..... 407 Page, William Tyler, minority clerk____________ 272 Paget, Wilmer J., United States Botanic Gar-z DR ed ee SS SO Re TB Ca TOL Tn Sol ATC 7 Paine, H. S., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering AE Sa OE AE 358 Paladino, Lt. Col. Alfredo, Argentine Embassy. 451 Pali¢, Dr. Vladimir, Czechoslovakian Legation. 453 Palin, R. V., British Embass 455 Palmer, Arthur W., Office of Foreign Agricul- TRL Relations. ieee es 35 Palmer, Burton E., Work Projects Administra- ON iit acntalt shat, or Catan Lanai 399 Palmer, Charles F., Division of Defense Hous- ing Coofdmation. oir corned corte 313 Panafieu, Francois de, French Embassy.____.__ 455 Pardo, Carlos A., Argentine Embassy.___._.___. 451 Pardo de Zela, Francisco, Jr., Peruvian Em- 5 Civ siete a amet (Ll se he 458 Park, ios A. Coast Guard...» 28 2s. aa 340 Pair Lt. Col. Chauncey G., Selective Service 3 tem Parker Edith, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations: a ih dw 265 Parker, G. L., Geological Survey__________.___. 348 Parker,T. B., Tennessee Valley Authority_.___ 416 Parkhurst, D. L., Coast and Geodetic Survey... 370 Parkinson, Dana, Torest Service -50 . . 363 Parkinson, Lt. Col. John L., Office of the In- speetor General, 0 LLaa Parkman, C. Breck, House Legislative Counsel. 274 Parkman, Charles H., clerk, Official Reporters - OL Dea Les Tr a er 274 Parkman, Harrison: Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster Gen-CE a a ce elle a Se nie abi Office of Postmaster General... _.... _........ Parkman, Robert B., secretary to Senator HO ma ere er nn ER rs fr Parks, Karl E., Bureau of Dairy Industry..._.. Parmley, Lt. Col. Loren F., Office of the Provost Marshal'Genorgl’ orb Co af 332 Parnell, Claude J., Electric Home and Farm AUINOTIEY ere tee 387 Parodi, Col. Antonio, Argentine Embassy._.___. 451 Parran, Dr. Thomas: Federal Board of Hospitalization. ____________ 385 Public Health'Servieesl slic oi tail du Jo in 395 Parry, Carl E., Board of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve System. wa: Sf aoiiens 395 Parry, Commander C. R. L., British Embassy. Parsons, George W., Office of the Third Assist- ant Postmaster Heneral. fi ou scieinteves 3. Page Parsons, Henry S., Reference Department, Con-gressional: Library a coz tioningpl 278 Parsons, Wyly, secretary to Senator McFarland. 269 Partearroyo, H. G. de, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. .__ 403 Paston, Maj. David G., Office of the Quarter-magter'General ooop (GLEE 327 Pasvolsky, Leo: Board of Economic Operation. _______________ 318 Division of Special Research.________________.. 319 Office of Secretary of State... _.._._...._..... 317 Patch, Margaret A., Bureau of the Census... __ 368 Patman, Connor, Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 Patmore, L. W., International Fisheries Com- Patrick, Austin L., Soil Conservation Service_ Pattee, Richard, Division of Cultural Relations Patterson, G. L., National Labor Relations Board zoo. iio ool al Ls aie Patterson, Robert P.: Army and Navy Munitions Board ___________ 381 National Power Policy Committee. ._________ 353 Under Secretary of War... oa. di. d..uc. 325 Patterson, William F., Division of Labor Stand=-ards i dea Los 374 Patterson, William J., Interstate Commerce Commission: i oo o_oition 404 Paulger, Leo H., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System___________________ Pauls, A. L., Tennessee Valley Authority _____. Paulsen, C. G., Geological Survey... ____._____ 348 Pavesich, F. X.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board. __.________ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- POLBGioON U.S ate Sa ae 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation ___________ 390 Payne, Felix H., Jr., Office of Recorder of Deeds. 435 Payne, George Henry, Federal Communications Commission. oo. J ooiiinalwpb. on dell 385 Payne, John B., Commodity Credit Corpora-i 360 Payne, William Howard, House Committee on Indign Aftalrs. fi abel.cdl. aaa. 273 Ji Pearson, Guy W., Distriet Collector of Taxes. 444 Pearson, Mrs. Herron, Congressional Club___. 384 Peek, E. A., Bureau of Yards and Docks______ 341 Peet, Lemuel J., Soil Conservation Service___. 365 Peet, William Creighton, Jr., Maritime Com- mission ae Sol ae ler 405 Pehle, John W., Office of Secretary of the Treas- WEY he li a ai a el rangi 321 Pehrson, Elmer W., Bureau of Mines_.___.____ 349 Peirce, Earl S., Forest Service... _........_. 363 Pelaez, Lt. Comdr. Rolando, Cuban Embassy. 453 eels jr ohert T., Division of Current Informa- ns esas i dase a vals 318 Pelton Walter E., assistant to the legal adviser. 320 Pemberton, Elliott, Rural Electrification Ad- nintelrationsss © diiciiesres 364 1 aes Pefialoza, Miguel, Mexican Embassy ____._____ Pence, Capt. H. L., General Board_._.________. Penniman, William F., Federal Home Loan Bonk Board oii vei kia aad 389 Penteado, Eurico, Brazilian Embassy _..__..____ Pepper, Claude: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy. 236 Joint Committee to Investigate the Adequacy and Use of Phosphorus Resources of the Inited: Statefemacs vesuntan as cries aaa 5 Pérez Allende, Lt. Col. P. A. José, Mexican Embass 457 Perkins, Frances (Secretary of Labor): Biography ol: i. icuiiin aid. cil -eninh-sos miuy 373 Council of National Defense___.__________.__. 312 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu- COLIN icone (Aa da tui » dann ard Ls Al oo ot 396 Member, Smithsonian Institution.__.________ 413 National Archives ii. 407 Council...oo Perkins, John W., Translating Bureau_________ 319 Perkins, Milo, Economic Defense Board ________ 315 Perkins, mn. T., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration. oui i asin on Birla 3 Perley, Allan H., House Legislative Counsel __. 274 Perrault, J. E., International Joint Commission. 403 Perry, Dominic, Capitol Police oc azo: 275 .ofl. Perry, Donald R., Immigration and Naturaliza-tion Service... revs seri dnt aera es 333 Individual Index Page Perry, John R., Office of the Sergeant at Arms ‘ ofSenate i = is Thee VEL 266 Perry, Randolph H., Celebration of the Birth of : ‘Thomas Jeflerson... oo a jogs 8 diigo Pershing, Everett M., Washington city post fle. 0 Saiel finn 8 CoO 0% Tae Te 448 Pershing, Gen. John J.: American Battle Monuments Commission___ 879 Goethals Memorial Commission______________ 402 Person, Harlow S., Rural Electrification Ad- minigtration. oo oo i con ol JHE 364 Peters, Charles A. Public Buildings Adminis- trations foo SEE SR 401 Peters, Li. A. H., Netherlands Legation__________ 458 Petersen, Harold C., office of the Under Secre- tary of War oir co TniE TE ai 325 orp Peterson, A. L., Bureau of Accounts. __________ 323 Peterson, C. S., District Fire Department______ 446 Peterson, J. Hardin, Joint Committee to Investi- gate the Adequacy and Use of Phosphate Resources of the United States. _____________ 237 Peterson, John Q., Grazing Service. .____________ 350 Peterson, N. Curtis, Office of the Doorkeeper___ 271 Peterson, Maj. Gen. Virgil L., Office of the In- spectorGenergls coo nl oo Sad Red 327 Petitt, Arthur L., District penal institutions____ 444 Petri, Lennart, Swedish Legation _____________ 459 Petrovich, Rastko, Yugoslavian Legation. _____ 461 Pett, Harris G., Railroad Retirement Board____ 411 Pettengill, Rear Admiral George, commandant ofnavy yardandstation==_ ~~ ~~ 343 Pettet, Zellmer R., Bureau of the Census_______ 368 Petty, John A., District Real Estate Commis- SI ee 44 Peyton, Thomas L., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- POIAON-Y Ed ee 389 Phair, Walter, secretary to Senator Downey____ 268 Pharr, Harry N., Mississippi River Corhmis- Soma Sl ne 330 Phelan, Capt. Donald A., United States Engi-neer Office 330 Philip, George, Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission 352 Phillips, Duncan, National Gallery of Art _____ 414 ., chaplain of United States Senate _______ 263 Philon, Philon A., Greek Legation _ ___________ 456 Pickens, Rear Admiral Andrew C.: Naval Examining ..... 343 Board...~~ Pierson, Warren Lee, Export-Import Bank of Washington Insnector re es oe Pilkerton, Arthur R., District auditor_.________ 443 Pillen, Harry, Office of the Sergeant at Arms of House 271 Pine, David A., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Co- lumbia OIG: ro ata rr iE 15 Piquet, Howard S., Tariff Commission ________ 415 Pittaluga, Commander Mario Collazo, Uru- guayan Bmbasgy.--a moat 460 Pitts, S.W., Tarif Commission... =... 416 Plant, Albin J., Public Works Administration__ 400 Plant, Paul J., Office of Official Reporters of Debates 274 Plumley, Mrs. Charles A., Congressional Club__ 384 Plumley, Nellie G., Administrative Division__ 334 Page Plunket, Benjamin, British Embassy__________ 456 Poe, Clarence, Federal Advisory Board for Vo-cational Edueation. _ 01 10 1 © 396 Pogue, L. Welch, Civil Aeronautics Board ____ 371 Poindexter, Joseph B., Governor of Hawaii_____ 351 Poleman, Horace I., Special Projects, Library of Congress. ils puma oF fen 279 Poling, Dr. Daniel A., Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission... oi on JAF amid Sob 239 polar Edward G., secretary to Senator Tun-1 TE Se Tene Eo RS SA Riis 12 03 Lt 269 Pollio, Lt. Comdr. Frank E., Coast Guard_____ 340 Pollock, Marion E., Veterans’ Administration _ 418 Polodna, Josef V., Czechoslovakian Legation__ 453 Ponce, Dr. L. Neftali, Ecudorean Embassy ____ 454 Poniatowski, George, House post office. ________ 272 Pool, M. E.: : x Secretary to Senator Thomas of Oklahoma.___ 269 Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. _______ 265 Poole, Nathan, Columbia Institution for the Peal. ove lu | an mn Sh renee 397 Pope, Mary Greenlee, Conference Minority of the Senatest: of Soscnt aly iii sa 264 Pope, Brig. Maurice A., Permanent Joint Board on Defense. Lo od 00h aan bid pion 411 Popham, W. L., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine’ 0x + 2 5. Toke 360 Poradzewski, Stefan, Polish Embassy_.________ 459 Porch, Jesse P., District Health Department___ 446 Porter, Claude R., Interstate Commerce Com- TISSION cea tubs ro 5 BE A rr Sa 04 Porter, Eloise, Senate Committee on Commerce. 264 Porter, Floyd], Patent Gfficez_._. =~ 4 370 Porter, Henry G., Civil Service Commission.__ 382 Porter, Irwin S., Columbia Hospital for Women _ 383 Porter, Stephen T., Chief, District Fire De- partment 0 BE Shanken GIRL 8 AB ed Rg) 446 Porter, Maj. Gen. William N., Office of the Chief of the Chemical Warfare Service. _________ 331 Poss, Lurlene, Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation: c== = Hi 265 Posse, Jorge Escalante, Argentine Embassy____ 451 Pott, Rear Admiral H., British Embassy______ 45 Potts, Col. John: Marine Barracks... oi oo 0 ov no wa 345 Embassy. = 0} emeto 60 Powel, Harford, Defense Savings Staff__________ 324 Powell, Clyde L., Federal Housing Adminis-ation zn Sm ey aa 388 Powell, Jesse H., Office of The Adjutant Gen-ork. Seaa nea ani 327 DOration oar oh See a a 390 Prescott, Josephine Pittman, District Health Department eased mud be aii i CRUBRES 446 Preston, James D., Office of the Secretary of the Senate ot re ra A 264 Preston, John F., Soil Conservation Service____ 366 Pribyl, Pearl, House Committee on Rules. ____ 274 Price, Dix. W., Senate Committee on the Ju- diciary 852 Congressional Directory Page Price, Marcus W., National Archives___._...__ 406 Price, Ralph, House postoffice. .... .i00is.kh. 272 Price, Walter L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation Tran ian Bn EARS SE 234 Price, Walter V., Housing Authority. ....__.__. 401 Pringle, Dr. John A., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Prins, Charles E. V., Housing Authority....._. 401 Procope, Hjalmar J., ’ Finnish Legation... ..... 454 Proctor, James M., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia. a hi. hi naat demainSE 433 Proffitt, M. M., Office of Education Proudfoot, Dr. Malcolm J., Bureau of the Cen- 3 Pryor, Earl, Officeof Legislative Counsel, Senate. 267 Pudifin, Davetta M,, Senate Committee on MAnNUlaCtures. cs ira in en ann an nh wad 265 Pugh, John C., House Committee on Appropri- BUIONIB,. oc LL do iin ime iat mas rob ioe Sm LI 273 Puig, Emilio Calderon, Mexican Embassy__.. 457 Purcell, Ganson, Securities and Exchange Com- mission lo. Z2anisians fn aon atl Ja) BEE So 411 Purdum, Smith W., Second Assistant Postmas- ter General Jo. nl) DodaneaL 35 Puryear, Edgar F., Public Works Agency. ___.. 399 Putnam, Herbert: Librarian of Congress emeritus. ......_..o...-278 Washington National Monument Society... 419 Putnam, Brig. Gen. Russell B., Headquarters, Marine Corps a... LSS 344 Q Quaid, William L., Civil Service Commission. . 383 Quezon, Manuel L., President of the Common- wealth of the Philippines ro A wn RE 351 Quick, John W., Washington city post office. 447 Quigley, E. T., Office of Secretary of Commerce. 367 Quine, John 5, House Legislative Counsel. ___ 274 Quinn, Esther 2. Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Affairs ______ o.oo... 266 Quinn, Irvin T., Jr., House post office.____._... 272 Quinn, Thomas D., Administrative Division. _ 334 Quintanilla, Dr. Luis, Mexican Embassy....... 457 Quinter, Ralph D., Jr., Corporation Counsel’s Offer i aes le ei 445 Quirk, ies J., Bureau of the Mint. _____.. 324 Quirno-Lavalle, Miguel E., Argentine Embassy. 451 R Rabb, Maxwell M., secretary to Senator Lodge. 269 Rabbit, Wade H., Administrative Department, Congressional Libpary =. ci 0007 5 0b 279 Rachford, C. E., Forest Service. ______._.______ 362 Rackley, L. G., Commodity Credit Corporation. 360 Radcliffe, George L.: Columbia Hospital for Women _______________ 383 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 235 Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission___ 237 Rademan, Maj. J. D. de Villiers, Union of South Africa Legation. ino erstlaws oa 460 Raditsa, Bogdan, Yugoslavian Legation .______ 461 Radgychich, Lt.-Col. Zivojin, Yugoslavian Lega-4 A a 61 Br Ellen K., judge of the municipal court... 435 Rakestraw, Clarence E., Office of Education___. 396 Ralston, Oliver Cc, Bureau of Mines. ._.._._... 349 Rambo, Judith, Senate Committee on Immi- EOI te rw EE Ku elk aT 265 Ramey, Elizabeth, secretary to District Com- missioner. cio. Co. aa lh a Mire 443 Ramirez-Duque, Anita, Panamanian Embassy. 458 Ramsay, M. L., Federal Works Agency. _______ 399 Ramsdell, Helen C., secretary to Senator Tobey. 269 Ramser, Charles E., Soil Conservation Service_. 365 Ramsey, Capt. D. C., Bureau of Aeronautics. _ 342 Ramsey, Lt. Col. Thomas H., Office of the Quartermaster General.... .... _. 328 Ramseyer, C. William, commissioner, Court of Ramspeck, Ernest W., Securities and Exchange Commission co A rk 412 Ramspeck, Robert: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-" 23 Page Rand, Hubert H., Senate Committee on, Mili-tary AAS. oo lias aan 265 Rand, Lt. Col. Oscar R., Office of the Tite ATVOCAEE CIOTIETOL. co ones frame tins sinus as 327 Randall, George C., Transportation Division___ 315 Randolph, EP. House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce. ____.__________ 273 Randolph, Jennings, National Capital Park and Planning Sommpsion TEIN ARES IR 408 Ranneft, Capt. J. E., Meijer, Netherlands Lega-THON i 2 mt sn bo idiom om we SRS i pe 4, Ransom, Ronald, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve SN YSTOME. SF i borse ovalbass 394 Rao, Paul P., Assistant Attorney General _____ 333 Rapp, Leslie’ M., House Committee on Ways nen hee 274 Rasberry, Howell P., House folding room._.____ 271 Raskowski, Frank, House postioffice. coe. suns 272 Rathell, G. E., Commodity Credit Corporation. 360 Rauber, Margaret E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Sr php Al SS RC 394 Rauch, Fred R., Work Projects Administration. 400 Rauh, oY oseph, Office of Lend-Lease Administra-tion SE Ei ai Sm wh BE a SE RE 314 Raver, Paul J.: Bonneville Project ERNE nha adie of 352 National Power Policy Committee. __....___ 353 Ravndal, Christian M., Division of the Ameri-can Republics Sh TR SRR Fe Re 317 Rawdon, H. S., National Bureau of Standards_. 369 Rawls, Fletcher H., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic COTITerce. ooa rh 368 Ray, Charles E., Administrative Department, iibrary of Congress Re ae 279 Rayburn, Sam: Speakerofithe House. aloo oo oll. oo 270 Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Ji efferson_. 238 Commission in Control of the House Office _ Balding. Jor. ol Enel eat Commission on Enlarging the ET Grounds. —--o-oo ooo Commission to Acquire a Painting of the Sign-ing of the Constitution... =. ...... 235 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission. ______ 239 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Getpyshurg Boulevard Commission... i... Cl] Raymond, William T'., Securities and ohn i Commissions ira Sv naa te oe] el 11 Rayner, Charles B., Economic Defense Board. 315 Reading, Paul, Canadian Legation. Diol: ot 452 Reagan, Frank @G., Veterans’ Administration___ 418 Reagh, Russell R., Division of Research and Statisties cout pear dio a IY rr ae 322 Reagle, Hilda R., District juvenile court. ....___ 435 Real, Fritz, Swiss Legation... iu ae bsraiassl 459 Recinos, Adrian: Ministeriof Guatemala... il lo an. 456 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 Redman, M. Chandler, Office of Land Use Coordination Sead Er AE Be BL ak 355 Redrow, Walter L., Patent Office. -—-.—...___ 370 Reed, Bessie O., Employees’ Compensation Commission a a en AR 384 Reed, 7 Carroll R., District Board of Educa-% a a oS = ne mee 4 Rood iT 'W., Office of Vehicles and Traffic. 446 Reed, Clyde M., Ir. secretary to Senator Reed_. 269 Reed, Mrs. Daniel A., Congressional Club_____ 384 Reed, David A., American Battle Monuments Commission ie BEE ae SE ae a lean Sl A 379 Reed, H. E., Agricultural Marketing Service-__ 359 Reed, Dr... hs District police surgeon._..______ 447 Reed, John B., District Health Department._.__ 446 Reed, J. L., British BInDasRy or iceneas 455 Reed, M. R., Railroad nt Board... 411 Reed, O. E., ‘chief, Bureau of Dairy Industry... 360 Beads, 2 M., Surplus Marketing Administra- Recs li F., Associate Justice, Unlied | States Supreme Court (biography) ...._____ Reed, Dr. Vergil D., Bureau of the Census._.___ £3 Reed, William V., Division of Defense Housing Coordination Bosal nde oe ea Sasa sein i 13 Reed-Hill, Commander Ellis, Coast Guard -.... 340 Reeley, Leslie O., Bureau of Accounts... cccee-a 337 Indrvidual Index Page Reeves, Elizabeth, House Committee on Public Buildingsand Grounds... dor 2 ....ciiu.ioue Reeves, John R. T., Office of Indian Affairs____ 347 Reeves, Joseph Y. , District Court of the United | States for the District of: Columbia: ....... Rehlaender, W. N., Procurement Division_____ Reichelderfer, Francis W.: National Advisory Committee for Aeronau- BCS a a A 406 Reid-Adam, R., British Embassy... .____._. 455 Reid, Edwy B., Farm Credit Administration._ 361 Reid, Harvey T., Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict of Columbia SP LA he A AI Me CER 428 Reid, Commodore H. E., Permanent Joint Board onDefense.. cl. iodo isl ueuay 411 Reid, Laura S., secretary to Senator Shipstead.. 269 Reid, T. Roy, Office of Personnel _________ 354, 355 Reid, Tom, International Pacific Salmon Fish- ories Commission...moins a 404 ci Reidy, Edward P., Board of Parole_.__________ 334 Rellly, orang D., National Labor Relations OAPAAiis a, Rete Ao aa i ia] Stale. opinhe RR ae Renner, Frederic G., Soil Conservation Service. 366 Rennie, Robert R., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- porationizil, aril gelatina 390 Reybold, Maj. Gen. Eugene: National Capital Park and Planning Commis- glopspo hud pba Soh olin: SoH Raptor 40 Office of the Chief of Engineers United States Soldiers’ Home________________ 4 Reyer, Hugo, Federal Communications Com-TRISHIONG i range Son Sa A PR SC 385 sonnet Reynolds, Col. C. C., Office of the Quartermaster General st oll all 0] op So eh 328 Reynolds, BE. L., Patent Office. __________._.____ 370 Reynolds, George M., Surplus Marketing Ad- minlsteation. wooo oro] 366 Reynolds, Gertrude M., Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Greands. rile 266 Reynolds, W. E.: Yederal Fire Connell, oooiiiet san 401 i Ba Buildings Administration. ____________ 400 Rhea, W. E.: Farm Credit Administration. _._____________ 361 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. _____.__ 362 Rhine, James L., Capitol Telephone Exchange. 276 Rhinehart, Oleta, Senate Committee on Public Lands and Surveys Blo 266 Rhodes, John D., Official Reporter, Senate_._.__ 267 Ribenack, Ww. oO, Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration Tn Ries, fai C. E., National Youth Administra- Rice, sie, office of the Under Secretary of Rice, ih Te! Federal Loan AONCY a er 386 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Rice, Stephen E., Senate legislative counsel____ 267 Rice, Stuart A., Bureau of the Budget ~~. ~ 316 Rice, William i. Surplus Marketing Adminic- tration be a et hh rr lg ln ad SL Rich, G. R., Tennessee Valley Authority ___._. 417 Rich, Robert F., Joint Committee on Printing.. 234 Rich, Mrs. Robert F. , Congressional Club. ._.. 334 Richard, Vernon 1., Patent Office ____ __._... 370 Richards, Dr. A. N., Office of Scientific Research and Development Ee ERE SR SE el a 315 Richards, Atherton, Coordinator of Information. 315 Richards, Franklin D., Federal Housing Ad- ministration Po TTR IB pa fe Ly mE nl Su Se J 389 Richards, Henry T., Civil Service Commission. 383 Richards, J. Bartlett, Office of Philippine ATTY re aS a een Lr 319 Richardson, Harold E., Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General... 336 Richardson, Rear AdmiralJ. O., General Board. 343 Richardson, L. S., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 360 Richardson, Maj. 'R. M. , British Embassy. .___ 456 Richardson, First Lt. William B., Office of the Provost Marshal. General... C.i.l bi gis 332 Richardson, W. W., General Accounting Office. 402 Richardy, Agnes M., Veterans’ Administration Contact OMICS... cours nesns vena staas Shea in 277 Page Riddle, Mae M., Tariff Commission___.._. «.. 416 Riemens, Dr. " Netherlands Legation____ _ _ 458 Riger, Martin, Securities and Exchange Com-TTF HET Dies PAS SO eG EI 412 Riggleman, John R., General Land Office... __. 347 Riggs, T homas: Alaskan International Hithwiy Commission. 235 International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada... ooo... 403 Right, Danzil A., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury SR Wn AR CSE A et 321 Rightor, Chester E., Bureau of the Census. 368 Riley, Henry W., "Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation i rr me oo SRE 386 Riley, Herbert E., Washington city post office. 448 Ring, D. S., Maritime Commission _ ....__... 405 Ring, James, Alley Dwelling Authority _______ 279 Riordan, James J., Securities and ERI COMMISION, oo cor it reaisee 412 Ripley, Jerome L., House folding room________. 271 Rippley, Euphrosine A., United States attor-neysoffiee. i. liana -435 Ritchie, W., British Embassy _.... o.oo._._ 455 Ritter, Robert A., Superintendent of Planning, Goverrment Printing Office__.__.__.______. 277 Ritter, Lt. Col. William L., Office of the Adju-tant Genergle 2 tno aera en RR SE 327 Rivero, Dr. Nicolds, Cuban Embassy-..-._..... 453 Rivers, Hugh F., District Parole Board_.._... 444 Rives, John, Office of the Doorkeeper..._._.__.__ 271 Rives, Thomas M., District penal institutions _ 444 Rives, Lt. Col. Tom C., Office of the Chief Sional OfICe i ait vas ros a SL ws sa LE. 330 Rixey, Chaplain George F., Office of the Chief of Chanlaing: ou) orci.vi tosis oite 326 Roach, Capt. Philip F., Coast Guard__________ 340 Roark, R. C., Burcau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... oo. tin ae 3 Robbins, E. H., Office of the Coordinator of-Inter-American Affalrs cla losis 313 Robbins, Irene de Bruyn, Foreign Service Build-Ings:Offee cot. vl piso ads uganda Jha 319 Roberts, Ly Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-porabienius. cod Lalla Lael 386 Roberts, George M., District superintendent of weights, measures, and markets. Coan. 445 Roberts, H. Ray, office of the Speaker _........ 270 Roberts, Owen J.: Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (biography). toiling 2 423 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee___ 238 Ropers; J. N., District Engineer Depart- ent Hola John P., secretary to Senator Norris... 269 Robertson, Martha E., Office of Secretary of COMITEIED. iio tt lant Sil iat 367 Robertson, Roy, Office of the Doorkeeper_.____ 271 Robertson, W. B., Surplus Marketing Adminis- tration. ino Las pnbiniea id laps Ti et 366 Robins, Thomas, Naval Consulting Board. ____ 342 Robins, Brig. Gen. Thomas M.: Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors__. 329 Office of the Chief of Engineers. ________.______ 329 Robinson, C. H., Agricultural Marketing Serv-2% Wn, Capt. C. R., navy yard and station__ 343 Robinson, G. C., International Boundary Com- mission, United States and Canada. ._____ 403 Robinson, G. Canby, American Red Cross_____ 381 Robinson, H. K., Tennessee Valley Authority... 416 Robinson, James Gordon, Office of Production Management oll sin CB Lars Delain 314 Robinson, J. W., Joint Committee on Govern- ment Organization itso Bor JNobiadi Robinson, Mary V., Women’s Bureau__________ 375 Robinson, Rear Admiral Samuel M., Bureau of Robson, H. Harris, Maritime Commission_____ 406 Rockefeller, Lewis K., Joint Committee on the Library gent Si IRR I Ll Sh ME Fu 234 Royer Mrs. Lewis K., Congressional Club... ema i ia aL 384 Rockefeller, Nelson A.: Economic Defense Board... 315 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs ti a CER I Se 313 854 Congressional Directory Page Page Rodier, Gilbert L., Housing Authority__.______ 401 Rodinoff, Nicholas R., Reference Department, Library of Congress Enis TR ee RL Le 278 Rodrigues de San Miguel, Manuel, Mexican Embassy... BOR en Bul Soin 457 Rodriguez, Mario, Chilean Embassy. ___._______ 452 Rodriguez, Dr. Vicente Valdés, in Em- hasty thud ies Sar BUNGE apn RI Ta 453 Rogers, Edgar F., Library of Congress__________ 278 Rogers, E.H., Postal Telegraph-Cable Co______ 276 Rogers, Lt. Col. John A., Office of the Surgeon General: Fo UHH cali dg TO 328 Rogers, John L., Interstate Commerce Commis- BIR. rrr see en EEO 404 Rogers, Lindsay, Federal Works Administration. 400 Rogers, Lore A., Bureau of Dairy Industry... __ 360 Rogers, W. J, "Office of Agricultural Defense Relations. aio oni i cpm poi JH 357 Rohrman, William H., Office of Foreign Agri-cultural Relotiong. = nili-r ar Spey7 356 Rohwer, S. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine ero le Th en Rh nd A 360 Rollins, Paul, United States Attorney’s office 435 Romney, Kenneth, Sergeant at Arms of House (biography)... 22ast 0a lifes in (v0 271 Ronan, Frank T., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration: oo ouie sos ivan cA 0I0 00 THES 387 Roof, Philip L., Botanic Garden________________ 277 Roosevelt, Franklin D. (President of United States): Blography of. Loi ibid aod1 21 311 Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson_ 238 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 413 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission_______ 239 Patron ex officio Columbia Institution for the Deal. nnwap eaisr an alas Joa 97 President American Red Cross. __._._________ 380 President ex officio Washington National Monument'Soelety. So mlly 0 Si 419 . Washington-Gimng Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. 12-. .. _ 236 Roosevelt, Mrs. Franklin D., Office of Civilian Delonge it Sel Biol 312 Root, Harriet M., United States Information Service SoLUrEEIgR SINE Sh ne Ha 316 Root, Irving C., National Park Service _______ 349 Roper, Elmo B., Jr., Coordinatorof Information_ 315 Rose, Carl T., Electric Home and Farm Author-’ Wy sins anal] se imal wl Ensley: 38 Rose, Dr. Edwin J., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Rose, FrancisC., Office of Secretary of Treasury. 321 Rose, Samuel, Veterans’ Administration________ 418 Rose, Brig. Gen. William C., Officeof The Adju- tant Genepal 11: iy LU mito ani 327 Roseman, Alvin, Federal Security Agency______ 395 Rosenwald, Lessing, J., Office of Production Management orm RUS CH a 314 Rosier, George, Securities and Exchange Com- myissiongidit no ite en ee 412 Ross, Andrew N., Federal Trade Commission. 399 Ross, Jy Lou, Senate Committee on Claims. 264 Ross, John C., Division of Commercial Policy and Agreement SERIE Le a Sea Le We 318 Ross, Luther, United States attorney’s office... 435 Ross, Malcolm, National Labor Relations Board 25 gi? DHE en IT a 408 Ross, Margaret, Work Projects Administration 399 Ross, Noe Tayloe, Director, Bureau of the Minto eh, oJ Satpming wily 8 bade 324 Rosie ro) G., Weather Buream.: iii 01) 371 Rossi, Dr. A. Yr; Bricefio, Pan American Sanitary Bureau SR I a Ty XN LY ch ae 409 Roth, Walter J., Soil Conservation Service_____ 365 Rough, Howard F., Civil Aeronautics Adminis- tration. Sot h lai ie aigdiniis anal inn 371 Roulfs, Madeline B., Maritime Labor Board.__ 406 Rounds, Gari 1, Public Works Adminis- IEMionii, oo so im el ae 400 Rouse, in (+., Federal Housing Administra-pL Reda [here Lo BR Deepen dome C08 0 URN SERS Rousseau, W. A., Office of Secretary of the Senabessarpn iW bia il MIE Eau al 263 Routh, James W., Housing Authority._________ 401 Rouzer, Horace D. ., Assistant Architect of the Capitol... Eakin hay 275 Rove a Joseph C., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Office... __i._.... 313 Rowalt, E. M., Office of Land Use GE 355 Rowan, Ida, House Committee on World Wa os Roweclift, Rear Admin @G. J., General Board___ 343 Gonerale lL. a 328 asinilia,ee Rowe, J;Joes H., Office of the Attorney General. 333 Rowe, L.8, Director General, Pan American BON a Es in BRE 409 Rowell, ward A., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster Generali. slo iio. shh 336 Rowen, Paul R., Securities and Exchange Com- misslonl ins saul ii dinn LE sian 4 412 Rowlands, E. Merwyn, Surplus Marketing Ad- ministration FEAST ER pS pn le SE PANS Dg 366 Rowntree, Dr. Leonard G., Selective Service System isi ans 413 niallma) Roy, William T., Assistant Parliamentarian ofthe House. 0. ol oiedn 10 © 270 Royall, Nathaniel: Reconstruction Finance Corporation The RFC Mortgage Company. __.___________ Metals Reserve Company..._.__ Rubber Reserve Company. __---.___________ Defense Plant Corporation... ...___________ Defense Supplies Corporation. _____.__________ Defense Homes Corporation. _________________ Royce, H. G., Western Union, House Office Ballding. 0. i: ogni ognds: Soll aia 276 Royer, Walter J., Washington city post office. 448 Roziers, Etienne Burin des, French Embassy __ 455 Rubin, Cora, secretary to Senator Thomas of Idaho 2, Jo... nue eR Be 269 Rubio, David, Reference Department, Library of Congress ye Fle Re eps RE it Ruch, G. M., Office of Education__.____________ 396 Ruddock, Capt. T. D., Jr., Bureauof Ordnance 341 Rude, Gilbert Ts Coast and Geodetic Survey.. 370 Ruhland, Dr. George C., District Health De- partment no A re ts SM 3 cere aa ch 446 Ruiz, Dr. LuisE. Goméz, Venezuelan Embassy. 461 Rumbold, Anthony, British Embassy__._______ 455 Ruml, Dr. Beardsley, National Resources Plan- ning Board uo dia el Sone 316 Rupp, Wallace S., National Mediation Board__ 408 Ruppert, Minna L., Sonal Committee on Banking and CUO tis tthe i 264 Rusch, Lt. Col. W. J., Office of Lend-Lease Ad- ini i 314 Russell, Charles A., Office of District Assessor.. 443 Russell, Eleanora M., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and Navigation SburtattEe ee A ls 370 Russell Francis H., Division of World Trade In- ET BRNe 319 Russell, William F., minority elerk_ ___.________ 272 Rutherford, Brig. Gen. Harry K Army and Navy Munitions Board. _________. 381 Office of the Under Secretary of War______.___ 325 Rutkowski, Casimer, House post office_________ 272 Rutledge, R. H., Grazing Service. __......_..... 350 Rutledge, Wiley, associate justice, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Colum-bin (biozraphy)e.. co tteag 2 oo or ml 428 Rutter, Commander J. B., Bureau of Naviga- OTHE ETE MS SRRSE Ovo Ryan, Archie D., Grazing Service. _____________ 350 Ryan, Dr. George J., Thomas Jefferson Me- morial-Commission oer 0 oC Ryan, General, Bureau of the Census__________ 368 Ryan, Kenneth N., Administrative Depart- ment, Library of Congress. o-oo... 279 Ryan, Loretta H., Federal Board of Hospitaliza- HOR Cea rd aber 385 Ryan, Oswald, Civil Aeronautics Board ______ 371 Ryan, Theresa, Senate Judiciary Committee.__ 265 Rybéi, Dr. Vladimir, Yugoslavian Legation____ 461 Ryder, Oscar ‘B.: Committee for Reciprocity Information. _____ 384 Tari Commission «7 ccc. coz eet seats 415 Ryerson, Knowles A., Bureau of Plant Industry. 364 S Sabath, Adolph J., Commission in Control of the House Office Building fm © 02 233 Sabin, Samuel H., Commodity Credit Corpo--ration Rd Se a RE RE 36 Indwidual Index Sadler, C. L., Geological Survey________________ 348 Sadly, Clarence T., Federal Trade Gone fice Saenz, Rafael, Chilean Embassy... ci-col 452 Sager, Fred As Public Utilities Commission____ 447 Sager, Dr. W. Warren, District police surgeon. 447 Sakanishi, Shio, Reference Department, Li- brary of Congressiii Conan0. LL soll 278 Salazar, Dr. Eduardo, Ecuadoran Legation ____ 454 Salisbury, Morse, Office of Information____ 354, 356 Salmon, David A., Division of Communications ANd Recordi tetas duis seal 318 Salmond, Gordon R., Forest Service_______.____ 363 Salter, Tr M., Bureau of Plant Industry: = 364 Salyer, J. Clark, Fish and Wildlife Service. __._ 351 Samuels, M. M., Rural Electrification Admin- istration. solicennnin. Boreas) Fada 3 Sanders, Charles W., Bureau of Marine Inspec-tion and Navigation:dit. .oofeaii foo Sanders, Hartley I., Office of the Chief of Coast Artillery: codoicneinodsun alan sii uF 326 Sanders, Coll Lewis, Selective Service System. 413 Sanders, Samuel D., Farm Credit Administra- DION bt otis leo sa tr oh, od ae re 361 Sanders, William, Pan American Union________ 410 Sanderson, John P., American Red Cross.._____ 381 Sandidge, R. P., Public Health Service._.____. 395 Sandifer, Durward V., assistant to the legal ad- oa tia g tema aelaal Sle Rai eee Ve ls 320 Sandstrom, M. M., Agricultural Marketing Service oo: co cele LE ee nan 359 Sandt, Anna B., House Committee on the Census a Pe I Yak 273 Sanford, Joseph N., police court______.__.__.._.__. 435 Sanger, "Monie, St. ‘Elizabeths Hospital. .2..o 398 Santiesteban, Teodoro, Cuban Embassy .__.._. 453 Santschi, Col. E., Jr., Office of the Quarter- TESLOr CROTETEL osteo tonite ns doen 328 Sapp, Paul, House post office.._.___.__.________ 272 Saraev, Col. Tlia M., Soviet Raith Republics IMDasey. co on en oT due bod conn 460 Sarhan, Huldi F., Turkish Embassy. _._._--____ 460 Sarich, Bozidar, Yugoslavian Legation_________ 461 Sarle, Charles F., Weather Bureau. .____._._.___. 371 Sarmanho, Walder, Brazilian Embassy__._____. 452 Sarmiento, Lt., Col. Jorge, Peruvian Embassy . 458 Sarré, A. J., Federal Works Agency. _._..___.__ 399 Sartain, Arthur: Secretary to Senator Bankhead .______________ 268 Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclama-Hon. lio Zito A ben Sided 265 Sasscer, E. R., Bureau of Entomology and ; Plant Quarantine res E ail at Losin 361 Sasscer, Lansdale G., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy fc da ill eigen 236 Sater, Lenore E., Bureau of Home Economics._ 363 Saucerman, Sophia A., Office of the Geographer. 319 Saugstad, Jesse E., Division of International Communications A ee drusEy 319 Saunders, Charles N., House post office________ 272 Savage, Carlton, Office of Secretary of State_____ 317 Saville, Dean Thorndike, Beach Erosion Board_ 329 Savoretti, Joseph, Immigration and Naturaliza- OT TI 333 Savoy, A. K., District government._____________ 443 Sayers, R. Yr Bureau of Mines: oo =o. iva 349 Sayre, Francis B., United States High Commis- sioner in the Philippines eh ew AE Ee HE 351 Scanlan, John J., Passport Division__.__________ 319 Scanlon, James F., House Committee on Ap-73 propriations EE oF Ay IME 0 10% gg 273 Scanlon, Brig. Gen. M. F., Office of the Chief il the ‘Army Air Poreess = 20 saenca: Scantlin, H. TD, Office of District Assessor __.__ -Scarborough, Harold, Office of Secretary of the STE RE a 263 Schaefer, J. H., Public Buildings Administra- BION cn is afin th Gabe Bhs nave dancin ni 401 Schafer, A. L., Ameriean Red Cross... _.______ 380 Schaffer, J acob M., Office of Plant and Opera- Hong Er a 355 Schapiro, Israel, Reference Department, Library OC OngLess Ee 278 Schayesteh, Mohammed, Iran Minister. ._._.___ 456 Schedler, Carl R., Conciliation Service. _.______ 373 Schell, S. D., Maritime Commission____________ 405 Schellenberg, Theodore R., National Archives. _ ii Scherer, Charles A ., House folding room___._____ Scherer, GC. Walter, Western Union Telegraph fm a oe 2 Sm am ve pe Ht mee Yr ea a ei Ne om ae Se Fo 27 Schieck, DeWitt C., Metals Reserve Company... 392 Schlemmer, F. Cc. , Tennessee Valley Authority__ 417 Schley, Maj. Gen. Julian L., Goethals Memorial Commission. ios Soy aoa in 50 402 Schlosberg, Lt. Col. Richard T., Office of the Chief Bional Officer. soul TH. loa 2 331 Schlup, Lester A., Extension Service. __________ 356 Samay J. E., Maritime Commission So, Albert, official stenographer to House committees ra a Bn i SANE DREAD 274 Schneider, Dr. Antoine, Commission on Mental Health ox...ons Hy 433 Li Schnellbacher, E. E., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic'Commeres ci. 0 Ulin iia ie 368 Sino Fred E., Public Works Administra- ton: oh. natu I Pann A Tarai yy Schoene, Lester P., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Schoeneman, Charles R., Office of Secretary of the Treasury. Lilie Sioles Fo roioed Jay 321 Schoeneman, George J., Bureau of Internal Revenue... Boi A000 Soon Gis 2 ha) 323 Schoenhals, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry. __ 364 Schoening, H. W ., ' Bureau of Animal Industry_. 359 Schofield, Lemuel B., Immigration and Natural- ization Service. 10 Uri doa menah 333 Schollenberger, Herbert K., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. ___________________ 443 Schooler, H. N., Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration: 20 0 Sarin Re LS as ae 358 Schott, John W., Office of Secretary of War_____ 325 Schottland, Charles I., Children’s Bureau______ 374 Schram, Emil, Federal Prison Industries, Inc... 334 Schrenk, Helmuth H., Bureau of Mines________ 350 Schroeder, Rilla, House Committee on Election of President, Vice President, ete____________ 273 Schuirmann, Capt. Roscoe E.: IslandGovernments. -co. 7 -~ ..-. 339 Joint Eeonomy. Beard... + 405 Officeoi Naval oi. 0 o.. Operations... 339 Schulte, William T., Joint Committee on Gov-ernment Organization... — = 7 = = 237 Schulz, Brig. Gen. John W. N., Office of the Under Secretaryofl War. ~~ “>a 325 Schumann, Capt. R. W., Joint Economy Board. 405 Schurz, William 1, Division of Cultural Rela- Schutt, Marie E., Office of Education__._______ 396 Schutz, Dr. Elliott C., District Board of to atry Amines hea Schuyler, Franklin J., Bureau of Navigation___ 11] Schuyler, Capt. G. i Bureau of Ordnance.___ 341 Sopa, Benjamin, Bureau of Animal Indus- NEU ema a Bd abl ete i Schwarz, Charles, Office of the Secretary of the biMET) ae fe ido wd ni a i Shc KR as 321 Schwegmann, George A., Jr., Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress... _____.____... 278 Scilingo, Adolfo, Argentine Embassy... _______ 451 Scobey, Col. William P., the Joint Board_______ 405 Scofield, C. S., Bureau of Plant Industry_____._ 364 Scott, A. J., secretary to Senator Langer _.______ 269 Scott, Andrew S., secretary to Senator Doxey... 268 Scott, Armond W., judge of the municipal court. 435 Scott, Finis E., postmaster of the House _______ 272 Seott, H. A., Canadian Legation... ..... 452 Scott, J. A., Jr., Bureau of Agricultural Chem- iIstryand Engineering... i... 358 Scott, John W., Federal Power Commission____ 393 Scott, Commander L. B., Army and Navy Munijtions:Board: c=... .c 381 Scott, Marjorie S., Office of Education_________ 396 Scott, Stuart, Office of Secretary of the Navy.. 338 Scott, T'. Harold, Senate Committee on Public Lands ond Surveys. iiss 266 Scoular, Agnes, Senate Committee on Terri-torics’and Insular Affairs ©...it = 266 Scowden, Brig. Gen. Frank F., Office of the Quartermaster General... _..._._... 327 856 Congressional Directory Page Seaman, Brig. Gen. A. Owen, United States Soldiers Home... 0 ail ol 415 Seaman, Fred A., General Accounting Office. . 402 Seaman, Guy L., Interstate Commerce Com- Gh EA Rl ae En Re SE 404 Seaquist, W. H., National Bureau of Standards. 369 Sears, J. D., Geological Survey! |; 5 Suro 348 Sears, William J., Veterans’ Administration_.__ 418 Seaver, William ?., Housing Authority________ 401 Seavey, Clyde L., Federal Power Commission_. 393 Seay, Temple w., Processing Tax Board of Review. asiginliaogbaiaslSainh loi wo Sebrell, William H., Office of Defense Health and Welfare Servlets LyissemilLede dol Sechrest, Earl F., Federal Power Commission. 2 Seckinger, Dr. Daniel L., District Health De- partment cenit He ons slain 446 Secrest, John D.,Saumey of Minesé sii uo ai 349 Secrest, Robert Ji oint Ti onsthe Library. i Jere 234 o.oo. Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Addi- tional Buildings for the Library of Congress. 233 National Archives Couneil ..—.__.._..___._ 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board ______. 407 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 238 Smithsonian Gallery of Art Commission. _____ 415 Sedgwick, Howard F.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board _____._______ 389 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpo- pablon al lo ela fs oosadgatl Lo TL deity 21 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ Sedlacek, L. H., Bureau of the Comptroller i the Currency BEE a ed aad aking i Seeger, Charles, Pan American Union__._______ 410 Seehorn, Claude E., Maritime Labor Board.._.. Co Seelen, J. J. H., Netherlands Legation... ._... 446 Seelig, R. A.: Secretary to Senator Bone... .___..___ 268 Senate Committee on Patents... __.____._.__.__ 265 Segel, David, Office of Education_______________ 396 Sellers, Ashley, Office of the Solicitor __________ 357 Sells, Dorothy M., Maritime Labor Board_____ 406 Senior, Mildred R, Interstate Commerce Com- IH I eo SEE Se BI SELs I 404 Serpas, Katherine C., United States attorney’s (PHTE eeeSS EE Sa (i LR rR 435 Sessions, A. R., The Alaska Railroad _________ 351 Sessions, Robert E., Tennessee Valley Au- NOT Y sey oa he bo fo ov Sohne es 416 Sette, Francis J., Rural Electrification Adminis-tra Settle, ES 5% National Capital Park and Plan- ning Commission ry trata 408 Setzler, Frank M., National Museum____.______ 414 Sevey, "Robert, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce SESE ERIOSIET fhe RRR Sia mt en Ke 369 Seward, Pere F., Public Works Administration. 400 Sexton, Rear Admiral W. R., General Board___ 343 Seydel, Harry M., Veterans’ Administration __ 418 Seymour, Walton, Tennessee Valley Authority. 417 Seynaeve, F., Belgian Embassy. Gabi (hou 451 Shackelford, Mary, House Committee on Elec- tions No.2. teraUE 273 Shafer, Franklin A. M., deputy collector, Cus- domReOnse oe i 322 Shaffer, Charles H., Patent Office _._._.________ 370 Shafroth, Capt. J. F., Bureau of Navigation____ 341 Shafroth, Will, Administrative Office of the United Staltes'Courts =. i 434 Shambarger, H. F., Office of Budget and Finance Sor LE 355 Shanks, J. C., office of Clerk of House__________ 270 Shank, Lu Tu, Secretary to Senator Clark of i inf satel sea Banus aed nn uli gd Tied Shantz, H. L., Forest Service. 1. __ 1" =. 363 Shapiro, Dr. Hyman D., Commission on Mental Hea ih nr re aus Laird 433 Sharp, Rear Admiral Alexander, Office of Naval Operallons oyhe a At 339 Shattuck, Maj. Edward S., Selective Service ERAT bel ae ale ee apute da 413 Shaughnessy, Edward J., Immigration and Naturalization Serviee. fi. 333 Shaw, A. Manning, secretary to Senator Brown. 268 Shaw, Humphrey S., House Rules Committee _ 274 Shaw, John F., House folding rooms____________ 271 Shaw, Ralph R., Library, Department of Agri- CE TS A a ea ey 354, 357 Shaw, G. Howland: Assistant Secretary of State______.__________ _ 17 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service__ 318 Board of Foreign Service Personnel 319 Shaw, Roselia B., District Cosmetology Board__ 443 Shea, Francis M., Assistant Attorney General _ 333 Sheehy, Joseph E., Federal Trade Commission__ 398 Sheild, Marcellus C., House Committee on Appropriations Coe a ag ee SE SS 273 Sheldon, H. P., Fish and Wildlife Service. ____ 351 Sheldon, Capt. Luther, Jr., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery... i. wr oaRi dines 342 Shelsé, Ronne C., Geological Survey_________ 348 Shelton, Arthur 5B, clerk, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals SE SE0Ten Jn Sounds 0dgIn 430 Shepard, Donald D., National Gallery of Art___ 414 Shepheard, Halert Jd, Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion and N| avigation Sars REN a AL 370 Shepherd, Geoffrey S., Commodity Credit Cor-poration edna gE Furia eh, 360 Sheppard, Chester S., United States attorney's offleall ln a0r SOE ria JE 435 Sheppard, Mrs. Morris, Congressional Club____ 384 Shepperson, Gay B., District Public Welfare Board oz. oo Ai Ad Salinas aad 444 Shera, Jesse H., Special Projects, Library of Congress... i diieiete aie vB 279 Tae Lauris N., Office of District Assessor. 443° Shere, Louis, Division of Tax Research ________ 323 Sheridan, Edwin A., Securities and Exchange Commission Se oa RS lh 411 Sheridan, John A., Federal Housing Adminis-tration SWRARACIIE Newall ena Son RH VIDA, 389 Sheridan, Roy L., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General EELS LE SRG nH 336 Sherman, Capt. Forrest P., Permanent Joint Board on-Defenseis “lita oC RC iE 410 Sherwood, Benjamin R., Office of Secretary of Tahoe Bal ty SiR (Ther Sie aN 373 Sherwood, Robert, Coordinator of Information__ 315 Sherwood, Sidney, Office for Emergency Man- agement: Srl Lire Te as Ae he 312 Shields, Robert H., Office of Secretary of Agri- eulfure, J cient Salle Sti Te 354 Shih, Dr. Hu, Chinese Ambassador. ___________ 52 Shih’ Chia, Chu, Reference Department, Li- brary.of Congress: [= ol dein oa 278 Shih-ming, Maj. Gen. Chu, Ciliese Embassy. 452 Shilling, Harry E., Washington city post office. 447 Shimon, Detective Sgt. Joseph W., United States attorneylsiofficel. 0. 0 T ERG 434 Shinn, George Curtis, Office of Director of Ve- hiclesand raffle = © 0 i ti 446 Shipley, Ruth B., Passport Division___________ 319 Shipman, Fred W., Franklin D. Roosevelt _ Library MRL SoD nds SIRES TR Commission det i AL Spa TRE 1 Shire, Albert C., Housing Authority___________ 402 Shirmanov, Pavel S., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy Shoemaker, Carl D., secretary, Special Senate Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Re-Ta Ee Tre ESC a LR Cr 184 Shoemaker, J. Raymond, Transportation Di-VS OTe he fr 15 Shoemaker, Thomas B., Immigration and Nat- uralization Service... ____.__________ ds Ae 333 Shore, F. M., Bureau of Mines. ________________ 349 Short, Dewey: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy___ 236 Interparliamentary Union... _______________ 235 Short, Joseph A., Housing Authority. _________ 401 Short, Oliver c., Office of Secretary of Com- TOOTCE nh sh den a tah PEt She Lo 367 Shover, in C., National Labor Relations Board ET A a 408 Shuffler, Marion J., Office of the Doorkeeper___ 271 Sichelstiel, George I House document room__ 272 Sidotti, Saviour, District barber examiner______ 443 Siebert, Charles, Washington city post office____ 447 Siegruhn, J. A. Union of South Africa Legation. 460 Sieker, John, Forest Service... 363 Sierra, Don J usto, Mexican Embassy. __________ 457 Sierra, Lt. Col. Manuel de 1a, Spanish Embassy -459 Sigurdsen, Bjarne J., Congressional Record 1G Dn dea se ers tn mp a 274 Individual Index Page Page Siling, Philip F., Federal Communications COMIMISEION ee Side oe me dian ss 385 Sillers, Basil, Washington city post office. ______ 448 Silva, ’Abelardo, Chilean Embassy... ....... 452 Silva, Marques de Zahara, Luis de, Spanish Bmbassy. ep chan re ain 45 Silva, Silvino da, Pan American Union_______._ 409 Silverman, A. G., Railroad Retirement Board... 411 Silvermaster, N. ’ Gregory, Farm Security Ad- ministration FE a le os ered Tv Te 362 Simmon, Glenn, District assistant corporation cormsel Cs i et ee AR 445 Simmons, B. H., Inspector General’s Office_.___ 327 Simms, Frederick B., Veterans’ Administration. 419 Simms, John H., Senate Legislative Counsel ___ 267 Simms, Joseph 5 District Fire Department. ___ 446 Simon, Frances H, Tariff Commission_________ 416 Simons, Howard J., American Red Cross-_._.____ 380 Simos, ¥ ames, House foldingroom.... ... =i __ 271 Sims, ‘Henry Upson, American Red Cross__.___ 380 Sinclair, A. Leftwich, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia_ 433 Sinclair, Col. Burke H., Veterans’ Administra-Pere Rt Ra et RE BS bel I Sheen pie) 4 18 Singer, Edward J.: Defense Homes Corporation... __________._____ 393 The RFC Mortgage Company .____________._ 388 Sinnott, Joseph J., Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives Ee Ere Rs Sr A 271 Sioussat, St. George Leakin, Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress Ee a EA 278 Sirag-el-Din, Mohamed Egyptian Legation. .___ 454 Sitz, Col. Walter H., Naval Examining Board (Marine Bo rome ie Sesleri 345 Sjolin, Ake, Swedish Legation ________..________ 459 Skaggs, Bruce, Office of the Chief of Chaplains. 326 Skalski, Walter, House folding room ..__________ 271 Skelton, Joe, House pogboffiee. 2 i iia 271 Skerrett, Ricardo, Jr., Public Works Adminis- tration. co oc a hae nt 400 Skidmore, D. I., Bureau of Animal Industry.___ 359 Skidmore, E. J., Office of Indian Affairs________ 348 Skinner, G. H., "Alaska Road Commission _._ ___ 352 Skinner, W. Ww. Bureau of Agricultural Chem- istry and Engineering RIL aR dE Sd 358 Skriagin, Commander Nicolai A., Soviet Social-ist Republics Embassy i cli... 460 Slade, William A. Reference Department, TibraryolCongress... oo.0 278 Slattery, Harry: National Power Policy Committee. ._________ 353 Rural Electrification Administration. ________ 364 Slattery, To F., Bureau of Engraving and U4 dre nin suai Bas ie Appt im RE a Baa Ls Len 324 a Wiliam L., comptroller of Post Office * Department... cicenenmanioman-SL Bor 337 Slaughter, R. H., General Accounting Office. ___ 402 Slindee, Michael E., Office of Treasurer of the Vnited Bates. nLrn L080 323 Sloan, Eugene W., Defense Savings Staff. ______ 324 Slover, George, Tennessee Valley Authority. 416 Slowie, T. J., Federal Communications Com- ITELY PS Sei eh FI Si Re rk Ree a LE 385 Small, Jessie M., Office of Official Reporters Sl mally: Walter I., Senate Committee on NTE ary ARIES. a eeeoosoaan 265 Smead, Edward L., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. aE 395 Smedberg, Lt. Comdr. William R., Office of Naval Operations... iL Smedley, Velma, House Committee on the Judi-LLha ee nL a TesI Smeeton, R. M.., British Embassy____________. 455 Smith, Addison To. Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Veterans’ Administration... ->-____-"_ 418 Smith, Blackwell, Office of Production Manage-me rEer 314 Smith, Charles F., Senate Committee on Agri-culture and Forestry eR Smith, Charles P., United States Board of Tax ADD FA er eer pd Se Se SR SER 381 Smith, Charles R., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining se a a ar 265 Smith, Charles W., Federal Power Commission. 394 Smith, Clara E., Senate Committee on Immi-pation nse loan Se end ritararrh 5 Smith, Daniel E., Veterans’ Administration____ 418 Smith, DeWitt, American Red Cross____._.______ 380 Smith, Don C., American Red Cross___________ 382 Smith, E. D., Jr., Senate Committee on Agri- caltureand Forestry-Sonl 264 aii.aoio Smith, Earl J., Office of the Solicitor_ __________ 357 Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on Ap- propriationsiis Jockin to anal oe tah 264 Smith, Farrar, Civil Service Commission. ______ 382 Smith, Franklin H., Tariff Commission________ 416 Smith, George, Committee on Conference Mi- nority ofthe Senate... cou.Joi Cro 264 Smith, George C., American Red Cross________ 380 Smith, Lt. Col. George I., Office of the Chief of Cavalry pameaogs CLE EE See An pai pd Smith, ay G., Soil Conservation Service.__ 320 Smith, Herold D.: Bureau of the Budgebssets Tuna rioanl, 316 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Bxpenditures.. o.oo. 238 Smith, Howard W.: Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission. ____ 235 Smith, John L., House folding room___________. 71 Pid Jorn Lewis, Jr., United States attorney’s 434 tio Smith, : W. Rixey Secretary to yor Glass... Soa Jnauil 268 Senate Committee on Appropriations. _______ 264 Smith, Leroy K., Federal Crop Insurance Cor-poration TERE ne te eS ER REE gL SA 362 Smith, Col. Lucius M., Office of the Judge A vacate Generals. Jin odin toe se ait Smith, Luther Ely, Territorial Expansion Me. morial Commission i ui lar sland 237 Smith, Mark A., Tariff Commission___.________ 415 Smith, Inspector Milton D., Metropolitan police ATE ht eo a ie te ie EEE 447 Smith, Nelson Lee, Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation__________________ 381 Smith, Dr. Philip i Geological Survey Smith, Raymond C., Bureau of ulin FL CONOMIOS ovis tm nro aL ITO BT 358 Soh Robert B., Federal Housing Administra-388 9 ti Talma L., official stenographer to House COTIIILLOOE os hs 274 oieemail Smith, Col. Walter B., War Department Gen-eral EY | AE SA Ch Le RoR EL ET Se 326 Smith, William, Production Manager, Govern-ment Printing ONCE ini nai Ed 277 Smith, William F., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce CER She aR rs eam a a 369 Smothers, Alice W., Conciliation Service. _____ 373 Smoot, H. BK, Office of Experiment Stations___ 356 Smyth, Robert L., Division of Far Eastern Sale. eo ane 318 Snell, Harold W., The Alaska Railroad... __.___ 351 Snoderass, C. Stribling, Office of Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense. _________ 352 Snodgrass, H. C., Pan American Union..___.__ 410 Snodgrass, Russell 1En Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 386 Snow, Lt. Col. Beverly C.: Assistant to Engineer Commissioner TO a 443 District Engineer Department________________ 445 Snow, Lt. Col. Conrad E., Office of the Chief Signal ITD ii ip ie i Ld Yhebndhecho 330 | Snow, Julian B., secretary to Senator O’Ma-honey ey CA Re eee a LE ne 269 Snow, William B., Jr., Federal Trade Commis- I Fe A a Te a TEU 398 Snow, W.7J., Jr., Farm Credit Administration. 361 Snyder, Baird, 3d, Wage and Hour Division... 374. Snyder, Rear Admiral C. P., General Board... 343 858 Congressional Directory Page Page Snyder, J. Buell, Board of Visitors to the Mili- Swafford, Wendell P., District Public Library. _ 444 tarylicademy. 0. oa 236 Stam, Colin E., Joint Committee on Internal Snyder, Joseph M., Soil Conservation Service.. 365 Snyder, John I., Tennessee Valley Authority... 416 Revenue Taxation RAAB Sa SR 234 Stamm, H. B., Federal Trade Commission___. _ 399 Snyder, John O., Office of the Sergeant at Arms Standifer, Kemna M., Office of Secretary of the of House Cale Lol ie a LB aed pa 3 lL 271 I he 3¢ Snyder, John W., Defense Plant Corporation... 392 Standley, Rear Admiral W. H., Office of Secre- Snyder, M. Allan, Division of Defense Housing tary of the Navy. .__.____ 339 Coordination. oi: Clooinnvyg00 313 Stanley, A. O,, International Joint Commis- Snyder, S. A., Office of Budget and Finance____ 355 Sion. hci me MULL Ea 03 Sola, Jorge L., Argentine Embassy_____________ 451 Solanko, Risto, Finnish Legation ___ ___________ 454 Soldan, Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz, Pan American Sanitary Bureau... aliius Sg) dora ie 409 Stanley, Louise, Bureau of Home Economics___ 263 Stansfield, Edgar Federal or Mortgage Association. _____ 388 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Soler, Juan Jose: Stanton, Charles I., Civil Aeronautics Adminis- Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 410 SEATION ici ani eat Ls Bl wonient hn 371 Ministerof Paraguay... Ln 458 Somers, J. J., Office of Budget and Finance ____ 355 Stanton, Thomas B., District Fire Department_ 446 Stapleton, Frank =, Railroad Retirement Somervell, Brig. Gen. Brehon B., Office of the Board Laman neither Bl ci ten an 411 Quartermaster General...| ___....._ 328 Starcher, Eleanor B., secretary to Senator Rosier 269 Semper, H. B., Office of Architect of the Capi-5 Stark, Admiral Harold R.: olin. Cioiiioas Lar senilenis Chiefof: Naval Operations... .__.... 339 Sommerkamp, Frank M., Jr., Washington give The Join Board. vont. st nan oiie ate oes 404 postioffice saosinSal oni in lal) Starling, Edmund W., Secret Service Division. 322 Somsen, Henry N., Jr., Secretary to na Starnes, Joe, Board of Visitors to the Military Ball A cademy. § 236 Sorensen, Col. E. P., Office of the Chief of the Stategir, Herbert ir “War Department General Army AIL IOTO08: a os eet ae GN 331 Staff der SE DUE UE Ml he) 326 Sorenson, H., Railroad Retirement Board.__.___ 411 Staton, Hiram, Senate Committee on Foreign Soto, Fausto, Chilean Embassy... _.________ 452 Relations NE LA i a i Yt su Te Eh 265 Same i at H., secretary to Senator Stauber, B. R.: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation___. .____ 362 Dr P. Bon de, Portuguese Legation__. 459 Office of Land Use Coordination_____.___.____ 355 Southard, Frank A., Division of Monetary Re- Stearns, Foster, regent, Smithsonian Institution. 414 search SEE REA BENS Sn bd 322 Stearns, Mrs. Foster, Congressional Club. 384 Southworth, Clay H., Office of Indian Affairs.. 348 Steele, Hannah K., Joint Committee on Internal Southworth, William L., Soil Conservation Rovenue Tomation, enh)Sei a 234 ServiegiiowiSn ene I suing deiiiniia 365 Steele, Lt. Comdr. Irwin B. Coast Guard______ 340 Spaatz, Brig. Gen. Carl, Office of the Chief of the Steele, Jack W.: Army:Air: Boreesiuidnes bo siil sediu lL ls 331 Office of Secretary of the Interior___._.___.____ 346 Spaeth, C. B., Office of the Coordinator of Inter- Petroleum Conservation Division_ _______.____ 352 ATlorienn ATTarS craw ioiot ota ih es 313 Steelman, John R., Conciliation Service________ 373 Spaniel, Col. Oldrich, Czechoslovakian Lega- Steely, E. Newton, Civil Service Commission__ 383 tio EE a a re A ER 53 Spi W. T., Office of Education........... 396 Steig, Olga M., Securities and Exchange Com-missioner tar Je ell uy Bl sun 412 || Sparkman, Mrs. John, Congressional Club_____ 384 Sparre, Fin, National Inventors’ Council. ____ 372 Spaulding, E. Wilder, Division of Research and Publication... coc. einen say BESET. 319 Stein, Edward T., Reconstruction Finance Corporation ata J IER ES 387 Steiner, G&., Bureau of Plant Industry. _ TERY] Stejneger, T.eonhard, National Museum ______ 414 | Speaks, Rheva A., Freedmen’s Hospital ._______ 398 Stengel, Arthur, Food and Drug A dministra- Spear, Rear Admiral Ray, Bureau of Supplies Fn RE Sanna Se ea TL Sn a To 397 and Alccoantssi ol alias Un buaieil Cu 342 Stephens, G. A., Federal Trade Commission___ 398 Speh, C. F., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry Stephens, Harold M., associate justice, Court of and Engineeringec: Lionel ahs na 358 Aen for the District of Columbia (biog- Speir, R. J., official stenographer to House com- itn = nies EM de a 427 mittees. Ino timaarmip lable 3 gulp! dx 274 EY Lt. Col. J. W. G., Office of the Quar- Spelman, H. J., Public Roads Administration._ 400 termaster General... ..... ilmcotioae 328 Spencer, F. H., Bureau of Entomology and Stephens, Winston B., Civil Service Commis- Plant Quarantine o_o... ini 360 glong oosioate Pos outing badass ek 82 Spencer; George Otis, Securities and Exchange Commission_....__ nage 412 Stephenson, Charles H., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General _____________ 336 Spencer, Richard A Housing ‘Authority. 401 Stephenson, J. G., Committee on Conference Spiller, Lou Nora, Senate Committee on Foreign Majorityof the Senate. [coon 20 0. = 264 Belatlongiic. sostui peda lH oabin cools 265 Spilman, Joseph L., Civil Service Commission _ 383 Sterling, Hawley W., Alaska Road Commis-SHOT bi Sati oa Ses a uy i eR 352 Spivacke, Harold, "Reference Department, Li- Stern, Beatrice M., National Labor Relations brary of Congress. nil io aim aith 278 Board. oii ade Ee i at 408 Splawn, Walter M. W., Interstate Commerce Commissions. Lo is winhitmsd3 aismh Spoonts, Lorine J., Mount Rushmore National Stern, Ben: Secretary tc Senator Van Nuys. ____________ 269 Senate Committee on the Judiciary. _________ 265 Memorial Commissions cof. i. lool 352 Stern, Max, Social Security Board .____________ 395 Spring, Isadore, Women’s Bureau. _.____._____ 375 Sternhagen, John M., Board of Tax Appeals__._ 382 Springarn, Stephen J., Office of General Counsel Stettinius, E. R., Jr., Office of Lend-Lease Ad- of the Treasury vis. tL sou nin. tid snnriiouy 322 ministration... 0s sei a 314 Springer, Lt. Col. Robert M., Office of the Judge Advocate General _______ ___________ 327 Stevens, Alla G., superintendent of stores and traffic manager, Government Printing Springer, William E., Quartermaster Depart- Office oa a Asiana dara va Biel 277 men, Marine Corpse: ot nl Sie 344 Spruks, H. Charles, Division of Protocol ______ 319 Stevens, Henry, Bureau of Agricultural Chem-istry and Engineering. td ooo, 358 Srygley, Sue, Senate Committee on Enrolled Stevens, Melvin L., Office of the Doorkeeper___ 271 LC EE DE Gn an Si Ro i is 0 ans i iB 265 Stevens, Raymond B., Tariff Commission_____ 415 Staack, J. G.: Stevenson, Charles, Bureau of Customs________ 322 Federal Board of Survey and Maps. i. 9885 Stevenson, Morton W., Washington city post Geological Survey. oonon uit iy 340 OffICe i. sumnis aon (OS EEN HIT TE Ty 447 Stabell, A. Bredo, Norwegian Legation_...._.__ 458 Stevenson, Perry J., Burcau of Foreign and Stabler, Herman, Geological Survey ____._.__..__. 348 Domestic Commerce... c. .c ooo 369 Stackpole, Ralph, Commission of Fine Arts____ 383 Stewart, Mrs. Carroll L., Veterans’ Adminis- Stacom, William B., Veterans’ Administration_ 418 abion. eri ran 418 Indwidual Index 859 Page Stewart, Charles, International Joint Com- Stewart, Charles E., District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia._ 433 Stewart, Dr. Irvin, Office of Scientific Research and Development =: ieior.woai 00 315 Co Stewart, James M., Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 348 Stewart, Maj. John W., Beach Erosion Board... 329 Stewart, Joseph W., Court of Appeals for the Districiiof Golumbiadoo a. LU t-2i 0 428 Stewart, Paul M., Public Health Service __.____ 395 Stewart, Lt. Col. Ralph B., Army Medical Coie: etaas il it ie 329 Stich, Frederick, House post office__.___________ 272 Stiles, Grace B., United States attorney’s office. 434 Stiles, Commander Norman R., Coast Guard__ 340 Stilson, Dr. George R., District Board of Podi- str Examiners. coo iosi. il aepan tt na 444 Stimson, Henry L. (Secretary of War): Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- SION. visa LS ep Shee is 81 Blographyofzor Sasa odo i baandies tani 325 Council of National Defense_______..______..__ 312 Economie Defense Board... oui... cocci as 315 Foreign-Trade Zones Board _ _________________ 402 Member, Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 413 National Archives Couneil. _. _. _.._. 407 .__..... National Forest Reservation Commission._._ 234 National Munitions Control Board... __.______ 409 Office of Production Management ____________ 314 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board..____ 315 Stine, Harry E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General... oi. soo a 03. sue 336 Stine, Oscar C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-NomMieS Fr rssh Leen rE Cane 359 Stinebower, Leroy D., Adviser on International Reonomie Afialrs oonei 317 Stirling, Harold V., Veterans’ Administration_. 418 Stirling, M. , Bureau of American Ethnology_ 414 ak 3 Wilmer R., United States attorney’s Stitt, iy Women’s Bareat.... 25 rire ni 375 Stitts, T. G., Farm Credit Administration.____ 361 Stockberger, ‘Ww. W., Office of Secretary of Agri- 3 oy Arlin E., Civil Aeronautics Ad- TTBIPStIoON © do a a ant the 371 Stockdale, L. C., Office of C. C. C. Activities .. 357 Stocking, Ernest A., Civil Service Commission. 383 Stokke, Tor, Norwegian Legation oiious 458 Stolper, Freda, Senate Committee on Indian NAR IT aE 265 Stone, A. M., Board of Governors of the Federal ReserVe:SYSIOM oo. oa oo rabbi Cr 394 Stone, Donald C., Bureau of the Budget ______ 316 Stone, Harlan F. (Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court): BI OSTADY curs Corn dentin bon noel Semi Sw rie 423 Chancellor, Smithsonian Institution....__..___ 414 Member, Smithsonian Institution ERE een il 413 National Gallery of ATE. i -cconnrsmtarean-414 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee _. 238 ‘Washington National Monument Society ____ 419 Stone, H. A., Office of Budget and Finance ____ 355 Stoner, George B.: Defense Supplies Corporation... ll rar 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation____.____ 387 Stopford, R. J., British Embassy _.___.__._.__.__ 455 Stortz, R. Bailey, Senate Committee on Inter- Sale COmMMEret. oo. ff nares asim 265 Story, Isabelle F., National Park Service _.____ 349 Stough, Raymond W., Civil Aeronautics Board. 371 Strachan, William 3: ., House Committee on Appropeistions. 0 is Sa 273 SR Hutton B., House Committee on Mines and Mining. eerecarnor ras Straight, Harry B., Senate Committee on Clim Sl arn Te Stratemeyer, Brig. Gen. G. E., Office of To Chiefofthe Alr Corps...2. 331 Straten-Ponthoz, Count Robert van der, Belgian Embassy co fe oe a sn ee Sh 451 Stratton, Lynn L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenne'Pasation cos = ni = 0 234 Straubinger, George W., Office of the Secretary ofthe Senate. = 0 J Swiss 264 Straus, Michael W., ‘Office of the Secretary of the TEE ho a for a i ee Sa i em Lg 34 21 FB Page Straus, Nathan, Housing Authority __._________ 401 Strauss, Simon D., Metals Reserve Company._ 392 Streeter, Charles J., National Archives__ ______ 407 Streett, Col. St. Clair, Office of Assistant Secre-tory:oisWar dotsiAlrine vole a Ban sso 325 Stripling, Robert E., Special Committee to Investigate Un-American Activities. ______ 210 Stroberg, H. R., Reconstruction Finance Cor-TEAL hr RL Ceee TL 38 Strong, Albert L.: Disaster Loan Corporation... ..._......._.. 388 Reconstruction Finance Corporation ________ 387 Strong, Howard, Division of Defense Housing Coordination a. oc tii iE des i 313 Stroud, W. E., Reconstruction Finance Corpo-EAL] th 2 Ua lf Th Me NE ENSTOE 387 Stuart, Commander D. H., navy yard and station SETAE SOE Se I 343 Stuart, Rear Admiral Harry A., Office of Secre-taryoithe Navy, 0d. ci i rahi 338 Stuart, W. G., official stenographer to House commitiessioee. oo oo mi ot ea 274 Stucchio, John H., Office of Assistant Secretary of War_ Sama LS I TU 325 Studebaker, John W.: Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu-CATION: oa ite pre ited em a Dad 396 Office of: BAUcatION. oona il 396 ts Spl, Lin W., Petroleum Conservation Divi-erie n de eis Ad ET oes Sh ER SA a 352 RR Louis P., Commission on Mental Bedlth oe a a ae 433 Sturdevant, Brig. Gen. Clarence L., Office of the Chiefof Bngineersis oi ci = 4 329 Sturdevant, W. L., Tennessee Valley Authority. 416 Sturgeon, Leo D., ‘Office of Seeretary of State___ 317 Sturgeon, S., Senate Committee on Indian Airs ee 265 Styer, Col. Wilhelm D., Office of the Quarter-masteriGenepal. Loe oeaa 328 Sivls. Rachel, Senate Committee on Immigra-tio : Sullivan, A. H., Tennessee Valley Authority__ 417 Sullivan, Harry L.: Defense Pt Corporation SO dr ai 392 Electric Home and Farm Authority _________ 387 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Sullivan, John L., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury SHR ne BSR sin (Wa wen SR 321 Sullivan, at ‘Washington National Monu-ment Society a RE 419 Sullivan, William W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. 0 387 Summerlin, George T., Division of Protocol ____ 319 Summersecale, TP, British Embassy...7 455 Sunstrom. E. A., Tennessee Valley Authority___ 416 Suppler, Charles A., Electric Home and Farm Authority or a a 387 Suro, ek A., Central Translating Office__ 319 Susong, Alex, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Bonds. oo oo oS R ATT 266 Sussini, Dr. Miguel, Pan American Sanitary BRrean nz -ales oy rr 409 Sutherland, George, Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (retired) ____________ 425 Sutliff, O. L., secretary to Senator Andrews____ 268 Sutlive, Carey, Senate Committee on Finance__ 265 Sutphin, William H., Board of Visitors to the NavalAcademyzizic o-oo 236 Sverdrup, Erling, Norwegian Legation. ________ 458 Swadley, R. A., Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 334 Swain, c. E. , Public Roads ‘Administration. ____ 400 Swain, Ep a, Weather Bureany =~ o.-% 371 Swain, Larsen, Weunston city post office______ 447 Swanson, EdwardB., Office of Petroleum Co- ordinator for National Defense______________ 352 Sweet, Ethyl L., Beach Erosion Board. ________ 329 Sweet, G. Henderson, Veterans’ Administra- tion El dd EIR SRR ie Bol So ee 418 Sweet, Henry E., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation A mE EE Le Sb 370 Sweet, Oliver E., Interstate Commerce Com-IIE OT ee 404 Swinburne A. Francis, Transportation Divi-gi Swi John B., Interstate Commerce Com-mission noon ean ston 404 Congressional Directory Switzer, Mary E., Federal Security Agency... Swofford, Mrs. Jewell W., Employees’ Com- pensation Commission: .____.C_ 3 Swope, Guy J.: Division of Territories and Island Possessions. Office of Secretary of the Interior______________ Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration. Synon, Lt. George D., Coast Guard ___._________ Szymezak, M. S., Board of Governors of the 3 Federal Reserve 2 System... T Taber, John: - Joint Committee on Government Organiza- BHT Bane ba Ser antl ems ses le SA Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures... 238 Taber, Mrs. John, Congressional Club_________ Taeusch, Carl, Bureau of Agricultural Econom- i 3 Taft, Robert A., General Anthony Wayne _ ‘Memorial Commission... J. * Talbert, T. R., Washington city post office. ___. Talbott, Cleo C., Office of Secretary of Agri- Talbott, William R., Veterans’ Administration. Talley, Inspector Clarence, Metropolitan police_ Talley, Lynn P., Reconstruction Finance Cor- DOIHON teSe he Talmadge, George E., Jr., Interstate Commerce COMMISION ron ih Benneena es Tamm, Edward A., Federal Bureau of Investi- rT I De Sa I Tannehill, Ivan R., Weather Bureau.__________ Tapia, José M., Mexican Embassy_____________ Tapp, Samuel, District Engineer Department __ Tarber, Rear Admiral William S., Office of Naval Operations... oi. ooo Loti Tate, Jack B., Federal Security Agency.._______ 395 Tate, Lt. Col. Ralph H., Office of Assistant Sec- rebiryol Wak. ov tr a ee 325 Tate, Thomas R., Federal Power Commission. 394 Tate, Vernon D., National Archives____________ 407 Taussig, Charles W., National Youth Adminis- rations. ios hes Dudes Lise cnt Se 397 Tawressy, Capt. Alfred P. H., the Joint Econ- Om. Bont i area 405 Tayloe, William C., House Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries... _________ 273 Taylor, Amos E., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mesticCommeres. Li... ool 369 Taylor, Ashby, District Nurses’ Examining iT a ee Ses LR El CL el ee 444 Taylor, Augustus C., District Pharmacy Board. 444 Taylor, Carl C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NOME. ee a ae 359 Taylor, Charles H., Civilian Conservation CODE. aid ptt a ts re ea 397 Taylor, Evan, enrolling clerk of the House .____ 270 Taylor, Frank D., Office of the Doorkeeper_.___ 271 Taylor, George, journal clerk of the House _____ 270 Taylor, Maj. Herbert C., Office of the Chief Sig- nalOfieer ote alias 330 Taylor, Ike P., Alaska Road Commission_____. 352 Taylor, James H., Bureau of Navigation_______ 340 . Taylor, John W., Court of Claims_.____._._____. 431 Taylor, Joseph, House post office. _____________. 272 "Taylor, Marl, Patent Office... ----.._-_. 370 Taylor, Oliver G., National Park Service.______ 349 Taylor, P. A., Office of Land Use Coordination. 355 Taylor, Porter R., Surplus Marketing Adminis- feationie ol a a 366 Taylor, R. J., Reconstruction Finance Corpora- BOM ar i nT 387 Taylor, Robert R., Division of Defense Housing Coordination. i iiiieeteien 313 Taylor, Telford, Federal Communications Com- mission... ... SE ER a deren 385 Taylor, Thomas R., National Inventors’ Coun- Page Taylor, Wayne C.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 318 Board of Foreign Service Personnel ___________ 319 Under Secretary of Commerce... ________.__ 367 Teachout, Robert B., Veterans’ Administration. 419 Tefit, Edw. C., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration Ei bo us rt a ae hs 386 Tenley, Christopher S., Extension Service. _._.__ 356 Terhune, H. W., Fish and Wildlife Service____.. 350 Termohlen, W. D., Surplus Marketing Admin- fgimationl oo ie 366 Terrell, Marjory B., National Archives_________ 406 Terrell, W. D., Federal Communications Com- mission. ol es a ae LE aa 385 Terrett, Julian, Grazing Service. ...._....___.. 348 Terry, David D., Board of Visitors to the Mili- tary Aeademy. ool anol a 2. Terry, Edward P., secretary to Senator Bilbo__ 268 Teuton, F. L., Bureau of Agricultural Chemis- tryand Engineering. ro. ii. Slo 358 Tharin, Whitney, Office of Information________ 357 Thatcher, Arthur B., Office of Plant and Opera- BONS es cr fee as Pd ea a 354, 355 Thau, Walter E., Maritime Commission..______ 406 Thaxton, Guy W., Rural Electrification Ad- mmigitation: ics te a a Lh aE 364 Thayer, Philip W., Division of World Trade Intelligenee. oo. 0. a Giea 319 Thickstun , William R., Weather Bureau.______ 371 Thier, Jacques de, Belgian Embassy. _________ 451 Thill, Lewis D., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy... ooo aan 236 Thom, Corcoran, Jr., Columbia Hospital for Wome os ea Ee eS ie 383 Thomas, A. B., General Accounting Office_____ 402 Thomas, Alonzo M., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General. __.______ inha 335 Thomas, D. E., National Bureau of Standards. 369 Thomas, Edward W., assistant District cor- poration connsel: 445 Thomas, Elbert D.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf _________.__ 397 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission____. 235 Thomas, Elmer: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy___ 236 Joint Committee on the Library. _.___________ 2 34 Thomas, Ernest J.: . Senate Committee on Civil Service... _____ 264 Secretary to Senator Bulow... ....... 268 Thomas, Ferris B.: Metals Reserve Company... oocommeaan-o 392 Rubber Reserve Company... —--.-__.--..-. 392 Thomas, George H., Federal Farm Mortgage Clorporalion = si a 362 Thomas, H. M., Federal Power Commission___ 394 Thomas, John, Board of Visitors to the Military ACRAOMY oie ee 236 Thomas, Nena, Capitol telephone exchange_____ 276 Thomas, Wilhelmina H., House Committee on Waysand Means. C0 Tr an 274 Thomas, Woodlief, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... -i---._.-394 Thomason, R. Ewing, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... ottool oon 236 Thompkins, William J., District recorder of i Cs Ce la Sais rn De a Ll 435 Thompson, Chester C., Inland Waterways Cor- porafion_ -. o.oo 371 Thompson, Donald S., Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation. i. oo a ona 386 Thompson, Dr. Edward E., District Board of Podiatry Examiners... -...---==z---s-cown=== 444 Thompson, Eugene C., National Mediation Board. a iiiiaeen rea ny 408 Thompson, Evelyn Mary, Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds_._______. 266 Thompson, George F., Office of Secretary of the BONE AE 263 Thompson, Laura A., Office of Secretary of 1] BY Se Se ND a Cl 373 Thompson, L. R., National Institute of Health__ 396 Thompson, Luke, Washington city post office. 448 Thompson, Neal L., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- TE EeeI Rei Ce 390 Thompson, Oco, Office of Secretary of the oY TIL har Re CE 263 ci 72 Individual Index Page Page henna, Russel H., Washington city post offic Sie W. N., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury lations ree en Se BR a 318 Thomson, Col. James H., United States Terri-torial Expansion Memorial Commission____ 237 -Thornburg, Max W., Office of the Secretary of LE EE Ra Re I reSE SE 317 Thornett, G. M., secretary to the Board, Dis-trict government i AE Sa a SE 443 Thornthwaite, C. Warren, Soil Conservation Service. ens te Sle ri Se SN 365 Thornton, BH. N., British Embassy. ~~" 455 ‘Thors, Thor, Minister of Iceland 1-1"" 456 ‘Thorold, G. F., British Embassy... = 455 Thrift, Chester R., House Press a EEE 734 Thuee, Frederick 2x, Commission on Mental Health i or a ee 433 Thurber, William L., Patent Office_..__________ 370 Thurston, Elliott, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System-___________________ 394 Thurston, Lawrence M., Senate Committee on Immldgratlon: nu no oe 265 Tietgen, William H., Customs Court___________ 33 Tietjens, Norman O., Office of General Counsel of the Treasuny.... 2. olan Soni 321 Tiller, Theodore: Federal Home Loan Bank Board. ____________ 389 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 390 Tilson, William J., judge, Customs Court (biog-raphy DLR LE Rd RNR EO Ti 432 Timlin, May, Senate Committee on Interoceanic Caml re. 265 Timmons, Francis L., Jr., District government__ 443 Timofeev, Anatoli L. } Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy i Mm a em Sh AD A 460 Tinkham, Capt. Ralph R., Coast Guard_______ 340 Tippens, Guy B., Chemical Warfare Service____ 331 Tipton, Calvin F., House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce... __.._._______ 273 Tisdel, Alton P., Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office; = 10 277 Titus, Dr. E. W., Columbia Hospital for Women_ 383 Tobin, Richard ¥, M. D., District Health De-PAnteNt. oo ane 446 Todd, C. C. Jr., Hydrographie Office___________ 341 Todd, Dr. Calvin D., Veterans’’A dministration. 418 Toivola, Urho, Finnish Legation vf7 is 454 Tolbert, Cecil ", Senate Committee on Appro-priations ERR Lo a ra UE SCE GRD IR 264 Tolles, N. Arnold, Bureau of Labor Statistics___ 374 Tolley, Howard R., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-3 Tolman, R. P., National Collection of Fine Arts. 414 Tolson, ‘Clyde A., Federal Bureau of Investiga-tion CE ae ere Ph Ro a Tolson, Hillory A., National Park Service______ 349 fon Julius document room__________ 272 383 Toms, R. °F. , Public Roads Administration____ 400 Torbert, Charles R., Office of Architect of the Cot ares a ae he Sen a Ee) 275 . Ali Fouad, Egyptian Legation_________ 454 Tower, R. S., General Accounting Office. _.I.. 40 Towers, Albert @G., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation SA ee aE Ee SR 6 Towers, Edward, Office of Director of Vehicles and dtd on ane Sei NE VER Te TE 446 342 Notiogal Advisory op for Aeronautics. 406 ‘The Aeronauties¥ Board =.=... 379 The dont: Board aio ol Townsend, Grace C., Committee on Conference Minority of the Senate SA er RE 264 Townsend, John G., Ir., Defense Relations Trai Sa Tes 354, 357 Tracy, Daniel W., Office of Secretary of Labor__ 373 64674°—T77-2—1st 56 Tracy, Frank T.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation__________ 387 The RFC Mortgage Company. ._____________ 388 Defense Homes Corporation__________________ 393 Troy Sonert C., secretary, Board of Tax Ap- ie ee A SSE Nee a 333 Trail, She House post office..._.. 272 Trayer, George W., Forest Serviee__.___________ 363 Treadway, Allen T Commission to Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for Library of Congress._.._______ 233 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Hon, oo nannies geal re 234 Joint Committee on the Library. ____________ 234 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Bxpenditures:-. 22. © 0... 238 Treanor, James A., Jr., Securities and Exchange Cormmiggion, Svs Cn oe 412 Trexler, George W., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General.. oo iad 337 Trice, J. Mark, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of the TET Re eee SR SI a to (RE BRN 266 Triem, William E., Office of the Second Assist-ant Postmaster = =~ = General... 336 Si South, Clerk of the House (biogra-’ er a i i a a 7! Trib South, Jr., Office of Secretary of Com- AOTCOES Soi 0h a a a Riot Sp 367 Tripo, Louis H., Veterans’ Administration_____ 418 Tron, Robert x General Accounting Office.___ 402 Troncoso, J. M. Governing Bord, Pan American Union_____ 410 Minister of the Dominican Republic. -: 454 True, Webster P., Smithsonian Institution_____ 413 Truesdell, A. M., the Alaska Railroad__________ 351 Truesdell, Dr. Leon E., Census Bureau________ 368 Trullinger, R. W., Office of Experiment Sta- OA a a a ee Ne) 356 Tsami, Spiro, Greek Logsiion vm i ie 456 Tschappat, Maj. Gen. W. , National Inven- tors. Caancll. 0. aa 372 Tsui, Tswen-ling, Chinese Embassy __._________ 453 Tuchfeld, Janice, Senate Committee on Post Officesand Post Roads... 266 ny Amis C., Senate Committee on Com-" Ten Walter I.., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. ¢ ¢o oo ~_¢ 234 Tucker, Wendell P., superintendent District Industrial Home School (colored)... _______ 444 Tudor, Clinton G., General Land Office________ 347 Tugwell, Rexford or Governor of Puerto Rico_. 351 Tulloss, S. B., General Accounting Office. ______ 402 Tumulty, J oseph P., Thomas Jefferson Memo- rial Commision 0 aan 235 Turbay, Dr. Gabriel: Ambassadorof Colombia... 453 Governing Board, Pan American Union._____ 410 Turnage, Col. Allen H., Headquarters Marine Conse a es 344 Turner, Bolon B., Board of Tax Appeals_._._____ 382 Turner, Harrison H: Defense Plant Corporation RI A i 392 Electric Home and Farm Authority __________ 387 Federal National Mortgage Association_______ 388 Turner, Rear Admiral Richmond K.: Office of Naval Operations_________________.___ 339 TheTomt Boards tw oi 405 Turner, Robert H., Department of Justice______ 333 Turpin, E.G. Railroad Retirement Board_____ 411 Twaddle, Brig. Gen. Harry L., War Department Goneml Salt...eran a 326 Twohy, James F., Federal Home Loan Bank Board an, onion ee 389 Twyford, L. V., secretary to Senator Spencer___ 269 Tydings, Millard E.: Interparliamentary Ron ea 235 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission_ =... = 236 Tyler, Brig. Gen. Max C., Mississippi River Commission a ee ee ra 330 Tyler, Paul M., Bureauof Mines... ....._ 349 Tyler, Robert B., Office of the Solicitor...______ 357 Tyson, John A., Board of Tax Appeals____...._ 382 862 Congressional Directory U Page Ulio, Brig. Gen. James A., Office of The Adju-tant General Soiio oll nuddoiidai ipias0ll 327 Ummel, J. R., The Alaska Railroad.___________ 351 Underwood, J. O. T., British Embassy_____.____ 456 Underwood, Joe, House Committee on Elee- OMENS Sh aot r titeen api 73 Unzicker, Willard E.: Defense Supplies Corporation SE) Ta 393 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _.______ 387 The RFC Mortgage Company... ___________ 388 Updike, Frank C., Office of Secretary of the In-terior A bon sabia dunn lk. Sl chisaiiis Upgren, Arthur R., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestiec Commerce i il So.anisiiuaeJi 369 Upham, C. B., Deputy Comptroller of the Cur-BONCY oii E300 ht Sib i SS rn LE 0 322 Urfas, Jesus Franco, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico._._ 403 Uriburu, Guillermo, Argentine Embassy ._.__.__... 451 Urich, Walter K., Board of Parole__.._..___..... 3 Uthus, Bruce, Work Projects Administration___ Uttley, Clinton B., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster Generalo uw. oo jcost vali. Lo 3 Utz, E. J., Office of Land Use Coordination... Vv Vallance, William R., assistant to the legal ad- Vallarino, Juan Ramoén, Panamanian Embassy. Vanaman, Lt. Col. A. W., Office of the Chief of the ATM AI Porees. ane 331 Van Arsdale, Henry, Patent Office..._________. 70 Vance, J ohn’ T., Law Library, rs of Con- L717 Bm Cr Lu hI SR I RE AR (RnR 279 Van Curan, Alma A., Franklin D. Roosevelt ry aL 408 Van Deman, Ruth, Bureau of Home Economics. 363 Vandebetts Arthur H., Interparliamentary Un Vindens:s: Arthur H., Jr., secretary to Senator Vandenberg Vanderwerker, i: Col. Francis H., Office of the Judge Advocate General 327 Van Dine, D. L., Bureau of Entomology snd Plant Quarantine kA LA BEL Sr BL bg Vandover, G. C., Home Owners’ Loan dao Van Duzer, William A., District director of vehiclesand traffic. co io, 0 as 446 Van Fossan, Ernest H., Board of Tax Appeals__ 382 Van Fossen, J. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve _. C _._.__.. System... 395 van Houten, H. R., Netherlands Legation______ 458 Van Hyning, Conrad, District Board of Public LE ee Re ae ee li 444 Van Keuren, Rear Admiral Alexander H., Bureay ol Ships = een 342 Van Nuys, Frederick: Celebration of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. 238 General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commis- Senate Office Building Commission ___________ Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 Van Orsdel, R. A., Columbia Hospital for BREEi ta hr ae phen fl nda Lelie Van Patten, Capt. Ellsworth, Bureau of Sup- plies and Actoants. or on 342 Van Seoyon: M. W., Federal Power Commis- Slo eyml I A a Van nh E. B., Committee on Practice.______ Vardeman, Paul E., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration EL Vass, GeorgeO., Columbia Hospital for Women_ 383 Vaughan, David B., Economic Defense Board... 316 Vaughan, Harry B., Jr, Beach Erosion Board_. 329 Vaughan, -Harry Yi. secretary to Senator Tru-a 7EL:1 ie ete BR of A SO pee fo Vaughan, William, Senate Radio Gallery_______ Vaughn, Merrill, Office of Fourth Anisant Postmaster Qeneral. [20 Jo arm” Vega-Gomez, Dr. Don Felipe, El Saivadoron Teegation': Si or M0 afi ls el 54 Veniselos, Col. Sophocles, Greek Legation. _.___ 456 Vermilya, Howard P., Federal Housing Ad- ministration: = cr. dina denims 389 Page Vest, George B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve ooo. Lat 394 System... Vestal, Vivian, Congressional Club_____________ 384 Viacava, Anselmo M., Argentine Embassy__._ 451 Vicioso, Dr. Horacio, "Dominican Republic_.._ 454 Vickery, Howard F.: Federal Home Loan Bank Board: ...)L all Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- Hern mia or do vicile Liivands 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 390 Vickery, Howard L., Maritime Commission____ 405 Victory, John F., National Advisory Committee for Aerenauticsi ns. coose li lly iain 406 Villard, Henry S., Division of Near Eastern AIS... nudeSn TE EE and Q Villmoare, Ed. S., Jr. Secretary to Senate Clark of Missouri________ 268 Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals____ 265 Yinasth H. B., Jr., Office of Price Administra-SC BRE aol nk ged ae sa Ld Tan 314 Vingent, Som H., Office of Secretary of the 5 BA Sp is er AE ES i id a ; 338 Vineor ia D., Wage and Hour Division____ 374 Vinson, Carl, Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy rt sm re ee me AR BS EEE 236 Vinson, Fred M., associate justice, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biography). oi ene. 427 Vint, Thomas C., National Park Service.._____ 349 Vinton, Warren Ys Housing Authority_________ 401 Vipond, B. Leslie, Office of Fiscal and Budget EE ELa MA 318 Vipond, Kenneth C., Civil Service Commission. 382 Virdin, Donald O., Office of Secretary of the REi RR LETT 264 Vogel, Maj. Gustave H., Office of the Quarter- master General uo coon til tooo 328 Vogt, Walter, House post office_________________ 272 Voigt, Wilbur R., Senate Committee on Fi- NONE LZ oris ores SE Suid oan oi Go Sb Shp a e Dati 2 Vonderlehr, R. A., Public Health Service. _____ 395 Voorus, Robert A., Reference Department, Librapy-of b.viniwan iib= Congress... mdb 35 278 Vought, Sabra W., Office of Education_________ 396 w Wadden, Caroline, office of the Sergeant at Armsiof-theiHouse: =o: uf oooas ial | 271 Waddle, Catherine, Administrative Office of the United States Courts... lt Gaal sig 434 Wadsworth, Eliot, American Red Cross._______ 380 Wadsworth, James W., Interparliamentary 235 Wot, Rear Admiral Russell R., Coast CEO Jo i Te eI nen 0 UX UL ey 340 Waggaman, Thomas E., marshal of United “States Sopreme Court. ono. 425 ooo Wahly, William H., assistant District corpora-tion counsel > ; 445 Waite, Charles P., medical and sanitary direc- tor, Government Printing Office_______.____ 277 Waite, Henry M., Bureau of the Budget_.____ 316 Waite, W..E.,; Patent Office... illui _L.2 370 Wakefield, Ray C., Federal Communications Commission... oc... cii.o noe colada? 385 Walcott, Frederic C., Regent, Smithsonian Institntlon. ciara ad initia 414 Waldron, Col. Albert W., Army and Navy Munitions'Board:c const. Bo 381 Josaanlo.Ho Walker, Addison, Office of Secretary of the NAVY. oeese oO se Manan 338 Walker, LOR P., National Zoological Park.__ 414 Walker, Frank C. (Postmaster General): Blography of... 2 i odcl Looso hl 0.50 = 335 Member, Smithsonian Institution._._________ 413 National Archives Council. __________...___.__. 407 Walker, Fred 8., District Minimum Wage : Walker, Ira D., Office of the Doorkeeper______. 271 Walker, J. Ben, Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors 329 Walker, John, National Gallery of Art Wales; John O., Farm Security Administra. on Walker, Bail AL; Fodoral Communications Commission... Indwvidual Index Page oer Thomas J., judge, Customs Cnt He (DIoTrADRYY. tia aeiin ah nem en ems EEE Hr Walker, William, House Committee on HongNo. 1... bawas lb ouimnoiaa.ganiom 273 Wall, C. C., Interstate Commerce Commission. 404 Wall, Duncan, Office of Information __________ 356 Wall, Norman J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NOOSE is mmr or. BETES 359 Wallace, Benjamin B., Tariff Commission______ 415 Wallace, Henry A. (Vice President of the United States): Boga PNY Of eo eaIAT 3 a of the Birth of Thomas Jefferson. 238 Chairman of Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds. as. So. i aealaa.l 233 Commission to acquire a Painting of the Sign-ingiof the Constitution... oo...al 11 235 i Fconomic Defense Board... oo... 315 Member of Smithsonian Institution. _________ 413 Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission. ______ 239 PresidentioftheSenate zou.oa 263 Regent of Smithsonian Institution ___________ 414 Supply Priorities and Allocations Board. _____ 315 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission: “o5 22 uit Loos 236 Wallace, William L., Joint Committee on Inter-nal:Revenuei Taxation or. Son funy Tans 234 Wallgren, Mon C., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. Si. io iia on nisi 236 Walling, L. Metcalfe, Division of Public Con- 1 Te ae eR LB Sa EE eB (RE 374 Walmsley, T'. Semmes, Office of Civilian Defense. 312 Walmsley, Walter N., Division of the American Republics... 222 EE OO We LR 317 Walsh, David I.: Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy _Sean 236 * Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-tioned inl pes lneiannanJolin i aie ll 234 Joint: Commiitecion Printing... i. _ cools 234 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 238 Walsh, Air Commodore G. V., Canadian Lega- ton Dao ibn tinal bmiion Todas 452 Walsh, John W., National Mediation Board.____ 408 ‘Walsh, Thomas Gillespie, Commission on Men- tal Sn bane i An ee TE WIE pe 433 ati ion Walter, Francis E., Muhlenberg Bicentennial Commission Soiecaiorl mums il 0 239 Walters, Alvin C., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System___________.______.: 394 Wang, Kung-shou, Chinese Embassy. _________ 453 Wanvig, Col. H. F., Selective i System. _ 413 Rion C. Ww. Farm Credit Administra- Ward, D.J., Farm Security Administration.___ 362 Ward, Frank X., assistant to the legal adviser___ 319 Ward, Mary, Senate Committee on Enrolled 266 Wardwell, Aubrey St. C., District Real Estate Commission i ee EA TEA 444 Wardwell, Charles A. R., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 369 Waring, Stuart H., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation pee I Ra £ Warne, William E., Bureau of Reclamation_____ 349 Warner, Dr. Edward: Civil Aeronautics Board Hes oo fie. SEL nino ny Warner, Capt. Richard A., Naval Dispensary._ 343 Warren, Avra M., visa Division 319 Warren, Charles, "Washington National Monu-- ment Society 419 Warren Fletcher: Division of Foreign Activity Correlation. ____ 318 Office of Secretary of: State. wilcoLTE J. 317 Warren, Jack, House post office. _______________ 272 Warren, L. G., Tennessee Valley Authority... 417 Warren, Lindsay C., Comptroller General ._____ 402 Wathen, Albert L. , Office of Indian Affairs.____ 347 Watkins, Charles L., Office of Secretary of Senate. Jil Alas 000 SRD STE Taacnl 263 Watkins, Elise Z., secretary, District Board of Education 443 Page Watkins, Harmon L., House Committee on the Judiclary-. i lo he ae aa 273 Watkins, Ralph J., National Resources Plan-ning Beard bea Lo sia) ea Te 316 Watrous, Capt. Frank T., Joint Eeonomy Bott oo. 50s tiie Sa em nw Stel 405 Watson, Edwin M., military aide to the Presi-dent: (blograpRY i saleaaa 3 dais tn 311 Watson, Lt. Col. James T., Jr., Office of the Chief: SignaliOffieer fio Sino lod Sa 330 Watt, Alan S., Australian Legation_____._______ 451 Watt, John B., District Fire Department. _____ 446 Watt, Robert, Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education..._____ 326 Watterson, Julia, House Committee on Military Ae Le aia 273 tration cosine 389 Military LT SL 265 ard Woh Frederick V., Surplus Marketing Ad- ministration’. C0 lac Sagrada 366 Waymack, E. R., Office of Information__._____ 357 Wayne, William, General Anthony Wayne ‘Memorial Commission. _ ooo.coio 2) Weaver, Benjamin W., District Fire Depart- 1110 LR he RL CL Ta 446 Weaver, Frank L., Federal Power Commission. 394 Weaver, H. B., Official Reporter, House_______ 274 Webb, Charles A., secretary to Senator Austin. _ 268 Webb, Robert E., Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation Se es 381 Webb, T. Federal an Y.oan Bank .. .-.. 39 Board... Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora« APY La LN LL ER 390 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation____________ 389 Weber, Margaret D., United States attorney’ a office Weber, he M., Ofer of Second Sr Postmaster General. oo ooo 336 Weber, William, Weather Bureau..._....._____ 71 Webster, E.M., Federal Communications Com- missionsuiole Sorellesor ana ih anil 5 oii Webster, Robert, Union of South Africa Lega- YOR. cana eae Ty Wehr, Lt. Col. Arthur J., Office of the Sienal Officer. =. .0-Toolcoe Wehrly, Max S., National Capital Park aid | Planning Commission =. i ~ oe Thain Weidner, Col. Edward, General Dispensary. . 32 Weightman, R. Hanson, Jeckinor Bureau...... 371 Weijerman, Col. F. G. L., Netherlands Lega- Hom. ior obi inn Lf pin aria 45 Weinberg, Sidney J., Office of Production Monsgementi(._ LoL Jas ool da) 314 Weiner, Joseph L. , Office of Production Manage-ment PALS ERIE RR Sh El CF ER le SE SRR ER Lo 315 Weinstein, Samuel M., Reconstruction Finance ‘Corporation LEI C ON 0 Et denreer sbaey tio Weir, William M., Division of Research and Siotistles. oo) oO. gionsHI 322 Welch, Joseph C., Civil Service Commission_. 383 wa Taya M., Defense Supplies Corpora- Welltorsi "Comdr. Charles, Jr., Office of Naval Operations Assia Elie sive als I Sn ie Weller, Dr. G. Louis, Jr., Metropolitan Police. i Wells, Sumner: American Red Cross. Gosariosa toaonnt! 380 Under Secretary of State. ____._____________._ 317 Wells, Chester, Washington National Monu-mentiSoelepy tl TATE 0a. od Shi 419 Wells, Capt. Chester H., Columbia Hospital for Women: JULES nD LC wma ahi 383 Wells, Kathryn B., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 was Oris V., Bureau of Agricultural Econom- es aie sn ER See MS SCI 358 Wells, Ralph A., Tarriff Commission. _________ 416 Welsch, Glenn 4 House document room_______ 272 Wenchel, John P., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury fg ne IE oy 321 Congressional Directory Page Wendell E. E., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora-rn LS ea Re MEE ep (a 389 ‘Wendolowski, George, Polish Embassy__._.__.. 459 Wendzel, Julius T., Office of Land Use Coordi-nation. 0 eo Vr We Ee i ho. EASA HR 355 Wennberg, Curt, Swedish Legation ___.._____ 459 Wennerberg, Folke, Swedish Legation.._.__._ 459 Wenrich, Charles C., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General _______________________ 335 ‘Wentzel, Nelson B., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General 36 Werheim, John L., District Fire Department... 446 Werner, Philip i, Civil Service Commission COTEOCE OIIC0. ore wine wb drag bie Sd Lt 277 Werntz, William W., Securities and Exchange Commissions...oi-tee cies oeamr ain a 411 . Wesley, Marvin, Bureau of the Public Debt__. 323 Wessel, Capt. Karl, Swedish Legation._.______ 459 ‘Wessenauer. G. O., Tennessee Valley Author-MV co inp ana cing as vbnnntm in Sotiathds StI Tk 4 17 ‘Wesson, Maj. Gen. C. M., Chief of Ordnance_ 330 ‘West, Douglas N., District Health Department. 446 West, Vernon E., principal assistant District corporation comnsel.. HOE Westbrook, Lawrence, Federal Works Agency. Westropp, E. L., British Embassy____........ 456 Wetmore, Alexander: National Magen aii: Lo LE Lull 414 JUIURE Smithsonian Institation..... ooo. 3100. 413 Wetzel, George B., Bureau of the Census__.___. 368 Whaley, Clarence B. , assistant District auditor. 443 Whaley, Richard g. ., chief justice, Court of Claims (biography). i.00 oal Joa . i. Wheat, Alfred A., chief justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Colum-bla cao Juan Sana Jini BESO alan 433 ‘Wheeler, Dan H.: Bituminous Coal Division... ...ceeaee.nll 350 Office of Secretary of the Interior ___.....__.. 346 ‘Wheeler, Katherine, House Committee on Agri-CUEING: i Sl Scams) et ls 273 linterna ‘Wheeler, Leslie A.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 318 Board of Foreign Service Personnel __________ 319 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 391 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations__ 354, 356 ‘Wheeler, Lynde P., Federal Communications Commission. oo oo ooe iara 385 Wheeler, Capt. V. H., Army and Navy Muni- tions Board: 0. co.waiuc Jaan 381 ‘Wheeless, Leon L., Railroad Retirement Board. 411 Whitaker, Rodney, Commodity Exchange Ad- ministration! Teena l Daron LU Los 3 Whitaker, Samuel E., judge, Court of Claims (biegraphy)eul i os) Todo i. ureuusy 430 Whitcomb, Eben M., Tariff Commission.__.... 415 White, Alfred G., Bureau of Mines...____.. sa. 349 ‘White, E. Wyndham, British Embassy........ 455 White, Harry D.: Committee for Reciprocity Information...._. 384 Division of Monetary Research _________._____ 322 Export-Import Bank of Washington_____.__.___ 391 Office of the Secretary of the Treasury_._.___.. 321 ‘White, Henry M., Federal Trade Commission.. 399 ‘White, James A., Office of the Secretary of State. 317 White, Dr. Lawrence W., Office of Indian ATAIE obi vino de va Shh 348 White, M. A., Federal Trade Commission_.____ 398 White, Mastin G., Office of the Solicitor.___ 354, 357 White, Thomas W ., secretary to Senator Lodge. 269 ‘White, W. B., Food and Drug Administration__ 397 ‘White, W. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine puro bl a ia A aa 361 White, Wilford L., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce 369 White, William Allen, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission = EAKAT pagi5 VR pn 237 leg Whitehurst, Elmore, Administrative Office of the United States Courts. ...___o_. 434 Which, H. C., District Engineer Depart-be ONE Ly Simin M., assistant to the legal adviser... 22 Page Whiteside, Dale B., Office of Secretary of the Interior. cernnese 347 Whiteside, Garrett: Secretary to Senator Caraway. _______________ 268 Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills__________ 265 Whiting, Capt. F. E. M.., Bureau of Navigation. 341 Whitman, Roy L., House Official Reporter of DEDIOE, 274 Whitmore, A. J.: International Fisheries Commission. _________ 403 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-AE I SE Sa a ma Ls aE a 404 Whitney, M. L., Patent Office. ..__._________.___ 370 Whitney, Paul C., Coast and Geodetic Survey__ 370 Whittemore, ih De; Export-Import Bank of Washington iol. Lorlnoiaol uablning Whitington, vo William M., PET re Whyte, Clifford R., District Engineer Depart-FHS Y 0 PAR ES TAY ER Nan STA RLS MN bf ER 3 445 Witt, nk C., Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation Rn asia Ls dans 370 Wickard, Claude R. (Secretary of Agriculture): Biography of Armia bl alanis nisin 354 Council of National Defense... ___._._..__ 312 Economic Defense Board ...__......_______. 315 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu- gation. Lode) cnn load isadie a aaiad 396 Member, Smithsonian Institution...._._..._.. 413 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... 235 National Archives Council... _____. =] 407 National Forest Reservation Commission____ 234 Widens, Aryness Joy, Bureau of Labor Statis-3 HL Se a Bn A AT Pine is eg © ETT 74 Widener, Ji yep E., National Gallery of Art... 414 Wiecking, E. H., Office of Land Use Coordina- 35. Wiersema, Harry, Tennessee Valley Authority. 416 Wigglesworth, Richard B., Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee ________________ 238 Wight, A. E., Bureau of Animal Industry._..._.. 359 Wilbert, Leonard J., Social Security Board.__.__ 395 Wilbourne, John, Senate Committee on Enrolled Bile. so oo coniuin canna seine 265 Wilcox, Billy, Office of the Speaker___....___._. 270 Wilcox, Rear Admiral John W., Office of Naval Operations TE LS A SR ON BE Ln 339 Wiens Sidney W., Bureau of Labor Statistics... 374 Wil % Sp Lawrence, Governor of American wide, iiiiam @G., deputy District budget Wiley, i Et Board of Visitors to the N gale Aeademy. £ tient cowptl NL aon Winky i V., United States attorney’ i Wilkinson, F. D., Howard University__._____.__ 398 Wilkinson, Dr. Garnet C., District Board of Education hn es SH S10 443 Wilkinson, Glen A., assistant District corpora-tionecoungel. Lo ipban nt Cur Wilkinson, Capt. Theodore S., Office of Naval Operations... cL 20s 7 Ue adisiidn} 339 Willard, Clarke L., Division of International oe ourt Williams, Aubrey, National Youth Adminis-__tratio 396 Williams, George B.: Defense Homes Corporation TTA 3 a ge ot The RFC Mortgage Company Williams, Rear Admiral H., Office of Secretary __of the Nav 338 urea feist anlvlae kh pdb So iain 331 Williams, Martha W., Tariff Commission... 416 Williams, Maj. R. A. F., British Embassy... 455 Williams, Dr. R. C., Farm Security Administra-6 ton. gsr sla mda brad relionnanllre Williams, Robert P., House Committee on Ap-Propristions. a. id ah ana TSE 273 Williams, Brig. Gen. Seth, headquarters Marine aid Corps Williamson, Dr. F. Y., District police surgeon... 447 Indwwidual Index Page Williamson, William, Mount Rushmore Na- tional Memorial Commission______________ ‘Williamson, William R., Social Security Board. Willingham, Harris E.: - Farm Credit Administration... ___........._ Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ________ Willingham, Mildred, Senate Committee on Espendiinzes in the Xxecutive Depart- Debate.sl ei ms os SS BA IN SO 274 Willoughby, W. R., National Archives... 407 Wills, Joseph E., Senate Press Gallery. Jebel 734 Willson, Dr; Prentiss, Columbia Hospital for AATI Rees ee SE ARE OL 383 Wilson, Arthur E., Bureau of the Public Debt__ 323 Wilson, Carroll L., Bureau of Foreign and Do- Mesto COMIMNOLED: o.oo seaman 368 ‘Wilson, Charles, House post office______________ 272 Wilson, Frances, Senate Committee on Post Offices: and: Post:Ro3d8... Jou 1. oc anh umsiden 266 Wilson, Frank J., Secret Service Division_____._ 322 Wilson, Frank P., National Archives_________.. 407 Wilson, Frank R., Bureau of the Census._______. 368 Wilson, G. Lloyd, Office of Price Administra-31 tion Wilson, J. Stewart, Rural Electrification Ad- TARISEation oo ee ae 364 Wilson, John B., Jr., Agricultural Adjustment Administration: Ser cole oye Wilson, Lloyd B., American Red Cross________ ‘Wilson, Madison, House folding room.__________ Wilson, Marie, Senate Committee on Public Bulldings'and Grounds. ~~... _ 266 Wilson, Meredith C., Extension Service._______ 356 Wilson, Milburn L.: Extension Service. ooo 354, 356 Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services. 313° Wilson, Orme, Office of Secretary of State______ 317 Wilson, Robert Ck: Disaster Loan Corporation a re ma Cea 388 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 387 Wilson, Theodore F., Office of the Secretary of FIR I Hr Sa snd sn es oe ae 321 Wilson, T'. Webber, Board of Parole..__________ 334 “Winder, C. A., Rural Electrification Adminis- POON. oo esi shar en nn Re pe 364 ‘Windham, J. O., Defense Homes Corporation__ 393 Winegar, Dorothy F., Committee on Confer- ence Minority of the Senate. ____________.__ 264 ‘Wingate, Jay, United States Travel Bureau.___ 349 Wingfield, B. Magruder, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. ______._._______ . 394 Winston, Carey: Federal Home Loan Bank Board ________._____ 389 Federal Savings and Loan. Insurance Corpora- i IT i ee OR Se ER a oh 391 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 389 Winter, Thomas D., United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission__________ 277 Winter, Mrs. Willie S., House Committee on CivitServiee: o.oo iae eee 273 ‘Winters, George H., Division of the American Republics. oo en a a 17 Winters, R. Y., Office of Experiment Stations... 356 Winton, Lt. Col. A. V., National Guard Bureau. 331 ‘Wirth, Conrad L.: National Park Service... 0...vin. ona 349 Office of Secretary of the Interior. .___________ 347 Wise, Arthur O., District examiner and life in- SUIaNCeRCtUATY naa 445 Wise, William Harvey, Copyright Office, Tibraryol Congress... oo = 279 Wistrand, Tor Hugo, Swedish Legation________ 459 Witman, E. RB. Public Buildings Administra-: 401 Wixcey, Earl B.: Secretary to Senator Thomas of Utah_________ 269 Senate Committee on Education and Labor. _ 264 Woehlke, Walter V., Office of Indian Affairs____ 347 Wolcott, Leon O., Surplus Marketing Adminis- ation. oo es a ae aie Se Wold, Ansel, Joint Committee on Printing, BE ei ORs Ta 234 Wolfe, C. A., Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering. = 0 i. oo... 358 Wolfe, Cassie L., General Accounting Office... 402 Page Wolfe, Virginia M., National Archives. .____.__ 407 Wolfenden, James, Migratory Bird Conserva-tion Commission... ................. 0009s 235 ‘Wolford, Dr. Roy A., Veterans’ Administration. 418 Wolfrey, William T., Jr., Office of Plant and oe Operations... oe aatasicrm Ly cba 355 ‘Wolfsohn, Joel David: General Lang Office... esi Z oizacol.Jig 347 National Power Policy Committee. ._________ 353 Woll, Matthew, Territorial Expansion Memo- rial Commissioneen 3d opens. ical.20s 237 Wood, Arthur D., Board of Parole_._..___._..__ 334 Wood, G. Pierce, secretary to Senator Pepper. _ 269 Wood, Gen. George H., Federal Board of Hos- pifalization wy lied Sustain wee nil 385 Wood, Henry G., Office of Legislative Counsel, Bente. ine ning aan Sat Saban GAN 267 Wood, Capt. Leighton, Bureau of Ordnance___. 341 Wood, Brig. Gen. R. E., Goethals Memorial Commission. of ooh eo or le. 402 Wood, Will S., Bureau of Narcotics. __________ 322 Woodard, Granville O., Division of Exports and Defense AfdUicol iol oo 08 BU Jig 318 Wooden, Walter B., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Woodfill, Web, Federal Trade Commission__.___ 398 ‘Woodruff, Allen L., Bureau of Marine Inspec- tion'and Navigation. a. 1p ua-m iat oo 370 Woodruff, Dorcas P., Senate Committee on Mil-He SAT OH TR ea ier 265 Woodruff, Roy O., National Forest Reservation Commission...ar lo 234 Woodruff, Mrs. Roy O., Congressional Club... 384 Woodruff, W. W., Tennessee Valley Authority. 417 ‘Woodrum, Clifton A., Joint Committee on Re- duction of Nonessential Federal Expendi-EmLG ea a a ead TR a TR Bg 239 Woods, Albert W., House Committee on Public Buildingsand Grounds... ot Jt 274 Woodside, Byron D., Securities and Exchange Commission... or vets on Eh sual 412 Woodside, Robert G., American Battle Monu-ments Commission. = -._. _.c___ 5 _ori 379 ‘Woodson, Rear Admiral W. B., Judge Advocate Generalofthe Navy____..__...-_.o& ... 342 Woodward, Cliff, Farm Credit Administration__ 361 Woodward, Ellen S., Social Security Board ____ 395 Woodward, H.H., Union of South Africa Lega- 10017 a EE RO Stee i el a 460 Woodward, Ray L., Civil Service Commission__ 382 Woodward, Sherman M., Tennessee Valley ATENOPIEYr. of obi mae ni brea SE EERE ao 416 Woodward, Stanley, Division of Protocol ______ 319 Woodward, Thomas M., Maritime Commis- CHD Paawan teen eben ses cus RR Si oe Woody, Arthur F., Tariff Commission___.______ 416 Woofter, Thomas 3. Federal Security Agency... 395 Woolard, Edgar W., Weather Bureau______.____ 371 Woolard, Logan L., "District Fire Department... 446 Workman, Capt. R. D., Bureau of Navigation. _ 341 Wrede, Edward C., House Committee on W orld ‘War Veterans’ __.c 274 Legislation...0. Wrede, Goddert, Finnish Legation. ____________ 454 Wright, C. M.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 386 Rubber Reserves Company. ____.____________ 392 Wot Douglas G., Public Works Administra-RR eat Se EN 400 Wright, Frank C., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration or EA eR me ee SR eR 387 Wright, Frederick E., National Academy of ROIONens oei a a 406 Wright, Henry H., Chief Clerk, Government Printing Office SE aan i ed Sale Se 277 Wright, J. Carl, Federal Crop Insurance Cor- Dorabion.. eh 362 Wright, John C., Office of Education___________ 396 Wright, Kenney P., deputy District disbursing Offloer. oh 444 Wright, Col. LowellB., Army Medical Center_. 329 Wright, Marshall S., Office of Plant and Opera- HomBo te ss ee 356 Wright, Dr. Orville: National Advisory Committee for Aero- En Sees ls ena de Ts Te Se 406 National Invenfors’Couneil..___.__~._ ____. 372 Wright, Roscoe, Civil Aeronautics Administra-in oN a ee 866 Congressional Directory Page Wright, Ted, Office of the Speaker_______ _____ 270 Wright, William, Office for Emergency Man-AZCINCH: 2p aie bud LT. JOH 312 EERESERINO Wrong, Hume, Canadian Legation. ____.________ 452 Wurzlow, Frank, Jr., secretary to Senator Blender. ovainni. seit sd wha ESE IOL 268 Wyatt, Walter, Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve System. ..... 00... 100 0 00 394 Wyckoff, J. B., Surplus Marketing Administra-7077s Lodo ES Ba HN 0 x Sr De A Bh Ae RATE 366 Wydra, Miriam, House Committee on Immi-gration and Naturalization ___.____________ 273 Wyeth, Nathan C., District Engineer Depart- mento. Dodds JET0D0 0 os QR I00E] IEE oO 445 Wylie, Minerva, Housing Authority __________ 401 Wyman, Henry C., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster Generale... ues. losis oonit ae 335 Wythe, George, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree. SL 200 aude vdeo KL BIG] 368 X Xanten, William A., District Engineer Depart-ACI cera ti es Ee ia ot of reg iS ee i SS LI SE mR 446 XY Yaden, James G., Civil Service Commission... 383 Yantis, George ¥, National Resources Planning VTLhE Lanes ra me beeen en N La 316 Yardley, Edward, Division of Personnel Super- vision and Management... ovo... 319 Yarnell, Rear Admiral H. E., Office of Secretary FG NET a Eee BSR SAIS Be 339 Yates, F. L., General Accounting Office________ 402 Yeager, O. K., Work Projects Administration. 400 Yefremovich, Spasoye, Yugoslavian Legation___ 460 Yegorichev, Capt. Ivan A., Soviet Socialist Re- publics Bmbagsy ol aeirEerasalE 460 Yekta, Abdol-Ahad, Iran Legation. _.___________ 456 Yellowlees, R. HE. Senate Committee on Manu- ER ram ed SS ER rs 265 Yerushalmy, Dr. Jacob, Children’s Bureau. ____ 374 Yingling, Raymund T., assistant to the legal CO RR Ding fa Mee Ant Sa fend ree 319 Yocom, Herbert A., Office of Petroleum Coordi- nator for National Defense_.._...._____._.___ 352 Yohe, H. S., Agricultural Marketing Service... 359 Yost, Charles W., Division of Exports and De- fenge Add i ins 318 Young, Fred R., Division of Accounts______.____ 317 Young, Harold, secretary to the President of the Ran a eei 263 Page Young, James W. Indian Arts and Crafts Bowdoin 000 20 HER AG TORE ARIE Young, John Russell: Alley Dwelling Authority for the District Lu Columbians. 2 = Solis) 2 SEDGE i District Commisgioney. Sic 0 Biv saline 3 District Unemployment Compensation Boards: Ola ie Slt Ea 444 Distriet Zoning Commission. __--i._ 77 445 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Solyshee Boulevard Commission trations Af 30 20 TE THI 05 eh Aart hid oF Young, R. D., Rubber Reserve Company.__ 392 Young, Roland, Senate Committee on Foreign IREIALIONSATS 4 hui 1) Sd Ae a a) 265 Yu, Kien-wen, Chinese Embassy._..__..________ 453 Z Zadeikis, Povilas, Lithuanian Legation________ 457 Zagami, Placidino, Congressional Record mes-SO Oy a or = or rio Ei = etn Sra 2687 Zahm, Tee Francis, Reference Department, TA 0 HEAT ty vps opm be Ae eR | 278 Zaldo, Maj. Ratil de, Mexican Embassy. ______ 457 Zane, Wesley, Federal Housing Administra- TT Dy So Te A NT SH 389 Zannelli, Augustus, General Land Office_______ 347 Zebley, J . S., District Engineer Department___ 445 Zeder, Fred, National Inventors’ Council ______ 372 Zelditch, Morris, District Public Welfare Board. 444 Zens, Lennah Curtiss, Bureau of Home Eco- LIL ere pe et Le Sr Cpa re 363 Zepp, Christopher M., Bureau of the Census... 368 Zermeno, Comdr. Manuel, Mexican Embassy__ 447 Zier, Julian G., Pan American Union. ._..._... 410 Zilliacus, Col. Per, Finnish Legation___________ 454 Zimermann, Capt. A. G., Bureau of Ordnance 431 Zimmer, Verne A., Division of Labor Stand- Zimmerman, William, Jr., Office of Indian Zinder, H., Federal Power Commission________ 394 Zinsser, Nancy, office of Assistant Secretary of War Zoller, Carl A., Jr., Veterans’ Administration._ 418 Zoltowski, Janusz, "Polish Tmbassy—r x... 4 59 Zychlinski, Louis Y. de, Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General __________.__._ 336 paseEo,=a PAntoBt Ee AT TANS! a D2 ee Le SIT ITE FETA ~ I} Lae MIL oo a SC ev ers,EE