78 CONGRESS, 187 SESSION BEGINNING JANUARY 6, 1943 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS SECOND EDITION CORRECTED TO May 14, 1943 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1943 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE 5 JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING By ROBERT W. HASTY Office of Congressional Directory, Basement of the Capitol Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 238 All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indicated Copies of this publication may be procured from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office Washington, D. C., at $1.25 per copy (cloth) II 7) AVI, /ma Ar AmoSe mA NANWoy or Changes tn membership SEVENTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS, ELECTION OF NOV. 3, 1942 Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in REPRESENTATIVES Philip A. Bennett; 6th Mo_______ Det Marion T. Bennett ____ Jan. 21,1943 Harry L. Englebright, 2d Calif__ May 13, 1943 SEVENTY-SEV ENTH CONGRESS, ELECTION OF NOV. 5, 1940 Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in SENATORS : Ernest W. Gibson, Jr.l__| July 3, 1940 Ernest W. Gibson, Vt.___________ JURE: 20, 1980 mnie {dcoree Dien Jan 10104 forroniention N oseph-H.. Ball't_:__ = ct. 17,1940 Ernest Lundeen, Minn. ________. Ang. 81,0040. { Tn ® Nelsontl. Nov. 18, 1942 Key Pittman,t Nev...........0... Nov. 10,1920 [o.oo 2 Berkeley L. Bunker 1___| Dec. 12,1940 oe J amos a Scrugham 3____ Dee i 30 osep. osiert. cpio ay 14,1941 Matthew M. Neely, W. Va_.____[..._...._...._. Jan. 12,1941 {fosen! Ike Shotts... Nov. 18, 1942 John EB. Miller, Ark. cio. clcu sean Mar. 31,1941 | Lloyd Spencer! ________ Apr. 2,1941 Andrew Jackson Hous-| June 2,1941 Morris Sheppard, Tex............. ADE. <0, 1041 Na: Lo Cn apn ve : 3 Panis EX J 15k . Lee O’Daniel 6______ ug. 4, ty 5 8 James O. Eastland 1_____ June 30, 1941 Pat Harrison, Miss______..._.._.. June 22,1041 |... ..c.ooii.-{ame Dosey 7 rn Sept. 29, 1941 Alva M. Lumpkin 18___| July 22,1941 James BF. Byrnes, 8, Con ooo hia on To July 8,1941 Doren), one RT gus i urnet R. Maybank ¢ __| Nov. 5, Alva B. Adams, Colo..... Det. LIME fo anaes Eugene D. Millikin 0___| Jan. 5, 1942 REPRESENTATIVES Sam C. Massingale, 7th Okla____| Jan. 17,1941 |.._____________ Victor Wickersham. ____ Apr. 14,1941 Kenneth F. Simpson, 17th N. Y_| Jan. 25,1941 |.______________ Joseph Clark Baldwin. _| Mar. 19, 1941 Walter W. Bankhead, 7th Ala... |... ___.... Feb. 1,1941 | Carter Manasco.__.____. July 3,1941 William D. Byron, 6th Md______ Feb. 27,1041 i Saar Katharine E. Byron____| June 11,1941 Colgate W. Darden, Jr, 2d: Va: | ooo Tod. Mar. 1,1941 | Winder R. Harris____.__ Apr. 15,1941 Pius L. Schwert, 42d N. Y_______ Marti, 94100 oo ol. John €. Butler t=" -.-& May 51941 Alonzo D. Folger, 5th N. C______ Apr. (3051041 tae oi John H. Folger.......... June 20,1941 Lo. M. Michael Edelstein, 14th N. Y_| June 4,1941 |.______________ Arthur G. Klein__._____. Aug. 7,1941 Stephen Bolles, 1st Wis__________ July. 8d: Loe on Lawrence H. Smith_____ Sept. 16,1941 Albert G. Rutherford, 15th Pa_.__| Aug. 10,1941 |... ._______. Wilson D. Gillette. .____ Dec. 4,1941 Edward T. Taylor, 4th Colo. ____ Sept. 1941 |... ool Robert F. Rockwell ____ Jan. 5,1942 Wall Doxey; 2d Miss 0. 0 ol eo Sept. 29,1941 | Jamie L. Whitten_______ Nov. 14,1641 Lee E. Geyer, 17th Calif. ________ (727 IR IE 7 pe ER Sensieee Cell R. King... Oct. 12,1942 Lawrence J. Connery, 7th Mass_.| Oct. 19,1941 |_____._________ Thomas J. Lane......._.. Jan. 12,1942 J-Joseph Smith, 5th Conn. ~ | 2 = ~~ = Nov. 4,1941 | Joseph E. Talbot. _______| Feb. 5 1942 J. Harold Flannery, 12th Pa_ 1. i. S710 Jan. 3,1942 | Thomas Byron Miller___| June 15,1942 Joscph A. MeArdle, 33d Pa. ol =. 0 Jan. §,1942 | Elmer J. Holland. _____. June 15,1942 Patrick J. Boland, 11th Pa_______ May 18,1942 (0 40 Veronica Boland. _.____ Nov. 19, 1942 Charles H. Leavy, 5th Wash. _.|-=." _ 7° ARES API ee es Arthur D.. Healey, 8th Mass__. |..... _. Aug, A042 [oo one ol Ri Robezt TF. Seerest, 15th Ohio. ~ | oeiivi 2 Ang Ad ae A.D. Banmbart, Jr; 13th Ohio. [= 0% Sept. 0, 04 tia ES Vincent F. Harrington, 9th Towa | ______________ Sept. 5,1942 | Harry E. Narey Frank H. Buck, 3d Calif ______._ Sept. 17,0002 LCor Ee Dd William P. Cole, Jr.,.2d:Md:. oc!20 To Qet.220, 1042 | (Sir. So nih on Charles Y. Faddis, 25th Pa... |: _.“~ Pec = 451042 Toss cna Horry P. Beam, 4thilll. 2) “5 Dee. Gog br wn Ty ioc Philip A. Bennett, 6th-Mo-..-. ii Dee 7,040 oss oon iiss casa James G. Scrugham, at L., Nev__|._._____ "~~". Dee, 0d i Anton F. Maciejewski, 6th II1____|_______________ Poe, 8AM eat a ae ! Appointed by Governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected. 2 Elected Nov. 5, 1940. p 3 Elected Nov. 3, 1942. 4 Was reelected for term beginning Jan. 3, 1941. b Died June 26, 1941, while serving as an appointee. 6 Elected June 28, 1941. ” Elected Sept.-23, 1941. 8 Died Aug. 1, 1941, while serving as an appointee. 9 Elected Sept. 30, 1941. 10 Appointed and subsequently elected to fill vacancy. 7 ¢ PR Ta NOTES CONTENTS (For List of Individuals A Page Academy of Sciences, National _____.___________ 405 Accounting Office, General _:__.._.______.______ 400 Accounts, Bureau of (Post Office Department)__ 340 Addressesof Members... oo od Sia 815 Adjutant and Inspector’s Department (Navy).. 347 Administrations: : Agricultural Research..._l. ii... _. 361 Benneville Power: . ... di cosh Salis iisdogs 356 Civil Aeronautics... .. 5 .oceaeo iodisiabioins 373 Farm: Credit. aul iain os a eardlineg 364 Farm Security. oi. ton ows su ti naguk 368 Federal Home Loan Bank... __._.....___ 409 Bederal Housing oo aa wd o.oo. 409 Bood andiDrug. a 396 o.oolapaian) Food Distribution. ieosi cori one oo Sica vr 366 Food Production...saiiccsosact = 367 Lend-Lease... i-istii-boihaiibagaad beady 313 Petroleum; for War... ....ol. oiioolilisee 318 3h A ST EE A LR A KC RE RE LL TY 318 Public Buildings. ic... bes oaio i dedi. 399 Public:Boads. &..iaunis ani satis 399 ciaboinnt Ruble Werks: = ai Sia ti baat 399 Puerto Rico Reconstruction. _____________.__ 356 Rural Electrification... th oo oo lull 366 Solidi Fuels, for War... ho oil apntouassds 357 Veterans? ool Jf alee el fiona staan 421 Contact offices at Capitol... .......... 277 Tl aE Be Re Re EE a PR En SE 366 Waar Shipping. coievii dna tin Nak asl Joli 317 Work Projects. i seed loipasniiinn fonts 398 ~ Administrative Division (Justice). ___._...._.._ 337 Administrative Office (Navy) _-__..________.___ 342 Administrative Office of the United States Courts. ooo Shi Bolmmbai 438 susie Administrative Services (War). ____._.________. 334 Administrator, Office of the, Federal Works ACONEY. in Et eh ahd 398 Advisory Board for Vocational Education, Federale ov “orLodo ti 396 Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings and Monuments._______ 357 Aeronautical Board, the. __. __ .. .coneooao..l. 385 Aeronautics: Administration, Civil. to... coanilaidanis 373 Board, Civil. cio... oinsnnriiovibe 374 ddan Bureaw ol (Navy)... dilng canto seven 346 National Advisory Committee for____________ 405 Agencies: Agricultural Adjustment... oo ona iuias 367 Bederal'Security. o.oo isebodinadai dnnsd 394 Federal Works_______. SERnR ar 398 National Housing. Lio co in: soninioiatdi 408 Select Committee to Investigate Acts of Executive, Beyond the Scope of Their Authority oo. o.i sumandala 210 Nous: see Index on p. 821) Page Agricultural Adjustment Agency._..___._________ 367 Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry, Bureau 31 HOTA dob it Sy SVE AY Ses CAG CS SL ode 361 Agricultural Economics, Bureau of ___________. 359 Agricultural Research Administration__________ 361 Agricultural War Relations, Office for__________ 359 Agriculture, Department of ___________________. 358 1B YEAR ee Tn 608 Agricultural Research Administration_.._..___ 361 Bureau of— Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. __ 361 Animal Industry oa 362 Dalry INAUSIYY. nse oen ats ooomono aa 362 Entomology and Plant Quarantine ._____ 362 Human Nutrition and Home Economics.__ 363 Plant -Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Bogineering & uence rier ans out... 363 Office of Experiment Stations_______________ 364 Beltsville, Research Center. _ _ _____._.___.____ 364 Bureau of Agricultural Economies __.________ 359 Farm Credit Administration. ________________ 364 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ______ 365 Forest. Service...i Ee a 365 YAbrary Sr hn ah 360 Office for Agricultural War Relations__.______ 359 Office of— Budget and Pinance.....o oo. _-o_o 359 GC. CC. Activities. «oodene vrs 361 le Foreign Agricultural Relations. ____._______ 359 Information... i oi oon oolaiotose 360 Land Use Coordination... oi. 358 Personnels... vis. .iinane ta lado rte 360 Plant and'‘Operations..... oo: oo 2 361 SoHeitor. os rosie saa es ee 360 Rural Electrification Administration. ____. ... 366 War Food Administration... cc. oc... 366 Food Distribution Administration. ________ 366 Food Production Administration. _._________ 367 Agricultural Adjustment Agency _________ 367 Soil Conservation Service. _ ____.__________ 368 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation_____ 368 ? Farm Security Administration_____________ 368 Commodity Credit Corporation____________ 369 Extension Serwiee. oo oc Boor iocaaioo 369 Airlines ticket office. ovooti nn indie t er amen 276 Ale Station, Naval. ooo 0 coc cosmic a ons 346 Alaskan International Highway Commission... 235 Alnska Railroad... on. 0 oa rr a te 356 Alaska Road Commission... 2 =-c-_ _o--C0 356 Alien Property Custodian, Office of. _.._...___ 311 Alley Dwelling Authority for the District of Columbin. oi cogs fii dustin lial 385 Puties of onan oi Sinise 638 F Vv VI : Congressional Directory | X i { | { | ! | 5 f: Alphabetical list: Page Delegates and Resident Commissioners_______ 154 Representatives sie ln oo or ee 147 Senators____ = 145 American Battle Monuments Comimission_____ 385 ETE i a RC i Se aE 639 American National Red Cross__________________ 386 ‘Animal Industry, > 362 Bureanof.____.____::___ Apportionment of Representatives by States, undereacheensus. i. 1} 258 Architect oftheCapitol o_o... 275 Duties of -533 Archives Council, National cx... ___.__ 407 Archives, The National ___ 406 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission. 387 Army Air Forces._____ -333 Army and Navy Munitions Board. .___________ 387 Army Ground Forces — 333 Army Servico'Forees.. __.___. 334 ........._.1... Afmy War College, the. 2. ee 335 Art: Freer Gallery of. _ 418 National Gallery of ____ 418 Arts: Commission of Fine. 389 National Collection of Fine __________________ 418 Assignment of rooms in the Capitol: Basement floor and terrace___________________ 285 " Gallery floor___ 291 Ground floor. -287 Principal floor. 289 Assignments to committees: Representatives and Delegates ______________ 211 Senalorst CoN ee 186 Association, Federal National Mortgage _______ 377 Astrophysical Observatory. _.___________________ 418 Attending physician at the Capitol ____________ 275¢ Attorney General, biography of. _ ______________ 336 Attorney’s Office, United States _______________ 439 Auditorium Commission, Capital . _____________ 233 Authority: ) Alley Dwelling, District of Columbia_________ 385 Federal PublicHousing ~~ 411 Tennessee Valley. _______ 420 War Relocation. _ 316 B Bank, Export-Import_ __ 378 Battle Monuments Commission, American_____ 385 Beach Erosion and Shore Protection Board_____ 335 Beltsville Research Center ____________________ 364): Biographies: Attorney General _ _______ 336 Clerk of the House of Representatives. ______ 270 Justices of the— Court of Claims of the United States. ______ 434 Supreme Court of the United States._..____ 427 United States Court of Appeals for the Districtof Columbia...= 2. 431 United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals__ 433 United States Customs Court. _____________ 435 Postmaster General =... 338 President of the United States________________ 309 Secretary of— Apeleultnre. oy Sn 358 Commerce. -370 | Biographies—Continued. Page Secretary of—Continued. Interior-_...--. 2 350 0 py) ee 0 ee oN SR En 380 Navy 341 Semnle. on a od Ne 263 State. = 393 Treasury. 327 War... HE 331 | Secretaries to the President.__________________ 309 | Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and | Resident Commissioners_ ___ __________ 3 | Sergeant at Arms of the House_ ______________ 271 li | Sergeant at Arms of the Senate_____________._ 266 2 Vice President of the United States.__________ 3 | = | Bituminous Coal Consumers’ Counsel, Office ofthe... 0... hb | | Bituminous Coal Division______________________ 355 | Board of Visitors: IZ Coast Guard Academy.__ 237 3 Military Academy...Cn. oh 236 E 0 Naval Academy. teva moi 0 on 237 ......70o0 fo | Boards: Aoromanbleal: oo ooo aad 0 iS a ER 385 Army and Navy Munitions_____________.____ 387 fa Civil Aeronauties. o_o © 374 Combined Food (United States and Great Briton). ooo. io ip ea 320 | Combined Production and Resources (United States, Great Britain, and Canada)_____ 321 Combined Raw Materials (United States and : Great:Britain).......ioinie 321 oo Combined Shipping Adjustment (United States and Great Britain) ______________ 321 2 Compensation, Navy... ... =r 2° 4 344 Decorations and Medals (Navy)______________ 344 Eeonomie Warfare .._________° 317 Economy, Joint... ito 404 ] Engineers for Rivers and Harbors____________ 335 Examination of Dental Officers, Navy ._______ 347 Examination of Medical Officers, Navy.______ 347 | Foreign-Trade Zones_.___ 400 General, Navy... Zk. 00 343 Governors, Federal Reserve System __________ 393 Hospitalization, Federal__ 391 | § Immigration Appeals (Justice) ______________ 337 Indian Arts and Crafts. s=i852 | Inter-American Defense... __.________ 401 Interior Control (Navy)... .._._ i 3° 343 Investigation and Research—Transportation_ 388 Joint Beonomy. =o 0 oi oii a 404 Joint, the 404 Library of Congress Trust Fund_____________ 279 r Medical Examiners and Naval Examining (Medical). ___ 344 Munitions, Army and Navy______.___________ 387 Munitions Assignments (United States and Great Britain)... Lo. w= CF 320 National Archives Trust Fund_______________ 407 National Labor Relations ___________________ 419 | National Mediation____ 412 National Munitions Control __________________ 413 | National Park Trust Fund __________________ 357 | National Resources Planning_________________ 310 = National War Labor. ...onn.as. 311 Naval Examining (Tiney. __........=i ¢ 344 =~ | Naval Examining (Marine Corps).____________ 348 4 Contents VII Boards—Continued. Page | Bureaus—Continued. Page Naval Retiring: i lo. Co oo Go Dis m logy 344 WOME SE. Shae dba faa SM PE iors 382 Parole (Prisons, Justice). c._ nc. ic lll. 337 Yards and: Docks... oi aani ao JU NE 345 President’s War Relief Control. ___._.________ 318 Production Awards (Navy)... ccoooooeooo 344 Cc Railroad Retirement... ooo.2121 C000 415 Raw Materials Board, Combined (United Cabinet. members, list offic IL io tL LO 308 States and Great Britain) ______________ Sat iCalendar. io i daeee ae 1v Regents, Smithsonian Institution ____________ 417 | California Debris Commission___.__________.___ 335 Boeial Security. |i io ga ditluliSlIl 304 | Canal, The Panama... 0.0.0 0 00000ol 413 Ui Vocational Education, Federal Advisory .____ 396 | Capital Auditorium Commission. ____._________ 233 War Communications... l0lioll Jie. 311 | Capitol: Dutiesof oo. oo HIRI AE HT 538 Aijr-lines tieket office. oo. c aadil lili 0 276 War Produetion= co io ocae oH E 8000000 315 Architect of the— Bonneville Power Administration __.__________ 356 Architeet’siOffice. co 00 Lvs in 276 Botanic Garden, United States. ________._______ 277 House Office Buildings... ____._____.._.. 275 Brazil-United States Defense Commission, Senate Office Building... ____._.______ 275 A Fr TE ra SCC Be GUERRA L38 B EL oon 322 Basement floor and terrace of— Duties of aS cE 543 Assignment of roomson.._.____.______._____ 285 Budget Advisory Committee, War Depart-Disgramol. ou imimBoiuisonil 284 Lond 11S po oR WN TO 1d A (EE LP 335 Building, history and description of. ________ 280 Budget and Finance, Office of ._________________ 359 Gallery floor of— Budget and Reports, Office of (Navy)__________ 343 Assignment of rooms 0.0 Cio ol on... 291 Budget, Bureanofithe.... co ln 0 ll Loi. 310 Diagramiof color on doin Io Basdeg a oi 290 Duties ol... rls ST SATIS 536 Ground floor of— Building Commission: Assignment of rooms on... i. Ca _ Cf. 287 House. Office.i co im adi 233 Pilagramof i. oi oar. IRILL neniinanbibiit 286 Senate OMe... oii loi Say 233 Grounds, Commission on Enlarging the. _____ 233 Buildings Administration, Public. _____________ 399 House Chamber, diagram of... ___.._. 296 Bureaus: Office of— Accounts, Post Office Department___________ 340 Architectiol ic dl ocoe SREES 276 Accounts (Fiscal Service, Treasury).________. 329 Attending physician. os oll Co on Liat 275 Aeronautics Navy)...C. ti lo Lo Uit Ilo 346 Congressional Record... bo. ioc. _.... 275 Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry_____._ 361 Officers of the— Agricultural Economies. _.___.___________._... 359 3207 FTA Sane St RC COAG I pel Le CLL BE 270 American Bthnology.o.. ..L.. ioio _iil.. 418 | Senate. Jill lo Diu mR LR Sats 263 Animal Industry io. Jo ui siii oi 362 1203s [DS £1 LO resins KID The CORON Opie 275 Budget. oo NL SG BU 310 Principal floor of— Census te rr RISL SUS 371 Assignmentiofiroomsion. oC illo Sl 00 289 Children’s. oh. oo nha Ss Dl ells 381 Plagramiol crayito dea niadic Soo ina s 288 Comptroller of the Currency... ______________ 328 Radio To0ms: oti, tot ae SAEs. 276 viacnoiia Customs “ror. ool ro lin In ISR 328 Railroad ticket office. _ oooooiioizioo. 276 Dairy Industry. oi uiies Ltn s i aenn 362 Senate Chamber, diagram and seating Engravingand Printing... oon 20 i ating 330 plane ulate naga Jo doins 292-205 Entomology and Plant Quarantine __________ 362 Melegraphiofficesi i aris tuna Finn 276 Foreign and Domestic Commerce ____________ 371 Telephone exchange. oo. -oiLolaloii 276 loool Human Nutrition and Home Economics. ____ 363 | Censorship, Officeiof... cos -oifoioie2uli 317 iis Internal Revenue... Jiosoils ciel 329: Census Burean =o. oa. oie iio EST 371 Investigation, Federal, Justice________________ 336 | Changes in membership of the Seventy-Tabor Statisties .-2 gris Sond tin 381 seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 111 Medicine and lol S0R8n 346 | Chaplain of the House of Representatives_.._.. 270 Surgery... BIH Ra A Sl Re aie es (4) 354 | Chaplain of the.Senate. i tc ll Zi tii CJ 263 Ent ol aaa 330 | Chemistry and Engineering, Bureau of Agri-INT COlICE sy a a iain am SI EIB 328 cultural. io. osu ale SE 362 NavaltPersonmel: cr aust 344 | Chief Inspector, Post Office Department___.___ 340 Ordnance, Navy... 0... LL liulie. 345 | Chief of Naval Operations, Office of the Com-Pan American Sanitary. ...........iv 413 mander in Chief, United States 0 Fleet, Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engi-and. oo. uaa rsa nd Tinissnme 342 neering. CainsSn nianntigny 363 | Chiefs of Staff, Combined (United States and cL 0 Eh ER es ee aE So BIE OTe ae i 337 Great:Britain) 0 Su cos i vocalsc 320 Public Debt (Fiscal Service, Treasury)... 329 | Chiefs of Staff, the United States Joint. ._______ 404 Reclamation 08s orn aso ooo moan 353 Children’s: Bareayy. ooo.oo 0a. Se on 381 Gods. Ships. oogzeaebniiisyool Sl Ba Lal 345 | Circuit Courts of Appeals of the United States_. 430 — Standards, National... ..... ooo condiliiis: 8721 City posbioffice so. Sort. cofuat a ns old 452 Suppliesiand Aceounts. oi ia ail Lol 346 | Civil Aeronautics Administration. _____________ 373 War Risk Litigation... ...b.co fdas ia, 337 | iCivil*Aeronauties Board: i. ca.oC ois 374 Weather. oro oo pg amnp in gils 373 1 Clvil=Afiairs Division (War)...i. 2st CT. 333 VIII Congressional Directory Page Civil Service Commission... ____..._______ 388 Duties ofi i. ro eelSe te 639 Contactiofficeat Capitol... 277 C0. Civil Service System, Special Committee to INVeSEIgale. oa i Dan deme 184 Civilian Conservation Corps. __.________._______ 396 ALG RREE i TER 672 C. CO. O. Activities, Office of (Agriculture)______ 361 Civilian Defense, Office of ____%_______._________ 311 Civilian Defense, Department of (District of Celumbiny. ctr no a aE 452 Claims, United States Court of. _-______________ 434 Classification, political, of Congress. ___________ 142 Clerk, House of Representatives (biography)... 270 Clerks to House committees. ___________________ 273 Clerks to Senate committees. _________._.________ 264 Club, the ._........_...._..__ 390 Congressional. .. Coal Division, Bituminous... ._.-._......_; .. 355 Coastiand Geodetic Survey... .. il ol. 372 Coast Guard Academy, Board of Visitors to the. 237 Coast Guard (Headquarters), Navy_______._____ 348 College, Army War... oobi iil ntiiranasss 335 Columbia Hospital for Women _________________ 389 Columbia Institution for the Deaf _____________ 397 Combined Chiefs of Staff (United States and Creat Britain)... Stason ....cono... 320 Dutiestofan obs, hn at Crain ii iy 542 Combined Food Board (United States and Great-Brifain).. o.oo...(GL i... 320 Duties of... ....:®8 0 ionBa 543 Combined Production and Resources Board (United States, Great Britain, and Cangag). togE Ea 321 Butles ofr. vo GN 543 Combined Raw Materials Board (United States and Great Britain) oc. oeoweenicool 321 Duties ol... ania ae 543 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board (United States and Great Britain). _______.______ 321 10 HON SS eae ERR SU Pe 543 Command and General Staff School____________ 335 Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations, Office of the_ 342 Commerce Commission, Interstate. ____________ 403 Commerce, Department of. _________.___________ 370 Dutiésiof............ 621 ,Bureau of— Foreign and Domestic Commerce___________ 371 Standards, National... 0 Looe coo 5 372 The Census........-.. ok 371 Civil Aeronautics Administration____________ 373 Civil Aeronautics Board... .___ ___.________ 374 Coast and Geodetic Survey___________.________ 372 Government activities under direction of Secretary of Commerce: Defense Plant Corporation. ___._____.___.___ 375 Defense Supplies Corporation... __________ 376 Disaster Loan Corporation ________________ 378 Export-Import Bank of Washington________ 378 Federal National Mortgage Association_____ 377 Metals Reserve Company__________________ 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ______ 374 Rubber Development Corporation_________ 379 Rubber Reserve Company... ..___.._._ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company ______.____.___ 377 War Damage Corporation. ______.._____.____ 378 Commerce, Department of—Continued. Page Government activities under direction of Sec- retary of Commerce—Continued. Inland Waterways Corporation_______________ 373 National Inventors’ Council ._________________ 374 Patent Ofle0. oan reins eM e 373 Wenther Bureaw. ou. Zouch igs or 373 Commissions: Alasks Road... ou. diauies cousina. 356 Alaskan International Highway_._____________ 235 American Battle Monuments_________________ 385 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. __________ 387 Capital Auditorium. 20.oh a 233 Civil Serviee. oo amb gaa ......0 388 Employees’ Compensation, United States___. 390 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds_______________ 233 Federal Communieations.._ 391 PederalPower...........=r {50 392 = PederabTrade.. 0 io ys Cin 397 TT Ya ME APES ST ie CE 389 Goethals Memorial... i: 5 = ......__ 401 House Office ‘ov. 5 © Building... 233 International Boundary— United States, Alaska, and Canada__________ 402 United States and Mexico. ___.______________ 402 International Fisheries, United States and BT I SE FG 402 International Joint... =~ = ii 402 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries... 403 Interstate Commeree..... oo...= 403 Maritione, ... of Bunn ani Dy aE a 404 Mental Health mao se rele gS wt iol 438 Migratory Bird Conservation_.______________ 235 National Capital Park and Planning_________ 407 National Forest Reservation_____________ Aaa 235 National Historical Publications. _____________ 407 Public Utilities, District of Columbia________ 452 Securitiesand. Exchange... ___.. _.... © 416 Senate Office Building______ SE eA 233 Tariff, United States... 2 20 0 en 419 Territorial Expansion Memorial ______-_______ 237 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial .______________ 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial. ______________.__ 236 Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor_.________________ 237 War Manpower: pan. 0 uni Shai corms 314 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Bomlevard oo ldo nilesng 236 Wayne Memorial...cir nla ... 238 Commissions and joint committees, congressional. 233 Committee assignments: Representatives. ___ io li cael 211 Senators: eiNa aE sa 186 Committees: Aeronautics, National Advisory______________ 405 House— Assienments to. ...o.. 1... i. TEli iE od 211 Clerks to. oc oii eas hl 273 Meeting daysiof: o.oo ove cia oil = 210 Membershipof. «oor.oa te 197 0 Official stenographersto......__.__.._ = 274 Selectandspecial o.oo.hi oa: 209 Joint Economic—United States and Canada__ 319 Joint War Production—United States and Canada... ies Cr 319 Material Coordinating—United States and Comadn........ oc ori eons Erp aiar 319 National. Power Policy... _..... = 357 On Practice (Treasury)... 330 Contents 1X: Committees—Continued. Page Printing, Jolnt oso Le nasa 234 Putiesof in oisaa 534 Reciprocity Information... ...._. i= io... 389 Puatiesiofs. oo i. hdd 643 Select and special— House. ic an SEN a aia 209 IGE RS Re a a SE Na 183: Senate— Assionmentsitol. ci ouitu ade e 186 Cer ES 10. Cs a a Se a Se Sama SESS 264 Meeting daysiol: ox oils oa 185 Membership of..oococ ionic oeiicza 177 Speeialiand select... .....co un tio ios 183 Commodity Credit Corporation________________ 369 Communications Commission, Federal .________ 391 Select Committee to Investigate _____________ 210 Company: Metals Reserve. clo ni sa SR 376 BubbersReserve. ic. oo. Faeroe 377 The REC Mortgage: ox... o.oo cute brig: 377 Compensation Board, Navy________>.__________ 344 Compensation Commission, Employees’ _______ 390 Comptroller General of the United States (General Accounting Office).__________._ 400 Comptroller of Currency-...oovuee......t 328 the oe Conciliation Service, United States. __...._..._.. 380 Congress: ELG1 IA Li RE RT A ele SS Ll 278 Political classifieationiof occaa oo 142 rR ENE TAO SSCSare, 243: Congressional: Apportionment, by States... __.... 258 CID an a a En a CE a en 390: Commissions and joint committees __________ 233 Delegations, by ... i ___..i_. States... 133 Districts, Mapsofs. oodaie 761 Record, officeof, at Capitol... ___............._ 275 Oonservation Corps, Civilian_________________._ 396 . Conservation of Wildlife Resources: House, Select Committee... ____._..____..__ 209 Senate, Special Committee... .........._.-%_ 183 Conservation Service, Soil... ______.______.._ 368 Consulor.officers. ...... co il ovo aa aida 455 Continuous service of Senators... ___.__.____.___ 160 Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, Office ofthe... na Eel 312 Coordinator of Research and Development, Officeof Navy) c= coa 343 Corporation counsel’s office, District of Colum-Inne i eee Le en 449 Corporations: Commodity Credit. o.oo...col 369 Defense Homes... 0... Ln ores 412 Defense Plant o.ooa arash 375 Defensa Supplies... dics 376 voor.Laes Disaster Yoana oo = oi. oe oa 378 Federal Crop -oo... 368 Insurance... Federal Deposit Insurance... _.............. 392 wPederal Farm Mortgage... -. o.oo...... 365 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance. _______ 410 Home-Owners®: Loom... ioe 410 Inland Waterways. 2...a oo 373 Reconstruction Finance... ....._..____ 374 Rubber Developthent. Si. uooouliias 379 ._..... SmalleeWar Plants...= oC ..... 316 WarDamage o.ooori 3781 | Council: Page Federal Five. coo loco laaiida i ni a 399 National Archives. noi oni = .......co.cco 407 | \-National Inventors’... ..__2i....c fio 374 | Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United States... _: i... init 431 | Court of Appeals, United States Emergency..__ 437 Court of: Claims oui mons So 3 0 434 Putiesiofsot a aa 643 | Court of Impeachment, Senate_________________ 249 | Courts, Administrative Office of the United | Btaten: fo. oil a li Tn 438 | Courts, District of Columbia: Court of Appeals, United States. _._______.___ 431 District; United States. io oo oe 4 438 Juvenile, rein it vanLs a 440 Dol Municipal Court. in ooii oan an fini = 440 Municipal Court of Appeals. _.____.___.....___ 440 | Courts, United States: Cireunit-Court of Appeals iccaivuic iiioio inl 430 Claims. ali. i ibaeetabea sob ha es 434 Customs. © oc. ool or es Sse nen ook 435 Customs and Patent Appeals___.._____._______ 433 Emergency Court of Appeals. _________._.._._ 437 Supreme... ool ieiea net tual Tat TE 427 Ba A a I Bl shar a ah 437 | Credit Administration, Farm____._________ ET Credit Corporation, Commodity... .o....__ 369 | Crop Insurance Corporation, Federal __________ 368 | Currency, Bureau of the Comptroller of the. .__ 328 1 Customhouse ......-_...5... 328 (Treasury). i Customs and Patent Appeals, United States Coumrtiol ios snailino 0k 433 Customs, Bureau oli o.oo ciatoga tiniest 328 | Customs Court, United States. _ ooo __ 435 -D | Dairy Industry, Bureawof... outa0 362 Deaf, Columbia Institution for the. _...._..____ 397 | Debates, Official Reporters of: House: i i Fda a 274 BONBLE.. a i al Soom BE TIS 267 | Decorations and Medals, Board on (Navy)_____ 344 | Decorations Board, War Department_____.____ 335 Defense Board, Inter-American. ________________ 401 | Defense Commission, Joint Mexican-United States: ie ad.are as 322 | Defense Homes Corporation_________________.__ 412 Defense, Officeof Civillan..L._ o.oo Loon... 311 | Defense, Permanent Joint Board on____________ 415 Defense Plant Corporation... .._.___ 375 Dutiesiol cian aS Nn 080 aaa | Defense Program, Special Committee to Investi-Ee Les Sl a ra 184 | Defense Supplies Corporation... _____._______.___ 376 Puties of cca suit ioe i i aN dann 631 | Defense Transportation, Office of _____.________ 312 | Delegates and Resident Commissioners: Alphabetical Meters o.oo. haa i inn 2 154 Assignments to committees __.__-____________ 211 Biographies of iu o. cosa io salvean 130 List of, with home post offices and Washing- ton addresses... ii i dn ae. 826 Rooms and telephones of _______________._._.. 299 Service record in Congress. _ cv cecmceeeacmaa-174 7 Votes Cash [071 Lov rnrmanesionbonstinsnmr ohn dh 257 = ) Congressional Directory Page Page Delegations, congressional, by States. _________ 133 | Divisions—Continued. Dental Officers, Board for Examination, Navy _. 347 Petroleum Conservation... .....__.._________ 356 DentalSchool, Naval. t.oiaa.ohio ule 347 Power-@nterlor). 0 Tn AUR vee 357 Departments: Procurement Legal (Navy)... _.__.._.....____ 342 35 Aerionlinre zh io rEa 858°) Procurement, Treasury... ... 0 1 330 5 Commieree: ta a ee ae] 370 Research and Statistics, Treasury. ___________ 328 Interior coho co one Jigen ug SiR Sg 350 Shore Establishments (Navy) ________________ 342 JASEICe oto felis se ra Sn Ram El 336 Saft (War) vos a dl RR OAR 334 LE Ca Aa 0 AL Eh a AT Sp ST SR Sm 380 Tax-Researehl i. coi onic bnar rn Putas 330 ; Navy a a mm Ra he a 341 Territories and Island Possessions. ___________ 355 B : PostiOMiees: ie fos te a aa BS 338 Training Liaison and Coordination (Navy)___. 343 {/ Bate Ns aR a AS 323 Wage and Hour and Public Contaets_________ 381 Treasurys. ROE CL 327 { Document room, House of Representatives. ____ 272 ! Wat en oe rn a a 331 | Domestic Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and.__ 371 i Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal ._______ 392 | Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives____ 271 Description and history of Capitol Building__:_ 280 | Drug and Food Administration________________ 396 | Diagram of the— = Basement floor and terrace of the Capitol_____ 284 E Gallery floor of the Capitol .__________._._____ 290 Ground floor of the Capitol...___. 286 | Economic Committees, Joint—United States & I House Chamber. oem ol 296 andrCanada. oo Se ae nr TA Donel 319 il i Principal floor of the Capitol _ _ _ ______________ 288 | Economics and Statistics Service (Mines) __._.__ 354 Sensie Chamber... lLig 294 | Economic Stabilization, Office of ______________ 312 | 3 I Diplomatic and Consular Service______._________ 455 | Economic Warfare, Board of... _____.__________ 317 if Directorof Defense Add... 0... 335 Dutlesol: io SoaR Bain 541 | Director of vehicles and traffic, District of Co-Economy Board, the Joint. so. ol.1 0 404 5 i hmmbiay = BinaRi ag 450: Education, Offfce'of 0 fui oii 395 1 | Directory ofthe Senate. i... .......... 7% 295 | Electrification Administration, Rural ___________ 366 b Disaster Y.oan Corporation..... .... .° 873 | Embassies, foreign. =r oy 455 | | EE SL Le a es se 633 | Emergency Court of Appeals, United States ___ 437 | Dispensary, Naval. so bl oa aN 346 | Emergency Management, Office for____________ 310 hoo N District Court of the United States for the Emergency War Agencies: ho DPistrict'of Columbia. =F ot 438 Board of Economic Warfare___.______________ 317 | HE Commission on Mental Health_______________ 438 Combined Chiefs of Staff (United States and | District of Columbia: Grogl Britain. 0 lo hrs lem dein 320 i Alley Dwelling Authority. ____________.._____ 385 Combined Food Board (United States and | i City postoffice 0 clo a 452 Great Britain): _~ = 1 i n 320 : | Corporation counsel’s office___..___________.___ 449 Combined Production and Resources Board ] Court of Appealsforthe: -.-_._. ..._.>.° 431 (United States, Great Britain and i Department of Civilian Defense______________ 452 Canada)si oo i na 321 i Director of vehicles and traffic. ______________ 450 Combined Raw Materials Board (United | il District Court of the United States for_______ 438 . States and Great Britain)______________ 321 i i Commission on Mental Health_____________ 438 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board |e i Engineer Department___________._.__.__.___.__ 450 (United States and Great Britain)______ 321 5 I Fire-Department. 1) Wl Conan 8 450 | Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis- i i Governmental ivy iba al ee 447 CHET EN Eb Ee nn ah aE 322 : l Health-Department..._... .o. iol 0 451 | Joint Economic Committees (United States 2 i Juvenile Courts == 0 os 440 and Canada): ool Cll ie TL ae ey 319 i Metropolitan poles nL 451 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- i Municipal: Courtht = ei 440 MIssion on een ah 322 Municipal Court of Appeals__________________ 440 Joint War Production Committee (United Office of United States Coordinator___________ 451 States'and Canada) 2 iio cn. 319 | Ofieers St oF WN RB IN Sa 447 Material Coordinating Committee (United | Origin and form of government_______________ 443 Statesand Canada): =. ~5 0 319 Public Utilities Commission... ___.._._...____ 452 Munitions Assignments Board (United States | Recorderofdeeds. "=~ 0 1 nl 440 and’ Great Britany. oo Li to 320 { i ) Register of wills and clerk of the probate Office for Emergency Management__________. 310 i eoUrt ll eS etal SRE 440 Board of War Communications_____________ 311 : : i Divisions: National War Labor Board.______._________ 311 { Administrative (Justice)... 337 Office of Alien Property Custodian_________ 311 i i | Bituminous@oal. io oon 355 Office of Civilian Defense___________________ 311 Clvil-Afaies, War... 0 0 333 Office of Defense Transportation ___________ 312 | Incentive (Navy) ii to tas od 2343 Office of Economic Stabilization. ___________ 312 ; Eabor Standards: 2/\ 17 C0 Vo ass 381 Office of Lend-Lease Administration________ 313 4 Legislative and Liaison, War_________________ 332 Office of Scientific Research and Develop- i Monetary Research, Treasury... ._._.__. 330 3 TIL01| Sophia ml sabe SR en A 313 ES. Contents X1 8 Page ; Page Emergency War Agencies—Continued. Federal Home Loan Bank System______________ 410 Office for Emergency Management—Con. Duties of. oi. ciibouailois iL uth 0% 705 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Federal Housing Administration_______________ 409 Affairs ooo EC ea aia? 312 Dutiegiof a0 naian sei 3 3s 704 Liomudl Office of War Information______________.___ 313 | Federal National Mortgage Association_________ 377 Smaller War Plants Corporation. ____....__ 316 [Duties of iareiols wis aivseosi iiubionioty 632 War Manpower Commission________.___.._ 314 | Federal Power Commission. ___________________ 392 ‘War Production Board i... i... i zscidiod 315 Dutiesof. co i a nh de relay 651 War Relocation Authority... ______...__. 316 | Federal Prison Industries, Ine., Justice. __.._ 337 ‘War Shipping Administration________._____ 317 | Federal Public Housing Authority_____________ 411 "@ffice of:CensorsbiD.... oi. ool acids 317 Duties:of. oo wi lo ner Bo 709 disliibau Office of Price Administration______._________ 318 Defense Homes Corporation__________________ 412 Petroleum Administration for War. __________ 318 | Federal Register (National Archives). ________ 406 President’s War Relief Control Board. _______ 318 | Federal Reserve System, Board of Governors__. 393 Employees’ Compensation Commission________ 390 Dutiesiof. ianAe 658 Duties of 2: om ralant ital 644 | Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-Engineer Department, District of Columbia____ 450 Hon. di deiantnsumnsiiLng 410 Engraving and Printing, Bureauof ___________. 3360 Dutiesof. G.olaa 707 ia Enlarging Capitol Grounds, Commission on.._. 233 | Federal Security Agency. ____._________________ 394 Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Bureau of_. 362 Dutiesof aos. ne or Seheen 661 Ethnology, Bureau of American______.__________ 418 Civilian Conservation Corps... __.___.._.__._ 396 Executive Agencies Beyond the Scope of Their Columbia Institution for the Deaf. ___________ 397 Authority, Select Committee to Inves-Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Educa-tigate Actsof .-.. ono h Jn nnsia, 210 fiona. et A Elminai Be 396 Executive Office of the President. ______________ 309| Food and Drug Administration. _____________ 396 Duties of. (desl dub olin agate 536 Freedmen’s Hospital 2...oi il cl. 397 Bureau of the Budget... so. idiisivacelilonllil 310 Howard University. coll cli bl ladonlog 397 Liaison Office for Personnel Management.___ 310 Public Health Service... ... icici2 lex 395 National Resources Planning Board. ____ 11810 National Institute of Health ______.________ 395 The White House Office... .uieniiilLad 309 St. Rlizabeths Hospital. .......ooocii 397 Personneliof.. asad oi ed Salis Da 310 Social Security: Board: i... aia iin 394 Secretaries to the President, biographies of. 309 | © United States Office of Education. ___________ 395 Experiment Stations, Officeof _________._______ 364 | Federal Trade Commission. __________..___..___ 397 Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups... .. 157 | Dutiesiof. 2 ge sedi 673 Export-Import Bank of Washington____________ 378 | Federal Works Agency... iii. ndouaoiolng 398 Dutiesiol en iioais li Ran iii] 633 Duties aula clniieny 680 of... coouiDid Extension Service, Agriculture Department.___ 369 Federal Fire Couneil.. cir i ao Lo. ioigtl 399 ; Office of the Administrator... coco. o_. 398 F Public Buildings Administration. ____________ 399 Public Roads Administration. ______________ 399 Farm Credit Administration___________________ 364 Public Works Administration. _______________ 399 Farm Mortgage Corporation, Federal ___________ 365 Work Projects Administration _______._______ 398 Farm Security Administration_________________ 368 | Finance Corporation, Reconstruction ..________ 374 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education. 396 | Fine Arts, Commission of. ____________________ 389 Federal Board of Hospitalization_______________ 391 Dutiesrof.c alr Sonia oii Yaaigazasdg. 641 Duties of iv is or PRET 647i Fire:Council, Federal... _...... civ: zoo oss 399 Federal Bureau of Investigation _______________ 336 | Fire Department, District of Columbia_________ 450 Federal Communications Commission___.______ 361 | First Assistant Postmaster General ____________ 338 Dutiesiof: 00 crease Dr Sit ban Aas 647 Fiscal Service, Treasury. ..... ci... .iooo ool 329 Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service. _._.__ 301 | Fish and Wildlife Service. ...........i io... 355 Select Committee to Investigate _____________ 210 | Floor leaders, House of Representatives. .______ 270 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation____________ 368 | Folding room of the House... ......._.___....... 271 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. _____ 392 | Folding room of the Senate..........._-ill..__ 266 Duticglofi. 3 is. aaah aaa 650 | Food Administration, War__________.__.______. 366 Federal Expenditures, Joint Committee on Re-Food Board, Combined (United States. and duction of Nonessential_________________ 239 Ph Gros Dr a RE oo : ood an rug Administration... .....z __..._ Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation___________ 365 DIE OF «Loria cai ons Ton eg 672 Feaeral Fire Coundll. cost soe 399 | Food Distribution Administration. _____.._____ 366 Hr EE TIED 683 | Food Production Administration _________.____ 367 Federal Home Loan Bank Administration _____ 409 | Foreign Agricultural Relations, Office of________ 359 Putiesolee sear bis capil dil 705 | Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of___ 371 . Federal Home Loan Bank System__._________ 410 | Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service ___.______ 301 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-Foreign consular officers in the United States... 469 BION oatn i. lra 410 | Foreign diplomatic representatives in the United States ol ae nl 455 oo XII Congressional Directory Page Page Foreign Service of the United States. _________. 501 House committees—Continued. Foreign-Trade Zones Board... ____..____._.____ 400 Meeting'daysiof ir io Lh: noiac oo 210 Dutlesof 00 an Bi aod 683 Membership of ______ 197 Forest Reservation Commission, National _____ 235 Official stenographers to. 274 Forest. Service: Zo Losi tL me aR Ls 365 Select and special ____ 209 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General .__._______ 339 House Office Building Commission_____________ 233 Ereedmen’s Hospital... ota sl alice) 397 House of Representatives: reer Gallery. of Arb. ci. uiiivivmnanminoSiadir. . 418 Miscellaneous officials__ 275 Fuels in Areas West of Mississippi River, Special Officersiofai on 70430 -270 Committee to Investigate Production, Personnel of: @ Transportation and Use of... 185 Chaplain___ 270 Clerks to committee. _ 273 G Document room ___ 272 Galleries: Folding room ______ > 21 Poriodical Press. nine a wenn 757 Majority ____. 270 corm Leader. DOS aeSn ee 727 Minority Leader. _ _ 270 Radio Correspondents’. ......coemvonncndann.-753 Office of the— ? Gallery of Art: Clerk __ 270 FT A LE BN nl BA TN 418 Doorkeeper 271 Nablonale cn a LS aaa 418 counsel i Dag ion 274 Legislative cianbir Garden, United States Botanic ._._____________ 277 Official Reporters of Debates of ___________ 274 Gasoline.and Fuel-Oil Shortages, Special Com-Parliamentarian__ 270 mittee to Investigate. ______.___________ 184 Postmaster. il oir piel 272 General Accounting Office. eee 400 Sergeant ab Arms... oo. pia mit oa 271 Dutiesol.: oon anh aise bi 684 Speaker... ationalEvel eanlii 270 General Board (Navy).._._ HE 343 Stenographers to committees of ____________ 274 General Counsel for the Treasury, Office of ____ 327 classification oil 1 142 Political of. =utiil= General Tand:Office ©... Si lpi” 0d 351 Special and minority employees. ._.___.______ 272 General Staff, War Department ________________ 332 Housing Administration, Federal .______________ 409 Geological Survey. _ 2 352 Howard University. ic oc io 0 397 iiasuasiis Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ___________ 236 Human Nutrition and Home Economics, Goethals Memorial Commission. _______________ 401 | Buveawol olan LE 363 Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines. __ ~ 356 |, I + Government of the District of Columbia________ 447 Government Printing Office. __________________ 277 Immigration and Naturalization Service._.____. 336 Governors of the States and Territories. ________ 259 Immigration Appeals, Board of ________________ 337 Grazing Service __________ 355 Impeachment trials by the Senate______________ 249 Incentive Division i (Navy)... 343 H Independent offices, agencies, and establish- ments_____ ERRSe iy 385 Headquarters Marine Corps. 347 Dugles ofan nmin LAs 638 Health and Safety Service (Mines) _____________ 354 Index, individual... si... i no iy 827 Health, Commission on Mental . _______________ 438 Indian Affairs, Officeof oon nol. i 351 Health Department, Districtof Columbia______ 451 Indian Arts and Crafts Board. ____._____________ 352 Health Service, Public... fer oy gn 0 395 oo...oenviall of 827 Individual-index.' oc Highway Commission, Alaskan International _ 235 Industrial Chemistry, Bureau of Agricultural History and description of the Capitol _________ 280 and. uD sans ee TE Ta, 361 Holmes Devise Committee, Oliver Wendell.___ 238 Industrial Mobilization Board __________________ 335 Home Loan Bank Administration, Federal ____ 409 Information, Office of, Agriculture Department. 360 Home Loan Bank System, Federal _____________ 410 Inland Waterways Corporation______._________ 373 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation______ ELL CR TRS. 410 Inspector General, Office of (War)_.________-____ 332 Duties of ____ 4 708 Institution, Smithsonian. _.........._= 0: 417 Home post offices of Senators, Representatives, Inter-American Affairs, Office of the Coordi- ete., with Washington addresses ________ 815 13 LHR SORA Ie Ne 312 Home, United States Soldiers’ _________________ 419 Inter-American Defense Board _________________ 401 Hospitalization, Federal Board of .______________ 391 181 n3n UR dt i ne NE De 685 Hospitals: Interior Control Board (Navy)... _________ 343 Columbia, for Women. 389 Interior Department oo“0 tC Le 350 Freedmen’s___.. ~ 397 DULIOSIO0: Se hin he abn a me ed 599 Naval __ LET Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic St. Elzabethe. |... 00. 00 eo isaints Sag vy 397 Sites, Buildings, and Monuments______ 357 Hour and Wage and Public Contracts Division. 381 Alaska Railroad... Lo. 0. J Ce wal iy 356 House committees: Consolidated Purchasing and Shipping Unit. 356 Assignments to watt i Alaska Road Commission o_o.= = = = 356 Clerks to. XTRA SIE rF Contents XI11 Page Page Interior Department—Continued. Joint Committee—Continued. Bonneville Power Administration ______..___ 356 On Reduction of Nonessential Federal Ex-Bureau of— penditures. i... Neae Es Fa 239 Mines vei ee hd ait 354 On Selective Service Occupational Deferment Economics and Statistics Service. ._...___ 354 of Officers and Employees of Legislative Fuels and Explosives Service. ____________ 354 Branch. osc snes Samar 2h aedesiig 239 Health and Safety Service. _______________ 354 Onthe Library 0. cocccionGels Sun. 234 RegionaltOMiees.. oi oo nsdn du tiased 354 Patiegiol i: oo rne ii i 534 Resources and Laboratory Service. ..____ 354 { Joint Economy. Board,.thes .. _.:. 404 -...._.. Reclomation.c.-odeieloon lo cau inl 353 | Joint Economic Committees (United States Division of Power. cicloteiitificaa iin 357 and Canada)... Lae. on sul gia Lara 319 sad Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 355 DPutiesiof. cacti tosiaauiiannd os 542 Fish and Wildlife Service... ___....__ 355 | Joint War Production Committee (United General Land Office. coeds 351 Statesand Canada)_... oo coolio 319 Geological SULVeY. ode iia 352 Dutiesof. sire belirii on tidiune sinus 542 Grazing Service. oan tl Llib aa an 355 | Judge Advocate General, Navy. ___..._._._.____ 342 Indian Arts and Crafts Boards ites iii. 352:| Justice, Department of... i. Co ia lio bo clas 336 National Park Service. coc.cicnciciaiiinaae 353 DPutiesiof. itn osdiis iin alos 575 ‘Washington Liaison Office... __.______.___ 353 Administrative-Division =... co acs belal 337 National Capital oc contain. 353 Burean-of Prisons... oo. oo lalilel 337 Parks... National Park Trust Fund Board____________ 357 Board of Parole’ saci bapa ia 337 Sopiioiiniai National Power Policy Committee ___._______ 357 Bureau of War Risk Litigation _._.____________ 337 Office of Indian Affairs. gio coo iivo ibe. 351 Federal Bureau of Investigation. ______._______ 336 Officeof the Solicitor =...Yo ou i 351 Federal Prison Industries, Inc________________ 337 = Petroleum Conservation Division____________ 356 Immigration and Naturalization Service._____ 336 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. 356 Board of Immigration Appeals_____________ 337 Solid Fuels Administration for War__________ 357 | Justices and officials: PerritorialiQffeialssil oli ar nada tei Tunak 356 Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Government of the Commonwealth of the United States sada oriinius Losin, 431 Philippines Lo: soe sialonlous 356 Courttef Claims. =. ro Fling ss 434 th Internal Revenue, Bureau of __________________ 329 Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, United Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee_. 234 States._._. 433 International Boundary Commission: Customs Court... : 435 United States, Alaska, and Canada. ______.__ 402 Emergency Court of Appeals. ______.__.._._.._ 437 Dtiesi0r a erly LOSS Supreme Court, United States___________.____ 427 United States and Mexico...cicilic 402 Tax Court... 437 0. Dutiesiof -zs. atc oc soudendblLooe 686 | Juvenile Court. . 440 International Exchanges, Smithsonian.__________ 418 International Fisheries Commission, United L States and Canada... Es 402 Labor, Department of. 380 International Highway Commission, Alaskan... 235 Duties of. SEC 634 International Joint __. i... 402 Bureaw of Labor Statistics Ts dae 381 Commission... iis Duties of... Ed a yy 687 Children’s Bureau.___ his 381 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-Conciliation Service, United States. __________ 380 miseion priregen Eee Es a 403 Division of Labor Standards......._._.______. 381 Interparliamentary Union... Skis paki 25 Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divi-Interstate Commerce Commission. __...ooceeooo 403 SORE. =i gubad akin ll 1 381 Women's Burcan... : 32 rinNational. Loo Liaiatesetenl goa | ; - Investigation and Research—Transportation, Labor Relations Board, National TRTRET CIEE 2 se pdeeieiSionkane pie shor Stantaion, Divinon of oo oT abor Statistics, Bureau of. 5 Investigation, Federal Bureau of. ____._________ 336 Lond Ome: Gonoral See 351 J Land Use Coordination, Office of .______________ 358 Joint Board on Defonse, Permancht. ooo. dbads 415 Legislative and Liaison Division (War). ._____. 332 JOO Board, the -oC. ate apenas 404 Legislative Counsel: Joint Chiefs of Staff, the United States. ........ soe | House 2 Joint commissions: Senate. 267 Brazil-United States Defense. ooo ooo. 392 | Lend-Lease Administration Officeof __________ 313 THerNAtIoNAl. 7 is a st i bE 402 | Lend-Lease Liaison Office (Navy).._._._._______ 343 Mexican-United States Defense. — — ooo. 392 | Liaison Office for Personnel Management ______ 310 Joint Committee: Duties of ._. 5636 On Internal Revenue Taxation ______.....__. 234 | Library, Department of Agriculture _.__________ 360 Dutiesiof el cid la anal lade 533 | Library, Franklin D. Roosevelt. _____________._ 407 On Printing tot oo sy Sad ay 234 | Library, Joint Committee on the ______________ 234 Dublegofi os ae i aan on 534 | Library, Trustees of Franklin D. Roosevelt... 407 XIV Congressional Directory Page Page Library of Congress: Personneliol.. il aan ani nl 278 Mrast-Pund Beard. i -.......-Cooo ila. 279 Loan Corporation, Disaster...2 _ 378 Loan Corporation, Home Owners’. _____________ 410 Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, etc., with home post offices. ._.___.___ 815 M Majority Leader (House), Office of. ________.___ 270 Maps of congressional distriets._________________ 761 Marine Barracks. 2: 0. Caoateniiaso 348 Marine Corps, Headquarters. ___________._______ 347 Maritime Commission, United States. __._._____ 404 Putlegiols. io lo gna)givin an 697 Marshal’s office, United States. ________________ 439 Material Coordinating Committee—United Statesand Canada...w/o x 319 Dutlesof ovengal a 542 SE a Medals and Decorations, Board on_____________ 344 Mediation Board, National ..___________________ 412 Medical Center, National Naval _._____________ 346 Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Board (Medieal)u tu. . o0oos 344 Medical Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 347 Medical Research Institute, Naval_____________ 347 Medieal School, Navale [Dl wf ao ond = 8) 347 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of ______________ 346 Meeting days: House committees 210 Senate committees.. 185 Members’ addresses... uaedai i 815 Members of the Cabinet, list’of_________________ 308 Members’ rooms and telephones 297 Membership: House committees.__ es 107 Senate COMMITS... nite yin enna 177 Membership changes of the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. _..__________ III Memorial Commissions: Arlington Amphitheater__ . 387 General Anthony Wayne... _-..___... _._. _._ 238 Goethals: =o... rl ena 401 Thomas Jefferson.___ x ee 286 United States Territorial Expansion_>________ 237 Mental Health, Commissionon________________ 438 Metals Reserve Company 376 Dgtieg of one foe inn aes 631 Metropolitanpolice-©...0 one "5 451 Mexican-United States Defense Commission, Joint--= rt i as ee el 322 L2H ESR ate Sh el i Lh pal 543 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission_____ 235 Military Academy, Board of Visitors___________ 236 Military Academy, United States. .____._______ 335 Military Missions. =. 335 Military Police Board. =. iia ol 335 Mines, Bureag of ire tm Sa ea a 354 Minority employees (House) __________________ 272 Minority Leader (House), Office of _____________ 270 Mint, Bureawefithe = oonoum ib 330 Miscellaneous officials of the House. ____________ 275 Mississippi River Commission______.___________ 335 Monetary Research, Division of ________________ 330 Monument Society, Washington National _____ 423 Monuments Commission, American Battle_____ 385 Mortgage Association, Federal National _______ 377 Mortgage Company, RPGC =: on 377 Motion Picture Review Board_________________ 335 Municipal Court. 440 Municipal Court of Appeals. __________________ 440 Munitions Assignment Board (United States and Great Britain) a= w 0 SSiegin 320 Duties of .__ 2542 Munitions Board, Army and Navy._.____.________ 387 Munitions Control Board, National .___________ 413 Museum, National z 418 N Narcotics, Bureau of. 120 wiles 7 sii Ne Tes 328 National Academy of Sciences._________________ 405 National Research-Counefl 2: " -2 = = 405 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 405 Duties of. Li __ 700 National Archives Couneil . ._________________._ 407 National Archives, The... .. tL . nl tii 7 406 Putiesof iti es NER RE BNE 701 Franklin D. Roosevelt Library_______________ 407 National Archives Council .__..______________ 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board________ 407 National Historical Publications Commission_ 407 Trustess of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board__________ 407 National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Prac- BIO er Na ER SIR 335 National Bureau of Standards_______.___________ 372 National Capital Park and Planning Commis- SION. woolEi NR ae ST 407 Dutiesof i. cools RANI 702 National Collection of Fine Arts________________ 418 National Defense Program, Special Committee to Investigatethe. .... ii odio 0 184 National Forest Reservation Commission______ 235 National Gallery of Arb. il ioe wo Ni @ 418 National Historical Publications Commission__ 407 National Housing Agency... ___________________ 408 Dutiesiof iA Tinh al Sali ia 703 shia Defense Homes Corporation. ________________ 412 Federal Home Loan Bank Administration___ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System__________ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpo- yooI NAR RCS CE SRE Ta IY pe 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation__________ 410 Federal Housing Administration____________ 409 Federal Public Housing Authority ___________ 411 Defense Homes Corporation. __________ wo. 419 Office of the Administrators. ______________ 408 National Institute’of Health ____________________ 395 National Inventors’ Couneil_.__..__.___. 374 National Labor Relations Board _______________ 412 National Mediation Board =... 2... 412 Duties of. 5. Goat Risenia} 709 National Monument Society, Washington______ 423 National Mortgage Association, Federal ._______ 377 National Munitions Control Board_____________ 413 National: Museam. 2. Sis oon aus ia a> 418 National Naval Medical Center___________.____ 346 Page Page ¥ National Park Trust Fund Board___________.__ 357 National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments, Advisory Board on_______ 357 National Power Policy Committee. ____________ 357 National Research Council ____________________ 405 National Resources Planning Board____________ 310 Duties ofits Ror aa Ioan t ir °F 537 National War Board...____..___ 311 Labor I DUIS Of aii SSR 0) 538 National Zoological Park..._________________.__ 418 Naturalization Service, Immigration and.______ 336 Naval Academy, Board of Visitors_____________ 237 Naval Afr: Station... cio seca clos Saasaiigiis 346 Naval Dental Sehool. o.oo i oo 347 frointe Naval Dispensary...uiinSiiil 2 346 Naval Examining Board (Line). _____.__.______ 344 Naval Examining Board, Marine Corps..._.___ 348 Naval'Hospital =. 0 digo nl iio ll Suiaiaiog 347 Naval Medical Center, National___ ________.__. 346 Naval Medical Research Institute ...._________ 347 Naval Medical School... .cooioso lenis 347 Naval Operations, Office of the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief Of Sa a LL nal an aan 342 Naval Personnel, Bureau of ._______________.____ 344 Naval Research Laboratory... __________________ 346 Naval Retiring: oo...uhaicg 344 Board...... vi Navy Department.... cidio sii ... io 341 Datiesiof. can dl isin CSIR 584 -Bureau of— Aeronautics... coco paren ree sn sme 346 Medicine and Surgery... ______.. 346 Naval Personnel. ooiocdusasloioni 344 soi i Ordnance. iho tani Ale dose bo LON 345 Ships. -on eal sara a 345 Naval Research Laboratory. __._________ 346 Supplies and Accounts... ...... coi... 346 Yards and Docks... o_o. ooooaiidiia 345 Coast Guard (Headquarters). __-_ooo__..____ 348 Executive Office of the Secretary... _______ 342 Administrative Office... v1. iousi 30 342 Board on Decorations and Medals_ _______._ 344 Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Board (Medical)____._______ 344 Board on Production Awards. _____________ 344 Compensation Board... -io... vise 344 Division of Training Liaison and Coordina- {1 1111 Ea ee SE Ce Se up LE Ts Me 343 General Board.ti oo oiooiaiiinT 343 Theentive Division. Loi soy coca saaciis 343 Interior Control sc coiaiiai 343 Board... Lend-Lease Liaison Office. __________._______ 343 Naval Examining Board (Line) ____________ 344 Naval Retiring Board... cfco rs Sui a:0 344 Office of— Budget and. oii vas ido Reports... 343 Coordinator of Research and Develop- Mele: Sie Soli nda oe ee 343 Petroleum Reserves. o.oo... i. 343 Procurement and Material ______________ 342 PublicRelatlons. ro 0. imi): 342 The Judge Advocate General _____________ 342 ‘War Savings Bonds... 0... ouiiioiiiant 343 Procurement Legal Division... __..___...__. 342 Shore Establishments Division... _______..__ 342 Transportation Braneh'o ic.i oo 343 Navy Department—Continued. Headquarters Marine Corps___....o__._______ 347 Adjutant and Inspector’s Department______ 347 Marine Barracks... oo 348 ianesieit Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps)... 348 Paymaster’s Department_____________._____ 347 Quartermaster’s Department________ Erg BN 347 The Commandant’s Office... ____.._. 347 National Naval Medical Center__.___________ 346 Board for Examination of— Dental Officers... coe i UriElNTIT 347 Medical Officers. = licilionoiicg 347 Naval Dental School... _...__ lo... iil .. 347 Navel Hospital cccoicios toaSiUiinse qui 347 Naval Medical Research Institute. ________ 347 Naval Medical 'Sehool_ =. ilo iiscial 347 Naval Air .... sani =__ Station... 346 Naval Dispensary... ui ioui iin iii 346 cnlaoi Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C_. 346 Office of Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations.__ 342 Related activities...iaburiiieg CCl 349 Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C____ 346 Networks, stations, and services represented in Radio Correspondents’ Galleries_____. 754 Newspapers represented in Press Gallery_______ 737 News Photographers Association, White House. 749 (0) Observatory, Astrophysical ______-_____________ 418 Office for Agricultural War Relations. __________ 359 Office for Emergency Management. ____________ 310 Dutiegef. ol el irmariiim 538 Board of War Communications..._____________ 311 National War Labor Board ___________-__._____ 311 Office of Alien Property Custodian.___________ 311 Office of Civilian Defense... ._._.____.____ 311 Office of Defense Transportation. ____________ 312 Office of Economic Stabilization______________ 312 Office of Lend-Lease Administration_____.____ 313 Office of Scientific Research and Develop- Ment, Loa adnLE SE BE 313 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Alalrs. oR 312 Office of War Information. ci. ......._....: 313 Smaller War Plants Corporation_____________ 316 ‘War Manpower Commission_________________ 314 War Production oo.asl 315 Beard. Loo War Relocation Authority... _......_._.__. 316 ‘War Shipping Administration _______________ 317 Office of— Administrator, Federal Works Agency_______ 398 Administrator, National Housing Agency.___ 408 Alien Property Custodian___________________. 311 Dutiesof........ T&L olneiiese 538 Bituminous Coal Consumers’ Counsel________ 413 Dutiesof. co. EEO 711 Budget and Finance (Agriculture) __._._______ 359 Budget and Reports (Navy)...__ 343 Censorship. ieei rE 317 Dutiesof....5... di iiaala 541 0. C.C. Activities... co sci ims 000 361 Chief Inspector, Post Office Department... _._ 340 Civilian Defense...LL 0 a 08 0. 311 Dutlegiol. ir. ala areal, ae 538 XVI Congressional Directory Page Office of—Continued. Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs________ 312 Duties of. aie. Lon lialshy] 539 Coordinator of Research and Development NOVY La ara Sl ne rn LBA Defense Transportation. oo oii. oo i eat 312 Dutiesof Ci Wiss pinata yt tril 539 Eeonomie Stabilization: li oi chee Sag! 312 Dutiesof =. il alt Teo dR Lip Tames 539 Bdueation hs... coil co at nr oy omit Trin 395 Duties of. noid ane sm SS Ene 669 Experiment Stations... Loo ilo Lu Ld 364 First Assistant Postmaster General __________ 338 Foreign Agricultural Relations. ______________ 359 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ________ 339 General Counsel for the Treasury_____________ 327 Indian Aflodrs. of. Laganala en 351 Information, Department of Agriculture______ 360 Inspector General, War... ...0 Localesfo 332 Judge Advocate General, Navy. __________.___ 342 Land Use ......_door: 358 Coordination. ooo: Legislative counsel: HOUSE: So at Na ss ha hee 274 Senate lo i cde Fail Son dn nde 267 Lend-Lease Administration. ____________.____ 313 Dutiesioli Se iii Bidridvin 539 alsa Personnel, Department of Agriculture._.__.___ 360 Petroleum Reserves __ ___._____ 343 (Navy)... Plant and Operations... ox oso ool. 361 Postmasterofthe House... =... i... 0 272 Price. Administration... ool ospirseSrnsios iol 318 Dutiesof SorinFaas nts 541 cu Procurement and Material _ ______.._____.... 342 Public Relations (Navy). ©... su... 342 Scientific Research and Development. _______ 313 Datiesiof Lo oneal mela an neg 539 Second Assistant Postmaster General_________ 338 Solicitor, Agriculture 2 2:05; 360 Department... Solicitor, Interior Department____.___________ 351 Third Assistant Postmaster General _________ 339 Treasurer of the United States________________ 329 United States Attorney... ______._ __.___._.. 439 United States Coordinator. ____._._.________.___ 451 United States marshal.c oo oo or oa 439 WarlInformation: ©. Ci coimonh 313 Patiesiof: uo Jo eshaae Se ag) 539 War Savings Bonds, Office of (Navy)___._____. 343 Office of the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations. _ 342 Offices, agencies, and establishments____________ 385 Officers of the— ny ON a ESSE 1D 270 Benatel. iniiaod he lenin ant ban 263 Officials, Territorial iiiioing,oy 356 n. al Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.._. 238 Ordnance, Bureau of, Navy... ________._____._ 345 Origin and form of government of the District of Columbia... 0 o iRSoNs 443 P Pacific War Council (duties). _________________ 541 Panama Canal, The to Loc i sono 0 413 Pan American Sanitary Bureau_-____.__________ 413 fe Duttesot oia allan 711 Page Pan American Union : ERI BY | Dutlesiof=i: Soil nin le ef Nida 712 Park and Planning Commission, National Capi-bali ll eet en TY ly SAT ie 407 Park Service, National. ilocos Ji nl an 07 353 Parliamentarian (House), Office of the__________ 270 Patent Appeals, United States Court of Cus-tomsand. co. lan ie 433 leninUT Patent: OMe ios ria ont ri ei 373 Paymaster’s Department (Navy). ______.________ 347 Periodical Press __._ _...... “757 Galleries... List of persons entitled to admission__________ 757 Rules governing admission to_________________ 758 Permanent Joint Board on Defense_____________ 415 Dutiesiof —.. 2% oo Uraaiagenet © 712 Personnel Management, Liaison Office for______ 310 Personnel, Office of, Department of Agriculture. 360 Petroleum Administration for War_____________ 318 Patios of os sida gain realli bl 3 542 Petroleum Conservation Division (Interior).___ 356 Petroleum Reserves, Office of (Navy). ____.____ 343 Philippines, government of the Commonwealth_ 356 Photo:News:Boardit | oni” hatin? 001 7 335 Photographers Association, White House News_ 749 Physician at the Capitol, attending_____________ 275 Plant and Operations, Officeof.________________ 361 Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural En- gineering.a Ta vey Tl 363 coos aanaiit Plant Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and... 362 Police: Capo vo eSSE 275 Metropolitan 3 --451 Political classification of Congress... ________ 142 Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. at Capitol. ________ 276 Postmaster General, biography of _ __________ ~.. 338 Postmaster of the House____ 272 Post office, city... 452 Post Office Department. _ 338 Dutiesof ..___.I 579 Bureau of Accounts. ______ 340 First Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 338 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ._______ 339 Office of the Chief Inspector__________________ 340 Second Assistant Postmaster General _________ 338 Third Assistant Postmaster General _________ 339 Post office of the Senate... ulin 0 to 266 Post-War Economic Policy and Planning, Special Committeeon. -._____._________ 185 Power Administration, Bonneville. ____________ 356 Power Commission, Federal. 392 Power, Division of _ __ Oi 357 Power Policy Committee, National ___________ 357 Practice, Committee on (Treasury) ____________ 330 President of the Senate. _ 263 President of the United States, biography of___ 309 President pro tempore of the Senate____________ 263 Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Con- gresses coincident with their terms. ____ 260 President’s War Relief Control Board _________ 318 Duties of _ 4 _ 542 Press Galleries: -~ List of persons entitled to admission to_______ 727 Newspapers represented in___________________ 737 Rules governing admission to___.______________ 747 Price Administration, Office of. _.______________ 318 Contents XVII Page Page Printing, Bureau of Engraving and ____________ 330 | Printing, Joint Committee on. . «ome ccceeceeee 234 Duties of . 534 Printing Office, Government___________________ 277 Prison Industries, Inc., Federal, Justice. _______ 337 Prisons, Bureaw of... 2 silico 337 Probate Court, Register of Wills and Clerk ofthe i nnaA en 440 Procurement and Material, Office of __.________ 342 Procurement Division, Treasury...__ 330 Procurement Legal Division (Navy). _.____.__. 342 Production and Resources Board, Combined (United * States, Great Britain, and Canada) ____ 321 Production Awards, Board on (Navy).___..__-. 344 Public Buildings Administration. ______________ 399 Duties of facie i Cn oni aa 681 Public Contracts and Wage and Hours Division. 381 Public Health Service... i cae oil die 395 Duties of ____ WE 667 National Institute of Health _________________ 395 Public Housing Authority, Federal .____________ 411 Public Relations, Office of (Navy)... ---____-_. 342 Public Roads Administration. ____________-___ 399 A DPutiesof....... £-27681 Public Utilities Commission, District of Co- lumbia______ 452 Public Works Administration. ______________.___ 399 Duties of _________ 4 681 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration.___ 356 Q Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and Plant__ 362 Quartermaster’s Department (Navy)_____.__.__. 347 R Radio Correspondents’ Galleries... .__...__._ 753 List of persons entitled to admission to_.__.___ 753 Networks, stations, and services represented ~ tah UN i eae TER eel 754 Rules governing admission to___.______.______ 755 Radio rooms (Capitol)... cesinnusnaudeng 276 Railroad, The Alaska... anninanc aban il 356 Railroad Retirement Board. ______ _____.__.___ 415 Dutiesiol cova i naar 712 Railroad ticketoffice......c5 cova 276 Raw Materials Board, Combined (United States and Great Britain). _____________ 321 Reciprocity Information, Committee for________ 389 Reelgmation Burean o.oo one 353 Reconstruction Administration, Puerto Rico:._ 356 Reconstruction Finance Corporation___________ 374 FRA I PES ORAS CO Te a LL 630 Recorderof deeds... oo... iiilai 440 Red Cross, American National. ________________ 386 Register of Wills... ote oc Nee 440 Regular and special sessons of Congress, list of__ 243 Reporters of debate: Ea ek OE ei Ae ra 274 Sengbe. Soave do So ad a La 267 Representatives: Alphabetieal listiof on so, occasThu 147 Apportioned to the several States under each census 83317°—T78-1—2d ed.——2 Representatives—Continued. Assignments of, to committees________________ 211 Biographies of... saniaon 3 ooo ng List of, with home post offices and Wash-ingion addresses... .......c.0z 818 ain Rooms and telephonesof-.....____...________ 299 Service of, showing Congresses in which it has beenrendered......conuiioliiniia ils 163 Votes east for: tr. olan cnn lini es Sar ny 251 Research Administration, Agricultural. ________ 361 Research and Statistics, Division of. ___________ 328 Research Center, Beltsville_.___________________ 364 Reserve System, Federal. ______________..... 393 Resident Commissioners and Delegates: Alphabetical Hist... c=. lo Zodaiiniiss 154 Assignment to committees. _____.___________ 211 Blographies.of .. «. so. oli. retinol 130 List of, with home post offices and Washing- ton addresses... ual so sn idag og 826 Rooms and telephones of. ______._._ ______.____ 299 Service record in Congress. ___________________ 174 Votes cast o.. 257 for... icawitmtaiiarioocy Resources Planning Board, National ___________ 310 RFC Mortgage Company..__....._._occooee-. 377 Putiesol ooSed annie oS 632 Road Commission, Alaska _-.._.._.....__..__._ 356 Roads Administration, Public__________________ 399 Rooms and telephones: : Representatives. .__.____ SS ae A 299 TTT] HT, Re COIS CO nal 11 S00 Ge RAT, 297 Roosevelt Library, Franklin D_____.___________ 407 Trusteesof. o.oo oa ELSIE 408 Rubber Development Corporation. _____._______ 379 Pubiesiol i ra LITE, 633 Rubber Reserve Company... _____.____ 377 Puties of. ~ aii ne atin EIT 631 Rules governing admission to— Periodical Press Galleries... __.c............. 758 Press'Gallerles. o.ooJi ional id 747 Radio Correspondents’ Galleries _____________ 755 Rural Electrification Administration __________ 366 S St. Elizabeths Hospital... ..... 00.0.0. oo. 397 Salmon Fisheries Commission, International PacliG. inn Ee 403 mendSh Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Fed- OPAL co dh hE ee en A LY 410 Scientific Research and Development, Office of. 313 Seating plan of the House, diagram of __________ 296 Seats.ol Senators aid ioe ns =... 292-295 Second Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 338 BeereliRervice Rea LS i Sa 328 Secretaries to Senators. oo. oi a... 268 Secretaries to the President, biographies of. ____ 309 Secretary of— Agriculture, biography of...............__._.C 358 Commerce, biography of... __...... 370 Interior, biography of»... o.ooZo. oo 350 oo Labor, DIography: Of... . cone emdamnrwie tne. 380 Navy, blography.of. atc oo Co cr oia: 341 Senate, biography aie. of... cacemscaaasbia 263 State, biographyof.... oo. ._-ci i ged 323 Treasury, biography iol 2 327 of... .c.-soataoez War, biography of. oe o-oo -asdasa Ula ot 331 XVII Congressional Directory Page Page hoki Securities and Exehange Commission___________ Duties of ioimurassstoyag oho aii do Security Administration, Farm_________________ Security Agency, Federal ..________.._____...__._. Security: Board, Social... ais a niin. Select and special committees: House. ___._ Sellizseerinlin | oadiieate onto Semate oF oC NLohialisewdTe Selective Service Occupational Deferment of Officers and Employees of Legislative Branch, Joint Committee on___________ Selective Service System... _____.__. Senate: ¥ Chamber, dlagramiof 2 isontos DivectorVaof. «7...he Er Cousi Office Building Commission. _.__.__.__...____ Personnel of— @haplain.cog footy. nol Seiad So aa Clerks to committees. ... sibs0 Folding room... 20 niin. berlaime Office of the— Legislativecounsel............ 0. io 0. Presidents iio 0 Lise d etait anos Secretary... phenuss negtonnl Sergeant at Arms... oo ono Official Reporters of Debates of ________.____ Post office: =. oil ait Satis ohio ds oy President pro tempore... o_o... Secretaries itoiSenators_ oiiii iio Political classification of... _..___si.i2 5 Special sesslonsoi_ oc. foi. oun SN Senate committees: Assignments tol. Ciaici sider Clerksito i... oie BNE Meeting days of. ...-c oa uli sions 0 Membership. ofc. icra cc SESH Special and select. oo Joo io tlm Senators: : Alphabetical listof. . ........... 0 Cilio r Biographies of zoinlos) lanhiona ool lie Continuous service of... oo io iio. Expiration of terms of service, by groups_____ List of, with home pest offices and Washing-ton addresses... .. il ios coin a0 Rooms and telephones of. ____________________ Seeretaries-to oo cil... 0. eff Votesieasbforzucse. Coo ol gn ha a Sergeant at Arms: House of Representatives, biography ofliiiig Senais, biography Of Se el A Conciliation, United States. __.__.___________. Extension, Agriculture Department__________ Piseal, Preasury oo. i vast soils Fishand Wildlife... © =F ois Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service... __._ Foreign, United States_..___.__._..__._______ --Forest... rr re Grazing oo... teHeImmigration and Naturalization. _____. National Park. |... ..... ouiipaefg PubliecHealthy.o...c. vo oo ric Susan ols Soll Conservation... . 15 tos 0 ia SUPDIYaCWar st... ... ac Cie 416 | Service and terms in Congress: 716 | <.Delegates i. olin ooo deere oeln ety 174 368 Representatives... o_o. 0 manana 163 394 | Resident Commissioners... ___.._______.____ 174 394 Senators Continuous service. 0 160 ........= 209 Expiration ofterms.. iitoa cal 157 183 | Sessions of Congress, list of. ____________________ 243 Sessions of the Senate, special, list of____________ 248 Shipping Adjustment Board, Combined (United 239 States and Great Britain)______________ 321 315 | Shipping Administration, War____________ 317 Ships, Bureawof....o te. sof Lariat 345 294 | Shore Establishments Division. ___________ 342 295 | Silver Committee, Senate Special ________ 184 233 | Small Business Enterprises, Special Commit- tee to Study, etc. (Senate)__________‘ 184 263 | Small Business, Select Committee on Ors 210 264 | Smaller War Plants Corporation. _________.____ 316 266 Dutlesof. oi Sopa nts 540 tasionin,, Smithsonian Institution SR SL RIO TRO 417 267 Dutiesof Lilo. Jrironiithe afd snail dais 718 263 Board of Regents, personnel of. _____.________ 417 263 | © Establishment, personnel of. _______._______ 417 266 Branches under direction of: 267 Astrophysical Observatory .._._.__________ 418 266 Bureau of American Ethnology... ___.__ 418 263 Freer Gallory-of Art i -io:ti J write oil 418 268 International Exchanges... ____._______ 418 142 National Collection of Fine Arts_.__________ 418 248 National Galleryof Art... =. =: 418 National Museum. 00 wen 418 7-50 186 National Zoological Park__..___________..____ 418 264 | Social Security Board... __. 394 185 Duatlegof lo a oo ih ian 662 177 | Soil Conservation Service... __________________ 368 183 | Soldiers’ Home, United States....___.._._______ 419 Solicitor: 145 | Agriculture Department______________________ 360 3 Interior Department_.__._ =F 351 160 | Solid Fuels Administration for War... .__.____ 357 1567 | Speaker of the House of Representatives. __ 270 Speaker, officoofthe-0 "= 7} Zl on 270 815 | Special and minority employees of the House... 272 297 | Special and select committees: 268 Hongo ssokn ui ves von tion J i bo 209 250 Senate... ionaaaiv oman p R20 WEES 183 Special sessions of the Senate, dates of. _________ 248 271 | staff Divisions Wary. Li iesnn 334 20 Standards, National Bureau of..________________ 372 334 | State delegations in Congress_...._..___________ 133 380 | State Department... ...._.__.__________________ 323369 Duties of ooo 543329 (i-Related activities. .--Jai i 326 355 | States and Territories, Governors of the________ 259 391 | Statistical information ___________________-_. 243 S01 | statistics, Bureau of Labor... 381 30 Stenographers to House committees ___________ 274 355 ; 336 | Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of (Navy) _____ 346 353 | Supply Services (War)... ....-......20i07 334 0 1 395 | Supreme Court, United States. ___._________ 427 368 Biographies-of the justices. _.__..______.______ 427 334 Residences of the justices and officials _______ 429 Union, Pan-American... o_o United States Territorial Expansion Commis-: 237 Vehicles and traffic, District of Columbia, directorofie is ci No nr ar nn 450 Veterans’ Administration... 421 to Dutiesol he ra ee a 723 Tiaisonofficesiat Capitol =... coe 277 Vice President of United States, biography of __ 3 Vice Presidents and the Congresses coincident withitheirterms. vii ion tonto a. Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission. ____ 237 Vocational Education, Federal Advisory Board. 396 Votes cast: Delegates and Resident Commissioners EIR, 257 Senators and Representatives. ________._.._._.___ 250 Ww Wage and Hour and Public Contacts Division _ 381 War College, Army. oo. n= 335 War Damage 2-2 Coc: 378 Corporation... Dutiesof:: cei. oo roooeel 633 War Department... oo indi lio nille 331 Duties ol a nanSe GS Army AdrRorees ada O 333 Army Ground >. L.A: 333 Forces...» Army Service Forces. ro c.. oo Ti nda 334 Army War = ft Sooo 335 College...ode General Staff. _________ ERETU MOTE 332 Civil Affairs Division oo. oo. oo oanse 333 Legislative and Liaison Division.._________ 332 Office of the Inspector General ___________.__ 332 Related activities...=i oreo Ze . 335 Three Principal Commands. _ ooo --333 Army Air. Forees. ho iota yar nine, 333 Army Ground Forces... . CC ri Co 333 Army Servico Pores... o.oooof 334 Administrative Services. _________________ 334 Stafl-Divislons. =. oo Tu. isana 334 Supply. Services...Litiii cos 334 War Department Boards, Exempted Stations, Military Missions and Commissions___. 335 ‘War Department General Staff _ ______________ 332 Office of the Treasurer of the United States. 329 War Food Admimistration. 0...= 2c 366 Office of General Counsel for the Treasury... 327 War Information, Officeof... ---___-~:0 ~_-.C. 313 Procurement Division. _ o-oo 330 ‘War Labor Board, National... __:>__-_-._ 311 SeerelService =... .ioto 328 War Manpower Commission_________.__.______ 314 War Savings Staff... ~~ Lf. 329 Dutlegiol sn. =r rr 540 Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate. __--_-249 Selective Service System _ ____________________ 315 Trust Fund Boards: War Production Board... =o oni oo. 315 Library of Congress... --. > conn.iasoo 279 Dudes ol cr Se ee 540 National Archives oi. oii aiin rin nine 407 Liaison offices at Capitol...“=z ok i 277 National Bark: = = i iiocgiaaient. 357 War Production Committee, Joint—United Statesand Canada: oC:oro 0 oa 319 War Relief Control Board, President’s_________ 318 War Relocation = 316 U Authority...CC Duties of ns anes ms Sa Sa 540 Investigate.oo. i. II 209 War Risk Litigation, Bureau of _______.___..__. 337 Un-American Activities, Special Committee to War Savings Bonds, Office of (Navy). _...__._. 343 og £ Union, Interparliamentary..__.__. ee 235 War Savings Staff (Treasury). --ooccoeeoaoo-329 Uniform Board, War Department.__________.____ 335 XX Congressional Directory Page War Shipping Adminstration. _________________ 317 Pullesiol at dood jolveni nr a Baila, 541 Washington’ addresses of Senators, Representa-tives, ete., with home post offices. ______ 815 Washington City postoffice.. ._._....._...._.. 452 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ____.__________ 236 Washington National Monument Society.______ 423 Washington Navy Yard and Station___________ 346 Waterways Corporation, Inland________________ 373 Wayne Memorial Commission, General An- hony oe aes rae i 238 Weather Bureau... o.oo ots ie v6 Satis 373 Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol_______ 276 White House 0 0hin yi Office... 309 Dutlesiolt =f. io aibirinr 536 Joma White House N ews Photographers Association _ 749 Membersirepresented, Ui. NT 749 Servicesirepresented,. 0 toretoed 751 Page Wildlife Resources, Select Committee on Con-servation of: Houseriom o.ooona ots 209 ha Bemate oo UES Cel rs a a 183 Wildlife Service, = = 7 Fishand.-.... 355 Women's Bureau =ubo 382 Wool, Special Committee to Investigate Pro- duction, Transportation, and Market-Te TRE TE SE 183 Work Projects Administration__ _______________ 398 Puatlesiol wl corp peilame ils 680 Works Administration, Public. _____________.._ 399 Works Agency, Federal. ob 0 lias 398 Y Yards and Docks, Bureau of. _ _________________ 345 Z Zoological Park, National .______________________ 418 | | 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 or (Secretary of Agriculture, 1921-24) and Carrie May (Brodhead) Wallace, and i 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; i 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 Board of Economic War-fare; member of War Production Board. ALABAMA (Population (1940), 2,832,961) 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 b 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; reelected November 3, 1942. 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 3 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- 1 -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. ro ogmaphics are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Represent atives. 3 4 : Congressional Directory ALABAMA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, Washington, and Wilcox (7 counties). Population (1940), 297,473. 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 MecDuffie; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, “Lowndes, Montgomery, and Pike (9 counties). Population (1940), 356,553. : 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, 1927-28, and as chairman of the Pike County Democratic executive committee, 1927-38; 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 Meclnvale, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lee, Macon, and Russell (10 counties). Population (1940), 303,837. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; is chairman of the Banking and Cur-rency Committee of the House. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Autauga, Calhoun, Clay, Coosa, Dallas, Elmore, St. Clair, and § Talladega (8 counties). Population (1940), 283,622. { 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; Committee service: Post Office and Post Roads 1935, Judiciary since; elected March 6, 1936, by the House of Representatives, one of the managers on the part of the Houge for the impeach--ment trial of Halsted L. Ritter, then judge of the United States District Court : ALABAMA Biographical 5 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chambers, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Ran- dolph, and Tallapoosa (8 counties). Population (1940), 294,539. 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- oy ber 6, 1934; reelected to Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bibb, Chilton, Greene, Hale, Perry, Shelby, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa (8 counties). Population (1940), 251,757. 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; i 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, 1941-42; member of board of governors of Jefferson Islands Club; member of the Methodist Church, Masons, p 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blount, Cullman, Fayette, Franklin, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Walker, and Winston (9 counties). Population (1940), 285,138. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; Baptist and Mason. 3g EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and ) Morgan (7 counties). Population (1940), 300,112. ! JOHN J. SPARKMAN, Democrat, of Huntsville, Ala., was born near Hartselle, Morgan County, Ala., December 20, 1899; attended the country schools, Morgan y 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, untilhe 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, b Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Military “Affairs Committee and of Special Committee Investigating National Defense Migration. Congressional Directory ARIZONA NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNnrty: Jefferson. Population (1940), 459,930. JOHN PARKS NEWSOME, Democrat, of Birmingham, Ala.; born in Mem-phis, Tenn., on February 13, 1893; attended the public schools, and Battle Ground Academy, Franklin, Tenn.; captain, Infantry, Fifth Division, American Expeditionary Forces, World War I; president-treasurer, Watts-Newsome Co., Birmingham, Ala. (wholesale electrical appliances and supplies); married Miss Lula Lewis Harris, of Macon, Ga.; past chairman of Appeals Board No. 2, State of Alabama, Selective Service System; past member of the Board of the Jefferson County Antituberculosis Association; past disaster chairman and board member of the Jefferson County Chapter of the American Red Cross; past commander: of General Gorgas Post, No. 1, of the American Legion; past president of the Jefferson County Council of American Legion Posts; past vice commander of State Department of the American Legion; past president of Birmingham Kiwanis Club; cochairman of Birmingham Community Chest; past chairman of Finnish Relief; past chairman of Greek Relief; Mason, Knight Templar, Shriner, Elk, and Eagle; member of the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Protestant Episcopal Church; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. ARIZONA (Population (1940), 499,261) 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 Pottawatomie 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 6 years as 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, 13 years old; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE—Population (1940), 499,261. RICHARD FIELDING HARLESS, Democrat, of Phoenix, Ariz.; born in Kelsey, Tex., August 6, 1905, the son of William C. and Mary Pennington Harless; . came to Thatcher, Ariz., at the age of 12, where he completed his grade and high school education; received an A. B. degree from University of Arizona in 1928; taught school for 2 years before entering the University of Arizona Law College, from which he received the juris doctor degree in 1933; immediately entered ARKANSAS Brographical private practice of law in Phoenix; appointed assistant city attorney of Phoenix in 1935; appointed assistant attorney general of Arizona in 1936; elected county attorney of Maricopa County in 1938; reelected county attorney in 1940; married to Margaret Harris, of Auburn, Wash,, in June, 1934; father of two sons; wife died in 1939; elected November 3, 1942, as United States Representative in the Seventy-eighth Congress to serve in Arizona’s newly created second seat. 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; 3 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, reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. ARKANSAS (Population (1940), 1,949,387) 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. JOHN L. McCLELLAN, Democrat, of Camden, Ark.; born at Sheridan, Grant County, Ark., February 25, 1896; first lieutenant of A. S. S. C. during the first World War; lawyer; member of Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Con-gresses from the Sixth Congressional District of Arkansas; elected United States Senator November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES / FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1940), 423,152. 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 succeeding Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Prairie, Randolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties). Population (1940) 222,974. WILBUR D. MILLS, Democrat, of Kensett, Ark., was born there May 24, 1909; attended Hendrix College and Harvard Law School; married Miss Clarine Billingsley, of Kensett, May 27, 1934, and they have two daughters—Martha Sue and Rebecca Ann; lawyer; admitted to practice law before Supreme Court of Arkansas in November 1933, the Supreme Court of the United States in 1939; served as county and probate judge of White County, Ark., 1934 to 1938, inclu-sive; Methodist; thirty-second degree Mason; elected to Seventy-sixth and suec- ceeding Congresses. Congressional Directory ARKANSAS THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1940), 177,476. J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT, Democrat, of Fayetteville, Ark.; born in Sumner, Mo., April 9, 1905; moved with his parents, Jay and Roberta Waugh Fulbright, to Fayetteville, Ark., in February 1906; attended the public schools; was gradu-ated from the University of Arkansas with B. A. degree in 1925; Rhodes scholar, Oxford University, England, receiving B. A. and M. A. degrees in 1928; and graduated from George Washington University with distinction in 1934 with LL. B. degree; attorney, United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, 1934-35; instructor in law, George Washington University and University of Arkansas, 1935-39; president of the University of Arkansas, 1939-41; president of the J. H. Phipps Lumber Co. and Fulbright Investment Co.; lives on a farm near Springdale, Ark., and has been engaged in farming most of his life; married Miss Elizabeth K. Williams in 1931; two children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1940), 242,165. 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 Cravens; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; member Judiciary Committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties). Population (1940), 293,023. BROOKS HAYS, Democrat, of Little Rock, Ark.; born in London, Ark., August 9, 1898, son of Steele and Sallie Butler Hays; attended Russellville, Ark., public schools; received A. B. degree, University of Arkansas, 1919; LL. B. degree, George Washington University, 1922; served in the United States Army Septem-ber to December 1918; married Marian Prather, of Fort Smith, Ark., February 2, 1922; they have two children, Betty Brooks and Marion Steele; assistant attorney general of Arkansas, 1925-27; Democratic national committeeman for Arkansas, 1932-39; held administrative and legal positions in the Department of Agricul-ture, 1936-42; president of the Arkansas Conference of Social Work 1932-34; member of board of trustees of George Peabody College, National Policy Com-mittee (vice chairman), Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Alpha, and Phi Alpha Delta fraternities, the American Legion, and Lions €lub (district governor, 1926-27); Baptist; Mason; elected November 3, 1942, to Seventy-eighth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1940), 303,301. WILLIAM FRANK NORRELL, Democrat, lawyer, of Monticello, Ark.; educated in public schools of Arkansas, College of Ozarks, Clarksville, Ark., and Arkansas Law School, Little Rock, Ark.; served as State senator from 1931-39; in military forces of United States during the first World War; married Catherine Dorris; has one daughter, Julia Jean, age 8; elected to Seventy-sixth and each -succeeding Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead, Lafayette, Nevada, Ouachita, and Union (11 counties). Population (1940), 287,296. 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 CALIFORNIA Biographical opposition; member of the Baptist Church, a Mason, Knights of Pythias, and Lions International Civic Club; married to Miss Ruth Ross, May 9, 1934, and they have one daughter—Carolyn Marie; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition. CALIFORNIA (Population (1940), 6,907,387) 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. 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 (1940), 308,986. 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, 1940, and 1942; chairman of the Democratic caucus of the Seventy-third Congress; chairman, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, beginning with the Seventy-fiftth Congress. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (18 counties). Population (1940), 218,002. [Vacant.] THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Napa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solano, and Yolo (5 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 409,404. J. LEROY JOHNSON, Republican, of Stockton, Calif.; born in Wausau, Wis.; graduate of University of Wisconsin (B. A.) and University of California (J. D.); lawyer; city attorney of Stockton 11 years; referee in bankruptcy 2 years; during first World War served as pilot in 104th Aero Squadron; participated in St. Mihiel and Argonne drives; received the Silver Star Medal; married Elizabeth Alpers, of Westfield, N. J.; two children— William A., 20, now in United States Air Corps, and Mary E., 14; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA [ FOURTH DISTRICT.—C1TY OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 19, 20, 21, and 22. Population (1940), 316,914. THOMAS ROLPH, Republican, of San Francisco, Calif.; born in San Fran-cisco, Calif., January 17, 1885. FleTH DISTRICT. Cory OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 23, 24, 25, and 26. Population (1940), 17,622. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA, ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 13, 14, and 15, Population (1940), 356,509. : ALBERT E. CARTER, Republican, Oakland, Calif.; elected to the Sixty-ninth and each succeeding Congress. : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, and 18. Population (1940), 56,956. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; chairman, Select House Committee Investigating National Defense Migration; member of the Committee on the Judiciary. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: San Benito, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz (4 counties). Population (1940), 343,180. 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, Carol, and Nancy; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress; member of the Committee on Naval Affairs, Ny Is THICT. Coven Fresno, Madera, Merced, and Stanislaus (4 counties). Population BERTRAND W. GEARHART, Republican, of Fresno, was born at Fresno, Calif., on May 31, 1890, the son of John Wesley and Mary Elizabeth (Johnson) Gearhart; educated in the public’ schools at Fresno and at the University of 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-ary 1919, in both the United States and in France; a founder of the American 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. TENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Kern, Kings, and Tulare (3 counties). Population (1940), 277,444. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Monterey, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura (4 counties). Population (1940), 246,518. GEORGE E. OUTLAND, Democrat, of Santa Barbara, Calif.; born in Santa . Paula, Calif., October 8, 1906, son of Elmer G. and Stella Faulkner Outland; was graduated from Santa Paula (Calif.) Union High School in 1924, Whittier (Calif.) College in 1928 with A. B. degree, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., in 1929, with M. A. degree in government, and Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in 1937, with Ph. D. degree in education; also attended University of Southern California; assistant director of boys’ work, Hale House, Boston, Mass., 1928-30; director of boys’ work, Denison House, Boston, Mass., 1929-33; and of Neighborhood House, Los Angeles, Calif., 1933-34; supervisor of boys’ welfare for. Federal Transient Service of Southern California, 1934-35; director, New Haven, Conn., Community College, 1935-36; instructor, Yale University, 1935-37; on faculty of Santa Barbara (Calif.) State College, 1937-42; author “Boy Transiency in America’ and many articles; wife, Ruth Merry Outland, of Oneida County, N. Y.; two children—George, 13, and John, 1; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. ETH DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 49, 50, and 53. Population (1940), 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 College, 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 University); elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in November 1936 and reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 54, and 56. Population (1940), 229,998. NORRIS POULSON, Republican, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born and reared on a ranch in Baker County, Oreg.; educated in the Baker schools and Oregon State College; resident of California since 1923; certified public accountant; member of Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA Los Angeles and California State Society of Certified Public Accountants; Masonic Lodge, Lions Club, and First Congregational Church; married to Erna June Loennig, daughter of a pioneer family of Oregon, and has three daughters—Erna Bea, Patricia, and Norissa; elected to the California Legislature in 1938 and reelected in 1940; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, defeating incumbent by 5,517 votes in a District which has a 2 to 1 Democratic registration. Tren DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 44, 55, 62, and 64. Population 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 assess-ments as the issues; in Los Angeles City Council led the successful fight against those who were opposing the development of the city’s power enterprise; married Lillian C. Cummings, of Los Angeles, on June 21, 1911; one daughter, deceased; author, with Lillian C. Ford, of The Foreign Trade of the United States, published by Chas. Scribner’s Sons in 1920 and used in many colleges as a. textbook; travel and economic research in Europe, in 1927; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by 11,717 majority; vote cast: Thomas F. Ford, Democrat, 47,368; William D. Campbell, Republican, 35,698; scattering, 53; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, by 63,365 votes, to Republican opponent’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 Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth -Congresses. ALES DISTRICT Lo ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 57, 58, 63, and 65. Population 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 59, 60, and 61. Population (1940), 330,350. WILL ROGERS, Jr., Democrat, of Culver City, Calif.; born in New York City, N. Y., October 20, 1911; son of Will Rogers and Betty Blake Rogers; grandson of Clem Vann Rogers, a leader of the Cherokee Nation; was graduated from Beverly Hills (Calif.) Grammar School, Beverly Hills High School, and Stanford University in 1935; publisher of Beverly Hills Citizen since 1935; married Collier Connell at La Luz, N. Mex.; commissioned second lieutenant, Field Artil-lery, R. O. T. C., in 1935; commission expired in 1940; enlisted as private in United States Army in June 1942; commissioned second lieutenant, Field Artillery, United States Army, in July 1942; assigned to Eight Hundred and Ninety-ninth Tank Destroyer Battalion in August 1942; elected as a Representative from the Sixteenth California District to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 46, 66, 67, and 68. Popu- lation (1940), 392,616. : CECIL R. KING, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Fort Niagara, N. Y., January 13, 1898; educated in the public schools of Los Angeles; business-man; married; one child; war veteran of the first World War; member of the California State Legislature, 1932-42; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on August 25, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, ; CALIFORNIA B 1ographical 13 Re DISTRICT.—Lo0sS ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population 1 ’ ’ : N 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; member of the Naval Affairs Committee. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0S ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 40, 51, and 52. Population (1940), 249,469. CHET HOLIFIELD, Democrat, of Montebello, Calif.; born in Mayfield, Ky., December 3, 1903, son of Ercie V. and Bessie Lee (O’Brady) Holifield; educated in the public. schools of Arkansas; resided in Montebello, Calif., since 1920; engaged in manufacturing and selling of men’s apparel for the past 22 years; member of the Christian Church; delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1940; married Miss Vernice Caneer and they have four children— Lois Anita, Betty Lee, Willa Mae, and Jo Ann; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, as the first Representative from the newly reap-portioned Nineteenth Congressional District of California, receiving 34,722 votes to his opponent’s 20,033. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—Lo0sS ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population (1940), 352,326. } CARL HINSHAW, Republican, of Pasadena, Calif.; born in Chicago, Ill., July 28, 1894; son of William Wade and Anna Williams Hinshaw; éducated 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—Lo0S ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly district 41. County of San Ber-nardino. Population (1940), 194,199. HARRY R. SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Yucaipa, Calif.; born in Mobile, Ala., January 10, 1885; 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Imperial, Orange, and Riverside (3 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 296,024. JOHN PHILLIPS, Republican,” of Banning, Calif.; born in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., September 1887; lived in St. Davids, Pa., and Cleveland, Ohio; attended the public schools and Haverford (Pa.) College, holding teaching fellowship; special work or summer schools in Cornell University, University of Pennsylvania, and in Germany; during the first World War served in the United States Army, 1917-19; has lived in California since 1924; member of the Banning City Council, 1930-32; served in the California Assembly, 1932-36; member of the State senate from 1936 until his resignation to represent the Twenty-second Dis-trict in Congress; married; three children; member of the Triangle Society, San Francisco Press Club, Adventurers Club, Masonic fraternity, Commonwealth Club, American Legion, Kiwanis Club; member of the Presbyterian Church; member of the United States delegation to the XIth World’s Dairy Congress in Berlin in 1937; traveled in England, France, Italy, Germany, Russia, and other countries, 1908, 1910, 1913, 1935, and 1937; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 3 Congressional Directory COLORADO TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTY: San Diego. Population (1940), 289,348. 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 Annap-olis, 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 Statés 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. COLORADO (Population (1940), 1,123,296) 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 produce business, a farmers’ cooperative, for 10 years at Craig, Colo.; served four terms in the Colorado House of Representatives, one term as Lieutenant Governor, and 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; reelected on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. EUGENE DONALD MILLIKIN, Republican, of Denver, Colo.; born at Hamilton, Ohio, February 12, 1891; son of Dr. Samuel H. and Mary Millikin; graduated from Law School of University of Colorado in 1913; executive secre-tary to Gov. George A. Carlson, Colorado, 1915-17; enlisted as a private in Colo- ' rado National Guard in 1917; served in United States with Thirty-fourth Division and in France with Forty-second, Sixth, and Seventh Divisions and Fourth Corps, and with Army of Occupation in Germany with Sixth Division; was com-missioned captain and major of Infantry and lieutenant colonel of Engineers; graduated from General Staff College at Langres, France; received Pershing cita-tion for distinguished and meritorious service; associate in law and business of the late United States Senator Karl C. Schuyler from 1919 to latter’s death in 1933; married Mrs. Delia Alsena Schuyler on January 30, 1935; no children; appointed United States Senator December 20, 1941, by Gov. Ralph L. Carr, Colorado, and elected November 3, 1942, to complete term of the late Senator Alva B. Adams expiring January 3, 1945. : REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City AND COUNTY OF DENVER. Population (1940), 322,412. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. CONNECTICUT B rographical 15 SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 (1940), 319,067. WILLIAM S. 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; from 1919 to 1923 was associated with Colorado Agricultural College as county agriculturist, special-izing in boys’ and girls’ 4-H Club work; secretary, Colorado State Farm Bureau, 1923; twice elected to Colorado State Legislature, 1924-26; manager, Standard Mercantile Co., Fort Collins, Colo., since 1927; private secretary 1939 to Governor Carr of Colorado; 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, I. O. O. F., Rotarian; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress by more than 30,000 majority in general election, November 3, 1942, carrying all 19 counties in the Second Congressional District of Colorado. 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 (1940), 308,970. 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 Republican 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, and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 172,847. 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; educated in public schools of New York, the Hill School, Pottstown, Pa., and Princeton University; married Aileen Miller, June 24, 1908; children, Wilson Miller and Robert Fay; cattle raising and ranching, Colorado, since 1907; member Colorado House of Representatives, 1916-20, Colorado Senate, 1920-24, 1938-40, 1940 to December 9, 1941; Lieutenant Governor of Colorado, 1922-24; Republican candi-date for Governor, 1930; member Seventy-seventh Congress (1941-43), Fourth Colorado District; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress (1948-45); member State Board of Agriculture, 1932-40, 1940-48 (vice president since 1938); Mason (Knight Templar and thirty-second degree); Episcopalian; club, Rotary. CONNECTICUT (Population (1940), 1,709,242) SENATORS FRANCIS MALONEY, Democrat, of Meriden, Conn.; born in Meriden on March 381, 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. Congressional Durectory CONNECTICUT 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; University Club of Hart-ford; of Hemlock Grange, Portland; Knights of Columbus, fourth degree; member of Hartford County, and of Connecticut 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 LJ AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 1,709,242. BOLESLAUS JOSEPH MONKIEWICZ, Republican, of New Britain, Conn. was born in Syracuse, N. Y., August 8, 1898; educated in the elementary schools and high school; was graduated from Fordham University Law School with degree of LL. B.; attorney at law; member of the board of compensation and assessment in 1927; served as clerk of the city and police courts of New Britain from July 1932 until August 1933; in 1933 revised the ordinances of the city of New Britain; appointed prosecutor of the police court of New Britain in April 1937, and served until elected to Congress; was in the Columbia University Naval Unit from late September 1918 until December 24, 1918; member of the Connecticut State Guard; married and has four daughters; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-eighth Congresses. . FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNnrty: Hartford. Population (1940), 450,189. WILLIAM J. MILLER, Republican, of Wethersfield, Conn., was born in North Andover, Mass., March 12, 1899, the son of James B. and Katherine S. Miller; attended the public schools of that town and Lawrence, Mass., enlisted as a private, September 1917, in the Aviation Section, United States Army, Signal Corps; served in France from November 1917 to April 1919; received flying training in France, qualifying as a military aviator; commissioned as .a second lieutenant, Air Service (flying status); injured in airplane crash in 1918 and as a result both legs were later amputated; past department commander and past national executive committeeman, American Legion, Department of Connecticut; member Wethersfield Rotary Club, Wethersfield Country Club, and American Legion; married Marguerite M. Parrish, of New London, Conn.; served as a member of the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties). Population (1940), 269,312. JOHN DACHER McWILLIAMS, Republican, of Norwich, Conn.; born in Norwich, Conn., July 23, 1891; son of the late John and Elizabeth Ann (McClure) McWilliams; attended Norwich Free Academy and was graduated from Mercers- burg (Pa.) Academy in 1910; during the first World War served 18 months in France with the Twentieth Engineers, United States Army; associated with the building industry all his life, first with Peck-Mc Williams Co. and later with the successor of that firm, the John D. McWilliams Co., builders; selectman of the town of Norwich, 1935-42; married Miss Ethel Viola McClafferty, of Norwich, the daughter of the late Edward J. and Elizabeth Ann (Bryce) McClafferty; one son, John Graeme (deceased), one daughter, Elizabeth Ann Sullivan, and two grandchildren; member of the American Legion, Forty and Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, B. P. O. Elks, Masonic fraternities, being a thirty-second degree Mason, Nemrod Grotto; chairman of Court of Honor, Boy Scouts; member of Duwell, Tannery, and Thamesville Athletic Clubs, Norwich and New London Chambers of Commerce, and the Greenville Congregational Church; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. THIRD DISTRICT.—NEwW HAVEN COUNTY: Towns of Bethany, Branford, Cheshire, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Milford, New Haven, North Branford, North Haven, Orange, ‘Wallingford, West Haven, and Woodbridge. Population (1940), 323,756. RANULF COMPTON, Republican, of Madison, Conn.; born in Poe, Ind.; graduated from Howe Military School at Howe, Ind., in 1899 and attended DELAWARE Bb tographical 17 Harvard University, class of 1904; engaged in banking and finance; captain, Infantry, New York National Guard, 1912-16; captain, Infantry, United States Army, July 1916—March 1918; captain and major, Tank Corps, April 1918-August 1919; went overseas with A. E. F. in December 1917; captain, Three Hundred and Sixty-ninth Infantry; assigned to Tank Corps, Bourg, France, serving as captain and chief instructor Tank School; served for a time with the French tanks; commanded Three Hundred and Forty-fifth Battalion, First Brigade, United States Tank Corps, in battles of St. Mihiel and Argonne; deco-rated, Purple Heart, United States, Legion of Honor, France, and Conspicuous Service Cross, New York State; now holds rank of Major, United States Army, retired list; military secretary to Gov. Nathan L. Miller of New York, 1920; deputy secretary of state of New York, 1921-22; executive secretary and treasurer, Hudson River Regulating District, Albany, N. Y., 1923-29; served as aide de camp to Gov. Raymond E. Baldwin of Connecticut, 1940-41; married Miss Florence J. Mabee in 1909; two sons and one daughter; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counrty: Fairfield. Population (1940), 418,384. CLARE BOOTHE LUCE, Republican, of Greenwich, Conn. ; born in New York . City, N. Y., April 10, 1903; was graduated from St. Mary’s School, Garden City, Long Island, N. Y., and Miss Mason’s Castle School, Tarrytown-on-the-Hudson; honorary degree of doctor of letters from Colby College, Waterville, Maine; playwright, author, journalist, foreign correspondent, and lecturer; writer, associ-ate editor, and managing editor of Vanity Fair, 1929-34; married Henry Robinson Luce in 1935; one daughter, Ann Clare, from a previous marriage to George Brokaw in 1923; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FIFTH DISTRICT.—LiTcHFIELD COUNTY, NEW HAVEN CouUNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Wolcott. Population (1940), 247,601. JOSEPH E. TALBOT, Republican, of Naugatuck, Conn., was born in Nauga-. tuck, Conn., March 18, 1901; educated in the public schools; graduated from Dartmouth College with bachelor of science degree in 1922 and from the Yale School of Law with bachelor of law degree in 1925; admitted to the Connecticut bar in 1925; prosecuting attorney in Naugatuck, Conn., 1928-33; judge in Nauga-tuck, Conn., 1935-37; treasurer of the State of Connecticut, 1939-41; workmen’s compensation commissioner, Fifth District, Connecticut, 1941-January 20, 1942; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in a special election on January 20, 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; married and has four children; member of House Committee on the Judiciary; is a member of American, New Haven, and Waterbury Bar Associations; member of Rotary, B. P.O. KE. and K. of C. DELAWARE (Population (1940), 266,505) SENATORS [ 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; trustee, Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio; elected to the Tau States Senate on November 5, 1940, for a 6-year term beginning January bJ | | | Congressional Directory FLORIDA CLAYTON DOUGLASS BUCK, Republican, of Wilmington, Del.; born March 21, 1890, in New Castle County, Del., at Buena Vista, the family estate inherited from John M. Clayton, three times United States Senator, co-author of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, and Secretary of State under President Taylor; graduated from Friends School, Wilmington, Del., and attended the University of Pennsylvania Engineering School for 2 years; received doctor of laws degree from University of Delaware in 1936; chief engineer of the Delaware State Highway Department, 1922-29; Governor of Delaware, 1929-37 (only person ever Governor of the State for two terms); member of Republican National Committee, 1930-37; president of Equitable Trust Co., Wilmington, Del., 1931-41; chairman of the Board of Equitable Trust Co., Wilmington, Del., 1941, to present time; married Alice duPont Wilson, May 5, 1921; children—Paul E. Wilson, Alice duPont Wilson, C. Douglass Buck, Jr., and Dorcas Van Dyke Buck; member of Immanuel Episcopal Church, New Castle, Del.; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 266,505. EARLE D. WILLEY, Republican, of Dover, Del.; born in Greenwood, Sussex County, Del., July 21, 1889, son of Jabez T. and Fannie A. Willey; educated in the public schools and at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. (bachelor and master degrees); after 4 years as principal of the Greenwood High School, served at Washington as secretary in the office of Hon. Thomas W. Miller, who represented Delaware in the House of Representatives from 1915 to 1917; attended George Washington University Law School; was admitted to the bar of Delaware in 1920; State librarian of Delaware 1917-21; deputy attorney general or prosecuting attorney for Kent County, Del., 1921-31; judge, the Court of Common Pleas for Kent County, 1931-39; judge, the Juvenile Court for Kent and Sussex Counties, 1933-39; Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor, 1940; secretary of state, January 1941 to January 1943, by appointment of Gov. Walter W. Bacon; member of Odd Fellows, the National Grange, Rotary Club; trustee, University of Delaware, and the Elizabeth W. Murphey School for Orphan Children at Dover, Del.; former member of board of trustees of the State College for Colored Students at Dover; official in Boy Scout work; Methodist; married August 13, 1917, to Miss F. Agnes Gibson of Greenwood, Del.; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress, or. November 3, 1942. FLORIDA (Population (1940), 1,897,414) 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 sec-retary 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 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- FLORIDA : Biographical 19 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, Elk, 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; honorary degree of doctor of laws from McMaster University 1941, Toronto University 1942, and University of Alabama 1942; nominated without opposition in a spe-cial 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. ; REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 1,897,414. 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 House of Representatives, 1918; elected and served as judge of Bradford County, Fla., 1920-24; nominated for Congress, June 1924, having a large majority in each of 16 counties comprising district; elected to Sixty-ninth Congress, carrying each county in general election; renominated without opposition to Seventieth Congress and reelected over Republican 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; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress as Congressman at Large; married October 6, 1935, to Miss Bessie Lucile Harris, of Gainesville, Fla.; one son, Robert Alexis Prem 20, born June 14, 1938; one daughter, Sandra Lucile Green, born January , 1940. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Charlotte, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando, Highlands, Hilishoroneh, Lee, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, and Sarasota (14 counties). Population (1940) 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 eriminal 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 20 Congressional Directory GEORGIA has two children—Ann and J. Hardin, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-third Con-ress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, eventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ’ SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Gilehrist, Hamilton, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Nassau, Suwannee, Taylor, and Union (16 counties). Popula- tion (1940), 388,053. : EMORY H. PRICE, Democrat, of Jacksonville, Fla.; born in Putnam County, Fla., December 3, 1899, the son of Drew L. and Sarah Adline Price; married Mary Frigo, of Lawtey, Fla.; attended public schools of Duval County; graduated from Jacksonville Law College; elected in 1929 to the city council of Jacksonville and served two terms; nominated supervisor of registration for Duval County in 1932, resigning during third term to become Representative; member of Baptist Church, Masonic Lodge, Knights Templar, Ancient and Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Civitan Club, and Jacksonville and Florida State Bar Associations; elected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (16 counties). Population (1940), 306,264. 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; president, Florida Press Association, 1937; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broward, Collier, Dade, Indian River, Martin, Monroe, Okeecho-bee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie (9 counties). Population (1940), 436,825. PAT CANNON, Democrat, of Miami, Fla. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brevard, Citrus, Flagler, Lake, Marion, Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. Johns, Seminole, Sumter, and Volusia (12 counties). Population (1940), 289,452. 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 Floridd in 1934; was admitted to the bar in 1934 and commenced practice in De Land, Fla., in 1935; married Jane Morrison Harris, Concord, N. C.; elected to the Seventy-fiftth 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; renominated for fourth term over two Democratic opponents on May 5, 1942, and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. GEORGIA (Population (1940), 3,123,723) 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. ; GEORGIA Bb 1ographical 21 RICHARD BREVARD RUSSELI, 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, 3921-31; 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; reelected November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Candler, Chatham, Effingham, Emanuel, Evans, Jenkins, Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Montgomery, Screven, Tattnall, Toombs, Treutlen, and ‘Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1940), 335,654. HUGH PETERSON, Democrat, of Ailey, Ga.; born August 21, 1898; graduated from high school and the Brewton Parker Institute, 1916; attended University of Georgia and the United States Military Academy at West Point, N. Y.; farmer; lawyer; editor of the Montgomery Monitor, Mount Vernon, Ga.; Methodist; Mason; member of the American Legion; former mayor of Ailey; member of house of representatives in General Assembly of Georgia from Montgomery County, 1923-30; chairman, State legislative committee on reorganization, 1931; member of senate in General Assembly of Georgia from fifteenth senatorial district, 1931-32; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, and reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Brooks, Calhoun, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady: Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Thomas, Tift, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1940), 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 357,295. STEPHEN PACE, Democrat, Americus, Ga. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Butts, Carroll, Clayton, Coweta, Fayette, Heard, Henry, Lamar, Nomen Newton, Pike, Spalding, Talbot, Troup, and Upson (15 counties). Population (1940), 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 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— | | | 22 Congressional Directory GEORGIA 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-expired term of the late E. M. Owen, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: De Kalb, Fulton, and Rockdale (3 counties). Population (1940), 487,552. ROBERT RAMSPECK, Democrat, born in Decatur, Ga., September 5, 1890; educated in public schools of Decatur and Griffin, Ga., and at Donald Fraser School in Decatur; received bachelor of laws 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 (Mrs. Jarrel R. Dunson, Jr.) and Betty Lynn (Mrs. John S. Leedy); 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; secretary, Democratic caucus, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS / THIRD DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN COUNTY: Town of Palmer. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Town of Ware. MippLESEX County: City of Marlborough; towns of Hudson, Maynard, Shirley, and Stow. Wog-cESTER CoUNTyY: Cities of Fitchburg, Gardner, and Leominster; towns of Ashburnham, Barre, Black-stone, Bolton, Brookfield, Charlton, Clinton, Douglas, Dudley, East Brookfield, Hardwick, Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Leicester, Lunenburg, Milford, Millbury, Millville, New Braintree, North-bridge, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton, Princeton, Rutland, Southbridge, Spencer, Stur-bridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Warren, Webster, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population (1940), 296,281. PHILIP JOSEPH PHILBIN, Democrat, of Clinton, Mass.; born in Clinton, Mass., May 29, 1898; educated at Clinton public and high schools, Harvard College, A. B. course, class of 1920, and Columbia University Law School, class of 1924, LL. B. degree; practicing attorney, business man, and farmer; former secretary, campaign manager, and personal representative for United States Senator David I. Walsh; former special counsel, United States Senate Committee on Education and Labor; former referee, United States Department of Labor; former member, advisory board, Massachusetts Unemployment Compensation Commission; present chairman of Town of Clinton Finance Committee; presi-dent of Clinton Chamber of Commerce; married Miss Lillan Sundberg; two children, Mary Ellen Bamby and Ann Blenda; veteran of first World War; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Waltham; towns of Ashland, Framingham, Hop-kinton, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Berlin, Boylston, Grafton, Holden, Northborough, Shrewsbury, Southborough, Sterling, Westbor-ough, and West Boylston. Population (1940), 313,605. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Essex CouNTy: Town of Andover. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Lowell and Woburn; towns of Acton, Arlington, Ashby, Ayer, Bedford, Belmont, Billerica, Boxborough, Burling-ton, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Lexington, Lincoln, Littleton, Pep-erell, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngsboro, Watertown, Westford, Wilmington, and Winchester. Pop- ulation (1940), 336,642. 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-eighth, in which she was unopposed. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Cities of Salem, Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and the city of Lynn, wards 2 and 3; towns of Amesbury, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Grove-land, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Methuen, Newbury, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. Population (1940), 281,875. GEORGE JOSEPH BATES, Republican, of Salem, Mass., was born in that city on February 25, 1891; married; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1918-24; served as mayor of Salem, 1924-37; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Lawrence, city of Lynn, wards 1, 4, 5, 6, and 7, and city of Peabody; towns of Middleton, Nahant, and North Andover. SUFFOLE COUNTY: Cities of Chelsea and Revere and town of Winthrop. Population (1940), 278,636. THOMAS J. LANE, Democrat, of Lawrence; born in Lawrence, Mass., July 6, 1898; attorney at law; attended the public schools of Lawrence, Mass.; graduated from Suffolk Law School with LL. B. degree in 1925; admitted to practice of law in Massachusetts in 1926 and the United States District Court in 1927; World War veteran; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1927 to 1938; member of Massachusetts Senate from 1939 until his resignation z ; 49 MASSACHUSETTS B rographical to become a member of the Seventy-seventh Congress; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on December 30, 1941, to fill, for the unexpired term, the seat left vacant by the death of Lawrence J. Connery; re-elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—EsSEX CoUuNTY: Towns of Lynnfield and Saugus.— MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Everett, Malden, Medford, and Melrose, city of Somerville, wards 4, 5, 6, and 7; towns of North Reading, Reading, Stoneham, and Wakefield. Population (1940), 307,374. GOODWIN, Republican, of Melrose, Mass. ; born in Fairfield, ANGIER LOUIS Maine, January 30, 1881; Colby College, A. B., 1902, Harvard Law School, 1905; admitted to Maine bar in 1905 and to Massachusetts bar in 1906; practiced law with office in Boston since 1906; married Eleanor Hardy Stone, of Bangor, Maine, in 1905 and has three children—Roger L., Mary E. (Mrs. Robert DeWitt Culver), and Barbara L.; during first World War served in Massachusetts State Guard and as member of legal advisory board to aid draft registrants; served as trustee of Melrose public library ; member of planning board and chairman of board years a member of the Melrose Board of Aldermen and president of of appeal; 8 the board in 1920; mayor of Melrose in 1921 and reelected in 1922; member of Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1925 to 1928; member Massachu-setts State Senate from 1929 to 1941 and president of the senate in 1941; chairman in New York World's Fair; appointed Massachusetts Commission on Participation by Gov. Leverett Saltonstall, as chairman of the Massachusetts Commission on Administration and Finance in December 1941, and resigned in May 1942, to become candidate for Congress; thirty-second degree Mason, member of Shrine, Eastern Star, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Grange, and Zeta Psi Club, and University Club of Washington; fraternity; member of Boston City Unitarian; elected to the Séventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. wards 1, 2, and 3. SUFFOLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 1, 2, 3, and 22. Population (1940), 328,051. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Cambridge and city of Somerville, JAMES M. CURLEY, Democrat, 350 Jamaica Way, Boston, Mass.; born in Boston, Mass., November 20, 1874; graduate of Dearborn Grammar School; attended evening high school for 3 years, and law school for 1 year; honorary Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS LL. D. degree, Suffolk Law School, and honorary master of oratory degree, Staley College; business, real estate and insurance; offices held: Boston City Council, 1900-1; representative to General Court of Massachusetts, 1902-3; Boston Board of Aldermen, 1904-10; Member of Congress, 1911-14; mayor of Boston, 1914-17, 1922-25, 1930-33; Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1935-36; Democratic national committeeman, 1941-42; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SurroLr CoUNTY: City of Boston, wards 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17. Population (1940), 329,294. 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, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; Majority Leader; reelected to the, Seventy-eighth Congress; World War veteran; awarded honorary degrees of LL.D. by Boston University, Boston, Mass., March 13, 1942; LL.D. by Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., May 5, 1942; member of Knights of Columbus. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NORFOLK COUNTY: City of Quincy; towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Dedham, Holbrook, Milton, Needham, Norwood, Randolph, Westwood, and Weymouth. PLYMOUTH County: City of Brockton. SUrroLK COUNTY: City of Boston, ward 18. Population (1940), 306,750. RICHARD B. WIGGLESWORTH, Republican, of Milton; born in Boston, April 25, 1891; educated at Harvard (A. B. 1912, LL. B. 1916); married Florence Joyes Booth of Louisville, Ky., April 30, 1931; children, Ann Joyes, Mary Dixwell, and Jane Booth; assistant private secretary to Hon. W. Cam-eron Forbes, Governor General of the Philippine Islands, 1913; lawyer; 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 term of the late Hon. Louis A. Froth- ingham; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy- fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Bristor. County: Cities of Attleboro, city of Fall River, wards 1,2,3,4, 5, 7, 8, and 9, and city of Taunton; towns of Berkley, Dighton, Easton, Freetown, Mansfield, North Attleboro, Norton, Raynham, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Somerset, and Swansea. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Holliston, Natick, and Sherborn. NORFOLK COUNTY: Towns of Bellingham, Dover, Fox-borough, Franklin, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Norfolk, Plainville, Sharon, Stoughton, Walpole, Wellesley, and Wrentham. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Hopedale and Mendon. Population (1940), 302,182. 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; resigned chairmanship in November 1942; in 1924, elected Member of the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-eighth; elected Minority Leader, House of Representatives, Seventy-sixth Congress. MICHIGAN Biographical 2 : 51 MICHIGAN (Population (1940), 5,256,106) 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, 1941, and 1942. HOMER FERGUSON, Republican, of Detroit, Mich.; born in Harrison City, Pa., February 25, 1889; attended the University of Pittsburgh and was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1913 with LL. B. degree; lawyer; appointed circuit judge of the Circuit Court for Wayne County, Mich., in 1929, elected in 1930, and reelected in 1935 and 1941; married Myrtle Jones in 1913; one daughter, Mrs. Charles R. Beltz; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City or DETROIT: Wards 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, and 15, and city of Hamtramck. Popula- tion (1940), 352,977. GEORGE G. SADOWSKI, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born in Detroit, March 12, 1903, the son of Charles and Ludwika (Jurkiewicz) Sadowski; attended the Ferry School at Detroit, Mich., and the Foley (Ala.) High School, graduating from Northeastern High School at Detroit in 1920, and from the law college of the University of Detroit, receiving the degree of LIL. B. in 1924; married Eleanor Leppek in 1928 and they have four children—Caroline, Eleanor, George, and Ludwika; law, real estate, insurance; State senator, 1931-32; member of Detroit Democratic Club, Wayne County Democratic Committee, Michigan Bar Asso-ciation, Detroit Bar Association, Polish National Alliance, Polish Falcons, University of Detroit Alumni Association, Chene Business Association, Sunny-brook Golf Club; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 285,648. EARL CORY MICHENER, Republican, of Adrian; born in Seneca County, near Attica, Ohio, November 30, 1876; removed with parents to Adrian, Mich., in 1889; educated in public schools of Adrian, the University of Michigan, and the law department of Columbian University; admitted to the bar in 1903, since which time he has practiced law; served throughout the Spanish-American War; married; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 283,352. PAUL W. SHAFER, Republican, Battle Creek, Mich.; newspaper editor and publisher; born April 27, 1893; elected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. ~ 4 \ Congressional Directory MICHIGAN FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1940), 242,339. 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; reelected November 3, 1942, with a plurality of 23,588, which was 69 percent of the vote cast, highest previous plurality being 61 percent. -FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Kent and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1940), 305,998. 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 University 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. : SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Genesee, Ingham, 4nd Livingston (3 counties). Population (1940), 379,423. 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 graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1912, since which time he has practiced law in Genesee County; he was assistant prosecuting attorney from 1913 to 1917; member of the board of education, Flint, for 10 years; has been instructor of the factory night school at Flint for 14 years; married to Cassie F. Miller, December 28, 1904, and they have three children—Shirley Mae, William W., Jr., and Jack Arnold; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, and to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilae, St. Clair, and Tuscola (6 coun-ties). Population (1940), 314,368. + 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 LI. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Clinton, Gratiot, Ionia, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee (6 counties). Population (1940), 294,842. FRED L. CRAWFORD, Republican, Saginaw, Mich. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benzie, Grand Traverse, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Missaukee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (11 counties). Population (1940), 236,861. 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 53 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 22 years; Albert Joseph, Jr., age 19 years; and Helen Louise, age 11 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, Morosia, Midland, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, and Roscommon (14 counties). Population (1940), 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; married; two children— daughter, Mrs. Ronald Houck, and son, Capt. Devere H. Woodruff, United States Army. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alger, Alpena, Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Delta, Emmet, Kalkaska, Luce, Mackinac, Menominee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, and Schoolcraft (16 counties). Population (1940), 224,551. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baraga, Dickinson, Gogebie, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Mar-quette, and Ontonagon (8 counties). Population (1940), 200,265. JOHN B. BENNETT, Republican, of Ontonagon, Mich.; born in Garden, Mich., January 10, 1904; graduate of Watersmeet (Mich.) High School; attended Marquette University Law School 1921-25; post-graduate at Chicago University Law School in 1926; admitted to Wisconsin bar in 1925, Michigan in 1926; prose-cuting attorney of Ontonagon County for three terms; deputy commissioner of the State department of labor and industry, 1935-37; general law practice for the past 16 years; married Corinne Waldhuetter of Milwaukee, Wis., and they have three children—Marilyn, Nancy Ruth, and John B. 2d; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ty oF DETROIT: Wards 1 to 4, 6, and 8, and Highland Park city. Popu-lation (1940), 357,775. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-' eighth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or DETROIT: Wards 17, 19, and 21 and townships of Gratiot and* Grosse Pointe, in Wayne County. Population (1940), 386,437. 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—Francis Dermott (S. J.), Marie Celeste (Sister Mary Palmyre I. H. M.), Louis 3d, Mary Jane, Vincent (Ensign, U. S. N. R.), Carolyn, Joan Marie, Stella Marie, and Martha; 1935, guest of the Philippine Government at the inauguration of the Commonwealth; 1939, dele-Robe to the Interparliamentary Union at Oslo, Norway, and inspected the United tates Foreign Service offices in the Scandinavian countries; 1941, chairman of 54 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN the first official congressional committee to South and Central America inspecting ~ Foreign Service offices and studying effects of the cultural relations program in 17 countries; elected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of the Committee on Appro-priations, chairman of the subcommittee on appropriations for the Departments of State, Commerce, and Justice. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—City or DETroIT: Wards 10, 12, 14, and 16. Population (1940), 382,399. 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 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 (1940), 371,096. 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 41% 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 two children by present marriage, Beverly Jane and Edwin Stanley; since the age of 18 has been exten-sively engaged in the building and real-estate business in the Detroit area; at the age of 26 he constructed 4,000 houses, which was the nucleus around which the resent city of Hamtramck was built; established the Hamtramck Lumber & es 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 first World War, and 13 years thereafter, was president 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 Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; has the distinction of being the only Member of Congress from the State of Michigan who is chairman of a stand-ing committee, the Committee on Invalid Pensions; and is also the only Demo-cratic Member of Congress from Michigan who is a member of the Committee on Labor, Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, Committee on Education, Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and Committee on the District of Columbia. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—OAKIAND CouUNTY, Ciry or DETROIT: Ward 22, and townships of Livonia, Northville, Plymouth, and Redford, in Wayne County. Population (1940), 419,007. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. MINNESOTA B tographical MINNESOTA (Population (1940), 2,792,300) SENATORS HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, Republican, of R. F. D., Carlos, Minn., was born in the township of Burbank, Kandiyohi County, Minn., January 8, 1881; elected to the United States Senate in 1922, 1928, 1934, and 1940; member of Committees of Agriculture and Forestry, Foreign Relations, Indian Affairs, Interstate Com-merce, and Special Committee on Silver. = 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 Uni-versity 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 capacity 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; served appointive term, which ended November 17, 1942; elected on November 3, 1942, to 6-year term commencing January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Rice, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (12 counties). Population (1940), 318,154. 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, Seventy-oh and Seventy-eighth Congresses from the First Congressional District of innesota. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Carver, Cottonwood, Dakota, Faribault, Jackson, ie Sen, McLeod, Martin, Nicollet, Scott, Sibley, and Watonwan (14 counties). Population (1940), JOSEPH PATRICK O’HARA, Republican, of Glencoe, Minn.; born in Tipton, Iowa, January 23, 1895; educated public schools, graduate of Spirit Lake (Iowa) High School; legal education, Inns of Court, London, England, and Notre Dame University (LL. B.); actively engaged in the general practice of law at Glencoe, Minn., specializing in trial work; member District, State, and American Bar Associations; admitted to practice in Federal courts of Minnesota and North Dakota and United States Supreme Court; county attorney, McLeod County, 1934-38; served 27 months in World War I, including A. E. F.; past State com- mander, American Legion; married Leila Lee White, of Holden, Mo.; three children; one son now serving in the Infantry and one in the Air Corps; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, 60,028 to 11,819 to 13,866. THIRD DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: 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 (1940), 321,987. 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, ie elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth ongress. Congressional Directory MINNESOTA FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY: Ramsey. Population (1940), 309,935. MELVIN J. MAAS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born on May 14, 1898, inDuluth, Minn. ; family moved to St. Paul same year; educated in St. Paul public schools; graduate 6f 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 321,859. WALTER H. JUDD, Republican, of Minneapolis, Minn.; physician and sur-geon; born in Rising City, Nebr., September 25, 1898; received B. A. (1920) and M. D. (1923) degrees from the University of Nebraska; enlisted in the United States Army in 1918 and served in the Field Artillery; fellowship in surgery, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minn., 1932-34; medical missionary and superin-tendent of hospitals in China, 1925-31 and 1934-38 under auspices of American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions; returned from China in 1938, to spend 1939 and 1940 speaking throughout the United States in attempt to arouse Americans to menace of Japan’s military expansion and to get embargo on sale and shipment of war materials to Japan; entered private medical practice in Minneapolis in January 1941; married Miriam Barber, of Montclair, N. J, in 1932; they have three children; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Aitkin, Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Kanabec, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Pine, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1940), 334,781. HAROLD KNUTSON, Republican, of St. Cloud, Wadena, and Manhattan Beach; 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 (1940), 305,139. 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, 12 years of age, and Alfred, 4 years of age; elected to ' the Minnesota State Legislature in 1935; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; profession, farmer. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Carlton, Cook, Itaska, Koochiching, Lake, and St. Louis (6 counties). Population (1940), 291,041. 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 and Dorothy Pittenger; 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 November 8, 1938, to the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress; elected November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 283,845. HAROLD C. HAGEN, Farmer-Labor, of Crookston, Minn.; was born in Crookston, Minn., November 10, 1901; attended the public schools and after graduation from high school engaged in railroading, farming, and newspaper work MISSISSIPPI B rographical | as editor and publisher of the Vesterheimen, Norwegian newspaper; was graduated from St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn., in 1927, with B. A. degree; taught history and civies at the Mandan (N. Dak.) High School in 1928; publisher and editor of the Polk County Leader, Crookston, Minn., 1928-32; secretary to Representative Richard T. Buckler from 1934 until his election to Congress in 1942: delegate to National Rivers and Harbors Congress held in Washington, D. C., in 1937; president of Congressional Secretaries Club, 1937-38; Minnesota member of the Tri-State Waters Commission in 1937; awarded honor plaque by Congressional Secretaries Club in 1937 as most valuable and outstanding secretary; married Miss Audrey Melton on November 22, 1928, and they have two children, November Harold, Jr., and Andora; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on MISSISSIPPI (Population (1940), 2,183,796) SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy- sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; was a delegate to the Democratic National 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 Authority, which contained section 12 of the present T. V. A. Act, giving to the Tennessee Valley Authority the right to build transmission lines, to distribute power, and to build additional dams on the Tennessee River; successfully led the fight in the House to force the acceptance of that main provision of the bill in lieu of a bill which had been passed by the House; succeeded in getting 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 at rates the people can afford to pay’; author of the amendment to raise the base pay of the men in the armed forces to $50 a month. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, Union, and Yalobusha (10 counties). Population (1940) 231,701. 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; one child, James Lloyd, born March 5, 1942; 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 on November 4, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Wall Doxey; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Humphreys, Issaquena, Leflore, Quit. man, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, and Washington (11 counties). Population (1940), 435,530. 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-eighth. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Grenada, Mont-gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1940), 201,316. THOMAS GERSTLE ABERNETHY, Democrat, of Okolona, Miss.; born in Eupora, Webster County, Miss., May 16, 1903, the son of Thomas Franklin and Minnie Jinkins Abernethy; educated in the public schools of Eupora, Miss., the University of Alabama, Cumberland University (LL. B. 1924), and the Univer-sity of Mississippi; admitted to bar in July 1924 and entered practice of law at Eupora, Miss., 1925; served as Mayor of town of Eupora, 1927-29; moved to Okolona, Miss., in July 1929, where he has continued his practice; elected dis-trict attorney of the Third Judicial District of Mississippi, 1935, and reelected without opposition, 1939; Methodist, Mason, Shriner, and Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity; married July 5, 1936, to Miss Alice Margaret Lamb, of State College, Miss. ; one daughter, Margaret Gail, and one son, Thomas Gerstle, Jr.; nominated in first primary over two opponents, and elected November 3, 1942, without op-position to Seventh-eighth Congress. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Simpson, and Smith (10 counties). Population (1940), 261,466. WILLIAM ARTHUR WINSTEAD, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Miss.; born near Philadelphia, in Neshoba County, Miss., January 6, 1904; educated in the public schools of Neshoba and Newton Counties, Miss. ; attended Clarke Memorial College, Newton, Miss., Mississippi Southern College, Hattiesburg, Miss., and me us tome MISSOURI Biographical the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; married Miss Etna B. Johnson April 26, 1933; member of the Baptist Church, Masonic fraternity, and Order of the Eastern Star; elected superintendent of education of Neshoba County in LL ok reelected in 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November , 1942, 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 (1940), 319,635. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Pike, Rankin, Walthall, Warren, Wilkinson, and Yazoo (15 counties). Popu- lation (1940), 470,781. - 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. MISSOURI (Population (1940), 3,784,664) SENATORS BENNETT CHAMP CLARK, Democrat, of St. Louis County, Mo., was born at Bowling Green, Mo., January 8, 1890, the son of Champ and Genevieve (Bennett) Clark; attended the public schools at Bowling Green and Washington, D. C.; graduated from Eastern High School, Washington, D. C., in 1908, Univer-sity of Missouri, with A. B. degree, in 1912, and George Washington University, with LL. B. degree, in 1914; received honorary degree of LL. D. from 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 and Thirty-fifth Divisions; discharged in May 1919; pro-moted 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-presi- Congressional Directory MISSOURI dent of the National Guard Association of the United States; member of the Vet-erans of Foreign Wars; practiced law in St. Louis since discharge from the Army;attended every Democratic National Convention since 1900; parliamentarian of the Democratic National Convention in 1916; delegate at large and member ofthe’ resolutions and platform committee of' the Houston Convention in 1928;delegate at large and chairman of committee on rules and order of business, whichreported repeal of two-thirds rule, Philadelphia Convention in 1936; delegate at large and chairman 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 OddFellows orders, Missouri Athletic Club, and the St. Louis, Missouri, and American Bar Associations; 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 October5, 1922, to Miss Miriam Marsh of Waterloo, Towa, and they have three sons; 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, byGovernor 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 8. 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, Daviess, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Clark, Grundy, Livingston, Macon, Marion, Mercer, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, Shelby, and Sullivan (16 counties). Popu- lation (1940), 232,484. WAT ARNOLD, Republican, of Kirksville, Mo., born on a farm near Downing,Schuyler County, Mo., September 21, 1879; attended the Coffey, Mo., ruralschool and was graduated from the Kirksville State Teachers College; taughtschool at Atlanta, Mo., 1903-04; entered the lumber business in 1905, and in 1908organized the Arnold Lumber Co., in which company he is now associated withhis son, Sam M. Arnold; past president of the Rotary Club and the Chamber ofCommerce of Kirksville; active in civic and fraternal organizations ; member of the Presbyterian Church; married Miss Myra Gertrude Mills; three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benton, Boone, Camden, Carroll, Chariton, Cole, Cooper, Hickory,Howard, Lafayette, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Randolph, and Saline (15 counties). Population (1940), 282,964. MAX SCHWABE, Republican, of Columbia, Mo., was born on a farm nearColumbia, Boone County, Mo., on December 6, 1905, the son of Dr. GeorgeWashington and Lulu Margaret (Stotts) Schwabe; attended the public schools of Sedalia and Columbia and the University of Missouri, completing a major in political science and taking a course in law; married Miss Georgia May Ashlockin Columbia, Mo., July 12, 1930, and they have two daughters, Gladys June andMaxine May; has been actively engaged in the life insurance business in centralMissouri the past 16 years, serving as president of the Life Underwriters Associa-tion; member of the Optimist Club; deacon in the First Christian Church of Columbia and teacher of a Sunday School class of boys; former Boy Scout leader : elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, from the SecondDistrict, which usually goes Democratic by about 15,000 majority and whichhad not been represented by a Republican for 20 years. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, DeKalb,Gentry, Harrison, Holt, Nodaway, Platte, Ray, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1940), 291,744. WILLIAM C. COLE, Republican, of St. Joseph, Mo.; born on a farm nearFillmore, Andrew County, Mo., on August 29, 1897; attended public schools ofFillmore and St. Joseph, Mo.; was graduated from the St. Joseph Law School inthe class of 1928, receiving the degree of LI. B.; admitted to the practice of law at St. Joseph, Mo., March 31, 1928; associate member of the law firm, Strop &Strop, St. Joseph, Mo.; served as State representative, second district, BuchananCounty, Mo., at special 1942 session of Missouri State Legislature; president ofSt. Joseph Bar Association, 1942; served as a member of the Registrants AdvisoryBoard, Draft Board No. 1, St. Joseph, Mo.; member of St. Joseph Lions Club, MISSOURI 3 B tographical : 61 Shady Beach Lodge, I. O. O. F.; B. P. O. E., Lodge No. 40, St. Joseph, Mo.; L. O. O. M., St. Joseph Lodge, No. 315; C. S. Simineo Lodge, No. 92, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; served 10 months as mounted scout on the Mexican Border with the Missouri forces in 1916; served 14 months in war zone on board the U. 8. 8. Machias, doing submarine patrol and convoy duty during first World War; member of American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States; past commander of Jack Schneider Post, No. 135, Veterans of Foreign Wars; past judge advocate of Department of Missouri Veterans of Foreign Wars; past commander of Pony Express Post, No. 700, Veterans of Foreign Wars; radio chairman, third district of Missouri, Veterans of Foreign Wars; married Miss Esther Leah Arnold at St. Joseph, Mo., August 29, 1927, and they have one daughter, Mary Barbara, aged 14; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 243,543. 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.) High 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 and Conrad, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; chairman of Committee on Insular Affairs. FIFTH DISTRICT.—JACKSON COUNTY: Washington Township. KANsAs City: Wards 1 to 8, and 15. Population (1940), 234,285. k > ’ ROGER CALDWELL SLAUGHTER, Democrat, of Kansas City, Mo.; born near Odessa, Lafayette County, Mo., July 17, 1905; attended the public schools at Independence, Mo., and was graduated from Princeton University in 1928 with A. B. degree; read law in the office of Henry L. Jost, former mayor of Kansas City, Mo., and a member of the Sixty-eighth Congress, and in addition attended the Kansas City School of Law; was admitted to the bar in 1932 and since that time has engaged in the general practice of law in Kansas City; shortly after his admis-sion to the bar served for a short period as assistant prosecutor of Jackson County, Mo.; member of the board of directors of the School District of Kansas City, 1940-42; married Miss Laura Brown, of Independence, Mo., on September 23, 1933, and they have two children, Ann Mercer Slaughter and Thomas Brown Slaughter; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Greene, Henry, Johnson, Pettis, Polk, St. Clair, and Vernon (11 counties). Population (1940), 288,849. MARION T. BENNETT, Republican, of Springfield, Mo.; born at Buffalo, Mo.; educated in public schools of Buffalo, Jefferson City, and Springfield, Mo.; graduate of Southwest Missouri State Teachers College, A. B., 1935, with honors, and Washington University School of Law, LL. B., 1938, with honors; practiced law in Springfield, Mo.; member of Greene County and Missouri Bar associa-tions, Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity, Missouri State Historical Society, Greene County, Mo., Republican Central Committee, 1938-42, and the Christian Church; married Miss June Young of Hurley, Mo.; volunteered for combat duty in World War II, but was rejected; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on January 12, 1943, at special election to fill vacancy caused by death of his father, Phil A. Bennett, who was a Member of the Seventy-seventh Congress and who had been elected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress; in the special election he carried all 11 counties in the Sixth Missouri Congressional District and led his opponent by 14,952 votes; member of Committees on the Census and World War Veterans’ Legislation. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barry, Christian, Dade, Dallas, Douglas, Howell, Jasper, Lawrence, Moho, Newton, Ozark, Stone, Taney, Webster, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1940), 313,435. > DEWEY SHORT, Republican, of Galena, Mo. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 6 Congressional Directory MISSOURI 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 (1940), 276,634. WILLIAM PRICE ELMER, Republican, of Salem, Mo.; born in Roberts-ville, Franklin County, Mo., March 2, 1871; father was native of New York City and answered Lincoln’s call for soldiers in 1861; mother native of Kentucky, her folks in the Confederacy; educated in public and high schools of Salem, Mo.; studied law under Col. E. T. Wingo, at one time instructor in William and Marys College of Virginia; admitted to the bar in Dent county, October 5, 1892, and licensed by Supreme Court of Missouri; practiced law continuously since admis-sion; first Republican to be elected prosecuting attorney of, and to represent. Dent County in the General Assembly of Missouri; served two terms as prosecutor and five terms as member of the legislature; temporary speaker of House in 1929, and floor leader in 1931; legal adviser of Federal prohibition director of Missouri 1 year, resigned; attended every Republican State convention in Missouri since 1896; four times delegate or alternate to Republican National Conventions; chairman of Republican County Committee 36 years; member of 1929 commis-sion to revise Missouri laws; one of the authors of the Centennial Road law of Missouri, under which the present system of roads was built; originator of old-age pensions in Missouri and author of amendment to the State constitution granting pensions to dependent persons over 70, being first State-wide pension law in the United States; member of nineteenth judicial district and State bar associations of Missouri; belongs to Masonic lodge at Salem and Scottish Rite lodge in St. Louis, Mo.; member of Baptist church; party nominee for Lieutenant Governor in 1940, spent $1 to get nomination and gave that to an opponent; married Amie Adelmann, December 9, 1896; had nine children, six living; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, from Eighth Missouri Dintring by 2,600 votes; first Republican to represent the district, normally 5,000 emocratic. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Maries, Monroe, Montgomery, Osage, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (13 counties). Population (1940), 214,757. 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,, .: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, 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-eighth Congress, leading all State and National tickets in congressional district from Sixty-eighth to Seventy-eighth 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. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Dunklin, Mississippi, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, and Stoddard (10 counties). Population (1940), 315,691. 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 / MISSOURI B 1ographical : : 63 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 and each succeeding Congress from the Tenth Congressional District; member of Committee on Agriculture. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ty oF ST. Louris: Ward 4, precincts 5, 6, 9, 11, 12, 14, and 17 to 22; wards 5to . 9 and 14 to 17; ward 19, precinets 1 to 8 and 16 to 27; ward 20, precincts 15, 16, and 18-to 27; ward 22, pre-cinets 1 to 5; wards 23 and 25; ward 26, precincts 1 to 5, 9 to 16, and 23 to 26. Population (1940), 327,287. LOUIS EBENEZER MILLER, Republican, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in Willisburg, Ky., April 30, 1899; educated in the grade schools of Washington County, Ky., Springfield (Ky.) High School, St. Mary’s College, and St. Louis University; valedictorian; LL. B. and LL. M. degrees from the latter institution; lawyer, practicing for 20 years, specializing in trial work; member of the Lawyers Association of St. Louis and the Missouri State Bar Association; member of United States Military Forces, 1918, American Legion, and Missouri Athletic Club; married Grace Laughren, of University City, Mo.; on April 21, 1938; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—ST. Louis County. City oF St. Louis: Wards 10 to 13, and 24; ward 28, pre-cincts 1 to 9 and 23 to 32. Population (1940), 503,738. WALTER CHRISTIAN PLOESER, Republican, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo.; 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 Assem-bly 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; Noonday Club; and Army and Navy Country Club; founder of the Insurance Institute of Missouri; insurance business, president of Ploeser, Watts & Co. and chairman of the board of Marine Under-writers Corporation, 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; wife is Dorothy Mohrig Ploeser; two daughters, Ann and Sally; elected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Committee on Appropriations and Select Committee on Small Business. : THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ci1tY OF ST. LOUIS: Wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 4, 7, 8, 10, 13, 15, 16; ward 18; ward 19, precincts 9 to 15; ward 20, precincts 1 to 14, 17; ward 21; ward 22, precincts 6 to 38; Tax precincts 6 to 8, 17 to 22, and 27 to 29; ward 27; ward 28, precincts 10 to 22. Population (1940), 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; defeated 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; delegate at large to Democratic National Convention, 1928; district delegate, 1932; chairman, Committee on Accounts; member, Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources, Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, Migra-tory Bird Conservation Commission, Democratic Steering Committee. Congressional Directory MONTANA MONTANA (Population (1940), 559,456) 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; L. L. D. 1941; admitted to Montana bar, 1901; served as county attorney of Silver Bow County, Mont., 1906-8; chairman of State advisory board, Mon-tana, 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, and again on November 3, 1942 for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaverhead, Broadwater, Deerlodge, Flathead, Gallatin, Granite, Jefferson, Lake, Lewis and Clark, Lincoln, Madison, Mineral, Missoula, Powell, Ravalli, Sanders, -and Silver Bow (17 counties). Population (1940), 235, 859. MICHAEL J. MANSFIELD, Democrat, of Missoula, Mont.; born March 16, 1903; reared and educated in Montana; did not complete eighth grade, but . left home in 1917 and joined United States Navy, at 14 years of age, on February 23, 1918, for the duration of the first World War; served 10 months overseas; enlisted in United States Army for 1 year, 1919-20; and in the United States Marine Corps for 2 years, 1920-22; while serving in the Marines was stationed in the Far East; worked as a miner and mining engineer in Butte, Mont., 1922-30; having never attended high school had to take entrance examinations in high -school subjects to enter college; 1 year at Montana School of Mines, 1927-28; 4 years at Montana State University, 1930-34; B. A. and M. A. degrees; professor of Latin-American and Far Eastern history at Montana State University, 1933-43; married Maureen Hayes, of Butte, Mont.; one daughter, Anne, born January 16, 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. 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, J inaus, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone National Park. Population (1940), 323,597. JAMES FRANCIS O'CONNOR, Democrat, of Livingston, Mont.; born on a farm near California Junction, Iowa; attended public schools and normal school in Iowa; 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, to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, and to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. NEBRASKA Biographical Fat Ly NEBRASKA {Population (1940), 1,315,834) SENATORS HUGH A. BUTLER, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Missouri Valley, Towa, February 28, 1878; was graduated from Doane College, Crete, Nebr., in June 1900 with B. S. degree; construction engineer with the Chicago, Burlington & Quincey Railroad Co., 1900-1908; engaged in the flour milling and grain business since 1908; president, Doane College Board of Trustees, 1932 to present; governor of Rotary International, 1932 to 1933; member of Board Rotary International, 1934 to 1935; State moderator of Nebraska Congregational Churches, 1937 to 1938; elected to the United States Senate for the term beginning January 3, 1941. KENNETH SPICER WHERRY, Republican, of Pawnee City, Nebr.; attorney; born at Liberty, Nebr., February 28, 1892, son of David Emery and Jessie Comstock Wherry; was graduated from the Pawnee City (Nebr.) High School and from the University of Nebraska in 1914 with B. A. degree; attended Harvard University, 1915-16; during the first World War served in the United States Naval Flying Corps, 1917-18, attending training schools at Chicago, Ill., and Boston, Mass.; in 1915 became partner in Wherry Bros., which was estab-lished in Pawnee City in 1892; opened branch offices in Wymore and Humboldt, Nebr., in 1915, operating former 1915-35 and the latter 1915-26; from 1918 to 1930 was especially active in the sale of automobiles and implements, furniture and undertaking business, and livestock and farms, with branches at Summer-field, Kans.,and Pawnee City and Tecumseh, Nebr.; licensed embalmer and funeral director for past 20 years in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and Missouri; leader in promoting annual fairs and stock shows; president of the Pawnee County Agri- _ cultural Society since 1927; member of the Pawnee City Council, 1927-29; mayor of Pawnee City, 1929-31 and 1938-43; State senator from District 19, 1929-32; Republican candidate for Governor of Nebraska in 1933; ran for Republican candidate for United States Senator in 1935; member of Republican State Central Committee, 1938-42; president of the State Founders’ Day in 1937; -Republican State chairman since December 1939; western director for the Re-publican National Committee in 22 States west of the Mississippi River, 1941-42; married Miss Marjorie Colwell, of Pawnee City, on September 15, 1920, and they have two children, David Colwell and Marilynn; member of the American Legion, Nebraska State and American Bar Associations, Kiwanis, Public Service Club, Round Table Club, Beta Theta Pi, Shrine, and the Presbyterian Church; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gage, Gosper, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Johnson, Kearney, Lancaster, Nemaha, Nuckolls, Pawnee, Phelps, Red Willow, Richardson, Saline, Thayer, and Webster (26 counties). Population(1940), 369,190. 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; represented the Fourth Congressional District of Nebraska in the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; due to population changes and redistricting, he was reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress from the First Congressional District, made up of the above-named counties, in 1942, the vote being Curtis, 69,651; Ralph G. Brooks, Democrat, 31,422; Claude A. Early, a petition candidate, 3,534. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Cass, Douglas, Otoe, Sarpy, and Washington (5 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 305,961. HOWARD HOMAN BUFFETT, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Omaha, Nebr., August 13, 1903; attended the public schools; was graduated from -~ 66 Congressional Directory NEVADA the University of Nebraska at Lincoln in 1925 with A. B. degree and certificate of journalism; engaged in investment business, livestock feeds, and farming; member of the Omaha Board of Education, 1938-42; married Miss Leila Stahl in 1925 and has three children—Doris, 14, Warren, 12, and Roberta, 9; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Antelope, Boone, Burt, Butler, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Hamilton, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Polk, Saunders, Seward, Stanton, Thurston, Wayne, and York (24 counties). Population (1940), 315,260. KARL STEFAN, Republican, Norfolk, Nebr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Committee on Appropriations. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Arthur, Banner, Blaine, Box Butte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garden, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Hall, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keya Paha, Kimball, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Perkins, Rock, Scotts Bluff, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (38 counties). Population (1940), 325,423. ARTHUR LEWIS MILLER, Republican, of Kimball, Nebr.; born on a farm in Pierce County, Nebr., May 24, 1892; was graduated from the Plainview (Nebr.) High School in 1911 and from the Loyola Medical College, Chicago, IIl., in 1918; taught in a rural school at Plainview, Nebr., for 2 years; discharged from the Medical Reserve Corps in January, 1919; practiced medicine and surgery in Kimball County, Nebr., since August, 1919; owns farms in western Nebraska; mayor of Kimball, Nebr., 1933-34; member of the Nebraska Unicameral Legis-lature, 1937-41; State governor of Lions Clubs in 1931; president of the State Medical Association in 1939; a fellow of the American College of Surgeons; Methodist; Mason, Elk, and member of Knights of Pythias; State health director, 1941-42; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, NEVADA (Population (1940), 110,247) 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, 1931-32; 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. 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 States Army, 1917; promoted to rank of lieutenant colonel in 1918; one of the incorporators of the American Legion, 1919; commander of the Nevada Department, American Legion, 1919, and national vice commander 1920-21; married; two children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Con-gresses; elected United States Senator from Nevada on November 3, 1942, to fill the unexpired term of the late Senator Key Pittman ending January 3, 1947. NEW HAMPSHIRE % B 1ographical 67 REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 110,247. MAURICE JOSEPH SULLIVAN, Democrat, of Reno, Nev., was born in San Rafael, Calif.; attended parochial school and Sacred Heart College at San Fran-cisco, Calif.; by profession a lawyer, practicing at Reno; Lieutenant Governor of Nevada for four terms, 1915-26 and 1939-42, a total of 16 years; during World War I was the adjutant general of Nevada, disbursing officer for the United States Government, and draft executive for Nevada; colonel in the Army of the United States from May 11, 1922, to May 11, 1932; author of the book Nevada’s Golden Stars, a biographical memorial volume of Nevada men who died in the service during World War I; married Miss Lula Gridley, of Goldfield, Nev., and they have one son—Lt. Maurice J., Jr., Army of the United States; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. : NEW HAMPSHIRE (Population (1940), 491,524) SENATORS STYLES BRIDGES, Republican, of Concord, N. H.; born in West Pem-broke, 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 Hampshire in 1935, and from Northeastern University in 1938; former member of the exten-sion 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 (ensign, United States Navy), 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; reelected on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. 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. 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 (1940), 244,491. CHESTER EARL MERROW, Republican, of Center Ossipee; born in Center Ossipee, Carroll County, N. H., November 15, 1906; son of Llewellyn and Florence (Nichols) Merrow; student, Brewster Free Academy, 1921-25; B. S. degree from Colby College, 1929; student, Teachers College, Columbia University, summers, 1934-37; A. M. degree in 1937; engaged as instructor of general science, physics, 68 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY chemistry, and biology at Kents Hill School at Kents Hill, Maine, 1929-30, and at Montpelier (Vt.) Seminary, 1930-37; assistant headmaster of Montpelier Seminary, 1935-38; instructor of political science and history, Vermont Junior College, Montpelier, Vt., also dean, 1937-38; member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1939-40; chairman of House Ways and Means Com- mittee and member of the Committee on Banks, 1939-40; radio news. commen- tator; lecturer on national and international affairs; writer of news letter on na- tional and international affairs; member of Phi Beta Kappa; member of Masonic fraternity ; married Miss Nellie M. Sands, of Albion, N. Y., June 12, 1933, and they have one son, Daniel S., born August 27, 1941; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; member of Post Office and Post Roads and Irri- gation and Reclamation Committees; member of Republican Congressional “Campaign Committee. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTMES: Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY: City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim,fBennington, 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 (1940), 247,033. 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 Seventy-sixth Congress, November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. NEW JERSEY (Population (1940), 4,160,165) SENATORS W. WARREN BARBOUR, Republican, of Locust, Monmouth County, N. J.; born Monmouth Beach, Monmouth County, N. J., July 31, 1888; married Elysabeth C. Carrére, on December 1, 1921; children, Elysabeth, Warren, and Sharon; appointed 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. ALBERT WAHL HAWKES, Republican, of Montclair, N. J.; born in Chicago, I11., November 20, 1878; was graduated from Chicago College of Law, obtained LL. B. degree in 1900; admitted to Illinois bar in 1900; attended Lewis Institute of Chicago 2 years; employed by Nichols Chemical Co. and its successor, General Chemical Co., for 32 years; resigned as executive vice president to become presi-dent of Congoleum-Nairn, Inec., in 1926; resigned that position when elected to United States Senate, 1942; has held following organizational and honorary posi-tions: President of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States; vice presi-dent, National Association of Manufacturers and the New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce; member of Governor Edison’s Five-Man Committee to Promote Industrial Peace; first chairman of New Jersey State Committee for Sale of War Stamps and Bonds; appointed by President Roosevelt as regular member, Na-tional War Labor Board; married Frances Whitfield, of Warrensburg, Mo.; two children, Maj. A. Whitfield Hawkes, Medical Corps, Army of the United States, and Mrs. Morgan G. Padelford, of Pasadena, Calif.; elected to the United States Senate in November 1942 for the term ending January 3, 1949. NEW JERSEY Biographical 69 REPRESENTATIVES aso utaan FInay DISTRICT Covvums: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1940), CHARLES A. WOLVERTON, Republican, of Camden (Merchantville), N. J.; born at Camden, N. J., his parents being Charles S. Wolverton and Martha Wolverton; educated in the public schools of Camden, graduating from Camden High School June 24, 1897; studied law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, graduating June 13, 1900, with the degree of LL. B.; admitted to the bar of the State of New Jersey at the November term, 1901; married June 25, 1907, to Sara May Donnell, M. D. (now deceased), daughter of John Knox Donnell and Anna Donnell; there is one child, Donnell Knox Wolverton; in 1903 revised and compiled the ordinances of the city of Camden; 1904 to 1906 was assistant city solicitor of Camden; 1906 to 1913 was assistant prosecutor of Camden County; from 1913 to 1914, special assistant attorney general of New Jersey; from 1915 to 1918, member of New Jersey House of Assembly from Camden County; in 1918 was speaker of the New Jersey House of Assembly; 1917 to 1919, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIEs: Atlantic, Cape May, and Cumberland (3 counties). Population (1940), 226,169. 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; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress, carrying all three counties of his district. 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 (1940), 286,838. ; JAMES COATS AUCHINCLOSS, Republican, of Rumson, N. J., was born in New York City, N. Y., January 19, 1885, the sixth of eight children of the late Edgar Stirling and Maria Sloan Auchincloss; educated at Groton School, Groton, Mass., and was graduated from Yale University, degree of A. B., 1908; employed by Farmers Loan & Trust Co. in New York City; was a member of the New York Stock Exchange, 1910-35 and served on board of governors for 18 years; veteran of Seventh Regiment, New York National Guard, and in the first World War served as captain, Military Intelligence; was deputy police commissioner of New York City and founder, treasurer, president, and chairman of board of New York Better Business Bureau; served for 12 years as member of Council of Borough of Rumson, N. J., and was serving third term as mayor when elected to Congress; in 1909 married to Lee F. Alexander and has two children—Douglas and Gordon, 2d, and seven grandchildren—Kenneth, Gail, Stuart, Gordon Sibley, Sibley Ann, David and Lee (twins); elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 70 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Burlington and Mercer (2 counties). Population (1940), 294,331. D. LANE POWERS, Republican, Trenton, N. J.; born Philadelphia, Pa., July 29, 1896; educated public schools, Philadelphia, Pa.; graduated Pennsyl-vania Military College, Chester, Pa., degree of C. E., 1915, B. M. S., 1921, M. S., 1935; married 1918 to Edna May Thropp, of Trenton, N. J., has one daugh-ter—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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Morris and Somerset. MIDDLESEX CouNty: City of Perth Amboy; boroughs of Carteret, Dunellen, Highland Park, Metuchen, Middlesex, and South Plainfield; town-ships of Piscataway, Raritan, and Woodbridge. Population (1940), 329,305. CHARLES AUBREY EATON, Republican, of Watchung, Somerset County; elected to Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—UNION COUNTY. Population (1940), 328,344. 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 prosecutor 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.—CoUNTIES: Hunterdon, Sussex, and Warren. BERGEN COUNTY: Cities of Garfield and Hackensack; boroughs of Allendale, East Paterson, Emerson, Fairlawn, Franklin Lakes, Glen Rock, Hillsdale, Hohokus, Lodi, Maywood, Midland Park, Montvale, Oakland, Oradell, Para-mus, Park Ridge, Ramsey, Riverside, Saddle River, Upper Saddle River, Waldwick, Westwood, Woodcliff Lake; townships of Hohokus, Lodi, Ridgewood, Rivervale, Rochelle Park, Saddle River, Washington, and Wyckoff. Passaic County: Borough of Ringwood and township of West Milford. Population (1940), 283,041. - 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, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress by an approximate plurality of 30,000 votes; serves on the Military Affairs, Claims, and Dies Committees of the House of Representa-tives. 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 (1940), 305,875. 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 . a a nS AX v \cr Es NEW JERSEY Brographical 7h 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 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 (1940), 292,576. HARRY L. TOWE, Republican, of Rutherford, N. J., was born in Jersey City, N. J., November 3, 1898; son of Walter and Isabel Baker Towe; attended the public schools in Passaic, N. J., and the United States Naval Academy, 1918-20; was graduated from New Jersey Law School in 1925; member of the law firm of Conkling, Smith & Towe, Rutherford, N. J.; United States commissioner, 1929-31; special Assistant Attorney General, 1931-34; member of the New Jersey House of Assembly in 1941 and 1942; married Miss Eliza Ball Binns; three children— Harry B., Virginia B., and Jerome D.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. / 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. HupsoN CoUNTY: Borough of East Newark; towns of Harrison and Kearny. Population (1940), 292,947. FRED A. HARTLEY, Jr., Republican, of Kearny, N. J.; born February 22, 1903, at Harrison, N. J., son of Fred A. Hartley and Frances Hartley; educated in the public schools of Harrison and Kearny, and Rutgers University; married Hazel Lorraine Roemer, daughter of Rudolph and Lilah Roemer; there are three children—Fred Jack, Frances Lorraine, and Henry Allan; Henry Allan, who is married to Hermine Pepinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pepinger, is a United States Army Aviation Cadet; was appointed to the Library Commission of Kearny in 1923; elected municipal commissioner in 1924; chairman of the Republican County Cominittee 1925; reelected in 1926; served as fire and police commissioner during two terms; thirty-second degree Mason, Scottish Rite; member of Jr. O. U. A. M. and Eagles; only living person after whom an aerie of the Fraternal Order of Eagles has been named; member of Special Committee to Investigate Government Agencies; elected to the Seventy-first Congress; reelected to Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 290,822. FRANK LEANDER SUNDSTROM, Republican, of East Orange, N. J.; born in Massena, N. Y., January 5, 1901; attended the public schools and was graduated from Cornell University in 1924 with A. B. degree in economics; all-American tackle in 1923 on Walter Camp team; coached football at Indiana University, 1924; in business in New York City as partner of Burton, Cluett & Dana; served as newspaper reporter and editor, 1918-20; is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; member of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalistic frater-nity; member of Cornell Club of Essex County, N. J., and of Cornell Club of New York Regional Scholarship Committee, Touchdown Club of New York, East Orange Historical Association, First Ward Republican Club, Inc., of East Orange, and chairman of East Orange Republican Committee; married to Miss Jean Johnstone, of East Orange, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 309,482. 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 72 Congressional Directory NEW MEXICO 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 and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HUDSON County: City of Bayonne; city of Jersey City, wards 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Population (1940), 271,807. 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, 1936, and 1940 elected delegate at large to the Democratic national conventions; in 1924 elected to the House of Representatives; reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-eighth; received the first degree of doctor of laws ever con-ferred by St. Elizabeth’s College, the oldest women’s college in New Jersey, in recognition of service in welfare and government; also received degree of doctor of . laws from Rider College, Trenton, N. J.; 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 Colum-bia, 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.—HupsoN County: City of Hoboken; city of Jersey City, wards 2, 3, 10, 11, and 12; city of Union City; towns of Secaucus and West New York; township of Weehawken. Population (1940), 278,408. EDWARD J. HART, Democrat, lawyer, Jersey City. NEW MEXICO (Population (1940), 531,818) SENATORS CARL _A. HATCH, Democrat, of Clovis, N. Mex.; born at Kirwin, Phillips County, Kans., November 27, 1889; served as assistant attorney general of New Mexico, 1917 and 1918; appointed collector of internal revenue for the district of New Mexico, 1919; appointed district judge of the ninth judicial district 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; reelected Senator November 3, 1942; 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—Dennis Chavez, Jr., an attorney, now with the Marines, Mrs. Stanley Miller, wife of Stanley Miller of the United States Air Corps, and Gloria Chavez; 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. NEW YORK B 1ographical : 73 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE—Population (1940) 531,818. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ANTONIO M. FERNANDEZ, Democrat, of Santa Fe, N. Mex.; born in Springer, N. Mex., January 17, 1902; court reporter for the eighth judicial dis-trict of New Mexico, 1925-30; received law training at Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; admitted to the practice of law in New Mexico in 1931; assist-ant district attorney of the eighth judicial district, 1933; practiced law in Santa Fe, N. Mex., 1934; served in the State legislature, 1935; chief tax attorney for the State Tax Commission, 1935-36; first assistant attorney general, 1937-41; member of the first New Mexico Public Service Commission, 1941-42; married Cleo Chavez in 1924 and has five children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Con-gress on November 3, 1942. NEW YORK (Population (1940), 13,479,142) 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; one son, Capt. Robert F., Jr.; 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 convention, 1915; justice of New York Supreme Court, 1919-26; assigned to the appellate division, first department, of the Supreme Court, 1924-26; resigned to become candidate for United States Senator; elected for the term expiring March 3, 1933; reelected for the term expiring in 1939; 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 (1940), 13,479,142. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 74 Congressional Directory NEW YORK WINIFRED C. STANLEY, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in New York City August 14, 1909; graduate of the University of Buffalo Arts College with B. A. degree, magna cum laude, 1930, and the University of Buffalo Law School with LL. B. degree, 1933; attorney at law; member of Erie County Bar Association; served as assistant district attorney of Erie County, N. Y., from January 1, 1938, to January 1, 1943; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress as Representative at Large on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 848,971. 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; reelected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 817,553. 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, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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 (1940), 177,667. JOSEPH L. PFEIFER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y. NEW YORK Biographical > | | | | FOURTH DISTRICT.—KINGS CouNTy: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of New York Bay and Sixty-third Street; thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh Avenue, to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place, to Dean Street, to Court Street, to Amity Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia Street, to Congress Street, to the waters of East River; thence southerly through the waters of the East River to the waters of New York Bay; thence through the waters of New York Bay to the point of beginning. Population (1940), 205,310. 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 (1940), 260,159. JAMES J. HEFFERNAN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y.; his forefathers were among the Irish pioneers who settled in 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., and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y.; awarded the degree of architect by the University of the State of New York; 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 Brooklyn Board of Trade; Society of Old Brooklynites; Police Athletic League; Steneck Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Colonel Jacob Ruppert 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—KiINGs 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 Sehenectady 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 Greene Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1940), 511,317. ANDREW I. SOMERS, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs CouNty: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of the waters of Buttermilk Channel, East River, and Congress Street; thence along Congress Street to Columbia Street, to Warren Street, to Clinton Street, to Amity Street, to Court Street, to Dean Street, to Boerum Place, to Bergen Street, to Nevins Street, to Atlantic Avenue, to Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Washington Park or Cum-berland Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Spencer Street, to Willoughby Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Flushing Avenue, to Harrison Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Throop Avenue, to Walton Street, to Broadway, to Lorimer Street, to Frost Street, to Union Avenue, to North Twelfth Street, to Berry Street, to North Eleventh Street, to the waters of East River; thence through the waters of East River to the waters of Buttermilk Channel, to the point of beginning. Population (1940), 183,723. JOHN J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; member of Rules Com-mittee. | 76 Congressional Directory NEW YORK i EIGHTH DISTRICT.—KINGS County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the | intersection of Sutter Avenue and Williams Avenue; thence along Williams Avenue to Blake Avenue, I 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 [E) to a point east of Duck Point marsh; thence southerly and easterly to the boundary line of Kings and i+ Queens Counties; thence southerly and westerly along said boundary line, south of Barren Island to it 2 the Atlantic Ocean; thence through the waters of the Atlantic Ocean to the waters of Gravesend Bay; i through the waters of Gravesend Bay to the Narrows and New York Bay; through said waters to it Sixty-third Street; thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth i! 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, if - to Washington Avenue or Parkville Avenue, to Gravesend Avenue, to Foster Avenue, to East Seven- I i 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 (1940), 911,210. 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; member of House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy- eighth Congress by a majority of 97,636. if i 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 = i Avenue, to Williams Avenue, to Blake Avenue; to Pennsylvania Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue, to { il New Jersey Avenue, to Vienna Avenue, to Pennsylvania Avenue, to the waters of Jamaica Bay; il thence southerly through the waters of Jamaica Bay to a point east of Duck Point marsh; thence south- il 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 i boundary line of the second and fourth wards in the said county to the boundary line of Kings and i Queens Counties; thence westerly and northerly along said line to the point of beginning. Population (1940), 473,557. } | EUGENE J. KEOGH, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; graduate of New York { HE University and Fordham University Law School; lawyer; member of the New | York State Assembly, twentieth district, Kings County, in 1936; elected to the i ir Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses, lt = TENTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs CouNTy: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the ik 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, ji 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 i Fulton Street, to Sumner Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Greene Avenue, to SL Nostrand Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1940), 210,555. 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- E menced practice in New York City in 1912; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty- ja. | ~ eighth Congress, November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Ie Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, : i Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of the t House Committee on the Judiciary; married and has two daughters—Judith S., attending college, and Jane B., married to Lt. Sydney B. Wertheimer, of the United States Navy; home address is 303 McDonough Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. s ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—RIcEMOND COUNTY.—NEW YORK COUNTY: Bedloe Island, Ellis Island, ie Governors Island, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at East River and Market Street, along Market Street to Henry Street, to Catherine Street, to East Broadway, along East Broadway to Chatham Square, to Worth Street, to Baxter Street, to Canal Street, to Varick 2 Street, along Varick Street and Seventh Avenue to Christopher Street, to Bleecker Street, to West i I Eleventh Street, to West Fourth Street, to Bank Street, to Greenwich Avenue, along Greenwich i Avenue to Seventh Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Hudson River; thence around southern | il a ot Manhattan Island, along East River to Market Street, the place of beginning. Population 1940), 227,020. | 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, NEW YORK B 1ographical 77 £3 PRE OK 2 Augustinian Academy, and Westerleigh Collegiate Institute, all Staten Island institutions; has 3 children—2 daughters, Elizabeth, wife of Lt. John K. Lucey, United States Army, and Janet, wife of Ensign John D. Lucey, U. S. C. G. R., and 1 son, Ensign James A. O’Leary, Jr., U. 8. C. G. R.; 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—DBeginning 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 (1940), 70,307. SAMUEL DICKSTEIN, Democrat, of New York City, was born on February 5, 1885; graduated from the publie 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at East Houston and Clinton Streets, thence along East Houston to Avenue B, to East Fourth Street, to Broadway, along Broadway to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, along Sixth Avenue to West ‘Washington 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 (1940), 92,148. 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; re-elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; 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 (1940), 113,820. 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; 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 subsequently admitted to practice in the United States courts, including the United States Supreme Court; was an attor-ney 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 & Gott- * lieb, 50 Broad Street, New York City; married; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on July 29, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. : 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 1f 78 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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 (1940), 112,491. THOMAS F. BURCHILL, Democrat, Fifteenth Congressional District resid-ing at 347 West Twenty-first Street, New York, N.Y., was born August 3, 1882, in New York, N. Y., in the district which he now represents; attended St. Francis Xavier and Niagara Universities; married in 1906, and is the father of five children; auctioneer and appraiser and has carried on this business for 40 years; first elected to the New York State Legislature in 1919, serving five terms in the Assembly; elected in 1924 to the State senate and remained a member of that body until 1938; while serving in the State Legislature, he was chairman of the senate com-mittee on public service, and chairman of the joint legislative committee to revise the election law; also a member of the joint legislative committee to investigate the milk industry, and the joint legislative committee to investigate public utilities; appointed by Gov. Herbert H. Lehman to the World’s Fair Commission; member of many social and fraternal organizations, including the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks, Knights of Columbus, and the Manhattan Club; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. : 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 (1940), 148,476. JAMES H. FAY, Democrat, of New York City, N. Y., was born in that city April 29, 1899; educated in the public schools and the De La Salle Institute; received LL. B. degree from Brooklyn Law School in 1929; during the World War served in France with the One Hundred and Sixty-fiftth Infantry (Fighting Sixty-ninth, New York); wounded in action; served as deputy and acting commissioner of hospitals, New York City, 1929-34; chief field deputy, United States Internal Revenue, third district New York, 1935-38; member of various veteran, civic, social, and religious organizations; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 237,564. 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 ; executive vice president and director, Nitralloy Corporation, 230 Park Avenue, New York City; vice president, Dunn & Fowler, 111 John Street, New York City; director, United Dyewood Corpora-tion, 22 East Forty-second Street, New York City; president and director, Mutual Optical Plan, Inc., 50 East Forty-second Street, New York City; enlisted in Navy, April 1917, transferred to Army, January 1918; fought overseas as a private, Machine Gun Company, 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, the Brook Club, Racquet and Tennis Club, National Republican Club, and Porcellian Club; Episcopalian; married in 1923 to Marthe Guillon- NEW YORK Biographical 79 Verne, grandniece of Jules Verne; four children—two boys and two girls; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congressat a special election held on March 11, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Kenneth F. Simpson; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at the East River and East Sixty-third Street, thence westerly along East Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, along Third Avenue to East Seventy-third Street, along East Seventy-third Street to Lexing-ton Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Ninety-ninth Street, along East Ninety-ninth Street to the East River and along the East River to East Sixty-third Street, the point or place of beginning. Population (1940), 141,997. MARTIN J. KENNEDY, Democrat, of New York City; born in New York City on August 29, 1892; 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 (1940), 294,046. SOL BLOOM, Democrat, of New York City; born in Pekin, Ill, March 9, 1870, real estate and construction business; chairman, Committee on Foreign Affairs; director, United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission; Director General of the United States Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; member and director of many clubs and institutions; thirty-second degree Mason and Shriner; Elks; Moose; Red Men; and I. O. B. B.; has one daughter, Vera Bloom; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-eighth 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 Twentieth Street, to Park Avenue, south to East One Hundred and Eighteenth Street, east to Second Avenue, south to East One Hundred and Seventeenth Street, east to the East River, to East Ninety-ninth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Tenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Sixteenth. Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One Hundred and Twentieth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 129,881. VITO MARCANTONIO, American Labor, of New York City; born in New York City, December 10, 1902; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy- sixth, Soponty sovenili and Seventy-eighth Congresses; New York City address, 11 Park Place. : TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion beginning at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, and running thence westerly along West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street to the Hudson River, and thence along the Hudson River to Spuyten Duyvil Creek, thence through Spuyten Duyvil Creek and the Harlem River and along the boundary line between New York and Bronx Counties to Eighth Avenue, thence southerly along Eighth Avenue to West One Hundred and Forty-fifth Street, along West One Hundred and Forty-fifth Street to the Harlem River, and along the Harlem River to Fifth Avenue, and along Fifth Avenue to West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street, the point or place of beginning. Population (1940), 424,410. : JOSEPH A. GAVAGAN, Democrat; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-first and succeeding Congresses. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—BRONX COUNTY: North ‘Brothers Island, Rikers Island, South Brothers Island, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at Jerome Avenue and the Harlem River, thence along Jerome Avenue to East One Hundred and Sixty-first Street, along East One Hundred and Sixty-first Street to Melrose Avenue, along Melrose Avenue to East One Huns 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 (1940), 207,255. 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 80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 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 (1940), 762,698. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BRrRoONX COUNTY: City Island, Harts Island, High Island, Hunters Island, Middle Reef Island, Rat Island, Twin Island, The Bluezes, and Chimney Sweep, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at the boundary line between the city of New York and the city of Mount Vernon, along said boundary line to Long Island Sound, along Long Island Sound to the East River, to One Hundred and Forty-ninth'Street, along East One Hundred and Forty- ' ninth Street to Prospect Avenue, along Prospect Avenue to Freeman Street, along Freeman Street to Southern Boulevard, along Southern Boulevard to Pelham Avenue, along Pelham Avenue to the Bronx River, along the Bronx River to the boundary line between the city of New York and the city of Mount Vernon, the place of beginning. WESTCHESTER COUNTY: Cities of Yonkers and Mount Vernon and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1940), 742,687. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Rockland and Westchester, except the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1940), 402,095. 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; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam (3 counties). Population(1940), 277,210. 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-time All-American; served three terms in the New York Assembly, 1914-16, 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 NEW YORK Biographucal 81 the American Silver Star and the French Croix de Guerre for gallantry; servedas 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.—CounTIiES: Columbia, Greene, Schoharie, Sullivan, and Ulster (5 counties). Population (1940), 215,120. JAY LEFEVRE, Republican, of New Paltz, N. Y.; born in New Paltz, Sep-tember 6, 1893; was graduated from Lawrenceville (N. J.) Preparatory School and attended Dartmouth College; in 1916 became associated with his father in the coal, lumber, feed, and fuel oil business in New Paltz, N. Y.; during the first World War served in Camp Taylor, Field Artillery; married Miss Mildred Hilte-brant in 1920 and they have three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Con- ? gress on November 3, 1942. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 1to 4 and 6 to 12. Population (1940), 257,392. > 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 5 and 13 to 17. Population (1940), 234,124. DEAN PARK TAYLOR, Republican, of Troy, N. Y.; born in Troy, N. Y., January 1, 1902; educated in the public schools of Troy; attended Colgate Univer-sity and was graduated from Union University Department of Law with LL. B. degree; appointed assistant United States attorney, Northern District of New York in 1927 and served in that capacity until 1930; now engaged in the practice of law with his brother, Donald S. Taylor, at Troy, N. Y.; chairman, Republiean County Committee, Rensselaer County; delegate to Republican National Con-vention; married Mary Hayford, of Newton, N. H.; one child, Peter; member Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942. : THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Schenectady (4 counties). Population (1940), 234,421. i BERNARD W. (PAT) KEARNEY, Republican, ‘of Gloversville, N. Y.; born in Ithaca, N. Y., May 23, 1889; was graduated from Schenectady (N. Y.) High School and Union University, Albany Law School with LL. B. degree; married Lillian Dean; three daughters, Mrs. George V. Lynch, Joan, and Patricia; enlisted as a private in Company G, Second New York Infantry, National Guard, in 1909, later serving with Troop B, First New York Cavalry, 1911-17, serving 9 months on the Mexican border during 1916-17; attended the Second Officers’ Training School, Fort Niagara, N. Y., in 1917, emerging as a captain; served overseas in various outfits and took part in numerous engagements, including St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne; returning to the United States in 1919, he was given com-mand of Company G, Second New York Infantry, which later became the One Hundred and Fifth Infantry, and in 1935 was advanced to rank of colonel; commissioned brigadier general in 1937 of the Fifty-third Brigade, New York National Guard, retiring in 1940, due to physical disability incurred in line of duty, with the rank of major general; decorated by the French Government with the Legion of Honor (Officer) and the French Croix de Guerre; admitted to the bar in October 1914; city judge of Gloversville, N. Y., 1920-24; assistant district a 82 Congressional Directory EW Yoon attorney of Hamilton County, N. Y., 1924-29, and of Fulton County, N.Y.,1929-31; district attorney of Fulton County, 1931-42; Fulton County, N. Y., commander of the American Legion, Fulton County, N. Y., for four terms; department com-mander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Department of New York, 1934-35; commander in chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1936; member of the Elks, Eagles, Knights of Columbus, and Grange; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. { THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). Population (1940), 223,568. 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 caused by the death of Hon. Wallace E. Pierce; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, and Oswego (4 counties). Population (1940), 217,691. FRANCIS D. CULKIN, Oswego, N. Y., Republican; lawyer; married. THIRTY THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1940), 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego (4 counties). Population (1940), 289,274. EDWIN ARTHUR HALL, Republican, of Binghamton, was born in Bing-hamton, Broome County, N. Y., February 11, 1909, the son of Edwin A. and Har-riet Babcock Hall; 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 Insti-tute 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 Repub-lican convention at Albany, 1936; nominated in September 1937 for city council-man from Binghamton’s fifth ward in a heated Republican primary battle, receiv-ing a total vote nearly equal to the combined votes cast for his opponents, Henry W. Strong, Edward W. Walls, Francis Wheaton, and William McLaughlin; elected in November 1937 to a 4-year term in city council by a 2-to-1 vote over his Democrat opponent, Rev. Delbert O. Colburn; in September 1939 nominated in the Republican primary for Congress by a vote of 16,000 over Clarence Chamber-lain, -of Port Dickinson, who received 13,000 votes, and Howard Smith, of Che-nango Forks, with 2,000 votes; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by defeating his Democrat opponent, John V. Johnson, of Oneonta, by a vote of 61,000 to 30,000; renominated by the Republican Party in September 1940 by defeating William E. Sampson-Smith, of Cooperstown, by an all-time record primary plurality for his District, with a vote of 30,000 to 12,000; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by an all-time record election plurality for his District, receiving / NEW YORK ‘Biographical 83 93,000 votes as against 40,000 votes cast for his Democrat opponent, Donald W. Kramer, of Binghamton, who also had the support of the American Labor Party; in August 1942, renominated in the primary election by the Republicans, defeating John Stott, of Norwich, by a vote of 15,000 to 12,000; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in November 1942 by defeating his Democrat opponent, Arthur J. Ruland, of Binghamton, and American Labor nominee Charles Doherty, of Norwich, the vote stood 52,000 to 32,000 to 2,000, respectively; member of the Committee on Agriculture. THIRTY FIITH DISTRICT.—CouNtiEs: Cortland and Onondaga (2 counties). Population (1940), 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.—€o0UNTIES: Cayuga, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (5 counties). Population (1940), 215,675. JOHN TABER, Republican, of Auburn, was born in that city May 5, 1880; ‘educated in the public schools, Yale University (B. A., 1902), and New York Law School; admitted to New. York bar in 1904; married April 13, 1929, to Gertrude J. Beard; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-eighth. > THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1940), 241,036. . W. STERLING COLE, Republican, Bath, N. Y.; Colgate University, Albany Law School; attorney; married; elected to Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses. 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 (1940), 339,667. 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; connected with the Merchants Dispatch Transportation Co., East Rochester, and the New York Central Railroad Co., as superintendent of con-struction at East 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, and to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 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 (1940), 240,708. 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 84 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA FORTIETH DISTRICT.—NI1AGARA 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 (1940), 433, 091. 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 as private, First New York Cavalry, and in France as major, 107th United States Infantry, 27th Division; wounded in action; awarded D. S. C.; elected to the Seventy-second and suc-ceeding 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 (1940), 265,578. : JOSEPH MRUK, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., November 6, 1903. 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 (1940), 259,818. JOHN CORNELIUS BUTLER, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in Buffalo, July 2, 1887; played amateur football and baseball; has been active in behalf of labor for 30 years; 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—OCOUNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Popu- ; lation (1940), 235,913. 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means. NORTH CAROLINA (Population (1940), 3,571,623) 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; reelected in 1942 by vote of 230,427 to 119,165 for Sam. J. Morris, 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 NORTH CAROLINA ; Biographical 85 b 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, 1937-38; 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, Main, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1940), 239,040. 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, 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 Corgress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, and Wilson (8 counties). Population (1940), 293,297. JOHN HOSEA KERR, Democrat, of Warrenton, was born at Yanceyville, N. C.; son of Capt. John H. Kerr, of the Confederate Army, and Eliza Catherine (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 (subcommittees, State, Commerce, Justice, and War); former chairman of Committee on Elections 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; chairman, Special Appropria-tions Subcommittee on Subversive Activities; member, Board of Visitors, United States Military Academy; member, advisory committee for celebration of twenty-fifth anniversary United States Air Mail Service; 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 (1940), 251,370. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, without opposition. Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). Population (1940), 358,573. HAROLD DUNBAR COOLEY, Democrat, of Nashville, N. C., son of 30s 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; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934, and to each succeeding Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (7 counties). Population (1940), 323,217. 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 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at the regular election of 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population (1940), 314,659. 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 Margaret 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Countiks: Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Hanover, and Robeson (7 counties). Population (1940), 318,298. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Committee on Rules. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Rich-mond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin (12 counties). Population (1940), 340,457. WILLIAM OLIN BURGIN, Democrat, of Lexington, N. C.; lawyer, mayorof Thomasville, 1906-10; elected to the House of Representatives of North Caro-lina 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-sixthCongress and reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, and Watauga (9 counties). Population (1940), 310,225. 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 andeach succeeding Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by thelargest majority ever received, approximately 35,000, carried every county in the district; reelected without opposition to Seventy-eighth Congress ; chairmanof the Committee on Ways and Means, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses, also reelected to theSeventy-eighth Congress without opposition. NORTH DAKOTA Biographical 87 TENTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, and Mitchell (6 counties). Population (1940), 295,822. CAMERON MORRISON, Democrat, of Charlotte, was born in Richmond County, N. C., October 5, 1869; son of Daniel M. and Martha (Cameron) Mor-rison; educated in the private schools of M. C. McCaskill, at Ellerbe Springs, and Dr. William Carroll, at Rockingham; read law under Judge Robert P. Dick, of Greensboro, and licensed to practice law in February, 1892; lawyer; mayor of Rockingham, 1893; chairman Democratic executive committee, Richmond County, 1898; presidential elector at large, 1916; Governor of North Carolina, 1921-25; during his administration he inaugurated the great constructive system of hard-surface and dependable roads, the program of progress including the rebuilding of the educational and charitable institutions of the State; elected member of the Democratic National Committee in 1928; appointed United States Senator, December 13, 1930, by Gov. O. Max Gardner, to succeed Senator Lee S. Overman, deceased, until the election in November 1932; Presbyterian; twice married—first, to Miss Lottie May Tomlinson, of Durham, December 6, 1905, who died November 12, 1919; one child, Angelia (Mrs. James J. Harris); second, to Mrs. Sarah Virginia (Ecker) Watts, widow of George W. Watts, of Durham, April 2, 1924; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cleveland, Gaston, McDowell, Madison, Polk, Rutherford, and Yancey (7 counties). Population (1940), 265,757. A. L. BULWINKLE, Democrat, of Gastonia, N. C.; born April 21, 1883; lawyer; major, One Hundred and Thirteenth Field Artillery, A. E. F., 1917-19; married Miss Bessie Lewis, Dallas, N. C.; two children—Mrs. E. Grainger Wil-liams and Captain Alfred Lewis Bulwinkle; Lutheran; member of patriotic and fraternal organizations and bar associations; elected from the Ninth Congressional District of North Carolina to the Sixty-seventh to the Seventieth Congresses, inclusive; elected from the Tenth Congressional District to the Seventy-second to the Seventy-seventh Congresses, inclusive; elected from the Eleventh Con-gressional District on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jack-son, Macon, Swain, and Transylvania (10 counties). Population (1940), 260,908. 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 thirteenth term; reelected on November 3, 1943, to represent the new Twelfth District in the Seventy-eighth Congress. NORTH DAKOTA (Population (1940), 641,935) 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; State’s attorney of Morton County, N. Dak., 1914-16; attorney general, 1916-20; legal advisor, Council of Defense, World War; on North Dakota ¢ampaign com- 88 Congressional Directory OHIO 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 5 os United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 947. REPRESENTATIVES -AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 641,935. 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, 1940, and 1942; independent in politics and a member of the Republican party of North Dakota; author of many books and booklets on western pioneers and Indians, the History of the Cattle Trade of the Dakotas 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, employed in the Legal Division of the War Department, Washington, D. C. WILLIAM LEMKE, Nonpartisan, elected on the Republican ticket, of Fargo, N. Dak., was born at Albany, Minn., August 13, 1878, son of Fred and Julia Lemke; educated in public schools and at the University of North Dakota; received B. A. degree in 1902; studied law, University of North Dakota and Georgetown University Law School, Washington, D. C.; received LL. B., Yale University, 1905; member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity; married Isabelle MeclIntyre, April 16, 1910, and they have three children; engaged in the practice of law at Fargo, 1905; member national executive committee, National Non- ~ partisan League, 1917-21; chairman, Republican State central committee, 1916-20; attorney general of North Dakota, 1921; had charge of drafting the laws establishing the industrial program in North Dakota; has been connected with practically every farm organization in the Northwest, as attorney or as an active member, including the Farmers’ Union and the Cooperative Exchange; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses as a Representative at Large; Union Party Presidential candidate, 1936; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. OHIO (Population (1940), 6,907,612) 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 OHIO Biographical 89 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, 1941; Ohio Wesleyan University, 1942, LL. D.; married Selma F. Smith, of Newton, Mass.; children: Mrs. H. Charles Weidner, Jr., William S., Mrs. R. Wallace Adler, and Robert S.; attorney at law; practiced with Gage, Wilbur & Wachner, Cleveland, 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 (1940), 6,907,612. GEORGE H. BENDER, Republican, of Cleveland Heights, Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio, September 29, 1896; president insurance company; editor and publisher, Ohio Republican and National Republican; State senator, Ohio Gen-eral Assembly, 1920-30; chairman, Republican central committee, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), since 1938; author, The Challenge of 1940; 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, anid the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. ; FIRST DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, wards 1 to 6; ward 7, except precincts A and C; wards 8 and 9; ward 10, except precincts I, K, I, N, and O; ward 11, precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 13; ward 14, except precinct Y; ward 15, except precincts A and B; ward 16, precincts D, G, K, O to X, and Z; ward 23, precinct T'; ward 24, precincts A to C and H to J; townships of Anderson, Columbia, Symmes, and all of Millcreek except the city of St. Bernard; all of city of Norwood. Population (1940), 308,578. 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; memberof 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, 20 years; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress ; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, ward 7, precincts A and C; ward 10, precincts I, K, IL, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 15, 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 (1940), 313,409. 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; Member of the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ‘ f THIRD DISTRICT. Couns Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1940), 439,058. HARRY P. JEFFREY, Republican, of Dayton, Ohio; born in Dayton, Ohio, December 26, 1901; educated in public schools of Dayton, Ohio; was graduated from Steele High School, Dayton, Ohio, Ohio State University, with B. A. and J. D. degrees; lawyer; member of law firm of Iddings, Jeffrey & Weisman; married Susan V. Gummer; three children, Harry P., Jr., Juliet L., and Susan J.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 90 Congressional Directory OHIO FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: ‘Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, and Shelby (6 counties). Population (1940), 245,130. 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 Qhio 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 J) 1935-39; elected to the Seventy-sixth and succeeding Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (7 counties). Population (1940), 163,561. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). Population (1940), 207,229. EDWARD OSCAR McCOWEN, Republican, of Wheelersburg, Ohio; born in Scioto County, Ohio; his father’s people were pioneer settlers in Scioto County, Ohio; on his maternal side he is descended from the Cecil family, who settled in Maryland about the middle of the seventeenth century; attended South Webster, Ohio,.schools; when in his teens, he was a newsboy, worked in coal mines, at a brick yard, as a farm hand, and store clerk; began teaching a one-room country school at 17; worked his way up as a high-school teacher, principal, and superin-tendent; served as county superintendent, Scioto County, Ohio, public schools from the beginning of county supervision in Ohio, August 1, 1914, to December 31, 1942, when he resigned a 5-year contract to enter the Seventy-eighth Congress; only one other of the 88 county superintendents in Ohio who had served all of that time in the same county was still in office; graduate of Ohio Northern Uni-versity, B. S. degree, Ohio State University, B. S. in education, University of Cincinnati, master of education; member of Phi Delta Kappa; past president and a past member of the executive committee of all educational organizations in Ohio in his field of work; has been president of the Ohio County Superintendents’ Association; president of the Ohio State Education Association in 1938 and a member of its executive committee to the time of entering Congress; has had a long, outstanding and distinctive record as an Ohio educator; is a life member of the National Educational Association; married Clara E. Smith, who is a lineal descendent, sixth generation, of Philip Smith, of Norwich, Vt., who was an ensign in the Revolutionary War; she is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution; five children, all college graduates and all taught or are teaching school-—Clara Frances, now Mrs. C. W. Smith, Portsmouth, Ohio, a graduateof Miami University and A. B. from Otterbein College; Eva Rosalie, now Mrs. J. L. Keller, South Webster, Ohio, B. S. in education, Miami Uni-versity, M. A., University of Michigan; Edward Reginald, B. S. in education, Ohio University, and master’s degree from Northwestern University; John Donald Smith, B. S. in education, Ohio University; Florence Kathryn, B. 8S. in education, Ohio University; another son, Cecil Bernard, died in infancy; member of a Masonic lodge, Wheelersburg, past master; member of Royal Arch Masons, and Solomon’ Council, Portsmouth; Kiwanian; member of Methodist Episcopal Church; served as precinct committeeman and delegate to Ohio Republican State Convention; was requested to be a candidate for the Seventy-eighth Congress by the Sixth District Republican Committee, representing all six counties; was nominated and elected on November 3, 1942, the first Republican Congressman from the Sixth Ohio District since 1928 election; carried four of the six counties, receiving 33,171 votes to 31,793 over the Democratic incumbent. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTiES: Champaign, Clark, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, Logan; Madison, Union, and ‘Warren (9 counties). Population (1940), 302,068. 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, 0HIO Biographical 1916; three children, Betty Jean, Dorothy Lucille, and Clarence J., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford, Hancock, Hardin, Marion, Morrow, and Wyandot (6 : counties). Population (1940), 183,187. -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 1937; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, and Ross (5 counties). Population (1940), 181,117. WALTER ELLSWORTH BREHM, Republican, of Logan, Ohio; born in Somerset, Perry County, Ohio, May 25, 1892; attended the public schools, Boston University, and Ohio Wesleyan University; was graduated from Ohio State University in 1917 with D. D. 8. degree; worked in steel mills, rubber factories, and oil fields after graduation from high school preparing himself Logan City Council, financially for college; treasurer of executive committee, 1936-38; member of the Ohio National Guard, 1908-14; during the first World Corps because of a War was rejected for service in the Regular Army Dental the Ohio House of Representatives, 1938-42; en- shoulder injury; member of gaged in the practice of dentistry in Logan, Ohio, 1921-42; married Miss Lucille 16; Mason and Shriner; member Fountain; two children, Tommy, 18, and Jimmy, of the Odd Fellows, Grange, Eagles, Elks, and the Kiwanis Club; elected to the is the second Republican ever Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; elected to Congress from the Eleventh District. 92 Congressional Directory OHIO degree, and the Michigan College of Law with LL. B. degree in 1924; admitted to practice in Ohio in 1924; commissioner of insolvents; prosecuting attorney of Erie County 1931-37; president of Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association; special counsel for Attorney General of Ohio; lecturer, School Police Admin-istration, Ohio State University; member of Ohio Bar Examiners’ Committee and County, State, and American Bar Associations; admitted to practice in county, State, and Federal courts; member of the American Legion; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit (4 counties). Popu- lation (1940), 531,489. ED ROWE, Republican, of Akron, Ohio; born in Carroll County, Ohio, December 21, 1892; married Mary Edna Wellan and has two daughters and one son; served in the first World War in the Submarine Chaser Service of the United States Navy and is a member of the American Legion; elected to Akron City Council five times, serving one term as president of the council; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; committee assignments: Post Offices and Post Roads and District of Columbia. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Guernsey, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Wash-ington (6 counties). Population (1940). 199,609. P. W. GRIFFITHS, Republican, of Marietta, Ohio; born at Taylor, Pa., March 30, 1893; attended the public schools; was graduated from Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa., in 1921 with B. S. degree and from Columbia University, New York, N. Y., in 1930, with M. A. degree; automobile dealer; mayor of Marietta, Ohio, 1938-39; enlisted in the United States Navy and served from 1910 to 1913 and during the first World War, 1917 to 1919; married; two children—Betty Ann, junior, Pennsylvania State College, and Margie Lenore, junior, Marietta High School; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. : SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (4 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 372,099. HENDERSON H. CARSON, Republican, of Canton, Ohio, was born in Cadiz, Ohio, on October 25, 1893, the son of C. W. and Georgie F. (Haverfield) Carson; attended the public and high schools of Cadiz; was graduated from the Cleveland (Ohio) Liaw School in 1919 with LL. B. degree from Baldwin Wallace College at Berea, Ohio; during the first World War enlisted in the field artillery at Camp Zachary Taylor, being honorably discharged in 1919 as a corporal; was admitted to the bar in 1919 and commenced practice in Canton, Ohio, in 1922; in 1928 became an active member of the present firm of Burt, Carson & Shadrach, Canton, Ohio; member of Canton, Stark County, Ohio State, and American Bar Associa-tions, and International Association Insurance Counsel; past president of Canton Lions Club and Canton Shrine Club; vice commander of American Legion Post No. 44; vice president, board of trustees, of the First Presbyterian Church; served on the faculty of McKinley Law School for the past 16 years; received honorary degree of doctor of jurisprudence in 1941; married Miss Ella M. Ward on June 2, 1917, and has two daughters—Anne Ward Snyder and Julia; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. : SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashland, Coshocton, Delaware, Knox, Licking, and Rich-land (6 counties). Population (1940), 254,315. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Harrison, and Jefferson (5 counties). Population (1940), 321,626. EARL R. LEWIS, Republican, of St. Clairsville, Ohio, was born in Lamira, Ohio, February 22, 1887, son of William D. and Nanna Ramage Lewis; educated esr Biographical in the country schools and St. Clairsville High School; received B. S. degree in 1911, Muskingum College, and LL. B. degree in 1914, Western Reserve University Law School; profession, lawyer; trustee, Muskingum College; member of Ohio Senate, 1927-28, 1931-34; Republican floor leader, Ohio Senate, 1931-34; president pro tempore, Ohio Senate, 1931-32; chairman, Republican State cam-paigh committee for Ohio, 1930; member, Interstate Commission on Conflicting Taxation of American Legislators Association, 1931-35; married Hazel J. Neff in 1916; children, Robert N., Elizabeth J., and Richard E. Lewis; elected to the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-eighth Congresses. : NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Mahoning, and Trumbull (3 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 441,240. MICHAEL JOSEPH KIRWAN, Democrat, of Youngstown, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-fifth and each succeeding Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—C1ry oF CLEVELAND: Wards 1 to 4; ward 5, precincts F, M, and V; wards 7 and 8; ward 9, precincts A to H; wards 10, 21, 23, and 24; ward 25, except part of precinct I; and ward 31, except precinct D. Population (1940), 282,616. MICHAEL A. FEIGHAN, Democrat, 16714 Marquis Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio; born in Lakewood, Ohio, February 16, 1905; attended public and parochial grammar schools; graduate of St. Ignatius High School, Cleveland, Ohio; attended John Carroll University 2 years; graduate of Princeton University, A. B. degree, 1927; graduate of Harvard Law School, LL. B. degree, 1931; member of Ohio State Legislature, 1937-40; Democratic floor leader, 1939-40; married Florence J. Mathews of Pawhuska, Okla., on June 21, 1930; children, Michael A. Feighan, Jr. (deceased), William Mathews Feighan, born April 14, 1934, and Fleur Feighan, born December 17, 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—Ciry 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, precincts A 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 (1940), 305,434. 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; LL. D., honorary, May 1942); entered the law school of Columbia Uni-versity 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 September 1901; was a member of the Ohio Houseof Representa-tives, 1911-12; was elected a member of the fourth Constitutional Convention of Ohio, which convened at Columbus on January 9, 1912, and adjourned August 26, 1912, serving as chairman of the initiative and referendum committee, and was the author of the initiative and referendum amendment to the constitution; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress from the State at large; reelected to the Sixty-fourth Congress from the Twenty-first Ohio District, and reelected to the Sixty-fifth Congress; again elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress by a vote of 34,717 for Mr. Crosser to 18,897 for his opponent. 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 (1940), 698,650. FRANCES P. BOLTON, Republican, of Lyndhurst (suburb of Cleveland), Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio; married in 1907; three sons, Charles, Kenyon, and Oliver; active for many years in public health nursing and nursing education, social service, and education; honorary degrees, LL. D., Colgate University, 1940, LL. D., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1942; Republican State Central Com-mittee, 1938-40; 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——8 Congressional Directory OELAHOMA OKLAHOMA (Population (1940), 2,336,434) 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 conventions, 1910, 1936, and 1940; 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, 1939; member of Phi Delta Theta college fraternity; is an Elk, Mason, and Shriner. EDWARD H. MOORE, Republican, of Tulsa, Okla.; born on a farm in Noda-‘way County, Mo., November 19, 1871; educated in the common schools and the Chillicothe (Mo.) Normal School; taught school in the country schools, and was graduated from the Kansas City School of Law in 1900; moved to Oklahoma in 1901; practiced law for 18 years; was married in 1905 to Miss Cora McComb, of Lamar, Mo.; is a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association, and also of the Ameri- can Bar Association; has engaged in business since 1919 as an independent oil producer, farmer, and cattle raiser; is a thirty-second degree Mason and a member of the First Christian Church of Tulsa; was elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, on the Republican ticket for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Craig, Delaware, Mayes, Nowata, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Rogers, Tulsa, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1940), 416,863. ° 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, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskogee, Okmulgee, Se-quoyah, and Wagoner (8 counties). Population (1940), 239,001. 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.; had a short career in cabaret and vaudeville entertainment; moved to Hanna, Okla., in 1916; reported for duty at the First Officers’ Training Camp, Fort Logan H. Root, Little Rock, Ark., on May 14, 1917, but failed of commission because of a quarrel with a superior officer; there-after joined the Nineteenth Infantry in the Regular Army, from which he was honorably discharged on March 27; 1919; returned to his then home in Eufaula, Okla., where he took up the study of law in the office of his brother, Clark Nichols; during the course of this study for a livelihood engaged himself in three enter-prises; in 1920 purchased and operated-the first drive-in filling station and bulk gasoline plant between Muskogee and McAlester, Okla.; coached the Eufaula OKLAHOMA . Biographical : 0h High School football team that year; in 1922 he sold his interest in the gasoline business to his partner, T. B. Porter; purchased an interest in and became the president of the Metropolitan School, Opera House, and Church Furniture Co. of Muskogee, Okla.; in 1923 sold his interest in this company to his principal partner, H. P. Battles, at which time he went to Oklahoma City and associated himself in the municipal bond business with the then Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma, M. E. Trapp; this association was dissolved upon Trapp assuming the position of Governor of that State in 1924; after getting together and selling a bloc of oil leases in eastern Colorado, in 1925 returned to Eufaula, Okla., where he devoted his entire time to the study of law in his brother’s office; was admitted to the bar upon examination in 1926; immediately took up the practice of law with his brother under the firm name of Clark & Jack Nichols; engaged in the general practice of law until 1934 when he was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress as a Representative from the Second Oklahoma District; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses from the same district; served on the following committees for his first three terms in Congress: Rivers and Harbors, Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Territories, District of Columbia, Elections No. 3, and Claims; at the beginning of his fourth term was elected to the exclusive Committee on Rules; was a member of a com-. mittee that in 1935 and 1937 was sent to Hawaii to conduct hearings on a bill which would have made Hawaii the forty-ninth State of the Union; in March of 1941 was made chairman of a select committee of the House of Representatives to investigate civil and commercial aviation; served as chairman of this com-mittee until its final report was filed in March 1943; married Marion Young of Eufaula, Okla., on March 30, 1921, and to this union on March 4, 1922, was born one daughter, Nina Jean, and on June 30, 1936, a son, Dan; member of the Scottish Rite Masons, Shrine, Elks, American Legion, National Press Club, Burn-ing Tree Country Club, Muskogee Town and Country Club, and Variety Club. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Atoka, Bryan, Carter, Choctaw, Latimer, Le Flore, Love, McCurtain, Marshall, Pittsburg, and Pushmataha (11 counties). Population (1940), 320,322. PAUL STEWART, Democrat, of Antlers, Okla.; born in Clarksville, Ark., February 27, 1892, son of Charles Jackson and Mary Ellen (Overbey) Stewart; entered business at the age of 13 in 1905; ranchman, farmer, publisher, lawyer, and merchant; owner and publisher of the Antlers American, a weekly newspaper, from 1929 to date; owner and operator of the Paul Stewart Ranch-Farm; married Mrs. Irene Almond Smith, daughter of Henry and Mary Lottie Almond, June 9, 1938; two daughters, Mrs. Elma Kerr and Mrs. Martha Genia McKinney, from a previous marriage in 1912; four grandchildren, Sally Ann Novotny and Paul Dow, Stewart, and Norma Gay McKinney; father’s family came to what is now the Third Congressional District of Oklahoma (then the Indian Territory) in 1894; his wife’s family came in 1886; elected to the Oklahoma House of Repre-sentatives in 1922, reelected in 1924; elected to the Oklahoma State Senate in 1926, reelected 1928, 1932, 1936, and 1940; majority floor leader 1929-30, president pro tempore 1933-34; resigned from State senate November 1942 to enter Congress; Presbyterian, Mason, and Elk; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; member of Committee on Military Affairs. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Coal, Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Potta-watomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1940), 324,641. LYLE H. BOREN, Democrat, of Seminole, Okla.; farmer, author, Congress-man; born near Waxahachie, Tex., May 11, 1909; son of Mark Lattimar .and Nannie Mae (Weatherall) Boren; B. A. degree from East Central Teachers . College, Ada, Okla., in-1930 and M. A. degree from Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College in 1935; teacher at Wolf, Okla., 1930-35; employed in the United States Treasury Department, 1935-36; married Christine McKown, of Maud, Okla., December 26, 1936; son, David Lyle, born April 21, 1941; partner, Boren & Malone Co., office and school supplies, Seminole, Okla.; Oklahoma State president, Democratic fraternity, 1934-35; member of the National Execu-tive Council of the Boy Scouts of America, Pi Kappa Delta, Knights of Pythias, I. O. O. F., and Elks Lodge; lieutenant commander, United States Naval Re-serves; member of Eugene Fields Society of Authors and Writers; member of the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee and of the following subcommittees: Oil, aviation, security and exchange, and public health; was the youngest Member elected in 1936 to serve in the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. | | 96 Congressional Directory : OKLAHOMA FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne (7 counties). Population (1940), 397,385. A. S. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, King-fisher, and Stephens (9 counties). Population (1940), 242,241. 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 1’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, Seventy- seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. x SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CountiES: Beckham, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa, Roger Mills, Tillman, and Washita (11 counties). Population (1940), 189,547. “VICTOR WICKERSHAM, Democrat, of Mangum, Okla., was born on a farm near Lone Rock, Baxter County, Ark., February 9, 1906; son of Frank M. and Lillie M. Wickersham; moved to Mangum, Okla., January 8, 1915; educated in the public schools of Oklahoma; married Miss Jessie Stiles, June 30, 1928, and they have three children: La Melba Sue, born August 3, 1930, Galen, born February 10, 1933, and Nelda, born July 25, 1935; servedin county clerk’s office, 1925 and 1926, and in court clerk’s office, 1926 to 1935; appointed court clerk one time and elected three times in Greer County, Okla.; chief clerk of Board of Affairs of the State of Oklahoma, 1935-36; is a member of the Christian Church; since 1937 has been in private insurance business as agent for 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; is a member of the Committee on Agriculture. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Garfield, Grant, Harper, Kay, Major, Noble, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (12 counties). Population (1940), 206,434. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. OREGON Biographical OREGON (Population (1940), 1,089,684) + SENATORS Cthat HARLES city, L. McNARY, June 12, 1874; Republican, of educated in Salem Salem, public Oreg.; schools born and on a farm Stanford near 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; reelected November 3, 1942, for 6-year term beginning January 3, 1943. 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 Corporation), 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 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, Lincoln, Marion, Polk, Tilla" mook, Washington, and Yamhill (10 counties). Population (1940), 309,004. 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 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA County in the Oregon Legislature in 1930; appointed corporation commissioner of Oregon by Gov. Julius L. Meier in 1931; married to Miss Ethel L. Walling, of Polk County, Oreg., in 1919, and they have three daughters—Frances Anne (Mrs. John L. Sullivan), Dorothy May, and Beverly Jane; elected to the Seventy- third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-eighth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Crook, Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1940), 210,991. * LOWELL STOCKMAN, Republican, Helix, Oreg., April 12, 1901; attended Seventy-sixth, Deschutes, Gilliam, Sherman, Umatilla, of Pendleton, Seventy-seventh, and : Grant, Harney, Hood River, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Oreg., was born near the Pendleton public schools and was graduated from Oregon State College, Corvallis, Oreg., in 1922, with B. S. degree in agriculture; in 1924 married Dorcas Conklin, graduate of the University of Oregon in 1923, and have three children, Bill, Mary, and Margery; farmed until being elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Multnomah. Population (1940), 355,099. 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, at law; admitted to practice in the States of New York and courts, and United States Supreme Court; member of from 1929 to 1938, when he resigned from the State senate for the United States Congress, with the exception of one not a candidate; married to Mayme Henton; elected to the seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. of New York; attorney Oregon, in the Federal the Oregon Legislature to become a candidate term for which he was Seventy-sixth, Seventy- : FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, and Linn (7 counties). Population (1940), 214,590. HARRIS ELLSWORTH, Republican, of Roseburg, Oreg.; newspaper editor; was born in Hoquiam, Wash., September 17, 1899; parents moved to Oregon the following year; attended public and high schools in Oregon; was graduated in journalism from University of Oregon in 1922; worked on Oregon newspapers, in lumbering industry, 1 year as manager of Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association and associate professor in journalism at the University of Oregon, and 3 years as manager of a lumber industry publication; has been publisher and part owner of Roseburg News-Review since 1929; served as president of Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, Oregon Press Conference, and Uni-versity of Oregon Alumni Association; member of Oregon Educational Policies Commission; appointed State senator near the end of the 1941 session of the Oregon Legislature; served in the S. A. T. C. in World War I; married to Miss Helen E. Dougherty, of San Jose, Calif., in 1923, and they have two daughters, Mary Margaret and Jane; member of the American Legion, Grange in sixth degree, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Delta Chi, Sigma Upsilon, and Rotary Club; Protestant; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. PENNSYLVANIA (Population (1940), 9,900,180) 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 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; { eo PENNSYLVANIA Biographical : 99 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, Woodmen of 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 AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 9,900,180. WILLIAM I. TROUTMAN, Republican, of Shamokin, Pa.; born in Shamokin, Pa., January 13, 1905; attended local public schools and was graduated from Franklin and Marshall College in 1927 with A. B. degree and from the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1930 with LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar in 1930 and has practiced law in Northumberland County, Pa., since; special attorney for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1939-42; member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Pi, and Masonic fraternities; married to Emeline B. Lark, and they have two daughters—Grace E. and Emeline L.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. ; FIRST DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 1 to 6, 26, 39, and 48. Population (1940), 252,131, JAMES GALLAGHER, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in the first ward of Philadelphia, Pa.; attended the public schools and business school; engaged in merchandised warehousing and transportation; married; three chil-dren; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SEooND DISTRICT.—CitY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 7 to 10, 24, 27, 30, 36, and 44. Population (1940), 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 two sons—James Patrick McGranery, Jr., and Clark McGranery; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 to 20, 25, 31, 37, and 45. Popula-tion (1940), 272,577. 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 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 100 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 15, 28, 29, 32, 38, and 47. Population (1940), JOHN EDWARD SHERIDAN, Democrat, of Philadelphia; born in Water- Be bury, Conn., September 15, 1902; received B. S. degree from the University of -Pennsylvania in 1925 and LL. B. degree from Temple University School of Law in 1931; lawyer; engaged in general practice; former deputy attorney general, department of justice, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; member and secretary of the Board of Revision of Taxes of Philadelphia County, January 5, 1937, to May 1937; secretary of Family Court, May 1937 to September 1937; Penn- sylvania counsel for Delaware River Bridge Commission, December 16, 1938, to June 16, 1939; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on November 7, 1939, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. J. Burr- wood Daly; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a plurality of 32,000 votes over his opponent, former Congressman Benjamin M. Golder; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Ci11Y oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 23, 33, 35, 41, and 43. Population (1940), 295,060. CHARLES FREDERICK PRACHT, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Pitman, Schuylkill County, Pa., October 20, 1880; attended the public schools; associated in the toy novelty and notions business, 1897-1914; children’s agent and investigator in county commissioner’s office, 1915-29; served in the depart- ment of accounts under the Clerk of Quarters Sessions, 1930-31; personal property assessor in the Board of Revision Department, 1932-42; member of the Republican Executive Ward Committee for 35 years, and its chairman for 26 consecutive years; vice president of the Thirty-third Republican Club; member of the Masonic Order, Philadelphia Consistory, and Lulu Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CIiTY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 34, 40, 46, 51, and 52. Population (1940), 293,854. FRANCIS JOHN MYERS, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Phila- delphia, Pa., December 18, 1901; was graduated from St. Joseph’s High School, Philadelphia, in 1919; St. Joseph’s College, Philadelphia, in 1923, with B. A. degree; and Temple University Law School in 1927, with LL. B. degree; in- structor in St. Joseph’s High School, 1923-27, engaged in the practice of law since 1927; secretary to the district attorney of Philadelphia, 1929-31; attorney ; for Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, 1934-35; appointed deputy attorney { general for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1937; married Miss Catharine i M. Hall, and they have three children—Francis John, Jr., Kathleen, and Barbara; IE elected to Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the i Seventy-eighth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CiTY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 21, 22,42, 49, and 50. Population (1940), 304,555. i! HUGH D. SCOTT, Jr., Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Fredericks- hi burg, Va., November 11, 1900; attended public and private schools; graduated from Randolph-Macon College in 1919, with A. B. degree, and from the University : of Virginia in 1922, with LL. B. degree; also attended University of Pennsylvania; i engaged in active practice of law since 1922; partner in firm of White & Staples; assistant district attorney, Philadelphia County, Pa., for 15 years; formerly i chairman, criminal law committee, Pennsylvania Bar Association; also active in i) Philadelphia and American Bar Associations; member, governor's commission on i reform of magistrates system; president, Woodmere Art Gallery; enrolled in student R. O. T. C. and S. A. T. C. during World War; lieutenant commander, United States Naval Reserve; member Hewitt-Hausler Post No. 154, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Alpha Chi Rho and Tau Kappa Alpha fraternities, Sons of the Revolution, Patriotic Order Sons of America, Order of Independent Americans, Philadelphia Cricket Club; University Club, Army and Navy Club (Washing- ton) ; national president of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity; married Marian Chase, of Germantown, Pa.; one child, Marian Lee; elected to the Seventy-seventh Con- gress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNtY: Delaware. Population (1940), 310,756. JAMES WOLFENDEN, Republican, of Upper Darby, was born in Carding- ton, Delaware County, Pa.; elected to the Seventieth Congress; reelected to the succeeding Congresses. PENNSYLVANIA iB rographical : 10 1 ° NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Bucks and Lehigh (2 counties). Population (1940), 285,248. CHARLES L. GERLACH, Republican, of Allentown, Pa.; born in Bethlehem, Northampton County, Pa., September 14, 1895; educated in the public schools of Bethlehem; married November 16, 1916, to Florence I. Hillegas; businessman; former assistant superintendent of Traylor Engineering Co.; owner of Allentown Supply Co., wholesale and retail fuels, burners, heat conditioners, and building supplies; Republican State committeeman, 1936-37; chairman of organization committee for Republican clubs in Lehigh County; past president Post L, T. P. A.; member of Moravian Church; thirty-second degree Mason; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of House Foreign Affairs Committee. y TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chester and Lancaster (2 counties). Population (1940), 348,130. 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.—CouUNTY: Lackawanna. Population (1940), 301,243. JOHN W. MURPHY, Democrat, of Dunmore, Pa.; born in Avoca, Pa., April 26, 1902; was graduated from Avoca High School 1918; Wharton Evening Exten-sion School (accounting work), 1922; B. S. degree in economics, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 1926; LL. B. degree from University of Pennsylvania Law School, in 1929; assistant district attorney of Lackawanna County, 1934-41, inclusive; member of the law firm of Mackie, Murphy & Law; member of the bar of Lackawanna County Courts, Pennsylvania Superior Court, Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court of the United States; director of the Lackawanna Bar Association; member of executive committee of the Pennsyl-vania Bar Association, and a member of the American Bar Association; president of Purple Club, member of Scranton Club, and fourth degree Knights of Colum-bus; married Miss Ella Heffron, August 14, 1931; children—John, aged 9, Jean Marie, aged 7, Ellen, aged 14 months, and George, aged 2 months; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. * TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Luzerne. Population (1940), 441,518. THOMAS BYRON MILLER, Republican, of Plymouth, Pa.; born in Plymouth, Luzerne County, Pa.; descendant of pre-Revolution families; attended the public schools and Hillman Academy; graduated from Dickinson College with M. A. degree and from Dickinson Law School; member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; officer in the first World War, Sixteenth Field Artillery, United States Army; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on May 19, 1942, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. J. Harold Flannery; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. DISTRICT Couns Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population 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 Schuylkill County Medical Society, member of Pennsylvania State Medical Society, member American Medical Association; elected to Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. 102 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Berks. Population (1940), 241,884. DANIEL K. HOCH, Democrat, of Reading, Pa.; born in Oley Township, Berks County, Pa., January 31, 1866; served apprenticeship with the Reading Eagle for the printing trade; worked on every department of a newspaper— pressman, compositor, reporter, editor, advertising manager, and circulation manager; active in the promotion and maintaining of the Appalachian Trail, a mountain path extending from Maine to Georgia; president of the Blue Moun-tain Eagle Climbing Club, which opened and now maintains the trail from the Lehigh River to the Susquehanna, a distance of over 100 miles; served in the Pennsylvania Legislature sessions of 1899 and 1901; county controller of Berks County, Pa., 1912-16; widower; trustee of St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church, Reading, Pa.; past State president of Patriotic Order Sons of America; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Bradford, Clinton, Columbia, Lycoming, Montour, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wyoming (10 counties). Population (1940), 368,721. WILSON D. GILLETTE, Republican, of Towanda, Pa.; born on a farm in Sheshequin, Bradford County, Pa.; 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 dis-tributor 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Allegheny County: City of Pittsburgh, wards 6, 9, and 21 to 27; boroughs of Aspinwall, Avalon, Bellevue, Ben Avon, Ben Avon Heights, Blawnox, Brackenridge, Bradford ‘Woods, Cheswick, Edgeworth, Emsworth, Etna, Fox Chapel, Glenfield, Haysville, Leetsdale, Mill-vale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Sharpsburg, Springdale, Tarentum, and West View; townships of Aleppo, East Deer, Fawn, Franklin, Frazer, Hampton, Harmar, Harrison, Indiana, Kilbuck, Leet, McCandless, Marshall, O’Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, Springdale, and West Deer. Population (1940), 356,594. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Montgomery. Population (1940), 289,247. 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 (1940), 215,352. 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 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties)., Popu-lation (1940), 324,857. 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. PENNSYLVANIA B tographical 103 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; reelected to. the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, receiving 62,119 votes, defeat-ing Andrew Beshore, who received 31,969 votes. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CounrtieEs: Cameron, Clarion, Elk, Forest, McKean, Potter, Venango, and ‘Warren (8 counties). Population (1940), 267,117. LEON HARRY GAVIN, Republican, of Oil City, Pa.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., February 25, 1893; during the first World War served as sergeant in the 51st Infantry, Sixth Division; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike (4 counties). Pop-ulation (1940), 267,948. ; 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 World Wars I and II served in the air force of the Navy; married; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.,—CouUNTIES: Adams, Franklin, and York (3 counties). Population(1940), 286,835. CHESTER H. GROSS, Republican, of Manchester, Pa.; born October 13, 1888, in East Manchester Township, York County, Pa., on the farm where he now lives; attended local rural schools until 16 years of age, then attended a busi-ness college in York, Pa.; later a short course in agriculture in the Pennsylvania State College; during 1910 and 1911, traveled widely in United States and Canada; married January 12, 1911, to Carrie M. Hykes, and began farming on his father’s farm; during the years eight children were born, seven still live, the eldest 29 years of age, all living at home; this is a typical farm family; elected a master farmer in Pennsylvania January 25, 1936; held nearly all local offices in his town-ship; elected to the Pennsylvania State Legislature in 1929, for one term; is a past officer in several fraternal organizations and a member of the National Grange; is a past president of the Pennsylvania State School Directors Association; he and his family worship in the Lutheran Church; elected to the Seventy-sixth. Congress on November 8, 1938; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Blair, Centre, and Clearfield (3 counties). Population (1940), 285,060. JAMES E. VAN ZANDT, Republican, of Altoona, 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 Penn-sylvania 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 His-torical 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 commander in chief of the V. F. W. of the United States; during third term as commander in chief, headed goodwill delegation of veterans tour of Orient; served as chairman of 104 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, receiving 38,283 votes, Harry E. Diehl, Democrat, receiving 24,391 votes. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Fayette, Greene, and Somerset (3 counties). Popula- tion (1940), 330,627. g . 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—Washington County; Allegheny County: Boroughs of Bridgeville, Coraopolis, Dormont, Heidelberg, McDonald, and Oakdale; townships of Bethel, Collier, Crescent, Findley, Moon, Mount Lebanon, North Fayette, Robinson, Scott, South Fayette, and Upper St. Clair. Population (1940), 312,508. ROBERT GRANT FURLONG, Democrat, of Donora, Washington County, Pa.; born in Roscoe, Washington County, Pa., son of Ethel A. Grant and Wil-liam Allen Furlong; attended the public schools; was graduated from the California State Teachers College in 1904, and Jefferson Medical College, Phila-delphia, Pa., in 1909, with M. D. degree; taught in the public schools at Roscoe, Pa.; practiced medicine in Donora, Pa., 30 years; served in the first World War with the Two Hundred and Eightieth Ambulance Company, Twentieth Division; burgess of Donora, Pa., 1922-26, and 1941-42; served as postmaster of Donora, Pa., 1933-38; inheritance tax appraiser for Washington County, Pa: for 1 year; married Miss Joyce M. Hoffman, of Lebanon, Pa., and they have two sons, Keen A. Furlong, first class seaman, Naval Aviation, and Robert Grant Furlong, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Beaver, Butler, and Lawrence (3 counties). Population(1940), 341,221. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 counties). Population (1940), 428,490. » HARVE TIBBOTT, Republican, of Ebensburg, Cambria County, Pa.; born May 27, 1885, in Cambria Township, near Ebensburg; public and high school of Ebensburg, Pa.; graduate of the University of Pittsburgh; pharmacist; treasurer of Cambria County, Pa., 1932-35; president of First National Bank of Ebensburg, -Pa.; director of Cambria Thrift Corporation; married Mary Eldora Humphreys, and has one son, Rowland Humphreys Tibbott; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Westmoreland. Population (1940), 303,411. AUGUSTINE BERNARD KELLEY, Democrat, of Greensburg, Pa.; coal operator; born in New Baltimore, Pa., July 9, 1883, son of Abraham Francis and PENNSYLVANIA Biographical : 105 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, president and director, Old Basin By-Product Coal Co.; Mammoth Coal & Coke Co., and Kelden Coal Co.; 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 unionization; member of the Greens-burg 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 Engineers and of the American Mining Congress; life member of the Association of Graduates of the United States Military Academy; member of the Army Athletic Association; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. : TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crawford, Erie, and Mercer (3 counties). Population (1940), 353,572. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses by increased majorities. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of McKeesport; boroughs of Braddock, Chalfant, Churchill, East McKeesport, East Pittsburgh, Edgewood, Elizabeth, Forest Hills, Glassport, Home-stead, Liberty, Munhall, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Swissvale, Trafford (part), Turtle Creek, Verona, Versailles, Wall, West Homestead, Whitaker, Wilkinsburg, and Wil-merding; townships of Braddock, Elizabeth, Forward, Lincoln, North Versailles, Patton, Penn, Plum, South Versailles, Versailles, and Wilkins. Population (1940), 313,390. SAMUEL ARTHUR WEISS, Democrat, of Glassport, Pa.; born in Krotowocsz, Poland, April 15, 1902; emigrated to the United States with his parents in 1903, who settled in Glassport, Pa.; graduated from Duquesne University Colbege, 1925, 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; referee in the National Professional Football League during 1942; 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 Ameri-can Bar Associations; served in the Pennsylvania Legislature two terms, 1935-39; married Miss Jeannette E. Hoffman on June 30, 1930, and they have two chil-dren—Joy Arlene, born December 2, 1935, and James Edgar, born July 25, 1938; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 5, 7, 8, and 10 to 15. Population (1940), 311,966. 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 of Representatives, sessions of 1935-36; veteran of the World War; married; and has two children— Herman P., Jr., born December 7, 1935, and James Jacob, born January 10, 1941; elected to Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. Residence: 3408 Parkview Avenue, fourth ward, Pittsburgh, Pa. 106 C ongresstonal Directory RHODE ISLAND THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 16 to 20 and 28 to 32; cities of Clairton and Duquesne; boroughs of Brentwood, Carnegie, Castle Shannon, Crafton, Dravos-burg, Greentree, Ingram, McKees Rocks, Mount Oliver, Rosslyn Farms, Thornburg, and West Eliza- 3 bans Son of Baldwin, Jefferson, Kennedy, Mifflin, Neville, Snowden, and Stowe. Population ’ E) . 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. RHODE ISLAND (Population (1940), 713,346) SENATORS PETER G. GERRY, Democrat, of Providence, 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. 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, 1888-90; Universities of Bonn and Berlin, Germany, 1890-92; 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; 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. I1.), Inc., 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 University, 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; reelected November 3, 1942, by a majority about three times that of 1936. sei SOUTH CAROLINA B rographical 107 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 (1940), 338, 883. 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, reelected to Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Kent and Washington. PROVIDENCE CouUNTY: 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 (1940), 374,463. 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, Eagles, president of the Bricklayers Union No. 1 of Rhode Island; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on Novem-ber 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SOUTH CAROLINA ~ (Population (1940), 1,899,804) SENATORS ELLISON DuRANT SMITH, Democrat, of Lynchburg, S. C., was born at Lynchburg, Sumter (now Lee) County, S. C., the son of Rev. William H. and Mary Isabella McLeod Smith; was prepared for college at Stewart’s School in Charleston, S. C.; finished the freshman class at the University of South Carolina; the next session entered Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C., from which insti-tution he graduated in 1889; was a member of the State legislature from Sumter County, 1896 to 1900; was one of the principal figures in the organization of the Southern Cotton Association at New Orleans in January 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; LL. 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; United States Senator; born in Charleston, S. C.; graduate of Porter Military Academy and College of Charleston; married Elizabeth deRossett Myers; children, Burnet, Jr., Army: Air Corps, Roberta, and Elizabeth; cotton exporter; alderman, City of Charleston, 1927-31; mayor of Charleston 1931-38; Governor of South Carolina 1939-41; Episcopalian; Mason; member of Society of Colonial Wars, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Junior Order, Elks, and Alpha Tau Omega. 108 Congresstonal Directory SOUTH CAROLINA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Allendale, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, Dor-chester, Hampton, and Jasper (9 counties). Population (1940), 289,482. 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; chair-man of Charleston County delegation, 1934-36, and vice chairman of judiciary committee of the State house of representatives, 1934-36; 1936 to 1940, served as special attorney, United States Department of Justice; 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg, Rich-land, and Sumter (8 counties). Population (1940), 361,933. 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; re-nominated 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; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress over M. B. Cross, Republican; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition; 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 operat-ing, being located at Columbia, S. C.; author of the Agricultural Adjustment SOUTH CAROLINA Biographical 109 Act, which was passed during the 1933 extra session, containing domestic allot-ment plan, refinancing farm mortgages, and refinancing drainage districts; chair-man of the Committee on Agriculture and vice chairman of the Joint Committee on Forestry. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Abbeville, Anderson, Edgefield, Greenwood, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Pickens, and Saluda (9 counties). Population (1940), 304,379. BUTLER B. HARE, Democrat, of Saluda, son of James and Elizabeth (Black) Hare; born on farm in Edgefield County, S. C.; received early training in rural public schools of State; graduated with A. B., Newberry College, M. A., George Washington 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, and agricultural statistician in United States Department of Agriculture; in 1912 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 his home 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 to the Seventy-third Congress, but voluntarily retired until 1938, when he was elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress from the Third District; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 339,858. 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, Redman, Junior, Merrymaker, and United Commercial Traveler; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1940), 251,137. 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 the late Phoebe Gibbes Richards; worked on a farm and attended county schools of Kershaw County until 17 years of age; attended Clemson Col-lege; 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth 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 commissioned as Reserve second lieutenant in February 1919, being discharged March 31, 1919; married on November 4, 1925, to Katharine Hawthorne Wylie, of Lancaster County, and they have two 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. 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 9 110 Congressional Directory SOUTH DAKOTA SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Lee, Marion, Marl-boro, and Williamsburg (9 counties). Population (1940), 353,015. JOHN L. McMILLAN, Democrat, Florence, S. C.; son of the late M. L. and Mary Alice Keith McMillan, 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 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 on all-southern football team 1922 and a member of the all-time all-South Carolina team; elected to Congress in 1938 over five opponents, and reelected over one opponent in 1940 by a majority of 18,000 votes; reelected in 1942 over two opponents by a majority of 17,000 votes. SOUTH DAKOTA (Population (1940), 642,961) SENATORS 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. HARLAN JOHN BUSHFIELD, Republican, of Miller, S. Dak.; born in Atlantic, Towa, August 6, 1882; moved to South Dakota with his parents in 1883; started life on a Dakota Territory homestead; his father soon engaged in the news-paper business, as editor and publisher of the Miller, S. Dak., Press; attended the public schools; was graduated from Minnesota University Law School at Minne-apolis in 1904 with LL. B. degree and from Dakota Wesleyan University, Mitchell, S. Dak., in 1939 with LL. D. degree; admitted to the bar in 1904 and commenced practice of law in Miller, S. Dak.; served as Governor of South Dakota, 1939-42, inclusive; married, has three children, two sons and one daughter; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aurora, Beadle, Bon Homme, Brookings, Brown, Brule, Buffalo, Camp-bell, 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 (1940), 485,829. 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; suc-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 District 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; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress with 60.5 percent of all votes cast. : x ; TENNESSEE | Biographical 111 SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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(1940), 157,132. : 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 publisher and rancher; 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 8 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; reelected Seventy-eighth Congress, 30,389 to 11,892. : TENNESSEE (Population (1940), 2,915,841) 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 8, 1938, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Nathan L. Bachman, for the term ending January 3, 1943, and assumed the duties as Senator on January 16, 1939; reelected on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Haw-hk J efferson, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1940), 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 | | 112 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE 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-ditionary 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 (N. Y. and D. C.), Lotos (N. Y.), and Johnson City Country; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. ; ? SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Knox, Loudon, McMinn, Monroe, Roane, and Union (9 counties). Population (1940), 388,938. 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. 8S. Grant University, Athens, Tenn., with B. S. degree in 1906; served as county superintendent of public instruc-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 & Jarvis; 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Grundy, Hamilton, Marion, Meigs, Polk, Rhea, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (12 counties). Population (1940), 331,120. 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. EM A Ou a. 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; member 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 D. McReynolds; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Overton, Pini, Putnam, Robertson, Scott, Smith, Sumner, and Trousdale (14 counties). Population (1940), 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- I TENNESSEE Biographical 113 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, and the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, DeKalb, Franklin, Giles, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, Rutherford, and Wilson (11 counties). Population (1940), 225,918. JIM NANCE McCORD, Democrat, of Lewisburg, Tenn., born in Unionville, | Bedford. County, Tenn., March 17, 1879; attended the public schools; also had private instructors; editor and publisher, auctioneer; mayor of Lewisburg, Tenn., 1917 to 1942; member of Marshall County Court, 1916 to 1942; presidential elector, State at large, Roosevelt-Garner ticket, 1932; Presbyterian,” Mason, Rotarian; married; elected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Davidson County. Population (1940), 257,267. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Cheatham, Dickson, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Montgomery, Perry, Stewart, Wayne, and Williamson (13 counties). Population (1940), 231,592. WIRT COURTNEY, Democrat, of Franklin, Williamson County, Tenn., born at Franklin, September 7, 1889; graduate of Battle Ground Academy, Franklin; academic and legal education, Vanderbilt University; taught ancient and modern languages in local preparatory schools while in university; special course in international law, Faculte de Droit, Sorbonne, Paris, France; enlisted as a private in the One Hundred and Seventeenth Infantry, Thirtieth Division, September 1917, discharged as a first lieutenant after 14 months in France; practiced law, Franklin, Tenn., 1911-32; successively city attorney, city judge, and county attorney; 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; Shriner; Elk; member of Sigma Chi fraternity, Tennessee and American Bar Associations; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress, reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses without oppo-sition; member, Committee on Foreign Affairs and Committee to Investigate Un-American Activities; married Currey Taylor, daughter of Judge Lytton Taylor, Nashville, 1919; four children, Jane, Wirt, Jr., Richard, and Robin. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Fayette, Hardeman, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, McNairy, and Madison (11 counties). Population (1940), 250,693. % TOM MURRAY, Democrat, of Jackson, Tenn.; was born in Jackson, Tenn., on August 1, 1894; graduated from Jackson High School, Union University (B. A. degree) and Cumberland University (LL. B. degree); taught in high school 2 years; served in the United States Army in World War I and was a member of the American Expeditionary Forces in France; after discharge from the Armyin 1919, began the practice of law in Jackson, Tenn.; elected district attorney general for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit of Tennessee in 1922 and served until September, 1933; resigned as district attorney to become associated with the office of the Solicitor of the Post Office Department in Washington; served with the Post Office Department until May 31, 1942; chairman of Democratic Executive Com-mittee of Madison County, Tenn., from 1924 to 1933; former member of State Democratic Executive Committee of Tennessee; delegate to Democratic National Conventions in 1928, 1932, and 1936; served as commander of the John A. Deaver Post of the American Legion at Jackson and as vice commander of the Legion for the State of Tennessee; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Sigma Alpha sion Fraternity; single; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 114 = Congressional Directory TEXAS NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, Tipton,and Weakley (9 counties). Population (1940), 248,992. , 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. - TENTH DISTRICT.—SHELBY COUNTY. Population (1940), 358,250. 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 and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member, Committee on Military Affairs. . TEXAS (Population (1940), 6,414,824)" 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; LL. D., Howard Payne College; enlisted man, Second Regiment 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 (deceased); one son—Ben Connally, lawyer, Houston, Tex.; married Mrs. Lucile Sanderson Sheppard April 25, 1942; 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 beginhing March 4, 1929; reelected in 1934, 1940; committees: Privileges and Elections; Finance; Foreign Relations, chairman; Judiciary; and Public Buildings and Grounds. W. 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; also elder in National City Christian Church of Washington, D. C.; 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 EE TEXAS Biographical 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; reelected to the United States Senate at the general election November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. \ REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bowie, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Harrison, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1940), 306,803. 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; United States Army, 1917-19; married Miss Merle Connor, of Winnsboro, Tex., February 14, 1919; they have three children—Connor Wright, age 23 (captain, United States Army, enlisted December 10, 1941), James Harold, age 21 (staff sergeant, Marine Corps in the South Pacific, enlisted De-cember 18, 1941), and William Neff, age 16 (Eagle Scout’ attending Kemper Military School, Bonnyville, Mo.) ; served 4 years as a member of the Texas Legis-lature; 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 nine Members of the House; he and all members of his family affiliated with First Baptist Church of Texarkana, Tex.; 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 honor-ary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; a member of the Democratic Steer-ing Committee of the House of Representatives and president of Texas State Society in Washington, D. C. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Angelina, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton, Orange, Sa-bine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (11 counties). Population (1940), 331,069. 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 (1940), 292,631. : LINDLEY BECKWORTH, Democrat, of Upshur County, Tex., Gladewater, Route 2; born in South Bouie community, Kaufman County, Tex., June 30, 1913, the son of O. J. Beckworth, who came to Smith County, Tex., from Georgia in 1900, and the late Josie Slaughter Beckworth, of near Edgewood, Van Zandt County, Tex.; reared on farm; attended public school in Upshur and Camp Counties, East Texas State Teachers College, Sam Houston State Teachers College, and Southern Methodist University; taught school 3 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; married to Miss Eloise Carter, of Tyler, Tex., June 27, 1942; nominated for the Seventy-sixth Congress in the Democratic primary of 1938, defeating the incumbent and three others; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-Seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, carrying 7 of 8 Third District counties. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, Kaufman, Rains, and Rockwall (7 counties). Population (1940), 259,239. : 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, Seven-tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-eighth 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: reelected Speaker of the Seventy-eighth Congress on January 6, 1943. 116 Congressional Directory © TEXAS FIFTH DISTRICT.—DALLAS COUNTY. Population (1940), 398,564. 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 (1940), 262,735. 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.—CoOUNTIES: Anderson, Cherokee, Grimes, Henderson, Houston, Madison, Yonizmery Nacogdoches, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (12 counties): Population (1940), "NAT PATTON, Democrat, of Crockett, Tex.; born in log cabin of humble farm parentage in Houston County, Tex., at a little village called Tadmore, 18 miles east of Crockett, the county seat; brothers and sisters still own old farm home. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—HARRIS County. Population (1940), 528,961. ALBERT THOMAS, Democrat, of Houston, Tex., born in Nacogdoches, Tex., April 12, 1898; A. B. and LL. B. degrees; World War veteran; married; two children; was elected to Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Austin, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Galveston, Goliad, Jackson, Lavaca, Matagorda, Victoria, Waller, and Wharton (15 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 355,317. ~ 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 (1940), 286,110. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, November 3, 1942, without opposition; married Lady Bird Taylor, November 17, 1934; member, Naval Affairs Committee. -ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bell, Bosque, Coryell, Falls, McLennan, and Milam (6 counties). Population (1940), 251,852. 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (5 counties) Population (1940), 286,132. 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. TEXAS Biographical THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Archer, Baylor, Clay, Cooke, Denton, Foard, Hardeman, Jack, Knox, Montague, Throckmorton, Wichita, ‘Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (15 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 279,924. 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 1. 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, 1933-37; 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, born on January 11, 1941, and a daughter, Judy Ann, born on April 9, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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 (1940), 368,764. 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, Jim Hogg, La Salle, Maver-ick, Medina, Starr, Webb, Willacy, Zapata, and Zavala (13 counties). Population (1940), 334,616. 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 (1940), 230,700. \ 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.—CoUNTIES: Callahan, Comanche, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Jones, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Shackelford, Stephens, and Taylor (12 counties). Population (1940), 230,010. 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 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 district in 1928; reelected in 1932 and 1936; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress from the Seventeenth Congressional District of Texas, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942; family consists of wife and two daughters. Collings-worth, Cottle, Dallam, Deaf Smith, Donley, Gray, Hall, Hansford, Hartley, Hemphill, Hutchinson, Lipscomb, Motley, Moore, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Armstrong, Briscoe, Carson, Castro, Childress, Potter, Randall, Roberts, Sherman, Swisher, and Wheeler (28 counties). Population (1940), 239,736. EUGENE WORLEY, Democrat, Shamrock, Tex.; education, Shamrock public schools, Texas A. and M., and University of Texas School of Law; member Texas Legislature 6 years; married Ann Spivy, of Bonham, Tex., 1937; one son, Gene Worley, born August 14, 1942; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress; re-elected to Seventy-eighth Congress. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Andrews, Bailey, Borden, Cochran, Crosby, Dawson, Dick-ens, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, Hale, Haskell, Hockley, Howard, Kent, King, Lamb, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Mitchell, Scurry, Stonewall, Terry, and Yoakum (25 counties). Population (1940), 275,339. . GEORGE H. MAHON, Democrat, Colorado City, Tex.; born September 22, 1900, near Haynesville, La., son of J. K. and Lola Brown Mahon; moved to f | Mitchell County, Tex., 1908; reared on a farm; attended rural school, graduated -from Loraine High School; B. A., Simmons University, Abilene, 1924; LL. B., | ; ; 118 Congressional Directory UTAH 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 (1940), 338,176. 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 LI. 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 in 1938 and reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses. 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 (1940), 258,425. ; 0. CLARK FISHER, Democrat, of San Angelo, Tex.; born near Junction, Kimble County, Tex., November 22, 1903; attended the public schools at Junc-tion, Tex.; LL. B. degree, Baylor University; married; one daughter, Rhoda, born February 18, 1929; served as county attorney, Tom Green County, Tex., 1931-35; member of State house of representatives 1935-37; served as district attorney, Fifty-first Judicial District, 1937-43; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. UTAH (Population (1940), 550,310) 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 Society of International Law; vice chairman, Thomas Jefferson Memo-rial Commission; member, American Council of Learned Societies; associate moderator of President’s 1941 Industry-Labor Conference; American member of the International Commission for the Adjustment of Disputes between South -Africa and the United States; director, Columbia Institute for the Deaf; sometime vice president, American Political Science Association; fellow and visiting pro-fessor, 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 co-operation, Interparliamentary Union; author: Chinese Political Thought and Thomas Jefferson, World Citizen; married Edna Harker, 1907 (died 1942); three daughters—Chiyo, Esther (Mrs. Wayne C. Grover), and Edna Louise (Mrs. Lomren L. Hansen); elected to the Senate November 8, 1932; reelected Novem-ber 8, 1938. 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. Sak § FA CAT VERMONT B tographical 119 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Duchesne, Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Summit, Uintah, ‘Wasatch, Washington, Wayne, and Weber (25 counties). Population (1940), 550,310. 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 College 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. Secon DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Utah (4 counties). Population (1940), J. W. ROBINSON, Democrat, of Provo, Utah; born in Coalville, Utah; married Birda Billings; children, W. Junius, Ruth Harris, George B., and Maree Maher; A. B., 1908, Brigham Young University; J. D., 1912, University of Chicago; principal, Uinta Academy, Vernal, Utah; principal, Wasatch High School, Heber City, Utah; member of Utah State Bar Association; food administrator, Utah County, World War I; county attorney, Utah County, 1918-21; member of board of regents, University of Utah, 1925-35; elected to the Seventy-third, Congress and each successive Congress. VERMONT (Population (1940), 359,231) 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; United States Commissioner, 1907-15; 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. GEORGE DAVID AIKEN, Republican, of Putney, Vt.; born in Dummerston, 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, Sc. 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. A EEE A fd tt, 120 Congressional Directory VIRGINIA REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 359,231. CHARLES ALBERT PLUMLEY, Republican, of Northfield; born in North- field, Vt., April 14, 1875, son of Frank Plumley, who represented the Second Congressional District in the Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses, and Lavinia Fletcher Plumley; educated in the Northfield graded and high schools, + 1892; graduated from Norwich University in 1896, A. B.; A. M. in course; honor-ary LL. D., Middlebury College, Norwich University, Boston University, and University of Vermont; principal and superintendent of Northfield graded and high schools, 1896-1900; admitted to the Vermont bar in 1903; memberof the law firm of Plumley and Plumley; assistant secretary Vermont Senate in 1894: assistant clerk and clerk of the Vermont House of Representatives, 1900-1910; member and speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives, 1912-15; com-missioner 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; colo-nel, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Con-gresses; member, Committee on Appropriations (subcommittees, Agriculture and Navy); Assistant Republican Whip, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. VIRGINIA (Population (1940), 2,677,773) 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; reclected on November 4, 1924, ’ for full term expiring March 3, 1931; on November 4, 1930, for the term ending in 1937, on November 3, 1936, for the term ending in 1943, and on November 3, 1942, for the term ending in 1949, each time practically without opposition at the primary or the general election; declined tender of Secretaryship of Treasury in Cabinet of President Roosevelt in 1933. HARRY FLOOD BYRD, Democrat, of Berryville, Va.; entered business at age of 15; in 1915 elected to Senate of Virginia, in which he served until he waselected 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. VIRGINIA Biographical -| 121 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spotsylvania, War-wick, Westmoreland, and York. Cities: Fredericksburg, Hampton, and Newport News. Popula- tion (1940), 250,621. : 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; married Miss Mary Putzel, of Newport News, Va. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Southampton, and Princess Anne. Cities: Norfolk, Portsmouth, South Norfolk, and Suffolk. Population (1940), 332,864. WINDER RUSSELL HARRIS, Democrat, of 719 Maury Place, Norfolk, Va.; born in Wake County (now in corporate limits 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.) Vir-ginian; 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 Norfolk 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, continu-ing in that capacity until February 28, 1941, when nominated for Congress; past president of Norfolk Rotary Club, Norfolk Community 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 servicein 1934, carrying honorary title of first citizen of Norfolk for that year; married Charlotte Lea Meares, of Raleigh, N. C., in 1915; four daughters; Epis-copalian; 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., and Toclogbsd to the Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition in primary or election. ; THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Charles City, Chesterfield, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King William, and New Kent. Ciries: Richmond and Williamsburg. Population (1940), 309,756. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Amelia, Appomattox, Brunswick, Buckingham, Cumberland, Din-widdie, Greensville, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Surry, and Sussex. Cities: Hopewell and Petersburg. Population (1940), 243,165. PATRICK HENRY DREWRY, Democrat, of Petersburg, member of the State senate from 1912 to 1920; elected without opposition, April 27, 1920, to 122 / Congresstonal Directory VIRGINIA fill the unexpired termof Hon. Walter Allen Watson, deceased, in the Sixty-sixth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Carroll, Charlotte, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, Pittsyl-vania, and Wythe. Cities: Danville and Martinsville. Population (1940), 301,157. 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, to the Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940, and to the Seventy-eighth Congress, November 3, 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alleghany, Bedford, Botetourt, Campbell, Craig, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke. Ciries: Clifton Forge, Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1940), 301,988. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Con- _gresses; was married in 1905 to Miss Lena Hancock, of Bedford County; has two children—Clifton A., Jr., and Martha Anne; member of Green Memorial Metho-dist Church, of Roanoke; thirty-third degree Mason; past potentate Kazin Tem-ple, 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 (1940), 259,048. A. WILLIS ROBERTSON, Democrat, of Lexington, Va., was educated in thepublic schools of Lynchburg and Rockymount, Va.; B. A. and LL. B., Universityof 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; duringthe 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 theSeventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-sixth Congress onNovember 8, 1938, to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, and _ to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Albemarle, Arlington, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Gooch- land, Greene, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Madison, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. CITIES: Alexandria and Charlottesville. Population (1940), 318,495. HOWARD WORTH SMITH, Democrat, of Alexandria; born at Broad Run,Va.; graduated from Bethel Military Academy in 1901; B. L., University ofVirginia in 1903; admitted to the bar in 1904, and practiced law until 1922, when accepted appointment as judge of the corporation court of Alexandria; resignedthis position in 1928 to accept appointment as judge of the sixteenth judicialcircuit of Virginia; resigned as judge in 1930 to run for Congress; Commonwealth’s WASHINGTON : vB 1ographical 123 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; re-elected to the Seventy-third Congress as a Member at Large from the State of Virginia; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bland, Buchanan, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, and Wise. City: Bristol. Population (1940), 360,679. JOHN W. FLANNAGAN, Jgr., 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, oropty seven, and Seventy-eighth Congresses from the Ninth Congressional istrict. WASHINGTON (Population (1940), 1,736,191) 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. MON 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, business 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; a 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; 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 (1940), 412,689. 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; elected to the Washington State Legislature and served in the regular and special sessions of 1933; appointed assistant United States district attorney shortly after £7 A See 124 Congressional Directory WASHINGTON the end of the special session of the legislature and was elected prosecuting attor-ney of King County in November 1934, taking office in January 1935; member of the Elks, Eagles, and Moose lodges; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; reelected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Clallam, Island, Jefferson, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and What- com. KiNG COUNTY: Precincts of Avondale, Bothell 1 and 2, Broadview, Foy, Greenwood, Haller Lake, Hollywood, Juanita, Kenmore, Lake City, Lake Forest, Maple Leaf, Meadow Point, Morning- side, North Park, North Trunk, Oak Lake, Ravenna, Richmond, Woodinville, and Woodland. Popu- lation (1940), 269,757. 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; reelected November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTies: Clark, Cowlitz, Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, Skamania, . Thurston, and Wahkiakum (9 counties). Population (1940), 258,301. FRED NORMAN, Republican, of Raymond, Wash.; born on farm near Martinsville, Clark County, Ill., son of Dr. A. Howard and Pauline Barthold Norman; graduate of Martinsville High School; came to Pacific County, Wash., in 1901; worked on farms, in logging camps, sawmills, shingle mills, and shipyards for years; married; two children, Howard A. and Evelyn Norman Carlson; president of Fred Norman Co., Raymond, Wash., wholesale and retail tobacco, candy, ete.; member of Raymond City Council 1916-18; member of Washington State House of Representatives, 1919-20; State senator for Pacific-Wahkiakum County district, 1925-29; State senator for Pacific-Grays Harbor County district, 1930-36; active in Washington State Legislature in behalf of farm, labor, veterans, highways, and old-age pension legislation; president of Southwest Washington Good Roads Association since 1932; director of White Pass Cross State Highway Association; member of Shingle Weavers Union and United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, 32 years; president of Central Labor Council of Willapa Harbor for 10 years; member of West Union Farmers Grange 23 years, Elks, Eagles, Odd Fellows, Rebekahs; elected to Seventy-eighth Con-gress on November 3, 1942 by majority of 8,568, carrying all counties in district. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Columbia, Franklin, Garfield, Grant, Kittitas, Klickitat, Walla Walla, Whitman, and Yakima (12 counties). Population (1940), 244,908. HAL HOLMES, Republican, of Ellensburg, Wash.; was born in Cresco, Iowa, February 22, 1902; attended the public schools of Washington; was graduated from Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., with bachelor of science degree and from Columbia University, New York City, with master of arts degree; former professor of economics and business, dean of men, head of department of social studies at Central Washington College of Education; at present is livestock rancher and operator; married to Margaret Coffin Holmes; member of Grange, Farm Bureau, and Phi Beta Kappa fraternity; past northwest district governor of Kiwanis; elected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress by approximately2 to 1 majority. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, Lincoln, Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Spokane, and Stevens (8 counties). Population (1940), 274,754. WALT HORAN, Republican, of Wenatchee, Wash. ; born in Wenatchee, Wash., October 15, 1898, son of Margaret (Rankin) and Micheal Horan; attended the grade and high schools in Wenatchee until enlisting in the United States Navy, April 5, 1917; was graduated from Wenatchee High School and the State College of Washington; engaged in fruit growing, packing, storing, and shipping; married classmate, Helen Campbell; five children—Kaye, Micheal, Scott, Harold, and Walt, Jr.; Presbyterian, Mason, Granger, American Legionnaire, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Delta Chi; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942, WEST VIRGINIA B 1ographical 125 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY OF PIERCE. KING COUNTY: All that part not included in districts 1 and 2. Population (1940), 275,782. JOHN MAIN COFFEE, Democrat, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in that city; graduated from the University of Washington and from Yale University; lawyer by profession; served as a secretary to former United States Senator C. C. Dill, 1923-24; is a member of Alpha Sigma Phi and of Delta Beta Xi, the latter a Yale honorary undergraduate society; Young Men’s Business Club of Tacoma, Yale Club, University Union Club of Tacoma, and Washington State Bar Association; married, has one child; chairman of the Pacific Coast Democratic Steering Com-mittee of the United States House of Representatives; chairman of the liberal bloc of the House of Representatives; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and. " reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses by huge majorities. : WEST VIRGINIA (Population (1940), 1,901,974) 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 E. Lilly, of Bluefield, W. Va., two children—Robert Martin and Elinor Stuart; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending Janu-ary 3, 1947. CHAPMAN REVERCOMB, Republican, of Charleston, W. Va.; born at Covington, Va., July 20, 1895, son of George Anderson and Elizabeth (Chapman) Revercomb; educated in the public schools, at Washington and Lee University and at the University of Virginia; graduated from the Univerisy of Virginia with the degree of LL. B; member of the editorial board of the Virginia Law Review, the Raven Society, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta Sigma Rho, enlisted in the United States Army in 1917 and served for the duration of the first World War; moved to Charleston, W. Va., in 1922, where he has since continued in the general practice of law; member of the law firm of Hodges, Revercomb & Michie, American Bar Association, West Virginia Bar Association (former vice president), Charleston Bar Association (past president); member of Presbyterian Church, the American Legion, Elks and Moose, former member of the Republican State Committee; chairman of the State Judicial Convention of 1936; married Miss Sara Hughes of Ashland, Va., in 1925; they have four children—William, George, Ann, and James; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brooke, Hancock, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, Taylor, and Wetzel (7 counties). Population (1940), 281,333. ANDREW CHARLES SCHIFFLER, Republican, of Wheeling, W. Va., where he was born August 10, 1889, son of Andrew J. and Emma C. Schiffler; married; two children, Virginia A. and Robert A; lawyer; served in governmental units during the first World War; referee in bankruptcy, United States court, northern district of West Virginia,-1918-22; prosecuting attorney, Ohio County, W. Va., 1925-33; Presbyterian; Odd Fellow; Pythian; Elk; member of Fort Henry Club, and other clubs; elected and served in the Seventy-sixth Congress; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 10 126 Congressional Directory WEST VIRGINIA + SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Tucker, and Webster (15 counties). Population (1940), 297,167. JENNINGS RANDOLPH, Democrat, of Elkins, Randolph County, W. Va.; born at Salem, W. Va., March 8, 1902, son of Ernest and Idell (Bingman) Ran-dolph; graduated from Salem Academy, 1920, and Salem College, 1924; honorary degrees, doctor of laws, Davis and Elkins College, 1939; doctor of letters, South-eastern University, 1940; member editorial staff Clarksburg Daily Telegram, 1924-25; associate editor West Virginia Review Magazine, 1925-26; head of the + department of public speaking and journalism, Davis and Elkins College, 1926-32; lectured with Redpath Chautauqua; governor, Lions Clubs of West Virginia, 1931; married 1933 to Mary Katherine Babb; two sons; member Seventh Day Baptist Church; trustee Salem and Davis and Elkins Colleges; member Sons of American Revolution, National Press Club, University Club of Washington; coauthor, Speaking that Wins; elected to the Seventy-third, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Harrison, Lewis, Nicholas, Ritchie, and Upshur (11 counties). Population (1940), 315,917. EDWARD G. ROHRBOUGH, Republican, of Glenville, W. Va.; born near Buckhannon, W. Va.; educated in the public schools; West Virginia Wesleyan College, Buckhannon, W. Va.; Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. (A. B.); Harvard University (A. M.); later studied at University of Chicago; honorary degrees, Ped. D., Salem College; LL. D., West Virginia Wesleyan College; married Lilian Martin Hartman, of Harrisville, W. Va.; has one son, Edward G. Rohrbough, Jr., Canadian newspaperman; instructor at West Virginia Wesleyan College and West Virginia University; vice president, Fairmont State Teachers College; president, Glenville State Teachers College; president and director, Glenville Banking & Trust Co.; chairman, County Council of Defense and Four-Minute Men, World War I; chairman, County Rationing Board, World War II; president for many years lof the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference; Methodist, Mason, Rotarian, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cabell, Jackson, Lincoln, Mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Roane, Tyler, Wayne, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1940), 323,202. HUBERT SUMMERS ELLIS, Republican, of Huntington, W. Va.; born in Hurricane, Putnam County, W. Va., July 6, 1887; attended the public schools and Marshall College; engaged in general insurance business since 1920; married; served 2 years in Army during World War I; 20 months in France with One Hundred and Fiftieth Field Artillery, Forty-second Division; department com-mander, American Legion, 1933-34; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. . FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Greenbrier, McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Monroe, Summers, and Wyo-ming (7 counties). Population (1940), 30 5,725. 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 schoolof 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 in May 1932, and elected to the Seventy-third Congress at the ensuing general election; renominated and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-eighth on November 3, 1942, by 10,000 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 the Executives Club and Kiwanis Club; member of Committee on Foreign Affairs. SIxTh DISTRICT —Comnes; Boone, Kanawha, Logan, and Raleigh (4 counties). Population (1940), JOE L. SMITH, Democrat, of Beckley, W. Va., elected in 1928 to the Seventy-first Congress; reelected to each succeeding Congress; chairman, Committee on Mines and Mining; ranking member, Committees on Insular Affairs, Indian Aint, and Invalid Pensions; member, Committee on Public Buildings and rounds. A | ro] / WISCONSIN Biographical WISCONSIN (Population (1940), 3,137,587) ( SENATORS ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE, Jr., Progressive, Madison, Wis.; born Febru-ary 6, 1895; married Rachel Wilson Young September 17, 1930, has two sons, J oseph Oden and Bronson Cutting; elected to the United States Senate on Sep-tember 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, 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: Dufty, Democrat, 231,976; Ekern, Progressive, 249, 209; Blair, Inde-pendent Communist, 1,283; Wiley, Republican, 446,770; Chapple, Tndependent Townsend Republican, 3 251; Ehrhardt, Independent Socialist Labor, 1,014. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Green, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (5 counties). Population (1940), 293,974. LAWRENCE H. SMITH, Republican, of Racine, Wis.; 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 first World War; department commander, Wisconsin Depart-ment, American Legion; national executive committeeman, American Legion; national child welfare, chairman, American Legion; president, ‘Racine County Bar Association; director, 'Y. M. C. A. Racine; president, Racine Lions Club; married Eleanor Rowley, of Racine; three children, Betty, Alice, and John; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on August 29, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Columbia, Dane, Dodge, Jefferson, and Waukesha (5 counties). Population (1940), 319,069. HARRY SAUTHOFF, Progressive, of Madison, Dane County, Wis.; born in Madison, Wis., June 3, 1879, son of August and Hermine (Brueggemann) Saut-hoff, both of whom were born in the Province of Hanover, Germany; graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1902, with an A. B. degree; taught school at the Lake Geneva High School and the Northern Illinois State Normal School; during these 4 years of teaching he also coached athletics; later returned to University of Wisconsin to study law, graduating in 1909 with LL. B. degree; married to Lenore Gilmour; district attorney for Dane County, Wis., 1915-19; rivate secretary to Gov. John J. Blaine, 1921; appointed by Governor Blaine as ans 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, Sons of Veterans of Civil War, American Bar Association, Wisconsin Bar Associa-tion; curator of Wisconsin Historical Society ; Member of the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; again elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, La Crosse, Lafayette, Monroe, Rich-land, Sauk, and Vernon (10 counties). Population (1940), 290,719. 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 cordwood with a bucksaw to earn expenses to put himself through school; graduated from the Teachers College, La Crosse, Wis., in 1912, the University of Wisconsin, at Madison, in 1919, and received the degree of LL. B. from the Law School of the University of Wisconsin in January 1920; married Miss Lulu Belle Bucklin, 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 RichlandCounty 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 inthe practice of law in La Crosse since 1930; elected district attorney of La CrosseCounty, Wis., in 1934; reelected in 1936 and 1938, which office he held untilelected’ to Congress; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUREE 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, Greenfield, Tah, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa, and villages of West Milwaukee and Greendale. Population (1940), 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 degreeand 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, and they have one son, Francis Thomas; elected to theSeventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; member of Ways and Means Committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILWAURKEE CoUNTY: City of Milwaukee, wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 9, 10, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20,21, 22, 25, and 26, towns of Granville and Milwaukee, and villages of Fox Point, River Hills, Shorewood,and Whitefish Bay. Population (1940), 391,467. HOWARD JOHNSTONE McMURRAY, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis. ;born in Mount Hope, Kans., March 3, 1901; attended the public schools andBerea Academy, Berea, Ky., and Wisconsin High School, Madison, Wis.; wasgraduated from the University of Wisconsin with B. A., M. A., and Ph. D.degrees; chief statistician, National Guardian Life Insurance Co., 1923-28;executive, air transport companies, 1928-35; member of the Department of -Political Scienceat the University of Wisconsin, 1936-42; married Miss Lucy- Gale Lockhart, of Mellen, Wis., on August 17, 1935; member of American Po-litical Science Association and American Society for Public Administration; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Calumet, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington, and Winne- bago (6 counties). Population (1940), 284,114. FRANK BATEMAN KEEFE, Republican, of Oshkosh, Wis., born in Winne-conne, Wis., September 23, 1887; graduate of State teachers college; LL. B., 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1940), 295,305. REID F. MURRAY, Republican, of Ogdensburg, Wis.; born in Ogdensburg, Wis., October 16, 1887; graduate of College of Agriculture, University of isconsin, 1916; professor of animal husbandry, agriculture extension of the University of Wisconsin, 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. WISCONSIN * Biographical EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1940), 329,815. LAVERN RALPH DILWEG, Democrat, of Green Bay, Wis.,, was born November 1, 1903, in Milwaukee, Wis.; was graduated from Washington High School in 1921; entered Marquette University in 1922, and had 1 year of engineer-ing, received his law degree, and was admitted to the Wisconsin bar in 1927; married to Eleanor Coleman of swimming fame, Milwaukee, Wis., in, 1927; has family of four children—Jon Coleman Dilweg, 13, Robert Anthony Dilweg, 8, Gary Thomas Dilweg, 6, and Dianne LaVerne Dilweg, 4; moved to Green Bay, Wis., in 1927 and started the practice of law there, spending 1 year with the firm of Sheridan & Evrard, and 1 year with the firm of Minahan & Duquaine; on the death of the senior member, the firm dissolved in 1929, and the firm of Clifford & Dilweg was formed; in 1935 the firm of Clifford & Dilweg consolidated with the Martin law firm at Green Bay; at present is a member of the firm of Martin, Clifford & Dilweg, with offices in the Bellin Building; has been actively engaged in trial work, and is a close student of taxation questions; this firm was continually engaged in the handling of farm questions, being attorneys for co-operative farm organizations, and individual farmers throughout this district; has had personal charge of Home Owner’s Loan Corporation legal work in this territory since 1934, and has a very thorough experience with reference to Federal Housing Administration work and projects, particularly with reference to the financing end of it; has had personal experience with war production contracts, which experience would be valuable to people of this district; has been connected with the Democratic Party from shortly after he left the university, actively participating in county, State, and National elections; active in fraternal and civic organizations, being past chapter chairman of the Brown County Red Cross, during which time he was instrumental as such chapter chairman in procuring funds for establishing first-aid stations throughout Brown County, and heading drives for funds for the sufferers of two major floods in this country; is a past president of the Lions Club of Green Bay, and was a director and one of the founders of the Bluejay Baseball Team, of Green Bay, Wis., played end on the Marquette football team, being a member of the All-American team in 1925; played 1 year with the Milwaukee Badgers professional team; in 1927 he joined the Packer team, and played through 1934; was a member of the 1929, 1930, and 1931 championship teams; was All-American end on professional selection for 3 years; after leaving professional football in 1934 he continued his connection with the game in the role of an official; at the present time he is one of the Big Ten officials; has been associated with a number of business concerns in Green Bay, and particularly construction work, being president of Colonial Village, Inc.; has had direct contact with union labor problems, and at all times recog-nizing and operating a union Jabor program in connection with the construction work; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Clark, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau (11 counties). Population (1940), 294,618. 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 in 1928; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Ninth District in 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in 1936, to the Seventy-sixth Congress in 1938, to the Seventy-seventh Congress in 1940, and the Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Ashland, Bayfield, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Lincoln, Oneida, Polk, Price, Rusk, Sawyer, Taylor, Vilas, and Washburn (14 counties). Population (1940) 263,088. ALVIN EDWARD O’KONSKI, Republican, of Mercer, Wis.; born on a farm near Kewaunee, Kewaunee County, Wis., May 26, 1904; was graduated from State Teachers College, Oshkosh, Wis., in 1927 with bachelor of education degree and from the University of Wisconsin in 1932 with master of philosophy degree; also took graduate work at the University of Iowa; professor of speech at Oregon State College, Corvallis, Oreg., 1928-31; and at the University of Detroit, Detroit, Mich., 1936-38; superintendent of schools at Pulaski, Wis., 1933-35; dean of a junior college at Coleraine, Minn., in 1936; educator, journalist, and lecturer, “i & 130 | Congressional Directory ALASKA editor and publisher of the Montreal River Miner at Hurley, Wis., since 1940; winner of national and international honors in speech contests; married to Miss Veronica Hemming, of Janesville, Wis.; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, which is his first public office. WYOMING (Population (1940), 250,742) SENATORS JOSEPH C. O’MAHONEY, Democrat, of Cheyenne, Wyo.; born in Chelsea, Mass., November 5, 1884; LL. B., Georgetown University, 1920; LL. D. Colum-bia University, New York, 1938; LL. D., Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., June 1941; engaged in the newspaper business in Boulder, Colo., December 1908; married Agnes V. O’Leary, June 11, 1913; city editor, Cheyenne State Leader, 1916; member of Conference on Uniform State Laws, 1925-26; First Assistant Postmaster General, March 6, 1933, to December 31, 1933; appointed by Gov. Leslie A. Miller, on December 18, 1933, to fill the vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the death of Hon. John B. Kendrick; elected November 6, 1934, to both the unexpired term ending January 3, 1935, and the full term ending January 3, 1941; reelected November 5, 1940. EDWARD VIVIAN ROBERTSON, Republican, of Cody, Park County, Wyo.; born in Cardiff, Wales, of Scotch parentage, on May 27, 1881, son of George and Ellen (nee Edwards) Robertson; received early education in grammar and high schools in Wales; served in Third Battalion, Welsh Regiment, in Boer War, 1899-1902; immigrated to the United States; settled in Park County, Wyo., in 1912; married Mabel C. Laird; in the livestock business, raising both cattle and sheep; conducts a large mercantile establishment at Cody, Wyo.; vice chair-man of Wyoming Republican State Central Committee, 1934-35; Republican national committeeman from Wyoming, 1935-37; member and vice president of Wyoming Stockgrowers Association, 1934-35; member of American National Livestock Association, Wyoming Farm Bureau, Wyoming Woolgrowers Associa-tion, and National Woolgrowers Association; life member of Buffalo Bill Museum Association; trustee of Cody General Hospital, 1940-42; thirty-third degree Mason; elected to United States Senate in 1942 for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 250,742. FRANK A. BARRETT, Republican, of Lusk, Wyo.; born in Omaha, Nebr., November 10, 1892; was graduated from Creighton University, Omaha, Nebr., in 1913 with A. B. degree and in 1916 with LL. B. degree; during the first World War served in the Balloon Corps, United States Army; engaged in the practice of law at Lusk, Wyo., from 1919; county attorney of Niobrara County, Wyo., 1923-32; engaged in livestock ranching for many years; member of the Wyoming State Senate, 1933-35; married Miss Alice C. Donoghue, May 21, 1919, and they have three children, Frank, Jr., James E., and Marialyce; member of Delta Theta Phi, legal fraternity; member of the board of trustees, University of Wyoming, -1939-43; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942. : ALASKA (Population (1940), 72,524) DELEGATE ANTHONY JOSEPH DIMOND, Democrat, of Valdez, Alaska; born at Pala-tine 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 PUERTO RICO Biographical 131 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 Novem-ber 8, 1932, and reelected at each subsequent biennial election. HAWAII (Population (1940 Census), 423,330) DELEGATE JOSEPH RIDER FARRINGTON, Republican, of Honolulu, T. H.; born in Washington, D. C., October 15, 1897; while still an infant, moved with his parents to Hawaii; attended Punahou Academy, Honolulu, and was graduated _ from the University of Wisconsin in 1919 with A. B. degree; entered the United States Army in 1918 and was commissioned a second lieutenant, Field Artillery; reporter on staff of Public Ledger in Philadelphia in 1919, and in 1920 was assigned to the Washington bureau and served 3 years as a member of the Press Gallery; returned to Honolulu to become associated with the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Ltd., a printing and publishing business, and has since been associated with that com-pany in various executive capacities; married Mary Elizabeth Pruett May 17, 1920, and they have two children, Beverly and John; was a member of Hawaii Territorial Boxing Commission in 1929; secretary of Hawaii Legislative Commis-sion in 1932; member of the Territorial senate from 1934 until his election as Hawaii’s Delegate to Congress in 1942. COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES (Population (1939), 16,356,000. 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. I.; 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; appointed member of President’s War Cabinet in 1942. PUERTO RICO (Population (1940), 1,869,255) RESIDENT COMMISSIONER BOLIVAR PAGAN, Coalitionist, of San Juan, P. R.; lawyer, journalist, and author; registrar, University 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 Appeals, 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— ’ 132 Congressional Directory PUERTO RICO 40; senator-at-large of the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico, 1933-40; vicepresident and majority floor leader of the Senate of Puerto Rico, 1933-40; city manager of San Juan, P. R., 1936-37; member of the American Group of theInterparliamentary 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 College of Lawyers, the Academy of Political Sciences, American Political Science Association, Foreign Poliey Association,National Planning Association, American Historical Association, and NationalAssociation of State Clubs; vice president and acting president of the Athenaeum of Puerto Rico, 1929-30; former member of several political and legislative com-missions from Puerto Rico to Washington; honorary vice president of the “Houseof Spain,” San Juan, P. R.; vice president of the Library Association of PuertoRico, 1934; honorary president, Puerto Rican Statehood Society; editor of the newspaper La Idea, 1917, and the magazine Aurora, 1918, Ponce, P. R.; con-tributing editor of the daily El Dia, Ponce, P. R., 1918, the daily El Aguila, Ponce, P. R., 1918, the magazine Renacimiento, 1918, San Juan, the weekly Nosotros,1918, San Juan, the magazine El Carnaval, San Juan, P. R., 1919, the magazinePuerto Rico Ilustrado, San Juan, P. R., 1918-21, the magazine Puerto Rico, 1920,correspondent and columnist of the daily El Mundo, San Juan, P. R., 1940; awarded prize, insular school literary contest in 1915, Ponce High School literary contest in 1916, Spanish literature in 1916, insular literary contest of the SpanishCasino of San Juan, P. R., in 1921, Institute of Puerto Rican Literature for best newspaper article, 1941; author: America y Otras Paginas, 1922, El SufragioFemenino, 1924, Ley Municipal Revisada, Anotada y Comentada, 1925, Ideales en Marcha, 1939, Handbook on Puerto Rico, 1940, Puerto Rico the Next State,1942; appointed Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico to the United States byAdmiral 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 thegeneral 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; American Labor in italic _ SMALL 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. John P. Newsome ARIZONA SENATORS Carl Hayden Ernest W. McFarland REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) ! [Democrats, 2] Richard F. Harless John R. Murdock ARKANSAS SENATORS Hattie W. Caraway John L. McClellan REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 1. BE. C. Gathings 4. Fadjo Cravens 7. Oren Harris 2. Wilbur D. Mills 5. Brooks Hays 3. J. William Fulbright 6. W. F. Norrell CALIFORNIA SENATORS Hiram W. Johnson Sheridan ‘Downey REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 12; Republicans, 10; vacant, 1] $0 et . Clarence F. Lea 9. Bertrand W. Gearhart 17. Cecil R. King [Vacant.] 10. Alfred J. Elliott 18. Ward Johnson 3. J. Leroy Johnson 11. George E. Outland 19. Chet Holifield 4. Thomas Rolph 12. Jerry Voorhis 20. Carl Hinshaw 5.. Richard J. Welch 13. Norris Poulson 21. Harry R. Sheppard 6. Albert E. Carter 14. Thomas F. Ford 22. John Phillips 7. John H. Tolan 15. John M. Costello 23. Ed. V. Izac 8. John Z. Anderson ° 16. Will Rogers, Jr. 133 134 Congressional Directory COLORADO Edwin : C. Johnson SENATORS Eugene D. Millikin . REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 3] 1. 2. Lawrence Lewis William S. Hill 3. J. Edgar Chenoweth CONNECTICUT 4. Robert F. Rockwell SENATORS Francis Maloney John A. Danaher REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 6] At large—B. J. Monkiewicz ¥. 2. William J. Miller John D. McWilliams 3. Ranulf Compton 4, Clare Boothe Luce 5. Joseph E. Talbot DELAWARE James M. Tunnell SENATORS ; C. Douglass Buck REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large—Earle D. Willey FLORIDA Charles O. Andrews SENATORS Claude Pepper REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] At large—Lex Green 1. 2. J. Hardin Peterson Emory H. Price 3. Robert L. F. 4. Pat Cannon Sikes 5. Joe Hendricks GEORGIA. Walter F. George ~ SENATORS Richard B. Russell REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10] 1. 2. 3. 4. Hugh Peterson E. E. Cox Stephen Pace A. Sidney Camp 5. Robert Ramspeck 6. Carl Vinson 7. Malcolm C. Tarver IDAHO 8. John S. Gibson 9. B. Frank Whelchel 10. Paul Brown : . D. Worth Clark SENATORS John Thomas REPRESENTATIVES [Democrat, 1; Republican, 1] LJ 1. Compton I. White 2. Henry C. Dworshak State Delegations ILLINOIS SENATORS Scott W.. Lucas C. Wayland Brooks REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7; Republicans, 19] At large—Stephen A. Day “1. William L. Dawson 10. Ralph E. Church 19. William H. Wheat 2. William A. Rowan 11. Chauncey W. Reed 20. Sid Simpson 3. Fred E. Busbey 12. Noah M. Mason 21. Evan Howell 4. Martin Gorski i 13. Leo E. Allen 22. Calvin D. Johnson 5. Adolph J. Sabath 14. Anton J. Johnson 23. Charles W. Vursell 6. Thomas J. O’Brien 15. Robert B. Chiperfield 24. James V. Heidinger 7. Leonard W. Schuetz 16. Everett M. Dirksen 25. C. W. (Runt) Bishop 8. Thomas S. Gordon 17. Leslie C. Arends 9. Charles S. Dewey 18. Jessie Sumner INDIANA SENATORS Frederick Van Nuys Raymond E. Willis REPRESENTATIVES Democrats, 2; Republicans, 9] 1. Ray J. Madden 5. Forest A. Harness 9. Earl Wilson 2. Charles A. Halleck 6. Noble J. Johnson 10. Raymond S. Springer 3. Robert A. Grant 7. Gerald W. Landis 11. Louis Ludlow 4. George W. Gillie 8. Charles M. LaF ollette IOWA SENATORS-Guy M. Gillette George A. Wilson REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 8] 1. Thomas E. Martin 4. Karl M. LeCompte 7. Ben F. Jensen 2. Henry O. Talle 5. Paul Cunningham 8. Charles B. Hoeven ~ 3. John W. Gwynne 6. Fred C. Gilchrist : KANSAS SENATORS Arthur Capper Clyde M. Reed REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 6] 1. William P. Lambertson 3. Thomas D. Winter 5. Clifford R. Hope 2. U. 8S. Guyer 4. Edward H. Rees 6. Frank Carlson B : 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 2. Beverly M. Vincent 5. Brent Spence 8. Joe B. Bates 3. Emmet O’Neal 6. Virgil Chapman 9. John M. Robsion 136 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA SENATORS ve 3 John H. Overton . Allen J. Ellender REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8] 1. 2. 3. F. Edward Hébert Paul H. Maloney James Domengeaux 4. Overton Brooks 5. Charles E. McKenzie 6. James H. Morrison 7. Henry D. Larcade, 8. A. Leonard Allen Jr. : MAINE SENATORS Wallace H. White, Jr. Ralph O. Brewster REPRESENTATIVES \ : [Republicans, 3] 1. Robert Hale 2. Margaret Chase Smith 3. Frank Fellows MARYLAND SENATORS \ Millard E. Tydings George L. Radcliffe REPRESENTATIVES ‘[Democrats, 4; Republicans, 2] 1. 2. David J. Ward H. Streett Baldwin 3. Thomas D’Alesandro, 4. Danzel Ellison Jr. 5. Lansdale 6. J. Glenn G. Sasscer Beall | MASSACHUSETTS | SENATORS i David I. Walsh Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. REPRESENTATIVES : [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10] 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Allen T. Treadway Charles R. Clason Philip J. Philbin Pehr G. Holmes Edith Nourse Rogers 6. George J. Bates 7. Thomas J. Lane 8. Angier L. Goodwin 9. Charles L. Gifford 10. Christian A. Herter 11. James M. Curley 12. John W. McCormack 13. Richard B. Waiggles-worth 14. Joseph W. Martin, Jr. MICHIGAN SENATORS 1148 Arthur H., Vandenberg Homer Ferguson | REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5; Republicans, 12] 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. George G. Sadowski Earl C. Michener Paul W. Shafer Clare E. Hoffman Bartel J. Jonkman William W. Blackney 7. Jesse P. Wolcott 8. Fred L. Crawford 9. Albert J. Engel 10. Roy O. Woodruff 11. Fred Bradley 12. John B. Bennett 13. George D. O’Brien 14. Louis C. Rabaut 15. John D. Dingell 16. John Lesinski 17. George A. Dondero State Delegations MINNESOTA SENATORS r 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. Walter H. Judd 8. William A. Pittenger 3. Richard P. Gale 6. Harold Knutson 9. HAROLD C. HAGEN MISSISSIPPI SENATORS Theodore G. Bilbo James O. Eastland REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 1. John E. Rankin 4. Thomas G. Abernethy 7. Dan R. McGehee 2. Jamie L. Whitten 5. Arthur Winstead 3. William M. Whitting-6. William M. Colmer ton MISSOURI SENATORS Bennett Champ Clark Harry S. Truman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5; Republicans, 8] 1. Wat Arnold 6. Marion T. Bennett 11. Louzs E. Miller 2. Max Schwabe 7. Dewey Short 12. Walter C. Ploeser 3. William C. Cole 8. William P. Elmer i3. John J. Cochran 4. C. Jasper Bell 9. Clarence Cannon 5. Roger C. Slaughter 10. Orville Zimmerman MONTANA SENATORS Burton K. Wheeler James E. Murray REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats 2] 1. Mike Mansfield * 2. James F. O'Connor NEBRASKA SENATORS Hugh A. Butler Kenneth S. Wherry REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 4] Y, Carl T. Curtis 3. Karl Stefan 4. A. L. Miller 2. Howard H. Buffett . 138 Congressional Directory NEVADA SENATORS Pat McCarran James G. Scrugham REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large—Maurice J. Sullivan NEW HAMPSHIRE SENATORS Styles Bridges Charles W. Tobey REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. Chester E. Merrow 2. Foster Stearns NEW JERSEY SENATORS W. Warren Barbour Albert W. Hawkes REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 11] 1. Charles A. Wolverton 6. Donald H. McLean 11. Frank L. Sundstrom 2. Elmer H. Wene 7. J. Parnell Thomas 12. Robert W. Kean 3. James C. Auchincloss 8. Gordon Canfield 13. Mary T. Norton 4. D. Lane Powers 9. Harry L. Towe 14. Edward J. Hart 5. Charles A. Eaton 10. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. NEW MEXICO SENATORS Carl A. Hatch Dennis Chavez REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Democrats, 2] Clinton P. Anderson Antonio M. Fernandez NEW YORK SENATORS Robert F. Wagner James M. Mead REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 23; Republicans, 21; American Labor, 1] At large—Matthew J. Merritt, Winifred C. Stanley 1. Leonard W. Hall 16. James H. Fay 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. Vitro 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. Hamalton Fish 41. Joseph Mruk 12. Samuel Dickstein 27. Jay LeFevre 42. John C. Butler 13. Louis J. Capozzoli 28. William T. Byrne 43. Daniel A. Reed 14. Arthur G. Klein 29. Dean P. Taylor 15. Thomas F. Burchill 30. Bernard W. Kearney State Delegations 7 j 139 Eo ! NORTH CAROLINA SENATORS : i Josiah W. Bailey Robert R. Reynolds REPRESENTATIVES | [Democrats, 12] ! ~~ 1. 2. 3. 4. Herbert C. Bonner John H. Kerr Graham A. Barden Harold D. Cooley 5. John H. Folger 6. Carl T. Durham 7. J. Bayard Clark 8. W. O. Burgin 9. Robert L. Doughton 10. Cameron Morrison 11. Alfred L. Bulwinkle 12. Zebulon Weaver NORTH DAKOTA : SENATORS Gerald P. Nye William Langer REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Republicans, 2] Usher L. Burdick William Lemke OHIO i Robert A. Taft SENATORS Harold H. Burton 1 REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 20] At large—George H. Bender 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Charles H. Elston William E. Hess Harry P. Jeffrey Robert F. Jones Cliff Clevenger Edward O. McCowen Clarence J. Brown Frederick C. Smith 9. Homer A. Ramey 10. Thomas A. Jenkins 11. Walter E. Brehm’ 12. John M. Vorys 13. Alvin F. Weichel 14. Ed Rowe ; 15. P. W. Griffiths 16. Henderson H. Carson 17. J. Harry McGregor 18. Earl R. Lewis 19. Michael J. Kirwan 20. Michael A. Feighan 21. Robert Crosser 22. Frances P. Bolton OKLAHOMA SENATORS | , Elmer Thomas E. H. Moore | REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7; Republican, 1] 1. 2. 3. Wesley E. Disney Jack Nichols ; Paul Stewart 4. Lyle H. Boren 5. A. S. Mike Monroney 6. Jed Johnson 7. Victor Wickersham 8. Ross Rzzley OREGON SENATORS Charles L. McNary Rufus C. Holman REPRESENTATIVES | [Republicams, 4] 1. 2. James Lowell W. Mott Stockman 38. Homer D. Angell 4. Harris : Ellsworth | | | 140 { ~~ Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA SENATORS James J. Davis Joseph F. Guffey REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 14; Republicans, 19] At large—William I. Troutman 1. James Gallagher 12. Thomas Byron Miller 24. J. Buell Snyder 2. James P. McGranery 13. Ivor D. Fenton 25. Grant Furlong 3. Michael J. Bradley 14. Daniel K. Hoch © 26. Louis E. Graham 4. John Edward Sheri-15. Wilson D. Gillette 27. Harve Tibbott dan 16. Thomas E. Scanlon = 28. Augustine B. Kelley 5. C. Frederick Prachi 17. J. William Dqtter 29. Robert L. Rodgers 6. Francis J. Myers 18. Richard M. Simpson 30. Samuel A. Weiss 7. Hugh D. Scott, Jr. 19. John C. Kunkel 31. Herman P. Eber- 8. James Wolfenden 20. Leon H. Gavin harter 9. Charles L. Gerlach 21. Francis E. Walter 32. James A. Wright 10. J. Roland Kinzer 22. Chester H. Gross 11. John W. Murphy 23. James E. Van Zandt : 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 Chan Gurney Harlan J. Bushfield REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. Karl E. Mundt 2. Francis Case TENNESSEE SENATORS Kenneth McKellar Tom Stewart REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8; Republicans, 2] 1. B. Carroll Reece 5. Jim McCord 9. Jere Cooper 2. John Jennings, Jr. 6. J. Percy Priest 10. Clifford Davis 3. Estes Kefauver 7. Wirt Courtney 4. Albert Gore 8. Tom Murray State Delegations COO) NShom Uti TEXAS SENATORS Tom Connally W..Lee O’Daniel REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 21] 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. O. C. Fisher 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] Schuyler Otis Bland 4, Patrick H. Drewry 7. A. Willis Robertson Winder R. Harris 5. Thomas G. Burch 8. Howard W. Smith Dave E. Satterfield, Jr. 6. Clifton A. Woodrum 9. John W. Flannagan, Jr. WASHINGTON SENATORS Homer T. Bone Mon C. Wallgren REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3] y . Warren G. Magnuson 3. Fred Norman 5. Walter F. Horan . Henry M. Jackson 4. Hal Holmes 6. John M. Coffee WEST VIRGINIA ? SENATORS Harley M. Kilgore Chapman Revercomb REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3] . Andrew C. Schiffler 3. Edward G. Rohrbough 5. John Kee Jennings Randolph 4. Hubert S. Ellis 6. Joe L. Smith 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 11 142 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN SENATORS > RoBeErT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR. Alexander Wiley REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 5; Progressives, 2] 1. Lawrence H. Smith 5. Howard J. McMurray 9. MerLIN HULL 2. HARRY SAUTHOFF 6. Frank B. Keefe 10. Alvin E. O’Konsks 3. William H. Stevenson 7. Reid F. Murray 4. Thad F. Wasielewski ~~ 8. LaVern R. Dilweg : WYOMING SENATORS Joseph C. O'Mahoney Edward V. Robertson REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large—Frank A. Barrett ALASKA DELEGATE > Anthony J. Dimond COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Joaquin M. Elizalde HAWAII DELEGATE Joseph R. Farrington PUERTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Bolivar Pagén - CLASSIFICATION SENATE HOUSE Demoerats.: o_o0, S200 S57 Demoeratss io ral Ln 222Republicans. = 43 "nC 33 Republicans. unl 0) Love ..cour 208Progressive. 0 dst: a... 1) Progressives... 38 2 .uicoslsaps —— 1 Parmer=labor.. = 1Totaly oo. ir 96 American ~~ 1 Labor... Nacant. ooae ha 1 Total 26. Toa 435 ALPHABETICAL LIST Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, ers, showing State and district from which elected, city alinement SENATORS [Democrats in roman (57); Republicans in italics (38); Progressive Name State Aiken’ GeorgeD =. casioaois Nermont-"0.00 Andrews, Charles O___._ __::-_--Worida. 2... % Austin; Warren Bo 2t diac Yermont. Bailey, Josiah WW. J.0-Fo North Carolina____| Ball; Joseph HL. arora Minnesota...._ Bankhead, Jom ¥H,, 2d, .-=-.::% Alabama... Barbour, W. Warren, = i-=iz2:-New Jersey.._.___ Barkley, Alben Wooo; Kentucky i.-Bilbo, Theodore’ G_. = L. z..-::: Mississippi_ _.____ Bone, Homer LF 0 coro Washington. ______ Brewster, Ralph 0... oso Maine oo o.oo Bridges, Styles. > Crim New Hampshire___| Brooks, -C, Wayland... oc ico-250 Mineiso ~~...= Buck, C. oc icosic: Delaware... Douglass... ..... Burton, Hyold Hi-Z 2. =>: Ohio. or ooo Bushfield> Harlan J. 5s Jace ck South Dakota_____ Butler, Bugh A. ocak Nebraska... .._. Byrd, Harry Flood. cc =: Virginia to... Capper, Arthur. lodo os Kansas co vonl Caraway, Hattie W. .______..-.-Arkansas. _ o.oo... Chandler, Aert' B=. ...-=: Kentucky. ...... Chavez, Dennis 2. 2 coro New Mexico-_..._| Clark, Bennett Champ__________ Missouri... Clark D. Worth. 125. ior daho. iv. oooor Connally, Toms nr 00 doin --Texas oo. Danoher John B-ree accorio, Connecticut. __ ___ Davis; James J 2: 2-0 to =o Pennsylvania. _.__ Downey, Sheridan...": California..... Eastland; James OQ. oo Mississippi. _.__ Fender, Allen J) oo. Louisiana_________| Ferguson, Homers = oy od: s00 = Michigan: ~~. George, Walter: FF...0 Georgia... =o Gerry, Peter @y 00 20 2 o> Rhode Island_____ Gillette, Guy M 22... = Iowa. rh os Glass, Carter 27000 Coo Virginia oo. 0. Green, Theodore Francis. _______ Rhode Island. ____ Guffey; Josep P=: “0: Lor Pennsylvania. _ ___ Gurney, Chan's... ia an South Dakota... Hateh, Carl A. : 0.00 New Mexico_____. Hawles, Albert Wa. o-oo oo New Jersey_______ Hayden, Corll...__.... .. Arvizopa__ C1... HL Bister 20s.aon Alabama. i... oa Holman, Rufus C.-viicnioiii Qreron=.0.......: Johnson, Edwin C..._. -...: Colorado. =~... Johnson, Hiram W-____ --._.-.__ California... and Resident Commission of residence, and political in SMALL CAPS (1); total, 96] City Putney. Orlando. Burlington. Raleigh. St. Paul. Jasper. Locust. Paducah. Poplarville. Tacoma. Dexter. Concord. Chicago. Wilmington. Cleveland. Miller. Omaha. Berryville. Topeka. Jonesboro. Versailles. Albuquerque. University City. Pocatello. Marlin. Portland. Pittsburgh. Claremont. Ruleville. Houma. Detroit. Vienna. Warwick. Cherokee. Lynchburg. Providence. Pittsburgh. Yankton. Clovis. Montclair. Phoenix. Montgomery. Portland. | Craig. San Francisco. 145 146 | Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Name Kilgore, Harley M__:xuox 3. La ForLLETTE, ROBERT M., JR___._| Langer, William... ........... Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr... ......% uens, Seotl: Wie wens teats -bak McCarran, Pat... ..... MeClellan, John L.............._ MeFarland, Ernest W___________ McKellar, Kenneth _____________ McNary, Chorles L. cv. in Maloney, Yoavels. 1... Maybank, Burnet BR... ....... Mead, James: MM... ..d..0..... Millikin; Eugene Deore ovo Moore, oH. ininitiotss cov inal Murdock, Abel io i wo ram Murray, James 8B...= Nye, Gerald PP -2 oe ook O'Paniel, W, Lee... >. O’Mahoney, Joseph C___________ Overion, Johp H.-C'~—= Pepper, Claude...2000 cio Radcliffe, George L_ ____________ Reed, Clyde a BM...200 Revercomb, Chapman. _........... Reynolds, Robert BR... oi i. Robertson, Edward Ve .o. i... Russell, Richard B. ~ __.. \= > = Serugham, James GQ... ...._ .: Stipsieod, Henrik oar do io. Smith, Ellison _.. oo ~00 D.._._ Stewarh Tom. coro cuneseioon Taft Robert Ax os ias issn ll Thomas, Elbert DD. = .-__~: Thomas, Eliner xd--Thomas; JOR rr ase 2a Tobey, Charles WW. } _.. ox 1200-35 Truman Hatry BR, d= r-Tunnel, James __.... _ Z:-Tydings, Millarxd B._—~ .---~ Vandenberg, Arthur Hw2: 200 Yan Nuys, J coo Frederick... Wagner, Robert F.-.. ../--o>rc: Wallgren, Mon C.._ .—-.~-1 = Walsh, David 1... = Wheeler, Burton KX _.......>: Wherry, BEenneth. 8S. ... wax 1-2-2050 White, Wallace H., J7 oo 200 Wiley, Alezander. cons 0io-o02 Willis, -Raymond Ee oe = 23 Wilson, George A. wuss nee es State West Virginia_____ Wisconsin. _______ North Dakota____| Massachusetts __ __| Iinoige cao: fainter Nevada = io... Arkansas........... Arizona. _.. Tennessee. ...iwwa-Oregon... -....~z..-Connecticut _____ South Carolina__ New Yorkd....... Colorado io Oklahoma ......... Utah =..207" Montana... _ North Dakota____| Texas. op io. C Wyoming. iz" >" "-Jouisiana...__-___ Tiorida J.C. Maryland. ~-._7__ Kansas... -West Virginia_____ North Carolina____| Wyoming... ______ Georgia... -> Nevada... Minnesota. _______ South Carolina____| Tennessee. _______ Ohio. ic. aman Utah ocrnuia lcm Oklahoma... Ydaho ....>. .. New Hampshire___| Missouri: ...... Delaware._.________ Marviand.. _-.. . Michigan... =~: Indiana..._. _ New. York. .._ Washington_ _ ____ Massachusetts____| Montana... > Nebraska..... Maine, «zs jo 72 Wisconsin... Indians... ...... OW oot finan City Beckley. Madison. Bismarck. Beverly. Havana. Reno. Camden. Florence. Memphis. Salem, R. F. D. Meriden. Charleston. Buffalo. Denver. Tulsa. Beaver. Butte. Cooperstown. Fort Worth. Cheyenne. Alexandria. Tallahassee. Baltimore. Parsons. Charleston. Asheville. Cody. Winder. Reno. R. F. D., Carlos. Lynchburg. Winchester. Cincinnati. Salt Lake City. Medicine Park. Gooding. Temple. Independence. Georgetown. Havre de Grace, Grand Rapids. Indianapolis. New York City. Everett. Clinton. Butte. Pawnee City. Auburn. Chippewa Falls. Angola. Des Moines. Alphabetical Last REPRESENTATIVES " [Democrats in roman (222); Republicans in italics (208); Progressives in SMALL CAPS (2); Farmer-Labor in CAPS (1); American Labor in italic SMALL c4AP8 (1); vacant (1); total, 435] Name Dis State City Abernethy, Thomas G______ 4 | Mississippi. ____ Okolona. Allen, A. Leonard _____.____ 8 | Louisiana_______ Winnfield. Alen, Leo B.-L 13" linole> "1 Galena. Andersen; H. Corl 2. > 7 | Minnesota______ Tyler. Anderson, Clinton P________ At L. | New Mexico____| Albuquerque. Anderson, John'Z->... ... 81" California. San Juan Bautista. Andresen, August H_________ 1 | Minnesota_._____ Red Wing. Andrews, Walter G__________ 40 | New York. _.____ Buffalo. Angell Homer Dito.v= 8 Orecon..--7 Portland. Arends, Loslie' 22 7 Tinos 0c Melvin. Coot Arnold, Weal... = 1 "Missouri... ri Kirksville. Awuchincloss, James C_ ______ 3 | New Jersey... __ Rumson. Baldwin, H, _ 2 Maryland______| Streett”"_.< | Towson. Baldwin, Joseph Clark__ ____ 17 "New York. to. New York City. Barden, Graham A _... 3 | North Carolina .| New Bern. Borrell, Prop 4 i 2 ns AtL. { Wyoming... Lusk. Barry, Willhm'B. >... 21 New York... ... St. Albans. Dates, George da bo 6 | Massachusetts__| Salem. Bates Joe. Bir trav ion 8 | Kentucky ...-__ Greenup. Beall J. -Qlenpz T= 1g= 2 6 | Maryland. ..___ Frostburg. Beckworth, Lindley_ _______ is Bd rT pa ten Gilmer. Bell, C..Jagper "2 >> >_> 4-1 "Migsourt... coo Blue Springs. Bender, George H—_ _= >= At. Ohio... Cleveland Heights. Bennett, John B_.22... 12:1 Michigan: _.-:_, Ontonagon. Bennett, Marion T=_. 6 | Missouri_____.__| Springfield. Bishop, C.W. (Run)... ..---25 Hinojs=:. Carterville. Blackney, William W_______ 6 Michigan. ...... Flint. Bland, Schuyler Otis___.____ 1 Virginia. 0 Newport News, Bloom, Solo. Foo 19 { New York... New York City. Bolion, Frances: P-.. 2.1 Ghinl >. Lyndhurst. Bonner, Herbert C_________ 1 | North Carolina_| Washington. Boren, Lyle HH. “U0 4 | Oklahoma______ Seminole. Boykin, Prank Wolo Iv Alsbamsa. Mobile. Bradley; fred 2 tr: 11 Michigan... Rogers City. Bradley, Michael J_________ 3 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Brehm, Waller’'E_. ..____._. 11" "Ohio...= Logan. Brooks, Overton... _... 4" Yonisiana. Shreveport. Broun, Clarence J. — 7 Oho. ---I" Blanchester. Brown, Paul. a 100 Georgia... 1. Elberton. Bryson, Joseph RB. '—____ = 4 | South Carolina.__| Greenville. Buckley, Charles’ A.C... 237) New York... New York City. Buffet, Howard H=. = 0 S98 Nebraska... | Omaha. Bullwinkle, Alfred L________ 11 | North Carolina _| Gastonia. Burch, Thomas GQ "21.2: 5:1. Virginiar = Martinsville. Burchill, ‘Thomas ¥. __.__. 15 | New York_._.... New York City. Burdick, Usher... .--..---At L.| North Dakota __| Williston. Burgin, Ww. o mao 8 | North Carolina_| Lexington. Bushey Bred BB. 10 Si Mlnois>. Chicago. Butler, John C2201 Toa 42 | New York_____._ Buffalo. Byrne, William To 28 | New York... = Loudonville. Camp, A. Sidney 10 (+ 4° "Georgia. 1. Newnan. Canfield, Gordon. ot. == 8 | New Jersey... Paterson. Cannon, Clarenee_ ___.._._.. 9 |iMissouri_ _.._._ Elsberry. Cannon, Pat... oatteen 4" Florida. ....... Miami. Capozzoli, Louis'd. + 13 New York = New York City. Corlson, Frank => V2"3 6 Kansas. Concordia. Carson, Henderson H_______ 68 Ohio. Canton. Carter; Albert EB. ..o. vai. 6. { California... ._.. Oakland. 148 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name triot State City Case, Francis. ince al: 2 | South Dakota___| Custer. Celler, Emanuel ____________ 10° New York...2 Brooklyn. Chapman, Virgil: nooooo 6 | Kentucky. .__.._ Paris. Chenoweth, J. Edgar... ..__. 3 | Colorado_______ Trinidad. Chiperfield, Roberi. B......... 15. Tinoise...... Canton. Church, Balph BE... ...c.. 10. Hlinoise._ ......_-Evanston. Clark, J. Bayard: .-c_. 7 | North Carolina_| Fayetteville. Clason, Charles R..... =... 2 | Massachusetts __| Springfield. Clevenger, Cliff = oc an o2 yiOhios Bryan. Cochran, John J. = ~~ 13. Missouri...__ St. Louis. Coffee, John Mz... .. 6 | Washington_____ Tacoma. Cole, Williom C. .. .sz.. 3. Missouri... ..._.. St. Joseph. Cole, W.. Sterling. ==... 37 |. New Xork.. ._ .. Bath. Colmer, William M_________ 6 | Mississippi_____ Pascagoula. Complon, Banulf.. =: ... 3 | Connecticut____| Madison. Cooley, Harold D........._. 4 | North Carolina _| Nashville. Cooper; Jere. .co-ncz.... 9 | Tennessee_ _____ Dyersburg. Costello, John M._.._..... 15 | California. _____ Hollywood. Courtney, Wirt. o-oo... 7 | Tennessee. _____ Franklin. Cox, B. Bo. To... 2. Coeorgia,..... .... Camilla. Cravens, Fadjo.. . =... . 4 | Arkansas... Tort Smith. Crowford, Fred ly viawes ons S| Michigan... .___ Saginaw. Creal, Bdward W._ __-...= 4 | Kentucky._...___ Hodgenville. Crosser; Robert. vo... .z-. .. 25. Ohloh ano... Cleveland. Culkin, Francis D....cu..... 32 | New York..____ Oswego. Cullen, Thomas H......-... 4 | New York______ Brooklyn. Cunningham: Poll... Sijclowa.... ...-.. Des Moines. Curley, James M_____._____ 11 | Massachusetts_ _| Boston. Curtis, Carl I: eats 1 | Nebraska_______| Minden. D’Alesandro, Thomas, Jr____ 3 “Maryland... Baltimore. Davis: Clifford... --.. .. 10 | Tennessee. _____ Memphis. Dawson, William L___._____ 1 |: Hlinois.o..... Chicago. Day, Stephen, A. cnienaicenn AtL. Illinois... ..... Evanston. Delaney, John J... co... 7.1: New York... Brooklyn. Dewey, Charles 8S. -zc. ._ 9 illinois... ....L. Chicago. Dickstein, Samuel __________ 12.{ New York....._ New York City. Dies, Martin... co cog oo | 2h: Texas io, -cninr-Orange. Dilweg, LaVern R____._____ 8° Wiseonsin......._ Green Bay. Dingell, JoniD.....= zc... . 15 {:Miehigan....... Detroit. Dirksen, Everett M.__.o-_.... 162] Hlnols=. _..._ | Pekin. Disney, Wesley E__________ 1} Oklahoma. i __ Tulsa. DiiteryiJ. William. — vn i. 17 | Pennsylvania___| Ambler. Domengeaux, James________ 3: Louisiana. ._..__ Lafayette. Dondero, George A__________ 17. { Michigan... ... . Royal Oak. Doughton, Robert L________ 9 | North Carolina_| Laurel Springs. Douglas, Fred] ...evscuc-.. 33 | New York. _____ Utica. Drewry, Patrick H__ _-__~_ 4 =Virginia. ..1..° Petersburg. Durham, Carl TT __ oo... 6 | North Carolina_| Chapel Hill. Dworshak, Henry C........ 2 pddaho. ol. Burley. Eoton, Charles A _ oon... 5 | New Jersey_.___ Watchung, Plainfield. Eberharter, Herman P______ 31 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Elliot, Alfred. + 10° California: .-._ Tulare. J... Ellis, Hubert’ S-. o. a0" 4 | West Virginia___| Huntington. Zllison, Daniel voz ae 4 | Maryland______ Baltimore. Elsworth, Harris... ozo 4 1 Oregong....i... Roseburg. Elmer, Wilkam B_ =... S81 :-Migsouri_ =... Salem. Elston, Charles H-_._ -_. _.. 4 Ohio. ns. Cincinnati. Engel, Aert Jun no uiisicne 0 | Michigan... __ Muskegon. Pay,James H. __. .ooniu-16 | New York_.___._ New York City. Alphabetical List 149 | REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Dis-tii] State iCity ] Feighan, Michael A________ 20:4: 06hio. LL... Cleveland. l Fellows, Frank sudzeloo : 8apMaine G15 Bangor. A Fenton, Ivor Diccingdillooo. 13 | Pennsylvania___| Mahanoy City. | Fernandez, Antonio M______ At L. | New Mexico____| Santa Fe. ! Fish, Hamillonaiclwrst oo... 26 | New York. ._.__._._ Garrison. | Fisher, 0.°C._. piledJo 21a Towa do 0 San Angelo. | Fitzpatrick, James M_______ 24 | New York_____._ New York City. | Flannagan, John W., Jr_____ 9. Virginiai_-_ |... Bristol. Fogarty, John KEossalis| 2 | Rhode Island___| Harmony. i Folger, Joon Hoceoi 5 | North Carolina_| Mount Airy. Forand, Aime:Jucoaaliion 1 | Rhode Island___| Cumberland. | Ford, Thomag Foun ll. .: 14 | California______ Los Angeles. Fulbright, J. William_._____ 3:j-Arkansas.___... Fayetteville. | Fulmer, Hampton Pad i... 2 | South Carolina._| Orangeburg. { Furlong, Grant. covii oa... 25 | Pennsylvania___| Donora. | Gale, Bichard PL loll). Gallagher, James ___ ____ ____ 3 1 | | Minnesota_____._ Pennsylvania___| Mound. Philadelphia. ] | Gamble, Ralph Ai-Gawil.l 2. 25+: New York. .... Larchmont. Gathings, FE. Coronal Jo. 1: |~Arkansas._ __... West Memphis. Gavagan, Joseph A_________ 21 | New York. _._._.. New York City. Gavin, Leon H _coinoeloon 20 | Pennsylvania. __| Oil City. Gearhart, Bertrand W_______ 9 | California. ____._ Fresno. Gerlach, Charles L.oi Youngstown. Kleberg, Richard M________ 14° Texan... =; Corpus Christi. Klein, Arthur G85 ty 14) New York.... New York City. Knutson, Harold 2 So — 6 | Minnesota______ St. Cloud. Runkel, John QL C200 19 | Pennsylvania___| Harrisburg. LaF ollette, Charles M_ ______ S 1 Indiana.. = Evansville. Lambertson, William P______ i Ransag > cues Fairview. Londis Gerald: Woo"5 Yo IndianaT> Linton. Lane, Thomas Joo 5 7 | Massachusetts. .| Lawrence. Lanham, Fritz’ G2. 2 COE. Forth Worth. Larcade, Henry D., Jr______ 7 | Louisiana_______ Opelousas. Lea, Clarence F____________ | California... Santa Rosa. LeCompte, Karl M....__._.. 4-FYown.. ll Corydon. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—C€ontinued Name 2 fot State City Lelovre, JOY casmenvil-wrn 27 | New York... ___ New Paltz. Lemke, Willow. --. At L. | North Dakota__| ceuniiz-t Fargo. Lesinski, John. bn. 16 | Michigan_______ .cccart--Dearborn. Lewis, Larl bi 1Sq Ohio. t.--L St. Bunion Clairsville. Lewis, Lawrence_ _.________ 1.{iColorado. ..L... Denver. Luce, Clare Boothe. ...oii-4 | Connecticut. ___| Greenwich. Ludlow, Louis. 0. aeons---11.{:Indiana;___.._.. Indianapolis. Lynch, Waller A... ct. ---22 | New York_____. New York City. McCord, Jim. cusses+ ~~~ 5 {.Tennessee. ....._ Lewisburg. McCormack, John W_______ 12 | Massachusetts__| Boston. McCowen, Edward O-_______ 6:4-Ohio_.s___.___ Wheelersburg. McGehee, Dan R_______ nd 7 | Mississippi. _.___ Meadville. McGranery, James P_______ 2 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. McGregor, J. Hopry...o5 = 1i.t.Ohlocs. West Lafayette. McKenzie, Charles E_______ 5. (Louisiana. __L___ Monroe. McLean, Donald H. ________ 6 | New Jersey_.____ Elizabeth. MeMillan, John Loc... 6 | South Carolina__| Florence. McMurray, Howard J. _____ 5 | Wisconsin______ Milwaukee. McWilliams, John D________ 2 | Connecticut. ___| Norwich. Maas, Melvin J..-2 rnin 4 | Minnesota______ St. Paul. Madden, Ray J... ..~. .. Li Indiana... i... Gary. Magnuson, Warren G_______ 1 | Washington_____ Seattle. Mahon, George H__________ 19. {: Texas. oc...__ Colorado City. Maloney, Paul H.... o.._.. 2 | Louisiana_______ New Orleans. Manasco, Carter______._____ 7.l Alabama... ___ Jasper. Mansfield, Joseph J________ O Texgg.a.Ft Columbus. Mansfield, Mike_ ___._.__.___ 1{ Montana_._____ Missoula. Marcanronio, VITO. _____ 20:|.New York... .. New York City. Martin, Joseph W., Jrs... 14 | Massachusetts __| North Attleboro. Martin, Thomas EB... .=---__ Ll Iowa. ts oc C1 Iowa City. Mason, Noah}. ....-%5-i--12.4 Mimoisr-....1... Oglesby. May, Andrew J... =... __ 7. Kentucky... .. Prestonsburg, Merritt, Matthew J________ AtL. | New York_.____. Malba (Flushing). Merrow, Chester E.......s-.... 1 | New Hampshire_| Center Ossipee. Michener, Barl C......... =... 2 | Michigan. _...__. Adrian. Miller, ALi sonnei tate 4 | Nebraska......_. Kimball. Miller, Louis BE. puivviveiet—--11 | Missouri... . St. Louis. Miller, Thomas Byron_______ 12 | Pennsylvania___| Plymouth. Miller, William. J... ne-i--1 | Connecticut. ___| Wethersfield. Mills, Wilbar,.D.._._ oi... 2 Arkonsas.._..__. Kensett. Monkiewics, B. Jot At L. | Connecticut____| New Britain. Monroney, A. S. Mike___.___ 5 { Oklahoma... .. Oklahoma, City. Morrison, Cameron_________ 10 | North Carolina__| Charlotte. Morrison, James H_. _______ 6 | Louisiana.______ Hammond. Mott, Jones W _....1.17 1 TegONs. 1 2 -. Salem. Mruk, Joseph... or was inn-41 | -New York... .. Buffalo. Mundi, Karl B._,.....=.1..-1 | South Dakota___| Madison. Murdock, John 'B._._...._ .. AtL, | Arizona... 1... Tempe. Murphy, Joh. WW... ..._ 11 | Pennsylvania___| Dunmore. Murray, Reid Fie... 71 Wisconsin. _.___ Ogdensburg. Murray, Tom + =...i 8 | Tennessee______ Jackson. = Myers, Francis]...7 6 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Newsome, John P._......__ 9 | Alabama... .__ Birmingham. Nichols: Jack...i .C 2 | Oklahoma... .._ Eufaula. =. Norman, Fred... cove. dor 3 | Washington_____ Raymond. Norrell W. F_ = ©. oo... 6 | Arkansas_______ Monticello. Norton,MaryT ____....-13 | New Jersey._____ Jersey City. . O’Brien, George D. _._-._.-._ 13 | Michigan_______ Detroit. O'Brien, Josephd oe neri —-38 | New York._____ East Rochester. OBrien, Thomas J........... 6. Minoisc......... Chicago. 152 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Diss State City O’Connor, James F.________ 2 | Montana. ______ Livingston. O'Hara, Joseph O’Konski, Alvin Pisis:.5 E__________ 2 10 | | Minnesota .____ Wisconsin. _____ Glencoe. Mercer. O’Leary, James A__________ 11 | New York_____._ West New Brighton. O'Neal, Emmet. oii 3 | Kentucky._..... Louisville. O'Toole; Donald Lo... 8 | New York_._____ Brooklyn. Outland, George E_________ 11“ California... Santa Barbara. Pace, Stephen... J... 3:1 Georgia... ..... Americus. Patman, Wright. io... PV Pexne 2. Texarkana. Patton, Nab... .Lo ida. 5 ZV Texan 2 oo. Crockett. Peterson, Hugh. ____..._._.. 1:*Georgin. =i... Ailey. Peterson, J. Hardin_....___. 15 Movida i. Lakeland. Pfeifer, Joseph L___________ S| New York... Brooklyn. Philbin, Philipidi io Lo 3 | Massachusetts___| Clinton. Phillips, John 205000 ov. 22 ‘California... =: Banning. Pittenger, William A________ 8 | Minnesota__.____ Duluth. Ploeser, Walter GLroio... o0 Plumley, Charles A. _______ 12 ALL. V “Missouri... Vermont... St. Louis. Northfield. Poage, W. R_ Jd. li nn Texas so Waco. Poulson, Norris... co... 13 California... Los Angeles. Powers, D. Lome. C05. an 4 | New Jersey._____ Trenton. Prachi, C. Frederick..... 5 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Price, Emory’ H_.20 2. (EE 2-1" Ploridn_.....<- Jacksonville. Priest, J. Perey. 00... 6 | Tennessee._____ Nashville. Rabaut, Louis C0020 14 | Michigan... _.. Grosse Pointe Park. Bomey, Homer A. 250 9-"Ohile 2. i Toledo. Ramspeck, Robert_________ 517 Georgin......-. Atlanta. Randolph, Jennings________ 2 | West Virginia___| Elkins. RankinpJohn'¥e. oC 0 1 | Mississippi-_._.._._ Tupelo. Rayburn, Sam Reece, B. Carroll. J 2800 . 05... 4-1 1 | Pesan Tennessee. _____ Bonham. Johnson City. Reed, Chauncey W__________ 1 'Ninois). Lo West Chicago. Reed; :Donideli dL 500. 43 { New York... Dunkirk. Bees, Bdword H.. 21 >... 4 | Kansas_________| Emporia. Richards, James P_________ 5 | South Carolina__| Lancaster. Rivers, Ricley I. Mendel _._________ Boss. = 00 20 Lis 1 8 | | South Carolina..| Oklahoma ______ North Charleston. Guymon. Robertson, A. Willis________ 7 Virginia... .....> Lexington. Robinson, JW. .1.20 oo. Lk a UE Re ed Provo. Bobsion, Rockwell, Jobkn' M.-C2 Robert F...._ _.._.__ 9 4 | Kentucky... :.. "Colorado. _..__- Barbourville, Paonia. Rodgers, Bobert'L. 2... 29 | Pennsylvania___| Erie. Rogers, Edith Nourse__.______ 5 | Massachusetts. _| Lowell. Rogers, Will, JJrailii=t = 16 California... .. Culver City. Rohrbough, Edward G_______ 3 | West Virginia___| Glenville. Rolph; Thomas..s2-2 1 4 California... -.. San Francisco. Rowan, William A__________ 2{ Tinols_ oi. -.. Chicago ewes Bd Sr ol F000oo 4: (Ohio... ...-- Akron. Russell, Sajm M20". _... 17 Texas...o Stephenville. Sabath, Adelph J. _..._.... Si NMinols =. -¢: Chicago. Sadowski, George G_____.__ 1° Michigan... Detroit. Sasscer, Lansdale G________ 5 Maryland... Upper Marlboro. Satterfield, Dave E., Jr_____ 8 Virginia... i... Richmond. Savrnore, Harpy ©: 2 "Wisconsin... Madison. Scanlon, Thomas E___._.___ 16 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Schifler, Andrew CQ: .. . 1 | West Virginia.__| Wheeling. Schuetz, Leonard W________ Nr Hinols oC Chicago. Schwabe, Maz... 2000200_o- 2 Missour]. ... ..- Columbia. Scott, Hugh D. Jr. :25..... 7 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Shafer, Poul W.oioiii. casa 3 Michizgon....-= Battle Creek. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name tTiot State City Sheppard, Harry Ro... 21 “California. .... Yucaipa. Sheridan, John Edward_____ 4 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Short, Deweyciiiooaid 7 “Missouri... Galena. _. Sikes, Robert Lo F_________ Sol Florida... ...--Crestview. Simpson, Richard M________ 18 | Pennsylvania. __| Huntingdon. Simpson, Sid... iioii. . 20: | Minois... i... Carrollton. Slaughter, Roger C_________ 5ilaMissouri.. ...on Kansas City. Smith, Frederick Coli. ...... . ._o.. Marion. SeitiOhio_.O Smith, Howard W__________ S{:Virginia. ...._.. Alexandria. Smith, Joe Liza ll Jz03 6 | West Virginia___| Beckley. Smith, Lawrence H_ ________ 1 Wisconsin. .__.. Racine. Smith, Margaret Chase. __ ___ 2] Maine... ..__.... Skowhegan. Snyder, J. Buellii) cl... 24 | Pennsylvania_.__| Perryopolis. Somers, Andrew L__________ 6il!New York... ... Brooklyn. Sparkman, John J oo ____ 8 | Alabama._______ Huntsville. Spence, Brent_sizoczal) 57tiKentueky....... Fort Thomas. Springer, Raymond S_______ 10: dndiana. Connersville. Stonley, Winifred C.......__. At'L. i" New York...... Buffalo. Stores, doe... oo... 5) Alabama,........ Guntersville. Steagall, Henry B._. ...... 8 (Alabama... __.._ Ozark. Stearns, Foster 20201221100 0 -2 | New Hampshire_| Hancock. Stefan, Karl. = ccaan 81 Nebragka: Norfolk. Stevenson, William H_ ___ ___ 3 | Wisconsin__.____ La Crosse. Stewart, Paul... ...alileg 3 | Oklahoma.______ Antlers. Stockman, Lowell __ _ _ _______ 2 {Oregon......... Pendleton. Sullivan, Maurice J...u. AtL.:{ Nevada_.._..__. Reno. Sumner; Jessie... i. i... 1S | linols.__.. ..cs Milford. Sumners, Hatton W________ SF Texas. o. nua Dallas. Sundstrom, Frank L... ... ... 11 | New Jersey._._.__ East Orange. olen, JOIN ao 36 New Auburn. diimeltoni | York....__ Talbot, Joseph oo 5 | Connecticut. ...| B.Li. Naugatuck. Tolle, HevrygO-since 2h dowa or aon. Decorah. Tarver, Malcom C_._.._.... 7 1 Georgian. ....... Dalton. Faglory Peon P57 29 | New York... _._. Troy. Thomas, Albert... =... Si Texas. .oi-nina Houston. Thomas, J. Parnell... ....... 7 | New Jersey._____ Allendale. Thomason, R. Ewing... 16 { Texas... 2. El Paso. Tibbott, Hagre...oona 27 Pennsylvania___| ini ii | Ebensburg. Tolan, Johw H. -._.._. 7 41 California... Oakland. Towe, Harry Li. 2a... 9 | New Jersey_____ Rutherford. Treadway, Allen T-. __..__ 1 | Massachusetts___| Stockbridge. Troutman, William I_______ At L. | Pennsylvania___| Shamokin. Van Zandl, James EB... 23 | Pennsylvania___| Altoona. Vincent, Beverly M________ 2 Rentueky. Brownsville. Vinson, Carl...>. 6: Georgia... Milledgeville. Yoorhis, Jerry.o. onion 12 | California... -San Dimas. Vorys, Jom AM: 12 1:0blo. Lo cos Columbus. Yusell, Charles W...--23 1 Illinois. o-oo. Salem. Wadsworth, James W__ _____ 39 | New York__.____ Geneseo. Walter, Francis B-.__. 21 | Pennsylvania___| Easton. Ward, David. J...... 7 1 Maryland. _.... Salisbury. Wasielewski, Thad F_______ 4: Wisconsin. ..... Milwaukee. Weaver, Zebulon___________ 12 | North Carolina__| Asheville. Weichel, Alvin F ....-i... 13: Ohio Lo Sandusky. Weiss, Samuel A___________ 30 | Pennsylvania___| Glassport. Welch, Richard J. ---—. .-5: Oolifornia.. __..: San Francisco. Wene, Elmer H.__. __.___ 2 | New Jersey.._-_ Vineland. West, Milton H___..._. 15 Texas =o....: Brownsville. Wheat, William H._......_._. 194 Minolss . .oo0 Rantoul. Whelchel, B. Frank.....-.....-9) Georgian... ...c Gainesville. Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis- Name trict State White, Compton I....:...... Whitten, Jamie I... ... oq... Whittington, William M____ Wickersham, Victor_ _______ Wigglesworth, Richard B_____ Willey, Borle onia lo... At Doce Wilson, Borles stunt -Winstead, Arthur. ..2:..5 inter, ThomasiD--..t L._. Weolcoll, Jesse Poti bi... Wolfenden, James_ -_ _______ Wolverton, Charles A________ Woodruff, Rog Ovid:oo Woodrum, Clifton A________ Worley, Eugene... Wright, James Au se. 3.L-.. Zimmerman, Orville_ _______ DELEGATES AND Pldabo. ip... ... 2. Mississippi... 3 | Mississippi_._.___ 7.1 Oklahoma, _.... 13 | Massachusetts__| L. | Delaware. ___._._ 9: Indiana... ... 5 | Mississippi. .... Siti Keongag: i. ¥:| :Miehigan.... -.-8 | Pennsylvania___| 1 | New Jersey_____ 10: Michigan... _... 64 Vicginia ua ia... 18::'Texas 2...._. 32 | Pennsylvania___| 10 (~ Missouri... _ : City Clarks Fork. Charleston. Greenwood. Mangum. Milton, Dover. Bedford. Philadelphia. Girard. Port Huron. Upper Darby. Merchantville. Bay City. Roanoke, Shamrock, Carnegie, Kennett. RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Commonwealth, Name Title insular possession, or Territory City Dimond, Anthony J_____ Elizalde, Joaquin M.!____| Farrington, Joseph R______| Pagédn, Bolivar 2________ Delegate__| Res. Com_| Delegate__.| Res. Com_| Alaska___________ Philippines_______ Hawaii___________ Puerto Rico. _.___- Valdez. Manila. Honolulu. San Juan. 1 No political affiliation. 2 Coalitionist. TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS + Crass III.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1945 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 21; Republicans, 11] Name Party Aflen, Georpge-D.L ob. Sool ool) RB. Barkley, Alben W.. oe i Saad 0 0 D. Bone, Homer T oc. mietendol D. Caraway, Hattie W_-..| —-. . .. . _.._ .. D. Clark, Bennett . D. Champ...._... Clark, DD. Worth... cco. bce n tena D. Danaher, John A. a... ol aL, EB. Davis, James J... ae ©. ea RB. Downey, Sheridan. zai. niet D. George, Walter o.. . . ..... D. Boo. oi... Gillette, Gay M_ oota ing inantona D. Gumey, Chon... cant ase nema mma en nn R. Hayden iCall. animes kai do awn min sens D. Hill, ister. cor cote tas adem anes mamma D. Holman, Rufus cw ee aoa Coal. R. Yucos, Boot WW. ounizit cpio D. McCarran, Pat... on ledin D. Millikin, Eugene D2... o.... ...... __ R. Nye CelaldeP. oe Pa R. Overton sJORR H cian. onze hill naan a D. Pepper, Claude. . coum be some ng nr mmiiin 2 =D. Reed, Clyde MM... oi... oie ios R. Beynolde, Boberbt RB. _..c. _ 0 a. BD. Smith, Eliseo D. . D. Bott Rober A... i a a ral R. Thomas; Blbert Dc... cena D. Thomag, Elmer. 20 oo i oe aa ia D. Mobey; Charles W.o.... 0 la R. Tydings, Millard BB. .._ 2 .. i-_ . .ai.. PD. Yon. Nays, Frederick... oo. D. Wagner, Robert Bo. . oii ia iiaa as DD. Wiey Alexander... Lo. io. R. 1 Elected Nov. 5, 1940. 2 Appointed by Governor Dec. 20, 1941; elected Nov. 3, 1942, 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——12 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. Denver, Colo. 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. Y. Chippewa Falls, Wis. 158 Congressional Directory Crass I.—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... . ._-~. _.. ___.. -D. Orlando, Fla. Austin, WarreniRBo 702 So SalasSuc. R. Burlington, Vt. Barbour, W. Warren... .......o.... ..¢ R. Locust, N. J. Bilbo; Theodore G..0. “oole LL Sibi vr D. Poplarville, Miss. Brewster, Baloh O.. ..... ... lL...ovals R. Dexter, Maine. Burten, Harold H.. ~~ Co aaa R. Cleveland, Ohio. Butler, Hugh A. {.. od.ais R. Omaha, Nebr. Byrd, Biifirv*Plood. oF 100 1D. Berryville, Va. Chavez, Dennle. oo. onornras D. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Commally, Tom... .. ;:....: 0... 0... D. Marlin, Tex. Gerry, Peter Ge 0 =~ oF dino ones D. Warwick, R. 1. Guffey, Joseph B=) =...sews D, Pittsburgh, l-fr Pa. Johnson, Hiram W-_ ~.L J. ort R. San Francisco, Calif. Kilgore; Marley M0c . oo oor D. Beckley, W. Va. LaFollette, Robert ME, Jr... oot Prog. | Madison, Wis. LangersWilliam > 0.1. =. Joi oro0-aoe R. Bismarck, N. Dak. McFarland, Emest W._.. 0... ----~ D. Florence, Ariz. MeKellar, Kenneth... 0. ----2-=2 D. Memphis, Tenn. Moloney, Franels. its aoc 2 D, Meriden, =... Conn. Mead, James M™-0 2. oon D, Buffalo, N. Y. Murdock) Abe Co ore D. Beaver, Utah. 0’ Mahoney,‘ Jogepht ©. v0 ----5---=--Pr: Cheyenne, Wyo. Radeliffe, George Tr 2 Loo 0 Joo Sma D. Baltimore, Md. Serugham James G12 1. = coo -on D. Reno, Nev. Shipstead?Mlenviley "ico-oo ioio R. R. F. D., Carlos, Minn. Troman, Harry! oo eo D. Independence, Mo. Tumnell, Jamie M1 % > oo ei D Georgetown, Del. Vandenbere, Arthur'®._ 1° ~~~ R. Grand Rapids, Mich. Walloren Mon @2 1 0. Lf oor tes {5 Everett, Wash. Walsh, David T10a01L drome D. Clinton, Mass. Wheeler, Burton’ © .C 2 oo. ooo i 3 Butte, Mont. Willis, Baymont fF 2c. / i Jeno roenens RB: Angola, Ind. 1 Elected Nov. 3, 1942. Rani Terms of Service 159 Crass II.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1949 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 15; Republicans, 17] Name Party Balle, Josiah Wi. . enum naman 2s D. Ball, Joseph Hl rd rad R. Bankhead, John H., 2d. 0. oi. D, Bridees, Styles. =... anil las R. Brooke, C.Waviand i B. Buck. CG. Dougings, o_oLoi R. Bushiield, Harlan J ed as R. Capper, Arthur... denn in R. Chandler Albert: Berd cch D. Eastland, James O-.. cu. oi co mmm eas BD, Rllendor, Allen) Ca Se D, Ferguson, Homer. ___._.__._. ew ad a R. Glags: Carter LL ed D. Green, Theodore ¥randis. «1 = _. D. Matel Card AL ed iil D, Hawkes, IAIDEIl We. oo os cn morgen R. Johnsen, Bdwin'C o.ooiT iT D. Todge, Henry Cabot, Ir... oi. os B. McClellan, Joh, 1...o.oo i i a D. MeNary, Charles ... cout narope n-ne B. Mavbank, Burnet R__.. oa. D. Maore, Bol da pao R. Murray, James Ba ead naa D. Daniel "WW, Lee...a Salli D. Revereomnb, Chapin... coe immermm te B. Foberfoon, TAWward Ve... o-oo nota ticna ax R. Buassell, Richard B..... . < iodo D. Stewart, TOM... or rami s mip dah i D. Thomas, On a oe Teo x ei A or R. Wherry, Kenneth 8 ee nate R. White, Wallace H., Jr oi i. is R. Wilson, George Al. ne ons arf As nbn R. Residence Raleigh, N. C. St. Paul, Minn. Jasper, Ala. East Concord, N. H. Chicago, Ill. Wilmington, Del. Miller, S. Dak. Topeka, Kans. Versailles, Ky. Ruleville, Miss. Houma, La. Detroit, Mich. Lynchburg, Va. Providence, R. L Clovis, N. Mex. Montclair, N. J. Craig, Colo. Beverly, Mass. Camden, Ark. Salem, Oreg., R. F. D. Charleston, S. C. Tulsa, Okla. Butte, Mont. Fort Worth, Tex. Charleston, W. Va. Cody, Wyo, Winder, Ga. Winchester, Tenn, Gooding, Idaho. Pawnee City, Nebr. Auburn, Maine. Des Moines, Iowa. 160 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS Rank Name State Beginning of present service i. Smith Ellison D._....} . South Carolina______ Mar. 4, 1909 2 | McKellar, Kenneth... _._..____ Tennessee. _........ Mar. 4, 1917 S.LJommsoh, Hiram W.___... .~~~~ -California. ~~ __. Mar. 16, 1917 4 | McNary, Charles L.!.__________ Oregole. cue cus’ Dec. 18, 1918 61. Capper, Arthur... _.. ~~~ Roansas. __ or oo.i Mar. 4,1919 6: Glass, Carter... .L...__...." Virginia, 0... Feb. 2,1920 0 7: George Walter FF... _ [~~~"= Georgia... Nov. 22, 1922 Shipstead, Henrik...~~ _ Minnesota..._. 8 ia Barton | SAS pr Montana... _....... Mar. 21023 9 | La Follette, Robert M., Jr______ Wisconsin fe. Sept. 30, 1925 10 :Nye, Gerald P_.. +. North Dakota_.____. Nov. 14, 1925 HH. Wash, David 12... ~~ Massachusetts. _____ Dec. 6, 1926 Barkley Alben i ___ _ Rentueky.. W.__ .._. Hayden Carl, . . ~:~ Avizong,. oor i | 12 Thomas, Elmer... i... Oklahoma. _._....... Mar. 4, 1927 Tydings, Millard BE... ...._. Maryland... ... Wagner Robert 2 "°° New York... o...... F..... 13 | Vandenberg, Arthur H.__._______ Michigan. _.... .c. Mar. 31, 1928 14. Connally, 2. ~ > ° Texas. oc... smn Mar. 4,1929 Tom_........ 15.1: Davis; James J... oC Pennsylvania. ....._. Dee. 2,1930 Dalley, Josiah. W_... ___._ > _ --| North Carolina___.___ 16 Bani Jonn MH. 2d... =. Alabama.... pis. 4, 1931 White, Wallace H., Jr..._ __ Maine: _ .. v.ce.cx 17. Austin, Warren RB... ~~. Vermont... ..... 5 Apr. 1,1931 18.4. Caraway, Hatlle W._..._ Arkansas...0 ..c Nov. 13, 1931 ~ . 19. Reynolds, Robert R_.... ~~ North Carolina.______ Dec. 5, 1932 20 { Russell Richard B. __ ~~ Georgia... Jan. 12,1932 21 | Clark, Bennett Champ__________ Missouri. ........ Feb. 3, 1933 Bone, Homer ... __ Washington.....__._ TT....~ Byrd, Barry 2. . ~ Virginia... ooo Flood... MeCarran, Pat: 2° Nevada. oo. o.oo = Overton, JohnH. __. -~~~ -Touigiana co... Mary 21050 Thomos, Elbevt = ~~ tah. oa.l D.._.. a Van Nuys, Frederick. __________ Indians. 23 Hateh, Carl A..... ..-New Mexico__.__.._. Oct. 10, 1933 24 | O’Mahoney, Joseph C__________ Wyoming... “i: --1:Jam 1, 1634 25: Murray, Jomes Bl. -..__ . Montana... Nov. 7,1934 Bilbo, Theodore GG... =... Mississippi... _.____ ] Gerry, Peier O.3_. .... . .::.! Rhodelsland ... = Guffey, Josep BP. __..= Pennsylvania_______ 26 0 Maloney, Franels. _ =... sc. Connecticut. _..._... Jan, 3, 1935 Radcliffe, George I... .......ci Maryland... Truman, Harry 8 oo. + Migsour?l-=. "= : 1 Mr. McNary also served in the Senate from May 29, 1917, to Nov. 5, 1918, 2 Mr. Walsh also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1919, to Mar. 3, 1925. 8 Mr. Gerry also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1917, to Mar. 3, 1929, Terms of Service 161 CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Beginning of I Rank Name State present service I 27 11 Chavez, Dennis. o.ciimadLoos New Mexieouli 40 May 11, 1935 Andrews, Charles O____________ Florida.....s 41 S40 | 28 K Gillette, Guy M...olids Towa... E8lduotl oo Nov. 4, 1936 | Pepper, Clande ool (00oz. 5 81851 | Florida. Bridges, Styles. lcniioo fo. New Hampshire___ _ il Ellender, Allen J oaliioi Louisiana. 0000100 | 29 [{ Green, Theodore Francis________ Rhode Island. >_. _. Jan. 3, 1937 Johnson, Edwin C.secuis il... Colorado. fidol coe] 0 Lodge, Henry Cabot; Jr... Massachusetts. _ ____ ! Hill, 100). Jan. 30 | Lister... .2.0laslsLun Alabamaiuisil) Jog 11,1938 oo] 31 ! Barbour, W. Warren:t.io/ .__.__. New Jersey. ____..__ Nov. 9, 1938 82 | Mead, James M..__ao0l vl... New York [Lorine J Dec. 38,1938 | Clark, D.. Worth... 0500... Idaho... Jy iosil 5 i Danaher, John A... ...... Connecticut * ===22 | Downey, Sheridan... cc coeunis-California. cot sooo | Gurney, Chan. ivi olson.wl South Dakota_______ I Holman, Rufus 0 Ofegonic iit vl "nr | @..0_.. 8s Tucas, Scott W.uu.anoncils Winoels. Jan 451939 | ia Reed, Clyde Ml. _._ J a... Kansns. ...ooinanna il Tat, Robert A... _-..% Ghia. aE : Tobey, Charles W..___._.._._.__ New Hampshire_____ | | Wiley, Alexander. :. _.. ........ Wisconsin... J | 84 | Stewart, Tom... i i: Tennessee. _..._.._._. Jan. 16, 1939 35 | Chandler, Albert B............. Kentucky... i... Oct. 9, 1939 | 30... Thomas, ... i. .-. Tdahol ierrae Jan. 27,1940 Jom... I 37 | Brooks, C. Wayland____________ Ninos. ..0 sooo Nov. 22, 1940 | 83 { Walloren, Mon C............. Washington..... Dec. 19, 1940 | | Brewster, Ralph O...._. ___.... Maine. 1. moe | Burton, Harold B______ _.__/_: Ohio. i cou | Butler, Hugh __.. _.. Nebraska_. __._.... A...~.. | Kilgore, Harley M.._...... West Virginia_______ 89 ‘langer, William... ._.C. _:. North Dakota. ____ Jan. 3, 1941 i McFarland, Ernest W__________ Arizona... 40°| 41] 42 43 | | Aiken, George DS..._._ .__. O’'Daniel, W. Lee...’.. =. Maybank, Burnet R_.___._..... Millikin, Bugene D?.._______. Noermont. RA a ee South Carolina______ | Colorado... Jan. Aug. Nov. Dec. 10, 1941 4, 1941 5, 1941 20, 1941 4 Mr. Barbour also served in the Senate from Dec. 1, 1931, to Jan. 3, 1937. 8 Mr. Thomas also served in the Senate from June 30, 1928, to Mar. 3, 1933. 6 Elected Nov. 5, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Ernest W. Gibson. 7 Appointed Dec. 20, 1941, and elected Nov. 3, 1942, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Alva B. Adams. 162 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Beginning of Rank Name State present service 44: | Scrugham, James G8. ......... Ball, Joseph Ho..._ spied. | Nevada... =u) Minnesota oiuulla Dec. : 7, 1942 Buek, C. Douglass... _o.oi.i.. _ Delaware... 1 Li) Bushfield, Havlan J. -i.uia.| South Dakota______._ Eastland, James O.10____________ Mississippi_ _-______ Ferguson, Homer. ocoiucdLo Michigan... colli _o 45 {4 Hawkes, Albert W_.J oi id... New Jersey_________ Jan. 3, 1943 McClellan, John L_odoorad Loo Arkansas. oral ou Moore, BE. H ovueodonmald Oklahoma i: -ouatl Revercomb, Chapman. .__._____. West Virginia_______ Robertson, Edward V__.._____._ Wyoming HW Wherry, Kenneth S__ _.________ Nebraska... Ii camel 46 | Wilson, George A.M_____________ Towa... figavi il Jan. 14, 1943 8 Elected Nov. 3, 1942, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Key Pittman. 9 Mr. Ball also served in the Senate from Oct. 14, 1940, to Nov. 18, 1942. 10 Mr. Eastland also served in the Senate from June 30, 1941, to Sept. 28, 1941. i Sworn in Jan. 14, 1943. Terms of Service 163 CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH on BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE [*Elected to fill a vacancy; t resigned; { unseated by contested election] Name State Dix Congresses (inclusive) Se 19 terms, consecutive Sabath, Adolph J________ J Net 560th to 78th... .... Mar. 4, 1907 17 terms, consecutive Doughton, Robert L_____ N.C 94 62d to 78th... Mar. 4, 1911 16 terms, consecutive Rayburn, Sam..." Tex 20. 44 63dto78¢h--~_-:-._ Mar. 4, 1913 Sumners, Hatton W______ Tex. BA 63dto Sth =. Mar. 4, 1913 Treadway, Allen T_______ Mass _ _ 1 63d to 78th ~~ =. Mar. 4,1913 Vinson, Carl. ...occ-z-0. Cy 215 6 *63d to 78th... _._ Nov. 3, 1914 15 terms, consecutive Steagall, Henry B____.___| Ala____ 8 | 64th to 78th... ..... Mar. 4, 1915 14 terms, consecutive Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ Yao TI *65thto 78th... ._ July 2,1918 Knutson, Harold_.___.____ Minn _ _ 6: 65th to 73th... ... Mar. 4, 1917 Lea, Clarence F______._._. Calif___ 14 G5th to 7Sth. Mar. 4, 1917 Mansfield, Joseph J______ Tex... 9 | 65th to 78th... .. Mar. 4, 1917 14 terms, not consecutive Crosser, Robert____.______ Ohio___| 21 | 63d to 65th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 78th. 13 terms, consecutive Cullen, Thomas H_______ NY 4; 66thto 78th... _.. Mar. 4, 1919 Drewry, Patrick H______. Val 4° 266th to 73th... = Apr. 27, 1920 Fish, Hamilton........... NY 26. *66th'to 78th... Nov. 2, 1920 Lanham, Fritz G___..... Tex tai -*56hto 73th i: __ Apr. 19, 1919 Reed, Daniel A__________ N.Y... 143 | 66th to 7Sth_..-__._ Mar. 4, 1919 13 terms, not consecutive Weaver, Zebulon________._ N.C___| 11 | {65th to 70th and | Mar. 4, 1931 72d to 78th. Woodruff, Roy Occeee-.. Mich__1 10 | 63d and 67th to 78th.| Mar. 4, 1921 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Die Congresses (inclusive) Bop 12 terms, consecutive Fulmer, Hampton P_____ gC. 21 67th to 78th. ea. = Mar. 4, 1921 Gifford, Charles I... Mass. _ O| *67thto 78th. .....- Nov. 7,1922 Rankin, John E_______.. Miss_._ 1. 67thtoi7Sth....... +; Mar. 4, 1921 12 terms, mot consecutive Michener, Earl C_______. Mich _ 2 | 66th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 8, 1935 to 78th. 11 terms, consecutive Bloom, Sol... 1... ......: N.Y! 19] =6Sthto 78th. Mar. 4, 1923 Cannon, Clarence.____.... Mo, 9 | 68th to:78h_.._ i... Mar. 4, 1923 Celler, Emanuel. ._.___. No Yeo 110 | 68th 78th. vo Mar. 4, 1923 Dickstein, Samuel _______ NaY-- 12 /68thtofSth:_..__ . Mar. 4, 1923 Johnson, Luther A_______ Mex 61 63thto78th. _... ... Mar. 4, 1923 Rerr, JohnH... ........ N.C... 2 | *68th t0 78the.cwws- Nov. 6, 1923 Taber John... .......- N.Y. {36 /68thto 78th... Mar. 4, 1923 Woodrum, Clifton A_____ Va... 6 | 68th toa78th._._..__ i.. Mar. 4, 1923 11 terms, not consecutive Bullwinkle, Alfred L______ N.C.___| 11 | 67th to 70th and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 78th. Reece, B. Carroll. ______. Tenn ._ _ 1 | 67th to 71st and 738d | Mar. 4, 1933 : to 78th. Robsion, John M________ Ky. >. 9 | 66th to 171st and | Jan. 3, 1935 74th to 78th. 10 terms, consecutive Carter, Albert B.._. ..._. Calif... 6 | 60hto78th.. .... Mar. 4, 1925 Cochran, JohniJ. Mo... 5113 | #269th to 78th ice Nov. 2, 1926 Cox, BB. EB. oa... Ga. 2{6%hto78h._...._ Mar. 4, 1925 Eaton, Charles A_______._ NJ 5 1 6Mhto78th..___ iz. Mar. 4, 1925 reen, Jez... i... __._.. Fla. ..]AtL.| 69thto78th_..__= Mar. 4, 1925 Jenkins, Thomas A______ Ohio_..l 110.] 60thto 78th. _____._ Mar. 4, 1925 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____| Mass_.| 14 | 69th to 78th________ Mar. 4, 1925 Norton, Mary T=... Nod. 13 | 60thto 78th... Mar. 4, 1925 Rogers, Edith Nourse____| Mass_ _ 57 60th to'7Sth._. June 30, 1925 Somers, Andrew L_______ N.Y . 6 | 69th to 78th. rane Mar. 4, 1925 Welch, Richard J... Calif ___ 5B *9thio 78th... Aug. 31, 1926 Whittington, William M__| Miss___ 3 | 69thito78th_______. Mar. 4, 1925 10 terms, not consecutive Guyer, U.-S__ ... ._._ __. Kans _. 2 | *68th and 70th to | Mar. 4, 1927 78th. Terms of Service 165 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued present service 9 terms, consecutive Culkin, Francis D.__._ ._.& N.oY.i} 132 | *70thto 78th... ..~-Nov. 6, 1928 Fitzpatrick, James M____| N. Y._| 24 | 70th to 78h________ Mar. 4, 1927 Hancock, Clarence E_____ N.oYolt 35 (| *70th 40 78th... Nov. 8, 1927 Hope, Clifford R.........: Kans __ 5 | 70th tos¥8th_. ...... Mar. 4, 1927 Johnson, Jed... oi Okla___ 6! 70th to: 78th... s6Lly. Mar. 4, 1927 McCormack, John W____| Mass __| 12 | *70th to 78th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Tarver, Malcolm C______ Ga... 71 70th to 78th... Mar. 4, 1927 Wigglesworth, Richard B.| Mass __.| 13 | *70th to 78th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolfenden, James._ _ _ ____ Pa... 81 #70thto 78th... .... Nov. 6, 1928 Wolverton, Charles A____| N. J___ 1 {70th to78th. Mar. 4, 1927 3 | 9 terms, mot consecutive | Andresen, August H_____ Minn _ _ 1] 69th to 72d and | Jan. 3, 1935 74th to 78th. | Chapman; Virgil..... Ky__...| 6 | 69th, 70th, and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 78th. 8 terms, consecutive Clark, J. Bayard......... N.C..c 7 | Flstto 78th...» ... Mar. 4, 1929 Cooper, Jere... _—_-. i] "Tenn ic 9 7ist to98th. il. ° Mar. 4, 1929 Gavagan, Joseph A______ N.oY.e} 21] *7ist 0: 78th... 240 Nov. 5, 1929 Hartley, Fred A., Jr__.__._ NJ ool 100) ist 40: 78th... Mar. 4, 1929 Kennedy, Martin J______ N.oYotyr 18 *7ist to 78th... Mar. 11, 1930 Kinzer, J.:Roland.......... JPall Ai 10 | *7istio 78th. —«_ Jan. 28, 1930 Lambertson, William P___| Kans __ 1 71st: 78th Mar. 4, 1929 Ludlow, Youis...... cont Ind.oF (11 | 7ist1e 78th. .0 Mar. 4, 1929 Patman, Wright_..._.... Tex... 1 71st to 78th. © AL Mar. 4, 1929 Ramspeck, Robert_______ Qa: Lc 5 #ist {078th ---: Oct. 2, 1929 Smith, Joel... ..i....l W. Va_ 6 | Tist 40: 78th-200 Mar. 4, 1929 8 terms, mot consecutive Delaney, John J___.___.. N.OY.C 7 | *65th and *72d to | Nov. 3, 1931 78th. Maas, Melvin J... ....... Minn __ 4 | 70th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 3, 1935 to 78th. 7 terms, consecutive Andrews, Walter G______ NY! 40° 72d: t0-780h.. = Mar. 4, 1931 Burch, Thomas G.._..._.: Va. i> Bl 72d%0 78th...= Mar. 4, 1931 Dies; Martin. tL... .... Tex... 20 720-40: 78h... Mar. 4, 1931 Disney, Wesley E________ Okla... Lo 72d to 78 th.n 0 Mar. 4, 1931 Flannagan, John W., Jr__| Va_____ 9 72dto 78th... __.. Mar. 4, 1931 Gilchrist, Fred 2 0. Towa___ 6 72d to 73th... Mar. 4, C_._ 1931 Holmes, Pehr G_____.__. Mass___ 41 722d 78th orn Mar. 4, 1931 Kleberg, Richard M______ Text 114 | #72d to 78th... Nov. 24, 1931 166 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) Sy 7 terms, consecutive—con. May, Andrew J.....__1. Ry... 7:1 72dit0. 78th... ii. Mar. 4, 1931 Schuetz, Leonard W_____ Ih Ji0 7:1] 72do "J zou Mar. 4, 1931 78th... Smith, Howard W_____._._ Vali. 81 72d to 78th... ._o:5c Mar. 4, 1931 “Spence, Brent____....__.. Ky. di 5 | 72d40: 78th....H Mar. 4, 1931 Thomason, R. Ewing_____ Tex dite 116 { 72d toi78th.. Mar. 4, 1931 Wolcott, Jesse P_________ Michal | 7] 72dto 78th. il Mar. 4, IL 1931 7 terms, mot consecutive Hare, ButlersB. _......i S.00.1:0 3 | 69th to 72d and 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 to 78th. Hess, William E_________ Ohio___ 2 | 71st to 74th and 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 to 78th. 6 terms, consecutive Allen,ileo Fr. 105 ju. Ne _cscp 18 [| 73d to; 78th... 1 Mar. 4, 1933 Brown, Paul ©. ~~ Cat .og.| 110 | *73d to 78th... . July 5, 1933 Colmer, William M______ Miss__ 6 | 73d to 78th. . wut Mar. 4, 1933 Cooley, Harold D..._.._. N.C. 4 | %73d to 78th... July 17,1934 Dingell, Job D.. _...__: Michi: 15 | 73d to 78th... ___.© Mar. 4, 1933 Dirksen, Everett M_____._ Wai sul 16 | 73d to. 78th... __.. _ Mar. 4, 1933 Ditter, J. William_______._ Pa. sais 17¢| 73d40 78th... id Mar. 4, 1933 Dondero, George A______ Michi.it : 17i| 73d to. =i _. Mar. 4, 1933 78th... Ford, Thomas F..._..._.. Calif. of 145] 73d1to 78th. _...L:i Mar. 4, 1933 Kee; John ..1 ..... 5. W. Va Bil 73d. to 78th.... be Mar. 4, 1933 Lesinski, John... ._..____.: Mich... | 16 { 73d to. 78th... ....iC Mar. 4, 1933 Lewis, Lawrence_________ Colo... irl 73d:te 78th... Mar. 4, 1933 McLean, Donald H______ Nodal 6 | 73d to. 78th. ......_3; Mar. 4, 1933 Mott, James W________.. Oreg.___ 1 (73d t0.78th..........20 Mar. 4, 1933 Peterson, J. Hardin_____. Fla: .t 1 73d4078th. ........... Mar. 4, 1933 Plumley, Charles A______ yt... AtL. | *73d to 78th... .. Jan. 16, 1934 Powers, D. Lane... _ NJ. 4! 73d to 78th... ucwun Mar. 4, 1933 Randolph, Jennings _____ W. Va_ 21 73d 078h.. _-... Mar. 4, 1933 Richards, James P_______ 8. Cian 1 73da0 78h... ....] Mar. 4, 1933 Robertson, A. Willis_ ____ Vaio. 7{%3d to 78th... .... Mar. 4, 1933 Rebinson, J. W..__ ....... Utah... 21 73dto7Sth......... Mar. 4, 1933 Snyder, J. Buell. .__.__.. Boy... 24: 73d to. 78th... ......_. Mar. 4, 1933 Wadsworth, James W.__.[ N.V__ | 39 73dto78th___. i... Mar. 4, 1933 Walter, Francis E________ Poss 21 (73d to 78th... ..... Mar. 4, 1933 West, Milton-H........_. Tex....f 15. *73dto78th_..._ _.. Apr. 22,1933 White, Compton I... _.. Idaho. _ 1 73dto: 78th... ......2 Mar. 4, 1933 6 terms, mot consecutive Hult Merlin. ......._. Wis____ 9 | 71st and 74th to 78th_{ Jan. 3, 1935 Johnson, Noble J________ Ind... c 6 | 69th to 71st, 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 to 78th. Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State pis Congresses (inclusive) gBoshmnnat 6 terms, not consecutive— continued Maloney, Paul H........ La dic 2 | 72d to 76th and 78th_| Jan. 3, 1943 Pittenger, William A_____ Minn _ _ 8 | 71st, 72d, 74th, 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 to 78th. Short, i Dewey. iL Mo____ 7 | 71st and 74th to 78th_| Jan. 3, 1935 6 terms, consecutive Arends, Leslie C_________ 1 HRATS 17 | 74th to 78th..._. Jan. 3, 1935 Barden, Graham A_______ NCL 3 | 74thit0/ 78th... ..... Jan. 3, 1935 Barry, William B________ No¥dic 98 4th to 73th... Nov. 5,1935 Bell; GC. Jasper... ......i Mol LL 4 | 74th to 78th________ Jan. 38,1935 Boykin, Frank W________ Ala ll “1| *74th'to' 78th... July 30, 1935 Buckley, Charles A______ N.Y.ClF 238 7T4thdo 78th... Jan. 3, 1935 Burdick, Usher Li. _______ N.Dak.|At L.| 74th to 78th__._.___.__ Jan. 3, 1935 Carlson, Frank _ __.._.... Kans__ 6 | 74th to 78th. ....... Jan. 3, 1935 Cole, W. Sterling. ....... NovY.of 37 | 74h tol78th._.._..._... Jan. 3, 1935 Costello, John M_____.___ Calificf 155 74th'to 78th... ....... Jan. 3, 1935 Ciawiord, Fred Li... ..... Mich __ 8 | 74th toi78th. _ ...... Jan. 3, 1935 Creal, Edward W________ Ry Lid 4 | *¥74thto 78th._._._.__. Nov. 5, 1935 Engel,cAlbert J... ... Mich __ 9 | 74th to 78th... ..... Jan. 3,1935 Gearhart, Bertrand W____| Calif___ 9i| 74th to! 78th... ... Jan. 3, 1935 Gwynne, John W________ Towa___ 3 | 74th to 78th... L=20 Jan. 3, 1935 Halleck, Charles A_______ Indl Jig 2. * 74th to’ 78th... Jan. 29, 1935 Hart, Edward J.........1 NoJch 146 74th 078th... ood Jan. 38,1935 Hobbs Samia...lo Ala. Lig 4 |*74th. to 78th... i. Jan. 3, 1935 0 Hoffman, Clare E________ Mich __ 4 | 74th to 78th_..___.__.|"Jan. 38,1935 McGehee, Dan R________ Miss___ 7 | 74th to 78th... . Jan. 3, 1935 Mahon, George H_______ Tex tif 19 | 74th te78th.... .... Jan. 3, 1935 Merritt, Matthew J______ NAYUHAL LL) 74th to: 78th...--Jan, 3, 1935 Nichols, Jaekl.L.ccouiaal Okla___ 2 | 74thto 78th... Jan. 3, 1935 O’Leary, James A________ NY 31 | 74th to 78th... 0 Jan. 3, 1935 O’Neal, Emmet__________ Ky. 04 3 | 74thito 78th. _..._... Jan. 3, 1935 Patton; Natio... o.oo Tex____ 7: 74thito 78th. 2. Jan, 3, 1935 Peterson, Hugh. ......' = Ga. L.53 Til 74th to 73th... Jan. 3, 1935 Pieifer; Joseph L.......¢ N.Y S| 7ithto 78th. ........ Jan. 3,1935 Rabaut, Louis C.ucnil Mieh li] 14 | 74thto78th.........[ Jan. 3,1935 Reed, Chauncey W______ 3 3 SAREE 11 | 74th to ¥8th......1 Jan. 3, 1935 Starnes; Joel: io. ....il Ala. >: 5| 74th to 78th..... Jan. 3, 1935 Stefan, Karle! © veo Nebr___ 3| 74th to 78th. ....... Jan. 3, 1935 Polar, John HL 3 oie Calif ___ 71 74th to 78th... ..--. Jan. 3, 1935 Whelchel, B. Frank______ Ons 9 | 74th to 78th.________ Jan. 3,1935 Zimmerman, Orville______ Mo....|-10 | 74h to 78th__.....-Jan. 3, 1935 5 terms, not consecutive Lemke, William. _......._. N. Dak_|At L.| 73d to 76th and 78th_| Jan. 3, 1943 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State * Dis Congresses (inclusive) gBegining al 4 terms, consecutive Allen, A. Leonard________ Ta. 8 | 7thto78th__.-_. Jan. 3, 1937 Bates, George J... 25 Lue. Mass _ _ 6 | 75th to. 75th.._._. Jan. 3,1937 Bates, Joe: BL... Los iy Ky. sel 8 | *75thito 78th. A oi: June 4, 1938 Boren; Lyle H..._..... Okla___ 4 | Z5thto 78th... Jan. 3, 1937 Bradley, Michael J_______ Pais ici 3 | 75th toi 78th... Jan. 3, 1937 Brooks, Overton... ..__._ Tara oo 41 75th to 78th_--~~ Jan. 3, 1937 Byrne, William T..____._ N.Y... 28 | 75th to 78th. vic Jan. 3, 1937 Case, Franeig. |. ° 50 -S. Dak 2 (thio 78h... Jan. 3, 1937 €lason, Charles R_______ “Mass _ oi -} Jan. Z5thtgifSth.___ 3,1937 Coffee, John M____.____ 6 75th 78th... : 8, Wash. | to __ i Jan. 1937 Douglas, Fred J_.______[. N.Y. 383 | 75thto 78th... __: Jan. 3, 1937 Eberharter, Herman P___| Pa._.__ 81 | toi7Sth___: Jan. 3, 75th 1937 Elliott, Alfred J... .___. Califo 10 | 375thao 78th... May 4, 1937 Gamble, Ralph A________ No¥. iif 255 =75tH (0'786h. A. = Nov. 2, 1937 Grant, George M________ Ala____ 2 | *75thitol78th_._.__.1 June 14, 1938 Gregory, Noble J_______._ Kyi dil } | 75thde Sth... Jan. 3, 1937 Hendricks, Joe... I Fla, ii Bil 75th 78h... Jan. 3, to 1937 Tzae; Bd. Veal oo... CalifLi 231 75thite 78th...| Jan. 38,1937 Jarman, Pete...4 Ala____ 6 | 75thitoi78th.. _._..| Jan. 3, 1937 Johnson, Lyndon B______ Texiioiff 10 | *75th toi78th_-_...& Apr. 10, 1937 Keogh, Eugene J________ NaY dil 9 | 75thitei78th__...... Jan. 3, 1937 Kirwan, Michael J_______ Ohio... 19 | 75th'to78th__ Z Li. Jan. 3, 1937 McGranery, James P_____ Pail 2 | 75thito 78th..._. Jan. -3, 1937 Magnuson, Warren G____| Wash__ Y | 75th ton78th. 4. Jan. 3, 1937 Mason, Noah M________._ Mot cid 12{ 75thto 78th. ___.__. Jan. 3, 1937 Murdock, John .. [AtL. to Jan. BR... Ariz. 75th 78th_____. 3, 1937 O’Connor, James F______ Mont. _ 2 | 75thtoi78th. _.... Jan. 3, 1937 QO’ Toole, Donald 1..._ NoYdii 8 ( 73th-toi78th....__-3 Jan. 3, 1937 Pace, Stephen... ......d Gas. lil 8i| 76th to. 78th... 5 Jan. ; 3, 1937 PoagesAW. RR... .....4 Texiff 15 | 75thto 78h...3 wc Jan. 3, 1937 Rees, Edward H.________.: Kans _ _ 4 | 75th to 78th. _-..... Jan. 3,1937 Satterfield, Dave E., Jr__.| Va____. 3: ®75th{o’78th._....A Nov. 2, 1937 Shafer; Paul W.__.__..4 Mich _ _ 8 | 75th to 78th... Jan. 3, 1937 Sheppard, Harry R______ Califif 21 | 73th te;78th._.....; Jan. 3, 1937 Simpson, Richard M_____ Par. 18 | *75th to'7Sth.....-. May 11, 1937 Sparkman, John J_______ Ala: 8 | 75thrto 78th. ...... Jan. 3, 1937 Thomas, Albert__________ Text iii 8: 75th to 78th.___....: Jan. 3, 1937 Thomas, J. Parnell___..__= Nadas 7 78th toif8th. 9. Jan. 3, 1937 Vincent, Beverly M______ Ky. oi 2 | *75thio 78th. ..... Mar. 2, 1937 Voorhis, Jerry... .._.__: Calif iz; 12 | 75thto 78th... .... Jan. 3, 1937 terms, not consecutive Blackney, William W____| Mich_ _ 6 | 74thand 76thto78th__| Jan. 3, 1939 Church, Ralph EB... =... 351a 10 | 74thto76thand78th..| Jan. 3, 1943 Marcantonio, Vito_______ N.Y___| 20 | 74thand76thto78th__| Jan. 3, 1939 Terms of Service 169 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued 3 Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) % nda 4 terms, not consecutive— continued O’Brien, Thomas J_____.. EEE 6 | 73d to 75th and 78th__| Jan. 3, 1943 Sadowski, George G_.__-_ Mich _ _ 1 | 73d to 75th and 78th__| Jan. 8, 1943 Sauthoff, Harry . _ _______ WisL: io 2 | 74th, 75th, 77th, and | Jan. 3, 1941 78th. 3 terms, conseculive Andersen, H. Carl_______ Minn._ _ 7.] 76th to 78th. .-..1L Jan. 3, 1939 Anderson, John Z____.____ Calif ___ 8 | 76thite: 783th... Ji! Jan. 3, 1939 Angell, Homer D________ Oreg.._ 3 | 76thito 78th... ...-& Jan. 3, 1939 Beckworth, Lindley______ Tex... 3 | 76thito 78th... =< Jan. 3, 1939 Bender, George H_ _ __.___ Ohio... | At. 76th to 78th._...-..-Jan. 3, 1939 Bolton, Frances P_______ Ohio... 22 | *76thito 78th. ...... Feb. 27, 1940 Bonner, Herbert C___.____ NOLL 1 | *76thite 78th. -.---Nov. 5, 1940 Bradley, Fred... ........: Mich.if 11 | 76th toi78th_..iii_-Jan. 3, 1939 Brown, Clarence J.___..___ Ohio___ 7 1 76thito 78th... .----Jan. 3, 1939 Bryson, Joseph R________ SAC 4 | 76th toi¥78th.....---Jan. 3, 1939 Burgin, W..0. nee. N.:CL.. 8 | 76th to’ 78th......---Jan. 3, 1939 Camp, A. Sidney...______ Ga. oe Expenditures in the Rivers and Harbors. Executive Departments. BENNETT of Michigan______ Immigration and Naturalization. Territories. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Beyond the Scope of Their Authority. ; Agencies Ben~NeTT of Missouri______ Census. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Brspoploo iii iil Census. Library. Mines and Mining. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Naval Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Select: Conservation of Wildlife chairman. Resources. Foreign Affairs, chairman. BolwoN. --- —-aula) Foreign Affairs. Box®en. Accounts. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. . ~ Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Roads. War Claims. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Patents, chairman. Accounts. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. BraADLEY of Michigan Merchant Mines and Marine and Mining, Fisheries. i 2a 4 2 CY House Commattee Assignments BrapLEY of Pennsylvania___ Naval Affairs. BeEaM...__.__ _..._ ......: Mines and Mining. Public Lands. BROORS. loli Military Affairs. Brown of Georgia_________ Banking and Currency. Brown ofl Ohio. _.-.7= Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rules. Bryson. i... a Judiciary. BUoRIny. © on ea Pensions, chairman. Education. Elections No. 1. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. Buorpnmn, ro Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. BOIWINKLE. aoc Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Printing. BuRen. iors ay Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. Bupemtnr sis on Census. Flood Control. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Rivers and Harbors. World War Veterans’ Legislation. BUBDICK =i Indian Affairs. Roads. Territories. Buran. -.....ccerenenia= Foreign Affairs. Bugnmy. o-oo Patents. World War Veterans’ Legislation. eC BUTLER. [au oe or ra Invalid Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. BYRNE. oii na Judiciary. Camp..._ -... .. Waysand Means. CanmiBLD.. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Cannon of Florida________ Agriculture. Cannon of Missouri_______ Appropriations, chairman. CArPOIZONL.. hen ba Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. Cavrson... o.oo. .oicicn. Ways and Means. CanmoN oho Civil Service. Claims. 214 Congressional Directory CARTER... .... ooo Case ooo. CFrren.. .. .....: Cupane CHENOWETH. _____________ z CUIPERFIVID. FE Cuunce-..- Crave... LL CASON. as CLEVENGER.... COCHRAN..______._____:___ i Coveme. .. ..-...... .._.. ! Core of Missouri _________ Core of New York________ 1 Cotmmr.................. COMPTON. =... oa. Coorpy. To ; GocPER.. 2...... | Coesrrrre. o.oo. ? COURTNEY... ...... : Cox..... .. allt Cuayews. ......0. ..... 50 OnAawroRrp. 0 0.00 Comar,. 0000 Crosser... .......- CuiRIN. oo... ’ Appropriations. Rivers and Harbors. / 3 Appropriations. Judiciary. - Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Claims. Education. Public Lands. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in Insular Affairs. the Executive Departments. Rules. Flood Control. Military Affairs. Agriculture. Accounts, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Appropriations. Invalid Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. Insular Affairs. Naval Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Rules. Coinage, Weights, Insular Affairs. and Measures. Agriculture. Ways and Means. Military Special: Affairs. Investigate Un-American Activities. Foreign Special: Affairs. Investigate Un-American Activities. Rules. Select: Investigate Commission. the Federal Communications Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Insular Affairs. Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Elections No. 2. Merchant Marine and Rivers and Harbors. Fisheries. House Committee Assignments | Cullen. isang ConNinGmEAM:. =~ = DILwEG. or Pmvoxe: x. PIRGELL.. ian DIRGENN. as DisNEYZ DirTER__ DeMERGBAUX. o>. DoNDERO Ways and Means. Roads. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Appropriations. Census. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Military Affairs. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation. Elections Labor. Revision No. 2. of the Laws. Rules. Select: Investigate Beyond the Scope Acts of of Their Executive Authority. Agencies Ways and Means. Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Claims. Indian Affairs. Rules. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities, chair-man. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. >. Territories. Ways and Means. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Elections No. 1, chairman. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Edueation. Rivers and Harbors. 216 Congresstonal Directory 2 DovenroN_ .-... ... Bowers. ci.oo Desway. =. 2° = Punaar.-.. ... DworsHAK ol BATON... ain ESERBARTER. ._....... LEY Th in eeSe eh RE SG Sa ee ea BLEIS-oo coh Sool Boson. 2. ErisworrH. ....._......__ BIvERr. BISTON. BNGELD a FARRINGTON -— AY PRI GguAN Le Fellows....... Ways and Means, chairman. Indian Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Naval Affairs. Military Affairs. -: 4 Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Disposition of Executive Papers, chairman, Accounts. Flood Control. : Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Roads. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. War Claims. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. Public Lands. Immigration and Naturalization. Mines and Mining. Military Affairs. Appropriations. World War Veterans’ Legislation, Agriculture. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Post Office and Post Roads. Census. District of Columbia. Education. Elections No. 1. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Judiciary. Revision of the Laws. Judiciary. House FENTON. o.canbooai oli. FERNANDEZ. iy ETH a ARE LE Tn Rhaa FIozPATRICE FIANNAGAN. noon POUARTY si aa PR OLGED: an anti BOomAND. oe naatn Porn... = SeEaR Can Th FULBRIGHT. oie oa re SE ET PORIONG aera GALT = on dan teaaia CariaGuER.. i= ANB: oni ie 5 ; GarmINGs. GAVAGAN. a CAVING oo va inneisay GEAREART. n-ne CopraAcm. Committee Assignments NT Military Affairs. Claims. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Rules. Elections No. 3. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Appropriations. Agriculture. Naval Affairs. Banking and Currency. Ways and Means. Banking and Currency. Foreign Affairs. Agriculture, chairman. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resourc es. Census. Mines and Mining. Patents. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Civil Service. Coinage, Weights, Indian Affairs. and Measures. Census. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Banking and Currency. Election of President, Vice sentatives in Congress. Elections No. 3. President, and Repre- Military Affairs. War Claims, chairman. Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Rivers and Harbors. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Invalid Pensions. Roads. Disposition of Executive Papers. Ways and Means. Foreign Affairs. 218 Congressional Directory GingoN_ oir CIDFORD: iim : CIeCanIST. ood GTi a Guure _ ...... GeeDWIN. : GOBDON = ail Gone. or. a Gonger. oC I I I De CRATAM. enn enn GRANGER... GRANT of Alabama_________ OrANT Of Indiana... CREEN. ins Grraony......... EE CUEEe CR St et Gran aes ST Ud isles IYER. einen aas GWYNNE -a. He GEN. i. JRE Re Tl i ee Se Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Insular Affairs. Patents. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Agriculture. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Indian Affairs. Printing. Agriculture. Claims. = Elections No. 3. Roads. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Judiciary. Elections No. 2, chairman. Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Revision of the Laws. Territories. Judiciary. Agriculture. Agriculture. Naval Affairs. Territories, chairman. Claims. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Indian Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. War Claims. Ways and Means. Flood Control. Pensions. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. War Claims. : Judiciary. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Invalid Pensions. Patents. BBi i Harn, Hav, House EDWIN ARTHUR. ____ Lrowano WW. .__.. = | ! BN \ Harypor PF ANTOOK ooo... rw n ois ee ha HaAwe © aa Hirtess.. ooo HABNRRE. oho Harris of Arkansas_______ Harris of Virginia ______._. |EE eRCen ee HARTLEY. uo. oan Hays. Hesmmuy os lt oe aoa aia HEFrvERNAN. o.oo HemDWwerB ceoi snihias : Bexomieoxs oo id Herren: vie ans Hess. 7 ti TEE ei ann LS Ret HimsiaAw.. ns Hopes. 2 aot sis.oon Hoow on as HoRVEN eri a Committee Assignments : 219 | Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Small Business. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rules. Select: Small Business. Elections No. 1. Judiciary. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Military Affairs. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Naval Affairs. Education. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. Revision of the Laws. War Claims. Select: Investigate the Federal Communications Commission. Labor. \ Patents. Post Office and Post Roads. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Beyond the Scope of Their Authority. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Naval Affairs. Elections No. 1. Memorials. Roads. Territories. Appropriations. Civil Service. Insular Affairs. Naval-Affoirs; Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. | Judiciary. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Invalid Pensions. Public Lands. Roads. War Claims. Census. Post Office and Post Roads. 220 | Congressional Directory HoreMAN =. oa : HorwiEry. -7 ~ HormEes of Massachusetts__ Hormes of Washington _____ Hope... taormian) | _ HoRAN. ~~ Lao HowBLr. . .... -....- Bunn.a Teac soi wn ana JACKSON... JARMAN. cca. JEPFRBY. Re Jee. a. JENNINGS... veneers JENSEN...a JoHNSON, ANTON J________ JounsoN, Cavin D_______ JoHNSON, J. LBROY. _______ JoHNSON, LUTHER A_______ JorNSON, Lynpon B_______ JOHNSON, WARD..._ Jornson of Indiana________ Jounson of Oklahoma _ ____ JONES. i. JONKMAN _.. . ovinenas Joppa Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor. War Claims. Post Office and Post Roads. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Indian Affairs. Pensions. Public Lands. Agriculture. Irrigation and Reclamation. Territories. War Claims. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Naval Affairs. Civil Service. Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rivers and Harbors. Select: Small Business. Printing, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Revision of the Laws. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Ways and Means. Claims. Elections No. 1. Post Office and Post Roads. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Beyond the Scope of Their Authority. Appropriations. Agriculture. Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. Public Buildings and Grounds. Military Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Appropriations. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Education. Insular Affairs. a 5 House Committee Assignments 221 2 = RK BAN eens Banking Elections and No. Currency. 1. : | : ReanNey ._......>: Immigration World War and Naturalization. Veterans’ Legislation. | Xe et aR a i Tg Foreign Affairs. Rewen:. ~~... ie Appropriations. = | Remover... Judiciary. Select: Small Business. NTA ee Re SL ee Coinage, Weights, and Education. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Mines and Mining. Territories. Measures. : ; : KENNeDY.~ ua Interstate and Foreign Commerce. : : BRROGH. 0 i as Revision of the Laws, chairman. Claims. Education. Elections No. 3. Select: Small Business. Kenn... Appropriations. Ripon... - ClviliService. Public Buildings Territories. and Grounds. BIIDAY - Military Affairs. RING. Coo ot Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. ; Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. Rivers and Harbors. VA La re Ga ee Agriculture. Census. BrewaAN Appropriations. | Kieepene. Agriculture. | 2 Kweww. oa. SSE a Enrolled Bills, chairman. Civil Service. Election of President, Vice sentatives in Congress. Patents. Revision of the Laws. War Claims. President, and Repre- a KNuraoN. . .-..c-s Ways and Means. KUNKEL ioe Banking Revision and Currency. of the Laws. LAPOLLERTY os Census. Civil Service. Invalid Pensions. LavesERTSON. =. of Appropriations. 83317 °—T78-1—2d ed. 16 222 Congressional Directory LANDIS. Zin no Election No. 2. Labor. Mines and Mining. LB he eea Judiciary. ANAM. Public Buildings Education. Patents. and Grounds, chairman. fi il H 0 EARCADY oo Education. Flood Control. Patents. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. i A RG Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. ExCoMerTE. Election of President, Vice sentatives in Congress. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. President, and Repre- or In ne Se ee District Insular of Columbia. Affairs. EMRE Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Revision of the Laws. LesiNaRY. «oa Invalid Pensions, chairman. Coinage, Weights and Measures. District of Columbia. Education. Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. Lewis of Colorado_..______ Rules. IleswisofiOhlo... _._ -. Judiciary. L Yuen. ial Military Affairs. 3 LODLOW. niin Appropriations. LYNCH as een an Ways and Means. ; | MceComvp..".... ........ Agriculture. | MeGonvAok. ~~... ... Majority Floor Leader. | McCowEN_____ Te Education. Immigration and Naturalization. | McGeaur... .c. ..... Claims, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. Elections No. 2. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. & MeCGranwnry 7° = Ways and Means. MeGRYGOR: 0: a Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings Roads. and Grounds. MeRenzivp: =v. Post Office and Post Roads. Molman.>io cloarh oy Ways and Means. House Commuttee Assignments 223 - Accounts. Civil Service. District of Columbia. Elections No. 3. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. : World War Veterans’ Legislation. Foreign Affairs. Accounts. Public Buildings and Grounds. Naval Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Naval Affairs. Select: Investigate the Federal Communications Commission. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Civil Service. Claims. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Pensions Public Buildings and Grounds. Maxsrierp of Montana____ Foreign Affairs. MansriELD of Texas Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. MARCANTONIO- = 2 = = MAaRrTIN of Towa Military Affairs. MarTIiN of Massachusetts. _ Minority Floor Leader. Immigration and Naturalization. Post Office and Post Roads. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Military Affairs, chairman. Military Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Office and Post Roads. Judiciary. Rules. MiLLeEr of Connecticut Post Office and Post Roads. MiLLER of Missouri Claims. Patents. Select: Investigate the Federal Communications Commission. Mirrer of Nebraska Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. MiLLER of Pennsylvania____ Elections No. 2. Post Office and Post Roads. War Claims. Malrs rr re nil ‘Ways and Means. Moxxiewicz. ...coloicius Banking and Currency. MONRONEY aeons Banking and Currency. MorrisoN of Louisiana. __ MorrisoN of North Caro-Naval Affairs. lina. More aaa Naval Affairs._ Public Lands. Roads. Muor. or Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. MuUNDT haa Foreign Affairs. Indian Affairs. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. MuRpOCK. ee Memorials, chairman. Census. : Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Mugeevy oo Claims. District of Columbia. Education. -Eleetions No. 3. Enrolled Bills. Insular Affairs. Revision of the Laws. Murray of Tennessee______ Post Office and Post Roads. Murray of Wisconsin______ Agriculture. MYERS. vinme HED Interstate and Foreign Commerce. NEWSOME... oni eet Interstate and Foreign Commerce. NICHOLS. = nies Rules. NoRMaN: = = oo. Census. Rivers and Harbors. Noungit..-. ar Appropriations. NORTON-ent 5 Labor, chairman. Education. Enrolled Bills. Memorials. O’Brien of Illinois_ __..____ Appropriations. O’BriEN of Michigan _______ Post Office and Post Roads. O’Brien of New York____._._ Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. £3 House Commattee Assignments 225 OCoRNon-— Indian Affairs, Census. Flood Control. Irrigation and Public Lands. Territories. chairman. Reclamation. Oana...—_ o.% Interstate and Foreign Commerce. oO’ RoNswY ie Labor. Pensions. q Qlmany. ia Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chair-- | man. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine Pensions. and Fisheries. | | O'NEAY. Lo a Appropriations. Ofoore. a. oc Library, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. r OUULAND. Foa Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Roads. Territories. E Pace... Agriculture. Pain il Agriculture. Insular Affairs. Labor. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Territories. | PATMAN. ooo. - Banking and Select: Small Currency. Business, chairman. ! PATTON : Accounts. Civil Service. Claims. Indian Affairs. Pensions. Roads. | Territories. = 2 | PeTERSON of Florida___.___ Public Lands, chairman. Census. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Revision of the Laws. ; World War Veterans’ Legislation. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. PeTERSON of Georgia___..__ Elections No. 3, chairman. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Territories. Select: Investigate Acts of Beyond the Scope of Their Executive Authority. 3 Agencies : | | | Premier. = Foreign Affairs. HETIL a ee MS en ha Ry Military Affairs. | | \ i iL Pains. : .o oy. or Agriculture. Irrigation and Reclamation. PrrrENGER. ooo Claims. Rivers and Harbors. PILOESER = navi Appropriations. Select: Small Business. i i :i PLUMALEY. TT A ol. ines DR Ee dS Appropriations. Elections No. 3. Agriculture. || | POULEON:. vo un nn Expenditures in Flood Control. the Executive Departments. : i Yoweny. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. : | RACH. hnnme en Accounts. Civil Service. i| i Re BRICE. Prism. Post Office and Post Roads. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. ] RABRGT. =ohao Appropriations. | if il hE (tv ee Claims. Coinage, Elections Revision Weights, and No. 3. of the Laws. Measures. i | 4 3 IEil I! ie ja bl RAMSPECR : RANDOLPH. > ---oosooo. ©... li onnnin=- Civil Service, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. District of Columbia, chairman. Civil Service. Labor. Mines and Mining. Roads. : \ RANKIN. voi immsiimmnmsdan = World War Veterans’ Legislation, chairman. Census. Election of President, Vice President, and sentatives in Congress. Rivers and Harbors. Repre- ; RAYBPURN.... .. i.a... Speaker. | j i REeEeE.. vd). Enrolled Bills. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. = | XReep of Tllinols = oeem ol Coinage, Weights, Judiciary. and Measures. 4 : : ; REEDof New Rees... York. .__.... ou Ways and Means. Civil Service. Immigration and Naturalization. 4 t | i Biemanps. Foreign Select: Affairs. Conservation of Wildlife Resources. | Bivens Co Naval Affairs. | Rrzvmy ol. re Agriculture. | : RoBERTSON of Virginia ____ Ways and Means. Select: Conservation man. of Wildlife Resources, chair- § | House Committee Assignments 227 RosinsoN of Utah_________ Roads, chairman. Flood Control. : Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Territories. Select: Small Business. Rossion of Kentucky______ Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Revision of the Laws. ROCKWELL... ..-... Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. RopGERs of Pennsylvania __ Public Rivers Buildings and and Harbors. Grounds. RocGers of California_______ Foreign Affairs. Roars of Massachusetts___ Foreign Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. RoOORBOUGH. District of Education. Columbia. Bowen. on Banking and Currency. Rowan... rinaof bars Claims. District of Columbia. Education. Patents. Public Buildings and Rivers and Harbors. World War Veterans’ Grounds. Legislation. Bowe... District of Post Office Columbia. and Post Roads. Russwil. Usa Sonu District of Judiciary. Columbia. : | Steal are Rules, chairman. BADOWEEL. -nnn Interstate and Foreign Commeree. | SASSCER. i arene Naval Affairs. SSTPERPIBID. vane Judiciary. 7 : E ¢ SAuthHowy. oe aa- Claims. Coinage, Weights, Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. and Measures. | | | BOANLON. eae Civil Service. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. War Claims. | | SCHIPFLER. os ace maim Foreign Affairs. | Seuumnz aaah Naval Select: Affairs. Conservation of Wildlife Resources. | : BOABWAB®: .-. _adseai Education. Flood Control. 298, Congressional Directory —_m, \ =" BARBRA BERPPARD. oan oo SUBBIDAN. Solio ..... Sms. SEs Ca a SimpsoN of Illinois... ____ Simpson of Pennsylvania.__ _ SVAVGATER. Loi. Sma of Mame. ._...__-Smtr ofOhlo: 20 Smita of Virginia... _____.. Smite of West Virginia_____ SymiTHE OF WISCONSIN. ______ SwypwR. boo canbe) SOMERS. «ison e SPRINGER... oo oir SmaNTeyY. oh STARNES, =. tooo one SrmWARR SMOCRMAN. oe Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. Military Affairs. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Military Affairs. District of Columbia. Rivers and Harbors. Ways and Means. Banking and Currency. Naval Affairs. Banking and Currency. Rules. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Be-yond the Scope of Their Authority. Mines and Mining, chairman. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Census. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Military Affairs. Banking and Currency. Judiciary. Civil Service. Patents. Appropriations. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Banking and Currency, chairman, Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. Pensions. Select: Small Business. Military Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. Irrigation and Reclamation. House Svraivaw oo. —-----SuMmNER of Illinois ____.__.. SumMNERS of Texas________._ SUNDRTROM. .... coisa BAnwn: oa _ Tazpor. a. BALL in esnnadk BARVER. eames AYTLOR ora TroMAS of New Jersey... TrOoMAS of Texas ________._ THOMASON ccnasi ne TIBBOTE ni toni aiems BOLAN aid oasis Town. ...o ian TREADWAY. oli.ie TROUTMAN... anne nna VAN ZANDT. veins VINCENT. _ raves VINSON... iene nn VOORHIS.... cee een me NORE: res YoRoul, ieee WADEWORPH. neon aams WALTER...al a Wann an WASIELEWERY. cea a WEAVER. nia Weiner... WEIss i ret a Committee Assignments Banking and Currency. Banking and Currency. Judiciary, chairman. Accounts. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Appropriations. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Appropriations. Roads. Territories. Claims. Military Affairs. Special: Investigate Un-American Activities. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Judiciary. Library. . Ways and Means. Education. Flood Control. Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Naval Affairs. Naval Affairs, chairman. Agriculture. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Beyond the Scope of Their Authority. Foreign Affairs. Civil Service. Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Ways and Means. Judiciary. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Post Office and Post Roads. 230 | Congressional Directory | WELCH. oo ee Insular Affairs. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | WEN. oh edna Appropriations. Wes anak Ways and Means. 1 WHEAT. aa Naval Affairs. WorncunL. Post Office. and Post Roads. |! | Wana: oe Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining, ? Public Lands. WUITeEN. a Appropriations. WHITTINGTON. weveeee Flood Control, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. | Roads. WICRERSHAM.. ce mim Agriculture. > WIGGLESWORTH. — weme — Appropriations. Select: Investigate the Federal Communications | Commission. WILLRY uel Enrolled Bills. Territories. : : World War Veterans’ Legislation. WiisoR ne nmmina Flood Control. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. WINSTEAD. . tc ieaamsenaa Accounts. Elections No. 1. Immigration and Naturalization. Indian Affairs. Patents. War Claims. WINTER: Interstate and Foreign Commerce. WOoLeOTT. oii eimai a Banking and Currency. : Roads. WOLFENDEN. .._ _... ... : Naval Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. WowveErToN......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. y Patents. WOODRUYE. oink Ways and Means. | WOoODBEUM... aoa Appropriations. WonteY. .. .... .. ....0. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- | sentatives in Congress, chairman, Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Insular Affair. Irrigation and Reclamation. Labor. War Claims. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES a i 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. 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. 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 L (Office, Room 130-A, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 1175) Frederick Van Nuys, [Two vacancies.] Senator from Indiana. 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 a : Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, chairman. Fritz G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Grounds. Pehr G. Holmes, Ranking Minority Member of the House Buildings and Grounds. Francis Maloney, chairman of the Senate Committee on Grounds. W. Warren Barbour, Ranking Minority Member of the Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Buildings and Committee on Public Public Buildings and Senate Committee on 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. Raymond E. Willis, Senator from Indiana. Alfred L. Bulwinkle, Representative from North Carolina. Wilson D. Gillette, Representative from Pennsylvania. | Clerk.— Ansel Wold, the Maryland Courts. | Assistant clerk.—Evelyn Hicks, the Schuyler Arms. | Inspector of paper and material (Government Printing Office).—Jules M. Klagge, 1105 East Capitol Street. 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. Donald L. O'Toole, Representative from New York. Graham A. Barden, Representative from North Carolina. [Vacancy.] Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, Representative from Illinois. Clerk.—[Vacant.] Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation (Office, Room 1336, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 290) | Chairman.—Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Vice Chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Thomas H. Cullen, Representative from New York. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts. Harold Knutson, Representative from Minnesota. 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. Executive assistant.—Lynn L. Stratton 6403 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Attorney.— William L. Wallace, 126 C Street NE, Statistician.— Walter L. Price, 2407 Fifteenth Street. Assistant statistician.—J. L. Smith, Jr., 2633 South Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Actuary.—Ralph E. Burgess, Martha's Acres, Brickyard Road, Bethesda, Md. Junior economist—Gerrard M. Brannon, 3612 Ingomar Place. Stenographers and clerks.—Irma Crisler, LaSalle Apartments; Clara E. Scheid, 4222 Fourteenth Street; Grace Allen, 2007 H Street; Bertha S. Harris, 1228 I Street. Commissions and Joint Commatlees 235 National Forest Reservation Commission (Room 4212, South Building, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142, branch 2749) 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.—W. Forrest Keels, 325 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. 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 chairman.— 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.] Migratory Bird Conservation Commission Chairman.—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, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Il 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 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission (Room 306, House Office Building) Chairrman.—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. 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. Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Joseph F. Guffey, Senator 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 Robert R. Reynolds, Senator from North Carolina. Joseph C. O'Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Harley M. Kilgore, Senator from West Virginia. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Chapman Revercomb, Senator from West Virginia. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts. Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Matthew J. Merritt, Representative from New York. John M. Costello, Representative from California. J. Buell Snyder, Representative from Pennsylvania. Joe Starnes, Representative from Alabama. John H. Kerr, Representative from North Carolina. 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. Commassions and Joint Committees 237 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts, ex officio. Bennett Champ Clark, Senator from Missouri. Francis Maloney, Senator from Connecticut. Charles W. Tobey, Senator from New Hampshire. Raymond E. Willis, Senator from Indiana. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia, ex officio. John J. Delaney, Representative from New York. Lansdale G. Sasscer, Representative from Maryland. Edward F. Hébert, Representative from Louisiana. ra Karl M. LeCompte, Representative from Iowa. Gordon Canfield, Representative from New Jersey. Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy Pat McCarran, Senator from Nevada. Francis Maloney, Senator from Connecticut. Claude Pepper, Senator from Florida. Edward V. Robertson, Senator from Wyoming. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia, ex officio. Herbert C. Bonner, Representative from North Carolina. James Domengeaux, Representative from Louisiana. Aime J. Forand, Representative from Rhode Island. Joseph J. O’Brien, Representative from New York. John W. Gwynne, Representative from Iowa. 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.] Brig. 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. Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission Chairman.—Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia. Secretary.— George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. : W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey. Patrick H. Drewry, Representative from Virginia. [Vacancy.] ; 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 17 238 Congressional Dzrectory Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee Chatrman.—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. Richard B. Wigglesworth, Representative from Massachusetts. [Vacancy.] General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. [Vacancy.] Cliff Clevenger, Representative from Ohio. [Two vacancies.] William Wayne, of Pennsylvania. William A. Kunkel, Jr., of Indiana. Harry G. Hogan, of Indiana. Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission 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. Executive secretary.—Edward Boykin. Commassions and Joint Commatiees 239 | | Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures | Chairman.—Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Vice chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from 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. North Carolina. : : | Joint Committee on Selective Service Occupational Deferment Employees of Legislative Branch of Officers and pe Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah. Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts. Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Walter G. Andrews, Representative from New York. | ld STATISTICAL SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Conioss Ses-Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ongre sion ning journment |in days of the Senate ! of Representatives Isheole to 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 PEE Ba MIR eu dn a Sa 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 RE RS Ss qi 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. Ee Se 1| Dee. 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. TV na 1| Dec. 7,1795 | June 1,1796 177 fais dor oh Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire. 2 | Dee. §5,1796 | Mar. 83,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania. Sth or 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of 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. {1 1 Ee 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. Hh... 1| Dec. 17,1801 | May 3,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, cof | Nathaniel Macon, of Georgia. North Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. Sth «0 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27, 1804 163 | John Brown, of Ken-Do. tucky. Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee. Othe oo 1| Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. ; Maryland. 2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 Ff bt do Ed ned 10the. =o 1 | Oct. 26,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 182: do. ho is Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 83,1809 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.” 2 The Constitution (art. I, sec. 4) provided that ‘“The Congress shall assemble at Tous? once in every year * * * on the first Monday iin 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. ¢ 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 | oon ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives Tih. = 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. 8 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 Jo i Le of Ken-ucky. 2th 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 122d Qos ra 13th 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2, 1813 rg LB Sl pL Sue Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18, 1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of : Massachusetts. 3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Gaillard, of [Langdon Cheves,’ of South Carolina. South Carolina, 14th = = 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 1484... dO Ah Henry Clay, of Ken-ucky. 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 02:1 oc Qo ie 5thoc ano 1 | Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 AF GE en Joo ee Do. 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3, 1819 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia. Ghee 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15, 1820 162 | John Gaillard, of Do. South Carolina. 2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 1 HE do. pi tL a John A % Taylor,® of ork. Vth oe 1 | Dee. 3,1821 | May 8, 1822 ITT QO Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dee. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 HL I pl doi calor ao 18th... 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 178ele un CV Rie et EE ER, Henry Cle, of Ken-tucky 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 bo a SA Vy WDYAERS ES Sa 190... 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 ae ide. 20th = ....-1 | Dec. 3,1827 | May 26, 1828 175 | Samuel Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dee. 1,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 03 il do Vik AE Eley ofet 1 | Dec. 17,1829 | May 31, 1830 Wei de te ei Do. 2 | Dee. 6,1830 | Mar. 3, 1831 88 Lin Waller T'aze-wl of Virginia. 0 Ee, 1 | Dee. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 Belo sade ken eae Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. Wd 1 | Dec. 2,1833 | June 30, 1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do. Mississippi. 2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 John Tyler, of Vir-| John Bell,” of Tennes-ginia. © see. Mth. 1 | Dec. 17,1835 | July 4, 1836 211 | William R. King, of | James XK. Polk, of Alabama. Tennessee. 2 | Dee. 5,1836 | Mar. 3,1837 80 acs dol. onthe... 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 45:00 dos oreo on Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 91838 218 do... srs 3 | Dec. 3,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 ol {i= dor any ees tho z-. 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 203 do Robert M. T'. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 7,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 Bf a a oth: So 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 BQ qos Ey 98th... 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17, 1844 106.0: =. d0es Fai e John W. Jones, of Vir-ginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 DS REO DEER aeOR ogth-=... 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 LE re doc isis S0thEs ar 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14, 1848 254 | ____ doitins Robert C. Winthrop, : of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 00:1. a doe sos or Sisto ovlos 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30, 1850 302 | William R. King, of | Howell Cobb, of Geor-Alabama. gia. 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar. 3,1851 02:0. ooo dos =e soo 32d... 1] Dee. 1,1851 | Aug. 31, 1852 by do tae Ti) Se NR a a Lun. Bovd, of Ken-ucky. 2 1 Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 88 252 Qoinartoia ok ii 8 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. 7 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. Statistical 245 7 2 3 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued v 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 3 = = 83d. lk... 1 | Dec. 65,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 | David R. Atchison, of | Linn Boyd, of Ken- Missouri. tucky. : 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 38,1855 90 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- bs diana. : A 4 Lewis Cass, gan. of Michi- j 34th... 1 | Dec. 3,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- | Nathaniel P. Banks, 3 diana. of Massachusetts. “ 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30,1856 gli det Leino : 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, ol . of Alabama. South Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3,1859 bE PR dol il on Both: .- 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 202: | ix doi ini nl William Pennington, fi Jesse D. Bright, of of New Jersey. Indiana. 2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 38,1861 93 | Solomon Foot, of Ver- ” mont. : 7th... 1| July 4,1861 | Aug. 61861 1 SE qoii. oli Galusha A. Grow, of ! Pennsylvania. | 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 p11 Li REC qa Lita | 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 Lp dose hieio 08 3 88th... 1 | Dee. 17,1863 | July 4,1864 209 iC. ana ne Schuyler Colfax, of Daniel Clark, of New Indiana. Hampshire. 2 | Dec. 5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 89.17 5a dos sili apa t 30th... 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, Do. | of Ohio. 40thc. Ca 1 | Mar. 4,18678| Dec. 2, 1867 rf ee do..o Siar i= Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1867°%| Nov. 10, 1868 ot I ee dol fan cin00 3 | Dec. 17,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 87 dol Nl Theodore M. Pome- roy, of New York. dlabd So. 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 on a doo alt. 3 | Dec. 65,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 89: doll tina 3h 424. nor 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | Apr. 20,1871 ABA AG Tal Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10, 1872 1900 odo a as 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3,1873 oi = dod aia nl 43d 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23,1874 204 | Matthew H. Carpen- Do. ter, of Wisconsin. 2 | Dec. 17,1874 | Mar. 3, 1875 ra atl Fr SeCe a Henry B. Anthony, ‘of Rhode Island. adi. 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15, 1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael O. Kerr, of - Michigan. Indiana. ’ Samuel S. Cox,2 of New York, pro tem- = pore. Milton Saylor,3 of Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3,1877 LN Ee (3 [1 Ep Oa Samuel J. Randall, of 2 Pennsylvania. 45th... 1] Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 BO ua (3 17 Watha hn Do. 2'| Dec. 3,1877 | June 20, 1878 W004 doi. iu . 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 EP PRR 313 Roni EE mA HOE: oo 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1, 1879 106 | Allen G. Thurman, Do. of Ohio. ¢ 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16, 1880 190-1 <> dof. ciaa 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 RE do lo con le | 47th. 5... 1 | Dec. 5,1881 | Aug. 8, 1882 247 | Thomas F. Bayard, | J. Warren Keifer, of . of Delaware. Ohio. David Davis, of Illi- nois. 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. \d § 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 Monday, Sept. 21, to Friday, Oct. 6, and to Tuesday, Nov. 10. No business was transacted subsequent to July 27. 10 Elected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served 1 day. 11 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 12 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19. 13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 246 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued o Ses- | Date of begin- | Date of ad- | Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House Ongress | sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives 48th: =u. 1| Dec. 33,1883 | July 17,1884 218 | George F. Edmunds, | John G. Carlisle, of of Yovmoul Kentucky. 2 | Dee. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 ica ados Le 49th... 1| Dec. 7,1885 | Aug. 5, 1886 242 | John nn, of Ohio. Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas S0th=-s. i. 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 bv i Ben doi Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 3,1889 01. docile o ALTE 1 | Dec. 2,1889 | Oct. 1,1890 304... dois anil su Thomas B. Reed, of aine. 2 | Dee. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. M anderson, of Nebraska. 52d... 1 | Dec. 17,1891 | Aug. 5, 1892 21,4 13 do. roi Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 38,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. 530 a 1 | Aug. 7,1893 | Nov. 3, 1893 895i o.. doi. amlyy am Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28, 1894 268.1: dos. LorAT a 3 | Dec. 33,1894 | Mar. 3,1895 97 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Sth 1 | Dec. 2,1895 | June 11, 1896 193 | William P. Frye, of | Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. Maine. 2 | Dec. 7,1896 | Mar. 3, 1897 873 5 doi ing 55th... 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24, 1897 181: 2 dos ional twin Do. 2 | Dee. 6,1897 | July 8, 1898 Nal GO SL 3 | Dee. 5,1898 | Mar. 3,1899 89a. dors laa Si 56th. =... 1 | Dec 4 1899 | June 7, 1900 186. 5-. dort i Davi B,B. Henderson, of Tow 2 | Dee. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 1) od Ea doc al adea Sth... 1 | Dec. 2,1901 | July 1,1902 NA doi fies mo” Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 LE Re 3 ITE TET Se 58th. 1 | Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 7,1903 br:1 Be dosti oie Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. 2 | Dee. 17,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,1905 59th osc 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30, 1906 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3,1907 60th. 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30,1908 Do. 2 | Dee. 7,1908 | Mar. 3,1909 Osho 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5, 1909 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 02d 1 | Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22, 1911 Champ Clark, of Mis- souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,15 Brandegee,16 Curtis,!” Gallinger,18 Lodge.1? 3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 3,1913 92 | Bacon,20 Gallinger, 21__ 63Q. oo 1| Apr. 7,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, of Do. Arkansas. ig 2 | Dee. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 828i Qos coro To 8 | Dec. 17,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 ST Ao a 64th=.. 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8,1916 78a dot vio ala Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. 65th- 1| Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 188 dos oe Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21,1918 854 |... GO Ew 3 | Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 id Er doi sini on 66th. 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 188 = dose er on] 3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 882 Ao Sai ons ofthe Co. 1 | Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23, 1921 Ly EE doc Sintto on Do. 2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22, 1922 202.4. dol sis isin 3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4, 1922 1 Ra QO i 4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 38,1923 90 |e: airmen See 68th... 1 | Dec. 38,1923 | June 7,1924 188 |... dosesio 0 Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 38,1925 Fei UT Ae 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 ssrve Feb. 12-14, A 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912. 19 Elected to serve Mar. 25— 26, 191 20 Elected to serve Aug. 27 to on 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. 21 Died Oct. 1, 1916. [J Statistical 247 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Coneress Ses- | Date of begin- | Date of ad- | Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House rong sion ning journment | in days of the Senate of Representatives | Both: hc. 1| Dee. 17,1925 | July 3,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth, 4 New Hampshire. of Ohio. 2 |'Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 88 (1 pS WR : 70th 2. o> 1 | Dec. 5,1927 | May 29, 1928 IPE RTE AN SERIE Ta Do. / 2 | Dec. 3,1928 | Mar. 3,1929 Oli adOuis. is ar Ll . Ist... 1| Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22,1929 AL Re EL er Do. | 2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 3,1930 04 {ol doc 0 ae | 3 | Dec. 1,1930 | Mar. 3, 1931 apa doa re ei 2 1. | Dec. 7,1931 | July 16, 1932 te SH ie QOS EL nd ar rat, J om N. Garner, of exas. 2 | Dee. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 BO: fii dor asl RLY RE 741Th En ae 1 | Mar. 9,1933 | June 15,1933 99 | Key Pitman, of Ne- | Henry T. Rainey, vada. of Illinois. -2 1 Jan 3,1934 | June 18,1934 167 eens doz Sr ere = ath... 1 | Jan. 3,1935 | Aug. 26,1935 2861 | do. ai Joseph W. Byrns,?2 of Tennessee. 2 | Jan. 3,1936 | June 20, 1936 170s do; ol er bd William B., Bank- head,?% of Alabama. 75th. Z . 1| Jan. 5,1937 | Aug. 21,1937 hc dO a a TT Do. 2 | Nov. 15,1937 | Dec. 21, 1937 Yaa. [3 UE tenan Ra Sa 3 | Jan. 3,1938 | June 16, 1938 16550 ue aOis on ch | 76th=—>_"". 1 | Jan 3,1939 | Aug. 5,1939 05 4. OL. sooo ul fe Do.28 | 2 | Sept. 21,1939 | Nov. 38,1939 44000. (3 A Re TE Ae 1 3 | Jan. 83,1940 | Jan. 38,1941 EE Ee do.”________.__.____| Sam Rayburn, of i Texas. | William H. King,?® of Utah. [ th. oo 1| Jan. 83,1941 | Jan. 2,1942 365 | Pat Harrison, of Do. | Mississippi; Carter | “I 73th. oie 2Th | Jan.Tan. 5,1942ie, 0088 | Dec. 16,1942Lae Glass, of Virginia. 346 | Carter Glassof VirginiaSale ene Do. | : 23 Died Aug. 19, 1934. 26 Died Sept. 15, 1940. 20 Elected Nov. 19, 1940. 1 24 Died June 4, 1936. 37 Died Nov. 10, 1940. 30 Elected Jan. 6, 1941; died June 22, § 25 Elected June 4, 1936. 8 Flected Sept. 16, 1940. 1941. 31 Elected July 10, 1941. Congressional Directory SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE Date of beginning Puesday Var deaL tents Mona ay, Mar ds a Friday, Mar. 4, reEr Wednesday, Mar. d ooh oa. bas i niu Satarday, Map dr ith Rhursday; Mar ad: ooa A a ES eR Re a Se en AR elie Monday, Mar. 5. -co Puesday;Mara4 oot oro Friday, Mar. 4 0 a Wednesday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, June’ls: =...__. i a a se LO Da A ee ee a TE RS ens SL i at SO Rtesday, JUNE 0 or ada re ws Monday, Mar. 4 at ee a, Wednesday, Mar. 4___.__.___ aa Saturday, Mar dL Monday, Apr. le Monday, ADL. d2. ia Wednesday, Mar. 4. 0 Sl. Mondays ar 4 a Sn Saturday, Mard —=t co S ehurSAay, Mar. dr neers n a Monday, Mari «ees hursday, Mar ee es Saturday, Mar. 4 oo a Phursday, Mar. 4d oarrine aanna rena PHeSdaY, Mar. dr rE nae Monday, Mor B.C Friday, Mar. 4 cc coy aT Wednesday, Mar. 4. oo aio Monday, Mar. 4. Monday, July 7 a Saturday, Mar. 4 =i a 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 > COURT OF IMPEACHMENT { i 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. Congressional Drrectory VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942 [The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] Vote Total vote State 1938 1940 1942 cast in 1942 Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican Alabama...:. 113,413 PA ee eld Ne a a, RE Rei 69, 212 Arizona... 82, 714 25, 378 101, 495 390 ae Ra Arkansas... oo. 122, 883 4, 200. aea fei 00,324 | Lola 99, 124 California... ----11,372,314 1, 126, 240 2 366,044 | 1 2, 238, 899 TL ra iE LETTE yt . , 817 191, 517 > Colorado... 262, 786 EERE Casi E Rt nN { 174, 612 170, 970 4 347 BEE 596 Connecticut._____ 1252, 426 270, 413 416, 740 STAIR CR Rese he dS Sate Jo J nS ER Delaware. wr | ana die 68, 294 63, 799 38, 322 46, 210 4 85, 308 Florida....: 145, 757 31, 035 Lv Tet LR ie vi Sint Celt sebD iN B Bia Sl she ted BE emer ead Georgia... .--.. 66, 987 i eerieah an he 59, 870 51,892 61, dees 762 Idaho: 15:00 =: 99, 801 81, 939 6 110, 614 6 124, 535 68, 989 73, 353 142, 342 Hines _..--v... 1, 638, 162 1, 542, 574 | 6 2,025,097 | © 2, 045, 924 1, 380, 011 1, 582,887 | 42,973,229 Indiana... 788, 386 783, 189 864, 803 RR Se a end on pt Bdeag pio mL Meena 00 Towa. 413, 788 410.9834 Ol dn Tall 295, 194 410, 383 4707, 863 ees Kansas: —_.c__. 326, 774 CHAS ene ee I I Bl ie 200, 437 284, 059 4 497, 359 Kentucky _...__.. 346, 735 212, 266 6 561, 151 6 401, 812 216, 958 175, 081 392, 039 Louisiana___.____ 151, 582 ae ATH enn Te 85, 488 Mame le 105, 740 150, 149 55, 754 111, 520 167, 274 Maryland._______. 357,245 153, 253 394, 239 ST a ei ee Ya ere ar a Massachusetts rc {z: oi aE 1, 088, 838 838, 122 641, 042 721,239 | 41,375,441 Michigan. 2. of 939,740 | 1,053,104 Wo 561, 595 : 589,652 | ¢ L 3 1) : 177, 008 372, 240 663, Mingeseta_ |. >... cl... 7 310, 875 641, 049 { 7913, 965 356, 297 4 758, 447 Mississlpplos lve oo aL deen Ea A ae as FE i aS 51, 355 Missouri. >... 757, 587 488, 687 930, 775 880,070 |i it tm [ore a ama Mongana. i o.oo. pos Ve le go 176, 753 63, 941 83, 673 82, 461 4.170, 514 Nebragkas:, = Mf or ft 247, 659 340, 250 5 108, 899 186, 207 4 380, 217 Nevada __..... 27, 406 19,078 31, 351 20, 488 8 23, 805 8 16, 735 40, 540 New Hampshire. 84, 920 JO0, 083) locas oe eee 73, 656 88, 601 162, 257 New Jersey. ___._. 9 704, 159 9 816, 667 823, 893 1, 029, 331 559, 851 648, 855 | 41,222, 132 New-Mexieo. St iin. oabdoicig 103, 194 81, 257 63, 301 43, 704 107,005 1 [92,438,904 | ° 2, 083, 666 New York..._... {i B407,020 | 12,008, 15 lms oom obda North Carolina. 316, 685 179, rE En RE ER 230, 427 119, 165 349, 592 North Dakota __. 5 112,007 131, 907 592, 593 100,647 | o=o ton i set af tn de O05 ee veer 1,085,792 1,258, 414 | 1,457,304 }-“1,602.408-] oo. oil oa na id Oklahoma_______. 307, 936 ELE ESea RL 166, 653 204, 163 4 372, 365 10 152, 773 10 180, 815 4 ” Orogon.... 154, 818 109, 031 187, 393 146, 253 6th... 149, 342 110, 823 260, 165 his 192, 750 162, 069 229, 161 220, 793 the 179, 906 177, 931 357, 837 Sth... 31, 823 10, 440 40, 074 11,232 Sth so 33, 425 8, 995 42, 420 Oth: = 44, 064 39, 512 49, 816 56, 806 Oth... 38, 679 40, 803 79, 482 0th or = 102, 234 141, 685 125, 827 199, 418 10th. =. 88, 266 150, 558 238, 824 thes wn 48, 876 94, 565 70, 581 128, 645 Jith Sea 39, 829 97, 316 137, 145 tho oo 43, 631 67, 326 58, 945 90, 744 12th 27, 405 68, 426 95, 831 18th oc 23, 708 45,177 31, 502 65, 698 13th: = 12, 596 48, 500 61, 096 4th: 41, 682 44, 243 55, 451 60, 909 Jathts => 32, 450 47, 294 79, 744 I5Che Sok 39, 779 47,703 50, 820 65, 639 15th: oc 29, 741 48, 677 78,418 6th 35, 081 61, 012 57, 567 79, 780 16th... 24, 969 55, 135 80, 104 17th. = 29, 023 45, 235 36, 102 56, 712 7th a 17, 023 44, 563 61, 586 18th. 45, 691 56, 587 56, 744 64, 409 18th 30, 852 51, 281 82, 133 0th-- 55, 956 59, 446 74, 091 75, 933 10th coer 42,171 56, 657 98, 828 06h =~ = 37,184 29, 907 44, 824 41, 806 20th =.= 30, 131 31, 360 61, 491 3 ESET 52,173 51, 651 63, 740 67, 896 st. 39, 318 54, 585 93, 903 Soda. 66, 743 60, 518 98, 162 84, 381 Sod 53, 470 67, 313 120, 783 28d 49, 537 42, 572 64, 072 61, 521 25d 42, 736 47, 526 90, 262 Mth... 40, 633 38, 889 48, 050 49 731 Mth © 26, 377 37, 008 63, 385 25th cy. 59, 203 53, 999 67, 891 69, 165 25the © 40, 762 49, 965 90, 727 At large__.| 1,572,870 | 1,472,638 | 1,968, 143 (2, 050, 493 At large___|1, 395,053 [1,481,419 |! 2,887, 632 Atlarge___| 1,560,283 | 1,456,529 | 1,913, 950 |2, 020, 006 Ind.: Ind.: Isto = 56, 630 46, 370 71, 606 45, 947 sb. ne 44, 334 38,450 82, 784 7 ES em: 57, 860 79, 304 63, 290 87, 652 V3 BRT 39, 943 63, 120 103, 063 8d. 59, 359 61, 836 70, 208 73, 914 Sq. 53, 992 66, 434 120, 426 Aho 52, 293 72, 567 58, 157 80, 259 dthe oo 39, 032 61, 032 100, 064 Sth......- 60, 643 73,102 65, 200 78, 691 Sth is 63, 989 80, 464 144,453 6th. =... 70,128 71, 883 73,499 80, 595 6th... 47, 363 65, 764 113, 127 EhSih 74,72576, 780 78, 14659, 254 74, 746$7141 | 81, 632evel |} ths oesth If 52, 38657%68| 69, 04467.237 121, 430125, 105 Othe a 70, 237 64, 541 69, 227 71, 624 Oh 44, 096 55, 949 100, 045 d0th._. i... 64, 176 73, 782 71, 478 80, 725 Oph. ie 49, 963 67, 201 117,164 the./ 65, 646 61, 627 79, 070 73, 867 Tithe. 79, 932 79,136 159, 068 2th... 65, 368 56, 319 80, 954 72,174 Iowa: Towa: % ast... 33, 765 46, 636 46, 040 70,120 eR ee 32, 893 55, 139 189, 737 od a 48, 155 47, 535 75, 774 69, 298 od. 46, 310 62, 290 108, 600 80... =... 30, 158 45, 541 43, 709 65, 425 8d... a..l 35, 065 54,124 89, 189 4th... 44, 601 48, 640 51, 558 66, 691 dh... 7 28, 745 52, 258 81,003 Gthee. oo. 43,452 50, 860 58, 718 66, 940 Sth. 28, 287 48, 578 76, 865 6th... 37, 056 53, 505 64, 314 70, 707 6th = 30, 802 46, 843 77, 645 hh 37, 992 54, 922 50, 644 71, 633 hin 27, 409 49, 086 76, 495 Sth... 30, 632 51, 934 46, 597 64, 687 Stho 23, 059 42, 154 65, 213 Oth... _.. 46, 705 46, 366 67,017 64, 877 Kans.: Kans. 18. ae 43, 374 65, 945 41,375 64, 766 Ist. coos 34,404 49, 962 84, 366 odio 54, 582 70, 608 62, 787 73, 659 2 PR Sees 33, 625 48, 594 82, 219 8d: aa 49, 117 56, 361 48, 971 60, 381 Bd 27, 364 40, 789 68, 153 dE at 32, 443 55,419 34, 947 58, 183 th... 44, 313 55, 612 99, 925 Sth... 43, 990 43, 480 58, 486 52, 901 Sth 27, 381 54, 655 82, 036 6th... 40, 466 69, 989 44, 702 69, 627 6th... 27, 590 49, 403 76, 993 th= 38, 357 72, 893 42, 518 75, 349 Ky.: Ky.: ist... 35, 332 11, 153 SDR ee 1862 Sr 17, 027 8,195 25, 222 a 36, 170 20, 566 6noes| 20h SLSoBH 21, 866 8d. 57, 227 36, 361 96,253 | 64,053 3d.________| 39,866 | 32 404 72, 270 ath. 32, 179 22, 139 55,561 | 39, 447 ah 23, 871 19, 015 42, 886 Includes the vote for varieus candidates. 3 Vote cast for Independent candidate. Statistical 253 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942—Continued State and Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 State and Vote cast in 1942 Gigrc, old district, new Total yore apportion-| pam. Repub-| Demo-| Repub-|| 8PPOIton-| pono. | Repub-cast in 1942 ment crat lican crat lican ment crat lican Ky.—Con : Ky.—Con Sth: 28, 383 13, 095 51, 954 32, 981 Sth. 18, 510 12, 073 134, 616 6th = 38,139 20, 471 74, 463 48, 700 thoi oS 27, 382 Shoo 27, 655 24, 337 44,185 | 83, 574 whe... 22,160 | 21,620 43, 780 Sth. 39, 006 27, 308 61, 881 44, 736 Sthot se 22, 499 17, 644 40, 143 7 Oth. oo: 21,327 42, 901 43,013 69, 415 L UH a a SDE 34, 440 34, 440 a.: a.: Ist ro oae 50,4583 Loonyis 58.204. Lo eel 20,973 {oe 20, 973 Men A786 a rt 56,026... odie 19,007: 1. caevr 19, 007 8dr SR eT ba, 27, 081 13, 933 3d aa 5200 Jemima 6, 260 ath 10, 661 244 33, 704 2 4th. ._=3 yi Eel Be 7,184 Sth ro 164d 0 0c. 83.462: 1a nu the O40 lo 7,949 6th. 12,225 bs oi ol 41178 oo. Othe. zs 9313 faa 9,313 Hh LEE Sel Ree oR, BIgu tr ay ih aa 6200 6, 201 Ti AE S088 lela To o5.004 1 Ns i eS A001... 8, 100 aine aine dst 40, 103 57, 642 32,018 55, 503 Isto. 28, 759 38, 128 66, 887 WERE 46, 900 55, 718 31, 334 57, 152 od rr 20, 164 42, 062 62, 226 ay a 29, 771 51,485 23, 934 46, 732 ay seal 31,728 31,728 -d.; : stoic 38, 926 23, 096 36, 057 30, 810 iste Orr’ 25, 270 19, 938 45, 208 2d 91, 231 44, 699 113, 495 59, 223 2d. 57, 865 35, 228 93, 093 3. 29, 891 22, 909 8, 540 24, 153 3d 20, 450 7, 469 27,919 4th... 37,416 37,126 *.50, 120 38, 444 4th ooo 21, 845 22, 673 44, 518 tho... 46,678 19, 604 58, 418 23, 857 Sih... 33, 191 16, 596 49, 787 Ro Ca 46, 200 44, 734 60, 037 52, 258 Na Co 31, 187 45, 724 76, 911 ass. ass.: ro NA 45, 397 64, 886 54, 634 72, 750 sho lobes 36, 257 50, 302 1 88, 664 od 41, 935 68, 106 54, 428 76, 373 5s Bia 36, 675 58, 781 95, 456 8d mur 58, 600 54, 557 72, 839 60, 676 8d. 46,412 45, 689 92, 101 qth. 53, 266 62, 874 60, 988 70, 542 qth. =o 42, 895 57,323 100, 218 Sth: 35, 323 104, 912 37,593 | 120,435 Bthio lv ae 95, 231 95, 231 6th oc 27, 967 82, 834 35, 214 88, 834 6th... 22, 523 68, 739 91, 262 thc. 83, 618 47, 533 89, 966 52, 701 qth: Zloii: 408-073 + ot. 68, 073 Sth i a2 62, 152 50, 711 71, 127 57, 217 Sth. oe 44, 401 57,016 101, 417 Sth. 68, 258 70, 059 81, 523 74,922 Oth_...... 35, 633 50, 902 86, 535 06h =: 43,093 78, 052 54, 093 78, 029 10th... 61, 359 64, 247 125, 606 Wth = 56,980 Jee 2 68, 041 13,176 thease 60, 850 27,008 87, 858 12th 86, 618 25, 678 97, 588 27, 302 12th. =o; 76, 043 20, 600 96, 643 13th. oo 39, 939 86, 389 48, 606 92, 651 13th... 42, 995 62, 608 105, 603 th. 5. 43, 876 63, 608 55, 241 65, 780 Hath oii: 37, 598 54, 977 92, 575 No a, 45, 867. 66, 054 53, 581 73, 358 AL ich.: ich Ist -.C. 71, 533 16, 752 87, 451 21, 399 Ist ua 48, 620 13, 691 62,311 od. 2 32,468 58, 921 43,733 72, 235 9d iia 23, 277 40, 277 164, 080 8d: iki 29, 832 58, 128 45,138 74, 614 8d. wi 20, 334 41,002 162,416 4th. = 33,912 49, 279 40, 443 65, 666 dbh. =. 19, 065 42,653 162,154 Oth. oa 34, 991 50,473 56,172 65, 240 Sth. -..o 30, 840 37,020 1 68, 541 6th oo 54, 491 66, 612 73, 629 77, 340 6th... 34, 893 48, 364 1 83,931 tho 28, 259 62, 910 39, 416 73, 926 hr 22,775 46, 946 1 69,724 Sth... 36, 758 52, 250 43, 297 68, 265 8th iio 21, 689 45,182 167, 515 Oth: ob 29, 397 40, 849 39, 667 52, 343 9th. 17, 954 34, 548 1 52, 831 10th =. 22,615 44 818 32, 289 52, 685 10th 20, 852 31, 895 1 53, 042 ihe oo 38, 707 40, 904 45, 826 48, 087 Nth 23, 555 32, 579 1 56, 148 BH ea 43, 453 40), 587 47, 429 44, 733 2th. 27, 983 31, 643 161,421 13th. 48, 443 50, 123 66, 985 55, 115 igth. == 33, 807 32, 208 66, 105 ddth: 62, 872 45, 967 80, 463 55, 910 i4th. 50, 707 35, 638 86, 345 15th. = 57, 401 48,429 85, 239 52,131 5th... 52, 384 28, 694 81, 078 6th "20h 49,101 39, 623 73, 956 51, 276 16th... 42,911 30, 480 73, 391 ik de 39, 784 63, 769 68, 195 82, 809 q7¢h-=o | 45,036 56, 607 99, 658 inn.: Minn.: Ist nes 40, 340 74, 493 27,479 88, 814 Ist arn 29, 771 58, 387 88, 158 odio 53, 258 43,919 57, 673 66, 610 U3 SR Re EI 13, 866 60, 028 185, 713 8d 10 50, 505 53, 442 10 50, 222 63, 854 1 EECer he 10 29, 936 44, 662 191,103 qth 10 40, 558 60,252 | 1032,898 68, 525 ith 10 17,071 45,903 170, 562 5th... 10 45, 568 67,722 10 52, 289 79, 491 Sth .o..% 10 18, 566 60, 883 195,425 6th: 10 36, 023 79, 900 10 52, 504 84, 023 6th =: 36, 770 49, 295 186, 365 th 7 sa 10 42, 572 49, 394 10 42, 356 65, 958 wh Loans 21, 192 46, 570 185,003 Sth. oo 10 54, 381 67, 960 10 39, 252 74, 521 Sth oo... 10 21, 786 51, 803 189,021 Wn SSE a 10 44, 017-40, 383 10 48 999 48, 324 on na 10 35, 265 34, 661 69, 926 iss. iss.: ;[meee 4,884 | 10,8304 -oa vo Isto HN Ee sete 7,079 od Bb Eeene 16,930 | oi ode 6,004 cir nae 6, 604 adi 55 1g 2 POE ee 13,864. 1 3dzi. a 4046 4, 646 Ah oo 8,502: |= 15.5200) = uh dthei 85,0000 5, 660 Stho=l 1,540. Ce L070 Sth. 10,048: oo i 10, 548 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. + Total vote received as candidate had one or more 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. other party endorsements. 10 Vote cast for Farmer-Labor candidate. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 18 + Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942—Continued State and Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 State and Vote cast in 1942 district, old = district, new Total vote AppoviIne Demo-Repub-Demo-| Repub-pheno Demo-| Repub-|Castin 1942 mon crat lican crat lican crat lican 2 Miss.—Con. Miss.—Con 6th~.__ ARTS io te Cr re Oth. LA 7,462 NN tha LEE A rlSr al 20,709 |. oo lh Lh os Mar 20) 9,608 Lo. ona 9, 603 0:3 0: sie 43, 607 36, 064 62, 461 61, 123 br oi 33, 465 41, 809 75, 274 20 AE Sel 51, 451 37, 294 77,922 66, 794 7 Le 37, 069 37, 635 74, 704 gaenrii oy 50, 501 40, 801 77,424 67, 757 10% en 31, 108 40, 227 71,335 8 re ae 71, 940 17, 560 72, 331 48, 181 dthisae Ses 30, 227 19, 709 49, 936 Sth. 75, 810 17, 809 63, 202 53, 390 Sth = 27, 243 26, 163 153, 507 Goh. => 52, 774 52, 159 67, 902 78, 746 Sth ooo 38, 946 46, 735 85, 681 he ox 49, 396 63, 758 59, 344 86, 547 Fie] ERE 28, 542 49, 595 78,137 Sethe ra 56, 489 45, 673 64,263 | / 61, 567 Sthuers2 37,072 39, 422 76,494 Gis Taos 40, 686 26, 510 60, 204 48, 704 Oh 30, 082 24, 912 1 55, 140 0th ls 44,182 30, 804 69, 859 51, 755 10th. 29, 514 22, 555 52, 069 Tih. oe 63, 332 38, 866 85, 722 68, 088 1 a 35, 510 36, 133 71, 643 12th == 78, 481 71, 831 108, 605 127, 005 Th ne 51, 649 68, 329 119, 978 Me ELT 59, 202 26, 476 82, 417 45, 262 pithA 37, 651 23, 770 61, 421 ont.: é ont.: 1 i 41, 319 49, 253 47, 352 56, 616 she sees 42, 754 28, 603 172,415 en a 63, 506 54, 632 83, 101 49, 710 2 EE ah 50, 489 45,051 197,093 ebr. Nebr.: 1 ea 45,178 45, 527 51, 524 64, 431 Ish. ae 0 31, 422 69, 651 1104, 607 Sd a 46, 927 32, 685 68, 760 52, 669 ads, =r 35, 743 40, 646 76, 389 Bd 25, 862 78, 765 19, 253 90, 561 8d. 27, 208 61, 813 192 753 ath. cs 42, 957 59, 794 29, 311 66, 966 Zid 1 Se 27, 406 55,914 83, 320 Sth == 57, 192 31, 225 63, 025 45, 548 Nev.: Nev.: Atl:large _ 30, 156 15, 285 32, 714 18, 032 Atlarge... 21, 100 18, 289 39, 389 Sf 44, 681 52, 174 55, 434 57, 982 = ed TNT ek 39, 743 43, 281 83, 024 a BE 34, 452 49, 696 49, 260 55, 530 ~~ Eins 30, 473 42,718 73, 191 iste 2. 58, 450 96, 518 77,931 97, 547 Isha so 46, 445 74, 867 1121, 895 2 Ree 55, 344 57, 090 60, 392 55, 382 PT) CAG EASA 40, 478 35, 930 76, 408 BdeE 64,621 63, 345 76, 048 70, 890 Bde ro 45, 037 51, 573 96, 610 dthe. =o 38, 921 62, 123 54, 909 69, 834 Athat 270 29, 088 51,498 1 80, 728 Sthe 0 54, 690 71, 661 65, 200 82, 840 Bthia == 32, 999 61, 896 195, 727 CAE TA 38, 667 63, 583 62, 888 78, 361 GohNs 36, 425 52, 211 1 90, 263 hh oo 35, 628 64, 147 44, 527 82, 287 75s RRee A 25, 171 55, 424 80, 595 Sth on 42, 030 61, 988 50, 622 72, 197 Sth. Tse 28, 060 56, 582 1 85, 005 Oth oo 43, 641 64, 903 54, 254 91, 352 9th... 32, 021 51, 692 83, 713 0th 36, 273 51, 025 46, 934 64, 699 100h = 31, 504 37,189 170,171 Ihe = 38, 885 43, 747 46, 130 61, 606 IItha. 23, 630 36, 500 1 61, 945 12th: = = = 36, 736 48, 854 53, 677 67, 996 126h__ 26, 188 43, 942 1:72, 252 13th... 89, 287 22, 459 92, 356 30, 274 136th = 73, 766 18, 894 92, 660 an aa 86, 128 23, 166 84, 538 44, 839 Tdih: 75 75, 322 20, 161 95, 483 ex.: N. Mex.: At large___ 90, 608 64, 281 106, 972 75, 085 At large___ 62, 320 43, 627 } 3 206, 492 N.Y AL large. 57,474 43, 071 ’ mt 99, 521 184, 539 141, 774 276, 873 3 Ei 83, 453 197, 473 1 290, 140 2d 4175, 009 4 81, 534 216, 309 170, 004 A DIE Sa 125, 090 95, 240 1 248 554 die 28, 317 10, 174 442 884 17, 839 Sd 18, 700 8, 979 131,372 Ath. r= 431, 881 10, 620 36, 995 25, 207 qth 21, 456 10, 070 1 33, 896 Bile oo 45, 387 423 410 4 63, 295 51, 428 Sth: isates 444 522 23, 285 67, 807 6th i -"478 530 4 69, 939 130, 391 58, 507 6th--. = 4 96, 990 37,427 134, 417 Toho ic 29, 823 9, 930 4 50, 189 18, 765 Thao it 497 B38 10, 353 38, 041 Shh 134, 461 4111, 252 217, 599 103, 753 Sth Saris 4 158, 685 59, 408 218, 093 TH ig 4 60, 164 37, 740 492, 559 67, 901 Oh: mnt 44, 064 41, 491 196, 512 0th 1: 443 881 14, 852 4 57, 286 21, 358 10th. ix 4 32, 026 14, 693 46, 719 Ath 40, 407 23, 220 46,616 42, 631 Bitho = 431,723 23, 029 54, 752 12th. = 417,295 1, 865 17,176 11 3 664 12th. it? 413, 584 2, 031 15, 615 13th. 13, 313 3, 809 18, 334 8, 367 18th: ap 411, 245 3,947 15,192 Iath_ | 407 799 10, 392 26, 455 13, 940 14th 417,652 | 10,037 27, 689 5th. 22, 237 7, 477 26, 314 13, 158 15th oo 14, 746 7, 566 125,110 16th... 424, 500 422,037 28, 837 31, 020 16th. 418,710 18, 630 37, 340 7th... 26, 581 4 40,421 45,339 53, 316 17th. oe 24, 365 4 38,079 62, 444 18th... 7. 25, 817 12, 952 31,151 24, 312 18th 2=ra8 18,636 | 416,665 35, 301 10th. ..0.. 43, 134 422 741 71, 018 32, 821 10th. “=. 4 41, 566 20, 000 61, 566 20th 12,376 | 41118, 960 15,160 [411 25, 254 20th... = 137 533 12 7.890 12 18, 924 2st 4 84,629 36, 034 108, 139 46, 324 2A ERE 4 60, 588 30, 796 91, 384 os Raa 4 34, 094 12, 77 44, 296 23, 532 24d. 4 25, 933 12, 714 38, 647 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. 11 Vote cast for American Labor candidate. 2 Total vote received by all candidates for 2 elec-12 Elected as American Labor, receiving the fol- tive offices. lowing votes: American Labor, 3,501; Democrat, 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or 7,533; Republican, 7,890. more other party endorsements. Statistical 255 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942—Continued State and distriet, old Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 Statenid district, new Vote cast in 1942 Total vote apportion- Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- AppOsinns Demo: | Repub- [cast in 1942 ment crat lican crat lican Hen crat lican N. Y.—Con. $120,474 |411 67,273 | 190,396 | 88,083 || 23d _______ 1142,395 | 50,063 192, 458 4116, 733 79,537 | 161,577 | 136,835 {| 24th. __ 4117,198 | 86,506 203, 704 46, 730 94, 865 64,880 | 125412 || 25th. ____ 33040 | 85024 | 1121,917 436, 937 67, 837 50,730 | 68,715 || 26th_______ £44,751 | 48,793 93, 544 437.452 | 458, 565 47.610 | 65618 || 2th _____ 431,426 | 53,626 85, 052 88, 037 54, 610 80,502 | 59,344 || 28th_______ 486,767 | 51,190 137, 957 440, 004 74, 888 43 588 | 82.328 || 29th. ___ 131,616 | 69,794 101, 410 438, 535 58, 691 51,270 | 66,159 || 30th_______ 20 414 | 53,147 | 184,903 19, 784 40,240 | 435307 | 58,727 || Bist... 110,448 | 43,197 82, 645 19, 631 60, 947 30,1054 vez dl ~3%a 17,631 | 50,970 | 169,665 37,195 63, 857 52.460 | 7242 3d... £34965 | 53,030 ’ 995 435,456 67, 330 41,027 | 93,990 || 34th ___ 33976 | 53,762 | 188, 482 4 50, 083 90, 078 60,730 | 97,688 || 35th... 42.270 | 82,021 | 1127 225 20, 636 48, 344 40, 92 64.507 | 3eth. 198 502 | 47,620 76, 122 437 216 57, 648 38878 | 76,630 || 37th. 199 452 | 54,700 77, 152 463, 325 80,063 | 486,197 | 92,866 || 38th... 453889 | 77,970 131, 859 28, 202 65480 | 448,133 | 73.316 || 89th _ 1892 006 | 61,189 83, 105 50, 705 92,271 | 476,468 | 119,972. 40th ______ 441,459 | 91,222 132, 681 £45, 516 46,784 | 462,843 | 57.335 || 4Ist_______| +36,580 | 49,239 85, 828 439’ 987 36,326 | 464,250 | 44,866 || 42d________| 34 248 | ..39,650 73, 808 4 98’ 289 53,261 | 440,080 | 67.520 || 43d. __ 20,867 | 43,730 | 168,063 Sd 2,363,463 [42,011,567 [43,199,019 [2,830,517 || At large___ [41,909,706 [1,887,688 [15g ga0 wild 2852] 150 [41,990] 455 (43,182, 636 2,812,066 || Af large... |11,872321 II, 065, 794 J 1839, 277 (FT FA Ba 36, 722 9.88 det. 8, 444 671 9,115 OSB Od a LEE ase 7,124 ei Be) Lawl ied TC ET Ra 9, 596 26, 932 15, 209 57,610 | 14926 || 4th. 20,703 | 11,064 31, 767 25, 472 11, 087 SISA ABST Sth. 20, 601 9, 899 30, 500 15,730 | 15 188 55,540 | 15,259 || 6th. __ 16, 548 5, 660 22, 208 17, 175 5, 501 41, 663 El The 1. a 12, 112 34, 757 28, 187 57.879 | 928232 || Sth. __T__ 27.146 | 20, 868 48 014 43, 912 28, 202 60,875 | 2827 || oth TC Sane. 29, 213 48, 590 37, 360 87,156. 37736 10th. C 26,785 | 21,535 48, 320 61, 508 34, 912 75.763 | 34,104 || 11th. __ 20200 fore. cL 20, 270 J 30,438 | 16, 150 46, 588 > aK.: N. Dak.: At large... 55,125 | 153,106 63,662 | 148,227 || Atlarge.._| 248,472 | 85,936 1 490g gao At large__ 44,691 | 149,047 63,027 | 111,125 At large | 47.972 | 65,905 } ) hio: 10: 45, 536 63, 285 61,382 | 84,622 (| 1st...__ 33,884 | 54,120 88, 004 42,773 61, 480 60,410 7760 (| 2d... 17: 20,823 | 53,083 82, 906 58, 139 73.534 | 103201] e3co2 || sal] 48,338 | 51,477 99, 815 [22] Jo) ws) ess) ah 22,567 | 39,275 61, 842 039,112 | 947,631 “ ) he sy y y 28, 109 37,027 31,063 | 48,040 || 5th...__ 17,514 | 30,667 48, 181 43, 646 42, 847 52,760 | 48,257 || 6th... 3,793 | 33171 64, 964 50, 163 68, 185 50,667 |. 854150 7th... 23,384 | 52,270 75, 654 33, 972 40, 772 44605 | 49.218 || Sth... _ 22,753 | 33,797 56, 550 56, 306 55, 441 soos | Trea ll eth -44,027 | 47,877 91, 404 24, 198 47,036 sn608| war 10h 16,582 | 29, 691 46, 273 33, 764 31, 004 508] arses | nth. 10,817 | 31,885 51, 202 62, 026 64, 409 S715. oL76r 12th. 40,290 | 56,558 96, 848 24, 749 56, 204 40,274 | 62442 || 13th. _ 23 618 | 37,923 61, 541 87, 303 76,346 | 121,037 | 108,016 || ‘14th ______ 57,759 | 60, 868 118, 627 42, 573 38, 903 57.350 | 40.233 | 15tho___ C 23213 | 35,137 58, 350 60, 382 62, 176 92,460 | 71629 || 16th... 45,531 | 50,657 96, 188 51, 305 46, 300 S635. 6a 100d Ith 28 235 | 47,565 75, 800 55, 809 56, 468 79,718 | 66,666 || 18th __.___ 37,051 | 43,279 81, 230 76, 268 60.214 | 122,075 | 75,016 || 19th ______ 60,248 | 46, 567 106, 815 54, 185 22, 775 72.305 | 34,605 || 20th .. 34 462 | 14,001 | 155,752 53, 180 24, 240 79,602 | 23,658 || 2st... _ 35100 | 19,137 | 154,990 87.635 | 100,404 | 126,273 | 165322 || 22d TT. 60,601 | 92, 644 162, 245 At large.__ 1,068,916 | 1,177,982 | 1,384, 745 |1,519,559 || At large. _| 717,692 | 945,995 | 1,663,687 At large__ 1,015,041 | 1,101,198 | 1,485,879 |1, 386,027 || Okla.: a. 55, 253 31, 755 93,366 | se 112] ist... oo 42,966 | 35,186 | 179,269 38, 058 15,335 50.351 | 20630 2d... .| 2ee1| 21273 42,934 42, 616 : 68,344 | 18145 || 3a... 23, 321 6, 347 29, 668 44, 233 17, 506 69,040 | 28,046 || 4th _______ 23041 | 18,179 42,120 47, 692 18, 271 93,457 | 34942 || “5th... 36,797 | 15,742 | 152,780 t Includes the vote for various candidates. 9 To fill a vacancy. 11 Vote cast for American Labor candidate. 3 Total vote received by all candidates for 2 elec- 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 13 Democratic votes cast for Republican candidate. tive offices. 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more other party endorsements. Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942—Continued State and district, old Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 State and district, new Vote cast in 1942 Toil Eg 8p portion Demo- Repub- Demo- | Repub- || apportion- | Demo- | Repub- [¢3St1D crat lican crat lican ment crat lican Okla.—Con Okla.—Con. 6th.2 = 33, 808 14, 617 52, 338 22, 343 Othiasc 19, 957 14, 535 34, 492 7 Ds 24, 986 7, 862 39, 884 16, 246 the oc 14, 051 6,010 20, 061 Sth = 34,113 33, 438 41, 417 48, 737 Sth; Se 19, 773 30, 548 1 50, 644 At large__ 306, 241 137, 733 479, 433 245, 384 reg.: Oreg.: sb 49, 666 119, 965 63, 940 145, 675 Ist br 27, 208 49, 021 1.76, 230 23 ERE 35, 200 25, 557 44, 832 33, 529 Al Te 16, 809 26, 723 43, 532 8d. 66, 498 69, 049 80, 930 84, 275 FR 51, 870 55, 775 107, 645 al Frags a 19, 632 29, 385 149,018 Pa.: to: Tob. 4 54, 819 47, 692 64, 599 39, 770 TE Al SR, 38, 768 44, 519 83, 287 od Otel 51, 565 46, 248 62, 844 39, 489 0 RERR ALR 36, 2568 35, 545 71, 803 RR Sans 61, 686 4 59, 958 77, 436 44, 757 od. a Pets 47, 515 45,014 92, 529 ah 60, 514 51, 343 74, 458 42, 578 dh: Err 43, 284 36, 689 1 81, 354 Sth ix 56, 492 63, 877 76, 724 60, 109 Het A TR 46, 691 48, 781 95, 472 gthzu 0 62, 524 59, 548 82, 550 51, 313 ATR 53, 284 42, 995 96, 279 th. oo 57, 046 84, 077 76, 054 79, 416 th ie 48, 373 60, 836 109, 209 Sth. 40, 324 84, 103 58, 389 79, 601 Sth So & 34, 164 48, 210 82, 374 ph oie 43,055 | ' 586,589 50, 632 55, 919 Oh fw) 25, 284 41, 282 66, 566 Oth. 43,928 78, 986 53, 333 72, 843 10th 23, 784 52, 380 76, 164 th: 66, 626 4 60, 307 65, 368 58, 831 qth =.= 43, 585 34, 527 78, 112 2h 98, 715 94,108 101, 854 74, 305 2th =~ 46, 550 55, 679 102, 229 Sth or 69, 817 479, 468 68, 501 70, 647 13th: = 36, 466 50, 721 87,187 the =v 34, 678 31, 068 48, 140 31, 839 4th == 23, 247 19, 498 145, 528 5th i 36, 096 58, 571 35, 696 54, 981 5th. 4 32, 953 63, 077 1.96, 040 6th. =. thie 38, 32, 908 931 63, 72, 241 225 39, 45, 988 616 61, 167 75, 006 16th... With. 47, 23, 920 492 45,472 52, 661 93, 392 76, 153 18th. 34, 578 53, 067 34, 328 486, 595 IRth wi 4 20, 340 33, 147 1 53, 487 19th... 63, 180 477,354 62, 298 74, 420 19th -¢ 31, 969 62, 119 94, 088 0th: i 4 40, 413 65, 542 44,914 64, 188 20th: = ¢ 20, 171 37, 738 1 58, 501 sho tas, 43, 276 41, 665 52, 530 40, 863 ist. oot 32, 498 28,272 60, 770 2d 4 54, 880 55, 565 60, 848 49, 532 ARIE GE EY 34, 131 34, 202 68, 333 ol Hehe = 4 45, 694 47,045 61, 44, 372 604 44, 54, 263 631 57,027 41, 641 20d rio oth 24, 432 33,480 | 38, 235 32,014 62, 667 65, 494 25th. ros 4 43, 604 38, 549 58, 442 37, 357 5th on 38, 316 37, 903 76, 219 26th 4 53, 434 59, 754 62, 273 64, 669 6th TF 29, 652 41, 730 71, 382 o7th. £63,790 | 481 690 69, 736 75, 243 othe 40, 096 50, 153 90, 249 23th... 4 52, 034 44, 196 58, 772 44, 528 o/h 32, 886 28, 543 61, 429 20th... 39, 762 46, 856 41, 924 50, 147 20th 27, 573 40, 243 67, 816 oth. 4 51,028 53, 541 62, 450 62, 097 S0th-~~ 43, 482 33, 568 77, 050 lsh. io Sod 1 55, 211 48,025 457,392 27, 440 76, 819 62,121 | 59, 960 28,196 SistLiiis gq. 50, 316 41,798 | 36, 239 39,262 86, 555 81, 060 Bde to 4 54, 888 51, 427 70, 824 57, 737 At large___{1,105, 992 |1, 360, 664 |! 2, 489, 382 Sliths RT: Jeti So 3 Reese 4 55, 502 72, 484 66, 408 55, 055 73, 394 487,934 75, 004 87,327 87, 253 | 64, 336 64,517 74, 926 R.I1.: Tabi p 2 a 68,242 69, 411 | 47,480 51, 471 115, 120, 722 882 8.C.: 15 A i od. an 7, 649 7,236 136 60 16, 628 14, 920 278 206 Itz fA BABY [a dagen 5, 452 4, 448 Bal oe 10, 028 43 15, 977 108 ThE So he oo 3, 201 ath oan 8, 995 58 23, 825 657 ath. is A208 nn oi 4,228 thos. 6, 191 13 14, 754 120 Abhi ho ss Mo ES 3,122 oth... 5, 707 48 12, 074 123 6th. 2-900 we 2, 905 S. Dak S. Dak asf. 2 95, 353 111, 796 91, 967 135, 406 To 54, 457 81, 373 135, 830 2. Eee 25, 932 41, 335 24, 127 47, 051 bts BRss 0 11, 892 30, 389 42, 281 Tenn. Tenn dst. ods oT 10, 609 216,079 23, 32, 251 222 18, 051 31, 663 39, 577 41, 274 AEF SAR od] 2799 16, 132 19, 18, 778 613 20, 577 34, 745 Sd til qbhs So 21, 824 ALLE ee 7,708 Se BE 35, 332 38, 278 16, 099 4,777 Sd ne dth SiC 14, 704 7, 667 3, 831 3,463 119, 437 11, 130 Sth Sth 16, 819 14, 318 21,749 21,957 20,933 BRO | 2 24, 565 Sth. =; GTUBER EL osdrt Goan tn 9,841 4, 945 tho. 19:58 Cn or neo ih. ow 8,080 [i 8, 689 Sth iio 18, 173 881 32, 002 2, 760 Sth ee 9, 151 5, 801 14, 952 Othe 43,976 2.709 55, 952 12,309 Oth ier 0th 7, 354 23,660: 882 [00 oT 8, 236 23, 660 Tex.: . Tex.: dst. ode a EE 16, 069 201 12.816 Jo ooi = LY Brat BE Rh 030 4 dg syle ahi EE Send od Sd 9.800 asi fuygeeg oes iE TE 9, 502 10, 128 10, 929 dth__ >" 16, 523 349 48,388 enue oi din 11,968 fe a 11, 768 Sth-6th... 10, 344 A500 oi 508 il 57,789 83. 548: 8, 273 Tn Sth. z= oth... 10,568 wes 0 22 10, 563 10, 726 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more 2? Vote cast for Independent candidate. other party endorsements. Statistical 257 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1938, 1940, AND 1942—Continued State and Vote cast in 1938 Vote cast in 1940 Siateand Vote cast in 1942 district, old district, new Total vote appvtion: Demo-| Repub-| Demo-| Repub-appotiion Demo-| Repub-cast in 1942 crat lican crat lican crat lican Tex.—Con Tex.—Con hol tl 16,467 ca 30, 385 565 Thos oie 11, 043 96 11,139 Stheo = 36, 989 631 89, 796 4, 925 Sth: oa 31, 038 622 132, 029 Oph rea 16,080. =o. BATBA I nr Oth cv 18,852 4. oa) 13, 852 106 =. 2LE rE Ree 48 442 | oa 10th. = 12,799 1-2-0 == 12, 799 igh 14, 664 207 Ee EA th =. 2 CALL vl I 7, 554 Toth: => 12,872 |. ~oo 2 {7 TR TR Sond hs 05,808 (Cl as 25, 894 Ith: ..l.. 20, 620 298 50, 076 1, 894 18th 12, 677 251 12, 928 14th: ~~ BE ham i 59,000-1: .o 4th. = 16:20 |r 16, 211 Toth. 0 18, 558 loci 31, 800 2, 628 15th... -I2:160 |. 12, 169 6th. FLL Bea ae SL, 516. 5. 16th. 2... 01 an 6, 612 Toh HPS rE Er 45,4505. 1th... 13,20) [ot aera 13, 261 18th 19,048: id 51,015 1, 858 18th... 10,780... 10, 739 19h: 1653720 58,510 0th. = PI bees Cle 12, 216 20th = 16,703. 47,075 9, 296 20th.s i... 8, 860 1, 980 10, 840 oust. 21, 671 1, 621 49, 468 3, 832 ER Se 16,554 |. 0 > a 16, 554 Utah: Utah: Ist... 52,927 35, 790 62, 654 47,021 Isto ou 36, 297 36, 028 72,325 2 EB, 58, 456 35, 359 86, 874 50, 332 % 2 Wf 43, 582 34, 586 78,168 At large. _ 40, 483 71, 901 50, 804 89, 637 v At large... 17, 304 40, 751 1 58,070 a.: a3. aug Aone I Se el 5207 nn 15,209 C75 AREER 15, 276 22,142 by le 2% nse CB URE 15,370 Sd 58005. 34, 885 141,126 } 7 Debian ER LH Te el REEa 1155, 826 4th... Ss8088] cL of 19, 043 14 788 qth... 22. ie Een 14, 464 Sth. EB EY ata, 25,0811 their 8, 166 14 601 18 768 Oth =o. = 11, 509 9, 083 30, 046 13, 864 otheiz-== 10, 510 14 724 111,248 the 11, 398 6, 449 26, 233 13, 964 thc 2 17, 545 Sth. = 13,7968]. vo 33, 031 8, 794 Sth. .i. 13, 380 1, 757 115,448 Otho: S003 21, 235 10, 612 32,412 24,109 Oth... ..—-= 16, 655 9, 534 26, 189 Wash ‘Wash ) isi 90, 768 56, 293 113,988 | 71,110 fatto 69,010 | 35,910 | 1105379 ly BREESE 58, 313 36, 442 66, 314 49, 209 AT} a ea Si 39, 628 26, 573 66, 201 i a 52, 305 34, 394 60, 529 48, 700 Sd i 25, 894 34, 462 60, 356 Gh 38, 647 37, 969 50,493 | 48,003 4th. 19, 751 34, 495 54, 246 BIE 52, 782 38, 858 67, 582 54, 258 Bh 28,076 | 47,242 75, 318 6th... 64, 871 24, 002 71, 536 42, 334 Gth_ ii 42, 666 23, 650 1 66, 686 W. Va.: W. Va.: ) Se 47, 051 57,043 72,717 63, 906 str: 35, 498 42, 787 78, 285 Oda 53, 277 44,334 77, 045 56, 911 ok 32, 935 32, 676 65, 611 8d. =r. 53, 722 43, 407 79, 441 60, 810 Ps 32, 682 37,135 69, 817 dh: 65, 965 58, 749 82, 979 74, 491 4th 1 5s 44, 528 48, 697 93, 225 5th’. 55, 501 34, 989 81, 903 48, 223 5th. 36, 625 27, 400 64, 025 6th. = 67, 818 40, 965 105, 927 65, 762 6th 1-5 46, 281 43, 043 89, 324 Wis.: Wis.: Ist casi 16 29, 478 45, 247 16 28, 308 69, 276 Ist A 16, 848 46, 453 1 64, 589 2d. ines 16 40, 656 42, 154 16 60, 481 58, 121 Waco: 16 43, 412 34, 272 1.86, 500 ERE 16 36, 509 43,495 | 16 52,131 54, 457 3d 16 31, 092 34,177 179,917 4th =o. 33, 559 34, 196 57,381 | 16 52, 907 4th... 46, 819 29, 104 195, 955 5th. = 31, 154 47,032 | 16 54, 501 73,728 Bthi o> =. 44,337 38, 345 1102, 690 6th. 25, 842 46, 082 30, 162 66, 821 6th. = 13, 364 41, 385 166, 556 7th 16 32, 442 41,662 | 16 40, 558 58; 696 Hh 15, 821 40, 520 1 56, 360 Sthe:— =. 16 29, 035 33, 354 16 49, 005 61, 987 Sth zs 40, 002 33, 441 173, 445 oth: 16 42, 880 32,375 | 1661, 009 47,825 Oth... .% 16 37, 919 19, 972 161, 345 10th... 16 45, 874 33,854 | 16 50,776 37,819 10th_______| 10 28,169 33,143 168, 516 Wyo.: yo.: Atlarge___ 44, 525 49, 975 57, 030 49, 701 At large 36, 892 37,963 74, 855 Vote ; 2 Total Territory or island 1938 1940 1942 . vote cast possession ; 2 ” 1942 Democrat Republi Democrat Reply Democrat Ropu li Alaska: Delegate at Large. 8,419 22,160 11, 241 3, 320 6,663 5 =o 6, 663 Hawaii: Delegate at Large. 28, 890 41,000: % 2c 54, 466 19, 746 39, 856 59, 602 Puerto Rico: Resident Commis-sioner (4-year ah Rei ree a lee Se 1999 384 1 18-9 d Rag enerLe 1 Includes the vote for various candidates. 16 Vote cast for Progressive candidate. 2 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 17 Coalitionist. 14 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. 18 Popular Party vote. 15 No vote reported for Chesterfield County. 258 = ongressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT [The Seventy-eighth Congress based on apportionment of the Sixteenth Census (1940)} ; £3 Bo | wvBEE 2) 2BD 7) 7) ge oF2 2)IEF 7 3 7)BE I<][3 7} a &EET o state = g g |8 |8| 2E|OF|°8 C2 xg = = 2 aa a ul » g fim]ele (SE |B gig 2/8 |B (8 25|°F|08|°F|58|°8|°R|°8|52|°8|2 > pee Eo Bl aStag aS ee Te Pra a a Ll eam eg Elani= + + 15) = o I=] ba] rmBas (mE IR ERR [BOE olfai=SE855 a2SAPS E=RN = DnHn |X| owBE x || © 2 = 7} IS == [<3 wm n A Z IS = IS BH |= |¢ Alabama. = 20 off Caeser 1 3 5 7 7 6 8 8 9 9 10| 9 9 AN Zona laaaie nt | 1} 1 2 Arltaneas oer oh le aa 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 7 7 Californias 0 oie Te a Ye 2 2 3 4 6 7 8 111207 23 Colorado_...____. pe vo] stat Ranier Beet WB 0d acest Hii H Edel il PERLE 1 1 2 3 4 | 4 ‘4 Connecticut______ Delaware _ ____.___ 5 1 7 1 7 1 7 2 6 1 6 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 5 1 5| 6 15.1 6 1 Blopldo: Ao 0 ale a 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 41 5 6 Georgia 7 — =.LTR 3ER 2Re 4SR 6Wl 7ME 9SCD 8 8El 7 9I 10 te 11Tl 11 12110 10fai aly 7§ di eo L ER e EE EE PT 1 3 7 9% 14 107 20] 22 ons o7ioraie 95 Indiana 2A ne Ty 1 3 vi BR a 1 13 | 13 13-1" 13 13 | 12 11 Towne fom io tuleJey SIAL PARE Rsv 2 2 6 9 11 11 11 11 9 8 Kansasa ee Aaa ho il eh BE i ug i} 3 7 8 8 807 6 Kentueky-|... °. 2 6 10 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 11 11 11 9 9 Toulsioma zoo vl do Fr 1; 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8| 8 8 Maine... ee Maryland. _______ 6 8 Massachusetts. __ S14 9 097 7 9 11801 7 9 13: 8 8 12°) 7 6 10.) 6 6 11 5 5 108] 5 6 11 4 6 12 4 6 137 4 4 6 6 140-16 3 6 115 3 6 14 fi Michigan, oc {lr Yoo loinsiol 1 3 4 6 Of. 11 12:7 12:4 13 7°17. 1 17 Minnesota, | Cols ee a el NE 2 2 3 5 7 91 10] 9 9 at Mississipple_. oopT Lael 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 S(=7 7 MIssoupis. ea 1 2 5 7 0 a: 18: 14 151 164-216-113 12 Montana... oy a a at i 1 1 1 2 =2 3 DI sna Re] RINSE BRS van WH (Gh Ce Ll Hani 1 1 3 6 6 6 5 4 INovadaa, a a Ee nh a 1 1} 1 1 1 1 1 1 . New Hampshire.{ 8 4 5 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2:02 2 New Jersey. ___._ 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8 10 12 | 14 14 New Mexleg rr ler il eA a ee 1 1 2 New York.____.__ 6 10 17 27 34 40 34 33 31 33 34 34 37 43 | 45 45 North Carolina. _ 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 9 10 10 | 11 12 | North Dakotal lh Ny a roe 1 1 2 3-2 IN IELTS ae het EOE hE i 6 14 19 21 21 19 20 21 21 21 221 24 23 f Oklahoma. te she sel et led a at a 5 S19 8 Oregon. i. Te se | Se 1 1 1 1 2 34='3 4 Pennsylvania____ 8 13 18 23 26 28 24 25 24 27 28 30 32 36 | 34 33 Rhode Island __ _. 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 South Carolina___ 6 8 9 9 7 6 4 5 7 7 7 71-6 6 South: Pakefa [5 lo olin tee er ee a ee 2 2 2 3 2 2 Tennessee________|._._ 1 3 6 9 13 11 10 8 | 10 10 10 10 10 9 10 5 GEL ma Leds ons Ds SI Bn a St NORTON Tan 2 2 4 6 11 13 16 18 | 21 21 WRN Ae rl SS OR Ei Be Hein) II RE St Re ad LO Nhe ol 1 1} 2 2 2 Vermont... v0 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 Virginia. 2.05 10 19 22 23 22 21 15 13 11 9 10 10 10 10 9 9 Washington Lx fr od ea ada rape Ee ene 1 3 50 6 WestiWiroinia tol a i a need 3 4 4 5 6| 6 6 Wisconsin... o ot a a | a 2 3 6 8 9s 5101 10 110101910 : UATE dane dil I EAU a NE ean Be dl I ALS DERN BC el li 1 1 1 11 il z Total. =. 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 293 | 332 | 357 | 391 | 435 |435 | 435 1 No apportionment was made in 1920. ll The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is included Hi in the above table: First—Tennessee, 1. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; il Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—Qalifornia, 2; Florida, 1; EE Towa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1. Eighth—Illinois, 1; | Iowa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ohio, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; | Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; - New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 3; Tennessee, 1; Vermont, 1. -Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, s 1 1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. Eleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5. Thir- | teenth—Arizona, 1; New Mexico, 1. NoTE.—The apportionment based on the Sixteenth Census (1940) distributes the 435 seats in the House | among the States according to the method of equal proportions. By this method the percent difference between the average number of Representatives per million people in any 2 States is made as small as possible. Also, the percent difference between the average districts, i. e., the average number of persons per i Representative, in any 2 States is made as small as possible. By equalizing the representation of all pairs { of Bans the method gives as nearly equal representation as possible to all States in proportion to their population. Statistical 259 = GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES EF : ; ; Poli-| Term of| ExpirationState or Territory Capital Governor tics |'service ofterm Salary ¥ EES | 3 a5 = 1a { r es f ! : ! jg | Is 15 i Ee s a x . STATE ; Years Alabama... Montgomery.___..__ Chauncey Sparks.._______.. PD. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 1 $6, 000 Arizona... Phoenix. 0.0. Sidney. P. Osborn...= = DL 2 | Jan. 1945 7, 500 Arkansas... ....... Little Rock. ...... Homer M. Adkins. _..______ D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 26,000 California____..... Sacramento... _...._ Barl Wawenr_._.. .......... R 4 | Jan. 1947 | 810, 000 Colorado... Denver... .....° John GC. Vivian 2 iis R. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 10,000 Connecticut. ..... Hartiord ......o.-Raymond E. Baldwin______ R. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 12,000 Delaware. _____.._. Dover: iia ui. ‘Walter W. Bacon............. R. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 47, 500 Florida. 1: -c-Tallahassee_..____ Spessard L. Holland __._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 57,500 Qeorglas il... Atlanta... _.... Elis Arnall ...... 00.0 5 D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 67,500 Idaho ii 82-1 Boise. 2... Q.’A. Bottolfsen.i2 0... L R. 2 | Jan. 1945 7, 500 Minols oc Springfield ________ Dwight H. Green. ______.__. BR 4 | Jan. 1945 | 312,000 Indians: Indianapolis. __.___ Henry F. Schricker_________ D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 28,000 Jowa: Saisie Des Moines_______ Bourke B. Hickenlooper.._..| R. 2 | Jan. 1945 7, 500 Kansas_.._._ Topeka tis: 2 Andrew Schoeppel ._________ RB: 2 | Jan. 1945 | 35,000 Kentucky Frankfort......... Keen Johnson...... ..._ .-D. 4 | Dec. 1943 | 510, 000 Louisiana... Baton Rouge.__.__ Sam H.Jones. ..._.......... D. 4 May 1944 | 12,000 Mame: Augusta >t Sumner Sewall ____________ HR 2 | Jan, 1945 | 55,000 Maryland._____._. Annapolis__....__. Herbert R. O’Conor__....... D. 4 | Jan, 1947 | 34,500 Massachusetts_..__| Boston________._.___ Leverett Saltonstall _________ R. 2 | Jan, 1945 | 10,000 Michigan_________ Lansing... ..... Hoary BE. Relly_ o.oo... R. 2 | Jan, 1945 | 45,000 Minnesota _______ St.-Paghitz «= Edward J. Thye = 32 *R. 2 | Jan, 1945 | 47,000 Mississippi... Jackson iil to Paul B. Johnson © S.-i 0 D. 4 | Jan, 1944 | 387 500 Missouri: =. cic Jefferson City_.._. Forrest C. Donnell. ______. R. 4 | Jan, 1945 { 35 000 Montana. ...._... Helena. 1 = SamC.Pord 0. R. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 57 500 Nebraska. .:....~ Lincoln 2 ~.r.>: Dwight Griswold. ____._____ R. 2 | Jan, 1945 | 87,500 Nevada... 5. Carson City______. B.P. CoapvillecionSo it D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 814,000 New Hampshire..| Concord...._.....| Robert O. BlooGQaano ooo. R. 2 | Jan. 1945 5,000 New Jersey... Prenton. i . Charles Edison. D. 3 | Jan. 1944 | 620, 000 New Mexico._____ Santa Pe.o.20. .% John J. Dempsey. -D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 35, 000 New York. ....... Albany. .c...l... Thomas E. Dewey R. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 5 25 000 North Carolina._.| Raleigh ___________ J. Melville er D. 4 | Jan. 1945 | 810, 500 North Dakota....| Bismarek_________ John:Moses:_. To iria D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 54 000 Ohio xo Colambus:. ==.3% John 'W. Bricker_2 1... R 2 | Jan. 1945 | 810, 000 Oklahoma... Oklahoma City...| Robert S. Kerr___._.__..._.. D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 36,500 Oregon. .x. 50 Salem... TarlSnell oo eoniios n. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 7,500Pennsylvania. Harrisburg... Edward Martin________.____ R. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 318,000 Rhode Island ____ Providence. .’c -_ J. Howard McGrath. _____. 51D, 2 | Jan. 1945 8, 000 South Carolina___| Columbia_..__.__. Olin 1D. Johnston = ooo oi-2 D, 4 | Jan. 1947 | 37,500 South Dakota. =| Pierre... M. Q. Sharpe. =: nascieawe R. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 33,000 Tennessee... Nashville... —... Prentice Cooper... ---.-----D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 34,000 INITBe ratEr Austinozo woo Coke R. Stevenson_..._..... D. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 812 000 Uish oo. Salt Lake City__-_| Herbert: B. Maw: toc... D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 36,000 Vermont... 0... Montpelier____.... William H. Willis.___...~.. R. 2 | Jan. 1945 5, 000 Virginia. = eocx Richmond.____..__| Colgate W. Darden, Jr__ D. 4 | Jan. 1946 | 3 10,000 Washington_____-Olympia... | Arthur B. Langlie _._.____| R. 4 | Jan. 1945 6, 000 West Virginia_____ Charleston. ___-__ {“Matihew M. Neely. o_o... iD, 4 | Jan. 1945 | 510,000 Wisconsin. ._.....| Madison._....._.. Walter S. Goodland”... |..__.. 2 | Jan. 1945 | 36,000 Wyoming__.------Cheyenne....._.__ Lester C. Himes =: D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 38,000 TERRITORY 8 3 Alaska: Juneau... o..._. FrmestGruening... 2 oo Fit Indefinite. | 8 10, 000 HWawall Honolulu: 2... Ingram M. Stainbaek > i oofroitisc Indefinite. | 10,000 : h ISLAND POSSES-SION 8 4 4 Puerto Rico______ SanJusn: oii Rexford Guy Tugwell =. of fo... Indefinite. | ® 10, 000 Virgin Islands... | Charlotte Amalie | Charles Harwood... —— {meee ]oeaeaaC Indefinite. 8, 000 ie J > 1 Sum of $10,000 appropriated to properly furnish and equip Governor’s 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 Acting Governor. 8 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. ® Also traveling expenses for official duties. PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES | 260 Congressional Directory COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS . : t 18 [NoreE.—The figures indicate the number of different individuals Vice President] who have served as President and I i President Vice President Service Congress i | 1 George Washington___._____ 1 John Adams..._. --| Apr. 380,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1 2 3 4, i FT Johh Ado... ea 2 Thomas Jefferson. _______ Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5 6. | j ’ 3 Thomas Jefferson___._.__.____ S Aaron Barro iso orl Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. . ; PEED TE 4 George Clinton__________ Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9,10. : ! d James:Madison... o-oo 5 EY Elee Mar. 4,1809-Mar.” 3,1813 | 11,12, Poll ola lil. 5 Elbridge Gerry 2. ___.____. Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13, 14. 5 James MONTroe- ----ccceeee- 6 Daniel D. Tompkins_____| Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 38,1825 | 15, 16,17, 18, 6 John Quincy Adams________ 7 John C. Calhoun____.____ Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 38,1829 | 19, 20. yeAndrew Jackson. -otoaaobl ool dol. lnm nd Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, 22. & ; Dorn row vi 8 Martin Van Buren ______ Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23 24, i SEMartin Van Buren... _._. 9 Richard M. Johnson_._.__ Mar. 4.1837-Mar. 38,1841 | 25 26, |1} : 9 William Henry To Eyr Harrison____| 10 os fe John Tyler ==_.___________ ny Se EEG ae Mar. Apr. 4,1841-Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 4,1841 3,1845 | | 27, 27, 28. f WW lamesK. Poll =o i. 11 George M. Dallas_.__._._| Mar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30. | 12 7achary Taylor. c........ 12 Millard Fillmore _________ Mar. 5,1849-July 9, 1850 | 31. : MI Nard TIIROre: ee | med I | July 10,1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31,32. a ] 14 Franklin Pierce ____..._.__ 13 William R. King4______.| Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33,34. = i i5 James Buchanan_ ____-_____ 14 John C. Breckinridee___.!| Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35, 36. i6 Abraham Lincoln. ._____._.__ 15 Hannibal Hamlin. ______ Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 3, 1865 | 37, 38. i SP a 16 Andrew Johnson________. Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. L 17 ANGrew JORDON. bos ois enim cdi 0 Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3,1869 | 39, 40. i 18 Ulysses S. Grant... ._...._. 17 Schuyler Colfax... __.._.. Mar. 4,1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41,42. Dos em { 18 Henry Wilsons _________ Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3, 1877 | 43, 44, | | 19 Rutherford B. Hayes. ______ | 19 William A. Wheeler______| Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45,48. % | : 20 James A. Garfield. _____.___ | 20 Chester A. Arthur_______ | Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19,1881 | 47. ! { 21 Chester A. Arthur__________ BN | Sept. 20,1881-Mar. 3,1885 | 47,48. 22 Grover Cleveland 7_________ | 21 Thomas A. Hendricks 6. | Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3, 1889 | 49, 50. § ; il - 23 Benjamin Harrison.._._____ {$22 TeviP. Morton. __.... Mar. 4,1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. | fl = Grover Cleveland 7_________ | 23 Adlai E. Stevenson___.__ | Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 3,1897 | 53,54. > tL 24 William McKinley. ________ 24 Garret A. Hobart 8_______ | Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 38,1901 | 55, 56. o : Dot soren on 25 Theodore Roosevelt. _____ | Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. | i = ¥ThesdoreBoomvelt..\....h.. | Sept. 14,1901-Mar. 38,1905 | 57, 58. il Pot: i ve 26 Charles W. Fairbanks___| Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60. Hl > 26: William HH. Taft........... -| 27 James S. Sherman ®______ Mar. 4,1909-Mar. 3, 61, 62. i 27 Woodrow Wilson. _.________ | 28 Thomas R. Marshall_____ Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 3,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. i i 98 Warren G. Harding_________ 29 Calvin Coolidge _________ 20. CAIVIN COREY. ribs oN a Mar. Aug. 4,1921-Aug. 3,1923-Mar. 2,1923 3,1925 | | 67. 68. H : | TERE a 30 Charles G. Dawes________ Mar. 4,1925-Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70. 2 i 30 Herbert C. Hoover_________ 81 CharlesCurtis. ..___== Mar. 4.1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72. id Hl : 31 Franklin D. Roosevelt______ 32 John N. Garner. _....... | Mar. 4,1933-Jan. 20,1941 | 73,74, 75, 76. £ BE he ae Be 33 Henry A. Wallace _______ Jan. 20,1941- 77, 78. i 1 Died Apr. 20, 1812, | 2 Died Nov. 23, 1814, | 3 Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senator. 4 Died Apr. 18, 1853. 5 Died Nov. 22, 1875. I: 6 Died Nov. 25, 1885. i 7 Terms not consecutive. i 1 i 8 Died Nov. 21, 1899, fos 1 9 Died Oct. 30, 1912, h Mu mse or! President of the Senate.— Henry A, Wallace, Wardman Park Hotel. THE CAPITOL OFFICERS OF THE SENATE PRESIDENT Executive secretary to the President of the Senate.—Harold Young, Diplomat Apart-ments. Bereons secretary to the President of the Senate.—Mary Huss, 1657 Thirty-first treet. 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.—Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, D. D., 2800 Thirty-sixth Street. 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 Convention 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., ensign, U. S. Navy; unanimously elected Secretary of the Senate on March 9, 1933; member, Benjamin B. French Lodge No. 15, F. A. A: M.; member, Chevy Chase Club and 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. Assistant journal clerk.—William N. Janson, 4036 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. 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 tn disbursing office.—Robert J. Logan, 8700 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md.; John R. Hile, 719 Erie Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Frank Emge, 4006 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va.; John Quincy Adams, 719 Erie Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Principal clerk.—Joseph C. Duke, 1778 Lyman Place NE. Enrolling clerk.—John Gatling, 120 C Street NE. 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. ors 264 Congressional Directory 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. 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, 115 C Street SE. Second assistant in document room.— Warren Worth Bailey, 5924 Ninth Street. Clerks tn document room.—Donald O. Virdin, 212 First Street SE.; Dallas Groce, 25 Third Street NE.; Dillard C. Rogers, 4403 Fourteenth Street. Clerks.—Clara Dyson Darbie, 3409 Carpenter Street SE.; James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, C. Alfred Lawton, 325 Senate Office Building: assistant clerks, KE. D. Smith, Jr., Filmore Village, Arlington, Va.; Pearl Murray, 5311 Eighth Street; Anna B. Pierce; Isobel S. Lawton, 325 SenateOffice Building; Charles F. Smith, Wardman Park Hotel; Mary G. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Mary Louise Broadway, 1855 Irving Street. i Appropriations.—Clerk, Everard H. Smith, 3321 Rittenhouse Street; assistantclerks, J. W. Rixey Smith, route 1, Vienna, Va.; Cecil H. Tolbert, 104 SouthPark Drive, Arlington, Va.; T. C. Durocher, 1338 Nicholson Street; Louise S. Joubert, 311 Myrtle Street, Alexandria, Va.; Jennie D. McDaniel, BellevueHotel, Mary B. Christian, 17 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria Va.; Frances B. Hoover, 2008 Brighton Road NE., Avondale; Helen Cooper Fox, Fort Ward Heights, Alexandria, Va. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.—Clerk, Margaret Me-Mahon, 3200 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, Frances Allen, 3861 Penn-sylvania Avenue SE.; Myra Bedel, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Anne Gorden, 713 East Capitol Street; Elizabeth Herbner, 1451 Park Road; Macel McGil- very, 2 Fighteenth Street SE.; Beatrice Sinakin, 5128 Ninth Street. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, Philip Levy, 5609 Thirty-third Street; assistantclerks, Minna L. Ruppert, 2929 Connecticut Avenue; Mildred Akins, 3220Connecticut Avenue; Helene O’Connor, 8302 Sixteenth Street: Helen M. Adams, 4718 Fifteenth Street; Eunice V. Avery, 2515 Thirteenth Street; Mary Hickey, 212 Maryland Avenue NE.: Elizabeth Hostetler, 4103 Fourth Street; Henry J. Fagan, 1419 Thirty-fifth Street. Civil Service—Clerk, Betty M. Marelius, 1020 Nineteenth Street. (etsy Ao stant clerk, Harry B. Straight, 3707 Forty-first Avenue, Cottage ity, Md. Commerce.—Clerk, A. Hand James, Roosevelt Hotel; assistant clerks, EstelleHilliard, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; Eloise Porter, 3543 Sixteenth Street;Millie Carter, 1731 New Hampshire Avenue; Maude Palmer, 120 C Streetnl Caro M. Pugh, 1312 Thirtieth Street; Jewel Shealy, 2601 Sixteenth Street. Conference Majority of the Senate.—Clerk, J. B. Fowlkes; assistant clerks, Flo. E.Sratien, J. G. Stephenson, James L. Johnson, Loraine Winfrey, Wythel L,illen. 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, 627East Capitol Street; Harriet Bentley, 2019 I Street; George Smith, 2427 MStreet; Virginia E. Nicholls, 7805 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md, District of Columbia.—Clerk, Eva B. Adams; assistant clerk, James W. Johnson; counsel, J. G. Sourwine. Education and Labor.—Clerk, Paul L. Badger, 2936 Carlton Avenue NE.; assistantclerks, Elaine Hatch Richards, the Kennedy-Warren; Emily Madsen, theCongressional. EE Officers of the Senate 265 Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Garrett Whiteside, 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway; assistant clerks, Dorothy B. Ward, 82 Darrington Street SW.; Elizabeth Mulligan, 2505 N Street SE.; Doris Roebuck, 1751 N Street; Anne S. Mellan, 3244 McKinley Street; Sue Srygley, La Salle Apartments. Expenditures in the FEaxeculive Departments.—Clerk, Curtis McPherson, 1725 Queens Lane, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks, Lillian G. Jones, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Margaret Stevens, 649 Kenyon Street; Annie Laurie Potts, Arling-ton Farms, Arlington, Va. * Finance.—Clerk, Christie Belle Kennedy, 2929 Connecticut Avenue; Queen Holden, 3507 Macomb Street; Carolyn Glover, 1725 New Hampshire Avenue; Norman M. Clapp, 227 North Park -Drive, Arlington, Va.; Betty Irwin Burdette, Senate Courts Apartments; Virginia Carroll, Keystone Apartment; Delores Melton, 314 East Capitol Street; Anne Arrington, 20 Third Street SE.; Elise Merriam, 2268 Cathedral Avenue. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Robert V. Shirley, 3900 Hamilton Street, Hyattsville, . Md.; Adaline S. E. Carr, 216 Maryland Avenue NE. ; Eleanor Crow Lyons, 1301 Concord Avenue; Marion N. Huff, 5800 Nevada Avenue; Lou Nora Spiller, the Dresden; Ellouise Naramore, 1217 Linden Lane, Silver Spring, Md.; Hazel Counts, 6006 Third Street; Dorothy Keith Hatch, 19 Lincoln Avenue, Kensington, Md.; Norma Heyser, 3704 Twenty-second Street NE. Immigration.—Clerk, Leeman Anderson; assistant clerks, Clara E. Smith, Bellevue Hotel; Margaret S. Appleby, 816 Connecticut Avenue; Rachel Styles Brei-myer, 1615 Franklin Street NE.; Catherine Fullbright, 2653 Woodley Road; Delia Beveridge, 4115 Wisconsin Avenue; Kathryn Benefield, 2817 Connecti-cut Avenue; Mary Ann Connor, 2817 Connecticut Avenue. 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, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; Joycette Jones, 424 Senate Office Building; Beth Gage, 215 B Street NE.; Elizabeth P. Blalack, 326 Senate Office Building. Interoceanic Canals—Clerk, Ed. S. Villmoare, Valley Vista Apartments; assistant clerks, Helen Meek, 3133 Connecticut Avenue; Rebul H. Nichols, 361 Senate Office Building; Lyda McDonald, 127 C Street NE.; Kathryn Kidd, Bellevue Hotel; Vera Hulings, 120 Maryland Avenue NE.; Rose B. Heiskell, 1451 Fairmont Street. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Maude W. Mitchell, 210 East Clifton Terrace; assistant clerks, Edward Jarrett, Falls Church, Va.; Jerry B. House, 5718 Twenty-seventh Street North, Arlington, Va.; Alma Lovely, 822 Butternut Street; Mary Bobskill, 916 Sixteenth Street; May Folkvord, 1722 Nine-teenth Street. Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Arthur Sartain, 1530 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, Mrs. Douglas Lacy, 127 C Street NE.; Lurlene Poss, 127 C Street NE.; Minnie Moultrie, 110 F Street SE. Judiciary.—Clerk, Wilma Aber, 2415 Fourteenth Street NE.; assistant clerk, Floyd J. Mattice, 918 Eighteenth Street. Library.—Elora Chance. Manufactures—Clerk, Ruth D. Overton, Wardman Park Hotel; assistant clerks, Mollie A. Gaumer, Stoneleigh Court, 1025 Connecticut Avenue; Davetta M. Pudifin, 900 Nineteenth Street; Ruth E. Yellowlees, 1620 Q Street SE.; Hilda Kearns, 322 Fourth Street SE. Military Affairs—Clerk, Wesley E. McDonald, 1823 North Glebe Road, Arling-ton, Va.; assistant clerks, Walter I. Smalley, 4535 Klingle Street; Mary C. Hoke, 2515 Fourteenth Street NE.; Marguerite E. Watts, 4759 Lee Boule-vard, Arlington, Va.; Dorothy S. Sheppard, 1836 Lamont Street; Evelyn E. Cordell, Roosevelt Hotel. Mines and Mining—Clerk, R. H. Bailey, Jr., 1439 Fairmont Street; assistant clerks, Emily A. Bradshaw, 4444 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Nora Darnall, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Mary G. Flatley, 8510 Manchester Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Ethel M. Ford, 1107 Eighteenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Mary F. Ford, 3133 Connecticut Avenue; William H. Plum-mer, 1538 Ridge Place; Margaret C. O’Regan, 1410 Newton Street NE.; Mary G. Bowden, 610 Ninth Street NE. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Margaret E. Gallagher, 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. 266 Congressional Directory Pensions.—Clerk, Edward P. Terry, Capitol Park Hotel, law examiner, Louis J. Meyerle, 612 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, D. W. McKellar, 120 C Street NE.; assistant clerks, Frances Wilson, 705 Eighteenth Street; William M. Fry, Box 281, R. F. D. 4, Alexandria, Va.; Janice Tuchfeld McKellar, 120 C Street NE.; -Sara Ward, Park Central Apartments; Lucille Vaccaro, 7701 Eastern Avenue; Barbara Alexander, 2701 Connecticut Avenue; Mildred Basinger, 701 Dahlia Street; Robbie Roe Anders, Scotts Hotel. Printing.—Clerk, Leona I. Sweeney. Privileges and Elections.—Edward J. Higgins, the Stratford; Edith 8. Walker, Bellevue Hotel; Mariee R. Flanagan, 127 C Street NE.; Ruth C. Heaton, 4421 Iowa Avenue; Helen T. Dunphy, 127 C Street NE.; Rose E. Adams, 4421 Towa Avenue. 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; Eleanor Holabird, 1321 Valley Place SE. ; Lillian Belton, 1642 V Street SE. Public Lands and Surveys.—Clerk, W. H. McMains, 1803 Biltmore" Street; assistant clerk, N. D. McSherry, 3607 New Hampshire Avenue. Rules.—Clerk, M. J. Menefee, 209 Senate Office Building. Territories and Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Corinne Barger; assistant clerks, Jane Leeke, Esther C. Quinn, Anna F. Doyle, Agnes Scoular, Dorothy M. Kernan,Lucile Brown, Helen Baughman, Agnes Fowler. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS | POST OFFICE FOLDING ROOM Foreman.—John W. Deards, Fontanet Courts. Officers of the Senate = 2907 OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. John D. Rhodes, 3535 Williamsburg Lane. Daniel B. Lloyd, Bowie, Md. Fred A. Carlson, 2020 Plymouth Street. Gregor Macpherson, 3111 Forty-fourth Street. Herbert N. Budlong, 5032 Glenbrook Terrace. Floyd Worden, the Broadmoor. Asststant.—Edward V. Murphy, 3539 R Street. Clerk.—Robert C. Brooks, 2018 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Ezpert transcribers—F. F. Chew, 1502 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va.; Elmer L. Koons, 826 Aspen Street; Joseph A. Koons, 2601 Seventeenth Street NE.; A. E. Belew, 2134 G Street. Congressional Record messenger.—Harry E. Padgett, 1837 M Street NE. (phone, “TRinidad 4746). OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 161, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 958) Leogenlitin counsel.—Henry G. Wood, 5001 Jamestown Road, Yorktowne Village, d 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. Law assistant.—Dwight J. Pinion, 1914 North Kirkwood Road, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—Earl Pryor, Tuxedo, Md. Assistant clerk.—Salvatore M. Derato, 413 Lincoln Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Fo LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES Senator Secretary Secretary’s address Ajken (VL) = oF Andrews (Fla.)________ Austin (Vt) Balley (N.C)... ... Ball (Minn). ......... Bankhead (Ala.)_______ Barbour (N. J.) 1. Batklev (Ky.Y. Bilbo:(Miss): Bone (Wash) .._______ Brewster (Maine).______ Bridees (N. FH.) Brooks (T.Y.:_-. - ._. Buck{Del.). _._.. . Burton (ChioYy-_..-_ Bushfield (8S. Dak.) _.__ Butler (Nebr.).__._—.._ Byed Va)...-. Capper (Rans.) Caraway (Ark.)_______ Chandler (Ry.)-.._.-.._ Chavez (N. Mex.) ____._ Clark dale)... Clavtk (Mo)... Connally (Tex.)......... Danaher (Conn.)______ Pavie (Pa)... 3. . Downey (Calif.)_______ Eastland (Miss.)______ Ellender Tn)... Ferguson (Mich.)______ George (Gn.).........0. Gerry (R. 1)... Gillette (Towa) ________ Glass (Va)... ..... s@reen(R. 1): Gufley: (Ba)..... Gurney (S. Dak.)______ Hatch (N. Mex.) Hawkes (N. J.) Haovden (Ariz) ©... Hill.(Ald.).o... ~c Holman (Oreg.)_______ Johnson (Calif.) 268 William H. A. Mills____ Edward P. Terry_______ B.A. Seclig._ Frances E. Dustin______ Hamilton S. Putnam ____ Joseph C. Mason._______ Frank W. Schroeder_ ___ Parl B, Hart Harry C. Westphal_____ Paul M. =~ Hawking. M.J. Menefee.... .. Walter W. Mulbry..____ José Edmundo Espinosa. Mary Reilly Palmer_____ Ed. 8. Villmoare_______ AS. RB. Carr. ~~ © David Kammerman___ _ Bdmund F, Erk. .... | Walter C. Phair... Douglas G. Mode______ Christie Bell Kennedy___ James A. Byrne________ Helen E. Sullivan_. ____ J. W. Rixey Smith... Edward J. Higgins______ R.H.Bolley, Jr... John P. DePagter. .____ Robert B, Parkman_____ Mary A, Connor........ 100 B St. NE. Park Central Apartments. 2101-B Suitland Terrace, Fairfax Village. The Roosevelt. 108 C St. NE. 1530 16th St. 200 West Leland St., Chevy Chase, Md. The Capitol Park. 329 Senate Office Bldg. 717 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 4728 32d St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 1851 Ontario PI. 607 King Street Rd., Alex-andria, Va. 314 B St. SE. 2006 Fort Davis St. SE. 200 Massachusetts Ave. 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway. The Highlands. 4414 Highland Ave., Be-thesda, Md. 1301 North Hudson St., Arlington, Va. The Valley Vista, 216 Maryland Ave. NE. 1647 Lamont St. 6310 Delaware St., Chevy Chase, Md. 3529 Ames St. NE. 11 Ridge Road SE. 8405 Woodcliff Court, Silver Spring, Md The Jefferson, 2929 Connecticut Ave. The Continental. The Washington House. R. F. D. 1, Vienna, Va. The Stratford. 1439 Fairmont St. 1508 North Lancaster St., Arlington, Va. 1803 Biltmore St. The Capitol Park. 1314 Massachusetts Ave. 1725 Queens Lane, Arling- ton, Va. 313 Cedar Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 1406 Meridian Pl, Officers of the Senate LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES— Continued Senator Secretary Secretary’s address Johnson (Colo). ___ Kilgore (W. Va.)______ La Follette (Wis.)___.__ Langer (N. Dak.)___.__ Lodge (Mass.) coo ____ Tueas(I.) = McCarran (Nev.)..____ McClellan (Ark.)______ McFarland (Ariz.)_____ McKellar (Tenn.)______ McNary (Oreg.)_______ Maloney (Conn.)______ Maybank (8. C)._.___ Mead (N.Y). -.. Millikin (Colo.) -——-—___ Moore (Okla)... Murdock (Utah)_______ Murray (Mont.)_______ Nye (N.Dak)...J.o.L ODanjel (Tex)... =: O’Mahoney (Wyo.)..__ Overton Ia.) __-_-____ Pepper (Fla). aan Radeliffe (Md.)________ Reed (Kans.)._______-__ Revercomb (W. Va.)___ Reynolds (N. C.)__.__._ Robertson (Wyo.)_____ Russell (Ga). -= Serugham (Nev.)______ Shipstead (Minn.)_____ Smith (8S. CY... ... lil: Stewart (Tenn.)_______ Tait (Ohio). .....-o.._-Thomas (Idaho)_______ Thomas (Okla.)_ ______ Thomas (Utah) ________ Tobey (N. H.)._.....- Truman (Mo.)--= Tunnell (Del.)_________ Tydinge (Md,)...... Vandenberg (Mich.)___ Van Nuys (Ind.)______ Wagner (N. Y.).__.____ Wallgren (Wash.)______ Walsh (Mass) ________ Wheeler (Mont.) ______ Wherry (Nebr.). ._____ White (Maine) _ _______ Wiley (Wis) _._______ Willis Ind.) oc cca ao-Wilson (Towa) 83317°—78-1—24 ed. Naney Chapman_______ Radle Herndon_________ GraceLyneh. .._ _.___. C. E. Van Horne_______ Maxwell M. Rabb__. ___ Margaret McMahon____ Eva B Adams... ... Ralph Matthews. ______ Wyly Parsons... Donald W. McKellar_ _ _ Helen K. Kiefer________ Catherine M. Flynn____ Dresden A. Smith. _____ Harry IL, Wivick.. John P. Barton... ______ Charles A. Murray... ___ Gerald W. Movius______ D. Roland Potter... ____ Julian B. Snow... Ruth D. Overton_______ W. Robert Fokes_______ Bertha C. Joseph........ Joseph Skubitz_________ Henry C. Shannon.______ Wesley E. McDonald.__ T..C. Thompson:_-i... Leeman Anderson. _____ C. Alfred Lawton_______ Brainard (Lon) Cheney.__ Arthur C. Leed]dle. =. : William M. Boyle______ Timothy J. Mooney... Corinne Barger. --t___ Philip Levy_.__._ ged Hugh B. Mitchell _____ Margaret E. Gallagher__ Maude W. Mitchell_____ Frederick H. Wagener _ _ Ruby C. Hutchinson____ Wilson C. Hefner_______ Ailene Loveland John D. Zug 19 2127 California St. 110 Maryland Ave. NE, 1817 Monroe St. 462 Senate Office Bldg. 4707 Connecticut Ave. 3200 16th St. The Diplomat. The Plaza. 208 Massachusetts Ave. NE. 120 C St. NE 7805 Takoma ‘Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 4125 18th Pl. NE. The Continental. 42 Independence Ave. SW. 7127 Varnum St., Landover Hills, Hyattsville, Md. The Mayflower. 4206 28th St., Mount Rainier, Md. 3002 Rodman St. Cathedral Mansions. 1 3d St. NE. Coon) Village, Arlington, a. The Wardman Park. 2059 North Glebe Road, Ar-lington, Va. The Washington. 2955 Nelson Pl. SE. 4817 36th St. 511 10th St. NE. 2808 First Rd. North, Ar-lington, Va. 1530 16th St. 3420 Lee Blvd., Arlington, V. 325 Senate Office Bldg. 12 4th St. SE. 3100 Connecticut Ave. Woodley Park Towers. 6228 Piney Branch Rd. 4613 North Henderson Rd., Arlington, Va 419 North Kenmore §St., Arlington, Va. 821 North Capitol St. 1407 Ingraham St. 2415 14th St. NE. 5609 33d St. 230 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 644 Massachusetts Ave. NE. 210 East Clifton Terrace. 1600 16th St. 110 Maryland Ave. NE. 3111 W Pl. SE. The Meridian Hills. 8700 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, Md. — -_-. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE (Phone, NAtional 3120) OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER The Speaker.—Sam Rayburn, the Anchorage. Secretary to the Speaker.—Alla Clary, 604 Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. Clerks to the Speaker.—Jennie A. Taylor, 2700 Wisconsin Avenue; Betsy Joe Jamison, 2337 Twenty-fourth Street SE.; Jane Morgan, 1611 Argonne Place; Irene W. Wright, 1761 North Troy 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.—Nicholas Cefalo. OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER Floor leader.—Joseph W. Martin, Jr., the Hay-Adams House. Secretary.—James x Milne, 104 George Mason: Drive, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—E. A. Gridley, 3 Brookdale Road. Legislative clerk.—Laura B. Hackett, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. OFFICE OF THE CLERK SOUTH TRIMBLE, Clerk of the House of Representatives (10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md.), attended the public schools of Frankfort, Ky., and Excelsior Institute; farmer by occupation; elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1898 and again in 1900, and served as speaker the last year; was in that capacity during the memorable Goebel contest; elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; Democratic " nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky, 1907; elected Clerk of the National House of Representatives in the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and again elected Clerk of the National House of Representatives in the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. Journal clerk.—Richard J. Tonry. Reading clerks:—Alney E. Chaffee, 311 Maryland Avenue NE.; Roger M. Callo-way, Washington House. Assistant reading clerk.—Irving W. Swanson, 2701 Sixteenth Street South, Ar- lington, Va. Tally clerk.—Hans Jurgensen, Jr., 2401 Calvert Street. , Assistant tally clerk.—William H. Hickson. Enrolling clerk.—Evan Taylor. Assistant enrolling clerk.—H. Newlin Megill, 423 Longfellow Street. 270 Officers of the House 271 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 NE. Librarian.—Joe M. Lynch. Property custodian.—John C, Page, 1313 Twenty-first Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant custodian.—Irene McCallan, 115 D Street SE. 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; married Miss Edna Fullerton, of Toronto, Canada, and they have one son, Kenneth, Jr., now in United States Army; elected Sergeant at Arms of the House in Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses. Cashier.—Harry Pillen, 511 Webster Street. Assistant cashier—John Oberholser, 232 Sixth Street SE. Bookkeepers—A. B. Fangmeyer, 4409 Seventh Street; Valerie Popham, 4026 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va. Private secretary.—Caroline Wadden, 2401 Calvert Street. Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of mace.—Victor Hunt Harding, 2928 Mec- Kinley Street. Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of pairs.—Joseph R. Eigler, 25 Seventh Street SE. Special assistant, Sergeant at Arms.—W. Moseley Miller, 1732 S Street SE. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER Boo oepey of the House of Representatives.—Ralph R. Roberts, 2401 Calvert treet. Chief page—Landon Mitchell, 6718 Third Street. Chief messenger.—Ira D. Walker, 2412 Monroe Street NE. Messengers—Harry B. Jacobs, 4636 Twelfth Street NE.; R. C. Hicks, 3306 Warder Street; David Mauser, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; Frank Taylor, 128 C Street NE.; J. Lee Aston, 1643 Hobart Street; Leo F. Caul-field, 101 B Street SE.; Ernest Williams, 101 Second Street NE.; James W. Cotton, 12 Fourth Street SE.; William G. Wofford, 128 B Street NE.; Turner Robertson, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Paul Soule, 200 Mas-sachusetts Avenue; George C. Beatty, 624 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va.; Louis Colvin, 75605 Blair Road, Takoma Park, Md.; John J. Durkin, 323 First Street SE.; J. H. Merriam, 511 B Street SE. Messengers on. soldiers’ roll—Thomas Onofrio, Portner Apartments; Charles Ingoldsby, 3713 Thirty-fifth Street; John A. Hunter, 1249 Lawrence Street NE.; John S." McNeave, 4614 Thirtieth Street; Chester A. Webb, 500 Ninth Street SE.; James A. Hogan, 724 Sixth Street SE.; John W. Farrell, 327 East Capitol Street; H. K. Alsabrook, 101 Second Street NE.; Hugh Wair, 202 East Capitol Street; William Horner, 222 First Street SE.; Bryce Curry, . 128 B Street NE.; James L. Reeves, Burlington Hotel; G. L. Malcolm, 5418 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Frank O. Rabbitt, 157 D Street SE. Special employee.— Marion J. Shuffler, 1203 Hamilton Street. Majority manager of telephones—C. H. Emerson, 216 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md Minority manager of telephones.—Michael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street. Chief of janitors.—John E. Bennett, 3304 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. FOLDING ROOM Superintendent.—Joseph H. Callahan. Assistant superintendent.—S. W. Brinker, 308 East Capitol Street. Secretary.—E. I. Crumpler. Bookkeepers—Robert McCue, 1318 Saratoga Avenue NE.; Joseph Stracke, Baltimore, Md.; C. T. Day, 208 A Street SE.; W. E. Dingus, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE. Order clerks—M. O. Vehue; S. E. Colburn. Work room, in charge—John Moore, 4624 Butterworth Place. 272 Leman ongressional Directory Shipping clerk.—Floyd Artrip, 206 Twentieth Street NE. Speech clerk.—Austin Brunicardi, 914 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant, S. H. Parker. Mail clerks—Raymond Jenkins; F. Barrett. Stock clerk—C. Gossage. DOCUMENT ROOM Superintendent.—Elmer A. Lewis, 115 Second Street NE. Assistant superintendent.—B. H. Ellert. : Assistants.—Carl Lutz, 1601 Argonne Place; Al T. Griffith, 112 Fifth Street NE.; Alan Olson, 1344 Monroe Street; John R. Stacy, 1900 H Street; Henry Clifford Collier, 2804 Fourteenth Street; William Graf, Jr., 300 Oglethorpe Street; J) Peter McCluskey, 6323 Luzon Avenue; John T. Halliday, 4024 Lorcom Lane, Cherrydale, Va. ; | SPECIAL AND MINORITY EMPLOYEES Special clerks to the minority.— William F. Russell: John Andrews, 310 Fifth Street SE. Minority pair clerk.—M. L. Meletio, 3363 Denver Street SE. Minority employees.—Frank W. Collier, 418 Seventh Street NE.; James P. Griffin, 305 Maryland Avenue NE.; John W. McCabe, 1204 Massachusetts Avenue. 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, 18 Ninth Street NE. Assistant.— Lorne Johnson, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Mail distributors.—Day clerk, William B. Dougherty, 175 Thirty-fifth Street NE.; night clerk, Joseph Taylor, 26 Farragut Place. Special mail clerk.—Ralph B. Price, 527 Tennessee Avenue, Alexandria, Va. MISCELLANEOUS ‘Delivery and collection messengers.—Charles N. Saunders, 501 Twelfth Street NE.; Horace Hagenlocker, 704 Longfellow Street; Walter Vogt, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Arthur F. Coffee, 128 B Street NE.; Jessie L. Grace, 128 B Street NE.; Grover Rains, 103 C Street SE.; Sidney Rheuban, 1426 Twenty-first Street; Joseph O’Brien, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Frank H. Harper, 210 Sixth Street SE.; M. W. Hightshoe, 103 C Street SE.; Silas W. Rogers, 1432 R Street; Lonnie W. Franklin, 323 East Capitol Street; Leonard C. Crowe, 111 First Street NE.; John T. Cannon, Jr., 12 Fourth Street SE.; Erskine Parks, 505 A Street SE.; J. M. Reynolds, 226 First Street SE.; Otis L. Daniel, 123 C Street SE.; Franklin G. Talley, 326 B Street SE.; Ralph Bailey, Jr., 2618 Washington Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; J. L. Ether-idge, 128 C Street NE.; Lawrence Werther, 505 A Street SE.; Joseph F. Salisbury, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; Orlie V. Barker, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Seth R. Grim, 510 Ethan Allen Avenue, Takoma Park, Md, BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL Clerk in charge—Leon S. Grantham, 218 Third Street SE. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Registry, stamp, and money-order clerk.—Jack Warren, 1630 Park Road. Assistant.—Bascom S. Damron, 1606 W Street SE. Night clerk.—William B. House, 228 First Street SE. Foreman of mail platforms.—Frank R. Monroe, 429 North Coe Street, Alexandria, a. ihe | Officers of the House 3 3 = vo | CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES Accounts.—Clerk, Frank M. Karsten, 2010 Fendall Avenue SE. Agriculture—Clerk, Katherine Wheeler, 1100 Greenwood Avenue, Takoma Park, i tas ~ Md.; assistant clerk, Jacquelyn Williams, 1324 House Office Building. i - . Appropriations.—Clerk, Marcellus C. Sheild, 3 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Shy Md.; assistant clerks, John C. Pugh, 5527 Fairglen Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; James F. Scanlon, 4207 Twelfth Street NE.; Arthur Orr, 233 North Filmore it : Street, Arlington, Va.; William A. Duvall, 6523 Maple Avenue, Chevy i ba Chase, Md.; Robert P. Williams, 3404 Cameron Mill Road, Alexandria, Va.; i ; George Y. Harvey, 16 Clagett Road, University Park, Md.; Corhal D. | Orescan, 3100 Sixth Street South, Arlington, Va.; messenger, Robert M. Lewis, 411 U Street; page, Charles F. Wirth, 712 F Street NE. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, Howard Kearley, Dodge Hotel; assistant clerk, Margo Marple, 3937 S Street SE. ~ Census.— Clerk, Clara D. Ingram, 20 Third Street SE. es Civil Service.—Clerk, Thomas L. Camp, Woodley Park Towers; assistant clerk, | Mrs. Willie S. Winter, 2359 Ashmead Place. Clazms.—Clerk, Helen Lee, 1404 Twenty-first Street; assistant clerks, Jack H. ; Ewing, 1404 Twenty-first Street; Sallie Lee Hall, 2620 Sixteenth Street. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Saul C. Cohen. Disposition of Executive Papers.—Clerk, Miss Ray E. Moore, Carroll Arms Hotel. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Mabel Haller, 3867 Alabama Avenue SE. i Education.—Clerk, E. S. Simpson, 1536 House Office Building. i] —~ Election of President, Vice President, and Represeniatives in Congress.—Clerk, 3 Florence Merriman, Wheeler, Tex. I Elections No. 1.—Clerk, Tophy Ashy, 333 House Office Building, i Elections No. 2.—Clerk, Lillian Whitehead, 1516 House Office Building. i Elections No. 3.—Clerk, Mildred C. Cooper, 1151 New Jersey Avenue. | Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry V. Hesselman, 1517 House Office Building. i Expenditures wn the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Alice M. Tuohy. gE Flood Control.—Clerk, Sarah Jane Glover, 225 House Office Building. Foreign Affairs.—Clerk, Boyd Crawford, Falls Church, Va. : / Immagration and Naturalization.—Clerk, Miriam Wydra, 2500 K Street. Tein Affairs—Clerk, W. J. Dunn, 3205 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, i d. i Insular Affairs—Clerk, Harlie F. Clark, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. i Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, 4730 Lee Boulevard, Co Arlington, Va.; first assistant clerk, F. P. Randolph, 4135 Alabama Avenue | SE.; second assistant clerk, Mary L. Michael, 1028 Connecticut Avenue; i janitor, Calvin F. Tipton, 127 Fiftieth Street NE. i 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. 2 Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Lela Scott, 408 Seward Square SE. Judiciary.—Clerk, Frank Connell, 232 First Street SE.; assistant clerk, Velma : I Smedley, 204 East Capitol Street. | Labor.—Clerk, Lucille M. Consedine, 4607 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerk, Charlotte R. Eldredge, Bellevue Hotel. | Library.—Clerk, Harryette M. Bailey. | Memorials. | Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Clerk, Elsie N. Keefer, 5106 Eighth Street; | assistant clerk, Elizabeth N. Bell, 1527 Isherwood Street NE. 2 Military Affairs.—Clerk, Julia Watterson, 1509 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Hutton B. Strader, 2108 Huidekoper Place. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, John C. Lewis, 111 First Street NE.; assistant clerk, | Marguerite Maddux, 2460 Sixteenth Street. Patents. Pensions.—Clerk, Alice B. Norton, 5735 Fourth Street; law examiner, Hiram W. Hummer, 4401 Windom Place. | Post Office and Post Roads.— Clerk, Carl T. Lindsay, 203 Sixth Street NE. | Printing.—Clerk, W. D. Hall, Dodge Hotel. Public Buildings and Grounds.— Clerk, Albert W. Woods, 245 House Office Building; assistant clerk, Dorothy Beam, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. | | 274 Congressional Directory Public Lands.—Clerk, Hattie Mae Coke, 2802 Devonshire Place. * Revision of the Laws. Rivers and Harbors.— Clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road; assistant clerk, Joseph H. McGann, Jr., 1345 Park Road. Roads.—W. S. Wilson, 1011 House Office Building. Rules.Clerk, Humphrey S. Shaw, 1440 Parkwood Place; assistant clerk, Pearl — Pribyl. PorrBiortoreeCllor, Arline Mann, 1434 New House Office Building. War Claims.—Clerk, Myrtle S. Locher. ‘Ways and Means.—Clerk, Barron K. Grier, 110 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks, Don D. Farshing, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Virginia Gibson, 1912 Calvert Street; J. Bain Doughton, 110 B Street NE.; minority clerk, Leslie M. Rapp, 416 North Norwood Street, Arlington, Va.; messenger, Sam W. Hardy, 1825 S 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. 8S. Milberg, 3041 Sedgwick Street. Elmer B. Clark, 604 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Talma L. Smith, 3548 Brandywine Street. 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; Georgette B. Allen, 3906 Old Dominion’ Boulevard, Beverly Park, Alexandria, Va.; Charles T. Dulin, 84 U Street; Howard Butterworth, 1701 Park Road; Beulah Burns, 3314 Mount Pleasant Street; Paul J. Plant, 1831 Belmont Road. Congressional Record messengers.—Preston L. George, 114 U Street NE. (phone, MIchigan 1133); Bjarne J. Sigurdsen, 1254 Owen Place NE. (phone, LUdlow 0581). OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES W. G. Stuart, 3446 Oakwood Terrace. L. F. Caswell, 8711 Sundale Drive, Rosemary Hills, Silver Spring, Md. Albert Schneider, 7516 Fourteenth Street. W. R. Graham, 6839 North Washington Boulevard, East Falls Church, Va. Lanham Connor, 4206 Second Road North, Arlington, Va. John J. Foley, the Hay-Adams House. Clerk.— William M. Day, Cavalier Hotel. OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 159, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 592) Legislative counsel.—Middleton Beaman, 3649 Albemarle Street. Assistant counsel.—Allan H. Perley, 3636 Van Ness Street; Gerald D. Morgan, 5509 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Edward O. Craft, 516 A Street NE. Law assistant.—Roy J. Waychoff, Jr., 1527 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Chief Si and law clerk.—C. Breck Parkman, 118 Northbrook Lane, Bethesda, Assistant clerks. —John L. Pestell, 3007 Douglas Street NE.; Cleo A. Garrett, 1757 P Street. oY | Miscellaneous Officials 275 MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS 5 | CONGRESSIONAL RECORD : gr (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 200) 8 | Fn Clerk in charge at the Capitol—Ralph L. Harris, 627 C Street NE. : A | ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL ; | ARCHITECT’S OFFICE H | (Office in basement of Capitol. Phone, NAtional 3120, branches 95, 125, 126, and 940) | | Architect.—David Lynn, 3700 Quebec Street. | Assistant architect.—Horace D. Rouzer, 3519 Porter Street. : gE Administrative officer.— Charles A. Henlock, 520 Oneida Place. Supervising engineer.— Arthur E. Cook, Roosevelt Hotel. ] Civil engineer.— August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street. i h Engineer in charge (House wing).—Charles R. Torbert, 492 G Street SW. i i Engineer in charge (Senate wing).—Timothy Murray, 908 Longfellow Street. i Loris architect and horticulturist.—William A. Frederick, 1206 Kennedy I treet. i Chief engineer (power plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. | Engineers (power plant).—J. M. Cowell, 1601 G Street SE.; William H. Hall, 112 Street SE. i Electrical engineer.—R. D. Holcomb, the Olympia. I Eo Elevator engineer.—H. B. Sommer, 7827 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. i Air conditioning engineer.—G. D. Fife, 4137 North Henderson Road, Arlington, Va. _ 4 SENATE OFFICE BUILDING (Office at room 219. Phone, branch 138) i 3 Custodian.—John J. Kearney, 1322 Nineteenth Street. Assistant custodian.—Charles E. Alden, 1801 Lamont Street. 1 HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS 4 (Office on second floor, northwest corner, Old Building. Phones, branches 142 and 143) | \ Superintendent.—Edward Brown, 1722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, | : V. a. 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 of f (Office in lower west terrace, room 3, Capitol. Phones: Captain, NAtional 3120, branch 1051; E 4 secretary, N Ational 3120, branch 102) 3 | i Capitain.— William S. Orthman, 1312 A Street SE. | | Secretaries.—C. M. Miller, 3120 Massachusetts Avenue SE.; Loyd M. Price, 4016 Marlboro Place. Supervising lieutenant.—Roy W. Brown, 640 A Street SE. = Lieutenants.—Billy Ballinger, 224 First Street SE.; Harry Gould, 221 A Street i NE.; Olin Cavness, 1813 P Street SE.; Robert W. James, 1613 Harvard | Street; Acie Hamrick, 203 Third Street SE. Sergeants. —Sam Bertrand, 124 C Street SE.; Noble Downs, 1437 South Carolina Avenue SE.; Victor Edler, 1613 Q Street SE.; Ernest Garcia, 1367 Childress = Street NE.; Ernest Hales, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Fridge L. Jester, / 326 B Street SE.; George Kaelber, 106 North Stewart Avenue, Essex, Md.; | Fred Miller, 314 Maryland .Avenue NE.; John T. Powers, 1813 Thirty-| fifth Street. I 276 Congressional Directory RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE (Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, branch 260) il Tar«bd CO a RR Tart Muto yl ip——Pb Tok ok 2 Cat apean e AL! 0kCA id pit Ticket agent.—Charles W. Owings, 3298 Aberfoyle Place. In charge Capriiol 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.— Virginia Hays Harris, 4836 North Thirtieth Street, Arlington, Va. TELEGRAPH OFFICES WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. (Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1111 and 28; Old House Office Building, branches 317 and 573 New House Office Building, branch 1062; House Press Gallery, branch 1085; Senate Press Gallery branch 1251) Executive Representative.—T. B. Gittings, Washington Building. Superintendent.—Bruce R. Allen, 708 Fourteenth Street. Manager Senate Office Building.—Edward R. Garvey, 1642 K Street NE. Manager Old House Office Building.—H. G. Royce, 208 Farragut Street. Manager New House Office Building.—Frances Traynor, 1942 Calvert 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. House gallery.—James O. Mathis, manager, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Senate office press room.—Carroll Linkins, 2033 Lawrence Street NE. POSTAL TELEGRAPH-CABLE CO. (Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1230 and 1231; House Office Building, branches 208 and 310) Superintendent.—Harry 1. Gilbert. In charge of Senate Office Building and Capitol.—Ara B. Carter, 114 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. In charge of House Office Building.—Ethel M. Searcy, 2422 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Offices in the Press Galleries: Senate gallery.—E. H. Rogers, manager, northeast corner Senate wing, third floor of the Capitol. House gallery.—Joseph W. Berlinsky, manager, southwest corner House wing, third floor of the Capitol. 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. RADIO ROOMS (House, southwest corner, fifth floor, Old House Office Building; phone, branch 1387. Senate, room 7-B, Senate Office Building; phone, branch 1296) Director.—Robert J. Coar, 3213 Old Dominion Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Assistant director—Helen Coar, 3213 Old Dominion Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Secretary.—Madeline Mayer, 3150 Sixteenth Street. Engineer.—Steve Carpenter, 4113 North Henderson Road, Arlington, Va. Miscellaneous Officials -277 UNITED STATES VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION LIAISON OFFICES -(House Office Building, room 354, branches 295 and 1030; Senate Office Building, room 106, branch 948) In charge.— William C. Murray, Hotel Roosevelt. Senate Office Building.— Margaretta B. Dawson, Evaline C. Livengood. House Office Building.—Agnes M. Richardy, Mildred C. Lawler, Mary H. Geary. 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 NAtional 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, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Nadine Marr, 1474 Columbia Road; Joseph M. Molloy, 1321 M Street. ded wr eo WAR PRODUCTION BOARD LIAISON OFFICES (House Office Building, room 304-A, branches 335, 1096 and 1320; Senate Office Building, room 10-B, branches 1511 and 1522) . House Office Building.— William J. Hays, 105 East Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md.; Tamar P. Dalberg, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va.; Virginia C. Perkins, 1815 Seventeenth Street; Lillian F. Jacobs, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. : Senate Office Building—Robert E. Day, 4224 Thirty-Seventh Street; Mary H. Frisa, Vis Second Street SE.; Clara Y. Brown, 4711 Merivale Road, Brook-dale, . BOTANIC GARDEN (West of the Capitcl Grounds) Acting Director—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol, 3700 Quebec Street. (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, branch 125; home, CLeveland 5724.) Assistant Director— Wilmer J. Paget, 5828 Fourth Street. (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, branch 267; home, GEorgia 4556.) GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE (Corner North Capitol and H Streets. Phone, DIstrict 6840) Public Printer—Augustus E. 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 Director of Personnel and Director of Training.—S. Preston Hipsley, 3132 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Baltimore, Md. Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 5308 First Street. Production Manager.— William Smith, 215 Emerson Street. Assistant Production Manager.—James W. Broderick, 1712 Seventeenth Street. Night Production Manager.— Alfred L. Fleming, 30 Madison Street. Production Planning Assistant to the Public Printer.—Robert A. Ritter, 8 Cler-mont Place, Garrett Park, Md. Director of Planning Service.—Philip L. Cole, 1206 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. Director of Plant Planning.—Grover W. Tribble, 4531 South Dakota Avenue NE. Director of Commercial Planning.—Raymond H. Leeraw, 4035 New Hampshire Avenue. Pieeyor of Typography and Design.—Frank H. Mortimer, 5917 Thirty-third treet. Superintendent of Composition.—Morris H. Reaves, 3816 Twentieth Street NE. Superintendent of Presswork.—Loxlie V. Adams, 8003 Eastern Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. or eel ptt bol ! 278 | Congressional Directory Superintendent of Binding—Thomas G. Maloney, 3614 Seventeenth Street NE. Superiutontom of Platemaking.—John A. McLean, 4819 Russell Avenue, Avon- dale, Md. Comptroller.—Felix E. Cristofane, 3901 Forty-eighth Street, Bladensburg, Md. Director of Purchases.— William J. Cassiday, 1611 Tuckerman Street. Superintendent of Documents.—Alton P. Tisdel, 2842 Twenty-eighth Street. Liaison officer—Mrs. Maybelle G. Fickel, 803 Forest Glen Road, Silver Spring, Md Mechanical Superiniendent.— Alfred E. Hanson, 3424 Quebec Street. Technical Director—Morris S. Kantrowitz, 741 Madison Street. Chief Storekeeper.—Alla G. Stevens, 225 Quackenbos Street. Medical and Safety Director—Charles P. Waite, M. D., 3700 Massachusetts _ Avenue. Captain of the Guards.—George L. Kisling, 705 Eighteenth Street. Clerk in charge of the Congressional Record (Capitol).—Ralph L. Harris, 627 C Street NE. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS (Capitol Hill. Phone, NAtional 2725) GENERAL ADMINISTRATION Librarian of Congress.—Archibald MacLeish, 607 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Va. 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.—Herman H. Henkle, 895 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. Admanistrative 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, 3426 Sixteenth Street. Director of Personnel.—Edgar F. Rogers, 3401 Twenty-fourth Street NE. REFERENCE DEPARTMENT Reference Librarian.—David Chambers Mearns, 9 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md Division of Aeronautics.— Albert Francis Zahm, Chief, Cosmos Club. Asiatic Dwision.—Arthur W. Hummel, Chief, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase Gardens, Md.; K. T. Wu, chief assistant, Chinese Section, 236 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Edwin G. Beal, Jr., chief assistant, Japanese Section, 653 East Capitol Street; Horace I. Poleman, chief, Indic Section, 303 B Street SE. Division of Bibliography.— Florence S. Hellman, Chief, 2804 Cathedral Avenue. Books for the Adult Blind.—Robert A. Voorus, Chief, 5604 Thirty-second Street. 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, Md. (on leave of absence to the Department of State); Robert C. Smith, Jr., (acting chief), St. Johns Lane, Ellicott City, Md.; David Rubio, curator of the Hispanic Collection, 3900 Harewood Road NE. 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, 6309 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Maps.—Lawrence Martin, Chief, 3215 R Street. Division of Music.—Harold Spivacke, Chief, 3201 Rowland Place. Disintys of Periodicals.—Henry S. Parsons, Chief, 8312 Carey Lane, Silver Spring, Photoduplication Service.—George A. Schwegmann, Jr., Chief, 3534 Porter Street. Rare Book Collection.—Frederick R. Goff, acting chief, 1207 Thirty-fifth Street. Reading Rooms.—Robert C. Gooch, superintendent, 4826 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; Donald G. Patterson, assistant superintendent, 4105 Wisconsin Avenue; Alvin W. Kremer, Keeper of the Collections, 1621 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, Va. BE Labrary of Congress 279 Reading Rooms.— Continued. 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; Leila F. Clark, custodian (office at Smithsonian Institution), 1818 Wyoming Avenue. Union Catalog.—George A. Schwegmann, Jr., Chief, 3534 Porter Street. PROCESSING DEPARTMENT Division of Accessions.—John H. Moriarty, Chief, 1107 South Oakerest Road, 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. ADMINISTRATIVE DEPARTMENT Accounting Office.—Kenneth N, Ryan, accounts officer, 2016 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. : Disbursing Office.— William W. Rossiter, acting disbursing officer, 6511 Colesville Road, University Park, Md. Library Buildings and Grounds.— William C. Bond, superintendent, 6007 Broad Branch Road; Lewis IL. Cogan, assistant superintendent, 702 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; C. Eldon Ray, chief engineer, 4844 Cordell Avenue, Be-thesda, Md.; Joseph E. Mullaney, captain of the guard, 1345 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Mail and Delivery.—Samuel M. Croft, Chief, 4315 Twenty-second Street NE. Publications Office.—[Vacant.] Supply Office.—George W. Morgan, supply officer, Seabrook, Md. LAW LIBRARY Law Sarton Tans X. Dwyer (acting), 4207 Oakridge Lane, Chevy Chase, d. COPYRIGHT OFFICE Register of Copyrights.—Clement L. Bouvé, 109 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Md = Assistant Register.—Richard C. DeWolf, Cosmos Club. EET EEE SPECIAL PROJECTS Census Library Project—Irene B. Taeuber, Director, 4222 Sheridan Street, University Park, Md. : Experimental Division for Study of Wartime Communications.—Harold D. Lasswell, Chief, Cosmos Club. 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.”’] Chatman Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2211 Thirtieth treet. Secretary.— Archibald MacLeish, Librarian of Congress, 607 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Va. Senator Alben William Barkley, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Mrs. Eugene Meyer, 1624 Crescent Place. Adolph C. Miller, 2230 S Street. . 280 TT TART CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS THE CAPITOL ~ This building is situated on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac River and covers an area of 153,112 square feet, or approximately 31% acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its width, including ap- proaches, is 350 feet; and its location is described as being in latitude 38°53/20.4'/ north and longitude 77°00’35.7’" west from Greenwich. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 5% inches. The dome is built of iron, and the aggregate weight of material used in its construction is 8,909,200 pounds. The Statue of Freedom surmounting the dome is entirely of bronze and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Thomas Crawford, father of Francis Marion . Crawford, the novelist, in Rome, Italy, and the plaster model shipped to this country. It was cast in bronze at the shops of Clark Mills, on the Bladensburg Road, not far from the city of Washington. The cost of the bronze casting and the expenses in connection therewith were $20,796.82, and, as the sculptor Crawford was paid $3,000 for the plaster model, the entire cost of the statue was $23,796.82. It was erected and placed in its present position December 2, 1863. SELECTION OF A SITE FOR THE NATIONAT 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 withbut a meager population. It may have been the intent to found a capital whichshould develop its own particular surroundings instead of attempting to conformwith conditions then existing. ~ But the principal reason was the lesson learnedfrom European experiences, where the location of the country’s capital in a largecity offered an opportunity for the coercion of legislators by the citizens of thecapital. 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 havebeen 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 the year 1846, when the Congress transferred to Virginia the portion furnishedby that State. PLANS FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDING 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 was burned by the British on August 24, 1814. The work of reconstruction of the damaged interiors was commenced by B. H. Latrobe, who continued the work of restoration until December 1817, when he resigned, and Charles Bulfinch, a prominent architect of Boston, Mass., continued the work of restoration and the erection of the central portion of the building, commencing in 1818 and continuing until its completion in 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 oc¢cupied 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, including the grading of the grounds, repairs, ete., up to the year 1827, was $2,433,844.13. Following the completion of the old Capitol in 1829 and the termination of the services of the architect, Charles Bulfinch, in 1830, such architectural services 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 TU. 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 ST TEE = 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 Architect’s 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 pro- vided by Congress in 1872 and 1873 in order to obtain a better 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 61.4 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 120.2 acres. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS OLD BUILDING An increased membership of the Senate and House resulted in a demand for additional 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. a 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., waspurchased as a site for the Senate Office Building, and the plans for the HouseOffice Building were adapted for the Senate Office Building, the only change beingthe omission of the fourth side of the building fronting on First Street NE., thisbeing planned for but not completed. The cornerstone of this building was laidwithout special exercises on July 31, 1906, and the building was occupied March 5,1909. In June 1933 the building was completed by the erection of the First Street wing, construction of which was commenced in 1931, together with alterations tothe 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 $8,390,892. CAPITOL POWER PLANT ee a A SA EA BE ] | fh Directory Congressional HOUSE WING SENATE WING : . | ] | i | I 4,3 213 24,2 3 5 Cbd ed i WA es 38 Bo eB Ai Pa ooo TAT IT = , I= 19 BASEMENT AND TERRACE ‘PO Pg—T-8L—-LIEES BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL iS 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. 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. buppng jopdo)) G8¢ HOUSE WING Room. 1. Rest room (Congresswomen). 2, 3. Subcommittee on Appropriations 4, 5, 24, Hon. John W. McCormack. 6, 7, 8. Official Reporters of Debates. 9, 10. Hon. Sam Rayburn. 11. Parliamentarian. 12, 13. Office of Sergeant at Arms. 14, 33. Private dining room (Speaker). 15. Barber shop. 16, 23. Committee on Appropriations. 17. Clerk’s storeroom. 18, 22, 23. Committee on Accounts. 19. Closets. 20, 21, 29, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant. 25, 28. Elevators. 27. Office, House restaurant. 31. Public restaurant. GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL MAIN BUILDING Rom. 68. Joint Committee on Printing. 70. Hon. Thomas H. Cullen. 71. Hon. H. W. Sumners. 72, 74, 75, 76. Dr. George W. Calver. 77, 80, 107. Senator Johnson. 83. Senators’ barber shop. 87. Congressional Law Library. \ 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Suprem Court room. 89, 90, 91, 101. Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 92. 93. Annex office, post office. 94, 96. Railroad ticket office. 95, 102, 103. House disbursing office. 97, 100. Clerk’s storeroom. 99. Enrolling clerk. 104, 105, 106. Assistant property custodian. SENATE WING Room. 36, 37, 38. Committee on Appropriations. 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 42, 46. Committee on Education and Labor. 43, 53, 63. Committee on Foreign Relations. 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 56, 61, 62. Restaurant. 51, 60. Elevators. 52A. Committee on Enrolled Bills. 66. Men’s toilet. 68. Women’s toilet. buapping 1070dn) [No | HOUSE WING SENATE WING : /3 4 ) Senate § Chamber § PRINCIPAL FLOOR (0U0LSSILIUO)) 4039243] 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. 48. Majority Leader, Committee on Library. 24. Chief Clerk. 10. Parliamentarian. 49, Sergeant at Arms. 25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 11, 12, 13, 14. Cloakrooms. 53. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. 26, 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 15. Hon. Robert L. Doughton, Democratic Steering 58, 59. House minority leader. 28. Senators’ lavatory. Committee, Ways and Means. 60, 61, 62. Speaker. 29, 30. Cloakrooms. 16. Library. 63. Formerly the Senate Chamber and later the Supreme 31. The Marble Room. 19, 18. Elevators. Court. 32. Room of the Vice President. Tn! 17. 20. Speaker. 64. House Legislative Counsel. 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. = 65. Pages, House (Cloakroom). 331%, 35. Elevators. = Ss. 36. Official Reporters of Debates. 37. The Senators’ reception room. 2. 38. Committee on the District of Columbia. 39. Office of the Sergeant at Arms. 40. Room of the President. on) S. U>, S {DQ SENATE WING HOUSE WING ' et i . Statuary Representatives. Hall 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. 44, Secretary to the Minority. 49, 50. 52, House Committee on Indian Affairs. 53, 54. Hon. James F. O’Connor. 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. jondn) bugppng L.C. Legislative Clerk, V.P. Vice President, D. SecretaryTo the Minority. C.C. Chief Clerk, J.C. Journal Clerk. R. Official Reporters. Sec, Secretary, A. Secretary to the Majority. Sgt. Sergeant at Arms. _P. Parliamentarian. SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER 1DU01882.46107) fi1009240(T et WN Oth JO O00 —_ OO 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 EpwiIN A. HALSEY, Secretary LesuE L. BIFFLE, Secretary for the Majority WALL DOXEY, Sergeant at Arms CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority JoHN C. CROCKETT, Chief Clerk REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Chaplain . Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. 25. Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massachu- 49. Thomas, John, Idaho. 74. Ball, Joseph H., Minnesota. . Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. setts. 50. Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. 75. Hawkes, Albert W., New Jersey. . Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey. . White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. 51. Danaher, john A., Connecticut. 76. Willis, Raymond E., Indiana. . Johnson, Hiram W., California. . Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. 52. Reed, Clyde M., Kansas. 77. Butler, Hugh A., Nebraska. . Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. . Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. 53. Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. 78. Burton, Harold H., Ohio. . Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. . La Follette, Robert M., Jr., Wiscon- 54. Austin, Warren R., Vermont. 79. Brewster, Ralph O., Maine. . Capper, Arthur, Kansas. . sin. 55. Glass, Carter, Virginia. 80. Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. . McNary, Charles L., Oregon. . Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. 56. Connally, Tom, Texas. 1. Maloney, Francis, Connecticut. . Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. . Hayden, Carl, Arizona. 57. Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. 82. Chandler, Albert B., Kentucky. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. 58. Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri. 83. Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode . . . George, Walter F., Georgia. Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. Wagner, Robert F., New York. . Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. . Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas. . Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. . Overton, John H., Louisiana. 59. 60. 61. 62. Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. 84. 85. Island. Clark, D. Worth, Idaho. Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. . McCarran, Pat, Nevada. . Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. 63. Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. 86. Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. . Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina. . . Bone, Homer T., Washington. 64. Gillette, Guy M., Iowa. 87. Hill, Lister, Alabama. . Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana. . Russell, Richard B., Georgia. 65. Pepper, Claude, Florida. 88. Mead, James M., New York. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Guffey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. 66. Murray, James E., Montana. 89. Downey, Sheridan, California. . Andrews, Charles O., Florida. . Truman, Harry S., Missouri. 67. Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. 90. Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. . Lucas, Scott W., Illinois. . Aiken, George D., Vermont. . Langer, William, North Dakota. . Taft, Robert A., Ohio. . McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. . Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. . Wilson, George A., Iowa. . Buck, C. Douglass, Delaware. . Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. 68. 69. 70. 71. Wallgren, Mon ‘C., Washington. Murdock, Abe, Utah. Wherry, Kenneth S., Nebraska. Bushfield, Harlan J., South Dakota.’ 91. 92. 93. 94. Tunnell, James M., Delaware. O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. Scrugham, James G., Nevada. Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. . Holman, Rufus C., Oregon. . Revercomb, Chapman, West Virginia. 72. Moore, E. H., Oklahoma. 95. Eastland, James O., Mississippi. . Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. . Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. 73. Robertson, Edward V., Wyoming. 96. McClellan, John L., Arkansas. €6¢ burping 10720) ty STAINS Se w . Aiken, George D., Vermont. 51. Danaher, John A., Connecticut. 19. Lucas, Scott W ., Illinois. . Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. . Andrews, Charles O., Florida. . Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. . Maloney, Francis, Connecticut. . Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. \ . Austin, Warren R., Vermont. . Downey, Sheridan, California. . Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. . Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. . Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. . Eastland, James O., Mississippi. . McCarran, Pat, Nevada. . Taft, Robert A., Ohio. . Ball, Joseph H., Minnesota. . Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. . -McClellan, John L., Arkansas. . Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. . Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. . Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. . McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. . Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. . Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey. . George, Walter F., Georgia. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . Thomas, John, Idaho. . Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. . Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. . McNary, Charles L., Oregon. . Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. . Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. . Gillette, Guy M., Iowa. . Mead, James M., New York. . Truman, Harry S., Missouri. . Bone, Homer T., Washington. . Glass, Carter, Virginia. . Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. . Tunnell, James M., Delaware. . Brewster, Ralph O., Maine. . Green, Theodore Francis, RhodeIsland. . Moore, E. H., Oklahoma. . Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. . Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. . Gufiey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. . Murdock, Abe, Utah. . Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. . Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. . Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. . Murray, James E., Montana. . Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana. . Buck, C. Douglass, Delaware. . Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. . Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. . Wagner, Robert F., New York. . Burton, Harold H., Ohio. . Hawkes, Albert W., New Jersey. . O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. . Wallgren, Mon C., Washington. . Bushfield, Harlan J., South Dakota. . Hayden, Carl, Arizona. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. . Butler, Hugh A., Nebraska. . Hill, Lister, Alabama. . Overton, John H., Louisiana. . Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. . Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. . Holman, Rufus C., Oregon. . Pepper, Claude, Florida. . Wherry, Kenneth S., Nebraska. . Capper, Arthur, Kansas. . Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. . Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. . White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. . Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas. otf ohnson, Hiram W., California. . Reed, Clyde M., Kansas. . Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. . Chandler, Albert B., Kentucky. . Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. . Revercomb, Chapman, West Virginia. . Willis, Raymond E., Indiana. . Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. . La Follette, Robert M., Jr., Wisconsin. . Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina. . Wilson, George A., Iowa. . Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri. . Langer, William, North Dakota. . Robertson, Edward V., Wyoming. . Clark, D. Worth, Idaho. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massa-. Russell, Richard B., Georgia. . Connally, Tom, Texas. chusetts. . Scrugham, James G., Nevada. - ONIATIOL TOLIIVO 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 : ‘WALL DOXEY, Sergeant at Arms CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority JOHN C. CROCKETT, Chief Clerk REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Chaplain G6C ROOMS AND TELEPHONES SENATORS [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol A tional 3120] exchange—N Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location ATREN Sota waits 358 | 1179 ANDREWS. _.levucmnn- 355 870 AUSTIN. atvdias 311 811 BAILEY oo ines 353 812 107 | 1206 217 846 tion. 245 813 205 151 Majority Leader__.________ Tdbrary coc cardcoon in 127 877 Pensions: oso. 329 177 Patents... anal. BREWSTER. eevee 248 876 BRIDGES... buenas 145 1225 111 950 255 857 125 175 BUSHFIELD. ivan 452 107 BUTLER. oa. namin 413 896 BYRD a ia saan 209 115 206 855 253 193 CHANDLER. 211 966 CHAVEZ... on 204 | 1201 CLARK (Idaho)_..__... 244 44 CLARE (Mo.)--covaun 361 875 Interoceanic Canals_______ CONNALLY. ova 453 969 Foreign Relations_________ 359 947 307 893 252 | 1142 304 | 1129 345 815 455 879 342 817 404 836 121 168 315 182 Appropriations_.__________ 321 162 Privileges and Elections __ 429 165 Mines and Mining________ 241 917 313 989 352 189 131 882 Printing roy Dearbornon 441 831 Expenditures in the Ex- ecutive Departments. 348 178 JoHNSON (Calif.)__.__ Old building, ground floor, northwest corner. a rr ST TE 298 Congressional Directory - SENATORS—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location JorNsoN (Colo.).____._ 7 Lo $8 ESR boned aes es ae al a a Se SE a a KNGORE. =. 105 A ee a Slee AE a ee) TA FOLLETTE. _... 254 PE ee aR Le I Ce el SN ES TANGER... 462 8 a RE ee a a a EODGE. aoaha 141 LY A EE Se Se A RR on SAN Se ae Sn i BUGAS. =o 428 930 Audit and Controle the | nr i oo ts me rp Contingent Expenses of the Senate. MCcCARRAN-........- 409 976 | District of Columbia______ Senate floor, east side____._____ McCILELIAN. ..... 437 EeRe Ee ei Ae LR Ee MCFARLAND _....__.. 262 A ae RR Rl mate EIR ret ne MEEKFLLAR aon 221 191 | Post . Offices and Post | Senate floor, southeast corner. Roads. : MCNARY =... 333 80 | Minority Leader__________ Gallery floor, west side________ MALONEY... oni. 354 196°) Publie--Bujldingg and oo = = St CS nao aems Grounds. MAYBANE = 454 BD a aa Se a Al da Sl Sen ee MEAD 360 bee ES a Le Ba eh CE Ss el a eB MILLIEIN. .o a lohoe 341 RAEe Ln SINE J Sgr LN Ee MOORE. olan 229 : En EE ea a lL Ea ST SL Ses See Se Sa ee Se MURDOCK... eins 447 EB a so iit A ERE Is 1 ns hn SS SUL MURRAY: Co... 432 aI LS CA er SR dod lle or on Ss NTE es 332 a a men a rat a Dl rw OIDANIEL cians 231 Elm Bo te SR ee Ne SE Bes SR i O’MAHONEY.. .._..... 232 Rs eS aie Lp Sk SM a FC OVERTON. 458 07 Manufactures. —= ane a a er i PEPPER... iia 337 RE a ERNE SE FE Sy RE BIE pny RE RADCLIFFE. .c.o- onan 133 AB har i stim ram Ee ee eR i Rd SE ENT AA REED aa nas 423 ABE nn i TE em won Si i oe Re hE REVERCOMB. ._._._.. 344 Ol | a ar aE a a REYNOLDS.....ocaaa-. 124 1154 | Military Affairs. __.._._..___ Senate floor, northwest corner. ROBERTSON... on... 260 a I a RUSSELL, i ov. 410 S07. Tmamigration os ee eT SCRUGHAM _______.._. 459 aan eha ee a SHIBSTEAD. occa 460 or PR Pe Le SE NE Le SL SN Re Sed ae SMITH io ccaiiinninie 325 183 | Acriculture and Porestry. (0. i. ao sO STEWART: ooo itl 259 LN ae a Re ela ne UL EE he TR I Sl CO eka, PARTS. ass 448 LE RR SS CR CR Sn ie, a ee Rei el a TrOMAS (Idaho)___.__ 443 Be a a Ee aT THOMAS (Okla) ._____ 326 807: Indiap-Aflaivg. 50 fo lem se a THOMAS (Utah) __.____ 442 993 | Education and Labor_____ Ground floor, southwest corner. OBEY. 0 viol A ET RR ee a ee Ee es PRUMAN ooo 240 BI se eeeaE EE ee TUNNEL... cco 347 a a ode Bt Bec BS SES lS Se ee IRYDINGS oe os 227 199 | Territories and Insular | Gallery floor, southeast corner. Affairs. VANDENBERG.___..._. 139 O08: en a are Sa A a a VAN-Nuys.........0. 405 818: Indielayy 0 Lor Ground floor, northwest corner. WAGNER... co. 2 226 960-1 Banking and'Ourrency-|o sod 8 or a WALLGREN 444 RE ha PE Ba San Cr nn a ATSIC 215 166 Naval Affairs = ~~ {oto dor mesg = WHEELER... -.. 421 1137 | Interstate Commerce. .____ Gallery floor, west side________ WHERRY. ioe EE Br Rab Ed A Se a A TS I eee WHITE: 417 A Se LT ed TR Sie eS Tn al Winey: 427 EE CR NSE aL al SO Se Se a WILLIS... 411 aE Tee WILSON-oo... uu 362 Emrr a I a CS ad | Rooms and Telephones 299 REPRESENTATIVES [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol A tional 3120] exchange—N | Office building ’ Capitol Name Chairmanship | Room | Phone Location Phone A | ABERNETHY. oo 1626 pL HA a Se SC RE Cele Se RAR ne i Re | AVENIN 1234 sm mn ge re Re] me em Et POE ST Et ArEN (Ea). 0. 0 1414 { 2 census SE ee a es ee ee el be ANDERSEN (MINnY ol ame ai a nl ee ee, ANDERSON (Calif)... 336: A08T lone aor nce nenonaniren nnn natn Prin brn doesent pase reat Eo io os wares ANDERSON (N. Mex.).| 1023 ft RS DN SI eR eB eR RE SR ANDRESEN (Minn.)._| 1533 8 ren aera LE CaM ARR SER ET te: FIRE Re ls eR eles am ANDREWS. oo ios 1109 OL ee A ee a A LC Re ANGELL. 1330 7d PE Re Dr NST Ce] Br Le ee en i ARENDS. oc 1024 pt Re Sg en A IR bd EN SE Ce I IE Se tn ARNOLD ec inmtnm 344 7G Pa ara ET Eee SE Rl re Sr et AVUCHINCLOSS ......... 140 a ie Nr ed BALDWIN (Md.)._..__ 409 YL BR i PR CL I ER me RE i Se ae re BALDWIN (N. Y.)_._.| 234 DR eR SR BERS SER Sse i eS en 0 \ BARDEN... Coan 1536 { i Edueation -Loria as la a ae ee | BABBETT. ooo ueeeann TE Ra eae SAR, In SE Se Rea ee i BARRY: 1327 FET pa Se en BRR cu a ian Sere 0 BATES (Ky). a 302 em a dh a a a ea BATES (Mass.) . ocee--+E) ai FE ee EP A ESR Lee Ree Ri BRAT as reaain 329 ALE tase en SO Say (Aa TR RRR aT a BECKWORTH..__ ooo. 1609 U4 Pee Sls le SRR Pe Bt Were bu Ral Le BELY ar nate { > oo } tnsutar E3ITSECC Mma ade al FCs eC Le ie SSR ER Sel PE 3 BENDER.a 355 i RES ee I a I PE SS TU I hm ee SE BENNETT (Mich.)._...| 1237 ot i Ll i eh BENNETT (MO.) 1037 2 i ae SASL OS on SE IR Sh ge Ls SR Biswop: oro0: ow 1207 AB NE] ) BLACENEY.. Si i. 1218 [28 Ee ER | De ee en I a a Siasi { 217 578 Bn Marine and } Es 219 579 Fisheries. Sa Se Sle Re BLOOM carnihasmnrnees 1235 { 7m Foreign Affairs... ___._. Gallery floor, west corridor_ __|230, 560 BOLTON ccanicranen 458 F110 Pe cle Sitieyem i min Seppe ig As SOAS SOE ali ci BLT BONNER oie eiimnn= 502 JEL SRI Sl en Cae ee Ee ne ad Ta tT BOREN cit nit 1337 ts hme es me A Re ee rt eb | ep © 412 1332 BOYRIN. ori onl { 416 | 1071 patents EEE Se Sone el [Ea opin el sis PERT LR Be BRADLEY (Mich.).___| 1339 by west der NA SL Sa A Sa ee ee Ea a BRADLEY (P3.).......-205 {1 vid epee Sea CIR SSR SE Le Cee I a a BRemm... ooo 2 fT ST LU ehee SREaE sot BROOKS. -oocnnnien 080 = tla al a SR SE a Se re a a BROWN (G8.) oo cceee 257 SO ER a 8 Se EO ae Ee eR aa | BrowN (Ohio): | M08) ms lr oe BRYSON aan 1209 Br ie mS i A mH rd Ee hr Re BUCKLEY oii { 143 Lous fpensions.. 428 fn RH Rs re a ee a en ET BUFFET nmeram 457 bo! el Re commeieier ar te Ce LO Sl le a SR ES Se i FER BULWINELE. e.... 1313 Bn Ei dt es | SA A er a) se A 215 793 BURCH: bis { 606 as fies 2nd. Post } i ee 670 : * BURCHILL--ota. 1006 Fo Ree So Sal A Cay BI ee Ee ais pest BURDICE. =... eeenie 444 BL re a a | i en BE RE Hh i er NE BURGIN.. ec vrics 107 FE RRR INE Cre TER eR NR A LV Rl i Te BUSBEY _=..o.C. 309 Sh Ee ee eel REPEL SI es SHR BUTLER. ote 116 LE EO I A RE fe a SN SB SRS lh LET { BY RN: cc neeirreses 1723 LEE RS RN ee REE I ECR ERE Ne ee 1 CAND. cnnercrnanns: 250 Re Se a I A eS as I aS 300 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone CANFIRLD. =: oo 222 TE ls I Lh ol co Ce Ll or CANNON (Fla)_._____ 1329 OD a rh nie fem ee i de Ge SE ee CANNON (Mo.).._.___ 1714 731 | Appropriations__._____.___ House floor, west corridor_____ 215, 353 CAPOZZOLT. =... 1416 A Ee res ST i nt el ENE LR Be pT le Ba CARLSON. --i.0 259 Yi Be pr Sa Cm Ee Ses Se RS si a SL Lem er ee CARSON... 452 LE DL er Sn CARTER... 1114 files of ea a el RS SS RRs Been peas Se a ee LOE iy Case. ooo 1034 A I ea a ea MA Ng GRIER Cc 1524 LE NR ee et Se CHAPMAN. =. oo 1232 OR Ee a ee a Cat ei amma ida a an CHENOWETH. ________ 218 A An a ns nada ten Soa ret el PR Re CHIPERFIELD _________ 1713 TeBR a LR LG ee Sr Cae CHURCH...) 1520 out Bore De abies i DURE Rant 1 Soda of ERR Li a te CLARK. oon 1236 >1b Se ean SH DNR I SES Se Ra ren LL Bl CLASON. V2 vet 1525 aah ie BE A RR ra Ba CLEVENGER... ....-. 305 vag Lan Like eant ins SOs eee Sa a BS ni COCHRAN. unseen funni Accounts. =. isi uiianl Ground floor, main corridor___|242, 264 COFFEE. ia ae 1608 fe De Se ee Sd Se a es a Ra Ena COLE MO.) aaa 342 BL cere a es ra Lg eae a vee sab Le LE Jee Core(N. Y)-oaiil 1528 Jc aneasaies se Lan nae inal Sp de nea ae a COLMBR =o oot 1228 od ae ee mae ree BES RS ee COMPION.Z... ood 105 1 aaa a COOLEY: cuss sno 203 Cyan Mabe Seal dase re a ee Raa fei COOPER: inion 1107 667 a ana a en SE a SR COSTELLO. aa 1421 HL Ee ST Ros bo Be i De See NR Tan COURTNEY oo. 1319 Ly Et A SI Py Se a ES renee SL SR vis COT enn 1104 1H elie Emel ee ES IE Ss Re | CRAVENS___ccmane 1519 JEN fl ele Ce AS a re ER SEI I BL BE Ee CRAWFORD ___ ccc 1123 BD EE ei dn i a mal dad dr a tk a SS Sr ek CREAY. a oad 1541 ft SA eS Ss Rs ens a ain. sal etal Dia SR SnD naaiie 0 CROSSER: SCs ooo 1130 Lv Bee a A wae ELL a Re SN Se Sa ae COLemN 1305 i a CULLEN har ns a a a ee Ground floor, room 70_......__ 261 CUNNINGHAM. __.___ 1028 HL EIR Sl Ca RL RE a ee ae CURLEY = 1716 ABO a mani a a PE ee CURmS: 1508 HER eR eR a Ee ee D’ALESANDRO..___._. 1210 BOB er a a ey me a ee DAVIS =n ii 1321 Eh Las onder caer seine ania Soul HI ee eee DAWSON... 117 a a Rr a was dae A aE DAY. ia 125 Ee Ln TO sey LITA SO a ee Be DELANEY: oo 1535 aaLar a ae ae PEWEY: oats 1507 ia a a a a es ha pense | | i pmmtemton wt mT 446 456 ralization. DIES oe 1121 dite Pasnelese Sele iei Jiiee ta ll Gl Dn Cassin nin een PIEWEG.cocaaiiesis 319 A ire da Rea ne DIMOND einen 455 617 | aaa Eoin Re er SA Ena DINGELL: oi 1110 Ly BES Se a aE rn a or EA rf der He DIRRSEN. oeeea a 209 CHL Eee Subtle SS Pie Se Cen Vl SS Re DIBNEY: soa 1112 Lyle ahh ederu homie DIG ee SaasEee i DYER 1211 ve I ET Ce PT WSR E rR on el el Sell eSB DOMENGEAUX.________ = JBtections LOR DlReR i SEAN a DONDERO. ea 204 1 Petes arte hin SINE Sens SINS NEE I TO DOUGHTON. ..........--I ways and Means. . im ew ee PE 219 PDOUGTAS oo 1222 482 SE pe Beet DREWRY .ouoeial 1124 U1 Mee Toa BE Sem Sgn Ret | ere ls SSR DURHAM... oo... 1217 511 Name DWORSHAK ce... BamON in EBERHARTER cee BRIADR. a aieaes PTI at sins BILLS ee ania ELLISON... ccccanne ELLSWORTH... .......-BME. io BLSTON cis ENGEL at a FARRINGTON. cece Pays o-oo oo PRIGHAN. aa. FELIOWS FENTON = =. FERNANDEZ... _.______ 1H RE re eR Se PISHER -ooo EIZPATRICE =. -_...:_ FLANNAGAN cco. FOGARTY: oi FOLGER =... BORAND. 0. PORD ci mais FULBRIGHT ccna YorLMER: oi FURLONG... GAL GALLAGHER. ..cceun-. GAMBLE. «oi GATHINGS. aces GAVAGAN GAVIN. Silat GEARHART. -oo eueawm-RERIACH vei vain GIHSON. =o GIFFORD. ce GILCHRIST: kane CGULEITE. aaa. GILLI GOODWIN. -vee ee QRORDON-.=. .-oucas CORE. ves QoBSRT. GoSsErTT. = =o GRATIAM oo GRRANGER: ous GRANT (Ala)... ___ GRANT (nd). oo: GEEEN. ..-ne cnen GREGORY... ccmecne-GRIFFITHS. nue GROSS. = a QRUIER.. ion Rooms and Telephones REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol a Chairmanship Room [Phone Location Phone 1323 LR See LE SR ee Le Da OS esi a 1229 4 EERO See Eee Lt SR me Be Sr 1622 ien je ee ee Sad Se en Li RE 1605 PT SE A Se wh nS ER Dee ANN CL Ss cn de EE ET on 1381 | Disposition of Brsuitval SR PRCE Be Se 1326 Papers. 141 F130. fo a OB pa LS LR | Lr CR he LS pe 103 AOS: | aa Ss aa PR 1631 Fi ES SR i J whe dm ma SE SS em AR 348 B20 fi cc ce Sn ea mane St he re Bm ARE wa aa ER A 1717 Ml i ii ren RD me pr ST MSR 1430 BR RE rN IL Bl wh erin i pe sR mn md SH Ee LE 118 A700 one asia i ae SS Sa ans aan ti aa Ale el 102 B00 fic cai ae RR a ei Cd me wie den Aa sda mal Se TE a es 415 ES BS Pe BC ee a] LS MRA Ce ee RSL Set SE 221 irs 58 BT Sal SA Hts SEL, J Se SLT 0 300 ro anne ia tants Er Te sr an Re a 1020 HL hn Ca era Lae 8 BR ee CE 1424 S508 [=== Ee RA a ES i ee a LL 106 Nr Ne pe ee | est Re Se Ce rar 1233 p11 BH ELE pM, Se EX LL emo Ne fe a Je . 1331 LY | 18 Ean, mes pa mn epee Bane) see MS ERIE Senge be. Tl ee 1515 1073 i. amwd RS wna SH 242 711 LS Ee MT i a SE Rie eS nO rp HE 1120 7S Ba ES Le a Ce dn Ll en Le A a HE 320 1 nH SA RRSARR a SE Rar an Be re RR A Re er LT 206 I RS SO er Se Re SE 1324 { Agricutture ro aE en Nh am Ae 323 Cv RL RASre Es Er SIL SR br Ss as La Ln 425 YELLS EEE Ss param pea Ll een Be DOE SE A i FS 121 AB cs mmm ma Bf re ee A OE 1032 Fs Se Se nie Li SE RE re a 3027611328 | niin ian hie a — ih bar CII. or nmin seh mmm mm E nk msn men tS ae (em mma 1629 1 Cl Ee SON eS LR De I SN Bl 1133 7: A 0 pel Et LO San CS nde EE 1119 YE! RRR SOR Ren A Le BE BL aE a BU OD sae ama aan aan re a a ds aa aaa S| TA 1208 LH SE ee Re] RL TL el SE eee 1705 Bl en a amma Sa Ee She Bm aa as som A At A me i Sp i 1712 AO er as em a a ad ie on Re 1522 Or sc ai ds rn Se a A en I 438 EL Rg I ee Ee EE LD ee i SC bon lh LVL 1618 OD es a a a a 401 OO de RR a SL a i sad Re a SEE TRI AER 220 O72 Voted san Side I Sm A i el i 112 734 | Blections N02. ovina ison ly i on er es 1628 EB OR SO a Tm SL BE me A SA LS Be et LS 1418 A0BL i arr eRe Ae et em ae re | 1721 dE fo Le ie cls AR I Ant Le id Ce UL rd by Ra tn hen SL a dl vn lt 1434 { ot I rerritories SRSA RS, LRT = Ne 1419 LE Ee a BE Ei i SNL Ln eC 312 OT ae a nL ee 1610 1 LE RR i at ne en Ss GD DR 201 {TH SESE > 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 21 302 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office Name Ce Room GWYNNE. «ooo 1441 HAGEN. .. —......-1620 HARE ienr 1516 HALL, Edwin Arthur | 1008 HALL, Leonard W____| 1718 EAT LECR ce can oh 1007 HANCOCE. oo 1224 BARE 447 HARLESS. iota on 503 FPARNESS: oo. on) 1408 HARRIS (Ark.)___.__. 1503 HARRIS (Va)... 310 CARY 453 HARTLEY. 2...C.. 1724 BAYS. lea 303 HEBERT C= £0. 340 HEFFERNAN. _________ 411 HEIDINGER -..... 0... 357 HENDRICKS... 1115 HERTER 441 HESS. 0 1529 LE RR 1318 HINSHAW. cers 1506 HORBI oc ho 1131 HOCH, in 352 HOXVEN =. nin 138 HOFFMAN. eave 1204 HOUIEIRLD. i...) 408 HoLMES (Mass.)..___ 1108 HormEs (Wash.)_____ 1220 HOoPR: oi 1314 HORAN. ccna 436 HOWELL: .. . 0] 1740 FEULL oo on 403 TZAC 240 JACKSON =o. ooo of 1422 JARMAN. o_o JEETREY. 5.oi aia. 1616 JENKINS. -cori 1128 JENNINGS. ©. ....._._ 241 JENSERS: a 256 JOHNSON, Anton J____| 1630 JOHNSON, Calvin D___| 137 JORNSON, J. Leroy. [288 JomnsoN,LutherA-1208) Jonson, Lyndon Bo | 50418 JoHNsON, Ward. _____ 1308 JoHNSON (Ind.)...._. 1641 JOHNSON (OKla.)_.___ 1106 JONES. Co. lo. 1029 JONKMAN--= 1711 JUDD Es 426 KEAN. olan 1518 building Capitol — Chairmanship | Phone Location Phone A a ci a AE et a A NE er mE a Soe CUE EEN EO NR Se a i BBB LeBrun rae naa a ye hE Ps Se DL RE eS Vive Se TR Re al a ERS Ne SR cS ET a de SRR Be eee Le Re ER EL AIR KC ES Sl ashe Ol le tm Ew nee nh Ha re ee fe ER i ap Cm Cr BIC aT en a er le ee [SRNR CSAS SIG TS ES Sec ee BD fm mi hee ee ee ee Ce Pa me I od sie SEE A tT a Se EE IR Se DR hs PRET Rs SR A mt orto dis dm dm ms Se Yat a Sma a mn Ee ee BT LL nn ER I RS LE SRR, Te el eR ERNE Lv Es RS A SR eR Er Tr UA ERR SNE Sei ela i Ne Qui ne En AOE as ta i a ps ao | Ble Ste dn SP TOBY Be bins Sram owes She Baan ee a as Js a SL SE Ly GEE | 6 nA i a ES GR i Be Lea LE SR Ol Be ee dep an ee A Me SI hy Ne LEE So Ae EPP Ls Co Te Tea ERR a Bye 1 RRA SES LL LL SR BS a ie ioe LT i IB ee rer ot Vn mre rn pe | i Ra Ad Pe ie ce An TL LT ef A REE CLR a CR rns SE LOL Slee Do CL Ra nite Re SD He TA TH RUE Me A te] oS nai a ale set alin 2dl O0 Tonn BBO Lt od ee es bn Pre chr pm SE ee en a re el ABB me eee ASE a EL NE To ee i Hr Te TR Re RL RR DS ae ee a LL 0 a Se a a rr anaes nA Ee AR ei eC DE SE a Bs ne ye es A LAE BERN lS PS I Set rE ERs BRS e HS LEY Aa ear BNE LL US pe ite ee Sy rH EA RENEE I a Ee SE Ha ONS Ce a Eee I rw en oe a a Le A dts a Ny a Sng BON aeeat nt NR CE See ae a i amen i ae a LA TH Tea eene Basement floor, main corridor. |750, 246 70 Po ECR es SE RR Cs re RO ENR ET Sg IEG Rae eR Bl CS SNS LIE Bane eiaadiinnn hi LT VATE RIE ae RL ea EO TS ey Se ee OE el LAC SE eI LD SIN Se Se ra aie ee G a ae LE ase ee I Re a be a SRE ES dda te et i dee be fr eae er SRE 20807. esp do |. fo. LS ae oA oemn oa Sa pT ; 1001 10. eo on ata Te na teen ee ee a CHER oa ease iL Sh ee ee CE ea Bi LA ES eee des Da] Se RR a eli ee Ly | pA OR Se Si ee SL a ei A le ee EE ne ee St Ee Ena A a I rn onde ea TTR ee abn Re OE Rhee Eee SE ry ARERRLE RN =~ Rooms and Telephones 303 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued | Office building Capitol Name rE ——— Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone Keen... EE Em eR eg pel fe I RILBURN Si 2 337 Hh REE Ae i ne mn Ap oe do Ste ER RIOUDAY ois 1513 HE neem eny sabe es Sell THRE BE See san ad) © RNG es A AT a a a rn Pa KINzZyR. ooo oa 1213 V7 TO pian neni SL RRO Sl i a Se Sa SE BRR Sa, Eh KIRWwAN. —......o ABIZt: OAT om mirein men em me mo ear ie ls Rr ri he Te DE tte KIEBERG. ol. 1315 F175 IA EE a A A Ast ld Ba BY A CCE IR ROA SUNIRY SL KEEN co La 1640 600: Earolled Bills. ci ee a Sl ee aaa OE KNUTSON. cole 1111 yi! 1 ESE Seeben i Lng nS gent of 0S HEE Se BT LL HUNEEL oes 459 JE ES tea Le ered ETRE Ep Se eee LAFOLLETTE /wvuese-324 [10 0 Eee a Se Tr era ry ERR en Be 0 BS BRR in Te LAMBERTSON._._.___-254 800: Erm eh a en ee LANDIS at 1016 7:11) FE fe Sa ea So le en LAM BE LSI BARE aes Eh BARES ar 1715 7 ES FR Ro a de sal SUSU] Be © gn to ERE eR To 0 Dt EO Priv 243 561 Jeans Buildings = and Er 245 | 1025 Grounds. 2h Soi Rs is Sea i LARCADE..-ovat 308 1 ETA el ate BL lyn Sete the pn RE fs Ea Lex { 1332 528 [a and Foreign | sir sinreiaaiatay 1334 221 Commerce. i Aes ESSERER LECOMPTE. ...cvvmenm-1709 pL Vi TE IIs drip porta oes 04 Loy BO Pens Se Le SRR Rear se ER be 2 LEFEVRE. ..cocaaiuan Pr hi oR TS SN rt ee 21 Se | a TR Ree SEE i LT EMER. aaa 1219 7 re Re ee Ti es Carre | Set UO lI al Re LR Leas. l 2 ny Jmvatia 3 iL TE peti) [i mR SAAS RR LR ad Ls LEWIS (Colo.)........ 404 FE LR AR Re ret BR Te ea ST LIVES a LEWIS (Ohio). ooooo__ 1118 1 ESE Rs a i fe Me IATLE] Raat feet eB ee 1a DE TCE i yak BES Ie he Se DB ie em nl lupow. 432 BD | aE en ae RED pr a a Re a mI (ELIE LYNCH so nin 229 80 Vo se A mr a en A ES dae oe MCCORD. rivera 104 1319 | = rm ae Le ease MCCORMACK. .ocoeea-1727 768 | Majority Floor Leader._._| Ground floor, west side__.__.__ 282, 499 MCCOWEN «ooo Belson Eo etl Sa GE ae 1221 629 . MeGEREE..-==: { 397 637 OMIA a es A ead os MCcGRANERY. 1225 OD i amma a mA A Ee re ee 5 me oN RE TY MCGREGOR... 17 Ey 2 PS RR AB] S08 CAA el ee MCKENZIE. 338 Lr EL ER sl i RE ee Died Ee Ee es MCLEAN. oii. 1729 LE BE fe SE Se St be ed | BE LSU SR LER Se ie ee McMILLAN... 252 yi] i nase aa leit ae Neesoanatll i Te Cees Ml obese SOME EER I a Hl me MCMURBRAY.........--325 BD | cr Eh al i a ae Eee ae en SEE ee eee Da MCWILLIAMS... 413 BOD [or nT waa mr | i Be Ba Sh Se A ra ee SY EE IVEAAS: es 427 FL Ee A Re Se ae DIR FRE oR on Sn SE pe ln SBC MADDEN... sey ammo ees Ce a aE MAGNUSON. cco ooomn 1710 11 PE Ce i Sen eae Ji Laie ¥ (MEE TIRE apn ein © [eT MAHON. cio 1212 EL Us NRRL Lr Spat Sh Sen ae MALONEY oi coeovinns 1039 [yd NT rit NE SIN] Lor met 0 3 LR SE Le Lee |e MANASCO.. Teen 1021 A le Ye MANSFIELD (Mont.)__ 136 000. a RR Rl mee ie a a MANSFIELD (Tex.)._._| 1304 i [Rivers And Haro dereni pr A Vr Ra MARCANTONIO________ 1722 A Oe RE he een |) SEER eae ee MARTIN (Iowa)_______ 1033 FE a Ee a IE aa a I TD MairmN*(Mass) lo = 1... Minority Floor Leader_.__| House floor, room 58__________ 262 MASOR aa 1117 Od a RS ER MAY: { in a hvitary Aas. os ee i LE am Re ee MERRIND..C 1238 BA nl ane ee MERROW... ave ho 1 EB BRET Se Te TE Sh ES RRR BL ee Be MICHENER. 1530 CTA TRS ae R eee eC Ie MLLER (Conn.)_____. 1018 ER Se ay IER HT SB IR ST CS Beli ee MIiLLER (Mo.)_...__.. 343 Te ST se TR einen Ce Sie sa eA eat i ] | ] i ) | | El SE | | | : i { { ] 2] 1 | > Name MILLER (Nebr.)...... MILLER (Pa)... ... NIELS le MONKIEWICZ _ _ oo. MONRONEY . ________._ MORRISON (La.)__.._.| MORRISON (N. C.)___| MOTD a MRBUE oe a MUNRDD MURDOCK... MURPHY MEBRAY (enn). MURRAY (Wis.)_____._ MYERS. NEWSOME... ........ NICHOLS: oo. NORMAN... ooo. NORRELL i. NORTON... O’BriEN (IN.). O’BrIEN (Mich.)..__. OBRIEN (N. Y.Y-.... QP OONROR. oo. ini OHARA... i. OK ONSEL. ..cccvenen- 5 O’LEARY...........---OINEAY.. tou OXPOOLB. 5. lous OUITAND cena ACY, oso al PAGAN: ii oar PATMAN. Z._.__..LL PATTON. Leet PETERSON (Fla.)..... PETERSON (Ga.)____.| PrEINER.. oo. PHILBIN oc. PHILLIPS: Toucai. PINTENGER.-ca. PLOESER. ooh ais PLUMLEY. boo... POAGE Celia POULSON xo... POWERS. S.-i PRACHP PRICE: A ieee PRIEST ane 0 BABAUD =e: BAMEY. > oo. or RAMSPECK... ......... RANDOLPH... coimn nv If RANKIN. .........o.cn Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone 101 sXe aeie Sle mites me ao CC Cet Ty a EOE Se ae , 1720 1 AR Sh Sena ee a] Bn a siete To Sed RL Sl Tn 1005 300 earRR haa Ee eC 1009 a enh Sa BER a a ae 1627 BO ae nS I REE a et alee 202 i Ee ee IE RT 1 en Seg LR Re i THT 1216 Eh Seder een a a PE Se pS Sl Sl | ed ET 1532 BY a aH teen) CBR a GRRE rn Th eh 424 rTER ep ee a 1206 BEA RR ses le ey a Le Te 540 B97. Memorials 7 oct HE a TER pe 120 BZ ARE a en Th RT eet ZO AOI a Pe TRE a ea 423 OO a re ul hl a REE i ee 1511 nC Re ee LT CN LE tl LEE Oe Sena ee 143 Be a a RE A ge 1004 na Tle steal ER BL Oe dr DHE Ss 119 LAs sent vn RRR LRG Be LN RE GB he BES nen i Tl 1427 vp A men TL SI OT Se i) ered 433 689 8 RE UT) SS EIR © NE © RL SO a a 1413 VA ge nea ase snail Lg Co Bn Le SERS ea LE 410 OM nT RR aE ee Re 127 "7 Dd PEs ees el be RU a foo nn fai Indian Affairs...__ Gallery floor, room 52____.____ 764, 465 1025 vel aS meas Mees es se il 110 SRR BH iG ela i I SR 439 ek salma Sein See Een a SUI ie OR RE Se i i 1231 762 || Expenditures in the Exec- 304 580 | utive. Departments. = [iC Ts8 Fr TF STITT TTT nn nena. 1404 7713 OI La (a SA) PR SR EL Nei Le TE 1230 B42 LILADIArY sae canine Jas SE BEAT a aa 145 YE SE Re SS ee I be SO Sl aa sm Bnd 1, 1726 SILER BE se ES CH aR i OF HE Sy 437 bre alma ee LEE Aol Cai ae al een a Lp piled Ls 1035 £7 vd Sent ee RC RS Ie SIRE LR ee Re a Se 1026 2 ed re Ne RRR en 1 tReetLp I 4 [pubic 1 Ce Saeed Sales ks De nt A Di 1501 oa Fetections I ea | SE Rl ea sn 1514 2bot I ONCE a Ee enteral IIE HS es Bae EI ele Ea 420 7 Rs A SA Je EE RR Rr TV 239 7] ET et EON SEE SC I Sh 8 See RT 4 TURE BAL ee SEA PS ESR | es i nk BS van oo VD 1409 DB i ER a ae A RE 402 By a Cs a mR a de ee ALL RE 1526 {HE RGN SE ae EIR 1 1 10 Tr oh DUN VE Wi ed A aE EOE gn Cg 236 BE a mb eh ng aE brs Cal SHE BL 1440 AE IAN RIES Sa a eC She Se LL te es CUA a aR Ra i Lea ne alate Cea rn ee 434 HH Bl Sr Sa ei Sr ee 1 RG ne I SE ae Ab Ta 1322 LE SER eT SSO i Re a SS Bn See an 1227 11 ARNO CEA ER SE nan LUI TO a a UE Se DR ERI SSR | 505 BBO a a an EEO SRG, 246 209. | Civil Service ....--..--... Gallery floor, west corridor___ (704, 274 330 652 | 604-1 Districbof. Columbia... Cf i ait | 345 | 279 356 | 336{|World War Veterans’ { 358 758 Legislation. 1} Err nas i Rema EE Side Led DR Rooms and Telephones REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone Ravan ads a SPER. at ig floor, rooms 19 and 20. _ 204 House floor, room 60________ -460 REECE. ia 1129 I oT er eI ne Ne CN Eh SU Rt D0 Se CO ME Le BE eh OE Rep (A)... cil. 321 ETS BRS RC er a fet GRRE | fo Ce Og pn fie LL pt Oe REED'(N. Y.).. ooo: 1202 BO eS aa I ee ee a Revs. mT See FoR Si ep Phonan ADae nl Ln ee RICHARDS. cera 1502 BS ad ree rp SE LRG ey et 3 Wee pe SEL Se RIVERS. ooo ol 1417 BAG i ia ar nn RR | RE mA Ee Ere SS EB Biztey. aon 1523 OB | aE rr prem na YS SS ts rr a EA ROBERTSON (Va.).__.| 450 73 PE RRS ne eSB Shri a RIN Se EE Sen 1428 727 ROBINSON (Utah) ____ { 1012 766 fronds a BL Sn La ll Tn ROBSION (Ky.)--._--253 i TH ee ie ERI CT ee et ie Ln SE TI ee EEL nT ROCEWELL........-= 233 FLY EE RI SER ee SN] I cle Cpe eS SUE Cn Ie RODGERS (Pa.)._____. 110 ABT ie a TY A i A er ROGERS (Calif.) _.____ 506 01g. oeSe ed no ee ROGERS (Mass.)-.___ 1725 eH EC an Hl lites le eee mi ape Re Le EDS ROHRBOUGH._ ________ 435 FBT. fori smn nn mie iE Ams mies me iL fine mi a we ve we ow Sw mm SEE ETS ROLPH:.. iano 108 7 Be SE Ree a RS i Ss IEE BT En ROWAN olia 111 v1 Ee mia he ae SR on a SI ps Sa Slee Se i DLL ne ROWE. coisiciicen 144 iC rr nn mmm mn ww mb wm mf a SE oe Ene Sree nes = oy BUSSPLL... ocd 1509 bs RE an Be ASS a MERI TR LGR na TT SABATH Co ian 1136 BIS -Rules: ieee Gallery floor, east corridor. ___|276, 308 SADOWSEY. onan 1320 FLY a So sam, Ld Re Sm Su ale USSR SENS sn POE La SASSCER:. ooo r 456 BB fe a a a El a SATTERFIELD--——---_ 207 7 I ES ee SE Sl Se Se Ca TE a BERR SE SLE SAUTHORF.. —---.-1328 ABT ec a mn na a ER SR dr se ee aE A TE CE SCANION..-ooo ni 422 S18 aise ane a as fea EE a eT CT a SCHIFFLER.. occa 1038 B12 [ona imma mmm wn mm nm mt {wm te SE ee ee pr we Ele TEAR vA 1534 CY I ee SE i I ee in a Ee Se SCHWABE. ...coo oo. 334 AB ee an Set me fr HE wR HB SE | Ee So SCOTT: 451 OA ied Cae alin sd et [de i BEE Lh am a Da A Ee SHAVER: ora 1808 ROS i ae a aaa OT SHEPPARD... 258 YL ert ee ee aE Sey Ie OR al en Rs I SHERIDAN. -cone Zono. 131 LE Een Se de En ll FH aL pon Ae ER Se LE Te SHORT... iiaaina 1239 7: LR eee TE Sa ee Vi SR ed BEC Sl Oe Se EE SIRES Ca 1022 BE ae a SiMPSON (Tl)... 135 AB i hr in Se Ei Vo Ala mr mB Ee nn Er Er mere ne a EEE SiMPsON (Pa.) 1405 T08: lis i dren ae i | REE Ln HE enh ne ap eT SE SLAUGHTER. ___. 126 BT a te i a ed BI Sa I Le ihe wea SMITH (Maine) -...__ bh fd PP 1 BE See ae EE ASR Si i Dl Ce Hr te Smita (Ohio) -._-__. 341 BL fe aia re a ig | Em a A RE bd Sn Em en Ea PT Ea a Sy (Va): oo 301 GIT Eee roe Sete Sle BRE ey i WB Cra er ni dE ee Smita (W.Va) ...__. 1401 525-4 Minesand Mining. Fr ir aan SMITH (Wis) oo. 442 yA ERIE SNE See CLI Bp, Clea Ln SNYDER... ia 1013 1 ei Se SS In pee nl el SHER a at Br SSR i CHE Tons { 109 224 Jone Weights, and } | Tretia ries 115 441 Measures. es abl eaeer a SPARKMAN. ooo ______ 1 be Eom 1 Se SE A St eg J ora eae MR ci TE TH ER SPENCE...= ik: 1307 8 1 Ey Se re Rn PR pen Ci Les me 0 OI dale SPRINGER..._.. 1527 AEN Le en a a Sa Li Sl Shem ne eR TT Te | STANLEY oo 235 rtp 8 ne UD wna CRE Ss Se tS LIT eS SIRS Ea LT Ee ET| STARNES. Los 1505 fi 1 Me TERR SR EL Sr EE NO Lp EE Sa des mea le HS i | STEAGALL icone 1301 213 |-Bankingand Currency... |... oni oh aoe oto| STEARNS. 00. iis Ig er BL En eae De GR SEE a i a SERS SS a | STEFAN... 1017 BOB ts a I i a a a a re me ame ra SE OD STEVENSON. oc ccmeeoo 1423 rh Er pr SRE Se i dard BE Som A bn OCS nll Sa STEWART wots ior) 123 i Ee Se A Ti en Cite Len Seer RS ES ea STOCEMAN.. .C.o-__2 407 Ly aaa CE RO Sans IE a Bene PE Ce ER Ra i i SULLIVAN. o-oo. 124 Ls EE El Ce SE aie de pe Se SRL Hei SE SUMNER (TIl.)._.__.__. 216 TD mr a as re ra i a 306 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name ma ———— Chairmanship Room | Phone Location SUMNERS (Tex.)__._. a ls BAloay er Ground floor, room 71___._____ SUNDSTROM._ _ _.__.___. 1607 AO a Ba ei eh A a Ea IPABER. oo on 1126 SEI NS Ye Se aT TRALBOT. iio omicn im 331 eRe A AT GLC pn Re Ee a, JMLE Se a ie 1420 AAO as reas Ss es SR ro EE sg Ta TARVER onion 1134 711 Td NR AR DL SE oe TRE Te AR RAYIOR «asd 1116 rh on Se SESS Cae. Se D0 Sa SS DTI RHIC LS THOMAS (N. J.) ooo. 318 O00 ES nas a A de ad i maa or LB en THOMAS (Tex.)__.... 212 B02 ic iis nt aa RE SE a LR ED THOMASON. _____..__.. 1730 BO eaa a Le eR ES Rr aE de PIBBOTT Ci vs 1431 esini ne Aha eR aE ee ROLAN ris 1226 Clr Or eh ll le Gea Sat a a LE eS NR PR OWEL ooo 142 UR ea i ev BT Pa So Sng eal IDR ee CGE A a Re TREADWAY.. oii... 1436 A En le CN SNE Ske Jaa Let a SR eC Re ST RIT TROUTMAN. _......... 211 008 be aa a EON FL SR he i TE a IVAN ZANDT... 237 BOG a a I ARE TE VINCENT.... 1432 HT eR Sn Salr eS SR Re CI Se VINSON. coavionnimniminn 25 Ivaval Aalrs a se VOORHIS. =a > 501 AO ce aa a a aL es NN ORYS Ce nips 460 OT rr a a ia a a aa VORSELL tot.our 133 31 HE men ER I 2 Lk 8 Be Ee EA ES no Eo ‘WADSWORTH. _____.__ 1031 158 er Se SAS ae hl Uy SE 6 7 fea A WALTER: 349 AT a te BO ar a WARD. oo ois 1317 Pt i Re ER a IT IS eR Rt WASIELEWSKI.__.____ 1223 37 SE Eat Die re ples Ca el Se SO Sa Se Ee WHRAVER: 0S 1125 et Ee nade) ole Re me eh (gS ee SR a SS i WEICHEL oie inns 339 A a ST Re Sada bt SERN WEISS: oo 419 4 Eh ie eee Te Re lew eet CT UT et TRS Re WELCH. i 1127 a eh WERE: Sco oi 1019 BOB a a a gr re Re ie ee Te Wear. 1521 pea WHEAT. ot 1407 ES eee ee ee He SS RS le a LS te WHELCHEL-. ._...... SE EE A Seen Ie alle ese EE et es hl Ten SE Vas 351 780 Fi and Reclama-Haid dds 353 676 tion. TE lets WHITTEN. ee 1215 en Se ae dl Se IS es SR ee WHITTINGTON. _...___ { a ae F000 ON SR ee eS Sa Ba i ea WICKERSHAM . ________ 1316 BL Ei ra ira rar Re SESE ir a A A a De WIGGLESWORTH.______ 1728 7 a SR erate Le et NE LS es Jah ie GS WILTEY noone 134 HE Ses sees eae aE i De i Ser ea SEE a RE WILSON. io minimis 1338 YE ER Re Ce Si el aR SOLER I SRR Re er a WINSTEAD: -oe 322 HS DSRS AR Sey se ine) ie LE ame kl opi ais Sn SE NO OF Li Te WINTER: -.-.i. 130 le re i a moran awe mt Pa EA ism A a Be Lo WOLCOTT is 1132 3 BL Cae Sh Ren i I Re a a fe Go ee LS ne a WOLFENDEN_ ___.__.. 1113 STAR Ee LL ONE Ls Se le Cl Sa aC WOLVERTON _ _..._... 251 I i ame i Be Tl lo Ro Aen A ea 2 DN WOODRUEF.. .. ... 1103 ral A Ste LS Pe LRA Se lh HR Se ST eR Sl i WOODRUM i. a ne sila ani asco r io wdm aan Gallery floor, west corridor.__ 523 || Election of President, WOBLEY..............-1015 1419 | Vice President, ete. | Esa Ct aR i ew 4 WRIGHT nese 1010 CR ORR Lh Rl Sea SAS i i Sp eh al Un SOM re | i! ZIMMERMAN _ ooo. 1540 558 | TN A Ao Rt A Ro mia mts ros li Pe i 14 i i i | li if i i Hi MEMBERS OF THE CABINET 308 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, 1913-20; 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. Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the United States Army and Novy Admiral William D. Leahy. 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 Country Clubs. Residence, 3106 Thirty-fourth Street. STEPHEN EARLY, born, Crozet, Va., August 27, 1889; lieutenant colonel Infantry, A. E. F., married; Washington staff United Press Associations, 1908-13; Washington 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. 309 / | 310 Congressional Directory EXECUTIVE OFFICE Personal secretary.—Grace G. Tully, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. 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; Lauchlin Currie, 4863 Potomac Avenue; Lowell Mellett, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va.; David K. Niles, Carlton Hotel; James M. Barnes; Jonathan W. Daniels, 3404 Garfield Street. | Special assistant to the President.—Harry L. Hopkins, Washington, D. C. Special executive assistant.— Eugene Casey, Gaithersburg, Md. : LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT F (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 1414) Liaison officer.— William H. McReynolds, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Consultant.—Guy Moffett, Paeonian Springs, Va. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Dsrector—Harold D. Smith, 3125 North Abingdon Road, Country Club Hills, Arlington, Va. Assistant director.—~ Wayne Coy, 5215 Watson Street. Assistant director in charge of legislative reference.—F. J. Bailey, 5 Pinehurst Circle. Assistant director in charge of estimates.—l.eo 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, war 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. Beardsiey 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. Watkins, 1516 Twenty-ninth Street; Frank W. Herring, 3219 Quesada Street. Executive officer.— Harold Merrill, 5700 Thirty-second Street. EMERGENCY WAR AGENCIES OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Liaison officer— Wayne Coy, 5215 Watson Street. Division of Central Administrative Services: Director—Dallas Dort, 5074 Lowell Street. Assistant Director—Shane MacCarthy, 3420 Legation Street. Budget officer.—J. Carney Howell, 9204 Sligo Creek Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. Fiscal officer— Waldemar Thorson, 7210 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md. Acting personnel officer.—L. E. Clark, 3629 Veazey Street. Service Operations officer— William D. Wright, route 2, Silver Spring, Md. Investigations officer.—George Gould, Annapolis Hotel. Chief of Field Operations.—John W. Jago, 27 Drummond Street, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Printing, Duplicating, and Distribution Office—James W. Hertsch, Friendship Station. Counsel. —Oscar Cox, 2922 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Board of War Communications (Room 6107, New Post Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3620) Chairman.—James Lawrence Fly, 4201 Warren Street. Maj. Gen. Dawson Olmstead, 8911 Livingston Street. Capt. Carl Holden, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Breckinridge Long, Montpelier Manor, Laurel, Md. Herbert E. Gaston, 2928 Forty-fourth Place. National War Labor Board (Department of Labor Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Representing the public: William H. Davis, chairman, Wardman Park Hotel. George W. Taylor, vice chairman, 3031 Sedgewick Street. Frank P. Graham, Washington Hotel. Wayne L. Morse, 120 Larry Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Representing labor: Van A. Bittner, Carlton Hotel. : George Meany, 901 Massachusetts Avenue. R. J. Thomas, Ambassador Hotel. Matthew Woll, 901 Massachusetts Avenue. Alternate members: Martin P. Durkin, Ninth-and Mount Vernon Place. Clinton S. Golden, Carlton Hotel. Emil Rieve, Annapolis Hotel. Robert J. Watt,-Ninth and Massachusetts Avenue. Representing industry: George H. Mead, 3336 Reservoir Road. :Roger D. Lapham, Carlton Hotel. Cyrus Ching, Mayflower Hotel. H. B. Horton, Carlton Hotel. , Alternate members: Almon E. Roth, Carlton Hotel. Reuben B. Robertson, Raleigh Hotel. George K. Batt, Raleigh Hotel. Frederick S. Fales, Hay-Adams House. Executive director and general counsel.—Lloyd K. Garrison, 3100 Ellicott Street. Office of Alien Property Custodian (National Press Building. Phone, DIstrict 8515) Alien Property Custodian.—Leo T. Crowley, Mayflower Hotel. Deputy Alien Property Custodian.—James E. Markham, 1335 Hemlock Street. General counsel.—A. Matt. Werner, 2420 Sixteenth Street. Economic adviser to Alien Property Custodian.—Dr. C. O. Hardy, Avenel, Silver Spring, Md. Executive officer—Henry W. Riley, 3633 Van Ness Street. Secretary.—Francis A. Mahony, 1615 Varnum Place NE. me Director of Information and Publications.—Forbes Campbell, 4805 Westway Drive, Crestview, Md. Chief, Division of Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals and Special Services.—Morrison G. Tucker, 1511 Thirty-third Street. Chief, Division of Investigation and Research.—Homer Jones, 3067 Ordway Street. Chief, Division of Patent Administration.— Howland H. Sargeant, 1511 Thirty- third Street. : Chief, Property Division.—Francis J. McNamara, 18 Wetherill Road, Westmore- land Hills, Md. Chief, Business Operations.—S. James Crowley, Chicago, Ill. Solicitor—W. McNeil Kennedy, Chicago, Ill. Chief, Division of Liquidation.— Edward C. Tefft, Chicago, Ill. Comptroller —R. A. Linehan, Chicago, Ill. Office of Civilian Defense (Dupont Circle Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director.—James M. Landis, 2901 Q Street. Assistant Director in Charge of Civilian Protection.—Maj. Gen. U. S. Grant, 3d (U. 8. Army), 1629 Twenty-first Street. ha 312 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Lasts: Director in Charge of Civilian War Services.— Reginald C. Foster, 2921O Street. Special Adviser to the Director.—E. A. Sheridan, 317 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va Assistant to the Director —John B. Martin, 3721 Upton Street. Chief Labor Adviser—Newman Jeffrey, 601 Hillwood, Falls Church, Va. General counsel.—Harold W. Newman, Jr., 2737 Devonshire Place. Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (Department of Commerce Building. Phone, R Epublic 7500) Coordinator.—Nelson A. Rockefeller, 2500 Foxhall Road. Assistant Coordinators.— Wallace K. Harrison, Statler Hotel; John C. McClintock,1731 Hoban Road; Joseph C. Rovensky, 1200 Sixteenth Street; Percy L Douglas, 2806 P Street. General counsel.—John E. Lockwood, 3624 Prospect Avenue. Special assistant to Coordinator.—John S. Dickey, 2903 Twenty-ninth Street. Special adviser to Coordinator.—Enrique S. de Lozada, 18 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Health and Sanitation Division.—Dr. George C. Dunham, 1215 Sixteenth Street. Director, Food Supply and Nutrition Division.—James D. LeCron, 1701 Hoban Road. Director, Emergency Rehabilitation Division.—John M. Clark, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va. Darector, Regional Division.—John Akin, 123 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Director, Motion Picture Division.—Francis Alstock, Mayflower Hotel. Director, Press Division.—Francis A. Jamieson, 2633 Fifteenth Street. Director, Radio Division.—Don Francisco, Hay-Adams House. Director, Science and Education Division.—Kenneth G. Holland, Hillmead Road, Bethesda, Md. Director, Division of Inter-American Activities in the United States.— Victor Borella, 4115 Davis Place. Bre, Industry and Trade Development Division.—William F. Machold, 3405 treet. Office of Defense Transportation (Interstate Commerce Commission Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director.—Joseph B. Eastman, 2266 Cathedral Avenue. Deputy Director.—Brig. Gen. Charles D. Young, Statler Hotel. Executive assistant.—Joseph L. White, 1738 P Street. Office of Economic Stabilization (East Wing of the White House. Phone, N Ational 1414, branch 184) Director and Chairman, Economic Stabilization Board.—James F. Byrnes, Shore-ham Hotel. 5 Assistant to the Director and counsel. —Benjamin Victor Cohen, 4840 Hawthorn Lane. Assistants to the Director—Donald Russell, 5019 Lowell Street; Marvin Jones, University Club; Walter Brown, 4400 P Street. Head attorney.— Edward F. Prichard, 2620 Foxhall Road. Administrative officer.— Cassie Connor, 4512 Thirtieth Street. Economic Stabilization Board: Secretary of the Treasury.—Henry Morgenthau, Jr., 2434 Belmont Road. Secretary of Agriculture.—Claude R. Wickard, the Westchester. Secretary of Commerce.—Jesse Jones, Shoreham Hotel. Booey of Labor.—Frances Perkins, Fourteenth Street and Constitution venue. Chairman, Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System.—Marriner S. Eccles, Shoreham Hotel. Director, Bureau of the Budget.—Harold D. Smith, 3125 North Abingdon Road, Arlington, Va. WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 313 <3 Economic Stabilization Board—Continued. Administrator, Office of Price Administration.—Prentiss M. Brown. SL National War Labor Board.— William H. Davis, Wardman Park otel. Representing labor.— William Green (President, American Federation of Labor), Washington, D. C.; Philip Murray (President, Congress of Industrial Organi-zations), Washington, D. C. Representing agriculture—James G. Patton (President, Farmers Cooperative Union), Denver, Colo.; Edward O’Neal (President, American Farm Bureau Federation), Washington, D. C. : | Representing managemént.—Eric A. Johnston (President, United States Chamber of Commerce), Spokane, Wash.; Ralph E. Flanders (President of the Jones and Lamson Machine Co., Springfield, Vt.), Springfield, Vt. Office of Lend-Lease Administration | | (515 Twenty-second Street. Phone, REpublic 7500) | z Administrator—E. R. Stettinius, Jr., Shoreham Hotel. Senior consultant.—John L. Pratt, Raleigh Hotel. Special assistant to the Administrator.—John Cowles, Statler Hotel. Special assistant.—Hayden Raynor, 1538 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Executive assistant.—R. J. Lynch, 1854 North Herndon Street, Arlington, Va. Research assistant.—John D. East, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant. —Ira C. Hopkins, 1754 Lanier Place. Senior Deputy Administrator—Bernhard Knollenberg, 1905 N Street. Deputy Administrators: Operations.— Arthur B. Van Buskirk, 5608 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Special Assignments.—Philip Young, 3100 Thirty-fifth Street. General counsel.—Oscar S. Cox, 2922 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Senior Assistant Administrators: Foreign Liaison.—J. E. Orchard, 800 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Operations.—L. J. Martin, 1606 Orchard Street, Alexandria, Va. U.S. 8. R. Supply.—Maj. Gen. C. M. Wesson, 3114 O Street. Liaison, British Empire—W. V. Griffin, Fairfax Hotel. Assistant Administrators: Finance and Statistics.—Harry M. Kurth, 2728 Blaine Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Liaison, Other United Nations.—W. E. Simmons, 316 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Reciprocal Aid.—Charles Denby, 3517 Springland Lane. Requirements and Control.—G. R. Rebmann, 7007 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, M Transportation and Storage.—Lt. Comdr. Donald Watson, 1940 Biltmore Street. U.S. 8S. R. Supply—J. N. Hazard, 3410 Thirtieth Street. China Division.—J. Franklin Ray, 618 Twenty-second Street. Director of Missions.—Charles McGehee, Mayflower Hotel. Administrative officer.—Roger P. Jenkins, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. : Z : | Office of Scientific Research and Development (1530 P Street. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director.—Dr. Vannevar Bush, 4901 Hillbrook Lane. Chairman, National Defense Research Committee.—Dr. J. B. Conant, Chairman, Committee on Medical Research.—Dr. A. N. Richards, 6 Bryn Mawr, Pa. Executive secretary.—Dr. Irvin Stewart, 3721 Livingston Street. 3245 S Rugby Street. Road, Office of War Information | (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) | { = Director—Elmer Davis, Carlton Hotel. Associate director—M. S. Eisenhower, 708 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant director for management.— Vernon A. McGee, 4115 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. General counsel.—A. H. Feller, 3040 Porter Street. Security officer—Rear Admiral Richard P. McCullough (U. 8S. N., retired), 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Special deputy.— Arthur Sweetser, 3060 Garrison Street. -~ J 314 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Domestic Operations Branch: : Director of Domestic Operations.—Gardner Cowles, Jr., 6 Kalorama Circle. Assistant director for Policy and Subject Matter Development.—James Allen, 2500 Q Street. Assistant director for Program Coordination and Production.—William B. Lewis, 14 Carvel Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Deputies of the director of Interdepartmental Liaison.—James R. Brackett, 3831 Rodman Street; Stephen E. Fitzgerald, 3414 Porter Street; Leo C. Ros-ten, 2920 Greenvale Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Nicholas Roosevelt, Brighton ~ Hotel; Clyde Vandeburg, 697 Rollingwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; James Rogers, 2900 Benton Place. Chief, News Bureau.—George Lyon, 3354 Tennyson Street. 3 Chief, Radio Bureau.—Donald D. Stauffer, Statler Hotel. ; Chief, Bureau of Motion Pictures.—Lowell Mellett, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Bureau of Graphics and Printing.—Price Gilbert (acting), the Mayflower. Chzef, Bureau of Special Services— Katherine C. Blackburn, 221 West Glebe Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Bureau of Field Operations—Robert Huse, 807 Lynn Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Overseas Operations Branch: Director of Overseas Operations.—Robert E. Sherwood, Willard Hotel. Assistant director, Administration.—Philip C. Hamblet, 1022 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Va. Deputy director, Psychological Warfare Policy.—James P. Warburg, 34 East Seventieth Street, New York, N. Y. Deputy director, United Nations Information Policy.— Ferdinand Kuhn, 8 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy director, Atlantic Operations.—Joseph Barnes, 430 West Twenty-second Street, New York, N. Y. Deputy director, Pacific Operations.—Owen Lattimore, 111 Sutter Street, San Francisco, Calif. Operations liaison officer.—Edward Stanley, Box 14, R. F. D. 1, Yorktown Heights, N. Y. Special field representative.—Lt. Col. Ben Stern, 4228 Forty-fifth Street. Chief, Bureau of Communication Facilities.— Murry Brophy, Raleigh Hotel. Chief, Outpost Service Bureau.—James Linen. _ Chief, Bureau of Research and Analysis.—Eugene Katz, 3204 Klingle Road. Chief, Bureau of Overseas Publications.—John Hackett, Sheraton Hotel. Chief, Bureau of Overseas Motion Pictures—Robert Riskin, 224 West Fifty- seventh Street, New York, N. Y. Chief, Radio Program Bureau.—John Houseman, 224 West Fifty-seventh Street, New, York, N. Y. Chief, News and Feature Bureau.—Edward Barrett, 224 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York, N. Y. War Manpower Commission (Room 5554, Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, EXecutive 4660.) Chagrman.—Paul V. McNutt, Shoreham Hotel. Arthur J. Altmeyer (Chairman of the Social Security Board, Federal Security Agency), 4613 Rock Spring Road North, Arlington, Va. Ralph A. Bard (Assistant Secretary of the Navy), 2810 Forty-fourth Street. Otto S. Beyer (Director, Division of Transport Personnel, Office of Defense Transportation, also representing the War Shipping Administration), Spring Hill Farm, McLean, Va. John B. Blandford, Jr. (Administrator, National Housing Agency), Fairfax Road, McLean, Va. Arthur 8S. Flemming (member, Civil Service Commission), 4913 Rodman Street. Robert P. Patterson (Under Secretary of War), 1545 Thirty-fifth Street. Donald M. Nelson (Chairman, War Production Board), the Westchester. Pinon Perkins (Secretary of Labor), Fourteenth Street and Constitution venue. Claude R. Wickard (Secretary of Agriculture), the Westchester. Assistant to deputy chairman.—Charlotte Carr, Lafayette Hotel. Executive director.—Lawrence A. Appley, Shoreham Hotel. Kero ‘WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 315 Acting deputy executive director.—James H. Bond, Hotel Washington. Assistant executive directors—lLeo Werts, 1803 Biltmore Street; Robert M. Barnett, 6509 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Budget and Administrative Planning Service, Director—Leonard W. A’Hearn, | 4610 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. ; General counsel.—Bernard C. Gavit, 1213 St. Matthew’s Court. Associate general counsel.—Lt. Col. Edward E. Shattuck, 1660 Lanier Place. | Information Service, Director—Philip S. Broughton, 3525 Davenport Street. Executive Services, Chief —Brig. Gen. William C. Rose, 4508 Hoban Road. Ew Assistant Chief. —Bruce D. Smith, 2558 Massachusetts Avenue. : Bureau of Manpower Utilization, Director—Dr. Frank H. Sparks, 1726 Mas- sachusetts Avenue. | ; Assistant director.—John J. Skelly. | Bureau of Placement, Director.— Albert L. Nickerson, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant director.—Glenn E. Brockway, 3919 Livingston Street. | Bure of Program Requirements, Director.— William Haber, 3700 Massachusetts : venue. Associate director.—Collis Stocking, 3225 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant director.—Louis Levine, 6429 Thirty-first Street. Bureau of Training, Director—Dr. W. W. Charters, Gralyn Hotel. ; Assistant director.—Philip S. Van Wyck, 1846 Sixteenth Street. Committee on Fair LI A Practice, executive secretary.—Lawrence W. Cramer, 3200 Rodman Street. 5% Management-Labor Policy Committee, executive secretary.—Marjorie G. Russell, | 1230 New Hampshire Avenue. Women’s Advisory Committee, chairman.— Margaret A. Hickey, Dodge Hotel. SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM (Twenty-first and C Streets. Phone, REpublic 5500) Director—Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, 5425 Thirty-first Street. Deputy directors.—Col. Carlton S. Dargusch, 5240 Reno Road; Col. Chauncey 2 | Parker, Jr., United States Marine Corps, 1689 Thirty-second Street. Chairman, Planning Council.—Col. John D. Langston, 2121 Virginia Avenue. General counsel.—Lt. Col. Edward S. Shattuck, 1660 Lanier Place. Chief liaison and legislative officer.—Lt. Col. Francis V. Keesling, Jr., 3133 Con- necticut Avenue. Executive assistant to the Director.—Lt. Col. Campbell Johnson, 1125 Columbia Road. Division Chiefs: Appointments and Personnel Division.—Col. George A. Bonnet, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Camp Operations Diviston.—Col. Lewis F. Kosch, 5460 Thirtieth Place. Communications and Records Division.—Lt. Col. William Hart, 8905 Fairview : Road, Silver Spring, Md. Field Dwvision.—Lit. Col. Gareth N. Brainerd, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. Finance and Supply Diviston.—Lt. Col. Joseph B. Mitchell, 1020 Nineteenth Street. 5 Head Archivist.—Col. Victor J. O’Kelliher, 3825 Fulton Street. Headquarters Division.— Angus J. Gallagher, 3200 McKinley Street. Manpower Diviston.—Lt. Col. George H. Baker, 420 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md Medical Division.—Dr. Leonard G. Rowntree, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Reemployment Division.—Col. Lewis Sanders, 1911 R Street. Research and Statistics Division.— Kenneth H. McGill, 321 Naglee Road, Hillan- dale, Md. War Production Board (Social Security Buil-ing, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublie 7500) Chairman.—Donald M. Nelson, Broadmoor Apartments. Secretary of War. Secretary of the Navy. Secretary of Commerce. Secretary of Agriculture. Lieutenant General in charge of War Department production. fe, Administrator, Office of Price Administration. 316 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Members—Continued. Chairman, Board of Heonomie Warfare. Special assistant to the President supervising the defense aid program. Chairman, War Manpower Commission. Director, Defense Transportation, Petroleum Administrator for War. Executive vice chairman.—C. KE. Wilson, Shoreham Hotel. Program vice chairman.—J. A. Krug, 5524 Massachusetts Avenue. Operations vice charzrman.—Donald D. Davis, Carlton Hotel. Vice chairman.—Ralph J. Cordiner, Shoreham Hotel. Vice chairman (International Supply).— William L. Batt, 3019 N Street. Vice chairman for Cwilian Requirements.—Arthur D. Whiteside, the Shoreham. Vice chairman on Smaller War Plants.—Col. Robert W. Johnson, Mayflower Hotel. Assistants to the chairman.—Sidney J. Weinberg, Shoreham Hotel; A. C. C. Hill, Jr., 1421 T hirty-fourth Street; KE. A. Locke, Jr., 3410 Volta Place. Executive secretary.—G. Lyle Belsley, 3227 Rittenhouse Street. General counsel.—John Lord O’Brian, Wardman Park Hotel. Rubber Director— William M. Jeffers, Mayflower Hotel. Director, Office of War Utilities.—J. A. Krug, 5524 Massachusetts Avenue. Director, Information Division.—Bruce Catton, 3139 Tennyson Street. 5 Administrative assistant to the chairman.—Bernard L. Gladieux, 4604 Brookview Drive, Westhaven, Md. Dicer,q Program Bureau.—John F. Fennelly, 44 Grafton Street, Chevy; Chase, Director, Distribution Bureau.—B. C. Heacock, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy vice chairman for Industry Operations. —John J. Hall, 4536 Twenty-eighth \ treet. : Deputy vice chairman for Field Operations.—Wade T. Childress, 2546 Massa- chusetts Avenue. Director, Facilities Bureau. — Charles E. Volkhardt, the Shoreham. Director, Office. of Production Research and Development. —Harvey N. Davis, Cosmos Club. | Darector, Office of Prosrens Reports.—Stacy May, 111 Albemarle Street, West- moreland Hills, Acting director, Procurement Policy Division.— Tudor Bowen, 2032 Belmont Road. . Chairman, Resources Protection Board.— William K. Frank, Shoreham Hotel. Plea, Statistics Division. —Stacy May, 111 Albemarle Street, Westmoreland kL ilis, D. C. Darector, Labor Production Division.— Wendell Lund, 1840 Plymouth Street. Director, War Production Drive Headquarters. Wo. GQ. Marshall, Washington Hotel. Smaller War Plants Corporation (101 Indiana Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500) Board of Directors: Brig. Gen. Robert W. Johnson, chairman, Mayflower Hotel. Albert M. Carter, Wardman Park Hotel. Samuel Abbot Smith, 1 Scott Circle. James T. Howington, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. J. A. R. Moseley, Mayflower Hotel. Executive secretary.—C. Walter Fowler, 1731 New Hampshire Avenue. Chief loan agent.—Frank Prince, 4511 Roland Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Acting attorney.— Bernard P. Holland, 1535 Foxhall Road. War Relocation Authority (Barr Building, 910 Seventeenth Street. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director.—Dillon S. Myer, 116 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Députy Director—Elmer M. Rowalt, 912 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. Assistants to the Director.—Edwin G. Arnold, R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va.; Col. Erle M. Wilson, 2737 Devonshire Place. Solicitor.—Philip Glick, Pyle Road, R. F. D. 3, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Office of Reports. ~ John C. Baker, 718 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Relocation Planning Officer.—B. R. Stauber, 9701 Bexhill Drive, Kensington, ‘Md. Cd WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments Chief, Community Services Division.—John Provinse, 215 Spring Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Agricultural Division.—E. J. Utz, 4507 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md.Chie] Frloyriont Division.—T. W. Holland, 200 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Executive officer.—Leland Barrows, 407 North Sycamore Street, West Falls Church, Va. : War Shipping Administration (Commerce Department Building. Phone, EXecutive 3340, branch 400) Administrator—Rear Admiral Emory 8. Land, United States Navy (retired), 2500 Massachusetts Avenue, Deputy Administrator.—Rear Admiral Howard L. Vickery, United States Navy,' 4420 Dexter Street; Edward Macauley, 3139 Dumbarton Avenue; L. W. Douglas, 2710 Thirty-sixth Street. . Executive officer.—S.D. Schell, 1901 Columbia Road. Secretary.—Lt. William Creighton Peet, Jr., 2620 Dumbarton Avenue. Assistants to Administrator.—D. E. Scoll, 3226 N Street; H. T. Morse, 27 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General counsel.— William Radner, 5908 Nevada Avenue. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Fiscal Affairs.—R. W. Seabury, 1338 Twenty- ninth Street. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Ship Control.—F. Schneider, 1338 Twenty- ninth Street. Assistant Deputy Admanistrator for Ship Operations—W. N. Westerlund. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Pacific Coast Operations.—J. E. Cushing, the Mayflower. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Tanker Operations.—B. B. Jennings, 3300 O Street. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Maritime Labor Relations.—H. Wyckoff, 3416 Q Street. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Training.—Telfair Knight, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Recruitment and Manning.—M. E. Dimock, 415 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. BOARD OF ECONOMIC WARFARE (Temporary Building T. Phone, EXecutive 7030) 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. Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. Lend-Lease Administrator. Chairman of the War Production Board. Executive director.—Milo Perkins, Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Assistant directors—Hector Lazo, 1920 Forty-seventh Street; Morris Rosenthal, 7 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; William T. Stone, 3818 Ingomar Street. General counsel.—Monroe Oppenheimer, 3113 Northampton Street. Admanzstrative officer.—David B. Vaughan, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF CENSORSHIP (Federal Trade Commission Building. Phone, EXecutive 3800) Director of Censorship.—Byron Price, 4521 Lowell Street. Assistant Director (Press).—N. R. Howard, 1609 Thirty-first Street. Assistant Director (Broadcasting).—John H. Ryan, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant Director (Division of Reports).—Harold Keats, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Chief Cable Censor.—Capt. H. K. Fenn, U. 8. N., 2430 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 22 318 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Chief Postal Censor.—Lt. Col. N. V. Carlson, 1546 Forty-fourth Street. Assim to the Director.—Lt. Theodore F. Koop, U. 8. N. R., 2737 Devonshire lace. Chairman, Censorship Policy Board.—Frank C. Walker, Wardman Park Hotel. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION (Federal Office Building 1, Second and D Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Administrator.—Prentiss M. Brown, 726—B, Westchester Apartments. Senior assistant to the Administrator.—Clyde L. Herring, the Mayflower. i assistant to the Administrator—A. Manning Shaw, 2901 Connecticut venue. Special assistant to the Administrator—Ronald C. Seeley. Senior Deputy Administrator—John E. Hamm, Marlyn Apartments. Deputy Administrator in charge of Price—J. Kenneth Galbraith, 3207 P Street. Deputy Administrator in charge of Rationing—Paul M. O’Leary, Brighton Hotel. Deputy Admanistrator in charge of Reni.—Paul Porter, 6001 Broad Branch Road. Deputy Administrator in charge of Professional Services.—Dexter M. Keezer, Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Administrator in charge of Information.—Lou R. Maxon. Deputy Administrator in charge of Administrative Management.—Edward N. Hay (acting), Stoneleigh Court Apartments. General counsel. —George J. Burke, the Mayflower. Economic advisor to the Administrator.—Richard V. Gilbert, 3814 Kanawha Street. Secretary.—C. A. Bishop, Vienna, Va. PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR Petroleum Administrator.—Harold L. Ickes, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md." Deputy Petroleum Administrator.—Ralph K. Davies, Shoreham Hotel. Organizational Planning Staff.—L. S. Fish, Director, Dorchester House. Labor counselor.—Dr. Frederick H. Harbison, Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va. Assistant Deputy Petroleum Administrators.—Robert E. Allen, York House; . DeGolyer, 2110 Leroy Place; Bruce K. Brown, York House. Chief counszl.—J. Howard Marshall, York House. Executive officer—E. L. Kohler, Carlyn Apartments. Administrative Division.—E. J. Skidmore, Director, 2410 South Fern Street, Arlington, Va. Facility Security Division.— William D. Mason, Director, Hay-Adams House. Foreign Division.—J. Terry Duce, Director, 4702 Reservoir Road. Marketing Diviston.— Director [vacant]. Materials Division.—Frank A. Watts, Director, 1921 Kalorama Road. Natural Gas and Natural Gasoline Division.—E. Holley Poe, Director, 2737 Devonshire Place. : Petroleum Reserves Division.— William B. Heroy, Director, 311 Newport Avenue, Friendship Heights, Md. Petroleum Supply Division.—Robert L. Minckler, Director, 2800 Woodley Road. Production Division.—Donald R. Knowlton, Director, Carlyn Apartments. Public Relations.— Gordon M. Sessions, Director, 10109 Lorraine Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Refining Division.— Edwin D. Cumming, Director, 2330 South Meade Street, ge Arlington, Va. Research Division.— Edward B. Swanson, Director, 2512 Q Street. Petroleum Supply and Distribution Board.—Walter R. Lange, secretary, 4304 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. Transportation Divistion—J. R. Parten, Director, 5040 Millwood Lane. PRESIDENT’S WAR RELIEF CONTROL BOARD (Washington Building, Room 1044. Phone, REpublic 3175) Chairman.—Joseph E. Davies, 3029 Klingle Road. Charles P. Taft, 2215 Wyoming Avenue. Frederick P. Keppel, 1516 Twenty-ninth Street. Executive secretary.—Homer S. Fox, 4715 Blagden Avenue. : General counsel.—Melvin D. Hildreth, 4512 Lowell Street. | heER= WAR AGENCIES Executive \ Departments p | 319 Consultants.—Judson C. Ringland, 322 Dorset Thirtieth Street. Dickerman, 6701 Connecticut Avenue; Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; E. Pendleton Arthur C. Turner, 1311 JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEES, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Federal Reserve Building. Phone, REpublic 1100) UNITED STATES COMMITTEE 3 : | Ea d - Chairman.—Alvin H. Hansen (Special Economic Adviser to the Board of Gover-nors of the Federal Reserve System), 56 Juniper Road, Belmont, Mass. E. Dana Durand (United States Tariff Commissioner), 3613 Norton Place. Robert R. Nathan (chairman, Planning Committee, War Production Board), 1308 Eighteenth Street. Eric Englund (Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agri-culture), R. F. D. 3, Rockville, Md George F. Yantis (member, National Resources Planning Board), First Na-tional Bank Building, Olympia, Wash. Adolf A. Berle, Jr.! (Assistant Secretary of State), 4000 Nebraska Avenue. Leroy D. Stinebower (Chief, Division of Economic Studies, Department of State; Liaison officer between the Committees and the Department of State), 4625 Thirty-sixth Street. CANADIAN COMMITTEE Chain. W. A. Mackintosh (Special Assistant to the Deputy Minister of inance). : G. C. Bateman (Metals Controller, Department of Munitions and Supply). J. G. Bouchard (Assistant Deputy Minister of Agriculture). D. A. Skelton (Chief, Research Department, Bank of Canada). oe L Keenleyside! (Assistant Under Secretary of State for External ffairs). H. F. Angus (Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of State for External . Affairs; Liaison officer between the Committees and the Department of External Affairs). MATERIAL COORDINATING COMMITTEE, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 2086) Avenue SW. \ ~~ United States members: William L. Batt (vice chairman, War Production Board), 3019 N Street. Howard C. Sykes (secretary, Combined Raw Materials Board), Carlton Hotel. Executive secretary.— George H. Emery (Combined Raw Materials Board). Canadian members: G. C. Bateman (member, Canadian Wartime Industry Control Board). H. J. Symington (member, Canadian Wartime Industry Control Board). Executive secretary.—F. V. C. Hewett. JOINT WAR PRODUCTION COMMITTEE, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (4605 Social Security Building, Fourth Phone, REpublic Street and Independence 7500, branch 2031) Avenue SW. UNITED STATES MEMBERS : , Chairman.—C. E. Wilson (executive vice chairman, War Production Board), Social Security Building. Deputy chatrman.— William L. Batt (vice chairman, International Supply, War Production Board). J. V. Forrestal (Under Secretary of the Navy). R. P. Patterson (Under Secretary of War). Milo Perkins (Executive Director, Board of Economic Warfare). E. R. Stettinius, Jr. (Administrator, Office of Lend-Lease Administration). Rear gaurd H. L. Vickery (vice chairman, United States Maritime Commis-sion). Executive director.—Capt. Gilbert MacKay, 4605 Social Security Building. 1Sits with committees from time to time as occasion renders desirable. 320 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES CANADIAN MEMBERS Chairman.—H. J. Carmichael (Coordinator of Production, Department of Muni- tions and Supply). I~ J. R. Donald (Director General, Chemicals and Explosives Branch, Depart- | ment of Munitions and Supply). fi E. J. Brunning (Director General, Ammunition and Gun Production Branch, Department of Munitions and Supply ). R. P. Bell (Director General, Aircraft Production Branch, Department of. fi : Munitions and Supply). H. R. MacMillan ant, War-Time Merchant Shipping, Ltd.). I Hume Wrong (Department of External Affairs). Executive Director—R. G. Peers (General Manager, War Supplies, Ltd., 1205 Fifteenth Street). COMBINED CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN e (Combined Chiefs of Staff Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. il Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 71469) United States members: Admiral William >. Leahy, Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Army and Nav Gen. George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, United States Army. Admiral Ernest J. King, Commander in Chief of the United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations. Gen. H. H. Arnold, Commanding General, Army Air Forces. Secretary.—Brig. Gen. John R. Deane. | Great Britain members: | Field Marshal Sir John Dill, former Chief of the Imperial General Staff. Admiral Sir Percy Noble. Lt. Gen. G. N. Macready. Air Marshal Sir William L. Welsh. Secretary.— Brig. H. Redman. MUNITIONS ASSIGNMENTS BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN 3 4 | (Combined Chiefs of Staff Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 78691) United States members: E Chairman.— Harry L. Hopkins. 3 Admiral J. M. Reeves. J Lt. Gen. Brehon Somervell. | Maj. Gen. R. C. Moore. | Maj. Gen. Geo. E. Stratemeyer. il : Ezecutive.—Maj. Gen. J. H. Burns. i Great Britain members: Admiral Sir Percy Noble. Lt. Gen. G. N. Macready. Air Vice Marshal W. F. MacNeece Foster. (A corresponding committee is functioning in London.) COMBINED FOOD BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (South Building, Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142) United States Representative—Claude R. Wickard (Secretary of Agriculture), the Westchester. Great Britain Representative—R. H. Brand (head of the British Food Mission). Joint executive officers: United States.—Leslie A. Wheeler (Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture), 810 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Great Britain.— Maurice I. Hutton (British Food Mission). 1 A supporting agency to the Combined Chiefs of Staff (United States and Great Britain). PESTER| A| i iH | WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments COMBINED PRODUCTION AND RESOURCES BOARD—UNITED STATES, GREAT BRITAIN, AND CANADA (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 73161) United States section: : United States member.—Donald M. Nelson (chairman, War Production Board), Broadmoor Apartments. Deputy member.—Charles E. Wilson (executive vice chairman, War ProductionBoard); Shoreham Hotel; alternate—William L. Batt (vice chairman, War Production Board), 3019 N Street. * Executive officer—Milton Katz (solicitor, War Production Board), 3033 Albemarle Street. : Secretary.—Stanley L. Phraner, 3816 North Dittmar Road, Arlington, Va. In London: Representative—W. Averell Harriman (Lend-Lease Coordinator). Deputy representative—Philip D. Reed (War Production Board). Great Britain section: Great Britain minister.—Capt. Oliver Lyttelton (Minister of Production). Deputy member.—Sir Robert J. Sinclair, K. B. E. (Director General, Army Requirements, British War Office), 2431 Kalorama Road. Executive officer.—T. H. Brand (War Cabinet Secretariat in London), 3226 Woodley Road. Secretary.—P. Hayward, 2500 Q Street. Canadian section: Canadian member.—C. D. Howe (Minister of Munitions and Supply). Deputy member —E. P. Taylor (Department of Munitions and Supply, Wash- ington Office). Executive officer—Sydney D. Pierce (Department of Munitions and Supply, Washington Office). : Combined staff: ; Executive director.—Arthur B. Newhall, Mayflower Hotel. Robert Nathan (chairman, Planning Committee, War Production Board), 1308 Eighteenth Street. y Stacy May (Director, Statistics Division, War Production Board), 3939 Hillbrook Lane. R. W. B. Clarke (Joint War Production Staff in London). R. G. D. Allen (British Supply Council in North America), 2745 Twenty-ninth Street. COMBINED RAW MATERIALS BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 3921) Mero appointed by President of the United States.— William L. Batt, 3019 N treet. Deputy member and United States executive secretary.—Howard C. Sykes, Carlton Hotel. Member appointed by Prime Minister of Great Britain.—Sir Clive Baillieu. Executive secretary, Great Britain—George Archer. COMBINED SHIPPING ADJUSTMENT BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Department of Commerce Building. Phone, REpublic 6620, branch 400) United States member.—Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, 2500 Massachusetts Avenue. Great Britain member. —Sir Arthur Salter. Executive officer.—David E. Scoll, 3226 N Street. Joint secretaries.—Lt. William Creighton Peet, Jr. (United States), 2620 Dum-barton Avenue; W. O. Hart (Great Britain). Congressional Directory | WAR AGENCIES JOINT BRAZIL-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION UNITED STATES MEMBERS (War Department. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 72128) Chairman.—Maj. Gen. J. Garesche Ord, 3325 Rowland Place. Rear Admiral W. O. Spears (Navy), Woodley Park Towers. Capt. Frank P. Thomas (Navy), 33 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Capt. M. B. Gardner, Lafayette Hotel. Col. K. F. Hertford (General Staff Corps), 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. Lt. Col. John D. Gillett (Air Corps, Army), 2445 Fifteenth Street. BRAZILIAN MEMBERS (Federal Reserve Building.-Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 72327) Chairman.—Maj. Gen. Estevao Leitao de Carvalho (War), Shoreham Hotel. Vice Admiral Alvaro Rodrigues de Vasconcellos (Navy), Shoreham Hotel. Col. Vasco Alves Secco (Air Force), Shoreham Hotel. Lt. Col. Joao Vicente Sayao Cardozo, Shoreham Hotel. Lt. Eneas Arochellas de Miranda Correa (Navy), Shoreham Hotel. Capt. Joao da Cruz Secco, Jr. (Air Force), Shoreham Hotel. Capt. Tasso Villar de Aquino, Shoreham Hotel. JOINT MEXICAN-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION (3E840 Pentagon Building. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 3607) United States members: Vice Admiral Alfred Wilkinson Johnson, U. S. N., retired (chairman), 2137 R Street. : Maj. Gen. Guy V. Henry, U. S. A., 6 Kennedy Drive, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md Mezican members: Maj. Gen. Francisco Castillo Ndjera, Mexican Embassy. Brig. Gen. Luis Alamillo Flores, Mexican Embassy. Cla A ike hi Executive Departments 323 DEPARTMENT OF STATE (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, REpublic 5600) CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State (Wardman Park Hotel), was born Oecto-ber 2, 1871, in Overton (now Pickett) County, Tenn.; is a citizen of Smith County; was graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon,Tenn., and is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the lower house of the Ten-nessee Legislature two terms; served in the Fourth Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry during the Spanish-American War, with the rank of captain; later was first appointed by the Governor and afterward electéd judge of the fifth judicialcircuit of Tennessee, which position he resigned during his race for Congress ; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixvy-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; authorof 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. AppointedSecretary 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,Sean Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics, abana, 1940. Under Secretary of State.—Sumner Welles, Oxon Hill, Md: Special assistants to the Under Secretary.—Max W. Thornburg, Shoreham Hotel : Charles Bunn, University Club; Emilio G. Collado, 3021 Forty-fifth Street.Assistant to the Under Secretary.—Anna Louise Clarkson, 1870 Wyoming Avenue.Liaison office.—Liaison officer, Orme Wilson, 2406 Massachusetts Avenue ; assistant liaison officer, David McK. Key, 2539 Waterside Drive. :. Assistant Secretary of State—Adolf A. Berle, Jr., 4000 Nebraska Avenue. Executive assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Frederick B. Lyon, Westchester Apartments; Robert C. Hooker, 3340 Dent Place. Assistant Secretary of State—Breckinridge Long, Laurel, Md. Gig assistant to Assistant Secretary.—George L. Brandt, 1357 Montague treet. Assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Carlton Savage, Norbeck Road, Rockville, Md.; Leo D. Sturgeon, 160 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Felton M. Johnston, 5274 Watson Street. Assistant Secretary of State.—Dean Acheson, 2805 P Street. Executive assistant to Assistant Secretary.—Eugene V. Rostow, 4526 Albemarle Street. Assistant to Assistant Secretary.—Kermit Roosevelt, Jr., Layton Farm, Fair-“fax, Va. Assistant Secretary of State and Budget Officer.—G. Howland Shaw, 3326 Reservoir Road. Executive assistants to Assistant Secretary.—Laurence C. Frank, 3412 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; William E. DeCourcy, 1511 Twenty-second Street. Legal adviser.—Green H. Hackworth, 3714 Morrison Street. Executive officer—John Ross, 3724 R Street; assistant executive officer, Wilbur C. Irving, 9124 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Advisers on Political Relations.—James Clement Dunn, 2554 Massachusetts Avenue; Stanley K. Hornbeck, 2139 Wyoming Avenue; Laurence Duggan, 3105 Cathedral Avenue; Wallace Murray, 1868 Columbia Road. Adviser on International Economic Affairs.—Adviser, Herbert Feis, 1529 Twenty-ninth Street; associate adviser, Emilio G. Collado, 3021 Forty-fifth Street; assistant advisers, John S. Hooker, 9 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Jack C. Corbett, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue, the Chancery; Otis E. Mulliken, 6429 Thirty-first Place. Assistant to the Secretary of State.—Cecil W. Gray, 1613 Harvard Street. 524 Congressional Directory STATE Special assistants to the Secretary.—Leo Pasvolsky, 3641 R Street; Thomas K. Finletter, 3132 Q Street; Joseph C. Green, 10 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; John Van A. MacMurray, 1412 Twenty-seventh Street; Joseph C. Grew, 2840 Woodland Drive; Francis B. Sayre, 4853 Rockwood Parkway. Commuattee on Political Planning.—Breckinridge Long (chairman); James Clement Dunn; Stanley K. Hornbeck; Laurence Duggan; Wallace Murray; Herbert Feis; Leo Pasvolsky; Selden Chapin (executive secretary). Division of Accounts.—Chief, Donald W. Corrick, 6333 Sixteenth Street; assistant chiefs, Fred R. Young, 6525 First Street; Lloyd C. Mitchell, 6813 Fifth Street. Division of the American Republics.—Chief, Philip W. Bonsal, 1301 Twenty-eighth Street; assistant chiefs, Joseph F. McGurk, Nineteenth and Q Streets; John M. Cabot, 2339 S Street; Gerald Keith, 3206 Wisconsin Avenue; Walter N. Walmsley, 2301 Connecticut Avenue; J. Kenly Bacon, 3316 Newark Street; Paul C. Daniels, 1519 Thirty-third Street; John C. Dreier, 2918 P Street; Lewis U. Hanke, 56 Montrose Avenue, Garrett Park, Md. Caribbean Office.—Chief, Coert duBois, 2129 Florida Avenue; assistant chief, Warden McK. Wilson, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Anglo-American Caribbean Commission, United States Section.—Charles W. Taussig, chairman, Carlton Hotel; S. Burns Weston, secretary, 2720 Daniel Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Office of Chief Clerk and Administrative Assistant.—Chief Clerk and administrative -assistant, Millard L. Kenestrick, 3906 Benton Street; assistant Chief Clerk and administrative assistant, William E. Cooke, 3620 Sixteenth Street. Division of Commercial Affairs.—Chief, Raymond H. Geist, 5201 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; assistant chief, Paul T. Meyer, 809 Grand View Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements.—Chief, Harry C. Hawkins, Clifton, Va.; assistant chiefs, William A. Fowler, 1642 Thirty-second Street; Robert M. Carr, R. F. D. 1, Clifton, Va.; Honoré Marcel Catudal, 7215 Cobalt Road, Wood Acres, Md. Division of Communications and Records.—Chief, David A. Salmon, 8223 Klingle Road; assistant chiefs, Roger S. Drissel, 512 Oneida Place; Harvey E. Fenstermacher, 1429 Ames Place NE. Office of Coordination and Review.—Chief, Blanche Rule Halla, 2131 Yorktown Road; assistant chiefs, Sarah D. Moore, 1909 Park Road; Helen L. Daniel, 1754 Lanier Place. : = Division of Cultural Relations.—Chief, Charles A. Thomson, 9 Carvel Road, West-moreland Hills, Md.; special assistant, Willys R. Peck, 3009 Forty-fifth Street; assistant chiefs, Richard Pattee, 1626 Argonne Place; John M. Begg, 2541 Waterside Drive; William L. Schurz, 4143 North Twenty-fifth Street, Arlington, Va.; Carol H. Foster, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Division of Current Information.—Chief, Michael J. McDermott, 1855 Upshur Street; assistant chiefs, Howard Bucknell, Jr., Westwood Farm, Waterford, Ya; Robert T. Pell, 617 Maine Avenue SW.; William D. Hassett, the Park ane. Division of Defense Materials.—Chief, Henry R. Labouisse, Jr., 2425 California Street; assistant chiefs, Hallett Johnson, 2212 R Street; T. Ross Cissel, Jr., Sas 2122 Massachusetts Avenue; Livingston T. Merchant, 3218 Cleveland venue. Division of Departmental Personnel.—Chief, John Ross, 3724 R Street; assistant chief, Wilbur C. Irving, 9124 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Board of Economic Operations.—Dean Acheson, chairman; Adolf A. Berle, Jr., vice chairman; Herbert Feis, adviser and vice chairman; Emilio G. Collado; Leo Pasvolsky; Thomas K. Finletter; Max Thornburg; Harry C. Hawkins; Henry R. Labouisse, Jr.; Christian M. Ravndal; Frederick Livesey; Donald Hiss; John 8. Dickey. Secretariat.—Executive secretary, John S. Hooker, 9 West Kirke Street, Chevy Ghme, Md.; assistant executive secretary, Jack C. Corbett, 3130 Wisconsin venue. Division of Economic Studies—Chief, Leroy D. Stinebower, 4625 Thirty-sixth Street; assistant chiefs, H. Julian Wadleigh, R. F. D. 8, Vienna, Va.; Melvin M. Knight, 3848 Calvert Street. Division of European Affairs.—Acting chief, Ray Atherton, 3017 O Street; assistant chiefs, John Hickerson, 3314 Ross Place; Paul T. Culbertson, R. F. D. 3, Gaithersburg, Md.; Hugh S. Fullerton, Hotel Claridge; Loy W. Henderson, 3112 Woodley Road; Hugh S. Cumming, Jr., 2811 O Street; Charles W. Yost, 28 Elliott Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. J State. Foreign Service Buildings Office.—Chief, Frederick Larkin, 601 Nineteenth Street : assistant v chief, Leland W. King, Jr., 2305 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, : a. Office of Foreign Service Furnishings.—Chief, Irene de Bruyn Robbins, 3242 Wood- land Drive. Foreign Service Officers’ Training School.—Acting director, Robert B. Macatee, 3260 N Street. Board of Foreign Service Personnel—G. Howland Shaw, chairman; Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Dean 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, 1426 Thirty-third Street; assistant chief, John W. Bailey, Jr., 3312 Rowland Place. Office of the Geographer.—Geographer, S. W. Boggs, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant geographer, Sophia A. Saucerman, the Broadmoor. 326 Congressional Directory STATE Division of International Communications—Chief, Thomas Burke, 3018 Forty- | fourth Place; assistant chiefs, Jesse E.Saugstad, 2021 Massachusetts Avenue; ae i Francis Colt deWolf, 4426 Hadfield Lane; Livingston Satterthwaite, 4431 : Greenwich Parkway. Division of International Conferences.—Chief, Warren Kelchner, 2027 Hillyer Place; assistant chief, Clarke L. Willard, 6613 Thirty-second Street. A Division of Near Eastern Affairs—Chief, Paul H. Alling, 1406 Twenty-ninth : Street; assistant chiefs, Henry S. Villard, 3335 Dent Place; Gordon P. ~ Merriam, 4619 Kenmore Drive. Passport Division.—Chief, Ruth B. Shipley, 5508 Thirty-ninth Street; assistant chief and technical assistant, John J. Scanlan, 4517 Fifteenth Street; assistant chief, F. Virginia Alexander, the Conard Apartments. Office of the Petroleum Adviser—Petroleum Adviser, Max W. Thornburg, Shore- ham Hotel; assistant chiefs, James C. Sappington 3d, 8501 Hazelwood Drive, Glenwood, Bethesda, Md.; Rex Townsend, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue, Office of Philippine Affairs.—Chief, Frank P. Lockhart, 3841 Harrison Street. Division of Political Studies.—Chief, Harley A. Notter, 6650 Barnaby Street; i assistant chiefs, Durward V. Sandifer, 8304 Oakford Place, Silver Spring, | : Md.; Philip E. Mosely, 5516 Wriley Road; S. Shepard Jones, 4403 Maple Avenue, Bethesda, Md. | Division of Protocol—Chief, George T. Summerlin, 1718 H Street; assistant [| chief, Stanley Woodward, 3005 O Street; ceremonial officer, H. Charles i Spruks, 4429 Volta Place. li Division of Research and Publication.— Chief, E. Wilder Spaulding, 6600 Thirty- i 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, James H. Keeley, Jr., 3717 Fulton Street; assistant if chiefs, Edwin A. Plitt, 2310 Connecticut Avenue; Albert E. Clattenburg, Jr., i 115 B West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Bernard Gufler, 1725 H 1 Street; Eldred Kuppinger, 3028 Wisconsin Avenue; Franklin C. Gowen, 1911 R Street. | Translating Bureau.—Chief, Emerson Christie, 3236 McKinley Street; assistant | chief, John W. Perkins, 1619 R Street. i Central Translating Office.—Chief, Guillermo A. Suro, Dorchester House; assistant i chief, Rafael Giménez, 1737 Q Street. il = Office of. the Editor of the Treaties.— Editor, Hunter Miller, Cosmos Club. i Treaty Division.—Chief, Charles M. Barnes, 3420 Sixteenth Street; acting assist- i ant chief, William V. Whittington, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. fo Board of Appeals on Visa Cases.—Members, Robert J. Bulkley, 2500 Q Street; / Frederick P. Keppel, 1516 Twenty-ninth Street; alternate member, Frederick i D. G. Ribble, 110 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va.; secretary, i Stuart B. Campbell, 2623 O Street. i Visa Division.— Chief, Howard K. Travers, 3110 Hawthorne Street; assistant i chiefs, Eliot B. Coulter, 2401 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va.; Knowlton V. i Hicks, 4527 Cheltenham Drive, Bethesda, Md.; Robert C. Alexander, 4704 I . South Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Hervé J. L'Heureux, 901 Varnum i Street NE.; Benjamin M. Hulley, 3824 Legation Street; Marjorie Moss, 1790 Lanier Place. o Division of World Trade Intelligence.—Acting chief, John S. Dickey (detailed from Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs), 2903 Twenty-ninth Street; assistant chief, Francis H. Russell, 906 Mansion Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; acting assistant chief, George W. Baker. Assistants to the legal adviser—Ralph W. S. Hill, 3327 N Street; Richard W. Flournoy, 111 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Benedict M. English, 3217 Foxhall Road; Frank X. Ward, 1431 Thirty-third Street; Raymund T. Yingling, 1759 R Street; Marjorie M. Whiteman, 5021 Glenbrook Road; Anna A. O’Neill, 1326 New Hampshire Avenue; Frederick M. Diven, 3706 Hillsdale Road, Baltimore, Md.; William W. Bishop, Jr., 3104 Nineteenth Street; Katherine B. Fite, 1601 Twenty-first Street; Walter E. Pelton, 5521 Colorado Avenue. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE I COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION | (For list of members, see page 389) i NATIONAL MUNITIONS CONTROL BOARD i (For list of members, see page 413) TREASURY Executive Departments 327 DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 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; member, National Munitions Control Board; member, Board of Economic Warfare; and member, Censorship Policy Board; managing trustee, Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund. Special assistant to the Secretary.—Henrietta S. Klotz, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. The Under Secretary.— Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramercy Street. 2 Assistant to the Under Secretary.— William T. Heffelfinger, 1448 Juniper Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service.—Herbert E. Gaston, 2928 Forty-fourth Place. ashing assistant.—Francis C. Rose, 6307 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Assistant Secretary.—John L. Sullivan, 4871 Glenbrook Road. Fiscal Assistant Secretary.—[Vacant.] Executive assistant—Edward D. Batchelder, 3318 Stephenson Place. Assistants to the Secretary.—Harold N. Graves, Cosmos Club; Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md.; William M. Robbins, Shoreham Hotel; Stuart Peabody, Shoreham Hotel; George Buffington, 2433 Tracy Place; Theodore R. Gamble, 5042 Nebraska Avenue; Peter H. Odegard, 4536 Macomb Street; John W. Pehle, 8804 Garfield Street, Bethesda, Md. Administrative assistant to the Secretary.—W. N. Thompson, 2922 Cortland Place. Technical assistants to the Secretary.—Charles S. Bell, 6317 Woodside Place, Chevy Chase, Md.; Charles R. Schoeneman, 2018 Klingle Road. Chief Coordinator, Treasury Enforcement Agencies.—Elmer L. Irey, 2012 Wood- reeve Road, Avondale, Md. Tax Legislative Counsel.—Stanley S. Surrey, Great Falls Road, McLean, Va. Director of Personnel.—Theodore F. Wilson, 3617 Twentieth Street NE. il of Public Relations.—Charles’ Schwarz, 14 Glenridge Road, Kensington, d. Chief Clerk.—Frank A. Birgfeld, 3338 Seventeenth Street. Chief, Secretary’s Correspondence Division.— Gabrielle E. Forbush, 3120 N Street. Superintendent of Treasury Buildings.—Denzil A. Right, 1422 A Street SE. OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY General counsel.—Randolph E. Paul, 3206 P Street. \ Chief Counsel for the Bureau of Internal Revenue.—John P. Wenchel, 6805 Sixth Street. Assistants general counsel.—Norman O. Tietjens, 5217 Reno Road; Joseph J. O’Connell, Jr., 8326 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Thomas J. Lynch, 102 West Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Eugene F. Roth, Hay-Adams House; Ansel F. Luxford, 3908 Huntington Street. Assistant to the general counsel.—[Vacant.] Special assistants to the general counsel.—Samuel Klaus, 2737 Devonshire Place; David J. Speck, 3041 Sedgwick Street. 328 ; Congressional Directory mmavony General counsel—Continued. Chief counsel: Bureau of Customs.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. Bureau of Comptroller of Currency.—John F. Anderson, 1805 Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Procurement Division.— Thurman Hill, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Bureau of Narcotics.—Alfred L. Tennyson, 1512 Thirtieth Street. BUREAU OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY Compiroller.— Preston Delano, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Deputy Comptrollers—C. B. Upham, University Club; L. H. Sedlacek, 2001 Sixteenth Street; R. B. McCandless, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chief National Bank Ezxaminer.—W. P. Folger, the Westchester. Personnel officer—R. L. Miller, 6612 Barnaby Street. Special disbursing agent.—J. O. Malott, 302 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Secretary to the Compiroller.— Alice Cotter, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS Director of Research and Statistics.—George C. Haas, 5510 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant directors.—Henry C. Murphy, 2300 Forty-first 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—Eldon B. Smith, 515 Underwood Street. Librarian.—Isabella S. Diamond, 519 North Overlook Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF CUSTOMS (Wilkins Building, 1512 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commassioner.—W. R. Johnson, 4234 Forty-second Street. Assistant 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. : Deputy Commissioner, Fiscal Administration.—A. Sidney Johnson, 5219 Western Avenue. Supervisor of appraisers.— Charles Stevenson, 3105 Thirty-fourth Street. Chief counsel.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. CUSTOMHOUSE (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phones, Michigan 0243 and 0244) Deputy collector tn charge—Franklin A. M. Shafer, 4504 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. BUREAU OF NARCOTICS (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commassioner of Narcotics.—H. J. Anslinger, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy Commissioner of Narcotics.—Will S. Wood, 2800 Woodley Road. Assistant to the Commaissioner.—M. L. Harney, 4325 Verplanck Place. UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE Chief —Frank J. Wilson, 2910 Tennyson Street. Assistant Chief. —Joseph E. Murphy, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Staff assistant.—Laurence E. Albert, 1916 R Street. Chief Clerk.— Walter S. Bowen, 1837 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Supervising agent, White House detail.—Michel F. Reilly, 6601 Fourteenth Street, TREASURY Executive Departments 329 BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 5050) Commissioner.—Guy T. Helvering, the Mayflower. : Assistant to the Commissioner—Norman D. Cann, 1526 Fast-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Seni assistant to the Commaissioner.—J. B. McNamara, 2745 Twenty-ninth , Street. Special assistant to the Commissioner.—Leone Bruch, the Mayflower. Special Deputy Commissioner.—Xldon 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; A. D. Burford, 424 North Nelson Street, Arlington, Va. : Beary, Technical Staff.—Aubrey R. Marrs, 1422 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, a. Chaef, Intelligence Unit.—W. H. Woolf, 1722 Irving Street. Head, Administrative Division and Budget Officer.—Frederick I. Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road. 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. FISCAL SERVICE BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Commissioner.—E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. Assistant Commaissioners.—R. W. Maxwell, 3352 Upland Terrace; Joseph Green-berg, 1335 Fort Stevens Drive. Chief accountant.—G. L. Cake, 3411 Twentieth Street NE. Chief, 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.—R. A. Heffelfinger, 4427 Davenport Street. Deputy Commissioner in charge, Chicago office.—W. Spencer Thompson, Merchan-dise Mart Building, Chicago, Ill. 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.—L. W. Owen, Nash Building, Chicago, IIL 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, Administrative Division.— Bernard A. Hayden, 4009 Thirteenth Street NE. WAR SAVINGS STAFF (Sloane Building, 709 Twelfth Street) Executive Director—Eugene W. Sloan, 202 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Executive Director.—Charles W. Adams, 1400 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. 330 Congressional Directory TREASURY Field Director—Robert W. Coyne, 601 Tuckerman Street. Director, Press, Radio, and Advertising Diviston.—Vincent F. Callahan, 2943 Twenty-eighth Street. Director, National Organizations Division.—James L. Houghteling, 2424 Wyo-ming Avenue. DIVISION OF MONETARY RESEARCH Director of Monetary Research.—Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Directors.—Harold Glasser, 622 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; William H. Taylor, Roosevelt Hotel; Edward M. Bernstein, 3513 North-ampton Street. DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH Diregior of Tax Research.—Roy Blough, 3243 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, a. Assistant Director, Research.—L. Lészl6 Ecker-Récz, 1318 Twenty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director, Legislation.—Louis Shere, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. PROCUREMENT DIVISION (Seventh and D Streets SW. Phone, DIstrict 5700) Director.—Clifton E. Mack, 6314 Thirty-second Street. Deputy Director—A. J. Walsh, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Assistants to the Director—W. N. Rehlaender, 4811 Middlesex Lane, Edgemoor, bi Md.; Robert LeFevre, 112 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; George Landick, Jr., 19 Franklin Street, Chevy Chase View, Kensington, | Md. : bi hy til BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING t 1 i (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.— Timothy J. Quirk, 3718 Livingston Street. Acting Supe Gold Unit—DPatrick S. Cooney, 5014 Saratoga Avenue, Glen- cove, Md. Acting Crit. Silver Unit.— Thomas Y. English, 5204 Second Street North, Arling-ton, Va. COMMITTEE ON PRACTICE (Room 106, Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, EXecutive 6400, extension 5017) Chairman.—G. C. Hanna, 2610 Thirty-sixth Place. Members.—W. W. Cook, 25 East Walton Street, Chicago, I11.; Hessel E. Yntema, University of Michigan Law School, Hutchins Hall, Ann Arbor, Mich. Attorney for the Government.—E. B. Van Veen, 131 Locust Avenue, Bethesda, Md. WAR Executive Departments 331 DEPARTMENT OF WAR (Pentagon Building. 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 officer.—Brig. Gen. E. S. Greenbaum, 3334 Reservoir Road. Director of Production.—1Lit. Gen. William S. Knudsen, 2930 Woodland Drive. Assistants to the Under Secretary of War.—Michael J. Madigan, 2500 Q Street; Edward F. McGrady, 30 Madison Street; Harold H. Neff, 3461 Macomb Street; Col. Warren S. Ege, 2500 Q Street; Col. Basil D. Edwards, 4100 Jenifer Street. Executive assistant to Under Secretary of War.—Howard C. Petersen, 402 North St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. -Administrative officer.—Col. Marion Rushton, 2501 Calvert Street. Private secretaries to Under Secretary of War.—Lucille Mundy, 815 Eighteenth Street; Esther Rice, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Clerk to Under Secretary of War.—Kate Buckingham, 53 Hamilton Street. Chief Clerk.—Anna Lanigan, 5509 Nebraska Avenue. President, War Department Board of Contract Appeals.—Col. Hugh C. Smith, 4343 Cathedral Avenue. Chairman, Price Adjustment Board.—Maurice H. Karker, Mayflower Hotel. Assistant Secretary of War.—John J. McCloy, 3303 Volta Place. Executive officer.—Col. William P. Scobey, the Kennedy-Warren. Assistant executive officer—1st Lt. John M. Hall, 206 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va. Administrative assistant.—John H. Stucchio, 2551 Seventeenth Street. Private secretary.—Nancy Zinsser, 1633 Thirty-first Street. Assistant Secretary of War for Air.—Robert A. Lovett, 2346 S Street. Executive officer.—1t. Col. Thomas J. Gent, Jr., 4733 Reservoir Road. Legal executive.—Col. George A. Brownell, 1692 Thirty-first Street. Private secretary.—Ruth B. Haley, 1629 Columbia Road. : Admansstrative assistant and Chief Clerk.—John W. Martyn, 2901 Thirty-fourth Street. Azide to the Secretary of War.—Lt. Col. W. H. S. Wright, 4622 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistants to the Secretary of War.—Julius H. Amberg, 2821 N Street; Hrrvoy H. Bundy, 3306 O Street; Goldthwaite H. Dorr, -3216 Macomb treet. Clerk to the Secretary.—John W. Schott, 5631 Third Street. Personal secretary.— Elizabeth C. Neary, 3108 Hawthorne Street. Assistant administrative assistant.—James C. Cook, 6803 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Special assistant to administrative assistani.—Frank B. Bourn, 3777 Oliver Street. 332 Congressional Directory WAR Chiefs of Division: Director of Civilian Personnel and Training.— William H. Kushnick, 4315 Woodberry Street, University Park, Md. Coordination and Record —L. Frank Nye, 23 V Street NE. Printing and Advertising.—Henry C. Lehmann, 1334 Valley Place SE. Procurement and Accounting.— Walla A. Kenyon, 1615 Juniper Street. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF (Pentagon Building) Chief of Staff.—Gen. George C. Marshall, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff—Lt. Gen. Joseph Tr McNarney, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—1 (Personnel).—Brig. Gen. Miller G. White, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chaef of Staff, G—2 (Military Intelligence).—Maj. Gen. George V. Strong, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G-8 (Organization and Training).—Maj. Gen. Idwal H. Edwards, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G-4 (Supply) —Brig. Gen. Raymond G. Moses, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Chief of Staff, Operations Division—Maj. Gen. Thomas T. Handy, . 3325 Runnymede Place. Secretary of the General Staff.—Col. William J. Sexton, Fort Myer, Va. Chief, Civilian Personnel Branch.—Capt. Samuel T. Adams, 2515 K Street. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL (Room 723, 2145 C Street) The Inspector Sonal: —Maj. Gen. Virgil L. Peterson, 3010 Ellicott Street. Depry the Inspector General.—Brig. Gen. Philip E. Brown, 1510 Forty-fourth treet. Assistants the Inspector General.—Brig. Gen. Howard McC. Snyder, 2101 Con-necticut Avenue; Brig. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis, 1721 S Street. Ezecutive.—Col. Rosser L. Hunter, 6821 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Md. Inspections Service.— Director, Col. Pierre V. Kieffer, 3926 Morrison Street. -Inspections Division.—Col. Robert H. Fletcher, 1921 Twenty-fourth Street. Special Inspections Division.—Col. David B. Falk, 2101 Sixteenth Street. Speen Assignment and Research Division.—Col. Leslie E. Babcock, 1734 P treet. Maintenance Division.—Lt. Col. Robert W. Timothy, 606 Cloverfield Place, Silver Spring, Md. Lemeniigarions Service.—Director, Col. Franklin Babcock, 4801 Connecticut venue. Investigations Diviston.—Col. Edward C. Hanford, 514 Nineteenth Street. Reviews Division.—Lt. Col. Benjamin H. Weisbrod, Windover Avenue and Lovers Lane, Vienna, Va. Money Accounts and Miscellaneous Division.—Col. John L. Parkinson, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Field Service Division.—Col. Frank G. Ringland, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Procurement and Construction Inspections Division.—Brig. Gen. Leo J. Ahern, Army and Navy Club. Overseas Inspections Division.—Brig. Gen. Elliot D. Cooke, 8 Carvel Road, West-moreland Hills, Md. Special Assistant to the Inspector General.—B. H. Simmons, 7701 Georgia Avenue, LEGISLATIVE AND LIAISON DIVISION (Room 3D-929, Pentagon Building) Chief, Legislative and Liaison Division.— Brig. Gen. Wilton B. Persons, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Ezecutive—Col. John P. Dinsmore, 3396 Stuyvesant Place. Chief, Legislative Branch.—Col. Edward J. Walsh, 3921 Harrison Street. Chief, Federal Agencies Branch.—Col. George Parker, Lafayette Hotel. Congressional Liaison Branch: Liaison Officer, United States Senate.—Col. David A. Watt, Clinton, Md. Liaison Officer, House of Representatives.—Lit. Col. C. 7 Hauck, Jr., 4714 Chestnut Street, Bethesda, Md. WAR Executive Departments a 333 CIVIL AFFAIRS DIVISION - (Room 5B-737, Pentagon Building) Acting director.—Col. John H. F. Haskell, 2327 Twentieth Street. Executive—Lt. Col. George G. Berry, General Staff, Fort Myer, Va. Secretary—Capt. Louis Stone, 1620 Fuller Street. THREE PRINCIPAL COMMANDS ARMY GROUND FORCES Commanding General, Army Ground Forces.—Lt. Gen. Lesley J. McNair, Army War College. Chief of Ground Staff—Brig. Gen. James G. Christiansen, Army War College. Deputy Chief of Ground Staff.—Col. William L. Mitchell, Army War College. Secretary 2 Ground Staff.—Lt. Col. Louis W. Truman, 2634 Lee Highway, Arling- ton, Va. : Ground Adjutant General.—Col. Clyde L, Hyssong, Army War College. G—-1—Brig. Gen. Alexander R. Bolling, Army War College. G-2.—Col. Giles R. Carpenter, Army War College. G-8.—Brig. Gen. John M. Lentz, 1911 R Street. G-4.—Brig. Gen. William G. Walker, Army War College. Requirements.—Maj. Gen. Richard C. Moore, Army War College. Plans.—Col. John S. Winn, Jr., 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Statistics.—Lt. Col. John W. Wurts, 4603 Langdon Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Technical Information.—Lt. Col. William F. Nee, 6114 Fourteenth Street. Chemical. —Lt. Col. George R. Oglesby, 2326 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. : Engineer.—Col. John B. Hughes, 3136 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Fiscal.—Col. Donald T. Nelson, 2300 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Medical.—Col. William E. Shambora, 2116 South Kent Street, Arlington, Va. Ordnance.—Col. Robert W. Daniels, 4418 Street. -Quartermaster.—Col. William F. Campbell, 818 Twenty-fifth Street South, Arling-: ton, Va. Signal.—Col. Garland C. Black, 4952 Hurst Terrace. ! Headquarters Commandant.—Col. George I. Smith, Army War College. ARMY AIR FORCES Commanding General, Army Air Forces.—Gen. Henry H. Arnold, Fort Myer, Va. Executive Assistant.—Col. “Horace 'W. Shelmire, 1513 Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. hf 3a dn : Advisory council.—Col. Charles P. Cabell; 3225 Military Road; Col. Jacob E. Smart, Statler Hotel. L8G 5 : Chief of Air Staff —Maj. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Chiefs of Air Staff.—Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Hanley, Jr., 3024 Tilden Street; Brig. Gen. LaVerne G. Saunders, Willard Hotel; Brig. Gen. William E. Hall, 432 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Secretary of the Air Staff —Lt. Col. Millard A. Libby, 3446 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Personnel.—Brig. Gen. James M. Bevans, 4125 : Military Road. i Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Intelligence—Col. Edgar P. Sorensen, 3133 Con- necticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Training.— Brig. Gen. Robert W. Harper, 2304 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Matériel, Maintenance, and Distribution.—Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Echols, 5100 Watson Street. Assistant Chief of Aur Staff, Operations, Commitments, and Maj. Requirements.— Gen. Barney McK. Giles, Thirty-ninth Street and Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, Plans.—Brig. Gen. Orvil A. Anderson; 449 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. : : Chief of Management Conirol.—Col. Byron E. Gates, Thirty-ninth Street and Cathedral Avenue. ; fi : Azr Inspector—Maj. Gen. Follett Bradley, Hotel 2400. Air Fergion~Pris Gen. David N: W. Grant, Thirty-ninth Street and Cathedral venue. . Chil; Budget and Fiscal Office.—Brig. Gen. Leland W. Miller, 3133 Connecticut venue. : 83317°—78-1—24 ed. 23 Congressional Directory WAR STAFF DIVISIONS Director of Control Division.—Brig. Gen. Clinton F. Robinson, 3019 Foxhall Road.Assistant Chief of Staff for Personnel.—Brig. Gen. J. N. Dalton, Fort Myer, Va.Merry Personnel Division.—Brig. Gen. Russel B. Reynolds, director, Tilden ardens. : Civilian Personnel Division.—James P. Mitchell, director, 62 Girard Street NE.Special Service Division.—Brig. Gen. Frederick H. Osborn, director, 2314 Wyoming Avenue. Training Division.—Brig. Gen. Walter L. Weible, director, 4409 Warren Street.The Adjutant General's Office.—Maj. Gen. James A. Ulio, The Adjutant General, Stoneleigh Court. I'iscal Division.—Brig. Gen. A. H. Carter, director, 2134 Kalorama Road. Assistant Chief of Staff for Operations.—Maj. Gen. LeRoy Lutes, Headquarters, Army Service Forces. : Plans Division.—Col. C. E. Dissinger, director, 3543 Quebec Street. Strategic Logistics Division.—Col. D. O. Elliott, director, 3620 Macomb Street.Dzstribution Division.—Col. R. ‘A. Case, director, 5442 Broad Branch Road. Assistant Chief of Staff for Matériel.—Maj. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, 3900 Connecti-cut Avenue. : LE Director of Procurement.—Brig. Gen. W. H. Harrison, the Shoreham. 3 Purchases Division.—Col. A. J. Browning, director, 2720 Wisconsin Avenue. : % /i pioational Division.—Col. Boykin C. Wright, director, 3001 Woodland rive. : ; Requirements Division.—Brig. Gen. W. A. Wood, director, 3637 Veazey Street. Resources and Production Division.—Brig. Gen. H. C. Minton, director, Marlyn . Apartments. : ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Chief of Administrative Services.—Maj. Gen. George Grunert, Fort Myer, Va. National Guard Bureau.—Maj. Gen. John F. Williams, chief, the Westchester. Office of the Judge Advocate Gemeral.—Maj. Gen. M. C. Cramer, the Judge Advocate General, 3717 Fordham Road. Office of the Provost Marshal General.—Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion, the Provost Marshal General, 2737 Devonshire Place. Office of the Executive for Reserve and R. O. T. C. Affairs.—Col. Edward W. Smith, executive, the Wardman Park. Office of the Chief of Finance.—Maj. Gen. H. K. Loughry, chief, Army and Navy Club. Office of the Chief of Chaplains.—Chaplain William R. Arnold (Brig. Gen.), chief, 1114 North Inglewood, Arlington, Va. Army Exchange Service—Brig. Gen. Joseph W. Byron, chief, 4614 Thirty-third Street North, Arlington, Va. Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps.—Oveta Culp Hobby, director, Westchester Hotel. SUPPLY SERVICES The Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. E. B. Gregory, 4401 Greenwich Parkway. The Chief of Ordnance.—Maj. Gen. L. H. Campbell, Jr., 2831 Twenty-ninth Street. The Chief of Chemical Warfare Service.—Maj. Gen. W. N. Porter, 3227 Thirty- third Place. The Chief of Engineers.—Maj. Gen. E. Reybold, the Wardman Park. The Chief Signal Officer.—Maj. Gen. D. Olmstead, 3911 Livingston Street. The Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. J. C. Magee, 1740 Poplar Lane. The Chief of Transportation.—Maj. Gen. C. P. Gross, Fort Myer, Va. WAR Executive Departments 335 THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE (Washington, D. C.) Acting Commandant.—Col. George I. Smith, Cavalry. Executive officer.—Maj. Charles E. Lewis, Infantry. Chief Clerk.— William H. Gaskins, 3110 Thirty-eighth Street. WAR DEPARTMENT BOARDS, EXEMPTED STATIONS, MILITARY MISSIONS AND COMMISSIONS The following boards, exempted stations, military missions, and commissions are placed under the jurisdiction of the authority indicated after their respective names: Title Responsible Authority Battle Monuments Commission. The President. Beach Erosion and Shore Pro-The Chief of Engineers. tection Board. Board of Commissioners, United Secretary of War States Soldiers’ Home. Board of Engineers for Rivers Chief of Engineers. and Harbors. Budget Advisory Committee___." Commanding General, Army Service Forces: California Debris Commission___ Chief of Engineers. Command and General Staff Commanding General, Army Service Forces School, Fort Leavenworth, (curriculum and doctrine under supervision Kans. of G-3, W. D. G. S.). Director of Defense Aid________ Commanding General, Army Service Forces. Industrial Mobilization Board___ Under Secretary of War Military Missions... .... i. Sriergrions Division, War Department General : taff. Military Police Board __________ Provost Marshal General. Mississippi River Commission___ Chief of Engineers. Motion Picture Review Board___ Bureau of Public Relations. : National Board for the Promo-Commanding General, Army Ground Forces. tion of Rifle Practice. Photo News Board __.__...-. Bureau of Public Relations. United States Military Academy, Commanding General, Army Service Forces West Point, N. Y. (curriculum and doctrine under supervision of G-3, W. D. G. 8.). War Department Decorations Commanding General, Army Service Forces. Board. War Department Uniform Board. Commanding General, Army Service Forces. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPITHEATER COMMISSION (For list of members, see page 387) ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (For list of members, see page 387) JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES (For list of members, see page 404) THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD (For list of members, see page 385) THE JOINT BOARD (For list of members, see page 404) THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (For list of members, see page 404) 336 Congressional Directory JUSTICE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Constitution Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets. Phone, REpublic 8200) FRANCIS BIDDLE, of Philadelphia, Pa., Attorney General of the United States (1669 Thirty-first Street); born May 9, 1886, in Paris, France; son of Algernon 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 Pennsylvania Supreme Court; associate Biddle, Paul & Jayne, Philadelphia; partner Barnes, Biddle & Myers, Philadelphia; special assistant, United States Attorney, eastern district Pennsylvania; class C director, Federal Reserve Bank; chief counsel, Joint Committee to Investigate Tennessee Valley Authority; judge, United States Circuit Court of Appeals, third circuit, 1938-39; admitted to practice before Supreme Court of the United States, 1927; chairman, Philadelphia branch of Foreign Policy Association; chairman, National Labor Relations Board; member, Governor Pinchot’s Commission on Special Policing in Industry; member, Philadelphia County Board of Law Examiners; member, committee of censors, Philadelphia Bar Association; member, Board of Public Education, Philadelphia; director, Philadelphia Contributionship for Insurance of House for Loss by Fire; trustee, Twentieth Century Fund (New York), Fairmount Park Art Association; Democrat; clubs—Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Franklin Inn (Philadelphia), Harvard, Coffee House (New York); author—Llanfear Pattern, 1927: Solicitor General of the United States from January 1940 to September 1941 and Attorney General of the United States since September 5, 1941. Solicitor General.—Charles Fahy, 3700 Northampton Street. The Assistant to the Attorney Genmeral—James H. Rowe, Jr., 1410 Twenty-ninth Street. : Assistant Attorneys General: Samuel O. Clark, Jr., the Broadmoor. Francis M. Shea, the Westchester. : f Norman M. Littell, 4101 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. REPEAL Wendell Berge, 9508 West Stanhope Road, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Tom C. Clark, 5715 Moreland Street. nih Hugh B. Cox, 1727 H Street. Assistant Attorney General, Division of Customs.—Paul P. Rao, 201 Varick Street, New York City. Assistant Solicitor General.—Oscar 8. Cox, 2922 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Executive assistant to the Attorney General.—Ugo Carusi, 3720 Fordham Road: Secretary to the Attorney General. —Mary O’B. Johnson, 4352 Verplanck Place. Director of Public Relations.—M. E. 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: i ' (Phone, EXecutive 7100) Director.—J. Edgar Hoover, 4936 Thirtieth Place. : : ) AT Assistants to the Director—Clyde 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.; Alex Rosen, Colonial Village Apartments. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (Franklin Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa.) Commissioner.—Earl G. Harrison, Rose Valley Road, Moylan, Rose Valley, Pa. Deputy Commissioner (in charge of operations).—Joseph Savoretti, 1125 Morgan Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa. Assistant Commissioner— For Alien Control.—Willard F. Kelley, 7222 Alderbrook Road, Upper Darby, Pa. For Adjudications.—Thomas B. Shoemaker, Mayfair House, Germantown, Pa. For Inspections.—Jose R. Espinosa, 3809 Garfield Street, Washington, D. C. For Alien Registration.—Donald R. Perry, 419 Netherwood Road, Beverly Hills, Upper Darby, Pa. : JUSTICE : Executive Departments 337 General counsel.—Albert E. Reitzel (acting), Whittier Hotel, Philadelphia, Pa. Director of Research and Educational Services.—Henry B. Hazard, Mayfair House, Germantown, Pa. Director of Administrative Services.—Perry M. Oliver, 269 Bickley Road, Glenside, Pa. t (Hutchins Building, Washington, D. C.) Special assistant to the Commissioner.— Edward J. Shaughnessy, Dorchester House. BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS (Washington, D. C.) Chairman.— Thomas G. Finucane, 5514 Center Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : Members.— Robert M. Charles, 1312 Shepherd Street; Leigh L. Nettleton, 7327 -Fourteenth Street; Martin F. Smith, 5504 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Examiner.—Robert E. Ludwig, 3707 Woodley Road. BUREAU OF PRISONS Director.— James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director— William T. Hammack, the Argonne Apartments. BOARD OF PAROLE Members: Arthur D. Wood, the Westchester; T. Webber Wilson, the Annapolis Hotel; Edward P. Reidy, 530. East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Parole executive.— Walter K. Urich, 9320 Caroline Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. BUREAU OF WAR RISK LITIGATION Director.— Lester P. Schoene, route 4, Box 332, Alexandria, Va. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Administrative assistant to the Attorney General. —Thomas D. Quinn, 3310 Stephenson Place. Assistant administrative assistant.—S. A. Andretta, 137 East Bradley Lane, Chevy . +. Chase, Md. Chief Clerk. — Harvey C. Donaldson, Dorchester House. General agent.—E. R. Butts, 105 Randolph Avenue East, Alexandria, Va. SE general agent. — Eugene J. Matchett, 613 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, d Appointment clerk.—Nellie G. Plumley, the Ontario. Chaef, Division of Records.—Armando di Girolamo, Montgomery Arius Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Supplies and Printing.—John W. Adler, 1801 Key Bonieward, Arlington, Va. Librarian.—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. Rehert Watt, American Federation of Labor, Washington, D. C., representing labor. 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 Commissioner of Prison Industries.—J. S. Barrows, 47 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Industries agents.—R. A. Swadley, 4414 Thirteenth Place NE., Washington, D. C.; L. E. Williams, 2600 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; A. Nel- son Davis, 5611 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Secretary.—Ralph J. LaVallee, 314 Rittenhouse Street, Washington, D. C. 338 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Twelfth and Thirteenth Streets. Phone, DIstrict 5360) FRANK C. WALKER, of Pennsylvania, Postmaster General (the Wardman Park); born May 30, 1886, at Plymouth, Pa.; son of David and Ellen (Comerford) Walker; educated at Gonzaga University and the University of Notre Dame; appointed executive secretary of the President’s Executive Council by President Roosevelt in 1933; in the same year was named by the President to become Executive Director of the National Emergency Council; was married on Novem-ber 11, 1914, to Hallie Boucher, of Butte, Mont., and has two children, Thomas Joseph and Laura Hallie Walker. Executive assistant to the Postmaster General.—William F. Cronin, 5303 Massa~ chusetts Avenue, Westgate, Md. Director of Budget and Administrative Planning.—Joseph F. Gartland, 1634 Nineteenth Street. Commasstoner of the Budget.—John J. Haggerty, Berwyn, Md. Commissioner of Administrative Planning.—Archie A. Imus, Continental Hotel. Special assistant to the Postmaster Gemeral.—Forest J. Hall, 518 South Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. : Special assistant to the Postmaster General.— William J. Bray, 6306 Delaware Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel.—Frank H. Ellis, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief Clerk and Personnel Officer.—Harold W. Bresnahan, 3361 Runny- mede Place. Purchasing agent.—Harrison Parkman, Capitol Park Hotel. Solicitor.—Vincent M. Miles, 1312 Twenty-second Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Solicitor.— Walter E. Kelly, 2720 Wisconsin Avenue. CE a W. Hassell, 219 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, 4 OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL First Assistant Postmaster General.—Xildroy P. Aldrich, the Kennedy-Warren. Deputy First Assistants.—Clinton B. Uttley, 7700 Blair Road; Tom C. Cargill, 3001 Porter Street. Assistant Deputy First Assistant and Chief Clerk.— Charles C. Wenrich, 6609 Thirty-second Place. Division of Post Office Service: Superintendent.—[Vacant.] Assistant Superintendents—John J. Leahey, 2007 O Street; Alonzo M. Thomas, 601 Nineteenth Street; Henry C. Wyman, 3149 Nineteenth Street; Donald R. Niblack, 401 Jackson Place, Alexandria, Va.; Lafayette G. Buehler, 311 Twelfth Street NE.; Thomas J. O’Halloran, 4301 Ridge Road SE.; Max Kohrn, 1410 Ingraham Street; Edward E. Sherer, 2804 Fourteenth Street; Jeremiah J. Dwyer, 246 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Division of Postmasters: Superintendent.—John W. Hunt, Continental Hotel. Assistant Superintendents.—Norman R. Grant, 4209 Forty-sixth Street; Louis Brehm, Chevy Chase Apartments. Division of Rural Mazls: Superintendent.—Joseph E. Cooper, 4437 Brandywine Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street. Division of Dead Letters and Dead Parcel Post: Superintendent.—Frank C. Staley, 3701 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Superintendent.—David E. Kisliuk, 3325 Eleventh Street. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Smith W. Purdum, 8 Ralston Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Deputy Second Assistant.—[Vacant.] Assistant Deputy Second Assistant and Chief Clerk.—James A. Faithful, 526 Newcomb Street. POST OFFICE Executive Departments 339 Division of Railway Mail Service: General Superintendent.—John D. Hardy, 4707 Cooper Lane. Assistant General Superintendent.—Roy W. Dobbins, 3625 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Superintendent.— Ernest L. Loving, 7325 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Superintendent, Star Route Section.— William P. Crater, 3428 Patter-son Street. fhe Superintendent, Car Construction.—Edward R. Jones, 1202 Longfellow reet. Division of International Postal Service: Director.— George H. Grayson, 2721 Ontario Road. Assistant Directors.—Stewart M. Weber, Benning Station, D. C.; Vincent B. Waters, 5103 Chevy Chase Parkway. Division of Railway Adjustments: ; Superintendent.—Charles H. Stephenson, 3424 Thirtieth Street. ‘Assistant Superintendents.— Edward C. Steagall, 424 Seventh Street NE.; Harry S. Frankhauser, 3339 Quesada Street. Division of Air Mail Service: Superintendent.—Roy M. Martin, Capitol Park Hotel. Assistant Superintendent.—[Vacant.] 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 and Disbursing Clerk.—Arthur E. Martin, 3712 Alton Place. : Assistant Superintendent.—Roy L. Sheridan, 48 Kennedy Street NE. Division of Money Orders: Superintendent.—[Vacant.] Assistant Superintendent.—[Vacant.] 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 Mails: 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.—[Vaecant.] Assistant Superintendents.— Charles H. Kocher, 1313 Taylor Street NE. ; Edward A. Rowell, 404 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 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; Arthur S. Bacon, 3718 Twenty-fourth Street NE. 340 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Division of Motor Vehicle Service: Superintendent.—A. G. Biedenweg, 3120 Quesada Street. as, Superintendent.—Arthur R. Gehman, 3708 Fortieth Place, Brentwood, d Division of Federal Building Operations: Superintendent.—Frederick C. Cornwell, 9014 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. Drvision of Equipment and Supplies: Superintendent.—George W. Trexler, 5245 Nebraska Avenue. Mail Equipment Shops: Superintendent.—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.—Jesse M.. Donaldson, 2800 Woodley Road. Assistant Chief Inspector.—Samuel R. Young, 1530 Sixteenth Street. General Superintendent.—Roscoe E. Mague, 1812 Newton Street NE. Adminzstrative Analyst.—Harold W. Davis, P. O. Box 763, Alexandria, Va. Drvision of War Services: : Se Iie, .—Lucas A. Leighton, 626 Silver Spring Avene, Silver Spring, Division of Administrative Investigations: Superintendent.— Walter H. Pilcher, 204 Crestmoor Circle, Woodmoor, Silver Spring, Md. : Assistant Superintendent.—John F. Free, 3035 Military Road. Division of Maal Investigations: Superintendent.—Joseph M. Clolion, 1337 Randolph Street. Assistant Superintendent. — Thomas W. Davis, 309 Fifteenth Street NE. Division of Financial Investigations: Superintendent.—Henry S. Simpkins, 6014 Second Street. Assistant Swrertniaiong, —Elmer J. Dutemple 4603 Fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. C : BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Comptroller.—[Vacant.] Assistant Comptroller.—John W. Askew, 808 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Drvision of Cost Ascertainment: : Superintendent.— Aubrey H. Clayton, 523 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesis, Md. Division of Retirement Records: Superintendent. —Harry L. Collomb, 1719 Kilbourne Place. Division of Postmasters’ Accounts: Superintendent.— Leslie C. Reeley, 5008 Forty-third ‘Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Division of Public Building Accounts: ~ Superintendent. — Elizabeth Ruhlen, 2446 Huidekoper Place. NAVY | Executive Departments 341 DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY (Navy Department Building, Potomac Park, Eighteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7400) FRANK KNOX, Secretary of the Navy (4704 Linnean Avenue), 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 Meyse-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, 1642 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Ralph A. Bard, 2810 Forty-fourth Street. Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Aur. —Artemus L. Gates, 2442 Massachusetts Avenue. Special assistants to the Secretary of the Navy. Adin E. Stevenson, 1904 R Street; Joseph W. Powell, Shoreham Hotel; William C. Bullitt, 2447 Kalorama Road: Dr. Joseph W. Barker, 5511 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Frank E. -Mason, Old Oaks, Long Lane, Leesburg, Va. Nerval aide to the Secretary.—Capt. Lyman S. Perry, 604 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Confidential assistant to the Secretary. —Maj. John H. Dillon, U. 8. M. C., 709 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. : Special assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Rear Admiral Harold G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road; Charles F. Detmar, Jr., the Westchester. Special assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy (Procurement Legal Division).— H. Struve Hensel, 2814 Dumbarton Avenue; W. John Kenney, 5151 Palisade Lane; Stuart Scott, 3332 O Street; Richard S. Kyle, 2000 F Street; Patrick H. Hodgson, 19 Vernon Terrace, Alexandria, Va.; William Randall Compton, 7216 Harwick Road, Woodacres, Md.; James A Fowler, Jr., 2129 Bancroft Place. Neal ade to the Under Secretary of the Navy.— Capt. John E. Gingrich, Shoreham otel. Private secretary to the Under Secretary of the Navy.— Katharine Foley, 2139 R Street. Special assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—A. 1L.. Michel, 3500 Thirty-fifth Street; Earl C. Norris, 7324 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md.; Arthur M. Hin, 2305 Bancroft Place; Lt. Comdr. George S. Piper, U. S. N. BR: 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Naval aide to the Assistant Secretary.—Capt. Emmet P. Forrestel, 2023 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va Fr secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Paula K. Fisher, 1767 Q treet. Special assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Lt. Comdr. Mal-colm P. Aldrich, U. S. N. R., 1248 Thirtieth Street; Lit. Comdr. Edward C. Bench, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Harvey Emery, 2121’ Virginia Avenue. Naval aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Capt. J. F. Bolger, 4819 North Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Doris M. Erbe, 500 Bashford Lane, Alexandria, Va. 342 Congressional Directory NAVY OFFICE OF THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF, UNITED STATES FLEET, AND CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS (Room 3054, Navy Department Building) Commander tn Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations.— Admiral Ernest J. King, U. S. S. Dauntless Navy Yard, Washington, D. C. Vice Chief of Naval Operations.—Vice Admiral F. J. Horne, 1661 Crescent Place. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY (Room 2307, Navy Department Building) Judge Advocate General.—Rear Admiral W. B. Woodson, 2304 E Street. Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Rear Admiral L. E. Bratton (retired), 2716 Thirty-sixth Place. Aide to Judge Advocate General.—Lt. (Jr. Gr.) W. M. Whittington, Jr., 1737 H Street. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE (Room 1010, Navy Department Building) Administrative officer.—Vice Admiral H. V. Butler, 1122 Twenty-second Street South, Arlington, Va. Executive assistant.—Ben Abbott, 305 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Administrative assistant.—Joseph S. Davitt, 422 Allison Street. i engineer—Commander R. M. Paget, 4708 River Road, Bethesda, d Director of Civilian Personnel.— Charles Piozet, 6902 Pine Way, College Heights, d ’ Assistant Director of Civilian Personnel.—Guy McPherson, 5603 Hoover Street, Bethesda, Md. SHORE ESTABLISHMENTS DIVISION (Room 2030, Navy Department Building) Director—Rear Admiral Charles W. Fisher, Hay-Adams House. OFFICE OF PROCUREMENT AND MATERIAL (Room 2010, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Vice Admiral S. M. Robinson, the Manor Country Club, Norbeck, Md. Special assistant.—J. H. Vincent, 1320 Thirteenth Street. pt Deputy Chief of Procurement and Material.—Joseph W. Powell, Shoreham Hotel.Assistant Chief in Charge of Production.—Rear Admiral C. A. Jones, 2101 Con- necticut Avenue. Assistant Chief in Charge of Procurement.—Frank M. Folsom, Marlyn Apart-ments. Assistant Chief in Charge of Planning and Statistics.—Donald Belcher, 2926 Porter Street. : Chief of Resources Branch.—Rear Admiral T. J. Keleher, Dorchester House. Administrative assistant.—F. L. Henckels, 2220 Twentieth Street. PROCUREMENT LEGAL DIVISION (Room 2206, Navy Department Building) Chief—H. Struve Hensel, 2814 Dumbarton Avenue. Assistant Chief —W. John Kenney, 5151 Palisade Lane. OFFICE OF PUBLIC RELATIONS (Room 0010, Navy Department Building) Director —Capt. Leland P. Lovette, 2000 F Street. Deputy Director—Commander Robert W. Berry, 1017 South Oakcrest Road,Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Director.—Commander W. G. Beecher, Jr., 3139 Eighteenth StreetNorth, Arlington, Va. Press officer —Lt. Comdr. W. Marvin McCarthy, Eddystone Apartment. NAVY Executive Departments 343 OFFICE OF BUDGET AND REPORTS (Room 0123, Navy Department Building) Director—Rear Admiral Ezra G. Allen, 2419 California Street. Assistant Director—Capt. Alfred Tawresey, 2305 South Pierce Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF COORDINATOR OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT (Room 0151, Navy Department Building) Coordinator.—Rear Admiral J. A. Furer, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Coordinator.—Capt. Lybrand Smith, 3303 Macomb Street. In charge of Office of Inventions.—Commander H. L. Phelps, 2820 Devonshire Place. OFFICE CF PETROLEUM RESERVES (Tempo No. 2, Room 1001) Director —Rear Admiral Harry A. Stuart, 3808 Kanawha Street. DIVISION OF TRAINING LIAISON AND COORDINATION (Room 2503, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Dr. Joseph W. Barker, 5511 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. LEND-LEASE LIAISON OFFICE (Room 1034, Navy Department Building) Liaison officer.—Admiral J. M, Reeves (retired), Brighton Hotel. Aide.—Commander R. S. Meclver, 4219 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. INCENTIVE DIVISION (2118 Massachusetts Avenue) Chief. Rear Admiral C. H. Woodward (retired), Westchester Apartments. Executive officer.— Commander S. J. Singer, 1915 Kalorama Road. OFFICE OF WAR SAVINGS BONDS (Room 0129, Navy Department Building) Coordinator.—Capt. Gerald A. Eubank, 2311 Connecticut. Avenue. : Deputy Coordinator—Lt. Comdr. W. M. Wakefield, 1440 North Inglewood Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Coordinator (Air).—Lt. Comdr. C. C. Morgan, 1 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. TRANSPORTATION BRANCH (Room K-1047, Navy Department) Chief.—Arthur M. Hill, 2305 Bancroft Place. GENERAL BOARD (Room 2743, Navy Department Building) Chairman.—Admiral A. J. Hepburn, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Members—Admiral T. C. Hart, Shoreham Hotel; Admiral E. C. Kalbfus, 3416 Reservoir Road; Admiral c.C Bloch, Wardman Park Hotel; Rear Admiral W. R. Sexton, Benedick Hotel; Rear Admiral G. J. Roweliff, "Fairfax Hotel; Capt. H. L. Pence, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Secretary.— Capt. W. D. Chandler, 5101 Tilden Street. Chief Clerk. ty Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. INTERIOR CONTROL BOARD (Room 2732, Navy Department Building) Senior member —Capt. Vance D. Chapline, 2608 Thirty-sixth Place. Recorder.—Lt. Comdr. A, B. Leggett, 2406 Fort Scott Drive, Aurora Hills, Arling-ton, Va. 344 Congressional Directory NAVY BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS AND NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) (Room 1N-87, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral Benjamin H. Dorsey (retired), 3104 Hawthorne Street. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (LINE) (Room 1N-87, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral David MeD. Le Breton, 2301 Connecticut Avenue. Recorder.— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD (Room K-1018, Navy Department) President.—Rear Admiral Benjamin H. Dorsey (retired), 3104 Hawthorne Street. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. COMPENSATION BOARD (Room K-1018, Navy Department) Senior member.—Capt. E. G. Kintner, 3005 Thirty-second Street. Member and Recorder.—Capt. A. S. Farquhar, 3337 Runnymede Place. Executive accountant and auditor—Charles M. Eichelberger, 3808 North Vernon Street, Arlington, Va. BOARD ON PRODUCTION AWARDS (2118 Massachusetts Avenue) Chairman.—Admiral C. C. Bloch (retired), Wardman Park Hotel. Secretary.—Capt. Frank Loftin (retired), Fairfax Hotel. BOARD ON DECORATIONS AND MEDALS (Arlington Annex, Room G-701) Senior member.— Rear Admiral A. E. Watson (retired), Shoreham Hotel. : Members—Rear Admiral A. C. Pickens, 711 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; Col. Frank Halford, U. S. M. C. (retired), 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Member and Recorder.—Capt. H. G. Patrick (retired), 2 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ; : : BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL (Navy Department, Arlington Annex, and Pentagon Building, Arlington, Va.) (For answers to questions coneerning 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 7281; for general information call REpublic 7400, branch 7171) Chief of Naval Personnel.—Rear Admiral Randall Jacobs, 3928 McKinley Street. Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel.—Rear Admiral L. E. Denfeld, Westchester Apartments. Aide ’.: Chief of Naval Personnel —Lt. C. A. Appleby, U. S. N. R., 3610 Warren treet. Administrative assistant to Chief of Naval Personnel.—Helen M. Hess, 3301 Six-teenth Street. Special assistants.—Capt. G. V. Stewart, Front Royal, Va.; Capt. R. A. Koch, 826 Connecticut Avenue; Franklin J. Schuyler, 101 North Highland Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Enlisted Personnel —Capt. A. M. Bledsoe, 316 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Recruiting Division.—Capt. Webb C. Hayes, U. S. N. R., Dorchester Apart-ments. ¢ Enlisted Distribution Division.—Commander J. T. Talbert, 1827 North Hart-ford Street, Arlington, Va. : Enlisted Performance Division.—Capt. H. G. Shonerd, McLean, Va. NAVY Executive Departments 345 Director of Officer Personnel—Capt. W. M. Fechteler, 3507 Livingston Street. Officer Procurement Division.—Capt. A. P. Lawton, Westchester Apartments. -Officer Distribution Division.—Capt. J. W. Roper, 2700 Tilden Street. Officer Performance Division.— Capt. B. B. Biggs, 4107 Twenty-third Street North, Arlington, Va. Director of Planning and Conirol.—Capt. H. G. Hopwood, 3215 Rittenhouse Street. Legislation Section.— Commander T. H. Hederman, 4215 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director of Special Activities.—Capt. C. C. Baughman, Westchester Apartments. Administrative Diviston.—Capt. J. B. Rutter, 7118 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Casualties and Allotments Section.—Commander A. C. Jacobs, U.S. N. R., 307 Taylor Drive, Alexandria, Va. Identification Section.—James H. Taylor, 618 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Naval Academy Section.—Leonard Draper, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Public Relations Diviston.—Lt. Comdr. P. B. Brannen, U.S. N. R., Shoreham Hotel. : : : : Records and Statistics Division—Commander E. A. Solomons, 514 Woodlan Terrace, Jefferson Park, Alexandria, Va. Training Division.—Capt. B. L. Canaga, U.S. N. Transportation Section.—Commander R. S. Robertson, 3211 Forty-fifth Street. Welfare Division—Commander J. L. Reynolds, 942 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. IT Chaplains Division.—Capt. R. D. Workman (Ch. C.), 3843 Livingston Street. Women’s Reserve Division.—Lt. Comdr. Mildred H. McAfee, U.S. N. R., 1634 I Street. : yo BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (Room 2403, Navy Department Building) Ga Admiral Ben Moreell, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 2300 treet. : : Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Admiral Lewis B. Combs, Corps of Civil Engineers, 5511 Broad Branch Road. : Fan Chief Clerk.—E. A. Peek, 1385 Nicholson Street. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (Room 0036, Navy Department Building) Chief—Rear Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, 2302 E Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.— Rear Admiral T. D. Ruddock, 4437 Klingle Street. Chief administrative officer.— Harry M. Klee, 716 Taylor Street. Director, Administrative Division.—Capt. A. D. Mayer, Westchester Apartments. Director, Planning and Progress Division.—Capt. E. E. Herrmann, 2936 Twenty- eighth Street. Director, Production Division.—Capt. G. F. Hussey, Jr., 3305 Cleveland Avenue. Direos, Fleet Maintenance Division.—Capt. William Granat, 3552 Brandywine treet. Director, Research and Development Division.—Capt. S. R. Shumaker, 3512 Rod- man Street. rE : Director, Financial Diviston.— Capt. A. G. Zimmermann, 2908 Forty-fifth Street. Senior member, Special Board on Naval Ordnance.—Capt. G. L. Schuyler, 1506 Thirty-fourth Street. : BUREAU OF SHIPS (Room 3-1804, Navy Department Temporary, Building T-3) Chief. —Rear Admiral Edward L. Cochrane, 3110 Thirty-third Place. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Admiral Earle W. Mills, 6208 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Special assistant to Chief of Bureau.—A. Brice Biggers, 1379 Sheridan Street. Administrative officer (room 3—1812).—Capt. E. E. Roth, 2308 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va. A Division (room 8-1716).—Capt. Philip G. Lauman, 3900 Cathedral venue. : Shipbuilding Division (room 4—2036).—Rear Admiral Charles L. Brand, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Maintenance Division (room 4—2002).—Rear Admiral Joseph J. Broshek, 3542 Raymoor Road, Rock Creek Hills, Md. : Radio Division (room 6—1006).—Capt. Jennings B. Dow, Westchester Apartments. 346 Congressional Directory NAVY NAVAL RESEARCH LABORATORY (Bellevue, D. C.) Director—Rear Admiral A. H. Van Keuren, 103 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Commander R. W. Dole, 310 Park Road, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS (Room I-2127, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Admiral W. B. Young, Paymaster General of the Navy, 105 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Paymaster ‘General.—Rear Admiral W. J. Carter, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Officer in Charge of Administrative Group.—Capt. T. Earle Hipp, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Special assistant to the Paymaster General.—Norwood P. Cassidy, 3292 Chestnut Street. Professional assistant to the Paymaster General. RE Comdr. P. P. Brown, 4325 Eighth Street. Office manager.—Lt. Comdr. T. B. Morrow, 2153 California Street. Chief Clerk.—Jacob H. Hollinger, 315 A Street SE. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (Potomac Annex, Twenty-third and E Streets) Chief —Rear Admiral Ross T McIntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy, 3637 Forty-ninth Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Rear Admiral Luther Sheldon, Jr., Medical Corps, 3203 Cleveland Avenue. Chef Clerk.—W. S. Douglass, Wellington Villa, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS (Room 2082, Navy Department Building) Chief—Rear Admiral John S. McCain, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant Chief of Bureaw.—Rear Admiral R. E. Davison, 3725 Van Ness Street. Chief Clerk.—John B. May, 101 Fourteenth Street NE. NAVAL DISPENSARY (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building, and Rear Third Wing, first floor, Arlington Annex) 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, FRanklin 5700) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear Admiral F. L. Reichmuth, U. S. N. Aides to Commandant.—Commander W. F. Loventhal, U. S. N. (retired); Lt. F. J. Loveless, U. S. N. R., 3813 V Street SE. Chzef Clerk. —QGeorge E. Gonard, 5610 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Superintendent, Naval Gun Factory, captain of the yard, ship’s Ofer, aeronautical officer, and navigation officer. ~ Capt. C. R. Robinson, U. S. N Senior inspector. —Capt. D. F.Ducey, U.:S.iN. Personnel officer—Capt. D. H. Stuart, U. 8S. N. (retired), 4703 Dover Road, Brookdale, Md. NAVAL AIR STATION (Anacostia, D. C.) Commanding officer —Capt. S. H. Ingersoll, 17 Forest Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. NATIONAL NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER (Bethesda, Md.) Commanding officer.—Rear Admiral C. W, O. Bunker, Medical Corps, 5312 Moor-land Lane, Edgemoor, Md. NAVY : Executive Departments 347 NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding officer.—Capt. Paul W. Wilson, Medical Corps, 2737 Devonshire Place. NAVAL DENTAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding officer.—Capt. Arthur H. Yando, Dental Corps, 3905 Morrison Street. 3 NAVAL HOSPITAL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) ?» Commanding officer.—Capt. John Harper, Medical Corps, Naval Hospital. NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) | Commanding officer.—Capt. W. L. Mann, Jr., 4508 Chase Avenue, Bethesda, Md. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) President.— Capt. Paul W. Wilson, Medical Corps, 2737 Devonshire Place. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) President.— Capt. Paul W. Wilson, Medical Corps, 2737 Devonshire Place. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS (Navy Building, Arlington Annex. Phone, REpublic 7400) THE COMMANDANT’S OFFICE Commandant.—Lt. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. or dentgons to Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Harry Schmidt, Quarters No. 3, Marine arracks. Plans and Policies Division.— Director, Brig. Gen. Keller E. Rockey, 2445 Fif-teenth Street. Marine Corps Reserve Division.— Director, Brig. Gen. Littleton W. T. Waller, Jr., Shoreham Hotel. Aviation Division.— Director, Maj. Gen. Ralph J. Mitchell, 221 North Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. Tor sot Di r-—lumecioy Col. Benjamin W. Gally, 6627 East Avenue, Chevy hase, : Public Relations Division.— Director, Brig. Gen. Robert L. Denig, Westmoreland Apartments. : Recruiting Division.— Director, Lt. Col. William E. Burke, 10 Norton Place, Alexandria, Va. ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT Acting Adjutant and Inspector—Col. Samuel C. Cumming, 2922 Forty-fifth Street. Chief Clerk.—Maj. Troy A. Nubson, 4301 Thirteenth Street NE. QUARFERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT Quartermaster—Maj. 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. Raymond R. Wright, 2737 Devonshire Place. Chief Clerk.—Ingrid Jonassen, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. 348 Congressional Directory NAVY NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MARINE CORPS) (Navy Building, Arlington Annex. Phone, REpublic 7400 President.—Brig. Gen. Walter N. Hill, 3722 Appleton Street. Recorder.—Lt. Col. Walter H. Sitz, 3731 Northampton Street. MARINE BARRACKS (Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, LIncoln 1230) Commanding.— Col. John Potts. COAST GUARD (HEADQUARTERS) (Southern Railway Building, 1300 E Street. Phone, REpublic 7400) The Commis Vice Admiral Russell R. Waesche, 7005 Rolling Road, Chevy ase, : Assistant Commandant and, chairman, Advisory Board.—Rear Admiral Lloyd T. Chalker, Tilden Gardens. : Chief, Administrative Management Division.—Commander Joseph Pois (retired), 3639 Ingomar Place. ; : : Chief, Pie Relations Division.—Capt. (E) Ellis Reed-Hill, 4815 Bradley Boule-vard. Aide to the Commandant.—Lt. Comdr. Arthur J. Hesford, 805 Fifteenth Street, New Alexandria, Va. : ea, ies Services Division.—Lt. Comdr. James E. Davidson (retired), 1621 treet. Citi Statistical Division.—Lt. Comdr. Frank R. Eldridge (retired), 3721 Porter treet. : Chief personnel officer.—Rear Admiral Robert Donohue, 3311 Rittenhouse Street. Assistant chief personnel officer—Capt. Lyndon Spencer, 6915 Arlington Road, Bethesda, Md. ; Chief, Auxiliary Division.—Capt. Chester H. Jones, 136 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chaef, Military Morale Division.—Capt. James L. Ahern, 3200 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Civilian Personnel Division.—Lt. Comdr. Carl E. Herrick (retired), 3904 Edmunds Street. Chief, Officer Assignment Division.—Capt. Norman R. Stiles, 8912 Seneca Lane, Bethesda, Md. / Chief, Enlisted Assignment Division.—Commander Edwin J. Roland, 409 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Personnel Procurement Division.—Lt. Comdr. Arthur G. Morrill, 4310 Windom Place. . Chief, Medical Division.—Medical Director Carl Michel, United States Public Health Service, 3024 Tilden Street. Chief, Training Division.—Capt. Charles W. Dean, Burlington Hotel. Chief, Merchant Marine Personnel Division.— Commander Henry T. Jewell, 11 Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, Va. : : Chief, Personnel Budget Section.—Lt. Comdr. William H. Carroll, 7903 Chicago : Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Women’s Reserve Division.—Lt. Comdr. Dorothy C. Stratten (WR), 4914 Upton Street. Inspector in chief—Capt. Clarence H. Dench, 809 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief intelligence officer—Commander Frank E. Pollio, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. i counsel.—Commander Kenneth S. Harrison (retired), 5605 Fourteenth treet. Chief Operations officer.—Capt. Charles A. Park, 5126 Nebraska Avenue. Assistant chief operations officer—Commander Frederick J. Birkett (acting), Hotel Harrington. : Gl Aids to Navigation Division.—Capt. Frederick P. Dillon, 3816 Van Ness treet. Chief, Allowance Division.—Capt. William J. Keester, 4434 North Nineteenth: Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Aviation Division.—Commander Frank A. Leamy, 62 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. . Chief, Beach Patrol Division.—Capt. Raymond J. Mauerman, 4500 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. NAVY Executive Departments 349 Chief, Communications Division.—Capt. Edward M. Webster, 3200 Porter Street. Chief, Merchant Marine Inspection Division.— Capt. Halert C. Shepheard (retired), 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, Ordnance and Gunnery Division.—Commander Russell E. Wood, 15 Fort Hunt Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Port Security Division.—Capt. (E) Norman B. Hall, 210 East Thornapple, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, finance and supply officer—Rear Admiral Frank J. Gorman, 4550 Con-necticut Avenue. Assistant chief finance and supply officer—Commander Edmund C. Nussear (retired), 6305 Thirty-second Street. Administrative assistant.—Oswald L. Crickenbarger, 3210 Tennyson Street. Engineer in chief and temporary chairman, Merchant Marine Council.—Rear Admiral Harvey F. Johnson, 115 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Engineer in chief —Capt. (E) Phillip B. Eaton, “Comynholm,” Klingle Road and Porter Street. Chief, Aeronautical Engineering Division.—Capt. William J. Kossler, 43 Edge- wood Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chie, Communication Engineering Division.—Capt. Irving L. Gill, Tilden 74 ardens, Chief, Civil Engineering Diwvision.—Capt. Ralph R. Tinkham, 3237 Arcadia Place. Chief, Naval Engineering Division.—Capt. (E) John N. Heiner, 5503 Fairglen Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. ‘Chief, Contract Services Division.—Lt. Leo T. Robbins, 3807 Benton Street. Chief, Matériel Reports Division.—Lt. Comdr. Samuel L. Denty, 709 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. : Presiden, Coast Welfare.—Rear Admiral Thomas M. Molloy, 2007 Wyoming venue. ; RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION : (For list of members, see page 387) ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (For list of members, see page 387) JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES (For list of members, see page 404) THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD (For list of members, see page 385) THE JOINT BOARD (For list of members, see page 404) THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (For list of members, see page 404) 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——24 350 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, Elizabeth Jane; was a reporter on Chi-cago newspapers, 1897-1900; practiced law at Chicago since 1907, and has been active in munieipal reform polities since 1897; was manager of the Chicago mayor-alty 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 Demo-cratic National Conventions of 1936 and 1940; chairman of the Illinois State Council of Defense Neighborhood Committee, 1917 to April 1918; was inY. M. C. A. work in France with the Thirty-fiftth 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 Association 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 Asscciation, Illinois Society of S. A. R., Swedish Colonial Society (honorary life), Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Phi, and Pi Gamma Mu (honorary), Chicago Press Veterans Association, Authors’ League of America, France Forever, American Philatelic Society, Izaak Walton League of America, Inc., International Honorary Editorial Board of Free World (a monthly) ; honorary member National Council of Boy Scouts of America; awarded the Louis D. Brandeis Medal for Service to Humanity, 1940; awarded the Cornelius Amory Pugsley Gold Medal for Distinguished Park Service in the United States for the year 1941; 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, 1941; Autobiography of a Curmudgeon, Fightin’ Oil, 1943. He became Secretary of the Interior March 4, 1933. Under Secretary.—Abe Fortas, 3025 N Street. First Assistant Secretary.—Michael W. Straus, Linnean Hill, Klingle Road and Porter Street. : Assistant Secretary.— Oscar L. Chapman, Westchester Apartments. Special assistants to the Secretary.—Ebert K. Burlew, 2812 Thirty-eighth Street; William H. MeCrillis, Cedar Lane, Bethesda, Md.; James V. MecClintie, the Chastleton. Assistants to the Secretary.—Saul K. Padover, 2909 O Street; George N. Briggs, 226 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va.; Philip P. Dickinson, 2702 Wisconsin Avenue; Mae A. Schnurr, 5610 Nebraska Avenue. Assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Land Utilization.—Lee Muck, 4723 Forty- eighth Street. Private secretary.— May B. Conley, 2737 Devonshire Place. Solicitor.— Warner W. Gardner, 116 Summerfield Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate solicitor.—Felix S. Cohen, 4956 Hurst Terrace. Chief Clerk.—Floyd E. Dotson, 5843 Potomac Avenue. Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator for War.—Howard A. Gray, Ashburn Farm, Ashburn, Va. Deputy Fishery Coordinator.—Ira N. Gabrielson, 535 Hinman Street, Evanston, TIL. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR Solicitor—Warner W. Gardner, 116 Summerfield Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate solicitor. —Felix S. Cohen, 4956 Hurst Terrace. : Administrative assistant.—Edith A. Mahon, 2572 University Place. Chiefs of Divisions: Indian Division.— William H. Flanery, 5735 Thirteenth Street. Conservation Division.—Leland O. Graham, 522 North Norwood StreetArlington, Va. Public Lands Division.—Harry M. Edelstein, 3623 Jenifer Street. :Property Acquisition Division.—Theodore Spector, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.Mines Diviston.—Charlotte T. Lloyd, 2501 Ridge Road Drive, Alexandria, Va.Legislative Division.—A. Bruce Wright, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. : GENERAL LAND OFFICE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) J Commissioner.—Fred W. Johnson, the Chastleton. Assistant Commissioner.—Joel David Wolfsohn, 4609 Norwood Drive, Chevy -Chase, Md. i ; :Branch of Adjudication.— Thomas C. Havell, supervisor, 1203 E Street NE. Branch of Land Planning.—John R. Riggleman, supervisor, 30 Drummond Ave-" nue, Chevy Chase, Md. Branch of Field Eramination.—Dale B. Whiteside, supervisor, 943 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Chiefs of Divisions: Admanistrative—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.—Riley V. Lewis, 1108 Euclid Street. Reclamation and Land Grant.—Andrew Markhus, 5013 Baltimore Avenue, Friendship Station, D. C. EC | | | | Research and Analysis.—[Vacant.] Surveys.—Earl G. Harrington, 1321 Fern Street. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner—John Collier, route 1, Falls Church, Va. Liaison officer.—Joseph C. McCaskill, 255 West Broad Street, Falls Division of Inter-American Cooperation; Director— Ernest E. Maes, eighth Place, Berwyn, Md. Church, Va. 9706 Forty- 352 Congressional Directory INTERIOR (Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Ill. Phone, WHItehall 5920) Assistant Commissioner.— William Zimmerman, Jr., 190 East Chestnut Street,Chicago, Ill. Chie fovppet John R. T. Reeves, Hotel DeWitt, 244 East Pearson Street, hicago, Ill. Administrative Branch: Chief and budget officer—W. Barton Greenwood, 1021 Hull Terrace, Evanston, Ill. Associate Chief —Paul L. Fickinger, 604 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Ill. Engineering Branch: Acting Chief—Albert L. Wathen. Resources Prot; Acting Chief —Walter V. Woehlke, 858 Oakdale Avenue, Chi-: cago, Ill. : Field REE LL, W. LaRouche, 338 Fairview Avenue, Winnetka, Ill, C. in Indian Division: Director.—Daniel E. Murphy, Wacker Hotel, Chicago, Construction Division: Director—E. A. Poynton, 1452 Oak Avenue, Evanston, ll | 1550 Education Division: = Director—Willard W. Beatty, 5425 North Kenmore Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Associate Director.—Olin R. Sande, 838 Lakeside Place, Chicago, Ill. Assistant Director.—Percy W. Danielson, 1317 Washington Street, Evanston, 111. ; Extension Division: Director—A. C. Cooley, LawsonY. M. C. A., Chicago, Ill. Assistant Director.—Ralph 8. Bristol, 380 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Fiscal Division: Chief.—Charles B. Emery, 5337 North Kenmore Avenue, Chicago, 1 ah Forestry and Grazing: > ; ~ Director—Leroy D. Arnold, 463 Drexel Street, Glencoe, Ill. Assistant Director.—John Donald Lamont, 1422 Edgewood Lane, Winnetka, 111. Health Division: : : Director.—Dr. J. R. McGibony, 617 Sheridan Road, Evanston, III. Assistant Director.—Dr. Horace De Lien, 30 West Chicago Avenue, Chicago, T11. Irrigation Division: Acting Director—Clay H. Southworth, 5458 North Kenmore -Avenue, Chicago, Ill. : Land Division: Acting Director.—Allan G. Harper, Hull House, 825 West Polk, Chicago, Ill. Personnel Division: Personnel Officer.—C. Arthur Barber, Wacker Hotel, Chicago, Im Roads Division: Director.—J. Maughs Brown, 1337 West Fargo Avenue, Chicago, 111 : Soil and Moisture Division: Chief.—William J. Endersbee, 1077 Cherry Street, Winnetka, Ill. ; Welfare Division: Director—Fred H. Daiker, 1513 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, 111. “INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS BOARD j (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chairman.—John Collier, Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Members: Ebert K. Burlew, special assistant to the Secretary. 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. 3 Jones Narcho, Jr., Sells, Ariz. General manager.—René d’ Harnoncourt, Chastleton Hotel. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (Interior Building (north). Phone, REpublic 1820) Director— William Embry Wrather; 2 Westwood Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Administrative geologist.—J. D. Sears, 21 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Geologic Branch: G. F. Loughlin, chief geologist, 3214 Northampton Street. S. R. Capps, assistant chief geologist, 3308 Thirty-fifth Street. Water Resources Branch: : G. L. Parker, chief hydraulic engineer, 2706 Forty-fourth Street. : C. G. Paulsen, assistant chief hydraulic engineer, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. INTERIOR Executive Departments Topographic Branch: T. Sr Pendleton, chief topographic engineer, 7605 Dellwood Place, Bethesda, J. G. Staack, assistant chief topographic engineer, 1520 Webster Street. Albert Pike, "division engineer, Atlantic Division, 1823 Nineteenth Street. C. L. Sadler, division engineer, Central Division, Rolla, Mo. Conrad A. Ecklund, division engineer, Pacific Division, Sacramento, Calif. Conservation Branch: H. B. Soyster, chief engineer, 6416 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. J. D. Northrop, assistant chief of branch, 3937 Legation Street. Alaskan Branch.— Philip S. Smith, chief Alaskan geologist, 3249 Newark Street. Division of Engraving and Printing. —PFred Graff, Jr., chief, 17 Franklin Street, Kensington, Md. Chzef Clerk.—Ronne C. Shelsé, Embassy Apartments. Division of Dristribution —Jule E. André, chief, 2710 Nineteenth Street North, ‘Lyon Village, Arlington, Va. Lorne, .— William H. Heers, 508 Maple Ridge Road, Battery Park, Bethesda, BUREAU OF RECLAMATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner.—John C. Page, 6600 Barnaby Street. Assistant Commassioner.— Harry W. Bashore, 3930 Huntington Sirah Assistant to the Commissioner and chief counsel.—J. Kennard Cheadle, 1603 Forty- fourth Street. Chief engineer.—S. O. Harper, United States Customhouse, Denver, Colo. Legal Division.—J. Kennard Cheadle, chief counsel, 1603 Forty-fourth Street. . Operation and Maintenance Division. ‘—John §. Moore, general supervisor, 910 United States National Bank Building, Denver, Colo.; Alfred R. Golze, assistant supervisor, 7819 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Accounting Division.— William F. Kubach, chief accountant, 1349 Sheridan Street. Engineering Division.— Wesley R. N elson, Chief, 3417 Alabama Avenue, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. 2 nformation Division.—GCoodrich W. Lineweaver, Chief, 3511 Davenport Street. Chief Clerk.—Charles N. McCulloch, LaSalle Apartments. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Jesse W. Myer, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue, NATIONAL PARK SERVICE DIRECTOR'S OFFICE (Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Ill. Phone, WH]Itehall 5920) Dirgiton, —Newton B. Drury, 101 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Chief of Operations. ory A. Tolson, 1224 West Chase Avenue, Chicago, IIL. Chief counsel.—G.A. Moskey, 421 Melrose Street, Chicago, Ill. Supervisor of Land Planning. —Conrad L. Wirth, 384 Woodlawn Avenue,. Glencoe, Til. Supervisor of Interpretation.—C. P. Russell, 737 Judson Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Acting Supervisor of Historic Sites. — Herbert E. Kahler, 401 South Northwest Highway, Park Ridge, Ill. dheies Chief of Engineering—Arthur W. Burney, 824 Judson Avenue, Evanston, 1 Chief of Planning.—Thomas C. Vint, 1153 Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IIL Chief of Forestry.—J. D. Coffman, 830 Michigan Avenue, Evanston, 111. Editor in chief.—Isabelle F. Story, 421 Melrose Street, Chicago Ill. WASHINGTON LIAISON OFFICE (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Associate Director.—A. E. Demaray, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARKS (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Superintendent.—Irving C. Root, 6301 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. 354 Congressional Directory INTERIOR BUREAU OF MINES (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director—R. R. Sayers, 201 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director—Reginald S. Dean, York Apartment. Office of Field Operations: Principal Metallurgical Engineer—Paul M. Ambrose, 4305 Van Buren Street, University Park, Md. Principal Mining Engineer. —Edward F. Fitzhugh, Jr., 2141 I Street. Special lzaison officer.—Earl A. Trager, 6412 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative officer.—John M. Morris, 4700 Connecticut Avenue, Assistant administrative officer, Business Management.—John D. Secrest, 3707 Parkwood Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md. Assistant administrative ‘officer, Budget. — William E. Rice, 6405 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Office of Minerals Reports.—Allan Sherman, 1545 North Falkland Cane Silver Spring, Md. RESOURCES AND LABORATORIES SERVICE Acting Chief of Service and Chief, Mines Planning Division.—Carl E. Julihn, 2820 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Laboratories Planning Division and Chief, Minerals Processes Division.— Charles: W. Davis, 3176 Upland Terrace. Chief, Division of Geophysical Exploration.—Frederick W. Lee, 841 Custom House, Baltimore, Md. FUELS AND EXPLOSIVES SERVICE Chief of Service— Arno C. Fieldner, Cosmos Club. 4enpton] od of Service.— Wilburn C. Schroeder, 4608 Beachwood Drive, College ark Chief, Explosives Division.—[Vacant.] Chil Petroleum and Natural Gas Division.—Roscoe A. Cattell, 7717 Posen treet. Chief, Coal Division.—[Vacant.] Chief, Division of Solid Fuels Utilization for War.—John F. Barkley, 541 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md Chief, High Explosives Research Division. —John C. Holtz, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS SERVICE Chief of Service—Elmer W. Pehrson, 1573 Forty-fourth Street. Assistant Chief of Service.—Francis M. Shore, 1221 Euclid Street. Chief, Metal Economics Division.— Thomas H. Miller, 11 Hilltop Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Mineral Production and Economics Division.—[Vacant. ] Chief, Nonmetal Economics Division.— Oliver Bowles, 5000 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief, Foreign Minerals Division.—Joseph S. McGrath, 3227 Adams Mill Road. Chief, Petroleum Economics Diviston.— Alfred G. White, 3733 Kanawha Street. Chief, Coal Economics Division.—John W. Buch, 1635 Montague Street. HEALTH AND SAFETY SERVICE Chief of Service—Daniel Harrington, 3153 Nineteenth Street. Chief, Safety Diviston.—[Vacant.] Chief, Coal Mine Inspection Division.—Edward H. Denny, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Chief, Health Division.—[Vacant.] Chief, Explosives Control Division.— Richard D. Leitch, 9313 Walden Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Mineral Production and Security Division.—John J. V. Forbes, 5507 Charl-cote Street, Bethesda, Md. REGIONAL OFFICES Regional engineer, Eastern Region, College Park, Md.—Paul M. Tyler. Regional engineer, Central Region, Rolla, Mo. —TEugene D. Gardner. Regional engineer, Western Region, Salt Lake City, Utah.—Stuart R. Fiwmorley. INTERIOR Executive Departments 355 GRAZING SERVICE (Walker Bank Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, Phone Sau Addresses listed below are in Salt Lake ity, Uta Director of Grazing.—R. H. Rutledge, 741 Elizabeth Street. Assistant Director —Julian Terrett, 105 East South Temple Street. Chief, Branch of Range Management.—E. R. Greenslet, 1709 Michigan Avenue. Chief, Branch of Range Improvement and Maintenance.—[Vacant.] Chief, Branch of Operations.—Depue Falck, 1451 Uintah Circle. Chief, Branch of Land Acquisition and Control.—J. H. Leech, 245 East South Temple Street. Acting chief counsel.—Daniel F. McGowan, Temple Square Hotel. (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Liaison officer.—Archie D. Ryan, 1916 G Street. BITUMINOUS COAL DIVISION (Walker Building. Phone, NAtional 4830) Director—Dan H. Wheeler, 619 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. al=tyind to the Director.—E. Boykin Hartley, 9206 Midwood Road, Silver Spring, 4 . General counsel.—Arnold Levy, 1508 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Marketing Branch.—Robert A. Magee, 2806 Crest Avenue, Cheverly, Md. Chief, Economics Branch.—George A. Lamb, Wooten Drive, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Trial Examiners Branch.—C. R. Larrabee, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Complionse Coordinator.—Joseph J. Laub, 5713 North Fifteenth Road, Arlington, a. . Chief, Records Section.—Leo A. Gough, 9302 Saybrook Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Cel, RG Section.—Howard M. Gillman, Jr., 3717 Alabama Avenue oD, i Chief, Information Section.— Leonard W. Mosby, 22 Melbourne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Field Office Branch.—N. O. Wood, Jr., 3410 Macomb Street. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (222 West North Bank Drive, Chicago, Ill. Phone, WHitehall 5920) Director.—Ira N. Gabrielson, 535 Hinman Street, Evanston, Ill. Assistant Directors.—Albert M. Day, 600 Diversey Parkway, Chicago, Ill; Charles E. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chzef counsel.—Donald J. Chaney, 613 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Ill Chiefs of Divisions: g Admanastration.—W. R. Dillon, 848 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Alaska Fishertes.—Ward T. Bower, Georgian Hotel, Evanston, III. Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration.—R. M. Rutherford, 914 Judson Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Fish Culture.—M. C. James, 1452 Oak Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Fishery Biology.—Elmer Higgins, 1012 Ashland Avenue, Wilmette, Ill. Fishery Industries.—R. H. Fiedler, 7100 Eighth Street, Washington, D. C. Game Management.—W. E. Crouch, 628 Sheridan Square, Evanston, Ill. Land Acquisition.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, 849 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Predator and Rodent Control.—D. D. Green, 818 Forest Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Public Relations.—H. P. Sheldon, Lakeshore Club, Chicago, Ill. Wildlife Refuges.—J. Clark Salyer, 2d, 807 Hinman Street, Evanston, Ill. Wildlife Research.—W. B. Bell, 2244 Cleveland Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Director of Aquarium (Commerce Building).—Fred G. Orsinger, 5607 First Street NE., Washington, D. C. 3 (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820), Liaison officer—John R. Gardner, 1317 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. DIVISION OF TERRITORIES AND ISLAND POSSESSIONS (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—Benjamin W. Thoron, 2900 N Street. Assistant Director—Ruth Hampton, Westchester Apartments. 356 : Congressional Directory INTERIOR TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS Governor of Alaska.—Ernest Gruening, Juneau, Alaska. Secretary of Alaska.—Edward L. Bartlett, Juneau, Alaska. Governor of Hawait.—Ingram M. Stainback, Honolulu, T. H. Secretary of Hawai and special disbursing agent. — Ernest K. Kai, Honolulu, T. H. Governor of Virgin Islands.—Charles Harwood, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. ose es secretary of Virgin Islands. — Robert M. Lovett, Charlotte Amalie, 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 ! United States High Commzissioner.—[Vacant].? Economic Adviser—E. D. Hester. President of the Philippines.— Manuel L. Quezon, Shoreham Hotel. Vice President of the Philippines.—Sergio Osmena, 1617 Massachusetts Avenue. THE ALASKA RAILROAD General manager.—Otto F. Ohlson, Anchorage, Alaska. Assistant general manager. — Harold W. Snell, Chicago 111., suite dise Mart. 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, 1125 Mérchan. Alnska! Superintendent of motive power and equipment.—W. L. Kinsell, Anchorage, Alaska. Supeimanion of hotels, commissary, and stores.—D. W. Metzdorf, Anchorage, aska Bridge engineer.—A. M. Truesdell, Anchorage, Alaska. Chief surgeon.—Dr. P. L. Heitmeyer, Anchorage, Alaska. Chief 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, 510 Virginia Street, Seattle, as h ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION Ex officio commissioner in charge of work.— Ernest Gruening, Governor of Alaska, Juneau, Alaska. Chief engineer.—lke P. Taylor, Juneau, Alaska. Assistant chief engineer.—Hawley W. Sterling; Juneau, Alaska. Chief Clerk.—G. H. Skinner, Juneau, Alaska. PUERTO RICO RECONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Admanistrator.—[Vacant.] Assistant Admanistrator.— Guillermo Esteves, San Juan, P. R. General counsel.—Henry A. Hirshberg, Broadmoor Apartments, 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, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. 1 The Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines was inaugurated November 15, 1935, under the act of Congress (Public, No. 127, 73d Cong.), approved March 24, 1934. 2 Duties of the High Commissioner were transferred to the Secretary of the Interior by Executive Order No. 9245, September 16, 1942. : INTERIOR Executive Departments 357 DIVISION OF POWER (Room 6312, South Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, extension 4545) Acting Director—Arthur E. Goldschmidt. NATIONAL POWER POLICY COMMITTEE (Room 6315, South Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, extension 4125) Chairman.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Vice chatrman.— Leland Olds, Chairman, Federal Power Commission. Members: ; J Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, Federal Works Agency. Ganson Purcell, 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. SOLID FUELS ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Solid Fuels Coordinator—Harold L. Ickes, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md. Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator—Howard A. Gray, Ashburn Farm, Ashburn, Va. Associate Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator (Bituminous Coal).—Thomas J. Thomas, Fairfax Village. Special assistant.—B. B. Brown, 2141 I Street. ; Associate Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator (Transportation).—Fred A. Dawson, 855 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator (Coke).—Harlen M. Chapman, 6521 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Deputy Solid Fuels Coordinator (Anthracite).—[Vacant.] Director, Information Division.—Leonard W. Mosby, 22 Melbourne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. NATIONAL PARK TRUST FUND BOARD (Phone, REpublic 1820) Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, 2211 Thirtieth Street. Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md. Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service, 101 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Dr. J. Horace McFarland, Harrisburg, Pa. Louis Hertle, Gunston Hall, Va. ADVISORY BOARD ON NATIONAL PARKS, HISTORIC SITES, BUILDINGS, AND MONUMENTS Chairman.— Edmund H. Abrahams, Savannah, Ga. Vice chazrman.—Clark Wissler, New York, N. Y. Secretary.—Frank M. Setzler, United States National Museum, Washington, D. C. Members.—Herbert E. Bolton, Berkeley, Calif.; Thomas Barbour, Cambridge, Mass.; Mrs. Reau Folk, Nashville, Tenn.; George deB. Keim, Edgewater Park, N. J.; Fiske Kimball, Philadelphia, Pa.; Waldo G. Leland, Washington, D. C.; Charles G. Sauers, River Forest, Ill.; and Richard Lieber, Indian-apolis, Ind. 358 Congressional 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 64 years of administrative work in the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis-tration; began farming with his father while still attending high school and con-tinued 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 Chureh Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Emery E. Jacobs, 367 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; Thomas J. Flavin, 7200 Gloster Road, Woodacres, Md.; Carl Hamilton, 400 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va.; Robert L. Webster, 301 North Noland Street, Falls Church, Va.; Edward Jerome Overby, 4118 Third Road North, Arlington, Va. : Special assistant to the Secretary.— William Parker, 1813 F Street. Secretary to the Secretary.— Catharine L. Loose, 2401 Calvert Street. Secretary to the Under Secretary.—Cleo C. Talbott, 2414 Wagner Street SE. Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Evelyn Wagner, 2315 Twentieth Street. Economic adviser.—Mordecai J. B. Ezekiel, 5000 Allandale Road, Friendship Station, D. C. Special adviser.— Warner W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Special assistant to the Under Secretary.—[Vacant.] Executive secretary to the Administrative Council.—Stanley P. Williams, 4633 Fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF LAND USE COORDINATION (South Agriculture Building, Independence Avenue between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Coordinator.—E. H. Wiecking, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Amerie Coordinator.—Carleton P. Barnes,30 Duvall Drive, Westmoreland Hills, d. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 359 BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Office of the Chief.— Howard R. Tolley, Chief, 212 South Fairfax Street, Va.; Bushrod W. Alexandria, Allin, 514 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md.; Foster F. Elliott, 121 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Ralph H. Rogers, 3215 Quesada Street; Raymond C. Smith, 3211 North Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va.; Oris V. Wells, 14 Belfield Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va.; Conrad Taeuber, 4222 Sheridan Street, Hyattsville, Md. Head of Division of— Agricultural Finance.—Norman J. Wall, 2928 P Street. Aided] Statistics.—Paul L. Koenig, 1733 North Danville Street, Arlington, a. Economic Information.—Peter H. De Vries, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. ~ 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.—V. Webster Johnson, 4317 Claggett Road, Hyattsville, Md. ‘Marketing and Transportation Research.—F. L. Thomsen, 806 Fifteenth Street, Alexandria, Va. Program Analysis and Development.—Harold A. Vogel, 803 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Va. Program Study and Discussion.—Carl Taeusch, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Program Surveys.—Rensis Likert, 4832 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Statistical and Historical Research.—Oscar C. Stine, 6345 Western Avenue. OFFICE FOR AGRICULTURAL WAR RELATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director—Samuel B. Bledsoe, 1505 Grace Church Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Director—Howard B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street. Assistant Director (Material Control Officer).—Frederic B. Northrup, 14 Wood- mont Road, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director and budget officer— William A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Assistant Directors.—Cameron G. Garman, 114 Allen Road, Yorktown Village, Md., Henry A. Nelson, 4631 Brandywine Street; Richard W. Maycock, 4521 Thirty-second Road North, Arlington, Va. Assistants to Director—Henry G. Herrell, 210 Peabody Street; Verne B. Lewis, 6225 Sligo Parkway, Hyattsville, Md.; John H. Lynch, 1401 Tuckerman Street; Norman L. Munster, 2712 Wisconsin Avenue; Robert A. Walker, 1416 North Taylor Street, Arlington, Va.; J. Banks Young, Brook Drive, Lee Boulevard Heights, Falls Church, Va. Chief of Division of— Accounting.— William R. Quigley, 3906 Twentieth Street NE. Estimates and Allotments.—Ralph S. Roberts, 6400 Thirty-first Place. Fiscal Management.—Harold A. Stone, 1051 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Va. Purchase, Sales, and Traffic—Ray Ward, 6234 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. 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, Waverly Way, Langley, McLean, Va. Assistant Director.—Ross BE. Moore, 2445 Thirty-ninth Street. Administrative officer.—[Vacant.] Division of Foreign Agricultural Research, Chief—John L. Stewart, 811 Thirtieth Street SE. Division of Latin American Agriculture, Chief —Ralph H. Allee, 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. Information Section, Head.—J. Clyde Marquis (acting), 2480 Sixteenth Street, Special assistant to Director—George B. L. Arner, 504 Aspen Street. Chief agricultural economist—Eric Englund, R. F. D. 3, Rockville, Md. 360 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE OFFICE OF INFORMATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—Morse Salisbury, 517 Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Director in Charge of— Publications, Special Reports, Exhibits Service.—Keith Himebaugh, Rockville, M d. Press and Radro Service Services.— Whitney Tharin, 4522 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. Field Information and Motion Picture Services.—Duncan Wall, 116 West Wood- bine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Erecutive assistant to the Director. —J. H. McCormick, 1308 Perry Street NE. Chief of Publications.—M. C. Merrill, 6701 Second Street. Chief of Special Reports.—XKeith Himebaugh, Rockville, Md. Chief of Exhibits Service.—Joseph W. Hiscox, 1820 Upshur Street=NE. Chief of Radio Service—Wallace L. Kadderly, 1800 North Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. Chef of Press Service — William K. Charles, 3207 Circle Hill Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Chief of M otion Picture Service. —Raymond ‘Evans, 4008 Forty-eighth Street, Bladensburg, Md. Chuef of Field Information Service.—Duncan Wall, 116 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Personnel and Administrative Services—R. A. Hollis, -9305 Colesville ; Road, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL E> (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Devector of Personnel.—T. Roy Reid, 3124 Quesada Street. Assistant Directors.—James L. Buckley, 4714 Sheridan Street, Riverdale, Md; Strother B. Herrell, 7114 Seventh Street. Executive officer. — Charles R. Peck, 4917 Rockwood Parkway. Assistants to the Director. — Joseph’ P. Findlay, 4710 Yuma Street; Thomas N. Roberts, 1006 Monroe Street. Chief, Division of Classification.— William C. Laxton, 7117 Harwick Road, Wood-acres, Chief, DR of Employment.—James M. Reynolds, 4505 Guilford Road, College Park d Chief,Division of Investigations. — Chalmers T. Forster, 904 Maryland Avenue Chief, Division of Organization and Personnel Management.—N. Robert Bear, 3290 Worthington Street. Chief, Division. of Personnel Relations and Safety. —Robert M. Moore, 2807 Con-necticut Avenue. Chief, Division of Teatntng. — Christopher o. Henderson, 5206 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Ji SE (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) The librarian.—Ralph R. Shaw, 330 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR (South Building, Independence Avenue between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Solicitor.—Robert H. Shields, 5 Carvel Circle, Westmoreland Hills, Md. flasen; Solicitor in Charge of Litigation.—W. Carroll Hunter, R. F. D. 1, Vienna, a Assistant to the Solicitor —Ruth Rouss O’Rourke, 1735 Queens Lane, Arlington, Va. Associate Solicitor in Charge of— Food Production and Forestry.—Donald J. Sherbondy, 618 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. fon Credit.—Robert K. McConnaughey, 5234 Canterbury Road, Kansas City, ans. Food Distribution.— Ashley Sellers, 303 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Rou Electrification.— Vincent D. Nicholson, 1307 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Commodity Credit, Research and General Legal Services—Henry Hilbun, Jr., 3811 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 361 (Office Address: 212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) | Associate Solicitor in Charge of Farm Credit.—Robert K. McConnaughey, Canterbury Road (Fairway District) Kansas City, Kans. 5234 (Office address: 420 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo.) Associate Solicitor in Charge, Rural Electrification.— Vincent D. Nicholson. 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. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief, Office of Plant and Operations, Equipment Conservator, and Mileage Ad-manistrator—Arthur B. Thatcher, 4116 Military Road. Assistant Chief.—John S. Lucas, 816 Whittier Place. Technical assistant to the Chief.—Marshall S. Wright, 2613 South Kent Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Chief—Raymond J. Weir, 4239 Benning Road NE. Chief,ik Services Division.— William E. Weir, 1408 Franklin Street | Chief, Central Supply Division.—Samuel L. ‘Gardiner, 3902 Twenty-fifth Place NE. Chief, Communications Division.—Linwood E. Donaldson, 2622 Sixth Street NE. Chief, Equipment and Engineering Services Division. — William K. Knauff, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Chzef, Motor Transport Division.—Samuel G. Quinn, 2504 Tenth Street NE. Chief, Real Estate Diviston.—Charles G. Blumer, 2411 North Potomac Bizeet, Arlington, Va. | | | AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW, Phone, REpublic 4142) Admanistrator—E. C. Auchter, 4400 Hartwick Road, College Park, Md. Assistant Administrator.—P. V. Cardon, 1730 Crestwood Drive. Assistant to the Administrator.—C. E. Schoenhals, 3367 Stephenson Place, Special assistants.—C. G. Woodbury, 1801 Hoban Road; Louise Stanley, 3223 Macomb Street. Publications and Information Coordinator. —Gove Hambidge, 64 St. Paul Street, Kensington, Md. Research Coordinators.—Rhett Y. Winters, 6609 Thirty-second Street; S. B. Fracker, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street; H. W. Marston, 7913 Orchid Street; 0. E. May, 5411 Thirteenth Street. : Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief. —W. W. Skinner, 6 Knowles Avenue, Kensington, Md. Assistant Chefs. — Carl F. Speh, 208 Elm Street, Alexandria, Va.; Henry A. Donovan, 4440 Forty-ninth Street. Chief of— ; Ainge Services Division. Sion E. Preinkert, 1742 North: Capitol treet darseniinre Chemical Research Division.—H. S. 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. Informant, Division.—F. Li. Teuton, route No. 2, Anacostia Station, Washing-ton Naval Stores Research Division.—Samuel Palkin) 3727 McKinley Street. Personnel Division.—N. E. Jack, 326 Channing Street NE. 362 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 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; Hugh C. McPhee,6514 Fortieth Avenue, University Park, Hyattsville, Md.; H. W. Schoening,5504 Nebraska Avenue; Paul E. Howe,! 2828 Twenty-ninth Street. Business manager.—J. R. Cohran, 917 Eighteenth Street. :Head of— Interstate Inspection Division.—A. W. Miller, 6833 Piney Branch Road.Pathological Division.—H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue.Tick Eradication and Special Diseases Division—W. M. MacKellar, 6100 Thirteenth Street. : ! Tuberculosis Eradication Division.—A. E. Wight, 112 C Street SE.Virus Serum Control Division.—D.1. Skidmore, 4452 Volta Place.Zoological Division.—Benjamin Schwartz, 2633 Sixteenth Street. BE Director of Animal Disease Station.—Adolph Eichhorn, Beltsville Research Center,Beltsville, Md. ; ‘ Bureau of Dairy Industry (Bouth Building, C Street, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—O. 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,Chief, Section of Information.—L. 8. Richardson, 610 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. : Sled Chief of Division of— : : : :"Dairy Research Laboratories,—George E. Holm, 3513 R Street. pesDairy Cle Breeding, Feeding, and Management.—Roy R. Graves,” German-© town, } ShMoris J reigns Res, Kelly, 1527 East Falkland Lane, Silver prin Y Darry Berd Improvement Investigations.—J. F. Kendrick, 2506 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. : Woon and Physiology.— Charles A. Cary, 4605 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, d. ; Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine 3 (Bouth Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief—P. N. Annand, 4247 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Associate Chief.—Avery S. Hoyt, 413 Van Buren Street. ° PheAssistant Chiefs.—S. A. Rohwer, 3103 Key Boulevard, Lyon Village, Arlington, Va.; F. C. Bishopp, 8014 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md.; F. H.Spencer, 4016 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md.; 'W. L. Popham, 4026Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va. : : . Cheef of Division of— Finance and Business Services.—B. Connor, 5808 Third Street. Personnel—W. F. Leffler, 1820 Clydesdale Place. Fruit 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: rich Elm Drsease Control.—E. G. Brewer, 503 Main Street, East Orange, Forest Insects—F. C. Craighead, 5301 Forty-first Street. Gypsy and Brown-Tail Moth Control.—R. A. Sheals, 20 Sanderson Street, Green-field, Mass. ’ : Plant Disease Conirol.—J. F. Martin, 7504 Fourteenth Street. Cereal and Forage Insects.—C. M. Packard, 4519 Eighteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. i ; Sh 10n military furlough, SEES EE AGRICULTURE Fxecutive Departments 363 Chief of Division of—Continued. ou Crop and Garden Insects.—W. H. White, Engel Terrace, College Park, d Cotton Insects.—R. W. Harned, 4417 Garfield Street, Pink Bollworm and Thurberia "Weevil Control.—R. E. McDonald, 571 Federal Building, San Antonio, Tex. Bee Culture.—J. 1. Hambleton, Brookeville, Md. Insects Affecting Man and Animals.—W. E. Dove, 1019 Taussig Place NE. 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.—C. P. Clausen, Woodley Park Towers. Insecticides.—R. C. Roark, 3163 Adams Mill Road. Foreign Plant Quarantines. E.R Sasscer, 9 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md Domestic Plant Quarantines—B. M. Gaddis, Box 101, Arlington, Va. Grasshopper Control.—Claude Wakeland, 820 Security Life Building, Denver, Colo. Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief—Henry C. Sherman, Cosmos Club. Assistant Chief.—Hazel K. Stiebeling, Westchester Apartments. Administrative officer.—Lennah Curtiss Zens, Silver Spring, Md. Chaef of Division of— Family Eeconomics.—Helen R. Jeter (acting chief), 5414 McKinley Street, "Bethesda, Md. Textiles and Clothing.—Ruth O’Brien, 1219 Hamilton Street. Foods and Nutrition.— Esther L. Batchelder, 8445 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Housing and Household Equipment.—Lenore E. Sater, 3900 Hamilton Street, Hyattsville, Md. Home Economics Information.—Ruth Van Deman, 3502 Thirtieth Street. Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering (Plant Industry Station, near Beltsville, Md. Phone, W Arfield 4400) Chief—R. M. Salter, 4411 Beachwood Road, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Chief.—M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief.—F. P. Cullinan, 4402 Beachwood Drive, Hyattsville, Md. Business manager.—H. E. Allanson, 7330 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Head of Division of— Agricultural Engineering.—G. R. Boyd (acting), 320 Long Branch Parkway, Takoma Park, Md. Cereal Crops and Diseases. —M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Cotton and Other Fiber Crops and Diseases. —H. Ww. Barre, 100 Albemarle Street, Westmoreland Hills, D. C. Dio iF Rema Plants.—D. M. Crooks, 6910 Wake Forest Drive, College ar Dry Land Agriculture.—C. E. Leighty, 2831 North Franklin Road] Arlington, Va, Porere Crops and Diseases.—O. S. Aamodt, 4306 Woodberry Street, Hyattsville, 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 I niroduction. —B. Y. Morrison, 7320 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Soil on Fertilizer I nvestigations. —F. W. Parker, 5711 Fortieth Avenue, Hyatts- ville ; Soil Survey.—C. E. Kellogg, 4100 Nicholson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Suge Bert nvestigations.—E. W. Brandes, 6310 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy ase, 364 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Head of Division of—Continued. Tobacco Investigations.—W. W. Garner, 1367 Parkwood Place. Rubber Plant Investigations Project.—E. W. Brandes, 6310 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. 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. 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. Office of Experiment Stations (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence: Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —James T. Jardine, 4334 P Street. Assistant Chief —R. W. Trullinger, 3115 South Dakota Avenue NE. Assistant to the Chief. —Walworth Brown, 7 Dupont Avenue, Kensington, Md. Chief, Division of Insular Stations.—James T. Jardine (acting), 4334 P Street. Editor, Experiment Station Record. —Howard L. Knight, 1364 Kalmia Road. Beltsville Research Center (Beltsville, Prince Georges County, Md. Phone, WArfield 4200) Chief, Division of Management and Operations.—Charles A. Es Beltsville Resenreh Center, Beltsville, Md. FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION (Municipal Auditorium, 212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) Governor.—A. G. Black, 1224 Huntington Road, Kansas City, Mo. Deputy Governors.—C. Ww. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; R. K. McConnaughey, 5234 Canterbury Rood, Kansas City, Kans.; J. E. Wells, Jr., 235 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. Land Bank Commissioner—W. E. Rhea, 1010 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. ropa ah Commassioner. — Samuel D. Sanders, Ambassador Hotel, Kansas ity, Production Credit Commassioner.—C. R. Arnold, 624 East Seventy-third Street, Kansas City, Mo Intermediate Credit Commissioner.—George M. Brennan, 4618 Warwick Boule-vard, Kansas City, Mo. Associate Solicitor in Charge, Farm Credit Division.—R. K. McConnaughey, 5234 Canterbury Road, Kansas City, Kans, Director, Regional Agricultural Credit Division.—C. C. Jacobsen, 229 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. Director, Finance and Accounts—W. J. Snow, Jr., 5512 Norwood Road, Kansas City, Kans. Drrector of Jafonmialion and Extemnsion.—Edwy B. Reid, 7212 Bellevue Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Dzrector, Mortgage Corporation Service Division. —Harris E. Willingham, 230 West Sixty-second Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. hel ezaminer.— Martin J. Fox, 722 Ward pid Kansas Gi Mo. ief, sixth Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Director, Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Division.—S. Paul Lindsey, Jr., 2 West -Seventieth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Chisel, Administrative: Diviston.—V. V. Hemstreet, 7200 Jefferson Street, Kansas ity, Mo Chuef, Personnel Division.—Cecil A. Johnson, 820 East Seventyseverth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Special assistant to the Governor: —CIliff Woodward, 321 Ward. Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 365 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation (212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) Board of Directors: Chairman.—A. G. Black, 1224 Huntington Road, Kansas City, Mo. Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramerey Street, Washington, D. C. W. E. Rhea, 1010 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. President.—A. G. Black, 1224 Huntington Road, Kansas City, Mo. Ezecutive vice president.—Harris E. Willingham, 230 West Sixty-second Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. : Vice president.—John H. Guill, 5507 Chadwick Road, Kansas City, Kans. Acting treasurer.—C. T. Veatch, Jr., 6319 Vernon Road, Merriam, Kans. Vice president and secretary.—George H. Thomas, 212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo. FOREST SERVICE (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —L. F. Watts, 1911 R Street. : Associate Chief —Earle H. Clapp, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief —R. E. Marsh, 5222 Chevy Chase Parkway. Division of Fiscal Control.—H. I. Loving, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. National Forest Divisions: C. M. Granger, Assistant Chief, box 1285, River Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of Fire Control and Improvements.—Perry A. Thompson, 4318 Thirty-sixth Street. Division of Timber Management.—E. E. Carter, 3213 Nineteenth Street. Division of Range Management.— L. Dutton, 2651 Sixteenth Street. Walt Division of Recreation and Lands.—[Vacant.] Division of Engineering.—T. W. Norcross, 407 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Wildlife Management.—H. L. Shantz, 2415 Twentieth Street. Emergency Rubber Project, executive officer.— Gordon R. Salmond, 106 West Myrtle Street, Alexandria, Va. State and Private Forest Divisions: Assistant Chief —E. 1. Kotok, 1408 Greenbrier Avenue, Arlington, Va. Desision 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 S. Peirce, 3738 Huntington Street. Forest Research Divisions: Assistant Chief —C. L. Forsling, 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, 624 Oakland Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Division of Forest Influences.—Edward N. Munns, 1358 Juniper Street. Division of Dendrology and Range Forage Investigations.— William A. Dayton, 4812 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Administrative Management and Information Divisions: Assistant Chief. —Xarl W. Loveridge, 1650 Harvard Street. Division of Operation.— William P. Kramer, 2700 Valley Drive, Alexandria, a. Binsin of Information and Educattion.—Dana Parkinson, 3707 Military oad. Division of Personnel Management.—H. D. Cochran, 204 North Piedmont Street, Arlington, Va. Lands Divisions: Assistant Chief —L. F. Kneipp, Alban Towers. Division of Forest Land Planning.—[Vacant.] Diviston of Land Acquisition.—[Vacant.] Northeastern Timber Salvage Administration: Lyle F. Watts, Administrator, 1911 R Street. . Assistant administrators.—Earl S. Peirce, 3738 Huntington Street; E. I. Kotok, 1408 Greenbrier Avenue, Arlington, Va. 83317°—78-1—24d ed.——25 4 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION (420 Locust Street, Boatmen’s Bank Building, St. Louis, Mo. Phone, CHestnut 8738) Admainistrator.—Harry Slattery, 4605 Lindell Boulevard.’ Deputy Administrators.—Robert B. Craig, 527 Greely Avenue, Webster Groves, Mo.; Vincent D. Nicholson, Boatmen’s Bank Building. Consulting economist—Harlow S. Person, Boatmen’s Bank Building. Acting Chief, Applications and Loans Division.— Arthur W. Gerth, 809 Westwood Drive, Clayton, Mo. : Chief, Design and Construction Division.—Guy W. Thaxton, 725 South Skinker Boulevard. Chief, Cooperatives’ Operations Division.— Willard E. Herring, 4615 Lindell Boule- vard. Chief, Finance Division.—Joseph F. Marion, 7507 Byron Place, Clayton, Mo. Chief, Technical Standards Division.—Maurice M. Samuels, Mark Twain Hotel.Chief, Information Division.—Allyn A. Walters, 6204 Marwinette Avenue. Acting Chief, Personnel Division.— Robert T. Beall, 4961 Laclede Avenue. Bhi M ov Division.—James R. Frazer, 7415 Cornell Avenue, University ity, Mo. WAR FOOD ADMINISTRATION Admanestrator.—Chester C. Davis, Carlton Hotel. Associate Administrator.—Jesse W. Tapp, Statler Hotel. FOOD DISTRIBUTION ADMINISTRATION (South Agriculture Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director—Roy F. Hendrickson, 1337 Lawrence Street NE. . Deputy Directors.—C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street; Maj. Ralph W.Olmstead, 409 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va.; E. A. Meyer, Broad-moor Apartments; J. S. Russell, 1216 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Deputy Directors.—Otie M. Reed, 1704 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va.; S. R. Smith, Beverley Plaza Gardens, Alexandria, Va.; Gordon T. Peyton, 909 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va.; Marcus J. Gordon,1503 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va.; Kenneth W. Berkey, Fort Ward Heights, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Special assistants to the Director—Arthur C. Bartlett, 737 Allison Street; James G.Polk, 8 Fourth Street SE. Assistants to the Director—S. R. Newell, 4610 Chesapeake Street; Norman L. Gold, 9023 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Economic adviser.—BuddA. Holt, 4838 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Fiscal adviser to the Director.—W. B. Robertson, 1308 Eighteenth Street. Consultant to the Director—Donald H. Butler, 1660 Lanier Place. Consultant.—J. B. Canning, 1819 G Street. Chief, Requirements and Allocations Control Branch.—John M. Cassels, 1006 Highland Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Civilian Food Requirements Branch.—Russell M. Wilder, Cosmos Club. Acting Chief, Civilian Programs Branch.—C. F. Kunkel, 5411 Harwood Road,Bethesda, Md. Chief, Compliance Branch.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood Street. Chief, Cotton and Fiber Branch.—Carl H. Robinson, 607 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Dawry and Poultry Branch.—T. G. Stitts, 6022 Utah Avenue. Chief, Facilities Branch.—J. B. Wycoff, 3252 S Street. Acting Chief, Fats and Oils Branch.—Robert W. Capp, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Fruit and Vegetable Branch.—W. G. Meal, 3926 Military Road. Chief, Grain. Products Branch.—Edward J. Murphy, 1719 Crestwood Drive. Chief, Livestock and Meat Branch.—Harry E. Reed, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Manpower Branch.—[Vacant.] Chief, Nutrition and Food Conservation Branch.—[Vacant.] Acting Chief, Processors Branch.—J. G. Fort, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Program Analysis and Appraisal Branch.—F. V. Waugh, 1006 South Twenty-sixth Street, Arlington, Va. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 367 Chief, Special Commodities Branch.—H. C. Albin, 2608 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. i Sugar Branch.—Joshua Bernhardt, 6800 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, d Crick Tobacco Branch.—Charles E. Gage, 307 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, a. Chief, Transportation and Warehousing Branch.—W. C. Crow, 3029 Fourth Street : North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Wholesalers and Retailers Branch.—Daniel A. West, 3620 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Personnel Division.—Frederick C. McMillen, 5802 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. rh Administrative Services Diviston.—Fred J. Hughes, 1711 Rhode Island venue. Chief, Budget Diviston.—J. E. Hoofnagle, 6209 Twentieth Avenue, Green Mead- -ows, Hyattsville, Md. Chief, Fiscal Diviston.—E. J. Kelley, 17566 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Marketing Reports Diviston.— Marvin M. Sandstrom, 926 North Cleveland ‘Avenue, Arlington, Va. Ciel Organization and Procedure Diviston.—H. I. Dunkleberger, 1445 Ogden treet. ca Program Liaison Division.—J. P. Hatch, 19 Lincoln Avenue, Kensington, d. : FOOD PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—M. Clifford Townsend, 8457 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Associate Director and executive officer.—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Associate Directors—A. G. Black, 1224 Huntington Road, Kansas City, Mo.; E. C. Auchter, 4400 Hartwick Road, College Park, Md. -Deputy Director—D. A. FitzGerald, 5517 Smallwood Drive, Green Acres, Md. Acting assistant to Director—J. Joe Reed, 401 South Highland, Arlington, Va. Acting Chief, Administrative Branch.—John B. Wilson, Jr., 5 Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. ; Acting Chief, Production Programs Branch.—Sherman E. Johnson, 118 North Jackson Street, Arlington, Va. Acting Chief, Production Supplies Programs Branch—David Meeker, Fairfax, Va. Acting Chief, Conservation Programs Branch.—Edwin D. White, 510 Twenty- fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. In charge, Production Loans Branch.—A. G. Black, 1224 Huntington Road, Kansas City, Mo. Acting Chief, Farm Service and Supply Branch.—Louis L. Needler, 8410 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Agricultural Adjustment Agency (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—Fred S. Wallace, 2500 Q Street. Associate Chief —Edwin D. White, 510 Twenty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. East Ceniral Division, Director.—Charles D. Lewis, 2877 Audubon Terrace. Fiscal Management Division, Chief.—J. Herbert Walsh, 1747 Shepherd Street. Information Division, Chief. —Willard H. Lamphere, 817 North Taylor Street, : Arlington, Va. North Central Division, Director—Harry N. Schooler, 4429 North Thirty-eighth Street, Arlington, Va. Nether: Lisson, Director.— Allen W. Manchester, 6806 Meadow Lane, Chevy hase, . Personnel Management Division, Chief—John T. Whalen, 2514 Forty-first Street. Service Operations Division, Chief.—Paul R. Preston, 1703 New York Avenue. Southern Division, Director—Ivy W. Duggan, 3721 Forty-ninth Street. Special Programs Division, Director.— William G. Finn, 821 Quackenbos Street. War Board Services Division, Director.—Louis L. Needler, 8410 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. nl Western Division, Director.—Norris E. Dodd, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. 368 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Soil Conservation Service (Executive Offices: South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —Hugh H. Bennett, R. F. D. 1, East Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief.—Jefferson C. Dykes, 4511 Gulford Road, College Park, Md. atid bs the Chief—Arnold N. Davis, 6907 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md : Executive assistant to the Chief.—Glenn K. Rule, 3806 Kanawha Street. Assistant Chiefs (Special Consultant to Chief). —J. Phil Campbell, Hotel Governor Shepherd; Walter C. Lowdermilk, 6336 Thirty-first Place. ogi Chief, in Charge Camp Operations.—Henry D. Abbot, 2319 Tracy lace. Chief of Division of— Admingstrative Services.—Samuel Goodacre, 2210 Cathedral Avenue. Budget and Finance.—Carl H. Dorny, 114 Kingsley Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Information and Education.—Gordon K. Zimmerman, 3108 Cameron Mills Road, Alexandria, Va. : Land Acquisition.—James M. Gray, 1445 Ogden Street. ; Personnel Management.— William R. Van Dersal, 4815 Chesapeake Street. Records and Reports—Thew D. Johnson, 33 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. States Relations.—Ivan L. Hobson, 2019 I Street. Chief, Operations.—Amwell E. Jones, Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chiefs.—John S. Barnes, 1211 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va.; Thomas L. Gaston, Jr., 6116 Thirty-second Place. Chief of Division of— Agronomy.—Charles R. Enlow, 1576 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Brology.—Edward H. Graham, 232 Prospect Street, Friendship Heights, Md. Cartographic—Joseph M Snyder, 4319 Woodbury Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Engineering.—Thomas B. Chambers, 2030 Allen Place. Forestry.—John F. Preston, 2700 Q Street Nursery.—Harry A. Gunning, 7511 Thirteenth Street. Land Management —Edward G. Grest, 1527 North Ivanhoe Street, Arlington, Va. : : Project Plans.—Melville H. Cohee, 204 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : Range.—Frederick G. Renner, 6692 Thirty-second Place. Soil Conservation Surveys.—Ethan A. Norton, 3600 Livingston Street. Chief, Research.—Mark L. Nichols, 3309 Stephenson Place. Assistant Chief —Howard E. Middleton, East Falls Church, Va. Research Specialists—Samuel B. Detwiler, 1028 North Daniel Street, Arling- ton, Va.; George W. Musgrave, 3215 Morrison Street; Charles E. Ramser, 4615 Kenmore Drive; C. Warren Thornthwaite, 4708 Calvert Road, College Park, Md.; Russell E. Uhland, 6116 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Division of— Erosion Control Practices.—Alva E. Brandt, box 89, route 3, Vienna, Va. Farm Irrigation.— Walter W. McLaughlin, Berkeley, Calif. hi Conservation and Disposal Practices.—Lewis A. Jones, 7131 Chestnut treet. Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (Bouth Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Board of Directors.—M. Clifford Townsend, chairman, Piney Branch Apartments, Silver Spring, Md.; Fred S. Wallace, 2500 Q Street; Edwin D. White, 510 Twenty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Manager.—Leroy K. Smith, 4900 North Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Lladii manager.—J. Carl Wright, 2815 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, a. Secretary.—Francis R. Donohue, 1745 K Street. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, -REpublic 4142) v Administrator.—C. B. Baldwin, 4340 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Adminisirators.—R. W. Hudgens, 414 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; G. 8. Mitchell, 3246 Epworth Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 369 Bares of Cooperative Division.—Raub Snyder, 5509 Charlcote Road, Bethesda, Director of Farm Ownership Division.—Paul V. Maris, 3166 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Berecker of Management Division.—Mason Barr, 49 Juniper Lane, Falls Church, a. Director of Program and Reports Division.—James G. Maddox, 209 East Broad Street, Falls Chureh, Va. : : Director of Rural Rehabilitation Division.—Carl N. Gibboney, 3123 Seventh Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief medical officer—Dr. F. D. Mott, 5506 Wriley Road. Chief administrative analyst, Division of Administrative Analysis.—O. A. Simmes, 6351 Cambridge Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. Director of Business Management Division.—W. O. Trone, 6013 Cary Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. ; Acting chief engineer.—Carl A, Johnson, 9409 Russell Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief fiscal officer— Milton P. Seigel, 5718 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief information officer.—Jack H. Bryan, 1727 Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Director i” Investigation Division.— David S. Allshouse, Cincinnati Club, Cincin-nati, Ohio. : Director of Labor Division.—N. Gregory Silvermaster, 5515 Thirtieth Street. Chief personnel officer—Donald P. Stephens, 2224 Crane Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (South Building, Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142) President.—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Vice presidents.—Carl C. Farrington, 4715 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Courtney C. Brown, 8208 Forty-fourth Street; Geron E. Rathell, 520 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Md. Assistant to the president.—James E. Thigpen, 1736 Queens Lane, Arlington, Va. Secretary and Director, Administrative Division.—Frank L. Walston, 1021 Twenti-eth Street South, Arlington, Va. Treasurer.—John B. Payne, 19 Baltimore Boulevard, Brentwood, Md. Director, Cotton Division.—Claude C. Smith, 2324 Inge Street South, Arlington, a. Director, General Crops Division.—Lawrence Myers, 230 Prospect Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Grain Division.— William A. McArthur, 303 Monticello Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. : Director, Foreign Commodities Division.—Leon Falk, Jr., Raleigh Hotel. Director, Hemp Division.—Samuel H. McCrory, 6811 Sixth Street. Director, Oilseeds Division.— William H. Jasspon, Mayflower Hotel. EXTENSION SERVICE (South Building, Fourteenth Sireet and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Milburn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Reuben Brigham, Ashton, Md. Assistants to the Director.—W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street; P. V. Kepner, 605 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Business Administration, Chief —W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street. Assistant Chief —Christopher S. Tenley, 3053 P Street. Division of Field Coordination, Chief—H. W. Hochbaum, 7329 Blair Road. 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 Avenue. : Assistant Chief.—Ralph M. Fulghum, 810 Grand View Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. 370 Congressional Directory COMMERCE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Constitution 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 University, 1927, A. & M. College of Texas, 1936, New York University, 1937, Temple University, 1937, John Brown University, 1938, Oglethorpe University, 1941, Washington and Jefferson College, 1941, Lafayette College, 1942, St. Lawrence University, 1942, and Northwestern University, 1942; married Mary Gibbs, of Mexia, Tex., December 15, 1920; Methodist; Mason; 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 appoint-ment 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, 1924-28, chairman, advisory finance committee, 1928, Demo-cratic National Committee; member, board of directors, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1932-39, chairman, 1933-39; Administrator, Federal Loan Agency, 1939 to February 24, 1942, when the powers and functions of the Federal Loan Administrator were transferred to the Secretary of Commerce; chairman of execu-tive committee, Export-Import Bank of Washington, 1936 to date; member, War Production Board; member, Economic Stabilization Board: member of Newcomen Society; trustee of George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville; trustee, Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Ala.; 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 Uentennial Association, Houston; clubs, National Democratie Club and Whist Club of New York; National Press, Metropolitan, Alfalfa, Jefferson Islands Club of Washington, D. C.; Bohemian Club, San Francisco. Under Secretary—Wayne C. Taylor, 1743 Twentyssecond Street. Secretary to Under Secretary.— Martha E. Robertson, 1613 Harvard Street. Assistant Secretary.— William L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. : Secretary to Assistant Secretary.—Elizabeth A. Hanna, 2315 Lincoln Road NE. Speci aviation assistant to the secretary.— William A. M. Burden, 1224 Thirtieth treet. Assistant to the special aviation lassistant.—George W. Burgess, 5700 Chevy Chase Parkway. ; Assistants to the Secretary.—Norman W. Baxter, Carlyn Apartments; James William Bryan, 3038 Dumbarton Avenue; Gerald Ryan, 100 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Howard H. McClure, 1901 Columbia Road; Raymond C. Miller, Jefferson Apartments. : : assistant to the Secretary.—Malcolm Kerlin, 5609 Broad Branch oad. : Secretary to the Secretary.—Gladys D. Mikell, 3445 Seventeenth Street. Solicitor —South Trimble, Jr., 3111 Macomb Street. Assistant Solicitor.—E. T. Quigley, 3800 Fourteenth Street. Chtely Divison of Current Information.—Clarence G. Marshall, Wardman Park ; otel. Chief Clerk and Superintendent.—E. W. Libbey, 15 R Street NE. Division of Personnel Supervision and Management: Director—Oliver C. Short, 6902 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md. Chief of Division of— Accounts.—Clarence O. Luhn, 4628 Rosedale Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Publications.—Clifford F. Mayne, 4308 Twenty-first Street NE. :Purchases and Sales.— Walter S. Erwin, 5706 Fourteenth Street. Labrarian.—Charlotte L. Carmody, 514 Nineteenth Street. COMMERCE Executive Departments 371 BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Director—J. C. Capt, the Westchester. Assistant Director.—Dr. Philip M. Hauser, 8912 Oneida Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Division of Information and Publications. — Amand W. von Struve (acting), route 1, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Division of Administrative Service.—Frank R. Pitman (acting), box 569-C, route 5, Anacostia, D. C. Chief, Division of Personnel.—Helen D. Almon, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. Geographer.—Clarence E. Batschelet, 2220 Military Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Machine Tabulation. —Ralph E. Galloway, 4238 Suitland Road, Suitland, Md. Chef, Division of Current Manufactures Reports.—Maxwell R. Conklin, 422 Cumberland Avenue, Somerset, Chevy Chase, Chief, Division of Basic Materials. — Ray Hurley, Bell Station, Bowie, Md. Chief Statisticians: Agriculture.—Zellmer R. Pettet, Chancellor Apartments. State and local government.—Dr. Edward R. Gray, 3501 Williamsburg Lane. Population.—Dr. Leon E. Truesdell, 3429 Ordway Street. . Vital statistics.—Dr. Halbert L. Dunn, route 2, Anacostia, D. C. Business census.—John Albright, 3717 Kansas ‘Avenue. Foreign Trade statistics.—J. Edward Ely, 4045 North Twenty-fifth Street, . Arlington, Va. Current surveys.—Dr. A. Ross Eckler, 3643 Brandywine Street. Experts: Occupations.—Dr. Alba M. Edwards, 2522 Twelfth Street. Cotton and oils.—Ray Hurley, Bell Station, Bowie, Md. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE Acting Director and executive assistant to the Director.—O. P. Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative assistant to the Director—John S. Collins, 4424 Third Street. Liaison officer.— George Wythe, 1325 Twenty-third Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Commercial and Economic Information.—E. E. Schnellbacher, 4540 Warren Street. Commercial Intelligence Unit.—E. E. Schnellbacher, 4540 Warren Street. Publications Unit.—E. A. Chapman, 2651 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Distribution Division.— Walter F. Grover, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Chief, Division of Industrial Economy.—H. B. McCoy, 106 Franklin Street, Ken- sington, Md. Chemacals Unit.—C. C. Concannon, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Construction Unit.—J. Joseph W. Palmer, R. F. D. 2, Vienna, Va. Drugs and Pharmaceuticals Unit.—T. W. Delahanty, 1806 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Fats and Oils Unit.—Charles E. Lund, 4709 Yuma Street. Foodstuffs Unit.—Fletcher H. Rawls, 32 Prospect Street, Kensington, Md. Industrial Projects Unit.—George Ww. Muller, 2934 Bellevue Terrace. Leather Unit.—Julius Schnitzer, 4736 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Lumber Unit.—Joseph L. Muller, 33—-L Ridge Road, Greenbelt, Md. Machinery Unit.—W. H. Myer, 3512 Newark Street. Metals and Minerals Unit.— Walter A. Janssen, Occidental Hotel. Motion Picture Unit.—Nathan D. Golden, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Motive Proaucts Unit.—Paul R. Mattix, 612 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Pulp and Paper Unit—W. LeRoy Neubrech, 3619 Twenty-sixth Street, NE. Rubber Unit.—S. Earle Overley (acting), 708 Cornell Street, Fredericksburg, Va. Specialties Unit.—Edward J. Detgen, 3403 Thirty-fourth Place. Textiles Unit.—Robert P. Sweeny, 2460 Sixteenth Street. Transportation Unit.—John B. Crane, R. F. D. 1, Chantilly Road, Fairfax, Va. Cred, Davision of International Economy.—James H. Edwards, 2230 California treet Adviser on Trade Controls. —Perry J. Stevenson, 3506 Quesada Street. American Republics Unit—Rollo S. Smith (acting), 315 Little Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. British Empire "Unit.—Thomas R. Wilson, 4441 Srlinond Place. European Unit.—Louis Domeratzky, MeLean, Va. 372 Congressional Directory PARES Far Eastern Unit.—Charles K. Moser, 4708 Reno Road. Foreign Laws Adviser.—Guerra Everett, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. International Economics and Statistics Unit. —August Maffry, 4919 Upton Street. pron Agrmeny Unit—H. P. Macgowan, 6 Carvel Road, Westmoreland ills Acting Chief, Division of Regional Economy.— Wilford L. White, 31831 Nebraska Avenue. Marketing Laws Unit.—E. E. McCleish, 1817 H Street. Regional Research Unit.—Wilford L.. White, 3131 Nebraska Avenue. Small Business Unit.— William Sheperdson, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.—Amos E. Taylor, 1451 Jonquil Street. ~ Current Business Analysis Unit.—Charles A. R. Wardwell, 619 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. National Economics Unit.—S. Morris Livingston, 8920 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md. National Income Unit.—Milton Gilbert, 2920 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Administrative Units: Accounts.—H. W. Haun, 746 Newton Place. Files.—William F. Smith, Roosevelt Hotel. Personnel.—Alice I. Macdonald, 1307 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 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 Bast Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chief of Division Phy Wore and Measures.—H. W. Bearce, 6308 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase; Electricity—FE. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Heat and Power.—H. C. Dickinson, 4629 Thirtieth Street. Optics.—F. J. Bates, 1649 Harvard Street. Chemastry.—G. E. F. Lundell, 402 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Mechanics and Sound. —H. 1. Dryden, 2020 Pierce Mill Roa 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.—1I1. J. Fairchild, 3707 Thirty-fourth Street. Codes and Specifications.—A. S. McAllister, 206 East Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, 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.—Rear Admiral L. O. Colbert, 4408 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant Director.—Rear Admiral J. H. Hawley, 3710 Jenifer Street. Speci assistant to the Director—Lt. Comdr. John A. Bond, 2701 Connecticut venue. Chief Clerk.—C. H. Dieck, 801 Crittenden Street. . Secretary to the Director—Peter Dulac, 3408 Twentieth Street NE. Chief of Dwvision of— Geodesy.— Capt. C. L.. Garner, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street. Coastal Surveys.—Capt. Gilbert T. Rude, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Charts.—Commander F. S. Borden, 3611 Chesapeake Street. Tides and Currents.—Lt. Comdr. Charles K. Green, 4755 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Geomagnetism and ‘Seismology.— Commander O. W. Swainson, 3000 Thirty- ninth Street. Personnel and Accounts.—Capt. R. F. Luce, 4511 Klingle Street. Instruments.—D. L. Parkhurst, 4602 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. COMMERCE Executive Departments 373 PATENT OFFICE Commissioner.— Conway P. Coe, 10 East Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md. First Assistant Commissioner.— Leslie Frazer, 12 West Lock Lane, Richmond, Va. Assistant Commassioners.— Henry Van Arsdale, 612 West Franklin Street, Rich- mond, Va.; Conder C. Henry, 4322 Argyle Terrace, Washington, D. C. Amiens assistant.— Grattan Kerans, 1305 Kennedy Street, Washington, A 1 Solicitor.— W. W. Cochran, 4358 Argyle Terrace, Washington, D. C. Chief Clerk.— James A. Brearley, 325 Second Street SE., Washington, D. C. 3 Assistant Chief Clerk.—C. E. Tomlin, 918 Blanton Avenue, Richmond, Va. Examiners in Chief.— Walter L. Redrow, 6214 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Elonzo T. Morgan, 2817 Bellevue Terrace, Washington, D. C.; James W. Clift, 4116 Harrison Street, Washington, D. C.; Charles H. Shaffer, 3443 Oakwood Terrace, Washington, D. C.; Floyd J. Porter, 124 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Vernon I. Richard, 4811 W Street, Washington, D. C.; Ernest F. Klinge, 9005 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. Law examiners.— Howard S. Miller, Byrd Hotel, Richmond, Va.; E. L. Reynolds, 425 Willard Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; C. W. Moore, 2923 Monument Avenue, Richmond, Va. Supervisors—W. M. Adams, 1609 Wilmington Avenue, Richmond, Va.; Mark Taylor, 1609 Wilmington Avenue, Richmond, Va.; C. L. Wolcott, 3500 Chamberlayne Avenue, Richmond, Va. Examiners of interferences.—W. E. Waite, 3027 Grove Avenue, Richmond, Va.; Philip I. Heyman, 1505 Bellevue Avenue, Richmond, Va.; Arturo Y. Casa~-nova, Jr., 2923 Monument Avenue, Richmond, Va.; L. F. Kreek, 3020 Ken-vous, Richmond, Va.; A. D. Bailey, 3951 Fauquier Avenue, Rich-mond, Va. INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION (Operating Federal Barge Lines and Warrior River Terminal Co. Executive offices: Boatmen’s Bank Building, St. Louis, Mo. Phone, CHestnut 6336) Incorporator—The Secretary of Commerce. President, Chairman of the board.—Chester C. Thompson, Hotel Gatesworth, St. Louis, Mo. Vice president—John S. Powell, 7725 Belfast Street, New Orleans, La. Administrative assistant.—Aubrey C. Mills, 7557 Byron Place, Clayton, Mo. Secretary-treasurer—Guy Bartley, 530 North Union Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. WEATHER BUREAU y (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. Executive assistant, Scientific Services.—Charles F. Sarle, 412 Jackson Place, Alexandria, Va. Special assistant for Technical Services—Delbert M. Little, 5325 Chevy Chase Parkway. 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, 5517 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—DRobert C. Aldredge, 1020 Eighteenth Street. Editor and Meteorological Consultant—Edgar W. Woolard, 1232 Thirtieth Street. CIVIL AERONAUTICS ADMINISTRATION Administrator of Civil Aeronautics.—Charles I. Stanton, 1709 North Harvard Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Administrator.—J. E. Sommers, 76 Manor Avenue, Hempstead, Long Island, N. Y. : | | | Congressional Directory COMMERCE Executive Director of Training.—R. McLean Stewart, 3101 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. General counsel.—Webb Shadle, 1530 Sixteenth Street. Executive officer.—Arlin E. Stockburger, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Director of Information and Statistics.—Fred Hamlin, 35 Juanita Road, Friendship Station, D. C. Director of Federal Airways.—Thomas B. Bourne, Millington, Md. Director of Safety Regulation.—Fred M. Lanter, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Director of Airports.—Charles B. Donaldson, 5510 First Street. Director of CAA War Training Service.—John P. Morris, 1600 Sixteenth Street.Manager, Washington National Airport—John Groves, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD Members: Chairman.—L. Welch Pogue, 116 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice chatrman.—Edward Warner, 4639 Kenmore Drive. Harllee Branch, the Kennedy-Warren. Oswald Ryan, 3239 Klingle Road. Josh Lee, 1501 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. Secretary.—Fred A. Toombs (acting), 3905 Twentieth Street NE. General counsel.—George C. Neal, 4449 Faraday Place. Darector, Economic Bureau.—Raymond W. Stough, 711 Norway Drive, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Safety Bureau.—Jesse W. Lankford, 3118 Central Avenue NE, NATIONAL INVENTORS’ COUNCIL Chairman.— Charles F. Kettering. Vice charrman.— Thomas Midgley, Jr. Secretary.— Lawrence Langner. Members: George Baekeland, Rear Admiral J. D. Beuret, Rear Admiral H. G. Bowen, George Codrington, Conway P. Coe, William D. Coolidge, Watson Davis, Frederick M. Feiker, Webster N. Jones, George W. Lewis, Fin Sparre, Maj. Gen. W. H. Tschappat, Brig. Gen. Walter A. Wood, Jr., Orville Wright, Fred Zeder. Chief engineer.—Leon B. Lent, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIES UNDER DIRECTION AND SUPERVISION OF THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE The functions, powers, and duties of the Federal Loan Agency and of the Federal Loan Administrator, relating to the following agencies, were transferred on February 24, 1942, by Executive Order, pursu-ant to the first War Powers Act, 1941, to the Department of Commerce to be administered under the jurisdiction and supervision of the Secretary of Commerce. } Special assistant to the Secretary: William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. " RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chairman.—Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. (Executive assistant to the chairman, John W. Barker, 2500 ) Street.) 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. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. Secretary.— Alfred T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place. Assistant secretaries.—Alexander B. Galt, 2219 California Street; Leo Nielson, 8322 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephen- son Place. General counsel.—John D. Goodloe, 102 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant general counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street; George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Hans A. Klagsbrunn, 3420 Q Street; Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. COMMERCE Executive Departments 375 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 Twenty-ninth Street; Jerome T. Kelley, 901 West University Parkway, Baltimore, Md.; William €. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. 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. Assistant to the directors—John W. Snyder, the General Scott. Examining Division: Chief —M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. Assistant Chiefs.—Albert E. Bassett, 2900 Brandywine Street; Thomas H. Davis, 2230 California Street; Sterling J. Foster, Jr., 403 Fontaine Street, Alexandria, Va.; W. J. Johnson, Marlyn Apartments; W. C. Ribenack, McLean Gardens; 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-liqguidating Division: -Chief.—Morton Macartney, 4267 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Drainage and Irrigation Section, Chief.—Albert L. Strong, Federal Reserve Bank Building, Kansas City, Mo. Engineering Section, Chief.— Walter L. Drager, 4914 Sedgwick Street. Mining Section, Chief.—Donald M. Rait, 4611 Forty-ninth Street. fons Section, Chief. —Edward T. Stein, 133 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, 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. silent chief auditor.—H. R. Stroberg, 9509 Thornhill Road, Silver Spring, Chief Clerk and Building Superintendent.—Frank T. Tracy, Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. DEFENSE PLANT CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, 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, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Hans A. Klagsbrunn, 3420 Q Street. John W. Snyder, the General Scott. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Executive vice president.—John W. Snyder, the General Scott. Vice president and general counsel.—Hans A. Klagsbrunn, 3420 Q Street. Vice presidents— Walter E. Joyce, 3051 N Street; Frank T. Ronan, 4801 Con-necticut Avenue. : : Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Assistant general counsel.—Schuyler W. Livingston, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va.; Francis J. O’Hara, Jr., 1701 Upshur Street. Chief industrial consultant.—Clarence Francis. Assistant chief industrial consultant.—Alired Schindler, Broadmoor Apartments. Secretary.—Leo Nielson, 8322 Sixteenth. Street, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant secretaries.—Martin 8S. Swenson, 1723 DeSales Street; Thomas Kelly, 7200 Taylor Street. Treasurer.—Harry L. Sullivan, 3326 Stephenson Place. : Assistant treasurers.—George W. Wilson, 3827 S Street; Howard J. Morin, 6421 Thirty-first Place. 376 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Chief, Administrative Division.—Albert E. Bassett, 2900 Brandywine Street. Assistant Chief, Administrative Division.—R. G. Rhett, 2220 Twentieth Street. Chief auditor.—— Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. Assistant chief auditor.—John R. Respass, 1712 Thirty-seventh Street. Chief engineer.— Walter L. Drager, 4914 Sedgwick Street. ‘Assistant’ chief engineers.—John F. Coleman, Wardman Park Hotel; F. E. Lamphere, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. DEFENSE SUPPLIES CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. W. L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. President.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Executive vice president and general counsel.—George H. Hill, Jr., 5918 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Vice presidents.—Stuart K. Barnes, 6212 Thirty-first Street; Reed M. Chambers, Carleton Hotel; M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel; Stokeley W. Morgan, Benedick Hotel; Samuel H. Sabin, 4140 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va.; George Stoner, 3500 Lowell Street. Secretary.—H. H. Turner, 814 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant secretary.— Merle A. Crandall, 2409 North Upton Street, Arlington, a. Treasurer.— Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant treasurers.—Henry N. Bassett, 204 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Stanley B. Hanes, 421 Vine Street, Herndon, Va.; John H. Carroll, 6412" Landover Place, Landover, Md. Assistant general counsel.—Harold E. Jacobson, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; Samuel H. Sabin, 4140 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va.; George B. Stoner, 3500 Lowell Street. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Chief auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. METALS RESERVE COMPANY . (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chairman.—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. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. President.—Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Executive vice president.—G. Temple Bridgman, Hay-Adams House. Vice presidents.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel; C. W. Nichols, Statler Hotel; H. DeWitt Smith, 3121 Newark Street. Assistant vice presidents.—Simon D. Strauss, 803 Elm Street, Bethesda, Md.; DeWitt C. Schieck, 2413 Thirty-ninth Place. Secretary.— Ferris B. Thomas, 4002 Crittenden Street, Hyattsville, Md. flan secretary.—George H. Hubert, 9 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurer.— William C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. General counsel.—Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Assistant general counsel.—Robert G. Wilson, 4800 U Street; Morris Levinson, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. Traffic manager.—T. A. Hamilton, 9494 Singleton Drive, Bethesda, Md. Assistant traffic manager.—M. E. Miller. 1911 R Street. COMMERCE Executive Departments 377 RUBBER RESERVE COMPANY (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. President.— Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Special assistant to the president.—China R. Clarke, 2500 Q Street. Vice presidents.—Stanley T. Crossland, 6112 Thirty-second Place; Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue; R. D. Young, 4711 Thirty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va.; John W. Livingston, 2500 Q Street. Secretary.— George H. Hubert, 9 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Anais secretary.— Ferris B. Thomas, 4002 Crittenden Street, Hyattsville, Md. Treasurer.— William C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. Assistant treasurers.—T. H. Claffy, 5331 Belt Road; Byron Horter, 510 North Nelson Street, Arlington, Va. General counsel—H. Clay Johnson, the Kennedy-Warren. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. ; ; Assistant general counsel. —John H. Rice, 3122 Tennyson Street. Chief auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. THE RFC MORTGAGE COMPANY (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: President.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. Vice president.—M. J. McGrath, Wardman Park Hotel. Vice president.— William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Secretary.—Harry L. Babbit, 605 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant secretary.—J. William McNamara, 4904 S Street SE. Assistant general counsel.—Richard C. Dyas, 1900 Mount Vernon Memorial Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. 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, Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: President.—Sam H. Husbands, 5309 Nevada Avenue. Vice president.— Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. Vice president and general counsel. —James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. H. A. Muiligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Assistant general counsel —Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Newell K. Ricks, 269 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Secretary.— Harrison H. Turner, 814 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant secretary.— Harry L. Babbit, 605 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Treasurer.—Jerome T. Kelley, 901 West University Parkway, Baltimore, Md. Assistant treasurer—James W. Considine, 4334 Thirty-sixth Street. Chief auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. 378 Congressional Directory COMMERCE DISASTER LOAN CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Managing directors: Charles B. Henderson, 1524 Thirty-third Street. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower Hotel. Secretary.—Merle A. Crandall, 2409 North Upton Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant secretary.—J. William McNamara, 4904 S Street SE. Treasurer.—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurer.—David B. Griffin, 3321 Runnymede Place. General counsel.—Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Counsel.—Arthur M. Blacklow, 4420 Butterworth Place; Walter J. O’ Donnell, 1921 Kalorama Road. Chief auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON (811 Vermont Avenue. ‘Phone, EXecutive 3111) President and general counsel.—Warren Lee Pierson, Shoreham Hotel. Vice presidents.—W. L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive; W. D. Whittemore, Westchester Apartments. Vice president and assistant general counsel. —Hawthorne Arey, 3 West Saul Road, Kensington, Md. Solicitor.—Hampson Gary, La Salle Apartments. Secretary.— Arthur S. Lord, 2500 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant secretary.—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, Secretary of Commerce, 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, Edgemoor, Md. Henry A. Mulligan, director and 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, Assistant Secretary of Commerce, 2812 Woodland Drive. W. D. Whittemore, vice president, Export-Import Bank, Westchester Apart-ments. Hawthorne Arey, vice president, Export-Import Bank, 3 West Saul Road,Kensington, Md. WAR DAMAGE CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of directors: Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Shoreham Hotel. George E. Allen, Wardman Park Hotel. W. L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. Frederic A. Delano, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., Mayflower 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. President—W. L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. Executive vice president.—Frank T. Christensen, 811 Vermont Avenue. COMMERCE Executive Departments 379 Vice presidents—Howard J. Klossner, 1026 Sixteenth Street; Stanley T. Crossland, 6112 Thirty-second Place; H. Clay Johnson, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Secretary.— Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place. Assistant secretary.—Harry L. Babbit, 605 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Treasurer—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant treasurers.— Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street; Facius W. Davis, 1917 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. General counsel.—James W. Close, 1890 Sudbury Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Assistant general counsel.—R. C. Goodale, 2349 Ashmead Place; Edward Edel- man, 2226 Observatory Place. Chief auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. RUBBER DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: Chairman of the board.—W. L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. President.—Douglas H. Allen, Statler Hotel. Vice presidents.—John W. Bicknell, 1802 Corcoran Street; Reed M. Cham- bers, Carlton Hotel; Paul B. McKee, Mayflower Hotel; William E. Mitchell, Dodge Hotel. General counsel.—H. Clay Johnson, Kennedy-Warren; T. Ross Cissel, Jr., 2122 Massachusetts Avenue. Secretary.—George H. Hubert, 9 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant secretary.—Edward J. Singer, 4000 Third Street. Asner general counsel.—James C. Moroney, 728 Arlington Village, Arlington, a. Assistant general counsel in charge of litigation.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Treasurer—W. C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. ; Assistant treasurer.—Byron Horter, 510 North Nelson Street, Arlington, Va. Chief auditor.—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. 380 Congressional Directory © LABOR DEPARTMENT OF LABOR (Department of Labor Building, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 2420) FRANCES PERKINS, of New York, Secretary of Labor (Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue); sociologist; born in Boston, Mass.; A. B., Mount Holyoke College; studied at University of Pennsylvania; A. M., Columbia Uni-versity, 1910; married Paul Wilson, and they have one daughter; executive secretary Consumers’ League, New York, 1910-12; lecturer in sociology, Adelphi College, 1911; executive secretary Committee on Safety, New York, 1912-17; director of investigations New York State Factory Commission, 1912-13; execu-tive director New York Council of Organization for War Service, 1917-19; com-missioner of New York State Industrial Commission, 1919-21; director Council on Immigrant Education, 1921-23; member State Industrial Board, New York, 1923 (chairman, 1926-29); commissioner New York State Industrial Commission since 1929; director American Child Hygiene Association, Consumers’ League of New York, Child Labor Committee, Maternity Center Association; member National Fire Protection Association Committee on Safety to Life, National Safety Council, Division of Industrial Hygiene of American Public Health Association, Academy of Political Science, American Economic Association. Clubs: Cosmopolitan, Women’s City (vice president); author of Life Hazards from Fire in New York Factories (1912), The Problem of Mercantile Fire Hazards (1914), A Plan for Maternity Care (1918), Women as Employers (1919), A Social Experiment Under the Workmen’s Compensation Jurisdiction (1921), People at Work (1933). Appointed Secretary of Labor, March 4, 1933. Administrative assistant to the Secretary of Labor.—Frances Jurkowitz, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Office of the Assistant Secretary: ge Assistant Secretary.—Daniel W. Tracy, Fourteenth Street and Constitution venue. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary.— Marie M. Bryce, 3345 Q Street. Office of the Second Assistant Secretary: Second Assistant Secretary.—[Vacant.] Diner, of Information.—J. V. FitzGerald, 4843 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, M Special assistant to the Secretary.—Mary LaDame, Fourteenth Street and Con-stitution Avenue. Office of the Solicitor: Acting solicitor.—Irving J. Levy, 3140 Highland Place. Assistant solicitors.—Louis Sherman, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Bessie Margolin, 3051 Idaho Avenue; Charles R. Reynolds, Jr., 3814 North Upland Street, Arlington, Va.; Arthur D. Hill, Jr. (acting), 105 George Mason Drive, Alexandria, Va. Administrative officer.—Roy E. Burger, 1333 Gallatin Street. Office of the Chief Clerk and Budget Officer: Chief Clerk and budget officer.—James E. Dodson, 524 Tennessee Avenue NE. Chief, Division of Publications and Supplies—Benjamin R. Sherwood, 4006 Thirty-first Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Cel, Division of Budgets and Accounts.—John R. Demorest, 4700 Connecticut venue. Office of the special assistant to the Secretary and Director of Personnel: Special Assistant to the Secretary and Director of Personnel.—Robert C. Smith, 6286 Twenty-ninth Street. Chief, Classification Section.— Milton A. Provus, 1445 Otis Place. Cie, Recruitment and Selection Section.—Harris P. Shane, 3816 Morrison treet. Chief, Appointments and Records Section.— Nora C. Lane, 6709 Georgia Avenue. Librarian.—Laura A. Thompson, the Ontario. UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE Director of Conciliation.—John R. Steelman, Department of Labor. Special assistant.— Albert J. Barnaud, 3812 Warren Street. Administrative assistant.—James J. Dinneny, 2900 P Street. Regional supervisors: Region No. 1.—H. Ross Colwell, 1416 R Street. Region No. 2—Howard T. Colvin, 10 Oak Street, Alexandria, Va. Region No. 3— Edward J. Cunningham, 3808 Windom Place. Region No. 4. —John T. Daly, 2434 Thirty-ninth Place. Region No. 6—Ewing R. McDonald, 6500 Utah Street. DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS Director— Verne A. Zimmer, 1745 Upshur Street. Assistant Director— Clara M. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va. WAGE AND HOUR AND PUBLIC CONTRACTS DIVISIONS (New York City office, 165 West Forty-sixth Street; phone, Wis. 7-8715. Washington, D. C., office,United States Department of Labor) Commissioner of Labor Statistics.—Isador Lubin, 2737 Devonshire Place. Acting Commissioner.—A. F. Hinrichs, 3214 Newark Street. Chiefs of Branches: : Epiny ins and Occupational Outlook.—Donald H. Davenport, 3075 Ordway treet. 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.—[Vacant.] : Directors of divisions: Research in Child Development.—Dr. Katherine Bain, 3604 Porter Street. Social Service.—Elsa Castendyck, 5001 V Street. Statistical —Edward E. Schwartz, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Industrial—Beatrice McConnell, Hammond Court. Editorial.—Isabelle Mott Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Health Services.—Dr. Edwin F. Daily, 4926 Albemarle Street. Public Health Nursing.—Ruth G. Taylor, 1940 Biltmore Street. Medical Social Work.—Edith M. Baker, 2222 Q Street. Nutrition.—Marjorie M. Heseltine, 1404 Twenty-ninth Street. Child Welfare—Mary Irene Atkinson, 1835 K Street. Day Care.—Hazel A. Fredericksen, Hickory Hills, Brinklow, Md. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 26 382 | Congressional Directory LABOR 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. Latin American.—Mary M. Cannon, 2712 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va. Supervisors of field investigations: Caroline Manning, Women’s Bureau. Ethel Erickson, Women’s Bureau. INDEPENDENT OFFICES, AGENCIES, AND ESTABLISHMENTS AERONAUTICAL BOARD, THE (Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, REpublic 7400, branch 3270) The Commanding General, Army Air Forces, Gen. Henry H. Arnold, Fort Myer, Va. Aion Chief of Air Staff, A. A. F., Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Echols, 5100 Watson treet. .; Member of Operations Division, General Staff, Army, Col. S. E. Anderson, 1909 North Highland Street, Arlington, Va. The Chief of Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Rear Admiral J. S. McCain, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. The Director of Planning Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Capt. H. B. Sallada, 1712 Surrey Lane. Member of Plans Division, Naval Operations, Navy, Capt. J. P. Whitney, 1726 Massachusetts Avenue. : Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. ALLEY DWELLING AUTHORITY FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE (1737 L 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 707, Albee 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 (on leave for active military duty). 385 386 Congressional Directory AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS : (Seventeenth Street, between D and E Streets. Phone, REpublic 8300) NATIONAL OFFICERS President.—Franklin D. Roosevelt. ; Vice presidents.—Harlan Fiske Stone, Washington, D. C.; Charles Evans Hughes, Washington, D. C.; Herbert Hoover, Palo Alto, Calif. Chairman.— Norman H. Davis, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Counselor.—Francis Biddle, Justice Department, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.—Daniel W. Bell, 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.; Maj. Gen. James C. Magee, Surgeon -General, United States Army, War Department, Washington, D. C.; Rear Admiral Ross T McIntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy, Navy Department, Washington, D. C.; Daniel W. Bell, Under Secretary of the Treasury, 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.; James B. Forgan, First National Bank of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.; George L. Harrison, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Gurney E. Newlin, 1020 Edison Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; Charles H. Kellstadt, 8501 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland Ohio; Mrs. Dwight F. Davis, 2145 Decatur Place, Washington, D. C. Eliot Wadsworth, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C.; Lloyd B. Wilson 2120 Kalorama Road, Washington, D. C.; Dr. Oliver C. Carmichael, Vander-bilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; Arthur Hays Sulzberger, the New York me, New York, N. Y.; Harry L. Hopkins, the White House, Washington, GENERAL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Chairman.—Norman H. Davis, American Red Cross, Seventeenth and D Streets, Washington, D. C. National chairman 1943 Red Cross War Fund.—Walter S. Gifford, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Viee shat War Fund.—Guy Emerson, American Red Cross, Washington, Assistant to the chairman.—Nelson Dean Jay, 3224 Woodland Drive. Special assistant to the chairman.— George E. Allen, Wardman Park Hotel. General counsel.—H. J. Hughes, Brooklandville, Md. Sor] counsel.—Joseph M. Hartfield, American Red Cross, Washington, Assistant counsel.—Julius G. Day, Jr., 6300 Thirty-second Street. Executive vice chairman.—Lloyd B. Wilson, 2120 Kalorama Road. Director of Domestic Operations.—DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. : Deputy director of Domestic Operations.—Robert E. Bondy, 7010 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Administrator of area services.—Fred A. Winfrey, American Red Cross, Wash-ington, D. C. Manager, North Atlantic area.—J. Harrison Heckman, 300 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Manager, Eastern area.— William Carl Hunt, 515 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Manager, Midwestern area.—H. F. Keisker (acting), 1709 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Manager, Pacific area.—A. L. Schafer, Civic Auditorium, San Francisco, Calif. Vice chairman at large—James L. Fieser, 5009 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Vice chairman in charge of finance—James K. McClintock, 1717 Twentieth Street. Director of accounting.—J. A. Hendrix, 2631 South Dakota Avenue NE. b ) ) 4 ndependent Offices and Estcllislments 387 Vice chairman in charge of insular and foreign operations.—Richard F. Allen, American Red Cross, Washington, Director of insular and foreign operations.—L. M. Mitchell, 2710 Beechwood Place, Arlington, Va. Vice i in charge of the Junior Red Cross.—James T. Nicholson, 4717 Fulton treet Director of the Junior Red Cross.—Livingston IL. Blair, 1109 Sixteenth Berest. Director of public information.—G. Stewart Brown, 3041 'N Street. Director of personnel relations.—E. G. Sabine, 1533 Forty-fourth Street. DIRECTORS OF SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES Services to the Armed Forces.—Robert E. Bondy, administrator, 7010 Fairfax Road, Tie Md.; Don C. Smith, "deputy administrator, 3615 Chesapeake treet Military and Naval Welfare Service.— William 8S. Hepner, 4914 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Md Home Service. —Charlotte Johnson, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. Disaster Relief and Civilian War Aid. —Colin Herrle, acting administrator, 19 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Health and Safety Services: Medical and health services.—Albert McCown, M. D., 714 Wolfe Street, Alex-andria, Va. Blood donor service.—G. Canby Robinson, M. D., 4712 Keswick Road, Balti-more, Nursing service.—Mary Beard, 3816 Forty-ninth ‘Street. aid, water safety, and accident prevention.—H. F. Enlows, 2753 Brandywine treet. Nutrition service.—Melva B. Bakkie, 2445 Fifteenth Street. Soler Special Services.— Mrs. Dwight F. Davis, 2145 Decatur Place. eneral: Fund raising.—Robert A. Shepard, 10002 Connecticut Avenue, Kensington, Md General supply officer.—George C. Smith, 1812 K Street. ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION (Act of March 4, 1921, created the commission to make recommendations for inscriptions, entombment, etc.) Chatrman.—Secretary of War. Secretary of the Navy. Executive and disbursing officer.—Commanding officer, Washington Quarter-master Depot. ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (Room 4068, Railroad Retirement Building) The Under Secretary of War, Robert P. Patterson, 1545 Thirty-fifth Street. The Under Secretary of the Navy, James V. Forrestal, 1642 Twenty-ninth Street. Chairman.—Auguste Richard, 1400 Thirty-fourth Street. Executive commattee: Auguste Richard, chairman, 1400 Thirty-fourth Street. Brig. Gen. Theron D. Weaver, General Staff Corps, deputy director, Resources god Production Division, Headquarters, Army Service Forces, 3610 Quebec treet. Rear Admiral T. J. Keleher, United States Navy, director, Resources Branch, Office of Procurement and Material, Dorchester House. Executive secretaries.—Col. F. T. Norcross, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 4420 Hawthorne Street; Capt. L. B. Scott (retired), United States Navy, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. 388 Congressional Directory BOARDOF INVESTIGATION AND RESEARCH— TRANSPORTATION (Third floor, Dupont Circle Building. Phone, ADams 0140) (Established under the Transportation Act of 1940) Chairman.—Nelson Lee Smith, 3010 P Street Vice chairman.—Robert E. Webb, 2401 Calvert Street. Member.—C. E. Childe, 8513 Lynnbrook Drive, Bethesda, Md. General counsel.—Talcott M. Banks, Jr., 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. Secretary.—[Vacant.] Administrative officer.—Lewis H. Guenther, 4348 River Road. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION (Offices, Eighth and F Streets. Phone, REpublic 5711) Commissioners.— President, Harry B. Mitchell, 117 Oxford .Street, Chevy Chase Id Md . Me Lucille Foster McMillin (Mrs. Benton MeMillin), 2400 Sixteenth treet. : Arthur S. Flemming, 4913 Rodman Street. Executive director and chief examiner.— Lawson A. Moyer, the Broadmoor. Assistant chief examiner.—Kenneth C. Vipond, 3332 Seventeenth Street. Chief of Field Operations.—J. H. Weiss, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant chief —Henry W. Rempe, 8506 Irvington Street, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Administrative Services—Francis P. Brassor, 4608 Nottingham Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the chief examiner.—Farrar Smith, 4331 Forty-third Street.Legal advisor.—John Q. Cannon, Jr., 4623 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.Borin) to the assistant chief examiner.—Julius Friedenson, 4707 Connecticut venue. Congressional contact representatives.—Robert -L. Bailey, the Westchester; James B. Baugh, Jr., 5606 Forty-second Street, Hyattsville, Md. Executive assistant to the commissioners.— William C. Hull, 2255 North PowhatanStreet, Arlington, Va. Director of Personnel —David F. Lawton, 1222 Connecticut Avenue. Medical Director.—Dr. Verne K. Harvey, 39 River Road Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Librarian.—Mary Virginia Lee Wenzel, 326 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. ? Board of Appeals and Review—John F. Edwards, chairman, 4302 ThirteenthStreet NE.; Selden G. Hopkins, 1519 North Utah Street, Arlington, Va.Alfred Klein, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Council of Personnel Administration: Chairman.—Frederick M. Davenport, 8000 Parkside Lane. Boonies assistant to the chairman.—Raymond R. Zimmerman, 4607 Kenmore rive. Assistant to Chairman.—Henry F. Hubbard, 6318 Thirty-second Street. Chief of Budget and Finance Diwision.—Cecil E. Custer, Rawlings Rest Farm, route 3, Gaithersburg, Md. Assasin] ohife Tin P. Polkinghorn, Rawlings Rest Farm, route 3, Gaithers-urg, ; Chief of Examining and Personnel Utilization Division.—W. A. McCoy, 3016McKinley Street. Assistant chiefs.—James O. Babcock, 4917 Rodman Street; Coleman F. Cook,101 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md.; Dr. Emery E. Olson, 3009 CathedralAvenue; Mary Mathis, 1903 N Street; Ernest J. Stocking, 616 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Va. Head Liaison Officer.— Charles R. Anderson, 1623 Lanier Place.Chief of Information Division.— Carson C. Hathaway, 403 Hamilton Avenue,Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Investigations Division.— William H. McMillen, 7701 Georgia Avenue. Assistant chiefs—Hugh P. Crowe, 1123 Thirteenth Street; E. Newton Steely, 4213 Woodberry Street, University Park, College Park, Md.; Joseph C. Welch, 6619 Thirteenth Street; James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue. Chief of Office Services Division.—Henry G. Porter, Bay Ridge, Md. Assistant chief —William E. Byram, 313 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, a. Chief of Mail and Files Section.—June K. Lawson, 2219 Perry Street NE. Ciel, 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, 3100 Forty-fourth Street. Chief of Service Record Division.—Vivian Carlson, the Westchester. Assistant chiefs.—David 8. Davison, 5733 Third Place; Ethel W. Burgess, 3412 Texas 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.—Frederick Bradley, Colorado Building. Treasurer.—Wayne Kendrick, Rust Building. Assistant treasurer.—Clark G. Diamond. { 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, Powell Browning, Surg. Gen. James C. Magee, U. S. Army; Surg. Gen. Ross T McIntire, U. S. Navy; Maj. Gen. Merritt W. Ireland (U. S. Army, retired); Henry P. Blair, Milton King, Mrs. George E. Allen, Page Hufty, Reeve Lewis, Jr., Sidney L. Hechinger, R. A. Van Orsdel, Corcoran Thom, Jr., George O. Vass, Guy Mason (Commissioner), Lida Tompkins, Hugh 8S. Cumming, Jr., Mrs. D. Lawrence Groner, Dr. Jerome Crowley. Superiieniin: and secretary—N. L. McDiarmid, M. D., colonel (U. 8S. 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. Paul P. Cret, Philadelphia, Pa. John A. Holabird, Chicago, Ill. Henry V. Poor, 3d, New City, N. Y. Ralph Stackpole, Cloverdale, Calif. David E. Finley, Washington, D. C. Secretary and administrative officer—H. P. Caemmerer, 701 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. : COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION (Tariff Commission Building, Eighth and E Streets. Phone, NAtional 3947) Members: Lynn R. Edminster (chairman), 4314 Klingle Street, vice chairman of the United States Tariff Commission. Harry C. Hawkins, Clifton, Va., Chief, Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements, Department of State. 390 Congressional Directory Members— Continued. Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md., Director of Monetary Research and Assistant to the Secretary, Treasury Department. H. P. Macgowan (acting), 6 Carvel Road, Westmoreland, Md., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce. George B. L. Arner, 504 Aspen Street, Chief, Division of Foreign Agricultural Research, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agri-culture. Edward A. Foley, University Club, Principal Agricultural Economist, Depart-ment of Agriculture. Executive secretary.— Edward Yardley, 3 Kenilworth Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. CONGRESSIONAL CLUB, THE (2001 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, DUpont 9215) [Incorporated by act of Congress approved May 30, 1908. Membership composed of women in official life] OFFICERS, 1943 AND 1944 © President.— Mrs. Thomas F. Ford, of California. Vice presidents.— Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin; Mrs. William M. Mrs. Whitting-ton, of Mississippi; Mrs. James M. Fitzpatrick, of New York; Mrs. Richard M. Simpson, of Pennsylvania; Mrs. Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia. Recording secretary.—Mrs. Clifford Davis, of Tennessee. Corresponding secretary.— Mrs. Fred Bradley, of Michigan. Treasurer.— Mrs. Karl M. LeCompte, of Towa. Chairman of: Membership committee.— Emmet O'Neal, of Mrs. Kentucky. Entertainment committee.—Mrs. Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. House commattee.—Mrs. Thomas Rolph, of California. Finance committee.— Harry S. Truman, of Missouri. Mrs. Press committee.—Mrs. H. Jerry Voorhis, of California. Printing committee.—Mrs. Joseph J. O’Brien, of New York. Book committee.— Mrs. Walter, C. Ploeser, of Missouri. Cookbook committee.— Earl Wilson, of Mrs. Indiana. Constitution and bylaws committee.— Hugh Peterson, of Mrs. Georgia. Evening card Mrs. LeFevre, New commattee.— Jay of York. Dance committee.— Clinton Anderson, New Mrs. P. of Mexico. Matinee card Mrs. William O. Burgin, of North Carolina. committee.— Hospitality commattee.— Mrs. R. Ewing Thomason, of Texas. Hostess committee.—Mrs. Donald H. McLean, of New Jersey. Emergency commattee.—Mrs. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. Red Cross Mrs. Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana, and Mrs. Charles committee.— S. Dewey, of Illinois, chairmen. Parliamentarian.— Mrs. Edward R. Burke; of Nebraska. Historian.— Mrs. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Chairman of associate members.— Miss Vivian Vestal, of I EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (Washington Office: Lincoln Building. Phone, NAtional 7177. New York office: Murray Hill Building. Phone, LExington 2-3604) Commassioners: Mrs. Jewell W. Swofford, chairman, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. John J. Keegan, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Albert H. Ladner, Jr., Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Secretary.— William McCauley, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Chief counsel.—Ward E. Boote, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Medical director—Franklin J. Halpin, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. C8 Crime Examiner.—Daniel M. Goodacre, Murray Hill Building, New York, Chief,ho oouning Divisien.—Bessie O. Reed, Murray Hill Building, New York, Deputy Commissioner, District of Columbia Workmen's Compensation Act.—Frank A. Cardillo, 514 Tenth Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 391 FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION (Vermont Avenue and H Street. 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 COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION (New Post Office Building, Pennsylvania Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phone, EXecutive 3620) Commissioners: Chairman.—James Lawrence Fly, 4511 Cathedral Avenue. Paul A. Walker, 4301 Forty-third Street. Norman S. 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. LAW DEPARTMENT General Counsel.—Charles R. Denny, Jr., 1603 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant general counsel.—Benedict P. Cottone, Ravenwood, Sleepy Hollow Road, Falls Church, Va.; Nathan H. David, 4737 Thirty-sixth Street; Rosel H. Hyde, 2709 McKinley Street. Litigation and Administration Division, Chief. —Harry M. Plotkin, 1611 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. : ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Chief engineer—E. K. Jett, 6305 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant chief engineers.—George KE. Sterling, 701 Kingston Road, Stoneleigh, Govans, Baltimore County, Md.; George P. Adair, 101 Allegheny Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Field Diglten, 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. Assistant Chief Accountant.—Hugo Reyer, 6737 Pomander Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. ADMINISTRATIVE Chief, License Division.—W. P. Massing, 6233 Thirty-first Street. Chief, Service Division.—N. F. Cureton, 1410 M Street. Chief, Records Division.— Walter S. Davis, 801 Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. FOREIGN BROADCAST INTELLIGENCE SERVICE Director.—Robert D. Leigh, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to the Director—Harold N. Graves, Jr., 8449 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Report Division—Thomas B. Grandin, 429 East Columbia Street, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Analysis Division.—Goodwin Watson, 933 L Street. 392 Congressional Directory FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION (National Press Building. Phone, EXecutive 8400) Chairman.—Leo T. Crowley, Mayflower Hotel. Directors.— Phillips L. Goldsborough, Tudor Arms Apartment, Baltimore, Md.; Preston Delano, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Secretary.—E. F. Downey, 4470 Dexter Street. Executive officer.—Henry W. Riley, 3633 Van Ness Street. Secretary to chairman.—Beryl Roberts, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to Phillips L. Goldsborough.—Albert G. Towers, Tudor Arms Apart- ment, Baltimore, Md. Director, Information and Public Relations.—J. Forbes Campbell, 4805 Westway Drive, Crestview, Md. Solicitor.—Francis C. Brown, 5600 River Road. Chief, Division of Examination. Vance L. Sailor (on leave for military duty). Acting Chief, Division of Ezamination.—Neil G. Greensides, 4604 Butterworth Place. Acting Chief, Division of Liquidation—Wheeler McDougal, Chicago, Ill. Supersising liquidator, Division of Liquidation.—Ralph E. Zimmerman, Chicago, 11. Acting supervising claim agent, Division of Liquidation.—James M. Gaffney, Chicago, Ill. Supervising accountant, Division of Liquidation.—H. R. Burling, Chicago, Ill. Fiscal agent.—W. G. Loeffler, Chicago, Ill. Auditor—Mark A. Heck, Chicago, Ill. Chief, Division of Research and Statistics—Donald S. Thompson, 10 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Personnel officer—Harold M. Salmon, 5467 Nevada Avenue. Chief, Service Section.—Frank C. Blowe, 2917 Twenty-eighth Street. FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION (1800 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 0100) Commissioners: Chairman.—Leland Olds, 105 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice chairman.— Basil Manly, 5059 Sedgwick Street. Claude L. Draper, 3056 Porter Street. John W. Scott, 3605 Macomb Street. Clyde L. Seavey, Alban Towers. Secretary.— Leon M. Fuquay, 4007 Connecticut Avenue. Bureau of Law: General counsel.—Charles V. Shannon, 1554 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Bureau of Water Power: Associate Chief of Bureau.—Frank L. Weaver, 15 Keswick Street, Garrett Park, Md. : pany Electrical Engineering: Acting Chief of Bureau.—George H. Buck, 1900 F Street. Bureau of Accounts, Finance and Rates: Chief of Bureau.—Charles W. Smith, Park Avenue, Halethorpe, Baltimore, Md. Chief, 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. Acting Chief, Division of Original Cost—R. C. Rainwater, 2025 Hanover Street, Silver Spring, Md. Chief engineer.— Roger B. McWhorter, 3624 Davis Street. Chief, Division of Trial Examiners.—Frank A. Hampton, 2700 Q Street. Chee foulliomimns Division.— Calvin Dold, 3500 Cameron Mills Road, Alexan- ria, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 393 Chief, Information Division.—John W. Jenkins, 315 A Street NE. Director of Personnel.—J. B. Turner, 3207 Northampton Street. Acting budget and fiscal officer.—J. B. Turner, 3207 Northampton Street. Regional offices: New York, N. Y.—Parcel Post Building, 341 Ninth Avenue. Baltimore, Md.—O’Sullivan 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. 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. Szymeczak, Wardman Park Hotel. Private secretary.—Dorothy R. Johnson, 1333 Sixteenth Street. John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street. Bie secretary.—E. Ralph Massey, 4100 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Ernest G. Draper, 2527 Belmont Road. Private secretary.—Margaret E. Rauber, 1921 Kalorama Road. Rudolph M. Evans, 3109 Cameron Mills Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Private secretary.— Elsie M. Westman, 2401 Calvert Street. Assistant to the chairman.— Lawrence Clayton, 4808 Seventeenth Street. Special assistant to the chairman.— Elliott Thurston, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Secretary.— Chester Morrill, 3908 Ingomar Street. Assistant secretaries. — Liston P. Bethea, 3900 Cathedral Avenue; S. R. Carpenter, 2738 McKinley Street; F. A. Nelson, 4436 Yuma Street. General counsel.—W alter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Road. General attorney.—J. P. Dreibelbis, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant general attorneys.—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 directors, Division of Research and Stalzstics.—Woodlief Thomas, 26 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. R. Stark, 509 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Division of Examination.—Leo H. Paulger, 2836 Chesapeake Street. Assistant chiefs, Dwviston of Examainations.—C. E. Cagle, Oxon Hill, Md.; William B. Pollard, 4441 Yuma Street. * Chief, Division of Bank Operations.—Edward L. Smead, 3706 Fordham Road. Assistant chiefs, Division of Bank Operations.—J. R. Van Fossen, 2713 Wiscon- sin Avenue; J. E. Horbett, 4440 Faraday Place. Chief, Division of Security Loans.—Carl E. Parry, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Division of Personnel Administration.—Robert F. Leonard, 704 Dorset Avenue, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Acting Administrator, Office of Adminastrator for War Loans Commitiee.—Edward L. Smead, 3706 Fordham Road. Assistant Administrator, Office of Administrator for War Loans Committee.— Gardner L. Boothe, 1, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Fiscal agent.—0O. E. Foulk, 1530 Spring Place. Deputy fiscal agent.—Josephine KE. Lally, the Portner. 394 Congressional Directory FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY (Social Security Building. Phone, EXecutive 6500) Administrator—Paul V. McNutt, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant Administrator— Watson B. Miller, 4101 Fordham Road. Assistants to the Adminisirator.— E. Switzer, 519 North Overlook Drive, Alex- Mary andria, Va.; James A Drain, Stoneleigh Courts; Edith M. Keyes, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Director of Research.—Thomas J. Woofter, Jr., 4318 Warren Street. Director of Information.—Zilpha Franklin, 3650 Upton Street. Administrative consultant.—Virgil M. Simmons, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Executive assistant to the Adminustrator.— Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue. Director of Personnel.—Arthur B. McLean, 4005 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Vv a. Budget officer.—Leo L. Miller, 2845 Northampton Street. Chief Clerk.—Taylor H. McCauley, 2018 Evarts Street NE, General counsel.—Jack B. Tate, 4432 Q Street. Assistant general counsel.—Leonard J. Calhoun, 406 Fontaine Street, Alexan-dria, Va.; Robert Ayers, Wyman Park Apartments, Baltimore, Md.; P. D. Cronin, 1945 Calvert Street; Alanson W. Willcox, 1511 Thirty-third Street; A. D. Smith, 1820 North: Roosevelt Street, Alexandria, Va.; Gladys Harrison, 2708 Dumbarton Street. Director of Community War Services—Charles P. Taft, 2215 Wyoming Avenue. Chairman, Committee on Physical Fitness—John B. Kelly, 3901 Henry Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Chairman, Health and Medical Committee—Dr. Irvin Abell, 321 West Broadway, Louisville, Ky. SOCIAL SECURITY BOARD (1825 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6500) Board members.—Arthur J. Altmeyer, chairman, 4613 North Rock Spring Road, Arlington, Va.; George E. Bigge, 5131 Massachusetts Avenue; Ellen S. Woodward, Westchester Apartments. Executive director—Oscar M. Powell, R. F. D. 2, Herndon, Va. 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. Dzrector, 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.—I1. S. Falk, 41 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Buren of Accounts and Audits.—Leonard J. Wilbert, 3224 Military oad. Director, Informational Service.—Max Stern, 2762 Chain Bridge Road. Actuarial consultant.— William R. Williamson, 3400 Fairhill Drive. Chairman, Appeals Council.—Joseph E. McElvain, 4615 Brandywine Street, REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region I (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont).—John F. Hardy, 120 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. Region 1/ (New York).—Peter Kasius, 11 West Forty-second Street, New ork City. Region III (Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania).— William IL. Dill, Juniper and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. Region IV (District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia).—Lavinia Engle, 1025 Vermont Avenue, Washington, D. C. Region V' (Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio).—Mary E. Woods, Euclid Avenue and East Ninth Street, Cleveland, Ohio. : Region VI (Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin).—Henry L. McCarthy, 105 West Adams Street, Chicago, Ill. Region VII (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and ~ Tennessee) .—Richard H. Lyle, 441 West Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga. Region VIII (Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota).— Fred M. Wilcox, Fourth Street and Second Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. I ndependent Offices and Establishments 395 Regional Directors—Continued. | ’ Region IX (Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma).—John E. Wrenn, 1006 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Region X (Louisiana, New Mexico, and Texas).—James B. Marley, North Presa and East Houston Streets, San Antonio, Tex. Region XI (Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah, and Wyoming).—Heber R. Harper, 728 Seventeenth Street, Denver, Colo. Region XII (Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington).—Richard M. Neustadt, 785 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif. Territorial Directors: Alaska.—Hugh J. Wade, Territorial Building, Juneau. Hawavi.—Robert W. Beasley, 425 Dillingham Building, Honolulu. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE (Bethesda, Md.) 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.—Lawrence Kolb, 6645 Thirty-second Street; Paul M. Stewart, 2210 Wyoming Avenue; J. W. Mountin, 3637 Brandywine Street; E. R. Coffey, 3361 Rittenhouse Street; R. A. Vonderlehr, 1862 Mintwood Place; W. F. Ossenfort, 7311 Bradley Drive, Bethesda, Md.; G. L. Dunnahoo, 6711 Forty-fourth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. . Executive assistant.—Charles E. Felton, 3951 Harrison Street. Chief Clerk and administrative officer—Daniel Masterson, 1305 Kearney Street NE. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH Director.—Asst. Surg. Gen. R. E. Dyer, 12 North Drive, Bethesda, Md. UNITED STATES OFFICE OF EDUCATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner.—John W. Studebaker, the Shoreham. Assistant Commissioner —Bess Goodykoontz, 531 South Lee Street, Alexandria, a. Assistant Commissioner for Vocational Education.—John C. Wright, 5624 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Commassioner.—C. F. Klinefelter, 3733 Veazey Street. Administrative officerMarie E. Schutt, 1721 North Quincy Street, Arlington, Va. — Private secretary to the Commissioner.—Marjorie S. Scott, 5611 Madison Street, Bethesda, Md. ' : Chefs of Divisions.— Consultants: M. M. Proffitt, 3209 Tennyson Street; David Segel, 1420 North Johnson Street, Arlington, Va. eh rin School Systems Division.—Carl A. Jessen, acting chief, 4420 Klingle treet. Higher Education Division.—F. J. Kelly, Westchester Apartments. Committe Education Division.—Alina M. Lindegren, acting chief, 2025 H treet. Special Problems Division.—Katherine M. Cook, 405 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. Inter-American Educational Relations.—John C. Patterson, 1709 H Street. Statistical Diviston.—E. 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.—Edith A. Wright, chief, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Library Service Division.—Ralph M. Dunbar, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. First executive assistant in vocational education.—[Vacant.] Second executive assistant in vocational education—Ward P. Beard, 316 North Oakland Street, Arlington, Va. Consultants in Vocational Education.—Clarence E. Rakestraw, 3900 Connecticut Avenue; Rall I. Grigsby, 4733 Twenty-fourth Road North, |Arlington, Va.; W. A. Ross, 4916 Forty-sixth Street. Agricultural Education Service.—W. T. Spanton, 3227 Vista Street NE. Trade and Industrial Education Service.—L. S. Hawkins, 4718 Forty-sixth St. Home Economics Education Service.— Edna P. Amidon, 1708 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va. 396 Congressional Directory Chiefs of Divisions—Continued. : Business Education Service—B. Frank Kyker, route 3, Vienna, Va. Dctupuilong) Information and Guidance Service—Harry A. Jager, 3238 Arcadia lace. Research and Statistical Service (vocational education).—G. M. Ruch, 4435 Forty-third Street. : Vocational Rehabilitation Division.— Director, John Aubel Kratz, 4302 Spring- dale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. War Production Training.—Director, L. S. Hawkins, 4718 Forty-sixth Street. Engineering, Science, and Management War Training.— Director, George W. Case, 4712 South Chelsea, Bethesda, Md. Rural War Production Training.— Director, W. T. Spanton, 3227 Vista Street NE. Student War Loans.— Director, Kendric N. Marshall, 122 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Visual Aids for War Training.— Director, Floyde E. Brooker, 7208 Cobalt Road, Woodacres, Md. FEDERAL ADVISORY BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chairman.—Robert Watt, representative of labor. EAC 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. Clarence Poe, representative of agricultural interests. 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.) CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS (Otis Building, 810 Eighteenth Street. Phone, REpublic 6530) Director—James J. McEntee, Fairfax Hotel. Executive Assistant to the Director—M. A. Stephens, Park Terrace Apartments. Secretary to the Director.—Ruth H. McGehee, 4818 North Third Street, Arlington, Va. Chief clerk—Richard K. McKey, 317 A Street SE. . FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Twelfth and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Commissioner.— Walter G. Campbell, 4801 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Associate Commissioner—Paul B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Commissioner—Charles W. Crawford, 4844 Old Dominion Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief Food and Drug Inspector— George P. Larrick, 4841 Thirtieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Sn to the Commissioner.—Fred B. Linton, 222 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, d : Chef of — Interstate Division.— Louis D. Elliott, North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Division of State Cooperation.— William A. Queen, 922 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Bacteriological Division.— Albert C. Hunter, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. Dan 416 Park, Cosmetic Division.— Dahle, Auburn Street, Takoma Md. : Drug Division—Robert P. Herwick, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Food Division—W. B. White, 4629 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Microanalytical Division.— Henry Welch, Overlook Drive, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Pharmacology— Herbert O. Calvery, 47 West Baltimore Street, Kensington, d. Vitamin Division. Elmer M. Nelson, 1830 Jackson Street NE, -Independent Offices and Establishments ~~ 397 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. Poole, Addison T. Smith, citizens of and the secretary of the institution. Secretary.— Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, 1748 Treasurer. Nathan Poole, 1737 K Street. Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a. FREEDMEN’S (Sixth and Bryant Streets. Superintendent.—John W. Lawlah, M. D. Draper, citizen of Connecticut; Nathan the District of Columbia; the president Lamont Street. m. to 3 p. m. HOSPITAL Phone, MIchigan 6262) Assistant superintendent.— Charles E. Burbridge. Associate medical officer—Bruce K. Bailey, M. D. Director of nurses.—Rheva A. Speaks. Chief Clerk.—Grace S. Jackson. ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL (Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, 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. _ Personnel officer.—Frank Ferris. HOWARD UNIVERSITY LIncoln 1424) (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, DUpont 6100) 5 Te Patron ex officio.—Paul V. McNutt, Administrator of the Federal Chairman, Board of Trustees—T. L. Hungate, S. M. President.—Mordecai W. Johnson, S. T. M., LL. D. . Administrative assistant to the President —G. Frederick Stanton, Secretary.—James M. Nabrit, Jr., J. D. Treasurer—V. D. Johnston, M. B.A Registrar—F. D. Wilkinson, LL. B. Security B. S., M. Agency A FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (Pennsylvania Avenue at Sixth Street. Phone, EXecutive 6800) Commissioners: Chatrman.—Garland (The chairmanship S. Ferguson, the rotates annually Wyoming Apartments. accordingto seniority.) Charles H. March, Shoreham Hotel. Ewin L. Davis, 2150 Wyoming Avenue. William A. Ayres, the Kennedy-Warren. Robert E. Freer, 116 Woodlawn Avenue, Kenwood, Chevy Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, 3024 Tilden Street. Assistant to the chairman. —M. A. White, 4801 Connecticut Economic adviser to the Commission.—Willis J. Ballinger, Street, Arlington, Va. Chief counsel. — William T. Kelley, 6601 Assistant chief counsel. — Richard P. B. Wooden, 4510 Amherst Road, 1030 South Twenty-sixth Street, 83317°—178-1—2d ed. 27 Chase, Md. Avenue. 202 North Trenton Fourteenth Street. Whiteley, 2915 Woodland Drive; Walter College Park, Md.; Joseph J. Smith, Jr., Arlington, Va. 308 Congressional Directory Chief examiner.—James A. Horton, 3016 Tilden Street. Assistant chief examiners.—Ishmael Burton, 1313 Lawrence Street NE.; Joseph E. Sheehy, 7208 Harwick Road, Wood Acres, Md. Chief trial Web Woodfill, 2101 New Hampshire examiner.— Avenue. Assistant chief trial examiner.—F. C. Baggarly, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Trade Practice Conferences—Henry Miller, 7600 Morningside Drive. Director, Radio and Periodical Division.—PGad B. Morehouse, 9419 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant director.— William F. Davidson, 6404 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Director, Medical Advisory Division.—Dr. James J. Durrett, route 1, Hyattsville, Md Chef, 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. Assistant secretary.—Andrew N. Ross, 1343 Sheridan Street. Chief, Budget and Finance Division.—Robert C. Dalrymple, 5408 Harwood Road, Bethesda, Md Chief, Personnel Division.—Edna B. Nye, 3018 Porter Street. Chief, Research and Library Diviston.—Richard S. Ely, Seminary Hill, route 2, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Records Diviston.—J. W. Karsner, 5232 Seventh Street. Chief, Publication and Procurement Division.—H. B. Stamm, 117 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md 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 Joni ~Uimenes T. Sadler, attorney in charge, 55 New Montgomery treet. . Seattle.—Henry M. White, attorney in charge, 801 Federal Building. New Orleans.—Herbert L. Propst, attorney in charge, 1107 Pere Marquette Building. FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY (North Interior Building. Phone, EXecutive 4900) OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Adminisirator.—Maj. Gen. Philip B. Fleming, 1554 Thirty-fourth Street. Secretary to the Administrator.—Leona L. Kempainen, 1660 Lanier Place. louis Michigan: Detroit. Jie: i nit 2 Samuel Fitzpatrick, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan and Ohio. Mississippi: Gulfport =...io. SELES Carlos Augusto Simpson, vice consul (honorary). For Mississippi. New York: New York City..._......._. Conrado Traverso, consul general.! Carlos Alfredo Casal, consul. Edmundo Dileo, consul. Adolfo Bollini, consul. For the United States except the New Orleans consular district. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia..__.._..__ Ernesto C. Uriburu, consul. : For Pennsylvania. & South Carolina: Charleston. ___.___.___ A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul (honorary). For South Carolina. Texas: Dallas AN ee aT Roberto Scaricabarozzi, consul. For Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Houston 3080 oot Ae as ‘Walter A. Evans, vice consul (honorary). Virginia; Norfolle= oo. oo a 4 William Holmes Davis, vice consul (honorary). Washington: Seattle. = ~~. oho John P. Hausman, vice consul (honorary). For Washington. BELGIUM Alabama: Mobile. 02 fo oi A. Tellier, consul (honorary). For Alabama. California; Los Angeles.__ :77. Charles Winsel, consul (honorary). : For Arizona and southern California. i San Francisco: oo. L. Genis, consul general. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, i Utah, Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii. Comal Zone. > co 0 arin doa J. Henriquéz, consul (honorary). | Colorado: Denver: = = | J. P. Constantine, consul (honorary). : | For Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming. | 1 Exequatur for present consular district issued November 8, 1940, 469 470 Congressional Directory BELGIUM State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction BELGIUM—continued Florida: Jacksonville... .......cnu 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. * Georgia: Atlants H. L. De Give, consul (honorary). For Georgia (except southeastern Georgia). Savannah. coi. ougonioon 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, Twiggs, Ware, Warren, ‘Washington, Wayne, Wilcox, Wilkinson, and Worth. For South Carolina. Hawsii: HonolWlu. ooo V. Lappe, consul (honorary). LEE ERE BI a ry ea John van Rickstal, 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. / Moline... oie coat Jena 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. Kentucky: Louisville...iu Bonnie, consul (honorary). . Sevier For Kentucky (except the counties of Boone, Campbell, and Kenton), and Tennessee. Louisiana: New Orleans_______________ A. Remés, consul general. H. Dabezies, consul (honorary). For Alabama, Arkansas. Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis-sissippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. Maryland: Baltimore: 2 2 2. _i_. J. G. Whiteley, consul (honorary). For Delaware and Maryland. Massachusetts: Boston... _..._ QG. H. Toole, consul (honorary), For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. : Michigan: -Detroit..o. oo P. Boeye, consul (honorary). For Michigan. Minnesota: Minneapolis________._______ 0. E. Safford, consul (honorary). For Minnesota. New York: New York City___________ ; 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. Ohio: Cinelnmagl. oo...-77 ~~ 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. Cleveland... F35d E. E. Stearns, consul (honorary). For the northern counties of Ohio. Oregon: Portland. > Zo.ob v=" A. Herman, vice consul (honorary). For Idaho and Oregon. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Jules 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, North-ampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike, Potter, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 471 State and residence BELGIUM—continued Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh. _____________ Philippine Islands: Manila_______...___ Puerto Rico: Mayagtiez_._.____.___.._. Texas: Galveston... ..u.oococan lost Houston. Zitiaiitas aan Virginia: Norfolk. .........ooo asisos Richmond...ho =. Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie ______ ‘Washington: Seattle________._____._.... -Wisconsin: Green Bay. coco... BOLIVIA California: Los AngeleS_ _ ooo. San Franciseo.....ooi. ica pr be Minols: Chicagoan Louisiana: New Orleans. _____.________ Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh________.______ Washington: Seattle... . oo...ies BRAZIL California: Los Angeles...a... Sen Francisco. -coca Florida: Miami vor iota ore a an Georgia: Savannah...lil oo. lineis: Chicago... cliginn. oil ailing Louisiana: New Orleans... ccueeeeo. Maryland: Baltimore... ..ccceeaaeeo-. BELGIUM—BRAZIL Name, rank, and jurisdiction 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. Oscar F. Bravo, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. 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. Federico Ostria Reyes, consul. Casimiro Alvarez, honorary consul. : Jorge Eduardo Boyd, honorary consul general. Francis M. Miller, honorary consul. Arturo Silva, honorary consul. Jaime Gutierrez Guerra, consul general. Gustavo Guerrero, honorary consul. Mrs. Marie Aline Z. de Blanco, honorary vice consul. William Henri Irish, honorary consul. : Enrique Naranjo, honorary vice consul. Arnold George Stifel, honorary consul. Teddy Hartmann, consul general. ‘Walter Montenegro, consul. J. Arturo Arguedas, honorary vice consul. N. N. Cleven, honorary consul. Israel Torrico, honorary consul. Raul Bopp, consul. Alfredo de Almeida Sa, vice consul. Edison Ramos Nogueira, vice consul. Anibal de Saboia Lima, consul general. Francisco Eulalio do Nascimento e Silva, consul. Mauricio Wellisch, vice consul. Carlos Fernandes, vice consul (honorary). For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Alfredo Polzin, consul general. José Castano Bueno Horta, Jr., consul. Luiz de Souza Bandeira, vice consul. For Georgia and Florida. Henrique Oswaldo de Miranda, honorary vice consul. , consul. Vicente Paulo Gatti, vice consul. as ; For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Jo#io Luiz de Guimaraes Gomes, consul. Arnaldo Vasconcellos, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennes- see. For United States possessions in the Caribbean Sea. Armando Fleury de Barros, honorary consul. = Pablo Alegre, honorary vice consul. For Delaware and Maryland. 472 Congressional Directory State and residence BRAZIL—continued "Massachusetts: Boston. ..___________._. New York: New York City__.__._____... Oregons Portland nv 00 Coo oon 00 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____.______. South Carolina, Charleston Pexas Pallas... coon. nncaonras Houston... ..coeucinannesnitss Port Arthur. Jui Ubiiii Virginia: Norfolk_____ oe Sent aaa / Washington: Seattle... ___._.._._..._ BULGARIA... cme CHILE California: Los Angeles. oo coacceaea- San Dlego... Liliica lll San Francisco... -comeuiaw-Hawaii: Honolnlu. . ........... 000000 Tilinois: Chicago... oueceieac: Louisiana: New Orleans. _ __._.......___ Maryland: Baltimore... ............__ New York: New York City_._.__....____ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia _____._____ Puerto Rico: San Juan... 0. bo .0.. ‘Washington: Seattle... cco... BRAZIL—CHILE Name, rank, and jurisdiction Ildefonso Falc&o, consul. Alberto Raposo Lopes, vice consul. Antonio Malva Gomes, vice consul (honorary) Oscar Corr8a, consul general. Jorge Maciel da Costa Leite, consul. Sotero Cosme, vice consul. José Jobim, vice consul. Henrique Rodrigues Valle, vice consul. Roberto de Oliveira Campos, vice consul. Celso Raul Garcia, vice consul. Aluysio Guedes Regis Bittencourt, vice consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Adolpho de Camargo Neves, consul. Aluisio Napolefio de Freitas Rego, vice consul. For Oregon and Washington. David Barbosa Lage Moretzsohn, consul. Jo#o 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. y Charles Stewart Barry, Jr., honorary vice consul. Carlos Meissner, Jr., consul. Jayme Azevedo Rodrigues, vice consul. For Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. José Luis Fernandes, honorary consul. Emmett Irwin Welch, consular agent. Jodo Antonio Rodrigues Martins, consul. Pedro Eugenio Soares, consul. Pedro Fernando Machado Polzin, vice consul. Luiz Paulo de Amorim, vice consul. For North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Robert C. Bullwinkel, vice consul (honorary). Ross Whitfield Sutherland, consular agent (honorary). ~ State of war declared by Bulgaria Dec. 13, 1941. Juan Pradenas Mufioz, consul general. For Arizona, Colorado, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Hawaii. Mauricio Herschel, honorary consul. For San Diego County. Javier Urrutia Valdes, consul. For San Francisco, Oakland, and Berkeley. Frederik A. Schaefer, honorary counsl. For the Territory of Hawaii. M. H. Ehlert, consul (honorary). For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wis- consin. Carlos Grant Benavente, consul. Enrique Gacittia Aquilera, 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. Anibal Jara Letelier, consul general. Fernando Dahmen, consul. Exequiel Puelma Silva, consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Connecti cut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisi-ana, Maine, Maryland, “Massachusetts, Michigan, Minne-sota, 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. For Puerto Rico. Manuel Moreno Lajafna, honorary consul. For Camden, New Jersey. For Delaware and Pennsylvania. Filipo L. de Hostos, honorary consul. For Puerto Rico. , consul. Alfonso Prieto Basadre, consul. For Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ore gon, South Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 473 CHINA—COSTA RICA State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction CHINA California; Los Angeles... .ocoooeooo-San Franciseo.......... .. Hawaliy Honolulu... oi io drei MMinocis: Chicago. inion ads snito gl Louisiana: New Orleans__ _.___________ Oregon: Portland... io 00 Jo i08bl38 Philippine Islands: Manila___._______.__ ‘Bexas; Honstonty-. oo sZt ono woe Washington: Seattle COLOMBIA California: Los Angeles. _..........._.. San Franeiseo...... Ji Tam Ilinois: Chicago... .o.. + A 0 01700 Louisiana: New Orleans. _.______.___._ Maryland: Baltimore... 0. 1 Ci Massachusetts: Boston. _«____ i... ._.. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_._._________ PuertorRico: Ponce. «i Foriui rie San-Jaan 2 oo thew0 COSTA RICA Alabama: Mobijle-.-0. owed California Berkeley...i 0 =: Hollywood =.....0 = 0 TogAngeles.. i... i... Tse-chang Kent Chang, consul. Chih Tsing Feng, consul general, Patrick Pichi Sun, vice consul. Shiao Wen-Liang, vice consul. Chan Ying-Wing, vice consul. Sien-yung Yu, vice consul. King-chau Mui, consul generals Ying Yu Huang, consul. Li Chia Hsiang, vice consul. Chang-Lok Chen, consul general, Gung Hsing Wang, vice consul. Chien Chin Chang, deputy consul. Tsune-chi Yi, consul general. Hsin Yu Lu, 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. T'sin Lon Ouang, vice consul. Yi-Seng Kiang, consul. Hsiao-wan Tao, vice consul. Tsu-Ying Ch’eh, deputy consul. Manuel Maria Muiloz Obando, consul. Luis Alfonso Londofio, honorary vice consul. Alfredo J. de Leon, consul general. Eusebio Cortés-Grégory, honorary consul. Marcel Gutiérrez, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington, -Rafael Rocha Schloss, consul general. For the Canal Zone from Balboa to Gamboa. Jorge Wills Pradilla, consul general. 4 the Canal Zone from Cristobal to Gatun, including Gatun ake. Gabriel Saravia Vasquez, consul general. Arturo Currea C., honorary vice 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. Eduardo Gallego Gutiérrez, consul general. Maria Camargo, vice consul. Z For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Ten-nessee, and Texas, Luis Carlos Lopez, consul. Eduardo Gomez Durén, consul. Hector R. Acebes, honorary vice consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont, Macedonio Romero, honorary consul. Alfredo Lozano Agudelo, consul general. Alvardo Rebolledo, vice consul. Bernardo Santa-Coloma, 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. Octavio Diaz Valenzuela, consul. Rafael Samper Caicedo, honorary vice consul. 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. José Pablo Quiros, honorary vice consul. Rodolfo Castro Wassmer, honorary vice consul. Ricardo Casorla, honorary consul. José Enrique Quiros Trejos, honorary vice consul. Jorge Cardona, honorary consul. Federico Guillermo Gongora, honorary vice consul. 474 Congressional Directory State and residence COSTA RICA—continued California: San Francisco. _____.__.__.... Canal Zone: Balboa... .......i... ._ Cristobal o.oo. Cis Delaware: Wilmington... .......... District of Columbia: Washington_____ Tlorida: Miami: ooo. sieasan HHineis: Chicago... ..... oo ivausdnasin Towa: Dubuque... ... 0 io. ibid Kansas: Lawrence... .oooooomo oon Louisiana: Baton Rouge__.._______.____. New Orleans ........_..... Maryland: Baltimore. cova .......ie. Massachusetts: Boston_________________ Michigan: Detroit... .o...o._.... Minnesota: Rochester-_ _._____________ hr) ETREN RA New Jersey: Newark __________________ New York: New York City... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Philippine Islands: Manila. ______ Puerto Rico: San Juan. ........o... Texas: Brownsville ou. coo ae oo Lar Utah: Salt ois OY reoe Virginia: Newport News_______________ Norfolk a oo a Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie_ _____ Washington: Seattle: ..~ in esica-‘Wisconsin: Milwaukee. _.._..___.____.. CUBA Alabama: Mobile _ ..- =...i... District of Columbia: Washington_____ COSTA RICA—CUBA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Arturo Fernandez Ardon, consul general. Enrique Allen de la Cruz, honorary consul. Fernando Flores Banuet, honorary vice consul. Juan Dévila Solera, honorary consul general. For the Canal Zone. Enrique Pucci Paoli, consul (honorary). Juan Pucci Genet, honorary vice consul. Roberto Gomez, honorary consul. Alberto Sasso, vice honorary consul. Jimmy Fonseca Mora, honorary vice consul. Gonzalo J. Gallegos, honorary consul general. Bernardo Vargas Canalias, honorary-eonsul general. Berthold Singer, honorary consul. Guillermo Valiente Lara, honorary vice consud. Lusch, honorary consul. José Maria Osma de Aysa, honorary consul. Joaquin Angulo, honorary vice consul. Alvaro Leiva Quiros, honorary vice consul. John Marshall Quintero, honorary consul general. Marco Fidel Tristan, honorary vice consul. For Louisiana. James Turneer, honorary consul. 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. José Basileo Acufa, honorary consul. Charles Barrows, vice honorary consul. For Kansas and for Kansas City, Mo. John M. Hadley, honorary consul general. Guillermo Quiros Quiros, honorary vice consul. Luis Alberto Salazar Cespedes, honorary consul. Javier Cortés Fernandez, consul general. Samuel Piza Chamorro,? consul general. Carlos G. Perez, honorary consul. Juan Elizalde, consul. Ramon Fournier, honorary consul general. 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. Luis Alberto Murillo Murillo, 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. Edward J. Menge, vice consul (honorary). Eduardo Mayea y Aroca, consul. For Alabama. 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. Mariano Escalona y Almeida, consul. 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, Stanis-laus, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Tuolumne, Yolo, and Yuba. For Nevada. José A. Sera y Serrano, consul general. Miguel Cornide y Salva, consul. . Rafael Mulet y Proenza, consul. Federico E. de Graw y Marquez Sterling, vice consul, For the District of Columbia. ? Consular jurisdiction includes the United States and possessions and the Canal Zone. n Foreign Consular Officers in the United States State and residence CUBA—continued Florida: Jacksonville. .cuaeoe concoct. Georgia: Savanmah o.oo Hinois-Chicage. oc oan ce oo il Kentucky: Louisville: o-oo oon Louisiana: New Orleans______. ._..__.. Maryland: Baltimore. ._...c.......c_._ Massachusetts: Boston... occ ual. "Michigan: Detroit... ........ Mississippi: Pascagoula Missouri: Kansas City... ooo. Co North Carolina: Winston-Salem _______ Ohio: Cincinnati... ......_. =~ Oregon: Portland’... oncait Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__......____ CUBA Name, rank, and jurisdiction 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, Flagler, Franklin, Gadsden, Gilchrist, Gulf, Hamilton, Holmes, Jackson, Jef-ferson, Lafayette, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Okaloosa, Putnam, St. Johns, Santa Rosa, Suwa-i 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 Gonzalez Sali, vice consul. For the counties of Broward, Collier, Dade, Hendry, Martin, and Palm Beach. , consul. Alberto de 1a Campa y Roff, vice consul. For the counties of Brevard, Charlotte, Citrus, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Indian River, Lake, Lee, Manatee, Okeechobee, Orange, Oceola, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Wi Lucie, Sarasota, Seminole, and Sumter. , consul, Carlos Tornes y Tamayo, vice consul. Ignacio Algarra y Mendivil, consul. For Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Angel Pérez y Hernandez, consul. For Kentucky. Carlos Marquez y Loret de Mola, consul. Francisco Batet y Rivas, vice consul. Federico Laredo y Arencibia, vice consul. For Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma. Juris-diction includes the honorary consulate at Pascagoula, Miss. Eugenio Castillo Borges, consul. For Delaware and Maryland. Antonio Bruzon y Rodrigues, consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Cesar Ferrer y Guillen, acting consul. José R. Cabrera y Bequer, consular agent (honorary). 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. Francisco Caifiellas y Marti, consul general. Miss Sofia Dihigo y Llanos, consul. . For Iowa, Missouri (except Kansas City consular district), Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Roberto Hernandez y Garcia, consul general. Cayetano de Quesada y Socarras, consul. Eduardo Portales y Calas, consul. Juan Manuel del Collado y Fuentes, consul. Antonio de Souza y Carvajal, consul. Alfredo Hernandez y Valdés, consul. Abelardo A. Leon Blanco, consul. 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 Pou, vice consul. For New York. For the New Jersey counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Mor-ris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren. For the United States. Juan Miranda y Suérez, honorary consular agent. For North Carolina. Luis Perdomo y Fernandez, 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. For Pennsylvania. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. / 476 Congressional Directory CUBA—DENMARK y State -and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction CUBA—continued Philippine Islands: Manila_ ______..____ Andrés Soriano y Roxas, consular agent (honorary). For the Philippine Islands. -Puerto Rico: SaniYuan: wolos Jsinis , consul. For Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Jurisdiction includes the honorary consulate at Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands. Tennessee: Chattanooga. ____.......... José Miguel Ribas y Villaverde, consul. For Tennessee. Texas: Galveston... co 0. Vi oii. Eduardo Patterson y de Jauregui, consul. José Tarrida y Victori, vice consul. For Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. FOUSION oh mi id Enrique Morales de los Rios, consular agent, For the Texas Counties of Anderson, Austin, Brazos, Burleson, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Freestone, Grimes, Harris, Houston, Lee, Leon, Madison, Milam, Montgomery, Robert-son, Trinity, Walker, Waller, and Washington. Virginia: Norfolles aus Adolfo del Castillo y Llanes, consul. For Virginia and West Virginia. Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. _____ Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miller, honorary consul. Washington:«Seattle. .s...lisuli loi Eduardo Calas Bertot, acting consul, CZECHOSLOVAKIA California: L.os Angeles. ____.__.__.___._ Felix B. Janovsky, consul (honorary). For Arizona and southern California. San Francisco. .---—---..... Bohu$§ Benes, consul. Erwin Ladislav Chloupek, consul (honorary). For northern California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. For Alaska and Hawaii. Supervisory jurisdic. tion over the honorary consulates at Los Angeles and Manila. Minois:> 2 0 Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ____ Washington: Seattle. -...........i..... ECUADOR Alabama: Mobile. loo California: Loos Angeles_.____._.___.____ San Fronelsco 20. 2 Mopida: Miami. ~ aa Louisiana: New Orleans. ______________ New York: New York City.__..___.__. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia___________. Puerto Rico; SanJuan. ... .. . ..._.... Texas: Houstons-r oon, 2 oh ons Virginians Norfolk. 100 000 Po Washington: Seattle... —.... EGYPT California: San Francisco. ..oeaeeaao.. New York: New York City___...______ EL SALVADOR California: Los Angeles. ............... San Franeiseo-..... Canal Zone cov Colorado; Denver... 0... Mineis: Chicago...oar Fabs . Louisiana: New Orleans... __.._._______ Minnesota: Winona... ...-2 _ FL. New York: New York City.........__. Name, rank, and jurisdiction Rafael Comprés Perez, 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, Pennyslvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, “Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Vir-ginia, and Wisconsin. Rafael Santoni Calero, consul. Roberto D. Abrahams, honorary consul. Juan P. Pellicer, honorary consul. José J. Zamora, horiorary vice consul. Andrés Leon Martinez, consul (honorary). Enloe L. Lowry, honorary vice consul. Juan B. Montes de Oca, consul. Manuel Pagan Esmeris, honorary consul. Lorenzo Loubriel, honorary consul. 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. T. L. Evans, honorary consul. Fernando Pro, honorary consul. Emile A. Berne, honorary consul. J. Percy Souffront, honorary vice consul. Francis E. Townsend, honorary vice consul, T. G. McGonigal, honorary consul. José Antonio Baquero, consul. Jorge Carrera Andrade, consul general. John A. Cleveland, honorary consul. Charles Cleveland, honorary vice consul. Hernan Pallares Zaldumbide, consul general. José R. Barios, honorary vice consul. Sixto Duran Ballén, consul general. Armando Pesantes Garefa, vice consul. Reginald Chutter, honorary vice consul. Fernando L. Gonzéalez, 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, Ne-braska, 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, Pennsyl-vania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Arturo Dominguez Araujo, consul. Dagoberto Granados Gavidia, consul general. Miguel Antonio Serrano, vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Roberto Boyd, consul general. Eduardo Kay, honorary consul. J. Humberto Arrieta Yadice, vice consul (honorary). José Francisco Morales, consul. José B. Acuiia, consul (honorary). 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. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 479 EL SALVADOR—GREAT BRITAIN pe " State and residence EL SALVADOR—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia .___.______ Philippine Islands: Manila___________ Puerto Rico: SanJuan... _.oi.-..._.:. Texas: Brownegyille! ic. 7 = 7, Houston. otisLitas it ESTONTA California: Los Angeles... .._...._ New York: New York City..__________ ETHIOPIA New York: New York City.__.._______ FRANCE. Soaui Son Franeisco. oo =... Canal Zone: Colon, Panama___________ Panamé, Panama_________ Colorado; Denverzas. cic berryJong District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Jacksonville... <0 noi 0 J Hawaii: Honolmlu. 2... i. 20 2 aa on Illinois Ohleago. Lf io desingoy Louisiana: New Orleans_______________ Maine: Porfland. Jo. i. oso a Name, rank, and jurisdiction i Nicolas Pedroso, honorary consul. Manuel Pérez Rosales, honorary consul. José Hernandez Usera, honorary consul. Claude P. Hilliard, 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. —— ——— consul general. Johannes Kaiv, consul. For the United States. John H. Shaw, honorary consul general. French Government severed relations with the United States November 8, 1942. 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). Eric Arthur Cleugh, consul. Leonard Gibson Holliday, vice consul. George Wellington Irving, vice consul. Matthew John Vincent Blood-Smyth, vice consul. Walter Crowhurst Hacon, 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. Godfrey Arthur Fisher, consul general. John Chevalier O’Dwyer, consul. Walter Hollis Adams, vice consul. Hugh McErlean, vice consul. : For California (except the counties included in the jurisdiction of the consulate at Los Angeles), Nevada, and Utah. John Anthony Thwaites, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. Charles Edward Schuter Dodd, consul general. William Kingsley Smith, consul. John Herbert Dickinson, vice consul. Stephen Patrick House, vice consul. For the Canal Zone. Roger Stevens, consul. For Colorado and Wyoming. John Campbell Thomson, consul. For the District of Columbia. «Francis Joseph White, vice consul. For Florida east of the Apalachicola River. For Georgia and South Carolina. Michael Anthony Moyse Robb, vice consul. Lewis Arthur Oates, vice consul (honorary). Malcolm Siborne Henderson, consul. Glyn Lloyd Roberts, vice consul. For Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida east of the Apa- lachicola River. Frank Arnold Wallis, consul. Harry Lewis Dawson, vice consul. For Hawaii. Wilfred Hansford Gallienne, consul general, Henry Hugh Thomas, consul. John Roland Kay, vice consul. Hubert Norman Pullar, vice consul. ~ For Illinois (except East St. Louis), Indiana, Iowa, and Nebraska, and the Wisconsin counties of Columbia, Crawford, Dane, Dodge, Grant, Greene, Iowa, Jefferson, Kenosha, Lafayette, Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Racine, Richland, Rock, Sauk, Vernon, Walworth, Washington, and Waukesha. David John Rodgers, consul general. William Percy Taylor Nurse, vice consul. Gordon William Creighton, viee 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. Christopher Handley Styles Tracy, vice consul. 480 Congressional Directory State and residence GREAT BRITAIN—continued Maryland: Baltimore...i iu -o. Massachusetts: Boston. ___...cceeee.__ Michigan: -Detroit.......c.conenvacnscll Minnesota: St. Paul-Minneapolis...___ HM Missouri: Kansas Clty. c.cvnacln StVoUls.. .. ide dai North Carolina: Wilmington... __..._.__. Ohio:>Claveland rio. oiieiis Oregon Portland = coo. io. ou. Pacific: Ocean: (Tonga. si-co-o.o. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__._......__ Pittsburgh... cca ic Philippine Islands: Cebu. __..._._____ Davao Sieh Nolo. doris cevan Legaspi. aioli Manila. ;.oeaaz GREAT BRITAIN Name, rank, and jurisdiction John William Taylor, consul. Joseph Todd Mulvenny, vice consul. A. Temple Blackwood, vice consul. Peter Sedgwick, vice consul. For Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Anthony Hastings George, consul general. R. B. Boyd Tollinton, acting consul. Gerald Fraser Tyrrell, vice consul, James Arthur Brannen, vice consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Cyril Hubert Cane, consul. Arthur Oliver Bray, vice consul. Leslie Hammersley Williams, vice consul. For the Southern Peninsula of Michigan. For Ohio. ionel Henry Lamb, consul. For the States of Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota; the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and the Wisconsin counties of Adams, Ashland, Barron, Bayfield, Brown, Buffalo, Burnett, Calumet, Chippewa, Clarke, Door, Douglas, Dunn, Eau Claire, Florence, Fond du Lae, Forest, Green Lake, Iron, Jackson, Juneau, Kewaunee, La Crosse, Langlade, Lincoln, Manitowoe, Marathon, Marinette, Marquette, * Monroe, Oconto, Oneida, Outagamie, Pepin, Pierce, Polk, Portage, Price, Rusk, St. Croix, Sawyer, Shawano, She-boygan, Taylor, Trempealeau, Vilas, Washburn, Waupaca, Waushara, Winnebago, and Wood. John Playfair Price, consul. Reginald Thomas Davidson, vice consul. For Kansas and Kansas City in Missouri. Hugh Charles McClelland, consul. Gerald Thomas Corley Smith, vice consul. William Milne Guthrie, vice consul. For Arkansas, Kansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma, 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. Peter Pares, vice consul. Francis Bryan Anthony Rundall, vice consul. Evelyn Basil Boothby, vice consul. Ayrton John Seaton Pullan, vice consul. James Alexander Milne Marjoribanks, vice consul. David Loinaz, acting vice consul. Frank Besant, acting vice consul. William Frederick Redmond, acting vice consul. Tan Howard Potter McEwen, acting vice consul. Walter Frederick James, proconsul. For Connecticut, New Jersey (except the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem), and New York. Storer Preble Ware, vice consul (honorary). Ernest James Bisiker, vice consul (honorary). James McDonald, consul (honorary). Arthur Leopold Armstrong, consul. For the islands under United States possession in the Pacific Ocean south of the Equator. Laurence Milner Robinson, consul general. James Mark Walsh, vice consul. Theodore Harold Fox, vice consul. For Delaware and Pennsylvania. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantie, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. Oliver Smalley, consul (honorary). Alexander McQuaker Galbraith, vice consul (honorary). Guy Walford, vice consul (honorary). Alexander Abercrombie Brown, vice consul (honorary). E.J. L. Phillips, vice consul. Alexander James Tyre, acting vice consul. David Cassels Brown, vice consul (honorary). 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. Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States 481 GREAT BRITAIN—GUATEMALA rh DS a State and residence GREAT BRITAIN—continued Puerto. Rico; San Juan... o> nH South Carolina: Charleston___/ __._.__. ToxasrGalvestono ao. 0 Houston-...b wv J Ns ik Virginians Norfolk: co a. ool or Virgin Islands: Frederiksted ._______.._ Charlotte Amalie. ___._ Washington: Seattle. . oi. io u.uvi. GREECE California: San Franciseo_ ooo. Tllinois: Chicago... cu. dovainiioie Louisiana: New Orleans. _ ___..oo..... Tassachusefts: Boston... .. .... ..id> GUATEMALA Alsbama: Mobile ooo... irda California: Berkeley. otf fat Los Angeles...opr .. Oakdond. oi nly AID. Pree nraa Mlinois; Chicago...oii 70283 . Louisiana: New Orleans______.__._..... Name, rank, and jurisdiction Arthur Henry Noble, consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. Harald de Courcy Harston, vice consul (honorary). Stewart Hunter Evans, vice consul (honorary). Henry Francis Chester Walsh, consul general, Leslie Bland Dufton, vice consul. For New Mexico and Texas. James Guthrie, consul (honorary). Miles Merwin, vice consul. Eric Howard Thomas, consul. For the islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas. Harold Couch Swan, consul. Francis Justinian Pelly, vice consul. Herbert Raymond Guyler White, vice consul. For Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska, Elias Picheon, consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, Washington, and Hawaii. Supervisory jurisdiction over Alaska, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. N Stephen Koundouriotis, acting consul. For the District of Columbia . For the States of Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. For the West Virginia counties of Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Greenbrier, Hampshire, Hardy, Morgan, Nicholas, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Tay- lor, Tucker, Upshur, and Webster. \ Demetrios Benetatos, consul general. For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Supervisory jurisdiction over Arkansas, Indiana,. Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Ne-braska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, and South Dakota. For the West Virginia counties of Boone, Braxton, Brooke, Cabell, Calhoun, Clay, Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Han-cock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, Kanawha, Lewis, Lincoln, Logan, McDowell, Marion, Marshall, Mason, Mercer, Mineral, Mingo, Monongalia, Monroe, Ohio, Pleasants, Putnam, Raleigh, Ritchie, Roane, Summers, Tyler, Wayne, Wetzel, Wirt, Wood, and Wyoming. 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, and New York. For the Pennsylvania counties of Adams, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Colombia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Dela-ware, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Northampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioba, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York. W. Steber, Jr., honorary consul. Ricardo T. Gutierrez, honorary vice consul. Erwin Widney, 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. Octavio Barrios Solis, 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, Kentucky, Joan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and exas. 482 Congressional Directory GUATEMALA—HONDURAS : State and residence GUATEMALA—continued Maryland: Baltimore. __________.__.___ Massachusetts: Boston_____._..__...... Missouri: St. Touls. ..... oo.ll New York: New York City___.._._____ Oregon Portland... 0.0. ol Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ___________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto: Rico: SanJuan. HAITI Afabama: Mobiles: 0 oi Bul oan Canal Zone: Balboa... _... _. .. 0. oii] Cristobal. lonac aii id Florida: Miami... oo. .... 2 iui eld Palm Beach and West Palm Beach. Iinois; Elmhurst iors ll co ieaina Louisiana: Lake Charles... ..____..___ New Orleans... ___..._____._ Maryland: Baltimore... ___._._.._____. Massachusetts: Boston._...........__.___ New Jersey: Newark... oo ____.. New York: New York City..........__ Pennsylvania: Chester ___.____________ Philadelphia... Puerto Rico: San Juan Texas: Galveston. __.... HONDURAS Alabama: Mobile... =... -. 0 California: Los Angeles. _-.._._____.___._ San:Franciseo....---------. Blineis:CHcag0:: aia annie me Louisiana: New Orleans... ___.___ Marviond: Baltimere =... Massachusetts: Boston...__._ Pa Michigan: Detroit. o.oo -co ao oc. New York: New York City.com. Puerto Rico: San Juan... ou -ocuass-Texas: Brownsville. cd. oo. Galveston... ivan ae Honston =: o.oo isisnea Port Arthur... . 7 anne San Antonio. ..... inanese an Name, rank, and jurisdiction Jean A. Maurer, honorary consul. For Maryland. William A. Mosman, honorary consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Frederic Lawson Niemeyer, honorary consul. For Kansas, Kentucky, and Missouri. Gustavo Rivas, 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. Reginald F. Chutter, 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 Bracons, honorary consul. For Washington. Richard Murray, honorary consul. Max R. Stempel, consul. , consul general. Manuel José Castillo Galvez, honorary vice consul, Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. William F. Ives, honorary consul. James H. Richmond, honorary consul. Glen A. Broussard, honorary consul. , consul general. Yves Verna, acting vice consul. Maurice B. Carlin, honorary consul. Francis R. Clark, honorary consul. Victor de la Fuente, consular agent, For New Jersey. Rulx Léon, consul general. Yves Verna, vice consul. William Ward, Jr., honorary vice consul, Louis Elson, honorary consul. Charles Vere, honorary consul. J. A. Torregrossa, honorary consul. . 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. Juan E. Petit, acting consul. Mauricio Calderon, honorary consul. Harold White, honorary vice consul. José Maria Albir, honorary consul general. Manuel F. Morales, vice consul. Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul. David C. Sasso, honorary vice consul. E. Carles, honorary consul. L. Lee, honorary consul. Edward Davis, honorary consul. Vicente Williams, consul general. Carlos Enrique Lazarus, honorary vice consul. For Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee. Ramon Santamaria, honorary consul. José Augusto Rodriguez U., consul. Saul R. Levin, honorary consul. Gonzalo Carias C., consul general. Juan Bermidez 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. Forewgn Consular Officers in the United States 483 State and residence HUNGARY: ..o.>tio i ICELAND Tlinois:;: Chleage. Sb © uriinacias Maryland: Baltimore / New York: New York City__.______... North Dakota: Grand Forks___.________ Oregon: Portland io oosinidnJia IRAN District of Columbia: Washington. __.._ New York: New York City.____.__._._.. : IRAQ District of Columbia: Washington..... IRELAND California: San Francisco... o.oo... INinbis: Chieagos boos Sill soaayinls LATVIA California: Los Angeles_ ___ ooo... District of Columbia: Washington___._ Indiana: Indianapolis Louisiana: New Orleans. _________._._.. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh. ove Puerto Rico: San Juan...5 co5 o_ LIBERIA Iinois-Chieagouss. oa . oo ibiuniona Louisiana: New Orleans_ ______________ HUNGARY—LIBERIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Relations severed Dec. 11, 1941; state of war declared by Hungary : Dec. 18, 1941. Arni Helgason, consul. Stefan Einarsson, vice consul. Helgi P. Briem, consul general. For the State of New York. Richard Beck, vice consul. Bardi Skulason, vice consul. The Legation of Iran at Washington has charge of Iranian con-Jae interests in the United States, except in the State of New ork. X ‘ Hussein Navab, consul. For the State of New York. Ali Jawdat al-Ayoubi, consul general, For the United States of America. Matthew Murphy, consul. For Arizona, California,-Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Garth Healy, 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. Joseph D. Brennan, consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Leo Thomas McCauley, consul general. Timothy J. Horan, consul. Patrick Hughes, 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 congressional 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. Edward W. Hunter, consul (honorary). For Indiana. August Edward Pradillo, consul (honorary). For Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. John Hemphill, consul (honorary). For Pennsylvania, except the Pittsburgh consular district. John Joseph Neville Gorrell, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, larion, Crawford, Erie, Fayette, Greene, Lawrence, Mer-cer, Venango, Washington, and Westmoreland. For West Virginia. Ricardo Ramon Pesquera, vice consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. Richard E. Westbrooks, consul (honorary). J. A. Hardin, consul (honorary). Walter F. Walker, consul general. Miss Carolyn Viola Johnson, vice consul (honorary). Mack H. Hanna, Jr., consul (honorary). 484 Con gressional Directory LITHUANIA—MEXICO State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction LITHUANIA California: Los Angeles. _..._....___. Julius J. Bielskis, honorary consul, iinoisE Chicago. vc mvinnnnnenrs Petras Dauzvardis, consul. ian For Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. Massachusetts: Boston... ...........: Anthony Oswald Shallna, honorary consul. New York: New York City_.__________ Jonas Budrys, consul general. Vytautas Stasinskas, vice consul. For Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Mary- -land, 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. > LUXEMBOURG District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Cornelius Jacoby, consul (honorary). For Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. Hlineis:Chieago.: =... =o io John Marsch, honorary consul general. Eugene Huss, vice consul (honorary). William Capesius, honorary vice consul. For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Minnesota: Minneapolis... ___.._._..__ , consul. Othon Raths, vice consul (honorary). For Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. New York: New York City________.... 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. South Dakota: Redfield __. .____________ Perry Daubenfeld, consul (honorary) For Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota. MEXICO Arizona: Douglas: ach ail Arturo M. Elias, consul. Morelos Gonzalez, vice consul. Fidencio Soria B., vice consul. For Cochise County (except Benson, Bisbee, Bisbee Junction, Cochise, Courtland, Don Luis, Dragoon, Fairbank, Fort Huachuea, Gleeson, Lowell, Naco, St. David, Tombstone, and Warren). —, gonsul. José Marfa Arredondo, vice consul, For Benson, Bisbee, Bisbee Junction, Courtland, Don Luis, Dragoon, Fairbank, Fort Huachuea, Gleeson, Lowell, Naco, St. David, Tombstone, and Warren, in Cochise County. Nogales. = oi aia. sina Fedirico Gutierrez Pastor, consul. Alejandro Elias Cass, vice consul. For Santa Cruz County. PUCSON = rt a Elias Colunga, consul. Angel Tellez, vice consul. For Pima County. California: 'Calexico......ccnveunaninans José Marfa Gutiérrez, consul. Ignacio A. Pesqueira, vice consul. For the Arizona county of Yuma and the California county of Imperial. Brosno. ....in.tae sad Eugenio Aza, consul. ao Eugenio 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, LosiAngeles.. ooo.olii Manuel Aguilar, consul. Alfredo Elias Calles Chacon, acting consul. Ernesto A. Romero, vice consul. Santiago A. Campbell, vice consul. Ernesto E. Cota, vice consul. Carlos Grimm, vice consul. Adolfo de la Huerta, Jr., honorary vice consul. For the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. Sacramento... .. ooo. Bernardo Blanco, consul. For Amador, Eldorado, Nevada, Placer, Sacramento, Sierra, Sutter, Yolo, and Yuba Counties. San Bernardino. ___________ Edmundo Gonzalez, consul. For Inyo, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties, Saw Diego: ii Elisio Ruiz Russek, consul. For San Diego County. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 485 State and residence MEXICO—continued California: San Francisco. _____________ Canal Zone: Colon, Panama. __________ Colorado; Denver icons mainiuis District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Miami il do) ssa 2. pieiy Ponsacoln....ceveiiaaason iin TRinois: Chicago... oui usr loans Kentucky: Louisville. .......c.ocais Louisiana: New Orleans... ooo... __ Massachusetts: Boston. _______.oooo.___ Michigan: Detrolt: . isi isi ining Missouri: Kansas City...-........icis MEXICO Name, rank, and jurisdiction Vicente Peralta Coronel, consul general. Antonio L. Schmidt, consul. Alberto Andrade Gonzalez, vice consul. Carlos F. Carranco, consul. Fernando Rueda. For the counties of Alameda, Alpine, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Mendocino, Modoc, Napa, Plumas, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Shasta, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama, and Trinity. For 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. Adolfo de la Huerta, consul general. Manuel Rodriguez de San Miguel, vice consul. For the United Sines and possessions in North America. , consul. Salvador Aguayo, 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. Mario Lasso Pérez, consul general. Emilio Almada, consul. Gregorio Gomez Cardenas, consul. J. de Jesus Camarena, 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, MecDonough, 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. 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. Charles V. Silliman, honorary consul. Roy Davis, vice consul (honorary). : For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Ernesto Martinez Trejo, consul. Raul Reyes Spindola, vice consul. Fausto Hernandez Ajuria, vice 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, Hancock, Hardin, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Huron, Jack-son, Knox, Licking, Logan, Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Marion, Mercer, Miami, Montgomery, Morrow, Ottawa, Paulding, Pickaway, Pike, Preble, Putnam, Richland, Ross, Sandusky, Scioto, Seneca, Shelby, Union, Van Wert, Vinton, Warren, Williams, Wood, and Wyandot. Rafael Nieto, 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. L 486 Congressional Directory p| MEXICO i State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction if - : MEXICO—continued | Ii i Missouri: St. Louis... . oi oiaiin. Luis Fernindez McGregor, consul. b Eugenio V. Pesqueira, vice consul. For Kentucky (except Jefferson County) and Tennessee. For z 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- i 2 liamson. For the Missouri counties of Adair, Audrain, i Butler, Callaway, Camden, Cape Girardeau, Carroll, Carter, i Chariton, Christian, Clark, Cole, Cooper, Crawford, Dallas, Daviess, Dent, Douglas, Dunklin, Franklin, Gasconade, fi Greene, Grunday, Harrison, Hickory, Howard, Howell, Iron, | Jefferson, Knox, Laclede, Lewis, Lincoln, Linn, Livingston. i Macon, Madison, Maries, Marion, Mercer, Miller, Missis- / i : sippi, Moniteau, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, New Af Madrid, Oregon, Osage, Ozark, Perry, Pettis, Phelps, Pike, i Polk, Pulaski, Putnam, Ralls, Randolph, Reynolds, Ripley, pie St. Charles, St. Francois, St. Louis (including the city of St. Louis), Ste. Genevieve, Saline, Schuyler, Scotland, Scott, Shannon, Shelby, Stoddard, Stone, Sullivan, Taney, Texas, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Webster, and Wright. il New Mexico: Albuquerque. .cceeeeeee| © , consul. José Izurieta Roman, vice consul. : For the counties of Bernalillo, Catron, Colfax, Curry, De f Baca, Guadalupe, Harding, McKinley, Mora, Quay, Rio Arriba, Roosevelt, Sandoval, San Juan, San Miguel, Santa Fe, Socorro, Taos, Torrance, Union, and Valencia. New-York: Buflalo.........-c.ciuzuis Ledén L. Lancaster, honorary consul. For Erie and Niagara Counties. New York City....o.o..___ Ricardo G. Hill, consul general. Juan E. Richer, consul. Rodolfo Salazar, consul. Joaquin Gudino Flores, consul. Julidn Séenz Hinojosa, vice consul. Miss Francisca Celis, vice consul. Luis G. Ibarguen, vice consul. Robert Torcuato Marcor, honorary vice consul. ; For Connecticut. For the New Jersey counties of Bergen, i Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren. For New York (except the counties of Erie and Niagara). Indirect - | jurisdiction over the consulates at Baltimore, Boston, ; Chicago, Detroit, Norfolk, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Provi- - dence, and Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands. OhlocCleveland =o..... iano Ricardo B. Perez, honorary consul. For Cuyahoga County. | ifl fi Oklahoma: Oklahoma City._.__..________ Oregon: Portland... ..... = _. _. :5: Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. cccaao--- Joel 8. Quifiones, consul. For Oklahoma. Victor Tafel M., honorary consul. For Oregon. Gustavo Ortiz Hernén, consul. , J : a 7 y For Delaware. For the New Jersey counties of Atlantic, Bur- ai lington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, hi Ocean, and Salem. For the Pennsylvania counties of Adams, i 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. | i Pittsburgh: oi 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, 4 Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Gallia, Geauga, Guernsey, : Harrison, Holmes, Jefferson, Lake, Lawrence, Mahoning, Medina, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, il Perry, Portage, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas, 1 i Washington, and Wayne. For West Virginia. i Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Alfredo Carmelo Casas, honorary consul. 1 Puerto Rico: SanJuan. 0. 22. il Manuel Pales, Jr., honorary consul. | = Rhode Island: Providence. _.___________ Edgar L. Burchell, honorary consul. ! For Rhode Island. PeXast Alpine... ii... iaaanaaaiis Francisco Polin Tapia, consul. “For the counties of Brewster, Crane, Jeff Davis, Pecos, Pre- sidio, and Upton. 4 | pl 1H = "Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 487 MEXICO State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction | Texas: MEXICO—continued ENE EERE a aria ai Fort: Worth. 3. onitui noel Galveston .......i coi. otdiuumn Houston... coors aanastannn be Lareo. iin Neenah MeAlen = re. olin aan San Antonio... 0. Gieaate Luis L. Duplan, consul. For the counties of Bastrop, Bell, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Collman, Hayes, Lampasas, Llano, Milam, Mills, San Saba, Travis, and Williamson. Enrique R. Ballesteros, 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, . Throckmorton, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, Wood, and Young. M. Tomas Morlet, consul. Edmundo F. Cota, vice consul. For the counties of Coke, Crockett, Glasscock, Irion, Reagan, Runnels, Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Terrell, Tom Green, and Val Verde. Lame OONSUL Esteban Walker Jacquier, vice consul. For the counties of Dimmit, Edwards, Kinney, Maverick, Uvalde, and Zavala. Raul Michel, consul general. Cosme Hinojosa, Jr., consul. Roberto S. Urrea, vice consul. Mrs. Elisena Espinosa Triana, 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, O1d-ham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Sherman, Swisher, Taylor, Terry, Ward, Wheeler, Winkler, and Yoakum. Jack Danciger, honorary consul. For Tarrant County. Angel Cano del Castillo, consul. For the counties of Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Jefferson, and Orange. Adolfo G. Dominguez, consul. For the counties of Angelina, Austin, Brazos, Burleson, Colo rado, Fort Bend, Grimes, Hardin, Harris, Houston, Jackson, 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. Mario Romero Lopetegui, vice consul. Fz thr conniis of Duval, Jim Hogg, La Salle, McMullen, and ebb. Lauro Izaguirre, consul. > For the counties of Hidalgo and Starr. Francisco de P. Jimenez, consul general. Reynaldo Jauregui Serrano, vice consul, Ernesto Zorilla Herrera, vice consul. Carlos Palacios Roji, consul. For the counties of Atascosa, Bandera, Bexar, Comal, Con-cho, DeWitt, Fayette, Frio, Gillespie, Gonzales, Guada-lupe, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kimble, Mason, McCulloch, Medina, Menard, Real, and Wilson. Indirect jurisdiction 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. 488 Congressional Directory MEXICO—NETHERLANDS State and residence MEXICO—continued Wish: Salt Take City. .-. 2... oa.... Virginia:Norfolk.: ©... coe inaanncs Washington: Seattle... ccaeceaeun--Wisconsin: Milwaukee. _coeeamaoo-MONACO Elorida:-Miami... .ieciuicenl New York: New York City. ocean__ NETHERLANDS Alnbama: Mobile-ii lil coi ol California: Los Angeles... cocoeeeeo. San'Diege... LoL. ..L 00 San Franeisco. .---ooaaenin District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Jacksonville. _______.__________ Georgia: Savannah. _____.__._ ___...___ Hawaiiy Honolulu... ......-....2 Mimeis:=Chicage: oo.li oo Jowa: Orange 0 City...............= Louisiana: New Orleans... __o.__.___ Maryland: Baltimore... ._...__._._ Massachusetts: Boston. _._....._.._.__ Michigan: Detroit. Cin i Grand Rapids. ceeevmeaeeo.. Name, rank, and jurisdiction Carlos Gutiérrez Macias, 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 Milwaukeé County. Harvey Carl Wheeler, consul (honorary). Paul Fuller, consul general (honorary). Paul A. Boulo, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama. For the Florida counties of Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, ‘Walton, and Washington. 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. A. J. van Hulsentop, 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. G. C. D. Hooft Graafland, vice consul. For the District of Columbia. CO. C. Arnow, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Alachua, Baker, Brevard, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, "Flagler, Franklin, Gadsden, Gil-christ, Hamilton, Jefferson, Lafayette, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Putnam, St. Johns, Suwannee, Taylor, Union, Volusia, and Wakulla. Th. M.M Vanderstempel consul (honorary). For the counties of Broward, Collier, Dade, Hendry, Indian River, Matin, Monroe, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie. Roy W. Masters, vice consul (honorary). For the counties of Charlotte, Citrus, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Lake, Lee, Manatee, Okeechobee, Orange, ‘Osceola, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Sara-sota, Seminole, and Sumter. Charlotte office has charge. For Georgia. 0. A. Mackintosh, consul (honorary). J. W. Eindhoven von Twilhardt, vice consul. For the Territory of Hawaii. 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 Iowa. J. A. Schuurman, consul general. For Alabama, "Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis-sippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. A. Terkuhle, consul (honorary). O. A. Lundeen, vice consul (honorary). L. Bisschop, consul (honorary). For Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. J. A. E. A. van Panhuys, acting consul. T. K. Hebert, vice consul (honorary). For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. William G. Bryant, consul (honorary). For Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne Counties. Jacob Steketee, consul (honorary). John Steketee, vice consul (honorary). LE Miva (except Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne Coun-ies), Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 489 NETHERLANDS—NICARAGUA State and residence NETHERLANDS—continued Minnesota: Minneapolis New Jersey: Paterson... ooo... New York: New York City.oeeocaeao.. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_.__________ Philippine Islands: Cebu. __oo.oo..___ Tollo oc. anil Samoa (American Samoa): Wellington, New Zealand. South Carolina: Charleston ______._.__. Utah: Salt Lake City. coo accaiia.... Virginia: Newport News... ccacacacanas NotiolR iii canine ainmaaie Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ___.. Washington: Seattle... cccococoannna... NICARAGUA California: Long Beach____.___._._____ Log Angeles... oo.o Sacramento........cevaovenz Sam Diego...0 . _.. ... San Francisco... .ceecwee==- Canal Zone: -.._ Cristobal...7. Panam4, Panama, Distriet of Columbia: Washington___.. Florida: Miami...So alii 1TH DE LR Set rani Tlineis:: Chicago:SL Sin can 0 0 Louisiana: New Orleans. . oceans Michigan: Detroit: oo wie Missourl: St.Louis ~~... New York: New York City........ a Name, rank, and jurisdiction L. O. Wilten, consul (honorary). D. Baars, vice consul (honorary). For Minnesota. William A. Hannon, consul (honorary). For Towa 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, T. Elink Schuurman, consul general. L. A. Gastmann, consul general. A. Fournée, consul. J. C. C. Greger, vice consul (honorary). E. V. E. Teixeira de Mattos, honorary consul. : For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pénnsylvania, Rhode Island, and, Vermont. J. Rypperda Wierdsma, Jr., honorary consul. For Ohio. 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 of 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. Waldemar F. Lee, acting consul (honorary). For Puerto Rico. M. F. Vigeveno, consul. 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. P. Bisschop, consul (honorary). 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, Luis Somoza, consul. Silvio F. Pellas, vice consul (honorary). For California. Manuel Alfaro Ocampo, consul (honorary). Mrs. Elsa de Pallais, consul general. For the Canal Zone. Mrs. Enid Eder Perkins, vice consul (honorary). J. M. Renedo, honorary consul. ‘Aurelio Andrés Gonzélez, consul (honorary). Raul Mena Marenco, consul (honorary.) Luis G. Bravo, consul general. re For Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi. José Guerrero, honorary consul. ? J. M. O. Monasterio, consul (honorary). Luis Mena Solorzano, consul general. For Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont. 490 Congressional Directory NICARAGUA—NORWAY State and residence NICARAGUA—continued New York: Syracuse... -. .._. Tic.ii.aa Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ______.___ Philippine Islands: Manila ____________ Puerto Rico: San Juan... __._ i. J. PexascBrownsville.s: ~ oo ssn. Corpus: Christi 0 iii. $BET em Tp NORWAY Alabama: Mobile. so. .oiaioiiaao-AlaskasJaneau.. o.oo liieiii.Sd California: Los Angeles and San Pedro__ San Dlego... 0 San:Franciseo_.-.. ...... Canal Zone: Ancon and Balboa. _______ Cristobal: coo anianai District of Columbia: Washington_ ____ Florida: Jacksonville.....20.. ... Tampa co sol war ti Tet Georgia: Savannaly.. oo. ail Massachusetts: Boston... _._............ MichiganaDetrolt loo Minnesota: St. Paul oor. ob Mississippi: Gulfport... t......... MissourizSt. Youls.... aia. Montana: Lewistown. _._____.____....__ New Xorks Albany. .~_.. ...-l. New York'City...........- Name, rank, and jurisdiction Heberto Lacayo, honorary consul. 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. Charles 8. McCombs, acting consul general. 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, consul. Roy E. Hegg, vice consul (honorary). For San Diego. Jgrgen Galbe, consul general. Alexander Berg, consul (honorary). 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 Embassy 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 A. Merritt, Jr., acting vice consul. 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). C. F. Powers, acting vice consul. For Georgia. 3 Victor Cotta Schoenberg, consul (honorary). For Hawaii. Sigurd Maseng, consul. ‘Wilhelm Fegth, 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). Einar Ulstrup, vice consul (honorary). For Louisiana. Seneca Arthur Paul, vice consul (honorary). For Maine. Joel M. Cloud, consul (honorary). Oluf Tostrup, vice consul. For Maryland. Bjarne Ursin, consul (honorary). For Massachusetts. Carl Bromstad Moe, vice consul (honorary). For Michigan. Arne Fremmegaard, acting eonsul. 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. Reidar Solum, consul. Ditlef Knudsen, vice consul. Paul Koht, vice consul. For Alabama, Connecticut, Delawere, 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. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 491 NORWAY—PANAMA State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction ~ NORWAY—continued New York: Niagara Falls______________ North Carolina: Wilmington___________ North Dakota: Fargo... tol ai oo OhiosCleveland._. =... 0 Lik Orsgon: Portland... oo. lot5 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ___________ Philippine Islands: Cebu. _____________ Tlollos. 2 i 0) Utah: Salt Lake City. o_o... + Virginia: Newport News_______________ NoLfolk oc actin ionitans Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie.._..._ Washington: Seattle.s. ._ .. .-.. 2... Wisconsin: Milwaukee __._..._.....____ PANAMA Coronado... =... Jogosie California: Los Angeles________________ SoniDiego. = Le ATi San Francisco. oi toi 080 Plorida: Miami. «0 vo eet i Qeorgia: Atlanta ~~ GEsaaaidd Tinois; Chicago. oi 0c oo To ows: Dubuque... ...... .atlCs Louisiana: New Orleans________________ Maryland: Baltimore Silas ln MichiganaDefreit....... ~~ ¢ Missouri; Kansas Oity-=... = St. Yous: oo... New Mexico: Silver City_______________ New York: New York City____________ North Carolina: Charlotte _____________ Raleigh? =.> Bjarne Klaussen, vice consul (honorary). For Niagara Falls. 7 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. Fredrik Richards, Jr., acting vice consul. 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). Henry Francis Chester Walsh, in charge of vice consulate. Timothy Joseph O’Halloran, acting vice consul. For Port Arthur and Sabine Pass. Nels Mettome, vice consul (honorary). For Utah. Charles Edwin Davis, acting vice consul (honorary). For Newport News. \ Anders Williams, consul (honorary). For Virginia (except Newport News). Carl Gustav Thiele, consul (honorary). Christen Andersen Stang, consul (honorary). For Washington. George Bernhardt Skogmo, vice consul (honorary). For Wisconsin. Clyde E. Posey, honorary consul. Raul Espinosa, honorary consul. Gonzalo Lopez, consul. Alcides Gonzales, honorary vice consul. Enrique Gerardo Abrahams, consul. Antonio Alberto Adames, honorary vice consul. Carlos de Diego, honorary consul. Mrs. Guillermina Augusta Arias v. de de la Guardia, honorary vice consul. Abdiel José Arias F., honorary consul. \ Juan B. Chevalier, honorary consul. Eric George Barham, consul (honorary). Alberto Aleman, consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. B. Howard Brown, consul generai. F. M. Traynor, honorary consul. John Ashley Jones, consul (honorary). Bert W. Caldwell, honorary consul. Enrique Alberto Arias, honorary vice 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. ‘ José Ramon Martinelli, honorary consul. William F. Volmerhaus, vice consul (honorary). Louis James Rosenberg, consul (honorary). Gabriel Guizado, honorary consul. Joseph S. Ergas, honorary consul. Ernesto de la Ossa, consul. Roberto de la Guardia, consul general. Guillermo Féabrega, vice consul. 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. Hilton H. Smith, honorary vice consul. 492 : Congressional Directory State and residence PANAMA—continued Oregon: Portland... .... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_________ 5a Philippine Islands: Manila__.__________ Puerto Rico: -Aguadilla______.._. _.._... Mayagtiez POLCE. oodae Sais Rhode Island: Providence. Tennessee: Nashville ______ Texas: Brownsville... >... _........_. PARAGUAY Alabama: Mobile... oi... . California: Los Angeles. ______________._ San-Diego. ... ilu.0 San Franeciseo.. 0... oii. Canal Zone: 0. Cristébal........01 Mlineis:x@Chicase. oc vai Louisiana: New Orleans. ________.____. ‘Maryland: Baltimore... ... Massachusetts: Boston________________. Ohio: Cineinmatl .co 0 soa.oat. Oregon: Portland... ec...i 0 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pexas; Austin.... Fusing 0 Washington: Seattle...oil ... 07 PERSIA (See Iran) PERU California: Los Angeles. _._____________ San Franeisco.-.t.oo-i-.co: Canal Zone: Colon, Panama. __________ Cristobal zc ro wry Niinois: Chicago, ote ii...oie Louisiana: New Orleans.___.__._..._.._. Maryland: Baltimore o_oooo oi) Massachusetts: Boston._______________._ Missouri: St, Louis." =~ = 77 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia___.________ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: Mayagiiez_ ___.__...>. San:Tuan sie cl aceon Texas: Heuston.....c= sro. oo. Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie_______ Washington: Seattle... = PANAMA—PERU Name, rank, and jurisdiction L. W. Hartman, consul (honorary). Carlos Berguido, Jr., consul (honorary). Carlos Berguido, honorary vice consul. E. M. Grimm, honorary consul. Jorge Silva y Tapia, consul (honorary). Enrique Gomez, honorary vice consul. Edelmiro Huertas Zayas, honorary consul. José Lopez Garcia, honorary consul. Lewis C. Cassidy, honorary consul. Miguel Gomez Hugeumin, 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. consul. Abraham P. Nasatir, honorary vice consul. Roberto Wilkinson, honorary consul. Ejgill Toke Nyegaard, honorary vice consul. Juan Brin, Jr., consul. For the Canal Zone. Fred W. Allen, honorary consul. Francisco Banda C., consul. (honorary). 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, 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. Felipe Rotalde, consul. For Los Angeles and San Pedro. J. Fernando Berckemeyer Pazos, consul general. For California. Fernandez Rodriquez Pastor, consul. ‘Oscar Pinedo del Aguila, consul. Emilio Ortiz de Zevallos, consul general. For the Canal Zone. Alberto Perez Saez, consul general. L. A. R. Gaspar, honorary consul. For Hawaii. Oscar Freyre, consul general. Federico Elguera, consul general. For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Carlos A. Mackehenie, consul. For Delaware and Maryland. Guillermo Garrido Lecca y Frias, consul. Wendell W. Moore, honorary consul. Francisco Pardo de Zela, consul general. For the United States. Luis Santillana, consul. For Oregon. 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. Foreign Consular Officers wn the United States 493 State and residence POLAND California: Los Angeles San Francisco Canal Zone: Colon, Panama IMinols: Chicago..ac. a lo oooon tn Col Louisiana: New Orleans Michigan: Detroit. ___ New York: New York City.._.___..... Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Philippine Islands: Manila PORTUGAL California: San Francisco Blorida:: Tampa. + oo or it Hawaii: Honolulu Illinois: Chicago Louisiana: New Orleans_ _ _._______.__ Maryland: Baltimore........... 2... Massachusetts: Boston Pennsylvania: “Philadelphia ° Philippine Islands: Manila Puerto Rico: San Juan Texas: Galveston SALVADOR (See El Salvador) SIAM (See Thailand) 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 33 POLAND—SIAM Name, rank, and jurisdiction Lech Niemojowski, honorary consul. For California. Wladyslaw Sokolowski, consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. For Alaska, Hawaii and the Philippine Islands. Luis Fernando Prada, honorary consul. For the Canal Zone. Karol Ripa, consul general. Aleksander Moc, vice consul. For Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Min-nesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin. Joseph P. Henican, Jr., honorary consul. For Louisiana. Stanislaw Angerman, consul general. For Michigan. Sylwin Strakacz, consul general. Kazimierz Krasicki, consul. Aleksander Jachimowicz, consul. Jan Pogorzelski, vice consul. 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, 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 and consular district. Francisco its Leo Francis Pallardy, vice consul (honorary). Alberto Alves de Aratijo, consul (honorary). , consul. J. Leonard Herron, vice consul (honorary). Luiz da Costa Carvalho, consul (honorary). Jo#io Francisco dos Santos, Jr., vice consul (honorary). Adelbert W. Mears, vice consul (honorary). Manuel Adeodato de Carvalho, consul. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. 5 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. Ruy da Fonseca e Sousa Cam&es Teixeira Guerra, deputy consul. 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. 494 Congressional Directory | State and residence SPAIN Hlinois: Chicago. x. cnecconanman- Louisiana: New Orleans. __.._.cocoeoo. New York: New York City. .__....... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. cceaeao--. Philippine Islands: Cebu_____._......__ -Manila Puerto Rico; San Juan::_.._...cooooi.a Nexas: Houston... mews ewar ies: Port Arthur... ooo ia. Washington: Seattle. -.. ...o. . SWEDEN Adsbama: Mobile. Leen 0 Alaska: Skagway. | oo LCE California: Los Angeles. ...___._______ San-Diege. to. Canal Zone: Colon, Panama. _______.___ Panam4, Panama Florida: Jacksonville... _._..__.___ ~ Hawaii: Honolulu. ~~ Tinois: Chicago. io i id a Louisiana: New Orleans. _______________ Maryland: Baltimore... 1:2. 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, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Hawaii. Pedro Calonge Garcia, vice consul (honorary). Tomés Alberto Mateos, honorary vice consul. For the District of Columbia. Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Duval, Nassau, and St. Johns in Florida. For the Georgia counties of Brantley, Bryan, Camden, Charl- ton, Chatham, Effingham, Glynn, Liberty, Long, McIntosh Pierce, and Wayne. 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 Altabé4s Yus, vice consul (honorary). For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, and 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. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Direct jurisdiction over the New Jersey coun- | ties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Middlesex, Monmouth, f Passaic, Sussex, and Union. Andres Iglesias y Velayos, consul. Enrique Albela y Ande, 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 Cermeiio, honorary consul. 3 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. Isidoro Felipe de Mora y Gonzélez, honorary vice consul. For Texas except the counties of Angelina, El Paso, Harding, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Sabine, ' San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler. : i Paul Jorge Verduzco Hill, honorary vice consul. For the counties of Angelina, Harding, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Sabine, San Augus- tine, Shelby, and Tyler. John Wesley Dolby, honorary vice consul. For Oregon and Washington. Herbert Clarence Brown, vice consul (honorary). Edward Anton Rasmusson, vice consul (honorary). Walter G. Danielson, vice consul (honorary). John Waldo Malmberg, vice consul (honorary). Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, consul. Carl Otto von Essen, vice 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). 4 Carl Axel Harald Janson, vice consul (honorary). For the Canal Zone. Richard Henrik Laftman, vice consul (honorary). Gustav Wilhelm Olson, vice consul (honorary). For Hawaii. Gosta Oldenburg, consul, Oscar Julius Bertilson, vice 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, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, and Texas, except their coast line. George Plant, vice consul (honorary). Edgar T. Fell, vice consul (honorary). William Otis Tydings, acting vice consul (honorary). Forewgn Consular Officers in the United States 495 SWEDEN—SWITZERLAND State and residence SWEDEN—continued Massachusetts: Boston. __._________.____. Michigan: Detroit... uv... cue acacias Minnesota: Minneapolis. _ ___.___._.___._ Missouri: Kansas City... coi .oo. Nebraska: Omaha... o.oo.lls New York: Jamestown_______ wo bib New York City............ Ohio: Cleveland. o.oo... naman Oregon: Portland... i. onannian Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Texas Galveston. oo. cooin casaa ds Virginia: Norfolk... oaeivicaaom. Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. ____. ‘Washington: Seattle... .....____ SWITZERLAND California: Los Angeles. ______.._._.._____ San Francisco... ....omue-.. Colorado: Denver... ..... itiican.ob District of Columbia: Washington_____ Tilinois:: Chicago... ©... Sadan Louisiana: New Orleans. _ _____ooo...__ Maryland: Baltimore... ............... Massachusetts: Boston. _______________ Missouri: St. Louls.....coneeeiriaaaas Now York: ...........cioBuffalo. iui. New York City Name, rank, and jurisdiction 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. Carl Alfred Okerlind, vice consul (honorary). Johan Martin Kasentgren, consul general. Victor Emanuel Lindholm, vice consul. Claes Cecil Carbonnier, vice consul. Nils Hugo Withmar Tamm, vice consul. Stig Olof Deneus, 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 (honorary). 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, Modoc, 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 (honorary). 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-Ssippy North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and exas. J. F. Schneider, consular agent (honorary). Georges Henri Barrel, 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, Massac, Monroe, Montgomery, Perry, Pike, Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Richland, St. Clair, Saline, Scott, Union, Wabash, Wash-ington, 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. 496 Congressional Directory SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY State and residence SWITZERLAND—continued Ohlo;:Cincinnati..... oc. ion Pittsburgh... ....00 Philippine Islands: Manila__.__________ Puerto Rico: SanJuan.......c......... Utah: Salt Lake City. -.__ voi....0i: VirginIslands:--0 asalzon Washington: Seattle. __________________ THAILAND (SIAM) TURKEY Tinois: Chieago.......oonaua aieutiey UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA New York: New York City_.__._..____ | UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS California: Los Angeles... ...______ San Franeisco.. .....ooaui. New York: New York City_______._____ URUGUAY Alabama: Mebile: = oo. ciao lil California: Hollywood .__________________ SamDiegos ii niiainl San Francisco... oo. 0:3 Florida: Jacksonville. __._______________ Illinois: Chicago. c ui. iiiial oo oo. Louisiana: New Orleans. _______________ Maryland: Baltimore... ___...__ ___ Massachusetts: Boston_______________._ Name, rank, and jurisdiction 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). Albert Sidler, honorary consul. Victor Braegger, consular agent (honorary). J. Glauser, consular agent (honorary). The consulate general at New York has charge of Swiss consular matters in the Virgin Islands. Alfred Schaiiblin, acting consul. For Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Arthur Messenger Beale, consul (honorary). Charles W. Atwater, consul general (honorary). Berthold Singer, honorary consul general. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne-braska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyo-ming. Georges R. Farnum, honorary consul general. For Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Cemil Vafi, acting consul general. 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. Robert Webster, consul. Theodore Hewitson, vice consul. Harold Langmead Taylor Taswell, vice consul. Vsevolod Pastoev, vice consul. : For the counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, - San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. Jakob Miranovich Lomakin, consul general. Nikolai Ivanovich Belov, vice consul. Grigori Markovich Kheifets, vice consul. For Arizona, California (except the Los Angeles consular district), Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Hawaii. Eugenii Dmitrievitch Kiselev, consul general. Alexander Papushin, vice consul. Dmitri Ivanovich Zaikin, vice consul. Pavel Panteleevich Klarin, vice consul. Pavel Petrovich Mikhailov, 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 Llorea Marty, vice consul (honorary). Carlos Barbé, honorary vice consul. Mauricio Herschel, vice consul (honorary). Albert Scott, consular agent. W. R. Lovett, honorary consul. Vicente J. Vidal, vice consul (honorary). Rodolfo Carlos Lebret, consul (honorary). Juan José Calandria, honorary consul. Edgar H. Morrice, Jr., consular agent. John Phelps, vice consul (honorary). William A. Mossman, consul (honorary). Leon L. Lancaster, vice consul (honorary). Santiago Rivas, Jr., acting consul general. Santiago Rivas, Jr., consul. Robert Richling, consul. For the United States. / Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States 497 URUGUAY—YUGOSLAVIA a State and residence URUGUAY—continued Oregon: Portland... ...... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Puerto Rico: San Juan... __..._._...... Virginia: Norfolk... oot oii ns Washington: Seattle. ......ouoeoauenan. VENEZUELA Alabama: Mobllel. oo a California: Los Angeles _______________ San Franeisco........._.=. Maryland: Baltimore... _........._.... New York: New York City. ___...__._. Pennsylvania: Bethlehem ______________ Philadelphia. .......__. Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico; Arecibo... 0... .... i... Mayagiiez..-. San Juan... Ci YUGOSLAVIA INinois: Chicago... tne eda muaaait Louisiana: New Orleans. _.__......... New York: New York City...____...__ Name, rank, and jurisdiction John H. Lothrop, vice consul (honorary). Eduardo Iglesias, honorary consul. Manuel Gomez Lopez, consul (honorary). For Arecibo, Bayamén, and Humacao. Girdler Branch Fitch, honorary consul. Enrique Schroeder, vice consul (honorary). Fernando Pro, vice consul (honorary). E. J. Rudgard Wigg, vice consul (honorary). Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. Rafael Roman D4vila, consul. Alberto Posse Rivas, consul. Rodolfo Moleiro, consul general. Carlos Alberto Arismendi, honorary vice consul. For Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Vicente Alamo Yharra, consul general. For the Canal Zone. V. M. Avendaifio Lozada, consul. José Rafael Velasco Y., consul general. Asdrubal Urdaneta, vice consul. For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Okla-homa, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia. Roberto Machado Morales, consul. Alejandro Fernandez Ortiz, consul general. Nicolas Veloz, honorary vice consul. Manuel Vicente Rodriguez Llamosas, honorary vice consul. Eduardo A. Perez, honorary consul. Lorenzo Mendoza Fleury, honorary consul. Alberto P. Defino, honorary consul. Eugenio Lefranc, in charge of consulate. Thomas Boothby, in charge of consulate. Diego Bustillos, consul general. For Puerto Rico. Valdemar A. Miller, honorary consul. Vladimir Vukmirovié, 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 Rusovie, honorary consul. Dragomir Stanoyevitch, consul general. Oscar Gavrilovich, consul. For Alabama, Conneeticut, 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. Kosto Unkovich, honorary consul. a oi de i 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 536 EXECUTIVE OFFICE Official Duties : 537 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 invested with authority to make, waive, or modify apportionments of appropriations, to approve the use of printing and binding appropriations for the printing of publications, to supervise the use of Government report forms and questionnaires, and to provide for effective utilization of Government equipment and supplies. 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. 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 1%) ig 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, and to act as a clearing house and means of coordination for planning activities, linking together various levels and fields of planning. Through 11 field offices, under the direction of regional chairmen and counse-lors, the National Resources Planning Board cooperates with 42 State planning boards and with regional or other planning agencies. : In connection with the war program, the Board is cooperating with the War Production Board on studies of industrial location, and with State planning agencies and defense councils on community planning where new plants or can-tonments have created special problems for local adjustment. A roster of scien-tific and specialized personnel has been prepared by the Board in cooperation with the Civil Service Commission. : 538 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES The Board is concentrating its attention on the post-war period with a view to developing advance plans and programs for necessary readjustments and new improvements after the war. EMERGENCY WAR AGENCIES 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, BOARD OF WAR COMMUNICATIONS Executive Order No. 8546 of September 24, 1940, created the Defense Com-munications Board. The name of the Board was changed to Board of War Communications by Executive Order 9183 of June 15, 1942. The purpose of the Board of War Communications is to coordinate the relation of all branches of communication to the war effort. Planning embraces common carriers such as commereial radiotelephone and radiotelegraph, as well as other telephone, tele-graph, and cable facilities, and radio broadcasting. NATIONAL WAR. LABOR BOARD The National Defense Mediation Board, created by Executive Order No. 8716, of March 19, 1941, ceased to exist upon creation of the National War Labor Board within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order No. 9017, of January 12, 1942. The Board, which has jurisdiction over all industries and all employees, has power finally to determine all labor disputes. Under Executive Order No. 9250, of October 3, 1942, no increases or decreases in wage rates or in salary rates under $5,000, with certain exceptions, can be made without Board approval. Applications for wage adjustments are received at offices of the Wage and Hour Division of the United States Department of Labor and are referred to the Board for action. OFFICE OF ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN The Office of Alien Property Custodian was established in the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 9095 of March 11, 1942, under the specific authority of the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended. The functions and duties of the Office of Alien Property Custodian were further defined by Executive Order 9193 of July 6, 1942, amending Executive Order 9095. The Alien Property Custodian is authorized to control or vest foreign-owned property, whether the ownership rests with a foreign government or with an individual who is a national of a foreign country, or with a business enterprise which is a national of a foreign country. Once vested, such property shall be held, used, administered, liquidated, sold, or otherwise dealt with in the interest of and for the benefit of the United States. 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 relation-ships. Its duties include planning and carrying out programs designed to protect civilian life and property in event of emergency. It also provides opportunities for constructive civilian participation in the war program. WAR AGENCIES Official Duties 539 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 hemisphere defense. 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. The Coordinator is chairman of the Inter-American Develop-ment Commission which was created by the Inter-American Financial and Economic Advisory Committee in January 1940. OFFICE OF DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION The Office of Defense Transportation was established in the Office for Emer-gency Management by Executive Order No. 8989, of December 18, 1941, and assumes the duties formerly vested in the Transportation Division of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense, established May 29, 1940. The Office coordinates transportation policies and activities of Federal and private agencies so that transportation systems of the Nation may function as the war requires. It coordinates and directs domestic traffic movements to prevent traffic congestion and to assure orderly and ready movement of men, materials, and sup-plies to points of need. OFFICE OF ECONOMIC STABILIZATION Established by Executive Order 9250 of October 3, 1942, to control so far as possible the inflationary tendencies and the vast dislocations attendant thereon which threaten the military effort and domestic economic structure, and for the most effective prosecution of the war. The Economic Stabilization Board was created by the same order to advise the Director of Economic Stabilization. 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, the Fifth Supplemental National Defense Appropriation Act, 1942, and all acts amendatory or supple-mental thereto, 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 Department, with the advice of the Economic Defense Board and the Lend-Lease Administration.” Executive Order 8751, of May 2, 1941, establishing the Division of Defense Aid Reports was revoked by the order establishing the Office of Lend-Lease Administration. 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. OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION Executive Order 9182 of June 13, 1942, established within the Office for Emergency Management the Office of War Information, consolidating into one agency the war information functions of the Government—foreign and domestic. Transferred to the Office of War Information were the Office of Facts and Figures, Office of Government Reports, Division of Information in the Office for Emergency Management (except functions with respect to the provision of press 540 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES and publication services relating to the specific activities of the constituent agencies of the Office for Emergency Management), and the Foreign Information Service, Outpost, Publications, and Pictorial Branches of the Coordinator of Information. The order established within the Office of War Information a Committee on War Information Policy to formulate basic policies and plans on war information and to advise with respect to the development of coordinated war information programs. The director is authorized to formulate and carry out, through the use of press, radio, motion picture, and other facilities, information programs designed to facilitate the development of an informed and intelligent understanding, at home and abroad, of the status and progress of the war effort, and of the war policies, activities, and aims of the Government. WAR MANPOWER COMMISSION By Executive Order No. 9139 dated April 18, 1942, the War Manpower Com-mission was created within the Office for Emergency Management for the purpose of assuring the most effective mobilization and utilization of the national man-power. At the same time there were transferred to the War Manpower Commis-sion the labor supply functions of the Labor Division of the War Production Board, the National Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnel, which was to be preserved as an organizational entity, and the Office of Procurement and Assignment. These latter two are now a part of the Bureau of Placement of the War Manpower Commission. On July 30, 1942, by Presidential order, the Committee on Fair Employment Practice was transferred from the War Production Board to the War Manpower Commission. Executive Order No. 9247, dated September 17, 1942, transferred to the War Manpower Commission the United States Employment Service, the National Youth Administration, the Apprenticeship Training Service, the Train-ing within Industry Service, and certain functions of the Office of Education with regard to war training. It provided that the Apprenticeship Training Service and the National Youth Administration should be preserved as organizational entities within the War Manpower Commission. They are now operating as such in the Bureau of Training. By Executive Order No. 9279, the Selective Service System was transferred to the War Manpower Commission, and is now known as the Bureau of Selective Service. WAR PRODUCTION BOARD The War Production Board was established within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order No. 9024, of January 16, 1942, to exercise general direction over the war procurement and production program. It succeeds to the functions of the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board, which was abol-ished by Executive Order No. 9024, of January 16, 1942, and to the functions of the Office of Production Management, which was abolished by Executive Order No. 9040, of January 24, 1942. The War Production Board acts to insure the maximum production of war munitions and to this end directs the orderly mobili-zation and use of the economic resources of the Nation. ; : SMALLER WAR PLANTS CORPORATION Public Law 603, Seventy-seventh Congress, Second Session, dated June 11, 1942, created the Smaller War Plants Corporation with a capital stock of $150,000,000, to ensure that small business concerns will be most efficiently and effectively utilized in the production of articles, equipment, supplies, and materials for both war and essential civilian purposes. The management of the Corporation is vested in a board of five directors, familiar with the problems of small business, appointed by the chairman of the War Production Board. WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY An agency created by Executive order on March 18, 1942, to facilitate the relo-cation of persons evacuated or removed from their homes during the war period. Up to the present time, the activities of the War Relocation Authority have been concerned almost entirely with the relocation of some 110,000 persons of Japanese WAR AGENCIES Officzal Duties 541 ancestry evacuated from the military area embracing the State of California, the western portions of Washington and Oregon, and the southern portion of Arizona. The actual evacuation was handled by the Wartime Civil Control Administration, a unit of the Western Defense Command, which supervised the movement of evacuees to temporary assembly centers. From these temporary centers the evacuees were moved to 10 inland relocation centers established by the War Relocation Authority where they will be engaged in developing public lands for agricultural production and in other work designed to make the centers as self-sustaining as possible. These evacuee communities, ranging in population from 8,000 to 20,000, are located as follows: Two in Cali-fornia, two in Arizona, two in Arkansas; and one in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and Idaho. Assistance in relocation also has been extended to individuals excluded by mili-tary orders from the Western Defense Command and from the Eastern Defense Command. WAR SHIPPING ADMINISTRATION The War Shipping Administration was established within the Office for Emer-gency Management by Executive Order No. 9054, of February 7, 1942, to insure the most effective utilization of shipping of the United States for the successful prosecution of the war. It controls the operation, purchase, charter, requisition, maintenance, insurance and use of all ocean vessels under the control of the United States, except combatant vessels of the Army, Navy, and Coast Guard; fleet auxiliaries of the Navy; transports owned by the Army and Navy; and vessels engaged in coastwise, intercoastal, and inland transportation under the control of the Office of Defense Transportation. Functions, duties, and powers dealing with the foregoing conferred by law upon the United States Maritime Commission were transferred to the Administrator. BOARD OF ECONOMIC WARFARE Executive Order No. 8982, of December 17, 1941, changed the name of the Economic Defense Board to Board of Economic Warfare. 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. Responsibility for importing essential raw materials from foreign countries was centered in the Board under Executive Order 9128 of April 13, 1942. In substance, the Order directed the Board to administer importation of materials and commodities required for the war pro-duction effort. OFFICE OF CENSORSHIP The Office of Censorship was established by Executive Order No. 8985, of December 19, 1941, to -censor mail, cable, radio, and other communications passing between the United States and any foreign country. The Office also supervises voluntary censorship of the domestic press and radio. The Censor-ship Policy Board, created by the order, advises the Director of Censorship with respect to policy and the coordination and integration of censorship. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION The Office of Price Administration is directed by statute to stabilize prices and rents and prevent speculation, profiteering, hoarding, and manipulation; to assist in securing adequate production, conserving essential materials, preventing dissi-pation of defense appropriations through excessive prices for procurement; to protect persons with fixed incomes; to prevent hardships to schools, universities, institutions, and governmental agencies; to prevent a post-war collapse of values; to ration certain scarce commodities to civilian consumers; and to construct the organization and secure and direct the staff necessary to achieving these objectives. PACIFIC WAR COUNCIL Announced by Stephen T. Early, Secretary to the President, at a press con-ference held March 30, 1942. In attendance at first meeting held April 1, 1942, were representatives-of the United States, Great Britain and its dominions, New Zealand, China, and the Netherlands. Considers matters of policy relating to the joint war effort. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——36 542 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR The Petroleum Administration for War was created by Executive Order 9276 of December 2, 1942, to coordinate and centralize the war policies and actions of the Government relating to petroleum with a view toward providing adequate supplies of petroleum for the successful prosecution of the war and for other essential purposes. The Petroleum Administration for War absorbed and super-sedes the Office of Petroleum Coordinator for War created by the President in his letter of May 28, 1941, to the Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary of the Interior is ex officio Petroleum Administrator and is directed to establish basic policies and formulate plans and programs to assure for the prosecution of the war the conservation and most effective development and utilization of petro-leum in the United States, its territories and possessions, and to collaborate in the determination of plans and policies with respect to foreign petroleum activities. The Petroleum Administration for War is authorized to issue necessary policy and operating directives and orders to effectuate such plans, programs, and policies. PRESIDENT’S WAR RELIEF CONTROL BOARD The President’s War Relief Control Board was established by Executive Order 9205 of July 25, 1942, to succeed the President’s Committee on War Relief Agencies, established by Presidential letter on March 13, 1941. The Board is authorized to control, in the interest of the furtherance of the war purpose, all solicitations, sales of merchandise or services, collections, receipts, and distribution of funds and contributions for (1) charities for foreign and do-mestic relief, rehabilitation, reconstruction, and welfare arising from war-created needs in the United States or in foreign countries; (2) refugee relief; (3) relief of the civilian population of the United States affected by enemy action; or (4) relief and welfare of the armed forces of the United States or of their dependents. JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEES—UNITED STATES AND CANADA The Joint Economic Committees were established by the United States and Canada on June 17, 1941, to study and report on the possibilities of better utili-zation of the combined resources of the two countries in the production of defense requirements, and to reduce the probable post-war economic dislocation in each country. MATERIAL COORDINATING COMMITTEE—UNITED STATES AND CANADA Creation of the Material Coordinating Committee— United States and Canada— was announced on May 14, 1941, by William S. Knudsen, Director General, Office of Production Management (absorbed by War Production Board). The Committee makes possible the free exchange of vital information between responsible officials of the two governments relating to their supplies of strategic raw materials required for war production. JOINT WAR PRODUCTION COMMITTEE—UNITED STATES AND CANADA The Joint Defense Production Committee was set up on November 5, 1941, by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Canada to advise on the coordination of the war production of the two countries, to survey capacity for war production, and to consider and advise on related matters. The name ‘Joint Defense Production Committee” was later changed to Joint War Production Committee. : COMBINED CHIEFS OF STAFF (UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN) Established by the United States and Great Britain, as announced by the War Department February 6, 1942, to insure complete coordination of the war effort of Great Britain and the United States, including the production and distribution of their war supplies, and to provide for full British and American collaboration with the United Nations now associated in prosecution of the war against the Axis powers. : MUNITIONS ASSIGNMENTS BOARD (UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN) Creation of the Munitions Assignment Board (a supporting agency to the Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain) was announced on January 26, 1942, by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Great Britain. The Board advises on quantity and priority of assignments to Great Britain and the United States or other of the United Nations. STATE Official Dutres 543 COMBINED FOOD BOARD (UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN) On June 9, 1942, the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Great Britain jointly authorized the creation of the Combined Food Board to obtain a planned and expeditious utilization of the food resources of the United Nations, in order to coordinate further the prosecution of the war effort. COMBINED PRODUCTION AND RESOURCES BOARD (UNITED STATES, GREAT BRITAIN, AND CANADA) Creation of the Combined Production and Resources Board was announced by the President on June 9, 1942. The Board was established by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Great Britain, in order to complete the organization needed for the most effective use of the combined resources of the United States and the United Kingdom for the prosecution of the war. Under date of November 10, 1942, by agreement among the President of the United States, the Prime Minister of Great Britain, and the Prime Minister of Canada, the scope of the Board’s responsibilities was broadened to include Canada. COMBINED RAW MATERIALS BOARD (UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN) Creation of the Combined Raw Materials Board was announced on January 26, 1942, by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Great Britain. The Board plans the best and speediest development, expansion, and use of raw material resources. COMBINED SHIPPING ADJUSTMENT BOARD (UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN) Creation of the Combined Shipping Adjustment Board was announced on January 26, 1942, by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Great Britain. The Board unifies the work of the British Ministry of War Transport and the shipping authorities of the United States Government. JOINT BRAZIL-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION The Commission, composed of military delegates—Army, Navy, and the Air Forces—of the two countries was established in May 1942 by agreement. between the United States and Brazil. Meetings are held in Washington for the purpose of making plans for the mutual defense of the Western Hemisphere. JOINT MEXICAN-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION On January 12, 1942, the Governments of Mexico and the United States announced the organization of a mixed defense commission to study the problems relating to the defense of the two countries and to propose measures which should be adopted. : DEPARTMENT OF STATE SECRETARY OF STATE The Secretary of State, who is the highest ranking Cabinet member, is the head of the Department of State. Upon him devolves the principal responsibility, under the President, for the determination of the policy of the Government in relation to international problems. He is charged with the conduct of negotia-tions pertaining to the protection of American rights and interests throughout the world, and the promotion of beneficial intercourse between the United States and other countries. He also performs certain domestic duties, such as having custody of the seal of the United States and publishing the laws enacted by Congress. 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, in the reception of representa-tives of foreign governments, and in other work of a highly responsible character. He gives special attention to political relations with foreign governments. In the absence of the Secretary of State he becomes Acting Secretary of State. + - 544 Congressional Directory 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 general liaison work with the War and Navy Departments; is also called upon to perform such other duties as may be deter-mined by the Under Secretary of State. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the coordination of financial questions with questions of major policy; with general supervision of affairs relat-ing to Canada and Greenland; and with general supervision over certain divisions of the Department. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the coordination of matters relating 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 Representatives and general representation of the Department of State at hear-ings before congressional committees, except 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 international fisheries. One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the coordination of com-mercial and economic questions with questions of major policy, and with general supervision over 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 the supervision of matters relating to personnel and management; as fiscal and budget officer of the Department, charged with the supervision and preparation of estimates of ap-propriations for 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 has general supervision over 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. EXECUTIVE OFFICER Charged with the planning, direction, and control of all administrative aspects of the formulation and execution of policy, including the development and execu-tion of sound principles of authority, responsibility, organization, and administra-tion to insure effective coordination of policy and action within the Department of State and in its relationships with other departments and with intergovernmental agencies; the defining of the functions, responsibilities, and authority of the divisions and offices of the Department; and the maintenance of surveillance over trends in foreign and domestic policy, so far as they affect or have a bearing on the functions of the Department, with a view to foreseeing the need for new or revised policies and to planning, initiating, and coordinating administrative action to give effect to such policies concurrently with their adoption. 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. 3 ADVISER ON INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC AFFAIRS Charged, under the Secretary of State, with analytical and advisory duties in regard to the economic relations between this Government and foreign governments, with assisting in the formulation of policy, with unifying and coordinating action STATE Official Dutres = 545 on economic matters within the Department, and with 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 Charged with general supervision of all disbursing officers under the Depart-ment; maintenance of all accounts of the Department in Washington, of the Foreign Service, of international commissions, congresses, and conferences, and of revenues and trust funds; administrative examination, audit, and approval of all accounts; decision as to accounting methods and procedure; preparation of regulations in regard thereto; recording of all fiscal transactions; preparation of pay rolls, financial reports, and statistics for the administrative officers of the Department; preparation of the report to Congress for the Foreign Service Retire-ment and Disability Fund; handling of transportation matters affecting the De-partment and the Foreign Service; 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 matters relating to accounts; and with 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 relating to the Caribbean area and supervises the formulation of regulations and proce-dure necessary for their fulfillment; collaborates with other departments and agencies, particularly those having jurisdiction in the fields of labor, agriculture, housing, health, education, finance, international trade, and tariffs; cooperates with other economic, educational, and labor agencies, and foreign missions in Washington. The office functions under the general supervision of the Under Secretary; its activities are subject to the review of the Division of the American Republics and the Division of European Affairs. It acts as executive agency for the Anglo-American Caribbean Commission created by the President on March 14, 1942, the United States section of which is an integral part of the Department of State. ANGLO-AMERICAN CARIBBEAN COMMISSION, UNITED STATES SECTION Acts as secretariat for the Anglo-American Caribbean Commission, which is an international commission created jointly by the British and United States Govern-ments by a joint communiqué issued from London and Washington on March 9, 1942. The Commission was organized for the purpose of encouraging and strength-ening social and economic cooperation between the United States of America and its possessions and bases in the area known geographically and politically as the Caribbean, and the United Kingdom and the British colonies in the same area, and to avoid unnecessary duplication of research in these fields. For reasons of administrative convenience, a departmental order issued December 14, 1942, made the United States section of the Commission an integral part of the State Depart-ment. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK AND ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Charged with supervision in matters relating to the administration of the appropriation “Contingent Expenses, Department of State,” the allotment of office space, custody of the property of the Department, and the maintenance of a current inventory; the authentication (for the Secretary of State) of certain docu-ments; the operation of the Federal coordinating service for translating documents; the custody of the seal of the Department of State; the assembling and maintain-ing for the Department of State of appropriate material for exhibition purposes at expositions; the administration of the telephone service; the initiation and enforce-ment of such general regulations as may be required for the proper business man-agement of the Department; the direction, as head, of the Purchase and Inventory, Diplomatic Pouch and Mail, Duplicating, Photographie, Supply, and Telephone Congressional Directory STATE Sections of his office; and such additional duties as may be delegated to him by the Secretary of State and the Assistant Secretary of State and Budget Officer. The Chief Clerk and Administrative Assistant is liaison officer with other executive departments and agencies of the Government on all matters relating to the func-tions of his office. DIVISION OF COMMERCIAL AFFAIRS Charged with the direction of the activities of the Foreign Service that pertain to the protection and promotion of American commercial and agricultural interests abroad (except those functions relating to protection now vested in other divisions and offices of the Department) and the distribution of information received from 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; responsibility for the administration of section 12 of the Neutrality Act, the Helium Act, and the Tin Plate Scrap Act; preparation of current studies, analyses, and statistical data in connection with matters relating to policy or national-defense activities; and the maintenance of liaison within the scope 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 commercial treaties, trade agreements, and other commercial agreements, as well as with matters relating to the tariff, general trade, and international commercial policy of the United States, and has responsibility for certain matters of foreign policy coming under the Lend-Lease Act, for the preparation of statistical and other studies needed by the Board of Economic Operations, for handling the interna-tional aspects of surplus commodity problems, and, within the scope of its func-tions, for maintaining liaison with other departments and agencies of the Govern-ment. DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIONS AND RECORDS Charged with the dispatch and receipt of all telegraphic correspondence of the Department; the encoding and decoding of messages exchanged in the con-duct of foreign relations; the building of codes and ciphers used in the Depart-ment’s intercourse with its representatives abroad, and the devising of rules and regulations governing their use; the auditing of telegraph accounts; the classi-fication, recording, distribution, and preservation of correspondence; the custody of and conduct of research in the records of the Department; the custody of the records of international conferences, congresses, and commissions in which the Government of the United States officially participates; the drafting of correspond-ence and instructions on codes, ciphers, and records; the maintenance of a com-prehensive index and file of documents published by the League of Nations; the maintenance of a record of precedents of policy and procedure. OFFICE OF COORDINATION AND REVIEW Reviews all outgoing diplomatic, consular, and other correspondence; coordi-nates the correspondence of the several bureaus of the Department for considera-tion and initialing before signing; submits the correspondence to the appropriate officers for signature; maintains 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 correspondence. DIVISION OF CULTURAL RELATIONS Has general charge of activities of the Department with respeet to international cultural relations, embracing the exchange of professors, teachers, and students; cooperation in the fields of musie, art, literature, and other intellectual and cul­ STATE Jin Official Duties 547 tural attainments; formation and distribution of libraries of representative works of the United States and suitable translations thereof; preparations for and management of the participation by this Government in international ex-positions 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 pursuits; cooperation with American private agencies and associations participating in international cultural activities, especially those of a scientific and social character; supervision of the program of the Interdepartmental Com-mittee for Cooperation with the American Republics; and, generally, the dis-semination abroad of the representative 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 maintenance of liaison between the Department and the domestic and foreign press, the radio, the newsreels, and all governmental agencies con-cerned with the collection and dissemination of information in which the Depart-ment has an interest; preparation and distribution to officials of the Department and the Foreign Service of daily press summaries and press clippings; dissemina-tion of 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. The Liaison Branch of the Division is charged with maintenance of liaison between the Department and those agencies of the Government engaged in the dissemination abroad of information regarding the American war effort. DIVISION OF DEFENSE MATERIALS Charged, in collaboration with the interested divisions and offices of the De-partment, with responsibility for the formulation and execution of policies in the field of defense materials with the exception of exports to the other American republics; and, with the Adviser on International Economic Affairs, for the establishment and maintenance of effective liaison with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned in these matters. This Division is a component part of the Board of Economic Operations. DIVISION OF DEPARTMENTAL PERSONNEL Charged with the direction and supervision of personnel functions involved in the administration of the departmental service, embracing organizational, pro-cedural, fiscal, and budgetary (including the administration of the appropriation “Salaries, Department of State’), classification, recruitment, appointment, efficiency rating, leave, retirement, personnel relations, training, and related personnel functions. BOARD OF ECONOMIC OPERATIONS Assistsin the formulation of policies in connection with the economic defense of the United States, coordinating the aetivities of the various divisions of which the Board is composed, and maintaining effective liaison with other interested departments and agencies of the Government. DIVISION OF ECONOMIC STUDIES Has responsibility for the conduct of continuing and special research and for the preparation of studies required in the formulation of policies and the planning of integrated programs as a basis for action in the field of foreign economic rela-tions affecting the interest of the United States, with particular reference to the long-range implications of current policies, actions, and developments in this field affecting post-war economic reconstruction, and for the formulation of appropri-ate recommendations with regard to the foregoing. In carrying out these respon-sibilities, the Division of Economie Studies cooperates and maintains liaison with other divisions and offices of the Department, in particular the Division of Political Studies, with other departments and agencies, and with interdepartmental and intergovernmental agencies having joint interestor authority in the field of activity. 548 Congressional Directory STATE 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, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Union of South Africa, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Yugoslavia, European possessions in the Far East (in conjunction with the Division of Far Eastern Affairs), and with international organizations in Europe. DIVISION OF EXPORTS AND REQUIREMENTS Has responsibility for all matters of foreign policy involved in the administration of the act of July 2, 1940, as amended (the Export Control Act), the act of March 11, 1941 (the Lend-Lease Act), except the negotiation of master lend-lease agree-ments and the application of article VII, the acts of June 28, 1940, and May 31, 1941, so far as priorities and/or allocations for export are concerned except that where such matters involve arrangements for purchase of materials in foreign countries, the policies to be followed shall be formulated in the Division of De-fense Materials; has responsibility in matters under its control for dealing with the Department’s correspondence and contacts with our representatives abroad and with representatives of foreign governments in this country; collaborates with other divisions, in particular the Division of Defense Materials, concerning the formulation and coordination of policy and the establishing and maintaining of liaison with other departments and agencies of the Government. DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Has general charge of relations with China, Japan, and Thailand and (in conjunction 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 relating to international cooperation for the suppression of 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; serves as a component part of the Board of Economic Operations. OFFICE OF FISCAL AND BUDGET AFFAIRS Charged, under the Assistant Secretary of State in charge of administration, with the allotment, apportionment, and control of expenditures of appropriations of the Department of State and its activities; with the direction and supervision of the estimates of appropriations, coordination thereof, and justification before the Bureau of the Budget and Congress; with matters relating to legislative pro-visions and bills; with the compilation of data for the Bureau of the Budget and Congress; and with special assignments coming within the purview of the work of this office. ; DIVISION OF FOREIGN ACTIVITY CORRELATION 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 Nationals; establishes and maintains liaison with other interested departments STATE Official Dutres 549 and agencies of the Government; serves as a component part of the Board of Economic Operations; on problems directly related to general financial policies collaborates with the Financial Division. OFFICE OF FOREIGN RELIEF AND REHABILITATION OPERATIONS Charged with the planning, coordination, and arrangement for the adminis-tration of this Government’s activities for the relief of victims of war in areas liberated from Axis control through the provision of food, fuel, clothing, and other basic necessities, housing facilities, medical and other essential services; and with the facilitation, in areas receiving relief, of production and transportation of these articles and the furnishing of these services. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE ADMINISTRATION Charged with the general administration of the Foreign Service; the initiation of recommendations; the drafting of regulations and the coordinating of instruc-tions in regard thereto; the preparation and justification of budget estimates for the Foreign Service; the control of expenditures from the various appropriations for the Foreign Service; analysis of cost of living at the various posts in conneec-tion with equitable distribution of allowances and clerical salaries; the granting of leaves of absence; the administration of the law governing the payment of annui-ties to retired Foreign Service officers and their widows; the establishment, opera-tion, or closing of diplomatic and consular offices; the administration and main-tenance of government property abroad, including supervision of contracts; the furnishing of equipment and supplies with maintenance of inventories; the opera-tion of the diplomatic pouch service and the supervision of diplomatic couriers; supervision of the despatch agencies and of matters relating to the designation of military, naval, and other attachés abroad; recommendation of legislation affect-ing the Foreign Service and keeping the Foreign Service informed concerning new statutes; maintenance and revision of the Foreign Service Regulations; handling of emergency wartime problems such as the evacuation of staffs and dependents from dangerous areas; Selective Service correspondence; general administrative assistance to missions sent abroad by other departments and agencies; handling of claims made by Foreign Service personnel for personal losses caused by the war; the documentation of merchandise; matters relating to the estates of Ameri-can citizens dying abroad; notarial services performed by consular officers; reports of death of American citizens; extradition cases handled in collaboration with the Office of the Legal Adviser; services for the Veterans’ Administration; and certain matters relating to diplomatic and consular rights and privileges. FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS OFFICE Charged with the general supervision of housing diplomatic and consular establishments abroad and the protection and maintenance of properties owned or to be acquired by the United States for such purpose; (with the approval of the budget officer of the Department) programs of expenditures for the acquisition, construction, alteration, or furnishing of such properties. ‘OFFICE OF FOREIGN SERVICE FURNISHINGS Has charge of matters incident to the furnishing of diplomatic and consular establishments abroad. 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 ersons who have successfully passed the examination for the position of Foreign ervice 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, the Assistant Secretary of State having supervision over the Division of Foreign 550 * Congressional Directory STATE Service Personnel, is chairman. In addition, under the provisions of Executive Order 8185 of June 29, 1939, one officer of the Department of Commerce and one officer of the Department of Agriculture are members of the Board, sitting as such only when matters of interest to their respective Departments are under consideration. The duties of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, under Executive Order 5642 of June 8, 1931, are: To submit to the Secretary of State, for approval, lists of Foreign Service officers prepared in accordance with law by the Division of Foreign Service Personnel in which they are 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 promotion to the grade of minister; to submit to the Secretary of State, for approval and transmission to the President, the names of those officers and employees of the Department of State who are recommended for appointment 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 recommended for designation as counselors of embassy or legation; to recommend 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 appropriate disciplinary action where required; to determine, after considering recommendations of the Division of Foreign Service Personnel, when the efficiency rating of an officer is unsatisfactory, in order that the Secre-tary of State may take appropriate action. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL Charged, under the supervision of the Assistant Secretary of State designated as chairman of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, with the administration of the classified, auxiliary, and clerical personnel of the Foreign Service of the United States. The Division is therefore responsible for the maintenance of the required efficiency standards of the Service and the proper operation of all field offices. It is the custodian of the confidential records of all personnel and in that capacity recommends to the Board of Foreign Service Personnel administrative action regarding assignments, transfers, promotions, demotions, disciplinary action, and separations from the Service, based upon conclusions drawn from an evaluation of efficiency reports, inspection reports, and official authentic informa-tion from chiefs of diplomatic missions and consular establishments, from com-petent officers of the Department, and from other informed sources. It prepares biannually, under the supervision of the chairman of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, a rating list in which all Foreign Service officers are graded in accordance with their relative efficiency and value to the Service. From this list recommenda-tions for promotions are made in the order of their ascertained merit within classes. In the performance of its prescribed duties, the Division consults with chiefs of missions, principal consular officers, and the heads of divisions and offices of the Department of State in its investigations and studies of methods deemed necessary to effect the improvement of conditions involving the proper functioning of field offices. It receives all officers and clerks on home leave of absence and discusses with them their work and problems, supplies candidates with preliminary informa-tion with respect to entrance into the Foreign Service, keeps the records of the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service and attends to all details connected with the holding of examinations, and drafts and examines all correspondence relating to the personnel of the Foreign Service. One Foreign Service officer, assigned for duty in the Division, is on the Board of the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School. 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. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS 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 ie Official Dutres 551 pictures, telegraph, cable, and shipping; assists in the preparation and interpre-tation of treaties in this field; drafts or reviews all correspondence pertaining to international communications activities; maintains liaison with other Govern-ment departments and agencies in matters relating to international communica-tions; and collaborates with foreign missions in Washington. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES Charged generally with the formulation and execution of policies with respect to United States participation, including character and extent, in international organizations, international conferences, congresses, expositions, and conventions at home and abroad; has the responsibility of planning and executing arrange-ments for such participation by this Government; with the organization of dele-gations to international conferences and the preparation of or collaboration in the issuance of instructions to such delegates; supervises the fulfillment of the international obligations of the United States with respect to membership in and expenditures for international-treaty commissions, committees, bureaus, and other official organizations; prepares for official use résumés and reports covering these activities; maintains liaison with permanent international organizations such as the Pan American Union; collaborates in carrying out agreements, resolutions, and recommendations of official international meetings; prepares requests for legislation and appropriations for special international conferences; supervises, under the Fiscal Control Officer, expenditures of all appropriations for conference activities; initiates action with respect to the appointment of United States mem-bers of certain treaty and other international commissions; and prepares the Department’s annual publication covering these activities. DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Has charge of relations with Afghanistan, Burma, Greece, India, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Trans-Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, 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 Charged with administration of the laws and regulations relating to the control of American citizens and nationals entering and leaving territory under the jurisdiction of the United States; limitation of travel of American citizens in foreign countries; determination of 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 inhabitants of the Canal Zone, Guam, or American Samoa, owing permanent allegiance to the United States; prevention and detection of fraud in passport matters and the 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 military ‘service, the preparation of reports of births of American citizens abroad and reports of marriages; administration of passport work performed by the executive officers of American Samoa, Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and by the United States High Commissioner to the Philippine Islands; super-vision of the passport agencies in New York, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, and Miami; direction of clerks of courts in the United States with regard to pass- port matters. OFFICE OF THE PETROLEUM ADVISER Charged, under the Secretary of State and the Under Secretary, with analytical and advisory duties in regard to petroleum matters as expressed, for example, in the foreign oil policy of the United States and the oil policies of foreign countries; the foreign organizations and activities of the American oil industry; and the oil resources and production, refining, marketing, and transportation facilities of foreign countries. The Petroleum Adviser also maintains liaison with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with petroleum problems. 552 Congressional Directory STATE 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 Eastern Affairs, has general charge of such other matters as concern the Department of State in relation to the Philippine Islands. DIVISION OF POLITICAL STUDIES Has responsibility for the conduct of continuing and special research, for the preparation of studies required in the formulation of policies, the planning of integrated programs as a basis for action in the field of foreign political relations affecting the interests of the United States, with particular reference to the long-range implications of current policies, actions, and developments in this field affecting post-war political reconstruction, and for the formulation of appro-priate recommendations with respect to the foregoing; cooperates and maintains liaison with other divisions and offices of the Department, in particular the Di-vision of Economic Studies, with other departments and agencies, and with inter-departmentaland intergovernmental agencies having joint interest or authority in the field of activity. DIVISION OF PROTOCOL 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 casual or ceremonial visits of foreign naval vessels and of foreign military organizations to the United States and visits of the same character of United States naval vessels and military organizations; arrangements for the entry of troops of Allied Nations and their baggage, arriving at United States ports en route to training centers in this hemisphere and en route to foreign duty; arranges for release, as international courtesy, of certain war materials, ammunitions, models, etec., used in fulfilling contracts for Allied Nations; matters with respect to visits of aliens to industrial factories and plants where war contracts are being executed; questions affecting the Diplomatic Corps under the commodities-rationing program; 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; questions of exemption of such foreign government officials from military training and service; preparation of exequaturs, certificates of recognition, and notes granting provisional recognition to foreign consular officers in the United States, and correspondence relating thereto; preparation of the List of Foreign Consular Offices in the United States; 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 Charged with research studies on pre-war and wartime foreign policies, includ-ing the preparation of data for current use by the Department, the compilation of diplomatic correspondence of the years immediately preceding American entry into the war for publication in the volumes Foreign Relations of the United States, and the compilation for publication of the records of the Paris Peace Conference of 1919; in collaboration with other offices and the Budget Bureau, it prepares a record of the administration of wartime projects in the Department; compiles and edits the Department of State Bulletin, the United States Statutes at Large, the Territorial Papers of the United States, and other publications of the Department; edits the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals, the Treaty Series, the Executive Agreement Series, and other documents related to the war; maintains STATE Official Duties 553 the Department’s Library; passes upon the question of the release of unpublished documents to qualified scholars; is assigned the chairmanship of the Publications Committee, whose approval is necessary for the publication of manuscripts written by Foreign Service officers et al.; maintains liaison with The National Archives; codifies regulatory documents promulgated by the Department; furnishes Depart-ment officials with information on status of legislation; prepares printing and bind-ing estimates and recommendations for allocation of such funds; has custody of and controls distribution of the Department’s publications and processed material; allocates to various Government agencies the foreign publications received from American diplomatic and consular offices, and assists in procuring war-area publications for the use of the various Government agencies. SPECIAL DIVISION ! Charged with responsibility for matters pertaining to the whereabouts and wel-fare of Americans abroad, transmission of funds, the evacuation and repatriation of Americans from foreign countries, financial assistance to Americans in terri-tories where the interests of the United States are represented by Switzerland, liaison with the American Red Cross and the President’s War Relief Control Board for the coordination of foreign relief operations with the foreign policy of this Government; the representation by this Government of the interests of foreign governments, representation by a third power of United States interests in enemy countries, the supervision of the representation in the United States by third powers of the interests of other governments with which the United States has severed diplomatic relations or is at war; the exchange of official and non-official American and Axis Powers personnel; all questions relating to civilian internees and prisoners of war, and the accompanying of representatives of the -protecting powers and the International Red Cross on prisoner-of-war and civilian-enemy-alien camp inspections. TRANSLATING BUREAU 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 into 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. Upon the specific request of the interested divisions of the Department, the Office also performs the following services: Interpreting and translating in connection with inter-American conferences; translation of agreements between the United States and the other American republics and of addresses of the President, the Secretary of State, and other ranking Government officials when of interest to the other American republics, such translations to serve as the accepted official translated version of those public utterances; review of material published in Spanish and Portuguese by other governmental departments and agencies; and review of Spanish, Portuguese, and French scripts for motion pictures and radio programs to be distributed through official channels in the other American republics, in-cluding cooperation with the Interdivisional Committee on Motion Pictures in the evaluation of films for distribution abroad. 1 This is a temporary division set up for the duration of the present war. 554 Congressional Directory TREASURY OFFICE OF THE EDITOR OF THE TREATIES 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. TREATY DIVISION Charged with assisting, when and as requested by the responsible officers, in the drafting of treaties and other international agreements, and correspondence pertaining to the negotiation, construction, and termination of treaties. The division is also charged with maintaining a set of treaties and other international agreements in force to which the United States is a party, and likewise those to which it is not a party, together with the pertinent laws, proclamations, Execu-tive orders, and resolutions; maintaining lists of treaties and other international agreements between the United States and foreign governments which are in process of negotiation or ratification; collecting and keeping available informa-tion regarding the application, interpretation, and status of treaties; analyzing treaties by subject, and assembling, comparing, and studying the provisions on the same subject in different treaties; examining the texts of treaties, 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 the issuance of exit and reentry permits; with making appropriate recom-mendations to American Foreign Service officers for their final consideration concerning individual visa applicants; and with the control of immigration quotas. The Division has responsibility for the issuance of licenses within the purview of paragraph XXV of the Executive order of October 12, 1917, relating to the Trading with the Enemy Act and title VII thereof, approved June 15, 1917. It also issues instructions to field offices, as necessary, and collaborates with interested offices and divisions of the Department, as well as with other agencies of the Government concerned with the control of subversive activities and the transportation of enemy aliens. DIVISION OF WORLD TRADE INTELLIGENCE Charged with the activities and problems envisaged in the President’s procla-mation of July 17, 1941, relating to trade with aliens whose interests are inimical to the United States and particularly with the maintenance of the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals. 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 Com-mercial 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. (b) Foreign Funds Control. | { | TREASURY Official Duties 955 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 Statisties. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service: 1. Bureau of Customs. 2. Bureau of Narcotics. 3. Secret Service. Assistant Secretary in Charge of the Bureau of Internal Revenue: 1. Bureau of Internal Revenue. 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) Budget Section. : (9) Division of Central Accounts. 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. War Savings Staff. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Division of Monetary Research. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Director of Tax Research: (a) Division of Tax Research. 2. Tax Legislative Counsel: (a) Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Procurement Division. 2. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. 3. Bureau of the Mint. : 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 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; member, National Munitions Control 556 C ongresstonal Directory TREASURY Board; member, Board of Economic Warfare; and member, Censorship Policy 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 and the Division of Research and Statistics. 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 the Bureauof Internal Revenue is assigned the supervision of the work of that Bureau. 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, and general supervision of the Foreign Funds Control. THE ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY To an assistant to the Secretary is assigned the general supervision of the War Savings Staff and its promotional and sales activities relating to United States War Savings bonds, Savings stamps, and other Government securities. To an assistant to the Secretary is assigned direct supervision of the Division of Monetary Research, general supervision of all matters with which the Treas-ury Department has to deal having a bearing on foreign relations, and super-Vien of matters relating to the management and operation of the Stabilization und. To an assistant to the Secretary is assigned general supervision of the Division of Tax Research and the Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel. To the assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Procurement, Engraving and Printing, and Mint is assigned the general supervision of the Procurement Divi-sion, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and the Bureau of the Mint. 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. In addition, the General Counsel is assigned general supervision of the Foreign Funds Control. FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL Foreign Funds Control was established in April 1940. Its primary function is to carry out the economic warfare program under the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended. It controls the use and disposition of the bulk of the 81 billion dollars worth of property or funds owned in the United States by the governments or nationals of 36 enemy, enemy-dominated and neutral countries. 5 main function is to prevent such assets from being used in any way to aid the xis. Through its broad powers Foreign Funds Control stops the enemy from extort-ing American-held property from invaded peoples. It prevents the Axis from using billions of assets to finance sabotage, propaganda, and subversive activities. It keeps the enemy from getting strategic materials. It destroys world markets for securities and United States currency looted by the enemy from invaded countries and carries out programs to protect currency and securities in United States possessions in danger of invasion. It discovers and purges businesses in the United States having Axis ties. The Control participates in the application of the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals. It regulates financial dealings with enemy-dominated firms, blacklisted firms, and neutrals under duress outside the United States. It helps to cut off Axis trade in South America and other vital areas. It also has responsibility for regulating communications of a financial or commercial nature with enemy nationals or territories. The ‘freezing’ control is made effective by (a) requiring either specific or general licenses to effect transactions involving foreign-owned assets, (b) securing reports on activities under license, (¢) investigating violations of the Control, and (d) applying sanctions such as freezing, blacklisting, liquidation, or formal prosecution against inimical interests. In the application of the program the Federal Reserve banks and the officials of the Territories and possessions of the United States act as agents of the Control. THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION GF 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. 83317°—T78-1-—24 ed. 37 558 Congressional Directory TREASURY 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 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 11 active customs agency districts—9 in the United States and 2 in foreign countries; and (4) the 3 border patrol districts 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 and perform certain duties under the Foreign Trade Zones Act. Under Executive Order No. 9083, dated February 28, 1942, the Bureau of Customs administers the navigation laws pertaining to registry, enrollment and licensing of vessels, including the issuing of commissions to yachts and the assign-ment of signal letters; the measurement of vessels, administration of tonnage duties and the collection of tolls; the entrance and clearance of vessels and aircraft; the regulation of vessels in the coasting and fishing trade and limitation of the use of foreign vessels in waters under the jurisdiction of the United States; the re-cording of sales, conveyances, and mortgages of vessels; the protection of steerage passengers; and all other functions which prior to March 1, 1942, had been per-formed by the Bureau of Customs on behalf of the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation or the Secretary of Commerce. 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 prinei-pally to persons and articles coming into this country and in some cases to articles sent out of the country. TREASURY Official Duties 559 Since the passage of the Neutrality Act of 1939, the Bureau of Customs, because of the location of its officers at strategic seaboard and land border ports, has been called upon to perform numerous miscellaneous duties having to do with the enforcement of war emergency laws and regulations, the prevention of espionage and sabotage, and the physical control of restricted imports and exports. In connection with the export control program, the Bureau of Customs is charged with inspection of all export declarations and permits presented as a prerequisite to export in order to insure compliance with the licensing provisions of the State Department, the Office of Export Control of the Board of Economic Warfare, and the Office of Lend-Lease Administration, to prevent the exportation of stra-tegic materials of every description except under proper license or permit. When deemed necessary, an actual examination of exports is made by customs officers to insure compliance with export control requirements. On the request of the Office of Export Control, the customs investigative unit conducts field investiga-tions of individuals, firms, and corporations conducting business relating to exports of merchandise from the United States and of violations of the Export Control Act. The Bureau assists the State Department in the supervision and control of the departure from and entry into the United States of persons whose departure or entrance would be prejudicial to the interests of the United States, and on behalf of the State Department the Bureau examines passports of American citizens departing from the United States at seaports and airports. The Bureau of Customs cooperates with the Foreign Funds Control Office of the Department by maintaining physical control of persons and their effects entering and leaving the United States to insure that no funds, securities, or property are taken out of or brought into the United States except in such amounts or values as may be authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury. By physical control of exports and imports it enforces the prohibition against trading with persons or firms on the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals. The persons and baggage of suspects entering the United States are searched to prevent the bringing of gold into this country in violation of the Gold Reserve Act of January 30, 1934. The Bureau of Customs enforces the rationing orders issued by the Office of Price Administration insofar as such orders apply (1) to supplies and stores for vessels entering United States ports, (2) to persons entering the United States, ! and (3) to merchandise imported into the United States. Under the regulations for the enforcement of the Trading with the Enemy Act, the Bureau of Customs is responsible for the licensing of tangible communications entering or leaving the United States, except in the regular course of the mail. This responsibility necessitates intercepting such tangible communications carried on vessels, vehicles, and persons arriving from and departing to foreign countries for the purpose of examining such communications to determine whether they contain matter inimical to the interests of the United States or helpful to its enemies. 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-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. 560 Congressional Directory TREASURY UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE The Chief of the 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 super-vision 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. S. C.), counterfeit-ing 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 BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE, OFFICE 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, ete. 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, Ac-counts and Collections Unit, Alcohol Tax Unit and the Salary, Stabilization Unit. The Commissioner and Miscellaneous Unit includes the immediate Office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Assistant to the Commissioner, the Executive Assistant to the Commissioner (Personnel Division, Administrative Division), the Office of the Special Deputy Commissioner, the Technical Staff, the Intelligence Unit, 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 Administer 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 TREASURY Official Duties 561 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 as-sessment 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 the investiga-tion, detection and prevention of willful and fraudulent violations of internal-revenue laws relating to liquors. , The Salary Stabilization Unit is charged with the administration of salary increases and decreases coming within the jurisdiction of the Commissioner as defined in the regulations of the Economie Stabilization Director which was approved by the President on October 27, 1942. Jurisdiction of the Commissioner covers all salaries over $5,000 per year, and salary payments of less than $5,000 per year in the case of executive, adminis-trative, or professional employees not represented by labor organizations. Its duties are to receive, consider, and issue rulings upon all requests for increases and decreases of the type of salaries under the jurisdiction of the Commissioner. ? 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. 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 Resolu-tion No. 75, Seventy-sixth Congress, approved June 4, 1940, provided for the establishment, as a part of the Fiscal Service of the Treasury Department, of a Bureau of Accounts with a Commissioner of Accounts at its head. It trans-ferred to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary, to be exercised under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury and through the Commissioner of Accounts, all func-tions 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 Depart-ment of authorizing the installation, maintenance, revision, and elimination of accounting records, reports, and procedure. The Bureau of Accounts consists of the immediate Office of the Commissioner of Accounts, the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants, the Division of Dis-bursement, the Division of Deposits, the Section of Surety Bonds, the Section of Investments, the Budget Section, and the Division of Central Accounts. The Commissioner of Accounts has supervisory duties in connectiori with all of these, as well as in connection with the remaining functions of liquidation of matters growing out of the control of the American transportation system, which was exercised through the United States Railroad Administration during the period from December 28, 1917, to February 29, 1920, and certain duties in the Office of the Treasurer of the United States which are related to the work of the Divisions 562 Congressional Directory TREASURY mentioned. The Commissioner of Accounts also has supervision of the prepara-tion of the combined statement of the receipts and expenditures of the Govern-ment which the act of July 31, 1894, requires the Secretary of the Treasury to lay annually before Congress, classifying the receipts, wherever practicable, by ports, districts, and States, and the expenditures under each separate head of appropriation. With the approval of the President, the Emergency Relief Accounting Organization, established under section II (a) of Executive Order No. 7034, dated May 6, 1935, was discontinued effective July 1, 1942, in line with the policy of reducing nondefense expenditures and making available the maxi-mum trained personnel for war activities. : The Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants was created by the act of July 31, 1894 (28 Stat. 208; U. 8. 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 Division, in the name of the Secretary of the Treasury, issues all warrantson the Treasurer of the United States; makes analyses of acts of Congress carrying 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 Accounting 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 War and Navy Departments, except with respect to departmental salaries and expenses in the District of Columbia, were exempted from Executive Order No. 6166 by Executive Order No. 6728 of May 29, 1934. The function of disbursement 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-one 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 dis-bursing functions outside Washington for the regular departments and agencies. The Division of Deposits is charged with the administration of all matters per-taining 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 as fiscal agents of the United States under Treasury Cir-cular 568; 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 corporate 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 TREASURY Official Dutres 563 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, 1934, between the United States and Turkey, and under the acts of April 10, 1935, and December 18, 1942, 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, Railroad 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 Re-vised Statutes, Philippine trust funds held in interest-bearing accounts, and ac-counts pertaining to withheld foreign check payments. The Division of Central Accounts performs the functions under Executive Order No. 8512, dated August 13, 1940, as amended by Executive Order No. 9084, dated March 3, 1942, requiring the Treasury Department to prepare finan-cial reports with respect to the financial condition and operations of the Govern-ment 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, and the Comptroller General of the United States, uniform termi-nology, classifications, and standards in connection with such financial reports for the use and guidance of all departments and establishments. Thus far, regulation No. 1 relating to apportionments and reports on status of appropria-tions and regulation No. 2 relating to financial reports of governmental corpora-tions and enterprises have been issued. 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. 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.—When a new issue of public debt securities is to 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 564 Congressional Directory TREASURY 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. Tt 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 distribution of publicity literature for the War Savings Staff, the maintenance of mailing lists and the conduct of the regular purchase plan program. The division carries on a large correspondence with the investing public in connection with the registration of savings bonds and the regular purchase plan. Chicago Office.—All transactions in savings bonds after their issue are conducted in the Chicago office of the Bureau. Branches 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, and the Division of Savings Bonds in its entirety, comprise the Chicago Office. 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 appropriationof Congress are credited in the accounts of such disbursing officers on the books of the Treasurer, and dis-bursements therefrom are made by checks drawn on the Treasurer. In his Office are prepared and issued, for the Secretary of the Treasury, the daily Treasury statement of the United States, the monthly preliminary statement of the public debt, and the monthly preliminary statement of classified expenditures of the Government; the monthly statement of the outstanding paper currency of the Government is also published. The Treasury general ledger accounts of the trust fund, the reserve fund, the gold 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 Philippine governments (of which the Secretary of the Treasury is the transfer agent), and for the redemption of national-bank notes, Federal Reserve notes, and Federal Reserve bank notes. He is treasurer of the board of trustees of the Postal Savings System, trustee for bonds held to secure 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: Administrative Division, Accounting Division, Cash Division, Currency Redemption Division, Division of General Accounts, and Division of Securities. TREASURY Official Dutres 565 THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF WAR SAVINGS STAFF, OFFICE UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF WAR SAVINGS STAFF This Staff is charged with the promotional and sales activities relating to United States War Savings bonds, savings stamps, and other Government securities upon which publicity efforts may be centered. THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF MONETARY RESEARCH, OFFICE UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF 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 analyses, 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. Analyses 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; financial and monetary problems relating to invasion and occupa-tion of enemy-held territory by American armed forces; 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. In addition, the Division provides economic analyses in connection with the Treasury’s Foreign Funds Control, and supervises the collection and use of data obtained in the census of foreign-owned assets in the United States. The Division also is responsible for the economic and financial work in connection with the negotiation of exchange stabilization agreements, made by the United States with foreign governments and central banks for the purpose of promoting international exchange stability. The Treasury’s operations under these agree-ments are performed by the Stabilization Fund, which is administered by the Division. THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH The Division of Tax Research in the Office of the Secretary conducts research in the economic aspects of taxation essential to the formulation of Treasury tax policy. The Division prepares reports and studies and conducts surveys for the use of the Secretary of the Treasury and other designated officials of the Treasury Department. When requested, it also provides information on various aspects of taxation and tax policy for the use of the Ways and Means Committee of the House of Representatives, the Finance Committee of the Senate, the Joint Com-mittee on Internal Revenue Taxation, and the several Federal agencies. The research functions consist primarily of making basic surveys of the tax problems of the Federal Government and devising methods of meeting the Government’s revenue requirements. Comprehensive analyses are made of the relationship of revenue yields to prospective revenue requirements, the desired economic objectives of the tax system, and the economic effects of taxation. In-dividual taxes are studied with relation to their effects on the particular groups of taxpayers involved, the equitable treatment of taxpayers within a particular group, the administrative and compliance problems inherent in the tax, and the are integration of the particular tax with the tax system as a whole. Analyses also prepared relating to the distribution of the tax burden, the inter-relationship of Federal, State, and local taxation, and foreign taxes and tax systems. OFFICE OF THE TAX LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL Congressional Directory TREASURY THE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF PROCUREMENT, ENGRAVING AND PRINTING, AND MINT, 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. Excepting as to the Army, the Navy, and the Maritime Commission, the Pro-curement Division is responsible for the determination of policies and methods of procurement, warehousing, and distribution of property, facilities, improve- ments, machinery, equipment, stores, and supplies for all Federal establishments; and 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 Procurement Division— (a) Negotiates general purchase contracts for supplies and services for use by all agencies as announced through the General Supply Schedule and makes definite quantity purchases. (b) Under the Federal Stock Catalog function, develops standard nomenclature covering commodities used by the Government; provides a standard arrangement for storage and issue of warehoused stock and for cataloging and recording supplies. (¢) Coordinates procedures and activities relating to movement of Government freight by various agencies, negotiates special rates and other particular freight considerations, supplies information of freight rates and routes, and represents the Government before the Interstate Commerce Commission and other regulatory bodies on traffic problems. (d) Stores, as warehoused stock, and issues to Federal agencies in the District of Columbia area as requisitioned, such common supplies as nonperishable food; janitor, office, and institutional items, and liquid and solid fuels. (¢) Makes quantitative and qualitative inspection of equipment and supplies, and examines items offered under propsed contracts, as to compliance with speci-fications. (f) Under Executive Order No. 9235, dated August 31, 1942, is responsible for the development of operating programs in cooperation with the Bureau of the Budget, which have as their objective the most economical and effective utilization of Government equipment and supplies, including their rehabilitation and dis-tribution, and the establishment of central warehouses through the consolidation of existing facilities and their appurtenant activities. Certain of these functions se are conducted through a system of regional offices which coordinate and control, as to reassignment to further Government uses or as to disposition otherwise, property declared surplus by other Federal activities, property seized and for-feited under the Federal Aleohol Act and the Liquid Law Repeal and Enforcement Act of 1935, and firearms seized and forfeited under the National Firearms Act, and operates in the District of Columbia, a furniture repair shop, a typewriter repair shop, and a garage where major and minor repairs and servicing functions are performed for the Treasury and certain other agencies on request. (9) Conducts investigations and studies in connection with the establishment or 3 modification of procedures, organization, and policy in connection with procure-ment, warehousing, and distribution of commodities or services. (h) Prepares and maintains currently, by amendments and revision as neces-sary, Federal specifications which deseribe minimum requirements of commodities important in Government use, with special reference to elements of quality, performance, measurement, or other factors and with due regard to the require-ments of consumers with relation to market limitations. (7) Pursuant to act of June 7, 1939 (Pub. 117), purchases stocks of strategic and critical materials, as basically approved by the War Munitions Board, and main-tains and replenishes such stocks. () Procures unfabricated ferrous and nonferrous metals and alloys and various industrial, agricultural, and other commodities and articles to meet requirements of nations subject to benefits of the Lend-Lease Act. Operates field services of inspection, expediting, and storage incident to such procurement. TREASURY Official Duties 567 Poor mn eg ae (k) Buys clothing, medical, and other vital supplies for the relief of destitute peoples overseas for distribution through the American Red Cross. (I) Procures certain of the heating, plumbing, and refrigeration and other house-hold fixtures for Federal housing structures related to war work. (m) Through field offices, buys materials and equipment needed to meet requirements of the Works Progress Administration and other offices operating with funds from the Emergency Relief Appropriation. (n) Transacts all the Treasury Department printing and binding business with the Government Printing Office and handles all requisitions for nonmonetary requirements of other agencies for supply by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. (0) Renegotiates war contracts consummated by the Procurement Division, cooperates with the War and Navy Departments and the Maritime Commission, and when the predominant interests are of the Procurement Division, renegotiates contracts for those establishments. (p) Directs the activities of 104 Federal business associations in larger centers of Government activity throughout the United States, to promote economies and efficiency in transaction of routine business of the Government and to assist in various regional or National Government projects as requested. 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; Federal farm loan, joint-stock land bank, consolidated Federal farm loan and Federal farm 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 and medals to be made for the armed services; reviews the accounts, authorizes expenditures, superintends the annual settle-ments of the several institutions, and makes special examinations of them when deemed necessary. Appointments, removals, and transfers in the mints, 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. 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 miscellaneous appropriations and expenditures therefrom, including the purchase and issuance of stationery, miscellaneous supplies, and equipment. He has supervision of the several service units including the telephone, tele-graph, duplicating, and book-binding sections; information service; and the motor messengers and chauffeurs. He administers and is certifying officer for several pay rolls and special allot-ments; prepares material for budget estimates for personal services and contingent expenditures; and maintains accounts, by offices, on all funds expended for per-sonal services for which pay rolls are administered. 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. The organization includes the Treasury archivist, who is liaison officer between the Treasury Department and the National Archives, including the Federal Register Division. | | | 568 Congressional Directory : WAR 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 supervises 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 by the War Department to Treasury officials, both in the District of Columbia and in the field. The Chief Clerk also has charge of the unassigned business of the Secretary’s office. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL The Division of Personnel has primary responsibility for the personnel manage-ment activities of the Department as a whole. It coordinates and exercises control over position-classification, salary administration, recruitment, appoint-ment, placement, promotion, separation, discipline, efficiency rating, employee relations, and other personnel matters. This Division represents the Department in its relations with the Civil Service Commission, the Council of Personnel Administration, and with other agencies where personnel functions are concerned. CORRESPONDENCE DIVISION This Division maintains control of all secretarial mail, including contacts with all branches of the Department 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 ‘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 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 Sécretary. 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. WAR Official Duties 569 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-tions, 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. THE UNDER SECRETARY OF WAR Exercises general supervision and direction over the Army Service Forces and the Army Air Forces in procurement and related matters; performs the duties and responsibilities placed upon the Secretary of War by section 5 (a) of the National Defense Act, as amended, and such other duties and responsibilities as may be delegated to him by the Secretary of War; coordinates the procurement and related functions of the Army Service Forces and the Army Air Forces and coordinates these War Department functions with the War Production Board and any other interdepartmental agency or superagency that may be created in connection with the allocation of material or industrial facilities to various uses; represents the Secretary of War on the War Production Board and the Board of Economic Warfare; is the War Department member of the Army and Navy Muni-tions Board; acts for the War Department on the War Manpower Commission and other departments and agencies of the Government, the Congress, the public, the press, and other appropriate nongovernmental agencies in reference to pro-curementand related matters; acts as Secretary of War during the absence or disability of the Secretary. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Acts for the Secretary of War on matters connected with the administration of the War Department which cannot be delegated to other officials, such as the issuance of orders affecting War Department administrative practices and author-ization of civilian personnel actions; advises the Secretary on matters of adminis-trative policy; directs changes in administrative organization and procedures; serves as member of the Board of Directors of the Panama Railroad Co. and acts for the Secretary of War on all official matters not requiring his personal attention. 570 Congressional Directory WAR WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF (a) The Chief of Staff is the immediate adviser of the Secretary of War on all business relating to the Military Establishment and is charged by the Secretary of War with the planning, development, and execution of the military program. On matters involving strategy, tactics, and operations, the Chief of Staff advises and executes decisions of the President in his role as Commander in Chief. (b) The War Department General Staff, under the direction of the Chief of Staff, will coordinate the development of the armed forces of the United States and insure the existence of a well-balanced and efficient military team. The War Department General Staff assists the Chief of Staff in the direction of the field operations of the Army of the United States. It is specifically charged with the duty of providing such broad basic plans as will enable the Commanding Generals of the Army Ground Forces, Army Air Forces, Army Service Forces, defense commands, task forces, and theaters of operations to prepare and execute detailed programs. (¢) The War Department General Staff will include the following divisions, each division being under the immediate control of an Assistant Chief of Staff: (1) Personnel Division (G-1) is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff in relation to the personnel of the Army as individuals. (2) Military Intelligence Division (G—2) is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff relating to the collection, evaluation, and dissemination of military information. (8) Organization and Training Division (G-3) is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff relating to the mobilization, training, and organization of the military forces. (4) Supply Division (G—4) is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff which relate to the supply of the Army. (5) Operations Division (OPD) is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff in relation to the formulation of plans and the strategic direction of the military forces in the theater of war. ) The Secretariat, War Department General Staff, is charged with the general administration of the Office of the Chief of Staff and the Deputy Chief of Staff. LEGISLATIVE AND LIAISON DIVISION The Legislative and Liaison Division was created on March 9, 1942, in the general reorganization of the War Department. It functions as part of the Special Staff of the Office of the Chief of Staff. Its responsibilities and functions fall into three general categories: (1) Super-vision of the preparation and processing of legislation pertaining to the War Department; (2) Congressional liaison; and (3) liaison between the War Depart-ment and various Federal agencies. The Legislative and Liaison Division reviews all legislation affecting the War Department and reports thereon to the Secretary of War. The Division must determine that legislation requested by the War Department is in proper form and legally sufficient for the purposes intended, and that it is in accord with the program of the President. The Division also supervises and processes the preparation of War Department reports on legislation. In the maintenance of Congressional liaison, the Legislative and Liaison Division assists official investigators of Congressional investigating committees when military activities of the War Department are involved. It also renders assistance when Congressional visits of inspection are made to War Department posts, camps, stations, reservations, and installations. The Legislative and Liaison Division also facilitates oral and written inquiries from the Congress to the War Department by providing information to Members of Congress and their staffs upon request, and is authorized to contact directly and informally all War Department agencies, subordinate departments, and commands for the purpose of expediting necessary information for the Congress. The Legislative and Liaison Division is further responsible for liaison between the War Department and the Work Projects Administration, Federal Works Agency, concerning all defense undertakings submitted for the approval of the Secretary of War under the provisions of the current Emergency Relief Appropria-tion Act. This includes the processing for War Department certification, as authorized by the Secretary of War, of all Work Projects Administration projects considered important for military purposes which are sponsored by the War Department and other Federal agencies, as well as projects sponsored by State, WAR Offical Duties 571 county, municipal, or other legally constituted governmental subdivisions within the continental United States and its possessions. Similar procedure is followed with the Federal Works Agency, War Public Works Division, and the Civil Aeronautics Administration, Department of Commerce. CIVIL AFFAIRS DIVISION The Civil Affairs Division was established on March 1, 1943, by direction of Jo Sosrotery of War, as a part of the Special Staff of the Office of the Chief of olall. ; The primary function of the Civil Affairs Division is to inform and advise the Secretary of War in regard to all matters within the purview of the War Depart-ment, other than those of a strictly military nature, in areas occupied as a result of military operations. The Civil Affairs Division also performs such additional advisory and administrative functions in connection with civil matters as are prescribed by the Secretary of War. Close coordination is maintained between the Civil Affairs Division and the Operations Division of the War Department General Staff and other military agencies of the War Department. All communications from the Civil Affairs Division to a commander in the field are cleared through and transmitted by the Operations Division. The Civil Affairs Division also maintains liaison with civilian agencies exercising functions in any theater of operations with which the Civil Affairs Division is concerned. The Civil Affairs Division is organized into three main groups: one, the mili-tary government group; two, the civilian relief group; and three, the economic group. Each of these groups, in turn, is organized in sections corresponding to the administrative requirements of the particular situation. 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 and the Chief of Staff to assist them 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 directed by the Secretary of War, the Chief of Staff, or other appropriate authority. 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 conduct 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 in-spection of headquarters of higher echelons of the field forces, and of service commands and departments; the reception, replacement, training, and maneuver the United States Military Academy; schools of arms and services; gar- centers; risoned posts and commands; general hospitals; armories and arsenals; ports of embarkation, United States Army transports, harbor boats, mine planters, and cable ships; service depots, proving grounds, and experimental stations; recruiting and induction stations; remount purchasing and breeding headquarters; detention na- and rehabilitation centers; the prisoners in military disciplinary barracks; tional cemeteries under War Department jurisdiction; property reported un- serviceable; 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. The office of the Inspector General also makes inspections of Army procurement activi-ties and activities of Army construction under contracts let on a cost-plus-a-fixed- fee. In general, his department conducts inspections of all commands and other activities of the Army, and makes such annual and special inspections and such promoting efficiency special investigations as may be ordered, with the objects of state of morale and discipline, and economy, to observe and report upon the condition and preparedness of commands, and other activities to fulfill their respective missions, and to report upon the general, economic, and administrative efficiency of Army activities. 572 Congressional Directory WAR THREE PRINCIPAL COMMANDS ARMY GROUND FORCES Under policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff, the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces, is charged in general with the functions, responsibilities, and authorities of command authorized by law, Army Regulations, and custom over individuals and units assigned to the Army Ground Forces. The mission of the Army Ground Forces is to provide ground force units prop-erly organized, trained, and equipped for combat operations. The following duties are specifically assigned to the Army Ground Forces: The operation of Infantry, Field Artillery, Coast Artillery, and Cavalry replace-ment training centers and schools for the Army Ground Forces, including officer candidate schools for the Army Ground Forces. The provision of basic training for individuals in the Army Ground Forces inducted in excess of replacement training center capacity. The organization of tactical units as directed by the War Department. The training of all tactical units assigned to the Army Ground Forces. The organization, equipment, and training of such task forces as are directed by the Chief of Staff. The development of tactical and training doctrine, tables of organization, tables of basic allowances, military characteristics of weapons and equipment, and operational changes needed in equipment for the Infantry, Field Artillery, Coast Artillery, Cavalry, and specialized combat units. Under the Chief of the Re-quirements Section, a separate division will be established for each of the combat arms of the Army Ground Forces. Each such division is charged with the responsibility of furthering the orderly continuity and progressive development of its arm. The Chief of the Requirements Section will coordinate the various divisions in the interests of the Army Ground Forces as a whole. The review with the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, of the tactical doctrine, military characteristics of weapons and equipment, tables of organiza-tion; and tables of basic allowances of Army Service Force units assigned to the Army Ground Forces. The discharge of personnel functions formerly performed in the offices of the Chiefs of Infantry, Field Artillery, Coast Artillery, and Cavalry, less those now engaged in the procurement of officer candidates. - The assignment of officers of the Army Ground Forces, including Army Air Forces and Army Service Forces personnel on duty therewith, The supply of Infantry, Field Artillery, Coast Artillery, and Cavalry personnel to the Army Air Forces, Army Service Forces, defense commands, theaters of operation and oversea forces in accordance with policies announced by the Chief of Staff. The submission to the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, of such recommendations on construction, shelter, training aids, movements, supply, equipment, real estate, estimates of funds needed for field training and travel, and such other matters as may be necessary. The control of the expenditure of funds allocated to the Army Ground Forces. The development jointly with the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, of ground-air support, tactical training, and doctrine in conformity with policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff. The minimization of the administrative activities of the Army Ground Forces by utilizing the services available in the Army Service Forces to the maximum degree consistent with proper control of the Army Ground Forces. The use of judicious shortcuts in procedure to expedite operations. ARMY AIR FORCES Under policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff, the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, is charged in general with the functions, responsibilities, and authorities of command authorized by law, Army Regulations, and custom over individuals and units assigned to the Army Air Forces. The mission of the Army Air Forces is to procure and maintain equipment peculiar to the Army Air Forces, and to provide air force units properly organized, trained, and equipped for combat operations. Procurement and related functions will be executed under the direction of the Under Secretary of War. The following duties are specifically assigned to the Army Air Forces: WAR Officral Duties : 573 The operation of Army Air Forces replacement training centers and schools, including officer candidate schools, for the training of personnel in pilot functions and specialist nonpilot functions of combat and ground crews and in all duties involving the care, supply, and maintenance of aeronautical matériel. The provision of basic training for individuals in the Army Air Forces inducted in excess of replacement training center capacity. The organization of air force tactical units as directed by the War Department. The training of all tactical units assigned to the Army Air Forces. The organization, equipment, and training of such task forces as are directed by the Chief of Staff. The development of tactical and training doctrine, tables of organization, tables of basic allowances, military characteristics of aircraft, weapons, and equipment, and operational changes needed in equipment, aircraft, and weapons peculiar to the Army Air Forces. The discharge of personnel functions pertaining to the Army Air Forces. The assignment of officers of the Army Air Forces, including Army Ground Forces and Army Service Forces personnel on duty therewith. The supply of air force personnel and equipment peculiar to the Army Air Forces, to the Army Ground Forces, Army Service Forces, defense commands, theaters of operation, and oversea forces in accordance with policies announced by the Chief of Staff. The approval of general plans governing the construction of stations of the Army Air Forces. : The submission to the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, of such recommendations on construction, shelter, training aids, movements, supply, equipment, real estate, estimates of funds, and such other matters as may be necessary. : The control of the expenditure of funds allocated to the Army Air Forces. The development jointly with the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces, of ground-air support, tactical training, and doctrine in conformity with policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff. The installation of such specialized air force equipment and matériel as may be provided by the Army Service Forces and the maintenance of such portion thereof as is not maintained by the Army Service Forces. The preparation of proposals and recommendations for conducting the design competitions authorized by law. The command and control of all Army Air Forces stations and bases not assigned to defense commands or theater commanders and all personnel, units, and installations thereon, including station complement personnel and activities. The supervision of all air force activities in connection with the research, de-velopment, procurement, storage, supply, maintenance, and final disposition of military aircraft, accessories, supplies, facilities, and appurtenances used in connection therewith, including technical inspection and the issuanceof pertinent technical instructions. All aerial operations of the Army Air Forces except for those units thereof as-signed or attached to other commands. The minimization of the administrative activities of the Army Air Forces by utilizing the services available in the Army Service Forces to the maximum degree consistent with proper control of the Army Air Forces. The use of judicious shortcuts in procedure to expedite operations. ARMY SERVICE FORCES The duties and responsibilities placed on the Secretary of War by section 5a of the National Defense Act, as amended, shall continue to be performed by the Under Secretary of War. The Director of Production shall continue to perform his present services, reporting direct to the Under Secretary of War. The Commanding General, Army Service Forces, shall, on procurement and re-lated matters, act under the direction of the Under Secretary of War and shall, on military matters, report to the Chief of Staff. The Commanding General, Army Service Forces, is charged in general with the functions, responsibilities, and authorities of command authorized by law, Army Regulations, and custom over individuals and units assigned to the Army Service Forces. \ The mission of the Army Service Forces is to provide services and supplies to meet military requirements except those peculiar to the Army Air Forces.. Pro-curement and related functions will be executed under the direction of the Under Secretary of War. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——38 ea 574 Congressional Directory WAR The Army Service Forces consolidate under the jurisdiction of the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, the supply arms and services, certain administrative services of the War Department, certain boards and committees, general depots, ports of embarkation and auxiliaries, and service commands, with such amal-gamation, reallocation of duties, and reorganization as is necessary or advisable. The following duties are specifically assigned to the Army Service Forces: (1) Determination of requirements and available resources. (2) Conduct of research and experimentation on the design of supplies and equipment. : (3) Procurement, through purchase or manufacture, of supplies and equipment. (4) Construction of new facilities for the Army. (5) Provision for and operation of storage depots and warehouses. . (6) Transportation of supplies and equipment and of personnel. (7) Operation of ports of embarkation, staging areas, holding and reconsign-ment stations, regulating stations, and port and transportation agencies. (8) Procurement, classification, and assignment of military personnel. (9) Command and training of personnel and units within the Army Service Forces. (10) Operation of training, replacement training and unit training centers, and of service schools. (11) Provision of housing, welfare activities, medical service, evacuation and hospitalization, and sanitation for troops. (12) Repair and maintenance of real property. (13) Purchase or leasing of real estate. (14) Administration of installations concerned with the internment and control of aliens or prisoners of war and the administration of conquered territory. The operation of replacement training centers and schools for the supply arms and services, including officer candidate schools. The provision of basic training for individuals in the Army Service Forces in- ducted in excess of replacement training center capacity. The operation of all reception centers. The organization of Army Service Forces units as directed by the War Depart-ment. The training of all units assigned to the Army Service Forces. The assignment of officers of the Army Service Forces, including Army Air Forces and Army Ground Forces personnel on duty therewith. The supply of Army Service Forces personnel and units to the Army Air Forces, Army Ground Forces, theaters of operations, and oversea forces in accordance with the policies announced by the Chief of Staff. The development of tactical and training doctrine, tables of organization, tables of basic allowances, military characteristics of weapons and equipment, and oper-ational changes needed in equipment for the Army Service Forces subject to review with the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces, as outlined in the duties pertaining to that Command. The command and control of all stations except those assigned Army Air Forces, defense commands, and theaters of operations. The use of judicious shorteuts in procedure to expedite operations. 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 operates under supervision of the Under Secretary of War, pursuant to section 5a 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 wartime needs. Due to the requirements for personnel and space, the Army Industrial College closed on December 23, 1941, until further notice. JUSTICE Offictal Duties 575 DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ATTORNEY GENERAL (FRANCIS BIDDLE) The Attorney General is the head of the Department of Justice (see sec. 346, R. 8.) 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 opinionswhen requested by the President or by the heads of the executive departments. He appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of exceptional gravity and importance, exercises general superintendence and direction over United States district attorneys and marshals in the various judicial districts of the United States, and provides special counsel for the United States in cases of exceptional importance or when the character of the interests involved requires such action. The duties of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Assistant Attorneys General, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Director of the Bureau 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. 8., 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- ment throughout the country in the performance of their duties when occasion requires. (See secs. 347 and 349, R. 8.) No appeal is taken by the United States to any appellate court without his authorization. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (JAMES H. ROWE, JR.) The Assistant to the Attorney General has primary responsibility, under the Attorney General, for the over-all supervision and administrative management of the Department of Justice, the formulation of major departmental policies and programs, the improvement of administrative practice, the formulation and supervision of the Department’s budget program and fiscal control, the develop-ment and administration of personnel policy, the coordination of the work of the various divisions of the Department and the supervision of the United States attorneys and marshals. In addition, he acts as liaison officer between the Attorney General and the Congress and other departments and agencies of the Government, prepares recommendations for presidential appointments, exercises administrative supervision over the Board of Immigration Appeals, and directs the disposition of conscientious objector cases (other than the criminal) under the Selective Service and Training Act. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (TOM C. CLARK) 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- SS leas aSaaLn ym 576 Congressional Directory JUSTICE 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. 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 conduct 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 bankruptcy; immigration and naturalization; 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; ete. 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 x the Slater General, and of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney eneral. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (HUGH B. COX) This assistant has charge of numerous matters directly relating to war activities and policies of the Department of Justice. Under his supervision are the Alien Enemy Control Unit, which has charge of the supervision and control of alien enemies; the Alien Property Unit, which exercises and performs the functions and duties imposed upon the Attorney General and the Department of Justice by paragraph 5 of Executive Order 9142, of April 21, 1942, and the amendment thereto, dated July 6, 1942, and which has charge of alien property litigation, and such other legal matters as may be referred to the Department of Justice by the Alien Property Custodian; the Special War Policies Unit, which directs and co-ordinates matters relating to sedition, espionage, sabotage, and with the adminis-tration of the Voorhis Act and the Foreign Agents Registration Act, the exami- JUSTICE Official Duties S77 nation and analysis of the Foreign Language Press, propaganda activities, and related matters; and the War Frauds Unit, which supervises investigations and handles all cases relating to war frauds except suits for recovery of money damage on war contracts. 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 (OSCAR 8. COX) 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. EB IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (EARL G. HARRISON, COMMISSIONER) 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 (6 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 to the administration of the Immigration and Naturalization Service and its 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. 578 Congressional Directory JUSTICR 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 (LESTER P. SCHOENE) Under the direction of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Director of the Bureau of War Risk Litigation has charge of war-risk insurance 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. 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 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 subclerical 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 POST OFFICE Official Duties 579 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 ex officio chairman of the board of trustees. CHIEF CLERK AND DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL The Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel of the Post Office Department is charged 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 binding required in the Department and Service; the receipt and inspection of blanks required in the Department; the supervision of receipt and inspection of supplies for the Department and Service delivered in Washington; superintendence of the publication and distribution of the Official Postal Guide and other postal publica-tions; the miscellaneous correspondence and files of the Department; matters affecting the proper administration of the civil-service rules and regulations and the execution of the provisions of the Reclassification, the Retirement, and the Employees’ Compensation Acts. The Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel is the liaison officer between the Department and the Classification Division of the yy Civil Service Commission. PURCHASING AGENT The Purchasing Agent supervises the purchase of all equipment, materials, and supplies for the Post Office Department proper and for all branches of the Postal Service. He reviews all requisitions and authorizations for equipment, materials, and supplies and, if proper, approves them. He passes upon all emergency pur-chases made locally by the field service. He determines the sufficiency and propriety of all specifications for equipment, materials, and supplies; prepares the advertisements and forms for proposals necessary to the making of the con-tracts; and enters into contracts for such equipment, materials, and 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 580 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE 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 consideration 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-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. POST OFFICE : Offical Duties 081 The Division of Dead Letters and Dead Parcel Post.—The treatment of all un-mailable and undelivered mail matter which is sent to it and the general super-vision 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. 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. 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-car, mail-messenger, powerboat, and star and air mail routes in Alaska, and the preparation of authorizations, orders, rules, and regula-tions governing the same, based on the law and the orders of the Interstate Com- i merce 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 Marl 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 carriers; 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. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL The Third Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions to which are assigned the duties specified: Finance.—The financial operations, including the collection and deposit of postal revenues; the distribution of postal funds among the several depdsitaries i 1 ] J i : i 582 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE so as to equalize, as far as possible, receipts and expenditures in the same sec-tion; the payment by warrant of all accounts settled by the General Accounting Office; the receipt and disposition of all moneys coming directly to the Depart-ment; and the keeping of books of account showing the fiscal operations of the Postal and Money Order Services and the regulation of box rents and key deposits. Money Orders.— The supervision and management of the Money Order Service, both domestic and international; the preparation of conventions for the exchange of money orders with foreign countries. Classification.— general control of all business relating to the classifica- The tion of domestic mail matter and the rates of postage thereon; the determina-tion of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter, the right to continue in that class, including the administration of the law requiring annual statements of their ownership, circulation, ete., and the instruction of postmasters relative thereto; also the use of penalty envelopes, the franking privilege, and the limit of weight and size of mail matter. Stamps.— The supervision of the manufacture and issuance to postmasters of postage stamps, stamp books, stamped envelopes, postal cards, and migratory bird hunting stamps, by the various contractors, and the keeping of the accounts and recordsof these transactions; the receipt and disposition of damaged and unsalable stamped paper returned by postmasters for redemption and credit; the issuance to postmasters of and accounting for internal-revenue stamps, motor vehicle tax stamps, and the issuance of War Savings stamps; the operation of the Philatelic Agency. Registered Mails.—The supervision and management of the domestic registry, insurance, and collect-on-delivery services; the establishment and control of all domestic registry dispatches and exchanges; the instruction of postmasters and the furnishing of information in relation to these matters; the consideration of all claims for indemnity for damaged or lost domestic registered and certain insured and ec. o. d. mail. Postal Savings.—The conduet and management of the administrative office of the Postal Savings at Washington; the selection and designation of post offices as postal-savings depository offices and the supervision of the business transacted at such offices; the management and investment of postal-savings funds as the agent of the board of trustees; the administrative examination of accounts of postmasters and other fiscal agents of the system; the supervision of the sale of United States savings bonds at post offices, including the administrative examination of postmasters’ accounts and settlement with the Treasury Depart-ment for bonds sold. Parcel Post—General direction of investigations of methods designed to improve the Parcel Post Service. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL The Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Engineering and Research.—The design and construction of buildings so far as the operation of the post-office service is concerned; the 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, leasing, 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 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 POST OFFICE Official Dutres transportation of the mails in cities by means of screen wagons and pneumatictubes, and the drafting of orders awarding such service, including the prepara- tion of contracts therefor; the fixing of allowances for the hire of vehicles usedin 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.Dwision of Equipment and Supplies.—The preparation of specifications for equipment 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. Marl Equipment Shops—The manufacture and repair of mail bags and other mail containers and attachments, mail locks, keys, chains, tools, dies, ete.; 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. Division of Federal Building Operations.—The operation and maintenance of Federal buildings under the administration of the Post Office Department; the procurement and distribution of supplies therefor; the appointment and super- vision of personnel necessary for the maintenance of these buildings. CHIEF INSPECTOR The Chief Inspector is charged with the duty of keeping the Postmaster General and his assistants advised as to the condition and needs of the entire Postal Service; the inspection, audit, and inventory of finances, valuables, equipment, supplies, and property, and the examination of procedures relating thereto in every Bureau or agency of the Postal Establishment in Washington and in the field; and the certification of the results to the Postmaster General or the Assistant Postmaster General in charge of the unit inspected. He is charged with the selection, govern-ment, and assignment to duty of post-office inspectors in charge, post-office inspectors and clerks at division headquarters. 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; the coordination of arrangements for making mail available for censorship; the coordi-nation of plans and arrangements for the handling of Army and Navy mail by the Post Office Department in time of emergency and advising with the War and Navy Departments on matters connected therewith; the representation of the Department in its relationship with certain other Departments and agencies having jurisdiction in preparing for wartime emergencies; the making of arrangements for postal service for internees, evacuees, and prisoners of war; and the execution of wartime instructions of the Postmaster General to the Postal Service. He also has jurisdiction in all matters relating to depredations upon the mails, both domes-tic and international, and losses therein; reported violations of the postal laws such as the alleged use of the mails in schemes to defraud and in the promotion of lotteries; violations of the private express statutes (Government monopoly of the 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 trauns-mission in the mails, and complaints of the interception of and tampering with the mails. He supervises the development of evidence and the preparation for prose-cution 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 installation and instruction of postmasters and the consideration of miscellaneous complaints against the service rendered at post offices of all 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 584 Congressional Directory : NAVY on the Chief Inspector. Applications for permission to take the examination for the position of post-office inspector and the correspondence in connection with the appointment, promotion, and the character of service rendered by inspectors should be addressed to the Chief Inspector. 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. To the Comptroller are assigned the administrative examination of all postal and money-order accounts of postmasters and foreign administrations; the instructing of post-masters relative to preparation and rendition of their accounts; the keeping of administrative appropriation and cost accounts; the compilation of statistical reports, monthly operating statements, and other financial data for the informa-tion of the Postmaster General and other officers of the Post Office Department in connection with the administration of the service; and the keeping of the individual accounts for the statutory deductions from basic salaries of all em-ployees of the department and the Postal Service for credit to the “civil-service retirement and disability fund.” The Comptroller also exercises general supervision over the work of ascertaining the revenues derived from and the cost of carrying and handling the several classes of mail matter and of performing the special services authorized in the Cost Ascertainment Act of February 28, 1925. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Secretary of the Navy is head of the Navy Department, and all naval boards and offices are generally administered by him. Under his general direc-tion, duly appointed officers are responsible for all combat and logistic operations and for all operating services of the Navy. The Secretary of the Navy has general supervision of the design, construction, equipment, maintenance, and manning of the fleets and shore stations of the Navy; and he performs such other duties as the President, who is Commander in Chief, may from time to time direct. THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Under Secretary of the Navy performs such duties as are prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy 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. His principal responsibility is the preparation and execution of contracts for the procurement of necessary facilities, supplies, and equipment, and for production thereunder. 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; the Administrative Office; civil employees; labor liaison; Army and Navy Munitions Board; and the Transportation Branch. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR AIR The Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air has supervision over naval aviation and the coordination of air activities with other governmental agencies. Those administrative duties pertaining to naval aviation lodged in the Secretary of the Navy have been delegated to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY The Judge Advocate General of the Navy has cognizance of all matters of law arising in the Navy Department and performs such other duties relating thereto as may be assigned to him by the Secretary of the Navy. NAVY Officral Dutzes 585 Legal aspects of the administration of justice in the naval service come under the cognizance of the Judge Advocate General. Instructions for naval courts and boards are prepared and furnished to the service and court-martial orders and bulletins are issued from time to time to serve as guides. The proceedings of all courts martial, courts of inquiry, and boards of investigation are reviewed to insure that there are no prejudicial errors. Charges and specifications for courts martial and necessary orders convening courts martial ordered by the Secretary of the Navy are prepared in this office. Naval prisons and prisoners are adminis-tered under the direction of the Judge Advocate General. Boards for the selection of officers for promotion, boards for the examination of officers for promotion and retirement, and boards for the examination of candi-dates for appointment as officers in the naval service, other than midshipmen, are reviewed after the necessary convening orders have been prepared in this office for the Secretary of the Navy. All legislation proposed by the Navy Department is drafted with necessary explanations of the existing law and statements of the purposes of the proposed legislation. An examination and report is also made upon all bills and resolutions introduced in Congress and referred to the Department for report. International law and admiralty cases and claims for damages involving vessels and aircraft are reviewed and necessary action taken. Decisions and opinions on questions of law are prepared on a variety of subjects falling under the general heads of appointment, rank, precedence, promotion, retirement, pay, misconduct, line of duty, neutrality, and other miscellaneous matters. Official bonds for supply officers and navy mail clerks are examined and approved. This office assists bureaus concerned in preliminary preparation of contracts for naval vessels and public utilities, including final review; passes upon all payments and questions arising in connection with the interpretation and administration under these contracts. All public building and service contracts are approved and reviewed as to form, and claims arising thereunder are reviewed. Adjustments are made on claims for injury to private property through damage by Govern-ment 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. SHORE ESTABLISHMENTS DIVISION Established by General Order No. 68 of September 6, 1921 (reprinted as Gen-eral Order No. 13 of May 13, 1935), to conduet, under the immediate supervision of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the departmental administration of navy yards and naval stations. The following activities of navy yards and stations are under its cognizance: Administration, organization, and management; civil-ian personnel and labor, and all matters pertaining thereto, including the main-tenance of high morale; recommendations for complements of officers; buildings, grounds, shops, power plants, service lines, and rolling stock; manufactures and manufacturing processes; cost analysis in connection with the determination of economy and efficiency; coordinating the assignment of available funds, coor-dinating the assignment of work on vessels made available for work at yards and stations by the Chief of Naval Operations, and coordinating other work as-signed to yards and stations in accordance with their abilities, with a view of maintaining stable labor conditions consistent with the military needs of the fleet; inspections of navy yards and naval stations; coordinating the above ac-tivities and functions with the fleet-operating schedules. These functions are Sonsalidnied in the Office of the Assistant Secretary (Shore Establishments ivision). 586 Congressional Directory NAVY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE The Adminstrative Office assists the Secretary of the Navy and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy in directing the administration of the Navy Department, including Headquarters, United States Marine Corps, and Headquarters, United States Coast Guard (during war). Its major activities include general administra-tive and office services to the Department: Management engineering; personnel administration; space’planning and control; mail; telephones: office equipment and supplies, including standardization and specifications; publications; duplicating; files and records, including methods and systems; security of Navy-occupied de-partmental property, including control of egress and ingress; motor-vehicle trans-portation, including passenger cars and trucks; and cafeteria. The Administrative Office also exercises general supervision over the budget, personnel, supplies, maintenance, mail, files, and pay roll of the Office of the Sec-retary and the Executive Office of the Secretary. OFFICE OF THE MANAGEMENT ENGINEER The Office of the Management Engineer assists the bureaus and offices in evalu-ating their organizational structure, determining'adequacy of their facilities and distribution of functions between organizational units, appraising their manage-ment methods and administration procedure, determining their personnel and equipment requirements, and eliminating unnecessary work and duplicate functions and activities. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT The Division of Personnel Supervision and Management supervises the func-tions of appointment, assignment, classification, promotion, service rating, transfer, and training of civil personnel of the Navy "Department and its field service; handles grievances; administers regulations regarding removals, retirements, leaves of absence, selective service, etc.; administers the act of March 7, 1942, granting financial aid to dependents of civil employees missing, beleaguered, or captured by an enemy. The Director of Civilian Personnel serves as a member of the Council of Personnel Administration and acts as liaison officer in civil personnel matters between the Department and the Civil Service Commission. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF PROCUREMENT AND MATERIAL Chief of Procurement and Material.—The Chief of Procurement and Material is an officer on the active list of the Navy, appointed by the Secretary of the Navy, from among the officers of the line not below the grade of captain. While so serving, the Chief of Procurement and Material has the rank and title of vice admiral. The Chief of Procurement and Material is charged (by General Order No. 166, January 30, 1942, approved by the President of the United States) with coordina-tion of all the material and procurement activities of the Navy Department; supervision of programs for the procurement of ships and materials of every char-acter as approved by the Secretary of the Navy, and the performance of such other duties as the Secretary of the Navy may direct. The orders of the Office of Procurement and Material are considered as emanating from the Secretary of the Navy and shall have full force and effect as such. DEPUTY AND ASSISTANTS TO CHIEF OF PROCUREMENT AND MATERIAL In case of death, resignation, absence, or sickness of the Chief of Office, the Deputy Chief of Procurement and Material is directed by the Secretary of the Navy to act in his stead. . An Assistant Chief in Charge of Production, an Assistant Chief in Charge of Procurement, and an Assistant Chief in Charge of Planning and Statistics are appointed by the Secretary of the Navy as assistants to the Chief of the Office of Procurement and Material. The three assistants to the Chief of Office need not be officers on the active list of the Navy. RESOURCES BRANCH, OFFICE OF PROCUREMENT AND MATERIAL In the Office of Procurement and Material, the Resources Branch comprises the Navy personnel of the Army and Navy Munitions Board. NAVY Official Duties B87 PROCUREMENT LEGAL DIVISION The Procurement Legal Division is responsible for advising the Under Secretary, the various branches of his office, and the procuring bureaus on all legal matters involving procurement of naval material, supplies, and facilities. OFFICE OF PUBLIC RELATIONS It is the function of the Office of Public Relations to keep the public informed of the activities of the Navy, where compatible with military security. The prepara-tion and dissemination of material are effected through press, photograph, maga-zine, and radio sections operating under the supervision of the Director of Public Relations. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND REPORTS The Office of Budget and Reports, under the Secretary of the Navy, has charge of the preparation and execution of the Navy Department’s budget. It analyzes the estimates of the individual bureaus and offices and correlates them into a well-balanced program. After funds have been appropriated by Congress, the office revises the budgetary program to conform to specific funds and follows up the execution of that program. OFFICE OF COORDINATOR OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT The principal function of the Office of the Coordinator of Research and De velopment is to bring about the fullest possible cooperation in, and coordination of, research efforts affecting the Navy—among the research establishments of the Army and Navy, other governmental and industrial research establishments, the activities mobilized under the Office of Scientific Research and Development, and the using Services themselves. The Coordinator provides information to the bureaus and offices of the Navy Department regarding research facilities of outside agencies and assists in directing research into appropriate channels. By personal contacts of his staff, by correspondence, and by inspections, he main-tains a follow-up on the progress of all research and development projects in which the Navy is interested, taking such steps as necessary to expedite the work. The Coordinator is the chairman of the Naval Research and Development Board and advises the Secretary of the Navy on all matters concerning naval research. He arranges for suitable representation of the Navy on outside boards, committees, and councils dealing with research. The Office of Inventions is one of the activities of this Office. It handles all suggestions and proposals made by individuals in civil life to the Navy Depart-ment direct or through the National Inventors Council for new or improved weapons and devices for use by the Navy. OFFICE OF NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES Established October 19, 1927, to aid in the preservation of the naval petroleum and oil-shale reserves. Administers general policies regarding the Navy’s fuel-oil supplies and acts as adviser to the Secretary of the Navy on matters pertaining thereto. Cooperates with the Department of Justice in all litigation affecting naval petroleum reserves. DIVISION OF TRAINING LIAISON AND COORDINATION The Division of Training Liaison and Coordination is charged with the co-operation with other governmental agencies for training and education. LEND-LEASE LIAISON OFFICE The Lend-Lease Liaison Office represents the Secretary of the Navy in nego-tiation between lend-lease representatives of foreign governments and lend-lease representatives of various bureaus of the Navy Department. INCENTIVE DIVISION The Incentive Division of the Under Secretary of the Navy is charged with the operation of industrial incentive plans of the Navy Department for stimulating, in cooperation with all cognizant Government agencies, the production of war materials. This division operates a comprehensive program designed to im-prove industrial morale by media which shows the necessity of any particular part of a product to the total war effort, including the handling of the ceremonies for the Army-Navy “E” awards. 588 Congressional Directory NAVY OFFICE OF WAR SAVINGS BONDS The Office of War Savings Bonds promotes the sale of War Bonds by allotment, pay-roll deduction, and cash payment plans to the civilian, enlisted, and officer personnel of the United States Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard, ashore and afloat, throughout the world. The Office of War Bonds is responsible for the appointment of issuing agents for War Bonds and War Bond officers at naval, Coast Guard, and Marine Corps activities. TRANSPORTATION BRANCH The Transportation Branch administers the policies of the Navy Department on matters relating to domestic transportation; procures, assigns, operates, and maintains all transportation facilities and equipment for domestic transportation; advises on, and acts as a clearing house with respect to, the procurement of auto-motive transport vehicles for use outside the continental limits of the United States. Excluded from the foregoing are: Transportation by air; by vessels under the Naval Transportation Service; by equipment used in training, maneuvers, or actual combat or patrol duty; by common carriers of personnel under travel orders; and transportation and routing of material by common or charter carrier. GENERAL BOARD The General Board, acting in an advisory capacity, considers and reports upon such subjects as the Secretary of the Navy may direct. The General Board con-siders the United States Naval policy; that is, the system of principles, the general terms of their application, governing the development, organization, maintenance, training, and operation of a navy. It recommends to the Secretary of the Navy the number and types of ships for the fleet, and considers the number of naval districts, yards, stations, operating bases, and other shore activities; and advises the Secretary of the Navy respecting the general policy to be adopted toward them. INTERIOR CONTROL BOARD The Interior Control Board studies matters concerning interior control-—a term designating control of the “interior” of warships and aircraft: Command and organization, fighting methods and facilities, etc.—and makes recommendations to the Secretary of the Navy. The Board prepares and maintains data on new control developments, collects data on currently prescribed installations, and rec-ommends specific interior control requirements for each new class of ship or aircraft. BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS The Board of Medical Examiners conducts the physical examinations of officers of the Line and Staff Corps, United States Navy, and Naval Reserve, to determine their physical qualifications for promotion, appointment, or advancement. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (LINE) The Naval Examining ‘Board conducts the professional examinations of line officers, including warrant and chief warrant officers, of the United States Navy for promotion, and for appointment, transfer, and promotion, United States Naval Reserve; competitive examinations of warrant and chief warrant officers for appointment to commissioned ranks of ensign, lieutenant (junior grade), and lieu-tenant, of the Regular Navy; competitive examinations of enlisted personnel for appointment to warrant ranks of the Regular Navy; and examinations of records of chief warrant officers, Regular Navy, and Naval Reserve, for certificates of creditability of record. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) The Naval Examining Board (Medical) conducts the professional examinations of Medical Corps officers of the United States Navy and Naval Reserve for promotion to the grades of commander and captain, Medical Corps. The examinations of officers for promotion to the grade of rear admiral, Medical Corps, are customarily conducted by a special examining board composed of officers of the grade of rear admiral, of which the president of this Board is a member, and the examination records are handled by this office. NAVY Offictal Duties 589 NAVAL RETIRING BOARD The Naval Retiring Board conducts the examinations of such officers of the Line and Staff Corps of the United States Navy and Naval Reserve as may be ordered to appear before it, or whose case may be referred to it, by the Secretary of the Navy, to determine their physical fitness to perform all the duties appro-priate to their respective ranks or grades. (Commonly referred to as examina-tions for physical incapacity retirements.) COMPENSATION BOARD The duty of the Compensation Board is to settle all claims with contractors under Navy contracts, and disputes between any contractor and !any Bureau, or any appeal of any contractor from the action of a Bureau in regard to decisions affecting cost, bonuses, penalties, cost of changes, final settlement of contracts, or any matter whatsoever affecting payments to or by contractors shall be re-ferred to the Compensation Board. BOARD FOR PRODUCTION AWARDS It is the duty of the Board for Production Awards to advance the national defense effort by stimulating the competitive spirit among producers of war materials and make awards for outstanding accomplishments. BOARD OF DECORATIONS AND MEDALS The Board of Decorations and Medals makes recommendations to the Sec-retary of the Navy on the bestowal of honors of all types within the naval serv-ice; on the legislation, Executive orders, and general orders, pertaining to decorations, awards, and campaign medals; and on retirement benefits to personnel with pre-vious commendations. The design of medals and the definition of policies come within the Board’s purview. THE OFFICE OF THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF, UNITED STATES FLEET AND CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF, UNITED STATES FLEET, AND CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS The duties of the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations have been combined. They devolve upon an admiral who is the principal naval adviser to the President on the conduct of the war and the principal naval adviser and executive to the Secretary of the Navy on the conduct of the activities of the Naval Establishment. As Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, he has supreme command of the operating forces, comprising the several fleets, seagoing forces, and sea frontier forces of the Navy, and is directly responsible, under the general direction of the Secretary of the Navy, to the President therefor. His staff, as the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, is composed of the Chief of Staff of the United States Fleet, the Deputy Chief of Staff, three Assistant Chiefs of Staff, and the required additional officers organized into three divisions— the Operational Division, the Plans Division, and the Readiness Division. The whole comprises the Headquarters of the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet. Under the Commander in Chief and his Chief of Staff, the staff of the Com-mander in Chief prepares and executes plans for current war operations, conducts operational duties, and directs the training essential to carrying out operations. His subordinates, as the Chief of Naval Operations, are the Vice Chief of Naval Operations, the Sub Chief of Naval Operations, the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations for Logistic Projects, the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations for Logistic Plans, and the required additional officers organized into the 12 divisions of the Office of Naval Operations. VICE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS The Vice Chief of Naval Operations executes the plans and policies of the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations, with respect to the preparation, readiness, and logistic support of the operating forces 83317°—T78-1—24 ed. 39 590 Congressional Directory NAVY | comprising the several fleets, seagoing forces, and sea frontier forces of the Navy, and coordinates and directs the efforts to this end of the bureaus and offices of the Navy Department. The Office of the Chief of Naval Operations is composed of 12 divisions— Logistic Plans, Central, Intelligence, Pan-American, Communications, Inspection, Fleet Maintenance, the Hydrographic Office, the Naval Observatory, Base Maintenance, Naval Transportation Service, and Aviation. LOGISTIC PLANS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Logistic Plans Division is the primary planning agency of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations and, as such, studies and recommends in regard to: Shore station development program; facilities and defenses required at outlying and advanced bases; types, characteristics, and numbers of ships; coordination of the preparation of the aircraft program; and the coordination of the logistic supply. 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; and matters pertaining to treaties and conventions. (¢) 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 and Island Bases. 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 such services. 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 execu-tive departments of the Government in discovering persons engaged in activities inimical to 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. 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. PAN-AMERICAN DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Pan-American Division is charged with the planning and preparation of policies affecting the American republics and has cognizance of the administration of naval missions to these nations. COMMUNICATION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Communication Division is charged with the administration, organization, and operation of the entire radio, telegraph, telephone, and cable systems of com-munications within the naval service, including the operation of the Navy over-seas 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 account-ing. The Communication Division handles all matters pertaining to naval com-munications 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. NAVY Official Duties 591 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, including submarines and aircraft, and, at inter-vals specified by law, with the material inspections of all vessels of the Navy. It is in close coordination with the Secretary of the Navy and the Fleet Main-tenance Division of the Office of Naval Operations. FLEET MAINTENANCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Director, Fleet Maintenance Division, is charged with, and is responsible to the Chief of Naval Operations, for: Anticipating the material needs of the service and advising the Chief of Naval Operations accordingly. The cootfdination 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. Handles matters concerning commissioning and decommissioning of all types of vessels; cognizance of all vessels acquired or building, while building or con-verting and until turned over to the proper activity; the assignment of home ports, and the disposal, transfer, or loan of naval craft. The Director of the Fleet Maintenance Division is senior member of the District Craft Development Board, Auxiliary Vessels Board, and Interior Control Board. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, NAVAL OPERATIONS 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 of charts and publications 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 hydrographic 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 eontribute 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. NAVAL OBSERVATORY, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Naval Observatory at Washington, D. C., broadcasts time signals daily. In addition to establishing standard time for the country and 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 requiring 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. Daily signals are also transmitted by the station at Mare Island, Calif., and the noon signals are dis-tributed 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. 592 Congressional Directory NAVY 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. BASE MAINTENANCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Base Maintenance Division has cognizance of the general organization and administration of naval districts; coordinates the acquisition and disposal of property, the procurement of required facilities, and the development of bases; coordinates matters relating to harbor and coastal defense. AVIATION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Aviation Division operates the Naval Air Transport Service for the transportation by air of naval personnel and freight; issues orders for the commis-sioning and decommissioning of aircraft units and handles all other aviation matters coming within the cognizance of the Office of the Vice Chief of Naval Operations. NAVAL TRANSPORTATION SERVICE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS The Naval Transportation Service operates vessels for the transportation of naval personnel and freight in logistic support of operating forces and bases; directs the inspection and acquisition of nonmilitary type vessels; and coordinates the Navy’s fuel requirements. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL 1. (a) The Bureau of Naval Personnel 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 responsible for libraries on ships and in shore stations throughout the Naval Establishment. (¢) 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 naval personnel, Training stations, Naval Home, 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, Tt 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. Tt keeps the records of service of all officers and men, and prepares an annual Navy Register for publication. NAVY Official Duties 593 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. 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. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS The Bureau of Yards and Docks is the Navy Department’s “Public Works Agency” for the entire naval Shore Establishment. The Bureau is responsible for the design and construction of all naval and Marine Corps public works and public utilities including: Navy yard facilities, such as drydocks, marine railways, building ways. Harbor structures, such as moorings, quay walls, piers, wharves, slips (including dredging), landings, floating and stationary cranes. Utilities, such as power plants, coaling plants, railroads, and systems for heat, light, telephone, water, and sewer service. All types of buildings and service structures, such as roads, walks, bridges, and radio towers. The Bureau is charged with responsibility for, and execution of, the annual inspection as to structural condition and all major repairs of such naval public works and utilities. It provides for their general and routine maintenance, except such minor routine work as can be accomplished by station forces, at ordnance stations, air stations, training stations, hospitals, marine posts, and the Naval Academy. The Bureau is also responsible for the operation of all central power plants and distribution systems and the provision and operation of land transportation and weight-handling equipment, including locomotives, locomotive cranes, cars, derricks (both shore and floating), shears, motortrucks, passenger automobiles, ete. The Bureau consults fully on new projects with those departmental bureaus or offices for whose use they are primarily intended; prepares designs that will be mutually satisfactory as to location, lay-out, and operating features; makes cost estimates; and supervises construction. It also has custody of all naval real estate which is not in active use, and the records of such properties; it also acquires real estate needed by the Navy, in-cluding easements and permits, as well as personal property located on lands acquired. It provides the furniture for all buildings (except at air stations, ordnance stations, hospitals, the Naval Academy, and marine posts). The Bureau of Yards and Docks is a direct construction agency, one of its major ultimate objectives being the construction of all shore facilities for the use of the Navy. Its work of design and construction is broad in nature and embraces nearly all forms of engineering and all the types of structures mentioned above. The Bureau’s previous practice has been the accomplishment of construction work coming under its cognizance through the medium of general contracts awarded on an advertised, lump-sum-bid basis. However, enacted legislation allows the award of contracts on a negotiated, cost-plus-a-fixed-fee basis, and this type of contract now is being extensively used. The work of the Bureau and its attendant field activities are administered by the Chief of the Bureau, who is an officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, appointed for a term of 4 years with the rank of rear admiral, and an Assistant Chief of the Bureau, also an officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, detailed for this duty with the rank of rear admiral during tenure of office. For administrative purposes the work of the Bureau is divided 594 Congressional Directory NAVY into five departments, each headed by a commissioned officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, as follows: Administration and Personnel Department. Progress Control and Statistical Department. Finance and Operating Department. Planning and Design Department. Construction Department. 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 armament (including armor, torpedoes, mines, depth charges, pyrotechnics, bombs, ammunition, war explosives, war chemicals, defensive nets, booms, and buoys, plus anchors, moorings, and appliances therefor except fixtures on shore used to secure the ends of nets and booms) and, except as specifi-cally assigned to other cognizance, optical and other devices and material for the control of guns, torpedoes, 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. (¢) Naval powder factories. (f) Naval ammunition depots. (9) Naval magazines on shore. (h) Naval mine depots. (2) 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 consulta-tion 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. 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 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 RN al UA NAVY Official Duties 595 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; and the Naval Research Labora-tory, Anacostia Station, Washington, D. C. 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, and also maintains jointly with the Bureau of Ordnance and Bureau of Aeronautics the offices of inspectors of naval material. The Office of Procure-ment and Material, Inspection Administration, in the Office of the Under Secre-tary of the Navy, is charged with the general administration of these offices, but the Bureau of Ships has cognizance of all technical matters concerning materials being purchased by or for that Bureau including the specifications therefor and the detailed requirements for inspection thereof. In the offices of supervisors 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 obligations 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 Establish-ment. These offices are available to and frequently used by other Federal depart-ments for the inspection of material purchased for Government use. It nominates to the Bureau of Naval Personnel specially qualified officers for engineering duty at sea and on shore, including those for duty as supervisors of shipbuilding, 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. 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 - 596 Congressional Directory NAVY with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service; it advises with the Department and other bureaus regarding 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; makes 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 clothing and food, water supplies used for drinking, cooking, and bathing purposes, and drainage and disposal of wastes, so far as these affect the health of the Navy. It safeguards the personnel by the employment of the best methods of hygiene and sanitation, both afloat and ashore, with a view to maintaining the highest possible percentage of the personnel ready for service at all times, and adopts for use all such devices or procedures developed 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 Naval Personnel 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, reception, storage, care, cus-tody, transfer, and issue of all supplies of every kind used in the Medical Depart-ment for its own purposes; and has charge of the civilian force employed at naval hospitals, medical supply depots, medical laboratories, the Naval Medical Center, and at all technical schools for the education or training of Medical Department personnel. It 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 each 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 Stock 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. The Bureau 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. The Bureau prepares and submits estimates of the funds required for freight, fuel, clothing, and subsistence of Navy personnel, and has supervision of the allotments of funds from its appropriations and the accounting for allotments granted ships under all appropriations. It recommends the necessity for, and the location, type, size, and interior ar-rangements of, storehouses ashore, and the equipment and arrangement of supply activity spaces afloat. alaei | NAVY Official Duties 597 It has charge of the procurement and disbursement of funds for the payment of naval and civilian pay rolls and for all articles and services procured for the Navy. It is charged with the keeping of the money and property accounts of the Naval ~ Establishment, including accounts of all manufacturing and operating expenses at navy yards and stations, the direction of naval cost accounting, and the audit of property returns from ships and stations. The Bureau originates the details to duty of officers of the Supply Corps. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS The Bureau of Aeronautics is charged with matters pertaining to naval aero-nautics as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy (sec. 8, act of Congress, July 12, 1921). The Bureau of Aeronautics, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for all that relates to the design, construction, fitting out, testing, repair, and alteration of naval and Marine Corps aircraft, barrage balloons, barrage kites and, except as specifically assigned to other cognizance, instruments, equipment, and accessories pertaining thereto. It provides aircraft in accordance with approved operating plans and in accord-ance with general military characteristics of new service classes (types) as recom-mended by the General Board and approved by the Secretary of the Navy. It is charged with the upkeep and operation of all aeronautics shore establish-mentsof the Navy and Marine Corps, exclusive of aircraft operations, and with their repairs. It makes recommendation covering all aeronautic matters as to operations, personnel, and material to the appropriate bureaus and offices of the Navy Department and the Headquarters, Marine Corps. When not prescribed by the United States Navy Regulations, specific assign-ment of cognizance will be as stated in the Manual of the Bureau of Aeronautics. HEADQUARTERS, UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS The 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 Commandant and three staff departments. In the office of the Commandant are his assistant, the director of plans and policies, the director of personnel, the director of Marine Corps Reserve, the director of aviation, the director of recruiting, the director of public relations, and the secretary to the Commandant, as follows: The assistant to the Commandant is his principal assistant and adviser, who performs the duties of a chief of staff, assists in coordinating the work of the several departments and divisions at Marine Corps Headquarters, and conducts the business of the office of the Commandant in the latter’s absence. The director of plans and policies makes recommendations to the Com-mandant relative to plans and policies of the United States Marine Corps, and has cognizance of military intelligence, education, operations, training, and matériel. The director of personnel has supervision over assignments and maintenance of complements of officers and enlisted men. The director of Marine Corps Reserve has supervision over the procurement, training, organization, promotion, and distribution of officers and enlisted men of the Marine Corps Reserve. The director of aviation has supervision over the training, operations, promotion, organization, and distribution of aviation personnel. The director of recruiting has supervision over the procurement of enlisted men in the regular Marine Corps and the organization and administration of the recruiting service. The director of public relations has supervision over, and is responsible for, all public relations and publicity, including publicity for recruiting. The military secretary to the Commandant. The Adjutant and Inspector’s Department is the administrative department in the Headquarters of the Marine Corps. It has general supervision of all matters pertaining to the appointment, examination, promotion, reduction, and retire- 598 Congressional Directory NAVY ment of commissioned and warrant officers, and of their military records, and of the promotion and reduction of all enlisted men, and of their military records. It has general supervision of the claims of officers and enlisted men, of courts martial, courts of inquiry, investigations, inspections, post exchanges, target practice, insignia, and the historical archives. All personnel statistical matters, including those of casualties and the determination of dependency for the purpose of paying allowances, are also a function of this department. The quartermaster has supervision of matters relating to the purchase of all supplies for the Marine Corps; pays all civilian field employees; pays all expenses of the Corps except those pertaining to the Paymaster’s Department; prepares annual estimates of the appropriation “General Expenses, Marine Corps’; 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. The paymaster has supervision of all matters relating to pay and allowances of the Marine Corps; the preparation of annual and supplemental estimates under the appropriations, ‘Pay, Marine Corps,” and ‘Pay of Civil Force, Marine Corps”; and is responsible for the administration and general efficiency of all offices and personnel of the Paymaster’s Department at headquarters and in the field. COAST GUARD The United States Coast Guard, pursuant to the act of January 28, 1915, as amended, is a military service and at all times constitutes a branch of the land and naval forces of the United States, operating under the Treasury Department in time of peace and as a part of the Navy in time of war or whenever the Presi-dent shall so direct. It represents, in its historical development 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. Pursuant to Exec-utive Order No. 9083 of February 28, 1942, certain functions of the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, Department of Commerce, pertaining to the navigation and vessel-inspection laws and the welfare of merchant marine sea-men, were transferred to the jurisdiction of the Coast Guard. Its functions as the Federal maritime police embrace, in general terms, maritime law enforce-ment, saving and protecting life and property, safeguarding navigation on the high seas and navigable waters of the United States, and 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; protection of the customs revenue; enforcement of navigation laws, including promulgation and enforcement of rules for lights, signals, speed, steering, sailing, passing, anchorage, movement, and towlines of vessels, and lights and signals on bridges; enforcement of vessel-manning require-ments, citizenship requirements, and requirements for the mustering and drilling of crews; enforcement of neutrality laws and regulations; the enforcement of the rules and regulations governing the anchorage and movements of vessels under the Espionage Act, including prevention of sabotage to shipping, locks and dams, and water-front property belonging to plants engaged in production of national defense materials; supervision over the loading and unloading of explosives and other dangerous cargoes, in the interest of safety to life and property, by vessels in our harbors and adjacent jurisdictional waters; responsibility for the safe-guarding against destruction, loss or injury from sabotage or other subversive acts, accidents, or other causes of similar nature, of vessels, harbors, ports, and water-front facilities in the United States and in Alaska, the Territory of Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands; the enforcement of the Oil Pollution Act; the patrol and enforcement of provisions of conventions into which the United States has entered 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) The affording of 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 INTERIOR Official Duties 599 and surgical aid to the crews of American vessels engaged in deep-sea fisheries; rescuing and safeguarding life and property and distributing food and clothing to marooned people during flood times on the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers and their tributaries; destruction of derelicts; the collection of statistics and investiga-tion of marine disasters; approval of plans for the construction, repair, and alteration of vessels; approval of materials, equipment, and appliances; classifica-tion of vessels; inspection of vessels and their equipment and appliances; issuance of certificates of inspection and of permits indicating the approval of vessels for operations which may be hazardous to life and property; administration of load-line requirements; control of log books; numbering of undocumented vessels; licensing and certificating of officers, pilots, and seamen; suspension and revoca-tion of licenses and certificates; shipment, discharge, protection, and welfare of merchant seamen; licensing of motorboat operators; administration of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, a voluntary organization of owners of motorboats and yachts. (c) 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, its personnel and resources being used to the best advantage by directives of the Secretary of the Navy and Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations. During the existing emergency, a number of the normal peacetime duties of the service have been subordinated, discontinued, or curtailed, wherever necessary, and every energy directed toward prosecution of the war, the Coast Guard functioning as a service in the Navy Department. Among the fields of wartime activities in which service facilities are being em-ployed are convoy, antisubmarine and patrol duty with the fleet, naval sea fron-tier or task forces; naval auxiliary manning; security of ports, harbors, vessels, and waterfront facilities; beach patrol; training of landing-boat crews, measures for the safety of merchant marine personnel, and control of pilotage. To assist the Commandant, who is charged by law with the administration of the Coast Guard, there are established at Headquarters: Offices of Personnel, Operations, Finance and Supply and Engineering; Divisions of Inspection, Intelli-gence, Legal, Administrative Management and Public Relations; and an advisory board and Merchant Marine Council. A report, covering the activities of the Coast Guard, is published annually. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to the General Land Office, Bureau of Reclamation, Geological Survey, Office of Indian Affairs, National Park Service, Bureau of Mines, Fish and Wild-life Service, Bituminous Coal Division, Grazing Service, Division of Territories and Island Possessions (see Executive order of May 29, 1934), the Bonneville Project (act of Aug. 20, 1937, Public, No. 329, 75th Cong.), Petroleum Adminis-tration for War, Solid Fuels Coordination for War, Coordination of Fisheries, 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 adminis-tration of the government of the Virgin Islands under his supervision. Executive order of May 29, 1934, transferred to the Department of the Interior all functions of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, Department of War, pertaining to or connected with the administration of the government of Puerto Rico. 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, effective July 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 Interior. Executive order of September 16, 1942, transferred the functions, powers, and duties of the United States High Com-missioner to the Philippine Islands, to the Secretary of the Interior. Executive order of April 17, 1934, transferred the functions of 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. 600 Congressional Directory INTERIOR The Bureau of Mines was transferred from the Department of Commerce to the Department of the Interior by direction of the President in Executive order of February 22, 1934. The act of April 26, 1937 (Public, No. 48, 75th Cong.), established in the Department of the Interior a National Bituminous Coal Commission to regulate interstate 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 to be 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 War on May 28, 1941, which was changed to Petroleum Administrator for War on December 2, 1942, to act as Solid Fuels Coordinator for War on Novem-ber 5, 1941, and as Coordinator of Fisheries on July 21, 1942. He is a member also of the Smithsonian Institution under act of March 12, 1894 (28 Stat. 41) and chairman of the National Park Trust Fund Board. Execu-tive order of June 10, 1933, transferred the functions and personnel of the following agencies 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 the Office of Education to the Federal Security Agency and the Branch of Buildings Management (public buildings) to the Federal Works Agency, both effective July 1, 1939. Under the Reorganization Act and the President’s Plan No. II 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. By authority of title IT of the First War Powers Act of 1941, the President ordered that all of the functions, duties, and powers vested in the Council of National Defense by section 8 of the Federal Explosives Act of October 6, 1917 (40 Stat. 385), as amended by the act of December 26, 1941 (55 Stat. 863), be transferred to and vested in the Secretary of the Interior. 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. National Power Policy Committee, chairman. Capital Auditorium Commission, chairman. National Archives Council, member. Board of Directors of Canal Zone Biological Area, member. Liaison Committee on War Relocation, member. UNDER SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The position of Under Secretary was established by the act of May 9, 1935 (49 Stat. 176, 177). He has general jurisdiction over all bureaus and divisions subject only to the Secretary. He is the general administrative Secretary of the Department, serves as budget officer for the Department, and has supervision over personnel and fiscal administration, and the Division of Territories and Island Possessions. a INTERIOR Official Dutres 601 FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The First Assistant Secretary has a general supervision over matters concerning the (1) Bureau of Mines, (2) Geological Survey, (3) Bureau of Reclamation, (4) Bituminous Coal Division, and (5) Petroleum Conservation Division. He is authorized and directed by the Secretary of the Interior to perform the functions and duties and exercise the powers vested in the Secretary for those particular offices and bureaus. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secretary, the First Assistant Secretary will act as Secretary and perform such other duties as the Secretary may assign from time to time. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Assistant Secretary has general supervision over all matters concerning the Office of Indian Affairs, General Land Office, Grazing Service, National Park Service, Office of Land Utilization, 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 signing of contracts under the contingent and stationery appropriations, etc. 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, accounts, museum, telephones, dispensary, mail and files, and motor vehicle service; custo-dian 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. 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. In all other matters involving public lands, irrigation projects, power development, Indians and Indian property and the Territories and insular possessions 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. 602 Congressional Directory INTERIOR COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE The Commissioner of the General Land Office is charged with the survey, classification, management, protection, leasing, and disposition of the public lands; adjudication of various kinds of applications filed under the public land laws; adjustment of conflicting claims; granting of railroad and other rights-of-way and easements; issuance of patents for lands; furnishing of certified copies of land patents, plats, and other records. In national forests executes all laws relating to surveying, 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. 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 Gov-ernment under the Department of the Interior following the passage of 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 INTERIOR Official Dutres 603 for and the construction and maintenance of irrigation works for the storage, diversion, and development of waters for the reclamation of arid and semiarid lands in the States and Territories * *7? As accretions from the sale of public lands diminished, the fund has been augmented by receipts from oil and mineral royalties and supplemented by direct appropriations from the General Treasury in the form of loans, which have been repaid. Under subsequent legislation, the activities of the Bureau have been expanded to include in addition to irrigation the construction and operation of hydro-electric power plants to assure more complete utilization, through multiple-pur- ose projects, of the water resources of the areas west of the 100th meridian. hese expanded activities are financed by appropriations from the General Treasury. Municipal, industrial, and military water supplies are also augmented by reclamation projects. Under the Boulder Canyon Project Act of 1928 the Bureau constructed Boulder Dam. 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 projeets, the preparation of plans, the construction of irrigation works and multiple-purpose dams, power development, the administration of funds provided for reclamation, the operation and mainte-nance of completed projects, the settlement and development of project areas, repayments from irrigation districts and water users’ associations of the cost of the construction works allocated to irrigation, and the return of the investment in power facilities from contractors for the purchase of electric energy. The principal field office of the Bureau is located at Denver, Colo., under the direction of the chief engineer. The general supervisor of operation and maintenance is also located in Denver. ; The Bureau of Reclamation in 1943 is providing irrigation water for 4,000,000 acres of productive agricultural land in 15 Western States. These lands are extensive producers of food and fibers. In the authorized construction program, which has been retarded by the war, are projects which will increase the total area to be served to more than 12,000,000 acres. About 5,000,000 acres will be new land brought into cultivation by the Bureau under the program, and the remainder will be areas inadequately irrigated by other systems which require additional water supplies. On March 15, 1942, the Bureau had in operation power plants on 19 projects with a combined capacity of 1,718,362 kilowatts of power, most of which are serving war industries. These projects in 1942 produced 7% billion kilowatt-hours of electric energy and the output in 1943 is estimated at 11% billion kilo-watt-hours. Scheduled for installation by June 1944, to meet urgent war needs, are 718,100 additional kilowatts which will bring the total capacity to 2,436,462 kilowatts. Under construction or authorized are projects which will bring the ultimate capacity to 4,793,262 kilowatts. 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; and. is responsible for the investigation of national park, monument, and historic site and military park projects. The Director is executive officer of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission and is a member of the National Park Trust Fund Board, the District of Columbia Zoning Commission, and of various other commissions and committees. NATIONAL PARK TRUST FUND BOARD The National Park Trust Fund Board was created by the act of July 10, 1935 (46 Stat. 477), which authorizes the Board to accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts or bequests of personal property for the benefit of, or in connection with, the National Park Service, its activities or its service, as may be approved by the Board. 604 Congressional Directory INTERIOR ADVISORY BOARD ON NATIONAL PARKS, HISTORIC SITES, BUILDINGS, AND MONUMENTS The Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monu-ments was established by the Historic Sites Act of August 21, 1935 (45 Stat. 666). The act provides that it shall be the duty of such Board to advise on any matter regarding national parks and the administration of the Historic Sites Act sub-mitted to it for consideration by the Secretary of the Interior. From time to time, it also may recommend policies to the Secretary pertaining to national parks and to the restoration, reconstruction, conservation, and general adminis-tration of historic and archeologic sites, buildings, and properties. 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 produc-tion of petroleum and natural gas; and other inquires 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; he has charge of issuance of licenses covering the manufacture, distribution, storage, use, or possession of all explosives and their ingredients. Under the provisions of section 7 (a) of the Strategic Materials Act, approved June 7, 1939 (53 Stat. 812), he is directed to investigate the extent and mode of occurrence, the development, mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of ores and other mineral sub-stances 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 provisions 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 58 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 protection of the Federal range and the control of 22,000 permits involving range use by 12,000,000 livestock. Inaugurates cooperative agreements with INTERIOR Official Duties 605 State and Federal agencies, local associations, 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 furtherance 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 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 ¢ommerce 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 12 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) game management and conservation-law enforcement; (8) fishery in-dustries; (9) fish culture: (10) Alaska fisheries; (11) predator and rodent control; 83317°—T78-1—2d ed——40 606 Congressional Directory INTERIOR and (12) public relations, in the dissemination 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. 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 INTERIOR Offical Duties 607 office at Suite 1125 Merchandise Mart, 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 Congress 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 transferred 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 appro-priations made by Congress. The board is charged by law with the construction, repair, and maintenance of roads, tramways, ferries, bridges, and trails in the Territory of Alaska. Under the act of June 30, 1921, there was authorized to be received from the Territory of Alaska or other source, funds contributed for the construction, repair, and maintenance of roads, bridges, trails, and related works, said funds to be deposited in the United States Treasury and expended in accordance with the purpose for which they were contributed. OFFICE OF SOLID FUELS COORDINATOR FOR WAR The Office of Solid Fuels Coordinator for War was created to carry out the functions and duties delegated by the President’s letter of November 5, 1941, designating the Secretary of the Interior as the Coordinator. It ascertains war-time requirements of coal, coke, and other solid fuels, and the adequacy of the means of meeting them. It recommends to appropriate Government agencies measures necessary to the maintenance of an adequate supply at reasonable prices. Its other responsibilities include carrying on programs to promote economy and efficiency in the development, production, distribution, utilization, transportation, and handling of solid fuels, and to facilitate the operation of the solid fuels industries so as to meet wartime requirements. Also, it makes recom-mendations to the appropriate Government agency with respect to the material, equipment, and supplies required by industry in producing, transporting, and distributing solid fuels. Although it is a separate agency, the Solid Fuels Office makes extensive use of the facilities of the Bituminous Coal Division and the Bureau of Mines in carrying out its responsibilities. OFFICE OF THE COORDINATOR OF FISHERIES The Office of the Coordinator of Fisheries was created to carry out the functions and duties delegated by the President in Executive Order 9204, dated July 21, 1942. The President designated the Secretary of the Interior as Coordinator of Fisheries and directed that the Secretary of the Interior designate such part or parts of the Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of the Interior as he may determine, as the Office of the Coordinator of Fisheries to ‘Maintain close liaison with appropriate Federal, interstate, State, and local agencies, and with fishery and allied industries, and obtain currently from them information for the use of appropriate Federal agencies relative to the conservation, production processing, packing, transportation, marketing, and consumption of fish and other fishery products, and to the construction, procurement, conversion, sub-stitution, replacement, and repair of fishery industry facilities.”” and to “Make specific recommendations to appropriate Federal, interstate, State, and local agencies, and to fishery and allied industries, for the purpose of encouraging co-ordination of effort and maximum utilization of their services and facilities, all with a view toward insuring an adequate and sustained production and supply to meet the requirements for fish and other fishery products as determined by appropriate Federal war agencies.” Pursuant to the authority vested in him by Executive Order 9280, dated December 5, 1942, the Secretary of Agriculture issued Food Directive 2 on February 8, 1943, delegating to the Secretary of the Interior responsibility for the conduct of those portions of the war food program concerned with the pro-duction and processing of fishery commodities. These functions are carried out by the Office of the Coordinator of Fisheries. 608 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY The Department of Agriculture is charged by the law which created it 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. For that purpose it conducts a comprehensive research and educational program. It is also required to administer many other Federal laws which relate to marketing and distribution of agricultural products, the regulation of interstate commerce in food, fiber, and related products, the protec-tion and management of the national forests, farm credit, agricultural adjustment, conservation and land use, flood control, crop insurance, farm tenancy and rural rehabilitation, rural electrification, the purchase of ‘‘lend-lease’”’ food and surplus agricultural products, and other phases of agriculture. All programs administered by the Department are now concentrated on giving assistance to farmers and other groups in carrying on their parts in the Nation's war program. To focus the Department’s entire resources on the war program, the Secretary has constituted a Department War Board in Washington. Its members are the eight Administrators who report directly to the Secretary, and the heads of the Office for Agricultural War ins the Bureau of Agricul-tural Economics, and the Extension Service. The War Board meets regularly with the Secretary. Decisions taken by the Secretary in consultation with the War Board are carried out through coordinated action of the Department’s agencies in the field. This coordination is attained through State and county United States Department of Agriculture war boards composed of field officers concerned with the action programs. The Secretary of Agriculture exercises general supervision and control over the affairs of the Department, and formulates and establishes general policies. His general administrative staff consists of a small number of administrative assistants, the Under Secretary, the Assistant Secretary, and the offices of Agricultural War Relations, Land Use Coordination, Foreign Agricultural Relations, Budget and Finance, Personnel, Solicitor, Information, Plant and Operations, the Ex-tension Service, the Library, and the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. The Administrative Council aids the Secretary in over-all coordination and management. An assistant to the Secretary is Chairman, and the other members are the Directors of Finance, Personnel, and Information, the Land Use Coordi-nator, and the Chief of the Office of Plant and Operations. OFFICE OF LAND USE COORDINATION The Office of Land Use Coordination is a staff unit in the Office of the Secre-tary. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS The Bureau of Agricultural Economics is the central economic, social, statistical, and research agency of the Department. Through the cooperation of thousands of voluntary crop and market reporters,it gathers and analyzes data on the Nation’s crops and livestock. It issues estimates on acreage, yield, production, and sales of more than 100 crops; on numbers and probable marketings of livestock; milk and egg production and consumption; prices paid and received by farmers; wages and employment of farm labor; and data on movements, utilization, and stocks of various agricultural commodities. The Bureau is also the Department’s research agency in agricultural economics and rural sociology. It conducts research in farm management and practice, farm finance, insurance, and taxation, land use and values, farm population and rural welfare, marketing and transportation, and the adjustments in production required by probable future demand for farm products. Under the special con-ditions created by the war and in anticipation of difficult post-war problems, the Bureau has curtailed its work in some of these fields but has expanded it in others, Doaiy those of production to meet needed goals, farm price analysis, and farm abor. . On the basis of its accumulated data and continuing research, the Bureau out-lines and develops programs for broad departmental action. In this work, the Bureau cooperates with other agencies of the Department in unifying general programs for production—adjustment, conservation, rural rehabilitation, farm tenancy, marketing, and other authorized activities. AGRICULTURE Official Duties 609 OFFICE FOR AGRICULTURAL WAR RELATIONS Provides a staff for the Food Advisory Committee which was established pursuant to Executive Order 9280 of December 5, 1942, to advise and assist the Secretary of Agriculture in carrying out his responsibilities in connection with the Nation’s wartime food program. Receives recommendations made by the Combined Food Board to the Govern-ment of the United States and arranges for the presentation of such recommenda-tions to the Secretary of Agriculture and the Food Advisory Committee for con-Siooratien and action. Transmits to the Combined Food Board advice of action taken. Supervises the relationships among agencies of the Department and between the Department and the War Production Board with respect to the requirements of the Department for critical materials. Represents the Department (or arranges for such representation) on committees of the War Production Board which are concerned with critical material control plans. Facilitates the coordination of war work carried on by the various bureaus within the Department of Agriculture. Provides staff assistance to the Secretary and his immediate office in obtaining reports and analyses of problems and policies in-volved in the war work of the Department. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE The Office of Budget and Finance exercises general direction and supervision of budgetary and financial affairs of the Department, including acquisition and distribution of funds, accounting, fiscal management, purchasing, warehousing, and related activities; formulates and promulgates departmental budgetary and financial policies and, in cooperation with staff and program agencies, develops improvements in management and operation of departmental activities; acts as liaison office on budgetary, fiscal, and procurement matters with Budget Bureau, General Accounting Office, the Congressional Committees on Appropriations, the Treasury Department including the Procurement Division, and other agencies. OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS The Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations is responsible for the collection and analysis of information on all phases of foreign agricultural production, consump-tion, and trade and for the dissemination of this information. This includes studies of the food and agricultural raw materials requirements of Axis-occupied countries preparatory to supplying their needs as and when they are liberated. It also includes analyses of economic vulnerability of enemy countries from the standpoint of food and agricultural raw materials production and supplies. The Office coordinates the relations of the Department of Agriculture with 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. In that connection it acts in an advisory capacity to the Secretary of Agriculture on policy matters with respect to for-eign relations generally. It also represents the Department in discussions with representatives of allied or friendly foreign governments on methods of handling agricultural surpluses and directs the Department’s program for the development of strategic and complementary agricultural products in Latin America such as rubber, fibers, vegetable oils, insecticides, etc. The Office provides the United States staff of the Combined Food Board as well as general administrative services for that Board. This staff maintains close liaison with representatives of other United Nations in respect to problems concerning the production and transportation of foodstuffs including the alloca-tion of supplies available to the United Nations in the best interests of the war effort. 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 photographic and duplicating services for the various bureaus of the Department. The Office prepares special Department reports and serves as a departmental clearinghouse 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 610 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 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 eco-nomics. The Office also is responsible for (1) informing the Secretary on the total information operation of the Department in the field; and (2) for arranging in the field and in cooperation with the information officers of the Department’s agencies and the State agricultural extension services, for preparation and dis-tribution of information materials which will enable citizens to make most effective use of combinations of departmental services. The Office is responsible, too, for the preparation, display, and distribution of Department exhibits and motion pictures. : OFFICE OF PERSONNEL The Office of Personnel has primary responsibility for the personnel program of the Department as a whole. It maintains general direction and supervision of organization, position, classification, recruitment, placement, training, safety, health, discipline, and related matters. The Office represents the Department in its relations with the Civil Service Commission and, where personnel matters are concerned, with other agencies. It is responsible for integrating the personnel needs with the various technical programs of the Department. LIBRARY The Department library contains more than 500,000 volumes on agriculture and the related sciences, technology, and economies, and receives currently more than 11,000 periodical and serial publications. The dictionary card catalog of the library, containing more than a million cards, is a record of the book resources of the whole Department. It is supple-mented by several extensive special indexes. These together form the most comprehensive bibliography of agriculture and the related sciences available in the United States. A Bibliography of Agriculture in mimeographed form is issued monthly by the library. This publication is in six sections and covers agricultural economics and rural sociology, agricultural engineering, entomology, plant science, forestry, and food processing and distribution. Miscellaneous bibliographies on special subjects are issued from time to time. 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. AGRICULTURE Official Duties 611 It examines the titles to lands authorized for purchase by the Department or onwhich 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 to finance, budget, pertaining 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 theOffice 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. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS The Office of Plant and Operations is responsible for the conservation andutilization of equipment and relationships with the Bureau of the Budget andthe Procurement Division of the Treasury Department on matters pertaining thereto; departmental representation on the technical operational services oftopographic and planimetric mapping operations and liaison with the Bureauof the Budget on map production methods, costs and operations, and with theWar and Navy Departments on the classification of aerial photography; the development of standard specifications where engineering principles are involved and the deciding of all engineering questions of controversial character in con-nection with awards of contracts; housing of departmental activities; communi-cations services; administrativé service functions for the Office of the Secretary; central storeroom and supply service, and motor transport service. AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION The Administrator of Agricultural Research is responsible for the direction andintegration of activities conducted by the Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry, the Bureau of Animal Industry, the Bureau of Dairy Industry, theBureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, the Bureau of Human Nufritionand Home Economics, the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering, the Office of Experiment Stations, and the Beltsville ResearchCenter. The Administration was created by order of the Secretary of Agriculture on February 25, 1942, pursuant to Executive Order No. 9069, to promote economyand efficiency and to concentrate the Department’s scientific work on problemsthat are most vital to the production and utilization of agricultural commodities. Functions of agencies of the Agricultural Research Administration: BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL CHEMISTRY The Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry is a research organiza-tion engaged in investigations and experiments in the fields of chemistry, physics, 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 andbyproducts. Its scientists conduct biological, chemical, physical, microscopical, and technological investigations of foods, feeds, drugs, and substances used in themanufacture thereof, including studies of their physiological effects on the humanorganism. They perform experiments on the utilization of agricultural raw mate-rials for industrial purposes and on the development of improved processes in theproduction 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 majorfarm producing areas of the country for the purpose of developing new and widerindustrial uses thereof. The Northern Regional Research Laboratory, located inPeoria, Ill, is engaged on studies of corn, wheat, and agricultural wastes; theSouthern 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- L] | 612 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 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. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY The Bureau of Animal Industry is primarily concerned with the protection and development of the livestock industry of the United States. It conduets scientific investigations of the causes, prevention, and treatment of diseases of domestic animals; investigates the existence of communicable diseases of such animals, and aids in their control or eradication; and carries on investigations and experiments in the feeding and breeding of animals, including poultry, and the improvement of their products. It also is charged with the administration of the Diseased Animal Transportation Act, and the Virus-Serum-Toxin Act. 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 research to develop sanitary and economical methods of producing and handling milk. 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 the severity of attacks of 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. In-vestigations 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 AGRICULTURE Officral Dutres 613 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. In compliance with plant-quarantine regulations it inspects at ports of entry plants and plant products that may be brought to the United States. 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. BUREAU OF HUMAN NUTRITION AND HOME ECONOMICS The Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics conducts researches to find more effective methods of using food, fiber, and other goods and services essential to everyday living. During wartime the Bureau’s work is geared to national production and conservation programs, and deals mainly with research data required by Government agencies and with scientific information to aid civilians in wartime living adjustments. Research of the Bureau falls into several broad fields: (1) Foods and nutrition— Facts needed by planning agencies, 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 basic information on family buying habits and needs for consumer goods, and the data are used in national planning, also in developing diet plans and other aids to effective use of family income. (3) Textiles and clothing—Information is developed to make possible more effec-tive use of textile fibers for clothing and household purposes, and to help families conserve strategic materials in wartime. (4) Housing and household equipment— These studies form the basis for publications to aid consumers in intelligent buy-ing, operating, and conserving of household equipment. Research results are made available through technical and popular publications and visual educational material. The Bureau works closely with the field organizations of the Department, the Office of Education, and the war agencies in their programs of educating homemakers toward better nutrition and ways of spending and otherwise using their resources more effectively for their well-being and for the Nation’s good. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY The activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineer-ing include investigation of soils, fertilizers, plants, principally those of economic importance, and engineering problems concerned with handling soils and plants. Soils investigations center around the relationship between the soil and crops that 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 of 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. 614 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Research on agricultural engineering includes problems concerned with the handling of soils for growing crops, problems dealing with sowing, cultivating, harvesting, storing, and otherwise handling plants and plant products, together with other engineering problems of direct concern to agriculture. 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, Soils and Agricultural Engi-neering. 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. 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 among the experiment stations, and between the stations and the Department through advisory relationships and supervisory activities which include the exam-ination and approval of formal memoranda of understanding covering coopera-tive research. It collects and disseminates 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 experiment stations and other agencies. BELTSVILLE RESEARCH CENTER The administrative organization of the Beltsville Research Center provides for the general supervision of the entire plant and the development and operation of the common facilities required by the organizations of the Department engaged in fundamental agricultural research. The reservation comprises an area of approximately 11,400 acres on which scientific, research, and experimental activi-ties are conducted by 9 bureaus of the Department and by several other govern-mental agencies. FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION The Farm Credit Administration provides a coordinated credit system which makes available to farmers and stockmen and their cooperative organizations both long-term and short-term credit. It was created by an Executive order effective May 27, 1933, which provided for the consolidation within this one organ-ization 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 530 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 Duties 615 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 Kansas City office supervises and coordinates the work of the entire system. A Central Bank for Cooperatives, located in Kansas City, Mo., and an office 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 Administra- tion located in Washington, D. C., conducts research studies and service activities relating to problems of farmers’ cooperatives. Some additional functions are performed by the Farm Credit Administration. Early in 1943 the Regional Agricultural Credit Corporation of Washington, D. C. (at Kansas City, Mo.), which operates under the supervision of the Farm Credit Administration, was authorized to finance the making of RACC loans through USDA County War Boards to supplement other sources of farm credit in order to assure maximum wartime production. Other activities include the making of emergency crop and feed loans from funds appropriated by Con-gress, the liquidation of the joint stock land banks, and the making of Land Bank Commissioner loans from funds made available by the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. FOREST SERVICE Congress 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. The job of the Forest Service also has to do with forest land in private ownership, for Congress has 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 178,340,157 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. Watersheds are protected for water 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. The program is expected to be completed by the end of 1943. Emergency Rubber Project.—The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized by the act of March 5, 1942 (Public, No. 473, 77th Cong.), to provide for the planting of guayule and other rubber-bearing plants and to make available a source of 616 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE crude rubber for emergency and defense uses. The Secretary by Memorandum No. 991 designated the Forest Service as the departmental agency responsible for the administration of the program. In cooperation with the Agricultural Research Administration, an extensive guayule production program has been undertaken in California and the Southwest, supplemented by cultural and rubber extraction investigations. The possibilities of developing emergency -supplies of natural rubber from kok-saghyz (Russian dandelion) and high rubber-bearing strains of goldenrod are being explored by large scale experimental plant-ings and rubber extraction studies. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION The Rural Electrification Administration conducts a program, established by the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, of providing electric service for farms, other residents, and enterprises in rural areas who are without such service. As the principal means of accomplishing this, Rural Electrification Administration makes loans on a self-liquidating basis to local groups, ipublic bodies, and utilities organized under State laws, with preference accorded to farmers’ cooperatives and other nonprofit organizations, to finance the construction and operation of rural power systems. These loans are made on a 25-year amortization basis for financing generating plants, and transmission and distribution lines. Supple-mentary loans also are made to system borrowers for relending to consumers to finance the wiring of premises and acquisition of certain electrical equipment. In the execution of this program, Rural Electrification Administration renders assistance through audits and technical advice to borrowers in the design, con-struction, and operation of their systems in order to achieve maximum efficiency in providing adequate electric service to their communities, and protect Govern-ment funds. Borrowers are assisted in helping farm consumers to achieve maxi-mum utilization of electricity in the production and processing of foods and in the alleviation of growing labor shortages in rural areas. In addition to serving farms, Rural Electrification Administration renders assistance to its borrowers in making provision for electric service to other types of rural consumers and enterprises including military camps and bases, airfields, air beacons, mines, oil pumps and pipe lines, food processing plants, dairies, machine shops, and community institutions. Though the Administration does not maintain field offices, it has a field staff of engineers, auditors, and other specialists to assist borrowers in construction, engineering, and operation of their systems. The Rural Electrification Administration was created by Executive Order No. 7037 on May 11, 1935, as an independent agency under the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of that year. The Rural Electrification Act of 1936, approved May 20, 1936, established the present agency and made provision for a 10-year program for rural electrification loans. Under Reorganization Plan No. II the Administration became a part of the Department of Agriculture. ADMINISTRATION OF FOOD PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION The Food Production and Distribution Administration was established by the President within the Department of Agriculture to administer the various phases of production and distribution of food and other farm products essential to the war effort. : FOOD DISTRIBUTION ADMINISTRATION The Food Distribution Administration was established as an agency of the Department of Agriculture by the President under the provisions of Executive Order No. 9280, dated December 5, 1942, which made effective the consolidation of the Agricultural Marketing Administration, the meat inspection activities of the Bureau of Animal Industry, certain functions of the Office for Agricultural War Relations, the War Production Board, and the Sugar Agency of the Agri-cultural Adjustment Administration. As one of the steps taken to carry out the wartime reorganization of the De-partment, the consolidation brings together under a single agency all major agricultural distribution services and programs. In substance, these functions and responsibilities of the agencies consolidated into the Food Distribution Administration are briefly as follows: To purchase, store, and make available for shipment agricultural commodities acquired for export under authority of the Lend-Lease Act. The purchases provide basic support for the markets of United States farmers, thereby encourag-ing them to expand production of food needed in connection with the war program. AGRICULTURE Official Duties : 617 | To develop, issue, and administer food orders; allocating foods; fixing quotas; and, in general, controlling the food supplies of the Nation. Estimate civilian food needs and to insure the adequacy of civilian food sup-plies, both as to amounts and nutritional requirements. To recommend programs for the conservation of food and obtain public participation in plans preventing the waste of food. To promote substitution of less scarce foods for those un-available. To determine requirements of foodstuff and to make allocations as between different claimant agencies. To determine needs for facilities for the processing of foodstuffs and to develop programs for the simplification and standardization of processing and packaging designed to conserve materials, manpower, and food. To develop market expansion programs, authorized by section 32, Public, No. 320, and by related legislation, which are designed to encourage increased domestic distribution and consumption of agricultural commodities, to develop wider domestic outlets and new uses for farm products, and to assist exports. To develop marketing agreement programs, authorized by the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, for the purpose of establishing orderly market-ing conditions for agricultural commodities, and to improve returns to producers by regulating the flow of products to market. The programs operate through marketing agreements and orders issued by the Secretary of Agriculture after certain conditions of approval have been met by producers and handlers. To collect and disseminate market information 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 in-formation is gathered and released at terminal markets and transmitted over a leased-wire system to other markets widely scattered over the country. During the heavy shipping season for a number of commodites, temporary field stations are maintained in major producing areas. To develop official standards which will 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 commerce. For most of the other commodities, the use of the official standards is permissive. : To make available an inspection service in principal producing and receiving centers of the country for grains, fruits, and vegetables, meats and meat products, cotton, tobacco, hay, beans, butter, cheese, eggs, and poultry. Mandatory and free inspection of tobacco is provided at more than 80 designated auction markets. Free cotton classification is provided, on request, to groups of producers organ-ized for the improvement of their cotton. As a basis for these services, to conduct research on standardization and inspec-tion, packing, packaging, labeling, transporting, storing, and market reporting. Laboratory studies include milling and baking tests with grains, spinning and gin-ning tests with various types and grades of cotton, wool shrinkage tests, ete. Demonstrations and school 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. To promote consumer understanding of and participation in regulatory proce-dures under marketing programs, and to make available to consumers information which will enable them to make wise selection of farm products. To collect and assemble official data and prepare determinations for the various war agencies concerned with sugar; to furnish technical assistance to these agencies. In order to encourage domestic sugar production, to provide for payments to producers of sugar beets and sugarcane. To administer the following 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 Agricultural Commodities Act, Export Apple and Pear Act, Tobacco Inspection Act, Insecticide Act, Naval Stores Act, Tobacco Seed and Plant Exportation Act, the Commodity Exchange Act, and the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act, and the Sugar Act of 1937. FOOD PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATION The Food Production Administration was established within the Department of Agriculture on December 5, 1942, by Executive Order 9280. Included in the Administration are: Agricultural Adjustment Agency, Farm Security Ad- 618 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE ministration, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, and Soil Conservation Service, as well as certain functions transferred from the War Production Board, the Office for Agricultural War Relations, and the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. In addition, on January 22, 1943, the Secretary transferred to the Food Produc-tion Administration the Office of Land Use Coordination, except its administra-tive management functions. The Food Production Administration is respon-sible for all departmental programs relating primarily to food production. In addition, functions of the former office of Special War Board Assistant to the Secretary were transferred to the Director of Food Production on January 20, 1943, by the Secretary. To aid the Director in meeting new responsibilities re-sulting from Executive Order 9280 and to provide an over-all coordinating and planning service for the constituent agencies of the Food Production Administra-tion, five branches were established: Production Programs Branch, Production Supplies Programs Branch, Conservation Programs Branch, Production Loans Branch, and Farm Service and Supply Branch. Functions of these new branches follow. PRODUCTION PROGRAMS BRANCH The Production Programs Branch develops in cooperation with other groups the desired level of agricultural production and determines national regional, and State production goals. It works with other Department officials and the Office of Price Administration in establishing needed price relationships. Continuous review of production progress and problems is maintained, and needed adjust-ments recommended from time to time to be carried out by the appropriate action agencies. ™ PRODUCTION SUPPLIES PROGRAMS BRANCH This branch has the responsibility of determining and taking the necessary steps for obtaining needed farm equipment, supplies, and facilities. The branch also develops programs for and administers allocation, preservation, or limitation orders of the Food Production Administration, except those involving rationing to individual farmers. : CONSERVATION PROGRAMS BRANCH " The Conservation Programs Branch coordinates the conservation programs of the several agencies of the Food Production Administration engaged in this work, including the Agricultural Adjustment Agency, the Farm Security Administration, and the Soil Conservation Service. Policies, plans, and programs relating to soil, water, naval stores, farm woodlands, conservation, land use and development, and farm practices consistent with current and future production needs and land capabilities are developed by the branch. PRODUCTION LOANS BRANCH It is the responsibility of the Production Loans Branch to develop and adminis-ter loan programs necessary to secure maximum agricultural production, to direct and supervise all activities of the Food Production Administration which relate primarily to loans to finance food production, except activities of the Farm Se-curity Administration in financing food production from funds appropriated for its use. FARM SERVICE AND SUPPLY BRANCH The Farm Service and Supply Branch administers rationing programs for farm equipment, machinery, and supplies through the county farm rationing committees and the county farm transportation committees or other appropriate agencies. It also directs the distribution of farm equipment and supplies from manufacturers in accordance with established State and county quotas. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT AGENCY The national AAA program seeks to help farmers: Grow the kinds of food and fiber needed, in the amounts needed; carry out practices that protect the soil and increase productivity; and maintain an Ever-Normal Granary of emergency re-serves of basic farm products for use as needed. Farmer committees, elected from among their own number by cooperating producers, administer all phases of the AAA program locally. These committees are assisting State and county United States Department of Agriculture war boards in helping farmers meet the farm production goals. AGRICULTURE Official Duties 619 To accomplish its purposes, the AAA program provides for the following methods: (1) National acreage goals and allotments for major crops that encour-age plantings in line with domestic, foreign, and reserve requirements; (2) pay-ments to producers who carry out specific soil-building practices on their individual farms, or who plant in accordance with their land resources and war requirements for food and fiber; (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 near parity levels; (4) crop loans (made available through the Commodity Credit Corporation) to enable producers to carry over supplies until needed; (5) marketing quotas on cotton, corn, wheat, rice, peanuts, and tobacco, to stabilize marketing in years of excess crop production, when approved by two-thirds of the producers voting in a referendum. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE The Soil Conservation Service conducts a specialized wartime program of | assistance to farmers and ranchers in the adoption of certain simplified conserva-tion and land-use practices which increase production per acre; assists farmers to develop and apply plans for erosion control, water conservation, and land use in order to maintain and increase agricultural production; provides technical and other assistance to soil conservation districts organized under State laws; conducts demonstration projects showing the value of modern soil-saving methods and carries on certain farm forestry activities; directs the purchase, development, and management of submarginal lands; supervises the work of Civilian Public Service camps assigned to soil conservation and land-improvement activities; and develops improved methods for the use and management of agricultural land and water resources through research. 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. Each year also loss experience is incorporated into the premium rates. The Cor-poration guarantees only yield, not price. Both premiums and indemnities are computed in units of the commodity insured. The applicant for insurance signs a commodity note for the premium, which matures about harvesttime. Pay-ments 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 liabilities 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 Denver, Colo., and Chicago, Ill. 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 earried on through the State and county agricultural conservation committees. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION The Farm Security Administration was established in 1937. Its major re-sponsibility is to carry out the programs of the United States Department of Agri-culture designed to help low-income farm families become self-supporting, and, more recently, to aid them in making their maximum contribution to the war effort. The agency administers the rural rehabilitation program, through which small farmers are provided with operating assistance, including loans and technical guidance to enable them to bring their farms into full production of vitally needed 620 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE war crops. It also administers the tenant purchase program authorized by the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, through which loans are made to enable farm tenants, sharecroppers, laborers, and others to become owners of family-type farms. The Farm Security Administration is also responsible for administering rural resettlement projects established by the former Resettlement Administra-tion and other agencies. In addition, the Farm Security Administration has been assigned the responsibility for providing labor supply centers and transportation facilities for migratory farm workers. Under a directive of the War Manpower Commission, and the terms of an agreement between the United States and Mexico concerning the use of Mexican farm laborers in the United States, pro-vision is made for the transportation and shelter of both domestic and foreign agricultural workers where acute shortages of labor for the production of war vital crops exist. : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION Commodity Credit Corporation is essentially a financing institution making loans to farmers on commodities stored on farms and in warehouses, supporting prices to facilitate increased production of agricultural commodities for war needs, and purchasing foreign agricultural commodities strategically needed in the United States. Loans to farmers are designed to protect farm income, to stabilize farm prices, and to assure adequate supplies of farm products. Under its charter, the Corporation is empowered to buy and sell, lend upon, or otherwise deal in commodities. 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 have been secured by commodities pledged as collateral under either warehouse receipts or chattel mortgages. Large quantities of Government-owned commodities have been sold since the outbreak of World War II, for use in expanding food production or otherwise meeting united war needs. Under the provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, as amended, loans are mandatory, under certain conditions, on six commodities: Cotton, corn, rice, tobacco, wheat, and peanuts. The rate of thé loan for 1942 crops of cotton, rice, tobacco, and peanuts is 90 percent of parity; and of wheat and corn, 85 percent of parity. Loans are prohibited on any of these six 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 Execu-tive 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. EXTENSION SERVICE The Extension Service carries on the general educational work in agriculture and home economics essential to the success of the wartime job of the Depart-ment of Agriculture and 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, carried on through voluntary local leaders, although other educational methods are also utilized to teach the best farm and home practices to farm and rural men, women, boys, and girls. COMMERCE Offictal Duties 621 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 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: War Production Board, Economic Stabilization Board, board of directors of the Textile Foundation, Council of National Defense, Board of Economic Warfare, 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, Com-modity Exchange Commission, and the Committee on Cooperation with American Republics. The Secretary of Commerce is authorized to call upon other de-partments for statistical data obtained by them. It is his further duty to make such special investigations and furnish such information to the President or Congress as may be required by them on the foregoing subject matters, and to make annual reports to Congress upon the work of said Department. 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 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, assists in the supervision of the administration and the coordination of the functions and activities of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Export-Import Bank of Washington, Rubber Reserve Co., Metals Reserve Co., Defense Plant Corporation, Defense Supplies Corporation, War Damage Corporation, the United States Commercial Co., and any other corporations which may hereafter be created or organized by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Acts for the Secretary of Commerce and performs the duties and exercises the powers and functions now vested in the Secretary of Commerce, with respect to those agencies, in accordance with the precedents, rules and regulations established, or directions that may be given by the Secretary of Commerce. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secretary he serves as head of the Department. SPECIAL AVIATION ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE Under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, the Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be preseribed 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. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed.——41 622 Congressional Directory COMMERCE 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 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. 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, classification of positions, assignment, service 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 recommenda-tions 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 recommenda-tions to the departmental budget officer with respect to estimates and expendi-tures for personal services; establishes and administers an equitable system of promotions and transfers; administers the regulations regarding removals, retire-ment, and leaves of absence; conducts correspondence and prepares recommen-dations connected with applications for positions, and performs such other func-tions as may be prescribed by the Secretary. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS The Chief of the Division of Accounts is charged with the duty of recording all fiscal transactions pertaining to appropriations and allotments made to the Office of the Secretary; the keeping of a treasury cash appropriation ledger for the Department; the maintenance of liaison with the General Accounting Office and the Treasury Department in regard to matters relating to accounts and accounting problems; the preparation of official bonds and custody of records pertaining thereto; and aiding the several bureaus and offices of the Department with accounting problems. 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. COMMERCE Official Duties 623 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 several divisions in the Office of the Secretary, and examines and reports on the property returns of all other bureaus and services. Maintains the Department’s traffic office and, also, the typewriter shop for the repair of the Department’s machines. 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 are basic to the work of public agencies, business, and research groups, as well as others, and are 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. In addition, the technical staff of the Bureau acts in an advisory capacity for many war agencies that have their statistical inquiries edited, coded, and tabulated by the Bureau of the Census. The decennial census includes most of the subjects mentioned above. Many of these inquiries are also conducted at more frequent intervals. Population and housing.—The first decennial census of population was taken in 1790 and repeated every 10 years thereafter. The sixteenth decennial population census (1940) determined 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 provided data on such subjects as education, migration, employment status, occupations, and wage and salary income. 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 mortgage data, and the type of structure, exterior material, and year built. Special censuses are made at the request of local communities and population estimates are prepared from time to time within the Bureau. Monthly surveys of the labor force and current surveys of housing occupancy and vacancy in selected areas are made by the Bureau of the Census, as well as other studies requested by war agencies. : The Bureau’s files of original population census records provide legally accepta-ble 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. Agriculture—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. Manufactures—The census of manufactures has been taken biennially since 1919 and at less frequent intervals before that. Data gathered included informa-tion concerning location of the plant, form of organization, persons employed, salaries and wages, cost of materials and fuel, inventories, and quantity and value of products made. The 1941 inquiry has not been taken because of the need for specialized instead of general manufactures statistics during the war period. Instead, the Bureau has conducted numerous surveys on production, flow of materials, and utilization of facilities designed especially to serve the needs |of the war agencies. Many of these surveys have now been placed on a monthly or quarterly basis. A census of mineral industries is taken as a part of the decennial census. Business.—The census of business has been a regular part of the decennial census since 1929. Censuses of business were taken also for 1933 and 1935. Retail, wholesale, service, hotel, and construction establishments are covered in 624 Congressional Directory COMMERCE this census. Characteristics enumerated for each establishment include location, legal form of organization, whether chain or independent, volume of business, employment, pay roll, and analysis of sales.” A special report on sales-finance companies was issued in 1940. Statistics on current trends in retail and whole-sale trades are issued monthly. Special canvasses are made in the trades and services field for war agencies. Vital statistics.—Through cooperative arrangements with all of the States, the Bureau collects, compiles, and publishes annually the only official Nation-wide data on natality and mortality, including detailed statistics on place and cause of death, age at death, number and geographic distribution of births, etc. 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. Periodically, basic information on the number of marriages and divorces in the United States has been collected and published. State and local government.—Official data for State and local governments are compiled and published. Every 10 years a census of governments is taken that covers all governmental units; such a census is now being conducted, covering the year 1942. Annual financial publications include summaries for States, for coun-ties, and for cities having populations over 100,000; with individual reports for each State and each of the 92 largest cities; and with summaries of State and city revenues, expenditures, debt, public-service enterprises, etc. State and local government employees and pay-roll data are collected and published quarterly. Elections proposals in States and cities are reported annually. A Municipal Reference Service for information on State, county, and city governments is maintained for the use of Federal, State, and local officials and research agencies. Foreign trade statistics.—Statistical information on the net quantity, value, and shipping weights of United States imports and exports by commodities, countries of origin and destination, and customs districts, is compiled by the Bureau on the basis of information contained in the export and import documents received from the collectors of customs and from war agencies. The Bureau also pre-pares the official record of exports under the lend-lease program and of exports under the licensing program of the Board of Economic Warfare. Publication of detailed statistics of foreign trade has been suspended during the war period. Statistical abstract.—The Statistical Abstract of the United States, published annually by the Bureau, is the official compendium of the Federal Government. Assembled in one compact volume is information selected from publications and special reports of all Government agencies on most of the important phases of the social, economic, and industrial life of the Nation. ) 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 serv-ice, the Bureau was completely reorganized during the early part of 1941. The present alinement 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 was placed on assisting the Nation's leaders, in both industry and Government, in formulating immediate as well as long-range plans. Currently, the Bureau operates to a very large extent in the foreign field as a major fact-finding organization for the Board of Economic Warfare. It provides a steady flow of domestic and foreign information to the various war action agencies, makes special studies and reports to them. Thus the statutory duty of the Bureau to gather, analyze, and report on all phases of foreign and domestic commerce has been converted to war work for the duration, both for Government and to aid business in converting its efforts to production of war materials or to do the job of sustaining the civilian economy under war conditions. 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 com-merce of the Nation, including the whole complex flow of funds between buyers COMMERCE Official Duties 625 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 prepares detailed and comprehensive analyses and interpretations of business conditions and trends in manufacturing, mining, construction, public utilities, distribution, and service industries; inaugu-rates and develops methods, procedures and programs for collection of current statistical data on specific industries, trades, and commodities; makes continuing studies and surveys of sources of supply, production, stocks (foreign and domestic), and usage of commodities and materials for manufacture; surveys and analyzes productive capacity of industry, prices, industrial and commercial business structure and policies; determines and reports on the position of the United States with respect to strategie, critical, and essential materials imported from foreign countries and the essential requirements of foreign countries for materials and manufactured products from the United States, particularly for policy purposes of Government war agencies. The Division also prepares special studies of indus-trial and agricultural developments, transportation, and communication facilities in foreign countries, for war agencies, and makes special commodity and industry surveys at the request of and in collaboration with the War Production Board. The Division acts as Government economic adviser to business and industrial adviser to Government. Division of International Economy.—This Division provides the Government, exporters, and importers with information and guidance on foreign econoniic and commercial affairs and on foreign national policies affecting commerce. It fune-tions on a regional basis according to the primary regions of politico-economic in-fluence 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 contacts with the Nation’s principal economic areas through a field force operating from stra-tegically located offices. The field force is staffed with practical business special-ists, backed at Washington by research units concentrating on regional economies, the problems of small business, marketing laws, and trade barriers. The Division assists local business units, through its field offices, with facts and expert counsel, and provides other branches of the Bureau, as well as other Government depart-ments, particularly those agencies concerned with the war emergency, with a continuous flow of regional data and observations helpful in the conduct of the war program. Diviston of Commercial and Economic Information.— Division This determines the format of published material; edits, publishes, and distributes, to Government and business, enlightening and timely information developed by the various divi-sions 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 (except such as might give aid to the enemy), helpful to business generally, and particularly to small businesses that do not have the research resources often available to larger organizations. 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 individual foreign firms. It makes studies of foreign transportation and communications and furnishes infor-mation to shippers regarding freight rates and facilities to enable them to route shipments 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. 626 Congressional Directory COMMERCE 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. At present over 90 percent of the Bureau’s personnel and facilities are devoted to confidential or secret problems in connection with the war effort. This work is being carried on for the Army, Navy, National Defense Research Committee, National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, War Production Board, Office of Price Administration, Office of Civilian Defense, and many other agencies. Special attention is being devoted to airplane lighting, radio communication in relation to ionosphere conditions, precision length gages for the dimensional control of machine parts made on a mass-production basis, airplane fuels and lubricants, rapid spectroscopic analysis of metals and alloys, electroplating and substitutes therefor such as vitreous enamels, control of active acidity through the development and standardization of pH indicators, strength of airplane and other structures in which very thin sheets are spread over very large areas, the development of standard methods of test for synthetic rubbers, organic plastics, properties of metals and alloys at high and low temperatures and under conditions of stress and corrosion, the development of improved varieties of optical glass and the control of the properties of glass through heat treatment, and numerous problems connected with the building industry. 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) observations COMMERCE Official Duties 627 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 aero-nautical 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) seismolog-ical observations and investigations, to supply data required in designing struc-tures to reduce the earthquake hazard. These duties require hydrographic, topographie, 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 meas-urements throughout the country. The results of these surveys and studies are analyzed in the Washington office and published as nautical and aeronautical charts; annual tables of tide and current predictions; charts showing magnetic declination; annual lists of United States earthquakes; publications of geographic positions and elevations; Coast Pilots; and as annual and special publications covering all of its other activities, including comprehensive manuals prescribing the methods which obtain for its various classes of surveying. 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 Public, No. 185, Sixty-eighth Congress, approved June 3, 1924, as amended by Public, 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; the taking of such meteorological observa-tions as may be necessary to determine and record the climatic conditions of the United States and its possessions; and the maintenance and operation of the basic synoptic network of weather-observation stations in the United States and its possessions and the primary issue of weather forecasts of all types for civil and military uses. : 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 628 Congressional Directory COMMERCE composed of the five-member Authority, the Administrator, and the three-member Air Safety Board. : 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 avrways.— 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 naviga-tional 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 COMMERCE Official Duties 629 emphasis on radio air navigation facilities; and lends technical assistance in the development of airports. Vital contributions to our war effort are being made by the Federal Airways System. This system which has been extended throughout Alaska is being further expanded and improved to provide the dependable com-munications service and air navigation facilities required both for civilian service and for the successful conduct of military operations. CAA War Training Service.—This service is now chiefly engaged in providing elementary flight instruction for Army and Navy aviation cadets in conjunction with the college programs of the armed services, and is training a group of Air Corps Enlisted Reservists on inactive status for employment as noncombat service pilots. It is also conducting several flight schools for the training of instructors for the Navy. This program, formerly known as the Civilian Pilot Training, since its inception has trained a total of more than 100,000 pilots, most of whom are now in the armed services or in civilian activities in connection with the war effort. Development of landing areas.—In the interest of national defense and of civil aeronautics the Administrator is charged with the duty of construeting, improving, and repairing public airports and other public landing areas in the United States and its Territories and possessions, as determined by him, with the approval of a board composed of the Secretary of War, Secretary of the Navy, and Secretary of Commerce, to be necessary for national defense. Through joint Federal and local participation this program provides airports which are essential to meet military requirements in the prosecution of the war, and which upon termination of hostilities will become available for use by civil aviation. 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 carrier; “(¢) 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 commerce of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national defense; and ‘“(e) The regulation of air commerce in such manner as to best promote its development and safety.” ACTIVITIES Economic regulation.—The Board, among other things, issues certificates of 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 car- 630 Congressional Directory COMMERCE riage 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 regula-tions, and has the power to suspend and revoke safety certificates after hearing. Accident prevention.—The Board makes rules on notification and report 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 acci-dents and prevent their recurrence. 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 war effort. The Council’s primary functions are: (1) Encouraging the public to submit inventions or inventive ideas of value for the war effort; (2) prompt evaluation of these inventions by a staff of engineers and by a system of technical com-mittees 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. GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIES UNDER DIRECTION AND SUPERVISION OF THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE The functions and activities of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Defense Plant Corporation,” Defense Supplies Corporation, Metals Reserve Company, Rubber Reserve Company, War Damage Corporation, Rubber Development Corporation, the RFC Mortgage Company, Federal National Mortgage Association, Disaster Loan Corporation, and Export-Import Bank of Washington are administered under the direction and supervision of the Secretary of Commerce. RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was created by the ‘Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act,” approved January 22, 1932 (47 Stat. 5). This basic Jaw, however, has been amended from time to time, and the Corporation’s powers increased and the scope of its operations extended (or otherwise affected) by subsequent legislation. The Corporation has succession until January 22, 1947, unless sooner dissolved by act of Congress. It functions through a principal office at Washington and loan agencies established in cities throughout the United States. In addition, the Corporation has special representatives at San Juan, P. R., and Honolulu, T. H. At present, the main function of the Corporation is the financing-of various war activities, such as the procurement of materials, the construction and opera-tion of war plants, and the writing of war damage insurance. Such financing is provided both to private business and to the Corporation’s own subsidiaries— Defense Plant Corporation, Defense Supplies Corporation, Metals Reserve Co., Rubber Reserve Co., War Damage Corporation, and Rubber Development Cor-poration. The Corporation may also make loans to public agencies, financial institutions, insurance companies, railroads, drainage, levee, irrigation and similar districts, mining and fishing industries, public school districts or other public school authorities; subscribe for and make loans upon nonassessable stock of banks, trust companies, insurance companies, national mortgage associations, mortgage loan companies, and purchase capital notes or debentures of such institutions; make loans for the carrying and orderly marketing of agricultural commodities and livestock, and exportation of agricultural or other products; and purchase securities from Public Works Administration. 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 COMMERCE Official Duties 63 1 by the Corporation. The principal office of the Corporation is located in Washington, D. C Functions.—The purposes of the Corporation are: (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 connection therewith; (¢) To lease, sell, or otherwise dispose of such land, plants, facilities, and ma-chinery to others to engage in such manufacture; (d) To engage in such manufacture itself, if the President finds that it is neces-sary for a Government 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 (g) To take such other action as the President and the Secretary of Commerce may deem necessary to expedite the national defense program. DEFENSE SUPPLIES CORPORATION Defense Supplies Corporation was created by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on August 29, 1940, pursuant to section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, with an authorized capital of $5,000,000. The capital stock of Defense Supplies Corporation is owned by, and it is further financed through loans from, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. 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 Defense Supplies Corporation is located in Washington, D. C. The purposes of Defense Supplies Corporation include the production, acquisi-tion, storage, sale, and other dealings in strategic and critical materials and other materials and supplies, operations in which are necessary to the prosecution of the war; the manufacture or production of supplies, materials, and articles necessary to the war effort; and the production, purchase, lease, and sale of rail-road equipment and commercial aircraft. Defense Supplies Corporation is also charged with the program for Americanization of Latin American airlines, com-mercial and technical training of citizens of other American republics, and various other operations executed by it pursuant to recommendation of other Government agencies. The Corporation works in close collaboration with the War Production Board, the Departments of War and Navy, and the Board of Economic Warfare. 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 principal purpose of the Company is to produce, acquire, carry, sell, and otherwise deal in strategic and critical materials necessary in connection with the war program, particularly metals and minerals. Reserve stocks of various materials are being accumulated by the Company when the supplies available permit. In the acquisition and distribution of these materials to manufacturers the Company works in cooperation with such other agencies as the War Production Board and the Office of Price Administration. 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. 632 Congressional Directory ~ coMMERCE The Company is managed by a board of directors, appointed by the Reconstruc-tion Finance Corporation, and by officers and agents appointed by the Company. The principal office of the Company is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.—Pursuant to general policies prescribed by the Rubber Director, the Company is engaged in purchasing, warehousing, and distributing all crude rubber, guayule, cryptostegia, and balata imported into the United States; in purchasing, warehousing, and distributing the national supply of scrap rubber; in developing and supervising the operation of facilities for the production of synthetic rubber and in distributing synthetic rubber. THE RFC MORTGAGE COMPANY Section 5c of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, added by the act approved January 31, 1935 (49 Stat. 1), 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 * * *” 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 suffi-cient 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 avail-able 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 203, title IT of the National Housing Act, as amended, and title I, class 3 loans, provided such mortgages meet the eligibility requirements of the Company. FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION The Federal National Mortgage Association (formerly the National Mortgage Association of Washington) was organized and established on February 10, 1938, pursuant to the provisions of title III of the National Housing Act, as amended. The capital stock of the Association is owned by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The Association is staffed by the Reconstruction Finance Corpo-ration and functions through a principal office in Washington, D. C., and agents stationed in the various loan agencies of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. COMMERCE Official Duties 633 The Association purchases mortgages insured subsequent to January 1, 1937, under section 203 of the National Housing Act, as amended, on urban homes constructed after January 1, 1936. Such mortgages are purchased from mortgagees approved by the Federal Housing Administration which have a net worth satis-factory to the Association. The Association also makes loans secured by first mortgages insured under section 207 of the National Housing Act, as amended. DISASTER LOAN CORPORATION The Disaster Loan Corporation was created by act of Congress approved February 11, 1937. (15 U. S. C. 605k-1.) 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 functions 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-trophes occurring during the period between January 1, 1936, and January 22, 1947. 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 of the United States dated February 2, 1934. Present capital stock is $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. 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 act approved September 26, 1940 (54 Stat. 961), 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. WAR DAMAGE CORPORATION Organization.—The War Damage Corporation was created by the Reconstrue-tion Finance Corporation on December 13, 1941, pursuant to section 5d of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended. 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.—The purpose of the Corporation, in accordance with Public Law 506, Seventy-seventh Congress, approved March 27, 1942) is to provide, through insurance, reinsurance, or otherwise, reasonable protection against loss of or damage to property, real and personal, which may result from enemy attack (including any action taken by the military, naval, or air forces of the United States in resisting enemy attack). RUBBER DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION Organization.—Rubber Development Corporation is a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware and a wholly owned subsidiary of Reconstruction Finance Corporation. It has an authorized capital stock of $200,000. The Cor-poration is managed by a board of directors, elected by 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.—Pursuant to general policies prescribed by the Rubber Director, the Corporation is engaged in the development.of rubber sources in foreign countries and the procurement of rubber therefrom, said functions having been transferred to the Corporation by Rubber Reserve Company, effective as of February 23, 1943, on the recommendation of the Rubber Director. 1634 Congressional Directory © LABOR 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. ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY OF LABOR The assistants to the Secretary perform such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary. SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY AND 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. OFFICE OF INFORMATION The Office of Information supervises all editing, illustrating, printing, and dis-tribution of publications and reports. It acts as a liaison between the Depart-ment and the press, radio and picture services, and other Government agencies LABOR Official Duties 635 concerned with the collection and dissemination of information and facts in which the Department has an interest. It acts as a clearing house for information prepared for the press and for labor and management groups as a result of the research, service, and regulatory programs of the Department. It correlates information on the results of specialized work along different lines and presents material so that it will be of the most practical value to wage earners and the general public. 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. CHIEF CLERK AND BUDGET OFFICER The Chief Clerk and Budget Officer is responsible for budgetary, administrative planning, accounting and auditing functions, the control of expenditures from departmental appropriations for travel, contingent, and printing and binding expenses, the procurement, of supplies, equipment, and printing and binding, and over-all service functions such as the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail, supervision of the buildings occupied by the Department, and telephone service. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR The Solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department of Labor. Responsible to him are an immediate staff of assistants and various attorneys stationed in field offices of the Department throughout the United States and in Puerto Rico. The Solicitor acts as legal advisor to the Secretary of Labor and to the other administrative officers of the Department. The Solicitor and attorneys on his staff assist in the preparation of administrative rules and regulations and interpre-tations of statutes administered by the Department. They assist also in the preparation of and reports on proposed legislation. His staff prepares or reviews all contracts and bonds entered into by or with the Department. The Solicitor’s Office supervises the predetermination of prevailing rates of wages on Federal contracts pursuant to the Davis-Bacon law. The Solicitor is in charge of the litigation of the Department. He veproscht the Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division and the Chief of the Children’s Bureau in all court actions involving the Fair Labor Standards Act. In litigation involving departmental activities handled by the Department of Justice, the Solicitor’s Office assists in the preparation, trial, and briefing of the cases. His staff prosecutes complaints of violations of the Public Contracts Act, and rep-resents the Department officials in administrative hearings. The regional attorneys on the staff of the Solicitor act as legal advisers to the regional offices of the Department. Their principal activity relates to the ad-ministration and enforcement of the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Public Contracts Act. They also perform legal services for the Children’s Bureau, United States Conciliation Service, and the administration of the Davis-Bacon Act and other laws under the jurisdiction of the Department. 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 collects data and publishes reports on employment, pay rolls, earnings, and hours of labor in manufacturing, trade, public service, building construction, and other industries; union wages; industrial 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. Among the subjects receiving continuous attention are post-war problems connected with labor. Special studies are made from time to time on 636 Congressional Directory LABOR the wage situation, labor supply, and occupational outlook in particular industries as well as on productivity of labor, consumers’ cooperation, and a large number of other subjects affecting the welfare of workers. The information acquired by the Bureau in the discharge of its duties is dis-seminated by means of special bulletins on specific subjects and the Monthly Labor Review. 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. Under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 the Children’s Bureau was given responsibility for administering the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. 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 inter-ested organizations and persons the existing resources of the Department of Labor and pertinent material obtainable from public or private sources. 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 labor 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. WAGE AND HOUR AND PUBLIC CONTRACTS DIVISIONS The Wage and Hour Division and the Public Contracts Division were consoli-dated October 15, 1942. Under the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (act of June 25,1938, Public, No. 718, 75th Cong.) the Wage and Hour 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 employees engaged in interstate commerce or in producing goods for interstate commerce are compensated in conformity with the wage-and-hour standards. It is author-ized to enjoin employers who do not meet these standards from further violations of the act and it is also authorized to enjoin the shipment in interstate or foreign commerce of goods produced in violation of the act. Under the general direction and control of the Attorney General, criminal proceedings may be instituted against willful violators of the wage-and-hour standards and a fine of not more than $10,000 imposed upon conviction for a first offense, and a prison sentence of not more than 6 months may be imposed upon conviction for a second or subsequent offense. Employers subject to the statute must pay minimum wages of not less than 30 cents an hour until October 24, 1945, and 40 cents an hour thereafter. In the interim the Administrator is authorized to appoint industry committees on which employers, labor, and the public are to be equally represented. These committees have authority to recommend minimum wages for their respective industries higher than 30 cents an hour, but not in excess of 40 cents an hour. These recommendations have the effect of law if approved by the Administrator. LABOR Official Duties 637 Employers subject to the statute are prohibited from employing any of their employees for a workweek longer than 40 hours unless they pay them time and one-half their regular hourly rate of pay for all hours worked in excess of the statutory maximum workweek, or unless they are wholly or partially exempt under the law from the overtime provisions of the statute. Employers subject to the statute are prohibited from shipping in interstate commerce any goods produced in an establishment in or about which oppressive child labor was employed within 30 days prior to the removal of such goods from the establish-ment. The Public Contracts Division administers Public Act No. 846 (Walsh-Healey Act), Seventy-fourth Congress, approved June 30, 1936, which requires Govern-ment supply contracts in excess of $10,000 to contain certain maximum hour, minimum wage, child labor, convict labor, safety, and health stipulations, and charges the Secretary of Labor with the duty of promulgating these standards and supervising their enforcement. Child labor and conviet labor is prohibited. The basic hours of work are 8 in any one day, or 40 in any one week. Overtime, however, is permitted provided that time and one-half is paid on either the daily or weekly basis, whichever is greater. The minimum wages required are those which have been determined by, the Secretary of Labor for specific industries. The act carries several penalties, Section Three, for example, permitting the Secretary to ‘blacklist’ any firm in willful violation. 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 preseribe. The war work of the Bureau centers around the effective employment of women in war industries. To this end it makes occupational analyses and counsels employers concerning the occupations and conditions of work found advisable for the employment of women. It advises with other administrative agencies concerning wage adjustments, suitable living arrangements in new war com-munities, migration of women workers, and other matters essential to the develop-ment and maintenance of a steady labor force of women workers. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.—42 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. In normal times, its dual objective is to reclaim the slums of Wash-ington and to assure an adequate supply of dwellings for families of low income whose housing needs are not adequately met by private enterprise. Its wartime objective is to provide, when properly designated as a Federal agency to do so, dwellings for war workers whose services are needed in Washington and for their immediate families. Its activities, in wartime, extend to the metropolitan area of Washington. 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—Iland 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—the functions of which have since been trans-ferred to the Federal Public Housing Authority, National Housing Agency—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. 638 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 639 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; (¢) 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. Other historical data are now in preparation, covering operations of American divisions during the World War. It is planned to publish these data during 1943. 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. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION The purpose of the Civil Service Act (Jan. 16, 1883), as declared in its title, is “to regulate and improve the civil service of the United States.” It provides for the appointment of three commissioners, not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same political party, and makes it the duty of the Commis-sion to aid the President, as he may request, in preparing suitable rules for car-rying the act into effect. The act requires that, as nearly as the conditions of good administration will warrant, the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classified service, the making of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, and apportionment of appointments in the departments at Wash-ington among the States and Territories, and a period of probation before abso-lute appointment. It prohibits the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules, and forbids, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, the solicitation by any person in the service of the United States of contributions to be used for political purposes from persons in such service, or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government building. 640 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The Retirement Act of May 22, 1920, as amended, places under the Commis-sion the entire administration of that act. The Commission also administers the Canal Zone Retirement Act and the Alaska Railroad Retirement Act. The Commission was organized on March 9, 1883. The first classification of the service applied to the departments at Washington and to post offices and customhouses having as many as 50 employees, embracing 13,924 employees. During the calendar year ending December 31, 1942, 2,407,043 appointments were made. At the end of December 1942, there were 2,810,871 employees in the executive branch of the Federal Government. Of this number, 284,068 were employed in the District of Columbia. Examinations are held in the principal cities throughout the country through the agency of local boards of examiners, of which there are approximately 5,000. The members of these boards are detailed from other branches of the service. The Commission also holds examinations in the Canal Zone, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Under the rules, the Commission is required to render all practicable assistance to the Philippine Civil Service Bureau, and it may, if required, announce examinations for positions in the Philippine Islands. 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 of the various divisions, field offices, and local boards of examiners, and the Com-mission’s business and fiscal operations; serves as the principal consultant to the Commissioners and formulates and develops matters of policy, interpretation, and procedure. OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Responsible for general administrative direction over the Budget and Finance Division, the Division of Personnel Supervision and Management, and the Office Services Division, as well as the management planning functions of the Commission. x EXAMINING AND PERSONNEL UTILIZATION DIVISION Through examinations and recruiting programs, develops and maintains a supply of personnel qualified for Federal employment; furnishes lists of qualified eligibles to Federal agencies; promotes effective utilization of Federal personnel; approves and cooperates in carrying out joint recruiting agreements with Federal agencies; assists Federal agencies in improving work standards and skills of per-sonnel; administers the system for reinstatement, transfer, and promotion of Federal employees under War Service Regulations; reviews examination ratings for accuracy and compliance with established procedure upon request of com-petitors; passes on qualifications necessary for persons proposed for promotion, transfer, reinstatement, and status classification; interviews applicants for Fed-eral employment or transfer; provides an information center for answering public inquiries. . BUDGET AND FINANCE DIVISION Responsible for the preparation of estimates, statements, and auditing of expenditures; conduct of all budgetary matters, including analysis of work reports to appraise activities and work loads; has charge of accounts covering general business operations of the main office and field offices. BOARD OF APPEALS AND REVIEW Reviews the record and passes upon the merit of appeals from ratings in post-master examinations; appeals from debarment from examination on account of unsuitability, or other unfavorable action on suitability; appeals from action taken in retirement cases. PERSONNEL CLASSIFICATION DIVISION Investigates 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; investigates problems relative to the extension of the Classification Act to posi-tions in the field service and administers classification following extensions made thereto under the provisions of the Ramspeck Act of November 26, 1940 (54 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 641 Stat. 1211); organizes and supervises the operation and procedures of efficiency rating boards of review established in Federal agencies under authority of the Ramspeck Act. SERVICE RECORD DIVISION Maintains service records of employees in the executive civil service; acts on cases of reinstatement, transfer, and change of status for the postal field service; acts on cases involving the granting of classified status; acts on cases of violation of the civil-service law or rules by administrative officers or employees. INFORMATION DIVISION Disseminates information to press and public on activities of the Federal clas-sified service; prepares public-address material for use by Commission officials and others; prepares the Civil Service Act and Rules, the Commission’s annual report. 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. INVESTIGATIONS DIVISION Investigates frauds, political-activity cases, irregularities in examinations, Executive order cases; conducts personal interviews and investigations of char-acter, training, experience, and suitability of applicants for various classes of positions; supervises the taking of fingerprints. MEDICAL DIVISION Determines physical requirements for employment in the classified civil serv-ice; passes on physical fitness of applicants; plans physical examination procedures; recruits and examines personnel in medical and related fields; conducts research studies pertaining to disability retirement and sick leave, with particular reference to their bearing on the adequacy of (a) physical requirements for entering the Government service and (b) measures for promoting the health and safety of Government employees; advises the Commission on the medical aspects of dis-ability retirement cases; renders advisory service to other Government agencies on medical matters. OFFICE SERVICES DIVISION Purchase and procurement of printing, supplies, and equipment; operation of duplicating machines; and supervision of matters pertaining to quarters of the Commission in Washington, D. C.; receives and distributes incoming mail; dis-patches outgoing mail; classifies, indexes, and files correspondence and other mat-ters; maintains central files and messenger service. DIVISION OF PERSONNEL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT Has general direction and supervision of personnel matters in the Commission’s organization, such as appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, removals, position classifications, retirement, and efficiency ratings. Supervises programs for improving employee morale and hears grievances; consults with administrative heads with respect to organization problems. COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS By act approved May 17, 1910, Congress created as a permanent body the National Commission of Fine Arts. The Commission is ‘composed of seven well-qualified judges of the fine arts,” who are appointed by the President and serve for a period of 4 years each, and until their successors are appointed and qualified. Under the provisions of this organic act Congress directs that “It shall be the duty of the Commission to advise upon the location of statues, fountains, and 74 642 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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.” 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 nabion. 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties -643 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 Secretary of State. Under the rules promulgated by the Committee for Reciprocity Information, those wishing to present information or requests for consideration in connection with announcements as to proposed negotiations may file their material with the Committee, and may request permission to present supplementary information at the hearing which the Committee holds on each trade agreement. The Committee also receives information on any phase of the trade-agreements program, whether relating to the operation of an agreement already made or to one under consideration, and such views may be presented verbally or by letter. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES This court was established by act of Congress February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. L. 612). It has general jurisdiction (36 Stat. L. 1135) of all “claims founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress, except for pen- -sions, or upon any regulations of an executive department, or upon any contract, express or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in respect of which claims the party would be entitled to redress against the United States, either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, except claims growing out of the late Civil War and commonly known as war claims,” and certain rejected claims. It has jurisdiction also of claims of like character which may be referred to it by the head of any executive department involving controverted questions of fact or law. In all the above-mentioned cases the court, when it finds for the claimant, may enter judgment against the United States, payable out of the Public Treasury. Under section 3 of the act of February 13, 1925, the Court of Claims may cer-tify to the Supreme Court any definite and distinct questions of law concerning which instructions are desired for the proper disposition of the cause; and also in any case the Supreme Court upon the petition of either party may require by certiorari that the cause be certified to it for review and determination. It also has jurisdiction of the claims of disbursing officers of the United States for relief from responsibility for losses of Government funds and property by capture or otherwise, without negligence, while in the line of duty. There is a statute of limitations which prevents parties from bringing actions on their own motion beyond 6 years after the cause of action accrued, but the departments may refer claims at any time if they were pending therein within the 6 years. 644 C ongresstonal Dzrectory MISCELLANEOUS By the act of March 2, 1919 (40 Stat. 772), known as the Dent Act, the Court of Claims is given jurisdiction of the class of war claims therein specified. In these cases the action of the Secretary of War upon the claim, or his failure to act thereon, is a condition precedent to the right of the claimant to commence an action in the Court of Claims. The court also has jurisdiction of actions provided for by certain statutes passed during the last war permitting the seizure of property by the Government. By section 151, Judicial Code (36 Stat. L. 1135), whenever any bill, except for a pension, is pending in either House of Congress providing for the payment of a claim against the United States, legal or equitable, or for a grant, gift, or bounty to any person, the House in which such bill is pending may, for the investiga-tion and determination of facts, refer the same to the Court of Claims, which shall proceed with the same in accordance with such rules as it may adopt and report to such House the facts in the case and the amount, where the same can be liquidated, including any facts bearing upon the question whether there has been delay or laches in presenting such claim or applying for such grant, gift, or bounty, and any facts bearing upon the question whether the bar of any statute of limitation should be removed or which shall be claimed to excuse the claimant for not having resorted to any established legal remedy, together with such con-clusions as shall be sufficient to inform Congress of the nature and character of the demand, either as a claim, legal or equitable, or as a gratuity against the United States, and the amount, if any, legally or equitably due from the United States to the claimant: Provided, however, That if it shall appear to the satis-faction of the court upon the facts established that under existing laws or the provisions of this chapter, the subject matter of the bill is such that it has juris-diction to render judgment or decree thereon, it shall proceed to do so, giving to either party such further opportunity for hearing as in its judgment justice shall require, and it shall report its proceedings therein to the House of Congress by which the same was referred to said court. Section 5, act of March 4, 1915 (38 Stat. 996), provides: ‘That from and after the passage and approval of this act the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims shall not extend to or include any claim against the United States based upon or growing out of the destruction of any property or damage done to any property by the military or naval forces of the United States during the war for the sup-pression of the rebellion, nor to any claim for stores and supplies taken by or furnished to or for the use of the military or naval forces of the United States, nor to any claim for the value of any use and occupation of any real estate by the military or naval forces of the United States during said war; nor shall said Court of Claims have jurisdiction of any claim which is now barred by the provisions of any law of the United States. 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 (5 U. S. C. ch. 5), for the purpose of administering the provisions of such act providing workmen’s compensation bene-fits for civil employees of the United States. The jurisdiction and the duties of the Commission were extended by the enactment of subsequent legislation to provide workmen’s compensation protection for other employments within the jurisdiction of the Federal Government. Such legislation includes the Long-shoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act approved March 4, 1927 MISCELLANEOUS Officral Dutres 645 (33 U. 8. C. secs. 901-950); the District of Columbia Workmen’s Compensation Law of May 17, 1928 (45 Stat. 600), the act approved August 16, 1941 (Public, No. 2s 796 Cong.), and the act approved December 2, 1942 (Public, No. 784, 77th ong.). ; The benefits provided by the act of September 7, 1916, originally applicable to civil employees of the United States, have subsequently been extended: to (a) Employees of the Government of the District of Columbia (except firemen and police). (b) In time of peace to members of the Reserve Corps of the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps, for injuries sustained in line of duty while on active duty or authorized training. (¢) The Coast Guard Reserve. (d) The Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps. (e) Women’s Auxiliary Volunteer Emergency Service. (f) Coast Guard Women’s Reserve. The act of September 7, 1916, subject to certain modification prescribed in the act of February 15, 1934 (5 U. 8S. C. 796), which limit the circumstances under which compensation benefits may be extended and reduce the scale of such benefits has been made applicable to (a) Employees of the Civil Works Adminis-tration. (b) Enrollees in the Civilian Conservation Corps. (¢) Persons employed as employees of the United States on projects financed by the Federal Emergency Relief Appropriation Acts. (d) Certain persons receiving assistance from the National Youth Administration. (e) Persons attached to the work corps estab-lished by the War Relocation Authority and other persons receiving compensation from such Authority for work performed. The act of September 7, 1916, provides compensation including medical, surgical, and hospital services made necessary by reason of a personal injury sustained while in the performance of duty. In case such injury causes death within 6 years, compensation is authorized for certain surviving dependents and provision is made for payment of reasonable burial expenses. No benefits may be authorized if the injury is caused by the willful misconduct of the injured person or by his intention to bring about the injury or death of himself or another, or i dniaxleation of the injured person is the proximate cause of the injury or death. Compensation under the basic law of September 7, 1916, may be extended to eligible persons for disability or death resulting from an injury by accident or a disease proximately caused by the employment. Persons engaged in employ-ments to which the limitations in the act of February 15, 1934, are applicable may receive benefits only for the effects of a traumatic injury which under a statutory definition is limited to injury by accident. Claims for compensation must be filed within one year. Medical and hospital treatment must be obtained from a United States medical officer or hospital. However, if this is not practicable, treatment must be ob-tained from a physician or hospital designated by the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission. When neither of these is available treatment may be obtained from the nearest physician or hospital. The monthly compensation for total disability may not be more than $116.66 nor less than $58.33, unless the employee’s monthly pay is less than the latter amount, in which case his compensation shall be the full amount of his monthly pay. The minimum rate of $58.33 is not applicable in the case of an employee who is not a citizen of the United States and who is injured outside the continental limits of the United States. 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. There is no minimum rate applicable to such cases. Compensation for partial disability is payable at a rate equal to 66%; percent of the difference between the employee’s monthly pay and his earning capacity after the beginning of such disability. Employees on relief projects are entitled to compensation for partial disability in accordance with a special schedule cover-ing specific injuries. In case of death, compensation is payable to the widow or dependent widower, to children under the age of 18 years, to dependent parents or grandparents, and to other dependents under certain conditions. 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 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. 646 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, approved March 4, 1927, covers employees in private industry engaged in maritime employ- ment on the navigable waters of the United States (including drydocks) who sus- tain injury or death arising out of, and in course of, employment. These employees are mostly longshoremen and men engaged in repair work on vessels. It does not include the master or members of the crews of vessels, nor persons engaged by the master to load or unload or repair vessels under 18 tons. The compensation fea- tures of the act were effective July 1, 1927. Compensation is paid by the em- ployer and the cost of administration by the United States. On and after July 1, 1927, every employer having employees coming under the provisions of the act is required to secure payment of compensation by insurance in a company authorized by the Commission or self-insurance authorized by the Commission. A heavy penalty is provided for failure to secure compensation. A severe penalty is also provided for the employing of any stevedoring firm which does not present a certificate of compliance. The Commission is required to make the rules and regulations under this act, prescribe forms, establish compensation districts, and appoint and assign Deputy Commissioners to such districts. The Deputy Commissioners are required to issue certificates of compliance with insurance provisions, enforce requirements as to reports and penalties, regulate medical and legal fees, hold hearings when nec- essary or demanded by either party, make investigations, allow or disallow claims, examine settlements when hearings are not required to see that the injured employee has received the benefits of the law, take action in case of default in payment, and certify records upon appeal to the courts. Appeal to the Federal Souris from the decision of the Deputy Commissioner may be had upon questions of law. Compensation for total disability is two-thirds of the average weekly pay, not to exceed a maximum of $25 per week, with a minimum of $8 per week. There is a schedule of benefits for permanent partial disability. Death benefits are payable to the widow until remarriage and to children until they reach the age of 18, also to other dependents under certain circumstances. Reasonable funeral expenses not to exceed $200 are provided. The total compensation payable for injury or death in any one case shall not exceed the sum of $7,500. The act approved May 17, 1928, which became effective July 1, 1928, made applicable to employers and employees in the District of Columbia the provisions of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, thus extending the principles of workmen’s compensation to employment in the District of Columbia. The act excludes from its benefits the master and a member of a crew of any vessel, such men having the rights known as maintenance and cure and the rights given by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act; the employees of railroads when engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, who are also specifically provided for by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act; and employees engaged in domestic service or agriculture; and those engaged in casual employment not in the usual course of the trade, business, occupation, or profession of the employer. Compensation is paid by the employer through an insurance carrier authorized by the Commission or direct as a self-insurer under conditions prescribed by the Commission. By the act approved August 16, 1941, as amended by the act of December 2, 1942 (Public Law 784, 77th Cong.), 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 mili-tary, air, or naval base acquired after January 1, 1940, by the United States from any foreign government or upon lands occupied or used by the United States for military or naval purposes in any Territory or possession outside the con-tinental United States, including Alaska, the Naval Operating Base, Guantanamo, Cuba, the Philippine Islands, and the Canal Zone, irrespective of the place where the injury or death occurs, and employees of contractors with the United States engaged in any public works to be performed outside the continental limits of the United States. The effect of the act of August 16, 1941, as amended, is to provide workmen’s compensation coverage under a Federal law for all employments in connection with construction work at national defense bases and other public works 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 applies, and to assign personnel to administer the law locally within such districts. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 647 Public Law 784, approved December 2, 1942, also provides certain benefits in the nature of workmen’s compensation for persons missing as a result of enemy action or captured by an enemy while in the employ of contractors with the United States in operations under such contract outside the continental limits of the United States. Such benefits also extend to certain persons engaged by the United States under a personal service contract and to civilian employees of a post exchange or ship-service store outside the United States. Provision is also made for the payment of allowances to the dependents of such missing persons and for repatriation upon release from custody. The Commission is authorized to make rules and regulations for the administration of such benefits which are pay-able from the annual appropriation to the Commission for the Employees’ Com-pensation Fund. Public Law 784 also provides for reimbursement to employers, insurance carriers, and compensation funds for benefits paid under a workmen’s compen-sation law in certain cases of injury or death occurring outside the United States as a result of a war risk hazard. Reimbursement is also provided for payments made with respect to the death of certain persons where such payments are in pursuance of an agreement made in accordance with a contract between the United States and the contractor employer and for benefits paid in respect to the failure of the United States or its contractor to furnish return transportation upon the completion of the employment of an employee. Such reimbursement is to be made from the Employees’ Compensation Fund under such awards as the Commission may approve. 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 insofar 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 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 functions 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- vise particular undertakings. The performance of specified functions is delegated 648 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 funec- 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 make award damages. are may an of Carriers 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 filing of annual reports, to prescribe systems of account, to authorize consolidations of telephone companies, and to authorize extensions of lines. Title IIT 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 overall 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 periodsof 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 theeffects of such use extend beyond the borders thereof, or upon vessels or aircraftof the United States, except in accordance with a license issued by the Commis-sion. The statute requires that the operation of radio transmitting apparatusshall be carried on only by persons holding operators’ licenses issued by the Commission. The radio license requirements do not apply to the PhilippineIslands 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 purposesof the act. It also has authority to revoke or modify licenses. Broadeast 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 issuedunless 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 MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties ; 649 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 served by 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. WAR ACTIVITIES There are three new units in the Commission devoted entirely to war work. The Radio Intelligence Division (formerly National Defense Operations Section) was established in the Engineering Department on July 1, 1940, to set up and direct the activities of monitoring stations throughout continental United States, its Territories and possessions. By means of these stations, all radio communica-tions channels are kept under continuous surveillance. Persons detected operating unauthorized stations are subject to criminal prosecution. Other special projects are undertaken from time to time either on the initiative of the Commission or at the request of other departments. : The Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service was created by the Commission in February 1941 and is now constituted as one of its departments. The function of this Service is to record, translate, analyze, and report to certain officials of the Government all broadcasts of foreign origin. This activity is carried on for three major purposes: (1) To keep abreast of propaganda activities of other countries; (2) to interpret present conditions in and the future policy of countries whose broadcasts are analyzed; and (3) to make available to the Government news and 650 C ongresstonal Directory MISCELLANEOUS information not made available by media other than radio broadcasts. Five listening posts are operated by this Service. Selected items of importance are teletyped from these units to certain civilian and military branches of the Gov-ernment 24 hours a day, and daily and weekly reports are published and sent to certain Government officials. ; In addition to the work performed by the three units referred to above, there are a large number of wartime projects carried on by the Commission. For example, personnel of the Commission contribute to the work of the Communications Branch of the War Production Board and to the work of the Board of War Com-munications. The functions of the Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service (director), fall outside the normal regulatory and licensing activities of the Commission, but include the analysis and reporting to other Federal agencies of the content of foreign radio broadcasts, especially those from enemy sources. 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. 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 whieh 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 14,877 operating banks in the United States and possessions on December 31, 1941, deposits in 13,482 banks, including 52 mutual savings banks, were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. As of that date 6,616 banks, members of the Federal Reserve System, had been automatically admitted to membership, and 6,814 nonmember banks, other than mutual savings banks, had made application and had been accepted for membership. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes \ 651 FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION Creation and authority.—As created under the Federal Water Power Act, of June 10, 1920 (41 Stat. 1063, 16 U. 8. 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; 16 U. 8. C. 792), with five full-time commissioners appointed by the President. Its duties were enlarged under title II of the Public Utility Act of 1935, approved August 26, 1935 (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), the I Control Act of 1938 (52 Stat. 1215), and the Natural Gas Act (52 Stat. 821). Congress in the Federal Power Act conferred on the Commission definite and far-reaching duties and responsibilities in time of war or other national emergency, including the taking over by Presidential order of hydro plants for munitions manufacture (sec. 16); requirement of interconnections and delivery of power (sec. BR; and the relation of power capacity and output to the national defense (see. 811). These statutory war duties were substantially broadened and strengthened by the President through his directive of June 14, 1940, authorizing the planning of power supply to meet national defense demands, and the protection of power facil-ities against hostile acts; through Executive Order 9165 extending the plant pro-tection program to gas utilities and power and irrigation water facilities; through the directives of September 26 and October 22, 1942, authorizing the Commission to review all power contracts for war plants and establishments and arrange for the procurement of such power from the cheapest available sources; and through the directive of December 12, 1942, authorizing Commission review of the adequacy of the existing power program. FEDERAL POWER ACT 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 Secretary 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. 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 652 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. Part I1.—Part II of the Federal Power Act embodies a comprehensive 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 transmission of 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 interconnections 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, nondiscriminatory 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 II11.—Part 111 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. Purpose of Natural Gas Act.—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 purpose. The policy of the 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 regu- latory powers. 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 examiners in the matter of presiding at and conducting hearings. The principal administrative subdivisions in the Commission are the Office of the Secretary, which coordinates activities of all bureaus and divisions; the Budget and Fiscal Office, which manages and coordinates business operations; the Director of Personnel, who handles all 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 in subdivided into the Bureau of Electrical Engineering, which supervises power requirements, supply and war phases of the Commission’s activities; the Office of the Chief Engineer, which advises the Commission on engineering matters; the Bureau of Water Power, which handles flood control and licensed projects work; 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, with various divisions which handle specific portions of the general work of the Bureau; and the Bureau of Law, which advises the Commission on all legal questions. Declarations of intentton.— 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties | 653 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 I11.—In accordance with provi-sions of parts IT and III of the Federal Power Act, the Commission receives and passes on applications for compulsory interconnections; authorizes and approves the sale, lease, merger, or consolidation of facilities or purchase of securities; 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. 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 pro-cedure of a flexible nature with provision for special procedure in particular cases. Uniform systems of accounts.—The Commission has prescribed uniform systems 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. Annual 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. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——43 654 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 3. Monthly and annual reports containing such information as production of electricity for public use, fuel consumed, and stocks of fuel on hand. 4. Reports from electric utilities and industrial corporations with respect to their electric power requirements and supply for war purposes. 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 conduets investigations to secure information to serve as a basis for recommending to Congress further legislation concerning the matters to which the Federal Power Act relates. Reports by the Commission.—The Commission publishes annual reports to Congress; annual reports of electric rates throughout the United States, a National Electric Rate Book; monthly reports of production of electric energy in the United States, and annual reports of electric power statistics covering production and generating capacity. In addition, special reports on power matters are published from time to time. 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 districts 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. WAR ACTIVITIES 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 par-ticularly, the capacity and output of all facilities for the generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity in relation to the war (sec. 311). 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 (c)). 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’ (sec. 16). Under the Natural Gas Act the Commission has power to order natural-gas companies to extend their transportation facilities or connect with local distribu-tors 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—On June 14, 1940, the President gave written instructions to the chairman of the Federal Power Commission directing the Commission, among other things, to survey defense-power needs and, in coopera-tion with other Government agencies, work out plans to protect the power supply against hostile acts. To carry out promptly the President’s instructions, 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 Staff 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 national defense agencies in assuring an adequate and dependable power supply in case of emergency. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 655 Agreement with War Production Board.—In order to coordinate the Commission’s war activities with those of the War Production Board, the two agencies agreed on April 24, 1942, to unite their efforts in meeting and handling wartime power problems. WAR POWER STAFF Under this agreement the War Production Board has responsibility for: (1) The programming of equipment and materials which can be made available for power supply purposes; (2) the deterfnination of power supply and demand in relation to the war production program and essential civilian activities; (3) the planning, development, and administration of power supply allocation programs for those regions where the available supply proves insufficient; and (4) the mobilization of power to meet specific war production requirements. The Federal Power Commission has made available to the War Production Board certain of its engi- neering staff to assist on those phases of the war activities and to coordinate the work of the two agencies. The Federal Power Commission exercises its full statutory powers under the Federal Power Act and amendments thereto. Through its War Power Staff, it collects, compiles, and tabulates information regarding the generation, trans-mission, distribution, and sale of electric energy, and publishes monthly reports on power system capacities and loads; surveys, in cooperation with other Govern-ment agencies, electric and gas utility properties to determine measures to be taken to protect against sabotage and other hostile acts; maintains continuing studies on the need for interconnection and coordination of power facilities and, where essential to the war effort and materials therefor are available, orders the con-struction and utilization of such interconnections; makes periodic reports on utility and industrial power facilities; and makes special studies related to the power situation as required or requested by the War Production Board or other agencies. Facilities protection work.—In his letter of June 14, 1940, the President directed the Commission to work out plans for the protection of power supply against hostile acts, and to this end to cooperate with the utilities and other Government agencies, including the Department of Justice, in protecting generating stations, interconnecting transmission lines, important substations and distribution facilities required to assure power supply to key industrial plants. In Executive Order 9165 dated May 19, 1942, providing for the protection of essential facilities from sabotage and other destructive acts, the President directed the Federal Power Commission, subject to and in conformity with the standards, plans, directives, and procedures of the Office of Civilian Defense, to develop and execute the Facility Security Program with respect to gas utilities. Executive Order 9165 also directed the Federal Power Commission and the Department of the Interior jointly to undertake the same responsibilities with respect to power and irrigation water, and related facilities. WAR POWER CONTRACTS Under date of September 26, 1942, the President addressed to the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, the chairman of the United States Maritime Commission, the chairman of the Defense Plant Corporation, the chairman of the War Production Board, and the Administrator of the National Housing Agency the following letter: “It is of the utmost importance that the costs of the war program be held to a minimum consistent with the fullest and most rapid progress. In arranging for the electric power supply for war plants or establishments, the cheapest sources of power consistent with war requirements should be used. “Public and private power supplying agencies should be advised as far in advance as possible of the prospective location and requirements of plants or establishments on or near their systems in order that they may assist in solving the power supply problems involved at the lowest possible cost. In many in-stances it should be possible to lessen power costs if provision is made for power to be supplied to the consuming agencies directly from the power generating agency. If the lines of the lowest cost power supplying agency do not connect immediately with the war plants, there is no reason why connecting lines of other companies or agencies should not be utilized for a reasonable transmission charge. 1 am asking the Federal Power Commission to cooperate by using its emergency Si ongresstonal Darectory MISCELLANEOUS powers when necessary to make available transmission and other appropriate services for the effectuation of this policy. “I do not think that companies not themselves having sufficient power to supply war plants should be purchasing power. from neighboring public power agencies for resale to these plants at a substantial profit. In such cases business-like procedure would suggest that the power be purchased directly from the power supplying agencies and reasonable transmission charges be paid to the transmitting 4 companies. “Adoption of my suggestion will not discriminate in favor of public or private power, but will accord with sound business practice.” On October 22, 1942, the President also sent to the chairman of the Federal Power Commission a letter and outline of procedure, the texts of which follow: “T would like the Federal Power Commission, after consultation with the pro-curement agencies and the War Production Board, to establish the procedure, outlined in the attached memorandum, to effectuate the policies set forth in my letter of September 26, 1942, addressed to the War Department, Navy Depart- ment, Maritime Commission, Defense Plant Corporation, National Housing Agency, and the War Production Board.” OUTLINE OF PROCEDURE FOR PURCHASE OF POWER FOR WAR PLANTS AND ESTABLISHMENTS “(1) Each agency directly or indirectly responsible for power procurement to designate a Power Procurement Officer to handle all contracts and arrangements for electric power as hereinafter provided. (2) Each agency to direct its representatives to report promptly to the Power Procurement Officer each proposed procurement of power, in excess of a reason-able minimum, which involves Government approval or any Government obliga-tion. Such reports to include all essential facts in accordance with forms ap-proved by the Federal Power Commission, (8) Power Procurement Officers to refer such reports promptly to the Fedeial Power Commission, together with proposed contracts, for determination whether cheaper power supply is available and, if so, how it can be delivered. Federal Power Commission to issue necessary orders after consultation with War Produec-tion Board as to priorities and allocations. (4) Federal Power Commission to determine whether proposed rates and conditions are reasonable and, if unreasonable, to fix proper terms and otherwise cooperate with Power Procurement Officers in effectuating arrangements neces-sary for securing power on best possible terms. “(5) Review and re-negotiation of existing contracts to be in accordance with above procedure.” The Commission undertook immediately to put the program into operation by meeting on October 28, 1942, with representatives of six Federal procurement agencies. In opening the conference, chairman Leland Olds briefly reviewed the President’s directives and stated that the Federal Power Commission would serve as the central agency for the determination, in accordance with sound busi-ness practice, of problems of procurement officers in contracting for power supply for war industries or establishments involving Government approval or any Government obligation. On November 11, 1942, chairman Olds addressed the following letter to the various procurement agencies outlining the responsibilities of power procurement officers and defining, as follows, contracts subject to review procedure: “For the present, the procedure will apply only to arrangements for the pro- curement of power for war plants and establishments involving deliveries of power of 1,000 kilowatts or more of actual or contractual demand. It is contemplated, however, that at the request of any Federal agency the procedure will be applied to arrangements involving lesser amounts of power. “The Commission will also provide for review and, if the public interest requires, modification of existing arrangements for the procurement of power in accordance with the procedure contained in the President’s directive. “Arrangements for procurement of power will be deemed to include all written or oral agreements, requisitions, understandings, or commitments which require the approval or concurrence of a procurement agency, or which involve the obliga-tion of the Government of the United States to pay, reimburse, underwrite, or otherwise assume any liability or responsibility with respect to the procurement of electric power.” / MISCELLANEOUS oy Official Duties 657 NATURAL GAS ACT Ezxportation or tmportation of natural gas.— 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 with- out 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 of July 13,1939, the Commission is directed to receive applications for the issuance of permits for the construction, operation, maintenance, or connection at the borders of the United States, of facilities for the transmission of electric energy, and for the transportation of natural gas, between the United States and foreign countries, and, after obtaining the recommendations of the Secretary of State and the Secretary of War thereon, to submit such applica-tions to the President with a recommendation as to whether such permits should be granted, and if so, upon what terms and conditions. DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH TVA Prescribes TV A accounts system.—The board of directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority is required to keep accounts of its cost of generation, transmis-sion, and distribution of electric energy according to the system prescribed by the Commission for public utilities. Other physical data and operating statistics of the Authority are also made available to the Commission. Approval of certain contracts.—The approval by the Commission of contracts for the extension of credit by the Tennessee Valley Authority to public agencies 658 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS and nonprofit organizations for acquiring, improving, and operating existing dis-tribution facilities and interconnecting transmission lines, is a prerequisite to the issuance of bonds by the Authority to obtain funds for that purpose. DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH BONNEVILLE DAM | Advisory board.—The Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration is required to act in consultation with an advisory board composed of representatives designated by the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture, and the Federal Power Commission. The Commission has desig-nated its chief engineer as its representative on this advisory board. Bonneville rate schedules.—Schedules of rates and charges for electric energy produced at the Bonneville project are prepared by the Administrator and become effective upon confirmation and approval by the Federal Power Commission. The rate schedules may be modified, subject to confirmation and approval by the Commission. ; Allocation of cost.—The Commission makes the alloeations of cost of facilities * for power and other purposes upon which rate schedules are based. Accounts of Bonneville Power Adminisiration.—The Administrator is subject to the requirements of the Commission with respect to the accounts of operations of the Bonneville project, including all funds expended and received in connection with transmission and sale of electric energy generated at the project. DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH FORT PECK DAM Rate schedules.—Schedules of rates and charges for electric energy produced at the Fort Peck project are prepared by the Bureau of Reclamation under the supervision and direction of the Secretary of the Interior, and become effective upon confirmation and approval thereof by the Federal Power Commission. The rate schedules may be modified, subject to confirmation and approval by the Commission. Allocation of costs.—The Commission makes the allocations of cost of facilities for power and other purposes upon which the rate schedules are based. Accounts.—The Bureau of Reclamation is subject to the requirements of the Commission with respect to the accounts of operations of the Fort Peck project, -including all funds expended and received in connection with transmission and sale of electric energy generated at the project. ; DUTIES IN CONNECTION WITH FLOOGD CONTROL PROJECTS Under the Flood Control Act of 1938, the Commission makes recommendations to the Secretary of War concerning the installation of penstocks or similar facilities adapted to possible future use in the development of hydroelectric power in dams constructed under the act. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM The Federal Reserve System was established pursuant to authority contained in the act of Congress approved December 23, 1913, known as the Federal Reserve Act, the purposes of which, as stated in the preamble, are “To provide for the establishment of Federal Reserve Banks, to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes.” The System comprises the Board of Governors, which exercises supervisory functions; the Federal Open Market Committee, consisting of the members of the Board of Governors and 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 6,600 member banks, which include all national banks in the United States and such State banks, trust companies, Morris Plan banks, and mutual savings banks as have voluntarily applied to the Board of Governors for membership 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 Shid— Sogn vaon: Official Duties . 659 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 representativesof the Federal Reserve Banks, each such representative being elected annuallyby the boards of directors of certain specified Federal Reserve Banks. Open-market operations of the Federal Reserve Banks are conducted under regulationsadopted by the committee with a view to accommodating commerce and businessand 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 credit, particularly credit for the purpose of purchasing consumers durable and semidurable goods. Under this authority, restrictions of credit have been applied to charge accounts, to instalment purchases of certain articles, and to certain kinds of loans. 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, trust companies, Morris Plan banks, and mutual savings banks to membership in the Federal Reserve System and on the termination 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 regula-tion 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-com-pany affiliates of member banks entitling them to vote the stock of such banks at any or all meetings of shareholders of the member banks; it may issue general reg-ulations permitting interlockingrelationshipsin certain circumstances between mem-ber banks and organizations 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, sus-pend member banks from the use of the credit facilities of the Federal Reserve Sys-tem, 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 applications of State member banks to establish out-of-town branches; it passes on applications of national banks for authority to exercise trust powers or to act in fiduciary capacities; it may grant authority to national banks to establish branches in foreign countries or dependencies or insular possessions of the United States, or to invest in the stock of banks or corporations engaged in international or foreign banking; and it supervises the organization and activities of corporations or-ganized under Federal law to engage in international or foreign banking. Another function of the Board is the operation of a settlement fund, by which balances due to and from the various Federal Reserve Banks arising out of their own trans-actions or transactions of their member banks or of the United States Govern-ment are settled in Washington through telegraphic transfer of funds without physical shipments of currency. 660 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS In exercising its supervisory functions over the Federal Reserve Banks and member banks, the Board of Governors promulgates regulations, pursuant to authority granted by the law, governing certain of the above-mentioned activities of Federal Reserve Banks and member banks. To meet its expenses and to pay the salaries of its members and its employees, the Board makes semiannual assessments upon the Federal Reserve Banks in proportion to their capital stock and surplus. The Board keeps a complete record of all action taken by it and by the Federal Open Market Committee on any question of policy, and in the annual report which it makes to the Speaker of the House of Representatives “for the information of Congress as required by law, it includes a full account of all such action and also a copy of the records required to be kept in that connection. The Board and the Federal Reserve Banks and their branches render services, relating to financial information, etc., to the War and Navy Departments and cooperate with such departments and the United States Maritime Commission in connection with guaranties and loans made by those agencies in order to finance war production contracts. The System renders assistance to member banks, nonmember banks, and other financing institutions in aiding concerns engaged in defense work to obtain whatever financial assistance is necessary in order to enable them to finance successfully the performance of their defense contracts. The Board cooperates with the Director of Censorship with respect to problems arising out of the transmission of financial communications. The Federal Reserve Banks are located in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco. 0 There are also in operation 24 branches and 1 agency of the Federal Reserve Banks, all of which are located in other cities of the United States. " The capital stock of the Federal Reserve Banks is entirely owned by the member banks and may not be transferred or hypothecated. Every national bank in existence in the United States at the time of the establishment of the Federal Reserve System was required to subscribe to the capital stock of the Federal Reserve Bank of its district in an amount equal to 6 percent of the subscribing bank’s paid-up capital and surplus. A like amount of Federal Reserve Bank stock must, be subscribed for by every national bank in the United States organized since that time and by every. State bank or trust company (except mutual savings banks) upon becoming a member of the Federal Reserve System; and, when a member bank increases or decreases its capital or surplus, it is required to alter its holdings of Federal Reserve Bank stock in the same proportion. A mutual savings bank which is admitted to membership in the Federal Reserve System must subscribe for Federal Reserve Bank stock in an amount equal to six-tenths of 1 per centum of its total deposit liabilities; and thereafter such subscription must be adjusted semiannually on the same percentage basis. One-half of the subscription of each member bank must be fully paid and the remainder is subject to call by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; but call for payment of the remainder has not been made. After all necessary expenses of a Federal Reserve Bank have been paid or pro-vided for, its stockholding member banks are entitled to receive an annual divi-dend of 6 percent on the paid-in capital stock, which dividend is cumulative. After these dividend claims have been fully met, the net earnings are paid into the surplus fund of the Federal Reserve Bank. 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 are exempt from Federal, State, and local taxation, except taxes upon real estate. The board of directors of each Federal Reserve Bank is composed of nine members, equally divided into three classes, designated class A, class B, and class C. Directors of class A are representative of the stockholding member banks. Directors of class B must be actively engaged in their district in commerce, agriculture, or some other industrial pursuit, and may not be officers, directors, or employees 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 elected by the stockholding member banks, while the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System appoints the three class C directors. The term of office of each director is 3 years, so arranged that the term of one director of each class expires each year. One of the class C directors appointed by the Board is designated as chairman of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank and as Federal Reserve agent, and in the latter capacity he is required to maintain a local office of the | 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 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 National Youth Adminis-tration and the United States Employment Service were transferred to the War 662 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Manpower Commission by Executive Order No. 9247, dated September 17, 1942. The Second Plan on Government Reorganziation 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 participation 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. Executive Order No. 9338, dated April 29, 1943, transferred to the Federal Security Agency from the Office for Emergency Management the functions of the Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services. Under this order and a Federal Security Agency Order implementing it, the Office of Community War Services and a Committee on Physical Fitness were established as integral parts of the Office of the Administrator, Federal Security Agency. 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-Bois security, educational opportunity, and the health of the citizens of the ation. 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, 73d Cong.) were consolidated with the unemployment compensation functions of the Board. On January 1, 1942, as a result of a request of the President to the States, the system of public employ-ment offices throughout the country came under national operation. Subse-quently, Executive Order No. 9247 of September 17, 1942, transferred the United States Employment Service functions to the War Manpower Commission. 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 are exercised by the Board, under the direction and supervision of the Federal Security Admin-istrator, 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. Operating bureaus are the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, the Bureau of Public Assistance, and the Bureau of Employment Security. 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 in-surance claims. Special activities relating to the war effort performed or participated in by the Social Security Board are included below in the description of duties of the particular bureau concerned. N= MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 663 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 supervision and direction of the work of the several bureaus and offices together with the immediate supervision and direction of the regional and territorial offices. The Executive Director is also charged with the following duties pertaining to Board i programs: Coordinating Federal-State relations, and providing an advisory service 1 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 personnel, procurement of supplies and equipment, selecting quarters and allotting space, furnishing centralized steno-graphic and typing assistance, maintaining centralized files and records, preparing travel orders, itineraries, vouchers, and other business operations. It receives and distributes 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 benefits to the dependent children (under 18) of individuals receiving primary insurance bene-fits 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 insur-ance 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 pay benefits to industrial and commercial wage earners and their families as partial replacement for loss of income due to the old age or death of the wage earner. This is a contributory program 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. The provisions of the original old-age insurance plan became effective January 1, 1937. By the end of 1942 about 68 million social security accounts had been established and about 58 million individuals had received wages for employment covered by this plan and hence have accumulated credit toward an insured status, i. e., toward eligibility for benefits when old age or death occurs. 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 payable to a family, based on one individual’s wages, ranges from $10 to $85. This title is administered by the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, which is the largest organizational unit of the Social Security Board. This Bureau is responsible for the establishment and maintenance of individual ac-counts in which are recorded the amounts of reported wages. It is responsible for determining 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, economic and administrative studies as are necessary to its functions of administering title IT; it also tabulates, from its wage and claims records, statistical data necessary to the Board in analyzing the operation of 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, Alaska, and Hawaii. These offices furnish information to wage earners and to employers as to their rights and obligations under the program, and accept, develop, and adjudicate claims under title II. The field organization brings the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance plan 664 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS close to the people who are affected by it, and thus helps to assure adequate, efficient, and economical operation of the plan. The Bureau participates in the administration of the temporary War Civilian Security Program under allocation from the Emergency Fund of the President. Under this program benefits are paid to civilians disabled in the United States as the result of enemy action and to civilian defense workers disabled in the performance of their duties. If death results from such injuries, benefits are payable to their dependents. Benefits are also payable to dependents of civilians killed, detained, or reported missing as the result of enemy action outside the United States. 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-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 aris 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 statis- tical and research activities relating to public assistance, general relief, and allied programs. Responsibilities related to war activities have been assigned to the Bureau of Public Assistance by the Social Security Board. The Bureau is responsible for broad planning for the relief of civilian distress caused by enemy action or mili- tary necessity. Presidential Allotment 42-70 dated February 6, 1942, as amended by Presidential Allotment 42/3-56 dated October 5, 1942, provides assistance to BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS AND AUDITS | 2i] ais. INFORMATIONAL SERVICE 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 SocialSecurity 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 theBureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, which makes the original determi-nations 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. REGIONAL OFFICES To provide decentralized service and supervision to the State and Federal agencies operating under the Social Security Act throughout the United States, the Board has established 12 regional offices, and territorial offices in Alaska and Hawaii. All operations of the Board in each region are supervised by a regional director responsible to the executive director, whose staff includes representatives of the several bureaus and offices of the Board. The regional directors of the Social Security Board have been designated as regional directors for the Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services, serving as chairmen of its regional advisory councils. They are assisted in this activity by regional representatives of that Office’s Divisions of Recreation, Nutrition, and Social Protection. ; The regional offices of the Board also supervise the operation of the civilian war relief program established under the Presidential allocation of February 6, 1942, as well as welfare aspects of enemy alien evacuation, and evacuation of non-servi ce-connected civilians from the Pacific territories. 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 por to the Administrator, Federal Security Agency, on the activities of the ervice. 668 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 to prevent the introduction of human contagious or infectious diseases from foreign ports into the United States through the intermediary agencies of maritime and aircraft commerce, and observes the provisions of the Pan American Sanitary Code, the International Sanitary Con- vention of Paris, and the International Sanitary Convention for Aerial Naviga- tion which apply thereto. In addition, this Division conducts the medical exam- ination of intending immigrants 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; (3) 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 the Public Health Service with State and Territorial health officers; (8) assistance to educational institutions in providing training for nurses; (9)’ establishment of reserves of blood plasma for treatment of casualties resulting from enemy action; (10) provision of temporary medical care for civilian injuries occasioned by enemy action. 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 in promoting health education throughout the United States. 2 Through the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief, hospital and out-patient treatment is given at 25 marine hospitals and 114 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 commissioned personnel records; convenes boards for the examination or discipline of medical officers and other personnel; and maintains and supervises property records. The Division of Venereal Diseases was created by act of Congress in July 1918 (1) to study and investigate the cause, treatment, and prevention of venereal diseases; (2) to cooperate with State boards or departments of health for the prevention and control of such diseases within the States; and (3) to control and ‘prevent the spread of these diseases in interstate traffic. 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, especially as they relate to the war effort, are conducted both independently and in cooperation with other agencies. The Division of Mental Hygiene is charged with the responsibility of administer-_ ing the two hospitals for the treatment of drug addiets; 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 £i BE MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 669 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. Executive Order No. 9079, signed by the President on February 26, 1942, authorizes the treatment during the present war and for 6 months after termination thereof of insane persons (except those from the District of Columbia) at the two hospitals established for the treatment of drug addicts under the same terms and conditions as such insane persons may be entitled to admission to St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, D. C The Chief Clerk and Administrative Officer has general supervision of clerical personnel, efficiency ratings, office quarters and space assignments, claims board cases, official files and records, mail, supplies of stationery to headquarters and field service, printing and binding for entire service, procurement of office equip-ment for headquarters, and general administrative matters. 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 mechanic 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 II (sec. 22), providing 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 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. (c) 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. (c) 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.—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 num-bers who have books made available to them through a system of interlibrary loans. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed.—44 670 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 Education for Victory, a biweekly, replacing School Life for the duration of the war. 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 $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-economics 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 voeational education in promoting vocational education; and, on the other, as a research agency it was required to make, or cause to have made, studies, investigations, and reports to aid the States in developing their programs. As representative of the Government, it 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- MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties ; 671 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 appropriations for this purpose. An amendment of August 14, 1939, through 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. i 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. Under authority of Public Law 647, Seventy-seventh Congress, second 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: 1. It assists the States to organize and conduct vocational courses 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 the public employment office registers, and provides funds for the rental of additional space found necessary for carrying out the approved plans. 2. It cooperates with degree-granting colleges and universities in providing short courses of college grade designed to meet the shortage of engineers, chemists, physicists, and production supervisors with specialized training and provides funds for the purchase and rental of additional equipment and leasing of addi-tional space found to be necessary to carry out approved plans in fields essential to the national defense. 3. It assists the States in the organization and conduct of vocational courses and related or other necessary instruction for out-of-school rural and nonrural persons and in the purchase and rental of equipment and rental of space found necessary for carrying out the approved plans. 4. It administers an appropriation of $5,000,000 to help, by loans, needy college students who ean complete in 2 years their studies of physics, engineering, chem-istry, medicine (including veterinary), dentistry, and pharmacy. 5. It produces visual aids for war training in occupations essential to the war effort. : Under authority of Public Law 463, Seventy-seventh Congress, second session, the Office of Education cooperates with the several State boards for vocational education in the selection of new or used equipment for purchase, rental, or other acquisition when needed in providing vocational courses described in paragraph above. ° 672 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS Under Public Law 647, Seventy-seventh Congress, approved July 2, 1942, the active operations of the Civilian Conservation Corps came to an end June 30, 1942. Under this act a fund of $8,000,000 was provided for the liquidation of the Civilian Conservation Corps during the fiscal year 1943. Camp buildings, trucks, tractors and other Corps equipment and materials valued at more than $100,000,000 has been and is being disposed of, the bulk of it going to the War Department, the Navy Department, and the Civil Aeronautics Administration. When the Corps ceased active operations it had 350 camps in operation, 200 of which were located on military reservations and 150 on critical national resource areas, particularly forests, to protect these areas from fire. The Civilian Conservation Corps, unit of the Federal Security Agency, was authorized by Public No. 5, Seventy-third Congress, and launched by Executive Order No. 6101, dated April 5, 1933. This 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 CCC, 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. When the Civilian Conservation Corps was initiated, its major objectives were the furnishing of employment to needy young men in the conservation and develop- ment of natural resources largely on public lands under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture. The act of June 28, 1937, listed the objectives of the Corps as follows: “To provide employ- ment, 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 CCC 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 was assisted by offi-cers of these departments and by a staff of administrative, special and technical assistants. Approximately 3,000,000 young men, war veterans, Indians and territorials were enrolled in the Civilian Conservation Corps during the nine and a quarter years it was in active operation. Over that period it planted about 3,000,000,000 trees, constructed 125,000 miles of truck trails, laid 89,000 miles of telephone lines, benefited about 40,000,000 acres of farm lands through its erosion control and drainage ditch rehabilitation programs, and expended more than 12,000,000 man-days on forest fire fighting and fire prevention work. 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. TSCELEANEOUS Official Duties 673 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 by the President of the United States, with the approval of the Senate for a term of 7 years each. No more than three of its members may be of the same political party. Further powers were 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, Seventy-fourth 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). WAR WORK Representation on Price Administration, Economic Warfare Board, and other war agencies.— The Commission, under the terms of Executive orders and other-wise, is represented by its chairman on the Price Administration Committee of the Office of Price Administration; on the Board of Economic Warfare, headed by the Vice President; on the Defense Petroleum Coordinator’s Committee; and on the Bureau of Industrial Conservation of the War Production Board. Staff members, from the beginning, have served on planning committees, and as advisors and consultants to committees of the War Production Board, and the Office of Price Administration. Employment of Commission personnel tn war work.—A substantial part of the personnel of the Commission’s legal and accounting services is engaged in emer-gency war work, or is at the disposal of the war agencies. The Commission has subordinated its own work in all of its divisions, whenever called upon, to assist in the war efforts, in full accord with the policy and direction of the President that existing agencies be utilized to as great an extent as possible for the necessary war activities. Wartime costs, profits, and prices.—In addition to its other duties, as hereinafter set out, the Commission has been and is functioning as a Federal cost-finding agency as it did in the former World War when it was a principal agency of the Government in matters relating to commodity quantities, production costs, and profits. It has been and is assisting wartime agencies by ascertaining costs, profits, and prices in different industries for use in determining commodity prices to be paid by the Government and the consuming public, and is supplying data and information necessary in connection with many of the price rulings and regulations of the Office of Price Administration. It has currently made reports on some 86 industries for that office and for the War Production Board, Office of Economic Stabilization, Office of Price Administration and the War, Navy, Labor. and other Government Departments. Household furniture, bread-baking, flour-milling, paperboard, steel, fertilizer, and other industries.—The investigation first referred to—the household furniture industry—was undertaken as early as June 1941 at the requestof the Office of Price Administration, to establish costs, profits, and prices current in thatindustry, and to report as to the justification of then recent price advances and whether they were attributable to increased costs, illegal contracts, or conspiracies between elements of the industry. The investigation of paperboard included detailed costs of different types and kinds of paperboard. The investigation of the steel industry covered detailed costs of the principal steel products. At the request of the Office of Price Administration, the Commission has also undertaken and com-pleted studies of costs, profits, and prices in the bread-baking, phosphate and fer-tilizer, and biscuit and cracker industries. At the request of the Office of Econom-ic Stabilization, it has also undertaken and completed investigations of practices and operations in the bread-baking and flour-milling industries, and has completed a compilation of data on Government programs for conservation of critical mate-rials during World War I and the present war. A large part of the Commission’s entire accounting force has been engaged in the above type of work since June 1940. 674 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The Commission’s ‘industrial corporation reports’ and the securing and supply-ing of industrial war data.—Extensive use has also been and is being made by the National War Agencies of the Commission’s series of corporation reports, and of the tabulations and summary reports which the Commission has been and is pre-paring therefrom and supplying to such agencies. These reports, initiated under the authority of section 6 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, prior to the War, in May 1940, are described herein. In addition to coordinating its industrial corporation reports project with wartime work to provide data requested by the War Agencies, the Commission has also thus coordinated two inquiries initiated by it, namely, those having to do with methods of production cost accounting in manufacturing industries, and methods and costs of distribution of essential commodities. Wartime priorities.—The Commission has been and is making very extensive legal investigations for the War Production Board, at its request, to determine the extent of compliance with or violation of wartime priority rules and regula- tions by basic and important industries. It has completed such inquiries with respect to the steel, copper and copper scrap, copper ingots, jewel bearings, silverware, chromium and nickel, and aluminum foundries industries. It has also completed such investigations involving a large number of companies which use tin, a group of manufacturers and wholesalers of quinine, and a group of pro- ducers and users of glycerine. It has also completed for the Board a rerating survey covering 25 companies engaged in the production of essential war materials, to determine whether purchase orders placed with certain companies had been improperly rerated so as to enable them to secure capital equipment or whether orders which had been rerated had been extended to obtain capital equipment in violation of the Board’s regulations. It has begun for the Board an investigation of approximately 140 manufacturers of portable electric lamps to determine whether they are complying with priority orders and regulations issued by the Board and has been requested by the Board to undertake also a survey of the activities of approximately 19 manufacturers of electric fuses in order to determine the extent of compliance with the orders and regulations of the Board relating to the firms included in the survey. War contracts and related matters.— The Commission has also completed two other matters for the Board, namely, a survey which furnished a detailed picture of the metal-working machines industry, and an investigation of the purchasing and inventory practices of 38 prime Army-Navy contractors to determine whether it was their practice to obtain critical materials too far in advance of the period in which they were to be consumed. At the request of the Committee on Naval Affairs of the House of Representatives, the Commission also assigned members of its accounting and legal examining staffs to assist the Committee in its inquiry into progress of the national defense program. The Commission, at its request, assisted the Committee in important field investigations which involved a thorough check of the awarding of contracts, and of cost records of aircraft manufacturers and their operations and management; construction of Naval air stations, and an examination into the speed, progress, and quality of the work in all phases. Other studies for the Committee covered cartel agreements and patent licenses. In performing this work, the Commission had a substantial part in effecting sav- ings estimated by the Committee at a very large amount. Wartime advertising surveys.—The Commission has been and is analyzing, summarizing, and reporting to the Director of Censorship, at his request, such advertising in magazines, newspapers, and radio broadcasts as contain any refer- ence to the war, war effort, war economy, or war production, the Armed Services, the general public morale or health, price rises or trends, rationing, priorities, and conservation of paper, rubber, and other materials. Advertisements containing possible violations of the Codes of War-Time Practices for press and radio, as published by the Office of Censorship, have been and are transferred to that office for consideration; while other advertising analyses have been and are being made for the War Production Board and the office of Price Administration. Wartime consumer protection— Wool products labeling and trade practice confer- ence activities.—During the present wartime period of enforced lowering of quality standards for consumer goods due to necessary restrictions on the use of essential materials and the replacement thereof by emergency substitutes, the need for consumer protection is greater than ever before. This is especially true in respect of woolen clothing where substitutions are necessary in order to conserve wool for both military and civilian purposes. Acting in the public interest, the Commission insures the consumer this protection through its enforcement of the provisions of the Wool Products Labeling Act which require that wool products be labeled in such manner as to afford the purchaser full information as to the material content of the product. And in harmony with the war program, the Commission, through its trade practice conference procedure, provides a means for the estab. lishment of trade practice rules having as their purpose the maintenance of fair competition, conservation of labor and materials, and consumer protection under the present emergency conditions. Conservation and protection of the public health and public economy.—The function of the Commission in preventing unfair competition and deceptive commercial practices, under the duties imposed upon it as more fully set forth below, is anessential activity at a time when protection of the public interest is imperative as never before. One of the Commission’s responsibilities in this field is enforcementof the law relating to dissemination of advertisements of drugs, cosmetics, andfood which are injurious to health and public well-being. Such enforcementplays an important part in the conservation of the health of our troops and civilianpopulation, while no less important at this time are the questions of price fixing, restraints of trade, coercive practices, false advertising, and numerous other trademethods which affect the price or quality of practically every commodity bought by members of both our civilian population and our armed forces. FUNCTIONS AND PROCEDURE OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION UNDER STATUTES WHICH IT ADMINISTERS 676 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 case 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 i 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 Act; 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 trial and appellate 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 specific methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices condemned by the Com-mission, are set forth in detailin its annual report. 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 vests 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. Important laws to which some of the Commission’s general investigations above referred to have led, directly or indirectly, include, among others, the Export Trade Act, the Packers and Stockyards Act, the Securities Aet of 1933, the Public Utilities Holding Company Act of 1935, the Natural Gas Act of 1935, and the Robinson-Patman Antidiscrimination Act of 1936, which amended section 2 of the Clayton Act. Inquiries presently under way or just completed under section 6 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. Corporation reports.— Under section 6 of the organic act, the Federal Trade Commission is empowered to periodically collect annual or special reports from corporations engaged in interstate commerce (except banks and common carriers). In accordance with the express provisions of section 6, the Commission on May 27, 1940, entered an order requiring about 900 individual corporations to file financial reports covering their 1939 operations. Subsequently, the number of corporations required to submit reports was enlarged and approximately 4,500 corporations were called upon to submit reports covering their 1940 operations. The reports including the 1939 information, combined for each industry, were published at frequent intervals, the first appearing during October 1940. These MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 677 reports have presented the significant facts regarding business conditions and financial results of the more important corporations operating in many industries without disclosing the business statistics of any individual corporation. In all, 76 reports and a summary were published by the Commission with regard to operations in 1939. These reports included the combined operations of 780 corporations with an average total investment, after deduction of reported ap-preciation of assets, aggregating $28,138,187,401, 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 of the 780 corporations represented approximately 63.7 percent of the total value of products as shown by the reports of the Bureau of the Census for the corresponding industry groups. These reports have been extensively used by the national defense agencies and now by the national war agencies. Summary reports including the 1940 informa-tion, although not for publication, have been completed and duplicate copies of most of the reports for 86 industries and covering the combined operations of 2,748 corporations have been supplied to the national war agencies, and in addi-tion, special tabulations prepared from the reports have been and are being supplied to these agencies. The combined industrial operations covered by the 1940 reports represented an aggregate average total investment of $28,561,702,000 after deducting ap-preciation in the amount of $417,213,000. The aggregate sales amounted to $30,736,188,000 and represented approximately 87 percent of the estimated total volume of products for the corresponding industry groups. The aggregate net income after payment of interest and income taxes averaged 10.23 percent on the net worth, or stockholders’ investment. 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 of said decrees 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 coun-tries where associations, combinations, or practices of manufacturers, merchants, or traders, or other conditions may affect the foreign trade of the United States; and to make public from time to time such portions of the information obtained by it as it shall deem expedient in the public interest, except trade secrets and names of customers. ; Section 7 provides that in any suit in equity brought by or under the direction of the Attorney General, as provided in the antitrust acts, the court may refer said suit to the Commission, as a master in chancery, to ascertain and report an appropriate form of decree therein. Other sections of the act give to the Commission authorization for such investi-gations and the compilation of data, with provisions for procedure under the act, and penalties prescribed for refusal of persons, partnerships, or corporations to furnish such material or to comply with orders of the Commission to testify, produce evidence, or file reports, as required. FUNCTIONS OF THE COMMISSION, BOTH LEGAL AND ECONOMIC It will be seen that under the Federal Trade Commission Act the functions of the Commission are both legal and economic. The legal functions include pre-vention of unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, 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 678 i Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 indirectly, 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 provides 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. 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 separa-bility 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 by the Robinson-Patman Antidis-crimination Act, declares that it shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce, either directly or indirectly to diseriminate 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 compensations, 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties : 679 ~ 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 are 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 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 conference is 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 proscribe 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 680 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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; and 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 reorganization 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. Four organizations which, prior to July 1, 1939, were operating either as inde- pendent establishments or as parts of departments, are now operating as con- stituent administrations of FWA. These organizations are: The Work Projects Administration (WPA), formerly the Works Progress Administration (with the exception of the National Youth Administration); the Public Works Administra- tion (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; 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 Department. Each of the administrations is headed by a Commissioner. The United States Housing Authority, which had been a part of the FWA under Reorganization Plan No. I, was transferred to the newly created National Housing 1Agency by Executive Order No. 9070, signed February 24, 1942, and became a part of Federal Public Housing Authority. National defense housing activities assigned to the Federal Works Administrator by the act of October 14, 1940 (54 Stat. 1125), as amended, were also transferred to the National Housing Agency by Executive Order No. 9070. All 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. War public works and services.—In connection with the war effort, the Federal Works Administrator is authorized under the act of June 28, 1941 (55 Stat. 361), and amended by the act of January 21, 1942, to undertake public works necessary for carrying on community life substantially expanded by the war effort 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 war activities exists or impends which would impede the war effort and that such public works or equipment 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 bor- rowing authority in which such shortage exists. He is also authorized to make contributions to public agencies and to nonprofit private agencies to aid in the maintenance and operation of certain public works and services. 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 proj-ects * * *°) as the Works Progress Administration. Under the Presi-dent’s first plan on Government reorganization submitted to Congress on April MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 681 25, 1939, under the terms of the Reorganization Act of 1939, the Works Progress ‘Administration was incorporated in the Federal Works Agency under the name of Work Projects Administration. By directive from the President to the Federal Works Administrator, dated December 4, 1942, the liquidation of the Work Projects Administration was ordered and no further funds will be appropriated for project operations after June 30, 1943. The responsibility for the final Vguidetion of the accounts after June 30, 1943, will rest with the Federal Works ency. : 2 2 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 Extension Act 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. PUBLIC ROADS ADMINISTRATION The Public Roads Administration is the principal road-building agency of the Federal Government. Normally it administers Federal funds made available to aid the States in improvement of highways and constructs roads or supervises road construction in national forests, national parks, and certain other Federal areas. All activities not required in the conduct of the war have been discontinued. The organization is now engaged in construction of access roads to war industries and Army and Navy areas, and the highway to Alaska. It is also correcting critical deficiencies in the network of strategic highways and is working with Central American countries and the Army in the improvement of the Inter-American highway. Research facilities are engaged in the solution of problems presented by war agencies. ; 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 and for the operation and protection of buildings I the District of Columbia and of certain buildings outside of the Distriet of ~olumbia. 682 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Participation of the Public Buildings Administration in the national war program embraces the design and construction of projects assigned to the Admin-istration the use of which is anticipated to be for the period of the emergency; the development of codes, methods, and measures to be employed in the protec-tion of Federally owned and leased buildings and their contents against war damage and against subversive activities; and, the operation of duration dor-mitories for Government employees in and near the District of Columbia for the account of the Federal Public Housing Authority. The Public Buildings Administration performs the physical movement of Government agencies directed to be moved from Washington, including the securing of space in other cities for the use of such agencies. 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 connection with contracts and changes thereof and for other purposes; effects final settlement of contracts. Duplicates drawings for construction 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 blueprinting, photostating, and photography, (3) information service, (4) clearance of surplus furniture for all constituent units of the Federal Works Agency, including transfer of furniture between units, (5) allotment of space available for occupancy by the Public Buildings Admin-istration. 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; administérs rental and lease contracts; administers the 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; administers leasing and sale of surplus real estate; maintains an inventory of Government-owned real estate. 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, eabinet sketches, working drawings and specifications for all projects authorized under the various Federal building programs, and for defense housing projects assigned to the Administration. Prepares codes, methods, and measures to protect Federal buildings and their contents against war damage and subversive activities. 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 Distret of Columbia; makes site surveys; collaborates with other offices of the Administration as necessary or desirable. Office of Decentralization Service— Arranges for lease or purchase of office space to be occupied outside of the District of Columbia by agencies directed to be moved from Washington, and for the physical movement of such agencies and of the household possessions of their employees; provides services to assist trans-ferred personnel in the location of living accommodations at their new stations and in the liquidation of real property interests in Washington. Office. of Residence Halls.—For the account of the Federal Public Housing Authority manages and operates duration dormitories for Federal employees in MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 683 and near the District of Columbia, together with facilities related and appurtenant thereto. Section of Fsne 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. A special committee has been appointed to prepare instructions for extinguishing incendiary bombs and render other assistance, for the duration of the emergency, to Government agencies charged with the preservation of lives, buildings, and records. Reports of surveys and other committee actions are submitted for adoption at pried 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. 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. On February 7, 1942, the War Department acquired, for military purposes, a considerable portion of the area and facilities of the New York Foreign-Trade Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS Zone. As an emergency measure, the Board authorized the grantee to use piers Nos. 72,73, 74, 75,and 84. North River, and adjacent uplands, as temporary sites where operations formerly carried on in Foreign-Trade Zone No. 1, will be continued. A partial list of manipulations 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 and sale by inscription of Sumatra 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. Applications for grants to establish and operate foreign-trade zones in several other ports of entry, including Houston, Tex., and New Orleans, La., 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 offices 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 MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 685 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. INTER-AMERICAN DEFENSE BOARD The Inter-American Defense Board is a permanently constituted organization composed of military, naval, and aviation technical delegates appointed by each of the governments of the 21 American Republics. It has been established in -accordance with Resolution 39 of the meeting of Foreign Ministers at Rio de Janeiro in January 1942. The Board is located in the city of Washington and is an autonomous international organization within the sphere of action and purposes of the Union of the American Republics and under the auspices of the Pan American Union. The purpose of the Board is to study and to recommend to the governments of the American Republics the measures necessary for the defense of the continent. 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, 833 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. 3. The United States and Canada boundary from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, with the exception of the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Length, 2,697 miles. Articles I, IT, III, V, VI, VII, and VIII, of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, entitled “Canadian International Boundary,” signed at 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——45 686 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. y 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. 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 where 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 687 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.” -The Commission consists of six members, three appointed by the President of the United States and three appointed by His Majesty on recommendation of the Government of Canada. It was organized in 1911, adopted rules of pro-cedure, and established permanent offices in Washington and Ottawa. It has jurisdiction over all cases involving the use or obstruction or diversion of bound-ary waters between the United States and Canada, of waters flowing from bound-ary waters, and of waters at a lower level than the boundary in rivers flowing across the boundary. Under article IX of the treaty the International Joint Commission also is con-stituted an investigatory body for the purpose of examining into and reporting upon any questions or matters of difference arising along the common frontier that shall be referred to it from time to time whenever either the Government of the United States or the Government of Canada shall request that such questions or matters of difference be so referred. Under article X of the treaty any questions or matters of difference arising between the high contracting parties involving the rights, obligations, or interests of the United States or of the Dominion of Canada, either in relation to each other or to their respective inhabitants, may be referred for decision to the Inter-national Joint Commission, it being understood that on the part of the United States such action will be by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and on the part of Great Britain with the consent of the Government of Canada. Under article VI of the treaty the Commission is charged with the measure-ment and apportionment from time to time of the waters of the St. Mary and Milk Rivers and their tributaries, these rivers lying partly in Montana and partly in Alberta and Saskatchewan, and being largely used for irrigation purposes in both countries. 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-Elkins 688 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Act of June 18, 1910; the acts of August 24, 1912, and May 29 and August 9, 1917; the Transportation Act, 1920; the Emergency Railroad Transportation Act, 1933; the Motor Carrier Act, 1935; the Transportation Act, 1940, and part IV of the Interstate Commerce Act, for the regulation of freight forwarders, approved May 16, 1942. The number of commissioners was increased under the act of June 29, 1906, to 7 members; under the act of August 9, 1917, to 9 members; and under the Transportation Act, 1920, to 11 members. The Commission appoints a secretary, 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 the Motor Carrier Act, 1935, by the addition of part II of the Interstate Commerce Act, over water carriers by the Transportation Act of 1940, by the addition of part III thereof, and over freight forwarders by the act of May 16, 1942. 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, or District of the United States to any other State, Territory, or District of the United States, or to any foreign country, and to common carriers engaged in inter-state transportation of passengers or property wholly by railroad (or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are used under a common control, manage-ment, or arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment); also to express companies 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 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 zailroad, 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 689 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 authorized 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 for-bids 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 IIT 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 noncarrier corporation may acquire stock control of one Or more carriers, and when so authorized by the Commission such noncarrier corporations are to be considered and treated as carriers subject to the act for the purposes of its provisions relating to reports, accounts, and issuance of securities. The act 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. In abandonment cases the Commission has discretionary authority to determine whether it will impose conditions for the protection of the interests of rail labor adversely affected by the abandonment. 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 continue in force until its further order, or for a specified period of time, according as shall be pre-scribed in the order, unless modified or set aside by the Commission, or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction. Carriers are required to publish and file rates, rules, and regulations applying to interstate traffic and are prohibited from engaging in interstate transportation unless such rates, rules, and regulations are published and filed. Severe penalties are 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. 690 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS By the second war powers act of 1942, the Commission is given the same authority with respect to motor carriers, to be exercised under similar circum-stances and conditions as it has under section 1 (15) of the Interstate Commerce Act of May 29, 1917, as amended, over rail carriers. 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 amendment of September 18, 1940, it is made unlawful for any common carrier by railroad or express company to enter into any contract, etc., with any person for the furnishing of protective service against heat or eold to property transported in interstate commerce, unless such contract, etc., has been submitted to and approved by the Commission as just, reasonable, and consistent with the public interest. The Commission was given access also by this act into the records of persons furnishing such cars or protective service, 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 classifications, 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 and of advantage to the convenience and commerce of the people, and such extension 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 691 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, etec., contrary to the provisions of the Commission’s orders or grants of authority. : 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 692 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, provided for the termina- tion of proceedings for recapture of excess income, and substituted 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 such 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 juris- diction 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, section22 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 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, ete., 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. if ! 3 +8 i MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 693 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 prescribe a law-ful rate. It also has jurisdiction over divisions of rates and fares as between joint carriers and other related matters. The Commission is directed in determining the justness of any rate to take into consideration the elements of the inherent advantages of 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, etc., as contained in the declaration of policy, heretofore set out. The Commission may not consider goodwill, earning power, or certificate value in rate determinations. 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. 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 regulation of the sizes and weights of motor vehicles and combinations of motor vehicles. The Commission’s report in this investigation has been printed and appears as House Document No. 354, Seventy-seventh Congress, First Session, and bills have been introduced in the Senate and House (S. 2015 and H. R. 5949) intended to carry out its recommendations. Part III of the Interstate Commerce Act, approved September 18, 1940, gives the Commission extensive authority over common carriers and contract carriers 694 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. Part IV of the Interstate Commerce Act, approved May 16, 1942, gives the Commission extensive authority over freight forwarders. The term freight for- warder means any person (other than a carrier subject to part I, II, or III of the act) who holds itself out to the general public to transport or provide transporta- tion of property for compensation, assumes responsibility for the transportation, and utilizes in whole or in part of the transportation the services of a carrier or carriers subject to part I, II, or III of the act. The act excludes from regulation cooperative associations where the property . consists of ordinary livestock, fish, agricultural commodities, or used household goods if the person engages in this service subject to this part with respect to not more than one of the classifications of such property. The act also vests the Commission with authority to administer its provisions and issue necessary rules and regulations, authority to prescribe reasonable rules and regulations for the filing of surety bonds, policies of insurance, etc. The Commission may obtain information concerning operations of the forwarder, make necessary recommendations for further legislation, and investigate com- plaints as to whether the forwarders have observed the provisions of the act. Freight forwarders must furnish service upon reasonable request therefor and provide just and reasonable rates as well as reasonable practices as to the issuance of receipts and bills of lading and for the pick-up and delivery of freight subject to this part of the act. Unreasonable preferences or advantages are forbidden. The Commission is also given extensive authority over the rates and practices of freight forwarders; the act requires the filing of tariffs, suspension, etc., and per- mits common carriers subject to parts I, IT, and III of the act to establish assem- bly or distribution rates on less-than-carload and less-than-truckload shipments. The act provides an adjustment period pending the establishment of assembly and distribution rates, provides for the issuance of permits for anyone to engage in the freight forwarding business, and forbids a freight forwarder from acquiring control of any carrier subject to parts I, II, or III of the act. The Commission may prescribe uniform systems of accounts for freight forwarders and require annual and periodical reports and its agents may have access to forwarder records. The act contains provisions for bills of lading and delivery of property by freight forwarders, requires them to collect lawful freight forwarder charges, and permits allowances to shippers for transportation services performed for the forwarder. The act contains provisions for notices, orders, and service of process; provides for enforcement of its provisions and the procedure thereunder and prescribes penalties for violation. It contains provisions for the services of other carriers whose services may be utilized by the freight forwarders. The act contains pro- visions also relating to when its various requirements are to become effective. 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 en-force certain provisions of the act approved October 15, 1914, to supplement existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies, insofar as such provi- MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties : 695 sions 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 eompetitive bidding under regulations to be preseribed by the Commission. The Commission is further authorized to investigate violations of the act by carriers and to require the guilty parties to cease therefrom, and its findings of fact in such investigations shall be conclusive when supported by testimony. Railway Mail Service Pay Act.—The act making appropriations for the service of the Post Office Department, approved July 28, 1916, empowers the Commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the trans-portation of mail matter by railway common carriers and services connected therewith, prescribing the method by weight or space, or both, or otherwise. The act making appropriations for the services of the Post Office Department for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1919, empowers the Commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the transportation of mail matter by urban and interurban electric railway common carriers. Standard Time Act.—By the act approved March 19, 1918 the Commission is authorized to fix the limits of the standard time zones established for the con-tinental United States and Alaska, having due regard, in doing so, to the con-venience of commerce and the junction and division points of common carriers whose movements are to be governed by the standard time of the zones so fixed. Safety Appliance Acts.—The act of March 2, 1893, known as the Safety 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. So Pan Act.—The act of May 30, 1908, makes it the duty of the Interstate Commerce Commission to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is provided that after a certain date no locomotive shall be used in moving interstate or foreign traffic, ete., not equipped with an ash pan which can be emptied without requiring a man to go under such locomotive. Penalties are provided for violations of this act. Transportation of Explosives Act.—The act of May 30, 1908, as amended by act approved March 4, 1921, directed the Interstate Commerce Commission to make regulations 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 87 % ; 696 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, confers jurisdiction upon the Commission to enforce certain provisions compelling rail-road companies to equip their locomotives with safe and suitable boilers and appurtenances thereto. By amendatory acts approved March 4, 1915, June 7, 1924, and June 27, 1930, the powers of the Commission to inspect and to prescribe standards of safety for locomotive boilers and appurtenances thereto was extended to include “all parts and appurtenances of the locomotive and tender.” 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 tests of such systems and appliances as shall be furnished in completed shape to the Commission for investigation and test, free of cost to the Government, in accord-ance with the provisions of joint resolution approved June 30, 1916, and Sundry Civil Appropriation Act approved May 27, 1908. Provision was made in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Acts approved August 1, 1914, March 3, 1915, July 1, 1916, June 12, 1917, and July 1, 1918, for continuing the investigation and testing of these systems and appliances. : By an act approved August 26, 1937, section 26 of part I of the Interstate Commerce Act, changed to section 25 by the Transportation Acv 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 earriers 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. Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938.—The first sentence of subsection (b) of section 1003 of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, as amended, is further amended by act of May 16, 1942, to permit air carriers to establish reasonable through service ScTiLaNToUs. Official Duties 697 and joint rates with other common carriers, except that with respect to trans-portation of property, air carriers not directly engaged in the operation of aircraft in air transportation (other than companies engaged in the air express business) may not establish joint rates with common carriers subject to the Interstate Commerce Act. : : Subsection (b) of section 412 of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, as amended, is amended by act of May 16, 1942, to provide that the Authority shall by order disapprove any such contract or agreement, whether or not previously approved by it, that it finds to be adverse to the public interest, or in violation of this act, and shall by order approve any such contract or agreement that it does not find to be adverse to the public interest, or in violation of this act; except that the Authority may not approve any contract or agreement between an air carrier not directly engaged in the operation of aircraft in air transportation and a common carrier subject to the Interstate Commerce Act, governing the com- pensation to be received by such common carrier for performing transportation services. MARITIME COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (See also War Shipping Administration, p. 541) Note.—On February 7, 1942, under authority of the First War Powers Act (Public Law 354, 77th Cong.) by Executive Order 9054 (7 F. R. 837), the Presi-dent established the War Shipping Administration within the Office of Emergency Management. Certain functions, duties, and powers set forth below were trans-ferred by that order from the Maritime Commission to the War Shipping Ad-ministration. 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. 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 ‘ile 698 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS clarified by acts of Congress on several occasions since enactment of the Merchant Marine Act, 1936. 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%-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 1214 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 3%-percent interest per annum, must be secured by a first preferred mortgage and otherwise as the Commission may direct. 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 vessels 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 MISCELLANEOUS ™ Official Duties 699 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. This authority is being exercised by the War Shipping Administration during the present war under authority of Executive Order 9054. 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 shail 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 work-ing 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. Citizenship requirements of officers and crews are enforced by the Secretary of Commerce. 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 ap-proval 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 national emergency and the present war. 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, | 700 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS and the construction at an accelerated pace of vessels under the Commission’s long-range 500-ship program. The aggregate construction program now under way is planned to produce about 2,700 ships of approximately 27,000,000 tons in 1942 and 1943. : a 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. 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 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. The Commission may in carrying out the 1936 act negotiate construction contracts without competitive bidding and adjust outstanding construction contracts. The chairman of the Commission, in coordination with the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, is authorized to renegotiate contracts for the purpose of preventing or recapturing excessive profits in aceordance with the provisions of section 403 of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense Appropria-tion Act, 1942, as amended by the Revenue Act of 1942. War Shipping Administration (see p. 641).—The Administrator, appointed by and responsible to the President, is authorized to perform the following functions and duties: Control the operation, purchase, charter, requisition and use of all ocean vessels under the flag or control of the United States except combatant vessels, transports and vessels engaged in inland transportation which are under the control of the Office of Defense Transportation; to allocate vessels under the flag or control of the United States for use by the Army, Navy, other Govern-ment agencies, and the governments of the United Nations; to provide marine -insurance and reinsurance against loss or damage by the risks of war; to establish the conditions to be complied with as conditions to receiving priorities and other advantages as provided by the act of Congress of July 14, 1941 (55 Stat. 591); to represent the United States Government in dealing with the British Ministry of War Transport and with similar shipping agencies of nations allied with the United States in the prosecution of the war in matters related to the use of shipping; to train personnel for the Merchant Marine in all of its branches and ratings, including unlicensed seamen, radio operators, officers from the ranks and the training of cadets for officers, and to operate State nautical schools (under Government aid and supervision), training stations and training ships in connection therewith; to maintain current data on the availability of shipping, in being and under construction, and to furnish such data on request to the War and Navy Departments, and other Federal departments and agencies concerned with the import or export of war materials and commodities; to keep the Presi-dent informed with regard to the progress made and perform such related duties as the President shall from time to time assign-or delegate to him; to cooperate with existing Military, Naval, and Civil departments and agencies of the Govern-ment performing functions connected with wartime overseas transportation and to issue such directives as he may deem necessary, from time to time. 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 the War and Navy Departments from the offices in charge of military and naval aeronautics, two representatives of the Civil Aeronautics Authority (Civil Aero- autics Act of 1938), one representative each of the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Weather Bureau, and the National Bureau of Standards, MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 701 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 th 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-nautiecs. 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’s major research station, known as the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory, is located at Langley Field, Va., comprising over 30 structures and a research staff of over 2,000 employees. Seven units of the Committee’s second major research station located at Moffett Field, Calif., have been constructed and placed in operation. This laboratory is known as the Ames Aeronautical Laboratory, employing over 400 research workers. Additional urgently needed research facilities are under construction at this station. At Cleveland, Ohio, the Committee is completing construction of its third major research station, known as the Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory. This $20,000,000 station, already in partial operation with a staff of over 1,000 employ-ees, is devoted entirely to aircraft engine research and will be completed and placed in full operation during 1943. NATIONAL ARCHIVES, THE The National Archives was established under an act of Congress approved June 19, 1934 (48 Stat. 1122-24), which created the Office of Archivist of the United States and prescribed his duties. The primary objective of The National Archives is to make the experience of the Government and the people of the United States as it is embodied in the records of the Federal Government and related materials available to guide and assist the Government and the people in planning and conducting their activities. It endeavors to attain that objective by assembling, preserving, arranging, and describing such of the noncurrent records of agencies of the Federal Government as have sufficient administrative, legal, research, or other value to warrant their permanent preservation and by making such records available for use by Government officials, scholars, and others who have occasion to consult them. ‘“Motion-picture films and sound recordings pertaining to and illustrative of historical activities of the United States” are also accepted, preserved, and made available. Another function of The National Archives is the appraising of records reported to the Archivist by Government agencies as having no permanent value or histori- 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——46 } } f Ny 702 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS cal interest to the Federal Government or as having been photographed in accord-ance with certain conditions, in order that the Archivist may, with the approval of the National Archives Council, report such records to Congress, which authorizes their disposal. - The Division of the Federal Register of The National Archives was created by a separate law approved July 26, 1935 (49 Stat. 500-503). Under this law and subsequent amendments thereto this Division receives and publishes in daily issues of the Federal Register the text of all Presidential proclamations and Executive orders and of rules and regulations issued by Federal agencies that have general applicability and legal effect. It also prepares for publication codifica-tions of all such documents that are still in force and effect, and annual supple-ments to these codifications. NATIONAL ARCHIVES COUNCIL The National Archives Council was established by the National Archives Act (48 Stat. 1122-1124), which 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 HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS COMMISSION The National Historical Publications Commission was created by the National Archives Act (48 Stat. 1122-1124). The duties of the Commission are to ‘“‘make plans, estimates, and recommenda-tions for such historical works and collections of sources as seem appropriate for publication and/or otherwise recording at the public expense.” The Archivist of the United States is the chairman of the Commission and is required by the act to transmit its recommendations to Congress. NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARD The National Archives Trust Fund Board was created by an 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 a joint resolution approved July 18, 1939 (53 Stat. 1062-1066), which prescribed as its primary functions the preservation and administration of such collections of historical material as shall be donated to it by Franklin D. Roosevelt and such other material related to and contemporary with this material as may be acquired from other sources by gift, purchase, or loan. The administration of the Library is vested in the Archivist of the United States. TRUSTEES OF THE FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY A Board known as the Trustees of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library was created by the joint resolution establishing the Library (53 Stat. 1062-1066), which authorizes the Board to ‘‘receive gifts and bequests of personal property and to hold and administer the same as trust funds for the benefit of the Franklin D. Roosevelt 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 703 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 recom-mendations of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia for changes in the existing highway plan. Paragraph (d) vested the new commission 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 Solumhin for use by the Commission in accelerating park purchases within the istrict. NATIONAL HOUSING AGENCY OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Creation and authority.—The National Housing Agency was created by the President on February 24, 1942. Employing the powers vested in him by the First War Powers Act, 1941 (55 Stat. 838, ch. 593; 50 App. U. 8S. C. 601, etec.), the . President issued Executive Order 9070 consolidating into the National Housing Agency the housing functions and activities formerly carried on by the following agencies: the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Federal Home Loan Bank System, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, the United States Housing Corporation, the Federal Housing Administration, the United States Housing Authority, the Defense Homes Corporation, the Division of Defense Housing Coordination, the Central Housing Committee, the nonfarm housing functions of the Farm Security Administration, and the housing functions of the Public Buildings Administration, the Division of Defense Housing and the Mutual Ownership Defense Housing Division in the Federal Works Agency, and the housing for the War and Navy Departments outside that on reservations, posts, and bases and that which is permanently useful to those Departments. : Organization.—All housing activities and functions formerly carried on by the consolidated agencies are now administered within the framework of the National Housing Agency, under the direction and supervision of the National Housing Administrator. Executive Order 9070 established three principal constituent units within the National Housing Agency: the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, the Federal Housing Administration, and the Federal Public Housing Authority. Office of the Administrator—In addition to supervising and directing the activi-ties of the three constituent units, the Administrator and his staff perform a special function arising out of the war effort. In cooperation with the War Production Board, the War Manpower Commission, and other Federal agencies, the Office of the Administrator determines the need for housing for war workers in areas where a shortage of housing exists or impends, which threatens to impede the war program, and devises ways and means of supplying such need. This 704 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS function includes surveys of individual communities; the compilation of employ- ment and housing data from both public and private sources; negotiation of priority ratings for materials; and, finally, in light of all the various factors, a determination of (a) the proportion of the housing need for each community which can be met through a more complete utilization of existing housing facilities, (b) the proportion which can be supplied by private builders through new construc- tion, and (c¢) the proportion of the remaining need which is absolutely essential to the war effort and which must therefore be supplied through publicly financed housing. The omen Use Service has been set up in the Office of the Administrator for the purposes of: (1) making maximum use of existing housing facilities by encour- aging persons who have extra living space to make it available to war workers during the emergency; and (2) increasing the number of housing accommodations in existing structures by encouraging their remodeling and conversion either with private funds supplied by their owners or by lease to the Government for conver- sion with public funds. The Homes Use Service also maintains clearing houses in war production centers where available living accommodations may be listed and where war workers may apply for use of those accommodations. These clearing houses are operated locally as homes registration offices in some communities and as war housing centers, with some Government support, in the more critical hous- ing areas. ; FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION The Federal Housing Administration was established by an act of Congress approved June 27, 1934, and was made a constituent agency of the National Housing Agency on February 24, 1942, by Executive Order 9070. The functions of the Federal Housing Administration are performed under four titles of the National Housing Act: (I) Property Repair and Modernization; II) Mortgage Insurance; (III) National Mortgage Associations; and (VI) War ousing Insurance. The act authorizes the Federal Housing Commissioner to insure loans made by private lending agencies. The Administration, accordingly, does not lend or grant Government funds, and its sole expenditures are made to cover the cost of administration and in connection with claims under its contracts of insurance. The Federal Housing Commissioner is appointed by the President for a term of 4 years, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. : Under title I, the Commissioner is authorized to insure qualified lending insti-tutions against loss on loans to finance the alteration, repair, or improvement of real property, or, within certain limitations, the erection of new structures. The maximum amount of a title I improvement loan is $5,000, the maximum of a new construction loan is $3,000. New structure loans are secured by mortgages, and all loans must comply with certain requirements as to interest rate, maturity, and periodic payment. A premium of one-half of 1 percent is charged the lender on loans for the construction of new dwellings, and three-fourths of 1 percent on other title I loans. Insurance coverage on title I loans amounts to 10 percent of the aggregate ad-vanced by the lender. The total liability which may be outstanding at any time may not exceed $165,000,000. The authority granted under this title expires July 1, 1944. Under title IT the Commissioner is authorized to insure approved mortgages as provided under sections 203 and 207 of the act. Mortgages insured under section 203 may not exceed $16,000 and 80 percent of the appraised value of a dwelling designed for not more than four families, except that mortgages on newly constructed single-family owner-occupied dwellings may be up to 90 percent of appraised value, provided they do not exceed $5,400; or may be up to 90 percent of the first $6,000 of appraised value and 80 percent of the remainder of such value, provided they do not exceed $8,600. The maximum interest rate on mortgages insured under section 203 is 414 percent; a mortgage insurance premium of one-half of 1 percent on reducing balances is likewise charged. Provision is made under section 207 for the insurance of mortgages up to $5,000,000 on apartment houses or groups of single or multiple-family houses. These mortgages are limited to 80 percent of the estimated value of the property when proposed improvements are complete, but in no event may a mortgage insured under this section exceed the estimated cost of completed physical im-provements. The insurance may, however, cover advances made during progress of construction. The maximum interest rate is 4% percent, the insurance premium one-half of 1 percent on reducing balances. Strict regulation of the mortgagor is maintained by the Commissioner in connection with section 207 projects. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 705 The aggregate amount of principal obligations of all mortgages insured under title II and outstanding at any one time may not exceed $5,000,000,000. By administrative action, title Il activities during the war period are restricted primarily to insurance of mortgages on existing dwellings under section 203. Insurance of war housing is conducted under title VI. If he is of the opinion that its establishment is desirable to provide a market for mortgages insured under titles II and VI and that it is in the public interest, the Commissioner is authorized under title III to provide for the establishment of national mortgage associations. Such an association may make real estate loans accepted for insurance or insured under title IT of the act, may purchase, service, or sell title II or title VI insured mortgages, may 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 the mort-gage does not exceed 60 percent of the appraised value of the property as of the date of its purchase by the association. Under title VI, the Commissioner may insure mortgages on dwellings in areas in which the President finds existent an acute shortage of housing which would impede war activities. Mortgages insured under section 603 of this title are limited to a maximum of $5,400 on a single-family dwelling, $7,500 on a two-family, $9,500 on a three-family, and $12,000 on a four-family dwelling. The maximum interest rate is 41% percent, the premium charge on reducing balances one-half of 1 percent. War workers must be given occupancy priority. Mortgages insured under section 608 of title VI may not exceed $5,000,000 and 90 percent of the Commissioner’s estimate of the reasonable replacement cost of the completed project, exclusive of off-site public utilities and streets, and organi-zation and legal expenses. The interest rate on section 608 mortgages may not exceed 4 percent, the premium charge one-half of 1 percent. The mortgagor must be approved by the Commissioner and may be regulated by him as to rents or sales, charges, capital structure, rate of return, and methods of operation. The property must be designed for rent for residential use by war workers. The Commissioner is authorized to insure under title VI mortgages the aggre-gate principal amount of which may not exceed $1,200,000,000. The authority granted under this title expires July 1, 1944. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK ADMINISTRATION The Federal Home Loan Bank Administration administers the functions, powers, and duties formerly administered by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and its members. Under the provisions of Executive Order No. 9070, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board became the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, and the chairman of the Board was designated as the Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner. The units in the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration are (1) the Federal Home Loan Bank System, together with a unit that charters and supervises Federal Savings and Loan Associations, (2) the Federal Savings and Loan Insur-ance Corporation, (3) the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, and (4) the United States Housing Corporation (in liquidation). 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. It was established to provide a credit reserve for the thrift and home financing institutions of the country, through the operations of regional Federal home loan banks. This act was subsequently amended by the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, approved June 13, 1933; by the National Housing Act, approved June 27, 1934; and by amenda-tory acts of Congress, approved April 27, 1934, May 28, 1935, and March 28, 1941. 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. Each bank has 12 directors, appointed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner, and 8 elected by the member institutions. Pursuant to law, member institutions have been divided 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 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 must be officers or directors of member institutions in the class selecting them. The remaining 2 directors are elected by all the member institutions without regard to classes. hein. fi 706 * Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The capital stock of the 12 Federal home loan banks is subscribed by institu- tions 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 Administration, are long-term loans (and, in the case of a savings bank, if, in the judgment of the Bank Adminis-tration, 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 Administration, 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 economi-cal home financing or the purposes of the act. The Administration may promul-gate 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 of its holdings in capital stock of its regional bank. The schedule of interest rates charged by the banks to members must be approved by the Bank Administration. The banks do not grant loans to indi* viduals. The Federal home loan banks also may make loans to nonmember lending institutions approved under title II of the National Housing Act upon the security of mortgages insured under title II of that act. Each bank may issue bonds, debentures, or other obligations when permitted by the Administration. 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 Administration 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. As of February 28, 1943, the membership of the System consisted of 3,740 institutions of the savings and loan type, 23 insurance companies, and 21 savings banks. Members’ assets totaled $5,753,095,000. 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 are associations organized under Federal charter to provide local mutual thrift institutions in which the public may invest its funds and may obtain sound and economical home financing. Each Federal savings and loan association, upon its establishment, automatically becomes a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank System and must obtain insurance of its investors’ accounts by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Supervision of these institutions is exercised through the 12 Federal home. loan banks in accordance with regulations promulgated by the Adminis-tration. Federal 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 Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. They lend their funds primarily upon the security of amortized first mortgages on” homes or MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 707 gombizetion home and business properties located within 50 miles of their home offices. Federal savings and loan associations can be organized anywhere in the United States or its territories upon a petition by citizens for a charter. The Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, 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 institution in its community, that the institution will, in all probability, be useful and successful, and that its incorporation will not unduly injure properly conducted existing thrift and home-financing institutions. Federally chartered savings and loan associations are also established by con-version of State-chartered associations which apply and are approved for Federal charter. As of February 28, 1943, there were 1,468 Federal savings and loan associations in operation. 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. This 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 institutions of the savings and loan type. Insurance is mandatory for Federal savings and loan associations; State-chartered institutions of the savings, build-ing and loan type may be insured upon application and approval. The Insurance Corporation is administered by the Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner. By law its capital, 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 newly insured associations. The Corporation insures repurchasable (withdrawable) share accounts, depos-its, and investment certificates only. Each insured investor is insured up to the amount 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 Corpora-tion, provided for in the law. Insurance of accounts can be voluntarily terminated by any insured institution, except a Federal Savings and Loan Association, upon adequate notice of its intention to the Corporation and to its members. 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 and within prescribed limits, to make loans to, purchase the assets of, or make contributions to, the insured institution. 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 debentures, payable one-half within 1 year and the other half within 3 years from the date the insured institution was taken over forliquidation. 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. As of February 28, 1943, associations to the number of 2,415 had become insured. Their assets totaled approximately $3,657,989,000. / 708 Congressional Directory | MISCELLANEOUS HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was created by the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, approved June 13, 1933. This act has 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 administered by the Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner. The Corporation has a capital stock, fully paid for by the Secretary of the Treasury, totaling $200,000,000, and was authorized to issue bonds in an aggre-gate 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 home mortgages of distressed home owners by exchanging its bonds for such mort-gages, which were then taken over by the Corporation. Loans could be made only to those who were unable to procure needed financing through normal chan-nels. Loans were made on the security of dwellings for not more than four fami-lies valued at not more than $20,000. In accordance with law, the Corporation terminated its lending activities on June 12, 1936, after making 1,017,821 loans to the amount of $3,093,000,000. Since then the Corporation has been engaged in the collection of its loans and the orderly liquidation of the properties it has been forced to acquire. Up to the end of 1942, total loans, subsequent advances, and other investments of the Corpo-ration in its loans, sales contracts, and properties reached a cumulative total of $3,481,509,270. On the same date $1,687,217,237 or 48.5 percent of this amount had been liquidated. Under the original Home Owners’ Loan Act, all loans of the Corporation were written for a term not to exceed 15 years. On August 11, 1939, the 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. In 1939, the Corporation made provision to accept, until further notice, interest at the rate of 41% 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 property by the Corporation, interest is to be charged at the 4)4-percent rate until other-wise directed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner. In addition, the Corporation is authorized to purchase obligations of the Federal home loan banks, shares of Federal savings and loan associations, and shares and other securities of other qualified applying institutions which are members of a Federal home loan bank or whose accounts are insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, up to a total of $300,000,000. Of a ‘total of $223,856,710 so invested in shares of associations, $109,372,160 remained outstanding on March 31, 1943. 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 administrative 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. : Under a program of the National Housing Agency, Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration has been assigned functions in the production of housing for war workers’ families by the lease and conversion of private homes and other buildings. It has the duties of negotiating leases with home owners on behalf of the United States, supervising alterations to provide additional dwelling space, renting the space to war workers and management of the properties throughout the life of the lease. UNITED STATES HOUSING CORPORATION The United States Housing Corporation was incorporated on July 5, 1918, pursuant to act of Congress approved June 4, 1918, 40 Stat. 595. It was trans-ferred from the Department of Labor to the Department of the Treasury by Executive Order No. 7641 of June 22, 1937, to be under the supervision of the Director of Procurement. It was transferred from the Treasury Department to the Public Buildings Administration of the Federal Works Agency by Executive Order No. 8186 of June 29, 1939. Under the provisions of Executive Order No. 9070 of February 24, 1942, the Corporation was placed in the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration of the National Housing Agency. h MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 709 FEDERAL PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITY The Federal Public Housing Authority was established by Executive OrderNo. 9070, dated February 24, 1942, as one of the three main constituent units of the National Housing Agency. The Federal Public Housing Authority is responsi-ble for the administration of functions and duties with respect to public housing which were formerly vested in (1) the United States Housing Authority; (2) the Federal Works Administrator, with respect to defense housing; (3) any agencies (including the Federal Works Agency and the Farm Security Administration) previously designated to provide temporary shelter in defense areas under the l | several Acts making funds available for such purpose; (4) the War Department and the Navy Department, with respect to housing units (except housing units located on military or naval reservations, posts, or bases) for persons with families under title IV of the Naval Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1941 (Public, No. 853, 77th Cong.); (5) the Farm Security Administration, with respect to housing projects determined to be for families not deriving their principal income from operating or working upon a farm; and (6) the Defense Homes Corporation. War housing.—The Federal Public Housing Authority is authorized to provide housing for persons engaged in war activities whenever the President finds that an acute shortage of housing exists which will impede such war activities and that such housing would not be provided by private capital when needed. This in-cludes housing for workers engaged in industries essential to the war effort, for certain military and naval personnel, and for certain employees of the United States whose duties are essential to the war effort. The Federal Public Housing Authority is authorized to acquire land for, con-struct, and operate projects to provide such war housing, including family housing, dormitories, and trailers. The Federal Public Housing Authority is authorized to utilize local public housing agencies in the construction and operation of such war housing projects. The Federal Public Housing Authority is also authorized to revise contracts for financial assistance which had been entered into with local public housing agencies in connection with the development and administration of low-rent housing and slum clearance projects located in areas where there is a shortage ofhousing for persons engaged in war activities, so that these projects can be used during the emergency to provide necessary public housing for persons engaged in war activities. Low-rent housing and slum clearance.—Pursuant to the United States Housing Act of 1937, as amended, contracts for financial assistance for the development and administration of low-rent housing and slum clearance projects were entered into with local public housing agencies. The Federal Public Housing Authority is now administering these contracts. The projects now being completed under these contracts are being made available for persons engaged in war activities wherever needed. No new urban housing construction is being started by local housing authorities except where the projects will be needed for persons engaged in war activities. 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.” It isan 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-~ | Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS 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, re-spectively, 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 Adjustment 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 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 0 the activities of each of the four divisions of the National Railroad Adjustment oard. Counsel as an independent agency in the Executive Branch of the Government, these functions were performed by the Consumers’ Counsel Division, Office of the Solicitor, Department of the Interior, and before that, by the Office of the Consumers’ Counsel of the National Bituminous Coal Commission. The Consumers’ Counsel reports annually on the activities of his office directly to the Congress. 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 informationof the American Republics. It was created by the Second International Con- ference of American Republics (1901-2), organized by the First Pan AmericanSanitary 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 internationalsanitary 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 communicablediseases. It acts as a consulting office for the national directors of health of theAmerican Republics, prepares the programs and publishes the proceedings ofthe Pan American Sanitary Conferences and the Conferences of the NationalDirectors of Health, and carries out epidemiological and other scientific studiesand 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. 712 C ongressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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 115,000 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 conference, 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, consid-erably enlarged the functions of the Pan American Union. All communications Should be addressed to the Director General, Pan American Union, Washington, 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- MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres | 713. 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, bureaus, and agencies controlled and maintained by carrier or carrier subsidiary employers and engaged in the performance of services in connection with or ineci-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 em-ployee representatives are under certain circumstances covered by the retirement acts but not by the Unemployment Insurance Act. Organization.—The Board is composed of three members appointed by 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 recommenda-tions. The Board is organized to integrate the duties imposed by the retirement and unemployment insurance acts. Directly responsible to the Board are the secre-tary, the Washington representative, the general counsel, the general auditor, and the director of research. The executive officer is directly responsible to the Board for the operations of the bureaus of administration, retirement claims, wage and service records and employment and claims. The liaison officer under the direction of the executive officer conducts liaison activities between the Board, employers, and employee organizations. The appeals council functions as an independent body responsible to the Board but is attached to the office of the executive officer for administrative purposes. Claims for annuities and death benefits under the Railroad Retirement Act are adjudicated in the Bureau of Retirement Claims. Claims for benefits under the Unemployment Insurance Act are adjudicated in the Bureau of Employment and Claims, although actual adjudication and certification for payment is per-formed in nine regional offices. An auxiliary administrative service is per-formed, under contract and for an agreed compensation, by covered employers who designate certain of their employees to receive unemployment insurance claims and registrations and forward them through a higher placed employee to the appropriate regional office of the Board. The Division of Employment Serv-ice 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 unem-ployment insurance claims. RAILROAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1937 Annuities—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 Ysgo 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; 114 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 7 14 C ongresstonal Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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 relation to, an employer under the act, or who were on that date employee representatives, 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. Under certain conditions, military service credit may be given in determining the years of service. 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 the monthly 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 circumstances, 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. In determining the amount of the deceased’s total compensation, provision has recently been made for giving $160 credit under certain conditions for each month the deceased was in military service after December 31, 1936. 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 The act created an account benefits.— 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. Subchapter B of chapter 9 of the Internal Revenue Code (53 Stat. 179) approved February 10, 1939 (formerly the Carriers Taxing Act of 1937; 50 Stat. 435), 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 employees 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 4 percent every 3 years until it reaches the maximum of 3%; percent, MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 715 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 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 payable to 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 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. 716 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. 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 IIT 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— tod Daily bene- Total compensation in base year fCrate Registra-Benefit tion period oor of 14 days y I 34 IIT Iv 15000: 8300.,00 0 enRe aT $1.75 $17. 50 $175. 00 $200itoIg474.99 Loo ola ta di po La EE as a dT 2.00 20. 00 200. 00 $47510:8749.99. 5. oho sees oT Se pe pein Nb] Sani 2.25 22. 50 225. 00 SS OorS000.90. naa he sak Sa Gen 2.50 25. 00 250. 00 OOO 0 SY, 209.00. i each hare 3.00 30. 00 300. 00 S1.30080 81,809.00. 1. o.oo aa He aE 3.50 35. 00 350. 00 $1600. aNAOVer. easea DL NH SHR 4.00 40. 00 400. 00 EE 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 madeto 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 (c¢) 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 authority.—The Securities and Exchange Commission was created 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 bankruptcy 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- pe MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 717 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 Commission.—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 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 statéments 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 1936.—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 geographic integration of holding company systems and 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 Commaission.—Chapter X of the bankruptcy 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, deben-tures, 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. 83317°—78-1—2d ed.—47 718 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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 aet, 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 Philadelphia office of the Com-mission. Photocopies of such public information may be procured at nominal rates from the Philadelphia office only. Public reference rooms are also main-tained in the New York and Chicago regional offices, where a great deal of informa-tion 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 719 Brancars 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 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 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, ete., by Whistler, Tryon, Dewing, Thayer, and other American artists, and extensive examples of Japanese and Chinese art. This collection is to the art and archeology of the Far East what the Cairo Museum is to that of Egypt. 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 ZCOLGCGICAL 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. N 720 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART [Under the direction of the Board of Trustees of the National Gallery] The National Gallery of Art, a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution, was established 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 collections 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 nine trustees. The Gallery building, designed by the late John Russell Pope, and completed under the direction of Otto R. Eggers and Daniel P. Higgins, was dedicated by the President of the United States on March 17, 1941. During its [first year, it was visited by over 2,000,000 persons. : The building contains, in addition to the Mellon collection, the notable collec-tion of Italian paintings and sculpture givento the Nation by Samuel H. Kress; also, the famous collection of paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts given by Joseph E. Widener in memory of his father, the late Peter A. B. Widener. Lessing J. Rosenwald has given to the Gallery his important collection of more than 6,000 prints, and additional prints have been given by Ellen T. Bullard, Elisabeth Achelis, Mr. and Mrs. J. Watson Webb, and four anonymous donors. Other gifts of paintings have been received from Duncan Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen, Mrs. Felix Warburg, Mrs. John W. Simpson, Mrs. Gordon Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Davison, Frederic A. Delano, Chester Dale, * Mrs. Robert Noyes, and Clarence Van Dyke Tiers. Gifts of sculpture have been received from Mrs. Ralph Harman Booth, Mrs. Jesse Isidor Straus, and Mrs. John W. Simpson. In addition, important loans of paintings from the Harris Whittemore collection and the Chester Dale collection are on exhibition. On the ground floor frequent exhibitions are held in the central gallery, many of them centered on the war effort in this country. TARIFF COMMISSION, UNITED STATES The United States Tariff Commission is an independent establishment of the Bove: created by the provisions of title VII of the Revenue Act of Septem-er 8, 1916. As originally created the Tariff Commission was intended to fill the long-felt need of an independent organization to supply factual information to the President, the Congress, and the Committees of Congress which handle tariff legislation. Particular tariff and related problems are from time to time assigned by Congress to the Commission for investigation, and special functions and duties of a continu-ing nature were added to the Commission’s other functions and duties by the Tariff Acts of 1922 and 1930, and other acts. The experience and store of technical and economic information acquired by the Tariff Commission through the exercise of its various functions and duties have caused it to be called upon to assist in the war effort by supplying essential information and analysis. At present, the great bulk of the work of the Commission is directly related to the war; a large part of it is directly for war agencies. 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 customhouse 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 pa section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and the duties imposed thereunder are as follows: MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 721 ~ (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 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. (8) To investigate the volume of importations compared with domestic pro-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. (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 cbtained 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. 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- A 722 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS tation. When the findings and recommendations of the Commission, upon its 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 diserimi-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 coop-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, sec. 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. At present the work, consists prin-cipally of information supplied at the request of the war agencies. Extensive studies involving technical and economic research are under way for the Board of Economic Warfare; numerous cost studies are being conducted for the Office of Price Administration; and requests from other war agencies are being handled. Because of its long experience with the trade in commodities now of strategic and critical importance and the experienced personnel on its staff, the Tariff Commission is particularly well qualified to contribute to the war effort. TAX COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, THE The Tax Court of the United States (see sec. 504 R. A. 1942, Public, No. 753, 77th Cong., 2d sess.) was formerly the United States Board of Tax Appeals. The latter 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 723 EE SE TE The principal office of the Court is at Washington, D. C. 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 and processing tax statutes. Effective as of the close of business on December 31, 1942, the United States Processing Tax Board of Review was abolished, and the jurisdiction vested in said Board trans-ferred to and vested in the Tax Court of the United States. Proceedings are public and are conducted judicially, in accordance with its rules of 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 for the convenience of taxpayers at about 50 different cities in the United States. Prac-tice is limited to those enrolled under the rules. The Court’s published reports are printed and bound by the Government Printing Office and are available, separately or in bound volumes, as public docu-ments, at listed prices. Decisions are subject to review by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the prescribed circuit, or, by agreement, by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, and thereafter by the Supreme Court of the United States upon certiorari. The Court is composed of 16 judges, each of whom comprises a division to hear and decide cases. Division decisions become decisions of the Court unless the presiding judge, within 30 days of their receipt, directs review by the Court. The presiding judge is designated by election of the judges, who are appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate, for 12 years, in groups of four. They are removable by the President, after public hearing, for ineffi-ciency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office, but for no other cause. VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION The Veterans’ Administration was authorized to be established as an independ-ent agency under the direction of the President, by Public, No. 536, Seventy-first Congress, approved July 3, 1930, which further authorized the President by Executive order to consolidate and coordinate under a single control all Govern-ment agencies having to do with the administration of laws relating to the relief of and other benefits provided by law for former members of the military and naval forces. By Executive order of July 21, 1930, there was established the Veterans’ Administration and consolidated therein the Bureau of Pensions (pre-viously under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior), the United States Veterans’ Bureau, and the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, the latter now known as the National Homes Service. The Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs is charged with the control, direction, and management of all agencies and activities comprising the Veterans’ Adminis-tration, and all final decisions or orders of any agency of the Veterans’ 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 o% gd expenditures on account of, increased Government hospital and domiciliary acilities. 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, hospital and domiciliary care, and vocational rehabilitation. 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. The Veterans’ Administration maintains and operates 93 facilities providing hospitalization or domiciliary care. PRESS GALLERIES WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES 725 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 Adams, Clifford H__._____ United Press Associations... oo coo coon i. 1749 Q St. Adams, Jo Ellen___________ Sir NewYork Dally News: 1835 Phelps Pl. *Adams, Phelps H________ JsNewsYork Bane ie ant 4605 North Rock Spring Rd., Arlington, Va. *Adams, William H_______ t= United Press Associations... ..ccooemece 1406 16th St. *Aladren, Jose M._._.........| EliAlcazrar (Spain) cr wooo cvennnnm=tonah Hotel Lafayette. Albright, Robert C_____.__ J Washington Post. ot rx co.mments 5509 Glenwood Rd., Be- thesda, * Alford, Theodore C_______ _..| Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times._._.__ 1315 35th St. *Allen, Herman R.......... Je Associated Press. . ooo itl ii. chen R ena an St., Silver Spring, *Allen, William B., Jr_____ 2029 Allen Pl. Alston, Boland. ........c.. 2331 Skyland Pl. SE. *Andrews, Bert... ........ 2480 16th St. Angly, Edward. _.-....... National Press Bldg. *Arbogast, W. PF... ....... 225 East Mason Ave., Alex- andria, Va. Ashby, Helen______________ 4... United Press ASSoCiations... ....cieeeoseesooo 1011 17th St. Azrael, Louis... Baltimore News-Post___-os __o io lc... 602 Times-Herald Bldg. United Press Associations...-.-cccmmameeaaa-30 Cedar Lane, Falls Church, Va. *Barcella, Ernest L________ 3 _{ United: Press Associations... ..coeeecwoeicam-607 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. *| Barkley, Frederick R____ New York PHnes St enecianaae 3 Armatt Drive, Bethesda, Md. *Barkley, Pauli:.......0... JE ARocIaled Press... coin nee rae nena es 1323 North Vernon St., Ar-lington, Va. Bass, Frances D._._____.. International News Service. . coceoooeooo___ 1660 Lanier Pl. *Bassett, Beni. >... ert ie mead saab alee din ie 2022 Lanier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. *Baoman, Karl: _....... : 2116 North 16th St., Arling-ton, Va. *Bayless, Glen R__________ 609 Garland Ave., Takoms Park, Md. *|| Beale, os Lioy IliGin Q se *IBoall, Jack. o.oo. 4801 Quebec St. *Bell, CD Vote red li dn 4137 Henderson Rd., Arling- ton, Va. *Bell, Samuel W__________ New York Herald Tribune___________.______ 3803 Alton St. | Benedict, Bertram ________ Editorial Research Reports _________________ 1714 Connecticut Ave. *Berkley, Earl ____________ Associated Press. 0 a 603 Silver Spring Ave., Sil- ver Spring, Md, 1216 Delafield St. 1358 Kennedy St. *Blanck, Roy ON Si 212 Maryland Ave. NE, *Bloom, Chester A., Sr.___ ‘Winnipeg Free Press, Regina Leader-Post, 3919 4th St. North, Arling-Star-Phoenix, Halifax Herald, Lethbridge ton, Va. Herald, Toronto Evening Telegram, Hali-fax Herald (Canada). Editorial Research Reports... ..._..___ R. F. D. 4, Rockville, Md. Washington Star... ot conor. 1734 P. St. Philadelphia Record, Boston Post._____.____ 2242 49th St. International News Service ERAS SNE Fy 4240 2d Rd. N. Arlington, a. Borwick, Harry G_________ _-.| New York Journal of Commerce_______.._.. 1530 16th St. Bosshard, Walker__.._____ ___| Switzerland, Neue Zuercher Zeitung. _______ 4607 Connecticut Ave. *Bramley, Bric... Harrisburg Telegrap.....co:. ...ovcrmeorbnin-Auburn Garden, Alexan- dria, Va. St. Louis Post-Dispatch meee 4955 Quebec St. Washington a SERRE eI on Dupont Circle Apartments. ASS0CIOLOA Press. ovary es em wi i whos wine 1918 37th St. Daily Trafie:World =. os nica ile 6132 30th St. Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Colum-4614 Langdrum Lane, bus Citizen, Kentucky Post. Chevy Chase, Md. International News Service. oo... 1443 Oak St. SRR TTT STE EO a Re re a a The Kennedy Warren. 727 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued { Name Paper represented Residence *Brown, George Rothwell____ Brown, HArry'J..—eaomicaaa- *Brown, Sevellon, 3d_...._____ *Browne, Merwin H *Bryant, George B., Jr.._____ Buck, Robert Mee. *Buel, Walker S... coca. *Burd, Lawrence Ho... *Butler, James J........canmma- Callender, Harold. cco *Camelon, David._-............. Capitaine, Elizabeth. ......__ *Carey, Fran *Carroll, Raymond G....__.. Corson, 100. amram a= = nanannsrs *Carter, John Franklin__.____ *Catledge, W. Turner... Cavanaugh, Mary Kay. ._.___ Celliers, Peter Joubert... __.__-*Chaney, Rex *Chase, EAWID Peeeee eo Chiang, Joseph... __ oo... *Childs, Marquis Wo.....____ *Chinn, James BE...__ Christerson, Melbourne Churchill, Gail W............. *Clapper, Raymond......__.. Clarke, Bert C..... ican da: sCline; JohnH... oni *(Coats, Horace M............... 3Code]l, Martin .....c..mawas-sole, Gordon HH. . -... *Collins, Frederic Wao... *Collins, Ralph A. .....ica.- a BITE01 VE | tit yinte *Combs, George W.ocecaaaean-*Connor, Francis J. ccaeaeao.. Conroy, Edward A _.caeoo._. *Constantine, Arthur_..___._. *Coppenbarger, Howard L.._ 3Corn, Herbert: FP... ceiveie *Cornell, Douglas Boccacaa-.. Corrdry, Charles W., Jr....._ Cotton, Felix>> = Cottrell, Ann os *Cottrell, Jesse Sc amcemeeena-. King Features Syndicate, Los Angeles Ex-aminer, San Francisco Examiner, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Baltimore News-Post, New York J ournal American, Chi-cago Herald and American, Milwaukee Sentinel, Detroit Times. Salt Lake Tribune, Spokane Spokesman- Review. Providence Evening Bulletin Si Buffalo Evening News... _ WallStreet Journal: moastoaraos Washington Daily News id Cleveland Plain Dealer... «cave Chicago Tr DUNG. or cremesae ns New Britain Herald, Newark (N. 7.) Ledger, Long Island Star Journal, Nassau Daily Review-Star, Long Island Daily Press, Staten Island Advance, West-chester (N. J.) County Newspapers. New York Times. ca. oe nsner mda mam win! Chicago Herald American, Milwaukee Sen-tinel, Detroit Times. St. Thomas (Ontario) Times-Journal, Strat-ford (Ontario) Beacon-Herald, British United Press, Ltd., Syracuse (N. Y.) Herald-Journal. International News Service... ooo... Bell Syndicate. i ean New: York Imes as os Michigan League of Home Dailies_.._______ Reutersofbondon = o-oo70 0 United Press Associations... .._________ Atlantic (Jowa) News Telegraph__._________ Chinese News Service ___ oo ooooomomoaeaooo St. Louis Post-Dispatch... cocoa neds Washingion Star. . ci. seas sscnnrrmassoans Associated Press Associated Press... Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_______. United States News Association ____________ Washington Evening Star___________________ International News Service. oo ccvemoeeoaae Radio News Bureau. _____._..._.____ rea PM Providenco: Journal... oc. ii ore=rsacn:caca-n Jersey Journal, Harrisburg Evening News and Patriot, General Press Association. United States News Association ____________ Baltimore Evening Sun._____________________ ETE Eh hr ie EAR TRAeS 2 SSR NOW Y OL SUN. or ne ee sessrea International News Service... ._.___.. ‘Washington Daily News. ooo ooo... Washington Star ax es A SSOCIAICA PIOSS. oes rics navman ne oa mom See United Press Associations... __...______ International News Service... _________ New York Herald Tribune. _.______.._____. Charlotte Observer, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester Times-Union, Watertown (N. Y.) Daily Times, Troy N. Y.) Record, Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader, Greenville News. Madison (Wis.) State Journal, La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune, Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette, Appleton (Wis.) Post Crescent, Sheboygan (Wis.) Press, Nashville (Tenn.) Banner, Charlotte Observer. 1335 30th St. 6412 Ridgewood Ave. Chevy Chase, Md. 5404 39th St. 4711 Albemarle St. 129 North Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md 118 Hawthorne St., Balti-more, Md. 3815 Gramercy St. 1303 Hillwood Drive, Ta-koma Park, Md. 241 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 4113 49th St. 35256 Ames St. NE. 2701 Connecticut Ave. 352 North Edison St., Ar-lington, Va. 4000 Cathedral Ave. 1200 16th St. 2130 Le Roy PI. 2906 N St. 3100 Connecticut Ave. 7966 West Beach Drive. 4205 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. 715 Norway Drive, Chevy hase, Md. 1900 H St. 501 Dorset Ave., Chevy ase, Md. 1700 North Calvert St., Arlington, Va 1441 Spring Rd. 1506 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. 3125 Chain Bridge Rd. 1723 21st St. Falls Church, Va. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 2701 32d St. 6366 Ridge Drive, Brook-mont, Md. 3929 Jenifer St. 5030 41st St. 3 Valley View Ave., Ta-koma Park, Md. 6239 33d St. 4517 nn St. 1426 N S Lee LR 5616 13th St. 6504 Meadow Rane, Chevy Chase, Md. 4408 Fairfield Drive, Be-thesda, Md. 3311 Nebraska Ave. 2005 Key Blvd., Arlington, Va. 1431 33d St. 2509 Powhatan St., Arling- 2509 Powhatan St., Arling-ton, Va. Press Galleries 729 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence tOraig, Elisabeth May... _._ Craighead, Jean OC. .________. Oram, RalphW.. to... Cromer, John F._........... *Crane, James B....iuanene... *Crawford, Kenneth G..____. *COrider, Joon H._...._..._. Crost, Lyn Crowley, Harriet H_._______. *Crowley, Raymond J_._____. *Crowther, Rodney... .__... *Cullen, George... -ceveoeo... *Cullinane,i leo P......oo.... *Cunningham, M. F_________ *Cushman, Norman C_______ *Cutter, John... oc vin *Davis, JW. oats ena *Davis, Watson. ....c coeennn Degges, Charles B..__________ *De Greve, Arthur F_________ Denby, Howard. ..... cc... *Dennis, Frank Li. .c...ou.... *Denny; Ludwell. ............ Pervan, Sidney 1... De Vore, Robert To ..ot *DeWitt George A... *Pickson, CoB io *PDixon, George... cious. *Dixon, Kenneth Li. _ ________ *Dorris, Henry N.__oooooooo. *Douthat, James W.___.._..__ Roads, Jane. Un. aa. *Bddy, Arveh is . . ...... *Bdson, Peter... ...ceuee.. *Edwards, Willard ___________ *Egan, Charles E__.._______. Eichler, Bessie H__...___-___._ Eisenhart, Edward C________ *Elhart, E. W Eliott, John... .....cC.00 *Elliott, Jackson S__.____.._. Elliott Margaret .____________ rangle, LB ol ae *Ervin, Morris D cece *Erwin, Robert A_.__._____.. Essary, Helen..........ocio Etten, Eileen A... cvcveveen. Farnsworth, Elizabeth_______ *Farrington, Robert M_______ Pay, Bllon'C. saa *Feeley, Stephen V____.__.____ *Ferguson, Stanley B._______ Portland Press Herald, Portland (Maine) 717 North Carolina Ave. Evening Express, Kennebec (Maine) SE Journal, Waterville (Maine) Sentinel. International News Service. ___..._....___.. 5301 41st St. Davenport (Iowa) Democrat... __...___... R. 3, Bethesda, Md. ‘Washington Daily News. occas Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va Chicago Sun, Tulsa World. .--occa 403 rsphid St., Chevy Chase, Md. 16 West Walnut St., Alex- andria, Va. 1 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. 532 20th St. 3332 Volta Pl. 2021 Lanier Drive, Silver Spring, Baltimore Evening Sun ay Nos Press Bldg. Associated Press__.___. ad Jah St., Silver Spring, New York Herald Tribune___.__ cae ___ 4900 Westway Drive, Crest- view, Lewiston Tribune (Idaho). __________.._____ 2512 Q Br. Netherlands News Agency... ___..___. 712 Jackson Pl. United Press Associations. _____._____._.____ 4912 Nor in 16th Rd., Arling- ton 1811 enh Key Blvd., Ar- lington, Va. 1422 Rhode Island Ave. 3922 10th St. NE 4801 Connecticut Ave. Washington Times-Herald.________._________ Tysons Corner, Va. Washington Post. tinea di fe Sram ee ies 3125 Nebraska Ave. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_....___ 3031 Sedgwick St. La Correspondencia de Puerto Rico.......__ 3759 McKinley St. Washinglon Post... a. 2% sc eanerensitnn 5409 Worthington Drive, Friendship Station, D. C. ‘Washington Times-Herald__________ Lemon Rd., Falls Church, Va. Chicago Sun o.oo C -| 6 Worthington Drive. New York Daily News.....cc.veeencduesonn=-McLean, Va. Assoolated Press oo re sul 4324 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. New York MImes. coi nec naramniannion 1630 Fuller St. AS80010 Press. . coi lcd bane nbnneernn 605 Bonifant St., Silver Spring, Md. Christian Science Monitor _ _____occcceeeo__ 2021 Belmont Rd. AssoéidtediPress: oro lo ch Ay 1615 Hobart St. Associated Press. i. oii cis mite nnn emer 1406 Crestwood Drive, Alex- andria, Va. Washington City News Service. ._....___.__ 4114 Military Rd. Newspaper Enterprise Association. .......__ 2828 Albemarle St. Washington Times-Herald__________________ 8719 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 2815 18th St. i Quiney St., Chevy United Press Associations.._____________..... 1815 17th St. 2 DalflyiNews Record... iu mcnecinak-1629 Columbia Rd. New York Herald-Tribune_______....._.__.__ 4606 Broilo Drive, West Haven,M International News Service -oo ooccceeeeo-. 4317 East-a. Highway, Bethesda, Md. New-York san ..........a..z Airis iaii ake 8432 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Washington Post. c.o.n.nts cosas vobue. 1313 28th St. Southam Newspapers of Canada... -| 5432 30th PI. United States News Association. __..__....... 3900 Connecticut Ave. ELT Lr RSSS A 150 Exeter Rd., Bethesda, Cincinnati Times-Star: ..c cao inrncmamnm-4943 Hillbrook Lane. Winston-Salem Journal and _ Sentinel, 2720 Wisconsin Ave. Durham (N. C.) Herald-Sun, Evansville Courier. ‘Washington Times-Herald_.________________ 3121 Newark St. Washington Times-Herald __________________ Wardman Park Hotel. Scripps-Boward Newspaper Alliance... 1868 Columbia Rd. Washington Time-Herald___________.________ 1619 R St. Associated Press: nai 424 Edgewood Ave., Silver Spring, Md. ‘Wall Street. Journal. oo ies ncdniciadnnabnh 3345 17th St. Associated Press. 6158 31st Pl. Associated, Press: .. ocr. asa io oi rol 1201 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Bufialo Courier-Express. coo 3807 W St. SE. New York Journal of Commerce... _______._. 1277 Simms Pl. NE. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Pernsler, David... ____..____ 3Yield, Carter. ; -: 220.00 spinney, Nat 8. so. Cod. Pinney, Ruth Li coo *PMisher, JohnM CL _... [I Fitzgerald, Joseph R____.___ *Flaherty, Vincent X Rm Fleisher, Wilfrid _.__<__._____. Fleming, Dewey Li. __________ sPlynn, Alfred P_________... *Flynn, Michael W__________ *Folliard, Edward T......... Foote, Dorothea io = 7 *Foote, Markl ac. Sto. Honesto Hal oo oi oa 20x, Joseph 7, fal AR Francis, Torani Xo on as *Prancis, Warren B___._.._.. *Frandsen, Jims, Ir. es *Frye, William SE ee bye *Gableman, Bdwin'W.__..... Gardner, Virginia Sarat hd Gasch, Marie Manning______ Gaylord, Mdithia 2 *Gemmill, Robert H__.._____ *George, A. R 2 Gibbs, Norms... =.__._ = *Qilbert; Ben Wo... i= *Qillan, James JY. _-____-___.. Gmeiner, M. Ruth... [|Gordon, Evelyn_______._____ Graham, Betty... 00. *Graves, Aubrey A__........_. *Green, Sterling F_.......... Gregory, Nicholas P._......_ *(ridley, Charles O..oo..... *Qriffin, Bulkley. ocacaaaoo._ Griffin, Gere....... co Griffin, Isabel Kinnear. __..._ *Haestier, Richard Hagan, Thomas W_______.____ *Haley, Pope A. --- *Harrig, Morris Ty... os *Harseh, Joseph: OC... 20... Harter, B.C ania Hartman, Carl. lo *Haslet, Charles C...coo.._._ *Havden, Joy CG. . cicencmcme 2Hayes, Elliott. colo olen. Hazlett, Walter Too:= Lo *Heath, Edwin ¥._._._......_ Heiman, Beatrice Associated: Press liu nr Lid Bell:Syndieate cu nas a os a Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune, Des Moines Register and Tribune. Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune, San Fran- cisco Daily News. Chicago Tribune Press Service oceeeceeaeae-Washington Daily News________________.__._. ‘Washington Times-Herald..._.____ __...... New York Herald Tribune Syndicate_______ Baltimore Sane sles oo aaLa ‘Washington Times-Herald ______.____________ Washingion: Pests iio to Ula So othe 1a Newark Evening News _ _ ooo ooo __.___._ Grand Rapids Press, Saginaw News, Jack- son Citizen Patriot, Flint journal, Kala-mazoo Gazette, Bay City Times, Muske-gon Chronicle, Ann Arbor News. Chicago Tribune’ Saud oresoi ‘Washington Evening Star____.___._._._.__..__. Los Angeles: Times. 5. 0 re ro dna eaaian Los Angeles DITnes i i United Press Associations... oo... vy, Sn Lan BY Beal el ee MLS Sasiae [5 Cincinnati Enquirer ro eas Bederalodi Press. insdren aman mades International News Service... ooo... ASSoeInted Press aaa Washihoton Posts. cser ade: Bell Syndicate. ii iii i nenssnnmmamie United Press Associations. .......ccommaan... Washington Daily News_. ooo... International News Service... ..._....___._ ‘Washington Daily News. ccc commccaaao Associated Prong oa nd ads New York Herald Tribune... ...._._ Chicago Sun, Denver Post. ____________ Hartford Times, Springfield Union, Worces-ter Gazette, Brockton Enterprise, New Haven Register, Waterbury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Holyoke Tran-script-Telegram, Pittsfield Eagle. Baltimore Sun. oo cs ida Springfield Union, Hartford Times, Worces- ter Gazette. Cleveland Plain Dealer. .__________________. ASSocIaled Press i dere pe Boston: Globes 0 International News Service_.______________. T.ondon Dally Express... oc. oi eat Miami Daily News, Dayton Daily News__ _ Associated Press 0 a N.C. W.C.NewsService..._.._........... Associated Press Cite by vd be NewYork Posh Se at Associated Presse. oi. cn ennai Ae Washington City News Service. ..__________ Associated Press or. ol bo JU a Christian Science Monitor... __.... ‘Washington Times-Herald...._._____________ Overseas News Agency...oo ooo Associated Press... a i Detroit News. ig International News Service... ooo. Philadelphia Inquirereens Gallipolis (Ohio) Daily Tribune, Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette. Telegraph Agency, U.S. S. R_____.._____.___ 4749 Reservoir Rd. 5044 Macomb St. 3900 Connecticut Ave. 1525 28th St. 1530 16th St. 1201 13th St. 2621 39th St. 2320 Tracy Place. 4000 Cathedral Ave. 3000 Otis St. N. E, 6120 Broad Branch Rd, 2659 Connecticut Ave. 2117 Leroy PI. 4816 Quebec St. ‘Wardman Park Hotel. 1351 Montague St. 2808 McKinley Pl. 2808 McKinley PI. 3900 Cathedral Ave. 3405 34th Pl. 1326 34th St. 922 Fidg Rd. SE. 1753 P St. 6403 Brodiyil Rd., Chevy Chas qd; 1545 17th St., Arlington, Va. 6517 32d St. 4801 Nori Lane, Bethesda, Md. 2428 14th St. NE. 1830 I St. 3829 North Upland St. Arlington, Va. 2139 Wyoming Ave. 2456 20th St. 2410 South Inge St., Ar-lington, Va. 3904 Edmunds St. 1701 16th St. 3 Phan Rd., Bethesda, 200 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md 111 Primrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. 200 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md. Fairfax Hills, Va, RR. FD. R. F. D. 1, Dearwood, Md. Riva, Md. 5410 41st St. Hotel Martinique. 2032 Belmont Rd. Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va. 3619 Fordham Rd. 808 Devon Pl., Alexandria, Va. 804 Hillwood Ave., Falls Church, Va. 1396 19th St. Franklin Park Hotel. 3900 14th St. 4610 3d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 1 East Lenox St. Chevy Chase, Md. 3525 Ames St. NE. Theological Seminary, Alex-andria, Va. 1841 16th St. 2801 Adams Mill Rd. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence 3Heinl,"RobertD.-........... Wabash (Ind.) Plain-Dealer___________.___._. 2400 California St. *Helm, William Po... United States News Association_____________ ay 44th Ave., Riverdale, *Henle, Raymond Z______.___ Pittsburgh'Post Gazette... _-...0 3434 Oakwood Terrace. *tHenning, Arthur S_________ Chicago Tribune Press Service... 2728 32d S *Hermann, Arthur F_._______ International News Service. _______._.___.___.__ 607 a Ave., Takoma Park, 3 Heymanson, Sydney R____... Australian Newspapers Service___________... Shoreham Hotel. Hickok, Robert C............ ‘Washington City News Service________.._._ 504 B St. N Associated Press. sions {0 li oaoatant1 1825 Quesada St., Arling- ton *Hightower, John M_________ Associated Presss. soo oo 0 oar oder 2553 5a §., Sgn Va. *Hildebrand, W. A Greensboro Daily News_____________________ 2721 Adam Mill Rd. Hill, Ernest Marvin, Jr_..... United Press Associations___.__________._____ 1406 16th St. Holleman, Emmit C_______.. New: York Times. Cv. dupsdiiladieii-1 3220 Connecticut Ave. Holmes, Kathleen Sexton... Jackson (Miss.) Daily News________________ 3930 Connecticut Ave. *Hopkins, Herbert S_.___.... ‘Washington Times-Herald______._____._____ 2525 Ontario Rd. Hornaday, Mary. L.. 0... Christian Science Monitor. _________._.___.__ 1327 Hemlock St. *Horner, Garnett D..__...... Washington Star...“ eorged edo iii 3240 19th St. *Hulen, Bertram D_______.... New:York Times... cool vin lonpnli 3020 Dumbarton Ave. Humphreys, Robert____.__.._ 602 Times-Herald Bldg. Hutchinson, William K__.... 1603 Connecticut Ave. *I Huston, Luther A... oan. Hollow Hill, :R. F.-'D.,.2, Silver Spring, Md. Hynes, Betty... ‘Washington Times-Herald. _____..______.... 1320 31st St. Jager, Betsy. ....-.oc.oei... Wichita Beacon... . 2:08 poignidoe7 Washington Inn. ®n George *Jamieson, Edward _ _....._._ Houston Chronicle, New Orleans States, 4822 Langdrum Lane, San Antonio (Tex.) Express, Wichita Falls Chevy Chase, Md. (Tex.) Record-News, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Nashville Tennesseean, Hono-lulu Advertiser. *Janssen, Otto. G.....c...J. United Press Associations 120 C St. NE. Jefferson, Mary F__......... ‘Women’s Wear Daily_____._______._.... 1731 20th St. *Jenks, George FB... ........ Toledo:Blade. ........cioiu0 Baal 325 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md Jensen, Doris B___. 3.0 Chicago Times__. 406 Aspen St. *Johnson, Vance._.__ i530. Chicago Sun_____ 3821 Gramercy St. *Johnston, Henry T__.___.__. Associated Press : Star Bldg. *Jones, Alexander F_______.___ Washington Post. wv. uiul nlalaiulo 0 Garfeld St. “Jones, Carter Brooke....._.. ‘Washington Evening Star.____________.._._.___ 8 N St. *Jones, Coleman B___.._.__.. New York Herald Tribune... .....0.. hi Greenwich Parkway. *Jones, Edward F............ Washington Times-Herald oo... 5656 Non 7th St., Arling- ton, Va. Jones, Rhys Mr... iris... United Press Associations... co... 2510 Q St. Jones, VV. Conti sroil Loh. Wall Street Journal so © cule Damenoo R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. *Kassewitz, Jack... ol... x... ‘Washington Times-Herald __________..______ 1437 Somerset Pl. Kearney, Martha M_________ International News Serviee_________________ 816 Whittier PI. *Relley, Frank B............. New York Herald Tribune ______.____..__..... 4533 Fessenden St. *Rally, Francis J... 5 Associated Press. .C.. oll iruoso asidiisl. 3914 5th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. *Xelly,JomW._.. _.......... East Oregonian (Oreg.) --«coo ooceccae Alban Towers. *Kendrick, Alexander_______. Philadelphia Inquirer: . cou. oowil20. 1296 National Press Bldg. Kennedy, Frank A... -St. Petersburg (Fla.) Independent, Jackson-1413 Crittenden St. ville Journal, Pensacola Journal and News, Orlando Sentinel and Reporter Star, Panama City News-Herald. *Kennedy, Robert B_________ Chicago ils ldacioddiednn aes Harwood Bethes- Times... ail Rd., a, % *Kennedy, William P________ ‘Washington Star, Springfield (Mass.) Re-2405 1st St. publican, Springfield (Mass.) Daily News. *Kenworthy, Carroll H_______ United Press Associations... ............._ 1425 44th St. Kernodle, Margaret Associated: Press. ..o cu ihoiodaa. 6403 Brookville Chevy __________ nia Rd., Chase, *Kidney, Daniel M__________ Indianapolis Times, Evansville (Ind.) 2121 R St. Press, Knoxville News-Sentinel, Mem-phis Press-Scimitar. Killeen, Kathryne__._________ Houston Chronicle... caer. _Jiio nati oo. 1315 Peabody St. * Kilpatrick, Carroll. _.______ Birmingham News and Age-Herald, York-1660 Lanier Pl. shire (England) Post, Raleigh News and Observer. Kilpatrick, Frances W_.______ Birmingham News. _....o.oo.oo aria 1660 Lanier PI. *King, John E Dallas News... coo iaand fasifome3. Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va. Kirsch, Mary B..oo....caoa. United Press Associations ______...__..._.... 1882 Columbia Rd. *Klein, Sandor So. ccooa-. United Press Associations. ______._ coccmaas 2605 Cheverly Ave., Chev- erly, Md. *Kluttz, Jerry. o.oo Washington Post prt iY 3705 Lozoom Lane, Arling- ton, *Kneeland, Harold. __._______ Washington Daily News -1314 N achuseiis Ave. *Knighton, WilliamH. Y., Jr_ Baltimore Morning Sun._.......ccceecamcea-1214 National Press Bldg. -. *Kovacie, Donald... ocooi i. Associated Press. ©. oosed foanligaadidi. 135 Joliet St. SW. *Rrafsur, 8. 8. accoaie 4200 Kaywood Drive,Mount Rainier, Md. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Kramer, Kenneth G___ Wall Street Journal... on rae Rd., Be- *Krieg, Frederick P.... Associated Press... oe loth St., Silver Spring, *Krock, Arthur: .....:.. New: -York:/Timess oo Sampson. 1763 N St. Lais, Edna F____._..__ International News Service. -ooo ooooooooo.-2723 O St. Laitin, Josephi.....lus, United Press Associations... _.__ 1739 Q St. “Lahey, Edwin A Chicago. Dally News. coool ooliiira ool 2812 Ordway St. Lam, Mildred. ....-.._. New York Journal of Commerce. 1621 T St. *Lamm, Lynne M__.__ Newport (R. I.) Herald . 2408 California St. *Lander, William H.___ United Press Associations... .___.____. 3825 5th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. Lange, Cal oion United PressiAssociations....... o.oo. 225 Webster St. *Lapin, Adam 2a... Daily Worker (N.Y. uu toa aiiaioioi... 1428 Saratoga Ave. NE. Lapin, Eva ooo Daily Worker (IN. Y.)oeausu.Susi: 1428 Saratoga NE. tioaisia oie Ave. *Lardner, Fred W...... New York Journal of Commerce... ......... 736 22d St. *Laue, William R______ New ._... Tilden St. York./Times-...._.-_..--c.C0c 2959 “Lawrence, David... 3900 Nebraska Ave. «Lawrence, William H__..____. 2807 Cheverly Ave., Md. *+1.each, Paul Bo io.ll Chicago Daily NewS. aucuneCaan Tilden St. mia 3024 *L.e May Francis M.__. Associated Press. io. Jogi lio iia...sa. 203 Grace Coolidge Bldg., Alexandria, Va. Lewis, Flora_._..._-...-Associated Press of Great Britian. __________ 957 Randolph St. Lewis, Howard. _______.. ‘Washington Daily News... oo ooocoeeooo 712 Upshur St. *Lewis, Sir Willmott... London: Bimes a acai Lelieio. 2356 Massachusetts Ave. *Lincoln, G. Gould.-.__. Washington Star... sERcs Li iio oo 123 Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. *Lindley, Ernest K_____ Washington Post, Des Moines Register, 1814 19th St. and Tribune. Lindsay, Malvina...... 1028 Connecticut Ave. *tLinz, Bertram F.__._ 1208 North Inglewood St., Arlington, Va *Lippmann, Walter New York Herald Tribune Syndicate. _.____ 1525 35th St. *Loeser, John C_.___... Hartford Courant... Sli L000oO 4810 Bradley Blvd., Bethes- da, Md. *Loftus, Joseph A______ AssociatedPress... vom ba Sn Sa 406 Delafield Pl. Lorance, John______.... Springfield (Mass.) Daily News__..________._ 1305 N St. Lord, Frank B......... Alexandria Gazette... ill Soot iii odo 1630 R St. “Lowe, Herman A_.._.. Philadelphia Inquirer. .2c0. loo 2 ce iL. 3911 McKinley St. *Lowell, William Associated Press. Sioiuaionao Ll 500 North. Fillmore E____ fo St. Arlington, Va. Lowry, Warrington S__ United Press Associations. ._..___...o______ 1708 New Hampshire Ave. *Lucey, Charles T-___.. New York World-Telegram_ ___________._._._. Ashton, Md. Central News Agency of China_._._________ 2800 Woodley Rd. *Lynn, Robert M__.._. Richmond News Leader. _ __._ ____________ 1277 New Hampshire Ave. *Lyon, Gideon A____.._ Washington Star. o.oo.ies oo 209 Rosemary St., Chevy Juiioa Chase, Md. *McCord, Robert E___. Jersey Observer, Rome (N. Y.) Sentinel, 3411 Brown St. McKeesport (Pa. ) Daily News, Sioux City (Iowa) Journal, Altoona (Pa. ) Mirror, Alton (111.) Telegraph, Fall River (Mass. ) Herald News, Shreveport (La.) Journal, Palm Beach Post-Times, Fort Wayne (Ind.) News Sentinel. *McCully, Samuel F., J Pome ChicagoiSunl.-05 00.000 anal Edgewater, Md. *MecCullough, John M. PhiladelphiaInquirer: loiJil co. 1330 Kalmia Rd. *McGaffin,J. Marr... Omaha oo ol. 801 Drive, World-Herald... Grandview Alex-andria, Va. |McGahan, Paul J____. Philadelphia Inquirer. ico ooo... The ....... Portner. *McKelway, Benjamin M___. Washington:Star. Lui an lo Loo lL ed 2071 Park Rd. McKusick, Frances... Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, Dur-1203 Hamilton St. ham Herald Sun, Evansville Courier, Mitchell (S. D.) Daily Republic. McLaughlin, Patrick H International News Service. -.ccocceocoooooo 1756 Q St. *MecNamara, Thomas... Philadelphia Record... .c Cio oi.jaan aas 1237 Raum St. NE. McNeil, Marshall __..__ El Paso Herald-Post, Fort Worth Press, Rodney Rd., Silver Spring, Houston Press. *MacCormac, John____. New York Times. oi iadtana 2120 Bancroft Pl. MacDonald, Betty. _... Newspaper Enterprise Association. ......._-3929 Benton St. *Mackey, Wilbur_____. Washington Post. -..-. ono ncl B20 Jos Arlington Village, Arling- ton, Va. MacLennan, Nancy H. New-York Dimes. . co. cocierminsdin : Bancroft Pl. dian 2137 Madison, Janet S____... ‘United Press Associations... cov meee 2630 Adams Mill Rd. *Magruder, Milton E________ United Press Associations___.________-_..___._ 4631 Verplanck Pl. *Maley, Raymond C__. Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)._____.__ 1301 15th St. *Mallon, Paul__._.__.__. King Features Syndicate. ooo Eds Haven, Alexandria, a. | Mallon, Winifred... New-York Times. ccivicnnnmremsne=sasaka 2311 Connecticut Ave. Marckres, Earle. _....._ International News Service. __.____..._-_.. 1728 P St. *Markham, Edgar_..._. St. Paul Pioneer Press, St. Paul Dispatch... 7703 13th St. *Marlow, James______.. Associated Press. .....cccoonoioaoiaaoa 5111 16th St. Martin, Georges Henri 2321 Ashmead Pl. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Meartin, Lorenzo W._____..__ *Martin, Ovid..:i..cocoa... *Massock, Richard G._._____ Mattes, Marion W._.___ Maynard, John. ___ *Meddoff, J. Lewis... *Meredith, Luther. __.__..___ *Michie, Charles A__ *Mickel, Merlin. ___._.__.____ Miller, Hope Ridings. _....... ler, Lee Bu. uillieaciunn. *Moore, William _.____...___ Monberg, Helene O.._..._.._ *Morgan, Cole BE. .icacano.. *Morris, George. ococeieeaen-- *Morris, John D._ .....i. ¢ *Morrow, Hugh: =...._ i. *Moser, John Earle. ____..._ *Moul on Rayo oil... *Mullen, G lon Sofi *Murphy, William C., Jr__.__ Music, Frankie .............. Myler, J. Lai. iio i. Naumann, Oscar E___._...... "Neal, William S-.. =. = *Nessly, William V_______..__ *Noel, KE. Perey... oi... *Norris, John CG: 2 To. *Norton, Howard M..a *Nover, Barnet... ........... *O’Brien, John'C. ii7 O’Brien, J. Patrick_.___.____. O’Brien, Marie B_..____.____ *O’Domell, John S20... *O Neary, dv A clo ina *O'Neal, Bam'A-.._.-=... iver, Frank: = =. a *Qliver, D. Harold ___________ *Qrtiz-Echague, Fernando____ *Page, Ralph W122 ioe Perk, Margaret _____________. *| Parker, George BE arn, DE *Pasley, "Fred AEE A Sn RY Pasley, Virginia. __________ Patterson, Eleanor M________ *Pattie, J. Delton... _._.___.___ Payne, Alan W.._ ____ __.__.. *Peacoek, W. I. —-~ Pearson, Drew. _____ SAL *Pearson, Leon M__. -— speck; Philips... *Perkins, Bertram J__.__..... *Perkins, Fred W.___.._._.... Louisville Times... ..c cocci fncabninnins.. Associated Press Washington Times-Herald o_o... Buffalo Evening News. ooo vooecimomns Chicago Sun... .....-wastage10 PM. Ei Associated Press... coou li oh Soalinl Washington Post... ... ool louise i Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_._.___. Associated Press... oF. ico ia alii Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald, Honolulu Star Bulletin. Associated Press. Eo fr Sh Detroit News. 2oniisiooendl maid Saloil an Toit York Journal and American, Chicago Herald and American, San Francisco Examiner, Los Angeles Examiner, Mil- waukee Sentinel. Commercial Appeal (Memphis)______._._.__ New York Times. i... 4 .loianiizcaio 0 PhiladelphiaInquirer. cl...1. 000. ‘Washington Times-Herald _______ ooo... Chicago Journal of Commeree. coc... United Press Associations. _.___.___..._....... Philadelphia Inquirer... tii il cdc 1 International News Service. ______._ i... United Press Associations. ____________._..__ New York Journal of Commeree. ___........ International News Service... ocoocoo_. Washington Post 27 2. "770 J 00 iabaa. o oo United Press Associations. ____.________.__._ Washington! Post: 2. Sitirob ate fwon ood Baltimore Evening Sun Washington Post =f fees Philadelphia Inquirer. ___..__.____ Associated Press. ____ gt a py A BE Washington Times-Herald________..____._.._ New York Dally News -01 r o 22 o Washington Stor oo 00 Le ticstos St. Louis Star-Times Baltimore Evening Sun... __.___._l_...__. ASS0rIated Press i i.e cements Washington Daily News. _____________.____ Film Daily, Radio Daily, Hollywood Re- porter. Londen Times. oo = Co La Nacion (Buenos Aires)... ccccoeeceoo. Philadelphia Evening Bulletin__.___________ Sanford (Fla.) Herald, Stuart (Fla.) Daily News, Daytona Beach News-Journal. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance__._____ St. Paul Pioneer Press and Despatch. _______ Harrisburg Telegraph. = ~~ "r= New York Dally News: —-~n-fan New York News... Dally 0 Washington Times-Herald________________._ Dally Frafffe World-ryFn br ore 1s Washington Times-Herald._.__________. _| Associated Press... ait _1 United Features Syndicate. ooomeeee__ United Features Syndicate. ..oooovcoacann-International News Service. -..ceemeccacan-- Daily Nows Repord: =: ot poems Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance____.__. 1763 Columbia Rd. 3109 North Military Rd, Arlington, Va 3011 34th St. American University. Ambassador Hotel. 6401 14th St. Box 72, Oakton, Va. 2007 R St. 3932 4th ig Arlington, Va. 3118 16th S 2327 15th S. 1706 21st St. 3608 S St. Monticello Court, aloton dria, Va. Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. 2004 Patterson Rd., West Hyattsville, Md. 1 Hawaii Ave, NE. 4719 10th St. NE. 2123 California St. Etowah Farm, Harwood, Md. (R. F. D.). 6523 Luzon Ave. 2016 Connecticut Ave. 2739 P St. 30th and Q Sts. Franklin Park, East Falls Church, Va 3606 Van Ness St. 1411 N St. 33 North Fenwick St., Ar lington, Va. 4817 Reservoir Rd. 4714 Albermarle St. 518 Concord Ave. National Press Bldg. fy North 25th, Arlington, a. 1214 National Press Bldg. 2737 Devonshire Pl. 3 West Underwood St., Chevy Chase, Md. 1701 H St. 1635 Connecticut Ave. 1510 19th St. 1222 Quincy St. NE. 5124 45th St. 1214 National Press Bldg. 1739 19th St. 2219 California St. 520 3d St. 2121 Virginia Ave. 6004 34th Pl. 21 Belmont Rd. 717 G St. 1548 34th St. 1840 24th St. Gordon Hotel. 1814 24th St. 4207 18th St. 4207 18th St. 15 Dupont Circle. Sandy Spring, Md. 3500 14th St. 228 North Edgewood St., Arlington, Va 2820 Dumbarton Ave. 3432 Newark St. 4308 N Fairfax Drive, Ar-lington, Va. 1634 32d St. 32 West Underwood St., Chevy Chase, Md. 83317°—78-1—2d ed. ——48 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Perlmeter, Irving ____._____. *Dorry, Glen...Jil 000. io. *Player, William O., Jr_______ Poor, Peggy. fo diedda *Porter,ThurstoniR...__._.. *Powers, Richard P...._..._. *Prevost, Clifford A___.__._____ *Pusey, Merlo. Lh oJ. *Pyle, Brnest Tai Lali *Ragsdale, Warner B.._______ *Ralph, Henry D.......... Rant, Joseph'L.. ..ovia. oo. *Reed, Philip Galosi. aio. *Reedy, Thomas A... *Reichmann, John A_____.._.__ Reid, Jay Herbert, Jr.._______ *Resseguie, Harry E__________ *Reynolds, J. Lacey._________ *Reynolds, H. Ki cin... *Richards, Ray: : ino. jito.ic. Riggs, Robert Leo. ii... *Riley, George D.c.veuitunna. *Ring, William B...l 0... *Rippey, Stephens. ......___. *Riseling, John J. W *Robb, Gene 8. .....c.iuau... *Roberts, Arthur:S_ =... *Roberts, Edward V._.._____ *Robinson, Tremain F_______ *tRochester, Edward S_.______ Rockwell, Dorothy C_________ Rosenfeld, Alvin__..__________ *Rothman, ALD... oon *Ryan, Edward F.___._...____ Sadler," Christine... ........-2:: *Sandahl, Clifford. ..c......:. *Sanderson, J. F......cn Schaefle, Louis’ J. «o.oo. *Scheleen, Joseph C....._.__. Scheibla, Shirley H___________ *Schreff, Fred Seeley, Evelyn... ....coeee... *Sentner, David P___________ *Ohackford, RB. _ _... H._..-. *Shalett, Sidney.....-...._... XOharpe, He Wi. c nowesaeainsSoe *Shoop, DUKE. ...cuwss-aiesmmm Shubert, Leonard B________._ *Sias, Erwin Do. o oc i. New York Daily News_= Li icceccna-Associated Press... co vomniibbnd ana Sidi Detroit Free Press, Akron Beacon Journal, Miami Herald. Washington Posbiz uo oo ouiolionsiiidsdas Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance ________ United States News Association_____________ ON City: (Pa) Derrlel o.oo aac United Press Associations... ______.___.__.__ International News Servicé. ________________ Associated Press... acids soil... United Press Associations.__.__.._______..__. Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Daily News Record __ i... i. _... Nashville Tennesseean, Fort Worth (Tex.) Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Ashtabula Star-Beacon, Youngstown Vindicator, Oklahoma City Oklahoman. International News Service _ _____.._________ Los Angeles Examiner, San Francisco Ex-aminer, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Los Angeles Herald-Express, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Oakland Post-Enquirer. Louisville Courier-Journal _ ________________. ‘Washington Times-Herald._________________ National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service. Bridgeport Post-Telegram.._. ooo... Washington Post... ooh. coe oats J New York Journal-American_______.._______ Houston Chronicle,. Arkansas Democrat, Shreveport Times, Nashville Tennesseean. Macon Evening News, Macon Telegraph____ Philadelphia Iriquirer: oo oo coo ool International News Service St. Louis Post-Dispatch... ________ Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald________ Washington Post co ooh. ot. oli meeath a Washington Post t..c. cui a rreaennmes Associated Press... ut maka deedcnn Conndion Press. corcv ose. gras oo United Press Associations_____._____________ Daily Trafic =o World.:c....cooccmeuearcin New York Journal-American, Baltimore News-Post, Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Boston American, Albany Times-Union. United Press Associations. ...____._.__________ New YorkeTimes. oo dn Ce Konsas Clty Star... oo. oraoe i Baltimore Morning Saun..c= +...cl. Associate Press co ns hh med Ta we eh International New Service._.__________ Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance 249 Ingraham St. 1380 Peabody St. 1502 Sominyy Rd., Silver Spring, Md. A Wolfe St., Alexandria, 2000 Connecticut Ave. 9928 Markam St., Silver Spring, Md. 6360 31st Pl. 9 Albemarle St., Waest-moreland Hills, Md 1013 13th St. 406 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 4561 Cathedral Ave. 7207 Bradley BIlvd., Be- thesda, Md. 2032 North Stafford St.. Arlington, Va. 214 E. Luray Ave., Alex-andria, Va. 201 South Fairfax 8t., Alexandria, Va. 1953 Biltmore St. 1629 P St. 5006 Ventnor Rd., Friend- ship Station, Md. 1915 16th St. 1016 16th St. 4611 Chevy Chase Blvd., Chevy Chase, Md. 3316 Rittenhouse St. 1370 Rittenhouse St. 6408 31st PI. 3608 Park Pl. 2600 16th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 1731 Q St. 1738 19th St.. 6 West Melrose 8t., Chevy Chase, Md. Mohican Rd. Station A. 3401 16th St. 520 3d St. 736 Rittenhouse St. 117 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 1301 15th St. 2445 15th St. A Prince St., Alexandria, 525 Tennessee Ave.,., Alex-andria, Va. 2805 Rittenhouse St. 1412 Kennedy St. 321 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va 1401 Sheridan St. 1834 Columbia Rd. 4308 Montgomery Ave., Bethesda, Md. 1825 Summit Pl. 2014 Tunlaw Rd. 6501 14th St. 1445 Otis Pl. 3901 Connecticut Ave. 3407 Q@Gilden Drive, Alex-andria, Va. 2033 Florida Ave. 119 Joilet St. 2101 Connecticut Ave. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence [|Simpson, Kirke Li_______.___ *Singleton, Alexander H______ *Slater, Harold... *Sloan, Kermit... ...coc-ul. Smaus, Jewel Spangler________ *omith, Carl. 2 ro...1 Smith, Mrs. Charles Brooks_. *Smith, Denys BE. H. .....L. *Smith, Frank M____._______ *Smith, Joseph Kingsbury... *Smith, Merriman. ___._._.._ *Smith, Balph...co-conieais Smith, Robert BE. ...co. .... *Smith, Stanley H._ _____...__ *Smith, Tony. Scott... Spargo, Mary. .....cc.ouiiicn-Springer, Betty Lou__________ *Stark, Lows Eee Stephenson, Malvina_________ *Sterner, Charles J____.._____ *Stevenson, Charles__.__._.._ *Stewart, Charles P_____.____ *Stewart, Gilbert W., Jr___.___ Stimpson, George Wee eeeeao. *Stinnett, Jack. .... icearuat-*Stokes, Richard Li........_.. *Stokes, Thomas L._.____.___ *Stone, T. B._.. vin. od neu *Stone, Walker... __.____ *Stratton, CHf =e-= CL. ||Strayer, Martha____.________ *Strebig, James: J.oconce *Stringer, William H_________ *Strout, Richard Li. ........._ Sullivan, Mark_._._._....___ =*Suttle, Howard... ...._..__..: arty, GaLi. rie. *aylor, Bobert. .coupcoaetl. *Theis, J, William_..._....._. Thomas, Barbara_..___....___ Thompson, JO -c7 ae it *Phompson, H. Q.c....cc..0. *Thornburg, Diek.co. ico: *Thrasher, James... __....._.. *Timmons, Bascom N__...___ *Todd, Laurence. .-......... ASS0cioted Press... cried danse rnvanh ine Associated Pressionsana aia lid bl International News Service Wall Street Journal can sic cenit ie io United Press Associations... ois lesiil Oregon Journal, Portland. _.._____.____.______ Wheeling Intelligencer, Fairmont (W. Va.) Times, Parkersburg (W. Va.) News. London Daily Telegraph and Morning Post. ‘Washington Times-Herald_______.____._______ New York Times 5, oral ionts Traffic World, ChiCag. ..cc.b bas duanstnthue-United Press .. Associations...tL. Washington Post-cc: o am ooo aides, Philadelphia Record, Miami Herald________ New York Times, oot toooivoncl. Kansas City Star, Cincinnati Times-Star____ wa Hon Journal, Exchange Telegraph 0 Washington Dally. NeWS.... iis Gnarmbbnts Central Press Association Wall Street Journal: 0. oo. Si Austin Daily Tribune, Cedar Rapids Gazette. LCETe Oe Be SR St. Louis Post-Dispateh....o co ic ior. S%ipreHowa Newspaper Alliance... Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... __. Reuters News Agency of London___________ Chicago Tribune... .. tou fetesit Kansas City Kansan, Topeka Daily Capital. Washington Dally ti News...omy. ASSOCIated Press. cc. cree ernment Christian Science Monitor _________________ New York Herald-Tribune Syndicate. ______ Charleston (S. C.) News and Courier, Spar- tanburg (S. C.) Herald-Journal, Wil- mington (N. C.) Star-News. Radio News Bare... c-onsei-murrtot= Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. _.._.___ ‘Washington Times-Herald. ______.__________ New York Daily News... ees PHAISDhUIEN Press. cc .uosio oer tivnrnsshon International News Service. _________.._____ Indianapolis News, Fort Wayne Journal- Gazette, Terre Haute Tribune. International News Service__ _.___..________ Associated Press. eeeel United Press Associations... __...|_ Cincinnati Post, Cleveland Press, Colum- bus Citizen, Kentucky Post. Newspaper Enterprise Association. _________ Chicago Sun, Houston Chronicle, San An- tonio Express, Dallas Times Herald, Fort ‘Worth Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Nash- ville Tennessean, . Shreveport Times, New Orleans States, Arkansas Democrat, Youngstown Vindicator. Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R.__...___ 302 Leland St., Chevy 1411 North Vernon St., Arlington, Va. 834 20th St. South Arling-ton, Va. 3521 rothers Pl. SE. 3541 R St. 1650 Harvard St. 1630-A 19th St. 2700 1st Rd., Arlington, Va. 1824 Jefferson Pl. 4314 North Carlyn Spring Rd., Arlington, Va. Wellington Villa, Alexan-dria, Va. 205 Ro Piedmont St., Arlington, Va. Mayflower Hotel. Park Central Apartments. 6680 32d PI. 317 Spring St., Takoma Park, Md. 2501 Calvert St. 21 Bryant St. NE. 1921 Kalorama Rd. 1113 Seminary Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 1745 K St. 4210 North Washington Blvd., Arlington, Va. 509 I St. NE. 2 Toashio Ave., Alexan- a, Va. Si North 16th St., Arling-on, Va. George Washington Inn. 2929 Connecticut Ave. 5224 Manning Place. 2019 Hillyer PI. 5618 Nebraska Ave. 2030 Hillyer PI. 2511 Q Street. 1728 Allison St. NE. The Burlington. 1421 Massachusetts Ave. an St., Silver Spring, 516 Queen Street, Alexan-dria, Va. 4517 Garfield St. 2146 Wyoming Ave. Fairfax Village, D. C. 4545 Linnean Ave. 100 Kennedy Drive, Ken-wood, Md. 1727 North Huntington St., Arlington, Va 1836 Calvert St. 1013 13th St. 603 Times-Herald Bldg. 200 Holly Ave., Takoma Park, Md. American University. 957 Randolph St. 5924 31st PI. 4119 Davis Pl. 1108 13th St. 1316 30th St. 4805 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md Congressional Darectory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *ragle, J: Frank... ........... Associated Press. cco ln as 606 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, *Trohan, Walter... ooo... Chicago Tribune Press Service. __..__..____. 5705 Nevada Ave. *Proth, Elton’ . otk. aon. International News Service. __._____________ 1429 Columbia Rd. *Trussell, Charles Po... New York Dimes ib Li vaiisesee 4900 Western Ave. *ueker, Roy. siti ov = ort 6308 Hillcrest Pl.,, Chevy Chase, Md. *Tufty, Esther Van Wagoner. Michigan League of Home Dailies, Lansing 207 North Royal St., Alex-(Mich.) State Journal, Pontiac (Mich.) andria, Va. Daily Press, Battle Creek (Mich.) In- -quirer-News, Central Press, Port Huron (Mich.) Times-Herald. *Turner, C. Russell, Jr_______ United Press Associations........ Atlingon Village, Arling- ton, *Turner, Richard L,2......... United States News Association. ___.__._____ 1503 35th ‘St. *Tutile, BrederieB_..__.._... International News Service -ooo _____ 111 East Clifton Terrace. *Vaccaro, Ernest B____._______ Associated Press rt ah 7701 Eastern Ave., Silver Spring, Md. *Van Devander, Charles_____ New Yorlc-Post vuln Tals nds 2k of he 804 Hillwood Ave. Falls Church, Va. *Vinecent, Jack. Co oi o ci International News Service. ________._._____ 1116 Locust Grove Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Waggoner, Walter H.._______ Wall-Street Journals 0b 0 3 al 1460 Rhode Island Ave. *Waithman, Robert_._.._____ London News Chronicle. .7 : ..... 5315 Drive, Friend- __..__ Earlston ship. *Waldrop, Frank C 1924 35th St. *Walsh, Burke______ “ 1013 Upshur St. NE. *Ward, Harold"W. iio... 318 Spring Ave., Takoma Park, Md. *Ward, Panl 0 CLC BaltinoroiBuI. «oh eens wr mmm eS nLee Hunt Chevy W..soox 4711 Ave., Chase, . M817 RLS 1403 St., *Warden, Philip Xs. co -.L. TET Dien Sa I AR N 2H Roosevelt East Falls Church, Va. *Warner, A. Fred. o.oo.ul United Press Associations. eee oa Fremont Gardens, Va. *Warren, Ernest G__----_.____ Agsoelated Press... on Lilli 4336 River Rd. *Watkins, Charles D__..____. Assoelated Press. or ae 4302 Sheridan St., Univer- sity Park, Md. || Watkins, Everett C__.______ Northumberland Apts. *Watson, Mark S___.._______ Baltimore Sun Ce Ser Si a National Press Bldg. Webb, Arthur. o.oo... 2480 16th St. *Wechsler, James A__________ P 2500 Q St. *Weir, Frank H__.._..___...-Philadelphia 3 i... 2517 K St. dnquirver-—-.-. Associated RL RR NAT RES LE ARE 2848 28th St. | Folte Prank Toil. nico. 330 Star Bldg. Clay16th St., Silver Spring, 19 Fort Hunt Rd., Alex- andria, Va. West Betty. Cr Cu Chicago Journal of Commerce... ......____ 3620 16th St. *White, James D.._..._...... Associated Press. _-. -__..--__........__.. 2304 40th St. *Whitney, Robert F._.____.__ East Falls Church, Va. *Whittington, Yanaing LDR, United Press Associations... ......__._.. 5320 8th St. *Wigoing, JohnH. ool ous Aasoeintol Progs: ion ie aa i 2008 Patterson Rd., Hyatts- ville, M Williams, Gladstone________.. Atlanta Constitution, Fresno (Calif.) Bee, 1919 Massachusetts Ave. Modesto (Calif.) Bee, Sacramento Bee. *Williams, Leonard W_______ Newark Evening News._.._.______....._____ 1901 Wyoming Ave. Wilson, Ann France-._....___ Newspaper Enterprise Association.____.___. 1529 33d St. *Wilson, Lyle C_> C0 i. United Press Associations. __._._____________ 2336 Massachusetts Ave. Wilson, Richard C.._._______ United Press Associations...77 | -Fairmount St. +1 1320 *Wilson, Richard Li........... Des Moines Register and Tribune, Minne-ithe Lane, Bethesda, apolis Star-Journal and Tribune. Wool, Franz B........50.-0 New York Journal of Commerce. ........._. 2041 Park Rd. *Wood, Tewis. reid New-York Dimes yo ob oo Ly ded 2559 Waterside Drive. *| Wooton, Paul... i... New Orleans Times-Picayune. ______________ 3016 Tilden St. *Wright, James L. -.. Buffalo Evening News... © [=v lz 3115 44th St. sYoung, Ralph... .......... Davenport Times, Waterloo (Iowa) Daily 1758 Q St. Courier, Davenport Democrat. *Yost, Paul M.... .. o..l Associated Press. Lr nN 4608 pre Rd., College Park, Md. *Zielke, George R._..______. 1358 Jefferson St. Zigler, Margarel.. 5. 1011 17th St. *Zimmerman, William E_____ 1317 Emerson St. NE. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN PRESS GALLERIES (Phones: House Press Gallery, NAtional 2437; Senate Press [NoTE.—¢., evening; m., morning; S., Sunday] Paper represented Name i Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal (e.).________ Clifford A. Prevost. ________ | Radford E. Mobley......_.. Albany Times-Union: o.oo.ror David Sentner......ocvuunas Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune (e.)-.___._ Ruth Winey... ........ Alexandria Gazette (€.) eee i... Frank B. Tord. .........-Altecona Mirror (6). =o. ic. 0 °.. Robert E. McCord._._._._._| | Alton (IN1,) Telegraph {e.) = oi i05 Robert E. McCord.__...___._| | Atlantic (Jowa) News-Telegraph__________ Edwin'P. Chase... _....... | AmarilloNews (mY. cc 2. aeo in ol Bascom N. Timmons.______. | Ann Arbor (Mich.) News (e.)-_____ Si Mark Foote... ....... Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent (e.).-.......| Mary James Cottrell___ -| | Arkansas Democrat (e., 8.) _________. Bascom N. Timmons.______ Tremaine F. Robinson._.____ Associated Press... .... cn ca. covnvoneia Pant-Miller. Kirke L. Simpson._.._.._..__ Chas. D. Watkins___________ | Frank-Weller............... | D. Harold Oliver. _._.___.__ i A-R.Georze.. ...._..... James W. Douthat._________| JB. Bngle | Melbourne Christerson______ | W.L. Beale, Jr... ........... Elton OQ. Fay./... anil Ernest G. Warren. __....._._ | 3 Douglas Cornell...__ Roland Alston -..........0.. William P.-Frye... ....._." Raymond J. Crowley...____ PaalBarkley.. ao KarlBauman .....-.... Leonard B. Shubert_________ John M. Hightower_________ Pope A. Haley... ........... | Joseph A. Loftus........... WP. Pegeock. iT Pam Weir. oe. an Irving Perlmeter Ovid A. Martin J. W.Davis_. ........-Hamilton W. Faron____ Earl Berkley George Cullen. ______________ LL. T. Easley, Jr. i Cant M. Yost Charles C. Haslet. ...____.__ Roy @.Blanck >...7. David Fernsler_ oo... Jack LsBell oT James J. Strebig:. oC... W. YP. Arbogast...0. Ernest B. Vacearo.._.._._... Merlin Mickel. __________.__ John 8S. Grover... --.--..._. | Jack Stinnett... i Prancis J. Xelly............. | J. Patrick O’Brien__________ Sterling F. Green_.._._______ | Clifford Sandahl.___________ OE. Werner... ..i....... "Alexander Singleton.______.__ Charles Molony.._..._..____ Herman’ B. Allen--~~ Gardner Bridge_____________ FrancisLeMay.... "= Harold W. Ward__.._..._... i Gall W.., Charenill: Margaret Kernodle__ __| Frederick P. Krieg___ __| John H. Wiggins x Arthur L. Roberts_______.___ Gallery, NAtional 0618) Office 1221 National 1221 National Times-Herald 1013 1630 1700 1700 as 1255 906 1230 1255 1255 Star Star Star Star Press Bldg. | Press Bldg. Bldg. | | | Drive, Chevy | . | Press Bldg. Star-Bldg. 13th St. R St. I St. I St. Lo oruny ase, National and 927 Colorado Bldg. | National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. | National Press Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. 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 Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star StarStar Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star Star 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. 3 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. 737 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Associated Press—Continued._..J.....____ Associated Press of Great Britain__.____.___ Ashtabula Star Beacon (e.)-.... cove... Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution (m.).._________ Atlanta (Ga.) Journal (e., S.)._.. —___.__. Austin Pafly ‘Tribune (e.). i cevicuime .-..-Australian Newspaper Service ...___.____._ Baltimore (Md.) Evening Sun. __._._______ Baltimore (Md.) News-Post (€.) cco... Baltimore (Md.):Sun (M.)-—--evemeannan-- Battle Creek (Mich.) Inquirer-News (e.) Bay City (Mich.) Times (€., S.) ccccceaoo Bell Syndicate ner ermine eres i Love Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Herald (m.)_._._... Birmingham (Ala.) News (e.) . _.__o____.._ Boston (Mass.) Globe (m.,e.)_____________ Bosgion (Mass.) Post.) cues coca aman Bridgeport (Conn.) Post Telegram (m., e.)_-British United Press, Ltd...__ 0 Brockton (Mass.) Enterprise (e.)____...___ Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier Express (m.)____. Buffalo (N. Y.) Evening News___._.__.____ Canadian Press. © rn ae Cedar Rapids Gazette (€.)...——ooooeeaeae Central News Agency of China____________ Central Press Association _______________. Charleston (8. C.) News and Courier (m.)__ Charlotte (IN. C.) Observer (m.)_______..___ Chattanooza Free Presse.) oo oaea Chicago (111.) Daily News (6.)-vcceaceaaa Chicago Herald-American (€.) cco Chicago Journal of Commerce (m.)..__.___ Cnicago BUN (N.Y. Ef rrr recat nr oe nta Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Thomas A. Reedy... Star Bldg. Mag, Halls re Star Bldg. James Be Whiteo ooo won Star Bldg. Richard P. Powers........... Star Bldg. JO Thompson: coal. Star Bldg. William E. Lowell __________ Star Bldg. Ben Bossett..-. lo. Star Bldg. Donald Kovaeie. .-._..._=. Star Bldg. Morris ¥.. Harris: oo... Star Bldg. Edward H. Higgs... __.___.__ Star Bldg. J. Frank Tragle i ~: 07" Star Bldg. Frank: Corey. c {=0r Star >= Bldg. BEdith:Gaylord: =~ =" Star Bldg. Robert M. Farrington______ Star Bldg. James Morlow. o_o Judson O’Quinn: --_ _...>. Henry IP. . Johnston: =.=: BasTHomt 2 rr Lacey J. Reynolds._.._.___. Gladstone Williams_________ 1246 National Press Bldg. Ralph Smithe: ~~~ Mayflower Hotel. George W. Stimpson_____.__ 726 National Press Bldg. Sydney R. Heymanson.....__ 832 National Press Bldg. George W. Combs_______... 1214 National Press Bldg. Rodney Crowther. ______...._ 1214 National Press Bldg. Thomas M. O’Neill 1214 National Press Bldg. Howard M. Norton_______.. 1214 National Press Bldg. George Rothwell Brown. ___ Times-Herald Bldg. David Sengner---....-----.-Times-Herald Bldg. Louis Azrael: ... 602 Times-Herald Bldg. Dewey L. Fleming..__.______ 1214 National Press Bldg. Gerald Griffin... cee 1214 National Press Bldg. Mark S..Watsent............ 1214 National Press Bldg. Poul WiWard: ©... ..c.-1214 National Press Bldg. Joseph H.Shost ._ .-........ 1214 National Press Bldg. Williath H. Y. Knighton, Jr__ 1214 National Press Bldg. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 1256 National Press Bldg. Mark. Yoole. ct 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1210 National Press Blecg. James J. Gillan... -.-.--.. 1210 National Press Bldg. Carroll Kilpatrick.__._.._..__ 1054 National Press Bldg. Carroll Kilpatrick. ........._ 1054 National Press Bldg. Frances W. Kilpatrick. _____ 1054 National Press Bldg. Charles S. Groves_._.._.____. 311 Evening Star Bldg. Windsor Booth... ......... 1204 National Press Bldg. Stephens Rippey.-.-.-.-..... 1232 National Press Bldg. Raymond G. Carroll________ 4000 Cathedral Ave. Bulkley Grifin............. 1215 National Press Bldg. Stephen V. Feeley__________ 1228 National Press Bldg. James ,. Wright: _— 1207 National Press Bldg. Merwin H. Browne. ________ 1207 National Press Bldg. J. Lewis Meddoff___________ 1207 National Press Bldg. J.P. Sanderson... ....... 330 Star Bldg. George W. Stimpson________ 726 National Press Bldg. Pavidlg. coinnn National Press Bldg. on 1151 1109 Leslie Ave., Alexandria, Va. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 1256 National Press Bldg. Howard Suttle. .____..... 1254 National Press Bldg. Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons___.___ 1255 National Press Bldg. Pal RB. Teach. .. ......... 901 Colorado Bldg. Edwin A. Lahey____________ 901 Colorado Bldg. George Rothwell Brown. ___ Times-Herald Bldg. David Camelon .............. Times-Herald Bldg. Cole E. Morgan... .... Times-Herald Bldg. Ray Moulden--._.._......... Times-Herald Bldg. Belly: West cots commana Times-Herald Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons. ..._.. 1255 National Press Bldg. FraneisY.:Connor............ 1255 National Press Bldg. James B. Crane........coe.n-1255 National Press Bldg. Cecil B. Dickson: .__........ 1255 National Press Bldg. Charles O. Gridley_.._.._.... 1255 National Press Bldg. Samuel F. McCully, Jr..._. 1255 National Press Bldg. Vance Johnson: ........c.cawna--1255 National Press Bldg. Luther Meredith. ____....___ 1255 National Press Bldg. Bdward Angly..~ . . = 1255 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED-—Continued Paper represented Name Office ChieagoMimes {etoii it ines Chicago (111.) Tribune Press Service. ____._ Chinese News Service... .._._._.__.L Christian Science Monitor, Boston (e.)____ Cincinnati (Ohio) Enquirer (m.)._._____._ Cincinnati (Ohio) Post (e.) ._ _______...____ Cincinnati (Ohio) Times-Star (e.).._______ Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer (m.)_._____ Cleveland (Ohio) Press (e.)_ ooo... Columbus (Ohio) Citizen (e.)._.._.________ Commercial Appeal (Memphis) (m.)Is28 Daily Herald (London)... __ Daily News Record (New York) (yi on Dallas (Tex.) News (m Dallas (Tex.) Times-Herald (e,; B.)... Out Davenport (Iowa) Democrat (e.) RN Davenport Times (ee)... 0 _....... Dayton Daily News (€.)-—-._._._____. a Daytona Beach News-Journal (e.)._______._ Denver Post (e.) Dos Moths (Iowa) Register and Tribune m., e.). Detroit (Mich.) Free Press (m.)__._________ Detroit (Mich.) News (e., S.) --oceeeeee Petrol ines Lt Te Pn eds Die Tat .... Switzerland)...KF Durham (N. C.) Herald-Sun (m.)_____.____ East Oregonian (Oreg.) (m.)_._____________ Editorial Research Reports._______________ El'Alcazar (Spainy i all coo uh El Paso (Tex.) Herald-Post (e.)-__________ Evansville (Ind.) Courier (m.,e.)________. Evansville (Ind.) Press (e., S.)_ Exchange Telegraph Co. (Ltd. ), London, England. Fairmont (W. Va.) Times (m.)-_______._.___ Fall River (Mass.) Herald-News (e.)_____. Federated Press. Fm Dally (IN YY ere ame a Tr Flint (Mich.) Journal (e., Fort Wayne (Ind.) J ons ‘Gazette (m.)__ Fort Wayne (Ind.) News Sentinel (e.)__.___ Fort Worth (Tex.) Star Telegram (m.,e.)__ Fort Worth (Tex) bros (0 Bl dos CEA Fresno. (Calif) Bee (e.) ooo aaa Gallipolis (Ohio) Daily Tribune (e.)-.-.._. General Press Association. ______._._________ Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press (e.)_.._______ Greensboro (IN. C.) Daily News (m.)______ Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette (e.)-.-____ Greenville (S. C.) News... __._.. Robert E. Kennedy_________ 1211 National Pris Bldg. Doris: B. Jensen. = =. 2... 1211 National Press Bldg. Arthur Henning. _..________ 815 Albee Bldg. Satie rohan... 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. _| 815 Albee Bldg. Philip L. Warden 815 Albee Bldg. William Moore__.._______.__ 815 Albee Bldg. Joseph:Chiang..._..-.. Sherman Apts. J. Roscoe Drummond_______ 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. Richard’ L. Strout-........° 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. Mary Hornaday.........._. 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. William H. Stringer_________ 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. Joseph C. Harsch _______.__ 1287-1293 National Press Bldg. Edwin W. Gableman._______ 1387 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. Dick ThornbWg..... ooo. 1013 13th St. Morris. Ervin. 2... 2... 1393 National Press Bldg. Malvina Stephenson________ 1393 National Press Bldg. Walker S.'Buael............. 611 Albee Bldg. George Z. Griswold. _.._____ 611 Albee Bldg. Ned Brooks... 1013 13th St. Dick'Thornburg. =... 1013 13th St. Ned'Brooks.:~>.1 ~~: 1013 13th St. Dick Thomburg.....__._ 1013 13th St. George Morris... 1013 13th St. Aiba Webb... Willard Hotel. 501 Union Trust Bldg. Harry E. Resseguie_________ 501 Union Trust Bldg. Bertram J. Perkins. ___ 501 Union Trust Bldg. John-E: King? =~. 620 Albee Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons. ______ 1255 National Bross Bldg, RelphYoung..o..0 ° 1758 Q St. Rolph! W.'Cram..... R.3, Bethesda, Md. RalphiYoung_-............. 1758 Q St. Thomas W. .. Belmont Rd. Hagan... 2032 Margaret Park. P. O. Box 762. Charles O. Gridley... _______ 1245 National Press Bldg. Richard L. Wilson__________ 1265 National Press Bldg. NatS: Finney... _......... 1265 National Press Bldg. Ernest K. Lindley__________ 1265 National Press Bldg. Clifford A. Prevost_________ 1225 National Press Bldg. Radford E. Mobley, Jr..____ 1221 National Press Bldg. Harriet H. Crowley _________ 1221 National Press Bldg. JayG.Havden......_-=. 904 Colorado Bldg. BlhirMeody-_ >... 904 Colorado Bldg. Elizabeth Capitaine ________ 904 Colorado Bldg. George Rothwell Brown. ___ Times-Herald Bldg. David Camelon._____________ Times-Herald Bldg. George Hout! Martin... 411 Albee Bldg. Robert A. Erwin... 1048 Earle Bldg. 1048 Earle Bldg. JomW. Kelly _..... ..... 1225 National Press Bldg, 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Hotel Lafayette. 1013 13th St. 1048 Earle Bldg. 1048 Earle Bldg. Daniel M. Kidney__________ 1013 13th St. Charles J. Sterner __..________ 1091 National Press Bldg. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith. 1650 Harvard St. Robert E. McCord. ____.____. 1700 I St. Virginia Gardner....____.___ 856 National Press Bldg. Andrew H. Older___________ 520 3d St. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. Mark Thistlethwaite________ 608 Albee Bldg. Robert E. McCord________._. 1700 I St. Bascom N. Timmons_______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson___________ 1255 National Press Bldg. J. Lacey Reynolds._________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Marshall MeNeil ___________ 1013 13th St. Gladstone Williams______.__ 1246 National Press Bldg. EdwinJ. Heath. ______._____ 1300 National Press Bldg. Ralph A..Collins.._........... 1376 National Press Bldg. Mark Foote... 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 'W. A. Hildebrand......_.... 623 Albee Bldg. Mary James Cottrell... 1230 National Press Bldg. Jesse S. Cottrell... 1230 National Press Bldg. 740 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Harrisburg (Pa. essemms is NEWER) mmm Harrisburg (Pa.). Patriot (m.) o.oo. Harrisburg (Pa.) Telegraph (6.)-oooo-_ Hartford {Conn Couranta(m). .--..--Hartford (Conn.) Times 0h RR Nl pL ST Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette (€.)cceeeceaaaoa-Hollywood Reporter... 2 0. Lt ._ .. = Holyoke (Mass.) Transcript-Telegram (e.)-Honolulu Advertiser. cn ivommia nt v.viec Honolulu Star-Bulletin (.) -cee ceo ooons Houston (Tex.) Chronicle (e., 8.) cccoaaao-- Houston (Tex.) Press (8... cemmeannc—v-= Indianapolis (Ind.) News (€.) -ccceeeeooooo Indianapolis (Ind.) Star (m.) ._oocooo____ Indianapolis (Ind.) Times (€.) cccoooeoo International News Service....__...___ is Jackson City (Mich.) Patriot (e., 8.)...__. Jackson (Miss.) Daily News (e.)--—.-_____ Jacksonville (Fla.) Journal (e.).___.___.___ Jersey Journal. . ti rh cata dims ama nnd Jersey Observer (e.) Kalamazoo (Mich.) Gazelle © 8. Kansas City Kansan (e., S.) Kansas City Star (e.) Times (m.)_ _._....__ Kennebec (Maine) Journal... __.___ Kentucky Post (€.). coz cori eminranasa King Features Syndicate... ____________ Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel (e., S.)__ La Correspondencia de Puerto Rico (e.)... La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune (e., S.) La Nacion (Buenos Aires)... coco. Lansing (Mich.) State Journal (e.)._..____. Lewiston Tribune (Idaho) (m.)____________ LondonDaily Express... o_o... h London Daily Telegraph and Morning ost. London News Chroniele.__________________ London Imes coo. eensaa Long Island Dally Press... ..-cvceeeenneew- Ralph: A. Collins. ............. Ralph A, Collins___...______ Wayne W. Parrish_________. BricBramley. > 0 John: Cir T.oeser.......-...---Bulkley Griffin... .... Isabel Kinnear Griffin. _____ Edwin J. Hea Andrew H, Older. __......._ Bulkley-Griffin.............~.. Edward Jamieson___________ Radford E. Mobley, Jr... __ Bascom N. Timmons. ______ Edward Jamieson ___________ Kathryne Killeen_._________ Marshall McNeil .__________ Mark Thistlethwaite________ Everett C. Watkins_________ Daniel M. Kidney... .__---William K. Hutchinson... Robert Humphreys... _..... Phillip G. Reed... William S. Neal .________.... Joseph Kingsbury Smith____ Harold:Slater....oann wo Arthur Hachten...... ..... ... Jack-Vineent::. .. ...... 0... Marie Manning Gasch______ Lee Carson oven eo.tinue William E. Zimmerman_____ Joseph A. Bors. ......coeeeeen H. K. Reynolds. --......._.. Phillips J. Peck... ..... Arthur F. Hermann_________ Arthur Constantine ________ Jackson S. Elliott, Jr________ FelixColten.o.......... Jean C. Craighead. _________ Earle Marchres. _ J. William Theis -...._..... Horace M. Coats._......____ Frances D./Bass...— oo... Alvin Rosenfeld.___.__..____. Betty Graham ........_.... Bessie H. Eichler. ___..___._ Frederic B. Tuttle. ...______ Elliott Hayes... .......... Frankie Music... __.______-. Bdna Bt. Vals. .-.-.-.20 Nota Gibbs... You Broth. ov. to CT Erwin D. Silas. _......c.u.iu Mark Foote........__..-._-._. Kathleen Sexton Holmes_..__ Frank A. Kennedy....._._.. Ralph:A.-Collins...........2.. Robert E. MceCord__________ Mark Foote. ~...oeve eee Cli Stratton..........cauiues Theodore & Alford... ... PukeShoon..-. —oneeees Elisabeth Bs Craojg:. =... Ned Brooks... ......... PamlMsallen. .._ .__ __....... George Rothwell Brown. _.. Daniel M. Kidney__________ Sidney L. Dervan_____..__.. Mary James Cottrell ________ Fernando Ortiz-Echague____ Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. M. F. Cunningham _________ Richard Haestier___________ Denys H. H. Smith_________ 1376 National Press Bldg. 1376 National Press Bldg. 300 American Bldg. 300 American Bldg. 1232 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1300 National Press Bldg. 5201 3d St. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 505 Albee Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press 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 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. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 3930 Connecticut Ave. 1413 Crittenden St. 1376 National Press Bldg. 1700 I St. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. The Burlington. 610 Albee Bldg. 610 Albee Bldg. 1233 National Press Bldg, 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 730 Jackson Pl, Times-Herald Bldg. 1013 13th St. 3759 McKinley St. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1420 New York Ave. 1256 National Press Bldg. 2512 Q St. 532 Bond Bldg. 999 National Press Bldg. 854 National Press Bldg. 1292 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1383 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Long Island Star-Journal (€.)-occceeeeea James J. Butler_____________ 1383 National Press Bldg. George Rothwell Brown____ Times-Herald Bldg. Los Angeles Examiner (m.) ___ccccemaeeo__ Ray Richapds.. 0... Times-Herald Bldg. Cole E. Morgan_______...... Times-Herald Bldg. Los Angeles Herald Express... coocee_.. Ray Richards... ......iis Times-Herald Bldg. Los Angeles (Calif.) Times (m.) occa Warren B. Franecis._________ 1217 National Press Bldg. 1217-1219 National Press Bldg. Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal (m.)__... Robert... Riggs. ..-.__ 1213 National Press Bldg. Louisville (Ky.) Times (€.) cco. Lorenzo W. Martin_________ 1025 National Press Bldg. Lynn(Mass.Y tem (efi ooooo oo Bulkley Griffin..... 1215 National Press Bldg. McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ...._.____. RaysTucker: 222... 0... 6308 Hillcrest Pl, Chevy Chase, Md McKeesport (Pa.) Daily News (6)... 1700 I St. Macon (Ga.) Evening News__.._.....___.. 1311 G St. Macon Telegraph™(m.). ooo ouuv ena 1311 G St. Madison (Wis.) State Journal (., S.)-—-.__ Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader (m., e.)_ Jesse S. Cottrell .____________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Memphis Press-Scimitar (6.). ccomceeeeeeo-Daniel M. Kidney._.________ 1013 13th St. Miami (Fla.) Daily News (€.)-ooccoeo_. Thomas W. Hagan____ -2032 Belmont Rd. Miami (Fla.) Herald (m.). ...ccimeacauas Clifford A. Prevost . 1221 National Press Bldg. Betty Springer__________ 1221 National Press Bldg. Radford E. Mobley, Jr______ 1221 National Press Bldg. Michigan League of Home Dailies.__.__.__ Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 1256 National Press Bldg. Mary Kay Cavanaugh_____. 1256 National Press Bldg. Milwaukee Sentinel... ooo. George Rothwell Brown. ___ Times-Herald Bldg. David Camelon_________.___ Times-Herald Bldg. Cole Morgan........ccona--. Times-Herald Bldg. Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune Richard L.. Wilson__________ 1265 National Press Bldg. mee. S.). Minneapolis Tribune (m.)________________._ Nat S.Finney-= __._._..._. 1265 National Press Bldg. Mitchell (8S. Dak.) Republic (e.)__________ Frances McKusick_________._ 1048 Earle Bldg. Modesto (Calif. y Bee... cance. 1246 National Press Bldg. Muskegon Chronicle (e.)_ _____.____________ 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. Nashville (Tenn.) Banner (e.) .___._...__.__ Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Nashville (Tenn.) Tennesseean (m., e.)._._ Bascom N. Timmons. ______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson___________ 1255 National Press Bldg. J. Lacey Reynolds. _________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Tremaine F. Robinson______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Nassau Daily Review Star (e.)______.______ James J. Butler_.__._._________ 1383 National Press Bldg. National Catholic Welfare Conference Frank AvHall: 0... 1312 Massachusetts Ave. News Service. BurkeWalsh. ©... 1312 Ave. .. Massachusetts William BE. Ring... =... _. 1312 Massachusetts Ave. Netherlands News Agency. ooo Norman C. Cushman_______ Wellington Villa, Alexandria, a. Newark (IN. J.) Ledger (m.)___.____________ 1383 National Press Bldg. Newark (N. J.) Evening News____________ 903 Colorado Bldg. -| 903 Colorado Bldg. New Britain (Conn.) Herald (e.)..._______ James J. Butler... 1383 National Press Bldg. New Haven (Conn.) Register (e.) -..______ Bulkley Griffin. _. a 1215 National Press Bldg. New Orleans (La.) States (€., S.) coo —____ Bascom Timmons. 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson... i 1255 National Press Bldg. New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune (m., Pal Wooton... ....... 1252 National Press Bldg. Newport (R. 1.) Daily News (€.)..________ Bertram: PB. Linz... 621 Albee Bldg. Newport (R. 1.) Herald (m.)______________ Lynne M. Lamm ___________ 1123 National Press Bldg. Newspaper Enterprise Association .__.____ Peter Bdson.......... 1013 13th St. James Thrasher_____________ 1013 13th St. Betty MacDonald__________ 1013 13th St. New York Daily News (I.) oc ocoecaoeo__ JohnO’Donnell.____..______ 1272 National Press Bldg. Fred Pasley-............... 1272 National Press Bldg. GLa apy=ls oo 1272 National Press Bldg. GeorgeDizon............._. 1272 Nationa] Press Bldg. Virginia Posley.............. 1272 National Press Bldg. Thurston RB. Porter.......... 1272 National Press Bldg. Jo Ellen Adams_____________ 1272 National Press Bldg. New York Daily Worker (m.)_____._.__.__. Adamlapin.s. ...._...... 954 National Press Bldg. Bvalapino ........L30 954 National Press Bldg. New York Herald Tribune (m.)____._.______ Bert Andrews_______________ 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. Nicholas P. Gregory... ..... 1285 National Press Bldg. Leo P. Cullinane____________ 1285 National Press Bldg. Walter J. Birkenhead 1285 National Press Bldg. Jom EHiott:.. ..__.. 1285 National Press Bldg. Frank R. Kelly_______ 1285 National Press Bldg. Ann-Cotivell:........ ..... 1285 National Press Bldg. JohmGCiSmith-_.. ..... .. 1285 National Press Bldg. New York Herald-Tribune Syndicate. ____ Mark Sullivan. ............. 820 18th St. ‘Walter Lippmann __________ 1525 35th St. ‘Wilfrid Fleisher ...___._____ 2320 Tracy Pl. 742 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS Paper represented New York Journal American (€.)-ccccceee- New York Journal of Commerce (Im.)----- New York Post (e.)---3 New York Sun (e.)---ba Now York: TImes (MY ce ..vosecunrsmanesat New York World-Telegram (6.)-ccocee--Oakland Post-Inquirer.. 0. oo occio. Oil City Derrick msi. ilo LadooC Oklahoma City, Oklahoman_ _____________ Omaha World-Herald (m.).______._.______ Oregon Journal, Portland (e., Orlando Sentinel and Reporter a (m.,e.). Overseas News Ageney. oo ceocemecanan--Palm Beach Post-ih (He) 0.) ..cdmnnanns Panama City News Herald Ce. HERE Parkersburg (W. Va.) News (m.)..__..____ Pensacola (Fla.) Journal and News (m., e.) -Philadelphia Bulletin (€.)---cccamaoaaaoo_o Philadelphia Inquirer (m., 8.) ccccoaaooooo Philadelphia Record (m., 8.) o-oo... Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gazette (m.)_ ....... Pittsburgh: (Pa.) Press (e.,;8.).cctcmmnnnuan Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph____.________.____ Pittsfield (Mass.) Eagle (€.) -cooccomoeeoooo PM) oot le Lonelannie Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press (8)... Port Huron (Mich.) Times-Herald _.._____ Portland (Maine) Evening Express____.___ REPRESENTED—Continued Name George Rothwell Brown. ___ Gene Robbai.....coean aaa Cole E. Morgan... David P. Sentner........... Oscar E. Naumann. ........ Fred W. Lardner....oane..-Harry G. Borwick.._......_ Mildred Lam. ..........2.5 Stanley B. Ferguson.._._..._. FranzZBoWell. .........000 Charles Van Devander._____ William O. Player, Jr... Mortimer Hall. IX, ..........-Phelps H. Adams. ......---. Glen Perrys il vuviimnma--Margaret Elliott... _-_ Edward A. Conroy... Frederick R. Barkley... .... Harold Callender. ..._.____. Turner Catledge. ooo. JohnH. Crider... =~. Henry N. Dorris Charles E. Egan _| _| Nancy H. MacLennan______ ‘Winifred Mallon_.__...._... John. Morris... -Sidney:Shalett......-eee Hal H., Smith. i....co 200 LouisiStark 0.0L..... Charles P. Trussell _________. Robert F. Whitney. _______. Lewis Wood Charles T. Lucey... Ray Richards...t .. -_._.. Henry D.Balph.... ...._.__. J. Lacey Reynolds... ...... J. Marr McGaffin__..._..... CarliSmitho tl o.oo. Frank A, Kennedy.......... Carlifiartman...........-. Robert BE. McCord.._....__. Frank A. Kennedy... ..._.. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith. Frank A. Kennedy. ......... Ralph W. Page. _...o....._. Jay Herbert Reid, Jr.___..__. William C. Murphy, Jr Pauly. MeGahan .......... JohmG. O’Brien. ........Ji.00 John M. McCollough_._._... Herman A. Lowe___________ Hugh Morrow... oo. Dorothy C. Rockwell _______ Alexander Kendrick_______.. Frank HoWeir 2. ......... ‘Walter T'. Hazlett __._____._. ‘Windsor P. Booth__________ Thomas McNamara____.._.. Betty Lou Springer________. Raymond Z. Henle. ._...__. George F.Jenks_.______.___. Robert: Taylor: ..csueoerna DPavid:Sentner....-..........-Buckley Griffin____ sir Kenneth G. Crawford._...__ Evelyn Seeley. ..ccomeeeann Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. Elisabeth May Craig___..___ Office Times-Herald Bldg. 729 15th St. Times-Herald Bldg. Times-Herald Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 619 619 1367 1367 1367 643 643 643 643 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 717 Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. National Press National Press National Press Munsey Bldg. Munsey Bldg. Munsey Bldg. Munsey Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. Albee Bldg. 1013 13th St. Times-Herald Bldg. 1224 1255 950 824 1413 1059 1700 1413 1650 1413 1277 1277 National Press National Press National Press Colorado Bldg. Crittenden St. National Press I St. Crittenden St. Harvard St. Crittenden St. National Press National Press 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1296-1298 National 1204 National Press 1204 National Press 1204 National Press 1280 National Press 1280 National Press 1013 13th St. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Press Bldg. Bldg. Bidg. Bldg Bldg. Bldg. Times-Herald Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 975 National Press Bldg. 1256 National Press Bldg. 1256 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. | | Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Portland (Maine) Press Herald (m.)_______ Elisabeth May Craig________ 1215 National Press Bldg. Providence (R. I.) Evening Bulletin______ Frederic W. Collins_________ 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. Providence (R. 1.) Journal (m)____________ Sevellon Brown 3d____._.____ 607-608 Hibbs Bldg.Radio Daily (N. Y.) Andrew H. Older___._.________ 520 3d St. Radio:News Bureau... ..... = MartinitGodel -870 National Press Bldg. .......c vt SelsTaishoff os: ootor 7 870 National Press Bldg. Raleigh (IN. C.) News and Observer (m.)_. Carroll Kilpatrick ___._____. 1054 National Press Bldg. Reuter’s (Ltd.), London, England _________ Kenneth Stonehouse _______ 1274 National Press Bldg. 1274 National Press Bldg. Richmond News-Leader (e.)._..___________ Robert M. Lynn: =. 1277 New Hampshire Ave.Rochester Chronicle and Democrat (m.)___ 1230 National Press Bldg. Rochester Times-Union (e.)______._________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Rome (N. YX.) Sentinel (e.)__-_.________._. 1700 I St. St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch (e., S.)_.__. Raymond P. Brandt___.____ 201 Kellogg Bldg. Marquis W. Childs________. 201 Kellogg Bldg. Richard L. Stokes __________ 201 Kellogg Rldg. Estelle G, Welsh_.______.___ 201 Kellogg Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. St. Louis Star-Times (€.)--cvcccmcaeoo 1250 National ots Bldg. St. Paul (Minn.) Dispatch.(€.) ceo. 625 AlbeeBldg. 625 Albee Bldg. St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press (m.)_____.__ 625 Albee Bldg. LweDoPartins-c 625 Albee Bldg. 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Union (m.,e.)_.________ Staten Island Advance... ______.___________ Stratford (Ontario) Beacon-Herald (e.).___ Stuart (Fla.) Daily News__________________ Switzerland, Neue Zuercher Zeitung_______ Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald_______ Syracuse (N. Y.) Herald-Journal 1 Yor Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R Terre Haute (Ind.) Star (m.)______________ Terre Haute (Ind.) Tribune (e.)__.________ Toledo (Ohio) Blade (e.). .-.....____.__.. Toledo (Ohio) Times (m.)..& ____.____... Topeka (Kans.) Daily Capital (m.)__.____ Toronto Evening Telegram ________________ Bascom N. Timmons_______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson___________ 12556 N i] Press Bldg. MaorgaretiBarke Fi 0 "0 P. O. Box7 George Rothwell Brown. ___ Times Hora Bldg. Ray Richards... ~~ = Times-Herald Bldg. RuthPinneyr: «~~ 1013 13th St. George Rothwell Brown____ Times-Herald Bldg. Cole E. Morgan__.__________ Times-Herald Bldg. Ray -Bichardss....0. Bldg. = Times-Herald Wain PDayiss o.oo 1719 N St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. William Phos Simms... 1013 13th St. Edward A. Evans___________ 1013 13th St. Raymond Clapper_____.____._ 1013 13th St. Thomas L. Stokes___________ 1013 13th St. Ernest 'I.Pyle:-:. 1013 13th St. Ho. Ma Talburbe + — 0 1013 13th St. Ludwell Denny _____________ 1013 13th St. Fred W. Perkins... ©. 1013 13th St. Ray Riehards.: Times-Herald Bldg. Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Pre ‘Bldg. Robert E. McCord_________. 1700 I St. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1700 I St. _| 832 National Press Bldg. Howard Suttle... 1254 National Press Bldg. HarryJd. Brown..." 713 Transportation Bldg. William P. Kennedy.________ Star Bldg. John Lorance:=... __.._ . 1305 N St. ‘William P. Kennedy.__._____ Star Bldg. Bulkley Griffin... _________ 1215 National Press Bldg. James.J. Butler...._........ 1383 National Press Bldg. Raymond G. Carroll________ 4000 Cathedral Ave. Margaret: Park: P. O. Box 762. ‘Walter Bosshard. ___________ 1026 National Press Bldg. AsDaBothman.. — . -__' 1301 15th St. Raymond C. Maley_________ 1301 15th St. Raymond G. Carroll________ 4000 Cathedral Ave. Laurence Todd_.___________ 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1397 National Press Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. Raymond Z. Henle. __._____ 1280 National Sons Bldg. George F.Jenks_____........ 1280 National Press Bldg. George F. Jenks 1280 National Press Bldg. Clif Stratton. _____ The Burlington. National Press Club. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Traffic World, Chicago___._.__- Troy (N. Y.) Record (m., e.)-__ Troy (N. Y.)' Times (e.).....<.--Tulsa (Okla.) World (m.)....-- United Features Syndicate____ United Press Associations... __ United States News Association Wall Street Journal (m.)______ Stanley H. Smith. .._..._.. J. Delton Pattie..oo..o Joseph C. Scheleen__________ Lewis’W. Britton............ Jesse S. Cottrell ._ _.________ Jesse S. 'Cottrell.......c.on.-Bascom N. Timmons._..__. J. Lacey Reynolds. _.._._.__._ James’ Cramer oi clo ioe Drew Pearson’. ou... uh Leon M. Pearson___.___._.__ Lyle QC. Wilson... ......... Julius Frandsen, Jr_________ C. Russell Turner, Jr....... Fred 0. Bailey...>: Sandor. Si Klein. o.oo Milton E. Magruder-__.._. Soh R.H. Shaekford....-.-.-.--Otto G. Janssen.____ John A. Reichmann___ Ernst L. Barcella_._____ 3 William H. Lander... .... Merriman Smith _________.. HO. Thompson.woo. wn: G. Frederick Mullen________ Rex Mi..Chaney..-coo Th Myler tal. ais Reuel S. Moore... Fred H: Seherfl.. o.oo Charles W. Corrdry, Jr.._... Charles B. Degges. ..__.__._._ Joseph Laitin._.. oui Helene C. Monberg________. Edward V. Roberts________. Peggy Poor... ila Richard C. Wilson_......... Joseph'L,, Ranft: ........... Clifford" H. Adams... Edward C. Eisenhart_______ Robert E. Smith... .......... William B. Allen, Jr_____.__ Ernest Marvin Hill, Jr______ Helen Ashby________ -| B. Percy Noel _....... Rhys M. Jones John; Cutter... Tony Scott Smith___________ William H. Adams__________ Jewel Spangler Smaus_______ Margaret Zigler... _________ Warrington S. Lowry _______ Louis J. Schaefle__._________ Glen'R. Bayless i: oon M. Ruth Gmeiner_ _________ Mary Elizabeth Kirsch_ ____ CU Dance rr rai A. Fred Warner______.______. Banning E. Whittington____ David Lawrence. _._________ Fred’ A. Bmery. =. Alfred D. Stedman.__________ William P. Helm. -2k5% George B. Bryant Charles J. Sterner Allred BP. Flynn... c= Kenneth Kramer... ._______. Kermit:V Sloan... xs: Walter H. Waggoner________ Gilbert W. Stewart, Jr______ Robert H. Gemmell _________ 1023 Earle Bldg. 1023 Earle Bldg. 1023 Earle Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1255 Naitonal Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1313 29th St. 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. 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 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 2201 M St. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 043 National Press Bldg. 043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries 745 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Wall Street Journal (m.)—Continued______ Elizabeth Farnsworth_______ 1043 National Press Bldg, V, QuJones to. 1. i. oC 1043 National Press Bldg. Shirley H. Scheibla___._.___. 1043 National Press Bldg. Wabash (Ind.) Plain Dealer (e.)-__._..._.. Robert D. Heinl. ........... 2400 California St. Washington Evening Star________________. G. Gould.-Lincoln..........._- 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. William P. Kennedy____.___ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. | JA. O Leary. .... Jeers 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Constantine A. Brown______ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. | Benjamin M. McKelway.__| 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. James E. Chinn............_. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. JohnH, Cline. _............. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Joseph:ALFoxi o.oo. oi 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Herbert: FP. Comn..--........ 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Gideon A. Lyon_____.__.... 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. BlainBolles.-. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. Garnett D. Horner__.____.__ Carter Brooke Jones. _______ 1101 1101 Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Ave. Ave. | Washington City News Service. ..._._.... Arch Bddy.. eens 705 National Press Bldg. it Robert C. Hickok.__________ 705 National Press Bldg. I Lee M. Hannify..__________ 705 National Press Bldg. | Washington Daily News (€.)ecemcace omens John 7. O'Rourke... ....... 1013 13th St. : Martha Strayer .__________. 1013 13th St. Evelyn Gordon..__._____.___ 1013 13th St. I Robert M. Buck___________._ 1013 13th St. i Joseph Robert Fitzgerald. __| Harold Kneeland __________ Charles Stevenson. _________ 1013 1013 1013 13th 13th 13th St. St. St. 8 Howard L. Coppenbarger.__| 1013 13th St. Aubrey A. Graves.......__. 1013 13th St. John: F, Cramer... 2. 1013 13th St. Howard Lewis...___________ 1013 13th St. Washington Post (m., 8) oii... = Alexander F. Jones__________ Post Bldg. Edward T. Folliard_._._____ Post Bldg. Hope Ridings Miller________ Post Bldg. Frank’Dennis.... .... Post Bldg. ‘William V. Nessly_._____.___ Christine Sadler. ___________ Post Post Bldg. Bldg. i RB Barnet Nover............... Post Bldg. i John G,. Norris. co = Post Bldg. Ernest K. Lindley Post Bldg. Edward F. Ryan___________ Post Bldg. i MerloJ. Pusey... ....... Post Bldg. H.B. Elliston...= ~~ Post Bldg. fl Jerry Klutz... ooo.i Post Bldg. 8 Robert Albright... Post Bldg. Robert T'. De Vore____.____ Post Bldg. John J. W. Riseling....._.__ Post Bldg. Ben'W. Gilbert ...0.. 0... Post Bldg. | Malvina Lindsay. __....... Post Bldg. i Mary. Spareo.. .c..cuuunun-. Post Bldg. Washington Times-Herald. _..cceeeoean.- ‘Wilbur Mackey... Eleanor Patterson. _________ Post Bldg. 1317-1321 H St. Michael W. Flynn__________ 1317-1321 H St. I Frank C. Waldrop......__.__ 1317-1321 H St. Alva Brewer. i... 1317-1321 H St. | Frank Smiths...oi. ...... 1317-1321 H St. * i Helen Essary.....«o- necosan 1317-1321 H St. George D. Riley... ....._.... 1317-1321 H St. Betty Hynes... anes 1317-1321 H St. | Herbert Hopkins... --....._| 1317-1321 H St. | Jack Kassewitz. ocean... 1317-1321 H St. i Edward F. Jones... caaaa... 1317-1321 H St i George A. DeWitt. caeeeo_. 1317-1321 H St B.C. Harter. nanauaremnvss- 1317-1321 H St | ¢}. BE. Tankersley....-...... 1317-1321 H St. | Willard Edwards... ....---._ 1317-1321 H St Howard Denbyecameenai... 1317-1321 H St. | John Maynard-....-.....o.0 1317-1321 H St. | Geraldine Fairall .___________ 1317-1321 H St. | Vincent X. Flaherty... 1317-1321 H St. John Earle MoSer-----—---Marie B. O’Brien... 1317-13211317-1321 HH St.St. || Alan W. Payne: ...--......- 1317-1321 H St. I Eileen A. Eften_...__.__.... 1317-1321H St, Waterbury (Conn.) American (m.,e.)___..| Bulkley Griffin_________.___ 1215 National Press Bldg. Waterloo (Iowa) Daily Courier (e.)__--___- Ralph Young..: .. ....o 2215 Washington Circle. | | Watertown (N. Y.) Daily Times (e.)---_-- Jesse S. Cottrell... ..._..._. 1230 National Press Bldg. Waterville (Maine) Sentinel (m.).__.__..__ Elisabeth May Craig_.__._._ 1215 National Press Bldg. | | 746 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Westchester County Newspapers_.._______ James Ju Butler... .. did. 1383 National Press Bldg. ‘Wheeling Intelligencer (m.)______-_________ Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith_| 1650 Harvard St. Wichita Beacon (ei) rsa Cun coco 800 Betsy Jageraic ooo... George Washington Inn. Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News (m.).._| Edward Jamieson.__________ 1255 National Press Bldg. Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times (€.)..._-co--.. Bascom N. Timmons_..____ 1255 National Press Bldg. Wilmington (N. C.) Star-News (m.,e.)_.__| Howard Suttle _____________ 1254 National Press Bldg. Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel (m.,e.)| Robert A. Erwin____________ 1048 Earle Bldg. Frances McKusick._________ 1048 Earle Bldg. Winnipeg Free Press. io. o.aosiiililll Chester A. Bloom ________._. National Press Club. Women’s Wear Daily (€.)--occoooomoee= Mary F. Jefferson... ........ 501 Union Trust Bldg. ‘Worcester (Mass.) Gazette _ ooo. Balltley Griffin... ........ 1215 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin._.__.__ 1215 National Press Bldg. Yorkshire (England) Post... ._._ Carroll:Kilpatrick.. ........ 1054 National Press Bldg. Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator (€.)-—----_-Bascom N. Timmons... _____ 1255 National Press Bldg. Lacey Reynoulds____________ 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, 1714 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va., and Howard C. Dawes, 23 Fifth Street SE., assistant superintendents. Congressional Directory RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Press Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXYV of the House of Represent-atives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule 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 NED Brooks, Chairman CeciL Dickson, Secretary Jack BrLL Epwarp T. FOLLIARD BurkLey GRIFFIN WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSCCIATION (Press Room, White House. Phone, REpublic 2121) MEMBERS REPRESENTED [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the [| designates those having other ladies with them] Name Representing— Abbott, Eugene Li________._.. Associated Press Photos... o.oo... *Adams, Robert Neal _______ Underwood & Underwood. _ ________________ ‘Alley, CO. EBq Co ouious 10 *Atking, Olliel Lid loo. | Brown, JoO.. aioo ame] oo *Burruss, Randolph M._______ *Chinn, Augustus C._________ *Churchill, CG. W.C i Ll. *Clover, Robert M___________ Coleman, Harry.............. *Curtis, Rexx ll iis.of. *Davis, Myron H________ *DelVecchio, Charles. 4 *Denton, Robert H_._________ *Deslor, Max... oo *Dibble, Allen OC... .... = *DiJoseph, John M_________. *Dorsey, George M___________ Pacik, George B...........=: *(Gaylin, George B............ Glick, Teonard H........... *Goodwin, Harry E__.___.____ *Qorry, Charles’ P............. *Gorry, William J............ *Graham, George Li. ___._____ *Greenberg, Hyman__________ *Griffin, Henry... *Harris, George Wi. ........... *Jamieson, Joseph D_________ *Johnson, Hugo C........... *Kelley, Thomas W._._._____ Kellogg, Steven... -_ Knell, Charles A... ...._ *Lanigan, Maurice F_________ *Lyons, James E *Maek, Charles J......... Mackland, Ray. ._. -......_ Harris: & Ewing... 0000000 BOSSA Hsa ds 10 Red Crossingis suds, Washington Evening Star.______________._____ Pathe News, Ine... [Jo coe Buin? Washington Daily News________________..___ International News Photos... ___________.. Associated Press Photos... 0 ff 2000 10 Acme N ewspictures, Ine... nnlinaimly International News Photos _______.__________ M-G-M Newsofthe Day. __________.____..__ Washington Pest. i. “uo Lodoibigiainial, Washington Evening Star__.________________ Associated Press Photos... _____.______.._..._ Associated Press Photos: J. i stor vivid Office of War Information._ Harris & Ewing... _.. _| Life Magazine, Time, Inc. Washington Post SE FA a 4 A ee Reni News Photos... o_o.ol. org Pathe News, Ime. rr: he Associated Press. oo... Coo at Acme Newspietures, Ine... .....ocacoian ‘Washington Times-Herald__________________ Washington Post toe oon oe 0 AssociatedPress Photos: io...-i = Associated Press come veeeeeen- Photos... Universal: Newsreel, Inc:_.......... oo... Department of Interior... .............0 Associated Press Photos........cccv eee Washington: Post... =... oo o.oo ‘Washington Times-Herald __________________ Agriculture Department ______ Acme Newspictares, Ine...__.. Universal Newsreel, Inc. ........____..___.. Lifo Magazine, Time, INC..0 ni. vn vennnenns- Residence 8300 Oakford Pl., Silver Spring, Md. 1733 N St. 2040 Pierce Mill Rd. 1800 Fort Davis St. SE. 329 17th St. SE. 2459 Tunlaw Rd. 1530 Rhode Island Ave. NE. 25 Overbrook Rd., Fairfax, Va. ne 1st Sn South, Arling- on, il 5827 No orth ‘Washington Blvd., Arlington, Va. 4306 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. 3601 Connecticut Ave. 7801 13th St. 3606 3d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 1506 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md 2331 40th St. 7212 Alaska Ave. 3646 New Hampshire Ave. 4027 Benton St. 806 Princeton Pl. 1332 Locust Rd. 7436 Georgia Ave. 1731 North Troy St., Arling-ton Va. 1739 Allison St. NE. 1359 Kalmia Rd. 105 Holly Ave., Takoma Park, Md. I 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. Son Ridge Rd., Greenbelt, 3107 Woodland Drive. 8504 Garfield St., Bethesda, Md 1506 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, : 604 Erie Ave., Takoma Park, 1220 N St. 209 P St. SW. 1220 Allison St. NE. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 7816 Aberdeen Rd., Bradley Woods, Bethesda, Md. 6209 Western Ave. 83317°—T78-1—2d ed.—49 749 Congressional Directory MEMBERS REPRESENTED—Continued Name Representing— Residence *Marsland, Joseph B_________ *Martenson, John........c.5. *May, Andrew J... >. *McAvoy, Thoma SD... 5] *O’eth, AHred J... ooo... O’Haire, William E..__.__._. *Pridgeon, Irwin aude. Puslis, John. ._. :iooisli-l Raines, Whitney C......._._.. *Riordan, Daniel E__________ *Rollins, Byron H sRous, John BH... sis... *Routt, Francis R *Routt, Randolph Jad Gece... *Rubel, Laurence E_____..__. Schmick, Paul M________.__. *Seott, Arthur B._..._.l... *Skadding, George R_______._ *Smith, William J....2. 0.20.0 Taylor, David....co.0.. i J *Thompson, F. Irving________ *Pondra, John'AL. loi...2. Troup, OB... 0...ola. i. Tugander, Harry _.____..._._. *Van Tine, Harry M._Lasil, *Wilkinson, Frank C_..______ Williams, La So Li. ous. sWilson, Jack Jo...i mana... *Wilson, Woodrow R......... ‘Wolkonsky, Dimitri________.._ *Zaimes, Charles J International News Photos... _____________ Mavietonews, Ine... cu.von.ranupgonauss suc Harkis & Bwing. = es Life Magazine, Time, Ine. -........ io... Washington Daily News... _......_... Washington Post... cians sernamebrs Washington Evening Star___________________ Movietonews, Inc... oo c..inoc carinii. Paramount News. boo aia oc ro. Acme Newspictures, Ines... _____. Washington Evening Star._..________._______ Associated: Pross:Photos..-o 1....i .... Acme Newspietures, Ine.... .... Acme Newspictures, Inc... o_o... Wide World: ..... Photos...0 ‘Washington Times-Herald._.____.___.._.._____ ‘Washington Evening Star... _____._____ ‘Washington Evening Star... _______...____ Underwood & Underwood... _____._.______ Washington Evening Star...._._.._._.__.___ International News Photos... ____.________ Associated Press Photos................ ...... Wide World Photos..co. cans. fstiosiniionan Acme Newspictures, Inc... ___.. International News Photos_......._...___.___ Movictonews, INE. coves ivinisne sean ea ‘Washington Times-Herald.____.______..____ Universal Newsreel, Inc__.__._.___i__....._.. International News Photos. -ccceccmceaaao.. Washington Times-Herald ..-ccccocoooooo.. War Department sco il soot Lota... ‘Washington Times-Herald. ooo .... Army Signal Corpsiiii i coacdi aionini. ‘Washington Times-Herald. ..._ocooooao____ Red Cross 3 Warren Drive, Falls Church, Va. 4133 North Henderson Rd., Arlington, Va. 1903 37th St. 3306 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Va. 2805 14th St. 4409 Yuma St. 635 Farragut St. 4 Radcliffe Rd., Bellehaven, Alexandria, Va. 6601 14th St. Spring Bank Manor, Alex-andria, Va. 6147 30th St. 5700 1st St. 1302 Bryant St. NE. 2608 Lee Highway, Arling-ton, Va. 4421 Butterworth PI. 3500 14th St. 1015 Flower Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 303 Lexington Drive, Wood-moor, Silver Spring, Md. 4508 17th St. 6323 Luzon Ave. 4221 15th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 2816 McKinley PI. 4513 17th St. NE. 2615 13th St. 6002 32d St. 200 Rhode Island Ave. NE. 9909 Rogart Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Commodore Hotel. 1527 Park Rd. 3030 North Quincy St. Arlington, Va. 610 Powhatan Pl. 4415 49th St. : 3022 K St. SE. 9522 Bruce Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 5244 44th St. News Photographers’ Association 751 ct —— SERVICES REPRESENTED Service Name STILL PICTURE SERVICE Acme Newspictures, Inc... occeceooo-George R. Gaylin, manager. ._.__. Whitney C. Raines. ._________.... Maurice F. Lanigan_._____________ Bertram G. Brandt... .. Associated Press Photos. -ceeeeeeaae G. W. Churchill, manager________ George R. Skadding._______________ Henry Griffin... o.oo. coves Robert M.. Clover... _...." Max Desfor.-. oo on Charles: P: Gorry:.. _..L{_ Uojiod William J. Gorry.co..ih socio Guy:D. Bowman.......cc.oa.-..... Bugene L.’Abbott: == ror John Puss... oo... oova nb George By Baelk. ol. Harris GC BWing ecvodane mine Andrew J. May, manager_________ Georgo W. Harrds.. ex. (2 Rexx Curtis oy a el OO BarAley. ISLE A IN oii International News Photos... __....___ Joseph E. Marsland, manager._____ Hairy M; Van Tine... eo oaae. F. Irving Thompson... ........ Walter Bordas. =... 5. Life Magazine, Dime, INC uc. daecia Thomas BD. MeAvoy... _.... ..._ Myron'tl, Davies 00... RayMackland-.. .....-..o... . WideWorld' Photos. ....0..ccoaen—i. Joseph D. Jamieson, manager._____ William Jd 8mith..............oz Byron H. RoOlNS.. co. ncnneaainee- NEWSREEL SERVICE Fox Movietonews, Inc____.__.._________ Anthony Muto, manager... ._._ John'A, Tondra........ oucacicii M-G-M News ofthe Day... _.________ J. C. Brown, manager.____________ Charles). Mack. oo. Paramount: News... i. cc...080% Robert H. Denton, manager_.____ Hugo C.Johnton.........0“0 =. Alfred J. Ofeth, icin nviis PatheNews, IneL. o.oo Diisl George M. Dorsey, manager.______ To Baltzelll io oo hie Universal Newsreel, Inc. ....___________ James E. Lyons, manager... _.___. Harry Tugahnder. ....._ ...... -... George L.. Graham... NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENT Washington Daily News. _ ooo.___ Willlamy'C. Beall: o.oo... Aaron 8, Miller: ....o..ooaianais: Washington Post. ....c.ccounubcdiasaae Hugh Miller, manager. ___________ Harry E. Goodwin... ___..-_. __ Charles DelVeechio.._______._____ Randolph M. Burruss.______._____ ‘Washington Evening Star. ________.____ Irwin Pridgeon, manager__________ John C. Mueller_______ Elwood A. Baker... ‘7 Randolph J. Routt. =... .. Augustus C. Chin... ooo.00 Office 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 1313 F St. 1313 F St. 1313 F St. 1313 F St. 1317-1321 H 8t. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H 8t. 815 15th St. 815 15th St. 815 15th St. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 736 Munsey Bldg. 736 Munsey Bldg. 736 Munsey Bldg. 1005 New Jersey Ave. 1005 New Jersey Ave. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. 752 Congressional Directory SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Service Name Office NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENT—CON. Washington Times-Herald _________..___. JohnH, Rous: ccd .0oc0iiiiain. 1317-1321 H St. Leonard HaGlelk 0. 1317-1321 H St. JaeksWilsoR atl dy oo coool 1317-1321 H St. Q..B.Broapobgaalaool 1317-1321 H St. do Dimitri Wolkonsky_______________ 1317-1321 H St. Steven Kellogg...______ 1317-1321 H ooo St. Frank C., Wilkinson_ __.__________ 1317-1321 H St. OFFICERS OF THE WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION George M. Dorsey, President ArTHUR E. Scorr, Vice President GeorceE R. Skapping, Secretary-treasurer Executive Committee Max DEsSror : | Harry E. GoopwIN Hueco C. JorNsON 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 Name Representing— Agronsky, Martin__._..._.___ Allen, Jerry (Miss). ........_ *Baukhage, H. R ; *Beatty, Morgan_____.__..... * Blair, Frank 8. Jr}... *Brown, A. Shirley......:... National Broadeasting Co. _____________ ian, Walter. ..o..oc.. Mutual Broadcasting System. __.._______.___ Transradio Press Service... *Cousins, Peter. J... io... WMAL—The Evening Star Station. _._____ *[|||Coyle, William Enders!._ WMAL—The Evening Star Station________ *Dennis, Albert N________._ Columbia Broadcasting System___._________ *Denzer, Peter W...__.:..... Transradio Press Service..... _.° Donohue, Elizabeth___._____ *Eaton, Richard. 2 >. Bid; Leolf. oi soem soar Ensign, Madeline. ______.____ Fangboner, Jean Hatton____ Mutual Broadcasting System.._.._..________ Frederick, Pauline_ _.______. Baukhage Radio Associates... ..._...____ *QGoad, Rex Transradio Press Service. o-oo coeeeao.. *Qodwin, Earl. x WatchitheWorld GoBy............ _ oi. .... *Harkness, Richard L___.___ National Broadeasting Co____..__._________ Hillman, William___________ Tho Blue Network. seat woo wily Joachim, Phillip N_.________ The Blue Network. ili oo... *Knode, Thomas E.1________ National Broadcasting Co. ______________ *Leitch, Albert C._.__.______ Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ *Lewis, Fulton, Jr______.___.__ Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ *Longmire, Carey __........__ National Broadcasting Co_______.___________ *McAndrew, William R_____ ‘The Blue Networkia co iol. 0 orem McCarthy, Clifford G1. ____ Transradio Press Service *McCormick, Robert K_____ National Broadeasting Co__._ ono ___.__ McCormick, Stephen J.1.___ Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ *Mclver, Ernest D., Jr... Columbia Broadcasting System ___..________ *Mahoney, Claude A___._____ WMAL—The Evening Star Station... 7... *Moore, Robert E. Lee______ Transradio:Press Service. i..c ce *Morrison, Fred W__________ Mutual Broadcasting System ________._______ *Neel, William... cool oon. WMAL—The Evening Star Station. __._____ [[Norman, John ____________ Transradio Press Service *Peoterson, Ralph H_ ________ National Broadcasting Commerc cccceceeeeo *Pickens, William H________ Transradio Press Service *Pureell, JohnilK oo... Columbia Broadcasting System ___________.. *Reed, Macon, Jr... ......_. Transradio Press Service Regan, Daniel... ....... WMAL—The Evening Star Station________ Repaid, Billy... Mutual Broadeasting System _______________ National Broadeasting'Co-.........0. .... National Broadcasting Co. _____.._._.____.___ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ *Shollenberger, Lewis W____ Columbia Broadcasting System._____._______ *Smith, Carleton D..._______ National Broadeasting Co... =. ..o imeem Stonehouse, Merlin F_______ Transradio Press Service. _..._._____.. _| *Swing, Raymond Gram____ The Blue Network______ ®iTorbett, Joe I... Joi... Associated Press Radio... 0.100 * Tully, Francis W.,Jr.l______ Yankee Network (Boston) . ecco. *Warner, Albert L.1 Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ *White, Leigh.5. 0. Columbia Broadcasting System So. _____________ *Wood, Robert S_.......... Columbia Broadcasting System.__.__________ *Worcester, Charles A_______ Columbia Broadcasting System _______._.____ ladies with them] Residence Cambridge Apartments. 1600 16th St. 1735 New Hampshire Ave. 2 Hilliop Rd., Silver Spring, d i Lee Blvd., Arlington, 1656 Euclid St. Newark St. 2024 I St. 1602 North Taylor St., Arlington, Va. 9900 Cherry Tree Lane, Sil-ver Spring, Md. 7708 Chicago Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 34 New York Ave. NE. Waneta Road, Glen Echo 3051 Idaho Ave. 4431 North 15th St., Arling-ton, Va. 4334 Montgomery Ave., Bethesda, Md. 2032 Belmont Rd. 1731 20th St. 112 Prince St., Alexandria, Va. R. R. 50 2, Alexandria, Va. 3002 P S 1701 seis Ave. 220 North Thomas St., Arlington, Va. 5513 Redford Rd., Green Acres, Md Earle Bldg. 4402 Volta Pl. Ebbitt Hotel. 4315 18th St. NE. 2300 South Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington, Va. 7656 Bradley Blvd., Bethes-da, Md. 713 26th St. South, Arling- ton, Va. 1530 16th St. 1829 Summit PI. meCameron St., Alexandria, = Paint Brag Farms, Silver Spring, Md. 431 Norn 15th St., Arling- on Va. 1717 17th St. 2800 Woodley Rd. 1918 Key Blvd., Arlington, a. 246 North Barton St. Arlington, Va. 1620 P St. 1807 H St. : 416 Fin St., Chevy Chase, roy St. 1742 Irving St. 6304 Oak Ridge Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. Presidential Gardens, Alex- andria, Va. 2926 Tennyson St. 1605 New Hampshire Ave. Hotel Roosevelt. Ave., Chevy , Md. 2364 any Pl. SE. 3320 University Ave. 1901 Wyoming Ave. 105 King St., McLean, Va. 322 Farragut St. 1 On leave of absence during service in the armed forces of the United States. 753 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 .. Joe uit 409 Bldg. Associated Press Radio... =...cc... H. Torbett 0. Bl 1 | Star Atlantic Coast Network ___ coo ooo... Richard Eaton... CU... i... 3051 Idaho Ave. Baukhage Radio Associates. _ __....._______ Pauline Frederick ______________ 622 Union Trust Bldg. Columbia Broadcasting System. ____..___. Eric Sevareid 853 Earle Bldg. 853 Earle Bldg. 853 Earle Bldg. 853 Earle Bldg. 853 Earle Bldg. John K. Purcell 853 Earle Bldg. Lewis W. Shollenberger._ _| 853 Earle Bldg. Albert L. Warner! ______ _| 853 Earle Bldg. LelghtWhite: ooloil 07 853 Earle Bldg. Robert'S.-Wood= +c... 5.8 856 Earle Bldg. 606 Earle Bldg. Mutual Broadeasting System___...__._.___ Fulton Lewis, Jr. c.cny on...’ 1627 K St. Frank S, Blair, Jr. 1... 0000 Walter Compton._____________ Madeline Ensign______________ Jean Hatton Fangboner__._____ Stephen J. McCormick 1._____ Fred W. Morrison__ _.___..___ Billy Repaid... oo National Broadcasting 00. -ccecacmceeaee--Morgan Beatty... .._.__._... 724 14th St. A. Shirley Brown_____________ 724 14th St. ran l EreaR eS 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. Carey: Longmire so... 11 724 14th St. Robert K. McCormick. _._____ 724 14th St. Ralph H. Peterson____.____.__ 724 14th St. Leonard Schleider....._..____. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. Robert St.John... a... 724 14th St. The Blue Network____._ H.R; Baukhage.. _nuciisy.. 622 Ten Trust Bldg. Martin Agronsky. ............ 724 14th Phillip N. Joachim _____.______ 414 Bond de. William Hillman______________ 724 14th St. 414 Bond Bldg. Jerry Allen (Miss) _________._. 1613 19th St. Raymond Gram Swing_._._____ 1613 19th St. : Transradio Press Service... ccveeeeemeeea. Bex Goad... iia 1258 National Press Bldg. 1258 National Press Bldg. Elizabeth Donohue___________ 1258 National Press Bldg. PDon'Cookiiceyt auiiih 1258 National Press Bldg. Clifford G. McCarthy 1______ 1258 National Press Bldg. Robert E. Lee Moore_.__._.... 1258 National Press Bldg. John Norman 1__________.___.__ 1258 National Press Bldg. William H. Pickens_..._...... 1258 National Press Bldg. Macon Reed, Jr.1_____._._...._ 1258 National Press Bldg. Merlin F. Stonehouse Taplier ng 1258 National Press Bldg. ‘Watch The World Go By._____ me 414 Bond Bldg WMAL—The Evening Star Station... 724 14th St. 724 14th St. ‘Wm. Enders Coyle! _._______ 724 14th St. George Gow... ii. ciaiil.. 724 14th St. Claude A. Mahoney.____._._... 724 14th St. Yankee Network (Boston). _oocceoeoooo_. Francis W. Tully, Jr.1.___..__ 1215 National Press Bldg. HOUSE RADIO GALLERY Robert M. Menaugh, superintendent, 322 Second Street NE. Harmon Burns, Jr.,! assistant, 2813 Quarry Road. Paul Ridgely, assistant, 212 Sixth Street SE. SENATE RADIO GALLERY D. Harold McGrath, superintendent, 3533 East Capitol Street. William Vaughan, assistant, 3024 Q Street. 10n leave of absence during service in the armed forces of the United States. 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 executivedepartment 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 influencingof 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’ eards 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 tothe 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 manner that shall be satisfactory to the executive committee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association, who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bonafide news gatherers and/or reporters of reputable standing in their business who represent radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies engaged primarilyin 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 tothe 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 CONGRESSIONAL Directory shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to thegathering and reporting of news for radio stations and systems engaged in thedaily dissemination of news, and of representatives of news-gathering agenciesengaged in the daily service of news to such radio stations or systems. 5. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privilegesof 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 supervision9 the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on ules. Approved. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. Harry F. Byrp, Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ ASSOCIATION Terms expiring June 1943 Terms beginning June 1943 FrEDp W. Morrison, Chairman Eric SEvaArEID, Chairman. Eric SEVAREID, Vice Chairman EARL GopwiN, Vice ChairmanEARL GopwiIN, Secretary RicaArRD L. HARKNESS, Secretary RicuarD L. HARKNESS, Treasurer Rex Goap, Treasurer H. R. BAUKHAGE, Member ex officio FrEp W. MoRRisoN, Member ex officio PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives accompany them] . Name Representing— Office * Andrew, Jean Douglas______ Ime ema ere Le De 815 15th St. *Bargeron, Carlisle. __________ Commercial and Financial Chroniele__.______ 1a nmmenisg Rd., Chevy ase, : *Beal, John i. >. NoWsWeekK. ....is. tuuds sotasnnt Sn diboui 1227 National Press R..c... Bldg. *Beatty, J. Emnk. Ce i Broadeasting. oo Lovo ay 874 National Press Bldg. * Belair, Pellx, Jr. 0 2 Ine A a 815 15th St. Boddie, William W__________ Newsweek ul oo Jal l Col Lied 1227 National Press Bldg. Brockett, Halley Anne______. NOWBWEPK oo. hd itu spat bwicins andanpi de 1227 National Press Bldg. *Browne, J. Donald.___.____ Chilton Publications. —---_~ er. 1061 National Press Bldg. *Burton, Malcolm FoodIndustries. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1383 National Press Bldg. 511 11th St. *Cherry, Ralphl..____....... 621 Albee Bldg. "Clay, Vera Jn coi roar 1227 National Press Bldg. Cohen, Stanley E____________ Broadcasting 874 National Press Bldg. *Colborn, Robert...ie. oud.ons Engineering News-Record ___________________ 1252 National Press Bldg. *Collins, James M___——_____ National Petroleum News... ___________.___ 1036 National Press Bldg. *Critchton, John FF conc2 Si aveitiny TE aaba a 1226 National Press Bldg. *Cross, Yoho ©... Loan Mimeln oil Uh coal Le DEG 815 15th St. *Cullom, Edward. ___.__.____ Pathfinder Gosh ilunradnt. avidsioavor adi a 2414 L Douglas St. NE. *Denson, John...+ _3 AB SII ARN 815 35. RE Ee *Doying, George E., Jr_______ Electrical BENTLL Se eileSal ni 1252 Press Bldg. eh Eaional Durrance, Thomad Drake.Cl Timer Zloof olla lad So dnalit 815 15th St. *Pield; Carter. i waiay ana McGraw-Hill Publications____ 1252 al Press Bldg. Fitzmaurice, Walter...3 Newsweek... ooimae ote 1227 National Press Bldg. *FitzSimmonds, Ann L______ Cotton Oll.Press.....oeeneu 517 11th St. SW. *Foos, Trvin/D.olL02 2200 20000 Business Week.__.___...__..__.. 1252 National Press Bldg. *Poss, Kendall... cocoa.nal Time. coin asidisndsiacal 815 15th St. Giliert, Dorothy ..azz>=>=-==== NOWSWOOK .. const ttm pod 1227 National Press Bldg. *Qriffin, Michael ._-.._-.__.. i tl aul 815 Erdal pebpodnaiiaien 15th *Grunwald, EB) AL oro i000 Business Week__....__..__.._._ 1252 tional Press Bldg. Hager, Alice Rogers_....__.._ Skyways. ool. SalinaNous 1256 National Press Bldg. *Hurd, Charles_.._-Newsweek. ©... n..ln oo. 1227 National Press Bldg. *Ingraham, H. R___ a TMB, oid sa Oe 815 15th St. Kane, Gladys C______ : Army and Navy Register___ 511 11th St. *Knight; 0. Hoos. aii) National Petroleum News_____ 1036 National Press Bldg. *Kruckman, Arnold_._________ 1120 Vermont Ave. *La Ban, Richard K....___.. 1252 National Press Bldg. *Lamm, Lynne M___________ SE PR he Se SL SE Le mi Sh 1123 National Press Bldg. *Lindley, Ernest K___________ Newsweek ia col ova af Sodilnain. t 1227 atint Press Bldg. *MecCormick, Robert K______ Collier's gels dora: 815 Weekly.......ouniubee. 15th S *McCune, Wesley... ______._ Newsweek uo = rr eran 1227 Se Press Bldg. McGaffin, Jane A ____________ wk Pn EE Sh 1227 National Press Bldg. *McNaughton, Frank. _______ 1 Aan EE SR Sn A 815 15th St. *MecRoberts, Reed. ._____.___ Pathiader I TR tel 2414 Douglas St. NE. *Maekland, Bay. ....._... BETRL MECp ES se 815 15th St. *Maddox, William J____._.____ 1036 National Press Bldg. *Markham, Edgar__._________ National Press Bldg. 1252 National Press Bldg. The Iron po 1061 National Press Bldg. Semin. Gladys T._._. BD aE Textile ‘World. ___ 1252 National Press Bldg. Palmer, Marv B.. _.-_._... Newsweek 0. .Ll. Lo 0 Li 1227 National Press Bldg. *Petty, A. M 1036 National Press Bldg. *Ralph, Henry D. Oh ra 1224 National Press Bldg. *Redmond, Panpline). L. 000 Paper Mill News_________.____ 1203 National Press Bldg. *Redmond, Wilirid_2 52200 Paper Mill News 1203 National Press Bldg. *Rippey, Stephens prey sl-Drag Topless. ati nae 1232 National Press Bldg. Tf Rixey, Lilian... 815 15th St. *Robinson, Lee Lamar. 629 Woodward Bldg. *Saunders, Richard E________ 1275 National Bo Bldg.*Shenkel, William T_________ Newswee 1227 National Press Bldg. *Shepley, James Ri 815 15th St. *Slinkman, John Francis. ____ Army and Navy Journal ______ 1701 Conn. Ave. *Stark, J. Ot McGraw-Hill Publications. __ 1252 National Press Bldg. Aviation, American Machinist 1252 National Press Bldg. Railway Age 1081 National Press Bldg. Broadeasting..... 0 0 2% 874 National Press Bldg. Railway Age... 2 iii 3 1081 National Press Bldg. Newsweek 1227 National Press Bldg. 1224 National Press Bldg. Thom, pu George........... 815 15th St. *Van Boskirk, Robert L______ 625 loin Bldg. *Watkins, Elizabeth __________ Ti 815 15th *Wecksler, A, N...__.. oi. 1203 National Press Bldg. *Westcott, Henry R., Jr.____. Army and Navy Journal ______ 1701 Conn. Ave. *Whitman, T0ROY. inna Army and Navy Journal 1701 Conn. Ave. Willeox, OU. V. 0... American Banker 1410 H St. Wood, Robert H.......= 1317 F St. *Wooton, Poul... .. oo 1252 National Press Bldg. 757 758 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 cards 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 economie, 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 a list 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 such as to make him eligible to the Press Galleries or Radio Correspondents’ Galleries. 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. Byrbp, Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Henry D. Raver, Chairman CarTeER FIELD, Secretary Jorn R. BAL Frank McNAUGHTON LeRoy WHITMAN M aps of Congressional Districts (9 districts) LAUDERDALE LIMESTONE | MADISON JACNSON 0 2% CO» 8 oe Po FRANKLIN 2) eos A MARS E KALE < MARION WINSTON CULLMAN ~ A ETOWAH LAMAR WALKER A FAYETTE pt” « Joo & A C 7 Si al N & 3 Q & S D«C9 § 5 TUscALoO & PICKENS / RN;V cL AYRRANDOLPH \! ® A 6 8188 (3 C0054 TALLAPOOSA |CHAMBERS oo CHILTON 4“ 9 HALE 4 PERRY ELMORE — AUTAUGA SUMTER MARENGO] § DALLAS acon RUSSELL OWNDES CHOCTAW : ¢f hy Ra BULLOCK eh Wo RBOUR CLARAS BUTLER PIKE banncy 3 MONROE WASHINGTON i 4 J NSHAW, HENRY fy Jeoreee DALE > COVINGTON HOUSTON ESCAMBIA AE BALDWIN GENEVA MOBILE SCALE STATUTE MILES TR ae 0 20 30 40 so Congressional Directory MOHAVE ARIZONA (2 at large) COCONINO NAVAJO APACHE YAVAPAI YUMA MARICOPA GRAHAM SCALE ~ STATUTECa MILES — PIMA SANTA CRUZ COCHISE (S1019SID 2)SYSNVIYV $302.98] PU0SSUBU0)) fo dv PT J Sd (IY) 764 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA (23 districts) p{3LAMEDA PT CONTRA Se 2 O. SCALE-STATUTE MILES TS 0 15 30 45 60 75 MOFFAT ROUTT g JACKSON LARIMER WELD LOGAN SEOGWICK (SIPLSID7)oavioTod PHILLIPS MORGAN WASHINGTON YUMA RIO BLANCO - BOULDER ADAMS 2 EAGLE JG/LPIN G ll 1 orbed® 3 VER GARFIELD o gd RAPANEE PARK DOUGLAS| EL BERT LINCOLN KIT CARSON a PITKIN AXE & 8 «X Vv =A 4 TELLER £L PASO CHEYENNE GUNNISON MONTROSE FREMONT Lf N X/0WA PUEBLO CROWLEY OURAY SAGUACHKE BENT PROWERS SAN MIGUEL HV SOAL O7em5 DOLORES Q or = 2 x ; HUERFANO 3 A R10. GRANDE |ALAMOSA MONTEZUMA LA PLATA LAS ANIMAS BACA 8, 3 i ARCHULETA CONEJIOS 4© SCALE STATUTE MILES ° 10 20 30 40 S50 Eo i re, ee sdv pr fo $700.98 Jouossaibuoy) G9. (e818[ 98 T PUB SIOLISID 9) AE Wy ONp, on 3 ) / yp i \ d \ aL, J IAN 4 NS UNIY RE SCALE -STATUTE MILES ; I) 5 20 \ nF LADILOANNOD 10U018$9.46U0)) 4030040] Maps of Congressional Districts 767 | DELAWARE (1 at large) : I | | cy ~ SCALE -STATUTE MILES or rsd ors 10 95 NEW CASTLE ! KENT SUSSEX 768 Congressional Directory FLORIDA (5 districts and 1 at large) SCALE-STATUTE MILES 0 2 0 15 "30 45 60 75 o | | J | Maps of Congressional Districts "769 GEORGIA (10 districts) AD. TOOSA, S IURRAR FANNIN UNION\ TOWNS (* RABUN oN0) & R LZ 3 ; J YT 3 8 ei Q¥ fir PRIN 0) 4 MILES Er HALL EE —— SCALE-STATUTE 3 -reps ie 5 70 20 30 40 SO an ANKS FRAN Te ~ 8 v0 BARTOW |CHEROKEELAWSO Wo FORSYTH 7 et =, ZLBERT 2 POLK . |coss8 Zr a # MCLARY [OGLE THORP, pr& © <. ld | LIN P1040 K x. | [Poveun © 5 X 5 AS Si 2 = ARRC RBA NCT A V A He § 3 = 3 2)! © X > = Wo A HEAR > Juy J ¢ ) put: ENR PZ5 -Ww \ COWETA ™ A ASEE = Ta 3 fa BURKE p \wermwer ad % a0Y PIN £ AMA A ONES Zl wb. 5X ef x Zz = 2\ ; UPSON (ENKINS [cP *° 6 HARRIS ALSO 2 WJZ INSON & > NSgN » * AA «) | SER J 1 MUSCO. 9 © 1G L 17/0 W ¢ «4/0 0 &5 = CAAT $ » 5 eeuTiE Canoe ) Cs 9 Eo putt ¢ J 3 oooLy 4 a \J \xpaN \ek Ten ¥y PULASH ve by X BR 2 WILCOX 4 gE E Rel SIs Sry) ott WEBN SUMTER CRISP 3 v ET IN o 4 Ten, LEE £0 & 0 A BEN MIL ef QuiIT Gory: = £ Yruenen) A A ") CLA So & rE > > RANDOLP! CALHOUN| DOUGHERTY |, IFT, HS D ER. [i C! £ ARLY' BAKER ATR Ow 12 2 rig 2 coLQUITT 8 >A 2 MILLER £5 = Zn A oan) A CLINCHNS, “4, Ww EMINO DECATUR] ORADY| aS TB ROONS\GOWNOES 3 ™ CEReTON J 770 Congressional Directory BOUNDARY IDAHO (2 districts) BONNER = KOOTENA/ SHOSHONE LATAH WEZ PERCE! CLEARWATER VALLEY SCALE -STATUTE MILES ET —— 0 10 20 30 %0 S50 | ; fey FREMONT BUTTE JEFFERSON MADISON TET: : OWYHEE ELMORE BLAINE CAMAS 6 | LINCOLN &° B8/NGHAM Ln BONNEVILLE CARIBOU ONEIDA LAKE Maps of Congressional Districts ILLINOIS (25 districts and 1 at large) JO DAVIESS STEPHENSON QWINNEBAGO HENRY LAKE CARROLL OGLE DEKALB QWKHANE COON 13 CHICAGO DU PAGE WHITESIDE IEE 1 2, 4, B, 8, 9 11 PTS. 3, 6, 7, 10 (NENDALL] WILL HENRY | BUREAU L ire’ 2 <«}PTS. 3, 6, 7,10 GRUNDY ROCK ISLAND MERC, ba [anmanzz STARK| PUTHAM XNOX WARREN MARSHALL] LIVINGSTON $ 15 PEORIA TROQUIS < WOODFORD & Q & [14 MELEAN TON Fi HANCOCK] MEDONOUGH 1 7 ORD FAZEWEL. VERMILION. C3 CHAMPAIGN fC)\3 OGAN SCHUYLER EWITT A ADAMS 4 25 [Mewaro ¢ (3 cA E>, ACON : PIKE MORGAN SANGAMON 19 DOUGLAS W £0GAR (SCOTT ’ Pa (2 2 0) 2 1 [od COLES GREENE BMACOUPIN CHRISTIAN L SHELBY 2 HONTCOm. CUMBERL D A Lv) —_ d JERSEY Sldhich La FF lhe wor rr MADISON BOAD > 3 Le fT CLAY TATION ICHLD | LAWRENCE 22 CLINTON | STCLAIR WAYNE Py 22 Al FASHINGTON Krs om N § § f RANDOLPH | PERRY HANILTOR WHITE FRANKLIN 24 | VACKSON SALINE |GALIA WILLIAMS 4INE : SCALE-STATUTE MILES 2 5 Sn fo gn He UNION OHNSON| POPE | HARON ALEX, Ss 1 = Ky 2 VERMILLION ee ec —————— NOBLE DE KALB WHITLEY ALLEN 4 WELLS ADAMS GRANT a H[ TIPPECANOE HOWARD 1S) DR —— | \ CLINTON TIPTON MADISON (3 RANDOLPH 4° & a © MONTGOMERY Bom mnt] HAMILTON ! BOONE HE AY PARKE ; | UNION IHELB | { i ; JOHNSON : | i Vio cLAY pamper re :4 en DECATUR : MONROE BARTMHOLOMEY] i ! SULLIVAN | GREENE LAWRENCE I KNOX MARTIN JEFFERSON Ee an ] goon 5, id CRAWFORD Lrosey WARRICH LOu80/8 PERRY WANOERDURE | 8 4% a SCALE -STATUTE MILES [J 0 20 So orp——————— OSCEOLA DICKINSON J EMMET NOSSUTH WINNEBAGO BVORTH MITCHELL |HOWARD WINNESHIEK|ALLAMAK L 'BRIEN | CLAY — \CERRO Gomoo spent ‘ [PALO ALTO HANCOCK 00 ri : 8 FAYETTE |CLAYTON ! TA le | emer i Ey dearer] VMOUTN CNERONEE |BUENA VISTA) BREMER =) DELAWARE | DUBUQUE = tate fe eed [+] WOODBURY Vea SAC HAMILTON GRUNDY X S Q TAMA JONES — [w} SION ONA CRAWFORD [Boone RY SHALL a S JACKSON. ~~ Q CLINTON = (=) pe EDA g.e & CEDAR b= [va] HARRISON |SHELBY LAS | POLK PER POWESHIEK] IOWA JOMNSON a 5 hy # 5 i S rm ~~ 1 MUSCATINE POTTAWATTAMIE [CASS ADAIR NACADISON |WARREN MARION KEOKUK ~~ WASH! vw : LOUISA & / 4 S =: MULS 2 En] ADAMS UNION CLARKE |Lucas WAPELLO [JEFFERSON |HENRY bry ye] $ PREMONT |PAGE& TAYLOR RINGGOLD |DECATUR |WAYNE APPANOOSE | DAVIS VAN BUREN ol < LEE Q SCALESTATUTE MILES - ee] © 0 20 30 40 SCALE -STATUTE MILES 0 © 20 30 0 So [Cer Ene on i orca LINS OE : CATUR |NORTON PHILLIPS SMITH JEWELL REPUBLIC WSHINCTON [MARSHALL | NEMANA [BROWN . . g 3 Q SHERMAN THOMAS SHERIDAN | GRARAN ROOKS OSBORNE MITCHELL hie CLAY Lo id iy =e 3 x 2 S OTTAWA $ 2 . LINCOLN WYAN, TREGO ELLIS RUSSELL SANE $ > :~ SALINE apa 0] . ELLSWORTH MORRIS 3 Conn FRANKLIN AMI ME JARION 2 rns CHASE COFFEY NDERSON|LINN PAWNEE | HAMILTON [KEARNY VFIWWED 4 HODGEMAN P—— gp— RENO HARVEY : S BUTLER ; BOURBON RAY Dc = 8 re FORD 'SEDGWICK 3 ] [PRATT Bn STANTON GRANT |RASKELL KIOWA KINGMAN 5 MORTON |STEVENS — ISEW, 'ARD MEADE CLARK BARBER HMNER Weey EROK. COMANCHE HARPER (Bist. ii CHAUTAUQUA 3 LR : 9)SYSNVX (S39119SID fiu0p00.40(] 10U01882.461U0)) SSCALE -STATUTE MILES : EER " GALAGA PEN" NDL Reracy, 0 10 20 30 40 50 2\4 OWE" of HARR.TROP\ AS! 5. NH oA oy Tox oo 9 A) LE >GP grrr 3 S s A any \ (C > 8 A § > of FA 2) < auLLirr | 2 = 5 ya 2 oe Tn © x oY Faye ~ POWELTY A «Ql 4, 0 A HEND, 22 2 : N On w NY] STFLOY PIKE%, L, RS& 9 & Req a 0 >, Q3 © I 13 Pac RN 7% 2 ox =i = =8 ow S ( D DS SS 3 SQN) @ @» S. S S SSvw) SS. (v2) ~ I i ve) & EN i) i CLAIBORNE UNION SCALE~STATUTE MILES 0 10 20 30 40 50 WEBSTER it VERNON RAP IDES 8)VNYISINO'T (870119SIP 1PU018S2LIUO))fiu09042(] BEAUREGARD| ALLEN £ FELICIANALL 5 Maps of Congressional Districts MAINE (3 districts) AROOSTCOK PISCATAQUIS PENOBSCOT] SOMERSET OXFORD JCALE-STATUTE MILES ” 20 30 40 so 8LL GARRETT ALLEGANY WASHINGTON 0 (FREDERICK CARROLL HARFORD 2 BALTIMORE CEC/L BALTIMORE CITY 3,4, 2 PT, 5 PT. » o SCALE wn -0 -STATUTE 20 MILES 30 40 b> ° o a 4 Cn2 Za i Zz W/COMICO fiao010.41(]70U0188946U0)) FRANKLIN WORRESTER MIDDLESEX SCALE=-STATUE MILES 0 &§ 10 15 20 25 780 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN (17 districts) BARAGA 2) 2 DICKINSON! ry A 5 & [RNZ \ on 2, %, PS E CHARLE.JOTSEGO|MONTMOR| ALPENA ANTRIM ; \ Als | ALCONA 1% (RALKASIASCRAWF'D |OSCODA Zante GRD TRAV D 10 IMASON |LAKE OSCEOLA [CLARE (GLADWIN | ARENAC 7 / Aur" Y OCEANA |NEWAYGOMECOSTA |ISABELLA [MIDLAND TUSCOLA |SANILAC | \ \ OTTAWA 5 /ONIA CLINTON 6 IND MACOM ALLEGAN BARRY EATON INGHAM | LIVINGST! VAN BUREN BNALAMA | CALHOUN JACKSON WASHTENAW 3 2 unt A S$ ST J0SEPHAGRANCH HILLSOALERLENAWEE | MONROE \ [cass DETROIT 15, PTS. 1 13, 14, 16, 17 PTS. 1.13, 14.16 17 782 Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI (7 districts) DE SOTO |MarsnaLL | senTon [rprawRaLcorn \ § o TUNICA S$ TATE $s BS IN PANOLA Lary Yerrs Se » JTAWAMBA Pe ot © NC N Qu iA i YALOBUSHA ] TALLAHATCHIE MONROE GRENADA 3 " | = WEBSTER o ARROLL | MONTGOM, 0 WASHINGTON | cv Lerions A wv Jorrissena \ ct oct Hoy Me a : % UM. <3 ATTALA WINSTON §NOXUBEE SHARKEY] YAZ 00 LP LEAKE NESHOBACHE ser ser WARRES fn Scorr NEWTON LAUDERDALE HINDS at 5 7 SMITH JASPER CLARKE CLAIBORNE |COPIAH SIMPSON JEFF, NES WAYNE ied RENCE COVINGTON |JO LINCOLN LAW ] ADAMS | FRANKLIN JEFF. DAVIS LAMAR | FORREST |PERRY |GREENE RION nso AMITE PINE MA wv WALTHALL | 6 PEARL RIVER GEORGE STONE / JACKSON HARRISON SCALE STATUTE MILES o "0 20 30 490 50 HANCOCK Maps of Congressional Districts } 4: i i fi A -MISSOURI i 4 iJ i » (13 districts) ATCHISON |NODAWAY | WORTH \waraison | MERCER | PUTNAM 1]SCOTLAND ; | ! J GENTRY Noir Nox Tews EW aaviess OF KALB 3 SHELBY ~~ [mARION v (CLINTON CALOWELL CHARITON Sr 47LS, SCALE STATUTE MILES SoPLATTE RAY GARROLL RAND «C oe 0 20 20 “0 fo CLAY WW LL pv ® Hon, DRA 420 re araverie| ONE an LINCOLN ans SITY 1 CALLAWAY2 PT, 5 PT: prem COOPER ho . PT,9 5 PT “fcassfc 2 s PLsd 5 A ST. Louis NJ N wDCame SP ENGR 4 Sy CITY Genny BENTON % $8 o y 4EE = ! 1,13, 12 PT. MILLER 33 ooMARIES bg I 12 PT. ST CLAIR y CAMDEN AWPFORD PITTA as xorv | YEVERNON 6 HICKORY viasn] PHELPS oo Ww STEGINEVILVE ICE {DALLAS We BON So) 2 on $ or IRON % BARTON 3 8 [MADISON | DADE TEXAS REYNOLDS $ __ WEBSTER (WRIGHT sl & GREENE SHANNON Te Kd B JASPER ¢ & = LAWRENCE 7 ir CHRISTIAN. DOUGLAS HOWELL CARTER) 1 0 sTont UTLER cSBARRY, OREGON Toa STODDARD x TANEY OZARK it 3MS DONALD ; 5 z { | | ae 1 i 3i | : . i i i 1al { i i | \ } | | 4 A | | j ew mario [Pemiscor 4A | j i | a Gall ye To0LE HILL BLAINE PHILLIPS VALLEY NIELSDA SHERIDAN % )=~ rovocti TETON Rx Y = 3S a CHOUTEAU . ROOSEVELT RICHLAND SANDERS BEAVERHEAD GALLATIN BPARK WHEATLAND MUSSELSHELL GOLDEN VALLEY 3S 33 hs ~ ENQ ROSEBUD B/G HORN POWDER RIVER 3 By3 . FALLO CARTER S Ss 2 o& o (VA) S S. a 2 Q &2 5 SE 8 Sd oo2 lw) Z x.a S KEITH LINCOLN SHERMAN| HOWARD Burien |SAUNPERSREOVSIAS w = Devel SARPY p PERKINS DAWSON BUFFALO HALL < YORK SEWARD [LANCASTER 65 WW oTOE CHASE HAVE. R ADAMS |CLAY FILLMORE | SALINE Ss FRONTIER GOSPER| pHELPS KEARNEY GAGE JOHNS ON|NEMAHA SLALE~ STATUTE MILES J C DOUNDY HITCHCOCK |REDWILLOW|FURNAS HARLAN |FRANKLIN |WEBSTER |NUCKOLLS | THAYER JEFFERSON 10 20 30 40 50 PAWNEE |RICHARDSON 786 Congressional Directory WASHOE |HUMBOLOT NEVADA (1 at large) ELKO > PERSHIN, LANDER | EUREKA : i pift | CHURCHILL WHITE PINE NYE LINCOLN ESMERALDA lL— CLARK o SCALE ~STATUTE 25 50 MILES 75 100 NEW HAMPSHIRE (2 districts) J c00s j 1| | Ad / SCALE-STATUTE MILES } o 10 20 30 40 i \ 1y ARROLL | BELK NAP STRAFFORD CHESHIRE } HILLSBORO NEW JERSEY (14 districts) SCALE -STATUTE MILES [4] 5 90 5 20 25 GN ge FRANKLIN | CLINTON A 5» ~ p it ) x €, $ 4 ; A i N$ $ 2 ~ = A [omeans Tan K : WAYNE Fi 3) onoNDAA ES GENESEE 3 8 : 2 ITD f 41, 42%¢41] 39 M Ki 35 40 PT. © WYOMING S oo Z 5 (( —— Py 2 = 42] hl or r ] RAUGUS ALLEGANY STERN » 5 (| oo 1 JL £OMPKINS Zo" cA 3 E 5 TIO6A BROOME 37 CHEMUNG 24 PT, 25 PT.. 25 pT £\ 23, 24 PT 7. 25 pT SCALE-STATUTE MILES Ins 6 PD Ww XN 0 B ‘ 3 LE = OCHIE = STAT I7 MILES o 20 40 60 so (9) 01/108 BURKE RENVILLE | BOTTINEAU ROLETTE TOWNER | CAVALIER WILLIAMS MEHENRY | WALSH H PIERCE BENSON GRAND FORKS SHERIDAN | WELLS STEELE TRA/ILL FOSTER GOLDEN| VALLEY B/L LINGS OLIVER BURLEIGH | KIDDER STUTSMAN cAss STARK Prt Torro $40 2 HETTINGER GRANT EMMONS | LOGAN RANSOM CHLANDRA l510UX 0818] 18 3) BOWMAN ADAMS MEINTOSH TSCg PE See KOO us SECT eR SI CW RS ERR ES EE — Maps of Congressional Districts 793 (22 districts and 1 at large) CLEVELAND =A = TA BU k 1 AS H WILLIAMS | FULTON DEFIANCE 7 TRUMBULL ) PAULDING SEES 3 MEDINA|SUMM/IT PORTAGE ] i 1 ; HANCOCK ASHL'D WYANDOT | CRAWFORDY RICHL'D WAYNE HARDIN 8 MARION I HOLMES rroW NinoxLOGAN TUNION MO 1 COSHOCTONDEL. 1 4 AHONING STARK COLUMBIANA 1 8) CARROLL : & 1 8 N& £o 8 & HARRISON] R & z | i ; : | : | PREBLE 3 BUTLER MIAMT ¥ |MONTGO, Ww. URE CHAMPAIGH CLAR, 5h N D\%)& = S TILLMAN A) SE 8 JEFFERSON oSiw 3 : JOHNSTON ; ATOKA 3 MECURTAIN © BRYAN CHOCTAW ‘ LOVE et et NE -y — — : : Se ——— lea 3 : UMATILLA WALLOWA WHEELER GRANT SARER LR = MARION JEFFERSON ZY » (w) ts CROOK ~ DESCHUT UTES boty | HARNEY Wir ut & Ca S2 = llfo a ee © SS S2>,(«) 2 Zz S8, KLAMATH LAKE Ne DOUGLAS >: TN ~S ND. ()& (Vo 0 nN hot JOSEPHINE J © Or 2 6 JEFFERSON BEAVER 0 CAMBRIA po) PHILADELPHIA 1TO7 38)VINVATASNNHL (0318[ 98 | PUB SJOLIISIP fi4010040(] J0U01SS2.46UO0)) CHESTER LANCASTER\ CHESTERFIELD SCALE STATUTE MILES HLNOS VNITOdVD 10U01882.160)) i402. ROBERTS {AROING PERKINS CORSON CAMPBELL | MSPHERSON BROWN MARSHALL Z/EBACH | DEWEY rr MEADE ARMSTRONG | Ei aii HYDE | HAND SPINK CODDINGTON : HAMLIN 2 i =5 RLS : °F — : BEADLE KINGSBURY | BROOKINGS a he S$S3 Rs o PENNINGTON 8 HAAKON KGHeS a 4 BUFFALO JERAULD : /SANBORN | MINER | LAKE a 5 g2 = 3 © > S 3 2&%: = z JACKSON RULE AURORA TANSON| MSCOOK | MINNEHAHA =) . S . A WASHINGTON | WASHA BAUGH MELLETTE ; = 5 FALL RIVER (Va)$33 BENNETT 7000 GREGOR SHANNON (v4) SCALE -STATUTE MILES ° Tt 20 40 60 80 Directory Congressional 800 STEWA, TORE . ROBERTSON EUBsiER | ENRY CARROLL | 5 ENDER. J OU pe SHELBY FAYETTE | 2 ARG WP WAYNE » 10 : 3 TENNESSEE(10 districts) 802 Congressional Directory : 4 BOX ELDER (2 districts) CACHE RICH SCALE-STATUTE MILES 3 . — 20 40 60 80 Ze, See 7 OOFLE MORGAN \ AN ©) \ ©0 5LD SUMMIT DAGGETT e Broa UINTA D UCHESNE WW.SALT LAKESQAS 4500 2 Y74k ; i i | JUAB CARBON i MILLARD ra EMERY GRAND 1SEVIER || BEAVER PIUT E EYE "SAN JUAN | IRON GARFIELD { | | , i WASHINGTON KANE £1 Maps of Congressional Districts 803. VERMONT (1 at large) : y 07) FRANKLIN ORLEANS ESSEX & Ie RUTLAND BENNINGTON SCALE -STATUTE MILES SCALE -STATUTE MILES CT — 0 0 20 30 40 so - fon Sw Fo oT. | g 2 Lo ly 2 1% \ PATER Pel] 10U018$2.4610)) fi0100.40( ONANOGAN JEFFERSON CHELAN C oV° 0 et LINCOLN = Q S 7 GRAYS HARBOR : L: 0AN KING nine * =| kisrR 3m = & YAKIMA GRANT A ADAMS WHITMAN = 55 2) — 24 a = © Zz ~ (Q)[V&» NS. SQ S E S \ FRANKLIN =.23 SHAMANIA ASOTIN S. S. [+74] KLICKITAT — SCALE-STATUTE MILES EE J] o © 20 30 $0 M aps of Congressional Districts 807 4 WISCONSIN (10 districts) SA DOUGLAS SSRN Ze fo ph ASHLAND) ' . SCALE STATUTE MILES ° 0 20 3 <0 » WASHBURN SAWYER IRON A gy A ort . PRICE l 1 0 {ownerwa REST “on ms POLK ST CROIX BARRON DUNN RUSK CHIPPEWA 9 TAYLOR CLARK J LINCOLN oeARATHON [LANGLADE : MARINETTE loconTo 8 SHAWANO Pierce FAU CLAIRE PEPIN BUFFALO Wooo PORTAGE WAUPACA | OUTAGAMIE \ JACKSON<< & & MONROE A CROSSE] [JUNEAU SADAMS | WAUSHARA {marouerreler. L VERNOA SAUK RICHLAND COLUMBIA > 7013; DANE JEFFERSON | WAUKESHA 5 LAFAYETTE GREEN ed ETWALWORY, YELLOWSTONE PARK BIG HORN SHERIDAN. CAMPBELL CROOK NATIONAL PARK JOHNSON PESTON TETON WASHAKIE if FREMONT HOT SPRINGS S NATRONA CONVERSE NIOBRARA S SUBLETTE < = (vA) re ep h = g- zg O S -E = =) A = ~~ gS m™ i PLATTE GOSHEN 2 S oQ = CARBON ALBANY a / ©) LINCOLN SWEETWATER (w} ale LARAMIE OINTA SCALE -STATUTE MILES \ OC [] 25 50 75 100 Inf . ~ NOME § 4 ’ LY FAIRBANKS® 7 Pil Wa in AK > Jo K%) 7 / Lf 7s : -— * ll lg 4 : ol v \ A V4 le a lie ir. | ? | sewaro 5 78 J \ : \FJUNEAU z Q N XS : oo ° =~ Pee eo o BN VISV1Y fo sd pr 8p4SYT (PU0ISSALbU0)) (0redoroq 1) Maps of Congressional Districts COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES (1 Resident Commissioner) VIEQUES IS. MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 53 MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, WASHINGTON RESIDENCE, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the 1 designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] THE SENATE *tHENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate, the Wardman Park. *CARTER Grass, President pro tempore, the Mayflower. *EpwiN A. HALsEY, Secretary, 3517 Williamsburg Lane. *|WaLL Doxey, the Capitol Park. *tRev. FREDERICK BrRowN Harris, D. D., 2800 Thirty-sixth Street. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 297-298) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Lis Page Aiken, George D_________ Putney; Vi. ~~ George Washington Inn_| 119 * Andrews, Charles O_____ Orlando, Fla... -.. 3511 Albemarle St_____ 18 *Austin, Warren R____._. Burlington, Vt______ The Shoreham. _______ 119 *t1Bailey, Josiah W_____._ Raleigh N.C... 2332 MassachusettsAve.| 84 %Ball, Joseph H._~-~ ._. St. Paul, Minn____._ 3193 Porter St _£..__. 55 *Bankhead, John H., 2d__| Jasper, Ala_________ The Washington__ ____ 3 Barbour, W. Warren______ Locust, N. J. ccn--2801 Bist St... 68 *Barkley, Alben W_______ Padueah, Ky. 1 2101 Connecticut Ave__| 38 Bilbo, Theodore G.._..__. Poplarville, Miss____| The Capitol Towers ___| «57 “Bone, Homer I". _.... Tacoma, Wash... alk + ow vo “ —-or oF 123 *|| Brewster, Ralph O_____ Dexter, Maine______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 44 Bridges, Styles... ...... Concord, N. H.. co. %. . 7 a. _o 67 Brooks, C. Wayland______ Chicago, T11_____-.. The Westchester_ _ ____ 24 *Bueck, C. Douglass. ___ __ Wilmington, Del____| The Shoreham ________ 18 “Burton, Harold H-Cleveland, Ohio_____ The Dodge. no. 89 *Bushfield, Harlan J______ Miller, S. Dak. _____ The Methodist Bldg___| 110 Butler, Hugh A... .__... .} Omaha, Nebr... ... The Hay-Adams______ 65 *Byrd, Harry Flood______ Berryville, Va........|-The Shoreham... .. 120 Capper, Arthur... _..... Topeka, Kans______._{ The Mayflower._______ 36 |Caraway, Hattie W_____ Jonesboro, Ark______ The Methodist Bldg___ 7 *Chandler, Albert B______ Versailles, Ky____.._ The Mayflower________ 38 *+Chavez, Dennis________ Albuquerque,N.Mex_| 1911 R St. __._.___..___ 72 *|| Clark, Bennett Champ._| University City, Mo_| 4922 Quebec St_______ 59 #Cark, D. Worth... Pocatello, Idaho_____ 4314 Cathedral Ave____| 23 *Copnally, Tom... 7... Marlin, Tex, _ 3025 Woodland Drive__| 114 ®*{Danaher, John A... __. Portland, Conn_____ 6348 31st Pl. si... 16 t1iDavis, James J. _. Pittsburgh, Pa______ 3618 Prospect St______ 98 Downey, Sheridan________ Qayemont, Calf. lo. 7 Sr ou atv a, 9 Eastland, James O_______ Baleville, Miss! [v.302. o8.i0. B57 *|| | Ellender, Allen J______ Houma, la... 2633 16th St... 41 *Ferguson, Homer._______| Detroit, Mich_______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 51 *George, Walter F_ __ ____ Vienna, Gas oo. The Mayflower________ 20 *Gerry, Peter GCG... Providence, R.J._-_ 1223008 St. ot... 106 #Gillette,'Cuy'M _.._ _..__ Cherokee, Iowa___-_ 2005 20th S6... -vas 34 / Congressional Directory THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 297-298) Name Home post office , Washington residence 2Cass, Carter 2 a. , Green, Theodore Francis--||| Guffey, Joseph F_______ -*Hawkes, Albert W______ *Hayden, Carl... is =, Lister. ios ould Holman, Rufus C-. *Johnson, Edwin C___.___ *Johnson, Hiram *1Kilgore, Harley M______ *La Follette, Robert M., Jr_ *11|| Langer, William _____._ *Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr__ *Lucas, Scott W ZiMecCarran, Pat... *MecClellan, John L__ ____ *MecFarland, Ernest W___ McKellar, Kenneth_______ *MecNary, Charles L______ *Maloney, Francis_ ______ *Maybank, Burnet R_____ *Mead, James M_________ *Millikin, Eugene D______ ZMoore; BB. Ho *t Murdock, Abe _.__-_-_-_ *Murray, James E_______ *Nye, Gerald P. 2. *Q’Daniel, W. Lee________ *||0’ Mahoney, Joseph C_._ *tOverton, John H_______ *Pepper, Claude. ___-____ *Radcliffe, George Li______ *Reed, Clyde M_________ *Revercomb, Chapman ___ *Reynolds, Robert R_____ *Robertson, Edward V____ Russell, Richard B_______ Scrugham, James G______ *Shipstead, Henrik_______ *|| ||| Smith, Ellison D_____ %3IStewart, Tom... -__>. Taft, Bobert-A Thomas, Elbert D_______ %Thomas, Elmer_.> Thomas, John. 21x. Tobey, Charles W________ *iTraman, Hafry 8S. _.... *Tunnell, James M_______ *Tydings, Millard E______ *Vandenberg, Arthur H___ *| Van Nuys, Frederick. __ Lynchburg, Va. ..-. Providence, R. I_____ Pittsburgh, Pa. .co. Yankton, S. Dak. -Clovis, N. Mex._.____ Montelair, N. J... Phoenix, Ariz_____._ Montgomery, Ala____ Portland, Oreg-____. Craig, Colo... 2. ¢ San Francisco, Calif _ Beckley, W. Va_____ Madison, Wis_-_____ Bismarck, N. Dak___ Beverly, Mass______ Havapa, TIL... _.~_ Reno, Nev... Camden, Ark_______ Florence, Ariz_______ Memphis, Tenn _____ Salem, Oreg., R. F. D.2 Meriden, Conn____-_ Charleston, S. C_____ Buffalo, N. Yo .--Denver, Colo__ _____ Tulsa, Okla... ..... Beaver, Utah_______ Butte, Mont... = Cooperstown, N. Dak_ Fort Worth, Tex____ Cheyenne, Wyo._____ Alexandria, La... Tallahassee, Fla_____ Baltimore, Md-_____ Parsons, Kans. _____ Charleston, W. Va___ Asheville, N. C_.____ Cody, Wyo. = Winder, Ga..c. .... Reno, Nev__________ BR. FEF. D., Carlos, Minn. Lynchburg, S. C_____ Winchester, Tenn _ _ _ Cincinnati, Ohio_____ Salt Lake City, Utah_ Medicine Park, Okla._ Gooding, Idaho_____ Temple, N. H __ .... Independence, Mo.__._ Georgetown, Del____ Havre de Grace, Md._ Grand Rapids, Mich_ Indianapolis, Ind____ The Mayflower________ University Club... --2929. Benton Pl... 2407 15th St. -4848 Upton St________ The Mayflower________ 131 Senate Office Bldg. S71 40th St. 7 70 3219 North Glebe Rd., Arlington, Va. The Carroll Arms__ __-122 Maryland Ave. NE_ 4849 Upton St________ 5200 Manning P1___.__ The Roosevelt _ _______ The Wardman Park _ _ _ 4711 Blagden Ave_____ The Wardman Park. __ 4404 Windom PI1______ The Mayflower________ The Mayflower________ 3515 Legation St______ 2101 Connecticut Ave__ The Mayflower________ 5101 Manning Pl... The Shoreham ________ 6 Farmington Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. The Washington_______ The Wardman Park _ _ _ The Wardman Park _ __ 1661 Crescent P1______ The Shoreham _ _______ Stoneleigh Court_ _____ The Mayflower________ 1113 East Capitol St___ The Wardman Park___ 4701 Connecticut Ave__ 4704 Dalton P1., Brook-dale, Md. The Wardman Park___ Vienna, Va... oo... Members’ Addresses | 817 THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 297-298) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence oe Page Wagner, Robert F________ New York City, N. Y_| The Shoreham________ 7 *Wallgren, Mon C_______._ Everett, Wash______ Woodley Park Towers_| 123 Walsh, David 1... Clinton, Mass_______| Metropolitan Club_____ 47 *Wheeler, Burton K______ Butte, Mont... ..__ 3757 Jocelyn St. ______ 64 *t Wherry, Kenneth S_____ Pawnee City, Nebr__| 444 Argyle Drive, 65 Alexandria, Va. *White, Wallace H., Jr____| Auburn, Maine______ 2449 Tracy Pl. | 43 *Wiley, Alexander________ Chippewa Falls, Wis_| The Westchester______ 127 *|| Willis, Raymond E_____ Angola; Ind... 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 31 *Wilson, George A______._ Des Moines, Iowa___| 217 Forest Drive, Falls 34 -Church, Va. 818 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Sam RAYBURN, Speaker, 1900 Q Street. *[||[Soura TrimBLE, Clerk, 10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. *KeNNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms, the Wardman Park. : *RALPH R. RoBERTS, 2401 Calvert St. *||Finis E. Scott, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road. *REV. JAMEs SHERA MoNTGOMERY, D. D., Chaplain, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name Home post office Washington residence Blog Page *Abernethy, Thomas G___| Okolona, Miss______ 2036 Fort Davis St. SE_| 58 *Allen, A. Leonard. ______ Winnfleld > Va oo oy = eh 43 Allen, Jeo .~ _. .. Goleng, "Tor University Club_______ 28 BB... 2 *Andersen, H. Carl_______ Lyle, Minn The Harvard Hall_____ “56 * Anderson, Clinton P_____ Albuquerque, N.Mex_| 7650 Bradley Blvd., 73 Bethesda, Md. *Anderson, John Z_ ______ San Juan Bautista, | 5509 Grove St., Chevy 10 A Calif. Chase, Md. *Andresen, August H_____ Red Wing, Minn___._| The Methodist Bldg___| 55 Andrews, Walter G_______ Buffalo, N. ¥__.-.--_ 2480 16th St. -=~.= 84 *Angell, Homer D________ Portland, Oreg_ _____ 2121 Virginia Ave_ ____ 98 Arends, Leslie C_________ Melvin, Ill..... The Roosevelt_ _ ______ 29 %Arnold, Wat...... Kirksville, Mo______ 2706 8th St. South, Ar-60 ' : lington, Va. * Auchincloss, James C____| Rumson, N. J_______ am Pun St., Alexan-69 ria, Va. *+Baldwin, H. Street... | Towson, Md... =| &=° od oo vo 45 *1Baldwin, Joseph Clark__| New York City, N.Y_| 3525 Woodley Rd______| 78 Barden, Graham A_______ New Bern, N. C_____ The Hamilton_________ 85 *i Barrett, Frank A_______ Tusk Wyo! tC .-The Roosevelt _ ______ 130 *Barry, William B_______ St. Albans, N,-Vo o] ovo JAY re 74 Bates, George J__________ Salem, Mass________ Dorchester House_ _ ___ 48 =iBates, Joe B.._ . -o Greenup, Ky____.___ George WashingtonInn_| 40 *Beall, J. Glenn... _..... Frostburg, Md._____ The Raleigh... 46 *Beckworth, Lindley _ ____ iodo nnter, Tex., | 3303 VS. SE ~~ 115 t. 2. 15 Bell, C. Jasper... .__. Blue Springs, Mo____| 315 House Office Bldg_._| 61 Bender, George H________ Cleland Heights, | The Mayflower________ 89 io. Bennett, John B_ _______. Ontonagon, Mich____| The Wardman Park___| 53 *Bennett, Marion T______ Springfield, Mo_____ 2105 Fort Davis St. SE_| 61 *Bishop, C. W. (Runt)___._| Carterville, TI1______ 1833 41st PLL.SE_.. 31 *Blackney, William W.___._| Flint, Mich... _____ The Roosevelt_ _______ *Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ Newport News, Va__| 2935 28th St__________ 121 Bloom, Sel... . New York City, N. Y_| 1930 Columbia Rd_____ 79 Bolton, Frances P________ Lyndhurst, Ohio____| 2301 Wyoming Ave____| 93 *Bonner, Herbert C______ Washington, N. C_.__| The Roosevelt__ ______ 85 “Boren, Lyle H-_... ._ Seminole, Okla______ The Westchester_ _ ____ 95 *Boykin, Frank W___._.. Mobile, Ala — The Washington_ __ ___ 4 *Bradley, \Fred._....... _.. Rogers City, Mich___| 4121 Argyle Terrace___| 53 *1iBradley Michael. J....| Philadelphia, Pa... |. = C= oo 99 “Brehm, Walter E________ Logan, Ohio... -__ The Methodist Bldg___| 91 *Brooks, Overton_ _ ______ Shreveport, La______ Sedgwick Gardens_____ 42 *{+Brown, Clarence J______ Blanchester, Ohio ___| The Alban Towers_____ 90 *Brown, Paul...5 Elberton, Ga___.____| The Alban Towers.____ 23 .. *1Bryson, Joseph R______ Greenville, S. C_____ The Independence_____ 109 Buckley, Charles A_______ New York City, N. Y_| 1429 House Office Bldg_| 80 *Buffett, Howard H______ Omaha, Nebr___.____ 3510 BSt.SE.. 1 G5 *Bulwinkle, Alfred L_____ Gastonia, N. C.-'-. The Wardman Park___| 87 *Burch, Thomas GG... ... Martinsville, Va_____ The Willard...0 122 Burchill, Thomas F_______ NewYork City, NY | tiousiol 0 78 tBurdick, Usher L,....... Williston, N. Dak___| Cheltenham, Md__.____ 88 Members’ Addresses . 819 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued | (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) ; i i | : Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Ni i Page Burgin, W.:00 no va Lexington, N. C_____ The Wardman Park___| 86 *Busbey, Fred *Butler, John E_________ C__. .__... Chicago, Buffalo, TH. culo N.Y... 0. 2012 1817 31st 41st St. PL. SE... __. SE. __ ___ 26 84 Byrne, William T________ Loudonville; Ni Yui. or Laval, uniooit 81 *Camp, A. Sidney_____.__ Newnan, Ga______.__ The Washington House_| 21 Canfield, Gordon_________ Patergon, NJ loud oon 8 000 naga 70 ~~ *Cannon, Clarence_______ Elsberry, Mo______._ 418 New Jersey Ave.SE.| 62 ~ #Cannon, Pat... oC. Miami, Fla... _.... 2100 Connecticut Ave_| 20 *Capozzoli, Louis J_______ Carlson, Frank...__ New York Cty, Ni¥e Concordia, Kans____| lo ooo aa 3635 Alabama Ave. SE_| 77 38 *+Carson, Henderson H_._| *Carter, Albert E________ Canton, Ohio_______ Oakland, Calif _ ____._ 215 13th St. NE... « 1026 16th St-=... =. 92 10 *Case, Franeis____.______. *Celler, Emanuel _________ Custer, S. Dak______ Brooklyn, N. Y_._... 3049 Foxhall Rd______ The Mayflower________ 111 76 | Chapman, Virgil. :___ Parig, Ky: s0..000 Army and Navy Club__| 40 i *+Chenoweth, J. Edgar___| Trinidad, Colo______ The Dodge: 5 ici... 15 | *Chiperfield, Robert B____| Canton, Ill_________ 1 Raymond St., Chevy | 29 : *Church, Ralph E___.____ Evanston, T11_______ Chase, Md. The Shoreham. _______ 28 i df *1Clark, J. Bayard_____._.._ Fayetteville, N. C.__| 3620 16th St______.___ 86 *Clason, Charles *Clevenger, Cliff R.______|_________ Springfield, Mass____| Bryan, Ohio. ut The The Broadmoor_______ Jefferson_._______ 47 90 | | Cochran, John J. vu .. ... St. Louis, Mo_______ The Shoreham. _____.__ 63 i Coffee, John M.._.____.__ Tacoma, Wash______ The Kennedy-Warren__| 125 i *+Cole, Williams C_______ *Cole, W. Sterling ________ St. Joseph, Mo______ Bath, N. Youu.co 2300 1606 41st 44th Sto... St. tc co 60 83 i | *Colmer, William M______ Paseagoula, Miss.oof. © 0 snl oan 59 | *Compton, Ranulf_______ Madison, Conn______ TAB 20 RN Stn i. seven 16 | *+Cooley, Harold D______ Nashville, N. C.____ 2937 28th Ste =v.~ = 86 i Cooper, Jere...uo. 5 Dyersburg, Tenn____| The Washington______ 114 Costello, John M________ *tCourtney, Wirt_ _______ Hollywood, Calif ____| Franklin, Tenn._:o| 2737 The Devonshire P1____| Fairfax ._..__5 © 12 113 2tiCox, BB ons iil Camilla, Ga._+'..:.. The Wardman Park___| 21 *1||Cravens, Fadjo_______ Fort Smith, Ark_____ 4735 Woodway Lane___ 8 Crawford, Fred L________ Saginaw, Mieh_souindl--tseel. oon 52 *Creal, Edward W_______ *|| Crosser, Robert. _______ Hodgenville, Ky_____ Cleveland, Ohio_____ George Washington Inn_| 5418 Edgemoor Lane, 39 93 | i Bethesda, Md. i Culkin, Franels D... 0.2 *Cullen, Thomas H_______ *Cunningham, Paul_ _____ Oswego, N. Y_______ Brooklyn, N. Y.._._ Des Moines, Iowa _ __ The Hamilton... .... The Shoreham. _______ 280 Rede Island Ave. 82 75 35 h | | *Curley, James M________ Boston, Mass_______ 3010 Legation St______ 49 2Curtis, CarbT 0. Li). Minden, Nebr_______ 109 Worthington Drive 65 (Friendship Station, D.C). | *D?Alegandro, Thomas, Jr.| Baltimore, Md. .cuaoli oo. J odasdl. bn 46 | *Davis, Clifford 22. od Memphis, Tenn_____ 4611 Butterworth Pl___| 114 A *+t Dawson, William L_____ Chieago, TIL... occ 1345 Franklin St. NE__| 25 *Day, Stephen A_________ Evanston, Tl. = 20 6916 Fairfax Rd., Be- 25 - thesda, Md. Delaney, John J_________ Brooklyn, N. Youle. mused ing 75 *Dewey, Charles S_______ Dickstein, Samuel ________ Chieage, TH... New YorkCily, ..... No ¥Val: 214 1st St. SE... +» en 27 TY *PDieg, Martin. 02. o Orange, Tex... 1625 Hobart St_____~_ 115 *Dilweg, LaVern R_______ 1 Green Bay, Wis_____ 2016 North Harvard | 129 St., Arlington, Va. *|| Dingell, John D________ Detroit, Mich__-._._: 4655 Kenmore Drive___| 54 - i *Dirksen, Everett M__ ___ Pekin IN. _ cot aohs The Mayflower________ 29 *Disney, Wesley E_______ Tulsa; Okla... 1026 166h St... 94 | 820 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see Name T Ditter, J. William... _ Domengeaux, James______ *Dondero, George A______ *tDoughton, Robert L____ *|||| | Douglas, Fred J______ *Drewry, Patrick H______ *1+Durham, Carl T__._... *Dworshak, Henry C_____ Eaton, Charles A________._ *Eberharter, Herman P___ Elliott, Alfred J... .... *Ellis, "Hubert Ban na Ellison, Daniel... . *1Ellsworth, Harris_______ *t Elmer, William P______ Elston, Charles H________ *}Engel, Albert’ J. ...... Yay, James H. . .__ _... *Feighan, Michael nol Fellows, Pronk. ooo *ttFenton, Ivor Diao oo *Fernandez, Antonio M___ %+Rish, Hamilton_ =..." *Fisher, QC. tianoa *|| Fitzpatrick, James M___ Flannagan, John W., Jr... Fogarty, Joon E__.__.... tFolger, John H_________ *Forand, Aime’ J... *Pord, Thomas F......... *Fulbright, J. William ____ *Fulmer, Hampton P__... *Furlong, Grant... *Qale, Richard PP... 0... Gallagher, James_________ Gamble, Ralph A________ *Gathings, B.C... _... Gavagan, Joseph A_______ *{Gavin, Leon H. . __...__ Gearhart, Bertrand W____ Gerlach, Charles L_______ %®Gibson, John 8.... [Lon Wilson D_______ CT George Wi... Goodwin, Anglers], tv. *Gordon, Thomas 8 rE SoAtonte *Gore, Albert rome Gorski, Martin... ... *Clossett,; do un i Graham, Louis E________ « *Granger, Walter K______ Home post office Ambler, Pa... be Lafayette, La_______ Royal Oak, Mich____ Laurel Springs, N:C. Utica, N. Y Petersburg, Vasile Chapel Hill, N. C___ Burley, Idaho_______ Watchung, Plain- field; N. J. Pittsburgh, Pa____._ Tulare, Calif. .L..__. Huntington, W. Va__ Baltimore, Md______ Roseburg, Oreg._____ Salem, Mo... ..: Cincinnati, Ohio_____ Muskegon, Mich____ New York City, N. Y_ Cleveland, Ohio_____ Bangor, Maine______ Mahanoy City, Pa___ Santa Fe, N. Mex___ Garrison, N.Y... San Angelo, Tex_____ New York City, N. Y._ Bristol, Va... Harmony, R. I______ Mount Airy, N. C___ Cumberland, R. I___ Los Angeles, Calif ___ Springdale, Ark., Rt. 3. Orangeburg, S. Ci Donora, Pal. to Mound, Minn_______ Philadelphia, Pa_____ Larchmont, N. Y____ West Memphis, Ark _ New York City, N.Y_ Oil City, Pa........ Fresno, Calif ._______ Allentown, Paiioied Douglas, Ga Cotuit, Mass________ Laurens, Towa_______ Towanda, Pa_._.... Fort Wayne, Ind____ Melrose, Mass______ Chicago, TH... Carthage, Tenn_____ Chicago, TI... ____.._ Wichita Falls, Tex.__ Beaver, Pa... iz Cedar City, Utah____ pp. 299-306) ‘Washington residence The Shoreham. -.____ The Continental _______ The Methodist Bldg___ The Willard _--L = The Willard_ 222-20ws The Lee Sheraton. ____ 2120 16th-St 2 1229 House Office Bldg. 706 North Tazewell St., Arlington, Va. The Carroll Arms_ ____ Cathedral Mansions North. 2135 Tunlaw Rd______ Berwyn, Md.__...._... The General Scott_____ 4518 Lowell St________ The Wardman Park _ __ 3725 Macomb St______ 2332. 24th St. SE: The Roosevelt_ _ ______ 1600:16th St... _ Cathedral Mansions_ _ _ The Westchester_ _ _ __ : 2929 Connecticut Ave__ The Roosevelt_ _ _ _____ 2101 Connecticut Ave. _ 110 Maryland Ave. NE. The Plaza allumil ets 154 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va 2222 18. aaa 217 Cameron Rd., Falls Church, Va. Cosmos Club =. The Raleigh... .._| _._ 2109 Fort Davis St. SE_ University Club_______ B30) Pennsylvania Ave. 203 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. 3200 16th St...) ~.. 2335 Skyland Pl. SE___ The Dodge: .... i... 3200 16th St... _._.__ Membérs’ Addresses 821° THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Bi *Grant, George M________ Troy, Ala. \ Lf oiioe 4801 Connecticut Ave__ Page *Grant, Robert A. ._._...._ South Bend, Ind____ Sa cmnylvanis Ave. 32 *Creen, Lex... *||Gregory, Noble J_______ Starke, Fla_____ 0... Mayfield, Ky_ ______ The 2401 Mayflower________| Calvert St_______ 19 39 *t7Criffithe, P.W Marietta, Ohlone 92 *t1Gross, Chester H______ Manchester :Pac 2c...Co. fd oon 103 *Guyer, U. 8...Ji lah *+Gwynne, John W______ Kansas City, Kans___| Waterloo, lowa___ __ George Washington Inn_| The Wardman Park___| 37 35 *1||Hagen, Harold C______ Crookston, Minn____| 4012 Southern Ave. SE_| 56 *tHale, Robert... ....... Portland, Maine_____ 2501 Calvert St- 44 Hall, Edwin Arthur_______ Binghamton, N. Y___| 4431 Ellicott St_______ 82 *tHall, Leonard W_______ *Halleck, Charles A_ _____ Oyster Bay, Rensselaer, N. Y___| Ind_ _ _ __ 2800 4524 Woodley Rd_____ Verplanck P1_____ 74 31 *Hanecock, Clarence E____| Syracuse, N. Y______ The Kennedy-Warren__| 83 *Hare, Butler B_.......0 Saluda 8. Co i= The Dodge... 109 Harless, Richard *Harness, Forest F_______ A_______ Phoenix Kokomo, Ariz. Ind_ 0.______ 6380: The 31stiPL. 1 i Broadmoor. ______ 6 32 *Harrie, Oren 2.0.00 El Dorado, Ark_____ 3679 Alabama Ave. SE_ 8 *1t1 tHarris, Winder R____| Norfolk, Va_________ The Capitol Park______ 121 Hart, Edward J... 0. Jersey Oty, Ne Jotiol OS oiais ion 72 Hartley, #tHays, Fred A., Jr______ Brooks... ........ Kearny, N. Little Rock, J. JL 1724 Ark. _ {6660 House Office 32d St... Bldg_| ___. 71 8 *Hébert, F. Edward______ New Orleans, La____| R. F. D. 3, Box 11-E, 41 Alexandria, Va. *tHeffernan, James J_____ Brooklyn, N. Y_____ The Roosevelt_ _______ 75 *Heidinger, James V______ Pairfield, JN. 1 7 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 30 *Hendricks, Joe. -.._....0 De Land Pla uta tulle ol enn na 200) 20 *Herter, Christian A______ Boston, Mass_______ 3336 Dent P1.: co... 49 *|Hess, *||Hill, William William E_______ S_._.._._.. Cincinnati, Ohio_____ Fort Collins, Colo_ __ The Broadmoor_______ ay Fort Davis St. 89 15 *Hinshaw, Carl. -........ Pasadena, Calif _ _ ___ 2325 Tracy Phool 13 Hobbs, Sam L000 Selma, Ala. ._.L. ..& 2231 Bancroft P1______ 4 |Hoch, Daniel K___._____ Reading, Pa_ _.__._._ 130 Maple Ave., Tako- | 102 ma Park. *Hoeven, Charles B______ Alton, Towa_________ The Raleigh oo. 0 36 *Hoffman, Clare E_______ Allegan, Mich_______ The Methodist Bldg___| 52 *11]|||Holifield, Chet______| Montebello, Calif ____| 2600 Cameron Mills 13 Rd., Alexandria, Va. *Holmes, Hal. Holmes, Pehr __..... 2..." G...........1 Ellensburg, Worcester, Wash____| Mass_ _ __ 2480 16th St__________ Sova 5 SE enIvanin 124 48 - ve. SE. *Hope, Cliford RB. .0..... Garden City, Kans__| 3541 Brandywine St___| 38 *+ Horan, Walt. 0...7. Wenatchee, Wash ___| 2729 Daniel Rd., Chevy | 124 Chase, Md. *Howell, Evan___________ Springfield, T11______ 2081 28th St. co. 30 Hull Merlin... 0 Black River Falls, | 3808 Garrison St______ 129 lene, Bd. Vo.0 0.000 San is. Diego, Calif _____ 2001 20th: Ste... 14 Jackson, Henry M_______| Everett, Wash______ 215 BS. NE. vin. 124 =Jarman, Pele ™ ii 0 0 Livingston, Ala_____ The Burlington________ 5 *Jefirey, Harry P. ........ Dayton, Ohio... 6802 Brookville Rd. 89 *Jenkins, Thomas *tJennings, John, A______ Jr______ Ironton, Ohio. ______ Knoxville, Tenn_____ Chevy Chase, Md. 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| The Roosevelt. ______ 91 112 *Jensen, Ben F__________ Exiva, Towa ii i000 The Washington House_| 36 *Johnson, Anton J_______ Macomb, Ill. -._._ p03 New Hampshire 29 ve. 4 ii { Johnson, Calvin D.______._ Belleville, I _____-_._ The Annapolis. ______ 30 ‘822 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name *Johnson, J. Leroy..._.._ *1||||Johnson, Jed________ *Johnson, Luther A______ *Johnson, Lyndon B______ *+J ohnson, Noble J. _-._ *| | Johnson, Ward... .. *Jones, Robert. F......... *+Jonkman, Bartel J... _-. *Judd, Walter H.....-*Kean, Robert W.-._.. ti Roney, Bernard W. | (Pat Ree, John noicai ll *| | Keefe, Prank B..-. *Kefauver, Estes_________ #11 Kelley, Augustine B___| *Kennedy, Martin J______| Keogh, Eugene J__._______ *Rerr, John H.0 i... =. *1Kilburn, Clarence E____| *Kilday, Paul J... .... 24King, Ceell B.0. 0... 0 *Kinzer, J. Roland. _____. Kirwan, Michael J_______ Kleberg, Richard M______ Rilein, Arthur G. . Knutson, Harold... .... .. Runkel, Jom C.._. ... 2 *LaFollette, Charles M___| *Lambertison, Willlam P.__ | *Landis, Gerald W________ Lane, ThomasJ.. -.-.. *Lanham, Fritz G_._-.___ *Larcade, Henry D., Jr___| *Lea, Clarence F______.__ *LeCompte, Karl M______ *tLeFevre, Jay_ _________ *Lemke, William _________ Lesingki, John...J... ... 0 Zilewis, Barl R___-o ~« Lewis, Lawrence_ ________ Luce, Clare Boothe_______ *Ludlow, louis. Lo. * | Lynch, Walter A_______ *M ¢Cord, JI ee en *MecCormack, John W.__ *McCowen, Edward O____ *tMecGehee, Dan R______ McGranery, James P_____ *1| || MeGregor, J. Harry___| *t McKenzie, Charles E.___| *MecLean, Donald H______ *MecMillan, John L_______ *McMurray, Howard J___| *McWilliams, John D___.| Home post office Washington residence oe Page Stockton, Calif ______ 20 Fort Davis St. Anadarko, Okla_____ 4975 Hillbrook Lane___| 96 Corsicana, Tex______ The La Salle__________ 116 Johnson City, Tex___| 4921 30th P1._________ 116 Terre Haute, Ind____| 3807 V St. SE_________ 32 Long Beach, Calif ___| The Broadmoor._______ 13 Lima,,Ohio.. 2... ‘The Alban Towers..___ 90 Grand Rapids, Mich_|' The Methodist Bldg___| 52 Minneapolis, Minn__| 3503 Lowell St________ 56 Livingston, N. J_____ WLR St. er 71 Gloversville, N. Y___| Dorchester House_____ 81 Bluefield, W. Va____| 3916 Southern Ave. SE_| 126 Oshkosh, Wis_.__... Dorchester House_ _____ 128 Chattanooga, Tenn. _| 1801 16th St__________ 112 Greensburg, Pa_____ The Alban Towers. ____ 104 New York City, N.Y.| The Mayflower________ 79 Brooklyn, N, Y.-... The Mayflower... ____. 76 Warrenton, N, C.__.{ The Willard... ...._ 85 Malone, N. Y_______ The General Scott_____ 82 San Antonio, Tex_.__| 3507 Albemarle St_____ 118 Los Angeles, Calif. clio. oie cu dilaton 12 Lancaster, Pa_______ The Shoreham ________ 101 Youngstown, Ohio___| The Carroll Arms_____ 93 Corpus Christi, Tex .| The Shoreham ________ 117 New York City, N.Y_| The Mayflower________ 77 St. Cloud, Minn... 225 B8t. NE _......... 56 Harrisburg; Pa... 0. oid es 102 Evansville, Ind______ The Westchester... ___ 33 Fairview, Kans... ....__.___. 87 Linton, Ind. oJous eos ato 33 Lawrence; Mass ied. 0 on nha se at 48 Fort Worth, Tex_____ Woodley Park Toros 116 Opelousas, La_______ The Shoreham ________ 43 Santa Rosa, Calif____| 110 Maryland Ave.NE._ Corydon, Iowa ______ The Wardman Park____| 85 Gleeson am EE ae a - ta New Paltz, N. Y____| The Wardman Park___| 81 Fargo, N. Dak...___ 2 Sherwood Rd., Forest {| 88 Grove, Silver Spring, Md. Dearborn, Mich_____ The Capitol Park_._____ 54 St. Clairsville, Ohio__| The Continental_______ 92 Denver, Colo_ ______ The Roosevelt _ ______ 14 Greenwich, Conn____| The Wardman Park___| 17 Indianapolis, Ind... | 1822 H St... _... 34 New YorkiClty, No Yel ooo cit names 79 Lewisburg, Tenn__..| The Fairfax_______.___ 113 boson, Mass... 2. The Washington_ _____ 50 eelersburg, Ohio__| George Washington Inn_| 90 Whe ville, Miss____._ The Wardman Park___| 59 Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Mayflower _______ 99 West Lafayette,Ohio_| 2022 37th St. SE______ 92 Monroe, La_________ ThelaSalle 42 Elizabeth, N. J_..___| The Wardman Park___| 70 Florenee, Br Le ae oo io an ok 5 urd 110 Milwaukee, Wis_____ 707 North Wayne St., | 128 Arlington, Va. Norwich, Conn______ 4607 Connecticut Ave__| 16 -Members’ Addresses 823 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES— Continued i (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) | tric : Bi | Name Home post office Washington residence ns t 2 Page *Maas, Melvin J_________ Si..Payl, Minn: = 1505 Dale Drive, Silver 5 ; : Spring, Md. E-Madden, Ray J...i 0 Cary, Ind cctbx The Continental_______ 31 2. Magnuson, Warren G_____ Seaftle, Wash... The Shoreham ________ 123 *tMahon, George H. ____ Colorado City, Tex__| The Alban Towers_____ Tr *Maloney, Paul H________ New Orleans, La____| The Wardman Park___| 42 * Manasco, Carter. _______ Jasper, Ala______.__ The Bellevue... _______ 5 h | 1H] Mansfield, Joseph J___ _| Columbus, Tex______ 2 New Hampshire | 116 | ve. i *Mansfield, Mike... ..__._ Missoula Mond. ool co. o.oo coi 3 64 Marcantonio, Vito________ New York City, NY |. 0 oman Soin 79 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____ Norih Attleboro, | The Hay-Adams______ 50 | ass. *Martin, Thomas E______ Iowa City, Iowa__.__| 2103 Fort Davis St. SE_| 34 | *Magon, Noah M.______._ Oglesby, II______._. The Baronet. ....i + 28 tMay, Andrew J_________ Prestonsburg, Ky_.__| The Roosevelt________ 40 Z *Merritt, Matthew J__.___ Mon (Flushing), | The Mayflower________ 73 | YX. ~ | Merrow, Chester E_______ Center Ossipee, N. H_| The Dodge___________ 67 *Michener, Earl C....... Adrian, Mich... cco The Wardman Park___| 51 Miller, A. bd cen Kimball, Nebr. =004 3809.V St. 8k... cho 66 | * Miller, Tons B....0 St. Louis, Mo. 5a LL Suitland Terrace 63 ! Miller, Thomas Byron____| Plymouth, Pa_______ The Mayflower________| 101 | *Miller, William J________ Wethersfield. Conn. _| 4500 Lowell St________ 16 *Mills, Wilbur D...ool0. Kenseti, Ark... .. 2701 Connecticut Ave__ 7 so *Monkiewicz, B. J_______ New Britain, Conn__| The Carroll Arms_____ 16 *Monroney, A. S. Mike___| Oklahoma City, Okla_| 2475 Kalorama Rd____| 96 *Morrison, Cameron______ Charlotte, N. C_____ 2228 Massachusetts Ave_| 87 *Morrison, James H______ Hammond, La. =n 4607 Connecticut Ave__| 42 ! *+ Mott, James W________ Salem, Oreg aa University Club_______ 97 Mruk, Joseph...LL... Buffalo, NAY uni: Dorchester House_ _ ___ .. 84 i *Mundt, Kerli EB... Madison, S. Dak____| The Capitol Towers____| 110 *Murdock, John R_______ Tempe, Avizeil antl Cos So i= aia) 7 Murphy, John W________ Dunmore, Pa_______ 1660 Lanier Pl... + 101 *Murray, Reid F...___.___ Ogdensburg, Wis___._| 2024 37th St. SE______ 128 Murray, Tem co goon Jackson, Tenn______ The Park Central. __.. 13 Myers, Francis J______.___ Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Mayflower________ 100 *Newsome, John P_______ Birmingham, Ala____{ The Wardman Park___ 6 pt Nichols, Fokoo 1... Eufaula, Okla_______ 5401 Worthington 94 rive. | Norman, Fred __________ Raymond, Wash____| 1116 46th Pl. SE______ 124 *tNorvrell, W.-.F....' [7 Monticello, Ark_____ 4531 Nebraska Ave____ 8 i{ Norton, Mary Ti .s0.) Jersey City, N. J____| The Kennedy-Warren__| 72 *(’Brien, George D__ ____ Detroit, Mich. .___._._ 4718 Albemarle St_____ 53 *(O’Brien, Joseph J____.___ East Rochester, N. Y_| The Alban Towers_____ 83 *()’ Brien, Thomas J______ Chicago, TH.o_ ii The Hamilton_________ 27 Ar O’Connor, James F_______ Livingston, Mont____| Third floor, Capitol____| 64 *O’Hara, Joseph P_______ Glencoe, Minn ______ 2813 31st St... 55 *(Q’Konski, Alvin E______ Mercer, Wis______.__ 28290:8 Si. SE. aa 129 O’Leary, James A________ Wess Jou Brighton, | The Continental _______| 76 ] *1t10’ Neal, Emmet_______ Louisville, Ky_______ The Boosevelt "=. 39 O’Toole, Donald L_______ Brooklyn, N. Y_____ 2222 I 8 oh. sa 76 *Qutland, George E______ Santa Barbara, Calif_| 305 Park Rd., Alexan-11 dria, Va. *1|| Pace, Stephen________ Americus, Ga______. The Methodist Bidg-_.| 21 *Patman, Wright... Texarkana, Tex_____ The Cavalier & 00. © 115 * 1 Patton, Nat. od. 0 Orockett, Tex. ...... George Washington Inn_| 116 824 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name Home post office Washington residence Dis Page *Peterson, Hugh...._ Alley, Gago oi. 2901 Connecticut Ave__| 21 f *{ Peterson, J. Hardin_____ Lakeland, Fla__..___. George Washington Inn_| 19 v Pfeifer, Joseph L_________ Brooklyn, N.Y... = The Raleigh... 74 v8 Philbin, PhilipiJ. -oo 5 * Phillips, John losiil Clinton, Banning, Mass__..__. Calif _ ____. The Raleigh... __._ George Washington Inn | 48 13 : ! #+Pittenger, William AL. Dulwihe- Minn. 0. asl Jo. .0id 56 f p *Ploeser, Walter C_______ St. Louis, Mo... 200. 2708 Central Ave. 63 Alexandria, Va. ~ *Plumley, Charles A_____. Northfield, Vt.______ 2929 Connecticut Ave__| 120 2Ponge, Wo. Ro. oo Waco, Bex. {oa 2309 Skyland PL. SE___| 116 #+1iPoulson, Norris. __.__ Los Angeles, Calif___| 6218 30th St_..________ 11 #+tPowers, D. Lane. _.___. Trenton, N. Jc... The Shoreliam Se oe 70 | Pracht, C. Frederick. _____ Philadelphia, Pa____. 216 Overlook Drive, | 100 Hillendale, Md. | *Price, Emory Hl... 4 Jacksonville, Fla_...{ 1218S U St. SE... 20 Priest, J. Perey. woo 0. Nashville, Tenn_____ The Pairfox_ =... i... 113 *tRabaut, Louise@. Ciro Pointe Park, | The Bellevue. ____.____ 53 ich.~ *|[ | Ramey, *Ramspeck, Homer A_____ Robert_ _____ Toledo, Atlanta, Ohio.......: Ga... The The Wyoming...=. Broadmoor_______ 91 22 -| *|| Randolph, Jennings____| Elkins, W. Va_______ 4608 Reservoir Rd_____ 126 *tRankin, John E________ Tupelo, Miss._._.__._._ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 57 Rayburn, Sam...0. *Reece, B. Carroll ________ Bonham Johnson ~Tex........ City, Tenn _| 1900.Q.5b. 0....o as Metropolitan Club_____ 115 111 i | *Reed, Chauncey W.__._.___ West Chicago, Ill____| 2009 Glen Ross Rd., 28 | *tReed, Daniel A________ Dunkirk, N.Y... ... Silver Spring, Md. The Roosevelt _ _ ___.__ 84 | © *Rees, Edward H________ Emporia, Kans______ 1801:46th St... «... 37 | *Richards, James Poli Lancaster, 8. Coal Lo. oigad nd nalp 109 1 *Rivers, L. Mendel... Nop Charleston, | 2014 Fort Davis St. SE_| 108 ZIRizley, Ross... c.uod Guymon, Okla______ 6140.31st PL. coc 96 *Robertson, A. Willis_____ Lexington, Va. Lol dl ae 122 *Ropinson, J. W. ........ Provo, Utah ...... The Wardman Park___| 119 *¥||Robsion, John M_______ Barbourville, Ky..._| 1500 Delafield P1______ 41 Rockwell, *Rodgers, Robert Robert F______ L______ Paonia, Colo........ Erie, Posie) wrans 1661 The Crescent P1______ Continental _______ 15 105 2 Rogers, Edith Nourse_____ Lowell, Mass_______ The Shoreham ____.____ 48 *Rogers, Will, Jro.oo.o. Culver City, Calif___ A Jersey Ave. 12 *Rohrbough, Edward G__.| *Rolph, Thomas... ___ Glenville, W. Va____| San Francisco, Calif | The The Washington. _____ Shoreham ________ 126 10 *Rowan, William A______ Chicage, Tl <1 0 i: 6020 Western Ave., 25 Chevy Chase, Md. - 2 Bowe, Bd... 00h oi Avon, Oho... al hls 92 *7tRussell, Sam M_______ Stephenville, Tex____| 2817 Q St. SE_________ 117 *||Sabath, Adolph J______ Chicago; Tio oi. The Mayflower__._____| 26 : *Sadowski, George G_____ Detroit, Mich___..____ 201939th St... 51 *t | Sasscer, Co G.- ‘Upper Marlboro, Md. |...doi EL 46 %Satterfield, Dave E., Jr. Richmond, Va... 0... aiinnn die 121 *Sauthoff, Harry Tio dec Madison, Wis_______ 5230 Chevy Chase | 127 Parkway. *Scanlon, Thomas E______ Pittsburgh, Pa... .. 1619 Fort Davis St. SE_| 102 *tSchiffler, Andrew C_____ Wheeling, W. Va____| The Northumberland__| 125 Schuetz, Leonard W______ Chieago, HL “0 Ji. 2121 Virginia Ave_____ 27 *Schwabe, Max_._......_. Columbin, Mo... of. niin cat mii mtn 60 Scott, Hugh D., Jr... Philadelphia, Posluigl uv. so sein oda 100 Shafer, Paul W... =. 2: Battle Creek, Mich__| The Methodist Bldg___| 51 *Sheppard, Harry B. .oie Yucaipa, Callt on. 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 13 : * Sheridan, John Edward.__| Philadelphia, Pa____. 32224 St. NE... 100 Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name ; *||Short, Dewey__________ *Sikes, Robert L. F._. ____ *Simpson, Richard M_____ #1 Simpson, Sid... *Slaughter, Roger C______ *Smith, Frederick C______ *|| ||Smith, Howard W_____ *8mith, Jee ._.-. L. 4 *Smith, Lawrence H___ ___ Smith, Margaret Chase___| *Snyder, J. Buell ._ © *+Somers, Andrew L______ *||Sparkman, John J______ *Spence, Brent__._______-_ *||Springer, Raymond S___| Stanley, Winifred C______ Starnes, Joe_____________| ||Steagall, Henry B_______ *Stearns, Foster. _________ *+||{IStefan, Karl____.____ *Stevenson, William H____| *Stewart, Paull 00 [0 *Stockman, Lowell. ______ *Sullivan, Maurice J______ Sumner, Jessie___________ Sumners, Hatton W______ *Sundstrom, Frank L_____ ®Paber, John. Talbot, Joseph E........_ Talle, Henxy O_. ..._ ... *|| Tarver, Malcolm C_____ *Taylor, Dean P..... ... *Thomas, Albert_____ =. Thomas, J. Parnell_______ *Thomason, R. Ewing____| *Pibbott, Harve ~~ *t1| [||| Tolan, John H_____ Towe, Harry LL... i. = *Treadway, Allen T__.___ *Troutman, William I____| *Van Zandt, James E_____ *Vincent, Beverly M_____ *Yingon, Carl... = #Voorhis, Jerry... _.. 2Vorys, Jom MM... = *Vursell, Charles W______ *Wadsworth, James W____| Walter, Francis E________ Ward, David J...=. *|| || Wasielewski, Thad F___| |Weaver, Zebulon________ Weichel, Alvin PF... Weiss, Samuel A_________ Home post office ‘Washington residence ie Page Galena, Mo... 0 2301 Connecticut Ave__| 61 Crestview, Fla______ 935 26th St. South, 20 Arlington, Va. Huntingdon, Pa_____ 4908 Western Ave., | 102 Chevy Chase, Md. Carrollton, TH. _ = | The Shoreham ________ 30 Kansas City, Mo____| 8502 Linwood Pl, 61 Chevy Chase, Md. Marion, Ohio_______ 3418 Carpenter St.__ __ 91 Alexandria, Va______ 204 West Walnut St., | 122 Alexandria, Va. Beckley, W. Va____._ The Mayflower. _______ 126 Racine, Wis 3 0c The General Scott____._ 127 Skowhegan, Maine _ _| 2745 29th St__________ 44 Perryopolis, Pa______ | 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 104 Brooklyn, No XY ooutl oo ib adsentlos 75 Huntsville, Ala______ The Broadmoor_______ 5 Fort Thomas, Ky___| The Roosevelt________ 40 Connersville, Ind____| 3339 Stephenson P1____| 33 Bufialo, NooYe oo). o.oo.coi] 74 Guntersville, Ala____| The Wardman Park___ 5 Qgark, Ala... i... The Wardman Park_ _ _ 4 Hancock, N. H______ The Mayflower________ 68 Norfolk, Nebr_______ The Mayflower________ 66 La Crosse, Wis______ The Dodge = 2 = 127 Antlers, Okla = oo fd.JOH 95 Pendleton, Oreg_____ 3606 Chesapeake St____| 98 Beno, Nev,__ © George WashingtonInn_| 67 Milford, JH.3 The Mayflower________ 29 Dallpg, Tex. =o... The Shoreham ________ 116 Bagg Orange, Noo J: 0 ooono 0 71 Avbmrn NY... Dorchester House _ ____ 83 Naugatuck, Conn_...( The Dodge. ._._-___ 17 Decorah, Iowa______ 1420 House Office Bldg_| 35 Dalton, Ga... ©... 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 22 Troy, N.Y... o.oo Dorchester House_ _ ___ 81 Houston, Tex: .. 1 Woodley Park Towers__| 116 Allendale, N. J... 4636 Garfield St_______ 70 El Paso, Tex________ The Kennedy-Warren__| 117 Ebensburg, Pa______ The Baronet... =o. 7° 104 Oakland, Calif _____ Dorchester House______ Rutherford, N. J____| The Alban Towers___.._ 71 Stockbridge, Mass___| 2490 Tracy P1_________ 47 Shamokin, Pa_______ 1514 Varnam St_____ 99 Altoona, Pa... .... |The Continental... ¢ 103 Brownsville, Ky_____ The Capitol Towers___| 39 Milledgeville, Ga____| 4 Primrose St., Chevy 22 Chase, Md. San Dimas, Calif____| 3307 Carolina Ave., Al-11 exandria, Va. Columbus, Ohio_____ 2702 Wisconsin Ave___| 91 Salem, Ill... George WashingtonInn_| 30 — Geneseo, N. Y______ 3268 N.St... 83 Baston,:Pa_ ool cosas nnd ol is 103 Salisbury, Md. co. o0s aa 45 Milwaukee, Wis_____ 2800 Woodley Rd_____ 128 Asheville, N. C______ 4611 Norwood Drive, 87 Chevy Chase, Md. Sandusky, Ohio_____ The Raleigh... .._._.. 91 Glassport, Pa... The Hightower......._ 105 -Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 299-306) Name Home post office Washington residence Blog *Welch, Richard J... .-_ San Francisco, Calif _.| The Roosevelt_ _______ Page 10 Wene, Elmer H__________ Vineland, WN. J. no] oo bloc iaseds hoo 69 West, Milton H.......... Brownsville, Tex____| The Hamilton_________ 117 *Wheat, William H_______ Rantoul, TIL. The Wardman Park___| 29 Whelechel, B. Frank_______ Gainesville, Ga______ 2310 Connecticut Ave__| 23 *|| White, Compton I______| Clarks Fork, Idaho._ oe Nop Carolina | 23 ve. SE. *Whitten, Jamie L_______ Charleston, Miss____| 2117 Fort Davis St. SE_| 58 *Whittington, William M_| Greenwood, Miss____| The Wardman Park___| 58 *Wickersham, Victor_ ____ Mangum, Okla_____._ LL Hillcrest Drive 96 *Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Milton, Mass_______ SBT N St ea 50 *|| | Willey, Earle D_______ Pover, Del...oc 1327 Shepherd St. NE_| 18 EWilson, Barl 4.00 Bedford, Ind___ _____ The Washington House_| 33 *Winstead, Arthur_ _ _____ Philadelphia, Miss___| 2001 Fort Davis St. SE_| 58 Winter, Thomas D_______ Girard, Kans o_o, George Washington Inn_| 37 *|| Wolcott, Jesse P_______ Port Huron, Mich___| 109 East Thornapple | 52 St., Chevy Chase, Md. *Wolfenden, James_______ Upper Darby; Pa: tof oc i Jobeniadl.a3 100 Wolverton, Charles A_____ Merehantville, N. J... lai nil al o.oo 69 *Woodruff, Roy O___.____ Bay City, Mich_____ George WashingtonInn_| 53 = Woodrum, Cliftom AZ /Roanoke, Va... = | = ei io 122 *Worley, Eugene_________ Shamrock, Tex______ 369 North Glebe Rd., | 117 Arlington, Va. Wright, James A__. ______ Carnegie, Pa________ The Occidental ________ 106 *Zimmerman, Orville. ____ Kennett, Mo___.___._ The Roosevelt_ _ ______ 62 DELEGATES *tDimond, Anthony 5. Valdez, Alaska______ 1868 Columbia Rd_____ 130 *fFarrington, Joseph R____| Honolulu, Hawaii____| 82 Kalorama Circle____| 131 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Elizalde, Joaquin M_______ Manila, P..T:_ 2621 Foxhall Rd. _____ 131 *| ||| Pagén, Bolivar__.____ San Juan, P.Ri_=il. : 1629 28th St. SE______ 131 INDIVIDUAL INDEX (For list of Members of Congress, with their addresses, see pp. 815-826) A Page Page Aamodt, O. S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Aerieliural Engineering... _______ 363 Abbot, C Director, Astrophysical Observatory.._._.._____ 418 International Exchanges _________-___________ 418 Ssiions) Advisory ie for Aeronau- EE CR ER len RE Sa National Archives Council. __________________ 407 National Galleryof Art... __--__-_. 418 Secretary, Smithsonian Institution___________ 417 Abbot, Henry D., Soil Conservation Service___. 368 Abbott, Ben, Administrative Office, Navy._.__ 342 Abell, Dr. Irvin, Federal Security Agency was 394 Aber, Wilma: Secretary to Senator Van Nuys_._ ooo... 269 _ Senate Committee on Judiciary. ._..__.._._... 265 Abrahams, Edmund H., Advisory Board on National Parks, 0tC. cic cia mene 357 Acheson, Dean: Assistant Secretary of State 323 Board of Economic Operations. _..__._____.___ 324 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 325 Board of Foreign Service Personnel ._________ 325 Adair, George P., Federal Communications ODIMINISHON ov rs Forres 391 eens Adams, Benjamin F., District assessor’s office__ 447 Adams, Charles W., War Savings Staff_________ 329 ‘Adams, Eva B.: Secretary to Senator MeCarran_______________ 2 Bennie Committee on the District of Colum-EYE Se a ihe SOR on IE SI Ra ET 264 Adams, Helen M., Senate Committee on Bank-ing ‘and Currency Se ea a a 264 Adams, John Quincy, Office of Secretary of the Senate: tic, os nectar Emre el 263 Adams, Loxlie V., Government Printing Office. 277 Adams, Rose E., Senate Committee on Privi- legos ANA BILLIONS. -soe. secsomens 266 Adams, Capt. Samuel T., War Department ST Aa TH OR a Si te A a 332 Adams, Warren, Maritime Commission________ 405 Adams, W.M,, Patent Office... _..........-373 Adams, Willem, Netherlands Embassy. _______ 463 Adkins, Jesse 'C. ., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District ol Columbia. 200: i res de eat 437 Adkins, RobinsonE., Veterans’ Administration. Adler; John W, Administrative Division_______ Adlof, Richard E., Jr., Tariff Commission_.____ Afira, Dr. Jodo R. 'Simoés, Portuguese Legation. 464 Agle, Charles K., Federal Public Housing Au- Shorty. oc rd IR I EE I 411 Ager, Patil W., Tennessee Valley Authority ___ 420 Agnew, Lt. John J., District Boxing Commis- Blom no i a IEE SE 447 Aguiar, Dr. Pedro P., Cuban Embassy._______. 458 A’Hearn, Leonard w., War Manpower Com- missions co cruralns 315 Ahern, Daniel F., District Industrial Home School (white) A EN RTE 449 Ahern, Capt. James L., Coast Guard___________ 348 Ahern, Brig. Gen. LeoJ., Office of the Inspector General, AAT ete ea ne Sea re Ahlefeldt-Laurvig, Count Benedict, Danish Begation i oa oe a 458 Aickin, K. A., Australian Legation_____________ 455 Aickin, T. R., New Zealand Legation__________ 463 Ainsworth, Culver M., International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico___. 402 Aitchison, Clyde B., Interstate Commerce Com- mission =i SN ial San le 403 Aker, Dr. Ziibeyir, Turkish Embassy._________ 465 Akers, H. O., District Engineer Department.__. 450 Akers, Richard H., commissioner, Court of MMS Coll cumnlianaend soils Lana Akin, John, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... =i ul 312 Akins, Mildred, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency: io Saige rons dia daas 2 Aktarzendi, Maj. Hassan, Iran Legation________ 461 Alba, Pedro de, Pan American Union__________ 414 Alban, Col. Augustin, Ecuadoran Embassy._.__ 458 Albert, Laurence E., Secret Service ____________ 328 Albertson, J. Mark, "Tariff Commission_______._ 479 Albin, H. C., Food Distribution Administra- A113 DESEO er GL RE ER sd SE Rn Ee 367 Albright, John, Bureau of the Census..._______ 371 Albuquerque Lima, Col. Stenio Caio de: Brazilian Embassy... Sif. i: 456 Inter-American ion Board ooh. 401 Alden, Charles E., assistant custodian, Senate OfficeBullding._._ _.. ... co otis. 275 Aldredge, Robert C., Weather Bureau Aldrich, Kildroy P., "First Assistant Postmaster General NIE Eb SR LL i VN po AN 338 Aldrich, Loyal B., Astrophysical Observatory. 418 Aldrich, Lt. Comdr. Malcolm P., Office of Secretary oftheNavy.. 0. ol woio.2 341 Alencastro-Guimarges, A. C. de, Brazilian Em-basRy. an re DE a 456 Alexander, Barbara, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads... ——-_._ 266 Alexander, F. Virginia, Passport Division______ 326 Alexander, Mildred, Office of Recorder of Deeds. 440 Alexander, Robert To Visa Division....-=__:t 326 Alfaro, Capitan Colon Eloy: Ecuadoran Ambassador... ooao---458 Governing Board, Pan American Union.__._. 414 i X Carlos Adalberto, El Salvadoran Em-150 ne Se Se PILE Cae mG Alhan, A Ali Sevki, Turkish Embassy--. 465 Allan, Joseph W., District Fire Department.__. 450 Allanson, H.E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... 363 Allard, Hector, Canadian Legation _________.__-456 Alldredge, J. Haden, Interstate Commerce Commission... .c. Sucoiiiidose, 403 ior ool Allee, Ralph H., Office of Foreign Agricultural Belatlons o-oopwdafpionsanle oo 359 Loc Allen, Bruce R., Western Union Telegraph Co... 276 Allen, Douglas I. Rubber Development Corpo- ration a A ne Allen, Edward W.: International Fisheries Commission... 402 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-4 mission ur er ST Ee at 03 . Allen, Rear Admiral Ezra G., Office of Budget and Reports, Navy... Ci gece.= 2 343 Allen, Frances, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. _--264 Allen, Georgette B., office of Official Reporters of Debates it sar a iedua 274 Allen, George E.: ‘War Damage Corporation ee eat sa 378 American Bed Cross. i oo. oso cile oo, 386 Allen, G. G., Panama Canal... 413 Allen, Me ‘George E., Columbia Hospital for 250 Wom RRL CR ah ST ne Uh Allen, ie Joint Committee on Internal Rev- enue Taxation. ca oi len 234 Allen, Guy F., Bureau of Accounts __._-_-._-_-329 Allen, James, Office of War Information __...__ 314 Allen, L. N., Tennessee Valley Authority. ..--421 Allen, Richard F., American Red Cross._.___--387 Allen, R Combined Production and R.G.D:, Re-sources Board PE Te Se a Je Ee 321 828 Congressional Directory Page Page Allen, Robert E., Petroleum Administration for a War... a ea Allen, S. V., Canadian Tegation. oc... 456 Allende, Lt. Col. Jose Perez, Inter-American Detnse Board... 401 Allin, TP lsarol 'W., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomics... Lo is GFR eed Ang Pol H., Division of Near Eastern Allred, is H., Securities and Exchange Com-desiomi eco eh oe kN Allshouse, David 8., Farm Security Adminis- an Sn Se Re eR RL RL ee Almon, Helen D., Bureau of the Census________ 371 Alomia, Lt. Enrique Carrera, Mexican Em- bossy. StoriaFre Sete ae 462 Alonso, Jorge, Cuban Embassy _.______________ 458 Alsabrook, H. K., Office of the Doorkeeper_.__.__ 271 Alstock, Francis, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... __._._ i... 312 Altmeyer, Arthur J.: Social Security Board: o.oo. Lil 394 ‘War Manpower Commission. ___________.____ 314 Alva Cejudo, Augustin, Mexican Embassy. _.__ 462 Amberg, Julius H., Office of Secretary of War__ 331 Ambrose, Paul M. , Bureau of Mines___._._.___ 354 Amidon, Edna P., "Office of Education.__ 395 Amis, Marshall Ww. Federal Public Housing. Anthority. oh. oc 0 wRiadiin pai OF Amorim do Valle, Commander Hin Jordéo: Brazilian Embassy... _.._______il 456 Anders, Robbie Roe, Senate Committee on Post Officesiand Post 0. i oeoi) Roads... 266 Anderson, Charles R., Civil Service Commis- Anderson, Mrs. Clinton P., Congressional Club_ 390 Anderson, Dewey, Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations _________________ 325 Anderson, E. D., Panama Canal. ______________ 413 Anderson, F. R., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance. Corporation. ci. to «i lig 410 Anderson, John F., Office of General Counselfor the Rreasury. totic bhi vows inn lal 2 328 Anderson, Leeman: Senate Committee on Immigration. __________ 265 Secretary to-Senator Russell __________________ 269 Anderson, Mary, Director, Women’s Bureau... 382 Anderson, Air Vice Marshal N. R., Permanent Joint Board on Defense _____________.________ 415 Anderson, Brig. Gen. Orvil A., Army Air Forces. 333 Anderson, R. E., Maritime Commission. ______ 405 Anderson, R. , José Luis, Ecuadoran Embassy... 458 Anderson, Col. S. E. , Aéronautical Board..__-. 385 André, Jule E. . Geological Survey... .5_ iabaar 353 Andretta, S. A Administrative Division_______ 337 Andrews, Charles O., Thomas Jefferson Memo- risl:Commission. >...0 aniie 0 oi 236 Andrews, John, minority clerk_________________ 272 Andrews, R. D, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- AONE aa Se Ded SST 0 es Walter G.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. __ 236 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment_ 239 Angus, H. F., Joint Economic Committees. _ 319 Annand, P. N. Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... es Soa as 362 Anslinger, H. J., Commissioner of Narcotics____ 328 Antonopoulos, Anastase, Greek Embassy __.____ 460 Anze-Franco, Emilio, Bolivian Embassy _______ 456 Anzorena, Eugenio de, Mexican Embassy. ____. 462 Appleby, Lt. C. A., Bureau of Naval anil 344 Abploby, £ H., ' Under Secretary of Paul Agricul-3 Ee MEE OE A Nea eh a SRL Se he Appleby, S. Margaret, Senate Committee on Jromigration aun bo Shamanaed po 265 Appley, Lawrence A., War Manpower Commis-sion 20 Lins Bank in tte FE ToL an ne 315 Aquino, Capt. Tasso Villar de, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission_________ 322 Ararigboia, Col, Armado de Souza e Mello: Brazilian" BEmbagey rit ae inset 0 io 456 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 401 Araujo, Dr. Romulo, Venezuelan Embassy.____ 466 Archer, George, Combined Raw Materials Board. oo mE Arends, Leslie C., Board of Visitors to the Mili-tectary Academy... Lo Car 236 Arey, Hawthorne, Export-Import Bank of Washington cold i b= of oo 8 378 Arias, Rodolfo Garcia, Argentine Embassy _____ 455 Ariburun, Maj. Tekin, Turkish Embassy ______ 465 Arlet, Wieslaw, Polish Embassy.._____.________ 464 Arline, Gertrude, United States Civil Service Commission contact office _____._____.__.____ 277 Armstrong, James E., United States attorney’s OBOE el hh bs a wi de me re bp 39 Arner, George B. L.: Committee for Reciprocity Information______ 390 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations______ 359 Arnold, C. R., Farm Credit Administration____ 364 Arnold, Edwin G., War Relocation Authority. 316 Arnold, Gen. Henry H.: Aeronautical Board AA Te rm ma 385 Army Alri Borees onl nu a Ei 333 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great: Britain acl oo cL sa Sia iin 320 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. __________ 404 National Advisory Committee for Aero-; 95 FEAT Sea DR ls Lana a 405 The Joint Beards cL a0, 0g vers ee wey nod 04 Arnold, Leroy D., Office of Indian Affairs______ 352 Arnold, Thurman Wesley, Associate Justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (blography) oe oy oan Coin i lil 432 Aras, ole Gen. William R., Army Service: REAR EE bie TE MR Ta fs Dia 334 ATA “William W., Tax Court of the United States Bee I Bl REEL Sw SA tle IR 437 Arosemena, Col. B. Mario, Panamanian Embassy. 463 Arrington, Anne, Senate Committee on Finance. 265 Arthur, Col. Joseph D., Jr.: Assistant to Engineer Commissioner____!_____ 447 District Engineer Department _______________ 450 Artrip, Floyd, House folding room_______ 271 Arundell, C. Rogers, Tax Court of the United States AS SI AL hs RSE SE 437 Ascarr@inz, Arturo, Bolivian Embassy__________ 456 Ascher, Charles S., National any Agency. _ 408 Asgeirsson, Thorhallur, Iceland Legation. ______ 461 Ashley, Baxter H., Washington city post office. 452 Ashworth, Dr. Reid R., District Health Depart- MEN. UL resin Sn EO Te is 451 Ashy, Ey, House Committee on Elections INR on le Le a TE 273 Ash John W., Bureau of Accounts_________: 340 Askim, Commodore Per, Norwegian Embassy _ 463 Aston, 1, Lee, Office of the Doorkeeper_________ 271 Atcheson, George, Jr., Division of Far Eastern Affairs Re BSA Ye Re SEAN Rl CE 325 Atherton, Ray, Division of European Affairs. __ 324 Atkinson, C. Newell, Municipal Court of Ap- peals for the District of Columbia... .__ I~ 439 Atkinson, Mary Irene, Children’s Bureau. _____ 381 Atkinson, Richard R., District Board of Barber Examiners: =... tl To oihea 447 Atwood, Mrs. Albert, District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Board Auburn, H. W., British Embassy ____._____.___ 460 Auchter, E.C Agricultural Research Administration________ 361 Food Production Administration_____________ 367 ing and Currency Ee eg LE, Eg 0 Ge 220 Avery, Hastings P., Securities and Exchange Commission. id ooioicl 2h aaliee? anid is 416 Aydinalp, Maj. Cemal, Turkish Embassy... ___ oe Ayers, Robert, Federal Security Agency Ayres, William A., Federal Trade Commission_ ie Azer, ‘Anis, Egyptian Legation... Lo 0 08 459 B Babbit, Harry L.: Federal National Mortgage Association. ____ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company 3 War Damage Corporation_..______.__________ Babcock, Charles E., Pan American Union_____ 414 Babcock, Col. Franklin, Office of the Inspector General, War. :. oof io, or ser or netdl 332 Babcock, James O., Civil Service Commission.__ 388 Babcock, Col. Leslie E. ., Office of the Inspector General, WAL on itcu ss, doit den Sty So ni 332 Bachman, Byers M., deputy District assessor. _ 447 Bacon, Arthur S., Office of Fourth .Assistant Postmaster General...=o. 0 ... 339 Individual Index Page Page Bacon, J. Kenly, Division of the American Republies. loool.consi alae 324 Badger, L. Paul, Senate Committee on Educa-tiontand: Labor: ao i i on lita 264 Baekeland, George, National Inventors’ Council CS al Te Cer Ls RR ER 374 Baez, Dr. Manuel Martinez, Pan American Sanitary. Bureau. 2 io oo gy RE on fe Baggarly, F. C., Federal Trade Commission____ 398 Bagley, Dudley W., General Accounting Office. 400 Bahgat, Dr. Mounir, Egyptian Legation________ 459 Bahmer, Robert H., National Archives_________ 406 Bailey, A.D... Patent: Office... ooo uo 373 Bailey, Dr. Bruce K., Freedmen’s Hospital___. 397 Bailey, Edward E., Jr., District license bureau. 449 Bailey, F. J., Bureau of the Budget ___________ 310 Bailey, George O’B., Federal Public Housing SEHEG ERE NE TE A © RE 412 Bailey, Harryette M., House Committee on LE Cy hae os RS a Se ee 273 Bailey, Jennings, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia_. _____ Stato ead La alls 487 Bailey, John W., Jr., Division of Foreign Service Personnel aes 325 Bailey, Lewis W., Office of Secretary of the Sen-oe ate Bailey, R. H., Jr. Secretary to Le Guffey: roo 268 Senate Committee on Mines and Mining_____ 265 Bailey, Ralph, Jr., House post office____________ 272 Bailey, Robert L ] Civil Service Commission Crib ms ER el ae 388 Civil Service Commission contact office_______ 277 Bailey, Warren Worth, Office of the Soren gitthe: Senate. Cnr oi aimaial GI sls Baillieu., Sir Clive, Combined Raw Naiorials Board ee RB Bl eR 32 Bain, I. Y., Bureau of Internal Revenue ___:_._ 329 Bain, Dr. Katherine, Children’s Bureau__._____ 381 Baird, George A., Federal Public Housing Authority i a a a mine 411 Baity,J. L., General Accounting Office ________ 400 Bajpai, Girja, Shankar, British Embassy_______ 459 Baker, A. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine A Ln 362 Baker, Cora W., American Battle Monuments Comm On... ol oo on 385 Baker, Edith M., Children’s Bureau.__________ 381 Baker, Lt. Col. George.H., Selective Service System cs nlaeA Dee 315 Baker, George W., Division of World Trade Intelligenee: "oi ant oo 326 Baker, John C., War Relocation Authority _____ 316 Baker, Walter E., Federal Power Commission__ 392 Baker, Willis M.., "Tennessee Valley Authority__ 421 Bakkie, Melva B., American Red Cross________ 387 Balbuena, C. J ulio, Peruvian Embassy __.._____ 464 Baldridge, Katherine; Senate Committee on Foreign Relations: =. 265 Baldwin, C. B., Farm Security Administration_ 368 Baldwin, Laurence A., Civil Service Commis- 389 Bales, i. A., District deputy purchasing officer. 449 Ballif, Louis S., Tariff Commission_____________ 419 Ballinger, Billy, apitol Bolice ts io 275 Ballinger, E. R., General Accounting Office____ 400 Ballinger, Willis J, Federal Trade Commission. 397 Ballivian, Don Rens, Bolivian Embassy________ 456 Ballon, Dr. Frank W., District Board of Educa- FIOTRS SE AB Dai al dh Sal re ae Ts Se 44 Balls, Alfred G., The Alaska Railroad______.___ 356 Balls, A. Bureau of Agricultural and In- dustrial Chemistry Se SSE nn as 361 Bane, Baldwin B., Securities and” Exchange Commission... ui eam 416 Bang-Jensen, Povl, Danish Legation___________ Banister, Marion, Assistant Treasurer of be United. Btates: =... CL .. oli a Banks, Talcott M., Board of Investigation we Research—Transportation re en 388 Banning, Paul D., special assistant to the Public FET ERT i Ce ln DR a aT 277 Bates, Francisco, Cuban Embassy__.___________ Barayev, Maj. Pavel I., Soviet Socialist Re- publics Embassy 52 220 Fog od oo oo 466 Barber, C. Arthur, Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 352 Barbour, Arnold W., St. Elizabeths Hospital__ 397 83317°—78-1—2d ed. 54 Barbie; Thomas, Advisory Board on National Parks, eter ia odo ante Barbour, W. Warren: Capital Auditorium Commission. ____________ Commission on Enlarging the Capito Grounds: & pint ann mae Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission._ _ i Barclay, R. E., British Embassy. i. = 460 Bard, Ralph A.: Assistant Secretary ofthe Navy....... ilo 341 War Manpower Commission. ________________ 314 Barden, Graham A.: Joint Committee on the Library. oY iri 234 National Archives Couneil ___________________ National Archives Trust Fund Board________ 407 Bardy, Lt. Paulo Antonio Telles, Brazilian Em-Passy. ca I SS a RE 456 Barger, Corinne: Secretary to Senator Tydings_________________ 269 Senate’ Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs Barker, Howard F., Tariff Commission________ 419 Barker, John W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... 2 1 7 00 si 374 Barker, Dr. Joseph W.: Division of Training Liaison and Coordina-i (Tilo mb St mh Sn iE le a 3 Office of Secretary of the Navy _______________ 341 Barker, Orlie V., House post office_____.___.______ 272 Barkley, Alben W.: Interparliamentary Union... ___._____________ 235 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- fon Lo UN a BUR aa 234 Joint Committee on the Library _____________ 234 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board_______ 279 National Archives Couneil .__________________ 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board. _______ 407 Regent, Smithsonian Institution_____________ 417 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission_ 237 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__ 238 Barkley, John F., Bureau of Mines_____________ 354 Barnach-Calbg, Ernesto, Spanish Embassy_____ 464 Barnaud, Albert Js Conciliation Service 30 pada administrative assistant to the Presi- (5 Barnes, Charles M., Treaty Division___________ 326 Barnes, G. O., Office of the Treasurer of the United States 328 Barnes, Joseph, Office of War Information______ 314 Barnes, John S., Soil Conservation Service_____ 368 Bornes Stuart 5, Defense Supplies Corpora- mission re ER A Ere Smt mt ei mim pm aT wan 5 Baron, Maj. Herman: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 401 ElSalvadoran Embassy... oi. 7 459 Baron, Dr. José T., Cuban Embassy_____.______ 457 Barr, Hugh W., deputy clerk, United States Supreme Coart: -x CN e. 429 Barr, Mason, Farm Security Administration, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ________ 369 Barr, Ross R., National Mediation Board______ 413 Barre, H.W, "Bureau of Plant Industry. _______ 363 Barrenechea, "Don Mariano Antonio, Yeacaiin Easy rr 455 Barreto, Dr. Jodo de Barros, Pan American Sani- tary Burresonat 413 Barrett, Edward, Office of War Information.___ 314 Barrett, F., “House foldingyoom=_-So. Barron, Bryton, Division of Research and Pub- Meatlons cco on on nt te en 326 Barrows, J. S., Federal Prison Industries, Inc.. 337 Barrows, Leland, War Relocation Authority. 317 Barse, George P., "judge Municipal Court for the Districtof Columbia. -. 2:2 439 Bartel, W. P., Interstate Commerce Commission. 403 Bartelmes, Christopher D., District Fire De- DATEINENL ne a a RT 450 Bartelt, E. F., Bureau of Accounts_____.________ 329 Bartlett, Arthur C., Food Distribution Admin- Siration. ee 366 Bartlett, Edward L., Secretary of Alaska._._____ 356 Bartlett, Ola, United States attorney’s office___ 439 Bartley, Guy, Inland Waterways Corporation_ 373 Barton, John P., secretary to Senator Murdock. 269 830 | Congressional Directory Page Baruch, Charles M., Office of Secretary of the Navy TE RR PORE SE 339 Barueh, rng Civil Service Commission___.__ 389 Bascuiian, Arturo, Chilean Embassy. _______.__ 457 Bashore, Harry W., Bureau of tion 353 Basinger, Mildred, "Senate Committee on Post Offices and Poot Roads. onions sicizas 266 Bass, Neil, Tennessee Valley Authority_.______ 421 Bassett, Albert E.: Defense Plant Corporation i nl SAE FR 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _______ 375 Bassett, Dr. Charles T., District Board of Dental Examiners. oo. cob oil ioese tiipegsal Daeg 447 Bassett, Henry N., Defense Supplies Corpora- JON IS TE Ee a 376 ‘Bassler, R. S., National Museum ___..___.__.._. 418 Batchelder, Edward D., Office of Secretary of VOASHILY a me es J day 327 Batchelder, ster L., Bureau of Human Nutri-tion and Home Economies. . oo... 363 Bateman, G. C.: Joint Economic Committees... 319 Negara Coordinating Committee.__..__._.__ 319 Bates, F. J., National Bureau of Standards..___ 372 Bates, J. L Maritime Commission ________.___ 405 Bates, iP. H, National Bureau of Standards... _ 372 Bates, Sanford, Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 337 Bathurst, Maurice Edward, British Embassy... a0 Batista, Consuelo, Cuban Embassy Fiala ah 458 Batlle, Dr. Julio Vega, Dominican Embassy... 458 Batschelet, Clarence E., Bureau of the Census. 371 Batt, Willlam L.: Combined Production and Resources Board. _ 2 Combined Raw Materials Board _____.._____. 321 Joint War Production Committee. .occeno-_. 319 Material Coordinating Committee. ...coae--319 ‘War Production Board... is... civaiuiomasaas 316 Batty, R. F., rite Embassy RE nos 460 Baugh, J ames B., Civil Service oy aon Sect aabion rs FL 388 Civil Service Commission contact office _____ 277 Baughman, Capt. C. C., Bureau of Naval Per-SONNEI S250 Sr oa ee Tha of Fear Bh 345 Baughman, J. S., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- TATA LC eeER Baxter, Kilgo O., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Boston, Doran Ww. Office of Secretary of Com- STE STE IN a Ra 370 A *Viadimir I., Soviet Socialist Republics Ey a 466 Beal, Edwin G., Jr., Reference Department, Tibrary of Congress... iii vine 278 Beall, Robert T., Rural Electrification Admin-istration hn BON Sr A SN Sea Beam, Dorothy, House Committee on Public Buildings aod Cronnds.. 273 Beaman, Middleton, Office of Legislative Coun- sel, ee 274 Bear, N. Robert, Office of Personnel._..___.____ 360 Bearce, H.W, National Bureau of Standards__ 372 Beard, Charles A., National Historical Publica- tions Commission... ooo oeoroone 407 Beard, Edward A., District Corporation Coun- sel’s (nih Vn ea RR he Se RL RN 449 Beard, Mary, American Red Cross ..._..__..__ 387 Beard, Ward P., Office of Education. __.__._____ 395 Beasley, Herman C., Court of Appeals for the Pistrictof Columbia...iar. . 432 Beasley, Robert W., Social Security Board... 395 Beatty, George C., Office of the Doorkeeper.... 271 Beatty, Willard W., Office of Indian Affairs.___ 352 Beaulac, Edmund J, Veterans’ Administration. 422 Beck, William C., Ir. Metals Reserve ’Company AL Lat re il 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation... _ 375 Rubber Development Corporation___________ 379 Rubber Reserve Company _ _____.____.___._.____ 377 Beckett, Humphrey, District Engineer Depart- ment. etave a A 450 Beckett, Inspector J. F., Metropolitan Police.__ 451 Beckley, Harold R., Senate Press Gallery_._____ 746 Bedel, Myra, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses___________ 264 Beecher, Commander W. G., Jr., Office of Pub-YicRelations 0. 0 dona ne 342 Begg, John M., Division of Cultural Relations__ 324 Page Belcher, Donald, Office of Procurement and Materials on coh se nt a ES a Gr 342 Debates ah a a AL SS Ti ea ete Belin, Ferdinand L., National Galley of Art_._. iH Bell, Charles S., Office of Secretary of the Treas-oh 2 Bell, Daniel W.: American Red Cross. _. ooo ooo eoeeeeie Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. 5 Under Secretary of the Treasury. ___.._.... Bell, E. W., General Accounting Office___._____ 400 Bell, Elizabeth N., House Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries_ _______________ 273 Bell, R. P., Joint War Production Committee_. 320 Bell, Ww. B. Fish and Wildlife Service _________ 355 Bell, Ww. Gordon, ‘Washington city post office._ 452 Belmont, Mrs. August, American Red Cross... 386 Belsley, G. Lyle, War Production Board...= 316 Belton, Lillian, Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds... _.._________ 266 Bench, Lt. Comdr. Edward C., Office of Secre-tary of the Navy. 0 aa 341 Benefield, Kathryn, Senate Committee on Immi-gan AA JER As Bey PL AE ls Bi -265 Beri Sfueh H., Soil Conservation Service.. 368 Bennett, James V.: Bennett, John E., Office of the Doorkeeper. .... 271 Benson, Col. R. L., British Embassy___________ 460 Bent, Donn, National Labor Relations Board.. 412 Bentley, Fay L., judge, juvenile court. ________ 440 Bentley, Harriet, Committee on Conference Minority of theSenate. 264 Benton, Russell W., Division of Exports ado Requirements A a SR EIR NE SE Beresford, Robert F., secretary, District rt iners and registrars of architects. ____..____. 447 Berezin, Col. Pavel Fedorovich, Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy... a 466 Silicoin Berge, Wendell, Assistant Attorney General___ 336 ° Bergstrom, P. R. Hichens, Swedish Embassy___ 465 Berkey, Kenneth Ww. Food Distribution Admin- REI ATH eet Sila et Se SAL SL 366 Berkshire, Stewart, Internal Revenue Bureau... 329 Berle, Adolf A., Jr.: Assistant Secretary of State________.._________ 323 Board of Economic Operations. ...._._.___.___ 324 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 325 Board of Foreign Service Personnel __________ 325 Export-Import Bank of Washington ___....___ 378 Joint Economic Committees... __..... 319 Berlin, Charles K., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ES ei Berlin, Isaiah, British Embassy. __.._.________ 460 Berlinsky, Joseph W., Postal Telegraph-Cable . 276 Bernard, Merrill, Weather Bureau... ..____.___ 373 Bernhardt, Joshua, Food Distribution Admin-istration Le a I LH da 3 SHEE 367 Bernstein, Edward M., Division of Monetary Researeh. wo. Ur Go ion ich co gien nl = Berry, Frank G., District Fire Department____ 450 Berry, Lt. Col. ’ George G., War Department Qeneral:Stafl 0 by loo i ors 333 Berry, Commander Robert W., Office of Public Relations’ Dito ios oo itis cin) dara 342 Berryhill, Porter, The Alaska Railroad .____._. 356 Bertrand, Sam, Capitol Pollee. = co oor. 275 Bethea, Liston P., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System: __— 0 __o. Betterley, Joseph F., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ooo... 339 Beuret, Rear AdmiralJ. D., National Inventors’ Council I Ti ian i Sr Sg 2 374 Bevans, Brig. Gen. James M., Army Air Forces. 333 Beveridge, Delia, Senate Committee on Immi-: gration =...teak i 264 Bey, Mahmoud Hassan, Egyptian Minister__.. 459 Beyer, Clara M ., Division of Labor Standards. . 381 Bejarano, Dr. Jorge, Pan American Sanitary Beyer, Otto S., War Manpower Commission___ 314 111 EN Sa ee SS Se SE ae 413 Bhakdi, Luang Dithakar, Thai Legation... 465 Page Bianchi, Dr. Jo8o Antonio de, Portuguese Min-pon Bickers, ThomasE. Natu Mediotion Bowl. 4136 Bicknell, John W., Rubber Development Cor-poration a As 379 Biddle, Francis (Attorney General): American Red Cross... oo0. a i fl 386 Biography ol ion aiaaie 336 Board of Economic Warfare_________._________ 317 Member, Smithsonian Institution_.__..._.._. 1 a A. G., Office of Fourth an Pm Gonoral noi oa. 0S 340 Biffle, Leslie L.: American Battle Monuments Commission____ 385 Secretary tothe Majority... = ~~: 266 Biggar, O. M., Permanent Joint Board on De- FENSeuta en a 415 Bigge, George E., Social Security Board________ 394 Biggers, A. Brice, Bureau ofShips.___...__._____ 345 Biggs, Capt. B. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel _ 345 Bigham, Truman o Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation A 387 Billard, George C., Bureau of Internal Revenue_ 329 Bilmanis, Alfred, Latvian Minister. ___._______ 462 Binley, Walter S., General Land Office_________ 351 Birdsall, Guy H., 'Veterans’ Administration____ 422 Birgfeld, Frank AL Chief Clerk, Treasury De- partments d a baer a a eh ah 327 Birkett, Sonmpnier FrederickJ., Coast Guard. 348 Bishop, C Office of Price Administration 315 Bishop, 0. W. (Runt), Joint Committee on the LE a INR Sr SS SI SEE 234 Bishop, E. L., Tennessee Valley Authority__. 421 Bishop, H. K., Public Roads Administration.. 399 Bishop, William W., Jr., assistant to the legal advisor ova ye a eas 326 Bishopp, F. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine RE RT Se 362 Bissell, William J., Public Buildings Adminis-tration le be Sarr SR ane Se A rE 399 Bittencourt, Aluysio Guedes Regis, Brazilian Embassy. re aa ray 456 Bittner, Van A., National War Labor Board... 311 Bjornsson, Henrik Sv., Iceland Legation_______ 461 Blaauboer, Commander J., Netherlands Em- hassy il i a 462 Black, A. G.: Farm Credit Administration. ________________ 364 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ..___._. 365 Food Production Administration .___________ 367 Black, Eugene, Tax Court of the United States_. 437 Black, Col. Garland C., Army Ground Forces_. 333 Black, Hugo L., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography) ____ 427 Black, J. K., Tennessee Valley Authority. _____ 420 Black, Ramsey S., Third Assistant Postmaster General Srna ne SR ane ST 339 Black, William C., Veterans’ Administration_. 421 Blackburn, Katherine C., Office of War Infor- 1 TI Se a SEE Ee ele She 314 Hiaglow, Arthur M., Disaster Loan Corpora- Bins " “B., Office of Sergeant at Arms of | Le ER i EE Le ae Blair, Henry P., Columbia Hospital for Women _ 20 Blair, Livingston L., American Red Cross_.____ 387 Blair-Smith, Robert M., Securities and Ex- change Commission A SH CE Sk 416 Blaisdell, Thomas C., Jr., National Resources Planning: Board. co onionoi oo 310 li Blake, Harry, District’ Zoning Adjustment ~ Er rt a PR Ee LEN ae OT Blake iy Lt. Col. Harry, British Embassy... 460 Blalack, Elizabeth P., Senate Committee on Indian AIS i in and na eh a 265 Blanco, Juan Carlos: Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Uruguayan Ambassador_.____________._______ 466 Bland, Oscar E., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography).._..___________ 433 Bland, Schuyler Otis: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-OY A as a To 237 Virginia aos Monitor Commission___ 237 Page Bland, Mrs. Schuyler Otis, Congressional Club. 390 Blandford, John B., Jr.: Administrator, National Housing Agency..__ 408 War Manpower Commission ________________ 314 Blandy, Rear Admiral W. H. P., Bureau of Ordnemee. co rn a a ey 345 Blanning, W. Y., Interstate Commerce Com-MISSION...Rae ar A Tn 03 Bledsoe, Oni A. M., Bureau of Naval Per-goomel. Coo or ei ay 344 Bledsoe, Samuel B.: Office of Secretary of Agriculture. ..._._.._. 358 Office for Agricultural War Relations __.______ 359 Blee, C. E., Tennessee Valley Authority.__.___ 420 Bliss, D. Spencer, Bureau of Internal Revenue. 329 Bloch, Admiral C. C.: Board on Production Awards zi aii 344 General Board-. o.oo coodbiiLl 343 Bloom, Frank, National Labor Relations Board. 412 Bloom, Sol: Columbia Institution for the Deaf STASI NL 397 Foreign Service Buildings Commission _______ 325 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__. 238 Blough, Roy, Division of Tax Research 330 Blowe, Frank C., Federal Deposit Insurance Gorporation. :»> 0. 00 SL Sai El 392 Blumer, Charles G., Office of Plant and Opera-2 Bona, Miss: Mabel T., American Red Cross Bobahill.i Senate Committee on Interstate oe Commerce... 8. or i Boetzelaer, Baron W. van, Netherlands Em- Re 462 Doan Valter S., House document room_____ 272 Boggs, S. W., Office of the Geographer_________ 325 Boiger, Capt. J. F., Office of Secretary of the S21 For Bolin iE: , Advisory Board on National Pally oles tl 357 Bolwell, Charles S., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions 381 Bond, Elizabeth, Special Committee on Con- “servation of Wildlife Resources... .._.... 209 Bond, James H., War Manpower Commission__ 315 Bond, Lt. Comdr., John A.,;Coast and Geodetic Survey ae La a SE eR i Bond, William C., Administrative Department, Library of Congress nn 279 Bondy, Robert E., American Red Cross_..___._ 386 Bonesteel, Verne Ce Federal Home Loan Bank System NER Pe CRS SB bt Bonner, Herbert C., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy are CL a Td 237 Bonnet, Col. George A., Selective Service System 315 Bonsal, Philip Ww. Division of the American Republics i le POR ARR) Rl TT SS 324 Boon, Dr. H. N., Netherlands Embassy..__.__ 462 Boote, Ward E, Employees’ Compensation Commission... ic Smash my Booth, Fenton W., chief justice (retired), Court of ‘Claims nn a a LL SLE ee Boothe, Gardner L., II, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. Hysiom iar hos 393 Borden, Commander F. S., Coast and Geodetic HASee Borella, Victor, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs vn oi Bil ol wae 312 Borges da Fonseca, Landulpho Antonio, Brazil-jan Bmbaggy + 0 Si as 456 Borja, Col. Augustin Alban, Inter-American De- fense Board 40 Bormann, Oscar, Brazilian Embassy. .___._____ 456 Boss, Robert L. , Washington city ii office... 452 Bostrom, W., Swedish Minister... c. 2 465 Botkin, Claude O., District penal institutions.. 449 Bouchard, 1..G., Joint Economic Committees. 319 Boucherie, Capt. Jorge R., Argentine Embassy. 455 Bourg, Walter A. de, Swiss Legation.io. 465 Bourn, Frank B., Office of Secietary of War____ 331 Bourne, Thomas B., Civil Aeronautics Admin- istration. coo olin ange 374 832 Congressional Directory Page Bouve, Clement Lincoln, Copyright Office, Library of i.i_ _Z.o...C 279 Congress... Bovard, Burton C., Federal Housing Adminis- tration Ls a phe taal Si paren BE an Bowen Mary3 G., Senate Committee of Mines and Mining... al ooo oo sasanitiani 265 Bowen, Rear Admiral Harold G.: National Inventor’s Council. ozcoeeo-. 374 Office of the Secretary of the Navy.-_.._.._.___ 341 Bowen, Tudor, War Production Board.....___ 316 Bowen, ‘Walter S., Secret Service. _.__..L_____.__ 328 Bower, Ward T., "Fish and Wildlife Service... 355 Bowles, Oliver, Bureau of Mines. ....__........ 354 Bowman, Isaiah, National Academy of Sciences. 405 Bowman, James S., Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Bowman, Lilian T, Tariff Commission. .__.___ 420 Boyd, G. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ______________ 363 Boyd, Howard B., Office for Agricultural War Cea eT ae le 359 Boykin, Edward, Thomas Jefferson Bicenten- nial Commission RSE RT TENE LEE ST ote (ARE pn Boykin, L. E., Public Roads Administration_. 399 Boyle, §William M. ., secretary to Senator Tru-5 Same ne US Bs re EU ee 3) LAN 26 Braces, James R., Office’of War Information. 314 Bradley, "Maj. Gen. Follett, Army Air Forces._ 333 Bradley, Mrs. Fred, Congressional Club. oi 390 Beagled, Frederick, Columbia Hospital for ’ So Sere ARCA a SE OR 89 Braco .ohn G., National Archives. ._._______ 406 Bradley, L. F., District Pharmacy Board.______ 448 Bradshaw, Clarence R., General Land Office. 351 Bradshaw, Emily A. "Senate Committee on ~ Mines and Mining. A eee SE ERTL E 265 Jaina (Lon) Cheney, secretary to Senator fewarbe onl eR 269 Brainerd, Ti Col. Joseph B., Selective Service System. sons ces aloo an SOW Lent 315 Bramhall, Walter F., Municipal Court for the Districtiof Columbian...70 .... 439 Branch, Harllee, Civil Aeronautics Board..____ 374 Brands Rear Admiral Charles L., Bureau of 5 I ERL EN er En na EE IRE Jel Tan arf ME Lon 45 Brand, RX. H., Combined Food Board, nied States and Great Britain__________________ Brand, T. H., Combined Production and sources Board po Lasts dhe Oil 321 Brandes, E. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ____ 363, 364 Brandt, Alva E., Soil Conservation Service____ 368 Brandt, George 5. Office of Secretary of State. 323 Brannen, Lt. Comdr. P. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel co... amma rina in 345 Brannon, Gerrard M., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation WEE RCA LE 234 Brasch, Frederick E., Reference Department, Congressional Library FS SR Sa [3 kid LOTS 27 Brasel, Royal H., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Conlineree... i. iain don. ads 372 Brasse, Ernest B., Washington city post office_. 452 Brassor, Francis ¥., Civil Service Commission. 389 Braswell, Ethel A United States attorney’s office iii le, Jah cd diale UE Sloat 439 Bratten, Flo. E., Committee on Conference Ma-jority of the Benate, ania oid 264 cove Bratton, Rear Admiral L. E., Office of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy an in 342 Bray, William J., Office of the Postmaster Gen-’ Brearley, James A., Chief Clerk, Patent Office. 373 Brehm, Louis, Office of the First Assistant Post-TASEEr GENOTAl oeasid oot Smead olson 338 Breimyer, Rachel Styles, Senate Committee on Immigration 5. lis Loaiszelidond 2 265 Breining, Harold W., Veterans’ Administration 421 Brennan, A. T., Union of South Africa Legation. 465 Brennan, B. M., International Pacific’ Salmon Fisheries Commission odtiasa it Seah Sonnet 403 Brennan, George M., Farm Credit Administra-he ae HE ER Te Ge EE RA ETI 64 Brennan, John A., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster.General soo. ioe unnacaorailn 339 Brennan, Robert, Irish Minister _______________ 461 Brennan, Roland M., District purchasing TT ep AL SA Pa CU LS ET pelt 449 Page Brero, L.. H., van, Netherlands Embassy.____._ 463 Bresnahan, Harold W., Office of Postmaster Generals co So DT Rte 338 subletna Brewer, E. G., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine! =o oii an ol i SER ILE 362 Bridge, Quintin, British Embassy... _-.________ 460 Bridges, Styles, National Forest Reservation Compiission . .....c. .i-c. Sl niles 235 Bret Wainwright, House Committee on e720 FOE Sie is Ml SE Oe SR EO Bridgman, G. Temple, Metals Reserve Com- In SR LEP Sle I RT A Br D. 8., Maritime Commission._..._.___ 405 Brigden,J. B., ’ Australian Legation. oven .o 455 Briggs, George N., Office of Secretary of the Imterior. 0. = nea ta as 350 Briggs, Lyman J.: Federal Fire Counell oc o_o= i. 400 National Advisory Committee for Aeronau- Ts ER i ie Ba As TER National Bureau of Standards___-.-_-______... 372 Brigham, Reuben, Extension Service. ....__..__ 369 Brinker, S. W., House folding room ____________ 271 Bristol, Col. Matt C., United States Soldiers’ Home ME ee TR SERS SR CT 419 Bristol, Ralph S., Office of Indian Affairs. ______ 352 Britt, 0. Lis National Bureau of Standards___--372 Brittain, Dr. Marion Luther, Federal Prison Industries, ING... ==. creo dt aio tes 337 Broadway, Mary Louise, Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry... ---____. 264 Brockett, Paul, National Academy of Sciences. 406 Brockway, Glenn E., War Manpower Com- WUSSION rain oie ~ Pim mi ai ia ene 315 Broderick, James W., assistant production manager, Government Printing Office. _____ 277 Bronson, Ralph B., National Mediation Board. 413 Bronz, George, Office of Bituminous Coal Con- sumer’ Counsel... ci ci esi el 413 Bronzonie, John A.: District Engineer Department____________ 450 District Plumbing Board... coco. 448 Brooke, E. P., District Engineer Department... 450 Brooker, Floyd E., Office of Education -__._____ 396 Brooks, Henry Q., 'Veterans’ Administration... 422 Brooks, Philip C., National Archives __________ 406 Brooks, Robert C., office of Official Reporters of Debates __ A on a a 267 Broome, John P., Federal Public Housing Authority =o is os Sm eat 412 Brophy, Murry, Office of War Information... 314 Hrofdik, Rear Admiral Joseph J., Bureau of hy Ips A ee 4 Bony Edgar B., Tariff Commission_ _...__. 419 Broughton, Philip’ S., War Manpower Com- mission Te 315 Bir Addie: Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex- amining Board a a. 344 Naval Examining Board -. .--~ o.oo 344 Naval Retiring Board =~ ~-----__-c... 344 Brown, B. B., Solid Fuels Administration for 3 : 57 for SWar Brown, Bryant C., secretary, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation _____________ 234 Brown, Clare Y., War Production Board liaison Oona ca TR Cl ER 277 Brown, 2 2 C., Commodity Credit Cor-poration tiie nl ot a ee SE el 369 Brown, Edward, superintendent, House Office Buildings. >: vs Thos id ao Ua ols 275 Brown, Ella A., Office of Register of Wills__.___ 440 Brown, Elsie, Pan American Union____________ 414 Brown, Francis C., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. occa onl SE RT 392 Brown, George E., Veterans’ Administration___ 422 Brown, G. Stewart, American Red Cross___.____ 387 Brown, J. Maughs, Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 352 Brown, Lucile, Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Affairs __._________.___._. 266 Brown, Norman C., National Capital Park and Planning Cominisstone, on eestoronda Individual Index | 833 Page Brown, Brig. Gen. Philip E., Office of the In- Spector General,yWay. ov or Cae 332 Brown, Prentiss M.: Office of Economic Stabilization______________ +313 Office of Price Administration________________ 318 War ProductionBoeard 2. mina ar conn 315 Brown, Lt. Comdr. P. P., Bureau of Supplies and iAiceconnis ross gins Sia Seah Then 346 Brown, Roy. W.., Capitol. Police. o_o...of. 275 Brown, Walter, Office of Economic Stabiliza- Hon: Losi cds nian Vim ul Brown, Walter D., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General. ______.________ 339 Brown, Walworth, Office of Experiment Station. 364 Brownell, Col. George A., Office of the Assistant Becretoryof War. io. coins So oad in 331 Brownell, R. A., Reconstruction Finance Cor-_ poration Flaps In Ee ae VL RN Lh BREA 3 Browning, Col. A. J., Army Service Forces. ____ 334 Browning, Powell, Columbia Hospital for Women ia Dol i Nene EE aa 389 Bruce, David K. E., “National Gallery of Art._ 418 Bruce, J. E., Union of South Africa Legation___ 466 Bruch), Leone, Bureau of Internal Revenue_____ 329 Bruggmann, Charles, Swiss Minister. __________ 465 Brummett, Walter H., Jr., Work Projects Ad- ministration sovsg Ste cte BT oar ins 399 Brun, Carl A. C., Danish Legation____.________ 458 Brun, Constantin, Danish Legation____________ 458 Brunet, Capt. Alberto D.: Argentine Embassy =... oo. oir Cua 455 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 401 Brunicardi, Austin, House folding room ________ 271 Brunning, E. J., Joint War Production Com- mittee al ci et AN Sr ay sa a 320 Bryan, Irving, District corporation counsel’s HESS sete lB a SRR RT RS She 49 Bryan, Jack H., Farm Security Administration. 369 Bryan, James ‘William, Office of Secretary of Gommeres: =... Cha AEs 370 Bryan, John Stewart, Washington National Monument Society... ....0 cio li: 423 Bryarly, William A., District Fire Department. 450 Bryce, Marie M., Office of Secretary of Labor.__ 380 Bryn, Aage, Norwegian Embassy _________.____ 463 Buch, John W., Bureau of Mines_______________ 354 Buck, Solon J.: Federal. Pire.Counell-= oi. 400 Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. _._____________ 407 National Arehives....: fcc. oo 406 National Archives Council _________________._ 407 National Archives Trust Fund Board._______ 407 National Historical Publications Commission. 407 Trustee of Franklin D. Rooseyelt Library... 407 Si D. E., District veterinary sur- 0 Sag Kate, Office of the Under Secre-tary ol War... ru. naan a 331 Buckley, Francis J., Office of the Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General... ....: 7. _. __. 339 Buckley, James L., Office of Personnel .________ 360 Bucknell, Howard, Jr., Division of Current In- formation Co li oh al 324 Budlong, Herbert N., Official Reporter, Senate. 267 Buehler, Lafayette a, Office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster omeral. di er 338 Buenaventura, Col. Ernesto: : Colombian Embassy. 2. oii ee anwmmanass 457 Inter-American Defense Board. ___.__________ 401 Puls, Alfred L., Joint Committee on 1 Ra De A Te Ne Ge 234 Bundy, Harvey H., Office of Secretary of War__ 331 Bunke, Michael J., Office of the Doorkeeper___. 271 Bunker, Rear Admiral C. W. O., National Naval Medical Center._._.:._._. ....._.... 346 Bunker, Edward J., District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Board ________________ 448 Bunn, Charles, Office of the Secretary of State._ 323 Bunten, Elizabeth, District corporation coun- SelB Ofer eaenn 449 Page Burbridge, Charles E., Freedmen’s Hospital___ 397 Burden, William A. M.: Office of the Secretary of Commerce ____.____ 370 Notions] Advisory Committee for Aeronau- Plnanee. 5 ooo cowhne saanara ln 265 Burdick, B. F., Panama Canal Burford, A. D., Bureau of Internal Revenue___ 329 Burger, Roy E., Office of Secretary of Labor____ 380 Burgess, Ethel W., Civil Service Commission__ 389 Burgess, George W., Office of Secretary of Com- Burgess, Ralph E., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation)...oe on So. 234 Burgin, Mrs. William O., Congressional Club__ 390 Burke, Edmund, Jr., Securities and Exchange Commissionsous;a sol ao sla lr on ic os 416 Burke, Mrs. Edward R., Congressional Club___ 300 Burke, George J., War Shipping Administration_ 318 Burke, John, United States attorney’s office.___ 439 Burke, Thomas, Division of International Com- munications ad cous to dada iS da 326 Burke, Vincent C., postmaster, Washington City Post Office... o.oo ge sl 452 Burke, Lt. Col. William E., Headquarters Ma-rine Corps: io om ola 0 Sal Burklin, R. DS share; Federal Home Loan Bank Burlew, Ebert K.: Office of Secretary ofthe Interiore..........-.. 350 Indian Arts and Crafts Board________________ 352 Burling, H. R., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration i: roan nie nn an ity nse 392 Burney, Arthur W., National Park Service_____ 353 Burnham, Paul F., Tariff Commission________ 419 Burns, Beulah, Office of Official Reporters of Pebates ii oon ig an re Se Burns, Harmon, Jr., House Radio Gallery_____-4b Burns, Maj. Gen. J. H. Munitions Assignments Boards bork fis ih reese Hr 320 Burpee, Lawrence J., International Joint Com-mission... ssooedosonSo Soon cual Saiki Burrows, James W., quartermaster’s depart- ment, Marine Corps..;. ... -_ . J. 1 —~0 347 Bursley, Sidney G., Washington city post office_ 452 Burton, Ishmael, Federal Trade Commission... 398 Bush, Dr. Vannevar: Regent, Smithsonian Institution_____________ 417 National Advisory Committee for Aero-nautles ooo le an ae Od 405 Office of Scientific Research and Development. 313 Buskie, George F., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... vb ote foie asian mae 375 Buskirk, Arthur B. Van, Office of Lend-Lease Administration: ci. S.C oslo alls 313 Bustamente, Joaquin C., International Bound-ary Commission, United States and Mexico. 402 Butler, Donald H., Food Distribution Admin- SITIO. oe ns ae en LT Sl SS 366 Butler, George H., Federal Works Agency____--398 Butler, H. B., British Embassy... 459 Butler, Rear ‘Admiral H. V., Administrative fice, Navy oo: io eae ooeiecciorntr 342 Butler, Jarvis: AeronaguticaliBoard i. oiimeceanaooa: 385 General Board, Navy cocaineaos 343 Joint Economy Board... veneer 404 Balers Ulysses, Interstate Commerce Commmis- OY se a a A a A ate Be or had bt SS Tet er Bittern, Howard, office of Official Rope ers of Debates ie SE ld He ST Ee Butts, E. R., Administrative Division_________ 337 Byram, William E., Civil Service Commission_ 389 Byrd, Harry Flood: Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditares. .. _.._/ _....._-o-=.-23 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission... 238 Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission___. 237 Byrne, James A., secretary to Senator Gerry... 268 Byrne, Peter T., Securities and Exchange Com-138 C0 HE nan a Me a ER =~ 416 Byrnes, James F., Office of Economic Stabiliza-771 ers ARTE PEE Be a Ca Sal ER 312 Byron, Brig. Gen. Joseph W., Army Service ie R0IYy eo Han ee a IN SAR Lo C Page Cabell, Col. Charles P., Army Air Forces_____. 333 Carbo, Esteban F., Ecuadoran Embassy. _____ 458 Cabell, Louise, Office of Secretary of the Senate. 264 Cardenas, Col. Cristobal Guzman, Mexican Cabot, John M., Division of the American Re-Embassy.» coc cio a rene du 461 publiesl: Seo ionnin, Eel 324 Cardillo, Frank A., Employees’ Compensation Caceres, Dr. Julian R.: : Commission... aint ola Lill pl Lila) 390 Governing Board, Pan American Union..._._ 414 Honduran Ambassador. ooo o_o. 461 Cadenas, Lt. Felipe: Cardozo, Lt. Col. Joao Vicente Sayao, Joint Cuban Embassy 2 oo... loots ln. Couns 458 Brazil-United States Defense Commission. 322 Inter-American Defense Board. __________.____ 401 Careaga, José M., Spanish Embassy. _________ 464 Cady, John B., Office of the Fourth Assistant Carey, James W., Alaskan International High- Postmaster General. oo. rc uiio ater 339 way Commission... 08 i. oo LL TR 235 Caemmerer, H. P., Commission of Fine Arts___ 389 Carey, Col. W. N., Federal Works Agency..__ 398 Cafirey, Anthony B., District Receiving Home Cargill, Tom C., Office of the First Assistant for:Children..o... 00 sihrseitumng 449 Postmaster ul oc. oC General......i 338 Caffrey, James J., Securities and Exchange Com-Carle, Charles H., Office of the Fourth Assistant WSSIonI DRE Snra a al Postmaster General. __._______. _._.._.._.. 339 Cagle, C. E., Board of Governors of the Federal Carlson, Fred A., Official Reporter, Senate..._ 267 Reserve System. jC. Loti iowa ro nL 00 393 Carlson, Lt. Col. N. V., Office of Censorship™.__ 318 Cahill, Raymond T., Federal Housing Adminis-Carlson, Vivian, Civil Service Commission._.__ 389 tration ie Seasiie ie vans fas pind cea Loot 409 Carmichael, H. J., Joint War. Production Com-Cairns, Huntington, National Gallery of Art__. 418 apdtbee Ludi ss rain SL 320 Cake, G. L., Bureau of Accounts. ______________ 329 Carmichael, Dr. Oliver C., American Red _Calderén, Carlos, Colombian Embassy_________ 457 Cross aad ren nl J See Sana 386 Caldwell, Dr. Bernie R., Veterans’ Administra-Carmody, Charlotte L., Office of Secretary of CH TA at Laat sss on see a LERDE RR 22 Commerce. 2.0 as as So FR a LS 370 Calhoun, Leonard J., Federal Security Agency. 394 Carmody, John M., Maritime Commission._.__ 404 Calkin, Claude B., National Labor Relations Carpenter, Col. Giles R., Army Ground Forces. 333 Board = neniiR a 412 Carpenter, Otto F., National Mediation Board. 413 Callahan, Harvey G., Metropolitan Police_____ 451 Carpenter, Steve, radio rooms, Capitol._________ 276 Callahan, Joseph H., House folding room .______ 271 Carpenter, S. R., Board of Governors of the Fed-Callahan, Vincent F., War Savings Staff _______ 330 eral Reserve i...0 393 System. 1.5L Calloway, Roger M., reading clerk of the House. 270 Carr, Adaline S. E.: Calver, Dr. George W., Capitol physician______ 275 Secretary to Senator Connally ______________ 268 Calvery, Herbert O., Food and Drug Adminis- Senate Committee on Foreign Relations..___ 265 tration ionalTal sna 396 Carr, Charlotte, War Manpower Commission. 314 Camacho-Lorenzan, José, Colombian Embassy. 457 Carr, Robert M., Division of Commercial Policy Cameron, Angus, Work Projects Administration 399 ili io loo aaa. and-Agreements. 23% Camp, Thomas L., House Committee on Civil Carr, Margaret V., United States attorney’s Service a i AL a UE 273 4 Campbell, Edward G., National Archives .____ 406 Campbell, Gary, General Accounting Office____ 400 Campbell, Gerald, British Embassy___._______ 459 Campbell, Forbes: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation._...__ 392 Office of Alien Property Custodian___________ 311 Campbell, H. Lyle, Federal Public Housing Authority is. 2d olan aie ol nd J 411 311 ply Eo onlin Po pk £1 ML ea 16 Campbell, J. Phil, Soil Conservation Service... 368 Carter, Amon G., Territorial Expansion Memo- Campbell, Maj. Gen. L. H., Jr., Army Service rial Commission... 00 oo a 237 Forces ce. = SUSue Linn 334 Dean Carter, Clarence E., Division of Research and + Campbell, R. I., British Embassy..........__. 459 Publication... 0. Coll eddalo ie iis, 326 Campbell, Stuart B., Board of Appeals on Visa Carter, E. E,, Forest: Service... .......... 365 Carter, Maude V.,. Civil Service Commission. 389 Carter, Millie, Senate Committee on Com- ELA Ee er gio + LR ORS 396 TRRYCO. Jol sn sbis 2s Ak Smo E © Sn A 264 Campbell, Col. William F., Army Ground Carter, Rear Admiral W. J., Bureau of Supplies Borees on coool beeen. ni BE TINO 333 and Aceounts. oo oiae laa nonin IEE 346 Campbell del Campo, Carlos, Chilean Embassy. 457 Carusi, Ugo, Office of the Attorney General.. 336 Campiche, Samuel Francois, Swiss Legation___ 465 Carvalho, Maj. Gen. Estevao Leitao de, Joint Campo, Lt. Col. P. A. Eliseo Martin del., Mexi- Brazil-United States Defense Commission. 322 ean Brabassy. sii cou alana iia Tin 462 Cary, Charles A., Bureau of Dairy Industry.. 362 Campos Ros, Dr. Néstor M., Paraguayan Em- Casanova, Arturo Y., Patent Office___._..______ 373 LOTR a0 DL SE Rt tg HEE CHA Eg 463 Case, George W., Office of Education._________ 396 Canaga, Capt. B. L., Bureau of Naval Personnel. 345 Canfield, Gordon, Board of Visitors to the Naval Case, Norman §8., Federal Communications Commission. z..a02 00 391 0 Academy. LoraaE Ta Ln 237 Cann, Norman D., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 329 Case, Col. R. A., Army Service Forces_._______ 334 Canning, J. B., Food Distribution Administra- Casey, Eugene, special executive assistant to the President... Loo Soo le Duo sl la as ir ene a el ST 31S SRR Le OU BE 366 Cannon, Clarence: : Casey, Walter J., judge, Municipal Court for the Regent, Smithsonian Institution_ ____________ 417 Districtcof. Columbia... or. oot 439 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Cashell, Irving M., Distriet Board of Examiners, Federal Expenditures. tel oio 239 Veterinary Medicine. coi coal. 448 ........ Cannon, John Q., Jr., Civil Service Commission. 388 Cashion, Edward H., Securities and Exchange Cannon, John T., Jr., House post office________ 272 Commission. iu...) nese toni os J 416 Cannon, Mary M., Women’s Bureau. _________ 382 Cass, Otto, District Home for Aged and Infirm. 449 Cannon, Walter B., National Academy of Cassels, John M., Food Distribution Adminis- Selenees. coo ton. 0 Lo RE LL SU -40 ERry (SRa a eS el 366 Cantrell, Lawson J., District Board of Educa-Cassiday, Elmer J., Washington city post office. 452 30 Cree Ren TCT CHE Aa eR pe 448 COassiday, Norwood P., Bureau of Supplies and Canyes, Manuel, Pan American Union________._ 414 ACCOUNIE. o.oo on bras et ie dal SE ar aa OL 346 Capp, Robert W., Food Distribution Adminis-Cassiday, William J., Director of Purchases, FE Se a Ri Sr 366 Government Printing Office..._____________ 278 Capps, S. R., Geological Survey... _..__._._...__ 352 Castellanos, Col. Félix: Capt, J. C., Director, Bureau of the Census... 371 Guatemalan Embassy...______.l._. = 461 Caraway, Hattie W., Joint Committee on the Inter-American Defense Board. _______________ 401 15 Tye Rae ee ty ee EE Ss 234 Castendyck, Elsa, Children’s Bureau.._____._. -381 | ‘ Individual Index Page Castillo Najera, Dr. Francisco: Mexican Ambassador. == oo aS 462 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Castillo Najera, D., Maj. Francisco: Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- Mexican Embassy... eeveeaa _ 462 Castillo Najera, Luis, Mexican Embassy. ______ 414 Castro, Hector David: El Salvadoran Ambassador... _____.___._..____ 459 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Castro, Morris F. de, Commissioner of Finance, Virgindslands: co 0. ua a a 356 Castro, Capt. Manuel Martinez, Mexican Em- assy Caswell, L. F., official stenographer to House COMIAILIERS o-ooa ena ata Cathcart, James M., Senate post office _.___.._ 266 Caton, Louise G., Library of Congress____.___._ 278 Cattell, Roscoe A., Bureau of Mines____________ 354 Catton, Bruce, War Production Board __.______ 316 Catudal, Honoré Marcel, Division of Commer- cial Policy and Agreements ________________ 324 Caulfield, Leo F., Office of the Doorkeeper__._. 271 Cavanagh, Helen L., District Public Library___ 448 Cavanaugh, Andrew J., Securities and Exchange Commission: so ol So tn tie in. aie @avness, Olin, Capitol Police____.______________ 275 Cayton, Nathan, judge, Municipal Court of Ap- peals for the District of Columbia__________ 439 Cefalo, Nicholas, Office of the Majority Leader-270. Cervenka, Dr. Karl, Czechoslovakian Legation. 458 /Chacin, Francisco Alvarez, Venezuelan Em- DABSY... iv imran A LR Ee ae Sn 466 Chaffee, Alney E., reading clerk of House____.. 270 Chalker, Rear Admiral L. T., Coast Guard____ 348 Chamberlin, Edward H., National Advisory Committee for Aeronauties.________________ 405 Chambers, Ralph L., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Chambers Reed M.: . Defense Supplies Corporation. ____._____._____ 376 Rubber Development Corporation. ________._ 379 Chambers, Robert: Bureau of. Customs. . orev ede 328 Office of General Counsel of the Treasury_.._. 328 Chambers, Thomas B., Soil Conservation Serv- ant Postmaster General...__._. 339 Champe, Elizabeth, District Minimum Wage | and Industrial Safety Board _______________ 448 Chance, Elora, Senate Committee on the LAbrany. = i REE as 265 Chandler, Henry P., Administrative Office of the United States Courts. =... _..__ 438 Chandler, Capt. W. D., General Board_________ 343 Chaney, Alvan C., District Public Library___.. 448 Chaney, Donald J., Fish and Wildlife Service.. 355 Chapdelaine, Jean, Canadian Legation_________ 456 Chapin, Selden, Committee on Political Plan- MENG a a a OST He 324 Chapline, Capt. Vance D., Interior Control Board =. 0 a ead Tay 343 Chapline, W. R., Forest Service_.______._._.______ 365 Chapman, E. A., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mesticiCommMereR i. oopios.anasto 371 aon Chapman, Harlen M., Solid Fuels Administra- rr A a er a Rp ee at 357 Chapman, Nancy, secretary to Senator Johnson 0b Colorado:..i. he isles dane dS 269 Chapman, Oscar L., Assistant Secretary of the Interorenc. oC aan ae en Ch 350 Chapoy, Maria V., Mexican Embassy_._..._.___ 462 Chappell, Richard A., Administrative Office of the United States Courts... 0... oo. 438 Charles, Philipp L., Securities and Exchange Commisglon ovoee Loi ico Charles, Robert M., Immigration and Natural- fzation Service... .. oo. li aa Charles, William K., Office of Information_____ 360 Charlton, Millard T., District Accountancy SION Pe hs a ei TY i Chase, John H., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration to Ls a ase 375 Chaudhuri, Capt. Dilip, British Embassy... .__. 460 Chavez, Juan, Peruvian Embassy... ...._... 464 Page Cheadle, J. Kennard, Bureau of Reclamation___ 353 Chesteen, Gaston D., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation.___________\____ 234 Chew, F. F., office of Official Reporters of De- dhates cil Nias ci ia de nd 267 Chiari, Eduardo A., Jr., Panamanian Embassy. 463 Chi-chih, Lt. Col. Kuo, Chinese Embassy______ 457 Chieh, Liu, Chinese Embassy__.___._____.___._ 57 Childe, C. E., Board of Investigation and Re- search—Transportation.._.. =... 8 braryolCongless:.. Ji... SoC 78 Ching, Cyrus, National War Labor Board______ 311 Chintakananda, Ananta, Thai Legation _._____ 465 100). Cnane a 378 Christensen, Lars, Norwegian Embassy ________ 463 Christian, Mary B., Senate Appropriations Commitee. 0 ii aii ore. 64 Christiansen, Brig. Gen. James G., Army Ground Porees. ooo 0 333 Christiansen, Milo F., District Recreation Board. ai ar 448 Christie, Emerson, Translating Bureau._______ ~ 326 Christy, Donald F., Office of Foreign Agri cultural Relations. ....___________-8" » 350 Ciechanowski, Jan, Polish Ambassador.________ 464 Cissel, T. Ross, Jr.: Division of Defense Materials________________ 324 Rubber Development Corporation. __________ 379 Claffy, T. H., Rubber Reserve Company ______ 377 Clagett, Brice, judge, Municipal Court for the Districtof Columbia: 5 ~~ 39 Clague, Ewan, Social Security Board___________ 394 BIRaNee. oo i a ay 265 Clapp, Verner W., Library of Congress____._____ 278 Clark, Bennett Champ: > Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy______ 237 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. ______.____ 417 Clark, Charles C., Weather Bureau_____________ 373 Clark, Elmer B., Official Reporter, House______ 274 Clark, Dr. Fred H., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Clark, Harlie F., House Committee on Insular Alans Ln Sn ee eae a 273 Clark, John M., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs 3 Clark, L. E. Office of Emergency Management_ 310 Clark, Leila F., Smithsonian Institution____ 279, 417 Clark, Omer W., Veterans’ Administration_____ 321 Clark, Samuel O., Jr., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral. Sa LE a i Ss a 336 Clark, Tom C., Assistant Attorney General____ 336 Clark, W. A. Graham, Tariff Commission____ . 419 Clark, Walton C., Federal Fire Couneil ________ 400 Clark, William M., Washington city post office. 452 Clarke, China R., Rubber Reserve Company... 377 Clarke, Gilmore D., Commission of Fine Arts__ 389 Clarke, Humphrey O., British Embassy _______ 460 Clarke, Oscar D., librarian, United States Su- preme Courl_& io. il. oor ii nn 429 Clarke, R. W. B., Combined Production and Resources Board... o.oo...iol 321 Clarkson, Anna Louise, Office of the Secretary of fateh oea See Fae 323 Clarkson, Frank, assistant superintendent, House Office Buildings... ..._.._ 275 Clary, Alla, secretary to the Speaker___________ 270 Clary, Virginia, Juvenile Court. ______________ 440 Clattenburg, Albert E., Jr., Special Division. __ 326 Clausen, C. P., Bureau of Entomology and Plant'Quarantine.._.. .... i... 363 Claveaux, Dr. Henrique, Pan American Sani-tary Burtean. i ll 413 Clay, Maj. Gen. Lucius D., Army Service BOT C08. am Ca ae 334 Cava Rd Clayton, Aubrey H., Bureau of Accounts._____ 340 Clayton, F. B., International Boundary Com- mission, United States and Mexico_______ 402 Clayton, Lawrence, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System _ __«______________ 393 836 | Congressional Directory Page Clayton, W. L.: Page Defense Supplies Corporation___________._____ 376 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 378 Office of Secretary of Commerce. _.___..____ e370 Rubber Development Corporation. _.________ 379 ‘War Damage Corporation____________________ 378 Clegg, Hugh H., Federal Bureau of Investiga-a ion Clevenger, Cliff, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission de ah en a i 238 Clift, James W'., Patent Office. __.._.__...__.__. 373 Cline, Genevieve R., judge, Customs Court (biography) SEE A TE Rye 436 Clinton, Ralph 8., General Land Office_.._____ 351 Close, James W., War Damage Corporation.____ 379 Close, Ralph William, Union of South Africa, Ministerz oc ool LT aaa al 465 Clouser, Robert O.: District Zoning Adjustment Bomrd. oli. 448 District Zoning Commission________ Coar, Helen, radio rooms, Capitol 9 Coar, Robert J., radio rooms, Capitol....._..... 276 Cobian, Maj. Salvador: Dotminizi Embassy. 0 oo ei 458 Inter-American Defense Board............... 401 Cochran, H. D., Forest Service_..__..._..______ 365 Cochran, John J., Migratory Bird Conservation Connialbn aaa 235 Cochran, R. L., Federal Public Housing Au-thority nT Rao 411 Cochran, W.W., Office... 373 Patent 0. Cochrane Allister, Official Reporter, House____ 274 Cochrane, Rear Admiral Edward L., Bureau of Cock ii Maj. James SE Fnter-American Defense Board... o> 0 ol oa. 401 Cock, Bernardo, Colombian Embassy.....__... 457 Codinston, George, National Inventors 374 A NU Er I IAA TR AL Tr Coe, her C., Jr., Western Union Telegraph RT TT nTCoe, Conway of Patents 373 National Inventors’ Council. ___..._._.______ 374 Coe, Frank, Joint War Production Committees. 318 Cos, Whaplrs 1, Distt Dosis Aboot | Coen, T. B. Creagh, British Embassy ._....._... 460 Coffee, Arthur F., House post office 272 ccccaann.-Coffey, E. R., Public Health Service._.__._._____ 395 Goftman, Jobin D., National Park Servicé_____ 353 Cogn: aa, c Adminismative Department, g79 Cogswell, Robert ¥., District rent control ad- ministrator hm sep a BER SS Ty EINE 449 Cohee, Melville H., Soil Conservation Service__ 368 Cohen, Felix S., Office of Secretary of the Inse. Es rhb feo Ait Bh on op Pe Bay i 0, 351 Golo Joseph M., Office of the Chief Post Othog Inspector ROLLE ChE anh LE ey 340 Cohen, Milton H., Securities and Exchange Commission ea bd Ses a BET 416 Cohen, Dr. Roger S., Commission on Mental Hygiene. noosa wndees CR anal an Cohen, Saul C., House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. «pein Ton 273 Cohen, Benjamin Victor, Office of Economic Stabilization. wal iT noi ae TR 312 Cohran, J. R., Bureau of Animal Industry.____ 362 Coile, Sam H., Veterans’ Administration ______ 422 Coke,9 Boss Mae, House Committee on Public -Colo Rear Admiral L. O., Coast and Geo-detic Survey: oooh ntlan tl 372 Colbjgrnsen, Ole, Norwegian Embassy ._________ 463 Colburn, S. E., House folding room_____________ 271 Cole, Arthur Q., District Health Department__ 451 Cole, Philip L., Director of planning service, Government Printing Office... 0... = 277 Cole, Robert F., National Mediation Board____ 412 Cole, William P., Jr., Customs Court (biogra-SE pO RA ee es ma 436 Coleman, Maj. Gen. Frodevic W., United States Soldiers’ Home. oid Lo 0 i 419 Coleman, John F., ra Plant Corpora- tion. 376 Colina, Capt. ‘Gabriel de Ia, ‘Mexican Embassy. 462 Colina, Rafael de la, Mexican Embassy_________ 462 Collado, Emilio G.: ; Board of Economie Operations_____._________ 324 Office of the Secretary of State________________ 323 Collie, L. L., Bureau of Accounts_______.________ 329 Collier, Frank W., minority clerk__-___________ 272 Collier, Henry Clifford, House document room _ 272 ‘Collier, John: Indian Arts and Crafts Board ________________ 352 Officeof Indian Affairs. = 0 5 0 0 oF 1 Collins, Charles W., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- porallon: oma uni San Es alas 411 Collins, John F., Railroad Retirement Board___ 415 Collins, John S., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce El nr od ts Br wi 371 Collins, Inspector Maurice, Metropolitan Police. 451 Collins, Maurice, Federal Security Agency. ____ 394 Coll-Pardo, Luis, Venezuelan Embassy_._______ 406 Collomb, Harry L., Bureau of Accounts________ 340 Colmer, William M., National Forest Reserva- tion Commission._.._..._.___________________ Colom, José L., Pan American Union__________ 414 | Colpoys, John B., United States marshal ______ 438| Colvin, Dr. E. Milburn, Jr., District Board of Dental Examiners .____________.___________ 447 Colvin, Howard T., Conciliation Service ..____ 381 Colvin, Louis, Office of the Doorkeeper...__.. 271 Colwell, George W., The Alaska Railroad.______ 356Colwell, H. Ross, Conciliation Service... 381 Lomby Rear Admiral Lewis B., Bureau of Aros an ISL TA pri vroaies Be oO ar tany H., Regent, Smithsonian In-a Compton, William Randall, Office of Secretary Cc of hada SRE OTC] h 241 pny lei, ee of Senile Researe Concannon, O. C., Bureau of Foreign and Do-“ mestie ommerce_ aA ae LO, o on cheso, Dr. Aurelio F: ubanAmbassador. ocYS a sy| Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 | Conklin, Maxwell R., Bureau of the Census_.__ 371 Lada) May B., Office of the Secretary of the cE 0 rial tad iar Go, hee Tom. © no TaTNTTTTT Intorpriliamentary Union. 235F S Buildings Commission... | (fiver Wendell Holmes Devise Commmitios oag | Connell, Frank, House Committee on the YE Conner,A. H., Federal Prison re Tr Industries, Inc... 3377 Conner, Charles E., District deputy superin- tendent of insurance....___ 449 Connolly, Edna V., Tariff Commission Connor, B., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine RAE Rel a RE SR Se 362 Connor, Cassie, Office of Economic Stabiliza-IT pra esate es WR Connor, Lanham, official stenographer to House COMMUILIRES. onta a EE 274 Connor, Mary A., secretary to Senator Johnson of fe) allfornin 2 oo Mooi hou ih a 269 Connor, Mary Ann, Senate Committee on Im-migration. cro nla Li oe iA a 265 Connor, Richard J., Federal Power Commis-sion__ -392 Consedine, Lucille M., , House Committee on Tabor Cu isl nan cnn Bi 273 Considine, James W., Federal National Mort- gage Association: ui NV UTES Lai 377 Conway, W. H., Extension Service_____________ 369 Cooger, Mildred C., House Committee on Elec- 2 Cook, Arthur E., Office of Architect of the "Capitol. 275 Cook, Coleman F., Civil Service Commission___ 388 Cook, Donald c, Securities and Exchange Coniston. oo ef 416 Cook, George A., National Mediation Board.__ 412 Cook, James C., Office of Secretary of War_____ 331 Cook, Katherine M., Office of Education_______ 395 Cook, W. W., Committee on Practice____._____ 330 Cooke, Rear Admiral C. M., Jr.,, The Joint Board a Lr hs Fina ae 404 Cooke, Brig. Gen. Elliot D., Office of the In-spector General,yWar: = = © iE 332 Indwidual Index Page Cooke, William E., Office of the Chief Clerk____ 324 Cooley, A. C,, Office of Indian Affairs... 352 Cooley, Dr. Martin, Veterans’ Admiristration__ 422 Coolidge, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission: =. ="... = 5... 236 Coolidge, William D., National Inventors’ Connell.» ras nip audio U0 ay 374 Cooney, Patrick S., Bureau of the Mint_.______ 330 Coons, Elmo V., General Accounting Office____ 400 Cooper, Jere, Joint Committee on Internal Rev- enue: Taxation. i uc nerf Se so vied, 20 234 Cooper, J. Herschel, Veterans’ Administration__ 422 Cooper, Joseph E., Office of the First Assistant PRogtmaster:General. oi. do gua ea 338 Cooper, Louise V., Administrative Office of the United StatesCourts.. 2 oo. Lo 0 i: 438 Coote, Robert K., General Land Office.________ 351 Cope, Richard P., District special insurance CYAIINer Srougss al beg ddn ali onal li 449 Coplen, George W., National Housing Agency. 409 Corbett, Estelle M., Invalid Pensions Com- NE OR A A I SR OTR aa 273 Corbett, Jack O., Office of the Secretary of State. 323 Cordell, Evelyn E., Senate Committee on Mili- Pry AMINE, (ol Jo ae i na 265 Cordiner, Ralph J., War Production Board__..__ 316 Cordova, Dr. Roberto, Mexican Embassy__.___ 462 Cornelius, V. E., British Embassy. _.__________.__ 460 Cornwell, Fred C., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. oo... isha ie 340 Coronado, Enrique, Pan American Union______ 414 Correa, Lt. Eneas Arochellas de Miranda, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. 322 Correa, Dr. José A., Ecuadoran Embassy______ 458 Corrick, Donald Ww, Division of Accounts. ____ 324 Corridon, Joseph Be Federal Public Housing ARNOLItY ool vo san suo bob udontno 411 Corson, John J., Social Security Board_ ________ 394 Costello, John M., Board of Visitors to the Mili- tary Academy re aN Ta en Da Re LT 236 Costs, William C.: : Federal National Mortgage Association_._____ 377 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 375 Sportal assistant to the Secretary of Com- MELO. J condos lilo nly asa Ui Ls 374 The RFC Mortgage Company... i.co.iia.. 377 Coston 1LeonardL. M., United States attorney’s Cotten, Fe I., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve i...vain 393 System. i Cotter, Alice, Bureau of the Comptroller of the CurreTree La se a 328 Cotter, Lie F., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- DOTAEION. is oh I Eh ai Sis haba Rs ad 410 Cotton, James W., Office of the Doorkeeper._ 271 Cottone, Benedict P., Federal Communications Pommisson LE Rr a ET RSE a 391 Coulier, Dr.A. Barklie, District Health Depart | Conn Eliot B., Visa Division. ........_.__... = Counts, Hazel, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations soe sve ons ea 265 Cowen, Wilson, commissioner, Court of Claims. 435 Coverdale, J. W., Senate post office _ __________ 266 Covey, Edwin L., Administrative office of the United States Courts. o.oo...~~ = 438 Cowan, M. Cordelia, District Nurses’ Examin-mg Board Lui ue. a IE ERNE Ta 448 Cowell, J. M., Office of Architect of the Capitol. 275 Cowles, Gardner, Jr., Office of War Information. 314 Cowles, John, Office of Lend-Lease Administra- Gos, Soh Clement P., Metropolitan Police... 451 0X, Regent, Snithsonion Institution... i... 417 Thomas J efferson Bicentennial Commission_._ 238 Cox, G. §., New Zealand Legation. ____________ 463 Cox, Hugh B., Assistant Attorney General _____ 336 Cox, Oscar: Office for Emergency Management _._________ 310 Office of Lend-Lease Administration_________ 311 Office of the Attorney General _______________ 336 Coy, Wayne: Bureanofthe Budget. i. io i sa 310 Office for Emergency Management ___________ 310 Coyne, Mary A., Veterans’ Administration____ 421 Page Coyne, Robert W., War Savings Staff__________ 33 Orly Edward O., ‘Office of Legislative Counsel, OUBEL of ely gh SE Se IY Craig, Robert B., Rural Electrification Admin-istration... Su brea NTS ea 366 Craighead, F. C. Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine HE ER RE ER CR SE EY 362 Cramer, Maj. Gen. Myron C.: Army Service Forees. .. sn Tail 334 u.....oit United States Soldiers’ Home________________ 419 Cramer, Lawrence W., War Manpower Com-mission: o.oo co oa tRa ai at Jali 315 Crandall, C. D., Interstate Commerce Commis-ny eer ne RT CE Lg BR gf El 403 Crandall, Merle A.: Defense Supplies Corporation___.___.________ 376 Disaster Loan Corporation. __________________ 377 Crane, Jacob, National Housing Ageney________ 408 Crane, Jere 7, District Board of Education_____ 448 Crane, John B. » Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. ay Cee La te 371 Crater, William P., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General. oo _.._ ii. 339 Craven, T. A. M., Federal Communications ommission... ..... . ill sinniiiUi 91 Cravens, C. Russell, Home Owners’ Loan Cor-orationss. a pat oat ara Rae 11 Crawford, Boyd, House Committee on Foreign A a a a ai 73 Craw, nam V., Commission on Men-a Crawford, Charles W., Food and Drug Admin-istration Sons we CRE a Ag Te 396 Creighton, C. F., District deputy superinten-dont OT InSAIINee. one 449 Creighton, Robert K., National Housing ABOONOYa ts el hs se ee 409 Cret. Paul P., Commission of Fine Arts________ 389 Crickenbarger, Oswald L., Coast Guard________ 349 Crisler, Irma, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation RL TR rT 234 Cristofane, Felix E., Comptroller, Government Prinking:Officer iz. 0n oye 278 Crittenden, E. OC., National Bureau of Stand-RS pe Sa RR TE VT a 372 Crockett, John C., Office of Secretary of the Sonate... in amit aro 263 Croft, Samuel M., Administrative Department, Library of Congress Esk End BU RR ra 279 Crogan, Charles J., United States attorney’s OHlee od Cl Es a RR a UE 439 Cronin, John W., Processing Department, Library of Congress eee An a Bl ees Gn 279 Cronin, P. D., Federal Security Agency... _____ 394 Cronin, William F., Office of the Postmaster Gonord coi ies my a 338 Crooks, D. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering... oi 363 Cropley, C. Elmore, clerk, United States Supreme Court Thin 0 0 conic. 429 Crossland, Stanley T.: Reconstruction Finance Corporstion SoRinChe as 374 Rubber Reserve Company. ___/.__.___________ 377 War Damage Corporation____________________ 379 Crouch, W. E., Fish and Wildlife Service______ 355 Crow, Leonard C., House postoffice____________ 272 Sa W. C., Food Distribution Administra- LEE Rr Son SR A Cs ea To Teg 367 Crowder, Walter F., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMOIOE. fe 371 «os oa Crowe, C.T., British Embassy... 460 1: Crowe, Hugh P., Civil a, Commission. ___ 389 Crowley, Dr. Jerome, Columbia Hospital for Women il, so uu wiinte J ee sii, 389 Crowley, Leo T.: Alien Property Custodian_.____________.______ 311 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation_______ 392 Crowley, S. James, Office of Alien Property Custodian i onion ol ae 311 Crumpler, E. I., House folding room___________ 271 Crutsinger, Frank M., Federal Public Housing Authority sa rn a a et 411 Culbertson, Paul T., Division of European ARS. aA RE 324 Culkin, Francis D.: Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__ 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission. 236 838 Congressional Directory Page Page Cullen, Thomas H.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- TION rs re i aE Joint Committee on Reduction of Non- essential Federal Expenditures. ____________ 239 Cullinan, F. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ____.__ 363 Cumming, Edwin D., Petroleum Administra- tion for War. ooo Cue faiaiTn uid Wine 318 Cumming, Surg. Gen. Hugh S. (retired), Pan American Sanitary Bureau. ________________ 413 Cumming, Hugh S., Jr.: Columbia Hospital for Women _______________ 380 Division of European Affairs_________________ 324 Cumming, Dr. James G., District Health DEepArtINent -cianpiabrer iE ial 451 Cumming, Col. Samuel C., Headquarters Ma- rine Corps: ard brain Tn ES 347 Cunningham, Edward J., Conciliation Service__ 380 Cunningham, Jo f0, e Alaska Railroad_.__ 356 Cureton, N. F., Federal Communications Com- TWISSION:-Sen osiaae Sod aril Ll den I 391 Curran, Edward M., United States attorney.__ 438 Currie, Lauchlin, administrative assistant to the President |... 05 310 Curry, Bryce, Office of the Doorkeeper________ 271 Curtis, William H., Washington city post office. 452 Curtiss, C. D., Public Roads Administration... 399 Curtiss, Lowell, Pan American Union_._________ 414 Cushing, J. E., War Shipping Administration__ 317 Cusick, A. J., Veterans’ Administration. _______ 422 Custer, Cecil E., Civil Service Commission____ 388 Cuthbert, Frederick A., National Housing AGOROY onee hai as 409 D Dahl, Lt. Col. A. D., Norwegian Embassy... 463 Dahl, Lt. R., British Embassy. ooic soi ioinoa 460 Dahle, Dan, Food and Drug Administration... 396 Dahlman, Sven, Swedish Legation. ___.________ 465 Daiker, Fred H., Office of Indian Affairs_______ 352 Daily, Dr. Edwin F., Children’s Bureaw_._____ 381 Dalberg, Tamar P., War Production Board liai- Sonofiees. i TShioSINie 277 Dale, Chester, National Gallery of Art._______. 418 Dale, John 'W., Customs Court. _..........0.... 437 Dale, Judson Carey, Veterans’ Administration. 422 Daley, Harriott G., Capitol telephone exchange. 276 Dalrymple, Robert C., Federal Trade Commis- Dalton, Brig. Gen. J. N., Army Service Forces. 334 Daly, James B., District Engineer Department 450 Daly, John T., Conciliation Serviee =i. or 380 Damron, Bascom S., House post office______..__ 272 Daniel, Helen L., Office of Coordination and Beviews ilu: iiaenanli 324 dic AU Daniel, Otis L., House post office__.____________ 272 Daniels, Jonathan W., administrative assistant tothe President...cadd oid oui .. 310 Daniels, Paul C., Division of the American Republics. ose c oiemn i dae ilo) 324 Daniels, Col. Robert W., Army Ground Forces.. 333 Danielson, Percy W., Office of Indian Affairs___ 352 Danis, EduardooN Spanish Embassy... 464 Danie, LeeF., District corporation counsel’s en Ter EG AAT em RL WRLe ats Ea OO pe 4 Darbie, ore Dyson, Office of Secretary of the TI EE Ee at LE Eh 264 Dargusch, Col. Carlton S., Selective Service NA RARECN ey 315 TB IL Charles F., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation ‘Operations ll Sal rad 325 Daal) , Ne Senate Committee on Mines Nora, and rR A AS Rae de ET Te 265 Dashiell, 5 H., Railroad Retirement Board.. 415 Daubanton, Ch. J. H., Netherlands Embassy. 462 Dauer, Dr. Carl C., District Health Department 451 Davenport, Donald H., Bureau of Labor Statis- pe a LENT Rey SE TION Ne mL 81 Davenport, Frederick M., Civil Service Com-ISSION.. Loin one cade 8 David, Nathan H., Federal Communications Commission: oo. oi = = ios oaidity 391 Davidge, Anne W., secretary to District Com-missioner uo lois von Ba a sd 447 Davidson, Charles M., Office of the Third As-sistant Postmaster General SL uite ue 339 Davidson, Lt. Comdr. James E., Coast Guard. 348 Davidson, William F., Federal Trade Com- mission. =i SS ne on EE 398 Davie, O. W., secretary to Senator Scrugham___ 269 Davies, Joseph E., War Relief Control Board._ 318 Davies, Ralph K., Petroleum Administration for War. th angesEE i sro 31 Davies, William, National Housing Agency... 30 Davis, A: F., Railroad Retirement Board. _____ 415 Davis, Arnold M., Soil Conservation Service... 368 Davis, A. Nelson, Federal Prison Industries, Inc_. 337 Davis, Brig. Gen. Benjamin O., Office of the Inspector General, War. _.___ i...__.. 332 Davis, Charles W., Bureau of Mines___________ 354 Davis, Chester C., Food Production and Distri- butions: CG 7 Joints as egiiNiauninieis 366 Davis, Mrs. Clifford, Congressional Club___.___ 390 Davis, Donald D., War Production Board. ___._ 316 Davis, Mrs. Dwight F., American Red Cross... 386 Davis, Elmer, Office of War Information _____. 313 Davis, Ewin i. Federal Trade Commission___ 397 Davis, Facius W., ‘War Damage Corporation___ 379 Davis, Harold W., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector SEL en IRM SE CPS re ---340 Davis, Harvey N.: Regent Smithsonian Institution .____________ 417 War Production Board -.. no. oh 316 Davis, Dr. Hugh J., District Health Depart- ment. cain imei nen DY Davis, J. Lionberger, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission...00 0 2c. 237 Davis, James J., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission pose DR REE BER a 237 Davis, John F., Securities and Exchange Com- mission: toil Selo nrany La La) Davis, Margaret H., District Alcoholic Bever- ageControk Boards. 5 oi oii na 44 Davis, Monnett B., Division of Foreign Service Administration ii Ui uc ins Leas 325 Davis, Murray M., Public Buildings Adminis- BAUION. a as an BA 399 Davis, Norman H., American Red Cross_______ 386 Davis, R.O.E,, Bureau of Plant Industry_____ 365 Davis, Soper H., District Engineer Depart-i ment. La SU SE 50 Davis, ine H., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... Joie baile0 375 Davis, Thomas W., Office of the Chief Po a OfficedInspeeclor. =. ise ne a Davis, Walter S., Federal RT Commission... logs a ionic, 391 Davis, Watson, National Inventors’ Council___ 374 Davis, William H.: National War Labor Board... cai 38) 311 Office of Economic Stabilization. _____________ 313 Davison, David S., Civil Service Commission__ 389 Davison, Col. F. Trubee, Army Air Force._____ 334 Davison, Rear Admiral R. E., Bureau of Aero- angles. il cli Nani eniaie nn 346 Davitt, Joseph S., Administrative Office, Navy. 342 Dawes, Howard C., Senate Press Gallery SRE 746 Dawson, Donald 8. Reconstruction Finance Corporation CA eR i eS RY 375 Dawson, Edward S., District corporation coun-sels office... oi odoio nonlin, US 450 Dawson, Fred A., Solid Fuels Administration FOr War... oenwecnne 357 Dawson, Margaretta B., Veterans’ Administra- tionliaisonoffices... orion 277 Day, Albert M., Fish and Wildlife Service_____ 355 Day, C.T., House folding room________.._.___.__ 271 Day, Julius G., American Red Cross__________ 386 Day, Robert E., War Production Board liaison OO. a ae ea ue a aE 277 Day, William M., official stenographers to Housecommittees.... oiei oo. 274 Day, William W., Washington city post office__ 452 Dayton, Kenneth, Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation ODOLAIONS noon iim 325 Dayton, William A., Forest Service. ___________ 365 Dean, Arthur E. , Washington city post office__ 452 Dean, Dr. Benjamin F., Jr., Metropolitan Police na EM J TR A Sa 451 Dean, Capt. Charles W., Coast Guard. ________ 348 Dean, Reginald S. , Bureau of Mines... =i 354 Deane, Brig. Gen., ’ John R.: Combined Joint "Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great: Britain > bodoa ii 320 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States... _.._____ 404 TheJoint Board...oi = 404 ov. Individual Index : 839 Page Deards, John W., Senate folding room___________ “266 De Bayle, Dr. Leon: Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Nicaraguan Ambassador_____________.________ 463 DeCourcy, William E., Office of the Secretary of State 323 Dedekam, André, Norwegian Embassy ______.._ 463 Degen E., Petroleum Administration for Deimel, Henry L., Jr., Maritime Commission__ 405 Delahanty, T.:We., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce AALS ah RT Ear SE 371 Delaney, J. J., The Alaska Railroad ._._____.___.___ 356 Delaney, J ohn J., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. lia 237 Delano, Frederic A.: Regent, Smithsonian Institution. __..________ 41 Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricul- tural Engineering... ..... oc... Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 National Resources Planning Board. _________ 310 ‘War Damage Corporation..___________.______ 378 * Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. _.___.____________.__ 236 Washington National Monument Society..__ 423 Delano, Preston: Comptroller of the Currency... _.__________ 328 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation__.___ 392 Delano, William A., National Capital Park and Planning Conuieslon. oc iitvont 408 DeLien, Dr. Horace, Office of Indian Affairs.. 352 Demaray, A.E.: Federal Fire Council. __.oo.__.._____._ 400 National Capital Park and Planning Com-IeSIONn: esLa aE SL TS 407 National Park . ._ _.__ _.... 353 Service... DeMarco, Patrick S., Customs Court. _._______ 437 DeMerit, "Merrill, Tennessee Valley Authority. 420-Demma, "Anthony P., House Press Gallery_____ 746 Demonet, Gertrude T, District Cosmetology Board EI ARNE SI SR a el SE 447 Demorest, John R., Office of Secretary of Labor. 380 Denby, Charles, Office of Lend-Lease Adminis- fEation coos no Lon aa ie aaa TR 313 Dench, Capt. Clarence H., Coast Guard._______ 348 DeNeale Stanley, District corporation counsel’s Denfeld, Rear Admiral L. E., Bureau of Naval Personnel NE ea a uA Denig, Brig. Gen. Robert L., Headquarters Marine Corps. ce i feiale 347 Denit, J. Darlington, General Accounting Office. 400 Dennis, Samuel J., National Housing Agency.__ 408 Dennison, Henry q. National Resources Plan-: ning Board er ow a 310 Denny, Charles R., Jr., Federal Communica- tions COTOTISEION i os vn oil siti as Denny, Edward H., Bureau of Mines____._____ 354 Dent, Edward A Districliassessor. codad Sl 447 oocoia District Real Estate Commission _____________ 448 Pent; J. S., British Embassy... oo... 460 Dent, William ‘W., District corporationcounsel’s Aan are ee i Denty, Lt. Comdr. Samuel L., Coast Guard___ 349 DePagter, John P., secretary to Senator Gurney. 268 Derato, Salvatore M., Office’ of Legislative CGounsel,:Senate. oi. ioiEnl co Dr LinT 267 Derby, H. National War Labor Board._____ 311 Deschler, Lewis, Parliamentarian of the House. 270 Detgen, Edward J., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMIeree. ene 371 Loteonions Detmar, Charles F., Jr., Office of the Secretary Ot RENAVY: a ee ea 341 Detwiler, Samuel B., Soil Conservation Service. 368 De Venny, George F.: Court of SEY for the District of Columbia. 432 Emergency Court of Appeals __________________ 437 Deviny, John J., Deputy Public Printer________ 277 Devlin, Denis, Trish Legation: & oiii. oc 461 DeVries, Peter H., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NOICS oo a sr a a Noa a 59 Dewey, Mrs. Charles S., Congressional Club___ 390 DeWolf, Francis Colt, Division of International Communications SEN Le BR Tey 326 DeWolf, Richard C., Copyright Office Library of Congress NAR Te Ll 279 d’Harnoncourt, René, Indian Arts and Crafts Board. oaTT 352 Page Diamantopoulos, Cimon P., Greek Ambassador. 460 Dispond, Clark G., Columbia Toshi for omen. =. Sail iva ar DL ie Diamond, Sabai S., Division of Bonh and ETEea ee 28 Diamond, John B., United States attorney’s office Dick, J. H., District Engineer Department____ 450 Dickerman, Judson C., War Relief Control Board. Uo Dn 0 Dari ph Se 319 Dickey, John S.: Board of Economic Operations. ____________._ 324 Division of World Trade Intelligence. __.____ ~.. 326 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Dickinson, H. C., National Bureau of Standards. 372 Dickinson, Philip P., Office of Secretary of the IRterior. . oi ett ne rng 350 Dicus, Dr. M. Luther, District Optometry Board: oo i a Li ee Te Dieck, C. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey...___ 372 Dieffenbach, Rudolph: Fish and Wildlife Service _________________._ 355 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 235 Diepenrykx, Col. E. M. Pierre, Belgian Embassy ol nt Linanne ah 455 ah Dill, Field Niarsbai Sir John, Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain___ 320 Dill, William L., Social Security Board __._._____ 394 Dille, John R., Wage and Hour and Contracts L Divisions Po AE RA SAVE Se Pe DS Le 381 Dilli, Reginald C., deputy clerk, United States Supreme Could isan tails 429 Dillon, Earl E., Office of the Clerk of the House. 271 Dillon, Mok John H., Office of Secretary of the Nav 3 Dillon, ak. FrederickP., Coast Guard__.____ 348 Dillon, W. R., Fish and Wildlife Service_.__.__ 355 Dimock, M. E. , War Shipping Administration_-0 Dinbergs, Anatol, Latvian Legation____________ Dingell, John D., Interparliamentary Union.___ > Dingus, W. E., House foldingroom_ 2: __ 272 Dinnen, William F., Federal Trade Commis- Dinneny, James J., Conciliation Service. ______ 380 Dinsmore, Col. John P., War Department Gen- DO RE GRRE Ca A ee LEE Ren Dissinger, Col. C. E., Army Service Forces..___ 331 Diven, Frederick M,, assistant to the legal ad- ASL Leliaon Sa EE Ea 326 Divers, William K., National Housing Agency. 409 Dixon, H. M., Extension Services oo. alia 369 Dixon, Owen, ’ Australian Legation. seu ou. 455 Djoemena, Raden Moehamed Moesa Soeria Nata, Netherlands Embassy... ________ 462 Dobbins, Roy W., Office of the Sy Assispaie Postmaster General ________________________ Dobbs, John M., National Housing Agency. --a Dodd, James A.., ‘Office of the Clerk of the House. 271 Dodd, Norris E., Agricultural Adjustment ABONOY. abl nl a en ae EN 367 Dodge, Vernon B., Washington city post office__ 452 ‘Dodson, James E., Office of Secretary of Labor... 380 Dolan, Edward aq; Bureau of the Public Debt__ 329 Dold, Calvin, Federal Power Commission _____ 392 Dole, Commander R. W., Naval Research Labo- TAOYY: iv. ces Dab aliases oral omen ine 346 Domaniewski, Wieslaw, Polish Embassy____._-464 Domengeaux, James, Board of Visitors to the Coast GuardAcademy. oo iono_o 237 Domeratzky, Louis, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic:Commeree... oonun on 371 Donahue, A. Madorah, District Public Welfare Boards cae da ova pari a an pail heats 448 Donald, J. R., Joint War Production Com- mittee RE Tn LI Cp BSR ee SE ST 320 Donaldson, Charles B., Civil Aeronautics Ad- ministration. 2 so uae 0 Cds waa 374 Donaldson, Harvey Cy Administrative Divi- Doras, Jesse M., Chief Post Office In-YI Ere CO tee CECE RNa EL 340 Donaldson, Linwood E., Office of Plant and Operations... .. i. Svels ih Span a me 361 Donaldson, William J., Jr., superintendent, House Press Gallery... ua wir noo 746 Donayre, Carlos, Peruvian Embassy _______._._-464 840 Congressional Directory Page Donohue, Francis R., Federal Crop Insurance Corporation TR CS a fl Le 368 Donohue, Rear Admiral Robert, Coast Guard. 348 Donoso, Ernesto Guzman, Chilean Embassy... 457 Donovan, Henry A. Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry... 10 00.2 361 Donovan, Joseph, Washington city post office. 452 Donovan, Brig. Gen. William J., Joint Chiefs of Sls se SL A NL Se ay : 4 Dorny, Carl H., Soil Conservation Service. ____ S08 Dorr, Goldthwaite H., Office of the Secretary of al Wars = oo ae Doris. Rear Admiral Benjamin H.: Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex-amining Board (medical). __________________ 344 aval Retiring Board. -»io. 00 ar = 344 Dorsey, George M., White House News Pho- tographers Association. _________.____________ 752 Dorsey, H. W., Smithsonian Institution. _____ 417 Dorsey, Nicholas W., Smithsonian Institution__ 417 Deri, ns; Office for Emergency Nonsge: Da James L.: Defense Plant Corporation. o.-.. Lio... Defense Supplies Corporation Disaster Loan Corporation. __________..____ 3 Federal National Mortgage Association. ______ 377 Metals Reserve Company... __.__....... 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 374 Rubber Development Corporation. ______.__ 379 Rubber Reserve Company ________________.._ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company._______________ 377 ‘War Damage Corporation__________________.__ 378 Dougherty, William B., House post office______ 272 Doughton, J. Bane, House Committee on Ways and Means... Sool san in 0 eat dia 274 Doughton, Robert L.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-. Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures _____________________ 239 Douglas, L. W., War Shipping Administration. 317 Douglas, Percy L., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs...lid _____ 312 Douglas, William O., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography)_____ 428 Dou W. S., Bureau of Medicine and Sur-ger Dove, Ww. E., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine PETC REE SNe Ee Sh FE Slr pe RR 363 Dow, Frank, Bureau of Customs_______________ 328 Dow, Capt. Jennings B., Bureau of Ships______ 345 Downey, E. F., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- POIATION.C oe ni inaasl a y 392 Downey, John J., Washington city post office. 452 Downs, Noble, Capitol Police... he 275 Doxey, Wall, ‘Sergeant at Arms of the Senate (biography) ot ee CE A CI 2 Doyle, Albert M., Division of Exports and Requirements. 000 no ns odin Jans 325 Doyle, Anna F., Senate Committee on Terri-toriesand Insular Affadrs. io. oo io io 266 Doyle, Mrs. Henry Grattan, District Board of Bdueation.. .-.. .c. lidaa i 448 Drager, Walter L.: Defense Plant Corporation. _______.___________ 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 375 Drain, James A., Federal Security Agency. ____ 394 Draper, Claude L., Federal Power Commission. 392 Draper, Earle S., Federal Housing Administra- bons. 2 el 409 Draper, Ernest G.: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systems tin Cio Lh i aah 393 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Naval Personnel__ 345 Draper, Warren F., Public Health Service______ 395 Draper, William A., District Engineer Depart- MONE. i Sa hls hans DEE 450 Dreibelbis, J. P., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________..___.__ 393 ‘Dreier, John C., Division of the American Re-Publics. Loe we iheany 3 Page Prove, Patrick H., Virginia (Merrimac)-Mon-Moy Commission... oe 237 | Drissel, Roger S., Division of Communications Ad Rotors sr a ae a a 324 Drury, Newton B.: District Zoning Commission. ___._.._.____.__ Losi 4440 Federal FireCommnelliio oooonc 20 00 400 National-Park Service... woo 0: 353 357 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission..._.. i 236 Dryden, H. L., National Bureau of Standards_. 372 du Bois, Coert, Caribbean 17 = = Office... 324 DuBois, Orval L., Securities and: Exchange Commission... ae 416 Dubord, F. Harold, Thomas Jefferson Bicenten-nial Commission. =o sso vi of 238 isaaiai Duce, J. Jerry, Petroleum Administration for Wap.or 0. oon sn saniais 318 Ducey, Capt. D. F., navy yard and station___ 346 Ducq, Capt. Jean, Belgian Embassy... ii. 455 Duggan, Ivy Ww. Agricultural Hint AGONY i Al Sh Se ee 367 Duggan, Laurence, ‘Adviser on Political Rela-tions ans hs nba Sra 323 Committee on Political Planning _____________ 324 Duhart, Salvador, Mexican Embassy. _ ___._____ 462 Duke, Joseph C., Office of the Secretary of the Senate tf Gl dn cornet JF pai ie aes 264 Dulac, Peter, Coast and Geodetic Survey. _____ 372 Pulp, tee T., office of Official Reporters of BOBTER Me a i aE Sa a aT eA the Sonate... Lak holeaie 266 Dunbar, Paul B., Food and Drug Administra- i Domes lh RE SRI Fa LT Re Le eS BR 6 Dunbar, Ralph M., Office of Education________ 395 Dune Charles A., Jr., Washington city post 452 Dre Dr. George C., Office of the Coordina-tor of Inter-American Affairs. ______________ 312 Dunkleberger, H. I.,, Food Distribution Ad-ministration) ooo odyiaatiaagndCn 367 bl hri Duna, E. J., Office of Sergeant at Arms of Sen-a BR pe ES ep 8 LO 266 Dr Francis G., Senate Committee on Civil OLVIOB cv b mi A ST 64 Dunn, Dr. Halbert L., Bureau of the Census. __ 371 Dunn, James Clement: Adviser on Political Relations. _____________ 323 Committee on Political Planning_ _.__________ 324 Dunn, Dr. Miriam F., Commission on Mental Halth.. ls Toe onan 438 Dunn, House Committee on Indian Affairs. ___ 273 Dunnahoo, G. L., Public Health Service. .__.___ 395 Dunphy, Helen T., Senate Committee on Priv- Hlegesand Elections. _ 0. citSs 0 266 Durand, E. Dana: Joint Economic Committees ..__________.____ 319 Tariff Commission. Zo 20 ou iia avi 419 Durand, Dr. William F., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics... _____._______ 405 Durant, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Indian Affaire Jo ai0e ba igi ra la Rei 265 Durkin, John J., Office of the Doorkeeper _____ 271 Durkin, Martin P., National War Labor Board_ 311 Durocher, T. C., Senate Committee on Appro- prigtiong: | SC CET Ga ALL aha) ha 264 Durr, Clifford J., Federal Communications OMmMISSION. obo nS 0H 91 Durrett, Dr. James J., Federal Trade Commis-rE a I a BR a 98 Durso, Tony J., Distriet Board of Barber Exam- mers... 0 Tinie LTRSAy 447 Durst, Vernon R., General Accounting Office__ 400 Dustin, Frances E., secretary to Senator Lh Dutemple, Elmer J., Office of the Chief Fost Office Inspeector='. ... 00 aa tii onus Dutton, Walt L., Forest Service. __________.__. oa Duvall, William A House Committee on Ap- proprigtiong: Eo tL ai 273 Dwyer, Francis X., Law Library, Library of Congress i 15 diss won TREN OIE 279 Dwyer, Jeremiah J., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General 20: oo or aiiiene 338 | { | Individual Index Page Dyas, Richard C., The RFC Mortgage Co_____ 377 Dyer, R. E., National Institute of Health______ 395 Dykes, Jefferson C., Soil Conservation Service. 368 E Early, Stephen, Secretary to President Roose-velt(blography). coo a 309 East, John D., Office of Lend-Lease A dministra-HONG a RT 313 Eastman, Joseph B: Interstate Commerce Commission. __________._ 403 Office of Defense Transportation _._____.______ 312 War Production Board. -.._ ooics 316 Eaton, Blaine, secretary to Senator Eastland___ 268 Eaton, Charles A Interparliamentary Union___._________________ 235 Foreign Service Building Commission_______-325 Eaton, Mildred, assistant clerk to the President sofitheBenate. of oon Cas cane 263 Eaton, Capt. Philip B., Coast Guard__________ 349 Eberhart, David C., Jr., National Archives____ 406 Ebert, E. M., Interstate Commerce Com- 403 Eccard, August, Office of Architect, Capitol____ 275 Eccles, "Marriner S.: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. seuivemnsldes 8 la nna Loos rl 393 Offices of Economic Stabilization. ____________ 312 Echegaray, Miguel de, Spanish Embassy_____._ 464 Echols, Maj. Gen. Oliver P.: Aeronautical Bord. oe ade er alla Dm de sass 385 Army Air. Forees. ovis oi tozoadinnn 333 National Advisory Committee for Aero- MaUbiess tol true Somnbe Du anne Tall te 405 Ecker-Réicz, L. Lé&szlo, Division of Tax Re- SEAPCH i, ha Rap a ds aT a 330 Eckler, Dr. A.§Ross, Bureau of the Census_____ 371 Ecklund, Conrad A., Geological Survey_____.___ 353 Eddy, L. M., Railroad Retirement Board. _.___. 415 Edelman, Edward, War Damage Corporation... 379 Edelstein, Harry M., Office of the Solicitor. ____ 351 Edgerton, Maj. Gen. Glen E., Panama Canal___ 413 Edgerton, Henry W., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (DIOTIADNY) oir Casas Sebamed a aad 432 Edler, ry Capitol Police...ious ui 275 Edminster, Lynn R.: Board of Economic Operations... ...._.... Committee for Reciprocity Information Tariff Commission. 2c oieh, oo osiuaice Edson, H. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering. ______________ 363 Edwards, Dr. Alba M., Bureau of the Census... 371 Edwards, Col. Basil D., Office of the Under Secretaryol Wor Loa. ot Laas oioisui 331 Edwards, Harry E., House Committee on In-valld Pensions. o.oo is. Sana a Bins 273 Edwards, Maj. Gen. Idwal H., War bepari ment: General:Staff. oo or 0 on We Edwards, James H., Bureau of Foreign rh Domestic Commerce SS Th 371 Edwards, John F., Civil Service Commission___ 388 Edy., J ohn N., Federal Public Housing Author- ity RI Yt AR SO Rh La SNR I CR 412 Bon John Taylor, Federal Public Housing Authorlby Cc. .. eo aT 412 Egbert, Va Lois, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____.._______________ 393 Ege, Col. Warren S., Office of the Under Secre- tary olWar:. ai on adn Ee Soni 331 Eggert, William A., Railroad Retirement Board. 415 Ehrenberg, Virginia, Civil Service Commission contaeboffiee... 05. Li liaanis bah 277 Eichelberger, Charles M., Navy Compensation Boardol orci do oe Lr ee 344 Eicher, Edward C., Chief Justice District Court of the United States for the District of Golombig arr a hs ul 437 Eichhorn, Adolph, Bureau of Animal Industry. 362 Eiger, Joseph R., office of Sergeant at Arms, oi 10 RIE ae Me BE SR eA I SR PO TE Pie M. S., Office of War Information. _ = Ekwall, William A. judge, Customs Court (biog Rp Ee 436 Page Fleas, Charlotte R., House Committee on 20 Eldridge, Lt. Comdr. Frank R., Coast Guard.__ 348 Eldridge, M. O., office of District director of vehicles and trafic EN Elguera, Dr. Juan I., Peruvian Embassy_______ Eliot, Charles W., National Resources Planning CHAM SI ee ieee. 310 Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Children’s Bureau... ___ a Elizondo, Enrique L. , Mexican Embassy. ______ Ellender, Mrs. Allen ”. , Congressional Club... si Eller, B. H., House document room poration EE Pa ARE SE Cor FONT 375 Elliott, Col. D. O., Army Service Forces_______ 334 Elliott, Foster F., ’ Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomic Bat ee RR Dr A Tha hee 359 tio Elliott, R. Winton, Federal Housing Adminis- BERTIE, ooh bis 2 Be iat Th ae 409 Ellis, Frank H., Office of the Postmaster General. 338 Ellis, Jesse B., International Joint Commission. 402 Ellis, J seh a, , Office of Secretary of the Senate_ 263 Ellis, Luther E. , Veterans’ Administration. ___ 421 Elson, Samuel il! Federal Public Housing Au-- thority PETAR oe eR Ba LR Se a EE 412 Blt, J van der, Belgian Embassy_________ 455 Joseph National Bureau of Standards_____ 372 By J. Edward, Office of the Census. __________ 371 Ely, Richard S., Federal Trade Commission___ 398 Embick, Lt. Gen. Stanley D., Inter-American DONnSE BOAT... ce ian 401 Emerson, C. H., Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 Emerson, Guy, ‘American Red Cross... 386 Emerson, M. A., Bureau of the Public Debt___ 329 Emery, Charles ’B,, Office of Indian Affairs__ 352 Emery, George i. Material Coordinating Committee it leit ols nda 319 Emery, Harvey, Office of the Secretary of the Navy:iaoimlsoning ih or use 341 Emge, Frank, Office of Secretary of the Senate. 263 Emley, W. E., National Bureau of Standards__ 372 Emmerich, Herbert, Federal Public Housing Authority Re ATA AR SNE SET SERRE, CRM Ce 411 Emmons, Charles N., District Engineer Depart- MOREE, i Se Fe Ee a 450 Endersbee, William J., Office of Indian A ffairs.. 352 Engel, Albert J., Board of Visitors to the Mili- tary. Aeademy. il. 0 i 236 England, William H., Federal Trade Commis- C3 Fhe tr TREN Be J (EE £ Lp Vn DP BE Tk CL 398 Engle, Lavina, Social Security Board ___________ 394 English, Benedict M., assistant to the legal ad- a Erm ee ONS SC PR English, Thomas Y., Bureau of the Mint_______ 330 Englund, Erie: Joint Economic Committee... ______________ 319 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations. _____ 359 Enlow, Charles R., Soil Conservation Service... 368 Enlows, Harold F., American Red Cross______. 387 Eralap, Orhan, Turkish Embassy ______________ 465 deny i Office of the Secretary of the on Bria John G.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service__ 325 Division of Foreign Service Personnel __._____ 324 Erickson, Arthur L., secretary to Senator Ball__ 268 Erickson, Ethel, Women’s Bureau_.___________ 382 Eriksson, Harry, Swedish Legation. ____________ 465 Erk, Edmund F., secretary to Senator Davis___ 268 Ernst, Dr. Edward C., Pan American Sanitary BUC: o.oo Ber ars LI ek 413 Erol, Orhan H., Turkish Embassy_____________ 465 Ertegiin, Mehmet Miinir, Turkish Ambassa-a5 QOL. a aS Ee Tn Jack H., House Commitiee on Claims_. 273 Erwin, Walter ¥, Office of Secretary of Com- TRCTCe-. a a eS a ie 370 Escalante, Carlos Manuel: Ambassador of Costa Riea____.._.__.......... 457 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Escalante, Dr. Diogenes, Venezuelan Am-bassador... =... line 466 .dslialipoa Espaillat, Rafael A., Dominican Embassy_.___. 458 Espil, Felipe A.: Argentine Ambassador. Cod 455 | Elble, Otto C., Veterans’ Administration_______ 422 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 | { 842 Congressional Directory Page Page Espinosa y Prieto, Eduardo, Mexican Embassy. 462 Espinosa, José Edmunds, Secretary to Senator Chaves sis ioir Lala nie oa itann 268 Espinosa, Jose R., Immigration and Naturaliza-tion Services iC oo ntl Re int 336 Esteves, Guillermo, Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. rico 00 CEESRL 356 Etheridge, J. L., House post office_____._____._-272 Eubank, Capt. Gerald A., Office of War Savings Bonds. oe Tien. balingno 343 Evans, A. B., District assessor’s office. .._______ 447 vans Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Reve- ig Luther H., Library of Congress_._...... 278 Evans, Raymond, Office of Information._____.___ 360 Evans, Rudolph M., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Lr EE TR 393 Evans, W. Ney, commissioner, Court of Claims. 435 Everett, Clarence D., House Select Committee on Small Business SE SIERRA EUS Cd i REY 210 Everett, Guerra, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commerens. inns. band 372 Ewerhardt, Dr. Paul J., Commission on Mental Heathen acai 0 aali ol eid 438 Ewing, Elmon J., District Plumbing Board..___ 448 Ezekiel, Mordecai J. B., Office of Secretary pat Agriculture nena Bl pan I, a F Fagan, Henry J., Senate Committee on Bank-Ingand. Currency. > iiiac oot. thE 264 Fahey, John H.: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration.. 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System____________ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-tomas ratte ann pain oh a 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ._._________ 410 Fahy, Charles: Federal Board of Hospitalization. ____________ 391 Solicitor General. 22. us orl enuegil 336 Fairbank, H. S., Public Roads Administration . 399 Fairehild, I. J., "National Bureau of Standards. 372 Faircloth, Olive Seiger, District deputy collector OLAS. ci iis do Pe aa 449 Faithful, James A., Office of the Second Assist-ant Postmaster 2oliol2ouie 3 General... ) Falck, Depue, Grazing Service ._.____._.___..._. 355 Fales, Frederick S., National War Labor Board. 311 Falk, Col. David B. , Office of the Inspector Gen- eral, Waar a lrEe 332 Falk, I. S., Social Security Board_______________ 394 Falk, Leon., Jr., Commodity Credit Corporation. 369 Fallon, Pascal D., General Accounting Office. 400 Fangmeyer, A. B, Office of Sergeant at Arms, Farias, Lt. Col. Medardo: Inter-American Defense Board Uruguayan Embassy. oii ioe i alanoi Farmer, Guy, National Labor Relations Board. 412 Farmer, Harry W., Veterans’ Administration.. 421 Farquhar, Capt. ALS, , Compensation Board. . 344 Farrell, John Ww. Office of the Doorkeeper.__.._ 271 Farrier, Clarence W., National Housing Agency. 408 Farrington, Carl C., Commodity Credit Corpo- pation rel oot SL Addn AES 369 Farshing, Don D., House Committee on Ways and Means. 0 oor al olan DR Sa iil 4 Fearn, Otto E., Dviict ie Department_._._. 450 Fechteler, Capt. W. , Bureau of Naval Per- sonnel... cdedel dnl open mae Reis 345 Fedotov, Anton N., Soviet Socialist Republics Brabassy. «0 oi aah CSToN 466 Feer, Edward, Swiss Legation... ___________ 465 Feiker, Frederick M., National Inventors Connell ol oi. ail mins rom Feimster, Maurice B., Washington city post office nei ps ane HSE Ll 452 Feis, Herbert: Advisor on International Economic Affairs___ 323 Board of Economic Operations. ___.__________ 324 Committee on Political Planning__________.___ 324 Feller, A. H., Office of War Information._______ 313 Feller, Robert E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General RA NER eal 1 ST, 339 Fellows Perry A., Work Projects Administra- aes Ee Ra En Ty OP 399 Felton. Duarlar E., Public Health Service... ___ 395 Fenn, Capt. H TK Office of Censorship... 317 Fennell, Aubrey B., Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. _ oo wosooeeee 440 Fennelly, John F., War Production Board.____ 316 Fenstermacher, Harvey E., Division of Com- munications and Records. ._._.__._______ 324 Fenstermacher, W. L., Official Reporter, House. 274 Fergus, Corwin A. Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation en Ae TOE 410 ‘| Ferguson, Abner H., Federal Housing Adminis-tration a fe iy 409 sio ulin Goyechea, Carlos M., Uruguayan Bmbassy.. vee me PR Bide a EL 00 466 Fernandez, Rodono M,, Mexican Embassy.____ 462 Ferris, Frank, St. Elizabeths Hospital __.______ 397 Ferris, J. P., Tennessee Valley Authority______ 421 Fickel, Mrs, Maybelle G., liaison officer, Gov- ernment Printing Offi Chl ey 278 Fickinger, Paul L., Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 352 Fiedler, R. H., Fish and Wildlife Service ______ 355 Field, George Ye, Work Projects Administration a Fieldner, Arno é, Bureau of Mines. ___________ 354 Fieser, James L., American Red Cross... 386 Fife, G. D;, Office of Architect of the Capitol___ 275 Fihelly, John W., United States attorney’s offices oiot ns PRA oe ius IS 438 Findlay, Joseph P., Office of Personnel _________ 360 Finletter, Thomas K.: Board of Economic Operations. ______._______ 324 Office of the Secretary of State__.__Z______.____ 324 Finley, David E.: Commissionof Fine-Arts.... iio. LC 389 NationaliGalleryiof Art... Ll ___ i 418 Finn, William G., Agricultural Adjustment Ageney. o.ootee ae ten te 367 Finucane, Dr. Daniel L., District Health De-partment: oo dine arnt ce oo i 451 Finucane, Thomas G., Immigration and Natu- ralization Services... . huni lu ena cl 337 Fischer, Milton, National Housing Agency.____. 408 Fish, L. S,, Petroleum Administration for War. 318 Fisher, Charles T., Jr: Defense Plant Corporation RR ee RE 375 Defense Supplies Corporation. ____________.__ 376 Disaster Loan Corporation... ..___._...... 378 Federal National Mortgage Association. __.__ 377 Metals Reserve Company... __________. 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ______._ 374 Rubber Reserve Company. __________._______ 377 War Damage Corporation... ._..o._...___... 378 The RFC Mortgage Company. ___..__.__._._ 377 Fisher, Rear Admiral Charles W., Office of Secretary ofthe Navy... oi i. lus 342 Fisher, Edwin L., General Accounting Office___ 400 Fisher, Lewis H., ’ Civil Service Commission____ 389 Fisher, Poni X. Office of the Secretary of the Nav Fite, ban assistant to the legal ad viser_ 326 Fitts, W. C., Jr., Tennessee Valley Authority... 421 FitzGerald, D. AG Food Production Admini- stration AE SAT Se S95 SSL RE ANE Os edhe 367 Fitzgerald, Henry J., BureauLabor Statistics. 381 of FitzGerald, JN Office of Secretary of Labor.__ 380 Fitzgerald, M. c, assistant District assessor... 447 Fitzgerald, Stephen E., Office of War Informa- ti Fitzgerald, Thomas J., Bureau of the Census... 370 Fitzhugh, Edward F., Jr., Bureau of Mines_._. 354 Fitzpatrick, Mrs. J ames M., Congressional Club_ 390 Fitzwater, J. A., Forest Service... ioe 365 Fladness, S. O., "Bureau of Animal Industry_._. 362 Flaherty, Francis E., Division of Foreign Service Administration. =... Cl iooisr oSairany 325 Flanagan, James H., Public Utilities Com-mdssion. enna rie 452 Flanagan, Marie R., Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections: oo. ste bo ooroni 266 Flanders, Ralph E., Office of Economie Stabili- gationo rh nnd Lian Jaduniulc Solely Liesl 313 Flanery, William H., Office of the Solicitor. .___ 351 Flannery, John Spalding, Washington National Monument: Society co. ool ia uses 423 Flatley, Mary G., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. ool oa laliid ads ani 265 Flavin, Thomas J., Office of Secretary of Agri-culture: vo lu Jon ras ee Re 35¢ Fleener, F. E., Railroad Retirement Board._.... 418 Individual Index Page Fleming, Alfred L., Night Production Manager, Government Printing Office: ..ouiea 277 Fleming, Maj. Gen. Philip B.: Federal Works Administrator. ---occceeo-. 398 National Power Policy Committee... ___.____ 357 Works Project Administration. ______________ 398 Fleming, W. F., District Penal Institutions._. 449 Flemming, Arthur S.: Civil Service Commission. iici-iiceiiin: 388 ‘War Manpower Commission __-_______....___ 314 Fletcher, Col. Robert H., office of the Inspector General, War. o-oo a 3! Flores, Brig. id Luis Alamillo: Inter-American Defense Board... 401 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Commis- TH Ba fg eh i Nt SRE Leite ar CIP Cg 22 Mexican: Embassy. ocooni oo iood liote aes 462 Flournoy, Richard W., Jr., assistant to the legal aANISer ie a aneeee 326 Fly, James Lawrence: Board of War Communications ___-_____.__._. 311 Federal Communications Commission________ 391 Flynn, Catherine M.: Secretary to Senator Maloney ___._______._._._ 269 Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds: rei rar ol ane Ln Fokes, W. Robert, secretary to Senator Pepper. _ oo Foley, Edward A Committee for Reciprocity Informationis os dba rr saa sii oo oad 390 Foley, John J., official stenographer to House committees. re SIGE hy Sh ten SR 274 Foley, Katharine, Office of Secretary of the Navy. 341 Folger, Ww 2s Bureau of the Comptroller of the CUIeNCY. ol io ed Sot ri i wana 328 Folk, Mrs. Ton Advisory Board on Maiional Parks, RET bets Se RTE Sige EO ss Tp Folkvord, May, Senate Committee on Yo STOLE COMIOBIOE. oes ons om qmmmanns 265 Folsom, Frank M., Office of Procurement and Malorne. os a ee 342 Fontaina, Roberto, Uruguayan Embassy___--_-466 Foran, Ross Js, National Mediation Board... __ 413 Forand, Aime 5. Board of Visitors to the Coss Guard Academy AE ECAR Fe Forbes, JohnJ. V., Bureau of Mines. ______.__. 4 Forbush, Gabrielle E. ., Office of His of the Treasury SSO Lo BLL CS Si a i SE EL Ford, “David, Federal Home Loan Bank Sys-PH 0 and Mininng.RE BS fe 265 Ford, Mary F., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. ny a Le 265 Ford, Mrs. ThomasF., Congressional Club.___ 390 Forgan, James B., American Red Cross... 386 Forker, Harry M., National Archives____._..___ 406 Forrestal, James V.: Army and Navy Munitions Board. --——--_ 387 Joint War Production Committee. ____._______ 319 Under Secretary of the Navy ____._.____________ 341 Forrestel, Capt. Emmet P., Sic of Secretary of the Navy naira as Forsling, C. L., Forest: Service... ..-..--365 Forster, Chalmers T., Office of Personnel ______ 360 Forster, Rho hs executive clerk, the White > HOUSES. =: toss a Sena pe ue 0 Fort, J. ny Food Distribution Administration. 366 Fortas, Abe: National Power Policy Committee. __________ 357 Under Secretary of the Interior __________ 350, 351 Foster, Carol H., Division of Cultural Relations. 324 Foster, E. M., Office of Education... 395 Foster, Howard C. ., assistant secretary to the MInoLibY So Bos aio 266 Foster, J. British Embassy 0 2. 460 ..........-Foster, LeRoy B., Veterans’ Err _ 422 Foster, Reginald, ‘Office of Civilian Defense... 312 Foster, Roger S., Securities and Exchange Com- ISSN a ee 416 Foster, Sterling J., Jr., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. oi. tie ol ain 375 Foster, Air Vice Marshal W. F. MacNeece, Munitions Assignments Board ____________ 320 Fotitch, Constantin, Ambassador to Yugoslavia 466 Foulk, 0. E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Pipl CCA SRR TR ai 393 Fowler, Agnes, Senate Committee on Territories ANd TOSTIAr ATTAIIS. oe am imn niamam ison 266 Page Fowler, C. Walter, Smaller War Plants Corpo-316 thesNavy oo ln 3 De J ron nt Fowler, Walter L., District budget officer_.____ i Fowler, William A. Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements____________________._ Fowlkes, J. B., Committee on Conference Ma-jorityofdthe Senate i.on nd 264 Fox, Helen Cooper, Senate Committee on Ap-propriotions. oc iaiy Sdn 264 intial Fox, Homer S., War Relief Control Board _____. 319 Fox, Martin J., Farm Credit Administration__ 364 Fracker, S. B., Agricultural Research Admin- istration: LS Ls a ines 361 Francis, Clarence, Defense Plant Corporation.. 375 Francisco, Don, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... ___ i... 312 Franges, Ivan, Yugoslavian Embassy... ______ 466 Frank, Laurence C., Office of the Ee of Bale. ai ae 23 Frank, William K., War Production Board..___ 316 Frankfurter, Felix: Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (biography). hai 428 =... U Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee__. 238 Frankhauser, Harry S., Office of Second Assist- ant Postmaster General... _._...___._ 339 Franklin, Lonnie W., House post office.__.______ 272 Franklin, Zilpha, Federal Security Agency-----394 Frantz, Samuel B., Bureau of the Mint________ 330 Frazer, James R., Rural Ee nti Admin- istration SCE LOR BRS LST Se 366 Frazer, Leslie, Patent Office... ._._____________ 373 Brarley5 faoy L., Office of ‘Secretary of the BLE EAE ea es Lo IRN SERIA FE Ss 263 Prodan, William A., Office of Architect of the Capit lio ae a 275 Fredericksen, Hazel A., Children’s Bureau.____ 381 Free, John F, Office of the Chief Post Office In- spector Teh Ie REC SI CG RAE SC he DR 340 Freed, Clyde, Capitol railroad ticket office. -___ 276 Freohill, Joseph H., Railroad Retirement Board. 415 Freeman, Rt. Rev. James E., Washington National Monument Society... ____________ 423 Freeman, Milton V., ris and Exchange Commission. 2. vi. Goan a oh 416 Freeman, Dr. Walter, Commission on Mental 15 CORN ni ars BER I DE le SE a ad 438 Freer, Robert E., Federal Trade Commission___ 397 French, Dr. Bernard S., Commission on Mental Health: ©. i Laie 438 Freyre y Santander, Manuel de: 7 Governing Board, Pan American Union.___.__ 414 Peruvian Ambassador... 464 Friedenson, Julius, Civil Service Commission__ 388 Frisa, Mary H., War Production Board liaison offices Brena il Le i Sa 277 Froes da Cruz, Paulo, Brazilian Embassy_-.__-456 Frost, A. C. , British Bmbassy. = a ali 460 Fry, ‘William M., Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads... hs 266 Fu, An, Embassy...lc. 457 Chinese -c Fuhrman, Ralph, District Engineer Depart- gis ab et LR SSS CRS LE CS REE nL, 450 Tle, Ralph M., Extension Service. __..__-_ 369 Fullbright, Catherine, Senate Committee on Immigration... ...._ -J-l. iota iio olin 265 Fullerton, Hugh §8., Division of European Affaire. —o 0 onan Eee 32 Fuquay, Leon M., Federal Power Commission... 392 Furer, Rear Admiral J. A, Office of Coordinator of Research and Development Pop En EE 343 Furr, William C., Washington city post office__ 452 Furse, Commander, J.P. W., British Embassy. 460 Futrelle, JEQQ, Export-Import Bank of Wash- E11a Tt Se ea LE. RI SR i SAC 378 9 G Gabrielson, Ira N.: Fish and Wildlife Service. occcomaoomaaaoo 355 Office of Secretary of the Interior. _____._._____. 350 Gaddis, B. M.., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Ee EE a 363 Gaffney, James M., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporallon. oie aaa 392 Gage, Dos, Senate Committee on Indian AAS rn a nt en em 265 844 ~ Congressional Directory Page Gage, Charles E., Food Distribution Adminis- HT TRA ie NE eS Br UL a i as Ir 367 Gaillani; A.-M. Iran Legation: ... . ...cl.2 461 Gaitan, Dr. Luis, Pan American Sanitary Bu- ri) Reet hn no Ae Re Ta as NOR Bb Le 413 Galarza, Ernesto, Pan American Union________ 414 Galbraith, J. Kenneth., Office of Price Adminis- feationay olni on Ca ea aL End 318 Galbraith, John R., Veterans’ Administration. 421 Gallagher, Angus J., Selective Service System__ 315 Gallagher, Margaret E.: Secretary to Senator Walsh __________________ 269 Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. _________ 265 Gallais, Hugues Le, Luxemburg Minister______ 462 Gallardo, José M., Commissioner of Education ofiPuertorRicorcs -. sunind i mn ove Soi 356 Galloway: Charles M., General Accounting Galloway, Rachel H., District National Train- ing School for CHE 0 oii 449 Galloway, Ralph E., Bureau of the Census_.___ 371 Cally go. Benjamin ‘W., Headquarters Marine Galt, dos B., Reconstruction Finance Corporation dat ES th SL 374 Gamhle, | Bertus D., Tax Court of the Unies Gamble, Theodore R., Office of the Secretary vs Treasury Sida Ste ai ll ac assailant 327 Gant, George F., Tennessee Valley Authority._ 421 Garcia, Celso Raul, Brazilian Embassy... _____ 456 Garcia, Elie, Haitian Embassy _________________ 461 Garcia, Ernest, Capitol Police. ________.___.______ 275 Gardiner, James S., United States attorney’s 439 Biopsies Sa ea iat Co Sunil doing 361 Gardner, Eugene D., Bureau of Mines. ________ 354 Gooner: Herbert W., Veterans’ ahi UTE LN Rn Sr SE ER Ia IE XS re Ki 422 Gardner, John R., Fish and Wildlife Service. __ 355 Gardner, Capt. M. B., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. ________________ 322 Gardner, Warner W., Office of Secretary of the Interior... co. asian Adie oes 350, 351 Garin, Dr. Vasco Vieira, Portuguese Legation__ 464 Garity, C. H., Tennessee Valley Authority_____ 421 Garland, T. L., House post office. .._.. _._....2 272 Garman, Cameron G,, Office of Budget aa Finance on role Grn odd ania ony Garner, Capt. C. L., Coast and Geodetic Survey. 3 Garner, W. W,, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _________ 364 Garrett, Cleo A., Office of the Legislative Counsel, House. ..... Johanoiicais lee 274 Garrett, Finis J.: American Battle Monuments Commission___. 385 Presiding judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals: (Dlography) oo Lo aan ne 433 Garrison, Lloyd K., National WarLabor Board. 311 Gartland, Joseph ¥., Office of the Postmaster General en Tas Ti 338 ington to .on. von TL ihn asain Gaskins, William H., Army War College_._____ 335 Gaston, Herbert E Assistant Secretary of the Treasury._.....____ 327 Board of War Communications_______________ 311 Gaston, Thomas L., Jr., Soil Conservation Serv- Oates rn , Assistant Secretaryof the Navy for Air Gates, Col. Byron E., Army Air Forces._..____. 333 Gates, Jack W., postmaster of the Senate. ______ 266 Gatling, John M., Office, of Secretary of the Hy LR A RES ee ESR oT ue ls 263 Gauges, Joseph G., marshal, Court of Customs and Patent Avpeals. ou oo. ih cian 434 Gaumer, Mollie A., Senate Committee on Manulactaresiio Jin Ju 265 baboedaiuyny Gavit, Bernard C., War Manpower Commis-SION UL sot ei oe aE Geary, Mary H., Veterans’ Administration Haisenoffiees oo.oJ tdaann 277 Page Gehman, Arthur R., Office of the Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General Affai Gent, Lt. Col. Thomas J., Office of the Assistant |. Secretary ol: War, ear od nT a 331 George, Preston L., Congressional Record mes- George, Walter Bor. thin ee Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax-aflon ii ce al 234 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _______________._____ 239 National Forest Reservation Commission____ 235 Geraghty, John L., Securities and Exchange Commission. = io =~ Fait fell 417 Gericke, Martha L., Division of Research and Publeation. oi Gr. Li pmh net 326 Gerth, Arthur W., Rural Electrification Ad- ministration... Co Tren ahoiennaie 366 Ghavam, Lt. Ali, Iran Legation_______________._ 461 Gibboney, Carl N. , Farm Security Administra- HT Var A Sr Ss Smee SEE SE She 369 Gibboney, Stuart G.: Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission. 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 236 Gibson, Virginia, House Committee on Ways andiMeans. 200 rain ote Tin Ue 274 Giebel, Adam A., District corporation counsel’s Office. Zi LLU REIe EE ali oh Os TY 50 Giegengack, Augustus E., Public Printer______ 277 Gifford, Walter Sa American Red Cross... 386 Gilbert, Harry I., Postal Telegraph-Cable Co__ 276 Gilbert, Milton, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tie Commerce. o_o0 Toliotd C0] 372 BON. is ies Gilbert, William C., Washington city post office Giles, Mal Gen. Barney McK., Army Air For 33 3 Gilford. M. E., Office of the Attorney General. 336 Gill, Capt. Irving L., Coast Guard: io oii. 349 Gillette, Lt. Col. John D., Joint Brazil-United Se Deionse Genhwdn AAG RInS al Selon eint Gillman, Howard M., Jr., Bituminous Coal Commission. [L700fier oh 355 ove Gilmore, M. E., Public Works Administration. 399 Giménez, Rafel, Central Translating Office____ 326 Gingles, Allene, House Committee on Roads.__ 274 Gingrich, Capt. John E., Office of Secretary of the Navy. i lo dopodaae ae 341 Girolamo, Armando di, Administrative Division 337 Gittings, T. B. , Western Union Telegraph Co.. 276 Giucci, Mario F., Uruguayan Embassy_______ 466 Gladieux, Bernard L. , War Production Board__ 316 Glass, Carter: Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures... c.. ..._. 239 President pro tempore of the Senate _________ 263 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission. 238 Glasser, Harold, Division of Monetary Research_ 330 Glavin, W. Richard, Federal Bureau of Investi- LOLATT TRESS REINER As Ohba ea NGA yA 0 oe 336 Glick, Philip M., War Relocation Authority___ 316 Glover, Carolyn, Senate Committee on Finance. 265 Glover, Charles C., Jr., Washington National MonumentSociety oc oo Of oii So 423 Glover, Sarah Jane, House Committee on Flood Conlrolois ar iden,liad 273 ie shortage Goff, Frederick R., Reference Deparment Library of Congress Pe Ln Ss a er i Goffin, Louis, Belgian Embassy. .______.._._____ Going, R.B. F., Federal Public Housing Au- OXY. a Bp Dh a na SE 3 411 tration Sn CSOT Cy TI I Ee LL Rn Sl 366 Golden, Clinton S., National War Labor Board. 311 Golden, Nathan D., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce...oo onl oa 371 Goldenweiser, E. A., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________..______ 393 Individual Index Page Page Goldsborough; Phillips L., Federal Deposit In-Te surance wae Joao. 392 Corporation... ....caovie Goldsborough, T. Alan, associate justice, Dis-trict Court of the United States for the Dis-trict oliColumbia 5.5 on oo oT Goldschmidt, Arthur E.: Divisionfof Power. Sillaooo alii iol, 355 Office of Secretary of the Interior_____________ 351. Cogsiens Morris G., Jr., District Pharmacy 448. | Golo Aired R., Bureau of Reclamation._._____ 353 Gonard, George E, navy yard and station. ____ 346 Gonzalez, Capt. Alfonso Calderon, Mexican Embass Yd ID A ada EY Rs 462 Gooch, Robert Charles, Reference Department, Library of Congress 278 Goodacre, Daniel M., Employees’ Compensa- tion Commission Eagle on am he Goodacre, Samuel, Soil Conservation Service_. 368 Goodale, R. C., War Damage Corporation_____ 379 Goodloe, John D., Reconstruction Finance Cor- rn Bl Aes a Se El SR Le Bi Goodykoontz, Bess, Office of Education________ 395 Gorden, Anne, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses Gordon, Archibald McDonald, British Em-a mmr a 460 Gordon, George A., Division of Foreign Activity ‘Correlaflon oo uciieod. reals bast eran 325 Gordon, Hayner H., commissioner, Court of CBI: ers. ors tor rik ones Gordon, J. B., District Engineer Department. 450 Gordons Joh Federal Public Housing Au- PROB Yr Ts ees Se reign 411 aie SR J., Food Distribution Admin- istration re Pat, La oe Gore-Booth, P. H., British Embassy. __...______ 460 Gorman, Rear Admiral Frank J., Const Guard. 349 Gorman, Thomas J., Bureau of Customs 328 Gossage, C., House folding roomy. uiuillad 271 Gough, Leo. A., Bituminous Coal Division____. 355 Gould, George, Office for Emergency Manage-ment i he SR LE Ss Ci Se RE AR SE LGN SE 310 Gould, Harry, Capitol Police... 0... 000 275 ...... Gouthier, Hugo, Brazilian Embassy. _...._____. 456 Gowan, Franklin C., Special Division__________ 326 Grace, Jessie L., House post office. ___._____..__ 272 Graf, John E., National Museum... 418 Graf, William, Jr., House document room..____ 272 Graff, Fred, Jr., Geological Survey: .-.-UIC] 353 Graham, Edward H., Soil Conservation Serv- ITeo A PE A EA AL RS BE Graham, Frank P., National War Labor Board. 311 Graham, Fred F., District assessor’s office_.__ __ 447 Graham, Leland o., Office of the Solicitor______ 351 Grain, Louis E., Columbia Institution for the re Graham, Samuel J., judge (retired), Court ”%a Chas Tr a Graham, W. R., official stenographer to Hots commitiees. oe ie a 274 Graham, William E., District Health Depart-ON ois. St tar Tin ein i ra re rats 451 Granat, Capt. William, Bureau of Ordnance.. 345 Grandin, Thomas B., Foreign Broadcast Intelli- GONCO SCEVICE cols oes Seth drei ra an LE 391 Granger, C. M., Forest Service. __..._____.___. 365 Grant, Brig. Gen. David N. W., Army Air Forces Fe RE hr SR 333 Grant, Norman R., Office of the First Assist ant Postmaster General EE or hE i bie 338 Grant, Maj. Gen., U. S., 3d: National Capital Park and Planning Com- mission. rudieaila Leeginia sot idl vii 407 Offiee of Civilian Defense._...___________._._._._ 311 Washington National Monument Society. ..... 423 “@ranthan, Leon S., House post office_._________ 272 Graves, Harold N,, Office of Secretary of the Treasury LoL (Tara ANT Nee vs STOR LENA SNE 5 § 327 Graves, Harold N., Jr., Foreign Broadcast In-telligenee Service i. 20002] oY Slo 22 391 Graves, Henry S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _________ 364 Graves, Roy R., Bureau of Dairy Industry_____ 362 Gray, Cecil W., ‘Office of the Secretary of State__ 323 83317°—T78-1—2d ed. 55 Gray, Chester H., District corporation counsel’s i TNi ET Ba Gray, Dr. Edward R., Bureau of the Census____ 3 Gray, Howard A.: Office of Secretary of the Interior_._._______.. 350 Solid Fuels Administration for War__________ 357 Gray, James M., Soil Conservation Service ____ 368 Grayson, George H., Office of the Second Assist- ant Postmaster General Grebler, Leo: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration____ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System ____________ 10 Green, Lt. Comdr. Charles K., Coast and Geo-detic Survey. ll nosso uot coosniioa 372 Green, D. D., Fish and Wildlife Service___._____ 358 Green, E. Allen, District penal institutions_.___ 449 Green, Joseph C National Munitions Control Board __________ 413 Special assistant to the Secretary of State_____ 324 Gres Siam, Office of Economic Stabiliza-313 Bro William R., judge (retired), Court of Yims. ENE sel 435 Greenbaum, Brig. Gen. E. S., Office of the Under Secretary of Wars ind Uo. Lo vos Bun 331 Greenberg, Joseph, Bureau of Accounts________ 329 Greensides, Neil G., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation... .o.......l oiii.c.oouand. Greenslet, E. R., Grazing Service_._.___________ 355 Greenwood, Ww. " Barton, Jr., Office of Indian Affaivs iio ules 00 HL gall sil alsdl) 352 Greer, Everett, Veterans’ Administration..____ 422 Gregory, Maj. Gen. Edmund B.: Army; Service Forces: ii... i. ilgili 334 neal Federal Eire -Council..-____ ._______10 C0 399 United States Soldiers’ Home.________________ 419 QGrest, Edward G., Soil Conservation Service_.. 368 Grew, Joseph C., Office of the Secretary of State. 324 Grickis, Ann M., Senate Committee on Public -Buildingsand-Grounds:-...--_.L__ 266 Gridley, E. A., Office of the Minority Leader__ 270 Grier, Barron K., House Committee on Ways and Means U0 BO 10 03 SUL ae 274 Griffin, David B.: Disaster Loan Corporation. __________________ 378 Export-Import Bank of Washington_.__._____ 378 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. __._____ 375 Griffin, James P., minority clerk_______________ 272 Griffin, W. V., Office of Lend-Lease Adminis-tration. Sii00 Sn 313 SPENT200 Griffin, William V., Pan American Union_.____ 414 Griffith, A1 T., House document room__________ 272 Griffith, Dr. Charles M., Veterans’ Administra- tons oo TBE RE 0 In aii al 422 Griffith, Glenn H., Bureau of Customs__.______ 328 Griffith, Joseph A., Washington city post office. 452 Grigsby, Rall I., Office of Education 395 Grim, Seth R., House postoffice, . .. 00 000, 272 Grimes, FP. Granville, ‘Wage and Hour and Pub- le Contracts Diviglons. °F i ol 001 Groce, Dallas, Office of Secretary of the Senate _ 264 Grogan, William B., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions. 02000cin it, D0 381 Gromyko, Andrei A., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy: Fi SURO Alo a0 tii Grondahl, i Holger, Finnish Legation_____ 459 Groner, D. Lawrence: Chief J ustice, Court of Appeals for the in BE of Columbia (biography)... _.._..... ‘Washington National Monument Society.____ 433 Groner, Mrs. D. Lawrence, Columbia Hospital for -Women.... Yori GL IEE Jai iio ss 389 Grorud, Albert A.: Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. ___...___ 265 Senate Special Silver Committee _______._.____ 184 Gross, Maj. Gen. OC. P., Army Service Forces... 334 Gross, Ernest A National Labor Relations Board ibidey, 6 o0iUl] SBE BHO Lela lh 412 Grosvenor, Gilbert H., Washington National Monument Society.Saal Ba so The Bia 423 Groves, Asa B., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora-10 fon Stl lee eR IN STI Groves, John, Civil Aeronautics Administration. 374 Grubbs, George, Office of Third Assistant Post- master General... oo iii nea) SE 339 846 Congressional Directory Page Page Gruben, Hervé de, Belgian Embassy _.________ 455 Gruening, Ernest H.: Alaska Road 78 356 Commission’. U.loicoi.o 2 Alaskan International Highway Commission. 235 Governorof Alaska lz 0 Ui rile nal 356 Grunert, Maj. Gen. George, Army Service Forces 3s. DAR nna RI TR Sei nl 33 4 Guachalla, Luis Fernando: Bolivian. Ambassador...t.1.inl o il ml 456 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Guardia, Mario, Panamanian Embassy. ____.._ 463 Guenther, Lewis H., Board of Investigation and Research Transportation. __.________._____ 388 Guffey, Joseph F., Washington-Lincoln Memo- rial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission_.__ 236 Gufler, Bernard, Special Division______________ 326 Guill, John H., Federal Farm Mortgage Corpo- ration. o BaoB Iesiaals 2a nuh lily 365 Gulick, Luther, Office of Foreign Relief and Re-habilitation Operations. a 100 sual fe 32. Gullion, Maj. Gen. Allen W., Army Service Orees aa Ea Da a ndaes. nn IE 334 Gunderson, Harvey J.: Disaster Loan Corporation... __._______ 378 Metals Reserve Company... ._..._.___. 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation ________ 374 Gunning, Harry A., Soil Conservation Service.. 368 Gustin, Don A., secretary to Senator Hayden___ 268 Cn Frederick A., National Housing AGONCY hol og debe oh win, IN TEINS FT 408 Guthride, C. J., Public Buildings Administra- VERS NE LE Sd TOI a EL BREAN SATS ry 99 Gutise: Dr. Riley H., St. Elizabeths Hospital. 397 Gwynne, John W., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy eX IRE TAR SI Fe i fe 237 Gyles, Herbert E., commissioner, Court of UO] E20 bys CES TR SHG SU a 08 BES LN BE 435 Haas, George C., Division of Research and Statisties. oo. ahesa bien ora 5 328 Haber, Samuel, Work Projects Administration. 398 Haber, William, War Manpower Commission.. 315 Hackett, John, Office of War Information. _____ 314 Hackett, Laura, B., Office of Minority Leader__ 270 Hackworth, Green H. , legal adviser to Secretary of State. ea a I at, air he Sah TR 323 Hadjeb-Davallou; H., Iran Legation. ___________ 461 Haettenschwiller, Alphonse, Swiss Legation____ 465 Hagenlocker, Horace, House post office. ________ 272 Hager, A. I., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission... ....._..____._ 403 Hager, John M.: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. __ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System... _________ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- Sons dime vive sosnor dint tl 4. ienan lt hai 410 Haggerty, John J., Office of the Postmaster General... .... ailstl ol hed pasa oud 338 Haig, Irvine T., Forest Service. ________________ 365 Hainsworth, Edith O., Bureau of Foreign and DPomestic:Commeree. coo id.soinillSan 372 Hales, Ernest, Capitol Police... _.. 0.0 ou 275 Haley, Ruth B., Office of the Assistant Secretary of War for Kir SO a Tr ei SE on OL EE 331 Halford, Col. Frank, Board on Decorations and "Medals 3 eda ME i od an SL Ed a Ba 344 Halifax, the Right Honorable the Viscount, British Ambassadors totic. als bail caupiiurl 459 Hall, Alvin W., Director, Bureau of Engraving and: Printing sc oira tf bona soot tn od dors IF 330 Hall, Charles F., District Engineer Department. 450 Hall, Donald, British Embassy. .._......._..._ 460 Hall, E. E., Federal Security Agency... _.._._.__ 398 Hall, Forest J., Office of the Postmaster General 338 Hall, John J., War Production Board __.________ 316 al, Johm M., Interstate Commerce Commis- of SHITE neni SET ad Le ie 331 Hall, N., British Embassy =. dooitoctn aod. 459 Hall, Capt. Norman B. Wn Guard ook ais 349 Hall, Percival, Columbia Institution for the Deaf. 397 Hall, Sallie Lea, House Committee on Claims . 273 Hall, W. D., House Committee on Printing____ 273 Hall, Brig. Gen. William E., Army Air Forces__ 333 Hall, William, H., Office of Architect of the Gap TOL. reEn ee EY, nei 275 Halla, rhs Rule, Office of Coordination and OVIOW:. sid oun Sail als sh ar Tl ee 32: Haller, Mabel, House Committee on the Dis-trictof Columbia...[fetes re 273 Hallett, Ralph H., Maritime Commission______ 405 Halliday, John T'., House document room______ 2 Halliday, Malcolm F., National Labor Relations BOA Lh nn ha a ma ne 412 Hallo, H. S., Netherlands Embassy _..__._______ 462 Halpin, Franklin J., Employees’ Compensation CommiSsiont. or. Xn aru gen ry 390 Halsey, Edwin A., Secretary of the Senate (DIOZEADNY. a crim ah waht LE dine 2) 263 Hambidge, Gove, Agricultural Research Ad- TISERATION oot ent I ht add edie ts 361 Hamblet, Philip C., Office of War Information__ 314 Hambleton, J. L., Bureau of Entomology and Plant. Quarantine... on oor” of wwii 3 | Hamer, Elizabeth E., National Archives Hamer, Philip M., National Archives__________ 406 ‘| Hamilton, Carl, Office of Secretary of Agricul-TIER rei Ch oe ee ew Bi Bf ait Hamilton, George E., Washington National Monument:Soclety. = 8. 423 Hamilton, Maxwell M., Division of Far Eastern LLL A as a ee PL 25 Hamilton, T. A., Metals Reserve Company _.___ 376 Hamlin, Fred, Civil Aeronautics Administra- Jomesnd Re ARN Xl Td a Ha 374 Hamm, John E., Office of Price Administration. 318 Hammack, William T., Bureau of Prisons______ 337 Hampton, Frank A., Federal Power Commis- 113)1 RR OR Re AE Re DE 1 2 Hampton, Ruth, Division of Territories and Island Possessions... «...-wou.S0I0 SU 355 Hamrick, Acie, Capitol Police. _.___.__________ 275 Hanback, William D., Washington city posi offiee. Zignds an TnL channeldann Hance, Emma, District Public Library. _.._. pi: Hancock, Clarence E., Commission in Control of the House Office Building... coo oo 233 Hancock, Mrs. ClarenceE., Congressional Club. 390 Handy, Maj. Gen. Thomas Ti The Joint Bord. ol soll const cura il gobi: 404 ‘War Department General Staff ______________ 332 Hanes, Laura R., Nyiimal Archives. ..__.._... 406 tio Hm Col. Edward C., Office of the Inspector General, WAT: el 3 00 Bh ie BEX nn fe 332 Hanke, Lewis U.: Division of the American Republies..o._ 324 Reference Department, Library of Congress._ 278 War Department General Staff ______________. 331 Hankin, Gregory, Public Utilities Commission_ 452 Hanley, Brie. Gen. Thomas J., Jr.,, Army Air 1 Tr eee ee en 333 2 rook] Elizabeth A, Office of Secretary of Com- TREY Here te a i TR errr 70 Hanna, G. C., Committee on Practice __________ 3 30 Hanna, Hugh S., Bureau of Labor Statistics_____ 381 Hansen, Alvin H., Joint Economic Committees. 319 Hansen, Rasmus C., Washington city post office Hanson, Alfred E., mechanical superintendent, Government Printing Office-Tchr 13 278 Harbison, Dr. Frederick H., Petroleum Admin-trationfor Wars. Lt.oN eit 318 08 Hardie, W. V.; Interstate Commerce Commis- 3 Harding, Harold F., District Fire Department__ 450 Harding, Victor Hunt, Deputy Sergeant at Arms oP House lio Lb JU JIL IGS ail Gy 271 Har Dr. C. O., Office of Alien Property Cus-Fp 537 RUE INE a LR IL BRET SO RLS BAL 311 Hardy, ee D., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster:General.o..u. J tooo Luuiin 339 Hardy, John F., Social Security Board________._ 394 Hardy, Lamar, Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission. cuineid wd 28 Fu ame oi 238 Hardy, Sam W., House Committee on Ways and |YT CR Fo RNY RR 274 { | | | Individual Index Page Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Ee eS 9S Cot Yn BL Sl 363 Harney, M. L., Bureau of Narcotics. __.________ 328 Harper, Allan o Office of Indian Affairs_______ 352 Harper, Frank H., House post office.___________ 272 Harper, Heber R., Social Security Board. ______ 395 Harper, Capt. John, Naval Hospital. ___________ 347 Harper, Brig. Gen. Robert W., Army Air OrCes no antl dunle lL LEER ante 333 Harper, S. O., Bureau of Reclamation. _________ 353 Harr, Luther, Office of Bituminous Coal Con-sumers” Counsel zo ise Lovin.adr 413 Harr, William R., Washington National Mon ment Society. SEN La ent om stil Harraman, Jesse O., Office of Third al Postmaster General ________________________ 339 Harriman, W. Averell, Combined Production and:Resonrces Beard: i. i ii za: io 321 Harrington, Daniel, Bureau of Mines___________ 354 Harrington, First Lt. Davis O., Inter-American Defense Board...Fie 00 402 Harrington, Earl G., General Land Office. _____ 351 Harris, Bertha S., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. sai of dul Enas 75 234 Harris, Rev. Frederick Brown, D. D., Chaplain of United States Senate .____.______________ 263 Harris, Ralph L., Congressional Record Clerk Capitol SE ea eee eT ee ts 275 Harris, Virginia H., Airlines Ticket Office, Capitolid. Soniuiyli logo. Sei niin Sing 276 Harrison, Andrew J., Veterans’ Administra-Hon SpilsG lei of Janie pare 0g pied 422 Harrison, Earl G., Immigration and Naturaliza- HON SOEVIEe 2s. orodol See 336 Harrison, George L., American Red Cross_.____ 386 Harrison, George’ Ww, Washington city post, office. Ui inc HSS IS paraLIST Harrison Gladys, Federal Security Agency... 1 Harrison, Commander Kenneth §., Coast Guard i onl a aE 348 Harrison, Lloyd B.: District corporation counsel’s office. __________ 449 Public Utilities Commission ____._______._____ 452 Harrison, Robert L., Office of Architect of the Capitol Pim emer me A eA Le Ee A a 275 Harrison, Ross G., National Academy of Seloneos 0. AI00. Joi Col oU ons 405 Harrison, Brig. Gen. W. H., Army Service OT CCS sienivas «cits ane rtash dont ns oi ia LOD 34 Harrison, Wallace K., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. ___._____.___.____ 312 Harron, Marion J., Tax Court of the United States Ui, 05 BL U00 TnL on ols 437 Hart, Earl E., secretary to Senator Burton. ____ 268 Hart, Shirley K., Federal Housing Administra- Pale Ey SE SR ER SA Cn CR SO PL SR ELA 409 Hart, Thomas B., Securities and Exchange Commission; D./.. Su8T Sa T0190 8 15] 17 Hart, Admiral I". C., General Board. __________ 343 Hart, W. 0., Combined Shipping Adjustment BOs sort ins ste iasar ies ra nro EE 321 Hart, Lt. Col. William, Selective Service Systemic 20:00 0 0 EA THRO BY 315 Hart, Willard L., Chief Clerk, Court of Claims__ 435 Hartfield, Joseph M., American Red Cross.____ 386 Hartley, E. Boykin, Bituminous Coal Divi- gionzoil -355 Hartley, Earl E.,, Secretary to Senator Millikin__ 269 Hartrey, James V., Office of the Majority Yeader. iat. ie es IBELDO 270 Harvey, George Y., House Committee on Ap- propriations einen ab EIR 1 JEST 273 Harvey, Hugh W., United States attorney’s office Co QU Clit LB VTS RTO 438 Hervey, John, Office of Secretary of the Interior_351 Harvey, Patrick D., National Mediation Board. 413 Harvey, Dr. Verne K., Civil Service Commis- Sion. oo a Snags30 IR 388 SUiaNOR Harwood, Charles, Governor of Virgin Islands__ 356 Haskell, Col. John H. ¥., War Department Cenoral Ball. icon. sore IE EST 333 Haskell, William N., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations... _____.___.__.___ 325 Haslam, Reuben B., Wage and Hour and Con-tracts DIVISIONS. coe. oo ooo co CHASE 381 Hassell, Calvin W., Office of Postmaster Gen-Cro BE RRsat Atay es Lee) | ESSE NO Er LT IR 338 Page Hassett, William D., Division of Current In-formation EE SX Tn CS se (REL LC a 324 Hatch, Dorothy Keith, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations: soz: 0 vial dasa 265 Haw, J P., Food Distribution Administra-SO ES SOLE ISIE SRS ee TN PR hs RR EE 367 Hatfield, Charles S., judge, Court of Customs and "Patent Appeals (biography) ______._.__ 433 Hatuway, Carson C., Civil Service Commis-sion. oar. ote CiniaamnaEnant hae 388 Hauck, Lt. Col. C. J., Jr., War Department General Stall... Joinoanliaro dust 332 Haun, H. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COTAMSION: (0 saa be Lh ihren i Laois 372 Hauser, Dr. Philip M., Bureau of the Census_._ 371 Havell, Thomas C., General Land Office_______ 351 Havens, Harry A., Division of Foreign Service Administration wisgiaaU oniilyf oir 25 Hawkins, Harry C.: Board of Economic Operations. _ ____.________ 324 Committee for Reciprocity Information. _____ 389 Division of Commercial Policy and Agree- ments: ioessidi].JN sad noninile Reo 324 Hawkins, L. S., Office of Education____________ 395 Hawkins, Paul M., secretary to Senator Butler. 268 Hawley, Rear Admiral, J. H., Coast and Geo- etieBarveyii bus alli cd siaad Dn 372 Hay, Edward N., Office of Price Administration. 318 Haycock, Robert L., District Board of Educa- tion io ooh iitvtaeiattuben) anid J 448 Hayden, Bernard A., Office of Treasurer of United: States .cicie fds Brsdrodiduis 329 Hayden, Carl: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 236 Joint Committee on Printing... _..___.. 234 Hayden, John H., Senate Press Gallery__..__... 729 Haydon, Edith M., superintendent of nurses, St. Elizabeths Hospitals. >. ioc... 05.0 397 Hayes, Capt. Webb C., Bureau of Naval Per- sonnel tel Aiolbol cabaniis aati) Bear 344 Hayes, William J., Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Haykin, David J., Processing Department, Li- brary. of Congreso iin. > sab bois)gma 279 Hays, William J., War Production Board liaison offieedis: Losi lL to oT ea Se Sage 277, Hayter, W. G., British Embassy... 460 Hayward, P., Combined Production and Re- Sources Board cies le A oon Loe ao 321 Hazard, Henry B., Immigration and Naturaliza-tion Services +f i. i ca ie a 337 Hazard, J. N., Office of Lend-Lease Administra- i TE ERG I eR RI ee 313 Heacock, B. C., War Production Board ___..____ 316 Healy, ones F., District Engineer Depart- Corie re RED Eg BE oof PES OE AE haat Tm» Plea 450 Healy, ott E., Securities and Exchange Com-TS ONE renTe ae teh ho 416 Heaton, Ruth C., Senate Committee on Privilegesand Elections. -._.. 264 Hébert, Edward F., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. — orien dees 237 Hechinger, Sidney L., Columbia Hospital for WOMB. ii so ioirra Sa arnt nih waats 389 Heck, Mark A., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poradion. Sin Tn as 392 Heckman, J. Harrison, American Red Cross.___ 386 Hederman, Commander T. H., Bureau of Naval Porshypjeliits 16 AaiEliics oo He aT 345 Heers, William H., Geological Survey. _________ 353 Hefielfinger, R. A., Bureau of Accounts________ 329 Heffelfinger, Will iam T., Office of Secretary of ENTIRE ay Laer hms ie Sd ete eles nls LD, 327 Heflin, Cecil R., United States attorney’s office. 438 Hefner, Wilson C., secretary to Senator Wiley__ 269 Heimer, BoB, Panama: Canal 0. 0 To 00 413 Heiner, Capt. John N., Coast Guard. _.._.___ 349 Heinmiller, Adelbert W., District Board of Ed-TTT Re rh rr ih LET 448 Heiskell, Rose B., Senate Committee on Inter-oceanic Canals____ Heisler, Kenneth G., Federal Home Loan Bank System 0 HEIDI oo Le Saiidagne (Orin 411 Heitmeyer, Dr. P. L., The Alaska Railroad. ____ 356 Heller, Harry, Securities and Exchange Commis-sion Hellman, Florence S., Reference Department, Library of Congress on pl SL CR LE el 278 848 Congressional Directory Page Page Ty Capt. J. Frederick, Naval Observa-ih RY CET Lo PU A ES I SL ey TL XT 1 Helmbyid, Gerald H., Maritime Commission___ 405 Helvering, Guy T., Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Ss aouizepiodzity0 OL dss Dando 329 Hemstreet, V. V., Farm Credit Administration. 364 Henckels, F. L., Office of Procurement and Materialia df sninidal vlan ig lo Suadasl aig. 342 Henderson, Charles B.: Defense Plant Corporation... ccocoeoooooooo-375 Defense Supplies Corporation... ocooooo-__ 376 Disaster Loan Corporation... __.....__. 378 Export-Import Bank of Washington____._____ 378 Federal National Mortgage Association.__..__ 377 Metals Reserve Company. -_ occ 376 National Power Policy Committee ____---____ 357 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _______ 374 Rubber Reserve Company _ __._____i_______ 82877 War Damage Corporation... __._.___. 378 Henderson, Christopher O., Office of Personnel 360 Henderson, Loy W., Division of European airshrts. Too Jalan 0. saris Hendrickson, Roy F., Food Distribution Ad-ministrationdiagsilssull on) Adil 366 a Hendrix, J. A., American Red Cross. __-_.__.__ 386 Henkle, ‘Herman H., Library of Congress.._--._ 278 Henlock, Charles x Office of the Architect of the Capitol Pe A IE ae AEE LEE ai ond ATL ey 275 Hennessy, Josselyn, British Embassy... 460 Henry, Conder C., Patent Office. ____...____..__ 373 Henry, Maj. Gen. ‘Guy V.: Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- TSslon:. Soleus a at DS TR BY 322 Permanent Joint Board on Defense. __.._.____ 315 Hensel, H. Struve: Office of Secretary of the Navy. _.ocoooooacoa = 341 Procurement Legal Division ____.____._...____ 342 Hepburn, Admiral A. J., General Board___..___ 343 Hepner, William S., American Red Cross... 387 Herbert, Clara W., District Public Library_.____ 448 Herbert, John, Office of Recorder of Deeds_ 440 Herbner, Elizabeth, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. _____ 264 Hertiny, Thomas I., United States attorney’s 253 CURE EE Sat Sl le ty 2 ER A Ls nl Sl ss oy Albert B., secretary to Senator Bar boris en ee 268 Hernéndez, Capt. D. E. M. Antonio Zavala, Mexican Ehbassy oon sis oi ivene 462 Hernandez, FranciscoJ., Pan American Union__ 414 Herndon, Radle, secretary to Senator Kilgore___ 269 Heroy, William B., Petroleum Administration Herrell, Le Officeof Budget and Finance 359 Herrell, Russell H. ., administrative assistant, Government Printing’Officest 7. is 277 Herrell, Strother B., Office of Personnel. _______ 360 Herrera, Dr. Porfirio, Dominican Embassy _____ 458 Herrera-Arango, Dr. Raoul, Cuban Embassy... 458 Herrick, Lt. Comdr. Carl E,, Coast Guard... 348 Herring, Clyde L., Office of Price Administra- IONE SA tT Nel a DER a ol 318 Herring, Frank W., National Resources Plan-ning Board Co UN TE BS 31 Herring, Willard E., Rural Electrification Ad- MINSErAtion. os sre Rem emt a 366 Herrmann, Capt. E. E., Bureau of Ordnance.... 345 Hershey, Maj. Gen. Lewis B., Selective Service NT TR a Gl dh Cn Ey 315 Hertford, Dr. Harold B., District Board of Den-LR Er aminors al wet 447 Hertford, Col. K. F., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission... cco eeoia 322 Hertle, Louis, National Park Trust Fond. EE TTT5 ME nel Stee SE A Hertsch, James W., Office for Emergency one AIO re ir nm EE ea 310 Herwick, Robert P., Food and Drug Adminis- tration Se Bp AE LB 396 Herwitz, Harry K., Railroad Retirement Board. 415 Heseltine, Marjorie M., Children’s Bureau. __._ 381 Hesford, Lt. Comdr. Arthur J., Coast Guard.__ 348 Hess, Lt. Col. Alexander, Czechoslovakian Le- SALON. = Arh ey 458 Hess, Helen M., Bureau of Naval Personnel.__ 344 Hesselman, Henry V., House Committee on Enrolled Bills. Cs 273 Hester, E. D., Commonwealth of the Philip- pines lr sn pine a y dalah 356 Hetzel, Naomi H., Public Utilities Commission_ 452 Heurtematte, Max, Panamanian Embassy _____ 463 Hewett, F. Vv. Cc. Material Coordinating Com- mittee saandlorysiand Teionl oaadal i: mae 31 Hewitt, ios G., Public Buildings Adminis- tration ate Fe Son ret FLL ae CU Mr RR 13 399 Heyman, Philip I., Patent Office Heyser, Norma, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. sous sustil einai) varies 10g 265 Hibben, James H., Tariff Commission. ..____._ 419 Hickerson, John Division of European Adlnirg. sian ana 324 Permanent Joint Bond on Defense. ..._.._. 415 Senate Hickey, Margaret A., War Manpower Com-mission. Cosi id lols ilo bolus IE Satan: Hickey, Mary, Senate Committee on Banking andiCurreney J. uo tl lena ao Rta eT 264 Hicks, Evelyn, Joint Committee on Printing, Capitol oo: cot fusnsd Jos aiul orl satlandl aids 234 Hicks, Roowig V., Visa Division... ci .ugii. 326 Hicks, R.C., Office of the Doorkeeper-....__._. 271 Hickson, William H., assistant tally clerk of TE OWSe Bron SE Ld an ID ean ba DE Bsa A 270 Higgins, Edward J.: Secretary to Senator Green_________.__________ 268 Senate Committee on Privileges and Elec- ITIL I CO a Le 266 Higgins, Elmer, Fish and Wildlife Service._____ 355 Higgins, Lt. Col. Lawrence, Inter-American De- odense Board... ol ciel blosssiviatisatl 401 Hightshoe, M. W., House post office __________ 272 Hilbun, Henry, Jr., Office of the Solicitor-...____ 360 Hildreth, Melvin D., War Relief Control Board. 318 Hile, John R., Office of the Secretary of the eNALeILE Lathan dS naR iradurcaa his renin 263 Hill, A. C. C., Jr., War Production Board...___ 316 Hill, Arthur D., Office of Secretary of Labor..._ 380 Hill, Arthur Mm Office of Secretary of the Navy d Transportation: Branch ti... ooclutiaoiaias Hill, George H., Jr.: Defense Supplies Corporation SS INS BR TV 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 374 Hill, Grover B., Assistant Secretary of Agri-CUIAPS i Th vi = rie eis Deis vr Sowl wt 3 SAAT 358 Hill, Jesse, International Boundary Commis- sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada.__ 402 Hill, Ralph W. S., assistant to the legal adviser. 326 Hill, Samuel B., Tax Court of the United States. 437 Hill, Thurman, Office of General Counsel for the ILyreasury. moiauold.i... So ouabicl toiusl is 328 Hill, Brig. Gen. Walter N., Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps)... c...onae dls. 20 348 Hiller, Adelbert D., Veterans’ Administration._ 421 Hillhouse, A. M., National Housing Agency... 408 Balad, Enel, Senate Committee on Com- is on ro Temetty 264 Hilts, H °F; , Public Roads Administration... 399 Himebaugh, Keith, Office of Information. ._.._. 360 Hines, Brig. Gen. Frank T.: Federal Board of Hospitalization. ______.______ 391 Veterans’ Administration. ..___________._.. -421 Hinrichs, A. F., Bureau of Labor Statistics.____ 381 Hinton, RaymondJ., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Hipp, Capt. T. Earle, Bureau of Supplies Ald, EL RR Le Te of Hipsley, S. Preston, director of training, a ment Printing Office... -osiiciuzioo. 277 Hirschman, George F., Pan American Union___ 414 Hirshberg, Henry A., Puerto Rico Reconstruc- tion Administration... Lou).ood. aus 356 -Hiscox, Joseph W., Office of Information___.._.. 360 Hiss, Donald: Board of Economic Operations. _______..___ 324 Foreign Funds Control Division. ____________. 325 Hitchcock, Col. Lawrence S., Inter-American Defense Board... i. socanmaiissesbindia. 401 Hoagland, Harrell O., General Accounting 0} Hobbs, Ewart W., commissioner, Court of Hobby, Oveta Culp, Army Service Forces._____ 334 Hobson, Alfred T., Reconstruction Finance COI DOratION re men nnn en a racemes 374 Individual Index 849 Page Page Hobson, Ivan L., Soil Conservation Service. _ 368 Horbett, J. E., Board of Governors of the Fed-Hochbaum, H, W., Extension Service 36 eral Reserve System. 0 Coo. Sontag Hockenberry, Lt. Col. Earl W., Permanent Hornaday, Dr. F. A., District Anatomical Joint Board on Defopse. = ima 415 Board... rn aE aan 447 Hodge, Charles L., Railroad Retirement Board. 414 Hornbeck, Stanley K.: Hodgson, Patrick =H, Office of Secretary of the tl Adviser on Political Relations________________ 323 Committee on Political Planning _____ ____ 324 Hoey, Jane M., Social Security Board.__.________ 394 Horne, Douglas B., Washington city post office. 452 Hogan, Harry G., General Anthony Wayne Horne, Vice Admiral . J Memorial Commission... __ 238 Naval:Operations./. ito aod sroall mle 342 Hogan, James A., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 271 The Joint Board zine asd siooticanls) 404 Hoidale, P.A, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Horner, William, Office of the Doorkeeper______ 271 Quarantine i ee EE earn EER 362 Horter, "Byron: : Hoke, Mary C., Senate Committee on Military Metals Reserve Company ER Re AS Ea Ee ere 377 ars. ea oye JURE ar 265 Rubber Development Corporation___________ 379 Holabird, Eleancr, Senate Committee on Public Horton, H. B., National War Labor Board_____ 311 Buildingsand Grounds... ___ ii: 7 Horton, James A., Federal Trade Commission__ oe Holabird, John A., Commission of Fine Arts___ 389 Hosny, Hassan, Egyptian Legation 459 Holcomb, R. D., Office of Architect of Capitol __ 275 Hostetler, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Holcomb, Lt. Gen. Thomas, Commandant, Banking and Currency Marine a 347 Hottel, J. Lee, General Accounting Office. ______ 400 Holden, Capt. Carl, Board of War Communica- Hough, Col. John F., Work Projects Adminis-2 fons. falas ATENEO Rea SEN 311 tration EA CREAR Es © ie DB ERE a Holden, Queen, Senate Committee cn Finance__ 265 Houghteling, James L., War Savings Staff__ Holger, Capt. Immanuel: Houghton, Arthur A., Jr., Reference Livi Inter-American Defense Board _______________ 401 ment, Library of Congress RAE CE ERA 278 Chilean Embaggy li? 185 sr mais2 a 457 House, Dr. ‘Hugh O., Metropolitan Police_____._ 451 Holland, Bernard bo Smaller War Plants Cor- House, Jerry B., Senate Committee on Inter-poration rR pe A a a Ep RE 316 state:Commeree: ©... sizi0 Lh amiio gad 265 Holland, John F., Administrative Office of the House, William B., House post office___________ 272 United States COUrts.. oiefo 438 Houseman, John, Office of War Information ___ 314 Holland, Kenneth G., Office of the Coordinator Houston, John M., National Labor Relations of Inter-American Affairs Boardumciscoiloni lio Lain adn Holland, Leicester B., Reference Department, Library of Congress rR re thd 278 Howard, N. R., Office of Censorship____________ 317 Holland, T.-W-., War Relocation Authority. ___ 317 Howard, Victor A., District Personnel Board___ 447 Hollinger, Jacob H., Bureau of Supplies and Howe, OC. D., Combined Production and Re-Accounts. oo 0 Saaban 346 sources: Boardur: Lodi ln Soret Set tue 321 Hollis, R. A., Office of Information_____________ 360 Holm, George E., Bureau of Dairy Industry____ 362 How Paul E., Bureau of Animal Industry____ 362 Holmes, Dr. Chester W., District Board of Edu- Howell, Copher, Office of Secretary of the Senate 264 [rain ene TealSa 448 ae en Howell, J. Carney, Office for Emergency Man- Holmes, Oliver W.: agement AES 3 31 008 1S 000 SB Re LU Wa Ba Li RY 310 Nationar Archives... etd ents 406 Howington, James T., Smaller War Plants Cor- National Historical Publications Commission. 407 POration... oC waaiab Taggers aadeln] 316 Holmes, Pehr G.: Hoyt, Avery S., Bureau of Entomology and Capital Auditorium Commission_____________ 233 Plant Quarantine 362 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Hoyt, James A., auditor and reporter, Court hounds... a ofiClaims. Jo ia bir died Saal Srnadl 435 Holmes, William H., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Hsiao, Maj. Sin-ju Pu, Chinese Embassy .______ 457 Holmgren, Hazel A., Administrative Office of Hsieh, Ching-Kien, Chinese Embassy. _.______ 457 the United States Courts___________________ 438 Huang, Jen Zien, Chinese Embassy. iii... 457 Hubbard, Henry F., Civil Service Dorission. 388 Hubbard, Henry Vv, National Capital Park and Planning Commission. oo... 408 Hubert, George H.: oh on C., Bureau of Mines.___.___________ 354 Metals Reserve Company... ______ ooo... 376 Hood, Andrew MecCaughrin, judge, Municipal Rubber Development Corporation. .____._.__ 379 Court of Appeals for the District of Colum- Rubber Reserve Company KNEE ERROR LIS A 377 Hudgens, R. W., Farm Security Administra-lotsa nmin J israbo. CM 00 0h 368 Hudlow, Thomas A., District Temporary Home for Soldiers and Ballers... irlli 449 Hooft Graafland, Jonkheer, G. C. D., Nether- Huff, Marion N., Senate Committee on Foreign lands Embassy 463 Relatlons. orn Biot oh ds 265 Hooker, John S., Office of Secretary of State. 323, 324 Huff, Ray L.: Hooker, Robert O., Office of the Secretary of Distriet penal institutions... ___._...___._._. 449 District Public Welfare Board. _________ae 448 Hoover, Frances B., Senate Committee on Ap- Hulfty, Page, Columbia Hospital for Women____ 389 Propriations. ci cof. consent sdivaaoiang 264 Hughes, Charles Evans: Hoover, Herbert, American Red Cross 386 American Red Crossiizi 0... 00 Juang 386 Hoover, J. Edgar, Federal Bureau of Investiga-Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court OR. covmeari Bt 02 Sag lioe TL NE an 336 (revived). Lod Soc annua Sanath 59 429 Hopkins, Harry L.: Hughes, Fred J., Food Distribution Adminis- AmericanHed:Cross: iti = FF i073 haan 386 tration. o.oo in Olan lg SIE 367 Munitions Assignments Board_______________ 320 Hughes, George P., Veterans’ Administration__ 422 Special Assistant to the President. ___________ 310 Hughes, H.J., American Red Cross______._._____ 386 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library __. 407 Hughes, Col. John B., Army Ground Forces..__ 333 Hopkins, Howard, Forest Service_______________ 365 Hughes, J. C., Panama Canal. _____.___________ 413 Hopkins, Ira C., Office of Lend-Lease Adminis-Hulbirt, Harry H., Office of Treasurer of United tration 4. ana] 313 States... 0 muni Zuid Seka SAR 329 Hopkins, Isabelle Mott, Children’s Bureau_.____ 381 Hulings, Vera, Senate Committee on Inter-Hopkins, O. P., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-oceanic Canals... Ji ZoningTE 265 tic Commerce: oo sipvpi.aan i a 371 (Secretary State): Jh Hull, Cordell of Hopkins, Selden G., Civil Service Commission_ 388 Biography ef lise Jorn rd gay Huy 323 Hopwood, Capt. H. G., Bureau of Naval Per-Board of Economic Warfare __-._____________ 317 SONNE. la nn om anas in res 345 Foreign Service Buildings Commission_____._ 325 Ea 850 Congressional Directory Page Hull, Cordell (Secretary of State) —Continued. Governing Board, Pan American Union.______ 414 Member, Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 417 National Archives Couneil..._......___....___ 407 National ‘Gallery of: Art... o.oo. aio 418 National Munitions Control Board_______..___ 413 Hull, William C., Civil Service Commission..__ 388 Hulley, Benjamin M., Visa Division___________ 326 Hulverson, George R.: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration___ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System ____________ 410 Hummel, Arthur W., Reference Department, Library of Congress be a 8 ri 278 Hummer, Hiram W., House Committee on Penstons. sotisanerdnboand § sailed Yoamaiian 273 Hungate, T'. L., Howard University SIAL ERR (he 397 Hunsaker, Dr. Jerome C.: National Academy of deolences.. noiion 405 National Advisory Committee or Aero- NAWHCS.. ose NS I RIE I 405 Hunt, Harry J., Jr., Washington city post office.. 452 Hunt, John W., Officelof the First Assistant Postmaster General _..... iooircgpiion. 338 Hunt, Merrill, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- tion E. sured wml A SRgis, enhia 411 Hunt, William Carl, American Red Cross._..__ 386 Hunter, Albert C., Food and Drug Administra-2 : donk. Staal nia J. slau. Lib Lgl 9 Hunter, Alice C., District Recreation Board.. 448 Hunter, Egerton KX, National Housing Agency. 408 Hunter, H. G., Public Buildings Administra- Hons slozida] distin No fide fini 399 Hunter, John A., Office of the Doorkeeper_.____ 271 Hunter, Col. Rosser L., Office of the Inspector General; Wiarzinz00 2 10 006. L400) 332 Hunter, W. Carroll, Office of the Solicitor Hurban, Vladimir, Ozechoslovakian Minister___ = Hurley, ‘Ray, Bureau of the Censusuild arinds. 371 Hursey, Frank, Railroad Retirement Board.__. 415 Husbands, Sam H.: Defense Plant Corporation. _____.._____._.__._.___ 375 Defense Supplies Corporation. _______________ 376 Federal National Mortgage Association ba EL 377 Metals Reserve Company... :cicice_. 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation...FLaTAARA LL) 374 Rubber Reserve Company. __.______%____.._ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company. ______________ 377 ‘War Damage Corporation. ______________._._.__ 25 Huse, Robert, Office of War Information_._____ 314 Huss, Mary, clerk to the President of the Senate. 263 Hussey, Capt. , Jr., Bureau of Ordnance_. 345 Hutchins, L. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, ‘and Agricultural Engineering_________ 363 Hutchinson, Ruby C., secretary to Senator ‘White 269 Dinu Credit Corporation. _._____._____. 369 Food Production Administration__.._________ 367 Hutton, Maurice D., Combined Food Board, United States and Great Britain____.____.___ 320 Hyde, Elizabeth A., Women’s Bureau___.______ 382 Hyde, Rosel H., Federal Communications Com- mission. ac ad Sail Benin Ball Dee Ho T A., Bureau of Entomology and Bia Quarantine ee SR Ne RR hr 363 Hyssong, Col. Clyde L., Army Ground Forces.. 333 I Icenhower, Fred J., District corporation coun-sel’sioffieecicus a. maint Dail aaiun ii dainr 449 Ickes, Bom L. (Secretary of the Interior): Biography of. iioeil ood. Lo tosii aod 350 Capital Auditorium Commission____.__.__._____ 233 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 417 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission.__ 235 National Archives Gouneil . ______.___________ 407 National Forest Reservation Commission... ___ 235 National Park Trust Fund Board. _....______ 357 National Power Policy Committee. ____.______ 357 Petroleum Administrator. ..._ i. __.... ....._ 318 War Production’ Board... ioc iis aan 316 Solid Fuels Administration for War. _________ 357 Ihlder, John, Alley Dwelling Authority..____.___ 385 Tjams, George E.: Federal Board of Hospitalization ____.__.______ 391 Veterans’ Administration. i i 421 Page Illanes, Fernando, Chilean Embassy. _____._____ 457 Illanes, Mario, Chilean Embassy. ___________3__ 457 Imus, Archie As; Office of the Tinie Gen-eral ne iA CAE RB reo Ok 338 Ingersoll, Capt. S. H., Naval Air Station. _______ 346 Ingoldsby, Charles J., Office of the Doorkeeper__ 271 Ingoldsby, John L., Jt r., United States attorney’s Ingram, Clara D., House Committee on Census. 273 Ireland, Maj. Gen. Merritt W., Columbia Hos-pital Ion Women. oi... soinid. k osenal ors 389 Irey, Elmer L., Office of General Counsel for the Treasury ic Lil oo ooo or dive) | 327 Irgens, Francis, Norwegian Embassy._..____.__ 463 Irvine, Dallas D., National Archives. _____.______ 407 Irvine, Joseph B., District Health Department__ 451 Irving, Wilbur C.: 3 Office of the Secretary of State_____ Tie inh 323 Division of Departmental Personnel ________ Isaminger, Dr. Melvin P., District Health Boo PATEMENt. Cl 0 oo ene tat nT Ives, Guy E., Office of Secretary of the Senate. __ on Izaguirre, Carlos, Jr., Honduran Embassy. 461 J Jack, N. E., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus-trial Chemistry 361 Jackson, Andrew, Securities and Exchange Com- Jackson, Charles E.: Fish and Wildlife Service ______.__.___________ 355 International Fisheries Commission_____.______ 402 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- TEES Ea es Laat de onda ede slog 3 Jackson, Elenora, District Cosmetology Board.. 447 J ackson, Grace S., Freedmen’s Hospital 9 J ackson, Hugh R., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations 325 Jackson, Joseph R., judge, Court of Customs and, Patent Appeals (biography) aS dg Jackson, Dr. Lawrence W., Freedmen’s How: pita J At vig Mary G., Senate Committee on Agri-culture and Forestry Sofi Ri Ph se Jackson, Robert H., aa Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography)...._..__. 428 Jackson, Royal E., Administrative Office of the United States Courts. _ Slaton Wren ote 438 Jacobs, Commander A. C., Bureau of Naval Per-Sonmel 200 Aa REGIS, pil ies edt Jacobs, Emery E., Office of Secretary of Agri- culture... te bf ha ma eo 358 Jacobs, Harry B., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 271 Jacobs, Dr. J. Bay, District Health Department. 451 Jacobs, Lillian F'., War Production Board liaison 27 Jacobs, Rear Admiral Randall, Bureau of Naval Aorsonnel 344 Jacobsen,C. C., Farm Credit Administration... 364 Jacobson, Harold E., Defense Supplies Corpora- Jacoby, Robert B., Federal Savings and Loan Insnrance:Corporation.. &. = 410 Jager, Harry A., Office of Education____________ 396 Jago, John W., Office for Emergency Manage- ment. C10. TANITA A 00s) (JO TERR RTA) 310 James, A. Hand: Secretary to Senator Bailey ___________________ 268 Senate Committee on Commerce ____________ 264 James, Concha Romero, Pan American Union__ 414 James, E. W., Public Roads Administration___ 399 James, Macgill, National Gallery of Art________ 418 James, M. C., Fish and Wildlife Service_.______ 355 James, SEE W., Saal Pollop. L001 Joins 275 Jamison, Betsy J oe, office ofHs Speaker_._____. 270 Jamison, Thomas H., General Land Office. ____ 351 Jandrey, Arthur 8., Tennessee Valley Au- thority Ps I A lit CB a Lk 1) 420 Janssen, Walter A., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic, Commeree. iz. on 0. si malin conte 371 Jardine James T., Office of Experiment Sta-tion Jarman, on Joint Committee on Printing... 234 Individual Index Page Page Jarnagin, RobertL., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Jarrett, Edward, Senate Committee on Inter-state Comméree. .. 265 Jasspon, William H., Commodity Credit Cor- DOPRLION wiz oan tos or oN rah re A 369 Jawdat, All, Iraq Minister... Farin vin 461 Jay, Nelson Dean, American Red Cross________ 386 Jefferds, Warren c., Office of the Secretary of the Sender il fl mnhor: 0 Coane 264 Jeffers, T. C., National Capital Park and Plan-ning*Commisgion_ 2 "=r ot brads40 408 Jeffers, William M., War Production Board____ 316 Jeffrey, Newman, Office of Civilian Defense___ 312 Jelleff, Frank R., District Parole Board________ 448 Jenkins, John W., Federal Power Commission__ 393 J suki Ray L., United States attorney’s offiges =F Test F iS 08 a RANE VE il 4 Jenkins, Raymond, House folding room _______. 271 Jenkins, Roger P., Office of Lend-Lease Admin- istration sc 0. Lo SSt 00 SERIE ree . 313 Jennings, B. B., War Shipping Administration. 317 Jessen, Carl A., Office of Education. ___________ 395 Jessup, G. P., Tennessee Valley Authority_____ 420 Jessup, Philip C., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations _________________ 325 Jester, Fridge L., Capitol Police_______________. 275 Jeter, Helen R., Bureau of Human Nutrition Py rai B., National Academy of Sciences. 405 Jiménez, Enrique A Ambassadorof Panama. ____________________-463 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 414 Jewell, Commander Henry T., Coast Guard____ 348 Joerg, W. L. G., National Archives_____________ 406 Johnson, A. Sidney, Bureau of Customs._______ 328 Johnson, Vice Admiral Alfred Wilkinson: : Inter-American Defense Board ____._________ 401 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- TERE Ee a Se Te Ln Se Se i 2 Permanent Joint Board on Defense___________ 415 Johnson, Lt. Col. Campbell, C.: District Parole Board. oot cocitiasLet 448 Selective Service System______________________ 315 Johnson, Carl A., Farm Security Administra-5 BONY. i tl a a 36! Sean Cecil A., Farm Credit Administration. 364 Johnson, Charlotte, American Red Cross.__.___ 387 Johnson, Clifford L., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Johnson, Dorothy R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System__________.___. ______ 393 Johnson, E. C., Farm Credit Administration__ 364 Johnson, Edwin C., Interparliamentary Union. 235 Jotun, Ellwood, District Engineer Depart- Ee a a TS ata nen a Sa ad he 450 Toto Fred W., commissioner, General Land soit kes ie sede Badan andi det abla 351 Johnson, H. Clay: Rubber Development Corporation. __________ 379 Rubber Reserve Company. _________ iA en 377 ‘War Damage Corporation_._____.____________ 379 Johnson, Hallett, Division of Defense Materials. 324 Johnson, Rear Admiral Harvey F., Coast Guardecs Cia ds pn 349 Johnson, Hiram W., Foreign Service Buildings COMMISSION =f ovo nite ot Pane Pose Ser 325 Johnson, J. Monroe, Interstate Commerce Com-TI ELH) deh ea Ge Sid Sap ial ed lid ufone pen 03 Johnson, James L., Committee on Conference Majority. of-the ....: _.o... 264 Senate... Johnson, James M., Office of the Sergeant at =e A TNE OB ena, sr Cth Eames nan 266 Johnson, James W., Senate Committee on the Districtof Columbia... =... o. Lier 264 Johnson, John DeW., General Accounting Col LNB HAR ball hE es 400 Johnson, Lee F., Federal Public Housing Au-thority... lois oo de aibns 411 Johnson, Lorne, House post office. ____________ 272 Johnson, L. A., House Committee on Invalid LRH EI Rib eb Con ER LN a al BE 273 Johnson, L. S., District assessor’s office_________ 447 Johnson, Mary O’B., Office of the Attorney General or irreSRE Sa 336 Johnson, Mordecai W., Howard University_.._ 397 Johmson, Otis B., Federal Trade Commission__. 397 Johnson, Brig. Gen. Robert W.: Smaller War Plants Corporation a FL 316 War Production os 316 Boards. _saciiiho Johnson, Sherman E.: Bureau of Agricultural Economies. ___________ 359 Food Production Administration_.___________ 367 Johnson, Thew D., Soil Conservation Service. _ 368 Johnson, V. Webster, Bureau of Agricultural Beonomies. oF ooo 359 Johnson, W. J.: Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 378 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 375 Johnson, W. R., Bureau of Customs____________ 328 J ohnston, Earl 5, Astrophysical Observatory___ 418 Johnston, Eric Ar Office of Economic Stabiliza- HOM ooo oo 20000 inno rt Hernan is ud 313 Johnston, Felton M., Office of Secretary of State. 323 J ohnston, L.J., Veterans’ Administration ______ 422 Johnston, Marie A. , Bureau of the Budget.____ 310 Johnston, V. Ds, Howard University... __...._. 397 J ohnstone, Alan, Federal Works Agency. ______ 398 Jonassen, Ingrid, Headquarters Marine Corps__ 347 Jones, Allen F. , N ational Archives. _______.__... 406 Jones, Amwell E., Soil Conservation Service... 368 Jones, Arthur Ww, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. _____.___________._ 314 Jones, Rear Admiral C. A., Office of Procure-mentand Material. RM oyanl 342 -...-.... Jones, Capt. Chester H., Coast Guard__________ 348 Jones, Edward R., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General reir herrea sa 339 Jones, Ernest P., Jr., Federal Housing Adminis-tration i ND: Sone LN SGia LE 409 Jones, Rear Admiral G. C., Permanent Joint Boardon Defense... i: li. _cillll.lil 415 Jones, Homer, Office of Alien Property Cus-todians SL U0E DBIHGIRG DS Sanit he U5 311 Jones, J. Weldon, Bureau of the Budget________ 310 Jones, Jesse H. (Secretary of Commerce): Biography of 2:0 iac pin, Hort (ite in 370 Board of Economic Warfare________.________ 317 Defense Plant Corporation. ___._________-____ 375 Defense Supplies Corporation_._________.____ 376 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 378 Federal Advisory Board for Vocaticnal Edueca- ET EeEd Ebb CE To LU Foreign Service Buildings Commission_______ 325 Foreign-Trade Zones Board _.______._________ 400 Inland Waterways Corporation_______________ 373 Member, Smithsonian Institution. ___.___.____ 417 Metals Reserve Company... _____._._____.____ 376 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 235 National Archives Council. __________________ 407 National Munitions Control Board___________ 413 Office of Economic Stabilization _____________ 312 Rubber Reserve Company __ _____.___________ 377 War Damage Corporation_________________.___ 37 War Productiomr Board. = ~1 Siti f Of 315 Jones, Ji oycette, Senate Committee on Indian AE er LE RR TY a) Jones-Parra, Col. Juan: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 401 Venezuelan Embassy. =o 466 Jones, L. A., General Accounting Office________ 400 Jones, Lewis A., Soil Conservation Service ____ 368 Jones, Lillian G., Senate Committee on Expend- itures in the Executive Departments ______ 265 isi] Sa, judge, Court of Claims (biogra- SHARIR Im eee a Cs el 4 Jones, Marvin, Office of Economic Stabilization_ 312 Jones, Olga A., Office of Eduecation_____________ 395 Jones, S. Shepard, Division of Political Studies. 326 Jones, Webster N., National Inventor’s Council 374 Jopson, R. Keith, British Embassy... _________ 460 Jordaan, J. R., Union of South Africa Legation_ 465 Jordan, Albert F., District superintendent of ITI0Y Th LE A pe i li ean 449 Jorstad, Lars J., Norwegian Embassy__________ 463 Joseph, Bertha C., secretary to Senator Rad- WTR 269 Joubert, Louis S., Senate Committee on Appro- DHALIONS Io] te otal eae ih rd Joyce, Walter E., Defense Plant Corperation___ 375 Judy, Howard A., Securities and Exchange Commission: fF coi itaid vue nivius. 417 Sam: Sy iam A., Treasurer of the United Page Page Jump, William A., Office of Budget and Fi- NANCE... i LOLLgIT In Paine ll Serr ty ----359 Jurado, Commodore Ignacio Garcia, Mexican Bmbossy. on oe etl Neos OIE 462 Jurgensen, Hans, Jr., tally clerk of the House---270 Jurkowitz, Frances, Office of Secretary of Labor. 380 Juve, O. A., Tariff Commission___ 419 K Kadane, David K., Securities and Exchange Commission asi oso otoe ooo oni SEE 416 Kadderly, Wallace L., Office of Information-_-. 360 Kaelber, George, Capitol Police 275 _ Kahler, Herbert E., National Park Service.___-353 Kahn, Herman, National Archives__.._.-—-----406 Kai, Ernest K., Secretary of Hawail __-—--o----356 Kaiv, Johannes, Estonian Legation ___-.------459 Kajeckas, Juozas, Lithuanian Legation 462 Kalbfus, Admiral E. C., General Board __--.-_-343 Kallistratov, Victor D., Soviet Socialist Re- publics Embassy. nena 466 -o-c-cieooooan Kammerman, David, secretary to Senator Panghers aoiereeno.Alama ion tos. 268 Kantrowitz, Morris S., technical director, Gov-ernment Printing Office. = --o-oo 278 Karker, Maurice H., Office of the Under Secre- tary ofl War... .Solelinil Lovo 331 Karr, C. L., Tennessee Valley Authority.------420 Karr, Day, Securities and Exchange Commis- Lakenis WE AN TVR Karsner, J. W., Federal Trade Commission__--398 Karsten, Frank M., House Committee on Ac- CONES ate aat ol -doses b A ann lt ns 273 Kasius, Peter, Social Security Board _ __--------394 Katz, Eugene, Office of War Information____---314 Katz, Milton, Combined Production and Re- sources: Board. citi teat sen bul ae 321 Kauffmann, Henrik de, Danish Minister .-----458 Kean, Brig. Gen. Jefferson Randolph: Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission. ---236 Kearley, Howard, House Committee on Bank-ing and CULreNeY.c toh ot same dz damm 273 Kearney, C. Michael, United States marshal’s in Keats, Harold, Office of Censorship Ke-chin, Wang, Chinese Embassy... -----------Keck, Inspector Ira E., Metropolitan Police... 451 Keech, Richmond B.: District corporation counsel. -o-oo 449 Public Utilities Commission... —coeoaoav 452 Keegan, John .J., Employees’ Compensation 5 OMISSION er ts oe So a Se Keeley, James H., Jr., Special Division ___..____ 326 Keels, W. Forrest, National Forest Reservation CC OTINISEION cm ne en re ad = ret Set srl sm 235 Keenleyside, Hugh L.: Joint Economic Committees... -----aceune---319 Permanent Joint Board on Defense___._.___._ 415 Keesling, Lt. Col. Francis V., Jr., Selective Service SYS: ors cny or ihe ane sas Sms re 315 Keester, Capt. William J., Coast Guard_.______ 348 Keezer, Dexter M., Office of Price Administra-2 JON red nks od ot LIME open 2 os hinian) 18 Kehoe, William A., Veterans’ Administration._ 422 Keim, George deB., Advisory Board on National Parks elec iis th adsl al an las celal 357 Keisker, H. F., American Red Cross Keith, Gerald, Division of the American Re- pubHegs oll ia SIL IRAs ST Sith LTO 324 Kelchner, Warren, Division of International Conferences: 2 lacs 0uuniils00 ns! J ay 3 Keleher, Rear Admiral T. J.: Army and Navy Munitions Board. _______.___ 387 Office of Procurement and Material __________ 342 Keller, H. G., Federal Home Loan Bank System. 410 Keller, Guy de, Swiss Legation____________.____ 465 Kelley, E. F., Public Roads Administration..__ 399 Kelley, E. J., Food Distribution Administra- ESi LA I ie 367 Kelley, Jerome T.: Federal National Mortgage Association ______ 377 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 375 Kelley, Leonora B., General Accounting Office. 400 Kelley, Paul L., Emergency Court of Appeals__ 437 Kelley, Willard F., Immigration and Naturali- zation Service. i. cuit. inion dean iod 4 336 Kelley, William T., Federal Trade Commission. 397 Kellogg, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering ____________.___ 363 Kellstadt, Charles H., American Red Cross____ 386 Kellum, William W., Pan American Union____ 414 Kelly, Edward J., major and superintendent, Metropolitan Police. ...0. 0... 451 ool Kelly, Ernest, Bureau of Dairy Industry._._____ 362 Kelly, F. J., Office of Education... ___.__________ 395 Kelly, John B., Federal Security Agency.______ 394 Kelly, Thomas, Defense Plant Corporation_____ 375 Kelly, Walter E., Office of Postmaster General. 338 Kelsey, Harlan P,, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering 364 Kemp, Edward G., Bureau of the Budget______ 310 Kempainen, Leona L.: Federal Works Agency. ....-deuccedennas-on.- Work Projects Administration 3 Kemper, J. M., Bureau of Dairy Industry______ 362 Kemper, James T., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. — ~~ * 7 237 Kendrick, J. F., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 362 Kendrick, Wayne: Columbia Hospital for Women... .__.____ 389 District Accountancy Board... ________..______ 447 Keneipp, G. E., Department of Civilian De-POIIRO 5 ohh Bs dren dey mais it A = it pg Bl sors le 451 Kenerson, William H., National Research LITH pd I Ee ae ae I SRT 405 Kenestrick, Millard L., Office of Chief Clerk___ 324 Kennedy, Bernard R., National Archives__.___ 406 Kennedy, Christie Bell: Secretary to Senator George... _______ 268 Senate Committee on Finance _______________ 265 Kennedy, J. Thomas, District Superintendent of Weights, Measures, and Markets____.____ 449 Kenney, W. John: Office of Secretary of the Navy. __..____________ 341 Procurement Legal Division _._______________ 342 Kennedy, W. McNeil, Office of Alien Property CUSEOQIBI. oo, te a is = 20s pa B8 mt mo rs prior 3 Kenyon, Walla A., Office of Secretary of War___ 332 Kepner, P. V., Extension Service...-......._._. 369 Keppel, Frederick P.: Board of Appeals on Visa Cases_.____________ 326 War Relief Control Board. —.-_______..__ 318 Kerans, Grattan, Patent Office_.-__..._.__.___. 373 Kerlin, Malcolm, Office of Secretary of Com- THIBEOD i oi ni et ern pr oy A re 370 Kern, John W., Tax Court of the United States. 437 Kern, Walter E., District Engineer Depart- INENE ciate mrt ns od ER ed oo Sr rE 2 PCT 450 Kernan, Dorothy M., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs... __.._______ 266 Kerr, Florence S.: Federal Security .. ....._.. 398 Ageney.....—--2--Work Projects Administration _-_____________ 399 Kerr, John H., Board of Visitors to the Military YO Bt ee mie Sa dil e al a sla a ales 236 Kerr, Raymond E., Office of Bituminous Coal Consumers. Counsel... 2...y= "0 413 Kessler, David, Railroad Retirement Board_.__ 415 | Kettering, Charles F., National Inventors’ Connello coo. pat eS 374 Key, David McK., Office of Secretary of State_. 323 Keyes, Edith M., Federal Security Agency... 394 Keyserling, Leon H., National Housing Agency. 408 Khandan, Saifullah, Iraq Legation. ____________ 461 Kidd, Kathryn, Senate Committee on Inter- oceanic Canals: -oan. en deNen ean 265 Kidd, Raymond C., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Kidder, Alfred V., Indian Arts and Crafts ahs Individual Index Page Page Kiefer, Helen K.: Committee on Conference Minority of the Senate. soil len. Soe tiio Jdrssll Secretary to Senator MeNary_ _______.______._ Kieffer, Col. Pierre V., Office. of the Inspector E General, Wareh cicns sonia00 32 bois Kielland, Rolf H., Federal Trade Commission. _ 398 Kilby, Edwin L., Bureau of the Public Debt___ 329 Kilgallon, Verne R., United States attorney’s Jil 439 Kilgore, Harley M., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. ooo civner-ce 236 ica Killen, Manned M., Office of Recorder of ah Deed 0 Killen, Wythe] L., Committee on Conference Majority of the Senatef Ladi alanis 264 Kimball, Dr. Fiske: Advisory Board on National Parks, ete_._____ 357 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission... 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 236 Kimbo, Jesse J., District Engineer Depart- ment. ssi inl a SS a TI INT 450 Kincer, bt B., Weather Bureau......______ 373 Kincheloe, David H., judge, Customs Court (biography). coi cen Sei Ci Bil 36 King, Cecil 5 British-Embassy. ... co: of 460 King, Olsreal , District corporation counsel’s SESE naan I BNR Ra Cus SR I SS aS BEL 1 Te 450 King Earle C., Securities and Exchange Com- missiond vis an J snus Lal EE 416 King, Eldon P., Bureau of Internal Revenue_.. 329 King, Admiral Ernest J Chief of Naval Operations. .__.___..____.___ 342 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain. oot. 0. ia a an A 320 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States.._._.__.____ 404 TheJoint: Board. £.. oo. oli. 0. 000s. oo 404 King, Homer C., Interstate Commerce Com-403 King, John A., Office of Third Assistant Post-master General... oo. lar oniraa 339 king Leland W., Jr., Foreign Service Buildings: , ffi King, Luther R., General Land Office_.________ 351 King, Milton, Columbia Hospital for Women__ 389 King, Robert C., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General..._.. oi il. Ul 339 King, William L., District Real Estate Com-mission =o 51. 448 Kingives Eugene T., "Office of the “Majority mi Bt wm Hm SARA AS Lied 270 Kinsell, Ww L., The Alaska Railroad. __________ 356 Kintner, Capt. E. G., Compensation Board_.__. 344 Kirby, Paul L., District Public Welfare Board. 448 Kirstein, George, National War Labor Board___ 311 Kisling, George L., Captain of guards, Govern- ment Printing’Offfee oo ill uit 0... 278 Kisliuk, David E., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General... 70. FT Si=UhJit 338 Kitchen, C. W., Food Distribution Adminis- tration... ol i En SL aE 366 Klagge, Jules M., Joint Committee on Printing. 234 Klagsbrunn, Hans A.: Defense Plant Corporation... _________________ 375 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 374 Klapp, Edgar A., International Boundary Com-mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 402 Klaus, Samuel, Office of General Counsel of the TreaSwry. FoonJnrgie. iggy 327 Klee, Harry M., Bureau of Ordnance___________ 345 Klein, Alfred, Civil Service Commission_______ 388 Klein, Dr. Elmer, Commission on Mental Health... HS Burin CL aa 438 Klinefelter, C. F., Office of Education..________ 395 Klinge, E. F., Patent: Office.......c.vvowocnnii 373 Klingenberg, Col. Oscar, Norwegian Embassy... 463 Klossner, Howard J.: Defense Plant Corporation... __._.________ 375 Defense Supplies Corporation... _____________ 376 Federal National Mortgage Association_______ 377 Metals Reserve Company. _____._._______.___ 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 374 Rubber Reserve Company. __________________ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company... _________.. 377 ‘War Damage Corporation____________________ 378 Klotz, Henrietta S., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury. io. io ii Bt jn aiin an 32 Klutznick, Philip M., National Housing Agency. 409 Knaebel, "Ernest, reporter, United States Su-premeCGomt.-. ~ ooo oe aig 429 Knarr, Matthias W.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 374 War Damage Corporation____________________ 379 Knauff, William K., Office of Plant and Opera- tions Da mi Se eR ey ea 361 Kneipp, L. F., Forest Service__________________ 365 Roig Howard L., Office of Experiment Sta- 364 324 Knit, Telfair, War Shipping Administration. 317 Knollenberg, Bernhard, Office of Lend-Lease Administration o.oo mal gloSil 0S Knowlson, James S., War Production Board.__ Knowlton, Daniel W., Interstate Commerce Commission’: _llomialonbo inindad os 403 Knowlton, Donald R., Petroleum Administra-Hon for War Dolssuinge oily 318 2 Knox, Charles F., Jr., Division of Exports and Requirements Cnr ee at CL 325 sion pntse A aed 387 Biographyef. i To: nf aay Lingerie 341 Board of Economic Warfare. _________________ 317 Member, Smithsonian Institution____________ 417 National Archives Couneil .__________________ 407 National Munitions Control Board. __________ 413 War Production Board... 7 ~~ = 315 Knudsen, Orrin C., Securities and Exchange Commission 5 ci 0m Fr Rinna an 417 Knudsen, Lt. Gen. William 8., Office of Under Secretary of War... roscoe 331 Knutson, Harold: Interparliamentary Union... oi ial. ian 235 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Hon... Label mialiani 234 Koch, Capt. R. A., Bureau of Naval Personnel 344 Koch, Henry A. ' District municipal lodging- TRSea ale sg 449 Kocher, he H., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General... __ 339 Koenig, Paul L., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-NOMIC ote ci. oooh rinse satin) 359 Ronen, E. L., Petroleum Administration for mii abe Oe A a 318 Kobrin yg Office of the First Assistant Post- Taster Goneral oar eo 338 Kolb, Lawrence, Public Health Service.____.____ 395 Kong-sou, Siu, Chinese Embassy. _____________ 457 Koons, Elmer L., office of Official Reporters of Debates. iii datas 267 Koons, Joseph A., office of Official Reporters of Dialer 267 Koop, Lt. Theodore F., Office of Censorship___ 318 Korman, Milton D., District corporation coun- sel’s BRD ag eo EE 449 Kosch, Col. Lewis F., Selective Service System_ 315 Kossler, Capt. William J., Coast Guard..__.____ 349 Kotok, E. I., Forest Bory, = a 365 Koudijs, Commander G., Netherlands Embassy-462 Kowalski, Kathryn, United States attorney’s Gilera techs alse Sin eam nae 439 Kramer, Andrew J., Office of Secretary of Oe a rere 264 creirerereaot Kramer, William P., Forest Service_.___________ 365 Kraskin, Dr. Lewis H., District Optometry Board ee 448 Kratz, John Aubel, Office of Education_________ 396 Kreck; 1. FP. Patent Office. _ -..... 373 Kremer, Alvin W., Reference Department, Li- brary. of Congress. rc. i rl 278 Kress, Samuel H., National Gallery of Art_____ 418 Kreutz, Oscar R., Federal Savings and Loan InsaranceCorporation........-.-. = 410 Kripke, Homer, Securities and Exchange Com- RISO To ara Coe 416 Krizman, Patria, Mencia de, Cuban Embassy. 457 Krohr, J. J., District assistant disbursing officer. 449 Krooth, David L., Federal Public Housing AWhority.: Ct he a eb 411 Krug, J. A.: Tennessee Valley Authority... _______ 421 War Production Board: i ot 316 Congressional Directory Page Kubach, William F., Bureau of Reclamation_._ 353 Kugel, i Kenneth, District Engineer Depart-TONE: or mn aa man TA aE 450 Kuhn, ann Office of War Information___ 314 Kunjara, Lt. Col. Mom Luang Kharb, Thai Tegation. od imwnnsid penal bial) 465 Kunkel, C. F., Food Distribution Admin-a WT Rn Sl SOR SUF a Kunkel, William A., Jr., General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission. ____________ 238 Kuppinger, Eldred, Special Division.__________ 326 Kurth, Harry M., Office of Lend-Lease Admin-stralion Leia ae BEE 313 Rushpiok, William H., Office of Secretary ois Tally ron. Turkish Embassy MT EL re Kutz, Col. Charles W.: District Engineer Commissioner A arn FE 447 District Unemployment Compensation Boardy site. sonra SlashEG 44 District Zoning Commission..________________ 449 National Capital Park and Pliitine Com- mission Cities a RI 07 Public Utilities Commission. _______._________ 452 ‘Washington-Lincoln : Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission _.__.___________I.____ 236 Kwapiszewski, Michal, Polish Embassy.___.___ 464 Kwong, Victor Kwonglee, Chinese hs ey _ 457 Kyker, B. Frank, Office of Education__..... 3 Kyle, Richard S., Office of Secretary of oe Navy: “nail fori sali peridot L Labarthe, Capt. Enrique A.: Peruvian Embassy... cs. 2h tao luli 464 Inter-American Defense Board ______.__._______ 401 Labouisse, Henry R., Jr.: Board of Economic Operations. __.________.___ 324 Division of Defense Materials _______________ 324 LaCour, Fay P., Office of Recorder of Deeds__. 440 Lacy, Dan, National Archives... 406 Lacy, Mrs. Douglas, Senate Committee on Irri- gation and Reclamation... 20 U0. 7 265 LaDame, Mary, Office of Secretary of Labor___ 380 Ladd, D. Milton, Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion Ge Sabla se Se SIE ne Ls Da a HS 336 Ladd, Dr. John M., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Ladner, Albert H., Jr., Employees’ Compensa- tion Commission er ay ois 390 La Follette, Robert M., Jr.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-tial Federal Expenditures... ______________ 239 LaGuardia, Fiorello H., Permanent Joint Board CEL TT Air Uo eens Mid Sr Ue 415 Laird, A. H., Jr., Interstate Commerce Com-" Lali Cn E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. System Cotoxen sa 393 a La Marche, Melville, Administrative Office of the United States Courts... = & == 438 Lamb, George A., Bituminous Coal Division___ 355 Lamb, William F., Commission of Fine Arts__. 389 Lambert, John W. Office of Secretary of Senate. 264 Lamont, ‘John Donald, Office of Indian Affairs. 352 LaMotte, Robert ow, Railroad Retirement Board co nN a ae Se a Lp 415 Lampert, Maj. Miguel, Brazilian Embassy_____ 456 Lamphere, F. E., Defense Plant Corporation._. 376 Lamphere, Willard H., Agricultural Adjustment Agenoy soy ia san Fl SE ple 367 Land, Rear Admiral Emory S.: Combined Shipping Adjustment Board._____ 321 Maritime Commission. =...oo 404 War Shipping Administration ___________.____ 317 Landick, George, Jr., Procurement Division____ 330 Landis, Augusta W., Veterans’ Administration. 421 Landis, James M., Office of Civilian Defense__. 311 Lane, Nora C., Office of Secretary of Labor_____ 380 Lange, Walter R., Petroleum Administration for War 1 RGRE a ies 318 Langner, Lawrence, National Inventors’ Coun-CoE i ie Gn 374 Page Langston, Col. John D., Selective Service System ona Sun. Rtas” bonesax Lanham, "Giitiord, District Engineer Depart- ments: lo ooaryu aa alongs 450 Lanham, Fritz G.: Capital Auditorium Commission. ____________ Commission on Enlarging the Gaiiol Cromnds: sissonca lamiub dvi nse Interparliamentary Union________._______.___ oe Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission ____ 236 Lanigan, Anna, Office of the Under Secretary EWA ivthns os eo LB ES Aa NL 331 Lankford, Jesse W., Civil Aeronautics Board... 374 Lisp, Fred M. , Civil Aeronautics Administra- LOT EEE Tn To IRs ox £06) ere 0 CTA T Ral SEE 374 LaPaduis, Michael J., Securities and Exchange Commisglon._ >. =: fC Hada adeidealt 417 Lapham, Roger D., National War Labor BOAPd oir y oieBona, meat 311 bh Lares, Arturo, Venezuelan Embassy. .____.______ 466 Larkin, Frederick: Foreign Service Buildings Commission_______ 325 Foreign Service Buildings Office_____.________ 325 Laroche, Col. Roche B.: : Haitian EMDASSY 0 wenn Sat 461 - nessSTEAL Inter-American Defense Board. ___-__________ 401 LaRoe, Wilbur, Jr., District Parole Board______ 44 8 La Rouche, Floyd Ww., Office of Indian Affairs. 352 Larrabee, Anne, Women’s Bureau _____.___ 382 Larrabee, C. R., Bituminous Coal Division____ 355 Loe George P. , Food and Drug Administra- ee a Te a em A Lei he 396 Laue, Biabeih B., Office of Recorder of eeds aid. hatiCT Dads dD SLED Senin Lasa, José, Maria de, Cuban Embassy._.__.____ 458 LaSalle, Jessie, District Board of Education.____ 448 Laskey, John E., District Minimum Wage and Industrial ‘Safety Board. iL daaiali 9 Lasocki, Count Jerzy, Polish Embassy 1 4 Lasswell, Harold D., Spécial Projects, Library of Congress AAR AT I Ie TL NT ES Cred 279 Latimer, Louise P., District Public Library... 448 Laser, 9 Murray 'W., Railroad ‘Retirement oar ousercs. Dull, dd vda aR Tr asia lr Lattimore, Owen, Office of War Information___ 314 Laub, Joseph J., Bituminous Coal Division____ 3855 Lauber, Calvin a. District Fire Department__ 450 Lauderdale, James W., -District corporation COUMSETB OEE. or eeean 449 Lauman, Capt. Philip G., Bureau of Ships_____ 345 Laval, Erik de, Swedish Tegation 0 SEE La a 465 LaVallee, Ralph J., Federal Prison Industries, 2 TE Rr ER SE BE Sl a LR RE 1 33 Lawlah, Dr. John W., Freedmen’s Hospital_.__ 397 Lawler, Mildred C., Veterans’ Administration Halsonoffices © adsl: etal ot Sin dia 277 Lawless, Joseph F., Jr., United States attorneys offleeail,}. wo iaTE CT ea Ladies Lawrence, Charles Drummond, judge, Customs Courti(blography)csca ti iol sled of 437 Lawrence, D. E., Maritime Commission________ 405 Laws, Bolitha Y, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of:Colambla: 0 LS aibid i looiaiiopuaias Lawson, June K., Civil Service Commission___ 389 Lawson, Lawrence M., International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. 402 Lawing, Capt. A. P., Bureau of Naval Person-SECURIT Tt El Der WR TTL PASI SIT BRT 3 8 345 Era C. Alfred: Secretary to Senator Smith__.____________.____ 269 Senate Committee on Agriculture and For- Cin AE BGR 0 TS LTE ST Cs le dE 264 Lawton, David F., Civil Service Commission___ 388 Lawton, Frederick J., Bureau of the Budget____ 310 Lawton, Isobel S., Senate Committee on Agri- culture and Forestry coco sooodons) 264 Laxton, William C., Office of Personnel. _______ 360 Layton, Elton J., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. ______________ 273 Lazo, Hector, Board of Economic Warfare______ 317 Leahey, Ji ohn J., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General...___ Leahy, Admiral William D.: Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. _________ Chief of Staff to the 'Commander in Chief. ___ 305 Tndiidud Indes | 855 Page Leahy, Admiral William D.—Continued. Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain. or ound OW Ha sofia 320 Leamy, Commander Frank E., Coast Guard.__ 348 Le8o, Josias, Brazilian Embassy. ________._____ 456 Leatherwood, Mrs. Elmer O., Congressional Club_ 390 Leavell, Byrd, Bureau of the Public Debt______ 329 Leavitt, Arthur H., National Archives_________ LeBreton, Rear Admiral David MeD., Naval Examining Board... i050 ain 344 LeCompte, Karl M., Board of Visitors to the Naval Aeademyot oJ. _ oiled alias 237 LeCompte, Mrs. Karl M., Congressional Club__ 390 Lecraw, Raymond H., Director of commercial planning, Government Printing Office_____ 277 LeCron, James D., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. _.___.____________... 312 Lee, Frederick W., Bureau of Mines____________ 354 Lee, Col. Harold: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration... 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System______._____ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- BON: Jo vordanoold Jo esl oO mae al 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 410 Lee, Helen, House Committee on Claims_______ 273 Lee, Josh, Civil Aeronautics Board... __.________ Lee, Dr. Kan, Chinese Embassy__._.__..______ 457 Lee, Walter R., House Committee on Claims__ 273 Lee, William E., Interstate Commerce Commis: Slon_.. .. Tania] Lael 403 foacrcitaosll Leech, J. H., Grazing Serviee. i. ci lu: Li 355 Leech, J. Russell, Tax Court of the United States. uiipred io nun oF anise) bh 437 Leedle, Arthur C., secretary to Senator Taft..__ 269 Leeke, Jane, Senate Committee on Territories and Insulap Affairs. 0.10 0 00 5. inh: 266 Lees, Frank, Office of the First Assistant Post- master General. __.... aie 338 LeFevre, Mrs. Jay, Congressional Club________ 390 LeFevre, Robert, Procurement Division_______ 330 Leffler, W. F., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine eco i a 362 ioiooniiania Legendre, Maj. Leonce, Office of United States Coordinator... . 7 rhvaaadwil 451 Leggett, Lt. Comdr. A. B., Interior Control Board... iis GEE 34 Legorburu, Federico de, Venezuelan Embassy. 466 Lehman, Herbert H., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations__.________._ 325 Lehman, Paul M., St. Elizabeths Hospital _____ 397 Lehman, Ross M., District Assessor’s office. __ 447 Lehman, Henry C., Office of Secretary of War. 332 Leigh, Robert D., Foreign Broadcast Intelli- gemeeServicen:-Ti lool dns nu 391 Leighton, Lucas A., Office of the Chief Post OfficeImspector. t .. .. = “=Fhrdtof 340 Leighty, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ._____________ 363 Leisenring, L. M., president, District examiners and registrars of architeets..______.________._ 447 Leiserson, William M., National Mediation Board, ooo oar AE nity 412 Leitch, Richard D., Bureau of Mines. ._.______. 354 Leland, Waldo G., Advisory Board on National Parks, ele. coli aint ait th aati 357 Lenroot, Irvine L., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). ______________ 433 Lenroot, Katharine F., Children’s Bureau. .____ 381 Lent, Leon B., National Inventors’ Council___ 374 Lentz, Brig. Gen. John M., Army Ground Forees.. — .. lo rsianledaiaseit 333 Léonard, Charles, Belgian Embassy. ___.__._____. 455 Leonard, F. Morton, Tariff Commission_______ 419 Leonard, G. K., Tennessee Valley Authority__. 420 Leonard, Robert F., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ____________________ 393 Leondopoulos, Capt. Alfred L., Greek Legation. 460 Lepkowski, Rafal J., Polish Embassy. ___._._____ 464 Lepson, Franklin P., District Retirement Section. iy oriiil cio hints oo. JL onbised 447 Lesh, Paul E., Columbia Hospital for Women. 389 Letts, F. Dickinson, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of. Colin. cacaty 2 midiseid 437 Levine, Louis, War Manpower Commission__. 315 Levinson, Morris, Metals Reserve Company __. 376 Levy, Arnold, Bituminous Coal Division. _____ 355 Levy, Irving J., Office of Secretary of Labor____ 380 Levy, Philip: Secretary to Senator Wagner_________________ 269 Senate Committee on Banking and Currency. 264 Levy, S. Frank, District Accountancy Board___ 447 Lewald, Dr. James, District Training School ___ 449 Lewinson, Paul, National Archives.____________ 406 Lewis, Charles D., Agricultural Adjustment AGENCY. oct cooe ene BE BY 367 Lewis, Maj. Charles E., Army War College. __. 335 Lewis, Edward McE., Veterans’ Administra- 117)1 EER Tr UNIS TAR Ck BU NR SE Te AE 22 Lewis, Elmer A., House document room_______ 272 Lewis, Ernest I., Interstate Commerce Com- IDISBION. ioc’. tie nla RTL 403 Lewis, Dr. George W.: National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 405 National Inventors’ Council _________.__.______ 374 Lewis, John C., House Committee on Naval ARalis. _a e o endally 273 Lewis, Mitchel D., National Mediation Board. 412 Lewis, Reeve, Jr., Columbia Hospital for Womenzasssin: @ daliinat biol nih Jeind 389 Lewis, Mrs. Reeve, Columbia Hospital for WOMEN. ...... .2hahtl sfonttir 2uatert wy Lewis, Riley V., General Land Office.__________ 351 Lewis, Robert M., House Committee on Appro- priations: aiolisitoni)iliasmel sal soni 2 Lewis, Verne B., Office of Budget and Finance. 359 Lewis, William B., Office of War Information._ 314 Lewisohn, Sam A., Federal Prison Industries, Inc Lewitt, Albert W., secretary to Senator Hawkes. 268 Lex, Charles E., Jr. JTennessee Valley Authority_ 421 L’Heureux, Hervé J., Visa Division____________ 326 Liautaud, André: Ambassadorof Halti-li coil Sonia =o 461 Governing Board, Pan American Union_______ 414 Libbey, E. W., Chief Clerk, Department of Commercen tot ui olny. 2 sonal. ails 370 Lichtenstein, Howard, National Labor Rela- Hons Board... o.oo unin E 412 Libby, Lt. Col. Millard A., Army Air Forces __ 333 Liberti, Phyllis R., District Tax Appeals Board__ 448 Lieber, Richard, Advisory Board on National Parks, Ole vs SH 357 Likert, Rensis, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomics... uieli i sound Tanta 359 Lilienthal, David E.: National Power Policy Committee. _______.___ 357 Tennessee Valley Authority _________________ 420 Limpurg, Count W. van Rechteren, Netherlands TNDARSY ivme tres SELL IAL 462 Lincoln, Harold S., Reference Department, Library of Congress... -ooo 0 279 Lindegren, Alina M., Office of Education._______ 395 Lindemann, Brig. C. L., British Embassy._.__ 460 Linden, William E., Work Projects Adminis- ation... _Liciiiz ined Gacg. sooall lee 398 Lindsay, Carl T., House Committee on the Post Officeand Post Roads... 853 273 Lindsay, Melville D., District assistant pur- chasingofficer o..—— ....— -~ . aun 449 Lindsey, S. Paul, Farm Credit Administration. 364 Linehan, R. A., Office of Alien Property Custo- dian... coger0 Sinai IG 311 Linen, James, Office of War Information. ______ 314 Lineweaver, Goodrich W., Bureau of Reclama- HoRoiclisooaratali otommant A eall au 421 Linkins, Carroll, Western Union Telegraph Co._ 276 Linkins, Mary B., Railroad Retirement Board. 415 Linton, Fred B., Food and Drug Administration. 396 Littell, Norman M., Assistant Attorney General. 336 Little, Delbert M., Weather Bureau... _______ 373 Little, Roy M., Federal Public Housing Author- IY soe tiie odie RRR. ESET OY Ure 1 Littleton, Benjamin H., judge, Court of Claims (biography) ze.) seas lesebodt J dill g 434 Litvinoff, Maxim, Soviet Socialist Republics Ambassador. fre rier. vind. Ld hl sasls 466 Livengood, Evaline C., Veterans’ Administra-tion liaison offices: coc. l oo coniv adi fosals 277 Livesey, Frederick: Board of Economic Operations. ____.____.__.___ 324 Financial Division 5001 alc. si coll 325 cm — RIA EE 856 Congressional Directory Page Page Livingston, S. Morris, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. _---_----SE RE Pr 372 Livingston, Schuyler W.: Defense Plant Corporation. caveeeeemaeeaoaoo-375 Rubber Reserve Company. «a-ceeacmeamaanea-376 Lleras, Alberto: Ambassador ofiColombia i. tl cosarioois 457 Pan American Union... S388. 414 Lloyd, Charlotte T., Office of the Solicitor... 351 Lloyd, Daniel B., Official Reporter, Senate_.__ 267 Lloyd, Joseph R., Weather Bureau_____________ 373 Loafman, M. R., Bureau of the Public Debt__ 329 Lobell, Nathan D., Securities and Exchange Commissions 7. coi ie dn i Eo 0s ADEE IT 41 Lobo, Fernando, Brazilian Embassy -_-_._.__.__ 456 Locher, John, District Unemployment Com- pensation Board onic! 230iooil Inno Un, Locher, Myrtle S., House Committee on War Claims. dentinal,he A ol hE Locke, E. A., Jr., War Production Board .__... 316 Lockhart, Frank P., Office of Philippine Affairs. 326 Lockhart, Maj. J. G., British Embassy__.__.__. 460 Lockwood, John E., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs... _____Z______ 312 Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy__. 236 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment_ 239 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 238 Lodge, Thomas Ellis, District Alcoholic Bever-age Control! 0 JIUel SO Board... 447 Loeffler, Carl A., secretary to the Minority____ 266 Loeffler, W. G., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration ulin piezo TL, 8 3alud ----392 Loftin, Capt. Frank, Board. on Production AWArds. es on ea AE IIE 344 Logan, Charles A., Beltsville Research Center__ 364 Logan, Robert J., Office of the Secretary of the Senateiisnaall,Gund 263 iol dR an Loggins, James E., Veterans’ Administration_. 422 Logsdon, Ella A., Office of Fiscal and Budget Examinersuie faites?SUIT in 447 JE Long, Bernard J., United States attorney’s OI CO a a i AT BR 39 Long, Breckinridge: Assistant Secretary of State_._________________ 323 Board of War Communications ___.___.._____ 311 Committee on Political Planning ____________ 324 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__ 238 Long, Clark R., Bureau of Engraving and Printing ior in a ETN 330 Long, Dr. Howard H., District Board of Edu- ealiom sas a ar PARRY Jo ie tdr 448 Loo, C. H. D. van der, Mexican Embassy_.____ 463 Loomis, Ormond E.: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration... _ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System.________.____ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- BORE pA0S, Sia Qa TC) 410 Loose, Catherine L., Office of Secretary of Agri-CUILHING. oo iil mii mem BR LE MULIR REL 58 Lopez-Herrarte, Dr. Enrique, Guatemalan Embassy aoonil ipl Loo sali A J ida 461 Lopez-Larrain, Lt. Col. Guillermo: Chilean Embassy il coil la oo2bi) asin]. 02 457 Inter-American Defense Board ____.__._._._______ 401 Lord, Arthur S., Export-Import Bank of Wash-Ingtoninh 2 Dum alle Susu atiny 378 taunt Lorenz, Max O., Interstate Commerce Commis-. glo pin an] (aia OE as aii BE Louchheim, Walter C., Jr., Securities and Ex- change Commission. 0. .00 oo oi cull 417 Loudon, Dr. A., Netherlands Ambassador_____ 462 Loughlin, G. F., Geological Survey...._._.._.____. 352 Loughry, Maj. Gen. Howard K.: Army Service Forces. oi... oo nmmmmama 334 nnn United States Soldiers’ Home. .__._._.__________ 419 Love, Ellen L., Federal Trade Commission_____ 398 Loveland, Ailene, secretary to Senator Willis___ 269 Loveless, Lt. F. J., navy yard and station._____ 346 Lovell, Fred F.: Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora-tlofee, 7. Slim nf Sngeirny RT TIREAR NOES 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation... ___.______ 410 Lovely, Alma, Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce: i. oh ili nude cB a ISL 265 Loventhal, Commander W. F., navy yard and Station. Zo Dalal To 0a ln: do mort J3 Shoda 346 Loveridge, Earl W., Forest Service ____________ 365 Lovett, Robert A., Assistant Secretary of War forAlrrie foocsapendandgul Dell Sadenl, oy 331 Lovett, Robert M., Secretary of Virgin Islands. 356 Lovette, Capt. Leland P., Office of Public Relationsavidors apnsie 0 EE andied ol 342 Loving, Ernest L., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General.» > toad Jor igi 339 Loving, H. 1., Forest io _._ 110 Service... 365 Lowdermilk, Walter C., Soil Conservation Senvicaaaaisbinuizai)cil il STi, 368 Jdanae Lozada, Enrique S. de, Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs __________________ 312 Lubin, Isador, Bureau of Labor Statistics. _____ 381 Lucas, John S., Office of Plant and Operations--361 Lucassen, Th. F. Valck, Netherlands Embassy. 463 Luce, Capt. R. F., Coast and Geodetic Survey. 372 Ludwig, Robert E., Immigration and Naturali- gation Serviee cso Jae (a0, Uo HITE 337 Lugo, Jests Gutierrez, Mexican Embassy. _____ 462 Luhn, Clarence O., Office of Secretary of Com- TET... AU ERIN. Fates (HIN OU 370 Luhring, Oscar R., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia... Soin D8 ty Liiacibar 437 Lumpkins, Porter M.: Department of Civilian Defense._._.__.______ 451 District Engineer Department__._.__..._.___ 450 Lund, Anthon H., Securities and Exchange Comission io. Jia J dal JoosJI 417 Lund, Charles E., Bureau of Foreign and Do-megtic:Commerce. F10J7000JT 110 0 A 371 Lund, Wendell, War Production Board________ 316 Lundell, G. E. F., Bureau of Standards________ 372 Lundvall, Arthur E., Federal Trade Commis- slong isetis alana Jeon 3 IRIANo, BRINE 398 Lusby, James R., District disbursing officer____ 449 Lusby, William R., District Fire Department__ 450 Lutes, Maj. Gen. LeRoy, Army Service Forces. 334 Lutz, Carl, House document room_____________ 272 Luxford, Ansel F., Office of General Counsel for HEY Eby A SE SL BTETOU 327 Lyle, Richard H., Social Security Board. __.____ 394 Lyle, S..P., Extension Service... ..._._ ULL 369 Lynch, Grace, secretary to Senator La Follette_. 269 Lynch, Joe M., librarian of the House. ___._____ 271 Lynch, John H., Office of Budget and Finance. 359 Lynch, R. J., Office of Lend-Lease Administra- Hono Ho 3000000 0 SAL bs san Dosh 313 Lynch, Thomas J., Office of General Counsel forthe Treasury... ciodl i cu ti. 00 2, 327 Lynn, Col. Clark, United States Soldiers’ BEomed i. Da l0 Solio sats, JENS UWE 419 Lynn, David: Acting Director of Botanic Gardens__._______ 277 Alley Dwelling Authority... _..._.__._.__ 385 Architeet-of the! Capitol. flaol 20 275 District Zoning Commission... ______ ___.__ 449 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol GIOUNAS 00am vce vi nid ordi sons oh Ro de 233 Lynn, Fielder J., Washington city post office-. 452 Lyon, Frederick B.: Division of Foreign Activity Correlation_____ 325 Office of the Secretary of State________________ 323 Lyon, George, Office of War Information _._.__ 314 Lyon, John B., District Fire Department ______ 450 Lyons, Daniel M., Office of Attorney General _ 336 Lyons, Eleanor Crow, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations... ono von 220 00 265 Lyons, Thomas E., Foreign-Trade Zones Board. 400 Lyttelton, Capt. Oliver, Combined Production and Resources Board. 20 i dC 321 M MecAmis, J. C., Tennessee Valley Authority.___ 421 McArdle, Ruskin, Office of Secretary of Senate. 264 McAftee, Lt. Comdr. Mildred H., Bureau of Naval Personnel2e 0 Lidl ids a0 10 345 McArthur, William A., Commodity Credit Corporations ctor fia rs S807 CI v2 369 MeBride, Harry A., National Gallery of Art___ 418 McCabe, John W., minority clerk... ..._...__. 271 Individual Index Page McCain, Rear Admiral John S.: Aeronautical Board. i =. iii 385 Burean of Aeronaudiest 2i7 0 hi y dfare 34 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 405 The-Joint:Boaydiy tof: 70 "LT © dian ap 4 McCall, M. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ______________ 363 MecCallan, Irene, Office of Clerk of the House__ 271 McCallum, George H., International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 200 oi hoo rae 402 McCandless, R. B., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency 328 McCarran, Pat.: National Capital Park and Planning Com-mission Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-CINY.. 00s DUR, Si nea crateDan TH 237 a McCarthy, Henry L., Social Security Board____ 394 McCarthy, Leighton, Canadian Minister. ____ 45 42 McCaskill, Joseph C., Office of Indian Affairs__ 351 McCauley, Taylor H., Federal Security Agency. 394 McCauley, William, Employees’ Compensa- tion Commission... 2 or do). LI Sian 390 McClain, Esther, District Nurses’ Examining Bord nat oo oa eet eal) 448 McCleish, E. E., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-ticiCommerce: i loiabn dl Samalims 372 McClintie, James V., Office of Secretary of the Intemiorti 0. Loo. co Tio o RAYS 3 50 MecClintock, James K., American Red Cross___ 386 McClintock, John C., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs___________________ 312 McCloy, John J., Assistant Secretary of War___ 331 MecClune, P. H., railroad ticket office in Capitol. 276 McClure, Howard H., Office of Secretary of COMINCYCR: ois vk. son min do i Jot fait 370 McCluskey, Peter, House folding room_________ McComb, William R., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions... .____.___.___. 381 McCombe, F. W., British Embassy...._.______ 460 McConnaughey, Robert K.: Farm Credit Administration ._____.___.__.____ 364 Office of the Solicitor. .: ioc coa oo. 360, 361 McConnell, Beatrice, Children’s Bureau... ____ 381 McCormack, John W.: Majority floor leader... iio tb ooiiioiuiul. 270 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee___ 238 McCormick, Edward T., Securities and Ex- changeCommission:. v3..1. =... 416 McCormick, J. H., Office of Information_______ 360 McCown, Albert, American Red Cross. _.______ 387 MeCoy, H. B., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMELer. mieishe aid, 371 McCoy, Horace L., Veterans’ Administration__ 422 MeCoy, W. A., Civil Service Commission______ 388 McCrann, A. Emmett, Securities and Exchange Commission 7 ors Rn 416 MecCrillis, William -H., Office of the Secretary oftheldnterlor > © Coc oT ml mae 350 McCrory, Samuel H., Commodity Credit Cor- POISON eCa ad 369 McCue, Robert, House folding room ___________ 271 McCulloch, Charles N., Bureau of Reclama- LONG. ea A a aa 353 McCullough, Rear Admiral Richard P., Office of War Information. 5 0 Ut vb Ea 313 McCurry, R. R., Railroad Retirement Board__ 415 McDaniel, Jennie D., Senate Committee on Appropriations. i rapa Tae 264 McDermott, Michael J., Division of Current Information: a aio rn Rr apts 324 cDermott, William J., Jr., bill clerk of the Hopige: ode oo Poh atha Spe isis ooh 271 McDiarmid, Col. N. L., M. D., Columbia Hos- pitakior. Women, ;. 2c cuifbiananohirshi 389 McDonald, Ewing R., Conciliation Service ____ 381 McDonald, Lyda, Senate Committee on Inter- oceanic:Camals. .. ~ EIEESL IISA 265 McDonald, R. E., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine McDonald, W. F., Weather Bureau McDonald, Wesley E.: Secretary to Senator Reynolds._______________ 269 Senate Committee on Military Affairs__._____ 265 McGann, Joseph H., House Committee on Riversiand Harbors.o fait inns 274 McGann, Joseph H., Jr., House Committee on Riversand Harbors: io ili Oo 0 _sabion 274 McGeachy, M. A. C., British Embassy________ 460 McGee, Vernon A., Office of War Information. _ 313 McGehee, Charles, Office of Lend-Lease Ad- ministration... DeoienlAl Senags ono 313 McGehee, Ruth H., Civilian Conservation Corps: iE Jonna) Ian Baad! Bisel ta COMIMENCR oo. dws bs edd sdb SE Tk -a od 370 Miller, R. L., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency SSE iEnd en LL tan iE A Ea aa ty wut 328 Miller, Thomas H., Bureau of Mines___.________ 354 ny ‘Watson B., "Federal Security Agency.... 394 Miller, W. Moseley, Office of the Sergeant at Armsof House .0o nl bia i a 271 Miller, Willard S., Senate post office.___-_______ Milligan, E. J., Public Utilities Commission____ 452 Milliken, Capt. Rhoda J., Women’s Bureau, Metropolitan Police tf i... ..: Millis, H. A., National Labor Relations Board. Mills, 4 C., Waterways Dante Aubrey Inland rei ein de Be ree HE es nS EAE ery 373 Mills, Rear Admiral Earle W., Bureau of Ships. 345 Mills, a Ne» Interstate Commerce Com- slit ATE pha el RR es Cs ee ET 268 Milne, George Heron, Reference Department, Library. of Congress. scio=rr buona ada 8 Milne, James N., Office of the Minority Leader. 270 Milner, Col. Fred C., Army Air Forces.._____. 334 Minchin, Capt. H . Cotton, British Embassy... 460 Minckler, Robert Tse, Petroleum Administra- Fon for Wap. a-i a hae hn 317 Minogue, Adelaide E., National Archives______ Minton, Brig. Gen. H. 'C. , Army Service Forces. 334 Mironov, Vassilli D., Soviet Socialist Repub- lest Embassy. oo iS an ay 466 Suk Maj. Milovoje V., Yugoslavian Em-: ELE EIR CE TARR Sl SAINI J 66 Mitchell, Charles L., Weather Bureau..._____ 373 Mitchell, G..S., Farm Security Administration. 368: Mitchell, Harry B., Civil Service Commission. 388 Mitchel] Hugh B., secretary to Senator Wall-oh EE aT he de Se re ap Bb a BE ahd SAA 9 Mitshell, James P., Army Service Forces__.____ 334 Mini, ¥ Col. B., Service Lt. Joseph Selective “5 TN Ore 5 Mitchell, Landon, Office of the Doorkeeper.___ 271 Mitchell, Lion C., Division of Accounts___.____ 324 Mitchell, L .M,, American Red Cross. = 0. 387 Mitchell, Maude W.: Secretary to Senator Wheeler________________. 269 Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce_. 265 Mitchell, Brig. Gen. Ralph J., Headquarters Marine OED. . iris mer 347 Mitchell, William E., Rubber Develops, Corporation PR ERT ES ds ein Mitchell, William L., Social Security Board._..__ = Mitchell, Col. William L., Army Ground Mitman, C. W., National Museum _________._._ Moda, Douglas D., secretary to Senator Fergu- Moftott, Guy, Liaison Officer for Personnel Man- agement 310 Mohler, John R.: Chief, Bureau of Animal Industry____..._____. 362 District Board of Examiners, Veterinary Melon... ite co osetiie sori dio Ei de pe ber Mohun, Mrs. Barry, Columbia Hospital for ‘Women Molekamp, B. Kleijn, Netherlands Embassy... Molina, Juan G. de, Spanish Embassy Moling, Walter H., secretary, Court of Claims__ 435 Individual Index Page Moll, Dr. Aristides A., Pan American Sanitary HE Be BT LC I ee ag Molloy, Joseph M., Civil Service Commission contact office... .l0noe oa aeliaTl 277 Molloy, Rear Admiral Thomas M., the Coast Guard 25 Monat, Anna Hurwitz, “Office of Secrctary of the eR a ae unl enh Monroe, Frank R., post office in New House Office Building i moo ib an ia Monroe, Robert A., Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Monizoney George T., General Accounting ce Montgomery, Rev. James Shera, D. D., Chap-laine House... 7h. olor = Legit 70 Mooney, Timothy O., Bureau of Internal Rev-0 ent... tpl tL len wo aia ha 32 Mooney, Timothy J., secretary to Senator Tun- 3: EtnaRe 2 gg ves pm Seb sn 269 Moore, C. W., Patent’ Office... 1 373 Moore, J., Francis: Federal Home Loan Bank Administration.___ 409 Federal Home Loan Bank System____________ 410 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor-porationt: 2.0 30.00 UY) 2 TIoRasiein 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ___________ 410 Moore, John, House folding room____.__________ 271 Moore, John S., Bureau of Reclamation. _______ ge Moore, Lawrence W., Tariff Commission_______ Moore, Lyman S., National Housing Agency__. -Moore, M. B., International Boundary Commis- sion, United States and Mexico... _____.____ 402 Moore, Miss Ray E., House Committee on the Disposition of Executive Papers Ld AS 273 Moore, Maj. Gen. Richard C.: Army Ground Forees. i GIFTLL Sn 333 Munitions Assignments Board__________._____ 320 Moore, Robert M., Office of Personnel _________ 360 Moore, Ross E., Office of Foreign Again Relations... action)iil Somodia Moore, S. M., Jr., Veterans’ Administration. oo Moore, Sarah D. , Office of Coordination and Review nial. Doha oo JIE TE ols 324 Moreell, Rear Admiral Ben: Chief of Bureau of Yards and Docks__________ 345 Federal Fire Connell... (tolayfiowiseg1: 400 Morehouse, PGad B., Federal Trade Commis- sign JCE OL BUgI0I0Y LB Bao JTL BO 398 Morell, William N., Veterans’ Administration__ 422 Mogan, Arja, Interstate Commerce Commis- Morgan, Lt. Comdr. C. C., Office of War Sav-ingstBends =. NW daaidiy 343 ootntioaatal Morgan, Elonzo T., Patent Office______________ 373 Morgan, George w., Administrative Depart- ment, Library of Congress 2% TTR ATR SE SE Eh 279 Morgan, ‘Gerald D., Office of Legislative Coun-gel, Homse. lavas 3 L hin 274 noilovmad Morgan, HarcourtA., Tennessee Valley Authority. 2 Morgan, Jane, Office of the Speaker. ___________ Morgan, Jo. V., District Board of Tax Appeals.___ on Morgan, Nathan V., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ER SR Rp RL Se 410 Morgan, Sidney, Tariff Commission____________ 419 Morgan, Stokeley W., Defense Supplies Corpo-HA A (ery os Mp Ee Phy See CL A ets 14 © Morgenstern, Capt. Tadeusz P., Polish Em-bassy Sor Bl USN LL A a a TE 464 Morgenthau, Henry, Jr. (Secretary of the Treas- ury): Biography ofc = i 0 v2du fol bUUE, Tha 327 Board of Economic Warfare __________._______ 317 Foreign Service Buildings Commission TL 325 Foreign-Trade Zones Board. _________________ 400 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. __.._______.___.______ 239 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board_______ 279 Member, Smithsonian Institution__._________ 417 National Archives Couneil .__._______________ 407 NationalEGalleryofArt. olan.JA 20d] 418 National Munitions Control Board.._________ 413 National Park Trust Fund Board____________ 357 Office of Economic Stabilization ___.__________ 312 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library____ 407 83317°—78-1—2d ed.——56 Page OTAtION wos odo TUNE PRN Vian 379 Morrell, Fred, Office of C. C. C. Activities_____ 361 Morrill, Lt. Comdr. Arthur G., Coast Guard.__ 348 Morrill, Chester, Board of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve Systemisln toa J nisin]1 393 Morris, James ‘W., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbian ii. LL aobe Os oda an fiir 437 Morris, John M., Bureau of Mines. ____________ 354 Morris, John BL Civil Aeronautics Adminis-: tration aha SEL HO BN an RL I 374 Morris, Roland S., Regent, Smithsonian Insti-tution Pl Am ee aA A SARE Su RIT Morris, Una Rita, District corporation counsel’s offles.. =. SAU Rn Baal Morrison, B. Y., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, "and Agricultural Engineering_____ 363, a Morrison, Loyle A., Tarifi Commission 419 Morrow, Ls. Comdr. T. B., Bureau of Supplies pe I ly 346 Morsch, Lucile M., Processing Department, Library of Congress pss tn Ey CE 279 Morse, H. T'., War Shipping Administration. __ 317 Morse, Dr. Robert T., Commission on Mental Health: 0:00 lO, Foal ulin 438 Morse, Wayne L., National War Labor Board_. 311 Morss, A. Patricia, District Public Welfare Board Mortimer, Frank H., Director of typography and design, Government Printing Office_.__ 277 Morton, Mary Louise, Committee on Confer-ence Minority of the Senate. .__..____.____.__ 264 Mosby, Leonard W.: Bituminous Coal Division. _________...._._.__ 355 Solid Fuels Administration for War. ___o.____ 357 Moscoso, Col. Oscar: Bolivian Embassy iii i ir eee amas 456 Inter-American ie Board to CoC 401 Moseley, J. A. R., Smaller War Plants Corpo-bia TabIOn: on a 1 Morsell, H. Tudor, Federal Public Housing Authority we Ron A SR aE es a Fe 411 Mosely, Philip E., Division of Political Studies. 326 Moser, ‘Charles Xx, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce Sn SR Pm Ba Yet Cu 372 Moses, Brig. Gen. Raymend G., War Depart- ment General Staff” =~. ~~: L. 332 Moskey, George A., National Park Service_____ 353 Moss, Marjorie, Vien Division coos ir 326 Motley, Emmett J., District corporation coun- sellgoffica tL xo mi J Ned, a Lv 450 Mott, Dr. F. D. par Security Administration. 369 Mott, SewardH., Federal Housing Adminis- tration fo TA Co Lee SSE Re eS 409 Moultrie, Minnie, Senate Committee on Irriga- tion and Reclamation 0. 0. lc ts 265 Mountin, J. W., Public Health Service.._______ 395 Movius, Gerald’ W., secretary to Senator Nye._ 269 Mowitt, Glendon £0 %: Railroad Retirement Board ee A ba RA ri Bp AE Ri 415 Moxley, Owen R., District Fire Department___. 450 Moyer, Lawson A: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service. 325 Civil Serviee Commission. ___________________ 3 Muck, Lee, Office of Secretary of the Interior___ Mudd, Robert L., assistant District auditor____ Muesebeck, C. F. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... _......T0500 Jo Mujica, Maj. Gen. Arturo Espinosa, Inter- American Defense Board _____._____________ 401 Mulbry, Walter W., secretary to Senator Chandler. 268 Mullady, Bernard. R., Wage and Hour and Pub- lic Contracts DIvISons.. os dh lai aa. 381 Mullaney, Joseph E., Administrative Depart-ment, Library of Congress TREE CIR by3 R AGA 279 Muller, George W., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic COMmeree. 371 Muller, Joseph L., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce WL ln ahi ane Mulligan, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Enrolled Billszren sc vviovenlBIO nan. 265 Congressional Directory Page Mulligan, Henry A.: Defense Plant Corporation. So ae MR i 375 Defense Supplies Corporation. __ o.oo... 376 Disaster Loan Corporation. __...._occccceec--Export-Import Bank of Washington. .__...__. 378 Federal National Mortgage Association ...... 377 Metals Reserve Company... ccccmcann-376 Rubber Reserve Company. oo cccccmmaaoa-377 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _.__.._ 374 The RFC Mortgage Company. --...cocoween-377 ‘War Damage Sorporaiion ERT I Ea Ag fe ni 3 Mullen, OtisE., Office of the Secretary of tration. == seas Miao assmreti ao Mo aniot Lio us Mulvihill, B. M., Bureau of Accounts _.._.._.. 329 Mundy, Lucile, "office of the Under Secretary or Mi C5 Col. Felipe: Cuban Embassy. ot tol Bil. nl mania mie 458 Inter-American Defense Board. _ oo... 401 Munns, Edward N., Forest Service... L. 365 Munro, G. H., Australian Legation Jo. 2iilc 455 Munster, N orman L., Office of Budget and Fimaneso isoails tha UMNO LS a BIH 357 Munthe de Morgenstierne, Wilhelm, Norwegian Ambassador cul nana. Slo SUoInl 463 Murchison, Lucia, District Health Department_ 451 Murdo; J. Edgar, Tax Court of the United Statesiio tCizaiiy ud Lo BOIL LIS SIRE) 437 Mi Charles S., Office of Legislative Coun- gel, Senate iol SUBLL 267 Murphy, Clement, District Fire Department._. 450 Murphy, Daniel E., Office of Indian Affairs____ 352 Murphy, Edward 3, Food Distribution Admin- stfafion ileal ba Chil SL ibe DL 366 Murphy, Edward V., Assistant Official Re-porter, Senate SL 2k 0 rd ag 267 Murphy, Frank, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography) 428 Murphy, Fred V., District examiners and regis-trars of architects ae Ans ene 447 Murphy, Henry C., Division of Research ad I OB ats nr or cnr ~ AT Erg = = mf per Murphy, James L., Interstate Commerce oon” ison oe a Murphy, James R., Office of the Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General. ao Lol 340 Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Senate_. 267 Murphy, John B., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- TEA AT PR Ena fee feta ed Summer J SRA 410 Murphy, Dr. Joseph A., District Health Depart- )15151 Fe Se a bs Ct RRA Skt pee 1 Murphy, Joseph E., Secret Service __.__._.____._ 328 Murphy, P. F., Railroad Retirement Board... 415 DO Richard J., District Vehicle Parking Mian a, Territorial Expansion Me-morial CORR naan 237 Murray, Charles A.: Secretary to Senator Murray en 269 Special Committee to Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises... 184 Murr, Charles B., United States attorney’s 438 Murray, J. D., British Embassy____..__...__._ ih Murray, John F., National Mediation Board.. Murray, Pearl, Senate Committee on nd ture and Forestry RR Ei ae a BOR pe Ls 3 264 Murray, Philip, Office of Economic Stabiliza-tion Mea Wallace: Adviser on Political Relations... o-oo. 323 Committee on Political Planning... ___._..._.. 324 Murray, William C., Veterans’ Administra-tion liaison offices. coaini toa ini. 277 fica Mourrin, James P., Federal Public Housing Authority epBomer Y roopi dL gents 411 Musgrave, George W., Soil Conservation Service i. iv. ie cas -wR0lorsEiol3200 I 368 Mux6, Dr. Alberto, Cuban Embassy. ..._.._... 457 Myer, Dillon S., War Relocation Authority_... oe Myer, Jesse W., ’ Bureau of Reclamation_._.___. 353 Myer, W. H., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce oe am a Em 371 Page Myer) Lawrence, Commodity Credit Corpora- DE A Te pa iy ry LL 3 Myers, Walter: Federal Fire Council... .._sollio lniivin. Fourth Assistant Postmaster General SERA Mykland, Gunnar, Federal Public Housing Authority ET Toit Ahn Ft i 1 2 BE gnats 411 Nabrit, James M., Jr., Howard University_____ Naramore, Ellouise, Senate Committee on Foreign Relation o.oo iret 265 Narcho, Jones, Jr., Indian Arts and Crafts Boards Lo. Laan 3 Narifio, Alberto Vargas, Colombian Embassy... 457 Nash, Walter, New Zealand Minister... CCL. 463 Nash, William Hs District Fire Department___ 450 Nathan Robert R Combined auction and Resources Board.. 321 Joint Economie Committees... ___________._ 319 Mande, Dr. W. C., Union of South Africa Lega- A1371 BEA On ey UR 0 VoRGE ae og 4 Neal, George C., Civil Aeronautics Board.._._. Neary, Elizabeth C., Office of the Secretary of Nee Lt.1 Col. William F., Army Ground Forces. 333 Needler, Louis L.: Agricultural Adjustment, Ageney....... i. Food Production Administration..__.._______ 367 Neff, Blanche, Municipal Court for the Disinict:, or COTA ir bt ote bate Gat rion Neff, Harold H., office of the Under rs of WAT. en abl vot ICR Es sea GO spa E 331 Neilson, George D., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. ovo oemeee 439 Nelson, Donald M.: i Board of Economic Warfare. oo... 317 Combined Production and Resources Board... 321 ‘War Manpower Commission. .___._.___._._.___ 314 War: Production: Board... _ i... il HL iid 316 Nelson, Col. Donald T., Army Ground Forces.. 333 Nelson, Elmer M., Food and Drug A dminis-TRON LL nn ak nett diane 396 Nelson, F. A., Board of: Governors of the Federal Reserve System EE TTR Pe 393 Nelson, Henry A., Office of Budget and Finance. 359 Nelson, Dr. John 5 Veterans’ Administration. 422 Nelson, Richard W., Forest Service. ___._____.-365 Nelson, Wesley R., Bureau of Reclamation_____ Nettleton, Leigh L, Immigration and Natural-ization Services. i) io li maces 337 alazell Neubrech, W. LeRoy, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. --371 Néumann, David, General Accounting Office__. 400 Neustadt, Richard M., Social Security Board... 395 Neves, Carl A. Veterans’ Administration.._.._-Nevitt, J.C , General Accounting Office. _____. New comb, John L., Thomas Jefferson Bicen-tennial COMMISION cS Ls size Tonstnss 238 codify). Newcomer, H. C., Columbia Institution for the DOA i oh an Em ty = Sere Re YL mA Ee Newell, A. C., Federal Home Loan Bank yetem euion soaps Dhec ll nnn oiz aaaune 1 Newell, S. R., Food Distribution Administra- JON Se eS 366 Newhall, Arthur B., Combined Production and Resources Board naatRl 321 Newhall, Beatrice, Pan American Union___._.. 414 Newlin, ‘Gurney B., American Red Cross...__.. 386 Newman, Harold w., Jr., Office of Civilian De- Rs CS a LR RL I Se 312 Newman, Hobart, judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia... io. i-nas 439 Newman, John W., office of the Majority coder: iC Buell mal ate Read nv 270 Niazi, Anwar, Egyptian Legation .______.__..____ 459 Niblack, Donald R., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster Centrale: T coprasweatdi] © 338 tte Nicholls, Virginia E., Committee on Conference Minority of the Sonate. acigons. Jaimie 2 Nichols, C. W., Metals Reserve Company. .--_ Nichols, J. Cis National Capital Park and Plan- ning Commission. _ PE Be i AB LF Jt LR 408 Nichol Louis B., Federal Bureau of Investiga-fe Page Nichols, Maude @&., Reference Department Libraryof. Congress...~~... . Nichols, Rebul H., Senate Committee on ns oceanic Canal oy i) 265 Nicholson, James T., American Red Cross EERE 387 Nicholson, Vincent Office of the Solicitor aE Sana RS 360, 361 Rural Electrification Administration. _._._____ 366 Nickerson, Albert L., War Manpower Commis-Oy Ee ER a RR CTT ll Ei SR 315 Nickerson, G. W., International Fisheries Com-TEfpr Le SR Sr SR SE DS te Sa 2 Nielson, Leo: Defense Plant Corporation... _........_... 375 Reconstruction Finance Corporation._.__.___ 374 Nienburg, Bertha M., Women’s Bureaul-_.____ 382 Nijdam, Lt. A., Netherlands Embassy... 463 Niles, David x, Administrative Assistant to -the President’ Trt Ee re Ce TV 31 Noble, C . Stott, Home Owners’ Loan Corpora-ou JORG aT hin Ge neil nuk abe dado sen bands Noble, John E., District Health Department___ 451 Noble, ‘Admiral Sir Percy: Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States ad. Great: Briain deals... 1h ouster ia lay Munitions Assignments Board... ._________ 2 Nolan, John L., Processing Department, Li-braryveof Congress: i 8 279 Nolen, John, Jr.: Alley Dwelling AULNOLHY own ne imam lat. 385 District Zoning Adjustment Board.-._._______ 448 National Capital Park and Planning Com- m ission Semmes op me en SIL Ce Ee ee Board. imitatedA a as a 387 Norcross, T. W., Forest Service__.___.__________ 365 Norfleet, W. J., Federal Communications Com- TISBION. Loin ivninh vuiueidointyoT Fe ira 391 Norgren, William A., Municipal Court for the District of Columbi an SO 439 Norris, Earl C., Office of Secretary of the Navy_. 341 North, Roy M., Office. of Third Assistant Post- master General Sdiniden Ad. J aren an a Northrop, J. D., Geological SULVeY. cocoon Northrup, Frederic B., Office for Agianiiural | War Holst El ar MRA pe ea a Ethan A., Soil Conservation Service.__ 368 Norion, Mary T., Columbia Hospital for Norton, Ralph A., assistant secretary to the Board, District government ________________ 447 Norton, R. H., Senate Committee on Patents.. 266 Notter, Harley A., Division of Political Studies. 326 Notz, Cornelia, Tariff Commission... .-.c.-=.. 420 Novikov, Fedor S., Soviet Socialist Republics A RE A A Te Ba ee 466 Noyes, Theodore W.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf-.....oocae. 397 District Pablie Library: .cocooofooidili 0 448 co Washington National Monument Society... 423 Nubson, Maj. Troy A., Headquarters Marine of LEN Federal Sin op Bed Liat 239 Nye, L. Frank, Office of Secretary of War______ 332 Nystron, Paul H., Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education An Es EE ae OL a 396 (0) Hou Obrdlfk, br. Antonin, Czechoslovakian Lega- eReER RE 58 O’Brian, John Lord, War Production Board.__ 316 O’Brien, Joseph, House Post Officeloc. sug 272 O’Brien, Joseph J., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy HC ART Cr STR Re 8 237 O’Brien, Mrs. Joseph, Congressional Club_____ 390 O’Brien, Richard J., District Boxing Commis- OrTon an 447 Page O’Brien, Robert H., Securities and Exchange Commision... C-ilooea 0’Connell, Anne L., Pan American Union_____ 414 0’ Connell Florence B., United States attorney’s 0? an Helos, Senate Committee on Bank- ingand' Currency. =. 027.Sadi. 264 ODI John, District corporation counsel’s RR re gE RS a See ET TE 449 0O’Dea, Sark, Maritime Commission__________ 405 Odegard, Peter H., Office of the Secretary of Treasury OL An A RE LS J CL LI ET Odenweller, Charles J., Jr., Securities and Ex- change Commission SLES ann hain 417 Odom, Edward E., Veterans’ Administration__ 422 Obed, AlF., Division of Research and Sta- omaha Daniel W., associate justice, Dis- trict Court of the United States for the Dis- trictof Columbia... =. = i ol 437 Oftedal, Torfinn, Norwegian Embassy. ________ 463 Ogden B. K., Maritime Commission___________ 405 Ogilvie, Noel J., International Boundary Com- mission, United States, Alaska, and rh 402 Oglesby, Lt. Col. George R., Army Ground Oreos. aot mind anil hen trdurnreasas 333 O’Halloran, Thomas J., Office of the First Assistant Postamaster General ____________ 338 (0) Hors, Francis J., Jr., Defense Plant Corpora- Ollie. Otto F., The Alaska Railroad __________ 356 Ojeda, Jose Hernandes, International Dondary Commission, United States and Mexico____ 402 0’Keeffe, Dr. James A., Metropolitan Police... 451 O’Kelliher, Col. Victor 3 Selective Service Sys- 7 RR AD Ca a le LER 315 O'Laughiin, Col. John Callen, Goethals Memo- rial Commission... rao oi 401 Olav, Hans, Norwegian Embassy. _____________ 463 Olas, Land, National Power Policy Commit-287 LEE CH Roberto de, Brazilian Em-A ee Re Sh LR ah EL 456 Oliver, Lois M., Immigration and Naturali-ZOLION BOTVIO0. Lor ess eeriiaie. 33 Oliver, Webster J., presiding judge, Customs Court (biography). ai ovals 435 Olmstead, Maj. Gen. Dawson: Army Service FOrees... tasesoY aa0s. 334 Board of War Communieations________._._____ 311 Olmstead, Ralph W., Food Distribution Ady ministration... 0.000Roe at Olmsted, Frederick Law, Bureau of Plant Ti dustry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering 364 Olmsted, Orvil B., Federal Public Housing AWhOTILY ETE ah 412 Olson, Alan, House document room__________ --272 Olson, Dr. Emery E., Civil Service Commis- stone Jaen Jo teil. nahi O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. oii oon Lo Jn ok 236 Onacewicz, Col. Wlodzimierz, Polish Embassy. 464 O’Neal, Edward, Office of Economic Stabiliza-25 tion CRA We Eid erin Sol aR Cia at iin eS 1 O’Neal, Mrs. Emmet, Congressional Club___._ 390 O’N ell, Anna A., assistant to the legal adviser-. 326 Onofrio, Thomas, Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 271 Opie, Redvers, British Embassy. 20. oo.odll 460 Oppenheimer, Dr. Ella, District Health Depart- mend. LRion nl 3890 00a SL DEL LRN 0D 451 Opgonhieimer, Monroe, Board of Economic War-317 f 864 Congressional Directory Page Page Opper, Clarence V., Tax Court of the Unlien y States waa Cu to aonsania Orchard, J. E., Office of the Lend-Lease yn istration ce. oie tL SR UBORIL SRT 313 Ord, Maj. Gen. J. Garesche: Inter-American Defense Board. _____.._.__ 401 Jo, Brazil-United States Defense Commis-> dsm Fea SB Sein Ii ang) 32 0’ Li Margaret C., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining 5%. Loigoen,. Jinn 265 Orekhov, Fedor T., vit Socialist Republics Embassy... Orescan, Corhal D., “House Committee on Ap- propriations #9 Je hens BUNDLE uy Cela Ww aT Hi 273 O’Rourke, Ruth Rouss, Office of the Solicitor... 360 Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appropria- tons. oa aa ARIALIe 273 Orsinger, Fred G., Fish and Wildlife Service_. _ 855 Orthman, William S., captain of Capitol Police 275 Osborn, Brig. Gen. Frederick H., Army Service Forces FOr ses AMEN an SESE ONY, Js te (0 Ga SEA OB A8 es 334 Osborne, Lithgow, Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations. _________________ 325 Osmeiia, Sergio, Vice President of the Common- wealth of the Philippines... ______________ 6 Ossenfort, W. F., Public Health Service__.___._ 395 Ci Commis Kristian, Norwegian Em- oO’ Toole, Donald L., Joint Committee on he AADTALY ie iosa BEE BE dd 234 Otway-Smithers, Lt. P. H. B., British Embassy 460 Overby, Edward Jerome, Office of Secretary of Agricaltare is SRO URI IIA. Ca Li Ll. Overholser, Dr. Winfred: Federal Board of Hospitalization_____________ 391 Superintendent, St. Elizabeths Hospital _____ 397 Overley, S. Earle, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tie Commerce seh TE an Sa antiat lle SRI Sen tho 371 Overton, Earl R., Veterans’ Administration.... 421 Overton, Ruth Senate Committee on Manufactures... 265 Secretary to Senator Overton. _.______________ 269 Owen, Claude W., District Boxing Commission. 447 Owen, L. W. , Bureau of the Public Debt_______ 329 Owen, Mabel M ., Tax Court of the United States et A A Sr mE bere mR 437 Owen, Marguerite, Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Owen, ThomasM., Jr., National Archives. ___ 406 Owings, C. W, , Capitol railroad ticket office ___ 276 P Pace, Rear Admiral Ernest M., National Ad-visory Committee for Aeronauties__________ 405 Packard, C. M., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine re eee fa PENT 362 Patent FIarzy E., Congressional Record mes-2 Padilla: Veen, Col. José Augusto, Honduran BINDASSY.. liamemt nb Ae mL era AS 461 Fadover, Saul K., Office of Secretary of the In-a A a LS Gla By Sr TT a Te Page, Arthur S., Office of Fourth Assistant Post- master Qotieral oiDons fat sata 340 Page, John C., Bureau of Reclamation_________ 353 Page, John Cc. , Office of Clerk of House___.._._-271 Page, Thad National Arihives Pia SRE SOR [ALR ARS Rs 405 National Archives Couneil.__________________ 407 Paget, Commande R. M., Administrative Office, Navy. -io iaricai UA, 342 Bagh, Wilmer Xe United States Botanic Gar-densSiacl scien liv al orromdl ua isl 277 Paine, H S., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial Chemistry Sul cl ralgesol. Meanie ld 36 Polson B., District corporation counsel’s office soot ilo sanlesialNioisiinny nl Paadil; Lt. Col. Alfredo, Argentine Embassy. 455 Palic, Dr. Vladimir, Czechoslovakian Legation. 458 Palin, R. V. WBritish Embassy. cui.sides ssi. 460 Palkin, Samuel, Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry RI Te I RL Palmer, J. Joseph W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMEree. -— oo oooooooee 371 Palmer, Mary Reilly, secretary to Senator Clark. 268 Palmer, Maude, Senate Committee on Com- TRCLCO svi titi i rt a Sr Fm Ld SE 264 Pare, Viscount Alain du, Belgian Embassy... __ 455 Pardini, Juan Francisco, "Panamanian Embassy. 463 Pardo de Zela, Francisco, Jr., Peruvian Em- Dassy iii re dn TE ei Ed 464 Park, Capt. CharlesA., Coast Guard__________ 348 Parker, Col. Chauncey G., Selective Service Sy Stem Sowalais 3a Ler TIO ELIE NT 315 Paris, F. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ________.___. 363 Parker, Col. George, War Department General Saf Sanaa oc Te Sana gi) 332 Parker, G. L., Geological Survey... .___________ 352 Parker, S. H. House foldingroom. .... ._._ ..= 271 Parker, i 1 B. Tennessee Valley Authority. ____ 420 Parker, William, Office of Secretary of Agricul- SBIR R FAR ARI IRE A SI SA) ilu 58 Porte, D. L., Coast and Geodetic Survey. 572 Parkinson, Dana, Forest Service. _______._____. Parkinson, Col. John L., Office of the TA: General, Wap Soa Guilds oC EU Es 332 Parkman, G. Breck, Office of Legislative Coun-sel, Hous Seo allan at gs JideHit 274 Parkman, Charles H., clerk, Official Reporters of Debates, House. Oo pHINI SR as, SOLENT 274 Parka, Harrison, Office of Postmaster Gen- "Holman SEE ste ORS rest bE RL SAT Parks, Erskine, House post office. _____________ 272 Parodi, Col. Antonio: Argentine 2 To] 57 Ts A De a A Le ys 455 Inter-American Defense Board _ ________.____ 401 Parran, Dr. Thomas: Federal Board of Hospitalization_____________ 391 Public Health Service... T 20" ff ____.Tioiit 395 Parry, Carl E., Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve System oo. URE 393 Parsons, Charles G., Work Projects Adminis-rat OM: cn chin ol BRED 8 SILER AL 399 Parsons, George W., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General. _____________________ 339 Parsons, Henry S., Reference Department, Con- gressional Library Shana boar salinities] 278 Parsons, Wyly, Jory to Senator McFarland. 269 Partearroyo, H. G., de, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico... 402 Parten,'J. R., Petroleum Administration for War. 318 Pasvolsky, Teo: Board of Economie Operations_______._______ 324 Committee on Political Planning ____________ 324 Office of Secretary of State__.__________.__.___ 323 Patrick, Capt. H. G., Board on Decorations and Medale: Go olin ng palais Ie 344 Pattee, Richard, Division of Cultural Relations. 324 Patterson, Donald G., Reference Department, Library of Congress LEA the LL ST ALE A 378 Patterson, John C., Office of Education________ 395 Patterson, Robert P Army and Navy Munitions Board. _.________ 387 Joint War Production Committee. ___________ 319 National Power Policy Committee. __________ 357 Under Secretaryof War... 0 _._.___._..___. 331 ‘War Manpower Commission_____._._.._______ 314 Patterson, William J., Interstate Commerce Commission... S00 E Bats JI00e Dail Pasion) James G., Office of Economie Stabiliza- Sogn Rr SORT JRI2DIR nin Sila 313 Yor. OR ndeiph E., Office of General Copy, for the Treasury. eS ha i ER Paul, Robert T., Office of the Bituminous Coal Consumers’ ‘Counsel THe CE TOR 5 EE HEC Te SL aT By Leo H., Board of Governors of te Federal Reserve Systemzii = te 393 Pauls, A. L., Tennessee Valley Authority... .__ 420 Paulsen, O. a. Geological Survey... ._.._. 352 Pavesich, FX. Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor- poration ceusiadacstd afd. 30g Suna 410 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ____.______ 410 Payne, George Henry, Federal Communieations COMMISSION. hei be citi uu ese 391 Prva, John B., Commodity Credit Corpora-Rr Ere NS Sli A 4 1 710 Ch sy 366 Pazos, Dr. Felipe, Cuban Embassy. ccao--458 Individual Index Page Page Peabody, Stuart, Office of Secretary of the Pharazyn, Lt. Col. W. N., New Zealand Lega- ROAST Y cola ora ws 327 Pearson, Guy W., District collector of taxes... 449 Pearson, L. B., Canadian Legation ____________ 456 Peck, Charles R., Office of Personnel. __________ 360 EY oe NN A AER Et Ea 327 Pehrson, Elmer W., Bureau of Mines__________ 354 Peirce, Earl S., Forest Service... __......._.._. 365 Pell, Robert T., Division of Current Informa- Ih ro SRR eS ee ie 324 Pelton, Walter E., assistant to the legal adviser. 326 Pefialoza, Miguel, Mexican Embassy.__________ 462 Pence, Capt. H. L., General Board _______.____ 343 Pendleton, T. P., Geological Survey... _.______ 353 Imbhasay. Lu ct ee an 462 Pérez-Cisneros, Enrique, Cuban Embassy. _____ 458 Perkins, Frances (Secretary of Labor): Bilographylofoiiaiil Uae TV diags Tagg 0 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu- CAPIONGS oil ere Br 396 Member, Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 417 National Archives Council ___________________ 407 Office of Economic Stabilization ___________ 312 War Manpower Commission_________________ 314 Perkins, John W., Translating Bureau________. 326 Perkins, Milo: Board of Economic Warfare _________________ 317 Joint War Production Committee ___________ 319 Perkins, T. T., Reconstruction Finance Cor-DOration: = fd Re a Perrault, J. E., International Joint Commission _ 403 Perry, Donald R., Immigration and Naturaliza-tom Service, [cairo nae EY 336 Perry, John R., Office of the Sergeant at Arms Of Benate. oo Ta 266 centennial Commission 7 17 °F ~~ 238 Pershing, Gen. John J.: American Battle Monuments Commission___ 385 Goethals Memorial Commission. ____________ 401 tary o aes a Et 331 Peterson, C. S., District Fire Department______ 450 Peterson, Mrs. Hugh, Congressional Club______ 390 Peterson, Maj. Gen. Virgil L., Office of the In- Specior General, War... -332 Petrovich, Rastko, Yugoslavian Embassy______ 466 Pett, Harris G., Railroad Retirement Board.___ 415 Pettet, Zellmer R., Bureau of the Census_______ 371 Petty, John A., District Real Estate Commis- OE eeeprs RE Peyton, Gordon T'., Food Distribution Admin-jetration. tT IE SRIR IEE. SORHAGL 366 Phair, Walter T., secretary to Senator Downey... 268 37. 353 Pilcher, James B., Division of Foreign Service Administration BarlTy. fi 447 Pillen, Harry, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House. 271 Pine, David A., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Co-lumbia 437 Minesand Mining... "77 "Vee 265 Plumptre, A. F. W., Canadian Legation_______ 456Plunket, Benjamin, British Embassy___________ 60 A ae a A Em ere hel SE em 318 Pogue, L. Welch, Civil Aeronautics Board... 374 Pois, Commander Joseph, Coast Guard________ 348 Ponce, Dr. L. Neftali, Ecuadoran Embassy... 458 Poncell, Miguel E., Uruguayan Embassy ______ 466 Poniatowski, George, House post office___.______ 272 Pool, M. E.: Secretary to Senator Thomas of Oklahoma___ 269 Senate Committee on Indian Affairs._________ 265 Poole, Nathan, Columbia Institution for the 297 ea) ee arb Lain a AG el Poor, Henry V., 3d, Commission of Fine Arts. 389 Pope, Harold, Work Projects Administration__ 399 Pope, James P., Tennessee Valley Authority.. 420 Page S Porter, Lt. Col. E. H., Inter-American De- fonse Board iui, oo win RITE ROL BSE 01 Porter, Eloise, Senate Committee on Commerce. 264 Porter; Floyd J. Patent Office 20.0... 0.1. 373 Porter, Henry G., Civil Service Commission___ 389 Porter, Irwin S., examiners and registrars of architeetsi oc Tofi0 Uo ala aliiag 447 Udine Porter, Paul, Office of Price Administration__. 318 Porter, Stephen T., Chief, District Fire De- partment 2011 rh gt 450 DORIUEOL Porter, Maj. Gen. W. N., Army Service Forces. 334 Poss, Lurlene, Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation cise oii Bul 0 265 Posse, Jorge Escalante, Argentine Embassy.___ 455 Post, Langdon W., Federal Public Housing Authority so oeal tl L202 tga Sori ara i nee 411 Pott, Rear Admiral H., British Embassy______ 459 Potter, D. Roland, secretary to Senator O’ Daniel. 269 Potter, Elwin A., Public Utilities Commission__ 452 Potts, Annie Laurie, Committee on Expendi- tures in the Executive Departments ____.___ 265 Office of Secretary of the Navy. _....._....__ 341 Powell, Oscar M., Social Security Board.._____ 394 Powers, D. Lane, Board of Visitors to the Mili- aL A CAAOITY. ee ae 236 Powers, John T., Capitol’ Police. ___._:... _ 275 Poynton, E. A. Office of Indian Affairs________. 352 Prado, Col. Hermogenes, Nicaraguan Embassy. 463 Pramoj, MomRajawongse, Seni, Thai Minister.. 465 Pratt, Mrs. Harold I., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ________ 364 Pratt, John L., Office of Lend-Lease Adminis- TSTELS A gi Sp tie eh VT a 313 Preacher, G. Lloyd, Home Owners’ Loan Cor- DOL OR: So esSe or dana 410 Preinkert, Clara E., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. _____._ .._____.. 361 Prescott, Josephine Pittman, District Health LEInn TA enn ein fred A Renn 451 Preston, James D., Office of the Secretary of 264 Preston, John F., Soil Conservation Service.._. 368 Preston, Paul R., Agricultural Adjustment A TONY CEear se 367 Pribyl, Pearl, House Committee on Rules...._. 274 Price, Byron, Office of Censorship.___.___.____.__ 317 Price, Loyd M., Capitol Police... ~-c.._.._. 275 Price, Marcus W., National Archives .._.._.._. 406 Price, Ralph B., House post office...___ 272 Price, Walter L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... co. im or ew wimedm on 234 Price, Walter V., Federal Public Housing Au- ROY Se tn re ae eT crab EE 411 Prichard, Edward F., Office of Economic Stabi- zat onc ia a adi er gh Sarai pi Prince, Frank, Smaller War Plants Corporation. 316 Pringle, Dr. John A., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Procope, Hjalmar J., Finnish Minister _____.__ 459 Proctor, James M., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia... io. aa rao 437 Proffitt, M. M., Office of Education____._._..____ 395 Propst, Herbert L., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Provinse, John H., War Relocation Authority.. 317 Provus, Milton A., Office of Secretary of Labor_ 380 Pryor, Earl, Office of Legislative Counsel, Senate 267 Pudifin, Davetta M., Senate Committee on MARNIACEUTES. 1. 25 omy sim Pe A wim ime ie ow 265 Page Pugh, Caro M., Senate Committee on Com-TIRES it wh i A rep To mat IO RI 264 Pugh, John C., House Committee on Appropri-ations HE Od area 273 Pupo, Delfin A., Cuban Embassy... __..... 458 Purcell, Ganson: National Power Policy Commission _________ 357 Securities and Exchange Commission. ________ 416 Purdum, Smith W., Second Assistant Post-master General 33 Purdy, Bettie F., United States attorney’s office. 439 Putnam, Hamilton S., secretary to Senator CRA gat A Ad a A Th oh 268 Etna, Herbert, Librarian of Congress emer-Hue SL RAN I0 BR Tt ee Pyle, Robert, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _______________ 364 Q Queen, William A., Food and Drug Adminis-tration. Jeaeus IL 10. Hainibs lanipafoaal. 396 Quezon, Manuel L., President of the Common- wealth of the Philippines 35 Quigley, E. T., Office of Secretary of Commerce. 370 Quigley, W. R., Office of Budget and Finance... 359 Quimby, Charles H., District corporation counsel’soffice: ov. oo iiinaetl. hnbici a -ob hunn 449 Quinn, Esther C., Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Affairs... ._._._.____ Quinn, Samuel G., Office of Plant and Opera- EE SE Se CI Cn Ee Br 3 IE 361 Quinn, Thomas D., Administrative Division._._. 337 Quirk, Timothy J., Bureau of the Mint_________ 330 Quirno-Lavalle, Miguel E., Argentine Embassy. 455 R Rabb, Maxwell M., secretary to Senator Lodge. 269 Rabbitt, Frank O., Office of the Doorkeeper.__. 271 Radcliffe, George L.: Columbia Hospital for Women. _-._.______.._ 389 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... 235 Virginia (Merrimac)-Monitor Commission.__ 237 Rademan, Maj. J. D. de Villiers, Union of South 781 LT DTAhy Cites hosed So Syae 466 Neil Radner, William, War Shipping Administra-sly tio Ea EE i VE ete Radoychich, Lt. Col. Zivojin, Yugoslavian Em- Rains, Grover, House post office ___.._..___._. 272 Rainwater, R. C., Federal Power Commission__ 392 Rait, Donald M., Reconstruction Finance Cor- irs na dasialindst bone i wees bil RELA, 375 Rakestraw, Clarence E., Office of Education___. 395 Ramey, Elizabeth, Secretary to District Com- ETE Crh]Lo eat Ln Se aS SE SS La 447 Ramirez-Duque, Anita, Panamanian Em- ERY a a ee 463 Ramsay, M. L., Federal Works Agency........ 398 Ramsdell, Helen C., secretary to Senator Tobey. 269 Ramser, Charles E., Soil Conservation Service. 368 Ramsey, Mary Louise, United States attorney’s PY FE A TER Se I Gr Se Be PI LS Ramspeck, Ernest W., Securities and Exchange Commission) Fo Co os sian 416 Randolph, F. P., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. -_.oo___--273 Randolph, Jennings, National Capital Park and Planning Commission. ____.....cccccmean 408 Rankine, Paul Scott, British Embassy-.---...-460 Ranneft, Rear Admiral J. E. Meijer, Nether- lands Embassy 0 a. ies 462 Ransom, Ronald, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... ccceee 393 Rao, Paul P., Assistant Attorney General. ..... 336 Rapp, Leslie M., House Committee on Ways and Meangy.oo. i 274 = Individual Index Page Rauber, Margaret E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________________ 393 Raver, Paul J.: BonnevilleiProjeel: ao i siains oodJodee 356 National Power Policy Committee. .__...___. 357 Ravandal, Olaf, Division of Exports and Re-quirements Lo iB 325 Ravndal, Christian M.: Board of Economic Operations... _.___........ 324 Division of Exports and Requirements__._.__ 325 Rawdon, H. S., National Bureau of Standards__ 372 Rawls, Fletcher H., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree...-..comwebusi. aanl lh. 371 Ray, C. Eldon, Administrative Department, YAbrary.of Congress. ...uvea iva: oe cwasus 279 Ray, J. Franklin, Office of Lend-Lease Admin-CR RS ae BT SE ST Se 313 Rayburn, Sam: Commission in Control of the House Office BAIN fr. toot n fimminhn waes oR SR oo et as 233 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol BOUMMAS 5 ort Fe eT tr bons ay Be wel rem ine Speakerolthe House. ....o. =...i. 270 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__ 238 ‘Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission _-.. nee omi canes 236 Raynor, Hayden, Office of Lend-Lease Adminis- a On Ts ST Nad 313 Reagan, Frank G., Veterans’ Administration___ 422 Reagh, Russell R., Division of Research and Sb abISies a Te a 328 Reagle, Hilda R., District juvenile court_______ 440 Real, Fritz, Swiss Legation. ________.___._______ 465 Reaves, Morris H. , Superintendent of printing, Gavornmen) Printing Officn.. 000 005 Rebmann, G , Office of i Admin- istration ot a8 Jah ant Nul a as 313 Rechendorff, Johannes V., Danish Legation... 458 Recinos, Dr. Adrian: Governing Board, Pan American Union.__... 414 Guatemalan Ambassador... ______.____.___... 461 Redman, Brig. H., Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain____._____. 320 Redman, M. C., Federal Public Housing Au- Ainotn Sa eR A Ed CS 411 Redrow, Walter L., Patent Office. ............. 373 Reed, Bessie O., oad Compensation Caen Eh wa ws sor oe hd its 390 Reed Dhiaries W., office of District. director ofl vehicles and traffie. ........._.._..__..__._ Reed, David A., American Battle rae Commission A ARE ww rE Fenn Reed, Harry E., Food Distribution Adminis tration ee a aL ES TN Te rE NC 366 Reed, Hoa b,, United States attorney’s office. 439 Reed, Dr.J.A Metropolitan Police... i. 451 Reed, J. Jos, Food Production Administration. 367 Reed, John B., District Health Department... ip Reed, M. R. , Railroad Retirement Board. ..... 415 Reed, O. E. , Chief, Bureau of Dairy Industry... 362 Reed, a M., Food Distribution” Administra- Reed "Philip D., Combined Production and Resources Boards ood oii ta tm 321 Reed, Stanley F., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography y. POSER Gane 427 Reeder, Sherwood, Federal Public Housing Authorit 412 Reed-Hill, Capt. Ellis, Coast Guard._..._.._..___ 348 Reeley, Leslie C., Bureau of Accounts... ...u.u 340 Reeves, James 1, Office of the Doorkeeper..... 271 Reeves, Admiral J. Lend-Lease Liaison Office. oooooooooeeeo. 343 Munitions Assignments Board. .....___...__. 320 Reeves, John R. T., Office of Indian: Affairs____ 352 Reeves, Joseph Y., District Court of the United States for the District of Columbiatl sil oii. 437 Rehlaender,W. N., Procurement Division_____ 330 Reichelderfer, Francis W.: National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics 405 Weather Burean, ii. i) 0. Fo 373 agmaeiio Reichmuth, Rear Admiral F. L.., Commandant -of Navy Yard andistationi: .. ruordioaa 346 Reid, Edwy B., Farm Credit Administration.. 364 Reid, Harvey i , Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict OECOIIIR ae eat 432 Page Reid, Laura 8., secretary to Senator Shipstead_. 269 Reid, T. Roy, Office of Personnel... _..._____. Reid, Tom, International Pacific Salmon Fish-erie COMMISION. too. ros cot diate. Reid-Adam, R., British Embassy. _____________ 460 Reidy, Edward P., Board-of-Parole... iL. iil. 337 Reilly, Gerard D., National Labor Relations Boarding]Sasrozs saoqols hid 412 Reilly, Michel F., Secret Service. _.__._.________ Reinstein, J acques J., Foreign Funds Control Diviston ial lil, Ula iil sh Sganis ol Reitzel, Albert E., Immigration and Naturaliza-tlonwService! Jo ooile il Susi heh nein Rempe, Henry W., Civil Service Commission__ 389 Renner, Frederic C., Soil Conservation Service_. 368 Rennie, Robert R., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration 23 Loiond. | ania idund: Lua 411 Respass, John R., Defense Plant Corporation.. 376 Reuterswird, Reinhold de, Swedish Legation_. 465 Revercomb, Chapman, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy. ioc lA sada ont 36 Revoredo, Col. Armando, Peruvian Embassy. 464 Reybold, Maj. Gen. Eugene: Army Service Forces. ......_...__..____...... 334 National Capital Park and Planning Commis-sion... obha oo Ss pa ani ani an nil United States Soldiers’ Home. _______________ 419 Reyer, Hugo, Federal Communications Com-mission haga rey LoTR ah Te Sli Beynolay Charles R., Jr., Office of Secretary Div ADOT aR EROYD Foyie B v1, Patent:Office,doin ioe ol 3 Reynolds, J. M. y Housepost office. .-___.._ il. 272 Reynolds, J. ames M. , Office of Personnel. ______ 360 Reynolds, Robert R., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy See SR Ta ed) 236 Reynolds, iL J. L., Bureau of Naval Personnels. a nc iG0lE LH anal Saad 345 Reynolds, Brig. Gen. Russell B., Army Service Orees. sna tahiigl nanlnoy ipa d sna Reynolds, Thomas F., Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations. ..occceno.. 325 Reynolds, W. E.: Federal Fire Council. oo oooeoeee. 399 Public Buildings Administration... .cooceaa-. 399 Rhea, W. E.: Farm Credit Administration. _____.___.___._. 364 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation___.._._. 365 Rhett, R. G., Defense Plant Corporation__..__. a Rheuban, Sidney, House post office _..__..___ Rhine, James L., emits Telephone Exchange. EL: Rhodes, John Ds fficial Reporter, Senate... 267 Ribbing, Herbert o Swedish Legation. ______. 465 Ribble, Frederick D. G., Board of Appeals on isa Cases: clei, Jmol Lou)oni 326 Ribenack, W. C., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration acl Na ol ane pli ings 376 Bl Esther, office of the Under Secretary of 51. Rice, in H., Rubber Reserve Company.-..... 377 Rice, Stephen’ E., Office of Legislative Counsel, Senate: wll, 00 Coola Aas LoL phn 267 Rice, Stuart A., Bureau of the Budget... ___.__ 310 Rice, William E., Bureau of Mines_..___....... 354 Rich, G. R., Tennessee Valley Authority. ..._._ 420 Richard, Auguste, Army and Navy Munitions Booed. LLG aul 387 Richard, Vernon I., Patent Office. ________.____ 373 Richards, Dr. A. N., Office of Scientific Research and Development oh 51 TASES IVR 8 CR pk 313 Richards, Elaine Hatch, Senate Committee on Education and Labor Fi $a hE 1 0, TS eR om 264 Richards, Franklin D., Federal Housing Ad- minisiration.; soe bgad, CB Lh PN Han 40 Richardson, L. S., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 362 Richardson, William E., judge, Municipal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.____ 439 Richardson, W. W., General Accounting Office--400 Richardy, Agnes M., Veterans’ Administration Haison Olees. — a ermal 277 Ricks, Newell K., Federal National Mortgage Assoelationo lic 2 nah oal oul ne 377 Riddle, Mae M., Tariff Commission.._.___..._.. 420 Ridgely, Paul, House Radio Qallery....2.u..c0 754 Ridgway, Ruth M., Tariff Commission.._.._.. 419 Riemens, Dr. H., Netherlands Embassy... 462 Rieve, Emil, National War Labor Board_._.___ 311 Riggleman, John R., General Land Office. _____ 351 Page Riggs, Thomas: Alaskan International Highway Commission. 235 International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. ______.__._.__. 402 Right, Denzil, A., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury. Hes oliec heals A Jan oil ons 327 Riley, Henry W.: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. __.._. 392 Office of Alien Property Custodian. .__....___ 311 Ring, D. S., Maritime Commission ______.._.___ 405 Ring, James, Alley Dwelling Authority________ 385 Ringland, Arthur C., War Relief Control Board. 319 Ringland, Col. Frank G., Office of the Inspector General; War oscar Soll, 0 SoonollSol 332 Riordan, James J., Securities and Exchange GQommissionzaisais seii tun] hleain 416 Rippley, Euphrosine A., United States attor- ney’sofficec.: Lait gagaloci od aoa. au 439 Riskin, Robert, Office of War Information... 314 Ritchie, W.; British Embassy-.--460 Ritter, Robert A., Production planning assistant to the Public Printer, Government Printing fleece. oo Luanne inset ai Diss Rivero, Dr. Nicolas, Cuban Embassy. ..._.___. 458 Roark, R. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. oo iota COI 363 Robbins, Irene de Bruyn, Office of Foreign Service:Furnishings. 0 ooo 0 ool us 325 Robbins, Lt. Leo T., Coast Guard Robbins, William M., Office of Secretary of the GTTh An Ee ALA AR) bis beta Tait Si by 327 Roberts, Beryl, Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration: ania ma serniit s M Lalo 392 Roberts, Owen J.: Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (biography)... -.-cites Seidl 427 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.. 238 Roberts, Ralph R., Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives: Lucia clo usil Si ol 271 Roberts, Ralph S., Office of Budget and Finance. 359 Roberts, Thomas N., Office of Personnel _______ 360 Robertson, Edward V., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy.._-__.____-________. 237 Robertson, J. N., District Engineer Department. 450 Robertson, Martha E., Office of Secretary of Commeree. -s-oi ai sini ius sao Ly 370 Robertson, Reuben B., National War Labor 11 Personnel socio apmgll_smubls ena Judes Robertson, Turner, Office of the Doorkeeper.___ 271 Robertson, W. B., Food Distribution Admin- istrationzotinus Jt datbasurt ab Bocas Siti 366 Robinson, Capt. C. R., navy yard and station__ 346 Robinson, Carl H., Food Distribution Admin- istragionaci ju Un iuimiiego ML 3 C00 JOR 366 Robinson, Brig. Gen. Clinton F., Army Service Foreesasios, salu] sul To Sls Said os 334 Robinson, G. Canby, American Red Cross_.._. 387 Robinson, H. K., Tennessee Valley Authority._ 421 Robinson, Mary V., Women’s Bureau__.__.___. 382 Robinson, Vice Admiral S. M., Office of Pro- curement and Material .__.____________i____ 342 Robison, George H., United States attorney’s 439 3 EL FA SE Ch Se Le I A NSIS Sen Lg 1 ti) Rockefeller, Nelson A.: Board of Economic Warfare _..______________ 317 Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affaifgioiaiol) aipud. dole anialn shad 312 Rockey, Brig. Gen. Keller E., Headquarters Marine Corps. Ll Cilia TULs ozoin. 345 Rockwell, Willard F., Maritime Commission._. 405 Rodier, Gilbert L., Federal Public Housing Authoriby.dicy 24. abil J oral anni lel 411 Rodinoff, Nicholas R., Reference Department, Library ofiCongress. inal JH LJ Jlaslinds Rodis, Dr. Isadore, Commission on Mental Health... Lh ne Doo, leniiisaones 438 Rodriguez, Mario, Chilean Embassy_._._______ 457 Rodriguez, Dr. Vicente Valdés, Cuban Embassy. 457 Rodriguez de San Miguel, Manuel, Mexican Embassy. Zou lib ihe Belted DE led 462 Roebuck, Doris, Senate Committee on En- rolled Bills. A GTi oalia iui 265 ahoulinnin Rogers, Dillard E., Office of Secretary of the Senate lil Suoa.l Jiohoinl. JIL BERL DEEN 264 Page Rogers, Edgar F., Library of Congress.____..-._ 278 Rogers, E. H., Postal Telegraph-Cable Co___._. 276 Rogers, James, Office of War Information ______ 314 Rogers, John L., Interstate Commerce Com- yaission: ane SEE I eSea nL unl 03 Rogers, Ralph H., Bureau of Agricultural BLCONOMHEE roi ria ca i ammeter a a ow wd 359 Rogers, Silas W., House post office. ....._._____ 272 Rohwer, S. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant -Quarantine” “URC UE SC LL Los 362 Rojne, Ivan, Swedish Legation ________________ 465 Roland, Commander Edwin J., Coast Guard... 348 Rollins, Paul, United States attorney’s office___ 439 Rolph, Mrs. Thomas, Congressional Club______ 390 Romney, Kenneth, Sergeant at Arms of House (biography) Sila tor od i to Ll hiss 271 Ronan, Frank T.: Defense Plant Corporation... __..____. 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 375 Rooksbery, William A., Railroad Retirement rd a es 415 Roosevelt, Franklin D. (President of United States): Biography of. circ notemmap--Gui imsrs coe 309 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 417 Patron ex officio, Columbia Institution for oR Dr Tee A a i Saar Dy President American Red Cross... _________ 386 President ex officio, Washington National Monument Society... -----—---=cs=z=sn==-423 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission. 238 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... =--=---2---~--236 Root, Irving C., National Park Service ..._.___ 353 Roper, Capt. J. W., Bureau of Naval Personnel 345 Rose, Dr. Edwin J., Veterans’ Administration. 422° Rose, Francis C., Office of Secretary of Treasury. 327 Rose, Samuel, Veterans’ Administration_______ 422 Rose, Brig. Gen. William C., War Manpower Commission... i io as i oh SNe, 315 Rosen, Alex, Federal Bureau of Investigation._ 336 , Rosenthal, A. S., Australian Legation__________ 455 Rosenthal, Morris, Board of Economic Warfare. 317 Ross, Andrew N., Federal Trade Commission. 398 Ross, John: : Division of Departmental Personnel _________ 324 Office of the Secretary of State ______ Phe Lae 323 Ross, Luther, United States attorney’s office__. 439 Ross, Nellie Tayloe, Director, Bureau of the (hp) AR LEE 0 ln Hl 1 SEAR SA eS RE Tel A 330 Ross, W. A., Office of Education ______________ 395 Rossiter, William W., Administrative Depart- ment, Library of Congress __._____.___._.__ 79 Rosten, Leo C., Office of War Information __._ 314 Rostow, Eugene V., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury=L. Dipiotcd bh LoS HL 00is 0] Rouse, John G., Federal Housing Administra- 3} i 1717 DATA ITLES da Sup) Lah SE EE Se 409 Rousseau, W. A., Office of Secretary of the Senate... Dojo JRsidii an a oh 263 Rouzer, Horace D., Assistant Architect of the Capitola onto SOI nnn Lo 200i nail 275 Rovensky, Joseph C., Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs ..._________.__.._ 312 Rowalt, E. M., War Relocation Authority_.____ 316 Rowan, Edward B., Public Buildings Adminis- tration oil 10 aOR sis ie Oui 399 Rowan, Ida, House Committee on World War 3 Veterans? Legislation Cio. Joi ccc J0-0loll 274 Rowecliff, Rear Admiral G. J., General Board__. 343 Rowe, James H., Office of the Attorney General. 336 Rowe, L. S., Director General, Pan American Unionenrscll ol 0 niin l Joon JUIN 414 Rowell, Edward A., Office of the Third Assistant -Postmaster General oc io i LC ELI 339 Rowen, Paul R., Securities and Exchange Com-TNISSION oo ee ilmenitewh i 417 Individual Index Page Rowntree, Dr. Leonard G., Selective Service reir iis saat sons Bad EN a 315 Roy, William T., Assistant Parliamentarian of the Housel Zl 0.0 [Fo nti salaaiinn 270 Royal, Capt. Forrest B.: Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. ...________ 404 The JontBoardiran Bimal, Liat Io 404 Royall, Nathaniel: Defense Plant. Corporation... 376 oc. cio. Defense Supplies Corporation ________________ 376 Disaster Loan Corporation_._.___.__________. 78 Federal National Mortgage Association. ______ 377 Metals Reserve Company. ____________._____ 76 Reconstruction Finance Corporation____.____ 375 Rubber Development Corporation____________ 379 Rubber Reserve Company ____________________ 377 The RFC Mortgage Company._._____________. 377‘War Damage Corporation. _____________._____ 9 Royce, H. G., estern Union, House Office Building faeinalnlNBG tana, Ba a, secretary to-Senator Thomas of phobia bl aia Lebanon Rubin, Robert S., Securities and Exchange Commission Loot Losing | Fail yoy Ruch, G. M., Office of Education______________ 396 5 SUrvey Coil ay nT UT Sidi Ruhland, Dr. George C., District Health De-partment sll de teenieaa 1 in FT Ruhlen, Elizabeth, Bureau of Accounts. _______ 340 Ruiz, Dr. Luis E. Goméz, Venezuelan Embassy. 466 Ruiz-Diez, Wing Commander Teodoro: Inter-American Defense Board _______________ Chilean Bmbassy. «oof 0 ar c.f Russell, Donald, Office of Economic Stabiliza-TiLen Ley inde ABT SRE WR PR 312 SHOR: ua She Set a TEE Ruel, William F., minority clerk_____________ 272 Ru Rutter, Capt. J. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel._ 345 55 Ryan, Gerald, Office of Secretary of Commerce ._ _ 0 36 317 ment, Library of Congress_________________s 279 Ryan, Loretta H., Federal Board of Hospitaliza-m Lap RAE SE OR 2 LUE AE Pg EE RT Ryan, Oswald, Civil Aeronautics Board _______ 374 Rybér, Dr. Vladimir, Yugoslavian Embassy___ 466 Ryder, Oscar B., Tariff Commission___________ 419 Page Sager, Fred A., Public Utilities Commission____ 452 Sailor, Vance L., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation U1) hail pds lL 2 ve 392 Salas, Mariano Picon, Venezuelan Embassy___ 466 Salazar, Dr. Eduardo, Ecuadoran Embassy____ 458 Affe il oo. il nolan ninaang 325 Salyer, J. Clark, Fish and Wildlife Service. ___ 355 Samuels, Maurice M., Rural Electrification Administration. io. oo cl» Tiaoll Sanasen, Mani, Thai Legation__________________ 465 Sanders, Lt. Otha R., Metropolitan Police. ____ 451 Sanders, Samuel D., Farm Credit Administra-ton iuigioelBUH rain ad pnusatath Ta Sandifer, Durward, Division of Political Studies. 326 Sandstrom, Marvin M., Food Distribution Administrationsio. (aes dil phil Seni 367 Sanger, Monie, St. Elizabeths Hospital ________ 397 Sansom, George, British Embassy. ____________ 459 Santiesteban, Teodoro, Cuban Embassy. ______ 458 Santiviago, Col. Luis: Paraguayan Embassy... lin al sil ....... 463 Inter-American Defense Board_______________ 401 Sanz, Dr. J. M., Dominican Embassy__________ 458 Sappington, James C., 3d, Office of the Petro- leum Adviser... 0 mite 326 Saraev, Col. Ilia M., Soviet Socialist Republics Embasgy. i350 ol0l ot anni aan nda 466 Sargeant, Howland H., Office of Alien Property Custodian... Liiiipnonlrunt ee JF 311 Sarhan, Huldi F., Turkish Embassy___________ 465 Sarich, Bozidar, Yugoslavian Embassy_________ 466 Sarle, Charles, F., Weather Bureau ____________ 3 Sarmanho, Walder, Brazilian Embassy_________ 456 Sarmiento, Lt., Col. Jorge: Inter-American Defense Board ______________ 401 Peruvian. Embassy... I pi rrioae 464 Sarré, A. J., Federal Works Agency____________ 398 Sartain, Arthur: Secretary to Senator Bankhead ______________ 8 Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclama- ion Sabine, E. G., American Red Cross. _______._._ 387 Sadler, C. L., Geological Survey. _.____._______.. 353 Sadler, Clarence T., Federal Trade Commis- glow. CoilaedieamlBepwh®E. roaaeior To Inter-American Defense Board... ____________ 401 Mexican Embassy. ~~ = a 462 Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operationgs iolud sahal. WW luslngi 325 Office of the Secretary of State ____..___.____ 324 Sayers, R. R., Bureau of Mines. Cs 385d Scalley, Thomas C., Office of Register of Wills__ 440 Scanlan, John J., Passport Division____________ 326 Scanlon, James F., House Committee on Ap- propristions is 3 suet Divan SiN nin 273 Scantlin, H. D., District assessor’s office________ 447 Page Searborough, Harold, Office of Secretary of the Senate: arises bipedoiened LL Loud Schafer, A. L., American Red Cross.._.________ 386 Schapiro, Israel, Reference Department, Library of Congress HSI oR Ven Ad Lt Js Tg Me) Rls {6 Eh Fr 279 Schayesteh, Mohammed, Iran Minister... _.__ 461 Scheid, Clara E., Joint Committee on Infernlia Revenue PRRALION a disca ats Schell, S. D.: Maritime COMMISSION — ooo 404 War Shipping Administration. _______________ 317 Schellenberg, Theodore R., National Archives.. 406 Senor C. Walter, Western Union Telegraph “o Schieck, DeWitt C., Metals Reserve Company. 376 Schindler, Alfred, Defense Plant Corporation. _ 375 Schlemmer, , Tennessee Valley ‘Authority. 420 Schley, Mayj. Gen. Julian L., Goethals Memorial Commission: gelsastioai] Sonus Bis 401 Schlup, Lester A., Extension Service... ___. 369 Schmid, Eileen Desmond, District Cosmetology Booed sot rebel fa 447 Schmidt, Maj. Gen. Harry, Headquarters Ma-oe D Schneider, Albert, official stenographer to House commitiees tein ali i aii LT mady 274 Schneider, F., War-Shipping Administration__ 317 Schnellbacher, E. E., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic CONOR. fit iil baa rreitsndinils 371 Schnesler, John K., National Housing Agency.__ 409 Schnitzer, Julius, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce olmstead oo Ll eli oesa by Jaa 371 Schnurr, Mae A., Office of the Secretary of the TRIOIIOT fo tenth thi snid I dbiin 1) aes 350 Bonosae; Lester P., Bureau of War Risk Litiga-2 tionss tepepdaen Tunrarlast) Coaohial gaanoadl 33 Schoeneman, Charles R., Office of Secretary of .. the Treasury i imethesersmpdind Er Erasanas 327 Schoeneman, George J., Bureau of Internal Revenue. ESN Tar A AY Teen pneyt SEIN oR LR 8 ey Schoenhals, C. E., Agricultural Research Ad- ministration... oo .ieass cr gegbanh ging! 361 Schoening, H. W., Bureau of Animal Industry. 362 Scholienberger, Herbert K., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. TL ook ives 447 Behoshn Harry N., Agricultural Adisiment | GONEY. io readin ciate D. WI DIoNE mag Schott, Ln W., Office of Secretary of War_ ___ a Schram, Emil, Federal Prison Industries, Inc.. 337 Schroeder, Frank W. , secretary to Senator Buck. 268 Schroeder, Wilbur g, Bureau of Mines___.____ 354 Schulte, George J., House Select Committee on Small Business LL ee BRE US RE LSE 210 Schurz, William L., Division of Cultural Rela- tions A I ee i A ee Cr 0 324 Schutt, Marie E., Office of Education __________ 395 Schutz, Dr. Eliott C., District Board of Podi- atry Bxaminers toon 448 Schuyler, Franklin J., Bureau of Naval Per- TTr1h(a) EE ae i Se SRE 3 OE Pl RE A 344 Schuyler, Capt. G. L., Bureau of Ordnance.... 345 Schwab, James E., District Recreation Board.. 448 Schwartz, Benjamin, Bureau of Animal Indus-3 Ye iodo obi oda tan, Sater dd. Stn 62 Schwartz, Edward E., Children’s Bureau.._.__ 381 Schwartz, Harry H., National Mediation Board. 412 Schwartz, Sylvan, United States attorney’s ny Charles, Office of the Secretary of ies IPreaASUIYo 0s. Jo faniad lo 23 aeenl Dadar Schwegmann, George A., Jr., Reference vie ment, Library of Congress RR A IS 279 Scilingo, Adolfo, Argentine Embassy. --.__._.__ 455 Scobey, Col. William P., Office of Assistant Secretary of War. ues, Jn) on) 331 ooatllil Scofield, C. S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and ’ Agricultural Engineering. ...oiilon0 3 Scoll, David E.: Combined Shipping Adjustment Board. _____ 321 War Shipping Administration__.___.__.___._. 317 Scott, i Se W., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. -oo oooooooooeoo 439 Scott, Arthur E., White House News FPho- tographers’ AsSoeiationi 0 Law 00000 752 Scott, Finis E., postmaster of the House... 272 Scott, H.A., Canadian Legation... 2a ak Sains 456 Scott, John Ww., Federal Power Commission._._ 392 Page Scott, Capt. L. B., Army and Navy Munitions Board. boris Son 387 saithARs Scott, Lela, House Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation... Coo oSieguin 273 nous. Scott, Majorie S., Office of Education__________ 395 Scott, Stuart, Office of Secretary of the Navy... 341 Scoular, Agnes, Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Affairs... 266 Scrivener, Samuel, Jr., District Zoning Adjust-ment Board. bos berndo” 2 pn SliE sr isd 448 Seabrook, Wing Comdr., J., New Zeland Lega- Hon: souisicize dl pau tnd JRE EGAN 463 Seabury, R. W., War Shipping Administration. 317 Seaman, Brig. "Gen. A. wen, United States Soldiers’. Homes oui 2 iiaige Saal Juicy 419 Seaman, Fred A., General Accounting Office... 400 Seaman, Guy I, Interstate Commerce Com- MISSION: avn oe dL S00 ASU EEL CE 403 Seaquist, W. H., National Bureau of Standards. 372 Searcy, Tthel M. , Postal Telegraph-Cable Co__ 276 Sears, J. D. , Geological Surveys onl 0K 352 Seaver, Ww. P., Federal Public Housing Au- thority $6 SS 0. SH TRY 0 tn w 1 SER SER 1 411 Seavey, Clyde L., Federal Power Commission__ 392 Secco, Capt. Joao da Cruz, Jr., Joint Brazil- United States Defense Commission .______-322 Secco, Col. Vasco Alves, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. __ ___--________ 322 Seckinger, Dr. Daniel L., District Health De- partment. Co. -—OUIRLE. 451 Secrest, John D., Bureau of Mines__..__________ 354 Sedlacek, L. H., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency EY SR TER 52 Aad La REA BIS ES ANNA RNR 328 Seeger, Charles, Pan American Union__________ 414 Seay Ronald C., Office of Price Administra- TION. nico DEOL Seagal STEN EE padi 318 Seelig, R. A.: Secretary to Senator Bone. ___________________ 268 Senate Committee on Patents. _______________ 266 Segel, David, Office of Education_._____________ 395 Seigel, Milton P., Farm Security Administra- longs aru did Tage sais BRILL INH 369 Sellers, Ashley, Office of the Solicitor... ____ 360 Senior, Mildred R., Interstate Commerce Com- mission Fe pa Rents ER Ra 403 Sefioret, Carmen Vial de, Chilean Embassy._.. 457 Sessions, A. R., The Alaska Railroad.._._.._.___ 356 Sessions, Gordon M., Petroleum Administration TOE WALES ies deirdreiE Alen 318 Sessions, bore E., Tennessee Valley Au- thority sun lieu oi ant 00 Bas 420 Settle, T. Ji National Capital Park and Plan- ning Commission edi Ja aan IL ung 408 Setzler, Frank M.: Advisory Board on National Parks, ete.._.__-357 NationaliMuseum y= bao oll. to 0 codons 418 Sexton, Rear Admiral W. R., General Board.__ 343 Sexton, Col. William T., "War Department General Staff. Lilt ftitu ay ns 332 Seydel, Harry M., Veterans’ Administration___ 422 Seymour, Walton, Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Seynaeve, F. , Belgian Embassy oustali dl 455 Shadi, Webb, Civil Aeronautics Administra-3 goss. mena de sei ERI 74 Shafer, FranklinA. M., Customhouse__________ 328 Shaffer, Charles H., Patent Office... 373 Shafroth, Will, Administrative Office of the United States Courts coi. coamasmmanziidoil 438 Shambora, Col. William E., Army Ground TPOrCes. toll in lati bn J raed 333 Shane, Harris P., Office of Secretary of Labor__ 380 Shanks, J. C. , office of Clerk of House.._-__.... 271 Shannon, Charles V., Federal Power Com- mission: SrFosni ani UU IERIE QUANT 392 Shanon, Harry C., Secretary to Senator Rever-wh BS BRS ed EE a 6! Shantz, BH. L., Forest Service._.conotoaonoc 365 Shapiro, Dr. Hyman D., Commission on Mental Healt Sharpe, Carleton, Federal Public Housing Au- tROTHY cine i as bens SeabeeTA 412 Shattuck, er Col. Edward E.: War Manpower COMMISSION _ «o-oo 315 Selective Serviee System _ __ o_o... 315° Shaughnessy, Edward J., Immigration and Naturalization Service...____ 337 Shaw, A. Manning, Office Price Administration. 318 Interparliamentary Union__-._"________ 235 Short, Oliver C., Office of Secretary of Com-TROPOS Yer sore to ons Sma eta ARI 0 370 264 4 Page Page Smith, Clara E., Senate Committee on Immi-gration. ci Lt ERR he al Sidi kL 265 Smith, Claude C., Commodity Credit Corpora- ton, Sisal a tur SU EEE Sa UO ary 369 Smith, Daniel E., Veterans’ Administration... 422 Smith, DeWitt, American Red Cross... ....-_-3836 Smith, Don C., American Red Cross__.__..___-387 Smith, Dresden A., secretary to Senator Maybenleos [020% Jona 269 CCITT lL Smith, E. D., Jr., Senate Committee on Agri-enlture and Borestry. no ora li 264 Smith, Col. Edward W., Army Service Forces. 334 Smith, Elden B., Division of Research and RatiRte ss a a 328 Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on Ap-DrOPpTIationst J a 264 Smith, Farrar, Civil Service Commission____... Smith, Franklin H., Tariff Commission. . . Smith, F. Homer, Canadian Legation. _________ 45 Smith, George, Committee on Conference Mi- ) morityoftheSenater =: i 0 en: 264 Smith, George C., American Red Cross._.....--386 Smith, Col. George I.: Army Ground Forces. iis. ene 333 ATmy War College. Fr enna 335 Smith, Harold D.: Bureanofthe Budget: = oC.or 2 1. 310 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures...= CT =n 239 Office of Economic Stabilization _____________ 312 Smith, H. DeWitt, Metals Reserve Company_. 376 Smith, Howard W.: Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission._ 238 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_-___ 236 Smith, Col. Hugh C., Office of the Under Secre-Biyories 331 a BE Smith, Mrs. Joe L., Congressional Club________ 390 Smith, Joseph J., Jr., Federal Trade Com- mission FIN0ITIE JAE: Soi Smith, J. L., Jr., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Paxationts Smith, Joseph R., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-ai POTAlION: = sin rrr NE a ena Smith, J. W. Rixey: Secretary to Senator Glass... ____________ 268 Senate Committee on Appropriations_..__.__. 264 Smith, Leroy K., Federal Crop Insurance Cor-DOTA ON aii ass ans Fons = gin wes SE mp rrip eS 368 Smith, Luther Ely, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission: c=........ 237 Smith, Capt. Lybrand, Office of Coordinator of Research and Development. __..___________ 343 Smith, Mark A., Tariff Commission_....______. 419 Smith, Martin F., Immigration and Naturaliza- ton Servich. i ie re rein Pr a ade Eh 337 Smith, Inspector Milton D., Metropolitan POCO os leie LR ap ahy 451 Smith, Nelson Lee, Board of Investigation and Research—Transportation. ___________.___._ Smith, Oscar S., National Labor Relations BOAEA Cree Set pe age ia BSS 412 Smith, Philip S., Geological Survey... ..._____ 353 Smith, Raymond C., Bureau of Agricultural Beonomies a 2 Et 359 LE BRR HE ee TT SE BT Smith, R. E. L., District Parole Board__._____. 448 Smith, Rollo S., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce. ......2cooo i Ye 371 Smith, Samuel Abbot, Smaller War Plants Corporation. tor ETE Tatty 316 Smith, 8S. R., Food Distribution Administra- HON... Coronado iptin sii dis Bik po ohm of v3 2 366 Smith, Talma L., Official Reporter, House. __.__ 274 Smith, William, Production Manager, Govern- ment Printing. Office. 2 =. i ioceuijbo 277 Smith, William F., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commerce. _____-Ve RE er Gr fe 372 Smyth, Robert L., Division of Far Eastern Affaire, fo = EAE SET I Ey 325 Snell, Harold W., The Alaska Railroad. __._..._ 356 Snodgrass, Col. Edgar H., Army Air Forces_.._ 334 Snodgrass, H. C., Pan American Union________ 414 Snow, Julian B., secretary to Senator O’Maho- MOY ns cro ca rah Sn ns SA SL ME 269 Snow, W.J., Jr., Farm Credit Administration._ 364 Snyder, Baird 3d, Federal Works Agency....___ 398 Snyder, Brig. Gen. Howard McC., Office of the Inspector General, War... __._.... Snyder, J. Buell, Board of Visitors to the Mili- taryiAeadomy tis ood obo Iii prs 236 Snyder, John I., Tennessee Valley Authority... 421 Snyder, John W.: Defense Plant Corporation... ....._ 375 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ._____.. 375 Snyder, Joseph M., Soil Conservation Service.. 368 Snyder, Raub, Farm Security Administration.. 369 Sola, Jorge L., Argentine Embassy_.._.________. 455 Solanko, Risto, Finnish Legation_.__._____._____ 459 Soldan, Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz, Pan American Sanitary Bureau. olA 413 Solomons, Commander E. A., Bureau of Naval Barone an 345 Somervell, Lt. Gén. Brehon: Munitions Assignments Board... ___________ 320 Army Service:Forces: co... =. oot L.. 334 Sommer, H. B., Office of Architect of the Capi-: 75 Sommerkamp, Frank M., Jr., Washington city postoffidec. > ri oC oe acd 452 Sommers, J. E., Civil Aeronautics Administra- OnE oe EE a Sorensen, Col. Edgar P., Army Air Forces..... 333 Sorenson, H., Railroad Retirement Board 415 Soto, Fausto, Chilean Embassy. -cocoeaomeaa-‘457 Souders, William H., secretary to Senator Sousa Pernes, Pedro P. Bon de, Portuguese Legation. a an 464 Southworth, Clay H., Office of Indian Affairs... 352 Soyster, H. B., Geological Survey. __...__..._....-353 Spain, John F., Railroad Retirement Board... 415 Spaniel, Col. Oldrich, Czechoslovakian Lega- Og LE TT I ar LR na a send 458 Spanton, W. T., Office of Education .__.._._._-395 Sparks, Dr. Frank H., War Manpower Commis- Trae ge pn sl Usb beds Jn een oe Sparre, Fin, National Inventors’ Couneil _______ 374 Spaulding, E. Wilder, Division of Research and Publication... co. et renin 326 Speaks, Rheva A., Freedmen’s Hospital __.._. 397 Spears, Rear Admiral W. O., Joint Brazil- United States Defense Commission._______ 322 Speck, David J., Office of General Counsel for the Treastry. oth ia 2 ia ee 327 Spector, Theodore, Office of the Solicitor _____. 351 Speh, C. F., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trinliChemispry.:ec oe ooo 361 Spelman, H. J., Public Roads Administration.. 399 Spencer, F. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 7. Fr a 362 Spencer, George O., Securities and Exchange Commission. x ots a a ey re 416 Spencer, Kenneth W., District assessor’s office. 447 Spencer, Capt. Lyndon, Coast Guard..__._____ 348 Spencer, R. A., Federal Public Housing Author-: i 11 ity Spiller, Lou Nora, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Soiire tanir 2s ibaa 265 Spilman, Joseph L., Civil Service Commission__ 389 Spivacke, Harold, Reference Department, Li- brary of ~c----caynriedi-—on 278 Congress... Splawn, Walter M. W., Interstate Commerce Commission. atoll erin ras renmnss 403 Sprague, George, Jr., Securities and Exchange Commission... Loon oor rnp nema Spring, Isadore, Women’s Bureau. ..._.__._..._ 382 Springer, William E., Quartermaster Depart- ment, Marine COPS. iouzoids-cememvman-snte 347 Spruks, H. Charles, Division of Protocol. .._.__ 326 Sryegley, Sue, Senate Committee on Enrolled 2411 Eran eR Ga SRL CR Woke nl SS RTE Staack, J. G., Geological Survey. _..._--.-----353 Stabell, A. Bredo, Norwegian Embassy... _--.-463 Stackpole, Ralph, Commission of Fine Arts_._. 389 Stacom, William B., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Stacy, John R., House document room... 272 Stafford, Wendell P., District Public Library... 448 Individual Index Page Stainback, Ingram M., Governor of Hawaii. 356 Staley, Frank C., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General TE EE CON a SER Stam, Colin F., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation = = ono07 Stamm, H. B., Federal Trade Commission_____ 398 Stanley,A. O., | International Joint Commission. 402 Stanley, Edward, Office of War Information____ 314 Stanley, Louise, ‘Agricultural Research Admin-ET LT TI RL Sl Se i 361 Stansfdld. kL Federal National Mortgage Association elt A em sl BR BL eh 377 Stanton, Charles I., Civil Aeronautics Adminis-TALON: ivewdanazs20 venus. And. anata do Stanton, Edwin F., Division of Far Eastern Stanton, G. Frederick, Howard University ____ 397 Stapleton, Frank B, Railroad Retirement BoarGe cowitoi.oka sadn foranal Stark, W. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... 0. .. =oioaaciana yids: Starnes, Joo, Board of Visitors to the Military Academy vine twa ana Ga UT Ls Ea 236 Starr, F. ie Federal Public Housing Au- TROPILY oo omine deni nt Bien ho Amrit tis 411 Stauber, ih R., War Relocation Authority. _.__ 316 Stauffer, Donald D., Office of War Information_ 314 Steagall, Edward C., Office of the Second Assist- ant Postmaster Genera) So ack W.: Office of the Secretary of the Interior_________ 351 Petroleum Conservation Division. ______.____ 356 Steelman, John R., Conciliation Service________ 380 Steely, E. Newton, Civil Service Commission__ 389 Steig, Olea M.,, Securities and Exchange Com- _Iniss EE SR ee Il Ty 417 poration smdiesiiorlibanniiall Cl norm. al Steiner, G., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Fngincering Shatner ararald aren 363 Stephens, DonaldP., Farm Security Adminis- NBBION. ie oo e penne ERA SORT 369 Stephens, G. A., Federal Trade Commission___ 398 Stephens, Harold M., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (biegraphy)uooed JnaniinSbed Side ll 431 Stephens, M. A., Civilian Conservation Corps._ 396 Stephenson, Charles H., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General ._____________ 339 Stephenson, J. G., Committee on Conference Majority of the Senate__________._______.___ 264 Sterling, George E., Federal Communications Commission: oi -suas caeels. Saul mas 391 Sterling, Hawley W., Alaska Road Commission 356 Stern, Lt. Col. Ben., Office of War Information. 314 Stern, Charles G., Federal Public Housing AWthority. .. . sce ini maunid. oasis 411 Stern, Max, Social Security Board_____________ 394 Sternhagen, John M., Tax Court of the Onjleds Stettinius, E. R., Jr. Board of Ps Wartare so. oc dgadaitiahs Joint War Production Committee Office of Lend-Lease Administration__________ 313 Stevens, Alla G., superintendent of stores and traffic manager, Government Printing ffi Stevens, Henry, Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. o. s for ooaiansain Stevens, Margaret, Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments _____________ 265 Stevenson, Adlai E., Office of Secretary of the NOVY ts oat sods 3 Be nee), og La nine 341 Stevenson, Charles, Bureau of Customs____.___ 328 Stevenson, Morton W., Washington city posk, OBOE foal Sa BK dl hl real an Stevenson, Perry J., Bureau of Foreign id Domestic Commerce Ta di al ae 371 Btewarh Charles, International Joint Commis- Sts , Charles E., District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia_________ Speratt, Capt. G. V., Bureau of Naval rd Sue Stovatt, Dr. Irwin, Office of Scientific Research and "Development ER US I Ty 313 Page Stewart, John L., Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations Sdiudoaneaianhan aisiianya ll Stewart, Joseph W., Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Srl ei Ted a Stewart, R: Mclean, Civil Aeronautics Ad-minist¥ations: JCC awuiall nal) Sif da 374 Stiebeling, Hazel K., Bureau of Human Nutri- tion and Home Economies... _______________ 363 Stiles, Grace B., United States attorney’s office. 439 Stiles, HF, Federal Public Housing Authority. 411 Stiles, Capt. Norman R., Coast Guard_________ 348 Stilson, Dr. G. Rahm, District Board of Podi-atry Examiners: oi 2 1 G00 00 i Ts 448 Stimson, Henry L. (Secretary of War): Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- 1 Tn Sohes n Ms SO SEC REA IB © 387 Blographyol oc... 0 S58 wat oagiador 331 Board of Economic Warfare_____________._____ 317 Foreign-Trade Zones Board _ ______________.__ 400 Member, Smithsonian Institution ___________ 417 National Archives Couneil .___.______________ 407 National Forest Reservation Commission____ 235 National Munitions Control Board___________ 413 War Production Board... celia. 315 Stine, Harry E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General =... ooo. oo. 00 339 MOTMCE fo ora oh. Sara so nen 359 Stinebower, Leroy D.: Division of Economic Studies Joint Economic Committees ______.__._______ Stirling, Harold V., Veterans’ Administration__ 423 Stirling, M. W., Bureau of American Ethnology. 418 Stitely, Wilmer R., United States attorney’s Stitt, Louise, Women’s Bureau.._._.____._______ 382 Stitts, xx G., Food Distribution Administra-an 13 pO SAE SED DLR Sh ERI UO Op alin: ‘Warner Wo, Office of Secretary of Agrlenare. of tina ae oh rei rae Stockburger, Arlin E., Civil Aeronautics Ad- mmistration: oo os hea ei 374 Stocking, Collis, War Manpower Commission_._ 315 Stocking, Ernest J., Civil Service Commission__ 388 Stofberg, Charles, assistant to District Commis- ET 447 Stokke, Tor, Norwegian Embassy ______________ 463 Stohlman, Dr. Martin A., District Board of Dental Examiners, Cool a 00 3 aliionio.s 447 Stone, Donald C., Bureau of the Budget_______ 310 Stone, Harlan F. (Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court): American Red Cross... __.c.i..7. 386 LE ih pa en ee a 427 Chancellor, Smithsonian Institution__________ 417 Member, Smithsonian Institution____________ 417 NationalGallery ol Art.oi. = 418 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee__ 238 Washington National Monument Society... _ 423 Stone, Harold A., Office of Budget and Finance. 359 Stone, William T., Board of Economic Warfare. 317 Stone, Capt. Louis, ‘War Department General tio Stored. B.J., British Embassy... cz o_o 460 Story, Isabelle ¥., National Park Service._.___. 353 Stough, Raymond W., Civil Aeronautics Board. 374 Stracke, Joseph, House folding room... ........ 271 Strader, Hutton B., House Committee on Mines and MINING. os ime ies She San SS rents 273 Straight, Harry B., Senate Committee on C BME eeret ee a td Se ds Stratemeyer, Maj. Gen. George E.: AMY AITOres. otion cn Src 333 Munitions Assignments Board __.____________ 320 Straten-Ponthoz, Count Robert van der, Bel- a EE DE a RR Sen ER NE se 455 Stratten, Lt. Comdr. Dorothy C., Coast Guard. 348 Stratton, Lynn L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue PARRUON ito de tt eco a de rare 234 Straubinger, George W., Office of the Secretary of the Senate .....--geresae-oell zoliiondeoce Strauss, Simon D., Metals Reserve Company. “376 Page Stripling, Robert E., Special Committee to Investigate Un-American Activities... __._ 209 Stroberg, H. R., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration... oii 0 37 coiCHIHOLL Strong, Albert L., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration. ei cemeaaa-375 Strong, Maj. Gen. George V., War Department GeneraleStafls toi ls ain JIG 332 Stroud, W. E., Reconstruction Finance Corpora-3 Stuart, Capt. D. H., navy yard and station._.._ 346 Stuart, Rear Admiral Harry A., Office of Petro-leum Reserves. sl dao ans, 343 Loailloanabiaad Stuart, W. G., official stenographer to House committees Ih estar 274 Jo sonioiinscna Stuechio, John H., Office of Assistant Secretary 0 AL an eeRee ER a 331 Studebaker, John W.: Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu-CBLION oo Sen EOS RN DS SRA SED 396 Office:of Edueations Zoli ii ooo 2 lio iD o 395 godl, Ray W., Petroleum Conservation Divi-2 56 ani Leo D., Office of Secretary of State__ 323 Sturgeon, S., Senate Committee on Indian ATTA i ne Sh aah he Si ad RL 265 Stuyt, G. C., Netherlands Embassy___...._.__. 463 Styer, Maj. Gen. W. D. , Army Service Forces... 334 Suarez, Horacio, Chilean Embassy L000. ol 457 Suit, Joseph E., District Fire Department______ 450 Sullivan, A. H., Tennessee Valley Authority... 420 Sullivan, Francis P., District examiners and registrars of architects THR ai nial INR HE 447 Sullivan, Harry L.: Defense Plant Corporation pL 875 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ___.___ 375 Sullivan, Helen E., secretary to Senator Gillette. 268 Sullivan, John Y) Assistant Secretary of the RP OASHEY sine nro ne Em Eo ee er 327 Sullivan, Mark, Washington National Monu-ment Society ai a A uaa he 423 Sullivan, William W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. -soy cos ia aemiesa sodas ds 375 Sulzberger, Arthur Hays, American Red Cross. 386 Summerlin, George T., Division of Protocol____ 326 Summerscale, J , British Embassy .__...__.. 460 Sunstrom, E. A, Bol Valley y ET 421 Suro, Guillermo 733 Central Translating Office. 326 Surrey, Stanley S., Office of the Secretary of TCASUEY. rn aul Dan aaa pr ea 327 Sutter, Dr. Victor Arnoldo, Pan American Sani-dary BUreAY SL a ea 413 Sutton, roar Federal Public Housing Au- NO re nt Ey A a oe Sd 411 Sutton, Millard H., District Fire Department__ 450 Swadley, R.A, Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 337 Swain, C. E., Public Roads Administration... 399 Swain, C. G., Weather Bureau... ________._. 373 Swain, Larsen, ‘Washington city post office___.__ 452 Swainson, Coramander O. W., Coast and Geo- Aotle RBUrVeY I rt al nn bree rat ree 372 Swanson, Edward B., Petroleum Administra-Th A El ERA ee Mn CT Eada, 318 Swanson, Irving W., assistant reading clerk of is Robert P., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 371 Sweet, G. Henderson, Veterans’ Administration. 421 Sweet, Oliver E., Interstate Commerce Com- Sweetser, Arthur, Office of War Information____ 313 Swenson, Martin's. Defense Plant Corporation. 375 Swidler, %: Clr Tennessee Valley Authority... 421 Switzer, John B., Interstate Commerce Com- Switzer, Mary E., Federal Security Agency... 394 Swofford, Mrs. Jewell W., Employees’ Com-pensation Commission. ccvcecoecmcmmnanean 390 Sykes, Howard C.: Combined Raw Materials Board. ___.____..._ 321 Material Coordinating Committee ___..__._._ 319 Page Symington, H. T., Material Coordinating Com-miftee sy. Salt Ra a0 girs pl Rent es 2 319 Szymezak, M. S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... ooeeainias 393 T Taber, John, Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures______._. 2 Taeuber, Conrad, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-noes SR ULNE RL IETTOR La 8 Sais 359 Toonpey ti B., Special Projects, Library of Congress Jali Gie mn pr ns Ba ee 279 Taft. ‘Charles Pa Federal Security Ageney: Suid saad 394 ‘War Relief Control Board ___________._____.._. 318 Taft, Robert A., General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission FAG RIRO sau Talbert, Commander J. T., Bureau of Naval Personnel SERIER Te RAW ER I SE LSS ER Re LE 344 | Talbert, T. R., SD ezien city post office__-__ 452 TalheuneCleo C , Office of Secretary of Agric a5 rE Ty BE Rm EE ES AR LS Talbott, Wiliam R., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Talley, Inspector Clarence, Metropolitan Police 451 Talley, Franklin G., House post office__________ 272 Talmage, George E, Jr., Interstate Commerce Commission siilic Jie J 0 Su 00 403 Tamm, Edward A., Federal Bureau of Investi- gallon: nh En il a eR AD 336 Tannehill, Ivan R., Weather Bureau Tannewald, Theodore, Foreign Funds Control Divislom rob 00 ibs ak 000 Cam 325 Tao-ming, Dr. Wei, Chinese Embassy_.._______ 457 Tapp, Jesse W., Food Production nd Distri- ALILA1) ¢ POT MN AES ploy SHR A En J ra os 366 Tate, Jack B., Federal Security Agency...._... 394 Tate, Vernon D., National Archives..__.._..__. 406 Taussig, Charles W., Anglo-American Carib- bean Commission. SHEsSI nal TDL, 324 Tawressy, Capt. Alfred, Office of Budget gids. Beoports, NAVY. roe errorsas iin. ...eousdss Taylor, Amos E., Sateall of Foreign and Pans tic Commerce JrEnpes nl Bass LLG DHA 372 Taylor, Augustus C., District Pharmacy Board 448 Taylor, a] Css Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomies Soirsmnnoipati FOR C00 SENS I 359 Taylor, E. P., Combined Production and Re sources Board Ft RTT he RT AS Er 21 Taylor, Evan, enrolling Clerk of the House_____ 270 Taylor, Frank D., Office of the Doorkeeper____. 271 Taylor, George W., National War Labor Board. 311 Taylor, Ike P., Alaska Road Commission______ 356 Taylor, James H., Bureau of Naval Personnel... 345 Taylor, Jennie A,, office of the Speaker____.__.. 270 Taylor, John W., "Court of Claims____—----_. 435 Taylor, Joseph, House postoffice._.._Cliiillill 272 Taylor, Mark, Patent Ofc. 0c aon once 373 Taylor, Ruth a, Children’s Bureau. ..___.____ 381 Lavin, R.:J., Reconstruction Finance Corpora-275 Tayi Robert R., National Housing Agency. as Taylor, BR. T., Railroad Retirement Board ____ Taylor, Tyre, "House Select Committee on Sail Business: Jo Jan DCoIliIaandSh Sl or 210 Taylor, Wayne C.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 325 Board of Foreign Service Personnel. __._._._. 325 Under Secretary of Commerce. _____coocooo___ 370 Taylor, William H., Division of Monetary Re-gearehicin rs Sil ACH a 0) de alee 330 Teachout, Robert B., Veterans’ Administration 422 Teflt, Edward C., Office of Alien Property Cus--todian. cots oa. 0 Hoo BSA Hon 311 Tenley, Christopher 8., Extension Service. ____ 369 Tennyson, Alfred L., Office of General Counsel for the IPreasygry ART bo fats ai Un 328 Terrell, W. D., Federal Communications Com-ie Terrett, Julian Grazing SOEVICO. err reer ear 355 Terry, Edward P Secretary to or Bilbo a 268 Senate Committee on Pensions... .._..____ 266 Teuton, F. L., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial Chemistry Tharin, Whitney, Office of Information____.._._. 360 Individual Index Page Thatcher, Arthur B., Office of Plant and Opera-: 61 Thau, Walter E., Maritime Commission Thaxton, Guy Ww, Rural Electrification Admin-Bttlon. a Anat 366 Thesleff, Alexander, Finnish Legation__________ 459 Thickstun, William R. , Weather Bureau_______ 373 Thier, Jacques de, Belgian i. ..c 455-1 Embassy... Thigpen, James E., Commodity Credit Corpo-Sets len ge Re 369 Thom, Corcoran, Washington National Monu-ment Society. o.ooam AIREY eres 423 Thom, Corcoran, Jr., Columbia Hospital for OMEN. =). ray i.ogenssanaaal 3! Thomas, A. B., General Accounting Office. _.__ 400 Thomas, Alonzo M., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General....... 338 Thomas, D. E., National Bureau of Standards_. 372 Thomas, Edward W., District corporation coun- Sel SoMinns ol oo earint ab EL aml 449 Thomas, Elbert D.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 397 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 236 Thomas, Elmer: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 236 Joint Committee on the Library ______._______ 234 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment_ 239 Thomas, Ferris B.: Metals Reserve Company ERT NRE UN 376 Rubber Reserve Company... ..._..__.__._.._. 377 Thomas, Capt. Frank P., Joint Davdrlinited States Defense Commission... ._____.__... Thomas, George H., Federal Farm Wisin” Glan alin Resi noas SA RS Seu Bei 365 Thomas, Hons, Capitol telephone exchange.... 276 Thomas, R . J., National War Labor Board.____ 311 Thomas, Thomas J., Solid Fuels Administra- PHN pe nen a Vea eR Se 357 Thomas, Woodlief, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System __._________________ 393 Thomason, R. Ewing: Board of "Visitors to the Military Academy.___ 236 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment_ 239 Thomason, Mrs. R. Ewing, Congressional Club. 390 Thompkins, William J., Recorder of Deeds____._ 440 Thompson, ‘Chester C., Inland Waterways Cor- poration oot hot Boni Ao a BE mt mt ers 373 Thompson, Donald S., Federal Deposit Insur-ance Corporation sb a ww hh aa 392 Thompson, Dr. Edward E., District Board of Podiatry Examinges. 0 or. Sve 448 Thompson, Eugene C., National Mediation Boardoor bl orse hae 413 Thompson, George F., assistant financial clerk, Office of ag A of theSenafe 2 iact 263 Thombs, LauraA., Office of Secretary oa ELE ye a a a Ss SE Wn Lester H., Federal Housing ii’ ministration mre at 409 Thompson, Luke, Washington city post office._ 452 Thompson, Oco, financial clerk, Office of Secre- tary of tho-Sonate. oo ol IT LY 263 Thompson, Perry A., Forest Service. ______.____ 365 Thompson, Ralph To na Public Library... 448 Thompson, RussellH., Washington city Dost Shot W. N., Office of the Secretary of the Treasury ations. plural? amu Thomson, Col. James H., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission map LL 237 Thornburg, Max W.: Board of Economic Operations. .eemerereencu-324 Office of the Petroleum Adviser. .__._.._____. 326 Office of Secretary of i. i... 323 State... Thornett, G. M., secretary to the Board, Dis-trict SOVernment, bie tus Su ara 447 Thornthwaite, C. Warren, Soil Conservation Seryiee a.ire Ed 368 Thornton, Air Commodore, H. N., British Em-hI eo EE ENE ORT 460 Page Thors, Thor, Minister of Iceland _______________ 461 Thorold, G. F., British Embassy__._.__._.__._.___ 460 Thoron, Benjamin W.: Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 355 Office of Secretary of the Interior_ ____________ 351 | Thorson, Waldemar, Office for Emergency Man-AEEMEAL. =a Sada Ee I NE 310 Thrift, Chester R., House Press Gallery________ 746 Thuee, Frederick ‘A Commission on Mental Health ioooo ooo ee came BE 438 Thurston, Elliott, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System________________.____ 393 Tietjens, Norman O., Office of General Counsel ofitheTreasury: otc.iii oils 327 oii | Tilson, William J., judge, Customs Court (biog-PRY). snina ll sali ae mi 436 | Timlin, May, clerk, Special Senate Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources_____ 183 Timmons, Francis L., Jr., secretary to District Commissioner. ool. i sat on: Timofeev, Savion L., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy. a anand Sl ania | Timothy, TL. Col. Hoyer w., Office of the In- spector General, Tinkham, Capt. IL Th Cont Guard. ..--. 349 Tinoco, Maj. Bernardo de la Guardia, Inter- American Defense Board... ___.__.__. 401 Tinoco, Maj. Fernando de la Guardia, Inter-American Defense Board ............_.__._.. 401 Tipton, Calvin F., House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commeres...L i... i. 273 Tisdel, Alton P., Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office__.___.__._______ 278 Tobey, Charles W., Board of Visitors to the NavaliAeademy. foiuionclUlli. cian Jl 237 Todd, Dr. Calvin D., Veterans’ Administration. 422 Toivola, Urho, Finnish Legation_______________ 459 Tolbert, Cecil H., Senate Committee on Appro- priations. ol gible me Induuon it. Ly anand 05 264 Tolles, N. Arnold, Bureau of Labor Statistics. 381 Tolley, Howard BR, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-4 59 Tolman, R. P., National Collection of Fine Arts. 418 Tolosana, ‘Antonio Vidal, Spanish Embassy _... 464 Telpn, Clyde A., Federal Bureau of Investiga- Tolan Hillory A., National Park Service...._-353 Tomlin, C. E., Patent OMB. 2. hd eis.ens oh 373 Tompkins, Lida, LA Hospital for Wo- 3 £11071 PO lL CRY VL I LS 389 Toombs, Fred A., Civil Aeronautics Board ___-_ 374 Tonry, Richard J., journal clerk of the House __ 270 Tob: pares R., Office of Architect of the Toulhs, Ali Foad, Egyptian Legation_______._._ 459 Tower, R. S., General Accounting Office_______ 400 Towers, Albert G., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation... .. asi cious bani Bo 392 Towers, Edward, office of District director of vehiclesand'traffie. 0... 0. Feb oo 450 Townsend, Grace C., Committee on Conference Minorityolthe Senate... =. ft" 264 Townsend, J. Leonard, Securities and Exchange Commissions. .-.ceoid ail Slieu 416 0. Townsend, M. Clifford: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation________. 368 Food Production Administration. __..________ 367 Townsend, Rex., Office of the Petroleum Adviser. 326 Tracy, Daniel w., Office of Secretary of Labor. 380 Tracy, Frank T.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 375 The RFC Mortgage Company._ _____________.. 377 Tracy, Banari C., Tax Court of the Onindd Stat Tracy, a J., Federal Bureau of ok 1 EAA pm SR 336 Trager, Earl A., Bureau of Mines_____._.___.____ 354 Travers, Howard K., Visa Division_____.___.___ 326 Trayer, George W., Forest Service... 365 Traynor, Frances, Western Union Telegraph Co. 276 Treadway, Allen T.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Joint Committee on the Library _____________ 234 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures... _._____._____ 239 Congressional Directory Page A -Page Treanor, James A., Jr., Securities and Exchange Vaccaro, Lucille, Senate Committee on Post Commission. =. od uate 417 Officesand Post ._ = 266 Roads... Tremblay, Paul, Canadian Legation___________ 456 Vahervuori, T. O., Finnish Legation________.___ 459 Trexler, George W., Office of Fourth Assistant Valle, Maj. C., Inter-American Defense Postmaster:General . oc... cioliinio ino 340 Ln EE ae Re Re en Ta 401 Trever, Karl L., National Archives... ____.___. 406 Valle, Henrique Rodrigues, Brazilian Embassy. 456 Tribble, Grover W., Director of plant planning, Van Arsdale, Henry, Patent Office. ____._______ 373 Government Printing Office. _______________ Van Curan, Alma A., Franklin D. Roosevelt Trice, J. Mark, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of Library =r hs ra Ta a 407 the Senate. no. iC gears 266 Vandeburg, Clyde, Office of War Information. _ 314 Trimble, South, Clerk of the House (biography). 270 Van Deman, Ruth, Bureau of Home Nutrition Trimble, South, Jr., Office of Secretary of Com-Economies. 0 and: Home _......._.._ 363 TACLCE oi rs eh Paha ta SE Bd ad 370 Vandenberg, Arthur H.: Trimble, William C., Division of Exports and Interparliamentary Union_..___._____________ 235 Requirements. :0 aphid JL ioangi foo 325 ao Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Tripp, Louis H., Veterans’ Administration. ____ 422 TT HR BR A IT SR SR aa sn Sa ; Vanderlip, Kelvin C., National Housing Agency. 40 Van Dersal, William R., Soil Conservation Dominican Ambassador..._.ol.__ 458 Ta A Sa A SS 3 o_o TRE Cn SR LED Se Governing Board, Pan American Union._.___ 414 Van Dine, D. L., Bureau of Entomology and Trone, W. O., Farm Security Administration... 369 Plant Quarantine... oo. 5-00ial oi 362 True, Webster P., Smithsonian Institution ____ 417 Van Duzer, William A., District director of —vehiclesandtraffiet. ___. -_ ..__ _... 450 Van Fossan, Ernest H., Tax Court of the United States... lr Ee ye EE 437 Van Fossen,; J. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. ___________________ 393 Fl se ae ae Ld SE RR 333 Van Horne, C. E., secretary to Senator Langer. 269 Tsami, Spiro, .Greek Embassy... 460 van Houten; H. R., Netherlands Embassy. --462 Tschappat, Maj. Gen. W, H., National Inven-Van Keuren, Rear Admiral A. H., ‘Naval Re-tors: Coumnell ip vin anon, 374 search co ir 346 soon. laboratory: Tsui, Tswen-ling, Chinese Embassy... _._..__.. 457 Van Nuys, Frederick: Tucker, Morrison G., Office of Alien Property General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commis- Custodian aL = Jo Lilboil con taining 311 BO de aa 238 Tucker, Wendell P., District Industrial Home Senate Office Building Commission___________ 233 School (colored). o.oo li iliac ln 449 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 Tugwell, Rexford G., Governor of Puerto Rico. 356 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission... 238 Tulloss, S. B., General Accounting Office ______ FS D oS Van Orsdel,” R. A., Columbia Hospital for Tully, Grace G., personal secretary to President Roosevelt. ooo Le alc cilia Lanne 310 Tumulty, Joseph P., Thomas Jefferson Memo- rialCommission-... ........ FoUi0C Tuohy, Alice M., House Committee on Expendi- tures in the Executive Department. _______ 273 Turner, B. R., New Zealand Legation__________ 463 Turner, Bolon B., Tax Court of the United Staftems: To 000 Se E ial 437 Turner, E. Pendleton, War Relief Control Board. 318 Turner, Harrison H.: ‘ Defense Supplies Corporation. _.___._.______ 376 Federal National Mortgage Association _._____ 377 Turner, J. B., Federal Power Commission______ 393 Turner, Robert H., Office of the Attorney Gen- System... co aiii Eian irises 410 Tydings, Millard E.: Interparliamentary Union..________._________ 235 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ..._______.__________ 236 Tyler, Paul M., Bureau of Mines______________ 354 Tyson, John A., Tax Court of the United States. 437 U ‘Uhland, Russell E., Soil Conservation Service. 368 Ulio, Maj. Gen. James A.: Army. Service Forees. cicol CLL 334 - United States Soldiers’ Home. _______________ 419 Ummel, J. R., The Alaska Railroad ___._.______ 356 Underwood, J. O. T., British Embassy... _._.___ 460 Unzicker, Willard E.: Defense Supplies Corporation. _______________ 376 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 375 The RFC Mortgage Company .___..___________ 377 War Damage Corporation. ......._o..._..._.. 379 Updike, Frank C., Office of Secretary of the In-re aeeS Se Se a Tei 351 Upham, C. B., Bureau of the Comptroller of the CUITONCY i iio ohs snes sata oi 328 Urbanowicz, Maj. Witold, Polish Embassy... 464 Urias, Jesus Franco, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico... 402 Uriburu, Don Guillermo, Argentine Embassy... 455 Urich, Walter K., Board of Parole _._._________ 337 Uttley, Clinton B., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General. cd io ro oiia iil 338 Utz, E. J., War Relocation Authority........__ 317 AVE Tn ee les al iE ta Se ae Es aT 389 Van Veen, E. B., Committee on Practice._______ 330 van Vredenburch, Jonkheer H. F. L. K., Nether- MNds EINDass yc ie rereee 462 Van Wyck, Philip S., War Manpower Com-S173 Loot Bee spe ee i 315 [7] {peta eines Vardeman, Paul E., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-DOLRLIOI. ial iiss he nnn tas 411 Vasconcellos, Vice Admiral Alvardo Rodrigues "de, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Com- 71110[71 Sa penis ban ne Grr Be SS 322 Vass, George O., Columbia Hospital for Women. 389 Vaughan, David B., Board of Economic Warfare. 317 Vaughan, William, Senate Radio Gallery.__._____ 754 Vaughn, Merrill, Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General...io. iu 339 Veatch, C. T., Federal Farm Mortgage Corpo-bon. aa ae 365 Veatch, Roy, Office of Foreign Relief and Re-habilitation Operations. __..____._.._._.______ 325 Vega-Gomez, Dr. Don Felipe, El Salvadoran Embassy. oathada nn iar te Sl 459 Vehue, M. O., House folding room_.______.____ 271 Velazquez, Dr. Celso R.: Paraguayan Ambassador. ______________._.__.__ 463 Governing Board, Pan American Union_______ 414 Vermilya, Howard P., Federal Housing Ad- ministration... cans ol oo TEL IT Shag 409 Vest, George B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________________ 393 Vestal, Vivian, Congressional Club_____________ 390 Vicioso, Dr. Horacio, Dominican Embassy._..__ 458 Vickery, Howard F., National Housing Agency. 408 Vickery, Rear Admiral Howard L.: Joint War Production Committee. .._________ 319 Maritime Commission...20 ot >i 404 War Shipping Administration _______________ 317 Victory, John F., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics: Fo ari oils 405 Villard, Henry S., Division of Near Eastern Affairs... 000 eeea Te Te 326 Villmoare, Ed. S.: Secretary to Senator Clark of Missouri_.__.___ 268 Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals____ 265 Vifias, Julia MacLean, Pan American Unjon____ 414 Vincent, J. H., Office of Procurement and Mate- Individual Index Page Page Vinson, Carl, Board of Visitors to the aval Wallace, Henry A. (Vice President of the United Academy. SASS SE CERN a SRE States): Vinson, Fred M.: Associate justice, United States Court of Blographyofiti oo lil abil a rn ais 3 Board of Economic Warfare. _________________ 317 Appeals for the District of Columbia (bio- Chairman of Commission on Enlarging the graphy). Emergency Vint, Thomas il LE eR 431 Court of Appeals_________________ 437 C., National Park Service. _______ 353 Capitol Member, President Gronnds.-__......= 7 TTA 233 Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 417 of the Senate... _______._ 263 Vinton, Warren Jay, Federal Public Housing Regent, Smithsonian Institution______________ 417 Amtheriby tots fol an ania ey Vipond, Kenneth C., Civil Service Commission. Virdin, Donald O., Office of Secretary of the Senger so sdab rain a he 411 388 264 Thomas Jefferson Bicentennial Commission__ 238 War Production Board...0 ii 316 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission_.__________________ 236 Vogel, Harold A., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- Walle Col. John, United States Soldiers’ ROMHES Ciaraae asa gs Baie Vogt, Walter, House post office_________________ Volkhardt, Charles E., War Production Board__ Vonderlehr, R. A., Public Health Service________ 59 272 316 395 ba a eh EN me pr AE STI Wolo William L., Joint Committee on Inter-nal Revenue Taxation nimi SE 8 TLE Sd Waller, Brig. Gen. Littleton W. T., Jr., Head- 419 34 von Struve, Amand W.., Bureau of the Census___. Voorhis, Mrs. H. Jerry, Congressional Club_____ 371 390 quarters Marine Corps.—~—~... Walling, L.. Metcalfe, Wage and Hour 1: and Pub- 347 Voorus, Robert A, Reference Department, Libraryiof:Congress.. o.oo. oa 278 lic Contracts Divisions SE Walmsley, Walter N., Division CS SIR of the American 81 Ww Republles.. oo Walsh, A.J. Pe oo oi Division. 2... 324 7.0 330 Wadimenioy Count Fredrik, Swedish Lega- Walsh, David I.: SN a nC A LS SS Woon Caroline, office of Sergeant at Arms, SKEE NS SR re SERRE Tn Bei La Ss Re LR ‘Waddle, Catherine, Administrative Office of the United States Courts...ooo oon 465 271 438 Board of Visitors Joint Committee BION. la Joint Committee to the Naval Academy ______ 237 on Internal Revenue Taxa-SEs2 234 on Printing. D0 oi 00 234 ‘Wade, Hugh J., Social Security Board__________ 395 Wadleigh, H. 5 ulian, Division of Economic Studies: Dodo sonia a Wadsworth, Eliot, American Red Cross_._.____ Wadsworth, James W., Interparliamentary L010 ES RI Sa ep mR Se Ta Waste) Vice Admiral Russell R., Coast 324 386 SEER led iy Walsh, J. Herbert, Agricultural Adjustment Ageneyas i oh A rn sala la Walsh, J -W., National Mediation Board____ Walsh, Leonard C. M., British Embassy_______ Walsh, Thomas Gillespie, Commission on Men- 332 367 413 460 ua Wotsoer, Frederick H., secretary to Senator WHOLLY oon lem om Sdn Sed od a 0 Waggaman, Thomas E., marshal of United States Supreme Court... .:.............. -Wagner, Evelyn, Office of Secretary of Agri- 200 429 tal Health 0... J 00 VPacillwif o ove Walston Frank L., Commodity Credit Corpo-LALION... «nattoh wn er a De eR Walters, Allyn A., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration... o_o hearer nt Wang, Kung-shou, Chinese Embassy ..________ 38 69 66 457 TLE Op SE a RS CR SE 358 Wang-Yih, Peng, Cites Embassy. 0 oF 57 ‘Wahly, William H., District corporation coun- Sel'sioffice. ilisl eileenThy Wair, Hugh, Office of the Doorkeeper__._______ Waite, Dr. Charles P., medical and sanitary 271 TON. Cie Ward, Dorothy A IL SNe ap ph B., Senate Committee on En- 364 director, Government Printing Office_._____ Waite, Henry M., Bureau of the Budget_______ Waite, W. B., Patent: Office... oi of oils 278 310 373 Polled Bills. 0 Client Ward, Frank X., assistant to the legal adviser._ Ward, Ray, Office of Budget and Finance______ 65 326 59 Wakefield, Ray C., Federal Communications Commission =... o.ooNy lie Wakefield, Lt. Comdr. W. M., Office of War 391 Ward, Sara, Senate Committee on Post Offices and PostiReads,. ii .h Co ii ooo Wart homes V., District Engineer Depart- 66 Savings Bonds... Wakeland, Claude, oases nina 343 Bureau of Entomology and ArT DOR Sas Wardwell, Aubrey St. ST EC C., District Real TS Estate 450 Plant Quarantine. ERS CEA 1 LS rR Commission HIER FER AV IGE GRA OS I at lard 48 Walcott, Frederic C., Regent, Sen Wardwell, Charles A. R., Bureau of Foreign Institabion. “ic. oulp te atmoll ou 417 and Domestic Commerce... ro, 72 Walker, SA. Edith, Senate Committee on Privileges TIGCHIONS. rossodt a 266 Warne, William E., Office of Secretary of the Interiors: i. Luc bri on noi J iar alr or 361 ‘Walker, Ernest P., National Zoological Park... 418 Warner, Dr. Edward: Walker, Frank C. (Postmaster General): Civil Aeronauties Board..... Blographyofiasi onicA Silda ges; 338 Member, Smithsonian Institution __________ 417 Nations) ics Advisory Committee for Aeronau-- National Archives Council _____.____.______._ 407 Warner, Capt. RichardA., Naval Dr 346 Officeof Censorship... oC. oJ. ool. 318 Wena, Avra M., Visa Division 324 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.____ 407 ‘Walker, Fred S., District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Bowed. Walker, Ira D., Office of the rosin ThA 448 Doorkeeper_ ______ 271 Walker, John, National Gallery of Art_________ 418 Walker, Paul A., Federal Communications Commission ESI AEE Bn Re de Mi 391 Walker, Robert DANCES. o.oo A., Office of Budget and Fi-sion hn Dian ais ry ask vir ant Poa ‘General ER Wathen, Albert L., Office of Indian ol in a 339 Affairs. ____ 352 Walker, Thomas J., judge, Customs Court Watkins, Charles L., Office of Secretary of (biography). fi fe Lia ah aad ty Walker, Lei Gen. William G., Army Goound Boreesidisd doi re Dilla a a a aT Wall, Duncan, Office of Information____________ Wall, Norman J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- 436 i Senate... 0 dori Alei A Watkins, Elise Z., District Board of Education_ Watkins, Ralph ¥, National Resources Plan-mngiBeard.. oo FL Te devant nO Watson, Rear Admiral A. E., Board on Decora- 263 448 10 | ROMICE. oh a SE Wallace, Benjamin B., Tariff Commission______ Wallace, Fred S.: Agricultural Adjustment Ageney: Joi oi Federal Crop Insurance Sr Nebel Sd 359 419 367 368 tionsiand Medals. 2.00 nino an Watson, Lt. Comdr. Donald, Office of Lend-Lease Administration 0. 2 Ul 0 0 Watson, Edwin M., military aide to the Presi-dent (biography) PS LR I 344 309 | 83317°—78-1—2d ed. | Congressional Directory Page Watson, Goodwin, Foreign Broadcast Intelli-genes Services. co. 0. ea 391 Watson, James A. Scott, British Embassy ___.:. 460 ‘Watt, Alan S., Australian Legation. ____.__ a. 455 wail, ook David A., War Department General I RI Th ps wha sk yo 332 Watt, Robert: Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu-CalION Citi i adn a me i a ma 3 Federal Prison Industries, Inc... .._. National1, Jul Labor Board Watts, Lyle F.: Forest Service... uriilicmpiilang oan wens ir National Capital Park and Planning Commis-SION... ot oes eet Sepsedd sanizates 407 Watts, Marguerite E., Senate Committee on Military Angie Waly, RobertB., National Labor Relations CandoTa es, Se Waychoff, Roy J., Office of the Legislative Counsel;-Houseu. wo g. ood nian doi. Joi 274 Wayne, William, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission. coven 238 Weaver, Benjamin W., District Fire Depart-; 311i A Te IER @ EE PAs Te Lo 50 or Frederick 8., Office of Recorder of Deeds Weaver, H. B., Official Reporter, House_____.. ‘Weaver, Brig. Gen, TheronD., Army and Navy Munitions: Board... .. cons oo Sasaki ‘Webb, Chester A., Office of the Doorkeeper. . il Webb, Robert E., Board of Investigation and ; Research— Transportation 88 Weber, Margaret D., United States attorney’s oh 4 Weber, iawezh M., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General mpm AEA 339 ‘Weber, William, Weather Bureau. _____._...__.. 373 ‘Webster, Capt. Edward M., Coast Guard..._.. Webster, Robert L., Office of Secretary of Agri- culties Lh Ben EL TE nea 358 Wedd, Lt. Col, W. B., Canadian Legation Wehrly, Max 8., National Capital Park and Planning COTATISSION... o.oo sno Lice 408 Weible, Brig. Gen. Walter L., Army Service F Weightman, R. Hanus; ‘Weather Bureau.__... Wellorrian Col. F. G. L., Netherlands Em-. Wolo Sidney J., War Production Board... 316 ‘Weingartner, Werner, Swiss Legation... _._..._ 465 Weintraub, David, Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation "Operations 325 Weir, Raymond J., Office of Plant and Opera- Hons: iss suss dla sellin kh pupil ii uss 361 Weir, William E., Office of Plant and Operations. 361 Weisbrod, Lt. Col. Benjamin H., Office of the Inspector General, War Weiss, Harry, Wage and Hour and Public Con-tracts DIVISIONS. oo ccs t mms BEE naam Weiss, J. H., Civil Service Commission. _.._._. Welch, Henry, Food and Drug Administration. 396 Welch, Joseph C., Civil Service Commission._.. 389 Weller, Dr. CG, Louis, Jr., Metropolitan Police.. 451 Welles, Sumner: American Red Oross. © con aaa: 386 ..coous.oi Under Secretary of State_ .._______.____..__._. 323 Wells, Chester, Washington National Monu-ment Societ 423 Welly, Capt. Chester H., Columbia Hospital for 5 Wells, J. E., Jr., Farm Credit Administration... 364° Wells, John L., "National Archives. .._.._...... 406 Wells, Kathryn B., Railroad Retirement Board. 415 Wells, Oris V., Bureau of Agricultural Economics. 359 Welsh, Air Marshal Sir William L., Combined Chiefs Of Staffs. ooo viii soma eonns 320 Wenchel, John P., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury TER TLL RTA BSS EL SOUR Sn Vf SL 327 Wendell, Zdwad E., Home Owners’ Loan Cor--POration. or iis coiiiive anal alii satel Went, pis S., District Recreation Board... 448 Page Wendolowski, George, Polish Embassy... _.._: 464 Wenley, Archibald G.; Freer Gallery of Art__ : 418 Wenrich, Charles C., Office of the First Asfisiansy Postmaster General EA ER Rr CUR SS Wentzel, Nelson B., Office of the Third Assia, Postmaster General. ________________.___ Wentworth, Howard F., office of District ro tor of vehicles and traffic... ...._____ 450 Wenzel, Mary Virginia Lee, Civil Service Commission... o.ooSor. Genin cL Werner, A. Matt.,, Office of Alien Property Custodian. rio. oo oni 8) To ee dail Tis 311 Werntz, William W., Securities and Exchange Commission. o.._joiviiidnr 3 416 ge ‘Wershof, Max, Canadian Legation ____. _____.__ 456 Werther, Lawrence, House post office __.___._.. 272 Werts, Leo, War Manpower Commission: .__.-315 ‘Wesley, Marvin, Bureau of the Public Debt _-329 ‘Wessel, Maj. Karl, Swedish Legation _._..o__.___ 365 Wessenauer, G. 0, Tennessee Valley Author- 3 AA ET ACI Me Ls S00 La Sd Lt A THRE ‘Wesson, Maj. Gen. Charles M., Office of Lend-Lease Administration...oC ci 2oiie i 313 West, Daniel A., Food Distribution Adminis- traflonl co boos 0 0 RL ir sh An 367 ‘West, Douglas N., District Health Department: 451 West, yom E., District corporation counsel’s so oe Elsie ra mie of dovernons of the Federal Reserve System__ tooo...= 393 Weston, Eugene, Jr., National Housing Agency. 409 ‘Weston, .S. Burns, ‘Anglo-American Caribbean Coin SRL AANR (nal L308 BN £00) 0G 1) 0 2 0 Woe Alexander: National Museum __._.._..... eT 418° Smithsonian Institation. L._ 417 cooolnfasies Weyde, W. van der, Netherlands Embassy._____ 463 Waalen, John T., Agricultural Adjustment i Whaley. ions B., assistant District auditor. 447 ‘Whaley, Richard gS. ., chief justice, Court of Claims (Hosraphy) PE RgSp yA A ESSL Ss: 434 ‘Wheeler, Dan H Bituminous Coal DIVISION. o..oomoioomae Office of Secretary of the Interior... i.c...o.__ ‘Wheeler, Katherine, House Committee on Agri-culture saniuolol PRTC Th eta LRA LL 27 ‘Wheeler, Leslie A.: J Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service. 2 Board of Foreign Service Personnel. Combined . Food Board, United States i Great. Britain... coos sai Jattinndi] 320 Export-Import Bank of Washington. _.__..... 37. Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations____:. 35 ‘Wheeler, Lynde P., Federal Communications Commission. oo... ic eins seen in aL DOES 391 hide; Chester H., Jr., Railroad Rerteeqents Ts DOA D0 TEral SR RANEY 8 FLA UR SUPA lb ik cor) Jn ‘Whitaker, Samuel. E. .» judge, Court of i (biography) 434 ‘Whitcomb, Eben M.: Committee for Reciprocity Information ....-. 390 Tariff:Commissions ool... cliolassil Toccoa 419 ‘White, Alig G., Bureau of Mines... 354 ‘White, E . Wyndham, British Flay RAITT ha 460 ‘White, Edwin D.: Agricultural Adjustment Agoney.. silos 3k 367 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. __..--_-368 Food Production Administration... ...-----367 ‘White, Harry D.: Committee for Reciprocity Information... 390 Division of Monetary Research... 330 Export-Import Bank of Washington____..----378 Office of the Secretary of the Treasury....----327 White, Henry M., Federal Trade Commission__ 398 ‘White, Herman a, Veterans’ Administration_. 422 Wiis, J apn L., Office of Defense Transporta-1 White: Brig. ‘Gen. Miller G., War Department ‘General Staff. _-- Individual Index 879 Page 4 Page White, ul B., Food and Drug Administration__ 396 Williams, Jacquelyn, House Committee on Agri- White,W. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant CHIbUre, = te us areneaan 2%: Quarantine hanes nstae lor ar NL Williams, Maj. Gen. John F., Army Service White, Wilford L., Bureau of Foreign Gia HNC Ce TRO EA RE a 1 Lr | 334 Domestic Commerce. SLi caladarnbety Lally Willams, L. E., Federal Prison Industries, . White, William Allen, Territorial a hr co EE TTS SET Sra DUR GRC RE 1 337 Memorial Commission...lll Join E., Housing 408 Lo Williams, Lewis National Agency. ‘Whitehead, Lili, House Committee on Elec-Williams, Maj. R. A. F., British Embassy_____ 460 tions No. 2 Ss Sa. I aiid ty Williams, Robert be House Committee on Ap-‘Whitehurst, Elmore, Administrative Office of : proprigtionsuae rl daly on essen daally 273 the United States Courts............S.lu. 3 Williams, Maj. Gen. Seth, Headqmren Marine ‘Whitehurst, H. C:.: OIDs. de di andi tl hala sl A Tn 347 Department of Civilian Defense... cia. bail 451 Williams, Stanley P., Office of Secretary of District Engineer Department_____________.___ 450 Agricultare. o.oo. rn. i loaned 358 Whitley Richard P., Federal Trade Commis Williamson, Dr. F. Y., Metropolitan Police.___ 451 SE NS a et LST 97 E Williamson, William R., Social Security Board. 394 Wi, Marjorie M., “assistant to the legal Willingham, Harris E.: adviSersol Sealine rand Laatis 326 Farm Credit Administration. ________________ 364 ‘Whiteside, Arthur D., War Production Board.. 316 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. _____.__ 365 ‘Whiteside, Dale B., General Land Office.__.... 351 Willingham, W. A., General Accounting Office. 400 ‘Whiteside, Garrett: Willis, | Raymond E.: Secretary to Senator Caraway_._________._____ 268 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. _____ 237 Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills______.___ 265 Joint Committee on Printing______. __________ 234 ‘Whitman, Roy L., Official Reporter, House_.._ 274 Willoughby, Westel R., National Archives. _.__ 406 ‘Whitmore, A. J.: Wills, Ji oseph E. , Senate Press Gallery._____..._. 746 International Fisheries Commission... _______ Wilson,C. E.: ; International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-Combined Production and Resources Board... 321 mission: Solan toy Hoo ond ro A dae 403 Joint War Production Committee. _.__.._._.___ 319 ‘Whitney, John H., Office of the Coordinator War Production Board. . J .ooan ln gai. La 316 of Inter-American Affairs... __..__.____... 314 Wilson, Mrs. Earl, Congressional Club_________ 390 ‘Whitney, Capt. John P.: Wilson, Col. Erle M., War Relocation Author-: Aeronautical Board... cl. .ooool Boal. 385 1 AS a SLT YT 16 Permanent Joint Board on Defense__.______._ 315 Wilson, Frances, Senate Committee on Post Whittemore, W. D., Export-Import Bank of Officesiand Post Roads... ii..ol..ii.od.Jas 266 Washineton. czodounasdood ogniss 378 Frank Secret oh. Wilson, J., Serviee_._..__-_____.__ ‘Whittington, Lt. W. M., Jr., Office of the Wilson, Frank P., National Archives.___._______ Judge Advocate General of the Navy_____.__ 342 Wilson, George W., Defense Plant Corporation. 375 Waitinguon, Mrs. William M., Congressional Wilson, John B., Jr., Food Production Admin- IStrabion.. io. oii oaseeenll drag Sen: 367Whitt oton, William V., Treaty Dvir Wilson, Lloyd B., American Red Cross. _._..__. 386 Whyte, Clifford R., District Engineer Depart-Wilson, McK. Caribbean Office... .._....___ 324 3 ORL a a nel Yn BRE a my 450 Wilson, Mario, Senate Committee on Public Wickard, Claude R. (Secretary of Agriculture): Buildingsiand!Grounds.-o... i... oaoollo 266 Biography 5 A EE M0 84 0 A TRE AER Ae £0 358 Wilson, Meredith C., Extension Service..._.._. 369 Board of Economic Warfare ____________.i.__ 317 Wilson, Milburn L., "Extension Service... 369 Combined” Food Board, United States and Wilson, Orme, Office of Secretary of State..____ 323 Great Britain. ........ foci wom vised 320 Wilson, Capt. "Paul W.: Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu-Naval Medical School eatlons. oo co as eet 396 Board of Examination Member, Smithsonian Institution___________. 417 Wilson, Robert G., Metals Reserve Company... 376 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... 235 Wilson, Sarah E., Public Utilities Commission. 452 National Archives Council _.________________. 407 Wilson, TL, Webber, Board of = z:. 337 Parole... National Forest Reservation Commission.... re Wilson, Theodore F'., Office of the Secretary 05] Office of Economic Stabilization___________._.__ 12 the Treasury... ....sieiveses fagicnniblicil 'War.Produetion. Board... ..o..cuainid cava 315 Wilson, Thomas R., Bureau of Foreign eS War Manpower Commission... ____._____.... 314 Domestic Commerce SE Aa en AAR 371 Wilson, W. S., House Committee on Roads.... 274 Wilson, William 8. Jn: Wid J as E., National Gallery of Art___ 418 Board of Examination of Dental Officers... 345 Wiecking, E , Office of Land Use Coordina-SR Board of Examination of Medical Officers..._ 345 Shion gana dar Dobe sel ts ‘Winder, Clarence A., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration... io. io Lonacoty 368 ooepbeoei ity Winegar, Dorothy F., Committee on Confer-Vic bnois Richard B., Oliver Wendell | ence Minority of the Senate. _ ____________.._ 264 Holmes Devise Committ BD ati cageeataris Winfrey, F. A., American Red Cross...._...._. 386 ‘Wight, A. E., Bureau of Animal Industry_._.__ Winfrey, Loraine, Committee on Conference ‘Wilbert, Leonard J ., Social Security Board._.._. 294 Majority of the Senate... _..____._____.__. 264 ‘Wilcox, Fred M., Social Security Board... ..._. 394 Wingfield, B. Magruder, Board of Governors os LL Sidney w., Bureau of Labor Statis-Sa the Federal Reserve System________________ Winn, Col. John S., Jr., Army Ground Forces._. Wilder, Russell M Food Distribution Admit: ‘Winship, Maj. Gen. Blanton, Inter-American istration. cooioaneeuinlld. Sli beatns 366 3% Fapaihs Sonning Defense: Board... oper. 401 Wilding: William G., deputy District budge. Winslow, Thacker, Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions: 2.00 Jf cass b ih. 381 Wiley, i “Alexander, Congressional Club___ =3 Winston, Oliver C., Federal Public Housing Wiley, Sumner K., Federal Public Housing 3 Authority: cosn is coisa dl th naan fonds 412 Authority. io... or vie fae evasion 4 Winter, Thomas D., Territorial Expansion Wilkinson, F. D., Howard University Memorial Commission... ...._._______. 237 Wilkinson, Dr. Garnet C., District Board of Winter, Mrs. Willie S., House Committee on Bdueationm:; .c.oiinodSlam. cit odin 448 og... H.C dade 2 ion Civil Serviesu s3. toald_ ls ‘Willard, Clarke L., Division of International Winters, Rhett Y., Agricultural Research Conferences SE he TS ET Ra TL SA 326 Administration. 0. coudiu mn Sioa Sas 361 Willcox, Alanson W., Federal Security Agency. Wirth, Charles F., House Committee on Ap-‘Willey, Harold B., deputy clerk, United States propriations. -_.....oooc.. wsgsole ll gail 273 Supreme COIL. ol ipa Totim et ay 4 Wirth, Conrad L.: ; ; ‘Williams, Ernest, Office of the Doorkeeper_____ N ational Park Borviee 5L saliods sau col (one. 353 Williams, George B., "Federal Public: Housing Office of Secretary of the Interior_ _.._________ 351 XLTOM ROE Te J SrA A LY 0 LE Do 4 12/| Wirick, Harry L., secretary to Senator Moore_. 269 ® Congressional Directory 3 Page Page Wise, Arthur O., District examiner and life in-. surance actuary a dm miei BG LT 449 Wissler, Chik Advisory Board on National MES Parke ete a oa ors Dee Wistrand, Tor Hugo, Swedish Togation bday oo Namen, ’E. R., Public Buildings Administra- Hon al solu bagel sli balun andl Woehlke, ‘Walter V., Office of Indian Affairs.. Wofford, illic a, Office of the Doorkeeper.. 271 Wojciechowski, "L . Col. Zygmunt, Polish fA Wolcott, C.L 373 mie Wold, Ansel, "Joint Committee on Printing, Capitol a i em ian PAA A SIRs 3. 234 Wolfe, Cassie L., General Accounting Office... Li Wolfe, Virginia M., National Archives___._...__ Wolfenden, James, Migratory Bird Conserva- tion Commissio 235 Wolford, Dr. nn Veterans’ Administration. 422° Wolfsohn, Joel David: General Land-Office...........no oie. JL ~ National Power Policy Committee. comaaaaail ‘Woll, Matthew: .. . ; National War Labor Board._.........o.....i. 311 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 237 ‘Wood, Arthur D., Board of Parole 33 Wood, sii Clayton L., Veterans’ Administra-4 tio 22 Woes 3 reg George H., Federal Board of Hos-pitalization Rat RRR ne SAS CYTES ST 391 Wood L Hany G., Office of Legislative Counsel, ‘Wood, Kenneth, United States attorney’s office. 23 Wood, N. O,, Jt., Diino Coal Division.__ 355 Wood, Brig. ’ Gen. R. , Goethals Memorial COMMISSION. ino tos as se dodaiat be cian 401 Wood, Commander Russell E., Coast Guard... 349 Wood, Brig. Gen. Walter A., J1.: Army Service Forces. .-.._ oo. National Inventors’ Council Woodbury, Coleman, National Housing Agency 408 Woodbury, C. G., Agricultural Research Divi-ai sion...no 0); AGE Re SRS RI TR Wooden, Walter B., Federal Trade Commission. 397 Woodfill, Web, Federal Trade Commission..___ Woodruff, Roy 0., National Forest Reservation Commission... oo. oe dO Lo lh 235 Woodruff, W. W., Tennessee Valley Authority. 420 Woodrum, Clifton A., Joint Committee on Regu: fion of Nonessential Federal Expendi- 239 Wooan Albert W., House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds... o.oo... ‘Woods, Amelia, Emergency Court of Appeals__ 437 ‘Woods, Mary E. , Social Security Board.___..___ 394 Woodside, Byron D., Securities and Exchange Commission...a. fo ol 0. 0 Woodside, Robert G., American Battle Monu-ments Commission.....__ 385 Woodson, Rear Admiral W. B., Judge Advocate General of the Nav 342 Woodward, Cliff, Farm Credit Administration _ 364 Woodward, Rear Admiral C. H., Incentive Di- 343 Woodward, Ellen S., Social Security Board.__.. 394 Woodward, H. H., Union of South Africa Lega- 3107 AEE ERS RC BR El aR Se LO 1 466 Woodward, Sherman M., Tennessee Valley Authority SS LIC a AN 4 Woodward, Stanley, Division of Protocol ______ Woodward, Thomas M., Maritime Commis- Wonka Arthur E., Tariff Commission. ____.___. Woofter, Thomas 3. Federal Security Agency... 394 Woolard, Edgar W., Weather Bureau. ______.___ 373 Woolard, Logan L. District Fire Department... 450 Woolf,W. H., Bureau of Internal Revenue ____ 329 Worden, Floyd, official Reporter of Debates. .__ 267 Workman, Capt. D., Bureau of Naval Personiol iil iii el a Wrather, William Embry, Geological Survey__ ‘Wrede, Edward C., House Committee on World ‘War Veterans’ "Legislation Ey Lo SL SE Sa 2 Wrede, Goddert, Finnish Legation.._____._.... 459 Wrenn, John E., Social Security Board__..__._.. 395 Wright, A. Bruce, Office of the Solicitor. _______ 351 Wright, Almon R., National Archives......._... 406 Wright, Col. Boykin O.,; Army Service Forces... oo Wright, Edith A., Office of Education. .._._...: Wright, Frank C., Reconstruction Finance: os Wright Henry H., Chief Clerk, Government _ Printing Office. Wright, Irene W., Office of the Speaker. ak | Wright, J. Carl, "Federal Crop Insurance poration... . 05 ae pried 368 Wright, John C., Office of Education. _______._._ 395 Wright, Kenney! P., District deputy Jishursing nm mm a re on nm tn a ee A tio { Wright, “br. Orville: National Advisory Comunjbice for Aero-mantles. Lilo So iLL Sa 405 Wright, Preston L., Neon Housing Agency. 409 | Wright, Brig. Gen. "Raymond R., Headquarters Marine Corps. olid Ln aoa akg J olan 347 Wright, Dr. Theodore, National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. ____ mile 405 ‘Wright, ila, Office for Emergency: Man- i agement. uli USN AN SUNN ERI 310 | Wright, ont Col. W. H. S., Office of the«Secre-tary of War oo. 0 2000 iia ini 331 Wrong, Ri Joint War Production Com-mittee. ova Lr RAO EN RE 320 Wu, K. T., Reference Department, Library of ‘Congress Pat MOE BRA Bl IEE a 1 Se 278 ‘Waurts, Lt. Col. John W., Army Ground Forces. 333 Wurzlow, Frank, Jr., secretary to Sonsjor Blender. ll Lil al al gle Wyatt, Walter, Board of Governors of the Pod. eral Reserve .o. 0 i. lill 393 System... Wyckoff, H., War Shipping Administration____ 317 Wyo J. B., Food Distribution Administra- Wydra, Miriam, House Committee on Immi-gration and Naturalization_________________ 273 Wyeth, on C., District Engineer Depart-11705111 AER Be ST a SC SB ‘Wyman, Henry C., Office of the First Aisin Postmaster Lah TEI EE LEE Te LE Wythe, George, Bureau of Foreign and Domes-tic Commeree.. Dob is 371 0. £00000. me Xanthaky, George, Office of Foreign Relief an Rehabilitation Operations. _..___.__________ Y Yaden, James G., Civil Service Commission_.__ 389 Yando, Capt. Arthur H., Naval Dental School. 347 Yantis, George F.: Joint Economic Committees. _____________..._ National Resources Planning Board Yardley, Edward, Committee for Reciprocity TRIOIIOAEION | irr sie do of ay 390 Yates, Frank L., General Accounting Office._._ 400 Yates, Lloyd D., Division of Foreign Activity CUrrelotions aL ih eh ha 325 Yefremovich, Spasoye, Yugoslavian Embassy__ 466 Yegorichev, Capt. Ivan A., Soviet Socialist Re- Publics. Embassy... i. .ii dannii 2 66 Yekta, Abdol-Ahad, Iran Legation __________._ 461 Yellowlees, R. E., Senate Committee on Manu- Ln ale le Te ee pe al i SE 265 Yingling, Raymund T., assistant to the legal adviser: IH Los 0 Sy NTL BRUIT Yntema, Hessel E., Committee on Practice _.._ 330 Yohalem, Morton E, Securities and Exchange Commission... on iti aiar 416 Yost, Charles W., Division of European Affairs. 324 Young, Brig. Gen. Charles D., Office of Defense Transportation... . Zion XY igiaiehn, 312 Young, Fred R., Division of Accounts _________ 324 Young, Harold, Secretary to the President of the Senafe ovine -263 Individual Index Page Page Young, J. Banks, Office of Budget and Finance. Young, James:W., Indian Artsand Crafts Board. Young, John Russell: Alley Dwelling Authority. ___.. ____...._.. District Commissioner... .o.o..oal. io. District Unemployment Compensation Board. District Zoning Commission. __.___ co... « Office of United States Coordinator___________ Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... _____.__.________:. Young, R. D., Rubber Reserve Company.____. Young, Samuel R., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector —. c.f oso loti loti Young, Rear Admiral W. B., Bureau of Sup- pliesand Accounts...) .... coo. Yu, Kien-wen, Chinese Embassy___________..__. Yuh-foo, Maj. Chiang, Chinese Embassy __.____ : Zz %adeikis, Povilas, Lithuanian Minister.____.____ Zagami, "Placidina, Congressional Record mes- Zahn, Albert Francis, Reference Department, Dibrary of Congress. .... contin ian Zaldo, Maj. Ral de, Mexican Embassy _.____-_ Zamoyski, Capt. Count Stefan, Polish Embassy. Zane, Wesley, Federal Housing Administration. 359 Zannelli, Augustus, General Land Office_______ 351 352 Zebley, J. S., District Engineer Department.____ aa Zeder, Fred, "National Inventors’ Council... 374 Zelditch, Morris, District Public Welfare Board. Zeledon, Luis, Costa Rican. Legation 457 448 Zens, Lénnah Curtiss, Bureau of Human Nutri-449 tion and Home Economies... .__..____.___ 363 451 Zier, Julian G., Pan American Union.______.____ Zimmer, Verne A., Division of Labor Stand- 236 APAS. a i Sa aR eG he EA 81 Zimmerley, Stuart R., Bureau of Mines________ 354 Zimmermann, Capt. A. G., Bureau of Ord- NON0E. 2 a aa 345 Zimmerman, Gordon K., Soil Conservation 340 A ERE Ea RE NO RR ae Zimmerman, Ralph E., Federal Deposit Insur- 346 ance Corporation SN I Re el 392 457 Zimmerman, Raymond R., Civil Service Com-457 YHSSIO ts ara a a Te 8 Zimmerman, William, Jr., Office of Indian AINE. es i rr a ies Zinder, H., Side Power Commission. .___.__ 2 462 War Zoller, Garl A., Jr, Veterans’ Administration.. 423 Zoltowski, Ji anusz, "Polish Embass 464 Zubilin, Vassili, Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy a 466 Zug, John D., secretary to Senator Wilson____.. 269 464 Zychlinski, Louis Y. de, Office of the Poms 409 Assistant Postmaster General... ..coeeens Oo eR ERNE 2 5i pt