CONGRESSIONAL | DIRECTORY |0 = | | 1) 79th Congress2d Session January1946 \ ; a2 ‘ bod ~ % = = f ) Zn = £ oo ~~= TEAS SATE ET (- 74 is stl on 79TH CONGRESS, 2» SESSION BEGINNING JANUARY 1451946 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS FIRST EDITION CORRECTED TO = JANUARY 1, 1946 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1946 By JoHN H. PINSON 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 25, D.. C., at $1.25 per copy (cloth) COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING oT PT ar EC Za > IdIE em EYEE Sana At 1 me 4 TT eww. ee NOTES The following changes have occurred in the membership of the Seventy-ninth Congress since the election of November 7, 1944: Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in SENATORS Mon C. Wallgren, Wash........0... Jan. 9, 1945 | Hugh B. Mitchell 1..___ Jan. 18, 1945 0... Harry 8. Traman, Mo........coolotian. Jan. 17,1945 | Frank P. Briggs! ______ Jan. 22, 1945 main Francis Maloney, Conn_____._.__ Jan. 16,3045: | oe Thomas C. Hart! .._._. Feb. 15, 1945 John Moses, N. Dak _._._....:.... Mar. 3, 1945 Mar. 19,1945 James G. Scrugham, Nev__.___ June 23, 1945 E. P. Carville ! July 26, 1945 Aug. 6, 1945 William F. Knowland 1. Sept. 5, 1945 Sept. 30, 1945 James W. Huffman?.___ Oct. 09,1945Albert B. Chandler, Ky... Nov. 1,1945 William A. Stanfill1_ Nov. 23, 1945 John Thomas, Idaho Nov. 10, 1945 Charles C. Gossett! Nov. 29, 1945 REPRESENTATIVES James F. O'Connor, 2d Mont. _.._ Jan. 15,1945 Wesley A, D’Ewart June 25, 1945 Dave E. Satterfield, Jr., 3d Va_._ J. Vaughan Gary Mar. 16, 1945 James V. Heidinger, 24th I11. _____ Roy Clippinger Nov. 26,1945 Clinton P. Anderson, At L., N June 30, 1945 Mex. D. Lane Powers, 4th N. J Aug. 30, 1945 James W. Mott, 1st Oreg__....__ Robert Ramspeck, 5th Ga___ __ __ “Dec.1045 31, Clifton A. Woodrum, 6th Va ____ Dec. 31, 1945 Joe W. Ervin 10th N.C.____.._.. Samuel Dickstein, 19th N. Y Dec. 30, 1945 Samuel A. Weiss, '33d Pa Jan. 7, 1946 1 Appointed by Governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected. # WEREY ari iE Rey” (PRT ore fa WY 27 JANUARY JULY Sun| M | Tu W|Th| F |Sat||Sun| M | Tu W | Th| F | Sat = 327 PUES i i a i 537 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board (United States and Great Britain). ___._________ 327 Botlesof, — 537 Command and General Staff School .___________ 247 Commerce Commission, Interstate. _._____ SR 427 Commerce, Department of... cvviveeeea--392 BTADS I Pn dt Se aR A eh nd A 619 Bureau of— Foreign and Domestic Commerce..__....___ 393 Standards; National. x... ia aaa e ne 394 AM OLE RA ll SR de LO ra 392 Civil Aeronautics Administration.._._________ 396 Civil Aeronautics Board... .............._. 396 Coast and Geodetic Survey. _.________________ 394 Inland Waterways Corporation_______________ 392 National Inventors Couneil................_.. 396 Commerce, Department of—Continued. Page Patent Offfcbi 2 os pr gerne Shree vn) 395 Weather Buyean. cai live seni fra 395 Commissions: Alaska Road coo 00 la Cena 375 Alaskan International Highway ______________ 239 American Battle Monuments_________________ 405 American, for the Protection and Salvage of Artistic and Historic Monuments in ay ARE Te Le 406 Anglo-American Caribbean_______________.__ 408 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. __________ 408 Capital Anditoriom. Cfinh 237 Civil Service. oo 02 AVE Fa, Tas 408 Employees’ Compensation, United States.___ 411 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds_______________ 237 Federal Communications... __._____________. 412 Pederal Powers ool grils oii vs 417 Federsl-Trade ne iin ir lime oF ii aw 423 Filipino Rehabilitation... -..........= * 243 Fine-Arvtsy 22 oh ui 0l Sols n SCA te 410 Goethals’Memeorial |. 1. = ois iv 425 House Office =~. '° 237 Building... _________ International Boundary, United States, Alaska, and Canada. -i or 426 International Boundary and Water Commis-sion, United States and Mexico_________ 426 International Fisheries, United States and Canada Er A 427 International Joint... 2 Coo 427 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries________ 427 Interstate Commerce...:_ :' 2 _ 427 Joint Brazil-United States Defense___________ 327 Joint Mexican-United States Defense_______. 328 Marlime. o.oo er a iE] 429 Mental Health oo. oc fia in ot 462 Migratory Bird Conservation. _______________ 239 National Capital Park and Planning. ________ 432 National Forest Reservation__________________ 239 National Historical Publications______________ 431 National Memorial Stadium__________________ 243 Public Utilities, District of Columbia. _______ 477 Securitiesand Exchange..."_.. _ ___ 439 Senate Office Building ________________________ 237 aril; United States. cocoSe cne 443 a Territorial Expansion Memorial ______________ 241 Thomas Jefferson Memorial ._______-._________ 240 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Zo 240 Wayne Memorlalz_ 2. 0 Co i een 242 Commissions and joint committees, congressional. 237 Committee assignments: : Representatives... : ... J.oo.eo oto aid 214 Benators. .. beesa 188 Committees: : Aeronautics, National Advisory. _____________ 430 Fair Employment Practice. __._____________. 319 House— ASSignMeNtS In: aimee 214 D2 Ty ESE Ce EE Ce 277 Meeting daysofe 25. aio. oe 213 Membership:ofi. ooo omnioa 199 oi i Official reportersto....__-__....i: 2 279 Select and special .________ Li mlna TE 21T Joint War Production—United States and DEEL LE mie A i CRIN 326 - Contents Committees—Continued. Page Material Coordinating—United States and Canadn. ed a a Gane 326 “National Power Policy... Loooicioaioaiil 375 On Practice (Treasury) .-.cccececemceanaann ———— 342 Printing, Joint... coh area 238 Putiesof=. iu. hoc die ada iis 528 Reciprocity Information... ...cceeeeccaaaooo_. 410 Dubiesof. Co iS aR 641 Requirements Review (Navy) occccemeoooo ~as 059 Select and special— House....... 211 Senate m= 185 Senate— Assignments to... 188 COATTIT Fy TR a Rae a SI rb a fl Ld 268 Meeting daysofi co... cu innsfuny 187 Membership ofc. fo iretsewn ied 179 Specigland selec. i ol eine. 185 Commodity Credit Corporation. ________.______ 389 Communications Commission, Federal .________ 412 Community Facilities, Bureau of_______________ 424 cPmtles of sods ail a Saas 680 Company: The REC oi coon lin 415 Mortgage... 2 TJ. 'S-Commerelal ZF = Tas iiboraanpanl 416 Compensation Commission, Employees’ ____.___ 411 Comptroller General of the United States (General Accounting Office).___________ 284 Comptroller of the Currency... _..__.... 339 Conciliation Service, United States__________.___ 398 Congress: Joint Committee on the Organization of. _____ 243 Libraryof --. oiio. iis Ld da bade 285 Political classification of . o_o __ 146 Sessionsiof............ — _. 247 Congressional: Apportionment, by States.........ccaceeauen-262 Club oe Ll Te nati a 410 Commissions and joint committees___________ 237 Delegations, by States...=0 car on 137 Districts, mapsef. cto ci alia 3 oa aln 20S 771 Record, office of, at Capitol._________.._______ 281 Conservation of Wildlife Resources: House, Select Committee... ................ 211 Senate, Special Committee... ._.__. 185 Conservation Service, Soil ooo... 390 /Consularofficersos. tc ohmian 495 Continuous service of Senators... ooo __ 162 Contract Settlement, Office of __________________ 322 Corporation counsel’s office, District of Columbia 474 Corporations: Commodity: Credit... ccna aaiaae 389 Defense Homes... coc. io lise maneniaes 436 Federal Crop Insurance... 389 Federal Deposit Insurance... ........... 413 Federal Farm Mortgage ______ icomccnaeee 384 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance_._._....._. 434 Home Owners’ Loan. iio io oss 434 Inlona Waterways. lool ve ab 392 Reconstruction Finance... .eemmeeuico ooo. 413 Rubber Development. .oli i oils20 416 Smaller War Plants... J. roll iin coding 325 AVES Tete el Sa eR(LR RE 416 War Damage___.. 416 Council: Council—Continued. : Page National Archives. co ccoromimmnanwmunress 431 National Inventors...... coc vovmeenidiog:000 396 Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United States 453 Court of Appeals, United States Emergency..__ 459 Courtof Cladms.........ooumumireREET] oo 456 Duties of.....coiviiiinibn bos vanes 049 Court of Impeachment, Senate. _._______________ 253 Courts, Administrative Office of the United States. arielaT RE 462 al Courts, District of Columbia: Court of Appeals, United States ar Nl LR 453 District, United States... ... ol.08 461 Juvenile. ...ci.iouavisse aE ibiicimn 464 Municipal:Court. ooo tL Ci Cir 464 Municipal Court of Appeals. _-o-veceeceaea= 463 Courts, United States: CirenitiCourtof Appeals... ...i0 ii na. 452 AT7) Fr WCE RR er SA IN A Tae 456 Customs... locas so 458 caelTiny Customs and Patent Appeals. __oooocoeeooe 455 Emergency Court of Appeals. ___________._____ 459 BOADIEMB.. coe vmte nh I RE A SS Loo 449 2 TY LE oe RR a 461 Credit Administration, Farm_____.._______.____ 384 Credit Corporation, Commodity... .__._._.___ 389 Currency, Bureau of the Comptroller of the____ 339 Customhouse (Treasury). o.oooon 340 -oooo Customs and Patent Appeals, United States Court of... ikeanaudil aos i 455 Customs; Bureawof. oll) a. -ococooaiaaaii 340 Customs Court, United States... oocoaeee.. Rie 458 D Dairy Industry, Bureau of. -................... 381 Deaf, Columbia Institution for the... .ooceeee_. 422 Debates, Official Reporters of: BONUS: «oii smi ain i im mA mr de 279 Senate. colceeniimreci andlor on Lol, 271 Decorations and Medals, Board of (Navy)_._._. 356 Decorations Board, War Department__________ 347 Defense Board, Inter-American_______________._ 425 -Defense Commissions: Joint Brazil-United States... _______ 327 Joint Mexican-United States. _._....__._._______ 328 Defense Homes Corporation. ________._._________ 436 Defense, Permanent Joint Boardon____________ 438 Defense Program, Special Committee to Investi-gabe can aninudieo nn acu dre 186 Defense Transportation, Office of _____.________ 320 Delegates and Resident Commissioners: Alphabetical list. ~~ ooo 156 Assignments to committees... _______ 214 Biographies of o.—ioiiiia Tl asi fein 135 List of, with home post offices and Washing-tonaddresses. ...o..onoannnl Seton 836 Rooms and telephones of... oo ocococoooaaaooae 307 Service record in Congress. oc covcmcacccaccaca= 176 Votegeastfor. at ol oH 261 Delegations, congressional, by States.___-_._... 137 Dental Officers, Board for Examination, Navy.. 363 Pental-School; Naval. ossnsaiosinnciins 363 Departments: Agriculture: cn. conn a a ee 377 TTITIT1 Tal § i Re Le Rr aT 392 Federal Fire_______._... 425 Interior cc se a nn a Te, 368 Congressional Directory Departments—Continued. Page Divisions—Continued. Page THE a epee ee Se Se ET 348 IL8DOL-.--ne2=m=-=ncoeczmesmrameeccomcoooa-= 398 NAVY ama Sa is Seles hs 355 RPost-OMce. ~~er ata 351 Stale. orl der a 329 easy. LE 338 a A Re I Ss 343 Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal ._______ 413 Description and history of Capitol Building____ 288 Diagram of the— Basement floor and terrace of the Capitol.____ 202 Gallery floor of the Capitol. -..__.___.____.____ 298 Ground floor of the Capitol .._._._____________ 294 Hons CRamber i ireneanal) 304 Principal floor of the Capitol... ..._.._______._ 206 Senate Chamber... C. .as. oi. asda an 302 Diplomatic and Consular Service.._..___.______ 481 Director of vehicles and traffic, District of Co- nrib A a SR 475 Directory oftheSenate.. ...._. .... ... ......... 303 Pigpensary, Naval: o.oo dor do oi iol canna 364 District Court of the United States for the Districtof Columbia. .« ~~ i=: 461 Commission on Mental Health_______________ 462 District of Columbia: City postiofies.c us Sous las tan iiarhanr 477 Court of Appeals forthe__..__._______ a 453 District Court of the United States for_._.____ 461 Commission on Mental Health ____________ 462 District Government... Liiii.oa... 471 LT EA ee Reee NR a 472 Corporation Counsel’s Office_._____..._.... 474 Department of— Public Welfare..t = 0... 0 haoil 476 Vehiclesand Traffie. o.oo.a 475 ‘Weights, Measures, and Markets______.___ 475 DIStrict OTACES. ... vic ohvs ae dae tA wn wis 471 A SSOSSOr SIOTRCE. foc oo pinto oe mo BI 471 Budget Oceana pains 471 Disbursing Office... .. on ue cada tan 248 472 License Buren...comer mnannid aoa 472 Miscellaneous Offices... cove... 472 Office of Collector of Taxes. _ _ cco _ 471 Officeofthe Auditor... occa io 471 Purchasing Division.......oicecaaucn.o.. 472 Engineer Department. Jo. civenessviuanis 474 Executive Offices... iui aliiiaieibenans 471 Pire/Department ... . ...cococimunnoinminns 475 Heslth Department... i... .. ccneasaca-us 475 Insarance Department...i... ... 476 Metropolitan Police... ooh =o too ion 476 Office of Civilian Defense, United States___ 477 Peoples Counsel: ouivi nind aon 477 Public Utilities Commission________________ 477 Veterans’ Information Center. ___________ 477 Juvenllo Cont...imesai: _ 464 eal Municipal Coart: toe i a Sia aus 464 Municipal Court of Appeals... oceeecno.... 463 Origin and form of government_______________ 467 Recorderof deeds... 0. coeisitoan niing is. 464 Register of wills and clerk of the probate TLE Pep AR IR Se sis Ca San ne 462 Divisions: Administrative (JUStice)...... oe ceeecnmunmmene—— 349 Industrial Survey (Navy)..... ma a a 356 Labor Standards fl iaaiiaeatat 399 Material (Navy). ..... = 357 Monetary Research, Treasury .--ccoeeeeo____ 340 Petroleum Conservation... cee oo... 375 Power (Interior)... isi ooaiidoey 375 Procurement, Treasury.........cevemeceeaesses 342 Requirements Review (Navy). .o..._________ 359 Research and Statistics, Treasury _._.._._._____ 339 Stal Wary CS an 346 Tax Researen. s iruan ist pee 342 ....owii Territories and Island Possessions___________ 374 ‘Wage and Hour and Public Contracts.______~ 399 Warlinanes...oL..ouoo itis nde 342 Document room, House of Representatives. ____ 276 Domestic Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and. __ 393 Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives._._ 275 Drug and Food Administration. ______.________ 422 E y Economics and Statistics Branch (Mines). _____ 373 Economy Board, theJoint..o io...= 0 0 429 Education, Office of... co.ol a 420 Electrification Administration, Rural __________ 390 Embassies, foreign... Sl 481 o.ooaloes Emergency Court of Appeals, United States... 459 Emergency Management, Office for. __________. 319 Emergency War Agencies: Board of War Communications... ___________ 321 Combined Chiefs of Staff (United States and Great Britain) ceo J os nately Combined Food Board (United States, United Kingdom, and Canada). ___.___________ Combined Raw Materials Board (United States and Great Britain) ______________ 327 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board (United States and Great Britain)______ 327 Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis-SIOT onl SAC a Sr ne 327 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com-missions. Juin non ery celta) . 328 Joint War Production Committee (United Statesand Canada)... ici oo oo Material Coordinating Committee (United Statesand Canada)... cio. i 326 Office for Emergency Management___________ 319 Civilian Production Administration______ 319 Committee on Fair Employment Practice. . 319 Office of Alien Property Custodian_________ 319 Office of Defense Transportation. ._________ 320 Office of Inter-American Affairs. __.________ 320 Office of Scientific Research and Develop- MENG. A an de 320 War Shipping Administration______________ 321 Office of Price Administration. _______________ 321 Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion_ 322 Petroleum Administration for War___________ 324 President’s War Relief Control Board________ 324 Selective Service System _ __ _________.________ 324 Smaller War Plants Corporation. ________.____ 325 United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Ad- ministration... hoo niet nad ot iaigy 328 War Contracts Price Adjustment Board..____ 325 Employees’ Compensation Commission. ____c= 411 Dutiesef o.ooTee Ci 643 Employment Service, United States______.___ 401 Engineer Department, District of Columbia.___ 474 Engineering, Office of (Coast Guard). ____.______ 367 Contents Engraving and Printing, Bureau of _____._.__.___ 339 Enlarging Capitol Grounds, Commission on.._. 237 Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Bureau of_. 382 Ethnology, Bureau of American________________ 442 Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Au- thority, Select Committee to Investigate ACIS Of nied amie SS He aS 212 Executive Office of the President... _..._-__. 317 IHRE a eS Re a Lh 531 Bureau-of the Budget.......ccocnmeeecacia... 318 Federal Board of Hospitalization. ___.._..__ 318 Government Information Service. _________. 318 Liaison Office for Personnel Management..__ 318 The White House Office... I. _“ui_:... Personnelof-o.oo.SIR nL LT Secretaries to the President, biographies of.. 317 Experiment Stations, Office of .______________... 383 Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups...... 159 Explosives Safety Board, Army-Navy. .......... 408 Export-Import Bank of Washington___________. 411 Extension Service, Agriculture Department___. 378 F Fair Employment Practice, Committee on..... 319 AU TELAoo 1] PSA A lr A Ae A SE 533 Farm Credit Administration. ..covveeeeemaa-384 Farm Mortgage Corporation, Federal ..._.__.__ 384 Farm Security Administration... ___..._____ 384 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education. 421 | Federal Board of Hospitalization. .____________. 318 137711CH Epesbl 532 Federal Bureau of Investigation... .__.._.._ 348 Federal Communications Commission..._.._... 412 DPuties-of...... IDA HL 645 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. __________ 389 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation._________ 413 Daties of. oa nanos nn EN a 648 Federal Expenditures, Joint Committee on Re- duction of Nonessential _.______________ 2492 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ___...._.. 384 Federal Pire:Counell. oo i Jo 0 425 [10.0 Duties of-..c oii aniaALL 681 Federal Home Loan Bank Administration______ 433 Paties of: cia ri tii nines i Federal Home Loan Bank System_.__________ 433 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation 434 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation_________.__ 434 Federal Home Loan Bank System._.________..___ 433 Dutiesof. nobispiu Sn i 00s 703 Federal Housing Administration. _.____________ 434 Putiosof >. Coal Deanastir 706 Federal Loan AgenCy i oo irda tannic dd 413 Dutiesof. ... iia tail sane ih 649 Federal National Mortgage Association. _____ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation... .._. 413 Rubber Development Corporation... ...._.. 416 The RFC Mortgage Company... coaeo--_ 415 U. 8S. Commercial Company.....ceaceacaaanc-416 Wari Assets. ......oasiioiiol 416 Corporation. aol War Damage Corporation... cco. 416 Federal National Mortgage Association _.._.___ 415 Duties of: til ul son saiinanil 650 Federal Power Commission. _.______.__.__._..___ 417 Dutlesot =. oon oa sane 651 Federal Prison Industries, Inc., Justice___...._. 349 ’ Page Federal Public Housing Authority. ......._____ 435 Duties ofioils diinidhpaisnmgil 708 iis! Defense Homes Corporation. ________.__._.____ 436 Federal Register (National Archives)_._________ 430 Federal Reserve System, Board of Governors... 417 DPatiesof oi Lana Sle 0 Sli Ree Lava 659 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- HOW er a a RE El Sel 434 Dates of i a eee EE NN 705 Federal Security Agency... Pr pp 418 Putiesol ior arr a eee 662 American Printing House for the Blind.._____ 422 Columbia Institution for the Deaf. ___________ 422 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Educa- BOTY a ee 421 Food and Drug Administration. _........_.... 422 PFreedmen’s:Hospital:. oc oo soi 422 Howard: University... oo LL li. io. 423 Office of Vocational Rehabilitation __________ 421 Public Health-Service.. +....... 419 +8t. Elizabeths' Hospital... 8. ool 0 ot. 422 Social Seeurity Board... oe... 419 United States Office of Education. .__._._... 420 Federal Trade Commission. ooo ooo... 423 Patiesof cous read oar dig 672 Federal Works Agency. 2 tic io oo 424 Duties afro. EC 680 / Bureau of Community Facilities... .__.._.__. 424 Federal Pire-Counell. ora illo ln 425 Office of the Administrator. ....oceeeeeeuaiaoc 424 Public Buildings Administration... ...__.. 424 Public Roads Administration... ___ o.oo... 424 Filipino Rehabilitation Commission..__________ 243 Finance and Supply, Office of (Coast Guard)._.. 366 Finance Corporation, Reconstruction ..._..__... 413 Fine Arts, Commissionof. ... ._.c...c.iio.... 410 Duties of. Coon leis insta ad 640 Pire Council, Federal .o.c.coldocconainall a 425 Fire Department, District of Columbia______... 475 First Assistant Postmaster General _______..__.. 351 Fiscal Director, Office of (Navy)... ocoooooo.. 357 Fiseal:Service, Treasury..c. co. ooio. uot. 341 Fish and Wildlife Service oa. 373 Floor leaders, House of Representatives. _____.. 274 Folding room of the House... _._____ 276 Folding room of the Senate... _.________.__ 270 Food and Drug Administration_____.__________ 422 Dutiesiof. cor odie nm AL LDA 672 Food Board, Combined (United States, United Kingdom, and Canada). __.____________. Food, Select Committee to Investigate Supplies and'Shortagesiof. oi o.oo oooh Foreign Agricultural Relations, Office of __.._.__. 378 Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of__. 393 Foreign consular officers/in the United States... 495 Foreign diplomatic representatives in the United States: oii otitis 481 Foreign Funds Control... oon. ededcenncen 340 Foreign Service of the United States. _.._.__.__.. 515 Foreign-Trade Zones Board... ________ 425 Duties of tor contin tl B 2 681 Forest Reservation Commission, National _____ 239 Forest: Service. oC. ooo Soe on aia 385 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ______._.___ 353 Freedmen’s Hospital... coo. cool sinlaaacs 422 XII Congressional Directory Page Page Freor Gallery of Avt o.oo loonie 442 | House of Representatives: . Fuels and Explosives Branch (Mines)... _..____. 372 Miscellaneous officials._ 281 Officers of. _ __ 274 G Personnel of: Galleries: Chaplain. __ 274 Periodical Pross.._.__.l...-aocc.--765 Clerks to committee. -_.. oom 1 a LRI 729 Document room. 276 Radio Correspondents’ _.-____ i .... 759 Folding room . 278 Gallery of Art: Office of the— LE al Sr A EO Se NR i eo ETAL 442 Clerk SATO National... 442 275 ..i..2 Doorkeeper.___ Garden, United States Botanic _._._____________ 287 Legislative counsel. _ L979 General Accounting Office... ____________ 284 Majority Leader. o-oo. ovens i 274 Dutiesof_...------~-------_..._...i___.. 530 Majority Whips. co oi. vo 274 General Board (Navy)... i. ___ 356 Minority 7 a= 274 Leader... General Counsel for the Treasury, Office of ____ 339 Minority Whip... ooo os pirat 274 General Counsel, Office of (Navy) ......__._____ 357 Official Reporters of Debates of __________ 279 General Land Office 369 Parliamentarian. _____ 274 General Staff, War Department ________________ 344 Postmaster, itl loin ae ea 276 Geological Survey. . 371 Sergeant ab Atms.. io iro ia 275 Gettysburg Boulevard Commission____________ 240 Sneakers rr rEae a 274 Goethals Memorial Commission 425 Reporters to committees of. ________________ 279 Government Information Serviece_.______.i___. 318 | Political classification of .___~_________________ 146 Government of the Commonwealth of the Special and minority employees. _____________ 276 Philippines... 374 | Housing Administration, Federal.______________ 434 Government of the District of Columbia________ 471 Dutlesof Ta aa 706 Government Printing Office... ooo. 287 | Housing Agency, National. ____________________ 432 Governors of the States and Territories. ________ 263 | Howard University... 493 = Grazing Service-373 | Human Nutrition and Home FEconomics, Bares of. cc oiin ltl Na 382 H Headquarters Coast Guard ___________________ 365 I Headquarters Marine Corps.___________________ 364 | Immigration and Naturalization Service._.._____ 348 Headquarters Military District of Washington 346 | Immigration Appeals, Board of.________________ 349 Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Com-Impeachment trials by the Senate______________ 253 if mand. coorRe Te seg 364 | Independent offices, agencies, and establish- a Health and Safety Branch (Mines) _____________ 372 11810 AR EE Behes Taira 405 Health, Commission on Mental ________________ 462 Duties of ooo is inii silos fa ih ng 637 Health Department, District of Columbia______ 475 Index, Individual i ia 837 c______ Health Service, Public. cei 5 00 419}| Indian Affairs, 1 ann Officeof.-...........0 370 Highway Commission, Alaskan International _ 239 | Indian Arts and Crafts Board. __________.______ 370 History and description of the Capitol__________ 298 (Individualindex” st . 837 Holmes Devise Committee, Oliver Wendell.___ 242 | Industrial Chemistry, Bureau of Agricultural Home Loan Bank Administration, Federal .____ 433 ra Re lt Se ea DET 380 Home Loan Bank System, Federal _.__________ 433 | Industrial Relations, Office of (Navy)________ 358 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation_ _____________ 434 | Industrial Survey Division (Navy) __._.________ 356 Duties of. 705 | Information, Office of, Agriculture Department. 379 Home post offices of Senators, Representatives, Information Service, Government. _________ 318 ete., with Washington addresses ________ 825 | Inland Waterways Corporation________________ 392 Home, United States Soldiers’. _________________ 442 | Institution, Smithsonian__________________ iL air 441 Hospitalization, Federal Board of ______________ 318 | Insurance Department, District of Columbia... 476 Hospitals: Inter-American Affairs, Officeof _______________ 320 Columbia, for Women. 409 | Inter-American Defense Board _________.______ 425 Freedmen’s_____ 422 Dutlesiof rr ai ay 682 ional Naval___ 363 | Interior Department_____.___________._...._ 368 StaBlzabeths. oh oo Senna 422 Dutiet ols ile a atriaand 598 “Hour and Wage and Public Contracts Division. 399 Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic House committees: Sites, Buildings, and Monuments______ 376 Assignments to 214 Alaska Railroad... liao io oo ol 0 374 Clerks to. eda PT Alaskan Purchasing and Shipping Office... 374 Meeting days of. el 1 Alaska Road Commission _________.__________ 375 Membership of 199 Bonneville Power Administration____________ 375 Official reportersto. oi 5 sii vai D0 279 Bureau of— Select and special__ 211 Mines Tm aga 372 House Office Building Commission_____________ 237 Administration Service... _.__._........ 373 Contents XIII Interior Department—Continued. Page Bureau of—Continued. Mines—Continued. Economics and Statistics Branch_________ 373 Fuels and Explosives Branch_____________ 372 Health and Safety Branch____________.___ 372 Metallurgical Braneh.............__...... 373 Mining Braneh. ohofi 373 oo... ii Reclamation. io usin noid ntautiogg 371 Division of: Power. oc OU. Jo ri) ioiaooia: 375 Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 374 Fish and Wildlife Service..._____._______.__.. 373 General Land Office: ic. oi. fui Lins] 369 Geological Survey. iu aintnam a 371 ea Grazing Servite. oc aad illic. ie. 373 Indian Arts and Crafts Board. ___________._... 370 National Park: Service... J. cocaine.S00 371 Direetor’s Office... Ll So iaoiiin lod 371 National Capital Parks... coo sian 372 Regional Offices. ooli nanan 372 ‘Washington Liaison Office_.._...__._.._.___ 372 National Park Trust Fund Board___:_____ -.. 376 i Power Policy Committee. __._.._.__ 375 Officeof Indian Afiairs. oo...oo .ooulil e 370 Office of Land Utilization... .... . J. 0a iG 369 Officetof the Solicitors i bay Lio uo 369 Petroleum Conservation Division____________ 375 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. 375 Solid Fuels Administration for War__________ 375 Southwestern Power Administration. _____. 375 TPerritorialiOffielals. 0...lo Ll 374 Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines... co ci dia 374 War Relocation Authority... o_o .... 376 Internal Revenue, Bureau of. ._____.____.______ 341 Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee__ 238 International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Gonads Sad La 426 Dutlesofe soo asi ie a 682 International Boundary and Water Commis-sion, United States and Mexico__..___._. 426 DRHIeS:00 ey a aa JIE Da EN 683 International Exchanges, Silthsonioh BASAL 442 International Fisheries Commission, United Statesan® Canada. Cio 0 oi 427 International Highway Commission, Alaskan__ 239 International Joint Commission. _______________ 427 Puties.ef i. asopiait Sou aml 0 684 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- mission, oo Sl nb od Seen A 427 International Trade Operations, Office of .______ 397 Interparliamentary Union... _____.______________. 239 Interstate Commerce Commission. _______.___. 427 Dates of 20 Le aU SR TTR PEL 685 Inventors Council, National ___________________ 396 Investigation, Federal Bureau of ______________ 348 Investigatory Services, Office of (Agriculture)... 388 J Joint Board on Defense, Permanent. ___________ Joint Board, the Ee LL a Sl AEN 428 Duties HES eal tui snl Be ST TERRE Sale 537 Joint Chiefs of Staff, the United States. _._.____ 428 Army and Navy Staff College ___________.._._ 429 Joint commissions: Page Brazil-United States-Defense...__ocoo_____ 327 International. cooolia diana nn oi Uf 427 Mexican-United States Defense. ___________. 328 Joint Committee: On Internal Revenue Taxation _.____________ 238 Duties of axial bia lus fice 9am 527 On Printingld tm ooiiuiiy,Tiss ade S0. 238 Dutiesiof usec is tis Do io niet 528 On Reduction of Nonessential Federal Ex-penditures: J chain] oo dei 242 On Selective Service Occupational Deferment of Officers and Employees of Legislative Onthe Library... oo. oii Con. 0 5iifen Dutiesof-.......... (Be RE BRL LD To Investigate the Pearl Harbor Attack______ Joint Economy Board, the...i... .__._. __. Joint Mexican-United States Defense Commis- Joint War Production Committee (United Statesand Canada)...linia oi 111190 SR Se eS ee Judge Advocate General, Navy___.____.__._____ Justice, Departmentof.i. ........ oii gl DAtiesiof os ioe a aa as EE Board of Immigration Appeals__.________.____ Boardiof Pavolel. oh... 0o. lauluiol Federal Bureau of Investigation _____________ Federal Prison Industries, Inc.____.________._ Immigration and Naturalization Service_.____ Justices and officials: _ Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United States... ai Courbiof: Claims. canta ani ni Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, United States... Customs Court._____ Emergency Court of Appeal. Lo Supreme Court, United States EE nba a po Tax Court..__ 461 Juvenile Court... Labor, Department of Duties of . : Apprentice Training Service .________________ Bureau of Labor Statisties......__._.________. Children’s Bureau... : Conciliation Service, United States __________ Division of Labor Standards.__________: _____ 399 Employment Service, United States______.__. 401 National War Labor Board... .__.__._._.. 400 Retraining and Reemployment Administra- Women’s Bureau... Labor, Office of (Agriculture)... .______.__.. Labor Relations Board, National .____._________ Labor Standards, Division of Labor Statistics, Bureau of. Congressional Directory Page Land Office, General._. 369 Land Utilization, Officeof........o...ci.oioiio 369 Legislative Counsel: House 279 Senate__._ 271 Lend-Lease Liaison Office (Navy).._.__.__.__.___ 356 Liaison Office for Personnel Management_______ 318 Duties of.__ a 531 Library, Department of Agriculture____________ 378 Library, Franklin D. Roosevelt. _________.____ 431 Library, Joint Committee on the___________.____ 238 Library, Trustees of Franklin D. Roosevelt.__ 432 Library of Congress: Personneliol. oo sical ail Eis 285 Trust Fund Board. _. 286 Loan Agency, Federals... o-oo aioill 413 Loan Corporation, Home Owners’. ._____.______ 434 Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, ete., with home post offices. ___________ 825 M Majority Leader, Office of: TRITL LORRI URE ahah Ss nn Le LS 274 Senate a. ceil nil nie Te 267 Majority Whip, Office of: HOUSe oa fil daa asta Sa tdeies an] 274 Senabel en rita mri ares de tania 267 Management Engineer, Office of the (Navy)_.__ 358 Maps of congressional distriets._________________ 771 Marine Barracks. nas 365 iain ia Marine Corps, Headquarters.._.________________ 364 Maritime Commission, United States. _________ 429 Dies:ol ois anid nl maa Ri lay 694 Marketing Services, Office of. _____-______-_____ 387 Marshal’s office, United States. _.._____________ 462 Material Coordinating Committee—United Statesiand Canada. .....cof eo. 326 Dantes ols he al BET hy Sei] 536 Material: Division (Navy)...c.. o-oo ii 357 Materials and Facilities, Office of (Agriculture). 388 Medals and Decorations, Board of (Navy)______ 356 Mediation Board, National ____________________ 436 Medical Center, National Naval _._____________ 363 Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Board (Medical). coo oie 356 Medical Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 363 Medical Research Institute, Naval ____________ 363 Medical School, Naval... .ooio ool oo 364 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of ______________ 360 Meeting days: House committees 213 Senateicommitiees. .... .... Goss clean 187 Members’ addresses. _______ 825 Members of the Cabinet, list of ____________-___ 316 Members’ rooms and telephones____-__________. 305 Membership: House committees --199 Senate committees. soso o Sol mar is 179 Membership changes of the Seventy -ninth CONGYORE. oonSe ie III Memorial Commissions: Arlington Amphitheater... .__.._. -__ =. 408 General Anthony Wayne... ________________ 242 Goethals____ 425 Thomas Jefferson. _____ 240 United States Territorial Expansion.__________ 241 Mental Health, Commission on 462 Merchant Marine Academy, Board of Visitors... 241 Merchant Marine Safety, Office of .____________ 366 Metallurgical Branch (Mines) __________________ 373 Metropolitan polices. Lh 476 romansTay Mexican-United States Defense Commission, Joint... is ir DMIOR.00: on da EE a Ie 537 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission_____ 239 Military Academy, Board of Visitors___________ 240 Military Academy, United States. _____________ 347 Military District of Washington, Headquar- OE de a re Arn Teal 346 Military Missions. = 347 Mines, Bureau of___ 372 Mining Branch (Mines). tc. co cot io 373 Minority employees (House). __________________ 276 Minority Leader, Office of: 18 rr rien SN ne EI 274 Senda... oo SR BRR 267 Minority Whip, Office of: HOUSE. | wna babii Sin fet camp deltas 274 Senate. i. asia mma RR aii a al 267 Mint, Bureau of the__ ~ 340 Miscellaneous officials of the House_.___________ 281 Mississippi River Commission. ________________ 347 Monetary Research, Division of ________________ 340 Monument Society, Washington National _____ 445 Monuments Commission, American Battle_.___ 405 Mortgage Association, Federal National _______ 415 Mortgage Company, RFC__ 415 Motion Picture Review Board. ________________ 347 Municipal Court. 464 Municipal Court of Appeals 463 Munitions Board, Army and Navy_____________ 408 Munitions Control Board, National .___________ 436 Museum, National. 441 N Narcotics, Bureau of___ 340 National Academy of Sciences__________________ 429 National Research Couneil ___________________ 430 Research Board for National Security___._____ 430 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 430 Duties of. 698 National Archives Council. ____________________ 431 National Arehives....l. . overcameinlay. = 430 roe DPuatles of x waioisi cabasiin. seanitoiits 699 Franklin D. Roosevelt Library_______________ 431 National Archives Council. ___..__________.__ 431 National Archives Trust Fund Board________ 431 National Historical Publications Commission. 431 Trustees of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. 432 National Archives Trust Fund Board___._______ 431 National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Prac- 4 1 RE Tr PL De 347 National Bureau of Standards__________________ 394 National Capital Housing Authority _._.___.___. 432 Duties of... oor te Serr deh Ska 700 National Capital Park and Planning Commission.. 432 Duties of... ic rater Lh anata 701 National Collection of Fine Arts______.______.____ 442 National Defense Program, Special Committee to Investigateithe.... . oC. coi... 186 National Forest Reservation Commission. _..__ 239 National Gallery of Art... o-oooi oo. 442 Contents Page National Historical Publications Commission_. 431 National Housing AgenCy.aeoaecccamocoeoooo 432 Dutiesiof. i asi a oink nkiadis 702 Federal Home Loan Bank Administration... 433 Federal Home Loan Bank System______.___ 433 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpo- ration: coin hu danni sas undlaalus 434 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ________. 434 Federal Housing Administration. _._.___._..__ 434 Federal Public Housing Authority. ...._._.__ 435 Defense Homes Corporation________.______. 436 Office of the Administrator. ____________.___.__ 432 National Institute of Health (Public Health)____ 420 National Inventors Council... _.________ _. 396 National Labor Relations Board. _______________ 436 National Mediation Board. . o-oo... ILIk A 436 Patles of... aoe i ssuspin i iteii i 00 709 National Memorial Stadium Commission. __._. 243 National Monument Society, Washington. _.___ 445 National Mortgage Association, Federal _______ 415 National Munitions Control Board _.___________ 436 National Musenm.:...... Looe oils 441 National Naval Medical Center....._.__._.__.. 363 National Park ill. Service... ..--z.---.-2zoosi 371 National Park Trust Fund Board______________ 376 National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments, Advisory Boardon__._._. 376 National Power Policy Committee....__.______ 375 National Research Council. 2. .___________ 430 National War Board (Agriculture). _._.______. 387 National War Labor Board. coven. 400 ‘National Zoological Park... o_ooooo. io. 442, Naturalization Service, Immigration and_____._ 348 Naval Academy, Board of Visitors____..__._._.__ 241 Naval Air Stationze 0 cio aos lo. Ls 364 Naval Clemency and Prison Inspection Board.. 357 Naval Dental Sehool......cc.uiloiisananioai. 363 Naval Dispensary.-...ccoo--.-CY ET BRR EL 364 Naval Examining Board (Line)... 357 Naval Examining Board, Marine Corps........ 365 Naval History, Office 0f.3....ccvnenonvondnnanes 303 Naval Hospital. oo ooiii id osuilin aia, 363 Naval Hospital Corps School (W-R).__________ 363 Naval Medical Center, National ___________.___ 363 Naval Medical Research Institute .._.._..____. 363 Naval Medical S¢ChoOl.. av ooomornceecceceiaaae 364 Naval Operations, Office of Chief of. _._.______. 359 Naval Personnel, Bureau of. -cc ccocceeeeee 360 Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale Reserves, Office of ..:.coo si dui ian 358 Naval-Retiring Board... ..... co oa cusnl 357 Naval Retiring Review Board______ eloole 357 Naval School of Hospital Administration_______ 364 Novy Department. onnii 355 «o.ooalii. IDR TT eS Se i SSE SS 584 Bureau of— Aeronombioss. ol tlio ais ila 359 Medicine and Surgery... -co ooo... 360 Naval Personnel i... oii cob ii, 360 Ordnance... ....... cola iicoi i ei ll 362 Shins. oo. ii ber wana asin 362 Supplies'and Accounts. ........ oi... 362 Yordsand Docks: oi iia nani 363 Coast Guard (Headquarters)... -ooceceoeooo. 365 Office of— Administrative Services... _____... 367 Page | Navy Department—Continued. Coast Guard (Headquarters)—Continued. Office of—Continued. Alr-Sea Resene. coir Sliiianii 366 ini. Commandant >s 32 dl Jiang 365 _ootadosi Engineeringsd sai truss ol in iio 367 Finance and Supply..c... Lacan oaiad 366 Merchant Marine Safety... ___.._... 366 Operations. sosizidoas Jissadioiin isl iu 366 Personfelicco oro ulnuaud ali aoa 366 Wellate.. oc... lobe sem ob tt ond 367, Executive Office of the Secretary... __.__...._ 355 Administrative Office. oo... coli... ... 355 Board of Decorations and Medals _ __._____. 356 Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Examining Board (Medical) ___________. 356 Board of Review, Discharges and Dismis- SAMS. el i sR Be Ce 356 General Board... coal closilon. 356 Industrial Survey Division. _________._._.____ 356 Lend-Lease Liaison Office... _______._.____ 356 Material Division... oni 0c. 357 Naval Clemency and Prison Inspection Board: _Soioca liio Ca sui tll 357 Naval Examining Board (Line). _____...... 357 Naval Retiring i sil... 357 Board... Naval Retiring Review Board__________ £..1:357 Navy Photographic Institute _.__._____._.. 358 Office of— ; Budget and Reports... _.__........ 357 Fiscal Director lainloidusis 357 oc Uo General Counsel... J -iaciale Lori 357 Industrial Relations. ci. co dio a. 358 Management Engineer... __._.____.. 358 Naval THSOry ..... voiSS 200 LS vena 358 Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale Reserves. 358 Navy Photographic Serviees________._____ 358 Public: Information: i oil...i. iin 358 Research and Inventions... ____._.._ 359 Savings Bonds... al luisodin ana 359 The Judge Advocate General _____________ 358 Requirements Review Board_______________ 359 Requirements Review Committee _____._._ 359 Requirements Review Division___.______._ 359 Headquarters Marine Corps... cece. 364 Marine: Barracksso tooil. oobi Sollutenl 365 Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps)... 365 Office of the Commandant_______.__________ 364 Paymaster Department. _________________. 365 Personnel Department. ____________ THT 365 Quartermaster Department. ________________ 365 Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Com-mand. SL DannRas 364 National Naval Medical Center... 363 Board for Examination of— Dental. OMcers. cit 363 olansbindmatden Medical Officers... i. ca ioiooidoaia.. 363 Naval Dental'School. oo oo 000s. 363 Naval Hespital ..... 0... 00 Jlaieaicy 363 Naval Hospital Corps School (W-R)_______ 363 Naval Medical Research -Institute__________ 363 Naval Medical School ._________________.... 364 Naval School of Hospital Administration___ 364 Naval Afr Station... ... oii aii, 364 Naval Dispensary.....c coi. ivan ioiiol 364 Navy Yard, Washington, D. O_____________-_ 364 Congressional Directory Navy Department—Continued. Page Office of Chief of Naval Operations. __________ 359 Relatediaetivities: «0 oo. anus. ial ol 367 Navy Photographic Institute __J_.__.____..___.. 358 Navy Photographic Services, Office of ._________ 358 Navy Yard, Washington, D..C........0__. 0... 364 Networks, stations, and services represented in Radio Correspondents’ Galleries___... Newspapers represented in Press Gallery ..____ 742 News Photographers Association, White House. 755 Oo Observatory, Astrophysical. CS CER Rae ea 442 Office for Emergency Management. __________._ 319 Duties of =r ea eas ia 5. 532 Civilian Production Administration__________ Committee on Fair Employment Practice... 319 Office of Alien Property Custodian._________._ 319 Office of Defense Transportation _._.__._______ 320 Office of Inter-American Affairs... _________ 320 Office of Scientific Research and Development. 320 ‘War Shipping Administration. ______________ 321 Office of— Administrator, Federal Works Agency.._____ 424 Administrator, National Housing Agency ..___ 432 Alien Property Custodian... ______________. 319 Duties ofcannulus na 533 uiei Budget and Finance (Agriculture)......______ 378 Budget and Reports (Navy). ______ 357 Chief of Naval Operations. .........._...... 359 Commandant (Coast Guard) _________________ 365 Commandant (Marine Corps)... _____ 364 Contract. Settlement 0 Loo... 322 ...........0 Defense Transportation .____________________ 320 Duties of ..._._ ems nen 533 Bdueation i ot SNe e se asn LL 420 Pubiestof. oil i te a Re 669 Experiment Stations... lo Joi i xa 338 First Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 351 Fiseal Director (Navy). ci... o.com... 357 Foreign Agricultural Relations__._.___________ 378 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ___.____ 353 General Counsel (Navy)... _______. 357 General Counsel for the Treasury. ____._______ Indian: Affalys. cic mn ieR inn Turing 370 Industrial Relations (Navy). ._.___________. 358 Information, Departmentof Agriculture_.___._ 379 Inter-American Affairs... ..ooluio oi 320 Putiegiof. oo. i es Sa INE 534 International Trade Operations. _____________. 397 Investigatory Services (Agriculture). .___._____ 388 Judge Advocate General, Navy. _____________ 358 Labor: (Agriculture)... cc i cation. 389 Land UtIgation: cel ea ieeedenen 369 Legislative counsel: THONS0. i os Ss SE Nr SO 279 Senate annEEN SR 271 Management Engineer (Navy). __..__.._____. Marketing Services (Agriculture). _.___ _____ Materials and Facilities... ___.__. Naval History. o.oo .cio lio usin are 358 Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale Reserves...__ 358 Navy Photographic Services___._____..___.._._. 358 Personnel, Department of Agriculture________ 379 Plantand Operations. ....... [= Postmaster of the House... ..____.___ PriceiCAgricalture) oo 0...0 % Office of—Continued. Page Price Administration_____________ 391 Dutiesof. «occ 0 chil a 534 Liaison offices at Capitol... .....______....___ 283 Public Information ... 358 (Navy)...i... Requirementsand Allocations (Agriculture)__ 387 Research and Inventions (Navy). _._._________ 359 Savings Bonds (NAVY). ec bis -20 ovcnvenad 359 Scientific Research and Development. _______ 320 Datlesiof.oooiii vicaraa 534 Second Assistant Postmaster General .________ 352 Solicitor, Agriculture Department. ___________ 380 Solicitor, Interior Department_______.________ 369 Stabilization Administrator. _.________________ 323 Surgeon General... losis iol oul Ji 419 Surplus Property and Reconversion (Agricul- FUER) ss ra pw a mL Cl JIT 387 Tax Legislative Counsel... ....._.......>. 341 Third Assistant Postmaster General ._________ 352 Transportation (Agriculture) _______________ 388 Treasurer of the United States________________ 341 United States Attorney..........._________._.. 462 United Statesmarshal 0:7 ........... 462 Vocational Rehabilitation. ________________ 421 Putilesiof Din. in 671 iinetSE War Mobilization and Reconversion__________ 322 DIesiOf a ea ETI 535 Water Utilization...ilies oiooc 388 Office of Chief of Naval Operations.____________ 359 Offices, agencies, ard establishments____________ 405 Officers of the— HOUSE... cena mini SS bmn hs Bonin orm we Who gE 274 Senate. ai ES SN RRL 267 Officials, Territorial 2. __. .._...._.o.° EISENEY 374 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.___ 242 Operations, Office of (Coast Guard) _.________._ 366 Ordnance, Bureau of, Navy. o.oo ooo. 362 Organization of Congress, Joint Committee on_._. 243 Origin and form of government of the District of Columbia. iii cate’ rai renin 467 P Pacific War Council (duties)... ___._____________ 536 Panama Cana, 0. 437The...oo; Pan American Sanitary Bureau_.______________ 437 Putiesof coo. a sagt ane 711 Pan Ameriean’Union... ota 437 civic nas Duties of... iil aii AsiinihIs 711 Park and Planning Commission, National Capi-4 EEA TS De Rn Oe LE PI es RIL Fy 432 Park Service, _.._ 371 National...C.. Parliamentarian (House), Office of the__________ 274 Parole, Board of... oo nia J ie 8 349 Patent Appeals, United States Court of Cus- tomsand. laia 455 Patent Office. i= oo aude 395 Paymaster Department (Marine Corps)__._____ 365 Pearl Harbor Attack, Joint Committee to In- vestigatethe io tea i tie, 244 People’s Counsel (District of Columbia)_._.____ 477 Periodical Press:'Galleries... cao.o oa. 765 List of persons entitled to admission. ___._.__ 765 Rules governing admission to... cccoooaao 766 Permanent Joint Board on Defense... 438 POtIesiof. oi ie RS 712 Personnel Department (Marine Corps) __-.-----365 Personnel Management, Liaison Office for______ 318 Contents XVII Page Page Public Buildings Administration 424 Duties of. 680 Public Contracts and Wage and Hours Division. 399 Public Debt, Bureau of the (Fiscal Service, Preasury). ci io iii ie 341 Public Health Service. 419 Bureau of Medical Services... ._._.____:___ 420 Bureau of State Serviees..______________._.__ _ 420 National Institute of Health .________.________ 420 Office of the Surgeon General ________________ 419 Duties of 667 Public Housing Authority, Federal .____________ 435 Public Information, Office of (Navy). __________ 358 Public Roads Administration__________________ 424 DULIRS.0F. coir wii a mimeo ei i asmwi 680 Public Utilities Commission, District of Co-lambin. aaa Re ELA LT 477 Public Welfare, Department of (District of Columbia) BY SAE AL CB La 476 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration____ 875 Q Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and Plant_. 382 Quartermaster Department (Marine Corps) .___ 365 R Radio Correspondents’ Galleries._______________ 759 List of persons entitled to admission to_______ 759 Networks, stations, and services represented 1b RAR LB EAA RA re EA Dw 2 gto § Ao 761 Rules governing admission to..____________ ren 03 Radio studios (Capitol)... oo. Ci lao. 282 Railroad, The Alaska. Co co: on i =o 374 Railroad Retirement Board. __.________________ 439 ARIAL ER DEYCSD ed Se 712 Railroad ticketoffles........inion oo 282 Raw Materials Board, Combined (United States and Great Britain) _ _____________ 327 Reciprocity Information, Committee for________ 410 Reclamation Bureaw. fos dois 009 Jag 371 Reconstruction Administration, Puerto Rico__._ 375 Reconstruction Finance Corporation___________ 413 Dutiesofl uithn 649 Recorderof deeds... 2 vo pion oni sion 464 Red Cross, American National . ________________ 406 Registerof Wills. oo 0 obi coe eon 462 Regular and special sessions of Congress, list of. 247 Reporters of debate: HOUSE... nie en or rangi me en hn ES Ea 279 So Eee NO RL AA ES I RTL Ce 271 Reporters to House committees. __._____________ 279 Representatives: Alphabetical st of... io. ociiicavaioiiag 149 Apportioned to the several States under each CENSUS. ribaSa eR aa 262 Assignments of, to committees._._.___________ 214 Biographiesof. 0. oi ne rae a 3 List of, with home post offices and Wash- ington addresses... iain 828 Rooms and telephonesof....... __..______.. 307 Service of, showing Congresses in which it has beenrendered.... c.oiiecdi liao 165 NVotescastlor oo. vio Saondadio 255 Requirements and Allocations, Office of (Agri-culture): ial Aer dea a 387 Personnel, Office of, Department of Agriculture. Personnel, Office of (Coast Guard). ____________ Petroleum Administration for War__.___________ Putlesol. tea Re Lei Petroleum Conservation Division (Interior) ____ Petroleum Resources, Special Committee to Investigate... io li oi Ea Philippines, government of the Commonwealth Photographers Association, White House News. Photographic Institute (Navy) oooooo _.___ Physician at the Capitol, attending____-________ Plant and Operations, Office of .________________ Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural En- gineering. ou. ah oa aE Plant Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and.-. Police: ; Capitol Metropolitan Political classification of Congress_.____________ Postmaster General, biography of _ _____________ Postmaster of the House-.._ Post office, city---Post Office Department. _ Duties of -Bureau of Accounts. _ Bureau of the Chief Inspector... __________. First Assistant Postmaster General ___________ Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ________ Second Assistant Postmaster General .________ Third Assistant Postmaster General ._________ Post office of the Senate. ___ Post-War Economic Policy and Planning, Special Committee on: Potomac River Naval Command, Headquarters. Power Administration, Bonneville ____________ Power Commission, Federal Power, Division of _ __ Power Policy Committee, National _ ___________ Practice, Committee on (Treasury). ____________ President of the United States, biography of___ President pro tempore of the Senate____________ Presidents and Viee Presidents and the Con- gresses coincident with their terms_____ President’s War Relief Control Board __________ Duties of. Press Galleries: List of persons entitled to admission to. ______ Newspapers represented in_ _______.__________ Rules governing admission to_________________ Price, Office of (Agriculture)... _._.____._______ Price Administration, Office of. _ __-____________ Duties of to. nN a ake Printing, Bureau of Engraving and_____________ Printing, Joint Committee on__________________ Duties of. Printing Office, Government. __________________ Prison Industries, Inc., Federal, Justice. _______ Prisons, Bureau of-_-._ Probate Court, Register of Wills and Clerk of the___ Procurement Division, Treasury. _ _.____________ Production and Marketing A dministration__ 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 2 379 366 212 186 364 XVIII Congressional Directory Page Requirements Review Board (Navy) ___..__.____ 359 Requirements Review Committee (Navy) .____ 359 Requirements Review Division (Navy).______ 359 Research Administration, Agricultural ________ 380 Research and Inventions, Office of (Navy)._____ 359 Research and Statistics, Division of. ..____.____ 339 Research Board for National Security. .__._.___ 430 Research Center, Agricultural... _______. 380 Reserve System, Federal... ____...... 417 Resident Commissioners and Delegates: Alphabetical list..........___...[___ lara 156 Assignment tocommittees.._................. 214 Biographies of._ i. oii. ao ai 135 List of, with home post offices and Washing- tonaddresses. ...........oa any on 836 Rooms and telephonesof. ..__________________ 307 Service record in Congress... _________._______ 176 Votesieastior. oi. aoa comis uo dor etdiipit i vaste 261 Retraining and Reemployment Administration. 401 Review, Discharges and Dismissals, Board of__ 356 RFC Mortgage Company.........____.__.___.. 415 Duties of ca 649 Road Commission, Alaska. _....._._____________ 375 Roads Administration, Public... ______________ 424 Rooms and telephones: Representafives. oocoaaoeoaiillilll in 307 Senators: lL Cane ens sebastianBl 305 Roosevelt Library, Franklin D_________________ 431 Trustees of. a da A aR 432 Rubber Development Corporation. ____________ 416 Dutiesiof. .-.---~cioico LL 651 Rules governing admission to— “Periodical Press Galleries .........______..... 766 Press Galleries. i onal oo slong 754 Radio Correspondents’ Galleries_____________. 763 Rural Electrification Administration. ._________ 390 S St. Elizabeths 0. 0. Lilo ..0 422 Hospital... Salmon Fisheries Commission, International Pacific... sic in ioin SEG 427 Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Fed- eral......_.-_.-.-fe waso elo daolt id 434 Savings Bonds, Office of (Navy)... _. 359 Scientific Research and Development, Office of. 320 Seating plan of the House, diagram of _ _________ 304 Seatsiof Senafors. clio mollisids sr 300-303 Second Assistant Postmaster General _____..____ 352 Secret Service... ni ici la niiiba sss ania 340 Secretaries to Senators... ........ ccc cooll0 272 Secretaries to the President, biographies of .____ 317 Secretary of— Agriculture, biography of ._______..___..._ 377 Commerce, biography of _ _ _____.._____ Popa sent d 392 Interior, biography. of... ..... aechdiiitLD 368 Labor, biography of... C00 Go on Ra 398 Navy, blographyof.c.....coi0 tar oso. 355 Senate, blography 0. Lio ls of... 267 State, biography of... 00 Lion TnL us. 329 Treasury, biography of... oi... 0.0 oll Jil i 338 War, blographyof. 0. Laoiiioc20s ns 343 Securities and Exchange Commission __________ 439 Dutiegof oi or rsa lS 716 Security Administration, Farm____._______..__. 384 Security Agency, Federal _________.. anmnmmmante 418 Page Security: Board, Soelal.. oi: iatial 419 Select and special committees: HOUSe. So sci as darnntn bra sd ae ah Le 211 Senate. iis ha i Nan i ea ae ‘185 Selective Service Occupational Deferment of Officers and Employees of Legislative Branch, Joint Committee on_.._...__.. 242 Selective Service System... oooooooooooooooo. 324 Senate: Chamber, diagram of oo. ia cai oti anys, 302 Directory. of no choo ce ie a de aun 303 Office Building Commission__________.____._._.. 237 Personnel of— Chaplain... oi ateat wun 267 Clerks to ooo ooociioe 268 committees... Folding room... oi .. tba ddde solders 270 Office of the— Legislativecounsel._.._...........i.c..... 271 Majority Leader-.. 0. io iva aciioadiondi 267 Majority Whip... f. Josaic. idaieecss 267 Minority Floor Leader. _________.________ 267 Minority Whip... 0...ssa dais 267 Reeretary. cain Seniesahia 267 Sergeant at ATINS. cena iii 270 Official Reporters of Debates of ______.____. 271 Postioffice: . -soliioania ee sulin 270 President pro tempore... ooo.... 267 Secretaries to Senators. ..................... 272 Political classification of... .. cco oii... 146 Special sessionsof....... sala t A Jail 252 Senate committees: Assignments: tos: ov inns eh. 188 Clerks 10... so nl mld tit vaen 268 Meetingdaysof-.:_..0. ...ii.. CRI ns 187 Membershipiof.cveeoaavinan ios sin es 179 Speeciakand seleeb: cos: _oiiisu lana Dron 185 Senators: Alphabetical Hst of... o.oo coo ameilin. 147 Biographiesiof. cco -o roi Ji alibidss 3 Continuous service o.ou tog in 162 of...tia Expiration of terms of service, by groups. ___. 159 List of, with home post offices and Washing- ton addresses. =o. i. oes shone 825 ivauiind Rooms and telephones of. _______________.__ 305 Secretaries to. oo. Sthianiosnial he oun 272 Votesicast for... . oc oi nialieild ton diicenl Sergeant at Arms: House of Representatives, biography of .______ 275 Senate, biography:-of.... io iia. naaasouinaick 270 Services: Apprentice Training.oi tic vo coinSdn 401 Conciliation, United States... __._____________ 398 Employment, United States.....-..__________ 401 Extension, Agriculture Department__________ 378 Fisen], TIeoSUTY.. io er oka Yoiiiien 341 aoc Pishand Wildlife...cou. o 5 c378 Foreign, United States. Vo. o_o oii 515 1h oa Se Re eS Re SOR Eee es 385 Government Information. ______________.___ 318 Rta Le Ra a EEL 373 Immigration and Naturalization.________._.___ 348 National Parle__ o_o o-0 = rd ow eins 371 PublicHealth-.20. wi oie io ~ oo 419 Soll. Conservation ic: no ini Jou, 390 Technical: CWP)... fbi iliaad 346 Contents XIX Page Service and terms in Congress: Delegates: ESI I La 176 Representatives... i oman 165 Resident Commissioners. __________.__________ 176 Senators: Continuousiserviee.....c..lo. a LA oi 162 Expiration of 0 ii 159 terms............. Sessions of Congress, list of. .u_ oo i tile 247 Sessions of the Senate, special, list of ___________ 252 Shipping Adjustment Board, Combined (United y States and Great Britain) ______________ 327 Shipping Administration, War. ________________ 321 Ships, Bureau.of .... io. Tila. 0 a ials 362 Silver Committee, Senate Special .______________ 186 Small Business Enterprises, Special Commit- tee to Study, ete. (Senate). ____________ 186 Small Business, Select Committee to Investi- gate and Study (House). _______________ 212 Smaller War Plants Corporation_ ______________ 325 Duties of... o.oo ar 536 Smithsonian Institution... =. io Zi: 441 Duties of tio fini 0 dling Janine 720 Board of Regents, personnel of ________________ 441 Establishment, personnel of _________________ 441 Branches under direction of: Astrophysical Observatory. ______-___.___.__ 442 Bureau of American Ethnology. .__________ 442 Freer Gallery of Art. i i foil be rid 442 International Exchanges. ___________________ 442 National Collection of Fine Arts____________ 442 National Gallery:of Arb: luito su 442 National Museam...__-...aio i lc. 441 National Zoological Park ___________________ 442 SocisliSecurity Board... oo. iitdiio Lis 419 Duties-of. orn liiz ro Songmei e ion 663 Soil Conservation Service. ______________________ 390 Soldiers’ Home, United States__________________ 442 Solicitor: 4) Agriculture Department______________________ 380 Interior Department... c@ciin yr ans 369 Solid Fuels Administration for War______.___.__ 375 Southwestern Power Administration___________ 375 Speaker of the House of Representatives___._____ 274 Speaker, officeofithe.. cu. coiNDE 274 Special and minority employees of the House.__ 276 Special and select committees: BIOUSG. oni in ieee en ELL ASTI 211 Senate... i asi ol Soin nana ol 185 Special sessions of the Senate, dates of. _________ 252 Stabilization Administrator, Office of _______.__ 323 Stadium Commission, National Memorial ______ 243 Staff College, Army and Navy. ________________ 429 Staff Divisions (Wary. -=: =n on 346 Standards, National Bureau of __________.______ 394 State delegations in Congress. __________._.___.__ 137 State Department... >...oi. o.oo 329 Duties.of cc... haere int divas 538 Relviodisetivitios.. cocoa) hr TG 337 States and Territories, Governors of the_ _______ 263 Statisticalinformation. =o. ol. oi i 247 Statistics, Bureau Labor...ome 399 of io Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of (Navy)... 362 Supplies and Shortages of Food, Particularly Meat, Select Committee to Investigate. 213 Page Supreme Court, United States.______.___________ 449 Biographies of the justices... _______________ 449 Residences of the justices and officials. _______ 451 Surgeon General, Office of the_____ Poa ee 419 Surplus Property and Reconversion, Office of CAgricaltare). ionsa oot 387 Surplus Property Administration _____________ 323 TAaisonofficeat Capitol. -oo cii . o o 283 Survey: Coast and Geodetic... ............... SE eRe 394 Geologieal. i. .. cosd de iii aaa 371 System: Fedoral Reserve... ....cvu i boh ne Danni 417 Selective Service oc. loadeaute 324 T Tariff Commission, United States. _____________ 443 Putiesefs: otisSEE ah xe 722 Tax Court of the United States... ____________ 461 Duties of. soioessiineLd 725 os An Tax Legislative Counsel, Office of the__________ 341 Tax Research, Divisione 2... .._.-i "= 342 Technical Services (War). i. 2 i. 2 ..% 346 Telegraph office, Capitol. ___._________._______. 282 Telephone Exchange, Capitol......_...________. 282. Tennessee Valley ol.co 443 Authority 0. Term? of Senators, expiration of. _ ______________ 159 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission.._ 241 Territorial Officials... .. 0 =% ........ 374 Territories-and Island Possessions, Division of. 374 Third Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 352 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____._ 240 Ticket offices, Capitol: : AIPHResr El SCs ha an Ta 282 Rallroad... coco ini ae gin sb tna a bd NEE 282 Trade Commission, Federal ._._________________ 423 Transportation, Office of (Agriculture) ________ 388 Treasurer of the United States, Office of the____ 341 Treasury Department _.__..._.._.._____._.____ 338 YELL ae St ea I cl 11 553 Bureau of— Comptroller of the Currency. _____________ 339 CURIOS cine ea ima Ee 340 -Engravingand Printing. ....__.____._.__._ 339 Internal Revenue... "oo iiood Jil ious, 341 Nareoties. oof io oii ne 340 Phe. Mints. ita. dunn ab Sn 2 340 Committecon Practice. .....cio.C 342 io CUstomioUSe. fnameZi Sa Vas 340 Division of Monetary Research _____.________ 340 Division of Research and Statisties___________ 339 Divisioniof: Tax Research... .c.....0. 342 Biseal Berviee... oo... oo aha as aia 341 Bureau of Accounts _=ii... 341 00 Bureau of the Public Debt____._____._______ 341 Office of the Treasurer of the United States. 341 Foreign Funds Control... ...... 340 =. Office of General Counsel for the Treasury..._ 339 Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel_________ 341 Procurement Division. -..... o.oo 03 342 BeeveliServieo. ili ar a a 340 WaorPinonce Division... oo 342 Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate_______ 253 Congressional Directory Trust Fund Boards: Page eLibrary.of Congress. = li io lL Nu 286 NationaliArehiuve Js on ves...nota 0 0.048] National Park. i coor surah lucid 376 U Union, Interparliamentary. ooo oo... 239 Wnion, PansAmeriean. [olivier sl 437 United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Ad- ministration. a eer 328 Putlesofsr. van mT 538 United States Territorial Expansion Commis- CH SE DG RR ER am 241 University, Howard... 5 ne era aniiens 423 1, S. Commercial Company... ......_...oeeeae.. 416 TT TU Ne An Rn Pe GI Ee lei 651 Vehicles and traffic, District of Columbia, QIrECtOT Of. svatite ar Sse dia a 475 Veterans’ Administration... eevee e eae. = 444 DIS Os totes dn res dai ham eat 725 wwii Liaison officesat Capitol... .o.icoC oo. Veterans’ Information Center, District + of Columbia. deatoie a Vice Presidents and the Congresses coincident withtheirterms.....c cl. oti aaa Vocational Education, Federal Advisory Board. 421 Vocational Rehabilitation, Office of .____________ 421 Votes cast: Delegates and Resident Commissioners... Senators and Representatives. _____._.__._______ Ww Wage and Hour and Public Contacts Division. 399 War Assets Corporation._.________-AWE LENT 416 War College, Army ._.________.__ EET ER 1 War Communications, Board of .___.___..______ 321 Dubies of usd. la See Lae 534 War Contracts Price Adjustment Board. _______ 325 Putiesol o.oo haa 536 War Damage Corporation... ooona] 416 Duties of... cons soi liso iii nina J 650 War Department... ci icine i dnosdbatesiin 343 Duties of... si is vanadate. 566 ATIMYAIr Forees. o.oo dissin ada, 345 Army Ground Forces..___._. Sena no Army. Service Forces. .....icumenncanis. do Army War College. ....oooioiasicou onl iy Decorations Board. ___..___._ OE RN General Staff. ooo ooo Libis ok liasiinang Special Staff Lil Sars dsisaesl Loaninlly 344 Headquarters Military District of Washington. 346 Related activities.........L. oto oat 347 Three Principal Commands. __._.________._.. 345 Afmy Aly Forees.... bili sill n paiasil 345 Army Ground Forces. ..... i i. i i i 00, 345 War Department—Continued. Page Three Principal Commands—Continued. 4 Army. Service Forces... ..... ronal: 346 Staff Divisions... .. 5... ce 0 beinon) 346 Technical Services... x oo oo. o.oo... 346 War Department Boards, Exempted Stations, Military Missions and Commissions____ 347 War Department General Staff. _ | _____________ 344 War Department Special Staff. ________________ 344 War Finance Division. -.0. alone irs needs 342 War Labor Board, National... ____.. 400 War Mobilization and Reconversion, Office of__ 322 Dutlesof..... od Goblinsnia 535 Office of Contract Settlement ________________ 322 Office of Stabilization Administrator._.________ 323 Surplus Property Administration. ___________ 323 War Production Committee, Joint—United -Statesand Canada...if il 326 o.oo War Relief Control Board, President’s______.__ 324 War Relocation Authority... ___________ 376 War Shipping Administration. ________________ 321 Putlesofi oi losin oi 534 aiasolibgl Washington addresses of Senators, Representa- tives, etc., with home post offices. __.___ 825 Washington City post office. .\________________ 477 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ______________ 240 Washington National Monument Society .__.____ 445 Washington Navy co et wus: Yard... toi... 364 Water Utilization, Officeof......c..ooou iia lol, 388 Waterways Corporation, Inland________________ 392 Wayne Memorial Commission, General An- £7 £77132 en ea CIE ns 2 a Fe le 1 242 Weather Burean..... ool. mosuoiainoil, aoa 395 Weights, Measures, and Markets, Department of (District of Columbia)... ..__..l._. 475 Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol ______ 282 ‘White House Office. ooo... I wi B17 Dublesiol no Loni daisa CREE 531 White House News Photographers Association_ 755 Members represented... izoiinii Lilt 755 Services represented. ....l..oicaanaiann 757 Wildlife Resources, Select Committee on Con- servation of: HH ONS00 ass niin bean Sab l S eae Es 211 Bente...ai ueuiidame na Tanya: Xo Nie 185 al Wildlife Service, Fishand.._._..._..___.._.._. 373 Women’ Ss Bureall... o.oo vnc camden nis 399 Wool, Special Committee to Investigate Pro- duction, Transportation, and Market-Imgoliicaiinsniiains ln ln asek 185 Works Agency, Federal. _ SER CRTCGS 424 Y Yards and Docks, Bureauof.._2:2l i... 363 Z Zoological Park, National... _..____...._. 44 BIOGRAPHICAL* 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; trustee of University of Alabama; member of board of directors, Alabama State Department of Archives and History; delegate at large to the Democratic National Conventions of 1936 and 1940; received 98 votes at Demo-cratic National Convention in 1944 for nomination for Vice President; senior member law firm of Bankhead & Bankhead, of which the late Speaker W. B. Bankhead was a member until his election to Congress in 1916; formed partner-ship with son, W. W. Bankhead, who was elected to Congress in 1940 to succeed his uncle, the late Speaker, but shortly after election he resigned to return to his law practice; in 1941 received the American Farm Bureau Federation award for distinguished and meritorious service in the interest of organized agriculture; 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 LIL. D. degree, University of Alabama, 1939, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1939, and National University, 1941; was admitted to the bar of Alabama in 1915 and commenced the practice of law at Montgomery, Ala., in October 1916; president of the Montgomery Board of Education, 1917-22; served in the Army with the Seventeenth and Seventy-first United States Infantry Regiments during the World War, 1917-19; member of Phi Beta Kappa; married Henrietta Fon-taine McCormick, of Eufaula, Ala.; children, Henrietta Fontaine and L. L.; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John R. Tyson; renominated reelected without opposition to the and Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses, and served from August 14, 1923, urtil 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; -reelected on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1851. 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 *Biographies are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Represent-atives. 3 4 Congressional Darectory ALABAMA 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 mem--ber of the Methodist Church; elected to the Seventh-fourth Congress at a special election held on July 30, 1935, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John McDuffie; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, 1927-37, and as chairman of the Pike County Democratic executive committee, 1927-37; 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; president, Dixie Amateur Baseball League, 1935; Alabama-Florida Baseball League 1936-38; and Alabama Society in Washington, 1944-45; member, Kiwanis, Woodmen of the World, Masons, and Shrine; married Miss Matalie Carter, December 5, 1938, and has one son, George MeclInvale, Jr.; nominated in special Democratic primary on March 11, 1938, and elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election on June 14, 1938, to fill the unexpired term of Congressman Lister Hill, resigned; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lee, Macon, and Russell (10 counties). Population (1940), 303,837. GEORGE WILLIAM ANDREWS, Democrat, of Union Springs, Ala.; born in Clayton, Ala., December 12, 1906; attended the academic department of the University of Alabama and was graduated with LL. B. degree in 1928; is a lawyer by profession; served as circuit solicitor for the third judicial circuit of the State of Alabama (Barbour, Bullock, Russell, and Dale Counties) from 1931 to 1943; at time of election to Congress was serving as lieutenant (junior grade), United States Naval Reserve, at Pearl Harbor, and had been in the United States Naval Reserve 14 months; was released from active duty by the Navy Department to serve in Congress; married Elizabeth Bullock, of Geneva, Ala., November 25, 1936; one daughter, Jane Meredith; fraternities, Sigma Nu, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Phi Delta Phi (legal); elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on March 14, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Henry B. Steagall, serving on Committee on Expenditures in Executive Departments, Roads Committee, and Committee on World War Veterans’ Legislation; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress, serving on Appropriations Committee and Independent Offices Sub-committee. . FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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 House for the impeach-ment trial of Halsted L. Ritter, then judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and served as one of such managers in that trial before the Senate of the United States; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. ALABAMA Biographical FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Chambers, Cherokee, Cleburne, Pe Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Ran-dolph, and Tallapoosa (8 counties). Population (1940), 294,539. ALBERT RAINS, Democrat, of Gadsden, Ala.; was born in De Kalb County, Ala., March 11, 1902; attended the public schools of De Kalb County, Snead Seminary, Boaz, Ala., State Teachers College, Jacksonville, Ala., and the Uni-versity of Alabama; is a lawyer by profession; was admitted to the bar in 1928 and commenced practice in Gadsden, being a member of the firm of Rains & Rains; was deputy solicitor for Etowah County, Ala., 1930-35; city attorney for the city of Gadsden, 1935-44; member of the house of representatives of the Alabama Legislature from Etowah County, 1942-44; married Miss Allison Blair of Centre, Cherokee County, Ala., on December 29, 1939; elected to the Seventy-ninth Con-gress on November 7, 1944. : : SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bibb, Chilton, Greene, Hale, Perry, Shelby, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa (8-counties). Population (1940), 251,757. PETE JARMAN, Democrat, of Livingston, Ala.; bornin Greensboro, Ala., : October 31, 1892; graduated from the University of Alabama, A. B. degree, 1913; chief clerk in probate office of Sumter County, 1913-17; assistant examiner of accounts of the State of Alabama, 1919-30; Secretary of State, 1931-35; assistant State comptroller, 1935-36; member of the State Democratic executive com-mittee, 1927-31, second and first lieutenant in the Three Hundred and Twenty-seventh Infantry during the World War, slightly wounded on the western front; inspector general of Alabama National Guard, with rank of major, 1922-24; division inspector of the Thirty-first Infantry Division, 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; member of the Methodist Church, Masons, Woodmen of the World, Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Military Order of World War, Purple Heart, Forty and Eight, and honorary member Kiwanis; president, Alabama Society in Washington, 1941-42; member of board of governors of Jeffer-son Islands Club; Tuscaloosa Riding Club; 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses; married to Miss Mae Emma Guyton, of Jasper, Ala.; Baptist and Mason. 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 County High School, at Hartselle, and the University of Alabama, at Tuscaloosa, where he received the degrees of A. B. in 1921, LL. B. in 1923, and A. M. in 1924; Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternities; a Mason, Woodman of the World, and Jr. O. U. A. M.; Kiwanian; member American Legion; is a lawyer by profession; was admitted to the bar in 1923 and commenced practice in Hunts-ville, being a member of the firm of Taylor, Richardson & Sparkman, of Huntsville, until he retired upon election to Congress in order to give his full time to his con-gressional duties; was a member of the Students Army Training Corps during the World War; is a lieutenant colonel in the Organized Reserves; married to Miss Ivo Hall, of Albertville, Ala., on June 2, 1923, and they have one daughter—Julia Ann (Mrs. Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr.); 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, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Sev-enty-ninth Congresses; member of Military Affairs Committee and of Select Com-mittee on Postwar Military Policy. Congressional Directory ARIZONA NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNtyY: Jefferson. Population (1940), 459,930. LUTHER PATRICK, Democrat, of Birmingham, Ala.; born in Morgan County, Ala.; attended L. 8. U. in Louisiana and Purdue University in Indiana; was graduated from the University of Alabama; lawyer; writer; city attorney, Fairfield, Ala.; assistant attorney general of Alabama; assistant United States attorney, northern district of Alabama; veteran World War I; married Pearl McPherson; one child, daughter, Patricia, 8 years of age; member of Methodist Church; Mason, Knights of Pythias, Elk, Shriner, Lions, Eagle, and American Legion; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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, 1938, and 1944. 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 politieal 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, 16 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 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944 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 N ARKANSAS Brographical 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; father of three children—Rachael Murdock Ellis, Scottsdale, Ariz., Lit. David N. Murdock, killed in action in Sicily, August 11, 1943, Maj. John B. Murdock, Sixty-seventh Fighter Wing, APO 557, New York; 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942; and to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. ARKANSAS (Population (1940) 1,949,387) SENATORS 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; prosecuting attorney of the seventh judicial district of Arkansas, 1926-30; member of Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Congresses from the Sixth Congressional District of Arkansas; elected United States Senator November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943. 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; LL. D. degree (honorary) Gettysburg College in 1944; attorney, United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, 1934-35; instructor in law, George Washington University and University of Arkansas, 1935-39; presi-dent of the University of Arkansas, 1939-41; president of the J. H. Phipps Lumber Co.; chairman, United States Delegation to Educational Conference, London, England, 1944; 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; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. ; 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 (deceased), and Virgie Garner Gathings; attended Earle (Ark.) High School and University of Alabama; was graduated from the Univer-sity of Arkansas with LL. B. degree in 1929; married Miss Tolise Kirkpatrick on April 6, 1939, and they have two children, one daughter, Tolise Kirkpatrick Gathings, born April 22, 1940, and one son, Joseph Royston Gathings 2d, born March 26, 1945; 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, 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 suc-ceeding Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1940), 177,476. JAMES WILLIAM TRIMBLE, Democrat, of Berryville, Ark.; born in Osage, Carroll County, Ark., February 3, 1894; received a common school education in Carroll County, Ark., and was graduated from the University of Arkansas in 1917; lawyer; prosecuting attorney of the fourth judicial circuit of Arkansas; judge of the fourth judicial circuit; married Miss Ruth Maples, of Berryville, Ark., February 14, 1922; one son, James Kerry; member of the American Legion and the Method-ist Church; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. ; FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 Forth Smith, University of Arkansas, University of Pittsburgh, and Washington and Lee University; lawyer; married 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; 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 Club (district governor, 1926-27); Baptist; Mason (KCCH); elected November 3, 1942, to Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1940), 303,301. ; W. F. NORRELL, Democrat, of Monticello, Ark; born August 29, 1896, at Milo, Ark.; educated in public schools, A. & M. College, College of the Ozarks (LL. D., honorary); licensed and practicing attorney in Supreme Court of Arkansas and United States Supreme Court; member of bar associations; ex-soldier of World War No. 1, charter member of Joe S. Harris Post No. 2, American Legion, Department of Arkansas; member First Baptist-Church (Deacon), Monticello, Ark.; member, F. & A. M., Council, Eastern Star (past Worthy Grand Patron of Arkansas), R. A. M. Chapter No. 115, Monticello, thirty-second degree Mason, Consistory of Little Rock; and Lions Club; elected to State senate of Arkansas in 1931, reelected in 1935, serving 8 successive. years; elected president of State senate from 1933 to 1937, during which time served on several occasions as acting Governor; married Catherine Dorris in 1924 and they have one child, a daughter, Judy Norrell; 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, Ark., Henderson College, Arkadelphia, Clark County, Ark., with A. B. degree, and LL. B. degree from Cumberland University Law School, Lebanon, Tenn.; engaged in the practice of law since 1930; admitted to practice in the United States Supreme Court; deputy prosecuting attorney of Union County, 1933-36; elected prosecuting attorney of the thirteenth judicial circuit, composed of Union, Ouachita, Columbia, and Calhoun Counties, in 1936; reelected in 1938 without opposition; member of the Baptist Church, a Mason, Knights of Pythias, and CALIFORNIA Biographical Lions International Civie Club (district governor of the 7-B district of Arkansas, 1939-40) ; married to Miss Ruth Ross, of Clark County, Ark., May 9, 1934; one daughter, Carolyn Marie; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses without oppo-sition. CALIFORNIA (Population (1940) 6,907,387) SENATORS SHERIDAN DOWNEY, Democrat, of San Francisco, 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; reelected November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND, Republican, of Piedmont, Calif.; born in Ala-meda, Calif., on June 26, 1908; was graduated from the public schools of Alameda and from the University of California; is assistant publisher of the Oakland (Calif.) Tribune; served from 1933 to 1935 as a member of the California State Assembly and from 1935 to 1939 as State senator; during his services in the State senate served as chairman of the Committee on Revenue and Taxation and as vice chairman of the Committee on Education; in 1938 was named as Republican national committeeman from California, and in 1940 was selected as a member, and later as chairman, of the executive committee; married Helen D. Herrick and they have three children—Emelyn, age 17, Joseph, age 15, and Estelle, age 8; served in World War II for 3 years in the United States Army as enlisted man and officer, 18 months of which time was in England, France, Belgium, and Germany, and was still overseas when appointed United States Senator by Gov. Earl Warren; was appointed to the United States Senate on August 14, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hiram W. Johnson for the term ending January 3, 1947, and took the oath of office on September 5, 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-fiftth 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, 1942, and 1944; chairman of the Democratic caucus of the Seventy-third Congress; chairman, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, beginning with the Seventy-fifth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (18 counties). Population (1940), 218,002. - CLAIR ENGLE, Democrat, of Red Bluff, Calif.; born in the city of Bakers-field, Kern County, Calif., on September 21, 1911; graduate of the Chico State College and the University of California Hastings College of the Law; married to Hazel Burney of San Francisco; one daughter, Yvonne, age 11 years; elected district attorney of Tehama County, Calif., in 1934, reelected in 1938; elected State senator in 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held on August 31, 1943, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Harry L. Engle-bright; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; assistant Democratic whip; member of the following committees: War Claims (chairman), Coinage, Weights and Measures, Mines and Mining, Public Lands, Roads, and World War Veterans’ Legislation. 10° Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA 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; awarded the Silver Star Medal; married Elizabeth Alpers, of Westfield, N. J.; two children— William A., 23, lieutenant in Army Air Forces, and Mary E., 17; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTY OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 19, 20, 21, and 22. Population (1940), FRANCK ROBERTS HAVENNER, Democrat, of San Francisco, Calif.; born in Sherwood, Md., September 20, 1882; attended Columbian College, Washington, D. C., and Stanford University, California; newspaper writer; member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, 1926-36; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; appointed in January 1941 a member of the California Railroad Commission for a 6-year term; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. PIE DISTRICT. re SAN FrANcIScO: Assembly districts 23, 24, 25, and 26. Population (1940), 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA, ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 10, 13, 14, and 3 15. Population (1940), 356,509. V GEORGE P. MILLER, Democrat, of Alameda, Calif.; born in [San Francisco, Calif., January 15, 1891; was graduated from St. Mary’s College with the dagree of B. S. in C. E.; veteran of World War I, serving as lieutenant, Field Artillery, and was graduated from the School of Fire for Field Artillery at Fort Sill, Okla.; executive secretary to the California Division of Fish and Game, 1941-44; served two terms in the California State Assembly, fifty-second and fifty-third sessions, 1937 and 1939; married Esther Perkins and they have one daughter, Ann, age 17; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, and 18. Population (1940), 256,956. JOHN H. TOLAN, Democrat, of Oakland, Calif.; born at St. Peter, Minn.; 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, Seventh-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Con-gresses; member of the Committee on the Judiciary. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: San Benito, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz (4 counties). Population (1940), 343,180. "JACK 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the Committee on Naval Affairs. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fresno, Madera, Merced, and Stanislaus (4 counties). Population (1940), 323,733. : 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’ , CALIFORNIA Biographical : 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 February 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; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; honorary life member of the United Spanish War Veterans; in Congress, the author of the act establishing Armistice Day a national holiday; a member of the Sons of the American Revolution, qualifying as a descendant of Capt. Jacob Gearhart, who, at Trenton, N. J., crossed the Delaware with Gen. George Wash-ington on that memorable Christmas Eve; member of the State Athletic Com-mission by appointment of Gov. G. O. Young in 1931; member of the board of directors of the California Veterans’ Home by appointment of Gov. James Rolph in 1932; elected and served as one of the 22 delegates to the California Constitu-tional Convention of 1933; honorary life member of Sierra Club; president, California State Society, 1942-43; member of the National Press and Army and Navy Clubs of Washington, D. C., and the University-Sequoia and Elks’ Clubs of Fresno, Calif. ; honorary member, National Exchange Club; member of the Frater-nal Order of Eagles, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Native Sons of the Golden West, and Knights of Pythias; nominated by both the Republican and Democratic Parties and elected without major party opposition to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the Committee on Ways and Means. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, 16, and John, 3; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. : TWiki DISTRICT.—Los 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, IIL, was first director of Dray Cottage Episcopal Home for Boys in State of Wyoming Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRIVINTH, DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 54, and 56. Population | NED R. HEALY, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Milwaukee, Wis., August 9, 1905, son of Dr. Romeyn James and Laura Neussel Healy; educated in the public schools of Milwaukee, Marquette University, and the University of Wisconsin; on June 27, 1929, married Helen, eldest daughter of Maud Saxton Nelson and Louis M. Nelson, attorney, of Marinette, Wis.; three children—Jean-nine 14, Peter 13, and Nelson 12; came to California in September 1932; production manager of Avery Adhesives, Los Angeles; director of Hollywood office, Cali-fornia State Relief Administration; elected member of Los Angeles City Council May 4, 1943; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. UE DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 44, 55, 62, and 64. Population HELEN GAHAGAN DOUGLAS, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Boonton, N. J., November 25, 1900, daughter of Walter Hamer (deceased) and Lillian Rose (Mussen) Gahagan, and great-great granddaughter of William Gahagan, who with 18 others founded Dayton, Ohio, in 1796; educated in Berkeley School for Girls, Brooklyn, N. Y., Capen School for Girls, Northampton, Mass., and Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, N. Y.; profession— stage star and opera singer; Democratic National Committeewoman for California, 1940-44; vice chairman, Democratic State Central Committee, and chairman, . Women’s Division, 1940-44; served on National Advisory Committee, WPA, and State Committee, NYA; member of Board of Governors of California Housing and Planning Association; Presidential appointee, Voluntary Participation Committee, OCD; married; husband, Maj. Melvyn Douglas; children—son, Peter Gahagan, age 11; daughter, Mary Helen, age 6; foster son, Gregory, age 18; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. EN isTaICT. Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 57, 58, 63, and 65. Population GORDON L. McDONOUGH, Republican, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., January 2, 1895; educated in Pennsylvania; profession, industrial chemist; specialized in metallurgy and explosives manufacturing; married Cather-ine Ann McNeil, of Niagara Falls, N. Y., in September 1916; has family of seven children, five sons and two daughters; all five sons are in the armed services; they are: Lt. (jg) Gordon L., Jr., Thomas C., and James Q. in the Navy, and Vincent S. and Paul M. in the Army; citation from U. S. Navy for civilian recruit-ing aid; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Belleau Woods Post, Los Angeles; citation from Carbrillo Assembly, Fourth Degree, Knights of Columbus, for civic, patriotic, and humanitarian leadership; member of executive committee of Los Angeles Metropolitan Area Council, Boy Scouts of America; honorary member, Southwest Los Angeles Kiwanis Club; member of Lodge 99, B. P. O. Elks, Los Angeles, Calif.; appointed a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors by the late Gov. James Rolph, Jr., of California, in August 1933; elected three successive times to 4-year terms; first chairman of Los Angeles County War Council; served 1 year as chairman of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors; elected to a 4-year term of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors May 16, 1944; nominated as Republican candidate for Congress-man of the Fifteenth California District July 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 59, 60, and 61. Population (1940), 330,350. . ELLIS E. PATTERSON, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Yuba City, Calif., November 28, 1898; educated in public schools; A. B. degree, Uni-versity of California; attorney at law; served in the United States Navy in First World War, in merchant marine after the war; taught school in Colusa County, Calif.; served 10 years as district superintendent of schools, South Monterey County; elected to State assembly three times, 1932-38, once as write-in candi-date; Lieutenant Governor, State of California, 1938-42; married Helen Hjelte in 1928; three children, Ellis, Jr., Helen Jane, Robert Edward; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. CALIFORNIA Biographical 13 SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 46, 66, 67, and 68. Popula-tion (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; 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 Sonn on November 3, 1942; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on Novem- er 7, 1944. ; A A DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population CLYDE DOYLE, Democrat, of Long Beach, Calif., was born in Oakland, Calif., July 11, 1887; father, Thomas Doyle; mother, Nettie Gilman Doyle; attended grammar school in Oakland, Calif., and Seattle, Wash.; graduated from Long Beach High School in 1909; graduated from the College of Law of the University of Southern California with LL. B. degree on June 17, 1917; continued to attend College of Law after successfully passing Supreme Court examination in 1916; began law practice in 1916 at Long Beach, Calif., in law firm of Haskell, Keeler & Doyle; elected president of Board of Freeholders, Long Beach, in 1921; subsequently was elected by public vote to serve on Board of Freeholders and draw the city charter of Long Beach; organizing president and first member of Kiwanis Club of Long Beach; first president of Boy Scout Council of Boy Scouts of America, Long Beach, Calif.; chairman for several years of tuberculosis stamp sales; counsel and member of board of trustees of Adelaide Tichenor Hospital-School for Crippled Children; served as attorney and as member of board of directors of Long Beach Social Welfare League for several years; member of board of directors of Long Beach Y. M. C. A.; member of board of trustees of California Junior Republic for about 10 years; president, Long Beach Recreation Commission, for about 15 years; president, Long Beach Coordinating Council, 1934; honorary member of National Recreation Association for about 10 years; member, board of directors of California Conference of Social Work, 1934; honor-ary member of Long Beach 20-30 Club for about 10 years; past president, Long Beach Trojan Club; received Meritorious Citizenship Award in the Inter-allied Council of Service Clubs, Long Beach, Calif., April 1936; during the First World War was married and had children, serving as counsel for exemption board on volunteer basis with no salary; married in 1914 to Lydia Yeomans, daughter of F. C. Yeomans, early Long Beach pioneer; three children—Lydia Louise Doyle, teacher in a day nursery for war workers’ children; First Lt. Clyde Doyle, Jr. (deceased), served in the Army Air Corps; and Dorothy Grace Stanton; mem-ber of First Congregational Church, Long Beach, and of Masonic Lodge, Sciots and Knights Templar; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. ADELE DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 40, 51, and 52. Population 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, receiving 57,000 to opponent’s 21,000. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population z (1940), 352,326. CARL HINSHAW, Republican, of Pasadena, Calif.; born in Chicago, Ill, July 28, 1894; son of William Wade and Anna Williams Hinshaw; educated in Chicago public schools; Valparaiso University, Indiana; Princeton University (degree, civil engineer, 1916); University of Michigan (postgraduate in business administration, 1916-17); enlisted in United States Army, May 8, 1917; served in American Expeditionary Forces, and resigned as captain, Corps of Engineers, September 1919, returning to Chicago; was employed first as a laborer and then progressed to various managerial capacities in automotive manufacturing and 78349°_79-2—1st ed. 3 Congressional Directory COLORADO 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Imperial, Orange, and Riverside (3 counties). Popula- tion (1940), 296,024. pies JOHN PHILLIPS, Republican, of Banning, Calif.; born in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., September 1887; attended the public schools and Haverford (Pa.) College, holding teaching fellowship; 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 District in Congress; married; three children; member of the Triangle Society, University Club (Washington), San Francisco Press Club, National Press Club (Washington), Adventurers Club, Masonic fraternity, B. P. O. E., Commonwealth Club (San Francisco), American Legion, Kiwanis Club; member of the Presby-terian Church; member of the United States delegation to the XIth World’s Dairy Congress in Berlin in 1937; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY: San Diego. Population (1940), 289,348. EDOUARD VICTOR MICHEL IZAC, Democrat, of San Diego, Calif.; was born in Cresco, Iowa; educated in schools of Iowa and Minnesota and was gradu-ated from the United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis, with the class of 1915, served as ensign, lieutenant (junior grade), and senior lieutenant in the Navy on various men-of-war; during the World War for service above and beyond the call of duty was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor and was further deco-rated. 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 post commander of the D. A. V.; past post commander of the American Legion; national aide-de-camp of the . F. W.; and member of the Legion of Valor; was married in 1915 to Miss Agnes Cabell, daughter of Gen. and Mrs. De R. C. Cabell, United States Army; they have six children—Cabell (Mrs. Robert Melvin Waller); Edouard, Jr., De Rosey Charles, Suzanne, Forrest, and André; was nominee for Gongress of Democratic and Progressive Parties in 1934; was elected to Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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 \ COLORADO Biographical 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; elected November 3, 1942, to complete term of the late Senator Alva B. Adams expiring January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for 6-year term. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City AND COUNTY OF DENVER. Population (1940), 392,412. DEAN MILTON GILLESPIE, Republican, of Denver, Colo.; born in Salina, Kans., May 3, 1884, son of David M. Gillespie, M. D., and Isabelle Black Gillespie; attended Salina Normal University; engaged in farming and cattle business, Clay County, Kans.; moved to Denver, Colo., in 1905; now president, Dean Gillespie & Co.; president, Colorado Springs Bus Co.; vice president and treasurer, Bluhill Foods Corporation, of Denver; president, Motoroyal Oil Co., Denver; married Lillie Baldwin in 1908; daughters, Jeanne Gillespie Land, Port Washington, N. Y., and Ruth Gillespie, Columbia University, New York; clubs, Rotary, Denver, Denver Athletic, Wigwam; member of Society of Automotive Engineers, Society for Research of Meteorites, Society of American Military Engineers, and Army Ordnance -Association; Elk, Mason, Shriner; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on March 7, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused hy the death of Lawrence Lewis; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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 8. 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. 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 Rebecea 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 / Congressional Directory CONNECTICUT | 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 five chil-dren—William, Wanda, Jack, James, and Ruth Anne; 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; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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 (deceased); 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 candidate for Governor, 1930; member Seventy-seventh Congress (1941-43), Fourth Colorado District; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member State Board of Agriculture, 1932-40, 1940-48; Mason (Knight Templar and thirty-second degree); Episcopalian; club, Rotary. CONNECTICUT (Population (1940), 1,709,242) SENATORS BRIEN McMAHON, Democrat, of Wilson Point, South Norwalk, Conn., was born in Norwalk, Conn., on October 6, 1903; attended the Norwalk public and high ‘schools; was graduated from Fordham University with B. A. degree in 1924 and from the law school of Yale University with LL. B. degree in 1927; judge, City Court of Norwalk, 1933; served as special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1933-35; served as Assistant Attorney General of the United States from 1935 to 1939 and was in charge of the Department of Justice Criminal Divi-sion; married Miss Rosemary Turner in February 1940, and they have one daugh-ter, Patricia, age 3; elected United States Senator November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. THOMAS CHARLES HART, Republican, of Sharon, Conn.; born at Davidson, Mich., June 12, 1877; graduated from the Naval Academy, 1897; married Caroline Brownson, March 30, 1910; children—Mrs. LaVerne Baldwin, Lt. Roswell R. Hart, U. S. N. R., Commander Thomas C. Hart, Jr., U.S. N. (died in service June 1945), Ensign Caroline B. Hart, U. S. N. R., and Harriet T. Hart; served in the Regular Navy from graduation until February 14, 1945, when placed on inactive list as admiral (retired); naval career covered service afloat in Spanish-American War and both World Wars; appointed to the United States Senate to fill the unexpired term of Senator Francis Maloney, deceased, and took office on February 15, 1945. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 1,709,242. JOSEPH F. RYTER, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn.; born in Hartford, Conn., February 4, 1914; attorney at law; was graduated from St. S. S. Cyril and Methodius Roman Catholic School and attended St. Thomas Seminary, 1927-33; was graduated from Trinity College in 1935, with B. A. degree, and from Hart-ford College of Law in 1938, with LL. B. degree; admitted to the Connecticut bar, July 12, 1938, and to the Federal bar, January 9, 1940; assistant clerk, Hartford Police Court, 1939-41; assistant clerk, Hartford City Court, 1941-43; delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1940; president, Pulaski Fed-eration of Democratic Clubs of Connecticut, 1939-42; married Mary C. Walsh, of Hartford, Conn., on December 28, 1943; daughter, Roberta Ann; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. : Sonar Biographical 7 FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Hartford. Population (1940), 450,189. HERMAN PAUL KOPPLEMANN, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn.; born May 1, 1880; resident of Hartford since 1882; educated in the public schools and attended Hartford High School; publishers’ agent for newspapers and maga-zines; married Adeline Augusta Greenstein, of Hartford; member of city council in 1904 and elected its president in 1911; member of Connecticut House of Rep-resentatives, 1913-14, and served as State senator, 1917-20, sponsoring several acts, most notable being the widows’ aid and children’s dependent act; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses; member Banking and Currency Committee; sponsored Kopplemann resolution for inves-tigation into dairy industry, law providing loans to industry and business, tobacco legislation, and Walsh-Kopplemann Flood Rehabilitation Act; honorary mem-. ber, Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; member of the Appropria-tions Committee. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties). Population (1940), 269,312. CHASE GOING WOODHOUSE, Democrat, of New London, Conn.; educated at Science Hill School, Shelbyville, Ky.; McGill University; University of Berlin, and University of Chicago; professor of economics, Connecticut College, and managing director, Institute of Women’s Professional Relations; formerly taught economics at Smith College and at summer sessions at Teachers College Colum-bia University, University of Texas, University of Iowa, ete.; personnel, director Woman’s College, University of North Carolina; senior economist, Bureau of Home Economics, United States Department of Agriculture; consultant, National Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnel, War Manpower Commission; active in League of Women Voters, American Association of University Women, Amer-ican Home Economics Association, American College Personnel Association, and Council of Guidance and Personnel Associations; past president, Altrusa Inter-national; former chairman, New London Democratic Town Committee; secretary of the State of Connecticut 1941-42; president, Connecticut Federation of Dem-ocratic Women’s Clubs; author of books and articles on women’s’ work and education; husband, Edward James Woodhouse; children, Noel R. S., captain 3. -F.), and Margaret; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November , 1944, 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. JAMES P. GEELAN, Democrat, of New Haven, Conn.; born in New Haven, Conn., August 11, 1901, son of Thomas E. and Mary M¢Donnell Geelan; educated in the public schools of New Haven and St. Anthony’s College, San Antonio, Tex.; married Elizabeth Marie Doll, October 9, 1933, and has four children; for a number of years was engaged in the retail business in New Haven; elected to the State senate in 1938, 1940, and 1942; assistant clerk of the New Haven City Court, 1941 to 1943; presently engaged in the insurance business; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Fairfield. Population (1940), 418,384. CLARE BOOTHE I UCE, Republican, of Greenwich, Conn.; born in New York City, N. Y.; graduated from St. Mary’s Episcopal 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; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. COUNTY, NEW HAVEN CouUNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Wolcott Population (1940), 247,601. " FIFTH DISTRICT.—LitcHFIELD 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 in 1922 and from the Yale School of Law in 1925; admitted to the Connecticut bar in 1925; prosecuting attorney, 1928-33; judge, 1935-37; treasurer of the State of Connecticut, 1939-41; workmen’s compensation com­ 18 Congressional Directory | FLORIDA missioner, Fifth District, Connecticut, 1941-January 20, 1942; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress in a special election on January 20, 1942; reelected to Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; married and has four children; member of House Committee on the Judiciary; is a member of American, New Haven, Je Sy orhuty Bar Associations; member of Rotary, B. P. O. E,, F. O. ., 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 Conventions, 1916, 1940, and 1944; 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 United States Senate on November 5, 1940, for a 6-year term beginning January 3, 1941. 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 Universityof 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; member of Republican National Committee, 1930-37; president of Equitable Trust Co., Wilmington, Del., 1931-41; chafrman of the Board of Equitable Trust Co., Wilmington, Del., 1941, to present time; married Alice duPont Wilson, May 5, 1921; children—Paul E. Wilson, Mrs. William E. Haible, C. Douglass Buck, Jr., and Mrs. Donald K. Farquhar; 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. PHILIP ANDREW TRAYNOR, Democrat, of Wilmington, Del.,, son of Andrew and Elizabeth Traynor; educated in the public schools, Goldey Business College of Wilmington, Del., and University of Delaware, Newark, Del.; was graduated from University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia, Pa., with D. D. 8. degree in 1895; former president and treasurer Delaware State Dental Society; member since 1918 and president of the Dental Examining Board of Delaware; member of Fraternal Order of Eagles, Fraternal Order of Elks, member Demo-cratic League, member Knights of Columbus; married; elected to Seventy-seventh and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FLORIDA (Population (1940), 1,897,414) SENATORS CHARLES O. ANDREWS, Democrat, of Orlando, Fla.; born in Holmes County, Fla., and educated in the public schools of Florida, South Florida Military Institute, and holds diplomas from Florida State Normal and the University of [ | 1 FLORIDA Biographical 19 Florida; captain, Company M, First Regiment, Florida National Guard; volun- teered for the Spanish-American War and applied for service in the First World War; bill secretary of the Florida 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; Florida Supreme Court, 1929-32; president of the Florida State Bar Association, 1921-22; member of American, Florida State, and Orange County. Bar Associations, . Rotary Club, Masons, Florida University Alumni Association, and Pi. Kappa ~ Alpha fraternity; legal fraternity of Phi Delta Phi; elected to the United States Senate November 3, 1936, and reelected for a 6-year term November 5, 1940; honorary degree, LL. D., Rollins College, 1941; married Miss Margaret Spears, of Tallahassee, and has three sons. CLAUDE PEPPER, Democrat, of Tallahassee, Fla.; born on a farm near Dudleyville, in Chambers County, Ala., September 8, 1900, son of J. W. and L. C. Pepper; married December 29, 1936, to Irene Mildred Webster, of St. Peters-burg, Fla.; common-school education—Camp Hill, Ala.; taught in Dothan public schools before entering college; served in the Students’ Army Training Corps, University of Alabama, October 7 to December 12, 1918; A. B., University of Alabama, 1921; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1924; taught law, University of Arkansas, school year 1924-25; engaged in the general practice of law at Perry, Fla., from 1925 until 1930, and at Tallahassee, Fla., from 1930 until elected to the United States Senate; served in the State house of representatives from Taylor County, session of 1929; member of the State Democratic executive committee, 1928-29; the Florida State Board of Public Welfare, 1931-32; the Florida State Board of Law Examiners in 1933, and the executive council of the Florida State Bar Association in 1934; member of the American Legion, the American Bar Association, and the Florida State Bar Association; Baptist, Mason, Shriner, Elk, Kiwanian; 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 and 1944; honorary degree of doctor of laws from McMaster University 1941, Toronto University 1942, University of Alabama 1942, and Rollins College, Winter Park, Fla., 1944; nominated without opposition in a special primary July 11, 1936, and on November 3, 1936, elected to succeed the late Duncan U. Fletcher in the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for an additional 6-year term. : REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Hardee, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, and Saratoga, (9 counties). Population (1940), 439,895. JAMES HARDIN PETERSON, Democrat, of Lakeland, Polk County, Fla.; was born in Batesburg, S. C., February Il, 1894; graduate of Lakeland High School and of the college of law of the University of Florida, receiving LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar in 1914; for a number of years specialized in municipal law; served 16 years as city attorney of Lakeland, and also represented a number of other cities; for 10% years was prosecuting attorney and solicitor of the criminal court, Polk County, Fla.; served several terms as chairman of the legislative committee of the Florida League of Municipalities; special counsel for the depart-ment of agriculture, State of Florida; served in the Navy during the World War; member of the Masonic lodge, Knights Templar, Ancient and Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Knights of Pythias, D. O. K. K., Navy Club (Fort Myers, Fla.), Army and Navy Club (St. Petersburg, Fla.) ; honorary member, Navy Club, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Navy Club, Tampa, Fla.; United States Naval Reserve Officers Association, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the American Legion; Phi Kappa Phi Honor Fraternity, and Phi Alpha Delta; married and has two children—Mrs. C. B. Myers, Jr., and J. Hardin, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Con-gresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Gilchrist, 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 20 Congressional Directory FLORIDA 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, Okaloosa County, Fla.; born at Isabella, Worth County, Ga., June 3, 1906, son of Ben F. and Clara Ford Sikes; farm reared; received bachelor’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 Demo-cratic executive committee, 1934; served with Democratic National Committee, 1936, 1940, and 1944; elected to Florida State Legislature in 1936 and 1938; member of Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Zsta, Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Sigma, Alpha Gamma Rho, Masons, Knights Templar, Knights of Pythias, Kiwanis, Junior Chamber of Commerce, B. P. O. E., V. F. W., and American Legion; president, Florida Press Association, 1937; Methodist; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Collier, Dade, and Monroe (3 counties). Population (1940), 286,919. : PAT CANNON, Democrat, of Miami, Fla. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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 Florida 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-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress without Democratic or Republican opposition; received Democratic nomination in 1940 for the Seventy-seventh Congress without opposition; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; renominated for fourth term over two Democratic opponents on May 5, 1942, and reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTES: Broward, Charlotte, De Sota, Glades, Hendry, Indian River, Lee, Martin, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie (11 counties). Population (1940), 186,831. DWIGHT L. ROGERS, Democrat, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was born near Reidsville, Tattnall County, Ga., August 17, 1886, son of William Millard and Augusta Laing Rogers; educated in the public schools of Reidsville and Locust Grove Institute; was graduated from the University of Georgia (B. S. degree) in 1909 and from the law department, Mercer University (L. B. degree) in 1910; admitted to bar for the practice of law at Ocilla, Ga., with his brother, H. L. Rogers, until 1925, at which time he moved to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and engaged in the practice of law with John E. Morris; representative from Broward County in the Florida Legislature from 1930 to 1938; speaker pro tempore of the house in 1933; father of the ‘Florida homestead amendment’; member of Century of Progress (World’s Fair at Chicago); chairman of Appeal Board No. 4, of the Selective Service System for 3% years; member of Methodist Church, Phi Delta Theta (Georgia Gamma), Sphinx (University of Georgia), Kiwanian; married Miss Florence Roberts, of Atlanta, Ga., November 15, 1916; they have three children—Dwight L., Jr. (lieutenant, U. S. N. R.), Paul G. (captain in the Army), and Doyle, attending high school; elected as first Congressman from the Sixth Congressional District of Florida to the Seventy-ninth Congress No-vember 7, 1944, : GEORGIA : : Biographical 21 : 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, again on November 8 1938, and again on November oy! 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; married Lucy Heard, 1903; two sons, Heard F. George and Joseph Marcus George (killed in action). RICHARD BREVARD RUSSELL, Democrat, of Winder, was born at Winder, Ga., November 2, 1897; graduated from Seventh District Agricultural and Mechanical School, Powder Springs, 1914; from Gordon Institute, 1915; and from the University of Georgia, B. L. degree, 1918; practiced law at Winder, Ga.; member of the American Legion; representative from Barrow County in the General Assembly of Georgia, 1921— 31; speaker pro tempore, 1923-26; speaker, 1927-28, 1929-31; member of committee of five to revise the Code of Georgia, 1929; Governor of Georgia, June 27, 1931, to January 10, 1933; chairman of the Georgia delegation to the Democratic National Convention at ‘Chicago in 1932; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. William J. Harris, and took his seat January 12, 1933, 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; grad-uated from high school and the Brewton Parker Institute, 1916; attended Univer-sity of Georgia and the United States Military Academy at West Point, N. Y.; farmer; lawyer; editor of the Montgomery Monitor, Mount Vernon, Ga.; Meth. odist; Mason; member of the American Legion; former mayor of Adley; 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, Sa Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Thomas, Tift, and Worth (14 counties). Population io), EDWARD EUGENE COX; Democrat, of Camilla, Ga.; son of SA 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, ; Shs, 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 22 Congressional Directory GEORGIA 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—' Albert Sidney Camp, Jr., and Molly Farmer Camp; Methodist; Mason; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress on August 1, 1939, to fill the unexpired term of the late E. M. Owen; reelected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: De Kalb, Fulton, and Rockdale (3 counties). Pcpulation (1940), 487,552. [Vacant.] SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baldwin, Bibb, Bleckley, Crawford, Glascock, Hancock, Jasper, Jeffer-son, Johnson, Jones, Laurens, Monroe, Putnam, Twiggs, Washington, and Wilkinson (16 counties), Population (1940), 289,404. CARL VINSON, Democrat, of Milledgeville, was born November 18 1883, in Baldwin County; educated at the Georgia Military College at Milledgeville, Ga.; graduated from Mercer University Law School in 1902; commenced the practice of law the same year in Milledgeville; solicitor (prosecuting attorney) for Baldwin County, Ga., 3 years; served two terms (1909-12) in the General Assembly of Georgia; speaker pro tempore during the term 1911-12; judge of the county court of Baldwin County 2 years; married; elected November 3, 1914, to the Sixty-third Congress to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses from the Tenth District; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses from the new Sixth Dis-trict; chairman, Naval Affairs Committee since December 1931. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Douglas, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (14 counties). Population (1940), 308,761. MALCOLM CONNOR TARVER, Democrat, of Dalton, was educated in the common schools of Whitfield County, Ga., McLellan High School, Dalton, Ga., and Mercer Law School, Macon, Ga.; admitted to the bar June 8, 1904; practiced law at Dalton since that date, with exception of period of service on the bench; elected to lower house of Georgia General Assembly, 1908; reelected, 1910; elected to Georgia State Senate, 1912; elected judge, superior courts, Cherokee circuit, Georgia, 1916; reelected 1920 and 1924; wife, Jewell Colclough Tarver; one son— Malcolm Connor Tarver, Jr.; is member of Methodist Episcopal Church; Mason; Odd Fellow; elected to the Seventieth and each succeeding Congress. IDAHO Biographical | 23 EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Appling, Atkinson, Bacon, Berrien, Brantley, Camden, Chariton, Clinch, Coffee, Cook, Echols, Glynn, Irwin, Jeff Davis, Lanier, Lowndes, Pierce, Telfair, Ware, and Wayne (20 counties). Population (1940), 255,139. JOHN S. GIBSON, Democrat, of Douglas, Ga:; born in Charlton County, Ga., January 3, 1893, son of William Owen and Julia Anne Gibson; was educated in the common schools of Charlton County, Ga., and studied law through corre-spondence course La Salle Extension University, Chicago, Ill.; admitted to the bar in August, 1922; practiced law in Douglas, Ga., since 1923; elected solicitor of City Court of Douglas (prosecuting attorney) in 1928; elected solicitor general of the Waycross Judicial Circuit (prosecuting attorney) in 1934, which position he held until elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; married Miss Jimmie Monroe Carmack, daughter of the late W. H. J. and Zackie Harden Carmack, of Vienna, Ga., and they have one son, Marvin McCall Gibson, and three daughters, Blanche Louise Gibson, Anne Harden Gibson, and Mary Gene Gibson; is a Mason, Elk, and member of the Junior Order United American Mechanics. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Banks, Barrow, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and. White (18 counties). Population (1940), 235,420. JOHN STEPHENS WOOD, Democrat, of Canton, Ga.; graduate of Mercer University; former member of the General Assembly of Georgia; solicitor general of the Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit of Georgia and judge of the Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit; member of the Army Air Corps during the First World War; married; member of the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses, 1931-35; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clarke, Columbia, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Lincoln, Madison, McDuffie, Morgan, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Richmond, Taliaferro, Walton, Warren, and Wilkes (17 counties). Population (1940), 300,590. PAUL BROWN, Democrat, of Elberton, Ga., was born in Hart County, Ga.; graduate of University of Georgia; lawyer and farmer; represented Oglethorpe County in General Assembly of Georgia 1907-8; delegate to Democratic National Convention in 1932; member of Methodist Church; married Miss Frances Lewis Arnold on October 21, 1914; two children—Robert Thomas and Frances Rosalyn Brown; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on July 5, 1933, to fill the unexpired term caused by death of Hon. Charles H. Brand, and reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. IDAHO (Population (1940), 524,873) SENATORS GLEN H. TAYLOR, Democrat, of Pocatello, Idaho; born in Portland, Oreg., April 12, 1904, son of Rev. Pleasant John Taylor and Olive Oatman Higgins Taylor; raised on the family homestead near Kooskia, Idaho, in Idaho County; married and has two sons, Glen Arod and Paul Jon; elected United States Senator on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. CHARLES C. GOSSETT, Democrat, of Nampa, Idaho; born in Princetown, Ohio, September 2, 1888; farming, livestock, feeder, and shipper; two terms as county representative to the State legislature; two terms as Lieutenant Governor of the State of Idaho; Governor of Idaho; married and has three sons; appointed to the United States Senate on November 17, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Thomas, for the term ending January 3, 1949. 24 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Benewah, Boise, Bonner, Boundary, Canyon, Clearwater, Custer, Gem, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, Lemhi, Lewis, Nez Perce, Payette, Shoshone, Valley, and Washington (19 counties). Population (1940), 224,516. COMPTON I. WHITE, Democrat, of Clark Fork, Idaho, was born in Baton Rouge, La., July 31, 1877, the son of John E. White and Roberta (Bowman) White, of Mississippi and Louisiana stock, respectively; soon after his birth his parents moved to the ancestral home in Rankin County, Miss.; received his early education in a private school at Jackson, Miss.; moved to Clark Fork, Idaho, at the age of 13, and attended the grade schools; entered the Metropolitan Busi-ness College of Chicago and the Gonzaga University of Spokane, Wash. ; pioneered with his father in reclaiming a farm from the logged-off land and also in the sawmill business; was in the railway service in the capacity of telegraph operator, trainman, and conductor, after which he engaged in the agricultural and lumber-ing businesses on his home place at Clark Fork, later becoming interested in min-ing and as manager of several mining properties; stock raising and agriculture are now receiving the major portion of his attention; married Josephine Elizabeth Bunn, in 1915, and they have two children—Compton I., Jr., and Enid Mary, ages 25 and 22, respectively; is a member of the Order of Railway Conductors, -Modern Woodmen, Elks, Eagles, Grange, and Farmers Union; served as a member of the town council and as school trustee, and has been active in the councils of the Democratic organization in the precinct, county, and State; was a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions at Houston in 1928, at Chicago in 1932, at Philadelphia in 1936, and Chicago in 1940; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; maintains his home place in Bonner County, Idaho, which is devoted to farming and stock raising. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Ada, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Blaine, Bonneville, Butte, Camas, Caribou, Cassia, Clark, Elmore, Franklin, Fremont, Gooding, Jefferson, Jerome, Lincoln, Madison, Minidoka, Oneida, Owyhee, Power, Teton, and Twin Falls (25 counties). Population (1940), 300,357. HENRY C. DWORSHAK, Republican, of Burley, Idaho; born in Duluth, Minn., August 29, 1894; educated in the public schools of Duluth; learned printing trade and entered newspaper work; editor and publisher of the Burley Bulletin 1924-44; elected president of Idaho Editorial Association in 1931; served in the American Expeditionary Forces; was Idaho commander of the American Legion in 1932; served as governor of the Idaho-Utah district of Rotary International, being installed at convention in Nice, France, in June 1937; married Miss Georgia B. Lowe in 1917, and they have four sons—Henry Irving, Charles L., Ward W., and Calvin G.; Scottish Rite Mason and Shriner; member of B: P. O. E. and I. O. O. F.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Appro-priations. ILLINOIS (Population (1940), 7,897,241) SENATORS SCOTT W. LUCAS, Democrat, of Havana, Ill., was born near Chandlerville, in Cass County, Ill., February 19, 1892; attended the public schools and was graduated from Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, Ill., in 1914, with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in 1915; elected State’s attorney of Mason County, Ill, in 1920; commander of the American Legion, Department of Illinois, 1926; unanimously selected as national judge advocate of the American Legion at the Paris convention in 1927; thereafter unanimously selected for four terms as national judge advocate; delegate to the Democratic National Conven-tions at Chicago in 1932, 1940, and 1944; appointed chairman of the Illinois State Tax Commission in January 1933 by Gov. Henry Horner; entered the military serv-ice during the World War as a private and was honorably discharged with the commission of lieutenant; served continuously in the Officers’ Reserve Corps from the close of the war until appointed judge advocate general of the Illinois National Guard, in August 1934, with the rank of colonel; married to Miss Edith Biggs, of Havana, Ill, in January 1923, and they have one child—Scott W., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected ILLINOIS Biographical 25 to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938; reelected in 1944 for the term ending January 3, 1951; served as chairman of the midwestern division of the Demo-cratic National Committee in the 1940 campaign. 7 C. WAYLAND BROOKS, Republican, of Chicago, was born in West Bureau, I1l., son of the Rev. Jonas Gardner Brooks, an ordained minister of the Congre-gational Church, and Ida Nora Bickford Brooks; while Rev. Mr. Brooks held pastorates in various cities of Illinois, his son attended public schools of Dixon, Peoria, Kewanee, and Neponset; graduated from Wheaton (Ill.) High School; entered University of Illinois in 1916; enlisted in United States Marine Corps, April 1917, when the United States entered the World War; served in the Sixth Regiment United States Marines, Second Division, overseas; was decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross, American Navy Cross, Croix de Guerre, and Purple Heart; commissioned a second lieutenant in the front line and advanced to first lieutenant in the front line; wounded seven fimes in action and invalided home; his father and older brother served overseas, the older brother dying in service there; a younger brother also served in the Marine Corps during the war; returned to University of Illinois after the war and later was graduated from Northwestern University, where he subsequently lectured on Illinois law for 2 years; admitted to bar in 1926; served as assistant State’s attorney for 7 years and was commended by the bar, press, and civic organizations for his aggressive fight against organized crime; delegate to 1940 and 1944 Republican National Conventions and member of convention resolutions and platform drafting com-mittees; past commander, Marine Post, American Legion; member Army and Navy Legion of Valor; Purple Heart Association; A. F. and A. M.; Phi Delta Phi law fraternity; Delta Sigma Phi fraternity; Chicago, Illinois, and American Bar Associations; Order of Moose; Elks Lodge; owns and operates farm in La Salle County, Ill.; has one son, Russell, age 21; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, to fill a vacancy; reelected November 3, 1942, for 6-year term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 7,897,241. EMILY TAFT DOUGLAS (Mrs. Paul Douglas), Democrat, of Chicago, Ill., was born in Chicago; graduate of the University of Chicago, B. A. degree; on the stage 2 years; organizer for Illinois League of Women Voters and chairman, Department Government and Foreign Policy Illinois League; secretary, Inter-national Relations Center, Chicago; husband is major in the Marines; one daughter, Jean; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FIRST DISTRICT.—CitY oF CHICAGO: Ward 1; ward 2, precincts 1 to 93 and 96 to 111; ward 4, precincts 1t07, 70, 75, and 88; ward 11, precincts 34, 40 to 54, 61, and 64. Population (1940), 140,527. WILLIAM LEVI DAWSON, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Albany, Ga, April 28, 1886; was graduated from Albany (Ga.) Normal School and Fisk Uni-. versity with A. B. degree; attended Kent College of Law and was graduated from Northwestern University Law School with LL. D. degree; during the First World War served as first lieuténant of the Three Hundred and Sixty-fifth Infantry, A. E. F.; attorney at law; State central committeeman, First Congressional Dis-trict, 1930-32; alderman of the second ward, 1933-39; Democratic committeeman from the second ward since 1939; married; two children, William L., Jr., and Bar-bara Dawson; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. : SECOND DISTRICT.— oF CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 1 to 56 and 68 to 84; ward 4, precincts 8 to City 69, 71 to 74, and 76 to 87; wards 5 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 20, that part of precinct 21 lying east of South Halsted Street, and precincts 22 to 77; ward 10; ward 17, precincts 53, 54, 70, 71, and 81; ward 19, precincts 52, 56, 58, 62, 63, and 75. Population (1940), 612,641. WILLIAM A. ROWAN, Democrat, 10741 South Avenue B, Chicago, Ill; born in the Second Congressional District, and has continuously resided in that same community all his life; was graduated from the St. Patrick Grade School and St. Patrick High School; completed his education at the University of Chicago; editor of the Daily Calumet, a daily community newspaper in the southeastern section of Chicago, for a period of 10 years; in 1927 was elected alderman of the tenth ward of the city of Chicago and resigned from that body on December 31, 1942, after nearly 16 years of continuous service; during his City Council career has been chairman of the Committee on Harbors, Wharves, and Bridges; was the first chairman of the Committee on Housing, and also Congressional Directory ILLINOIS established the first Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations in the City Council; chairman of the Committee on Building and Zoning which drafted a comprehensive zoning ordinance for Chicago; married Miss Isabel Dunne in 1926, niece of Finley Peter Dunne, the American humorist; they have four children— Miriam 18, William 16, Richard 13, and Patricia 11; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—Ci1ty oF CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 58 to 63; ward 9, that part of precinct 21 lying west of South Halsted Street; ward 13, precincts 5 to 39, 41 to 46, 48 to 54, 61 to 70, 72, 78 to 84, 88, and 89; ward 14, precincts 24 to 42, 50 to 53, and 56; ward 15, precincts 5 to 57, 59 to 69, and 71 to 74; ward 16: ward 17, 1 to 52, 55 to 69, 72 to 80, 82, and 83; ward 18; ward 19, precincts 1 to 81, 53 to 55, 57, 59 to 61, 64 to 74, and 76 to 88. COOK COUNTY: Towns of Chicago Heights and Harvey; townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. Population (1940), 575, 799. EDWARD A. KELLY, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in the city of Chicago, April 3, 1892; graduated from the Longfellow School, the Lake High School, and Orr's Business College; played professional baseball; employed by the Tilinois Steel Co. as accountant; entered the United States Army during the World War, served in the American Expeditionary Forces in France, honorably discharged February 28, 1919; organized the real estate and insurance firm of E. A. Kelly Co., which bears his name; always active in civic and political affairs in his district for the past 37 years; member of Chicago Planning Committee, appointed by Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago; was elected president of the thirty-second ward Democratic organization when only 23 years old; married Miss Rosemary Eulert, of Lemont, Ill., and is the father of 2 sons and 1 daughter— Edward A. Jr. lieutenant, United States Infantry; Robert J., U. S. N. R., formerly at Notre Dame University and now midshipman at United States Naval Academy, and Rosemary; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; elected fo the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7 , 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ty or CHICAGO: Ward 2, precincts 94 and 95; ward 3, precincts 57 and 64 to 67; ward 11, precincts 1 to 33, 35 to 39, 55 to 60, 62, and 63; ward 12; ward 13, precincts 1 to 4, 47, 60, 74, and 75+ ward 14, precincts 1 to 23, 43 to 49, 54, 55, and 57 to 50; ward 15, precincts 1 to 4, 58, and 70; ward 21, pre-cincts 7 to 11, 25 to 27, 53, and 54; ward 22, that part of precinet 7 south of Cermak Road, recinets 18 to 20, 22 to 42, 44to 46, and 51 to 54; ‘ward 25, precincts 31, 37 to 40, 46, 48, and 51. Population’ 1940), 223,304. MARTIN GORSKI, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Poland, October 30, 1886; his parents emigrated to the United States in 1889 and settled in :Chicago, I1l.; has lived in the same district for over 50 years; attended the grammar and high schools; was graduated from a business college and from the Chicago Law School in 1917 with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar the same year; assistant State’s attorney, 1918-20; master in chancery of the Superior Court of, Cook County, Ill., 1929-42; member of the Chicago Bar Association; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; Teelocted to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—City or CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 4 to 14, 18, 25, 33 to 41, 43, 46, 47, and 49 to 51; ward 21, precincts 1 to 6, 12 to 24, 28 to 52, and 55 to 57; ward 22, that part of precinct 7 north of Cermak Road, precincts 8 to 13, 51, 49, and 50; ward 24, precinets 13 to Y 41 to 47, 54, and 55; ward 25, precincts 3, 26 to 30, 32 to 36, 41, 47, and 50. Population (1940), 112,116. ADOLPH J. SABATH, Dean of the House, Democrat, of Chicago, born in Czechoslovakia, April 4, 1866; came to United States in 1881; attended Bryant and Stratton’s Business College of Chicago; engaged in real-estate -business; graduated from Chicago College of Law, 1891, and admitted to practice same year; received the degree of LL. B. from Lake Forest University in 1892; prac-ticed law in Chicago until 1895; served as municipal judge and police magistrate in Chicago from that time to 1907; as judge, advocated the municipal court act; was instrumental in abolishing the fee system, establishing the juvenile court, and also the parole system for first offenders; in 1906 had distinction of being nominated for two offices, municipal court judge and Congressman, choosing the latter; first elected to Congress in 1906, and reelected 19 times (20 terms in all); March 4, 1945, marked his thirty-ninth year of continuous service; has serve under 8 Presidents (Theodore Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Truman) and 9 Speakers (Cannon, Clark, Gillett, ‘Longworth, Garner, Rainey, Byrns, Bankhead, and Rayburn); is the only Member now sitting ‘who was a member of the historic Committee on Foreign Affairs of the World War I period; aided in movement for recognition of small nations after the war, helping to bring about their independence; served 24 years on Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, as a member of which he opposed inhuman and harsh immigration measures but supported stringent de- ILLINOIS | Biographical 27 portation laws; also served as chairman of Committee on Alcohol Liquor Traffic, and member of Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee; chairman, Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bondholders’ Reorganization; 11 years a member and present chairman of Committee on Rules; member ex officio of Democratic Steering Committee of the House; introduced the first workmen's compensation bill, and for his efforts on behalf of this legislation he received the personal thanks of President Theodore Roosevelt; was the first Member to advocate Federal aid for better highways; among other legislation for the enactment of which he worked unceasingly was the parcel post, and Securities and Exchange Commission Acts; opposed prohibition and fought for its repeal; introduced, in 1931, first Reconstruction Finance bill; at all times supported labor and all relief legislation; introduced first old-age pension resolution in 1909, also urging enact-ment of the Social Security Act; for 49 years member of the Cook County Demo-cratic Central Committee, and for 10 years its chairman; delegate to all Demo-cratic National Conventions since 1896; married Miss Mae Ruth Fuerst, December 31, 1917; member of Masons, Elks, Knights of Pythias, and various other social, fraternal, and civie organizations of Chicago. SIXTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 13, precincts 40, 55 to 89, 71, 73, 76, 77, and 85 to 87; ward 20, precincts 1 to 3; ward 22, precincts 1 to 6, 14 to 17, 43, 47, and 48; ward 23; ward 24, precincts 1 to 12, 18 to 40, 48 to 53, and 56 to 61; ward 25, precincts 1, 2, 4 to 25, 42 to 45, and 49; ward 27, precincts 1 to 43, 46, 51, 61, 62, and 64 to 67; ward 28, precincts 29, 53 to 55, 67, and’68; ward 29; ,ward 30, precincts 21 to 66, 68, and 73 to 77; ward 387, precincts 46 to 81, 85 to 88, and 90. CoO COUNTY: Townships of Berwyn, Cicero, Lyons, Oak Park, Proviso, Riverside, Stickney, and Summit. Population (1940), 641,719. THOMAS J. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born April 30, 1878, in Chicago, I1l.; educated in high school and took advanced courses in business law and accounting; married Nettie Kaufer, July 15, 1920; was State representative in the forty-fifth, forty-sixth, fifty-sixth, and fifty-seventh general assemblies; was State bank examiner under auditors Brady, Russel, and Nelson; associated in the accounting business with John S. Weisbach & Co.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 164,187 votes, his opponent, Alfred F. Ruben, Republi-can, receiving 95,637 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected sheriff of Cook County, 1938 to 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CI1ry oF CHICAGO: Ward 26, precincts 1 to 7, 49, and 50; ward 28, precincts 1 to 28, 30 to 52, 56 to 66, and 69 to 71; ward 30, precincts 1 to 20, 67, and 69 to 72; ward 31; ward 32, precincts 1 to 21, 48 to 51, and 55 to 59; ward 33, precincts 1 to 48, 52 to 61, and 63 to 66; wards 34 to 36; ward 37, precinets 1 to 45, 82 to 84, 89, and 91; wards 38 to 40; ward 41, precincts 1, to 75, 78 to 81, and 83 to 85; ward 45, precinct 1;'ward 47, precincts 1 to 18, 74, 75, 78, 85, and 89; ward 50, precincts 52 to 69, 74, 79 to 81, 85, and 86. Co0OK COUNTY: Townships of Barrington, Elk Grove, Elmwood Park, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Palatine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling. Population (1940), 914,053. WILLIAM W. LINK, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; bornin Swiec, Poland, February 12, 1884; came to the United States when 3 years old with his parents; attended parochial and elementary public schools, was graduated from Medill High School, and attended Lewis Institute, Department of Engineering; founded the Imperial Enameling Co. and was president of the company for 20 years; in 1933 was ap-‘pointed president of the Board of Local Improvements of the city of Chicago; during his tenure of office as president and vice president many major construction improvements and street paving projects under Government supervision were satisfactorily completed; in 1943 was appointed vice president of the Board of Civil Service Commissioners of Cook County, which position he has held until his election as Congressman; member of the board of directors of the Milwaukee Avenue National Bank of Chicago, is general secretary of the Polish-American Democratic Organization of Illinois; married and has five children, two of them in the service; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 15 to 17, 19 to 24, 26 to 32, 42, 44, 45, and 48; ward 26, 8 to 48, and 51 to 56; ward 27, precincts 44, 45, 47 to 50, 52 to 60, and 63; ward 32, precincts 22 to 47, 52 to 54, and 60 to 62; ward 33, precincts 49 to 51 and 62. Population (1940), 123,743. THOMAS S. GORDON, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Ill, December 17, 1893; attended parochial school; was graduated from Weber High School; engaged in banking business; later employed as clerk of the Polish Daily News and advanced to head cashier and office manager; appointed com-missioner of the Chicago West Parks in 1933; 3 years later appointed as com-missioner of public vehicles; elected city treasurer of Chicago, 1939 to 1942; married; four children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 28 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS NINTH DISTRICT.—C11yY oF CHICAGO: Ward 42; ward 43, precincts 10 to 44, 47 to 55, 57, and 58; ward 44, precincts 1 to 14, 16 to 45, 57 to 59, 61, 62, and 65 to 72; ward 46, precincts 12 to 60 and 63 to 78. Popu- lation (1940), 215,175. : ALEXANDER J. RESA, Democrat of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Cook County, Ill., August 4, 1887; educated in public schools of Chicago, St. Joseph’s College, Kirkwood, Mo., and the John Marshall Law School of Chicago; admitted to the Illinois bar in 1911; thereafter engaged continuously in general practice of law until January 6, 1937; for 24 years a member of the faculty of the John Marshall Law School; appointed assistant corporation counsel of the city of Chicago January 6, 1937; head of the appeals division of the law department of the city of Chicago 3% years and for more than 4 years thereafter head of the public improvements division of that department; married Miss Irene Mary Deegan, of Chicago, Ill., September 24, 1945; elected to the Seventy-ninth Con-gress November 7, 1944. TENTH DISTRICT.—City or CHICAGO: Ward 41, precincts 76, 77, and 82; ward 43, precincts 1 to 9, 45, 46, and 56; ward 44, precincts 15, 46 to 56, 60, 63, 64, and 73; ward 45; precincts 2 to 74; ward 46, pre-cincts 1 to 11, 61, 62, and 79; ward 47, precincts 19 to 73, 76, 77, 79 to 84, and 86 to 88; wards 48 and 49; ward 50, precincts 1 to 51, 70 to 73, 75 to 78, and 82 to 84. Cook COUNTY: Townships of Evanston, Morton Grove, New Trier, Niles, Northfield, and Skokie. LAKE CoUNTY. Population (1940), 625,359. RALPH E. CHURCH, Republican, 300 Church Street, Evanston; lawyer, 10 South La Salle Street, Chicago; was born on a farm near Catlin, Vermilion ° County, Ill.; received degree of A. B., University of Michigan, 1907, A. M. and LL. B., Northwestern University, 1909; admitted to the bar in 1909, since which time he has practiced law in Chicago; elected to the Illinois Legislature as repre-sentative from the sixth district in 1916; member of executive committee, central department, Citizens’ Military Training Camp Association, 1916; in May 1917, while serving in the fiftieth general assembly, he volunteered for military service; was later honorably discharged and was reelected to the fifty-first, fifty-second, fifty-third, fifty-fourth, fifty-fifth, fifty-sixth, and fifty-seventh general assemblies; lieutenant commander L-V (S), United States Naval Reserve 1938-41, a member of the Chicago, Ill., and American Bar Associations, Chicago Association of Commerce, Union League Club, University Club of Evanston, Kiwanis,. Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Chi fraternities; Shriner; Methodist; trustee of the National College of Education; married Marguerite Stitt, of New York City, on December 21, 1918, and they have three children—Lt. Ralph Edwin, Jr.,, U. S. N. R,, William Stitt, ensign, U. S. N. R., and Marjory Williams; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress in 1934, reelected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Con-gresses; congressional delegate to the Inter-Parliamentary Conference at Oslo, Norway, August 1939; candidate for Republican nomination for United States Senate in 1940; again elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942 and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress in 1944. LE SRL Du Page, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population CHAUNCEY W. REED, Republican, of West Chicago, Ill., was born at West Chicago, Ill., June 2, 1890; educated in West Chicago public and high schools, Northwestern University, and Webster College of Law; city treasurer of city of West Chicago, 1913-14; during the World War served in the Eighty-sixth Division of the United States Army; was first commander of Naperville Post, No. 43, * American Legion, and served as National Garde de la Porte and National Con-ducteur of La Société des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux; elected State’s attorney of Du Page County, Ill., in 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1932; served four terms as secretary of the Du Page County Bar Association and two terms as president of the Illinois State’s Attorneys’ Association; chairman of the Du Page County Republican central committee for 8 years; associated in the practice of law at Wheaton, I11., with Judge Russell W. Keeney; married to Ella Stegen in 1929 and has three children—Barbara Ann, James William, and Thomas Henry; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the Committee on the Judiciary and ranking Republic member of the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, De Kalb, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1940), 298,072. NOAH MORGAN MASON, Republican, of Oglesby, Ill.; born in Wales, July 19, 1882; completed high school and college, receiving degree of bachelor of educa-tion; also did graduate work in social science, studying taxation, government, and labor problems; in school work for 83 years as teacher, principal of grade school, ILLINOIS : Biographical 29 and superintendent of schools; member of the State senate, 1930-36; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and to each succeeding Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside (6 counties). Population (1940), 186,433. LEO ELWOOD ALLEN, Republican, of Galena, Jo Daviess County, Ill., was born in Elizabeth, Ill., on the 5th day of October 1898; graduate, University of Michigan, 1923; member of law firm of Allen & Heer, Galena, Ill.; during World War served for 27 months in this country and in France as a sergeant in the One Hundred and Twenty-third Regiment Field Artillery, Thirty-third Division; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Con-gresses; member of Rules and Accounts Committees. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island and Warren (6 counties). Population (1940), 214,500. ANTON J. JOHNSON, Republican, of Macomb, Ill.; born in Peoria, Ill, October 20, 1878, son of the late Rev. C. W. and Mary Johnson; married Mayme McMurray in 1905; public-school education and short course in dairy manu-facturing at the University of Missouri School of Agriculture; farmer a number of years and engaged in dairy-products manufacturing in the city of Macomb, I1l.; member of the Illinois National Guard, 1898-1901; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 217,334. ROBERT BRUCE CHIPERFIELD, Republican, of Canton, Ill.; born in Canton, Ill., November 20, 1899; attended Knox College, Galesburg, Ill.; was graduated with an A. B. degree from Harvard College in 1922, and an LL. B. degree from Boston University Law School in 1925; member of American Legion and Forty and Eight; married Miss Catherine Newbern, and they have a son, Robert N., 11 years old, and a daughter, Virginia, 5 years old; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. : SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell (6 counties). Population (1940), 276,685. - EVERETT McKINLEY DIRKSEN, Republican, of Pekin, Ill.; born at Pekin, Ill., January 4, 1896; attended grade and high schools of Pekin and Uni-versity of Minnesota College of Law; served in the United States Army, 1917-19, with 17 months’ overseas service; commissioned from the ranks; member of the bar of the District of Columbia and Illinois; married and has one child, Joy, age 17; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (5 coun= ties). Population (1940), 176,337. LESLIE C. ARENDS, Republican, of Melvin, Ill., born at Melvin, Il; attended grade and high schools at Melvin, Ill.,, and Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; served in the United States Navy during the World War; charter member of Melvin Post, No. 642, American Legion, serving as post commander, county commander, and seventeenth district commander; member of Ford County Farm Bureau; Mason; member of board of directors, Illinois Wesleyan University; actively engaged in banking and farming since 1920; president, Commercial State Bank of Melvin; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Ver-milion (6 counties). Population (1940), 235,134. JESSIE SUMNER, Republican, of Milford, Ill.; graduate of Girton School, 1916; Smith College, 1920; studied law at University of Chicago, and at Columbia and Oxford Universities; admitted to the (bar in 1923; practiced law in Chicago; employed at Chase National Bank, New York City, 1928-29; opened law office at home in 1932; entered politics and was defeated in primary for State’s attorney; 78349°—T79—2—1st ed. 4 30 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS elected county judge in 1937 to fill unexpired term; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Coles, De Witt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1940), 284,001. ROLLA C. McMILLEN, Republican, of Decatur, Ill.; educated in the public schools of Monticello, Ill.; attended the University of Tllinois, and was graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 1906; has since practiced law at Decatur, Ill.; member of the Decatur, Illinois, and American Bar Associations; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1940; married Ruth Roberts and they have three children—Capt. Thomas R., Mrs. William C. Beall, and Martha H.; elected to fill the vacancy in the term of the late William FH. Wheat in the Seventy-eighth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard, Mor-gan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties). Population (1940), 162,528. SID SIMPSON, Republican, of Carrollton, Greene County, Ill.; served with AEF. member of American Legion; present chairman of Greene County Republican Committee, serving 18 years; married Edna Oakes; two daughters, Martha (Mrs. Arthur Stoffel, Jr.) and Janet; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties). Population (1940), 237,279. EVAN HOWELL, Republican, of Springfield, Ill.; born in Marion, Williamson County, Ill , September 21, 1905, son of Ernest T. and Jo Ella Howell; attended grade and high schools at Villa Grove, Douglas County, Ill.; ; graduated from the University of Illinois, College of Commerce, with a B.S. degree, in 1927 and the College of Law, with an LL. B. degree, in 1930; elected a member of Beta Gamma Sigma and is also a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi Delta Phi; taught school at Harvard Community High School, McHenry County, Ill.; was a member of the faculty of the College of Commerce, University of Illinois, 1928-30; mem-ber, Officers’ Reserve Corps; entered practice of law at Springfield, IL, in 1930; served as referee in bankruptcy, United States District Court, southern district, southern division of Illinois, 1937-41; married to Kathryn Sellers, of Springfield, and they have two daughters, Marilyn, age 7; Joella Florence, age 3; and one son, William Evan, born August 26, 1944: elected to the Seventy-seventh Con-gress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942; and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1940), 359,343. CHARLES MELVIN PRICE, Democrat, of East St. Louis, Ill.; born in East St. Louis, Ill., January 1, 1005; educated in the parochial schools of East St. Louis, St. Louis (Mo.) University "High School, and 2-year prelegal course at St. Louis (Mo.) University; newspaper correspondent (East St. Louis, Ill, Journal, St. Louis, Mo., Globe-Democrat, and for 2 years sports editor of suspended East St.. Louis News-Review); former member of National Baseball Writers’ Association; member of St. Clair County Board of Supervisors, 1929-31; secretary to former Congressman Edwin M. Schaefer, March 4, 1933, to January 3, 1943; at time of election was enlisted man in United States Army, stationed at Camp Lee, Va.; voluntarily enlisted in October 1943 at age of 38; single; descendant of Gen. James Shields, first United States Senator from Illinois; member of American Legion, Knights of Columbus, Loyal Order of Moose, Eagles, Ancient Order of Hibernians, and the National Press Club; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson, Lawrence, Marion, Richland, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1940), 243,130. CHARLES W. VURSELL, Republican, of Salem, Ill.; born in Salem, III, February 8, 1881; attended the public schools of Marion County, Ill.; sheriff of Marion County, 1910-14; member of the Illinois General Assembly for the forty-second senatorial district, 1914-16; entered the publishing business in 1916 purchasing the Salem Republican, and has continued as its publisher to the present time; is interested in other business enterprises in addition.to his news-paper; thirty-second degree Mason; Rotarian; married Miss Bessie Brasel and INDIANA Biographical they have two sons, Harold D. Vursell, who served with the rank of captain in the U. S. Army in World War II, now editor of the magazine Tomorrow published in New York City, and Charles E. Vursell, who served in World War II as a lieutenant (junior grade) in the U. S. Navy and is now in the insurance business in Kansas City, Mo; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson, Massae, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). -Population (1940), 174396. ROY CLIPPINGER, Republican, of Carmi, was born in Fairfield, Wayne County, Ill., January 13, 1886, the son of the late A. C. and Eliza B. Clippinger; starting as a ““printer’s devil”’ at the age of 10, he has been in the newspaper busi-ness for 50 years and has been a publisher in Carmi for over 36 years; founder and chairman of the Board of Greater Weeklies, New York, N. Y.; member of the Board of Publishers of the American Press Association; past president of the Illinois Press Association; founder and past president of the Carmi Chamber of Commerce; president of the Carmi Hospital Association; manager of the White County Bridge Commission; editor and president of the Carmi Democrat-Tribune; married May 31, 1917, to Miss Verna Essery, of Melrose Park, Ill.; has two sons, " Earl E., who is in the Navy, and John F., of Gary, Ind., and one granddaughter; Methodist, Shriner, Elk and past president of the Carmi Kiwanis Club; nomi-nated by the Republican Party in a special election July 31, 1945, which was * called by Gov. Dwight H. Green to fill the vacancy created March 22, 1945, by the death of James V. Heidinger, Republican, of Fairfield; elected without oppo-sition November 6, 1945. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1940), 262,426. C. W. (RUNT) BISHOP, Republican, of Carterville, Ill.; born in Johnson County, Ill., June 29, 1890; educated high school and Union Academy, Anna, Ill. ; learned tailoring trade; worked as coal miner, telephone lineman, professional football and baseball player and manager; city clerk of Carterville two terms; secretary of Lions Clubs of Illinois; postmaster for 10 years; secretary of Illinois Postmasters’ Association; district governor and special representative of Inter-national Association of Lions Clubs; married Elizabeth Hutton; one son, Jack Hutton, yeoman, first class, United States Coast Guard Reserve; member of I. 0. O. F., Rebekahs, Elks, Eagles, and Lions; teacher of Young People’s Sunday School class; elected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. INDIANA (Population (1940), 3,427,796) SENATORS RAYMOND E. WILLIS, Republican, of Angola, Ind., was born in Waterloo, Ind., August 11, 1875; received A. B. degree from Wabash College in 1896, and honorary degree, A. M., in 1902; newspaper publisher; during the World War served as chairman of the County Council of Defense for Steuben County, Ind.; member, Indiana Legislature, 1919, 1921; governor, Indiana District Rotary Clubs, 1934 and 1935; Congregationalist; Scottish Rite Mason; member, Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Delta Chi fraternities; member of the Columbia Club of Indianapolis, and the Indiana Society of Chicago; married Mary Adelaide Taylor, of Orland, Ind.; elected United States Senator, November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947; member of the United States group at first plenary session, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Quebec, 1945. HOMER E. CAPEHART, Republican, of Washington, Ind.; born June 6, 1897, at Algiers, Ind., the son of Alvin T. and Susan Kelso Capehart; high school education; farmer and manufacturer; no previous public service; served 2 years in Army during World War I, having enlisted as a private; married and has two sons and one daughter; member of Lutheran Church, Mason, Shrine, American Legion, Rotary Club, Elks, Eagles, Moose, and Press Club; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944 for term ending January 3, 1951. Congressional Directory INDIANA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY: Lake. Population (1940), 293,195. RAY J. MADDEN, Democrat, of Gary, Ind.; born in Waseca, Minn., Feb-ruary 25, 1892; attended the public schools and was graduated from Creighton University, Omaha, Nebr., in 1913 with LL. B. degree; elected municipal judge of Omaha, Nebr., 1916; resigned to serve in the armed forces during the First World War; city comptroller of Gary, Ind., 1935-38; treasurer of Lake County, Ind., 1938-42; member of the American Legion; practicing attorney; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Kosciusko, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, Starke, Tippecanoe, and White (12 counties). Population (1940), 253,952. : CHARLES A. HALLECK, Republican, of Rensselaer, was born in Jasper County, Ind., August 22, 1900, and has resided there all his life, attended grade and high schools in Rensselaer, was graduated from Indiana University with an A. B. degree in 1922 and with an LL. B. degree in 1924, elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Order of the Coif, and is also a member of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Phi; served in the World War and is a member of the American Legion; married to Blanche White, of Indianapolis, and they have two children (twins), Charles W. and Patricia; was elected prosecuting attorney of the Jasper-Newton circuit in 1924, and was reelected four times; is chairman of the National Repub-lican Congressional Committee; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on January 29, 1935; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THE DE TnICT. Counnen: Elkhart, La Porte, Marshall, and St. Joseph (4 counties). Population ROBERT A. GRANT, Republican, of South Bend, Ind., was born July 31, 1905, in Marshall County, Ind., the son of Everett F. and Margaret Edith (Hat-field) Grant; spent his boyhood there and at Hamlet in Starke County, Ind.; came to South Bend in 1922, where he finished high school; was graduated from the University of Notre Dame with an A. B. degree in 1928 and with an LL. B. degree in 1930; since then he has been engaged in the practice of law in South Bend; married Margaret A. McLaren of Galien, Mich.; son, Robert A., Jr.; was deputy prosecuting attorney of St. Joseph County, 1935-36; member of Methodist Church, Indiana State Bar Association, Scottish Rite; Orak Temple Shrine, DeMolay Legion of Honor, Elks, Odd Fellows, and Eagles; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Allen, De Kalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, Wells, and ‘Whitley (8 counties). Population (1940), 288,062. GEORGE W. GILLIE, Republican, of Fort Wayne, Ind.; born in Berwickshire, Scotland, August 15, 1880; moved to the United States with his parents, who settled in Kankakee, Ill., in 1882, and in Fort Wayne, Allen County, Ind., in 1884; attended public schools and the International Business College; in 1901, completed a course in dairy science and industry at Purdue University; graduated from Ohio State University in 1907, doctor of veterinary medicine; in charge meat and dairy inspection of Allen County, 1908-14; began practice of veterinary medicine in 1914; sheriff of Allen County, 1917-20, 1929-30, and 1935-36; captain in the Reserve Officers’ Corps; Congregational Church, Kiwanis, Scottish Rite, Mizpah Shrine, Moose, Odd Fellows, Modern Woodmen, Y. M. C. A., American Veterinary Association, Indiana State Veterinary Association, and United States Livestock Sanitary Board; married to Grace Nannette Merion, of Columbus, Ohio, in 1908; two married daughters; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to Sev-enty-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blackford, Clinton, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Jay, Madison, Miami, Tipton, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1940), 356,528. FOREST ARTHUR HARNESS, Republican, of Kokomo, Ind., where he was born, June 24, 1895; son of Oscar Melvin and Elfie Marie (Willits) Harness; LL. B., Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., 1917; married Amy Bernar- “dine Rose, of Washington, D. C., August 15, 1917; lawyer; admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in 1917, and admitted to Indiana bar in 1919, and since practiced in Kokomo; admitted to practice be-fore the Supreme Court of the United States in 1933; elected prosecuting attor­ INDIANA Biographical ney, Howard County, Ind., in 1920; reelected in 1922; appointed special assistant to Attorney General of United States, February 1, 1931; resigned to resume private practice, July 31, 1935; represented United States in extradition of Samuel Insull from Greece 1933-34; served in World War, April 1917-June 1919; commissioned first lieutenant, Three Hundred and Nineteenth Infantry, Eightieth Division, year overseas; awarded Purple Heart decoration; member, Indiana State and Howard County Bar Associations, American Legion (State commander 1929-30), and Delta Chi; Protestant, Mason, and Elk; member of Kokomo Country Club and Columbia Club (Indianapolis); elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, and reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Boone, Fountain, Hamilton, Hendricks, Montgomery, Parke, Put-nam, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1940), 281,124. NOBLE J. JOHNSON, Republican, of Terre Haute, Vigo County; born at Terre Haute, Ind., August 23, 1887, son of Abraham S. and Ida M. Johnson; married October 16, 1913, to Mercy Chase Broadhurst; has one daughter, Mirium Ruth Johnson; admitted to Indiana bar in December 1911, and engaged in prac-tice of law; with offices at Terre Haute, Ind.; deputy prosecuting attorney in 1917 and 1918; elected prosecuting attorney for forty-third judicial circuit in 1920; reelected in 1922; was elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth and to the Seventy-first Congresses; elected to the Seventy-sixth Con-gress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Clay, Daviess, Gibson, Greene, Johnson, Knox, Martin, Monroe: Morgan, Owen, and Sullivan (11 counties). Population (1940), 285,772. GERALD W. LANDIS, Republican, of Linton, Ind.; born in Bloomfield, Greene County, Ind., February 23, 1895, son of John D. and Netta C. Landis; educated in Linton schools; graduated from Linton High School in 1914, and from Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind., in 1923, with B. S. degree; received M. S. degree from Indiana University, class of 1938; business and law instructor, athletic director of Linton High Schools for 16 years; second lieutenant in United States Army in 1918; married Vera H. Wilson, of Bicknell, Ind., and they have one child—Mary Lou; member of Christian Church; Delta U; thirty-second degree Mason, B. P. O. E., L. 0. 0. M,, and K. of P.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Con-gress; was reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Perry, Pike, Posey: Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick (11 counties). Population (1940), 336,364. CHARLES MARION LAFOLLETTE, Republican, of Evansville, Ind.; born in New Albany, Ind., February 27, 1898; parents, Harry C. LaFollette and Marian Allis LaFollette, the grandaughter of William Heilman, who was elected to the Congress of the United States from part of the same district in 1878 and 1880; moved to Evansville, Ind., in 1901, where he has resided ever since; attended Evansville public schools; entered Wabash College September 1916; enlisted in the Army April 8, 1917, including 4 months overseas; discharged February 14, 1919; returned to Wabash College until June 1921; 1 year of law, Vanderbilt University, 1921; balance of law study in law offices in Dayton, Ohio, and Evansville, Ind.; admitted to the Supreme Court of Indiana in 1925; practiced law continuously since that date; admitted to the Supreme Court of the United States February 11, 1943; one term Indiana House of Representatives, 1927; married Frances Hartmetz, May 14, 1925; one living child, Marian LaFollette, born November 4, 1927; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. he NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jen- nings, Lawrence, Ohio, Orange, Ripley, Scott, Switzerland, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1940), 241,323. EARL WILSON, Republican, of Huron, Ind., was born near Huron, Law-rence County, Ind., April 18, 1906; reared on a farm; educated in the Huron Public School; received A. B. and M. 8. degrees from Indiana University; diploma from Coyne Electrical School, Chicago, Ill; attended Purdue University; taught high school in Dubois, White, and Decatur Counties, Ind.; high-school principal in Jackson County, Ind.; member of Vallonia Lions Club; married Elsie Bex; one child, Linda Sue, born November 25, 1944; affiliated with the Baptist Church; Mn Congressional Directory T0WA elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and reelected to the Seventy. ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Decatur, Delaware, Fayette, Hancock, Henry, Randolph, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (10 counties). Population (1940), 306,498. RAYMOND SMILEY SPRINGER, Republican, of Connersville, Ind., was born near Dunreith in Rush County, Ind. , April 26, 1882; lawyer by profession; graduate of common and high schools; attended Butler University, Indianapolis, Ind.; was graduated from the Indiana Law School at Indianapolis, With degree of iL. Bm 1904; served as judge of the thirty-seventh judicial circuit of Indiana, 1916-22; captain of Infantry in the World War; now a lieutenant colonel of Infantry in the Officers’ Reserve Corps; served as first State commander of the American Legion in Indiana, in 1919-20, and as national executive committeeman from Indiana for the American Legion, 1929-31; was a candidate for Governor of Indiana in 1932 and 1936; married; no children; thirty-second degree Mason; belongs to Elks, Eagles, and Knights of Pythias lodges; member of the Forty and Eight; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on N ovember 8 1938, the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, the Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942, and reelected to the ‘Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Marion. Population (1940), 460,926. LOUIS LEON LUDLOW, Democrat, of Indianapolis; born on a farm in Fayette County, Ind.; when 18 years of age went to Indianapolis to get work on a newspaper; first employed as reporter on Indianapolis Sun; in 1896, when a reporter on the Indianapolis Sentinel, married Katherine Huber, society editor of the same newspaper, and they have "four children— Margery, Blanche, Virginia, and Louis; Washington correspondent of Indianapolis newspapers from 1901 to 1913 and for Columbus Dispatch since 1913; author of “From Cornfield to Press -Gallery,” an autobiography; “In the Heart of Hoosierland,” a story of the Indi-ana pioneers; ‘Senator Solomen Spiffledink,” a satire on political bunkum; “ America Go Bust,” an exposé of governmental bureaucracy; and “Hell or Heaven,” a treatise on peace and war proposing a method of war prevention; Methodist; member of Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Delta Chi (national news-paper fraternity) and Society of the Indiana Pioneers; also member and former president of National Press Club, in which capacity he made the address of wel-come to Col. Charles A. Lindbergh on the latter’s return from his epochal flight to Paris; elected to Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. "He was the first newspaper correspondent to go directly from the Press Gallery to a seat in Congress; on February 7, 1940, Butler University con-ferred upon Mr. Ludlow the degree of doctor of laws. IOWA (Population (1940), 2,538,268) SENATORS GEORGE ALLISON WILSON, Republican, of Des Moor, Towa; born on a farm near Menlo, Adair County, Towa, April T 1884, the youngest son of James H. and Martha G. Wilson; attended the rural schools and was graduated from Menlo High School; later attended Grinnell College and was graduated from the law school of the State University of Iowa in 1907; his political career began with election as county attorney of Polk County, Towa; subsequently he has served as judge in the district court for 2 years, which position he resigned to again undertake the practice of law; elected to the State senate from Polk County in 1926, and was subsequently reelected in 1930 and 1934; Governor of Iowa, 1939-43; married to Miss Mildred Zehner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Zehner, December 8, 1921; three sons, James, captain, and George, Jr., second lieu-tenant, in the United States Army, and J ohn, private, United States Army, and one daughter, Mary; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949. BOURKE BLAKEMORE HICKENLOOPER, Republican, of Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa; born in Blockton, Taylor County, Iowa, July 21, 1896, son of Nathan O. and Margaret A. (Blakemore) Hickenlooper; graduated Block-ton High School, 1914; graduated Iowa State College, B. S.; Law School, Univer-sity of Iowa, J. D.; honorary degrees, Parsons College, LL. D., and Loras College, ‘LL. D.; entered first officers’ training camp, Fort Snelling, Minn., May 1917; served as second lieutenant, Three Hundred and Thirty-ninth Field Artillery, in United States and France until spring of 1919; practiced law, Cedar Rapids, Towa, beginning 1922; elected to Iowa Legislature (house) 1934; reelected 1936; "elected Lieutenant Governor of Iowa, 1938; reelected 1940; elected Governor of Iowa, November 1942; married Verna E. Bensch, of Lansing, Iowa, 1927; two children, Jane Carroll, 16, David B., 12; college fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Delta Phi; American Legion, V. ¥. W.; various Masonic organizations; B. P. 0. E, I. O. O. F., Moose, Eagles, S. A. R.; Linn County, Iowa State, and American Bar Associations; elected to the United States Senate in November 1944 for term ending January 3, 1951. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cedar, Des Moines, Henry, Iowa, Jefferson, Johnson, Lee, Louisa, Muscatine, Scott, Van Buren, and Washington (12 counties). Population (1940), 338,261. THOMAS ELLSWORTH MARTIN, Republican, of Iowa City, Iowa; born in Melrose, Monroe County, Iowa, January 18, 1893; attended country school in Monroe County and grade and high schools in Russell, Iowa, 1907-9; attended and graduated Albia High School, Albia, Iowa, 1909-12; A. B. degree, State Uni-versity of Iowa, 1916; juris doctor degree, Law College, State University of Iowa, 1927; Order of Coif; awarded university fellowship by Columbia University for 1927 and 1928; LL. M. degree, Columbia University, 1928; accountant and lawyer; admitted to Iowa bar, 1927, and to United States Supreme Court bar, 1939; member, Johnson County, Iowa State, and American Bar Associations; city solicitor of Iowa City, 1933-35; mayor of Iowa City, 1935-37; Republican nom-inee for Railroad Commissioner of Iowa in 1932 and 1934; permanent chairman, Iowa State presidential convention, February 28, 1936; graduate, First Officers’ Training Camp, Leon Springs, Tex., 1917; commissioned United States Regular Army; served with Thirty-fiftth Infantry throughout the World War I; retired No-vember 10, 1919; assistant professor military science and tactics, University of Iowa, 1921-23; sales analyst, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 1916-17 and 1920-21; married Dorris Jeanette Brownlee, of Waterloo, Iowa, June 5, 1920; children, Richard Coupland and Dorris Brownlee 2d (Mrs. Raymond Reiser); elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Allamakee, Benton, Buchanan, Clayton, Clinton, Delaware, Du-buque, Fayette, Jackson, Jones, Linn, and Winneshiek (12 counties). Population (1940), 392,052. HENRY O. TALLE, Republican, of Decorah, Iowa; born and reared on a farm; by profession an educator in economics and political science; served in the United States Navy during World War I; commissioned ensign; elected to the Seventy-sixth and the Seventy-seventh Congresses from the old Fourth District; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses from the new Second District. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Black Hawk, Bremer, Butler, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Floyd, Frank- lin, Grundy, Hardin, Howard, Marshall, Mitchell, Tama, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1940), 344,467. JOHN W. GWYNNE, Republican, of Waterloo, Iowa; born in Iowa County, Iowa, October 20, 1889; received degree of B. A. in 1912 and LL. B. in 1914, from the State University of Iowa; judge of the municipal court of city of Waterloo for 6 years; prosecuting attorney of Black Hawk County for 6 years; served in the World War with the Eighty-eighth Division; married and has two children, Mary and John, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Appanoose, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Mahas-Sr alontos, Poweshiek, Ringgold, Union, Wapello, and Wayne, (14 counties). Population (1940), KARL MILES LeCOMPTE, Republican, of Corydon, Iowa, was born in Corydon, Iowa, May 25, 1887; graduated from the Corydon High School in 1905, and from the State University of Iowa, in 1909, with a degree of B. A.; publisher of the Corydon Times-Republican since 1910, member of the State senate, 1917-21; served as a private during the World War I; was married in 1927 to Miss Dorothy ° g 36 | Congressional Directory KANSAS Tye; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Popu- lation (1940), 313,157. PAUL CUNNINGHAM, Republican, of Des Moines, Iowa; lawyer; born in Indiana County, Pa., son of Robert Harvey and Sarah Jane Cunningham; gradu-ated from the State Normal School, Indiana, Pa., and from the literary and law departments of the University of Michigan; Fort Sheridan Training Camp, 1917; discharged 1919, first lieutenant, Infantry; former captain, Iowa National Guard; former State representative, Polk County, Iowa; member Westminster U. P. Church, American Legion, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, Masonic bodies, Odd Fellows, Moose, and various civic organizations; married Gail Fry; three children, Paul Harvey, Jr., Edward Plummer (killed on Saipan Island, November 15, 1944, in the Marines), and Harriett Sarah; elected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Boone, Calhoun, €arroll, Crawford, Emmett, Greene, Hamilton, Han-cock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, Winnebago, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1940), 304,059. JAMES I. DOLLIVER, Republican, of Fort Dodge, Iowa; born in Park Ridge, I1l., August 31, 1894; father, Rev. Robert H. Dolliver, mother, Elle Barrett Dolli-ver; was graduated from Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa, with A. B. degree in 1915, and from the University of Chicago Law School with J. D. degree in 1921; lawyer; served in the Signal Corps Service in World War I; prosecuting attorney of Webster County, Iowa, 1924-29; member of school board, Fort Dodge Independent School District, 1938-45; department commander, Iowa Amer- “ican Legion, 1937-38; married Rachel McCreight, of Fort Dodge, Iowa; four children—James M., 21, ensign, Coast Guard; Margaret, 16; Arthur, 14; Robert, 11; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Adams, Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, logos Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, Shelby, and Taylor (14 counties). Population (1940), BEN FRANKLIN JENSEN, Republican, of Exira, Iowa; born December 16, 1892, in Marion, Linn County, Iowa, of Danish parentage; attended rural school, Exira High School, and Officers’ Training School, commissioned second lieutenant during the World War I; retail lumberman; student of government science and has devoted much of his life to the problems of the people; past seventh district com-mander of the American Legion; member of Lutheran Church; married Charlotte E. Hadden, of Clearfield, Iowa, and they have one daughter—Betty (Mrs. Donald G. Fitzpatrick); elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (12 counties). Population (1940), 297,341, CHARLES B. HOEVEN, Republican, of Alton, Iowa; born in Hospers, Iowa, March 30, 1895; was graduated from the Alton High School in 1913 and from the State University of Iowa with a B. A. degree in 1920 and an LL. B. degree in 1922; lawyer and was admitted to the Iowa bar in 1922; county attorney of Sioux County, Iowa, 1925-37; member. of the Iowa State Senate, 1937-41; president pro tempore of the Iowa State Senate, 1939-41; permanent chairman of the Towa Republican State Convention, 1940; both temporary and permanent chairman of the Iowa Republican State Judicial Convention, 1942; veteran of the First World War, serving with the A. E. F. in England and France; member of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Disabled American Vet-erans; married Velma Ruth Pike, of Toledo, Iowa, and they have two children— Pauline Ruth and Charles Pike; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, KANSAS (Population (1940), 1,801,028) SENATORS ARTHUR CAPPER, Republican, of Topeka, was born in Garnett, Anderson County; Kans., July 14, 1865; received his education in the common schools and KANSAS Biographical 37 high school of Garnett; learned the printing trade on the Garnett Journal; went to Topeka in 1884 and secured work as typesetter on the Topeka Daily Capital, of which he is now owner and publisher; later became a reporter on this paper and then city editor; in 1891 went to New York and was a reporter on the New York Tribune, and in 1892 was in Washington as special correspondent; in 1893 started in business for himself by purchasing the North Topeka Mail, a weekly paper, which he afterward combined with the Kansas Breeze; a few years later he pur-chased the Topeka Daily Capital and other publications; was president of board of regents, Kansas State Agricultural College, from 1910 to 1913; was elected Governor of Kansas in 1914 and again in 1916; is a member of the national board of the American Red Cross, a member of the national board of directors of the 4-H Clubs since the organization was founded, and has been on the national council of the Boy Scouts of America for a number of years; elected United States Senator at the general election November 5, 1918; reelected in 1924, 1930, 1936, and again in 1942; married Florence Crawford (deceased), daughter of former Gov. Samuel J. Crawford. CLYDE MARTIN REED, Republican, of Parsons, Kans., was born in Cham-paign County, Ill.,, October 19, 1871; family moved to Labette County, Kans., in 1875; common school education; taught school 1 year; appointed Railway Mail Service in 1889; served Post Office Department in transportation of mail branch for 28 years, rising through all grades to be field superintendent of divisions at Cleveland and Cincinnati, Ohio, New Orleans, La., Omaha, Nebr., and St. Paul; Minn.; superintendent, Railway Adjustment Division, Post Office Department, 1908-10; resigned to actively manage and publish the Parsons (Kans.) Sun, a daily newspaper, of which he is now editor and publisher; secretary to Gov. Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, in 1919; appointed a member of Kansas Court of Industrial Relations in 1920; appointed chairman of Kansas Public Utilities Commission in 1921, and served to 1924; Governor of Kansas, 1929-31; practiced extensively before Interstate Commerce Commission and State commissions, Middle West; married Minnie E. Hart in 1891, and they have seven children; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Clay, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, losin, Nemaha, Pottawatomie, Riley, Shawnee, and Washington (13 counties). Population (1940), ALBERT M. COLE, Republican, of Holton, Jackson County, Kans.; born in -Moberly, Mo., on October 13, 1901, son of Walter I. and Mary B. Cole; attended grade schools of Topeka, high school in Sabetha, and Washburn College, Topeka; was graduated from University of Chicago with LL. B. degree in 1925; member of Phi Alpha Delta and Kappa Sig; married to Emily Corbin of Kansas City and they have two children, Kitty and Will; member and president of Holton School Board for 12 years; county attorney of Jackson County; State senator, represent-ing Jackson and Atchison Counties from 1941 to 1944; member of Kansas Legis-lative Council from 1941 to 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1940), 308,392. ERRETT P. SCRIVNER, Republican, of Kansas City, Kans.; born in Newton, Kans., March 20, 1898, son of Rev. William H. and Etta (West) Scrivner; attended grade schools in several Kansas towns; graduated from Manual Training High School, Kansas City, Mo.; enlisted in Battery B, One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Field Artillery, in July 1917; served overseas with the Thirty-fifth Division; awarded Silver Star and Purple Heart medals; graduated from Kansas University, 1925, LL. B.; member of Phi Delta Phi and Order of Coif; general practice of the law; member of Wyandotte County Bar Association, Kansas State Bar Associa-tion, and of the bar of the United States Supreme Court; past State commander, American Legion (Kansas); member of Christian Church and Masonic bodies; married} Jean Lorraine Marshall, 1921; one daughter, Nancy Lee, age 15; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on September 14, 1943, to fill the vacancy caused by pe death of U. S. Guyer; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November. 3 4, 38 | Congressional Directory KANSAS THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Montgomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1940), 249,574. THOMAS D. WINTER, Republican, of Girard, Kans.; born July 7, 1896, at Columbus, Kans.; attended grade schools in Galena and Columbus, Kans.; graduated from high school in Columbus, Kans.; served in the Air Service during the World War; court reporter of the district court of Crawford County, Kans., 1921-27; admitted to practice law in Kansas in 1926; served as assistant county attorney and county attorney of Crawford County, Kans.; commissioner of public utilities of the city of Girard and commissioner of finance and revenue of . the city of Girard; engaged in practice of law at Girard, Kans.; married Blanche Gracey, of McCune, Kans., in 1922; two children—Robert and John; member of the various Masonic bodies, the American Legion, and the Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Butler, Chase, Coffee, Dickinson, Geary, Greenwood, Harvey Lyon, McPherson, Marion, Morris, Osage, Sedgwick, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (15 counties). Pop, ulation (1940), 382,546. EDWARD H. REES, Republican, of Lyon County, Kans.; born on a farm in Lyon County, Kans.; was a student at the Kansas State Teachers College, of Emporia, Kans.; was admitted to the practice of law in 1915; is married and has one son; member of the Kansas House of Representatives, 1927-33, being ma-jority floor leader, 1931-33; served in the State senate, 1933-35; served as chairman of the Kansas Judiciary Committee, 1935-37; member of the Kansas Judicial Council, 1933-37; is engaged in the general practice of law at Emporia, Kans., also operates a farm and interested in agriculture; member of the various Masonic bodies, the American Legion, and the Farm Bureau and Grange; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearney, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Meade Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, Sumner and Wichita (33 counties). Population (1940), 296,118. : CLIFFORD R. HOPE, Republican, of Garden City, Kans.; born at Birming-ham, Iowa, June 9, 1893; has been a resident of Finney County, Kans., since 1906; attended Nebraska Wesleyan University, Lincoln, Nebr.; graduate of Washburn Law School, Topeka, Kans., 1917; admitted to Kansas bar same year; attended first officers’ training camp, Fort Riley, Kans.; served with the Thirty-fifth and Eighty-fifth Divisions in the United States and France; member of Kansas House of Representatives; 1921-27; speaker pro tempore, 1923; speaker, 1925; married Pauline E. Sanders, of Topeka, Kans., January 8, 1921; three children—Edward Sanders (deceased), Clifford R. Hope, Jr., and Martha; Presbyterian; Scottish Rite Mason; Elk; also member American Legion; elected to Seventieth and all succeeding Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cheyenne, Cloud, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Ottawa, Phillips, Rawlins, Republic, Rooks, Russell, Saline, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (26 counties). Population (1940), 251,805. FRANK CARLSON, Republican, of Concordia, Kans.; farmer-stockman; born January 23, 1893, at Concordia, Kans.; attended rural schools, Concordia High School, Concordia Normal and Business College, and Kansas State College; World War veteran; member of Kansas Legislature, 1929 and 1931 sessions; chairman of Republican State committee in 1932; member of the various Masonic bodies and the Baptist Church; married August 26, 1919, and has two children— Eunice Marie, born December 20, 1926, and a foster son, Millard Ross; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-cighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. KENTUCKY Biographical KENTUCKY (Population (1940), 2,845,627) SENATORS ALBEN WILLIAM BARKLEY, Democrat, of Paducah, Ky., was born in Graves County, Ky., November 24, 1877; educated in the county schools and in Marvin College, Clinton, Ky., graduating there in 1897, receiving A. B. degree, afterward attending Emory College at Oxford, Ga., and the University of Virginia Law School at Charlottesville, Va.; is a lawyer by profession, having been ad-mitted to the bar at Paducah, Ky., in 1901; was married June 23, 1903, to Miss Dorothy Brower, of Paducah, Ky., and has three children; was elected prose-cuting attorney for McCracken County, Ky., in 1905 for a term of 4 years; at expiration of term was elected judge of the McCracken County court and served until elected to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-third and all succeed-ing Congresses; was chairman State Democratic conventions at Louisville, Ky., 1919, and at Lexington, Ky., May 1924; was delegate at large to Democratic National Conventions at San Francisco in 1920, at New York in 1924, at Houston in 1928, at Chicago in 1932, at Philadelphia in 1936, and at Chicago in 1940, serving as temporary chairman at Chicago and Philadelphia; served as per-manent chairman at the Democratic National Convention in 1940; elected to United States Senate from Kentucky for term beginning March 4, 1927; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1933; reelected for term beginning January 3, 1939, and reelected for term beginning January 3, 1945; was elected Majority Leader of the Senate in 1937 to succeed the late Senator Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas, which position he still holds. WILLIAM A. STANFILL, Republican, of Hazard, Ky., was born in Barbour-ville, Knox County, Ky., on January 16, 1892, the son of Joshua F. and Lura D. Stanfill, both deceased; attended public schools of Barbourville, Ky., and Union _ College; law work at University of Kentucky, receiving LL. B. degree in 1912; commenced practice in Hazard, Ky., where he has since resided; practiced law in the firm of Judge H. C. Faulkner and W. E. Faulkner at Hazard until 1925, when he opened his own law office, practicing alone until June 1, 1929, when he formed a partnership with J. W. Craft in the firm known as Craft & Stanfill; formerly a member of the Board of Regents of Morehead State Teachers College; member of the Board of Governors of the Kentucky Children’s Home at Lyndon, Ky., before it was taken over by the State of Kentucky, and for many years has been a member of the Joint Board of Education of the Methodist Church in Kentucky; elected chairman of the Republican State Central Committee of Kentucky in 1944, and was Republican campaign chairman for Kentucky in 1944; has devoted most of his time to the affairs of the Republican Party for the past 2 years; married Miss May Begley on July 17, 1917; they have no children; Mason and member of the Methodist Church; appointed to the United States Senate on November 19, 1945, by Hon. Simeon S. Willis, Governor of Kentucky, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator A. B. Chandler, for the term ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Christian, Crittenden, Fulton Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, McCracken, Marshall, and Trigg (14 counties). Population © (1940), 251,346. NOBLE JONES GREGORY, Democrat, of Mayfield, Ky.; born in Mayfield, Ky., August 30, 1897, son of William Jones and Rosa A. (Boyd) Gregory; edu-cated in private and public schools of Mayfield; married to Miss Marion Hale, of Mayfield on June 22, 1925; one daughter, Marion Hale; served in various official capacities with First National Bank of Mayfield since 1917; resigned as cashier and trust officer after election to Congress in 1936; at present, director of this bank; Presbyterian; member of Elks, Odd Fellows, and other fraternal orders; elected to Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allen, Butler, Daviess, Edmonson, Henderson, Hopkins, Logan, McLean, Muhlenberg, Ohio, Simpson, Todd, Union, Warren, and Webster (15 counties). Population (1940), 354,347. EARLE C. CLEMENTS, Democrat, of Morganfield, Ky.; born in Morganfield, Ky., October 22, 1896; attended the University of Kentucky, leaving in 1917 for Congressional Directory KENTUCKY service in World War I; captain, Infantry; farmer; served 23 years as public official in the offices of sheriff, county clerk, county judge, and State senator; majority floor leader in 1944, Kentucky State Senate; married Miss Sara Blue of Morganfield, Ky.; daughter, Elizabeth Hughes Clements; elected to the Seventy~ ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. : ‘THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Jefferson. Population (1940), 385,392. EMMET O’NEAL, Democrat, of Louisville, Ky., was born in Louisville, Ky., on April 14, 1887; attended the public schools; was graduated from the academic departments of Centre College, Danville, Ky., in 1907 and Yale University in 1908, and from the law department of the University of Louisville in 1910; also did some postgraduate work at Yale University; was admitted to the bar in 1910, and practiced in Louisville, Ky., until 1917, when he enlisted in the First Division of the American Army at Paris, France; following his discharge in 1919 he returned to Louisville, and has since been active in civic affairs; served as one of the first department commanders of the American Legion of Kentucky in 1921, and has served that organization in many capacities; member of the board of trustees of Centre College, 1928-34; married Glessie Morris, and they have two daughters— Lydia and Mary; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adair, Anderson, Barren, Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hancock, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Metcalfe, Nelson, Spencer, Shelby, Taylor, and ‘Washington (19 counties). Population (1940), 280,609. FRANK LESLIE CHELF, Democrat, Lebanon, Marion County, Ky.;*born, Elizabethtown, Hardin County, Ky., September 22, 1907, youngest child of Judge Weed S. Chelf, deceased, and Hallie Wrather Chelf, deceased; at age of 5 years, due to death of parents, was placed in Masonic Widows and Orphans Home of Kentucky; served as enlisted man, U. S. Navy; attended St. Mary’s College, St. Mary, Ky., and Centre College, Danville, Ky.; received LL. B. degree, Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; admitted to the bar, 1931; married Louise Rash, North Middletown, Bourbon County, Ky., 1935; children—Carolyn, Bonnie, and Frank L., Jr. ; Presidential delegate, Democratic National Convention, Philadelphia, Pa., 1936; chairman, Sixth Bar District, Kentucky, 1940-41; elected prosecuting at-torney, Marion County, three consecutive 4-year terms; in July 1942 took leave of absence and served in World War II with U. S. Army Air Forces; was a major when retired due to physical disability, August 1944; member, Phi Delta Theta, American Legion, Kiwanis Club; Mason; Eastern Star; elected to Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; member Judiciary Committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Oldham, Pendleton, and Trimble (9 counties). Population (1940), 225,426. BRENT SPENCE, Democrat, of Fort Thomas, Ky.; son of Philip Brent and Virginia (Berry) Spence; born in Newport, Ky.; attorney at law; served as State senator for 4 years and city solicitor of the city of Newport for 8 years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bourbon, Boyle, Casey, Clark, Estill, Fayette, Franklin, Garrard, Henry, Jessamine, Lee, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (17 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 340,438. VIRGIL CHAPMAN, Democrat, Paris, Bourbon County, Ky.; son of James Virgil and Lily (Munday) Chapman; born Middleton, Simpson County, Ky., March 15, 1895; married, June 12, 1920, Miss Mary Adams Talbott, Paris, Ky.; one daughter—Mrs. Francis J. Danforth, Jr.; graduated, University of Kentucky, 1918; admitted to practice law, 1917; city attorney, Irvine, Ky., 1918-20; moved law office to Lexington, Ky., 1920, with residence at Paris; campaigner in Ken-tucky and several other States, 1921-22, in organizing tobacco growers’ cooperative marketing associations; Member, Sixty-ninth and Seventieth Congresses; nom-inated for Seventy-first Congress, but defeated in Hoover landslide of 1928; Member, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fiftth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Select Committee on Conserva-tion of Wild Life Resources, Democratic Steering Committee of House of Repre-sentatives; chairman, executive committee of Democratic National Congressional Committee. - LOUISIANA Biographical 41 SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Floyd, Johnson, Knott, Letcher, Magoffin, Martin, Perry, and Pike (8 counties). Population (1940), 286,766. ' ANDREW JACKSON MAY, Democrat, of Prestonsburg, was born on Beaver Creek, Floyd County, Ky., June 24, 1875, the son of John and Dorcas Conley May; attended the county schools and taught in the common schools of Floyd and Magoffin Counties for 5 years; later entering Southern University Law School, Tennessee, from which he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 1898, and at once taking up the practice of law, in which he has since been constantly engaged; was married to Julia Grace Mayo (deceased), daughter of John D. and Anna Mayo, July 17, 1901; three children—Olga, Andrew (deceased), and Robert; in 1901 was elected prosecuting attorney for a term of 4 years, at the end of which he was reelected; has had an active and successful business career; Baptist; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930; reelected to Seventy-third and each succeeding Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Breathitt, Carter, Elliott, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Nicholas, Powell, Robertson, Rowan, and Wolfe (20 counties). Population (1940), 307,613. JOE B. BATES, Democrat, of Greenup, Ky., elected on June 4, 1938, to the Seventy-fifth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Fred M. Vinson; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiEs: Bell; Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Leslie, McCreary, Monroe, Owsley, Pulaski, Rockecastle, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (17 counties). Population (1940), 413,690. g : JOHN MARSHALL ROBSION, Republican, of Barbourville, Knox County, Ky., was reared on a farm and attended the common schools; received degree from the National Normal University, of Lebanon, Ohio; also attended the Ohio Northern University,of Ada, Ohio, and Hqlbrook College, at Knoxville, Tenn.; received the degree of bachelor of laws from Centre College, Danville, Ky.; taught in the public schools of Kentucky and Union College, Barbourville, Ky.; engaged in the practice of law; was a delegate to the Republican National Con--ventions in 1916, 1928, 1936, 1940, and 1944; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and Seventy-first Congresses; appointed to the United States Senate on January 9, 1930, to fill vacancy caused by the. resignation of Hon. Frederic M. Sackett; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; re-elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress by approximately 40,000 majority ; member of the Committees on the Judiciary, Mines and Mining, Revision of the Laws, and Committee on Committees, in the House; married and has two children, John M. Robsion, Jr., of United States Army, and Mrs. Henry Gordon Edmonds, 1500 Delafield Place. 2 LOUISIANA (Population (1940), 2,363,880) SENATORS JOHN HOLMES OVERTON, Democrat, of Alexandria, La.; born at Marks-ville, Avoyelles Parish, La., of the marriage of Judge Thomas Overton and Miss Laura Waddill; graduated from the Louisiana State University, with the degree of A. B., and from Tulane Law School, with the degree of LL. B.; conferred LL. D. by Duquesne University, June 7, 1939; married December 12, 1905, to Miss Ruth Dismukes, of Natchitoches, of which marriage are the following children— Mrs. Edward G. Cailleteau, Ruth, John, and Mrs. Elbert C. Brazelton; member of Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Phi fraternities, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Masonic order, Knights Templar, American Bar Association, Sons of the American Revolution, and Society of the Cincinnati; elected May 12, 1931, as Representative from the Eighth Congressional District of Louisiana to fill an unexpired term; elected to the United States Senate Nowember 8, 1932, for the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. ALLEN JOSEPH ELLENDER, Democrat, of Houma, La.; born in Montegut, Terrebonne Parish, La., September 24, 1891; lawyer and farmer; graduate of St. Aloysius College, New Orleans, La., and Tulane University of Louisiana, at Congressional Directory LOUISIANA New Orleans, with degrees of M. A. and LL. B.; married to Miss Helen Calhoun Donnelly; one son—Allen J., Jr.; served in World Way; city attorney of Houma, 1913-15; district attorney, Terrebonne Parish, 1915-16; delegate to Constitutional Convention of Louisiana in 1921; member of the house of representatives of Louisiana, 1924-36; floor leader, 1928-32, during administration of the late Huey P. Long, Governor; speaker of the house of representatives, 1932-36; Democratic nominee for United States Senator from Louisiana, and elected without opposition in the general election held on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; reelected November 3, 1942, in the general election, without opposition, for the term ending January 3, 1949; Democratic national committeeman from Louisiana, 1939-40. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 3 to 9 and 15. PARISHES: Plaquemines and St. Bernard. . Population (1940), 280,600. . F. EDWARD HEBERT (pronounced ‘‘ A-Bear”), Democrat, of New Orleans, La., was born in New Orleans, La., October 12, 1901; educated in the public and parochial elementary schools, Jesuit High School, and Tulane University of New Orleans; newspaperman on the New Orleans States and New Orleans Times-Picayune; city editor of the New Orleans States, which “broke” the Louisiana scandal on June 9, 1939, and which paper was subsequently awarded the Sigma Delta Chi plaque for ‘‘ courage in journalism’’; political editor and columnist for the New Orleans States for many years before appointment as city editor in 1937; colonel on the staff of Gov. James A. Noe of Louisiana, 1936; named by Gov. Sam Houston Jones of Louisiana as his personal representative in Washington, D. C. on May 15, 1940; member of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity and served as third national vice president, 1936-39; married to Gladys Bofill on August 1, 1934; one child, Dawn Marie; member of the Catholic Church; elected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 1, 2, 10 to 14, 16, and 17. PARISHES: Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1940), 327,645. PAUL HERBERT MALONEY, Democrat, of New Orleans, La. THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, La Fourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1940), 269,762. JAMES DOMENGEAUX, Democrat, of Lafayette, La.; lawyer; married; Catholic. FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, De Soto, Red River, and Webster (7 parishes). Population (1940), 318,513. OVERTON BROOKS, Democrat, of Shreveport, La., was born in East Baton Rouge Parish, La., parents, Claude M. Brooks, deceased, and Mrs. Penelope Overton Brooks; living—four sisters and one brother; educated in the schools of East Baton Rouge Parish; enlisted in the United States: Army in July 1918 and served in the Sixth Field Artillery, First Regular Army Division, until Sep-tember 1, 1919, seeing service in France, Belgium, and Germany during this time; graduated from the law school of the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., on April 10, 1923, at which time he began practicing law at Shreveport, La.; became United States Commissioner on September 1, 1925, and served as such for 10 years; married Miss Mollie Meriwether on June 1, 1933, and they have one child—Laura Anne; member of the Episcopal Church, Thirty-second degree Mason and Shriner; Elks club, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Shreveport Bar Association, Louisiana State Bar Association, Kiwanis club, Forty and Eight Organization, Bienville Cattlemen’s Association; elected to Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; renominated and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, East Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (14 parishes). Population (1940), 325,374. CHARLES EDGAR McKENZIE, Democrat, a native of Monroe, La.; born October 3, 1896; independent oil and gas operator, business man, insurance execu-tive, farmer and cattle fancier, aviation enthusiast; volunteered for service on Mexican border, 1916, with Louisiana National Guard; mustered in Federal service April 1917; commissioned September 1917; went overseas June 1918; returned to the States in September 1919; married Carrie Jack Perry, of Perryville, La., March MAINE Biographical 17, 1918; four children—Eleanor Yvonne (Mrs. Lea S. Thompson), Jane, Barbara, and Charles E., Jr. (seaman, first-class, U. S. Navy); member First Methodist Church, Monroe, La., Masons, Knights of Pythias, American Legion (past com-mander, Louisiana Department, 1927-28, and past national executive committee- man 1929-31), Forty and Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Military Order of the World War; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942; reelected i the Seventy-ninth Congress without opposition in either the primary or general elections. : SIXTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Ascension, East Baton Rouge, East Feliciana, Iberville, Livingston, Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1940), 333,295. JAMES HOBSON MORRISON, Democrat, of Hammond, La.; born in Ham-mond, La., December 8, 1908; attended the public schools; was graduated from Tulane University in 1935 with LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar in 1934 and commenced practice in Hammond, La., in 1934; member of the law firm of Mor-rison & Sims; married Miss Marjorie Abbey, of Webb, Miss., February 14, 1940; -elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Jef-ferson Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1940), 268,525. HENRY DOMINIQUE LARCADE, Jr., Democrat, of Opelousas, La.; born in Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, La., July 12, 1890; educated in the public and ‘parochial elementary schools, Opelousas High School, Academy Immaculate Conception, and Opelousas Institute; married Miss Virginia Budd, of Opelousas, La., June 18, 1913; in early business experience engaged in banking; resigned banking connections to enter insurance business; presently engaged in general insurance business at Opelousas, La.; member of St. Landry Parish School Board, 1913-28; elected a member of the Louisiana State senate in 1928 from the sena-torial district comprised of the Parishes of Acadia and St. Landry, serving from 1928 to 1932; served as assistant clerk of the senate, 1932-36; elected as a member of the State house of representatives from the Parish of St. Landry, La., in 1936 and served until 1940; member of and served as head and official of American Red Cross, Chamber of Commerce, Rotary Club, B. P. O. Elks, Knights of Colum-bus, District Boy Scout Council, Woodmen of the World, United Service Organiza-tions, American Legion, Forty and Eight, and other civic organizations; served at Camp Pike, Ark., during the First World War; religion, Catholic; elected to the evenly Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth ongress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Avoyelles, Grant, La Salle, Natchitoches, Rapides, Sabine, Vernon, and Winn (8 parishes). Population (1940), 240,166. A. LEONARD ALLEN, Democrat, of Winnfield, La., was born in a log cabin near Winnfield, La., January 5, 1891; son of Asa L. Allen and Sophronia Perkins Allen; reared on a small hill farm and received his early education in rural schools; graduated from the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., receiving A. B. degree in 1914; taught in rural schools; principal of the Georgetown High School, 1914-15, and the Verda High School, 1915-17; superintendent of Winn Parish schools, 1917-22; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1922 and has practiced his profession since at Winnfield; married Miss Lottie Mae Thompson in 1915, and they have two sons—Harwell Leonard Allen and Lyndon Blaine Allen; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. MAINE (Population (1940), 847,226) SENATORS WALLACE HUMPHREY WHITE, Jr., Republican, was born at Lewiston, Maine, August 6, 1877; graduated from Bowdoin College; member of the bar of the District of Columbia and of Maine; was elected to the House of Repre-sentatives of the Sixty-fifth Congress and to each succeeding Congress up to and including the Seventy-first; in September 1930 was elected United States Senator from Maine, was reelected in September 1936 and in September 1942; A rT i 44 Congressional Directory MAINE was appointed by President Coolidge as a delegate of the United States to the Pan American Electrical Communications Conference in Mexico City in 1924, and by the Secretary of State as a United States delegate to the International Telegraph Conference in Paris in 1925, and as an unofficial observer of the United States at the International Juridical Conference on Wireless Telegraphy, held in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1927; was appointed by the President as a United States delegate to the International Radio Telegraphic Conference in Washington, D. C., in 1927, as chairman of the United States delegation to the International Con-ference on Safety of Life at Sea, held in London, England, in 1929, by the Secre-tary of State as chairman of the United States delegation to the meeting of the International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications, held at Copenhagen in 1931, and by the President as chairman of the United States delegation to the International Radio Conference, Cairo, in 1938; is a member of the board of overseers of Bowdoin College; received honorary degrees of LL. D. from Bowdoin College in 1928 and from Bates College in 1938; minority floor leader of the Senate in the Seventy-ninth Congress. OWEN BREWSTER, Republican, of Dexter, Maine; born at Dexter, Maine, February 22, 1888; educated in the Dexter schools; graduated from Dexter High School, 1905, Bowdoin College, 1909, and Harvard Law School, 1913; prin-cipal of the Castine High School, 1910; admitted to the Maine bar in 1913; member of Portland school committee, 1915-23; representative to Maine Legis-lature, 1917-18; renominated, but resigned to enter military service; private, second lieutenant, captain, and regimental adjutant, Third Infantry, Maine National Guard; private, Field Artillery Central Officers’ Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor; representative to Maine Legislature, 1921-22; senator 1923-24; Governor of Maine 1925-29; chairman Governors’ conference 1926-27; married Dorothy Foss, of Portland, Maine, April 20, 1915; son, Charles F. Brewster born May 8, 1916; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on September 10, 1934, reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on September 14, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on September 12, 1938; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947. : REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Counmies: Cumberland, Oxford, Sagadahoc, and York (4 counties). . Population(1940), 290,335. ROBERT HALE, Republican, of Portland, Maine, born in Portland, Maine, November 29, 1889; was graduated from Portland High School 1906; A. B. degree Bowdoin College 1910; B. A. degree, Oxford University, England, 1912; studied at Harvard Law School 1913-14; M. A. degree, Oxford University 1921; honorary M. A. degree, University of Maine 1931; fraternities, Psi Upsilon and Phi Beta Kappa; admitted to Massachusetts bar in 1914, Maine bar in 1917; practiced law, Portland, Maine, 1917-42; representative to Maine Legislature, 1923 to 1930; speaker of Maine House of Representatives 1929-30; served in the United States Army, August 1917 to September 1919, in grades from private to second lieutenant; married Agnes Burke, of Morristown, N. J., April 20, 1922; daughter, Patricia Hale, born January 7, 1926; elected to the Seventy-eighth Conaroe September 14, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress September 11, Rb SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Kennebec, Knox, Lincoln, Somerset, and Waldo (7 counties). Population (1940), 276,695. MARGARET CHASE SMITH, Republican; native of Skowhegan, Maine; honorary degrees, LL. D., Wilson College, M. A., Colby College; printing, publish-ing, telephone, and woolen executive; technical advisor to International Labor Organization Conference, 1944; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress June 3, 1940, to fill the unexpired term of her husband, the late Clyde H. Smith; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; com-mittee, Naval Affairs. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aroostook, Hancock, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (5 counties). ‘Population (1940), 280,196. FRANK FELLOWS, Republican, of Bangor, Maine; born in Bucksport, Maine, November 7, 1889; educated in Bucksport schools, East Maine Conference Seminary, Universityof Maine, and University of Maine Law School; admitted to Maine bar August 1911; appointed clerk, United States District Court for ne MARPLAND Biographical 45 District of Maine, January 12, 1917; resigned September 1920; since in active practice of his profession with brother at Bangor under name of Fellows & Fellows; married June 27, 1910, to Georgie Eleanor Maling, Brewer, Maine; children— Elizabeth, Oscar, Joan, Raymond, and William; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress on September 9, 1940; nominated and reelected without opposition to Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. MARYLAND (Population (1940), 1,821,244) SENATORS MILLARD E. TYDINGS, Democrat, Havre de Grace, Md.; born at Havre de Grace, April 6, 1890; married Eleanor Davies of Washington D. C.; attorney at law; graduated from University of Maryland in mechanical engineering; studied law at University of Maryland; admitted to bar 1913; served in World War from April 6, 1917, to June 1, 1919; promoted through ranks from enlisted man to lieutenant colonel; cited by Generals Pershing, Morton, and Upton; awarded Distinguished Service Medal and Distinguished Service Cross; speaker of Maryland House of Delegates; State senator, Maryland; elected to Sixty-eighth and Sixty-ninth Congresses; elected to United States Senate 1926; reelected 1932; reelected 1938; reelected 1944. GEORGE L. RADCLIFFE, Democrat, of Baltimore; lawyer; born at Lloyds, Md., August 22, 1877; son of John Anthony LeCompte and Sophie D. (Travers) Radcliffe; graduated from Cambridge (Md.) Seminary in 1893; A. B., Johns Hopkins, 1897, Ph. D., 1900; LL. B., University of Maryland, 1903; LL. D., Washington College, 1934, University of Maryland, 1943; married Mary McKim Marriott on June 6, 1906, and they have one son—George Marriott Radcliffe, born June 9, 1919, now first lieutenant, A. U. S.; engineering officer with Air Corps (in the Pacific); principal of Cambridge Seminary, 1900-1901; teacher, Baltimore City College, 1901-2; admitted to Maryland bar in 1903; attorney for American Bonding Co., 1903-4, second vice president 1906-14, and president, 1914-30—now director; first vice president, member of the executive committee and board of directors of the Fidelity & Deposit Co.; member of the executive com-mittee and board of directors of the Fidelity Trust Co.; member of Baltimore board, Liquor License Commission, 1916-19; secretary of state of Maryland, 1919-20; regional adviser, 1933-34, region No. 10, Public Works Administration for States of Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Ten-nessee, Kentucky, and District of Columbia; member Maryland State Council of Defense, World War; special commissioner to organize war-work records of SE A Maryland in 1919 and also appointed in 1942 for a similar purpose; president of Maryland Historical Society; chairman of Maryland Branch, the National Foun-dation for Infantile Paralysis, 1934; chairman of Maryland Democratic Campaign Committee, 1932 and 1936; author: Governor Hicks of Maryland and the Civil War, 1902; elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, over his oppo-nent, Joseph I. France; reelected on November 5, 1940, receiving 394,239 votes, Harry W. Nice, Republican, receiving 203,192 votes. Home, 12 Edgevale Road, Roland Park, Baltimore; office, Fidelity Building, Baltimore. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Annes, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1940), 195,427. DUDLEY G. ROE, Democrat, of Sudlersville, Md.; born at Sudlersville, Queen Annes County, Md., March 23, 1881, the son of the late William D. Roe and Martha N. George; the Roe family have lived continuously in Queen Annes County since 1706; educated in the public schools, was graduated from Washing- ton College, Chestertown, Md., A. B. degree, 1901, and A. M. degree, 1903; from the University of Maryland, LL. B. degree, 1905; received honorary degree doctor of laws at Washington College, 1943; member of the Maryland House, 1907 to 1909; member of the Maryland Senate, 1923 to 1934 and 1939 to 1943; chairman of the finance committee and Democratic floor leader the last term; farmer, bank president, grain dealer; delegate to the Democratic National Con- vention at Houston, 1928; alternate to the Democratic National Convention at 78349°—T9—-2—1st ed. 5 Congressional Directory MARYLAND Chicago, 1932; Elk, Mason, Episcopalian; married Miss Anna Jane Metcalfe, of Prince William County, Va.; has three sons—Dudley G. Roe, Jr., and Brown M. Roe, associated with him in the grain firm of W. D. Roe & Son; youngest son, Lt. (Jr. Gr.) William M. D. Roe, in the United States Naval Reserve; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford. City oF BALTIMORE: Wards 15 and 16; ward 25, precincts 1 to 10; wards 26 to 28. Population (1940), 534,568. H. STREETT BALDWIN, Democrat, of Hydes, Md.; born in Baldwin, Baltimore County, Md.; son of Harry W. and Mary E. Baldwin; was graduated from Towson High School and attended the University of Maryland; owner and operator of one of the largest truck farms in Maryland; married Mary Virginia Smith, July 1917; has one daughter and two sons, having lost two sons in the war, Lt. Harry Wallace Baldwin and Capt. John Streett Baldwin; served two terms in first political office as a member of the House of Delegates of Maryland; member of the Board of County Commissioners of Baltimore County, 1934-42, being president from 1938 until 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in a majority of approximately 23,000 votes; reelected to the Seventy-ninth ongress. TE STRICT oF BALTIMORE: Wards 1 to 8; ward 18, precinets 8 to 12; ward 22. Population THOMAS D’ALESANDRO, Jr., Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in the city of Baltimore, August 1, 19233, the son of Thomas D’Alesandro, Sr., and Mary Annie D’Alesandro; Catholic; educated at St. Leo’s Parochial School and Cal-vert College; engaged in the brokerage and insurance business; president of D’Alesandro-McCullough Insurance Agency, Inec.; married Miss Annunciata M. Lombardi in September 1928, and they have six sons and one daughter; elected to the State house of delegates in 1926, and reelected in 1930; member of St. Leo’s Holy Name Society; fourth degree, Alhambra, Knights of Columbus; Fraternal Order of Eagles; B. P. O. Elks; Loyal Order of Moose, and Maryland Historical Society; served as general deputy collector of internal revenue, 1933; elected a member of the Baltimore City Council in 1935; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; to the Seventy-seventh Congress on No-vember 5, 1940, to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. : FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF BALTIMORE: Wards 9 to 14, and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3; wards 19and 20. Population (1940), 276,856. GEORGE H. FALLON, Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in the City of Baltimore, July 24, 1902, the son of Lawrence Fallon, Sr., and Mary Dempsey Fallon; educated in the public schools and Calvert Business College, Johns Hopkins University (night); engaged in the advertising sign business; partner in the Lawrence Fallon Co.; married Miss Willa Virginia Thomas in 1929 and they have one child, Mary Joyce; elected to Democratic State Central Committee of Baltimore in 1938, served as chairman; elected to the Baltimore City Council in 1939, reelected in 1943; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St. Marys (6 counties). Ci1TY oF BALTIMORE: Ward 18, precincts 4 to 7, 13, and 14; wards 21, 23, and 24; ward 25, precincts 11 to 17. Population (1940), 288,851. LANSDALE G. SASSCER, Democrat, of Upper Marlboro, Md.; born in Upper Marlboro, Md., September 30, 1893, son of late Frederick and Lucy Claggett Sasscer; attended the public schools of Prince George County, Central High School of Washington, D. C., and Tome School, Port Deposit, Md.; received LL. B. degree from Dickinson Law School in 1914; served 13 months in active service with the American Expeditionary Forces in France; at the time of his dis-charge held a first lieutenant’s commission; after war resumed practice of law in southern Maryland; married February 15, 1919, to Miss Agnes Coffren, and they have three children—Mrs. Hal B. Clagett, Jr., Mrs. W. Murray Sanders, and Lansdale G., Jr.; member of the Maryland Senate, 1922-38, serving as chair-man of the committee on judicial proceedings, 1927-29, as majority floor leader, 1931-33; and as president of that body in 1935 and 1937; delegate to the Demo-cratic National Convention in New York in 1924 and at Philadelphia in 1936; unanimously designated by the Democratic State Central Committee as party candidate to fill the vacancy in the Seventy-sixth Congress caused by the death of Stephen W. Gambrill; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress February 3, 1939; MASSACHUSETTS Biographical 47 reelected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Naval Affairs Committee. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 coun-ties). Population (1940), 319,016. JAMES GLENN BEALL, Republican, of Frostburg, Md.; born in Frostburg, Md., June 5, 1894; attended the public schools and Gettysburg (Pa.) College; during the First World War served in the Ordnance Corps, United States Army, being discharged with the rank of sergeant; engaged in the insurance and real-estate business, with offices in Frostburg and Cumberland, Md.; member of the Allegany County Road Commission, 1923-30; served in the Maryland State senate, 1930-34; served as member and chairman of the Maryland State Road Commission, 1938-39; Episcopalian; married Miss Margaret Schwarzenbach of Cumberland, Md., and they have three sons; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November on November 7, 1944. 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on MASSACHUSETTS (Population (1940), 4,316,721) SENATORS DAVID IGNATIUS WALSH, Democrat, of Fitchburg, Mass. (resident of Clinton, Mass.), was born in Leominster, Worcester County, Mass., on November 11, 1872; attended the public schools of Clinton, Mass.; Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., A. B., 1893, LL. D., 1913; Boston University School of Law, LL. B., 1897; from several universities, LL. D.; lawyer; elected a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1900, and reelected, 1901; Lieutenant Governor, 1913; Governor, 1914, and reelected 1915 (yearly terms); delegate at large to the Democratic National Conventions, 1912, 1916, 1920, 1924, 1928, . 1932, 1936, and 1940; delegate at large to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, 1917-18; elected as the first Democrat since before the Civil War . to the United States Senate, November 5, 1918, to succeed Hon. John W. Weeks, his Republican opponent; was defeated for reelection to the United States Senate, November 7, 1924, receiving 547,600 votes to 566,188 for his Republican opponent; elected to the United States Senate, November 2, 1926, to succeed William M. Butler, appointed to fill the unexpired term of Henry Cabot Lodge; reelected November 6, 1928; reelected November 6, 1934; reelected November 5, 1940; his term of office expires in 1947. LEVERETT SALTONSTALL, Republican, of Chestnut Hill, Mass.; born in Chestnut Hill (Newton), Mass., September 1, 1892; Noble and Greenough School; Harvard College, A. B., 1914; Harvard University Law School, LL. B., 1917; married Alice Wesselhoeft, of Jaffrey, N. H., June 27, 1916; children, Leverett, Jr. (first lieutenant, U. S. Army, being discharged), Rosalie (deceased), Emily B. (Rm. 1/¢-U. S. N. R. WAVES, discharged), Peter B. (killed in action, sergeant, U. S. Marines), William L. (enlisted U. S. N. R., May 12, 1945), and Susan; served as first lieutenant, Three Hundred and First Field Artillery, 1917-18 (5 months’ service in France); attorney at law; member of board of aldermen, Newton, 1920-22; assistant district attorney of Middlesex County, 1921-22; member, Massachusetts House of Representatives 1923-36; speaker of the house for 8 years of service; director of Community Fund Drive, 1938; elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1938; reelected in 1940 and 1942; chairman, New England Governors’ Conference, 1939-44; chairman, National Governors’ Conference, 1944; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the unexpired term of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (resigned), ending January 3, 1949. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Berkshire and Franklin. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Holyoke and Westfield; towns of Blandford, Chester, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, and Tolland. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Towns of Belchertown, Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Huntington, Mid-dlefield, Pelham, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, and Templeton. Pop-ulation (1940), 278,459. JOHN WALTER HESELTON, Republican, of Deerfield, Mass.; born March 17, 1900; educated in the public schools of Gardiner, Maine, Amherst College, and Harvard Law School; lawyer; served in the U. S. Army October 10 to Decem- Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS ber 12, 1918; secretary, trustees of Deerfield Academy; trustee, Greenfield Savings Bank; selectman, Deerfield, Mass., 1932-35; president, Massachusetts Selectmen’s Association, 1935-38; district attorney, Northwestern District, 1939, and reelected in 1942; married; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Agawam, Brimfield, East Longmeadow, Hampden, Holland, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Monson, Wales, West Springfield, and Wilbraham. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, East-hampton, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield, and South Hadley. Population (1940), 299,109. CHARLES RUSSELL CLASON, Republican, of Springfield, Mass.; born in Gardiner, Maine, September 3, 1890; was graduated from Bates College in 1911; from Georgetown University Law School in 1914; and from Oxford University in 1917; attorney at law; district attorney, western district of Massachusetts, 1927— 30; World War veteran; married to Emma M. Pattillo, of Truro, Nova Scotia; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy- seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN COUNTY: Town of Palmer. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Town of Ware MippLESEX COUNTY: City of Marlborough; towns of Hudson, Maynard, Shirley, and Stow. WORCES- TER COUNTY: 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, Westminister, 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, businessman, 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 Lillian Sundberg; two children, Mary Ellen Bamby and Ann Blenda; veteran of first World War; elected to the Seventh-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 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, Westborough, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—ESSEX CouUNTY: 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-perell, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngsboro, Watertown, Westford, Wilmington, and Winchester. Population (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; honorary LL. D. from Washington College of Law; president of the board of trustees 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 husband, the late Representa-tive John Jacob Rogers; reelected to the Seventieth and all succeeding Congresses, including the Seventy-ninth by large majorities. ¥ASSAcEOSETS Brographical | 49 SIXTH DISTRICT.—EsSEXx 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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. SUFFOLK 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 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—EssEX County: 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. ANGIER LOUIS GOODWIN, Republican, of Melrose, Mass. ; born in Fairfield, 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 of appeal; 8 years a member of the Melrose Board of Aldermen and president of 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 Massachusetts Commission on Participation in New York World’s Fair; appointed 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, EEE Ee Eastern Star, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Grange, and Zeta Psi fraternity; member of Boston City Club, and University Club of Washington; Unitarian; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress and reelected to the Seventy- | ninth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket. BristorL County: City of Fal River, ward 6, and city of New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, and Westport NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Cohasset. PLYMOUTH COUNTY: Towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marion Marshfield, Mattapoisett, Middleborough, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plymton, Rochester, Rockland, Scituate, Wareham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Population (1940), 311,840. -CHARLES L. GIFFORD, Republican, of Cotuit (Barnstable), Mass.; educated in the public schools, taught school 10 years; engaged in real-estate development and other business; member Massachusetts Legislature—house of representatives 1912-13, senate 1914-19; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation, August 2, 1921, of Hon. Joseph Walsh; reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-ninth. TENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Newton. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Brookline. SurroLK County: City of Boston, wards 4, 5, 10, 12, 19, 20, and 21. Population (1940), 346,623. CHRISTIAN ARCHIBALD HERTER, Republican, of Boston, Mass.; born in Paris, France, March 28, 1895, of American parents; was graduated from Harvard University, cum laude, in 1915; attaché of the American Embassy in Berlin, Germany, in 1916, and for 2 months was in charge of the American Legation in Brussels, Belgium; in the Department of State at Washington, D. C., Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS 1917 and 1919; in 1918 was assistant commissioner and secretary of special diplo-matic mission to draw up prisoner-of-war agreement with Germany and secretary of American Peace Commission; executive secretary, European Relief Council, 1920; personal assistant to Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, 1921-24; editor of the Independent, 1924-28; associate editor and vice president of the Sportsman, 1927-37; visiting lecturer on Government, Harvard University, 1929-30; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1931-43, serving as speaker 1939-43; president of the Republican Club of Massachusetts, 1937-41; overseer of Harvard University, 1940-44; trustee of many philanthropic and charitable organizations; deputy director, Office of Facts and Figures, Wash-ington, D. C., from December 1941 to June 1942; married Mary Caroline Pratt, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1917; four children, Christian A., Jr., 27, major, Field Artillery, overseas; Frederic P., 25, first lieutenant, Medical Corps; Adele, 21, “and Miles, 17; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Cambridge and city of Somerville, wards 1, 2, and 3. SUFFOLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 1, 2, 3, and 22. Population (1940), 328,051. 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 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; elected to the office of mayor of the City of Boston for a 4-year term beginning January 1, 1946. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SUrroLK 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 Dorchester; born in South Boston; lawyer; educated in the Boston public schools; admitted to practice law in Massa-chusetts 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; Majority Leader; reelected to the Seventy-ninth 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; LL. D. by Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Mass., June 13, 1945; 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. SUFFOLK 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. Cameron 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. MICHIGAN Biographical 51 FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BRIsTOL COUNTY: City 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; chairman of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee in 1938; permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1940; member of Republican National Committee, 1936 to 1940; elected chairman of the Republican National Committee, July 1940; resigned chairmanship in November 1942; delegate at large to Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1944 and served as permanent chairman; in 1924, elected Member of the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress, includ-ing the Seventy-ninth; elected Minority Leader, House of Representatives, Seventy-sixth Congress. 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, 1943, and 1945; United States delegate to United Nations Organization meeting at San Francisco, 1945. 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.—Ciry oF 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 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 LL. B. in 1924; married Eleanor Leppek 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 Association, Detroit f i | 1 { | | | Congressional Directory MICHIGAN Bar Association, Polish National Alliance, Polish Faleons, University of Detroit Alumni Association, Chene Business Association, Sunnybrook Golf Glub; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Popula-tion (1940), 285,648. EARL CORY MICHENER, Republican, of Adrian, Mich.; educated in public schools of Adrian, the University of Michigan, and the law department of Co-lumbian University; admitted to the bar in 1903; served throughout the Spanish-American war; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties).Population (1940), 283,352. PAUL W. SHAFER, Republican, Battle Creek, Mich. ; elected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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; reelected November 7, 1944, with a plurality of 30,479. 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. Sy DISTRICT Cov Genesee, Ingham, and Livingston (3 counties). Population (1940), 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 Cunningham, 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 Novemher 5, 1940, to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, 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 LL. B.; during the World War served as second lieutenant, Machine Gun Company, Twenty-sixth Infantry, First Division, and saw active service in France during the Meuse-Argonne offensive; after the war, settled in Port Huron; was elected assistant police judge in 1921, serving in that capacity until he was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney of St. MICHIGAN : Biographical 93 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, B. P. O. E., American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars, past department commander, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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 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—Mrs. Robert L. Cavanagh, of Dayton, Ohio, Capt. Albert J. Engel, Jr., United States Army, and Helen Louise, age 14 years; elected prosecuting attorney of Missaukee County, Mich., in 1916; enlisted during the World War on May 15, 1917; com-missioned first lieutenant, A. G. D., at Fort Sheridan Training Camp, August 15, 1917; served in War Department at Washington from September 1 to October 15, 1917; sailed for France October 15, 1917; was promoted to rank of captain and returned from France September 15, 1919, having served 23 months in France and Germany; served in Michigan State Senate 1921, 1927, 1929, and 1931; elected to the Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alcona, Arenac, Bay, Clare, Crawford, Gladwin, Iosco, Isabella, Motos, Midland, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, and Roscommon (14 counties). Population (1940), 218,768. 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; married; two children—daughter, Mrs. Ronald Houck, and son, Maj. Devere H. Woodruff, TIE on duty in the Philippines, United States Army; member of Ways and Means Committee; chairman of Republican Conference; member, National Forest Reservation Commission. 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, I11., 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baraga, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Mar quette, and Ontonagon (8 counties). Population (1940), 200,265. FRANK E. HOOK, Democrat, of Ironwood, Mich.; born in L’Anse, Baraga County, Mich., May 26, 1893; was graduated from L’Anse High School in 1912; LL. B. degree, department of law, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Ind., 1918; attended Detroit College of Law in University of Detroit preparatory to Michigan bar examinations; admitted to practice law in the State of Michigan in October 1924; attorney, with law offices at Ironwood; World War veteran, member of Ironwood Post, No. 5, American Legion; served as city commissioner of city of Wakefield, Mich., and municipal judge, city of Wakefield; member of board of Congressional Directory MICHIGAN supervisors of Gogebic County, Mich.; married Elsie C. Schneider, of Ironwood, Mich., and they have two children—Mary Louise and Emma Mae; elected to Seventy-fourth Congress, the first Democrat to represent the Twelfth District; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry 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 four children—George D., Jr., Maureen, Joan, and John P.; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—City oF 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—Rev. Francis Dermott (S. J.), Marie Celeste (Sister Mary Palmyre I. H. M.), Louis 3d, Mary Jane, Vincent (lieutenant, U. S. N. R.), Carolyn, Joan Marie, Stella Marie, and Martha; 1935, guest of the Philippine Government at the inauguration of the Commonwealth; 1936, received a special citation from the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Michigan Department, for services as chairman of the Michigan Congressional committee which obtained the establishment of veterans’ facilities in Michigan; 1939, dele-gate to the Interparliamentary Union at Oslo, Norway, and inspected the United States Foreign Service offices in the Scandinavian countries; 1941, chairman of the first official congressional committee to South and Central America in-specting Foreign Service offices and studying effects of the cultural relations program in 17 countries; 1944, received annual award of the International Eco-nomic Council for outstanding devotion to world trade; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses; member of the Committee on Appropriations, chairman of the sub-committee on appropriations for the Departments of State, Commerce, Justice, and the Judiciary. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—City oF DETROIT: Wards 10, 12, 14, and 16. Population (1940), 382,399. JOHN D. DINGELL, Democrat, of Detrcit, 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 Wilillife 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 4% to 11, and afterward attended the St. Cyril and Methodeusz Seminary in Detroit and the Detroit Business University; married Miss Estelle J. Geisinger, of Dearborn, Mich., June 11, 1938; has five children by previous marriages, Joan, John A.) Jr., Maxine, Delphine, and Raymond J., and 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 present city of Hamtramck was built; established the Hamtramck Lumber & Supply Co., and the First State Bank of Hamtramck,now known as the Peoples Wayne County Bank of Hamtramck; later established the Dearborn Lumber & Coal Co., of Dearborn, Mich. ; during the First World War, and 13 years thereafter, was president of the Polish Citizens’ Committee of Detroit, which committee was CR MINNESOTA a Biographical : 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; has the distine-tion of being the only Member of Congress from the State of Michigan who is chairman of a standing committee, the Committee on Invalid Pensions; is a member of the Committee on Labor, Committee on Immigration and Naturaliza-tion, Committee on Education, Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and Committee on Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—OAKLAND CouUNTY, City oF 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. 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 (anactly 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. Congressional Directory MINNESOTA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmstead, 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-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses from the First Congres-sional District of Minnesota. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Carver, Cottonwood, Dakota, Faribault, Jack-son, Le Sueur, McLeod, Martin, Nicollet, Scott, Sibley, and Watonwan (14 counties). Population (1940), 305,559. JOSEPH PATRICK O'HARA, Republican, of Glencoe, Minn.; born in Tipton, Towa, January 23, 1895; educated public schools, oraduate of Spirit Lake (Iowa) High’ School; legal education, Inns of Court, London, England, and Notre Dame University dr. 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 overseas and one in the Air ‘Corps; elected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress by a vote of 91,970 to 29,619. 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. WILLIAM J. GALLAGHER, Democrat, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born in Minneapolis, Minn., May 13, 1875; high school graduate; working man; married; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—County: Ramsey. Population (1940), 309,935. FRANK T. STARKEY, Democrat, of St. Paul, Minn.; born in St. Paul, Minn., February 18, 1892; served as business representative of Milk Drivers Union from 1917 to '1933; ‘member of the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1923 to 1933 and in 1933 served as chief clerk of the House; in 1933 was appointed a member of the State Industrial Commission, which position he held until 1939; from 1939 to 1942 served as director of research division of the Minne-sota State Federation of Labor; also vice president of the Minnesota State Fed-eration of Labor for 12 years; in 1942 was again elected business representative of the Milk Drivers Union and at the time of his election to Congress was serving in that capacity; at the present time is a member of the Ramsey County Civil Service Commission and a member of several civic committees; married and the father of six children; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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 o. 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 hospital superintendent 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 ¢hildren— Mary Lou, Carolyn, and Eleanor; elected to Seventy -eighth Congress; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress. MISSISSIPPI Biographical on 57 | SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aitkin, Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Kanabee, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Pine, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and ‘Wright (15 counties). Population(1940), 334,781. HAROLD KNUTRON, 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, 15 years of age, and Alfred, 7 years of age; elected to the Minnesota State Legislature in 1935; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; -reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Con-gresses; 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-secaond 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; reelected November 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, Republican, of Crookston, Minn.; was born in Crook-ston, Minn., November 10, 1901; attended the public schools and after graduation from high school engaged in railroading, farming, and newspaper work 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 civics 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; presi-dent 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, Harold, Jr., and Andora; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, by the largest majority ever given a winning candidate and by the largest vote ever given a winning candidate in the history of the district. MISSISSIPPI (Population (1940), 2,183,796) SENATORS THEODORE GILMORE BILBO, Democrat, of Poplarville, Miss.; born on October 13, 1877, near Poplarville, in Pearl River County, Miss.; educated in the public schools in that county; attended Peabody College at Nashville, Tenn., Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., and the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor; lawyer and farmer; member of the State senate, 1908-12; served as Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi, 1912-16, and as Governor, 1916-20 and 1928-32; has two children—Mrs. Jessie Forrest Smith, Poplarville, Miss., and Col. Theodore G. Bilbo, Jr., Camp Cook, Santa Ynez, Calif.; received 63,752 votes in the first primary, Ross. A. Collins 42,209, and Senator Hubert D. Stephens 64,035; in the run-off primary, Governor Bilbo received 101,702 votes and Senator Stephens 94,587; elected to the United States Senate on November 6, 1934, for the term ending January 3, 1941; nominated for reelection to the United States Senate August 27, 1940, defeating ex-Governor Hugh L. White, wealthy lumber-man of Columbia, Miss., by a vote of 91,334 to 62,641, Governor White carrying only 13 out of the 82 counties of the State; had no opposition in the general election in November. JAMES OLIVER EASTLAND, Democrat, of Ruleville, Miss.; born in Dodds-ville, Miss., November 28, 1904; Methodist; attended the University of Mississippi, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Alabama; moved to Forest, Miss., in 1905 and was reared in Scott County, Miss.; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1927, and commenced practice in Forest, Miss. ; also engaged in agricultural pursuits; member of the State house of representatives from Scott County, Miss., 1928-32; married Elizabeth Coleman in 1932; three daughters, Nell, Ann, and Sue, and one son, Woods Eugene; moved to Sunflower County, Miss., in 1934; appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Pat Harrison, and served from June 30, 1941, to September 28, 1941, when a duly elected successor qualified; elected vo the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alcorn, Clay, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tishomingo (10 counties). Population (1940), 263,367. JOHN ELLIOTT RANKIN, Democrat, of Tupelo, Miss.; dean of the Missis-sippi delegation in the House; chairman of the Committee on World War Veter-ans’ Legislation; was born in Itawamba County, Miss., on March 29, 1882, son of Thomas B. and Modeste Rutledge Rankin; was educated in the common schools, the high school, and the University of Mississippi, graduating from the law depart-ment of the latter institution in 1910; entered the practice of law at West Point, Miss., in June 1910 and moved to Tupelo, Miss., in November of that year, where he has practiced his profession since that time, during which period he served 4 years as prosecuting attorney; an ex-soldier of the World War; member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, the Masonic fraternity, and several other orders; was married on October 1, 1919, to Miss Annie Laurie Burrous, of West Point, Miss.; they have one child, a daughter, Annie Laurie, who was born January 14, 1923; was nominated in the Democratic primaries of 1920 and elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress at the general election on November 2; renominated and reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-_ first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; was a Seventy-eighth, 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.IA, 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 pro-vision 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 adpoted 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; author of the amendment to the Rules of the House creating the permanent Committee on Un-American Activities. AREER Biographical : : 59 SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 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., lieutenant, U. S. Naval Reserve, and Charles Aven, aviation cadet, U. S. Army Air Corps; State senator; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-ninth. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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.; elected November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress, and reelected November 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 in Neshoba County, Miss., January 6, 1904; educated in the public schools of Neshoba and Newton Counties, Miss.; attended Clarke Memorial College, Newton, Miss.; received B. S. degree from Mississippi Southern College at Hattiesburg, Miss., and did work on M. A. degree at University of Alabama; farmer and educator; married Miss Etna B. Johnson, April 26, 1933; one son, William Arthur (Bill) Winstead, Jr., born December 19, 1943; member of Baptist Church, Masonic and Order of the Eastern Star; elected fraternity, superintendent of education of Neshoba County in 1935 and reelected in 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress without opposition. 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.; a member of the Rules Committee; chairman of the Special House Committee on Post- Congressional Directory MISSOURI War Economic Policy and Planning; member of the National Forest Reser-vation Commission; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November §, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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), Gdoria, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. MISSOURI + (Population (1940), 3,784,664) SENATORS FORREST C. DONNELIL, Republican; residence, 55 Joy Avenue, Webster Groves, Mo.; born August 20, 1884, at Quitman, Mo.; was graduated from Mary-ville (Mo.) High School, 1900; University ‘of Missouri, A. B. degree 1904, LL. B. degree 1907; Westminster College, Fulton, Mo., LI. D. degree (honorary), 1941; lawyer; served as city attorney of Webster Groves, Mo., and, beginning Febru-ary 26, 1941, as Governor of Missouri; married January 29, 1913, to Hilda Hays; two children, Mrs. Boyd Rogers, of Webster Groves, Mo., and John Lanier Don-nell, of St. Louis, Mo.; elected United States Senator on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. FRANK PARKS BRIGGS, Democrat, of Macon, Mo.; born February 25, 1894, at Armstrong, Mo.; attended Central College, Fayette, Mo., 1911-14; was graduated from the University of Missouri in 1915; publisher of the Macon (Mo.) Chronicle-Herald at the present time; married Miss Catherine Allen Shull, of St. Joseph, Mo., May 28, 1916, and they have five children, two sons and three daughters; appointed to the United States Senate on January 18, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator Harry S. Truman for the term ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Adair, Clark, Daviess, Grundy, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Marion, Mercer, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, Shelby, and Sullivan (16 counties). Population (1940), WAT ARNOLD, Republican, of Kirksville, Mo., born on a farm near Downing, Schuyler County, Mo., September 21, 1879; attended the Coffey, Mo., rural school and was graduated from the: Kirksville State Teachers College; taught school at Atlanta, Mo., 1903-04; entered the lumber business in 1905 at Atlanta, Mo., and in 1908 organized the Arnold Lumber Co. and moved to Kirksville, Mo., in which company he is now associated with his son, Sam M. Arnold; past president of the Rotary Club and the Chamber of Commerce 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; committees, Indian Affairs, Public Buildings and Grounds, War Claims, and Immigration and Naturalization. MISSOURI Biographical SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Boone, Camden, Carroll, Charlton, 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 near Columbia, Boone County, Mo., on December 6, 1905, the son of Dr. George Washington 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 Ashlock in Columbia, Mo., July 12, 1930, and they have two daughters, Gladys June and Maxine May; formerly engaged in the life-insurance business in central Missouri; member of the Christian Church; former Boy Scout leader; brother of George B. Schwabe, Member of Congress from Tulsa, OkKla.; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, from the Second District, which usually goes Democratic by about 15, '000 majority and which had not been represented by a Pope d for 20 years; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 1944 THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, De Kalb, 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 near Fillmore, Andrew County, Mo., on August 29, 1897; attended public schools of Fillmore and St. Joseph, Mo.; was graduated from the St. Joseph Law School in the class of 1928, receiving the degree of LL. 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, Buchanan County, Mo., at special 1942 session of Missouri State Legislature; president of St. J oseph Bar Association, 1942; served as a member of the Registrants Advisory Board, Draft Board No. 1 St. Joseph, Mo.; member of St. Joseph Lions Club, Charity Lodge No. 331, A. F.& A. M.: ; Shady Beach Lodge, I. O. O. F.; Lodge No. 40, St. Joseph, Mo.; L. 50 M., St. Joseph Lodge, No. 315; CE 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. S. S. Machias, dcing submarine patrel and convoy duty during First World War; member of American Legion and Vet-erans of Foreign Wars of the United States; married Miss Esther Leah Arnold at St. Joseph, Mo., August 29, 1927, and they have one daughter, Mary Barbara; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—JAckSON CouUNTY: 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 cirouit 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the Filipino Rehabil-itation Commission; chairman of Committee on Insular Affairs. FIFTH DISTRICT.—JAcCrKSON CouUNTY: Washington Township. KANSAS City: Wards 1 to 8, and 15. Population (1940), 234,285. ROGER CALDWELL SLAUGHTER, Demccrat, of Kansas City, Mo.; Hom, near Odessa, Lafayette Countv, Mo., Julv 17, 1905; attended the public schools at Independence, Mo., and was eraduated 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 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 6 Congressional Directory MISSOURI has engaged in the general practice of law in Kansas City; shortly after his admis-sion to the bar served for a shert 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; first elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; member of Committee on Rules. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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., June 6, 1914; educated in public scheols of Buffalo, Jefferson City, and Springfield, Mo.; graduate of Southwest Missouri State College, A. B., 1935, and Washington University School of Law, LL. B., 1938; admitted to practice of law in State and Federal courts, including United States Supreme Court; practiced law in Springfield, Mo.; member of Greene County and Missouri Bar Associations, Delta Theta Phile gal fraternity, Missouri State Historical Society, the American Academy of Political and Social Science, National Aeronautic Association, Greene County, Mo., Republican Central Committee, 1938-42, various farm organizations, and the Christian Church; married Miss June Young, of Hurley, Mo.; two children, a daughter, Ann and a son, William Philip; vol-unteered for combat duty in World War II, but was rejected; served as secretary to his father, Phil A. Bennett, Member of the Seventy-seventh Congress and Member-elect of the Seventy-eighth Congress; elected at a special election, January 12, 1943, to fill vacancy caused by death of Phil A. Bennett; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; in both elections he carried all counties in the Sixth Missouri District and received the largest majorities ever cast for a candidate for Congress in the District; member of Committees on the Census, Territories, and World War Veterans’ Legislation. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barry, Christian, Dade, Dallas, Douglas, Howell, Jasper, Lawrence, ‘McDonald, Newton, Ozark, Stone, Taney, Webster, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1940), 313,435. DEWEY SHORT, Republican, of Galena, Mo. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carter, Crawford, Dent, Iron, Jefferson, Laclede, Madison, Oregon, Perry, Phelps, Pulaski, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Shannon, Texas, Washington, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1940), 276,634. A.S.J. CARNAHAN, Democrat, of Ellsinore, Mo., was born January 9, 1897, on a farm in Carter County, Mo., near Ellsinore; grew to young manhood on the farm and attended the local country elementary school; 2 years of high school at Ellsinore and the remaining 2 years at Cape Girardeau, Mo.; was graduated from the State Teachers College at Cape Girardeau in 1926 with the degree of bachelor of science in education; graduate study at the University of Missouri and received the master’s degree in 1934; began teaching school at the age of 17; taught 4 years in rural schools, has taught elementary grades in the town schools, was 1 year a high school principal, and for the last several years has held school administra-tive positions in Carter, Reynolds, and Shannon Counties; served in the Navy overseas with a naval aviation unit in World War I; member of the Baptist Church; married in 1925 to Miss Kathel Schupp, a native of Carter County, and they have two sons, Robert, age 19, who is in the Navy, and Melvin, age 11, at home; has not heretofore held an elective political office; was elected on November 7, 1944, to serve in the Seventy-ninth Congress from the Eighth Congressional District of Missouri. ? 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, Mo.; born April 11, 1879; elected to Sixty-eighth and succeeding Congresses; long identified with the service of the House; introduced original system of standardizing Journalization of pro-ceedings of House precluding points of order on Journal; author of compendium of House procedure which has reduced by three-fourths the time formerly devoted to debate on parliamentary questions and which has to large extent nullified and eliminated obstructive tactics; facilitated proceedings of House by introduction of mechanical count on roll calls, by installation of amplifying equipment reducing / MISSOURI Biographical 63 disorder on floor and in galleries, by advocating discard of prefix on roll calls and by discontinuation of practice of Members announcing how colleagues would have voted if present; secured adoption of resolution establishing Democratic Steering Committee; as war chairman of Committee on Appropriations reported largest war appropriations in history of the world and heaviest reductions in non- war appropriations under previous fiscal year in the annals of the Congress; intro- duced system of committee procedure which has reduced time required for hear- ings and volume of transeripts; established investigating staff which has resulted in reduction of appropriations and expenditures at minimum operating cost; secured standardization of qualifications and method of appointment of perma- nent employees of the committee; author of law requiring study and designation of war surpluses under which billions of dollars in appropriations and contractual authorizations have been reclaimed for the Treasury; reported practically all appropriation bills during the critical period of the war by unanimous vote of the committee; led all State and national tickets in Congressional district in each election from the Sixty-eighth to the Seventy-ninth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress by increased majority; dean of State delegation. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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, 1880; attended country school at Glen Allen and later attended Mayfield-Smith Academy at Marble Hill; graduated from State Teachers College at Cape Girardeau, Mo., in 1904, and from University of Missouri in 1911 with LL. B. degree; was admitted to the bar in the same year and began the practice of law at Kennett, Mo., where he has since resided; volunteered for service in the World War; married Miss Adah G. Hemphill in 1919, and they have one son—Joe A.; member of Lions Club, American Legion, 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 and Postwar Economic Policy and Planning Committee of House. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Cirty or St.-Louls: Ward 4, precincts 13 to 20, 24 to 26, 28, and 29; ward 5, pre-cinets 1, 9 to 14, 19 to 22, 29, and 30; wards 6 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 6, 10 to 14, 16, 17, 22 to 24, and 29; ward 14, precincts 3 to 9; ward 15, precincts 3 to 25; wards 16 and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3 and 7 to 29; ward 19, precincts 1 to 5, 8 to 20, and 22 to 29; ward 25; ward 26, precincts 1 to 3, 8 to 15, 26, and 27; ward 28, precincts 7 and 8. Population (1940), 327,287. : JOHN BERCHMANS SULLIVAN, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo., was born in Sedalia, Pettis County, Mo., October 10, 1897, son of the late Patrick F. and Catherine Rochford Sullivan; was graduated from St. Louis University, with A. B. degree in 1918; enlisted in the United States Army October 5, 1918; received honorable discharge December 20, 1918; received LL. B. degree in 1922, and LL. M. degree in 1923; admitted to Missouri bar, 1921, and engaged in private practice from 1921 to 1933 in partnership with brother, Francis Patrick Sullivan (deceased), thereafter to 1936 alone; associate city counselor of St. Louis, 1936-38; _ secretary to the mayor, City of St. Louis, 1938-40, in the administration of Bernard F. Dickmann; married Miss Leonor A. Kretzer of St. Louis, Mo., Decem-ber 27, 1941; memberships—American Bar Association, St. Louis Bar Association, Missouri Bar Association, Lawyers’ Association of St. Louis (vice president, 1938); American Arbitration Association; public member and panel chairman, Regional War Labor Board VII; American Legion, past adjutant, past commander, Post No. 1; past judge advocate, Department of Missouri; the Forty and Eight, execu-tive committee, 1931; Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Theta Phi, Jefferson Club (vice president, 1932, president, 1938-39, executive committee, 1940-43); Smoke Elimination Committee of the City of St. Louis, secretary and lawyer member; City Government Institute, member of executive committee; Municipal Employees Merit and Pension System Committee, 1938-41; Municipal Government Survey Commission; Mayor's Budget Committee, 1938-41; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, with a plurality of 17,634, a total of 153,832 votes being cast; failed of reelection in 1942 by 565 votes, a total of 71,643 being cast; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944, with a plurality of 20,916 votes, a total of 117,786 votes being cast; member of Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. w 64 | Congressional Directory MONTANA TWELFTH DISTRICT.—ST. Louis County. City or ST. Louis: Ward 9, precincts 7 to 9, 15, 18 to 21, and 25 to 28; wards 10 to 13; ward 14, precincts 1, 2, and 10 to 28; ward 15, precincts 1, 2, 26, and 7; wards 23 and 24; ward 28, precincts 1to06, 9 to 11, and 17 to 26. Population (1940), 503, 738, WALTER CHRISTIAN PLOESER, Republican, of Clayton, St. Louis County, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo.; -educated iin public schools of St. Louis City, St. Louis County, and Casper and Lusk, Wyo., and at City College of Law and Finance at St. Louis; member of the House of Representatives of the Fifty-sixth General Assembly of the Missouri Legislature 1931-32; member of the DeMolay Legion of Honor; deputy member, Grand Council, Order DeMolay, Algabil Lodge, No. 544, A. F.and A. M.; A. and A. S. R. , thirty-second degree; Moolah Temple, A. A. 0. N. M. S.; ; 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 of Marine Underwriters’ 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Ap-propriations and Select Committee on Small Business. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CITY OF ST. Louis: Wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 12, 21 to 23, 27, and 30; ward 5, precincts 2 to 8, 15 to 18, and 23 to 28; ward 18, precincts 4 to 6; ward 19, precincts 6, 7, and 21; Fa 20 to 2 ward 26, precincts 4 to 7 and 16 to 25; ward 27; ward 28, precincts 12 to 16. Population 1940), 259,25. JOHN J. COCHRAN, Democrat, of St. Louis, born August 11, 1880, in St. Louis County, Mo. ; lawyer, secretary to Hon.I 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; reelected, leading 13 Democratic candi-dates; candidate for United States Senate, primary August 7, 1934; defeated by Harry Truman, the vote being Truman, 276, 850; Cochran, 236, 105; Fe 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: reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress without opposition; 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 Coin-age, Weights, and Measures, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. 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 iin 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.; education: graduated St. Jerome’s College, Berlin, Canada, 1895; New York University Law School, New York, LL. B. 1900, LL. M. 1901, LL. D. 1941; admitted to Montana bar, 1901; served as county attorney of Silver Bow County, Mont., 1906-8; chairman of State advisory board, Montana, P. W. A., 1933; married Miss Viola E. Horgan, of Memphis, Tenn., June 1905; "has five sons, James A., William D., Edward E., Howard A., and Charles A; elected to United States Senate on November 6, NRTRisE. Biographical 1934, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Thomas J. Walsh; reelected Novem-ber 3, 1936, and again on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949; chairman of Senate Special Committee on Small Business; chairman of Senate Committee on Education and Labor. ; REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaverhead, Broadwater, Deer Lodge, 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Big Horn, Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Custer, Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Golden Valley, Hill, Judith Basin, Liberty, Mec-Cone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Petroleum, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Richland, Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland, Wibaux, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone National Park. Population (1940), 323,597. WESLEY ABNER D’EWART, Republican, of Wilsall, Park County, Mont.; born at Worcester, Mass., on October 1, 1889; attended grade and high school in Worcester, Mass., and Washington State College at Pullman, Wash.; married Marjorie Cowee; has one son, age 29, and one grandson, age 6; served two ses-sions in the Montana House of Representatives and three sessions in the State senate from Park County, Mont.; stockman, farmer, and businessman in Park County; active in reclamation and livestock organizations in the State; was elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress at a special election held on June 5, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James F. O’Connor. NEBRASKA (Population (1940), 1,315,834) SENATORS HUGH BUTLER, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Missouri Valley, Iowa; graduated from Doane College, Crete, Nebr.; now chairman of the board of trustees; construction engineer with the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rail-road; operated flour milling and grain business; served two terms as president, Omaha Grain Exchange, and two terms as president, National Grain Dealers Association; district governor of Rotary International, 1932 to 1933; member of board, Rotary International, 1934 to 1935; State moderator of Nebraska Con-gregational Churches, 1937 to 1938; in Omaha, Nebr., served as member, Board of Education, Y. M. C. A. Board, Salvation Army Advisory Board, Community Chest, Chamber of Commerce; Republican national committeeman from Ne-braska, 1936 to 1940; 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 Congressional Directory NEBRASKA States Naval Flying Corps; in 1915 became partner in Wherry Bros., which was established in Pawnee City in 1892; later opened branch offices in Wymore and Humboldt, Nebr. ; was especially active in the sale of automobiles and implements, furniture and undertaking business, and livestock and farms; 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 Agricultural 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 Re-publican 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 Marilyn; 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; Republican Whip. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 redistricting, he was reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress from the First Congressional District, made up of the above-named counties, in 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress in 1944, the vote being Curtis, 100,816, and Charles A. Chappell, Democrat, 43,401. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: 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 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, 1939-42; married Miss Leila Stahl in 1925 and has three children—Doris, 17, Warren, 15, and Roberta, 12; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. 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. : g KARL STEFAN, Republican, of Norfolk, Nebr.; dean of the Nebraska delegation in Congress; born on farm near Zebravkov, Bohemia, March 1, 1884; son of Karl and Marie Stefan; brought to United States in 1885; received educa-tion in public schools of Omaha, Nebr.; married Ida Rosenbaum, January 30, 1907; children, Dr. Karl Franklin (lieutenant in the United States: Naval Medical Corps) and Ida Mae (Mrs. Robert Askren); began as messenger and check boy for Western Union Telegraph Co., Omaha, Nebr.; student, night schools, Y. M. C. A.; degree of doctor of laws, National University, Washington D. C., June 1945; successively telegraph operator, Morse and -Continental, newswriter, reporter, city editor, radio news commentator, instructor in radio code; director, Norfolk Building and Loan Association; private in Illinois National Guard; lieutenant in Nebraska National Guard; served in Telegraph Division, Philippine Constabulary (1904-6); honorary colonel in National Volunteers of the Philippines; honorary member, Spanish War Veterans; member of the Military Order of the Carabao; member, Rotary, Elks, Masons, Odd Fellows, National Press Club, U. C. T., T. P. A.; member of Congressional Committee aiding in the inauguration of the Philippine Commonwealth Government, Manila, P. I., in 1935; member, American group, Interparliamentary Union, Oslo, Norway, 1939; as member of Appropriations Committee for State Department, inspected most of NEVADA Biographical 67 United States Foreign Service offices in Norway, Sweden, France, Germany; Czecho-slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Italy in August 1939; official ad-visor, United Nations Conference, San Francisco, Calif., in 1945; selected by Speaker as member of 1944 Board of Visitors to the United States Naval Academy; world traveler, speaks numerous foreign languages; member, appropriations com-mittees dealing with the Department of State, Department of Justice, Depart-ment of Commerce, and the District of Columbia; Episcopalian (vestryman Trinity Church, Norfolk, Nebr.); member, Seventy-fourth to Seventy-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Arthur, Banner, Blain, 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, Sos Di Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (38 counties). Population 0), 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, Ill., 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; married; one son; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 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 Associa- tion, 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; reelected to the Senate, No- vember 7, 1944; degree of doctor of laws conferred by Georgetown University on September 12, 1943; degree of doctor of laws conferred by University of Nevada on Moy 12, 1945; member, honorary society Phi Kappa Phi; legal residence, eno, Nev. EDWARD P. CARVILLE, Democrat, of Reno, Nev., was born in Mound Valley, Nev., May 14, 1885, the son of Edward and Emily E. (Porcher) Carville; attended the grammar schools at Mound Valley and later graduated from the Elko County High School at Elko, Nev., after which he entered the University of Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind., where he graduated in 1909; following his graduation from Notre Dame entered law practice in Elko and was elected dis-trict attorney of Elko County in 1912, serving in that office until 1918; in 1928 was elected district judge of Elko County and served in that office until ap-pointed United States attorney for Nevada in 1934; in 1938 was elected Gover-nor of Nevada and took office January 1, 1939; was reelected Governor in 1942 and held office until his appointment to the United States Senate July 24, 1945; was married to Irma M. Callahan of South Bend, Ind., on August 29, 1910, and they have three sons, all in the Armed Forces of the country—Lt. Havand D., U. S. Navy, Pfc. Richard A., U. S. Army, and Pvt. Robert T., U. S. rmy. . 68 Congressional Directory NEW HAMPSHIRE REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1940), 110,247, BERKELEY LLOYD BUNKER, Democrat, of Las Vegas, Nev.; born in St. Thomas, Nev., August 12, 1906, son of Martin A. and Helen McNeil; married to Lucile Whitehead of Las Vegas in 1933; two children; in business in Las Vegas since 1934; president, Young Democratic Clubs of Nevada, 1938; secretary, Democratic County Central Committee, Clark County, 1937-40; elected to the assembly of the State Legislature in 1936, 1938, and 1940; served as chairman of the ways and means committee of the assembly in 1937, and as speaker in 1939; appointed November 27, 1940, by Governor of Nevada to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Key Pittman; served in the United States Senate from December 1940 to December 1942; member Rotary International; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; legal residence, Las Vegas, Nev. NEW HAMPSHIRE (Population (1940), 491,524) SENATORS STYLES BRIDGES, Republican, of Concord, N. H.; born in West Pembroke, Maine, September 9, 1898; was graduated from the University of Maine in 1918; received M. A. degree from Dartmouth College in 1935, and LL. D. degrees from the University of Maine and the University of New Hampshire in 1935, and from Northeastern University in 1938; former member of the extension staff of the University of New Hampshire; former secretary of the New Hampshire Farm Bureau Federation; former director and secretary of the New Hampshire Invest-ment Co.; formerly secretary and treasurer of the Farm Bureau Mutual Auto-mobile Insurance Co.; member of the New Hampshire Public Service Commis-sion, 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; at present serving as vice president and trustee of the New Hampshire Savings Bank, as treasurer of the Putnam Agricultural Foundation, and as director of the Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.; member National Forest Reservation Commission; married Doloris Thauwald, of St. Paul, Minn., February 11, 1944; his three children are Henry Styles (lieutenant, United States Navy), David Clement, and John Fisher Bridges; 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; reelected on November 7, 1944 for a second term, ending January 3, 1951; member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Monetary Conference held at Bretton Woods, N. H., July 1944. 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, > NEW dn Biographical 69 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; 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; delegate to international conference on education and cultural relations of the United Na-tions held in London, November 1945; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs; member of Republican Congres-Soa Campaign Committee; member of Republican Congressional Food Study ommittee. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY: City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, Lyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mount Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK COUNTY: Cities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Danbury, Dunbarton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wil-mot. Population (1940), 247,033. SHERMAN ADAMS, Republican, of Lincoln, N. H.; born at East Dover, Vt., January 8, 1899; Dartmouth College, A. B., 1920; business executive for 24 years; chairman, Committee on Labor, New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1941-42; speaker of New Hampshire House, 1943-44 (largest legislative body in the United States, 443 members); district delegate, Republican National Con-vention, 1944; chairman, Grafton County Republican Committee since 1942; member, American Legion and Forty-and-Eight, Grange, Shrine, and Elks; Director, Pemigewasset National Bank; formerly president, White Mountain Region Association; council member, New England Council; senior member, Society American Foresters; married Rachel White, July 1923; three daughters, one son; elected November 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth Congress. NEW JERSEY (Population (1940), 4,160,165) SENATORS 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, Inc., 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. ( H. ALEXANDER. SMITH, Republican, of Princeton, N. J., was born in New York City, January 30, 1880, son of A. Alexander Smith, M. D., and Sue Lehn Bender; attended Cutler School, New York City; was graduated from Princeton University with A. B. degree in 1901 and from Columbia University with LL.B. degree in 1904; received honorary LL.D. from Brussels (Belgium) University in 1930; admitted to New York bar in 1904; lived in Colorado 1905-20; admitted to Colorado bar in-1906; practiced law in Colorado until 1917, the outbreak of World War }; served in United States Food Administration in Colorado and Washington \ 70 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY during World War I, and was member post-war relief organizations headed by former President Herbert Hoover; returned to Princeton, N. J., in 1919 and was executive secretary of the university until 1927; then became lecturer, Department of Politics, Princeton University, until 1930, and later resumed practice of law in New York City, associated with the firm of Hines, Rearick, Dorr and Hammond; member of the board of directors or trustees of the following organizations: Bel- ~ gian American Educational Foundation, Princeton Yenching (China) Foundation, Foreign Policy Association, and Department Art and Archeology, Princeton University; also member of American Bar Association, Council Foreign Rela-tions, Society of Colonial Wars, and St. Nicholas Society; became treasurer of New Jersey Republican State Committee in 1934 and chairman 1941-43; member Republican Program Committee 1938-40 under chairman Glenn Frank; member Republican National Committee 1942-43; also member Republican Post-War Advisory Council appointed by Republican National Committee, which met at Mackinac Island, Mich., in September 1943; married Helen Dominick on June 21, 1902; children, Helen Dominick (Mrs. Samuel Moor Shoemaker, Jr.), Marian Dominick (Mrs. H. Kenaston Twitchell, Jr.), and H. Alexander Smith, Jr. (mar-ried Mary Howard Bruce of Baltimore); elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, to fill unexpired term of Senator W. Warren Barbour (de-ceased), ending January 3, 1947. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (8 counties). Population (1940), 370,220. CHARLES A. WOLVERTON, Republican, of Camden (Merchantville), N. J.; married; 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; 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; has one son, Lt. Col. 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 dele-gate at large, Republican National Convention at Chicago; 1918 to 1923, prose-cutor of the pleas of Camden County; member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Patents, Special House Committee on Post-War Economic Policy and Planning, and Republican congressional campaign committee; mem-ber 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SpcoNp DST RICT~(ouNies! Atlantic, Cape May, and Cumberland (3 counties). Population T. MILLET HAND, Republican, of Cape May City, N. J.; born in Cape May, N. J. July 7, 1902, son of Albert Reeves Hand and Sara Millet Hand; educated in the public schools of that city; was graduated from Dickinson School of Law, LL. B. degree, 1922; member of the New Jersey bar; special master in chancery; former president of Cape May County Bar Association; member of New Jersey State Bar Association; member of bar of Supreme Court of the United States; newspaper publisher and other business interests; clerk, Board of Chosen Freeholders of Cape May County, 1924-28; prosecutor of the pleas, Cape May County, 1928-33; mayor, city of Cape May, 1937-44; married in - 1930 to Mary Mercer Worth, of Philadelphia; widower; one child, T. Millet Hand, Jr.; member of University Club and National Press Club of Washington, D. C.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, ER hh a A hi RA RNA NEW JERSEY Biographical 71 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 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 Ann, David and Lee (twins); elected to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; re-elected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Burlington and Mercer (2 counties). Population (1940), 294,331. FRANK A. MATHEWS, Jr., of Riverton, N. J.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., August 3, 1890; LL. B., Temple University Law School, Philadelphia, Pa., 1920; counsellor at law, State of New Jersey; admitted to practice before United States Supreme Court; judge of the District Court of the First Judicial District of Bur-lington County, N. J., 1929-33; assistant counsel, State Highway Department of New Jersey, 1934-44; deputy attorney general, State of New Jersey, 1944-45; legal advisor and counsel for the New Jersey Legislature’s Veterans Commission, 1945; private, sergeant, sergeant first class, and ordnance sergeant, Ordnance Department, Army, September 1917 to May 1919 (19 months overseas); first lieutenant, J. A. G. D., U. 8S. O. R. C., 1923-26; first lieutenant, Infantry, N. J. N. G., 1926-32, serving as S—-2, Fifty-seventh Brigade; major, J. A. G. D., N. J. N. G., State Staff Corps, 1932-37; lieutenant colonel, J. A. G. D., N. J. N. G,, 1937 to Septembar 16, 1940; inducted into Federal service with Forty-fourth Division September 16, 1940; division judge advocate and acting division recruit-ing officer and division public relations officer; conducted recruiting campaign of Forty-fourth Division, August 1940 to date of being relieved of active duty, October 15, 1940; at present lieutenant colonel, J. A. G. D., Inactive Reserve; department commander, American Legion, Department of New Jersey, 1925-26; national executive committeeman from New Jersey, 1932-34; chairmanof Na-tional Veterans’ Preference Committee for 3 years; presently member of National World War II Liaison Committee; department public relations officer, Depart-ment of New Jersey, 1944-45; author of many stories, articles, and verses in American Legion and other magazines; member, Frederick M. Rodgers Post, No. 156, American Legion, Palmyra, N. J.; Union League of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Plays and Players of Philadelphia, and Riverton (N. J.) Golf and Country Club; married Carol Becker; five children, two daughters and three sons; all three sons in service, two in Army and one in Navy at present; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 6, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of D. Lane Powers. 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, Ssventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, 1945. SIXTH DISTRICT.—UNION COUNTY. Population (1940), 328,344. CLIFFORD PHILIP CASE, Republican, of Rahway, N. J.; born in Franklin Park, N. J., April 16, 1904; son of the late Clifford P. and Jeannette (Benedict) Case; Rutgers College, A. B. degree, 1925; Columbia University Law School, LL. B. degree, 1928; married Ruth M. Smith in 1928; has two daughters, Mary Jane and Ann, and one son, Clifford Philip, 3d; attorney at law, practicing in New York City since 1928; became associated with, and later a member of, law firm of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; alumni member of Rutgers University Board of Trustees; member of House of Assembly of New Jersey, 1943 and 1944, and of Rahway Common Council, 1938-42; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 72 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY 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 Lodi, Mahwah, 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; 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 Ameri-can Legion; member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected a member of borough council of Allendale in 1925; elected mayor of Allendale in 1926 and reelected 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; married 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, both at present serving overseas in the armed forces of the United States; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress by an approximate plurality of 42,500 votes; serves on the Military Affairs, Claims, ane Un-American Activities Committees of the House of Representatives. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PAssAic County: Cities of Clifton, Passaic, and Paterson; boroughs of Blooming-dale, Haledon, Hawthorne, North Haledon, Pompton lakes, Prospect Park, Totowa, Wanaque, 554 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 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 KE. 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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. HupsoN 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, SmithTowe, 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—EssExX County: City of Newark, wards1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 11, and 15; borough of Glen Ridge; towns of Belleville, Bloomfield, and Nutley. HUDSON COUNTY: Borough "of East Newark; towns of Harrison and Kearny. Population (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 a lieutenant bomber pilot in the United States Army Air Corps, is married to NEW JERSEY Biographical 73 Hermine Pepinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pepinger; was appointed to the Library Commission of Kearny in 1923; elected municipal commissioner in 1924; chairman of the Republican County Committee in 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., Eagles, and Elks; 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, Seventy-eighth, and Sev-enty-ninth 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 frater-nity; member of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalistic fraternity; member of Cornell Club of Essex County, N. J., Touchdown Club of New York, East Orange Historical Association, First Ward Republican Club, Inec., of East Orange, and chairman of East Orange Republican Committee; married to Miss Jean John-stone, of East Orange, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 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 Millburn. 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 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Con-gresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HuDpsoN 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, 1940, and 1944, elected delegate at large to the Democratic National Conventions; in 1924 elected to the House of Representatives; reelected to each succeeding Con-gress, including the Seventy-ninth; received the first degree of doctor of laws ever conferred by St. Elizabeth’s College, the oldest women’s college in New Jersey, in recognition of service in welfare and government; 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. Popu-lation (1940), 278,408. EDWARD J. HART, Democrat, lawyer, Jersey City. Hi fi | | |! | ie i | Ii i J 74 Congressional Directory NEW YORK 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 iit il 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 a lieutenant with the Marines, Mrs. Stanley Miller, wife of Capt. Stanley Millar 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. fide Tivgley on May 11, 1935; elected November 3, 1936; reelected November , 1940. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1940) 531,818 ANTONIO M. FERNANDEZ, Democrat, of Santa Fe, N. Mex.; born in Springer, N. Mex., January 17, 1902; court reporter for the eighth judicial district of New Mexico, 1925-30; received law training at Cumberland University, Leb-anon, Tenn.; admitted to the practice of law in New Mexico in 1931; assistant 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 Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. [Vacant.] ° 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; New York grammar school, high school; B. 8., College of the City of New York; LL. B., New York Law School; NEW YORK Biographical 75 widower; one son, Maj. 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 In-vestigating Commission, 1911-15; Acting 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, 1925-26; 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; reelected for the term expiring in 1951; chairman of the National Labor Board, 1933-34; Democratic leader, New York constitutional convention, 1938; delegate to the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods, 1944. 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, causedby 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 FIRST DISTRICT.—SUFroLK COUNTY. NASSAU COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at a point where the center line of North Hempstead Turnpike intersects the dividing line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties, running thence southwesterly along said center line of North Hempstead Turnpike to the center line of Guinea Woods Road, turning thence southerly along center line of said Guinea Woods Road to the northerly line of the incorporated village of Garden City, thence easterly along said northerly line of the incorporated village of Garden City to the northeast corner of the incorporated village of Garden City, running thence southerly along the easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Garden City to the northeasterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Hempstead, running thence along said easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Hemp-stead to the southerly boundary of the incorporated village of Hempstead, running thence westerly along the southerly boundary of the incorporated village of Hempstead to the center line of Baldwin Road, thence southerly along the center line of Baldwin Road and Grand Avenue to the center line of DeMott Avenue, thence easterly along the center line of DeMott Avenue to the center line of Cen-tennial Avenue, thence easterly along the center line of Centennial Avenue to the center line of North Brookside Avenue, running thence southwesterly along the center line of North Brookside Avenue to the northerly line of the incorporated village of Freeport, running thence easterly and southerly along the northerly and easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Freeport to the intersection .of the center line of the Meadowbrook State Parkway with the said easterly boundary line of the incor-porated village of Freeport at the most southerly point south of Merrick Road, running thence southerly and easterly along the center line of the Meadowbrook State Parkway to the center line of Ocean Park-way, running thence due south to the Atlantic Ocean, running thence easterly along the Atlantic Ocean to the boundary line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties, running thence northerly along said bound-ary line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties, to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 270,972. EDGAR A. SHARP, Republican, of Patchogue, N. Y., was born in Patchogue, Suffolk County, N. Y., on June 3, 1876; attended Patchogue High School; employed in Patchogue post office for 20 years, during which time was assistant postmaster for 12 years; in 1916 married Miss Sadie Ginocchio, of Patchogue, and they have no family; in April 1918 went overseas for the Knights of Columbus in charge of their construction work in Bordeaux and Paris, France, and appointed to take charge of the work in the British Isles in August 1918, with headquarters in London, England; came back to America in January 1920 and in April 1920 purchased a real-estate and insurance business, which he is still carrying on; actively engaged in politics since casting first vote; about 1930 was appointed on the zoning and planning board of the town of Brookhaven, which board he helped to organize, and served for about 3 years; in September 1935 was appointed supervisor of the town of Brookhaven for the unexpired term cf Claude Neville, former supervisor, whe died suddenly, and was then elected four successive terms of 2 years each, which expired January 1, 1944; while supervisor served as chair-man of the finance committee and equalization board of Suffolk County; member of the road and bridge committee; chairman of the vocational school committee, and a member of most of the important committees of the county until January 1, 1944; in fraternal organizations has been Grand Knight, district deputy, and State treasurer of the Knights of Columbus; also Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; was a member of the Modern Woodmen of America 76 Congressional Directory NEW YORK and the Foresters Lodge; trustee of the Union Savings Bank of Patchogue, and was a director of the Patchogue Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Patchogue; now acting as a real estate appraiser for Suffolk County and also writes the State insurance in Suffolk County; active auctioneer for the past 15 years; owns large tracts of real estate in Bay Shore and Patchogue, N. Y.; elected to.the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SECOND DISTRICT.—NAssAU County: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the First Congressional District. Population (1940), 333,131. \ 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, 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 to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—QUEENS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at a point at the intersection of Twenty-eighth Avenue and Little Neck Bay, thence along Twenty-eighth A venue to Bell Boulevard, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Two Hundred and Third Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Utopia Parkway, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-ninth Street, to Crocheron Avenue, to Northern Boulevard, to Parsons Boulevard, to Sanford Avenue, to Kissena Boulevard, to Elder Avenue, to Rodman Street, to Horace Harding Boulevard, to Grand Central Park-way, to Sixty-ninth Road, to Queens Boulevard, to Sixty-sixth Avenue, to Thornton Place, to Dane Place, to Fleet Street, to Yellowstone Boulevard, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Cooper Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Sixty-ninth A venue, to Seventy-eighth Street, to Cooper Avenue, to Central Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Myrtle Avenue, to Interborough Parkway, to Cypress Hills Road, to the boundary line between Queens and Kings Counties, to Elderts Lane, to Atlantic Avenue, to Eighty-fifth Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to Ninety-second Street, to Eighty-eighth Avenue, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Hillside Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-second Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventieth Street, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventy-first Street, to One Hundred and Eighth Avenue, to Merrick Boulevard, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to One Hundred and Eightieth Street, to Liberty Avenue, to Dunkirk A venue, to Brinkerhoff A venue, to Liberty Avenue, to Farmers Boulevard, to Linden Boulevard, to Springfield Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Road, to Two Hundred and Eighteenth Street, to Merrick Boulevard, to Two Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Avenue, to Brookville Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-second Avenue, to the Nassau and Queens boundary line to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 317,627. HENRY J. LATHAM, Republican, of Queens Village, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., December 10, 1908; educated at St. John’s College and Brooklyn Law School of St. Lawrence University; degrees, bachelor of laws and master of laws; attorney at law; member of the New York State Assembly, 1941-42; resigned in 1942 as a member of the New York State Legislature and was commissioned a lieutenant (junior grade) in the United States’ Navy; subsequently made a lieu-tenant; has been on active service in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters of war; married Elizabeth Schwarze and they have two children, Barbara Ann and Steven Grant; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FOURTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the -Nassau-Queens County line at One Hundred and Thirty-second A venue, to Brookville Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Avenue, to Two Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to Merrick Boulevard, to Two Hundred and Eighteenth Street, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Road, to Springfield Boulevard, to Linden Boulevard, to Farmers Boulevard, to Liberty Avenue, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to Dunkirk Avenue, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Eightieth Street, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to Merrick Boulevard, to One Hundred and Eighth Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventy-first Street, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventieth Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-second Street, to Hillside A venue, to Myrtle Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Jamaica A venue, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Eighty-eighth Avenue, to Ninety-second Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to Eighty-fifth Street, to Atlantic Avenue, to Elderts Lane, to the boundary line between Queens and Kings Counties; thence along the said boundary line to the waters of Jamaica Bay; thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay east of Duck Point Marshes, through the waters of Rockaway Inlet to the | waters of Atlantic Ocean; and through the waters of Atlantic Ocean, to the boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, thence along the said boundary line to One Hundred and Thirty-second | Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 318, 171. 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 commer-cial 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 Naw rome | Biographical Jy 7 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, Seventy-eighth, and Sev-enty-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at East River and Hoyt Avenue (Twenty-fifth Avenue) to Astoria Boulevard South, to Forty-ninth Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to T'wenty-eighth Avenue, to Hobart Street, to Fifty-first Street, to Broadway, to Fifty-third Place, to Northern Boulevard, to Woodside Avenue, to Barnett Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Skillman Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Forty-third Avenue, to Fifty-fifth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Fifty-fourth Avenue, to Maurice Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-sixth Avenue, to Ha8pel Street, to Fifty-seventh Avenue, to Eighty-fourth Street, to Fifty-eighth Avenue, to Eighty-third Place, to Eliot Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Caldwell Avenue, to Seventy-seventh Street, to Eliot Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Place, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Metropolitan Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Seventieth Avenue, ~ to Seventy-fourth Street, to Seventy-first Avenue, to Cooper Avenue, to Seventy-eighth Street, to Sixty-ninth Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Cooper Avenue, along Cooper Avenue, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Yellowstone Boulevard, to Fleet Street, to Dane Place, to Thornton Place, to Sixty-sixth Avenue, to Queens Boulevard, to Sixty-ninth Road, to Grand Central Parkway, to Horace Harding Boulevard, to Rodman Street, to Elder Avenue, to Kissena Boulevard, to Sanford Avenue, to Parsons Boulevard, to Northern Boulevard, to Crocheron Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-ninth Street, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Utopia Parkway, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Two Hundred and Third Street, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Bell Boulevard, to Twenty-eighth Avenue, to the waters of Little Neck Bay; thence through the waters of Little Neck Bay, Long Island Sound and East River, to Hoyt Avenue (Twenty-fifth Avenue), the place of beginning. Population (1940), 330,039. > JAMES A. ROE, Democrat, of Flushing, N. Y.; born in Flushing, Queens County, N. Y., July 9, 1896; educated in the grade and high schools of Queens County; also studied law, engineering, and accounting; enlisted at age of 20 in World War I and by promotion rose to rank of lieutenant and instructor of advanced flying in U. S. Army Air Corps; was graduated with honors from United States School of Military Aeronautics, Cornell University; served as a reserve officer for 5 years; entered Army again in July 1943 in World War II and assigned to duty with the Corps of Engineers; retired from active duty in January 1945, with rank of lieutenant colonel, upon entering Congress; 25 years’ wide business experience in New York City, serving as branch manager of one of the largest American insurance companies, treasurer of a contracting and engineer-ing firm, president of numerous real estate holding corporations and director of a national bank; chairman of the Democratic County Committee and Democratic Executive Committee of Queens County; member of Aviators Post, New York City, and William A. Leonard Post, Flushing, N. Y., American Legion; member of Reserve Officers’ Association and numerous other veteran organizations; active in all war veterans’ programs; member of the Elks, Knights of Columbus, and American Society of Military Engineers; Roman Catholic and member of St. Andrew’s Parish, Flushing; married; wife, formerly Margaret M. Farrell, of Westchester County, N. Y.; four children—Capt. James A. Roe, Jr., age 22, with U. S. Army Combat Unit in France; Patricia, age 19, College of New Rochelle; Frances, age 16, Dominican Academy, New York City, and John, age 11, St. Arar School, Flushing; elected to the Seventy-n inth Congress on November , 1944, : SIXTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at East River and Hoyt Avenue (Twenty-fifth Avenue) to Astoria Boulevard (Grand Central Parkway), to Forty-ninth Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to Twenty-eighth Avenue, to Hobart Street, to Thirty-first Avenue, to Fifty-first Street, to Broadway, to Fifty-third Place, to Northern Boulevard, to Woodside Avenue, to Barnett Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Skillman Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Forty-third Avenue, to Fifty-fiftth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Fifty-fourth Avenue, to Maurice Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-sixth Avenue, to Haspel Street, to Fifty-seventh Avenue, to Eighty-fourth Street, to Fifty-eighth Avenue, to Eighty-third Place, to Eliot Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Caldwell Avenue, to Seventy-seventh Street, to Eliot Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Place, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Metropolitan Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Seventieth Avenue, to Seventy-fourth Street, to Seventy-first Avenue, to Cooper Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Myrtle Avenue, to Interborough Parkway, to Cypress Hills Road, and the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line to Newtown Creek; thence through the waters of Newtown Creek to the East River; through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 331,797. JAMES J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Long Island City, N. Y.; born in New York City, N. Y., March 19, 1901; attended the public and high schools in Long Island City, N. Y., and St. John’s College, Brooklyn, N. Y.; lawyer; assistant district attorney for 9 years in the district attorney’s office, Queens County, N. Y.; married; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, 78349°—T79—2—1st ed.——7 : 78 Congressional Directory NEW YORK SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KINGS County: That portion within and bounded by aline beginning at waters of East River and South Eighth Street, to Kent Avenue, to Broadway, to Berry Street, to South Sixth Street, to Broadway, to Havemeyer Street, to South Fourth Street, to Rodney Street, to Broadway, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to Lafayette Avenue, to Lewis Avenue, to Greene Avenue, to Classon Avenue, to Eastern Parkway, to and around southern end of Grand Army Plaza, to Prospect Park West, to Carroll Street, to Eighth Avenue, to First Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Fifth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place, to Pacific Street, to Court Street, to Pacific Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia Street, to Congress Street, to waters of East River, thence through the waters of East River to South Eighth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 300,424. | | I JOHN on Rules. J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; member of Committee EIGHTH DISTRICT.—KINGS County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and South Eighth Street, to Kent Avenue, to Broadway, to Berry Street, to South Sixth Street, to Broadway, to Havemeyer Street, to South Fourth Street, to Rodney Street, to Broadway, to Saratoga Avenue, to Hancock Street, to Broadway, to Weirfield Street, to Bushwick Avenue, to Han-cock Street, to Central Avenue, to Halsey Street, to Wilson Avenue, to Jefferson Avenue, to Knicker-bocker Avenue, to Decatur Street, to the boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line and through waters of Newtown Creek and waters of East River to South Eighth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 304,212. JOSEPH L. PFEIFER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y. NINTH DISTRICT.—KiINGS County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties at Decatur Street, to Knickerbocker Avenue, to Jefferson Avenue, to Wilson Avenue, to Halsey Street, to Central Avenue, to Hancock Street, to Bushwick Avenue, to Weirfield Street, to Broadway, to Hancock Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Broadway, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Patchen Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Buffalo Avenue, to Herkimer Street, to Howard Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Radde Place, to Herkimer Street, to Rockaway Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Sackman Street, to East New York Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Sutter Avenue, to Christopher Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Lott Avenue, to Stone Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue (Linden Boulevard), to Bank Street, to East One Hundred and Seventh Street, to Avenue D, to East One Hundred and Fourth Street, to Farragut Road, to East One Hundred and Third Street, to Flatlands Avenue, to Hinsdale Street, to waters of Fresh Creek Basin, to the waters of Jamaica Bay, thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay to Kings and Queens County line, and thence along Kings and Queens County line to Decatur Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 301,308. ‘EUGENE J. KEOGH, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; graduate of New York University and Fordham University Law School; lawyer; member of the New York State Assembly, twentieth district, Kings County, in 1936; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. & ih €! y TENTH DISTRICT.—K1INGSs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the corners of Greene and Marcy Avenues, thence along Greene Avenue, to Lewis Avenue, to Lafayette Avenue, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to Macon Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Utica Avenue, to East New York Avenue, to East Ninety-sixth Street, to Avenue A, to East Eighty-eighth Street, to Avenue B, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Ditmas Avenue, to Ralph Avenue, to Flatlands Avenue, to Avenue M, to East Thirty-fifth Street, to Avenue K, to East Twenty-sixth Street, to Avenue I, to Nostrand Avenue, to Avenue H, to Amersfort Place, to Germania Place, to Kenilworth Place, to Avenue G, (Glenwood Road), to Amersfort Place, to Farragut Road, to Flatbush Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to East Twenty-third Street, to Cortelyou Road, to Bedford Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Twenty-eighth Street, to Tilden Avenue, to Rogers Avenue, to Church Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Maple Street, to New York Avenue, to Lincoln Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Lefferts Avenue, to New York Avenue, to Lincoln Place, to Rogers Avenue, to Grant Square, to Bedford Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Marcy Avenue, to Greene Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 289,816. ANDREW L. SOMERS, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y. il Il ft tl If ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—KINGSs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Classon Avenue and Greene Avenue, thence along Greene Avenue, to Marcy Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Bedford Avenue, to Grant Square, to Rogers Avenue, to Lincoln Place, to New York Avenue, to Lefferts Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Lincoln Road, to New York Avenue, to Maple Street, to Nostrand Avenue, to Church Avenue, to Rogers Avenue, to Tilden Avenue, to East Twenty-eighth Street, to Beverly Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Bedford Avenue, to Cortel-you Road, to East Twenty-third Street, to Clarendon Road, to Flatbush Avenue, to Farragut Road, to Amersfort Place, to Avenue G (Glenwood Road), to Kenilworth Place, to Germania Place, to Amers-fort Place, to Avenue H, to Nostrand Avenue, to Avenue I, to East Eighteenth Street, to Avenue J, to East Fourth Street, to Avenue I, to McDonald Avenue, to Eighteenth Avenue, to East Second Street, to Avenue F, to Dahill Road, to Forty-third Street, to Seventeenth Avenue, to Dahill Road, to Fortieth Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to East Fourth Street, to Caton Avenue, to East Fifth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Prospect Avenue, to Vanderbilt Street, to Eighteenth Street, to Seeley Street, to Prospect Avenue, to Sixth Avenue, to Thirteenth Street, to Fourth Avenue, to Ninth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to First Street, to Eighth Avenue, to Carroll Street, to Prospect Park West, to and around southern end of Grand Army Plaza, J aan Parkway, to Classon Avenue, to Greene Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1940), ’ JAMES N. Y.; his J. HEFFERNAN, Democrat, of forefathers were among the Irish Brooklyn, N. pioneers who Y.; born in Brooklyn, settled in lower Man- . NEW vosk Biographical 79 hattan 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, Brocklyn, 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; 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 execu-tive member of the Twelfth Assembly District Regular Democratic Organization; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—KinGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Con-gress Street and East River to Columbia Street, to Warren Street, to Clinton Street, to Pacific Street, to Court Street, to Pacific Street, to Boerum Place, to Bergen Street, to Fourth Avenue, to St. Marks Place, to Fifth Avenue, to Fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Ninth Street, to Fourth Avenue, to Thir--teenth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Seeley Street, to Eighteenth Street, to Vanderbilt Street, to Prospect Avenue, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to East Fifth Street, to Caton Avenue, to East Fourth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Fifty-second Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fifty-eighth Street, to New Utrecht Avenue, to Sixty-third Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Seventy-second Street, to Tenth Avenue, to Seventy-third Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to Sixth Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Second Avenue, to Wakeman Place, to Colonial Road, to Sixty-eighth Street, to Shore Road, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to waters of Upper Bay; thence through waters of Upper Bay, Buttermilk Channel and East River to Congress Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 308,991. JOHN J. ROONEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; was born in the district which he now represents and in which his family has lived for almost 80 years, on November 29, 1903; son of James and Ellen Fitzsimons Rooney; education: St. Paul’s Parochial School, St. Francis Preparatory and College, Fordham Univer-sity School of Law, class of 1925; practicing attorney; served as assistant district attorney in Brooklyn under appointment of District Attorney William O’Dwyer from January 1, 1940, to June 5, 1944; married Helen M. Hughes of Brooklyn and has two sons, John James, Jr., and Edward Patrick, and a daughter, Mary Ann; member, Brooklyn Bar Association, Catholic Lawyers Guild, District Attorneys Association of the State of New York, Lawyers Club of Brooklyn, and Brooklyn-Manhattan Trial Counsel Club; Esteemed Leading Knight of Brooklyn Lodge, No. 22, B. P. O. Elks; New York State vice president of Ancient Order of Hibernians in America; past president, St. Patrick Society of Brooklyn; life member, Columbus Council No. 126, Knights of Columbus; member of Committee on Appropriations; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held on June 6, 1944, to fill, for the unexpired term, the seat left vacant by the death of Thomas H. Cullen; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at waters of the Upper Bay and Bay Ridge Avenue, to Shore Road, to Sixty-eighth Street, to Colonial Road, to Wakeman Place, to Second Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to Seventh Avenue, to Seventy-third Street, to Tenth Avenue, to Seventy-second Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Sixty-third Street, to New Utrecht Avenue, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Dahill Road, to Seventeenth Avenue, to Forty-third Street, to Dahill Road, to Avenue F, to East Second Street, to Eighteenth Avenue, to McDonald Avenue, to Avenue I, to East Fourth Street, to Avenue J, to Ocean Parkway, to Avenue N, to Sixtieth Street, to Twenty-third Avenue, to Sixty-first Street, to Bay Parkway, to Eightieth Street, to Twentieth Avenue,to Eighty-sixth Street, to Bay Eleventh Street, to Bath Avenue, to Sixteenth Avenue, to waters of Gravesend Bay; thence through waters of Gravesend Bay and Upper Bay, to Bay Ridge Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 299,278. 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 Fordham University ; lawyer, with offices in New York City; married and has three children; chairman of House Committee on the Library and member of War Claims, Insular Affairs, Accounts, and Expenditures in the Executive Departments; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy- -eighth Congresses; was then rejected for renomination to the Seventy-ninth Congress by the Brooklyn Democratic organization, supposedly the most powerful in the country, but despite this opposition was reelected to the Seventh-ninth Congress and succeeded in electing his secretary as a member of the Assembly; is the only Independent Democrat in the New York delegation. STE iN 80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Gravesend Bay and Sixteenth Avenue, thence along Sixteenth A venue to Bath Avenue, to Bay Eleventh Street, to Eighty-sixth Street, to Twentieth Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Bay Parkway, to Sixty-first Street, to Twenty-third Avenue, to Sixtieth Street, to Avenue N, to Ocean Parkway, to Avenue J, to East Eighteenth Street, to Avenue I, to East Twenty-sixth Street, to Avenue K, to East Thirty-fiftth Street, to Avenue M, to Flatlands Avenue, to Flatbush Avenue, to Avenue P, to Hendrickson Street, to Quentin Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Quentin Road, to East Twenty-ninth Street, to Avenue R, to East Twenty-seventh Street, to Avenue T, to East T'wenty-third Street, to Avenue U, to East Twenty-second Street, to Avenue V, to Coney Island Avenue, to Ocean View Avenue, to Ocean Park-way, to waters of Atlantic Ocean, thence through waters of Atlantic Ocean and Gravesend Bay to Six-teenth Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 300,998. LEO F. RAYFIEL, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y.; was graduated from the public elementary and high schools and New York Uni-versity Law School; admitted to the bar of the State of New York in 1918; served as a member of the New York State Assembly from 1939 to 1944, inclusive; mar-ried; resides at 1818 Avenue L, Brooklyn, N. Y.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at corner of Macon Street and Lewis Avenue, thence along Macon Street, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Patchen Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Buffalo Avenue, to Herkimer Street, to Howard Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Radde Place, to Herkimer Street, to Rockaway Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Sackman Street, to East New York Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Sutter Avenue, to Christopher Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Lott Avenue, to Stone Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue (Linden Boulevard), to Bank Street, to East One Hundred and Seventh Street, to Avenue D, to East One Hundred and Fourth Street, to Farragut Road, to East One Hundred and Third Street, to Flatlands Avenue, to Hinsdale Street, to Fresh Creek Basin, to the waters of Jamaica Bay, thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay to the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties, thence along said boundary line to waters of Atlantic Ocean, to Ocean Parkway, to Ocean View Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Avenue V, to East Twenty-second Street, to Avenue U, to East Twenty-third Street, to Avenue T', to East Twenty-seventh Street, to Avenue R, to East Twenty-ninth Street, to Quentin Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Quentin Road, to Hendrickson Street, to Avenue P, to Flatbush Avenue, to Flatlands Avenue, to Ralph Avenue, to Ditmas Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Avenue B, to East Eighty-eighth Street, to Avenue A, to East Ninety-sixth Street, to East New York Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Macon Street, the place of beginning. Population (1940), 303,538. 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 commenced practice in New York City in 1912; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress, November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the 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. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—RICEMOND COUNTY. NEW YORK County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and Whitehall Street, to State Street, to Broadway, to Great Jones Street (West Third Street), to West Broadway, to Washington Square South, to Thompson Street, to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, to West Fourth Street, to Barrow Street, to Bleecker Street, to West Eleventh Street, to Hudson Street, to West Twelfth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Twenty-sixth Street, to Hudson River, through the waters of Hudson River to the place of beginning, including Ellis Island, Governors Island, Bedloe Island. Population (1940), 257,876. ELLSWORTH B. BUCK, Republican, of Staten Island, N. Y.; born July 3, 1892, in Chicago, Ill., son of Orlando J. and Lillian (Brewer) Buck; attended the public schools in Chicago; graduated from Dartmouth College, B. S., in 1914; honorary M. A., 1939; honorary LL. D., Wagner College, 1942; chairman of board, L. A. Dreyfus Co., Staten Island; vice president, Thunder Mountain Ranch Co., Crivitz, Wis.; director, Malayan Guttas, Ltd., Singapore, Straits Settlements; enlisted as seaman, second class, United States Naval Reserve, July 1917; com-missioned and assigned as instructor in meteorology, Naval Aviation Ground School, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, April 1918; in charge of meteoro-logical instruments, United States Naval Observatory, Washington, D. QO. August to December 1918; chairman, Code Authority under N. R. A., 1934-35; member of Board of Education of the City of New York 1935-39 and 1940-44, vice president 1938-39 and 1940-42, president 1942-44; former trustee, Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island Academy, Staten Island Savings Bank, American Museum of Natural History; former director, Staten Island Community Chest, Staten Island Council of Boy Scouts of America, Staten Island National Bank & Trust Co.; director and treasurer, Staten Island Zoological Society; member of Delta Tau Delta and American Legion; clubs: New York Yacht, India House, NEW YORK ‘Biographical 81 Richmond County Country, Richmond County Yacht; married Constance Tyler, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; one son, First Lt. Orlando J. Buck, A. U. S., killed in service in Alaska September 18, 1944; one daughter, Nancy; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress from old Eleventh Congressional District at special election June 6, 1944; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944, from new Sixteenth Congressional District. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at the East River and East Fortieth Street, to Third Avenue, to Bowery, to Great Jones Street, to West Third Street, to West Broadway, to Washington Square South, to Thompson Street, to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, to West Fourth Street, to Barrow Street, to Bleecker Street, to West Eleventh Street, to Hudson Street, to West Twelfth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Twenty-ninth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Thirty-first Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Thirty-fourth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fifty-fourth Street, to Ninth Avenue, to Columbus Avenue, to Broadway, to West Seventieth Street, to Columbus Avenue, to West Ninety-seventh Street, to Central Park West, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hun-dred and Tenth Street), to Fifth Avenue, to East One Hundredth Street, to Park Avenue, to East Ninety-seventh Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Eighty-fifth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eightieth Street, to Second A venue, to East Seventy-second Street, to Third Avenue, to East Sixty-eighth Street, to Second Avenue, to East Sixty-first Street, to Third Avenue, to East Fifty-ninth Street, to East River, through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 298,995. 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, 230 Park Avenue, 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-Verne, grandniece of Jules Verne; four children—two boys and two girls; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on March 11, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Kenneth F. Simpson; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK County: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at the East River and East Fifty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Sixty-first Street, to Second Avenue, to East Sixty-eighth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Seventy-second Street, to Second Avenue, to East Eightieth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eighty-fifth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Ninety-seventh Street, to Park Avenue, to East One Hundredth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to East One Hundred and Nineteenth Street, to Third Avenue, to the Harlem River, through the waters of Harlem River and East River to the place of begin-A with Welfare Island, Wards Island, Sunken Meadow, and Randalls Island. Population (1940), 297,743. VITO MARCANTONIO, American Labor, of New York City; born in New York City, December 10, 1902; lawyer; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; New York City address, 1484 First Avenue. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and Whitehall Street to State Street, to Broadway, to Great Jones Street, to Bowery, to Third Avenue, to East Fortieth Street, to the East River, through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 315,639. [Vacant.] 82 Congressional Directory NEW YORK TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Hudson River and West T'wenty-sixth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West T'wenty-ninth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Thirty-first Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Thirty-fourth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fifty-fourth Street, to "Ninth Avenue, to Columbus Avenue, to Broadway, to West Seventieth Street, to Columbus Avenue, to West Ninety-seventh Street, to Central Park West, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hundred and Tenth Street), to Columbus Avenue, to Morningside Avenue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and ‘Sixteenth Street, to Broadway, to West One Hundred and Fourteenth Street, to the Hudson River, through the waters of the Hudson River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 302,984. 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. 0. 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, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line he-ginning at the Hudson River and West One Hundred and Fourteenth Street, to Broadway, to West One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Morningside Avenue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and Twenty-second Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to St. Nicholas Terrace, to West One Hundred and Fortieth Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Fifty-ninth Street extended, to the Harlem River, to the boundary line between New York and Bronx Counties and along said boundary line to the Hudson River, thence through the waters of the Hudson River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 302,531. JAMES H. TORRENS, Democrat, of New York City, N. Y.; retired business-man; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held on Feb-ruary 29, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph A. Gavagan; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—NEw YORK COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Harlem River and Third Avenue, to East One Hundred and Nineteenth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hundred and Tenth Street), to Morningside Avenue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and Twenty-second Street, to Amsterdam. Avenue, to West One Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to St. Nicholas Terrace, to West One Hundred and Fortieth Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Fifty-ninth Street extended, to the Harlem River, through the waters of the Harlem River to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 288,594. ADAM CLAYTON POWELL, Jr., Democrat, of New York City; born in New Haven, Conn., November 29, 1908; education: B. A. degree Colgate Uni-versity, 1930; M. A. degree, Columbia University, 1932; D. D. degree, Shaw Uni-versity, 1934: studied 4 months in Europe, North Africa, and Asia Minor; min-ister of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, 1937, organized 1808, membership over 10,000, budget $75,000, property worth’ $500, 000; first Negro councilman of the city of New York, 1941; chairman of the board of directors of the Powell-Bu-chanan Publishing Corporation; editor in chief'of the People’s Voice; chairman of the Coordinating Committee for Employment; member of the Phi Upsilon Kappa Society, honorary fraternity in philosophy; Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, I. B. P. O. E.of the W., Y. M. C. A.; church committee, Russian War Relief; board of direc-tors, American Soviet Council; board of directors, Planned Parenthood; traveled 16,000 miles through 12 countries; instituted Federal Credit Union with $125,000 on deposit, Consumers Cooperative Society with 250 shareholders now successfully operating own store, Friendly Society—cooperative church insurance—mem-bership increased to A, 000 with $75,000 worth of insurance; opened community house as defense recreation center to armed forces; in the community—director of relief for Harlem during 1930 and 1931; conducted first successful campaign for jobs for Negroes in various stores; coordinating committee for employment, which staged successful bus strike, securing employment for Negroes with the bus com-pany; increased pay roll of Harlem $1,000,000 per year; instructor, Columbia University Extension School, Department of Religious Education, 1932-40; editorial writer for New York Evening Post, 1934; executive committee, Negro Exhibit, New York World’s Fair; co-founder National Negro Congress; board of NEW YORK Biographical | directors, Baptist Educational Center, Harlem; executive council, Manhattan Civilian Defense Volunteer Office; organizer, All Harlem Victory Council; author, Marching Blacks, Dial Press, 1945; married August 1, 1945, to Miss Hazel Scott; first Negro Congressman from the East; being elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—BRrRONX COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Bronx Kills and St. Ann’s Avenue, and thence along St. Ann’s Avenue, to East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Tremont Avenue, to West Tremont Avenue, to Harlem River, and thence through the waters of the Harlem River and Bronx Kills to the place of beginning. Population (1940), 354,006. 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 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BRroNX CoUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at thejunction of the East and Bronx Rivers, and thence through the waters of the Bronx River to East Tremont Avenue, to Third Avenue, to East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, to St. Ann’s Avenue, to Bronx Kills, to East River, and thence through the waters of the East River to the place of beginning, together with North Brother Island, South Brother Island, and Riker’s Island. Popula-tion (1940), 346,904. : BENJAMIN J. RABIN, Democrat, of New York City; born in Rochester, N. Y., June 3, 1896; veteran, World War I; member of law firm of Poletti, Dia-mond, Rabin, Freidin & Mackay ; formerly chairman of the Mortgage Commission of the State of New York, after having served as counsel to that committee and counsel to the New York State Joint Legislative Committee investigating the guaranteed mortgage situation; married; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—BRONX CouNTY: That portion within and beunded by a line beginning at the Harlem River and West Tremont Avenue, to East Tremont Avenue, to Bronx River, to East Two Hundred and Thirty-third Street, to Van Cortlandt Park East, to the boundary line between Bronx and Westchester Counties, and thence along said boundary line to the Hudson River and through the waters of the Hudson River to the Harlem River and along the boundary line between Bronx gnd New York Counties, to the Harlem River and West Tremont Avenue, the place of beginning. Popula-tion (1940), 365,918. 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—BroNX COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the junction of the East and Bronx Rivers, and thence through the waters of the Bronx River, to East Two Hundred and Thirty-third Street, to Van Cortlandt Park East, to the boundary line separating Bronx and Westchester Counties; thence along said boundary line to Long Island Sound, and through the waters of Long Island Sound to the East River, to the place of beginning, together with City Island, Hunter’s Island, Hart’s Island, Twin Island, High Island, Middle Reef Island, Rat Island, the Blauzes, Chimney Sweeps, Cuban Ledge, Big Tom, Green Flats, Hog Island, East Nonations, South Nona-tions, and all other islands in Long Island Sound within the boundary line of Bronx County. Popula-tion (1940), 327,883. PETER ANTHONY QUINN, Democrat, of New York City, N. Y.; born in New York City, May 10, 1904; was graduated from Manhattan College in 1926 with degree of bachelor of science in civil engineering; thereafter pursued the study of law at Fordham University and was graduated in 1929 with degree of bachelor of laws; engaged in the practice of law in New York City, with offices at 369 East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, Bronx, New York City; elected in 1935 to the assembly of the State of New York and by reelection served there continuously until 1944, when he was elected to Congress; married the former Viola Murphy, of Edgewood, N. J., and they have two children, Sheila and Kathleen; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 84 Congressional Directory NEW YORK TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PUTNAM COUNTY. WESTCHESTER COUNTY: Cities of Peekskill and Yonkers; towns of Cortlandt, Eastchester, Greenburgh, Mount Pleasant, Ossining, and Yorktown. Population (1940), 297,808. RALPH WALDO GWINN, Republican, of Bronxville, N. Y.; lawyer, farmer; born in Noblesville, Ind., March 29, 1884, the son of John Harvey and Eva Gwinn; graduated from DePauw University and Columbia University; admitted to the New York bar; during the First World War served as special counsel of the War Shipping Board and as special representative of Secretary of War Newton D. Baker in the European theater; village counsel of Bronxville, N. Y., and member and president of the board of education; married Essie O’Daniel on June 30, 1908; five children—Lt. Robert L., David M., Gordon T., Eleanor E., and Margaret (de-ceased) ; trustee of DePauw University, Indiana, and Asheville (N. C.) School for Boys; vice president of the International Council of Religious Education; presi-dent of the International Association of Daily Vacation Bible Schools; chairman of the Layman’s Movement for a Christian World, Inc.; director of Agricultural Missions, Ine., and of the Christian Rural Fellowship; member of Reformed Church; author of Fifth Avenue to Farm, 1938, and numerous articles on agriculture and religious education; president of the National Republican Club; Mason; member on Kappa Psi Fraternity; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November , 1944. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—WESTCHESTER COUNTY: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the Twenty-seventh Congressional District. Population (1940), 292,305. 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; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 2, 1937; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Delaware, Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (4 counties). Population (1940), 293,264. ; AUGUSTUS W. BENNET, Republican, of Newburgh, N. Y.; born in New York, N. Y., October 7, 1897; attended the public schools of New York City, N. Y., and Washington, D. C.; was graduated from Amherst College, Amherst, Mass., with B. A. degree in 1918, and Columbia University Law School with LL. B. degree in 1921; attorney; served in United States Naval Reserve Flying Corps from June 1918 to January 1919, with rating of chief quartermaster (Avia-tion); United States Referee in bankruptcy 1923-44; married Maxine Layne, of Memphis, Tenn., on October 19, 1929; children, Linda, born June 12, 1932; William S., 2d, born April 30, 1934, and Susanne Graham, born February 20, 1937; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Schoharie, and Ulster (5 counties).Population (1940), 297,761. : : 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, and was commissioned a second lieutenant; married Miss Mildred Hiltebrant in 1920, and they have three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Otsego, and Schenectady (5 counties). Population (1940), 280,503. 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 NEW YORE Biographical 85 Lillian Dean; three daughters, Mrs. George V. Lynch, Mrs. Robert Wade, and Patricia; enlisted as a private in Company G, Second New York Infantry, Na- tional 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 engage- ments, including St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne; returning to the United States in 1919, he was given command of Company G, Second New York Infantry, which later became the One Hundred and Fifth Infantry, and in 1935 was ad- vanced to rank of colonel; commissioned brigadier general in 1937 of the Fifty- third Brigade, New York National Guard, retiring in 1940, due to physical dis- ability 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 attorney of Hamilton County, N. Y., 1924-29, and of Fulton County, N. Y., 1929-31; district attorney of Fulton County, 1931-42; commander of the American Legion, Fulton County, N. Y., for four terms; department commander 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; reelected to Seventy-ninth Con- gress on November 7, 1944. /'THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 1 to 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clinton, Essex, Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENSs-SELAER COUNTY: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the Thirty-second Congressional District. Population (1940), 322,308. °o 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, Republican 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 November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Franklin, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, and 8t. Lawrence (5 counties). Population (1940), 301,729. 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Oneida and Oswego (2 counties). Population (1940), 274,911. HADWEN CARLTON FULLER, Republican, of Parish, Oswego County, N. Y., was born August 28, 1895, in West Monroe, N. Y., and was educated at Central Square (N. Y.) High School; early career was devoted to banking; was assistant cashier of the First National Bank of Central Square, N. Y., when he left to join the Army in the World War I; was one of the organizers of the 86 Congressional Directory NEW YORK State Bank of Parish, N. Y., in 1919 and was cashier and director of the bank until 1937, when he resigned as cashier to become president of the Parish Oil Co.; served as chairman of the Oswego County Republican Committee and as chair-man of the Pulaski, N. Y., Draft Board, No. 486; executive member of the Oswego County War Council; elected a member of the New York State Assembly in November 1942; served 1 year, and resigned to accept nomination for Member of Congress from the Thirty-second Congressional District to fill a vacancy; member of the Baptist Church, American Legion, Forty and Eight, and I. O. O. F. Lodge; a thirty-second degree Mason and a member of Media Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., of Watertown, N. Y.; married Miss Edith Rill, and they have one son, Robert C., stationed with the United States Army; elected on November 3, 1943, to the Seventy-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Francis D. Culkin, from the Thirty-second Congressional District; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress from the Thirty-fifth Congressional District. THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Onondaga. Population (1940), 295,108. 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-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, and Madison (3 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 241,801. EDWIN ARTHUR HALL, Republican, of Binghamton, was born in Bing-hamton, N. Y., February 11, 1909; attended Cornell University; 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 H Democrat opponent, Rev. Delbert O. Colburn; in September 1939 nominated in Hl the Republican primary for Congress by a vote of 16,000 over Clarence Chamber-i lain, who received 13,000 votes, and Howard Smith, 2,000 votes; elected to the I. Seventy-sixth Congress by defeating his Democrat-American Labor opponent, 0 John V. Johnson, by a vote of 61,000 to 30,000; renominated by the Republican iif -Party in September 1940 by defeating William T. Sampson-Smith, by an all-i time record primary plurality for his district, with a vote of 30,000 to 12,000; re-elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by an all-time record election plurality for his District, receiving 93,000 votes as against 40,000 votes cast for his Democrat-American Labor opponent, Donald W. Kramer; in August 1942, renominated in 1h the primary election by the Republicans, defeating John Stott, by a vote of 15,000 to 12,000; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in November 1942 by defeat-ing 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; renominated unanimously by his party in 1944 and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress over Democrat-American Labor opponent James F. | Byrne by a plurality of 42,000, thereby establishing all-time record majorities | greater than any candidate for any office ever received in his home city of Bing-i hamton and in his home county of Broome; member of the Committee on Agriculture. THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Cayuga, Cortland, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (6 counties). Population (1940), 249,343. 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-ninth. NEW YORK | Biographical 87 THIRTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1940), 241,036. : W. STERLING COLE, Republican, of Bath, N. Y.; Colgate University, Albany Law School; attorney; married; Sigma Nu Fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa, Trustee Colgate University, Masonic fraternity, Naval Reserve; member of Committees on Naval Affairs, Insular Affairs, and Post-War Military Policy; elected to Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses. FORTIETH DISTRICT.—MoNROE COUNTY: That portion within the city of Rochester beginning at _ the intersection of the city line and Lexington Avenue, thence along Lexington Avenue to the eastern boundary line of the twenty-fourth ward, to Lyell Avenue, to Whitney Street, to Jay Street, to Colvin Street, to Wilder Street, to Saxton Street, to Jay Street, to the eastern boundary line of the eleventh ward, continuing along the eastern boundary line of the eleventh and nineteenth wards, to the Genesee River; thence through the waters of Genesee River, to the city line, and thence easterly and northerly along said city line as it winds and turns to the place of beginning; towns of Brighton, Greece, Henrietta, Irondequoit, Mendon, Penfield, Perinton, Pittsford, Rush, and Webster. Population (1940), 339,667. GEORGE F. ROGERS, Democrat, of Rochester, N. Y.; born in Harwood, ° Ontario, Canada, March 19, 1887; food merchant in Rochester, N. Y., for 32 years; president of the Monroe County (N. Y.) Retail Food Merchants’ Associa- tion for 3 years; supervisor of Monroe County for 2 years; New York State senator for 2 years; member of the Genesee State Park Commission; married to Emily L. Scott; two sons, Technical Sgt. George J. Rogers and First Lt. Ralph J. Rogers; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FORTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Genesee, Livingston, Orleans, and Wyoming. MONROE CouNTY: That portion within the city of Rochester not hereinbefore described as a part of the Fortieth Congressional District; towns of Chili, Clarkson, Gates, Hamlin, Ogden, Parma, Riga, Sweden, and Wheatland. 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 Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress from the Forty-first Congressional District. : FORTY-SECOND DISTRICT,—NIAGARA CouUNTY. ERIE COUNTY: That portion within the city ot Buffalo beginning at the north city line of Buffalo and Elmwood Avenue, to Scajaquada Creek, to Main Street, to North Street, to Porter Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Niagara Street, to Albany Street, to Niagara River, through the waters of Niagara River, to the north city line, to the place of beginning; towns of Tonawanda and Grand Island; city of Tonawanda. Population (1940), 319,294. 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, One Hundred and Seventh United States Infantry, Twenty-seventh Division; wounded in action; awarded D. S. C.; elected to the Seventy-second and succeeding Congress; member Military Affairs Committee. FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ERIE COUNTY: That portion of the city of Buffalo beginning at the north city line at the intersection of Elmwood Avenue, to the Scajaquada Creek, to Main Street, to North Street, to Porter Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Niagara Street, to Albany Street, to the Niagara “River, to the waters of Lake Erie, and through the waters of Lake Erie, to Buffalo River, through the waters of Buffalo River to West Perry Street, to Main Street, to West Seneca Street, to Pearl Street, to West Swan Street, to Main Street, to Broadway, to Jefferson Avenue, to William Street, to Spring Street, to Eagle Street, to Smith Street, to Broadway, to the east city line, thence north and west along the said city line to the place of beginning. Population (1940) 320,093. EDWARD J. ELSAESSER, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born March 10, 1904, in the city of Buffalo, N. Y.; completed grammar and high schools at Buffalo, N. Y.; was graduated from the University of Buffalo in 1927 with LL. B. degree; practicing law at Buffalo, N. Y., since 1927; married, two children; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 88 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA FORTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—ERrIE County: That portion of the city of Buffalo beginning at the intersection of Broadway and the east city line, south and west along said city line to Lake Erie, thence northerly through the waters of Lake Erie to the Buffalo River, thence through the waters of Buffalo River to West Perry Street, to Main Street, to West Seneca Street, to Pearl Street, to West Swan Street, to Main Street, to Broadway, to Jefferson Avenue, to William Street, to Spring Street, to Eagle Street, to Smith Street, to Broadway, to the east city line, the place of beginning; city of Lackawanna; towns of Alden, Amherst, Aurora, Boston, Brant, Cheektowaga, Clarence, Colden, Collins, Concord, Eden, Elma, Evans, Hamburg, Holland, Lancaster, Marilla, Newstead, North Collins, Orchard Park, Sar-dinia, Wales, and West Seneca. Population (1940), 319,100. 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; 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FORTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Pop-ulation (1940), 235,913. DANIEL ALDEN REED, Republican, of Dunkirk, N. Y., was born at Sheri-dan, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means; member of Joint Committee on Taxation; chairman of Republican Post-War Tax Study Committee. NORTH CAROLINA (Population (1940), 3,571,623) SENATOKS 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 Com-mission 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. CLYDE ROARK HOEY, Democrat, of Shelby, N. C.; born at Shelby, N. C., December 11, 1877; attended the public schools until 12 years of age, at which time began working in a printing office as devil and continued for 4 years until he learned the printer’s trade; at 16 bought a county paper on credit and began editing and publishing this newspaper, which he continued for 14 years; in the meantime, studied law at home and attended summer law school at the University of North Carolina, after which stood examination before the State Supreme Court in September 1899 and obtained license to practice law, and has continued the practice of law since that time until the present; in 1898 when just 20 years of age, was elected to State house of representatives, but became 21 before it was necessary to be sworn in in January 1899; was reelected to the house in 1900 “and elected to State senate in 1902; was appointed assistant United States attorney for the Western District of North Carolina by President Wilson in July 1913 and served until December 1919, when he was elected to Congress from the Ninth North Carolina District to succeed Hon. E. Y. Webb, who had been appointed United States judge; after serving for the unexpired term voluntarily retired from Congress and practiced law until elected Governor of North Carolina in 1936; served as Governor from January 7, 1937, until January 9, 1941, after which returned to Shelby and resumed the practice of law; served as Democratic na-tional committeeman for North Carolina from 1941 to 1944; degree of LL. D. was conferred upon him by Davidson College in 1932, Duke University and the NORTH CAROLINA | Biographical 8&9 University of North Carolina in 1938; Methodist, Mason, Odd Fellow, Woodman of the World, Junior Order, and Knights of Pythias; Omicron Delta Kappa and Sigma Chi; married on March 22, 1900, to Bess Gardner of Shelby, N. C., and three children were born of this marriage—Clyde R., Jr., Charles A., and Isabel Y.; Mrs. Hoey died on February 13, 1942; was nominated for United States Senator from North Carolina in the Democratic primary on May 27, 1944, over four opponents in the first primary, receiving the largest majority ever given a candi-date for Governor or Senator in a Democratic primary in North Carolina; was elected to the United States Senate in the general election held on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. » REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Monin, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1940), 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-seeond Infantry; served overseas with the Eighty-first Division during the World War; Episcopalian; Elk; Mason; 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 Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 enteted upon the practice of his profession; LL. D. Wake Forest College, June 4, 1945; 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 Com-mittee on Elections No. 3; trustee, University of North Carolina; member, Demo-cratic steering committee; appointed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull to serve as chairman, United States delegation to the Inter-American Travel Congress, Mexico City, 1941; chairman, Special Appropriations Subcommittee on Sub-versive Activities; member, Board of Visitors, United States Military Academy; member, advisory committee for celebration of twenty-fifth anniversary United States Air Mail Service; member of subcommittee for State Department appro-priations selected by State Department to inspect United States Foreign Service Establishments in Europe for postwar purposes; the third member of thé 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 practiee 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, | | | | | | 90 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA 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; re- elected to the Seventy- eighth Congress, without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). Population (1940), 358,573. HAROLD DUNBAR COOLEY, Democrat, of Nashville, N. C., son of the late R. A. P. Cooley and Hattie Davis Cooley; born July 26, 1897; attended the public schools of Nash County, the University of North Carolina, and the law school of Yale University; licensed to practice law in February 1918; served in the Naval Aviation Flying Corps during World War I; 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, N. C.; born in Rock-ford, Surry County, N. C,, December 18, 1880; educated in high schools and Guilford College (N. C.); studied law at the University of North Carolina; mem-ber 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress at the regular election of 1944. DHT, —COUNTIgg: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population CARL THOMAS DURHAM, Democrat, of Chapel Hill, N. C.; horn 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 Mrs. George D. Jackson; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, mayor of Thomasville, 1906-10; elected to the House of Representatives of North Carolina in 1930; elected to the State senate for the eighteenth district, session of 1932; married Miss Edith Leigh Greer, of Lexington, N. C.; elected to the Seventy-sixth’ Congress and reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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 and banker by occupation; married and has five children; appointed member of the ’ NORTH DAKOTA Biographical : be) board of agriculture of North Carolina in 1903, serving in same position for 6 years; elected member of State senate in 1908; served as director of State’s prison from 1909 to 1911; elected to Sixty-second and each succeeding Congress; chair-man of the Committee on Ways and Means, Seventy-third to Seventy-ninth Congresses, inclusive; alternating chairman, Joint Congressional Commitee on Internal Revenue Taxation. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, and Mitchel (6 counties). Population (1940), 295,822. [Vacant.] 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. EF, 1017-19; married Miss Bessie Lewis, Dallas, N. C.; two children— Mrs. E. Grainger Williams (husband, Lt. E. G. ‘Williams, U.S. N.) and Maj. 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 Con-gressional District to the Seventy-second to the Seventy-seventh Congresses, inclusive; elected from the Eleventh Congressional District on November 3, 1942, to "the Seventy-eighth Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. 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 Qeroinn was admitted to bar in Sep-tember 1894, and practiced law in Asheville,N Cs 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 fourteenth term; reelected on November 3, 1943, to represent the new Twelfth District in the Seventy-eighth Congress, and re elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. NORTH DAKOTA (Population (1940), 641,935) SENATORS WILLIAM LANGER, Republican (elected with the endorsement of the Non-Partisan League), of Bismarck and Wheatland, N. Dak., R. F. D. 1; farmer and lawyer; 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 practice law on his twenty-first birthday; married Lydia Cady, of New York City; children—Emma Bulkley Shaeffer, wife of Lt. J. Peter Shaeffer; Lydia Cady; Mary Erskine Gokey, wife of Lt. Franklyn Gokey; and 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 campaign committee, Robert M. La Follette for President, each time he was a candidate, and comanager of Hiram Johnson for President committee; Republican nominee for Governor in 1920; Governor of North Dakota, 1933 to July 17, 1934, when he was removed by the Supreme Court of North Dakota; only person ever to be arrested in any English-speaking country for filing an affidavit of prejudice against a judge; again Governor from 1937 to 1939; member Sigma Chi fraternity; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947. 92 Congressional Directory OHIO MILTON R. YOUNG, Republican, of Berlin, N. Dak.; born Decemker 6, 1897, in Berlin, N. Dak.; attended the La Moure County public schools and was graduated from La Moure High School in 1915; attended North Dakota State Agricultural College and Graceland College at Lamoni, Iowa; actively engaged in the operation of his farm near Berlin, N. Dak.; member of school, township, and County AAA boards; elected to house of representatives of North Dakota State Legislature in 1932; elected to State senate of North Dakota in 1934 and served continuously until his resignation March 14, 1945; served as chairman of Committee on Corporations, State Affairs, Ways and Means, and Appropria-tions; elected president pro tempore 1941; majority floor leader 1943; division campaign manager of Republican National Committee for Willkie Farm Voters, 1940; Republican State campaign manager 1940 and 1944; married Malinda V. Benson, of La Moure, N. Dak., July 7, 1919; three sons, Wendell M., Duane C., and John M.; appointed to the United States Senate March 12, 1945, by Gov. Fred G. Aandahl to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Moses. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.— Population (1940), 641,035. 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 Meclntyre, 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, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses as a Representative at Large; Union Party Presidential candidate, 1936. CHARLES R. ROBERTSON, Republican, of Bismarck, N. Dak.; born on a farm near Madison, Wis., September 5, 1889, son of William Robertson and wife, the former Janet Mair, both natives of Ayrshire, Scotland; assisted on his father’s stock and grain farm in Columbia County, Wis., while attending school at Arling-ton, Wis., and high school at Poynette, Wis.; graduate of Parker College; held executive positions in wholesale and retail establishments in Winnebago, Fergus Falls, St. Paul, and Minneapolis, Minn., and Aberdeen, S. Dak.; owned and operated stores in Aberdeen and Redfield, S. Dak., and later owned and operated concurrently women’s wear stores in Valley City, Wahpeton, Jamestown, and Bismarck, N. Dak.; married Mary Armstrong, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Armstrong, of Kansas City, Mo.; member of the Presbyterian Church, all Masonic bodies, Rotary, Elks, and Eagles; delegate to the National Republican Convention at Philadelphia in June, 1940; elected by Republican State executive committee to fill vacancy for nomination to Congress in summer of 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, as Representative at Large; candidate for renomination to the Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942, but was defeated; North Dakota State chairman of Russian War Relief, Inc., and Committee for Economic Development, 1943-44; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, 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 OHIO Biographical | 93 as assistant counsel for the United States Food Administration, 1917-18, and as counsel for the American Relief Administration in 1919; member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1921-26, and served as speaker in 1926; served in the Ohio Senate, 1931-32; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, and reelected November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. JAMES WYLIE HUFFMAN, Democrat, of Columbus, .Ohio; born at Chand-lersville, Ohio, September 13, 1894; educated in the public schools of Rich Hill Township, Muskingum County, and Ashland County, Ohio; attended Ohio Wesleyan University and Ohio State University; was graduated from the Uni-versity of Chicago with LL. B. degree; during the First World War served as a machine gun lieutenant with the Three Hundred and Twenty-ninth Infantry, Eighty-third Division, and the One Hundred and Twentieth Machine Gun Bat-talion, Thirty-second Division, participating in four major offensives and spend-ing 6 months beyond the Rhine in the Army of Occupation; in 1922 was admitted to the Ohio and Illinois bars and in the same year became associated with the firm of Scott, Bancroft, Martin & MacLeish, of Chicago; in 1923, while with that firm, served as an assistant attorney general of Illinois; returned to Ohio in 1924 and became executive secretary to Gov. Vie Donahey; early in 1927 became a member of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, and at the expiration of his term early in 1929 entered the practice of law in Columbus, Ohio; served as direc-tor of commerce of the State of Ohio, and has specialized in corporation law; since 1929 has represented the city of Columbus as special counsel in rate litiga-tion, and also represented Cleveland and other Ohio cities; member of the Ameri-can Bar, Ohio State Bar, and Columbus Bar Associations; the Columbus Athletic Club, Scottish Rite, and Shrine; and Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Phi frater-nities; has no hobbies, but finds relaxation in farming, reforestation, and horse-back riding; married Margaret K. Donahey on June 3, 1925, and they have two children, Margaret E. (Peggy) and James W., Jr.; appointed to the United States Senate on October 8, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Harold H. Burton for the 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 of the National Republican; State senator, Ohio General Assembly, 1920-30; chairman, Republican central committee, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), since 1938; author, The Challenge of 1940; married to Edna Eckhardt; two children, Virginia Bender and Mrs. Ernest B. Stevenson (Barbara Bender) ; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. 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 Bj; 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; member of the American Legion and Forty and Eight; served two terms as president of the Hamilton County Republican Club; elected member of Hamilton County Charter Commission in 1934; married August 23, 1920, to Edna G. Kirker; one daughter, Mrs. Robert P. Dietz; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—HaAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, ward 7, precincts A and C; ward 10, precincts I, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 15, precincts A and B; ward 16, precincts A to C, E, F, HtoJ, L to N, 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 78349°—T79—2—-1st ed. 8 » ! 94 ‘Congressional Directory OHIO 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. THIRD DISTRIGT~Counnes Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1940), EDWARD JOSEPH GARDNER, Democrat, of Hamilton, Ohio; born in Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio, August 7, 1898, son of Edward and Mary Long Gardner; attended Catholic high school in Hamilton, Ohio; Night College of Commerce and Finance at St. Xavier University, Cincinnati, Ohio; post-graduate work at night classes in the Wharton School of Business of the University of Pennsylvania, and at the University of Cincinnati in economics, law, banking, money, credits, and tax theory; winner of the Phillip C. Swing Scholarship at the University of Cincinnati for outstanding ability in finance and economics; prac-ticing public accountant since 1924, specializing in general economic advice to large and small businesses; president of the Hamilton City Council and vice mayor in 1926-28; elected State representative from Builer County in 1937-38 and in 1941-42; chairman of the joint committee of house and senate for the studies of causes of delinquent taxes in 1938; secretary of the house taxation committee during 1937 and 1938; president of the Public Accountants Society of Ohio, Inec., in 1943; married October 12, 1926, to Esther Pring, of Cincinnati, Ohio; two children, Edward Austin, 17, and Patricia Marie, 15; member of the Public Accountants Society of Ohio, Inc., Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Knights of Columbus, fourth degree, Loyal Order of Moose, and the Ameri-can Menagerie Club; holds honorable discharge from the United States Army from World War I; past adjutant of Frank Durwin Post, No. 138, American Legion; past chef de gare Voiture No. 6, Forty and Eight, American Legion; chairman of the legislative committee of the Ohio Department of the American Legion at the first war conference held in Cincinnati in 1943, and secretary of the legislative committee of the Ohio Department of the American Legion at the second war conference held in Columbus, Ohio, in 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, and Shelby (6 counties). Population (1940), 245,130. . ROBERT FRANKLIN JONES, Republican, of Lima, Ohio; born June 25, 1907, son of Josephine and the late J. C. Jones; educated Allen County public schools and Ohio Northern University Law School; admitted to the practice of law in 1929; married Miss Ida Marie Spreen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Spreen, and they have two children, Robert Franklin, Jr., and Jeraldine; member of the Methodist Church; Allen County prosecuting attorney 1935-39; elected to the Seventy-sixth and succeeding Congresses. 3 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. 8.; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and ~ Seventy-ninth Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 brickyard, as a farm hand, and store clerk; began teaching 4 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 OHIO Brographical 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 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 Revolu-tionary 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 graduate of Miami Uni-versity and A. B. from Otterbein College; Eva Rosalie, now Mrs. J. L. Keller, South Webster, Ohio, B. S. in education, Miami University, M. A., University of Michigan (the son-in-law, J. L. Keller, is a captain in the U. S. Army, World War II); Edward Reginald, B. S. in education, Ohio University, and master’s degree from Northwestern University, now a lieutenant in the United States Navy; John Donald Smith, B. S. in education, Ohio University; Florence Kathryn, now Mrs. William L. Carter, Jr. (Mr. Carter is technician, fourth grade, Signal Service Bn., World War II), B. S. 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 can-didate for the Seventy-eighth Congress by the Sixth District Republican Com-mittee, representing all six counties; was nominated and elected on November 3, 1942, the first Republican Congressman from the Sixth Ohio District since 1928 election; reelected to a second term in 1944, receiving 45,284 votes to 42,167, a majority of 3,117, which is more than twice the majority received in 1942; member of the following committees; Education, Flood Control, and Immigration and Naturalization. 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.; farm operator; Lieutenant Governor of Ohio 1919-23; Secretary of State of Ohio 1927-33; Republican nominee for Governor of Ohio 1934; delegate to various Republican national conventions; member of the Repub-lican National Committee for Ohio; member of the Executive Committee of the Republican National Committee; married Ethel McKinney July. 15, 1916; three children, Betty Jean, Dorothy Lucille, and Clarence J., Jr.; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Lucas and HOMER A. RAMEY, Republican, 1916 and commenced practice in Ottawa of Put in (2 counties). Toledo, Ohio; Bay, Ohio; Population admimember (1940), 368,693. tted to of Ohio the bar House in of Representatives, 1920-24; served in the Ohio Senate, 1925-26; judge of the Municipal Court of Toledo, Ohio, 1926-43; member of Toledo Bar Association, Lucas County Bar Association, the Ohio State Bar Association, a sustaining member of the American Bar Association, and member of the American Judicature Society; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Athens, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, and Vinton (6 counties). Population (1940), 180,482. THOMAS A. JENKINS, Republican, of Ironton; born in Jackson County, Ohio; married to Miss Mabel Wynne; graduate Providence University and Ohio State University; admitted to bar in 1907; elected prosecuting attorney, Lawrence 96 Congressional Directory eto County, Ohio, two terms; elected to State Senate of Ohio in 1922; elected in 1924 to Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to all subsequent Congresses; member of Ways and Means Committee. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, and Ross (5 counties). Population (1940), 181,117. WALTER ELLSWORTH BREHM, Republican, of Logan, Ohio; born in Somerset, Perry County, Ohio, May 25, 1892; attended Boston University, Ohio Wesleyan University, and was graduated from Ohio State University in 1917 with D. D. S. degree; member of Logan City Council, 1936-38; member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1938-42; served 4 years, Company D, Seventh Regi-ment, Ohio Infantry; married Miss Lucille Fountain; two sons, Tommy, T/5, 20, and Jimmy, 18; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Franklin. Population (1940), 388,712. JOHN M. VORYS, Republican, of Columbus, Ohio; lawyer; born in Lancaster, Ohio, June 16, 1896; attended public schools in Lancaster and Columbus, Ohio; graduated from Columbus East High School, Yale University (B. A.), Ohio State University (juris doctor); pilot in United States Naval Air Service, overseas, retir-ing to inactive service in 1919 with rank of lieutenant, senior grade; teacher in the College of Yale in China, Changsha, China, 1919-20; assistant secretary, Ameri-can delegation, Conference on Limitation of Armament and Pacific. and Far East Affairs, Washington, 1921-22; representative from Franklin County in Ohio Gen-eral Assembly, 1923-24; senator from tenth district in Ohio General Assembly, 1925-26; director of aeronautics of Ohio, 1929-30; member of the law firm of Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease, 1926-39; president, Columbus Bar Association, 1938; married Lois West, of Lucknow, India, in 1927; three children—Martin, -Jeanny Esther, and Mary; first elected to Congress in 1938; reelected in 1940, 1942 and 1944. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Erie, Huron, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wood (5 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 219,310. 3 : ALVIN F. WEICHEL, Republican, of Sandusky, Ohio; son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto A. Weichel, of Sandusky; educated in Sandusky schools; was graduated from Ferris Institute, Big Rapids, Mich., the University of Michigan with A. B. 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; part-time lecturer, 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. . FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit (4 counties). Popu-lation (1940), 531,489. : : WALTER B. HUBER, Democrat, of Akron, Ohio; born in Akron, Ohio, June 29, 1903; married; one son; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. ; 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; president of Atlas Chemical Co., Marietta, Ohio; 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 and Margie Lenore; elected to the Seventy-eighth Corigress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (4 counties). Popula tion (1940), 372,099. WILLIAM R. THOM, Democrat, of Canton, Ohio; born July 7, 1885, in that city, the son of Louis and Katherine M. Thom; graduated from Canton High OHIO Biographical School in 1903, devoting the next 5 years to newspaper reporting for Canton newspapers; special student in Adelbert College of Western Reserve University, at Cleveland, Ohio, 1909-11; graduate of Georgetown Law School, Washington, D. C., 1916; admitted to the bar of Ohio, January 1917 and since then a practicing lawyer in Canton; served in Washington as secretary of J. J. Whitacre, a Member of the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses from the old Eighteenth Ohio District, consisting of Stark, Columbiana, and Mahoning Counties; reporter for the United Press in the House of Representatives Press Gallery, 1915-16; member of the Canton Park Commission for 12 years; member of First Evangelical and Reformed Church, of Canton, Ohio; Member of the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-seventh Congresses; elected to the Seventy-ninth Con-gress over Henderson H. Carson on November 7, 1944; member of the Banking and Currency Committee. 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, Mrs. Warde Butler, Jr., 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, Belmont County, Ohio, February 22, 1887, son of William D. and Nanna Ramage Lewis; educated 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 campaign committee for Ohio, 1930; member, Interstate Commission on Conflicting Taxation of American Legislators Association, 1931-35; married Hazel J. Neff in 1916; children, First Lt. Robert N. Lewis, United States Army Medical Corps Reserve, Mrs. Elisabeth L. Spurrier, and Richard E. Lewis, hospital apprentice, first class, United States Navy; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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.—CI11y 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, Cleveland, Ohio; graduate of Princeton University, A. B. degree, graduate of Harvard Law School, LL. B. degree; member of Ohio State Legislature, 1937-40; minority floor leader, 1939-40; married; two children, William Mathews Feighan and Fleur Feighan; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 8, 1942; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. : TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.— oF CLEVELAND: Ward 5, except precincts F, M, and V; ward City 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 Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA 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 House of 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, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, L. H. D., Baldwin-Wallace College, 1944, Doctor of Humanities, Western Reserve University, 1944; Repub-lican State Central Committee, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. : 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, 1932, and 1938; reelected in 1944 for the term beginning January 3, 1945; member of Phi Delta Theta college fraterhity; 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. OKLAHOMA Biographical REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRIGT.—COUNTIES: Craig, Delaware, Mayes, Nowata, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Rogers, Tulsa, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1940), 416,863. GEORGE BLAINE SCHWABE, Republican, of Tulsa, Okla.; born in Arthur, Vernon County, Mo., July 26, 1886; reared on farms near Sedalia and Columbia, Mo.; attended country and town schools in Pettis County, Mo., and Sedalia High School; arts and science and law education at University of Missouri, grad-uating in law in 1910; practiced law at Nowata, Okla., 1911-22 and at Tulsa, Okla., from 1922; mayor of Nowata, Okla., 1913-14; member of board of educa-tion, Nowata, Okla., 5 years; representative, Oklahoma State Legislature, from Nowata County, 1918-22; speaker, house of representatives, Oklahoma State Legislature, 1921-22; chairman, Republican County Committee, Tulsa County, Okla., 1928-36; delegate, Republican National Convention, 1936; member First Christian Church, Tulsa, Okla.; married; four sons, one daughter, one stepson; brother of Max Schwabe, Representative from Columbia, Mo.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; member of the following House Committees: Indian Affairs, Mines and Mining, and Patents. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskogee, Okmulgee, Se-quoyah, and Wagoner (8 counties). Population (1940), 239,001. WILLIAM G. STIGLER, Democrat, of Stigler, Okla.; born in Stigler, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma); educated in Oklahoma common schools, graduated from the Northeastern State College, Tahlequah, Okla., received legal education at the University of Oklahoma; attended Grenoble University, Grenoble, France, spring of 1919; admitted to practice law in State of Oklahoma in December 1920; in World War I served nearly 2 years, second lieutenant in Infantry; served over-seas with the Three Hundred and Fifty-seventh Infantry, Ninetieth Division, on the battlefronts of St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne; with Army of Occupation in Germany ; city attorney of Stigler for 4 years, 1920-24; elected to the State senate in November 1924, from the twenty-seventh senatorial district, composed of Muskogee, McIntosh, and Haskell Counties; reelected second term in November 1928; president pro tempore of State senate in 1931; member of Soldiers Relief Commission of Oklahoma in 1932; elected department commander of the American Legion of Oklahoma in 1933; served as national executive committeeman of the American Legion from Oklahoma for 2 years; elected national president of the Ninetieth Division Association in 1935; lieutenant colonel, Oklahoma National Guard, Forty-fifth Division, from 1925 to 1938; executive vice president of the Choctaw Area Council of the Boy Scouts; Haskell County chairman of War Finance Committee until resignation to run for Congress; ex-member of State Pardon and Parole Advisory Board under Gov. Robert 8. Kerr; admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, the United States District Court of Eastern Oklahoma, the United States Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, the United States Court of Claims, and the Supreme Court of the United States; « national attorney for the Choctaw Nation for 7 years; member of executive council of State Bar of Oklahoma 1943-44; member of the Stigler Methodist Church, serving on the board of stewards for many years; American Legion, Forty and Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner, Bedouin Temple, Muskogee; Independent Order of Odd Feilows, Modern Wood-men of America, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and a duly enrolled member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians; family consists of Mrs. Stigler and two daughters, Denyse and Elaine; nominated for Congress in special Democratic primary in Second Congres-sional District on March 7, 1944, elected to Congress in special general election March 28, 1944, to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Jack Nichols; sworn in as Member of Congress April 12, 1944; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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, since 1929; 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 Novotny and Mrs. Martha Genia McKinney, from a previous marriage in 1912; two stepchildren, Mary Ellen and Wray Smith; four 100 Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA grandchildren, Sally Ann Novotny and Paul Dow, Stewart, and Norma Gay Mec-Kinney; father’s family came to what is now the Third Congressional District of Oklahoma (then the Indian Territory) in 1894; his wife’s family ¢hme in 1886; elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives 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; served as acting Governor; resigned from State senate November 1942 to enter Congress; Presbyterian, Mason, and Elk; elected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Military Affairs. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Potta- Coal, watomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1940), 324,641. LYLE H. BOREN, Democrat, of Seminole, Okla. . FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiESs: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne (7 counties). Population (1940), 397,385. A ; 3 A. 8. MIKE MONRONEY, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, Okla.; born in Oklahoma City, March 2, 1902; educated in the public schools and the University of Oklahoma, B. A., 1924; married; served 5 years as political writer of the Scripps-Howard Oklahoma News in Oklahoma City; member of Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Delta Chi, and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the Committee on Banking and Currency and the Joint Committee on Organization of Congress (vice chairman). SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, King-fisher, and Stephens (9 counties). Population (1940), 242,241. JED JOHNSON, Democrat, of Anadarko; 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, One Hundred Forty-fourth Infantry, Thirty-sixth Division; 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, representing 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 con-ferences at Geneva, Switzerland, 1929, and Paris, 1937; delegate from Oklahoma, Tenth Annual Convention, American Legion, Paris, 1927; first vice president, Thirty-sixth Division Association; chairman, speakers’ bureau, Democratic Na-tional Congressional Committee; member, House Steering Committee; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. . 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; reared on cotton, wheat, and dairy farm near Mangum, Okla., and on wheat and poultry farm near Greensburg, Kans.; educated in the public schools of Oklahoma; married Miss Jessie Stiles, June 30, 1929, and they have three children: La Melba Sue, born August 3, 1930, Galen, born, February 10, 1933, and Nelda, born July 25, 1935; served in 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; building contractor, Oklahoma City, Okla., 1937 and 1938; since 1938 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 OREGON Biographical 101 District of Oklahoma to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Sam C. Massingale; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; 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; and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. OREGON (Population (1940), 1,089,684) SENATORS GUY CORDON, Republican, of Roseburg, Oreg.; born in Cuero, Tex., on April 24, 1890; has resided in Oregon continuously since 1900; attended the public ‘schools; served in the United States Army in 1918; county assessor of Douglas County, Oreg., 1917-20; was admitted to the bar in 1920; district attorney of Douglas County, 1923-35, inclusive; married to Ana Allen on September 30, 1914, and they have two daughters and one son; appointed to the United States Senate by Governor Snell on March 4, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles L. McNary; elected November 7, 1944, to the unexpired term ending January 3, 1949. WAYNE LYMAN MORSE, Republican, of Eugene, Oreg.; lawyer and educa-tor; was born near Madison, Wis., October 20, 1900; received Ph. B. degree, Uni-versity of Wisconsin, 1923, M. A. degree, 1924, LL. B. degree, University of Minne-sota, 1928; J. D. degree, Columbia University, 1932; completed 4-year advanced military training course, University of Wisconsin, 1919-23, and held reserve commission as second lieutenant, Field Artillery, U. S. Army, 1923-29; taught argumentation at University of Wisconsin and University of Minnesota and was appointed assistant professor of law at University of Oregon in 1929; became asso-ciate professor in 1930, and in 1931 was made dean and professor of law, holding that position until his resignation in February 1944; served as member of Gover-nor’s Committee to Consider Judicial Reforms; administrative director, United States Attorney General’s Survey of Release Procedures, 1936-39; Pacific Coast arbitrator for United States Department of Labor (Maritime Industry); chair-man, President’s Railway Emergency Board, 1941; public member, National War Labor Board, 1942-44; married Miss Mildred Downie in 1924 and they have three daughters—Nancy Faye, Judith Mary, and Amy Ann; member of American, Federal, and Oregon Bar Associations, Rotary Club, Scottish Rite Mason, Mystic Shrine, Eagles, Moose, Pi Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Rho, Gamma Eta Gamma, Scabbard and Blade, Order of the Coif; Congregationalist; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. - Ee TO 102 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Lincoln, Marion, Polk, Tilla-mook, Washington, and Yamhill (10 counties). Population (1940), 309,004. : [Vacant.] ) SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood River, Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1940), 210,991. LOWELL STOCKMAN, Republican, of Pendleton, Oreg., was born near Helix, Oreg., April 12, 1901; attended the Pendleton public schools and was graduated from Oregon State College 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, William, age 15; Mary, age 11; and Margery, age 9; farmed until being elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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, of New York; attorney at law; admitted to practice in the States of New York and Oregon, in the Federal courts, and United States Supreme Court; member of the Oregon Legislature from 1929 to 1938, when he resigned from the State senate to become a candidate for the United States Congress, with the exception of one term for which he was not a candidate; married to Mayme Henton; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: 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; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. PENNSYLVANIA (Population (1940), 9,900,180) : SENATORS JOSEPH F. GUFFEY, Democrat, Pittsburgh, Pa., unmarried. FRANCIS JOHN MYERS, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Phila-delphia, Pa., December 18, 1901; was graduated from St. Joseph’s High School, PENNSYLVANIA : Biographical : 103 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; appointed deputy attorney general for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1937; married Miss Catharine M. Hall, and they have three children—Franecis John, Jr., Kathleen, and Barbara; elected to Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy- eighth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CiIitY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 1 to 4, 26, 30, 36, 39, and 48. Population (1940), 24,424. WILLIAM A. BARRETT, Democra., of Philadelphia, Pa.; born August 14, 1896; was graduated from Brown Preparatory School and St. Joseph’s College, Philadelphia, Pa.; realtor; served as member of the Board of Mercantile Apprais ers, Philadelphia, Pa, for 4 years; director of war bond and war chest campaigns in his district; married; three children, one son in United States Navy; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. Se DISTRICT.—Ci1tYy OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 27, 34, 40, 44, 46, 51, and 52. Population (10:0), WILLIAM THOMAS GRANAHAN, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., July 26, 1895; graduate of Roman Catholic High School, Philadelphia, Pa., and LaSalle Extension University, Chicago, I1l.; World War veteran, serving in Army of Occupation in Germany; member of American Legion and Irish War Veterans; member of Democratic State ‘Committee for 4 years; Democratic leader of the fifty-second ward, Philadelphia, Pa.; engaged in building business, later supervisor of inheritance tax, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and chief disbursing officer for State treasury, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; married Kathryn O’Hay McNally, of Easton, Pa., on November 20, 1943; elected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7 1944. THIRD DISTRICT.—City oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 5 to 20, 25, 31, and 45. Population (1940), 339,006. MICHAEL J. BRADLEY, Demcecrat, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born in that city on May 24, 1897; educated in the parochial schools and public high school; World War veteran, having enlisted in May 1917, and serving overseas 2 years in the United States Navy; member of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; married, July 6, 1919, to Emily Angiuli, of Rome, Italy, and they have four children—Raymond, Marian, Catherine, and Edward; engaged in investment security and brokerage business from 1923 to 1935; deputy insurance commis-sioner, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, from July 1 1935, to January 1, 1937, member, Commercial Telegraphers’ Union; elected to the Seventy fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FOURIY DISTRICT.—CItYy OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 24, 28, 29, 32, 37, 38, and 47. Population (1940), JOHN EDWARD SHERIDAN, Democrat, of Philadelphia; born in Water-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; married Virginia Wight on May 8, 1943; two children, John Edward, Jr., and Irene Virginia; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 23, 33, 35, 41, and 43. Population (1940), 295,060. WILLIAM JOSEPH GREEN, Jgr., Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., March 5, 1910; Was graduated from St. Joseph’s Prep School and attended St. J oseph’s College for 2 years; insurance broker; entered Army on March 22, 1944, at New Cumberland, Pa., and was transferred to Camp Lee, Va.; after completing basic, field, and technical training at Camp Lee was assigned to 104 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA company as supply clerk; member of the American Legion; married Miss Mary E. Kelly, September 25, 1937, and they have four children—William J., 3d, Mary Elizabeth, Anne Theresa, and Michael Francis; elected to the Seventy-ninth: Congress on November 7, 1944. SIXTH DISTRICT.— OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 21, 22, 42, 49, and 50. Population (1940), CITY 304,555. HERBERT J. McGLINCHEY, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born Novem-ber 7, 1904; was graduated from parochial and public schools; served as super-visor of labor and industry for the eastern district of Pennsylvania from 1935 to 1937; president of the Board of Mercantile Appraisers in Philadelphia from 1937 to 1944; married and has one daughter, Mary Jane; resides at 596 East Geneva Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa., and holds office as second vice chairman of the Phil-adelphia Democratic County Committee; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: 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. EIGHTH 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; distributor of General Electric oil burners and heating equipment; General Electric appliance dealer; Republican State committeeman, 1936-37; chairman of organization committee for Republican clubs in Lehigh County; past president Post IL, T. P. A.; member of Moravian Church; thirty-second degree Mason; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of House Foreign Affairs Committee. NINTH 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., attended the public schools; grad-uated 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; elected to the Seventy-first Congress; reelected to succeeding Congresses. ; TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNtY: 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; member of Scranton Club, and fourth degree Knights of Columbus; married Miss Ella Heffron, August 14, 1931; children—John, Jean Marie, Ellen, and George; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. ’ -ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNrtY: Luzerne. Population (1940), 441,518. DANIEL J. FLOOD, Democrat, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; born at Hazleton, Pa., November 26, 1903; received early education in the public schools of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and St. Augustine, Fla.; graduate of Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y., and later attended Harvard Law School and Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle, Pa., graduating in 1929 with LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar of the various State and Federal courts in 1930; engaged in the practice of law since 1930; attorney for PENNSYLVANIA. Biographical Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, 1934-35; appointed deputy attorney general for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and counsel for Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 1935-39; director, Bureau of Public Assistance Disbursements, State treasury, and executive assistant to State treasurer, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1941-44; national committeeman for Pennsylvania Young Demo-cratic Clubs of America, 1942-43; member of many local civie, fraternal, benefi- a) and social societies; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 944. : RyiLEn DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population (1940), 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 internship 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 Con-gress; reelected to the succeeding Congresses. THIRTEENTH 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Pike, Sullivan, Susquehanna, ‘Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1940), 212,979. 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; elected to State house of representatives in 1930; reelected in 1932, through 1940; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on November 4, 1941; reelected to Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses.’ FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cameron, Clinton, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, and Tioga (6 counties). Population (1940), 244,920. ROBERT F. RICH, Republican, of Woolrich, Clinton County, Pa.; married Julia Trump, of Jersey Shore, Pa., and they have four daughters; educated at Williamsport Dickinson Seminary and Junior College, of which he is president of the board of trustees; Williamsport Commercial College, Williamsport, Pa.; Mer-cersburg Academy, Mercersburg, Pa.; Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., a member of the board of trustees; Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; general manager and treasurer of the Woolrich Woolen Mills; director, secretary, and treasurer of the Chatham Water Co., of Woolrich; director and treasurer of the Pearce Manufacturing Co., Latrobe, Pa.; president of the State Bank of Avis; director of the Lock Haven Trust Co., of Lock Haven; thirty-third degree Mason; delegate to the Republican National Convention, 1924; elected a Member of the Seventy-first and succeeding 106 Congressional Directory "PENNSYLVANIA Congresses; was not a candidate for the Seventy-eighth Congress; elected to the ‘Seventy--ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Montgomery. Population (1940), 289,247. SAMUEL K. McCONNELL, Jr., Republican, of Penn Wynne, Pa.; born in Eddystone, Pa., April 6, 1901; was graduated from the University of Penn-sylvania in June 1923, with B. S. degree in economics; investment banker; married; one child, Shirley; past master, Franklin Lodge, No. 134, F. and A. M.; elected president of the board of trustees, Norristown State Hospital in 1940; elected township commissioner of Lower Merion Township in 1941; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held January 18, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of J. William Ditter; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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 Pitts-burgh, graduating therefrom iin 1923, with an A. B. degree, and from Georgetown Law School with the degree of LL. B. in 1942; served during the World War in the Tank Corps at Raleigh, N. C.; member of. "the Pennsylvania House of Repre-sentatives representing Huntingdon County for two terms, 1935-37; married Grace Metz, who died March 6, 1945, and has two daughters—Susan and Barbara; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election held on May 11, 1937; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. . EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Popula-tion (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. 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; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clarion, Elk, Forest, Jefferson, Venango, and ‘Warren (6 counties). Population (1940), 239,481. LEON HARRY GAVIN, Republican, of Oil City, Pa.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., February 25, 1893; during {he First World War served as sergeant in the Fifty-first Infantry, Sixth Division; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; ‘reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. NILIH DISTRICT, Dooney Carbon, Monroe, and Northampton (3 counties). Population 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 foree of the Navy; married; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress. - TWENTE bho DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Franklin, and York (3 counties). Population (1940), CHESTER H. GROSS, Republican, of York, 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’ 8 farm; during the years eight children were born, seven still live; this is a typical farm’ family; elected a master farmer in Pennsylvania January 25, 1936; held . nearly all local offices in his township; elected to the Pennsylvania State Legisla- PENNSYLVANIA B 1ographical : ture 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, and to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, NY uoND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Blair, Centre, ahd Clearfield (3 counties). Population DAVID EMMERT BRUMBAUGH, Republican, of Claysburg, Pa.; born in Martinsburg, Pa., October 8, 1894, son of Moses R. and Sarah Florence Brum-baugh; educated in the public schools of North Woodbury Township, Pa., and the summer normal school at Martinsburg, Pa.; during the First World War served as a private in the Thirty-third Division, Fifty-eighth Brigade Headquarters; vice president and cashier of the First National Bank of Claysburg, Pa.; member of Evangelical and Reformed Church, of Claysburg, Pa.; chairman of the Blair County Chapter, American Red Cross, 1934 to 1945; member of the Masonic Order, thirty-second degree, Williamsport, Pa., Consistory, Jaffa Shrine and Jesters, Veterans of Foreign Wars, American Legion, Forty and Eight, and the Pennsylvania Society of New York; married Miss Carolyn L. Acker on October 29, 1919, and they have four children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 2, 1943, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James E. Van Zandt; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. NI amp DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fayette and Somerset (2 counties). Population (1940), JOHN BUELL SNYDER, Democrat, of Perryopolis, Pa.; born on a farm in Upper Turkeyfoot Township, Somerset County, Pa., July 30, 1877; 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; co-author of original Guffey-Snyder Bituminous Coal Act, 1935; chairman of Army Appropria-tions subcommittee since 1937; known in Congress as the ‘father’ of Trans-continental-Superhighways; elected a Representative to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TW NY YOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Greene and Washington (2 counties). Population (1940), THOMAS E. MORGAN, Democrat, of Fredericktown, Pa.; born in Ellsworth, Pa., October 13, 1906; attended the public schools of Washington County, and was graduated from East Bethlehem Township High School at Fredericktown, Pa., in 1926; was graduated from Waynesburg College, Waynesburg, Pa., in 1930 with a bachelor of science degree; from Detroit College of Medicine and Surgery, Detroit, Mich., in 1933 with a bachelor of medicine degree, and from Wayne Uni-versity in 1934, with a doctor of medicine degree; served internship at Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich., and since that time has practiced medicine and surgery at Fredericktown, Pa.; married Winifred Stait at Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Canada, August 26, 1937; they have one daughter, Mary Ann; member of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society, American Medical Association, and numer-ous fraternal and civie organizations; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. TWENTY-FIFTH 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 A 108 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, and Indiana (3 counties). Population(1940), 374,400. HARVE TIBBOTT, Republican, of Ebensburg, Cambria County, Pa.; born 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, Seventh-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. : TWENTY-SEVENTH 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 Mary Elizabeth (Kegg) Kelley; attended parochial and public grade schools and Greensburg (Pa.) High School; United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y., 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— Capt. A. Regis, Marine Pfc. Robert V., Lt. Richard B., Lt. J. Hilary, Cadet 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-Produect 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 unioni-zation; member of the Greensburg Board of Education, 1935-36; member of the scale committee of the Coal Operators Association of Western Pennsylvania, 1935-39; member of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engi-neers; 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses; chairman subcommittee, House Labor Committee, to investi- . gate aid to the physically handicapped. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNmIES: 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 deathof 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. : : TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY CouUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 7, 8, and 11 to 14; boroughs of Chalfant, Churchill, Edgewood, Forest Hills, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Swissvale, Verona, and Wilkinsburg; townships of Braddock, Patton, Penn, Plum, and Wilkins. Population (1940), 272,288. HOWARD E. CAMPBELL, Republican, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was born in Pitts-burgh, Pa., January 4, 1890; educated in the Pittsburgh schools and University of Pittsburgh; became identified with the real estate and insurance business early in life; has been a member of the real estate board for many years and was elected president of the Pittsburgh Real Estate Board in 1943; has given much of his time to public affairs, and is a member of the Civic Club of Allegheny County; PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 109 is active in church work, being a trustee of the Shadyside United Presbyterian Church, and is also a member of the Masonic fraternity; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 21 and 25 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, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Sharpsburg, Springdale, Tarentum, and West View, townships of Aleppo, East Deer, Fawn, Franklin, Frazer, Hampton, Hariison, Harmar, Indiana, Kilbuck, Leet, Marshall, McCandless, O’Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, Springdale, and West Deer. Population (1940), 271,544. ROBERT J. CORBETT, Republican, of Bellevue, Pittsburgh, Pa.; born in Avalon (Pittsburgh), Pa., August 25, 1905; graduated Allegheny College in 1927, with A. B. degree; graduated University of Pittsburgh in 1929, with M. A. . degree; Wallace research fellow (University of Pittsburgh) 1927-29; senior high-school instructor, Coraopolis, Pa., 1929-38; special research study Columbia University; member of Bellevue Board of Trade; Phi Delta Theta fraternity; Loyal Order of Moose, Elks, Eagles, and Kiwanis; Phi Alpha Theta National Forensic Society; and Pennsylvania State Educational Association; married Ruth McClintock, of Ligonier, Pa.; one child, Eleanor Louise; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; elected sheriff of Allegheny County (Pitts-burgh), 1941; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 19, 20, 28 to 30, and 32, boroughs of Brentwood, Bridgeville, Carnegie, Castle, Coraopolis, Crafton, Dormont, Greentree, Heidelberg, Ingram, Mount Oliver, the fifth election district of McDonald, McKees Rocks,Oakdale; Rosslyn Farms, Shannon, and Thornburg; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Collier, Crescent, Findlay, Kennedy, Moon, Mount Lebanon, Neville, North Fayette, Robinson, Scott, South Fayette, Upper St. Clair, and Stowe. Population (1940), 295,063. JAMES GROVE FULTON, Republican, of Dormont (Pittsburgh), Pa.; born March 1, 1903, in that part of Allegheny County, Pa., now known as Dormont Borough, the son of James E. and Emilie Fetterman Fulton; graduate of South Hills High School, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Pennsylvania State College, A. B. degree, in 1924; Harvard Law School, LL. B. degree, in 1927; studied 2 years in Fine Arts Department of Carnegie Institute of Technology at night; lawyer and farmer; associated with Pittsburgh law firm from 1928 to 1942; member of the Allegheny County Board of Law Examiners from 1934 to 1942; solicitor for Dormont Borough, 1942; State senator for the Forty-fifth district of Pennsylvania, 1939-40; volunteered for military service and commissioned lieutenant in the United States Naval Reserve in 1942; single; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; returned from the Philippine combat area in the Pacific to take seat in Congress on February 2, 1945. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 6, 9, 10, 15 to 18, and 22 to 24. Population (1940), 301,241. 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— HermanP., 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. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, ward 31; cities of Clairton, Du-quesne, and McKeesport; boroughs of Braddock, Dravosburg, East Pittsburgh, East McKeesport, Elizabeth, Glassport,.Homestead, Liberty, Munhall, North Braddock, Port Vue, Rankin, the first election district of Trafford, Turtle Creek, Versailles, Wall, Whitaker, West Homestead, West Elizabeth, and Wilmerding; townships of Elizabeth, Forward, Jefferson, Lincoln, Mifflin, North Ver-sailles, Snowden, South Versailles, and Versailles. Population (1940), 271,403. [Vacant.] 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 9 110 Congressional Directory RHODE ISLAND 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 War Spanish-American 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 1944, 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. 1.), Ine., 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 sinee 1900, and vice president, 1907-39; trustee, Providence Public Library since 1903, and secretary since 1908; chairman, board of directors, Morris Plan Bank 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 1903; 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. = REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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.; post office address R.F. D. 2, Valley Falls, 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 Representatives, 1923-26; sergeant, first-class, Motor Transport Corps, World War; served in France 12 months; married in 1931 to Gertrude Bedard; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars of America, Elks, Eagles, Knights of Columbus, fourth degree, Club Marquette, SOUTH CAROLINA Biographical 111 and L’Union St. Jean Baptiste d’Amerique; elected on November 3, 1936, to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy- ninth Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Kent and Washington: PROVIDENCE COUNTY: City of Providence, representative districts, 8 to 25; city of Cranston; towns of Burrillville, Foster, Glocester, Johnson, North Providence, North Smithfield, Scituate, and Smithfield. Population (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; married ; 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 and Seventy-ninth Congresses. SOUTH CAROLINA (Population (1940), 1,899,804) SENATORS BURNET RHETT MAYBANK, Democrat, born in Charleston, S. C., March 7, 1899; graduate of Porter Military Academy and College of Charleston; veteran, World War I; married Elizabeth deRossett Myers; children, Burnet, Jr., first lieu-tenant, Army Air Corps; Roberta, student of Radcliffe College; Elizabeth, student of Holton Arms School; cotton exporter, alderman, city of Charleston, 1927-30; mayor of Charleston, 1931-38; chairman, South Carolina Public Service Author-ity, 1934-38; Governor of South Carolina, 1939-41; delegate to all Democratic city, county, State and National conventions since 1930; national committeeman, 1940-44; chairman, South Carolina delegation, Chicago, 1944; Episcopalian; Mason; member of Society of Colonial Wars, South Carolina Agricultural Society, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Junior Order, Elks, and Alpha Tau Omega; elected to finish unexpired term of Hon. James F. Byrnes, 1941; reelected in 1942. : OLIN D. JOHNSTON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, S. C.; born near Honea Path, Anderson County, S. C., November 18, 1896; father and mother were E. A. and Leila (Webb) Johnston, of Anderson, S. C.; married Miss Gladys E. Atkinson, of Spartanburg, S. C., on December 27, 1924; ‘Baptist denomination; was graduated from Textile Industrial Institute in 1915, from Wofford College with A. B. degree in 1921, and from the University of South Carolina with M. A. degree in 1923 and LL. B. degree in 1924; during the First World War served as sergeant, Company C, One Hundred and Seventeenth Engineers, Forty-second Division, serving 18 months overseas; received regimental citation; moved from Anderson to Spartanburg, S. C., in 1924; lawyer, firm of Johnston & Williams; successful lawyer in all courts, both State and Federal, member of the State house of representatives from Anderson County 1923-24 and from Spartanburg County 1927-30; Democratic national executive committeeman 1936-40 and 1944-48; candidate for Governor in 1930, leading field of eight candidates by 15,000 majority in first primary and in second primary missed nomination by less than a thousand votes; in 1934 led field of eight candidates by approximately 20,000 votes in first primary and in second primary defeated opponent by almost 35,000 majority; member of the American Legion, Forty and Eight, and Disabled American Veterans; member of the Baptist Church and for many years interested in work of Baptist Young People; thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner; Optimist; member of Jr. O. U. A. M., Red Men, Woodmen of the World, Knights of Pythias, and B. P. O. Elks; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Allendale, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, Dor-chester, Hampton, and Jasper (9 counties). Population (1940), 289,482. L. MENDEL RIVERS, Democrat, of Charleston, S. C., born in Gumville, Berkeley County, S. C., September 28, 1905; educated in public schools, College 112 Congressional Directory ~~ sourm caroLina of Charleston, and University of South Carolina; admitted to South Carolina bar in 1932; served in the South Carolina Legislature, 1933-36; chairman of Charleston County delegation, 1934-36, and vice chairman of judiciary com-mittee of the State house of representatives, 1934-36; 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 two daughters; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland, and Sumter (8 counties). Population (1940), 361,933. JOHN JACOB RILEY, Democrat, of Sumter, S. C.; born in Orangeburg, S. C., February 1, 1895; elementary training in Orangeburg County school; was graduated from Orangeburg (S. C.) High School and from Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C., with A. B. and A. M. degrees; taught in the Orangeburg city schools and at Clemson A. & M. College, Clemson, S. C.; served in the United States Navy in World War I; has been engaged in the real estate and insurance business in Sumter, S. C., for the past 25 years; secretary of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association; past president of Sumter Chamber of Commerce, Wofford College Alumni Association, and of the Sumter Rotary Club; post com-mander of Post No. 15, the American Legion; district commander, the American Legion; head of boys’ work, Sumter Post, the American Legion, since 1926; member, Forty and Eight, B. P. O. E., K. of P., Mason; board of stewards, Trinity Methodist Church; married to Corinne Anderson Boyd, of Spartanburg, 8. C., in 1917; one daughter, Helen Burnett, and one son, O. Beverley, 3d; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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, 5. C.; received early training in rural public schools; A. B.,, M. A,, LL. B., LL. D.; taught in public schools and Leesville College; secretary to Member of Congress; special agent, United States Bureau of Labor, to investigate and report social and economic condition of woman and . child wage earners in textile industry; assistant in agricultural education, editor rural economics, and agricultural statistician, United States Department of Agri-culture; prepared plan for system of rural credits published as Senate Document 421, Sixty-third Congress; married Miss Kate Etheredge; has two children— Robert Hayne and James Butler; lawyer and farmer; member South Carolina and American Bar Associations; Mason, Shriner, Lutheran; member, board of trustees, Newberry College; elected to Sixth-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses from Second District; did not offer for reelection to the Seventy-third Congress, but was elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress from the Third District; reelected to Seventh-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; author Produce Agency Act and coauthor first Philip-pine Independence Act, 1933; member, Appropriations Committee; chairman, subcommittee on appropriations for Department of Labor, Federal Security Agency, and related agencies. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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— Joseph Robert, Ruth, William J. (now a member of the United States Marine Corps), David, and Judy; member of the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, and the Baptist Church, thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Wood- SOUTH DAKOTA Biographical ; man, Redman, Junior, Merrymaker, and United Commercial Traveler; 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 on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1940), 251,137, JAMES PRIOLEAU RICHARDS, Democrat; of Tanchster, 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; volunteered as private at Camp Styx, S. &. 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; they have two sons—Richard Evans and Norman Smith—and one daughter—Jane; member of the Masons, American Legion, and Junior Order United American . Veterans of Mechanics, Foreign Wars, and other fraternal organizations. 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; enlisted in the U. S. Navy at Columbia, S. C., August 2, 1918, relieved from active duty December 17, 1918, and discharged from U. S. Naval Reserve September 30, 1921; married Margaret English, of Mount Pleasant, Tenn., October 1936; member Masons, Elks, and Jr. O. U. A. M.; member American Legion Post and Forty and Eight of 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 majorityof 17,000 votes; reelected in 1944 without opposition. 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; reelected on November 7, 1944. HARLAN JOHN BUSHFIELD, Republican, of Miller, S. Dak.; born in Atlantic, Iowa, 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. 114 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE 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, author of articles in Successful Farming, The Christian Advocate, The Country Gentleman, Liberty Magazine, Tomorrow, Nations. Schools, Fairplay (London), and others; past governor, Minnesota-Dakotas District of Kiwanis International; member National Press Club and the University 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; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress with 63.9 percent of all votes cast. 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, and Ziebach (24 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, and Acacia fraternities; newspaper publisher and rancher; State regents of education, 1931-33; in World War I served in United States Marine Corps; later commissioned in U. S. Army Reserve and U. S. Marine Corps Reserve; married to Myrle Graves, of Mitchell, S. Dak., in 1926; two children—Jane Marie, born February 10, 1935, and Francis H., Jr., born April 7, died April 11, 1945; elected in 1936 to the Seventy-fifth Congress, 34,812 to 32,549; in 1938 to the Seventy-sixth Congress, 41,335 to 25,932; in 1940 to the Seventy-seventh Congress, 47,051 to 24,127; in 1942 to the Seventy-eighth Congress, 30,389 to 11,892, and in 1944 to the Seventy-ninth Congress, 33,119 to 14,869. : 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 TENNESSEE Biographical | 115 of 55,828, and reelected by a majority of 55,070 for the term expiring in 1935; delegate to Democratic National Conventions, 1932, 1936, 1940, and 1944; 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; unani-mously elected President pro tempore on January 6, 1945; on the death of Presi-dent Roosevelt, April 12, 1945, the Vice President having assumed the duties of the office of President of the United States, as President pro tempore he assumed the Vice President’s duties as presiding officer of the Senate; author of the book, Tennessee Senators, published in August 1942. TOM STEWART, Democrat, of Winchester, Tenn.; born in Dunlap, Tenn., January 11, 1892, son of Chancellor T. L. and Mary Fricks Stewart; educated at Pryor Institute, Emory College, and Cumberland University; Delta Tau Delta College Fraternity; member of Methodist Church; Mason; married Helen Turner, daughter of Dr. M. Turner and Mary Cook Turner, of Jasper, Tenn., December 19, 1914; five children—Capt. Tom M. Stewart, who served 414 years in the United States Army, 18 months overseas in European theater, with Third Army in France, Belgium, and Germany; Betty Ann Stewart, Mrs. Charles S. Coffey; Capt. L. F. Stewart, 3% years in the United States Army, about 12 months in CBI theater; Paul Turner Stewart (U. S. Navy); Democratic elector, Third District, 1920; lawyer; served as assistant attorney general, eighteenth circuit, under Gen. Ben McKenzie, of Dayton, Tenn.; was appointed attorney general for the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit of Tennessee by Gov. Austin Peay in 1923 to succeedGen. Ben McKenzie, resigned; elected to remainder of term in August 1924; reelected without opposition in 1926 and in 1934; alternate delegate to Houston, Tex., Democratic National Convention; delegate to Democratic Na-tional-Convention, Chicago, 1940 and 1944; 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 of 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-ig Jedersom; 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, First National Bank of Jonesboro, and the Sullivan County Bank; board member of Farmers Bank at Blountville; Republican national committeeman for Tennessee; served as a member of the Temporary National Economic Com-mittee, and is a member of the Special House Committee on Postwar Economic Policy and Planning; member of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Insti-tution; educated in Watauga Academy, Carson and Newman College, New York University, and University of London; LL. D., Cumberland University; member, American Economic Association, American Statistical Association, American Academy of Political Science, and American, Tennessee, and Federal Bar Asso-ciations; assistant secretary and instructor in New York University, 1916-17; director of the School of Commerce, Accounts, and Finance in New York Univer-sity and instructor in economics (day division), 1919-20; enlisted May 1917, and served in the American Expeditionary Forces October 1917 to July 1919 with the Twenty-sixth Division; 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; married Louise Despard Goff, 1923; daughter, Louise Despard Goff Reece, born 1928; member, Delta Sigma Pi, Newcomen Society, 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; reelected to the fron vein Congress without opposition. Home address: Johnson City, enn, 116 Congressional Directory : FENNEUSEE SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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. S. 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 J. Coykendall, Katherine J. 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member, Committee on Claims, Committee on the Judiciary, Committee on Elections No. 1, and Select Committee to Investigate Executive Agencies. Home address: 3339 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, Tenn. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Grundy, Hamilton, Marion, Meigs, Polk, Rhes, 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. degree at University of Tennessee in 1924 and LL. B. degree at Yale University in 1927; practiced law at Chattanooga since 1927; member of the firm of Sizer, Kefauver & Duggan; was married to Miss Nancy Patterson Pigott, of Glasgow, Scotland; one daughter, Eleanor, age 4; served as ccmmissioner 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; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member, Committee on the Judiciary and Select Committee on Small Business. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Overton, Rlopest: 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; B. S. and LL. B.; admitted to bar in 1936; chairman of the Tennessee Democratic speakers’ bureau for the general elections in 1934 and 1936; served as commissioner of labor for the State of Tennessee, 1937-38; married Miss Pauline LaFon, 1937; one daughter; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, De Kalb, Franklin, Giles, Lincoln, Marshall, ‘Moore, Rutherford, and Wilson (11 counties). Population (1940), 225,918. HAROLD HENDERSON EARTHMAN, Democrat, of Murfreesboro, Ruther-ford County, Tenn.; born in Murfreesboro, Tenn., April 13, 1900, son of the late Dr. V. K. and Virginia Henderson Earthman his father was a captain in the Spanish-American War and served in the Fourth Tennessee with Cordell Hull, and also served in World War I as a major in the Medical Corps; attended the grammar school at Murfreesboro, the Webb School, Bell Buckle, Tenn. ; Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Tex., and the University of Texas at Austin; received his LL. B. degree from Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; married Miss Mary Wilson Moore, of Nashville, Tenn., and they have four children—Harold H. Earthman, Jr., who is in the United States Navy, Mary, 17, Virginia, 16, and Ben Moore, 11; after being discharged as a private from the United States Army (World War I) lived in Nashville, Tenn., and was connected with a banking institution; while there was a member of the Lions and Bellemeade Clubs, Junior Chamber of Commerce, Junior Order, and other civie groups; after moving back to Murfreesboro, where he owns and operates a farm, engaged in the private practice of law; organized the TENNESSEE Biographical famous One Gallus Fox Hunters’ Association of America, and is a member of the Tennessee as well as the National Fox Hunters’ Associations; is a Presbyterian, Mason, Elk, and Kiwanian; member of the American Legion, Bob Brown Post No. 16, Tennessee Bar Association, and Sigma Chi Fraternity; director, Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders’ Association; served in the State legislature in 1931-32 and was a member of the joint subcommittee of the finance ways and means, which in time of depression was charged with the responsibilityof refinancing the entire State; prior to being elected to Congress was judge of Rutherford County and vice president of the Tennessee County Judges’ Association; also vice president of the Southern Institute of Local Government; in the spring of 1941 was named associate State administrator of war bonds for the State of Tennessee and has made many speeches in behalf of the sale of war bonds throughout Tennessee and the eastern par of the United States; elected on November 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth ongress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—DAvVIDSON 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, National Press Club, and Elks Club; not married; was elected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Cominerce. 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, Tenn.; born at Franklin, Sep-tember 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, 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 each succeeding Congress without opposition; member, Committee on Foreign Affairs; married Currey Taylor, daughter of Judge Lytton Taylor, Nashville, 1919; four children, Mrs. A. A. Klieforth, Wirt, Jr., and Richard, both in the armed services, and Robin. 3iloF EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 Army in 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 Epsilon Fraternity; single; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, 118 Congressional Directory TEXAS NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, I.auderdale, 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 sinee 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth 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., now lieutenant colonel, Army Air Forces; 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 dele-gate at large in 1932, 1936, and 1940; chairman, Texas delegation, 1936; perma-nent chairman, Texas Democratic State convention, 1938; special congressional advisor to the United States delegation to the Inter-American Conference on Problems of War and Peace, Mexico City, 1945; member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, 1945; served in House of Representatives, Sixty-fifth through Seventieth Congresses; elected United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1929; reelected in 1934, 1940; committees: Foreign Relations, chair-man; Agriculture and Forestry; Finance; Privileges and Elections; Public Build-ings and Grounds. a W. LEE O’DANIEL, Democrat, 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, Granada, Colo.; three children—Lieutenant Pat, Lieuten- TEXAS Biographical 1 19 ant Mike, and Molly; Mason and Shriner; member Christian Church; also elder National City Christian Church, Washington, D. C.; engaged in flour milling and grain business, 1909 to 1938; although never before a candidate for public office, was petitioned to run for Governor of Texas by 54,499 Texas citizens and was elected in the 1938 first primary with 573,166 votes, a clear majority over 12 opponents, the first victory of this nature in the history of the State; reelected for second term in the 1940 first primary with 645,646 votes, a clear majority over 6 opponents; elected to the United States Senate at a special election June 28, 1941, to fill vacancy in term ending January 3, 1943, caused by death of Hon. Morris Sheppard, and took his seat August 4, 1941; reelected to the United States Senate at general election November 3, 1942, for term ending January 3, 1949; is actively sponsoring an amendment to the Constitution which would limit to 6 years the tenure of office of all elected Federal officials. 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, Cumberland University, 1916; United States Army, 1917-19; married Miss Merle Connor, of Winnsboro, Tex., February 14, 1919; they have three children—Connor Wright, age 25 (major, United States Army, with Thirty-fifth Division, Third Army, in Europe; enlisted as private December 10, 1941, awarded Bronze Star and Oakleaf Cluster during drive into Germany), James Harold, age 23 (technical sergeant, Marine Corps, recently returned from South Pacific after 30 months’ foreign war service in Second Marine Division; enlisted as private December 18, 1941), and William Neff, age 18 (Eagle Scout; graduate of Kemper Military School, Booneville, Mo., 1944; now private in United States Marine Corps, Parris Island, S. C.; enlisted January 13, 1945); served 4 years as a member of the Texas Legislature; district attorney for 5 years of the fifth judicial district of Texas; elected to the Seventy-first Congress and succeeding Congresses; member of Banking and Currency Committee of the House of Representatives; chairman of Select Committee on Small Business, composed of nine Members of the House; he and all members of his family affiliated with First Baptist Church of Texar-kana, Tex.; thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason; member of the American Legion, the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, although not privi-leged to serve overseas during the war by reason of a service-connected disability, and an honorary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Angelina, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton, Orange, Sa-bine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (11 counties). Population (1940), 331,069. J. M. COMBS, Democrat, of Beaumont, Tex.; born in Center, Tex., July 7, 1889; lawyer; county judge of Hardin County, Tex., 1919-20; district judge of the Seventy-fifth district, 1923-25; associate justice of the Ninth Court of Civil Appeals, 1933-43; member and president of the board of trustees of South Park Schools (Beaumont), 1926-40; president of the board of trustees of Lamar College (Beaumont), 1940-44; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944. 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; two children, Lindley G. (Gary) Beckworth, Jr., and Carter Otis Beckworth; 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. 120 Congressional Directory TEXAS FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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, Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; majority leader, Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Con-gresses; elected Speaker on September 16,1940, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Speaker, William B. Bankhead, Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-seventh Congress on January 3, 1941; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-eighth Congress .on January 6, 1943; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-ninth Congress on January 3, 1945. 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.—CoOUNTIES: 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; offices held prior thereto: county attorney of Navarro County and dis-trict attorney of the thirteenth judicial district of Texas; has served as delegate to Democratic National Convention and also as chairman of the State Democratic convention of Texas; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress. ¢ SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anderson, Cherokee, Grimes, Henderson, Houston, Madison, Moy omery: Nacogdoches, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (12 counties). Population (1940), TOM PICKETT, Democrat, of Palestine, Tex.; born August 14, 1906, at Travis, Falls County, Tex., son of J. D. and Helen Mackey Pickett; attended the Palestine public schools and the University of Texas; licensed to practice law in 1929; elected county attorney of Anderson County in 1930, serving 1931-35; elected district attorney, third judicial district of Texas, in 1934, serving 1935-45; married Louise Watson, of Athens, Tex., August 30, 1938, and they have two daughters; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, 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 ta Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: 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, wasborn February 9, 1861, at Wayne, W. Va. (then Virginia); moved to Texas in 1881; engaged as laborer on farm and in nursery, later baggage-master and freight clerk on railway; admitted to the bar in 1886; appointed city attorney of Eagle Lake, Tex., 1888; elected mayor, Eagle Lake, 1889; county attorney, Colorado County, Tex., 1892; county judge, Colorado County, 1896, serving for 10 consecutive terms, and while holding that office was ex officio county school superintendent for 12 years, and as receiver conducted the fiscal affairs of the city of Columbus for 10 years; organized two companies of Texas Volunteer Guards in 1886, holding commissions from the adjutant general of Texas, respectively, as second lieutenant, first lieutenant, and captain; appointed by Col. Peareson as adjutant, Fourth Texas Regiment, with rank of captain; several years acting chairman committee on grievances and appeals, Masonic Grand Lodge, and in 1912-13 was Grand Master of Masons in Texas; established, the first newspaper ever published in Eagle Lake, and for several years editor Celorado Citizen, of Columbus; several years assistant chief, Columbus fire department, and for 20 years vestryman St. John’s Episcopal Church; married in 1888 to Annie Scott Bruce, of Eagle Lake (now deceased); has three children, Bruce Jefferson (captain, One Hundred and TEXAS Biographical 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. Harold H. Earthman 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 A LB EE RN State Delegations | 145 TEXAS SENATORS Tom Connally : W. Lee O’Daniel REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 21] Wright Patman 8. Albert Thomas 15. Milton H. West J. M. Combs 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 Tom Pickett 14. John E. Lyle 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, &; vacant, 1] Schuyler Otis Bland 4. Patrick H. Drewry 7. A. Willis Robertson Ralph H. Daughton 5. Thomas G. Burch 8. Howard W. Smith . J. Vaughan Gary 6. [Vacant] 9. John W. Flannagan, Jr. WASHINGTON SENATORS Warren G. Magnuson Hugh B. Mitchell REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 2] . Hugh De Lacy 3. Charles R. Savage 5. Walt Horan . Henry M. Jackson 4. Hal Holmes 6. John M. Coffee WEST VIRGINIA SENATORS Harley M. Kilgore Chapman Revercomb REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5; Republican, 1] . Matthew M. Neely 3. Cleveland M. Bailey 5. John Kee . Jennings Randolph 4. Hubert S. Ellis 6. E. H. Hedrick DD = 146 nr Congressional Directory WISCONSIN SENATORS RoBERT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR. Alexander Wiley REPRESENTATIVES * [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 7; Progressive, 1] 1. Lawrence H. Smith 5. Andrew J. Biemiller 9. MerLIN HuLL 2. Robert K. Henry 6. Frank B. Keefe 10. Alvin E. O’Konsks 3. William H. Stevenson 7. Reid F. Murray 4. Thad F. Wasielewski 8. John W. Byrnes WYOMING SENATORS Joseph C. O’Mahoney Edward V. Robertson REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large—Frank A. Barrett ALASKA DELEGATE E. L. Bartlett COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Carlos P. Romulo HAWAII DELEGATE Joseph R. Farrington PUERTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Jestds T. Piiiero CLASSIFICATION SENATE HOUSE DIOMOCTIE. one ahi nseen 56lDemoerats. . ... ima. 236 Repablieans. oo oa 39 Republicans... __-._ cr ng 190 Progressives © FO 0 or Lil | Progressive... 1 im..._. 1 ——— | American Labor_________________ 1 Total... ..cooeaneeas 96 .......coi oo finds Vacant. i. 7 ~ Total ou...8m a 435 ALPHABETICAL LIST Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commission-ers, showing State and district from which elected, city of residence, and political alinement [Democrats in roman (56); Republicans Name Aitken, George D2. oie sss Andrews, Charles O_____________ Austin, Warren Bos vaceeasae Bailey; Josiah W. _ =... BallsJosephk HLF oc Bankhead, Jobn H., 2d... ___.___ Barkley, Alben W______________ Bilbo, Theodore: ®.... ooo Brewster, Owen it or on ra Bridges, Styles iy nL Briges, Frank P =. Ltn Brooks; C. Waylond. _..-... Buck, C.-Douglass. =.=. ova Bushfield, Horlan Joelas os Bugler, Hugh. oi zoe inet on is Byrd, Harry ¥Flood.......-==: Capehart, Homer E......... Capper Avthur. ane Carville, BaP. 22 = 4-0 Chavez, Dennis_. ..__...... Connally, Tom. =... Cordon, Queries onanat Donnell; Forrest Cs oasis Downey, Sheridan. ____._. _—.*_ Eastland, James O-.._.._ _.__ SENATORS in italics (39); Progressive in State Nermont. oo Florida: oo Vermont... .. North Carolina____| Minnesota._______ Alabama... Kentucky... Mississippi---____ ane. o-oo New Hampshire_._._| Missourl. TWinoig.. co Delaware_________ South Dakota_____ Nebraska. ..._____ Virginia. oo ndiang. oo. Kansas... +... Nevada... >. New Mexico. ____._ Xeozne Lr Oregon. ......~-Missouri... California... -Mississippi- Ellender, Allen J... ...........{Louisiana_.___ = Ferguson, Home soca mov aes Fulbright, J. William... ..... George, Walter'V_. Gerry, Peter G. --Glogs, Carter... Lv Gossett, Charles C._.._......... Green, Theodore Francis. _______ Gufiey, Joseph F. -..__._. . ~o) Gurney, Chan. =. Hari, Thomas C. curemas = Hatch, Carl’ AL 2 Hawkes, Albert W_.__.____.. ie Hayden, Carl: ._..... .......... Hickenlooper, Bourke B__________ Hil Lister oa Hoey, Clyde RB: _..... . : Huffman, James W._..__-____.__ Johnson, Bdwin C.._._......... Johneton, Olin .__. D........... Kilgore, Hagley . . _... M...... Knowland, William F..__________ LA ForLETTE, ROBERT M., JR____| Michisan.. Arkansas... ....-. Georgia. Lo. Rhode Island_____ Virginia... = Xdaho oo... Rhode Island. ____ Penngylvania_. South Dakota_____ Connecticut... .. New Mexico. ____. New Jersey... Arizona... Towa... Couiabo: Alabama.___...___ North Carolina____| Ohno.oa. on Colorado... ..-.-. South Carolina____| West Virginia. ____ California. i... Wisconsin________ SMALL CAPS (1); total, 96] City Putney. Orlando. Burlington. Raleigh. St. Paul. Jasper. Paducah. Poplarville. Dexter. Concord. Macon. Chicago. Wilmington. Miller. Omaha. Berryville. Washington. Topeka. Reno. Albuquerque. Marlin. Roseburg. Webster Groves. San Francisco. Ruleville. Houma. Detroit. Fayetteville. Vienna. Providence. Lynchburg. Nampa. Providence. Pittsburgh. Yankton. Sharon. Clovis. Montclair. Phoenix. Cedar Rapids. Montgomery. Shelby. Columbus. Craig. Spartanburg. Beckley. Piedmont. Madison. 147 148 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Name State City Langer, Williamy....... ccc viveonne= Lucas, :Seott ti anon Juste Woaious MeCarran, Pat... i. McClellan, Johmilo oi Js McFarland, Emest W............ McKellar, Kenneth one. oo McMahon, Brien... __ Magnuson, Warren G................ Maybank, Burnet R.............2 Mend, James M..__.. .... ...... M illikin, gene Dr mea Mitetiell, High 2. ...-.- B..... Moore; Bo Ho al be nonaad astai Morse, Wayne.ted icetie Murdoekz, Abe... ocx Co ._. Murray, James Eo. o-oo Myers, Pranels J... oooi Q!Daniel, W. Lee... =.... ~. O’Mahoney, Joseph C___________ Overton, Johw' FE ~~... Pepper, Claude...inant 5-l a Radcliffe, George Li _.__._______ Reed, Clyde Monnens Revercomb, Chapman... .--...__.__ Robertson, Edward V .. .-....._._. Russell, Richard B.__......_____ Saltonstall, Leveseil..... ......_ _: Shipstead, Herth, ceive nwnna= Smith, H. Alezonder._ Stanfill, William A. _..= Ag + Stewart, T Patt, Bobejt A i cn citilinmn Tayler, Glen H..... =... ...._. Thomas, Elbert D.....cae... Thomas, Tobey, Charles W.. iewinovionnnex Tunnell, James M... _........ _ Tydings, Millard.._... B__.-Vanidioriy. Arthur Hat......-. x Wagner, Bobert Fo... oo... Walsh, David. 1._-.__..... Wheeler, Burton K_._ _........... Wherry, Kenneth SS... .. White, Wallace H.y-J 7 isimm mie Wiley, Alexander... wren nm =n Willis, Roymond B.-.. Wilson, George do cami ninsmn=ns Young, Millon R.....cioracm=ewnns North Dakota._ __ Tennessee... .c..: Connecticut. _ ____ Washington_______ South Carolina____ Colorado... = Washington_______ Oklahoma... Texas or ts Wyoming... ....-.- Kansas. vet “ Massachusetts_ _ __ "Minnesota.._-_..._ New Jersey. _____ Kentucky... .... Tennessee | Sesame tna, New Hampshire__ _ Delaware_________ Maine oa Ta North Dakota_ __._ Wheatland, R. F. D. (Bismarck), N. Dak. Havana. Reno. Camden. Florence. Memphis. Norwalk. Seattle. Charleston. Buffalo. Denver. Everett. Tulsa. ‘Eugene, Beaver. Butte. ‘Philadelphia. Fort Worth. ‘Cheyenne. Alexandria. Tallahassee. Baltimore. Parsons. Charleston. Cody. Winder. Chestnut Hill. Carlos, R. F. D, Princeton. Hazard. Winchester. Cincinnati. Pocatello. Salt Lake City. Medicine Park. Temple. ‘Georgetown. Havre de Grace. -Grand Rapids. New York City. Clinton. Butte. Pawnee City. Auburn. Chippewa Falls. Angola. Des Moines. Berlin. Alphabetical List 149 REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats in roman (236); Republicans in italics (190); Progressive in SMALL CAPS (1); American Labor in CAPS (1); vacant (7); total, 435) Dis-: Name trict State City Abernethy, Thomas G______ 4 | Mississippi-.... Okolona. Adams, Sherman... -....... : 2 | New Hampshire_| Lincoln. Allen, A. Leonard... ..._... 8 | Louisiana. ...~. Winnfield. Alen, Leo BE. v.00 13:{ Nlinois..-__._.. Galena. Andersen, H. Corl... ....... 7 | Minnesota..____ Tyler. Anderson, Jock Z. . vein. 8 | California... .... San Juan Bautista. Andresen, August H__ ______ 1 | Minnesota_._.___ Red Wing. Andrews, George W________ 3 labama,........ Union Springs. Andrews, Waller G... ...._._ 42 New York...... Buffalo. Angell, Homer D..... ..... 3 Oregone...... Portland. Avends Leslie Ce. vous ¥Y7-Nlinois._.....-Melvin. Arnold, Wal... 2 or. no Y1-Missouri Kirksville. Auchincloss, James C_______ 3 | New Jersey_____ Rumson. Bailey, Cleveland M________ . 3 | West Virginia___| Clarksburg. Baldwin, H. Streett.________ 2 | Maryland. ._.___| Hydes. Baldwin, Joseph Clark. _____ 17-7 New York. .... New York City. Barden, Graham A... 3 | North Carolina_| New Bern. Barreit, Bronk A. -:i-> AtL. | Wyoming_>_____| Lusk. Barrett, William A_________ 1 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Barry, William B 0170 17 4 | New York. ___._ St. Albans. . Bates, Coorge Sevens nnn 6 | Massachusetts -_| Salem. Bates, Joe B. -. counh 8 | Kentucky. ..__._ Greenup. Beall, J. Glenn. i... 6 Maryland... Frostburg. Beckworth, Lindley__._._._.__ 3 Poxng Gladewater, Rt. 2. Bell, C: Jpsper trata: 44" Miigsourl.....2-Blue Springs. Bender, George H .. ...... 0.5 At L. el Cleveland Heights. Bennet, Augustus W____.____ 29 | New York. .... Newburgh. Bennett, Marion T.......... Missouri: ....--Springfield. Biemiller, Andrew J________ 5 | Wisconsin. ._.___ Milwaukee. Bishop, C. W. . (Bunty... 95 Minels +7 Carterville. Blackney, William W_______ 6 ‘| Michigan. __..__ Flint. Bland, Schuyler Otis._._____ TY Virginia... Newport News. Bloom, Sol... La 20° New York... .... New York City. Bolion, Fronces Po: % Ohio. Lyndhurst. Bonner, Herbert C-_____._._ 1 | North Carolina_| Washington. Boren Lyle ll i= 4 | Oklahoma._____._ Seminole. Boykin, Frank W_-.=C_ = 1{ Alabama. _..._. Mobile. Bradley, Fred. cern anes 11 "Michigan... Rogers City. Bradley, Michael J_________ 3 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Brehm, Water 2. °07 Te Ohler Logan. Brooks, Overton >>>. 4" Touislana_____.-Shreveport. Brown, Clarence J... .....-Ohio... Blanchester. Brown, Paul... 7-2 10 Georgia... Elberton. Brumbaugh, D. Emmert_ _ __: 22 | Pennsylvania___| Claysburg. Bryson, Joseph R__________ 4 | South Carolina__| Greenville. Buck, Bllsworth Bi == 16. { New York. ..... Staten Island. Buckley, Charles A_________ 25 | New York.....__| New York City. Bufett, Howard H.....-....-2 [ Nebraska... ._.. Omaha. Bulwinkle, Alfred L________ 11 | North Carolina__| Gastonia. Bunker, Berkeley L________ At'L, { Nevads......... Las Vegas. Burch, Thomas GQ... ...... 5: Virginia... >. Martinsville. Burgin W.0 > 1-. 8 | North Carolina_| Lexington. Butler, John Ces 44 | New York.....: Buffalo. Byrne, William T.._.___.__. 32 | New York__.._._._ Loudonville. Byrnes John WW. .L. ounai 8 | Wisconsin__.___ Green Bay. Camp, A. Sidney. _-._.__._ 4 Georgia... iis Newnan. Campbell, Howard E---_____ 29 | Pennsylvania. __| Pittsburgh. Canfield, Gordon... .....:. 8 | New Jersey.____ Paterson. { L { Congressional Directory 150 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Dis-riot State City Cannon, Clarence... .______ 9 | Missouri......- Elsberry. Connon, Patz. ooo on 4: Florida...-... Miami, Carlson, Frank. . ..umanwnsm 6 Kongne .. ._ Concordia. Carnahan, a-8- yo 8 | Missouri_______| Ellsinore. Case, Clifford Pe ocvvcnnun 6 | New Jersey_____ Rahway. Case, Broneis ec ena 2 | South Dakota___| Custer. Celler, Emanuel _.__.._._._.__ 1531 New York ... Brooklyn. Chapman, Virgil. ........... 6 | Kentucky. ... Paris. Chelf, Prank Li... ........ 4 | Kentueky....__ Lebanon. Chenoweth, J. Edgar. ______- 3] Colorado... .. Trinidad. Chiperfield, Robert: B. - 15: Mines... ~~ Canton. Church, Ralph BE. vs cir -ivm 10: Thinois_........ Evanston. Clark, 8 Bayard... ce. 7 | North Carolina__| Fayetteville. Clason; Chozles BR... ...o5.- 2 | Massachusetts__| Springfield. Clements, Earle C__________ 2 .( Kentucky....... Morganfield. Clevenger, CUE. ir ssmi 54 Ohio.. cocoa Bryan. Clippinger, Roy... envreinmn 24 1 TinoiSe...cuinnm Carmi. Cochran, John'd .........- 13:7 -Missouri....... St. Louis. Coffee, hm M. 6 | Washington.____ Tacoma. Cole, Albert ML... es ime 1... Kansas........... Holton. Cole, William: C.. .o cious~m ni 3 | Missouri......_ St. Joseph. Cole, W. Sterling ...cnnwivnnn 39 | New York______ Bath. Colmer, William M_________ 6 | Mississippi... .. Pascagoula. Combs, J.-M... ........ 2 exo... Beaumont. Cooley, Harold D........... or 4 | North Carolina _| Nashville. Cooper, Jere... .s.-vinino 9 | Tennessee. .___._ Dyersburg. Corbeil, Robert J... —..«.....- 30 | Pennsylvania___| Bellevue. Courtney, Wirt..........ciww mm 7 | Tennessee. .__._. Franklin, 2 El Dred DER Ri 2.1 Georgin.............. Camilla. Cravens, Fadjo.... ovat 4 | Arkansas_______ Fort Smith. Crouford, Fred’L.. .ca-- 8. Miehigan........ Saginaw. Crosser, Robert......-«...--- 21 1 Ohio... Cleveland. Cunningham, Poul............. 5 Llowa........ ec... Des Moines. Curley, James M___________ 11 | Massachusetts. | Boston. Curtis, Corl... on nisiwii 1:| Nebraska....... Minden. D’Alesandro, Thomas, re Daughton, Ralph H._ _______ 3 2 | Maryland. ..... Nuzginig........- Baltimore. Norfolk. Davis, Cliltord...— 10 | Tennessee. _.___ Memphis. Dawson, William L_________ I { Hinois.. -...7. ~ Chicago. De lacy, Hugh. .... .c..... 1 | Washington_____ ~ Seattle. Delaney, James J__________ 6 | New York....... Long Island City. Delaney, JohnJ. .......... 7] New York... .. Brooklyn. D2 Lbwort, Wesley Aviv = 2 Montana....- Wilsall. Dingell, John D......couvn- 15 | Michigan... .... Detroit. Dirksen, Everett M__________ 16 Ninels. Pekin. Dolliver, James L.......o-- Gl lowa. ... ...... Fort Dodge. Domengeaux, James________ Dondero, George A__ ________ 3 17-1 | Louisiana.__.____ Michigan....... Lafayette. Royal Oak. Doughton, Robert L________ 9 | North Carolina__| Laurel Springs. Douglas, Emily Taft. ...... -. AtL, Tinos..._: Chicago. Douglas, Helen Gahagan____ 14 | California______ Los Angeles. Doyle, Clyde... ...c5ear-i-.- 18 | California. _____| Long Beach. Drewry, Patrick H.......... 4. Virginia........ Petersburg. Durham, Con. TT. oui iva 6 | North Carolina__| Chapel Hill. Dworshak, Earthman, Henry Cee-----Harold H. ...... 2d 5 | ldaho. aa. 1. Tennessee. ____ Burley. Murfreesboro. Eaton, Charles oA a 5 | New Jersey.____._ Watchung, Plainfield. Eberharter, Herman P______ 32 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Elliott, Alred 10. California...-- Tulare. / Alphabetical List REPRESEN TATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name loi State City Ellis, Hubert 8ecicueaasana 4 | West Virginia___| Huntington. Ellsworth, Harris _ iocoeenein-4 regont. .. i... Roseburg. Elsaesser, Edward J cc =... eS 43 | New York______ Buffalo. Elston, Charles H.....ccun.ua 10hi0. io as Cincinnati. Bngel, Albert dcoiiiinnnnaa 9 | Michigan___.___ Muskegon. Engle, Clair... isi. col a 2 | California. ....__ Red Bluff. Fallon, George H_ _____._.____ 4 | Maryland. ____._ Baltimore. Feighan, Michael A___..__. 20/|:0Ohio. 0... ... Cleveland. Fellows, Frombo loo co. 3 Maine. ........ Bangor. Fenton, Ivor Dov sine. * 12 | Pennsylvania___| Mahanoy City. Fernandez, Antonio M_.____ At L. | New Mexico____| Santa Fe. Fisher, O. Ce 2 id-Texng. LU... ...c. San Angelo. Flannagan, Jolm:'W., Jr... .. 9. Virginia... ..... Bristol. Flood, Daniel Jouioai oo -11 | Pennsylvania___| Wilkes-Barre. Fogarty, John ool... 2 | Rhode Island___| Harmony. Folger, John H. ici oa. 5 | North Carolina | Mount Airy. - Forand, Aime J. .coici. a... 1 | Rhode Island___| Cumberland. Fuller, Hodwen Coico. 35 | New York__._.__ Parish. Fulion, James GQ. continu in 31 | Pennsylvania___| Dormont (Pittsburgh). Gallagher, William J 4 ER AA 3 | Minnesota..____ Minneapolis. Gamble, Ralph diiiatll a... 28 | New York__._._._._ Larchmont. Gardner, Edward J__.___.___ SHON Dalia Hamilton. Gary, J. 'Vaughan aa dl Ld Sid=Virginid. . _ _L.=. Richmond. Gathings, B. Cavan..... 1:{ Arkansas. __..._. West Memphis. Gavin, Leon H_ iiss. io 19 | Pennsylvania._.| Oil City. Gearhart, Bertrand W__._____ 9. California... ... Fresno. Geelan, Yomes Puiias 3 | Connecticut....| New Haven. Gerlach, Charles Lic undecn um 8 | Pennsylvania. .__| Allentown. Gibson, John S.L.. ..ik. 8 | Georgia. ....... Douglas. Gifiord, Chorles Lucianne 9 | Massachusetts__| Cotuit. Gillespie, Dean M.......... lili Colorado... Denver. Gilletie; Wilsons Douiouliv nn... 14 | Pennsylvania___| Towanda. Gillie, George Wisin... 4 {dndiana.._... ... Fort Wayne. Goodwin, Angier Lo... _.... 8 | Massachusetts. .| Melrose. Gordon, Thomas Soo... 8 [=Hlinojs.. _...... Chicago. Gore, Albert. .lLococii..... 4 | Tennessee. __._._._ Carthage. Gorski, Martinao. ocx... 4: Tlinois......... Chicago. Gossett, Bd..c.ool of... 13: {dexns Wichita Falls. Graham, LowisiBuiee 2... 25 | Pennsylvania___| Beaver. Granahan, William-T....... 2 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Granger, Walter Koo. L=2Uahs Susi. Cedar City. Grant, George M...occe.e 2. | Alabama... .... Troy. Grant, RBobegt: A... in... 8: Indians... -..... South Bend. Green, William J., Iria... 5 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Gregory, NobleTouoeal 1{ Kentucky...... Mayfield. Griffiths, P. Wine caniuninxn 157 Ohio... LiL , Marietta. Gross, Chester Hinoooaunans 21 | Pennsylvania. __| York. Gwinn, Bolph W.oioien un. 27: «New York. ..... Bronxville. Gwynne, John Wooo van... SB alowa. 8... Waterloo. Hagen, Horold C..vivivenn-9 | Minnesota.____._ Crookston. Hale, Bobert.. . .osecicilncnn. LijoMainer.. ...... Portland. Hall, Edwin Arthur... ___. 37 | New York__.____ Binghamton. Hall, Leonard Weaiciaili oi 2 [iNew York...... Oyster Bay. Halleck, Charles A. ooh... 2 Indianac.... LL Rensselaer. Hancock, Clarence E.......... 36.1: New York... . Syracuse. Hand, T. Milleton kh oni U.... 2 | New Jersey_._.___ Cape May Si Hare, Buller-B. ives... 3 | South Carolina__| Saluda. Harless, Richard F._._____. At Y, {) Iinois-..._. Mason, Noah ... _. i. Oglesby. Mathews, Frank A.,Jr._ ____ New Jersey... ... Riverton. May, Andrew J............. Kentueky._..._.. Prestonsburg. Merrow, Chester BE... ......... New Hampshire. Center Ossipee. Michener, Bord Caviaan. Miechigan....... Adrian. Miller, LL a Kimball. Miller, Ceorge Po ol. Alameda. Mills Wilby D......c0 Kensett. Monroney, A. 8S Mike... .. Oklahoma City. Morgan, Thomas E_________ Pennsylvania. _ _ Fredericktown. Morrison, James H__ _______ Louisiana______._ Hammond. Mundi Korb lB. iiii nnn. Madison. Tempe. Murphy, Joon W.__.__...... SO Teg es Dunmore. Murray, Redd B.uvo Wisconsin. _____ Ogdensburg. Muriay, Tom. ..oaah. La. Tennessee_ _____ Jackson. Neely, Matthew M_________ West Virginia. __ Fairmont. Norrell, W. P........0 ...-. Arkansas___-_.__ Monticello. Norton, Mary T.-L... ..-Jersey City. O’Brien, George D_________ Detroit. O’Brien, Thomas J.__.___.._. Chicago. OQ Hara, Joseph P.........; Minnesota_____. Glencoe. O’Konski, Alvin E.........-Wisconsin. _____ Mercer. —t (Sy [= = [) ) (=) NSW WHO JO. HOB OTN OH ND HI 154 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis- Name io State City O'Neal, Emmet. ...oodl na 3 | Kentucky. .__..._ Louisville. oO’ Toole, Donald Lio... ..... 13 New York... ... Brooklyn. Outland, Ceorge. Boni... 11 | California... Santa Barbara. Pace, Stephen DTA Rae 3 | Georgia________| Americus. Patman, Wright. ..c0...... 1 Texas... ...... Texarkana. Pairick, Tmther-. ia... : 9 | Alabama______._ Birmingham. Patterson, Ellis E............ 16: | California... ... Los Angeles. ~ Peterson, Hugh: ..:.0:. 1: Georgia... ..... Ailey. Peterson, J. Hardin... _... LisKlorida... ....-Lakeland. Pfeifer, Joseph L___________ 8 | New York______ Brooklyn. Philbin, Philip nn ncai 3 | Massachusetts. _| Clinton. J.u.ui Phillips, John niin 22: California. . .... Banning. Pickett, Tome 0. 22... rgd idlETE Ae Da Palestine. Pittenger, William A Siglo 8 | Minnesota... _._._ Duluth. Ploeser, Walter Core 12. Missouri. ...... Clayton. Plumley, Charles: A... ....... AtL. Vermont. ._. .. Northfield. Poage, W.. BR... .oose ....: MN toTexas of... Waco. Powell, Adam C., Jr........ 22 | New York...... New York City. Price, Emory H._...v....: 2cllovidn. 0 Jacksonville. Price, Melvin... ciuman-i 22 je linois.. ......... East St. Louis. Priest, J. Pereyaa onli... .6 | Tennessee. _____ Nashville. Quinn, Peter A. ..osmivu-n 26 | New York_._._.._ New York City. ; Rabaut, louis C._........._ 14. Miechigan........ Grosse Pointe Park. Rabin, Benjamin J_______ oo 24 | New York_..__._._ New York City. Rains, Albert... uicuunn-5. | Alabama......... Gadsden. Ramey, Homer A............ 0: i0Ohio. o-oo... | Toledo; Randolph, Jennings_ _______ 2 | West Virginia___| Elkins, Rankin, John Bey uel... 1 | Mississippi-___._ Tupelo. Rayburn, Sam... coo... oo AdrTRexas Lo Bonham. Rayfiel, Leo Foo uci ncn. 14 | New York. ...._ Brooklyn. Reece, B. Corroll. . ivan 1 | Tennessee. ._..._ Johnson City. Reed, Chauncey W_..__.___ ae inolsl West Chicago. Reed, Dovdel Apdo onnin 45 | New York_._____ Dunkirk. Rees, Edward H. coi no... 4d-Ransas_.__..___ Emporia. Resa, Alexander J__________ 9 Mlinols=.-1 Chicago. Fich, Bobert P... .ivii... 15 | Pennsylvania___| Woolrich. Richards, James P_________ 5 | South Carolina__| Lancaster. Riley. John'J... Loo..... 2 | South Carolina__| Sumter. Rivers, L.Mendel........._ 1 | South Carolina__| Charleston. Rizley, Bosgo oi cnet 8 | Oklahoma _____._ Guymon. Robertson, A. Willis od. Lad Virginia... ..ocn Lexington. Robertson, ‘Charles R_______ At L. | North Dakota __| Bismarck. Robinson, JoW sulin Lo 2 Utah i... .... Provo. Robsion, Jobers to 9 | Kentucky. ____._ Barbourville. Rockwell, Robert in. 4d: Colorado... Bouivic Paonia. Rodgers, Bobart-Lo 28 | Pennsylvania___| Erie. Roe, Dudley G..cuccoaa 1 | Maryland. _____| Sudlersville. Roe, James A. oon... 5: | New York...... Flushing. Rogers, Dwight: L.......__. 6“ Borida._......... Fort Lauderdale. Rogers, Edith Nourse___.____ 5 | Massachusetts. | Lowell. Rogers, George F___________ 40 | New York. ._._._._ Rochester. Rooney, John J. ..oouee... 12 | New York_.___._ Brooklyn. Rowan, William A_________ 2: 1linoise a. Chicago. Russell, Samy Mo.oooa oo... 17: Beas. sonal. Stephenville. Ryter, Joseph F._._........ At L.| Connecticut. ___| Hartford. Sabath, Adolph J. ......... 51 Hiinolst.._..._. Chicago. Sadowski, George G________ 1. Michigan... ... Detroit. -Sasscer, Lansdale G________ 5.1: Maryland... Upper Marlboro. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name ies State City Savage, Charles R__________ 3 | Washington_____ Shelton. Schwabe, George B__ ________ 1 | Oklahoma____.._ Tulsa. Schwabe, Max... ..o....... 2-(*Missouri....... Columbia. Scrivner, Brrell Poo... .... 12: Kansas. ........ Kansas City. Shafer, Poll W.cc. LL... . 3 | Michigan.______._ Battle Creek. Sharp, Bdgar A.-o.ul..o... 1{ New York_.___._ Patchogue. Sheppard, Harry R_________ 21: -California. ..._. Yucaipa. Sheridan, John Edward. _ _. 4 | Pennsylvania. __| Philadelphia. Short, Dewey. ill cui... 7=|Missouri. _ Galena. Sikes, Robert L. F._.______. 3rq-Florida........... Crestview. Simpson, Richard M.__. ____._ 17 | Pennsylvania. __| Huntingdon. Simpson, Sid... udopilo... 20: | Hlinojs......... .... Carrollton. Slaughter, Roger Cre Bt: Missouri... ... Kansas City. Smith, Frederick C__ _.___._ ye Setit@hio. tL. Lo... Marion. Smith, Howard =>. 8 | Virginia___.___.| Alexandria. W..\. Smith, Lawrence H__ ______. 1 | Wisconsin. __.._. Racine. Smith, Margaret Chase. ._. 2-1 Maine. .o.-owais Skowhegan. Snyder, J. Buell. ............. 23 | Pennsylvania___| Perryopolis. Somers, Andrew L__________ 10 | New York _._._._ Brooklyn. Sparkman, John J 2-00 8] Sh Alabang 2 Huntsville. Spence, Brent: uci ov 5 | Kentucky... .__| Fort Thomas. Springer, Raymond S__ ____. 10. Indiana..... Connersville. Starkey, Frank T....... 4 | Minnesota._____ St. Paul. Siefon, Karl. ...... 5c: 3 | Nebraska_...___..| Norfolk. Stevenson, William Ha = 3'| Wisconsin. _...__ La Crosse. Stewart, Paul. Ls 3 OCklshoma. ..... Antlers. Stigler, Wilm CG... 2 V-Oklashomh....L Stigler. Stockman, Lowell. _ _.. ... ... ... 2] Oregon. .iiii... Pendleton. Sullivan, John Be 1142 Missouri... ... St. Louis. Sumner, Jessle. ic ......... 18 | Illinois. __...__. Milford. Sumners, Hatton'W.......... 5iiTexasiv.. on... 1 Dallas, Sundstrom, Frank L__.______ 11 | New Jersey._.__._. East Orange. Taber, Tolono 88 | New York... Auburn. Talbot, Joseph Bu. 5 | Connecticut .___| Naugatuck. Talle, "Henry Qos ar 241 Towa... <._-=| Decorah. Tarver, Malcom . .._ 7 Georgia... _._ C... Dalton. Taylor, Deen P. —......... 33 New York... Troy. Thom, Willllam .. _.. 16: Ohio... i. .| Canton. BR... Thomas, Albert... oo, S Temes... ....0 Houston, Thomas, Llanelli 7 | New Jersey... ... Allendale. Thomason, R. Ewing... _____ 16: Texas aces on El Paso. Tibbolt; Harve... oi. 26 | Pennsylvania ___| Ebensburg. Tolan, John MH... ........ 7 | California. .__| Oakland. Torrens, James H ......... 21 | New York...... New York City. Towe, Harry L...... Lane 9 | New Jersey... ._. Rutherford. Traynor, Philip A... .... At L. | Delaware__.. .__ Wilmington. Trimble, James W_________ 31 Arkansas... Berryville. Vinzon, Carl... Aneel, 6: Georgian... .....-Milledgeville. Yoorhis, Jerry... ......... 12. Californian... San Dimas. Yorys, John M...... ...... 1%i.0hlo.. o. ..-Columbus. Vursell, Chorles W. ......... 23 i Mlinels. ........ Salem. Wadsworth, James W____ ___ 4] {New York...... Geneseo. Walter, Francis BE. _________ 20 | Pennsylvania. . .| Easton. Wasielew ski, Thad: FP... ... .. 4 | Wisconsin. _____ Milwaukee. Weaver, Zebulon... 12 | North Carolina | Asheville. Weichel, AINE a as 131 0llo.:. ... i Sandusky. Welch, Rida Jo a 5 | California. ...._ San Francisco. West, Milton 0... 15 Texas... 0. = Brownsville. 156 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-. Name trict State City White, Compton: 1... ... Liiddaho ©... Clark Fork. Whitten, Jamie Lo.l-0_.... 2 | Mississippi__.___ Charleston. Whittington, William M_____ 3 | Mississippi-__-.._ Greenwood. Wickersham, Vietor_ _______ 7 | Oklahoma... .. Mangum. Wigglesworth, Richard B_____ 13 | Massachusetts. _| Milton. Wilson, Barl_ oocndeain's O94 Indiana... Huron. Winstead, Arthur_ _._____._ 5 | Mississippi. ___._ Philadelphia. Winter, Thomas Da... 5....... 3 shea... o.oo Girard. Wolcott, Jesse Pua. bo... 7: Michigan... Port Huron. Wolfenden, James_ _ ________ 7 | Pennsylvania___| Upper Darby. Wolverton, Charles A________ 1 | New Jersey_____ Merchantville. Wood, John Solero..... 9:1 CGeorgias -...... Canton. Woodhouse, Chase Going_ _ _ 2 | Connecticut. ___| New London. Woodrull, Boy .. . 10 | Michigan. ______ Bay O=csiczii City. Worley, Eugene____________ 18 Texas ~ Shamrock. Zimmerman, Orville _______ 10. Missouri. .....-. Kennett. DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Commonwealth, Name Title insular possession, City : or Territory Bartlett, B. Loo... ain. Delegate. .| Alaska. ___._._____ Juneau. Farrington, Joseph R_____ Delegate. | Hawaii___________ Honolulu. 8 Pifiero, Jess Tl. 1 Res. Com__| Puerto Rico______ Canovanas. Romulo, Carlos P.2______ Res. Com__| Philippines_______ Manila. 1 Popular Democrat. 2No political affiliation. TERMS OF SERVICE 78349°—79-2—1st ed.——12 TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS 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, Warren R- _ _o.o. ooe 7 oo in R. Burlington, Vt. Bilbo, Theodore; Gc cr oa oe D. Poplarville, Miss. Brigos, Frank:Pl. cn D. Macon, Mo. Brewster, Owen. cc _. o.. >. =~ ike 8 0 Dexter, Maine. Butler, Hugh A. aves am oo R. Omaha,. Nebr. Byrd, Harrys PlooR aoe oo ee os a on, D. Berryville, Va. Carville, B. PZ... re ims D. Reno, Nev. Chavez, Denti. cata. ire ot hana meme 7, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Connally, [Tom co a or ly ret D. Marlin, Tex. Certy, Peter Qt. ea ail D. Providence, R. I. Culley, Joseph Xo caer ce ee ia D. Pittsburgh, Pa. Hart, Thomas C3. cic. or 007 R. Sharon, Conn. Hulman, James W.to ive ee uae ne a en D. Columbus, Ohio. Kilgore, Harlay Mo 0 is D. Beckley, W. Va. Knowland, Willlam ¥.8._ .- _ «_ ~ _ .. R. Piedmont, Calif. Ta Tollette, Robert. M., Jr...0 — . Prog. | Madison, Wis. Langer, Willa. oescue mmsn sn mens R. Wheatland, R. F. D. 1 (Bismarck), N. Dak. McFarland, Ernest W—..— —.—_-____. .. D. Florence, Ariz. McRollar, Renneth...vecveccnnenminninnnnns D. Memphis, Tenn. Mead, James Ml _.. cc. iL D. Buffalo, N. Y. Mitehell, Hugh Be... ier aanan D. Everett, Wash. Murdoels, Abe. = =. coe. A D. Beaver, Utah. O'Mahoney, Joseph. Cs... aaa... 2... | D. Cheyenne, Wyo. Badeliffe, George L...... -cnnmennmneenmainos-=} Dh Baltimore, Md. Shipstead, Henrikson al RB. R. F. D., Carlos, Minn. Smith, H. Alexander’... oae-.i nL 00 R. Princeton, N. J. Tunnell, James Ml. =... einai D. Georgetown, Del. Vandenberg, Arthur Ho. ......c ocean R. Grand Rapids, Mich. Walsh, David... ease D. Clinton, Mass. Wheeler, Burton 18.2: v0 ni vo 0 D. Butte, Mont. Willis, Raymond Be oo. cc oe aaa is R. Angola, Ind. 1 Appointed by Governor Jan. 18, 1945. 2 Appointed by Governor July 24, 1945. 8 Appointed by Governor Feb. 8, 1945. 4 Appointed by Governor Oct. 8, 1945. 5 Appointed by Governor Aug. 14, 1945. 6 Appointed by Governor Jan. 10, 1945. 7 Elected Nov. 7, 1944. 159 160 Congressional Directory : : : Crass IL—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1949 | [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 15; Republicans, 17] | Name’ Party Residence Bailey, Josiah" W.. o.ooca. D. Raleigh, N. C. ol BallaJoseph Ho i al R. St. Paul, Minn. Bankhead, Jom H. 2d... .... ... ooo: D. Jasper, Ala. Bridges, Styles... clic. oaiod R. East Concord, N. H. oo... Brooks C. Wayland... .... loca R. Chicago, Ill. Buck. CiDouglass... .. vi scenes Re Wilmington, irene Del. Bushfield, Harlan J. 0... 0... aesai R. Miller, S. Dak. Capper, Arthur.> co Czoxsroorioe R. Topeka, Kans. Cordon Quy Lie rr rire R. Roseburg, Oreg. Rastiond James Oa = © 5 Lor Eo ey D. Ruleville, Miss. Fllender, Allen 3... oasisiol D. Houma, La. Yergusonm tomer...ioc R. Detroit, cio Mich. ECs Carter ri reasroe D. Lynchburg, Va. Gossett, Charles Cou. oh = wp cleus BP: Nampa, Idaho. Green, Theodore Francis... . ooo. -i:o-5: BD. Providence, R, I. i Hateh, Carb A _ o.oo D. Clovis, N. Mex. Bawkes AlDertW. . r ine aae a ssa ds R. Montelair, N. J, Johnson, Bdwin'C. = initiaoo D. Craig, Colo. MeClellan, Joh... ~.. Lc-rl coc 155 Camden, Ark. Maybank, Burnet R -... Coorsrr ans Br Charleston, S. C. Moore, BH airs BR: Tulsa, Okla. Murray, dames E.~ 2. -oaoorocraonaes D. Butte, Mont. O'Paniel "WW aTee. 2. ro iain: D. Fort Worth, Tex. Revercomb, Chapman... LL -ooro aris Rs Charleston, W. Va. Robertson, Bdward' V. ..........2-2-2: R. Cody, coc Wyo. Russell*Richard B-... 0. il ... D. Winder, ....... Ga. Saltonstall, Deverett® rer olol R. © | Chestnut Hill, i... Mass. Stanfill "William Af oC. Je omer R. Hazard, Ky. Stewart, Tem. 0... ro rrr D. Winchester, Tenn. Wherry, Wenneth'S_ = _ roo oc on R. Pawnee City, Nebr. “White, Wollace H., Jr... ...... i ng pe R. Auburn, Maine. Wilson, George’ A... EES RB: Des Moines, Iowa. 1 Appointed by Governor Mar. 4, 1944; elected Nov. 7, 1944. 2 Appointed by Governor Nov. 17, 1945. 3 Elected Nov. 7, 1944. ¢ Appointed by Governor Nov. 19, 1945. Terms of Service Crass III..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1951 20; Republicans, 12] [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, Name Aiken, George D... . es i Barkley, Alben W-._._ ... . 8 Lo CapehartyHomer B.........5000enl Lo. Donnell, Forvest C.--_-= atasnndil Downey, Sheridan... 00.0 ...830ounce Rulbrights Jo ee oo C9 William... ieronss George, Walter F._. _citwsivaoci Lo. Curney, Chan... Jriidandd oo =o Hayden, Carl tL. ....... 8063080oa Hickenlooper, Bourke B._ oo oot oo Hill, Lister.ea. os. oman Hoey; Clyde B. ..-r.os diel Johnston Olin DD. ooo mas woo Ll Fucag; SecoteW a 8a Ll oa McCarran, Pat. Chrno do 00 aa MeMahon, Brien... codeceiii. Lo oo Magnuson, Warren noo CG... oouiollnial Millikin, Bugehe I. 0... .dobimial Loan Morse, Wayne. Bir =...viii Myers, Franels J. ooo. 0b laid aa Overton, Johm!H Slavai=. Pepper, Claude... .. An cainl a Reed, Glvde™M «odio a Taft, BobertrA. 0 LF Taylor, Glen-H__.......i lis Thomas, Blbert PB... cobain oie. Thome, Bimmer. 2 obeseooo hans) io Tobey, Charles Wo dl. il 00. Lobel Tydingg, Millard Bo. uc: oa Wagner, Bebert B.... liv via oo. Wiley, Alésander..... 000 00 voi ao Young, Milton R.1.. 0 0. a... 1 Appointed by Governor Mar. 12, 1945. Party R. D. RB. R. D, 3D. D. R. D. R. D. D. D. D. D, D. D. R." R. D, D. D. R. R. D. D. D. R. D. D. R. R. Residence Putney, Vt. Paducah, Ky. Washington, Ind. Webster Groves, Mo. San Francisco, Calif. Fayetteville, Ark. Vienna, Ga. Yankton, S. Dak. Phoenix, Ariz. Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Montgomery, Ala. Shelby, N. C. Spartanburg, S. C. Havana, Ill. Reno, Nev. Norwalk, Conn. Seattle, Wash. | Denver, Colo. Eugene, Oreg. Philadelphia, Pa. Alexandria, La. Tallahassee, Fla. Parsons, Kans. Cincinnati, Ohio. Pocatello, Idaho. Salt Lake City, Utah. Medicine Park, Okla. Temple, N. H. Havre de Grace, Md. New York City, N. Y. Chippewa Falls, Wis. Berlin, N. Dak. 162 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS Rank Name State Beginning ofpresent service 1 | McKellar, Kenneth. occ cmeeo... Tennessee. -occu. Mar. 4, 1917 2 | Capper, Arthur... ieee ccccnnnn Kansas... ......0. Mar. 4, 1919 8 | Glass, Carter-l CL. cocaau.-Virginia. ..cuonauiss Feb. 2, 1920 4 | George, Walter F_ _ _ ccna __ Georgia. ......wn Nov. 8, 0 1922 Shipstead, Henrik... cecvauene-Minnesot8...cocme--8 fn Burton Kt... _.._. Montana. ....ecane-J Mar 3 102 6 | La Follette, Robert M., Jr....._. Wisconsin... ooo. Sept. 30, 1925 7 Walsh, David 1.1. . CLouinaiains MassachusettSe cc aa Dec. 6, 1926 Barkley, Alben Woo ccceeo_ Kentueky. . : ocuae-Hayden, Carl... ollceacnnns Arizona...ee oo S$ Thomas, Elmer... 8 oc. Oklahoma... ......-4, 1927 Tydings, Millard BE. vvnuean. Maryland..... Wagner, Robert F.C. cnnuecna-. New York... .... 9 | Vandenberg, Arthur H__________ Michigan... uoil I: 1928 Nils 10 | Connally; Tom... ..Loacanao. Texng.. co iin cllyl 4, 1929 Bailey, Josiah'W__... __.__.....| North Carolina... 11 |) Bankhead, John H., 2d_________ Alabama. .. 0. Mar. 4, 1931 ..... White, Wallace H., Jr___._.____ Maine... _...0 0050 12 | Austin, Warren R_-=0 Lo Vermont... il A 1, 1931 13 | Russell, Richard Boo -.._ Georgia. .nmeeais. Ji 12,1933 Byrd, Harry Flood. i camax. Virginia. cocoon auaids MeCarran,:Pat.. cto0 Nevada. .....c.o.td 14 Overton, Jom H.C._.. __-Louisiana...i." Maz, 41033 _ ... Thomas, Elbert D..... ___.__ Utah... ocei 15 -Hateh, Carl A... 5. ciaal New Mexico... 10, 1933 16 | O’Mahoney, Joseph C___..______ Wyoming. ....._.... so 1, 1934 19 Murray, James BB. _ cL... ..... Montana. --.—.._.L3 7, 1934 Bilbo, Theodore CG... cocunan-o: Mississippi -«= ccoooo Gerry, Peter-02. . fi. cicnnnnin Rhode Island. .__.: = 18 Guffey; Joseph Po. iui. Pennsylvania_..___. 31985 Radecliffe, George Liou...__ Marviand....... 2.1 19 a, Dennis____._ SS New Mexico.._____. May 11, 1935 Andrews, Charles O....ocoo__._ Florida...........0 20 | Pepper, Chude = =i od Plorida -.. -Nov. 4,106 Bridges, Styles... coeee eae New Hampshire... _._ Flender, Allen Jc. .-__ Louvisiang,_ =... gl Green; Theodore Franeis_ ______._ Rhode Island_____._._ 31087 ; Johnson, Edwin C... =. ____ Colorado... ...... 2 Hil,-Lister oo Alabama. J... Jan. 11, 1938 1 Mr. Walsh also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1919, to Mar. 3, 1925. 2 Mr. Gerry also served in the Senate from Mar, 4, 1917, to Mar. 3, 1929. Terms of Service CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued of Beginning 3 Mr. Ball also served in the Senate from Oct. 14, 1940, to Nov. 17, 1942. 4 Mr. Eastland also served in the Senate from June 30, 1941, to Sept. 28, 1941. § Sworn in Jan. 14, 1943. 6 Appointed Mar. 4, 1944, and elected Nov. 7, 1944, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Charles L. McNary. 7 Elected Nov. 7, 1944, to fill the unexpired term of Senator W. Warren Barbour. 164 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Rank Name State Beginning of present service 36 | Magnuson, Warren G___________ Washington. ______._ Dec. 14, 1944 Capebhart, Homer EB... ...... Indiana. uc ia... Fulbright, J. William. ....c..... Arkansas.......o. Hickenlooper, Bourke B_________ Iowa. ...... Soon Héey, Clyde B..... voi ooo. North Carolina______ 37 SJohnston, Olin D._.. oli... South Carolina______ Jan. 3, 1945 McMahon, Brien ..oll oui... Connecticut... _____ ; Morse, Wayne L............... Oregon... alien, Myers, Francis J. oceniiali_ . Pennsylvania_______ | Paylor, Glen HW. ._ __cougbl Idsho.-bralici. o_o ki 38 | Saltonstall, Leverett 8___________ Massachusetts. _.___| Jan. 4, 1945 Donnell, Forrest Coa. 0.0 *Missouri=. ir 2 29 Sg Hugh Bo. coi. Washington. ______ Jan. 10, 1045, 40 | Briggs, Frank P10: Jou... 0 i. Jan. 18, 1945 Missouri... 41 |. Hart, Thomas C1. oui... Connecticut... ..... Feb. 15, 1945 42 | Young, Milton R.12.____...._ __._. North Dakota______ Mar. 12, 1945 43 Carville, B. P.B.. .oniolil.on Nevada... ooo.) July 25, 1945 44 | Knowland, William F.4_________ California. Jiuuuis. Aug. 26, 1945 45 | Huffman, James W.05__________. Ohio... i. voi. Oct. 8, 1945 46 | Gossett, Charles C.36____________ Idaho... ulti un Nov. 17, 1945 47 Stanfill, William A¥___ 7 _______ Rentueky. iio lil Nov. 19, 1945 8 Elected Nov, 7, 1944, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. 9 Appointed Jan. 10, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Mon C. Wallgren. 10 Appointed Jan. 18, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Harry S. Truman. + 11 Appointed Feb. 8, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Francis Maloney. 12 Appointed Mar. 12, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator John Moses. 13 Appointed July 24, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator James G. Scrugham. 14 Appointed Aug. 14, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Hiram W. Johnson. 18 Appointed Oct. 8, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Harold H. Burton. 16. Appointed Nov 17, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator John Thomas. 17 Appointed Nov. 19, 1945, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Albert B. Chandler. Terms of Service CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING: OF PRESENT SERVICE [¥ Elected to fill a vacancy; resigned; unseated by contested election] Name State Dis © Congresses (inclusive) hon bd 20 terms, consecutive Sabath, Adolph J__.____._ np al 5. GOtlto Toth... Mar. 4, 1907 18 terms, consecutive Doughton, Robert L_ ____ N.C... 9 (62d to 79th.......... Mar. 4, 1911 17 terms, consecutive Rayburn, Sam... | "Pex 0. | 463d toT0th.. ...... Mar. 4, 1913 Sumners, Hatton W______ Tex iV 5 63d10' 70th..." Mar. 4, 1913 Vinson, Carl... Gal. 6 | *¥63d to 79th. _..___. Nov. 3, 1914 15 terms, consecutive Bland, Schuyler Otis... __ Va... 1: *65th t0:79th......... July 2, 1918 Knutson, Harold _._____ Minn. _ 6:0 65th to" 70th. Mar. 4,1917 Lea, Clarence F__ ______._ Calif" 1 65vh to’ 79h r=: Mar. 4, 1917 Mansfield, Joseph J___.___ Tex. i: 9 63thto 70th. ......_ Mar. 4, 1917 15 terms, mot consecutive Crosser, Robert______.___ Ohio._.| 21 | 63d to 65th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 : to 79th. 14 terms, consecutive Drewry, Patrick H_______ ¥a...-. 4 | *66th to. 79th... __ Apr. 27, 1920 Lanham, Fritz G....... Tex....| 12.0 *66th to 79th... Apr. 19, 1919 Reed, Daniel A_.________ N.Y... 45 66th:ito 70th. .....-Mar. 4, 1919 14 terms, mot consecutive Weaver, Zebulon_ _______ N.C....0 11 | 165th to 70th and | Mar. 4, 1931 72d to 79th. Woodruff, Roy O......... Mich__| 10 | 63d and 67th to 79th_| Mar. 4, 1921 13 terms, consecutive . Gifford, Charles L_______ Mass. _ OQ 267th to 79th = ">: Nov. 7, 1922 Bankin, John B..._...... Miss... 1 67thto 7Oth.........| Mar. 4, 1921 13 terms, mot consecutive Michener, Earl C________ Mich _._ 2 | 66th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 3, 1935 to 79th. Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES— Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) Gn 12 terms, consecutive Bloom, Sol... ........ N.Y--.;. 20 %65thto 70th..avcex ‘Mar. 4, 1923 Cannon, Clarence________ Mo.... 9 | 68thto 79th... ....._ Mar. 4, 1923 Celler, Emanuel _ ________ N. Yeu 15 | 68th t0i79%h......3. Mar. 4, 1923 Johnson, Luther A-._.._.!| Tex_ _ 6 68Xhto 79th. Mar. 4, 1923 Kerr, Join. H._ ._._._._. N.C... 2.1. %8ih 10 Toth. uve" Nov. 6, 1923 Taber, Jom... .......... N.Y... | 38 (68Sthito7%h........ Mar. 4, 1923 12 terms, mot consecutive Bulwinkle, Alfred I... ___ N.C___| . 11 | 67th to 70th and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 79th. Reece, B. Carroll. .______ Tenn ... 1 | 67th to 71st and 73d°| Mar. 4, 1933 : to 79th. Robsion, Jobn M....... .. Ry... 9 | 66th to t71st and | Jan. 3, 1935 74th to 79th. 11 terms, consecutive Cochran, John J_________ Mo....| 13 | *69th to 79th_______ Nov. 2,1926 Cox, BE. FE. onenot Oe ina 2{69thto79th.__.______ Mar. 4, 1925 Eaton, Charles A________ Nodataz 5 | 69th to 79th... ..._.. Mar. 4, 1925 Jenkins, Thomas A______ Ohio... 10 {60th to 79th... ... Mar. 4, 1925 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____| Mass __| 14 | 69th to 79th___.___. Mar. 4, 1925 Norton, Mary T......... NJ... 15 |. 60th to 79th... .... Mar. 4, 1925 Rogers, Edith Nourse. .__| Mass __ 5: 60th. to: 79th. ...... June 30, 1925 Somers, Andrew L.______ NeYeoo| 104. 69th to 79th..... Mar. 4, 1925 Welch, Richard J... ... Calif ___ 5 | *69th to 79th______.| Aug. 31, 1926 ~ Whittington, William M__| Miss___ 8 {69th{o79th.. ...... Mar. 4, 1925 10 terms, consecutive Hancock, Clarence E.____ N.Y...| 36 | *70th to 79th ______ Nov. 81927 Hope, Clifford B.......... Kans __ 5 ( 70th to-79th... .:.-Mar. 4, 1927 Johnson, Jed. ............ Okla... 6! 70th{o 70th... ..... Mar. 4, 1927 McCormack, John W____| Mass_._.| 12 | *70th to 79th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Tarver, Malcom C....... Qa_o-. 7 (70th to 79th. ....... Mar. 4, 1927 Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Mass -_| 13 | *70th to 79th_______ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolfenden, James... _.._ Pa..... 7 { 270ch to Toth... Nov. 6, 1928 Wolverton, Charles A____| N.J__._ 1 70th to 79th. ....c--Mar. 4,1927 10 terms, not consecutive Andresen, August H_____ Minn _ _ 1 | 69th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 3, 1935 : to 79th. Chapman, Virgil_....._.. Ky.... 6 | 69th, 70th, and 72d | Mar. 4, 1931 to 79th. Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) i 9 terms, consecutive Clark, J. Bayard........: N.C. 7 [71st to 70th... -.1. | Mar. 4, 1929 Cooper, Jere. .......... Tenn. _ 9 [»7lstiio Toth... ..... Mar. 4, 1929 Hartley, Fred A., Jr____._ N.Ji3d 10-0: 71st:t0°700h.. _.....2 Mar. 4, 1929 Kinzer, J. Roland... Pa. i 9 Mist to 79th. 0. oo Jan. 28 1930 Ludlow, Louis........ow.-a Ind i.) 11] Mist te 79th. ....3. Mar. 4, 1929 Patman, Weight... .... .i 40 Texili:: sto 79th... .... 1 Mar. 4, 1929 9 terms, not consecutive Delaney, John J... _..... NoY.o 7.[ *65th and *72d to | Nov. 3,1931 79th. : 8 terms, consecutive Andrews, Walter G______ NY... 42 72d 40.79%h.......A Mar. 4, 1931 Burch, Thomas G..... ...; Va. ...o 54724 to:7Oh...... co IL Mar. 4, 1931 Flannagan, John W., Jr__| Va____._ 9 1724 10. 79th... .-.. .L Mar. 4, 1931 Holmes, Per Gc... Mass _ _ 4 -72d 10:70th... .... Mar. 4, 1931 May, Andrew J........... Ry... 7 1724 to. 79th... ... Mar. 4, 1931 Smith, Howard W________[ Va....._ 8 | 72dt0796h......-... Mar. 4,1931 Spence, Brent. ....... Ry... 5 =724 10. 79%h....... ..... Mar. 4, 1931 Thomason, R. Ewing_____ Tex....| 106 72d to Toth... ..o.o.t Mar. 4, 1931 Wolcott, Jesse P_________ Mich _ _ 7 .72d.te. 79th... cnn n-Mar. 4, 1931 8 terms, not consecutive Have, Butler B........4. S..Ci.. 3 | 69th to 72d and 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 ; ! to 79th. Hess, William E__._..__.. Ohio___ 2 | 71st to 74th and 76th | Jan. 3, 1939 to 79th. Rich, Robert. F...........4. Pa: i... 15 | *71st to 77th and | Jan. 3, 1945 : 79th. . 7 terms, consecutive Allen; Teo:B....c. ..... 0s Th... .. 13 |: 73d40:79%h..........0. Mar. 4, 1933 Brown, Pauli-..v.codidl Gali 10 {| *73d to 79th... ...... July 5,1933 -Colmer, William M______ Miss. _ 673d to 796h___-____.2 Mar. 4, 1933 Cooley, Harold D________ N.C. 4 | *73d't0:79th........ July 17,1934 Dingell, John D.........&; Mich..I 15 [ 73dt0i70th........3. Mar. 4, 1933 Dirksen, Everett M______ This iis 16 73d 079th...1 Mar. 4, 1933 Dondero, George A______ Mich...{ 17 | 73d to: 79th... ... 5. Mar. 4, 1933 Kee, Johni........ W. Va_ 5 73d to 70th. ...o-.. Mar. 4, ...._ 1933 Lesingki, John... ........ Michi..{ 16 | 73d.t0.99th.. ..cve--Mar. 4, 1933 Peterson, J. Hardin______ Pla: 173d to. 79th...aa Mar. 4, 1933 Plumley, Charles A______ Vi..i.. AtL. [| %73d.t0,79th. -cu... Jan. 16, 1934 Randolph, Jennings______ W. Va. 2 73d to, 70th... 0.2 Mar. 4,1933 Richards, James P___. 8.0L... 531734 to 79th....-Mar. 4, 1933 168 : Congressional Directory | SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Die Congresses (inclusive) Dose 7 terms, consecutive—con. Robertson, A. Willis. ____ Va..:l. 7 73d to 7Oth. i Nebr __ 3 7thto79th. Jan. -3 1935 Tolan Jom H. Calif___ ry 7dthto 79th > Jan. 3, 1935 Zimmerman, Orville______ Mo...) 10. 74th to 79th. ........ Jan. 3, 1935 6 terms, mot consecutive Lemke, William _ _ _______ N.Dak_| AtL.| 78d to 76th, 78th, | Jan. 3, 1943 and 79th. 5 terms, consecutive Allen, A. Leonard________ Ya on S| 75thto 79th... ..< Jan. 3, 1937 Bates, George J. -..._... Mass _ G1 T5thio 79th... Jan. 3, 1937 Bates; JoeB... By S| th to 70th <=" June 4, 1938 Boren, 1lyle ®. .._.__..__ Okla___ 4 7T5thto 79th. __.. Jan. 3, 1937 Bradley, Michael J_______ Pa...-3 73thito 79th... ..... Jan.. 3,1937 Brooks, Overton_________ La....5 4 ({ 75thto 79th... .... Jan. 3, 1937 Byrne, William T.-.._._.. N.Y...p 32] 73thto 79th... Jan. . 3, 1937 Case, Francis. o -. S. Dak_ 2 | 7othio/70th.. Jan. 3, 1937 Clason, Charles R__._____ Mass -_ 2 7hthito'Foth_ Jan. 3,1937 Coffee, John'M............ Wash __ 6 75th to 70th. ....... Jan. 3, 1937 Eberharter, Herman P___| Pa_____ 32. 75thto 79th... .... Jan. 3, 1937 Flliots, Alfred J... .....«¢ Calif. (10° { *75th to 79th... .. May 4, 1937 Gamble, Ralph A________ N.Y... 28} *75th to 70th... ._. 1 Nov. .2,1937 Grant, George M________ Ala. 2 *75thto 79th...1. . June 14, 1938 Gregory, Noble J________ Ky. ont i 1 | thio 79th .....o. Jan.: 3,1937 Hendricks, Joe. . .......= Fla. x 51 75thito 79th. ....... Jan. 3, 1937 zoe, BA. ... us Calif...} 123 | 75th 10. 79th... Jan. ‘3, 1937 NV... Jarman, Pete... .......-Also -0 70tht079%h__ Jan. 3, 1937 Johnson, Lyndon B______ Tex: 110 | 275th to 79th. iii. Apr. 10, 1937 Keogh, Eugene J________ NY x 9] 75th to 9th... ....... Jan. = 3, 1937 Kirwan, Michael J______._ Ohio.i:| -19 § 76th te 7Oh.... Jan. 3, 1937 Mason, Noah M_________ dE 12 { 75th to 70th... _-_ Jan. 3, 1937 Murdock, John R________ Ariz. PAG LL. 75th to: 79h... Jan. 3, 1937 O’Toole, Donald L_______ NV. 183 Yh to 70h: Jan. 3, 1937 Pace, Stephen... ......c Go sin ri 70thtoIOth oo. Jan, 3,1937 Poage; W..Br.......0.5 Tex... .1 114 75th1o. 70th... 3 Jan. 3, 1937 Rees, Edward H_________ Kans _ _ 4! 78hio 7h... Jan. 3, 1937 Shafer,ePaul W__________ Mich _ _ 3 |-7bthtoYoth_ _..__.. Jan. 3, 1937 Sheppard, Harry R______ Calif...y 21. 75thto 79th. ........ Jan. 3, 1937 Simpson, Richard M_____ Pa... 171 75th to 70th. oo. May 11, 1937 Sparkman, Jon J... ..... Ala. cos SH. 75th to 79th... 0. Jan. 3, 1937 Thomas, Albert... ... Tex.» S81 75th to 79h _....-Jan. 3, 1937 Thomas, J. Parnell _______ NJ. 7 | bth te 79h..... Jan. 3.1937 Voorhis, Jerzy... Calif...}] 12] 75thto-79th. _.__._._.._ Jan. 3, 1937 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) Ti 6 terms, mot consecutive Blackney, William W____| Mich_._ 6 | 74thand 76thto79th_{ Jan. 3, 1939 Chureh, Ralph E........ Mm... 10 | 74th to 76th, 78th, | Jan, 3, 1943 and 79th. Hook, Frank B........... Mich__| 12 | 74thto77thand79th_| Jan. 3, 1945 Kopplemann, Herman P__| Conn __ 1| 73d to 75th, 77th, | Jan. 3, 1945 and 79th. Marcantonio, Vito____2__| N. Y___| 18 | 74thand 76thto 79th_| Jan. 3, 1939 Neely, Matthew M______ W. Va._ 1 | *63dto 66thand 79th_| Jan. 3, 1945 O’Brien, Thomas J_______ Mm. .... 6 | 73dto 75th, 78th,and | Jan. 3, 1943 79th. Sadowski, George G._____ Mich. _ 1 | 73dto 75th, 78th,and | Jan. 3, 1943 79th. Thom, William B........ Ohio___| 16 | 73dto 75th, 77th,and | Jan. 3, 1945 79th. 4 terms, consecutive Andersen, H..Carl_______ Minn_ _ 7 76thto79th.......] Jan, 3, 1939 Anderson, Jack Z________ Calif... 8 76th'to 79th... ...... Jan, 3, 1939 Angell, Homer D________ Oreg.___ Bl 76thtoY%th... .... Jan. 3, 1939 Beckworth, Lindley. _____ Text: 3] 76thtovoth......... Jan. 3, 1939 Bender, George H_______ Ohio. .1AtL.) 76th to 79th... ... Jan. 38,1939 Bolton, Frances P_______ Ohlo--_}]. 22'| *76th $0 79th. 1. Feb. 27, 1940 Bonner, Herbert C_______ N.C. 1] *6th'to 79th... .. Nov. 5,1940 Bradley, Fred... ......... Mich l.] '11-76th'to 79th... .. i -Jan. ’3,7939 Brown, Clarence J._______ Ohio___ Y | 6thto' 79th... ....% Jan. 3, 1939 Bryson, Joseph R________ SACL 4 | 76th to 79th________| Jan. 3, 1939 Burgin, W. 0. .....:.. N.C. 8 | 76th to 79th. ....... Jan. 3, 1939 Camp, A. Sidney..._..__. Cg’ DC 4 | *6thto 79th. ...._. Aug. 1, 1939 Capnon, Pat..._ 1 Fla. '] ‘4 | 76thto 79h. .-... Jan. 3,1939 Chiperfield, Robert B____| Ill_____ 15] 76th t0°79th....3*= Jan. 3, 1939 Clevenger, Cliff __________ Ohio___ 5.) 76th'to' 79th. ...__. Jan. 3, 1939 Courtney, Wirt.......... Tenn'l] 7] W6thito 79th... | May 11, 1939 Cravens, Fadjo........... Ark... 1 47 *76th to 70th... Sept. 12, 1939 Curtis, CarV' TT. -......10 Nebr __ 176610 7Sth =. Jan. 3,1939 D’Alesandro, Thomas, Jr_| Md___._ 3 76thto79th---| Jan. 3, 1939 Davis2Clifford........0 Tenn_..¢ 10 | *76thto 79th... ..... Feb. 15, 1940 Durham, Cant T...-..5 N.C! 6] 76thto 70th... ‘Jan. 3,1939 Dworshak, Henry C______ Idaho 7} 1 2.1 = --= Jan. 3, 76th'to'7Oth.--1939 Elston, Charles H________ Ohio___ 1 { 76th to 70th: =. :-: Jan. *3, 1939 Fenton, Ivor D.......... Pp de 12 | 76thto 70th. 7: Jan. 3,1939 Cathings ‘.7C CARE 1° 76th 079th:© Jan. 3, 1939 Gerlach, Charles L_______ Pa..." 2 76th 'to’79th: > -Jan. 3, 1939 Gillie, George W________. Ind 4 1 76thto 79th....-Jan. 3, 1939 Gossett, B---~—.Fb Pox2 0 18 76th to 70th... Jan. 3, 1939 Graham, Touis BE. -.---.. Pa-l.. 25 | 76th to-7oth. =... Jan. 3, 1939 Grant, Robert A... _.... Ind. -. 3 70thto 79th. -.... Jan. 3,1939 Hall, Edwin Arthur______ NY. ..l 37 *76th to 79th... .... Nov. 17,1939 Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name 4 terms, consecutive—con. Hall, Leonard W_...._... Harness, Forest A.__.____ Hinshaw, Carl...550 Jennings, John, Jr... ..... Jensen, Ben ¥........... Johnson, Anton J.......... Jones, Robert F.......... Jonkman, Bartel J____.___ Kean, Robert W________. Reofe, Frank B........... Kefauver, Estes... Kilburn, Clarence E______ Kiday, Paul J... ia Runkel, John C.. ....._. Landis, Gerald W________ LeCompte, Karl M______| Lynch, Walter. A. ....... McGregor, J. Harry ___.__ McMillan, John L._._____ Martin, Thomas E_______ Mille, Wilbur D. ........-Monroney, A. S. Mike____| Mundt, Karl EB... .-... 2 Murray, Reid PP. _. _...4 Norrell, W.. FF... .. Rodgers, Robert L_______ Sasscer, Lansdale G______ Sheridan, John Edward___| Smith, Frederick C______ Smith, Margaret Chase_._| Springer, Raymond 8__._.{ Sumner, Jessie___________ Talle, Henry O. ........2 Tibbott, Harve.......... Vorys;, John 'M_. __ __._ Winter, Thomas D_______ 4 terms, not consecutive Curley, James M_______._ Porand, Aime J... ........ Gore, Albert... ........ O’Brien, George D_______ Patrick, Luther... ...... State N.Y... Ind: = Calif-_.. Tenn __ Towa__. BEAL Ohio___ Mich __ N.Joz Wis... Tenn.-f N.Y. Tex: Pos... Ind. Towa__.._ N.-Y...] Ohio....1 BC Iowa... Ark... Okla___ S. Dak_ Wis... Ark... Pa... Md... Pa_____ Ohio... Maine _ Ind... ..[ Ts pn Towa___ Pa... Ohio....y Kang. Mass._.| Ril. Tenn_..| Mich._._| Als... Dis-Beginning of i trict Congresses (inclusive) present service 2 [76th 1to-79th........... 1 Jan. 3, 1939 5. | 76th to7oth. ....... Jan. 3, 1939 20 76th to. 79h. ....... Jan. 3, 1939 2 ¥*6thto 79th... .-. Dec. 30, 1939 ¥ (| 76th to 79th... ...... Jan. -3, 1939 14/7 76th {0 79th... _... Jan. 3, 1939 qd | 76thilo 79th. .......-Jan. 3,1939 Dr *76thto79%h -.._ = Feb. 19, 1940 12 | 76th to 79h... Jan. 3, 1939 G1 76thito 79th. _...... Jan. 3, 1939 -3. *76th +0. 7%h._.. _=.-Sept. 13, 1939 34 | *76thito 70th__..... Feb. 13, 1940 20 | 76th to 79th _.__.... Jan. 3, 1939 183 | 76thto 79th... ..... Jan. 3,1939 71 76th to 79%h____... | Jan.” 3, 1939 4 [76th to 79th... ..... Jan. 3, 1939 23 | *6ih to 79th... ....[.-Feb. 20,:1940 '17-| *76th 10 79th. ..._.. Feb. 27, 1940 6 1 76thto 79th. ........| Jan... 3, 1939 1.| 76th to/79th. -.....+ Jan. 3, 1939 2 ]:76th to/79th..........-Jan. 3, 1939 5 76th 10.79th.. .. ..... Jan. 3, 1939 1 76th to /9th. .. 5. Jan. 3,1939 7 76thio70th.. ....._. Jan. 3, 1939 6) 76th to 79th... ..... Jan. 3, 1939 28 “76thto 79th... _..__ Jan. 3, 1939 5 | *76th to 79th... .. Feb. 3, 1939 4 | *76th te 79th... ... Nov. 7, 1939 S| 76thto 79th... Jan. 3, 1939 2 *76th.to 70th. Ji... June 3, 1940 10] 76th to 79th. ....._.. Jan. 3, 1939 13 76th to79th. Jan. 3, 1939 2 76th to 79h...1. Jan. 3, 1939 26 | 76thito 70th... ...: Jan. 3, 1939 12 | 76th to . .._. Jan. 3, 1939 79h... 8 | 76th {o:7%h.........-Jan. 3, 1939 11 | 62d, 63d, 78th, and | Jan. 3, 1943 79th. 1 | 75thand 77th to 79th_| Jan. 3, 1941 4 | 76th to 178th and | Jan. 3, 1945 79th. : 13 | 75thand 77thto 79th.| Jan. 3, 1941 9 | 75th to 77th and | Jan. 3, 1945 79th. Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) Li ARR 3 terms, consecutive Baldwin, Joseph Clark_..._.| N.Y... | 17 | *77th to 79th. __.___ Mar. 11, 1941 Bishop, C. WW. (Bunt)... if TH.’ 25 | 77th to 7th vn. Jan. 3, 1941 Butler, John'C_-=-.:..>: NOY: | 44 | *7ithto70th--=~ Apr. 22, 1941 Canfield, Gordon... .--__. NIT S {7H oth o> Jan. 3, 1941 Chenoweth, J. Edgar_____ Colo. -3 THEO THh. = Jan. 3, 1941 Cunningham, Paul_______ Towa.___ 6! 7Tithto79%th 2... Jan. 3, 1941 Pellows, Frank _-.:-.-.. Maine _ 3 7thto 79th... 1 Jan.’ 3,194} Yolger,; John H---.:..... N.C. 5 *77thto Toh. =... June 14, 1941 Gibson, John's... ...... Co.2lo 8 Tithto 79th: .-.:.". Jan. 3, 1941 Gillette, Wilson D.____.__ Pal ie! 14 | *77th to 79th_______| Nov. 4, 1941 Granger, Walter K____._. Utah] i 1 77th to 79th. c-.-. Jan. 3, 1941 Harris; Oren. _.......0.. ‘Ark: oT TH to 70th. ol Jan. 3, 1941 Hébert, F. Edward_______ Ya-2>: Ti 7h to" TOth: o-oo Jan. 3, 1941 Heffernan, James J______ NA] 1 Tth to 70th a Zz Jan. 3, 1941 Hill, William S.. -._.... Colo... 2 | 77th to¥9th...._: Jan <3, 1041 Howell, Evan. ....... ._. nm... 21 | 7h to 79th... >... Jan. 3, 1941 Jackson, Henry M_______ Wash__ 2 T7thio%9h:-=... Jan. 3, 1941 Kelley, Augustine B______ Pa cr 27 [ Tih to THh.. .... Jan. 3, 1941 King, Ceell R..-c......0. Calif...| 17 | *77th to 79th. _.....| Aug. 25, 1942 Yane, Thomas J-........ Mass. -7 *77thto 79th. ......5 Dec. 30, 1941 Manasco, Carter__.__.__. lg 7 27thito 70th: _...._ June 24, 1941 O'Hara, Joseph P__. Minn. “2 | 77thito 79th... __. | Jan. "3, 1041 Ploeser, Walter C________ Moot] 121 77thto 79h... Jan. -3,1941 Priest. J. Perey... :-...0 Tenn _ _ 6 | 7th to 79th-....-.. Jan. 3, 1941 Rivers, L. Mendel. _ ______ SC {4 | 7ichto 79th zz" Jan. -3,1941 Rizley, Rose: ....._...... Okla__._ S| 77thto 79th. ....... Jan. 3, 1941 Rockwell, Robert F._____ Colo... 4 | *77thto 79th... ... Dee. 9, 1941 Russell, Sam M......... Tex Ux 17 [| 77th to 78th. 1 =. Jan. 3, 1941 Smith, Lawrence H______ Wig i 1 |*77th'to 70th... ... Aug. 29, 1941 Stevenson, William H____| Wis____ 3 | 77thito 79th... Jan. 3,1941 Talbot, Joseph E_ _______ Conn. _ | ¥7th to 79th... ... Jan. 20, 1942 Wasielewski, Thad F_____ Wis. 4 | T7thto79th._....... Jan. 3,1941 Whitten, Jamie L________ Miss: {2 | *Tthto 79th. ...... Nov. 4, 1941 Wickersham, Vietor______ Okla___ 7 | *77th to 70th... _.... . Apr. 1,1941 Wilson, Earl... .....-... Ind. 9 | 77th'to 79th. ....._.. Jan. 3, 1941 Worley, Eugene. _ ______._ Tex....] 18 | 77thto79th-.__..__{'Jan. 38,1041 3 terms, not consecutive Domengeaux, James_____ La... .. 3 | 77th, 1*78th, and | Nov. 7, 1944 79th." Fogarty, John E_.______._ Blood 2 | 77th, 178th, and 79th_| Jan. 3, 1945 Gross, Chester H_ _______ Pa... 21 | 76th, 78th, and 79th_| Jan. 3, 1943 Havenner, Franck R._._._| Calif._.| 4 | 75th, 76th, and 79th_| Jan. 3, 1945 Yewis, Bart R... ... 0... . : Ohio...I 18 76th, 78th, and 79th_ Jan. 3, 1943 Terms of Service 173 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued | Name State D is Congresses (inclusive) Bogitming of rict present service 3 terms, not consecutive— continued Sikes, Robert L. F________ Bla.... 3 | 77th,t78th, and 79th_| Jan. 8, 1945 Wood, JomniS.........L0. Ga. [ir 9 | 72d, 73d, and 79th___| Jan. 3, 1945 2 terms, consecutive Abernethy, Thomas G____| Miss___ 4 | 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Andrews, George W______ Ala. 3 | *78thand 79¢th_.___. Mar. 14, 1944 Arnold, Wat. ........0] Mo 1 | 78th and 79th... Jan. 3, 1943 Auchincloss, James C.__.| N. J__._ 3 78th and 79th... Jan. 3, 1943 Baldwin, H. Streett__._.._ Md.___ 2 78th and 79th... .. Jan. 3,1943 Barrett, Frank A. 0 Wyo___|AtL.| 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Beall, J. Glenn... ....LL Md.... 6 | 78th and 79th..... Jan. 3, 1943 Bennett, Marion T_______ Mo.... 6 | *78th and 79th____._. Jan. 12, 1943 Brehm, Walter E______._ Ohio...| 11 | 78th and 79th... .. Jan. 3;1943 Brumbaugh, D. Emmert__| Pa_____ 22 | *78th and 79th._...__ Nov. 2,1943 Buck, Ellsworth B_______ N-Y.2. 16 | *78th and 79th... . June 6, 1944 Buffett, Howard H_______| Nebr___ 2 | 78thand 79th... 2. 0 Jan. 3, 1943 Cole, William C. ......_. Mo.__._ S| 78th and 79th... Jan. 3, 1943 Daughton, Ralph H______ Va..... 2 | *78th and 79th______| Nov. 7,1944 Dawson, William L______ me. 1 [78th and 79th......_. Jan. 33,1943 Ellis, Hubert 8... iol W. Va._ 4 | 78h and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Ellsworth, Harris________ Oreg._._ 4 | 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Engle, Clair......0. Calif. 2 | #78th and 79th... Aug. 31,1943 ... Feighan, Michael A______ Ohio...| 20 | 78th and 79h... .& Jan. 3, 1943 Fernandez, Antonio M___| N. Mex.|At L.| 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Pigher, 0.:C....... Lu. Tex....! 21 [ 7Sth'and 79th......... Jan, 3, 1943 Fuller, Hadwen C.___.___ N..Y-...[ 35 *7Sthand 79th... .._. Nov. 2,1943 Gavin, Leon'H...... 0.00 Pa...o. 19 { 7Sthand 79th... 2 Jan. 3, 1943 Gillespie, Dean M_______ Colo___ 1 | *78th'and 79th......... Mar. 7, 1944 Goodwin, Angier L_______ Mass_ _ 8 | 78th'and 79th.....__. Jan. 33,1943 Gordon, Thomas S_______ 1 heat 8 | 78h and 79th._.______ Jan. 3, 1943 Gorski Martin............L nL. 4 | 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Griffiths, PB. W __ _.____.0. Ohio...{ 15 | 7Sthand 79th....._. Jan. 38,1943 Hagen, Harold C________ Minn _ _ 9 | 78th and 79th.__..____{ Jan. 3,1943 Hale, Fobert. :. iil Maine. 1 | 78thand 79th._....:.| Jan. 3,1943 Harless, Richard F....___| Ariz. __|AtL.| 78h and 79th....___\'Jan. 3,1943 Hays, Brooks...LiL Ark... 5 | 78h and 79th_..____ Jan. 3, ... 1943 Herter, Christian A______ Mass__| 10 | 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Hoch, Daniel KX... =... Pn. 13 | 78th'and 79th. = Jan. 3, 1943 Hoeven, Charles B_______ Iowa.___ 8 | 78h and 79th_______| Jan. 3, 1943 *-Holifleld, Chet. =... Calif... 10 [| 78th and 79th... .. Jan. 3, 1943 Holmes, Hal. ........0L Wash __ 4 | 78h and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 Horan, Waltl..........00 Wash __ 5 1 78thiand 79th...» .. Jan. 3, 1943 Johnson, J. Leroy________ Calif ___ 3| 78thand 79th... ... Jan. 3, 1943 ‘Judd, Waller H...._._ Minn. _ 5] 78h and 79th______.' Jan. 3, 1943 78349°—79-2—1st ed.——13 174 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) pine 2 terms, consecutive—con. Kearney, ' Bernard W. | N.Y...| 31 (78th and 7%th........ Jan. 3, 1943 (Pat.). LaFollette, Charles M____| Ind___._ 8 | 78thand 79th........ Jan. 3,1943 Larcade, Henry D., Jr..._{ La. -_. 7 78thand 7%h....... Jan. 3, 1943 lePevre, Jay... ........ NN. Y...; 30 | 78th and 79th. uu. Jan. 3, 1943 Luce, Clare Boothe ______ Conn... 4 | 78th and 79th... ... Jan. 3, 1943 McConnell, Samuel K., Jr_| Pa_____ 16 | *78h and 79th._____ Jan. 18, 1944 McCowen, Edward O____| Ohio___ 6 | 78h and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1943 McKenzie, Charles E_____ 1a. .22: 51 78thand 79th........ Jan. 3, 1943 McMillen, Rolla C....___ TN... 19 | *78th and 79th... .... June 13, 1944 Madden, Ray J........... Ind... 1 73thand 79h___ Jan. 3, 1943 Mansfield, Mike. .______. Mont _ _ L {78th and 7%h......... Jan. 3, 1943 Merrow, Chester E___ ___ NaH... 1 7Sthand 79th... ... Jan. 3, 1943 Millew. AL........ Nebr... 4 | 73th and 79th... ... Jan, 3, 1943 _.. Morrison, James H__ ____ Ta. 6: 78th and 79th......... Jan, 3,1943 Murphy, Jom W. ..... Paso. 10 | 78th and 79th....... Jan. 3, 1943 Murray, Tom... Tenn... 8 | 78h and 79th_______| Jan. 4, 1943 .. O’Konski, Alvin E_______ Wis....] 10 | 7Sthand 79%th__... Jan. 3, 1943 Outland, George E_______ Calif..} 11 | 78th and 79%h_.___.. Jan. 3, 1943 Philbin, Philip J.......5. Mass_ _ 3 YSthand 79th......¢ Jan. 3, 1943 Phillips, John... Calit..l 22 0 78thand 70th... u. Jan. 3, 1943 Price; Emory H._..___.. Fla... 2 | 7Sthand 79th... Jan. 3, 1943 Ramey, Homer A... .... Ohio___ 9 | 78th and 79th... .. Jan. 3, 1943 Rooney, John J... N.Y 12 *8thand 79th._....| June’ 6,11944 Rowan, William A_______ THe ois 2 | 78thand 79th........ Jan. 3, 1943 Schwabe, Max... ..._.0. Mo... 2] 7Sth'and 79th....... Jan. 3, 1943 Scrivner, Errett P_._.___ Kans_._ 2 | *7Sth and 79th... .. Sept. 14, 1943 Simpson, Sid... 00 MT 201 7Sthand 79th... -Jan. 3, 1943 Slaughter, Roger C______ Mo... 5 78%h and 79th... __. Jan. 3, 1943 Stewart, Paul... ..... Lo. OEkla_..| « 3 | 78th and 79th.... Jan. 3, 1943 Stigler, William G_______ Okla___| 2 | *78th and 79th______ Mar. 28, 1944 Stockman, Lowell________ Oreg.... 21 78hand 79th....... Jan. 3, 1943 Sundstrom, Frank L_____ NJ | 7Sthand 79th... Jan. 3, 1943 Taylor, Dean P.........0 NoY..| 33| 78th and 7Sth__.....[ Jan. = 3;1043 Torrens, James H________ N.Y | 21] *7Sthand 79th. =. Feb. 29, 1944 Towe, Harry 1... .......... NJ. 9 | 78th and 70th... _.... Jan. 3, 1943 Vursell, Charles W_._____ Ths foi 23 | 78thand Y9th.......: Jan. 3, 1943 Weichel, Alvin F________ Ohio....} 13 { 7Sthand 79th... _._.. Jan. 3,1943 Winstead, Arthur..______ Miss___ 5 | 78th and 79th_______ Jan. 3,1943 2 terms, mot consecutive Corbett, Robert J________ Po: 30 | 76thand 79th... __ Jan. 3, 1945 Robertson, Charles R_.__| N.Dak.! At L.| 77th and 79th_______ Jan. 3, 1945 Sullivan, John'B-.. ._...... Mo....] 11] 77th:and 9th... Jan. 3, 1945 Traynor, Philip-A...0. Delii ' AtY:! 776hiand 79th... Jan. 3, 1945 Terms of Service 175 of SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Fi Congresses (inclusive) RL 1 term Adams, Sherman. _______ BRERA AE ERONe a, Jan. 3,1945 Bailey, Cleveland M_____ Sl 709hen) Jan. = 3, 1945 Barrett, William A_______ Both st oll a Jan. 3,1945 Bennet, Augustus W____._ 20 1 Yh) Laat Jan. ' 3, 1945 Biemiller, Andrew J______ 170th. ouiae a Jan. 3, 1945 Bunker, Berkeley L______ AL FOth Co cuaSi il Jan. 3, 1945 Byrnes, Jom W.._....... S| T0h il... Jan. 33,1945 Campbell, Howard E____ 20 Voth. as Jan. 3,1945 Carnahan, A. S.J... SL ¥Gh. 4 La Jan. 3, 1945 Cage, Clifford Po... Ith Jan. 3, 1945 Chef, Frank IL... ..... THERE AT Yl el Jan. 3, 1945 Clements, Earle C_______ 2 70th i co losit Jan, 3, 1945 Olippinger,: Roy... ... 2% x70th. x oon Lo Nov. 6, 1945 Cole Albert: M........... 10 70thiie i a Jan. 3, 1945 Combs, JM... ...... REAL OR ae A Jan. 3, 1945 Deillacy, Hugh.......... 1 7%tha lL] Jan. 3, 1945 Delaney, James J________ 61 Tnh. Jan. 3, 1945 D’Ewart, Wesley A______ eg Othe oo 2 June 5, 1945 Dolliver, James I. __..... 6 Fhe as Jan. 3, 1945 Douglas, Emily Taft_____ AL 70h la iS Jan. 3, 1945 Douglas, Helen Gahagan__ TL 7h. of Jan. 3, 1945 Doyle, Clyde_____ EER IS {79h ane Jan. 3, 1945 Earthman, Harold H_____ Bl AMhii ceinianaits Jan. 8, 1945 Elsaesser, Edward J______ 43 oth oc Slonalonr Jan. 3, 1945 Fallon, George H. ..._... doh sa Jan. 3, 1945 Flood, Daniel J... . VL -T70 ho aaa ia Jan. 3, 1945 Fulton, James G_... .... 31 LY0th._ iia Jan. 3,1945 Gallagher, William J_____ Bt Lalaaa Jan. 3, 1945 Gardner, Edward J______ Toth ry Jan. 3, 1945 Gary, J. Vaughan...__ Sah. Mar. 6, 1945 Ceelan, James. P_.~ __ 3190... dain Jan. 3, 1945 Granahan, William T____ ales AR SE TR Jan. 3, 1945 Green, William J., Jr_____ BAL TOth oa Jan. 3,1945 Gwinn, Ralph W________ SHEL TS RAR Jan. 3, 1945 Hand, T. Millet. ........ QLN0th, ian Jan. 3, 1945 Healy, Ned R..... ....... M3 Th a Jan. 3, 1945 Hedrick, BE. H._......... 67h. aa Jan. 3, 1945 Henry, Robert KX... levoh Jan. 3, 1945 Heselton, John W________ EEA rs SAR Jan. 3, 1945 Huber; Walter B......... Flat Re A eh Jan. 3, 1945 Latham, Henry J__.__.__ SrToh. a Jan. 3, 1945 Link, William W_....... Th aa Jan. 3, 1945 Iyle, Johu B.__._.._.... I =70th. Jan. 3, 1945 McDonough, Gordon L___ 15: 70th ya ees Jan. 3, 1945 McGlinchey, Herbert J___ 6 T0h,. anni Jan. 3, 1945 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) -me term—continued Mathews, Frank A., Jr___.| N. J._. dh a Nov. 6, 1945 Miller, George P._....__. Calif... 81 70h. at Jan. 3,1945 Morgan, Thomas E______ Pah WU LTOh oa Jan. 3, 1945 Patterson, Ellis BE... Colit | (16. 70h... _.-5l us Jan. 3, 1945 Picketi, Tom............. Tex... AE I fe Ho Jan. 3, 1945 Powell, Adam C., Jr_.._. N.Y! 220 709%he aa Jan. 3,1945 Price; Melvin... ........ TH. 224 TMh CL iii Jan. 3, 1945 Quinn, Peter A... _. NY 126 79h vo o.oo Jan. 3, 1945 Rabin, Benjamin J__.____ NeoYoou 24 I 70th. Jan. 3, 1945 Rains, Albert... .._.. Ala 0 BY TOh. o..o Jan. 3, 1945 Rayfiel Leo FF... ....... N.Y {79h oo oo Jan. 3, 1945 Resa, Alexander J_______ W...n0 9 70th. 2 ah Jan. 3, 1945 RileyiJohmn J... ....... B.C 2 2 79th lrco on Jan. 3, 1945 Roe, Dudley G. Md. _--Y | 7Othen co oi Jan. 3, 1945 Boe, JamesiA .. ...... N.Y... Hy Fath i on Jan, 38,1945 Rogers, Dwight L________ Pia. RTA Dl ENnd Jan. 3, 1945 Rogers, George F.._.___.___ N.Y 401 70th. 8 i an hl Jan. 3, 1945 Ryter, Joseph FF... ___. Conn. AGT. 79th... 2... Jan. 3, 1945 Savage, Charles R_______ Wash__ BA Toth oo Jan. 3, 1945 Schwabe, George B______ Okla... 79th iia Jan. 3, 1945 Shorp, Vdsar A... ....... N.Y... 14 990h. 0. eno Jan. 3, 1945 Starkey, Frank T........ Minn_ _ CEN He Se Jan. 3, 1945 Trimble, James W_______ Ark.._. 3 Th... eas Jan. 3, 1945 Woodhouse, Chase Going_| Conn... A LT bee ST Jan. 3, 1945 TERRITORIAL DELEGATES Bartlett, B. L..____ ..__. Alaska |. __.. oth. oo eo Jan, 3, 1945 Farrington, Joseph R_____ Hawaii... -73th and 79th... Jan, 3,1943 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Piflero, Jess T........... P. RL... FELTH TT Co Bnose Jan, 3, 1945 Bomulo, Carlos P.......... Plaga *78th and 79th.._____ Aug. 10, 1944 COMMITTEES STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE [Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics; Progressive in SMALL CAPS] Agriculture and Forestry Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. Raymond E. Willis, of Indiana. Theodore G. Bilbo, of, Mississippi. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. Harlan J. Bushfield,of South Dakota. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. George A. Wilson, of Iowa. Tom Stewart, of Tennessee. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. Tom Connally, of Texas. William F. Knowland, of California. Sheridan Downey, of California. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. Appropriations Carter Glass, of Virginia. } Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Chan Gurney, of South Dakota. Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. C. Wayland Brooks, of Illinois. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. Clyde M. Reed, of Kansas. Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. Joseph H. Ball, of Minnesota. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Raymond E. Willis, of Indiana. John H. Overton, of Louisiana. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. Kenneth S. Wherry, of Nebraska. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Theodore Franeis Green, of Rhode Island. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. James M. Mead, of New York. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Abe Murdock, of Utah. ; Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. C. Wayland Brooks, of Illinois. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Kenneth S. Wherry, of Nebraska. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. Banking and Currency Robert F. Wagner, of New York. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. C. Douglass Buck, of Delaware. Sheridan Downey, of California. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado, Abe Murdock, of Utah. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho. J. William Fulbright, of Arkansas. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. E. P. Carville, of Nevada. 179 180 Congressional Directory @ Civil Service Sheridan Downey, of California. William Langer, of North Dakota. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Walter F. George, of Georgia. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Thomas C. Hart, of Connecticut. James M. Mead, of New York. Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho. Claims Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. Arthur Gapper, of Kansas. W. Lee O’Daniel, of Texas. . Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin, Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. Kenneth S. Wherry, of Nebraska. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. George A. Wilson, of Iowa. Brien McMahon, of Connecticut. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. James W. Huffman, of Ohio. Commerce Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. John H. Overton, of Louisiana. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin, George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Edward V. Robertson, of Wyoming. Claude Pepper, of Florida. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. James M. Mead, of New York. C. Wayland Brooks, of Illinois. W. Lee O’Daniel, of Texas. Thomas C. Hart, of Connecticut. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. William F. Knowland, of California. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington, Charles C. Gossett, of Idaho. District of Columbia . Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. C. Douglass Buck, of Delaware. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. W. Lee O’Daniel, of Texas. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. Frank P. Briggs, of Missouri. James W. Huffman, of Ohio. Education and Labor James E. Murray, of Montana. RoBERT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR., of Wis-David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. consin, Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Claude Pepper, of Florida. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. Joseph H. Ball, of Minnesota. Lister Hill, of Alabama. H. Alexander Smith, of New. Jersey. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. Forrest C. Donnell, of Missouri. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. J. William Fulbright, of Arkansas. Enrolled Bills Clyde M. Reed, of Kansas. Commaltees of the Senate 181 Expenditures in the Executive Departments Lister Hill, of Alabama. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode | Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. Island. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Brien McMahon, of Connecticut. Finance Walter F. George, of Georgia. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Tom Connally, of Texas. Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. Brien McMahon, Tom Connally, of Walter F. George, Robert F. Wagner, Elbert D. Thomas, James E. Murray, Claude Pepper, of Theodore Francis Island. of Connecticut. Foreign Texas. of Georgia. of New York. of Utah. of Montana. Florida. Green, of Rhode Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Carter Glass, of Virginia. James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Lister Hill, of Alabama. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. RoBERT M. La FoLLETTE, JR., of Wis-consin, Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota. Albert W. Hawkes, of New Jersey. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. Relations Arthur Capper, of Kansas. RoBERT M. LA FoLLETTE, JR., of Wis- consin. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan, Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire, Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin. Chan Gurney, of South Dakota. Immigration Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. J. William Fulbright, of Arkansas. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. Indian Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho. E. P. Carville, of Nevada. Joseph H. Ball,of Minnesota. C. Douglass Buck, of Delaware. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. Forrest C. Donnell, of Missouri. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. William F. Knowland, of California. Affairs RoBERT M. LA ForLETTE, JR., of Wis- consin, Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota. William Langer, of North Dakota. Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota. E. H. Moore, of Oklahoma. Edward V. Robertson, of Wyoming. 182 Congressional Directory Interoceanic Canals Tom Stewart, of Tennessee. Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota. Claude Pepper, of Florida. Albert W. Hawkes, of New Jersey. Sheridan Downey, of California. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington. Interstate Commerce Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota. Tom Stewart, of Tennessee. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. ‘| Clyde M. Reed, of Kansas. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Albert W. Hawkes, of New Jersey. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. E. H. Moore, of Oklahoma. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Francis J. Myers, of Pennsylvania. Brien McMahon, of Connecticut. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. Frank P. Briggs, of Missouri. James W. Huffman, of Ohio. Irrigation and Reclamation John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. | Chan Gurney, of South Dakota. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. John H. Overton, of Louisiana. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. William Langer, of North Dakota. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. William F. Knowland, of California. Sheridan Downey, of California. William A. Stanfill, of Kentucky. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. W. Lee O’Daniel, of Texas. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. ~ Judiciary Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin, Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. William Langer, of North Dakota. Joseph C. O'Mahoney, of Wyoming. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. ~ Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. Chapman Revercomb, of West Virginia. Abe Murdock, of Utah. Kenneth S. Wherry, of Nebraska. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. E. H. Moore, of Oklahoma. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. William A. Stanfill, of Kentucky. Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. James W. Huffman, of Ohio. Library Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Albert W. Hawkes, of New Jersey. Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma. : Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. George L. Radcliffe, of Maryland. Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode Island. Committees of the Senate 183 Manufactures John H. Overton, of Louisiana. RoBErRT M. La FoLLETTE, JR., of Wis-Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. consin. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Joseph H. Ball, of Minnesota. James M. Mead, of New York. C. Douglass Buck, of Delaware. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Thomas C. Hart, of Connecticut. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. Military Affairs Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Lister Hill, of Alabama. Chan Gurney, of South Dakota. Sheridan Downey, of California. Chapman Revercomb, of West Virginia. Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. George A. Wilson, of Towa. James E. Murray, of Montana. H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Thomas C. Hart, of Connecticut. Robert F. Wagner, of New York. Tom Stewart, of Tennessee. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Frank P. Briggs, of Missouri. Mines and Mining Joseph F. Guffey, of Pennsylvania. Clyde M. Reed, of Kansas. Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Chapman Revercomb, of West Virginia. Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. Edward V. Robertson, of Wyoming. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. E. P. Carville, of Nevada. Charles C. Gossett, of Idaho. Naval Affairs David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. Raymond E. Willis, of Indiana. Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. C. Wayland Brooks, of Illinois. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Edward V. Robertson, of Wyoming. Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington. Francis J. Myers, of Pennsylvania. Patents Claude Pepper, of Florida. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. Albert W. Hawkes, of New Jersey. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Francis J. Myers, of Pennsylvania. Congressional Directory Pensions James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. E. H. Moore, of Oklahoma. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Forrest C. Donnell, of Missouri. Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah. William F. Knowland, of California. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Francis J. Myers, of Pennsylvania. Post Offices and Post Roads Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Clyde M. Reed, of Kansas. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. William Langer, of North Dakota. Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina. C. Douglass Buck, of Delaware. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. Forrest C. Donnell, of Missouri. “James M. Mead, of New York. William A. Stanfill, of Kentucky. W. Lee O’Daniel, of Texas. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho. E. P. Carville, of Nevada. Printing Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Raymond E. Willis, of Indiana. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Joseph H. Ball, of Minnesota. Claude Pepper, of Florida. Forrest C. Donnell, of Missouri. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Frank P. Briggs, of Missouri. Privileges -and Elections Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Island. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. Tom Connally, of Texas. E. H. Moore, of Oklahoma. Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Chapman Revercomb, of West Virginia. James M. Mead, of New York. George A. Wilson, of Iowa. Tom Stewart, of Tennessee. H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. James M. Tunnell, of Delaware. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. Abe Murdock, of Utah. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. Charles C. Gossett, of Idaho. Public Buildings and Grounds Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. Chapman Revercomb, of West Virginia. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Kenneth S. Wherry, of Nebraska. Tom Connally, of Texas. George A. Wilson, of Iowa. Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. + Island. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. J. William Fulbright, of Arkansas. Thomas C. Hart, of Connecticut. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. Committees of the Senate 185 Public Lands and Surveys Carl A. Hatch, of New Mexico. Chan Gurney, of South Dakota. Robert F. Wagner, of New York. Raymond E. Willis, of Indiana. Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Edward V. Robertson, of Wyoming. James E. Murray, of Montana. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Towa. Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. William A. Stanfill, of Kentucky. Abe Murdock, of Utah. -Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho. : Rules Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Wallace H. White, Jr., of Maine. Charles O. Andrews, of Florida. Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin. Scott W. Lucas, of Illinois. Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota. John H. Bankhead, 2d, of Alabama. Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Theodore G. Bilbo, of Mississippi. Territories and Insular Affairs Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland. Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan, Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Warren R. Austin, of Vermont. Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. Abe Murdock, of Utah. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire, Allen J. Ellender, of Louisiana. C. Wayland Brooks, of Illinois. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. Frank P. Briggs, of Missouri. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington. / SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE Special Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources (Room 117-B, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, Branch 1139) Chairman.— Wallace H. White, Jr., Senator from Maine. Josiah W. Bailey, Senator from North Carolina. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Pat McCarran, Senator from Nevada. Scott W. Lucas, Senator from Illinois. Homer Ferguson, Senator from Michigan. Guy Cordon, Senator from Oregon. Secretary.—Carl D. Shoemaker. Clerk.—May A. Timlin. Special Committee to Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of : Wool Chairman.—Joseph C. O’Mahoney, Senator from Wyoniing. Carl A. Hatch, Senator from New Mexico. James E. Murray, Senator from Montana. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Chan Gurney, Senator from South Dakota. Edward V. Robertson, Senator from Wyoming. 186 Congressional Directory Senate Special Silver Committee (Room 424, Senate Office Building) Chairman.— Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado. Pat McCarran, Senator from Nevada. Sheridan Downey, Senator from California. James E. Murray, Senator from Montana. Abe Murdock, Senator from Utah. Henrik Shipstead, Senator from Minnesota. Eugene D. Millikin, Senator from Colorado. William Langer, Senator from North Dakota. Secretary.—Albert A. Grorud. Special Committee to Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises (Room 13-B, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtienal 3120, Branches 1282, 1291, 1297, and 1501) Chairman.—James E. Murray, Senator from Montana. Allen J. Ellender, Senator from Louisiana. James M. Mead, Senator from New York. Tom Stewart, Senator from Tennessee. Claude Pepper, Senator from Florida. Brien McMahon, Senator from Connecticut. Glen H. Taylor, Senator from Idaho. Arthur Capper, Senator from Kansas. George A. Wilson, Senator from Iowa. Kenneth S. Wherry, Senator from Nebraska. C. Douglass Buck, Senator from Delaware. Homer E. Capehart, Senator from Indiana. Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program Chairman.—James M. Mead, Senator from New York. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Harley M. Kilgore, Senator from West Virginia. James M. Tunnell, Senator from Delaware. Hugh B. Mitchell, Senator from Washington. Frank P. Briggs, Senator from Missouri. Owen Brewster, Senator from Maine. Joseph H. Ball, Senator from Minnesota. Homer Ferguson, Senator from Michigan. William F. Knowland, Senator from California. Special Committee on Postwar Economic Policy and Planning Chairman.— Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Claude Pepper, Senator from Florida. Scott W. Lucas, Senator from Illinois. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Warren R. Austin, Senator from Vermont. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. Albert W. Hawkes, Senator from New Jersey. Commultees of the Senate 87 Special Committee to Investigate Petroleum Resources Chairman.—Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado. E. H. Moore, Senator from Oklahoma. Owen Brewster, Senator from Maine. John H. Overton, Senator from Louisiana. Chan Gurney, Senator from South Dakota. Scott W. Lucas, Senator from Illinois. Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. Special Committee on Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Skylights Charles O. Andrews, Senator from Florida. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. Special Committee on Atomic Energy Chairman.— Brien Mc¢Mahon, Senator from Connecticut. Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. Warren R. Austin, Senator from Vermont. Eugene D. Millikin, Senator from Colorado. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Senator from Iowa. Thomas C. Hart, Senator from Connecticut. MEETING DAYS OF SENATE COMMITTEES (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman) Clafmas 0 ove CI a De Wednesday. Commerce... 5. cri liag oan Po ___ Tuesday. Pinanee... 7. 0/00 enw id Caen Thursday. Foreign Relations... 0. co. Loo coor, Wednesday. JURCIArY sy ad ene cn be ek rE Monday. Miltary Affairs. o-oole a eo. Tuesday. Naval Affaire cc ea Loa. First and third Tuesday. ASSIGNMENTS BanrnmaAp. oi BARKLEY. OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry. Civil Service. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Immigration. Judiciary. Naval Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Rules. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Special: Atomic Energy. Commerce, chairman. Finance. Post Offices and Post Roads. Special: Conservation of Wildlife Resources, Appropriations. Education and Labor. Immigration. Manufactures. Printing. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. : Banking and Currency. Rules. Library, chairman. Banking and Currency. * Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Finance. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. District of Columbia, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Library. Pensions. Rules. 188 Senate Committee Assignments 189 Bruwsrem oo ofc od Commerce. Finance. Library. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Brpams oo ofa Appropriations. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Bataes. eno. ti District of Columbia. Interstate Gommerce. Military Affairs. Printing. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. BROORS. en heh Appropriations. Audit and Control the Senate. Commerce. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Contingent Affairs. Expenses of the £3775 A CR a Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Immigration. Manufactures. Post Offices and Post Roads. Special: Study and Survey Business Enterprises. Problems of Small BUSHPIBID. . aes Agriculture and Forestry. Finance. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Rules. Bomuep.- >». a. Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Finance. Irrigation and Reclamation. Territories and Insular Affairs. | Byrp. oC iii Rules, chairman. Civil Service. Finance. Naval Affairs. Special: Conservation of Special: Reconstruction lights. Special: Atomic Energy. Wildlife Resources. of Senate Roof and Sky- a | ! CAPRUART. nian Banking and Currency. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Patents. Privileges and Elections. Special: Study and Survey Business Enterprises. Problems of Small 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 14 190 Congressional Directory CAPPER... tae 2h CARVILLE. oan ns SCuAYRZL Lo CONNALLY bi aonmiinans CORDON... cairns DORNDLY-= ihr os ~ DowNEY.-_...... ET TASTLAND. oo... ve BILLENDER. naa . Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Claims. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Post Offices and Post Roads. Appropriations. Education and Labor. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. Foreign Relations, chairman, Agriculture and Forestry. Finance. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Special: Atomic Energy. Appropriations. Commerce, : Irrigation and Reclamation. Library. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Education and Labor. Immigration. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Printing. Civil Service, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Special: Silver. Claims, Immigration, Judiciary. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. Claims, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Education and Labor. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Business Enterprises. Senate Committee Assignments 191 FERGUSON aria itn Sree Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration. Judiciary. Privileges and Eleetions. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. -Special: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. FULBRIGHT. anni Banking and Currency. Education and Labor. Immigration. Public Buildings and Grounds. GEORGE rs dE in il Finance, chairman. Civil Service. Foreign Relations. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning, chairman, CeRBy.. ir ima Finance. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Rules. Territories and Insular Affairs. COARSE Appropriations, chairman. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. £5 La ae Commerce. Mines and Mining. J Privileges and Elections. BRABN. ii rit nmn ina Privileges and Elections, chairman. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Relations. : Library. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights. CUPERY ae oo inn Mines and Mining, chairman. Education and Labor. Finance. Foreign Relations. Manufactures. GURNEY. ovina Appropriations. Foreign Relations. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Hany... aceiarnts Civil Service. Commerce. Manufactures. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Atomic Energy. ET A TS GT TT TTS. 192 Congressional Directory Maven So en aN ne Public Lands and Surveys, chairman. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. RIAWRES riroie ae Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Interstate Commerce. Library. Patents. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning, HAYDEN Co indicus Printing, chairman. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contains Expenses of the Senate. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Affairs. : Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning, HICEENLOOPER. .... oni... Banking and Currency. Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Atomic Energy. {ST es nase ee CE Ee Expenditures in the Exeeutive Departments, chair- man. Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Houy oo =... a Agriculture and Forestry. District of Columbia. Immigration. Interstate Commerce. HurrMaN coo oboow Claims. District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. JornsoN of Colorado. _____ Finance. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Silver. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Special: Atomic Energy. JornsTOoN of South Carolina_ Claims. Distriet of Columbia. Education and Labor. Interstate Commerce. Privileges and Eleetions. KILGORE... >. -. .. ... Claims, Judiciary. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Privileges and Elections. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. Senate Committee Assignments 193 RNOWLAND..cnwuw amen i Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Immigration. Irrigation and Reclamation. Pensions. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. TA Borner. ooo. inns Education and Labor. Finance. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Manufactures. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. ANGERS. ri nian Civil Service. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Post Offices and Post Roads. Special: Silver. ir Wie SG Re EA Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Finance. Foreign Relations. Patents. Rules. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Special: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. McC ARBAN. ocean ios Judiciary, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Special: Silver. McoCIBEULANS aati Commerce. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. McUARTAND. vienna Banking and Currency Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Pensions. MceEuiTAl eae Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service. Library. Rules. MoOMATON. onunnenis Claims. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Special: Study and ead Problems of Small Business Enterprises. Special: Atomic Energy, chairman. MAoNUSON. Coos Ta Commerce. Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. \ 194 Congressional Directory MAveaNE... oan Appropriations. : “Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Immigration. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Printing. Rules. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. MAD: Seen or on Appropriations. Civil Service. Commerce. Manufactures. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program, chairman. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Busi- ness Enterprises. ; NMOL RIN. a Banking and Currency. Finance. Irrigation and Reclamation. Manufactures. Mines and Mining. Special: Silver. Special: Atomic Energy. Muroueprl Lr naeOi Banking and Currency. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Investigate the National Defense Pro- gram. MooBY. ih Indian Affairs. . Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Morse...... ... -..:. Claims, Education and Labor. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Muppook....0. on Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands and Surveys. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Silver. MBRBAY. iii Education and Labor, chairman. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. : Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. Special: Silver. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Busi- ness Enterprises, chairman. Senate Commiuttee Assignments 195 OvemmoN. 0 BuppnR 2 Raponrreme oo =; Revemrcoms... i... ROBERTSON Interstate Commerce. Naval Affairs. Patents. Pensions. Claims. Commerce. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Offices and Post Roads. Indian Affairs, chairman. Appropriations. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Patents. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool, chairman. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources, chairman Manufactures, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Patents, chairman, Commerce. Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Printing. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Busi-ness Enterprises. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Banking and Currency. Commerce. . Finance. Immigration. Library. Appropriations. Enrolled Bills. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Post Offices and Post Roads. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Privileges and Elections. : Public Buildings and Grounds. Commerce. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining Naval Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, and Marketing of Wool. 196 Congressional Directory RUSSELL. sin itiseis Immigration, ehairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Special: Atomic Energy. SATTONSTALL. lil District of Columbia. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Library. Naval Affairs. BHIPSTEAD aera Agriculture and Forestry. : Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Rules. Special: Silver. Surpass ad nia District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. |, Public Buildings and Grounds. SmAWPILLE ll Irrigation and Reclamation. / Judiciary. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. STEWART SL fu owcaiints mets Interoceanic Canals, chairman. : Agriculture and Forestry. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. : Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Busi- ness Enterprises. IY NE a Banking and Currency. Education and Labor. Finance. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Bpoelal: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights. PAYTOR Sri soon Banking and Curreney. Civil Service. Indian Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Small Busi- ness Enterprises. Senate THOMAS of Oklahoma.______ TUNNEL. aiiio ead TxpiNGs:. =. nm NV ANDENBERG 2 Commattee Assignments 197 Agriculture and Appropriations. Indian Affairs. Library. Special: Silver, Forestry, chairman. chairman. Military Affairs, chairman, Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Banking and Currency. Interstate Commerce. Naval Affairs. Territories and Insular Affairs. Pensions, chairman. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Education and Labor. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Privileges and Elections. Special: Investigate the National Defense Program. Territories and Insular Affairs, chairman. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. . District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds: Special: Atomic Energy. Commerce. Finance. Foreign Relations. Rules. Territories and Insular Affairs. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Special: Investigate Petroleum Resources. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky-lights. Special: Atomic Energy. Banking and Currency, chairman. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Naval Affairs, chairman. Education and Labor. Finance. Pensions. Printing. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Investigate Production, Transportation, Marketing of Wool. 198 Congressional Directory WuBELER. -oh WOERRY. WHITE... he WILEY ol ail Ee AWTS. neem WirsoN =. ha YOUNG. oo ices iodo Interstate Commerce, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Pensions. Territories and Insular Affairs. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses Senate. Claims. Judiciary. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Study and Survey Problems of Businéss Enterprises. of the Small Appropriations. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Patents. Rules. Special: Conservation of ; Wildlife Resources, chair- man. Claims. Commerce. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Rules. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Naval Affairs. Printing. Public Lands and Surveys. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Study and Survey Business Enterprises. Problems of Small Agriculture and Forestry. District of Columbia. Immigration. Manufactures. Post Offices and Post Roads. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE [Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics; Progressive in SMALL CAPS; American Labor in CAPS ] Accounts John J. Cochran, of Missouri. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Donald L. O'Toole, of New York. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. Tom Pickett, of Texas. Leo E. Allen, of Illinois. Frank L. Sundstrom, of New Jersey. Max Schwabe, of Missouri. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Agriculture John W. Flannagan, Jr., of Virginia. Harold D. Cooley, of North Carolina. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. Stephen Pace, of Georgia. W. R. Poage, of Texas. George M. Grant, of Alabama. Pat Cannon, of Florida. Victor Wickersham, of Oklahoma. Jerry Voorhis, of California. Walter K. Granger, of Utah. E. C. Gathings, of Arkansas. John L. McMillan, of South Carolina. Eugene Worley, of Texas. Thomas G. Abernethy, of Mississippi. Earle C. Clements, of Kentucky. Harold H. Earthman, of Tennessee. Jests T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Clifford R. Hope, of Kansas. J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania. August H. Andresen, of Minnesota. Anton J. Johnson, of Illinois. Reid F. Murray, of Wisconsin, Cliff Clevenger, of Ohio. George W. Gillie, of Indiana. Edwin Arthur Hall, of New York. Ross Rizley, of Oklahoma. William S. Hill, of Colorado. John Phillips, of California. Charles B. Hoeven, of Iowa. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Appropriations Clarence Cannon, of Missouri. Louis Ludlow, of Indiana. Malcolm C. Tarver, of Georgia. Jed Johnson, of Oklahoma. J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania. Emmet O’Neal, of Kentucky. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. George H. Mahon, of Texas. Harry R. Sheppard, of California. Butler B. Hare, of South Carolina. Albert Thomas, of Texas. Joe Hendricks, of Florida. Michael J. Kirwan, of Ohio. John M. Coffee, of Washington. W. F. Norrell, of Arkansas. Albert Gore, of Tennessee. Jamie L. Whitten, of Mississippi. Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois. James M. Curley, of Massachusetts. “Thomas D’Alesandro, Jr., of Maryland. George W. Andrews, of Alabama. John J. Rooney, of New York. Herman P. Kopplemann, of Connecti- cut. John Taber, of New York. Richard B. Wigglesworth, of Massachu-setts. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont. ‘| Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Albert J. Engel, of Michigan. Karl Stefan, of Nebraska. Francis Case, of South Dakota. Frank B. Keefe, of Wisconsin. Noble J. Johnson, of Indiana. Robert F. Jones, of Ohio. Ben F. Jensen, of Iowa. H. Carl Andersen, of Minnesota. Henry C. Dworshak, of Idaho. Walter C. Ploeser, of Missouri. Harve Tibbott, of Pennsylvania. Walt Horan, of Washington. Dean M. Gillespie of Colorado. Gordon Canfield, of New Jersey. 199 Congressional Directory Banking and Currency Brent Spence, of Kentucky. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. Paul Brown, of Georgia. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. Wright Patman, of Texas. Ralph A. Gamble, of New York. William B. Barry, of New York. Jessie Summer, of Illinois. A. S. Mike Monroney, of Oklahoma. Frederick C. Smith, of Ohio. John H. Folger, of North Carolina. John C. Kunkel, of Pennsylvania. H. Streett Baldwin, of Maryland. Henry O. Talle, of Towa. Brooks Hays, of Arkansas. Frank L. Sundstrom, of New Jersey. Daniel K. Hoch, of Pennsylvania. Clarence E. Kilburn, of New York. George E. Outland, of California. Howard H. Buffett, of Nebraska. William R. Thom, of Ohio. D. Emmert Brumbaugh, of Pennsylvania, Peter A. Quinn, of New York. Chase Going Woodhouse, of Connecticut. John J. Riley, of South Carolina. Albert Rains, of Alabama. MeruiN HuLr, of Wisconsin. Census A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. William H. Stevenson, of Wisconsin. Ed Gossett, of Texas. Charles M. LaF ollette, of Indiana. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Marion T. Bennett, of Missouri. Andrew L. Somers, of New York. Hadwen C. Fuller, of New York. Charles R. Savage, of Washington. Albert M. Cole, of Kansas. Walter B. Huber, of Ohio. James G. Fulton, of Pennsylvania. James J. Delaney, of New York. Frank A. Mathews, Jr., of New Jersey. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. William J. Gallagher, of Minnesota. Civil Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. Carter Manasco, of Alabama. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Leo F. Rayfiel, of New York. George P. Miller, of California. J. M. Combs, of Texas. William T. Granahan, of Pennsylvania. George H. Fallon, of Maryland. Walter B. Huber, of Ohio. Service Edward H. Rees, of Kansas. Charles M. LaFollette, of Indiana. Christian A. Herter, of Massachusetts. Charles W. Vursell, of Illinois. James G. Fulton, of Pennsylvania. Augustus W. Bennet, of New York. John W. Byrnes, of Wisconsin. Clifford P. Case, of New Jersey. Committees of the House 201 Claims Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. J. Parnell Thomas, of New Jersey. Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. William A. Pittenger, of Minnesota. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. John Jennings, Jr., of Tennessee. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. J. Edgar Chenoweth, of Colorado. Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Homer A. Ramey, of Qhio. J. M. Combs, of Texas. Errett P. Scrivner, of Kansas. William T. Granahan, of Pennsylvania. John W. Byrnes, of Wisconsin. E. H. Hedrick, of West Virginia. Albert M. Cole, of Kansas. William A. Barrett, of Pennsylvania. Clifford P. Case, of New Jersey. Clyde Doyle, of Galifornia. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. Coinage, Weights, and Measures Compton I. White, of Idaho. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Andrew L. Somers, of New York. August H. Andresen, of Minnesota. John J. Cochran, of Missouri. Joseph Clark Baldwin, of New York. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. Rolla C. McM:zillen, of Illinois. John Lesinski, of Michigan. James G. Fulton, of Pennsylvania. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Robert K. Henry, of Wisconsin. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Frank A. Mathews, Jr., of New Jersey. Clair Engle, of California. Cleveland M. Bailey, of West Virginia. George F. Rogers, of New York. George H. Fallon, of Maryland. William A. Barrett, of Pennsylvania. James P. Geelan, of Connecticut. Disposition of Executive Papers Alfred J. Elliott, of California. | Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. District of Columbia Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. George J. Bates, of Massachusetts. John L. McMillan, of South Carolina. Joseph Clark Baldwin, of New York. Oren Harris, of Arkansas. Jay LeFevre, of New York. F. Edward Hébert, of Louisiana. Sid Simpson, of Illinois. John W. Murphy, of Pennsylvania. J. Glenn Beall, of Maryland. Michael A. Feighan, of Ohio. Joseph P. O'Hara, of Minnesota. Thomas G. Abernethy, of Mississippi. P. W. Griffiths, of Ohio. Howard W. Smith, of Virginia. Gordon L. McDonough, of California. William W. Link, of Illinois. Ned R. Healy, of California. J. M. Combs, of Texas. 202: Congressional Directory Education Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. | George A. Dondero, of Michigan. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. J. Edgar Chenoweth, of Colorado. Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. Edward 0. McCowen, of Ohio. John Lesinski, of Michigan. Walter H. Judd, of Minnesota. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. Maz Schwabe, of Missouri. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. -| Hubert S. Ellis, of West Virginia. Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Ralph W. Gwinn, of New York. ) C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. -| Clifford P. Case, of New Jersey. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. | Ralph A. Gamble, of New York. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Karl M. LeCompte, of Iowa. Carter Manasco, of Alabama. Harris Ellsworth, of Oregon. John S. Gibson, of Georgia. Charles W. Vursell, of Illinois. John Lesingki, of Michigan. Leon H. Gavin, of Pennsylvania. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. J. M. Combs, of Texas. Ellis E. Patterson, of California. Elections No. 1 James Domengeaux, of Louisiana. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. John Jennings, Jr., of Tennessee. . Charles A. Buckley, of New York. , Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. James J. Delaney, of New York. Elections No. 2 Ed Gossett, of Texas. Gerald W. Landis, of Indiana. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. Rolla C. McMillen, of Illinois. A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Augustus W. Bennet, of New York. Leo F. Rayfiel, of New York. Sherman Adams, of New Hampshire. Elections No. 3 O. C. Fisher, of Texas. Charles A. Plumley, of Vermont. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. Ralph A. Gamble, of New York. Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. Angier L. Goodwin, of Massachusetts. William T. Granahan, of Pennsylvania. | Homer A. Ramey, of Ohio. \ Commattees of the House Enrolled Bills George F. Rogers, of New York. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Samuel K. McConnell, Jr., of Pennsyl- John J. Cochran, of Missouri. vania,. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. Edgar A. Sharp, of New York. Expenditures in the Executive Departments Carter Manasco, of Alabama. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. John J. Cochran, of Missouri. George H. Bender, of Ohio. William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Walter H. Judd, of Minnesota. Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. Charles M. LaFollette, of Indiana. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Donald L. O’Toole, of New York. Henry J. Latham, of New York. John S. Gibson, of Georgia. Robert K. Henry, of Wisconsin. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. . Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Ed ‘Gossett, of Texas. Alexander J. Resa, of Illinois. Flood William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Carter Manasco, of Alabama. 0. C. Fisher, of Texas. Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. A. 8. J. Carnahan, of Missouri. Clifford Davis, of Tennessee. Control Charles R. Clason, of Massachusetts. Earl Wilson, of Indiana. Max Schwabe, of Missouri. P. W. Griffiths, of Ohio. J. Glenn Beall, of Maryland. Edward O. McCowen, of Ghio. Charles R. Robertson, of North Dakota. T. Millet Hand, of New Jersey. Sherman Adams, of New Hampshire. Foreign Sol Bloom, of New York. Luther A. Johnson, of Texas. John Kee, of West Virginia. James P. Richards, of South Carolina. Joseph L. Pfeifer, of New York. Pete Jarman, of Alabama. W. O. Burgin, of North Carolina. Wirt Courtney, of Tennessee. Thomas S. Gordon, of Illinois. Emily Taft Douglas, of Illinois. James W. Trimble, of Arkansas. Helen Gahagan Douglas, of California. Joseph F. Ryter, of Connecticut. Daniel J. Flood, of Pennsylvania. Mike Mansfield, of Montana. Affairs Charles A. Eaton, of New Jersey. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. Robert B. Chiperfield, of Illinois. John M. Vorys, of Qhio. Karl E. Mundt, of South Dakota. Bartel J. Jonkman, of Michigan. Frances P. Bolton, of Ohio. James W. Wadsworth, of New York. Charles L. Gerlach, of Pennsylvania. Lawrence H. Smith, of Wisconsin. Chester E. Merrow, of New Hampshire. Congressional Directory Immigration and Naturalization John Lesinski, of Michigan. | Noah M. Mason, of Illinois. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. Edward H. Rees, of Kansas. ~ A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Hubert S. Ellis, of West Virginia. Ed Gossett, of Texas. Bernard W. (Pat) Kearney, of New O. C. Fisher, of Texas. =. York. Ralph H. Daughton, of Virginia. Lowell Stockman, of Oregon. George P. Miller, of California. Edward O. McCowen, of Ohio. .E. H. Hedrick, of West Virginia. Wat Arnold, of Missouri. William A. Barrett, of Pennsylvania. James I. Dolliver, of Towa. Edgar A. Sharp, of New York. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Indian Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Compton I. White, of Idaho. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. Ellis E. Patterson, of California. ‘William J. Green, Jr., of Pennsylvania. Cleveland M. Bailey, of West Virginia. Adam C. Powell, Jr., of New York. William J. Gallagher, of Minnesota. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Insular C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Dan R. McGehee, of Mississippi. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Ed Gossett, of Texas. James Domengeaux, of Louisiana. John S. Gibson, of Georgia. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Donald L. O’Toole, of New: York. Ralph H. Daughton, of Virginia. George P. Miller, of California. Herbert J. McGlinchey, of Pennsylvania. Jests T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Affairs Karl E. Mundt, of South Dakota. Robert F. Rockwell, of Colorado. Hal Holmes, of Washington. Wat Arnold, of Missouri. Charles R. Robertson, of North Dakota. Edgar A. Sharp, of New York. George B. Schwabe, of Oklahoma. Wesley A. D’ Ewart, of Montana. Affairs Richard J. Welch, of California. W. Sterling Cole, of New York. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. Karl M. LeCompte, of Iowa. Chester H. Gross, of Pennsylvania. Walter H. Judd, of Minnesota. Jay LeFevre, of New York. Leon H. Gavin, of Pennsylvania. P. W. Griffiths, of Ohio. A. L. Miller, of Nebraska. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Commuttees of the House 205 Interstate and Foreign Commerce Clarence F. Lea, of California. Charles A. Wolverton, of New Jersey. Robert Crosser, of Ohio. : | Pehr GQ. Holmes, of Massachusetts. Alfred L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. Virgil Chapman, of Kentucky. Charles -A. Halleck, of Indiana. Lyle H. Boren, of Oklahoma. Carl Hinshaw, of California. Lindley Beckworth, of Texas. Clarence J. Brown, of Ohio. J. Percy Priest, of Tennessee. Evan Howell, of Tllinois. Oren Harris, of Arkansas. Leonard W. Hall, of New York. ~ George G. Sadowski, of Michigan. Thomas D. Winter, of Kansas. Richard F. Harless, of Arizona. Joseph P. O'Hara, "of Minnesota. John W. Murphy, of Pennsylvania. Wilson D. Gillette, of Pennsylvania. Edward A. Kelly, of Illinois. Luther Patrick, of Alabama. John B. Sullivan, of Missouri. Dwight L. Rogers, of Florida. Benjamin J. Rabin, of New York. VITO MARCANTONIO, of New York. Invalid John Lesinski, of Michigan. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. Charles R. Savage, of Washington. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. Adam €. Powell, Jr., of New York. Clyde Doyle, of ‘California. FE. H. Hedrick, of West Virginia. Pensions J. Harry McGregor, of Ohio. | Charles M. LaFollette, of Indiana. Robert Hale, of Maine. Leon H. Gavin, of Pennsylvania. Robert J. Corbett, of Pennsylvania. Edward J. Elsaesser, of New York. Frank A. M hows, J r., of New Jersey. Irrigation and John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Compton I. White, of Idaho. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. James Domengeaux, of Louisiana. Andrew L. Somers, of New York. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Alfred J. Elliott, of "California. Charles R. Savage, of Washington. George P. Miller, of California. —_-— 78349°—T79—2—1st ed. 15 Reclamation Dewey Short, of Missouri. Robert F. Rockwell, of Colorado. William Lemke, of North Dakota. Chester H. Gross, of Pennsylvania. A. L. Miller, of Nebraska. Lowell Stockman, of Oregon. John Phillips, of California. Frank A. Barrett, of Wyoming. Hal Holmes, of Washington. Wesley A. D’ Ewart, of Montana. Congressional Directory Judiciary Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. Emanuel Celler, of New York. Earl C. Michener, of Michigan. Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. Francis EE. Walter, of Pennsylvania. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Sam Hobbs, of Alabama. John W. Gwynne, of Iowa. John H. Tolan, of California. Louis E. Graham, of Pennsylvania. William T. Byrne, of New York. Raymond S. Springer, of Indiana. Estes Kefauver, of Tennessee. Joseph E. Talbot, of Connecticut. Joseph R. Bryson, of South Carolina. Frank Fellows, of Maine. Fadjo Cravens, of Arkansas. Earl R. Lewzs, of Ohio. Sam M. Russell, of Texas. John Jennings, Jr., of Tennessee. Thomas J. Lane, of Massachusetts. Angier L. Goodwin, of Massachusetts. Martin Gorski, of Illinois. Michael A. Feighan, of Ohio. Frank L. Chelf, of Kentucky. Labor Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Richard J. Welch, of California. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. John Lesinski, of Michigan. Gerald W. Landis, of Indiana. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Joseph Clark Baldwin, of New York. O. C. Fisher, of Texas. Samuel K. McConnell, Jr., of Penn-James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. sylvania. Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Sherman Adams, of New Hampshire. Ellis E. Patterson, of California. Ellsworth B. Buck, of New York. James P. Geelan, of Connecticut. William J. Green, Jr., of Pennsylvania. Adam C. Powell, Jr., of New York. Jests T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Library Donald L. O’Toole, of New York. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, of Illinois. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. John W. Heselton, of Massachusetts. Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. Memorials Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey. Merchant Marine and Fisheries Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. Richard J. Welch, of California. Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. Fred Bradley, of Michigan. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Alvin F. Weichel, of Ohio. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Christian A. Herter, of Massachusetts. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Ellsworth B. Buck, of New York. James Domengeaux, of Louisiana. Robert Hale, of Maine. Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. Samuel K. McConnell, Jr., of Pennsyl-Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. vania. Ralph H. Daughton, of Virginia. T. Millet Hand, of New Jersey. Ellis E. Patterson, of California. | Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Committees of the House 207 Military Andrew J. May, of Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, of Texas. Overton Brooks, of Louisiana. John J. Sparkman, of Alabama. Paul J. Kilday, of Texas. Carl T. Durham, of North Carolina. John Edward Sheridan, of Pennsyl- vania. Robert L. F. Sikes, of Florida. Philip J. Philbin, of Massachusetts. Paul Stewart, of Oklahoma. Arthur Winstead, of Mississippi. Chet Holifield, of California. James A. Roe, of New York. Melvin Price, of Illinois. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Jesus T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Affairs Walter G. Andrews, of New York. Dewey Short, of Missouri. Leslie C. Arends, of Illinois. Charles R. Clason, of Massachusetts. J. Parnell Thomas, of New Jersey. Paul W. Shafer, of Michigan. Thomas E. Martin; of Iowa. Charles H. Elston, of Ohio. Forest A. Harness, of Indiana. Ivor D. Fenton, of Pennsylvania. J. Leroy Johnson, of California. Clare Booth Luce, of Connecticut. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Mines and Mining Andrew L. Somers, of New York. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Fred Bradley, of Michigan. John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Gerald W. Landis, of Indiana. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. Robert F. Rockwell, of Colorado. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. Harris Ellsworth, of Oregon. Compton I. White, of Idaho. Walter E. Brehm, of Ohio. Clair Engle, of California. Robert J. Corbett, of Pennsylvania. E. H. Hedrick, of West Virginia. George B. Schwabe, of Oklahoma. A. S. J. Carnahan, of Missouri. Wesley A. D)’ Ewart, of Montana. William J. Gallagher, of Minnesota. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Naval Carl Vinson, of Georgia. Patrick H. Drewry, of Virginia. Lyndon B. Johnson, of Texas. Michael J. Bradley, of Pennsylvania. Ed. V. Izae, of California. Langdale G. Sasscer, of Maryland. James J. Heffernan, of New York. L. Mendell Rivers, of South Carolina. F. Edward Hébert, of Louisiana. John E. Fogarty, of Rhode Island. Emory H. Price, of Florida. William A. Rowan, of Illinois. Ray J. Madden, of Indiana. Franck R. Havenner, of California. Hugh De Lacy, of Washington. Andrew J. Biemiller, of Wisconsin. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Jestis T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Affairs W. Sterling Cole; of New York. George J. Bales, of Massachusetts. William E. Hess, of Ohio. Jack Z. Anderson, of California. James Wolfenden, of Pennsylvania. William W. Blackney, of Michigan. Robert A. Grant, of Indiana. Margaret Chase Smith, of Maine. Harry L. Towe, of New Jersey. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, of Illinois. - i §108 1 Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. 208 Congressional Directory Patents Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. Leslie C. Arends, of Tllinois. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. Charles A. Wolverton, of New Jersey. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Robert K. Henry, of Wisconsin. John 8. Gibson, of Georgia. George B. Schwabe, of Oklahoma. Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. Howard E. Campbell, of Pennsylvania, Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Augustus W. Bennet, ‘of New York. Herbert J. McGlinchey, of Pennsylvania. Roy Clippinger, of Illinois. Leo F. Rayfiel, of New York. George H. Fallon, of Maryland. Clyde Doyle, of California. Cleveland M. Bailey, of West Virginia. Pensions Charles A. Buckley, of New York. William H. Stevenson, of Wisconsin. John 8. Gibson, of Georgia. Hubert S. Ellis, of West Virginia, C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Hal Holmes, of Washington. A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Alvin E. O’Konski, of Wisconsin, Carter Manasco, of Alabama. Rolla C. McMillen, of Illinois. Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. William Lemke, of North Dakota. Tom Pickett, of Texas. Alvin F. Weichel, of Ohio. George F. Rogers, of New York. Howard E. Campbell, of Pennsylvania, Cleveland M. Bailey, of West Virginia. Henry J. Latham, of New York. George P. Miller, of California. William W. Link, of Illinois. William J. Gallagher, of Minnesota. Post Office Thomas &. Burch, of Virginia. George D. O’ Brien, of Michigan. Charles E. McKenzie, of Louisiana. Tom Murray, of Tennessee. James H. Torrens, of New York. Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. Philip A. Traynor, of Delaware. Edward J. Gardner, of Ohio. Frank T. Starkey, of Minnesota. Ned R. Healy, of California. John E. Lyle, of Texas. Dudley G. Roe, of Maryland. J. Vaughan Gary, of Virginia. and Post Roads Fred A. Hartley, Jr., of New Jersey. Noah M. Mason, of Illinois. John C. Butler, of New York. William C. Cole, of Missouri. Harold C. Hagen, of Minnesota. William H. Stevenson, of Wisconsin, Walter E. Brehm, of Ohio. Robert J. Corbett, of Pennsylvania. John W. Heselton, of Massachusetts. Edward J. Elsaesser, of New York, James I. Dolliver, of Iowa. Printing vr Pete Jarman, of Alabama. Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania. Alfred L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. Committees of the House 209 Public Buildings Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. C. Jasper Bell, of Missouri. Charles A. Buckley, of New York. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. John 8. Gibson, of Georgia. Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Carter Manasco, of Alabama. James H. Morrison, of Lousiana. Herbert J. McGlinchey, of Pennsyl- vania. Walter B. Huber, of Ohio. Charles R. Savage, of Washington. and Grounds Pehr G. Holmes, of Massachusetts. J. Harry McGregor, of Ohio. Robert L. Rodgers, of Pennsylvania. Earl Wilson, of Indiana. Wat Arnold, of Missouri. Hubert S. Ellis, of West Virginia." Rolla C. McMillen, of Illinois. Charles R. Robertson, of North Dakota. Ralph W. Gwinn, of New York. Public J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Compton I. White, of Idaho. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. Clair Engle, of California. Charles R. Savage, of Washington. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. William A. Barrett, of Pennsylvania. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Lands Karl M. LeCompte, of Iowa. J. Edgar Chenoweth, of Colorado. William Lemke, of North Dakota. Frank A. Barrett, of Wyoming. Hal Holmes, of Washington. Harris Ellsworth, of Oregon. Robert F. Rockwell, of Colorado. Lowell Stockman, of Oregon. Wesley A. D’ Ewart, of Montana. Revision of the Laws Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. Ed Gossett, of Texas. John C. Kunkel, of Pennsylvania. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. William Lemke, of North Dakota. William T. Granahan, of Pennsylvania. Homer A. Ramey, of Ohio. J. M. Combs, of Texas. Howard E. Campbell, of Pennsylvania. Rivers and Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. C. Jasper Bell, ot Missouri. Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. O. C. Fisher, of Texas. Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Clyde Doyle, of California. James P. Geelan, of Connecticut. Herbert J. McGlinchey, of Pennsyl- vania. William W. Link, of Illinois. James J. Delaney, of New York. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Harbors George A. Dondero, of Michigan. William A. Pittenger, of Minnesota. Robert L. Rodgers, of Pennsylvania. Homer D. Angell, of Oregon. George H. Bender, of Ohio. Sid Simpson, of Illinois. James C. Auchincloss, of New Jersey. John C. Butler, of New York. William C. Cole, of Missouri. Alvin E. O’ Konskz, of Wisconsin. Gordon L. McDonough, of California. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Congressional Directory Roads J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. ~ William M. Whittington, of Mississippi. Paul Cunningham, of Towa. Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia. J. Harry McGregor, of Ohio. Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. J. Glenn Beall, of Maryland. Alfred J. Elliott, of California. Leon H. Gavin, of Pennsylvania, Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Dean P. Taylor, of New York. 0. C. Fisher, of Texas. Hadwen C. Fuller, of New York. Clair Engle, ‘of California. Albert M. Cole, of Kansas. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. Roy Clippinger, of Illinois. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. William W. Link, of Illinois. George H. Fallon, of Maryland. E. L. Barrett, of Alaska. Rules Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. Leo E. Allen, of Illinois. E. E. Cox, of Georgia. Earl C. Michener, of Michigan. Howard W. Smith, of Virginia. Charles A. Halleck, of Indiana. J. Bayard Clark, of North Carolina. Clarence J. Brown, of Ohio. John J. Delaney, of New Yor William M. Colmer, of Hi toni. Joe B. Bates, of Kentucky. Roger C. Slaughter, of Missouri. Territories Hugh Peterson, of Georgia. . Homer D. Angell, of Oregon. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. Paul Cunningham, of Iowa. Ed Gossett, of Texas. Dean P. Taylor, of New York. Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. A. L. Miller, of Nebraska. John S. Gibson, of Georgia. Marion T. Bennett, of Missouri. Henry D. Larcade, Jr.; of Louisiana. Harold C. Hagen, of Minnesota. James J. Delaney, ‘of New York. Charles R. Robertson, of North Dakota. George P. Miller, of California. Gordon L. McDonough, of California. James P. Geelan, of Connecticut. Henry J. Latham, of New York. Alexander J. Resa, of Illinois. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. A S.J. Carnahan, of Missouri. BE. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Jests T. Pifiero, of Puerto Rico. Un-American Activities John S. Wood, of Georgia. J. Parnell Thomas, of New Jersey. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Karl E. Mundt, of South Dakota. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Gerald W. Landis, of Indiana. J. W. Robinson, of Utah. John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. War Claims Clair Engle, of California. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Earl Wilson, of Indiana. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Chester H. Gross, of Pennsylvania. Donald L. O’ Toole, of New York. Wat Arnold, of Missouri. Ralph H. Daughton, of Virginia. Ralph E. Church, of Illinois. Frank E. Hook, of Michigan. Walter E. Brehm, of Ohio. William J. Green, Jr, of Pennsylvania. John W. Byrnes, of Wisconsin. Ellis E. Patterson, of California. Roy Clippinger, of Illinois. Alexander J. Resa, of Illinois. Frank A. Mathews, Jr., of New Jersey. Berkeley L. Bunker, of Nevada. Committees of the House 211 Ways and Means ‘ Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. Harold Knutson, of Minnesota. Jere Cooper, of Tennessee. Daniel A. Reed, of New York. John D. Dingell, of Michigan. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia. Thomas A. Jenkins, of Ohio. Milton H. West, of Texas. Bertrand W. Gearhart, of California. Wilbur D. Mills, of Arkansas. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. Noble J. Gregory, of Kentucky. Richard M. Simpson, of Pennsylvania. A. Sidney Camp, of Georgia. Robert W. Kean, of New Jersey. Walter A. Lynch, of New York. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts, Aime J. Forand, of Rhode Island. Carl T. Curtss, of Nebraska. : Thad F. ‘Wasielewski, of Wisconsin. Paul H. Maloney, of "Louisiana. Herman P. Eberharter, of Pennsylvania. Cecil R. ine of California. World War Veterans’ Legislation John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida. Paul Cunningham, of Iowa. A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Bernard W. (Pat) Kearney, of New John S. Gibson, of Georgia. York. James Domengeaux, of Louisiana. Marion T. Bennett, of Missouri. Clair Engle, of California. Errett P. Scrivner, of Kansas. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. James C. Auchincloss, of New Jersey. A. 8S. J. Carnahan, of Missouri. Charles W. Vursell, of Illinois. . Tom Pickett, of Texas. Homer A. Ramey, of Ohio. William J. Green, Jr., of Pennsylvania. Leo F. Rayfiel, of New York. Walter B. Huber, of Ohio. SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE i : i Select Committee on Conservation of Wildlife Resources : Chairman.—A. Willis Robertson, Representative from Virginia. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia. James P. Richards, Representative from South Carolina. John D. Dingell, Representative from Michigan. John J. Cochran, Representative from Missouri. Herbert C. Bonner, Representative from North Carolina. J. Hardin Peterson, Representative from Florida. Virgil Chapman, Representative from Kentucky. Henry M. Jackson, Representative from Washington. John W. Flannagan, Jr., Representative from Virginia. August H. Andresen, Representative from Minnesota. 8 Homer D. Angell, Representative from Oregon. : C. W. (Runt) Bishop, Representative from Illinois. Walter E. Brehm, Representative from Ohio. 2 Bertrand W. Gearhart, Representative from California. : 1 Robert K. Henry, Representative from Wisconsin. Clerk.—Elizabeth Bond. 212 Congressional Directory Select Committee To Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business (Room 227, House Office Building. Phones, N Ational 3120, branches 1434 and 1435) Chairman.— Wright Patman, Representative from Texas. W. Robinson, Representative from Utah. Eugene J. Keogh, Representative from New York. Henry M. Jackson, Representative from Washington. Estes Kefauver, Representative from Tennessee. Leonard W. Hall, Representative from New York. Walter C. Ploeser, Representative from Missouri. William H. Stevenson, Representative from Wisconsin. Evan Howell, Representative from Illinois. Assistant to the Chatrman.—George J. Schulte. Chief Investigator—Dan W. Eastwood. Investigators.— William J. Deegan, Jr., Carlo G. Cambra, William F. Bennett. Clerk.—Clarence Everett. Select Committee To Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority Chairman.—Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. John J. Delaney, Representative from New York. . Hugh Peterson, Representative from Georgia. Albert Gore, Representative from Tennessee. Fred A. Hartley, Jr., Representative from New Jersey. John Jennings, Jr., Representative from Tennessee. Clare E. Hoffman, Representative from Michigan. Special Committee on Postwar Economic Policy and Planning Chairman.— William M. Colmer, Representative from Mississippi. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. Francis E. Walter, Representative from Pennsylvania. Orville Zimmerman, Representative from Missouri. Jerry Voorhis, Representative from California. John R. Murdock, Representative from Arizona. Walter A. Lynch, Representative from New York. Thomas J. O’Brien, Representative from Illinois. John E. Fogarty, Representative from Rhode Island. Eugene Worley, Representative from Texas. Charles L. Gifford, Representative from Massachusetts. B. Carroll Reece, Representative from Tennessee. Richard J. Welch, Representative from California. Charles A. Wolverton, Representative from New Jersey. Clifford R. Hope, Representative from Kansas. Jesse P. Wolcott, Representative fromMichigan. Jay LeFevre, Representative from New York. Sid Simpson, Representative from Illinois. Staff Director.—Marion B. Folsom. Committees of the House 213 Select Committee to Investigate Supplies and Shortages of Food, Particularly eat Chairman.—Stephen Pace, Representative from Georgia. Earle C. Clements, Representative from Kentucky. Martin Gorski, Representative from Illinois. William G. Stigler, Representative from Oklahoma. August H. Andresen, Representative from Minnesota. Christian A. Herter, Representative from Massachusetts. : Hal Holmes, Representative from Washington. Special Committee on Reconstruction of House Roof and Skylights Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. Sol Bloom, Representative from New York. C. Jasper Bell, Representative from Missouri. Pehr G. Holmes, Representative from Massachusetts. J. Harry McGregor, Representative from Ohio. MEETING DAYS OF HOUSE COMMITTEES (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman) Claims. 4h dl Wednesday. omittedey District.of Columbig.o ib. i. vu ieorsnilddons Rs Monday. Faorcion AFalrs. 0. cians Piotr anl Sanlu oe Tuesday. Immigration and Naturalization. i... a 0... Wednesday. Irrigation and Reclamation... oa... is Thursday. rdudiclary i. ran de ae So Ney SE Tuesday and Thursday. Merchant Marine and Fisheries_ _ ___________________-Thursday. Millinry Affairs. ©... cos oe Situ viach, Tuesday. Naval ABalre. olat de wdiie th pa smn Tuesday. Un-American Activities... oo. _ so. and fourth Wednes- Second day. f | B Lik AHi {i ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COM-MISSIONERS, AND DELEGATES TO COMMITTEES ABERNETHY... 5 aaa Agriculture. District of Columbia. Elections No. 2. Flood Control. Labor. Arienof Hinois 2... .._ Accounts. Rules. A1LLEN of Louisiana... ______ Census, chairman. Elections No. 2. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. ANDERSEN of Minnesota____ Appropriations. AxpErsoN of California_ ___ Naval Affairs. ANDRESEN of Minnesota____ Agriculture. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Select: Investigate Supplies and Shortages of Food, Particularly Meat. ANDREWS of Alabama______ Appropriations. ANDREWS of New York____._ Military Affairs. ANGELL LTE ar la Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. ARENDS... aire Military Affairs. Patents. ARNOLD. oo iia Immigration and Naturalization. Indian Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. AUCHINGLOSE. ween Rivers and Harbors. World War Veterans’ Legislation. BAILEY iene Weights, and Measures. © Coinage, Indian Affairs. Patents. Pensions. Banking and Currency. 214 -House Committee Assignments 2B | Barpwin of New York_._.__ Coinage, Weights, and District of Columbia. Labor. Measures. Bagpowee : oo Education, chairman. Census. Civil Service. Labor. Library. : Rivers and Harbors. N ; baal ze: il BARRETT of Pennsylvania... : Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Lands. BARRETT of Wyoming______ Irrigation and Public Lands. Reclamation. ; i Banyo... oa Banking and Currency. BARTIERR. [0 nade in Indian Affairs. Merchant Marine and Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Territories. Fisheries. Hl fl Bates of Kentucky_______ _ Rules. Bates of Massachusetts____ District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. BemaLn. io Fen Sohne od District of Columbia. Flood Control. Roads. Brexwortn ea Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BELL... Yt rm EY Insular Affairs, chairman. Education. Elections No. 1. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. Special: Reconstruction of House lights. Roof : and Sky- i! BENDER... aia Expenditures in the Rivers and Harbors. Executive Departments. BENNET of New York. ..___._ Civil Service. Elections No. Patents. 2. BENNETT of Missouri___.___ Census. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Biever... ... env Naval Affairs. Biswer— oo Library. SN Naval Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. | Bracenme... lL. Naval Affairs. 216 Congressional Directory BraNp. iol lsaiduitl Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Library. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. BiGoM. Foreign Affairs, chairman. Specie): Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- - lights. . BOWIoN. nea Foreign Affairs. Bows o_o a Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress, chairman. Accounts. ; Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Roads. ; Un-American Activities. War Claims. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. BosrEN. ... er Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BoYEIN. ian Patents, chairman. Accounts. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. ~ Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. BrapLEY of Michigan______ Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. BrapLEY of Pennsylvania... Naval Affairs. Brena ou Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. War Claims. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. BROOKS vie os niin anni Military Affairs. Brown of Georgia_________ Banking and Currency. Browx of Ohlo...ooo a=. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rules. Beumpavem. oi... Banking and Currency. BRYSON avai Judiciary. BCE mn Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BUCKERY oi ne mae Pensions, chairman. Education. Elections No. 1. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. BUYPETY.. nema Banking and Currency. BuswINgRLE: Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Printing. BUNKER iro aioobi Accounts. Education. Indian Affairs. - Mines and Mining. Public Lands. War Claims. House Committee Assignments 217 BYRNE of New York. _____ ByrnEs of Wisconsin. _ ____ CAMPBELL. oi CANTIBLD or ils CANNON of Plorida: -.-= CANNON of Missouri. -._.__ CARITSON. a cr Co CARNAHAN. Cask of New Jersey.-_-_--_ Cask of South Dakota. ____ CRLLER,. . oie tv ais CoipERviBID. Cauncue. cv dea. * CLEVENGER CLIPPINGER Post Office and Post Roads, chairman, Foreign Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Rivers and Harbors. Judiciary. Civil Service. Claims. War Claims. Ways and Means. Patents. Pensions. Revision of the Laws. Appropriations. Agriculture Appropriations, chairman. Ways and Means. Flood Control. Mines and Mining. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Civil Service. Claims. Education. Appropriations. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Judiciary. Claims. Education. Public Lands. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Rules. Flood Control. Military Affairs. Agriculture. Select: Investigate Surnlios and Shortages of Food, Particularly Meat. Agriculture, Patents. Roads. War Claims. 218 Congressional Directory COCHRAN... Losin wari Copper... ..\............ Courol Kanzag. © =... Cone of Missouri_._._______ Coir of New York. ______ COEMER Co an ; Cows. 0 1 nln COOLEY... ncoomacnias-COOPER... uaa GoRERTY. o-oo COURTNEY... nina Cox. an Cravens mioloi lou CRAWPORD.. wav sian CrosspR. =... cucu CUNNINGHAM. oo ceme eo ; * CurLEY ml ms aT Convis....c-—-. Cia D’ ALESANDRO. Choma DaveHTON of Virginia. ____ DAVIS. atae DawsOoN___.—oooeoo-—-___.__ Pe ACY. vi Accounts, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Appropriations. Census. Claims. Roads. Post Office and Post Roads. Rivers and Harbors. Insular Affairs. Naval Affairs. Rules. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning, chairman. Civil Service. Claims. : District of Columbia. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Revision of the Laws. Agriculture. Ways and Means. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning: Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. Foreign Affairs. Rules. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Insular Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Roads. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Flood Control. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation, Naval Affairs. House DELANEY, JAMES J__ oo... DELANEY, JorN J_________ PDBwawe_ cael tn BIE a AL SE DIRKSEN. ____ Esa a Doriwwen. on aeenh DoOMENGBAUX. vc uvv nnn DONDERO in : DovuarTOoNOf North Carolina. DovugLas of California_____ Deouaras of linois. DOYWE.. ose : SPRBWRY.. oro Dormaw.-. DWORSHAR . oo... . FanpmamaN_ oo... = BATON... as ah a EsmnuAnten. .._.____00 Fuvremr. Commutiee Assignments 219 Census. Elections No. 1. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Rules. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Which Exeeed Their Authority. Agencies Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Ways and Means. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Post Office and Post Roads. Elections No. 1, chairman. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Education. Rivers and Harbors. Ways and Means, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Foreign Affairs. : | Claims. Invalid Pensions: Patents. Rivers and Harbors. | | Naval Affairs. | Military Affairs. : Appropriations. | Agriculture. Foreign Affairs. Ways and Means. Disposition of Executive Papers, chairman. Accounts. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Flood Control. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Roads. 220 Congressional Directory 000 1 LOREa RE Ne Education. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. EULEWORTH. vane = Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. BrsAmdsmR. ... . _. fobs Invalid Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. BILSTON 2 tin me Military Affairs. EnxceL of Michigan________ Appropriations. EnxcLE of California_______ War Claims, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation. BATION... enn Civil Service. Goinage, Weights, and Measures. Patents. Roads. FARRINGTON... curr mime Agriculture. Immigration and Naturalization. - Insular Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Rivers and Harbors. | Territories. IPRTOIIAN viewis iio in District of Columbia. Judiciary. PYInows dante Judiciary. PENMON. in mend) Military Affairs. BERNANDEZ.. eta Memorials, chairman. Claims. Elections No. 1. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. PIsSHER. i Elections No. 3, chairman. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. PLANNAGAN..... .o._Jduziual Agriculture, chairman. : Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. House Commattee Assignments ORPON: ea 78349°—79-2—1st ed. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning Banking and Currency. Ways and Means. Census. Roads. Census. Civil Service. ; Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Census. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Banking and Currency. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. Elections No. 3. Post Office.and Post Roads. Post Office and Post Roads. Agriculture. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Roads. Disposition of Executive Papers. Ways and Means. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Labor. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Foreign Affairs. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. Patents. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Ways and Means. : Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. Judiciary. Elections No. 3. Foreign Affairs. 16 222 Congressional Directory Qongey: on ie SF a ee Harr, EDWIN ARTHUR... ._._ Harr, LEoNarD W________ Appropriations. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Which Exceed Their Authority. Ag encies Judiciary. Select: Investigate Supplies Particularly Meat. and Shortages of Food, Elections Census. No. 2, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Revision of the Laws. Territories. Judiciary. Civil Serviee. Claims. Elections No. 3. Revision of the Laws. Agriculture. Agriculture. Naval Affairs. Indian Affairs. Labor. War Claims. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Ways and Means. District of Columbia. Flood Control. Insular Affairs. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. War Claims. Education. Public Buildings and Grounds. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Territories. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Tidiorien Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. ‘Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rules. Elections No. 1. Judiciary. Flood Control. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. House Amol Tl DIESE ded en en Loar Prd es ee ny Commiattee Assignments 223 filitary Affairs. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Education. Election of President, Vice sentatives in Congress. President, and Repre- Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. Revision of the Laws. War Claims. Labor. Patents. Post Office and Post Roads. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority. Naval Affairs. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Post Office and Post Roads. District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Claims. Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Coinage, Weights and Measures. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Patents. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Civil Service Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Select: Investigate Supplies and Shortages of Food, ‘Particularly Meat. Library. Post Office and Post Roads. Naval Affairs. Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Agriculture. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor. War Claims. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority. Military Affairs. 2%: Congressional Directory HowruMes of Massachusetts___ HormEs of Washington_____ Hoor. oo0 2] Horm... vnenars HOUAN laaa i HOWELL... sees a ata HupEr. onde Cs Howe, unlieiids RR RE Le JACKSON: = a ale cn 2 JARMAN. oc l o JENKINS. TENNINGE. canis abmie J ENSEN I Le I Se BE JornsoN of California. ____ JoansonN of Illinois... _____ JounsoN of Indiana_______ JOHNSON, LuTHER A_______ JorNsON, LynpoNn B_______ Jornson of Oklahoma... ____ Jones... Cn JONKMAN........... sas Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- lights. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Pensions. Public Lands. Select: Investigate Supplies and Shortages of Food, Particularly Meat. Civil Service. Claims. Labor. Patents. War Claims. Agriculture. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. Census. Civil Service. Public Buildings and Grounds. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Banking and Currency. Naval Affairs. Indian Affairs, chairman. Civil Service. Flood Control. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rivers and Harbors. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Printing, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Ways and Means. Claims. Elections No. 1. Judiciary. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Agriculture. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. House JUDD. na as Kuan ooo Resnwey.. 5... Bow oo. essai |GTr ee ee KEpAUVER.ov ie ir. KeLLEY of Pennsylvania.___ Keay oflllinois .. ...... Kmoew.__ -_-_ i... _....." LT i SS Se an KNBUBN oc idannan KUDAY. 0 Ven.oo RWG. o.oo Rinzen. oi Kirway ee ByurtgoN--=. KOPPLEMANN. -eee. RUNETL. vnien hone IlaPorrmree. = =. LANDIS. .ilasiianr ARE Yioammawm... o.oo 0lblas Committee Assignments 225 Education. Expenditures in Insular Affairs. the Executive Departments. Ways and Means. Immigration and Naturalization. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Judiciary. Select: Investigate Business. and Study Problems of Small Coinage, Weights, and Education. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Mines and Mining. Territories. Measures. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Revision of the Laws, chairman. Claims. Education. Elections No. 3. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Select: Investigate and Study Problems Business. of Small Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Military Affairs. Ways and Means. Agriculture. Census. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Banking Revision and Currency. of the Laws. Census. Civil Service. Expenditures in the Invalid Pensions. Executive Departments. Elections No. 2. Labor. Mines and Mining. Un-American Activities. Judiciary. Public Buildings Education. Patents. and Grounds, chairman. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Shy. lights. EE 226 Congressional Directory LaAnGaDR © co Siiiidea Education. Flood Control. Patents. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Lavaam. ......0nt Expenditures in the Executive 800 Departments. Pensions. Territories. A a a Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. TECOMPTR. va. 2b eee Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. 1zfeven. =... =. -_-_ District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. : Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Der ple a RN ee RSE Irrigation and Reclamation. Pensions. Public Lands. Revision of the Laws. Lh EN ee et Invalid Pensions, chairman. : Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Immigration and Naturalization. Labor. : Towle oo Judiciary. nr Te a es Gr District of Columbia. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. Roads. Bal anne en Military Affairs. LUDLOW. «hiner Appropriations. ER SN WE Post Office and Post Roads. DE AS A Rs Ways and Means. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning, McCONNBLL., ..oosvaaas * Enrolled Bills. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. McCoBMACE.... conan Majority Floor Leader. McCowBN....c-eneenemam Education. Flood Control. Immigration and Naturalization. McDoNoUGH: Canna District of Columbia. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. McBoupw. |. icin Claims, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Distriet of Columbia. Education. Elections No. 2. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. House Committee Assignments 227 MeGraNncReY oo. Insular Affairs. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. McOrreoR,....... nena Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Roads. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- | lights. MeRenzre. = Post Office and Post Roads. | McMirran of South Caro- Agriculture. lina. District of Columbia. McMiLLEN of Illinois______ Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. MappEN. oro Naval Affairs. Manion. oo oun aa Appropriations. Maroney... oo. Ways and Means. MANASRCO. occ oreerne wn Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chair- man, Civil Service. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. : Flood Control. | Pensions. | Public Buildings and Grounds. MansFIELD of Montana____ Foreign Affairs. MANSFIELD of Texas______._ Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | MARCANTONIO. =. _ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Manminof Towa... i... Military Affairs. Martin of Massachusetts. Minority Floor Leader. Mason. = = = Immigration and Naturalization. Post Office and Post Roads. Maraews, Census. i Coinage, Weights and Measures. Invalid Pensions. War Claims. May. Sosa Military Affairs, chairman. Mempow... i Foreign Affairs. Micnemn®eR. 2. - Judiciary. Rules. MivrLER of California_______ Civil Service. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Pensions. Territories. , 228 Congressional Directory ‘MiLLER of Nebraska_______ Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Territories. Mus. Ways and Means. MowroNey.. rill... Banking and Currency. Mogaaw. =o. cob nn Census. Enrolled Bills. Flood Control. Invalid Pensions. Mines and Mining. MosRigoN-...- =... Civil Service. Claims. Invalid Pensions. Labor. Public Buildings and Grounds. Roads. Muni. tae Foreign Affairs. j Indian Affairs. Un-American Activities. Muvevock.- ......-.. ar Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Indian Mines Affairs. and Mining. N Public Lands. Un-American Activities. Special: Postwar Economic Policy. and Planning. MuUBPHY. . .. 7 ion. ke District of Columbia. [ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. MurrAY of Tennessee_____. Post Office and Post Roads. MvurrAY of Wisconsin______ Agriculture. NepLy. lo Post Office and Post Roads. NOBRELL.. a Appropriations. NORTON. =. rec ai Labor, ‘chairman. Education. Enrolled Bills. Memorials. O’Brien of Illinois... Appropriations. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and ThA O’BrieN of Michigan______ Post Office and Post Roads. OHAnA-.. . '. .. .... 08 District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. OQ ICONSEY la Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. O:NBAL. Appropriations. O’TooLE_____ aS RAs Library, chairman, Accounts. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Insular Affairs. War Claims. House OUBLAND ccaa ass PACE. ade PAPMAN ae PATRICE....cn-nie bemi mins PATTERSON... PETERSON of Florida_______ PeTERSON of Georgia. _____ 5 TT ee HL me i PHI BIN nn PHILLIPS. vein nna PICRETY. nian aon : PIERO. os PIP TENGER. . ocwe nnn em PIOUS... ai i SS PVOMIRY. ae Poagy. a POWELL. c uu iainisins mn Committee Assignments 229 Banking and Currency. Agriculture. Select: Investigate Supplies and Shortages of Food, Particularly Meat, chairman. / Banking and Currency. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. Indian Affairs. s Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. Public Lands, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Rivers and Harbors. Un-American Activities. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Territories, chairman. Elections No. 3. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. - Roads. : Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority. Foreign Affairs. Military Affairs. Agriculture. « Irrigation and Reclamation. Accounts. Pensions. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Agriculture. x Insular Affairs. Labor. i Military Affairs. Naval Affairs. Territories. Claims. Rivers and Harbors. Appropriations. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. : Appropriations. Elections No. 3. Agriculture. Indian Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Labor. 230 Congressional Directory / Priceof Florida! ._.. ._.. Pricwof Minois... ..... .... BRIBE. Gogo to en QUINN... Banaue... Soin) ERABN RAINS. oi. iti Ravey.. ...... ———— BanpoLrm... -....... -- Baye... RAYBUBN. iii nmiedn Rayewr.oc oo orwell REucE. oe Rerp of Hlinols. -0... REED of New York________ abe Sn a RateSe Resse. 2 Ric... Naval Affairs. Military Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Claims. Elections No. 3. Revision of the Laws. World War Veterans’ Legislation. District of Columbia, chairman. Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor. E | Mines and Mining. Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation, chairman. Census. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Rivers and Harbors. Un-American Activities. Speaker. Civil Service. Elections No. 2. Patents. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Enrolled Bills. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Judiciary. Ways and Means. Civil Service. Immigration and Naturalization. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Territories. War Claims. Accounts. Expenditures in the Executive Depariments, Printing. House RosERTSON Of North Da-kota. RoBERTSON of Virginia_____ RosinsoN of Utah_________ Rossion of Kentucky. ______ BOCEWENLY. co ine RopGERS of Pennsylvania _ _ Rozof Maryland...__ Rozof New York--_.._-._ Rocers of Florida. -_.__-__ RoGErs of Massachusetts___ Rogers of New York.______ Commuttee Assignments Foreign Affairs. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources. Banking and Currency. Naval Affairs. Agriculture. Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. Ways and Means. Select: Conservation of Wildlife Resources, chair-man. Roads, chairman. -Flood Control. Insular Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Territories. Un-American Activities. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. a Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Revision of the Laws. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Public Building and Grounds. Rivers and Harbors. Post Office and Post Roads. Military Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Foreign Affairs. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Enrolled Bills, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Pensions. Appropriations. Naval Affairs. Judiciary. Foreign Affairs. Rules, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Naval Affairs. : 232 Congressional Directory / SAVAGE. eas aa | ScaEwABE of Missouri _____ ScawABE of Oklahoma._____ SOUNDER. nn anian® SRAPER. iio. lLiiia SWARP LaeCo SHEPBARD:. — =... i... SHERIDAN . co ai mii BHR La BIER. ooo nits Simpson of Illinois_________ Simpson of Pennsylvania__. SLAUGHTER...0 08 . Smita of Maine. __________ Swrrmof Oho... Smite of Virginia_______.___ Smita of Wisconsin________ SNYDER... mssnopell) SeMERS. ;... o...hl ; SPAREMAN. Loo SPeNeEs. Nun oa SPRINGER... STARKEY... aaa AN. ee hee anne Census. Invalid Pensions. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Accounts. Education. -Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Minés and Mining. Patents. Claims. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Military Affairs. Enrolled Bills. Immigration and Naturalization. Indian Affairs. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Military Affairs. District of Columbia. Rivers and Harbors. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Ways and Means. Rules. Naval Affairs. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Rules. Select: Investigate Acts of Executive Agencies Which Exceed Their Authority, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Mines and Mining, chairman. Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. Banking and Currency, chairman. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Appropriations. House Committee Assignments 233 SuMNER of Illinois SuMNERS of Texas TroMAS of Texas Census. Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. Select: Investigate and Study Problems of Small Business. Military Affairs. Claims. Flood Control. Indian Affairs. Roads. World War Veterans’ Legislation. Select: Investigate Supplies and horiagss of Food, Particularly Meat. Immigration and Naturalization. Irrigation and Reclamation. Public Lands. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Judiciary, chairman. Accounts. Banking and Currency. Appropriations. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Appropriations. Roads. Territories. Banking and Currency. Claims. Military Affairs. Un-American Activities. Appropriations. Military Affairs. Appropriations. Judiciary. Post Office and Post Roads. Naval Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Foreign Affairs. Naval Affairs, chairman. Agriculture. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Foreign Affairs. Civil Service. ; Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-sentatives in Congress. World War Veterans’ Legislation. bs % N ; } a | Foi) X 8 $ 234 Congressional Directory WADSWORTH. meme WALTER: c,h WASIELBWSKY.. eee eee WeuesvER... aaa Ween). aa WELCH... onesie pn WHSY.. eveESL BEET WHINE. . ad read Wormes........... 0... WHITTINGTON -comme ie > WICKERSHAM. _ vee WIiGGLESWORTH.. vee WiLsoN oe WINSEEAD. noon id Wavrer .o. Worconr. o.oo WOLrENDEN. .. WOLVERTON... => Woop... ee WoopnoUuse. i... WOODRUPE. oo...HE WoRrEY.. ... itihen ZIMMERMAN... Foreign Affairs. Judiciary. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Ways and Means. Judiciary. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Insular Affairs. Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Ways and Means. Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Appropriations. Flood Control, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Roads. | Agriculture. Appropriations. Flood Control. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. Military Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Roads. : Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Naval Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Patents. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Un-American Activities, chairman. ‘Banking and Currency. Ways and Means. Agriculture. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. Agriculture. Special: Postwar Economic Policy and Planning. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds Chairman.— , Vice President of the United States. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States. Charles O. Andrews, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Robert A. Taft, 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. , Minority Leader of the United States Senate. Joseph W. Martin, Jr., Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Senate Office Building Commission (Office, Room 130-A, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 1175) [Three vacancies.] House Office Building Commission Chairman.—Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Adolph J. Sabath, Representative from Illinois. Clarence E. Hancock, Representative from New York. Capital Auditorium Commission Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, chairman. Fritz G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Pehr G. Holmes, Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Charles O. Andrews, chairman of the Sena’z Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Robert A. Taft, Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 237 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 17 238 ; Congressional Directory Joint Committee on Printing (Office, Capitol, ground floor, west center. Phone, NA tional 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. Robert F. Rich, Representative from Pennsylvania. Clerk.— Ansel Wold, the Maryland Courts NE. Assistant Clerk.— Elizabeth T. Anderson, 3821 Thirty-fourth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Inspector of Paper and Material (Government Printing Office) —Edward O. Rodgers, 3318 Reservoir Road. Joint Committee on the Library Chairman.— Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. [Two vacancies. ] Donald L. O’Toole, Representative from New York. Graham A. Barden, Representative from North Carolina. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia. John W. Heselton, 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, N Ational 3120, branches 290, 315, 1024) 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. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. John D. Dingell, Representative from Michigan. Harold Knutson, Representative from Minnesota. Daniel A. Reed, Representative from New York. Secretary and Attorney.—Bryant GC. Brown, 1756 North Rhodes Street, Arling- ton, 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. Technical Assistant.—David C. Longinotti, 11 Ridge Road SE. Statistician.— Walter L. Price, 2407 Fifteenth Street. Assistant Statistician.—J. L. Smith, Jr., 2732 South Veitch Street, Arlington, Va. Attorney.—W. H. McClenon, 211 Cedar Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Economists.—L. N. Woodworth, 2810 Crest Avenue, Cheverly, Md.; Russel M. Oram, Technical Advisor, McLean Apartments. Clerks.—Irma Crisler, LaSalle Apartments; Clara E. Scheid, 1400 Decatur Street; Bertha S. Harris, 1228 I Street; Margaret Bakey, 252 Gallatin Street; Claire L. Taylor, 1321 M Street; Ellen Riddle, 2131 O Street. \ Commassions and Joint Committees 239 National Forest Reservation Commission (Room 3112, South Building, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142, branch 2749) President.—Robert P. Patterson, Secretary of War. Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Clinton P. Anderson, 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.—F. W. Grover, 4320 Livingston Road SE. The Interparliamentary Union OFFICERS President.— Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. Vice Presidenis.—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 Ez Officio Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. 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. [Four vacancies.] Migratory Bird Conservation Commission Chairman.— Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture. Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Commerce. George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland. C. Wayland Brooks, Senator from Illinois. John J. Cochran, Representative from Missouri. Walter E. Brehm, Representative from Ohio. Secretary.— Rudolph Dieffenbach, Fish and Wildlife Service, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Il. Alaskan International Highway Commission Warren G. Magnuson, Senator from Washington. Ernest H. Gruening, Governor of Alaska. Donald MacDonald, of Alaska. James W. Carey, of Washington. [Vacaney.] ote. Congressional Directory Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission (Room 306, House Office Building) Chairman.— Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah. Vice Chairman.—Charles O. Andrews, Senator from Florida. Vice Chairman.—[Vacant.] Secretary.—Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. James C. Auchincloss, Representative from New Jersey. 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 Beulevard Chairman.—Harry S. Truman, President of the United States. Acting Chairman.— Thomas H. MacDonald, Commissioner of Public Roads. Kenneth McKellar, Presiding Officer of the Senate. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. John Russell Young, President of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Frederic A. Delano, Regent, Smithsonian Institution. Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland. Joseph F. Guffey, Senator from Pennsylvania. Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service. Gen. Gordon R. Young, Engineer Commissioner.of the District of Columbia. [Three vacancies.] Board of Visitors to the Military Academy Robert F. Wagner, Senator from New York. Tom Stewart, Senator from Tennessee. Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. John Thomas, Senator from Idaho. [Vacancy.] Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Overton Brooks, Representative from Louisiana. John J. Sparkman, Representative from Alabama. J. Buell Snyder, Representative from Pennsylvania. George H. Mahon, Representative from Texas. 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. Albert J. Engel, Representative from Michigan. [Vacancy.] Commassions and J oint Commattees 241 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts, ex officio. James O. Eastland, Senator from Mississippi. John L. McClellan, Senator from Arkansas. EdwardV. Robertson, Senator from Wyoming. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia, ex officio. Lansdale G. Sasscer, Representative from Maryland. Edward F. Hébert, Representative from Louisiana. Emory H. Price, Representative from Florida. Frank B. Keefe, Representative from Wisconsin. [Vacancy.] Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy W. Lee O’Daniel, Senator from Texas. George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland. Edward V. Robertson, Senator from Wyoming. Thomas C. Hart, Senator from Connecticut. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia, ex officio. Eugene J. Keogh, Representative from New York. . Ralph H. Daughton, Representative from Virginia. Chase Going Woodhouse, Representative from Connecticut. Gordon Canfield, Representative from New Jersey. Joseph E. Talbot, Representative from Connecticut. Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy Josiah W. Bailey, Senator from North Carolina, ex officio. Theodore G. Bilbo, Senator from Mississippi. Harley M. Kilgore, Senator from West Virginia. Alexander Wiley, Senator from Wisconsin. Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia, ex officio. Frank W. Boykin, Representative from Alabama. J. Hardin Peterson, Representative from Florida. Eugene J. Keogh, Representative from New York. Richard J. Welch, Representative from California. Ellsworth B. Buck, Representative from New York. 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 Commitiee.—Luther Ely Smith (chairman), St. Louis, Mo. ; J. Lionberger Davis, St. Louis, Mo. Other Members: [Two vacancies.] Thomas D. Winter, Representative from Kansas. [Two vacancies.] 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. EE 242 Congressional Directory Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee Chazrman.—Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States, Felix Frankfurter, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. [Vacaney.] David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. John W. McCormack, Representative from Massachusetts. Richard B. Wigglesworth, Representative from Massachusetts. [Vacancy.] General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. [Two vacancies.] Cliff Clevenger, Representative from Ohio. [Two vacancies.] William Wayne, of Pennsylvania. William A. Kunkel, Jr., of Indiana. Harry G. Hogan, of Indiana. Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures (Room 11-C, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 1187) Chairman.—Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Vice Chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Carter Glass, Senator from Virginia. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Hugh Butler, Senator from Nebraska. Styles Bridges, Senator from New Hampshire. Clarence Cannon, Representative from Missouri. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. [Vacancy.] John Taber, Representative from New York. Harold Knutson, Representative from Minnesota. Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury. Harold D. Smith, Director of the Budget. Clerk.—Francis S. Hewitt. : Joint Committee on Selective Service Occupational Deferment of Officers and Employees of Legislative Branch Chairman.— Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. Allen J. Ellender, Senator from Louisiana. Chan Gurney, Senator from South Dakota. Andrew J. May, Representative from Kentucky. R. Ewing Thomason, Representative from Texas. Walter G. Andrews, Representative from New York. Commassions and Joint Committees 243 Filipino Rehabilitation Commission United States Members: Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland, chairman. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan. > Hi C. Jasper Bell, Representative from Missouri. Dan R. McGehee, Representative from Mississippi. i Richard J. Welch, Representative from California. Lynn R. Edminster, vice chairman, United States Tariff Commission. E. D. Hester, economic adviser, office of the United States High Commissioner to the Philippines, Department of the Interior. : Wayne Coy, assistant to the editor, Washington Post, and former assistant director, Bureau of the Budget. i Filipino Members: Jaime Hernandez, vice chairman. Brig. Gen. Carlos P. Romulo. Tomas Confesor. | Tomas Cabili. Maximo Kalaw. Dr. Urbano Zafra. Senator Carlos P. Garcia. Assemblyman Pedro Lopez. [Vacancy.] Secretary.— Vernon E. Moore, room 113, House Office Building. Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress Chairman.—Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin. 3 Vice Chairman.—A. S. Mike Monroney, Representative from Oklahoma. {i Elbert D. Thomas, Senator from Utah. . 1 Claude Pepper, Senator from Florida. i Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Wallace H. White, Jr., Senator from Maine. C. Wayland Brooks, Senator from Illinois. E. E. Cox, Representative from Georgia. Thomas J. Lane, Representative from Massachusetts. Earl C. Michener, Representative from Michigan. Everett M. Dirksen, Representative from Illinois. > | Charles A. Plumley, Representative from Vermont. | Siaff Director.—George B. Galloway, room 247¢c, Senate Office Building. National Memorial Stadium Commission Chairman.— Theodore G. Bilbo, Senator from Mississippi. Vice Chairman.—Jennings Randolph, Representative from West Virginia. James M. Mead, Senator from New York. [Vacaney.] Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas. Sid Simpson, Representative from Illinois. John Russell Young. Floyd D. Akers. John A. Reilly. a : | Secretary—Edward P, Terry. 244 Congressional Directory Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl Harbor Attack Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky. : Vice Charrman.—Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Scott W. Lucas, Senator from Illinois. Owen Brewster, Senator from Maine. Homer Ferguson, Senator from Michigan. J. Bayard Clark, Representative from North Carolina. John W. Murphy, Representative from Pennsylvania. Bertrand W. Gearhart, Representative from California. Frank B. Keefe, Representative from Wisconsin. STATISTICAL SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Congress Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House sion ning journment [in days of the Senate ! of Representatives 117) a 1 | Mar. 4,17892| Sept. 29, 1789 210 | John Langdon,® of | FrederickA.C. Muh- = New Hampshire. lenberg, of Pennsyl- vania. 2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 521 2 BPA SS RI IRE (al 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 Er SR Ril Sn dan 1 EI ST, 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. hea 1| Dec. 2,1793 | June 9,1794 190 | Ralph Izard, of South | Frederick A. C. Muh- Carolina. lenberg, of Pennsyl- vania. 2 | Nov. 3,1794 | Mar. 38,1795 121 | Henry Tazewell, of Virginia. ithe Laas 1 | Dec. 17,1795 | June 1,1796 $y 7 £2 WN Ey RRSN Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire. 2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. .3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania. ths: ..... 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of Do. Rhode Island. 2 | Nov. 13,1797 | July 16,1798 246 | Jacob Read, of South | GeorgeDent, 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. Oth. oun 1| Dec. 2,1799 | May 14,1800 164 | Samuel Livermore, of | Theodore Sedgwick, New Hampshire. of Massachusetts. Uriah Tracy, necticut. _ of Con- 2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John E. Howard, of Maryland. James Hillhouse, of Connecticut. 7 nr igen 1 | Dec. 17,1801 | May 3,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of | Nathaniel Macon, of Georgia. North Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. hs... 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27,1804 163 Jong Brown, of Ken- Do. tucky. Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee. Oth... 1 | Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. Maryland. 2 | Dec. 1,1806 !| Mar. 3,1807 03ch i doi iooeealaud 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 least once in every year * * * on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.’”” Pur-suant to a resolution of the Continental Congress, the first session of the First Congress convened Mar. 4, 1789. Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress met regularly on the first Monday in December until 1934, when the twentieth amendment to the Constitution became effective, changing the meeting of Congress to Jan. 3. The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in New York City; subsequently, including the first session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in Washington. 3 Elected to count the vote for President and Vice President, which was done Apr. 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for the first time. John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. 4 Elected Speaker pro tempore for A pr. 20, 1798, and again for May 28, 1798. 247 248 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS— Continued Congress | Ses-gion | Date of begin-| ning Date of ad-journment | | Length| in days President pro tempore of the Senate | Speaker of the House of Representatives IKEA Ean 1 | Oct. 26,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 182 | Samuel Smith, of | Joseph B. Varnum,of . Maryland. Massachusetts. 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. John Milledge, of Georgia. : th. 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28, 1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Do. Pennsylvania. 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1, 1810 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina. 3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3, 1811 91 Jorn Zope, of Ken- tucky. 10th... 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 | William H. Crawford, | Henry Clay, of Ken- of Georgia. tucky. 2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 122 1... SRE Aa 15th. 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 VA EEA SE GR SO Se Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18,1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. 3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Gaillard, of | Langdon Cheves,5 of South Carolina. South Carolina. Wiha. 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 Ja8 00 dosti rast Hons Clay, of Ken- ucky. 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3, 1817 TIE AE a A ae FL gh 1| Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 IE Ti a) EET Ben i) ea Do. 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3, 1819 108 | James Barbour, of : Virginia. the 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John Gaillard, of Do. South Carolina. 2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3, 1821 tL Re 0. reas John W. Taylor,8 of New York. 11740 Fe shag 1 | Dec. 83,1821 | May 8, 1822 AY treme 2 AO... ne rcaann Philip P. Barbour, of - Virginia. 2 | Dee. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 02 dO. sini Sth. oo. 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 178 |--r do uid ti Huy Clay, of Ken- tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 88 i do FB iuiaide « 18h. 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 RES AR ae EE Mth. o.oa- 1 | Dec. 3,1827 | May 26,1828 175 | Samuel Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 3, 1829 03. dos et an AT MAE 1 | Dec. 17,1829 | May 31, 1830 176. ROTORS ER Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3, 1831 88 | Littleton Waller Taze- well, of Virginia. 2 I 1 | Dec. 5,1831 | July 16, 1832 225 1... dor. or Vo Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2, 1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. Bd sural 1 | Dec. 2,1833°| June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do. Mississippi. 2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 83,1835 93 | John Tyler, of Vir- | John Bell,” of Tennes- ginia. see. 24th. il 1 | Dec. 7,1835 | July 4, 1836 211 | William R. King, of | James K. Polk, of Alabama, Tennessee. 2 ({ Dec. 5,1836 | Mar. 3, 1837 80-3 a me tha oo 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 Jie ben Sr Se Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 09,1838 O18 do. Shiai 3 | Dec. 3,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 oll. EL CL th... ie 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 233 | eee QO Sireas mama Robert M. T'. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 7,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 A TEA Sen Sl WE 17 Dn 1 | May 31,1841 | Sept. 13,1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, | John White, of Ken- of New Jersey. tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina. 3 | Dec. 5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 89 | emi QO, oun bad aud 140 1 pa 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17, 1844 196). =: 3 0 Ee eRe JohnW. Jones, of Vir- ginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 Lg rl QOL rod = bn Swine 20th. ce 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 S| a JO. i3 na wrmt gies 30th... «..: 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 250, 1 oe A000 og poems Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 080). 3 DRE PRT Sa Ist ee on 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 0% Te JO Sofisith iin nnt) 8 Elected Speaker Jan. 19, 1814, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 6 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 249 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length President pro tempore Speaker of the House Congress sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives 32d 1 | Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 275 William R. King, of Linn Boyd, of Ken-Alshams. tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3, 1853 88 88d. as 1 | Dee. 5,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 Bavid R. Atchison, of Do. Missouri. 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 Jesse D. Bright, of In-diana. Lewis Cass, of Michi-gan. 3dth.....c. 1 | Dee. 3,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 Jesse D. Bright, of In-Nathaniel P. Banks, diana. of Massachusetts. 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30, 1856 10 3 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 James M. Mason, of Virginia. Thomas J. Rusk, of Texas. Sth 1 | Dec. 17,1857 | June 14, 1858 189 Benjamin Fitzpatrick, James L. Orr, of of Alabama. South Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3,1859 88 86th... 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 202 William Pennington, of New Jersey. Jesse D. Bright, of Indiana. 2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 Solomon Foot, of Ver-mont. ff Hh 1| July 4,1861 | Aug. 6,1861 34 Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 228 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 93 3Sthi-s 1| Dec. 7,1863 | July 4,1864 209 Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana. Daniel Clark, of New Hampshne: 2 | Dec. 5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 89 80the. cual 1 | Dec. 4,1865 | July 28,1866 237 itis S. Foster, of Connecticut. 2 | Dec. 3,1866 | Mar. 3,1867 91 Benjamin F. Wade, of Ohio. 40th: =.= 1 | Mar. 418678 Dec. 2,1867 274 2 | Dec. 2,1867° Nov. 10, 1868 345 3 | Dec. 7,1868 | Mar. 3, 1869 87 Theodore M. Pome- roy,!? of New York. fists... 1| Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 10,1869 38 Henry B. Anthony, James G. Blaine, of of Rhode Island. Maine. 2 | Dec. 6,1869 | July 15,1870 222 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 89 42d. .....C-1 | Mar. 4,1871 | Apr. 20,1871 48 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10,1872 190 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar.® 3,1873 92 43Q. cad 1| Dec. 1,1873 | June 23, 1874 204 Matiow H. Carpen-Do. ter, of ‘Wisconsin. 2 | Dec. 7,1874 | Mar. 3,1875 87 Hons B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. ih... 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 Thomas W. Ferry, of Michael C. Kerr,!1 of Michigan. Indiana. Samuel S. Cox,!2 of New York, pro tem-pore. Milton Saylor,13 of Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3,1877 90 Samuel J, Randall, of Pennsylvania. 45th. i. 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 50 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20, 1878 200 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 92 46th... oc 1 | Mar. 18, 1879 | July 1,1879 106 Do. of Ohio. 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16,1880 199 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 88 ¢ There were recesses in fa Session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 9 There were recesses in i session from Monday, July 27, to Mondays 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. 1 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 12 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19, 13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 250 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued C 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 47th. 2 1 | Dec. 5,1881 | Aug. 8,1882 247 | Thomas F. Bayard, of | J. Warren Keifer, of Delaware. hio. David Davis, of Illi- nois. 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, of opment 48th. .. 1 | Dec. 3,1883 | July 71884 AR dO John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 LR EIA LS 49th... .... 1 | Dec. 17,1885 | Aug. 5, 1886 242 | John Sherman, of Ohio. Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. S0the 3. 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 320 oi. dois sarily Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 3, 1889 17 I Le DT WR, Slapaiii te. 1 | Dec. 2,188) | Oct. 1,1890 804... .. do. i oh er Linas B. Reed, of aine. 2 { Dec. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Sodunti se, 1 | Dec. 17,1891 | Aug. 5,1892 0111) rad he BE doi bi bined 8 Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham GG. Harris, of Tennessee. 53d. ana 1| Aug. 7,1893 | Nov. 3,1893 80:1 dos ooh Deo. : 2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28, 1894 208... doin APE Na 3 | Dec. 83,1894 | Mar. 3,1895 97 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Bath. «i. 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 Goth... oa 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24, 1897 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8, 1898 3 | Dec. 5,1898 | Mar. 3, 1899 a 1 | Dec. 4,1899 | June 7,1900 186+... AOL pale David B. Henderson, of Iowa. 2 | Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 1 081 tl SS doi. mankua 57th ___.-- 1 | Dee. 2,1901 | July 1,1902 A215... QOsE anda Los Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. -3,1903 1 dois ith 8th ce 1| Nov. 9,1903 | Dec.- 7,1903 20 ci doc nah on Josni |G. Cannon, of linois. 2 | Dec. 17,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 184-0 Oc iolmii mate 3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,1905 3 NE dolicl.90s ac il 50th... 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30,1906 200 |< dolor wwilviee. Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3,1907 Ol. .... dol an 0 Ld 60th... ... 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30, 1908 181i. doih i Ln Do. 2 | Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 3,1909 87 lois ChE TRIN [HIE 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 440 got dan Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 202i = doll ain st ih 3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 804) n donor 62d... 2 1| Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 Tatas «oo do-Hig.t2 ae Champ Clark, of Mis- souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,15 Brandegee, 16 Curis, i Gallinger,!8 : Lodge.1® 3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 3,1913 92 Bacon. Gallinger,2!___ G3 i 1| Apr. 7,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, of Do. Arkansas. 2 | Dec. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 828 Qo... 3 | Dee. 7,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 Ly pe do.a a 64th -__.. 1| Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8, 1916 v.70 FO do. 22. Lo os Do. 2 | Dec. -4,1916 |-Mar. 3,1917 90 Wille. i, of Delaware. 65th. -.... 1| Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 188i cae dosoliisoiou too Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21, 1918 8544 dos ba aot don 3! Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3 1919 go = doit R28, 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 Tily 5, Aug. 1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912. 16 Elected to serve May 25, 1912. 17 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. 18 Elected to serve Feb. 12-14, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912. 19 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912. 20 Elected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, Jan. 5-18, and Feb. 2-15, 1913. 21 Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3. 1913. 2 Died Oct. 1, 1916. Statistical 251 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Congress Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House gre sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives Goth...= 1 | May 19,1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, of Iowa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 1,1919 | June 5, 1920 188-0 J doa staid 3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 88: ak doc. ux thon 1 Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23,1921 WT Vhs do LebansiucllLo Do. 2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22,1922 202 (C0. dots one niui. 3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4,1922 15: {co do. Seabaaporiol. 4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 3,1923 00, [o. == Gold heall.. 68th... 1| Dec. 38,1923 | June 7,1924 188 oor dost). palais. Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 3,1925 93 13 nl dosiniswividi.il Goth. 20 1 | Dec. 7 1925 | July. 3,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth, New Hampshire. of Ohio 2 | Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 REE doi, olen oF oth... 1 | Dec. 5,1927 | May 29, 1928 1778 dois soba£0 Do. 2 | Dec. 38,1928 | Mar. 3,1929 Olle. t. doi arse ist... ..... 1| Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22, 1929 Saul oso cgeianlLo Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 3,1930 N4 |: mal do comin 3 | Dec. 1,1930 | Mar. 3,1931 93: I-23 lng RCLr hm Le, 72dc 1 | Dec. 17,1931 | July 16,1932 ye le I ri Ta CA I ee fom N. Garner, of exas. 2 | Dec. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 80: doris, a 73d... 1 | Mar. 9,1933 | June 15,1933 99 | Key Tian, of Ne- | Henry T. Rainey, vada. of Illinois. 2 | Jan. 3,1934 | June 18,1934 167... 1 do. cainoddooo 74th. = 1| Jan. 3,1935 | Aug. 26, 1935 2836 .. 00 1) To PnLL LAH Joseph W. Byrns,2 of Tennessee. 2 | Jan. 3,1936 | June 20, 1936 170: a BOLT soiderials. William B. Bank- head,? of Alabama. 75th: 1| Jan. 55,1937 | Aug. 21, 1937 Do. 2 | Nov. 15, 1937 | Dec. 21, 1937 3 | Jan. 3 1938 | June 16, 1938 76th... 2. 1| Jan. 3,1939 | Aug. 5,1939 Do. 2 | Sept. 21,1939 | Nov. 3,1939 3 | Jan. 3,1940 | Jan. 3,1941 Sam Rayburn,” of Texas. Wiliam H. KXing,® of 7th Lie 1| Jan. 3,1941 | Jan. 2,1942 365 rs A rion 30 of Do. Mississippi; Carter Glass,3! of Virginia. 2 | Jan. 5,1942 | Dec. 16, 1942 346 | Carter ‘Glass of Vir- ginia. 78th .7359 1 | Jan. 6,194332 Dec. 21,1943 350... dossiconteyio. Do. 2 | Jan. 10, 194433] Dec. 19, 1944 odd |... dol sabato oth: 2 1 | Jan. 3,1945%| Dec. 21, 1945 353 | Kenneth McKellar, of Do. Tennessee. Tan. Hd A040 Calan a BLT Poms i A 23 Died Aug. 19, 1934. 24 Died June 4, 1936. 2 Elected June 4, 1936. 28 Died Sept. 15, 1940. 2 Died Nov. 10, 1940. 8 Elected Sept. 16, 1940. % Elected Nov. 19, 1940. 30 Elected Jan. 6, 1941; died June 22, 1941. 81 Elected July 10, 1941. 32 There was a recess in this session from Thursday, July 8, to Tuesday, Sept. 14. 33 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Apr. 1, to Wednesday, Apr. 12; from Friday, June 23, to 2 Jesday, Aug. 1; and from Thursday, Sept. 21, to Tuesday, Nov. 14. 4 The House was in recess in this session from Saturday, July 21, i to Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1945, and the Senate from Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1945, to Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1945 Congressional Directory SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE Date of beginning Date of adjournment Friday, Mar. 4 Friday, Mar. 4. Monday, Mar. 4 Monday, Mar. 4. Monday, June 8 Friday, June 26. Saturday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 4. Tuesday, JAly-17... 20 cous toonany Thursday, July 19. Wednesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 5. Tuesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 6. Saturday, Mar.d ooo... oioarlidunanl Tuesday, 7. IE Mar. Monday, Mar. 4 Monday, Mar. 4. Briday, Mardi...teh nd EE a Wednesday, Mar. 9. a Wednesday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, Mar. 17. Saturday, Mar. 4 Friday, Mar. 10. PhwrsSday Mar. 4...A daa Monday, Mar. 15. Tuesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 20. Monday, Mar. 5 Friday, Mar. 23. Tuesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 13. Friday, Mar. 4 Monday, Apr. 11. Wednesday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 14. Tuesday, June 15 Wednesday, June 16. Friday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 10. Tuesday, Tune 20. 5...abo June 28. ne Thursday, Monday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 28. Wednesday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 14. Satarday Mare...ei time Mar. 11. it Saturday, Monday, Apr. 1 Saturday, Apr. 20. Monday, Apr. 12 Thursday, Apr. 22. Wednesday, May 10 Saturday, May 27. Wednesday, Mar. 26. Wednesday, Mar. 24. Saturday, Mar. 17. flriday, Moarid oo io i lL SI as Friday, May 20. Monday, Oct: 10.0. 0... iol ass Saturday, Oct. 29. Wednesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Apr. 2. Monday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, Apr. 2. Saturday, Mar. 4 Friday, Apr. 15. Thursday, Mar. 4 Wednesday, Mar. 10. Monday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 9. Iharsaay, Mar 5. heeat Thursday, Mar. 19. Saturday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 18. Thursday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 6. Monday, Mar. 17. Friday, Mar. 16. Tuesday, Mar. 15. Wednesday, Mar. 18. Monday, Mar. 4 Tuesday, Mar. 5. Monday. Faby. coo. 000. ol in Monday, July 21. Sotarday Vat d da Ns Monday, Mar. 6. Statistical 253 COURT OF IMPEACHMENT The Senate has sat as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the following accused officials, with the result stated, for the periods named: WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges dismissed for want of jurisdiction; Monday, December 17, 1798, to Monday, January 14, 1799. JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United States district court for the district of New Hampshire; removed from office; Thursday, March 3, 1803, to Monday, March 12, 1804. SAMUEL CHASE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; acquitted; Friday, November 30, 1804, to March 1, 1805. JAMES H. PECK, judge of the United States district court for the distriet 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. 78349°-—T79-2—1st ed. 18 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944 [The figures show the Votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] Vote State 1940 1942 1944 Total vote yous Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican| Democrat | Republican Aobama ooTc on RI 202, 604 41,983 | 1247, 749 Arizona... 101, 195 lh Rie 90, 335 39, 891 130, 226 ATEAnE os of Siiial lier os RT WC Se 182, 499 31, 942 214, 441 California... 366,04 | 322805 | Gish 725185 | 1,576,558 | 13,805,234 143,817 | "4191 51 Golorde. odo { nur ‘MN mems| aac] rasms Connecticut... 416,740 J 013 388818 ais Al 430,716 | 391,748 | 1828 497 Saini Delaware... ..... 68, 204 63, 799 38, 322 YETTA SE, med un Fis Wain UG Florida... rr nasi hE SA 335, 685 135, 258 Re) 470,043 he ON ea hE ia ery 59, 870 T1802) PRE 1972, 573 Idaho. ore. 6110, 614 | © 124, 535 68, 989 73.353 | 107,096 | 102,373 200, 469 Tilinots con oe. 69,025,007 | 02,045 924 | 1,380,011 | 1,582,887 | 2 036,03 | 1,841,703 | 13,013,920 ; 1775, 4 i857, 250 | 11,645, 01 Indiana... 864,803 | 888,070 |... |... { 807,766 | 820,489 | 11,651 385 ASC eal! Re ei We) 205,104 | 410,383 | 404,229 | 523.963 | 11,021 687 Bans or hoe ma 200,437 | 284.059 | 272,053 | 387.090 | 1669, 191 Kentucky... 561,151 | 0401812 | 216,958 175,081 | 464,053 | 380,425 | 1846, 627 Bomisinng. Brass [ill 287, 365 5 287, 391 Maine: 105, 740 150, 149 55, 754 WE at ae a Maryland... BOER seein tle oo ol 344,725 | 213,705 558, 430 -Massachusetts. .| 1,088. 838 | 838.192 | 641,042 | 721,230 | 667.086 | 1,228 754 | 11,911 422 Michigan _.... 90.740 | 103104 | ser o0s | ssgese | DT : 177, 00: 372, 24 Minnesota... 1310,875 | 641,049 { CHES } ERR i AL Mississippi-_.____ 143,431 or LD relly eet Sot 1 SE Lan SBE 0 oy ede dp CH Missouri... .... 980,775 {© 886 876 poll lid 776,700 | T7778, 778 | 11, 559, 103 Montana... 176, 753 63, 941 83, 673 PORTS RI A RE ee Nebraska... 207,650.4 « BA00M0 | s108.800 | IBM 207 | LITTER Nevads 31, 351 20,488 | 823.805 | 816,735 30, 595 21, 816 52, 411 New Hampshire |... ooooloeiiie 73, 656 88, 601 106,508 | 110, 549 217, 057 New Jersey... 893,803 | 1,020,331 | 550,851 | 648,855 | $910,096 | 5040,051 | ! 1,863 610 New Mexico... 103, 194 81, 257 63, 301 EUS un ALE Lae New York. ..... $8,070 100. BORE a es 53,208, 576 | 2,800,407 | 16,415,018 North Caroling. {oor fis T0 230, 427 119, 165 33,813 | 926.037 759, 850 North Dakota._..| 502, 503 RE Jaco rors sans 95, 102 60.530 | 1210, dle soils 422 Ohler. SUE RB Oe LR SReRe 1,482,610 | 1,500,609 | 2 983,219 ORIIOIE. ef EET 166,658°| "204,163 a0, 8ol | 300.222 | {702 dus 2, 9 260, 631 452, 936 Oregon... ooo eof 63, 946 214, 755 { 174,140 | 269,005 443, 235 Pennsylvania... 2,060,980. 1,803,104 {= . o.oo Joi os. ik 1, 864, 622 | 1,840,938 | 13,730,277 Rhode Island __.| 173,927 | 141, 401 195,207 [TT 00, 280 TERR [fyOe Soath:Oarolnaliii 6a: Lo tra an TL 22, BBB TO 94, 556 3,214 1101, 736 Somth-Dakota. |. lo. 74, 045 | 7106, 704 82,199 | 145 248 297, 447 Tennessee... ..... 205, 440 121, 790 109, 881 eA CESS cad Lona IPOs ore 978, 095 50,340 | 260,629 of aa ER easesRT Tah og] Re 1 EE 148; 748 00,5357 | "248, 280 Vermont. ________ sg 0 4 RC RL 42,136 | 81004 | 1123248 Virginia. _.___... 2742001 wn uma | use|. 05 {0 TH SEDRER Washington ____. 104718 | 342, 589 a ER S| B08 | 64 356 | IRIE dg 207, 67 297, 46 West Virginta___| ~~ 492,413 | 381,806 |{ ° 207 878 oh Se Mie aaa Sn Wisconsin________ O0A600% senza 537,144 | 634,513 | 11,256,480 Wyoming... 65, 022 45, 682 34, 503 Lawl lo ar ie 1 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 2 Vote cast for Prohibition candidate. 8 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more other party endorsements. ¢ For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1945 5 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 8 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1943. 7 Farmer-Labor vote. 8 For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1947. ? For unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1949. 10 Socialist vote. 11 No vote reported for Chesterfield County. 13 Progressive vote. ho Statistical 255 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944 [The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] State and Vote cast in 1940 State and Vote cast in 1942 State and Vote cast in 1944 Total disiiel, old gisiic new disiriep, new Yo £0 oe t ApPOTuon- | nom. | Repub- || @PPOIYOD" | nemo. | Repub- || @PPOTUOR | pop. | Repub- | in 1944 ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican 19, 08224, 180 20, 47029, 945 AoA in 3) 25, 317 CITI 14, 561 4 PER EaTR a 8734 023 378 38, 887 23,01518, 205 At large. -|WA large_.| 86,69188,532 | 39, 03536,352 Je 251, 079 rk.: Grint RR IstoA De 32-80 a Aro 32, 501 Sau oda. td 8 rr Se 24, 977 ESR 3d... ..21:20,053 11,613 31, 666 ted AEST dthe.Lsth. ____.| i280, 310 See33215 | 4002| 30, 31038117 EERIE Oth... 37852 Sv 31, 785 ential dl 71 ERE Le SR CAE 27, 851 Calif.: 3 55,703 dsb 2492, 706% Lh 392, 822 4 50, 094 2d. i 8, 201 27,312 | 375,514 ; 63, 982 1 WS OE Le 4131, 705 | 8 131, 857 ath... 4 61, 341 75, 369 462, 735 Ath to 73, 582 73, 367 146, 949 Sth zs 55,232 |4119,122 4 85, 747 od ER LO BE) 4112,151 112, 151 6th... 55,426 |4 131,584 4 108, 585 6th 104, 441 96, 395 | 3 200, 946 7th... 72,838 56,8081: qth... 477,200 1. Loo, 7th 81, 762 59, 360 | 3 141, 278 Sth. ua 55,186 |4 148,180 91, 536 8th_ 72, 420 94, 218 | 3 166, 642 $1 EEa 4 99, 708 65, 791 Oph: Ci Ble gn ed 4 66, 845 | 367,194 10the 0 4125,845 63,826: 10th. ...[ 143,864 I> cai 10th £60,000: 0 onl 3 60, 081 Thos 56,003 (4170,504 30, 781 th... 52, 218 41,005 | 393,232 12th 99, 494 54, 731 4640, 780 12ths. t.2 77, 385 62, 524 | 3 139, 959 13th... 4127,167 |4636,406 38, 577 3th... 66, 854 54,792 | 3 121, 741 14th... 73,137 37, 939 24, 349 Hth: = 65, 729 61, 767 | 3 127, 687 1110 94,435 | 4 71, 667 4610, 185 15th: 3 73,655 | 100,305 | 3 177,114 16thi 2: 57,017 |4 188,049 52, 023 16the 105, 835 89, 700 | 3 195, 644 17th... f 75,109 32,8621 17th... 003960 Vo so 17th... t.o HEE a BR 3 147, 471 18th. Ju: 60, 764 73, 932 53, 136 8th. . .=b 95, 09 75,749 | 3 170, 926 19th. 84, 931 75, 495 20, 446 19th. .i2 65, 758 25,852 | -891,715 20th: Sk 69, 874 66, 132 62, 628 20th. -.L 101,090 | 112,663 | 3 217, 449 71, 350 28h: i 48 539 , 4 82, 955 42,765 224. pani eas 4 88, 537 88, 678 42, 087 v7) {ER 86, 707 70, 787 157, 494 Colo.: Colo.: Asta a 110,078 59, 427 50, 083 1st: ng 83, 253 90, 151 | 8 174, 202 2d ll 66, 662 76, 859 64, 984 24: hd 49, 079 83, 264 | 3 133, 554 3d 65, 269 70, 842 55, 838 Bh ius 53, 904 69, 492 123, 396 Rl Ge 868, 225 | 865, 675 28, 460 4th. us 24, 039 38, 671 62, 710 dth-=.oiv 44,095 30, 126 Conn Conn IstZe uo. 109, 880 | 4 92, 980 72, 306 Ish Zul 120, 100 | 102, 257 222, 357 46, 426 3122, 987 57,612 3 160, 227 63, 719 3 204, 526 42, 602 3115, 126 283, 280 At large.. 424, 146 397, 725 | 3 827, 745 A large_| 68,205 64, 384 45, 376 a large..| 63, 649 62, 378 | 3 126, 440 a.: a.: Taba oT HA Rees 0) | DR 1 CRE | yA Ee Ea Isticanul 87,8800. Jaa. 87, 880 8 LENT 68, 797 8,882 Mio Odit LL PUNSaTIT Ta a bs KER 66,604: ior. 66, 604 Bd 36; 502: vil sv vp lb LBs Lp CNY 80 did 851,603: co 51, 693 5 a 84, 594 27,815 5, 725 4th: .. 65, 900 25, 643 91, 543 Sth: : 49, 715 16, 214 6, 906 Sth 0. 48, 602 23, 406 72, 008 Atlarge. 1-791,120 1 Co... ... 6thizi 32, 491 14, 134 46, 625 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 2 Total vote received by all candidates for 2 elective offices. 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. ¢ Total vote received, as candidate had one or more other party endorsements. 5 Vote cast for Communist candidate. 6 Vote cast for Prohibition candidate. 7 Vote received by candidate by ‘‘write-in’’ process. 8 To fill a vacancy. 256 Congressional Directory & VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944— Continued State and | Vote cast in 1940 || State and | Vote cast in 1942 State and | Vote cast in 1944 Total district, old district, new district, new ri 3 t apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-[2 8 Sas ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican in Ga.: 186. 28, 601 1111 6, 980 1129 3 23, 892 ES 19, 443 1636 3, 793 11 21,313 Sd 22.882 lenis 1.017 TA as 25, 276 4th. 25, 600i 5 ond 5,106 12 27,375 Stho-41, 677 47 9,176 1382 53, 186 6th... 21, 966 21 5,725 bei. 19, 034 tha. 32, 280 5, 062 FTL eo RR 31, 400 Si Srapals on 4788 Ti" 21,916 oth: 25, 461 4, 651 7,394 | 13,013 25, 880 10th... 18, 291 1238 y 898 Jes Le 25, 102 Idaho: Ispii o010.62,107 37, 999 30, 105 25, 562 87, 579 He RINE ll 61, 726 69, 804 37,815 | 45,805 118, 000 Teta 34,641 | 30, 698 26,280 | 28, 537 68, 917 2d ah 155, 698 | 146, 927 110, 069 | 106, 552 324, 668 8d. 148, 382 | 141, 768 109, 409 | 115,390 305, 905 7: A Pa 74, 977 21, 858 60, 623 16, 396 98, 589 Sth... 35, 637 14, 540 29, 167 11, 255 50, 299 Gh... 187, 393 | 146, 253 149, 342 | 110, 823 3 352, 539 thes... 229, 161 | 220, 793 179, 906 | 177, 931 478, 680 Sth. 2. 40, 074 11, 232 33, 425 8, 995 50, 340 Ohh. ol 49, 816 56, 806 38, 679 40, 803 115, 866 10th: >... 125, 827 | 199, 418 88, 266 | 150, 558 347, 592 Ith. =. 70, 581 | 128, 645 39, 829 97, 316 193, 360 126h. = 2 58, 945 90, 744 27, 405 68, 426 141, 464 13th... 31, 502 65, 698 12, 596 48, 500 84, 854 14th... 55, 451 60, 909 32, 450 47, 294 102, 571 5th. 1. 50, 820 65, 639 29, 741 48,677 98, 451 16th ..0 57, 567 79, 780 24, 969 55, 135 119, 080 17th_.___| 36,102 | 56,712 17,023 | 44, 563 79, 438 18th. ____ 56, 744 64, 409 30, 852 51, 281 102, 957 19th i .( 74, 091 75, 933 42, 171 56, 657 127, 189 20th: : 44 824 41, 806 30, 131 31, 360 70,014 IE Ra 63, 740 67, 896 39, 318 54, 585 112, 929 I LR 98, 162 84, 381 53,470 67,313 163, 927 23d... 64, 072 61, 521 42, 736 47, 526 103, 669 thi: 43, 050 49, 731 26, 377 37, 008 73,735 o5th-LC 67, 891 69, 165 40, 762 49, 965 107, 812 At large_|1,968,143 |2,050,493 1, 395, 053 [1 ,481 ,419 2, 030, 753 |1, 839, 518 [33 882, 657 As large. |1,913,950 |2,020,006 nd.: Astii cr. 71, 606 45, 947 44, 334 38, 450 75, 635 46, 968 | 2 123, 380 J a Re 63, 290 87, 652 39, 943 63, 120 48,103 78,061 | 3 126, 800 ads. ol 70, 208 73,914 53, 992 66, 434 78, 621 85,362 | 3 164, 958 dths i= 58, 157 80, 259 39, 032 61, 032 53, 636 81,110 | 3 135, 369 Sthl oo .iL 65, 200 78, 691 63, 989 80, 464 80, 208 94, 274 | 3 177, 688 Othe... 73, 499 80, 595 47, 363 65, 764 60, 758 75, 517 | 8 136, 697 ths. 0. 74, 746 81, 632 52, 386 69, 044 62, 136 73,417 | 3136, 248 Sth. 87, 141 69, 761 57, 868 67, 237 76, 905 84,095 | 3 161,709 oth.....70 69, 227 71, 624 44, 096 55, 949 49, 380 62, 831 | 3 113, 009 10thiz... 71, 478 80, 725 49, 963 67, 201 67, 724 82, 582 | 3 152, 050 Ith... 79, 070 73, 867 79, 932 79, 136 114, 051 108, 503 | 3 223, 308 12th... 80, 954 72,174 Iowa: Ist va 46, 040 70, 120 32, 893 55, 139 60, 048 78, 729 138, 777 2d. 75, 774 69, 298 46, 310 62, 290 68, 489 86, 903 155, 392 Bd. aan 43, 709 65, 425 35, 065 54, 124 56, 985 74, 901 131, 886 ath. 51, 558 66, 691 28, 745 52, 258 49, 098 59, 658 108, 756 5th.....-58, 718 66, 940 28, 287 48, 578 56, 138 66, 260 | 3 122, 590 6th... .... 64, 314 70, 707 30, 802 46, 843 42,098 60, 153 | 3 102, 362 hoo on 50, 644 71, 633 27, 409 49, 086 41, 802 66, 905 | 3 108, 748 8th__ 46, 597 64, 687 23, 059 42, 154 45, 682 58, 537 | 3 104, 248 Oth. .5..2 67,017 | 64,877 Kans. iste. 5 41, 375 64, 766 34, 404 49, 962 34, 731 71, 565 106, 296 7 Le 62, 787 73, 659 33, 625 48, 594 47, 676 68, 815 116, 491 Th Ile 48, 971 60, 381 27, 364 40, 789 34, 645 52, 361 87, 006 4th... .C 34, 947 58. 183 44, 313 55, 612 63, 843 90, 186 154, 029 5th.....0 58, 486 52, 901 27, 381 54, 655 32, 557 72, 370 104, 927 6th... 44 702 69, 627 27, 590 49, 403 32, 408 63, 035 95, th... 42, 518 75, 349 Ky. Ky.: Ky.: Yobo oo rae EL 17,027 | 8,195 Yeti 51,369 | 22,196 | 374,125 oda 60:905 |... .--_.. 3 21, 860° ...c 7 (ARIA ARE, 57,948 42,802 | 3 101, 068 LL ei 96, 253 64, 053 3d_______| 39,866 32,404 Sd. 79, 922 59, 190 | 3 139, 420 ath. 55, 561 39, 447 Ath 23, 871 19, 015 4th i... 48,671 40,317 | 889, 272 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 3 Includes the vote for various other candidates. Statistical 257 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944—Continued State and | Vote cast in 1940 || State and | Vote cast in 1942 State and | Vote cast in 1944 Total district, old r district, new district, new Vota cast apportion-| Demo- | Repub- || apportion- | Demo- | Repub- || apportion- | Demo- | Repub- in 1944 ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican Ky.—Con Ky.—Con Ky.—Con Bthe. tL. 51,954 | 32,981 Bhs. To 18,510 | 12,073 the is = 45,228 | 32,606 | 277,967 Gths: > 74,463 | 48, 700 6th_______| 63,404 | 44,214 | 3 107,923 the 44,185 | 33, 574 Vif a LA 33,406 | 30,165 | 363,630 Stho. .... 61,881 | 44,736 Shs. iid 48,969 | 41,154 | 390,257 Otho... 43,013 | 69, 415 Oth... iL 31,019 | 68,908 | 3100, 181 La: La; Isto... 58, 234. 18t2. 20. 85, 887) Cro 55, 887 od 56,026 ic... i 2d... O30 56, 636 LG LL 27,081 | 13,933 8d... ho . 123 28,123 dh. ua 33, 704 1 4th... tb 27, 886 27, 886 Sth: .... 83,462: 1. c.o0. Sthe. = 25, 462 25, 462 ths... PUES bre SI RTE 6th... i. 38, 561 38, 561 Teh. RW BIS Hann thy. 2 26, 931 26, 931 Sthe..... 904 mnt Sth... 8,100 )..c... Bho) ic. 23, 083 23, 083 Maine Maine Maine Tepilo. 32,018 | 55, 503 iste... 28,759 | 38,128 1 MA 21, 620 69, 341 doll. 31,334 | 57,152 7 dl 20,164 | 42,062 7 Dlg 22, 139 68, 684 0 23,934 | 46,732 a I LAR Ts 31, 728 8d........ 10, 102 45, 746 Mad: Mad: Md: Ist aie 36,057 | 30,810 Isbicob 25,270 | 19,938 3: in ghaiee $50 30, 257 59, 555 5 Ir 113,495 | 59, 223 oda. ir 57,865 | 35,228 od... , 239 170, 708 gd... 8, 540 | 24,153 Sdo..if 20,450 7, 469 LL 39,032 53,078 qth... .L. 50,120 | 38,444 4th 21,845 | 22,673 4th... 1. 47, 088 79, 504 Sth... id 58,418 | 23,857 5th...... 33,191 | 16, 596 Sth. a 51, 318 7 79, 139 Oth... i. 60,037 | 52, 258 6th... 31,187 | 45,724 6th. -.... 45, 877 | 63,079 | 108, 956 Mass: Mass: Mass: 1st..-....] 54,634 | 72,750 istic... 36,257 | 50, 302 CC} Ra 62,550 | 63,671 | 3126, 243 1% Lae nl 54,428 | 76,373 dea: 36,675 | 58,781 75, 571 | 3 135,771 i ; ; 49, 300 | 3 128, 169 76, 097 | 4 137, 073 109, 242 | & 149, 158 87, 211 | 5 130, 149 36, 877 | 8 114, 897 79,912 | 2 138, 973 75, 803 | 8 129, 635 100, 334 | 3 179, 725 39, 523 | 3 114, 993 iH 31,178 | 8 128, 648 ihIt 97,013 | 79,928 | 3 147, 393 3 128, 926 |i es 24, 542 | 8 128, 796 A 80, 594 | 8 124, 453 tie ska 73,134 | 8117, 027 dd 68, 233 | 3 106, 386 eds 73,034 | 126,471 mi 87,105 | 3 157,712 BY as 79, 455 | 3 120, 661 a 75,700 | 8 112,178 IRS 56, 308 90, 013 54,066 | 383,395 ans 46,985 | 379,695 Lo 40,573 | 82,054 Las 58,101 | 8139,135 76,358 | 8175, 587 57,070 | 8 158, 317 59,456 | 3 155,469 68, 195 | . 82,809 A ett 43, 036 56, 607 116, 242 | 3 206, 138 inn.: 27,479 | 88,814 186. i... 29,771 | 58,387 77,798 | 126,099 57,673 | 66,610 d 60, 028 91,867 | 121,415 9 50,222 | 63,854 44, 662 69,277 | 141,133 932,808 | 68,525 45, 903 59,994 | 124,428 52,289 | 79,491 60, 883 81,798 | 144, 559 952,504 | 84,023 49, 295 76,421 | 8118, 382 942,356 | 65,958 46, 570 75,315 | 114, 264 939,252 | 74,521 51, 803 62,600 | 120,731 $ 48, 999 | 48,324 34, 661 58, 080 98, 098 19,300 Vac inl: = Webi. of P07 Joos 562 18, 055 (Tn IR ET Ee DR a 1 1 ia) 218 16, 469 15864 i Bee GEE [ea 606 16, 828 15,320 (emaat andi a An S00 aac nes Er SO 13, 343 QTc ee Sty 0, 50% a ae Ss 22, 934 BRT a i Oe a Tp A0D fe 1,434 33,176 00 700 li tT Eh aN 9608 2,313 31, 907 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more 8Includes the vote for various other candidates. other party endorsements. 9 Vote cast for Farmer-Labor candidate. Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944—Continued State and | Vote cast in 1940 || State and | Vote cast in 1942 State and | Vote cast in 1944 Total district, old district, new district, new vote cast apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-in 1944 ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican . Mo.: Mo.: 62, 461 61, 123 Is6z. = 33,465 41, 809 1863. ity 50, 476 52, 008 102, 484 77,922 | 66,794 3 Hem 37,069 | 37,635 od. it 60, 587 | 60, 857 | 3121, 455 77,424 | 67,757 3d... 31,108 | 40,227 8d... 1. 60,273 | 61,720 | 121,993 72, 331 48, 181 4th... ol. 30, 227 19, 709 4th: 2 60, 594 45, 381 | 3 105, 989 63,202 | 53, 390 Sthi..... 27,243 | 26,163 S5tha...... 53,320 | 48,127 | 3101, 474 67,902 | 78, 746 Gth..:... 38,946 | 46, 735 6th... .... 54,095 | 71,705 | 125, 800 59, 344 86, 547 th: sat 28, 542 49, 595 rth... il.. 42, 929 76, 180 119, 109 64, 263 | 61, 567 thy... ii 37,072 | 39,422 Sthe 2. 54,010 | 52,924 | 3106, 946 60,204 | 48, 704 oth: .... 30,082 | 24,912 Oth... oi; 50,594 | 44,476 95, 070 69, 859 51, 755 10th... 29, 514 22, 555 10th... ... 55, 243 42,129 97, 372 85,722 | 68,088 1th... 35,510 | 36,133 Tigh... ii. 69,351 | 48,435 | 117,823 108, 605 | 127, 005 12th at 51, 649 68, 329 12th... 110, 060 | 118, 394 228, 454 5 45, 262 13th... 37, 651 23, 770 13th. .... hn d08 doz Le 376,443 Mont.: Mont.: 47,352 | 56, 616 Istsiz. i= 42,754 | 28,603 Ista. in. 57,008 | 26,141 | 383,990 83, 101 49, 710 es...3% 50,489 | 45,051 51,372 | 3113, 227 51, 524 31,422 69, 651 100, 816 144, 217 68, 760 35,743 | 40, 646 78,686 | 132, 323 19, 253 27,208 | 61,813 84, 251 123, 243 29, 311 27,406 | 55,914 72,647 | 3115,143 63, 025 32,714 | 18,032 Ab large.| 21,100 | 18,289 19, 096 51, 744 55,434 | 57,982 Istcis. 39,743 | 43,281 57,537 | 113,039 49, 260 | 55, 530 a Ga ak 30,473 | 42,718 55,911 | 3102, 818 77, 931 97, 547 Ist. i 46,445 | 74,867 87,950 | 3174, 379 60,392 | 55, 382 13 Sn 42 40,478 | 35,930 51,194 94, 056 76,048 | 70,890 1 ER 45,037: | 51, 573 80,438 | 141, 207 54,909 | 69, 834 4tha.....1 29,088 | 51,498 68, 647 | 3 123, 363 65,200 | 82,840 Sth: .... 32,999 | 61,896 87,129 | 3 149, 124 62, 888 | 78, 361 6the..... 36,425 | 52,211 84,143 | 8151, 598 44,527 | 82, 287 7th... 25,171 | 55,424 86, 759 | 3131, 365 50,622 | 72,197 Sthe 12: 28,060 | 56, 582 75,479 |3129,113 54,254 | 91,352 othe. .... 32,021 | 51,692 93, 687 | 147, 534 46,934 | 64, 699 10th-.-.: 31,504 | 37,189 62,004 | 3117, 106 46,130 | 61, 606 th... 23,630 | 36, 500 58,586 | 3113, 252 53,677 | 67,996 12th... 26,188 | 43,942 67, 680 | 8133, 770 92,356 | 39,274 13th..... 73,766 | 18,894 38, 336 | 3 128, 324 84, 538 44, 839 I4this .L 75,322 20, 161 4th... 79, 158 46, 076 125, 234 . 5 N. Mex.: N. Mex.: At large_| 106,972 | 75,085 At large.| 62,320 | 43,627 At large._| 85,244 | 66,309 } 298. 049 Atlarge.| 57,474 | 43,071 At large..| 80,752 | 66,644 | ’ N.Y. 0 Ye Ashe... 141,774 | 276,873 Isto... 83,453 | 197,473 Tgpex 440,294 | 92,044 | 132,338 odes: 216, 309. | 170, 004 da... 125,090 | 95,240 2d. i 462,242 | 131, 906 194, 148 Sd.u 442,884 | 17,839 3d... 18, 700 8,979 3d... Lo 470,163 | 108,118 | 178,281 4th: . 36,995 | 25,207 4th...... 21,456 | 10,070 4th. ____| 473,098 | 65390 | 138,488 She. tL 4 63,295 | 51,428 Sthe. 444 522 | 23,285 5thii..... 490,338 | 76,014 | 166,352 6th... .. 130,391 | 58, 507 6th... 406,990 | 37,427 6th... 481,228 | 65,821 147, 049 tn. 20 450,189 | 18,765 th: ... 427,688 | 10,353 nh. 473,868 | 42,716 | 116,584 Sth. 217, 599 | 103, 753 Sth oc. 4158, 685 | 59,408 Sth... i. 4 55,565 | 37,816 93, 381 Othe 492 559 | 67,901 Oth... 44,064 | 41,491 Oth... 463,400 | 34,517 | 3 114,438 10th... . 4 57,286 | 21,358 10th... 432,026 | 14,693 10th... i; 478,753 | 36,854 | 8 136,326 Hih: 2. 46,616 | 42,631 Hh... = 431,723 | 23,029 Heh... 495,213 | 49,442 | 144,655 12th... 17,176 | 10 3, 664 12th... 413, 584 2,031 19th... 3. 451,411 | 42,007 93, 418 183th... 18, 334 8, 367 13th... 411, 245 3,947 Bh 481,640 | 53,854 | 135,494 4th: 26,455 | 13,940 14th. _. 417,652 | 10,037 With. .... 4 85,534 | 32,393 | 28146, 693 15th... 26,314 | 13,158 15th. _: 14, 746 7, 566 15th. 4105,943 | 24,650 | 130, 593 16th, = 28,837 | 31,020 16th... 418,710 | 18,630 16th... ... 448 411 | 55,647 | 104, 058 17th... 45,339 | 53,316 7th... 24,365 | 438,079 1h... 57,769 | 77,196 | 3147, 243 18th... . 31,151 | 24,312 18th... 18, 636 | £16, 665 18th... 137,042 |1131, 731 82, 316 19th: .. 71,018 | 32,821 19th: 441,566 | 20,000 Ith... 469,973 | 25,494 95, 467 20th: ..... 15, 160 (41025,254 20th... 127,533 | 12 7,890 20th... ... 487,724 | 36,197 | 123,921 21st... 108,139 | 46,324 Sst. 4 60, 588 | 30,796 2st... 491,747 | 40,718 | 132,465 22d: 44,296 | 23, 532 22d... 425,933 | 12,714 2d... 13 67,192 [14 15, 948 83, 140 2d... 190, 396 | 88,083 23d... 4142,395 | 50,063 23d... 4126,245 | 32,594 | 158,839 4th... 161, 577 | 136, 835 24th_____|4117,198 | 86, 506 24th. ..... 4102,684 | 18,461 | 121,145 25th. __ 64, 889 | 125,412 25th_____| 33,040 | 85,024 With. 4114,248 | 50,274 | 3 184,083 2 Total vote received by all candidates for 2 elective lowing votes: American Labor, 13,543; Democrat, offices. 37,042; Republican, 31,731. 8 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 12 Elected as American Labor, receiving the fol-4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more lowing votes: American Labor, 3,501; Democrat, other party endorsements. 7,533; Republican, 7,890. 10 Vote cast for American Labor candidate. 13 Includes American Labor vote. 11 Elected as American Labor, receiving the fol-14 Republican votes cast for Democratic candidate. Statistical 259 VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944—Continued State and | Vote cast in 1940 || State and | Vote cast in 1942 State and | Vote cast in 1944 Total district, old district,new district, new Lo 2 " apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-|| apportion-| Demo-| Repub-[V2 0S ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican | IB N.Y.—Co; 26th 68, 715 444 751 70, 746 162, 411 7th. =~! 65, 618 431,426 90, 699 146, 455 Bth_ it 59, 344 4 86, 767 90, 623 138, 269 0th: 82, 328 431,616 £62, 583 133, 213 20th. 2 66, 159 29, 414 88, 067 139, 792 31st. 58, 727 19, 448 85, 178 141, 884 32d. 71, 782 17, 631 63, 603 148, 750 (LE PORE 72,412 434, 965 95,299 | 8152, 183 ath. 93, 990 33, 276 75, 532 120, 089 35th... 97, 688 42, 270 65, 857 125, 882 6th... 64, 507 4 28, 502 79, 535 149, 547 Sth: : 76, 630 422, 452 75, 246 108, 711 38th... 92, 866 4 53, 889 75,432 | 2 115, 053 Sotho. 73, 316 15 22, 006 75,740 | 8 111, 288 40th. _...Y 119, 972 441,459 88, 782 179, 151 dst: 57,335 436, 589 71, 988 113, 979 494: > 44, 866 434, 248 83, 781 146, 371 43d...5 67, 520 20, 867 74, 366 145, 582 At large. |43, 199, 019] 2,830,517 At large_[41 ,909, 706 72, 402 144, 566 AL large. 3 182, 936| 2,812,066 Al large. 4 872, 321 64, 456 100, 506 «OC. N.:C.: Ist... ._15: 36,722 2, 851 Ist. ...: 8, 444 3,139 33, 288 Sa A NT ei oS CLR ETT 1513 | 36,462 30a ot 33, 760 11, 248 8d... 1: 9, 596 12, 055 42, 502 4th. ....1 57,610 14, 926 4th... .. 20, 703 18, 046 71, 386 Sth... 53,778 15,872 5th” _....1 20,601 21, 669 64, 651 6th. 55,540 | 15,250 || 6th... 16, 548 18,195 | 68,198 hi a.6631 7ies|| nhl 12,112 10,260 | 49,602 Sthz io 57, 879 28, 232 Sth... .. 27, 146 32, 450 80, 694 Oth... 60, 875 8, 287 Oth. il 29, 213 35, 506 86, 101 10th. = 87, 156 37,736 10th_____| 26,785 26, 757 77, 362 Bith: i. 75, 763 34, 104 Tathe: 13 20, 270 21, 829 63, 405 12th. 30, 438 28 965 81, 007 N. Dak.: N. Dak. At large.| 63,662 | 148, 227 Atlarge_| 148,472 85, 936 At large. 56,699 | 101, 007 J% 330.769 At large.| 63,027 | 111,125 At large 47,972 | 65, 905 Atlarge__| 45,308 | 91,425 2 Ohio: Ohio: Ohio: 188. is 61, 382 84, 622 Ist ot 33, 884 54,120 ists o.oo 62, 617 82,373 144, 990 oq I 60,410 | 77.760 || 2d 7 1. 20,893 | 53.083 || 2d. 61.473 | 78,185 | 139,658 3d. 103, 291 93, 002 8d... 48, 338 51, 477 8d: . 1 204,247 94, 064 198, 311 4th......1 47,765 65, 534 dh. 22, 567 39, 275 qth. Lo 42, 983 67, 829 110, 812 Sth hs 31, 063 48, 040 Sth: 17, 514 30, 667 Sth: <2 22, 740 48, 490 71, 230 Oth......] =52 769 48, 257 6th__....| 31,793 33,171 6th. 42, 167 45, 284 87,451 the. 50,667 | 83415 7th. 93/384 | 52,270 || 7th. .| 52,403 | 84,770 |8137,384 Sth... 44 605 49, 218 Sth... .:: 22, 753 33, 797 Sth: orl 34,494 51, 253 85, 747 9th_._.___| 86,956 71, 927 oth... 44, 027 47,377 Oth: =. 77, 693 82, 735 160, 428 doth: i. 33, 698 48, 217 10th..." 16,582 29, 691 9th = 23, 986 43, 388 67,374 1th... 43, 548 37, 398 11th __..}:>19, 817 31, 385 Tish xi 33, 098 38, 263 71,361 12th..... 87,115 91, 767 12th. -.t 40, 290 6, 558 12th. iL. 82, 503 97, 856 180, 359 Bh. 40,274 | 62442 | 13th. Chl CU RE SOE 67,298 | 67,2 4th... 121, 037 | 108, 016 14th: i. 57, 759 60, 868 4th... 117,770 | 115,145 232, 915 5th... 57, 359 40, 233 15th___..| 23,213 35, 137 5th. .... 1, 756 47,710 79, 466 16th. 2, 469 71, 629 16th: 45, 531 50, 657 16th__._. ..| 85,755 75,921 | 3 162, 825 17th... _..}. -56,343 69, 102 17th___..| 28,235 47, 565 1th 43, 271 73, 206 116, 477 18th... 79, 718 , 666 18th___..| 37,951 43, 279 18h. ii. 63, 098 65, 847 128, 945 19th. :. 122, 075 75,016 10th. 60, 248 46, 567 19th: 1. 120, 191 69, 403 189, 594 oth... 72, 395 34, 605 20th. .:. 34, 462 14, 001 0th. I 75, 218 23, 945 69, 163 Nest: 79, 602 23, 658 ost 35, 109 19, 137 oe REIT 77, 525 22, 288 99, 813 2245. 126, 273 | 165, 322 od... 69, 601 92, 644 20d. Li 137, 546 | 185, 187 322,733 At large_{1, 384, 745 {1 ,519, 559 oe large. 717, 692 945, 995 Atlarge.._|1, 362, 843 1; 542, 422 |2, 905, 265 At large. ¥ 483, 879 |1 386, 627 OXkla.: Okla.: Okla.:SR 03,366 | 56,112 || 1st... 42,966 | 35,186 || Isb.---oe-68,561 | 71,545 | 140,106 2d. -<}750, 351 30, 630 0% ale ll 21, 661 21, 273 527% BRI doe 39, 052 28, 282 67, 334 3d.......]1" 68,344 18, 145 7% Eh 23,321 6, 347 3d ..i-|--51:135 16, 016 67, 151 dth_. 69, 040 28, 046 ath, 28 23, 941 18, 179 4th. 0 47,733 29, 582 77,315 Sth... i. 93, 457 34,942 Shh... tt: 36, 797 15, 742 Sthe it 85, 132 50, 207 | 8 135, 770 6th. io 52, 338 22, 343 6th. = 19, 957 14, 535 6th...) 41, 987 27, 979 69, 966 76 HE 39, 884 16, 246 the: i 14, 051 6, 010 Hh. iis 35, 895 14, 790 50, 685 Sth_.. 1. 41, 417 48, 737 Sth... 19, 773 30, 548 Sth oo. 31, 737 43, 878 3 76, 233 At large 479, 433 | 245,384 reg.: Oreg. Oreg. Isto 63,940 | 145,675 iste al 27, 208 49, 021 Wo 39, 928 80, 106 120, 034 v.78 aly ie 44 832 33, 529 ds is 16, 809 26, 723 OA a 22, 498 43, 145 65, 643 or ah 80, 930 84, 275 51, 55, 1 77,814 605 419 Sd. 870 775 lai 95, 173, 4th: .. 19, 632 29, 385 4th: a 30, 024 53, 356 83, 380 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or 2 Toil vote received by all candidates for 2 elective more other party endorsements. 0 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 16 Democratic votes cast for Republican candidate. ines the vote for various other candidates. 260 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944—Continued Sisto and Vote cast in 1940 State'and Vote cast in 1942 State and Vote cast in 1944 i district, old qistpichnew Gisivioy, new vote oust apportion | nyo, | Repub-|| BPPOTHON-| pop. | Repub-|| 2PPOTUOD-| pom. | Repub-| in 1944 ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican Pa.: Pa.: Pa.;si... 64,599 | 39,770 Ist od 38, 768 4, 519 Ist IRA, z, 289 52 159 195, 448 od T 62,844 | 39.489 || 2d_._.___ 6, 2 545 od 1 : 57.849 | 155, 200 Cammpebog74 42,578 || ER : IB689 || ERE 01 » ath. 458 | 4th _-4th. __ ; He 385 5th ME 76,724 | 60 109 sth — 46, oo is, 781 sth gre £ 74 63 085 : 187, 829 Oth 82550 | 51,313 || 6th. _____ : 2,995 || 6th... : 75,794 | 3 154, 062 Hh 76,054 | 79,416 || 7th... 48,373 | 60,836 || ‘Tth___.__. 68,161 | 72,289 | 140,450 aphid55919 || _-: pg sic ER : mig081 oh. 50,632 | 9th. om... 1 10th. ____ 53 333 | 72.843 10h 23,784 | 52,380 0th 50,047 | 45,593 | 104, 640 1h. 65,368 | 58,831 1th. 43,585 | 34, 527 1th... 71.843 | 65,922 | 137,765 Ete Erne Se ane th... 501 | 70,647 || 13th_____ ; vl Asth i A ' 240 | 379, 974 In 48 140 | 31,839 13th. 23,247 | 19, 408 1h 27,653 | 51,333 | 78,986 15th... 35,696 | 54,981 15th... £32 053 | 63,077 15th... 33,750 | 52,826 | 86,576 loth at 39, 988 61, 167 loth ie 47 920 | 45,472 loth ain ) ds, 392 7, 55 124, 947 17th... 45,616 | 175,006 || 17th ____ 52,661 || 17th.... 3 5198 | 70,073 18th_____ 34,398 | 46, 595 8th 7 190,340 | 33,147 18th. 49,080 | 81.814 | 130,894 19th_____ 62,208 | 74,420 19th __ 31,969 | 62, 119 19th. -27,655 | 49,670 | 378 477 20th_____ 44914 | 64,188 || 20th __._ 20,171 | 37,738 20th... 51,504 | 38.460 | 90,054 lst. 52,530 | 40,863 lst... 32,408 | 28,272 21st... 50,548 | 55,984 | 106, 532 eas Nel pl S| ae ll Bao os | Wen | Sem 24th. | 54,631 | 41.641 || 24th_____| 33,480 | 32,014 || 24th _____| 52.500 | 31.940 | 84 440 25th. 58 442 | 37,357 25th __ 38,316 | 37,903 Sth on 60,473 | 61,544 | 122 017 26th. ' 273 | 64, 669 26th. 20,652 | 41,730 || 26th ___._ 52,994 | 58 743 | 111,737 Eo Ee DIB 29th| 41,924 | 50,147 20th_____| 27.573 | 40,243 20th ____| 62,592 | 63.086 | 125678 30th... 62,450 | 62, 097 30th... 43 482 | 33,568 30th... 56,423 | 60,391 | 116,814 ust. 76,819 | 50,960 || lst... .. 50,316 | 36,239 || Sist___... 61,104 | 71,222 | 132 326 32d... 62,121 | 28196 || 32d... 41,798 | 39,262 || 32d. ___-83,724 | 33,221 | 116,945 33d. Sa 70, 824 a, 37 At large. [1,105,992 [1,360,664 || 33d... 75,796 | 33,651 | 109, 447 th. 75,004 | 64,336 R.1: : R.I: R.I1: 1 eek 87,327 | 64,517 el 68,242 | 47,480 mL 88,179 | 54,233 | 3 142, 514 d 69,411 | 51,471 : 2d CREE 87,189 | 63,778 | 150,967 sass fe Ke 1 15,326 | 1,190 | 16,517 Lam fire EY a 19, 342 308 | 319, 741 Som LIT a 13, 105 404 | 313 512 oe Es bi 20, 988 934 | 21922 CSE lee She 14, 435 78 | 14.713 2905 Ir 2 6th ars 14, 164 201 | 814, 457 . ak.: 54,457 | 81,373 ARE 63,981 | 113,769 | 177,750 11,802 | 30,389 2 SES 14,869 | 33,119 | 47,988 enn.:; 1799 | 19,778 st. su 45,498 | 45, 498 wiles 2a 36,441 | 45,416 | 81 857 5 3, 831 LT 32 497 | 11.541 | 847,932 7.677 | 3 463 4h. 20,684 | 0,642 | 331 761 gen [Ar Sh 27.087 | 4508 | 31685 4 as foe parr 6th RE 28, 752 885 | 29,637 Reso CIEE “Hl ones fo 22, 592 Sth. 32,002 | 2,760 || Sth... 9,151 |" "5, 801 Sth 1. 19,822 | "11,500 | 31,331 oth... 55952 | 12,309. || 9th _____ 7,354 882 || oth _-25,250 | 3,510 | 28 760 5 loth a TH A oe 10h... ra RAR 47, 569 ex ex OX onirie 5. 2.030 Lei i sia lL 0.50% bua... ine CT en 10 839, 410 oY haa £3607 voi a £0 Ba A 54,258 |" 3,442 | 357.709 ay EE a Re 200% |. 22% | doom fh... oT, 780 Tg 273 sho... a tho... 6z, 459 "795,027 5 480 dreamer TN Sth eet oth. __..| 36.884]... .|%38 7th. 30, 385 565 7th... 11, 043 96 Hh 32,850 | 1.328 | 334 179 Sth... . 89,796 | 4,925 sth. 31, 038 622 || sth____ 90,963 | 7.555 98 518 Sth... TH wae oth. | TE nai oth... 56,194 | 3,967 | 360,184 10th... rN a 10th. ____ CEE 10th... 44,602 | 3,262 | 347.866 Te WE Et VE a Le 18th... 50, ore "771,804 lath... I 677 | "251 13th... 3, 508 To, 586 256 099 — EN Ag eR he eave ih 31,800 | 2,628 15th... Zin} wih. 50,802 as ire 3 36, 367 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 4 Total vote received, as candidate had one or more 8 Includes the vote for various other candidates. other party endorsements. Statistical 261 : VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, DELEGATES, AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER IN 1940, 1942, AND 1944—Continued State and Vote cast in 1940 State and Vote cast in 1942 State and Vote cast in 1944 district, old Sialic) ,NeW singh, new BEY oo apportion-| emo-.| Ro _ || apportion-J _|| apportion-il pub Demo-| Repub Demo-| Repub-| in 1944 ment crat lican ment crat lican ment crat lican Tex.— Con Tex.—Con . id. B16 [mar 16th 16,612 31,658 | ........] 331,666 tha. 45,456 [2 ctrl 17h 13, 261 43, 785 1,468 | 845, 260 18tho-::. 51,015" 1, 858 18th 10, 739 47,638 3,552 | 351,194 19th... 53,10 (Tali 9th 5 ; B52, 426: ua lant 3 52, 431 20th. 2: 47, 075 9, 296 oth. , 860 30,804 i 39, 394 21st... 49,468 3, 832 2st 16, 554 47, 796 5, 474 53, 270 Utah: Utah: Isbis.. 62,654 | 47,021 Ist: =: V%36,207 59,7565 | 43,642 | 103, 397 vis Sola 86,874 | 50,332 Ay ol a 43, 582 89,844 | 54,440 | 144,284 te: t.: ot large.| 50,804 | 89,637 a large | 17,304 46,230 | 76,800 | 3 123,036 a.: a.: ste 22,408 fev gi 3 0 5, 207 23, 284 5, 391 28, 675 dea 99.788 Joie cil 2d. x 5,3 21, 268 9,304 | 336,879 CREED 34,885 | 161,126 8dr. 17 5, 822 32,018 |=: Co 332,925 Athi e. 19, 043 16 788 4this _« 4, 457 15,724 eens 315,728 8, 166 24,781 | 14,509 29, 202 10, 510 30, 844 13, 798 344 877 , 521 24,967 | 16,738 41,705 13, 380 31,618 | 111,019 | 352,582 i 16, 655 33,943 | 26,373 | 360,317 69, 010 118,354 | 103,099 | 3 222, 956 | 39, 628 74,676 | 48,974 | 123,650 25, 894 57,942 | 53,503 | 111,445 i 19, 751 37,150 | 56,211 93, 361 i 28,076 | 47,242 Sth... 57,235 | 62,648 | 119,883 | 42,666 | 23, 650 % an Ra 80,679 | 51,119 | 131,798 : | Va, | 35,498 | 42,787 Ist: 58,313 | 57,363 | 115,676 32,935 | 32,676 od. nl. 58,695 | 49,722 | 108,417 32,682 | 37,135 8d..00.. 57,912 | 52,457 | 110, 369 44 528 | 48,697 Jihe Er 07 64,986 | 68,204 | 133,190 36,625 | 27,400 Sth... ... 65,463 | 40,568 | 106,031 | 46,281 | 43,043 wl Seana 84,369 | 60,457 | 144,826 |! 1S.: A 16,848 | 46,453 defi us. 1824 013 | 74,223 | 3 99,230 i 1843 412 | 34,272 od i. 34,145 | 74,937 | 3 132,010 18 31,092 | 34,177 1 INE 26,978 | 74,092 | 8106, 051 46,819 | 29,104 Ahi g. 103, 583 | 55,375 | 3163, 162 44 337 | 38,345 Sthe vue 88, 60 78,834 | 3174, 354 13,364 | 41,385 Othe... 36,180 | 74,487 | 3 111,950 15,821 | 40, 520 Ghilt 31,991 | 73,531 |3106,162 40,002 | 33,441 Sthei lt: . 57,458 | 64,623 | 3 126,410 Oth iii. 18 61, 009 47,825 Otho. 18 37,919 19, 972 Oh... c= 18 48 064 16 736 348 819 10the = 18 50, 776 | 37,819 10th 1898 ,169 | 33,143 10th. x. 29,773 | 54,731 | 394,710 Wyo.: Wyo.: Wyo.: At large.| 57,030 | 49,701 At large_| 36,892 | 37,963 At large | 42,569 | 53,533 96, 102 | | | Vote | | | i 1 | | Territory or island | 1940 1942 | 1944 Ji ital possession | Sad] 1944 | Republi-Republi . | Republi- Democrat hrs Democrat an Democrat oa Alaska: Delegate at Large. 11, 241 3, 320 6,603 1 ta id 7,252 3, 762 11,014 Hawaii: Delegate at Large_|___________ 54, 466 19, 746 39,856 ( .-o..... 52,074 52, 074 Puerto Rico: Resident Commis-sioner (4-year form) or 1029 38 | 0d Rdg la. 21 383, 317 | 22 208, 723 592, 222 1 Vote cast for Independent candidate. 19 Coalitionist. 8 Includes the vote for various other candidates. 20 Popular Party vote. 18 Vote cast for Socialist candidate. 21 Popular Democrat. H 17 No vote reported for Chesterfield County. 22 Vote of Union Republic, Progressive, and So-fl 18 Vote cast for Progressive candidate. cialist Parties. 262 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT So | B 12] 12] 2] ©w 7) 2] [2] 2] 2] [=] 22] a : o 68/2 |8 (2 |Z |E |2 |B |B |2 (8 |& | |& |S. |8 = 8 CEN ST ae) g_ So fo go go Eo Eo g 8, as CFF State BEICE ICE |1°8 |°8|08 |Z C8 PE [ok [°F | 8% C8 | £8 22a" SRE Eel ge =r Filia — — ts a — — I=E%8 a= AES HS w 8 Ema lg |B (B28 [2E|5 283888 gai is dm fg IB Seve Ele (HBT (BEES oa |& 3 = 3 = Ra 3 JE 5) — B oe OE Je |e PE Efe eel ge El ee eel Alnbama. co oboe Basis 1 3 5 7 7 6 8 8 9 9171019 9 ATIZORN Et i] ml ea paanat To aml a a EEN tL LoS aaah 1 1 2 Aransasar Vo ml ee ae 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 73 7 too California oz cc 1 senpias bo 0 nd Ve maes 2 2 3 4 6 7 8-11 20.1 23 Colorado: .-= {or nai oo Slanted ds Sorrel Sl ee 1 1 2 3 404 4 Connecticut... 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5% 6 6 Delaware _______ i 1 1 2 i} 1 1 1 1 il 1 1 1 1 1 1 Bloridas Sead car andra © oo lisa caja i 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 5 6 Georgian... 0. 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 Gals i 10a) v1 11 1210] 10 ST a, SS i Bid BOHR Da lL WR Ret ES Las 1 1 1 2:1-2 2 Hlinefers. Soo nil bassbonl a 1 3 7 9 14 19 20 22 25 27 {27 26 Filgas Indiana me ol 1 3 gl Ra I I BE BE BORE I BS Ra SH Re BR Jowana rt Cada galerieeras 2 2 6 O21] 11 11 Tg 8 3 an eer WETERR nll ST TL EU Penn FS tig Bo sc of ret SE) opin IRIS 0) 1 3 7 8 8 Cp ey 6 Kentucky... 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 11 TE 11 9 9 Louisiana____ 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 7 81 8 8 Maine... ........ 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4] 3 3 Maryland 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 Massachusetts... Silsaea {17 313 131 121 10811 10 j11 12:18 | #14 (+16 |: 15 [+14 Michigantas, jac mp od Cana IY 1 3 4 6 0 Tae 212 312 £13 17 1517 Minnesota mn conic et fos edn baat. egal 2 2 3 5 7 9 10] 9 9 Mississipplc oi.ye 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 7 7 ca Milgsourk oof sow taal aero at 1 2 5 7 9 13 14 15 16 16 | 13 13 Montana ae oUt coh aaa saa seal ae LL el 1 1 1 fwee2 | 2 2 Nebraslen: snc Pogues I A ge dena mes 1 h 3 6 6 61.15 4 Nevada | fv sl role 0 adil eisai. ddx Lh 1 i ik 1 1 1 1 1 New Hampshire. 3 4 5 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2:12 2 New Jersey... 4 5 6 [§ 6 6 5 5 5 7} 7 81 10.12]. 14 |i34 NeW MEXICO... oc le. ol memes one ie oe Send Bhs | RIE aan a ea 1 1 2 New York... = 6: 210] 17 271 34 | 40 34: 383 31 83 | 3di{:34 1 37) 43] 45 |>45 North Carolina. -Gil. »10-7-39 Las: 13> 13 9 8 7 8 9 01:10:04 10: 11 12 North:Dakota=| oni vo iy er oss Sr dargains 1 1 2 3il-+2 2 eelSER ES ad 1 61d 19° 21 521 fF 19 [i520 | 21-20 | £20 {22.1 24 4-03 Oklnhoma. cic. Simi nen le oda as gle sa Vi adsl ae Sof oC diario ais] gn 5 8 9 8 Oregon... nl. ha aaa) Rei TG pe Ee COR 1 1 1 1 2 2 3:13 4 "Pennsylvania... __ 8 13 181 28 126 1. 28 | 24:1 25.| 24 | =27-| 280-30] 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 9 7 6 4 5 7 7 7 750-6 8 Sonthe Dakota.Sor] a erin faria ont ma de Sg pO ELL Soo PRE 2 2 2 3 2 Zz ‘Bennessee. of ol. ..00 1 3 6 Oufr-18 v1 aa0 81510 10: -30:{::107 10 | 9 +10 AN Da STR ae MR I Col Real Ire poe ag La 2 2 4 6 11 13 16 18 | 21 21 {Ihe des RCo Ce EE BEV ie TRS MST been 0 1 TOR 0 BE ET mara) isnasi se 1 1 1 14 RE 2 Vermont... iii].vis 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 211 1 Virginia... oo... 1030 397 221.028 | 1220 20 iS I3 i. 11 9-30 10 13:30 1210) 9 9 Washingtonian loaaacae solo an {oe sa denis a Lea. 15 2 3 5| 6 6 West Virginia0 yo oo. fo. ans at ahr se (sepia).o02 3 4 4 8 6| 6 6 Wisconsin. =...a Na 2 3 6 8 9 10 | 11 11.110 oem 10 Wyoming. oda uolbnr cfr basins (oA oe od [oo oailo lasmaliva. 1 1 1 1 1 1 Fotal-o =. 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 293 | 332 | 357 | 391 | 435 (435 | 435 1 No apportionment was made in 1920. The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is included in the above table: First—Tennessee, 1. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1; lowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1. Eighth—Illinois, 1; Towa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ohio, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 3; Tennessee, 1; Vermont, 1. Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. Eleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5. Thir-teenth— Arizona, 1; New Mexico, 1 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 Representative, in any 2 States is made as small as possible. By equalizing the represention of all pairs of i the method gives as nearly equal representation as possible to all States in proportion to their population. Statistical 263 GOVERNORSOF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES : : Poli-|Term of| Expiration State or Territory Capital Governor ties | service |: of term Salary STATE Years Montgomery.______ Chauncey Sparks. __..___.__ D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 1 $6,000 Phoenix... Sidney P. Osborn_____.______ D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 10,000 Little Roek_______ BenT.laney. oh... D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 26,000 Sacramento. ______ Bal Warren... oe R. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 310,000 Denver: 0.2 JohmC. Vivian..... R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 10,000 Hartford... .:. Raymond E. Baldwin_.____ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 12,000 ONO L230 Walter W. Bacon. __________ R. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 47, 500 Tallahassee. ..____ Millard F. Caldwell___.____ D. 4 | Jan. 1949 9,.000 Atlanta...er RligAvnall oC on ot ag D. 4 | Jan. 1947 7, 500 0 Boise lio laroF Arnold Williams (acting)___.| D. 2 | Jan. 1947 7, 500 Springfield ________ Dwight H. Green___________ R. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 12,000 Indianapolis. _____ Ralph BE. Gates... __._ R. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 512,000 Des Moines_._____ Robert D, Blue ¥>0 R. 2 | Jan. 1947 7, 500 Topeka. oo i. .% Andrew F. Schoeppel.______ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 35,000 Kentucky ._______. Frankfort i i: _% Simeon S. Willis... ......... R: 4 | Dec. 1947 | 310, 000 Louisiana__.______ Baton Rouge_.____ Jo He DAVIS tani wanws D. 4 | May 1948 | 312, Lei 000 Maing fee Augusta tTCo in Horace A. Hildreth_________ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | ©5000 Maryland. .______ Annapolis_________ Herbert R. O’Conor..______ D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 34,500 Massachusetts__._| Boston____________ Mauriced. Tobin... D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 10,000 Michigan... .... Lansing ov= 0 Horry P.RKelly........... R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 45,000 Minnesota_.______ St.Paul foo Edward J. hye Bp our R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 77,000 Mississippi. ..____ Jackson: Hoi l..:8 Thomas L. Bailey ....._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1948 | 37, 500 Missouri 3 00k Jefferson City_.__. Phil M. Donnelly .__.._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 8 10, 0008 Montana. ..__.... elenf. coin Sam-C..-Ford... ..... R. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 37, 500 Nebraska. _______. Tineoln tf 7-2 Dwight Griswold. __________ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 37,500 Nevada 2.7 =u% Carson City_._____ Vail Pittman (acting) ____.__ D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 814,000 New Hampshire__| Concord. _______._ Charles M.Dale..__________ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 , 000 New Jersey._____. Trenton... Walter E. Edge... R. 3 | Jan. 1947 | ° 20,000 New Mexico______ Sonts'¥e ~~ John J. Pompey Ned D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 35,000 New York. ___.__.. Albany... Thomas E. Dewey__..._____ R. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 325,000 North Carolina.__| Raleigh __________ R. Gregg Cherry TURN TEE D. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 310, 500 North Dakota..._.| Bismarck_________ Fred G. Aandahl ...._ _._ _. R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 36,000 hice! 2m L Columbus. __.._ 2. Frank J. Lausche__...._.____ D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 310, 000 Oklahoma. .______. Oppnams City... Robert 8. Kerr ........._ D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 36, 500 Oregon.=. 32. I:t alemer. a) Earl Spell io fei) R. 4 | Jan. 1947 7, 500 Pennsylvania_____ Harrisburg_.______ Edward Martin ___-__.__._. R. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 318, 000 Rhode Island_____ Providence________ John O. Pastore (acting)__...| D. 2 | Jan. 1947 8, 000 South Carolina.._.| Columbia. ________ vi J. Williams (act-| D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 8 7 500 in South Dakota. =.= Plerre > ......=. MQ. Sharpe... is usczi R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 33,000 Tennessee. _______ Nashville. ________ Jim Nance McCord._________ D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 34,000 Texas. vl1 toy Austin oF oke R. Stevenson__._______ D. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 312, 000 Ulah. iis ...00 Salt Lake City.._.| Herbert B. Maw____._______ D. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 36,000 Vermonte on i i: Montpelier___.____ Mortimer R. Proctor________ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 5,000 Virginly, =. Richmond..._____ Colgate W. Darden, Jr______ D. 4 | Jan. 1946 | 210, 000 Washington______ Olympia 2-0. Mon C. Wallgren __________ D. 41 Jan. 1949 | 36,000 West Virginia_____ Charleston_______. Clarence W. Meadows _____ D. 4 | Jan. 1949 | 10, 000 Wisconsin._.__._. Madison... 5... Walter S. Goodland _________ R. 2 | Jan. 1947 | 310,.000 Wyoming......... Cheyenne________._ Lester C. Hunt... D. 4 | Jan. 1947 | 38,000 TERRITORY 10 Alaska Zi4 7 Juneat.: 2 Brest Gruening or nena Indefinite.| 3 10, 000 Hawaii. oo oo Honolulu. .._.__.% Ingram-M.-Stainback_. |: leeacaa.. Indefinite.| 10,000 ISLAND POSSES-SION 10 Puerto Rico____.. San Juan i oi. = Rexlord Guy Tugwell... Indefinite. [11 10, 000 Virgin Islands. ...| Charlotte Amalie.| Charles Harwood... ______|-_.___|-...__._. Indefinite.| 8, 000 1 Sum of $10,000 appropriated to properly furnish and equip Governor’s mansion. 2 With $1,000 additional for mansion rent. 8 Also use of executive mansion and certain expenses for upkeep. 4 No executive mansion; nominal appropriation for expenses. § Also maintenance of Governor’ s mansion, emergency contingent fund, and a civil and military con-tingent fund. 6 Also Governor’s contingent fund and an SopIapraion for expenses of executive mansion. 7 No executive mansion; $2,400 annual contingent fun 8 Furnished living quarters. 9 Summer residence at seashore; $15,000 for expenses. 10 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. 11 Also traveling expenses for official duties. Congressional Directory PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS [NoTeE.—The figures indicate the number of different persons who have served as President and Vice President] President Vice President Service Congress 1 George Washington_________ 1 John Adams. 30" aL .f Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4. 2John:Adams. *-~-.: 2 Thomas Jefferson. __...._ Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5,6. 3 Thomas Jefferson___________ 3 Agron Burr. oi. ooh Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. Doris ie cx 4 George Clinton___________ Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9, 10. 4:James Madison: ............{-..... dot a as Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11,12. DORE LealoT 5 Elbridge Gerry 2._________ Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13, 14. oe 5 James Monroe. _.._________. 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. 3,1829 | 19, 20. 7oAndrew: Jackson... cola. dobarJn waa Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, dol 22. Por Was 0 8 Martin Van Buren_______ Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23, 24. 8 Martin Van Buren. ________ 9 Richard M. Johnson._._.. Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3,1841 | 25, 26. 9 William Henry Harrison 4__| 10 John Tyler... _________._ Mar. 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. 10 Johnyler Ba hw» foe aL SHEOE Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28. 11: James BK. Polk «0.._ i 11 George M. Dallas. __..___ Mar, 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30. 12 Zachary Taylord. _...____.___ 12 Millard Fillmore_________ Mar. 5,1849-July 9,1850 | 31. 3 Millard Fillmore oo. oleh a Phong] July 10,1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31, 32. 14 Franklin. Pierce......_..._.__ 13 William R. King 5_______| Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33, 34. 15 James Buchanan. __________ 14 John C. Breckinridge._._| Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35, 36. 16 Abraham Lincoln. _________ 15 Hannibal Hamlin________ Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 3,1865 | 37, 38. Dod. 16 Andrew Johnson_________ Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. le Andrew Johnson... ls... oo eessail HE. aiose Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3,1869 | 39, 40. 18 Ulysses S. Grant............ 17 Schuyler Colfax_____.__.. Mar. 4,1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41,42 Pore bai 18 Henry Wilson 6__________ Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3,1877 | 43, 44. 19 Rutherford B. Hayes. ______ 19 William A. Wheeler_____. Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45, 46, 20 James A. Garfield 4. _________ 20 Chester A. Arthur. ______ Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19, 1881 | 47. Ces or A. AT hl a tae Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. 3,1885 | 47,48 22 Grover Cleveland 7_________ 21 Thomas A. Hendricks 8__| Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3, 1889 | 49, 50. 23 Benjamin Harrison_________ 22 Levi P. Morton. ____.__. Mar. 4,1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. Grover Cleveland 7_________ 23 Adlai E. Stevenson_____. Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 3,1897 | 53, 54 24 William McKinley... _______ 24 Garret A. Hobart .______ Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 38,1901 | 55, 56 1017 SAR SE A 25 Theodore Roosevelt ____. Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. 25s Pheodore-Roosevell: Xo (0 riaa Sept. 14,1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57, 58 Pos: satis 26 Charles W. Fairbanks____| Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60 260WilliamH. Taft... . 27 James S. Sherman 10______ Mar. 4,1909-Mar. 3,1913 | 61, 62. 27 Woodrow Wilson___________ 28 Thomas R. Marshall_____ Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 83,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. 28 Warren G. Harding4________ 29 Calvin Coolidge _________ Mar. 4,1921-Aug. 2,1923 | 67. 20 Calvin Coolidge: tc iors 0 ln sa re To en Aug. 3,1923-Mar. 3,1925 | 68. Do. =r 0 30 Charles G. Dawes._.____. Mar. 4,1925-Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70. 30 Herbert C. Hoover_ _____._.. 81.CharlesiCurtisi: rio Mar. 4,1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72. 31 Franklin D. Roosevelt. ____ 32 John N. Garner... Mar. 4,1933-Jan. 20,1941 | 73, 74, 75, 76. LB Ee ee a 33 Henry A. Wallace________ Jan. 20,1941-Jan. 20,1945 | 77,78. FH Ee ReA 34 Harry 8S. Truman......... Jan. 20,1945-Apr. 12,1945 | 79. 32 Harry-S.Mruman.-. 5icoalo deacn SERS E TD D2 Apr. 12, 1945-79. 1 Died Apr. 20, 1812. 2 Died Nov. 23, 1814. 3 Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senator. 4 Died in office. 5 Died Apr. 18, 1853. 8 Died Nov. 22, 1875. ’ Terms not consecutive. 8 Died Nov. 25, 1885. ¥ Died Nov. 21, 1899. 1¢ Died Oct. 30, 1912. THE CAPITOL THE CAPITOL OFFICERS OF THE SENATE PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE President Pro Tempore of the Senate.—Kenneth McKellar, the Mayflower. CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, ID. D., Litt. D., LL. D. 2800 Thirty-sixth Street. MAJORITY LEADER Floor Leader.— Alben W. Barkley, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. MAJORITY WHIP Majority Whip.— Lister Hill, 3715 Forty-ninth Street. MINORITY FLOOR LEADER "Minority Floor Leader.—Wallace H. White, Jr., 2449 Tracy Place. Research Assistant to the Minority Leader.— George H. E. Smith, 127 C Street NE. MINORITY WHIP Minority Whip.—Kenneth S. Wherry, 444 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary of the Senate (the Westchester, phone, WOodley 9153), son of Billie B. and Ella (Turner) Biffle, born Boydsville, Ark., October 9, 1889; educated Piggott (Ark.) High School and Keys Business Institute, Little Rock, Ark.; first came to Washington as secretary to Representative Bruce Macon of Arkansas in 1909; served continuously in various capacities in the United States Senate until he was elected Secretary for the Majority in 1933, with the excep-tion of the period he served with the A. E. F. in France as auditor for the War Department, 1917-19; appointed by President Roosevelt as a member of the American Battle Monuments Commission; appointed colonel on the governor's staff; married Miss Mary Glade Strickling; unanimously elected Secretary of Senate February 8, 1945; member of the National Press Club, Congressional Country Club, Army-Navy Country Club, Jefferson Island Club, Manor Club, Burning Tree Club, Alfalfa Club. Private Secretary to the Secretary.— Elizabeth C. Euler, 428 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Secretary to the Secretary.— Mary E. Kraus, 1420 South Highland Street, Arlington, Va. ‘ 26 268 : Congressional Directory 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, 421 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Bookkeeper.—Joseph C. Ellis, 1628 C Street NE. Principal Clerk.—Joseph C. Duke, 1112 Sixteenth Street. Enrolling Clerk.—John Gatling, 120 C Street NE. Executive Clerk.—Lewis W. Bailey, 124 C Street NE. Assistant Hrecutive Clerk.—W. A. Rousseau, United States Senate. Printing Clerk.—Guy E. Ives, 221 B Street NE. Clerk of Enrolled Bills.—Garrett Whiteside, 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway. Keeper of Stationery.—Andrew J. Kramer, 305 Longfellow Street. Librarian.—Ruskin McArdle. the Ceeil. : Assistant Librarian.— George W. Straubinger, 2862 South Buchanan Street, Arling- ton, Va. Superintendent of Document Room.—John W. Lambert, 1351 Juniper Street. First Assistant in Document Room.—Copher Howell, 1309 Bryant Street NE. Clerk.—James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, M. E. Pool, 6228 Piney Branch Road; S. Stur, geon, 312 North Oxford Street, Arlington, Va.; Daisy Goad, the Chastleton Elizabeth Durant, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; Joycette Jones, 127 C Street NE.; Beth Gage, 215 B Street NE.; Dorothy Wright, 50 S Street; Dena Woods, 3035 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Appropriations.—Clerk, Everard H. Smith, 3321 Rittenhouse Street; assistant clerks, J. W. Rixey Smith, 4512 Edmunds Street; Cecil H. Tolbert, 104 South Park Drive, Arlington, Va.; Louise 8. Joubert, 510 Four Mile Road, Alexan-dria, Va.; Jennie D. MeDaniel, the Bellevue; Mary B. Christian, 17 Wood-mont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va.; Frances B. Hoover, 2008 Brighton Road NE., Avondale; Helen Cooper Fox, Fort Ward Heights, Alexandria, Va.; Rodney E. Marshall, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.—Clerk, Margaret Mec-Mahon, 3200 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks: Alice Cameron, 3206 Wis-consin Avenue; Fay Crossley, 3511 Davenport Street; Anne Gorden, 713 East Capitol Street; Elizabeth Herbner, 1451 Park Road; Vera Hulings, 215 B Street NE.; Ruth Johnson, 1312 W Street SE.; Virginia M. Mayo, 3023 Fourteenth Street; Macel McGilvery, 2 Eighteenth Street SE.; Marion Sutton, 1316 Euclid Street; Constance Williamson, 3216 Twelfth Street SE. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, David Delman, 3604 Davis Street; assistant clerks, Minna L. Ruppert, 2929 Connecticut Avenue; Mildred Akins, 3220 Connecticut Avenue; Helene O’Connor, 8302 Sixteenth Street; Eunice V. Avery, 2515 Thirteenth Street; Joan Thebo, 615 Hamilton Street; Mary Williams, 1523 Twenty-eighth Stree; SE.; Mary Ritzka, 2242 Chester StreetSE.; Anita Judge, 3333 Tennyson Street; Charlotte Oertly, Cherry Hill, Va.; Ethel Weiss, 1337 Twenty-first Street. Civil Service.—Clerk, Margaret Wilson, 1820 Bay Street SE. Claims.— Assistant clerk, Marion Wills Squires, 3881 Porter Street. Commerce.—Clerk, Paul J. Doyle, 226 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks, Estelle Hilliard, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; Eloise Porter,3543 Sixteenth Street; Caro M. Pugh, 1515 Twentieth Street; Marie Wilson, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Kathryn MacCrae, 515 Bashford Lane, Alexandria, Va.; Miriam Milano, 1806 North Oak Street, Arlington, Va. Conference Majority of the Senate.—Clerk, J. B. Fowlkes: assistant clerks, Flo. E. Bratten, Loraine Winfrey, Wythel L. Killen. Conference Minority of the Senate.—Clerks, Marguerite Doyle, 1701 Massachu-setts Avenue; C. C. O'Day, 4025 Connecticut Avenue; Randy Dompierre, 1905 Upshur Street NE.; Geraldyne M. Creagan, 2901 Connecticut Avenue; Ruth Kean, 1439 Euclid Street; Estelle Sullivan. Dustrict of Columbia.—Clerk, Edward P. Terry, Dorchester House; counsel, J. O. Day, Buckingham Apartments, Arlington, Va. Officers of the Senate 269 Education and Labor.—Clerk, Charles A. Murray, 2201 Forty-second Street; assistant clerks, Paul Sample, 4726 Fifth Street; Vivien T. Harman, 802 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Enrolled. Bulls. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Charles 8. Brewton, Jr., 105 Anascostia Road SE.; assistant clerks, Margaret Stevens, 4322 Seventh Street; Mrs. A. J. Buckley, 1812 K Street; Mrs. James W. Hunt, 2008 Thirty-eighth Street SE.; Claramai Melnnis, 1833 New Hampshire Ave-nue; Lillian Prosser, 1146 South Thomas Street; Alene Willis, 2013 New Hampshire Avenue. Finance—Clerk, Heard F. George; Queen Holden, 3507 Macomb Street; Carolyn Glover, 4831 Thirty-sixth Street; Virginia Carroll, Keystone Apartment; Delores Melton, 314 East Capitol Street; Ralph Frederick, R. F. D. 2, Laurel, Md.; Elizabeth Springer, 1020 Nineteenth Street; Margaret Linton, 1619 _ Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Robert V. Shirley, 3900 Hamilton Street, Hyattsville Md.; Adaline S. E. Carr, 216 Maryland Avenue NE.; Marion N. Huff, 5800 Nevada Avenue; Ellouise Naramore, 1217 Linden Lane, Silver Spring, Md.; Norma Heyser, 3704 Twenty-second Street NE.; Emmett M. O’Grady, 2415 Eighteenth Street; Sue Srygley, LaSalle Apartments; Ione Conway, 209 First Street NE.; Mildred A. Thompson, 7607 Eastern Avenue; Bonnie Williams, 1629 Columbia Road. Immigration.—Clerk, Leeman Anderson; assistant clerks, Clara E. Smith, the Bellevue; Mary Louise Hall, 1954 Columbia Road; Lillian Coogle, Meridian Hill Hotel; Margaret S. Appleby, 903 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va.; Marjorie Groover Warren, 816 E Street NE.; Alice M. Thomas, 2123 I Street; Mary Parrish Viccellio, 3707 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, Julian B. Snow, 1802 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; attorney, A. A. Grorud, Maryland Courts NE.; assistant clerks, Mike Manatos, Maryland Courts; Margaret C. Vendel, 11030 Old Bladensburg Road, R. F. D. 1, Silver Spring, Md.; Miss Mary Mahan, 1916 R Street; Agnes Doherty, the Wardman Park. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Robert A. Everett, New Colonial Hotel; assistant clerks, Mary Virginia Cox, Miramar Apartments; Sarah H. Murrey, La Salle Apartments; Lois C. Joy, Park Lane Apartments; Anne W, Clayton, Moulton Apartments; Katherine Smith, 2010 Kalorama Road. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Maude W. Mitchell, 261 Senate Office Building; assistant clerks, Edward Jarrett, 804 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va.; Jerry B. House, 3504 Valley Drive, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va.; May Folk-vord, 3914 Eighth Street; Ray E. Baker, 1765 Massachusetts Avenue; Vera R. Burgess, 638 C Street NE.; Frithie Lauson, 1301 Fifteenth Street. Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Arthur Sartain, 1530 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks, Mrs. Douglas Lacy, 2737 Devonshire Place; Lurlene Poss, 127 C Street NE.; Minnie Moultrie, 224 Twelfth Street SE.; Ivadell Bowser, Lindbergh Apartments. Judiciary.—Clerk, Eva B. Adams, 2420 Sixteenth Street; counsel, J. G. Sourwine, 1608 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Library.—Elora Chance, Marjorie Maxie. Manufactures.—Clerk, Ruth D, Overton, the Wardman Park; assistant clerks, Davetta M. Pudifin, 900 Nineteenth Street; Ruth E. Yellowlees, 1620 Q Street SE.; Hilda Kearns, 215 B Street NE.; Florence Caillouet, 458 Senate Office Building; Delia Reddington, 220 Allison Street. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Paul L. Badger, 319 Anacostia Road SE.; assistant clerks, Walter I. Smalley, 4535 Klingle Street; Elaine F. Hatch, the West-chester; Helen J. Casto, 3806 Davis Place; Rulon E. Rasmussen, 2530 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, R. H. Bailey, Jr. 1439 Fairmont Street; assistant clerks, Nora Darnall, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Ethel M. Ford, 2905 Queens Chapel Road, Mount Rainier, Md.; Mary F. Ford, 3133 Connecticut Avenue; Mary G. Bowden, 610 Ninth Street NE.; Dorothy R. McCann, 124 Darrington Street SW.; Doris Mahood, 127 C Street NE.; Mary A. Newton, 807 Silver Spring Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Margaret E. Gallagher, 120 C Street NE. Patents.—Clerk, W. Robert Fokes, room 253, Senate Office Building. Pensions.—Clerk, Daniel G. Conant, 225 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; law examiner, Fred R. Miller, 7535 Seventeenth Street. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 19 270 Congressional Directory Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, ; assistant clerk, H. E. Downey, 415 Second Street NE.; W. R. Davidson, 1711 Lyman Place NE.; Janice Tuchfeld McKellar, 120 C Street NE.; Dorothy McDaniel, the Dodge; Sara Ward, Park Central Apartments; Mildred Basinger, 1349 Talbert Terrace SE.; Barbara Alexander, 2010 Kalorama Road; Sarah Hale, 2116 Kalorama Road. : Printing.—Clerk, Doralynn Lyons, 2321 Lincoln Road NE. Privileges and Elections.—Edward J. Higgins, the Stratford; Edith S. Walker, the Bellevue; Marie R. Flanagan, 127 C Street NE.; Ruth C. Heaton, 4421 Towa Avenue; Helen T. Dunphy, 127 C Street NE.; Adrienne L. Crafton, Alcott Hall. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Maj. O. L. Sutliff, the Stratford; assistant clerks, Clara Whitelaw, the Stratford; Helen Sims; Norma Hall, 1007 Douglas Street NE.; Thelma Reid, 1619 Evarts Street NE.; Joan Beam, 1348 Euclid Street. Public Lands and Surveys—Clerk, W. H. MecMains, the Dorchester House; 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, Anna F. Doyle, Agnes Scoular, Dorothy M. Kernan, Agnes Fowler, Estelle Bedsworth, Josephine J. Baughman, Alice M. Dodd, Nancy I. Hubbard. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS WALL DOXEY, Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate (the Continental); born at Holly Springs, Marshall County, Miss., August 8, 1892; married in 1916 to Miss Myrtle Frances Johnson, of Jackson, Tenn.; one child, Wall Doxey, Jr., born January 11, 1926 (now in the Army Air Corps); member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, Masonic order, Shriners, Elks, Rotarian, Phi Delta Phi (legal fraternity), and Omicron Delta Kappa; educated in public schools of Holly Springs; graduated from University of Mississippi in 1913, A. B. degree, and from University of Mississippi Law School in 1914 with LL. B. degree; admitted to bar in 1914, and has since practiced law at Holly Springs; elected prosecuting attorney of Marshall County in 1915 and reelected without opposition in 1919; elected district attorney, third judicial district of Mississippi, in 1923, and reelected without opposition in 1927; nominated in the primary of 1928 and elected without opposition November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-first Congress; served continuously in Congress as Representative of Second Congressional District of Mississippi until his resignation on September 29, 1941, having been elected United States Senator from Mississippi to succeed the late and lamented Senator Pat Harrison of Missis- sippi; elected Sergeant at Arms of the Senate, February 1, 1943. Secretary to the Majority.—Felton M. Johnston, 5274 Watson Street (phone, EMerson 4054). Secretary to the Minority.—Carl A. Loeffler, 4615 Twenty-ninth Place (phone, ORdway 0508). : Assistant Secretary to the Majority.— Walker Totty, 3208 Cleveland Avenue (phone, WOodley 1220). : Assistant Secretary to the Minority.—Howard C. Foster, Park Tower, 2440 Six-teenth Street, apartment 507 (phone, COlumbia 8841). Deputy Sergeant at Arms and Storekeeper.—J. Mark Trice, 17 Worthington Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. (phone, Wlsconsin 3450). Messenger at Card Door.—John R. Perry, 1370 East Capitol Street. Messengers Acting as Assistant Doorkeepers.—Samuel P. Griffin, 211 First Street NE. ; E. J. Dunn, 653 East Capitol Street; J. Cecil Legare, 2817 Naylor Road SE. POST OFFICE Postmaster.—Jack W. Gates, Chastleton Apartments. Assistant Postmaster.—J. W. Coverdale, 1203 Gallatin Street. Chief Clerk.— Willard S. Miller, 1629 Fairlawn Avenue SE. Money Order and Registry Clerk.—James M. Cathcart, 63 S Street. FOLDING ROOM Foreman.—John W, Deards, Fontanet Courts. Officers of the Senate 271 OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. John D. Rhodes, 3535 Williamsburg Lane. Fred A. Carlson, 2020 Plymouth Street. Gregor Macpherson, 3111 Forty-fourth Street. Herbert N. Budlong, 5032 Glenbrook Terrace. Floyd Worden, the Broadmoor. Assistant.—Robert C. Brooks, 2018 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Clerk.—Elmer L. Koons, 826 Aspen Street. Expert Transcribers—F. F. Chew, 1502 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va.; Joseph A. Koons, 3601 Seventeenth Street NE.; A. E. Belew, 2134 G Street; Paul J. Plant, 1831 Belmont Road. Congressional Record Messenger.—Joseph F. Martin, 1005 Fourth Street NE. (phone, FRanklin 8173). OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 161, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 958) Legislative Counsel.—Stephen E. Rice, Mount Pleasant, R. F. D. 2, Falls Church, V. a. Assistant Counsel.—Charles F. Boots, 5601 Nevada Avenue; Charles S. Murphy, 905 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md.; John H. Simms, 1434 Somerset Place; Dwight J. Pinion, 1914 North Kirkwood Road, Arlington, Va. Law Lr uimorlames B. Minor, Jr., 6204 Twentieth Place, Brookside Manor, Clerk.— Earl Pryor, Tuxedo, Md. Assistant Clerk.—Salvatore M. Derato, 413 Lincoln Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Stenographer-Typist.—Faye Liken, 2329 Skyland Place SE. LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR Senator Nhe (Vb). ol. Loaf Andrews (Fla.)________ Austin (Vt) =. .L... Balley (N. C.)-_..._--. Ball (Minn)...ac Bankhead (Ala.)_______ Barklev(Ky.). ....uo: Bilbo (Miss)...--Brewster (Maine) ______ Bridges (N. HY. Prices (Mo,)............ Brooks (T1.)-.-....... Buck (Del)... ...... . Bushfield (S. Dak.)____ Butler (Nebr.): oi. oo. Byrd-(Va.). . Capehart (Ind)... _.-: Capper (Kans.)________ Carville (Nev.)________ Chavez (N. Mex.)____._ Connally (Tex.) ......-Cordon (Oreg.y..... .-._ Donnell (Mo.)_..____ Soa Downey (Calif)... .____ Eastland (Miss.)_______ Ellender (1a)... _.._. Ferguson (Mich.)______ Fulbright (Ark... ..... Ceorge (Gay... .__ Gerry. (RB...) ._.. Glass. (Va)... ... Gossett (Idaho) _______ Green (B. 1)... Gulley (Pay)... .._.. Gurney (8.-Dak.).____.. Hart (Conn)... .. Hoteh (N. Mex.) -._ Hawkes (N. J.) __ Hayden (Ariz). _.__.____ Hickenlooper (Iowa) ___ Hill(Alsy.. . = Hoey (N.C)... Huffman (Ohio). ______ Johnson (Colo)... ... Johnston (8. C.).._ = Kilgore (W. Va.) __ _... Knowland (Calif.)______ La Follette (Wis.)_____ Langer (N. Dak.)__._._._ 272 Secretary wi in ne pasts ni QL. 8uthiff. 0 William H. A. Mills__ __ Paul). Doyle..... Elisabeth R. Ball_______ Arthur Sartain.__ _ .____ EdwardP. Terry_______ Frances E. Dustin______ Wesley Powell. _ _______ Joseph F. Healey_______ Joseph C. Mason_______ Frank W. Schroeder____ Harry C. Westphal _____ John Comstock. ____ M. J. Menefee. .___ James E. Armstrong____ Brook I. Haines. .___._ Arthur N. Suverkrup____ Stanley W. Miller_ _____ A.S. EC Robert B. Parkman____ Virginia M. Simmerman_ Frances B. Long... Douglas G. Mode______ John'L. Erickson... ___ Heard F. George_______ JW. Bivey Smith. ____ Charles Wood... Edward J. Higgins______ Richard H. Bailey, Jr___ W.T.Knudison......... Catherine M. Flynn____ W.H. McMains_...__._ Charles S. Brewton, Jr__ Jack Spang...0 Paul Nancy Chapman_______ J. Baxter Funderburk.___ Radle Herndon...... Dudley W. Frost__.._._ Hi Grace Lynch... .__.. C.E. Van Horne. ._.... SECRETARIES Secretary’s address The Stratford. 2101 Suitland Terrace SE. 226 North Thomas St., Ar- lington, Va. 3193 Porter St. 1530 16th St. Dorchester House. 717 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, IMd. 3615 Minnesota Ave. SE. 4037 9th St. NE. 4728 32d St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 1851 Ontario PI. 127 C St. NE. 421 Senate Office Bldg. 3956 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 2613 22d St. NE. 525 Mellon St. SE. 1814 19th St. 216 Maryland Ave. NE, 313 Cedar Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 212 Wayne Pl. SE. 1616 16th St. 1426 M St. The President. Keystone Apartments. The Mayflower. 4512 Edmunds St. The Stratford. 1439 Fairmont St. 2823 27th St. 4125 18th Pl. NE. Dorchester House. The Continental. 1812 K St. The Stratford. 105 Anacostia Rd. SE. 2127 Suitland Terrace SE. 815 South Fillmore St., Ar-lington, Va. 2127 California St. 1521 Buchanan St. 110 Maryland Ave. NE. The Annapolis. 1817 Monroe St. 462 Senate Office Bldg. Lsi Officers of the Senate 273 LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES—Continued Senator Secretary Secretary’s address Yveag (ML) -= oo. Margaret McMahon. ___ 3200 16th St. McCarran (Nev.)._.___ ; Eva B. Adams... 2420 16th St. McClellan (Ark.)_____._ Ralph Matthews. ______ 1741 28th St. SE. McFarland (Ariz.)_____ Anthony O. Jones______._ 4828 7th St. McKellar (Tenn.)______ McMahon (Conn.)_____ 2327 15th St. Magnuson (Wash.)____ 2893 South Abingdon St., Arlington, Va. The Continental. Maybank (S. C.)____. Dresden A. Smith______ : pe Mead '(N. Y.)-. .G..0 Millikin (Colo.) ----.._ Mitchell (Wash.) _ _.___ Moore (Okla)... .._. Morse (Oreg.)--cine Murdock (Utah)_..____ Mur {Mont:)..:-=-... OR (P0.) cite iiisi amel (Tex)... ..-an (Wyo... Overton (La)-2.. .-. Pepper (Fla) co mena Radeliffe (Md.)___._._._ Reed (Kans)... ... Revercomb (W. Va.)__._ Robertson (Wyo.)_____ Russell (Ga)... . Saltonstall (Mass.)_____ Shipstead (Minn.).____._ Smith (NL) ao Stanfill (Ky). — 1. Stewart (Tenn.) .—----. Taft (Ohio). ooosaaana Taylor (Idaho)... ..... Thomas (Okla)... .-_--Thomas (Uiah)o = Tebey (NH)... -:.. Tunnel (Deal)... Tydings (Md.)_.=.-.--Vandenberg (Mich.)__._. Wagner (N. Y Walsh (Mass.).....-—-. Wheeler (Mont.).____--Wherry (Nebr.) ..o---_ White (Maine). -_.._ Wiley (Wis)... --.-Willis (Ind) =... Wilson (Iowa) _.c---_-_ Young (N. Dak) _:_...= Claire L.. Keefe... ___.._ Dorothy A. McRae___._._ John D:>Walsh. =... Virginia Whitson_______ Helen IK. Kiefer. 25-2__ John P. Barton=-:...= Charles A. Murray. .._-John A. Hayes... oc D. Roland Potter _..--Julian B.'Snow_ =>: .._ Ruth D. Overton. __._-_ W. Robert Fokes______._ Bertha C. Joseph_._____ Joseph Skubitz.._..__.__. Louis Reed’... ous. James R. Reynolds_____ Laura S. Reid». 1. Albert B. Hermann_____ Wheeler Nickell .________ Robert Ashton Everett__ 1. Jack Martin... ..... 2. Paul L. Badger... ... Helen C. Ramsdell____._ Timothy J. Mooney... Corinne Barger. 2-2. Minna L. Ruppert___-__ Margaret E. Gallagher _ Maude W. Mitchell _____ Paul V. Armstrong. _._ Ruby C. Hutchinson____ Wilson C. Hefner___.___ William D. Murray___-_ George W. Hesalroad.___ John O. Hjelle.._..__._ 42 Independence Ave. SW. 1002 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 2120 Tunlaw Rd. 2313 Skyland Pl. SE. 7805 Takoma Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 17 5th St. SE, 4220 Van Ness St. 6804 Utah Ave. 13d St. NE. Colonia) Village, Arlington, The Wardman Park. 2059 North Glebe Rd., Ar-lington, Va. The Washington. 2811 32d St. SE. Capitol Hill Apartments. 2407 Good Hope Rd. SE. 2808 1st Rd. North, Arling- ton, Va. 120 Maryland Ave. NE. 200 West Leland St., Chevy Chase, Md. Capitol Hill Apartments. The New Colonial. 8201 Colston Pl.,, Chevy Chase, Md. 3401 A St. SE. 6228 Piney Branch Rd. 319 Anacostia Rd. SE. 4613 North Henderson Rd., Arlington, Va. 821 North Capitol St. 1407 Ingraham St. 2929 Connecticut Ave. 120 C St. NE. 261 Senate Office Bldg. 2111 Fort Davis St. SE. 110 Maryland Ave. NE, 3111 W Pl SE. 2327 Q St. SE. 3130 Wisconsin Ave. 816 South St. Asaph St., Alexandria, Va. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE (Phone, NAtional 3120) OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER The Speaker.—Sam Rayburn, the Anchorage. 3 Secretary to the Speaker.— Alla Clary, 604 Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. Clerks to the Speaker.—Jane Morgan Lagler, 532 Twentieth Street; Irene Wade, 1761 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va.; Virginia Ann Whittle, 1601 Argonne Place, John R. Ball, 1417 N Street; Edna Fewell, 3347 Brothers Place SE. OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENTARIAN Parliamentarian.—Lewis Deschler, 101 Lucas Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Parliamentarian.— William T. Roy, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. 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, the Washington. Secretary.— Eugene T. Kinnaly, 1918 Park Road. Legislatwe Clerk.—John W. Newman. Assistant Legislative Clerk.— Nicholas Cefalo. Clerk to Majority Leader—Mary Agnes McCarthy, 334 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. MAJORITY WHIP Majority Whip.—John J. Sparkman, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER Floor Leader.—Joseph W. Martin, Jr., the Hay-Adams House. Secretary.—James N. Milne, 104 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—E. A. Gridley, 3 Brookdale Road. Legislative Clerk.— Virginia E. Nicholls, 2222 I Street. Assistant Clerk.— Helen E. Morris, 2325 Fifteenth Street. MINORITY WHIP Minority Whip.—Leslie C. Arends, the General Scott Apartments. 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; 274 Officers of the House 275 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. Journal Clerk.—Richard J. Tonry. Reading Clerks.—Alney E. Chaffee, 311 Maryland Avenue NE.; George J. Maurer, 157 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Reading Clerk.—Irving W. Swanson, 2701 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Tally Clerk.—Harry W. Kalich. Assestant Tally Clerk.— William H. Hickson,-2814 Thirty-first Street SE. Enrolling Clerk.—Evan Taylor. : Assistant Enrolling Clerk.—H. Newlin Megill, 423 Longfellow Street. Disbursing Clerk.—J. C. Shanks, 2404 Twenty-first Place NE. File Clerk.—M. 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.— Turner N. Robertson, 3338 Ames Street NE. 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 (the Wardman Park, 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 seven 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses. Cashier.—A. B. Fangmeyer, 4409 Seventh Street. Assistant Cashier.—John Oberholser, 232 Sixth Street SE. Bookkeepers.—Catherine A. Knockey, 5425 Connecticut Avenue; Valerie Popham, 4026 Twenty-fiftth Road North, Arlington, Va. : Private Secretary.—Helen Paine, 2737 Devonshire Place. 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, 314 B Street SE. Special Assistant, Sergeant at Arms.—W. Moseley Miller, 1732 S Street SE. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives.—Ralph R. Roberts, 2401 Calvert Street. Chief Pages.—Landon Mitchell, 6718 Third Street; Dorsey Joe Bartlett, 1733 E Street NE. Chief Messenger.—Ira D. Walker, 2412 Monroe Street NE. Messengers.—Leo H. King, 308 Second Street NE.; Ernest Williams, 107 Second Street NE.; R: C. Hicks, 3306 Warder Street; Wesley Naron, 20 Third Street SE.; Frank D. Taylor, 128 C Street NE.; William E. Gordon, 12 Fourth Street SE.; Lonnie W. Franklin, 323 East Capitol Street; Dan R. Jones, 128 C Street NE.; Joe McGahey, 128 C Street NE.; David Mauser, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; J. Lee Aston, 1643 Hobart Street; John J. Durkin, 323 First Street SE.; James A. Good, 216 Sixth Street SE.; Milton Wooford, 308 New Jersey Avenue SE. 276 Congressional Directory Messengers on Soldiers’ Roll.—James E. Greenwell, 3213 Sixteenth Street NE.; Joseph L. Kaspar, 1842 Mintwood Place; Chester A. Webb, 500 Ninth Street SE.; William D. Renner, 7012 Ninth Street; Thomas Onofrio, Portner Apart-ments; Frederick W. Callanan, 217 Second Street SE.; Louis Harris, 4339 Bowen Road SE.; Alfred M. Rice, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Archer L. Keeton, 4308 Newark Road, Colmar, Md.; Charles A. Hartley, 505 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Fred Chott, ‘5418 Edgemore Lane, Bethesda, Md.; H. K. Alsabrook, 101 Second Street NE.; S. H. Johnson, the Dodge. Special Employee. — Marion J. Shuffler, 1203 Hamilton Street. Majority Manager of Telephones.—C. H. Emerson, 216 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Majority Manager of Telephones.—Hiram B. Cannon, 128 B Street NE. Minority Manager of Telephones.— Michael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street. Chief Janitor.—John E. Bennett, 3304 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. FOLDING ROOM Superintendent.—Joseph H. Callahan. Assistant Superintendent.—S. W. Brinker, 308 East Capitol Street. Bookkeepers.—Robert McCue, 1318 Saratoga Avenue NE.; Joseph Stracke, Bal- timore, Md.; Celeste F. Day, 3511 Thirteenth Street; Mary C. Murphy, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. Order Clerks.—Mary Olga Vehue, Lucille W. Walsh. Book Section, in Charge.—John Moore, 4624 Butterworth Pie. Shipping Clerk.—Fern F. Barrett; assistant, Betty M. Brashear. Clerk, Messenger Service. ~_Phyllis’ M. Keating. ; Speech Clerks.—Sue H. Parker; James Wesley Gowen, Madison Heights, Va. Speech Mail Clerk.—Raymond Jenkins. DOCUMENT ROOM Superintendent.— Elmer A. Lewis, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Superintendent.—B. H. Ellert. Assistants.—Al T. Griffith, 100 Fifth Street SE.; William Graf, Jr., 20 Randle Circle SE.; E. D. Harrington, 1423 Webster Street; Otis L. "Daniel, 510 Seward Square SE.; James T. Joyce, 218 Maryland Avenue NE.; Edward L. White, 1419 Columbia Road; Eugene B. Sloan, 305 New Jersey Avenue! SE.; Julius H. Tolton, 3710 Livingston Street. SPECIAL AND MINORITY EMPLOYEES Sper? Crores to the Minority.— William F. Russell; John Andrews, 310 Fifth treet 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 Ww. McCabe, 1204 Massachusetts Avenue, CAUCUS ROOMS M ajority.—Truman Ward, 3901 Illinois Avenue. Minority.—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.—Charles Wilson, 408 A Street SE. Chief Clerk of Postal Stations.— George Poniatowski, 18 Ninth Street NE. osm Registry and Money Order Clerk.— Walter Vogt, 305 New Jersey Avenue Superintendent of Mails.—Lorne W. Johnson, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Assistant Superintendent in Charge of Mail Distribution.— William B. Dougherty, 175 Thirty-fifth Street NE. Officers of the House 277 Bra Maal Distributors.—Day clerk, Robert H. Rollins, 640 K Street. Night clerks, Eldon A. Volkmer, 101 Whittier Street; Billy E. Wilder, 3108 Key Boulevard; Arlington, Va. MISCELLANEOUS Delivery and Collection Messengers.—Charles N. Saunders, 501 Twelfth Street NE.; Horace Hagenlocker, 704 Longfellow Street; Frank H. Harper, 106 C Street NE.; Seth R. Grim, 510 Ethan Allen Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Joseph O’Brien, 113 C Street SE.; John O’Leary, 321 Second Street SE.; Tom D. White, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue Six.; Morton E. Mack, 1759 Hobart Street; H. Elmo Taylor, 511 B Street SE.; Edward A. Richards, 421 Wilke Street, Alexandria, Va.; Henry M. Eidson, 316 Maryland Avenue NE.; David G. Phillips, 1732 C Street NE.; Harvard Cashwell, 321 Second Street SE.; Thomas Monaghan, 55 V Street; Joseph E. Davis, 115 B Street SE.; George Amidon, 1438 Eighteenth Place SE.; William T. Cochran, 321 Second Street SE.; Thomas M. Newton, 128 C Street SE.; Robert Stallings, 128 C Street NE.; Wayne Miller, 116 C Street SE.; Richard Gertner, 224 First Street SE.; Jesse E. Barker, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; George M. Bowman, Jr., 318 Second Street SE.; Ernest B. Gilmore, 2920 Ontario Road; Bill Mabry, 2450 Massachusetts Avenue; Gerald C. Hargrave, 128 C Street NE.; Johnnie Nazary, 230 First Street SE.; Robert L. Haislip, 4104 Quintana Street, Hyattsville, Md.; Henry Gee Martin, 202 East Capitol Street; Robert MecCamy, 128 C Street NE. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL Clerk in Charge—Farrar Blanchard, 510 Seward Square SE. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Regiyiry, Stamp, and Money-Order Clerk.—Fred Nazary, 801 Thirty-fourth Street Assistant Registry, Stamp, and Money-Order Clerk.—Paul R. Hunsucker, 128 Street NE. i Foreman of Mail Platforms.—Orlie V. Barker, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES Accounts.—Clerk, Frank M. Karsten. erie eClerh; Katherine Wheeler, 1100 Greenwood Avenue, Takoma Park, d Appropriations.—Clerk, John C. Pugh, 3000 Tilden Street; the assistant clerk, George Y. Harvey, 4323 Clagett Road, University Park, Md.; second assistant clerk, William A. Duvall, 6523 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant clerks, Arthur Orr, 233 North Filmore Street, Arlington, Va.; Corhal D. Orescan, 2306 North Vernon Street, Arlington, Va.; Robert IH. Lambert, 230 Rhode Island Avenue, NE.; Robert P. Williams, 3404 Cameron Mills Road, Alexandria, Va.; Bert J. Skinnard, 78 Webster Street NE.; messenger, Robert M. Lewis, 411 U Street; page, Jess Taylor, 4202 Kaywood Drive, Mount Rainier, Md. Banking and Currency.— Clerk, Wallace E. Dingus, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant clerk, Margaret H. Smith, 1900 F Street. Census.—Clerk, Mrs. Derwood D. Harrison, 5133 Seventh Street. Civil Service.—Clerk, Mrs. Willie S. Winter, 2359 Ashmead Place; assistant clerk, Lucy K. Daley, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Claims.—Clerk, Walter R. Lee, 219 Upshur Street; assistant clerks, Helen B. Lee, 219 Upshur Street; Alline Dozier, 128 C Street NE. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.— Clerk, John McBride, 212 First Street NE. Disposition of Executive Papers.—Clerk, Miss Ray E. Moore, the Carroll Arms. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Mabel Haller, 3867 Alabama Avenue SE. Education.—Clerk, Georgia Davis, 1536 House Office Building. 278. Congressional Directory Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives. in Congress.—Clerk, Edith W. Gordon, 1731 New Hampshire Avenue. Elections No. 1. . Elections No. 2.—Clerk, Adelaide Edwards, 2112 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Elections No. 3.—Nelle Snallwood. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry V. Hesselman, House Enrolling Room, Capitol. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, William A. Young. Elon] Congjcl=sliont, Doris B. Hazur, 5018 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arling-on, Va. Foreign Affairs.—Clerk, Boyd Crawford, 714 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Immigration and Naturalization.—Clerk, Miriam Wydra. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, Alice M. Tuohy. Insular Affairrs.—Clerk, Harlie F. Clark, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, 4730 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks, F. P. Randolph, 4135 Alabama Avenue SE.; Pauline E. Mickelsen, 108 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va.; janitor, Roy P. Wilkinson, 155 Forty-seventh Street NE. Invalid Pensions.—Clerk, Bingham W. Mathias, 2009 Evarts Sirect NE.; as- sistant clerk, Chester Mrozowski; examiner, L. A. Johnson. Irrigation and Beclimation .—Mary Carter Moeur, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. Judiciary.— Clerk, Velma Smedley, 204 East Capitol Street; assistant clerk, Bonnie Roberts, 2601 Sixteenth Street. Labor.—Clerk, Lucille M. Consedine, 4607 Connecticut Avenue ; assistant clerk, Mary B. Cronin, 3931 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Library.— Mary V. Solari, 42 Independence Avenue SW. Memorials. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Clerk, Elsie N. Keefer, 5106 Eighth Street; assistant clerk, Elizabeth B. Bedell, ’1527 Isherwood Street NE. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Julia Watterson, 1509 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Saul C. Cohen, 115 House Office Building. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, John C. Lewis, 111 First Street NE.; assistant clerk, Betty Snead, 1708 Newton Street. Patents.—Clerk, Clatie Ashley, 144 B Street NE. Pensions.—Clerk, Alice B. Norton, 5735 Fourth Street; law examiner, Hiram W. Hummer, 4401 Windom Place. Post Office and Post Roads.—Clerk, Frances Still, 3032 N Street; assistant clerk, Blanche LeMan, 1442 Somerset Place. Printing.—Clerk, W. D. Hall, Fairfax Village. Public Bil and Grounde~Clerk, Albert W. Woods, 245 House Office Building. Public Lands.—Clerk, Claude E. Ragan. Revision of the Laws. Rivers and Harbors.—Clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road; assistant clerk, Joseph H. McGann, Jr., 1345 Park Road. Roads.—Clerk, John Maher. Rules.—Clerk, Humphrey S. Shaw, 1440 Parkwood Place; assistant clerk, Henry Stratton. Territories.—Clerk, Mildred C. Cooper, 2714 Quarry Road. Un-American Activities.—John W. Carrington. War Claims.— Clerk, {Jack Matteson, 2813 Eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Ways and Means.—Clerk, Robert M. Gambill, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant clerks, Erskine Stewart, 1630 R Street; Margie Halsey, 109 First Street NE.; Stella Miller, 511 B Street SE.; Wilma, Crouse, 109 First Street NE.; : minority clerk, James A. Tawney, 3819 V Street SE.; messenger, Sam bi Hardy, 1825 S Street; assistant messenger, Hughlon Green, 19 Quincy ace. World War Veterans’ Legislation.—Clerk, Ida Rowan, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerk, James R. Rhodes, 4300 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Md. Officers of the House 279 OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. W. L. Fenstermacher, the Broadmoor. Roy L. Whitman, 4820 Linnean Avenue. F. S. Milberg, 5032 Massachusetts Avenue. Elmer B. Clark, 604 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Frank E. Battaglia, 414 Ethan Allen Avenue. Claude S. Scheckel, 6 East Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Clerk.— Charles H. "Parkman, 1003 Taylor Street NE. Assistant Clerk.—Paul L. Miller, 1314 S Street SE. Expert Transcribers.—Charles 1 Dulin, 84 U Street; Howard Butterworth, 3221 Connecticut Avenue; Beulah Burns, 3314 Mount Pleasant Street; Terese R. Willmett, 935 Bonifant Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Joyce C. Coogler, 2712 Wisconsin Avenue; Sidney W. Williston, the. Broadmoor. Congressional Record Messengers. —Bjarne J. Sigurdsen, 1254 Owen Place NE. (phone, FRanklin 4031); Harry A. Gritton, 4326 Third Street (phone, GEorgia 4616). OFFICIAL REPORTERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES W. G. Stuart, 3446 Oakwood Terrace. Albert Schneider, 7516 Fourteenth Street. Talma L. Smith, 3548 Brandywine Street. W. R. Graham, '6839 North Washington Boulevard, East Falls Church, Va. Lanham Connor, 4206 Second Road North, Arlington, Va. Ralph J. Sterling, 801 Butternut Street. Clerk.— William M. Day, Cavalier Hotel. Expert Transcribers.—David M. Pechin, 4407 Taylor Street, Suitland, Md.; John C. Gibson, 6745 Potomac Drive; Jean Robinson, 1638 R Street: Andrew F. Gallagher, Jr., 1735 Irving’ Street; Louis E. Reichard, 1313 Delafield Place; Martena R. Ambrose, 2335 Eighteenth St reet. 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, 2800 Franklin Street NE. Assistant Counsel and Administrative Assistant.—C. Breck Parkman, 118 North-brook Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Clerks.—Cleo A. Garrett, 1139 New Hampshire Avenue; Royice Reno 3209 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. yh MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 200) Clerk in Charge at the Capitol.—Ralph L. Harris, 2328 Twenty-fifth Street SE. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL ARCHITECT’S OFFICE (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. Administrative Officer.—Charles A. Henlock, 520 Oneida Place. Supervising Engineer.— Arthur E. Cook, the Roosevelt. Assistant Supervising Engineer.— Thomas F. Clancy, 1004 Fifteenth Street SE. Civil Engineer.— August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street. Engineer in Charge (House Wing).— Charles R. Torbert, 201 Second Street NE. Engineer in Charge (Senate Wing).—Timothy Murray, 908 Longfellow Street. Leadon Architect and Horticulturist.— William A. Frederick, 1206 Kennedy treet. Chief Engineer ( Power Plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. Engineer (Power Plant).—J. M. Cowell, 1601 G Street SE. ; Electrical Engineer.—R. D. Holcomb, the Olympia. Elevator Engineer.—H. B. Sommer, 7827 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Air Conditioning Engineer.—Norman A. Hollister, 4309 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING (Offices at reoms 219 and 320. Phones, branches 138 and 810) Custodian.—John J. Kearney, 1322 Nineteenth Street. Assistant Custodian.— Charles E. Alden, 1801 Lamont Street. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS (Office on second floor, northwest corner, Old Building. Phones, branches 142 and 143) Superintendent.—Edward Brown, 201 Eighth Street NE, Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Clarkson, 1722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN (Office on ground floor, Capitol. Phone, branch 305) Medical Officer.—Dr. George W. Calver, 3103 Cathedral Avenue. CAPITOL POLICE (Office in lower west terrace, room 3, Capitel. Phones: Captain, NAtional 3120, branch 1051; secretary N Ational 3120, branch 102) . Captain.—Roy W. Brown, 640 A Street SE. Secretaries—C. M. Miller, 2 Eighteenth Street SE.; C. F. Lowery, 1725 D ~ Street SE. ; Supervising Lieutenant.—Walter H. Hunt, 1321 North Carolina Avenue NE. Lieutenanis.—Olin Cavness, 1831 P Street SE.; Billy Ballinger, 132 Kentucky Avenue SE.; Robert W. James, 1613 Harvard Street; Fridge L. Jester, 326 B Street SE.; George A. Parks, 314 B Street SE. TRE ane 5 gaat = 282 Congressional Directory Sergeants.—Edward J. Hutter, 2502 Thirty-third Street SE.; Gordon S. Huff, route 2, Anacostia Station; Claude S. Oaks, 404 New Jersey Avenue; George Kaelber, 106 North Stewart Street, Essex, Md.; Haskell Gentry, 2710 Ter-race Road SE.; Thomas E. Mulloy, Jr., 128 Eleventh Street NE.; J. E. Wheeler, 610 East Capitol Street; Fred E. Miller, 132 Kentucky Avenue SE.; Harley A. Hylton, 505 Sixty-ninth Place, Seat Pleasant, Md. RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE (Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, branch 260) Ticket Agent.—Charles W. Owings, 3298 Aberfoyle Place. In Charge Capitol Ticket Office.—P. H. McClune, 1123 Fern Street. Assistant Agent.—Clyde Freed, 613 Lexington Place NE. AIRLINES TICKET OFFICE (Ground floor, House side of Capitol. Phone, branch 1425) a H. Poole, 1835 K Street; Doreen O’Neil, 2111 Massachusetts venue. WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1111 and 28; Old House Office Building, branches 317 and 573; New House Office Building, branches 1062 and 208; House Press Gallery, branch 1085; Senate Press Gallery, branch 1251) : Assistant Vice President.—T. B. Gittings, Commercial Bank Building. Assistant to the Vice President.—K. W. Heberton, Commercial Bank Building, Superintendent.—A. K. Mitchell, 708 Fourteenth Street. Special Representative—Joseph George Corona, Senate Office Building. Manager Senate Office Building.—Maude V. Blaine, 1750 Harvard Street. 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; Joseph W. Berlinsky, assistant manager. House Gallery.—James O. Mathis, manager, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Senate Office Press Room.—Carroll Linkins, 2033 Lawrence Street NE. TELEPHONE EXCHANGE (Office, first floor, west side, New House Office Building) Chief Operator in Charge—Nena C. Thomas, Greenway Apartment (phone, FRanklin 8300). Assistants.—Mollie Combs, 1122 South Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; Clare Mann, 4000 Nineteenth Street NE. Wire Chief.—James L. Rhine. RADIO STUDIOS (House, southwest corner, fifth floor, Old House Office Building; phone, branch 1387; for Senate location call branch 1387) Director.—Robert J. Coar, 3213 Old Dominion Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Secretary.—Evelyne Bouchard, 1830 Seventeenth Street. Engineer —Steve Carpenter, Oak Street, Idylwood, Falls Church, Va. UNITED STATES VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION LIAISON OFFICES (House Office Building, room 354, branches 295 and 1030; Senate Office Building, room 106, branch 948) In Charge—Earle D. Chesney, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. House Office Building.—Agnes M. Richardy, Mildred C. Lawler, Mary H. Geary, Velma M. Perkins, Maurine Mayo, Edwin H. Gantt; Pauline V. Byrd. Senate Office Building.—Margaretta B. Dawson, Evaline C. Livengood. Mascellaneous Officials UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION CONTACT OFFICES (House Office Building, room 248, phone NAtional 3120, branches 225 and 294; Senate Office Building, room 249, phone, N Ational 3120, branches 869 and 1293) In Charge—Robert L. Bailey, Westchester Apartments. ; Senate Office Building.—James B. Baugh, Jr., 127 C Street NE.: Virginia Ehren-berg, Westchester Apartments. House Office Building.—Gertrude W. Arline, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Edith G. Stamps, 3051 Idaho Avenue; John L. Ash, Jr., 1736 G Street. CIVILIAN PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATION LIAISON OFFICES House Office Building, room 157, branches 335 and 1096; Senate Office Building, room 15-B, branches 1511 and 1522) House Office Building.—W. K. Chapman, 2716 Ordway Street; Virginia C. Perkins, 1815 Seventeenth Street; Lucy Mitch, 5206 First Street. Senate Office Building.—Frederick P. Hobart, 4816 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Laura M. Spilman, 2915 Porter Street; Clara Y. Brown, 4711 Merivale Road, Chevy Chase, Md. | OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION LIAISON OFFICES (House Office Building, room 129, branches 1320 and 1440; Senate Office Building, room 4-A, branches 1506 and 1237) House Office Building.—James L. Harrison, 23 Anacostia Road NE.; Elinor G. Goodwin, 3217 Connecticut Avenue; Rose M. Leone, 4910 Third Street. Senate Office Building.—John M. O’Connell, Jr., 812 Taylor Street NE.; Rose J. Glinberg, 4073 Minnesota Avenue NE.; Roxie L. Monson, 2001 Tucker man Street, Green Meadows, Hyattsville, Md. SURPLUS PROPERTY ADMINISTRATION LIAISON OFFICE (House Office Building, room 406, branches 1461-1462) In Charge.— William J. Hays, 105 East Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistant.—Eunice Mae Scott, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Secretaries.— Kamilla Athey, 818 Tewkesbury Place; Della S. Howder, 2021 Thirty-eighth Street SE. 284 Congressional Directory .GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE (General Accounting Office Building, Fifth and F Streets. Phone, EXecutive 4621) Comptroller General of the United States.—Lindsay C. Warren, 3300 Stuyvesant Place. Special and Confidential Assistant to the Comptroller General.—Leonora B. Kelley, 1829 Parkside Drive. Secretary to the Comptroller General.—Cassie L.. Wolfe, 1442 Somerset Place. Assistant Comptroller General of the United States.—Frank L. Yates, 4628 Reservoir Road. Secretary to the Assistant Comptroller General.—Cleo Karydakis, 1656 Euclid Street. Executive Officer.—Dudley W. Bagley, the Roosevelt. Assistant Executive Officer.—John F. Feeney, 1425 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistants to the Comptroller General.—J. C. Nevitt, 6320 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Frank H. Weitzel, 2914 Tennyson Street; William L. Ellis, 19 Carvel Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Office of Administrative Planning.—J. C. Nevitt, assistant to the Comptroller General, in charge. General Counsel. SLi C. McFarland, 6706 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant General Counsel.—Harrell O. Hoagland, 5923 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Elmo V. Coons, 4820 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Albert A. Peter, 4317 Warren Street; Edwin L. Fisher, 5552 Wessling Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Eldred N. Mahoney, 5509 Chevy Chase Parkway; William 1. Morrow, 3941 Newdale Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Corporation Audits.—T. Coleman Andrews, the Mayflower. Deputy Director of Corporation Audits.—Howard W. Bordner, 6500 Barnaby Street. Assistant Directors of Corporation Audits.— Melville T. Werner, 6683 Thirty-second Street; Theodore Herz, 9520 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Harold 8. Morse, 11 Leland Court, Chevy Chase, Md.; O. Gordon Delk, 2957 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va.; Clyde Weldin. Chief of Investigations. —S. B. Tullos, Lorton, Va. Assistant Chiefs of Investigations.—R. H. Slaughter, 7100 Hampden Lane, Green-: wich Forest, Bethesda, Md.; Taylor G. Addison, 7127 Eighth Street. 3 Chief Clerk.—Reed F. Martin, 6818 Ninth Street. Director of Personnel.—E. R. Ballinger, 4821 Sixteenth Street. : Assistant Director of Personnel.—T. A. Flynn, Jr., 3819 Woodley Road. Chiefs and Assistant Chiefs of Divisions: \ Clazms.—Chief, A. B. Thomas, 3713 Yuma Street; assistant chiefs, Louis P. if Cook, 3990 Langley Court; Allan H. Epperson, 7216 Seventh Street. Awudat. —_ Chief, E. W. Bell, '3525 Davenport Street; assistant chiefs, John DeW. Johnson, 1703 North Harvard Street, Arlington, Va.; W. W, Richard-} son, 3600 Twentieth Street NE.; W. A. Willingham, 871 North Kentucky | Street, Arlington, Va.; Charlie’ Monroe, 1223 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va: Raymond T. Parker, 1000’ Sigsbee Place NE. Accounting and Bookkeeping. — Chief, 7. Darlington Denit, 4218 Reno Road; assistant chiefs, George T. Montgomery, 5420 Connecticut Avenue; Fred A. Seaman, 1626 P Street. Postal Accounts. —Chief, Gary Campbell, Asheville, N. C.; assistant chiefs, R. 8. Tower, Asheville, N. C.; J. Lee Hottel, Asheville, N. Reconciliation and Clearance. — Chief, Vernon R. Durst, 3011 Twentieth Street | NE.; assistant chiefs, Pascal D. Fallon, 221 Lexington Drive, Woodmoor, Silver Spring, Md.; 1A Jones, Herndon, Va.; J. Hess, 6304 Thirty-first treet. \ Mascellaneous Officials 285 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS (Capitol Hill. Phone, NAtional 2722) GENERAL ADMINISTRATION Librarian I Congress.—Luther H. Evans, 514 South Fairfax Street, Alexan-dria, Va. Librarian of Congress Emeritus.—Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street. ‘Chief Assistant Librarian.—[Vacant.] Executive Assistant to the Chief Assistant Librarian.—Edgar F. Rogers, 3401 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Accounts Office.—Kenneth N. Ryan, accounting officer, 9417 Glen Ridge Road, Silver Spring, Md. . Books for the Adult Blind.—Joseph P. Blickensderfer, director, 1427 Webster treet. Buildings and Grounds.— William C. Bond, superintendent, 6007 Broad Branch Road; Lewis L. Cogan, assistant superintendent, 702 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; C. Eldon Ray, chief engineer, 4844 Cordell Avenue, Bethesda, ? Ja. ; Joseph E. Mullaney, captain of the guard, 1345 Massachusetts Avenue Disp ing Soe plomes A. Severn, Jr., disbursing officer, 1900 Seventeenth treet : Information and Publications Office.—Milton M. Plumb, Jr., information and publications officer, 203 Avenue I, District Heights, Md. Keeper of the Collections.—Alvin W. Kremer, 1621 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, Va. Motion Picture Project.—John G. Bradley, director, 4500 Seventeenth Street. Cows Offs iredonioh H. Wagman, acting director of personnel, 3524 B treet . Photoduplication Service.—Donald C. Holmes, director, 7621 Thirteenth Street. Secretary’s Office.—Alva B. Walker, acting secretary, 1412 Manchester Lane. Supply Office.—George W. Morgan, supply officer, Seabrook, Md. Tabulating Office.—John I. Meehan, tabulating officer, 1668 Fort Davis Street SE. ACQUISITIONS DEPARTMENT Director.— Verner W. Clapp, 4 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Mortimer Taube, assistant director for operations, 408 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; James B. Childs, assistant director for planning, 1325 Jackson Street NE.; John L. Nolan, selection officer and editor of Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions, 21 Rokeby Avenue, Garrett Park, Md. Exchange and Gift Division.— Thomas R. Barcus, chief, 15 E Street. Order Division.—Alton H. Keller, chief, 4801 Rodman Street. Senta), Berns) Divisinn=Baity Bradford, chief, 410 Cummings Lane, Chevy ase, : : PROCESSING DEPARTMENT Director—Herman H. Henkle, 895 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director.—John W. Cronin, 214 Fifth Street SE. Binding Office.—Ruth Kline, binding officer, 204 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Card Division.— Nathaniel Stewart, chief, 3060 Thirtieth Street SE. Descriptive Cataloging Division.— Lucile M. Morsch, chief, 3438 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Subject Cataloging Division.—David J. Haykin, chief, 4958 Brandywine Street. Union Catalog Division.—George A. Schwegmann, Jr., chief, 3534 Porter Street. A 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 20 286 Congressional Directory REFERENCE DEPARTMENT Director—David Chambers Mearns, 9 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Coreviution Service.—Donald G. Patterson, assistant director, 4105 Wisconsin venue. Loan Division.—Elsie Rackstraw, chief, 139 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; Service for the Blind, Maude G. Nichols, librarian; 5305 Connecticut Avenue; Library Station at the Capitol, Harold S. Lincoln, custodian, 736 Easley Street, Silver Spring, Md. Serials Division.— Henry S. Parsons, chief, 8312 Carey Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Sl and Reader Diviston.— Donald G. Patterson, acting chief, 4105 Wisconsin venue. Public Reference Service.— Assistant director [vacant]. Aeronautics Division.—Albert Francis Zahm, chief, Cosmos Club; Nils H. Randers-Pehrson, assistant chief, Brandywine, Md. General Reference and Bibliography Division.— Robert C. Gooch, chief, 4826 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; Leslie Dunlap, assistant chief, 19 Monmouth Avenue, Garrett Park, Md.; Thomas Jefferson Library Catalog Project, Emily M. Sowerby, bibliographer, 2601 Sixteenth Street; Nether-lands Studies Unit, Elly Van Aalten, chief bibliographer, 144 B Street NE.; United States Quarterly Book List, Joseph P. Blickensderfer, editor, 1427 Webster Street; Slavic Room, John T. Dorosh, curator, 5 Idylwood Road, East Falls Church, Va. Hispanic Foundation.—Lewis Hanke, director, 40 West Baltimore Street, Ken-sington, Md. Manuscripts Division.—St. George I. Sioussat, chief, 6309 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Maps Division.—Robert S. Platt, chief, Library of Congress. Music Division.—Harold Spivacke, chief, 3201 Rowland Place. Orientalia Division.— Arthur W. Hummel, chief, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase Gardens, Md.; Indic Section, Horace I. Poleman, chief, 303 B Street SE.; Japanese Séction, Edwin G. Beal, Jr., chief, 2851 Denver Street SE.; Hebraic Section, Theodor Herzl Gaster, chief, 2220 North Quantico Street, Arlington, Va.; Near East Section, Harold W. Glidden, chief, 308 South Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. Prints and Photographs Division.—Alice Lee Parker, acting chief, 3911 Living-ston Street; Photograph Collection, Hirst D. Milhollen, curator, 803 Enderby Drive, Alexandria, Va.; exhibits officer [vacant]. Rare Books Division.— Frederick R. Goff, chief, 3348 Prospect Avenue; Micro-film Reading Room, Faustine Dennis, curator, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Legislative Reference Service.—Ernest S. Griffith, director, 1941 Parkside Drive; Congressional Reading Room, George H. Milne, custodian, 9411 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md LAW LIBRARY Law Librarian.— Eldon R. James, Westchester Apartments; Francis X. Dwyer, assistant law librarian, 4207 Oakridge Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; Law Library at the Capitol, William Crouch, custodian, 200 Rhode Island Avenue NE. COPYRIGHT OFFICE Register of Copyrights.—Sam Bass Warner, 3215 R Street. Assistant Reguster.—Herbert A. Howell, 3113 Forty-fifth Street. 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.”’] Chaitrman.—Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury, the Wardman Park. Secretary.—Luther H. Evans, Librarian of Congress, 514 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. : Mascellaneous Officials 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. 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. Executive Officer.— Russell H. Herrell, Westchester Apartments. Comptroller.— Felix BE. Cristofane, 3901 Forty-eighth Street, Bladensburg, Md. Director of Commercial Planning. —Raymond H. Lecraw, 4035 New Hampshire Avenue. Production Manager.— William Smith, 215 Emerson Street. Director of Purchases.—William J. Cassiday, 1611 Tuckerman Street. Director of Personnel.—S. Preston Hipsley, 3132 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Balti- more, Md. Technical Director.— Morris S. Kantrowitz, 741 Madison Street. Superintendent of Documents.—Fred W. Cromwell, 10504 Lorain Avenue, Wood- moor, Silver Spring, Md. Mechanical Superintendent.— Willard A. Anderson, 1314 Highland Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Production Manager.—James W. Broderick, 1712 Seventeenth Street. Night Production Manager.— Alfred L. Fleming, 30 Madison Street. Superintendent of Presswork.—Loxlie V. Adams, 9131 Bradford Road, Silver Spring, Md. Director of Planning Service.—Phillip L. Cole, 1206 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. Si ih ii of Platemaking.—John A. McLean, 4819 Russell Avenue, Avondale, Superintendent of Binding.— Thomas G. Maloney, 3614 Seventeenth Street NE. Director of Typography and Design.—Frank H. Mortimer, 5917 Thirty-third Street. Superintendent of Composition.— Morris H. Reaves, 3816 Twentieth Street NE. Director of Plant Planning.—Grover W. Tribble, 4531 South Dakota Avenue NE. Assistant to the Production Manager.—John Li. Grant, 5419 Thirteenth Street. ii Officer.—Mrs. Maybelle G. Fickel, 803 Forest Glen Road, Silver Spring, Administrative Assistant to the Production Planning Assistant to the Public Printer. — Eustis E. Morsberger, 839 Glen Allen Drive, Baltimore, Md. Chief, Transportation Section.—Herbert A. Tuohy, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 5308 First Street. Superintendent, Library Branch ‘Section. —Harry Falk, Catharpin, Va. Medical and Safety Director.—Dr. Louis J. Goffredi, 6924 Eighth Street. Chief Storekeeper.— Alla G. Stevens, 225 Quackenbos Street. Clert; in Charge of Congressional Record at Capitol.—Ralph L. Harris, 2328 Twenty- fifth Street SE. Captain of the Guard.— George L. Kisling, 705 Eighteenth Street. BOTANIC GARDEN (West of the Capitol Grounds) Acting Director—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol, 3700 Quebec Street (Phones, office, NAtional 3120, branch 125; home, WOQodley 5724.) Assistant Director—Edmund E. H. Sauerbrey, 1911 Seventeenth Street SE. (Phone, office, N Ational 3120, branch 267). Chief Clerk.—Sue Armentrout, 2001 Sixteenth Street. 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 3% acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its width, including approaches, “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 NATIONAL CAPITAL It may seem strange that, in the selection of the 10 miles square for the territory in which the National Capital should find a home, a locality was selected with but a meager population. It may have been the intent to found a capital which should develop its own particular surroundings instead of attempting to conform with conditions then existing. But the principal reason was the lesson learned from European experiences, where the location of the country’s capital in a large city offered an opportunity for the coercion of legislators by the citizens of the capital. From the inception of the Continental Congress, either through neces-sity or voluntarily, it had moved from Philadelphia to Baltimore, Lancaster, York, Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York City. Philadelphia seems to have been the favorite location, and it was from this city that the Federal Congress, organized in New York City, took up its abode until its removal to Washington in the year 1800. The original 10 miles square was formed from territory donated by Virginia and Maryland, and the cornerstone was erected and fixed on April 15, 1791, at Hunters Point, just south of Alexandria, Va. This area remained intact until the year 1846, when the Congress transferred to Virginia the portion furnished by that State. PLANS FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDING Following the selection of a site for the Capital, some little time elapsed before advertisements appeared offering a prize of $500, or a medal of the same value, to be awarded for the “most approved plan’ for a Capitol Building. Some 14 plans were submitted—some writers claim 16—but of these plans none was wholly sat-isfactory. In October 1792, Dr. William Thornton, a versatile physician of Tortola, West Indies, requested by letter an opportunity to present a plan as within the terms of the original advertisement. The request was granted and his plan accepted by the commissioners on April 5, 1793. Affairs seemed to move rapidly in those days, for on September 18, 1793, the cornerstone was laid with Masonic ceremonies in the southeast corner of the north section of the building. Thornton’s plan provided for a central section nearly square in area, surmounted by a low dome, this central section to be flanked on: the north and south by rectangular buildings, with a length of 126 feet and a width of 120 feet. The northern wing was the first completed, and in this small building the legislative and judicial branches of the Government, as well as the courts of the District of Columbia, were accommodated at the time of the removal of the Government from Philadelphia in the year 1800. 288 i Caprtol Buildings and Grounds 289 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 occupied by the United States Supreme Court Building. They continued this occupancy until 1819, when the Capitol was again ready for occupancy. The original Capitol as completed was built of Aquia Creek (Va.) sandstone, procured from quarries owned by the Government. This structure was 352 feet 4 inches in length and 229 feet in depth. The central portion was sur-mounted by a low dome, and the sandstone interior was unchanged when the new dome was erected in a later period. The cost of this original building, 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 pro-phetic utterances on that occasion have been quoted many times. In the build-ing of the Senate and House wings the exterior marble came from the quarries of Lee, Mass., and the columns from quarries of Cockeysville, Md. This work was prosecuted under the architectural direction of Thomas U. Walter from 1851 to 1865 during his tenure as Architect of the Capitol, and there-after certain uncompleted details were supervised by his successor, Edward Clark, whose term ran from 1865 to 1902. The present House Chamber was occupied for legislative purposes December 16, 1857, and the Senate Chamber January 4, 1859. The addition of the Senate and House wings made the construction of a new dome necessary for the preservation of architectural symmetry. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast iron, completed in 1865. The greatest exterior diameter of the dome is 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda is 97 feet in diameter, and its height from the floor to where the dome closes in at the base of the lantern is 180 feet 3 inches. The Capitol has a floor area of 14 acres, and 432 rooms are devoted to office, committee, and storage purposes. There are 16,878 square feet of skylights, 679 windows, and 554 doorways. The dome receives light through 108 windows, and from the Architect’s office to the top of 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.” 290 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. SENATE CFFICE BUILDING The demand for a new building to be used for offices was greater for the Rep-resentatives, on account of the large number forming the membership of that . body, and because the Members of the Senate were supplied with additional office space by the purchase of the Maltby Building, located on the northwest corner of B Street and New Jersey Avenue NW. However, the acquisition of this building supplied but a temporary purpose, and its condemnation as an unsafe structure created on the part of the Senators a desire for safer and more commodious quarters. Accordingly, under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, square 686, on the northeast corner of Delaware Avenue and B Street NE., was purchased as a site for the Senate Office Building, and the plans for the House Office Building were adapted for the Senate Office Building, the only change being the omission of the fourth side of the building fronting on First Street NE. this being planned for but not completed. The cornerstone of this building was laid without special exercises on July 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 to the C Street facade, and construction of terraces, balustrades, and approaches. The cost of the completed building, including site, furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the Senate Office Building with the United States Capitol, was $8,390,892. : : Capitol Buildings and Grounds 291 CAPITOL POWER PLANT During the development of the plans for fireproof office buildings for occupancy by the Senators and Representatives, the question of heat, light, and power was considered. The Senate and House wings of the Capitol were heated by separate heating plants. The Library of Congress also had in use a heating plant for that building, and it was finally determined that the solution of the heating and light-ing, with power for elevators, could be adequately met by the construction of a central power plant to furnish all heat and power, as well as light, for the Capitol group of buildings. Having determined the need of a central power plant, a site was selected in Garfield Park, bounded by New Jersey Avenue, South Capitol Street, Virginia Avenue, and B Street SE. This park being a Government reservation, an ap-propriation of money was not required to secure title. The determining factors leading to the selection of this site were its nearness to the tracks of the Pennsyl-vania Railroad and its convenient distance to the river and the buildings to be cared for by the plant. The dimensions of the Capitol power plant, which was constructed under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, and completed and placed in operation in 1910, are 244 feet 8 inches by 117 feet, with a height over the boiler room of 81 feet to accommodate the coal bunkers. A later additional building, for accom-modation of shops and storerooms, is located near the power plant and is built of selected red brick, it being 90 feet long, 50 feet wide, and 2 stories high. The building is located upon concrete foundations resting upon 790 simplex reinforced concrete piles; the superstructure is of red brick. There are 2 Alphons Custodis radial brick chimneys 212 feet in height and 11 feet in diameter at the top. The buildings served by the power plant are connected by a reinforced-concrete steam tunnel 7 feet high by 4% feet wide, with walls approximately 12 inches thick. This tunnel originally ran from the power plant to the Senate Office Building, with connecting tunnels for the House Office Building, the Capitol, and the Library of Congress, and has since been extended to the Government Printing Office and the Washington City Post Office, with steam lines extended to serve the new House Office Building, the Supreme Court Building, the Annex to the Library of Congress, and the relocated Botanic Garden. In 1935 Congress authorized the air conditioning of the Capitol, Senate, and House Office Buildings and provided therefor an appropriation of $2,550,000 and, in 1937, an additional amount of $1,672,000, including authorization for construc-tion of a central refrigeration plant to serve the systems. An addition to the power plant building, 123 feet 2 inches long, 79 feet 6 inches wide, with a height of 37 feet 10 inches, was constructed to house the refrigeration plant. This plant was placed in operation May 16, 1938, and was, at that time, the largest central station water-cooling plant ever constructed. Its huge pumps carry chilled water through large supply mains to the four buildings served. The refrigerating capacity of the plant may best be described in terms of the melting of 3 block of ice 50 feet by 50 feet and the height of a seven-story building every 24 hours. Directory Congressional 292 HOUSE WING SENATE WING sgn 6.14Fat 12 ire uk 5 Ld ; i H ‘hrs9 5 3 16] 1zan 7 { I 3 dodo l Figs UREN EEL Lp st v2 gL. ITT TFT >of ; aps: ERE / BASEMENT AND TERRACE HOUSE WING TERRACE Room. : 1. Dynamo room. 2. Schoolroom for page boys. 3. Dynamo room, 5. Dynamo room. 4, 6. 7,9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Dynamo rooms. 12. Janitor’s storeroom. 14. Tile room. 16. Women’s toilet. 18. Repair shop, dynamo room. 19, 21. Tinner’s shop. 20. Men’s toilet. 22, 24, 26, 28. Carpenter shop. 30, 32, 34, 36. Machine shop. 37. Electrician’s storeroom. 38, 39. Storeroom. 40. Plumber’s shop. BASEMENT 33. Engineer’s office. 35, 39. Elevators. 37. Kitchen. BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING ; SENATE SIDE TERRACE Room. Room. 21, 23, 25, 27, 29. Architect’s office. 1, 3. Captain of police. 5. Architect’s drafting room. HOUSE SIDE 8, 10, 12, 14. Storage rooms. 13. Associated Press. 21. Architect’s office. g 11, 15, 16, 17, 18. Janitor’s rooms. 23, 25. House Committee on Printing. 19. Electrician’s storeroom. 27. Special Minority clerk. 20. Men’s toilet. 29. Office of Compiler of Congressional Directory. 31. Hon. Leslie C. Arends (Republican whip). . BASEMENT 33, 34. Secretary’s file rooms. 35, 47. Elevators. 39, 41. Engineer’s rooms. 43. Kitchen. bugppng jondn) NO Ne) (JS) HOUSE WING SENATE WING hope dovoevsoccas AL AMS Ss le) 2B a | j GROUND FLOOR nn) 0U0188946U0)) Ruop0041(T 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 Room. 68. Joint Committee on Printing. 70. Committee on Post-War Military Policy. 71. Hon. H. W. Sumners. 72, 74, 75, 76, Dr. George W. Calver. 77, 80, 107. Senator McMahon. 83. Senators’ barber shop. 87. Congressional Law Library. 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme Court room. 89, 90, 91, 92, 101. Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 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. 35, 36, 37, 38, 67. Committee on Appropriations 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 42, 43, 46. Committee on Education and Labor. 53, 63. Committee on Foreign Relations. 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 56, 61, 62. Restaurant. 51, 60. Elevators. 66. Men’s toilet. 68. Women’s toilet. [WV] Ne) Cr Ra0100.43J [0U0SSOUBUO) HOUSE WING SENATE WING Rf f} 2 ; 4SR#HEH 249 § 25| ge 26Eo[Te RR CY # 40 XW D4 - |oi 39 m 8 | 40 3 Hall of Representatives 13 5 ES | Statuary all = > 42 |p $43 1. # 3Senate at Chémber , 30 32 i 5 am DN 35 lit Sfidlo: = c i IE = ong 37 3# of|c] i To. Buc 38 [aol23) 36. BAhR BE PRINCIPAL FLOOR HOUSE WING Room. . 1, 2, 3, 4. Committee on Appropriations. 5. Office of the majority leader. 6. Closets. 7, 8,9. Members’ retiring rooms. 10. Parliamentarian. 11, 12, 13, 14. Cloakrooms. 15. Hon. Robert IL. Doughton, Democratic Steering Committee, Ways and Means. 16. Library. 17, 20. Speaker. 18, 19. Elevators. PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL MAIN BUILDING Room. 40, 41. House document room. 42, 43, 44. Office of the Clerk of the House. 45, 46. Senate disbursing office. 48, Majority Leader, Committee on Library. 49. Sergeant at Arms. ; 53. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. 58, 59. House minority leader. 60, 61, 62. Speaker. 63. Formerly the Senate Chamber and later the Supreme Court. 64. House Legislative Counsel. 65. Pages, House (Cloakroom). SENATE WING Room. 21. Office of the Secretary. 22. Executive clerk. 23. Secretary. 24. Chief Clerk. 25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 26, 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 28. Senators’ lavatory. 29, 30. Cloakrooms. 31. The Marble Room. 32. Room of the Vice President. 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. 3314, 35. Elevators. 36. Official Reporters of Debates 37. The Senators’ reception room. 38. Committee on the District of Columbia. 39. Office of the Sergeant at Arms. 40. Room of the President. [NV Re} IN| burppng 101240) HOUSE WING SENATE WING T Hall of . Representatives. GALLERY FLOOR fis010040(F J0U0I8SOU6UO)) HOUSE WING Room. 1, 2, 3. Committee on Foreign Affairs. 4. File room. 5. Committee on Appropriations. 6, 7, 8,9, 10. Press Gallery. 11, 12. Committee on Rules. 13. Ladies’ retiring room. 14. Elevators and Radio Correspondents’ Gallery. 15. Elevator. 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. 406. Senate document room. 41, 42. Senate storekeeper. 43. Secretary to the Majority. : 44. Secretary to the Minority. 49, 50. 52, 53, 54. House Committee on Civil Service. 56, 57. ! 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. Radio Correspondents’ Gallery. 27. Elevator. bugpping j01dn) 66¢ £1402904%(T 1DU0L8S2LOU0)) LC. Legislative Clerk. V.P. Vice President. D. Secretary to the Minority. C.C. Chief Clerk. J.C. Journal Clerk, R. Official Reporters. Sec. Secretary. A. Secretary to the Majority Sgt. Sergeant at Arms, 6 a P. Parliamentarian, ; 5 SENATORS' LOBBY SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER Io) = pS KENNETH McKELLAR, President pro tempore of the Senate 7 Lesuie L. BIFFLE, Secretary JouN C. CrOCKETT, Chief Clerk © WALL DOXEY, Sergeant at Arms CHARLES L. WATKINS, Parliamentarian to FELTON M. JOHNSTON, Secretary for the Majority EMERY L. FRAZIER, Legislative Clerk ’ CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority EpwarD J. Hickey, Journal Clerk wn -REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain f=% 1. Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. 25. Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. 49. Hawkes, Albert W., New Jersey. 73. Capehart, Homer E., Indiana. No 2. Willis, Raymond E., Indiana. 26. Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. 50. Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. 74. Moore, E. H., Oklahoma, a 3. Langer, William, North Dakota. 27. Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. 51. Reed, Clyde M., Kansas. 75. Wherry, Kenneth S., Nebraska. Q 4. Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. 28. La Follette, Robert M., Jr., Wisconsin. 52. Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. 76. Ball, Joseph H., Minnesota. = 5. Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. 29. Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. 53. Austin, Warren R., Vermont. 77. Smith, H. Alexander, New Jersey. Ss 1 6. Capper, Arthur, Kansas. 30. Hayden, Carl, Arizona. 54. Glass, Carter, Virginia. 78. Cordon, Guy, Oregon. or 7. White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. 31. Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. 55. Connally, Tom, Texas. 76. Brewster, Owen, Maine. wy) 8. Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. 32. Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. 56. Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. 80. Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. pou 9. McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. 33. Wagner, Robert F., New York. 57. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. 81. O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. ~~ 10. George, Walter F., Georgia. 34. Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. 58. Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. 2. Eastland, James O., Mississippi. a 11. Tydings, Millard E., Maryland. 35. Overton, John H., Louisiana. 59. Russell, Richard B., Georgia. 83. McClellan, John L., Arkansas. 3° ; 12. McCarran, Pat, Nevada. 36. Bilbo, Theodore G. Mississippi. 60. Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. 84. Carville, E. P., Nevada. =] 13. O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. 37. Andrews, Charles O., Florida. 61. Pepper, Claude, Florida. 85. Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. 14. Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. 38. Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode Island, 62. Murray, James E., Montana. 86. Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. 15. Lucas, Scott W., Illinois. 39. Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. 63. Guffey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. 87. Hill, Lister, Alabama. 16. Downey, Sheridan, California. 40. McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. 64. Magnuson, Warren G., Washington. 88. Mead, James M., New York. 17. Murdock, Abe, Utah. 41. Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. 65. Fulbright, J. William, Arkansas. 89. Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. : 18. Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina, 42. Myers, Francis J., Pennsylvania. 66. Hoey, Clyde R., North Carolina. 90. Tunnell, James M., Delaware. 19. Morse, Wayne, Oregon. 43. Young, Milton R., North Dakota. 67. Johnston, Olin D., South Carolina. 91. McMahon, Brien, Connecticut. 20. Robertson, Edward V., Wyoming. 44. Donnell, Forrest C., Missouri. 68. Stanfill, William A., Kentucky. 92. Taylor, Glen H., Idaho. 21. Bushfield, Harlan J., South Dakota. 45. Wilson, George A., Iowa. 69. Knowland, William F., California. 93. Mitchell, Hugh B., Washington. y 22. Aiken, George D., Vermont. 46. Revercomb, Chapman, West Virginia. 70. Hart, Thomas C., Connecticut. 94. Briggs, Frank P., Missouri. 23. Butler, Hugh, Nebraska. 47. Buck C. Douglass, Delaware. 71. Saltonstall, Leverett, Massachusetts. 95. Huffman, James W., Chio. | 24. Taft, Robert A., Ohio. 48. Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. 72. Hickenlooper, Bourke B., Iowa. 96. Gossett, Charles C., Idaho. 108 | { | DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE KENNETH McKELLAR, President pro tempore of the Senate LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary Jorn C. CrockETT, Chief Clerk WALL DOXEY, Sergeant at Arms CHARLES L. WATKINS, Parliamentarian FELTON M. JOHNSTON, Secretary for the Majority EMERY L. FRAZIER, Legislative Clerk CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority EDWARD J. HICKEY, Journal Clerk REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain . Aiken, George D., Vermont. 82. Eastland, James O., Mississippi. 3. Langer, William, North Dakota. 20. Robertson, Edward V., Wyoming. 37. Andrews, Charles O., Florida. 86. Ellender, Allen J., Louisiana. 15. Lucas, Scott W., Illinois. 59. Russell, Richard B., Georgia. 53. Austin, Warren R., Vermont. 1. Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. 64. Magnuson, Warren G., Washington. 71. Saltonstall, Leverett, Massachusetts. 53. Bailey, Josiah W., North Carolina. 65. Fulbright, J. William, Arkansas. 18. Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. 5. Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota. 76. Ball, Joseph H., Minnesota. 10. George, Walter F., Georgia. 12. McCarran, Pat, Nevada. 77. Smith, H. Alexander, New Jersey. 31. Bankhead, John H., 2d, Alabama. 57. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. 83. McClellan, John L., Arkansas. 68. Stanfill, William A., Kentucky. 8. Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky. 54. Glass, Carter, Virginia. 40. McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. 89. Stewart, Tom, Tennessee. 36. Bilbo, Theodore G., Mississippi. 96. Gossett, Charles C., Idaho. 9. McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. 24. Taft, Robert A., Ohio. 79. Brewster, Owen, Maine. 38. Green, Theodore Francis, RhodeIsland. | 91. McMahon, Brien, Connecticut. 92. Taylor, Glen H., Idaho. 25. Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. 63. Guffey, Joseph F., Pennsylvania. 88. Mead, James M., New York. 34. Thomas, Elbert D., Utah. 94. Briggs, Frank P., Missouri. 27. Gurney, Chan, South Dakota. 48. Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. 32. Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma. 50. Brooks, C. Wayland, Illinois. 70. Hart, Thomas C., Connecticut. 93. Mitchell, Hugh B., Washington. 4. Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. 47. Buck, C. Douglass, Delaware. 14. Hatch, Carl A., New Mexico. 74. Moore, E. H., Oklahoma. 90. Tunnell, James M., Delaware. 21. Bushfield, Harlan J., South Dakota. 49. Hawkes, Albert W., New Jersey. 19. Morse, Wayne, Oregon. 11. T'ydings, Millard E., Maryland. 23. Butler, Hugh, Nebraska. 30. Hayden, Carl, Arizona. 17. Murdock, Abe, Utah. 26. Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan. 56. Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. 72. Hickenlooper, Bourke B., Iowa. 62. Murray, James E., Montana. 33. Wagner, Robert F., New York. 73. Capehart, Homer E., Indiana. 87. Hill, Lister, Alabama. 3 42. Myers, Francis J., Pennsylvania. 80. Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. 6. Capper, Arthur, Kansas. 66. Hoey, Clyde R., North Carolina. 81. O’Daniel, W. Lee, Texas. 29. Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. 84. Carville, E. P., Nevada. 95. Huffman, James W., Ohio. 13. O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. 75. Wherry, Kenneth S.; Nebraska. 39. Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. 85. Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. 35. Overton, John H., Louisiana. 7. White, Wallace H., Jr., Maine. 55. Connally, Tom, Texas. 67. Johnston, Olin D., South Carolina. 61. Pepper, Claude, Florida. 52. Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. 78. Cordon, Guy, Oregon. 41. Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. 60. Radcliffe, George L., Maryland. 2. Willis,.,Raymond E., Indiana. 44. Donnell, Forrest C., Missouri. 69. Knowland, William F., California. 51. Reed,Clyde M., Kansas. 45. Wilson, George A., Towa. 16. Downey, Sheridan, California. 28. La Follette, Robert M.., Jr., Wisconsin. 46. Revercomb, Chapman, West Virginia. 43. Young, Milton R., North Dakota. burpyng 103d) ‘ROOMS AND TELEPHONES SENATORS [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N Ational 3120] Office building Capitol Name $m RE SO Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone AIREN. ovens, 358 AT ee a a DB a aa ais | AE ANDREWS. -.......... 240 S70: Public. tBulldings andy © Si J dun tira eg ee Grounds. AUSTING anda 311 HE VO amano 1) LA ROR St I elt oo Banwmy oi 353 S12 1 Commerce. ...o.oewensens Gallery floor, northwest corner. 121 BALL ao bia -107 1206: ls TES SE] ING RL i SSR Ne Ne ak LS BANKHEAD. _ cove 217 $46 |. Irrigation. and Reclama... 0 0 CieRE tion. Bigxvey.. 205 | 151 iyADBY Loader erent rr cron wins Side senate floor, main corridor. ___|_______ | BILBO. oni 127 877 | District of Columbia______ Senate floor, east side ___._.__ 113 | BREWSTER. .o.ouvoene 248 RL I ES Pie fe nk ee JR SOR | BRIDGES. Linu 145 3 E250) Er CL Tg 4.3 LR TB EA) BLN TE ef WL SE Sa i ag 1 yf BRIGGS. i. ssisasra: SEH DEAL 1 24 ERs FSU aL ED J CI ee ame Nm AA 5a BROCE ot iris 111 ers I Se RC ma 37 catty 2 3 ll Se ii LE | BUCE ovo cimiianas 255 2170 1 SEER nf LA OE at] Rel nl De Come Lf | BUSHFIEED. oor 211 Wf en ea a EA gy he as lee aid ete | BUTLER: vai 421 ALT So SORE MOE 1 CV LONE SI LU LC Ce art, 3 BYRDS dn 209 i 18 NE EF)1 RS SR aA eater LS A CAPEHART oc 405 BS rc rirse nr pa So mr Se hr) Sh EE Emmettie CAPPER: ronnie 206 i fa ti tem mms se i rg i hE mH RR CARVILLE oo oui 459 lB a al ci nd BO SHE IE i aba Se Ss Fe } CHAVEZ oosi vi 204 Ib 17 I Me PR cE eae nny we no BELLE REE SL be TUE CRRA date 1) LL CONNALLY oo oi ooo 453 969 | Foreign Relations.________ Ground floor, east side_______. 101 CORDON .-.ciacacuisos 333 1 5B SR et BN Gee pte © Sg 1 DS lei notated be DONNELLY. oo bomasans 463 1 8 FE SSCA CH SP Re en Li a eat ee Bee A ress i Dg DOWNEY. ico sais 124 142-1 BOrVICE. a Le nh i Be me Sm BE BASTLAND. cocoa 304 2D a IE ei BE Ss BLIENDER. dea: 345 BB Oa ImS. nieee FERGUSON. __......._. 455 Lye! Re eR Cr NIE We | RT i RS SA EL TLL TR FULBRIGHT=: cviceoo 329 Tr ROR op CURR BC eR EAS Ne LD EC SCRA OD Se AB SE 0 end VE QRORGE IL Liisi 342 S17 Binanee. uni Ln GSE iS a aan is Nt. GERRY ova ovuiniza 404 POT RBS Se pe Shei Glin bok |S BR sols Sous WERE SRB sR ON LT CLASS. 5 sia anon s 315 182 | Appropriations__._________ Ground floor, west side________ €1 GOSSETT LL. alidl 348 rl SKEET A RE Ine ba i BO 2 E ERE i SINGS eS Sei M1 Je ARBEN eo 321 162: | Privileges and. Fleetions |. 0 ar eos or CURFRY =o =sizsais 429 165: Minesand Mining... | 880. C00. ana. GUBNEY: --o.ocacicusz 241 BAR EEN bs I ME i Te lr GE TA SARIN AG CSO SR NIE hala A HART ios ciincaaides 354 EET REL SWART 0 SS Je ER SS SST ROHL FL a HATow inti 313 089-1 PublicTandsand Surveys. i... i oolLT HAWRRS. -_:oozoosuss 352 1120 SR SO Ee i ES DR I AR MR i HAYDEN: cooooaiuna- 131 REE HTH RT SOR RE CER aR | SRE IF ER a sp EC HICKENLOOPER._.____ 432 DL tm mm hm me ee op he ae ne aL a HILL Giceicaicaniia.s 441 8311 Expenditures in the: Bx-. ol fa nar meneame nsf ves ecutive Departments. HOBY zo: zizcziszes -.337 tbe ER nS SE a ele FES AE LT SOI SCO ne eR aI LE | HGFFMAN. oon 411 J a ba ATS Et A SEN RE) Sn a Se I SN SR ZR Lee JorNsoN (Colo.)..... 361 1 Ev a a,ER a SR LS aE eT JoaNSTON (S. C.)....- 252 829 HE Fe SSee 306 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room [Phone Location Phone KILGORE... oa i: 359 2 ¥ 4 A) Hen Slt Spd pes MERC fun St Se TSE cpg ns a IS KNOWLAND. o.oo 355 1b ne SORE Ae i el Sinai] UE BCU RO SS Cmte od RL am L.A FOLLETTE.....----254 L150) Lp a I a WR a a el po SRB A SR eo ESR LANGER... -i.-2C 462 LE A Sy pls] By pe mg Sr rp lp em) LS LUCAS. -. ceramics 428 930 | Audit and Control the |. ito ad oe ea Contingent Expenses of the Senate. MCCARRAN........... 409 70 Tndlelary csrnae Ground floor, northwest corner. 156 MCCLELLAN... .----437 eC NS ie aE et i Sal Pe Sin OR J EE MCFARLAND. _ occ. 262 3 7 El, SS Se a eT Ud BAS COL RR SR Ss a ae eal a (0 MCEFELLAR....------~ 221 191 | Post Offices and Post | Senate floor, southeast corner. 34 Roads. MCMAHON. ccccccemee ale rl IE tn eh BR Ground floor, northwest corner. 047 MAGNUSON. __ococoo-444 1 8 Be AE ple arin UL TRIN EF ae LJ a Setanta be Fr MAYBANE cee. 454 8 LIE SC Ca OBE pe dl J ER RL Se el SE MEAD. rs irl LL By” ER Ene, IRE RE CR TUC Ua Let Cn A S A ee Ie 8 MOURN... oo 341 BEL He SRR Sr SS Lo WE TL El SIE i NRL EA Be MICHELL coerame n= 327 ABT I RN oh ie mf re rai LC MOORE... =... 229 AR I eram a SY a MORSE... i... ci 443 rel PRP te EL Cera fen a aT ed of ei SRR Co a Is Ep ETE] UT MURDOCK -cece 447 RE { MURBAY acer 121 805 | Education and Labor.____ Ground floor, southwest corner. 41 MYERS. ca 307 TH INE A NO Se CB, SR CNR ol vf a fine oT CW SC SR GRRE] PS O’ DANIEL... oom ~~ 231 3110 I ia Se As SRT a nt ET HC eh SRR see ho een Ba TO 2 O’MAHONEY _ 232 as Indian Allaire (A as Ee OVERTON. eee 458 ZEAE EET REET 00 VEL ep ent ES ZL ON heel CORR E001 BEPRER aii 253 176 APMIS. eee seep Ce a i oe BADCLIFFE cc ocnuiil 133 2 A Ee Se LS te pattem oS SE eR Ce Re I I A BE 7 BERD. iil 423 y {13 (010 SE BOR i So os Com i Jen SORES UE TL Oi Rr OR RS Be REVERCOMB._.___._.. 344 1 Ce LS ANS eB SE TOM RE tae Dn Sle LER pa ROBERTSON. _._______ 260 13 RE Rk CE SE hs] 1 iy Ct oR A COE Gin eee ORS RT BEE RUSSELL... ool. 410 807 | Tmmigration: oc... oof ure la an te datas er Sm bl) Sea SALTONSTALL. ooo... 141 BAT hele de a re I aE CEL a a SHIPSTEAD oo cccmee 245 2 len on a SE NN BC CS Re Re RN a mi EN SMITH 460 4 a are Shree eho Sy MELT UF I we A ee Me ER i SCAN. oom 452 | en an RE at BNR Ad 5 mi TB ots bi mR eo ETERS STEWART. ........aun 259 06. | Interoceanic Canals... Vai od. ie ara at 447oh a 332 20 SB RE Sh Smee I al Le A LSE Eo SLR CR Be a eR PAVIOR. = i oi 244 A ee ha ir THOMAS (Okla) _____. 326 807. Agriculture and Forestry. | 1 0 on ee Satefea THOMAS (Utah). _____ 442 993 | Military Affairs.......____ Senate floor, northwest corner. 155 POBEY.. ica 2b Lvs TB B10 Rss See pint isin E de © TE ed ee Re BU TUNNEL... cura. 347 824K Pensions... oo se a | ee REA at. TYDINGS. onanial 2217. 199 | Territories and Insular | Gallery floor, southeast corner. | .__.._. Affairs. VANDENBERG. .__--__ 139 1 A BESO (aki Ct SR LE le SP ets els pi Ea og LCT WAGNER... oie 226 060. Banking and COrreney.... | -loci cr omen ont bathe es re mda 20 WALSH. -o2. eens 215 166: | Naval Afairg cod elecfbn ae roo ant WHEELER occ 261 1137 | Interstate Commerce. _._. Gallery floor, west side_______. 100 WHERRBY...--oom 109 7 SR Ce en I NU Be LH SC i i nest Pd a WHE. aesa mins 417 4 1H BS ee Sl a En ET eR LS ees POE Sn WILEY inns 427 $B BRE ee Regt SP Sac NI] Wa Saree NE et la RR PRT TR MET Se WILLIS. ee ra 125 BE dh I I ea Ee I mma We eS ER A er WILSON... rina 362 Yb EE ST NE a ELE Rh ns Ts Ce i py pn RT XX OUNG.. oaasianais 448 1113: 00 1 Be SE Io as LVR Cet oe HH oS 5 Ne A SO dee i TL Rooms and Telephones 307 REPRESENTATIVES [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N A tional 3120] g Name ABERNETHY __--cceen ADAMS... Lu eat ALLEN (N.Y. caeaeenia- ARLEN (La). i. ANDERSEN (Minn.)._.| ANDERSON (Calif.)___ ANDRESEN (Minn.)__| ANDREWS (Ala.)____.. ANDREWS (N. Y.)._.._| ANGELL era ARENDS. on ihrerind ARNOLD... ermine AUCHINCLOSS..._____.. BAILEY abe, BALDWIN (Md.)...... BArpwiN (N. Y.)..... BARDEN. BARRETT (Pa.)._...... BARRETT (Wyo.)___._ BABRY: ans BARTLETT. ines BATESI(Y.). .crrren= BATES (Mass.) oo... BEALL SE on a BECKWORTH..-~nvee- Ber toi BENDER. ..cieureins BENNET (N. Y.)ooo.. BENNETT (MO.)...... BIEMULER. |. .onien BISHOP is aonb BILACENEY oo inere= Bath Da roams BrooM. Toit BOIION vivo srancs BONNER. © ..iic.aue- BOREN-toe cinde nes BOYRING:-»oriiies BrADLEY (Mich.)___.| BRADLEY (P3.)-...... BREA o.ooaae BROOKS. ....ocmombmn BROWN (Ga.) ooeee BrOwWN (Ohio). _..... BRUMBAUGH. ...._... BRYSON. crcnwnnian BOK. L oieaaean BUCBLEY: vn Office building Capitol a Chairmanship z Room [Phone Location Phone 1032 1 213 Erections NOI een Eh cater mn bh aa eRe I pL EE ERE | LE NE Rt i a a | yd ek en MERE aaa aes Seetraiuent len Do RS CaM TT 1234 QT a a TE SE 1414 { 5: census a a a a a ar lr ees 1328 LE I A Ree See a ni a Re GS Se ES I nT Coe EVR 1105 Er A Se et ne Se Re I SC Sa AE 1533 747) Eo Bente aan Rel or os LO ae Gi ES A720: | Bl oo em ar mm Semi SA Be eA EE SEIN A a 1109 372 UH FE US pa RO Gia SE OL RS he Ee al SS eI Sl a 1330 rr RA Re Bl on Sip Lt EIR ee 0S RE Ce 1024 729 | Minority whip. _____._..__. Basement floor, room 31_______ 278 344 BLT ree i le eo Ra Ue Ba pn 237 er SIL Rr ev Sn lng fi Lp IR Re dD ER el Ne LT 426 a a a a a a eC Ge 1505 A oi im smi im mimi mi sh) re ED mio rh Be eh ne AE Be) ET SEA 234 mmmSi aS mE bw Am hs rt ra ER 1536 -I aucation alm nn Ew | a Gk nm ek tw nm A ES ore 131 7 Sr RO ee MR IE TM SS SR rn A 1508. JA0T | Gini Sa mmm mmm ann men mm hp aint 5 AE St mr pe a AS 1327 e101 OR I SR REC Nn 8 LR Ne BRB EL 455 +1 br A Ei Ce ST AC Bo 10 Re LC IR RR RI 302 727 PN a RES GE EE Te SL SEE 307 Li 2 GREE se SER re Be OL eat ey RE SS, 0 DL 1509 Ee er PN oe] EE oN ST SR Sl EIN Loe bE 1609 rT RE Se a he Rte Tos Mr rin i Ln GR pablo pS Ei TE 315 1319 5 113 416 Vrnontar SNL FE pre i et Sat HG SRE I EA ET 355 Ba ee a mes Wels ST SR cea) Ce 439 ot of cot on i Be ee | Se mb HA EO i an re Sh nC) 1037 ea ane Tre ee ies in SRS Sea aa La ne 329 FL ee Sn a EC I EE I BC SER TL fe Ra ne aR El 1207 AB ld a LC] 1218 173 I Sl SO Se ENGEL BE MR I La a ena IC 217 578 ge Marine and } 219 579 Fisheries. i rt Th aera 1235 2 Iroreten Aflsirsorso ooo Gallery floor, west corridor....|230, 560 458 SF BH ee are ne Re Ty Yon BELT Co Des In LS 15% rt of President, Vice 1015 President, and ReDIe: [f.. ico remiss caerborsnrsnnnnsnnsadon 1430 A ; sentatives in Congress. 1337 Ly eS aE ee Nl al No BR FE ee CR a Sl LL 2s 412 1332 { a6 | 1071 patents eo he re om mm | ho mer me a Eo em er wt VE idee 1339 7 vB ER EN CU I CO See) ad IE a En RR DST 205 Fr A Snel Le 1004 BB oils oh stm din = ss i i fs sm br ro et om Be SS IE SD 1030 FH FA Rh A Ae RE Neg ue fen LE NN rai a EE RT 257 rE ee SP tl in SSE Soe (Eldan ok UL TINE RE 1406 YEE Eo EE ee I DUN EC CTI el RRS OY ga a LT Re 1016 EN Dea nan inane le ELT ipo co gel Sn OER UH Gd 1209 Ol eih vib mbm mam cm ms Sd ey at BL AEE ett cb naar Joa he 137 1 Le Be CR ea OR) Ki 1. T Lan i. Lp ee Cr ie Th RT 1429 1318 4 498 586 pensions Em memm hc Te 308 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name PRE ET Chairmanship 3 Room [Phone Location Phone BUFFETT coiomuin-n 457 5 ERG Se Rab MRR 1 Le alos tee alin nd Da a BULWINKLE — ........ 1313 Cd] Bl NS i Hi FE Sm STs SIR nl a BUNKER: cain 441 rE A en Lr SR Ie 215 2 Post Office and Post | i eR wh SA a a] oe a BURCH...----oeveeooe 213 I 606 Roads 670 : BUORGIN. . --vcenieiun 107 rE Re AS I Rae re ta BE Van Ren Snel es or ta BUTLER. een en 116 rE] Ee Se CR TT SS ae IN RR BYBNE(N.. VY... He BS 1 ER el eC A BE OR 2 PRN CSR ALI i aa LE BYRNES (WiS.)o coun 427 EE a BA ER el ns ce i CE Re ERB nA Sa Be GAWD. 265 711 8 EE RE RIE AS IAA ie LO en et Sn SSR a Dy BL RSE Te CAMPBELL Senin 118 1 EEE Rare ER a LR) BD CO XE NS EE ROR Sr a CANFIELD... anus 222 fry 21 NE SR Ch as ae Bt 2 IEE IRL 5 SRR STR Ses CANNON (Fla.)--.-_.. 1329 Oe a a il aia sr So EE i din Be sre rt a me A ATH CANNON (MO) cue. 1714 731 | Appropriations__.____ ~.___| House floor, west corridor. .___ 215, 353 CARISON--=. oe 259 rd Voth reba See ted | REIS wl 3 DRT e ee AGUIRRE tre 0 CARNAHAN... cian 331 BOB i cro ran md itt Be mw em pm NI a T CASE (N. J.) nena], -435 bryan La aR A Sh Se MRE I SR SR BSR MR RB QCAsE(S.-Dak y-__ 303A ABT es i A EE i SSR wn kw i BR Ay A DS CEILER. eo FTV TH SG ae Rae HR ORR IER ala US CHAPMAN... i... {AA SR EE CER ei I 0 CB SUES aie a RTT eR Eng 409 I ER aR EC Rn ee ER Tl Ea CHENOWETH -ceva 218 11 pM eit pat Senate A Be A SIR [3 RR BEI eT Sm BR YD RT CHIPERFIELD. ccc... 1713 22 onsite bein A Sor Sa Sb A it ee ia mi Be {RL 3 Bi CHURCH -cavaininnnin 1520 4 SER Smee eR BI IE LR nd fe Me eT eh Br 1 TL CARI. oo oni iin 1236 SLi Ee Ie SR AUB se Le POR BR Le CASON... nee ner 1525 B00 he rn dar MH a Sa a a al BR EER] CLEMENTS: as 320 BOT 1 Lr rit nan a oh Bs on Ae RB ei i vu AAT oT GS CLEVENGER. _ coven. 305 rf UR EER NESTE Sie Se ee On ec ER Sele Cl ES Ee EY CLIPPINGER.-.cvuwuw-m 130 08D cle sri Sime tr ES rei Se mL BAA Se SH SI COCHRAN: .....0is maf en Lota Accounts... iia. oa. Ground floor, main corridor___|242, 264 COrFER ~~ ovo 1608 file bh OV RS SMR ERIS UE Se (RE REE Sed CoLE (Kans.)........ 452 ra eh BEER Ea Oe Te oT RR SO SL SE Ce ees a Ln Cor (Moe). os 342 £1 1 TR RE A SE eR tr MEL el Ths LE TMP CR SCAN pF Ye COLE (N..Y.). oun 1528 7 LI Eee veer Sea SEE IE RN RR SE eR RR COLMER: corres 1705 BOO etd ra a he te AR Eo Mes ew hl Le COMBE fon nnnviinn 436 BED |. en i a rr Se] ee SAREE wR Ee Cae STC COOLEY... cidiimiomis 203 BBY, Lo iim mi eo es | EA vm A Be i I AE TE eR COOPER. a ainniin 1107 LY ERR iE SOIR CE A 1 SRR Sei ER UI SP a Bal Te Di CORBETT o-oonai 1440 1h ee ee a IR Bei Ce Sn pI Re ah COURINEY . .2cverc-s-1319 BO it oe re rte wt Rh UL Si RE Si a a i NE Cos 1104 AO | i amend A] he RRR re hn A ea a CRAVENS. eins 1231 7 A Ey rR ai Erect SR oR chp Ei TA CRAWFORD. -....oonn 1123 FLEE SE BSS RI ee Ne TA Sr S| Re CROSSED. oo onriiiin 1130 bt IRR he ES CEL BRR Ee Sr ES CR NE A LL Ce Eg Set LR CUNNINGHAM. ___.._. 1028 Lr Seo Mas ee MESS Cal See a Le EB ee CURLEY cn sanimissin 1716 9 1 ee Oa A Le Ie 6 Se LC ER re Ba I a UL ON Pel Sn 1508 EEE ER Se Ee SR ee Te Eee a Le ta D’ALESANDRO._.._____ {HEL te a meiiran ines: BU CHEE Smitsplea DAUGHTON (Va.)..... 310 BO Hc he re hs rd] br mn hy Sn wom on 8 TEAR DELS DAVIS: oe eninge 132 MA neees Le REE ps Cee AR DAWSON ooo veri 117 EL BE Er PR Eh WUE Se ptt I CR EN ea EA DE UACT icicaic-136 AB7: ar pe AY SA de es DELANEY, James J_._| 334 AE ERE Rr re RE Tin ho RELe] ER DELANEY, John J____| 1535 esSR a See a a BD’EWART.... -.-...o. 120 MABE ame a Lok a Tl A Cd Bmit, boi SE DINGELL oer ual 1110 BO eaee Rede sin Ln Se cote Sat DIRKSEN ease acs 209 Ed ST in siete 3 LRA yt AR So SN Cr Ey GE DOILIVER. «=: 308 494 Rooms and Telephones REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name ET Bes Chairmanship = Room | Phone Location Phone DOMENGEAUX ....cooe 333 715 = Bleetions No. Lolo oc inh nn dd ane at DONDERO... iil 204 BN BE a EB al dad oR RE DouGHTON (N. C0.) Tl 7 [ways CR TRS, [Sa Se min 219 Dovuaras (Calif)... 143 012.4: = recite enden ns AER ei ese Lon dn J ERT ol a DouGrAs (11). ----__| 459 BAL ube shar Sidra nina ius ua Bh vn Lo aa Tea POYLE.. ooo 144 7 BR ei a SE SRT te oa RR aX of SSR Ca CURSOR Se SO LE D8 DREWRY......L-lo 1124 O00. 2: sn en SR a ee rR Pe EAN DURAN a 1217 1H Bs tN en ber nto HER MERE en Te EE SE oe DWORSHARK « ccceee 1204 BN eR Sa NL en ER Tr SE OT oe LL Ba EARTHMAN cvcmacane- 104 bE Re SE OR SR IE 1 RUE 0 IN, TRA RIC nk LP 4 POR ERA BATON: oo esa 1229 BOB ss dena et i BE a oT A EBERHARTER. ..cuue-- 1622 FRY het ae i Sl et Bs I EC aida SRR EN 1381 || Disposition of Executive BLUM. «xc uetomnnens 12 i } Papers. -ene sr sgh rps ape i BR ee ws DETTE fe en Er El a 241 BAT od mines a A RN i a aa ErLisworTH.. {o-oo 1631 BOG ts ee dan a RRC A LT da ah re CBE SB BILSARSSER. _____._._. 125 BS a on A IR aN I re RB EE DG TS Seti i be 1717 I ho dam Nos Sb rl AIS op Bath wr iE rer SY ENGEL (Mich.)_._.---- 1430 A I et he fd I AM EERO IL SNE SS ED SO he PS ENGLE :(Calif). .o~--- 1018998 | 1427531 ![War ;BI eRe Se A NT A AC EE ee ALTON a 126 ra i a i a Ne FEBE 2 a BB 2d ing alo rail po le hat FARRINGTON. ccc 254 i I ER SE Av ese SL BRT SCR BOA pe i 1 MRIS CO SE Ea AR CA Ee WD BEIGTIAN. on -aiancn CEPR bb ERIC re Ce UR ISIN Re Se TI I ED BRILL OWS. io ill 221 7 XA HSE Soe wR erated UE Se 1 RR a tn IRS mer tale 9 Lh beat RENTON. onde EGE bE CPR Rese Bs een ne ord [0 St J Sea het SRB tS FERNANDEZ. coon 1023 690 Memorials...i em CTT Te 1434 or loetione NG. 8 le ar FLANNAGAN Shei 1324 B70 Aget bare ns Ss ada ee FE Sa Le aa a RE TR PLOOD. isi sec alls 343 HR SRD. Co a Eh REP EE BRS HE be er SE RA el Sede PRR lL ROGARTY. ooma-- 3 5 BR 1) vs (ROR So Set I er 0 LE rN age BP ODBED oven immms 242 ATO es Een ES A BR hd Se eae Le BOBAND.. ican 1120 7 ris RE ECON SR a Rt Ee PA Be yr eS pe LL GRE Se SER i on FULLER. oo o--2:0 140 BOR Lots an a ee A I aR Cs saat Sa van va at BUIMON. ooo oot 337 IB nah an nS aa rer a i ee a dR A Sa Ee na AW hmm we AR STE GAILTAGHEER ee. 0 AB cn sl a an A RE a AE Re a BE ia Gada dea a RR ES GAYBIE. ..- oa 200 1233 FERC TR Ao ST re NG BLE ONS 4 FL SA LE 8 i ele 2 GARY ie vena nn 207 {Wa ed AT Re SCE Lie nd BL SEN OCA A Meee 0 YE end 1 GARDNER. oc eiaias IEE sa RE he a Er ER re PES ai i HE LT Re GATHINGS. cvoeee ee. OZ Ao a Ea a SR Bl La a JES GAvINL. Lo 1629 21 Sl Rae Mn SEL Ste cn EAE pall BR Gt a te ES Ee Re CHL SO CEARHART oot. 1133 Od oe a Lanta taser eh ae Se BR Ce I ERR Sa ORUIAN. oo oeeiiak 408 fy Bn TR RRS SP VU CIN Ne UE oa 3) dk SRC Sn EAN GERLACH Coo las 1119 3 Vit FE RM eb el Sen Le Oe] BR on GR SR Sh TO eb GIBSON. oon ES PRL ee CD Ee a PLGA LUD Sn AR 4 aS PEN se LB SU UL CH ITORD neon ian 1208 OB Yo rt a En TR nt a De A an Be RR Ln brs re Ne ee as GILLESPIE. uberis 404 a er Ae hs IRS RO a CGHLETIE. .---ec=vnn 1712 A ene a oa I nt eee Ee GILIIE bao thas 1522 ORE ne Sp ER Ls Ge ee Sg ee ed ep nee de ie GOODWIN coon 2h CN Ee 1 Rb ie SR COL LINE 5 hy Se BRS eee Er aN CR SA 0 eT COBBON: e-em 1618 OAT doa er a es a AT GIL LL sa en ee Se ead BORE: neni 1213 BOD eb rr Te eS Ss ESE TRL I aR Gorse. 220 TE i SO i 3 i is Io Lo RAE, Wel We 1 Me Tl SCD ei det RSH aa ROSSENT canis 112 734 -Rleetions No. 2. 0 ral Ee AS Ll cA Pi ats GRAHAM... 1628 | 4832 lemmedead LE eh ea GRANAHAN _omccmeemee 127 CE YE i Se BE SR eb re] SUN MRt e Coee Sa Lite ey 0 J 2 GRANGER... creme OT IO) i a Sw ene SE SO an Ct a ee 310 Congressional Directory | REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name RE I A Chairmanship Room [Phone Location Phone GRANT (Ala)... .--.. 1721 rr A SCR DN PL Cy be SE SEN Se SE I fa SE TE nt Grant nd) ....--.--bn AEA yg Pee ARR ee] BO SE LC EE BLE dat BREEN i a 224 A re a a a UE SRE TR rl Se Te 3 Ay GR RGORY enn 1419 LTH ed SRR ole TS Re CR 90, 4 PL SA bi GRIFFITHS. -.o-aia. 309 Eri 1d ae So le SE Ce] 0 ek BERG SIRE £0 AMAT Ry OROBIZ ee 113 er ERE Coe CA To End BT Sel te GWINN (N.Y) oe Lh IEE ve i ER AS a hd LAE SA Cl eR EE eb NL] ye GwyNNE (Iowa)__.-._ ri) EI brs REE EL SI i BL ir de Li (CELE ES eT 0 Cl Sl HAGENS -aot 1620 CL a] Ee ie A Sal a TL po Co Bs be SEL Sse Lo 8 ay 3 HALE. tana 1507 EL SS Wr LR RL SMS Rd BALE. oh SITE Ei, CR ERE BC SOI TS S| br ul LL HAvrL, Edwin Arthur.| 1121 VEY Br SE RE SE DL SE MA SOR Lyte DL kon oka L eli ROL Mel FT ol HALL, Leonard W____| 1718 SOB i Sai Tse rn RE sale ARR aR Teer [Re HALURCR =o 1007 004 Li errs aa Tn he BRR a asa HANCOCK... .... 1224 GIL rire le a Us Em rae ei ae re ta BAND 2 410 LLL Ee Mn Te Bl Att SLES Re EL SAB Me HARE ce cries 447 7L, RL ERA a et IL a Th Ct Rl I Se BIR OD SE Crt HARLESY. o.oo civa. 1222 bY Be SC Cre ad SSR te CR I Sr SRB LL Ee HARNESS... cuooii. 1408 BAB i a ind A ee Ba wa AS he em RTE RT TPARRIN. oo cainiica 1503 LD EE OE En Le NTE LOH Bt bo LE ea 8 2 Qo INR Be pel ed iT ok HART 5 oon 453 5) SE TI ee Dt Nd Lo eel Me CRT OL ER i Bs Cy A Ra HARTLEY idan 1724 (LA Ee a De Ea TL ile i SE ADDR Se PEs HAVENNER_._________ 238 yp BE eae De Bain Saas eae ial DEES 0 Ti SN Selec) Suman) lie el HAYS: lea 303 F111 A Re SA Lr CCDs SEG Fr Sr: CERRY or SR Re er a fe de HEALY. a asad 142 Ly 2 EER EE PCIe RaNIPR CI |, 106 ER He oom Soles nn, ov pf HEBERT... ound 340 4:7 I BS gn A os IRE a ies] InAs pRREUE A lel SER Sune a IE TELL HEDBICR -o toa iniis 422 FI Er or IAPR SE EN 1 0 Jhb BA op i (il IR ean © HEFFERNAN... ........ 411 ye! A Bee rope BR SOE Ets Lh TRE A el ee Pe ee a Se HENDRICKS. .......... 1115 erp Be SA CCS I Yeates i) Eee UR Redd fe SS pT TL HENRY. |: = vo 425 et I ARR RO en TR Br LES cL Se ae Sd ace, tall Dae HERTER: -. oo 239 v7) 2) IRE Eat FS pe RRMA II Sa ot CE Tage ae heii HESELTON.___________ yn SHE A ee a UN (RRS E SL Nl SR py SB ooo 45 1529 ABB insti wns i A LE A RB es tm i dw Sd me | ET, HI: coe 1318 2 1 de TE rh Lv OR ENE TY ant TR SR SEE rr HINSHAW. J... 1511 TBR Ls i i RR cde be ee a Ce TS HOBBS. =) 1131 fA SR ee RTE Se PRY Slr Ca MP) | pe 15 Th aR eg 352 7 11% bl EO ete en ne De IG Rah alien FORMER Ral VRRIEE |. een HOEVEN.... oi 1519 SOO Lr Ra i ree da Ba TR ARE a a ea RR HOFFMAN... ones 1424 80] cia wm a wa A SE Br wisi EE ENS HOLIFIELD-. =... (1006 TY ho di rath AS ae) a DR wr eh a nr i RP A HoLMES (Mass.)_____| 1108 7 LS PE Np NC OB DIE RG I ors TT i te pe SA SIR 4 HorLMmES (Wash.)_____ 1220 4% Ba Ret SS ROR TE ie OE IRS Re Bp LL RE HOOK cocanecon 1020 £1 5 0 On Cte CSSA A sR Ei La Das oo) ei FREE eT Td 0 a OPH. dais 1314 11. HN Pa ARP on Ut NI Br 1 GSU «NE SR OT Se A ny HORAN. cic 1316 va 4 Ge Re SR NE 0 I, TAR CAVE IR SAE MRR nD ORT WE TE HOWELL... ......¢ 1740 BB he ate ee SE NS SR LL RES HUBER Sr one 460 170 Ld MST CN CIR TN RE RD POR To a ROE Re Er EY HOLL: = sansa. 403 ABT) et Ee ER IE a rr Aa BY YZAC oe ain 240 bo RSC ie Se en fe Or SN Mie Sy JACKSON. “=o a... 0 { So fo Yindin ATPAIPR. SC ENS Ed rr de JARMAN. coisa Printing. ooo oii Basement floor, main corridor. |750, 246 JENKINS. =. consis: 1436 17) PR Cel MRE a DL eh Br RELL Se PU aia Pi (| 2 LLL JENNINGS. oo. 1228 v1 rE) Bie) Sea dee LR Sete Toe UE I TARR Tony | eb BI SAL LY TT JENSENS BZ Haina, 256 BIG No aout i Se PR RL EE Tr me ER JOHNSON (Calif). ____ 10095 BO he EE a a JorNSsoN (I11.)_______. 1630 Lye SS SR SE SL RC, Bn il Cs cS Ine CT JOHNSON (Ind.)______ 1128 i Lo METRE SE VST a fC TERRE) Ee nen fe A 5 JOHNSON, Luther A__| 1203 1151 BE OR Bea ea GL Sl mL Maou ASTANA pe pe 2 2 he 015 JOENZON, Lyndon B. |. c 5B CA00L ee on eda LL RENEE JOHNSON (Okla.)_____ 1106 YE EER Sle Nee vr SE ee SS el SR Se Te eS ad] Rte | JONES: carilo 1029 Ne INN LC han I is Rooms and Telephones 311 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name TT Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone JONEMAN.-vnranaen 1711 rf ney led SOP Sol Likes ui Salas le 0 Sa FUDD veel 1516 EA i Rea Lod IE CE i ine od Sieben sai BLS REANG. 5 ceiiaens 1729 Ee Bt En J er Bol eel] bo Rl Th eS Se eS Eb Gdn i KEABNEY. c--onanana 1416 A A ieme ner pad, KER he cocina 1531 B08:t Iii. i and mA SE LE eal aa el 1 RRae SE 421 OB a edBa ha a a a Ree KEPAOVER ..... ic: 1741 Tet Be An fe pe ns btiee DL le ) EE Be SRN SE Li REILEY. (Po) curve 417 Bl elit i mt yy Er a a Kerry (Tl... canine 1606 BB hr AA a nd EN een RHR Bp es REOGH. -an tense 1707 pi Revision of the Laws... ola sn en Leads, RR RRR co inedonchiuns 1201 BOG rr rs a sa le MAE A Dw a KILBORN: .cummurcn~ 357 bE etn nh RO SEE en ed me a i FHDAY:etolebssuna 1513 0 a rd Ml ee KiNG tiene cncns IEG ar ME a iT a Le Rn Sn Ben LI he Sa RINZER Lo. cau 1214 YEN EE Ie SE SR a | SHR ER FR i ESS IE TT Sa BIRWAN ue 1517 VA [hic i sam ad i sara | CUBES Aap orf Saif ht onion wl a a BNUISON-.«. crunnvnne 1111 EE rt Tr en Se Minch NEE SCL I Ld Wop ay KE i KOPPLEMANN . _...._.. 1616 tpl ph tr LE LA ER (bil SE os SES Boe bam al i i eg RUNEEL.L: 5: un iee 1210 BOT rr nra a ea LAFOLLETTE. ...-vi--324 020: tad na es ara a eal LANDIS: loans 1113 A I a a a DANE. eae. 1715 12 UP oie LONE I ni LE On 243 561 |{Public Buildings and LAREN «+x she (fT TEE Gass House floor, rooms 19 and 20. 204 BAYEUBN.ssrotor-siiioSomeefennnnnt Spoghtr fstarcoeeee Ly floor, room 60_ _ ____.___ 460 BAYFIELD. vin nirne 312 S03 Ite nner ad aa sh re he AS Cn pa Aa a BRECE ar Sina 1129 ll er aa a a at nd AEN Taal Sa snl Bruny ...... 321 2 CRESS SE DS i Ved Be SL ll CO SER a REEDIIN.Y) aaa 1202 oy ns EN Et eS Ie ES Be Seo RETR A conneas sedis 1205 EEEo RR Ae SS Tn dy adidas RBA ein iadanzinia 105 eRA i, BN Sr Sd td Ll 105TH A OI 1441 Tie Ca i Cfeee Loa RICHARDS. . cain: 1502 HE hd HEE Se Co en Gt oe BOwy. ...itesi-sniin 141 Eeel RA NOU I 0 10 Be el Ens oh 0s RIVERS... coool 1417 PBIB Ta armas itn ddan minim di TE A a dr Sa en a Se RIZLEY. .oviinisaaeasie 1523 eeLS Eas Raa SUB TS Rn UE Beadle) RoBuRTeoN ON. Dak). |-A607 1048 Vi oe ann ie ae ne A a ROBERTSON (Va.)__.. 450 a or Ey th Ce yd ECO ab SA FEE Eon SPIE Cr id Eh Cal 1428 727 ROBINSON (Utah)... 1012 766 Rosas SN te fe aN Bs RoBsION (Ky.)-ccooo-253 EBan le J So or Dll on i a ROCEWELL.. i 1510 1875: bene srme pions meant TC Te ee dN Re RODGERS (Pa). a 1307 LA a BO eS Se lB) er RS TRS Cy eo RoE (Md) cocoons 121 EB BB Cal I rs IE CL LA RoE (N.Y) esas 208 {7 RE Set SR SONOS SC te LC nl SR I Se ES RoGERS (Fla.)___.._.. 111 BT aa Re oe ER ROGERS (Mass.)__....| 1725 TOO a a ses ER a ETE BR RoGgERS (N. ¥.)-.-124 548-{ Envolled ‘Bills. oan afro P30 0d Jel sda naan lee BOMULO:. eins 1605 yy oe er Ra 1 La BONN rt hb No SE ot on ROONEY coin sateniniea 1418 2 Nig eC TT LL Tr Eh TR BOWAN ooo ivr 1237 LpSf] (Leta dG eh sida LP FAL C0 i ent BRUSSEL ea 1315 Oi rh ra a a a ED he a a A ds LE EH LeSe La 123 B00 as Re al TE BABANT. oo ia 1138 AEE DY er ESes Ce Gallery floor, east corridor... 276, 308 SADOWSEIL. ___.icocceun 1320 Bld sins ra A a a ee BABSOBR hinds 1331 OB om rad EE a EE SAVAGE... oi... 138 vir HE LCS Rae Se ee aOR Nee Ree FOS SCHWABE (Mo.)._.._. 1010 FE ane meatal tl Ls Cl Bel a a I er SER Sl) SCHWABE (Okla.)__.__ 102 ROB fetcsido in sain ban san a SCRIVNER ooo 316 1 Be Sa Ea Tse HS Cl eee ne SHATER niin nn 1112 EL EL a ee le aa Ll ha Se ae ea SHABBY... aia 503 1FE ET CVE Dt Sneek be Wi CPi RR Sad wl SM Ae se i ah SHEPPARD... __.._.. 258 BE i a A I re 22 SHERIDAN ____________ 235 eC CR LL Th hed ba Ebb Silat Coals WB Ei CE RR lo Bl Bedi S040 SHORT... Cini 1239 TAO tam de ra Sr a A A SIEES.. Lo iaiaiaon 1022 B85 Inca ea FE es Be ee ee ne A Simpson (TH)... 1421 EE ECSb edu SOO LR al A SIMPSON (P8.)._..__.. 1405 788 do es a Nnet Ee SLAUGHTER... =... 106 braa i LO I ER I Ce Ra Suita (Maine)... 231 3BR RoR Rei Se Tee, CLC Le | SE a Tle Smits (Ohio)... 341 > Ett ER Le Ln Ese Re RL A Se ES a Ct SMH (Va). ooo. 301 OO I Ss SMITH (Wis) o-oo. 442 a § 160 HE CEA IR Ge ee PLL Ee al lees Ci SNYDER. oss 1013 BRE ty mmr a a a a 109 224 ; yin SOMERS... oor 115 441 tines and Mining... Clit oes sree ne. sb en aE SPARRKMAN. _ ooo 1512.05 30831 Majorlly Whip... nea lain ey oti secs sse mnt Ck SEENCE.. aes 1301 718. |: Banking and. Crreney.... | -coc foce coos co cf carmenae SPRINGER... 1527 Te eeeSn Se aE RS Re Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room |Phone Location Phone 505 325 1017 668 1423 662 1038 459 424 293 407 537 401 647 SuMNER (111). _______ 216 702 346 680 SUMNERS (Tex.)_.____ Ground floor, room 71_________ 1033 347 681 1504 462 1126 410 1238 696 1420 | 1349 1134 700 1116 785 325 623 TaHOMAS (N. J.) __.__ 318 656 THOMAS (Tex.)_______ 212 502 THOMASON. _____._____ 1730 536 1431 452 1226 468 1640 588 211 631 348 620 206 266 311 217 313 593 501 466 1232 675 133 356 1031 520 349 347 1223 549 1125 454 339 445 1127 555 1521 259 | 351 | 780 [mn Weights, and 353 676 Measures. 1215 428 225 | 1001 }¥100a Control. =... 226 | 1000 1323 517 1728 770 1338 677 1216 556 201 461 1132 384 WOLFENDEN_ _______._ 1114 571 WOLVERTON... 251 248 319 716 536 | 1357 537 | 1405 250 | 1314 1103 794 Gallery floor, west corridor__.__ 284 1308 523 1540 558 MEMBERS OF THE CABINET James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina, Secretary of State, the Shoreham. Frep M. Vinson, of Kentucky, Secretary of the Treasury, the Wardman Park. Robert P. Patterson, of New York, Secretary of War, 1511 Thirty-third Street. Tom C. Crark, of Texas, Attorney General, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. RoBERT E. HANNEGAN, of Missouri, Postmaster General, 4955 Glenbrook Road. | James ForrEsTAL, of New York, Secretary of the Navy, 3508 Prospect Avenue. Je-ltws A. HBarorp—L.-lckgs, of Illinois, Secretary of the Interior, Headwaters Farm, Reus, Olney, Md. CrinToNn P. ANDERSON, of New Mexico, Secretary of Agriculture, 6 Wesley Circle. Henry A. WarrAcE, of Iowa, Secretary of Commerce, the Wardman Park. Lewis B. ScaweLLENBACH, of Washington, Secretary of Labor, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. 316 EXECUTIVE THE PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN, Democrat, of Independence, Mo., President of the United States, was born May 8, 1884, at Lamar, Barton County, Mo.; son of John Anderson and Martha Ellen (Young) Truman; attended public schools in Independence; Field Artillery School (Fort Sill, Okla.), 1917-18; Kansas City School of Law, 1923-25; married Bess Wallace June 28, 1919; one daughter, Mary Margaret; operated family farm 1906-17; first lieutenant, Battery F, and captain, Battery D, One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Field Artillery, Thirty-fifth Division, U. S. Army, in World War I and served in Vosges operations, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives, August 18 to November 11, 1918; dis-charged with rank of major, U. S. A. R. C., May 6, 1919; colonel, U. S. A. R. C,, since 1927; judge, Jackson County (Mo.) Court, 1922-24, presiding judge, 1926— 34; elected to the United States Senate from Missouri in 1934 and reelected in 1940; served on Appropriations, Enrolled Bills, Military Affairs, Printing, Inter-state Commerce, and Public Buildings and Grounds Committees, and as chairman of the Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program; elected Vice President November 7, 1944, and took office January 20, 1945; acceded to the Presidency April 12, 1945, on the death of President Roosevelt; member of the Baptist Church; Past Grand Master of Masons of Missouri. Legal residence: Independence, Mo. Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the United States Army and Navy.—Fleet Adm. William D. Leahy. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, NAtional 1414) SECRETARIES MATTHEW J. CONNELLY, born, Clinton, Mass., November 19, 1907; married; Fordham University, 1930; stock brokerage business, New York City, 1930-33; Western Union Telegraph Co., 1933-34; Federal Emergency Relief Administration, Boston, Mass., 1935; Division of Investigation, Works Progress Administration, 1935-38; Appropriations Committee, United States House of Representatives, 1939; Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures, United States Senate, 1940; Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program, 1941-44; Executive Secretary to the Vice President, January 20, 1945; Secretary to the President, April 21, 1945. Residence, 1764 Lanier Place. CHARLES G. ROSS, born, Independence, Mo., November 9, 1885; son of James Bruce and Ella (Thomas) Ross; married; A. B., University of Missouri, 1905; member of faculty, School of Journalism, University of Missouri, 1908-18; successively Washington correspondent, editor of editorial page, and contributing editor, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1918-45; appointed Secretary to the President May 15, 1945; member, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Chi, Sigma Delta Chi; clubs: Gridiron, Overseas Writers, National Press (Washington, D. C.). Residence, 117 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. WILLIAM D. HASSETT, born, Northfield, Vt., August 28, 1880; Clark University, 1902-4; newspaper work, Washington, 1909-21; London correspond-ent of newspapers and press association, 1921-25; National Recovery Adminis-tration and National Emergency Council; detailed to the White House, September 1935; Secretary to the President, February 19, 1944. Residence, 2025 1 Street. 317 78349°-—T79-2—1st ed. 22 318 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Special Counsel to the President.—Samuel I. Rosenman, the Wardman Park. Special Assistant to the President.—John R. Steelman, the Kennedy-Warren. Special Executive Assistant to the President.—George J. Schoeneman, 1609 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Administrative Assistant in the President's Office.—Rose A. Conway, Meridian Hill Apartments. « Executive Clerk tn Charge of White House Executive Offices.—Maurice C. Latta, 315 East Cedar Lane, Bethesda, Md. Executive Clerk.— William J. Hopkins, 814 Rowen Road, Silver Spring, Md. Administrative Assistants.—David K. Niles, the Carlton;'Raymond R. Zimmer- man, 4607 Kenmore Drive; Richmond B. Keech, 2746 Woodley Place. LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 1414) Liaison Officer—Raymond R. Zimmerman, 4607 Kenmore Drive. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET (State Department Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phore, EXecutive 3300) Director.—Harold D. Smith, 3125 North Abingdon Road, Country Club Hills, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director.—Paul H. Appleby, 5925 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. dhesisiin Director in Charge of Legislative Reference.—F. J. Bailey, 5 Pinehurst ircle. Assistant Director in Charge of Estimates.—Leo C. Martin, 3509 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Assistant Director in Charge of Adminisirative Managemeni.—Dconald C. Stone, 4921 Tilden Street. Assistant Director in Charge of Statistical Standards.—Stuart A. Rice, 2863 Beech-wood Circle, Arlington, Va. dsstniel Director ©n Charge of Fiscal Division.—J. Weldon Jones, Hay-Adams ouse. Chief of the Field Service.—J. Otis Garber, 6622 Braeburn Parkway, Bethesda, Md. General Counsel.—Edward G. Kemp, the Washington. Administrative Assistant to the Director.—Frederick J. Lawton, 1816 Varnum Street NE. Secretary to the Director.— Marie A. Johnston, 2926 Porter Street. (Government Information Service, 1400 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500) Chief, Government Information Service.—Katherine C. Blackburn, the Fairfax. Federal Board of Hospitalization (Federal Works Agency Building, Eighteenth and F Streets. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Acting Chairman.—Harold D. Smith, Director, Bureau of the Budget. Members: Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, the Surgeon General of the Army. Vice Adm. Ross T MeclIntire, the Surgeon General of the Navy. Dr. Thomas Parran, the Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service. William A. Brophy, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. James V. Bennett, the Director, Bureau of Prisons. Maj. Gen. Paul R. Hawley, Acting Surgeon General, Veterans’ Administration, Director of Staff. —B. Frank Bennett, 4224 Sixteenth Street. Secretary.— Winifred Wilcox, 3220 Connecticut Avenue. WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments | 319 EMERGENCY WAR AGENCIES OFFICE FOR EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Civilian Production Administration : (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Administrator—J. D. Small, 5 West Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Administrator. —Philip Maguire, 208 West Glendale Avenue, Alexandria, a. United States Member, Combined Boards.— William L. Batt, 3019 N Street. Swain War Plants Corporation, Chairman.—Maury Maverick, 1829 Jefferson lace. General Counsel.—Laurence Lombard, Metropolitan Club. Director, Information Division.—Maxey N. Morrison, 2038 F Street. Deg, Office of Labor Requirements.—Ralph D. Hetzel, route 1, Falls Church, a. Director, Review and Analysis Staff.—Robert Johnson, 6033 Baltimore Avenue, Riverdale, Md. Director, Bureau of Demobilization.—G. Lyle Belsley, 3227 Rittenhouse Street. Dae Pure of Reconversion Operations.—Fred Glover, 2745 Twenty-ninth treet. Director, Bureau of Reconversion Priorities.—Lincoln Gordon, 6323 Delaware Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Bureau of Field Operations.—Clarence A. Woodruff, the Shoreham. Director, Bureau of International Supply.—Robert Turner, Merrwood Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Committee on Fair Employment Practice (261 Constitution Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 5101) Members: 3 Chairman.— Malcolm Ross, box 240, route 1, Vienna, Va. John Brophy (Congress of Industrial Organizations), 250 Farragut Street. Boris Shishkin (American Federation of Labor), Theological Seminary, Alex- andria, Va. Milton P. Webster (international vice president, Brotherhood Sleeping Car Porters), 3456 South State Street, Chicago, Ill. ; Sara, Southall (International Harvester Co.), 180 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Charles L. Horn (president, Federal Cartridge Co.), 2300 Foshay Tower, Minneapolis, Minn. Attorney.—[Vacant.] Staff: Deputy Chairman.—George M. Johnson, 2801 Eleventh Street. Administrative Officer.—Sinclair V. Jeter, 909 Fifty-second Street NE. Director, Field Operations.—Clarence M. Mitchell, 1324 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Director, Review and Analysis.—John A. Davis, 211 T Street. Office of Alien Property Custedian (National Press Building. Phone, DIstrict 8515) Alien Property Custodian.—James E. Markham, 7609 Morningside Drive. : Deputy Alien Property Custodian.—Francis J. McNamara, 5315 Earlston Drive, Westgate, Md. Assistants to the Alien Property Custodian.—Paul V. Myron, 1615 Varnum Place E.; W. D. Bradford, 6507 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. General Counsel.—Raoul Berger, 5121 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Executive Officer— William H. Moore, 1 Scott Circle. Secretary.—Lloyd L. Shaulis, Avenel, Silver Spring, Md. 320 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Chief, Divnion. of Business Operations and Liquidation. —C. R. Bergherm, New York, N. Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.— Fritz Machlup, 3051 Idaho Avenue. ter Division of Investigation.— Henry G. Hilken, 401 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Lic Tn Diaision of Patent Adminisiration.—Howland H. Sargeant, the General Chief, nis Division.—Thomas H. Creighton, Jr., 6204 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Comptroller. — William E. Downey, New York, N. Y. Manager, New York Office.—C. Gordon Lamude, New York, N. Y. Manager, San Francisco Office.—A. L. Stoner, San Francisco, Calif. Manager, Honolulu and Philippine Offices. —Roger KE. Brooks, Honolulu, T. H. and Manila, P: 1. Office of Defense Transportation (Interstate Commerce Commission Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Office of the Drrector: Director—J. M. Johnson, the Shoreham. Deputy Director—Homer C. King, 5309 Broad Branch Road. Executive Officer—Joseph L. White, 2400 Sixteenth Street. General Counsel.—Clair M. Roddewig, 2015 Peabody Street, Hyattsville, Md. Consultants: Railway.—E. E. McCarty. Highway.—Guy A. Richardson. Waterway.—L. C. Turner. Rates.—G. Lloyd Wilson. Office of Inter-American Affairs (499 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director.—Franecis A. Jamieson (acting), 2633 Fifteenth Street. Executive Assistant.—Martha Dalrymple, 1239 Thirty-seventh Street. General Counsel.—Kenneth Iverson, Cedar Lane, Falls Church, Va. Executive Director and Comptroller. John W. Hisle, 5308 Worthington Drive, Westgate, Md. Basic Economy Department (Institute of Inter-American Affairs).—Col. Harold B. Gotaas, 5314 Sixteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. Bivcton, Health and Sanitation Division.—John D. Yeagley, 5906 Thirteenth treet. Director, Food Supply Division.— William C. Brister, 3730 Thirty-ninth Street. Director, Training Division.— William W. Peter, 1750 North Troy Street, rlington, Va. Education (I nter-American Educational Foundation) —@G. Kenneth Holland, Hillmead Road, Bethesda, Md. Transportation and Economic Development Depariment.—Col. Maurice E. Gilmore, 5311 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Director, Economic Diviston.—Donald W. Rowland (acting), 3864 Porter Street. Director, Labor Relations Diviston.—John Herling, 6713 North Washington Boulevard, East Falls Church, Va. Office of Scientific R ch and Devel } 4 i (1530 P Street. Phone, REpublic 7500) Director—Dr. Vannevar Bush, 4901 Hillbrook Lane. Chairman, National Defense Research Committee—Dr. J. B. Conant, 3245 S Street. Chairman, Committee on Medical Research.——Dr. A. N. Richards, 6 Rugby Road, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Chief, Office of Field Service—Dr. A. T. Waterman. Executive Secretary.— Dr. Irvin Stewart, 3303 Macomb Street. WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 321 War Shipping Administration (Commerce Department Building. Phone, EXecutive 3340, branch 400) Administrator—Vice Adm. Emory S. Land, U. S. Navy (retired), 2500 Massa-chusetts Avenue. Deputy Administrators.—Vice Adm. Howard L. Vickery, U. S. Navy, 4420 Dexter Street; Capt. Edward Macauley, U. S. Navy (retired), 2339 Massachusetts Avenue; Capt. Granville Conway, the Raleigh. Executive Deputy Administrator.—S. D. Schell, 1901 Columbia Road. Secretary.—A. J. Williams, 1507 Otis Street NE. : Assistant to Administrator.—H. T. Morse, 27 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General Counsel.—Wade H. Skinner, 1629 Columbia Road. Coordinator of Ship Defense Installations.—Vice Adm. A. P. Fairfield, U. S. Navy (retired), 2400 Sixteenth Street. Comptroller.—J. M. Quinn, 2951 Upton Street. Shama Price Adjustment Board.—James L.. Murphy, 39 Broadway, New York, Chairman, Pacific Coast Maritime Industry Board.—Paul Eliel, 220 Bush Street, San Francisco, Calif. Assistant Deputy Administrators: For Ship Operations.—Gerald H. Helmbold, 3138 Q Street. For Maritime Labor Relations Organization.—J. Godfrey Butler (acting), 3131 Tennyson Street. For Training Organization.—Commodore Telfair Knight, U. S. M. S., 2000 Connecticut Avenue. For Recruitment and Manning Organization.—H. Chase Stone, the Raleigh. on Maintenance and Repair Organization.—D. S. Brierley, 3900 Cathedral venue. For Small Vessels Organization.— Adm. E. J. Moran, U. S. N. R., 2822 Rear Dumbarton Street. BOARD OF WAR COMMUNICATIONS (Room 6107, New Post Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3620) Chairman.—Paul A. Porter, 6001 Broad Branch Road. Rear Adm. Joseph R. Redman, 14 Worthington Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Maj. Gen. Harry C. Ingles, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. William L. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. Herbert E. Gaston, 2928 Forty-fourth Place. OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION (Federal Office Building 1, Second and D Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 7500) Administrator.—Chester Bowles, Lower Ranleigh, McLean, Va. Executive Assistant to the Admanistrator.— Maurice W. Lee, 705 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Administrator.—James G. Rogers, Jr., 1705 Hoban Road. Assistant to the Administrator in Charge of Price Boards.—James C. Scully, 6207 Connecticut: Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistants to the Administrator—Maxwell L. McCullough, 25 Glenrose Street, Kensington, Md.; Norton E. Long, 1546 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md.; Joseph A. Kershaw, 2700 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Bice Clemow, 3800 Porter Street. Deputy Administrator for Price.—Jerome M. Ney, the Statler. Deputy Administrator for Rationing.—Leon A. Bosch, 700 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Administrator for Rent.—Ivan D. Carson, 4632 Tilden Street. Deputy Administrator for Information.—Robert R. R. Brooks, River Road, Bethesda, Md. Depily Administrator for Enforcement.—George Moncharsh, 2500 Jackson Street Deputy Administrator for Accounting.—Paul M. Green, 300 North Granada Street, Arlington, Va. General Counsel.—Richard H. Field, 6202 Spruce Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 322 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Economic Adviser.—Richard V. Gilbert, 2220 North Quantico Street, Arlington, Va. Office of Congressional Information, Director.—Zenas L. Potter, the Wardman Park, Agricultural Relations Adviser.—Tyrus Timm. Labor Relations Adviser.—[Vacant.] off fee 3) Industry Advisory Committees, Director.—Ethel B. Gilbert, 2480 Sixteenth treet. Consumer Relations Adviser.— Esther Cole Franklin, 2700 Q Street. Credit Policy Adviser—Francis A. Bonner, University Club. Hearing Administrator.— Charles L. Ferguson, the Harrington. OFFICE OF WAR MOBILIZATION AND RECONVERSION (Director” s Oca; The White House, East Wing. Plone, N4tional 1414) a. 1g 4 / 5 (Offices of Deputy Directors and General Counsel, Lafayette Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Deputy Director for Reconversion.—Robert R. Nathan, 1308 Eighteenth Street. Deputy Director for Information.—Anthony Hyde, 2611 Dumbarton Avenue. General Counsel.—Thomas I. Emerson, 3547 Quebec Street. Advisory Board.—0. Max Gardner (chairman), T. C. Cashen, Chester C. Davis, Nathaniel Dyke, Jr., Albert F. Goss, William L. Green, Eric A. Johnston, George H. Mead, Philip Murray, Edward A. O’Neal, James G. Patton, Anna M. Rosenberg. Office of Contract Settlement (Federal Reserve Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3300, branch 400) Director of Contract Settlement.—Robert H. Hinckley, the Mayflower. feprly Director of Contract Settlement.—Roger L. Putnam, 4801 Connecticut venue. General Counsel of Contract Settlement.—Edward H. Foley, Jr., 10 Thompson Circle. Assistant Director for Property and Plant Clearance.—John F. Th omas, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Director for Admainistration.—E. J. Madill, 3931 Huntington Street. Special Assistant to the Director.—Martin Taitel, 3530 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Public Information.— Walter F. Wiener, 3151 Adams Mill Road. Chel: Progress and Statistics.—Joseph A. Zettler, 301 Wayne Place, Silver Spring, Md. Contract Settlement Appeal Board—Edward J. Dimock (chairman), 1900 Q Street; Lawrence Hartwig, 1740 Riggs Place; Raymond P. Baldwin, Cosmos Club: George O. May, 56 Pine Street, New York, N. Y.; Henry Ji Chamberlain, 6525 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Ti. ; David F. Taber, 72 West Adams Street, Chicago, Ill. Contract Settlement Advisory Board.—Robert H. Hinckley (chairman), Director of Contract Settlement; Lt. Col. H. C. Rose (secretary); Secretary of War; Secretary of the Navy; Secretary of the Treasury; Chairman, United States Maritime Commission; Secretary of State; Chairman, Board of Directors, Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Administrator, Civilian Production Administration; Chairman, Board of Directors, Smaller War Plank Cor-poration; the Attorney General. WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 323 Office of Stabilization Administrator (Federal Reserve Building. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 2113) Administrator and Chairman, Economic Stabilization Board.—John Caskie Collet, route 1, box 158, McLean, Va. General Counsel. —Henry M. Hart, Jr. (acting), 1628 Thirtieth Street. Economic Adviser.— Walter S. Salant, 3616 Fulton Street. Executive Officer.— William Berg, Jr., 106 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. destin General Counsel.—Brainerd Currie, 4128 Third Road North, Arlington, a. -Information Director.—Paul Duncan, 3428 South Wakefield Street, Fairlington Arlington, Va. Consultant.—John T. Dunlop, Department of Economics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Economic Stabilization Board: Secretary of the Treasury.—Fred M. Vinson, the Wardman Park. Secretary of Agriculture.—Clinton P. Anderson, 6 Wesley Circle. Secretary of Commerce.—Henry Wallace, the Wardman Park. Secretary of Labor.—Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Department of Labor Building. Chairman, Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System.—Marriner S. Eccles, the Shereham. Director, Bureau of the Budget.—Harold D. Smith, 3125 North Abingdon Road, Arlington, Va. Administrator, Office of Price Administration.—Chester Bowles, Lower Ranleigh, McLean, Va. Chairman, National War Labor Board.—Lloyd K. Garrison, 2732 P Street. Chaim, Securities and Exchange Commission.—Ganson Purcell, 3501 Macomb treet. : Federal Loan Administrator.— Charles B. Henderson (acting), the Mayflower. Admanistrator, National Housing Agency.—John B. Blandford, Jr., Fairfax Road, McLean, Va. 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), Washington, D. C.; Edward A. O’Neal (president, American Farm Bureau Federation), Washington, D. C. Representing Industry.—Eric A. Johnston (president, United States Chamber of Commerce), Spokane, Wash.; George Mead (president, Mead Corporation), Washington, D. C. Surplus Property Administration (Railroad Retirement Building. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 3132) Admanistrator.—W. Stuart Symington, the Shoreham. Executive Assistant.—E. M. Zuckert, 6144 Thirty-first Street. General Counsel.—Hugh B. Cox, 1727 H Street Assistant General Counsel.—Victor A. Sachse, 800 Sixteenth Street. Director, Compliance Enforcement.—Joseph F. Carroll, 4305 South Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Budget Management.—Don S. Burrows, 3142 Key Boulevard, Ar-lington, Va. Assistant Administrator.—Raymond T. Bowman, 13 Beechwood Lane, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Administrators.—D. H. O’Brien, the Anchorage; Col. G. E. Monson, 1142 Valley Drive, Arlington, Va.; M. G. Penticoff, the Shoreham; John M. Redding, White Stone Farm, Rural Point No. 1, River Road, Rockville, Md. Director, Information Branch.—R. W. Baxter, 3600 Macomb Street. House Liaison.— William J. Hays, 105 East Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md. Senate Liaison.— William Jacobsen, 2756 Macomb Street. 324 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR Petroleum Administrator.—Harold L. Ickes, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md. Deputy Petroleum Administrator.—Ralph K. Davies, the Shoreham. Personal Assistant to the Deputy Administrator.—Bernice Kirschling, 1905 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Counsel.—Robert E. "Hardwicke, 3000 Tilden Street. Administrative Division, Director.—E. J. Skidmore, 2410 South Fern Street, Arlington, Va. Foreign Production Division, Director.— William B. Heroy, 311 Newport Avenue, Friendship Station, D. C. Foreign Refining Division, Director.—C. Stribling Snodgrass, Marlyn Apartments. \ Production Division, Director. — Philip H. Bohart. Public Relations Division, Director.—IlLudwig Caminita, Jr., 501 North Lincoln Street, Arlington, Va. Refining Division, Director.—Frederick M. Jayne (acting), 3855 Rodman Street. Research Division, Director.— Edward B. Swanson, 2512 Q Street. PRESIDENT’S WAR RELIEF CONTROL BOARD (Washington Building, Room 1044. Phone, REpublic 3175) Chairman.—Joseph HE. Davies, 3029 Klingle Road. Charles P. Taft, 16 Garden Place, Cincinnati, Ohio. Charles Warren, 1527 Eighteenth Street. Executive Director.—James Brunot, 2480 Sixteenth Street. General Counsel.—Melvin D. Hildreth, 4831 Indian Lane. Assistant Executive Director.—Arthur C. Ringland, 322 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Program Analyst.—Kathaleen C. Arneson, 921 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM (Twenty-first and C Streets. Phone, REpublic 5500) Director.—Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, 16 Blackistone Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. f Deputy Director.—Col. Carlton S. Dargusch, 5240 Reno Road. fo Assistant Director, Presidential Appeals and Advisory.—Col: John D. Langston, 2121 Virginia, Avenue. Assistant Director, Camp Operations.—Col. Lewis F. Kosch, 5460 Thirtieth Place. Assistant Director, Postwar Plans.—Col. Victor J. O’ Kelliher, 3825 Fulton Street. Gey Liaison and Legislative Officer.—Col. Louis H. Renfrow, 1200 Sixteenth treet. Boogie Assistant to the Director.—Col. Campbell C. Johnson, 1125 Columbia oad. General Counsel.—Col. George H. Hafer, 3415 Thirty-eighth Street. Pa Officer.—Lt. Col. Arthur R. Boone, 223 North Oakland Street, Arlington, chief 71or mation Officer.—Col. James T. Coatsworth, 7904 Custer Road, Bethesda, Plas Officer.—Col. William Hart, 1351 Kalmia Road. Adjutant General.—Col. Edmund H. Jones, 3240 Gunston Road, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Presidential Appeals Officer.—Col. John N. Andrews, 3612 North Albemarle Street. Medical Consultant.—Col. Richard H. Eanes, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Special Assignments Officer.—Lt. Col. Joseph H. Berry, Jr.,' U. 8."M.2C.,-212] Virginia Avenue. i WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 325 Division Chuefs: y Appointments and Personnel Division.—Ronald M. Holmes, 4518 Davenport Street. do Archivist, Archives Division.—Col. Cloyd T. Caldwell, 3445 Thirty-eighth treet. Communications and Records.—Lt. Col. Michael R. London, the Wardman Park. Field Division.—Col. Gareth N. Brainerd, 2000 Connecticut Avenue. Finance and Supply Division.—Col. Stanhope A. Ligon, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Headquarters Diviston.—Angus J. Gallagher, 107 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Legal Division.—Col. George H. Hafer, 3415 Thirty-eighth Street. Manpower Division.—Col. Richard P. Davidson, 208 North Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. Medical Division.—Col. Richard H. Eanes, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Research and Statistics Diviston.—Kenneth H. McGill, 321 Naglee Road, Hillandale, Md. Veterans Personnel Division.—Col. Emmett G. Solomon, 4224 North Twenty-third Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Marine Corps Liaison.—Col. Victor I. Morrison, U. S. M. C., 2151 California Street. Director, Navy Liaison.—Capt. B. S. Killmaster, U. S. N., 1230 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. War Department Liaison Officer.—Col. Earl Gordon Welsh, 4721 Thirty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. SMALLER WAR PLANTS CORPORATION (101 Indiana Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500) Board of Directors: Chairman.— Maury Maverick, 1829 Jefferson Place. Vice Chairman.—James T. Howington, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Patrick W. McDonough, the Mayflower. Laurence F. Arnold, the Wardman Park. C. Edward Rowe, the Statler. Clerk of the Board—Marion T. Woodruff, 6324 Woodside Place, Chevy Chase, Md. General Manager.— Maury Maverick, 1829 Jefferson Place. Assistant General Manager.— [Vacant] Secretary of the Corporation.— Jesse Robison, 505 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda,Md. General Counsel.— David L. Podell, the Shoreham. Special Assistant to Chatrman in Charge of Field Operations.— William C. Wright, 1909 Nineteenth Street. Chief, Operations Bureau.— M. Rea Paul, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Chief, Loan Bureau.—Charles L. Clark, 812 Jefferson Street. Drreder, Office of Program Negotiation.—Philip E. Nelson, 3614 Connecticut venue. Director, Office of Reports.—John M. Blair, 3010 Crest Avenue, Cheverly, Md. Direnor, Office of Information.—Paul H. Jordan, 2815 Abingdon Street, Arlington, a. Comptroller—Robert F. Nachtrieb, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Technical Advisory Service.—Orville T. Colby, 4413 Fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. WAR CONTRACTS PRICE ADJUSTMENT BOARD (Principal office: Room 3334, Main Navy Building, Eighteenth Street and Constitution Avenue; phone, REpublic 7400, branch 4786. Pentagon office: Room 3B547, the Pentagon; phone, REpublic 6700, branch 73636 Members: Chairman.—Col. Maurice Hirsch, G. S. C. (War Department Price Adjustment Board). Vice Chairman.—Commander E. D. McDougal, U. S. N. R. (Navy Price Ad-justment Board). a Si 326 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES Members—Continued. Capt. H. C. Maull, Jr. (Treasury Department Price Adjustment Board). . John R. Paull (U. S. Maritime Commission Price Adjustment Board). Charles T. Fisher, Jr. (Reconstruction Finance Corporation Price Adjustment Board). Carman G. Blough. Sta SR Counsel.—Maj. F. Wanvar Myers. Associate General Counsel.—Lt. Melvin A. Hardies, U.S. N. R. Secretary.—Lt. J. 8. Feight, U. S. N. R. MATERIAL COORDINATING COMMITTEE, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW, Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 2031) United States Members: William L. Batt (Civilian Production Administration). Edward Browning, Jr., consultant. Executive Director.— George H. Emery. Canadian Members: G. C. Bateman (member, Canadian Woriine Industry Control Board). H. J. Symington (member, Canadian Wartime Industry Control Board). JOINT WAR PRODUCTION COMMITTEE, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (4058 Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 2031) UNITED STATES MEMBERS Chairman.— William L. Batt (Civilian Production Administration). James Forrestal (Secretary of the Navy). Robert P. Patterson (Secretary of War). Vice Adm. H. L. Vickery (vice chairman, United States Maritime Commission). Executive Director.—George Emery, 4058 Social Security Building. CANADIAN MEMBERS Chairman.—H. J. Carmichael (Coordinator of Production, Department of Muni-tions and Supply), Ottawa. J. R. Donald (Director General, Chemicals and Explosives Branch, Depart-ment of Munitions and Supply), Ottawa. J. H. Berry (Director General, Automotive and Tank Production Branch, Department of Munitions and Supply), Ottawa. > A. Newman (President, Federal Aircraft, Ltd.), Montreal. ) . B. Carswell (Director General, Shipbuilding Branch, Department of Muni-Sa and Supply), Montreal. Hume Wrong (Department of External Affairs), Ottawa. Creo Director—J. J. D. Brunke (Department of Munitions and Supply), ttawa. COMBINED CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Combined Chiefs of Staff Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue.Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 77500) United States Members: Fleet Adm. William D. Leahy, Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy. General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, Chief of Staff, United States Army. Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, Chief of N aval Operations. General of the Army Henry H. "Arnold, Commanding General, Army Air Forces. Secretary.—Brig. Gen. Andrew J. McFarland, United States Army. Great Britain Members: Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson. Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville. wey WAR AGENCIES Executive Departments 327 Great Britain Members—Continued. Lt. Gen. Sir G. N. Macready. Air Marshal Douglas Colyer. Secretary.—Brig. A. T. Cornwall-Jones. COMBINED FOOD BOARD (UNITED STATES, UNITED KINGDOM, AND CANADA) (Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142, branch 3681) United States: Member.—Clinton P. Anderson (Secretary of Agriculture), 6 Wesley Circle. Deputy Member.—D. A. FitzGerald (Director, Office of Requirements and Allocations, USDA), 5517 Smallwood Drive, Green Acres, Md. Executive Officer—Glenn H. Craig, acting (Assistant Deputy Director, Office of Requirements and Allocations, USDA), 2900 Erie Street SE. Deputy Executive Officer—Glenn H. Craig (Assistant Deputy Director, Office of Requirements and Allocations, USDA), 2900 Erie Street SE. United Kingdom: Member.—M. 1. Hutton (Head, British Food Mission). Deputy Member.— Eric Roll (British Food Mission). Executive Officer.— Eric Roll (British Food Mission). Deputy Executive Officer.—G. E. F. Chilver (British Food Mission). Canada: Member.—J. G. Gardiner (Canadian Minister of Agriculture). Deputy Member.—Dr. H. Barton (Deputy Minister of Agriculture). Executive Officer.—George R. Paterson (Canadian Embassy). Deputy Executive Officer.—J. Neil Lewis (Canadian Embassy). Board Secretary.— William E. F. Conrad (Office of Requirements and Allocations, USDA), 3530 Whitehaven Parkway. Assistants.— Eunice B. Gettell (Office of Requirements and Allocations, USDA), 2480 Sixteenth Street; M: M. Benidt (Office of Requirements and Alloca-tions, USDA), 2900 Naylor Road SE. : COMBINED RAW MATERIALS BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Social Security Building, Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 73564) Wonder, Appointed by the President of the United States.— William L. Batt, 3019 N Street. United States Executive Secretary.—R. B. Whiting, 108 Exeter Road, Bethesda, Md. Member Appointed by Prime Minister of Great Britain.—Sir Henry Self, K. C. M. G., RK. B. E., C B. Great Britain Executive Secretary.—H. O. Hooper. COMBINED SHIPPING ADJUSTMENT BCARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Department of Commerce Building. Phone, REpublic 6620, branch 400) United States Member.— Vice Adm. Emory S. Land, 2500 Massachusetts Avenue. Great Britain Member.—W. O. Hart. Joint Executive Officer.—Richard M. Bissell, Jr. (United States), 3418 Q Street. Joint Executive Officer—Derrick Allen (Great Britain). JOINT BRAZIL-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION UNITED STATES MEMBERS (Room 3ES838, the Pentagon; phone, REpublic 6700, branch 72909. Room 3407, Navy Building; phone, REpublic 7400, branch 2389) Rear Adm. W. O. Spears (Navy), Woodley Park Towers. Brig. Gen. Kenner F. Hertford (Army), 3108 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Capt. Colin C. Campbell (Navy), 1230 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Capt. G. W. Anderson, Jr. (Navy), 3634 Upton Street. Col. Arthur S. Peterson (Army), 9106 Providence Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Lt. Col. Harmon Lampley (Army), 2018 Fifth Street South, Arlington, Va. 328 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES BRAZILIAN MEMBERS (Room 2062, Munitions Building. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 78894) Vice Adm. Sylvio de Noronha (Navy), the Shoreham. Lt. Col. Lourival Seroa da Motta (War), 2702 Wisconsin Avenue. Lt. Jorge Osorio de Noronha (Navy), 35630 Thirty-ninth Street. JOINT MEXICAN-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION United States Members: Vice Adm. David W. Bagley, U. 8. Navy (retired), chairman (U. 8. Navy Section, War Department Building, REpublic 7500, branch 72866). Maj. Gen. Guy V. Henry, U. S. Army, Senior Army member (U. S. Army Section, Room 3E838, the Pentagon, REpublic 6700, branch 3607). Mexican Members: Rear Adm. Ignacio Garcia Jurado, chief. Brig. Gen. Cristobal Guzman Cardenas, subchief. (Mexican Section: Mexican Embassy, COlumbia 3781.) UNITED NATIONS RELIEF AND REHABILITATION ADMINISTRATION (1344 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 7300) Director General.—Herbert H. Lehman, the Mayflower. Senior Deputy Director General.—Commander R. G. A. Jackson, London. England. Deputy Director General and Chief EHxecutive.—Maj. Gen. L. W. Rooks, 2826-A South Abingdon Street, North Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director General, Bureau of Finance and Administration.—Corrington Gill, 2630 Adams Mill Road. Deputy Director General, Office of Secretariai.—P. W. Kuo, Broadmoor Apartments. Deputy Director General, Bureau of Services—Michail Menshikov, 2808 North Hampton Street. Deputy Director General, Bureau of Supply.—Roy F. Hendrickson, 1549 Forty-fourth Street. General Counsel.—Alfred E. Davidson, 4805 Chevy Chase Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Public Information.— Morse Salisbury, 716 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Diplomatic Adviser.—Francis B. Sayre, 4853 Rockwood Parkway. Financial Adviser.—J. J. Polak, 1754 Kenyon Street. fires Office of Country Mission Affairs.— George Xanthaky, 2615 Sixteenth treet. Crd Dice of Far Eastern Division.—J. Franklin Ray, Jr., 813 Maryland Avenue STATE Executive Departments 329 DEPARTMENT OF STATE (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, REpublic 5600) JAMES FRANCIS BYRNES, Secretary of State (the Shoreham), was born May 2, 1879, in Charleston, S. Cc. is a member of the bar; was an official court reporter, 1900-1908 and editor of a newspaper, 1903-7; solicitor, Second Circuit, South Carolina, 1908-11; member of Congress, 1911-25; practiced law, 1925-31; United States Senator, 1931-43; justice, United States Supreme Court, 1941-42; became Director of Office of Economic Stabilization, October 3, 1942; appointed Director of Office of War Mobilization, May 27, 1943; accompanied President Roosevelt to the Crimea Conference, 1945; resigned April 2, 1945; appointed Secretary of State, July 3, 1945; accompanied President Truman to the Berlin Conference, 1945; chairman, Governing Board of the Pan American Union, 1945. Under Secretary of State.—Dean Acheson, 2805 P Street. Special Assistants to the Under Secretary.—Edward G. Miller, Jr., 1421 Thirty-third Street; Herbert S. Marks, 1518 Twenty-sixth Street. Assistant to the Under Secretary.—Frances E. Willis, 3505 Fulton Street. Counselor of the Department.—Benjamin V. Cohen, the Winthrop House. Assistant to the Counselor.—James E. Doyle, 1844 Kenyon Street. Assistant Secretary of State (for Economic Affairs).— William IL. Clayton, 2812 Woodland Drive. : Deputy to the Assistant Secretary.— Willard L. Thorp, the Carlton. Deputy on Financial Affairs to the Assistant Secretary.—Emilio G. Collado, 3021 Forty-fifth Street. Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary.—C. Tyler Wood, 125 Joliet Street vel Henry R. Labouisse, Jr., 3331 O Street; Fisher Howe, 2643 Forty-first treet. Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Otto W. Schoenfelder, 6437 Dahlonega Road, Friendship Station. Aogitens to the Assistant Secretary.—Kingsley W. Hamilton, 2231 California treet. Special Assistant to the Deputy.—Lt. Kermit Gordon, 3891 Newark Street. a on Refugees and Displaced Persons.—George L. Warren, 1635 Wisconsin venue. Assistant Secretary of State (for European, Far Eastern, Near Eastern and African Affairs).—James Clement Dunn, 2554 Massachusetts Avenue. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Philip E. Mosely. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.— Raymond E. Cox, 2726 N Street. Acting Executive Officer—Hugh S. Cumming, Jr., 2811 O Street. Assistant Secretary of State (for Administration).—Donald 8. Russell, 2301 Califor- nia Street. Deputy to the Assistant Secretary.—Anthony J. Panuch, the Statler. Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Carter L. Burgess, 560 Twenty- third Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of State (for Public and Cultural Relations).— William Benton, 2500 Foxhall Road. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—John P. Howe, 3009 P Street. Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Haldore E. Hanson, 3341 Pros- Shepherd pect Avenue. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Robert Edgar Moore, 520 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of State (for American Republic Affairs).—Spruille Braden, the Wardman Park. Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary.—Gustayo Duran, 1423 Street; Carl B. Spaeth, 2804 Daniel Road; James H. Wright. Executive Officer.—Thomas H. Englesby, 5002 North Capitol Street. Assistant Secretary of State (for Congressional Relations).—[Vacant.] 2 Special Assistants.—John H. Ferguson, 3405 O Street; Florence K. Kirlin, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant.—Frank J. Merkling, 4851 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. | | | | | 330 Congressional Directory STATE Legal Adviser.—Green H. Hackworth, 3714 Morrison Street. Assistants to the Legal Adviser.— William W. Bishop, Jr., 2420 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va; Frederick M. Diven, 3706 Hillsdale Road, West Forest Park, Baltimore, Md.; Benedict M. English, 3217 Foxhall Road; Katherine B. Fite, 1601 Twenty-first Street; Richard W. Flournoy, 111 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Albert H. Garretson, 1613 North Garfield Street, Arlington, Va.; Anna A. O’Neill, 1326 New Hampshire Avenue; Walter E. Pelton, 5521 Colorado Avenue; Maurice P. Shaner, Hyattsville, Md.; Lionel M. Summers, 3703 Northampton Street; Marjorie M. Whiteman, 5021 Glenbrook Road; Raymund T. Yingling, 1704 Eighteenth Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary for International Organization and Security Affairs.—Leo Pasvolsky, 3641 R Street. Executive Assistant to the Special Assistant.—Robert W. Hartley, 1919 Massa-chusetts Avenue. Special Assistant to the Secretary, in Charge of Research and Intelligence.— Alfred McCormack, 4701 Fulton Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary and Foreign Liquidation Commissioner. Thomas B. McCabe, the Shoreham. Special Assistant to the Secretary.— Walter Brown, 4400 P Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary for Press Relations.—Michael J. McDermott, 1875 Upshur Street. Assistants to the Special Assistants.~Lincoln White, 102 Jesup Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Thomas D. Blake, 1524 Thirty-third Street; Reginald P. Mitchell, 4626 Warren Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary and Chief of Protocol.—George T. Summerlin, 1718 H Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary of State—Joseph W. Ballantine, 3311 Highland Place. Assistants to the Secretary of State.—Charles E. Bohlen, 2811 Dumbarton Avenue; Borden Reams, 1419 Hemlock Street; Blanche R. Halla, 2131 Yorktown Road; Carlton Savage, Norbeck Road, Rockville, Md.; Cassie Connor, 2800 Woodley Road. Adviser on Petroleum Policy.—Charles B. Rayner, 2110 Bancroft Place. Executive Staff Committees: - Secretary’s Staff Committee.—James F. Byrnes, chairman; Dean Acheson, vice chairman; Benjamin V. Cohen; William L. Clayton; James Clement Dunn; William Benton; Donald S. Russell; Spruille Braden; [vacancy]; Green H. Hackworth; Leo Pasvolsky; Alfred McCormack. Coordinating Committee.—Dean Acheson, chairman; H. Freeman Matthews; John Carter Vincent; Loy W. Henderson; Ellis O. Briggs; Alger Hiss; Clair Wilcox; John Stam Hooker; Seymour J. Rubin; William T. Stone; George P. Baker; Francis H. Russell; Selden Chapin; Frank A. March; Frederick B. Lyon; Michael J. McDermott; Thomas B. McCabe. Central Secretariat of the Executive Staff Committees: Executive Secretary.—C. Easton Rothwell, 1902 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Executive Secretary.—John F. Gange, 3626 Greenway Place, Alexan-dria, Va. Special Assistant to the Executive Secretary.— William Adams Brown, Jr., 1254 Thirty-first Street. : Office of European Affairs: Director.—H. Freeman Matthews, 3224 Woodland Drive. Deputy Director.—John D. Hickerson, 3314 Ross Place. Executive Officer.—Hugh S. Cumming, Jr., 2811 O Street. Special Assistants to the Director.—Raymond E. Murphy, 3438 Mount Pleasant Street; Harold W. Moseley, 2800 Woodley Road; G. Hayden Raynor, 1538 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. STATE Executive Departments 4331 Office of European Affairs—Continued. Division of British Commonwealth Affairs: Chief.—Edward T. Wailes, 2804 Thirty-fourth Place. Assistant Chiefs.—J. Graham Parsons, 1528 Eighteenth Street; John C. Pool, the University Club. : Division of Eastern European Affairs: Chief.— Elbridge Durbrow, 2230 California Street. Assistant Chiefs.—Robert G. Hooker, Jr., 3340 Dent Place; Francis B. Stevens, 2930 Legation Street. Division of Central European Affairs: . Chief —James W. Riddleberger, 3323 Quesada Street. Assistant Chiefs.—Henry P. Leverich, 4530 Lowell Street; David Harris. Division of Southern European Affairs: Acting Chief.—Samuel Reber, 1532 Thirty-first Street. Assistant Chiefs.— Walworth Barbour, 3429 Patterson Street; Walter C. Dowling, 2354 North Quiney Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Northern European Affairs: Chief.—Hugh S. Cumming, Jr., 2811 O Street. Assistant Chiefs.—John H. Morgan, 3511 Lowell Street; William C. Trimble, 2116 Bancroft Place. Division of Western European Affairs: Chief.—Paul T. Culbertson, R. F. D. 3, Gaithersburg, Md. Assistant Chief.—James C. H. Bonbright, 1516 Thirty-third Street. Office of Far Eastern Affairs: ; Director.—John Carter Vincent, 3408 Reservoir Road. Deputy Director.—James K. Penfield, the University Club. Sree) Assistant to the Director.—George H. Blakeslee, 2224 Thirty-eighth treet. Adviser and Acting Executive Officer.—Ruth E. Bacon, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Division of Chinese Affairs: Chief —Everett F. Drumright, 1385 Nicholson Street. Division of Japanese Affairs: Chief.—William T. Turner, 1016 Valley Drive, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Acting Assistant Chief.—Hugh Borton, R. F. D. 1, Burke, Va. Division of Southeast Asian Affairs: Chief —Abbot Low Moffat, 3705 Thirty-third Place. Assistant Chief.—Kenneth P. Landon, 4711 Fulton Street. Division of Philippine Affairs: Chief.—Frank P. Lockhart, 4600 Yuma Street. Acting Assistant Chief. —Edward W. Mill, 4100 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. Office of Near Eastern and African Affairs: Director—Loy W. Henderson, 3308 Woodley Road. Deputy Director—George V. Allen, 129 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Acting Executive Officer.—Harold B. Minor, 3035 Newark Street. Division of Near Eastern Affairs: Chief.—Gordon P. Merriam, 4619 Kenmore Drive. : Assistant Chiefs.—George Lewis Jones, Jr., 1512 Thirty-third Street; Joseph C. Satterthwaite, the Army and Navy Club. Division of Middle Eastern Affairs: Acting Chief—Harold B. Minor, 3035 Newark Street. Assistant Chief —Lampton Berry, 2325 Fifteenth Street. Division of African Affairs: Chief —Henry 8. Villard, 3335 Dent Place. Assistant Chief—Thomas C. Wasson, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Office of American Republic Affairs: Director.— Ellis O. Briggs, 3174 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director.—George H. Butler, 3313 Quesada Street. Special Assistant to the Director—H. Kingston Fleming, Ashton, Md. Executive Officer—Thomas H. Englesby, 5002 North Capitol Street. Division of Mexican Affairs: ; Chief.—John Willard Carrigan, 1519 Thirty-third Street. 332 C ongressional Directory STATE Office of American Republic Affairs—Continued. Division of Caribbean and Central American Affairs: Chief— William P. Cochran, Jr., Carlyn Apartments. Assistant Chiefs.— Willard F. Barber, 1522 Red Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Robert Newbegin, 4314 Cathedral Avenue. Division of Brazilian Affairs: Chief.— Philip Owen Chalmers, 7213 Cobalt Road. Assistant Chief —Daniel M. Braddock, 6139 Thirty-first Street. Division of River Plate Affairs: Acting Chief—Thomas C. Mann, 3317 Coryell Lane, Alexandria, Va. Division of North and West Coast Affairs: + Chzef.—Joseph Flack, 2420 Tracy Place. Assistant Chief —Milton K. Wells, 1763 Park Road. Division of American Republics Analysis and Liaison: Chief.—John C. Dreier, 4621 Q Street. Assistant Chief.—Roland D. Hussey, 3856 Porter Street. Acting Assistant Chief.— Louis J. Halle, Jr., 2800 Woodley Road. Office of Special Political Affairs: Director.— Alger Hiss, 3210 P Street. Deputy Director.—John C. Ross, 3724 R Street. Adviser.—Harley A. Notter, 6650 Barnaby Street. Special Assistants to the Director.—Samuel D. Boykin, 8338 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md.; Elwood N. Thompson, 3306 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Executive Oflicer.— Calvin J. Nichols, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Division of International Organizalion Affairs: Chief —Durward V. Sandifer, 8304 Oakford Place, Silver Spring, Md. Associate Chiefs.— Walter M. Kotsehnig, 108 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; William Sanders, 30 Edgewood Terrace, Belle Haven, Alex-andria, Va.; John Maktos, 705 Eighteenth Street; Isaac N. P. Stokes, 4119 Military Road. Assistant Chief.—Max Gideonse. Adviser.—0. Benjamin Gerig, 4708 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Internaiional Security Affairs: Chief.—Joseph E. Johnson, 4419 Forty-seventh Street. Associate Chief.—Donald C. Blaisdell, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Division of Dependent Area Affairs: Chief.—O. Benjamin Gerig, 4708 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Chief.—Ralph J. Bunche, 1510 Jackson Street NE Acting Associate Chief. —James F. Green, 21 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief —Xugene P. Chase, 9406 Russell Road, Silver Spring, Md. Office of International Trade Policy: Director—Clair Wilcox, 407 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director.—Leroy D. Stinebower, 4625 Thirty-sixth Street. Advisers.—Charles Bunn, 1237 Thirty-first Street; Joseph D. Coppock, 3901 Davis Place. Consultant.— Edward S. Mason, 3225 Klingle Road. Special Assistant to the Director—J. Robert Schaetzel, 1541 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Si Officer.— Edward W. Kelly, 5833 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, a. War Areas Economic Division: Chief.—Donald S. Gilpatric, 409 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Associate Chief.—Wayne G. Jackson, 2739 O Street. International Resources Division: Chief.—Donald D. Kennedy, 1236 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Associate Chief—Edward G. Cale, 6615 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Chiefs—Norman Burns, 3123 North Military Road, Arlington, Va.; Frederick Exton, 4519 Davenport Street; Robert P. Terrill, 1746 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va.; Clarence W. Nichols, 5436 Seven-teenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Acting Assistant Chief.—Francis A. Linville, 118 Thirty-fifth Street SE. STATE Ezecutive Departments 333 g Office of International Trade Policy—Continued. Petroleum Division: : Chief.—John A. Loftus, 5205 Sherrier Place. : Assistant Chiefs.—Robert H. S. Eakens, 2408 North Florida Street, Arlington, Va.; David A. Robertson, 1509 Forty-fourth Street; Rex Townsend, 2127 California Street. Division of Commercial Policy: Chief.—Winthrop G. Brown, 3514 Rodman Street. Associate Chiefs—Woodbury Willoughby, 109 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; H. Gerald Smith, McLean, Va. : Assistant Chief in Charge of General Commercial Policy Branch.—Carl D. Corse, 6511 Brennon Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief in Charge of European Branch.—Vernon L. Phelps, 236 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief in Charge of British Commonwealth and Empire Branch.— James A. Ross, Jr., 1641 Thirty-fifth Street. Assistant Chief tn Charge of American Republics Branch.—[Vacant.) Assistant Chief in Charge of the Far and Middle Eastern Branch.— Merrill C. J J Gay, 6804 Rhode Island Avenue, College Park, Md. Special Assistant to the Chief—Vernon E. Bundy, 1543 Forty-fourth Street. Adviser to the Far and Middle Eastern Branch.—Daniel H. Buchanan, 2322 Forty-first Street. of who to the American Republics Branch.— Erwin P. Keeler, 2231 Bancroft lace. diay on Commercial Treaties—Robert R. Wilson, 4506 Brandywine treet. Adviser on General Commercial Policy.—John M. Leddy, 205 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Division of International Labor, Social and Health Affairs: Chief.—Otis E. Mulliken, 6429 Thirty-first Place. Assistant Chief —William T. Ham, 5101 Chevy Chase Parkway. Office of Financial and Development Policy: Acting Director.—John Stam Hooker, 9 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. -Adviser.— Frederick Livesey, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Executive Officer.—John T. Forbes, 1629 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Financial Affairs: Chief.—George F. Luthringer, 4640 Reservoir Road. Associate Chief.—Jacques J. Reinstein, 4105 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant Chief in Charge of Western European Section.—Victor M. Long- street, 3919 Newport Avenue. Assistant. Chief in Charge of Eastern European Section.—Harold R. Spiegel, 8412 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md Assistant Chief in Charge of American Republics Financial Section.—James C. Corliss, 2737 Devonshire Place. Assistant Chief. —Alexander M. Rosenson, 6010 Thirteenth Place. Assistant Chief in Charge of the Far and Middle Eastern and African Section.— Paul F. McGuire, 406 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Foreign Economic Development: Chief.—Dudley M. Phelps. Associate Chief and Adviser on Foreign Investment.—John Parke Young, 33 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ; Assistant Chiefs.—Oliver C. Lockhart, 15 Abingdon Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md.; William Scanlan, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Special Assistant on Projects and Programs.—Jerome J. Stenger, 6226 Twenty- | third Street North, ai Va. Assistant Adviser on European Reconstruction.—Edward R. Gray, 3501 Williamsburg Lane. Consultant.—Abram Bergson, 116 Irvington Street SW. Division of Lend-Lease and Surplus War Property Affairs: Chief. —Frank W. Fetter, 6409 Oak Ridge Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—James A. Maxwell, 2034 I Street; Hale T. Shenefield, : : } | || 3136 Newark Street. | 78349°—79—2—1st ed. 23 | 334 | Congressional Directory ir STATE Office of Economic Security Policy: Acting Director.—Seymour J. Rubin, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Special Assistant to the Director. — Monroe Karasik, 1919 Nineteenth Street. Acting Executive Officer.—Frank D. Nidiffer, 612 Eighteenth Street. Division of Economic Security Controls: Chief —Walter S. Surrey, 318 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chiefs.—George W. Baker, 1312 Twenty-seventh Street; James Simsarian, 6444 Thirty-first Street. Acting Assistant Chiefs.—George N. Monsma, 4119 Third Road North, Arlington, Va.; Hendrik Van Oss, 1816 New Hampshire Avenue. Division of German and Austrian Economic Affairs: Chief.—Charles P. Kindleberger, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Associate Chiefs.—John C. de Wilde, 3310 Giunston Road, Alexandria, Va.; Covey T. Oliver, 3516 Connecticut Avenue. Dass of Japanese and Korean Economic Affairs: Chief. —Edwin M. Martin, 9 Brookdale Road, Brookdale, Md. Special Assistant.—Robert Barnett, 2600 Q Street. Office of Transport and Communications Policy: Director.—George P. Baker, 1232 Thirty-third Street. Deputy Director.— Garrison Norton, 3023 P Street. Adviser— Walter A. Radius, 3330 Newark Street. Executive Officer.—Richard F. Cook, 1711 Otis Street NE. Aviation Division: Chief —Stokeley W. Morgan, 3702 Livingston Street. Assistant Chief. —Joe D. Walstrom, 4431 Greenwich Parkway. Adviser on Air Law.—Stephen Latchford, 3520 Thirty-fifth Street, Mount Rainier, Shipping Division: Chief —Jesse E. Saugstad, 2021 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Chief.—L. James Falck, 508 Ashford Road, Silver Spring, Md. Adviser on Shipping.—Henry L. Deimel, Jr., 4414 Macomb Street. Telecommunications Division: Chief.—Francis Colt de Wolf, 4426 Hadfield Lane. Assistant Chiefs.—Harvey B. Otterman, 6219 Picty-first Street; George R. Canty, 3606 Fulton Street. Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs: Director— William T. Stone, 3818 Ingomar Street. -Deputy Pinner .—John E. Peurifoy, 4225 Four Mile Run Drive South, Arling- ton Adviser.— Charles A. Thomson, 9 Carvel Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Consultant.— Arthur W. Macmahon, Glengary Road, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Special Assistants to the Director.—Raymond L. Zwemer, 5003 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Richard H. Heindel, 35 Kennedy Street NE.; Robert E. Ward, Jr, 2422 Twenty-seventh Street South, Arlington, Va. I nterdepartmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation: Chairman.— William Benton, 2500 Foxhall Road. Vice Chasrman.— William T. Stone, 3818 Ingomar Street. Executive Director.— Raymund L. Zwemer, 5003 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Executive Secretary.— Kenneth McIntosh, 2800 Woodley Road. Division of Cultural Cooperation: Acting Chief —Raymond L. Zwemer, 5003 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md, Assistant Chief in Charge of European Branch.—Eugene N. Anderson,’ 412 Baltimore Avenue. Assistant Chief tn Charge of American Republics Branch.—Herschel Brickell, 2039 New Hampshire Avenue. Assistant Chief in Charge of Far Hosiern Branch. — Willys R. Peck, 3009 Forty-fifth Street. Acting Assistant Chief in Charge of the Near East and Africa Branch.—Robert F. Ogden, 3016 South Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Acting Assistant Chief in Charge of the Umited States Resources Branch.— William L. Schurz, 4143 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Adviser on Art and Music.—Charles Child, 1311 Thirty-fifth Street. Adviser on Libraries and Publications. — Harry R. Warfel, 5601 Forty-second Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. STATE Executive Departments 335 Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs—Continued. International Information Division: Chzef.—John M. Begg, 2541 Waterside Drive. Assistant Chief in Charge of Media Branch.—J. Noel Macy, 3339 'N Street. Central Translating Division: Chief.—Guillermo A. Suro, Dorchester House. Office of Public Affairs: Acting Director.—Francis H. Russell, 1111 Springfield Avenue, Silver Spring, Md : Special Assistant to the Director.—John E. Peurifoy, 4225 Four Mile Run Drive South, Arlington, Va. Division of Public Liaison: Chief.—Francis H. Russell, 1111 Springfield Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Chief in Charge of Public Attitudes Branch.—S. Shepard Jones, 4404 Maple Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Chief in Charge of Group Relations Branch.—Chester S. Williams, 3139 Upland Terrace. Acting Assistant Chief in Charge of Mass Media Branch.— Margaret R. T. Carter, 1215 Sixteenth Street. Acting Assistant Chief in Charge of Special Writing Branch.—Delia W. Kuhn, 3116 Cathedral Avenue. Division of Research and Publication: Chief—E. Wilder Spaulding, 1412 Twenty-seventh Street. Assistant Chief.— Robert T. Miller, 3d, 3223 Northampton Street. Special Adviser.—Bernadotte E. Schmitt, 1812 Thirty-fifth Street. ti of the Department.—Martha L. Gericke, 1316 New Hampshire venue. Editor of Territorial Papers.—Clarence E. Carter, 7100 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Geography and Cartography: Chief —Samuel W. Boggs, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief.—Otto E. Guthe, 3245 Livingston Street. Special Assistant.—Sophia A. Saucerman, the Broadmoor. Office of the Foreign Service: Director—Selden Chapin, 3000 Woodland Drive. Deputy Director.—Julian F. Harrington, 3333 Dent Place. Executive Assistant to the Director.—Alan N. Steyne, 1900 Q Street. Special Assistants.—R. Horton Henry, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue; Bernhard G. Bechhoefer, 2810 Thirty-fifth Street. Division of Foreign Service Planning: Acting Chief.— Archie M. Palmer, 3321 Runnymede Place. Foreign Service Consultant.—Lynn W. Meekins, 4631 Chesapeake Street. Division of Foreign Service Personnel: Chief.— William E. DeCourecy, 1511 Twenty-second Street. Assistant Chiefs.— Daniel V. Stapleton, 710 Villa Ridge Road, Falls Church, Va.; Harold S. Tewell, 6800 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief in Charge of Recruitment and Placement Branch.— Walton C. Ferris, the Wardman Park. Division of Training Services: Chief.—Carol H. Foster, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Chief.—Perry N. Jester, the Kennedy-Warren Apartments. Division of Foreign Reporting Services: Acting Chief.— Archie M. Palmer, 3321 Runnymede Place. Division of Foreign Service Administration: Chief.—E. Paul Tenney, 6023 Wynwood Road, Wood Acres, Md. Assistant Chzefs.—Harry A. Havens, 300 Lynn Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Francis E. Flaherty, 3615 Fourteenth Street NE.; Kenneth C. Krentz, 2231 California Street. Aes Assistant Chief.—Ancel N: Taylor, 86 Concord Street, Kensington, Division of Foreign Buildings Operations: Chief —Frederick Larkin, 601 Nineteenth Street. Assistant Chiefs — Leland W. King, Jr., 2305 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, Va.; Hugh C. McMillan, 6207 Dunrobbin Drive, Fairway Hills, Md. 336 Congressional Directory TATE Office of Departmental Administration: © Acting Director—Frank A. March, R. F. D. 3, Bethesda, Md. Deputy Director—Harry M. Kurth, 2728 Blaine Drive, Chevy Chase; Md. Aon Executive Officer.— Wilbur C. Irving, 9124 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Division of Budget and Finance: Chief and Budget Officer of the Department.—Harry M. Kurth, 2728 Blaine Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief.—Clifford C. Hulse, 5211 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Division of Management Planning: Acting Chief.—Orlando A. Simmes, 1355 Monroe Street NE. Division of Departmental Personnel: Acting Chief.—W. Pierce MacCoy, 2631 South Grand Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Central Services: Acting Chief—William D. Wright, Colesville, Md. Division of Communications and Records: Chief.—Walter K. Scott, Landover, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—Paul T, Meyer, 1900 F Street; G. Harold Keatley, 1620 Fuller Street. Division of Cryptography: Chief—Commander Lee W. Parke, U. S. Navy, 4905 Edgemoor ae Bethesda, Md. Adviser.— David A. Salmon, 3223 Klingle Road. ghosioion; Chief.—Paul E. Goldsberry, 610 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Division of Coordination and Review: o Chief.—Blanche R. Halla, 2131 Yorktown Road. Assistant Chiefs.—Sarah D. Moore, 1909 Park Road; Helen L. Daniel, 1754 Lanier Place. Division of Protocol: Chief.—Stanley Woodward, 3005 O Street. Ceremonial Officer—Raymond D. Muir, 4701 Western Avenue. Division of International Conferences: Chief —Warren Kelchner, 2027 Hillyer Place. Assistant Chief.—Clarke L. Willard, 6613 Thirty-second Street. Office of Controls: Acting Director—Frederick B. Lyon, the Westchester. Special Assistant to the Director.—Robert L. Bannerman, 4533 South Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. Passport Division: Chief —Ruth B. Shipley, 56508 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Chiefs.—John J. Scanlan, 4517 Fifteenth Street; F. Virginia Alexander, the Conard. Visa Division: Chief —Howard K. Travers, 3110 Hawthorne Street. Assistant Chiefs.—Eliot B. Coulter, 2401 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington. Va; Sidney A. Belovsky, 2922 Buchanan Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va.; Robert C. Alexander, 4707 South Chelsea. Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Edwin B. Earnest, Broxburn Drive, Bethesda Branch; Marjorie Moss, 1790 Lanier Place. Special Projects Division: Acting Chief and Assistant Chief in Charge of Ezecuiive Branch.— Albert E. Clattenburg, Jr., 115-B West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief in Charge of Representation Branch.—[Vacant.] Assistant Chief in Charge of Prisoners of War and Internee Branch.—E. Tomlin Bailey, 1437 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Chief in Charge of Relief Branch.—Eldred D. Kuppinger, 3028 Wisconsin Avenue. Assistant Chief in Charge of Public Services Branch.—Gilson G. Blake, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Division of Foreign Activity Correlation: Chief —Frederick B. Lyon, the Westchester. Assistant Chiefs.—Jack D. Neal, 6611-B Strathmore Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Herbert J. Cummings, 1842 North Capitol Street; Lloyd D. Yates, 2424 Massachusetts Avenue, Acting Assistant Chief.—Kenneth Anderson, 1954 Columbia Road. STATE Executive Departments 337 Interim International Information Service: Director.—Ferdinand Kuhn, 3116 Cathedral Avenue. Deputy Directors.—Charles M. Hulten, 3733 T Street; Francis A. Jamieson, 2633 Fifteenth Street. Foreign Service Buildings Commission.—Sol Bloom (Representative from New York), chairman; James F. Byrnes (Secretary of State); Fred M. Vinson (Secretary of the Treasury); Henry A. Wallace (Secretary of Commerce) ; Tom Connally (Senator from Texas); Arthur Capper (Senator from Kansas); Charles A. Eaton (Representative from New Jersey); Frederick Larkin (Chief, Division of Foreign Buildings Operations, Department of State), executive secretary. Board of Foreign Service Personnel—Donald S. Russell (Assistant Secretary of State), chairman; William Benton (Assistant Secretary of State); Spruille Braden (Assistant Secretary of State); Alfred Schindler (Under Secretary of Commerce); Leslie A. Wheeler (Director, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture). Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service—Donald S. Russell (Assistant Secretary of State), chairman; William Benton (Assistant Secretary of State); Spruille Braden (Assistant Secretary of State); Alfred Schindler aig Secretary of Commerce) ; Leslie A. Wheeler (Director, Office of Foreign Agricultural Re-lations, Department of Agriculture); Selden Chapin (Director, Office of the Foreign Service, Department of State) ; William E. DeCourcy (Chief, Division of Foreign Service Personnel, Department of State) ; Lawson A. Moyer (Chief Examiner, Civil Service Commission). Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Board.—Donald S. Russell (Assistant Secretary of State), chairman; William Benton (Assistant Secretary of State); Spruille Braden (Assistant Secretary of State); Alfred Schindler (Under Secretary of Commerce); Leslie A. Wheeler (Director, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture); Selden Chapin (Di-rector, Office of the Foreign Service, Department of State); William E. DeCourcy (Chief, Division of Foreign Service Personnel, Department of State) ; Carol H. Foster (Acting Director, Foreign Service Officers’ Training School, and Chief, Division of Training Services, Department of State). American-Mexican Claims Commission: Chairman.—Edgar E. Witt, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. Members.—Charles F. McLaughlin, 2310 Connecticut Avenue; Samuel Marshall Gold, 4607 Connecticut Avenue. : General Counsel.—Guy Martin, 1826 Twenty-fourth Street. Associate Counsel.— William H. King, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Secretary and Attorney.—James A. Langston, 2633 Adams Mill Road. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION (For list of members, see page 410) NATIONAL MUNITIONS CONTROL BOARD (For list of members, see page 436) | J 338 Congressional Directory TREASURY DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 6400) FRED M. VINSON, of Ashland, Ky. (the Wardman Park), son of James and Virginia (Ferguson) Vinson; born at Louisa, Ky., January 22, 1890; graduate, Kentucky Normal College; B. A. and LL. B. Centre College, Ky.; married Roberta Dixon, January 24, 1923; children—Frederick Moore and James Robert; engaged in the general practice of law at Louisa, Ky., and Ashland, Ky., 1911-38; city attorney, Louisa, Ky., 1913; United States Army during World War I; Commonwealth attorney, thirty-second judicial district of Kentucky, 1921-24; member of the House of Representatives of the United States in the Sixty-eighth through the Seventy-fifth (excluding the Seventy-first) Congresses, 1924-38; member, Committee on Ways and Means for four consecutive terms; chairman of the Subcommittee on Conflicting Taxation (State and Federal Taxes); chairman of the Subcommittee of the Ways and Means Committee on Internal Rev-. enue Taxation during first session of Seventy-fifth Congress; member of the House of Representatives Select Committee on Reorganization of Govern-ment Departments; appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia May 12, 1938; designated by the Chief Justice of the United States to be chief judge of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals under the Price Control Act of 1942, March 2,'1942; appointed by President Roosevelt Director of Eco-nomic Stabilization, May 28, 1943; Federal Loan Administrator, March 8, 1945, and Director of War Mobilization and Reconversion, April 4, 1945; appointed Secretary of the Treasury by President Harry S. Truman July 23, 1945; chairman, board of trustees, endowment fund, American National Red Cross; chairman, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board; chairman, National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems; managing trustee, board of trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund; member— National Park Trust Fund Board; board of trustees, Postal Savings System; board of directors, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation; advisory board, Export-Import Bank of Washington; Economic Stabilization Board; Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures; Foreign-Trade Zones Board; Contract Settlement Advisory Board; National Munitions Control Board; Smithsonian Institution; board of trustees, National Gallery of Art; National Archives Council; Foreign Service Buildings Commission; trustee, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. The Under Secretary.—Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramercy Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Narcotics, and Secret Service.—{Vacant.] Assistant Secretary in Charge of Monetary Research and Foreign Funds.—Harry D. White, 6810 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. General Counsel for the Treasury.—Joseph J. O'Connell, Jr., 8320 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md Fiscal Assistant Secretary in Charge of the Finances, Accounts, Public Debt, and Treasurer.— Edward F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. Assistant to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary.— William T. Heffelfinger, 1448 Juniper Street. Executive Assistants to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary.—Edward D. Batchelder, 3318 Stephenson Place; Frank F. Dietrich, 1214 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va.; Walter F. Frese, 1100 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Assistants to the Secretary.—Roy Blough, 3243 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va.; Josiah E. DuBois, Jr., 1023 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md.; J. H. Randolph Feltus, 3212 P Street; Theodore R. Gamble, 2400 Sixteenth Street; Paul L. Kelley, 1838 Monroe Street; Wilbur R. Lester, A-12 Cleveland, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va.; Ansel F. Luxford, 3908 Huntington Street; John W. Pehle, 8804 Garfield Street, Bethesda, Md. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary.—Paul L. Kelley, 1838 Monroe Street. Assistant Administrative Assistant to the Secretary.—Paul McDonald, 2006 North Upton Street, Arlington, Va. Technical Assistant.— William W. Parsons, 708 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. Director of Personnel.—Theodore F. Wilson, 3617 Twentieth Street NE. Chief Clerk.—Frank A. Birgfeld, 3338 Seventeenth Street. Superintendent of Treasury Buildings.—Denzil A. Right, 1422 A Street SE. Chief, Correspondence Division.—Gabrielle E. Forbush, 5404 Galena Place. ¢ TREASURY "Executive Departments 339 Budget Officer.—Charles R. Schoeneman, 2018 Klingle Road. Lands Budget Division.—George H. Jones, 8504 Lynwood Place, Chevy Chase, i Chief Coordinator, Treasury Enforcement Agencies.—Elmer L. Irey, 2019 Wood-reeve Road, Avondale, Md. Brent, of Public Relations.—Charles P. Shaeffer, 5513 Wriley Road, Westhaven, OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY General Counsel.—Joseph J. O’Connell, Jr., 8320 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md Chief Counsel for the Bureau of Intermal Revenue.—John P. Wenchel, 6805 Sixth Street. Assistants General Counsel.—Norman O. Tietjens, 5217 Reno Road; Thomas "J. Lynch, 416 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Charles Oliphant, 3247 Quesada Street; Lehman C. Aarons; Joseph B. Friedman, 344 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Special Assistants to the General Counsel.—David J. Speck, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street; George Bronz, 2704 Thirty-sixth Place. Chief Counsel: Bureau of Comptroller of Currency.—John F. Anderson, 1805 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. : Bureau of Customs.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. Foreign Funds Control.—Isadore G. Alk, 1660 Lanier Place. Bureau of Narcotics.— Alfred L. Tennyson, 1512 Thirtieth Street. Procurement Division.— William G. Helfrich, 5406 Connecticut Avenue. Bens of the Public Debt.—Theodore W. Cunningham, 2320 Nebraska venue. BUREAU OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY Comptroller.—Preston Delano, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Deputy Compirollers.—C. B. Upham, University Club; R. B. McCandless, 5420 onasian Avenue; J. L. Robertson, 4614 Brookview Drive, Westhaven, Chief National Bank Examiner.— W. P. Folger, the Westchester. Personnel Officer.—R. L. Miller, 6612 Barnaby Street. Secretary to Comptroller.— Cotter, Connecticutthe Alice 5420 Avenue. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS Director of Beal and Statistics.—George C. Haas, 5510 Cedar Parkway, Chevy ase, : Assistant Directors.— Wesley Lindow, 916 South Highland Street, Arlington, Va.; 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.; Sidney G. Tickton, 4112 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Director.—Anna M. Michener, 1622 Twenty-ninth Street. Administrative Assistant to the Director.— William M. Weir, 2212 I Street. . Librarian.—Isabella S. Diamond, 519 North Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING (Fourteenth and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 5151) Director.— Alvin W. Hall, 1319 Kalmia Road. Associate Director.—Clark R. Long, 1348 Iris Street. Assistant Director.—Thomas F. Slattery, 3825 Beecher Street. Chief, Research and Development Engineering.—Henry J. Holtzclaw, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. 340 Congressional Directory aE sstny BUREAU OF THE MINT Director.—Nellie Tayloe Ross, 2126 Connecticut Avenue, Assistant Director.—Leland Howard, 3835 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va, Chief Accountant.—Frederick W. Tate, 1110 North Kirkwood Road, Arlington, Va. Assayer.— Timothy J. Quirk, 3718 Livingston Street. BUREAU OF CUSTOMS (Wilkins Building, 1512 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commassioner—W. R. Johnson, 4234 Forty-second Street. Assistant Commisstoner.—Frank Dow, 6405 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Acting Deputy Commissioner, Tariff and Marine Administration.—Glenn H. Griffith, 1333 Hemlock Street. Deputy Commissioner, Investigations and Pairol.—Edson J. Shamhart, the General Scott Apartments. 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 in Charge—Franklin A. M. Shafer, 4504 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. BUREAU OF NARCOTICS (Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commissioner of Narcotics—H. J. Anslinger, the Shoreham. Deputy Commissioner of Narcotics.—Will S. Wood, 2800 Woodley Road. Assistant to the Commissioner.—M. L. Harney, 4395 Verplanck Place. UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE Chief —Frank J. Wilson, 2910 Tennyson Street. Associate Chief.—James J. Maloney, 2800 Ontario Road. Assistant to the Chief.—Laurence E. Albert, 1126 South Thomas Street, Arling- on, Va. Haxecutive Aide to the Chief.—Harry E. Neal, 5907 Wynnwood Road, Wood Acres, Md. Chief Clerk.— Walter S. Bowen, 1837 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Supervising Agent, White House Detail.—George C. Drescher, 2459 Tunlaw Road. Supervising Agent, Fifth Field District.—Harry D. Anheier, 802 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. DIVISION OF MONETARY RESEARCH Director of Monetary Research.—Frank Coe, 2700 Thirty-sixth Street. Assistant Directors.—Harold Glasser, 5410 Cathedral Avenue; William H. Taylor; Edward M. Bernstein, 3513 Northampton Street; Norman T, Ness, 2304 Fortieth Street. FOREIGN FUNDS CONT ROL (District National Bank Building, 1406 G Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Director. —Orvis A. Schmidt, 418 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Licensing Division. —John 8. Richards, Baileys Crossroads, Alexandria, Va. Cheef, Enforcement Division.—Rella R. Shwartz, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Executive Officer and Chief, Statistics and Reporting Division.—[Vacant.] TREASURY Executive Departments 341 FISCAL SERVICE . BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Commassioner.— Robert W. Maxwell, 3352 Upland Terrace. Associate Commissioner.—Gilbert L. Cake, 3411 Twentieth Street NE. Assistant Commissioner.—Joseph Greenberg, 1335 Fort Stevens Drive. Chief Accountant.—George E. Jones, 1629 Columbia Road. Assistant to the Commissioner—Harold R. Gearhart, 4525 Sleaford Road,Bethesda, Md. Chief Disbursing Officer—Emmett J. Brennan, 4210 Twelfth Street NE. Chie Ditton of Bookkeeping and Warrants.—Joseph A. Woodson, 3009 Military oad. : Chief, Division of Deposits.—Bernard M. Mulvihill, 3900 Fourteenth Street. Chief, Section of Surety Bonds—Harry R. Schwalm, 916 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va. : Chief, Section of Investments.—Eugene P. O’Daniel, 2954 Upton Street. | || | | i BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT Commassioner.— William S. Broughton, 1819 Q Street. Associate Commassioner.— Edwin L. Kilby, 7106 Ninth Street. Deputy Commaissioner.—R. A. Heffelfinger, 4427 Davenport Street. -Acting Deputy Commissioner in Charge, Chicago Officc.—Donald Homestead Hotel, Evanston, 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, Hotel Windermere, Chicago, Ill. M. Merritt, 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.—Michael E. Slindee, the Iroquois. Admanistrative Assistant to the Treasurer.—F. L. Church, 3219 Fifth Street South, Arlington, Va. ‘ Staff Assistant.—G. C. Emerson, 3824 Van Ness Street. Cheef, Administrative Division.— Bernard A. Hayden, 4009 Thirteenth Street NE. Chief, Cash Division.—John L. Schram, 3800 New Hampshire Avenue. Chief, Division of General Accounts.—W. J. Weber, Alban Towers. Chief, Accounting Division.—A. W. Starratt, 419 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Md. Chief, Securities Division.—C. E. Hearst, 3241 Worthington Street. Chzef, Currency Redemption Division.—B. C. Gardner, 615 Lexington Place NE. OFFICE OF THE TAX LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL Tax Legislative Counsel.—Robert W. Wales, 4950 Thirtieth Place. Assistants Tax Legislative Counsel.—Frederick C. Lusk, 1432 Otis Adrian W. DeWind, 224 North Alfred Street, Alexandria, Va. Street NE.; BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 5050) Commissioner.—Joseph D. Nunan, Jr., the Statler. Assistant Commassioner.— William T. Sherwood, 1213 Holly Street. Assistant Commassioner.—Paul A. Hankins, 4327 Montgomery Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Special Deputy Commissioner.—Eldon P. King, 3821 Fulton Street. Deputy Commissioners.—D. Spencer Bliss, 923 East Capitol Street; Victor H. Self, 4504 Rittenhouse Street, Riverdale, Md.; Norman D. Cann, Thirty-ninth Street and Cathedral Avenue; Stewart Berkshire, 4238 Forty-third Street; Wilber A. Gallahan, 3716 Warren Street. 342 | Congressional Directory | TREASURY Head, Technical Staff. — Aubrey R. Marrs, 1422 North Fillmore Street, Nellhaton ; Va. Chief, Intelligence Unit—W. H. Woolf, 1722 Irving Street. Head, Administrative Division and Budget Officer. —Xrederick I. Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road. Head, Personnel Division.—John E. Lynch, 2500 Q Street. Chief, Recruitment and Placement,—I. Y. Bain, 1102 South Oakcrest Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Employee Relations and Service Section. — George C. Billard, 3260 Van Hazen Street. Public Relations Officer—Irving Perlmeter, 249 Ingraham Street. PROCUREMENT DIVISION (Seventh and D Streets SW. Phone, DIsirict 5700) Director.—Clifton E. Mack, 6314 Thirty-second Street. Associate Director.—A. J. Walsh, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Director Administration. Paul King, 3956 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Deputy Director, Fiscal.—H. F. Riley (acting), 5820 Fourth Street. Deputy Director, Stores.—S. A. Snyder, 7001 Brookeville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director, Standards.—W. S. MacLeod (acting), 9 West Maple Street, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director, Purchase.—W. M. B. Freeman, Runny Mede Farm, Vienna, Va. Assistant to the Deputy Director, Purchase. — Robert LeFevre, 112 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH Dien of Tax Research. —Roy Blough, 3243 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Assistant Diverior. — Louis Shere, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant to the Director.— Walter W. Heller, Presidential Gardens; Alexandria, Va. Head, Business Tax Section.—E. Gordon Keith, 607 Whittier Street. Head, Individual Income Tax Section. —_ Marius Farioletti, 4822 Third Street North, Arlington, Va. Head, Miscellaneous Tax Section.—F. Newell Campbell, 2053 McKinley Street. WAR FINANCE DIVISION (Washington Building, Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue) National Director.— Theodore R. Gamble, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Assistant National Director.—Robert W. Coyne, 320 Aspen Street. Assistant National Director.—Charles W. Adams, 1400 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. Dzrector, Natronal Organizations Division.—James L. Houghteling, 2431 Kalo-rama Road. Director, Radio, Press, and Advertising Division.—John M. Delehanty, 200 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director of Pay Roll Savings. —Ralph 'G. Engelsman, 4926 Thirtieth Street. Director, Motion Pictures and Special Events.—J. Edward Shugrue, the Broadmoor. Associate Field Director for Agriculture.—Merrill L. Predmore, 635 Alabama Avenue SE. Associate Field Director for Women’s Activity.—Dr. Mabelle B. Blake, 4651 Kenmore Drive. COMMITTEE ON PRACTICE (Room 106, Tower Building, Fourteenth and K Streets. Phone, EXecutive 6400, extensions 5017 and 5097) Chairman.—G. C. Hanna, 2610 Thirty-sixth Place. Members.—Hessel E. Yntema, University of Michigan Law School, Hutchins Hall, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Huntington Cairns, National Gallery of Art, Attorney for the Government.— Allison Rupert, Treasury Building. WAR Executive Departments 343 DEPARTMENT OF WAR (The Pentagon. Phone, REpublic 6700) ROBERT P. PATTERSON, of New York, Secretary of War (1511 Thirty-third Street), born in Glens Falls, N. Y., February 12, 1891; son of Charles R. and Lodice E. (Porter) Patterson; A. B., Union College, 1912; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1915; married Margaret T. Winchester, 1920; children—Robert P., Aileen W., Susan H., and Virginia; admitted to New York bar, 1915; judge, United States District Court, Southern District of New York, 1930; judge, United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, 1939; Assistant Secretary of War, July 31, 1940; Under Secretary of War, December 19, 1940; Secretary of War, September 27, 1945; served as private, Company I, Seventh Infantry, New York National Guard, from October 21, 1915, until mustered out of Federal service December 2, 1916; commissioned as second lieutenant, Infantry, May 15, 1917; promoted to captain, August 15, 1917; to major, March 26, 1919; served with Three Hundred and Sixth Infantry in Oise-Aisne and Meuse-Argonne offensives; in World War I awarded Purple Heart for combat wound, Silver Star for gallantry in action, Distinguished Service Cross for extraordinary heroism in action; in World War II awarded Distinguished Service Medal for supervising procurement of all Army weapons and equipment; member Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Theta, Harvard and Lawyers Clubs of New York. Home, Cold Spring, N. Y. Under Secretary of War.—Kenneth C. Royall, 1200 South Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va. Ezxecutive—Col. G. K. Heiss, 3407 Quebec Street. Assistants to the Under Secretary of War.— Austin H. MacCormick, 3337 P Street; Harold H. Neff, 3461 Macomb Street. Deputy Executive Chairman (Army), Army-Navy Munitions Board.—Maj. Gen. Sidney P. Spalding, route 2, Herndon, Va. Chief, Planning Division.—Maj. Gen. Sidney P. Spalding, route 2, Herndon, Va. Chief, Industrial Activities Diviston.—Col. E. 8. Gruver, 503 North Monroe Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Nowindustrial Division.—Col. George DeGraaf, 4456 Q Street. Chief, Administrative Branch.—Lt. Col. Bayard Schieffelin, 7 Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Legal Branch.—Col. Donald W. Wainhouse, 4708 Linnean Avenue. Private Secretaries to Under Secretary of War.— Virginia Grantham, 214 South Courthouse Road, Arlington, Va.; Esther Rice, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Clerk to Under Secretary of War.—Kate Buckingham, 53 Hamilton Street. Chief Clerk.—Anna C. Lanigan, 5509 Nebraska Avenue. President, War Department Board of Contract Appeals.—Col. J. A. Avery, 4319 Second Road North, Arlington, Va. Executive Officer, National Board for Promotion of Rifle Practice.—Col. Emerald F. Sloan, Army War College. Commandant, Army Industrial College.—Brig. Gen. Donald Armstrong, 2600 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of War.—Howard C. Petersen, 402 North Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Executive Officer—Col. Charles W. McCarthy, 5415 Lynnhurst Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative Assistant.—John H. Stucchio, 1623 Massachusetts Avenue. Private Secretary.—Jean Wehner, 2511 Q Street. Assistant Secretary of War for Air—[Vacant.] Executive Officer.— Brig. Gen. George A. Brownell, 2734 P Street. Assistant Executive Officer.—Col. A. M. Hanson, University Club. Private Secretary.—Burnita L. O’Day, 2517 K Street. Administrative Assistant and Chief Clerk.—John W. Martyn, Westchester Apart-ments. Aide to the Secretary of War.—Col. Hugh M. Exton, 1406 North Johnson Street, Arlington, Va. Special Assistants to the Secretary of War.—William8. Gaud, Jr., 2311 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va.; Col. Tracy S. Voorhees, Metropolitan Club. Clerk to the Secretary.—John W. Schott, 1338 Holly Street. 344 Congressional Directory WAR Secretaries to the Secretary of War.—Lucille Mundy, 815 Eighteenth Street; Mary C. O’Brien, West View Apartments. Deputy Administrative Assistant.—James C. Cook, 6803 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Special Assistant to Administrative Assistant.— Frank B. Bourn, 3777 Oliver Street. Assistant to the Administrative Assistant.—George E. Brewer, 4429 Thirty-sixth Street, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Chiefs of Division: Darector of Civilian Personnel and Training.—Fletcher C. Waller, 4609 Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. Ccordination and Record.—L. Frank Nye, 23 V Street NE. Procurement and Accounting.— Walla A. Kenyon, 1615 Juniper Street. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF . (The Pentagon) Chief of Staff.—General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff.—Gen. Thomas T. Handy, 3325 Runnymede Place. Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff —Brig. Gen. Henry I. Hodes, 3910 Yuma Street. Secretary of the General Staff.—Col. H. M. Pasco, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—1 (Personnel).—Maj. Gen. W. S. Paul, Fort Myer, Va.’ Director of Women’s Army Corps.—Col. Westray Battle Boyce, 1920 S Street. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—2 (Military Intelligence) —Maj. Gen. Clayton Bissell, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G—8 (Organization and Training).—Maj. Gen. Idwal H. Edwards, 3222 Klingle Road. dhysiniont Chief of Staff, G~4 (Supply).—Maj. Gen. Russell L. Maxwell, Fort yer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, Operations Division.—Lt. Gen. John E. Hull, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF Director of Information.—Maj. Gen. Alexander D. Surles, Fort Myer, Va. Acting Director, Bureau of Public Relations.—Col. R. Ernest Dupuy, 2719 Dumbarton Avenue. Chief, Legislative and Liaison Division.—Maj. Gen. Wilton B. Persons, 3133 Con-necticut Avenue. Ezecutive.—Col. George Parker, the Wardman Park. Liaison Officers: For Committee on Military Affairs, United States Senate.—Col. Earl B. Wixcey, 3600 Connecticut Avenue. For United States Senate at Large.—Col. Walter O. Rawls, 1805 Thirty-seventh Street. For Committee on Military Affairs, House of Representatives.—Col. C. J. Hauck, Jr., 5500 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. For House of Representatives at Large. —Col. William F. Pearson, 2330 Tracy Place. . Director, Information and Education Division.—Maj. Gen. Frederick H. Osborn, the Wardman Park. Director, Budget Division.—Maj. Gen. George J. Richards, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. President, War Department Manpower Board.—Maj. Gen. C. H. Bonesteel, 3061 Porter Street. Director, Special Planning Division.—Maj. Gen. Ray E. Porter, 3129 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director, Civil Affairs Division. —Maj. Gen. John H. Hilldring, Fort Myer, Va. Director, New Developments Division.—Brig. Gen. William A. Borden, 2306 Tracy lace. The Inspector General.—Lt. Gen. Daniel I. Sultan, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. WAR Executive Departments 345 Depth > The Inspector General.—Maj. Gen. Philip E. Brown, 4444 Greenwich arkway. Assistant to The Inspector General.—Maj. Gen. Howard McC. Snyder, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Acting Chief, National Guard Bureau.—Maj. Gen. John F. Williams, Westchester Apartments. Ergun) for Reserve and ROTC Affairs.—Brig. Gen. Edward S. Bres, Army-Navy lub THREE PRINCIPAL COMMANDS ARMY GROUND FORCES \ Comming General, Army Ground Forces.—Gen. Jacob L. Devers, Army War ollege Chief of Stuf —Lt. Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Army War College. Deputy Chuef of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Robert W. Hasbrouck, 3928 Macomb Street. Secretary of the General Staff.—Col. Donald G. McLennan, Army War College. G-1.—Maj. Gen. David G. Barr, Army War College. G—2.—Maj. Gen. Millard G. Wyman, 2022 Columbia Road. G-3.—Maj. Gen. Clarence R. Huebner, Army War College. G-4.—Maj. Gen. Lunsford E. Oliver, Army War College. Plans.—Maj. Gen. Gilbert R. Cook, Army War College. Development.—Maj. Gen. Albert W. Waldron, Army War College. Budget and Fiscal.—Col. Harry W. Crandall, ‘Army War College. Statistics.—Col. John W. Wurts, 4603 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Liaison (War Department).—Col. John R. Francis, Army War College. Liavson (Antiaircraft).—Brig. Gen. Paul B. Kelly, Army War College. Liaison (Air).—Brig. Gen. John P. Doyle, 4 Alcott Road, Bethesda, Md. Special Information.—Brig. Gen. Edmund B. Sebree, Army War College. Historical.—Lt. Col. Kent R. Greenfield, 1312 Twenty-second Street South, Arlington, Va. Adjutant General.—Col. Everard F. Olsen, Army War College. Medical.—Brig. Gen. Frederick A. Blesse, 4720 Alton Place. Engineer.—Col. Hans W. Holmer, 2902 N aylor Road SE. Ordnance.—Brig. Gen. Harold A. 'N isley, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Quartermaster.— Brig. Gen. Harvey Edward, 4421 Q Street. Chemacal.—Col. John A. McLaughlin, Army War College. Signal.—Brig. Gen. Emil Lenzner, 3411 Rodman Street. Headquarters Commandant.—Col. William N. Todd, Jr., Army War College. ARMY AIR FORCES Commanding General, Army Air Forces.—General of the Army Henry H. Arnold, Fort Myer, Va. Executive Assistant.—Col. Fred M. Dean, 532 Twentieth Street. The Air Inspector.—Maj. Gen. J. W. Jones, 4440 Q Street. Budget and Fiscal.—Brig. Gen. L. W, Miller, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Commander, AAF.—Lt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, Fort Myer, Va. Chuef of Air Staff.—Maj. Gen. C. C. Chauncey (acting), Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Air Staff.—Brig. Gen. R. C. Hood, Jr., 4840 Little Falls Road, Arlington, Va. Arr Adjutant General.—Col. Hugh G. Culton, Park Fairfax, Va. Office of Information Services.—Col. H. W. Bowman, 312 South Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Secretary of Awr Staff.—Col. Jacob E. Smart, 3226 Klingle Road. Office of Legislative Services.—Col. W. S. Ege, 2500 Q Street. Assistant Chiefs of Air Staff: 1.—Maj. Gen. F. L. Anderson, 1301 Juniper Street. 2.—Maj. Gen. E. R. Quesada, 2629 O Street. 3.—Lt. Gen. H. S. Vandenberg, Quarters 66, Bolling Field, Va. 4.—Maj. Gen. E. M. Powers, 2500 Q Street. 5.—Maj. Gen. Lauris Norstad, Quarters 72, Bolling Field, Va. 46 Congressional Directory WAR ARMY SERVICE FORCES The Commanding General, Army Service Forces.—Lt. Gen. LeRoy Lutes, the Westchester. Deputy Commanding General and the Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Daniel Noce, Fort Myer, Va. STAFF DIVISIONS Director of Control Division.—Maj. Gen. C. F. Robinson, 3019 Foxhall Road. Director of Personnel.—Maj. Gen. Joe N. Dalton, Fort Myer, Va. Director of Military Training.—Maj. Gen. Fred Walker, 4440 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director of Supply.—Brig. Gen. Neal H. McKay, 3232 Gunston Road, Alex- andria, Va. Dzrector of Matériel. — Maj. Gen. Glen E. Edgerton, Army War College. Fiscal Director—Maj. Gen. A. H. Carter, 2220 Wyoming Avenue. Chief of Finance.—Maj. Gen. W. H. Kasten, 2926 Thirty-eighth Street. The Adjutant General. —Maj. Gen. Edward F. Witsell, 3817 Cathedral Avenue. The Judge Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. Thomas H. Green, 2229 Bancroft Place. Director of Plans and Operations.—Maj. Gen. Daniel Noce, "Fort Myer, Va. ~ Deputy Chief of Staff for Service Commands.—Maj. Gen. Richard Donovan, the Broadmoor. Prot Marshal General.—Brig. Gen. Blackshear M. Bryan, Jr., 3306 Highland lace. Intelligence Division.—Col. J. M. Roamer, 3540 Cumberland Street. TECHNICAL SERVICES The Quartermaster General.—Lt. Gen. E. B. Gregory, 4401 Greenwich Parkway. The Chet of Ordnance. —Lt. Gen. L. H. Campbell, Jr., 2831 Twenty-ninth Str The Chief be Clitonl Warfare Service.—Maj. Gen. Alden H. Waitt, the Kennedy- arren. The Chief of Engineers.—Lt. Gen. R. A. Wheeler, 2022 Columbia Road. The Chief Signal Officer.—Maj. Gen. H. C. Ingles, the Kennedy-Warren. The Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. N. T. Kirk, Army Medical Center. The Chief of 1ransportation.—Maj. Gen. Edmond H. Leavey, 3637 Upton Street. HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON -Commanding General, Military District of Washington.—Brig. Gen. Robert N. Young, 4522 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Staff, Military District of Washington.—Col. Clifton A. Pritchett, 2316 North Stafford Street, Lee Heights, Arlington, Va. ACofS, G1.—Col. Anthony O. Adams, 6247 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. ACofS, G2.—Lt. Col. Elias C. Townsend, 1607 Thirty-first Street. ACofS, G3.—Col. William F. Rehm, 3269 Worthington Street. ACofS, G4.—Col. RaymondJ. Williamson, 6305 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Public Relations Officer.—Lt. Col. Leonce R. Legendre, 4016 Westway Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. ARMY WAR COLLEGE (Washington, D. C.) Acting Commandant.—Col. William N. Todd, Jr., Cavalry. Executive Officer.—Lt. Col. Charles E. Lewis, ‘Infantry. Chief Clerk.— William H. Gaskins, 3110 Thirty-eighth ‘Street. | | WAR Executive Departments 347 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 respec-tive 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. 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. 8). Military Missions... ....... Operations Division, War Department General ta Mississippi River Commission___ Chief of Engineers. Motion publ. Review Board__._ Bureau of Public Relations. National Board for the Promo-Commanding General, Army Ground Forces. tion of Rifle Practice. 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. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF WAR ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION (For list of members, see page 408) ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (For list of members, see page 408) JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES (For list of members, see page 428) THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD (For list of members, see page 405) THE JOINT BOARD (For list of members, see page 428) THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (For list of members, see page 429) 7 348 Congressional Directory JUSTICR DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Constitution Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets. Phone, REpublic 8200) TOM C. CLARK, of Dallas, Tex., Attorney General of the United States (2101 Connecticut Avenue); born September 23, 1899, in Dallas, Tex.; son of William H. and Jennie (Falls) Clark; student, Virginia Military Institute; A. B., University of Texas 1921, LL.B. 1922; married Mary Jane Ramsey, of Texas, on November 8, 1924; chil-dren, Tom C,, Jr. (deceased), William Ramsey, and Mildred; admitted to the bar of the State of Texas June 1922, Texas Supreme Court1922, United States Supreme Court 1932; associate Clark & Clark, 1922-27; One Hundred and Fifty-third Infantry, World War I; civil district attorney for Dallas County, Tex,, 1927; special attorney, Department of Justice, Bureau of War Risk Litigation, 1937; special assistant to the Attorney General assigned to the Antitrust Division, 1938; Chief, West Coast Offices, Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, 1940-42; coordinator of Alien Enemy Control of the Western Defense Command and Chief of Civilian Staff for Japanese War Relocation, 1942; Chief, War Frauds Unit, and first assistant to Assistant * Attorney General in charge of Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, 1942-43; Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, March 1943; Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division, Department of Justice, August 1943; Democrat; Presbyterian; clubs—Dallas (Tex.) Country, Jonathan (Los Angeles), University (Washington, D. C.); fraternities—Masonic (Scottish Rite, Shrine) ; Delta Tau Delta; American, Texas, and Federal Bar Associations; honorary degree, LL.D., Bethany College, 1945. Solicitor General.—J. Howard McGrath, 2717 Chesapeake Street. The Assistant to the Attorney General.—James P. McGranery, the Warwick Hotel, Philadelphia, Pa. Special Assistant.—A. Devitt Vanech, 5808 Nevada Avenue. Assistant Attorneys General: Samuel O. Clark, Jr., the Broadmoor. John F. Sonnett, the La Salle. [Vacaney.] Wendell Berge, 9508 West Stanhope Road, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. Theron Lamar Caudle, 2939 Newark Street. Herbert Wechsler, 3422 Reservoir Road. Assistant Attorney General, Division of Customs.—Paul P. Rao, 201 Varick Street, New York, N. Y. Assistant Solicitor General.—Harold Judson, 4607 Connecticut Avenue. Freon Assistant to the Attorney General—Donald C. Cook, 2800 Woodle oad. : Secretary to the Attorney General.—Grace M. Stewart, the Westchester. Director of Public Relations.— Timothy A. Meclnerny. a Ta AO NARA Pardon Attorney.— Daniel M. Lyons, 4237 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant Pardon Attorney.—G. Lynn Barry, 1400 Fairmont Street. FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (Phone, EXecutive 7100) Director.—J. Edgar Hoover, 4936 Thirtieth Place. Assistants to the Director—Clyde A. Tolson, Marlyn Apartments; Edward A. Tamm, 3353 Runnymede Place. Assistant Directors.—Hugh H. Clegg, Woodley Park Towers; W. Richard Glavin, 815 Green Street, Arlington, Va.; D. Milton Ladd, 5235 Nebraska Avenue; Louis B. Nichols, box 11, route 3, Alexandria, Va.; Stanley J. Tracy, 918 Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Alex Rosen, Colonial Village Apartments, Arlington, Va. : IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (Franklin Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa.) Commissioner.— Carusi, 83720 Fordham Road, Washington, D. C. Ugo Deputy Commissioner.— Thomas B. Shoemaker, Mayfair House, Germantown, Pa. JUSTICE Executive Departments 349 \ Assistant Commissioner— For Adjudications.—Joseph Savoretti, 3736 Woodland Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa. For Alien Control.—Willard F. Kelly, 1522 Lynnewood Drive, Manoa, Upper Darby, Pa. General Counsel.—L. Paul Winings, 509 Argyle Road, Drexel Hill, Pa. Director of Research and Educational Services. —Henry 'B. Hazard, Mayfair House, Germantown, Pa. buen: of Administrative Services. —Perry M. Oliver, 269 Bickley Road, Glenside, a Director of Personnel—Edward A. Loughran (acting), Mayfair House, Ger-mantown, Pa. (Hutchins Building, Washington, D. C.) Special Assistant to the Commassioner.—Edward J. Shaughnessy, Dorchester House. : BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS (Washington, D. C.) Chatrman.—Thomas G. Finucane, 5514 Center Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Members.—Robert, M. Charles, 3526 T Street; Leigh L. Nettleton, 7327 Four-teenth Street; Jack Wasserman, 2717 South Veitch Street, Arlington, Va.; Patricia H. Collins, 2500 Q Street. Chief Examiner. — Robert E. Ludwig, 4509 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. ~N BUREAU OF PRISONS Director—James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Directors.— William T. Hammack, the Argonne Apartments; Frank Loveland, Fairfax, Va. 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 ezecutive— Walter K. Urich, 5807 Annapolis Road, Hyattsville, Md. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Admanistrative Assistant to the Attorney Gemeral.—S. A. Andretta, 3447—-A South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrative Assistant.—[Vacant.] Chief, Budget and Planning Section—E. R. Butts, 105 Randolph Avenue East, Alexandria, Va. Chef Clerk —Harvey C. Donaldson, Dorchester House. Chief, Division of Accounts — Eugene J. Matchett, 613 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chef, Personnel Officc—John W. Adler, 1801 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Records Administration Office.—Armando di Girolamo, Montgomery Arms, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Supplies and Printing.— Archibald C. Keegin, Annapolis June-tion, Md. 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 of Institutions and Agencies, Trenton, N. J., 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. Robert Watt, American Federation of Labor, Washington, D. C., representing labor. 78349°—T79—2—1st ed. 24 350 Congressional Directory JUSTICE \ Officers and Directors—Continued. Commissioner of Prison Industries.—James V. Benno, 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.; J. M. Burns, West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; John C. Hill, 2651 Sixteenth Street; R. A. Lawless, 4703 Twenty-fifth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Secretary. —Ralph J. LaVallee, 314 Rittenhouse Street. nN POST OFFICE Executive Departments POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Twelfth and Thirteenth Streets. Phone, DIstrict 5360) ROBERT E. HANNEGAN, of Missouri, Postmaster General (4955 Glenbrook Road); born June 30, 1903, at St. Louis, Mo.; son of John Patrick and Anna (Holden) Hannegan; educated at Yeatman High School, St. Louis, Mo., and St. Louis University Law School, LL.B., 1925; engaged in practice "of law in St. Louis 1925-42; appointed collector of internal revenue for the Eastern District of Missouri on June 1, 1942; appointed Commissioner of Internal Revenue on October 10, 1943; elected chairman of the Democratic National Committee on January 22, 1944; assumed duties as Postmaster General July 1, 1945; mar-ried Irma Protzmann, of St. Louis, Mo., November 14, 1929; has four children, Patricia, Robert Emmet, Jr., William v, and Sally Ann. stile Assistant to the Postmaster General.—Sidney Salomon, Jr., 2480 Sixteenth treet. Director of Budget and Administrative Planning.—Joseph F. Gartland, 1634 Nineteenth Street. Commissioner of the Budget.—Alfer B. Strom, 3432 South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Commassioner of Administrative Planning.—Archie A. Imus, 3001 Porter Street. Special Assistants to the Postmaster General.—George E. Clifford, 921 Taylor Street NE.; Samuel R. Young, 1530 Sixteenth Street. Chief Clerk and Director of Personnel.—Frank H. Ellis, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief Clerk and Personnel Officer.—Harold Ww. Bresnahan, 3361 Runny- mede Place. Purchasing Agent.—Harrison Parkman, the Raleigh. Solicitor.— Vincent M. Miles, 1312 Twenty-second Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Solicitor.— Walter E. Kelly, 2700 Wisconsin Avenue. A Solicitor—Calvin W. pm 219 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma ark, Md. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL First Assistant Postmaster General.—Jesse M. Donaldson, 2800 Woodley Road. Deputy First Assistants.—Clinton B. Uttley, 7700 Blair Road; Tom C. Cargill, 7 Everett Street, Kensington, Md. Special Administrative Aide.—Clarence N. Bruce, 4400 South Thirty-fourth Street, Arlington, Va. Assistants to Special Administrative Aide.—Henry C. Wyman, 3149 Nineteenth Street; Earle L. Stone, 903 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va.; Hugh E. Alford, 4511 Thirty-eighth Street. Post Office Service: Division No. 1: Sune inendenle=Reed U. Mills, 715 South Washington Street, Alexandria, a. ; Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street. Division No. 2: Superintendent.—[Vacant.] dosti) Superintendent.—Jeremiah J. Dwyer, 246 Arlington Village, Arling- ton, Va. Division No. 3: Superintendent. ol oseph E. Cooper, 4437 Brandywine Street. lon en) Superintendent. —Donald R. Niblack, 401 Jackson Place, Alexandria, a Division No. 4: Superintendent.—John J. Leahey, 3896 Porter Street. Assistant Superintendent. —[ Vacant. ] Division of Postmasters: Superintendent.—Charles C. Wenrich, 6609 Thirty-second Place. Assistant Superintendent.—Norman R. Grant, 4209 Forty-sixth Street. |S ¢ f x LL& 352 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Gael Sullivan, the Dodge. Deputy Second Assistant.—Roy M. Martin, 725 Nineteenth Street. Special Administrative Aide.—James A. Faithful, 526 Newcomb Street SE. 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. Assistant Superintendent, Car Construction.—Arthur L. Van Horn, 3104 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Division of International Postal Service: Director.—Stewart M. Weber, 6702 Marlboro Pike SE. Assistant Directors.— Vincent B. Waters, 5103 Chevy Chase Parkway; Edward J. Mahoney, 910 Erie Avenue. -Division of Railway Adjustments: Superintendent.— Charles H. Stephenson, 3424 Thirtieth Street. Assistant Superintendents.— Edward C. Steagall, 3205 Twenty-eighth Street SE.; Harry S. Frankhauser, 3613 Van Ness Street. Division of Air Mail Service: Superintendent.—Robert S. Burgess, Livingston Manor. Assistant Superintendent.—[Vacant.] OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Joseph J. Lawler, Dorchester House. Deputy Third Assistant.—Roy M. North, 2501 Calvert Street. Deputy Third Assistant.—Nelson B. Wentzel, 1630 Nicholson Street. Special Administrative Aide.—John A. Brennan, 1886 Monroe Street. Assistant to Special Administrative Aide. —Clifford O. Arnebeck, 1551 North Falk- land Lane, Silver Spring, Md. -Division of Finance: Superintendent and Disbursing Officer.—George Grubbs, 311 Madison Street. Assistant Superintendent and Assistant Disbursing Officer.—Arthur E. Martin, 3712 Alton Place. Division of Stamps: Superintendent. —Robert E. Fellers, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Superintendents. — Herbert S. Chamberlin, 1550 East-West Highway; Francis J. Salb, 5612 First Street NE. Division of Postal Savings: Superintendent.—Charles H. Kocher, 4616 Albemarle Street. Assistant Superintendents.—Edward A. Rowell, 3932 Fourth Street, Arlington, Va.; Harry A. Leusenkamp, 1721 Kearney Street NE. Division’ of Money Orders: Superintendent.—Harry E. Stine, 2008 Glen Ross Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Superintendents.— Cecil V. Wiman, 2822 Sixth ‘Street NE.; Edward F. Roberson, Seat Pleasant, Md. 7 Division of Letter and Miscellaneous Mail: ’ Superintendent.— Charles M. Davidson, 9208 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Superintendent.—John F. Trabold, 6613 Twenty-fourth Street North, Falls Church, Va. Division of Newspaper and Periodical Mail: Superintendent.—James O. Bouton, 2857 Monroe Street NE. Assistant Superintendent. _ William B. Mansfield, 698 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Division of Registered Mails: Superintendent.—John A. King, 16 West Maple Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Superintendents.— Walter D. Brown, 3504 Sixteenth Street; Everett C. Johnson, 1616 Hobart Street. Division of Parcel Post: Director.—Jesse C. Harraman, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Director.— Edward R. J ones, 9716 Sutherland Road, Silver Spring, Md. ZOUPOTTICE Executive Departments 358 Pl 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. Special Administrative Aide to Fourth Assistant Postmaster General.—Louis Y. de Zychlinski, 4260 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Division of Engineering and Research: Superintendent.— Wrightson Chambers, the Continental. Assistant Superintendent.—Milton J. Anderson, 5531 Fourteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. Division of Post Office Quarters: Superintendent.—Joseph F. Betterley, 5004 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Superintendents.—Charles H. Carle, 4612 Eighth Street; Harold E. Richardson, 2901 Queens Chapel Road, Mount Rainier, Md. Division of Motor Vehicle Service: Superintendent.—A. G. Biedenweg, 3120 Quesada Street. Assistant Superintendents.—Arthur R. Gehman, 3708 Fortieth Place, Brent- wood, Md.; Arthur K. Kauffman, Elkridge, Md. Division of Federal Building Operations: Supe onisndint = Broderis C. Cornwell, 9014 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Assistant Superintendent.—John J. McGinness. 4618 DeRussey Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Equipment and Supplies: Superintendent.—George W. Trexler, 5245 Nebraska Avenue. Assistant Superintendents.—Leo Vullings, 3500 Fourteenth Street; Oscar K. Byerly, Falls Church, Va. Mail Equipment Shops: Superintendent. oor Frech, 4716 Fifth Street. ghost Superintendent. “Fred H. Clough, 747 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Division of Topography: Topographer.—Arthur S. Page, 1552 Forty-fourth Street. Assistant Topographer.—Paul Profe, 1344 Sheridan Street. Division of Traffic: Traffic Manager.—James R. Murphy, 745 Varnum Street. BUREAU OF THE CHIEF INSPECTOR Chief Inspector—James J. Doran, the Continental. Assistant Chief Inspector. __Richard E. Eggleton, the Continental. General Superintendent.—Roscoe E. Mague, 1812 Newton Street NE. Senior Administrative Officers.—Harold W. Davis, P. O. Box 763, Alexandria, Va.; Thomas W. Davis, 309 Fifteenth Street NE. Division of Service I nvestigations: Superintendent.— Walter H. Pilcher, 204 Crestmoor Circle, Woodmoor, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Superintendent.—John F. Free, 3035 Military Road. -Drvision of Admanistrative Investigations: Supe nisndont. Nidal L. Keefe, 8510 Loughborough Place, Chevy Chase, M Assistant Superintendent.—Henry S. Simpkins, 6014 Second Street. Division of Marl Investigations: Superintendent.—Joseph M. Cohen, 1337 Randolph Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Francis A. Cole, 6307 Thirty-third Street. Division of Financial Investigations: Superintendent.— Elmer J. Dutemple, 4603 Fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Superintendent.—Fred Schuppe, Jr., 1414 South Pollard Street, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Comptroller.—John J. Haggerty, 4813 Ruatan Street, Berwyn, Md. Assistant Comptroller.—John W. Askew, 808 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Special Administrative Aide.—Joseph P. Griffin, 1646 Monroe Street. 354 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Division of Cost Ascertainment: Superintendent.— Alfred H. Black, 1539 I Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Seth E. DeMaret, 808 South St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Division of Accounts: Superintendent.—Thomas J. Cronin, 3717 Warren Street. Assistant Superintendent.—Gordon N. Miller, 1227 Shepherd Street. Division of Methods and Procedures: Principal Administrative Officers.—TLucas A. Leighton, 626 Silver Spring Avenue, Wg Spring, Md.; Edmund J. Walsh, 3521 South Stafford Street, Arlington, a Senor El eisai Officer.— Virgil C. Stone, 1105 Flower Avenue, Takoma ark, 2 Administrative Officers.—David B. Albright, 202 East Luray Avenue, Alexan-dria, Va.; Raymond H. Wheeler, 3713 Thirty-fourth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. NAVY | Executive Departments | 355 L} DEPARTMENT, OF THE NAVY (Navy Department Building, Potomac Park, Eighteenth Sireet and Constitution Avenue. Phone. -REpublic 7400) JAMES FORRESTAL, Secretary of the Navy (3508 Prospect Avenue), investment banker; born, Beacon, N. Y., February 15, 1892; son of James and Mary A. (Toohey) Forrestal; student, Dartmouth College, 1911-12, Princeton University, 1912-15; married Josephine Ogden, October 12, 1926; children— Michael, Peter; with N. J. Zinc Co., Tobacco Products Corporation, New York City (1915-16); with Dillon, Read & Co., 1916-40, president 1937-40; Under Secretary of the Navy, 1940-44; appointed Secretary of the Navy, May 10, 1944; served as lieutenant, junior grade, United States Naval Air Service, 1917-19; Democrat. Clubs: Racquet and Tennis, Links, River (New York City) ; Meadow-brook (Long Island, N. Y.). Office: Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Under Secretary of the Navy.—[Vacant.] Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—H. Struve Hensel, 2814 Dumbarton Avenue. Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—John L. Sullivan, 4871 Glenbrook Road. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Naval Aide to the Secretary of the Navy.— Capt. Edmund B. Taylor, 3107 Valley Drive, Park Fairfax, Alexandria, Va. Special Assistants to the Secretary of the Navy.—Maj. Mathias F. Correa, U. S. M. C. R., Westchester Apartments; Eugene S. Duffield, Falls Church, Va.; Rear Adm. Lewis L. Strauss, the Shoreham. : : Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—Katharine Foley, Westchester Apartments. OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Naval Aides to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Capt. Robert N. McFarlane, 4237 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Capt. A. B. Vosseller, 3654 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Special Assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Commander David G. Click, 1 Scott Circle; Charles Piozet, 6902 Pine Way, College Heights, Md.; Francis X. Downey, 830 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Private Secretary to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Doris M. Erbe, 602 Bashford Lane, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE 'OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Depaity to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—W. John Kenney, 78 Kalorama ircle. Naval Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Commander Richard G. McClung, 1680 Thirty-first Street. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Commander H. Spotts-wood White, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—VirginiaM. Campbell, 3827 Veazey Street. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR AIR Naval Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Capt. William V. Saunders, 221 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Capt. Roy H. Callahan, 822 ‘Monroe Street; Commander James Q. Newton, 2616 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va.; James F. O’Neil, 4871 Glenbrook Road. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Ellen H. Bloyer. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE (Room 1010, Navy Department Building) Administrative Officer.—Capt. Ronald J. Chinnock, 532 Twentieth Street. Assistant to the Administrative Officer—Ben Abbott, 305 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 356 Congressional Directory | NAVY [} Admanistrative Assistant and Director, Operating Services Branch.—J. S. Davitt, 422 Allison Street. Director, Departmental Civilian Personnel Branch.—Commander Willis Sargent, 125 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : Dor Office Methods Branch.—Lt. Comdr. Herbert Angel, route 3, Bethesda, Director, Publications Branch.— Walter A. Jacobson, 3659 Minnesota Avenue SE. BOARD OF DECORATIONS AND MEDALS (Room 1635, Arlington Annex) Senior Member.—Rear Adm. R. W. Hayler, the Wardman Park. Member and Recorder.— Capt. H. G. Patrick (retired), 2 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. dal BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS AND NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) (Room 100, Navy Department Corcoran Annex, Twenty-third and D Streets) Prodigen, Dom Adm. Benjamin H. Dorsey, Medical Corps (retired), 3500 Newark treet. Recorder.— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. BOARD.OF REVIEW, DISCHARGES AND DISMISSALS (Room 1602, Tempo No. 2) President.—Capt. A. B. Anderson, Cathedral Mansions. Secretary.—Lt. Comdr. H. W. Hall, 125 Granville Avenue, Annapolis, Md. Senior Member, Board No. 2.—Capt. Paul Cassard, Ontario Apartments. Senior Legal Member.— Commander Jerome A. Lederman, 610 Twenty-third Street South, Arlington, Va. Office Manager.—Lt. Comdr. John L. Peacock, 2517 Thirty-ninth Street. Recorder, Marine Corps.—Maj. John R. Blandford, 811 South Fillmore Street, Arlington, Va. Recorder, Coast Guard.—Lt. Robert J. Clark, 732 Kennedy Street. GENERAL BOARD (Room 2743, Navy Department Building) Chairman.—Admiral A. J. Hepburn, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Members.—Admiral E. C. Kalbfus, 3416 Reservoir Road; Vice Adm. A. G. Kirk, 3017 N Street; Vice Adm. O. M. Hustvedt, 3525 Ordway Street; Rear Adm. R. W. Hayler, the Wardman Park. Secretary.—Capt. W. D. Chandler, 5101 Tilden Street. Chief Clerk.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. INDUSTRIAL SURVEY DIVISION (Room L-2509) Director.—Rear Adm. Joseph J. Broshek, the Jefferson. Assistant Director.—Capt. Lew M. Atkins, 3504 Macomb Street. Members.—Capt. Harold C. Gwynne, 1673 Columbia Road; Capt. Guy C. Hitch-cock, Alban Towers; Capt. Joseph L. McGuigan, the Wardman Park; Capt. John E. Ostrander, Jr., 818 Seventeenth Street; Commander Raymond W. Fox, 12 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, Md. Administrative Assistant.—Lt. (jg) Robert W. Leavenworth, 30 Old Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. LEND-LEASE LIAISON OFFICE (Room 1034, Navy Department Building) Liaison Officer—Admiral J. M. Reeves (retired), the Brighton. Aide.—Lt. Douglas L. C. Jones, 4824 Linnean Street. NAVY Executive Departments 357 MATERIAL DIVISION, OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY (Room 2010, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Vice Adm. B. Moreell (CEC), 2300 E Street. Vice Chief—W. John Kenney, 78 Kalorama Circle. Special Assistant.—J. H. Vincent, 3107 Dumbarton Avenue. Special Assistant, General Administration. —Capt. Charles K. Mallory (retired), 2531 Q Street. Chief, Inspection Administration.—Coramodore R. M. Watt, 2339 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Production Branch.—Rear Adm. A. M. Charlton, 1341 New Hampshire Avenue. Chief, Procurement Branch. — Commander Mark Andrews, 1404 Thirty-fifth Street. Chief, I ndustrial Readjustment Branch.—Rear Adm. H. L. Merring (retired), Chevy Chase Club. Chief, Property Disposition Branch.—Capt. Robert F. Batchelder. Chief, Joint Procurement Branch.—Capt. Ralph J. Arnold, 914 St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. NAVAL CLEMENCY AND PRISON INSPECTION BOARD (Room 3025, Navy Department Building) Sentor Member.— Vice Adm. J. K. Taussig (retired), 2126 Connecticut Avenue. Recorder.—Lt. Comdr. Richard L. Tedrow, 4505 Ridge Street, Chevy Chase, Md. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (LINE) (Room 100, Navy Department Corcoran Annex, Twenty-third and D Streets) President.—Rear Adm. David M. LeBreton, 2320 S Street. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD (Room 100, Navy Department Corcoran Annex, Twenty-third and D Streets) President.— Rear Adm. Benjamin H. Dorsey, Medical Corps (retired), 3500 Newark Street. Recorder.— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street,hy dxtingion, Va. NAVAL RETIRING REVIEW BOARD (Room 1534, Arlington Annex) President.—Rear Adm. P. H. Bastedo (retired), 3055 Whitehaven Street. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND REPORTS : (Room 1025, Navy Department Building) Director.—Rear Adm. Ezra G. Allen, 2419 California Street. Assistant Director.—Capt. Alfred Tawresey, 2305 South Pierce Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE FISCAL DIRECTOR (Room 1026, Navy Department Building) Fiscal Director—W. J. McNeil, 1802 Irving Street. Counsel.—Marx Leva, 3051 Idaho Avenue. OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL (Room 2310, Navy Department Building) General Counsel.—J. Henry Neale, 1316 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant General Counsel —W. Randall Compton, 7216 Harwick Road, Wood-acres, Md. Executive Officer. — Commander John W. Avirett, 2d, 2309 Calvert Stroct. 358 Congressional Directory NAVY Counsel for Bureaus.— Aeronautics—William Wemple, 3130 Wisconsin Avenud; Ordnance—Orville H. Schell, Jr., 4701 Alton Place; Naval Personnel— Com: mander Gerard Swope, Jr., 2309 Calvert Street; Ships— Mason 0. Damon, 1620 Fitzgerald Lane, Alexandria, Va.; Supplies and Accounts—Arthur L. Shipman, Jr., 1716 Twenty-second Street; Yards and Docks—Edward G. Chandler, 4523 Maple Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Navy Price Adjustment Board—Melvin A. Hardies, 6626 Hillendale Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Material Division of the Office of the Assistant Secretary— Dudley W. Orr, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. OFFICE OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS (Room 2028, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Real Adm. F. G. Crisp, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY (Room 2307, Navy Department Building) Judge Advocate General.—Rear Adm. O. S. Colclough, 1806 South Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Rear Adm. George L. Russell, 204 East Columbia Street, Falls Church, Va. Aide to Judge Advocate General.—Lt. Charles H. Burton, 1508 Seminary Place, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF THE MANAGEMENT ENGINEER (Room 1010, Navy Department Building) Management Engineer.—Capt. R. M. Paget, 4708 River Road. Assistant Management Engineer —Commander W. F. McCormick, 3634 Windom Place. OFFICE OF NAVAL HISTORY (Room 2735, Navy Department Building) Director—Admiral E. C. Kalbfus (retired). Deputy Director.—Commodore D. W. Knox (retired). Assistant Directors: ; Administrative History.—Dr. R. G. Albion. Operational History.—Commander S. E. Morison. Special Assistant.—Commander A. D. Turnbull. Executive Assistant.—Lt. M. F. Ivey Hawkins. Records Officer.—Lt. Shirley R. Baraw. OFFICE OF NAVAL PETROLEUM AND OIL SHALE RESERVES (Room 1011, Tempo No. 2) ~ Director.—Commodore William G. Greenman, 204 Hanover Street, Annapolis, Md. OFFICE OF NAVY PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES (Room 2449, Navy Department Building) Director.—Commodore Gene Markey, Army-Navy Club. Assistant Director.— Commander H. A. MacDonald. NAVY PHOTOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE (Room 2442, Navy Department Building) Director.— Capt. Edward J. Steichen. OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION (Room 0014, Navy Department Building) Director—Rear Adm. H. B. Miller, Army and Navy Club. Deputy Director. =Copt, Ww. C. Chambliss, 304 Fontaine Street, Alexandria, Va. NAVY Executive Departments 359 OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND INVENTIONS (Room 3449, Navy Department Building) Chief —Rear Adm. H. G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road. Assistant Chief. —Rear Adm. Luis de Florez, 1900 Q Street. OFFICE OF SAVINGS BONDS (Room 1416, Navy Department Building) Coordinator.—Capt. C. J. Zimmerman, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Dendy Soardietne~ Comdr. E. M. Landis, 111 Lake Avenue, Piedmont, * Calif. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW BOARD Senior Member.—H. Struve Hensel, 2814 Dumbarton Avenue. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW COMMITTEE Chairman.—H. Struve Hensel, 2814 Dumbarton Avenue. Secretary.—Lt. Comdr. W. V. Reilly, 2115 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW DIVISION (Room 2428, Navy Department Building) Director—Lt. Comdr. W. V. Reilly, 2115 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Deputy Deans Comdr. FE. W. Waeber, 4305 North Pershing Drive, Arling-ton, Va. Assistant Director.—Lt. Comdr. C. F. Nettleship, Jr., 1212 Woodside Parkway, ; Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS (Room 2064, Navy Department Building) Chief of Naval Operations.—Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, U. S. N., U. 8. 8. Dauntless, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C. . : Naval Inspector General.— Admiral C. P. Snyder, U. S. N., 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Special Assistant to Chief of Naval Operations for Logistics.—Admiral F. J. Horne, U.S. N., 2300 E Street. Vice Chief of Naval Operations.— Admiral R. S. Edwards, U. 8. N., the Shoreham. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Air).—Vice Adm. M. A. Mitscher, U. 8. N,, 5 Wetherill Road, Westmoreland Hills. : Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Operations).—Vice Adm. C. M. Cooke, Jr., U. S. S. Dauntless, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Logistics).—Vice Adm. W. S. Farber, U. S. N., the Kennedy-Warren. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Personnel).—Vice Adm.L. E. Denfeld, U. S. N., - Westchester Apartments. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Administration).—Rear Adm. B. H. Bieri, U.S. N,, 3926 McKinley Street. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS (Room 2085, Navy Department Building) Cres Bureau of Aeronautics.—Rear Adm. Harold B. Sallada, 5117 Macomb treet. ) Assistant Chief.—Rear Adm. L. B. Richardson, 3325 Quebec Place. Director, Administration Division.—Capt. Ferdinand Jelke, 3d, 2745 Twenty- ninth Street. ; Director, Contract Administration Division.—Capt. Frank A. Zunino, 1028 Con-necticut Avenue. Director, Engineering Division.—Capt. Theodore C. Lonnquest, 110 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Fiscal Division.—Capt. Elwood A. Cobey, 3201 Thirty-third Place. Director, Maintenance Division.—Capt. Edward W. Clexton, 4225 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. _———— 360 Congressional Directory NAVY Director, Military Requirements Division.—Capt. Robert E. Dixon, 3488 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. \ Dzrector, Photography Division.—Capt. Loverne A. Pope, 4416 Alton Place. Dzrector, Procurement Division.—Capt. Geoffrey S. Smith, 2723 Q Street. Director, Production Diviston.—Capt. Leland D. Webb, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Darector, Progress Diviston.—Capt. Irving M. McQuiston, 2737 Devonshire Place. Director, Supply Division.—Capt. Theodore S. Dukeshire, 1518 Allison Street. Head, Shore Establishments Group.—Capt. Daniel N. Logan, 400 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (Potomac Annex, Twenty-third and E Streets) Chief.—Vice Adm. Ross T Melntire (M. C.), Surgeon General, U. S. N., 3637 Forty-ninth Street. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. William J. C, Agnew (M. C.), 401 Rose-mary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Suregon General for Dentisiry.—Rear Adm. A. G. Lyle (D. C.), 3509 Thirty-fourth Street. Assistant to the Surgeon General for Inspections.—Rear Adm. George C. Thomas (M. C.), 418 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Civilian Assistant to the Surgeon General.—W. S. Douglass, Wellington Villa, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Inspector of Medical Department Activities, Atlantic Coast.—Rear Adm. Dallas G. Sutton (M. C.), 5155 Macomb Street. Assistant Chief of Administration Division.—Lt. Chester L. Guthrie H (S), R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. ! Chief of Aviation Medicine Diviston.—Commodore John C. Adams (M. C.), 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief of Finance Division.—Capt. Carl H. McMillan (M. C.), 119 Lynn Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Matériel Division.—Rear Adm. Kent C. Melhorn (M. C.), United States Naval Medical Supply Depot, Brooklyn, N. Y. Head, Matériel Division, Washington Office.—Lt. Comdr. P. T. Rees (H. C.), 3110 South High Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Medical Statistics Diwviston.—Commander F. R. Lang (M. C.), 2407 Fif-teenth Street. Chief of Personnel Division.—Commodore W. W. Hargrave (M. C.), 8550 Locust Hill Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief of Physical Qualifications and Medical Records Division.—Capt. B. H. Adams (M. C.), R. F. D. 3, Fairfax, Va. Chief of Planning Division.—Commodore Carlton L. Andrus (M. C.), 3170 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief of Preventive Medicine Division.—Capt. Otto L. Burton (M. C.), 4522 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md. Clad, of Professional Division.—Rear Adm. John Harper (M. C.), 4204 Yuma treet. Chief of Publications Division.—Commander R. C. Ransdell (M. C.), 1831 Bel-mont Road. Clea of Research Division.—Rear Adm. Harold W. Smith (M. C.), 4000 Cathedral venue. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL (Navy Department, Arlington Annex, Arlington, Va.) -(For answers to questions concerning naval personne! call Congressional Liaison Office, Bureau of Naval Personnel, REpublic 7400, extension 71375; Senate Liaison Office, REpublic 7400, extension 61209; or House Liaison Office, REpublic 7400, extension 62125) Chief of Naval Personnel.—Vice Adm. Louis E. Denfeld, the Westchester. fhm) Chief of Naval Personnel.—Rear Adm. W. M. Fechteler, 4000 Cathedral venue. Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel for Demobilization.—Rear Adm. J. L. Holloway, 924 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Aide to Chief of Naval Personnel.—Lt. M. C. Courts, the Brighton. Administrative Assistant to Chief of Naval Personnel.—Helen M. Hess, 3301 Sixteenth Street. ¥ { NAVY Executive Departments 361 Special Assistants.—Commander M. C. Mumford, 1030 North Nelson Street, Arlington, Va.; Capt. G. V. Stewart, Front Royal, Va.; Capt. R. A. Koch, 826 Connecticut Avenue; Franklin TY Schuyler, 101 North Highland Street, Arlington, Va.; Commander W. F. Calkins, 3332—A South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Adminzstrative Officer.—Lt. R. M. Sanderson, 31 Kent Street, Kensington, Md. Dorecloy of Women’s Reserve.—Capt. Mildred McAfee Horton, 4000 Cathedral venue. Director of Congressional Liaison.— Commander H. V. Bird, 3107 Woodland Drive, Arlington, Va. press of Demobilization.—Capt. W. F. Petersen, 424 Queen Street, Alexandria, Planning Division.—Commander B. L. Gurnette, 612 Nineteenth Street. Field Services Division.—Capt. F. R. Stickney, 1500 Mount Eagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Civil Readjustment Division.—Lt. Comdr. J. B. Whitelaw, 2701 North Twenty- fourth Street, Arlington, Va. Information Division.—Lt. Comdr. J. M. Stokes, 532 Twentieth Street. Central Control Division.—Commander R. V. Robinson, 817 North Irving Street, Arlington, Va. Director of ‘Enlisted Personnel. —Capt. A. J. Robertson, 3824 Legation Street. Assistant Director of Enlisted Personnel.—Capt. J. 'H, Shultz, 5929 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Recruiting and Induction Division. Capt. D. A. White, 2500 Q Street. Br pisien Distribution Division.—Capt. G. R. Cooper, 2812 Twenty-seventh treet. Enlisted Performance Division.—Capt. W. M. Cole, 607 Beverly Drive, Alex-" andria, Va. Director of Officer Personnel.—Capt. C. L. Green, 9343 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director of Officer Personnel.—Capt. A. F. Converse, 2711 South Inge Street, Arlington, Va Officer Distribution Division.—Capt. H. Crommelin, 320 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Officer Performance Division.—Capt. C. J. Cater, 4647-B Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Officer Procurement Division.—Commander C. K. Duncan, 4886-B Twenty-eighth Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Planning and Control.—Rear Adm. F. L. Johnson, 817 Twenty-sixth Place South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director of Planning and Control.—Capt. M. E. Arnold, Army and avy Plans and Operations Division.—Capt. W. B. McHugh, 4453 Q Street. Finance and Material Division.—Capt. D. F. McLean, 3333 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Director of "Training. — Capt. E. R. Durgin, 2807 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Director of Training.—Capt. J. M. Will, 5315 North Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Standards and Curriculum Division.—Commander Li. Ensey, the Roger Smith. Field Administration Division.—Capt. W. G. Fisher, 506 Woodland Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Training Aids Division. —Capt. F. C. Camp, the Wardman Park. Quality Control Division.—Capt. W. R. Headden, 3223 Macomb Street. Director of Welfare.—Capt. T. > O’Brien, 1838 North Herndon Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director of Welfare—Capt. G. A. Leahey, Jr., 1112 Sixteenth Street. Special Services Division.—Commander D. B. Cushing, 621 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Corrective Services Division.—Col. E. W. Skinner, U. S: M. C., 804 Bashford Lane, Alexandria, Va. Dependents Welfare Division.—Commander W. W. Finke, 4811 South Twenty- seventh Road, Arlington, Va. Dzrector of Chaplains. —Rear Adm. W. N. Thomas, the Westchester. Director of Records and Transportation. —Capt. J. B. Rutter, 7118 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Director of Records and Transportation. —Commander B. P. Seaman, 1679 Thirty-fifth Street. 362 Congressional Directory NAVY Director of Records and Transportation—Continued. Transportation Diviston.—Capt. H. A. Yeager, the Wardman Park. Records Diviston.—Commander J. H. Tallman, 1401 South Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. Naval Academy Section.—Leonard Draper, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (Room 0036, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Adm. G. F. Hussey, Jr., 3218 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. W. A. Kitts, 3d, the Westchester. Chief Administrative Officer.—Harry M. Klee, 716 Taylor Street. Director, Administrative Division.—Capt. J. H. Carter, 2737 Devonshire Place. Director, Naval Ordnance Establishments Division.—Capt. William Granat, 3552 Brandywine Street. Director, Planning and Progress Division.—Capt. O. A. Weller, 6127 Utah Avenue. Director, Production Divistion.—Capt. R. H. Roberts, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Fleet Maintenance Division.—Capt. W. J. Longfellow, Peabody Apart- ments, Baltimore, Md. Dreier, Research and Development Diviston.—Capt. A. A. Burke, 4529 Hawthorne treet. Director, Financial Diviston.—Capt. A. G. Zimermann (retired), 2908 Forty-fifth Street. : Senior Member, Special Board on Naval Ordnance.—Capt. G. L. Schuyler, 1506 Thirty-fourth Street. Tuspritor of Explosive Activities.—Capt. L. P. Davis (retired), 2123 California treet. BUREAU OF SHIPS : (Room 3-1804, Navy Department Temporary Building T-3) Chief a Bureau.—Vice Adm. Edward L. Cochrane, Quarters C, Twenty-third and treets. A Sond of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Earle W. Mills, 6208 Hillcrest Place, Chevy ase, Md. Senior Member, Contract Settlement Review Board (Room 3—-2703).—Rear Adm. Ivan E. Bass (retired), 3220 Cathedral Avenue. Special Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—A. Brice Biggers, 1379 Sheridan Street. Director of Administration (Room 3-1816).—Capt. E. E. Roth, 2308 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va. Fiscal Director (Room 3-1716).— Capt. Philip G. Lauman (retired), 3900 Cathe-dral Avenue. Director of Shipbuilding (Room 4—2034).—Rear Adm. Charles L. Brand, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Director of Ship Maintenance (Room 4—2002).—Rear Adm. Sherman S. Kennedy, 1022 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Va. Director of Electronics (Room §—C103).—Commodore Jennings B. Dow, the West-chester. Director of Contracts (Room 3-2004).—Rear Adm. Frank J. Wille, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Director of the Shore Division (Room 4—2044).—Rear Adm. Norborne L. Rawlings, : the Kennedy-Warren. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS (Room I-2131, Navy Department Building) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. W. J. Carter (SC), the Kennedy-Warren. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. H. D. Nuber (SC), 2347 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant to Chief of Bureau and Deputy Fiscal Director.—Norwood P. Cassidy, 3292 Chestnut Street. : Professional Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—Capt. P. P. Brown (SC), 126 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Office Manager.—Lt. Comdr. R. W. Story (SC), the Hawthorne. Chief Clerk.—Jacob H. Hollinger, 315 A Street SE. NAVY Executive Departments 363 BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (Bureau of Yards and Docks Annex) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. John J. Manning, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy. Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Lewis B. Combs, Corps of Civil Engineers, 5511 Broad Branch Road. Chief Inspector—Rear Adm. Edward L. Marshall, Corps of Civil Engineers, 3610 Kanawha Street. ; Chief Planning Officer.—Rear Adm. William H. Smith, Corps of Civil Engineers, the Shoreham. Director, Planning and Design Department.—Rear Adm. W. H. Smith, Corps of Civil Engineers, the Shoreham. Director, Construction Department.—Capt. Theron A. Hartung, Corps of Civil Engineers, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Finance and Operating Department.—Capt. J. J. Chew, Corps of Civil Engineers, 5925 Thirty-second Street, Director, Advance Base Department.—Capt. Cuthbert P. Conrad, Corps of Civil Engineers, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Administration and Personnel Department.—Capt. H. P. Needham, Corps of Civil Engineers, 1 Scott Circle. Director, Progress Control and Statistical Department.—Capt. A. C. Eberhard, Corps of Civil Engineers, 3605 Jenifer Street. NATIONAL NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER (Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer.—Rear Adm. William Chambers (M. C.), Quarters A. Medical Center. : BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) President—Rear Adm. William Chambers (M. C.), QuartersA, Medical Center. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS (Naval Medical School, N ational Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) President.—Rear Adm. William Chambers (M. C.), Quarters A, Medical Center. NAVAL DENTAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Dental Officer in Command.—Capt. Clemens V. Rault, Dental Corps, 3107 Forty-fourth Street. NAVAL HOSPITAL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Medical Officer in Command.—Capt. Robert E. Duncan, Medical Corps, Naval Hospital. NAVAL HOSPITAL CORPS SCHOOL (W—R) (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Medical Officer in Command. — Commander M. V. Brown, Medical Corps. 4557 Windsor Lane, Bethesda, Md. NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) N Commanding Officer—Capt. Erik G. Hakansson, Medical Corps, Westchester Apartments. 364 Congressional Directory | NAVY NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Medical Officer in Command.—Capt. Herbert L. Pugh, Medical Corps, 5506 Lambeth Road, Bethesda, Md. NAVAL SCHOOL OF HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION : (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Officer in Charge.— Commander Glenn F. Lyon, Hospital Corps, Tilden Lane, R. F. D. 2, Rockville, Md. NAVAL AIR STATION (Anacostia, D. C.) Commanding Officer.—Capt. George A. Seitz, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. NAVAL DISPENSARY (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building, and Rear Third Wing, first floor, Arlington Annex) Medical Officer in Command.—Commodore Richard A. Warner, Medical Corps (re-tired), 3716 Forty-ninth Street. _ NAVY YARD, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, FRanklin 5700) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear Adm. F. L. Reich- muth, Quarters A, Navy Yard. Aide to Commandant.—Capt. W. F. Loventhal (retired), Quarters D, Navy Yard. Chief Clerk.—Charles M. Franklin, 4934 Forty-seventh Street. Captain of the Yard.—Capt. C. R. Robinson, lab B, Navy Yard. Senior Inspector, Naval Gun Factory.—Capt. I. T. Duke, Quarters F, Navy Yard. Personnel Relations Officer.— Commander E. D. Duckett, 513 King ‘Street Road, Alexandria, Va. HEADQUARTERS, POTOMAC RIVER NAVAL COMMAND (Navy Yard, Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, FRanklin 5700) Commandant.—Rear Adm. F. L. Reichmuth, Quarters A, Navy Yard. Chief of Staff and Aide.—Capt. John B. W. Waller, Quarters C, Navy Yard. Public Information Officer.—Lt. Clary Thompson, 149 Ivanhoe Street SW. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS (Navy Building, Arlington Annex. Phone, REpublic 7400) OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT Commandant.—Gen. Alexander A. Vandegrift, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. Assistant Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Allen H. Turnage, Quarters No. 1, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. J repel lo Division. —Maj. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle, 305 Russell Road, Alexandria, a Division of Plans and Policies.—Brig. Gen. Gerald C. Thomas, director, 4412 Volta Place. Division of Aviation.—Maj. Gen. Field Harris, director, Quarters No. 4, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Dreinin of Public I nformation.—Col. Julian P. Brown, director, Army and Navy : u Mees Seersiuny to the Commandant.—Col. Joseph C. Burger, 4711 Overbrook oad. NAVY Executive Departments 365 Legal Aide.—Col. Joseph W. Knighton, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Aide-de-Camp.—Lt. Col. Lewis J. Fields, 4314 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va, Administrative Division.—Lt. Col. Miles S. Newton, administrative officer, 1735 Kenyon Street. PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT Director of Personnel.—Maj. Gen. Thomas E. Watson, 4906 Tilden Street. Assistant Director of Personnel.—Brig. Gen. William C. James, 3223 Ravensworth Place, Alexandria, Va. QUARTERMASTER DEPARTMENT Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. W. P. T. Hill, Quarters No. 3, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. ‘Executive Officer.—Brig. Gen. Leonard E. Rea, 5205 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Frances J. Weber, Idaho Hall, Arlington Farms, Arlington, Va. PAYMASTER DEPARTMENT Paymaster General.—Maj. Gen. Raymond R. Wright, 2737 Devonshire Place. Ezecutive Officer.—Col. Leo Sullivan, 3224 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Clerk.—Ingrid Jonassen, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MARINE CORPS) (Corcoran Annex, Room 126, 401 Twenty-third Street. Phone, REpublic 7400, extension 5693) President.—Col. Selden B. Kennedy, 3171 Porter Street. Recorder.—Lt. Col. Walter H. Sitz, 3731 Northampton Street. MARINE BARRACKS (Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, LIncoln 9400) Commanding.—Col. Donald J. Kendall, Quarters No. 2, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. COAST GUARD (HEADQUARTERS) (Southern Railway Building, 1300 E Street. Phone, REpublic 7400) OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT The Commandant.— Admiral Joseph F. Farley, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Commandant.—Rear Adm. L. T. Chalker, 7418 Lynnhurst Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Aide to the Commandant.—Commander W. J. Smith, 4886 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Merchant Marine Council.—Rear Adm. H. F. Johnson, 115 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice Chairman, Merchant Marine Council.—Commodore H. C. Shepheard, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief Planning and Control Staff— Chief, Planning and Control Staff.—Rear Adm. F. J. Gorman, 4550 Con-necticut Avenue. Assistant Chief, Planning and Control Staff. —Capt. A. C. Richmond, 2801 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Chief, Budget and Requirements Division.—Capt. A. C. Richmond, 2801 Lor-com Lane, Arlington, Va. Chief, Administrative Management Division.—Capt. Joseph Pois, 3639 Ingomar Place. Chief, Program Planning Division.—Capt. F. T. Kenner, 912 Cameron Street, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Public Information Division.— Commodore (E) Ellis Reed-Hill, 4815 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel.—Capt. K. S. Harrison, 5605 Fourteenth Street. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 25 366 Congressional Directory NAVY OFFICE OF PERSONNEL Chief Personnel Officer.—{Vacant.] Assistant Chief Personmel Officer.—Rear Adm. R. T. MecElligott, Quarters O, Washington Navy Yard. Chief, Auxiliary Division.—Capt. C. H. Jones, 136 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chef, Givilian Personnel Division.—Commander GC. E. Herrick, 3904 Edmunds Street. Chief, Demobilization Division.—Capt. C. A. A. Anderson, 6511 Chestnut Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chil Enlisted Assignment Division.—Capt. Ephriam Zoole, 701 Quackenbos treet. Chief, Medical Division.—Asst. Surg. Gen. Carl Michel, United States Public Health Service, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, Military Morale Division.—Capt. L. H. Morine, 6405 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Officer Assignment Division.—Capt. N. R. Stiles, 8912 Seneca Lane, Be-thesda, Md. Chel, Personnel Procurement Division.—Lt. Comdr. Harry Wilkison, 1717 R treet. Chief, Temporary Reserve Division.—Commander Carlton Kelsey, 1020 Nine-teenth Street. Chief, Training Division.—Commander E. T. Calahan, 2000 Patterson Road, West Hyattsville, Md. Chel; Women’s Reserve Division.—Capt. Dorothy C. Stratton (W), 4914 Upton treet. OFFICE OF FINANCE AND SUPPLY Chief, Finance and Supply Officer—Rear Adm. Joseph Greenspun, Burlington Hotel. Chief, Accounting Division.—Commander Alexander Smith, 3807 Benton Street. Chief, Supply Division.—Commander C. B. Arrington, 4500 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md OFFICE OF AIR-SEA RESCUE Gel, Air-Sea Rescue Officer.—Rear Adm. Robert Donohue, 3311 Rittenhouse treet. Chief, Aviation Division.—Commander W. E. Sinton, 3201 Circle Hill Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Planning and Coordination Division.—Capt. Carl B. Olsen, 102 Aspen Street. Chief, Rescue Vessel and Station Division.—Commander Robert Wilcox, 2003 Pea-body Street, West Hyattsville, Md. OFFICE OF OPERATIONS Chief Operations Officer—Rear Adm. C. A. Park, 2334 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. Vessel Operations Officer.—Capt. Walter C. Capron, 701 North Emerson Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Aids to Navigation Division.—Commodore F. P. Dillon, 5909 Wynnwood Road, Wood Acres, Md. Acting Chief, Ordnance and Gunnery Division.—Lt. L. A. Johnson, 73-L Ridge Road, Greenbelt, Md. Chief, Communications Diviston.—Commodore E. M. Webster (retired), 3200 Porter Street. Acting Chief, Allowance Division.—Lt. Comdr. W. C. Bethea, 422 Mellon Street H OFFICE OF MERCHANT MARINE SAFETY Chief, Merchant Marine Safety Officer—Rear Adm. Lyndon Spencer, 3601 Ritten-house Street. Chief, Merchant Marine Inspection Division.—Commodore N. B. Hall, 210 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. NAVY Executive Departments 367 Chief, Merchant Marine Safety Officer—Continued. Chuef, Merchant Marine Personnel Division.—Capt. H. T. Jewell, 11 Fort Hunt Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Port Security Division.—Capt. M. A. Gulick, 10 Hawley Court, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Chief Administrative Services Officer.—Commodore W. J. Keester, 1909 North High-land Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Intelligence Division.—Capt. F. E. Pollio, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Chief, Inspection Division.—Commodore W. J. Keester, 1909 North Highland Street, Arlington, Va, Chuef, Headquarters Administration Division.—Commander R. H. French, 6746 -Eastern Avenue. OFFICE OF ENGINEERING Engineer in Chief—Rear Adm. H. F. Johnson, 115 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Engineer in Chief.—Rear Adm. P. B. Eaton, “Comynholm,” Klingle Road and Porter Streets. Chzef, Naval Engineering Division.—Capt. (E) J. N. Heiner, Pyle Road, Locust Ridge, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Communications Engineering Diviston.— Capt. I. L. Gill, 3024 Tilden Street. Chief, Aeronautical Engineering Division.—Lt. Comdr. W. R. Kenly, 843 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Civil Engineering Division.—Capt. (E) R. R. Tinkham, 3237 Arcadia Place. Chief, Merchant Marine Technical Division.—Capt. R. A. Smyth, 4521 Reno Road. Chief, Research and Development Division.—Capt. G. A. Tyler, 604 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. WELFARE President, Coast Guard Welfare.—Commodore (E) Ellis Reed-Hill, 4815 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. RELATED ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION (For list of members, see page 408) ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (For list of members, see page 408) JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF, UNITED STATES (For list of members, see page 428) THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD (For list of members, see page 405) THE JOINT BOARD (For list of members, see page 428) - THE JOINT ECONOMY BOARD (For list of members, see page 429) |’ 4 368 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 became active in municipal reform politics in 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, 1940, and 1944; chairman of the Illinois State Council of Defense Neighborhood Committee, 1917 to April 1918; was in Y. M. C. A. work in France with the Thirty-fifth Division of the American Expeditionary Force from April 1918 to January 1919; president of the People’s Protective League in 1922; Illinois manager of Hiram W. Johnson’s Presidential campaign in 1924, and of the campaign of Hugh S. Magill, Independent Republican candidate for United States Senator from Illinois in 1926; member of the Roosevelt Memorial 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 Association, 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 Amer-ica; Independence Hall Association (honorary), Save-the-Redwoods League; 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; awarded the American Labor Party’s citation for outstanding service in liberal and progressive causes, 1945; his clubs are the University (Chicago), Indian Hill (Winnetka), Shawnee Country (Wilmette), Lake Shore Athletic (Chicago), National Press, and Saints and Sinners. Author: The New Democracy, 1934; Back to Work, 1935; America’s House of Lords, 1939; The Third Term Bugaboo, 1940; Not Guilty, 1940; Autobiography of a Curmudgeon, Fightin’ Oil, 1943; editor, Freedom of the Press Today, 1941. He became Secretary of the Interior March 4, 1933. Under Secretary.— Fortas, 3025 N Abe Street. Assistant Secretaries.—Michael W. Straus, Linnean Hill, Klingle Road and Porter Street; Oscar L. Chapman, Westchester Apartments. Special Assistant to the Secretary.— William H. MecCrillis, 9000 Greentree Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistants to the Secretary.— Wesley C. Clark, Davidsonville, Md.; May B. Conley, 2737 Devonshire Place. Chief Clerk.—Floyd E. Dotson, 5843 Potomac Avenue. bree i Information.—John E. Ryckman, 3950 Langley Court, McLean ardens. Director, Division of Budget and Administrative Management.— Vernon D. Northrop, 5315 Worthington Drive, Westhaven, Friendship Station, D. C. Director of Personnel.—Mrs. J. Atwood Maulding, 1514 Seventeenth Street. Chief, Purchasing Division.—Earl E. Eisenhart, 107 Earlston Drive, Yorktowne Village, Md. . Chief, Muscellaneous Service Division.— Frank C. Updike, 8037 Eastern Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. | INTERIOR Executive Departments 369 Special Adviser on Labor Relations.—C. Warren Stapleton, 2708 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Supervising Field Virgil P. Wallace, 1755 Q Representative.— Street. Director, Division of Power.—Arthur E. Goldschmidt, 3036 P Street. Assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Land Utilization.—Lee Muck, 3202 Welling- ton Road, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. : Solicitor.— Warner W. Gardner, 116 Summerfield Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Solicitor.—Felix S. Cohen, 4956 Hurst Terrace. Director, United States Board on Geographical Names.— Meredith Burrill, 5503 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Division of Territories and Island Possessions.-——Edwin G. Arnold, R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Borel, Office of Surplus Property.—John M. Barringer, 1511 Rhode Island venue. Dr Petroleum Conservation Division.— Edward B. Swanson (acting), 2512 treet. Deputy Solid Fuels Administrator for War.—Charles J. Potter, the Shoreham. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR Solicitor.— Warner W. Gardner, 116 Summerfield Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Solicitor.—Felix S. Cohen. 4956 Hurst Terrace. Adminastrative Officer.— Edith A. Mahon, 2572 University Place. Chiefs of Divisions: Indian Division.— William H. Flanery, 5735 Thirteenth Street. Conservation Diviston.— Thomas C. Billig, 8908 Grant Street, Bethesda, Md. Public Lands Division.— Harry M. Edelstein, 3623 Jenifer Street. Property Acquisition Division.— Theodore Spector, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Mines Division.—John L. Hofflund (acting), 3530 Quebec Street. Legislative Diviston.— Herbert J. Slaughter, 1135 Sixteenth Street. OFFICE OF LAND UTILIZATION Assistant to the Secretary in Charge of Land Utilization.—Lee Muck, 3202 Welling- ton Road, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director of Forests.—John F. Shanklin, 4600 Asbury Place. Director of Soil Conservation.—Edward N. Kavanagh, the Fairfax. Director of Land Classification.—John B. Bennett, 6431 Western Avenue. Boconils Officer, Water Resources Committee.—W. G. Hoyt, 3703 Thirty-fifth treet. Administrative Assistant.—Bernard C. Blakley, 1932 Summit Place NE. GENERAL LAND OFFICE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commaissioner.—Fred W. Johnson, the Chastleton. Assistant Commaissioner.—Joel David Wolfsohn, 4609 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Branch of Adjudication.—Thomas C. Havell, supervisor, 1203 E Street NE. Branch of Land Planning.—John R. Riggleman, supervisor, 6612 Hillandale Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Branch of Field Examination.—Dale B. Whiteside, supervisor, 943 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief Counsel.—Jacob N. Wasserman, 1500 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Cheefs of Divisions: Administrative.—[Vacant.] Accounts.—August J. LaCovey, 834 South Ivy Street, Arlington, Va. Homestead.— Augustus Zannelli, 209 Cromwell Terrace NE. Indian Lands.— William O. Hancock, 3600 Park Place. Land Classification.—Byron C. Denny, 222 Farragut Street. Mail and Files.— Elbert T. Johnston, Jr., Landover, Md. Mineral.—Lewis E. Hoffman, 121 Nineteenth Street NE. Patents.—Ralph 8. Clinton, 65 Forrester Street SW. Posting and Tract Records.—Riley V. Lewis, 1108 Euclid Street. Reclamation and Land Grant.—Andrew Markhus, 5013 Baltimore Avenue, Friendship Station, D. C. pe 370 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Chiefs of Divisions—Continued. = Research and Analysis.—Alf Z. Nelson, 822 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Surveys.— Wilbur S. Wills, 3812 T Street. Surplus Real Property.—Craig W. Kershow (acting), 7701 Georgia Avenue. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner.— William A. Brophy, 613 Twenty-second Street. Assistant Commaissioner.—[Vacant.] Bid Feviementative~DiAvey McNickle, 9925 Sutherland Road, Silver Spring, d Administrative Analyst.—Leonard L. Nelson, 2931 South Columbus Street, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. (Merchandise Mart, Chicago, lil. Phone, WHItehall 5920) Assistant Commissioner.— William Zimmerman, Jr., 190 East Chestnut Street, Chicago, Ill. Chief Counsel.—Theodore H. Haas, 30 West Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Administrative Branch: Chief and Budget Officer.—Paul L. Fickinger, 604 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Ill. ) Personnel Officer.—C. E. Lamson, 627 Washington Boulevard, Oak Park, Ill. Engineering Branch: Chief.— Albert L. Wathen, Hotel Knickerbocker, Chicago, Ill. Resources Branch: Chief.—Walter V. Woehlke, 858 Oakdale Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Field Representative.—[Vacant.] Construction Division: Director.—E. A. Poynton, 1452 Oak Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Education Division: Director.— Willard W. Beatty, 5425 North Kenmore Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Associate Directors.—Olin R. Sande, 838 Lakeside Place, Chicago, Ill.; Percy W. Danielson, 1317 Washington Street, Evanston, I. Extension Division: Director—A. C. Cooley, 724 Noyes Street, Evanston, Ill. Assistant Director.— Albert Huber, 1100 North LaSalle Street, Chicago, Ill. Budget and Operations Division: Chief.—Guy C. Williams, 5929 North Rockwell Street, Chicago, Ill. Fiscal Dissoion; Chief —Charles B. Emery, 5337 North Kenmore Avenue, Chi-cago, Ill. Forestry and Grazing: Director.—Leroy D. Arnold, 733 Prairie Avenue, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Assistant Director.—John Donald Lamont, 616 Park Boulevard, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Health Division: Director.—Dr. Ralph B. Snavely, 5506 North Spaulding Street, Chicago, Ill. Associate Director.—Dr. Horace De Lien, 737 North Wabash Avenue, Chicago, i132 Information Division: Director.—John G. Neihardt, 4917 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Irrigation Division: Director.—Ernest C. Fortier, 1406 Central Street, Evanston, Ill. Land Division: Director.—Harry M. Critchfield, 1305 Grant Street, Evanston, Ill. Mail and Files Division: Direcior.—Carl J. Wingate, 1230 North Waller Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Rosds Diskion: Director.—J. Maughs Brown, 1337 West Fargo Avenue, Chicago, Soil and Moisture Division: Director.— William J. Endersbee, 1077 Cherry Street, Winnetka, Ill. Statistics Division: Director.—J. Nixon Hadley, 601 Fullerton Street, Chicago, Ill. Welfare Division: Director.—Fred H. Daiker, 1513 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, Ill. INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS BOARD (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chairman.—René d’Harnoncourt, vice president, Museum of Modern Art. New York, N. Y. Members: Willard W. Beatty, Director of Education, Indian Service, Chicago, Ill. Alfred V. Kidder, Carnegie Institution of Washington, and National Research Council, 10 Frisbie Place, Cambridge, Mass. James W. Young, Rancho Canada, Pena Blanca, N. Mex. [Vacancy.] INTERIOR Executive Departments 371 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (Interior Building (north). Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—William Embry Wrather, 20 Dalecarlia Drive. Assistant Director.—Thomas B. Nolan, 2219 California Street. Administrative Geologist.—J. D. Sears, 21 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Personnel Officer.—Charles A. King, 3649 Bangor Street SE. Geologic Branch: W. H. Bradley, chief geologist, 115 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. J. W. Peoples, assistant chief geologist, 3237 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Water Resources Branch: G. L. Parker, chief hydraulic engineer, 2706 Forty-fourth Street. C. G. Paulsen, assistant chief hydraulic engineer, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Topographic Branch: te Pendleton, chief topographic engineer, 7605 Dellwood Place, Bethesda, d. 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. J. Duncan, chief, Benning Hall, McLean Gardens. Alaskan Branch.—Philip S. Smith, chief Alaskan geologist, 3249 Newark Street. Chief Counsel.—Max Barash, 1704 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Engraving and Printing.—Fred Graff, Jr., chief, 17 Franklin Street, Kensington, Md. Chief Clerk.—Ronne C. Shelsé, Embassy Apartments. Division of Distribution.—Jule E. André, chief, 2710 Nineteenth Street North, Lyon Village, Arlington, Va. dehy een in H. Heers, 508 Maple Ridge Road, Battery Park, Bethesda, Md. BUREAU OF RECLAMATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner.— Harry W. Bashore, 3930 Huntington Street. Assistant Commassioners.— William E. Warne, 805 Enderby Drive, Alexandria, Va.; Kenneth W. Markwell, 4607 Four Mile Run Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief Counsel.—Clifford E. Fix, 102 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Commissioner.—G. S. Ellsworth, 2739 McKinley Street. Acting Assistant to the Commissioner— Engineering.—T. W. Mermel, 6207 Twentieth Place, Brookside Manor, West Hyattsville, Md. Chief Information Officer—Barrow Lyons, 1072 Thomas Jefferson Street. Director of Finance.— William F. Kubach, 1349 Sheridan Street. Chel Personnel Officer—Glenn D. Thompson, Continental Oil Building, Denver, MA i a ———m——— olo. Director; Branch of Operation and Maintenance.— Goodrich W. Lineweaver, 3511 Davenport Street. Director, Branch of Design and Construction and Chief Engineer.— Walker R. Young, United States Customhouse, Denver, Colo. Acting Director, Branch of Project Planning.—John W. Dixon, 4651 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Branch of Power Utilization.—H. F. McPhail, United States Custom-house, Denver, Colo. Regional Directors of Reclamation: Region 1.—R. J. Newell, Boise, Idaho. Region 2.—Richard L. Boke, Sacramento, Calif. Region 3.—Ernest A. Moritz, Boulder City, Nev. Region /.—Ernest O. Larson, Salt Lake City, Utah. Region 5.—Wesley R. Nelson, Amarillo, Tex. Region 6.—Harold D. Comstock, Billings, Mont. Region 7.—Erdman B. Debler, Denver, Colo. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE DIRECTOR’S OFFICE (Merchandise Mart, Chicago 54, Ill. Phone, WHItehall 5920) Director—Newton B. Drury, 101 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Assistant Director.—Hillory A. Tolson, 1224 West Chase Avenue, Chicago 26, Ill. 372 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Chief Counsel.—Jackson E. Price, 717 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Chief of Lands.—S. Herbert Evison, 401 Woodlawn Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Chief Naturalist.—C. P. Russell, 737 Judson Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Chief Historian.—Herbert E. Kahler, 15 Greenwood Avenue, Park Ridge, Ill. Chief Engineer.— Arthur W. Burney, 824 Judson Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Chief Landscape Architect.—Thomas C. Vint, 1018 Michigan Avenue, Evanston, I11 Chief Forester.—J. D. Coffman, 830 Michigan Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Supervisor of Concessions.—Oliver G. Taylor, 1410 Gregory Avenue, Wilmette, Ill. Editor in Chief.—Isabelle F. Story, 1117 North Dearborn, Chicago 10, Ill. Finance Officer.—P. P. Patraw, 2617 Hartzell Street, Evanston, Ill. Personnel Officer—Hugh M. Miller, 1337 West Fargo Avenue, Chicago 26, Ill. Chief Clerk.—Roger M. Rittase, 6027 North Winthrop Avenue, Chicago 40, Ill. WASHINGTON LIAISON OFFICE (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Associate Director—A. E. Demaray, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase 15, Md. REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region 1.—Thomas J. Allen, the Mosque, Laurel and Main Streets, Richmond 20, Va. Region 2.—Lawrence C. Merriam, Keeline Building, Omaha 2, Nebr. Region 3.—M. R. Tillotson, box 1728, Santa Fe, N. Mex. Region 4.—O. A. Tomlinson, 601 Sheldon Building, San Francisco 5, Calif. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARKS (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Superintendent.—Irving C. Root, 6301 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF MINES (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—R. R. Sayers, 3123 Dumbarton Avenue. gst Director (Mining and Metallurgy) .—Reginald S. Dean, 532 Twentieth ; treet. Assistant Director (Economics and Administration).—George A. Lamb, 6035 Wooten Drive, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Office of Minerals Reports.—Allan Sherman, 1545 North Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. HEALTH AND SAFETY BRANCH Chief of Branch.—Daniel Harrington, 3153 Nineteenth Street. Chief of Division of— Coal Mine Inspection and Assistant Chief of Bramch.—John J. V. Forbes, 6621 Hillandale Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Explosives Control.—Richard D. Leitch, 9313 Walden Road, Silver Spring, Md. Safety Division.—Simon H. Ash, 8406 Galviston Road, Silver Spring, Md. Health Diviston.—Helmuth H. Schrenk, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. FUELS AND EXPLOSIVES BRANCH Chief of Branch.—Arno C. Fieldner, Cosmos Club. Chief of Division of— Petroleum and Natural Gas.—Roscoe A. Cattell, 7717 Fourteenth Street. Solid Fuels Utilization for War.—John F. Barkley, 541 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md. High Explosives Research.—John C. Holtz, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Coal.—[Vacant.] : Explosives.—[Vacant.] Signs Executive Departments 373 Chief of Division of—Continued. Office of Synthetic Liquid Fuels.— Wilburn C. Schroeder, 2504 Allison Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Besearel and Development.—Henry H. Storch, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, a. Synthesis Gas Production.— William W. Odell, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Oil Shale Research and Demonstration Plant.—Albert J. Kraemer, box 191, Alexandria, Va. 0:l Shale Mining Division.—Eugene D. Gardner, 912 United States National Bank Building, Denver, Colo. : MINING BRANCH Chief of Branch.—Lowell B. Moon, Prospect Hill, Barnesville, Md. METALLURGICAL BRANCH Chief of Branch.—Ray G. Knickerbocker, 2141 I Street. ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS BRANCH Chief of Branch.—Elmer W. Pehrson, 1573 Forty-fourth Street. Assistant Chief of Branch.—Thomas H. Miller, 6501 Barnaby Street. Chief of Division of— Metal Economics.—Charles W. Merrill, 1554 Forty-fourth Street. Nonmetal Economics.—Oliver Bowles, 5000 Massachusetts Avenue. Coal Economics.— William B. Reed, 6700 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Petroleum Economics.— Alfred G. White, 3733 Kanawha Street. Accident Analysis.—Forrest T. Moyer, 1607 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Foreign Minerals.—Joseph S. McGrath, 8227 Adams Mill Road. ADMINISTRATION SERVICE Chief of Service.— William E. Rice, 6405 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Field and Property Division.—John D. Secrest, 3707 Parkwood Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md. Personnel Officer.—J. Leland Acuff, 5208 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chitehs Budget and Finance Division.—Arnold J. Kirch, 700 Berry Street, Falls hureh, Va. GRAZING SERVICE IR RR EERE (Walker Bank Building, Salt Lake City, Vian, Photo 1.2552, Addresses listed below are in Salt Lake i ity, Uta Director of Grazing.— Clarence L. Forsling, Grazing Service, Walker Bank Building. Chief, Branch of Range Management—James A. Scott, 735 South Eleventh Street East. Acting Chief, Branch of Range Improvement and Maintenance.—C. K. Caron, 1949 Laird Drive. Chief, Branch of Operations.—Depue Falck, 1451 Uintah Circle. Chief, Branch of Land Acquisition and Conirol.—J. H. Leech, 245 East South Temple Street. Chief Counsel.— William A. Hilton, 100 East South Temple Street. (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director of Grazing.—Clarence L. Forsling, 3283 Arcadia Place. Assistant Director and Liaison Officer.—Archie D. Ryan, 2000 F Street. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (222 West North Bank Drive, Chicago, Ill. Phone, WHItehall 5920) Director.—Ira N. Gabrielson. : Assistant Directors—Albert M. Day, 443 West Wrightwood Avenue, Chicago, Ill.; M. C. James, 516 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. 374 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Chief Counsel.—Donald J. Chaney, route 2, Herndon, Va. Chiefs of Divisions: Admanistration.—W. R. Dillon, 1505 Maple Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Alaska Fisheries.— Ward T. Bower, Georgian Hotel, Evanston, Ill. Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration.—R. M. Rutherford, 914 Judson Avenue, . Evanston, Ill. Game Fish and Hatcheries.—O. Lloyd Meebean, 233 Avon Road, Elmhurst, Ill. Fishery Biology.— Elmer Higgins, 3449—-A South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Commercial Fisheries.—A. W. Anderson, 6522 Fifth Street, Washington 12, D. C, Game Management.—W. E. Crouch, 831 Forest Avenue, Evanston, Ill Lands.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, 849 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Ill Predator and Rodent Control.—D. D. Green, 818 Forest Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Information.—Frank Dufresne, 1260 North Dearborn Parkway, Chicago, Ill. Wildlife Refuges.—J. Clark Salyer, 2d, 807 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Wildlife Research.—Clarence Cottam, 932% Judson Avenue, Evanston, Ill. Director of Aquarium (Commerce Building).—Fred G. Orsinger, 5607 First Street NE., Washington 11, D. C. (Interior Building, Washington, D. GC. 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—Edwin G. Arnold, R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Assistant Director.—Jack B. Fahy, 1042 Thirty-first Street NW. Chief Counsel.—Irwin W. Silverman, 3920—A Southern Avenue SE. Chief, Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands Branch.—Mason Barr, Falls Church, Va. Acting Chief, Alaskan Branch.—M. W. Goding, Wellington Villa, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Administrative Branch.—Alan B. Neumann, 3800 Fourteenth Street. Director, Office of Surplus Property.—John M. Barringer, 1511 Rhode Island Avenue. TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS Governor of Alaska.—Ernest Gruening, Juneau, Alaska. Secretary of Alaska.—Llewellyn M. Williams, Juneau, Alaska. Governor of Hawaii.—Ingram M. Stainback, Honolulu, T. H. Seoriny of Hawaii and Special Disbursing Agent.—Gerald R. Corbett, Honolulu, Governor of Virgin Islands.—Charles Harwood, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. Government Secretary.—Morris F. de Castro, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. Governor of Puerto Rico.—Rexford G. Tugwell, San Juan, P. R. Ereonian Secretary of Puerto Rico.—Haydee Fuxench de San Miguel, San Juan, GOVERNMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES. United States High Commaissioner.—Paul V. McNutt, Manila, P. I. Economic Adviser.—E. D. Hester. President of the Philippines.—Sergio Osmeifia, Manila, P. I. THE ALASKA RAILROAD (General Offices, Anchorage, Alaska) General Manager.—Col. John P, Johnson, Anchorage, Alaska. Assistant General Managers.—Harold W. Snell, Chicago, Ill., suite 1123 Merchan-dise Mart; J. J. Delaney, Anchorage, Alaska. Superintendent of Transportation.—J. T. Cunningham, Anchorage, Alaska. ALASKAN PURCHASING AND SHIPPING OFFICE Purchasing Agent and Office Manager.—J. J. Lichtenwalner, 510 Virginia Street, Seattle, Wash, The Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines was inaugurated November 15, 1935, under the act of Congress (Public, No. 127, 73d Cong.), approved March 24, 1934. INTERIOR Executive Departments 375 i IE PUERTO RICO RECONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator—Edwin G. Arnold, R.F.D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Assistant Administrator.— Guillermo Esteves, San Juan, P. R. General Counsel.—Henry A. Hirshberg, Broadmoor Apartments. 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. : PETROLEUM CONSERVATION DIVISION Acting Director.—Edward B. Swanson, 2512 Q Street. Associate Director for Production.—[Vacant.] Associate Director for Refining and Marketing.—[ Vacant.) Admanastrative Assistant.— William A. Kearney, 2442 Huidekoper Place: BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION Adminisirator.—Paul J. Raver, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Assistant Admanistrator.—D. L. Marlett, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Port-land, Oreg. General Counsel.—C. Girard Davidson, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, reg. Acting Controller.—Earl D. Ostrander, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Power Manager.— William A. Dittmer, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Chief Engineer.—S. E. Schultz, 811 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Consulting Engineer. —J. P. Alvey, South Interior Building, Washington, D. C. DIVISION OF POWER (Room 6315, South Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, extension 4125) Director.— Arthur E. Goldschmidt, 3036 P Street. NATIONAL POWER POLICY COMMITTEE (Room 6315, South Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, extension 4125) Chairman.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior. Vice Chairman.— Leland Olds, Chairman, Federal Power Commission, Members: Philip B. Fleming, Administrator, Federal Works Agency. Ganson Purcell, Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission. Kenneth C. Royall, 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. Claude R. Wickard, Administrator, Rural Electrification Administration. Executive Secretary.—Joel David Wolfsohn. SOUTHWESTERN POWER ADMINISTRATION Administrator—Douglas G. Wright, Kennedy Building, Tulsa 1, Okla. SOLID FUELS ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR ? (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Solid Fuels Administrator for War.—Harold L. Ickes, Headwaters Farm, Olney, Md Deputy Solid Fuels Administrator for War.—C. J. Potter, the Shoreham. 376 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Assistant Deputy Solid Fuels Administrators for War.—Harlen M. Chapman, 6521 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Dan H. Wheeler, 619 East Thornahple Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Clark M. Groninger, 2100 Connecticut venue. Special Assistant to the Deputy Admanistrator.—Charles H. Hayes, 1314 North Courthouse Road, Arlington, Va. Head Administrative Officer.—J. E. MacDonald, Harvard Hall. Chief, Anthracite Distribution Division.— Thomas G. Valleau, 3405 Lowell Street. Chief, Bituminous Distribution Division.— William F. Hahman, 107 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. General Counsel.—Jesse B. Messitte, 4804 Forty-fifth Street. Chuef, Compliance Division.— Thomas J. O’Brien, 634 Hamilton Street. Chuef, Conservation and Information Division.—Leonard W. Mosby, 22 Melbourne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Budget and Admanistrative Services Diviston.— Waldron E. Leonard, 10 Fairview Avenue, R. F. D. 4, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Field Office Diviston.—N. O. Wood, Jr., 3410 Macomb Street. WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY (Barr Building, 910 Seventeenth Street. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—Dillon S. Myer, 116 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Director.—Philip M. Glick, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Solicitor—Edwin E. Ferguson, 2912 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Office of Reports.—Morrill M. Tozier, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Relopson Planning Officer.—B. R. Stauber, 9701 Bexhill Drive, Kensington, Chief, Community Management Division.—John Provinse, 215 Spring Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Operations Division.—E. J. Utz, 4507 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Director.— Malcolm E. Pitts, 718 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Relocation Division.—H. Rex Lee, 9204 Old Bladensburg Road, Silver Spring, Md. NATIONAL PARK TRUST FUND BOARD (Phone, REpublic 1820) Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury, the Wardman Park. 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 Acting Chairman.— Waldo G. Leland, Washington, D. C. Vice Chairman.—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.; Ralph W. Chaney, University of California, Berkeley, Calif.; Fiske Kimball, Philadelphia, Pa.; Charles G. Sauers, River Forest, Ill.; Tom Wallace, Louisville, Ky.; Theodore C. Blegen, Minneapolis, Minn. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 377 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) CLINTON P. ANDERSON, of Albuquerque, N. Mex., Secretary of Agri-culture (6 Wesley Circle); 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, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; chairman of the House Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures in the Seventy-eighth Congress; chairman of the House of Representatives Special Committee to Investigate Food Short-ages in the Seventy-ninth Congress until his resignation from Congress to become Secretary of Agriculture; owns and operates farms in New Mexico and South Dakota; appointed Secretary of Agriculture June 30, 1945. Under Secretary.—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Secretary.— Charles F. Brannan, 3921 Langley Court. Assistants to the Secretary.—Nathan Koenig, 6411 Thirty-third Street; William A. Minor, 435 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Lawrence Myers, 230 Prospect Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Judicial Officer.— Thomas J. Flavin, 6504 Chestnut Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary to the Secretary.— Luna E. Diamond, 15 McDonald Place NE. Secretary to the Under Secretary.— Dorothy M. Perry, 15 Auburn Court, Alexandria, Va. Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.— Louise I. Nylander, 3831 Porter Street. Staff Offices, Department of Agriculture BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublie 4142) Office of the Chief.— Howard R. Tolley, Chief, 212 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va.; Bushrod W. Allin, 514 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md.; Foster F. Elliott, 34 Kensington Parkway, Kensington, 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.; James G. Maddox, 209 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va.; Mordecai Ezekiel, 5000 Allandale Road; J. Henry Jarrett, 513 South Glebe Road, Alexandria, Va. Head of Division of— Agricultural Finance.—Norman J. Wall, 2928 P Street. Agioudiurd 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, 4702 Twentieth Road North, Arlington, Va. Land Economics.—V. Webster Johnson, 4317 Claggett Road, Hyattsville, Md. Marketing and Transportation Research.—F. L. Thomsen, 815 Fifteenth Street, Alexandria, Va. Program Analysis and Development.—Oris V. Wells, 14 Belfield Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Program Study and Discussion.— Taeusch, 3133 Connecticut Carl Avenue. . Program Surveys.—Rensis Likert, 4832 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Statistical and Historical Research.—Oscar C. Stine, 6345 Western Avenue, 378 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE EXTENSION SERVICE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Milburn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director (Farm Labor).—M. C. Wilson, 3005 South Dakota Avenue NE. Assistant Directors.—Reuben Brigham, Ashton, Md.; L. A. Bevan, Durham, 2 H.; W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street; H. H. Williamson, 509 Longfellow treet. Divison of Business Administration, Chief. —Christopher S. Tenley, 3053 P Street. Division of Field Coordination, Chief. —H. W. Hochbaum, 7329 Blair Road. Division of Subject Matter, Chief. —P. V. Kepner, 605 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. In Charge, Agricultural and Home Economics Section.—S. P. Lyle, 4435 Daven-port Street. In Charge, Economics Section.—W. B. Stout, 4704 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. i Division of Field Studies and Training, Chief. —Gladys Gallup, 2000 F Street. Decision of Extension Information, Chief.—Lester A. Schlup, 4707 Connecticut venue. Assistant Chief.—Ralph M. Fulghum, 810 Grand View Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Farm Labor, Assistant Deputy Director.—H. M. Dixon, 14 Riggs Road NE. Recruitment and Placement Division, Chief.—Barnard D. Joy, 1718 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. : Victory Farm Volunteers Division, Chief.—Irvin H. Schmitt, 4808 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va. Labor Utilization Division, Chief.—L. M. Vaughan, 8916 Oneida Lane, Be-thesda, Md. In Charge, Labor Management Section.—K. F. Warner, 6816 Pine Street, College Heights, Hyattsville, Md. Women’s Land Army Division, Chief.—Florence L. Hall, the Kenesaw. LIBRARY (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) The Librarian.—Ralph R. Shaw, 4910 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director and Budget Oflicer.— William A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Assistant Directors.— William R. Quigley, 3906 Twentieth Street NE.; Ralph S. Roberts, 6400 Thirty-first Place. Assistants to Director.—John H. Lynch, 1401 Tuckerman Street; Howard A. Nessen, 3961 First Street SW.; John L. Wells, 2722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Chief of Division of— Accounting.—Charles N. Mason, 6432 Thirty-first Street. Audit.—John C. Cooper, 2611 Eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Corporate Fiscal Service.—Lawrence W. Acker, 2922 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Estimates and Allotments.—Joseph C. Wheeler, 2747 South Troy Street, Ar-lington, Va. Fiscal Management.—Harold A. Stone, 1051 Twenty-sixth Road South, Ar-lington, Va. Purchase, Sales, and Traffic—James Scammahorn, 612 South Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Office of the Director: Director.—Leslie A. Wheeler, 810 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. doin Director.—Francis A. Flood, 5 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Assistant Director.—A. Rex Johnson, 1707 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, a. Regional Investigations Branch: Chief.—Eric Englund, R. F. D. 8, Rockville, Md. International Commodities Branch: Chief. —Joseph A. Becker, 220 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Technical Collaboration Branch: Chief—Ross E. Moore, 2445 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Chief —Ralph H. Allee, 6241 Thirtieth Street. Division of Foreign Information and Statistics: Chief —Louis C. Nolan, 7200 Overhill Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of Administration: : Chief —Elmer A. Reese, 5410 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md. OFFICE OF INFORMATION Director—XKeith Himebaugh, route 8, Rockville, Md. Assistant Director in Charge of— ; Publications, Special Reports, Motion Pictures, Exhibits Service—R. L. Webster, 301 Noland Street, Falls Church, Va. Press Service.—Donald J. Lehman, the Maxwell. Radio Service—John C. Baker, 718 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Special Assistant to the Director—George F. Rowe, 1105 North Tuckahoe Street, Falls Church, Va. Ezecutive Assistant to the Director—J. H. McCormick, 1326 Perry Street NE.Chief of Motion Picture Service.—Chester A. Lindstrom, 318 Dorsett Avenue, Somerset, Md. Chief of Publications.—M. C. Merrill, 6701 Second Street. Chief of Exhibits Service—Joseph W. Hiscox, 1820 Upshur Street NE.Chief of Press Service.— William K. Charles, 3207 Circle Hill Road, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Chief of Personnel and Administrative Services.—R. A. Hollis, 9305 ColesvilleRoad, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone REpublic 4142) Director of Personnel.—T. Roy Reid, 3124 Quesada Street. Assistant Directors.—James L. Buckley, 4714 Sheridan Street, Riverdale, Md.;Strother B. Herrell, 7114 Seventh Street. Assistants to the Director—Robert L. Hill, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Charles A. Locke, 4001 Oglethorpe Street, Hyattsville, Md. Chief, Division of Classification.—Bernard A. Neary, 4503 Four Mile Run Drive,Barecroft, Va. Chief, Division of Employment.—Parke G. Haynes, 8216 Cedar Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Investigations.—Chalmers T. Forster, 904 Maryland Avenue NE.Chief, Division of Organization and Personnel Management.—N. Robert Bear, 3290 Worthington Street. Chief, Division of Personnel Relations and Safety.—Henry F. Shepherd, 6311 Ridge-wood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Division of Traiming.—Christopher O. Henderson, 5206 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief, Office of Plant and Operations.—Arthur B. Thatcher, 4116 Military Road.Assistant Chiefs,—William T. Luman, 4001 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md. : Everett C. Norberg, 3228 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. 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, Administrative Division.— William E. Weir, 1408 Franklin Street NE. Chief, Central Supply Division.—Cyril W, Long, 1101 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Communications Division.—John 8, Lucas, box 309, route 1, Vienna, Va. Chief, Equipment and Engineering Services Division.— William K. Knauff, 3500 Fourteenth Street. 380 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Chief, Motor Transport Division.—Samuel G. Quinn, 2520 Tenth Street NE. Chief, Photographic and Duplicating Services Division.—Samuel L. Gardiner, 3902 Twenty-fifth Place NE. Chief, fee? Estate Division.—Mackey W. White, 805 Grandview Drive, Alexan-dria, 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. ~ Associate Solicitor on Litigation.—W. Carroll Hunter, R. F. D. 1, Vienna, Va. Associate Solicitor in Charge of— Agricultural Adjustment, Crop Insurance and Labor.—James A. Doyle, 5505 Charlcotte Road, Bethesda, Md. Commodity Credit.—Edward M. Shulman, 2125 Observatory Place. Farm Credit.—Robert L. Farrington, 4105 Jenifer Street. Farm Security.—K. Wilde Blackburn, 3534 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Forestry, Research and General Legal Services—Henry Hilbun, Jr., 3811 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. Marketing, Regulatory Laws, and Transportatton.—Charles B. Nutting, 5518 Charlcotte Road, Bethesda, Md. Rural Electrification.—[Vacant.] Executive Assistant to the Solicitor—W. Edward Bawcombe, 3536 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Special Administrative Assistant to the Solicitor.—LaVantia M. Sampson, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. (Office Address: 212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) Associate Solicitor tn Charge of Farm Credit.—Robert L. Farrington, 4105 Jenifer Street, Washington, D. C (Office Address: 420 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo.) Associate Solicitor in Charge of Rural Electrification.—{ Vacant.] AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—P. V. Cardon, 1730 Crestwood Drive. Assistant Adminisirator.—W. V. Lambert, 4929 Western Avenue. Assistant to the Administrator.—C. E. Schoenhals, 3367 Stephenson Place. : Special Assistants.—Louise Stanley, 3725 Macomb Street; Charles A. Magoon, 4308 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. Publications and Information Coordinator.—Ernest G. Moore, 7205 Old Chester Road, Bethesda, Md. Research Coordinators.—Rhett Y. Winters, 6609 Thirty-second Street; S. B. Fracker, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street; H. W. Marston, 7913 Orchid Street. Agricultural Research Center (Beltsville, Prince Georges County, Md. Phone, WArfield 4200) Superintendent, Office of Operations.—Charles A. Logan, Agricultural Research Center, Beltsville, Md. Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—O. E. May, 5411 Thirteenth Street. Assistant Chiefs.—Carl F. Speh, 208 Elm Street, Alexandria, Va.; Louis B. How-ard; Henry A. Donovan, 4440 Forty-ninth Street. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 381 Director of— Northern Regional Research Laboratory, Peoria, Ill.—H. T. Herrick, Hotel Jefferson, Peoria, Ill. Southern Regional ‘Research Laboratory, New Orleans, La.—Harry P. Newton (acting), 7025 Freret Street, New Orleans, La. Eastern Regional Research Laboratory, Wyndmoor, Pa.—P. A. Wells, 207 Wheatsheaf Avenue, Abington, Pa. Western Regional Research Laboratory, Albany, Calif. —T. L. Swenson, 1665 Thousand Oaks Boulevard, Berkeley, Calif. end of— Aeirain Siriien Services Division.—Clara E.-Preinkert, 1742 North Capitol treet Agricultural Chemical Research Division.—L. F. Martin, 106 East Park Place, New Orleans, La. Allergen Research Division. —Henry Stevens, 4439 Volta Place. Biologically Active Chemical Compounds I nvestigations. —G. W. Irving, Jr., 4901 Lackawanna Street, Berwyn, Enzyme and Phytochemistry Research Division.—A. K. Balls, 1665 Thousand Oaks Boulevard, Berkeley, Calif. 1 PLOT, Division.—F. L. Teuton, route 2, Anacostia Station, Washington, Microbiology Research Division.—V. H. McFarlane (acting), 215 Harvey Street, Germantown, Pa. Naval Stores Research Division.—I. E. Knapp, 1605 Charlton Drive, New Orleans, La. Personnel Division—N. E, Jack, 326 Channing Street NE. Brg ealogy Laboratory. — Floyd DeEds, 2001 California Street, San Francisco, alif Suptiats Liquid Fuels Project.—J. W. Dunning, 108 Edgehill Court, Peoria, 11. Bureau of Animal Industry (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic4142) Chief.—B. T. Simms, 226E Administration Building. ; Assistant Chiefs.—Hugh C. McPhee, 6514 i Avenue, University Park, Hyattsville, Md.; S. O. Fladness, 2312 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va.; Paul E. Howe,! 2823 Twenty-ninth Street. Business Manager.—J. R. Cohran, 917 Eighteenth Street. Head of— Animal Husbandry Division.—Hugh C. McPhee, 6514 Fortieth Avenue, Univer-sity Park, Hyattsville, Md. Field Inspection Division.—S. O. Fladness, 2312 South Joyce Street, Ar- lington, Va. Information Division.—D. S. Burch, 6322 Thirty-second Street. Interstate Inspection Division.—W. M. MacKellar, 6100 Thirteenth Street. Pathological Division.—H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue. Tuberculosis Eradication Division.—A. E. Wight, 112 C Street SE. Virus Serum Control Division.—D. I. Skidmore, 4452 Volta Place. Zoological Division.— Benjamin Schwartz, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Bureau of Dairy Industry (South Building, C Street, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—0O. E. Reed, 4927 Thirtieth Place. Assistant to the Chief (Research). —FErnest Kelly, 1527 East Falkland Lane, Wtvof Spring, Md. Assistant to the Chief (Admimistration).—J. M. Kemper, 2231 Newton Street NE. Head, Section of Information.—L. S. Richardson, 610 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Head of Division of— Dazry Research Laboratories.—George E. Holm, 3513 R Street. Dazry Cae Breeding, Feeding, and Management. —Roy R. Graves, German- town, Md 1 On military furlough. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 26 382 Congressional Doty AGRICULTURE Head of Division of—Continued. Dairy Herd Improvement Investigations.—J. F. Kendrick, 2506 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. Nutrition and Physiology.— Charles A. Cary, 4605 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, d. Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—P. N. Annand, 4247 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Associate Chief.—Avery S. Hoyt, 413 Van Buren Street. hoi Gag —S. A. Rohwer, 3103 Key Boulevard, Lyon Village, Arlington, C. Bishopp, 8014 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md.; L. SE 4026 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va.; F.-H. Spencer, 4016 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Head of Division of— Finance and Business Services.—B. Connor, 5808 Third Street. Personnel. —W. F. Leffler, 1820 Clydesdale Place. Fruit Insects.—B. A. Porter, 123 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Fruitfly Investigations.—A. C. Baker, Laboratorio Entomologico, United States Denim 0of Agriculture, Apartado Num. 3, Colonia Anahuac, Mexico, flnien Fruitfly Conirol.—P. A. Hoidale, 503 Rio Grande Building, Harlingen, ex Enforcement of Japanese Beetle, Gypsy Moth, and Brown-Tail Moth Quarantines: Duel Elm Disease Control.—E. G. Brewer, 503 Main Street, East Orange, Forest Insects.—F. C. Craighead, 5301 Forty-first Street. Gypsy and Brown-Tail Moths Control. —R. A. Sheals, 20 Sanderson Street, -Green- field, Mass. Plant Disease Control.—J. F. Martin, 7504 Fourteenth Street. Cereal and Forage Insects.—C. M. 'Packard, 4519 Eighteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. Fe Crop ‘and Garden Insects.—W. H. White, University Lane, College Park, Cotton Insects.—R. W. Harned, 4417 Garfield Street. Pink Bollworm and Thurberia Weevil Control.—L. F. Curl, 571 Federal Building, San Antonio 6, Tex. Bee Culture.—1J. 1. Hambleton, Brookeville, Md. Insects Affecting Man and Animals.—E. C. Cushing, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. Insect Identification.—C. F. W. Muesebeck, 4312 Sheridan Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Insect Pest Survey and Information.—G. J. Haeussler, 4216 Queensbury Road, Hyattsville, Md. " Foreign Parasite Introduction.—C. P. Clausen, Woodley Park Towers. Control Investigations.—C. P. Clausen, Woodley Park Towers. Insecticides.—R. C. Roark, 3163 Adams Mill Road. Foret Plant Quarantines. —E. R. Sasscer, 9 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Domestic Plant Quarantines.—B. M. Gaddis, 6713 North Washington Boule-vard, Falls Church, Va. Grasshopper Control.—Claude Wakeland, 131 Speer Boulevard, Denver 3, Colo Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief. —Hazel K. Stiebeling, Westchester Apartments. Assistant Chiefs.—Ruth O’ Brien, 1219 Hamilton Street; Callie Mae Coons, 5462 Third Street. Administrative Officer.—Cecelia Huneke, 1301 Fifteenth Street. Head of Division of— Family Economics.—Margaret G. Reid, 5173 Fulton Street. Textiles and Clothing.—Ruth O’Brien (acting head), 1219 Hamilton Street. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 383 Head of Division of—Continued. Fogy oud Nutrition.—Esther L. Batchelder, 8433 Woodcliff Court, Silver Spring, Housing and Household Equipment.—Lenore E. Sater, 3806 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, WArfield 4400) Chief. —R. M. Salter, 4613 Beechwood Road, College Park, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—F. P. Cullinan, 4402 Beechwood Road, Hyattsville, Md.; M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; F. W. Parker, 6503 Fortieth Avenue, Hyattsville, Md.; A. W. Turner, 4400 Hartwick Road, College Park, Md. Business Manager.—H. E. Allanson, 7330 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Budget Officer—Edmund Stephens, 1 Stockton Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to Chief. —Albert H. Moseman, 1108 Linden Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Head of Division of— Con Crops and Diseases.—M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Cotton. and Other Fiber Crops and Diseases.—H. W. Barre, 100 Albemarle Street, Westmoreland Hills, D. C. Farm Mechanical Equipment.—R. B. Gray, 3162 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Farm Structures.— Wallace Ashby, 3746 Jocelyn Street. Zo Crops and Diseases.—0O. 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. Mechanical Processing of Farm Products.—G. R. Boyd, 301 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md Mycology and Disease Survey.—J. A. Stevenson, 4113 Emery Place. Nematology.—G. Steiner, 4117 Twenty-ninth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Plant Exploration and Introduction.—B. Y. Morrison, 7320 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Sols, fam and Irrigation.—F. W. Parker, 6503 Fortieth Avenue, Hyatts- ville, : : Soil Survey.—C. E. Kellogg, 4100 Nicholson Street, Hyattsville, Md. ei Plant Investigations.—E. W. Brandes, 5 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Tobacco, Medicinal, and Special Crops.—D. M. Crooks, 6910 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md. Rubber Plant Investigations Project.—E. W. Brandes, 5 Grafton Street, 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. Harlan P. Kelsey, East Boxford, Mass. ; 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. 384 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION (Municipal Auditorium, 212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) Governor.—I. W. Duggan, 635 Romany Road, Kansas City, Mo. Deputy Governor.—J. E. Wells, Jr., 1704 Kalmia Road, Washington, ID. C. den ol |Commissioner.—W. E. Rhea, 424 West Fifty-ninth Terrace, Kansas ity, Mo. Coorg uit |Bank Commissioner.—Samuel D. Sanders, Ambassador Hotel, Kansas ity, Mo. Production Credit Commissioner.—C. R. Arnold, 624 East Seventy-third Street, Kansas City, Mo. -Intermediate Credit Commaissioner.— George M. Brennan, 4618 Warwick Boule-vard, Kansas City, Mo. Associate Solicitor in Charge, Farm Credit.—R. L. Farrington, 4105 Jenifer Street, Washington, D. C. : Acting Director, Regional Agricultural Credit Division.—A. C. Sullivan, 4618 Warwick Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo. Director of Information and Extension.—Edwy B. Reid, 449 East Fifty-fifth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Director, Mortgage Corporation Service Division.—Harris E. Willingham, 230 West Sixty-second Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Chief Examiner.— Martin J. Fox, 722 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. Chief, Economic and Credit Research Division.—R. C. Engberg, 215 East Seventy- fourth Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Director, Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Division.—S. Paul Lindsey, Jr., 612 West Fifty-ninth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Gots ak Division.—V. V. Hemstreet, 7200 Jefferson Street, Kansas ity, Mo. Chief, Personnel Division.— William L. Moore, 2712 West Sixty-seventh Terrace, Mission, Kans. Special Assistant to the Governor.—Cliff Woodward, 821 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. ( Washington, D. C., Liaison Office: South Building, Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142) Deputy Governor.—J. E. Wells, Jr., 1704 Kalmia Road, Washington, D. C. Chief, Cooperative Research and Service Division.—Harold Hedges, 6532 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation (212 West Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo.) Board of Directors: Chairman.—I1. W. Duggan, Governor, Farm Credit Administration, 635 Romany Road, Kansas City, Mo. Daniel W. Bell, 3816 Gramercy Street, Washington, D. C. W. E. Rhea, 424 West Fifty-ninth Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. President.—I. W. Duggan, Governor, Farm Credit Administration, 635 Romany Road, Kansas City, Mo. Executive Vice President.—Harris E. Willingham, 230 West Sixty-second Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. Vice Presidents.—John H. Guill, 5507 Chadwick Road, Kansas City, Kans.; Harold F. James, 5132 Clark Drive, Kansas City, Kans. Vice renin and Secretary.—George H. Thomas, President Hotel, Kansas City, o. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Adminzstrator.—Dillar B. Lasseter. Associate Administrator—Robert W. Hudgens, 414 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Admanistrators.—C. Stott Noble, 4871 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Norman L. Johnson, 8224 Morrison Street; Stephen C. Hughes, 2985 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Rural Rehabilitation Division.—M. B. Braswell, 1226 North Abington Street, Arlington, Va. = AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 385 Director of Cooperative Division—Walton Dodge, 4319 Thirty-second Road South, Arlington, Va. Director of Farm Ownership Division.—Paul V. Maris, 3166 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director of Project Sales Division.—T. W. Crutcher, 4839 Twenty-seventh Road, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Chief Engineer.—Carl A. Johnson, 9409 Russell Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Medical Officer—Frederick D. Mott, 3414 Newark Street. Director of Information Division.—Ralph A. Picard, 2106 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Chief Fiscal Officer.—William C. Orr, Jr., 6317 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief Personnel Officer.—V. L. Couch, 401 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Investigation Division.—E. B. Johnson, 405 Brewster Street, Silver Spring, Md. Business Manager.—L. B. Owen, 1418 M Street. Chief Administrative Analyst.—C. H. Van Natta, 2801 Sixty-third Avenue, Cheverly, Md Assistant Director of Program and Reports Division.—Sidney S. Farabow, 3355 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. FOREST SERVICE (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—L. F. Watts, 1911 R Street. Assistant Chief. —R. E. Marsh, 5222 Chevy Chase Parkway. Diision of Fiscal Control.—O. A. Zimmerli, 6317 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, National Forest Divisions: Assistant Chief —C. M. Granger, box 236, 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.—John Sieker, 359 Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Division of Engineering.—T. W. Norcross, 407 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Wildlife Management.— Lloyd W. Swift, 323 North Oxford Street, Arlington, Va. Emergency Rubber Project, Executive Officer—Gordon R. Salmond, 106 West Myrtle Street, Alexandria, Va. State and Private Forest Divisions: Assistant Chief.—R. E. McArdle, 2907 Rittenhouse Street. Division of State Forestry.—J. A. Fitzwater, 100 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Private Forestry.—Howard Hopkins, 1801 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Division of State Cooperation.— S. Peirce, 3738 Huntington Street. Earl Forest Research Divisions: Assistant Chief.—E. I. Kotok, 1408 Greenbrier Avenue, Arlington, Va. Division of Forest Management Research.—L. 1. Barrett, 1823 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Md. Division of Forest Economics.—Edward C. Crafts, 6711 Forty-fourth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 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.—Earl W. Loveridge, 1650 Harvard Street. Division of Operation.— William P. Kramer, 2700 Valley Drive, Alexandria,Va. Diaisos of Information and Education.—Dana Parkinson, 3707 Military oad. Division of Personnel Management—H. D. Cochran, 204 North Piedmont Street, Arlington, Va. 386 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Lands Divisions: Assistant Chief.—L. F. Kneipp, Alban Towers. Division of Forest Land Planning.—H. Glenn Meginnis, 817 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Division of Land Acquisition. —[Vacant.] PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Thirteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—J. B. Hutson, 5606 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Deputy Adminsstrator (Also Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation).— G. G. Armstrong, the Statler. Assistant = Administrator for Regulatory and Marketing Service Work.—C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street. Assistant Administrator for Inventory Management (Also Vice President, Com-modity Credit Corporation).—Col. R. L. Harrison, 3036 Woodland Drive. STAFF OFFICES Director of Information.—J. B. Hasselman, 5449 Nebraska Avenue. Director of Price.—H. B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street. Director of Requirements and Allocations.—D. A. FitzGerald, 5517 Smallwood Drive, Greenacres, Md. Transportation Officer. TF, B, Black, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Director of Claimants Program Coordination.—J. B. Long (acting), 103 Rhode Island Avenue NE. BRANCHES Director, Budget and Management Branch (Also Secretary, Commodity Credit Corporation). —J. B. Gilmer, 4837 Twenty-eighth Strest South, Arlington, Ve. Directo, Compliance and Investigation Branch.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood treet. Director, Cotton Branch.—C. C. Farrington (acting), 4715 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Dairy Branch.—T. G. Stitts, 6022 Utah Avenue. Director, Fats and Oils Branch.—W. H. Jasspon, the Mayflower. Director, Field Service Branch.—N. E. Dodd, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. Director, Fiscal Branch (Also Treasurer, Commodity Credit Corporation).—C. G. Garman, 6649 Thirty-second Street. Director, Food Distribution Programs Branch.—P. C. Stark, the Washington. Director, Foreign Food Programs Branch.—J. B. Gilmer (acting), 4837 Twenty- eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Fruit and Vegetable Branch. —E. A. Meyer, 425 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Grain Branch (Also Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation).— CC Farrington, 4715 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Labor Branch.—Col. W. R. Buie, 4430 Thirty-sixth Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Livestock Branch.—H. E. Reed, "5420 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Marketing Facilities Branch. LW. C. Crow, 1258 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va Director, Materials and Equipment Branch.—L. B. Taylor, 110 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Poultry Branch.—Hobart Creighton, 1605 Kennedy Place. Director, Shipping and Storage Branch. I _ColH. © Warlick, 3528 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Special Commodities Branch.—H. C. Albin, 2608 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Sugar Branch.—E. B. Wilson, the Shoreham. Director, Tobacco Branch.—C. E. Gage. 401 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. STAFF DIVISIONS Budget and Management Branch: Ch, Budget Division.—H. F. Shambarger, 1913 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 387 Budget and Management Brinda Cpbitd. Ciel, Administrative Services Division.—F. J. Tony 1711 Rhode Island venue. Chi, Management and Organization Division.—H. G. Herrell, 210 Peabody treet. Chief, Personnel Division.—R. Douglas Smith, 3121 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Fiscal Branch: Assistant Director, in Charge of Special Assignments and Financial Functions.— James J. Somers, 2005 Key Boulevard North, Arlington, Va Assistant Director, in Charge of Accounting Operation Functions.—Karney A. Brasfield, 1501 ‘North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director, in Charge of Administration.—Milton P. Siegel, 5722 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Plant Financing Division.—J. B. Wyckoff, 3256 S Street. Chief, Quotations Division.—F. J. Kyttle, 1610 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Disbursing Division.—Guy G. Chase, 1840 Mintwood Place. Chief, Claims Dwviston.—W. A. Stroud, 5505 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Operations Procedures and Review Division. —Karney A Brasfield, 1501 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Fiscal Control and Reports Dwision.—Elder E. Glover, 2922 First Road North, Arlington, Va. Chief, 1 nventory Accounting Division.—L. D. Ellsworth, Box 67, Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Va. Oheter; Program Accounting Division.—H. B. Hays, New York, N. Y. Chief, Administrative Accounting Division.—H. L. McLeod, 3216 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. NATIONAL WAR BOARD (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chairman.—Ernest R. Duke, 3524 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF PRICE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—Howard B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street. OFFICE OF REQUIREMENTS AND ALLOCATIONS Director.—D. A. FitzGerald, 5517 Smallwood Drive, Green Acres, Md. OFFICE OF SURPLUS PROPERTY AND RECONVERSION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Acting Director.—E. D. White, 510 Twenty-fourth Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF MARKETING SERVICES (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director—Clarence W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street. Deputy Director for Operations. — Harry E. Reed, 5420 Connecticut Avenue, Assistant Deputy Director—Gordon Peyton, 909 South Washington Street, Alexandia, Va. Assistant Deputy Director.—William C. Crow, 1258 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Chaef, Cotton and Fiber Branch.—Carl H. Robinson, 607 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chuef, Dairy and Poultry Branch.—Thomas G. Stitts, 6022 Utah Avenue. Chief, Fats and Oils Branch.— William H. Jasspon, the Mayflower. Chief, Fruit and Vegetable Branch.—Emanuel A. Meyer, 6704 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. . | | 388 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Assistant Deputy Director—Continued. Chief, Industry Operations Branch.—Xenneth W. Berkey, Fort Ward Heights, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Grain Products Branch.—Edward J. Murphy, 1719 Crestwood Drive. Chief, Livestock and Meats Branch.—Sterling R. Newell, 4610 Chesapeake Street. Chief, Marketing Facilities Branch.— William C. Crow, 1258 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Marketing Reports Diviston.— Elwyn J. Rowell, 506 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. ; Chief, Special Commodities Branch.—Harold C. Albin, 2608 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Sugar Branch.—Joshua Bernhardt, 6800 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director for Civilian Programs.—Sylvester R. Smith, Beverley Plaza Gardens, Building 6, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Deputy Director.—Herbert L. Forest, 5 Shenandoah Road, route 1, Alex-andria, Va. Acting Chief, Civilian Food Requirements Branch.—Arthur E. Browne, 17 Tauxe-mont Road, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Chaef, Nutrition Programs Branch.—Milburn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md Deputy Director for Management.—Fred J. Hughes, 1711 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Deputy Director.—Henry G. Herrell, 210 Peabody Street. Acting Chuef, Administrative and Procedure Analysis Diviston.— Marion F. Alls-man, 4823 Twenty-seventh Road South, Arlington, Va. . fleging Chaef, Admanastrative Services Division.—Charles E. Offutt, 1445 Ogden treet. Acting Chief, Budget and Reports Division.—Forest C. Brimacombe, 8307 Six-teenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Acting Chief, Fiscal Division.—Herman L. McLeod, 3216 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Acting Chief, Personnel Diviston.— William A. DeVaughan, 2506 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF MATERIALS AND FACILITIES (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—Frederic B. Northrup, 14 Woodmont Road, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director.—Arthur E. Burns, 6521 Thirty-second Street. Administrative Officer.— Michael A. Stahl, 1301 South Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Chemicals and Fertilizers Branch.—Guy F. MacLeod, 560 Twenty-third Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Containers and Packaging Branch.—Russell A. Palen, 1789 Lanier Place. Chief, Farm Machinery and Supplies Branch.—Leon B. Taylor, 110 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Aen Chief, Priorities and Allocations Branch.—Dudley B. Harde, 1734 Poplar ane. Chief, Program Branch.—Theodore L. Sweet, 1660 Lanier Place. Acting Chief, Transportation and Storage Branch.—John P. Monahan, 3821 ~ Twenty-second Street NE. OFFICE OF TRANSPORTATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director—Edgar B. Black, the Broadmoor. OFFICE OF WATER UTILIZATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—Ralph R. Will, 2611 Randolph Street NE. OFFICE OF INVESTIGATORY SERVICES (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood Street. Assistant Directors.—Rodger R. Kauffman, 6417 Western Avenue; W, Edwards Beach, 5719 Chevy Chase Parkway. ee AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 389 Executive Officer.— Walter L. Miller, Glen Cove Parkway. Chief, Accounting and Audit Services Division.—John J. Backman, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Compliance Investigation Division.— William H. Duggan, 1 Scott Circle. Acting Chief, Commodity Exchange Supervision Division.—Rodger R. Kauffman, 6417 Western Avenue. Chief, Cost Investigations Division.— Albert L. Morgan, 428 Whittier Street. . Personnel Officer.—Claude M. Chilson, 3200 Sixteenth Street. OFFICE OF LABOR (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director of Labor.—Col. Wilson R. Buie, Corps of Engineers, 4430 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Directors of Labor.—Xenneth A. Butler, 2807 Queens Chapel Road, Mount Rainier, Md.; Howard A. Preston, 4658 Thirty-sixth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Liaison Officer. Col. William M. Wilder, Infantry, 2224 F Street. Chie, dis Branch.—Clarence E. Herdt, 1522 East-West Highway, Silver pring, Md Chief, ns Branch.— William C. Holley, 4436 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Health Services Branch.—Dr. Henry B. Makover, 2706 Thirty-first Street SE. FEDERAL CROP INSURANCE CORPORATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Board of Directors.—Ernest R. Duke, chairman, 3524 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va.; Howard B. Boyd, 3357 Rittenhouse Street; William A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Manager. —J. Carl Wright, 2815 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (South Building, Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142) President.—Frank Hancock, the Continental. Vice Presidents.—Carl C. Farrington, 4715 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Richard W. Maycock, 4521 Thirty-second Road North, Arlington, Va. beply Director, Office of Basic Commodities.—Geron E. Rathell, 3000 Connecticut venue. Deputy Directors, Office of Supply.—Otie M. Reed, North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va.; M. L. Brenner, 2809 Erie Street SE.; Robert H. Cunningham, 501 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Treasurer. __Cameron G. Garman, 6649 Thirty-second Street. Secretary.—Jesse B. Gilmer, 4837 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Cotton Division, Office of Basic Commodities.—C. C. Smith, 2324 South Inge Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Grain Division, Office of Basic Commodities— William McArthur, 303 Monticello Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Director, General Crops Division, Office of Basic Commodities.—Milton S. Briggs, 12 West Rosemont Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Diterpors Hemp Division, Office of Basic Commodities.—S. H. McCrory, 6811 Sixth treet. Director, Oilseed Division, Office of Basic Commodities.—W. H. Jasspon, the Mayflower. Diy Sugar Division, Office of Basic Commodities.—Earl B. Wilson, the Shore- Acting Chief, Procurement and Price Support Branch, Office of Supply.—L. J. Cappleman, the Harrington. Acting ah Program Liaison Bramch.—J. B. Long, 103 Rhode Island Avenue NE Chief, Reports and Special Programs Branch.—M. M. Sandstrom, 926 North Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va. Acting Chief, Sales Branch. —[Vacant.] 390 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE Chief, School Lunch and Distribution Branch.—W. C. Ockey, 5544 Wessling Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Shipping and Storage Branch.—Harry B. McGrew, the Northumberland. Chief, Personal Diviston.—R. Douglas Smith, 1140 North Randolph Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Administrative Services Diviston.—Joseph Haspray, 9409 Warren Street, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Audit Division.—D. J. Harrill, route 2, Falls Church, Va. AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT AGENCY (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief —Norris E. Dodd, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. Budget Division, Chief.—Douglas J. Scruggs, 117 South Clifton Terrace. East Central Division, Director.—Charles D. Lewis, route 2, box 7, Leesburg, Va. Fiscal Management Division, Chief.—J. Herbert Walsh, 1747 Shepherd Street. Information Division, Chief.— Willard H. Lamphere, Spring Drive, Falls Church, Va. North Central Division, Director.— Leroy K. Smith, 4900 North Sixteenth Street, Arlington, Va. Northeast Dissict: Director.—Allen W. Manchester, 205 Hodges Lane, Takoma Park, ’ 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.—Clovis D. Walker, 4010 Warren Street. Western Division, Director.—G. F. Geissler, 8336 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—Claude R. Wickard, Westchester Apartments. Deputy Adminisirator.— William J. Neal. Asn Administrator.—Carl Hamilton, 400 South Garfield Street, Arlington, a. 3 Consulting Economist.—Harlow S. Person. Chief, Applications and Loans Division.— Arthur W. Gerth. Acting Chief, Design and Construction Division.—J. K. O’Shaughnessy. Chief, Cooperatives’ Operations Division.— Thomas J. Robertson. Chief, Finance Division.—Joseph F. Marion. Chief, Technical Standards Division.—Maurice M. Samuels. Chief, Information Division.—Allyn A. Walters. Chief, Personnel Division.—John W. Asher, Jr., 1003 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Management Division.—James R. Frazer. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE (Executive Offices: South Building, Fourteenth and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—Hugh H. Bennett, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief.—Jefferson C. Dykes, 4511 Guilford Road, College Park, Md. -Assistants to the Chief.—Arnold M. Davis, 7013 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md.; Thomas L. Gaston, Jr., 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Executive Assistant to the Chief.—Glenn K. Rule, 4908 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant Chief (Special Consultant to Chief).—Walter C. Lowdermilk, 6336 Thirty-first Place. Gi Chief, in Charge Camp Operations.—Henry D. Abbot, 2319 Tracy lace. Foreign Liaison Representative— William X. Hull, 1344 Longfellow Street. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 391 Soil Conservation Service—Continued. Chief of Division of— Administrative Services.—John R. Moore, 4314 South Capitol Street. Budget and Finance—Carl H. Dorny, 6812 Oak Lane, Chevy Chase, 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.—Robert W. Rogers, 5512 Huntington Parkway, Bethesda, Md. States Relations.—Ivan L. Hobson, 2019 I Street. Chief Operations.—A. E. Jones, 7011 Fordham Court, College Park, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—Frank J. Hopkins, 109 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Robert M. Ross, 313 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. Chief of Division of— Agronomy.—Grover F. Brown, 5056 Temple Hills Road, Temple Hills, Md. Biology.— Edward H. Graham, 232 Prospect Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Cartographic.—Joseph M. Snyder, 4319 Woodberry 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.—Alfred M. Hedge, 5600 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. Range.— Frederick G. Renner, 6692 Thirty-second Place. Se Lona aakon Surveys.—Ethan A. Norton, 4702 Morgan Drive, Chevy “hase, : Water Conservation.—Homer M. Wells, 105 Anacostia Road SE. Chief, Research.—Mark L. Nichols, 3309 Stephenson Place. Assistant Chief —Howard E. Middleton, 603 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Research Specialists.—Samuel B. Detwiler, 1028 North Daniel Street, Arlington, Va.; George W. Musgrave, 4205 Four Mile Run, Arlington, Va.; 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.—Forrest G. Bell, 5320 Flint Drive, Westgate, Md. Farm Irrigation.— Walter W. McLaughlin, Berkeley, Calif. Weer Conservation and Disposal Practices.—Lewis A. Jones, 7131 Chestnut treet. 392 Congressional Directory COMMERCE -DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Constitution Avenue and E Street. Phone, District 2200) HENRY AGARD WALLACE, Secretary of Commerce (Wardman Park Hotel), was born on a farm in Adair County, Iowa, October 7, 1888, son of Henry Cantwell Wallace (Secretary of Agriculture, 1921-24) and Carrie May (Brod-head) Wallace, and grandson of Henry Wallace, a member of President Theodore Roosevelt’s Country Life Commission; B. S. A. Towa State College, 1910; married Ilo Browne, of Indianola, Towa, May 20, 1914; children—Henry B., Robert B., Jean B.; editorial staff, Wallaces’ Farmer, 1910-24; editor, 1924-29; editor, merged Wallaces’ Farmer and Towa Homestead, 1929-33; devised first corn-hog ratio charts, indicating probable course of markets, 1915; author of many publica-tions on agriculture; chairman, Agricultural Round Table, Williamstown, 1927; delegate, International Conference of Agricultural Economists, 1929; developed, raised and marketed hybrid corn of high yield quality, 1913-33; appointed Secretary of Agriculture, March 4, 1933, and served until his resignation on September 5, 1940; elected Vice President of the United States on November 5, 1940, and served for the term 1941-45; member, Council of National Defense, National Munitions Control Board, Textile Foundation, Smithsonian Institution, Interdepartmental Committee on the Proclaimed List, Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education, Foreign Service Buildings Commission, National Archives Council, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Commodity Ex-change Commission, chairman, Foreign-Trade Zones Board; governor, Inland Waterways Corporation; ex-officio general chairman, Business Advisory Council; vice chairman, the Publication Board; entered upon duty as Secretary of Com-merce on March 2, 1945, under appointment by the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Home, Des Moines, Towa. Under Secretary.— Alfred Schindler, Embassy Apartments. ; Assistant to the Under Secretary.— Max H. Schroeder, General Scott Apartments. Assistant Secretary.— William A. M. Burden, 1224 Thirtieth Street. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—George W. Burgess, 1411 Thirty-fifth Street. Executive Assistant to the Secretary.—Bernard L. Gladieux, 4604 Brookview Drive. Solicitor.—HaroldH. Young, Diplomat Apartments. Assistant Solicitor.—E. T. Quigley, 3800 Fourteenth Street. Assistants to the Secretary.—George M. Reynolds, 615 South Lee Street, Alex- andria, Va.; Philip M. Hauser, 6306 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary to the Secretary.— Mildred M. Eaton, 2702 Wisconsin Avenue. Director, Office of Budget and Management.—Francis R. Cawley, 4120 Third Road North, Arlington, Va. Director, Office of Information.—Bruce Catton, 3139 Tennyson Street. Director, Office of Persomnel.—Oliver C. Short, 4605 Clemson Road, College Park, Md. Director, Office of Administrative Services.—Gerald Ryan, 100 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Office of Declassification and Technical Service.—John C. Green, 3220 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Office of Civilian Defense Property.— Gilbert A. Bonstetter, 1405 Dela-field Place. INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION (Operating Federal Barge Lines and Warrior River Terminal Co. Executive offices: Boatmen’s Bank Building, St, Louis, Mo.; phone, CHestnut 6336. Washington office: Department of Commerce Building; phone, DIstrict 2200, extension 570) Incorporator.—The Secretary of Commerce. Chairman of the Advisory Board.—South Trimble, Jr., 3111 Macomb Street, Washington, D. C. President.—Joseph A. Lennon, 1330 Boatmen’s Bank Building, St. Louis, Mo. Vice President.—John S. Powell, 7725 Belfast Street, New Orleans, La. Admanastrative Assistant.—Aubrey C. Mills, 1330 Boatmen’s Bank Building, St. Louis, Mo. Secretary-Treasurer.—Guy Bartley, 530 North Union Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Director.—J. C. Capt, the Westchester. Assistant Director.—Dr. Philip M. Hauser, 6306 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. COMMERCE Executive Departments 393 Statistical Assistant to the Director.—Morris H. Hansen, 512 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief Social Science Analyst.—Dr. A. Ross Eckler, 3643 Brandywine Street. Chief Economist.—Howard C. Grieves, 4808 Middlesex Lane, Bethesda, Md. Ezecutive Assistant to the Director.—Ralph E. Galloway, 4799 Silver Hill Road, Suitland, Md. Chief, Budget and Finance Division.—John T. Moore, 3029 O Street. Chief, Machine Tabulation Division.—Adrian E. Velthuis (acting), 206 Washing- ton Boulevard SE. J Chief, Personnel Division.—Helen D. Almon, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief, Publications Division.—Frank R. Wilson, Somerset House. Geographer.—Clarence E. Batschelet, 2220 Military Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Agriculture Division.— William F. Callander, 2126 Key Boulevard, Arling- ton, Va. Chief, Business Division.— William C. Truppner, 4608 Walsh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Freld Division.—Earl D. Krickbaum, 7905 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Foreign Trade Division.—Dr. J. Edward Ely, 2049 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Chief, Governments Division.—Dr. Calvert L. Dedrick, 6615 Western Avenue. Chief, Industry Division.— Maxwell R. Conklin, 422 Cumberland Avenue, Somer- set, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Population Division.—Dr. Leon E. Truesdell, 3429 Ordway Street. Chzef, Vital Statistics Division.—Dr. Halbert L. Dunn, 7631 Fort Foote Road. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE Director.—Amos E. Taylor, 1451 Jonquil Street. Assistant Director.—0O. P. Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative Assistant to the Director.—C. O. Luhn, 4628 Rosedale Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Liaison Officer.—Herbert P. Van Blarcom, 407 Jackson Place, Alexandria, 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. Trade Association Unit.—C. J. Judkins, 1414 Fifteenth Street. Chaef, Distribution Division.—[Vacant.] Distribution Management Unit.—Nelson A. Miller, 9604 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Distribution Cost Unit.—E. R. Hawkins, 6218 Vorlich Lane, Fairway Hills, Md. Chief, Construction Division.—John L. Haynes, 3012 McKinley Street. Construction Statistics Unit.— William H. Shaw, 2022 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Industrial Economy.—H. B. McCoy, 106 Franklin Street, Ken- sington, Md. Chemical Unit.—C. C. Concannon, 1200 Sixteenth Street. 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.— Charles E. Lund (acting), 4709 Yuma Street. Industrial Projects Unit—George W. 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 and Motiwe Products Unit.—W. H. Myer, 3512 Newark Street. Metals and Minerals Unit.— Walter A. Janssen, the Occidental. Motion Picture Unit.— Nathan D. Golden, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Pulp and Paper Unit.—W. LeRoy Neubrech, 3619 Twenty-sixth Street NE. Rubber Unit.—S. Earle Overley (acting), 708 Cornell Street, Fredericksburg, Va. Specialites Unit.—Donald S. Parris (acting), 802 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Textiles Unit.— Robert P. Sweeny, 4607 Connecticut Avenue. Transportation Unit.—James C. Nelson, 3824 Porter Street. Acting Chief, Division of International Economy.—Frank A. Waring, 1717 Twen-. tieth Street. American Republics Unit.—George Wythe, 2151 California Street. British Empire Unit—Thomas R. Wilson, 4441 Burlington Place. " 394 : Congressional Directory COMMERCE Division of International Economy—Continued. European Unit.—Louis Domeratzky, McLean, Va. Far Eastern Unit.—Charles K. Moser, 4708 Reno Road. Russian Unit.— Ernest C. Ropes, 3715 Canal Road. Industrial Property Adviser.—James L. Brown, 815 Eighteenth Street. Ley patton Payments Umt.—Hal B. Lary, 14 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md. International Trade Unit.—Christopher Roberts (acting), 2807 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. ih Ag emis Unit—H. P. Macgowan, 6 Carvel Road, Westmoreland ills, . Trade Controls Unit.—Perry J. Stevenson, 3506 Quesada Street. Acting Chief, Division of Small Business.— Wilford White, 3131 Nebraska Avenue. Special Studies Unit.— Wilford White, 3131 Nebraska Avenue. Management Aid and Finance Unit.—[Vacant.] Finance and Tax Research Unit.—[Vacant.] Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.—M. Joseph Meehan, 810 Dahlia Street. Brine Statistics Unit.—Louis J. Paradiso, 8505 Mayfair Place, Silver Spring, Md. Business Structure Unit.—[Vaecant.] Current Business Analysis Unit.—Harry Magdoff, 3226 Ravensworth Place, Alexandria, Va. National Economics Unit.—S. Morris Livingston, 4 Acre Farm, Burnt Mills Hills, Silver Spring, Md. National Income Unit.—Milton Gilbert, 2920 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director, Field Service Division.—Joseph A. Mack, 3700 Thirty-ninth Street. Administrative Units: Accounts.—H. W. Haun, 1332 Rittenhouse Street. Files.— William F. Smith, the Roosevelt. | Personnel.— Alice I. Maedonald, 1307, Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Supply.—Edith O. Hainsworth, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. Consonants Edad G. Montgomery, 24 West Kirke Street, Chevy ase, NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS (Connecticut Avenue and Van Ness Street. Phone, WQodley 1720) i Director.—E. U. Condon, 3324 Military Road. Assistant Director.—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Assistant to Director.—Ralph W. Smith, 700 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Division of— : Weights and Measures.— Wilmer Souder (acting), 3503 Morrison Street. Electricity.—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place. Heat and Power.—Henry T. Wensel (acting), 113 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Optics.—F. J. Bates, 1649 Harvard Street. | Chemistry.—G. E. F. Lundell, 402 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. J Mechanics and Sound.—H. L. Dryden, 2020 Pierce Mill Road. i Organic and Fibrous Materials.—A. T. McPherson, 19 Cleveland Street, Ken- | sington, Md. | Metallurgy.—John G. Thompson (acting), 114 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Clay and Silicate Products.—Douglas E. Parsons, 5510 Southwick Street, Bethesda, Md. Simplified Practice.—E. W. Ely, 1725 Juniper Street. Trade Standards.—1. J. Fairchild, 3707 Thirty-fourth Street. Codes and Specifications.—G. N. Thompson, 3717 S Street. | Ordnance Development.—H. Diamond, 3226 Northampton Street. i : Plant.—O. L. Britt, 6209 Thirtieth Street. Shops.—W. H. Seaquist, 219 Rittenhouse Street. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY Director.—Rear Adm. L. O. Colbert, 4408 Twenty-ninth Street. Assistant Director.—Rear Adm. J. H. Hawley, 3710 Jenifer Street. Special Assistants to the Director.—Lt. Comdr. John A. Bond, 2701 Connecticut Avenue; Lt. Comdr. W. M. Scaife, 3532 Valley Drive, Parkfairfax, Alexan- dria, Va.; Lt. Comdr. Paul A. Smith, 4714 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. COMMERCE Executive Departments 395 Chief Clerk.—C. H. Dieck, 801 Crittenden Street. Secretary to the Director. — Peter Dulac, 3408 Twentieth Street NE. Chief of Division of— Geodesy.—Lt. Comdr. Henry W. Hemple, 5712 Nevada Avenue. Coastal Surveys.—Commander Raymond P. Eyman, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Charts.—Capt. F. S. Borden, 3611 Chesapeake Street. Tides and Currents.—Commander Charles K. Green, 4451 Four Mile Run Drive South, Arlington, Va. Goosen ‘and Seismology.—Capt. O. W. Swainson, 3000 Thirty-ninth treet Personnel and Accounts.—Capt. R. F. Luce, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. Photogrammetry.—Commander K. T. Adams, 4103 North Chesterbrook Road, Falls Church, Va. Instruments.—D. IL. Parkhurst, 4602 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. PATENT OFFICE Commassioner.—Casper W. Ooms, 6538 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. First Assistant Commassioner.— Leslie Frazer, 12 West Lock Lane, Richmond, Va. Assistant Commissioners. —Henry Van Arsdale, the Westchester, Washington, ; Conder C. Henry, 4322 Argyle Terrace, Washington, D. C. Administrative Assistant.—Grattan Kerans, 1305 Kennedy Street, Washington, Die Solicitor.—W. W. Cochran, 4358 Argyle Terrace, Washington, D. C. Chief Clerk.—James A. Brearley, 325 Second Street SE., Washington, D. C. Assistant Chief Clerk.—C. E. Tomlin, 918 Blanton Avenue, Richmond, Va. Examiners in Chief.—Walter L. Redrow, 6214 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; 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.; Mark Taylor, 1705 Newton Street NE.; H. H. Jacobs, 5014 Glenbrook Terrace, Washington D. C. Law Ezaminers—Howard S. Miller, Byrd Hotel, Richmond, Va.; E. L.. Reynolds, 425 Willard Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; C. W. Moore, 322 Oak Lane, Blea, Va.; R. F. Whitehead, 1524 Twenty-eighth Street, Washington, Supervisor.—C. L. Wolcott, 1519 Palmyra Avenue, Richmond, Va. Examiners of Interferences. WE, Waite, 1316 Tris Street, Washington, D.-C.; PhilipI. Heyman, 7107 Ninth Street, Washington, D. C.; ArturoY. Casanova, Jr., 7915 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C.L-E Kreek, 3603 Twenty-second Street NE., Washington, D.C.; A.D. Bailey, 3701 Albemarle Street, Washington, D. C. : WEATHER BUREAU (Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, Michigan 3200) Chief of Bureau.—Francis W. Reichelderfer, 3837 Garrison Street. Assistant Chief for Admanistration.— Willard F. McDonald, 1931 North Upton Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Administrative Services.— William Weber, 2032 Belmont Road. Sh Division of Personnel Management.—C. Garton Swain, 4714 Harrison treet. Chief, Budget Division.— William Weber, 2032 Belmont Road. i Chef, Technical Services. — Delbert M. Little, 5325 Chevy Chase Park- Chief, ‘Division of Synoptic Reports and Forecasts.—Ivan R. Tannehill, 4635 Warren Street. Aeting Chief, Division of Station Operations.—Robin E. Spencer, 5273 Nebraska venue. Chief, Instrument Division.— William R. Thickstun, 1101 Euclid Street. Chief. Division of Climate and Crop Weather. —[Vacant.] Hihinger Director.—Merrill Bernard, 2205 Forty-second Street. 396 Congressional Directory COMMERCE | Executive Assistant, Scientific Services.—Charles F. Sarle, 412 Jackson Place, Alexandria, Va. s Acting Chuef, Division of Special Scientific Services.—Roger A. Allen, 5751 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. Crd, Special Military Forecasts Unit.—Charles L. Mitchell, 1340 Jefferson treet. Chief, Extended Forecasts Unit.—Jerome Namias, 3111 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Acting Chief, Division of Statistics.—Loyd A. Stevens, 1366 Sheridan Street. Librarian.—Robert C. Aldredge, 1020 Eighteenth Street. Special Liaison Officer.—R. Hanson Weightman, 5914 Wisconsin Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Washington Forecast District (Washington National Airport).— Temporary official in charge, Reinhart C. Schmidt, Baileys Cross Roads, Va. CIVIL AERONAUTICS ADMINISTRATION Administrator of Civil Aeronautics.—Theodore P. Wright, 2918 Glover Driveway. Deputy Aduinisirador halen I. Stanton, 1709 North Harvard Street, Arling- ton, Va. Assistant Administrator for Field Operations and International Director.—A. S. Koch, box 2, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Administrator for Business Management.—Arlin E. Stockburger, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Administrator for Airports.—Charles B. Donaldson, 5510 First Street. Assia Administrator for Safety Regulation.—Fred M. Lanter, 3726 Connecticut ! venue. Assistant Adminestrator for Federal Avrways.—[Vacant.] Assistant Administrator for Aviation Trawming.—Bruce Uthus, 6118 Forty-third Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Administrator for Aviation Information.—Ben Stern, 4228 Forty-fifth Street. Airport Administrator, Washington National Airport.—Hervey F. Law, route 3, box 409, Vienna, Va. General Counsel.—Glen D. Woodmansee, 103 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Aircraft Control Officer.—John P. Morris, 1600 Sixteenth Street. CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD Members: : Chairman.—L. Welch Pogue, 116 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice Chairman.—[Vacant.] Harllee Branch, the Kennedy-Warren. Oswald Ryan, 3239 Klingle Road. Josh Lee, 4920 Upton Street. Executive Assistant to Chairman.— Marian L. Newman, 1360 Peabody Street. Secretary. —Fred A. Toombs, 3905 Twentieth Street NE. General Counsel.—George C. Neal, 4449 Faraday Place. Chaef, Office of Trial Examiners.—Francis W. Brown, 3416 Morrison Street. V Director, Economic. Bureau.—Russell B. Adams; 10710 Old Bladensburg Road, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Safety Bureau.—Jesse W. Lankford, 3118 Central Avenue NE. Chief, Public Information.—Edward E. Slattery, Jr., 2909 Rittenhouse Street. NATIONAL INVENTORS COUNCIL Chairman.— Charles F. Kettering. Secretary.— Lawrence Langer. { Members: Roger Adams, George Baekeland, Rear Adm. J. D. Beuret (retired), Brig. Gen. William A. Borden, Rear Adm. H. G. Bowen, Oliver E. Buckley, George W. Codrington, William D. Coolidge, Watson Davis, Frederick M. Feiker, Webster N. Jones, George W. Lewis, Orville Wright, Fred Zeder, Casper W. Ooms. Chief Engineer.—John C. Green, 3220 Connecticut Avenue. | . Administrative Assistant.—Jerome E. Burke, 4020 Calvert Street. COMMERCE Executive Departments 397 OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE OPERATIONS (Temporary Building T, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 7030) Director.— Arthur Paul, 3104 Q Street. Assistants to the Director.—Monte F. Bourjaily, 2919 Q Street; Murray H. Marker, 1673 Columbia Road. Executive Officer—David B. Vaughan, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. General Counsel.—Nathan Ostroff, 5813 Fourteenth Street. Field Liaison Officer—Dewayne Kraeger, 1406 South George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Information Officer—Roger Tubby, 8471 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Economic Program Staff.—Lewis L. Lorwin, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Trade Relations Officer.—[Vacant.] Director, Food Programs Branch.—Herbert W. Parisius, 5447 Forty-second Street. Direc, Requirements and Supply Branch.— Walter Freedman, 2901 Eighteenth treet. Dereon Technical Industrial Intelligence Branch.—Howland H. Sargeant, 1 Scott ircle. Director, Clearing Office Branch.—Homer Jones, 3067 Ordway Street. Director, Foreign Trade Branch.—George L. Bell, 4936 Brandywine Street. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 27 398 Congressional Directory LABOR DEPARTMENT OF LABOR (Department of Labor Building, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 2420) LEWIS B. SCHWELLENBACH, of Spokane, Wash., Secretary of Labor (Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue); born Superior, Wis., September 20, 1894; son of Francis and Martha (Baxter) S.; married Anne Duffy of Seattle, December 30, 1935; LL. B., University of Washington, 1917; LL. D., Washington State College, 1945; lawyer; United States District Judge, Eastern District of Washington, 1940-45; dean of the law school of Gonzaga University, 1944-45; United States Senator, 1935-40; president, Board of Regents, University of Washington, 1933-34; president, Alumni Association, University of Washington, 1928; commander, American Legion, Department of Washington, 1922; assistant instructor, University of Washington, 1916-17; admitted to Washington bar, 1919, and began practice at Seattle; associated with firm Roberts & Skeel, 1919-21; associated, Schwellenbach, Merrick & MacFarlane, 1925-31; practiced alone, 1931-35; private, Twelfth Infantry, during World War I; delegate Interparliamen-tary Union, The Hague, 1938; member, American Council Institute of Pacific Relations, American Society International Law, American Academy of Political and Social Science, American Bar Association, Regional Board of Legal Examiners, Rotary Club of Spokane, member, Advisory Board, Salvation Army (Spokane); Democrat; Episcopalian; became Secretary of Labor July 1, 1945. Officeof the Assistant Secretary: The Assistant Secretary.—Daniel W. Tracy, Fourteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Marie M. Bryce, 3345 Q Street. Office of the Second Assistant Secretary: The Second Assistant Secretary.—Edward C. Moran, Jr., the Wardman Park. Private Secretary to the Second Assistant Secretary.—Mary J. Smith, 2420 Sixteenth Street. Special Assistants to the Secretary.—John W. Gibson, 1325 Thirteenth Street; Albert Abrahamson, 1530 Sixteenth Place. Director of Information.— Leslie Eichel, 6601 Fourteenth Street. Office of the Solicitor: Acting Solicitor.—William S. Tyson, 5803 McKinley Street, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Solicitors.—Louis Sherman, 3726 Connecticut Avenue; Bessie Margo-lin, 3051 Idaho Avenue; Arthur D. Hill, Jr., 3774 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va.; Donald M. Murtha, 4619 Thirty-fourth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va.; Jeter S. Ray, 8600 Hempstead Avenue, Bethesda, Md. 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. Chie; Division of Budgets and Accounis.—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. Associate Director of Personnel—Harris P. Shane, 3816 Morrison Street. Assistant Director of Personnel.—William E. Workmaster, 4315 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Appointments and Records Section— Nora C. Lane, 8001 Blair Mill Drive, Silver Spring, Md. : Chief, Classification Section.—Edward J. McVeigh, 316 Hillmoor Drive, Wood- moor, Silver Spring, Md. Acting Chief, Projects and Training Section.—Norman S. Cramer, 2613 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. Junior Administrative Assistant.—Marian L. Bialla, 3419 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. : Librarian.— Laura A. Thompson, the Ontario. UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE Director of Conciliation.—Edgar L. Warren, Department of Labor. Assistant Director—Howard T. Colvin, Department of Labor. Assistant to the Director.—John T. Daly, 2434 Thirty-ninth Place. LABOR Executive Departments 399 Regional Directors: Region No. 1.—H. Ross Colwell, 341 Ninth Avenue, New York, N. Y. : | Region No. 2—C. H. Williams, 10 Forsyth Street Building, Atlanta, Ga. ; & Revi No. 3—Edward J. Cunningham, 258 Federal Building, Cleveland, 10. i Region No. 4.—E. P. Marsh, 533 Phelan Building, San Francisco, Calif. | Region No. 5—W. F. White, 222 West Adams Street, Chicago, Ill. | & Chaef, Arbitration Diviston.— Elmer T. Bell, 4031 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Technical Division.—[Vacant.] 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 DIVISION (National Office: New York City, 165 West Forty-sixth Street; phone, Wis. 7-8715. Washington, D. C.. 2 office, United States Department of Labor) 2 % | glrtpisiaior ot. Metcalfe Walling, 165 West Forty-sixth Street, New York | : ity. Deputy Administrators.— William R. McComb, 1605 Caton Place, Washington, D. C.; Thacher Winslow, 409 East Fiftieth Street, New York City. | Assistants to the Deputy Administrator.— William S. Singley, 348 Marbledale Road, | Tnanahoe, N. Y.; F. Granville Grimes, 1504 Van Buren Street, Washington, | D Directors of Branches: Economics.—Harry Weiss, 36 Grandview Boulevard, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Field Operations—John R. Dille, 26 West Ninth Street, New Director, Information and Compliance.—Robert C. Washburn, York City. 11 Valley Place, | | Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. | Business Management.—Raymond G. Garceau, business manager, Knights of Columbus, 1 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, N. Y BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS Commissioner of Labor Statistics.—Isador Lubin (on leave), 2737 Devonshire Place. | Acting Commissioner.—A. F. Hinrichs, 3214 Newark Street. Assistant Commissioner Operations.—Aryness Joy Wickens, Vienna, Va. Executive Officer.—Henry J. Fitzgerald, 5210 Western Avenue. Chief of Field Service— Walter G. Keim, 5059 MacArthur Boulevard. | Employment and Occupational Outlook Branch.—Hugh B. Killough, Rutland | Courts. : Prices and Cost of Living Branch.—Lester S. Kellogg, 404 Shady Lane, Falls Church, Va. CHILDREN’S BUREAU Chief —Katharine F. Lenroot, St. Regis Apartments. | 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.—Mildred Arnold, 1900 Lamont Street. Statistical. —Edward E. Schwartz, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Industrial.—Beatrice McConnell, Hammond Court. Reports.—Mary Taylor Montgomery, 812 Seventeenth Street. Health Services—Dr. A. L. Van Horn, 6709 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md. 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. WOMEN’S BUREAU Director.—Frieda S. Miller, the Brighton. Assistant Director.—[Vacant.] 400 Congressional Directory Sion Laila Admanistrative Assistant.— Anne Larrabee, 528 Seventeenth Street. Dzrectors of Divisions: Editorial and Public Service: Director.—Mary V. Robinson, 2032 Belmont Road. Editor —Sylva S. Beyer, 2712 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va. Research: Director.—Constance Williams, 9603 Rilley Place, Silver Spring, Md. Research Planning: Director—Mary Elizabeth Pidgeon, 3420 Sixteenth Street. Statistician.—Isadore Spring, 1713 1 Street. Labor Legislation and Administration: Director.—Margaret L. Plunkett, Connecticut Building, Beverly Park Gardens. Assocrate.— Alice Angus, 719 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Field Operations: Supervisors.—Xthel Erickson, 3420 Sixteenth Street; Rachel C. Nason, 2633 Fifteenth Street. NATIONAL WAR LABOR BOARD Representing the Public: Lloyd K. Garrison, chairman, 2732 P Street. Frank P. Graham, the Washington. . Lewis Gill, 407 North Bryan Street, Arlington, Va. Edwin Witte, 2633 South Uhle Street, Arlington, Va. Nathan P. Feinsinger, 3940 Langley Court. W. Willard Wirtz, 3500 Norris Place, Alexandria, Va. Theodore W. Kheel, 1722 Varnum Street. Representing Labor: Regular: Van A. Bittner, the Carlton. George Meany, 901 Massachusetts Avenue. R. J. Thomas, the Ambassador. Matthew Woll, 901 Massachusetts Avenue. Alternates: Martin P. Durkin, 4021 Van Ness Street. Emil Rieve, the Annapolis. Robert J. Watt, 901 Massachusetts Avenue. John Brophy, 250 Farragut Street. Substitutes: Neil Brant, 1029 Vermont Avenue. Delmond Garst, Marlboro Apartments. David R. Stewart, the Parkside. Carl J. Shipley, 2402 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Representing Industry: : Regular: Vincent P. Ahearn, 7324 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Clarence Skinner, Dorchester House. Earl Cannon, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Lee H. Hill, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co., 330 West Forty-second Street, New York, N. Y. Alternates: Fred Climer, assistant to president, Goodyear Tire Co., Akron, Ohio. S. Bayard Colgate, 105 Hudson Street, Jersey City, N. J. Walter Knauss, 612 Capitol Avenue, Hartford, Conn. Hoey Hennessy, National Industrial Council, 14 West Forty-ninth Street, New York, N. Y. Substitutes: Charles Roberts, assistant to president, White Cap Co., Chicago, Ill. William B. Maloney, 638 Raymond Street, Westfield, N. J. Kenneth Hannau, executive vice president and general manager, Wagner Packing Co., Newark, N. J. Robert E. Sullivan, 51 Exeter Street, Boston, Mass. Lee M. Ayres, industrial relations manager, Peoples Natural Gas Co., Pitts- burgh, Pa. 3 hi ¥ £ -AS Ce BERR lee = ay 3 og 7 : : 5 oF DE Ta = y LABOR Representing Industry—Continued. Substitutes—Continued. Randall Irwin, director Industrial Relations Service, Aircraft Industrial Association of America, Ine., 631 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D. C. John Ross, attorney for New York Telephone Co., 140 West Street, New York, N.Y. Paul Potter, Associated Milk Dealers, Chicago, Ill. Executive Director—Benjamin Aaron, 4209 Second Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Executive Director and Director of Administrative Management Diviston.— B. M. Joffe, 4283 Minnesota Avenue. APPRENTICE TRAINING SERVICE (1778 Pennsylvania Avenue) Director.—Willam F. Patterson, Woodley Park Towers. Assistant Director.— Ansel R. Cleary, 6214 Wagner Lane. : Admwnastrative Officer.— Edward F. Gallagher, 1144 Forty-sixth Street SE. Standards Examiner.—John R. Newland, 20 Rosecrest Street, Alexandria, Va. Feohiion! Analyst.—O. L. Harvey, 25 East Mississippi Avenue, Silver Spring, UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Director.—Robert C. Goodwin, 4323 South Thirty-sixth Street, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director.—Edward L. Keenan, 3230 N Street. Veterans’ Employment Service, Director.—Perry Faulkner, the Continental. Assistant Director for Program.—Collis Stocking, 3225 North Glebe Road, Arling- ton, Va. ghostalons Director for Operations.—Lyle Garlock, 3406 Halcyon Drive, Alexandria, a. Assistant Director for Business Management.— William J. Rogers, 323 South Gar- field Street, Arlington, Va. Standards and Methods Dwision, Chief.—Richard D. Fletcher, 2000 F Street. Industry Services Division, Chief. —Philip S. Van Wyck, 2500 I Street. Reports and Analysts Division, Chief.—Louis Levine, 6429 Thirty-first Street. National Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnel, Director.—George A. Works, 1006 U Street. Personnel Service, Chief. —Robert M. Barnett, 6509 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Budget and Finance Service, Chief.—Waldemar Thorson, 7210 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md. Administrative Service, Chief.—Harold Dotterer, 306 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. RETRAINING AND REEMPLOYMENT ADMINISTRATION (Federal Trade Commission Building. Phone, EXecutive 2420, branch 656) Representing the Secretary of Labor.—Maj. Gen. Graves B. Erskine, the Wardman Park. Assistant Administrator for Reemployment.—Edward Cushman. General Counsel.—George H. Lynch, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, Program Analysis.—James S. Taylor, 7009 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Information Center Division.—Maj. William H. Burnham. INDEPENDENT OFFICES, AGENCIES, AND ESTABLISHMENTS AERONAUTICAL BOARD, THE (Room 2231, Munitions Building. Phones, REpublic 7400, branch 3588, and R Epublic 6700, branch 78155) The Deputy Commanding General, Army Air Forces, Lt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, Quarters 6B, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Air Staff, M. & S., Maj. Gen. E. M. Powers, 2500 Q Street. Member of Operations Division, General Staff, Army, Col. J. B. Cary, 3822 North Vernon Street, Arlington, Va. The Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Air), Vice Adm. Mare A. Mitscher, U. S. N., 5 Wetherill Road, Westmoreland Hills, D.C; Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Rear Adm. L. B. Richardson, U. 8. N,, 3325 Quebec Place. The Chief of Aviation Plans, Naval Operations, Capt. L. A. Moebus, U. S. N., 214 Belle Haven Road, Alexandria, Va. Secretartat.—Capt. G. B. H. Hall, U. S. 'N., 5 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, Md.; Col. H. G. Montgomery, Jr., ‘U.S. A. ’ 4912 Crescent 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.— General of the Armies of the United States John J. Pershing, War Department. Vice Chairman.—Robert G. Woodside, County Controller’s Office, Pittsburgh, Pa. David A. Reed, 747 Union Trust Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Finis J. Garrett, 3550 Springland Lane. D. John Markey, Frederick, Md. Mrs. Cora W. Baker, Maywood Avenue, Ruxton, Md. ih Leslie L. Biffle, the Westchester. Secretary.—[Vacant.] AMERICAN COMMISSION FOR THE PROTECTION AND SALVAGE OF ARTISTIC AND HISTORIC MONUMENTS IN WAR AREAS (Office of the secretary; National Gallery of Art) Chairman.—Owen J. Roberts, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court (retired). Vice Chairman.—David E. Finley, National Gallery of Art. Secretary-Treasurer.—Hungtington Cairns, National Gallery of Art. Assistant Secretary-Treasurer.—Charles H. Sawyer, National Gallery of Art. William Bell Dinsmoor, Columbia University, New York, N. Y. Herbert H. Lehman, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. Paul J. Sachs, Fogg Museum of Art, Cambridge, Mass. Archbishop F. J. Spellman, 452 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. Francis H. Taylor, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, N.Y. Special Advisers.—John Walker, National Gallery of Art; Sumner McK. Crosby. Yale University, New Haven, Conn. 405 406 Congressional Directory AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS, THE (Seventeenth Street, beiween D and E Streets. Phone, REpublic 8300, branch 147) NATIONAL OFFICERS President.— Harry S. Truman. Vice Presidents.— Harlan Fiske Stone, Washington, D. C.; Charles Evans Hughes, Washington, D. C.; Herbert Hoover, Palo Alto, Calif. Chairman.— Basil O'Connor, American Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Counselor.—Tom C. Clark, Washington, D. C. : Treasurer.—Fred M. Vinson, Treasury Department, Washington, D. C. Secretary.— Mrs. Walter Lippman, Washington, D. C. CENTRAL COMMITTEE Basil O’Connor, American Red Cross, Washington, DB. C.; William L. Clayton, Washington, D. C.; Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, Surgeon General, United States Army, War Department, Washington, D. C.; Vice Adm. Ross T Meclntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy, Navy Department, Wash-ington, D. C.; Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury, Treasury De-partment, Washington, D. C.; Tom C. Clark, Washington, D. C.; Lloyd B. Wilson, 725 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Dwight F. Davis, 2145 Decatur Place, Washington, D. C.; Dr. Oliver C. Carmichael, Vander-bilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; George L. Harrison, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Edward Dana, 31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.; Harry L. Hopkins, 3340 N Street, Washington, D. C.; Gurney E. Newlin, 1020 Edison Building, Los Angeles, Calif.; Charles H. Kellstadt, 8501 Carnegie Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. William O. Rowland, Jr., Torresdale, Phila-delphia, Pa.; James B. Forgan, First National Bank, Chicago, Ill.; Arthur Hays Sulzberger, the New York Times, New York, N.Y.; Mrs. Mason Colt, Tuxedo Park, N.Y. Honorary members: Mrs. August Belmont, 1115 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Cornelius N. Bliss, 1 Wall Street, New York, N. Y_; Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Locust Valley, Long Island, N.Y.; Gustavus D. Pope, 1818 Ford Building, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Henry R. Rea, ‘“Farmhill,” Sewickley, Pa.; Henry Upson Sims, 911-12 Protective Life Building, Bir-mingham, Ala.; Eliot Wadsworth, 2416 Tracy Place, Washington, D. C.; Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, D. C GENERAL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Chairman.—Basil O'Connor, 1220 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Assistants to the Chairman.—George E. Allen, the Wardman Park; Louis I. Dublin, 1 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y.; Arthur L. Mayer, Rialto Theater, New York N.Y. General Counsel.—H. J. Hughes, Brooklandville, Md. Special Counsel.—Joseph M. Hartfield, the Shoreham. Executive Vice Chairman and Chairman of the Administrative Committee.—Douglass Poteat, the Fairfax. Varo Sone in Charge of Finance.—James K. McClintock, 1717 Twentieth reet. Vice Chairman in Charge of Insular and Foreign Operations.—James T. Nicholson, 4717 Fulton Street. Assistants to the Vice Chairman.— Walter Wesselius, 2821 Beachwood Circle, Arlington, Va.; Presnell K. Betts, 712 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Vice Chairman in Charge of the American Junior Red Cross, Personnel Relations, and College Units.—James T. Nicholson, 4717 Fulton Street. Vice Chairman in Charge of Public Relations.—Howard Bonham, 1510 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Vice Chatrman.—Benjamin D. Burch, the Wardman Park. Vice Chairman in Charge of Domestic Services.—DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistants to the Vice Chairman.— Laurence M. Mitchell, Bull Run Ranch, R. F. D. 3, Manassas, Va.; Thomas DeC. Ruth, 1331 Twenty-first Street; Jesse O. Thomas, 1757 U Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 407 Vice Chairman in Charge of Area Offices and Chapter Service.—Fred A. Winfrey, 1507 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Admansstrator.— William Carl Hunt, box 72, Fairfax, Va. Assistants to the Vice Chairman.—Harold B. Nearman, 409 Brook Drive, Falls Church, Va.; Richard P. Swigart, 706 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. DIRECTORS OF SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES Services to the Armed Forces and Services to Veterans.—Robert E. Bondy, adminis-trator, 4827 Willett Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.; Don C. Smith, deputy administrator, 3615 Chesapeake Street. Military and Naval Welfare Service—William 8S. Hepner, assistant adminis-trator and director, 4914 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Md Services to Veterans.—Roy Johnson, assistant administrator, Hunting Terrace Apartments, Alexandria, Va. ; Home Service.—Charlotte Johnson, assistant administrator and director, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. Camp and Hospital Council Service.— Mrs. Joe Hume Gardner, director, 2100 Connecticut Avenue. Service in Veterans’ Hospitals.—J. Gilmore Marquis, director, 4119 W Street. Disaster Preparedness and Relief.—Colin Herrle, acting administrator, 19 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Volinied Special S¢rvices.— Mrs. Mason Colt, administrator, 1513 Twenty-eighth treet. Medical Director.—G. Foard McGinnes, M. D., 3620 Thirty-ninth Street. Civilian Blood Donor Service.—John Alsever, M. D., director, 6508 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. or Nursing Services.— Virginia M. Dunbar, administrator, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Nutrition Service.— Melva B. Bakkie, director, 2445 Fifteenth Street. First Aid, Water Safety and Accident Prevention Service.—A. W. Cantwell, acting administrator, Ravenwood, Falls Church, Va. General Services.—Laurence M. Mitchell, administrator, Bull Run Ranch, R. F. . 3, Manassas, Va.; Chester H. Whelden, Jr., deputy administrator, 1507 North Frederick Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrators: Edward H. Cavin, 1628 Twenty-first Street; Walter Davidson, 4430 Lowell Street; Everett Dix, 3706 S Street; E. P. Krick, 106 Aspen Street, Chevy “Chase, Md.; S. M. Nichols, 8439 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. General Supply Officer.—George C. Smith, 1812 K Street. Accounting.—J. A. Hendrix, director, 2631 South Dakota Avenue NE. American Junior Red Cross.—Livingston L. Blair, director, 321 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Personnel Service.—Harry A. Wann, director, 3821 Newark Street. College Units.—Margaret Hargrove, director, 1117 Portner Road, Alexandria, Va. Public Relations.—Louis C. Boochever, director, 4111 Fourth Street North, Arling- ton, Va. Publicity.— Lewis H. Bowen, director, 2234 North Vernon Street, Arlington, Va. Fund Raising.—Royle Clyde Agne, director, 4201 Thirty-seventh Street. Insular and Foreign Operations: Civilian Relief —Philip E. Ryan, director, 820 Twenty-sixth Place South, Arlington, Va. Prisoners of War Relief.—Maurice Pate, director, 528 Seventeenth Street. AREA OFFICES Manager, North Atlantic Area.—E. Roland Harriman, 300 Fourth Avenue, New York 10, N. Y. Manager, Eastern Area.—Ramone S. Eaton, 615 North St. Asaph Street, Alex- andria, Va. Manager, Southeastern Area.—John Wilson, 230 Spring Street NW., Atlanta 3, Ga. Manager, Midwestern Area.—H. F. Keisker, 1709 Washington Avenue, St. Louis 3, Mo. Manager, Pacific Area.—Verne Simmons, Civie Auditorium, Larkin and Grove Streets, San Francisco 1, Calif. 408 Congressional Directory ANGLO-AMERICAN CARIBBEAN COMMISSION (810 Eighteenth Street) United States Section: Charles W. Taussig, United States cochairman. Rexford G. Tugwell, Governor of Puerto Rico, member of Commission. Ralph J. Bunche, member of Commission. Sidney de la Rue, special assistant to the United States cochairman. John H. Fuqua, special assistant to the United States cochairman. * C. L. Simmering, executive secretary of the United States section. British Section: Sir John S. Macpherson, K. C. M. G., British cochairman and comptroller for development and welfare in the British West Indies. Brigadier R. D. H. Arundell, O. B. E., British resident member in Washington. (The third British member is appointed ad hoc according to the problems under consideration.) E. S. Pembleton, C. M. G., executive secretary of the British section. ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION (Act of March 4, 1921, created the commission to make recommendations for inscriptions, entombment, etc.) Chairman.—Secretary of War. Secretary of the Navy. Executive and Disbursing Officer—Commanding officer, Washington Quarter-master Depot. ARMY-NAVY EXPLOSIVES SAFETY BOARD (Rooms 4321-4329, Munitions Building. Phone, REpublic 6700, branch 77530) President.—Col. Francis H. Miles, Jr., U. 8. Army, 3428 Quebec Street. Capt. Ernest R. Gayler (C. E. C.), U. 8. Navy (retired), 1715 North Hunting- ton Street, Arlington, Va. Col. Dale C. Hall, U. S. Army, 1418 Whittier Street. Col. James W. Freeman, U. S. Army, 1542 Forty-fourth Street. Col. William C. Young, U. S. Army, 1847 Plymouth Street. Col. Raymon C. Buell, U. S. Army, the Harrington. Lotpmuians Norman B. Hall, U. 8. C. G., 201 Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Capt. James H. Ward, U. 8. Navy, 1931 Seminary Road, Alexandria, Va. Capt. Merle A. Sawyer, U. 8S. Navy, 709 Grand View Drive, Alexandria, Va. Commander F. C. Toal (8S. C.), U. 8. Naval Reserve, 718 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. ARMY AND NAVY MUNITIONS BOARD (Room 4068, Railroad Retirement Building) The Under Secretary of War. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Executive Committee: Maj. Gen. S. P. Spalding, U. S. Army, route 2, Herndon, Va. Rear Adm. Lewis L. Strauss; U. S. Naval Reserve, the Shoreham. Executive Secretaries: Col. William H. Hutchinson, U. 8S. Army, the Kennedy-Warren. Commander G. M. Prevost, U. S. N. R., 1310 Locust Road. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION (Offices, Eighth and F Streets. Phone, REpublic 5711) Conmivsioners—Prosidons, Harry. B. Mitchell, 117 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Mrs. Lucille Foster McMillin (Mrs. Benton McMillin), 2400 Sixteenth Street. Arthur S. Flemming, 4913 Rodman Street. Independent Offices and Establishments 409 Executive Director and Chief Examiner.—Lawson A. Moyer, the Broadmoor. Assistant Chief Examiner—Xenneth C. Vipond, 3332 Seventeenth Street. i Chief of Field Operations.—J. H. Weiss, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. 1 Assistant Chief. —Henry W. Rempe, 8506 Irvington Street, Bethesda, Md. | Chief of Administrative Services.—Francis P. Brassor, 4608 Nottingham Drive, i Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Chief Examiner.—Farrar Smith, 4331 Forty-third Street. Chief Law Officer.—Alfred Klein (acting), 3000 Connecticut Avenue. i Congressional Contact Representatives.—Robert L. Bailey, the Westchester; i James B. Baugh, Jr., 127 C Street NE. ; | Executive Assistant to the Commissioners.— William C. Hull, 2255 North Pow- I hatan Street, Arlington, Va. | Director of Personnel.—David F. Lawton, 1222 Connecticut Avenue. i Medical Director.—Dr. Verne K. Harvey, 39 River Road Terrace, Alexandria, Va. i Assistant Medical Director—Dr. E. Parker Luongo, 1309 North Buchanan | Street, Arlington, Va. Libs Virginia Lee “Wenzel, 326 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, i Board of Appeals and Reviews: Chairman.—John F. Edwards, 4302 Thirteenth Street NE. Members.—Selden G. Hopkins, 1519 North Utah Street, Arlington, Va.; = E. Newton Steely, 4213 Woodberry Street, University Park, Md.; James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue. Council of Personnel Administration: | Chairman.—Frederick M. Davenport, 8000 Parkside Lane. Erie Assistant to the Chairman.—Henry F. Hubbard, 6318 Thirty-second ] treet. oslo to Chairman.—Justice M. Chambers, 4809 Middlesex Lane, Bethesda, : Md. Chief of Budget and Finance Division.—Cecil E. Custer, Rawlings Rest Farm, | route 3, Gaithersburg, Md. : i Chief of Examining and Personnel Utilization Division.—W. A. McCoy, 3016 McKinley Street. | Assistant Chiefs.—Samuel S. Board (acting), South River Park, Md.; Coleman F. Cook, 101 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md.; Mary Mathis, 2000 F Street; Ernest J. Stocking, 616 North Kenmore Street, Arlington, Va.; C. V. Taylor, box 475, Herndon, Va. Chief of Information Division.—Carson C. Hathaway, 403 Hamilton Avenue, so A Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Chief.—Cecil M. Nichols, 8418 Woodcliff Court, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Investigations Diviston.— Walter E. Elder (acting), 3061 South Abingdon Street Arlington, Va. Chief of Office Services Division.— Henry G. Porter, Bay Ridge, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—Charles R. Brill, 2404 North Capitol Street; John J. Coughlin, 4028 Eighth Street NE. Chief of Personnel Classification Division.—Ismar Baruch, 8708 Brandywine Street. Associate Chief.—Joseph L. Spilman, 3235 Rittenhouse Street. » Chief of Retirement Division.— Warren B. Irons, 3242 Valley Drive, Parkfairfax, 3 Alexandria, Va. d | Assistant Chiefs.—Maude V. Carter, 1624 Hobart Street; Lewis H. Guenther, 4348 River Road. Chief of Service Record Division.— Vivian Carlson, the Westchester. ; Assistant Chief— William E. Byram, 313 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 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.—R. A. Van Orsdel. Second Vice President.— Frederick Bradley, Colorado Building. Treasurer.— Nelson B. O’Neal, Riggs National Bank. Assistant Treasurer—Clark G. Diamond. : | | I 410 Congressional Directory Directors—George L. Radcliffe, Senator from Maryland; Mary T. Norton, Representative from New Jersey; A. L. Miller, Representative from Nebraska; Mrs. Barry Mohun, Mrs. Reeve Lewis, Powell Browning, Surg. Gen. Ross T Meclntire, 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, Corcoran Thom, Jr., Guy Mason (Commissioner), Lida Tompkins, Hugh S. Cummings Jr., Mrs. D. Lawrence Groner, Dr. Jerome Crowley, George Hewitt Myers, Irwin S. Porter, Dr. Alec A. Preece, John G. Scharf, Dr. Richard Silvester, Wayne Kendrick. Superintendent and Secretary.—N. L. McDiarmid, M. D., colonel (U. S. Army, retired). COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS (Interior Department Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, branch 2097) Chairman.— Gilmore D. Clarke, New York City. Ralph Stackpole, Cloverdale, Calif. David E. Finley, Washington, D. C. William T. Aldrich, Boston, Mass. L. Andrew Reinhard, New York City. Maurice Sterne, Mount Kisco, N. Y. [Vacancy.] 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, N Ational 3947) Members: Lynn R. Edminster (chairman), 4314 Klingle Street, vice chairman of the United States Tariff Commission. Winthrop G. Brown, 3514 Rodman Street, Chief, Division of Commercial Policy, Department of State. Frank Coe, 2700 Thirty-sixth Street, Director of Monetary Research, Treasury Department. Harold H. Neff, 3461 Macomb Street, Special Assistant to the Under Secre-tary of War, War Department. Navy Department [vacancy]. ; George B. L. Arner, 504 Aspen Street, Foreign Trade Adviser to the Director of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture. Amos E. Taylor, 1451 Jonquil Street, Director of Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce. 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, 1945 AND 1946 President.—Mrs. Harold H. Burton, of Ohio. Vice Presidents.—Mrs. Emmet O’Neal, of Kentucky; Mrs. W. Sterling Cole, of New York; Mrs. J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania; Mrs. Clinton P. Anderson, of New Mexico; Mrs. Frank A. Barrett, of Wyoming. Recording Secretary.—Mrs. Robert L. F. Sikes, of Florida. Corresponding Secretary.— Mrs. Thomas E. Martin, of Iowa. Treasurer.—Mrs. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Chairman of: Membership Committee.—Mrs. Chet Holifield, of California. Entertainment Commiitee.— Hal Holmes, of Mrs. Washington. Independent Offices and Establishments 411 Chairman of—Continued. House Commattee.—Mrs. William E. Hess, of Ohio. Finance Commaiitee.—Mrs. Charles R. Clason, of Massachusetts. Press Committee.— Leroy Johnson, of Mrs. California. Printing Committee.—Mrs. Orville Zimmerman, of Missouri. Book Committee.—Mrs. Robert Hale, of Maine. Cookbook Committee.—Mrs. Lawrence H. Smith, of Wisconsin. Constitution and Bylaws Commattee.—Mrs. William M. Whittington, of Mis- sissippi. Dance Committee.—Mrs. Lowell Stockman, of Oregon. Hospitality Commattee.—Mrs. Joe Hendricks, of Florida. Hostess Commaittee.—Mrs. Aime J. Forand, of Rhode Island. Red Cross Commaittee.—Mrs. Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota. : Bonds and Stamps Commattee.—Mrs. Albert E. Carter, of California; cochairmen: Mrs. John H. Tolan, of California; Mrs. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York. U. 8. 0. “Troops-in-Transit”’ Lounge, Union Stattion.—Mrs. Clarence F. Lea, of California. Parliamentarian.—Mrs. Daniel A. Reed, of New York. Historian.— Mrs. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Chairman of Associate Members.—Miiss Vivian Vestal, of Indiana EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION, UNITED STATES ( Washington office: Lincoln Building. Phone, NAtional 7177, New York office: Murray Hill Building. Phone, LExington 2-3604) . Commissioners: Mrs. Jewell W. Swofford, chairman, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Hattie W. Caraway, 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. Chel Clots Ezxaminer.— Daniel M. Goodacre, Murray Hill Building, New York, Chic, Accounting Division.—Esther G. Struthers, Murray Hill Building, New ork, N.Y. Chief Statistician. Edward F. Brayer, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y, Safety Engineer—Edward P. Herges, Murray Hill Building, New York, N. Y. Deputy Commissioner, District of Columbia Workmen's Compensation Act.—Frank A. Cardillo. 514 Tenth Street. i EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF WASHINGTON (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111, branch 627) President.—Wayne C. Taylor. Vice President and General Counsel.—Hawthorne Arey. Vice Presidents.—W. D. Whittemore, Henry W. Riley. Secretary.—Richard W. Effland. Assistant Secretary.—J. C. Futrelle. Treasurer.—D. B. Griffin. Assistant Treasurer.— Walter C. Sauer. Members, Board of Directors: James F. Byrnes (Secretary of State), ex officio. William McChesney Martin, Jr. Herbert E. Gaston. Lynn U. Stambaugh. Clarence E. Gauss. 412 Congressional Directory FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION (New Post Office Building, Pennsylvania Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phone, EXecutive 3620) Commissioners: Chairman.—Paul A. Porter, 6001 Broad Branch Road. Paul A. Walker, 4301 Forty-third Street. Ray C. Wakefield, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Clifford J. Durr, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, Va. E. K. Jett, 6305 Hillerest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Charles R. Denny, Jr., 2825 Forty-ninth Street. William Henry Wills, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Secretary.—T. J. Slowie, 3851 Porter Street. LAW DEPARTMENT General Counsel.—Rosel H. Hyde, 2709 McKinley Street. Assistant General Counsels.—Benedict P. Cottone, Ravenwood, Falls Church, Va.; Harry M. Plotkin, 1343 Perry Place; Vernon Wilkinson, 5312 Fourth Street. ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Chief Engineer.— George P. Adair, 101 Allegheny Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant Chief Engineers.—George E. Sterling, 1003 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; John A. Willoughby, 2272 Cathedral Avenue; E. E. Hale. Chief, Field Division.—George S. Turner, 4626 Thirty-eighth Street. Chief, International Division.—Marion Woodward, 316 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Technical Informaiion Division.— Lynde P. Wheeler, 2325 Twentieth Street. Chief, Safety and Special Services Division.— William N. Krebs, 2811 Chelsea Terrace, Baltimore, Md. ACCOUNTING, STATISTICAL, AND TARIFF DEPARTMENT Chief Accountant.—W. J. Norfleet, 506 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md. osink Chief Accountant—Hugo Reyer, 6737 Pomander Lane, Chevy Chase, ADMINISTRATIVE Chief, License Division.— William P. Massing, 6233 Thirty-first Street. OFFICE OF INFORMATION Director of Information.—Earl Minderman, 3051 Idaho Avenue. BUDGET AND PLANNING DIVISION Director of Budget and Planning.— William B. Robertson, 1308 Eighteenth Street. PERSONNEL DIVISION Acting Director of Personnel.—Gilbert H. Hatfield, 3079 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Independent Offices and Establishments 413 FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION (National Press Building. Phone, EXecutive 8400) Chairman.—Maple T. Harl. Dzrectors.—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, the Wardman Park. Secretary to Chatrman.—Beryl Roberts, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Assistant to Phillips L. Goldsborough.—Albert G. Towers, Tudor Arms Apartment, Baltimore, Md. Special Assistant to the Chatrman.—J. Forbes Campbell, 4805 Westway Drive. Solicitor—James M. Kane, Chicago, Ill., and the Harrington, Washington, D. C. Counsel.—Goodwin J. Oppegard, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, Division of Examination.—Vance L. Sailor, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Chief, Division of Research and Statistics.—Homer Jones, 3067 Ordway Street. Chief, Service Dwvision.—Frank C. Blowe, 2401 Calvert Street. Director of Personnel.—Carl W. Satterlee, 159 Hilton Street, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Division of Liquidation.— Wheeler McDougal, Chicago, Ill. Fepoittey Liquidator, Division of Liquidation.—Ralph E. Zimmerman, Chicago, 11. 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, Ili. Chief, Audit Division.— Mark A. Heck, Chicago, Ill. FEDERAL LOAN AGENCY (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Administrator.—[Vacant.] Acting Administrator.—Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: Chairman.—Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. Secretary.—Alfred T. Hobson, 1675 Avon Place. Assistant Secretaries.—Alexander B. Galt, 2219 California Street; George H. Hubert, 9 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place; Minot C. Mulligan, 1827 Nineteenth Street; Leo Nielson, 8331 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Edward J. Singer, 1803 Poimont Street; Ferris B. Thomas, 4002 Crittenden Street, Hyatts-ville, ; General Counsel.—John D. Goodloe, 102 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant General Counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street; George B. Stoner, 3500 Lowell Street; Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Treasurer—Henry A. Muiligan, University Club. Assistant Treasurers.— William C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place; James W. Considine, 4334 Thirty-sixth Street; David B. Griffin, 3806 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md.; Jerome T. Kelley, 901 West University Park-way, Baltimore, Md.; Harry L. Sullivan, 3326 Stephenson Place; Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. Special Assistant to the Board of Directors.—George F. Buskie, 2311 Connecticut Avenue; Frank C. Wright, 811 Vermont Avenue. \ 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 28 414 Congressional Directory Examining Division: Chief—M. J. McGrath, the Wardman Park. Assistant Chiefs. — Thomas H. Davis, 2230 California Street; W. J. Johnson, Marlyn Apartments; W. C. Ribenack, McLean Gardens; W. I. Stroud, 2700 Connecticut Avenue; Rr & Taylor, 2820 Thirty-sixth Place; W. E. Willett, 3901 Connecticut Avenue. Agency Division: Chief.—R. A. Browneil, Westchester Apartments. -Assistant Chiefs.—B. E, Boldin, 5315 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; T. T. Perkins, 303 Franklin: Avenue, Hillandale, Md. Railroad Division: Chief— William W. Sullivan, the Wardman Park. Self-Liquidating Division: Chief—Morton Macartney, 4267 North Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief. Drager, 4914 Sedgwick Street. Drainage and Irrigation Section, Chief.— Albert L. Strong, 1116 Federal Reserve Bank Building, Kansas City 6, Mo. Industrial Section, Chief.— Lemuel V. Reese, 2002 North Randolph Street, Arlington, Va. Public Agency Section, Chief.—Lewis H. Strom, the Burlington. Mining Section, Chief. ' Donald M. Rait, 4611 "Forty-ninth Street. Finance Section, Chief —Edward T. Stein, 3024 Tilden Street. 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.—Arthur B. Merritt, 3801 Thirty-ninth Street. Division of Personnel: Chief —Frank M. Eliot, 3704 Quebec Street. Auditing Division: Chief Auditor—Nathaniel Royall, 3257 Arcadia Place. flaiman Chief Auditor.—H. R. Stroberg, 9509 Thornhill Road, Silver Spring, d Office of Surplus Property: Executive Director.—George F. Buskie, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Associate Director.—Sterling J. Foster, Jr., 403 Fontaine Street, Alexandria, Va. Associate Director in Charge of Surplus Aircraft.—Frank 3 Murphy, the Anchorage. Deputy Director, Administratton.—A. J. Cristadoro, 1530 Sixteenth Street. Deputy Director, Producers’ and Capital Goods ‘Disposal. —John S. Cooke, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Deputy Director, Aircraft Disposal.—James A. Garfield, 2001 O Street. Deputy Director, Warehousing.—C. David Williams, 3462-B South Utah Street, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director in Charge of Accouniing.—Lloyd A. Nelson, 312 Birch Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Deputy Director in Charge of Plant Disposal.—Fred E. Berquist (acting), 3746 Cumberland Street. Deputy Director, Owning Agency Assistance and Priority Disposal.—Robert J. Hayes, 876 North Kensington, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director, Liaison with Surplus Property Administration.— Walter E. Joyce, 3051 N Street. Office of Defense Plants: Executive Director.—Franeis J. O'Hara, Jr., 1610 Longfellow Street. Associate Director.—Frank T. Ronan, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Director in Charge of Engineering Division.—Adolphus W. Greely, Westchester Apartments. Deputy Director in Charge of Plant Servicing Division.—Herbert R. Rutland, 3147 Upland Terrace. Chief Counsel.—James G. Boss, 306 Montgomery Street, Laurel, Md. Office of Metals Reserve: Executive Director.—Morris Levinson, the Winthrop House. Deputy Directors.— Walter J. O’ Donnell, 2222 1 Street; Severt H. Petterson, 4608 Twenty-ninth Place; Simon D. Strauss, 5534 Nevada Avenue. Independent Offices and Establishments 415 Office of Defense Supplies: Executive Director.—Stuart K. Barnes, 6212 Thirty-first Street. Associate Director.—George B. Stoner, 3500 Lowell Street. Deputy Directors.—Henry D. Brite, 8401 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md.; D. C. Carnes, 3841 Newark Street. Office of Rubber Reserve: Executive Director.—[Vacant.] Associate Director.—Gerald B. Hadlock, 112 West Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Directors.—Richard Baybutt, 3214 North Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va.; George M. Hebbard, 1714 Lanier Place; W. Arthur Murphy, 1830 K Street; George White, Jr., 400 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. RFC Price Adjustment Board: Chairman.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Chief Administrative Officer.—George P. Luce, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief Counsel.—Charles R. Larrabee, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Review Committee.—Harry C. Butkiewicz, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue; Wilfrid J. Geoffroy, 4018 Veasey Street; George P. Luce, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; Thomas E. Parks, 3901 Langley Court, McLean Gardens; John A. McAllister, George Washington Inn. Secretary.—Edward J. Singer, 1803 Biltmore Street. THE RFC MORTGAGE COMPANY (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. M. J. McGrath, the Wardman Park. Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. President.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Vice Presidents.— William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road; M. J. McGrath, the Wardman Park. Secretary.— Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place. General Counsel—Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Treasurer—Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: William C. Costello, 1921 Kalorama Road. James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. Stewart McDonald, the Carlton. Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. President.—Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. Vice President.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Vice President and General Counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street. Secretary.— Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place. Treasurer.—Jerome T. Kelley, 901 West University Parkway, Baltimore, Md. 416 Congressional Directory WAR DAMAGE CORPORATION Z (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: Chairman.—[Vacant.] George E. Allen, the Wardman Park. Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower. Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. President.—Henry A. Mulligan, University Club. Executive Vice President.—Frank A. Christensen, 811 Vermont Avenue. Vice Presidents.—Charles T. Fisher, Jr., the Mayflower; J. Victor Herd, 811 Vermont Avenue; Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. Secretary.— Matthias W. Knarr, 3354 Stephenson Place. Treasurer.—Facius W. Davis, 7415 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. General Counsel.—Robert C. Goodale, 607 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Va. RUBBER DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Board of Directors: Chairman.—Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. William C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. R. B. Bogardus, the Dodge. Raymond J. Consley, 16 Franklin Street, Kensington, Md. Alan L. Grant, 1529 Thirty-third Street. Donald D. Kennedy, 5326 Rock Creek Church Road NE. W. J. McNamee, 4265 Thirty-fifth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. President.—Alan L. Grant, 1529 Thirty-third Street. Executive Vice President.—R. B. Bogardus, the Dodge. Secretary.— George H. Hubert, 9 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General Counsel. —Raymond J. Consley, 16 Franklin Street, Kensington, Md. Treasurer.— William C. Beck, Jr., 3306 Stephenson Place. U. S. COMMERCIAL COMPANY (811 Vermont Avenue. Phones, EXecutive 3111 and 7030) Board of Directors: Chairman.—Charles B. Henderson, the Mayflower. Stuart K. Barnes, 6212 Thirty-first Street. Arthur Z. Gardiner, McLean, Va. Raymond L. Harrison, 3036 Woodland Drive. Morris Levinson, the Winthrop House. Ansel F. Luxford, 3908 Huntington Street. Peter A. McDermott, 200 Rhode Island Avenue NE. DeWitt C. Schieck, 3904 Calvert Street. Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. Clair Wilcox, 407 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. President.—DeWitt C. Schieck, 3904 Calvert Street. Secretary.—Leo Nielson, 8331 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Treasurer.— Willard E. Unzicker, 5311 Twenty-ninth Street. General Counsel.—George B. Stoner, 3500 Lowell Street. WAR ASSETS CORPORATION (811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3111) Directors: Chairman.—Sam H. Husbands, 3450 Thirty-eighth Street. Vice Chairman.—George F. Buskie, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. President.— Arthur J. Fushman, 1821 Belmont Place. Harvey J. Gunderson, 3335 Stuyvesant Place. Merritt C. Penticoff, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street. David H. O’Brien, 1900 Q Street. Secretary.—Minot C. Mulligan, 1827 Nineteenth Street. General Counsel.—Edgar A. Stansfield, 5204 Hampden Lane, Edgemoor, Md. Treasurer.—Lloyd A. Nelson, 312 Birch Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Independent Offices and Establishments 417 FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION (1800 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 0100) -Commaissioners: Chatrman.—Leland Olds, 3236 McKinley Street. Vice Chairman—Nelson Lee Smith, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Claude L. Draper, 3056 Porter Street. Richard Sachse, 3236 McKinley Street. Harrington Wimberly, 3705 McKinley Street. -Secretary.—Leon M. Fuquay, 4007 Connecticut Avenue. Special Assistants to the Commisston.— Henry W. Blalock, 9211 Kingsbury Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Burton N. Behling, 4447 Davenport Street. Bureau of Law, General Counsel.—[Vacant.] Assistant General Counsel.—Charles E. McGee, 423 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; Howard E. Wahrenbrock, McLean, Va. Natural Gas Investigation: Chief Counsel.—George Slaff, 318 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Bureau of Power: Chief of Bureau.—E. Robert de Luccia, 714 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief of Bureau.— Francis L. Adams, 3208 Forty-fourth Street. Chic, fees Basin Division.—Frank L. Weaver, 15 Keswick Street, Garrett ark, ] Chief, Electrical Division.—Claudius E. Bennett, 2007 Klingle Road. Chief, Licensed Projects Division.—W. R. Farley, 5307 Twenty-sixth Road North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Projects Cost Division.—Eugene Logan, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Bureau of Accounts, Finance and Rates: Chief of Benn Lanes W. Smith, 1810 Park Avenue, Halethorpe, Balti- more, 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 Certificates—Edgar S. Coffman, 1724 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Original Cost.—R. C. Rainwater, 2025 Hanover Street, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Engineer—Roger B. McWhorter, 3628 Davis Street. Chief, Division of Trial Ezaminers.—Frank A. Hampton, 49054 Ashby Place. Chief, Publications Division.—Calvin Dold (acting), 1900 F Street. Chief, Information Division.—John W. Jenkins, 315 A Street NE. Chief, Fiscal and Personnel Division.—J. B. Turner, 3207 Northampton Street. Regional Offices and Regional Engineers in Charge: New York 7, N. Y.—D. J. Wait, 1601 Park-Murray Building, 11 Park Place. Chicago 7, Ill.—Benjamin H. Greene, United States Custom House, 610 South Canal Street. Atlanta 38, Ga.—Marion F. Hetherington (acting), Grant Building. Fort Worth 2, Tex.— Wilbur F. Fairlamb (acting), Neil P. Anderson Building, Seventh and Lamar Streets. : Sop Francisco 2, Calif —Lesher S. Wing, Phelan Building, Market and O’Farrell treets. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM, BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE (Federal Reserve Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1100) Board of Governors: Chairman.— Marriner S. Eccles, the Shoreham. Private Secretary.—Va Lois Egbert, the Wardman Park. Vice Chairman.—Ronald Ransom, 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Private Secretary.—Anne I. Cotten, 4707 Connecticut Avenue. 418 Congressional Directory Board of Governors—Continued. M. S. Szymezak, 1581 Mount Eagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Private Secretary.— Dorothy J. Klise, 3420 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street. Private Secretary.—E. Ralph Massey, 4100 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md Ernest G. Draper, 2527 Belmont Road. Private Secretary.— Margaret E. Rauber, 1921 Kalorama Road. Rudolph M. Evans, 1579 Mount Eagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Private Secretary.— Elsie M. Westman, 2401 Calvert Street. Assistant to the Charrman.— Elliott Thurston, 708 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va. Special Adviser to the Board.—Chester Morrill, 3908 Ingomar Street. Secretary.—S. R. Carpenter, 2738 McKinley Street. Assistant Secretary.—Bray Hammond, 414 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. General Counsel.—Walter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Road. General Attorney.— George B. Vest, 5005 Linnean Avenue. Assistant General Attorney.—J. Leonard Townsend, 7916 Sixteenth Street. Economic Adviser.—E. A. Goldenweiser, 5914 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Division of Research and Statistics.—Woodlief Thomas, 26 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director, Division of Research and Statistics.—Howard S. Ellis, 8605 Mayfair Place, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Division of Examinations.—Leo H. Paulger, 2836 Chesapeake Street. Assistant Directors, Division of Examinations.—C. E. Cagle, 6601 Fort Foote Road, Oxon Hill, Md.; William B. Pollard, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Division of Bank Operations.—Edward L. Smead, 3706 Fordham Road. Assistant Directors, Division of Bank Operations.—J. R. Van Fossen, 2713 Wis-consin Avenue; J. E. Horbett, 4440 Faraday Place. Director, Division of Security Loans.—Carl E. Parry, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Director, Division of Security Loans.—Bonnar Brown, 4437 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Pirean, Division of Personnel Admanistration.—Robert F. Leonard, 3620 Warren © Street. Bored, Division of Administrative Services.—Liston P. Bethea, 3900 Cathedral venue. : Assistant Director, Division of Administrative Services.—F. A. Nelson, 4436 Yuma Street. Administrator for War Loans.—Edward L. Smead, 3706 Fordham Road. Assistant Administrator, Office of Administrator for War Loans.—Gardner L. Boothe, 2d, 15 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Fiscal Agent.—O. E. Foulk, 1530 Spring Place. Deputy Fiscal Ageni.—Josephine E. Lally, the Portner. FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY (Social Security Building. Phone, EXecutive 6500) Admanzstrator— Watson B. Miller, 4704 Yuma Street. Assistant Administrator.—Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue. Assistants to the Administrator.—Harry N. Rosenfield, 3600 Thirty-eighth Street; Henry C. Iler, 113 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Mary E. Switzer, 519 North Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director of Research.—Thomas J. Woofter, Jr., 4318 Warren Street. Director of Information.—Zilpha C. Franklin, 3650 Upton Street. Administrative Consultant.—James C. Penman, the Continental. Executive Assistant to the Administrator.—Leo L. Miller, 2845 Northampton Street. Director of Personnel.— Arthur B. McLean, 4005 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Budget Officer.—M. A. Stephens, 1660 Lanier Place. Director of Service Operations.— Taylor H. McCauley, 2018 Evarts Street NE. General Counsel.—Jack B. Tate, 4432 Q Street. Assistant General Counsel.—Gladys Harrison, 2708 Dumbarton Street; Earle Simrell, 2901 Eighteenth Street; A. D. Smith, 1820 North Roosevelt Street, Arlington, Va.; Alanson W. Willcox, 4468 Garfield Street; Daniel P. Willis, 1210 Quincy Street; Bernice Lotwin, 407 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Sr ad Independent Offices and Establishments 419 Executive Officer, Community War Services.—Dean Snyder, 7 Hunting Cove, Alexandria, Va. Liquidating Officer, Civilian Conservation Corps and National Youth Adminis-tration.—M. A. Stephens, 1660 Lanier Place. 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.—Oscar C. Pogge, 5107 Edmondson Avenue, Baltimore 29, Md. Director, Bureau of Public Assistance.—Jane M. Hoey, 1200 Sixteenth Street. Director, Bureau of Employment Security.—Ewan Clague, 3821 Woodley Road. Director, Bureau of Research and Statistics.—I. S. Falk, 31 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Bureau of Accounts and Audits.—Leonard J. Wilbert, 3224 Military Road. Director, Informational Service.—Robert Huse, 307 Lynn Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 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 16, Mass. Region II-III (New York, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania).—Peter -Kasius, 11 West Forty-second Street, New York 18, N. Y. Region IV (District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia).— Lavinia Engle, 1523 L Street, Washington 25, D. C. Region V (Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio).— Mary E. Woods, 521 Union Com-merce Building, Cleveland 14, Ohio. Region VI (Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin).—Robert W. Beasley, 188 West Randolph Street, Chicago 1, Ill. Region VII (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee).— Richard H. Lyle, 441 West Peachtree Street, Atlanta 3, Ga. Region VIII (Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota).— Chester B. Lund, Fourth Street and Second Avenue, Minneapolis 1, Minn. Region IX (Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma).—Ed McDonald, 1006 Grand Avenue, Kansas City 6, Mo. : Region X (Louisiana, New Mexico, and Texas).—James B. Marley, North Presa and East Houston Streets, San Antonio 5, Tex. Region XI (Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah, and Wyoming).—Heber R. Harper, 730 Seventeenth Street, Denver 2, Colo. Region XII (Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington).—Richard M. Neustadt, 785 Market Street, San Francisco 3, Calif. Territorial Directors: Alaska.—Hugh J. Wade, Territorial Building, P. O. Box 1331, Juneau. Hawaii.—Harold S. Burr, 434 Dillingham Building, Honolulu 16. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE (Bethesda, Md.; 2000 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. Phone, OLiver 4200) : N Surgeon General.—Thomas Parran, 3734 Oliver Street. Deputy Surgeon General—Warren F. Draper, 4710 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL Chief, Sanitary Engineering Division.—Asst. Surg. Gen. J. K. Hoskins, 6318 Woodside Place, Chevy Chase, Md. : Chief, Dental Division.—Asst. Surg. Gen. W. T. Wright, Jr., 4704 Locust Hill Court, Bethesda, Md. 420 Congressional Directory Chief Medical Officer, U. S. Coast Guard.—Asst. Surg. Gen. Carl Michel, West-chester Apartments. Chief Medical Officer, War Shipping Administration.—Asst. Surg. Gen. Justin K. Fuller, 3730 Cumberland Drive. Chief Public Health Adviser on the staff of the U. S. High Commissioner of the Philippine Islands and Chief Public Health Service Representative for the Far asin area, including the Philippine Islands.—Asst. Surg. Gen. Howard F. mith. Medical Director.—W. F. Ossenfort (Division of Commissioned Officers), 7311 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md Nurse Director—Lucile Petry (Division of Nurse Education), 3700 Wisconsin venue. Division of Public Health Methods.—George St. J. Perrott, 8905 Grant Street, Bethesda, Md. Executive Assistant.—Ivan Paul Asay, 4416 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Md. Budget and Fiscal Officer.—Roy L. Harlow, 1402 Emerson Street. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH Director.—Asst. Surg. Gen. Rolla E. Dyer, 12 North Drive, Bethesda, Md. Medical Directors.—R. R. Spencer (National Cancer Institute), 6 West Drive, Bethesda, Md.; Charles A. Armstrong (Division of Infectious Diseases), 7005 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; William H. Sebrell, Jr. (Division of Physiology), 7119 Marion Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Milton V. Veldee (Biologics Control Laboratory), 3620 Kanawha Street; Prof. Claude S. Hudson (Chem-istry Laboratory), 3016 Tilden Street; Paul A. Neal (Industrial Hygiene Research Laboratory), 445 Grosvenor Lane, Bethesda, Md.; R. D. Lillie (Pathology Laboratory), 7825 Old Chester Road, Bethesda, Md. Semi Scientist.— Willard H. Wright (Zoology Laboratory), 6624 Thirty-second Place. BUREAU OF MEDICAL SERVICES Chef.Asst. Surg. Gen. R. C. Williams, 6 West Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. — Medical Directors.—Otils L. Anderson (Hospital Division), 7906 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md.; Gilbert L. Dunnahoo (Foreign Quarantine Division), 8411 Irvington Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Robert H. Felix (Mental Hygiene Divi-sion), 5802 Roosevelt Street, Bethesda, Md. Senior Nurse Officer.—Jessie MacFarlane (Office of Nursing), 4802 Bradley Boulevard. BUREAU OF STATE SERVICES Chief — Asst. Surg. Gen. L. R. Thompson, 17 Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ssi Chief. — Asst. Surg. Gen. C. L. Williams, 8525 Locust Hill Road, Bethesda, Medical Directors.—J. W. Mountin (States Relations Division), 3637 Brandywine Street; J. R. Heller, Jr. (Venereal Disease Division), 4815 Lynnbrook Drive, Bethesda, Md.; J. G. Townsend (Industrial Hygiene Division), 4801 Con-necticut Avenue; Herman E. Hilleboe (Tuberculosis Control Division), 5617 Glenwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Senior Nurse Officer.—Pearl Mclver (Office of Public Health Nursing), 5412 Har-wood Road, Bethesda, Md. Administrative Officer—E. Glen Hunter, 4016 Thirty-seventh Street, Mount Rainier, Md. UNITED STATES OFFICE OF EDUCATION (Tempo M Building. Phone, EXecutive 6500) Commassioner.—John W. Studebaker, the Shoreham. Assistant Commissioner and Director, Division of Elementary Education.—Bess Goodykoontz, 531 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Commissioner for Vocational Education.—John C. Wright, 5624 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. . Independent Offices and Establishments 421 Director, Division of Auxiliary Services and Special Assistant to the Commissioner.— Rall I. Grigsby, 4733 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Executive Assistant to the Commissioner and Director, Diviston of Ceniral Serv- ices.—Kenneth O. Warner, 3639 Minnesota Avenue SE. Director, Division of Secondary Education.—Galen Jones. Director, Division of Higher Education.—Fred J. Kelly, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Division of International Educational Relations.—Harold Benjamin, 3915 Calverton Drive, Hyattsville, Md. . Dzrector, Division of School Adminestration.—[Vacant.] Director, Division of Surplus Property Utilization.—H. F. Alves, 6524 First Street. Director, Division of Vocational Statistics and Research.—James R. Coxen, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Administrative Officer.—Marie E. Schutt, 1721 North Quincey Street, Arlington, Va. Secretary to the Commissioner.—Lucille G. Anderson, McLean, Va. Section Chiefs: Agricultural Education.—W. T. Spanton, 3227 Vista Street NE. American Republics Educational Relations.—John C. Patterson, 1709 H Street. Blind, Service for—Maurice I. Tynan, 1232 Blair Mill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Business Education.—B. Frank Kyker, R. F. D. 3, Vienna, Va. Engineering, Science and Management War Training.—George W. Case, 4712 South Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. “Food Production War Training—W. T. Spanton, 3227 Vista Street NE. Home Economics Education.—Edna P. Amidon, 1708 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va. Information and Publications.—{Vacant.] Libraries, Service to—Ralph M. Dunbar, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Occupational Information and Guidance—Harry A. Jager, 3238 Arcadia Place. Office Library.—{Vacant.] Research and Statistical Service.—Francis G. Cornell, 113 Southbrook Lane, Bethesda, Md. School Housing.—Ray L. Hamon, 4009 Clagett Road, College Heights Estates, Hyattsville, Md. Trade and Industrial Education.—Layton S. Hawkins, 4718 Forty-sixth Street. Visual Aids for War Training.—Floyde E. Brooker, 7208 Cobalt Road, Wood- acres, Md. Vocational Training for War Production Workers.—Layton S. Hawkins, 4718 Forty-sixth Street. FEDERAL ADVISORY BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION (Temporary M Building. Phene, EXecutive 6500) Chairman.—Paul H. Nystrom, representative of manufacturing and commercial interests. The Secretary of Agriculture, Clinton P. Anderson, 6 Wesley Circle. The Secretary of Commerce, Henry A. Wallace, the Wardman Park. The Secretary of Labor, Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Fourteenth Street and Con- stitution Avenue. The Commissioner of Education, John W. Studebaker, the Shoreham. Clarence Poe, representative of agricultural interests. Robert Watt, representative of labor. (This board acts in an advisory capacity to the Commissioner of Education in matters relating to vocational education.) : OFFICE OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION (Rochambeau Building. Phone, EXecutive 6500) Director.—Michael J. Shortley, 3250 Arcadia Place. Associate Director.—John Aubel Kratz, 4302 Springdale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Administrative OfficerMargaret Paulick, 4119 Davis Place. — Assistant Director in Gharge of Division of Rehabilitation Standards.— Tracy Copp, 528 Seventeenth Street. Chief, Division of Administrative Standards.—Joseph Hunt, 4112 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. 422 Congressional Directory FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Twelfth and C Streets SW. Pkene, REpublic 4142, branch 4445)- Commissioner.—Paul B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Commassioner.—Charles W. Crawford, 4844 Old Dominion Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief Food and Drug Inspector.— George P. Larrick, 4841 Thirtieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Commassioner.— Frederick Munchmeyer, 4315 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief of— Interstate Division.— Louis D. Elliott, North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Division of State Cooperation. — William A. Queen, 922 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Cosmetic Division.—Dan Dahle, 416 Auburn Street, Takoma Park, Md. Drug Division.—Robert P. Herwick, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Food Division.—W. B. White, 4629 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Microbiological Division. — Albert C. Hunter, R. F. D. 2, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Penicillin Control and 1 mmunology. —Henry Welch, Overlook Drive, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Vitamin Division.— Elmer M. Nelson, 1830 Jackson Street NE. COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF (1 Kendall Green NE. Phone, LIncoin 2450) Patron ex Officco.—Harry S. Truman, President of the United States. President of the Board.—Percival Hall, 1 Kendall Green NE Executive Officer.—Leonard M. Elstad, 1 Kendall Green NE. 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, Albert W. Atwood, Addison T. Smith, citizens of the District of Columbia; Ignatius Bjorlee, citizen of Maryland; the president and the treasurer of the institution. Secretary. — Ernest G. Draper, 2527 Belmont Road. Treasurer.—Lt. Comdr. Nathan Poole, 14 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. AMERICAN PRINTING HOUSE FOR THE BLIND (1839 Frankfort Avenue, Louisville, Ky.) : President.— Charles W. Allen, Louisville, Ky. -Vice President.—Robert Lambert, Louisville, Ky. Superintendent.—A. C. Ellis, Louisviile, Ky. FREEDMEN’S HOSPITAL (Sixth and Bryant Streets. Phone, Michigan 6262) Superintendent.—James L. Hall, M. D. Assistant Superintendent. — Charles E. Burbridge. Medical Officer.—Bruce K. Bailey, M. D. Acting Superintendent of Nurses.—Marion Seymour. Chief Clerk.—Grace S. Jackson. ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL (Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1424) Superintendent.— Winfred Overholser, M. D. Executive Assistant to the Superintendent. —David W. Bishop. Principal Adminasirative Officer.—M. K. Madden. First Assistant Physician.—Samuel A. Silk, M. D. Chief Clerk.—Paul M. Lehman. Superintendent of Nurses.—Edith M. Haydon, R. N. Personnel Officer—[Vacant.] : \ Independent Offices and Establishments 423 HOWARD UNIVERSITY (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, DUpont 6100) Patron ex Officco.— Watson B. Miller, Federal Security Administrator. Chairman, Board of Trustees.—P. B. Young, LL. D., D. H. L. President.— Mordecai W. Johnson, S. T. M., LL. D. Administrative Assistant to the President.—G. Frederick Stanton, B. S., M. A. Secretary.—James M. Nabrit, Jr., J. D. Treasurer.—V. D. Johnston, M. B. A. Registrar.—F. D. Wilkinson, LL. B. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION (Pennsylvania Avenue at Sixth Street. Phone, EXecutive 6800) Commissioners: Chairman.— William A. Ayres, the Kennedy-Warren. (The chairmanship rotates annually according to seniority.) Garland S. Ferguson, 2022 Columbia Road. Ewin L. Davis, 2150 Wyoming Avenue. Robert E. Freer, 116 Woodlawn Avenue, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Lowell B. Mason, 5117 Chevy Chase Parkway. Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, 3024 Tilden Street. Assistant to the Chairman.—M. A. White, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Economic Adviser to the Commission.— Willis J. Ballinger, the Kennedy-Warren. Chief Counsel.— William T. Kelley, Building 115, 1007 Beverly Drive, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief Counsel.—Richard P. Whiteley, 2915 Woodland Drive; Walter B. Wooden, 2012 Hayden Road NE. Director, Export Trade Office.—Allen C. Phelps, 3615 Idaho Avenue. Chief Examiner—James A. Horton, 3741 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Chief Examiners—Ishmael Burton, 1313 Lawrence Street NE.; Joseph E. Sheehy, 7208 Harwick Road, Wood Acres, Md.; Donald B. Gatling, 7823 Thirteenth Street. Chief Trial Examiner—Web Woodfill, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Associate Chief Trial Examiner—F. C. Baggarly, 2915 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief Trial Examiner—John W. Norwood, 3630 Jocelyn Street. 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, Md. Director Division of Accounts, Statistics, and Economic Investigations.— William H. England, 1344 Iris Street. Chief Accountant.—Arthur E. Lundvall, 3710 Greenmount Avenue, Baltimore, Md.d Chief Statistician.—Roger E. Barnes, the Westchester. Director, Medical Advisory Division.—Dr. James J. Durrett, route 1, Hyattsville, Md Assistant Secretaries.—Andrew N. Ross, 1343 Sheridan Street; William L. Haigh, 901 Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief, Budget and Finance Division.—Huber Frear, McLean, Va. Chief, Legal Research and Compiling Division.—Richard S. Ely, Seminary Hill, route 2, Alexandria, Va. Librarian.—Madge E. Harkness, 113 Locust Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Personnel Division.—Edna B. Nye, 3018 Porter Street. Chief, Records Division.—J. W. Karsner, 5232 Seventh Street. Chief, Publication and Procurement Division.—H. B. Stamm, 117 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Mail and Files Section.—David T. Burgh, 4004 Maryland Drive, Brookmont, Md. BRANCH OFFICES OF THE COMMISSION — 424 Congressional Directory Seattle.—Henry M. White, attorney in charge, 801 Federal Building. New Orleans.—Herbert L. Propst, attorney in charge, 1107 Pere Marquette Building. Washington Headquartiers—Harry A. Babcock, attorney in charge, Pennsylvania Avenue at Sixth Street. FEDERAL WORKS AGENCY (Federal Works Building. Phone, EXecutive 4900) OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Administrator—Maj. Gen. Philip B. Fleming, 1554 Thirty-fourth Street. Secretary to the Admainistrator.—Leona L. Kempainen, 1660 Lanier Place. ivi Sr aR Snyder, 3d, 8 Blackiston Road, Westmoreland ills, Md. Executive Officer—Ernest E. Hall, 1900 F Street. General Counsel.— Alan Johnstone, 2000 F Street. Diva of i E. Taylor, 6309 Oakridge Avenue, Chevy hase, 4 PUBLIC BUILDINGS ADMINISTRATION (Federal Works Building) Commassioner of Public Buildings.—W. E. Reynolds, the Westchester. Assistant Commaissioner.—H. G. Hunter, 112 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Depgy Commasstoner for Real Estate Management.—E. R. Witman, 1435 Kennedy treet. Deputy Commissioner for Design and Construction.—J. E. Stanton. Deputy Commissioner for Buildings Management.—Charles A. Peters, 4892 MacArthur Boulevard. Deputy Commissioner for Admanistration.—R. O. Jennings, 3508 Twenty-fourth Street NE PUBLIC ROADS ADMINISTRATION (Federal Works Building. Phone, EXecutive 4950) Commassioner.—Thomas H. MacDonald, Cosmos Club. Deputy Commasstoner in Charge of— Finance and Business Management.—C. D. Curtiss, 10 West Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Construction and Maintenance.—J. S. Bright, 1901 Columbia Road. Research.—H. S. Fairbank, 2041 East Thirty-second Street, Baltimore, Md. Design.—H. E. Hilts, 1914 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Mad. Solicitor —L. E. Boykin, 2825 Albemarle Street. Chief, Inter-American Regional Office.—E. W. James, 6412 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Division Engineer in Charge of Road Construction in National Forests and National Parks.—H. J. Spelman, Falls Church, Va. Division Engineer, Division 2-C.L Swain, 6813 Exeter Road, Bethesda, Md. BUREAU OF COMMUNITY FACILITIES (Federal Works Building. EXecutive 4900, branch 4511) Commissioner.— George H. Field, 7004 Clarendon Road, Bethesda, Md. Deputy Commasstoner for Engineering.—Pere F. Seward, 8100 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Deputy Commissioner for Construction.—Rufe B. Newman, Jr., the Claridge. Assistant Commissioner for War Public Services. —Mary G. "Moon, 322 North Oakland Street, Arlington, Va. ° | Independent Offices and Establishments 425 FEDERAL FIRE COUNCIL (Room 5333, Federal Works Building. Phone EXecutive 4900, branch 4248) Governing Body: W. E. Reynolds, Commissioner of Public Buildings, Federal Works Agency, the Westchester Apartment. Lt. Gen. Raymond A. Wheeler, Chief of Engineers, United States Army, Wyoming Apartments. Walter Myers, the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Post Office Depart-ment, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. Vice Adm. Ben Moreell, Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks, United States Navy, 2300 E Street. Newton B. Drury, Director, National Park Service, Department of the Interior, 101 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Ill. Lyman J. Briggs, Director, National Bureau of Standards, Department of Commerce, 3208 Newark Street. Solon J. Buck, the Archivist of the United States, the National Archives, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Officers: Gag i E. Reynolds, Commissioner of Public Buildings, Federal Works gency. Vice Chairman.—A. E. Demaray, Associate Director, National Park Service, the Department of the Interior, 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.— Walton C. Clark, Engineer Assistant, Public Buildings Adminis-tration, Federal Works Agency, 3904 Legation Street. FOREIGN-TRADE ZONES BOARD (Room 5872, Commerce Building. Phone, DIstrict 2200, branch 2350) Chairman.—Henry H. Wallace, Secretary of Commerce. Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury. Robert P. Patterson, Secretary of War. Executive Secretary.— Thomas E. Lyons, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. GOETHALS MEMORIAL COMMISSION (Room 274, State, War, and Navy Building) Chairman.—General of the Armies of the United States John J. Pershing. Vice Chairman.—Col. John Callan O’Laughlin, 1701 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, HObart 6477. Members: , Senator from : Schuyler Otis Bland, Representative from Virginia. Maj. Gen. Julian L. Schley (U. S. Army, retired), Washington, D. C, Brig. Gen. R. E. Wood (U. 8. Army, retired), Chicago, Ill. [Vacancy.] INTER-AMERICAN DEFENSE BOARD (New War Department Building. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 72867) Delegates: Argentina.—Rear Adm. Alberjo D. Brunet, the Mayflower; Brig. Aristébulo F. Reyes, 5630 Sixteenth Street; Col. Arturo Bertollo, 5630 Sixteenth Street. Bolivia.—Lt. Col. Alfredo Pacheco, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue; Maj. Miguel, Ayllén, 1444 Belmont Street. Brazil.—Vice Adm. Sylvio de Noronha, the Shoreham; Lt. Col. Clovis Monteiro Travassos, 3807 Rodman Street. 426 Congressional Directory Delegates—Continued. Chile.— Vice Adm. Emilio Daroch, 3913 Morrison Street; Col. Ernesto Medina-Parker, 2011 Rosemont Avenue; Group Capt. Arturo Meneses, 1409 Decatur Street; Commander Donald McIntyre, 1852 Monroe Street. . Colombia.—Col. Hernando Mora, 5238 Nebraska Avenue. Costa Rica.— Col. Fernando de la Guardia, 2400 Sixteenth Street; Col. Bernardo de la Guardia, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Cuba.—Lt. Comdr. Felipe Cadenas, the Shoreham. : Dominican Republic.—Capt. Amado Herndndez Polanco, 1725 Lanier Place. | Ecuador.—Gen. Luis Larrea Alba, 704 Concord Avenue; Maj. Edmundo Carvajal, 7203 Hilton Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. El Salvador.—Col. Arturo Rivas-Mena, 4019 Fourteenth Street. Guatemala.—Col. Oscar Morales Lépez, 2000 South Grant Street, Arlington, Va. Haiti.—Col. Roche B. Laroche, 3604 New Hampshire Avenue. Honduras.— Capt. Juan Da Costa, 1910 Calvert Street. Mezico.— Brig. Gen. Cristébal Guzman Cédrdenas, 2829 Sixteenth Street; Maj. Eduardo Aldasoro Sudrez, 116 Carroll Street SE. Nicaragua.—Capt. Luis A. Somoza, 1627 New Hampshire Avenue. Panama.—Col. Bey Mario Arosemena (absent). Paraguay.—Col. Luis Santiviago, 2700 Porter Street; Commander Amado Daniel Candia, 3508 Sixteenth Street. Peru.—Gen. Armando Revoredo, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; Capt. Manuel Nieto, 2480 Sixteenth Street; Col. Jorge Sarmiento, 4105 Harrison Street. United States.—Lt. Gen. S. D. Embick, 2118 Wyoming Avenue; Vice Adm. D. W. Bagley, 2204 Decatur Place; Maj. Gen. Robert L. Walsh, 1345 Thirtieth Street; Brig. Gen. K. F. Hertford, 3108 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Uruguay.— Brig. Gen. Hector J. Medina, 4848 Albemarle Street. Venezuela.—Col. Juan Jones-Parra, 3433 Thirty-fourth Street; Lt. Comdr. Aristides Rojas, 3809 Garfield Street; Maj. Josué Lépez Henriquez, 4209 Thirty-ninth Street. Chatrman.—Lt. Gen. S. D. Embick, 2118 Wyoming Avenue. Coordinator—Maj. Gen. Edmund W. Hill, the Wardman Park. Secretary General. —Col. L. S. Hitchcock, 2231 California Street. Executive Officer.—Lt. Col. Robert G. Boyd, 4107 W Street. Liaison Officer.—Col. Earl H. Chapman, George Washington Apartments, Presi- dential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES, ALASKA, AND CANADA For defining, marking, and maintaining the boundary between the United States, Alaska, and Canada | | (Office, room 2213, Commerce Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 2200, branch 791) . | | United States Section: Commissioner.—John A. Ulinski, 2213 Department of Commerce Building. Engineer to the Commission.—Jesse Hill, 3415 Porter Street. Secretary.—Edgar A. Klapp, 4607 Connecticut Avenue. Canadian Section: Commassioner.—Noel J. Ogilvie, Ottawa, Canada. Engineer to the Commission.—George H. McCallum, Ottawa, Canada. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY AND WATER COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO | | ”» UNITED STATES SECTION (Offices, 627 First National Bank Building, El Paso, Tex.) Commissioner.— Lawrence M. Lawson. Consulting Engineer.—Culver M. Ainsworth. Counsel.—F. B. Clayton. Secretary.— George H. Winters. Adminastrative Officer and Chief Clerk.—M. B. Moore. Independent Offices and Establishments 427 MEXICAN SECTION . (Offices, Avenue Lerdo 219 Norte, Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Post office address, Box 14, El Paso, Tex.) Commassioner.—Rafael Ferndndez MacGregor. Consulting Engineer, Boundaries.—Joaquin C. Bustamante. Consulting Engineer, Waters.—Jests Franco Urias. Secretary.—H. G. de Partearroyo. Assistant Secretary and Translator.—Fernando Rivas S. INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND CANADA (Headquarters office, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.) American Members— Charles E. Jackson, Washington, D. C. Edward W. Allen, secretary, Northern Life Tower, Seattle, Wash. Canadian Members— A. J. Whitmore, Department of Fisheries, Ottawa, Canada. G. W. Nickerson, chairman, Prince Rupert, British Columbia. INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION, THE (Washington Loan and Trust Building. Phones, DIstrict 3733 and 3734) United States Section: Chairman.—A. O. Stanley, Henderson, Ky. Roger B. McWhorter, Courtland, Ala. Secretary.—Jesse B. Ellis, Elsberry, Mo. Canadian Section: Chairman.—Charles Stewart, Ottawa, Ontario. J. E. Perrault, Montreal, Canada. Secretary.— Lawrence J. Burpee, Ottawa, Ontario. INTERNATIONAL PACIFIC SALMON FISHERIES COMMISSION (Headquarters office, Dominion Building, New Westminster, British Columbia) American Members— Charles E. Jackson, Washington, D. C. F. J. Foster, Director, State Department of Fisheries, Seattle, Wash. Edward W. Allen, chairman, attorney, Seattle, Wash. Canadian Members— A. J. Whitmore, secretary, Department of Fisheries, Ottawa, Canada. Tom Reid, Member of the Canadian Parliament, New Westminster, British Columbia. A. L. Hager, president of the Canadian Fishing Co., Ltd., Vancouver, British Columbia. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION (Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7460) Chairman.—John L. Rogers, 2500 Q Street. Clyde B. Aitchison, 1929 S Street. Claude R. Porter, 3752 Kanawha Street. William E. Lee, 5622 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md. Charles D. Mahaffie, 3012 O Street. Carroll Miller, 2929 Benton Place. Walter M. W. Splawn, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. William J. Patterson, 3916 Legation Street. J. Haden Alldredge, 3352 Tennyson Street. J. Monroe Johnson, the Shoreham. George M. Barnard, the Wardman Park. fe Ce = rT = 428 Congressional Directory Secretary.—W. P. Bartel, 2832 Davenport Street. - Assistant Secretary.— George W. Laird, 5427 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. ‘Assistant to the Seeretary.—James L.. Murphy, 1716 Lanier Place. Chaef, Section of Audits and Accounts.—Guy L. Seaman, 207 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Purchasing Agent.—A. H. Laird, Jr., 5521 Colorado Avenue. Librartan.— Mildred R. Senior, 900 Nineteenth Street. Director of Accounts.—C. D. Crandall, 1613 Harvard Street. Director of Finance.—Oliver E. Sweet, 7619 Thirteenth Street. Chief Examiner.— Ulysses Butler, 1419 Longfellow Street. Chief of Informal Cases.—Arja Morgan, 425 Manor Place. Director of Inquiry.—E. M. Ebert, 1383 Manchester Lane, Chief Counsel.—Daniel W. Knowlton, 1829 Phelps Place. Dzrector of Locomotive Inspectton.—John M. Hall, 7605 Morningside Drive. Director of Motor Carriers.—W. Y. Blanning, 3308 Maud Street. Director of Personnel.—John B. Switzer, 8019 Eastern Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Director of Safety.—Shirley N. Mills, 3911 Legation Street. Director of Service.— Virgil C. Clinger, 5040 New Hampshire Avenue. Director of Transport Economics and Statistics.— William H. S. Stevens, 1940 Biltmore Street. | Director of Traffic.—W. V. Hardie, 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Director of Valuation.—George S. Douglass, 3706 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Dzrector of Water Carriers and Freight Forwarders.—[Vacant.] JOINT BOARD, THE (Combined Chiefs of Staff Building. Phones, REpublic 6700, branch 775060; REpublic 7400, branch 3544) The Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, Fort Myer, Va. The Chief of Naval Operations, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, U. 8. S. Dauntless, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C. The Commanding General, Army Air Forces, General of the Army Henry H. Arnold, Fort Myer, Va. The Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral R. S. Edwards, the Shoreham. The Dopuiy Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, Gen. Thomas T. Handy, 3325 Runnymede lace. The Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Air), Vice Adm. M. A. Mitscher, 5 | Wetherill Road, Westmoreland Hills. Head of Strategic Plans Section, Operations Division, Office of Chief of Naval Operations, Rear Adm. M. B. Gardner, U. S. S. Dauntless, Navy Yard, 3 Washington, D. C. The Assistant Chief of Staff, Operations Division, War Department General Staff, Lt. Gen. John E. Hull, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.—Brig. Gen. Andrew J. McFarland, U. S. Army, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Secretary.— Capt. Charles J. Moore, U. S. Navy, 3325 Cleveland Avenue. JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF, THE UNITED STATES (Combined Chiefs of Staff Building. Phones, REpublic 6700, branch 77500; REpublic 7400, branch 3544) Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy, Fleet Adm. William D. Leahy, 2168 Florida Avenue. The Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, Fort Myer, Va. The Chief of Naval Operations, Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, U. S. S. Dauntless, Navy Yard, Washington, D. C. The Commanding General, Army Air Forces, General of the Army Henry H. Arnold, Fort Myer, Va. Secretary.—Brig. Gen. Andrew J. McFarland, U. 8. Army, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Secretary.—Capt. Charles J. Moore, U. S. Navy, 3325 Cleveland Avenue. Independent Offices and Establishments 429 ARMY AND NAVY STAFF COLLEGE (New War Department Building. Phone, REpublic 6700, branches 77270, 77330, or 76889) Commandant —Lt. Gen. J. L. DeWitt, U. S. Army, the Brighton. Deputy Commandant.—Rear Adm. Edward J. Foy, U.S. Navy, the Wardman Park. Executive Officer.—Col. W. A. Linn, 7219 Central Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. JOINT ECONOMY BOARD, THE (Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, REpublic 7400, branch 3261) Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 200 Rucker Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. MARITIME COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (Commerce Department Building. Phone, EXecutive 3340, branch 400) ClhezenansVios Adm. Emory S. Land, U. 8. Navy (retired), 2500 Massachusetts venue Vice Chairman.—Vice Adm. Howard L. Vickery, U. 8. Navy, 4420 Dexter Street. John M. Carmody, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Raymond S. MecKeough, 3713 Thirty-fifth Street. ~ Capt. Edward Macauley, U. S. Navy (retired), 2339 Mosspehmsehis Avenue. Secretary—A. J. Williams, 1507 Otis Street NE. Executive Director.—S. D. Schell, 1901 Columbia Road. General Counsel.—Wade H. Skinner, 1629 Columbia Road. Dlrenny Division of Finance.—R. E. Anderson, 3922 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Dzrector, Division of Regulations. —Ralph H. Hallett, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. Director, Division of Operations and Traffic.—Gerald H. Helmbold, 3138 Q Street. Director, Technical Diviston.—J. Li. Bates, 23 Bryant Street. Director, Mazntenance and Repair Division. —D. S. Brierley, 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Division of Insurance.—B. K. Ogden, 3518 Newark Street. Director, Diviston of Shipyard Labor Relations.— Edward J. Tracy, 3701 Massa-chusetts Avenue. Director, Division of Information.—Robert W. Horton, 3135 O Street. Dzrector, Division of Personnel Management.—E. G. Montgomery (acting), 4468 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Division of Vessel Disposal and Governmental Aids.—Lt. Comdr. W. A. Weber, 3923 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Production Division. —Joseph Macdonald (acting), 1629 Columbia Road. C. Irving Hansen, 4413 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Division Economics Butler, Piregiin, 3 of and Statistics.—Hugh D. 1559 Forty-fourth treet. Director, Division of Contract Settlement and Surplus M aterial.—Burton L. Hunter, 4014 Veazey Street. Director, Division of Redelivery of Chartered Vessels. Capt. Leon B. Scott, U.S. N,, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Division of Investigations.—Thomas E. Stakem, Jr., 2910 Pwenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Division’ of Terminals and Real Estate.—Maj. Howard J. Marsden, 148 Wesmond Drive, Alexandria, Va. Budget Officer. — William U. Kirsch, 331 Peabody Street. Charrman, Price Adjustment Board.—John R. Paull, 3881 Porter Street. NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (Constitution Avenue and Twenty-first Street. Phone, EXecutive 8100) President.—Frank B. Jewett, National Academy of Sciences. Vice President.— Luther P. Eisenhart, Graduate School, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 29 430 : Congressional Directory Foreign Secretary.—Detlev W. Bronk, ad interim Johnson Research Foundation, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 4 Pa. Home Secretary.—Fred E. Wright, 2134 Wyoming Avenue, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.—Jerome C. Hunsaker, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. Executive Secretary.— George B. Darling, National Academy of Sciences. NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL - Chairman.— Ross G. Harrison, National Research Council. Executive Secretary.— George B. Darling, National Research Council. RESEARCH BOARD FOR NATIONAL SECURITY Chairman. —XKarl T. Compton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. Executive Officer.— Louis Jordan, National Academy of Sciences. NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS 7 (1500 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, Navy Department or EXecutive 3515, 3516, or 3517) Chairman.—Dr.. Jerome C. Hunsaker, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. Vice Chairman.—Dr. Theodore P. Wright, Administrator of Civil Aeronautics. General of the Army Henry H. Arnold (U. S. Army), Hon. William A. M. Burden, Dr. Vannevar Bush, Dr. Edward V. Condon, William Littlewood, Vice Adm. Marc A. Mitscher (U. 8S. Navy), Maj. Gen. E. M. Powers (U. 8S. Army), Dr. Francis W. Reichelderfer, Rear Adm. L. B. Richardson (U.S. Navy), Dr. Edward Warner, Dr. Alexander Wetmore, Dr. Orville Wright. Director of Aeronautical Research.—Dr. George W. Lewis, 6502 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Executive Secretary.—John F. Victory, 2107 Plymouth Circle. Assistant Secretary.—Edward H. Chamberlin, 1111 South Oakcrest Road, Arling- ton, Va. NATIONAL ARCHIVES (National Archives Building. Phone, DIstrict 0525) Archivist of the United States.—Solon J. Buck, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Secretary to the Archivist.—Faye K. Geeslin, 1817 North Rhodes Street, Arling-ton, Va. Division of the Federal Register: Director.—Bernard R. Kennedy, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Chief Editor.—David C. Eberhart, Jr., 1309 Mount Vernon Boulevard, Alexan- dria, Va. Acting Management Officer—Arthur E. Young, 4116 North Henderson Road, Arlington, Va. Administrative Secretary.—Thad Page, 3203 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Program Adviser.—Oliver W. Holmes, 10120 Pierce Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Budget Officer.—Stuart Portner, 4413 Seventy-second Avenue, Landover Hills, Md. Dzrector of Operations.—Dan Lacy, 1900 Lamont Street. Deputy Director of Operations. —Marcus W. Price, 16 East Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Records Appraisal Officer.—Philip C. Brooks, 210 West Alexandria Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Records Control ‘Officer. — Philip M. Hamer, River Road, Bethesda, Md. Heads of Records Divisions and Offices: Agriculture Department Archives.—Herman Kahn (acting), 304 Monroe Street, Rockville, Md. Commerce Department Archives.—Arthur H. Leavitt, McLean, Va. ‘Interior Department Archives.—Herman Kahn, 304 Monroe Street, Rockville, Independent Offices and Establishments 431 Heads of Records Divisions and Oflices—Continued. Justice Department Archives.—Gerald J. Davis, 10214 Southmoor Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Labor he Sn Archives.—Paul Lewinson, 1718 Army-Navy Drive, Arling- ton, Va. Legislative Archives.—Thad Page, 3203 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Maps and Charts.—W. L. G. Joerg, 6302 Ridge Drive. Photographic Records.—Lt. Vernon D. Tate, U. S. N. R., 1502 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Post Office Department Archives,—Arthur H. Leavitt, McLean, Va. State Department Archives.—Roscoe R. Hill, 4500 Forty-seventh Street. Treasury Department Archives.—Westel R. Willoughby, 214 Kennedy Drive, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Veterans’ Records.— Thomas M. Owen, Jr., 3901 Connecticut Avenue. War Records—Edward G. Campbell, 5750 North Fifteenth Street, Arlington, a. Heads of Other Divisions and Sections: Cleaning and Rehabilitation.— Adelaide E. Minogue, 704 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Exhibits and Publications.— Elizabeth E. Hamer, River Road, Bethesda, Md. Finance and Accounts.—Lottie N. Sanders, 1803 Biltmore Street. General Reference—W. Neil Franklin, 212 West Alexandria Avenue, Alex- andria, Va. Labor and Traflic— William Thompson, 15 Sixth Street SE. Library.— Matilda F. Hanson, 1816 New Hampshire Avenue. Personnel Management.—Ruth A. Henderson, the Grover Cleveland, Alexandria, a. Printing and Processing.—Harry M. Forker, 3314 Seventeenth Street NE. Property.—Frank P. Wilson, 33 West Glendale Avenue, Alexandria,Va. Records and Communications.— Virginia M. Wolfe, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. NATIONAL ARCHIVES COUNCIL (Phone, DIstrict 0525, extension 443) Chairman.—The Archivist of the United States. Vice Chatrman.—E. Wilder Spaulding (alternate for the Secretary of State). Members.—The Secretaries of the executive departments of the Government (or alternates named by them), the Chairmen of the Senate and House Com-mittees on the Library, the Librarian of Congress, the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, the Archivist of the United States. ; Secretary.—Thad Page, Administrative Secretary of the National Archives. NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS COMMISSION . (Phone, DIstrict 0525, extension 314) Members.—The Archivist of the United States (chairman); the Historical Adviser of the Department of State; the Chief of the Historical Section of the Army War College; the Officer in Charge of the Naval Records and Library; the Chief of the Division of Manuscripts in the Library of Congress; Dumas Malone, member of the American Historical Association; Charles A. Beard, : member of the American Historical Association. desig Seen Thiln M. Hamer, Records Control Officer of the National rchives. NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARD (Phone, DIstrict 0525, extension 211) Members.—The Archivist of the United States (chairman); the Chairmen of the Senate and the House Committees on the Library. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY (Hyde Park, N, Y., under the administration of the Archivist of the United States) Archivist of the United States.—Solon J. Buck, 3508 Rittenhouse Street. Director.—Fred W. Shipman, 6804 Forty-sixth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.— Edgar B. Nixon, Hyde Park, N. Y. Adminsstrative Assistant.—Alma A. Van Curan, Hyde Park, N. Y. oi 432 Congressional Directory TRUSTEES OF THE FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT LIBRARY (Phone, DIstrict 0525, extension 211) Members.—The Archivist of the United States (chairman), the Secretary of the Treasury, Basil O’Connor, Frank C. Walker, Samuel E. Morison, Harry L. Hopkins, and Samuel I. Rosenman. . NATIONAL CAPITAL HOUSING AUTHORITY (1737 L Street. Phone, REpublic 3201) Chatrman.—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. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION * (Office, New Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820, branch 2101) Chairman.— Gen. U. S. Grant, 3d, 1929 Q Street, Washington, D. C. Maj. Executive Officer—A. E. Demaray (acting), 612 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md., National Park Service. La en. Raymond A. Wheeler, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, 2022 Columbia | oad. A Brig. Gen. Gordon R. Young, Engineer Commissioner, District of Columbia, |. 4434 Hawthorne Street. : Lyle F. Watts, Chief, Forest Service, 1911 R Street. : Theodore G. Bilbo, chairman, Senate Committee on the District of Columbia, the Capitol Towers. Jennings Randolph, chairman, House Committee on the District of Columbia, 4608 Reservoir Road. : Henry V. Hubbard, care of Olmsted Bros., Brookline, Mass. J. C. Nichols, 310 Ward Parkway, Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo. -ima A. Delano, 126 East Thirty-eighth Street, New York, N. Y. taff: John Nolen, Jr., director of planning, 1916 S Street. T. S. Settle, secretary, 3715 Van Ness Street. Norman C. Brown, land purchasing officer, 1673 Columbia Road. T. C. Jeffers, landscape architect, 6620 Sixth Street. Max S. Wehrly, city planner, 631 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. NATIONAL HOUSING AGENCY OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR (1600 I Street. Phone, EXecutive 4160; information: branch 656) Administrator.—John B. Blandford, Jr., R. F. D. 1, Fairfax Road, McLean, Va. § Special Assistants to the Administrator.—N. S. Keith, 3839 Rodman Street; Jacob Crane, 1235 Thirty-first Street. Assistant Administrator (Administration). —Lyman S. Moore, 4816 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Administrator (Program).—Coleman Woodbury, 3800 Porter Street. Assistant Administrator (Reconversion).— William K. Divers, 1600 I Street. General Counsel.—Leon H. Keyserling, 3234 N Street. Information Director—Howard F. Vickery, 4007 Connecticut Avenue. Ferien! Director.—Clarence W. Farrier, 2221 North Pollard Street, Arlington, a. Housing Finance Director—Leo Grebler, 4417 Warren Street. " Independent Offices and Establishments 433 Housing Market Service Director.—J. Bion Philipson, 5205 North Second Street, Arlington, Va. : : Administrative Relations Director.—Richard O. Niehoff, 4508 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Admanastrative Services Director.—Lewis E. Williams, 3819 Forty-eighth Street. Budget and Accounting Director—R. E. O'Hara, 5104 Klingle Street. REGIONAL OFFICES Region I (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont).—John M. Dobbs, 24 School Street, Boston 8, Mass. Region II (Delaware, Maryland, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania).— Charles S. Ascher, 2 Park Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. Suboffices: Philadelphia 4, Pa., Egerton K. Hunter, housing representative, 1617 Penn Boulevard; Pittsburgh 22, Pa., John C. R. Kelley, housing representative, 200 Arrott Building, Fourth Avenue and Wood Street. Region III (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Ohio, West Virginia. and Wis-consin).—Charles A. Horan, 201 North Wells Street Building, Chicago 6, 111. Region IV (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Caro-lina, Tennessee, and Virginia).—Clarence N. Walker, 321 Grant Building, Atlanta 3, Ga. Suboffice: Richmond, Va., David H. Eddy, housing representative, 1633 Central ~ National Bank Building, 219 East Broad Street. Region V (Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Aor) .—Joseph P. Tufts, room 1909, Tower Petroleum Building, Dallas 1, ex. . Region VI (Arizona, California, Nevada, and TUtah).—Preston L. Wright, Balboa Building, 593 Market Street, San Francisco 5, Calif. Suboffice: Los Angeles 15, Calif., M. H. Jim Driggers, assistant regional repre-sentative, 1151 South Broadway. : : Region VII (Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, and Alaska).— George W. Coplen, room 1018, Vance Building, Third Avenue and Union Street, Seattle 1, Wash. Suboffice: Portland 4, Oreg., Frederick A. Cuthbert, housing representative, 509 Corbett Building. Washington Metropolitan Office (District of Columbia, Prince Georges, Calvert, Charles, Montgomery, and St. Marys Counties and the locality of Odenton in Anne Arundel County in Maryland; Arlington and Fairfax Counties and the city of Alexandria in Virginia); Panama Canal Zone; Puerto Rico; Hawaii; Samoa; Virgin Islands; and off-continent areas.—Maurice Davis, area repre-sentative, room 102, 1601 I Street, Washington 25, D. C. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK ADMINISTRATION [Including Federal Home Loan Bank System, Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, and ‘ Home Owners’ Loan Corporation] (Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, First Street and Indiana Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 4160; information: branch 2686) Federal Home Loan Bank Commissioner.—John H. Fahey, Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building. : Executive Assistant to the Commaissioner.—Ormond E. Loomis, 2815 South Abing- -don Street, Arlington, Va. . Assistant to the Commassioner.— William F. Penniman, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. General Counsel.—Col. Harold Lee, 5 Forest Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Secretary.—J. Francis Moore, 3342 Quesada Street. Director of Personnel.—George R. Hulverson, 1307 Saratoga Avenue NE. [ Ror asion Section.—Martin J. Broderick, 4232 Second Road North, Arlington, a. Federal Home Loan Bank System Governor, Federal Home Loan Bank System.—James Twohy, the Shoreham. Assistant Governors.—David Ford, 3510 Thirty-ninth Street; H. G. Keller, 3405 Ordway Street. Associate General Counsel.—Kenneth G. Heisler, Boyd, Md. 434 Congressional Directory Chief Cin —Verne C. Bonesteel, 3020 Tilden Street. Chief Supervisor—John M. Wyman, 7900 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Compiroller.—R. Reyburn Burklin, 3349 Tennyson Street. Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation General Manager.— William H. Husband, 5070 Lowell Street. Deputy General Manager.—Fred F. Lovell, 1208 Juniper Street. Assistant General Managers.—F. R. Anderson, 6620 Twenty-fourth Street North, Falls Church, Va.; Nathan V. Morgan, 5857 Nebraska Avenue. Associate General Counsel.—Robert B. Jacoby, the Westchester. Awuditor.— Elmer S. Frazier, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Comptroller.— Charles K. Berlin, 6747 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md. Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (Washington office, Federal Home Loan Bank Board Building, First Street and Indiana Avenue. New York City office, 2 Park Avenue) General Manager.— Charles F. Cotter, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Deputy General Manager—Edward E. Wendell, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. Deputy General Manager and Acting Comptroller. —J. S. Baughman, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Reconditioning Assistant to the General Manager. —G. Tdoyd Preacher, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Associate General Counsel. —John B. Murphy, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Auditor—Elmer S. Frazier, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Ny Treasurer.— Patrick J. Maloney, 2 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Managers: New York Regional Office (Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Colum-bia, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, ‘New York, N orth Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and Puerto Rico) —Under jurisdiction of general manager, 2 Park Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. Cincinnaty Regional Office (Ohio and West Virginia). —Willis G. Kemper, Cincinnati and Suburban Bell Telephone Building, 209 West Seventh Sr. Cincinnati 2, Ohio. Memphis Regional Office (Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee).— Philip A. Tharp, Sterick Building, '8 Third Street, Mem-phis 3, Tenn. Chicago ‘Regional Office (Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin).—W. C. Wilson, Merchandise Mart Building, 336 North Wells Street, Chicago 54, Ill. Omaha Regional Office (Colorado, Towa, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota). , Woodmen of the World Building, Fourteenth and Farnum Streets, Omaha 2, "Nebr. Dallas Regional Office (New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas).— Wilbur D. Baker, Poles Cotton Exchange Building, St. Paul and San Jacinto Streets, Dallas 1: Tex San Francisco Regional Office (Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and Territory of Alaska). '—Robert RB. Rennie, Pacific Building, 821 Market: Street, San Francisco 3, Calif. FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION (Federal Housing Administration Building, Vermont Avenue and K Street. Phone, EXecutive 4160; information: branches 609 and 3166) Commissioner.—Raymond M. Foley, the Westchester. Ch Assistant to the Commissioner.— Walter L. Greene, 2929 Conmebtions venue. General Counsel.—Burton C. Bovard, 3923 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Commissioner.— Robert B. Smith, 8 Albemarle Street, West- moreland Hills, Md. Assistant Commissioner (Title I).—Arthur J. Frentz (acting), 8337 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Lil Ee Independent Offices and Establishments 435 Assistant Commissioner (Underwriting) — Curt Mack, box 221, route 1, Vienna, Va. Assistant Commissioner (Rental Housing).—ClydeL. Powell, the Wardman Park. Assistant Commissioner (Administrative Services).—R. Winton Elliott, 2517 Thirty-ninth Street. Zone Commissioners: Zone I.—John G. Rouse, 37 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Zone II. —Kent R. Mullikin, 209 Patuxent Road, Laurel, Md. Zone III.—Frederick A. Van Patten, Wilson Lane and Broxburn Drive, Bethesda, Md. Zone IV.—Franklin D. Richards, 8328 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Division of Research and Statistics.—Shirley K. Hart, box 28, Lorton, Va. Comptroller.— Lester H. Thompson, 2525 Fourteenth Street NE. Budget Officer.—John D. Burrows, 2712 Porter Street. Personnel Director.—James E. Hicks, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Office Manager.—James C. Russell, 533 Peabody Street. FEDERAL PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITY (1201 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 4160; information: branch 2251) Commisstoner.— Philip M. Klutznick, 108 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Commassioner.—James R. Lee, 3393 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. . Assistant Commissioner for Real Estate and Disposition.—C. Russell Cravens, 4341 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Commissioner for Development and Reutilization.—W. P. Seaver, 3831 Rodman Street. Assistant Commissioner for Project Management.—John Taylor Egan, 3855 Rodman Street. General Counsel.—David L. Krooth, 3121 Quebec Place. Chief Economist.— Warren J. Vinton, 1026 Sixteenth Street. Comptroller —Herbert L. Wooten, 6628 Thirty-second Street. Personnel Director.—Charles G. Stern, 5610 Colorado Avenue. Administrative Planning Director.—Thomas M. Hall, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Budget Director.—Tirrell Ferrenz, 2716 Ordway Street. : REGIONAL OFFICES Region I (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont).—Sumner K. Wiley, 24 School Street, Boston 8, Mass. Region II (New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland).— John A. Kervick, 270 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. Region III (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Missouri, Nebraska, and Wisconsin).—O. R. Olmsted, 201 North Wells . Street, Chicago 6, Ill. Region IV (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia).—John P. Broome, Georgia Savings Bank Building, Peachtree and Broad Streets, Atlanta 3, Ga. Region V (Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, and Kansas). —Marshall W. Amis, 1411 Electric Building, Seventh and Taylor Streets, Fort Worth 2, Tex. Region VI (Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, and Utah).—Langdon W. Post, 760 Market Street, San Francisco 2, Calif. : Region VII (Wyoming, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington).— hg Epstein, Skinner Building, Fifth Avenue and Union Street, Seattle 1, Wash. aa Region VIII (Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, and Michigan).—Charles B. Law-rence, Jr., 2073 East Ninth Street, Cleveland 15, Ohio. Detroit Area Office: Representative, Benjamin Glassberg, Barlum Tower Build-ing, Cadillac and Bates Streets, Detroit 15, Mich. General Field Office: (Washington, D. C.; Fairfax and Arlington Counties and the city of Alexandria, Va.; Montgomery and Prince Georges Counties in Maryland; the war housing localities of Cedar Point, Indian Head, Meadedale, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Cuba, and the Panama Canal Zone), Director, Oliver C. Winston, 2633 Fifteenth Street, Washington, Bc 436 Congressional Directory Defense Homes Corporation President.—Philip M. Klutznick, 108 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. General Manager.— William A. Ziegler, 2222 Q Street. \ NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD (Rochambeau Building. Phone, NAtional 9716) Conan. —Paul M. Herzog, 3101 Garfield Street. Wenbis, am D. Reilly, 1615 Thirty-fourth Street; John M. Houston, ny aridge Executive Secretary.— Donn N. Bent, 5624 Green Tree Road, Bethesda, Md. General Counsel.—David A. Morse, 1230 Sixteenth Street. Associate General Counsel.—Malcolm F. Halliday, 1556 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant General Counsels.—A. Norman Somers, 2524 Forty-first Street; Ivar Peterson, 5002 Fourteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Jack G. Evans. Dicer of Field Diviston.—Oscar S. Smith, 311 Windsor Street, Silver Spring, Associate Director of Field Division.—L. N. D. Wells, 5025 Twenty-fifth Place North, Arlington, Va. Chief Trial Examiner.—Frank Bloom, 4501 Walsh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Chief Trial Examiners. — William R. Ringer, 1617 Twenty-fifth Street SE.; George Bokat, 4713 Rosedale Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Samuel H. Jaffee, 4816 Forty-fifth Street. Director of Information.—Louis Silverberg, 2010 Colorado Road. Sil fy Fiscal and Office Services Section.—David C. Buchalter, 5416 Nebraska venue. NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD (2018 Federal Works Agency Building, Eighteenth and F Streets. Phone, N Ational 8460) } Members: H. H. Schwartz, chairman, 1673 Myrtle Street. George A. Cook, 3200 Sixteenth Street. Frank P. Douglass, Federal Works Agency Building. Secretary—Robert F. Cole, 4919 Westway Drive. Assistant Secretary.—Mitchel D. Lewis, 6040 Oregon Avenue. Mediators (2018 Federal Works Agency Bldg.).—Frank C. Bandel, Thomas E. Bickers, Ross R. Barr, Otto F. Carpenter, Clarence G. Eddy, Lawrence Farmer, Ross J. Foran, "Patrick D. Harvey, James M. Holaren, Cornelius E. Hurley, Matthew E. Kearney, Warren S. Lane, William F. "Mitchell, Jr. John TF. Murray, George S. MacSwan, James KE. Newlin, J. Joseph Noonan, Alexander D. Penfold, Wallace G. Rupp, H. Albert Smith, Eugene C. Thomp-son, John W. Walsh. NATIONAL MUNITIONS CONTROL BOARD (Room 140, Department of State Building. Phone, REpublic 5600, branch 755) Chairman.—The Secretary of State. + The Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of War. The Secretary of the Navy. The Secretary of Commerce. Executive Secretary.—Joseph C. Green, Department of State, 10 Quincey Sireot, Chevy Chase, Md. Independent Offices and Establishments 437 PANAMA CANAL, THE (411 Tenth Street. Phone, REpublic 6700) Chief of Office and General Purchasing Officer.—B. F. Burdick, 1016 North Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, : Assistant Chief of Office and Assistant General Purchasing Officer—J. C. Hughes, 9308 Columbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to Chief of Office.—F. B. Heimer, Berwyn, Md. Assistant Compiroller—G. G. Allen, 2915 Albemarle Street. ON THE ISTHMUS Governor of the Panama Canal.—Maj. Gen. Joseph C. Mehaffey, U. S. Army, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. Engineer of Brig. Gen. F. K. Newcomer, U. S. Army, Balboa Maintenance.— Heights, Canal Zone. : PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU (Formerly International Sanitary Bureau) (Pan American Building, Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone, N Ational 6635) Director —Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming (retired), United States Public Health Service, 2219 California Street. Assistant Director.—Dr. John R. Murdock, 2505 Thirteenth Street. Secretary and Editor.—Dr. Aristides A. Moll, 3702 Military Road. Vice Director.—Dr. Jorge Bejarano, Bogoté, Colombia. Counselors.—Dr. Victor Arnoldo Sutter, San Salvador, El Salvador; Dr. Enrique Claveaux, Montevideo, Uruguay. Honorary Members, Directing Council.—Dr. Jodo de Barros Barreto, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz Solddn, Lima, Peru; Dr. Luis Gaitén, Guatemala, Guatemala; Dr. Manuel Martinez Bdez, Mexico City, Mexico. Members.—Dr. Ramén Prieto, Asuncion, Paraguay; Dr. Jules Thébaud, Port-au-Prince, Haiti; Dr. Pedro H. Ordéiiez-Diaz, Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Dr. C. Estévez, Guatemala, Guatemala; Dr. Félix Veintemillas, La Paz, Bolivia; Dr. L. F. Thomen, Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic; Dr. A. Gonzélez-Revilla, Panama, Panama. : PAN AMERICAN UNION (Formerly International Bureau of the American Republics) (Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone, N Ational 6635) Director General.—L. S. Rowe, Pan American Annex. Assistant Director—Pedro de Alba, Ponce de Le6n Apartments. Counselor.— William Manger, 1744 C Street. Treasurer.—Lowell Curtiss, 709 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief: Clerk.— William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street. Foreign Trade Adviser.—J. Silvado Bueno, 5331 Fourth Street. Librarian.—Janeiro V. Brooks, 4112 Ingomar Street. Chief, Division of Agricultural Cooperation.—José IL. Colom, 2500 Q Street. Chief, Editorial Diviston.— Elsie Brown, 450 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. Editorial Assistants.— Enrique Coronado, 2601 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Dorothy M. Tercero, 5331 Nebraska Avenue. Chief, Division of Financial and Economic Information.—Charles K. Ludewig, 7819 Eastern Avenue. . Chief, Division of Intellectual Cooperation.—Concha Romero James, 1609 Thirty-. fourth Street. Chief, Juridical Division.— Manuel Canyes, 1605 O Street. ») 7 Se I<5 : 438 Congressional Directory Cheef, Division of Labor and Social Information.—Ernesto Galarza, 5517 South-wick Street, Bethesda, Md. : ; Chief, Division of Music—Charles Seeger, 7 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Division of Printing.—H. C. Snodgrass, 6505 Barnaby Street. LY Division of Special Publications.—Beatrice Newhall, 1277 New Hampshire venue. Chief, Division of Travel—Francisco J. Herndndez, 1803 Biltmore Street. Assistant to the Director General.—Anne L. O’Connell, the Wardman Park, Secretary to the Assistant Director.—Julia MacLean Vifias, 1739 I Street. Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds— William W. Kellum, 6011 Kilmer Avenue, Cheverly, Md. Chief Mail Clerk.—George F. Hirschman, 402 Kennedy Street. GOVERNING BOARD Chairman.— Carlos Martins, Ambassador of Brazil, 3000. Massachusetts Avenue. Vice Jalna CaD R. Veldzuez, Ambassador of Paraguay, 5500 Sixteenth treet. Luis Luti, Chargé d’ Affaires of Argentina, 1816 Corcoran Street. Victor Andrade, Ambassador of Bolivia, 3012 Massachusetts Avenue, Marcial Mora, Ambassador of Chile,” 2805 Massachusetts Avenue. Antonio Rocha, Representative of Colombia, the Martinique. Francisco de Paula Gutiérrez, Ambassador of Costa Rica, 2112 S Street. Guillermo Belt, Ambassador of Cuba, 2630 Sixteenth Street. Ele Garcia Godoy, Ambassador of the Dominican Republic, 4530 Sixteenth treet. Galo Plaza, Ambassador of Ecuador, 2320 Bancroft Place. Héctor David Castro, Ambassador of El Salvador, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Rafael Arévalo Martinez, Representative of Guatemala, the Cairo. Jacques C. Antoine, Ambassador of Haiti, 4842 Sixteenth Street. Julidn R. Céceres, Ambassador of Honduras, 2611 Woodley Place. Auponio Espinosa de los Monteros, Ambassador of Mexico, 2829 Sixteenth treet. Callin Sevilla Sacasa, Ambassador of Nicaragua, 1627 New Hampshire venue. J J. J. Vallarino, Ambassador of Panama, 2881 Woodland Drive. f Pedro Beltrdn, Ambassador of Peru, 3001 Garrison Street. Spruille Braden, Representative of the United States, the Wardman. Park. Mateo Marques Castro, Representative of Uruguay, 1025 Connecticut Avenue. Di6égenes Escalante, Ambassador of Venezuela, 2443 Massachusetts Avenue. PERMANENT JOINT BOARD ON DEFENSE UNITED STATES SECTION lg Chairman.—Fiorello H. LaGuardia (president, United States Conference of Mayors), City Hall, New York City. Secretary.—John D. Hickerson (State Department), 3314 Ross Place. -Members.—Vice Adm. David W. Bagley (U. 8S. Navy), 3058 Porter Street; Maj. Gen. Guy V. Henry (U. S. Army), 6 Kennedy Drive, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md.; Capt. Felix L. Baker (U. S. Navy) 2702 Thirty-sixth Street; Col. Charles H. Deerwester (U. S. Army), 1200 Sixteenth Street. {CANADIAN SECTION Chairman.—Lt. Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton (C. B., C. M. G,, D. 8S. 0.), Ottawa. Secretary.—Mr. R. M. Macdonnell (Department of External Affairs) Ottawa. Members.—Vice Adm. G. C. Jones (Naval Headquarters, Ottawa); Maj. Gen. H. F. G. Letson, Ottawa; Air Vice Marshal W. A. Curtis (CBE., DSC) (R. C. A. F. Headquarters, Ottawa); Col. J. H. Jenkins (Army Headquarters, Ottawa); Group Capt. W. W. Bean, Ottawa. Independent Offices and Establishments 439 RAILROAD RETIREMENT BOARD (844 Rush Street, Chicago 11, Ill.) Members: Murray W. Latimer (chairman). Administrative Asststant.—John F. Collins. F. C. Squire. Admanistrative Assistant.—Charles L. Culkin. J. G. Luhrsen. Administrative Assistant.—James N. Haviland. Secretary of the Board.—Mary B. Linkins, Librarian.— David Kessler. General Counsel.—Myles F. Gibbons. General Auditor——Carl W. Benecke (acting). Director, Research.— Walter Matscheck. Executive Officer.—Robert H. LaMotte. Liaison Officer.— William A. Rooksbery. Chief Administrative Analyst.—Frank J. McKenna (acting). Chairman, Appeals Council.—Frank Hursey. Director, Finance.—Paul R. Langdon. Director, Personnel.—V. Paul Carney. Purchasing Agent.—Harvey O. Lytle. Director, Retirement Claims.—John W. Callender. Director, Wage and Service Records.—George F. Pusack. Director, Employment and Claims.—H. L. Carter. Washington Office: 910 Seventeenth Street, Washington 25, D. C. Regional Offices: Atlanta 3, Ga., 32 Peachtree Street; H. H. Dashiell, director. Chicago 11, IIL, 844 Rush Street; RT Taylor, director. Cleveland 13, Ohio, 4253 New Post Office Building; P. F. Murphy, director. Daliss 2, Tex., 424 United States Terminal Annex Building; F. E. Fleener, irector. Denver 2, Colo., 1706 Welton Street; F. H. Stapleton, director. Kansas City 8, Mo., 30 Union Station Plaza; H. Sorensen, director. Minneapolis 4, Minn., 123 East Grant Street ; H. G. Pett, director. New York 1, XN. YN. 341 Ninth Avenue; R. R. McCurry, director. San Francisco 3, Calif. 833 Market Street ; W. J. Macklin, director. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (Eighteenth and Locust Streets, Philadelphia 3, Pa. Phone, KINgsley 3600) Commissioners: ‘Chairman.—Ganson Purcell, 3501 Macomb Street, Washington 16, D. C. Robert E. Healy, Lincoln Drive and Hortter Street, Germantown, Phila- delphia 19, Pa. Sumner T. Pike, 1710 Manning Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. Robert K. MecConnaughey, 17 East Willow Grove "Avenue, Chest Hill, Philadelphia 18, Pa. James J. Caffrey, 81 Prospect Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y. Secretary.—Orval L. DuBois, 802 Fern Street, Yeadon, Pa. Special Assistant to the Commission.— Leslie T. Fournier, 718 Stradone Road, Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. CORPORATION FINANCE DIVISION Director.—Baldwin B. Bane, Drake Hotel, Philadelphia 3, Pa. Associate Director.— Andrew Jackson, 2601 Parkway, Philadelphia 30, Pa. Assistant Directors.—Harry Heller, 1530 Spruce Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa.; Edward T. McCormick, 514 Essex Avenue, Narberth, 'Pa.; Ernest W. Rams’ peck, 605 Ashborne Road, Elkins Park 1% Po.: : Byron D. Woodside, Hay-market, Va. Counsel —Edward H. Cashion, 345 South Eighteenth Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. 440 Congressional Directory PUBLIC UTILITIES DIVISION Director.—Milton H. Cohen, 326 Wellesley Road, Philadelphia 19, Pa. Assistant Directors.—George O. Spencer, 104 Shirley Circle, Narberth, Pa; Robert F. Krause, 74 Hillside Road, Strafford, Pa.; David XK Kadane, 7002 Pennsylvania Avenue, Upper Darby, Pa. Counsel.—Morton E. Yohalem, 2101 Locust Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. ean Chief Accountant.—George Sprague, Jr., 518 Brookside Avenue, Wayne, Qe Special Counsel.—Harry G. Slater, Merion Gardens, Wynnewood at City Line, Merion, Pa, TRADING AND EXCHANGE DIVISION Director.—James A. Treanor, Jr., 6401 Drexel Road, Philadelphia 31, Pa. Assistant Directors. —Walter C. Louchheim, Jr., 2824 0 Street, Washington 7. D. C.; Olga M. Steig, 405 Elm Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa.: Anthon H. Lund, 721 Stradone Road, Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Assistant to the Director. Raymond Vernon, 131 Bently Avenue, Cynwyd, Pa. Counsel.—Louis Loss, 2833 Haverford Road, Ardmore, Pa. Assistant Chief Accountant.—Michael J. LaPadula, 4314 Willow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Technical Consultant.—Edward E. Laufer, 723 Mason Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR Solicitor.—Roger S. Foster, box 51, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Assistant Solicitors.— Milton V. Freeman, Franklin Park Apartments, Philadel- phia 38, Pa.; Robert S. Rubin, 2601 Parkway, Philadelphia 30, Pa. Special Assistant. '—Theodore L. Thau, 2313 County Line Road, Ardmore, Pa. Special Counsel. —Walter G. Holden, 7000 Lincoln Drive, Philadelphia, Pa. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF ACCOUNTANT Chief Accountant.— William W. Werntz, 25 West Amherst Road, Bala-Cynwyd, : Montgomery County, Pa. Assistant Chief Accountant.—Earle C. King, 5 Allendale Road, Overbrook, Philadelphia 31, Pa. OPINION WRITING OFFICE Eaocutive Assistant.—Herbert B. Cohn, 2324 Forty-first Street, Washington, D. C. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Director. —Hastings P. Avery, 1 North Drexel Avenue, Upper Darby, Pa. Budget Officer and Assistant Director.—James J. Riordan, Montgomery Court Apartments, Narberth, Pa. Director of Dif .—Philipp L. Charles, 112 Yale Road, Brookline, Upper : Darby, REGIONAL ADMINISTRATORS Atlanta Regional Office.— William Green, Palmer Building, Streets, Atlanta 3, Ga. Bettniope Regional Office.— William M. Malone, O’Sullivan d. Forsyth and Marietta Building, Baltimore 2, Independent Offices and Establishments 441 Boston Regional Office.—Paul R. Rowen, Shawmut Bank Building, 82 Devonshire . Street, Boston 9, Mass. Chicago Regional Office.—Thomas B. Hart, Bankers Building, 105 West Adams Street, Chicago 3, Ill. ] Cleveland Regional Office.—Charles J. Odenweller, Jr., Standard Building, 1370 Ontario Street, Cleveland 13, Ohio. ; Denver Regional Office.—John L. Geraghty, Midland Savings Building, 444 Seven-teenth Street, Denver 2, Colo. Fort Worth Regional Office.—Oran H. Allred, United States Courthouse, Tenth and Lamar Streets, Fort Worth 2, Tex. New York Regional Office.—Peter T. Byrne, Equitable Building, 120 Broadway, New York 5, N. Y. San Francisco Regional Office.—Howard A. Judy, 625 Market Street, San Fran-cisco 5, Calif. Seattle Regional Office.—Day Karr, 1411 Fourth Avenue Building, Seattle 1, Wash. WASHINGTON LIAISON OFFICE Tower Building, 1405 K Street, Washington 25, D. C. Phone, DIstrict 3633) SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION (The Mall. Phone, NAtional 1811) Secretary.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. . Assistant Secretary.—John E. Graf, 2035 Parkside Drive. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary.—H. W. Dorsey, 4107 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Treasurer.—Nicholas W. Dorsey, 1521 Thirty-first Street. Administrative Accountant.—Thomas F. Clark, 2000 Taylor Street NE. Chief, Editorial Division.— Webster P. True, Falls Church, Va. Librarian.— Leila F. Clark, 1818 Wyoming Avenue. Personnel Officer.—Bertha T. Carwithen, Arlington, Va. THE ESTABLISHMENT Harry S. Truman, President of the United States; , Vice President of the United States; Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States; James F. Byrnes, Secretary of State; Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury; Robert P. Patterson, Secretary of War; Tom C. Clark, Attorney General; Robert E. Hannegan, Postmaster General; James Forrestal, Secretary of the Navy; Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior; Clinton P. Anderson,’ Secretary of Agriculture; Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Commerce; Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Secretary of Labor. BOARD OF REGENTS Chancellor.—Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States; , Vice President of the United States; Alben W. Barkley, Member of the Senate; Wallace H. White, Jr., Member of the Senate; Walter F. George, Member of the Senate; Clarence Cannon, Member of the House of Repre-sentatives; E. E. Cox, Member of the House of Representatives; B. Carroll Reece, Member of the House of Representatives; Frederic A. Delano, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Vannevar Bush, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Roland S. Morris, citizen of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia); Harvey N. Davis, citizen of New Jersey (Hoboken); Arthur H. Compton, citizen of Illinois (Chicago); Frederic C. Walcott, citizen of Connecticut (Norfolk). Executive Committee.—Frederic A. Delano, Vannevar Bush, Clarence Cannon. BRANCHES UNDER DIRECTION OF SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION NATIONAL MUSEUM Director.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Head Curators.—R. S. Bassler, the Ontario; C. W. Mitman, 3738 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Frank M. Setzler, 4219 Forty-ninth Street; Waldo L. Schmitt, Highland Lane and Allegheny Street, Takoma, Park, Md. 442 Congressional Directory NATIONAL COLLECTION OF FINE ARTS Acting Director.—R. P. Tolman, 3451 Mount Pleasant Street. ; FREER GALLERY OF ART Director.— Archibald G. Wenley, 4348 Garfield Street. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY (Office in Smithsonian Building) Chief.—M. W. Stirling, 3319 O Street. Aso Chief.—Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., 415 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, d. -INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES Acting Chief —H. W. Dorsey, 4107 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK (Adams Mill Road. Phone, COlumbia 0744) Director.— William M. Mann, 2801 Adams Mill Road. Assistant Director.— Ernest P. Walker, 3016 Tilden Street. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY Director.—Loyal B. Aldrich, 1642 J onquil Street. “In Cleves, Division of Astrophysical Research.—Loyal B. Aldrich, 1642 Jonquil treet. Assistant Director, in Charge, Division of Radiation and Organisms.—Earl 8. Johnston, 4409 Beechwood Road, College Heights, Hyattsville, Md. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART [Under the direction of the Board of Trustees of the National Gallery of Art] (Constitution Avenue, between Fourth and Seventh Streets. Phone, REpublic 4215) Board of Trustees.—Harlan F. Stone, Chief Justice of the United States, Chairman; James F. Byrnes, Secretary of State; Fred M. Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury; Alexander Wetmore, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; Samuel H. Kress; Ferdinand Lammot Belin; Duncan Phillips; Chester Dale; Paul Mellon. : President.—Samuel H. Kress, 1020 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Vice President.—Ferdinand Lammot Belin, 1623 Twenty-eighth Street. Secretary-Treasurer.—Huntington Cairns, 2219 California Street. Director.—David E. Finley, 3318 O Street. Admanistrator.—Harry A. McBride, 3000 Tilden Street. General Counsel.—Huntington Cairns, 2219 California Street. Chief Curator.—John Walker, 2806 N Street. Assistant Director.—Macgill James, 3310 N Street. Consultant Restorer.—Stephen S. Pichetto, National Gallery of Art. SOLDIERS’ HOME, UNITED STATES (Regular Army) BOARDOF COMMISSIONERS (United States Soldiers’ Home. Phone, RAndolph 9100) Lt. Gen. Raymond A. Wheeler, Chief of Engineers. Lt. Gen. E. B. Gregory, The Quartermaster General. Maj. Gen. Howard K. Loughry (retired), Governor of the Home. Brig. Gen. Thomas H. Green, The Judge Advocate General. Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, The Surgeon General. Maj. Gen. William H. Kasten, Chief of Finance. Maj. Gen. Edward F. Witsell, The Adjutant General. Col. Clark Lynn (retired), Secretary of the Board. Independent Offices and Establishments 443 OFFICERS OF THE HOME (Residing at the home. Phone, RAndolph 9100) Governor.—Maj. Gen. Howard K. Loughry (retired). Deputy Governor.—Col. Douglas C. Cordiner (retired). Secretary-Treasurer.—Col. Claire R. Bennett-(retired). Quartermaster and Purchasing Officer—DBrig. Gen. A. Owen Seaman (retired). Chief Surgeon.—Col. John Wallace, Medical Corps, U. S. Army. Utility Officer.—Col. Clark Lynn (retired). : TARIFF COMMISSION, UNITED STATES (Tariff Commission Building, Eighth and E Streets. Phone, NAtional 3947) Chairman.—Oscar B. Ryder, of Virginia, 803 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Vice Chairman.—Lynn R. Edminster, of Illinois, 4314 Klingle Street. Commissioners: Edgar B. Brossard, of Utah, 1629 Columbia Road. E. Dana Durand, of Minnesota, 3613 Norton Place. George McGill, of Kansas, 2346 South Meade Street, ‘Arlington, Va. [Vacancy.] Secretary.—Sidney Morgan, 3719 Morrison Street (on military duty). Acting Secretary.—Eben M. Whitcomb, 9210 Kingsbury Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Executive Officer— Lawrence W. Moore, 7827 Thirteenth Street. Chief Economist—Ben D. Dorfman, 2712 Woodley Place. Director of Investigation and Chairman of Planning and Reviewing Commitiee.— Eben M. Whitcomb, 9210 Kingsbury Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Economics Division.—Loyle A. Morrison, 1616 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. : Chief of Technical Service.—Louis S. Ballif, 4302 Forty-seventh Street. Special Adviser on International Trade Policies.—Benjamin B. Wallace, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE. General Counsel.—Edwin G. Martin, 5006 Tulip Avenue, Relay, Md. Seman to the Chairman.—Ruth M. Ridgway, 6401 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Chiefs of Research Divisions: Agricultural.—O. A. Juve, 3001 McKinley Street. ° Ceramics.—J. Mark Albertson, 606 Aspen Street. Chemical.—James H. Hibben, 14 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Economics.—Loyle A. Morrison, 1616 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. Lumber and Paper.—Franklin H. Smith, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Metals.—F. Morton Leonard, 3016 Tilden Street. Sundries.—Paul F. Burnham, 6607 Summit Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md, Textiles.—W. A. Graham Clark, 3712 Morrison Street. Accounting.—Howard F. Barker, 3611 Thirty-fifth Street. Distribution and Markets.— William B. Harmon ‘(acting chief), Harwood, Md. Statistical.— Arthur E. Woody, 5100 Sherrier Place. Editorial Seciion.—Geniana R. Edwards, 3341 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Docks) and Public Information Section.—Edna V. Connolly, 1430 Belmont treet. Finance Section.— Lilian T. Bowman, 1726 Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Personnel Section.—Frances H. Simon, 7707 Twelfth Street. Librarian.—Cornelia Notz, 7000 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Graphic Section—Weikko E. Sippo, 2124 I Street. Manls, Files, and Publications Section.—Edna B. Mahoney, 1495 Newton Street. Stenographic Section.—Mae M. Riddle, 1841 Columbia Road. Chief, New York office.—S. W. Pitts, 513 Customhouse, New York City. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY (Wilson Dam, Ala.; Washington office, Woodward Building; Knoxville office, New Sprankle Buildings Chattanooga office, Old Post Office Building) OFFICE OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS Directors: David E. Lilienthal, chairman, Knoxville. Harcourt A. Morgan, vice chairman, Knoxville. James P. Pope, Knoxville. Add Congressional Directory OFFICE OF THE GENERAL MANAGER General Manager.—Gordon R. Clapp. Knoxville. Assistant General Manager.— Arthur S. Jandrey, Knoxville. Director of Information.—W. L. Sturdevant, Knoxville. Chief Budget Officer.—Paul W. Ager, Knoxville. Washington Representative.— Marguerite Owen, Washington. ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENTS Chief Engineer.—C. E. Blee, Knoxville. Assistant to the Chief Engineer.—Harry Wiersema, Knoxville. Water Control Planning Department: Chief Water Control Planning Engineer.—James S. Bowman, Knoxville. Design Department: Chief Design Engineer.—Robert A. Monroe, Knoxville. Construction Department: Project Manager, Fontana Project.—F. C. Schlemmer, Fontana Dam, N. C. Project Manager, Kentucky Project.—G. P. Jessup, Gilbertsville, Ky. POWER DEPARTMENTS Manager of Power.—G. O. Wessenauer, Chattanooga. Chief Power Engineer.— Merrill De Merit, Chattanooga. Power Utilization Department: Director.— Walton Seymour, Chattanooga. Power Engineering and Construction Department: Engineer of Power Design and Construction.—W. W. Woodruff, Chattanooga. Power Operations Department: Superintendent of Power Operations.—C. L. Karr, Chattanooga. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING AND CONSERVATION DEPARTMENTS Chief Conservation Engineer. —Neil Bass, Knoxville. Chemical Engineering Department: Director.—Charles H. Young (acting), Wilson Dam, Ala. Agricultural Relations Department: Director.—J. C. McAmis, Knoxville. Forestry Relations Department: Director.—W. M. Baker, Norris, Tenn. STAFF SERVICES General Counsel and Secretary to the Corporation.—T. J. Griffin (acting), Knoxville, Comptroller.—E. A. Sunstrom, Knoxville. Treasurer—H. K. Robinson, Knoxville. Director of Personnel.—George F. Gant, Knoxville. Director of Health.—E. L. Bishop, M. D., Chattanooga. Property and Supply Department: Director—J. 1. Snyder, Knoxville. Regional Studies Department: Director.—H. K. Menhinick, Knoxville, Commerce Department: Director.—J. P. Ferris, Knoxville. Reservoir Property Management Department: Director.—J. Ed Campbell, Knoxville. VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION (Veterans’ Administration Building) Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs.—Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Fort Myer, Va. Brecyiies Assistant Admainastrator.—Col. Eldon L. Bailey, 4700 Connecticut venue. Administrative Adviser to the Administrator—Brig. Gen. H. B. Lewis, 3133 Con-necticut Avenue. Independent Offices and Establishments 445 Director of Coordination and Planning.— William T. Comer, 2416 Twenty-seventh Street South, Arlington, Va. Director of Public Relations.—Edward McE. Lewis, 3133 O Street. Solicitor—Edward E. Odom, 3131 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Board of Veterans’ Appeals.—R. L. Jarnagin, 4525 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md Assistant Admanastrator for Claims.—Maj. O. W. Clark, 3357 Stuyvesant Place. Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. Paul R. Hawley (acting), 5535 Nevada Avenue. Assistant Administrator for Medical Administration. Nr Adkins, 8003 Eastern Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Administrator for Imsurance—H. W. Breining, 1724 Crestwood Drive. Assistant Administrator for Vocational Rehabilitation and Education.—H. V. Stirling, 6400 Valley Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Administrator for Personnel. —G. H. Sweet, 6805 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Admanastrator for Construction and Supplies.—Col. George E. Ijams, 3201 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md Assistant Administrator for Contact and Services.—Lt. Col. Ralph P. Bronson (acting), 3016 Tilden Street. Assistant Administrator for Finance.—Frank W. Kelsey, 6619 Sixth Street. Director of Special Services.—Col..E. K. Wright (acting), 3106 Martha Custis Drive, Park Fairfax, Alexandria, Va. WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY (Organized 1833; chartered 1859; acts of Congress August 2, 1876, October 2, 1888) President ex Officito.—Harry S. Truman, President of the United States. Vice Presidents ex Officico.—The governors of the several States. Furst Vice President.—Frederic A. Delano. Second Vice President.—Harlan F. Stone. Members: George E. Hamilton; Maj. Gen. U. 8. Grant, 3d; Gilbert H. Grosvenor; Cloyd Heck Marvin; Mark ullivan; John Spalding Flannery; Charles C. Glover, Jr.; Chester Wells; Charles Warren; Corcoran Thom; D. Lawrence Groner; Robert Lincoln O’ Brien; John Lord 0’ Brian; Joseph C. Grew. : Treasurer.— Theodore W. Noyes, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue. Secretary.— William R. Harr, 36 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Office, 1644 Department of Justice Building (phone, REpubiic 8200, branch 239). 78349°—T79-2—1st ed.——30 JUDICIARY SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES (1 First Street NE. Phone, EXecutive 1640) HARLAN F. STONE, of New York City, Chief Justice of the United States; born in Chesterfield, N. H., on October 11, 1872, son of Frederick L. and Anne Sophia (Butler) Stone; married Agnes Harvey, of Chesterfield, N. H., September 7, 1899; has two sons, Marshall and Lauson; graduate of Amherst College, B. S., 1894, M. A., 1897, honorary LL. D., 1913; Columbia Law School graduate, receiving LL. B., 1898; honorary LL. D., 1925; honorary LL. D., Yale University, 1924; Williams College, 1925; George Washington University, 1927; Harvard University, 1931; Dartmouth College, University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania, 1934; University of Chicago, 1938; Oberlin College, 1939; Kenyon College, 1940; Princeton University, Colgate University, 1942; Yeshiva College, New York City; Bowdoin College, 1944; honorary D. C. L., Syracuse University, 1928; Tufts College, 1942; member International Academy of Comparative Law since 1923; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1933; member American Philosophical Society, 1939; honorary member, Society of Public Teachers of Law, London, 1939; honorary bencher of Lincoln’s Inn, 1941; mem-ber of the Athenaeum, London, 1944; trustee of Amherst College and of Folger Shakespeare Library, 1933; chancellor Smithsonian Institution, 1941; chairman Board of Trustees National Gallery of Art, 1941; admitted to New York bar 1898; became member of law firm of Wilmer & Canfield and later of its successor, Satterlee, Canfield & Stone; while practicing law with that firm lectured on law in Columbia Law School, 1899-1902, 1910-23; adjunct professor of law, 1903; severed his university connection and devoted himself exclusively to practice, 1905-10; Kent professor of law and dean of Columbia Law School, 1910-23; resigned 1923 and became member of law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City; appointed Attorney General of the United States, April 7, 1924; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Coolidge January 5, 1925; confirmed by the Senate February 5, 1925, and entered upon the duties of that office on March 2, 1925; served as Associate Justice until July 3, 1941, on which date he took the oath of office of Chief Justice of the United States, having been appointed to that position by President Roosevelt on June 12 and confirmed by the Senate on June 27, 1941; took his seat on October 6, 1941. HUGO LAFAYETTE BLACK, of Birmingham, Ala., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; was nominated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on August 12, 1937, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; confirmed by the Senate on August 17, 1937, and took his seat on October 4, 1937. : STANLEY FORMAN REED, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born in Mason County, Ky., December 31, 1884; A. B., Kentucky Wesleyan College, 1902; A. B., Yale, 1906 (Bennett prize); LL. D., 1938; LL. D., Columbia University, 1940; University of Kentucky, 1940; Kentucky Wesleyan College, 1941; studied law at University of Virginia, Columbia University, and University of Paris; married Winifred Elgin, of Maysville, Ky.; has two sons, John A. and Stanley Forman, Jr.; general practice Maysville and Ashland, Ky., 1910-29; member. General Assembly of Kentucky, 1912-16; American Legion; American Law Institute; counselor and member, executive committee, American Red Cross, 1935-38; general counsel, Federal Farm Board, 1929-32; general counsel, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, December 1932 to March 1935; Solicitor General of the United States, March 23, 1935, to January 31, 1938; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by Presi-dent Roosevelt, January 15, 1938; confirmed January 25, 1938, and took his seat January 31, 1938. 449 \ 450 Congressional Directory FELIX FRANKFURTER, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born in Vienna, Austria, November 15, 1882; brought to the United States in 1894; A. B., College of the City of New York, 1902; LL. B., Harvard, 1906; D. C. L., University of Oxford, 1939; LL. D., Amherst, 1940; assistant United States attorney, southern district of New York, 1906-10; law officer, Bureau of Insular Affairs, War Department, 1911-14; professor at Harvard Law School, 1914-39: George Eastman visiting professor, Oxford University, 1933— 34; major and judge advocate, Officers’ Reserve Corps, United States Army, 1917; assistant to the Secretary of War; secretary and counsel to the President’s Media-tion Commission; assistant to the Secretary of Labor; chairman of War Labor Policies Board, June 1918; declined Governor Ely’s nomination to Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, June 1932; author: The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, 1927; The Business of the Supreme Court (with James M. Landis), 1928; The . Labor Injunction (with Nathan Greene), 1930; The Public and Its Government, 1930; The Commerce Clause Under Marshall, Taney, and Waite, 1937; Mr. Justice Holmes and the Supreme Court, 1939; editor: Cases Under the Interstate Commerce Act, 1915 (2d edition, 1922); Criminal Justice in Cleveland (with Roscoe Pound), 1922; Mr. Justice Holmes, 1931; Cases on Federal Jurisdiction (with Wilbur G. Katz) 1931; Cases on Administrative Law (with J. Forrester Davison), 1931; Mr. Justice Brandeis, 1932; Cases on Federal Jurisdiction (with Harry Shulman), 1937; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt, January 5, 1939; confirmed January 17, 1939, and took his seat January 30, 1939. WILLIAM ORVILLE DOUGLAS, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born at Maine, Minn., on October 16, 1898; graduated from Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., A. B., 1920, and from Columbia University Law School, LL. B., 1925; member of Securities and Exchange Com-mission, 1936-39, chairman, 1937-39; nominated Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court by President Roosevelt, March 20, 1939; confirmed by the Senate, April 4, 1939, and took his seat April 17, 1939. FRANK MURPHY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Harbor Beach, Mich.; chairman of the Philippine War Relief (of the United States), Inec.; chairman, American Anti-Bigotry Committee; president, Friends of the Michigan Indian Organization; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court by President Roosevelt on January 4, 1940, and took his seat February 5, 1940. ROBERT H. JACKSON, of Jamestown, N. Y., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; born February 13, 1892, in Spring Creek, Pa; son of William Eldred and Angelina (Houghwout) Jackson: married Irene Gerhardt, of Albany, N. Y.; children, William Eldred and Mary Margaret; confirmed as Solicitor General of the United States, March.4, 1938; confirmed as Attorney General of the United States, January, 16, 1940; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt, June 12, 1941; confirmed July 7, 1941, and took his seat October 6, 1941. WILEY RUTLEDGE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United: States; born in Cloverport, Ky., July 20, 1894; attended Maryville College (Tenn.); University of Wisconsin, A. B., 1914; Indiana University School of Law; Univer-sity of Colorado, LL. B., 1922; taught in high schools, Bloomington and Conners-ville, Ind., Albuquerque, N. Mex., and Boulder, Colo., 1915-22; associated with the law firm of Goss, Kimbrough & Hutchinson, Boulder, Colo., 1922-24; member of law faculties, University of Colorado, 1924-26; Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., 1926-35; the State University of Iowa, 1935-39; also dean, School of Law, Washington University, 1930-35; College of Law, the State University of Towa, 1935-39; associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, 1939-43; member National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, from Missouri, 1931-35; from Iowa, 1937-43; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Roosevelt, January 11, 1943; confirmed by the Senate, February 8, 1943, and took his seat February 15, 1943. Judiciary 451 HAROLD HITZ BURTON, of Cleveland, Ohio, Associate Justice of the | Supreme Court of the United States; born in Jamaica Plain, Mass., June 22, 1888; Bowdoin College, A. B. 1909. LL. D. 1937; Harvard University, 11. B. 1912; | LL. D. Oberlin College, Ohio Wesleyan University, Kenyon College, Boston | University, College of Wooster and Heidelberg (Ohio), College; L. H. D., Mount | Union College; married Selma F. Smith, of Newton, Mass.; ‘children: Mrs. H. Charles Weidner, Jr., Lt. William S., Mrs. R. Wallace Adler, "and Lt. 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; ’ instructor, Western Reserve University School of Law, 1923-25; member of Cull, Burton & Laughlin, 1925-29; Andrews, Hadden & Burton, 1932-35; lieutenant and later captain, 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; United States Senator from Ohio, Janu- ary 3, 1941, to September 30, 1945; nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Truman, September 18, 1945; confirmed by the Senate, September 19, 1945, and took his ‘seat, October ¥ 1945, RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT i [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose daughters accompany them; the [| designates those having other ladies with them] *Mr. Chief Justice Stone, 2340 Wyoming Avenue. *Mr. Justice Black, 619 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. *Mr. Justice Reed, the Mayflower. *Mr. Justice Frankfurter, 1511 Thirtieth Street. *Mr. Justice Douglas, Silver Spring, Md. || Mr. Justice Murphy, the Washington. *Mr. Justice Jackson, McLean, Va. #+ Mr. Justice Rutledge, 4928 Indian Lane. LOAN *||Mr. Justice Burton, the Dodge. ®ak Mr. Chief Justice Hughes (retired), 2223 Rr Stront, Mr. Justice McReynolds (retired), 2400 Sixteenth Street. *Mr. Justice Roberts (retired), 2101 Connecticut Avenue. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT Clerk.—Charles Elmore Cropley, Cathedral Mansions South. Deputy Clerks.—Reginald C. Dilli, 1329 Hemlock Street; Hugh Ww. Barr, 4701 Connecticut Avenue; Harold B. Willey, 3214 N orth Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Marshal.—Thomas E. Waggaman, 202 King Street, Alexandria, Va. Reporter.—Ernest Knaebel, 3707 Morrison Street. Librarian.— Oscar D. Clarke, 3034 Newark Street. Bang 452 ny Congressional Directory UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS District of Columbia Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Stone. District of Columbia. Chief Justice.—D. Lawrence Groner. Associate Justices.—Harold M. Stephens, Henry W. Edgerton, Wilbur K. Miller, E. Barrett Prettyman, Bennett Champ Clark. : First Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Frankfurter. Districts of Maine, New Hamp-shire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico. Circuit Judges.—Calvert Magruder, Boston, Mass.; John C. Mahoney, Providence, R. I.; Peter Wood- * bury, Concord and Manchester, N. H. : Second Judicial Circust.—Mr. Justice Jackson. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, northern New York, southern New York, eastern New York, and western New York. Cercuit Judges.— Learned Hand, New York, N. Y.; Thomas W. Swan, New Haven, Conn.; Augustus N. Hand, New York, N. Y.; Harrie Brigham Chase, Brattleboro, Vt.; Charles E. Clark, New Haven, Conn.; Jerome N. Frank, New York, N.Y. Third Judicial Circutt.—Mr. Justice Burton. Districts of New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, middle Pennsylvania, western Pennsylvania, Delaware,and the Virgin Islands. Circuit Judges.—John Biggs, Jr., Wilmington, Del.; Albert Branson Maris, Philadelphia, Pa.; Herbert FF: Goodrich, Philadelphia, Pa.; Gerald Melani n, Newark, N. J.; John J. O’Connell, Pittsburgh, Pa.; [vacancy]. : Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Stone. Districts of Maryland, north-ern West Virginia, southern West Virginia, eastern Virginia, western Virginia, eastern North Carolina, western North Carolina, and eastern and western South Carolina. Circuit Judges.—John J. Parker, Charlotte, N. C.; Morris A. Soper, Baltimore, Md.; Armistead M. Dobie, Charlottesville, Va. Fifth Judicial Circuit.— Mr. Justice Black. Districts of northern Georgia, south-ern Georgia, middle Georgia, northern Florida, southern Florida, northern Alabama, middle Alabama, southern Alabama, northern Mississippi, southern Mississippi, eastern Louisiana, western Louisiana, northern Texas, southern Texas, eastern Texas, western Texas, and Canal Zone. Circuit Judges.— Samuel H. Sibley, Atlanta, Ga.; Joseph C. Hutcheson, Jr., Houston, Tex.; Edwin R. Holmes, New Orleans, La.; Leon McCord, Montgomery, Ala.; Curtis L. Waller, Tallahassee, Fla.; Elmo P. Lee, Shreveport, La. Sixth Judicial Circutt.—Mr. Justice Reed. Districts of northern Ohio, southern Ohio, eastern Michigan, western Michigan, eastern Kentucky, western Ken-tucky, eastern Tennessee, middle Tennessee, and western Tennessee. Circuit Judges.—Xen Hicks, Knoxville, Tenn.; Charles C. Simons, Detroit, Mich.; Florence E. Allen, Cleveland, Ohio; John D. Martin, Sr., Memphis, Tenn.; Thomas F. McAllister, Grand Rapids, Mich.; [vacancy]. Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Murphy. Districts of Indiana, northern Illinois, eastern Illinois, southern Illinois, eastern Wisconsin, and western Wisconsin. Circuit Judges.—Evan A. Evans, Madison and Baraboo, Wis.; William M. Sparks, Indianapolis, Ind.; J. Earl Major, Springfield, Ill.; Otto Kerner, Chicago, Ill.; Sherman Minton, New Albany, Ind. Eighth Judicial Circutt.—Mr. Justice Rutledge. Districts of Minnesota, northern Iowa, southern Iowa, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern Arkansas, western Arkansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Circuit Judges.— Kimbrough Stone, Kansas City, Mo.; Archibald K. Gardner, Aberdeen and Huron, S. Dak.; John B. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Joseph W. Woodrough, Omaha, Nebr.; Seth Thomas, Fort Dodge, Iowa; Harvey M. Johnsen, Omaha, Nebr.; Walter G. Riddick, Little Rock, Ark. Ninth Judicial Circust.—Mr. Justice Douglas. Districts of northern California, southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, eastern Washington, western Washington, Idaho, Arizona, Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. Circuit Judges.—Francis A. Garrecht, Spokane, Wash.; William Denman, San Fran-cisco, Calif.; Clifton Mathews, San Francisco, Calif.; Albert Lee Stephens, Los Angeles, Calif; William Healy, Boise, Idaho; Homer T. Bone, Tacoma, Wash.; William E. Orr, San Francisco, Calif. : Tenth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Rutledge. Districts of Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, western Oklahoma, northern Oklahoma, and New Mexico. Circust Judges.—Orie L. Phillips, Denver, Colo.; Sam G. Bratton, Albuquerque, N. Mex.; Walter A. Huxman, Topeka, Kans.; Alfred P. Murrah, Oklahoma City, Okla. Judiciary 453 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (U. S. Court of Appeals Building, southeast corner Fifth and E Streets. Phoné, REpublic 3811) D. LAWRENCE GRONER, chief justice, was born in Norfolk, Va., September 6, 1873; educated at Washington and Lee University and the University of Vir-ginia; commenced practice in Norfolk, Va., in 1894; appointed United States Attorney, eastern district of Virginia, 1910; member State council of defense of Virginia, 1917; appointed judge of the United States District Court, eastern district of Virginia, May 1921; appointed judge of the United States Court of Appeals, Washington, February 1931; Phi Beta Kappa, University of Virginia; LL. D., Washington and Lee University, National University. HAROLD M. STEPHENS, associate justice; born in Crete, Nebr., March 6, 1886, son of Frank B. and Lunette (Stebbins) Stephens; educated at University of Utah, 1904-6; Cornell University, 1907-9; Harvard Law School, 1910-13, 1931-33; University of California, 1930-31; degrees—A. B., Cornell, 1909; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1913; S. J. D., Harvard Law School, 1932; LL. D. (honor-ary), Georgetown University, 1939; married Virginia Adelle Bush, of Salt Lake City, Utah, August 6, 1912; admitted to Utah bar 1912 and began practice in Salt Lake City; assistant prosecuting attorney, Salt Lake County, 1915-17; judge third judicial district court, Utah, 1917-21; member Cheney, Jensen, Holman & Stephens, Salt Lake City, 1921-28; Martineau & Stephens, Los Angeles, 1928; member, grievance committee Utah State Bar Association, 1922-23; member, code commission to revise Utah laws, 1928; acting associate director, American College of Surgeons, 1921; president, Salt Lake City Community Clinic and Dispensary, 1923-28; member, American Judicature Society; member, Selden Society; author Administrative Tribunals and the Rules of Evidence; appointed by President Roosevelt Assistant Attorney General of the United States, June 14, 1933; the assistant to the Attorney General, July ‘5, 1935; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals by President Roosevelt July 23, 1935; confirmed by the Senate July 24, 1935; entered upon the duties of that office October 7, 1935; American chairman of the Joint Committee on Interchange of Patent Rights and Information with Great Britain for mutual aid in the prosecution of World War II. HENRY WHITE EDGERTON, associate justice; born in Rush Center, Kans., October 20, 1888; University of Wisconsin, 1905-7; special agent, United States Bureau of Corporations, 1908; A. B., Cornell University, 1910; law school of the University of Paris, 1910-11; LL. B., Harvard, 1914; practiced in Boston, Mass. ; member of law faculties of George Washington University (1921-29), University of Chicago (1928-29), and Cornell University (1916-18, 1929-38) ; special assistant to the Attorney General, 1934-35; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Roosevelt November 26, 1937; confirmed by the Senate December 9, 1937; assumed duties February 1, 1938. BENNETT CHAMP CLARK, associate justice, of St. Louis, 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, Uni-versity 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; parlia-mentarian of the United States House of Representatives, 1913-17; attended first officers’ training camp at Fort Myer, Va., in 1917, receiving commission as captain; elected lieutenant colonel, Sixth Regiment Missouri Infantry, and served as 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-fiftth Divisions; discharged in May 1919; promoted to colonel of Infantry in March 1919; one of the 17 charter members and an incorporator of the American Legion and chairman of the Paris caucus which RE 454 Congressional Directory formally organized the Legion; past national commander of the American Legion; past commander of the Thirty-fifth Division Veterans’ Association and ex-president of the National Guard Association of the United States; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; practiced law in St. Louis until 1945; parliamentarian of the Democratic National Convention in 1916; delegate at large to Democratic National Conventions of 1928, 1936, 1940 and 1944; compiler of several manuals on parliamentary law; author of John Quincy Adams— Old Man Eloquent; coauthor, Social Studies; married in 1922 to Miss Miriam Marsh of Waterloo, Towa, who died in 1943, and they had three sons, Champ, Marsh, and Kimball; married October 6, 1945, to Miss Violet Heming of New York; Presbyterian, Mason, Phi Beta Kappa, Order of the Coif, Delta Sigma Rho, Delta Tau Delta, and Phi Delta Phi; United States Senator 1933 to 1945; appointed associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the Distriet of Columbia by President Truman on September 12, 1945, and confirmed by Senate on September 24, 1945. WILBUR K. MILLER, associate justice; born in Owensboro, Ky., October 9, 1892; academic and legal education at the University of Michigan; married Marie Louise Hager, June 2, 1917; county attorney of Daviess County, Ky., 1922-30; chairman, Public Service Commission of Kentucky, 1934-35; judge of Special Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1940-41; member, American Legion; nominated associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals by President Trane, September 12, 1945, and entered upon the duties of that office October 16, 1945. ELIJAH BARRETT PRETTYMAN, associate justice; born in Lexington, Va., August 23, 1891; son of Forrest Johnston and Elizabeth Rebecca (Stone-street) Prettyman; A. B., Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va., 1910, A. M., 1911; LL. B., Georgetown University, 1915; married Lucy C. Hill of Baltimore, Md., September 15, 1917; children, Elizabeth Courtney and Elijah Barrett; admitted to Virginia bar, 1915; member law firm of Potter, Prettyman & Fisher, Hopewell, Va., 1915-17; special attorney, Bureau of Internal Revenue, Washing-ton, D. C., and New York City, 1919-20; associate and member law firm of Butler, Lamb, Foster & Pope, Chicago and Washington, D. C., 1920-33; general counsel to Bureau of Internal Revenue, Washington, 1933-34; corporation counsel of District of Columbia, 1934-36; member law firm of Hewes, Prettyman & Awalt, Washington, D. C., and Hartford, Conn., 1936-45; professor of taxa-tion, Georgetown University Law School; served in the United States Army, 1917-19, advancing to captain of Infantry; trustee of Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va., and of American University of Washington, D. C.; member of American and Federal Bar Associations, District of Columbia Bar Association (past president), American Judicature Society, Phi Beta Kappa, Kappa Sigma, Gamma Eta Gamma, Omicron Delta Kappa, Washington Board of Trade (past president); Democrat; Methodist; nominated as associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by President Truman, September 12, 1945; confirmed by the Senate, September 19, 1945; assumed duties October 17, 1945. RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; thé t those whose daughters accompany them] *Chief Justice D. Lawrence Groner, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. * Associate Justice Harold M. Stephens, the Wardman Park. *Assaciate Justice Henry White Edgerton, 2853 Ontario Road. * Associate Justice Bennett Champ Clark, 3626 Prospect Street. * Associate Justice Wilbur K. Miller, 2737 Devonshire Place. *Associate Justice E. Barrett Prettyman, 106 Woodlawn Avenue, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md. RETIRED Chief Justice George E. Martin, 1661 Crescent Place, Judiciary 455 OFFICERS OF THE UNITED. STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Clerk.—Joseph W. Stewart, 1610 Myrtle Street. Marshal.—George F. De Venny, 1609 Kennedy Place. Reporter.—Harvey T. Reid, 810 Thirteenth Street. UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS (Internal Revenue Building. Phone, N Ational 4696) FINIS JAMES GARRETT, presiding judge, of Dresden, Tenn., was born August 26, 1875, near Ore Springs, in Weakley County, Tenn., of Noah J. and Virginia Garrett; educated at the common schools, at Clinton College, Clinton, Ky., and at Bethel College, McKenzie, Tenn., graduating from the latter insti-tution in June 1897, taking the degree of A. B.; in June 1925 received the honorary degree of LL. D. from Roanoke College at Salem, Va.; admitted to the bar in August 1899, and began practice at Dresden, January 1, 1900; was appointed master in chancery, September 14, 1900, and served until January 24, 1905; married, November 27, 1901, to Miss Elizabeth Harris Burns, of McKenzie, Tenn.; : they have two children—Mrs. B. G. Koehler, of Geneva, Nebr., and Burns Garrett, of Dresden, Tenn.; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and to each succeeding Congress. up to and including the Seventieth; nominee of the minority party for Speaker of the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth Congresses, serving as minority leader for those Congresses; appointed judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Coolidge February 18, 1929, and took the oath of office March 5, 1929; appointed presiding judge by : President Roosevelt December 1, 1937, and took ‘the oath of office December 9, 1937. OSCAR E. BLAND, judge, of Linton, Ind., was born in Greene County, Ind., November 21, 1877; educated at Indiana University and Valparaiso University; studied law at Indiana University, admitted to the bar in Indiana in 1901; member of the Indiana State Senate, 1907, 1908, 1909; elected to Congress from the Second District of Indiana in 1916, served through the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, and Sixty-seventh Congresses; appointed to the United States Court of Customs Appeals by President Harding March 4, 1923. CHARLES SHERROD HATFIELD, judge, was born in West Millgrove, Ohio, June 29, 1882; A. B. at Hanover College; postgraduate course at Indiana Uni-versity; ‘graduated in law at Ohio State University and commenced the practice of law in 1907; was prosecuting attorney of Wood County; LL. D. National University, 1931; appointed judge of the United States Court of Customs Appeals by President Harding March 4, 1923. JOSEPH RAYMOND JACKSON, judge, of New York City, was born in Albany, N. Y., August 30, 1880, son of Michael J. and Alice (Birmingham) Jackson; educated in the common schools and was graduated from Manhattan College, New York City, in June 1900 with the degree of A. B.; in June 1930 received honorary degree LL. D. from the same college; married Josephine Kelley, of Butte, Mont., June 30, 1902; admitted to the bar of the State of Montana in 1907; practiced in Butte, Mont.; county attorney, Silver Bow County, Mont., 1917-20; judge, second judicial district court of Montana, 1920-25; commis-sioner of the Supreme Court of Montana in 1922; president, Montana State Bar Association in 1925; practiced law, New York City, 1925-34; appointed by President Roosevelt as Assistant Attorney General of the United States, June 1934; nominated judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Roosevelt November 29, 1937; confirmed by the Senate December 9, 1937; entered upon the duties of that office December 15, 1937. 456 | : Congressional Directory AMBROSE O’CONNELL, judge, was born in Wapello County, Iowa, July 9, 1881; graduated, Ottuma High School, 1902, University of Notre Dame, 1907, and the Law School of Columbia University, 1910; admitted to the bar in the State of New York and commenced the practice of law there in 1910; was ap-pointed Second Assistant Postmaster General, 1938, First Assistant Postmaster General, 1940, executive vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee, 1943, and judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, June 27, 1944. ‘ RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS . [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the f those whose daughters accompany them] *Presiding Judge Finis J. Garrett, 3550 Springland Lane. *tJudge Oscar E. Bland, 2950 Macomb Street. *tJudge Charles S. Hatfield, 4335 Cathedral Avenue. *Judge Joseph R. Jackson, Westchester Apartments. *tJudge Ambrose O’Connell, the Mayflower. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS Clerk.—Arthur B. Shelton, 3910 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. Marshal.—Joseph G. Gauges, 3900 Fourteenth Street. ! Assistant Clerks.— Mary Belle Nicol, 410 Cedar Street; Cabell’ N. Pryor, 4324 Clagett Road, Hyattsville, Md. ~ Reporter.—W. R. McWherter, the Continental. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES (Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street. Phone, DIstrict 0642) RICHARD SMITH WHALEY, chief justice; born in Charleston, S. C., July 15, 1874; son of William B. and Helen (Smith) W.; Episcopal High School, Alexan-dria, Va.; LL. B., University of Virginia, 1897; admitted to the bar of South Carolina in 1897; elected to the House of Representatives of South Carolina, 1900, and reelected six times (speaker of house for 4 years); presiding officer of the Democratic State convention, 1910; delegate to Democratic national conven-tion, Baltimore, 1912, and San Francisco, 1920; elected to Sixth-third Congress (1913-15), First South Carolina District; reelected to Sixty-fourth, Sixth-fifth, and Sixty-sixth Congresses (1915-21) ; chairman, Rent Commission of the District of Columbia, 1923-25; commissioner, Court of Claims; 1925-30; judge of Court of Claims, June 4, 1930-39; chief justice of United States Court of Claims, June 28, 1939. BENJAMIN H. LITTLETON, judge; of Nashville, Tenn., born in Weather-ford, Tex.,in 1889; educated in the public schools of Tennessee; LL. B., Cumber-land University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1914; admitted to the bar in 1914 and practiced law at Nashville, Tenn.; appointed assistant United States attorney for the mid-dle district of Tennessee, 1918; appointed special attorney, Treasury Department, 1921; appointed a member of the United States Board of Tax Appeals, July 16, 1924, for 2 years; reappointed June 6, 1926, for term of 10 years; elected chairman of the Board, April 1927; reelected chairman, April 1929; commissioned judge of the Court of Claims, November 6, 1929. SAMUEL ESTILL WHITAKER, judge; born in Winchester, Tenn., Septem-ber 25, 1886; son of Madison Newton and Florence Jarrett (Griffin) Whitaker; student Winchester (Tenn.) Normal College, 1902-5; University of Virginia, 1005-6; LL. B., University of Chattanooga, 1909; married Lillian Nelson Cham-bliss, daughter of Justice and Mrs. Alexander W. Chambliss, of Chattanooga, June 30, 1913; children, Nelson Chambliss (Mrs. Paul Campbell, Jr.) and Samuel Estill, Jr.; admitted to Tennessee bar in 1909, and practiced in Chattanooga until outbreak of First World War; served as captain of Cavalry, later Field Artillery, United States Army, 1917-19; attorney, United States Department of Justice, 1919-20; attorney, Bureau of Internal Revenue, 1920; in private practice Judiciary 457 of law in Chattanooga, 1921-37; city attorney, Chattanooga, 1923; member of firm of Whitaker & Whitaker, 1924-37; mayor of Riverview, Tenn., 1925-29; employed from time to time as special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1933-37; Assistant Attorney General of the United States, 1937-39; appointed judge, United States Court of Claims, July 13, 1939; home address: 4921 Quebec Street. . MARVIN JONES, judge, was born near Valley View, in Cooke County, Tex., son of Horace King and Dosia (Hawkins) Jones; was graduated from South-western University, Georgetown, Tex., with A. B. degree, and from University of Texas with LL. B. degree; was appointed chairman of the board of legal examiners for the seventh supreme judicial district of Texas; member American Legion; elected to the Sixty-fifth and to each succeeding Congress to and including the Seventy-sixth; chairman House Committee on Agriculture December 1931 to November 20, 1940; appointed judge of United States Court of Claims April 9, 1940; confirmed by United States Senate April 10, 1940; assumed duties of that office November 20, 1940; on leave beginning January 15, 1943; as adviser and assistant to Justice James F. Byrnes, Director of Economic Stabilization, to June 29, 1943; president, United Nations Conference on Food and Agriculture, Hot Springs, Va., May 18 to June 3, 1943; served as administrator, United States War Food Administration, June 29, 1943, to July 1, 1945, then resumed duties as judge, United States Court of Claims. JOSEPH WARREN MADDEN, judge; born at Damascus, Stephenson County, Ill., January 17, 1890; son of William J. and Elizabeth Dickey (Mur-daugh) Madden; country school; Freeport (Ill.) High School; Northern Illinois State Normal School, De Kalb, Ill.; University of Illinois, A. B., 1911; University of Chicago, J. D., 1914; married Margaret Bell Liddell, of McAlester, Okla., 1913; children, Mary Esther (Mrs. David Persinger), Lt. Joseph Warren, Jr. (killed in military service, 1943), Capt. Robert Liddell, Margaret Elizabeth (Mrs. Edmond Sommer), Sgt. Murdaugh Stuart; admitted to bar of Illinois, 1914; Ohio, 1918; West Virginia, 1922; Pennsylvania, .1927; professor of law, University of Okla-homa, 1814-16; Ohio State University, 1917-21; University of Pittsburgh, 1927-37; visiting professor of law, University of Chicago, North Carolina, Cornell, and Stanford Universities; dean of Law School, West Virginia University, 1921-27; practiced law in Tllinois and part time in Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania; adviser to Reporters in Property and Torts Restatements, American Law Insti-tute; author treatise on domestic relations, case book on domestic relations, coauthor case book on property; special assistant to Attorney General of the United States, 1920; member of Governor’s Commission on Private Policing in Industry in Pennsylvania, 1933-34; chairman. National Labor Relations Board, 1935-40; commissioned judge Court of Claims, January 8, 1941. RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the those whose daughters accompany them] Chief Justice Richard S. Whaley, the Shoreham. *Judge Benjamin H. Littleton, the Dodge. *tJudge Samuel E. Whitaker, 4921 Quebec Street. Judge Marvin Jones, the University Club. *ttJudge J. Warren Madden, Falls Church, Va. RETIRED Chief Justice Fenton W. Booth, 4810 Washington Boulevard, Indianapolis, Ind. Judge Samuel Jordan Graham, Metropolitan Club. Judge William R. Green, U. 8. Court of Claims, Washington, D. C. OFFICERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS Chief Clerk.— Willard L. Hart, 3505 Woodley Road. Assistant Clerk.—John W. Taylor, 4619 Van Ness Street. Bailiff. —Jerry J. Marcotte, 4502 Watkins Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Secretary to Court.— Walter H. Moling, 1791 Lanier Place. Reporter.—James A. Hoyt, 4813 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va, Financial Officer.—Herbert Starek, 3211 Nineteenth Street. Auditor.—Eugene C. Sauer, 7924 Orchid Street. 458 Congressional Directory COMMISSIONERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS Hayner H. Gordon, 1755 Lamont Street. Ewart W. Hobbs, box 5478, Seat Pleasant, Md. Richard H. Akers, 7008 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Herbert E. Gyles, 589 Arlington Village Apartments, Arlington, Va W. Ney Evans, 4651 Kenmore Drive. Wilson Cowen, '10 Poe Road, Bethesda, Md. (on leave; in war work). Raymond T. Nagle, 6622 Broad Street, Brookmont, Md. UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT (201 Varick Street, New York City. Phone, W Alker 5-9030) WEBSTERJ. OLIVER, presiding judge; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January 14, 1888; son of William P. and FrancesL (Fortune) O.; LL.B. St. Lawrence Uni-versity (Brooklyn Law School), 1911; received the honorary degree of LL. D., St. Lawrence University, 1941; married Genevieve M. Carlin, June 27, 1917, one son, Robert W.; buyer for Oliver Bros., Inc., hardware, machinery, New York and Pittsburgh, 1902-11; admitted to New York bar 1911; member of the firm of Oliver & McNevin; later member of the firm of Leubuscher, Kayser & Oliver; appointed special United States attorney 1935; appointed Assistant Attorney General in Charge of Customs, 1938; appointed judge, United States Customs Court, 1940, by President Roosevelt designated by him as presiding judge on June 24, 1940: served as captain, Ordnance Reserve Corps, 1917-19; Democrat, Roman Catholic, Knights of Columbus. Home address, 2215 Newkirk Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y WILLIAM J. TILSON, judge; born in Clearbranch, Tenn., August 13, 1871; B. A., Yale University, 1894; LL. B., 1896; M. L., 1897: practiced law in Atlanta, Ga., 28 years; appointed United States judge, middle district of Georgia, July 5 1926, and resigned March 17, 1928, to accept appointment as judge United States Customs Court, qualifying March 17, 1928. Presiding judge United States Customs Court, June 10, 1932, to December 6, 1934. GENEVIEVE R. CLINE, of Cleveland, Ohio, judge of the United States Customs Court; nominated to be judge of the United States Customs Court by President Calvin Coolidge on May 4, 1928; confirmed by the United States He on May 25, 1928; entered upon the duties of that office on June 6, 1928. DAVID H. KINCHELOE, judge; born on a farm near Sacramento, Ky., April 9, 1877; attended Valparaiso University, Indiana, 1896; B. S., Bowling Green . College, Ky., 1898; admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1899; prosecuting attorney of McLean County, Ky., 1902-6; practiced law at Madisonville, Ky., 1906-30; Member of Congress from Kentucky, 1915-30; appointed judge United States Customs Court by President Hoover September 22, 1930, resigning from Congress to accept appointment, and entered upon the duties of that office October 6, 1930; at the time of his appointment was renominated for Congress from his district for his ninth term without Democratic or Republican opposition. WILLIAM J. KEEFE, judge; born in Clinton, Iowa, November 17, 1873; State University of Iowa, LL B., 1894; admitted to Towa bar and Federal courts -in 1895, and practiced law in Clinton, Towa, 1895-1933; county attorney of Clinton County three terms; appointed judge United States Customs Court by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933. WILLIAM A. EKWALL, judge; born in Ludington, Mich., June 14, 1887; moved to Klamathon, Siskiyou County, Calif., in 1893, and to Portland, Oreg. sin 1906; married Lina Moser of Portland, Oreg., June 19, 1915; two daughters, Mrs. "Joyce Atkinson and Jacqueline; iL. E. , Oregon Law School, 1912; admitted to Oregon and Federal bars; engaged in general practice 1912-22 as member of firm of Senn, Ekwall & Recken, "Portland, Oreg.; appointed municipal judge of the city of Portland, Oreg., 1922-27; elected circuit judge, fourth judicial district (Multno-mah County), Oregon, 1927-34; Representative in Congress from the third con-gressional district (Multnomah County), Oregon, 1935-36; resumed general practice of law in 1937 and as member of firm of Morton & Ekwall, 1938-42, at Judiciary | Portland, Oreg.; served as private of infantry at Camp Pike, Ark., during World War, in 1918; chairman, local draft board No. 6, Multnomah County, Oreg., 1940-42; appointed judge, United States Customs Court under commission of President Roosevelt, dated February 13, 1942. WILLIAM PURINGTON COLE, Jg., judge; born in Towson, Md., May 11, 1889; graduated from Towson High School, Towson, Md., 1907; and from Maryland Agricultural College (now University of Maryland) in civil engineering in 1910; studied law at University of Maryland, passing State bar in 1912; admitted to practice same year; entered Fort Myer Training Camp, Fort Myer, Va., in August 1917, where he received first lieutenant commission and then as-signed to the Three Hundred and Sixteenth Regiment of Infantry, Seventy-ninth Division, Camp Meade, Md.; after foreign service discharged with the rank of captain of Infantry; member of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; member of the Baltimore County, State of Maryland, and American Bar Associations; chairman of the Board of Regents of the University of Maryland, which is also the State board of agriculture; married in June 1918 to Edith May Moore, and they have one child— William Purington Cole, 3d, who enlisted in the United States Army, June 26, 1941, as private, One Hundred Tenth Field Artillery, Twenty-ninth Division; attended Officers’ Training school, Fort Knox, Ky., from which he graduated; later captain, Company C, Twenty-third Armored Infantry Battalion, Seventh Armored Division; killed in action in Europe Septem-ber 11, 1944; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses; resigned from Seventy-seventh Congress October 26, 1942, to accept appointment on the United States Customs Court. CHARLES DRUMMOND LAWRENCE, judge; native of North Yarmouth, Maine; graduated from North Yarmouth Academy, Yarmouth, Maine; Shaw’s Business College, Portland, Maine; New York Law School, LL. B.; New York University Law School, LL. M.; assistant counsel for Treasury Department before Board of General Appraisers (now United States Customs Court), 1904-06; assistant solicitor of customs, 1906-10; United States special attorney, Customs Division, Department of Justice, 1910-25; assistant attorney general in charge of Customs, 1925-34; special assistant to the Attorney General, 1934-43; ap-puinied judge, United States Customs Court February 1, 1943, by President oosevelt. IRVIN C. MOLLISON, judge; born in Vicksburg, Miss., December 24, 1898; attended Oberlin College, 1916-17; University of Chicago, 1917-23, graduating with Ph. B. degree in 1920, and J. D. degree in 1923; member of Phi Beta Kappa; admitted to Illinois bar in 1923 and practiced law in Chicago until October 1945; member of Board of Directors of Chicago Public Library from October 1938 to January 1944; member of board of education of city of Chicago from January 1944 to October 1945; Democrat; appointed judge of United States Customs Court, October 1945, by President Truman. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT Clerk.— William F. X. Band. Marshal.—Patrick S. DeMarco. Court Reporters—DeVera Hill, Michael J. Russo, Edward A. Barron. UNITED STATES EMERGENCY COURT OF APPEALS [Established under the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942] (U. S. Court of Appeals Building, southeast corner Fifth and E Streets. Phone, N Ational 7408) ALBERT BRANSON MARIS, chief judge, of Lansdowne, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 19, 1893, son of Robert W. and Elma Branson Maris; educated at Drexel Institute of Technology and Temple University, receiving from the latter institution the degrees of LL. B. in 1918, and LL. D. in 1940; married Edith M. Robinson of Drexel Hill, Pa., July 3, 1917; served in the Coast Artillery Corps, United States Army, 1918, discharged with rank of second lieutenant; admitted to Pennsylvania bar, 1918; practiced law in Phila- . 460 Congressional Directory delphia, Pa., 1918-36, member of firm of White, Maris & Clapp; editor, the Legal Intelligencer, Philadelphia, 1933-36; member of council, borough of Yeadon, Pa., 1935-36; appointed United States district judge, eastern district of Penn. sylvania, June 22, 1936; appointed United States circuit judge, third judicial circuit, June 24, 1938; designated by the Chief Justice of the United States to be a judge of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals, Merch 2, 1942, and to be chief judge of the court, June 4, 1943. CALVERT MAGRUDER, judge, of Cambridge, Mass.; born in Annapolis, Md., December 26, 1893, son of Daniel Randall and Rosalie Eugenia Stuart (Webster) Magruder; graduated St. John’s College, A. B., 1913, A. M., 1917; LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1916; married Anna Saltonstall Ward of Cambridge, Mass., ’ October 8, 1925; children— Calvert, Robert Stuart, Michael; law clerk to Mr. Justice Brandeis Washington, D. 4 1916-17; admitted to Maryland bar, 1917; served as second and first lieutenant, infantry, U. S. R. C., Camp Lee, Va., 1917-19; attorney, United States Shipping Board, Washington, D. C., 1919-20; assistant professor of law, Harvard, 1920-25, professor, 1925-39, vice dean, 1930-39; leave of absence as general counsel National Labor Relations Board, Washington, 1934-35, and as general counsel Wage and Hour Division, Depart-ment of Labor, Washington, 1938-39; appointed United States circuit judge, first circuit, June 13, 1939; designated by the Chief Justice of the United States to be a judge of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals, March 2, 1942. THOMAS FRANCIS McALLISTER, judge, of Grand Rapids, Mich.; born March 4, 1896, son of James T. and Mildred (Madden) McAllister; educated at Grand Rapids Central High School, University of Michigan Literary and Law Schools (A. B. as of 1918, LL.B. as of 1921); married Dorothy Wonderly Smith June 11, 1921; children—Mary Wonderly, Claire Raiguel; served as member of American Field Service Ambulance with French Armies, 1917; volunteer, French Foreign Legion, 1917; graduated aspirant-officer, French Artillery College, Fontainebleau; with Thirty-second and Sixtieth Regiments, Field Artillery, and in aviation as artilleur-aviateur, Escadrille Spad 285; service in campaigns of Verdun and Les Eparges, 1917; Champagne, Marne, Somme, Aisne, Meuse, 1918; commander sous-lieutenant in French army, 1918; decorated Croix de Guerre at second battle of Marne; Fourragere of Medaille Militaire (60 R. A. C.); admitted to Michigan bar, 1921, "and began practice as member of McAllister & McAllister, Grand Rapids; appointed member of State Advisory Liquor Com-mission, 1933; Democratic nominee for Congress, Fifth Michigan district, 1934, 1936; appointed special assistant to United States attorney general, Criminal Divi-sion, "Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., 1937; elected justice of Supreme Court of Michigan, 1937, for term 1938-46; appointed member of United States Attorney General's Commission on Bankruptcy Administration, 1939; appointed by National Mediation Board, referee in railroad disputes before National Railroad Adjustment Board, 1939-41; appointed by President Roosevelt judge of United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, April 25, 1941, and confirmed by United States Senate, May 19, 1941; appointed judge of the United States Emer-Sones Court of Appeals by the Chief Justice of the United States February 26, 1945 WALTER CHARLES LINDLEY, judge, of Danville, Ill., born in Shelby County, I1l., July 12, 1880, son of Alfred Watson and Irena Carey Lindley; grad-uated University of Illinois, A. B. 1901; College of Law, 1904, LL. B.; 1910, J. D.; married Louise Dewey Brown, of North Egremont, Mass. April 30, 1913; children Molly (Byrne), Louise (Morgan), and Walter Cary; taught English in University of Tliinois 1901— 4; admitted to par in Illinois July 1, 1904; practiced until 1922 when appointed United States District Judge for the ‘Eastern District of Inois; a S. M. in Chancery 1910-18; member Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Gamma Delta, and Order of the Coif; designated by the Chief Justice of the United States November 1,1944, to be a judge of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals. BOLITHA JAMES LAWS, judge, of Chevy Chase, Md.; born in Washington, D. C., August 22, 1891, son of Bolitha J. and Mary A. Laws; educated in the public schools of "Washington, D. C., Emerson Institute, and Georgetown Uni-versity, receiving from the latter institution the degrees of LL. B. in 1913 and LL. M: in 1914; married Nancy MacLeod, of Lynchburg, Va., August 25, 1920; Judiciary i 461 admitted to bar of the District of Columbia, 1913, State of New York, 1920, State of Maryland, 1923; assistant United States attorney for the District of Columbia, 1014-20; assistant general counsel United States Shipping Board, 1921-22; practiced law in the District of Columbia as a member of the firm of Cromelin & Laws, 1922-38; president of the District of Columbia Bar Association, 1938; appointed: associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia, June 10, 1938; designated by the Chief Justice of the United States to be a judge of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals on June 4, 1943; appointed chief justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia, January 22, 1945. | Trea Al Hit : i JIN : } a | i el ao LJ OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES EMERGENCY COURT OF APPEALS Clerk.—Herman C. Beasley, 3311 Marshal.—George F. De Venny, Alabama Avenue, Alexandria, 1609 Kennedy Place. Va. | ao TAX COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, THE i (Office, Constitution Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phones, N Ational 5771 to 5775) & Drogo Judge. —Bolon B. Turner, Westchester Apartments. Judges: John M. Sternhagen, 3328 O Street. Charles P. Smith, 3817 Kanawha Street. C. Rogers Arundell, 4930 Quebec Street. Ernest H. Van Fossan, 2101 Connecticut Avenue, J. Edgar Murdock, 2940 Foxhall Road. Eugene Black, 5206 Colorado Avenue. J. Russell Leech, 3506 Macomb Street. Arthur J. Mellott, 6 Radcliffe Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, William W. Arnold, the Wardman Park. John A. Tyson, Westchester Apartments. Samuel B. Hill, 3020 Tilden Street. Richard L. Disney, 3502 Macomb Street. Marion J. Harron, Constitution Avenue at Twelfth Street. John W. Kern, 4407 Hadfield Lane. Clarence V. Opper, 2802 P Street. Secretary.—Robert C. Tracy, 2500 Q Street. Clerk.—Bertus D. Gamble, Garrett Park, Md. Reporter.—Mabel M. Owen, 3100 Connecticut Avenue. Va. vod Sa ini, PR feelin & < : th a = ad DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (United States Courthouse. Phone, DIstrict 2854; clerk’s cffice, District 2854) . ~ Chief Justice.—Bolitha J. Laws, 7 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Justices: Jennings Bailey, 213 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Jesse C. Adkins, Ontario Apartments. James M. Proctor, 4615 Linnean Avenue. F. Dickinson Letts, 3500 Garfield Street. Daniel W. O’Donoghue, 2303 California Street. T. Alan Goldsborough, La Salle Apartments. James W. Morris, the Westchester. David A. Pine, 1625 Nicholson Street. Matthew F. McGuire, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Henry A. Schweinhaut, 6502 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Alexander Holtzoff, 2651 Sixteenth Street. Auditor—Fred J. Eden, 4726 Brandywine Street. ; Clerk.— Charles E. Stewart, 1629 Columbia Road. (Office phone, DIstrict Chief Probation Officer. itt oseph Y. Reeves, 5607 Thirty-ninth Street. phone, DIstrict 2854.) 2854.) (Office aril gi | Li il Sl SEE 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 31 462 Congressional Directory COMMISSION ON MENTAL HEALTH (Municipal Center, 300 Indiana Avenue. Phones, REpublic 1208; N Ational 6000) Chairman.— Thomas Gillespie Walsh (lawyer-member), 4312 Thirteenth Place NE. Alternate.—Frederick A. Thuee (lawyer-member), Investment Building. Physicians (Psychiatrists): : Camilla M. Anderson, M. D., 4503 Seventeenth Street. Paul J. Ewerhardt, M. D., 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Walter Freeman, M. D., 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Robert H. Groh, M. D., 2025 R Street. -Irma Belk Hobart, M. D., 5110 Manning Place. Albert E. Marland, M. D., 1216 Sixteenth Street. Robert T. Morse, M. D., 3106 N Street. On leave in Military Service: Lt. Comdr. Roger S. Cohen, M. C,, U. S. N. R. Commander Elmer Klein, M. C., U. S. N. R. Lt. Col. Hyman D. Shapiro, M. C., U. S. A. R. : Executive Secretary.— Louis P. Stumph, 3430 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT (United States Courthouse. Phone, NAtional 2840) Register and Clerk.— Victor S. Mersch, 3615 Quesada Street. Deputies.—Thomas C. Scalley, 5019 Forty-first Street; Ella A. Brown, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES COURTS (Supreme > Court Building, 1 First Street NE. Phone, EXecutive 1640) Director—Henry P. Chandler, 3525 Edmunds Street. Secretary to the Director.—Louise V. Cooper, 505 Green Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director.—Elmore Whitehurst, 2914 W Street SE. Secretary to the Assistant Director.— Margaret H. Seamon, 2115 P Street. Chief, Division of Procedural Studies and Statistics.—Will Shafroth, 30-East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Probation.—Lewis J. Grout, 2018 Pierce Mill Road. Chief of Bankrupicy.— Edwin L. Covey, 8403 Galveston Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Auditor.—Melville La Marche, 8 Barney Circle SE. Budget and Accounting Officer.—John C. Brown, 7413 Blair Road. Service Officer.—John F. Holland. Personnel Officer.—Catherine Waddle, 2111 Massachusetts Avenue. UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE (United States Courthouse. Phone, District 2854) United States Marshal.—W. Bruce Matthews, La Plata, Md. Chief Deputy Marshal.—C. Michael Kearney, 2808 South Joyce Street, Arlington, Va. UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE (United States Courthouse. Phones, NAtional 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139) United States Attorney, District of Columbia.—Edward M. Curran, 6607 Western Avenue. : Secretary to the United States Attorney, District of Columbia.—Margaret V. Carr, 4305 Thirteenth Street NE. ge Judiciary Co aag Assistant United States Attorneys, District of Columbia: John W. Fihelly, 1737 H Street. George E. McNeil, 1438 Iris Street. Charles B. Murray, 6404 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. | Cecil R. Heflin, 9 Woodmont Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. | Arthur J. McLaughlin, 1115 Massachusetts Avenue. John B. Diamond, 3d, Upton Street, Rockville, Md. Daniel B. Maher, '2925 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Sug C. Conliff, Jr., the Westchester. oe ime counties, a register of wills, and a judge of the orphan’s court (2 tat. 103). The first government of the city of Washington consisted of a mayor appointed by the President of the United States and a city council elected by the people of the city. This was in 1802. The act chartering the city of Washington also created the levy courts, consisting originally of the justices of the peace of the respective counties (2 Stat. 115; 2 Stat. 773; 3 Stat. 195; 9 Stat. 230; 12 Stat. 384). The levy courts were given broad administrative powers over the counties of Washington and Alexandria, but had no judicial functions. At a later date the levy court of Washington County was composed of nine members appointed by the President (12 Stat. 799). Thus, there were within the 10 miles square five distinet local administrative units, namely (1) the corporation of Washington, (2) the corporation of Georgetown, (3) the county of Washington, (4) the corpo-ration of Alexandria, and (5) the county of Alexandria. These were reduced to three units in 1846 with the retrocession of Alexandria city and county to the State of Virginia (9 Stat. 35; 9 Stat. 1000). The members of the city councils of the three municipalities were elected as were the mayors of Georgetown and Alexandria. In 1812 the city council was permitted to elect the mayor of Wash-ington and in 1820 and thereafter the mayor was elected by the people (3 Stat. 583). The term of the mayor of Washington was for 2 years. This government continued until 1871. By an act of Congress of February 21, 1871, the corporation of Washington, the corporation of Georgetown, and the levy court for Washington County were abolished and the administration consolidated into a so-called territorial form District of Columbia 469 of government. This government consisted of a governor, a board of public works, and a legislative assembly. This legislative assembly consisted of a council of 11 members and a house of delegates of 22 members. The District then also had a Delegate in the House of Representatives of the United States. The Governor, the board of public works, and council were appointed by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The 22 members of the house of delegates and the Delegate in Congress were elected by the people. The District had a Delegate in Congress until March 4, 1875. oie This form of government lasted for 3 years, until June 20, 1874, when Con-gress provided that the District should be governed by three commissioners, appointed by the President. This was known as the temporary form of govern-ment and lasted until July 1, 1878, when the present permanent commission government was set up (18 Stat. 116). In the creation of the temporary com-mission form of government in 1874 and the permanent form in 1878 no provision was made for the franchise, and for the first time in three-quarters of a century no part of the District exercised the right of suffrage. The present form of gov-ernment was created by act of Congress approved June 11, 1878 (20 Stat. 102). The District of Columbia has an area of 69.245 square miles, of which 60.1 square miles are land. The river boundary is high-water mark along the Virginia shore of the Potomac River. The local government of the District of Columbia is a municipal corporation having jurisdiction over the territory which was ‘‘ ceded by the State of Maryland to the Congress of the United States for the permanent seat of the Government of the United States’ (20 Stat. 102). This government is administered by a board of three Commissioners having general equal powers and duties (20 Stat. 103). Two of these Commissioners, who must have been actual residents of the Dis-trict for 3 years next before their appointment and have during that period claimed residence nowhere else, are appointed from civil life by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate for the term of 3 years each and until their successors are appointed and qualified. The other Commissioner is detailed from time to time by the President of the United States from the Corps of Engineers of the United States Army, and shall not be required to perform any other military duty (ib.). This Commissioner shall be selected from the captains or officers of higher grade having served at Jost i in the Corps of Engineers of the Army of the United States (26 tat. ; Three officers of the same corps, junior to said Commissioner, may be detailed to assist him by the President of the United States (26 Stat. 246). The senior officer of the Corps of Engineers of the Army, who for the time being is detailed to act as assistant (and in case of his absence from the District, or disability, the junior officer so detailed), shall, in event of the absence from the District or disability of the Commissioner, who shall for the time being be detailed from the Corps of Engineers, perform all the duties imposed by law upon said Com-missioner (26 Stat. 1113). One of said Commissioners shall be chosen president of the Board of Commis-sioners at their first meeting and annually and whenever a vacancy shall occur (20 Stat. 103). ; The Commissioners are in a general way vested with jurisdiction covering all the ordinary features of municipal government and are also members of the Zoning Commission (37 Stat. 974). The expenditures of the District of Columbia are based upon estimates pre-pared annually by the Commissioners and submitted by them to Congress through the Bureau of the Budget. To the extent to which it shall approve of said esti-mates, Congress shall appropriate a portion out of the Treasury of the United States. The remainder of the amount of such approved estimates shall be levied and assessed upon the. taxable property and privileges in said District other than the property of the United States and of the District of Columbia (act approved June 11, 1878; 20 Stat. 104). “All taxes collected shall be paid into the Treasury of the United States, and the same as well as the appropriations to be made by the Congress as aforesaid shall be disbursed for the expenses of said District, on itemized vouchers, which have been audited and approved by the auditor of the District of Columbia, certified by said Commissioners or a majority of them’ (ib. 105). This act also provided that the cost of operation, development, and maintenance of the District of Columbia should be borne jointly by the United States and the District of Columbia upon a 50-50 basis. This ratio was in 1922 changed to a payment of 60 percent from the revenues of 470 Congressional Directory the District of Columbia and 40 percent by the United States and this provision was repealed by act of Congress approved May 16, 1938. The act of July 26, 1939, provided for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1940, and for each fiscal year thereafter, that there was authorized to be appropriated as the annual payment by the United States toward defraying the expenses of the Government of the District of Columbia, the sum of $6,000,000. The remainder of the local ex-penses are borne by the revenues of the District of Columbia derived from taxa-tion of private property and privileges. Congress has by sundry statutes empowered the Commissioners to make building regulations; plumbing regulations; to make and enforce all such reason-able and usual police regulations as they may deem necessary for the protection of lives, limbs, health, comfort, and quiet of all persons, and the protection of all property within the District, and other regulations of a municipal nature. While the District has a municipal form of government, Congress by various statutory enactments has treated it as a branch of the United States Government by including it in legislation applying to the executive departments, such as the Budget and Accounting Act, the act classifying the salaries of Federal employees, and the act providing for retirement of Federal employees. All legislation affecting the District of Columbia must be passed by Congress under the provisions of the Constitution. The advice of the Commissioners is usually asked before such legislation is enacted. District of Columbia 471 DISTRICT GOVERNMENT | (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone, NA tional 6000) EXECUTIVE OFFICES Commision ~~lohn Russell Young (president of the Board), 1834 Jefferson ace. Special Assistant.—Charles Stofberg, 1314 Saratoga Avenue NE. Private Secretary.— Elizabeth Ramey, 2000 Sixteenth Street. Commissioner —Guy Mason, Westchester Apartments. ' Special Assistant.—Anne Ww. Davidge, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue, Private Secretary.—Dorothy G. Allen, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Engineer Commassioner.— Gen. Gordon R. Young, U. S. A., 4434 Haw- Brig. thorne Street. Special Assistant.—Francis L. Timmons, Jr., 3210 Wheeler Road SE. Private Secretary.— Esther A. Eberly, Oak Bluff Road, Edgewater, Md. Anan) to Engineer Commissioner. Col. J oseph D. Arthur, Jr., 1909 Nineteenth treet. Secretary to the Board.—G. M. Thornett, 4610 Fourth Street. Assistant Secretary.—Ralph A. Norton, 3115 Patterson Place. Chief Clerk.—Ethel G. Dh 4829 Sixteenth Street. DISTRICT OFFICES ASSESSOR’S OFFICE Assessor.—Edward A. Dent, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Assessor.—Byers M. Bachman, 4429 Lowell Street. Real Estate Division: Administrative Head.—Louise Wray, 3100 Connecticut Avenue. Board of Assistant Assessors.—Benjamin F. Adams, 3717 Morrison Street; L. S. Johnson, 6111 Utah Avenue; H. D. Scantlin, 4700 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, ‘Md.; Fred F. Graham, 3422 Oliver Street; Kenneth W. Spencer, 6800 Sixth Street; clerk to board, Georgianna, L. "Kimmel, 2551 Seventeenth Street. Personal Tax Division: Board of Personal Tax Appraisers.—A. B. Evans, 5448 Nebraska Avenue; Ross M. Lehman, 315 Evarts Street NE.; James L. Martin 4501 Garrison Sn Chief Clerk, Preston J. Stang, 10216 Ridgemoor Drive, Silver Spring, d Income and Inheritance and Estate Tax Divisions: Administrator—John R. Merrick, 2313 North Stuart Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrator, Income Tax.—Allan F. Brooke, Sandy Spring, Md. Assistant Administrator, Inheritance and Estate Tax.—Charles P. Miller, Jr., 6008 Thirty-fourth Place. Special Assessment: Clerk in Charge.—Alicia W. Ryder, 2133 Wisconsin Avenue. OFFICE OF THE AUDITOR Auditor—Arthur R. Pilkerton, 4514 Connecticut Avenue. Principal Assistant Auditor.—Robert L. Mudd, 329 Longfellow Street. BUDGET OFFICE Budget Officer.— Walter L. Fowler, 1360 Maple View Place SE. Deputy Budget Officer.— William G. Wilding, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Budget Officer.—David P. Herman, 3825 W Street SE. Secretary of District Personnel Board. — Victor A. Howard, 6103 Fourth Street. OFFICE OF COLLECTOR OF TAXES "Collector of Taxes.—Guy W. Pearson, 4025 Nineteenth Street NE. Deputy Collector of Taxes.— George H. Kidwell, 629 G Street SW. Chief Cashier.—Charles M. Sabins, 914 C Street NE. Special Financial Unit.—Olive G. Faircloth, attorney, 2851 Twenty-ninth Street. 472 Congressional Directory DISBURSING OFFICE Disbursing Officer—James R. Lusby, 3232 Military Road. Deputy.—Kenney P. Wright, 414 Clifton Terrace, East. Assistant Disbursing Officer.—J. J. Krohr, 2205 Evarts Street NE. LICENSE BUREAU Superintendent of Licenses.—Edward E. Bailey, Jr., 1530 Rhode Island Avenue NE, Assistant Superintendent of Licenses.—C. T. Nottingham, 8303 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Md. : PURCHASING DIVISION Purchasing and Contracting Officer.—Roland M. Brennan, 1313 Taylor Street NE. Deputy Purchasing Officer.—H. A. Bales, 2619 Forty-second Street. Principal Assistant Purchasing Officer.— Melville D. Lindsay, 6819 Fifth Street. Market Analyst.—J. F. Marcellino, 5235 Seventh Street. : MISCELLANEOUS OFFICES Community Canning Center and Penny Milk Program.—Harry M. Gardner, supervisor, 1424 R Street. Coroner.—Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, 522 Eleventh Street NE. Poundmaster.—Frank B. Marks, 617 Bennington Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Printing and Publications Diviston.—Joseph H. MacQuilliam, Chief, 1603 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va.; John J. Reynolds, administrative assistant, 841 South Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Rent Control.—Robert F. Cogswell, administrator, 3504 Lowell Street. Veterinary Surgeon.—Dr. D. E. Buckingham, 2115 Fourteenth Street. Victory Garden Office.—J. Morton Franklin, supervisor, 310 Sycamore Street, West Falls Church, Va. Zoning Commission.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Archi-tect of the Capitol, and the Director of the National Park Service. Executive officer, Robert O. Clouser. : BOARDS Accountancy.— Wayne Kendrick, president, Rust, Building; Millard T. Charlton, secretary, Tower Building; S. Frank Levy, treasurer, Earle Building. Alcoholic Beverage Control.—Alan W. Payne, chairman, 5324 Second Street; Mrs. Agnes K. Mason, member, 2202 Kalorama Road; William P. Meredith, member, 2101 Connecticut Avenue; Herbert K. Schollenberger, chief in-spector, 3409 Twenty-ninth Street. Anatomical. —Dr. F. A. Hornaday, secretary-treasurer, the Mayflower. Architects, Examiner, and Registrars of.—L. M. Leisenring, president, 1777 Church Street; Robert F. Beresford, secretary-treasurer, 810 Eighteenth Street; Thomas Locraft, 1413 H Street; Irwin S. Porter, Metropolitan Bank Build-ing; Francis P. Sullivan, 808 Seventeenth Street. Barber Examiners.—Saviour Sidotti, president, 2214 Fourth Street NE.; Richard R. Atkinson, vice president, 422 Fifth Street SE.; Tony J. Durso, secretary-treasurer, 2903 Tenth Street NE. : Boxing Commission.—Claude W. Owen, chairman, 2321 Fourth Street NE.; Thomas P. Morgan, Jr., Southern Building; Inspector Clarence Talley, Metropolitan Police Department; Richard J. O’Brien, acting secretary, Times-Herald Building. Cosmetology.— Eileen Desmond Schmid, president, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Myrtle Price, 1409 N Street; Elenora Jackson, treasurer, 2800 Dumbarton Avenue; Roselia B. Shaw, secretary, 4808 Seventeenth Street. Dental Examiners.—Dr. Martin A. Stohlman, president, 1726 I Street; Dr. Harold B. Hertford, secretary-treasurer, 1726 I Street; Dr. Charles T. Bassett, 1726 I Street; Dr. Vernon J. Lohr, Medical Science Building; Dr. Joseph R. Palkin, 4701 Thirty-second Street. Education (13th and K Sts.).—Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, president, 5500 Thirty-third Street; Robert, A. Maurer, vice president, 2029 Park Road; Mrs. Philip Sidney Smith, 3249 Newark Street; John H. Wilson, 512 Fifth Street; C. Melvin Sharpe, Potomac Electric Power Co., Tenth and E Streets; Mrs. James W. Williams, 2700 Georgia Avenue; Dr. James A. Gannon, 1915 Bilt-more Street; Adelbert W. Lee, 3211 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; George E. C. Hayes, 613 F Street; Elise Z. Watkins, secretary, 1800 Birch Drive; Robert L. Haycock, superintendent, 1606 Longfellow Street; Dr. Carroll R. Reed, first assistant superintendent, 9300 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; ) Dzstrict of Columbia 473 Education (13thand K Sts.) —Continued. Jere J. Crane, assistant to the superintendent in charge of business administra-tion, 5829 Chevy Chase Parkway; Dr. Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant superintendent, 406 U Street; associate superintendents of schools: Dr. Chester W. Holmes, 809 Chalfonte Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va.; Lawson J. Cantrell, 6101 Utah Avenue; Jessie LaSalle, 6304 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md.; Adelbert W. Heinmiller (in charge of school budget), 127 Joliet fre SW.; A. Kiger Savoy, 217 T Street; Dr. Howard H. Long, 1112 Girard treet. ; Healing Art Commission on Licensure to Practice.—President, Board of Com-missioners, District of Columbia; United States Commissioner of Education; United States district attorney for District of Columbia; superintendent of ‘public schools, District of Columbia; health officer, District of Columbia (secretary-treasurer). Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety.—Mrs. Albert Atwood, 65 Observatory Circle; John L. Vandegrift, 3241 Thirty-eighth Street; James C. Turner, 1441 East Capitol Street; Edith J. Rieger, secretary, 101 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va.; Fred C. Thomas, Director of Industrial Safety, 1207 Tewkesbury Place. Nurses’ Examining.—Elsie C. Casassa, president, 512 Powhatan Place; Ethel J. Odegard, executive secretary and treasurer, 2017 S Street. Optometry.—Dr. Lewis H. Kraskin, president, Washington Loan and Trust Building; Dr. M. Luther Dicus, secretary, 1028 Connecticut Avenue. Parole—Frank R. Jelleff, chairman, 2439 Wyoming Avenue; Wilbur LaRoe, Jr., Investment Building; Col. Campbell C. Johnson, 1125 Columbia Road; Hugh F. Rivers, executive secretary, 524 Ashford Road, Silver Spring, Md. Pharmacy.— Augustus C. Taylor, president, 1733 Upshur Street; Harold C. Kin-ner, secretary, 301 Kennedy Street; Morris G. Goldstein, Jr., 2704 Woodley Place; David L. Maxwell, 1801 I Street; Vincent B. Norelli (U. N. N. R. A.). Police and Fire Surgeons.—(See Police Department.) Plumbing—Elmon J. Ewing, president, 2129 I Street; John A. Bronzonie, secre-tary, 5405 Second Street; Donald C. Dow, 514 Randolph Street. Podiatry Examiners.—Dr. Edward E. Thompson, president, 705 Twelfth Street; Dr. Harry L. Hoffman, secretary-treasurer, 1314 Massachusetts Avenue; Dr. A. Owen Penney, 711 Highland Avenue. Public Library (8th and K Sts.).—Theodore W. Noyes, president, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue; Wendell P. Stafford, vice president, 1661 Crescent Place; Clara W. Herbert, librarian, 3920 Jenifer Street; Ralph L. Thompson, assistant librarian, 3922 Benton Street; Helen L. Cavanagh, administrative assistant, 1008 Shepherd Street NE.; Emma Hance, assistant librarian, service to adults, 1706 Thirty-seventh Street; Louise P. Latimer, assistant librarian, service to children, the Wyoming; Alvan C. Chaney, superintend-ent of buildings and grounds, 9410 Glenridge Avenue, North Woodside, Md.; Helen T. Steinbarger, 2456 Twentieth Street, consultant in adult education; Louise S. Shepard, 203 North Lawton Street, Falls Church, Va., Central Librarian; Catherine M. Houck, personnel officer, 1718 Otis Street NE. Public Welfare.—Edgar Morris, chairman, 712 Thirteenth Street; A. Harding Paul, vice chairman, Munsey Building; Mrs. Radford Moses, secretary, 3839 Livingston Street; A. J. Driscoll, 2651 Woodley Road; Mrs. John J. Hasley, 3224 Rittenhouse Street; Dr. Ethel L. Nixon, 1818 Thirteenth Street; Fred i Bosod, 6011 Blair Road; Rowland S. Marshall, Southern Building, room Real Estate Commission.— Edward A. Dent, chairman, 4701 Connecticut Avenue; Aubrey St. C. Wardwell, Woodward Building; Carey Winston, 739 Fifteenth i John A. Petty, secretary, 6225 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arling-ton, Va. Recreation.—Harry S. Wender, chairman, 6432 Thirty-first Place; James E. Schwab, vice chairman, 3715 Ingomar Street; Alice C. Hunter, secretary, 72 R Street; Milo F. Christiansen, superintendent, 3239 Beech Street. Tax Appeals.—Lawrence Koenigsberger, member sole, 3749 McKinley Street; Phyllis R. Liberti, clerk-secretary, 1605 Holbrook Street NE. Unemployment Compensation.—Commissioners of the District of Columbia, ex-officio members; George H. O’Connor, 3313 Cleveland Avenue; John Locher, 3423 O Street; acting director, Lewis S. Springer, 3912 Fourteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. . Veterinary Medicine, Examiners of —Dr. John R. Mohler, president, 1620 Hobart Street; Dr. Irving M. Cashell, secretary-treasurer, 2128 L Street. 474 Congressional Directory Zoning Adjustment.—John Nolen, Jr., 1916 S Street; Harry Blake, near Fair-fax, Va.; Theodore I. Coe, 1741 New York Avenue: Samuel Scrivener, Jr., 3422 Thirty-sixth Street; Robert O. Clouser, 3301 Commonwealth Avenue, Alexandria, Va. CORPORATION COUNSEL’S OFFICE Corporation Counsel.—Vernon E. West, 23 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.—Mrs. Ruth D. Neff, 3413 Ordway Street. Brn Assistant Corporation Counsel.—Chester H. Gray, 6420 Thirty-first treet. Special Assistant Corporation Counsel for Public Utility Matters.—Lloyd B. Harrison, 6249 Thirtieth Street. Assistant Corporation Counsel.—Milton D. Korman, 2901 Eighteenth Street; George C. Updegraff, 1108 North Utah Street, Arlington, Va.; Stanley DeNeale, 1507 Decatur Street; Lee F. Dante, 6125 Western Avenue: John O’Dea, 3901 Seventeenth Street NE.; Irving Bryan, 811 Quincy Street ; Edward A. Beard, 4659 Kenmore Drive: Harry L. Walker, 35 Crittenden Street NE.; Hubert B. Pair, 1210 Lamont Street; John J. Donnelly, Jr., 3118 Newton Street NE.; : Henry E. Wixon, 1636 Kenyon Street; Richard W. Barton, 511 Cameron Street, Alexandria, Va.; George F. Lynch, 144 Thirteenth Street SE. Assistant Corporation Counsel Assigned to Municipal Court, Criminal Division.— Robert D. Wise (in charge), 208 Eastwood Avenue, Northwood Park, Md.; Clark F. King, Garrett Park, Md.; Enoch D. Chase, '2730 Wisconsin Avenue. Robert C. Chalfonte, 1400 Fairmont Street. Assistant Corporation Counsel Assigned to Juvenile Court.—Una Rita Morris, 1601 Argonne Place. Chief (Law) Clerk.—Adam A. Giebel, 2815 Woodley Road. Inspector of Clarms.—Edward S. Dawson, 1316 Juniper Street. Assistant Inspectors of Claims.—Emmett J. Motley, 1404 Highland Drive, Woodside Park, Md.; Oscar J. Avallone, 6276 Ritchie Road SE.; Thomas A. Holloran, 72 Bates Street. ENGINEER DEPARTMENT Cheef Clerk.—Porter M. Lumpkins, 3747 W Street. Assistant Chief Clerk.— William N. Handiboe, 2815 Fifth Street NE. Director of Construction.—Col. Joseph D. Arthur, Jr., 1909 Nineteenth Street. Deputy Director of Construction.—A. G. Hutson, 5512 Johnson Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Municipal Architect.—Nathan C. Wyeth, 2915 Forty-fourth Street. Superintendent, District Buildings.—E. P. Brooke, 3714 Calvert Street. Lagi! Superintendent, District Buildings. Ee Akers, 1615 Kenyon treet Engineer in Charge of D. C. Repair Seep: — William A. Draper, 325 A Street SE. Assistant Engineer in Charge of D. C. Repair Shop. — Norman L. Biggs, 4927 Fourth Street. Water Registrar.—Raymond B. Ward, Mount Rainier, Md. Director of War Public Works Projects of the District of Columbia.—David Auld, 1403 Thirty-first Street. Surveyor.—Francis F. Healy, 1435 Taylor Street. i an Surveyor.—Kenneth G. Fernald, 6534 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Director of Civilian Defense.—Herbert C. Whitehurst, 3115 Thirty-fourth Street. Executive Officer, Civilian Defense.—Porter M. Lumpkins, 3747 W Street. Director of Highways. —Herbert C. Whitehurst, 3115 Thirty-fourth Street. Electrical Engineer.— Walter E. Kern, 432 Delafield Place. Superintendent of Fire Alarms.—Herbert A. Friede, 6911 Western Avenue. Engineer of Bridges.—Clifford E. Whyte, 1960 Euclid Street. Engineer of Streets.—J. N. airs 5727 Fifth Street. Deputy Engineer of Streets.—S. R. Harrison, 103 South Kensington Street, Arlington, Va. Superintendent, Central Garage and Shops.—Charles N. Emmons, 6233 Utah venue. Superintendent, Trees and Parking Division.—Clifford Lanham, 4210 Alabama Avenue SE. ; Assistant Superintendent, Trees and Parking Division.—J. W. Batson, 305 Adams Street NE. District of Columbia a Inspector of Buildings and Director of Inspection.—John W. Oehmann, 1253 Lawrence Street NE. : Deputy Inspector of Buildings and Director of Inspection.—Robert H. Davis, 4836 Albermarle Street. Chuef Engineer, Division of Smoke Regulation and Boiler Inspection.—H. Kenneth Kugel, 3825 Morrison Street. Chief Engineer, Department of Building Inspection.—James B. Daly, 4314 Thirteenth Street NE. Administrative Officer, Department of Building Inspection.—Charles ¥. Hall, McLean, Va. 8 Chief of Inspection.—J. S. Zebley, 1115 Orren Street NE. Chief Building Inspector (Field).—Jesse J. Kimball, 2942 W Street SE. Chief Electrical Inspector (Field).—H. H. Daniels, 3027 Alabama Avenue SE. Chief Plumbing Inspector,—John A. Bronzonie, 5405 Second Street. Director of Sanitary Engineering.—Harold A. Kemp, 1721 North Huntington Street, Arlington, Va. : Assistant to the Director of Sanitary Engineering.—Emil A. Press, 8420 Queen Annes Drive, Silver Spring, : : Engineer of Sewers.—Ellwood Johnson, 3309 Runnymede Place. Supervisor of City Refuse.— William A. Xanten, 3355 Military Road. Superintendent, Water Division.— Humphrey Beckett, Lanham, Md. ayia Superintendent, Water Diviston.—David Auld, 1403 Thirty-first treet. Superintendent, Sewage Treatment Plant.—Ralph E. Fuhrman, Locust Terrace, Blue Plains, D. C. Superintendent, Public Convenience Stattons.—J. H. Dick, 602 Girard Street NE. DEPARTMENT OF VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC Director of Vehicles and Traffic.— William A. Van Duzer, 2640 Forty-fourth Street. First Assistant.—M. O. Eldridge, 1789 Lanier Place. : Administrative Assistants.—Howard F. Wentworth, 850 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va.; Edward Towers, 4118 Tenth Street NE. Supervising Inspector.—Charles W. Reed, 1628 Columbia Road. DEPARTMENT OF WEIGHTS, MEASURES, AND MARKETS Superintendent.—J. Thomas Kennedy, 1622 Twenty-eighth Place SE. Deputy Superintendent.—James G. Dance, 301 Hamilton Street. Administrative Assistant.—Joseph A. Danos, 12 Fourth Street SE. FIRE DEPARTMENT Chief Engineer.—Stephen T. Porter, 4320 Forty-sixth Street. Deputies.—Benjamin W. Weaver, 2125 Thirty-second Street; Logan L. Wool-ard, 919 E Street SE. Battalion Chief Engineers.—Frank G. Berry, 222 Eighth Street SE.; William A. Bryarly, 1328 North Carolina Avenue NE.; Joseph E. Suit, 1310 Farragut Street; Harry O. Bailey, 6952 Maple Street; Millard H. Sutton, 3014 Twenty-sixth Street NE.; Fred Litteral, 1449 Harvard Street; Percy A. Davis, 2917 Akron Street SE.; Harold F. Harding, 5920 Fourth Street; Joseph W. Kay, 300 Taylor Street; Clement Murphy, 3822 Tenth Street; Alexander J, Lipske, 1443 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; William R. Lusby, 1226 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Joseph A. Mayhew, 1811 Kearny Street. NE.; William H. Nash, 1151 North Capitol Street; Christopher D. Bartelmes, 2262 Hall Place. Fire Marshal.—Raymond C. Roberts, 115 Eighteenth Street SE. = Superintendent of Machinery.—Otto E. Fearn, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Executive Officer—C. S. Peterson, 1811 Twenty-third Street SE. HEALTH DEPARTMENT Health Officer—George C. Ruhland, M. D., 1875 Plymouth Street. Assistant Health Officer.— Daniel L. Seckinger, M. D., 4923 Sedgwick Street. Chief Clerk.—Arthur G. Cole, 4121 Seventh Street. Director, Bureau of Preventable Diseases.—James G. Cumming, M. D., 2801 Thirty-fourth Place. Director, Bureau of Sanitation.—Maj. William H. Cary, Jr., 2106 Ross Road, Rosemary Hills, Silver Spring, Md. 476 | Congressional Directory Health Officer—Continued. Discos, Bureau of Food Inspection.—Reid R. Ashworth, D. V. S., 3533 Hertford ace. Director, Bureau of Vital Statistics.—Joseph B. Irvine, LL. M., 315 Franklin Street NE. -Chemast.—John B. Reed, A. B., 3100 Forty-fifth Street. Serologist.—Jesse P. Porch, D. V. M., Vienna, Va. Bacteriologist.—John E. Noble, 1544 Twenty-fifth Street SE. Director, Medical and Sanitary Inspection of Schools.—Joseph A. Murphy, M. D., 75 Observatory Circle. Daehn, Maternal and Infant Welfare.—Ella Oppenheimer, M. D., 3031 Newark treet. Medical Directorsof Maternity.—J. Bay Jacobs, M. D., 1801 I Street. Director, Social Hygiene.—Dr. Ben D. Chinn (acting), 741 Alabama Avenue SE. Director, Child Hygiene Service.—Hugh J. Davis, M. D., 1841 Wyoming Avenue. Director, Dental Service.—A. Harry Ostrow, D. D. S., 2830 Calvert Street. Director, Bureau of Tuberculosis.—A. Barklie Coulter, M. D., 2136 LeRoy Place. Director, Bureau of Nursing.—Josephine Pittman Prescott, 5327 Second Street. Nutritionist.—[Vacant.] Director, Public Health Instruction.—Melvin P. Isaminger, Dr. P. H., 4300 River Road. Director, Permit Bureau.—Douglas N. West, 8405 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Epidemiologist—Carl C. Dauer, M. D., 3515 Livingston Street. Superintendent, Gallinger Hospital.—Dr. Alvin R. Sweeney, 5526 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. Superintendent, Tuberculosis Sanatoria, Glenn Dale, Md.—Daniel L. Finucane, M. D., Glenn Dale, Md. : Director, Bureau of Mental Hygiene.—Dr. Leopold E. Wexberg. INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Superintendent.—Albert F. Jordan, 117 West Mason Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Deputies.—C. F. Creighton, 723 Dartmouth Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Charles E. Conner, Ashton, Md. Examiner and Life Insurance Actuary.— Arthur O. Wise, 5508 First Street NE. Special Examiner.—Richard P. Cope, 209 Peabody Street. METROPOLITAN POLICE Colonel and Superintendent.— Edward J. Kelly, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue. Police Headquarters.— Assistant Superintendent Harvey G. Callahan, 4018 Twenty-first Street NE.; Assistant Superintendent MiltonD. Smith, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; Inspector Oscar J. Letterman, 2030 F Street; Inspector John H. Fowler, 1631 Roxanna Road. Detieie Headquarters.— Assistant Superintendent Robert J. Barrett, 5811 Seventh treet. -Traffic Division.—Inspector Arthur E. Miller, 7804 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md. First Police District.—Inspector James F. Beckett, 729 Kennedy Street. Second Police District.—Inspector Ira E. Keck, 6019 Utah Avenue. Third Police District.—Inspector Clarence Talley, R. F. D. 1, McLean, Va. Chaef, also Property Clerk.—Inspector Clement P. Cox, 1627 Varnum Street NE. Police Surgeons.—Dr. J. A. Reed, 3309 Thirty-fifth Street; Dr. Fred Y. Williamson, 3619 Legation Street; Dr. Benjamin F. Dean, Jr., 3221 Patterson Street; Dr. Hugh O. House, 4540 Dexter Street; Dr. J. Blaine Harrell; 808 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va.; Dr. William D. Claudy, 4924 Forty-sixth Street; Dr. Maurice Mensh, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street. Harbor Master—Lt. Otha R. Sanders, 4601 Chesapeake Street. Woman's Bureau.—Capt. Rhoda J. Milliken, 3315 N Street. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WELFARE Director.—Ray L. Huff, 3124 Westover Drive SE. Principal Assistant Director.—Raymond F. Clapp, 2804 N Street SE. Assistant Director.—Paul L. Kirby, 5550 Edgemoor Lane, Edgemoor, Md. Business Manager.—Frank M. Gray, 1626 Forty-fourth Street. General Superintendent, District of Columbia Penal Institutions.—Howard B. Gill, Ashmoore, Md. ll Drustrict of Columbia 477 Business Manager, District of Columbia Penal Institutions.—E. Allen Green Lorton, Va. : Supima; District of Columbia Jail.—Claude O. Botkin, 200 Nineteenth treet p Superintendent, District of Columbia Reformatory.—E. J. Welch, Lorton, Va. Superintendent, District of Columbia Workhouse.—W. F. Fleming, Lorton, Va. Superintendent, Women’s Division, District of Columbia Workhouse.—Blanche LaDu, Lorton, Va. Superintendent of Industries, District of Columbia Penal Institutions.— William C. Meade, Lorton, Va. -: Superintendent, Public Assistance and Children’s Services.—Donald Gray, box 431, R. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Superintendent, Special Services, Child Welfare.—Mrs. Robin R. Miller, the Broadmoor. Chuef, Deportation of Non-Resident Insane.—Anna A. Herdina, 1215 Kalmia Road. Superintendent, National Training School for Girls.—Rose Cooper Smith, 5300 Loughboro Road. Superintendent, District Training School.—Dr. James Lewald, Laurel, Md. Superintendent, Home for Aged and Infirm.—Otto J. Cass, Blue Plains, D. C. Superintendent, Industrial Home School (Colored).—Wendell P. Tucker, Blue Plains, D. C. ; Superintendent, Industrial Home School (White) .—[Vacant.] Superintendent, Municipal Lodging House.—Henry A. Koch, 458 C Street. Superintendent, Receiving Home for Children.— Anthony B. Caffrey, 5300 Lough- boro Road. / : Superintendent, Temporary Home for Soldiers and Sailors.—Clarence A. Lowman, 921 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. UNITED STATES OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE WASHINGTON REGION (Room 500, District Building) Regional Director—John Russell Young, president, Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia, 1834 Jefferson Place. Executive Officer.—Lt. Col. Leonce Legendre, Infantry, U. S. Army, 4916 Westway Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA VETERANS’ INFORMATION CENTER (1350 Pennsylvania Avenue) Director—Porter L. Lumpkins, 3747 W Street. PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION Commissioners; ; James H. Flanagan, chairman, 4419 Volta Place. Private Secretary.—Grace Chinn, 1717 R Street. [Vacancy.] Private Secretary.—Sarah E. Wilson, 504 Oglethorpe Street. Brig. Gen. Gordon R. Young, U. S. A., 4434 Hawthorne Street. Executive Secretary.—E. J. Milligan, 1429 Longfellow Street. General Counsel.—Vernon E. West, 23 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special Assistant Corporation Counsel.—Lloyd B. Harrison, 6249 Thirtieth Street. Executive Accountant and Auditor.—V. A. McElfresh, 616 Bonifant Street, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Engineer.—Fred A. Sager, 3901 Livingston Street. Inspector of Gas and Meters—Elwin A. Potter, 4425 Yuma Street. Chief Clerk.—Naomi H. Hetzel, 815 Eighteenth Street. PEOPLE’S COUNSEL James W. Lauderdale, 1424 Webster Street. WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE (Corner Massachusetts Avenue and North Capitol Street. Phone, DIstrict 7272) Postmaster.— Vincent C. Burke, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Postmaster.—W. Gordon Bell, 206 East Luray Avenue, Alexandria, Va. 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 32 478 Congressional Directory Secretary to Postmaster and Appointment Clerk.—Larsen Swain, 4005 Eighth Street NE. General Superintendent of Finance.—T. R. Talbert, 324 Emerson Street. Superintendent of Postal Finance.—Fielder J. Lynn, 4508 Yuma Street. Senior Assistant Superintendent of Postal Finance.—George W. Harrison, 422 Ingraham Street. Superintendent of Money Orders.— William C. Gilbert, 4210 Seventh Street. Senior Assistant Superintendent of Money Orders.—Joseph A, Griffith, Uni- versity Park, Md. Auditor— William C. Furr; 1318 C Street NE. « Chief Station Ezaminer.— Arthur E. Dean, 501 Twelfth Street NE. Superintendent of Buildings.— William W. Day, 1301 Vermont Avenue, Physician.—Aaron W. Martin, Beltsville, Md. Gena Superintendent of Mails.—Frank M. Sommerkamp, 3616 Twentieth Street Assistant General Superintendent of Mails.—Russell H. Thompson, 3105 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Superintendent of Incoming Mails.—Herbert E. Riley, 5020 Wisconsin Avenue. Superintendent of Outgoing Mails.—John J. Downey, 4401 Fifth Street. Superintendent of Carriers.—Harry J. Hunt, Jr., 910 Quincy Street. Superintendent of Registry.—Robert L. Boss, 3511 Twentieth Street NE. Superiviendont of Motor Vehicles.—Douglas B. Horne, 409 Rock Creek Church oad. Senior Assistant Superintendents of Mails.—Vernon B. Dodge, 4018 Illinois Avenue; Rasmus C. Hansen, 2321 Thirty-second Street SE.; John E. Burke, 2109 Thirty-seventh Street. : Senior Assistant Superintendent of Mails in Charge of United States Official Mail and Messenger Service.—Joseph Donovan, 1700 Thirtieth Street SE. Assistant Superintendent of Mails in Charge of Schemes and Schedules.—Luke Thompson, 3416 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Superintendent of Mails in Charge of Route Adjustments.—William D. Hanback, 1912 H Street. GeniralF oreman in Charge of Imquiry.—Clarence M. Mace, 6706 F, Seat Pleasant Classified stations Station or branch Superintendent Location Ahacogtin. o.oo. ... i 1217 Good Hope Rd. SE. D.Y.Roche..... Pee ci aa E.F. Weightman. ._._.._... 813 Market Space. Benjamin Franklin ____._.. I.E. Belfield. ...........0 Post Office Department Bldg. Benning ii.” ati V. LL. BeSmith...oc...ooilz. 4017 Minnesota Avenue NE, Bethesda Branch_________. GG W.Corley_-__._ >... 7400 Wisconsin Ave. Brightwood: i... Joi Wise ll cial 5921 Georgia Ave. Brookland: =o. 8 Fo J.P. Swinburnel....L.....-3309 12th St. NE. Central... =. 0 H.E. Moon... 2.20.0 i... 1418 I St. Chevy Chase Branch______ HP. McCuen >... 5910 Connecticut Ave. Cleveland Park_ _____.._.. LeR Holl ooo 3430 Connecticut Ave. Columbia Heights______.__ Y.JiiCarrico vr so niu 1423 Irving St. Columbia Road. .__.__. ean Co RN Rafferty... bon. aie 1771 Columbia Rd. Connecticut Avenue.______ W. I. Wilkinson... co... 1220 Connecticut Ave. Streets oc HE. Brown. \... Tariff Commission Bldg. Fort:Davis.:.. 20... LO. Bryant. ition 3843 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. Briendship. io. 2 .0...: OO RoHurley.. oor... 4005 Wisconsin Ave. Georgetown. 22... i... B. F. Greenstreet______.____ 1215 31st St. MidiGity vr G.-H. Robinson... ....._ [140% 14th St, National Airport _._.__._._ LM. Brooke oii oi Gravelly Point. Noriheagt=* 0 .~ 7 W.PoRobey. iol lio 1016 H St. NE. Northwest. =. Cx W.A Follin.. -..« ~ 5632 Connecticut Ave. Pentagon Branch__________ em CAbNer. ors Pentagon Bldg. Petworthis, > <=. R. McDonald... sc...iat 4211 9th St. Handle 2 o.oo... oc... RO Carnes. eee cantonal 2306 Prout St. SE. Somtheast, =. . J. We. Sehwier, Soci 408 8th St. SE. Sotthwest ow ovo wn M.D. Newland..... 416 7th St. SW, Street oa R.W.0ant.. .o.-.08 0 1409 T St. Takoma Park. ooo LH CG Lunsiord.. .ievivens 301 Cedar St. Temple Heights___._____.. B.LSmith io oC 1810 20th St. reasury. wv. id a aocaaodd Ba Be DYOr oo oie dian Treasury Bldg. _.-Turners... Fraxton Circle 5. i: AG. oi iii: 17 Florida Ave. NE. West Bnd... As Maus. Sia 1751 Pennsylvania Ave. Woodridge, = 2 diiere d BE. W.Harkins. oa. 2211 Rhode Island Ave, NE. 4 FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES 479 FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATIVES {The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the t designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] AFGHANISTAN (Office of the Legation, 2001 Twenty-fourth Street. Phones, ADams 3770 and 3771) Mr. Abdol Hosayn Aziz, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Said Tadjeddin, first secretary. Mr. Mohamed Ayoub Aziz, second secretary. ARGENTINA (Office of the Embassy, 1816 Corcoran Street; phones, NOrth 4900, 4901, and 4902. Office of finance, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone, DEcatur 1100. Office of naval attaché, 1302 Eighteenth Street; phone, DEcatur 2730. Office of economic counselor, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone, NOrth 4901. Office of agricultural attaché, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone, HObart 0027. Office of military attaché, 1816 Corcoran Street; phone, NOrth 4900) *Sefior Dr. Don Oscar Ibarra-Garcia, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. Sefior Don Luis S. Luti, minister counselor. Sefior Don Guillermo Uriburu, counselor. Sefior Don Ernesto C. Uriburu, first secretary. *Sefior Don Enrique Moss, first secretary. Col. José Fernandez, assistant military attaché. Sefior Don Manlio A. Zileri, second secretary. *Sefior Don Romulo M. Zabala, third secretary. *Sefior Don Carlos Macchi Zubiaurre, financial counselor. *Sefior Don Anselmo M. Viacava, economic counselor. *Serior Don Jorge L. Sold, commercial attaché. Sefior Don Rodolfo E. Barbagelata, agricultural attaché. Lt. Comdr. Vicente M. Baroja, assistant naval attaché. *Lt. Comdr. Emilio Luis Diaz, assistant naval attaché. *Lt. Oscar Manzoni, assistant military attaché. Seftor Don Francisco Carlos de Posada, attaché. AUSTRALIA (Office of the Legation, 3117 Woodland Drive. Phone, EMerson 4900) Sir Frederic Eggleston, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Alan S. Watt, counselor. *Mr. J. B. Brigden, financial counselor. *Commander S. H. K. Spurgeon, D. 8S. O., R. A. N., naval attaché. *Mr. L. R. McIntyre, second secretary. *Mr. G. H. Munro, attaehé. Lt. Comdr. N. D. Pixley, R. A. N. R., assistant naval attaché. *Mr. H. Neil Truscott, third secretary. *Mr. Wilson Ewart, attaché. BELGIUM (Office of the Embassy, 1715 Twenty-second Street; phones, DEcatur 1286, 1287 and 1288. Office of commercial counselors, Rockefeller Center, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York City; phone, ClIrcle 7-1725; 1780 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C.; phone, DUpont 1300. Office of military attaché, 2101 Leroy Place; phone, DUpont 1300) Baron Robert Silvercruys, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Louis Goffin, counselor of embassy. Lt. Col. Count Baudoin de Borchgrave d’Altena, military attaché. *Viscount Alain du Pare, commercial counselor. *1 Mr. Joseph Jennen, commercial counselor. *Mr. Joseph Nisot, counselor, 481 482 Congressional Directory 5 Bod *Mr. Léon Van Den Berghe, first secretary. *Mr. Carlos van Bellinghen, first secretary. “*¥Mr. Charles Léonard, agricultural attaché. *Mr. Georges Follebouckt, second secretary. BOLIVIA (Office of the Embassy, Investment Building, Fifteenth and K Streets; phone, REpublic 1481. Office of military and air attaché, Investment Building, Fifteenth and K Streets, room 1125; phone, EXecutive 3483. Office of financial counselor, Investment Building, Fifteenth and K Streets; phone, REpublic So Won commercial attaché, Investment Building, room 1115, Fifteenth and XK Streets; phone, yublic 0537 *¥Sefior Don Victor Andrade, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Carlos Dorado Chopitea, counselor of embassy. *Lt. Col. Alfredo Pacheco, military and air attaché. *Sefior Don Emilio Sarmiento, first secretary. *Sefior Don German Rovira, commercial attaché. *Maj. Miguel Ayllon, assistant military attaché. *Sefior Don Juan J. Ruiz Rada, second secretary. Sefiorita Emma Costas, attaché. BRAZIL (Office of the Embassy, 3007 Whitehaven Street; phone, MIchigan 1164. Office of air attaché, 3007 Whitehaven Street; phones, MIchigan 1164 and COlumbia 6770. Office of military attaché, 3007 White-haven Street; phone, COlumbia 2081. Office of naval attaché, 3007 Whitehaven Street; phone, DEcatur 1112 and ADams 6986. Office of financial counselor, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City. Office of commercial counselor, 3007 Whitehaven Street; phone, Mlchigan 1164 and D Ecatur 2411 and 2412; and 60 East Forty-second Street, New York City; phones MUrray Hill 2-5352. Office of financial attaché, 120 Wall Street, New York City; phone, WHitehall 4-1578) *Mr. Carlos Martins, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Rear Adm. Sylvio de Noronha, naval attaché. *Mr. Fernando Lobo, minister counselor. *Lt. Col. Clovis Monteiro Travassos, air attaché. *Lt. Col. José Vicente de Faria Lima, assistant air attaché. Commander Jodo Pereira Machado, assistant naval attaché. *Maj. Frederico Mindello, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Mario de Camara, financial counselor. *Mr. Eurico Penteado, commercial counselor. *t Mr. Edgard de Mello, commercial counselor. \ *Mr. A. Boulitreau Fragoso, first secretary. Mz. Paulo Frées da Cruz, agricultural attaché. Mr. Alpheu Domingues, agricultural attaché. *Lt. Jorge Osorio de Noronha, assistant naval attaché. *Capt. Colombo Guardia Filho, assistant air attaché. Mr. Fernando Saboia de Medeiros, second secretary. *Mr. Celso Raul Garcia, second secretary. *Mr. Aluizio Napoledo, second secretary. *|| Mr. Roberto de Oliveira Campos, second secretary. Mr. Antonio Borges Leal Castello Branco, second secretary. *Mr. Aluysio Guedes Regis Bittencourt, third secretary. *Mr. Mario Gibson Barboza, third secretary. BULGARIA (State of war declared by Bulgaria December 13, 1941. Armistice signed by Bulgaria October 28, 1944. Formal diplomatic relations not restored) CANADA (Office of the Embassy, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, DEcatur 1011, Office of naval attaché, mili-tary attaché, air attaché, and commercial counselor, 1771 N Street; phone, DEcatur 1011) *Mr. LesterB. Pearson, O. B. E., Ambassador Extraordinary and Fenprioiay *t Mr. Merchant Mahoney, CEE , counselor. ~ *Mr. Thomas A. Stone, counselor. . *Mr. Harry A. Scott, commercial counselor. *Col. W. Clement Dick, O. B. E., military attaché. *Group Capt. F. Homer Smith, air attaché. *CommanderF. J. D. Pemberton, R. C. H. V. R., naval attaché. *Mr. Escott Reid, first secretary. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 483 *Mr. Graham Morrow, 0. B. E,, E. D,, first secretary. *Mr. G. R. Paterson, commercial attaché. *Mr. S. V. Allen, assistant commercial attaché. *Mr. Paul Tremblay, second secretary. *Mr. Ralph E. Collins, second secretary. *Mr. A. E. Ritchie, third secretary. *Mr. J. Richard Murray, third secretary. CHILE (Office of the Embassy, 2154 Florida Avenue; phones, NOrth 0746, 0747, and 0748. Office of commercial counselor, 2154 Florida Avenue; phone, COlumbia 9468) »} tiation Don Marcial Mora, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Arturo Bascuiian, first secretary. *Col. Ernesto Medina, military attaché. *Group Capt. Arturo Meneses, air attaché. *Sefior Don Fernando Ortizar, first secretary. *Sefior Don Mario Illanes, commercial counselor. Sefior Don Fausto Soto, first secretary. *Sefior Don Ramon Rodriguez-Rivera, first secretary. *Sefior Don Gastén Wilson, first secretary. *Commander Donald McIntyre, naval attaché. *Sefior Don Leandro Lacunza, second secretary. *Maj. Oscar Avendafio S., assistant military attaché. Sefior Don Victor Rioseco, second secretary. Sefior Don Ernesto Guzmédn Donoso, attaché. CHINA (Office of the Embassy, 2001 Nineteenth Street; phones, NOrth 9000, 9001, 9002, 9003, and 9004. Office of military attaché, 2340 Massachusetts Avenue; phones, DUpont 1530 and ADams 7373. Office of com-mercial counselor, 2001 Nineteenth Street; phone, Michigan 5471. Office of air attaché, 2340 Massa-Shnselts Sronus; phone, DEcatur 6914. Office of naval attaché, 2340 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, ams *Dr. Wei Tao-ming, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Siu Kong-sou, counselor. *Mr. Chen Chih-Mai, counselor. > *Dr. Kan Lee, commercial counselor. . *Rear Adm. Liu Ten-fu, naval attaché. Mr. Tswen-ling Tsui, first secretary. Mr. Peng Wang-Yih, first secretary. *Mr. King Ching, first secretary. *Mr. Kien-wen Yu, first secretary. *Lt. Col. Sinju Pu Hsiao, assistant military attaché. Lt. Col. Ko-Tsan Wang, assistant air attaché. *Mr. B. S. Lee, first secretary. Mr. Ching-Kien Hsieh, third secretary. *Mr. Chow Er-Hsun, third secretary. Maj. Chen Chia-ting, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Jen Zien Huang, attaché. *Mr. Victor Kwonglee Kwong, attaché. *Mr. An Fu, attaché. Mr. Wang Ke-chin, attaché. Mr. Lo Hsiao-Ch’ao, attaché. Mr. Yu Tso-min, attaché. COLOMBIA (Office of the Embassy, 1520 Twentieth Street; phone, DEcatur 2746. Office of commercial counselor, i Building; phone, EXecutive 7975. Office of military attaché, Barr Building; phone, NAtionzal 4898 *Sefior Don Carlos Sanz de Santamaria, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. *Sefior Don Alberto Vargas Narifio, counselor of embassy. *Sefior Don Guillermo Eliseo Suarez, commercial counselor. *Sefior Don José Camacho-Lorenzana, second secretary. *Col. Hernando Mora, military attaché. Capt. Santiago Barbosa, assistant military attaché. Sefior Don Gabriel Betancourt, commercial attaché. 484 Congressional Directory COSTA RICA (Office of the Embassy, 2112 S Street. Phone, DUpont 3001) *Sefior Don Francisco de P. Gutierrez, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. | [[Seiior Don Jorge Hazera, first secretary. Seftor Don Fernando Hazera, attaché. Sefior Don Jorge R. Escalante, attaché. . CUBA (Office of the Embassy, 2630 Sixteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 0100, 0101, and 0102. Office of financial attaché, National Press Building, suite 300; phone, NAtional 4885. Office of military attaché, 2639 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 5023. Office of naval attaché, 2639 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 5176. Office of air attaché, 2639 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 4848) *Sefior Dr. Guillermo Belt, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. José T. Bar6n, minister counselor of embassy. ~ *Sefior Dr. Joaquin E. Meyer, minister counselor. *Sefior Dr. Carlos Blanco, minister counselor. *Sefior Dr. Oscar Diaz Albertini, financial counselor. *Sefior Dr. Miguel Figueroa, first secretary. *Sefior Dr. Pedro Saavedra, second secretary. *Sefior Dr. Nicolas Rivero, second secretary. *Lt. Comdr. Felipe Cadenas, naval attaché. *Sefior Dr. Felipe Pazos, commercial attaché. *Capt. Efrain R. Herndndez, military and air attaché. *Sefior Enrique Pérez-Cisneros, assistant commercial attaché. Seiior Dr. Valentin Riva, third secretary. Sefiorita Consuelo Batista, attaché. *Sefior Dr. Ramén Garcia Osuna, attaché. CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Office of the Embassy, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue; phones, NOrth 3300 and 3301. Office of military and air attaché, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, NOrth 3330) *Mr. Vladimir Hurban, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Dr. Karel Cervenka, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Col. Karel Lukas, military and air attaché. Col. Alexander Hess, D. F. C., assistant military and air attaché. *Mr. Emanuel Jan Hajn§, commercial counselor. *Dr. Vladimir Palic, first secretary. *Dr. Oldtich Chyle, first secretary. *Dr. Antonin Obrdlik, second secretary. Staff Capt. Vilém Ball, assistant military and air attaché. DENMARK (Office of the Legation, 2343 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, DUpont 3283. Office of financial counselor, 17 Battery Place, New York City; phone, Bowling Green, 9-578). Office of agricultural attaché, and commercial attaché, 1603 K Street; phones, EXecutive 3003 and 3004) * Mr. Henrik de Kauffmann, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary *Mr. Carl A. C. Brun, counselor of legation. Mr. Constantin Brun, honorary counselor. Mr. Soren Sorensen, agricultural attaché. Count Benedict Ahlefeldt-Laurvig, financial counselor. *Mr. Povl Bang-Jensen, counselor. Count Adam Moltke-Huitfeldt, secretary. Mr. O. H. L. Olesen, agricultural attaché. Mr. Gunnar Seidenfaden, commercial attaché. Mr. C. O. Husum, attaché. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (Office of the Embassy, 4500 Sixteenth Street; phones, GEorgia 7667, 7668, 7669. Office of commercial counselor, Hotel Ansonia, Broadway at Seventy-third Street, New York City. Office of military attaché, 4500 Sixteenth Street; phone, GEorgia 7667) *tSefior Don Emilio Garcia Godoy, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. *Sefior Dr. J. R. Rodriguez, minister counselor. *Sefior Don Mario E. de Moya, minister counselor. -Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 485 ~ *Sefior Don Plinio B. Pina Chevalier, commercial counselor. *Sefior Dr. J. M. Sanz, first secretary. *Sefior Don Miguel Guerra, first secretary. Seiior Miguel R. de Moya, first secretary. Sefior Otto Vega, second secretary. *Sefnior Dr. José Vega Espaillat, second secretary. *Sefior Don Homero Hoepelman, second secretary. *Capt. Amado Hernandez P., assistant military attaché. ECUADOR (Office of the Embassy, 2125 LeRoy Place; phone, ADams 7200. Commercial office, 2125 LeRoy Place; phone, ADams 7200. Office of military and air attaché, 2125 LeRoy Place; phone, ADams 7200) *Sefior Galo Plaza, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Sefior Dr. L.. Neftali Ponce, minister counselor. *Sefior Dr. Luis Eduardo Laso, minister counselor. *1 Gen. Luis Larrea-Alba, military and air attaché. *Capt. Francisco Fernandez-Madrid, naval attaché. *Senor Jorge Reyes, financial counselor. *Maj. Edmundo Carvajal, air attaché. *Sefior Jorge Ferndndez, second secretary. *Capt. Alfredo Ponce, assistant military attaché. Senor José Luis Anderson, third secretary. Sefiorita Maria Rosa Pareja, third secretary. : EGYPT (Office of the Legation, 2200 Kalorama Road. Phones, Michigan 5400, 5401, and 5402) *Mr. Mahmoud Hassan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Anis Azer, minister counselor. *Mr. Mahmoud Fawzi, counselor. Mr. Osman Ebeid, second secretary. *Dr. Mounir Bahgat, agricultural attaché. Mr. Hussein Rouchdy, third secretary. *Mr. Seifel Nasr Hamdy, third secretary. Mr. Anwar Niazi, attaché. *Mr. Hassan Hosny, attaché. Mr. Ibrahim E. Imam, attaché. EL SALVADOR (Office of the Embassy, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 7100) *tSefior Dr. Don Héctor David Castro, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-tentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don Felipe Vega-G6mez, first secretary. *Col. Arturo Rivas-Mena, military attaché. *Sefior Don Carlos A. Siri, attaché. Maj. José Maria Lemus, assistant military attaché. *Capt. Adolfo Rubio-Melhado, assistant military attaché. ESTONIA (Office of the Consulate General, 9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City. Phone, Circle 7-1450) *Mr. Johannes Kaiv, acting consul general of Estonia in New York City, in charge of legation. : ETHIOPIA (Office of the Legation, 2134 Kalorama Road. Phones, ADams 2281 and 2282) *Blatta Ephrem Tewelde Medhen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. ; Mr. Getahoun Tessema, first secretary. Mr. Petros Sahiou, second secretary. FINLAND (Diplomatic relations severed June 30, 1944) 486 | Congressional Directory FRANCE (Office of the Embassy, 2129 Wyoming Avenue; phone, ADams 0990. Office of the air attaché, 1420 Six-teenth Street; phone, DEcatur 7935. Office of the naval attaché, Munitions Building; phone RE-public 7409. Office of the military attaché, 1759 R Street; phone, DEcatur 7935. Office of the finan-cial counselor, 1800 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, HObart 7700. Office of the commercial attaché, 1761 R Street; phone, DEcatur 7935) - *Mr. Henri Bonnet, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Vice Adm. Raymond Fenard, naval attaché. *Maj. Gen. Auguste Brossin de Saint-Didier, military attaché. -*Maj. Gen. Charles Luguet, air attaché. : *Mr. Francis Lacoste, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Armand Berard, counselor. *Mr. Pierre Siraud, counselor. *Mr. Arnauld Wapler, counselor. *Mr. Christian Valensi, financial counselor. *Mr. Henri Seyrig, counselor. , *Mr. Jean Baube, counselor. *Lt. Col. Raymond J. Cann, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Jean Pierre Benard, first secretary. *Mr. Marcel Flory, first secretary. *Mr. Francois Charles-Roux, second secretary. Mr. Jean-Claude Winckler, second secretary. *Mr. Maurice Charlois, commercial attaché. Mr. Henri Claudel, attaché. GERMANY (State of war declared by Germany December 11, 1941) GREAT BRITAIN (Office of the Embassy, 3100 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, HObart 1340, Office of Indian Agency General, 2107 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, COlumbia 5050) *The Right Honorable the Earl of Halifax, K. G., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. J. Balfour, C. M. G., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *The Honorable Sir Girja Shankar Bajpai, K. C. S. 1., K. B. E., C. I. E., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Agent General for India. *Mr. H. B. Butler, C. B., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. J. H. Magowan, C. M. G.,O. B. E., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Bir George Sansom, K. C. M. G., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. *Mr. Roger Makins, C. M. G., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. * Mr. Robert Henry Hadow, M. C., counselor. *Capt. E. M. C. Abel Smith, R. N. naval attaché and naval air attaché. *Col, Kenneth Mackessack, military attaché. *Group Capt. R. J. Legg, air attaché. Col. Rajkumar Rajendra Singhji, military attaché. *Mr. Michael Wright, counselor. *Mrz. J.P. Summerscale, counselor. *Mr. J. B. Greaves, O. B. E., counselor. Mr. BR. B. Stevens, counselor. *Mr. Redvers Opie, C. M. G., economic counselor. Brig. C. L. Lindemann, D. 8S. 0. counselor. >=Mr. EF. W, McCombe, counselor. *Mr. Archibald Mc¢Donald Gordon, counselor. *Sir Frederick Hale Puckle, K. C. i E., C. 8. 1., counselor. *Mr. B. Cockram, O. B. E., counselor. *Mr, A. H. Tandy, first secretary. Mr. P. Pares, first secretary. *Mr. D.. D. Maclean, first secretary. Mr. Gerald Tyrrell, "first secretary. *Maj. J. G. Lockhart, first secretary. *Mr. George Grant McKenzie, first secretary. *Mr. Charles Henry Campbell, first secretary. _ *Mr. Humphrey Trevelyan, first secretary. Forewgn Diplomatic Representatives 487 Mr. J. C. Thomson, O. B. E., M. V. O,, first secretary. *Mr. M. E. Bathurst, first secretary. *Mr. Roger William J ackling, first secretary. *Brig. J. G. Deedes, O. B. E., attaché *Mr. Peter Masefield, air attaché. Mr. 'A. N. Duckham, agricultural attaché. *Mr. M. S. Sundaram, attaché. =*Mr, G. I, Middleton, second secretary. *Mr. F. C. Everson, second secretary. *Mr. Robert Cecil, second secretary. Mr. M. Ahmad, second secretary. Mr. R. Milburn, second secretary. *Commander Leopold E. Rebbeck, R. N., assistant naval attaché. *Lt. P. H. B. Otway Smithers, R. xy R., assistant naval attaché. Lt. Col. R. A. F. Williams, assistant military attaché. *Squadron Leader J. L.. Mitchell, assistant air attaché. *Mr. A. C. Frost, second secretary. Mr. R. R. B. Bannerman, M. C., second secretary. *Mr. Ralph Hobhouse Lloyd-Thomas, second secretary. *Mr. J. A. Judson, second secretary. *Mr. David Daiches, second secretary. Mr. A. R. K. Mackenzie, second secretary. Mr. J. O. T. Underwood, second secretary. *Capt. H. Cotton Minchin, second secretary. *Mr. M. B. Thresher, second secretary. Mr. W. D. Clark, second secretary. Mr. Richard Miles, third secretary. *Mr. Andre Francois Geolot, third secretary. *Mr. Ralph Kipling Taylor, third secretary. *Mr. G. R. Ranken, third secretary. GREECE (Office of the Embassy, 2221 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, NOrth 3168. Office of naval attaché, 1341 Connecticut Avenue; phone, DEcatur 8145) *Mr. Cimon P. Diamantopoulos, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Paul Economou-Gouras, counselor. *Capt. Constantine Skoufopoulos, naval attaché. *Mr. Alexis S. Liatis, first secretary. Mr. George Christopoulos, first secretary. GUATEMALA (Office of the Embassy, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Phone, DEcatur 2240) *||Sefior Jorge Garcia Granados, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don Enrique Lépez-Herrarte, counselor of embassy. *Col. Oscar Morales Lopez, military and air attaché. Sefior Don Francisco Linares Aranda, second secretary. HAITI (Office of the Embassy, 4842 Sixteenth Street. Phones, GEorgia 7000 and 7001) *Mr. Jacques C. Antoine. *Mr. Elie Garcia, first secretary. Mr. Daniel Théard, second secretary. *Col. Roche B. Laroche, military attaché. Mr. Auguste Brisson, third secretary. HONDURAS (Office of the Embassy, 2611 Woodley Place. Phone, ADams 2811) *Sefior Dr. Don Julian R. Caceres, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-tentiary. Capt. Juan Da Costa, military attaché. HUNGARY (Severance of diplomatic relations December 11, 1941; state of war declared by Hungary December 13, 1941) p 488 Congressional Directory ICELAND (Office of the Legation; 909 Sixteenth Street. Phones, District 0909, 0919, and 0911) *Mr. Thor Thors, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Magnus V. Magnusson, first secretary. *Mr. Thorhallur Asgeirsson, secretary. IRAN (Office of the Legation, 3005 Massachusetts Avenue, Phones, NOrth 4000 and 4001) *Mr. Mohammed Shayesteh, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Dr. A. A. Daftary, counselor. *Mr. H. Hadjeb-Davallou, first secretary. *tMr. Abdol-Ahad Yekta, first secretary. *Lt. Col. Hassan Aktarzendi, military attaché. Mr. Khosrow Behroon, attaché. - IRAQ (Office of the Legation, 3141 Thirty-fourth Street. Phones, ORdway 3480 and 3481) *+ Mr. Ali Jawdat, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. A. M. Gailani, commercial secretary. Mr. Adnan Pachachi, attaché. Mr. Mohammed Adham, attaché. IRELAND : (Office of the Legation, 2310 Tracy Place. Phones, NOrth 4400 and 0479) *Mr. Robert Brennan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Sean Nunan, counselor. Mr. Denis Devlin, first secretary. ITALY (Office of the Embassy, 1601 Fuller Street. Phones, ADams 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938) *t11Signor Alberto Tarchiani, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Signor Mario di Stefano, counselor of embassy. *Signor Enrico Scaretti, financial counselor. *Signor Luigi Silvestrelli, nobile di Toscanella, first secretary. Signor Tristano Gabriei, second secretary. *Signor Vineenzo Vogliolo, commercial attaché. *Signor Felice Catalano, nobile di Mellili, third secretary. *Signor Mario Mondello, third secretary. Signor Corrado Orlandi-Contucei, third secretary. Signor Paolo Pansa, third secretary. Signor Maruilio G. Varalda, third secretary. Signor Carlo Almagia, attaché. Signor Vittorio Quella, attaché. JAPAN (State of war declared by J apan December 7, 1941, United Sinbos time) LATVIA (Office of the Legation, 1010. Vermont Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 0957) *Dr. Alfred Bilmanis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plevipsientiars, Mr. Anatol Dinbergs, ‘attaché. LEBANON (Office of the Legation, 3120 Woodland Drive. Phone, ORdway 5628) *Dr. Charles Malik, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Muktar Mokaish, counselor. *Mr. Henri A. Bassoul, commercial attaché. Mr. Mahmoud Hafez, first secretary. Mr. Maurice Jacques Tabet, attaché. Miss Angela N. M. Jurdak, secretary. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 489 LITHUANIA (Office of the Legation, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Phone, ADams 5860) * Mr. Povilas Zadeikis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Juozas Kajeckas, attaché. LUXEMBOURG (Office of the Legation, 2200 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, Michigan 3857) * Mr. Hugues Le Gallais, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. MEXICO (Office of the Embassy, 2829 Sixteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 3781, 3782, and 3783. Office of financial attaché, 70 Pine Street, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-3196) *Sefior Dr. Don Antonio de los Monteros, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Rafael de la Colina, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. : *tSefior Don Vicente Sdnchez Gavito, counselor. *Sefior Don Salvador Duhart, counselor. *Rear Adm. Ignacio Garcia Jurado, naval attaché. *Brig. Gen. Cristébal Guzm4n Cardenas. [|Seiior Don Miguel Pefialoza, second secretary. *Sefior Don Eugenio de Anzorena, second secretary. *Sefior Don Andrés Fenachio, second secretary. TfSefior Don Carlos Chapoy Vidaurri, third secretary. ; ||Sefior Dr. Don Javier Baz Manero, third secrétary. Sefior Don Julidn Sdenz Hinajosa, third secretary. *Lt. Col. D. E. M. Ratdlde Zaldo, assistant attaché. *t+1Maj. F. A. M. Eduardo Aldasoro S., assistant military attaché. *Maj. Francisco Castillo N4jera D., assistant military attaché. *Lt. Comdr. Enrique Carrera Alomia, assistant naval attaché. *Capt. Gabriel de la Colina, assistant military attaché. *Capt. D. E. M. Victor Esper6n Urbina, assistant military attaché. *Sefior Don Manuel Rodriguez de San Miguel, attaché. *tSefior Don Fausto Madrid G., attaché. *Sefior Don Gonzalo Blanco Macias, agricultural attaché. *Sefior Don Horacio Aburto Valencia, assistant agricultural attaché. *Sefior Don Jess Gutiérrez Lugo, financial attaché. . *tSefior Don Rodolfo M. Ferndndez, attaché. *Sefior Don Carlos Alarcén, attaché. NETHERLANDS ( Office of the Embassy, 1470 Euclid Street; phones, ADams 1662-1671, inclusive; after 7 p. m., ADams 1662 Office of agricultural aitaché, 1620 Belmont Street; phone, ADams 4301. Office of financial attaché 25 Broadway, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-2226) *Dr. A. Loudon, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *tBaron W. van Boetzelaer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Ch. J. H. Daubanton, Minister Plenipotentiary. *Rear Adm. J. E. Meijer Ranneft, R. N. N., naval attaché. *Jonkheer O. Reuchlin, counselor of embassy. *Jonkheer H. F. L. K. van Vredenburch, counselor. *Col. R. Roos, military attaché. *Dr. J. G. de Beus, counselor. *Dr. H. N. Boon, first secretary. *Dr. H. Riemens, financial attaché. *Dr. K. E. van der Mandele, commercial secretary. *Mr. H. F. Eschauzier, first secretary. *Raden Moehamed Moesa Soeria Nata Djoemena, first secretary. Commander J. Blaauboer, R. N. N. R., assistant naval attaché. *t Mr. L. A. H. Peters, agricultural attaché. Dr. G. E. Mellema, commercial secretary. *Mr. E. L. C. Schiff, second secretary. *Lt. A. Nijdam, R. N. N. R., assistant naval attaché. 490 Congressional Directory Mr. G. C. Stuyt, attaché. *Mr. A. Elsakkers, attaché. *Mr. C. H. D. van der Loo, attaché. Mr. Frans von Oven, attaché. Mr. Alex Laboyrie, attaché. NEW ZEALAND (Office of the Legation, 19 Observatory Circle. Phones, COlumbia 1721, 1722, and 1723) Mr. C. A. Besendsen, C. M. G.; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. *t Mr. J. S. Reid, first secretary. *Commander B. T. Giles, naval attaché. Col. W. N. Pharazyn, M. C. , military attaché. *Air CommodoreJ. L. Findlay, C. B. E., M. C,, air attaché. *Mr. T. R. Aickin, C. B. E., second secretary. *Mr. B. R. Turner, second secretary. NICARAGUA (Office of the Embassy, 1627 New Hampshire Avenue. Phones, DUpont 4371 and 4372) *Sefior Dr. Don Guillermo Sevilla Sacasa, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. Seiior Dr. Don Alberto Sevilla Sacasa, secretary. Capt. Luis A. Somoza, military attaché. *Sefior Don Alfredo J. Sacasa, commercial attaché. NORWAY (Office of the Embassy, 3401 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, ORdway 1000. Office of military, naval, and air attachés, 3409 Fulton Street; phone, ORdway 1000. Office of agricultural attaché, Westchester Apartments; phones, ORdway 3913 and EMerson 7256) *Mr. Wilhelm Munthe de Morgenstierne, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. *Mr. Lars J. Jorstad, counselor of embassy. *Mr. Anders Fjelstad, agricultural attaché. *Mr. Francis Irgens, counselor. *Capt. Kristian Ostby, naval and air attaché. *Mr. Lars Christensen, financial counselor. *Mr. Ole Colbjgrnsen, financial counselor. ) *Mr. Hans Olav, counselor. Mr. Arne Skaug, commercial counselor. *Mr. A. H. Kolstad, first secretary. *Mr. Torfinn Oftedal, first secretary. *Mr. Tharleif Paus, second secretary. Capt. Morten Krog, assistant air attaché. Mr. Trygve Haavelmo, commercial secretary. *Capt. Reidar From, assistant air attaché. *Mr. Tor Stokke, attaché. Mr. Halvor Skjelmerud, attaché. Mr. Rasmus S. Gundersen, attaché. Mr. Hans Grgner, commercial attaché. " PANAMA (Office of the Embassy, 2862 McGill Terrace.. Phone, MIchigan 3780) *tSefior Dr. Don J. J. Vallarino, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Don Alberto Mendez Pereira. *Sefior Don Julio Ernesto Heurtematte, commercial counselor. *Sefior Don Alberto Vallarino, first secretary. Sefior Don Juan Francisco Pardini, second secretary. . Sefior Don Walter Garrido, second secretary. Sefiorita Anita Ramfrez-Duque, attaché. *Sefior Dr. Don Antonio Gonzélez Revilla, attaché. Sefiora Graciela Rajas Sucre, attaché. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 491 PARAGUAY (Office of the Embassy, 5500 Sixteenth Street. Phone, TAylor 5000) *Sefior Dr. Don Celso R. Veldzquez, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. *Sefior Dr. Cesar R. Acosta, counselor. *Sefior Dr. Don Néstor M. Campos Ros, first secretary. *Col. Luis Santiviago, military attaché. Commander. Amado Daniel Candia, naval attaché. PERU Office of the Embassy, 1320 Sixteenth Street; phones, ADams 3001 and 3002. Office of commercial coun-selor, 1320 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 7760. Office of military attaché, Miramar Apartments, Fifteenth Street at Rhode Island Avenue; phones, MIchigan 5600 and ADams 3808. Office of naval attaché, 1320 Sixteenth Street; phone, ADams 3432. Office of air attaché, 1320 Sixteenth Street; phones, ADams 0195, 0197, and 0054) Sefior Don Pedro Beltrdn, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Humberto Fernandez-Davila, counselor of embassy. *Sefior Don Juan Chévez, minister, commercial counselor. *Gen. Armando Revoredo, air attaché. Capt. Manuel R. Nieto, naval attaché. *t Col. Jorge Sarmiento, military attaché. *Sefior Don Adhemar Montagne, first secretary. *Sefior Don Carlos Vdsquez Ayllén, second secretary. Sefior Don Fernando Schwalb, second secretary. *Sefior Don Carlos Donayre, commercial attaché. Sefior Don Carlos Gibson L., third secretary. Sefior Don Ricardo Gutierrez, assistant commercial attaché. POLAND (Office of the Embassy, 2640 Sixteenth Street. Phones, ADams 3800, 3801, and 3802) Mr. Janusz Zoltowski, Chargé d’ Affaires ad interim. PORTUGAL (Office of the Embassy, Wardman Park Hotel. Phones, COlumbia 1643 and 1644) *+Dr. Josio Antonio de Bianchi, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, *Dr. Vasco Vieira Garin, counselor of embassy. Dr. Luiz Guimaraes Vieira de Campos de Carvalho, first secretary. Dr. Eduardo A. Bacelar Machado, second secretary. *I,t. Comdr. Jeronimo Henriques Jorge, naval attaché. Dr. José Calvet de Magalhies, attaché. Mr. Pedro P. Bon de Sousa Pernes, attaché. RUMANIA (State of war declared by Rumania December 12, 1941. Armistice signed by Rumania September 12, 1944. Formal diplomatic relations not restored) SIAM (Office of the Legation, 2300 Kalorama Road. Phone, NOrth 1849) *Mom Rajawongse Seni Pramoj, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. *Luang Dithakar Bhakdi, secretary. *Lt. Col. Mom Luang Kharb Kunjara, military and air attaché. *Mr. Mani Sanasen, secretary. *Mr. Ananta Chintakananda, secretary. Mr. Chintamye Amatayakul, secretary. j 492 Congressional Directory SPAIN (Office of the Embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 0190 and 0191. Office of the commer-cial attaché, 1629 Columbia Road; phone, COlumbia 7661. Office of military attaché. 2700 Fifteenth Street; phone, COlumbia 1220. Office of naval attaché, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phone, DUpont 7612. Office of agricultural attaché, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phone, COlumbia 0341). *Sefior Don Juan Francisco de C4rdenas, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni-potentiary. : Sefior Don Juan G. de Molina, Marques de Fontana, Minister Plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy. Sefior Don Manuel Aznar, Minister Plenipotentiary. Sefior Don German Baraibar, Minister Plenipotentiary. . *Sefior Don Felipe Campuzano, first secretary. *Sefior Don Eduardo Casuso, first secretary. *Sefior Don Manuel Bermudez de Castro, Marquez de Lema, second secretary. *Sefior Don Ernesto Barnach-Calbé, second secretary. Seiior Don Carlos de Goyeneche, second secretary. *Capt. Jer6nimo Bustamante, naval attaché. *Lt. Col. Fernando G. Camino, military attaché. Sefior Don José M. Careaga, attaché. *Sefior Don Miguel de Echegaray, agricultural attaché. *Sefior Don Mariano de Yturralde, commercial attaché. *Lt. César Marquez, assistant military attaché. SWEDEN (Office of the Legation, 1900 Twenty-fourth Street; phones, DEcatur 2783, 2784, 2785. Office of naval and military attachés, 2247 R Street; phones, NOrth 1047, 1048, 1049. Office of department for foreign interests, 1601 Twenty-third Street; phone, MIchigan 4747. Office of commercial counselor and finan-cial attaché, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York City; phone, Circle 6-5822) *Mr. Herman Eriksson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Tor Hugo Wistrand, counselor of legation. *1+tCommodore Olof Angelin, naval attaché. *Col. Erik de Laval, counselor. *Col. Arvid Eriksson, military attaché. *Mr. V. E. Lindholm, commercial counselor. *Mr. Alexis de Aminoff, counselor. *Mr. Sven Dahlman, counselor. *Mr. C. A. de Wistfelt, first secretary. *Count Gustaf Bonde, first secretary. : *Lt. Comdr. Gunnar Askar, assistant naval attaché. * Mr. Gregar Bendz, agricultural attaché. *Mr. Olaf Rydbeck, second secretary. *Count Fredrik Wachtmeister, second secretary. Capt. Joel Pettersson, assistant military attaché for air. Mr. Ake A. Jonsson, attaché. Mr. Eric de Virgin, attaché. *Mr. Ulf Barkman, financial attach. - SWITZERLAND (Office of the Legation, 2900 Cathedral Avenue; phone, HObart 1815. Office of military and air attaché, 3215 Cathedral Avenue, Annex; phone, HObart 1815) *Mr. Charles Bruggmann, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Max Grissli, counselor. *Lt. Col. Jean Notz, G. S. C., military and air attaché. *Mr. Werner Weingértner, first secretary. Mr. Fritz Real, second secretary. *Mr. Ernst Schneeberger, second secretary. * Mr. Andre Boissier, second secretary. Mr. Samuel Frangois Campiche, attaché. *Mr. Guy de Keller, attaché. SYRIA (Office of the Legation, 2215 Wyoming Avenue. Phones, ADams 1414 and 1415) *Dr. Nazem al-Koudsi, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Dr. Costi K. Zurayk, counselor. Mr. Husni A. Sawwaf, counselor. Mr. Sirri al-Kaltakji, attaché. Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 493 TURKEY (Office of the Embassy, 1606 Twenty-third Street; phone, NOrth 6400. Office of military and air attachés, 2202 Massachusetts Avenue; phones, COlumbia 6909 and D Ecatur 8200. Office of commercial counselor, 20 Exchange Place, New York City; phones, Bowling Green 9-8916 and 9-8917) Mr. Hiiseyin Ragip Baydur, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. A. Mennan Tebelen, counselor. ; Mr. Orhan Eralp, second secretary. Mr. Faruk N. Berkol, second secretary. Maj. Nureddin Fuad Alpkartal, military attaché. *Mr. Talha Sabuncu, commercial counselor. *Mr. Biilent Yazici, financial counselor. Mr. Bahaeddin Kayalioglu, financial attaché. *Mr. Nuzhet Baba, attaché. UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA (Office of the Legation, 3101 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, MIchigan 4402) *Mr. H. T. Andrews, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Mr. J. R. Jordaan, secretary. *Dr. W. C. Naudé, attaché. *Maj. H. E. Penfold, assistant air and military attaché. *Mr. J. A. Siegruhn, commercial attaché. : *Mr. H. H. Woodward, attaché. Mr. D. J. Gardner, agricultural attaché. UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Office of the Embassy, 1125 Sixteenth Street; phones, NAtional 7550, 7551, and 7552. Office of military attaché, 2700 Tilden Street; phones, EMerson 1143 and 1632. Office of naval attache, 2234 Massachu-setis Avenue; phones, DEcatur 6976 and 6638) ; *Mr. Andrei A. Gromyko, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Mr. Nikolai V. Novikov, minister counselor. *Mr. Fedor T. Orekhov, first secretary. *Mr. Anatoli B. Gromov, first secretary. *Maj. Gen. Ilia M. Saraev, assistant military attaché. *Capt. Nicolai A. Skriagin, assistant naval attaché. *Mr. Nikolai I. Moliakov, second secretary. *Mr. Fedor A. Garanin, second secretary. *Capt. A. Belikov, assistant naval attaché. *T,t. Col. V. Maksimovich, assistant naval attaché for air. *Tt. Col. Mikhail N. Khrolenko, assistant naval attaché for air. *Capt. Mikhail N. Dorokhov, assistant naval attaché. *Lt. Col, Anatoly Y. Galkovsky, assistant military attaché for air. *Tt. Col. Boris D. Vassiliev, assistant naval attaché. *Col. Peter S. Motinov, assistant military attaché. *Mr. Alexandre G. Khomianin, third secretary. *Mr. Leonid Ivanovich Pavlov, attaché. *Mr. Alexander T. Oustinov, third secretary. *Mr. Mikhail M. Sumsky, attaché. *Mr. Igor V. Chechetkin, attaché. *Mr. Anatoli A. Ermolaev, attaché. *Mr. Alexander G. Vislych, attaché. URUGUAY (Office of the Embassy, suite 303, 1025 Connecticut Avenue; phones, N Ational 0411, 0412, and 0413. Office of commercial and financial department, suite 303, 1025 Connecticut Avenue; phones, NAtional 0411, 0412, and 0413. Office of military and naval attachés, 2007 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, HObart 6648) *Dr. Juan Carlos Blanco, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Juan Felipe Yriart, first secretary. *Gen. Hector J. Medina, military attaché and military attaché for air. *Lt. Comdr. Alfonso Delgado-Pealer, naval attaché. *Sefior Roberto Fontaina, attaché. Sefior Hugo Garcia, financial attaché. *Sefior Washington P. Bermtdez, commercial attaché. *Maj. Alberto I. Laporte, assistant military attaché. *Capt. Juan Carlos Jorge, assistant military attaché for air. *Lt. Comdr. Pablo J. More, assistant naval attaché. *Lt. Jorge F. Francois, assistant military attaché. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 33 \ 494 Congressional Directory VENEZUELA (Office of the Embassy, 2445 Massachusetts Avenue; phones, MIchigan 7400 and 7401. Office of the com-mercial counselor, 2445 Massachusetts Avenue; phone, MIchigan 7587. Office of financial counselor, 1507 M Street, room 404; phone, DIstrict 9301. Office of military, naval, and air attachés, 1129 Vermont Avenue; phone, N Ational 3573) *||Sefior Dr. Don Dié6genes Escalante, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-tentiary. Sefior Don Arturo Lares, counselor of embassy. *||Sefior Dr. Don Luis E. Gémez Ruiz, counselor. *Sefior Dr. Don M. A. Falcon-Bricefio, commercial counselor. *tSefior Dr. Don Pedro I. Aguerrevere, financial counselor. *Col. Juan Jones-Parra, military attaché. *Sefior Don Federico de Legérburu, first secretary. *Lt. Comdr. Aristides Rojas, naval attaché. *Maj. Josué Lépez Henriquez, air attaché. *Sefior Don Francisco Alvarez Chacin, second secretary. Sefior Don Hugo Orozco, assistant commercial counselor. Capt. Jésus Manuel Gamez Arellano, assistant military attaché. YUGOSLAVIA (Office of the Embassy, 1520 Sixteenth Street; phone, HObart 1450) *11 Mr. Stanoje Simié, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. *Dr. Sergije Makiedo, counselor. *Dr. Slavko Zore, counselor. *1 Col. Mihovil Tartalja, military attaché. *Mr. Beno Habjanic, commercial attaché. *Mr. Ivan Randic, assistant commercial attaché. *Mr. Maks Mijuskovie, second secretary. Mr. Teodor Tijan, attaché. Mr. Ljubomir Ljubicie, attaché. FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES ] [For territory under the jurisdiction of these consular officers consult the Foreign Consular Offices in the United States, published annually by the Department of State (U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C AFGHANISTAN—BELGIUM | [NoTE.—The word “honorary’’ preceding a title indicates that the officer was so designated in his exequatur; appearing in parentheses after a title, it indicates that the officer is serving in an honorary capacity, although not so designated in his exequatur] State and residence AFGHANISTAN New York: New York City___....._... ARGENTINA NT San Franciseo..--. 20: Florida: Jacksonville.___.___________.__ Georgia: Savannah Winois: Chieago. >. no ilo ian vi Louisiana: New Orleans_______________ Maryland: Baltimore... ___._.______.. Massachusetts: Boston................ Mississippi: Guliport...._o .....-...% " New York: New York City_______._____ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ____._______ Moxas; Dallas cro 0 i tas Port Arthur... Virginia: Norfolk... ......... Washington: Seattle AUSTRALIA New York: New York... ...._..: BELGIUM Abbama:Mebile_...____.._. _l-.o-CC California: Los Angeles... _.._.. San Francisco... ...... avannah Hawali: Honolulu... coat eeon Tilinois; Ohiesg0...nvr one etn Moline. ose Tia Kentucky: Louisville... coven. Louisiana: New Orleans. __ __._.__..... Missouri; St.Louis... New York: New York City Ohio: Cincinnati ci coe aa tral, Cleveland...) 0 ohn OregonuPortland 2 ar Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__._________ Pittsburgh... =. .-Philippine Islands: Manila... _._.._.. Name, rank, and jurisdiction Alikadr Mohammad Chouaib Khan, consul. Mohammad Omar Khan, honorary consul. Gilbert Russell Ladd, vice consul (honorary). Emilio Loseano Tegui, consul. Roberto Scaricabarozzi, consul. Ramon Ureta, vice consul (honorary). Fernando A. Bidabehere, consul. Edmundo Dileo, consul. L. N. Dantzler, T r., vice consul (honorary). William H. Morrell, vice consul (Honorary). Alejandro del Carril, consul. Juan Carlos Weidemann, vice consul (honorary). Lorenzo A. Servente, consul general. Antonio Ashby, honorary consul. Carlos A. Quiros, consul. Eduardo Amadeo Artayeta, consul. Carlos Augusto Simpson, vice consul (honorary). Miguel Angel Chiappe, consul general. Adolfo Bollini, consul. Carlos A. Casal, consul. Roberto Scaricabarozzi, consul. Walter A. Evans, vice consul (honorary). Christie Flanagan, vice consul (honorary). William Holmes Davis, vice consul (honorary). John P. Hausman, vice consul (honorary). Cedric Vernon Kellway, consul general. Albert Tellier, consul. Charles Winsel, consul (honorary). Joseph van der Elst, acting consul general. J. Henriquéz, consul (honorary). JOP, Constantine, consul (honorary). A.J. Rosenthal, consul (honorary). H. Hilton-Green, vice consul (honorary). A. van Eepoel, vice consul (honorary). H. L. De Give, consul (honorary). A. Thesmar, consul (honorary). V. Lappe, consul (honorary). John van Rickstal, consul general. John Cyrille Vermeren, vice consul Ed. Andries, vice consul (honorary). Sevier Bonnie, consul (honorary). A. Remés, consul general. H. Dabezies, consul (honorary). J. G. Whiteley, consul (honorary). (honorary). Walter V. Connor, honorary vice consul. Albert Navez, consul. P. Boeye, consul (honorary). 0. E. Safford, consul (honorary). Charles Webb Godefroy, consul ohorary; Charles Hallaert, consul general. A.D. Castellini, consul (honorary). E. E. Stearns, consul (honorary). A. Herman, consul (honorary). Jules Leroux, consul (honorary). R. Dereume, consul (honorary). H. Vander Straeten, consul general. 495 496 Congressional Directory State and residence BELGIUM—continued Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie______ ‘Washington: Seattle __.______________... Wisconsin: Green Bay... ccoceeeunn. BOLIVIA California: Los Angeles... _._.... San‘Franeisco. ooo LL San Leandro. .........l.... Canal Zone: Panam, Panama.___.__.__._ Florida: Miami, ool nl oo o.ooooo Nlinois; Chicago... Indiana: Bloomington. _._____ Louisiana: New Orleans________._...._.. Massachusetts: Boston... __._.. Missouri St. Louls. ooo iinioa anni, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh____.._________ Texas: Fort Wor Virginia: Richmond Washington: Seattle BRAZIL California: Los Angeles... ___ o_o... San Franecisco.......o...ci. Canal Zone: Panam4, Panama..._.____ Plorida: Miamb oc iene Georgia: Savanmah..... ui....... THinois:; Chicago...s23sd0sting sou. Louisiana: New Orleans... ._....._.. Maryland: Baltimore... ._._____ Massachusetts: Boston. _....____._.___ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_______._____ South Carolina: Charleston. _._.._______ Texas: Dallas... os... Sueagane BELGIUM—BULG ARIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Oscar F. Bravo, consul (honorary). Juan José Ortiz Alibran, consular agent. M. Baudouzx, consul (honorary). R. C. Patterson, consul (honorary). R.T. Hasler, consul (honorary). Fred E. Nolting, consul (honorary). “ D. V. Bornn, consul (honorary). : Henry H. Ketcham, consul (honorary). William J. La Luzerne, consul (honorary). ‘Walter Montenegro, consul. Duke N. Banks, honorary consul. Mario Araoz Levy, consul general. Casimiro Alvarez, honorary consul. Alberto Velarde, honorary vice consul. Jorge Eduardo Boyd, honorary consul general. Francis M. Miller, honorary consul. Arturo Silva, honorary consul. José Guzman Baldivieso, honorary consul. Santiago Jordan Sandoval, consul general. Gustavo Guerrero, honorary consul. Mrs. Marie Aline Z. de Blanco, honorary vice consul, Francisco Jiménez Sainz, honorary vice consul. William Henri Irish, honorary consul. Enrique Naranjo, honorary vice consul. Arnold George Stifel, honorary consul. Teddy Hartmann, consul general. Jorge Cusicanqui, honorary consul. J. Arturo Arguedas, honorary vice consul. N. A. N. Cleven, honorary consul. Sproesser Wynn, honorary consul. Roland A. Egger, honorary consul. Israel Torrico, honorary consul. Alfonzo Barbosa de Almeida Portugal, consul. Alfredo de Almeida Sa, vice consul. Octavio Augusto Dias Carneiro, vice consul. Anibal de Saboia Lima, consul general. Heraldo Pacheco de Oliveira, consul. Jodo Baptista Pinheiro, vice consul. Carlos Fernandes, vice consul (honorary). Paulo Germano Hasslocher, consul general. Antonio Roberto de Arruda Botelho, consul. Julio Vieira Diogo, consul general. Fernando Ramos de Alencar, consul. Miguel Alvaro Ozorio de Almeida, vice consul. Henrique Oswaldo de Miranda, honorary vice consul. Argeu de Segadas Machado Guimaries, consul. Vicente Paulo Gatti, vice consul. Donatello Grieco, vice consul. Fernando Nilo Alyarenga, consul. Arnaldo Vasconeellos, vice consul. Mario Tancredo Borges da Fonseca, vice consul. Armando Fleury de Barros, honorary consul. Pablo Alegre, honorary vice consul. Américo Galvao Bueno, consul. Paulo Braz Pinto da Silva, vice consul. Antonio Malva Gomes, vice consul (honorary). ‘Walder Lima Sarmanho, consul general. Sotero Cosme, consul. Zilah Mafra Peixoto, consul. Carlos Jacyntho de Barros, vice consul. Jodo Augusto de Araujo Castro, vice consul. Pedro de Alcantara Nabuco de Abrew, Jr., wonsil Helio de Burgos Cabal, vice consul. A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul (honorary). William Porter Cart, acting vice consul (honorary). J. Kirby Medonough, honorary consul. Charles Stewart Barry, Jr., honorary vice consul. Edison Ramos Nogueira, consul. Emmett Irwin Welch, consular agent. Pedro Eugenio Soares, consul. Luiz Paulo de Amorim, vice consul. Robert C. Bullwinkel, vice consul (honorary). Ross Whitfield Sutherland, consular agent (honorary). State of war declared by Bulgaria Dec. 13, 1941. Armistice with Bulgaria effective Oct. 28, 1944. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 497 State and residence CANADA New York: New York City.._._.______.__ CHILE California: Los Angeles ._..______ BANDIORO. irr rnp en a) San Francisco.... 2 Maryland: Ballimore o.com onal Massachusetts: Boston. __._...ocoeeao-a New York: New York OCity_-.-ooo---- Pennsylvania: Philadelphis_..____..... Puerto Rico: San Juan Washington: Seattle. ...-_-i._ -iicl. CHINA Qalifornia: Los Angeles... _._______ San Francisco. ....._______ Hawaii: Honolulu... oii TNolS: CC hICag0. inn rainmes Louisiana: New Orleans... ___.____ Massachusetts: Boston___._____________ New York: New York City-_..._._____ Oregon; Portland... -0L 0... _.... Philippine Islands: Iloilo... ._.___.____ Manfla_.o Sooo Pexag: Honslon.. 0. 1% Lo odo wn to Washington: Seattle. o-cocoeaeooo___. COLOMBIA California: Los Angeles. ____.o______ San Francisco. ...-aa-o--.- CANADA—COLOMBIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Hugh Day Scully, consul general. Miss Katherine Agnes McClosky, consul. J. A. Strong, consul. Leland Herbert Ausman, vice consul. Paul Emile Morin, vice consul. Christopher Harfield West, vice consul. Juan Pradenas Mufioz, consul general. Carlos Grant, consul. Miguel Angel Padilla, consul. Mejjiclo Herschel, honorary consul. Philip L. Gildred, honorary consul. Juan Guzman Cruchaga, consul. Javier Urrutia Valdes, consul. Fernando Dahmen, consul. Arturo Chavez, consul. Frederik A. Schaefer, honorary consul. M. H. Ehlert, consul (honorary). Alberto Coddow, consul. Fernando Cerda, consul. Guillermo Brown Guerra, consul. Mrs. Carmen Vial de Seiloret, consul. Alfonso Grez Valdovinos, consul general. Jorge Hayler, consul. Exequiel Puelma Silva, consul. Enrique Gracit@a, consul. Guillermo Atria, consul. Manuel Moreno Lajafia, honorary consul. Filipo L. de Hostos, honorary consul. José Sampelayo, consul. , consul. Tsao Kuo-Pin, vice consul. Hsu Shao-Chang, vice consul. Miss Chiang Wei-Teh, deputy consul. T. K. Chang, consul general. Chan Ying-Wing, consul. Patrick Pichi Sun, consul. Woo Chiang Hwa, vice consul. Raymond Show-jui Chao, vice consul. King-chau Mui, consul general. Ying Yu Huang, consul. Yu Pei-chun, consul. Li Chia Hsiang, vice consul. Wu Sun-Han, deputy consul. Chang-Lok Chen, consul general. Kwang-Hsun Tseng, consul. Tso-chien Shen, vice consul. Hsiung-chung Tang, vice consul. Gung Hsing Wang, consul. Chien Chin Chang, deputy consul. —— consul. ‘Wang Kung-show, vice consul. Tsune-chi Yii, consul general. Hsin Yu Lu, consul. ‘Wei-hsien Tsung, vice consul. Yin-ling Wu, vice consul. Chang Nai-Wei, vice consul. Silwing Pei-Chiu Au, consul. Ching-hsien Wang, vice consul. Pao-Kong Chu, consul. Tuan Mao-Lan, consul general. Chang Shih-Kun, vice consul. Hsueh Yu Chi, vice consul. Peng Chi Ping, deputy consul. Yu Sien-yung, consul. Stephen Ching-hsien Wang, deputy consul. Yi-Seng Kiang, consul. Hsiao-wan Tao, vice consul. Tsu-Ying Ch’eh, deputy consul. Yang Chao-chen, deputy consul. Liang Der-Shing, deputy consul. Jorge Castafio Castillo, consul general. Guillermo Restrepo, vice consul. Carlos E. Ardila Ordofiez, consul general. I Gabriel Jiménez Paneso, vice consul. 498 Congressional Directory COLOMBIA—COSTA RICA State and residence CoLOMBIA—continued Canal Zone: Balboa........ c...noauioa. Cristdbal ii hua. Florida: Miami. i... ooo aecdiiinunacar Illinois: Li al Louisiana: New Orleans Maryland: Baltimore. ............... Massachusetts: Boston... ..._.___._.. Missouri;.St. Loulds. sacs ..._.onizia COSTA RICA Alabama: Mobile... 0.0... California: Berkeley... coencanii.. Hollywood. ......couiis on Tos Angeles: oc lo. alu: Delaware: Wilmington__............._. District of Columbia: Washington_ ____ Morida: Miami... oo... cumini Towa: Dubuque Kansas: Lawrence Louisiana: Baton Rouge.____.___________ New Orleans. __..______.__. Maryland: Baltimore... ____.._...._____ Massachusetts: Boston. _____.._._._._____ Michigan: Detrolt . oo. ooo ial Minnesota: Rochester... ______.______ Missouri: Kansas City New Jersey: Newark _..___._____._____. New York: New York City... oo... Oregon: Portland... ....... io... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia... _._____ Pittsburgh... ...... Philippine Islands: Manila___________._ Puerto Rico: SanJuan.. 0...Cl .. Texas: Brownsville. lu. chebng Pallog wr op Houston =... oo Utah: Salt Lake City Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie_______ Washington: Seattle... i... i i.. Name, rank, and jurisdiction Carlos Borda Mendoza, consul general. José Restrepo Jaramillo, consul general. Gabriel Saravia Vasquez, consul general. Arturo Currea C., honorary vice consul, Hernando de Castro Gomez, vice consul. Earle C. Moore, honorary vice consul. Alfonso Orozco, consul. Eduardo Gallego Gutiérrez, consul general. Maria Camargo, vice consul. Miss Maria Teresa Murillo, honorary vice consul. Eduardo Gomez Duran, consul. Macedonio Romero. honorary consul. Salvador Camacho, consul general. Edmundo de Holte Castello, consul general. Mario Jaramillo, vice consul. Bernardo Santa-Coloma, vice consul. 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. Bernard H. Eichold, honorary consul. Nicolas Meyer, honorary vice consul. Manuel Antonio Viquez V., honorary vice consul. Fernando Flores Banuet, consul general. Jorge Maroto Bastidas, consul. Ricardo Casorla, honorary consul. Fernando Soto Guardia, consul general. Federico Soto Harrison, vice consul. Enrique Allen de la Cruz, honorary consul, Teodoro Picado Lara, honorary vice consul. Thomas Beck Ricardo, honorary vice consul. Enrique Pucci Paoli, consul (honorary). Juan Pucci Genet, honorary vice consul, Roberto Gomez, honorary consul. Jimmy Fonseca Mora, honorary vice consul. Gonzalo J. Gallegos, honorary consul general. Bernardo Vargas Canalias, honorary consul general. Berthold Singer, honorary consul. Carlos Lara Hine, Honorary vice consul. Jorge Carron Orozco, honorary vice consul. Juan José Flores Matamoros, honorary vice consul, E. F. 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. James Turneer, honorary consul. Carl E. Brown, vice consul. Eduardo Azuola A., consul general (honorary). Jorge Vargas Méndez, honorary consul. Otoniel Flores, honorary consul. Miguel Flores Trejos, honorary consul. José Basileo Acufia, honorary consul. Charles Barrows, honorary vice consul. Luis Alberto Salazar Cespedes, honorary consul. Samuel E. Piza, in charge of consulate general. Samuel Piza Chamorro,! consul general. Harold H. Bonilla, vice consul, Mario Montealegre Aguilar, honorary vice consul. Guillermo Quiros Q., honorary consul. Carlos G. Perez, honorary consul. Juan Rafael Saborio Molinari, honorary vice consul. Juan Elizalde, consul. Ramon Fournier, honorary consul general. Manuel Isaac Ugalde G., consul general. Joaquin Figuls, honorary consul. Leroy W. Reed, Jr., honorary consul. Carl G. Stearns, honorary consul. Luis Alberto Murillo Murillo, honorary consul. George Levy, honorary consul. William D. White, honorary consul. Appointed and recognized for the purpose of exercising supervisory functions over the United States and possessions and the Canal Zone. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States ~~ 499 CUBA—DANZIG, FREE CITY OF State and residence CUBA Alabama: Mobile... co. ounits 1% BET1 TS SA i Sa pc fv Tinols: Chicago. nant cerersiret Kentucky: Louisville....__. Louisiana: New Orleans___.___________ Maryland: Baltimore... car cand Massachusests: Boston... ___... Michigan: Detroit. mees re Missouri: Kansas City... .-..... ... St. Lonis. oso na re North Carolina: Winston-Salem _______ Ohios:Cincinnatl. oo... on... Oregon: Portland... oc. arene Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto:Rico: SamJuan....:... .....:... Tennessee: Chattanooga. ______________ Texas; Galveston: =. [3 Honusion. ii a Virgimiay Noziolk. «= oc. oo Washington: Seattle. oi... necro” CZECHOSLOVAKIA California: Los Angeles. _____.______.___ anFraneisco._ 5 = District of Columbia: Washington. ____ TNlineis: Chicago +2. 0 ro 0 th Maryland: Baltimore... ona Minnesota: ATA, An fei Missouri: St. Loui New York: New Se Clty. aoe Ohioz Cleveland...To =. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh... Johsast Philippine Islands: Manila_.________.__ Texas; Houston... Losils Jute uioine: DANZIG, FREE CITY OF .________. Name, rank, and jurisdiction Manuel Velazguez y Blanco, consul. Justo A. Proenza y Proenza, vice consul. Oscar Presmanes y Fernandez, consul. Mrs. Patricia Mencia y de Armas, vice consul. Mariano Escalona y Almeida, consul. José A. Sera y Serrano, consul general. Miguel Cornide y Salva, consul. Miss Silvia Shelton y Villalon, consul. Federico E. de Graw y Marquez Sterling, vice consul. Julio Rodriguez Embil, consul. Enrique Heymann y de la Gandara, vice consul. Carlos Roloff de Acosta, consul. , consul general. Antonio Bruzon y Rodriguez, consul. Adolfo Castillo y Llanes, consul. Oscar Rene Morales y del Campo, consul. Alberto Conzales Sali, vice consul. Conrado Dominguez y Nunez, consul. Andres Jimenez y Ruz, consul. Guillermo Bolivar y Morales del Castillo, consul. ——, ‘consul. Carlos Tornes y Tamayo, vice consul. Ignacio Algarra y Mendivil, consul. Angel Pérez y Hernidndez, consul. José Miguel Ribas y Villaverde, consul general. Carlos Marquez y Loret de Mola, consul. Francisco Batet y Rivas, vice consul. Federico Laredo y Arencibia, vice consul. Eugenio Castillo Borges, consul. Luis Soto y Figueredo, consul. Eduardo Mayea y Aroca, consul. Eduardo L. Sanchez y del Castillo, consul. Francisco Cafiellas y Marti, consul general. Miss Sofia Dihigo y Llanos, consul. Reinaldo Fernandez Rebull, consul general. Cayetano de Quesada y Socarras, consul. Eduardo Portales y Calas, consul. Matias Taboada y Suarez, vice consul. Octavio Laredo Caturla, vice consul. Celestino Fernandez y Santana, vice consul. Ernesto de Blanck y Martin, vice consul. Alberto de la Campa y Roff, vice consul. Juan A. Pumariega y Frayle, vice consul. Anibal Santana y Lopéz, vice consul. Juan Miranda y Suérez, honorary consular agent. Luis Perdomo y Fernandez, consul. Ernesto Luis y Fuentes, consular agent. Donald S. Cameron, acting consular agent. Nicolds Meneses y Comas, consul general. Andrés Soriano y Roxas, consular agent (honorary). Gustavo Schumann y Poveda, consul. Julio Roloff, acting consul. Eduardo Patterson y de Jauregui, consul. José Tarrida y Victori, vice consul. Enrique Morales de los Rios, consular agent. Luis Sotto Figueredo, consul. Luis A. Arenal y Garcia Tejeda, consul. Felix B. Janovsky, consul (honorary). Bohus§ Benes, consul. Erwin Ladislav Chloupek, consul (honorary). Oldfich Chyle, consul. Alois Oz4abal, acting consul general. James (Vaclav) Primus, consular agent (honorary). Joseph F. Kepple, acting consul. Karel Wendl, in charge of consulate. Karel Hudec, consul general. Josef Novy, consul. Josef Novy, acting consul. Charles Robinson Toothaker, honorary consul. Josef Zak-Marusiak, consul. , consul. Norbert W. Schmelkes, acting consul. Charles Julius Hollub, consul (honorary). The diplomatic and consular representatives of Poland have horse in the United States, of the interests of the Free City of anzig. 500 Congressional Directory DENMARK—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC State and residence DENMARK Alabama: Mobile: roi Cc California: Los Angeles __.._.__._.__.. San Prancisco......--x-o--. Canal Zone: Cristobal. __..--ico-cno---anamé, Panama___..____ Coloradoi Denver...anaes a Florida: Ramps. fo coircaso West Palm Beach_____........ Georgia: Savannah...i. Co. 0. Hawaiiz Honolua... i... ientanat INinois: Chicago: oom Louisiana: New Orleans... __....__.._.. Maryland: Baltimore... ...cceeevnia. Massachusetts: Boston. __.__ ooo Michigan: Detroit. _____.______ -| Minnesota: Minneapolis... Nebraska: Omaha_____________ o _| New York: New York City.__.._._____ North Dakota: Fargo......ccuivimetine. Ohio: Cleveland... .......c.c...... Oregon: Portland. iu... occasions Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila__________.__. Puerto Rico: Mayagiiez.__.__.__._.__.____ San Juan... .... a wae South Dakota: Brookings _____________ Texast Houston... Utah: Salt Take City......c. cna. Virginia: RN owport News rr cin DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Alabama: Mobile... ..... cu. ce mm mana: California: Los Angeles... .ccevoeean--San Francisco. ...--.o-.o... Hinois: Chicago. . ..... cc. ccarmemman Louisiana: Lake Charles... ._______.. New Orleans_ _._._._____.___ eViaryland: Baltimore... ........--ceu.--Massachusetts: Boston... .__._ Minnesota: Rochester. ______._________ New Jersey: Newark __ ________________ West New York. ____..___ New York: New Rochelle. ____________ New York City... ...... Ohio: Cleveland...fincas Li Pennsylvania: Philadelphia... ________ a Ob es Christiansted ..._______ Washington: Seattle. __________________ Name, rank, and jurisdiction Neander Douglas Cunningham, vice consul (honorary). Ryan Asger Grut, vice consul (honorary). Axel Caspar Frederik Sporon-Fiedler, consul. Charles Butler Fenton, acting consul (honorary). Wladimir Ishoy, consul. Wolf C. Hansen, vice consul (honorary). Paul Walter Petersen, vice consul (honorary). Miss Marie Dickinson, acting vice consul. John Frederick Martin Ranitz, acting vice consul. Robert Benjamin Booth, consul (honorary). Reimund Baumann, consul. Ingemann Olsen, consul (honorary). Holger Bloch-Jespersen, acting vice consul (honorary). Theodore von Rosenvinge, vice consul (honorary). George (Peter) Everson, vice consul (honorary). Andrew Nissen Johnson, vice consul (honorary). John Holst, vice consul (honorary). Georg Bech, consul general. Walter Peter Christensen, vice consul (honorary). Niels Anthon Christensen, vice consul (honorary). Sherman Harkson, vice consul (honorary). Ludvig Theodor Brehm, vice consul (honorary). Niels Nicolaj Therkelsen Nyborg, consul (honorary). José Oscar Bravo, vice consul (honorary). Frantz Adolf Charles Hastrup, consul (honorary). Hans Wilhelm Bagger, vice consul (honorary). Christian Larsen, vice consul (honorary). Alva Charles Madsen, acting vice consul. Gheistian Otto Jensen, vice consul (honorary). . Andersen, acting vice consul (honorary). AERTA, Knox, vice consul (honorary). Hjalmar Bang, consul (honorary). Christian Jensen, acting consul. Mogens Grove Bildsge, consul (honorary). T. G. McGonigal, honorary consul. Ismael Avilés, honorary consul. José Enrique Aybar, consul general. Henriquez, honorary vice consul. M. de J. Quijano, honorary consul general. René Rodriguez, honorary consul. José Vega Espaillat, consul. Mario O. Benedicto, consul. Forrest Parker, honorary consul. Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul. José Maria Nouel Simpson, consul. José Manuel Lovaton P., vice consul. , consul. James T. Case, honorary vice consul. G. P. Hannan, honorary consul. J. Marino Inchautegui, consul. Luis A. Ovideo, consul. Miguel A. Herrera, consul. Max L. Glazer, honorary consul. Rafael Izquierdo, honorary consul. Luis A. Mendez L., consul. Walter Seth Kipnis, honorary consul. ‘David J. Schweitzer, honorary consul. Rafael Comprés Perez, consul general. Luis Romanacce, vice consul. O. A. Reynolds, honorary consul. Julio César Sardinas Tejera, consul. Roberto D. Abrahams, honorary consul. Armando Font, Jr., honorary vice consul. Andrés Leon Martinez, consul (honorary). Enloe L. Lowry, honorary vice consul. Marco Antonio Cabral, consul. Lorenzo Loubriel, honorary consul. Carlos M. Petterne Alomar, honorary vice consul, M. M. Morillo, consul general. Miguel Such, honorary consul. Nilo H. Soto, vice consul. Frank J. Richardson, honorary vice consul. Jack Danciger, honorary consul. J. A. Torregrosa, honorary consul. T. L. Evans, honorary consul. Richard Patrick Flanagan, honorary consul. George Conrad, honorary consul. J. Percy Souffront, honorary vice consul. Luis Golden, honorary consul. Francis E. Townsend, honorary vice consul. Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 501 ECUADOR—GREAT BRITAIN State and residence ECUADOR San Diego. iol inn San Praneisco.. aot. oo. District of Columbia: Washington_.___ Florida: Miami...0000 00 ... New York: New York City ___._._.._.._ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia_______..... Texas: Houston...ul ilio Jin Washington: Seattle...ooo... i. EGYPT California: San Francisco... o...___.. New York: New York City EL SALVADOR California: Los Angeles_._______ ....... San Francisco... ...u..one-u-Canal Zone. friisee Loans. Leia o Colorado; Denver... .. i. couan beri Florida: Miami...dicate toca. fo Louisiana: New Orleans... Minnesota: Winona... ........o_ooo New York: New York City._..__._____. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ..______.___ Philippine Islands: Manila____.____.__.. Puerto Rico; San Juan..........o...... Texas: Brownsville... ....c...:0i.i... Houston. i=...a. coo ESTONIA California: Los Angeles. ___.___._..___ New York: New York City-.....__.__. ETHIOPIA New York: New York City... FINLAND. ... nem s oreo FRANCE California: T.os Angeles... 2... __.. San Francisco... a District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Iinois: Chieago... co Louisiana: New Orleans_._____ Ud Massachusetts: Boston_________________ New York: New York... ......... Philippine Islands: Manila____._.______ GREAT BRITAIN Alabama: Mobile...caanni loc ind California: I.oes Angeles. oo ccceeeaao Son Franeisco....cceveeaces Canal Zone: Colon, Panama._________.. Panam4, Panama....__._. Colorado; Denver-........cccinrenmssas District of Columbia: Washington... Name, rank, and jurisdiction T. G. McGonigal, honorary consul. Ismael Aviles Mejia, consul. Jorge Luis Perez, consul. Abraham P. Nasatir, honorary vice consul. Luis Chiriboga Gangotena, consul general. José Luis Anderson, vice consul. John A. Cleveland, honorary consul. Charles Cleveland, honorary vice consul. Carlos Puig, consul general. Pedro Alcivar Cordova, vice consul. José R. Banos, honorary vice consul. Emilio Maulmé, consul general.. Armando F. Pesantes Garcia, consul. Aurelio Zambrano Orejuela, vice consul. Reginald Chutter, honorary vice consul, Carlos Morales Chacon, consul. Victor M. Naranjo, consul. Sami Rejkallah Semeika, consul general. Hussein Chawky, consul general. Ramon Gonzalez Montalvo, consul. Carlos Alberto Balibrera, consul general. Roberto Boyd, consul general. José Miguel Safie, consul (honorary). Fred W. Borton, consul (honorary). Seymour Charles Mickler, consul (honorary). John B. Metzenburg, consul (honorary). J. Humberto Arrieta Y dice, vice consul (honorary). Galileo Cabrales, consul. José B. Acufia, consul (honorary). Bernardo Cevallos Andrade, consul general. Rafael Barraza, Jr., vice consul. Nicolas Pedroso, honorary consul. Manuel Pérez Rosales, honorary consul. José Hernandez Usera, consul general (honorary). Ernesto Ulloa Morazan, consul. Fidel R. Quintanilla, consul. Reginald Birdsall Olds, honorary vice consul. , consul general. Johannes Kaiv, consul. John H. Shaw, honorary consul general. Diplomatic relations with Finland severed June 30, 1944. Jean Charles Moise Strauss, consul. Jacques Baeyens, consul general. Maxime Rainguet, vice consul. Lionel Vasse, consul. Francois Chiarasini, consul general. Albert Chambon, consul. Guérin de Beaumont, consul general. Gaston Willoquet, consul general. René Engel, consular agent. John Ritchie Macpherson, vice consul (honorary) , consul general. Guy Hamilton Clarke, consul. Walter Crowhurst Hacon, vice consul. George Wellington Irving, vice consul. Matthew John Vincent Blood-Smyth, vice consul, Cyril Hubert Cane, consul general. Ayrton John Seaton Pullan, consul. Walter Hollis Adams, vice consul. Denholm Dunglinson McKie, vice consul. Frederick Cecil Mason, vice consul. Stanley Gordon Irving, consul general. William Kingsley Smith, consul. Stephen Patrick House, vice consul. Frank Ongley Darvall, consul. Cyril Ward, acting consul. John Campbell Thomson, consul. Sn SRE a = 502 Congressional Directory GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE State and residence GREAT BRITAIN—continued 3 DP Georgin: Atlanta =i co -2 SreeLLL Hawail: Honolulu... ooo aa Tlinois? Chicago... |... Jitsu sel Michigan: Detroltiic iii Ei Minnesota: St. Paul-Minneapolis_ _____ Missouri, Kansas City. > be 2 Stilonis.. 7c crass New York: Buffalo. oo it New York City Ohio: Cinelmmatl «ox0 oe @leveland, c-fos Oregon: Portland fn... o.oo PagificiOcean: (Tonga)... ...........: Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh...i. ._ Philippine Islands: Manila___.________ Puerto Rico: SanJuan.. -.. _-______.._ Texas: Galveston oo. oii wm? ELONSEON Latincared —o ha Virginia: Norfolk... coi oss las Virgin Islands: Frederiksted___________ Charlotte Amalie______ Washington: Seatile: rci eiayy Spokane...Lid ol GREECE Name, rank, and jurisdiction Francis Joseph White, vice consul. , consul. D. J. B. Robey, vice consul. Lewis Arthur Oates, vice consul (honorary). Henry Russell Henshaw, vice consul. Richard Whittington, consul. Roland Seaton Jackson, vice consul. John Chevalier O’Dwyer, consul. Harry Lewis Dawson, vice consul. Wilfred Hansford Gallienne, consul general. Kenneth Bumstead, consul. John Roland Kay, vice consul. Hubert Norman Pullar, vice consul. Herbert Thomas James Cream, acting vice consul, Robert William Urquhart, consul general. Gordon William Creighton, vice consul. William Percy Taylor Nurse, vice consul. Christopher Handley Styles Tracy, vice consul. Norman Redvers Prickett, acting vice consul. Harold Braham, consul. Joseph T'odd Mulvenny, vice consul. A. Temple Blackwood, vice consul. Bernard P. Sullivan, consul general. Joseph William Blanch, consul. R. B. Boyd Tollinton, acting consul. Gerald Fraser Tyrrell, vice consul. James Arthur Brannen, vice consul. § Daniel Francis Horseman Brickell, consul general. Allen Price, consul. Leslie Hammersley Williams, vice consul. Lionel Henry Lamb, consul. Herbert Troyte Griffith, vice consul. , consul. Reginald Thomas Davidson, vice consul. Alexander Swinton Paterson, consul. William Milne Guthrie, vice consul. Angus Somerville Fletcher, consul. Francis Edward Evans, consul general. Archibald Wallace Robertson, consul. Williams Gruffydd Rhys Howell, consul. Francis Bryan Anthony Rundall, consul. Ronald Sinclair, consul. Gerard Thomas Corley Smith, vice consul. Leonard Gibson Holliday, vice consul. John Herbert Dickinson, vice consul. Edward Truman Baker, vice consul. Edward Parr Wiltshire, vice consul. Frank Besant, acting vice consul. William Frederick Redmond, acting vice consul. Ian Howard Potter McEwen, acting vice consul. Miss Cecily Mary Eleanor Hasting, acting vice consul. Walter Frederick James, proconsul. Arthur Harry Tandy, consul. Peter Gordon McDonald, vice consul. Ernest James Bisiker, vice consul. Eric Arthur Saunders, vice consul. James McDonald, consul. Humphrey Campbell Dickson Neilson, vice consul. Charles Walter Trevor Johnson, consul. Hugh Charles McClelland, consul general. Charles Clifford Gordon Chaplin, vice consul. Theodore Harold Fox, vice consul. Peter Joseph Nolan, vice consul. Alexander McQuaker Galbraith, acting consul (honorary). Dermot Francis McDermot, consul. Arthur Henry Noble, consul (honorary). Horace MacLean Grindell, vice consul. Stewart Hunter Evans, vice consul (honorary). Henry Francis Chester Walsh, consul general. Leslie Bland Dufton, vice consul. James Guthrie, consul. Andrew Ian Pye, vice consul. Miles Merwin, vice consul. ———, consul. Henry Leopold O’Neal, acting vice consul. Gerald Ernest Stockley, consul. Francis Justinian Pelly, vice consul. Herbert Raymond Guyler White, vice consul. John Galbraith Ridland, vice consul. ”~ Peter Depasta, acting consul general. Stephen Koundouriotis, acting consul. Foreign Consular Officers vn the United States 503 GREECE—HONDURAS State and residence Name, rank, and jurisdiction GREECE—continued Tllinois: Chicago vio oti Tass Louisiana: New Orleans. _.___.__.__ Massachusetts: Boston _____._.____.____ New York: New York City-ocacaocoo- GUATEMALA Alabama: Mobile 22... =... ___ i... California: Berkeley... .________ Los Angeles Oakland. JC. triaiibloh San Franelseo...--: ==. Canal Zone: Balboa... o_o l Cristébal .-.o...228 Florida: Miami»...aot on INinois: Chicago i oo eoses Sidon Louisiana: New Orleans... ---—-o.o—__ Maryland; Baltimore... --o-oo oee--Massachusetts: Boston... _______ Missouri’ Sti Lonis.. 2 oo Saini New York: New York City____________ Oregon: Portland..."A ‘.xX C Pennsylvania: Philadelphia ___________ Philippine Islands: Manila___.___.______ Puerto Rico; SanjJuan.....-.._.—-_-_-> Nexas: Brownsville. on 300aes Dslas. o.oo ete oT Laredo i: 5 ia naa ea RE HAITI Alabama: Mobile... ico cual cio Canal Zone: Balboa... ool ci... = Cristobal... aa ast Plotidas Miami...ocr 0 Tlinois: ‘Blmhurst sui’ior Louisiana: Lake Charles _____________. NewOrleans..._.__.._-__._. Maryland: Baltimore...ii... = Massachusetts: Boston... _..__.___.______ New Jersey: Newark. _________ ooo._ New York: New York City..-__-=-__-. Texas: Galveston... ooo t-oaaocsfnzoae. Port:Arthur...o........ CR (I Virginia: Newport News. _____._.._._..._ HONDURAS Alabama: Mobile... i...2 2000S California: Los Angeles____....._____.__. San Francisco _| Canal Zone: Balboa. __..._.____ CristObalds co ol, 5. Hlinols: Chicago. carer i2til Louisiana: New Orleans_______________ Maryland: Baltimore. .........._____.. Michigan: Detroit... =i 2220000 New York: New York City_..____ y el Puerto Rico: SanJuan.....--.-__=_-L ‘Pexas: Brownsville... ooo. Sains Galveston... .....Coabuoipadzds Houstono aor ia Anthony J. Poumpouras, acting consul general. William Helis, consul (honorary). Anastase Antonopoulos, consul, John Callergis, acting consul general. ‘W. Steber, Jr., honorary consul. Ricardo T. Gutierrez, honorary vice consul. Rafael Aldana, consul. Manuel M. Morales, honorary vice consul. Francisco Palomo, consul general. Tomas Arias, honorary consul. Humberto Leignadier, honorary consul. Manuel F. Castillo, honorary vice consul. Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul. Francis M. Sack, honorary consul. Octavio Barrios Solis, consul general. Gustavo Adolfo Salazar, consul general. Americo H. Oneto, honorary consul. William A. Mosman, honorary consul. Frederic Lawson Niemeyer, honorary consul. Jorge Arenales, consul general. Lawrence Walter Hartman, honorary consul. Reginald F. Chutter, honorary consul. José Garcia Alonso, honorary consul. Edelmiro Martinez Rivera, honorary consul. C. P. Hilliard, honorary consul. Robert Burgher, honorary consul. Ballard Burgher, honorary vice consul. José Sixto Holguin, honorary consul. Richard M. Bazzanella, honorary vice consul. T. L. Evans, honorary consul. Edward H. Corrigan, honorary consul. Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. Richard Murray, honorary consul. Max R. Stempel, consul. , consul general. Manuel José Castillo Galvez, honorary vice consul. Danilo F. Goodrich, honorary consul. James H. Richmond, honorary consul. Glen A. Broussard, honorary consul. J. L. Stulb, honorary vice consul, Maurice B. Carlin, honorary consul. Francis R. Clark, honorary consul. Victor de la Fuente, consular agent. Rulx Léon, consul general. Yves Verna, vice consul. William Ward, Jr., honorary vice consul. Louis Elson, honorary consul. Jaime Oliver, vice consul (honorary). Charles Vére, honorary consul. Gabriel Consalves, Jr., vice consul (honorary). J. A. Torregrossa, honorary consul. Arthur S. Kahn, vice consul. Harry Reyner, honorary consul. R. W. Weiss, honorary consul. George Conrad, honorary consul. Philip Gomez, honorary vice consul. Juan E. Petit, acting consul. Mauricio Calderon, Jr., honorary consul. José Maria Albir, honorary consul general. Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul. David C. Sasso, honorary vice consul. E. Carles, honorary consul. A. Aben de Almar, honorary consul. Enrique Fugoén, consul. Lawrence Hernandez, honorary vice consul. Edward Davis, honorary consul. Vicente Williams, consul general. Ramon Santamaria, honorary consul. Saul R. Levin, honorary consul. Gonzalo Carias C., consul general. Juan Bermtdez Sénchez, honorary consul general. C. P. Hilliard, honorary consul. José Torregrossa, honorary consul. , consul. T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul. 504 Congressional Directory HONDURAS—LUXEMBOURG State and residence HONDURAS—continued ICELAND California: Los Angeles: .-vivo uouis San-Francisco.... .... ..... District of Columbia: Washington ______ HMinois: Chicago. 2... fal Maryland: Baltimore... _..... oa... New York: New York City... ....... North Dakota: Grand Forks_._.__._____ Oregon: Portland... JL. ......coven Washington: Seattle... roo ae. IRAN District of Columbia: Washington_____ New York: New York City....________ IRAQ District of Columbia: Washington_____ IRELAND California: San Francisco __________.____ Hiinois: Chicago. = oxo rt rr aons Massachusetts: Boston______.________._ New York: New York City._____.._____ LATVIA California: Los Angeles______....__.___. District of Columbia: Washington_____ Indians; Indianapolis: ©. i i clioiy Louisiana: New Orleans___._____._._._._. Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ___________ Puerto Rico: San Juan_______ SROA LEBANON New York: New York. ._ _.. 1 200 710% LIBERIA Florida: Miami... ...... .......0... Wines: Chicago: cn oo...0s Louisiana: New Orleans___.____________ 'Pexas: Port ast Arthurs... ..L.ou-di LITHUANIA California: Los Angeles________________ Nlinolsy' Chicago... ol= tania or Massachusetts: Boston. . mAAE RAE LUXEMBOURG California: Los Angeles. _-____________. District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Name, rank, and jurisdiction R. E. McInnis, honorary consul. Bertil Korling, honorary vice consul. Bins rel Dec. 11, 1941; state of war declared by Hungary ec. 1 Stanley T. Olafson, vice consul (honorary). Steingrimur O. Thorlaksson, vice consul (honorary). MagnusV. Magnusson, consul. Arni Helgason, consul. Stefan Einarsson, vice consul. Helgi P. Briem, consul general. Richard Beck, vice consul. Bardi Skulason, vice consul. Kolbeinn S. Thordarson, vice consul (honorary). The Legation of Iran at Washington has charge of Iranian con-Pl interests in the United States, except in the State of New ork. Hussein Navab, consul general. Ali Jawdat al-Ayoubi, consul general. Matthew Murphy, consul. Garth Healy, consul. Joseph D. Brennan, consul. Leo Thomas McCauley, consul general. ' Timothy J. Horan, consul. Patrick Hughes, vice consul. Frank Biggar, vice consul. The Embassy of Italy has charge of Italian consular interests in the United States. 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). Alfred Bilmanis, consul general. Edward ‘W. Hunter, consul (honorary). August Edward Pradillo, consul (honorary). John Hemphill, consul (honorary). Ricardo Ramon Pesquera, vice consul (honorary). Edouard A. Ghorra, acting consul general. Edouard A. Ghorra, consul. Ramiz Shamma, consul. Emile Nassim Mittar, vice consul. Kelsey L. Pharr, consul (honorary). Richard E. Westbrooks, consul (honorary). J. A. Hardin, consul (honorary). Frederick A. Price, consul general. Roland H. Cooper, vice consul. Miss Carolyn V. Johnson, vice consul (honorary). Mack H. Hanna, Jr., consul (honorary). Julius J. Bielskis, honorary consul. Petras Dauzvardis, consul. Anthony Oswald Shallna, honorary consul. Jonas Budrys, consul general. Vytautas StaSinskas, vice consul. Bugene Huss, honorary consul. Cornelius Jacoby, consul (honorary). Foreign Consular Officers in the United States LUXEMBOURG—MEZXICO State and residence LUXEMBOURG—continued Illinois: Chieago. . . ch. wane sue Minnesota: Minneapolis__.__..______.__ New York: New York City-....-._.__. MEXICO Arizona: Douglas as Bm Rape ’ Sacramento. .....CSUL oi San Bernardino....._.._..._ SanDieco. .._..__--_-uc San Francisco. ......-3-C.. Canal Zone: Colon, Panama. __________ Colorado: Denver... i... ....l.. District of Columbia: Washington. ____ Florida: Miami oie Pensacola... ....... 5s Illinois: Chicago. ....... ol oto Lae Kentucky: Louisville..._.._.__1.0t -Louisiana: New Orleans_____.__________ Massachusetts: Boston_..__________.____ Michigan: Detroit... ono Missouri: Kansas City-._______________ St. Louls Ao b0szoJosie i New Mexico: Albuquerque. _.__._____ New York: Buffalo... _ZZli3 20.0. New York City. _.......... Objo: Cleveland... ._c_ oi dosiiion Oklahoma: Oklahoma City. ._._____.____ Name, rank, and jurisdiction . John Marsch, honorary consul general. William Capesius, honorary vice consul. , consul. Othon Raths, vice consul (honorary). , consul general. Corneille Staudt, honorary consul. Arturo M. Elias, consul. Morelos Gonzalez, vice consul. Fernando Rueda, vice consul. , consul, José Marfa Arredondo, vice consul. Francisco Torres Perez, consul. Julian Cruz Pefia, consul. Alejandro Elias Cass, vice consul. Angel Tellez y Pardo Bazan, consul. José Maria Gutiérrez, consul. Ignacio A. Pesqueira, vice consul. Rodolfo Salazar Reyes, consul. Eugenio V. Pesqueira, vice consul. Vicente Peralta Coronel, consul general. Manuel Aguilar, consul. Roberto S. Urrea, consul. Ernesto A. Romero, vice consul. Santiago A. Campbell, vice consul. Ernesto E. Cota, vice consul. Luis Witter Marin, vice consul. Adolfo de la Huerta, Jr., honorary vice consul. Bernardo Blanco, consul. Edmundo Gonzalez, consul. Felix Ibo Téllez, consul. Carlos F. Carranco, consul. Alfredo Ellias Calles, consul. Eugenio Aza, consul. Alberto Andrade Gonzalez, viee consul. Raul Reyes Spindola, vice consul. Mrs. Maxima Ruiz de Garrido, vice consul. Silvio Salazar, honorary consul. Jorge Navarro, vice consul. Juan Manuel Salazar, honorary vice consul. Federico Gutierrez Pastor, consul. Adolfo de la Huerta, consul general. Manuel Rodriguez de San Miguel, vice consul. Fausto Hernandez Ajuria, vice consul. Fausto Madrid, vice consul. , consul. Salvador Aguayo, vice consul. Vicente Ruesga, honorary vice consul. Alejandro V. Martinez, consul general. Emilio Almada, consul. Mariano Gomez Cardenas, consul. J. de Jesus Camarena, vice consul. Gabriel G. Romo, honorary consul. Rafael Jiménez Castro, consul. José Alabarda Ortega, vice consul. Charles V. Silliman, honorary consul. Claudio J. Gloria, honorary consul. Roy Davis, vice consul (honorary). Napoleon Alcocer Mazatéin, consul. Servando Alzati, vice consul. Gonzalo Obregon, consul. Luis Fernindez McGregor, consul. Eugenio V. Pesqueira, vice consul. , consul. José Izurieta Roman, vice consul. Leon L. Lancaster, honorary consul , consul general. Juan E. Richer, consul. Joaquin Gudino Flores, consul. Rafael Nieto, consul. Julian Saenz Hinojosa, consul. Carlos Gutierrez Macias, consul. Miss Francisca Celis, vice consul. Luis G. Ibarguen, vice consul. Robert Torcuato Marcor, honorary vice consul. Ricardo B. Perez, honorary consul. José Rivas Rodriguez, honorary vice consul Joel S. Quifiones, consul. 506 Congressional Directory MEXICO—NETHERLANDS State and residence MEXICO—continued Oregon: Portland... it sons Pennsylvania: Philadelphia___.__.______ Pittsburgh. wo oon. Philippine Islands: Manila_____...____ Puerto Rico; _._. SanJuan..__.:.____ Rhode Island: Providence... _...._.____ Texas: Alpes: Jl oC ty conn2% ANSE ea a Brownsville. i-o. cso Corpus: Christi 2... ...-. 10 LE RSSR Se SE Eagle Pass. i =i iia 30 LE 2 IS RO Sea Le Zapa Utah: Salt TG City... ciodei on Virginia: Noriolk. . ..........oooiioin ‘Washington: Seattle... __._._.. Wisconsin: Milwaukee.............._._. MONACO Florida: Miami... _....... sdieiiis: New York: New York City... ooo... NETHERLANDS Alabama: Mobile............. PRR California: Los Angeles... .............. San Diego... oases liaine Canal Zone: Colon, Panama _..____.__. ristébal. . .outhsoiuLad Panama, Panga ER gh on Colorado: Denver... ......>=7ifcws District of Columbia: Wolson ahs Florida: Jacksonville... .. ........... TOPS. eee cen anilt anor Georgia: Savannah...00000 ...0 0 Hawaii; Honoluld. c.neer-cicanonnnons Jinois: Chicago... ...cc.eeaieialYiass Towa, Orange City... ccamiraiinnntis Louisiana: New Orleans... ..___..___. Maryland: Baltimore........-.......o.k Massachusetts: Boston... PATO. Michigan: DetroitLlc... Lisisss: Grand Rapids. ......-..... Minnesota: Minneapolis... .oocoooeeoo Missouri: Kansas City o-oo. St. Moule. oo aii oor -Name, rank, and jurisdiction Victor Tafel M., honorary consul. Gustavo Ortiz Hernan, consul, Antun J. Guina, honorary consul. Alfredo Carmelo Casas, honorary consul. Manuel Pales, Jr., honorary consul. Edgar L. Burchell, honorary consul. Eduardo Prado, consul. Luis L. Duplan, consul. Enrique R. Ballesteros, consul. Lamberto H. Obregon, consul. Luis Perez Abreu, consul. Mario Romero Lopetigui, vice consul. Francisco Polin Tapia, consul. Edmundo F. Cota, vice consul. , consul. Esteban Walker Jacquier, vice consul. Raul Michel, consul general. Cosme Hinojosa, Jr., consul. Elias Colunga, consul. Ernesto Perez Vargas, consul. Mrs. Elisena Espinosa Triana, vice consul, Jack Danciger,shonorary consul. Angel Cano del Castillo, consul. Adolfo G. Dominguez, consul. Javier Osornio Camarena, consul. Rodolfo Rubio Rojo, consul. Carlos Muro Astnsulo, consul. Ricardo Garcia, consul, Benjamin C. Trevifio, vice consul. Lauro Izaguirre, consul. Enrique A. Gonzales, consul general. Carlos A. Calderon Garcia, consul general. Carlos Palacios Roji, consul. Ernesto Zorilla Herrera, consul. Reynaldo Jauregui Serrano, consul. Rafael San Miguel, honorary consul. Carlos Grimm, consul. Joseph Claireborne Davis, honorary consul. John P. Hausman, honorary consul. E. P. Kirby Hade, honorary consul. Harvey Carl Wheeler, consul (honorary). ‘Paul Fuller, consul general (honorary). Paul A. Boulo, vice consul (honorary). A. Hartog, consul (honorary). A. B. van Leer, vice consul (honorary). F. A. van Woerden, consul general. L. E. M. Van Rijckevorsel, consul. E. F. R. de Lanoy, consul (honorary). J. Steenbergen, consul (honorary). G. C.D. Hooft Graafland, vice consul. R. Rijkens, vice consul. Julio A. Salas, consul (honorary). . Sasso, consul general (honorary). Allen Redeker, vice consul (honorary). G. E. Mellema, acting vice consul. A. C. W. Bosman, vice consul (honorary). Th. M. Vanderstempel, consul (honorary). Roy W. Masters, vice consul (honorary). H. Hastings, vice consul (honorary). C. A. Mackintosh, consul (honorary). J. W. Eindhoven von Twilhardt, vice consul( honorary): J. A. Schuurman, consul general. A. P. van der Burch, consul (honorary). T. E. Klay, vice consul (honorary). , consul general. 0. A. Lundeen, vice consul (honorary). L. Bisschop, consul (honorary). T. K. Hebert, consul (honorary). William G. Bryant, consul (honorary). Jacob Steketee, consul (honorary). John Steketee, vice consul (honorary). L. C. Wilten, consul (honorary). D. Baars; vice consul (honorary). William A. Hannon, consul (honorary)a Fred C. Eberle, consul (honorary). Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 507 NETHERLANDS—NORWAY State and residence NETHERLANDS—continued New Jersey: Paterson... cooocoao.. New York: New York City..._-..-.__. Ohio:iCleveland_ >. _._..licitens Oregon: Portland fusciaotis . Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__._________ Pittsburgh... =o 0. Philippine Islands: Cebu..__.__...____ Holo. eooioiiu Samoa (American Samoa): Wellington, New Zealand. South Carolina: Charleston. __.....___. Texas: Corpus .....ovesas Christi. nace Houston... etiiogoyTals Port Arthur io.a aant Utah: Salt Lake:City....... cco 2.) Virginia: Newport News_.___._.__._.___ NOrIOlk ai vn aE Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie______ Washington: Seattle... .occccoaeao.. NICARAGUA California: Long Beach. _______________ Los Angelest i Lilliol Sacramento... CT Coc tio San Diego Jou uals.igad San Francisco... ...... i. Canal Zone: Cristobal...2. oa Panam§, Panama_________ District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Miami anor or adios Mingign Chiedge tala Louisiana: New Orleans_______________ Michigan: Delroit i... Ji0iios C5 Missouri::St. Loals.... luo.saeco ss New York: a Tok City. ._.Uruns Philippine Islands: Manila___..________ Puerto Rico: San Juan........L 0 Texas: Brownsville. Co. 0 0 .._.L._ Corpus:iChristl «cc. 30 EEN SE ea ae Galveston... ATI Ullal U3 San ANtORIO. «vommmm dk NORWAY Alabama:>Moeblle... loinloi 058 Alaska: Juneaw. J 5 ooo. Alii 3 California: Los Angelesand San Pedro-- San Diego. 100 20-000000 San Francisco... =. -...... Florida: Jacksonville...00 00 4 Key: West ien) oA fbn00) SH en ag en ak BR RA Hawaii: Honolulu. c onthesi = .oc. Hlinois:. Chicago: iversonae oo Name, rank, and jurisdiction P. Hofstra, vice consul. T. Elink Schuurman, consul general. G. R. G. van Swinderen, consul E. V. E. Teixeira de Mattos, consul H. Crommelin, vice consul. J. C. C. Greger, vice consul (honorary). J. W. van den Bosch, consul (honorary) George Powell, vice consul (honorary). . J. Groenendall, consul (honorary). J.H. PF. Veltman, consul honorary). Guy Walford, vice consul (honorary). E. J. Lacey Phillips, acting vice consul (honorary). H. Bos, consul general. 0. F. Bravo, vice consul (honorary). Jaime Salicrup Annexy, vice consul (honorary). Waldemar F. Lee, consul (honorary). M. F. Vigeveno, consul. Lionel K. Legge, consul (honorary). Charles C. Henny, vice consul (honorary). E. Pincoffs, consul (honorary). A. van Wijk, vice consul (honorary). E. A. Bunge, consul (honorary). B. Tiemersma, vice consul (honorary). E. D. J. Luening, vice consul (honorary). P. Bisschop, consul (honorary). Emile A. Berne, consul (honorary). A. van der Spek, consul (honorary). Francisco Alvarado Granizo, consul (honorary). Julio C. Quintana V., consul. James A. Kenyon, consul (honorary). Julio César Juarez, consul (honorary). Carlos Alberto Morales, consul general. Luis Somoza, consul. Silvio F. Pellas, vice consul (honorary). Mario Talavera, consul (honorary). Mrs. Elsa de Pallais, consul general. 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. José Guerrero, honorary consul. J. M. O. Monasterio, consul (honorary). Juan José Martinéz Lacayo, consul general. 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 S. McCombs, consul (honorary). Joaquin Elizondo, vice consul. Robert L. O’Brien, honorary consul. Alonso S. Perales, consul general (honorary). Thomas Alden Provence-vice consul (honorary). Herbert Lionel Faulkner, vice consul (honorary). Erling Sundt Bent, consul. Roy E. Hegg, vice consul (honorary). Jgrgen Galbe, consul general. Alexander Berg, consul (honorary). Clifford Payne, acting consul (honorary). Alan Neave Dodd, consul (honorary). The Embassy of Norway has general supervision over consular matters throughout the United States. Jason Curry Outler, vice consul (honorary). Charles Sigsbee Lowe, vice consul (honorary). John A. Merritt, Jr., acting vice consul (honorary). Barton Hewitt Smith, vice consul (honorary). Reidar Arnljot Trosdal, vice consul (honorary). J. J. McQuillan, acting vice consul. Victor Cotta Schoenberg, consul (honorary). Sigurd Maseng, consul. Wilhelm Fegth, vice consul. 508 Congressional Directory State and residence NORWAY—continued Jowa: Decorah. noo al Louisiana: New Orleans. ______.__.___.. Maine: Portland... 2202 10) Maryland: Baltimore...i& ..._ Massachusetts: Boston._.______.______. Michigan: Detroit__..____ RRA EEAAEN 0 Minnesota: Minneapolis. ....._.._.____ Mississippi: Gulfport........2.LL aio Missouri: St.-Louis... c.00 0 L0iT00 Montana: Lewistown_ ____.._._........ New York: Albany...ol otolii New York City... Niagara Falls... ci 1) North Carolina: Wilmington___________ North'Dakota: Fargo...13 LL 2 Ohio; Cleveland...oil sii. :o Oregon: Portland... oi Ul...000 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. ___________ Philippine Islands: om IPAS Puerto Rico: San Juan... .........._. South Carolina: Charleston Wish: Salt. lake City...= =: Virginia: Newport News_..___________. Norfolle........... cnioniily Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie.._____ Washington: Seattlec i. i ora i. ‘Wisconsin: Milwaukee... __.__________ Mobile... digsoins Jhald San Diego...cain uid San Franeisco.......o.ol Bon Yost. aa District of Columbia: Washington_____ Florida: Miamil oor co. Tual os 4} Georgia: Atlanta... .....i0% Minois; Chicago... .....ogsaaaule Massachusetts: Boston______ FARR fa Michigan: Detroit. cool di ooo a Missouri; Kansas City. -.o.oo uo NORWAY—PANAMA Name, rank, and jurisdiction Trond Stabo, vice consul (honorary). Walter Frederick Jahncke, consul (honorary). Einar Ulstrup, vice consul (honorary). Seneca Arthur Paul, vice consul (honorary). Joel M. Cloud, consul (honorary). .Oluf Tostrup, vice consul. Bjarne Ursin, consul (honorary). Carl Bromstad Moe, vice consul (honorary). Reidar Solum, consul. Jacob Stefferud, vice consul (honorary). Olus John Dedeaux, vice consul (honorary). Mrs. Helen D. Sverdrup, acting vice consul (honorary). Oscar M. Ulsaker, vice consul (honorary). Donald G. Kibbey, vice consul (honorary). Rolf Asbjorn Christensen, consul general. Knut Lykke, consul. Paul Grude Koht, vice consul. Elovius Mangor, vice consul. Olaf Tellefsen, vice consul. Knut Thommessen, vice consul. Bjarne Klaussen, vice consul (honorary). William Gillies Broadfoot, vice consul (honorary). Albert Idan Johnson, vice consul (honorary). Joseph Chester Calhoun, vice consul (honorary). Emil P. Slovarp, vice consul (honorary). Mathias Moe, consul (honorary). Guy Walford, vice consul (honorary). Edwin James Lacey Phillips, vice consul (honorary). Alf Welhaven, acting consul. Sven Hurum, vice consul (honorary). Edward Alexander Lee, consul (honorary). Fredrik Richards, Jr., acting vice consul (honorary). Niels Oliver Monserud, vice consul (honorary). John W. Focke, vice consul (honorary). Samuel A. Dunlap, vice consul (honorary) Timothy Joseph O’Halloran, vice consul (honorary). Nels Mettome, vice consul (honorary). ; Charles Edwin Davis, acting vice consul (honorary). Anders Williams, consul (honorary). Carl Gustav Thiele, consul (honorary). Christen Andersen Stang, consul (honorary). George Bernhardt Skogmo, vice consul (honorary). Clyde E. Posey, honorary consul. Tomas Rodrigo Arias, honorary consul. Raul Espinosa, honorary consul. Gonzalo Lopez, consul. Julio Alvarado, vice consul (honorary). 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., consul. Juan B. Chevalier, honorary consul. Eric George Barham, consul (honorary). Alberto Aleman, consul general. Pedro Galindo, vice consul. Julio de Diego, vice consul (honorary). Carlos J. Garay, honorary consul. Manuel Felipe Rodriguez, consul general. F. M. Traynor, honorary consul. John Ashley Jones, consul (honorary). Enrique Alberto Arias, honorary consul. John Rider Wallis, consul (honorary). Rodolfo Estripeaut, Jr., consul general. Dario Felix Ballina, honorary vice consul. José Ramon Martinelli, honorary consul. William F. Volmerhaus, vice consul (honorary). Miguel Antonio Corro, honorary vice consul. Luis F. Cardarelli, consul (honorary). Louis James Rosenberg, consul (honorary). Gabriel Guizado, honorary consul. Joseph 8S. Ergas, honorary consul. Ernesto de la Ossa, consul. Roberto de la Guardia, consul general. Guillermo Fabrega, vice consul. Edwin L. Jones, honorary consul. Hilton H. Smith, vice consul. L. W. Hartman, consul (honorary). Foreign Consular Officers in the United States State and residence PANAMA—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia.______.____ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico: Aguadillg=_ => = =n Mayagillez. aso Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie. _____ Washington: Seattle PARAGUAY Canal Zone: Cristébal......... ........ Florida: Miami oi iain Minols; Chicago or oor ve i ie Louisiana: New Orleans. ______________ Maryland: Baltimore...ounza- vio Missouri: Bo 8 87 IN Se Ohio:-Cncinnati tesmls Pua re Oregon: Portland. cot a oe Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Texas: Susan, PERSIA (See Iran) PERU California: Los Angeles. __._.. o_o... San Francisco. .....c..o2._. Canal Zone: Cristobal. =...oo 7 Florida: Miami oor. eas Hawall: Honolua...iia oc THinels: Chicago. 0 07 eer Louisiana: New Orleans_ ______________ Maryland: Baltimore. . .............._. Massachusetis: Boston... i= ..... Michigan: Detroit...ae. i New York: New York City_...._._____ Oregon: Portlandia ois oe iit or Pennsylvania; Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila Puerto Rico: Mayagliez_-___..__.______ San Juan. oo cveroiy Texas, Houston 2.0 "0 oc 0 2 Soo = Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie.______ Washington: Seattle... i oc 20 °C POLAND Hlinelsy Chicago... = havinr Michigans Detrolt. oo ov. > vars New York: New York City Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh PORTUGAL California: San Francisco Florida: Tampa PANAMA—PORTUGAL Name, rank, and jurisdiction Carlos Berguido, Jr., consul (honorary). Carlos Berguido, honorary vice consul. . Grimm, honorary consul. Jorge Silva y Tapia, consul (honorary). Enrique Gomez, honorary vice consul. Edelmiro Huertas Zayas, honorary consul. Fernando Rodriguez Meléndez, honorary consul. Miguel Gomez Hugeunin, honorary consul. Victores Prieto, honorary consul. R. L. O’Brien, consul (honorary). S. W. Heald, consul (honorary). Rolando J ulio de Leon, honorary consul. R. W. Weiss, honorary vice consul. 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. J. E. Yonge, consul (honorary). Eugene Zemans, honorary vice consul. A. E. Pradillo, consul (honorary). Thomas E. Barrett, Jr., consul (honorary). F. L. Phillips, vice consul (honorary). Charles L. Lippert, consul (honorary). ———, consul general. Edmund Dill Scotti, consul (honorary). Irwin F. Westheimer, vice consul (honorary). Howard L. White, honorary consul. Henry P. Pilgert, honorary consul. Juan Pedretti, honorary vice consul. Manuel Condra Alfaro, honorary vice consul, John D. Hudson, honorary consul Felipe Rotalde, consul. José Francisco Mariategui, consul general. Enrique Laroza, consul. José Luis de Cossio, vice consul. Pedro Silva Arrieta, consul. Alberto Perez Saez, consul general. Alejandro Guinassi, consul. L. A. R. Gaspar, honorary consul. Federico Elguera, consul general. Oscar Freyre, consul general. Carlos A. Farje, consul. Adhemar Montagne, consul general. Ernesto Balarezo Pinillos, honorary consul. Miguel Vega Leon, honorary consul. Juan Mendoza Almenara, consul general. José Varela Arias, consul general. Carlos A. Farje y Briugas, consul general. Carlos Pezet, consul. Antonio Melian y Pavia, honorary consul. Guillermo H. Moscoso, honorary consul. Antonio Franco Guerra, honorary consul. Clarence A. Miller, honorary consul. George Levi, consul (honorary). Eduardo Espantoso, consul. Stefan Rogozinski, acting consul general. Olgierd Langer, acting consul. Eugene Rozwadowski, acting consul general. Roman Kwiecien, acting consul. José da Rocha Prista, consul. G. Armas do Amaral, vice consul (honorary). Leo Francis Pallardy, vice consul (honorary). 78349°—T79—2—1st ed. 34 510 Congressional Directory State and residence PORTUGAL—continued Maryland: Baltimore. ...cooeaeenoaon Massachusetts: Boston... ...-..o-enu-- Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Philippine Islands: Manila____________ Puerto Rico: San'Juan.......ceeveeiea-Pexas;, Galveston. . ... ivan awmmmsnmmns: SALVADOR (See El Salvador) SIAM (THAILAND) Massachusetts: Boston____.__________._._ New York: New York... oo... SPAIN Cangl Zone: Cristébal __... 2.0... District of Columbia: Washington._.____ Florida: Jacksonville... ..........._. JIlinoisy Chicago... ........clevaemnsias Louisiana: New Orleans... _...._._.___ Missouri: St, Youis. ._... -. Fa. New York: New York City........_.___ Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Philippine Islands: Cebu... _....__._____ Puerto Rico: San Juan... ........ SWEDEN Alasks: Skagway. ........ ..lueceeades California: Los Angeles__.__________.__. San PDlego.s ion daa San Franeisco......oeanaioe Canal Zone: Colon, Panama._.___.______ Panamé4, Panama_____ hes Florida: Jacksonville. ooo ieee Hawaii: Bonolulu...... coi-ii 200 Hlinols: Chieago......Cosatseeainamaiias Louisiana: New Orleans. _______._._._.___ Maryland; Baltimore... .....vy: .: Massachusetts: Boston__.___.____._____ MiehiganxPDetrolt. occascon on Minnesota: Minneapolis_______________ Missouri: Kansas fot City... oo Nebraska: Omaha 2... oo o-oo PORTUGAL—SWEDEN Name, rank, and jurisdiction Alberto Alves de Aratjo, consul (honorary). Luiz da Costa Carvalho, consul (honorary). Jodo Francisco dos Santos, Jr., vice consul (honorary). Adelbert W. Mears, vice consul (honorary). Ruy da Fonseca e Sousa Camoes Teixeira Guerra, acting consul. Manuel Caetano-Pereira, vice consul (honorary). Vasco Antunes Villela, consul (honorary). José Manuel da Silva Bettencourt Ferreira, consul general. José Calvet de Magalhaes, deputy consul. Camilo Camara, consul (honorary). Angelo da Costa Carvalho, consul (honorary). Carlos Maria da Luz Nunes, vice consul (honorary). 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. Arthur Messenger Beale, consul (honorary). Charles W. Atwater, consul general (honorary). » J. Llorca Marty, honorary vice consul. Francisco de Amat y Torres, consul. Angel Sanz Briz, consul. Pedro Calonge Garcia, honorary vice consul. Tom4s Alberto Mateos, honorary vice consul. Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul. Manuel Martin Gonzalez, consul. José Maria Garay y Garay, consul. Julio Altabés Yus, vice consul (honorary). José Alvarez Hernandez, vice consul (honorary). Miguel Espinos y Bosch, consul general. José Gimeno Aznar, consul. José Pérez del Arco y Rodriguez, consul. Enrique Albela y Ande, consul. Silviano Cermefio, honorary consul. Mariano Amoedo Galarmendi, consul general. Mariano Sanz Briz, vice consul. José Aragones y Vila, consul. Paul Jorge Verduzco Hill, honorary vice consul. John Wesley Dolby, honorary vice consul. Edward Anton Rasmusson, vice consul (honorary). Walter G. Danielson, vice consul (honorary). John Waldo Malmberg, vice consul (honorary). Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, consul general. Carl Ake Malmaeus, vice consul. Carl Otto von Essen, vice consul. Julio Abraham Salas, vice consul (honorary). Hans Vilhelm Axel Elliott, consul (honorary). Carl Axel Harald Janson, vice consul (honorary). Richard Henrik Laftman, vice consul (honorary). Gustav Wilhelm Olson, vice consul (honorary). Gosta Oldenburg, consul general. Bjorn Axel Eyvind Bratt, vice consul. Oscar Julius Bertilson, vice consul. Gustaf Bernhard Anderson, vice consul (honorary). George Plant, vice consul (honorary). Edgar T. Fell, vice consul (honorary). William Otis T'ydings, acting vice consul (honorary). Albert Olof Wilson, vice consul (honorary). Carl Berglund, vice consul (honorary). Carl Fredrik Hellstrom, consul. Ingvar Anders Harald Crauers, acting consul. A. Hawkinson, vice consul (honorary). Axel Carl Richard Swenson, vice consul (honorary). Carl Alfred Okerlind, vice consul (honorary). Johan Martin Kasentgren, consul general. August Herman von Hartmansdorft, consul. Jens Henrik Peder Arnold Malling, vice consul. Stig Olof Deneus, vice consul. A { Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States 511 State and residence SWEDEN—continued Ohio: Cleveland... rename Oregon: Portland. 0: co atv te C2 Pennsylvania: Philadelphia____________ Pittsburgh.2 00% oF Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto Rico: x2 Ponce...i Texas: Galveston...=. c-coi Virginia: Norfolk... o.oo loot Virgin Islands: Charlotte Amalie.._____ Washington: Seattle... to _......cfC SWITZERLAND California: Los Angeles. _______ ooo... San Francisco. ......cnieae Colorado: Denver-......o. .o.od..dcuf District of Columbia: Washington.____ Mlinois:'Chieagh. Lo.eal ian Louisiana: New Orleans_.__.__________ Maryland: Baltimore. ............... Massachusetts: Boston... .____.____ Missouri: St.Louis... . io oe cccn New York: Buffalo... ooo... New York City...-oc.ccua-Ohio: Cincinnati ooo oc... Cleveland... ..._..... Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Pittsburgh 4....co....0 Philippine Islands: Manila. ___________ Puerto Rico; SanJuan................. Utah: Salt Take Clty... co . ...._.& VirginiIslands. .. oo. .c oo ivan Washington: Seattle... ..ccucarncianna SYRIA District of Columbia: Washington.____ TURKEY Tinois: Chicago =: i occ i. on hE UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA New York: New York City... ..-_____ UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS California: Tos Angeles. ............... an Francisco. ...—-.aneeics URUGUAY California: Loos Angeles. ..ccccoeeeaooo San Francisco... .---acne-saes TinoiS: Chicago...an nares io Louisiana: New Orleans... ______________ Massachusetts: Boston. .....ceeoao.. New York: Buffalo... -. ..__.i. ~i. New York City.....co...... Oregon: Portland o-oo.ols SWEDEN—URUGUAY Name, rank, and jurisdiction Einar G. Carlson, vice consul (honorary). Axel Nils Herman Wide, vice consul (honorary). Maurice Hogeland, vice consul (honorary). Henry Arvidson Bergstrom, vice consul (honorary). Helge A. Janson, consul (honorary). Luis Alberto Ferre, vice consul (honorary). Robert Richard Prann, consul (honorary). Herman Arthur Bornefeld, vice consul (honorary). Anders Williams, acting vice consul (honorary). Herbert Ernest Lockhart, consul (honorary). Yngve Carl Ivar Lundequist, vice consul (honorary). Otto Wartenweiler, honorary consul. Paul Frossard, consul general. . 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. Verner Tobler, in charge of consulate. J. F. Schneider, consular agent (honorary). Georges Henri Barrel, consular agent (honorary) Alfred Aigler, honorary consul. Robert Kuoch, consular agent (honorary). Victor Nef, consul general. Alphonse Biber, in charge of consulate. Karl Anton Walder, consular agent (honorary). Maurice Rohrbach, in charge of consulate. ; Frederic Otto Henzi, consular agent (honorary). Oskar Schneider, consul. Victor Braegger, consular agent (honorary). J.G. Glauser, consular agent (honorary). The consulate general at New York has charge of Swiss consular matters in the Virgin Islands. Alfred Schaiiblin, acting consul. Husni A. Sawwaf, consul general. Berthold Singer, honorary consul general. Georges R. Farnum, honorary consul general. Cemil Vafi, consul general. Sadan Erman, vice consul. Robert Webster, acting consul general. Robert Webster, consul. Theodore Hewitson, vice consul. ; Harold Langmead Taylor Taswell, vice consul, Evgeni Pavlovich Tumantzef, vice consul. Mikhail Sergeevich Vavilov, consul general. Stepan Zakharovich Apresian, vice consul. Evgueni Dmitrievitech Kisselev, consul general, a Pavel Petrovich Mikhailov, vice consul. Vasili Andreevich Kazanev, vice consul. Mikhail Ivanovich Sorokin, vice consul. Carlos Barbé, honorary consul. Eduardo Dieste, consul. Humberto Viglione, honorary vice consul. W. R. Lovett, honorary consul. Roberto Cosio, consul. Vicente J. Vidal, vice consul (honorary). Rodolfo Carlos Lebret, consul (honorary). Juan José Calandria, honorary consul. William A. Mossman, consul (honorary) Eduardo Hector Armanino, honorary vice consul. ” Leon L. Lancaster, vice consul (honorary). Santiago Rivas, Jr., acting consul general. Santiago Rivas, Jr., consul. Robert Richling, consul. John H. Lothrop, vice consul (honorary). 512 Congressional Directory State and residence URUGUAY—continued Pennsylvania: Philadelphia__.__________ Puerto Rico: San Juan... co. 20. Texas: CalVesSton. oc. Jobe an ivan tines Virginia: Norfolk. 2... ..oceionaid Washington: Seattle oo... .oioiuan... VENEZUELA Alabama: Mobile... cova. annenane California: "Los .. _.. a: Angeles... San Francisco... ci: Canal Zone: Colon, Panama Florida: Miami...Jee silo HNlinoiss Chicago: 7.25.0 ise iin ale Louisiana: New Orleans__ _.____.______ Maryland: Baltimore.......cooneenen.. New York: New York City. ......___ Pennsylvania: Bethlehem ______________ Philadelphia... _ Philippine Islands: Manila_____________ Puerto'Rico; San'Juan. ao olf Texas: Houston_______ SA Sin Sia Se YUGOSLAVIA Hlinois: Chicago. fi iiel 1 catan Fh Haut Louisiana: New Orleans. ______________ Edmundo Novoa, consul. Manuel Gomez Lopez, consul (honorary). Girdler Branch Fitch, honorary consul. Enrique Schroeder, vice consul (honorary). E. J. Rudgard Wigg, vice consul (honorary). Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul. Rafael Roman Dévila, consul. 4 V. M. Avendafio Losada, consul. Pedro Felipe Rojas, consul general. Carlos Alberto Arismendi, honorary vice general. Herman Marquez Iragorry, consul general. Roberto Machado Morales, consul general. José Gil Borges, vice consul. Gustavo Adolfo Ahrensburg Ernst, honorary consul. Ramon Font Carrera, consul general. Alfonso Goday Chalbaud, vice consul. Asdrubal Urdaneta, consul. Angel R. Bustillos, consul general. Nicolas Veloz, honorary vice consul. Manuel Vicente Rodriguez Llamosas, honorary vice consul. Eduardo A. Perez, honorary consul. Luis A. Lopez Mendez, honorary consul. Alberto P. Defino, honorary consul. Jorge A. Odreman, consul general. William M. Ryan, honorary consul. Bladimir Vukmirovie, consul general. Basile Rusovic, honorary consul. Oscar Gavrilovich, acting consul general. Oscar Gavrilovich, consul. James Mally, honorary consul. Kosto Unkovich, honorary consul. | ———— URUGUAY—YUGOSLAVIA Name, rank, and jurisdiction a FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES [ This Foreign Service section is abridged to show only ranking diplomatic and consular officers at each post. For complete information consult the Foreign Service List, published four times yearly, January 1, April 1, July 1, and October 1, by the Department of State (U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C.)] ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS (C)—Consulate. (L)—Legation. (CA)—Consular agency. (M)—Mission. (CG)—Consulate general. (VC)—Vice consulate. . (E)—Embassy. (MD)—Office of the maritime delegate. AFGHANISTAN—BOLIVIA . Post Name and rank AFGHANISTAN Rabaul (lL). a a Ely E. Palmer, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-3 tentiary. ALBANIA Tiras (MD). Gail lL sill Joseph E. Jacobs, Foreign Service officer. ARGENTINA Buenos Aires (BY: 2. , Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. . Edward L. Reed, counselor of embassy. Howard H. Tewksbury, commercial attaché. Paul C. Squire, consul general; first secretary. AUSTRALIA Canberra, Australian Capital Terri-Nelson T. Johnson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-tory (L). potentiary. John R. Minter, counselor of legation. Adelaide, South Australia (C)_______.__ Erik W. Magnuson, consul. Brisbane, Queensland (C)._____._._.___.. Joseph P. Ragland, consul. Melbourne, Victoria (C).____......... Clarence J. Spiker, consul general. Perth, Western Australia (C)________._ Madson Turner, consul. Sydney, New South Wales (CQ) ....._. Charles H. Derry, consul. AUSTRIA Vienna (United States Mission) ________ John G. Erhardt, Foreign Service officer.! Cecil Wayne Gray, counselor. BELGIUM AND POSSESSIONS Belgium: Brussels (Bruxelles) (E) o_o... Charles Sawyer,2 Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. Jefferson Patterson, counselor of embassy. Leigh W. Hunt, commercial attaché. George Platt Waller,? first secretary and consul. AMWerp (CR). i rec avon rere James Hugh Keeley, Jr., consul general. Africa: Léopoldville, Belgian Congo (CG) __ Robert L. Buell, consul general. > BOLIVIA 100 BLL PSN le at Sanaa A eo Walter Thurston, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. Hector C. Adam, Jr., second secretary; vice consul. Cochabamba (Geen c aoa eo Douglas Henderson, vice consul. 1 With the rank of minister. 2 Assigned also to Luxembourg. 515 1 516 Congressional Directory Post 5 BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (EY a swsesneoress «eens. Victoria, Espirito Santo (VC) (T)_-Bahia (Sao Salvador), Bahia (C)_______ Bello Horizonte, Minas Geraes (C)__.__ Fortaleza, Ceard (C).. UL. uu 0l 02 Natal, Rio Grande do Norte (C)_._..-__ Pari (Belém), Para (OC) Manios, Amazonas (VC) (T)_.__-_-S40 Luiz, Maranhdo (CA) _________ Pernambuco (Recife), Pernambuco C). Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul (C)__. ino Grande, Rio Grande do Sul Santos, Sio Paulo (CY i a iy Sao Paulo, SaoiPaulo (CQ)... eee ea. Curitiba, Paran4 (VC) (Deiuinans BULGARIA Sofia (Soflya) earm (Mccainaman CANADA Ottawa, Ontario (B) ...c-.omeromesmmmm- Colgary, Alberta (CG). ......imnsinssmnm Edmonton, Alberta (C).....ceeceine.-. Fort William and Port Arthur, Ontario (©). Halifax, Nova Scotia (CQ) ........_____ Fredericton, New Brunswick{ VC). Hamilton, Ontario (C) Montreal, Quehee (CO). cnx cuomuonevin Niagara Falls, Ontario (C)evevmccnnan-a-Quebec, Quebec (C) Regina, Saskatchewan (C)_____________ St. John, New Brunswick (C)____._.___ St. Stephen, New Brunswick (C).._... Sarnia, Ontario (OC). .~.. 0. teancaan Toronto, Ontario (CG Vancouver, British Columbia (CQ)___. Victoria, British Columbia (C)__.._____ Windsor, Ontario 1 =i (Qo.i. Winnipeg, Manitoba (CG)-Kenora, Ontario (CA) CHILE Softiaro (BY ar rir neni mma aanaass Area (VOY iene ! Coneepeion (UC). .... cn vinuia-Punta Arenas (Magallanes) (VC)__ Antofagasta (OC) cs or eh, Valparaiso (OC). = oc eo Cruz Grande, Coquimbo (CA)_____ CHINA Chungking (BY... ucuccens-Seal Kunming (Yiinnanfu), Yunnan (CQG).. Shanshal (CRY... os Tihwa, Sinkiang (C)4.-...... cco... Consular offices in Japanese-occupied areas of China closed. COLOMBIA Bogota dE) de Barranquilla (C) Ne crm comms necc ance ———— Temporarily. BRAZIL—COLOMBIA Name and rank - Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Paul C. Daniels, counselor of embassy. Hiram A. Boucher, consul general; first secretary. Clarence C. Brooks, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Robert Bruce Harley, 8 vice consul. F. Ridgway Lineaweaver, consul. Jay Walker, consul. Coldwell S. Johnston, consul. Robert Jakes, 3d, vice consul. Randolph A. Kidder, consul. Robert Black, vice consul. Wiley T. Clay, consular agent. Donald W. Lamm, vice consul. Reginald S. Castleman, consul. Eugene C. Pfiffner, consular agent. Arthur G. Parsloe, vice consul. Cecil M .P .Cross, consul general. William Preston Rambo, vice consul. Maynard B. Barnes, Foreign Service officer. Ray Atherton, Ambassador Extraordinary and Ploaipoiontinry.: Lewis Clark, counselor of embassy; consul general. Charles W. Allen, vice consul. Robert B. Streeper, consul. Harvey T. Goodier, consul. Howard F. Withey, consul. Frederick C. Johnson, vice consul. Robert English, consul. North Winship, consul general. George M. Graves, consul. Bertel E. Kuniholm, consul. Walter S. Reineck, consul. Harry M. Donaldson, consul. George L. Brist, vice consul. Charles E. B. Payne, vice consul. Arthur C .Frost, consul general. Edwin F. Stanton, consul general. Troy L. Perkins, consul. Bernard Gotlieb, consul. Walter H. McKinney, consul general. Rupert H. Moore, consular agent. Claude G. Bowers, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Hugh Millard, counselor of embassy. John W. Bailey, Jr., consul general; first secretary. William B. Snidow, Jr., vice consul. Lee M. Hunsaker, vice consul. Thomas Edmund Burke, vice consul. Ellis A. Bonnet, consul. Rufus H. Lane, Jr., consul. Frank T. Rueter, consular agent. , Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Robert Lacy Smyth, counselor of embassy. William R. Langdon, consul general. Paul R. Josselyn, consul general. Leo D. Sturgeon, consul general. Robert S. Ward, consul. John C. Wiley, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Gerald A. Mokma, first secretary; consul. Leonard G. Dawson, consul. Temporary. Functions under the general supervision of the Embassy at Chungking. Foreign Service of the United States COLOMBIA—ETHIOPIA Post COLOMBIA—continued Cali (QC). SE, JIC Slli Ld Buenaventura (VC)... _____.__ Cartagena (CY (DY. LoL iiediaiiant Medellin (Qe oss cn oa COSTA RICA SamtJos8 (I) anon nese Goll (OA) te insistir Puntarenas (VC) (T) Quepos (CA)... iter Port Limon (CY (TY...tr coi a Habana (Bl). ao. da PC SOE 7% 014 1H 00 ERON Sh lt 1 Sr Sagua la Grande (CA)... Nuevifasi (CQ). ==... iol... Santiago de Cuba (O)..oceveeeenlll Manzanillo (CA)-oan CZECHOSLOVAKIA Praha (BB)... aie eave cata 2s DENMARK Copenhagen (Kobenhavn) (L)....____. Consulate General at Copenhagen closed. Greenland: Godthaabi (CY... oa DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Ciudad Bruiilo (BY. oo.co. Fos La Romana (CA)... .....-...1% ECUADOR Quito: (EY Xoo aie h aE Guayaquil (CO). anil cides 10H) Ra eaean SE Alexand@rin (OC). ...c.cuiania nasi ts Port Sid (CY. cceaennn-00 305 asl 00 Suez (CO). aoa ill saniaai EL SALVADOR San Salvador (Bye i. cn 242 ESTONIA Legation at Tallinn closed. . ETHIOPIA Addis Ababa 4 1) DS ie CERT Temporarily. Name and rank Howard A. Bowman, consul. George T. Lister,’ vice consul. William B. Randolph, vice consul. James S. Triolo, vice consul. Hallett Johnson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. Raleigh A. Gibson, first secretary; consul. James H. Logan, consular agent. John I. Copeland, vice consul. Kenneth W. Harding, consular agent. Hilton F. Wood, vice consul. R. Henry Norweb, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. James H. Wright, counselor of embassy. Albert F. Nufer, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Paul G. Minneman, agricultural attaché. George C. Howard, commercial attaché. Richard F. Boyce, consul general; first secretary Horace J. Dickinson, consul. Eugene E. Jova, consular agent. Gerald G. Jones, vice consul. Harry W. Story, vice consul. Raoul A. Bertot, consular agent. Laurence A. Steinhardt, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni-potentiary. Alfred W. Klieforth, counselor of embassy. Monnett B. Davis, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Arvid G. Holm, vice consul. Joseph F. McGurk, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary. George F. Scherer, first secretary; consul. Eugene J. Lieder, consular agent. Robert M. Scotten, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- tentiary. George P. Shaw, counselor of embassy. Joseph F. Burt, consul general. S. Pinkney Tuck, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. Cecil B. Lyon, first secretary; consul. Hooker A. Doolittle, consul general. Robert C. Coudray, vice consul. Wilfred V. MacDonald, vice consul. John F. Simmons Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. Felix Cole, appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Congressional Directory FINLAND—GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. Post FINLAND Helsinkd co oon ee ny FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS (France): PAR SACI is ar ain i nn Bordeaux QB) lois Cherbourg (GC). oo. ii lo Le Have (OC). viii nidanes Lyon (C) Marseille(CY: o-tioiofa neti Nice (C) Possessions: Algiers, Algeria (CQ) Brazzaville, French Equatorial Af- rica (CQ). Dakar, French West Africa (CG) ._._ Martinique, French West Indies(C). Nouméa, New Caledonia (C)_._..__._ Oran, Algeria (C) Toms, Society Islands, Oceania Tananarive, Madagascar (C)..__.. Tunis, Tanisia (CY... ices GERMANY Unconditional surrender of Germany effective May 8, 1945. For officers on duty in special office see Dp. 524. GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, AND INDIA Yondon CB) oo. 0 ls ahs Belfast, Northern Ireland (CG) ._..____ Birmingham; England (C).____________ Bradford, Bngland (CQ)... _-__. 2 Bristol, England (C)..». 100) 5-000 Cardiff, Wales (C) Edinburgh, Scotland (C)___._._..________ Glasgow, Scotland (GC)... = Hull, England (C) Liverpool, England (C)______.__________ Manchester, England (C)_________ %: Newcastle-on-Tyne, England (C) Plymouth, England (C) Southampton, England (C)___._________ Europe: Gibraltar (CY. ia. blceailialue Malta (CY 7. a India: New Delhi (MM)... oo. lizeing Bombay (C) Caleatta (CR)... co . dmmaninly Rarachi (EY. cool. oo oii ns Madras (Qe Other Asia: Consular offices in enemy-occupied possessions closed. Aden, Arabia (OC)... oi i Colombo, Ceylon (GC)... 8 With the honorary rank of Minister. 7 Not functioning. 8 With the rank of Minister. Name and rank Maxwell M. Hamilton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Benjamin M. Hulley, first secretary; consul. Jefferson Caffery, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Hugh 8. Fullerton, counselor; consul general. Daniel J. Reagan, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Harold L. Williamson, consul general. . Carlton Hurst, consul. James E. Parks, consul. Russell M. Brooks, consul. Herve J. IL’Heureux, consul general. Hartwell Johnson, vice consul. Miss Kathleen Molesworth, vice consul. Albert W. Scott, consul. James R. Wilkinson, consul general. William H. Christensen, vice consul. Edmund Osborne Barker, vice consul. David K. Newman, vice consul. Richard M. de Lambert, consul. Robert F. Fernald, consul. George Gregg Fuller, consu John G. Winant, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Waldemar J. Gallman, counselor of embassy.8 W. Perry George, counselor of embassy. Don OC. Bliss, Jr., commercial attaché. Harry C. Hawkins, economic counselor. Paul O. Nyhus, agricultural attaché. Raymond A. Hare, first secretary; consul. Quincy F. Roberts, consul. Samuel Sokobin, consul. Joseph G. Groeninger, consul. Roy W. Baker, consul. Henry O. Ramsey, consul. Charles Roy Nasmith, consul. Hugh H. Watson, consul general. John A. Embry, consul. C. Porter Kuykendall, consul general. George Alexander Armstrong, consul, Charles H. Heisler, consul. Fred H. Houck, vice consul. William H. Beck, consul general. C. Paul Fletcher, consul. George R. Merrell, commissioner.8 Howard Donovan,? consul general. Myrl S. Myers, consul general. Clarence BE. Macy, consul. Roy E. B. Bower, consul. Harlan B. Clark, consul. Calvin Hawley Oakes, consul. 9? Assigned also to Portuguese possessions in India, he Foreign Service of the United States GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—IRAQ ee _——- en A —L Post GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, AND INDIA—continued Africa: Accra, Gold Coast, West Africa (C). Lagos, Nigeria, West Africa (CG): Freetown, Sierra Leone (CA). Ms, Kenya, East Africa 1 Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa (CG). Fiji Islands: Suva, Fiji Islands (C): ceo. Newfoundland: St.John 8 (CO)... coins Other America: Antigua, Leeward Islands, British West Indies (C). Barbados, B. W. I. (C Belize, British Honduras (C)_..___ Georgetown British Guiana (C) (TD). Grenada, B. W. I. (C) Hamilton, Bermuda (CG)._.._______ Kingston, Jamaica, B. W. I. (C)___ Nassau N. P., Bahamas (C)_..___.. Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, B. W. I. (C)__ GREECE Athens(Athenal) (BB)... ...iccoo... Potrasi(Ohl on dol ssman a erly Salonika {C) ii dein naoninns ‘GUATEMALA Guatemala (BY...ee annnsny ool HAITI Port-au-Prince (BE)... FINO Ll Cap. Haitlen(CAY.__... co. Gonalves (CA). o.oo. aos HONDURAS Peguelgdpa (ELL J ul. Jr Jian La Ceiba CY UD) iii iniiioaconnase Puerto Cortes fC)... i. vasoenonsnieas RA OF.D Bae A an Ce HUNGARY Budapest (United States Mission).___. ICELAND Reykjavik (Ly. o.oo.oo a IRAN ehran (BB). acres CO) sr a 2015 Lo Ree SER ER IRAQ Baghdahi(l):.. o.oo oo BasralChaa or ois oan anaes Name and rank Thomas A. Hickok, consul. Andrew G. Lynch, consul. Christian K. Nielsen, consular agent. J. William Henry, vice consul. Willard Quincy Stanton, consul. Thomas S. Horn, consul. Mahlon Fay Perkins, consul general. David L. Gamon, vice consul. Samuel R. Thonipson, consul. Culver Gidden, vice consul. Albert A. Rabida, vice consul. Charles H. Whitaker, vice consul. Clay Merrell, vice consul. Edwin Carl Kemp, consul general. John H. E. McAndrews, vice consul. Claude H. Hall, Jr., consul. tmeoin MacVeagh, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- entiary Choa T, Steger, counselor of embassy; consul general. Bartley P. Gordon, consul. William M. Gwynn, consul general. Edwin Jackson Kyle, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Robert F. Woodward, first secretary. Chester H. Kimrey, vice consul. Orme Wilson, Ambassador Extraordinarty and Plenipotentiary. Curtis E. Hough, consular agent. J. William Woél, consular agent. John D. Erwin, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Edward Lowry Waggoner, vice consul. Francis C. Jordan, vice consul. Willis E. Walton, consular agent. H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld, United States representative.il Louis G. Dreyfus, Jr., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Harry E. Carlson, first secretary; consul. Wallace Murray, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary ys Ward, counselor of embassy. John D. Jernegan, vice consul (second secretary). Samuel G. Ebling, consul. ——— ——— Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipoten-tiary. F. Lester Sutton, vice consul. : 10 Functions under supervision of consulate general at Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa. 11 With the personal rank of minister. 520 Congressional Directory IRELAND (EIRE)—MEXICO Post IRELAND (EIRE) Dublin (Baile Atha Cliath) (L) ooo ITALY For officers on duty in special offices at Naples and Rome, see p. 524. Rome (Boma) _.c.oaionoi (BY... lenis Florence (Firenze) (OC)... .cceeeeaao.-Genoa (Genova) (CG)... ..caaiaita. MUan (CG)... cc cravesb ERD mad Naples CON). Sour a ool shih da a RI Palermo (CY... cisatin JAPANESE EMPIRE Unconditional surrender of Japan signed Sept. 1, 1945 (U. S. time). For officers on duty in special office at Tokio see p. 524. LATVIA Legation at Riga closed. LEBANON Belt (Le avai bads ann iar ens wma LIBERIA Monrovia (1)... oe menb nanan LIECHTENSTEIN Vaduz (CR). oman nia asininem LITHUANIA Legation at Kaunas closed. LUXEMBOURG Luzembourg (LY oi ia-oanniJol od MEXICO México, D. BoB)... unc anaawnn= Acapulco de Jufirez, Guerrero (VO). Agua Prieta, Sonora (C) Chihuahua, Chihuahua (C)._....__.____ Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua (C)._........ Durango, Durango (C).......-cneuiaa-. Guadalajara, Jalisco (C).....uocvnnennea- Manzanillo, Colima (VC) o_o... Guaymas, Sonora (C)...-...cconenaun. Matamoros, Tamaulipas (C)accceeeaa_-Mazatlan, Sinaloa (CC)... ceeeuinnnion Mérida, Yueastin (C)....7. .ocsmi-aaes = Mexicali, Baja California (C)_._._.___. Monterrey, Nuevo Leon (C)_...__._... Nogales, Sonora (C)....... hensecunnsns Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas (C)._...__. Piedras Negras, Coahuila (C)_.. Reynosa, Tamaulipas (C) San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosf (C)... Tampico, Tamaulipas (C)...coooooo___ Tijuana, Baja California (C)..coceae... Torreon, Coahuila {C)......c.neeneenn Veracruz, Veracruz (CO)... ...oac.... Tapachula, Chiapas (VC)._..._.... 12 A ceredited also to Syria. 18 Accredited also to Belgium. Name and rank David Gray, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Thomas McEnelly, consul general. Robert A. Tennant, consular agent. William A. Smale, consul. Cleveland B. McKnight, vice consul. Alexander C. Kirk, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. David McK. Key, counselor of embassy. Walter W. Orebaugh, consul. Lester L. Schnare, consul general. H. Coit MacLean, consul general. George L. Brandt, consul general. Alfred T. Nester, consul general. George Wadsworth,12 Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Lester A. Walton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary Charles Sawyer,13 ‘Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. George S. Messersmith, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni-potentiary. Raymond H. Geist, counselor of embassy. Thomas H. Lockett, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Merwin L. Bohan, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Maurice L. Stafford, consul general; first secretary. Manuel J. Codoner, vice consul. William Clarke Vyse, consul. John S. Calvert, consul. William P. Blocker, consul general. Earl Wilbert Eaton, vice consul. James E. Henderson, consul. Walter E. Kneeland, vice consul. Myron H. Schraud, vice consul. Cyril L. F. Thiel, consul. Stewart E. McMillin, consul. Stephen C. Worster, vice consul. John B. Ketcham, consul. Henry S. Waterman, consul general. Ben Zweig, vice consul. Frederick D. Hunt, vice consul. Gilbert R. Willson, consul. Henry GQ. Krausse, vice consul, Curtis C. Jordan, consul. Francis H. Styles, consul. Horatio Mooers, consul. Stanley G. Slavens, consul. Ilo C. Funk, consul. H. Claremont Moses, vice consul. Foreign Service of the United States MOROCCO—PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Post MOROCCO Tangler'(Tanger) (LL. oi. logan Casablanes (OC) ooons lg Rabat (C). i noe.aiid NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS Netherlands: * The Hague (’s Gravenhage) (E)___. Amsterdam (CO). iTi fo collin 0 Rotterdam (CY) cc. l sa. Possessions: Consular offices in enemy-occupied possessions closed. Curacao, West Indies (CQ) -____.__ Aruba NO) nut ai Paramaribo, Surinam (C)_._________ NEW ZEALAND Wellington (LY). ...ccovoasionoms-io Christchurch (CA)... ...... 0... Dunedin (CA) Auckland (GC). ©... Soil Eat NICARAGUA Managusi(B). o.ooiT Matagalpa (CA)... =... NORWAY Oslo (E). § MAT RTA FIR NT ES Consular offices in Norway closed. PALESTINE AND TRANS-JORDAN Jerusalem (CQ). oui. indoSUES td Panama (BY... coeoe isilnl Almirante CCA)... .onnviciiaiin Puerto Armuelles (CA) ____________ Colon ACY. intipm aaa PARAGUAY Asuncion (BY. 0. ii i irantill Lima (E). mmm mmm Arequipa (VO) i oi ninaiin.. 18 0roya (CAs oven nna sns Seas an Mollendo (CA)... ca. ibn lio Lit Salaverty (CA) o-oo cea at PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Manila (CG): o.oo. in bs Sheet37 14 With the rank of Minister. Name and rank Paul H. Alling, diplomatic agent and consul general. Charles W. Lewis, Jr., consul general. Maurice Pasquet, consul. Stanley K. Hornbeck, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-tentiary. J. Webb Benton, counselor of embassy. Jesse F. Van Wickel, commercial attaché. George J. Haering, first secretary; consul. Albert M. Doyle, consul general. Charles Gilbert, vice consul. Lynn W. Franklin, consul. Carl O. Hawthorne, vice consul. Lee R. Blohm, consul. Kenneth S. Patton, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni-potentiary. Prescott Childs, first secretary; consul. H. P. Bridge, consular agent. Harman Reeves, consular agent. John C. Fuess, consul. Fletcher Warren, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Harold D. Finley, first secretary; consul. John A. Willey, consular agent. Lithgow Osborne, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary Oras N. Nielsen, counselor of embassy; consul general. H. Lawrence Groves, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Winthrop S. Greene, first secretary; consul. Lowell C. Pinkerton, consul general. Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Walter J. Donnelly, counselor of embassy. Harry R. Lewis, consular agent. Lewis B. Tolman, consular agent. Arthur R. Williams, consul. Willard L. Beaulae, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary Leslie hb. Reed, consul general; first secretary. William D. Pawley, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Edward G. Trueblood, counselor of embassy. Julian C. Greenup, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. John J. Macdonald, first secretary; consul. Franklin Hawley, consul. Norman Duncan, consular agent. Felipe Ferrer M., consular agent. Jacob Reznik, consular agent. Paul P. Steintorf, consul general. 522 Congressional Directory POLAND—SWITZERLAND Post POLAND Warsaw (Warszawa) (E)__._......__.__ Consulate General at Warsaw closed. PORTUGAL AND POSSESSIONS Portugal: Lisbon (Lisboa) (E).....c..i....... Angra do Heroismo, Terceira, Azores . Funchal, Madeira (OC). ............. Horta, Fayal, Azores (MD) ________ Oporto( Porto) (C) ; Ponta Delgada, Sao Miguel (St. Michael), Azores (MD). Possessions: 15 Beira, Mozambique, Africa (C)16__ Lourenco Marques, Mozambique, Africa (CQ). Luanda, Angola Africa (C)_______. RUMANIA Bucharest (United States Mission)... __ SAUDI ARABIA, KINGDOM OF Ada)? dane. a ee Dhahran (C)a..coe rn eatioibniging ais SIAM Declaration of war against the United States declared null and void Aug. 16, Madrid (BE). casi al Barcelona (CQ)... coi ciawbenen BUbao(C)t rah Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Canary Islands (C). : Malaga (Coane coals sollvomilal San Sebastitn (CY. 20 = ee Seville (CY)... tosedirain J. lean Tenerife, Canary Islands (C) (T).._._. Nalencis (QQ)... C. _ ... _Jineaal A ABNEY En A SR DE i LUT] SWEDEN Stockholm (LY... ae let aoaiaut Goteborg). a MalmOi(C) 14 riST Sa Hilsingborg (CA)... 0 ia SWITZERLAND Bern (I)... Geneva (CY, or ZUrCh (CRY cis a di 15 See Bombay for consular officers who Name and rank Arthur Bliss Lane, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. Gerald Keith, counselor of embassy. C. Burke Elbrick, first secretary; consul. Herman B. Baruch, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. Edward S. Crocker, 2d, counselor of embassy. Charles E. Dickerson, Jr., first secretary; consul. Foster H. Kreis, vice consul. Renwick S. McNiece, American maritime delegate. William P. Robertson, American maritime delegate. Clifton R. Wharton, consul. Frederick van den Arend. consul. George K. Donald, consul general. Harold Sims, vice consul. Burton Y. Berry, Foreign Service officer. Col. William A. Eddy, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Parker T. Hart, vice consul. Norman Armour, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary. William W. Butterworth, Jr., counselor of embassy. Fayette J. Flexer, first secretary; consul. Richard Ford, consul general. Harry F. Hawley, consul. Arthur F. Tower, consul. Harold B. Quarton, consul general. Willard Galbraith, consul. John N. Hamlin, consul. Willis R. Etter, vice consul. Daniel V. Anderson, consul. Richard T. Smyth, vice consul. Herschel V. Johnson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Christian M. Ravndal, counselor of legation. Marcel E. Malige, commercial attaché. Sheldon Thomas, first secretary; consul. William W. Corcoran, consul. Benjamin Reath Riggs, consul. Frank F. Hass, consular agent. Leland Harrison, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary. J. Klahr Huddle, counselor of legation. George Tait, first secretary. John H. Madonne, consul (first secretary). Walter H. Sholes, consul general. Howard Elting, Jr., consul. Robert B. Macatee, consul general. are assigned also to Portuguese possessions in India. 16 Functions under supervision of consulate general at Louren¢o Marques. Foreign Service of the Unated States : 523 SYRIA—YUGOSLAVIA Post Name and rank SYRIA Pamescus (FL) ii caiman George Wadsworth,” Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- o.oo potentiary. James S. Moose, Jr., counselor of legation. TURKEY Ankara (BY B clos nen Bw C. Wilson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-iar Thelin S. Bursley, counselor of embassy. Edward B. Lawson, counselor of embassy for economic affairs. Earl L. Packer, first secretary. Istanbul (Constantinople) (CGQ)_______ Sam E. Woods, consul general. Temir (Smyrna) (CY... i. Ellis A.J ohnson, vice consul. UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA Pretoria, Transvaal (1)19 Gen. Thomas Holcomb, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Edward M. Groth, counselor of legation. Samuel H. Day,20 counselor of legation for economic affairs. Capetown, Cape Province (CG) _._____ H. Earle Russell, consul general. Durban, Natal (Cefnni E. Talbot Smith), consul. J ohannesburg, Transvaal (CQ): __...._ Thomas D. Bowman, consul general. Port Elizabeth, Cape Province (C) -.__ Frank Anderson Henry, consul, UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS MoSCoW (BR)... anna sda ‘W. Averell Harriman, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo- aici tentiary. George F. Kennan, counselor of embassy. Edward Page, Jr., first secretary; consul. Viadivostok (CR)... -...-.ictmenaa i Oliver Edmund Clubb, consul general. URUGUAY Montevideo (BR). connoraea = William Dawson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten-tiary. Edward J. Sparks, first secretary; consul. VENEZUELA Caracas (BY. oi eamesaes han P. Corrigan, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipoten- | iary. Allan Dawson, counselor of embassy. Charles F. Knox, Jr., commercial attaché. Thomas J. Maleady, first secretary. ' (CQ) James P. Moffit, consul general. 1laGumira (VC)...if Austin J. Rittenhouse, vice consul. Puerto dela Cruz, Anzo4tegui (VC). Maracaibo (CY oe Odin G. Loren, consul. YUGOSLAVIA Belgrade (Beograd) (EB)... _______ Richard C. Patterson, Jr., appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Harold Shantz, counselor of embassy. Consular offices in Yugoslavia closed. 17 A ceredited also to Lebanon. 18 Office of Embassy also at Istanbul. 19 Legation Chancery maintained at Capetown during sessions of the Union Parliament. (Parliament normally convenes early in January and is prorogued about the end of May, but special sessions may be called at any time.) 20 Assigned to serve at Johannesburg. OFFICERS ON SPECIAL AND TEMPORARY DETAIL Name ‘Where assigned Name Where assigned Beach, Arthur Eugene 1 Middle East Supply Rountree, William M.1. Middle East Supply Center. Center. Brown, G. Stewart !_-_ Allied Commission for Shollenberger, Joseph H.! Do. Italy Taylor, Myron C______ Vatican City. Gowen, Franklin C____ Valion City. Tittmann, Harold H., Do. Lightner, E. Allan, Jr__ European Advisory Com-Jr. mission, London. ‘Winters, George H_____ Ciudad Juérez. Ozzard, Charles J.1_____ Middle East Supply Young, Roland A.l_____ Middle East Supply Center. Center. 1 Temporary specialist appointed for the emergency. Congressional Directory OFFICERS ON DETAIL AS INSPECTORS Butrick, Richard P. Cochran, H. Merle. DeCourcy, William , OFFICERS ON LEAVE OR ASSIGNED TO POSTS BEING REESTABLISHED Name Status Name Status Cooper, Charles A_____ On leave of absence with-Haven, Richard B..___ Consul at Turin; office not out pay. yet reestablished. Farrell, William _______ On leave of absence with-Hopper, George D_____ Consul general at Hong out pay. Kong; office not yet re- Foote, Walter A._.._.. Consul general at Batavia; established. office not yet reestab-La Rue, G. Wallace. ___ On leave of absence with-lished. out pay. Gufler, Bernard ________ On leave of absence with-Smith, Miss A. Viola. _ On leave of absence with-out pay. out pay. SPECIAL OFFICES Post Name and rank GERMANY Office of the United States Political Robert D. Murphy, United States political adviser.1 Adviser for Germany. Donald R . Heath, counselor of mission. INDIA New Delhi (Office of Deputy Political Charles W. Yost,2 United States political adviser. Adviser to Commanding General, Charles S. Reed, 2d, 2 deputy United States political adviser. India-Burma Theater). ITALY Naples (Office of the United States Po-James Orr Denby, Foreign Service officer. litical Adviser on the staff of the Su-preme Allied Commander, Mediter-ranean theater). Rome (Office of the United States Rep-Alexander C. Kirk, United States representative. 1 resentative on the Advisory Council for Italy). JAPAN Office of Acting U. S. Political Adviser George Atcheson, Jr., acting political adviser. to Supreme Commander for Allied H. Merrell Benninghoft, Foreign Service officer. Powers (Tokyo). . 1 With the personal rank of ambassador. 2 Temporarily. OFFICIAL DUTIES 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 35 OFFICIAL DUTIES LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL The Architect of the Capitol, acting as an agent of the Congress, has charge of the structural and mechanical care of the United States Capitol Building, together with arrangements in cooperation with the proper authorities, for cere-monies and ceremonials held in the building and on the grounds; is responsible for the care, maintenance, and improvement of the Capitol Grounds, the old and newly enlarged areas comprising approximately 120.2 acres; as well as the care of the grounds, walks, and driveways about the buildings in the legislative group; has the structural and mechanical care of the Library of Congress Buildings, United States Supreme Court Building, Courthouse of the District of Columbia, Court of Appeals Building, Court of Claims Buildings, and Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-In Asylum; is responsible for the operation of the United States Senate and House of Representatives Restaurants. In addition to these activities, the duties and responsibilities of the Architect include the following: Under the direction and approval of the House Office Building Commission, the structural, mechanical, and domestic care and maintenance of the House Office Buildings, including the maintenance and operation of the mechanical equipment, and the care, maintenance, and operation of the Capitol power plant, which supplies heat, light, power, and air conditioning refrigeration for the Capitol, Senate and House Office Buildings, heat, light, and power for the Library of Congress Buildings, United States Botanic Garden, United States Supreme Court Building, and the legislative garage, and steam heat for the Government Printing Office and Washington City Post Office. Subject to the approval of the Senate Committee on Rules as to matters of general policy, the structural, mechanical, and domestic care and maintenance of the Senate Office Building, including the maintenance and operation of the mechanical equipment. : Subject to the joint action of the Vice President of the United States and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the jurisdiction and control including the care and maintenance of the legislative garage. Under the direction and supervision of the Joint Committee on the Library, serves as acting director of the United States Botanic Garden. In addition to these maintenance and repair activities, ithe Architect of the Capitol is charged with the planning and construction of such buildings as may be committed to his care by Congress from time to time. Over and above these functions, the Architect of the Capitol serves as a member of the Capitol Police Board, of the Commission for the Enlarging of the Capitol Grounds, of the District of Columbia Zoning Commission, and of the National Capital Housing Authority. : JOINT COMMITTEE ON INTERNAL REVENUE TAXATION The Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation was established in 1926 under section 1203 of the Revenue Act of 1926. This section is codified in chapters 47 and 48 of the Internal Revenue Code. The*duties imposed upon the committee by statute are as follows: (1) To investigate the operation and effects of the Federal system of internal-revenue taxes. 527 528 Congressional Directory LreisLATIVE BRANCH (2) To investigate the administration of such taxes by the Bureau of Internal Revenue or any executive department, establishment, or agency charged with their administration. (3) To make such other investigations in respect of such system of taxes as the Joint Committee may deem necessary. (4) To investigate measures and methods for the simplification of such taxes, “particularly the income tax. (5) To publish from time to time for public examination and analysis proposed " measures and methods for the simplification of such taxes; and . (6) To report from time to time to the Committee on Finance and the Com-mittee on Ways and Means and, in its discretion, to the Senate or the House of Representatives, or both, the results of its investigations, together with such recommendationsas it may deem advisable. To the above, section 710 of the Revenue Act of 1928 added the duty of exam-ining refunds in excess of $75,000 of income, war-profits, excess-profits, estate, and gift taxes and of making annual reports thereof to the Congress. A similar pro-vision had theretofore been enacted in the first deficiency act, fiscal year 1927, approved February 28, 1927 (44 Stat. 1254). Section 377 7 of the Internal ig Code, derived from section 710 of the Revenue Act of 1928, reads as ollows: “Sec. 3777. Reports of refunds and credits in excess of $75,000. “(a) By Commissioner to Joint Committee.—No refund or credit of any in- come, war-profits, excess-profits, estate, or gift tax in excess of $75,000 shall be made until after the expiration of 30 days from the date upon which a report giving the name of the person to whom the refund or credit is to be made, the amount of such refund or credit, and a summary of the facts and the decision of the Commissioner is submitted to the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. “(b) By Joint Committee to Congress.—A report to Congress shall be made annually by such committee of such refunds and credits, including the names of all persons and corporations to whom amounts are credited or payments are made, together with the amounts credited or paid to each.” The statute confers upon the Joint Committee certain powers necessary for the performance of its duties; and by development and direction of the Committees on Ways and Means and Finance the staff acts as a fact-finding and advisory agency for these committees. The committee is composed of 10 members, of whom 5 are members of the Committee on Finance and 5 of the Committee on Ways and Means. The Committee on Finance and the Committee on Ways and Means each elects its membership on the Joint Committee, 3 from the majority and 2 from the ‘minority party. It has been the custom to elect ranking members. The committee was organized in 1926 and functions with the aid of a perma-nent staff, with a chief of staff as administrative head. It is the custom of the Joint Committee to elect a chairman and vice chairman annually, alternating these offices between the chairman of the Committee on > Wags and Means and the chairman of the Committee on Finance. JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING The Joint Committee on Printing, consisting of three Members of the Senate and three Members of the House of Representatives, was created by the act of August 3, 1846, and its principal duties are set forth in the Printing Act approved January 12, 1895. That act gave the committee authority “to remedy any neglect or delay in the public printing and binding.” This authority was ex-tended by section 11 of the Legislative Appropriation Act for 1920, empowering the committee ‘“to adopt and employ such measure as, in its discretion, may be deemed necessary to remedy any neglect, delay, duplication, or waste in the public printing and binding and the distribution of Government publications.” The act of 1895 provides that the committee ‘shall have control of the arrange-ment and style of the Congressional Record, and, while providing that it shall be substantially a verbatim report of proceedings, shall take all needed action for the reduction of unnecessary bulk.” The committee is also authorized to provide for the publication of semimonthly and session indexes to the Record and has general authority over the forms and style of congressional printing and * binding. LEGISLATIVE BRANCH Official Duties 529 The CoNGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY, memorial addresses on deceased Senators and Members, statute proceedings, and similar publications are compiled and prepared under the direction of the committee. The Superintendent of Documents pub-lishes the index of public documents upon a plan approved by the committee and indexes such single volumes as it shall direct. The committee is directed by law to establish rules and regulations for the printing of documents and reports in two or more editions. Orders for subse-quent editions after 2 years from date of original order must receive its approval. The committee directs whether extra copies of documents and reports shall be bound in paper or cloth, and prescribes the arrangement and binding of documents for depository libraries. The cost of printing any document or report which cannot be properly charged . to any other appropriation may, upon order of the committee, be charged to the congressional appropriation. The committee may order additional copies printed of any Government pub-lication within a limit of $200 in cost in any one instance. ; The act of 1895 also provides that the committee shall exercise the following functions in regard to the purchase of paper for the public printing and binding: Fix upon standards of quality, receive proposals and award contracts therefor, appoint a member of the board of-paper inspection, determine differences of ‘opinion as to quality, act upon defaults, and authorize open-market purchases. The Legislative Appropriation Aet for 1925 authorizes the Public Printer to procure under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing in accordance with the act approved January 12, 1895, and furnish on requisition paper and envelopes (not including envelopes printed in the course of manufacture) in common use by two or more departments, establi shments, or services of the Government in the District of Columbia. The Public Printer is required by law to advertise for bids for material, other than paper, under the direction of the committee, and to make a return to it on all such contracts awarded by him. The committee may authorize the Public Printer to make certain open-market purchases of material, and, by resolution, it has required him to obtain its approval on all purchases of machinery and equipment in excess of $1,000 in any one instance. Maps and illustration plates for Government publications are purchased under the direction of the committee whenever the probable cost exceeds $1,200; or, whenever the exigencies of the public service do not justify advertisement, the committee may authorize immediate contracts for lithographing and engraving. Printing for the Patent Office is required by law to be done under such regu-lations and conditions as the committee may prescribe. Section 11 of the Legislative Appropriation Act for 1920 requires all printing, binding, and blank-book work for the Government to be done at the Govern-ment Printing Office, except such classes of work as shall be deemed by the Joint Committee on Printing to be urgent or necessary to have done elsewhere than in is Distriet of Columbia for the exclusive use of any field service outside of said Distriet. JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE LIBRARY The Joint Committee on the Library was established by law; in 1809 the two Houses by concurrent action supplemented the law, and in 1843 recognized it by joint rule. The joint rules having ceased to exist in 1876, the rules of the House recognized the committee in 1880. In 1902 a law increased the membership of the committee to five in each House. The statutes confer on the joint committee certain executive functions, such as the acceptance or purchase of works of art for the Capitol, the assignment of the same to such place in the Capitol as they may deem suitable, and control of the Botanic Garden, and provide that its powers shall reside in the Senate portion in the recess after the expiration of a Congress. Aside from the executive functions of the joint committee, the House branch exercises functions as a standing committee of the House, and has a jurisdiction covering construction and care of the building of the Library of Congress, man-agement of the Library, purchase of books and manuscripts, erection of monu-ments to the memory of individuals, and in some instances on battlefields, and the removal of the remains of distinguished persons. The general affairs of the Smithsonian Institution and the incorporation of similar institutions are also within the jurisdiction of the House branch of the committee. Neither the joint committee nor the House branch reports appropriation bills. 530 Congressional Directory LmeisLaTive BraNcH GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE The Comptroller General of the United States is charged by law with the settlement and adjustment, independently of the executive departments, of all claims and demands whatever by the Government of the United States or against it, and all accounts whatever in which the Government of the United States is concerned, either as debtor or creditor, and is vested with all powers and duties previously conferred or imposed by law upon the former Comptroller of the Treasury and the six Auditors of the Treasury Department; also with the duty of keeping the personal ledger accounts of disbursing and collecting officers; of reporting to Congress delinquency in rendering accounts; and of certifying balances, which are final and conclusive upon the executive branch of the Gov- ernment. He may provide for payment of accounts or claims adjusted and’ settled in the General Accounting Office through disbursing officers of the several departments and establishments instead of by warrant. He prescribes the forms, systems, and procedure for administrative appropriatien 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 effectiveness 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 General in person. He makes such rules and regulations as may be necessary for carrying on the work of the General Accounting Office, including those for the admission’ -of attorneys to practice before it, and furnishes, under the seal of said Office, copies of records from books and proceedings thereof, for use as evidence 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, or certifying officers, the Comptroller General is required to render his advance decision upon any question involving a payment to be made by them or under them, or pursuant to their certification, 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 certi- fied by audited settlements to be due the United States, 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. The Comptroller General is required to audit the financial transactions of all Government corporations after July 1, 1944, in accordance with commercial corporate practices and under such rules and regulations as he may prescribe. A report of each such audit for each fiscal year ending on June 30 must be made by him to the Congress not later than the following January 15. It is also the duty of the Comptroller General to investigate at the seat of government or elsewhere all matters relating to the receipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and to make recommendations to the President, when requested by him, and to Congress concerning legislation necessary to facilitate the prompt and accurate rendition and settlement of accounts, and concerning such other matters as he may deem advisable in regard to the receipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and economy or efficiency in public expenditures. He makes investigations for Congress as to revenue, appropriations, and expenditures, furnishing assistants from his office to Congress for that purpose, and specially reports to Congress every expenditure or contract made by any department or establishment in any year in violation of law. He also reports to Congress upon the adequacy and effectiveness of departmental inspection of the offices and accounts of fiscal officers, and, in accordance with law, has access to and examines any books, documents, papers, or records, except those pertaining to certain funds for purposes of intercourse or treaty with foreign nations, of all departments and establishments, for the purpose of securing from time to time information regarding the powers, duties, activities, organization, financial transactions, and methods of business of their respective offices. It is also his duty to furnish to the Bureau of the Budget such information relating to expenditures and accounting as it may request from time to time. : EXECUTIVE BRANCH EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Under authority of the Reorganization Act of 1939 and in accordance with the President’s Reorganization Plans No. I and No. II, the Executive Office of the President comprises the following major divisions: The White House Office, Bureauof the Budget, Liaison Office for Personnel Management, and the Office for Emergency Management. Executive Order No. 8248 of September 8, 1939, established the divisions and defined their functions. THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE The functions and duties of the White House Office, as defined in Executive. Order No. 8248 of September 8, 1939, are as follows: In general, to serve the President in an intimate capacity in the performance of the many detailed activities incident to his immediate office. To that end, the White House Office shall be composed of the following principal subdivisions, with particular functions and duties as indicated. : (a) The Secretaries to the President.—To facilitate and maintain quick and easy communication with the Congress, thé individual Members of the Congress, the heads of executive departments and agencies, the press, the radio, and the general public. (b) The executive clerk.—To provide for the orderly handling of documents and correspondence within the White House Office, and to organize and supervise all clerical services and procedure relating thereto. (¢) The administrative assistants to the President.—To assist the President in such matters as he may direct, and at the specific request of the President, to get information and to condense and summarize it for his use. These administrative assistants shall be personal aides to the President and shall have no authority over anyone in any department or agency, including the Executive Office of the President, other than the personnel assigned to their immediate office. In no event shall the administrative assistants be interposed between the President and the head of any department or agency, or between the President and any one of the divisions in the Executive Office of the President. LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT The Liaison Office for Personnel Management assists the President in the execu-tion of the duties imposed upon him by the Constitution and by legislation with respect to personnel management and in maintaining closer contact with all Federal departments and agencies in their relation to personnel-management policies. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET The Bureau of the Budget was created by the Budget and Accounting Act of June 10, 1921. Although established as a staff agency under the immediate direction of the President, the Bureau was physically located in the Treasury Department. In harmony with proposals made as early as 1924 by the Joint Congressional Committee on Reorganization, the Bureau was transferred to the Executive Office of the President under authority granted in the Reorganization Act of 1939. Simultaneously its functions in the fields of general management and executive coordination were strengthened. The main functions of the Bureau are: 1. To assist the President in the preparation of the Budget and the formulation of the fiscal program of the Government. 2. To supervise and control the administration of the Budget. : 3. To conduct research in the development of improved plans of adminis-trative management and to advise the executive departments and agencies of the Government with respect to improved administrative organization and practice. 531 { 532 -Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES 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. 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. In the exercise of its functions, the Bureau is governed not only by the Budget and Accounting Act but also by various statutory authorizations of a special character. These include the so-called Anti-Deficiency Act of 1905 (as amended in 1906) under which the Director of the Bureau determines apportionments of appropriations; the congressional resolution of May 11, 1922, which requires his approval for the printing of periodicals from appropriated funds; the Federal -Reports Act of 1942, which directs him to supervise the use of Government report forms and questionnaires; and the Federal Employees Pay Act of 1945, which charges him with the duties of determining for each quarter the personnel require-ments of Federal agencies, of ordering the release of excess personnel, and of establishing budgetary reserves where savings are possible. Government Information Service—The Government Information Service pro-vides information services to the public, executive agencies, and the Congress. Its functions were transferred from the Office of War Information to the Bureau of the Budget by Executive Order 9608, August 31, 1945. FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION The Federal Board of Hospitalization is an advisory agency to the Bureau of the Budget. It was organized on November 1, 1921. It is the duty of the Board to initiate studies of and analyze and review the hospital, convalescent, and domiciliary activities and programs developed and operated by all agencies of the Federal Government (except the District of Columbia and Territorial govern-ments) for the purpose of: ; 1. Preventing the overlapping and duplication of services and overbuilding of facilities. 2. Ensuring the most efficient and complete utilization of the total services and facilities of the Federal Government by each agency. 3. Determining the need for existing or additional facilities of each agency. 4. Determining the area or locality in which additional facilities should be provided. 5. Determining the extent to which non-Federal facilities may be utilized in the administrationof the hospital activities or programs of any Federal agency. 6. Developing a complete over-all program for providing hospitalization for all veterans, including the veterans of World War II. 7. Furnishing recommendations with respect to such matters as the Director of the Bureau of the Budget may refer to the Board. 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 Office of Emergency Management as such formerly had certain stated functions which were performed under the direction of the Liaison Officer for Emergency Management. This official existed under the terms of the adminis-trative order issued by the President on January 7, 1941, to the effect that ‘‘pro-vision may be made in the Office for Emergency Management for liaison facili-ties * * *7 ‘When the President, by letter of November 3, 1943, accepted the resignation of the Liaison Officer for Emergency Management, he appointed no successor; the effect was to terminate the liaison facilities under the optional provisions of administrative order of January 7, 1941. WAR iin Official Duties 533 The Office for Emergency Management is primarily a framework within the confines of the Executive Office of the President, within which framework various civilian war agencies have been established. ' It has served as a major device for organizing the war program. CIVILIAN PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATION The Civilian Production Administration was established within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 9638 of October 4, 1945. The same order terminated the War Production Board, effective at the close of business November 3, 1945, and transferred its functions and powers to the Civilian Production Administration. The order provided that the functions and powers transferred shall “be utilized to further a swift and orderly transition from wartime production to a maximum peacetime production in industry free from wartime Government controls, with due regard for the stability of prices and costs.” COMMITTEE ON FAIR EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE The Committee on Fair Employment Practice, established within the Office of Production Management (superseded by the War ‘Production Board) by Exec-utive Order 8802, of June 25, 1941, was transferred to the War Manpower Com-mission by Presidential letter, effective July 30, 1942. This Committee ceased to exist upon the establishment of a new Committee on Fair Employment Prac-tice within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 9346, of May 27, 1943. The purpose of the new Committee is to promote the fullest utili-zation of all available manpower and to eliminate discriminatory employment practices. 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. The Alien Property Custodian is authorized and empowered to take such action as he deems necessary in the national interest, including but not limited to, the power to direct, manage, supervise, control, or vest, with respect to: 1. Any business enterprise within the United States which is an enemy national. 2. Any other business enterprise in the United States which is a foreign national, after determination by the Custodian and certification to the Secretary of the Treasury that the action is necessary in the national interest. 3. Any other property within the United States owned or controlled by an enemy government or national, except cash, deposits, securities, and similar ~ property, the latter being subject to control only when they are determined to be necessary for the maintenance of property subject to vesting belonging to the same enemy country or national. 4. Any patent, copyright, and trade-mark and related property and interests, in which any foreign government or national has any interest. 5. Any ship in which there is any foreign interest. 6. Any property in process of administration by any person: acting under ju-diecial supervision, or which is in partition, libel, condemnation, or other similar proceedings and which is owned or claimed by an enemy government or national. The Alien Property Custodian is also authorized to issue regulations concerning the service of process or notice upon persons in enemy countries or enemy-occu-pied territory in connection with court or administrative actions or proceedings, and to represent such persons in such actions or proceedings. OFFICE OF DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION The Office of Defense Transportation was established in the Office for Emer-gency Management by Exceutive 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 534 Congressional Directory WAR AGENCIES 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 supplies to points of need. The Office is now in the process of liquidation, which will be completed by June 30, 1946. OFFICE OF INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS The Office was established as an operating agency on August 16, 1940, by an order issued by the Council of National Defense pursuant to authority in section 2 of the act of August 29, 1916 (39 Stat. 649). Subsequently, Executive Orders No. 8840 of July 30, 1941, No. 9389 of October 18, 1943, and No. 9532 of March 23, 1945, changed the name of the Office and redefined its duties and responsi-bilities. Shortly after the end of the war in the Pacific, the informational pro-grams of the Office were placed under the Interim International Information Service established in the Department of State by Executive Order No. 9608 of August 31, 1945. The remaining departments of the Office are charged with the responsibility of formulating and executing programs in the commercial, ‘economic, and educational fields which will strengthen the bonds among the American Republics. The Office works closely with other Government agencies concerned with inter-American affairs and with the Inter-American Development Commission, which was created by the Inter-American Financial and Economic Advisory Committee in January 1940. 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. 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 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 Board of War Communications was established to coordinate the relation of all branches of communication to the war effort. Planning included common carriers such as commercial radiotelephone and radiotelegraph, as well as other telephone, tele-° graph, and cable facilities, and radio broadcasting. : OFFICE OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION The Office of Price Administration was created pursuant to the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 with power to establish maximum prices and maximum rents for the purpose of preventing inflationary increases in prices and rents. The Stabilization Act of 1942 conferred upon the President further authority to stabilize prices, wages, and salaries affecting the cost of living. Under this act, the Stabilization Administrator, pursuant to Executive orders and a delegation of authority from the Director of War Mobilization and Reconversion, exercises . certain policy controls over the Office of Price Administration. The Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 as amended, the Stabilization Act of 1942 as amended, and Executive orders under the latter act, prescribe the standards and pro-cedures which govern the administration of the price control program. The WAR AGENCIES Official Duties 535 Office of Price Administration also carries out the civilian rationing of scarce commodities pursuant to a delegation of the statutory power to allocate scarce materials and facilities conferred upon the President by the Second War Powers Act, 1942. OFFICE OF WAR MOBILIZATION AND RECONVERSION e The Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion was established by the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944, approved October 3, 1944 (Public Law 458, 78th Cong., 2d sess.), providing a national program for war mobilization and reconversion. The President has also transferred to this Office all of the functions previously assigned to the Office of War Mobilization under Executive order, dated May 27, 1943. The Director is charged with the supervision of the activities of all Government agencies having responsibilities directly concerned with or affecting the transition from war to peace. It is his responsibility to coordinate the planning of respon-sible Government agencies to insure prompt and orderly demobilization and to direct the economic forces of the Nation into a coordinate program for reconver-sion to a sound peace-time economy with a minimum of dislocation and un-certainty. The act also provides for an Advisory Board to the Director to consist of 12 members to be appointed by the President with the approval of the Senate. In addition to his general supervision of the executive agencies concerned with war mobilization and reconversion, the Director is specifically charged with the general supervision of the following agencies: Office of Contract Settlement.—The Office of Contract Settlement was established by Public Law 395, Seventy-eighth Congress, and became effective July 1, 1944. The objectives of the Contract Settlement Act, as laid down by the Congress of the United States, are as follows: 1. To facilitate maximum war production during the war and expedite recon-version from war production to civilian production as war conditions permit. 2. To assure to prime contractors and subcontractors, small and large, speedy and equitable financial settlement of claims under terminated war contracts, and adequate interim financing until such final settlements. 3. To assure uniformity among Government agencies in basic policies and administration with respect to such termination settlement and interim financing. 4. To facilitate the efficient use of materials, manpower, and facilities for war and civilian purposes by providing prime contractors and subcontractors with notice of termination of their war contracts as far in advance of the cessation of work thereunder as is feasible and consistent with the national security. 5. To assure the expeditious removal from the plants of prime contractors and subcontractors of termination inventories not to be retained or sold by the con-tractor. 6. To use all practicable methods compatible with the foregoing objectives to prevent improper payments and to detect and prosecute fraud. Office of Stabilization Administrator.—Established by directive of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion, dated October 12, 1945, pursuant to Executive Order 9620 of September 20, 1945. Performs by delegation from the Director of War Mobilization and Reconversion the functions heretofore carried on by the Office of Economic Stabilization under Executive Orders 9250 of October 3, 1942, 9328 of April 8, 1943, and 9599 of October 18, 1945, and the functions assighed by Executive Order 9651 of October 30, 1945. Coordinates the controls of inflationary and deflationary tendencies and dislocations attendant thereon which threaten the final stage of the war emergency and tend to interrupt orderly transition to a peacetime economy. Under Executive Order 9651, implements the national wage-price policy by issuance of policy directives to the wage and price stabilization agencies. The Economic Stabilization Board was created by Executive Order 9250 to assist the Office in an advisory capacity. Surplus Property The Surplus Property Administration was Administration.— created by Public Law 181, (79th Cong., 1st sess.), approved September 18, 1945, which provided for the administration of the Surplus Property Act of 1944 by a. Surplus Property Administrator. By the terms of Public Law 181 the Surplus Property Board, created by section 5 of the Surplus Property Act of 1944, was abolished and all of its functions were transferred to the Surplus Property Admin-istrator. He is charged with the general supervision and direction over (1) the care and handling and disposition of surplus property, and (2) the transfer of sur-plus property between Government agencies. Government agencies designated as disposal agencies by the Administrator carry out disposal functions under Administration regulations. 536 Congressional Directory -WAR AGENCIES PACIFIC WAR COUNCIL Formation of the Pacific War Council was announced by the President on March 30, 1942. The Council considers matters of policy relating to the joint war effort. Meetings are held at the White House. A diplomatic representative of each of the following nations attends meetings of the Council: United States, Great Britain, China, the Netherlands, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the Commonwealth of the Philippines. ; 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, ex officio Petroleum Administrator, was 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 was 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 domes- tic relief, rehabiliation, reconstruction, and welfare arising from war-ereated 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. 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 insure 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 Corporation assists in the procurement of prime contracts and subcontracts, leases machinery, lends money, aids in the disposal of surplus materials and equipment to small business, and in the solution of technical and financial problems. The management of the Corporation is vested in a board of five directors, familiar with the problems of small business, appointed by the President. : WAR CONTRACTS PRICE ADJUSTMENT BOARD The War Contracts Price Adjustment Board was created by the Renegotiation Act of 1943 (title VII of the Revenue Act of 1943, approved February 25, 1944, sec. 701 (d) (1); 58 Stat. 85, 50 App. U. S. C. 1191). The Board has authority over all renegotiations for fiscal years ending after June 30, 1943, and establishes principles, policies, and procedures with respect to such renegotiations. Actual renegotiation proceedings are conducted by the departments named in the Renegotiation Act under delegated authority from the Board. The Board may review determinations of excessive profits made by such departments. 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) and the WAR AGENCIES Officral Duties 837 honorable C. D. Howe, Minister of Munitions and Supply. The Committee was established to provide for the free exchange of vital information between respon-sible officials of the two governments relating to 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 associated in prosecution of the war against the Axis powers. COMBINED FOOD BOARD (UNITED STATES, GREAT BRITAIN, AND CANADA) . 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. In October 1943, the membership was expanded to include Canada. » On August 29, 1945, it was announced that the three member governments had decided to continue the Combined “Food Board for the time being but that without delay the work of the Board should be reviewed to determine the neces-sity for continuing its operations. 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’s charter was renewed on January 19, 1945, and on August 29, 1945, the two Governments announced that it would be continued on an interim basis in the postwar reconversion and rehabilitation period. The Board plans the best and speediest development, expansion, and use of raw materials in short supply. 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 War Shipping Administration. 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. 538 Congressional Directory STATE UNITED NATIONS RELIEF AND REHABILITATION ADMINISTRATION The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration is an international agency, composed of 47 united and associated nations, created to help the victims of the war in liberated areas by providing them with food, clothing, and medicine; by aiding them in the care and repatriation of ‘displaced persons,’”’ and by assisting them in the resumption of urgently needed agricultural and industrial production and essential services. UNRRA’s operating expenses are contributed to by those nations which have not been invaded by the enemy. All member nations con- tribute to administrative expenses. By the end of October 1945 UNRRA had delivered over 2,640,000 long tons of supplies overseas, and was carrying on relief programs in Greece, Albania, Italy, Yugoslavia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and China. It was also assisting the mili-tary in the repatriation of millions of displaced persons in Germany. VJ-day inaugurated global relief and rehabilitation operations, and UNRRA’s program _ of aid to China was getting into high gear. Among countries declared eligible for assistance were Korea, Formosa, Austria, the Ukrainian, and Byelorussian Soviet Republics, while Italy was judged eligible to receive full-scale aid instead of the limited assistance heretofore provided by UNRRA. 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 guindy of the seal of the United States and publishing the laws enacted by ongress. UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE The Under Secretary of State serves as the Secretary’s deputy in all matters and in the absence of the Secretary becomes Acting Secretary of State. COUNSELOR OF THE DEPARTMENT The Counselor of the Department is one of the two principal assistants to the Secretary of State in the discharge of his various functions, aiding in the formu-lation and execution of the foreign policies of the Government and the reception of representatives of foreign governments and in work of a highly responsible character. He gives special attention to such important phases of our foreign relations as may be assigned to him by the Secretary. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secretary, he becomes Acting Secretary of State. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS) Has jurisdiction over the Office of International Trade Policy, the Office of Financial and Development Policy, the Office of International Security Policy, and the Office of Transport and Communications Policy; is chairman of the Executive Committee on Economic Foreign Policy. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR EUROPEAN, FAR EASTERN, NEAR EASTERN, AND AFRICAN AFFAIRS) Charged with matters relating to the formulation and execution of foreign policies assigned to him by the Secretary of State; has jurisdiction over the Office of European Affairs, the Office of Far Eastern Affairs, and the Office of Near Eastern and Africian Affairs; is Chairman of the State-War-Navy Co-ordinating Committee. : ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR ADMINISTRATION) Has jurisdiction over the Office of the Foreign Service, the Office of Depart-mental Administration, and the Office of Controls. STATE Offictal Dutres 539 ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR PUBLIC AND CULTURAL RELATIONS) Has jurisdi¢tion over the Office of Public Affairs, the Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs, and the Interim International Information Service; is responsible for the public-information policy of the Department and supervises the Department’s relations with other Government agencies on all matters involving public-information policy; is chairman of the Interdepartmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation and of a committee on infor-mation policy. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR AMERICAN REPUBLIC AFFAIRS) Has jurisdiction over the Office of American Republic Affairs. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE (FOR CONGRESSIONAL RELATIONS) Has responsibility for maintaining liaison with the Congress and with the Bureau of the Budget on all matters of interest to the Department, except for budget, fiscal, and other administrative matters; in collaboration with the com-petent offices and divisions of the Department is responsible for the preparation and submission to the Congress of all legislation, including treaties and con-ventions submitted to the Senate for ratification. THE LEGAL ADVISER Is in charge of legal affairs. SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY FOR INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION AND -SECURITY AFFAIRS Has jurisdiction over the Office of Special Political Affairs. SPECIAL ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY Special assistant to the Secretary in charge of research and intelligence; is in charge of the Interim Research and Intelligence Service, which has responsibility for those functions of the Office of Strategic Services transferredto the Depart-ment of State by Executive Order 9621 of September 20, 1945. Special assistant to the Secretary and Foreign Liquidation Commissioner; administers the Office of Foreign Liquidation; has authority, under the general supervision of, and in conformity with such directions, orders, or instructions as may from time to time be issued by, the Secretary of State in the execution of the foreign policies of the United States, to dispose of, subject to the authority of the Surplus Property Administrator under the Surplus Property Act of 1944, all sur-plus property, including scrap, salvage, waste materials, property captured from the enemy, and surplus property of lend-lease origin, in the control of or for the disposal of which the Department of State may be responsible, located in foreign areas; and reports to the Secretary of State through the Assistant Secretary for economic affairs. - Special assistant to the Secretary for Press Relations; represents the Secretary in the Department’s relations with the press. Special assistant to the Secretary and Chief of Protocol. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES SECRETARY’S STAFF COMMITTEE Responsibility for advising and otherwise assisting the Secretary in determining current and long-range foreign policy. It is available for instant consultation with the Secretary on the full range of activities and interests of the Department. COORDINATING COMMITTEE Responsibility for considering matters of policy or action and questions of interoffice relations referred to it by the Secretary, the Under Secretary, or the Secretary’s Staff Committee, or initiated by one of the members. CENTRAL SECRETARIAT OF THE EXECUTIVE STAFF COMMITTEES Responsibility for aiding the development and application of foreign policy within the Department by (a) providing a channel through which policy matters originating with the offices, divisions, and committees of the Department may 540 Congressional Directory STATE be broughtto the Executive Staff Committees for decision; (b) assisting in the communication of Executive Staff Committee decisions to the responsible officers and preparing periodic reports to the committees in regard to action taken on these decisions; (¢) correlating the work of other committees in the Department with the operations of the Executive Staff Committees; and (d) aiding the Depart-ment’s representatives on the interdepartmental committees in determining the policy positions to be taken in behalf of the Department. OFFICE OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for Eu-ropean, Far Eastern, and Near Eastern and African affairs, for the formulation of over-all United States policy toward the countries under the jurisdiction of its component divisions and for the coordination as to these countries of the programs and activities of other offices and divisions of the Department and of . other Federal agencies with over-all United States foreign policy. DIVISION OF BRITISH COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS British Commonwealth of Nations and British territories (jointly with the interested geographic offices and divisions of the Department), except India, Burma, Ceylon, and possessions in Africa. DIVISION OF EASTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (jointly with the interested geographic offices and divisions in matters relating to the Soviet Far East), Poland, and other areas of Eastern Europe. DIVISION OF CENTRAL EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia. DIVISION OF SOUTHERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Rumania, San Marino, Yugoslavia, and the Vatican. DIVISION OF NORTHERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and territories of these countries (jointly with the interested geographic offices and divisions of the Department). } DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS Andorra, Belgium, France, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, and (jointly with the interested geographic offices and divisions of the Department) territories of these countries, except possessions in Africa. OFFICE OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for Eu-ropean, Far Eastern, Near Eastern, and African affairs, for the formulation of over-all United States policy toward the countries under the jurisdiction of its component divisions and for the coordination as to these countries of the pro-grams and activities of other offices and divisions of the Department and of other Federal agencies with over-all United States foreign policy. DIVISION OF CHINESE AFFAIRS China and adjacent territories. DIVISION OF JAPANESE AFFAIRS Japanese Empire. DIVISION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN AFFAIRS Thailand, and (jointly with other interested geographic offices and divisions) Indo-China, Malaya, British North Borneo, Netherlands East Indies, Portugese Timor, and British and French island possessions in the Pacific. DIVISION OF PHILIPPINE AFFAIRS Philippine Islands and other American-controlled islands of the Pacific. STATE : Official Dutres : 941 OFFICE OF NEAR EASTERN AND AFRICAN AFFAIRS Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for Eu-ropean, Far Eastern, and Near Eastern and African affairs, for the formulation of over-all United States policy toward the countries under the jurisdiction of its component divisions and for the coordination, as to these countries, of the pro-grams and activities of other offices and divisions of the Department and of other Federal agencies with over-all United States foreign policy. DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS Egypt, Greece, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Trans-Jordan, Saudi Atohis and other countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, and Turkey. DIVISION OF MIDDLE EASTERN AFFAIRS Afghanistan, Iran, India, Ceylon, and Burma. DIVISION OF AFRICAN AFFAIRS Ethiopia, Liberia, and all parts of Africa (including the colonies, protectorates, and mandated territories), except the Union of South Africa, Algeria, Egypt, and the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. " OFFICE OF AMERICAN REPUBLIC AFFAIRS Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for American Republic affairs, for the formulation of over-all United States policy toward the countries under the jurisdiction of its component divisions and for the coordination, as to these countries, of the programs and activities of other offices and divisions of the Department and of other Federal agencies with over-all United States foreign policy. DIVISION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS Mexico. DIVISION OF CARIBBEAN AND CENTRAL AMERICAN AFFAIRS Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama, and (jointly with the appropriate divisions in the Office of European Affairs) European possessions in the area, the Guianas, and British Honduras. DIVISION OF BRAZILIAN AFFAIRS Brazil. ; DIVISION OF RIVER PLATE' AFFAIRS Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. DIVISION OF NORTH AND WEST COAST AFFAIRS Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela. DIVISION OF AMERICAN REPUBLICS ANALYSIS AND LIAISON Responsibility for (a) collection and analysis of data from all sources; (b) con-duct of special studies on current conditions, trends, ete.; (c) assembling and digesting of research materials on policy and background developments; (d) co-operation with other divisions of the Department and other Government agencies engaged in research relating to the other American republics; (¢) maintenance of an information service regarding the other American republics for all officers of the Department and other Federal agencies; (f) maintenance of liaison with other offices of the Department concerned with general inter-American activities, on policy matters outside the scope of the geographic divisions; (g) advice to other agencies of the Government carrying on programs in the other 'American republics on the relation of their programs to the policy of the Office of American Republic Affairs; (h) formulation and recommendations of policy and action to be adopted on departmental problems of an inter-American character; and (2) handling, in cooperation with the Division of International Organization Affairs, of matters on policy relating to American participation in inter-American organizations, meetings, treaties, and agreements. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 36 z 542 Congressional Directory STATE Et OFFICE OF SPECIAL POLITICAL AFFAIRS . Responsibility, under the general direction of the special assistant to the Secretary for International Organization and Security Affairs, for the formulation and coordination of policy and action relating to such affairs, with special emphasis on the maintenance of international peace and security through organized action. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION AFFAIRS Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action in all matters regarding (a) the establishment of the proposed United Nations Organiza-tion and relations with that Organization; (b) relations between the Organization and specialized or regional agencies and organizations and the coordination of their policies and activities through the Organization; and (c¢) liaison, within the scope of its jurisdiction, with international agencies and organizations and with other Federal departments and agencies. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS Responsibility for (a) the formulation and coordination of policy and action * regarding all security phases of the proposed United Nations Organization, includ-ing the security aspects of relations between regional systems or arrangements: and the Organization, and, together with the Division of International Organiza-tion Affairs, relations with the Organization on security matters and relevant security aspects of United States foreign policy generally; and (b) liaison, within the scope of its jurisdiction, with international organizations and agencies and with other Federal departments and agencies. : DIVISION . OF DEPENDENT AREA AFFAIRS Responsibility for (a) the formulation and coordination of policy and action regarding activities of the proposed United Nations Organization affecting de-pendent areas, and, together with the Division of International Organization Affairs, the conduct of relations with the Organization on such matters; and (b) liaison, within the scope of its jurisdiction, with international agencies and organ-izations and with other Federal departments and agencies. OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY Responsibility, under the general ‘direction of the Assistant Secretary for economic affairs, for initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action by the Department of State for international economic, trade, and com-mercial affairs. WAR AREAS ECONOMIC DIVISION Responsibility, so far as the Department is concerned, for coordination of policy and action in wartime economic matters pertaining to all the European and Middle and Far Eastern countries and their colonial possessions, wherever located (except Japan, Germany, Austria, the British Commonwealth, and Russia), including (a) all supply and requirement programs; (b) economic block-ade of enemy and enemy-occupied territories; (c¢) establishing and maintaining a unified wartime economic policy for each country or area within its jurisdicton; (d) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with the appropriate supply branches of the War and Navy Departments and the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration; and (e) representation of the Department on the Liberated Areas Committees. - INTERNATIONAL RESOURCES DIVISION Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action in the following matters: (a) Development of the foreign-policy aspects of production and control and the distribution in international commerce of major commodities such as rubber, tin, and the heavy metals, coffee, sugar, wheat, and cotton; (b) international commodity arrangements, including analysis of arrangements of other countries as they affect the United States; (¢) international fisheries matters and agreements; (d) cartels and related industrial arrangements; (¢) procurement and development abroad of materials needed for the prosecution of the war or the relief of war areas; (f) coordination of departmental views on the economic policies to be followed in the application of wartime-trade controls by various governmental agencies and, in this connection, convening and acting with repre-sentatives of the divisions of the Department concerned; (g) administration, so STATE : Official Duties ; 543 far as the Department is concerned, of the statutes for the control of international -traffic in arms, ammunition, and implements of war, and the discharge of related duties; and (hk) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with intergovern-mental agencies concerned with international commodity problems, with the Department of Agriculture, with the Department of Justice on matters involving international cartels and industrial arrangements, and with such other depart-ments and agencies as may be concerned. PETROLEUM DIVISION Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action in all foreign-policy matters pertaining to petroleum and petroleum products and liaison with the intergovernmental agencies concerned with international problems in this field and with the Petroleum Administration for War and other departments and agencies concerned. : DIVISION OF COMMERCIAL POLICY Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action in the following matters: (a) Protection and promotion of American commercial and agricultural interests in foreign countries; (b) tariff, general trade, and international commercial affairs of the United States; (¢) formulation, negotiation, and adminis-tration of commercial treaties, reciprocal-trade agreements, and other commercial agreements; (d) commercial-policy aspects of lend-lease agreements and settle-ments; and (e) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with the Treasury Department, Department of Commerce, Department of Agriculture, United States Tomi Commission, and such other departments or agencies as may be concerned. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL LABOR, SOCIAL, AND HEALTH AFFAIRS Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action by the Department regarding international labor, social, and health affairs, including (a) analysis and recommendation on the effects of labor developments on the foreign policy of the United States, on the foreign policy of foreign countries, and on international relations; (b) study and advice regarding the effects of inter-national economic policies and activities of the United States, of international organizations or agencies, and of foreign governments, on employment, wages and standards of living in the United States; (¢) analysis of policies regarding labor and of conditions of employment in this and other countries as they affect foreign policy or are affected thereby; (d) development of policies and recommenda-tions regarding international measures to promote full employment and the . raising of labor standards, and advice on economic measures related to these ends; (e) development of policies and recommendations regarding the foreign-policy aspects of the migration and settlement of persons, including post-war aspects of wartime displacements; (f) maintenance of liaison with labor, social, and health organizations in the' United States, both public and private, on labor, social, and health matters which affect or are affected by United States foreign policy; (¢) 'in collaboration with the Division of International Organization Affairs, development of policies, formulation of recommendations, and mainte-nance of liaison on labor, social, and health matters relating to the operations of international organizations in those fields; (7) study and advice on international labor and social movements as they affect the foreign policy of the United States; (7) coordination of the policy of the Department regarding importation of foreign labor into the United States; (j) analysis and formulation of the Department’s . policy regarding the international control of narcotics and the performance of the duties imposed by statute and treaty obligations in relation to international cooperation for the suppression of the abuse of narcotic drugs; (k) in collaboration with other divisions of the Department and other agencies of the Government, development of policy regarding labor, social, and health matters in liberated areas and in ex-enemy territories; (I) analysis and clearance for the Department of overseas programs of other Federal agencies relating to labor, social, and health affairs; and (m) maintenance of liaison with the Department of Labor and with other Federal agencies concerned. OFFICE OF FINANCIAL AND DEVELOPMENT POLICY Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for eco-nomic affairs, for initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action by the Department of State for international financial and economic development affairs, and related emergency property and financial controls. 544 Congressional Directory STATE DIVISION OF FINANCIAL AFFAIRS Responsibility, so far as the Office of Financial and Development Policy is’ concerned, for initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) general international financial and monetary policy and agreements; (b) reparations and financial problems of countries liberated from enemy occupation; (¢) foreign exchange and foreign-exchange control prob- lems; and (d) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with appropriate Federal agencies. DIVISION OF FOREIGN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Responsibility, so far as the Office of Financial and Development Policy is con-cerned, for the initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) general investment, loan, and foreign economic development policy; (b) international agreements, arrangements, or institutions for economic development in other countries; (¢) industrialization and develop-ment projects and programs; (d) industrial and economic developmental aspects of terms of surrender, of peace treaties, and of general security; and (e) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with other appropriate agencies and departments of the Government. : : DIVISION OF LEND-LEASE AND SURPLUS WAR-PROPERTY AFFAIRS Responsibility, so far as the Office of Financial and Development Policy is concerned, for the initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) lend-lease, including the initiation of policy proposals and the negotiation of lend-lease agreements and settlements; (b) foreign-policy aspects involved in disposal abroad of surplus war-property and the development of policy proposals for the consideration of officials of the Depart-ment concerned with particular kinds of property; and (¢) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with appropriate Federal agencies, particularly the Treasury Department, the War and Navy Departments, and the Surplus War Property Board. OFFICE OF ECONOMIC SECURITY POLICY Responsibility, under the direction of the Assistant Secretary for economic affairs. for initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action by the Department of State for economic security policy, including economic aspects of the occupation of Germany, Austria, Japan, and Korea. DIVISION OF ECONOMIC SECURITY CONTROLS Responsibility for the initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in connection with (a) foreign funds or properties; (b) export control— applicability to specified designees; (¢) control and disposition of enemy property in the United States and in other countries; (d) prevention of concealment or flight of enemy assets and capital; (e) protection or restoration of patent, copy-right, or similar rights affected by the war; (f) administration of financial and economic controls in accordance with the several inter-American Conferences, including replacement of Axis concerns; and (g) collection, evaluation, and organization of biographic data. : DIVISION OF JAPANESE AND KOREAN ECONOMIC AFFAIRS Responsibility for the initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in connection with (a) economic and financial matters related to the occu-. pation and control of Japan; (b) economic and financial aspects of the occupation and control of Korea and its reestablishment as an independent state; (c) repara-tions, restitution, and economic and financial aspects of peace treaties insofar as these relate to Japan and Korea. DIVISION OF GERMAN AND AUSTRIAN ECONOMIC AFFAIRS Responsibility for the initiation, formulation, and coordination of policy and action in connection with (a) economic and financial matters related to the occu-pation and control of Germany in accordance with the principles established by the Potsdam Conference; (b) economic and financial aspects of the occupation and control of Austria and its reestablishment as an independent state; (¢) reparations, restitution, and economic and financial aspects of peace treaties insofar as these relate to Germany and Austria. yom Oficial Duties ~~ 545 OFFICE OF TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATIONS POLICY Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for eco-nomic affairs, for the formulation and coordination of policy and action con- cerning the foreign-policy aspects of transportation and communi- international Responsibility for formulation and coordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) international aviation, including the development and operation of airlines and air transportation, the acquisition of landing rights abroad, and matters relating to airports and airways; (b) discussions with foreign countries on matters relating to civil aviation and the drafting of agreements on this subject; (c) assembling basic material and otherwise preparing for inter-national aviation conferences; (d) representation of the Department on the International Technical Committee of Aerial Legal Experts, on the United States National Commission of the Permanent Aeronautical Commission and on other international bodies dealing with aeronautical affairs; (e) international airmail; (f) presentation to the Munitions Assignments Committee (Air) or other appro-priate allocation authorities, of foreign requests for aircraft and collaboration with other offices and divisions of the Department and with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned in the export of aircraft; (g) training of foreign aircraft and ground personnel in the United States and abroad; (h) ob-taining of military and civil flight permits for United States aircraft proceeding abroad and, on request of diplomatic missions accredited to the United States, for foreign aircraft visiting the United States and its possessions; (2) representation on interdepartmental committees considering problems involving aviation; and (7) other matters involving aviation, including liaison with the Department of Commerce, Civil Aeronautics Board, Civil Aeronautics Administration, the War, Navy, and Post Office Departments, and other departments and agencies of the Government. SHIPPING DIVISION Responsibility for the formulation of the policy of the Department with refer-ence to (a) the economic, commercial, and political aspects of international shipping, particularly developments in other countries in connection with sub- -sidies, freight and insurance rates, maritime laws, and discriminatory practices which may affect similar developments in the United States; (b) international conventions, treaties, and agreements governing shipping and shipbuilding industries; (¢) war shipping; (d) representation of the Department before the Combined Shipping Adjustment Board, the War Production Board, the War Shipping Administration, and other departments and agencies, in connection with shipping requirements and requests for allocations for shipping submitted by other divisions of the Department; and (e) postwar problems in the shipping field. TELECOMMUNICATIONS DIVISION Responsibility for (a) the formulation and coordination of policy and action in matters pertaining to the international aspects of telegraph, telephone, cable, and postal communications, radio (with reference to technical as distinguished from informational phases) and motion pictures (other than the responsibilities assigned to the Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs); and (b) liaison, within the scope of its responsibilities, with the Federal Communications Commission, War and Navy Departments, Office of Censorship, Post Office Department, and such other departments and agencies as may be concerned. OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS » Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for public and cultural relations, for formulation and coordination of policy and action regarding informational aspects of foreign relations. DIVISION OF PUBLIC LIAISON Responsibility for (e¢) the Department’s relations with private groups and organizations interested in the formulation of foreign policy; (b) collection and analysis of materials relating to public attitudes on foreign-policy questions; (c) assistance to the officers of the Department in the public interpretation of foreign policy; and (d) handling of correspondence expressing public views on foreign policy. 546 Congressional Directory STATE DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION Responsibility for (a) eonduet of historical research studies in international relations; (b) preparation of a history of the Department’s policies and opera-tions in the war period; (¢) furnishing research service to officers of the Depart-ment upon request; (d) furnishing treaty information and advice, both as to pro-visions of existing or proposed instruments, and as to procedural matters involved therein; (e) all publishing activity of the Department, including administration of the printing and binding appropriation; (f) distribution, custody, and eontrol of the Department’s publications; (g) maintenance of the Department’s library; (h) procurement and distribution of foreign publications received through the Foreign Service; (2) performing a secretariat function with respect to the adoption by the States of amendments to the United States Constitution and in the ascer-tainment of electors for President and Vice President. DIVISION OF GEOGRAPHY AND CARTOGRAPHY Responsibility for (a) geographie correlation, evaluation, and interpretation of information and data received by the Department concerning interregional and international relations; (b) assembling and analyzing current statistics and other information pertaining to distribution, growth, and movement of population, food and agricultural production and resources, mineral, metal, and fuel production and resources, transportation and communications, industrial development, inter- national trade, and territorial claims and immigration quotas; (¢) initiating and conducting studies of the geographic aspects of economic, political, and social problems in foreign areas to meet the needs of the Department; (d) the compilation from current intelligence and other information, and the drawing and completion of maps, charts, and graphs required by the Department; (¢) maintaining the Departmental map library; and (f) representing the Department in matters relating to problems in geography, cartography, and geodesy which arise between the Department and other governmental agencies and between this Government and other nations. OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS Responsibility for (a) the coordination and direction of the formulation of policy and the taking of action in the field of international information and cultural affairs; (b) the development of policies and programs promoting freedom of information among peoples; (¢) the furtherance of international interchanges of persons, knowledge; and skills with other countries; and (d) the coordination of the programs and activities of other Federal agencies in the international inter-changes of persons, knowledge, and skills with over-all United States foreign policy. DIVISION OF CULTURAL COOPERATION Responsibility for formulating policy and executing programs of the Depart-ment of State, as well as programs undertaken through the collaboration of other agencies of the Government and private groups, designed to encourage and strengthen cultural contact, interchange, and mutual understanding between the peoples of the United States and other nations. Relations with private organi-zations are facilitated by a number of advisory committees. Matters pertaining to specific areas are channeled through four area branches. INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION DIVISION Responsibility for the initiation and coordination of policy and programs in respect to the Department’s interest and participation in dissemination overseas of information through the media of films, radio, and certain publications, in-cluding the development and furtherance of international film, radio, and publica-tions programs (other than books and specialized periodicals) ; advising on foreign policy aspects of the overseas information programs of other Federal agencies, particularly the war agencies; and advisory liaison with private organizations and industries on international information problems. CENTRAL TRANSLATING DIVISION Responsibility for all the translating and interpreting work of the Department of State, including (a) translation from English of certain official publications or other material recommended for distribution in the other American republics by STATE Official Duties : 547 Government departments and agencies participating in the program of the Inter-departmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation, and, in coopera-tion with other divisions and offices of the Department and the Interdepartmental Committee, the formulation and administration of programs for the distribution of such translations; (b) translation from English of addresses and statements on foreign policy, as required, such translations to serve as the official translated version of those public utterances; (¢) review of material published in foreign languages by other Government departments and agencies, and review of Spanish, Portuguese, and French films and seripts for motion pictures and radio programs to be distributed through official channels in the other American republics; (d) translation of communications addressed to the President by hgads of foreign states and other material referred by the White House, and of diplomatic notes and miscellaneous material; (¢) the translation of agreements between the United States and foreign governments, and 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; and (f) coordination of a translating service for all Federal agencies through the facilities of the Division, other Fed-eral departments, or contracts with commercial services. INTERIM INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION SERVICE Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for . public and cultural affairs, for all international-information functions formerly carried on by the Office of War Information and the Office of Inter-American Affairs. : OFFICE OF THE FOREIGN SERVICE Responsibility for the over-all administration of the Foreign Service, its relationships with the Department and other interested departments and agencies, and the coordination of the activities of the component divisions of the Office which share responsibility for the effective direction of the Foreign Service. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE PLANNING ‘With the collaboration of other divisions of the Office of the Foreign Service, interested offices and divisions of the Department, and other departments and agencies of the Government, responsibility for programming, planning, and recommending to the Director of the Office continual adjustments and improve-ments in the over-all administration and direction of the Foreign Service, including management, budgetary, personnel, and legislative planning. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL Under the direction of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, responsibility for (a) recruitment, appointment, and placement of all Foreign Service personnel; (b) consultation with interested offices and divisions of the Department, and with other departments and agencies, concerning the number and qualifications of the personnel required to service their overseas programs and to represent effectively the United States Government abroad; (¢) consultations with chiefs of missions and principal consular officers concerning personnel programs for individual establishments, including the number and qualifications of personnel required; (d) stimulation of effective personnel management in establishments abroad; (¢) maintenance and use of the required efficiency standards of the Service, custody of the confidential records of all personnel, and preparation of the required periodical rating list for the chairman of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel; (f) recommendation to the Board of Foreign Service Personnel of administrative action regarding assignments, transfers, promotions, demotions, disciplinary actions, retirements, and separations from the Service; (g) cooperation with the the Division of Foreign Service Planning and Division of Training Services in the development and utilizationof training programs; (hk) granting of leaves of absence and keeping of records thereof; (¢) consulting with Foreign Serv-ice personnel; (5) handling of correspondence concerning entrance into the Foreign Service; (k) maintenance of the records of the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service and the handling of matters connected with the holding of examinations for entrance into the Foreign Service; and (/) the maintenance of all necessary files, and, in collaboration with Division of Research and Publication, the preparation of the Foreign Service List and Foreign Service sections of the Register of the Department of State. 548 Congressional Directory STATE DIVISION OF TRAINING SERVICES Responsibility for carrying out broad and intensive programs of training for Foreign Service and departmental personnel, and when requested by the respon-gible officials concerned, for employees who are being sent abroad by other Govern-ment agencies. : DIVISION OF FOREIGN REPORTING SERVICES Responsibility for (a) assuring that the offices and divisions of the Department and other departments and agencies of the Government are effectively supplied with the full and timely information necessary to discharge their responsibilities; (b) reviewing and coordinating requests for Foreign Service reporting; (¢) assur-ing that the field staff is adequate to meet the demands for such reporting; (d) administering the appraisal and grading of reports from the field; and (¢) maintain-ing liaison with users of the reporting facilities of the Foreign Service. DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE ADMINISTRATION General responsibility for all matters concerning the administration of the Foreign Service of the United States, except such matters as are or may be assigned to other Divisions in the Office of the Foreign Service or to the Division of Budget and Finance in the Office of Departmental Administration. Specifically, super-visory responsibility for functions relating to (a) the navigation laws of the United States and matters concerning shipping and seamen as provided by statute and regulation; (b) protests and declarations of captains, masters, crews, passengers, and merchants; (¢) notifications of outbreaks of disease, sanitary reports, bills of health, and other public services of interest to United States medical, health, and sanitation agencies; (d) representation by American diplomatic and consular officers abroad of the interests of third powers; (¢) immunities, powers, and privi-leges of Foreign Service personnel and their status in regard to and in relations with personnel of other Government agencies operating abroad; (f) documentation of merchandise and issuance of necessary certificates for goods being exported to the United States; (g¢) notification of the decease of Americans abroad and all matters connected with their burial or shipment of their remains; (kh) services for Veterans’ Administration, Social Security Board, and other agencies having bene-ficiaries or dependents abroad; (¢) notarial acts, oaths, affirmations, affidavits, and legal instruments executed abroad; (5) administrative matters in connection with consular courts, extradition, and extraterritorial rights in collaboration with the Legal Adviser; (k) protection of American lives, property, and interests -abroad; (I) arrangements for the Atlantic ice patrol, scientific explorations and expeditions abroad, etc.; and (m) servicing of needs of establishments in the field and services for Foreign Service personnel. DIVISION OF FOREIGN BUILDING OPERATIONS Responsibility for performing the functions of housing and furnishing diplo-matic and consular establishments abroad, specifically for (a) analysis, approval, and development of projects for the purchase of properties and construction of buildings or leasing of properties for the housing of the diplomatic, consular, and other agencies of the United States Government abroad; (b) supervision of the physical maintenance and use of Foreign Service real properties; (¢) the purchase of furniture and furnishings; (d) preparation and submission to the Foreign Serv-ice Buildings Commission and to Congress of reports on the status and projects of the Foreign Service buildings program; and (e) preparation of budgetary pro-grams for initial construction work, property acquisitions, leased properties, alterations, repairs, maintenance, furnishings, and supervision of construction. OFFICE OF PEPARTMENTAL ADMINISTRATION Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for administration, for all matters of administration and organization of the De-partment of State. DIVISION OF BUDGET AND FINANCE Responsibility for the budgetary and fiscal operations of the Department of State, including international commissions and other international bodies. This includes (a) formulation and control of the budgetary program of the Depart-ment; (b) fiscal operations; (¢) drafting, clearance, and review of budgetary and fiscal legislation and regulations and instructions relating to budgetary and fiscal affairs, and review of general legislation for fiscal and budgetary implications; (d) assistance in providing and directing the fiscal services necessary to the con- STATE Official Duties 549 duet of international conferences and meetings; (¢) administration of appropria-tions for international conferences and fulfillment of financial obligations incurred by the United States through participation in international conferences or mem-bership in international organizations; (f) arrangement, in collaboration with other departments and agencies of the Government, for the necessary use of the Department’s fiscal facilities abroad; and (g) liaison with other divisions of the Department, Federal departments and agencies, and the appropriations com-mittees of the Congress. DIVISION OF MANAGEMENT PLANNING Assists the Secretary of State and other high officers in the effective management of the activities of the Department and improvement of its organization and fune-tional relations with the Foreign Service. In fulfilling its responsibilities the Di- vision performs such functions as (a) the study of existing foreign policies and objectives and participation in planning future foreign-relations programs, with particular reference to administrative implications and feasibility of such pro-grams; (b) furnishing of consultative service and assistance in a staff capacity to offices and divisions in order to facilitate the carrying out of their assigned fune-tions; (¢) the study of improved techniques of management analysis and planning to determine their applicability to the Department’s activities; (d) investigation, analysis, and appraisal of the Department’s organizational structure and the organ-ization and functional relations of units within the Department, as well as relations with other governmental and intergovernmental agencies and committees or similar groups; (e) analysis of functions, lines of authority, and responsibilities among the offices and divisions with a view to clearer definition; (f) study and anal-ysis of work methods and procedures in order to simplify and standardize them and improve utilization of employee skills; (g) preparation, or assistance in preparation, and review of (1) proposed legislation or Executive orders concerning the authority, functions, or management of the Department, and (2) departmental orders, designations, and regulations, administrative instructions, and other documents concerning organization structure, functions, lines of authority and responsibility, work methods, and procedures; (kh) assistance in the development and the use of a system of divisional progress reports; and (7) participation with other divisions in considering such matters as the preparation of budget estimates, allotment of positions, evaluation and classification of jobs, allotment and utiliza-tion of space and equipment, and records administration. DIVISION OF DEPARTMENTAL PERSONNEL Responsibility for (a) the planning, developing, determining, and prescribing of all policies and procedures governing personnel management in the departmental service of the Department; (b) administration and execution of the applicable provisions of law and regulations controlling Government personnel-management programs involving the classification of positions, the recruitment and placement of employees, €mployee relations, health and welfare programs, employee-training programs, proper utilization of personnel, promotion programs, efficiency-rating system, personnel aspects of leave of absence and retirement, and matters such as resignations, involuntary separations, suspensions, ete.; and (¢) supervision over the development, installation, and maintenance of personnel records and reports. DIVISION OF CENTRAL SERVICES Responsibility for (a) procurement and supply activities of the Department and the Foreign Service; (b) procurement and allocation of space and related matters; (c) assistance in providing and directing the administrative services necessary to the conduct of international conferences and meetings; (d) main-tenance of special secretarial and conference-reporting facilities; (e) control and operation of all motor-propelled vehicles; (f) in cooperation with the Office of Public Affairs, arrangements for presentation of the Department’s exhibits at national and international expositions; (9) signature and issuance of certificates of authentication under the seal of the Department of State; (h) certification, with or without seal, of copies of the official texts of United States treaties; and (4) centralized transportation service for the Department and the Foreign Service. DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIONS AND RECORDS Responsibility for the formulation of policies and the development and establishment of procedures and regulations governing the dispatch, receipt, and distribution of all correspondence and telegraphic communications that are DIVISION OF CRYPTOGRAPHY DIVISION OF COORDINATION AND REVIEW DIVISION OF PROTOCOL STATE : Official Dutres “; 551 to foreign duty; (¢) arrangements for release, as international courtesy, of certain war materials, ammunitions, models, ete., used in fulfilling contracts for Allied nations; (j) matters with respect to visits of aliens to industrial factories and plants where war contracts are being executed; (k) questions affecting the Diplo-matic Corps under the commodities rationing program; (I) matters of ceremonial in connection with the White House and the Department of State, including operation of the Blair House and the Blair-Lee House; (m) preparation of the Diplomatic List; (n) maintenance of a record of all officers and employees of foreign governments in the United States and its possessions; (0) handling matters concerning the application of the provisions of the Selective Service and Training Act of 1940, as amended, to duly qualified officials and employees of foreign governments and to. foreign students; (p) 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 Foreign Consular Offices in the United States; (r) questions concerning the medals and decorations conferred by foreign governments upon officers of the United States; (s) preparation of communications from the President to the heads of foreign states; (f) obtaining exemption of foreign government officials, em-ployees, missions, and instrumentalities from certain Federal, State, and local taxes; (uw) preparation of nominations of officers appointed and promoted by the President through the Department of State, issuance of commissions, certificates of designation, and exequaturs, and custody of pertinent records; and (v) custody of and control over the Great Seal of the United States. DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES Responsibility for the planning, coordination, and execution of organizational and administrative aspects of international conferences in which the Government of the United States and, particularly, the Department of State participate, other than conferences of the United Nations Organization. With respect to the latter category, the Division of International Conferences and the Office of Special Political Affairs shall collaborate as circumstances may require. The services of the Division shall also be available, upon his request, to the Assistant Secretary in charge, for coordination and planning with respect to policy aspects of any conferences in which the Government of the United States participates. OFFICE OF CONTROLS Responsibility, under the general direction of the Assistant Secretary for administration, for formulating and coordinating policy and action in all matters pertaining to the control activities of the Department of State. PASSPORT DIVISION Responsibility for formulating and coordinating policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) the administration of laws and regulations relating to the control of American citizens and nationals leaving and entering territory under the juris-diction of the United States; (b) limitation of travel of American citizens in foreign countries; (¢) determination of 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, the Virgin Islands, or the Commonwealth of the Philippines, or inhabitants of the Canal Zone, Guam, or American Samoa, owing permanent allegiance to the United States; (d) prevention and detection of fraud in passport matters and the prepara-tion of cases involving fraud for prosecution in the courts; (e) issuance of pass-ports; (f) 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; (g) supervision of the passport agencies in New York, San Francisco, and Miami; and (h) direction of clerks of courts in the United States with regard to passport matters. VISA DIVISION Responsibility for the formulation and eoordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to (a) alien visa control; (b) the assembling and examination of all information necessary to determine the admissibility of aliens into the United States in the interest of public safety; (¢) the issuance of exit and reentry permits; (d) recommendations to American Foreign Service officers for their final consideration concerning individual visa applicants; (e¢) the control of immigra- / = 552 1 Congressional Directory STATE tion quotas; (f) 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 (g9) collaboration with interested offices and divisions of the Department, as well as with other agencies of the Government, concerning the control of sub-versive activities and the transportation of enemy aliens. SPECIAL PROJECTS DIVISION Responsibility for formulation and coordination of policy and action in all wartime matters pertaining to (a¢) the whereabouts and welfare of, and transmis-sion of funds to, Americans abroad; (b) the evacuation and repatriation of Ameri-cans from foreign countries; (¢) financial assistance to Americans in territories where the interests of the United States are representedby Switzerland; (d) liaison with the American Red Cross and the President’s War Relief Control Board for the coordination of foreign-relief operations of private agencies with the foreign policy of this Government; (e) representation by this Government of the interests of foreign governments; (f) representation by a third power of United States interests in enemy countries; (g) 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; (kh) the exchange of persons between the United States and enemy government; (2) 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; and (j) in collaboration with other offices and division, all questions arising from the use, possible use, or allegation of use of asphyxiating, poisonous, or other similar gases, or of bacteriological methods of warfare. DIVISION OF FOREIGN ACTIVITY CORRELATION Responsibility for the formulation and coordination of policy and action in all matters pertaining to such foreign activities and operations as may be directed, for liaison with various intelligence agencies of the Government, and for censorship matters. : : 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 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 oreign 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. ANGLO-AMERICAN CARIBBEAN COMMISSION, UNITED STATES SECTION See duties under ‘Independent Offices, Agencies, and Establishments’ for a description of the purposes and functions of the Anglo-American Caribbean Commission. It should be noted that while the United States chairman of the Commission reports directly to the President, for reasons of administrative con-Yraionoe, the United States section operates as an integral unit of the Department of State. TREASURY = Offical Duties 553 AMERICAN MEXICAN CLAIMS COMMISSION Examines and renders final decisions on certain claims of the Government of the United States on behalf of American nationals against the Government of Mexico, pursuant to the provisions of the Settlement of Mexican Claims Act, approved December 18, 1942. THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT The following is an outline of the organization of the Treasury Department, showing the various branches of the Department and the divisions of the Secre-tary’s office. A description of the duties of each follows the outline. Secretary of the Treasury. ‘ Under Secretary of the Treasury: 1. Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency. 2. Division of Research and Statistics. 3. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. "4. Bureau of the Mint. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury: 1. Bureau of Customs. 2. Bureau of Narcotics. 3. Secret Service. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury: 1. Division of Monetary Research. 2. Foreign Funds Control. Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury: 1. The Finances. : 2. Bureau of Accounts. 3. Bureau of the Public Debt. 4. Office of the Treasurer of the United States. General Counsel for the Treasury: 1. Legal Division. : 2. Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel. 3. Bureau of Internal Revenue. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Procurement Division. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Division of Tax Research. Assistant to the Secretary: 1. War Finance Division. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary: 1. Office of the Chief Clerk. 2. Division of Personnel.’ 3. Correspondence Division. 4, Office of Superintendent of Treasury Buildings. Budget Officer. 1. Budget Division. 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, ete.; 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 chairman of the board of trustees, endowment fund, American National Red Cross; chairman, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board; chairman, National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems; managing trustee, board of trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund; member— National Park Trust Fund Board; board of trustees, Postal Savings System; 554 Congressional Directory TREASURY board of directors, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation; advisory board, Export- Import Bank of Washington; Economic Stabilization Board; Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures; Foreign-Trade Zones Board; Contract Settlement Advisory Board; National Munitions Control Board Smithsonian Institution; board of trustees, National Gallery of Art; National Archives Council; Foreign Service Buildings Commission; trustee, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. z In the absence of the Secretary, the Under Secretary acts as Secretary of the Treasury. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secretary, the senior Assistant Secretary 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 The Under Secretary exercises general supervision over the Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Division of Research and Statistics, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and the Bureau of the Mint. 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 OF THE TREASURY An Assistant Secretary exercises general supervision over the work of the Po of Customs, the Bureau of Narcotics, and the United States Secret ervice. An Assistant Secretary exercises general supervision over the Division of Monetary Research, the Foreign Funds Control, all matters with which the Treasury Department has to deal having a bearing on foreign relations, and supervision over matters relating to the mangement and operation of the Stabiliza- tion Fund. The Fiscal Assistant Secretary exercises supervision over matters relating to the finances, and supervision of the Fiscal Service established in the -Treasury effective June 30, 1940, pursuant to Reorganization Plan No. ITI, 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 maintains 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 The General Counsel is the chief law officer of the Department. He has di-rect supervision of the Legal Division of the Department and performs such duties in respect of the legal activities thereof as may be prescribed by the Secretary or required by law. His duties include responsibility for all legislation of interest to the Department, including tax legislation. He has general supervision of the Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel, and he is charged with administrative responsibility for the operation of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. THE ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY D An assistant to the Secretary exercises general supervision over the Procurement ivision. An assistant to the Secretary is adviser to the Secretary on tax policy matters, and as Director of Tax Research has direct supervision of the Division of Tax Research. An assistant to the Secretary is the National Director of the War Finance Division and is assigned the general supervision of the War Finance Division and its promotional and sales activities relating to United States War Savings bonds, Savings stamps, and other Government securities. TREASURY Official Dutzes 999 THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY The Administrative Assistant to the Secretary exercises supervision over all matters of administration, including personnel matters, and supervision of the Office of the Chief Clerk, the Office of the Director of Personnel, the Division of Personnel, the Correspondence Division, and the Office of Superintendent of Treas- ury Buildings. THE BUDGET OFFICER The Budget Officer of the Department is responsible for the preparation, presentation, and justification of estimates of appropriations necessary for accom-plishment of the Department’s operations. In cooperation with the bureau heads and bureau budget officers, he directs and coordinates the budgetary programs of the Department, representing the Department before the Bureau of the Budget and the Appropriations Committees of both Houses of Congress in matters per-taining to appropriation estimates and related subjects. The Budget Officer also serves as chairman of the Budget and Improvement Committee of the Depart-ment and is a member of the Treasury Wage Board. The Budget Division com-prises the operating staff of the Budget Officer. 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 bank- ing laws. DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS The Division of Research and Statistics in the Office of the Secretary of the Treasury serves as a technical staff for the Secretary and other Treasury officials on the economic aspects of certain fiscal operations and policies. Its work is concerned particularly with Treasury financing and public debt problems, esti-mating the amount of future Federal revenues, actuarial analyses involved in certain Treasury functions, and various general economic problems arising in connection with Treasury activities. ; 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, war savings, and postage stamps; Government checks; and many other classes of engraved work for governmental use. It performs 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 and other agencies; reviews the accounts, authorizes expenditures, superintends 556 Congressional Directory TREASURY the annual settlements of the several institutions, and makes special examinations of them when deemed necessary. Appointments, removals, and transfers in the mints, assay offices, and bullion depositories are subject to approval of the Director of the Mint. The Director of the Mint publishes quarterly an estimate of the value of the standard coins of foreign countries for customhouse use and other public purposes; makes an annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury, covering the operations of the Mint Service for the fiscal year and giving statistics of the production of precious metals in the United States and the world for the calendar year. The Director is responsible for all gold and silver assets of the Government which are in custody of the mint. ) 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 45 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 45 customs collection districts have been allocated, with a comptroller of customs in charge of each; (3) the 12 active customs agency dis-tricts—9 in the United States and 3 in foreign countries; (4) the 3 border patrol districts established on the Canadian and Mexican borders; and (5) 9 customs laboratory districts. -. 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 assessments of duties; determine and certify for payment the amount of drawback 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. 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 assignment of signal letters; the measurement of vessels, administration of tonnage duties, and the collection of tolls; the entrance and clearance of air-craft; 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 recording of sales, conveyances, and mortgages of vessels; the protection of steerage passengers; and the remission and mitigation of fines, penalties, and forfeitures incurred under the laws governing these matters. TREASURY : Official Duties 557 The Customs Service also cooperates with other services in the Treasury Depart- BN ment and other Executive departments and agencies of the Government in the i collection of taxes, fees, and other charges, and in the enforcement of preventive, i sanitary, and other laws under their respective administrations relating prineci- i pally to persons and articles coming into this country and in some cases to articles i sent out of the country. . 3 BUREAU OF NARCOTICS SPE il The Commissioner of Narcotics, under the direction and supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury, has general supervision of the enforcement of the Nar- il cotic and marihuana tax provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, the Opium { Poppy Control Act of 1942, and related statutes, including the administration of the permissive features of the Narcotic Drugs Import and Export Act, and co- operates with the Customs Bureau in the enforcement of the prohibitive features of the latter act. The Commissioner also cooperates (1) with the State Department oll 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 fi 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 and the Opium Poppy Control Act of 1942), the determination, with the cooperation of the Public Health Service, of quantities of crude opium i and coca leaves to be imported into the United States for medical and legitimate Hl uses, and the issuance of permits to import the crude narcotic drugs and to export {} drugs and preparations manufactured therefrom under the law and regulations. Vii An annual report is made to Congress which also serves the purpose of the special i report heretofore prepared in the Bureau on behalf of the Government for trans- fl mittal through the State Department to the nations signatory to the International | Drug Conventions of 1912 and 1931. | + UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE ; 1 The protection of the President of the United States, the members of his immediate family, and the person chosen to be President, at all times and under all conditions, and the protection of the White House and grounds by the White il House Police. iH The suppression of counterfeiting, forging, or alteration of obligations or secu- Sil rities of the United States (including war savings stamps, internal revenue stamps, Sa | postage stamps, and hunting stamps, but not postal money orders) or of foreign a governments; the counterfeiting of coins; the investigation of the forgery of endorsements on, or the fraudulent negotiation of, United States Treasury checks; and the investigation of the counterfeiting or altering of Government transpor- tation requests. Investigations pertaining to certain violations of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, the Silver Purchase Act, section 12-B of the Banking Act of 1935 covered by ih subsections (s) to (x), inclusive (sec. 264, title 12, U. 8. C.), the Federal Deposit i Insurance Act, the Federal Land Bank Act, and the Federal Farm Loan Act. i Investigations pertaining to thefts of Government property under control of the Treasury Department, and loss of valuables in shipments by agencies of the United States (Government Losses in Shipment Act). Personnel investigations as directed by the Secretary or Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. : Protection by the Uniformed Force of the Treasury Building, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and certain other buildings housing Treasury Depart- ment activities; protection of the production, transportation, and storage of money, stamps, securities, and obligations of the United States; protection of all other valuable papers stored in the Treasury Department vaults and buildings. Hi Investigations within the Treasury Department of its several branches when directed by the Secretary of the Treasury or his representative. Performance of such other duties as the Secretary or Assistant Secretary of the Treasury may direct. 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 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 37 558 : Congressional Directory TREASURY 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. - FOREIGN FUNDS CONTROL During World War II the Treasury Department, through Foreign Funds Control, was primarily responsible for planning and executing this Government’s program of financial warfare against our enemies, under the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended, and Executive Orders Nos. 8389, as amended, and 9193. In carrying out this program Foreign Funds Control vigorously pursued the vital objectives of weakening the enemy’s financial resources, preventing financial operations contrary to our war effort, and facilitating financial operations supporting the war effort of the United Nations. + In the implementation of this program, Foreign Funds Control (1) froze the ' 8.5 billion dollars in assets held within the United States by persons in enemy, enemy occupied, liberated, and European neutral countries and regulated the use of such assets; (2) investigated and regulated international financial trans-actions; (3) administered import controls so as to close United States markets to enemy loot in the form of securities, currency, checks and drafts, and other assets; (4) through the Department of State, cooperated with other American Republics to secure their adoption of effective controls over enemy property and transactions, and participated in the administration of the Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals; (5) under section 3 (a) of the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended, administered the wartime restrictions on trade with the enemy; (6) supervised the taking of the census of foreign-owned property and ° the census of American-owned property abroad; and (7) participated with other Treasury organizations in carrying out the Department’s broad responsibilities in connection with problems of areas liberated from enemy domination and occupied territory. In the post hostilities period Foreign Funds Control has a threefold program: (a) An orderly defrosting program, conducted in such a manner as to (1) insure the uncovering of cloaked enemy interests; (2) prevent the completion of trans-actions effected under duress or for the benefit of the enemy; (3) prevent the completion of transactions for the benefit of collaborationist elements; and (4) establish measures for the protection of claims of this Government and of private American creditors in blocked assets. (b) To assure complete elimination of existing German and Japanese economic and financial influences in this country and to prevent the postwar use of United States banking facilities by enemy interests. (¢) The development of the necessary procedures for licensing the reopening of trade, remittances, and general financial and commercial relations with former enemy countries consistent with this Government’s objectives in controlling their postwar developments. The Federal Reserve Banks and the governors of the territories and possessions of the United States act as field agents of Foreign Funds Control. FISCAL SERVICE BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS (Formerly Office o {Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits) The Bureau of Accounts is composed of the Office of the Commissioner of Accounts, Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants, Division of Disbursement, Division of Deposits, Section of Surety Bonds, and the Section of Investments. TREASURY Offictal Duties 559 In addition to the general supervisory duties relating to these activities, the Commissioner of Accounts exercises supervision: over the deposit of withheld taxes under the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943; final liquidation of affairs of the Office of Central Administrative Services and certain other war agencies as listed below; and 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. Under Reorganization Plan ITI (54 Stat. 1231), the Commissioner of Accounts also exercises general supervision over the installation of or changes in the accounting procedures of the various Treasury bureaus and offices; the account-ing and reporting development work under Executive Order No. 8512; and the preparation of the combined statement of the receipts and expenditures of the Government under the act of July 31, 1894. : The Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants was created by the act of July 31, 1894 (28 Stat. 208; U. 8S. Code, title 5, sec. 255). Prior to that time it was known as the Division of Warrants, Estimates, and Appropriations. Section 1, para-graph (38) 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 warrants on the Treasurer of the United States, makes analyses of acts of Congress carrying appropriations and maintains the appropriation accounts on its ledgers relating to all activities of the Government. It issues warrants for placing disbursing funds to the credit of disbursing officers, for the payment by the Treasury of claims settled by the General Accounting Office, and for covering into the Treasury the revenues and receipts of the Government. It also 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. The Division includes the central offiee in Washington, D. C., 20 regional offices in the several Federal Reserve districts and 25 offices outside the continen-tal limits of the United States for the purpose of performing the disbursing funec-tions for the various departments and agencies. The Division of Deposits is charged with the Administration of all matters pertaining to designation and supervision of Government depositaries and the deposit of Government funds in such depositaries; i. e., the Federal Reserve banks, member bank depositaries, and special depositaries under the Liberty Loan Acts, foreign depositaries, Territorial depositaries, Federal land banks, and the Philippine treasury; matters pertaining to the qualification of Federal savings and loan associations as fiscal agents of the United States under Treasury Circular 568; and matters pertaining to the functions of the Treasury under the Govern-ment Losses in Shipment Act. : The Section of Surety Bonds is responsible for analyzing the financial statements 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 seetion 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 560 Congressional Directory TREASURY Treasury; handles the collection of other obligations owned by the United States which are turned over to the Treasury by other departments for collection; makes payments, keeps accounts, and handles matters relating to awards under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, under the claims agreement of October 25, 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; and handles matters relating to investment accounts under control of the Secretary of the Treasury 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 and special deposit accounts of the Secretary of the Treasury relat-ing to alien property trust funds, offers in compromise under the provisions of section 3469 of the Revised Statutes, guaranty deposits, Philippine trust funds held in interest-bearing accounts, and withheld foreign check payments. The Office of the Director General of the 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. = This work is performed in the Bureau of Accounts. The Division of Central Administrative Services of the Office for Emergency Management was terminated, effective November 30, 1944, by regulations dated September 26, 1944, of the Director of the Bureau of the Budget issued pursuant to Executive Order No. 9471, dated August 25, 1944. The regulations of the Director provided for the transfer to the Bureau of Accounts of the liquidation of residual affairs of the Division. : The Office of Civilian Defense was terminated June 30, 1945 by Executive Order 9562, dated June 4, 1945. Paragraph 3 of the order provided that the Secretary of the Treasury acting through the Bureau of Accounts of the Treasury Department shall wind up the affairs of the Office. The War Refugee Board was terminated, effective September. 15, 1945 by Executive Order 9614, dated September 14, 1945. The Executive order author-ized and directed the Secretary of the Treasury to liquidate all of the activities and obligations and wind up all of the affairs of the Board as rapidly as practicable and not later than June 30, 1946. The Office of Censorship was terminated on November 15, 1945, by Executive Order 9631, dated September 28, 1945. The order directed that for the purpose of completing the liquidation of the affairs of the Office of Censorship all property and records of the Office on hand on November 15, 1945, together with its remain-ing personnel and any balances of appropriations then unexpended shall be trans-ferred to the Secretary of the Treasury to be utilized by the Secretary in winding up the affairs of the Office. Executive Order 9608, dated August 31, 1945, provided that certain functions of the Office of War Information be transferred to an Interim International Infor-mation Service to be established in the Department of State; that certain other functions be transferred to the Bureau of the Budget; effective as of the close of business on September 15, 1945, the functions of the Office of War Information then remaining be abolished; effective as of the close of business on December 31, 1945, the Interim International Information Service and any functions then remaining be abolished; and, that all of the personnel, records, property, and appropriation balances of the Interim International Information Service and of the Office of War Information then remaining be transferred to the Treasury Department for final liquidation. The liquidation of the affairs of such agencies by the Bureau of Accounts in-volves generally (1) the disposition of property, equipment, and supplies; (2) the termination of contracts; (3) the placement or separation of excess agency personnel; (4) the collection of moneys owed to the Government; (5) the liquida-tion of obligations incurred under appropriations, including the payment of vouchers and the certification of claims; (6) the satisfaction of post-audit excep-tions taken by the General Accounting Office to expenditures under the programs; (7) the disposition of special deposits (as for example, employees’ pay-roll deduc-tions, bond purchases, and withheld taxes); (8) the completion of accounting records, retirement records, ete.; (9) the answering of inquiries concerning past transactions; (10) the preparation of records for the archives and disposition of other records; and, (11) the preparation of final reports. 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 TREASURY §" Official Duties 561 issues of the United States. It also is charged with the procurement of distinctive paper required for printing currency and public debt securities of the United States. As agent, the Bureau also conducts transactions in the interest-bearing issues of the Philippine and Puerto Rican Governments, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, the Federal Housing Administration, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the Commodity Credit Corporation, the United States Housing Authority; and in the consolidated issues of the Federal Farm Loan banks. The Bureau organization consists of the Office of the Commissioner, the Division of Loans and Currency, the Office of the Register of the Treasury, the Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit, the Division of Savings Bonds, and the Division of Paper Custody. Office of the Commissioner.— a new issue of public debt securities is to When be offered for subscription, the Office of the Commissioner prepares the necessary documents incident to the offering, directs the handling of subscriptions for and allotments of the securities to be issued. General supervision is exercised over the conduct of transactions in such securities after issue, either by the divisions of the Bureau in Washington, or by Federal Reserve banks, fiscal agents of the United States. Division of Loans and Currency.— This division is the issuing branch. It is charged with the receipt and custody of new securities, and their issuance, directly or to the Federal Reserve banks; with the conduct of transactions in the outstand- ing debt including exchanges, transfers, conversions, maintenance of registered accounts, and the issuing of checks for interest thereon; and with the verification of canceled redeemed United States paper currency, and mutilated work from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Office of the Register of the This office is the retiring branch. It Treasury.— is charged with the receipt of all paid or redeemed or exchanged public-debt securi- ties, including interest coupons, canceled and retired on any account, and from any sources whatever, their audit, verification, and custody. . Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit.—This division maintains adminis- trative -control accounts over all transactions with which the Bureau of the Public Debt is charged, and related transactions conducted by the Office of the Treasurer of the United States, and by the Federal Reserve banks acting in their capacities as fiscal agents of the United States. Similar accounts are maintained over transactions in distinctive and nondistinctive paper used in printing public debt and other securities, currency, stamps, ete. It also makes administrative examinations and audits of transactions so conducted and the securities involved. It maintains control accounts over reserve stocks of currency, and conducts administrative examinations and physical audits of such stocks, cash balances in the several divisions of the Treasurer's Office, and collateral securities held in trust by the Treasurer. Division of Paper Custody.—This division is charged with the receipt, count, custody, and issue of all distinctive paper used for production of securities and currency by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. In connection with the manufacture of distinctive paper, a small field force is maintained at the mills -of the contractors. : Division of Savings Bonds.— This division is charged with the distribution of publicity literature for the War Finance Division, the maintenance of mailing lists and the conduct of the regular purchase plan program. The division con- ducts correspondence with the investing public in connection with the regular purchase plan and the registration of savings bonds. Chicago office.—All {ransactions 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 ronal and disburse-ment of public moneys that may be deposited in the Treasury at Washington and in the other depositaries authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury to receive deposits of Government funds for credit in the account of the Treasurer of the United States. Funds advanced to disbursing officers for the use of Government departments and establishments under the appropriation of Congress are credited in the accounts of such disbursing officers on the books of the Treasurer, and dis-bursements therefrom are made by checks drawn on the Treasurer. In his Office are prepared and issued, for the Secretary of the Treasury, the daily Treasury statement of the United States, the monthly preliminary statement of the public 562 Congressional Directory TREASURY 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. OFFICE OF THE TAX LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL The Office of the Tax Legislative Counsel assists the Secretary in the legal aspects of planning and coordinating the Treasury Department’s legislative program respecting the internal revenue, and in representing the Department on such matters before the appropriate congressional committees. The Office assists in the consideration of Treasury regulations and rulings dealing with the inter-pretation of internal-revenue laws. It supervises the preparation of depart-mental reports on internal-revenue bills, gives assistance in drafting tax legisla-tion, and handles departmental correspondence on such legislation. 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 Commissioners, the Personnel Division, the Administrative Division, the Office of the Special Deputy Com-missioner, the Technical Staff, the Intelligence Unit, Training Division, and Division of Information. ; -: The Income Tax Unit is the agency of the Bureau of Internal Revenue for administering the Federal income and profits tax provisions of the revenue laws. Its duties are to prepare regulations for the administration of such provisions; to receive, audit, and verify the returns covering such taxes; to review and dispose of claims for refund, and to compile statistics from these returns. The Miscellaneous Tax Unit is charged with the administration of 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 Sugar Act of 1937, approved September 1, 1937, the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, approved August 2, 1937, the National Firearms Act, approved June 26, 1934, the Federal Firearms Act, approved June 30, 1938, and the tax imposed on hydraulic mining under the act of March 1, 1893, as amended June 19, 1934. The Accounts and Collections Unit is charged with the administration of matters having to do with the organization and management of the offices of collectors of internal revenue, including their field forces; with the administration of the laws relating to employment taxes; and with the administrative audit of revenue and disbursing accounts in the Internal Revenue Bureau and Service, -It also issues stamps to colectors of internal revenue. TREASURY Official Dutres 563 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 Economic 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, administrative, 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 five main divisions of the Field Service, as follows: The Collection Service, the Field Audit Service, the Supervisory Field Service of Alcohol Tax Unit, the Field Divisions of the Technical Staff, and the Field Divisions of the Salary Stabilization Unit. : 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 Tax Special Squads, and Field Inspection Serviee. 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). : : . The Procurement Division is responsible for the determination of policies and methods of procurement, warehousing, and distribution of property, facilities, improvements, machinery, equipment, stores, and supplies for all Federal execu- tive establishments; for performance of procurement of all such property and . supplies for use either at the seat of Government or in the field for all existing Government executive agencies and such agencies hereafter created, except the War and Navy Departments and the Marine Corps. The Procurement Division— (a) Makes general term contracts for supplies and services for use by all agencies, as announced through the General Schedule of Supplies, and makes definite quantity purchases and contracts for their use. Prescribes standard forms of Government contracts and purchase orders. .(b) Under the Federal Standard Stock Catalog function, develops standard nomenclature covering commodities used by the Government; provides a standard description of commodities 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 regula-tory bodies on traffic problems. (d) Stores commonly used supplies in warehouses in the District of Columbia and the field, and issues them to Federal agencies as requisitioned. Also operates a fuel yard, a furniture repair shop, a typewriter repair shop, and an automotive repair shop, providing in the District of Columbia solid and liquid fuels and major and minor repairs for the Treasury and certain other agencies. (e) Makes quantitative and qualitative inspection of equipment and supplies, and examines items offered under proposed contracts, as to compliance with specifications. (f) Conducts investigations and studies in connection with the establishment or modification of procedures, organization, and policy in connection with proeure-ment, warehousing, and distribution of commodities or services. 564 | Congressional Directory TREASURY (9) Prepares and maintains currently, by amendments and revision as neces-sary, Federal specifications which describe minimum requirements of commodities important in Government use, with special reference to elements of quality, per-formance, measurement, or other factors and with due regard to the requirements -of consumers with relation to market limitations. (h) Pursuant to act of June 7, 1939 (Public, No. 117), purchases stocks of stra-tegic and critical materials, as basically approved by the Army and Navy Muni-tions Board, and maintains and replenishes such stocks. (z) Procures various industrial 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. (4) Buys clothing, medical and other vital supplies for the relief of persons rendered sick or destitute by hostilities, for distribution through the American Red Cross. (k) 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. ; (I) Renegotiates war contracts pursuant to the provisions and procedures of the Renegotiation Act. (m) Coordinates purchases by the Federal Government of the blind-made products specified by the Committee on Purchases of Blind-made. Products. (n) Coordinates and controls as to reassignment for Federal use or other disposition property abandoned or seized and forfeited under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act and the Liquor Law Repeal and Enforcement Act of 1935. (0) Provides, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, services of reproduc- ‘tion, including duplicating and photographing, and distribution of material for the constituent agencies of the Office for Emergency Management and the Office of Price Administration. : (p) Considers requirements of regular Federal establishments for electric power, telephone, and other utilities’ service; negotiates consolidated contracts and pro-vides assistance toward developing most advantageous practices in use of such service. DIVISION OF TAX RESEARCH The Division of Tax Research serves in a technical capacity, assisting both the Secretary of the Treasury and the congressional committees dealing with taxation by assembling the facts and preparing the analyses (other than legal) needed to formulate tax policy. On request, it provides information on various tax matters for the use of the President, the House Ways and Means Committee, the Senate Finance Committee, the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, and officials of the Treasury Department and other Federal agencies. It answers in- quiries and analyzes suggestions on taxation submitted by the public. It appraises the operations and results of Federal tax legislation to determine whether con- gressional objectives are being accomplished and to advise of defects or inadequa- cies. The Division is also charged with general responsibility with respect to the assembly and publication of statistics pertaining to Federal taxation. To carry out its functions, the Division is required to make basic surveys of the tax problems of the Federal Government, to devise alternative methods of meeting revenue requirements, and to develop methods of adjusting the tax system to changing economic conditions. The tax system as a whole is analyzed with a view to obtaining revenue yields large enough to meet prospective revenue re- quirements and to making adjustments in a manner which will be fair to taxpayers and will avoid undesirable economic effects. Individual taxes are studied (1) to determine their effects on the particular groups of taxpayers involved, (2) to avoid inequity among taxpayers within a given group, (3) to ascertain and develop methods of meeting the administrative and compliance problems of the tax, and (4) to devise ways of integrating the particular tax with the tax system as a whole. These studies require economic analyses of the effects of each tax; technical analyses of the more complicated problems inherent in various tax measures; and statistical analyses of the distribution of the burden of specific taxes, of the total Federal tax load, and of the combined Federal, State, and local burden. WAR FINANCE DIVISION This Division is charged with the promotional and sales activities relating to United States War Savings bonds, savings stamps, and other Government secu-rities, excepting commercial bank sales. TREASURY = Official Duties 565 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, as well as the control of surplus property and utilization of reserve equipment. He has supervision of the several service units including the telephone, tele-graph, duplicating, and bookbinding 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 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. 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 Secretary. : 566 Congressional Directory WAR DEPARTMENT OF WAR SECRETARY OF WAR The Secretary of War is head of the War Department, and performs such duties as are required of him by law or may be enjoined upon him by the President. He is charged by law with the supervision of all estimates of appropriations for the expenses of the Department, including the Military Establishment; of all purchases of Army supplies; of all expenditures for the support, transportation, and maintenance of the Army; and of such expenditures of a civil nature as may be placed by Congress under his direction. He is responsible for the proper execution of the provisions of the National Defense Act of 1920. He is held responsible for the protection of our seacoast harbors and cities; for the development of improved weapons and matériel; for the proper instruction of all military personnel; for the discipline and morale of the Military Establishment; for the defense of, and the administration of government in, those insular possessions that come under his jurisdiction. He directs the activities of the Corps of Engineers in the improvement of the waterways of the United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, including examinations, surveys, and economic studies of harbors and streams for the for-mulation 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. e 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 Po VS SM Se CT 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 Establishes policies for, directs, and supervises the War Department’s activities with respect to procurement and related matters, including industrial mobilization and demobilization, and coordinates the activities of the Army Air Forces, Army Service Forces, and other War Department agencies with reference thereto; coordinates these War Department activities with interdepartmental agencies and superagencies; represents the Secretary of War on the President’s Committee on Oil, the Contract Settlement Advisory Board, the Advisory Board of the Surplus War Property Administration; is a member of the War Council; is the War De-partment member of the Army and Navy Munitions Board; is the president of the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice, and acts for the War WAR -Official Duties 567 Department in its dealings with the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion, the Surplus Property Board, other departments and agencies of the Government, the Congress, the public, the press, and appropriate nongovernmental agencies, in reference to procurement and related matters, industrial mobilization and demobilization; exercises supervision and direction of clemency for military prisoners and of matters relating to military justice, claims, and other activities delegated by the Secretary of War; acts as Secretary of War during the absence or disability of the Secretary. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR Acts as assistant to the Secretary of War and to this officer have been delegated general administrative duties of various kinds relating to the Army and the War Department. Many of the Department’s relationships with other agencies are conducted by him. He also acts as one of the Council who meet with the Secre-tary, Under Secretary, Assistant Secretary of War for Air, and the Chief of Staff and heads of the Forces, to discuss matters of broad interest and policy. Acts as chairman of the Combined Civil Affairs Committee and exercises general supervision over civil affairs matters and lend-lease policy. as it affects the War Department. Acts as the Under Secretary of War in the Under Secretary’s ab-sence, and as the Secretary of War in the absence of both the Secretary and the Under Secretary of War. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR FOR AIR The Assistant Secretary of War for Air is charged with the supervision of matters pertaining to the Army Air Forces and performs such other duties as may be assigned to him by the Secretary of War. : 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. CHIEF OF STAFF The Chief of Staff is the immediate adviser of the Secretary of War on all busi-ness 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. The ~ Chief of Staff is assisted by the Deputy Chief of Staff. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF The War Department General Staff, under the general direction of the Chief of Staff, plans and coordinates the development of the Army to insure the existence of a well balanced and efficient military organization. It further assists the Chief of Staff in the direction of field operations of the Army and is specifically respon-sible for providing broad basic plans that will enable the commanding generals of the major commands, the Army Ground Forces, the Army Air Forces, and the Army Service Forces, as well as the commanding generals of defense commands, task forces, and theaters of operations, to prepare and execute detailed programs. The War Department General Staff comprises five divisions, each headed by an Assistant Chief of Staff: Personnel Division, G—1; Military Intelligence Division, G—2; Organization and Training Division, G-3; Supply Division, G—4; and Oper-ations Division, OPD. PERSONNEL DIVISION, G-1 The Personnel Division, G—1, prepares plans and policies and supervises activ-ities pertaining to the personnel of the Army as individuals and is responsible for policy determination and coordination in the establishment and operation of the Army Replacement System. The Director, Women’s Army Corps, is a member of this division and prepares plans and policies and supervises activities which relate to the WAC. \ 568 Congressional Directory WAR MILITARY INTELLIGENCE DIVISION, G-2 The Military Intelligence Division, G—2, prepares plans and policies concerning military intelligence and counter-intelligence. It supervises the operation of the Military Intelligence Service which performs certain operational functions con-cerning matters under the jurisdiction of the Military Intelligence Division. ORGANIZATION AND TRAINING DIVISION, G-3 The Organization and Training Division, G—3, prepares plans and policies and supervises the organization, mobilization, and training of the Army including the preparation of training literature and the establishment of a curriculum for the Command and General Staff school and the United States Military Academy. The Division also supervises the operation of the Army Industrial College. SUPPLY DIVISION, G-4 The Supply Division, G—4, performs those functions of the War Department General Staff which relate to the logistics and supply of the Army. It prepares supply policies and plans required as a basis for the operation of detailed programs set up by the major commands (the Army Ground Forces, the Army Air Forces, and the Army Service Forces). OPERATIONS DIVISION, OPD The Operations Division, OPD, formulates and develops strategic, logistical, and operational plans and assists the Chief of Staff in the strategic direction of the military forces in theaters of war. In developing and keeping these plans current it coordinates with the Joint and Combined Chiefs of Staffs. Likewise, the Operations Division provides representation on various joint and combined boards and committees. WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF The War Department Special Staff, under the general direction of the Chief of Staff, serves in an advisory capacity to the Chief of Staff and to the divisions of the General Staff on matters within. the assigned fields of interest of the Special Staff. The latter comprises 12 organizations: Office of the Director of Informa-tion, Bureau of Public Relations, Legislative and Liaison Division, Information and Education Division, Budget Division, War Department Manpower Board, Special Planning Division, Civil Affairs Division, New Developments Division, Office of the Inspector General, National Guard Bureau, and Office of the Execu-tive for Reserve and ROTC Affairs. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF INFORMATION The Director of Information is responsible to the Deputy Chief of Staff for policy control over and coordination of the activities of three of the agencies of the War Department Special Staff—the Bureau of Public Relations, the Legisla-tive and Liaison Division, and the Information and Education Division. BUREAU OF PUBLIC RELATIONS The Bureau of Public Relations initiates and directs the public relations policies and programs of the War Department and the Army. LEGISLATIVE AND LIAISON DIVISION The Legislative and Liaison Division performs functions which fall into three general categories: (1) Supervision of the preparation and processing of legislation pertaining to the War Department; (2) congressional liaison; and (3) liaison between the War Department 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 deter-mines 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 prep-aration of War Department reports on legislation. In the maintenance of congressional liaison, the Legislative and Liaison Di-vision 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,. WAR el Official Duties 569 camps, stations, reservations, and installations. The Legislative and Liaison Division facilitates the answering of 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 providing necessary information for the Congress. INFORMATION AND EDUCATION DIVISION The Information and Education Division plans and produces materials and programs for the orientation and education of troops and supervises the operation of the general Army program in the field of troop education. BUDGET DIVISION The Budget Division prepares plans, develops policies, and exercises general supervision and control over those matters which relate to the budget of the War Department and the Army, to the language of the proposed appropriation acts, and to the budgetary and fiscal relationships with the Bureau of the Budget, the Congress, and other governmental agencies; and formulates and coordinates basic principles, concepts, and plans relating to fiscal matters of the War Department, both foreign and domestic. The Budget Division is specifically charged with the following functions: (1) The formulation and preparation of budget directives, the assignment of responsibility for preparation and defense of estimates, and ‘general supervision over the preparation of the annual War Department budget and supplemental estimates. (2) The review and adjustment of the estimated money requirements of all War Department agencies to assure conformity with the War Department pro-gram and to insure maximum economy consistent with military necessity. (8) The coordination and control of all activities relating to the presentation and justification of estimates or other pertinent matters to the Bureau of the Budget and the appropriations committees of both Houses of Congress. (4) The allocation to all War Department agencies of Such appropriated funds as are necessary to implement approved programs. (5) The development of plans with respect to the conversion, use, and transfer ~ of War Department assets. The Director of the Budget Division is also budget officer for the War Depart-ment and chairman of the Budget Advisory Committee. WAR DEPARTMENT MANPOWER BOARD The function of the War Department Manpower Board is to make a con-tinuous survey of the employment of manpower, both military and civilian, under the jurisdiction of the War Department, with the objective of recommending measures to the Chief of Staff which will secure the most effective and economical utilization of all personnel. SPECIAL ILANNING DIVISION The Special Planning Division prepares plans and policies for military and related industrial demobilization and for the post-war military establishment. The Director of the Division reports to the Secretary of War through the Under Secretary of War on policy matters relating to industrial demobilization, and through the Chief of Staff on matters relating to military policy. CIVIL AFFAIRS DIVISION The Civil Affairs Division provides the Secretary of War with information and advice on matters concerning areas occupied as a result of military operations, other than matters strictly military in nature. It is also responsible for the formulation and coordination of War Department policy on these matters. The Civil Affairs Division also maintains liaison with civilian agencies exercising functions in theaters of operations with which the Civil Affairs Division is con-cerned. NEW DEVELOPMENTS DIVISION The New Developments Division performs functions relating 4o research and development and the military application of new or improved weapons, equip-ment, devices, and techniques. Hhe Director of the Division is 2 member of the New ‘Weapons and Equipment Committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 570 Congressional Directory WAR INSPECTOR GENERAL The Inspector General assists the Chief of Staff in keeping the Secretary of War informed as to the condition of the Army. The office of The Inspector Gen-eral inquires into and reports upon all matters which affect the efficiency and the economy of the Army and causes necessary inspections, investigations, and reports prescribed by law or directed by appropriate authority to be made. Specifically, The Inspector General is charged with— (1) Making inspections and investigations for the purpose of observing and reporting upon the state of morale, discipline, and preparedness of the major commands and other Army activities. (2) The initiation of action to correct irregularities and deficiencies that may be found and to further the general and administrative efficiency of the Army. Inspectors general assigned to commands, function under the direction of the respective commanders and perform duties in relation to the commands similar to those performed by The Inspector General for the War Department. NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU The National Guard Bureau is responsible for the administration of War Department policies for the National Guard not in Federal service; for the initia-tion of proposals for changes in existing policies, regulations, or laws affecting the National Guard; for the initiation of action to extend Federal recognition to qualified personnel and units of the National Guard of the several States, Terri-tories, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia, and to withdraw Federal recognition from them when no longer qualified; for the formulation and admin-istration of War Department policies for the State Guard; and for assisting in the preparation of plans affecting the conversion, redesignation, and change of location of National Guard units returned to State control after a period of Federal service. OFFICE OF EXECUTIVE FOR RESERVE AND ROTC AFFAIRS : The Executive for Reserve and ROTC Affairs advises the Chief of Staff on matters relating to the Reserve component of the Army and the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps and assists the Chief of Staff in keeping the Secretary of War informed on Reserve and ROTC affairs. 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 properly organized, trained, and equipped for combat operations. The following duties are specifically assigned to the Army Ground Forces: The operation of Infantry, Field Artillery, Antiaircraft Artillery, Cavalry, Tank Destroyer, and Armored replacement training centers, and Infantry, Field Artillery, Antiaircraft, Coast Artillery, Cavalry, Tank Destroyer, Parachute, 2a Armored Schools, including officer candidate schools, for the Army Ground orces. 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, Antiaircraft Artillery, Coast Artillery, Cavalry, and specialized combat units. The furtherance of the orderly continuity and progressive development of the several arms. : The review with the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, of the tactical doctrine, military characteristics of weapons and equipment, tables of organi-zation, and tables of basic allowances of Army Service Forces 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. in Official Dudes 571 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, Cavalry, Antiaircraft Artillery, Tank Destroyer, air-borne, and armored personnel to the Army Air Forees, 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, and such other matters as may be necessary. The submission to the Budget Officer for the War Department of estimates of funds and other budgetary estimates as required. : The control of funds allocated for 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 short cuts in procedure to expedite operations. ARMY AIR FORCES I. Under policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff, the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, is charged 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; to provide air force units properly organized, trained, and equipped for combat operations; and to operate a world-wide air transport ‘service and related facilities of communications, weather, and flight control necessary to air transport operation. 1 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: 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 inductees assigned to the Army Air Forces. The organization of tactical units as directed by the Chief of Staff. The training of all tactical units assigned to the Army Air Forces. The organization, equipment, and training of such air task forces as are directed by the Chief of Staff. : The development of tactical and training doctrine, tables of organization and equipment, 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, in-cluding operation of facilities for processing personnel returned from combat. The assignment of officers of the Army Air Forces, including Army Ground Forces and Army Service Forces personnel on duty therewith. : The supply of personnel and equipment peculiar to the Army Air Forces, to the Army Ground Forces, Army Service Forces, defense commands, theaters of on, 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 presentation to the Commanding General, Army Service Forces, of require-ments on real estate, contruction, shelter, movements, common utility, supply, and equipment, 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 joint ground-air operations, tactical training, and doctrine in conformity with policies prescribed by the Chief of Staff. The installation and maintenance of equipment and matériel used by the Army Air Forces. The preparation of proposals and recommendations for conducting the design competitions authorized by law. 572 Congressional Directory | WAR The command and control of all Army Air Forces installations and bases not assigned to defense commands or theater commanders and all personnel, units, “and facilities thereon, including station complement personnel and activities. The supervision of Army Air Forces activities in connection with the research, development, procurement, storage, supply, maintenance, and final disposition of military aircraft and communications equipment peculiar to the Army Air Forces, including accessories, supplies, facilities, and appurtenances used in connection therewith, including technical inspection and the issuance of pertinent technical instructions. The collection, evaluation, and dissemination of air intelligence. All aerial operations of the Army Air Forces except for those units thereof assignedor attached to other commands. ; II. The Commanding General, Army Air Forces, is charged with command of the Twentieth Air Force as the agent of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 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. 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 a§ 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. (8) 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 orces. (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. (15) The operation of. replacement training centers and schools for the supply arms and services, including officer candidate schools. (16) The provision of basic training for individuals in the Army Service Forces inducted in excess of replacement training center capacity. ; (17) The operation of all reception centers. (18) The organization of Army Service Forces units as directed by the War Department. (19) The training of all units assigned to the Army Service Forces. (20) The assignment of officers of the Army Service Forces, including Army Air Forces and Army Ground Forces personnel on duty therewith. JUSTICE Official Duties 573 (21) The supply of Army Service Forces personnel and units to the Army Air Forces, Army Ground Forces, theaters of operations, and oversea forces in accord-ance with the policies announced by the Chief of Staff. (22) 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 Army ‘Service Forces sub-ject to review with the Commanding General, Army Ground Forces, as outlined in the duties pertaining to that Command. (23) The command and control of all stations except those assigned to Arm Air Forces, defense commands, and theaters of operations. (24) The use of judicious shortcuts in procedure to expedite operations. ARMY WAR COLLEGE The Army War College, located at Washington, D. C., is one of the general service schools of the Army. It is one of the highest units in the military educa-. tional system. Its object is to train selected officers for duty in the War Depart-ment General Staff and for high command in accordance with the doctrines and methods approved by the War Department. In addition it supervises the activi-ji of the Historical Section, formerly a branch of the War Department General taf. THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE The Army Industrial College is one of the three general service schools of the Army. It operates under policies established by the Under Secretary of War pursuant to section 5 (a) of the National Defense Act. In early December 1945 the college completed a temporary mission of training personnel for industrial demobilization. In these courses approximately 4,500 officers of the Army and Navy and key civilian personnel of the Armed Forces as well as of other govern-mental agencies were instructed in contract termination and property disposal. Its long range objective is research and instruction in the field of industrial mobili-zation which has for its purpose the effective utilization of our economic resources in war. Prior to establishing the definitive course of instruction of the Army Industrial College in September 1946, an interim course will be conducted for the purpose of analyzing and evaluating experience in industrial mobilization and demobili-zation, production and procurement in World War II. This course which opens January 4, 1946, will close June 28, 1946. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ATTORNEY GENERAL (TOM C. CLARK) 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 opinions when requested by the President or by the heads of the executive departments. He appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of exceptional gravity and. importance, exercises general superintendence and direction over United States district attorneys and marshals in the various judicial districts of the United States, and provides special counsel for the United States in cases of exceptional importance or when the character of the interests involved requires such action. : The duties of the Assistant to the Attorney General, the Assistant Attorneys General, the Director of 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. S., as amended by act of Feb. 27, 1877, 19 Stat. 241; secs. 356, 357, and 358, R. S.; act of June 30, 1906, 34 Stat. 816; secs. 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, and 366, R. S.) SOLICITOR GENERAL (J. HOWARD M’GRATH) 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. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 38 574 Congressional Directory | JUSTICE 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. hen 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. 8S.) No appeal is taken by the United States to any appellate court without his authorization. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (JAMES P. M'GRANERY) 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 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; drafts department legislation and reports on legislative proposals and enrolled bills; exercises administrative supervision over the Board of Immigration Appeals, the United States Board of Parole and the Library; and directs the handling of con-scientious objector cases (other than criminal) under the Selective Service and Training Act. 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 Tax Court of the United States; also of the enforcement of tax liens and of mandamus, injunctions, eriminal proceedings, 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 (JOHN F. SONNETT) 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 veterans’ 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 (VACANCY) This Assistant has charge of all civil matters relating to the title, possession, and use of lands and water rights, and the prosecution and defense of suits affecting those matters. This includes the acquisition of lands by condemnation and the examination of titles to lands acquired by the United States. He also has charge of the representation of the interests of the United States in all civil litigation pertaining to Indians and Indian affairs; insular and territorial affairs except those specifically assigned, other than criminal; and briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment made by the Solicitor General, as well as matters: specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (WENDELL BERGE) 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 Agricultural Adjustment Acts of 1933 and 1938, Agricultural Marketing Agreements Act of 1937, Anti-Racketeering Act (in conjunction with antitrust violations), Ashurst-Sumners Act, Capper-Volstead Act, Civil Aero-nautics Act of 1938, Commodity Exchange Act, Communications "Act of 1934, JUSTICE Officzal Duties 575 Connally Act, Elkins Act, Federal Alcohol Administration Act of 1935, Federal Register Act of 1935, Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914, Freight Forwarders Act, Interstate Commerce Act, Land Grant Act of 1866, Motor Carrier Act, Packers and Stockyards Act, Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, Produce Agency Act, Public Utility Holding Co. Act, Railway Labor Act, Robinson-Patman Act, Securities Act of 1933, Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Small Business Act of 1942, Sugar Act of 1937, Surplus Property Act of 1944, Tobacco Inspection Act, Transportation Act of 1940, War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944, and the Webb Export Trade Act. 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 (THERON L. CAUDLE) This Assistant has charge of all matters relating to crimes not otherwise spe-cially assigned to other Divisions of the Department, including the giving of advice and assistance to United States attorneys relative to trial and pretrial procedure, indictments, grand jury proceedings, search warrants, removal pro-ceedings, extradition, etc. ; offenses against Federal Statutes affecting Civil Rights, including matters arising under the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940; court cases arising under the Immigration and Naturalization laws, includ-ing expatriation and cancellation of citizenship proceedings; the consideration, acceptance, or rejection of compromises of criminal liability under current liquor laws; consideration of petitions for the mitigation or remission of civil forfeitures under current liquor laws, and collection of outstanding bail bond judgments and unpaid fines; condemnation proceedings under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and the Gold Hoarding laws; proceedings to recover penalties in civil actions under the Hours of Service Act, the Safety Appliance Act, and the Signal Inspec-tion Act; war frauds, except suits for the recovery of money damages on war con-tracts; enforcement by criminal proceedings of priority orders, and price control, rationing, and allocation laws and offenses affecting the national defense and security, including Selective Service, Sedition, Espionage, Sabotage, and Foreign Agents’ activities. He also has charge of legal matters pertaining to prisoners and parole and various jurisdictional questions arising in connection with the acquisition of land for military purposes. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (HERBERT WECHSLER) This Assistant has charge of all matters relating to the control of enemy aliens; the administration of the act of July 1, 1944 (58 Stat. 677), providing for voluntary renunciation of United States citizenship; administration of special wartime travel controls; administration of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended; participation of the Attorney General in the administration of the “Proclaimed List of Certain Blocked Nationals’; litigation involving property vested by the Alien Property Custodian and funds controlled by the Treasury Department under the Trading with the Enemy Act and such other legal matters as may be referred to the Department of Justice by the Alien Property Custodian; litigation arising from the declaration of martial law in Hawaii, military exclusion orders, and similar exercises of military authority affecting the civilian population; assistance to the Foreign Economic Administration and other departments in relation to foreign cartel problems; advice to other departments and agencies in relation to matters of State law affecting the war effort; legal advice to the War Department in connection with specially assigned problems; briefs in arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General; special assignments by the Attorney General. : ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (PAUL P. RAO) This Assistant has charge of protecting the interests of the Government in matters of reappraisement and classification of imported goods, and all litigation incident thereto. He also has charge of briefs and arguments in the Supreme Court on assignment by the Solicitor General, and of matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General. : ASSISTANT SOLICITOR GENERAL (HAROLD JUDSON) The Assistant Solicitor General appears for and represents the Government in such cases as may be designated by the Solicitor General and performs such additional duties as may be required of him by the Attorney General and the 576 Congressional Directory JUSTICE Solicitor General. He has charge for the Attorney General of the preparation of legal opinions and of the review and revision,as to their form and legality, of Executive orders submitted to him by direction of the President. He also handles obo arising out of trusts, bequests, gifts, and similar benefits to the United tates. ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS (DANIEL M. LYONS) Under the direction of the Attorney General, the Pardon Attorney has charge of applications for pardon and other forms of executive clemency. 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 with the exception of those involving immigration and naturalization matters, counterfeiting, nar-cotics, or other matters not within the jurisdiction of the Department of Justice; directs the acquisition, collection, classification, preservation, and exchange of identification records; directs personnel investigations requisite to the work of the Department of Justice or when required by acts of Congress; carries out the Presi- -dent’s directive of September 6, 1939, designating the Federal Bureau of Investi-gation as the clearing house for the handling of espionage, sabotage, and other subversive matters; trains law enforcement agencies in the handling of security matters, and conducts the operation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Na-tional Police Academy. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (UGO CARUSI, 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 (5 F. R. 2132, June 5, 1940), the Service and its functions were transferred to the Depart-ment of Justice, to be administered under the direction and supervision of the Attorney General. All functions and powers of the Secretary of Labor relating to the administration of the Immigration and Naturalization Service and its functionsor to the administration of the immigration and naturalization laws were transferred by such plan to the Attorney General. . The functions of the Service are the administration of the laws relating to the admission, exclusion, and deportation of aliens, the registration and fingerprinting of aliens, and the naturalization of aliens lawfully resident in the United States; the investigation of alleged violations of said laws, and when prosecution is deemed advisable, the submission of evidence for that purpose to the appropriate United States district attorneys. The primary function of the Immigration Border Patrol, which operates as a part of the immigration force, is to detect and prevent the smuggling and surreptitious entry of aliens into the United States in violation of the immigration laws, and to apprehend smugglers of |, aliens and aliens. who have effected unlawful entry. : Under the provisions of the Nationality Act of 1940 (Public, No. 853, 76th Cong.), naturalization jurisdiction was conferred upon certain specified United States and State courts. The Service exercises administrative supervision over the clerks of these courts in naturalization matters, requiring an accounting for all naturalization fees collected by them, and cooperates with the public schools in the education of applicants for naturalization for their citizenship duties and responsibilities. Through its field officers, located in various cities in the United States, the Service investigates the qualifications of candidates for citizen-ship 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 also has charge of special assignments by the Attorney General. POST OFFICE Official Dutres 577 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. ; ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (8. A. ANDRETTA) 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, Budget and Planning Section, office of the Chief Clerk, the Personnel Office, the Division of Records, the Supply Division, and the Statistical Division. He directs all budget, accounting, and auditing matters; controls expenditures from all appropriations 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 sub-clerical forces of the Department, exclusive of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. and all personnel matters regarding civil-service employées; has charge of the enforcement of general departmental regulations, the designation of space require-ments throughout the country, and the handling of all fiscal matters and business operations of the Department of Justice. FEDERAL PRISON ‘INDUSTRIES, INC. The Federal Prison Industries Corporation was authorized by act of Congress, approved June 23, 1934 (Public, No. 461), and created by Executive Order No. 6917 of December 11, 1934. Under the general direction and supervision of the Attorney General it manages and operates all industrial enterprises in Federal penal and correctional institutions. Its board of directors is charged by law with the duty of determining in what manner and to what extent industrial operations shall be carried on in Federal penal and correctional institutions, and is required to diversify, so far as practicable, prison industrial operations and so operate the prison shops that no single private industry shall be forced to bear an undue burden of competition from the products of the prison workshops. The Corporation is governed by a board of directors of five persons—a representa-tive of labor, a representative of industry, a representative of -agriculture, a representative of retailers and consumers, and a representative of the Attorney General. They serve at the will of the President and without compensation. The principal office of the Corporation is in the city of Washington, with branch offices at the several penal and correctional institutions. The officers of the Corporation are a president, a vice president, a secretary, and a Commissioner of Prison Industries. The Commissioner of Prison Industries is the acting executive officer of the Corporation. The products of the industries are sold only to other Government departments and agencies at current market prices. No goods or articles made in the Federal penal and correctional system are sold to the public. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT POSTMASTER GENERAL The Postmaster General is the executive head of the Postal Service. He appoints all officers and employees under his supervision, except the four Assistant Postmasters General, the purchasing agent, the comptroller, and postmasters of the first, second, and third classes, who are appointed by the President of the United States. Subject to the approval of the President, he makes postal treaties with foreign governments. He is the executive head of Postal Savings and ex officio chairman of the board of trustees. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING The Office of Budget and Administrative Planning, under the immediate direc-tion of the Postmaster General, is charged with the budgeting and the administra-tive and management planning activities of the Post Office Department. The 578 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE Office is under the supervision of the Director who, with the Commissioner of the Budget and the Commissioner of Administrative Planning, is directly responsible to the Postmaster General. The Director acts as chairman of the Operations Board. The Office also is charged with the duty of studying the operations of the Postal Establishment and of analyzing, planning, and devising management, operating, and financial procedures; of submitting recommendations to the Post-master General in collaboration with the Operations Board or bureaus and offices of the Department with respect thereto; of keeping informed of developments and improvements in government and business management, operating and financial systems and practices; of studying such developments and improvements in the light of the Postal Establishment and submitting recommendations to the Post-master General; of advising with and assisting the Department official in charge of legislative matters, and preparing data and information for legislative purposes;. of participating in hearings before the Bureau of the Budget, ‘Appropriation and other committees of Congress, for the purpose of explaining the Postal Establish-ment’s financial and operating policies, of maintaining a check on the execution of the budget program and general operations and recommending to the Post-master General such changes in administration and operations as may appear necessary; of collecting, analyzing and preparing material and data for annual and special public and confidential reports, and such other duties as the Postmaster General may direct. THE OPERATIONS BOARD The Operations Board of the Post Office Department is composed of the Director of Budget and Administrative Planning (as chairman), the Commissioner of the Budget, the Commissioner of Administrative Planning, and such other postal officials as the Postmaster General may designate, and is charged with the following functions: : ~ To coordinate the activities of the several bureaus and offices of the Postal Establishment; to recommend to the Postmaster General any action to be taken for the more effective handling of postal business; to consider and approve the issuance of all orders, regulations, and instructions for conduct of the Postal Establishment; to consider and recommend to the Postmaster General action to be taken on all requests for performance of any nonpostal service; to consider and recommend to the Postmaster General action to be taken on orders issued by other governmental agencies which affect the Postal Establishment; to coordinate the activities of the Department in meeting wartime emergencies; to consider and recommend to the Postmaster General action to be taken on all requests for cooperation of the Postal Establishment in activities resulting from the existing Tate of war, and to perform such other functions as the Postmaster General may irect. 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 forces of the Department; the care and maintenance of public property located in the Department building; the advertising of the Department; the supervision of requisitions entailing expenditure of the appropriations’ for the departmental service; the consideration of requisitions for the printing and binding required in the Department and field service; the supervision of receipt and inspection of supplies for the Department and field service delivered in Washington; su-perintendence of the publication and distribution of the Official Postal Guide and other postal publications; 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 Classification, 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 Civil Service Commission. : PURCHASING AGENT The Purchasing Agent contracts for and purchases 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- POST OFFICE | Officral Dutres 579 tracts; and enters into contracts for such equipment, materials, and supplies for the Postmaster General. The Purchasing Agent also enters into contracts for the ° Postmaster General for the procurement of all envelopes for the executive depart-ments, Government bureaus and establishments and the branches of the service coming under their jurisdiction, except plain envelopes for use in the District of Columbia. SOLICITOR OF THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT The Solicitor is charged with the duty of giving opinions to the Postmaster General and the heads of the several offices of the Department upon questions of law arising upon the construction of the postal laws and regulations, or otherwise, in the course of business in the Postal Service; with the duty of assisting in the defense of cases against the United States arising out of the transportation of the mails, and in other matters affecting the postal revenues. These include suits in the Federal courts involving claimsof 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; with the preparation of reports upon proposed legislation affecting the Postal Establishment; with the responsibility of seeing that the Postal Laws and Regulations are amended in accordance with legislation, 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 Special Administrative Aide.— Acts as budget officer for the 14 appropriations of the Bureau; prepares the estimates; responsible for the presenta-tion to the Department Director of Budget and Administrative Planning, to the Bureau of the Budget and Congressional Appropriation Committee; makes con-tinuous studies and analyses of departmental and field expenditures with a view to economy generally and at specific locations; generally supervises the mainte- 580 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE nance of requisite statistical data; prepares journals for submission to General -Accounting Office and others for statistical reports; the fixing of postmasters compensation rates; has charge of the planning of research work and cost studies for the Bureau looking toward the reduction of expenditures, improvement of service, a better understanding between the field operations and administrative control; has charge of planning and research for the Bureau in field of personnel looking to planning for promotion by examination; organized training of em-ployees; improved efficiency ratings, health and safety; acts as technical advisor to the First Assistant; suggests means of applying statutes, decisions and depart-mental policies for the Bureau; is contact officer with Departmental Commissioner of the Budget and with the Director of Personnel; exercises supervision of the Office Services Section; revision of forms (Field and Department); retains the precedent files; grants allowances for Miscellaneous Items, first-and second-class post offices; preparation of Postal Bulletin notices; initiates and prepares amend-ments to Postal Laws and Regulations, Postal Guide, and Manual of Instruec-tions; receives and disburses dead letter and other funds; keeps statistical data relative to Postal Credit Unions; passes on matters affecting postmasters’ salaries. The Divisions of Post Office Service.—Post Office Serviee under the jurisdiction of the First Assistant Postmaster General is divided into four geographical divi-sions. Each division is under the supervision of a superintendent who is charged with the organization and management, maintenance, hours of service, change in name, and discontinuance of classified and contract stations and branches, and rural stations; the designation of Army mail clerks and assistant Army mail clerks and the supervision of the performance of, their official duties; the appointment, disciplining, removal, and salaries of assistant postmasters, supervisors, special clerks, clerks, watchmen, messengers and laborers, printers, mechanics, and skilled laborers, and city, village, and rural carriers, also cleaners, janitors, telephone operators, elevator conductors, and firemen paid from the appropriation of the First Assistant Postmaster General; the establishment, extension, maintenance, and conduct of city and village delivery and collection service, and rural delivery service, and the authorization of all allowances for expenditures for such services, including carfare and bicycle hire; also all matters concerning special-delivery service; allowances for clerk hire at first-, second-, and third-class post offices, for the separation of mail and unusual conditions at fourth-class offices; the treatment of all unmailable and undeliverable mail matter sent to dead-letter branches for disposition; the enforcement of the prompt sending of such matter according to the regulations; the correcting of errors of postmasters connected with the nondelivery of mail matter sent to dead-letter branches, and the investigation by correspond-ence of complaints made with reference thereto. 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 regula-tion of hours of business and change of site of post offices of the fourth class. 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 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 POST OFFICE Official Dutzes 581 of address of international mail; and the preparation of general correspondence with foreign countries. : \ Railway Adjustments.— supervision of expenditures for the 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-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 Mail Service.—Supervision of all matters within the jurisdiction of the Post Office Department pertaining to the operation of the domestic air-mail service; the designation and preparation of air-mail schedules and the preparation of orders authorizing air-mail service and changes therein on all domestic routes; the examination of regular and special reports covering the performance of service; the preparation of orders relating to deductions for the nonperformance of service or other delinquencies on the part of 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.—Gathering and distributing funds derived from the collection of the revenues of the Postal Service for the purpose of meeting the obligations of the service when and where payable; supervision of the handling and remitting of funds by postmasters; covering postal moneys into the Treasury of the United States; receiving moneys coming directly to the department; paying indebtedness not settled by postmasters; making chargebacks in accounts of fourth-class post-masters in connection with the rendering of false returns of cancellations; han-dling matters affecting the postal revenues; * * * the regulation of box-, rent rates and deposits for keys of lock boxes in post offices; the payment of all salaries to all officers, clerks, and employees of the department; the making of all payments for rent of departmental buildings, contingent expenses, printing and binding, and such other expenditures as may be authorized; the sale of post route and rural delivery maps, and the keeping of accounts of expenditures. Postal Savings.—The conduct and management of the administrative office of the Postal Savings at Washington; the selection and designation of post offices as postal-savings depository offices and the supervision of the business transacted at such offices; the management and investment of postal-savings funds as the agent of the board of trustees; the administrative examination of accounts of postmasters and other fiscal agents of the system; the supervision of the sale of United States savings bonds and war savings stamps at post offices, including the administrative examination of postmasters’ accounts and settlement with the Treasury Department for bonds and savings stamps sold. Stamps.—The supervision of the manufacture and issuance to postmasters of postage stamps, stamped envelopes, postal cards, and rhigratory bird hunting stamps, by the various contractors, and the keeping of the accounts and records of these transactions; the receipt and disposition of damaged and unsalable stamped paper returned by postmasters for redemption and credit; the issuance to postmasters of and accounting for internal-revenue stamps, international reply coupons, motor vehicle tax stamps, and the issuance of War Savings stamps; the operation of the Philatelic Agency and maintenance of stamp exhibit. Money Orders.—The supervision and management of the Money Order Service, both domestic and international; the postal-note system, and the preparation of conventions for the exchange of money orders with foreign countries. Letter and Miscellaneous Mail.—The general control of all business relating to the classification of domestic mail matter, other than that of the second class, rates of postage, limits of weight and size and the addressing, forwarding and return of such mail; metered, nonmetered and other permit mailings; penalty envelopes, franking and other free mailing privileges; V-mail and acceptance of other mail for armed forces; and the verification and allowance of claims for credit by post-masters for postage-due stamps affixed to undeliverable matter. 582 Congressional: Directory POST OFFICE Newspaper and Periodical Mail.—The determination of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter, the right to continue in that class, rates of postage thereon and the collection of such postage, including the exami-nation of postmasters’ quarterly statements and -accounting therefor; the ad-ministration of the law requiring annual statements of their ownership, circula-tion, ete., and the instruction of postmasters relative thereto. ; 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 c. o. d. mail. 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: 3 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 Quildings); 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, ete.; the monthly and quarterly reports and correspondence pertaining to the accounting system; the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for the transportation of the mails in cities by means of screen wagons and pneumatic tubes, and the drafting of orders awarding such service, including the prepara-tion of contracts therefor; the fixing of allowances for the hire of vehicles used in the delivery and collection service; the examination of reports and the prepa-ration of orders making deductions and imposing fines for nonperformance of service and other delinquencies on the part of contractors. Topography.—The compilation, revision, and distribution of post-route, rural-delivery, county, and local-center maps; the preparation of parcel-post zone keys. Division 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. Mail 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, etec., 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 Serv-ice: the inspection, audit, and inventory of finances, valuables, equipment, supplies POST OFFICE Official Duties 583 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 inspec-tors and clerks at division headquarters and field domiciles of post-office inspectors. He authorizes and directs all investigations by inspectors and generally super-vises 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 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 con-nected therewith; the representation of the Department in its relationship with certain other Departments and agencies having jurisdiction in preparing for war-time emergencies; the making of arrangements for postal services 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 domestic and international, and losses therein; reported violations of the postal laws such as the alleged use of the mails in schemes to defraud and in the promotion of lotteries; violations of the private express statutes (Government monopoly of the transportation of letter mail); mailing of explosives, poisons, firearms, intoxicants, and of letters of extortion containing threats to injure the reputation of any person, or to accuse him of a crime; forgery of money orders and postal-savings certificates; mailing of obscene, scurrilous, and other matter prohibited transmission in the mails, and complaints of the interception of and tampering with the mails. He super-vises the development of evidence and the preparation for prosecution of criminal offenses arising in connection with the operation of the Postal Service and main-tains examiners of questioned documents located at strategic places in the United States. He 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 on the Chief Inspector. Applications for permission to take the exam-ination for the position of post-office inspector and the correspondence in connec-tion 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, Bureau of Accounts, are assigned the administrative examination of all postal, money-order, and postal-note accounts of postmasters at direct and central accounting offices and the accounts of foreign administrations; the prescribing and supervising the administrative examination of district office accounts at central accounting offices; the administrative examination of the accounts and conducting of physical audits of the cash and accountability of the philatelic agent and the superintendent, Division of Finance and Disbursing Officer; the instructing of postmasters relative to the maintenance of financial records and the preparation and rendition of their accounts; the supervising of the quarterly counts of penalty mail and determining the quantity of penalty matter procured and mailed by each department, agency, or organization of the Government and the cost of handling such mail; the work of ascertaining the revenues derived from the cost of carrying and handling the several classes of mail matter and of performing the special postal and nonpostal services; the keeping of administrative appropriation and cost accounts; the maintenance of control accounts of appropri-ations, apportionments, allotments, obligations, revenues, receipts, and expendi-tures; the maintenance of records of gross postal receipts, by calendar years, of post offices; the compilation of statistical reports, monthly operating statements, % 584 Congressional Directory NAVY and other financial data for the information of the Postmaster General and other officers of the Post Office Department; the ascertainment of the facts and the reparation of certifications relating to proposed compromise of liabilities to the rar an: under section 306; the general supervision of the administration of the Retirement Act; and, in collaboration with the Office of Budget and Admin-istrative Planning, the conducting of surveys and research necessary to the development of improved cost accounting and control procedures and the formula-tion of policies with respect to the financial accounting and statistical systems of the postal establishment. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Secretary of the Navy is responsible to the President of the United States for the general supervision and direction of all naval affairs and activities. THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The. Under Secretary of the Navy supervises and directs, in accordance with law, all matters of the Department of the Navy relating to naval and civilian personnel and the general administration of the Department of the Navy, in-cluding the general administrative control of all shore establishments of the Navy. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY The Assistant Secretary of the Navy supervises and directs, in accordance with law, all matters of the Department of the Navy relating to matériel, including the development, production, procurement, and disposition of matériel and the facilities therefor. : THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR AIR The Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air supervises and directs, in accord-ance with law, all mattersof the Department of the Navy relating to aeronautics, including the coordination of naval aeronautics with other governmental agencies. The 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 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE The Administrative Office coordinates and supervises general administration and management services for the Navy Department, including civil personnel; certain appropriations; space; mail; telephone; office equipment and supplies, warehousing; printing and publications; correspondence and records manage-ment; microfilming (except V-mail); building security; transportation; rationing; housing; restaurant; civil pay roll; personal business facilities; civilian health services; improvement of working conditions; and related management functions * to increase efficiency and economy of operation. Provides office management services for the Office of the Secretary and the Executive Office of the Secretary. Acts in staff capacity to the Naval Establishment on printing and publications control, correspondence and records management, microfilm programs, and certain appropriations. : Tie BOARD OF DECORATIONS AND MEDALS The Navy Department Board of Decorations and Medals makes recommenda-tions to the Secretary of the Navy on the bestowal of honors of all types within the naval service not awarded by delegated authority; on the legislation, Execu-tive orders, and general orders, pertaining to decorations, awards, and campaign medals; and on retirement benefits to personnel with previous commendations. The design of medals and the definition of policies come within the Board’s purview. 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, and advancement. NAVY Official Duties 585 BOARD OF REVIEW, DISCHARGE AND DISMISSALS This board, established July 22, 1944, in compliance with section 301 of Public Law 346, Seventy-eighth Congress, reviews discharges and dismissals of former members of the naval service for purpose of determining whether, under reasonable standards of naval law and discipline, the type and nature of discharge or dis-missal of former service personnel should be changed, corrected, or modified. Cases are reviewed either by hearing or documentary review on petitioner’s request. After this review they are submitted to the Secretary of the Navy, for, and subject only to his final review. GENERAL BOARD The General Board acts in an advisory capacity to the Secretary of the Navy, considering and reporting upon such subjects as the Secretary may submit to it. INDUSTRIAL SURVEY DIVISION This Division has been established in order that the Secretary of the Navy may -be kept informed as to the efficiency of operation of the industrial activities of the Shore Establishments of the Navy, the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard, including the effectiveness of utilizationof personnel engaged in industrial work. The mission of this Division is to inspect such industrial activities from time to time and report the results thereof to the Secretary, with pertinent observations and recommendations. : LEND-LEASE LIAISON OFFICE The Lend-Lease Liaison Office represents the Secretary of the Navy in nego-tiations between lend-lease representatives of foreign governments and lend-lease representatives of various bureaus and offices of the Navy Department. MATERIAL DIVISION, OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Chief of the Material Division.—The Chief of the Material Division is charged with coordination of all the material and procurement activities of the Navy Department; supervision of programs for the procurement of ships and materials of every character 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 Material Division are considered as emanating from the Secretary of the Navy and have full force and effect as such. The Material Division is composed of: Inspection Administration Branch.— This branch of the Material Division was established to consolidate the administration of the material inspection activities of the material bureaus of the Navy Department. : Production Branch.—The duty of this branch is to coordinate and expedite the Navy’s production program. Procurement Branch.—This branch coordinates the various phases of procure-ment in the Bureaus. It has cognizance of contract clearance, guaranteed loans, and insurance. : Industrial Readjustment Branch.—This branch supervises and coordinates policies and procedures in connection with contract termination and related matters of industrial readjustment. is . Property Disposition Branch.—This branch supervises and coordinates policies and procedures in connection with property redistribution and disposition.. The Navy Material Redistribution and Disposal Administration operates under the direction of the Property Disposition Branch. Navy Price Adjustment Board.—This Board handles the renegotiation of con-tracts totaling $500,000 or more and manufacturers representatives and distributors. : Emergency Plants Operation.—The supervision of plants taken over by executive order. Navy Department Board of Contract Appeals.—Handles appeals of contractors claims. NAVAL CLEMENCY AND PRISON INSPECTION BOARD The Naval Clemency and Prison Inspection Board, convened by precept of the Acting Secretary of the Navy dated August 27, 1943, considers applications of naval prisoners for clemency and for restoration to duty: The Board makes recommendations to the Secretary of the Navy on such applications and on mat-ters relating to the treatment of naval prisoners and to naval discipline. Members i | 586 -Congressional Directory NAVY of the Board make frequent inspections of naval prisons, detention barracks, and brigs, and recommendations upon the organization and conduct of such activities are submitted. 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 of 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. 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.) - NAVAL RETIRING REVIEW BOARD This Board reviews and reports upon the findings and decision of any naval retiring board by reason of which any person who, while serving as an officer of the naval service, has been or may be retired or released to inactive service without pay. The Board’s authority is extended only to those individuals who may request review within the time limit prescribed in the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, approved June 22, 1944. / 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 THE FISCAL DIRECTOR The Office of the Fiscal Director, under the Secretary of the Navy, formulates, establishes, supervises, and coordinates all policies and procedures affecting the finance, budgeting, aecounting, and auditing activities of the Navy Department. OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL This Office furnishes commercial legal services to the Navy Department. It is charged with responsibility for all legal matters relating to procurement, contract terminations, property disposition, and renegotiation. Branch offices designated as Office of Counsel are established in each of the contracting bureaus, the Navy Price Adjustment Board, and the Material Division of the Office of the Assistant Secretary. OFFICE OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS The Office of Industrial Relations is responsible to the Under Secretary of the Navy for the development of the Navy’s personnel program for civilian employees and for advising and assisting bureaus, offices, and shore establishments in the application of the program throughout the departmental and field services. Its NAVY | Official Duties O87 field of interests includes all matters relating to the employment, assignment, transfer, promotion, discharge, service rating, and training of civilian employees, as well as those relating to wage administration, classification, employee relations, and safety engineering. The Office acts for the Under Secretary in interpreting established civilian personnel policies and recommends changes in policy. It is responsible for coor- dinating the Department’s over-all program so that uniform standards are main- tained throughout the naval establishment. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY The Office of the Judge Advocate General has cognizance of all matters of law which involve the service, and reports upon the legal features of courts martial, courts of inquiry, and boards of investigation and inquest. It also drafts pro- posed legislation, except appropriations, arising in the Department. It renders to the Secretary opinions on the legality of any matters referred to the Office by him, including proceedings in the civil courts by or against the Government. The Judge Advocate General prepares for submission to the Attorney General such questions as the Secretary of the Navy may direct. This Office examines reports, bills, and resolutions introduced into Congress and referred to the Navy Department. Additional functions include the review and necessary action on international law, admiralty cases, and claims for dam- ages involving vessels and aircraft. OFFICE OF THE MANAGEMENT ENGINEER . This Office is under the direction of the Management Engineer, who acts as a management consultant and advisor to the secretaries and their staffs. It is the responsibility of this Office to assist in the development of adequate organiza- tional structure of the bureaus and offices in the Navy Department. It is also the responsibility of this Office to coordinate management effort in the Navy Department, to eliminate nonessential work, simplify essential work, and to improve the utilization of personnel. These responsibilities are effected through Department-wide management programs and specialized surveys and analyses. OFFICE OF NAVAL HISTORY The ‘Office of N val History was established July 31, 1944, directly under the Secretary of the Navy. The Director is charged with coordinating the preparation of histories and narratives of the present war, in order to assure adequate coverage to serve present and future needs and effectively to eliminate nonessential and overlapping effort. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR, NAVAL PETROLEUM AND OIL SHALE RESERVES The Office of Naval Petroleum Reserves was established in 1927 as a part of the Secretary’s office. By a directive dated June 6, 1944, the duties and func-tions of the office were redefined -The Office of the Director of Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale reserves was established to take custody and charge of the reserves on behalf of the Secretary; to formulate plans and programs for the exploration, prospecting, protection, conservation, development, use and operation of the reserves, and for the production of oil therefrom, and to make recommendations to the Secretary with respect thereto; to execute such plans and programs as are duly approved; and to consult with the bureaus and other offices of the Navy Department and other Government departments and agencies to the extent necessary for the administration and control of the reserves, and for the produc-tion therefrom. OFFICE OF NAVY PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES This office was established to represent the Secretary of the Navy in all photo-graphic activities of the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard, and to conduct and coordinate Navy liaison concerning photography with Government agencies and commercial producers. NAVY PHOTOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE The Navy Photographic Institute was established under the Director, Navy Photographic Services, to stimulate and encourage Navy photographers and to raise standards and extend the development of photography in the service of the Navy. 588 Congressional Directory NAVY OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION The following are the functions of the Office of Public Information: (a) To Satisfy the American public’s justifiable interest in the activities of the avy. (b) To Procure for the personnel of the Navy public recognition commensurate with their accomplishments. (¢) To Insure continuing public support for the prosecution of the war. (d) To Foster a sustained interest in the Navy in the post-war period. OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND INVENTIONS This office, established May 19, 1945, coordinates and disseminates to all bureaus full information with respect to all naval research, experimental test, and developmental activities; undertakes studies of specific instrumentalities and techniques for the purpose of outlining research, experimental, test, or develop-mental projects; maintains a continuous survey of research, experimental, test, and developmental work conducted by other governmental agencies, corporations, educational and scientific institutions, and represents the Navy Department in dealings therewith in regard to such work; supervises and administers all activi-ties within or on behalf of the Navy Department relating to patents, inventions, trade-marks, copyrights, royalty payments, and similar matters, and correlates such activities with the research, experimental and developmental activities of the Navy; is charged with operation, ete., of Naval Research Laboratory, Wash-ington, D. C., and Special Devices Laboratory, Washington, D. C. OFFICE OF SAVINGS BONDS — The Office of Savings Bonds promotes the sale of Savings 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 Savings Bonds is responsible for the appointment of issuing agents for Savings Bonds and Savings Bond officers at Naval, Coast Guard, and Marine Corps activities. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW BOARD The Requirements Review Board is responsible for assuring that balance is maintained within and between Navy matériel and personnel procurement programs and for keeping procurement levels consistent with actual needs. The Board is to maintain such balance and consistency by direct action of the individual members in those matters for which each is administratively responsible. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW COMMITTEE The Requirements Review Committee assists the Requirements Review Board in the discharge of its responsibilities by keeping the major matériel and personnel procurement programs of the Navy under constant audit review. In performing this function the Committee gives consideration to the conformity of these pro-grams to strategic requirements, to rates of use and attrition, to inventory levels, ete. REQUIREMENTS REVIEW DIVISION The Requirements Review: Division assists the Requirements Review Board and Committee in the discharge of their responsibilities. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS The Office of the Chief of Naval Operations is organized in accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 9635 of September 29, 1945. The following duties are prescribed for the Chief of Naval Operations by that Executive order: ‘4, The Chief of Naval Operations— - “(a) Shall be the principal adviser to the President and to the Secretary of the Navy on the conduct of war, and principal naval adviser and military execu-tive to the Secretary of the Navy on the conduct of the activities of the Naval Establishment. ‘“(b) Shall have command of the operating forces comprising the several fleets, seagoing forces, sea frontier forces, district and other forces, and the related shore NAVY : * Official Duties 589 establishments of the Navy, and shall be responsible to the Sontstiry of the Navy for their use in war and for plans and preparations for their readiness for war. “(c) Shall be charged, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, with the preparation, readiness, and logistic support of the operating forces, comprising the several fleets, seagoing forces, sea frontier forces, district and other forces, and related shore establishments of the Navy, and with the coordination and -direction of effort to this end of the bureaus and offices of the Navy Department.’”’ The duties of the Vice Chief of Naval Operations, the various Deputy Chiefs of Naval Operations, and the Naval Inspector General are as follows: (a) Vice Chief of Naval Operations.—Principal assistant and adviser to CNO; head of General Planning Greup; coordination of efforts of DCNO’s; general matters in connection with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Combined Chiefs of Staff, and other like agencies; performance of such other duties as CNO may delegate. (b) Naval Inspector General.—Inquiry into and report upon all matters affecting the efficiency or economy of the United States Naval Service (as directed by CNO) ; maintenance of contact with other inspection agencies in the naval service. (¢) Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Personnel).—Initiation and development of personnel logistic plans and policies; development and preparation of operating force plan for personnel logistics; coordination of basic training; liaison with Army through joint personnel boards and agencies. (d) Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Administration).—General administra-tion of Office of CNO; direction of Pan American affairs and United States naval missions; supervision of island governments; cognizance of naval district ad-ministrative affairs; liaison with State and other Government departments; over-all direction of communications and intelligence services; representation on joint ‘administrative agencies. (e) Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Operations).—Formulation of strategic plans and policies; cognizance of organization, operational development and readiness, administration, plans and operations of seagoing forces, sea frontiers, and overseas naval command areas; evaluation of operational information and dissemination thereof; representation on joint operational agencies. (f) Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Logistics)—except for duties allocated to DCNO (Awr).—Initiation, development, and execution of logistic plans and policies; determination of matériel requirements of the Naval Establishment; control of the distribution and disposal of all materials for logistic support, including petroleum throughout the Naval Establishment; coordination and direction of the construction and maintenance of naval vessels and bases; coordi-nation and direction of logistics efforts of the Bureaus and Offices of the Navy Department; supervision of the Naval Observatory, Hydrographic Office, and Board of Inspection and Survey; coordination of naval logistics efforts with Army and other Government agencies; representation on joint logistic agencies. (9) Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Air).—Principal adviser to CNO on aviation matters; correlation and eoordination of policy, plans, and logistics of naval aviation; preparation, readiness, and logistic support of aeronautical elements of the Naval Establishment; integration of marine aviation within over-all naval aviation program; supervision and direction of policies and programs affecting NATS; general cognizance of lighter-than-air activities; aviation train-ing; representation on joint air agencies and civil air agencies. (h) The Marine Corps and Coast Guard.—The Marine Corps and Const Guard (when under the SecNav) are parts of the Naval Establishment. Their functions will be integrated with those of the Chief of Naval Operations. The respective Commandants deal directly with him on matters of common interest between the Marine Corps or Coast Guard and the Chief of Naval Operations as may be appropriate in the discharge of his prescribed duties. The respective Comman-dants and their subordinates may deal directly with the Vice Chief of Naval Operations and the Deputy Chiefs of Naval Operations on routine matters within the scope of duties assigned those officers. (2) ‘The Bureaus and Offices of the Navy Department.—The Chiefs of Bureaus and Offices will have direct access to the Chief of Naval Operations in the same manner as the Deputy Chiefs of Naval Operations. They and their subordinates will deal directly with the Vice Chief and Deputy Chiefs of Naval Operations in such manner as to assist the Chief of Naval Operations in the execution of duties prescribed by paragraph 4 of Executive Order 9635 of September 29, 1945, quoted above. The functions and duties of the Bureaus and Offices remain as prescribed by statutes, executive and general orders. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 39 590 Congressional Directory | NAVY BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS The Bureau of Aeronautics is charged with such matters pertaining to naval aeronautics as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy (see. 8, act of July 12, 1921; 42 Stat. 140, as modified by letter of the Secretary of the Navy, dated August 18, 1943). The Bureau of Aeronautics makes recommendations to the Chief of Naval . Operations as to the technical characteristics and limitations of naval aircraft, naval aviation equipment, and manufacturing sources therefor involved in the formulation of operating plans. Conducts research, makes tests, and participates with other Government agencies and with industry in the design, development, and improvement of such aircraft and equipment. Contractsfor naval aircraft "and aviation equipment of a technical, specialized nature. Provides for plant facilities as necessary to meet production programs. Schedules, in accordance with requirements, the production of naval aircraft and naval aviation equipment and assists manufacturers in the production thereof, to the end that the various items may be delivered in the quantities, of the qualities, and at the times specified. Collaborates with the Bureau of Yards and Docks in the design, construction, and alteration of all aeronautic shore establishments, except advance bases, and maintains and repairs such establishments. Initially outfits and thereafter replenishes with aeronautical equipment and material all bases afloat and ashore from which naval aircraft operate. Supervises the service, repair, overhaul, and salvage of naval aircraft and aviation equipment. Provides and distributes, with minor exceptions, all photographic material for the Navy and Marine Corps. Redistributes Government-owned material, handles termination claims, and disposes of property under its cognizance. 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 enlisted personnel of the Medical Department. It is charged with the management and control of all naval hospitals, medical supply depots, medical laboratories, the National Naval Medical Center, and of all technical schools, established for the education or training of members of the Medical Corps, Dental Corps, Nurse Corps, and Hospital Corps, and with their upkeep and operation. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery provides for inspection of the sanitary condition of the Navy, and recommends with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service; it advises with the Department and other bureaus 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 personnel, with a view to the selection or retention of those only whose physical condition is such as to maintain or im-prove the military efficiency of the service if admitted or retained therein; it passes upon the competency, from a professional standpoint, of all personnel of the Hospital Corps for enlistment, enrollment, and promotion by means of examina-tions 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 the personnel of the Medical Corps, Dental Corps, and Hospital Corps. Itis charged with the administration of the Nurse Corps, and has power to Spain and remove all nurses, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the avy. NAVY Official Duties 591 “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 National Naval Medical Center, and at all technical schools for the education or training of Medical Department personnel. : It approves the design of hospitals and other shore establishments and 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 shore establishments and 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 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. It is charged with the operation of the Navy Demobilization Program. 5. It has under its direction the organization and administration of the Naval Reserve, and provides for the mobilization of all these Reserves. c 6. It has cognizance of transportation for all naval personnel except the Marine orps. 7. It establishes the complements and allowances of ships. 8. It keeps the records of service of all officers and men, and prepares an annual Navy Register for publication. 9. 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. 10. It is charged with the preparation, revision. and enforcement of all regu-lations governing uniforms, and with the distribution of general orders and regulations. ; : 11. Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments are submitted by this Bureau for the actionof 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. 12. It receives all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. 13. It is charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding naval ceremonies and naval etiquette. 14. 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 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 eharges, pyrotechnics, bombs, ammunition, war explosives, war chemicals, defensive nets, booms, and buoys, plus anchors, moorings, and appliances therefor except 592 Congressional Directory NAVY 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. (e) Naval powder factories. (f) Naval ammunition depots. (9) Naval magazines on shore. (h) Naval mine depots. (z) Naval net depots. (j) Naval ordnance test stations. (k) Naval mine warfare test stations. (!) Naval ordnance laboratories. BUREAU OF SHIPS The Bureau of Ships is charged with and responsible for the general design, structural strength, stability, and seaworthiness of all ships and floating craft 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 and supplies on its approved allowance list. It is charged with the design of all radio, radar and sonar equipage, including ordnance and air-borne applications, and special devices used by the naval com-munications service. It is responsible for installation and maintenance of radio, radar, and sonar apparatus ashore and afloat. 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 planning for materials and appliances for defense against gas attacks, except as specifically assigned to other cognizance; for diving gear and experimental diving units, respiratory protective devices, paravanes and mine-sweeping gear, office labor saving devices for ships and certain shore activities, mess and galley equipment, ground tackle and towing gear, life-saving equipment and navigational equipment. It is responsible for the quality control of all petroleum products for the fleet. It prepares specifications and recommendations for the purchase on annual con-tracts 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. NAVY | Official Dutres : 593 The Bureau is charged with the upkeep, operation, and repair of the David W. Taylor Model Basin, Carderock, Md.; the: Naval Engineering Experiment Sta-tion, Annapolis, Md.; the Navy Radio and Sound Laboratory, San Diego, Calif.; the Naval Boiler and Turbine Laboratory, Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa.; the Materials Testing Laboratory, Navy Yard, New York, N. Y.; the Industrial Test Laboratory, Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pa.; the Naval Metals Laboratory, Munhall, Pa.; the Naval Chemical Laboratory, Houston, Tex.; the Paint Labora-tory, Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Va.; the Paint Laboratory, Navy Yard, Mare Island, Calif.; the Rubber Testing Laboratory, Navy Yard, Mare Island, Calif.; the Naval Electrical Testing Laboratory, Somersworth, N. H.; navy yard materials laboratories located in the navy yards in Portsmouth, N. H.; Boston, Mass.; Norfolk, Portsmouth, Va.; Charleston, S. C.; Mare Island, Calif.; Puget Sound, Bremerton, Wash.; and Pearl Harbor, T. H. These activities are em-ployed for conducting necessary research, tests, investigations, and developments to obtain suitable apparatus and material for naval purposes. They supply ‘technical services directly to the Bureau although the administrative eontrol of such activities is vested in the military commands of the naval establishments in which they are located. . It is charged with management control of all activities comprising the United States naval shipyards. It maintains, in the field,” offices of supervisors of shipbuilding, industrial managers and assistant industrial managers, and inspectors of machinery, and also maintains jointly with the Bureau of Ordnance, Bureau of Aeronautics and Bureau of Yards and Docks, the offices of inspectors of naval material. 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 con- tractual 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 mainte- nance of the Naval Establishment. These offices are available to and frequently used by other Federal departments for the inspection of material purchased for Government use. 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 appropriations, “Maintenance, Bureau of Ships,” ‘Increase and Replacement of Naval Vessels, Construction and Machinery,” “Defense Installations on Merchant Vessels, Navy,” and, together with the Bureau of Ordnance, has joint supervision and control over the appropriations, “Increase and Replacement of Naval Vessels, Emergency Construction,” and “Repair Facilities, Navy.” BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS The Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with and responsible for: Developing plans, formulating policies, and specifying proeedures to be followed in the performance of supply, disbursing, and accounting duties afloat and ashore. These include the specialized operations pertaining to naval aviation supply and accounting matters. Functional supervision over the operations of supply, disbursing, and ac- counting activities. These activities include Supply Depots, the Naval Clothing Factory, coffee-roasting plants, fuel plants, supply piers, market offices, com- missary and ship’s store activities, purchasing offices, cost inspection offices, property transportation offices, Supply Corps schools, and material redistribu- tion and disposal activities. Supervision of the operation of receiving barracks and training stations main- tained from Defense Aid Funds. ; Recommendations to the Bureau of Yards and Docks relative to the location, design, construction, and equipment of storehouses and other facilities required for supply, disbursing, and accounting operations ashore. : 594 Congressional Directory NAVY ~ Recommendations to the Bureau of Ships for space and equipment requirements of supply activities afloat. Coordinating the assembly of the supplies and materials required for the initial establishment of advanced bases, and determining storage and space requirements in connection with the movement of such bases. : Coordinating the compilation and arranging for the printing of Navy Depart- ment specifications; supervising the upkeep of stocks of those specifications and of the Navy stock of Federal specifications; and procuring the printing of the Federal Standard Stock Catalog. ) : Preparing budget estimates and controlling the expenditure of the sums required for freight, fuel, clothing, subsistence of Navy personnel and for the maintenance of supply, disbursing, and accounting activities ashore. Controlling the Naval Stock Fund, Naval Working Fund, Clothing and Small Stores Fund, and Naval Procurement Fund, and the stocks of supplies and ma- terials procured from these funds. . Developing fiscal and accounting policies and procedures relative to the posses- sion and operation of private plants by the Navy, and their return to private ownership. Recommendations to the Bureau of Naval Personnel with respect to the educa- tion and training of Supply Corps officers and their assignment to duty. Supervision of the reporting of Navy inventories, usage, and requirements of critical and strategic materials subject to allocation by the War Production Board and other Government agencies. Supervision of the procurement of all supplies, provisions, clothing, fuel, and other materials required by the Navy, except certain specific items which are procured directly by technical bureaus. Supervision of the receipt, custody, warehousing, and issuance of Navy supplies and materials, exclusive of medical items and of ammunition, projectiles, mines, and explosives. . : Directing the collection, classification, and re-use or ultimate disposal by sale or transfer of all Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard scrap, salvage and surplus materials. This includes condemned vessels, materials in offshore naval activities and combat areas, scrap and salvage materials in private plants engaged in work for the Navy, and residual materials created by contract modifications or termina-tions. Developing new containers and packaging and packing methods for the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. Authorizing and supervising the transportation of Navy property, civilian personnel, and the household effects of Navy personnel, both military and civilian; the procurement of cargoes, the loading and discharging of supply ships and tankers, and the charter of merchant vessels for the transportation of supplies. Determining allowable costs under all types of Navy contracts wherein cost is the basis for compensation. Payment for all articles and services procured for the Navy; payment of Navy pay rolls, military and civilian; payment of family allowances to the dependents of Navy personnel and of other allotments; and arranging for the funds required by Navy disbursing officers. Supervising the issuance of War Savings Bonds purchased by Navy personnel, both military and civilian. ~ Keeping and auditing the property and money accounts of the Naval Establish-ment. This includes accounts of all manufacturing and operating expenses at yards and stations; accounts pertaining to the lend-lease operations of the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard; inventory records relating to the plant proper-ties, facilities, and capital equipment owned in whole or in part by the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard; the direction of naval cost accounting; and the rendering of periodic and special reports and statements based thereon. 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. It is the function and responsibility of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and its field organizations to assist all Bureaus and Offices of the Navy Department in development planning and to administer directly the design, construction, and major repairs of the public works and public utilities including: Navy Yard facilities, such as drydocks, marine railways, building ways, hammerhead cranes; harbor structures, such as moorings, quay walls, piers, wharves, slips (including dredging), landings, float-ing cranes; utilities, such as power plants, railroads, and systems for heat, light, oy Official Duties : 595 telephone, water, and sewer services; all types of buildings, including structural and machine shops, and such accessories 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 ex-cept such minor routine work as can be accomplished by station forces, at ord-nance 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, loco-motive 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 statisfactory as to location, lay-out, and operating features; makes cost estimates; and supervises construction. The Bureau of Yards and Docks is charged with all functions, both legal and administrative, respecting the acquisition and disposition of real estate, or any interest therein, for the Navy Department, and is custodian of all naval real estate which is not in active use. The Bureau of Yards and Docks is a direct construction agericy, 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 types of structures mentioned above. The Bureau’s present practice is the accomplishment of construction work coming under its cognizance through the medium of general contracts awarded on a competitive 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 was extensively used during the period immediately prior to and during the early stages of the war, in the interests of satisfying the construction demands of the Navy in the shortest time. The use of this type of contract has been largely discontinued, since March 1943, in favor of the lump-sum form of contract. Insorder to accomplish the design, construction, repair, and operation of public works facilities at advanced bases, the Bureau has been instrumental in organizing and placing in service naval personnel known as Construction Battalions (Sea-bees). A Construction Battalion consists of approximately 32 officers and 1,100 enlisted men who are all qualified engineering and construction personnel, with a sufficient diversity of ratings to perform any and all tasks, the accomplishment of which is a responsibility of this Bureau. Members of the Construction Battalions are trained in military tactics and have ~ participated in and experienced combat in every theater of war. Construction Battalions (Special), specifically trained in handling cargo from ship to shore, have been formed in considerable numbers, and are gradually as-suming the major responsibilities in the movement of Navy cargo at advanced bases. Construction Battalion Maintenance Units, composed of 7 officers and 270 men usually take over the base maintenance work from those regular battalions which have completed the base construction, and which have been assigned to other construction work or have been inactivated as a result of demobilization. Construction Battalion Detachments are smaller groups of men specially organized for particular assignments and may be transferred immediately to other destinations upon completion of the task. The complement of such units is not constant. : The work of the Bureau and its attendant field activities are administered by officers of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, headed by the chief of the Bureau, who is an officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, and also Chief of Civil Engineers, United States Navy, appointed for a term of 4 years, who now holds the temporary rank of vice admiral, and an Assistant Chief of the Bureau, also an officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, who holds the temporary rank of rear admiral. . For administrative purposes the work of the Bureau is divided into six depart-ments, each headed and administered by a commissioned officer of the Civil Engineer Corps, United States Navy, as follows: Administration and Personnel Department, Construction Department, Planning and Design Department, Finance and Operating Department, Progress Control and Statistical Depart-ment, and Advance Base Department. 596 Congressional Directory NAVY HEADQUARTERS, UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS The Commandant of the Marine Corps is charged with and responsible for the procurement, distribution, education, training, discipline, and discharge of officer and enlisted personnel of the Marine Corps, including the Marine Corps Reserve and their administration and general efficiency. The Headquarters is organize as the Office of the Commandant, Personnel Department, and two staff depart- ments. In the Office of the Commandant are his assistant, the Inspector General, the Director of Plans and Policies, the Director of Aviation, the Director of Public Information, the military secretary to the Commandant, the legal aide to the Commandant, and the administrative officer. 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 Inspector General when ordered by the Commandant makes periodic inspections and special investigations, and performs such other duties as may be prescribed by the Commandant. The Director of Plans and Policies makes recommendations to the Commandant relative to plans and policies of the United States Marine Corps, concerning military personnel, intelligence, operations, training and matériel. The Director of Aviation is Assistant Commandant (Air) of the Marine Corps; maintains liaison with DCNO (Air); is responsible for planning, organization, equipment, training, deployment, promotions and distribution of personnel, and budgetary matters for Marine Corps Aviation. The Director of Public Information has supervision over, and is responsible for, all public relations. The military secretary to the Commandant serves the Commandant in a confidential capacity in the performance of the activities of his office; facilitates communications between the Commandant and his subordinates; provides for the orderly disposal of communications and correspondence in Headquarters, Marine Corps; assists the Commandant in such other matters as he may direct. The legal aide is the liaison officer with Congress in legislative matters, and legal Cy to the Commandant in matters relating to administration of the Marine orps. The responsibilities of the administrative officer are to administer a program pertaining to civil employees and to control procurement and placement of en-listed personnel, to perform service functions, such as issuance of office bulletins and memoranda, operate Headquarters Communication Office control of parking spaces and issuance of parking permits, disposition of obsolete records, and similar services common to all parts of Headquarters. The Director of Personnel, Marine Corps, under the direction of the Comman-dant, is charged with the procurement of officer and enlisted personnel; with the classification, detail, and assignment of officer and enlisted personnel; with the appointment, promotion, retirement, military histories, and separationof officer personnel; with the promotion, military histories, and separation of enlisted personnel. The Director of Personnel is also charged in like manner with the administration of discipline; mess management, decorations and medals; morale, welfare, recreation, post exchange, and rehabilitation; casualties (including dependents’ benefits) ; target practice; with the adjudication of claims, legislation, preparation, revision, and issue of regulations and instructions to the service; with the keeping of records and reports and furnishing returns and necessary information in connection with the administration of the personnel and organization of the Marine Corps; and with such other duties as may be prescribed by the Com-mandant of the Marine Corps. The Director shall make inspections and investigations pertaining to the Personnel Department when so ordered. He shall determine responsibility for overpayments and loss, damage, or destruction of Government property, funds, ete. The Quartermaster General of the Marine Corps has supervision of matters relating to the purchase, storage, and distribution of all supplies for the Marine Corps; pays all civilian field employees; pays all expenses of the Corps except those pertaining to the Paymaster General’s Department; prepares annual. esti-mates of thé appropriation, ‘General Expenses, Marine Corps’; has jurisdiction over quarters, barracks, and other public buildings provided for officers and en-listed men; over repairs, alterations, and improvements thereto; over vehicles for the transportation of troops and supplies; over public animals and their equip- NAVY Official Dutres 597 ment; furnishes means of transportation for movement of troops; prints and issues blank forms for the Marine Corps. The Paymaster General of the Marine Corps has cognizance over all matters relating to the payment of pay and allowances of Marine Corps and attached Navy personnel and to the administrative audit and analyses of accounts and returns of disbursing officers; preparation of estimates under the appropriations “Pay, Marine Corps,” and “Pay of Civil Force, Marine Corps’’; and the super- vision and administration of all offices and personnel of the Paymaster’s Department. : : 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 normal peace- time functions as the Federal maritime police embrace, in general terms, maritime law enforcement, 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 fhe 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 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 598 Congressional Directory INTERIOR Guard Auxiliary, a voluntary organization of owners of motorboats, yachts, aircraft, and radio stations. (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 have been em-ployed are convoy, antisubmarine and patrol duty with the fleet, naval sea fron-tier or task forces; manning of naval transports, frigates, landing craft and other auxiliaries and certain Army vessels; security of ports, harbors, vessels, and waterfront facilities; beach patrol; training of landing-boat crews, Air-Sea Rescue Agency, 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: a Planning and Control Staff, an Advisory Board, a Merchant Marine Council, and Offices of Operations, Merchant Marine Safety, Air-Sea Rescue, Engineering, Personnel, Finance and Supply, and Administrative Services. : DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR The Department of the Interior has the primary task of developing and con-serving the natural resources of the United States and its territories for this and future generations. As the head of that Department, 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 Wildlife Service, Grazing Service, Office of Land Utilization, Division of Territories and Island Possessions, Division of Power, Bonneville Power Administration, South-western Power Administration, United States Board on Geographical Names, Federal Petroleum Board and Petroleum Conservation Division, Indian Arts and Crafts Board, and the Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings and Monuments. It is the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to mobilize the Nation’s natural resources for war. To aid in this mobilization, he was appointed Petroleum Administrator for War, Solid Fuels Administrator for War, Coal Mines Adminis-trator, Coordinator of Fisheries, and given supervision over the War Relocation Authority. The Secretary was a member of the War Production Board. The Secretary was also chairman of the American delegation to the Anglo-American Oil Treaty Negotiations at London in September 1945. The Secretary is a member of the following bodies: Petroleum Reserves Corporation, president. National Power Policy Committee, chairman. Board of Directors of the Virgin Islands Company, chairman, National Park Trust Fund Board, chairman. Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, chairman. National Forest Reservation Commission. Smithsonian Institution. National Archives Council. : United States Council of National Defense. Board of Directors of the Canal Zone Biological Area. Liaison Committee on War Relocation. 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 also 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. : INTERIOR Officzal Dutres 599 ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR (MICHAEL W. STRAUS) The Assistant Secretary has a general supervision over matters concerning the (1) Bureau of Mines, (2) Geological Survey, (3) Bureau of Reclamation, (4). Petroleum Conservation Division, and (5) Patent Policies and Procedures. He is authorized and directed by the Secretary of the Interior to perform the fune-tions and duties and exercise the powers vested in the Secretary for those partic-ular offices and bureaus. In the absence of the Secretary and the Under Secre-tary, the Assistant Secretary will act as Secretary and at all times perform such other duties as the Secretary may assign. The Assistant Secretary also serves as chairman of the Interior Department Suggestions System. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR (OSCAR L. CHAPMAN) 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, United States Board on Geographic Names, and matters on which the Conservation Branch of the Geological Survey acts in conjunction with the General Land Office or the Office of Indian Affairs, or in which it acts in relation to the work of these bureaus; 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, ete. Duties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus are assigned to him from time to time. CHIEF CLERK The Chief Clerk of the Department initiates, promulgates, and enforces regula-tions affecting the operational management and coordination of the departmental, bureau, and divisional offices under the Secretary of the Interior; controls space occupied by the departmental offices; has direct supervision over purchasing, duplicating, accounts, mail, files, communications, emergency room, museum, and garage. He is responsible for conservation and utilization of property; is contact officer for the Department in matters relating to the Division of Disbursement, Treasury Department, and the General Accounting Office; handles such official mail as the Secretary of the Interior may direct and various miscellaneous matters of the Secretary’s office not otherwise assigned, and is custodian of the official seal of the Department. A branch office is maintained at Chicago, Ill. 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 affecting 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 conduet 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 600 Congressional Directory | INTERIOR 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. He represents the Government of Puerto Rico in litigation in the higher Federal Courts. OFFICE OF LAND UTILIZATION The Office of Land Utilization is charged, under Administrative Order 1466, dated April 15, 1940, with the responsibility of coordinating and integrating the land classification, land use, and land management activities of the several bureaus and agencies of the Department, the establishment and development of sound forestry practices, the general administration of the soil and moisture conserva-tion work, and the maintenance of cooperative relations with Federal, State, and private agencies concerned with the protection, conservation, and prudent use of the lands and natural resources of the United States and Alaska. 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 publie 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 aré 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 Sr — INTERIOR Official Dutres 601 examination of the geological structure and the mineral resources and produets 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 Rec-lamation Act of June 17, 1902. This: act established the ‘reclamation fund” from the sale of public lands ‘‘to be used in the examination and survey 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 * * *” Ag accretions from the sale of public lands diminished, the fund has been augmented by receipts from oil and mineral royal-ties 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 hydroelectric power plants to assure more complete utilization, through multiple-purpose proj-ects, of the water resources of the arid and semiarid areas in the 17 States bisected by or west of the 97th meridian. Municipal, industrial, and military water supplies are also augmented by reclamation projects. Under the Boulder Can- yon Project Act of 1928 the Bureau constructed Boulder Dam with the largest power plant in the world. Under other legislation it has completed Grand Coulee Dam with a power plant which ultimately will be larger than that of Boulder Dam. Coulee Dam will also serve the Columbia Basin irrigation project of more than a million acres. The Commissioner, under the supervision of the Secretary, is in administrative charge of all the activities of the Bureau of Reclamation, including preliminary surveys .and investigations of proposed projects, the preparation of plans, the construction of irrigation works 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. : Denver, Colo., is headquarters of the Branch of Design and Construction, and the Branch of Power Utilization. The Bureau also has seven regional field offices: at Boise, Idaho; Sacramento, Calif.; Boulder City, Nev.; Salt Lake City, Utah; Amarillo, Tex.; Billings, Mont.; and Denver, Colo. The Bureau of Reclamation is providing irrigation service for more than 4,000,000 acres of land. Gross value of crops produced on Federal reclamation projects in 1944 amounted to more than $411,000,000. In April 1945 the Bureau of Reclamation submitted to the Committee on Irriga-tion and Reclamation of the House of Representatives an “inventory’” of 415 proj-ects including more than 100 which have been authorized. If all projects in the ‘inventory’ are authorized by the Congress they will greatly aid in maintdining production and employmentat high levels and in stimulating further development of the West. The proposed projects would -extend irrigation to 10,800,000 acres of new land and in addition furnish supple-mental water for 10,600,000 acres now inadequately watered. Almost 200,000 new family-type farms would be made available for demobilized servicemen, war workers, and others, and it is estimated that between 150,000 and 200,000 men could be put to work at construction sites the first year if funds, manpower, and materials are available. In addition, thousands of other jobs would be created in mills, factories, and other supply centers throughout the country. The Bureau of Reclamation is the largest producer of hydroelectric power in the world. Its hydroelectric plants at Boulder, Shasta, and Grand Coulee Dams played a vital role in war production and will be an important factor in further 602 Congressional Directory INTERIOR stimulating industrial expansion of the West. Nearly 14 billion kilowatt-hours of electric energy were produced at Bureau projects during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1945. Present plants have a capacity of 2,283,400 kilowatts and an ultimate capacity of 4,021,900 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 of enjoyment by visitors; directs construction from engineering, architectural, and landscape viewpoints; directs public interpre-tive service in natural sciences, history, and archeology, and provides for museum developments and is responsible for the investigation of proposed national parks, monuments, historic sites, and other park projects. Through the Office of National Capital Parks, maintains the Executive mansion and grounds. The Director is executive officer of the National Capital Park and Planning Commis-sion 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 (49 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. : 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 (49 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 acci-dents; the prevention of waste; the improvements of method in the produc-tion of petroleum and natural gas; and other inquiries and technological investi-gations pertinent to such industries. He has charge of tests and analyses of ores, coals, lignites, and other mineral fuel substances belonging to or for use of the United States; has charge of the collection of statistics on mineral resources and economic studies of metals and minerals produced or consumed in the United States 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 nonmilitary explosives and their ingredients. Under the pro-visions 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 substances found in the United States or its Territories or insular posses-sions, 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 deter-mine the extent and quality of deposits of such minerals, the most suitable meth-ods 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 INTERIOR Official Duties 603 to make or cause to be made annual or necessary inspections and investigations in 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. The act of April 5, 1944 (Public Law 290, 78th Cong.), author-izes him to conduct research and operate plants to demonstrate the production of synthetic liquid fuels from coal and other substances. : : 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 60 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 more than 11,000,000 livestock. Inaugurates cooperative agree-ments with 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. 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; 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 604 Congressional Directory INTERIOR 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 Horpibar, for the protection of big-game and fur mammals and of game and other irds DIVISION OF TERRITORIES AND ISLAND POSSESSIONS By the act of March 1, 1873 (17 Stat. 484, 5 U. S. C., sec. 486), the Secretary of the Interior was authorized to exercise all the powers and perform all the duties in relation to United States Territories then exercised by law or custom by the Secretary of State. Thus the Department acquired jurisdiction over the Territory of Alaska, and later, in 1898, over Hawaii. Executive Order No. 5566 of February 27, 1931, ‘transferred supervision over the Virgin Islands from the Navy Depart-ment to Tnterior; jurisdiction over certain equatorial islands in the South Pacific was added by Executive Order No. 7368 of May 13, 1936 (Baker, Howland and Jarvis) and Executive Order No. 7828 of March 3, 1938 (Canton and Enderbury). The Division of Territories and Island Possessions was created by Executive Order No. 6726, dated May 29, 1934, which simultaneously transferred to it all functions pertaining to the civil government, of Puerto Rico then performed by the War Department’s Bureau of Insular Affairs. Reorganization Plan No. II, effective July 1, 1939 (Pub. Res. No. 20, 76th Cong.), transferred all remaining functions, including those with respect to the Philippines, from the War Depart-ment to the Division. In order to concentrate all responsibility for civil govern-ment in the territories and possessions in a single division, the Secretary of the Interior issued on February 13, 1936, Order No. 1040, vesting in the Division of Territories the Department’s responsibility for government in Alaska, Hawaii, and the Virgin Islands. Under ‘these statutes and executive and departmental orders the Division performs a variety of services and has many duties. It is the Federal bureau with responsibility for advising the President and the Congress on all aspects of territorial policy. It acts as liaison between the territories and all branches of the Federal Government and the general publie, explaining the territorial viewpoint, protecting the territorial interests insofar as they do not conflict with Federal interests, encouraging industrial development and acting as an informa-tional clearing house for Federal officials and private persons, associations and organizations interested in business, commerce, trade or travel. It assists the territorial areas in working out plans and policies for a stable economy and a political status satisfactory to the inhabitants. It aids in the drafting of legis-lation to be introduced in the territorial legislature or in Congress. It repre- ~ sents the territories in litigation on appeal in the Federal courts, and in proceedings before Federal administrative agencies. It supplies financial and administrative services for the territorial governments in connection with personnel records and with the preparation of annual budget estimates to the Congress. The Division carries out the duties assigned by Congress to the Secretary for the care and maintenance of the Alaska insane. It supervises the operation and administration of such federally sponsored agencies, operating in the territories, as the Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief Loan Section, established to assist in re-lieving the devastation caused to agricultural enterprises in the Island by the SLE INTERIOR Official Dutres 605 hurricanes of 1928 and 1932; the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration, which has conducted a program of relief projects; the Virgin Islands Company, which produces rum, cultivates and grinds sugar cane, and engages in other activ-ities beneficial to the economy of the Virgin Islands; the Alaska Rural Rehabili-tation Corporation, devoted to the furtherance of agricultural enterprises; the Alaska Railroad; the Alaska Road Commission, and the Alaska Purchasing and Shipping Office. Two war-necessitated offices were placed under the Division’s supervision—the Civilian Food Reserve, created to administer the fund for the maintenance of food stockpiles in Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands established by the act of December 23, 1941 (55 Stat. 856), a program required to counteract the shipping shortages; and the Surplus Property Office, established to carry out surplus property disposition in the territorial areas, under regulation No. 1 of the Surplus Property Board designating Interior as disposal agency for virtually all classes of surplus property in those areas, and the vesting of that authority by the Secretary in the Division. PETROLEUM CONSERVATION DIVISION AND FEDERAL PETROLEUM BOARD The Petroleum Conservation Division was established by the Secretary (Orders No. 1054, March 14, 1936, and No. 1057, March 31, 1936) to assist in administering the Connally Act, to cooperate with the Interstate Oil Compact Commission and the oil-and gas-producing States in the prevention of waste in oil and gas produc-tion and in the adoption of uniform oil and gas conservation laws and regulations; and to keep informed currently as to the movement of petroleum and petroleum products in interstate commerce. The creation of the Division was authorized by Executive Order No. 7756 of December 1, 1937. The Federal Petroleum Board enforces the Connally Act (act of February 22, 1935, 49 Stat. 30; 15 U. S. C. secs. 715-715 (1)) and regulations, including the securing of monthly reports of petroleum production, transportation and refining operations from oil operators and reports of petroleum cargoes from operators of tankers, barges and other vessels, the physical inspection of properties and facilities of oil operators, the investigation of cases involving violations of the Connally Act or regulations. The Board was established by the Secretary pur-suant to authority granted him in Executive Order No. 7756 of December 1, 1937. BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION The Bonneville Power Administration was created by act of Congress approved August 20, 1937 (50 Stat. 731; 16 U. S. C. 832), to market power generated at the Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River in Oregon and Washington. It is directed by statute to encourage the widest possible use of electric energy and to provide market outlets therefor by constructing, operating, maintaining, and improving such electric transmission lines and substations as may be necessary. By Executive order of the President issued pursuant to the authority of the act of August 30, 1935, the Administration was made the marketing agency for energy generated at the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in Washington. By order of the Secretary of the Interior it has also been designated as the marketing agency for energy generated at the Hungry Horse Dam on the South Fork of the Flathead River in western Montana which will be constructed and operated by the Bureau of Reclamation. j The Bonneville and Grand Coulee Dams are operated, respectively, by the United States Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation. Power generated at the dams is sold by the Administration over a network of high voltage transmission lines in Oregon and Washington. Most of this power is being disposed of to war industries, including the production of metals such as aluminum in industries newly established in the region and to military and naval establishments. The Grand Coulee and Bonneville power plants are capable of expansion to an aggregate installed capacity in excess of two and one-half million kilowatts. During 1945 the ultimate capacity of the Bonneville plant and two-thirds of the prime capacity of the Grand Coulee plant will be utilized. SOUTHWESTERN POWER ADMINISTRATION The Southwestern Power Administration was created on September 1, 1943, by order of the Secretary of the Interior, to effect the provisions of Executive Orders 9366 of July 30, 1943, and 9373 of August 30, 1943, designating the Secre-tary as the agent for the operation of the facilities of the Grand River Dam 78349°—T79-2—18t ed.—40 606 Congressional Directory : INTERIOR Authority and for the sale and distribution of all electrical energy generated at the Pensacola, Denison, and Norfolk Dams in the States of Oklahoma, Texas, and Arkansas. : The Pensacola Dam was built for flood eontrol and the generation of power on the Grand River with the aid of loans and grants from the Public Works Administration. The Denison and Norfolk Dams were built under the direction of the Secretary of War and under the supervision of the Chief of Engineers of the War Department for the purpose of improving navigation, regulation of the flow of the Red River and North Fork of the White River, controlling floods, and other beneficial uses. The Denison and Norfolk Dams are being operated by the United States Corps of Engineers. The Southwestern Power Administration has been designated by the Secretary of the Interior as the marketing agent for power and energy produced by the multiple-purpose dams constructed by the War Department in the area in accord-ance with section 5 of the Flood Control Aet of December 1944 (H. R. 4485). Section 5 provides: ‘‘Electric power and energy generated at reservoir projects under the control of the War Department and in the opinion of the Secretary of War not required in the operation of such projects shall be delivered to the Secretary of the Interior, who shall transmit and dispose of such power and energy in such manner as to encourage the most widespread use thereof at the lowest possible rates to consumers consistent with sound business principles, the rate schedules to become effective upon confirmation and approval by the Federal Power Commission * * *7 : Under the provisions of section 5, there are at present assigned to the South-western Power Administration 14 constructed and authorized multiple-purpose dams and 16 additional proposed multiple-purpose dams. The Administration is developing and prosecuting a comprehensive plan for distributing and marketing power from these multiple-purpose dams. SOLID FUELS ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR ~ The Solid Fuels Administration for War was established by Executive Order No. 9332, issued April 19, 1943, which designated the Secretary of the Interior as Administrator. The Administration absorbed the Office of Solid Fuels Coor-dinator for War. In discharging its functions, it utilizes the facilities of other apenas within the Department of the Interior, particularly those of the Bureau of Mines. The Solid Fuels Administration establishes basic policies and formulates pro-grams to assure for the prosecution of the war the conservation and most effective development and utilization of bituminous and anthracite coals, and certain other solid fuels. It issues necessary policy and operating directions to persons engaged in the solid fuels industries. It issues and administers regulations governing the distribution of solid fuels by producers, wholesalers, and retail dealers in order to assure to the Nation during wartime that the available supply of solid fuels will be equitably distributed. The Administration collects from the solid fuels industries and from various governmental agencies data relating to the prices prevailing for solid fuels, to the distribution of such fuels and to the availability of facilities and manpower for the solid fuels industries. It is authorized and directed to make recommendations to other governmental agencies. For example, it recommends to the Office of Price Administration needed adjustments in maximum prices for solid fuels; it submits to the War Production Board recommendations as to the kinds and ‘quantities of materials needed by the solid fuels industries; it makes recommendations to the Office of Defense Transportation and the War Shipping Administration concern-ing facilities for transporting solid fuels; and it requests from the War Manpower Commission appropriate action to meet the manpower problems of the solid fuels industries. The Administration acts as liaison between governmental agencies -and persons engaged in the solid fuels industries. It also supervises the operation of mines taken over by the Federal Govern-ment pursuant to the War Labor Disputes Act and various Executive orders. OFFICE OF FISHERY COORDINATION The Office of Fishery Coordination was created to carry out the functions aod duties delegated by the President in Executive Order.9204, dated July 21, 1942, Pursuant to the authority vested in him by .Executive Order 9280, dated December 5, 1942, the Secretary of Agriculture issued Food Directive 2 (War AGRICULTURE Official Duties 607 Food Order 52) on February 8, 1943, delegating to the Secretary of the Interior responsibility for the conduct of those portions of the. war food program con-cerned with the production and processing of fishery commodities. These functions were in turn redelegated by the Secretary of the Interior to the Office of Fishery Coordination. Executive Order No. 9649, of Gctober 29, 1945 (10 F. R. 13431), terminated the Office of Fishery Coordination as well as the «Office of Fishery Coordinator. The order, however, authorizes the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Fish and Wildlife Service, to wind up the affairs of the Office of Fishery Coordina-tion and to use so much of the personnel, records, property, and funds as may be necessary to carry out the functions vested in him by Food Directive No.2. WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY An agency created by Executive order on March 18, 1942 to facilitate the relocation of persons evacuated or removed from their homes during the war period—primarily the some 110,000 persons of Japanese ancestry evacuated from the military area embracing 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 and then to 10 inland relocation centers, established and managed by the War Relocation Authority. From 1942 to December 1944, the centers were being developed into nearly self-sustaining temporary communities. At the same time loyal and law-abiding evacuees were steadily relocating to normal communities outside of the evacuated zone. With the announcement by the Western Defense Command on December 17, 1944, that the mass exclusion orders would be revoked on January 2, 1945, and with the Supreme Court decision in the Endo case on December 18 that WRA had no authority to limit the freedom of movement of “concededly loyal” Ameri-can citizens, relocation was put on a Nation-wide basis. Simultaneously WRA announced that all relocation centers would be closed by January 2, 1946, and all center residents with Army clearance—the great majority of the group—relocated by that time. Under present plans, the evacuees who have not been cleared by the Army for relocation will eventually be transferred to the custody of the Department of Justice. The WRA has also had responsibility for operation of the Emergency Refugee Shelter, housing nearly 1,000 European war refugees, at Fort Ontario, Oswego, N. Y,, since its establishment in the summer of 1944. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 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 pro-tection and management of the national forests, farm credit, agricultural adjust-ment, conservation and land use, farm tenancy, and rural rehabilitation; rural electrification; and other phases of agriculture. Staff Offices, Department of Agriculture BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS The Bureau of Agricultural Economics is the central economic, social, and statistical research agency of the Department. Through the cooperation of thousands of voluntary crop, livestock, and market reporters, it gathers and analyzes data on the Nation’s crops and livestock. It issues estimates on acreage, yield, produetion, 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. 608 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE It conducts research in farm management and practice, farm finance, insurance, taxation, land use and values, farm population and rural welfare, marketing and transportation, and the adjustments in production required by probable future demands for farm products. In the reconversion period following the war years, the agricultural economy must adjust to the national and international situation. Production goals, although modified, will be as essential in peace as in wartime. Agriculture-industry relationships will require major attention, and the Bureau will direct activities toward the problems we face as a member of the United Nations. 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. EXTENSION SERVICE > The Extension Service carries on -the general educational work in agriculture and home economics of the Department of Agriculture and aids in making avail-able the results of research and investigation in agriculture and home economics to those who can put the information 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 Department in the conduct of cooperative extension work in agriculture and home economics by the State agricultural colleges and the Depart-ment under the Smith-Lever, Capper-Ketcham, Bankhead-Jones, and supple-mentary 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 exten-sion work. In each State the organization consists of a State administrative and . supervisory staff, with headquarters in most cases at the State agricultural col-lege, and county agricultural agents, county home demonstration agents, and county club agents, who have their offices usually at the county seats. The dis-tinguishing 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. Under the general administrative direction of the Director of Labor of the Production and Marketing Administration, the Extension Service has general administration and supervision of those phases of the farm labor program which are assigned to the Cooperative Extension Service of the Depart-ment and the State agricultural colleges. LIBRARY The Department library contains more than 500,000 volumes on agriculture and the related sciences, technology, and economics, and receives currently more than 13,000 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 printed form is issued monthly by the library. Miscellaneous bibliographies on special subjects are issued from time to time. OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE The Office of Budget and Finance exercises general direction and supervision over budgetary and financial affairs of the Department, including acquisition, allotment and apportionment of funds, accounting, auditing, fiscal management, purchasing, sales, warehousing and related activities dealing with the supplies and equipment of the Department; formulates and promulgates departmental budgetary and financial policies and procedures; reviews the budgetary and financial aspects of program proposals; and, in cooperation with staff and pro-gram agencies, develops improvements in the management and operation of the Department; acts as the central point of contact on budgetary, fiscal, procure-ment, and related matters with Budget Bureau, General Accounting Office, AGRICULTURE Official Duties 609 | Treasury Department, the Congressional Committees on Appropriations, and other agencies concerned with the finances and supply activities of the De-partment. : OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS The Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations is responsible for the collection and analysis of information on all phasesof foreign agricultural policy as well as pro-duction, consumption, and trade and for the dissemination of this information. This includes studies of the factors influencing the food supply and needs of foreign countries, competition, trade barriers, production and marketing, and other developments affecting American agriculture. The Office coordinates the relations of the Department of Agriculture with respect to foreign trade and related 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 on policy matters with respect to foreign relations gen-erally. It also represents the Department in discussions with representatives of foreign governments on methods of handling agricultural surpluses. It also di-rects the Department’s program for the development of strategic and comple-mentary agricultural products in Latin America such as rubber, fibers, vegetable oils, insecticides, ete. In addition, it coooperates with representatives of foreign governments in supplying agricultural technicians to those countries. The Office performs technical commodity and regional investigations and analyses in the interests of the Department, the Combined Food Board, the Army and the Navy, and collaborates with other governmental agencies in studies of foreign economic developments. OFFICE OF INFORMATION The Office of Information supervises the expenditure of the appropriations for printing and binding for the Department and supervises all editing, illustrating, printing, and distribution of publications. The Office prepares special Depart-ment reports and serves as a departmental clearinghouse for information pre-pared for the press as a result of the research, regulatory, conservation, service, and action programs of the Department; it correlates information on the results of specialized work in diverse lines, and presents facts in forms most practical for use by farmers and the general public. The Office also furnishes daily, through radio stations in all parts of the United States, authentic information of practical use to farmers and others concerning the discoveries made by the Department and the farm practices recommended by it; and answers by radio questions in all fields of agriculture and home economics. The Office also is responsible for (1) informing the Secretary on the total information operation of the Department; and (2) for arranging in cooperation with the information officers of the Department’s agencies and the State agricultural extension services, for preparation and distribution 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. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS The Office of Plant and Operations is responsible for the housing of depart-mental activities both in Washington and the field; communications and records management services and programs; technical advisory service and development of standard specifications where engineering principles are involved in the pro-curement, operation, and maintenance of equipment, and the deciding of all engi-neering questions of controversial character in connection with award of contracts; 610 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE departmental representation on technical operations in connection with Federal planimetric and topographic mapping projects and liaison with the Bureau of the Budget on map production methods, costs and operations, and with the War and Navy Departments on the initiation, classification, and execution of aerial photo-graphic projects covering areas of military importance; administrative services functions for the Office of the Secretary; and central departmental storeroom and supply, motor transport, and photographie, duplicating, addressing, and mailing services. : OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR The Office of. the Solicitor is the law office of the Department of Agriculture. The law requires that ‘“‘the legal work of the Department of Agriculture shall be peso 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 all activities of the Department, and render legal opinions relative to the application of statutes, Executive orders, and administrative rules and regulations. They assist in the preparation of proposed legislative bills, administrative rules and regulations, orders, and proclamations. The Office of the Solicitor also takes part in drafting, examining, and eonstruing contracts, deeds, mortgages, leases, orders, and other documents. It approves the organization of cooperative associations, soil-conservation districts, and similar instrumentalities, and assists in determining their eligibility for partici-pation in Department programs. . Other activities of the Office include the examination of evidence to determine whether there have been violations of the acts or orders administered by the Department. In proper cases, the Solicitor recommends prosecution to the At-torney General. Pleadings and briefs in civil and criminal cases involving the Department and laws or orders administered by them are prepared by the Office, which cooperates with the Department of Justice in handling such litigation in the lower and appellate courts. The Office of the Solicitor represents the Department as counsel at hearings before the Secretary. The Office handles eontacts on legal matters with other Federal and State 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 or orders administered by the Department. 43:3 The Office of the Solicitor also prosecutes, for employees of the Department, applications for patents on inventions which are to be used in official work. It examines the titles to lands authorized for purchase or on which loans may be made by the Department. The Office considers and recommends the ap-propriate 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 their operations. Rar AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION ‘The Administrator of Agricultural Research is responsible for the direction and integration of activities conducted by the Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry, the Bureau of Animal Industry, the Bureau of Dairy Industry, the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, the Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics, the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering, the Office of Experiment Stations, and the Agricultural Research Center. The Administration was established by Executive Order 9069 of Febru-ary 25, 1942, to promote economy and efficiency and to concentrate the Depart-ment’s scientific work on problems that are most vital to the production and utilization of agricultural commodities. Functions of agencies of the Agricultural Research Administration: AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH CENTER The administrative organization of the Agricultural 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 11,700 acres on which scientific, research, and experimental activi-ties are conducted by 10 bureaus of the Department and by several other govern-mental agencies. - AGRICULTURE Official Duties co 611 BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL AND:'INDUSTRIAL CHEMISTRY The Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry is a research organization engaged in investigations and experiments in the fields of chemistry, physics, and other sciences with the object of developing new and wider industrial uses for agricultural products, and thereby improving agriculture. The Bureau is engaged in investigations concerning the industrial utilization, technology, manufacture and preservation, including freezing, of agricultural products and byproducts. Its scientists conduct biological, chemical, physical, microscopical, and technological investigations of foods and feeds and substances used in the manufacture thereof. They perform experiments on the utilization of agricultural raw materials for industrial purposes. The work of the Bureau is carried on at Washington, D. C., and at regional research laboratories located at Peoria, I1l., New Orleans, La., Wyndmoor, Pa., and Albany, Calif., and at a number of specialized field stations. 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 conducts 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 to improve the methods of breeding, feeding, and managing dairy cattle for more economical milk production; it investigates, among other questions, the nutritional requirements of dairy cattle of all ages for growth, health, production, and reproduction, and the efficacy of different feeds and combinations of feeds in meeting the requirements. In cooperation with the State dairy extension services it is establishing improved dairy practices through the operation of dairy-herd-improvement associations. It maintains and analyzes production records of cows in dairy-herd-improvement association herds for the purpose of identifying dairy sires and determining their breeding value. The Bureau conducts research to improve the quality of dairy products, to in-crease the efficiency of established practices, to develop new processes and prod-ucts, and in general add to the knowledge essential to the proper handling of milk and its manufacture into products. It supervises 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 fo 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, and diseases dangerous to the adult honeybee. 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 ® 612 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE outbreaks of insect pests and plant diseases, including those which may have gained a more or less limited foothold within the United States. It cooperates with State and local agencies in combating insects or plant diseases which occur in emergency outbreaks which unless controlled would cause extreme losses over wide areas within their normal distribution. It cooperates with agencies of the Federal Government responsible for the management of lands under control of the United States in operations to combat insects and plant pests. To prevent the entry or spread within the United States of injurious plant pests and diseases it enforces quarantines and restrictive orders, issued under authority provided in various acts of Congress, which prohibit or regulate the importation or interstate movement of injurious insects and of plants and plant products that may introduce or spread plant pests or diseases new to or not widely prevalent within the United States. To carry out this work it regulates and inspects the entry into the United States of railway cars and other vehicles, freight, express, and baggage from Mexico, and when necessary cleans or disinfects them. In compliance with plant-quarantine regulations it inspeets 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 research relating to the utility and economy of food, textiles, and other agricultural prod- ucts used in the home, makes economic investigations, including housing and household buying, and disseminates information to help families use their resources advantageously. 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 nutri- tional needs of the human body, and of methods of food preparation and preser- vation, 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. The data are used in national planning by Government agencies, also in developing diet plans and other aids to the wise management of family income. (8) Textiles and clothing— Information is developed to make possible more effective use of textile fibers and fabries for clothing and household purposes, and to assist families in the selection and care of clothing and household textiles. (4) Housing and household equip-ment—Studies are made of family requirements for household equipment and of the housing facilities needed for efficient housekeeping and comfortable living. These form the basis for publications to aid consumers in the intelligent buying, operating, and conserving of household equipment. St Research results are made available through technical and popular publica-tions, visual educational material, and press and radio releases. The Bureau works closely with the Extension Service and other field organizations of the Department of Agriculture, and with other Government agencies, such as the Office of Education, in their programs of educating homemakers in regard to nutrition, and ways of using available goods more effectively for the well-being of their families and for the Nation’s good. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY, SOILS, AND AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING The activities of the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineer-ing include investigation of plants, principally those of economic importance, soils, fertilizers, cropping methods, and engineering problems concerned with production, transportation, harvesting, and storing of crops. 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 completed. ge 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 AGRICULTURE Official Duties 613 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 ehiefly 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 practical control measure such as seed treatment, spraying, or dusting. 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, including production and processing machinery and farm structures, together with other engineering problems of direct concern to agriculture. In addition to the experimental activities of the Bureau at the Plant Industry Station at the Agricultural 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 Bank-head-Jones: Act of June 29, 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 exami-nation 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. 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. About 2,000 of these associations serve all parts of the Nation. 614 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE 2. A production credit corporation which has partly capitalized and which supervises local production credit associations. There are 514 production credit associations located at convenient points throughout the United States. 3. A district bank for cooperatives which'makes loans to farmer cooperatives. 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 distinet 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, which is located in Kansas City, Mo., and maintains 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 Administration 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. These include the wartime agricultural financing program of the Regional Agri-cultural Credit Corporation of Washington, D. C. (at Kansas City, Mo.), the making of emergency crop and feed loans from funds appropriated by Congress, 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. FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION The Farm Security Administration makes loans and provides farm and home guidance to help low-income farm families earn better incomes and improve their living conditions. It was established in 1937 as an agency within the Department of Agriculture to replace the Resettlement Administration. Loans are made to farm families who cannot get the credit they need on reason-able terms anywhere else. Loans are of two general types: (1) operating loans for livestock, equipment, and other farm and home needs; and (2) 40-year loans to enable tenants, sharecroppers, farm laborers and qualified World War II veterans to purchase farms under terms of the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act. Credit is supplemented with advice and individual guidance of. super-visors who help the borrowers prepare annual farm and home plans and carry out improved farming practices. Local committees of farmers assist the supervisors. In the West the Farm Security Administration carries out the Department of Agriculture’s water facilities program as authorized by-the Pope-Jones Act as amended. It administers a special loan program, in designated counties, to repair damage caused to farms by flood and windstorm. Other rehabilitation services developed include group health service plans, group purchasing and use of equipment and high-grade sires, and assistance in improving tenure arrangements and in adjusting burdensome debts. The rural resettlement projects under management of the Farm Security Administration are being liquidated. FOREST SERVICE Congress has designated the Forest Service as the agency of the Federal Gov-ernment 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 or pasture. 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 179,380,866 acres of Government land. On these public properties forestry methods are applied in growing and harvesting AGRICULTURE Official Dutres 615 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 managed to safeguard the supply of water for domestic, agricul-tural, and industrial purposes. Simple, democratic, and inexpensive forms of recreation are encouraged. Provision is also made for other forms of land and resource use. In research, in national-forest administration, and in cooperation with States and private timberland owners, the Forest Service works in close cooperation with other branches and bureaus of the Department; its policy is guided by the Department’s basic purpose of building and maintaining communities and pro-moting social and economic welfare locally and nationally. 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 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, supplemented by cultural and rubber extraction inves-tigations. : PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ADMINISTRATION The Production and Marketing Administration was established within the Department of Agriculture by Secretary’s Memorandum No, 1118 dated August 18, 1945. Under the direction of the Administrator, the functions of the Administration are assigned to the following staff offices, commodity branches, functional branches, the Commodity Credit Corporation, and the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. STAFF OFFICES OFFICE OF PRICE To supervise over-all functions relating to approval of maximum prices to be fixed for agricultural commodities or products, and relating to price-support programs in connection with particular commodities. TRANSPORTATION OFFICER To coordinate the transportatiqn work within PMA and to be responsible for formulating and supervising the execution of general transportation policies and for directing PMA activities in connection with the movement of food and farming and food processing materials or facilities within and into and out of the country. OFFICE OF REQUIREMENTS AND ALLOCATIONS To obtain from all claimants their estimated requirements of food from United States supplies, to coordinate the analysis and appraisal by the PMA of the essentiality of these requirements, and to recommend to the Administrator periodic allocations of food among claimants. To participate in the joint de-velopment of plans for the most effective distribution of world food supplies, coordinate the analysis and determination of the quantities of food to be imported into the United States and the sources of supply of such food imports, and prepare directives for the conservation and approval of the Administrator dealing with such imports. OFFICE OF CLAIMANTS PROGRAM COORDINATION To coordinate supply program activities and service and assist both claimants and branches in supply matters relating to allocations, commitments, procure-ment, shipping, and financing. COMMODITY BRANCHES Livestock Branch, Fats and Oils Branch, Cotton Branch, Dairy Branch, Fruit and Vegetable Branch, Grain Branch, Special Commodities Branch, Poultry Branch, Sugar Branch, Tobacco Branch. : Each of the commodity branches has, with respect to the commodities over which it has jurisdiction, responsibility for: (1) Production, adjustment, loan, purchase, subsidy, diversion, export, import, price support, marketing quota, processing, distribution, sale, and surplus disposal programs and, as assigned by 616 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE the Administrator, shipping and storage of commodity stocks; (2) supply esti-mates and allocation recommendations; (3) recommendations with respect to time, extent, and conditions of rationing; (4) recommendation of action with re-spect to maximum price regulations; (5) programs to effect economies and improve-ments in processing and marketing of food and farm products; (6) working with advisory committees; (7) war food orders; (8) cooperating with industry and other agencies—of the Department in developing new and substitute products and processes and new uses; (9) assistance in handling materials and equipment priority applications; (10) assistance in labor supply and utilization in com-modity processing and distribution industries; (11) market news services; (12) standards, inspection, and grading; (13) developing program information; (14) agricultural. marketing agreement and order programs; and (15) administering certain acts as assigned. FIELD SERVICE BRANCH To carry out on individual farms soil and range-building practices which con-serve and inerease the productivity of farm land, and produce and maintain supplies of agricultural commodities in the amounts needed during peace or war. -Farmer committees, elected annually from among their. own number by co-operating producers, administer all phases of the AAA program locally, as well as related programs such as crop loans, dairy production payments, and other price-stabilization measures. These committees also assist farmers in solving problems through special programs for distributing limited supplies of feed, fertilizer, and other materials, and surplus war property to farmers. To guide and assist farmers in producing national farm goals and in carrying out conservation measures which enable their land to produce abundantly while maintaining and increasing its fertility for future production. To make program payments for completed practices either in cash or in conservation materials or services. To place in effect during the 1945-46 marketing year (as directed by legislation and approved by farmers) marketing quotas for flue-cured.and burley tobacco. (Such quotas, with penalties for excess marketing, may be used only when ap-provedby two-thirds of the producers of a crop voting in referendum. Normally, marketing quotas are proclaimed and may be used in years of excess production of any basic crop; in 1944 and 1945, legislation directed their use for the two types of tobacco in order to encourage greater production of food crops.) To carry out the programs in the various States of the Materials and Equip-ment and the Food Distribution Programs Branches and programs of the com-modity branches assigned. FUNCTIONAL BRANCHES FOOD DISTRIBUTION PROGRAMS BRANCH To be responsible for school lunch program, direct food distribution programs, industrial feeding program, and to cooperate with Federal, State, and local agencies, public or private, for improvement of nutritional standards and food habits. ; : MATERIALS AND EQUIPMENT BRANCH To determine policies for and direct the formulation of requirements for critical nonfood materials, equipment, and facilities necessary to accomplish the approved PMA food programs. To determine policies for the distribution of materials, equipment, and facilities allocated by other Government agencies and to direct the control over such distribution. To administer a program for the effective utilization of surplus materials, equipment, and facilities which can be released by the armed forces, Government corporations, and other public agencies and used for the implementation of the PMA food program and other programs in Agriculture. SHIPPING AND STORAGE BRANCH . To be responsible for shipping and storage of commodities, except as assigned to commodity divisions; and assisting the Administrator in coordinating the shipping and storage work of commodity divisions to insure the best use of avail-able shipping and storage facilities. MARKETING FACILITIES BRANCH To be responsible for the administration of the United States Warehouse Act, section 201 of the Agricultural Act of 1938 covering adjustments in freight rates AGRICULTURE Official Dutzes + GF for farm products, the 28-Hour Act, improving food transportation and marketing facilities, administration of war food orders as assigned, and development of programs for improved marketing. LABOR BRANCH To assist in providing an adequate supply and distribution of foreign labor by transporting foreign workers to agricultural areas certified as needing manpower for producing and harvesting essential crops. To operate labor supply centers ant provide health and other essential services as required to these transported workers. : To develop and administer the farm wage stabilization program and to perform liaison services for the PMA in relation to other national agencies which deal with labor, supply and utilization problems in agriculture, and the food processing and distribution industries. COMPLIANCE AND INVESTIGATION BRANCH To develop information and means to facilitate the prevention of speculation, profiteering, fraud, and violations in all phases of the PMA food program. To investigate reports and make recommendations respecting war food orders, purchases, sales, storage, and related programs. To exercise powers of inspection nd to make cost investigations. To administer the Commodity Exchange ct. FOREIGN FOOD PROGRAMS BRANCH Administers the programs, with respect to food, food machinery, and other food facilities transferred to the Department of Agriculture from the Foreign Economic Administration under Executive Order 9630 of September 27, 1945. Secretary’s Memorandum No. 1130 of October 19, 1945, established the programs as a temporary branch of the Production and Marketing Administration. FISCAL BRANCH To be responsible for fiscal, accounting, inventorying, .disbursing, and related activities of the Administration and the Commodity Credit Corporation, including maintenance of the official inventory and inventory control records thereof. BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT BRANCH To be responsible for budgetary, auditing, administrative management, organiza-tion, personnel, administrative services of the Administration and the Commodity Credit Corporation. COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION The office of the President of the Commodity Credit Corporation was consoli-dated into the Production and Marketing Administration. 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 Executive Order 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 aggre-gate amount not to exceed $4,750,000,000. FEDERAL CROP INSURANCE CORPORATION The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation was established as a separate bureau within the Production and Marketing Administration by Secretary’s Memoran-dum No. 1118, Supplement 1, dated October 8, 1945. The Corporation was created within the Department of Agriculture under title V of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, cited as the Federal Crop Insurance Act, approved February 16, 1938. This act provided for the insurance of wheat crops, but it _ was amended June 21, 1941, to extend insurance protection to cotton crops. The 1944 and 1945 Agricultural Appropriation Acts provided that funds appropriated for the Corporation could be used for no other purpose than to liquidate existing contracts on the wheat and cotton crops planted prior to July 31, 1943. However, the Federal Crop Insurance Act was further amended December 23, 1944, remov- 618 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE ing the restrictions of the 1944 and 1945 Agricultural Appropriation Acts and providing for the insurance of the wheat, cotton, and flax crops planted for harvest in 1945. The amendment also provided for trial insurance on corn and tobacco in .1945 and on other crops in subsequent years in not to exceed 20 representative counties. : The Corporation is authorized to provide insurance protection against loss in yield due to unavoidable hazards, with the alternative that the protection on trial crops may be against loss of a percentage of the investment in the crop rather than against loss in yield. Premiums sufficient to pay indemnities and to establish a reserve for unfore-seen losses are to be collected from the insured growers. To assure payment of -indemnities during years of adverse insurance experience, the Corporation was provided in the original act with an authorized capital stock of $100,000,000, but ° the amendment of December 23, 1944, provides that no part of this stock may be used after the crop year 1949. The costs of administration are paid by direct annual appropriations. : RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION The Rural Electrification Administration administers a program, established by the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, of providing central station electric service for farms, residences, and other establishments in rural areas that are without such service. As the principal means of accomplishing this, Rural Elec-trification Administration makes loans on a self-liquidating basis to local groups, public bodies, and utilities organized under State laws, with preference accorded to farmers’ cooperatives and other nonprofit organizations, to finance the con-struction and operation of rural power systems. These loans are made on a maximum 35-year amortization basis for financing electrical facilities. 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 to borrowers in the organization of cooperatives and on problems involved in the design, construction, and operation of their systems in order to achieve maximum efficiency in providing adequate electric service to their com-munities at a reasonable cost and protect the Government funds which are secured by mortgages on the facilities. Borrowers are assisted in extending electric service to farms and other rural establishments and in helping consumers obtain maximum benefits of electricity on the farm and in the home. In connection with these activities the Rural Electrification Administration makes studies and disseminates information concerning the progress of rural electrification. Though the Administration does not maintain field offices, it has a field staff of engineers, auditors, and other specialists to assist borrowers on problems involved 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 electrifications loans. Under Reorganization Plan No. II the Administration became a part of the Department of Agriculture in July 1939. The Department of Agriculture Organic Act of 1944 removed the time limitation from the lending program and liberalized the loan terms. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE The basic purpose of the Soil Conservation Service is to aid in bringing about desirable physical adjustments in land use with a view to bettering human welfare, conserving natural resources, establishing a permanent and balanced agriculture, and reducing the hazards of floods and siltation. To this end, the Service con-ducts a program of assistance to farmers and ranchers in the adoption of certain simplified conservation 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; 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. COMMERCE Official Dutzes 619 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 pro-motion 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, Governor of the Inland Waterways Corpora-tion, vice chairman of the Publication Board, and a member of the following: Board of directors of the Textile Foundation, Council of National Defense, Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Education, Smithsonian Institution, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Foreign Service Buildings Commission, National Munitions Control Board, National Archives Council, Commodity Exchange Commission, and the Interdepartmental Committee on the Proclaimed List. The Secretary of Commerce is authorized to call upon other Departments for statistical data obtained by them. It is his further duty to make such special investigations and furnish such information to the 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 has general supervision over all of the bureaus and agencies of the Department, and performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secretary or may be required by law. In the absence of the Secretary he acts as the head of the Department. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF COMMERCE Under the Secretary of Commerce, and Under Secretary of Commerce, has im-mediate direction of the Civil Aeronautics Administration, the Coast and Geodetic ‘Survey, and the Weather Bureau, performing the duties and exercising the powers and functions which are now, or may be hereafter, vested in the Secretary of Commerce with respect to these agencies in accordance with the precedents, rules, and regulations established, or directions that may be given by the Secretary. In the absence of the Under Secretary, he exercises the powers and authority of that official over the other agencies in the Department. EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY The executive assistant to the Secretary serves as general assistant to the Secretary on executive matters, and is responsible for the over-all administrative management of the Department, including the coordination of the functions of the several offices and bureaus. SOLICITOR The Solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department of Commerce and his duties are to act as legal advisor to the Secretary of Commerce, the Under Secre-tary, the Assistant Secretary, and the chiefs of the various bureaus and offices. He also serves as chairman of the Committee of Alternates of the Foreign-Trade _ Zones Board. 620 Congressional Directory COMMERCE OFFICE OF BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT The Director of the Office of Budget and Management advises and assists the Secretary and other officials ‘of the Department in developing broad management and budget policies and programs necessary to achieve the various objectives, and develops the organization through which the Secretary can most effectively direct and coordinate the activities of the Department of Commerce; develops budget programs designed to assure the provision of funds necessary effectively to discharge the functions and responsibilities of the Department; develops and coordinates all administrative practices and procedures of the Department; develops systems to ensure the most economical use of manpower, equipment, ‘travel, communications, and printing services and other facilities of the Department in the performance of its essential functions. OFFICE OF INFORMATION The Director serves as a medium through which information concerning the program and facilities of the Department to aid business and industry will be transmitted to the public; provides adequate distribution of economie, scientific, and other technical materials developed through research and analysis in the various bureaus and offices of the Department; reviews material prepared in the bureaus and offices of the Department for conformity with general policy; con-ducts relations with the press, and issues releases to the public. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION The Director of Personnel is charged with the supervision of the functions of recruitment, 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 a program of manpower utilization; supervision of the health program; the direction of programs of employee relations; the establishment of means for the hearing of grievances of employees and presenting appropriate recommendations for the settlement thereof to the Secretary; serves as a member of the Council of Personnel Adminis-tration; acts as liaison officer in personnel matters between the Department and the Civil Service Commission; makes recommendations to the departmental budget officer with respect to estimates and expenditures for personal services; establishes and administers an equitable system of promotions and transfers; administers the regulations regarding removals, retirement, and leaves of absence; conducts correspondence and prepares recommendations connected with appli- .cations for positions, and performs such other functions as may be prescribed by the Secretary. ’ OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES The Director of Administrative Services provides the over-all service facilities of the Office of the Secretary; enforces the general regulations of the Department, and has administrative supervision of the buildings occupied by the Department; the care of all vehicles under the Office of the Secretary; the receipt, distribu-tion, and transmission of the mail; the custody of the Department’s seal and the records and files of the Secretary’s office; the answering of calls from Con-gress 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. : OFFICE OF DECLASSIFICATION AND TECHNICAL SERVICES “Under authority delegated by the Director of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion, the Office of ‘Declassification and Technical Services in the Office of the Secretary of Commerce assists in declassifying scientific information obtained from both foreign and domestic sources and is responsible for its rapid and extensive dissemination to industry. OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE PROPERTY The Office of Civilian Defense Property is charged with the performance of all functions transferred to the Department of Commerce by Executive Order No. 9562, incident to the storage, care, transportation, inspection, and disposition of the protective property of the former Office of Civilian Defense. | | | / COMMERCE Offictal Dutzes : 621 INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION The Inland Waterways Corporation is charged with the development of national inland waterway transportation underthe 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 promote the official and interchange encourage Government arrangements between rail and waterway traffic, and otherwise inland waterways transportation water function agency. carriers, gener and ally to as 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, foreign trade, and other subjects. 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 other Government agencies that have their statistical inquiries edited, coded, and tabulated by the Bureau of the Census. Machine tabulation facilities are maintained to cover the needs of other Government agencies either for specialized work or for overflow jobs beyond their own capacity. The decennial census includes most of the subjects mentioned above. Many of these inquiries are also conducted at more frequent intervals. , Population and housing.—Beginning with 1790, a census of population has been taken every 10 years. From a very simple questionnaire in the earlier censuses, the schedule of inquires has been expanded to meet changing conditions and increasing demands for basic population data. The sixteenth decennial popula-tion census (1940) showed 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, an year built. . , Regular reports are made on patients in hospitals for mental disease, on insti-tutions for feeble-minded and epilepties, on prisoners in State and Federal prisons and reformatories, and on judicial criminal statistics. 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 other governmental agencies. : The Bureau’s files of original population census records provide legally accept-able evidence concerning age and other personal data. Records of these facts in the census are obtainable only at the request of the person concerned when needed for such purposes as obtaining old-age pensions, annuities, passports, ete.. 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 are issued currently. Industry.—The manufacturing statistics program provides information on the production of manufactured commodities, as well as on the movement of materials from the mine and farm through the various stages of manufacturing up to the distribution channels through which products move to the consumer. This is accomplished through censuses of manufactures and mineral industries which | 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 41 | 622 Congressional Directory Contos provide comprehensive data on all industries and commodities and a system of current reports to keep the most important aspects of industrial information up to date. Although provided for by law on a biennial basis, the census of manufactures. has not been taken since 1939, having been set aside under the authority contained in the Second War Powers Act. It is proposed to take the census of manufactures (and mineral industries) covering the first full peacetime year, 1946. These censuses furnish data on the production of commodities, consumption of materials, employment, man-hours worked, wages, value of production, cost of materials, inventories, capital expenditures, etc. The current manufacturing statistics program presently includes about 100 carefully selected monthly, quarterly, and annual surveys needed to measure the more important aspects of industrial operations. Data are obtained on measures -of activity, such as production or shipments, and also on ‘forecasting’ items for . selected commodities such as the volume of new and unfilled orders and inventories. Business.—The business statistics program includes censuses of business, the previous ones having been taken in 1929, 1933, 1935, and 1939, and annual and monthly surveys of business activity. The census of business covers retail and wholesale trade, the service trades and businesses, and contract construction. For various kinds of business, information as to legal form of organization, type of operation, volume of business, employment, pay roll, analysis of sales, operating costs, credit operations, and inventories is made available for small geographic areas—counties and most cities—as well as for States, census regions, and the entire country. Annual surveys through 1944 have covered sales and inventories for the major types of retail trade. Kind-of-business detail is made available for States and certain city-size groups. Monthly surveys of retail trade sales have been made available by type of business for 34 States. Monthly wholesale trade, sales, inventories, and credits are available classified by kind of business. Vital statistics.—The vital statistics program of the Bureau includes the annual compilation of death data, including number, distribution, cause of death, extent of hospitalization, and other information necessary for public health, scientific, and commercial purposes; the annual compilation of birth data, including number, distribution, type of medical attendance, and other information necessary for infant health work, analyses of population replacement, and other scientific or commercial purposes; monthly sample analyses of deaths giving an up-to-the-minute index of health of the Nation. Statistics on births and deaths are also issued weekly and monthly on a provisional basis. The program also includes cooperative activity with State officials in the development of efficient procedures for the registration and certification of vital statistics data necessary for essential civilian purposes, as well as legal and quasi-legal uses in connection with military appointment, servicemen’s claims, ete., and for the general attainment of a com- pp ) , yplete and uniform system of registration. Governments.— Official data on such subjects as budgets, revenues, expenditure, debt, Government enterprises, employment, Government organization and elec-tions are compiled and published for various types of governmental units. Every 10 years a census of governments is taken that covers all governmental units; the last census covered the year 1942. Annual financial publications include summaries for States, for counties, and for cities over 25,000, with individual reports for each State and each of the 37 largest cities, and with selected topical summaries. Government employee and pay-roll data are collected and published quarterly. Elections proposals in States and cities are reported annually and an elections calendar is also published regularly. A Municipal Reference Service for information on State, county, and city government is maintained for the use of Federal, State, and local officials and research agencies. Foreign trade.—Statistical information on United States imports and exports is compiled by the Bureau from information contained in shipper’s export decla-rations and import entries, filed with Collectors of Customs by exporters and ‘importers and transmitted to the Bureau. The statistics compiled include in-formation on the dollar value, shipping weight, and net quantity (bales, square vards, gallons, etc.) of United States imports and exports by commodities, countries of origin and destination, and customs districts through which the merchandise enters and leaves the United States. In addition, information is compiled on the method of transportation (air, vessel, rail, truck, etc.), the do-mestic to foreign port routingof the shipments by vessel and by air and the na-tionality of the carrier for shipments by vessel. Publication of statistics of foreign trade was suspended for security reasons during the war period. This restriction has now been removed except for information on trade in uranium and thorium COMMERCE = ; Official Duties 1623 . and statistics on the foreign trade of the United States may now be released to the public. ae 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 as well as material from non-govern-mental sources 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 the businessman’s repre-sentative in Government. It serves to interpret American business to the Federal Government and Government to business. Its role was created by an act approved on August 23, 1912, in which Congress set forth its statutory funec-tions as follows: “To foster, promote, and develop the foreign and domestic commerce of the United States.” : To furnish practical service that will help all types of businessmen, large and small, to operate more effectively and more profitably, the Bureau is organized on a divisional basis. These divisions are International Economy, Industrial Economy, Construction, Distribution, Small Business, Research and Statistics, * Commercial and Economic Information, and the Field Service. In carrying out its functions, the Bureau offers the businessman two broad types of service. These are personal and published aids in the fields of inter-national and domestic commerce and industry. They are based on (1) an intimate knowledge of business at home and abroad; (2) a storehouse of informa-tion and statistics of interest and value to business which are evaluated, inter-preted, and analyzed for easy assimilation; and (3) a constant scrutiny of trends through which the changing needs of business are anticipated and special helps are created. : Individual service in the form of advice, suggestions, or pertinent information on business operations is available either from the Bureau in Washington or from any of the field offices of the Department. To insure the widest possible distribu-tion of Bureau data, the bulk of original statistical and economic research is brought out in published form. Another important channel through which the personal and published services of the Bureau reach the individual businessman is his trade association or business group. Close contact with these organizations results in a steady flow of material to the business public. The following periodicals, services, and special study series are the major vehicles used by the Bureau in disseminating published information to the public; Foreigh Commerce Weekly, Domestic Commerce (monthly), the Survey of Cur-rent Business (monthly), the International Reference Service, the Industrial Reference Service, the Economic (Special Study) Series, and the Industrial (Special Study) Series. : 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 all Bureau activities. It studies all facts pertinent to the current state of the commerce of the Nation, including the whole complex flow of funds between buyers and sellers; estimates the national income; establishes and maintains the Nation’s economic books and records, collecting, analyzing, and disseminating data on general business conditions, developments, and trends in the United States; and prepares periodic reviews for policy guidance for government officials and business executives. Division of Commercial and Economic Information.— Division This provides the flow of information, foreign and domestic, developed by the various divisions of the Bureau and by the Foreign Service of the United States. It determines the format of published” material; edits, publishes and distributes to business and Government this commercial and economic information containing a wide variety of statistlcal and factual material presented in concise form, helpful to business generally and particularly to small businesses that do not have research resources. It is the center of information in Government on trade associations and organizations of businessmen generally. It maintains the World Trade 624 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Directory, a compendium of information on some 800,000 foreign firms, compiles . trade lists of foreign buyers, sellers and agents, issues foreign trade opportunities and is the consultative center for guiding new and prospective foreign traders in the practices and techniques of international trade. Division of International Economy.— This Division assists the Director in the formulation of economic foreign policy, and provides exporters, importers, trans-portation agencies, investors, and Government agencies, with information on and analyses of foreign economic affairs. It collects, analyzes, and disseminates information on all foreign countries regarding production, domestic and foreign trade, public and private finance, foreign exchange, living costs, commercial laws and trade practices, import and export controls, and tariffs and customs regula-tions. It issues market surveys and reports on sources of supply. The Division prepares statements of the balance of international payments of the United States and makes studies of the balance of payments of foreign countries. It compiles information on United States foreign investments and the foreign in-vestments of other countries, and advises prospective investors regarding the laws, regulations, and taxesof foreign countries. The Division furnishes guidance -.to the Foreign Service of the United States concerning economic reporting from abroad, trains personnel for foreign commercial reporting; and cooperates with the Department of State in recruiting for the Foreign Service. Division of Industrial Economy.—This division prepares information for manufacturers, exporters, and importers on production, supply and markets, “both at home and abroad, for the products of industry including raw materials and manufactured goods. It also prepares detailed and comprehensive analyses and interpretations of business conditions and trends in manufacturing, mining, construction, transportation and public utilities; inaugurates and develops methods, procedures and programs for collection of current statistical data on. specific industries, trades and commodities; makes continuing studies and sur-veys of sources of supply, production, stocks and usage of commodities and materials for manufacture; surveys and analyzes productive capacity, output, employment, ete., of industry. The Division also makes specific studies of interest to industry in connection with domestic reconversion and the resumption of foreign trade in order that the best possible information may be available to Government and industry for making decisions and future plans; prepares questionnaires to be sent to the Foreign Service of the United States in order to obtain from foreign countries detailed information on commodities and industries and disseminates this infor-mation to industry and foreign traders for the purpose of developing export and import business. The Division prepares studies of markets for industrial and consumer products and other reports and investigations designed to promote and stimulate the expansion of markets for industrial production. Distribution Division.—The Distribution Division prepares educational ma-terial and reports for direct aid to retailers, wholesalers, and other distributors, leading toward more efficient and economical individual operations and best management practices. The studies embrace (a) market analysis providing factual data for setting sales quotas and effectively exploiting geographical markets for goods and services, and including manuals on how to apply market measurement data to individual marketing problems; (b) separate trade studies based on case material from efficient operators in wholesaling and retailing, thereby ~making best practices available to whole trades; (¢) booklets on opportunities and capital and other requirements for entering various trades; (d) distribution cost analysis enabling individual firms to segregate both profitable and unprofit-able elements of their operations in terms of commodities, customers, territories and operating procedures; and (¢) functional marketing subjects such as adver-tising and selling, accounting, stock control, store location, credit management, and others. Division of Small Business.— This Division is responsible for the coordination of the small business activities of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce; for the maintenance of liaison with all Government agencies and private organiza-tions working in this field; and for keeping interested officials of the Department of Commerce advised on trends in legislation on small business problems, trends in community and industry thought with respect to these problems, and the status of the Department program to aid small business. It is responsible for the conduct of a program of continuous research on problems relating tc management policies, taxation, credit and finance of small business, as well as the particular problems of the service industries. Its staff also works closely with veterans and members of the armed forces considering opening small businesses of their own. COMMERCE Official Duties be 625 Particular attention is given the industrial and commercial problems of com-munities and larger geographic areas. The Division also maintains close working relationships with the collegiate schools of business of the United States, in order to coordinate their programs on small business problems with that of the Division. The Construction The Construction Division is charged with serv- Diviston.— icing the construction industry and with assisting the Director to formulate policy with respect to achieving a sustained high level of construction. It organizes and publishes factual information pertaining to the industry. The Division’s program includes the preparation of detailed market data on construction activity, construction materials and construction costs, and by purposeful analyses of these data in terms of industry requirements and business and Government policies. In addition, the Division reviews construction prac-tices with a view to recommending effective ways of reducing costs, and follows foreign construction markets as a means of aiding members of the industry. Miscellaneous services to foreign traders.—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 information 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 misunder-standings arising between foreign traders in the United States and their clients in foreign countries. It aids in the protection abroad of American industrial prop-erty, such as trade-marks and patents. It investigates world stocks of raw ma-terials 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 Bureauin estab-lishing suitable contacts with American firms. \ Still another of the Bureau’s functions involves activities in administering the China Trade Act, a law authorizing the creation of and assistance to corporations engaged in the China trade. : Field Service—The field service comprising 26 offices in important business centers in the United States has the responsibility of making available to the business public the information gathered and compiled by the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, the Bureau of the Census, and the American Foreign Service. The trained personnel thoroughly familiar with marketing techniques and pro-cedures in domestic and foreign trade assist businessmen in making most effective utilization of the facilities available from the above-named agencies at points where they are of greatest use. The offices also gather information for the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce in Washington. Each field office serves as a convenient source of published material distributed by the Bureaus of Foreign and Domestic Commerce and the Census, to sell publi-cations for which charges are made, and to take subscriptions for Foreign Com-merce Weekly, Domestic Commerce,. the Survey of Current Business, and the International and Industrial Reference Services. Field offices prepare and distribute weekly the Foreign Commerce News Bulle- tin. This keeps businessmen posted on constantly changing regulations, tariffs, and other important facts in the foreign trade field. As the official representative of Office of International Trade Operations advises businessmen on export control regulations and disseminates information contained in Comprehensive Export Schedules and Current Export Bulletins. The Field Service also issues a Regional Commerce Bulletin on a semimonthly basis which brings to the attention of local businessmen current material prepared by the Bureau. It also prepares quarterly reports that analyze specific phases of business conditions on a regional basis. FIELD OFFICES, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Atlanta 3, Ga.—603 Rhodes Building. Boston 9, Mass.—1800 Customhouse. Buffalo 3, N. Y.—242 Federal Building. Charleston 3, S. C.—Chamber of Commerce Building. Chicago 4, I11.—357 United States Courthouse. Cincinnati 2, Ohio.—Chamber of Commerce. Cleveland 14, Ohio.—753 Union Commerce Building. Dallas 2, Tex.—Chamber of Commerce Building. Denver 2, Colo.—566 Customhouse. 626 Congressional Directory COMMERCE Detroit 26, Mich.—1028 New Federal Building, Houston 14, Tex.—603 Federal Office Building. Jacksonville 1, Fla.—425 Federal Building. Kansas City 6, Mo.—724 Dwight Building, Los Angeles 12, Calif.—1540 United States Post Office and Courthouse. Memphis 3, Tenn.—229 Federal Building. Minneapolis 1, Minn.—201 Federal Office Building. New Orleans 12, La.—408 Maritime Building. New York 18, N. Y.—17th Floor, 130 West Forty-second Street. Philadelphia 2, Pa.—1510 Chestnut Street. Pittsburgh 19, 'Pa.—1013 New Federal Building. : Portland 4, Oreg. —Room 313, 520 Southwest Morrison Street. Richmond 19, Va.—Room 2, Mezzanine, 801 East Broad Street. St. Louis 1, Mo.—107 New Federal Building. San Francisco 11, Calif. —307 Customhouse. Savannah, Ga. 518 Liberty National Bank & Trust Building. Seattle 4, 'Wash.—809 Federal Office Building. 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. During the war over 90 percent of the Bureau’s personnel and facilities were devoted to confidential or secret problems. A large amount of work is still being carried on for the Army, Navy, and National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. Special attention is now being devoted to electronics, airplane lighting, radio communication in relation to ionosphere conditions, and quartz crystals for the construction of radio oscillators; motor vehicle and airplane fuels and lubricants; spectroscopic analysis of metals and alloys; the use of the mass spectrometer for the rapid and precise determination of the composition of complex materials, such as hydrocarbons; electroplating and vitreous enamels; control of active acidity through the development and standardizacion of pH indicators; strength COMMERCE Official Duties 627 of airplane and other structures; the development of standard methods of test for synthetic rubbers and 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. Under a research associate plan, industrial groups can send to the Bureau qualified technical men to work on problems of mutual interest to the Government and industry. The results are published by the Bureau. Fifty-eight research associates are stationed in the laboratories at the present time. The results of the Bureau’s work are made available through its monthly . . Journal of Research, Technical News Bulletin, and several series of nonperiodical publications. 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 of tides and currents, to furnish datum planes to engineers and tide and current tables to mariners; (4) the compilation and publishing of nautical charts to meet the needs of marine commerce; (5) the compilation and publishing of aeronautical charts for use in air navigation; (6) observations of the earth’s magnetism in all parts of the country, to furnish magnetic information essential to the mariner, aviator, land surveyor, radio engineer and others; and (7) seismological observa-tions and investigations, to supply data required in designing structures to reduce the earthquake hazard. : These duties require hydrographie, topographie, and air-photographie 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 coun-try, including the operation of magnetic observatories; the operation of instru-ments recording building vibrations and strong earthquake motions, and coopera-tion with non-Federal agencies engaged in this work; and gravity measurements throughout the country. The results of these surveys and studies are analyzed in the Washington office and published as nautical and aeronautical charts; annual tables of 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. : : 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 networkof 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. 2 A 628 Congressional Directory COMMERCE 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 aeronauties.”” As originally established it was 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 Air Safety Board was abolished and its functions were transferred to the Civil Aeronautics Board. The Civil Aeronau-tics Board and the Administrator were transferred to the Department of Com-merce, with the proviso that the Board should exercise its functions of rule-making, adjudication, and investigation independently of the Secretary of Com-merce. Reorganization Plan IV further provided that the Administrator of Civil Aeronautics, whose functions would be administered under the direction and supervision of the Secretary of Commerce, and the Civil Aeronautics Board would constitute the Civil Aeronautics Authority. However, the Civil Aero-nautics Authority performs no functions, all of its responsibilities being dis-ofiargod by either the Civil Aeronautics Administration or the Civil Aeronautics oard. 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 is 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 de- velopment of civil aeronautics and air commerce in the United States and abroad, to encourage and make plans for the orderly development of civil airways and the establishment thereof and landing areas, to install and maintain air naviga-tion facilities, to perform the functions of aircraft registration and safety regula-tion 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 sus-pending and revoking certificates after hearing), to exercise the power contained in section 1101 of the Civil Aeronautics Act relating to air hazards, to perform the functions vested in the Civil Aeronautics Authority by the Civilian Pilot Training Act of 1939, as amended, and to exercise the powers and perform the duties contained in the Washington National Airport Act of 1940; is responsible for the enforcement of safety rules, regulations and standards; the emergency suspension of certificates, and the compromise of civil penalties for violations of titles V and VI of the Civil Aeronautics Act; recommends to the Civil Aeronautics Board proposed standards, rules and regulations designed to promote safety in air commerce. ACTIVITIES Safety regulations.—Determines original and continuing compliance with applicable safety standards and issues appropriate airman, aircraft, air carrier operating, air navigation facility, and air agency certificates and ratings and other aeronautical documents; registration of aircraft, recordation of aircraft convey-ances, maintenance of records of persons and things subject to regulation; issuance of permits for foreign operations of United States aircraft and for operation of foreign civil aircraft into and within the United States; enforcement of civil aviation rules and regulations; 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 subject to ratification by the Administrator. Aviation information.—Collection and dissemination of information relative to civil aeronautics; compilation and publications of statistics and other data per-tinent to the development of air commerce and the aeronautical industry; compila-tion and distribution to civilian airmen, service airmen and other interested persons of current information pertaining to airports and air navigation facilities on civil airways; editorial review of material used in aeronautical education; preparation and distribution of all types of visual information materials; the maintenance of a comprehensive aeronautical research library. COMMERCE Official Duties 629 Federal airways.— This activity covers the planning, construction, maintenance, and operation of the Federal Airways System which has been extended throughout Alaska and other United States possessions and now totals 43,211 miles of airways implemented with air navigation facilities for day and.night contact and instru-ment operations not including the trans-oceanic routes. The duties include aerial and ground surveys for layout of new routes; selection of sites; preparation of plans and specifications for facilities; supervision of construction, negotiation of power, communication, and telephone contracts; purchase and installation of radio range and communication equipment; operates the airways traffic control system; maintains and operates Government-owned air navigation facilities on the Federal Airways System; conducts research for development and improvement. of new types of equipment for air navigation aids, aircraft power plants, flight instruments, ete.; conducts special studies and furnishes technical assistance in connection with airport development; furnishes technical and engineering assist-ance to the War and Navy Departments which includes surveys, selection of sites, " construction, and installation of radio range and communication facilities at points throughout the domestic and foreign zones of military operations. At the request of the War and Navy Departments establishés and operates airport control towers. Aviation training.— This office, through its Education Division, brings to schools and colleges the benefit of the Administration’s technical services and experiences in all phases of aviation with the primary aim of promoting understanding of and participation in aviation activities. It also administers and supervises Govern-ment programs involving the aeronautical training of foreign nationals in this country and assists other countries in their aviation training activities through foreign missions. It encourages and assists the widespread development of civilian flight training and directs the operation of all federally sponsored civilian pilot training programs. This office also conducts such training and educational pro-grams as are required to serve the needs of the Administration for qualified per-sonnel. : Federal airport program.—The -Administrator formulates broad policies, develops and presents plans for, directs and coordinates the execution of a national system of airports suitable and adaptable to the future needs of civil aviation and national security. The Administrator makes plans for the orderly develop-ment of airports throughout the United States, territories and possessions, renders airport advisory services to public agencies and civic groups, prepares and dis-tributes bulletins and publications on airport planning and design, collects and maintains information on facilities available at all civil airports. The Administra-tor directs and supervises the Federal airport program and fosters State and local legislation needed to facilitate airport development and protect the approaches to airports by zoning and property acquisition. 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 proper, space or property within or upon the airport for purposes essential or appropriate to the operation of the airport. THE CIVIL AERONAUTICS BOARD The Civil Aeronautics Board is, in contrast with the Civil Aeronautics Admin-istration, an independent agency composed of five members, appointed by the President with the confirmation of the Senate, one of whom is annually designated by the President as chairman and another as vice chairman. The members are appointed for a period of 6 years. Not more than three members may be of the same political party. The Board exercises legislative and judicial powers which Congress has delegated to it in the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 as modified by the President’s reorganization plans III and IV. The reorganization places the Board within the framework of the Department of Commerce solely for ‘“admin-istrative housekeeping’’ purposes. ; POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE BOARD Tt 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: 630 Congressional Directory LABOR “(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 ad-vantages, 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 Somme of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the national defense; an ‘“(e) The regulation of air commerce in such manner as to best promote its development and safety.” ACTIVITIES Economic regulation.—The Board issues certificates of public convenience and necessity to air carriers and permits to foreign air carriers; regulates the filing of tariffs; regulates rates for the carriage of persons and property; prescribes rates of compensation for the carriage of mail; and regulates accounts, records and reports, mergers, loans and financial aid, methods of competition, and inter-locking relationships. § Safety regulation.—The Board prescribes safety standards, rules, and regula-tions, and has the power to suspend and revoke safety certificates after hearing (including the disposition of any petition for the reconsideration of the denial by the Administrator of an application for the issuance or renewal of an airman certificate under section 602 (b) of the act). 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 accidents 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 armed services. The Council’s primary functions are: (1) Encouraging the public to submit inventions or inventive ideas of value for the military; (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 branches of the Army and Navy and other appropriate Government agencies in order that prompt and . complete technical consideration can be given to all suggestions received. OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE OPERATIONS The Office of International Trade Operations is responsible for administering the functions transferred to the Department of Commerce from the Foreign Economic Administration by Executive Order No. 9630, of September 27,.1945. These functions include the licensing of commercial exports under statutory authority, the administration of technical industrial intelligence investigations in liberated and enemy areas in Europe, direction of the Clearing Office for Foreign Transactions and Reports which is responsible for providing centralized records and reports of all Government transactions abroad, facilitation of foreign trade activities, and the final liquidation of the residual wartime affairs of the Foreign Ecqnomic Administration. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR THE SECRETARY OF LABOR The Secretary of Labor is charged with the duty of fostering, promoting, and developing the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, improving their working conditions, and advancing their opportunities for profitable employ- LABOR Official Dutzes 631 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, antl other Government agencies 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. 632 Congressional Directory LABOR 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 coordination of current pro-grams of the several bureaus, the control of expenditures from departmental appropriations, the procurement of supplies, equipment and printing and binding, and over-all service functions of the Department. 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 adviser to the Secretary of Labor and to the other administrative officers of the Department. The Solicitor and attorneys on his staff perform legal services for the Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions, the Children’s Bureau, the United States Conciliation Service, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Division of Labor Standards, the Women’s Bureau, the United States Employment Service, the Retraining and Reemployment Adminis-tration, and for other bureaus within the Department, and assist in the prepa-ration of administrative rules and regulations and interpretations 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 represents 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 admin-istration and enforcement of the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Public Contracts Act, and other laws under the jurisdiction of the Department. = They also perform miscellaneous legal services for the Children’s Bureau, United States Conciliation Service, and for other bureaus within 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; labor turn-over; industrial disputes; consumer and industrial prices; and changes in prices paid by families of wage earners and moderate-income workers in large cities of the United States. Special studies are made from time to time on the wage situation, labor supply, and occupational outlook in particular industries as well as on. pro-ductivity of labor, consumers’ cooperation, and a large number of other subjects affecting the welfare of workers. : LABOR Offictal Dutres 633 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. ; The Children’s Bureau administers the emergency maternity and infant-care program which provides grants to State health agencies for medical, nursing, and hospital maternity and infant care for wives and infants of enlisted men of the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh grades in the armed forces of the United a Shs first appropriation for this program having been approved on March 8, 1943. : 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 bring suit to enjoin employers who do not meet these standards from fur-ther violations of the act and also to bring suit 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. The minimum wage of 40 cents an hour, which was to go into effect for all covered workers not specifically exempt not later than October 24, 1945, was reached for all industries more than a year in advance set by the industry com-mittee procedure provided by Congress. -About 20,000,000 workers are covered under the act. 634 Congressional Directory LABOR Overtime pay at the rate of time and one-half the employee’s regular hourly rate must be paid to covered workers for all hours worked over 40 in a week unless they are wholly or partially exempt from the overtime provisions of the statute. Employers subject to the statute are prohibited from shipping in interstate com-merce 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 establishment. The Public Contracts Division administers the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act (act of June 30, 1936, Public, No. 846, 74th Cong.), which requires Govern-ment supply contracts over $10,000 to contain certain minimum wage, hour, child labor, convict labor, safety and health stipulations, and charges the Secretary of Labor with the duty of enforcing those standards. The minimum wages required are those which have been determined by the Secretary of Labor to be the prevail-ing minimum wage rates for specific industries. Overtime pay at the rate of at least time and one-half the employee’s basic hourly rate is required to be paid for all hours worked over 8 in a day or 40 in a week, whichever yields the greater compensation. Child labor and convict labor are prohibited. The act carries several penalties for violation, including cancellation of contract, liability for liqui-dated damages, and possible ‘blacklisting’ of firms for 3 years to prevent their obtaining further Government contracts. With a trained field staff strategically decentralized over the country and familiar with industry, the Divisions were able to swing into action when war agencies found themselves in urgent need of inspections to find out the actual situation in regard to policies or critical materials. Inspections were made of aluminum inventories for the Office of Production Management, tire inventories for the Office of Price Administration, silk, copper, scrap, and defense housing for the War Production Board, and for the latter, inspections under the Production Requirements and Controlled Materials Plans. Assistance was also provided the -War Manpower Commission in connection with the enforcement of some of its regulations. The Divisions have for several years been acting as the initial contact with the public for the War I.abor Board on wage stabilization. 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 conditions, increase their efficiency, and advance their opportunities for profitable employ-ment. The Bureau has authority to investigate and report to the Department upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of women in industry. The Director of the Bureau publishes the results of these investigations in the manner and to such extent as the Secretary of Labor may prescribe. The Bureau is devoting its attention to the problems of employment and read-justment women face in the period of reconversion and in this connection is conducting research, holding conferences with interested agencies, and formulating plans and policies to integrate women workers into a peacetime economy designed for the best good of the whole people. : The basic work of the Bureau is concerned with the occupations and conditions of work for the employment of women, and advising on labor legislation for women. NATIONAL WAR LABOR BOARD The National War Labor Board was created within the Office for Emergency Management by Executive Order 9017 of January 12, 1942. Under Executive Order 9617 dated September 19, 1945, the Board, its functions, officers and employees, records, property, and funds were transferred to the Department of Labor to be administered as an organizational entity. . Under Executive Order 9017 the Board was given the power finally to deter-mine all labor disputes, with certain exceptions. Statutory recognition and additional authority was given the Board by Congress in the War Labor Disputes (Smith-Connally) Act of June 25, 1943. This act authorized the Board to settle all labor disputes affecting the war effort and to provide by order the “terms and conditions * * * governing the relations between the parties which shall be in effect until further order of the Board.”” The act provides for certification of such disputes to the Board by the Secretary of Labor and also permits the Board to assume jurisdiction of disputes on its own motion. E Sp — LABOR Officzal Dutzes 635 Under the Economic Stabilization Act of October 2, 1942, and Executive Order 9250 of October 3, 1942, the Board was also given responsibility for sta-bilizing wages and most salaries under $5,000 at the levels of September 15, 1942. The Board’s authority to give wage or salary increases was limited under Execu-tive Order 9328 of April 8, 1943, to adjustments to correct substandards of living, those to give effect to the Little Steel Formula or those to permit individual increases for promotions, reclassifications, merit increases, incentives, and the like. By order of May 12, 1943, the Director of Economic Stabilization directed that the War Labor Board might, in addition, approve increases to aid in the effective prosecution of the war and to correct gross inequities. Under Executive Orders 9599 dated August 18, 1945, and 9651 dated October 30, 1945, the Board’s authority with respect to disputes and with respect to wage control was modified for the purpose of achieving an effective transition to a peacetime economy. Executive Order 9599 granted authority to the War Labor Board to permit all wage increases which were not to be made the basis of price relief or which would not result in increased costs to the United States. In addition, the Board was authorized to approve increases which might involve price-ceiling changes where such increases were necessary to correct maladjust-ments or inequities which would interfere with the effective transition to a peace-time economy, subject, however, to the further approval of the Direetor of Economic Stabilization. Executive Order 9651 defines three classes of cases in-volving maladjustments or inequities where the Stabilization Admihistrator (formerly the Director of Economic Stabilization) shall approve wage increases found by the National War Labor Board to be necessary to correct such mal- -adjustments or inequities. APPRENTICE-TRAINING SERVICE The Apprentice-Training Service functions under the provisions of an act of August 16, 1937, “to enable the Department of Labor to formulate and promote the furtherance of labor standards necessary to safeguard the welfare of appren-tices and to cooperate with the States in the promotion of such standards.” In cooperation with national advisory committees appointed by the Secretary of Labor, the Service develops and formulates standards of apprenticeship for the training of skilled workers by industry. Such standards deal primarily with the welfare of the apprentice as an employed worker and deal with such matters as adequate work experience, length of apprenticeship, provisions for supervisor, related technical instruction, and employer-employee participation. Through its field staff the Service, in cooperation with State Apprenticeship Agencies, endeavors to extend the application of these standards by bringing together employer and labor for the formulation of programs of apprenticeship and by giving technical and advisory service in the development of programs and in their maintenance and operation. The office of the Director is responsible for the application of national policies with respect to apprenticeship through direction of the headquarters and field organization of the agency; for the encouragement of State apprentices activities; and for the maintenance of liaison with established State apprenticeship agencies. The headquarters staff acts as a clearing house for the national apprenticeship program. This is done by providing services for the review of apprenticeship pro-grams with regard to conformity with accepted standards and practices and for the registration of apprentices and apprenticeship programs; by conducting re-search on matters affecting apprenticeship and compiling statistics regarding apprentices and apprenticeship programs; and by the preparation, publication, and dissemination of information for the advancement of understanding of appren-ticeship and the creation of general interest in the training of skilled workers through apprenticeship. UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE The United States Employment Service was established in the Department of Labor by act of Congress approved June 6, 1933. Its functions were to promote and develop a national system of public employment offices, to maintain a vet-erans service to be devoted to securing employment for veterans, tc maintain a farm placement service, to maintain a public employment service for the District of Columbia, and to assist in establishing and maintaining systems of public employment offices in the several States, and to assist in coordinating such systems throughout the country and in increasing their usefulness by developing and prescribing minimum standards of efficiency, promoting uniformity in ad- 636 Congressional Directory LABOR ministrative and statistical procedure, furnishing information as to opportunities -for employment, and other information of value in the operation of the system, and maintaining a system for clearing labor between the several States. Under the Reorganization Pldn No. I, effective July 1, 1939, the United States Employment Service was consolidated with the unemployment compensation functions in the Social Security Board. As of January 1, 1942, the State Employ-ment Services were brought directly under Federal operation, and a few months later the entire United States Employment Service was made a part of the War Manpower Commission. During the war period, the United States Employment Service was the main operating arm of the War Manpower Commission, and car-ried the major burden of the manpower program. By Executive order of September 19, 1945, the War Manpower Commission was liquidated, and the United States Employment Service was transferrred to the Department of Labor. RETRAINING AND REEMPLOYMENT ADMINISTRATION The Retraining and Reemployment Administration, created by Executive Order 9427 of February 24, 1944, and by title III of the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944, was transferred from the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion to the Department of Labor by Executive Order 9617 of Sep-tember 19, 1945. The Administration is authorizedto have general supervision and direction of the activities of all existing executive agencies (except the Veterans’ Administra-tion and the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs) relating to retraining, reemploy-ment, vocational education, and vocational rehabilitation and to coordinate such activities and eliminate overlapping functions; to issue regulations in connection with such work already provided for by law and to coordinate the activities of Federal agencies with those of State and local agencies engaged in retraining, reemployment, vocational education, and vocational rehabilitation. INDEPENDENT OFFICES, AGENCIES, AND ESTABLISHMENTS 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 World War I 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 25, D. C., and by bookstores at $2.75 a-copy. In 1944 the Commission published a series of 28 volumes covering the opera-tions of all American divisions which had combat service during the World War. These are entitled ‘Division Summary of Operations in the World War” and are being sold by the Superintendent of Documents at the following prices: First, second, third, fourth, twenty-eighth, forty-second, seventy-seventh, $1.50; fifth, twenty-sixth, thirty-second, thirty-third, eightieth, $1.25; twenty-seventh, thirtieth, eighty-second, eighty-ninth, ninetieth, ninety-first, ninety-third, $1; seventh, twenty-ninth, thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, thirty-seventh, seventy-eighth, seventy-ninth, eighty-first, ninety-second, 75 cents. 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. 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 42 637 638 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS ANGLO-AMERICAN CARIBBEAN COMMISSION As a result of an exchange of notes between the two Governments, a joint communiqué was. issued March 9, 1942, by Great Britain and the United States announcing the creation of the Anglo-American Caribbean Commission. The purpose of the Commission is to encourage and strengthen social and eco- nomic cooperation between the United States and its possessions and bases in the Caribbean, and the United Kingdom and the British Colonies in the same area and to avoid unnecessary duplication of research. It is concerned with matters pertaining to labor, agriculture, housing, health, education, social welfare, finance, economics, and related subjects in the territories under the British and United States flags within the Caribbean area. In its studies and in the formulation of its recommendations, the Commission is charged with bearing in mind the desira- bility of close cooperation in social and economic matters between all regions adjacent to the Caribbean. It serves as an advisory and expediting body and works with the appropriate British and United States agencies that have admin- istrative responsibility in regard to the problem in question. The United States chairman reports directly to the President, but for reasons of administrative convenience the United States section of the Commission acts as an integral unit of the Department of State. 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: 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, 1944, 1,920,131 appointments were made. At the end of December 1944, there were 2,859,737 employees in the executive branch of the Federal Government in continental United States. Of this number, 255,186 were employed in the Washington, D. C., metropolitan ‘area. 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 re- quired, 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- MISCELLANEOUS es Official Duties 639 mission’s business and fiscal operations; serves as the principal consultant to the Commissioners and formulates and develops matters of policy, intorprointion, and procedure. OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Responsible for general administrative direction over the Budget and Finance Division, and the Office Services Division, as well as the management planning functions of the Commission. 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 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 proposed under civil-service rules; acts on cases involving the granting of classi- -fied status; acts on cases of violation of the civil-service law or rules by adminis-trative 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. 640 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 eivil service; 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 So a period of 4 years each, and until their successors are appointed and qualifiéd. Under the provisions of this organic act Congress directs that ‘It shall be the duty of the Commission to advise upon the location of statues, fountains, and monuments in the public squares, streets, and parks in the District of Columbia, and upon the selection of models for statues, fountains, and monuments erected under the authority of the United States and upon the selection of the artists for the execution of same. It shall be the duty of the officer charged by law to determine such questions in each case to call for such advice. The foregoing provisions of this act shall not apply to the Capitol Building of the United States and the building of the Library of Congress. The Commission shall also advise generally upon questions of art when required to do so by the President or by any committee of either House of Congress.” By Executive order dated October 25, 1910, the President directed that “Plans for no public building to be erected in the District of Columbia for the General Government shall be hereafter finally approved by the officer duly authorized until after such officer shall have submitted the plans to the Commission of Fine Arts created under the act of Congress of May 17, 1910, for its comment and advice.” ; On February 2, 1912, the President directed the Commission to advise the officer in charge of public buildings and grounds in regard to the improvement of any of the grounds in the city of Washington under his charge whenever such advice is asked for by that officer. That officer now uniformly consults the Com-mission regarding details of the development of all the parks and reservations under his control. On November 28, 1913, the President issued the following Executive order: “It is hereby ordered that whenever new structures are to be erected in the Dis-trict of Columbia under the direction of the Federal Government which affect MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 641 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 submittedto 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 har-moniously both under Federal and District jurisdictions, the President has requested the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia to consult the Commission of Fine Arts on matters of art falling under their jurisdiction and control. The duties of the Commission, therefore, now embrace advising upon the loca-tion of statues, fountains, and monuments in the public squares, streets, and parks in the District of Columbia; upon the selection of models for statues, fountains, and monuments erected under the authority of the United States, and the selection of the artists for their execution; also for medals, insignia, and coins; upon the plans and designs for public structures and parks in the District of Columbia, as well as upon all questions involving matters of art with which the Federal Government is concerned. In addition the Commission advises upon general questions of art whenever requested to do so by the President or any committee of Congress. The creation of the National Commission of Fine Arts in 1910 was the outcome of the Senate Park Commission of 1901, which presented plans for the development of the park system of the District of Columbia and the location of future Govern-ment buildings and memorials. These plans of 1901 were based on the plan of the National Capital prepared by Pierre Charles L’Enfant in 1792 under the direction of President Washington. The Commission of Fine Arts has been guided by the fundamental plan of 1901, which aims to secure the progressive development of Washington as the well-ordered, unified, and grand capital of a great Nation. E The height, color, and design of private buildings facing public buildings and public parks in certain mapped areas in the District of Columbia are subject to the advice of the Commission, as provided in the act of May 16, 1930, known as the Shipstead-Luce Act. ; The advice of the Commission of Fine Arts must be requested in the selection of lands to be acquired, under the act of Congress approved June 6, 1924, as amended, by the National Capital Park and Planning Commission for the park, parkway, and playground system in the District of Columbia and adjacent areas in Maryland and Virginia. In the will of Charles L. Freer, giving the Smithsonian Institution the building for the Freer Gallery, together with his collections of Far Eastern art, and an endowment for the increase thereof, it is stipulated that purchases shall have the approval of the National Commission of Fine Arts. The Congress in various legislation has required the advice of the Commission on the design and location of special monuments, memorials, and other works of commemorative art. COMMITTEE FOR RECIPROCITY INFORMATION The Committee for Reciprocity Information was created by Executive order in June 1934 to carry out the provisions of section 4 of the act entitled ‘‘Promotion of Foreign Trade,” under which the President is authorized to enter into trade agreements with foreign countries. This section provides that before any foreign-trade agreement is concluded public notice of the negotiations shall be given in order that any interested person may havé 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 642 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 pensions, or upon any regulations of an executive department, or upon any contract, express or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in respect of which claims the party would be entitled to redress against the United States, either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, except claims growing out of the late Civil War and commonly known as war claims,”’ and certain rejected , claims. It has jurisdiction also of claims of like character which may be referred to it . by the head of any executive department involving controverted questions of fact or law. In all the above-mentioned cases the court, when it finds for the claimant, may enter judgment against the United States, payable out of the Public Treasury. Under section 3 of the act of February 13, 1925, the Court of Claims may certify to the Supreme Court any definite and distinct questions of law 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. By the act of March 2, 1919 (40 Stat. 772), known as the Dent Act, the Court of Claims is given jurisdiction of the class of war claims therein specified. In these cases the action of the Secretary of War upon the claim, or his failure to act thereon, is a condition precedent to the right of the claimant to commence an action in the Court of Claims. : The court also has jurisdiction of actions provided for by certain statutes passed during the last war permitting the seizure of property by the Government. By section 151, Judicial Code (36 Stat. L. 1135), whenever any bill, except for a pension, is pending in either House of Congress providing for the payment of a claim against the United States, legal or equitable, or for a grant, gift, or bounty to any person, the House in which such bill is pending may, for the investigation and determination of facts, refer the same to the Court of Claims, which shall proceed with the same in accordance with such rules as it may adopt and report to such House the facts in the case and the amount, where the same can be liquidated, including any facts bearing upon the question whether there has been delay or laches in presenting such claim or applying for such grant, gift, or bounty, and any facts bearing upon the question whether the bar of any statute of limi-tation should be removed or which shall be claimed to excuse the claimant for not having resorted to any established legal remedy, together with such conelu-sions 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 satisfaction 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 jurisdiction 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 MISCELLANEOUS Offical Duties 643 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 (83 U. 8S. 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. 208, 70h Cong.), and the act approved December 2, 1942 (Public, No. 784, 77th Cong.). 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 peaceto 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) Commissioned personnel of the United States Public Health Service. (e) Student nurses in training in Federal hospitals. The act of September 7, 1916, subject to certain modification prescribed in the act of February 15, 1934 (5 U. S. 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 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 hy the willful misconduct of the injured person or by his ’ 644 Congressional Directory | MISCELLANEOUS intention to bring about the injury or death of himself or another, or if intoxication of the injured person is thé 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 1 year, but under certain conditions the time limit may be extended in the discretion of the Commission. 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. 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 Eons 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 MISCRLLANEGUS Official Duties . 645 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. 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 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, ros TRS 1646 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 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 func-tions include matters of accounting regulation, compilation and analysis of statistics, and tariff analysis and regulations. Engineering Department (chief engineer), whose functions include the engineer-ing phases of broadcast, common carrier, and private and ship service regulation and enforcement; international and interdepartmental matters; supervision of the field staff; and technical engineering information and research. Law Department (general counsel), whose functions include the legal phases of radio licensing and of common carrier regulation; conduct of investigations; administration (including legislation, rule-making, and international matters) and litigation before the courts. Secretary’s office (secretary of the Commission), which has charge of all matters of internal administration. Title I of the Communications Act contains provisions defining the purposes of the statute, fixing the terms and compensation of Commissioners, and conferring general powers. The statute provides that with certain exceptions employees of the Commission shall be appointed subject to the provisions of the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923. Title II applies to all common carriers engaged in interstate or foreign com-munication by wire or radio. The act specifically provides that persons engaged in radio broadcasting shall not be deemed common carriers. Common carriers are required by title II to furnish communication service upon reasonable request, to establish physical connections with other carriers, to establish through routes and charges and the divisions thereof, and to establish and provide facilities. All charges and practices are required to be just and reasonable, and it is declared -unlawful for any carrier to make unjust or unreasonable discriminations or to extend undue or unreasonable preferences or advantages in connection with com-munication service. Carriers are required to publish and file with the Commission tariffs for all charges showing the practices affecting such charges. The Commis-sion is given powers to hold hearings as to the lawfulness of charges, to suspend tariffs, and to prescribe just and reasonable rates. Persons claiming to suffer damages as a result of action by common carriers subject to the act may make complaint to the Commission, and the Commission is required to investigate such complaints and may make an award of damages. Carriers are required to file their contracts with the Commission. Persons seeking to hold office in more than one carrier company subject to the act must obtain the Commission’s consent. The Commission has power to make valuations of carrier property, to make in-quiries into management, to require the 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 over MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties : 647 all channels of interstate and foreign radio transmission; and to provide for the use of such channels, but not the ownership thereof, by person for limited periods of time, under licenses granted by Federal authority. It is made unlawful for any person to operate any apparatus for the transmission of energy or communi-cations or signals by radio within any State, Territory, or possession when the effects of such use extend beyond the borders thereof, or upon vessels or aircraft of the United States, except in accordance with a license issued by the Commis-sion. The statute requires that the operation of radio transmitting apparatus shall be carried on only by persons holding operators’ licenses issued by the -Commission. The radio license requirements do not apply to the Philippine Islands or to the Canal Zone. The Commission does not have jurisdiction with . respect to radio stations belonging to and operated by the United States which may use such frequencies as may be assigned by the President. The Commission is authorized to classify radio stations, prescribe the nature of their service, assign frequencies, and make regulations to carry out the purposes of the act. It also has authority to revoke or modify licenses. Broadcast licenses may not be for a longer term than 3 years, and the Commission rules and regu--lations provide for a 3-year term for standard broadcast licenses. With a few minor exceptions, the statute provides that no license shall be issued unless a permit for the construction of the station has first been issued. Appli- . cations for construction permits and licenses must be in writing and sworn to by 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 a 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 threatof war, 648 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 The Radio Intelligence Division, set up within the Engineering Department in July 1940, maintains a continuous round-the-clock patrol of the radio spectrum. From-field stations strategically placed throughout the United States and its Territories and possessions, RID monitors police the radio channels to keep unlicensed and illegal operators off the air; to identify suspicious signals; to elimi-nate sources of interference to legitimate radio transmissions; and to give emer-gency direction-finding service to aircraft in distress. Since Pearl Harbor the effectiveness of this radio patrol has kept enemy transmissions within this country almost to zero. The long reach of RID direction-finders has assisted Latin American governments in rounding up more than 300 spies connected with radio espionage rings in their countries. ; The Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service was set up at the suggestion of the State Department in February 1941 as the official Government unit to intercept, translate, edit and transmit to intelligence agencies of this and other friendly governments information picked up from foreign radio programs. FBIS operates four powerful listening posts, all linked by teletype with Washington headquarters. Selected items are teletyped to some 16 offices within our Government 24 hours a day. Yysonnel of the Commission assist the Board of War Communications in the preparation of reports and carrying out Board orders. Many of the Commis-sion’s specific war activities are undertaken at the direction of the Board. 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.); by Public Resolution No. 83, approved April 21, 1936 (74th Cong.); by Public, No. 544, approved May 25, 1938 (75th Cong., 3d sess.); by Public Resolution No. 116, approved June 16, 1938 (75th Cong., 3d sess.); by Public, No. 135, approved June 20, 1939 (76th Cong., 1st sess.); by Public Law 603, approved June 11, 1942 (77th Cong., 2d sess.); and by Public Law 37, ap-proved April 13, 1943 (78th Cong., 1st sess.). 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. The assessment is computed and paid by insured banks semiannually. "A second function of the Corporation is to act as receiver for insured banks which fail. The Corporation is appointed receiver for all national banks which fail and may be appointed receiver for closed insured State banks if such appoint-ment is tendered by the State banking authority and is permitted by State law. Upon the closing of an insured bank, the Corporation promptly pays to depositors the amount of their insured deposits. For this purpose the Corporation may, if it MISCELLANEOUS : Officzal Dutres 649 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 recoveries 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 14,710 operating banks in the United States and possessions on December 31, 1944, deposits in 13,460 banks, including 192 mutual savings banks, were insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. As of that date 6,811 banks, members of the Federal Reserve System, had been automatically admit- ted to membership, and 6,457 nonmember banks, other than mutual savings banks, had made application and had been accepted for membership. Pursuant to Executive Order 9148 of April 27, 1942, the Corporation is super- vising Federal credit unions and otherwise carrying out the functions, powers, and duties vested in the Farm Credit Administration and the Governor thereof under the Federal Credit Union Act, as amended (12 U. S. C. 1751-1771). Federal credit unions are not insured under the Federal Deposit Insurance Law. FEDERAL LOAN AGENCY The Federal Loan Administrator, head of the Federal Loan Agency, supervises the administration, and is responsible for the coordination of the functions and activities of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the RFC Mortgage Com-pany, Federal National Mortgage Association, War Damage Corporation, U. S. Commercial Company, and Rubber Development Corporation. RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was created by the ‘‘Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act,” approved January 22, 1932 (47 Stat. 5). This basic law, 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 subse-quent 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. The Corporation may make loans to public agencies, business enterprises, 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, and 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; make loans determined to be necessary or appropriate because of floods or other catastrophes. From the beginning of the national defense emergency the Corporation financed various war activities, such as the procurement of mate- rials, the construction and operation of war plants, and the writing of war damage insurance. This financing was provided to both private business and to certain of its national defense subsidiary corporations—Defense Plant Corporation, Defense Supplies Corporation, Metals Reserve Company, Rubber Reserve Com- pany, and War Damage Corporation. All except War Damage Corporation have since been dissolved and their functions, powers, duties, and authority transferred to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation by Public Law 109, Seventy-ninth Congress. The Corporation since VJ-day has been actively engaged in reconver- sion activities which, among other things, includes providing for interim financing to terminated war contractors. It has also been named the disposal agency for capital and producer’s goods, as well as consumer goods, pursuant to the provi- sions of the Rs Property Act of 1944. 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 ‘‘subsecribe for or 650 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS make loans upon the nonassessable stock of any class of any national mortgage association organized under title IIT of the National Housing Act and of any mortgage loan company, trust company, savings and loan association, or other similar financial institution * * *7 : Pursuant to this authority the Reconstruction Finance Corporation has sub- scribed for $25,000,000 of the capital stock of the RFC Mortgage Company, which was organized under the laws of Maryland on March 14, 1935. The general purpose of the Company is to aid in the reestablishment of a normal market for sound mortgages on income-producing urban property, such as apart-ment houses, hotels, and business and office buildings, when credit is not other-wise available on reasonable terms and when the net income from the property, after payment of taxes, insurance, and operating costs, is sufficient to pay interest and the required amortization. : The principal office of the Company is in Washington, D. C., and it operates in all the States and Territories of the United States. Its business is handled through agents whose offices are located in the various loan agencies of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The activities of the Company can be classified into the following major groups: -(1) When financing is necessary and cannot be obtained upon reasonable rates and terms, the Company considers applications for loans, on a sound basis, secured by first mortgages on urban income-producing properties, such as apart-ment houses, hotels, business and office buildings, if the net income from the property, after the payment of taxes, insurance, and operating expenses is sufficient to pay interest charges and the required amortization of the loan. These loans are chiefly for refinancing and aiding in the reorganization of distressed real property. : (2) The Company also gives consideration to applications for loans to finance new construction, provided there is an economic need for such construction, the mortgagor’s investment in the completed project will be substantial in relation to the amount of the loan requested, and his resources and experience are sufficient to indicate that the property can be operated on a sound basis. (8) 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. 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.’ WAR DAMAGE CORPORATION Organization.—The War Damage Corporation was created by the Reconstruc-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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties : 65 1 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 and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware. Executive Order No. 9630, dated September 27, 1945, transferred Rubber Development Corporation, to-gether with its capital stock, from the Foreign Economic Administration to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Such transfer became effective as of the close of business October 20, 1945. Rubber Development Corporation is managed by a Board of Directors elected by the stockholders and by officers appointed by the Board of Directors. The principal office of Rubber Development Corporation is in Washington, D. C. Representatives of Rubber Development Corporation are stationed in most of the foreign countries in which the Corporation is engaged in business. Functions—The Corporation is engaged in purchasing all crude rubber, liquid latex, guayule, and other gums of similar utility allocated to the United States by the Combined Raw Materials Board from all areas outside the continental United States. It is also engaged in the procurement of salvaged rubber and rubber products in foreign countries. U. S. COMMERCIAL COMPANY Organization.—The U. S. Commercial Company was created March 27, 1942, by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, pursuant to section 5d of the Recon-struction Finance Corporation Act as amended. During the period July 15, 1943, to October 20, 1945, control of the U. S. Commercial Company was vested in Foreign Economic Administration by virtue of Executive Order 9361 of July 15, 1943. Pursuant to Executive Order 9630 of September 27, 1945, control of the U. S. Commercial Company was returned to Reconstruction Finance Corporation on October 21, 1945. The capital stock of U. S. Commercial Company 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 Reconstruc-tion Finance Corporation and by officers and agents appointed by U. S. Com-Joi Company. The principal office of the Company is located in Washington, D. C. Functions.—The activities of the Company include the procurement of stra-tegic and critical materials abroad, facilitating the resumption of American trade with areas with which direct commercial dealings have been cut off or restricted by reason of the war, and the operation of certain special projects for the Army and Navy in liberated and occupied areas. FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION Creation and authority.—The Federal Power Commission was organized as an independent commission in its present form by the act approved June 23, 1930 (46 Stat. 797). The Commission was originally created in 1920 by the Federal Water Power Act, approved June 10, 1920 (41 Stat. 1063, 16 U. S. C. 791-823), providing for the licensing by the Commission of hydroelectric projects on United States Government lands or on navigable waters of the United States. The Federal Water Power Act was amended March 3, 1921, to exclude water power projects in national parks or national monuments (41 Stat. 1353). By title II of the Public Utility Act of 1935, approved August 26, 1935 (49 Stat. 838,16 U. S. C., Sup. IV, 791a—-825r), the original Federal Water Power Act with certain amendments was made part I of the Federal Power Act and parts II and III were added vesting the Commission in addition with jurisdiction over the transmission and sale at wholesale of electric energy in interstate commerce and public utilities engaged therein. Other jurisdictional statutes of the Commission.—Natural Gas Act, approved June 21, 1938 (52 Stat. 821, 15 U. S. C. 717-717w), giving jurisdiction over the transportation and sale of natural gas in interstate commerce for resale and natural-gas companies engaged therein, as amended February 7, 1942 (56 Stat. 83, 15.1. 8. C. 7171). | f § {] | | | IRi 652 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Tennessee Valley Authority Act, approved May 18, 1933 (48 Stat. 58, 16 U. S. C. 831-831dd), sections 12a, 14, 15, 15a, 15c, 26a, as added or amended (49 Stat. 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 53 Stat. 1083, 16 U. S. C. 831k, 831m, 831n, 831n-1, 831n-3, 831-29. : Bonneville Act, approved August 20, 1937 (50 Stat. 731, 16 U. 8. C. 832-8321). Fort Peck Act, ‘approved May 18, 1938 (52 Stat. 403, 160. 8. S 833-833k). o long eel Act of 1938, approved June 28, 1938 (52 Stat. 1215, 1216, 33 oe Control Act of 1939, approved August 11, 1939 (53 Stat. 1415, 33 U. S. C. 1 —4 a Control Act of 1941, approved August 18, 1941 (55 Stat. 639, 33 U. 8. C. Flood Control Act of 1944, approved December 22, 1944 (secs. 5, 10, and 12, 58 Stat. 890, 891, 904). River and Harbor Act, approved March 2, 1945, (secs. 2 and 6). Boulder Canyon Project Act, approved December 21, 1928 » Stat. 1057, 43 U. 8S. C. 617-617t). Act Relating to Fort Apache and White Mountain Indian Reservations, approved February 28, 1929 (45 Stat. 1344). Acts Relating to Flathead Indian Reservation, approved March7, 1928 (45 Stat. 200, 212-213), and amended March 4, 1929 (45 Stat. 1623, 1639-1640). Stabilization Act of 1942, approved October 2, 1942 (30 Stat. "765, 50 U.S. C. Appendix 961), June 30, 1944 (58 Stat. 643). Executive orders— Executive Order No. 8202, dotted July 13, 1939, authorizing and requesting the Federal Power Commission to perform’ certain functions ‘relating to the transmission of electric energy between the United States and foreign countries and to the exportation and importation of natural gas from and into the United States. Executive Order No. 9328, dated April 8, 1943, the Hold-the-Line Order, directing the attention of the Federal Power Commission, as a Federal rate regulatory authority, to the stabilization program so that rate increases will be disapproved and rate reductions effected ‘‘in order to keep down the cost of living and effectuate the purposes of the stabilization program.’ Executive Order No. 9373, dated August 30, 1943, requires approval by the Federal Power Commission of rates for sale of electric energy from the Grand River, Denison, and Norfork projects by the Secretary of the Interior. Presidential directives. — The Presidential directives of September 26 and October 22, 1942, relative to designation of the Commission as the central agency to deter-mine the cheapest source of power supply for fulfillment of war contracts and the review and renegotiation of proposed and existing power contracts. FEDERAL POWER ACT Part I.—Part I of the Federal Power Act 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 pri-vate 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 653 issues of parties involved, in the absence of State regulation. The act also provides for investigations of unlicensed projects subject to Federal regulation and the issuance of orders in the public interest to conserve and utilize navigation and water power resources. Part I1I.—Part IT 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 author-ity 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 impedeor tend to impede coordination of facilities; for the approval of the transfer of assets, under certain conditions, involving companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission; for the approval of the issuance of long-term securities in accordance with specified standards, and for the scrutiny of the issuance of short-term securities, involving companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission where the companies are not organized and operating in a State under the laws of which its security issues are regulated by a State commission. Further provisions apply to the charging of just, reasonable, nondiseriminatory and nonpreferential rates in connection with the transmission or sale of electric energy subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission; and for the furnishing of proper, adequate, and sufficient service in the interstate transmission or sale of electric energy. 3 : Part I11.—Part III provides for the prescribing and enforcement of compliance with a uniform system of accounts by licensees and interstate electric utilities, reclassification of accounts, regulation of depreciation, and like accounting matters. It also requires approval of the holding of interlocking positions in the companies subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, in security underwriting com-panies, and in electrical equipment supply companies when neither public nor private interests will be adversely affected thereby. Part III also contains provisions for the hearing of complaint cases, the instituting of investigations, conduct of hearings, and the review of Commission orders by the courts. Organization.—The Commission is composed of five members, one of whom is elected Chairman and another Vice Chairman. The Chairman is designated by statute as the principal executive officer of the Commission. 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; the Fiscal and Personnel Office; and the Publications Division. The Commission’s technical staff is subdivided into the Bureau of Power, which, through its various divisions, handles power requirements and -supply, flood control, licensed project and project cost work; the Office of the Chief Engineer, which advises the Commission on engineering matters; the Bureau of Accounts, Finance, and Rates, which supervises the preparation of systems of accounts, auditing and accounting, rate investigation, natural gas activities, and related work, with various divisions which handle specific portions of the general work of the Bureau; the Division of Trial Examiners, which presides at hearings in Commission proceedings; and the Bureau of Law, which advises the Commission on all legal questions. The Commission has five field offices under the Bureau of Power, headed by regional engineers. Declarations of intention.— Upon the filing of declarations of intention to con-struct project works on streams or their parts, other than those defined as naviga-ble waters, and over which Congress has jurisdiction, the Commission makes investigations and adopts findings as to whether the interests of interstate or foreign commerce would be affected by the proposed construction. Preliminary permits.— Upon applications filed, the Commission, in proper cases, issues preliminary permits and renewals for the purpose of maintaining priority of application for a license for a total of not more than 3 years. Licenses.— Upon application, the Commission, in proper cases, issues licenses and amendments thereto, approves their transfer, and fixes and collects annual charges for them. Cost determination cases.—The Commission is required by the act to determine the net investment in and actual legitimate original cost of every licensed project 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 43 654 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS for use in event of recapture of the project by the United States as well as in connection with various phases of regulation such as rate regulation. Recapture of licensed projects.—The act provides that the United States shall have the right to recapture licensed projects upon or after expiration of any “license. The proportion of surplus earnings in excess of a specified reasonable rate of return is determined by the Commission and is to be held until the ter- mination 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 Com- mission 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 Unated States lands for power purposes.— Upon application for a license, any lands of the United States included are reserved for power purposes from entry, location, or other disposal, unless the Commission determines that the lands so reserved will not be injured or destroyed for the purposes of power development by location, entry, or selection under the public land laws and 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.— Commission conducts general The 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. Power market studies and surveys.—Commencing with the National Power Survey, which was initiated in 1933 by direction of the President, the preparation of power market studies and surveys has been one of the long-standing activities of the Commission. Studies'and surveys have been and are being made for several segtions of the country regarding the utilization and marketing of electric power from existing and future hydroelectric developments, as provided by section 4, part I, of the Federal Power Act. ! Federal Inter-Agency Agreement.—The Commission is party to an agreement entered into jointly with the Departments of War, Interior, and Agriculture, under date of December 29, 1944, to permit agencies of these departments and the Commission to cooperate more completely in the preparation of reports on multiple-purpose reservoir projects and to correlate the results to the greatest practicable extent. The Chairman represents the Commission on the Federal Inter-Agency River Basin Committee, the body formed to carry out the purposes of this agreement. The Committee meets in Washington monthly to discuss the results of studies and investigations, to adjust differences of opinion, and to promote ways and means for the implementation of this agreement. Through its staff the Commission has participated during the year in several cooperative studies with other members of the Committee. Authorizations and orders under parts II and III.—In accordance with provi-sions of parts II 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres : | 655 and charges involved in any transmission or sale subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or service rendered, and may issue orders preseribing 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 hearings and procedure, and authorizing conferences with State commis-sions, the Commission has adopted a cooperative procedure of a flexible nature with provision for special procedure in particular cases. Uniform systems of accounts—The Commission has preseribed uniform systems of accounts for public utilities subject to its jurisdiction and for its licensees. Reports to the Commission.—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. 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 and essential civilian 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 conducts 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.—Thé 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. FLOOD CONTROL ACTS Authorizations under flood control acts.— Under the Flood Control Act of 1938 and subsequent years the Commission is authorized‘to investigate power potenti-alities in the flood-control dams to be constructed by the War Department, and is charged with the responsibility of making recommendations to the Secretary of War with regard to the installation of penstocks or similar facilities adapted to possible future use in the development of hydroelectric power in any flood-control or navigation dam to be constructed by the War Department. Section 5 of the act requires approval by the Federal Power Commission of rates for the sale of electric power and energy generated at reservoir projects under the controlof the War Department. : The Flood Control Act of 1938 authorized the sum of $1,500,000 to be appropri-ated and expended by the Commission for carrying out any examinations or surveys provided for in that act, or any other acts of Congress, to be prosecuted by the Commission. Under the Flood Control Act of 1944, an additional $1,500,000 was authorized for continuing these activities. Extension of authority by River and Harbor Act of 1946.— Duties similar to those . authorized by flood control acts with respect to navigation or flood control dams to be constructed by the War Department are imposed on the Commission by the provisions of the River and Harbor Act of 1945. 656 Congressional Drrectory MISCELLANEOUS NATURAL GAS ACT 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. : Natural gas investigation.—By its order of September 22, 1944, the Commission instituted an investigation into the extent and probable life of the Nation’s natural gas reserves; the present and probable future utilization of natural gas for domestic, commercial, and industrial purposes; the extent, character, and results of the competition of natural gas with other fuels, and such related matters as may be helpful to the Commission in its administration of the Natural Gas Act or in determining what additional legislation, if any, should be recommended to the Congress. The Commission directed that a copy of the order be sent to the Governors, ' regulatory commissions, and conservation commissions of each of the States, to the Interstate Oil Compact Commission, to the National Association of Railroad and Utilities Commissioners, to each natural gas company, and to coal, railroad, and labor organizations and other interested parties. The first of a number of public hearings scheduled was held in Kansas City, Mo., beginning September 12, 1945, and was followed by a second hearing in Oklahoma City on October 9. Others scheduled include New Orleans, La., on November 12; Houston, Tex., on January 28; Biloxi, Miss., February 11; Chicago, Ill., February 19; and Charles- ton, W. Va., March 19, 1946. Complexity of natural gas problem outlined.—The Commission issued the follow-ing statement in announcing its order of September 22: “As our order points out, there are many complex and difficult problems re-lated to the conservation and utilization of natural gas in this country. The need for a comprehensive, fact-finding survey of this exhaustible natural resource has been recognized for several years, not only by the Commission as a result of proceedings under the Natural Gas Act, but also by members of Congress, con-gressional committees, State and Federal conservation agencies, State regulatory agencies, and State officials, and representatives of industry and labor. For ex-ample, the Overton resolution (S. J. Res. 92), introduced by Senator Overton, of Louisiana, during the current session of Congress, provides for a more extensive survey than the one we are undertaking on our own motion. “Representatives of gas-producing States, in proceedings before us, have ad- vanced various and divergent contentions with respect to the exportation of natural gas from their States for consumption in areas where other energy re- sources are available. The economic, sociological, and technological aspects of fuel competition have been presented to us in certificate proceedings by repre-sentatives of coal, labor, railroad, and other interests. These groups have strongly urged the Commission either to deny certain requested certificates of convenience and necessity for new pipe lines, or to attach restrictions which would substantially limit the uses for which natural gas might be sold from the new facilities. “On the other hand, representatives of natural gas companies have appeared before us to emphasize the amount of investments that have been made to supply gas to markets which include domestic, commercial, industrial, and other cus-tomers. They have contended that curtailment of the supply of natural gas to industrial customers would substantially impair their ability to render natural-gas service to other classes of consumers at reasonable rates. They have also con-tended that new or additional sources of supply are necessary to maintain ade-quate service in areas where natural gas supplies are waning and in which large investments in pipe lines and distribution facilities have been made. “Another aspect of the matteris that large investments have been made in : certain plant facilities designed for the utilization of natural gas in industrial processes. It has been contended that the conversion of these specially de-signed facilities to utilize other fuels, or the installation of new facilities using other fuels, will require large expenditures of money, time, and materials, and may cause substantial changes in the method of operation, cost of production, and end products of many industrial establishments. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutes 657 “Proceedings under the Natural Gas Act have shown that it is principally in the field of direct industrial sales for interstate pipe lines that natural gas comes into direct competition with other fuels. The rates at which such sales are made are not subject to regulation under the Natural Gas Act. “In undertaking this investigation, the Commission fully recognizes the juris-diction of the various State regulatory and conservation commissions regarding the production proration, and distribution of natural gas in their respective States. It is not the Commission’s intention to trespass upcn such authority in any manner whatsoever. We seek the cooperation of the various State agencies, as well as other interested parties, so that every aspect of the public interest may be considered in an effort to solve the problems involved in our natural gas resources and uses. : “Extensive data and information relating to the problems involved in the conservation and utilization of natural gas have been obtained through proceedings under the Natural Gas Act, but these data are not sufficiently complete for adequate consideration of the problems outlined in our order. It is necessary, for the purposes of this survey, to collect information on substantially all phases of the natural gas industry and, in order to avoid duplication, we plan to utilize the data and information already obtained by other Federal agencies, as well as that in the hands of State agencies and others concerned with natural gas problems. “We believe that such a cooperative survey will not only be productive of information needed for the administration of the Natural Gas Act but will also develop constructive public policy in these important matters.” Ezxportation or importation 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. : et 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 faeilities 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. Certificates.—An amendment to section 7 of the Natural Gas Act, made Feb-ruary 7, 1942, requires ‘‘grandfather clause” certificates covering bona fide operation as of the date of the amendment and certificates of public convenience and necessity for all new construction, operation, extensions, and acquisitions thereafter. The establishment of service areas is also provided for. 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 procedure.—Provision is made for joint hearings and cooperative procedure with State utility commissions 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. 658 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Reclassification of accounts.—The Commission is enforcing the uniform system of accounts for natural-gas companies by reclassification of account proceedings. Electric and Natural Gas Rate Regulation.—The Commission in its rate regula-tion, as in its system of accounts, has taken actual legitimate cost or prudent investment as its basis; and, in the cases of Natural Gas Pipe Line Company of America et al. v. Federal Power Commission, 315 U. S. 575, and Federal Power Commassion v. Hope Natural Gas Company, it has obtained rulings from the Su-preme Court of the United States sustaining rate orders determined on an actual legitimate cost or prudent investment rate base. The Commission’s rate regula-tion policies were further strengthened by the Supreme Court’s decisions, uphold-ing the Commission’s orders reducing rates of Colorado Interstate Gas Co., Colorado-Wyoming Gas Co., Canadian River Gas Co., and Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. The Commission has completed the trial and decision. of a number of major rate cases involving large rate reductions and others are now in process of trial or preparation. The Commission has also effected a number of sizable rate reduc-tions by negotiation without trial. 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 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)). 3. During the continuance of any emergency requiring immediate action, persons not otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission may make temporary connections with public utilities or may construct temporary facilities for the interstate transmission of electric energy as may be necessary or appro-priate to meet the emergency, without thereby becoming subject to the jurisdic-tion of the Commission. The section requires that such connections be dis-continued and such construction removed or otherwise disposed of at the termina-tion of the emergency, but permits permanent connections for emergency use only upon approval by the Commission (sec. 202 (d)). Many persons have requested and obtained appropriate assurances from the Commission that such temporary connections or construction would not subject them to jurisdiction. . of the Commission. The Commission also receives and grants requests for approval of permanent interconnections for emergency use under section 202 (d). 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 finding 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)). Activities during World War [1.—A great deal of the Commission’s work since the start of the war has been done under Executive orders by which the technical staff turned its activities from normal regulatory duties to work helpful to the war effort. A survey of the power resources and wartime power requirements of the country was undertaken by the engineering staff, including all major utility systems and some 20,000 industrial establishments. A great number of electrical transmission line interconnections were studied and of those needed to allow maximum utilization of available generating capacity for war production, the majority were completed voluntarily by the industry and in a few cases inter-connection orders were issued by the Commission under its statutory authority. The instituting of “war time’ was recommended by the Commission after extensive studies of load characteristics and consultations with utility officials. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 659 “War time” resulted in material savings in coal, labor, and transportation need for war and other essential use and effected a reduction in need for electric gener--ating capacity estimated at over 1,500,000 kilowatts. The Commission was directed by Executive order to review all major war contracts for electric power and determine the adequacy of supply, the expense ineurred in modification or construction of physical facilities and reasonable charges for the energy. Large amounts of money were saved the taxpayer through such activities. ; : Another important war activity undertaken by the Commission was the internal security program for the protection of electric and gas facilities from sabotage and other hostile acts. Field inspections were made of all important generating plants and substations throughout the country and recommendations made regarding guards, protective fences and lighting, fire protection, alarm systems and other measures designed to protect the property or limit damage in case of accident or sabotage. These inspections were made jointly with the various Army Service Commands until January 1944, when the War Department requested the Com- mission to assume sole responsibility for all future protection work. A further war activity of the Commission’s engineering staff was the prepara- tion of reports on electric power supply in enemy and enemy-occupied countries for the use of the War Department and other war agencies. These studies covered nearly all European countries and most of the Far East. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM The Federal Reserve System was established pursuant to authority eontained 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 6,800 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 consent of the Senate. In selecting these seven members, the President is re- quired to have due regard to a fair representation of the financial, agricultural, industrial, and commercial interests, and geographical divisions of the country. No two members may be from the same Federal Reserve district. Each member of the Board of Governors is also a member of the Federal Open Market Committee, whose membership, in addition, includes five representatives of the Federal Reserve Banks, each such representative being elected annually by the boards of directors of certain specified Federal Reserve Banks. Open- market operations of the Federal Reserve Banks are conducted under regulations adopted by the committee with a view to accommodating commerce and business and with regard ‘to their bearing upon the general credit situation of the country; and no Federal Reserve Bank may engage or decline to engage in open-market operations except in accordance with the direction of and regulations adopted by the committee.” The Board of Governors may, within certain limitations and in order to prevent injurious credit expansion or contraction, change the requirements as to reserves to be maintained by member banks against deposits. For the purpose of preventing the excessive use of credit for the purchase or carrying of securities, the Board of Governors is authorized to regulate the amount of credit that may be initially extended and subsequently maintained on any security (with certain exceptions) registered on a national securities exchange. Certain other powers have been conferred upon the Board which are likewise designed to enable it to prevent an undue diversion of funds into speculative operations. 660 Congressional Drrectory MISCELLANEOUS 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 installment 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 transactions 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 interlocking relationships in, certain circumstances between_ member banks and organizations dealing in securities or, under the Clayton Antitrust Act, between member banks and other banks; it has the power to re-move officers and directors of a member bank for continued violations of law or unsafe or unsound practices in conducting the business of such bank; it may, in its discretion, suspend member banks from the use of the credit facilities of the Federal Reserve System, for making undue use of bank credit for speculative ~ purposes or for any other purpose inconsistent with the maintenance of sound credit conditions; it passes on 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 cor- porations engaged in international or foreign banking; and it supervises the organ-ization and activities of corporations organized under Federal law to engage in international or foreign banking. Another function of the Board is the operation of a settlement fund, by which balances due to and from the various Federal Reserve Banks arising out of their own transactions or transactions of their mem-ber banks or of the United States Government are settled in Washington through -telegraphic transfer of funds without physical shipments of currency. In exercising its supervisory functions over the Federal Reserve Banks and member banks, the Board of Governors promulgates regulations, pursuant to authority granted by the law, governing certain of the above-mentioned activities of Federal Reserve Banks and member banks. To meet its expenses and to pay the salaries of its members and its employees, the Board makes semiannual assessments upon the Federal Reserve Banks in proportion to their capital stock and surplus. The Board keeps a complete record of all action taken by it and by the Federal Open Market Committee on any question of policy, and in the annual report which it makes to the Speaker of the House of Representatives 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 Cones ion with guaranties of loans made under the Contract Settlement Act of 1944. The Federal Reserve Banks are located in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco. There are also in operation 24 branches 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 661 bank’s paid-up capital and surplus. A like amount of Federal Reserve Bank stock must be subseribed 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 of Governors is designated as chairman of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank and as Federal Reserve agent, and in the latter capacity he is required to maintain a local office of the Board of Governors on the premises of the Federal Reserve Bank. Another class C director is appointed by the Board of Governors as deputy chairman. Each Federal Reserve Bank has as its chief executive officer a president ap-pointed for a term of 5 years by its board of directors with the approval of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. There is also a first vice president appointed in the same manner and for the same term. Federal Reserve Banks are authorized, among other things, to receive and hold on deposit the reserve balances of member banks; to issue Federal Reserve notes; to discount for their member banks notes, drafts, bills of exchange, and bankers’ acceptances of short maturities arising out of commercial, industrial, or agricul-tural transactions, and short-term paper secured by obligations of the United States; to make advances to their member banks upon their promissory notes for periods not exceeding 90 days upon the security of paper eligible for discount or purchase or upon direct obligations of the United States, and for periods not exceeding 15 days upon certain other securities; to make advances upon security satisfactory to the Federal Reserve Banks to member banks for periods not exceeding 4 months at a rate of interest at least one-half of 1 percent higher than that applicable to discounts and advances of the kinds mentioned above; in certain exeeptional circumstances and under certain prescribed conditions, to make advances to groups of member banks; under certain prescribed conditions, to grant credit accommodations to furnish working capital for established industrial or commercial businesses for periods not exceeding 5 years, either through the medium of financing institutions or, in exceptional circumstances, directly to such businesses, and to make commitments with respect to the granting of such accom- modations; in unusual and exigent circumstances, when authority has been granted by at least five members of the Board of Governors, to discount for individuals, partnerships, or corporations, under certain prescribed conditions, notes, drafts, and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities made eligible for discount for member banks; to make advances to individuals, partnerships, or corporations upon their promissory notes secured by direct obligations of the United States for periods not exceeding 90 days; at the direction of the Federal Open Market Committee, to purchase and sell in the open market bankers’ 662 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS acceptances and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities eligible for discount, obligations of the United States, and certain other securities; to act as clearing houses and as collecting agents for their member banks, and under certain con-ditions for nonmember banks, in the collection of checks and other instruments; to act as depositaries and fiscal agents of the United States; and to exercise other banking functions specified in the Federal Reserve Act. : Federal Reserve notes are a first and paramount lien on all the assets of the Federal Reserve Banks through which they are issued and are also obligations of the United States. They are issued against the security of gold certificates and of commercial and agricultural paper discounted or purchased by Federal Reserve Banks, and may also be secured by direct obligations of the United States. Every Federal Reserve Bank is required to maintain reserves in gold certificates of not less than 25 percent against its Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation and against its deposits. - ~The Federal Advisory Council acts in an advisory capacity, conferring with the " Board of Governors on general business conditions and making recommenda-tions concerning matters within the Board’s jurisdiction and the general affairs of the Federal Reserve System. The Council is composed of 12 members, 1 from each Federal Reserve district being selected annually by the board of direc-tors of the Federal Reserve Bank of the district. The Council is required to meet, in Washington at least four times each year, and oftener if called by the Board of Governors. FEDERAL SECURITY AGENCY As presently constituted the Federal Security Agency consists of the following units: Food and Drug Administration, Office of Education, Office of Vocational Rehabilitation, Public Health Service (including Freedmen’s Hospital), Social Security Board, and St. Elizabeths Hospital. The Agency discharges certain duties prescribed by law in connection with the American Printing House for the Blind, Columbia Institution for the Deaf, and Howard University. 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 were 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 Manpower Commission by Executive Order No. 9247, dated September 17, 1942. The Civilian Conservation Corps and the National Youth Administration are both now substantially liquidated. The Second Plan on Government Reorgan-ization 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 Ageney. The Committee on Physieal Fitness was terminated June 30, 1945. Under a Federal Security Agency order dated September 4, 1943, there was established in the Agency an Office of Vocational Rehabilitation to carry out the provisions of the Vocational Rehabilitation Act amendments of 1943. 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 funetions 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-none security, educational opportunity, and the health of the citizens of the ation, Seats : Official Duties 663 The general responsibility of the Office of Community War Services is to serve as a center for the coordination of health and welfare services for the Nation as a whole during the war emergency. In addition to this general function, it provides service and guidance to war-affected communities in two fields—recrea-tion and social protection—for which there was no existing Federal agency. Through the Recreation Program, it aids communities to develop war-recreation activities for the military services and war-industry workers and their families. Through the Social Protection Program it furnishes advice and assistance to locali-ties in maintaining law-enforcement measures for the repression of prostitution and conditions which might constitute venereal-disease hazards. 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 Aet 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. Also, a new title—Title XII, Reinsurance of State Unemployment Funds—was added to the Social Security Act by the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944. Under title V of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, the Board participates with the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs in certifying to the Secretary of the Treasury for payment amounts for administrative expenses incurred or to be incurred by participating States. Under the Reorganization Act of 1939 (Public, No. 19, 76th Cong.) and Reorganization Plan No. I, the Social Security Board was made a part of the Federal Security 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 com-pensation functions of the Board. On'January 1, 1942, as a result of a request of the President to the States, the system of public employment offices throughout the country came under national operation. Subsequently, under Executive Order No. 9247 of September 17, 1942, the functions of the United States Employ-ment Service were transferred to the War Manpower Commission and later (under Executive Order No. 9617, September 19, 1945) to the Department of Labor. 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, the Office of the Actuary, and the organizational units of the Office of the Executive Director. The Office of Appeals Council provides means for review of old-age and survivors insurance claims. OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Within the Office of the Executive Director are centered the administrative and executive duties of the Board. The Executive Director has general 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 programs: Coordinating Federal-State relations, and providing an advisory service with respect to the establishment and maintenance of State merit systems of personnel administration. 664 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The Office of the Executive Director is also responsible for servicing the Board and its bureaus and offices with respect to budget, general coordination and pro-cedures, personnel, travel, space, publications, procurement of supplies and equipment, furnishing centralized stenographic and typing assistance, maintain-ing centralized files and records, 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. The Office of the Executive Director is responsible for preparation of the Board’s official periodical publications—the Social Security Bulletin and the Annual Report. It also prepares the Social Security Yearbook, in collaboration with an interbureau advisory committee. BUREAU OF OLD-AGE AND SURVIVORS INSURANCE Under title IT of the Social Security Act, as amended, the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance administers a program which provides monthly benefits for insured workers who have reached the age of 65 and retire. Wives who have reached 65 and any children under 18 years of age of these workers,as well as widows and children under 18 years of age or aged dependent parents of deceased ~ workers, are also entitled to monthly survivor benefits. If there is no person immediately qualified to receive monthly survivor benefits, lump-sum payments are made to specified classes of individuals. The purpose of this program is to provide wage earners and their families with partial replacement for loss of income due to the old age or death of the wage earner. Benefits are based on wages received in employment covered under title II. This program is financed through contributions by wage earners and their employers; it is administered entirely by the Federal Government as contrasted with old-age assistance or other social security programs which are administered by the States. The provisions of the original old-age insurance plan became effective January 1, 1937. Benefits under the amended plan began in January 1940. : The Bureau is responsible for the establishment and maintenance of individual accounts in which are recorded the amounts of reported wages. By the end of September 1945, about 83.1 million social security account numbers had been issued since the inception of the program. Not all these accounts, however, had wages credited to them. It is estimated that as of the end of 1944, 70.6 million living persons had wages credited to their accounts. Account numbers are assigned in the field offices of the Bureau, which also furnish information to workers and employers as to their rights and obligations under the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance program. . The Bureau’s field representatives assist potential claimants in filing applica-tions for benefits and in developing the necessary evidence for the determination of their claims. They also determine eligibility for benefits and compute the amount of the benefits. Responsibility for reviewing field office determinations and for making certifications to the Treasury Department for payment of benefits, from the old-age and survivors insurance trust fund, is decentralized to five area offices. Up to the end of April 1945, monthly benefits and lump-sum payments aggregating almost 896 million dollars had been certified for payment. The Bureau conducts such actuarial, economic, and administrative studies as are necessary to the administration of title II; it also tabulates, from its wage and claims records, statistical data needed by the Board in analyzing and supervising the operation of the old-age and survivors insurance provisions of the Social Security Act. On the basis of experience and studies in administration of title II, the Bureau makes recommendations as to establishment and improvement of policy and procedure. : : BUREAU OF PUBLIC ASSISTANCE The Bureau of Public Assistance is concerned with the administration of grants to the States for old-age assistance, aid to dependent children, and aid to the needy blind under the provisions of titles I, IV, and X of the Social Security Act. The Bureau advises the States in the preparation of their public assistance plans and, in cooperation with the appropriate bureaus and offices of the Social Security Board and the Office of the General Counsel of the Federal Security Agency, ex-amines these plans (and modifications thereof) for conformity with the require-ments of the Social Security Act and the standards and policies of the Board. It is on the basis of Board approval of these plans that certification of grants-in-aid are made to the States to assist them in financing their programs for aid to the MISCELLANEOUS -Officral Duties 665 needy aged, to dependent children, and to the needy blind. The Bureau reviews the operation of these plans periodically for continuing conformity with the act, and offers to the States technical consultative services on public assistance admin-istration. It also serves the States as a clearing house for the exchange of public assistance information and experience. ; : The Bureau has the duty of presenting to the Board quarterly the recommenda-tions for the certification by the Board of the grants-in-aid to the States. It is also responsible for obtaining and presenting the reports which the Social Security Board requires of the States, offering to State and local public welfare agencies consultative service in connection with those reports and with their other re-search activities. Another duty of the Bureau is that of collating data on assist-ance under the Social Security Act with data on other assistance programs. The Social Security Board has given to the Bureau of Public Assistance respon-sibility for the administration of two war emergency programs: civilian war assistance, administered under Presidential allocation to the Administrator of the Federal Security Agency, and services and assistance to enemy aliens and others affected by restrictive governmental action, financed by Federal funds through a regular appropriation. fis By agreement with the Selective Service System, the Bureau assists in the medical survey program, particularly with regard to distributing funds to reim- burse State departments of public welfare for these services. " BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY The Social Security Board’s administrative responsibility in connection with the Federal-State unemployment compensation system is discharged by the Bureau of Employment Security. : With respect to unemployment compensation, the Social Security Act is essen-tially an enabling statute, designed to facilitate the enactment and administra-tion of unemployment compensation laws by .the States. State employees administer provisions of those laws. Title III of the Social Security Act provides for Federal cooperation with States establishing systems of unemployment compensation. Grants to meet the cost of proper and efficient administration are authorized to be made to those States which have unemployment compensa-tion laws approved by the Board under section 1603 of the Internal Revenue Code and which meet the conditions prescribed in title III. The Bureau is responsible for recommending approval or disapproval of grants to those States which meet or fail to meet the conditions prescribed in title III, and for pro-moting economical administration through the development of fiscal standards and procedures. The Bureau of Employment Security also discharges the re-sponsibility of the Social Security Board to Congress to assure that State admin-istrations provide prompt payment of benefits and carry out their responsibilities in a manner consistent with the requirements and conditions laid down by Con-gress. Under Executive Order No. 9617 (September 19, 1945) the Department of Labor is directed to provide for making available to State unemployment eompensation agencies such services, information, and facilities as are not incon-sistent with the purposes of that order; to the extent that Federal funds are involved, services, information, and facilities shall be furnished only when and to the extent that the Social Security Board shall approve. Sig The Internal Revenue Code, in subchapter C of chapter 9, levies a Federal tax on employers of eight or more workers. The Social Security Board is author-ized therein to approve State unemployment compensation laws which fulfill certain conditions and include provision for depositing, to the creditof the State, all contributions upon collection, in the unemployment trust fund of the United States. Such approval will permit those employers making contributions to State unemployment compensation funds under approved State laws to obtain credit up to a maximum of 90 percent against the Federal tax. Within the same maximum limitations, employers may receive credit also with respect to reduced rates of contributions under State laws which permit such reductions under conditions which are found by the Social Security Board to comply with the provisions of section 1602 of the Internal Revenue Code. The Bureau is responsible for certifying to the Social Security Board that the respective State unemployment compensation laws meet these provisions of the Internal Revenue ode. : The Bureau also assists the States in the preparation of unemployment com-pensation laws, amendments thereto, and rules and regulations implementing such laws. Technical assistance and guidance are provided to the State agencies 666 C ongressitonal Darectory MISCELLANEOUS on problems of organization and administration including questions of general policy, claims procedure, statistical reports, and other activities related to admin-istration of the State unemployment compensation programs. The Bureau also functions as a central clearing house for the dissemination of technical information of interest to all States. The Bureau also assists the Board in carrying out its responsibilities under title V of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, for participating with the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs in certifying to the Secretary of the Treasury for payment amounts for administrative expenses incurred or to be incurred by States participating in the administration of this title. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS AND AUDITS The Bureau of Accounts and Audits is responsible for the conduct of budget processing, accounting, financial reporting, auditing and fiscal advisory functions relating to the departmental and field activities of the Board. This Bureau con-ducts audits of State public-assistance agencies and reviews the fiscal aspects of State public-assistance plans and requests for grants. It furnishes constructive ac-counting services to State public-assistance agencies. In unemployment com- pensation it conducts audits of administrative expenditures of State employment security agencies. It is responsible for processing the budget: of the Social Se-curity Board and for keeping continuous control over expenditures. It maintains the Board’s system of accounts covering all funds collected or disbursed. The preaudit and certification for payment of administrative expenses of the Board and the furnishing of advisory services to its bureaus on budget, accounting, and fiscal matters are further duties of this Bureau. BUREAU OF RESEARCH AND STATISTICS The Bureau of Research and Statistics conducts research concerning factors causing economic insecurity, the over-all adequacy of existing social-security measures, and problems connected with the development of a comprehensive and coordinated social-security program covering all appropriate groups and risks. In this connection it is charged with the development of new fields of study in social security, such as health and disability insurance and the provision of medical care, arising out of the Board’s responsibility under section 702 of the Social Security Act. Research and statistical activities beyond the immediate fields of the operating programs of the Board dealt with by the Bureau include the over-all financial and economic aspects of the social-security program and the characteris-tics or effects of the interrelations of Board programs and other social insurance and welfare programs. The Bureau is responsible for a continuing review of the research and statistical programs of the several bureaus and offices of the Board concerning their adequacy and their integration into a total research program. Accordingly, the Bureau of Research and Statistics has certain responsibilities in connection with coordination of related statistical and research activities carried on in the Bureaus of the Board and with the review of research and statistical materials. ) : INFORMATIONAL SERVICE The Informational Service is responsible for informing workers, employers, and the general public concerning the provisions of the Social Security Act which are administered by the Board, particularly concerning the Federal old-age and survivors insurance program. Information is disseminated through various channels of public information and education so that persons affected may secure the benefits the law provides, may meet their responsibilities under the law and comply with the necessary administrative procedures and regulations. The Informational Service advises and assists State agencies administering public assistance and unemployment compensation in the planning and execution of . their informational programs. OFFICE OF THE ACTUARY The Board maintains an actuarial consultant and his staff serving as advisers 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, in determining costs, and in considering proposals concerning the social-security program. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 667 OFFICE OF APPEALS COUNCIL The Office of Appeals Council provides a means for hearing and review of appealed claims for old-age and survivors insurance under title IT of the Social Security Act, as amended. This Office consists of the 3 members of the Council, 12 regional referees, and a consulting referee. The Office is independent of the Bureau of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, which makes the original determina-tions with respect to claims. OTHER SERVICES Legal services are provided to the Board by the Office of the General Counsel of the Federal Security Agency. These services include legal advice to the Board, the Executive Direetor, 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 for the State and Federal agencies operating under the Social Security Act throughout the United States, the Board has 11 regional offices, and territorial offices in Alaska and Hawaii, responsible to the Executive Director. All operations of the Board in each region are supervised by a regional diréctor 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 Community War Services. They are assisted in this activity by regional representatives of that Office’s Divisions of Recreation and Social Protection. The regional offices of the Board also supervise the operation of two war pro- grams: Civilian war assistance, and assistance and services to enemy aliens and others affected by restrictive governmental action, which are administered by State public welfare agencies through agreements with the Board. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE The headquarters of the Public Health Service at Washington comprises the Office of the Surgeon General, the National Institute of Health, and the Bureaus of Medical Services and State Services. The Surgeon General, assisted by the Deputy Surgeon General, exercises general supervision over the administration and operations of the Public Health Service, including the assignment of the respon-sibility for exercising professional supervision over the Public Health Service _ officers detailed for duty with other governmental agencies; conducts the relations of the Public Health Service with international organizations having public health functions; and supervises the Office of the Surgeon General. The Office of the Surgeon General includes the following divisions: -1. The Division of Commissioned Officers is responsible for appointments, promotions, transfers, training, retirement, and other matters relating to commis-sioned personnel, and also for the recruitment, and assignment of interns to Marine hospitals. 2. The Dental Division supervises all dental activities of the Public Health Service, and advises the Surgeon General regarding plans, programs, and policies for the Service in relation to dental activities. 3. The Sanitary Engineering Division supervises all sanitary engineering and sanitation operations carried on by the Service including sanitation problems related to domestic quarantine; administers the Stream Pollution Laboratory at | Cincinnati, Ohio; and advises the Surgeon General regarding plans, programs, and policies for the Service in relation to sanitary engineering and sanitation activities. 4, The Division of Nurse Education supervises all activities of the Service in relation to the provisions of the act of June 15, 1943 (Public Law No. 74, 78th Cong.), known as the Bolton Nurse Training Act. 5. The Division of Public Health Methods is responsible for the study and definition of public health problems; evaluation and perfection of procedures; 668 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS collection of information regarding the prevalence of diseases dangerous to the public health; analysis of health statistics; scientific and informational publica-tions of the Service; and cooperative health activities. In addition, the Budget and Fiscal Office prepares estimates of appropriations required for the operation of the Service and maintains accounts for the control of appropriated funds. The executive assistant supervises the Civil Service Personnel Section, the Chief Clerk’s Office, and' the Purchase and Supply Section. A National Advisory Health Council advises the Surgeon General on public health matters. The Chief Medical Officer of the United States Coast Guard is responsible . to the Commandant of the Coast Guard and the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service for the medical and dental care of the personnel of the Coast Guard. The National Institute of Health is the scientific research bureau of the Public Health Service. Through the Institute, the Service also enforces the act of July 1, 1902, to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analogous prod-ucts, 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 Institute also includes the Divisions of Infectious Diseases and of Physiology and the following laboratories: Pathology, biologics control, chemistry, zoology, and industrial hygiene research. The Bureau of Medical Services is responsible for all foreign and insular quaran-tine activities; medical services rendered to beneficiaries of the Public Health Service; and administrative supervision of officers assigned to certain governmental agencies and of medical care services conducted in collaboration with other Government agencies, including medical and psychiatric services in Federal, penal and correctional institutions under the control of the Department of Justice. The Bureau comprises three divisions: 1. The Hospital Division is responsible for the administration of 24 Marine hospitals, the National Leprosarium, the Sheepshead Bay Hospital for trainees of the Maritime Service, health and medical activities within the Service which are carried out for the benefit of the United States Coast Guard, and the super-vision of Freedmen’s Hospital. 2. The Mental Hygiene Division administers the two hospitals for the treat-ment of drug addicts; conducts studies of the causes, prevalence, prevention, and treatment of mental and nervous disease; and cooperates with State officials in developing and improving facilities for the care of the mentally ill. Executive Order No. 9079, signed by the President on February 26, 1942, authorizes the treatment for the duration of the present war and 6 months thereafter of insane persons (except those from the District of Columbia) at the two hospitals estab-lished for the treatment of drug addicts. 3. The Foreign Quarantine Division administers the quarantine laws of the United States to prevent the introduction of quarantinable diseases—anthrax, cholera, leprosy, plague, psittacosis, smallpox, typhus, yellow fever—from foreign ports into the United States and its insular possessions. The Division also pro-vides medical consultation to the immigration service at home and abroad. Also within the Bureau is the Office of Nursing which is responsible for the general administration of all clinical nursing activities, dietetic and physical therapy services in the facilities of the Public Health Service. The Bureau of State Services is responsible for grants to States for the several types of public health activities, other cooperative work with State and local health’ departments, interstate quarantine functions and such emergency health and sanitation activities as are not specifically assigned otherwise. The Chief of the Bureau supervises the work of the district offices and the liaison officers assigned to Army Service Commands. The Bureau comprises four divisions: 1. The States Relations Division assists State and local health authorities in the development and maintenance of adequate public health services, including training of personnel, as authorized under section 314 (¢) of the Public Health Service Act; cooperates with State health authorities in preventing the spread of epidemic diseases; conducts an annual conference of the Public Health Service with State and Territorial health officers; and administers the national defense health and sanitation program. 2. The Venereal Disease Division investigates the cause, treatment, and pre-vention of venereal diseases so as to cooperate with State boards or departments of health for the prevention and control of such diseases within the States; and to control and prevent the spread of these diseases in interstate traffic. Section 314 (a) of the Public Health Service Act authorizes the Service to make MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties ow A060 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. 3. The Industrial Hygiene Division recruits and trains professional personnel, provides industrial hygiene services in Government industrial establishments and gives consultation to State industrial hygiene organizations. 4. The Tuberculosis Control Division was established under provisions of the Public Health Service Act of July 1, 1944 (Public Law 410) which charged the Public Health Service with responsibility for developing “more effective measures for the prevention, treatment, and control of tuberculosis.” Three sections, created within the Division, are: State Aid Control, Field Studies, and Radiology. Grants-in-aid to the States for control of tuberculosis are made under the authority of section 314 (b) of the Public Health Service Act. 5. The office of Malaria Control in War Areas, responsible for control of malaria during the war period, is extending its work in an effort to eradicate malaria in the United States. In addition, the office is concerned with control of typhus -and diseases of tropical origin. Also within the Bureau is the Office of Publi¢ Health Nursing which coordinates all public health nursing activities of the various divisions of the Bureau. UNITED STATES OFFICE OF EDUCATION The United States Commissioner of Education, under the direction of the Federal Security Administrator, has charge of the United States 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 United States 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. Adminisiration of laws of Congress relating to colleges.—This responsibility includes: (a) The supervision of expenditures 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 IT (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 purposes 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 university be inspected by the United States 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 presented to Congress each year in the report of the Office of Education. 2. Administration of Federal vocational education laws.—The Federal program of vocational education now administered by the United States Office of Educa-tion was formerly administered by the Federal Board for Vocational Education, created under the provisions of the Smith-Hughes Act approved February 23, 1917. 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 under a provision of the act has been provided annually since July 1, 1925. An act approved Feb-ruary 5, 1929 (George-Reed. Act), authorized an additional appropriation of $250,000 for agriculture and $250,000 for home economics for the fiscal year 1930, and for each year thereafter, for 4 years a sum exceeding by $250,000 the appro-priation 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 | 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 44 | ZS —E Ek; 670... Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS each of the fiscal years 1935, 1936, and 1937 for the further development of voca-tional education, to be used for instruction in agricultural subjeets, home econom-ics 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 annual 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 for vocational education in agriculture, trade and industry, and home eco-nomics; $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 has been allotted to the States on the basis of rural, farm, nonfarm, urban, or total population, as designated in the acts. The first three acts—Smith-Hughes, George-Reed, and George-Ellzey— stipulated that the State or local community, or both, should match the expendi-ture of Federal money dollar for dollar. The George-Deen Act stipulates that States and Territories shall match only 50 percent of the expenditure of Federal money for the first 5 years in which the act is operative, or until June 30, 1942, this percentage being increased by 10 percent annually thereafter, until it reaches 100 percent beginning July 1, 1946. The duties imposed upon the Federal Board for Vocational Education by the Smith-Hughes Act were of a twofold character: On the one hand, as the repre-sentative of the Government it cooperated with State boards for vocational 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. It examined the plans submitted by the State boards for vocational education and approved those 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 prepared 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 com-plied with the provisions of the act, together with the amount which each State was entitled to receive. It made studies, investigations, and reports dealing with occupational processes and educational requirements for workers and appren-tices, 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 commercial employment. Under Executive order issued June 10, 1933, the functions of the Federal Board for Vocational Education were transferred to the Department of the Interior, and on October 10, 1933, the Secretary of the Interior assigned the Board’s functions to the United States Commissioner of Education. These functions are now carried on by the vocational division of the United States Office of Education. On July 1, 1939, the United States Office of Education was transferred from the Department of the Interior to the Federal Security Agency. The Board now acts in an advisory capacity without compensation. : Services for the blind.—The United States Office of Education administers a Federal act of June 20, 1936 (Randolph-Sheppard Act), which authorizes the operation of stands in Federal buildings by blind persons. The act also provides for enlarging the economic opportunities of the blind, the making of surveys of industries with a view to obtaining information that will assist blind persons to obtain employment, and the making available to the publie, and especially to persons and organizations engaged in work for the blind, information obtained as a result of such surveys. 3. Educational research and investigation.—(a) Studies of current problems in all phases and at all levels of education regularly carried on by specialists in various fields of education. (b) Biennial surveys of education, including both statistical and descriptive forms of information on the status of education in all fields. (¢) Surveys in definite phases of education authorized by special appropriations of Congress. (d) Library research work as a regular function of the Office, by special authorization of Congress. 4. Consultative and advisory services.—(a) Surveys of State and local school systems and of educational institutions. (b) Cooperative studies with represent-atives of educational systems and organizations. (¢) Services on educational committees and through conference groups. (d) Participation in programs of educational organizations. (e) Advisory services to school officials. (f) Advisory and informational services to other Government agencies. 5. Library.—The library of more than a quarter million volumes, together with charts, maps, and other forms of materials on educational data, provides facilities MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 671 for study to a large number who .come to its reference rooms and to larger num-hors who have books made available to them through a system of interlibrary oans. 6. 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 School Life, issued monthly, except August and September. 7. Activities carried on by allotments from special funds appropriated by Con-gress.—Under Public Law 150 administered by the Federal Works Agency, employs field representatives to recommend upon individual applications for funds for maintenance and operation of schools and for extended school services for children of working mothers; with funds provided by the Office of Defense Transportation furnishes consultative service to school officials on problems of school transportation in wartime; operates the school and college section of the physical fitness program of the Federal Security Agency; promotes inter-American educational relations through programs made possible by funds received from the Interdepartmental Committee on Cooperation with the American Republics “and by the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. 8. War training programs.— Under authority of Public Law 373, Seventy-eighth Congress, second session, and subsequent laws, the United States Office of Education cooperated with the several State boards for vocational education and with degree-granting colleges and universities in the furtherance of the education and training of war production workers as follows: (1) It assisted 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 were preparing for such occupations, selected from the public employment office registers, and provided funds for the rental of additional space found necessary for carrying out the approved plans. (2) It cooperated 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 provided 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 assisted the States in the organization and conduct of vocational courses in food production and conservation, mechanics, farm-machinery repair, and farm-labor training of less than college grade designed to give general preemploy-ment mechanical training and to assist in attaining the production goals for those farm commodities designated from time to time in the food-for-freedom program promulgated by the United States Department of Agriculture, and in the purchase and rental of equipment and rental of space found necessary for carrying out the approved plans. (4) It supervised the repayment of approximately $3,000,000 in Federal loans which were made to certain professional and technical students during the fiscal years 1943 and 1944, to assist them in completing their accelerated courses in shortage fields. (5) It produced visual aids for use in training persons for. occupations essential to the war effort. (6) It authorized the purchase, rental, or acquisition in other ways of equipment needed in providing vocational courses of the type described in paragraph (1). It is now in the process of liquidating these programs. OFFICE OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION The Office of Vocational Rehabilitation was established in the Federal Security Agency by the Federal Security Administrator on September 4, 1943, under the direction and control of a Director of Vocational Rehabilitation. The Director has been delegated authority, under the supervision of the Federal Security Administrator, to exercise, with certain exceptions, the authority, duties, functions, and powers granted to the Federal Security Administrator in the Vocational Rehabilitation Act amendments of 1943 (Public Law 113), approved July 6, 1943. The 1943 act amends the act of June 2, 1920, which provided for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry or otherwise and their return to civil employment. 672 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS The Federal Board for Vocational Education was designated by the 1920 act as the agency to administer the Federal program in cooperation with the States. 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 act of July 6, 1943, defines ‘‘vocational rehabilitation” and ‘vocational rehabilitation services’ as any services necessary to render a disabled individual fit to engage in a remunerative occupation. The 1943 act made basic changes in the act of 1920 with reference to the scope of services to be rendered, the groups of disabled individuals to be served, and the method to be followed in financing the program. : The 1943 act provides for an expanded Federal-State program of rehabilitation by including physical restoration services for disabled individuals, necessary hos-pitalization to effect these services; transportation; occupational licenses and necessary occupational tools and equipment; prosthetic devices essential to obtaining or retaining employment; and maintenance not exceeding the estimated cost of subsistence during training. These provisions may be contrasted with those of the 1920 act, which practically limited the use of Federal funds to the training phase of the program and to the furnishing of prosthetic devices. In addition to the groups of disabled individuals served under the provisions of the original act, specific provision is made in the 1943 act for the rehabilitation of the blind and for the rehabilitation of war-disabled civilians defined as individ-uals disabled in civilian defense activities or while serving with the Merchant Marine. The act of July 6, 1943, provides that appropriations for grants-in-aid to the States will be allotted on the basis of the needs of the States and their ability to match Federal funds. The original Rehabilitation Act limited the authorization for Federal appropriations and provided that allotments to the States be made on the basis of general population. While the 1920 act provided that all expenditures made by a State from Federal allotments must be matched by a like amount of State funds, the 1943 act provides that the entire cost of the administration of the State programs and the cost of guidance and placement of handicapped persons will be paid wholly from Federal “funds. The 1943 act likewise provides that 100 percent of the cost of rehabilitat-ing war-disabled civilians will be borne by the Federal Government. One-half of the cost of services (other than guidance and placement) rendered to other disabled individuals will be paid from Federal funds. Moneys made available for the purpose pursuant to the act of July 6, 1943, will be used for making payments to the States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, which have submitted and had approved by the Federal Security Administrator State plans for vocational rehabilitation of disabled persons. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION ‘The Food and Drug Administration enforces the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic As Tea Importation Act, Import Milk Act, Caustic Poison Act, and Filled Milk ct 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 manufacturers against unfair competition with such goods. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION The Federal Trade Commission was created by an act of Congress approved September 26, 1914, in which the powers and duties of the Commission were defined. The Commission is an administrative tribunal with its five members appointed 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. MISCELLANEOUS ~ Officcal Duties : 3 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 SERVICE Representation on war agency commattees.—The Commission, under the terms of Executive orders and otherwise, was represented by its chairman on several war agency committees or boards. Staff members also served on planning com-mittees, and as advisers and consultants to committees of the War Production Board, the Office of Price Administration, and also on budget statistical com-mittees and interdepartmental committees. : Commission personnel and the war.—The exigencies of the war were responsible for the furlough of more than one-third of the Commission’s personnel since the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The Commission did not request any deferments, and some 170 employees left to join the armed services since that date. Of the remaining personnel a substantial part, in the Commission’s legal investigational and accounting services, were engaged in emergency war work whenever called upon, in full accord with the expressed policy of the Presi-dent that existing agencies be utilized to as great an extent as possible for neces-sary war activities. Wartime advertising surveys.—The Commission analyzed, summarized, and reported to various war agencies, at their request, such advertising in magazines, newspapers, and radio broadcasts as contained any reference 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 viola-tions of the Codes of War-Time Practices for press and radio, as published by the Office of Censorship, were transferred to that office for consideration; while other advertising analyses with reference to price rises, trends, shortages, rationing nd priorities relating to textiles and clothing were made for the War Production oard. -; Wartime consumer protection— Wool products labeling and trade practice confer-ence activities.—During the wartime period, due to necessary restrictions, the need for consumer protection was greater than ever before. The Commission, in the public interest, acted to bring the consumer this protection, also to bring protection to honest business, through its enforcement of the law against unfair and deceptive acts or practices in commerce and enforcement of the provisions of the Wool Products Labeling Act which require that woolen or part-woolen clothing and other wool products shall be truthfully and informatively labeled as to content. Through its trade practice conference procedure the Commission provided a means for the establishment of trade practice rules directed to the maintenance of free and fair competition and of consumer protection under wartime conditions. . WAR AND POSTWAR CONDITIONS AND RECONVERSION Trade practice rule work.—Many industries operating under trade practice rules issued by the Commission were engaged in war production as well as pro-duction or distribution for essential civilian needs. Established rules of fair trade practices governing such industries have an important effect in maintaining a fair competitive balance in the respective industries and trades and in affording an over-all stabilizing influence which was most helpful in advancement of the . war effort and in protecting the public interest in the prevailing economy of scar-city and stress. The substantial results achieved in this respect are brought about at small cost. The waste and burdens which unfair or harmful trade practices impose upon competitive enterprise and upon the buying public are eliminated, and industry and trade are thereby freed for maximum effort in meeting the needs of the country. The rules of fair trade practices promulgated by the Commission, covering approximately 150 industries, were administered and applied by the Commission in 674 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS line with maintaining effective support: of the maximum war effort. Besides affording material contribution to the war program, the rules placed the respective industries in an advantageous position to meet the impact of postwar conditions. Such fair trade practice provisions are designed to foster and promote free enter-prise on a fair competitive basis without monopolistic or discriminatory trade restraints which stifle small businesses and suppress competition to the detriment of the public. Resumption of war-deferred proceedings.—Shortly after the close of the fiscal year, the Commission, following the termination of such requests under arrange-ments entered into by it with the War and Navy departments early in the war, -announced that it would proceed as expeditiously as possible with a substantial number of cases, which had thus been suspended at the requests of the two Departments because of probable interference with the war effort, and which involved a wide range of products, including precision instruments, machinery, -chemicals, construction materials, and automobile tire chains. Conservation and protection. of the public health and our 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 an essential 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 enforcement of the law relating to dissemination of false advertisements of drugs, cosmetics, and food. Such enforcement plays an important part in the conservation of the health of our population, while no less important at this time when problems incident to the preservation and strengthening of free enterprise and our competitive system press for solution, are the questions of price fixing, restrainty of trade, coercive practices, false advertising, and numerous other trade methods which not only affect the price or quality of practically every commodity bought by members of our population generally, but are directly involved in the accomplishment of the objectives above set forth. "FUNCTIONS AND PROCEDURE OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION UNDER STATUTES WHICH IT ADMINISTERS The Commission’s legal functions include prevention of unfair methods of com-petition 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 FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ACT Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act provides that ‘unfair methods of competition in commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are hereby declared unlawful” and empowers and directs the Commission ‘to prevent ‘‘persons, partnerships, or corporations, except banks, common carriers subject to the acts to regulate commerce, air carriers and foreign air carriers sub-ject to the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, and persons, partnerships, or corpora-tions subject to the Packers’ and Stockyard Act, 1921, except as provided in section 406 (b) of said act, from using unfair methods of competition in commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce.” The Commission is empowered and directed whenever it shall have reason to believe that any such person, partnership, or corporation has been or is using any unfair method of competition in commerce or any unfair or deceptive aat or prac-tice in commerce, and if it shall appear to the Commission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of the public, to issue and serve upon such person, partnership, or corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect. Provision is made for hearings, the taking of testimony and oral argu-ment before the Commission upon request therefor. If the Commission shall then be of the opinion that the method of competition or the act or practice in question is prohibited by this act, it shall issue and cause to be served upon the person or organization against whom complaint is made its findings of fact and an order to cease and desist from such unfair method of competition or such unfair or deceptive act or practice. : Provision is made for petition to a circuit court of appeals of the United States, within any circuit where the method of competition or the act or practice in question was used or where such person, partnership, or corporation resides or carries on business, within 60 days from the date of the service of such order to modify or set aside such order of the Commission. Upon such petition the court MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 675 has power to affirm, modify, or set aside such order, and to enforce the same to the extent that such order is affirmed. An order of the Commission to cease and desist becomes final upon the expiration of the time allowed for filing a petition for review, if no such petition has been duly filed within such time; and, in case peti- tion for review has been duly filed within the time allowed, the order of the Com- mission becomes final when the time for filing petition for certiorari has expired - after such order has been affirmed or modified by a circuit court of appeals and no such petition has been filed, or, if certiorari has been granted, at such time as the decision has been affirmed by the Supreme Court. : Section 5, as amended, also provides that ‘any person, partnership, or cor- poration who violates an order of the Commission to cease and desist after it has become final, and while such order is in effect, shall forfeit and pay to the United States a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 for each violation, which shall accrue to the United States and may be recovered by a civil action brought by the United States.” Generally, a letter to the Commission stating the employment of unfair practices by some concern is sufficient to institute the Commission’s consideration of a pro-ceeding. If the letter clearly discloses that nothing is charged within the juris-diction of the Commission, it is filed without further action. If it appears, how-ever, that there may have been such a violation of law, the matter is settled, after further investigation, by stipulation and agreement with the concern named in the .letter, or by the issuance of a formal complaint followed by a formal trial of the charges, or by closing the file without action, or by dismissal of the charges, as required by the facts of the particular 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 the Commission as a matter of privilege and not of right, in instances where formal action appears unnecessary in 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; violations of the Wool Products Labeling Act or the rules promulgated thereunder; 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 the duty of passing upon the testimony and evidence and with other details incident to the trial of the case. Procedure and internal organization of the Commission, specific methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices condemned by the Com- mission, are set forth in detail in 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 agencies, 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 fstommaendaiions for changes in the corporation’s methods so as to conform to the law. 676 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. 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 Act of 1933, the Public Utilities Holding Company Act of 1935, the Natural Gas Act of 1938, the present Federal Power Commission Act and the Robinson-Patman Antidis-crimination Act of 1936, which amended section 2 of the Clayton Act. Inquiries recently completed under section 6 include: Export trade associations and international cartels.—An investigation to dis-close the facts with respect to the economic effects of the activities of export trade associations with special reference to their participation in international cartels and the effects of such participation on domestic industry is in progress, and staff reports have been completed on a number of important industries and Save been made available to other government agencies studying the cartel roblem. P Corporation reports.—Under section 6 of its organic act, the Federal Trade Commission is empowered to collect periodically 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, requested about 900 individual corporations to file financial reports covering their 1939 operations. Subsequently, the number of corporations requested to submit reports was enlarged and approximately 4,500 corporations were requested to submit reports covering their 1940 operations. Similar information for a number of industries was collected for the Office of Price Administration covering the year 1941, but was not published by the Com-mission. The Commission’s published reports, therefore, cover only the years 1939 and 1940. The separate industry reports and the summary for the year 1939 cover the combined operations of 780 corporations, representing 76 industry groups, while those for 1940 cover 2,748 corporations in 86 industries. These reports present significant facts regarding business conditions and financial results for the more important corporations in each industry group without disclosing the business statistics of any individual corporation. The combined operations of the 780 corporations summarized for 1939 repre-sented an average total investment aggregating $28,138,187401 after deducting reported appreciation of assets; total sales amounting to $24,932,624,668, and combined net profit of $2,127,475,966 after deducting interest and all taxes. The aggregate sales represented approximately 63.7 percent of the total value of pro-duction for the 76 industries as reported by the Bureau of the Census for the year 1939. : The combined operations of the 2,748 corporations summarized for 1940 repre-sented an average total investment of $28,561,702,000 after deducting apprecia-tion. Their aggregate sales amounted to $30,736,188,000 and represented approxi-mately 87 percent of the estimated total volume of production of the 86 industry groups covered. Extensive use has been and still is being made of the series of Corporation Reports, and of special tabulations and summaries which the Commission has prepared therefrom for both National War Agencies and other Government Departments. These reports have been, and still are being widely used by engineering firms, research agencies, and business executives in planning for post-war operations. Literally thousands of requests have been received for data developed by the project, and they continue to be received daily. : Interdepartmental service.—For almost 40 years the Commission (and its'pred-ecessor, the Bureau of Corporations) has been collecting and establishing a vast fund of information concerning the Nation’s important industries. The Commission has been called upon to furnish to other Government departments, and especially to the agencies created during the war emergency, an increasing amount of these data, and frequently it has been requested to prepare special MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 677 2eponis as the basis for the actions of the war agencies responsible for economic controls. Distribution methods and costs.—The Commission has completed an inquiry on distribution methods and costs which was undertaken by the Commission under authority conferred upon it by section 6 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. The inquiry covered the methods and channels of distribution, costs of distribu-tion, and practices, usages, and trade barriers, laws, charges, rates, and other factors which are an element of or affect distribution in any substantial degree. The inquiry was planned to obtain information for the use of war agencies, and when a part of the report was completed it was furnished to the Office of Price Administration and to other war agencies. The report presents information respecting the methods used and the costs of distribution incurred by a representative group of manufacturers of each of 23 important commodity groups together with the distribution expenses of repre-sentative groups of wholesalers and retailers in whose business one or more of these commodities is an important factor. In most instances the periods cov-ered by the study were prior to the active participation of the United States in the war.. It therefore presents data valuable for comparison with wartime methods and costs of distribution. The Commission, in cooperation with the Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of Interior, made a study of the cost of production and distribution of fresh fish in‘each of the four principal producing areas. The results of this study were made available to the Fish and Wildlife Service and to the Coordinator of Fisheries. The Commission is preparing a report of this inquiry as a part of its series on Methods and Costs of Distribution. The Commission has transmitted seven parts of its report to the Congress, namely, “Part I, Important Food Products,” which presents date collected by the Commission in its investigation of the methods and costs of distributing Bis--cuits and Crackers, Bread, Coffee, Flour, Milk and Milk Products, Packaged Cereals, Cane and Beet Sugar, Canned Fruits and. Vegetables, and Meats; “Part III, Building Materials—Lumber, Paints and Varnishes, and Portland Cement’; Part IV, which covers methods and costs of distributing Petroleum Products, Automobiles, Rubber Tires and Tubes, Electrical Household Appli-ances, and Agricultural Implements; Part V, Advertising as a Factor in Distribu-tion; Part VI, Milk Distribution, Prices, Spreads and Profits; Part VII, Cost of Production and Distribution of Fish in the Great Lakes Area; and Part VIII, -Cost of Production and Distribution of Fish in New England. Report on cigarette shortage—The Report of the Federal Trade Commission on the Cigarette Shortage was issued by the Commission on February 13, 1945, fol-lowing an investigation to determine whether the shortage was artificial or attrib-utable to violation of laws enforced by the Commission. In its conclusions the Commission reported that the shortage ‘in the American domestic market and particularly in the civilian market is directly traceable to the volume of cigarettes moving to the armed services and to the allies” and that “the shortage created by such movement has been magnified by an increased demand from the American people.” The Commission also reported that ‘‘the current over-all scarcity of cigarettes in the American marketis not attributable to illegal contracts or undertakings as between manufacturers or jobbers or retailers or to the violation of any of the laws under the jurisdiction of the Commission.” The investigation was made at the request of Senator Burton K. Wheeler, chairman of the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee. The Commission also received numerous communications from the public and the cigarette distributing industry with respect to the shortage and alleged unfair trade practices connected with it. Section 7 of the organic act provides that in any suit in equity brought by or under the direction of the Attorney General, as provided in the antitrust acts, the court may refer said suit to the Commission, as a master in chancery, to ascertain and report an appropriate form of decree therein. Other sections of the act give to the Commission authorization for such investi-gations and the compilation of data, with provisions for procedure under the act, and penalties prescribed for refusal of persons, partnerships, or corporations to furnish such material or to comply with orders of the Commission to testify, produce evidence, or file reports, as required. 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 678 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 cosmeties 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. Jia 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. 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 discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality, where such commodities are sold for use, consumption, or resale within the United States or any Territory thereof, or the District of Columbia, where the effect of such discrimination may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition. This section outlaws discriminations in price, services, and facilities and prohibits the payment or receipt of certain brokerage fees and allowances or other 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. THE EXPORT TRADE ACT This law permits the formation of export 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, substantially lessen competition or otherwise restrain trade within the United tates. : MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes | 679 THE WOOL PRODUCTS LABELING ACT OF 1939 This act was approved by the President October 14, 1940, and became effective July 14, 1941. The administration of the act is committed to the Commission, with authority to make rules and regulations thereunder. The purpose of the act is “to protect producers, manufacturers, 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,” ‘re-processed wool,” “reused wool,” and other fiber contained in the product, and also to reveal the percentage 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 respec-tive responsibility 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 em-powered 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, and other illegal business methods. 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 within the inhibitions of laws administered 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 practices 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 cooperation 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 deal-ing 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 680 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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. Two 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 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. A third organization, established January 1, 1945, is the Bureau of Community Facilities. Each of the organizations is headed by a Commissioner. The organizations grouped in the Federal Works Agency are those dealing with public works, not incidental to the normal work of other departments, and which administer Federal grants or loans to State and local governments or other agencies for the purposes of construction. PUBLIC BUILDINGS ADMINISTRATION The Public Buildings Administration was established as a part of the Federal Works Agency by Reorganization Plan No. I, section 303, under the provisions of the Reorganization Act of 1939, approved April 3, 1939. 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 in the District of Columbia and certain buildings outside of the District of Columbia. § * PUBLIC ROADS ADMINISTRATION The Public Roads Administration is the principal road-building agency of the Federal Government. It administers Federal funds made available tc aid the States in improvement of highways and constructs roads or supervises road construction in national forests, national parks, and certain other Federal areas. The organization administers the large postwar highway program authorized by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1944, which authorizes $500,000,000 as aid to the States in highway construction in each of the first three postwar fiscal years. The yearly amount is assigned $225,000,000 for the Federal-aid system, $150,000,000 for farm-to-market or secondary roads, and $125,000,000 for urban sections of the Federal-aid system. An important feature of the new program is the designation of a National System of Interstate Highways not exceeding 40,000 miles in extent. This system will be included in the Federal-aid system and be eligible for improvement with Federal-aid system funds. Planning of this system and of a system of secondary or farm-to-market roads and steps toward beginning construction of the three classes of work are being carried on actively in cooperation with the States. Constructionof roads in national forests, national parks, and other Federal areas will be resumed at the beginning of the 1946 construction season. BUREAU OF COMMUNITY FACILITIES The Bureau of Community Facilities is responsible for the administration of ' the provisions of title V of the act of Congress of October 3, 1944, entitled the ~ “War Mobilization and Reconversion Act of 1944” (Public Law 458, 78th Cong.) and for the administration of the provisions of the Lanham Act, except title 1, approved June 28, 1941 (55 Stat. 361; 42 U. S. C. 1523), as amended. It is also responsible for the administration of the public works program in the Virgin Islands (Public Law 510, 78th Cong.). MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 681 Title V of the War Mobilization and Reconversion Act provides for Federal loans or advances to States and other non-Federal public agencies to assist in the plan preparation of their proposed postwar public works. Federal funds advanced under the authority of the act are to be repaid without interest to the Federal Government if and when construction of public works so planned is undertaken. The act further provides that the making of such advances shall not in any way commit the Congress to appropriate funds to undertake any project so planned. The Lanham Act authorizes the Federal Works Administrator, in the interest of national defense, to construct, provide, maintain, and operate certain public works and to make contributions or loans to public or private agencies for the maintenance and operation of such public works. With the surrender of Japan, no new construction projects are being undertaken. Federal assistance for the operation of needed child care centers is available until March 1, 1946. Where necessary, recreation projects for service personnel of the armed forces will be continued during the 1946 fiscal year. Assistance for schools, hospitals, and municipal services will be available until July 1, 1946. Steps are in progress to bring the Lanham Act program to an orderly termination. Public Law 510, Seventy-eighth Congress, authorizes a public works program in the Virgin Islands and the municipalities and inhabitants thereof. It includes such public works as hospitals, sewers, water systems, schools, markets, recre-ational facilities, and other projects. . FEDERAL FIRE COUNCIL The Federal Fire Council was established by Executive Order No. 7397 of June 20, 1936, as an official advisory agency on the protection of Federal employees and property from fire. Executive Order No. 8194 of July 6, 1939, placed the Council 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. 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; to maintain a record of fire losses on Government property; and to review plans for new construction. 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 sith 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 consider-able degree of freedom is allowed in the handling of such goods within the zone, as, for example, repacking, resorting, mixing, and other types of manipulation. A bill, H. R. 3382, designed to permit manufacturing and exhibiting in foreign-trade zones, was introduced in the first session of the al Congress. On January 30, 1936, the Board issued a grant to the municipality of New York pormliing the establishment and operation of a foreign-trade zone at Stapleton, taten 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 682 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Zone. As an emergency measure, the Board authorized the grantee to use piers Nos. 53, 72, 73, and 74, 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, polish-ing, and rebagging Chinese peas; cleaning, grading, and rebagging chick peas and mustard seed; cleaning and drying crude drugs; drying, ridging, culling, and bag-ging Brazil nuts; refining, 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 San Francisco, Calif., Houston, Tex., and New Orleans, La., are now pending before the Board. ~ 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 was established in accord-ance with Resolution XXXIX of the meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics at Rio de Janeiro in January 1942. The Board is located in the city of Washington and is an autonomous international organization 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 Western Hemisphere. : INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES, ALASKA, AND CANADA : (For defining, marking, and maintaining the boundary between the United States, Alaska, and Canada) The International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada, was created under the provisions of the several boundary treaties between the United States and -Great Britain, for the purpose of defining, marking, and maintaining the demarcation of the international boundary line between the United States and Canada and between Alaska and Canada, as follows: 1. Southeastern Alaska, or the boundary between Alaska and British Columbia. Length, 893 miles. : Article VI of the convention between the United States and Great Britain, providing for the settlement of questions between the two countries with respect to the boundary line between the Territory of Alaska and the British possessions in North America, signed at Washington, January 24, 1903, stipulated that when the high contracting parties shall have received the decision of the tribunal upon the questions submitted as provided in the foregoing articles, which decision shall be final and binding upon all parties, they will at once appoint, each on its own behalf, one or more scientific experts, who shall with all convenient speed proceed to lay down the boundary line in conformity with such decision. 2. The boundary between Alaska and Canada, along the one hundred and forty-first meridian. Length, 647 miles. ! The convention between the United States and Great Britain, signed at Wash-ington, April 21, 1906, provided for the surveying and marking out upon the ground of the one hundred and forty-first meridian of west longitude where said meridian forms the boundary line between Alaska and the British possessions of North America. The convention stipulated that each Govérnment shall ap-point one commissioner, with whom may be associated such surveyors, astron-omers, and other assistants as each Government may elect, who shall locate the boundary line, erect the necessary boundary marks, make the necessary surveys, . and file duplicate records with their respective Governments. 38. The United States and Canada boundary from the Atlantic to the Pacific Qoonn, with the exception of the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Length, 2,697 miles. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 683 Articles I, II, III, V, VI, VII, and VIII, of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, entitled ‘‘Canadian International Boundary,” signed at Washington, April 11, 1908, stipulated that each of the high contracting parties shall appoint without delay an expert geographer or surveyor as Commissioner, and the Commissioners so appointed shall jointly execute the necessary surveys, repair existing boundary marks, erect additional boundary marks, and lay down the boundary line in accordance with the existing treaties upon quadruplicate sets of accurate modern charts, prepared or adopted by them for that purpose, and that said charts so marked shall be filed with each Government, and said Commissioners shall also prepare, in duplicate, and file with each Government a joint report or reports, describing in detail the course of the boundary so marked by them, and the character and location of the several monuments and boundary marks and ranges marking it. 4. Article IV of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain in respect to Canada, signed at Washington, February 24, 1925, which provides for the maintenance of an effective boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Dominion of Canada, author-izes and directs the Commissioners appointed under the provisions of the treaty of April 11, 1908, to inspect the various portions of the boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Domin-ion of Canada at such times as they shall deem necessary; to repair all damaged monuments and buoys; to relocate and rebuild monuments which have been destroyed; to keep the boundary vistas open; to move boundary monuments to new sites and establish such additional monuments and buoys as they shall deem desirable; to maintain at all times an effective boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Dominion of Canada as defined by the present treaty and treaties heretofore concluded or hereafter to be concluded; and to determine the location of any point of the boundary line which may become necessary in the settlement of any question that may arise between the two Governments. : INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY AND WATER COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO The International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mex-ico (formerly 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 portionof the frontier between the United States of America and the United Mexican States where for a distance of 1,240 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 Golorado 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 disprove 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 684 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS the powers, duties, and functions of the American section, International Water Commission, United States and Mexico, which was abolished by the terms of such act effective July 1, 1932. In addition to the development and analysis of general data pertaining to the extent of beneficial use of international waters, there are operated by the United States section of the Commission. some 50 stream gaging stations on the approximately 1,240 miles of the Rio Grande, its tributaries and diversions, between El Paso, Tex., and the Gulf of Mexico. 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 conduet by the American Commissioner of technical and other investigations relating to the defining, demar-cation, fencing, or monumentation of the land and water boundary; and the con-struction 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 admin-istrative provisions for the construetion, operation, and maintenance of treaty and other boundary projects. The treaty concluded with Mexico February 3, 1944, and effective November 8, 1945, provides for the equitable distribution between the two countries of waters of the Colorado River and the Rio Grande below Fort Quitman, Tex.; studies regarding the conservation and utilization by the two countries of the waters of the Tijuana River system; the construction and operation of certain works required for the conservation of waters of the Rio Grande and for the distribution between the two countries of the waters of that stream and of the Colorado River; studies relating to feasible hydroelectric plants on the Rio Grande as well as for necessary flood-control works on that stream and the Colo-rado River, and for the subsequent construction of such hydroelectric plants and flood-control works as may be approved by both Governments. The application of the treaty, regulation and exercise of the rights and obligations assumed there-under by the two Governments, and settlement of all disputes to which its observ-ance and execution may give rise are entrusted to the Joint Commission. The treaty specifies the Department of State of the United States of America and the Ministry of Foreign Relations of Mexico as the agencies to represent the two . Governments in every case in which joint action or joint agreement by the Gov-ernments is required under the treaty. The same agencies exercise supervision as to policy over their respective sections of the Commission. 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. ; 2 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 shail 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- IRE. ; MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 685 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 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 IIT 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 afrangement 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 suchemanner 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 ITI, 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- 78349°—T79—2—1st ed. 45 686 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS vided, however, that the Commission may, in special cases, after investigation, authorize carriers to charge less for longer than for shorter distances, and from time to time prescribe the extent to which such carriers may be relieved, subject, however, to the further proviso that in so doing the Commission shall not permit the establishment of any charge to or from the more distant point that is not reasonably compensatory. Insofar as carriers by railroad are concerned, the Commission is precluded from granting relief under the fourth section to carriers: by railroad, or other carriers subject to part I, because of merely potential water competition not actually in existence. The Commission is authorized to require rail carriers to establish through routes and joint rates, and it may act summarily in itself establishing, temporarily, through routes when, in its opinion, shortage of equipment, congestion of traffic, or other emergency exists. The act requires that divisions of joint rates shall be -just, reasonable, and equitable, and authorizes the Commission, upon complaint or upon its own initiative, after hearing, to prescribe the just, reasonable, and equitable divisions of such rates, and it may require readjustment of such divisions | if it finds they have been unjust, unreasonable, or inequitable in the past, and if the joint rates, the divisions of which are in issue, were themselves prescribed pursuant to a finding or order of the Commission. The Commission is also 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, etc., 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) of section 16 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 | MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 687 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- seribed 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. 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 eircum- 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, ete., with any person for the furnishing of protective service against heat or cold to property transported in interstate commerce, unless such contract, ete., 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. : 688 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS At the same time section 6 of the act was amended by adding a new paragraph conferring upon the Commission jurisdiction over transportation of property from point to point in the United States by rail and water, whether through the Panama Canal or otherwise and not entirely within the limits of a single State, this jurisdiction, under certain conditions, including power to establish physical con-nection between lines of ‘the rail carrier and the dock of the water carrier by directing the rail carrier to make such connection, and to determine to what traffic and in connection with what vessels, and upon what terms and conditions propor-tional, or maximum, or minimum, or maximum and minimum proportional rates shall apply; and to require rail carriers entering into through routing arrangements with any water carrier to extend the privileges of such arrangements to other water carriers. By the act approved March 1, 1913, as amended by act approved June 7, 1922, amending the act to regulate commerce, the Commission is directed to investi-gate, ascertain, and report the value of all property owned or used by every common carrier subject to the provisions of part I of the act, except street, sub-urban, or interurban electric railways not operated as a part of a general steam railroad system of transportation. Section 19a 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 Tis connection that the rail carrier shall not be liable after its delivery to the vessel. It is further provided that the 2-year period for the institution of suits against carriers for loss, damage, or injury shall be computed from the day when notice is given by the carrier to the claimant that the carrier has disallowed the claim or any part thereof. The act approved April 23, 1930, modifies the requirements of this section as to notice and filing of claims. Part I of the act as amended February 28, 1920, prohibits a carrier from issuing securities or from assuming obligations or liabilities as lessor, lessee, guarantor, indorser, surety, or otherwise, in respect of the securities of others from and after 120 days after the provision takes effect, except after having been authorized by the Commission so to do; prescribes the conditions under which the Commission may grant authorities to the carriers; the form and contents of applications which shall be made to the Commission for such purposes; provides for the giving of notice by the Commission of such applications to the Governor of each State in which the applicant carrier operates; for hearings by the Commission in respect of such applications; that carriers may issue certificates and assume obligations or liabilities without obtaining authority other than that of the Commission, and for the issuance by the carrier without the consent of the Commission of short-term notes in limited amounts, reports of which are, however, required to be filed with the Commission. It is further provided that nothing in the act shall be construed to imply any guaranty or obligation as to such securities on the part of the United States. Part I of the act also provides for a right of action in favor of investors or purchasers in good faith and without notice of securities which, if not legally issued, are void, and for penalties against directors, officers, attorneys, or agents of carriers who knowingly assent to or concur in the issuance of securities, ete., contrary to the provisions of the Commission’s orders or grants of authority. 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 | | | I Official Duties 12 : 689 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 aright of review of such decisions, by the entire Commission or appropriate appellate divisions thereof. An act approved March 3, 1933, as amended by an act approved August 27, 1935, amends the Bankruptey Act by providing for proceedings for the reorgani-zation of railroads, which proceedings may be instituted either by a petition of a railroad, filed in the appropriate Federal court, stating that the carrier is ‘‘insol-vent or unable to meet its debts as they mature and that it desires to effect a ‘reorganization,” or by the filing of a similar petition, after Commission approval, -by the creditors of a railroad whose claim aggregates not less than 5 percent of its indebtedness. Many duties are imposed upon the Commission by these amend-atory acts, including the approval, after hearing of plans of reorganization, the regulation of protective committees, the ratification of the selection of trustees, and the fixing of maximum allowances, expenses, and attorneys’ fees for the trustees, their counsel, or organization managers, or others entitled thereto. ; By amendment of June 22, 1938, the bankruptcy law was further amended to provide that any commission created by any law of the United States or of any State having regulatory jurisdiction over a public-utility corporation should have submitted to it a plan approved and given opportuaity 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 interest of adequate and efficient railroad transportation service at the lowest cost consistent with the furnishing of such service; and to the need of revenues sufficient to 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, section 22 of said part I was further amended to authorize a carrier to transport a totally blind person accompanied by a guide or seeing-eye dog or other guide dog specially trained and educated for that pur-pose at the usual and ordinary fare charged to one person. By an act approved August 25, 1937, section 22 of said part I was so amended as to authorize carriers subject to said part to accord reduced rates for the trans-portation of property to or from any section of the country with the object of 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. 690 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS By section 201 (a) of the act of February 16, 1938, the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to institute and prosecute before the Commission complaints con-cerning charges, etc., pertaining to the transportation of farm products, and when like complaints are filed by parties other than the Secretary the Commission is required to give him notice concerning the fact and accord him an opportunity to be heard in the premises. Under the Motor Carrier Act, 1935 (part II of the Interstate Commerce Act), as amended June 29, 1938, and September 18, 1940, the Commission is charged with the duty of regulating common carriers by motor vehicle, contract carriers by motor vehicle, private carriers of property by motor vehicle, and transportation brokers, who engage in interstate or foreign commerce. The regulation of private carriers of property by motor vehicle is confined to reasonable requirements to promote safety of operation, including qualifications and maximum hours of serv-ice of employees and standards of equipment, to be established by the Commission if need therefor is found. : : * Authority from the Commission to do business is required in the form of certifi-cates of public convenience and necessity for common carriers, permits for con-tract carriers, and licenses for transportation brokers. Such certificates, permits, and licenses may be suspended, revoked, or changed by the Commission after notice and hearing for willful violation of the act or of any lawful order, rule, or regulation of the Commission, or of any term, condition, or limitation of any such certificate, permit, or license. Similar authority was conferred upon the Commission with respect to common ~and contract carriers by water by the Transportation Act of 1940. Such provisions are contained in part IIT 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, etec., 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. : MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 6 ’ 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. Part III of the Interstate Commerce Act, approved September 18, 1940, gives the Commission extensive authority over common carriers and contract carriers by water, quite similar to its authority over motor vehicle common and contract carriers, above discussed. The act in part III permits the Commission to make numerous exemptions from its provisions, such as bulk carriers onthe 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. Kquality 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, ete. 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. 692 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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-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 apnroved January 12, 1918, provides that, effective January 1, 1919, no carrier shall have dealings in securities or supplies, or contract for con-struction or maintenance to the amount of more than $50,000, in the aggregate in any one year, with another corporation or organization when, by reason of common officers or otherwise, there exists a community of interest between the carrier and such other corporation or organization, except as a result of free competitive bidding under regulations to be prescribed by the Commission. The Commission is further authorized to investigate violations of the act by carriers and to require the guilty parties to cease therefrom, and its findings of fact in such investigations shall be conclusive when supported by testimony. Railway Mail Service Pay Act.— The act making appropriations for the service of the Post Office Department, approved July 28, 1916, empowers the Commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the trans-portation of mail matter by railway common carriers and services connected therewith, prescribing the method by weight or space, or both, or otherwise. 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 693 made unlawful to require or permit employees engaged in or connected with the movement of trains to be on duty more than a specified number of hours in any 24. Ash Pan Act—The act of May 30, 1908, makes it the duty of the Interstate Commerce Commission to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is provided that after a certain date no locomotive shall be used in moving interstate or foreign traffic, ete., not equipped with an ash pan which can be emptied 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 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 Act of 1940, was so amended as to authorize the Commission to require any carrier by railroad sub-ject to that part (including any terminal or station company), and any receiver or any other individual or body, when in the possession of the business of a carrier subject to the section, to install the block-signal system, interlocking, automatic or similar appliances, methods and systems intended to promote the safety of railroad 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 perti-nent reports 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 spproved 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 i inter-state or foreign commerce, produced in violation of State law. 694 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS By the Carriers Taxing Act, approved June 29, 1937, which provides for the payment of excise taxes by certain carriers and the payment of income taxes by the carriers’ employees, but does not apply to either street, suburban, or inter-urban electric railways, unless such railways are operated as parts of general steam-railroad systems of transportation, the Interstate Commerce Commission is authorized and directed, upon request of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, or upon complaint of any party interested, to determine, after hearing, whether any line operated by electric power falls within the terms of said exception. Under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act, approved June 25, 1938, the Commission is required to determine after hearing whether any line operated by electric power falls within the terms of the exemption proviso included in section 1 (a) of that act, when requested to do so by the Railroad Retirement Board or in a complaint filed by an interested party. 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 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. 534) ’ Nore.—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 Administration. 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, appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The chairman is designated 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. i a ge MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties. | 695 By the terms of the act, the United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Cor-poration was dissolved and all its records, books, papers, and property were taken over by the Commission. Likewise, all money, notes, bonds, mortgages, con-tracts, lands, vessels, terminals, property, and interests "of every kind, owned by the United States and controlled by the Department of Commerce as the Successor to the powers and functions of the former Shipping Board, were transferred to the -Commission by the act. Ocean mail contracts made by the Postmaster General were terminated effective June 30, 1937. The holder of any such contract was authorized to file an applica-tion with the Commission to adjust and settle all the rights of the parties under the contract, subject to appeal by the Attorney General. Under the act the Commission, as successor to the powers and functions orig-inally vested in the United States ‘Shipping Board and later transferred by Execu-tive Order No. 6166, issued on June 10, 1933, to the Department of Commerce, possesses all the powers and functions delegated in the Shipping Act, 1916, as amended, the Merchant Marine Act, 1920, as amended, and the Intercoastal Ship-ping Act, 1933, as amended. The Commission’s powers have been extended or clarified by acts of Congress on several occasions since enactment of the Merchant Marine Act, 1936. 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 within 20 years at 3%-percent interest per annum, must be seeured by a first preferred mortgage upon the vessel. Aid may be extended to any citizen of the United States in the construction of a new vessel to be operated in the foreign or domestic trade (excepting vessels engaged solely in the transportation of property on inland rivers and canals exclusively), in cases where no construction-differential subsidy is to be allowed, although the Commission is authorized to pay the cost of any national defense features incorporated in such new vessels. The applicant is required, in-case the vessel has a gross tonnage of 3,500 or more tons and a speed of 16 knots or more, to pay not less than 12% per centum of the cost of the vessel, and in case of a vessel of less tonnage or less speed, not less than 25 per centum of the cost of the vessel; and the balance, payable within 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. ee 696 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 N 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. i 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 Ir . 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 prescribed jointly with the Treasury Department, construction reserve funds established by American ship- owners who may deposit therein proceeds from the sales or indemnity for loss of vessels and earnings from operations of vessels, for use in the construction or acquisition of new vessels. Any deposits so used which represent gain on the sale or loss of a vessel are exempt 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. 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 World War II under authority of Executive Order 9054. i : 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 and, in time of war or national emer- gency proclaimed by the President, of vessels so owned without regard to docu- mentation. 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, cargo, and fishing vessels, 24 vessels and tugs, towboats, barges, and dredges of not less than 200 gross tons, 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 vessel and the amount of the mortgage insured may not exceed 75 percent of the cost of such new construction, recon- struction, or reconditioning. The premium charge for the mortgage insurance is fixed by the Commission but shall not be less than one-half of 1 percent per annum nor more than 1 percent per annum of the amount of the mortgage obli- gation outstanding at any time. The premium charge is to be paid by the mort- gagee. 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 Coast Guard. 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 ! 4 persons carrying on the business of forwarding or furnishing wharfage, dock, ware- 1 house, or other terminal facilities in connection with common carriers by water. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties Fos 697 These powers are principally in relation to rates, fares, charges, regulations, and practices. The Commission possesses quasi-judicial authority to receive and de-termine complaints of shippers, passengers, and others alleging unreasonableness or unjust discrimination by common carriers by water and others subject to its regulatory authority and the method for the enforcement of orders of the Com-mission, including orders directing the payment of money in reparation for viola-tion of statutory provisions, as prescribed in the Shipping Acts. An important regulatory power vested in the Commission is the approval, disapproval, or modi-fication of agreements entered into between common carriers by water subject to its jurisdiction respecting cooperative working arrangements. The Commission’s approval of such agreements, commonly referred to as conference agreements, excepts the parties thereto from the operation of the Sherman Antitrust Aet, Wilson Tariff Act, Clayton Act, and supplementary acts and amendments directed at monopolies in restraint of trade. : The Commission’s authority has been modified and amplified in connection with the national emergency and World War II. Under the 1936 act the Commission adopted, prior to the outbreak of World War II, and has been carrying out the long-range ship construction program of 500 ships in 10 years. This program placed the ship construction industry on a sound basis capable of wartime expansion. From January 1, 1942, to October 1, 1945, the Commission carried out the greatest shipbuilding program in history. The total output for this period was 5,371 vessels, which aggregated 52,018,471 tons deadweight. Included in this accelerated program were cargo vessels of the Liberty, Vietory and Standard “C” types, and tankers, as well as various types of military and naval auxiliaries. : 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. 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 accordance with the provisions of section 403 of the Sixth Supplemental National Defense Appropria-tion Act, 1942, as amended by the Revenue Act of 1942. Under the Contract Settlement Act of 1944 and the Surplus Property Act of 1944 the Commission settles claims arising from war contracts terminated at the option or for the convenience of the Commission, aids in the disposition of con-tract and subcontract termination inventory, promotes the utilization of unre-quired materials by war contractors with the Commission, and stores and dis-poses of surplus property both as owning and as disposal agency. Under section 10 (b) of the latter act the Commission is the sole disposal agency for surplus merchant ships. War Shipping Administration (see p. §34).— 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 nm 698 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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 Creation and The Advisory for authority.— National Committee Aeronauties was created by act of Congress approved March 3, 1915 (38 Stat. 930; 49 U. S. C. 241), as amended by the act approved March 2, 1929 (45 Stat. 1451; 49 U. S. C. i as amended by the act approved June 23, 1938 (52 Stat. 1027; 49 U. S. C. 241). Purpose—The law provides that the Committee shall ‘supervise and direct the scientific study of the problems of flight, with a view to their practical solu-tion, * * *? and also ‘direct and conduct research and experiment in aeronautics.” Under rules and regulations formulated by the Committee and approved by the President, technical subcommittees, organized along lines similar to the main Committee, and with members serving as such without compensation, prepare programs of fundamental research in aeronautics. Applied research is also conducted to answer immediate and pressing problems in military and civil aeronautics. In order that research programs may be of maximum value, pro--vision is made to keep the subcommittees informed as far as possible as to aero-nautical researches conducted by foreign nations. b-The general purposes of the Committee are to— 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 the Committee, scientific aeronautical research, including: (a) Special investigations in the nature of applied research on problems sub-mitted by the Army and Navy for immediate improvement in performance of military and naval aircraft. (b) Fundamental researches instituted by the Committee on its own initiative or authorized upon request of the Army, Navy, or Civil Aeronautics Authority, to increase speed, safety, and economy of operation of aireraft, military and civil. 4. Advise the War and Navy Departments, the 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. On request of the President, the Congress, or any executive department, to advise upon any special problem in aeronautics which may be referred to it. Organization.—The Committee is composed of 15 members appointed by the President, and consists of 2 representatives each of the War and Navy Depart-ments (from the offices in charge of military and naval aeronautics) and Civil Aeronautics Authority, 1 representative each of the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Weather Bureau, and the National Bureau of Standards, together with 6 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. Laboratories.—The Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory at Langley Field, Va., the Ames Aeronautical Laboratory at Moffett Field, Calif., and the Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory at Cleveland, Ohio, are the "principal aeronautical research laboratories of the Government, where the Committee carries on fundamental scientific research and development on which the War and Navy Departments, the Civil Aeronautics Authority, and the aircraft indus- MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 1699 try rely for new knowledge underlying progress in improving the performance, efficiency, and safety of American aircraft. Office of Aeronautical Intelligence.—This Office was established in the early part of 1918. It serves as the depository and distributing agency for the scientific and technical data on aeronautics comprising the results of Committee researches, and for similar information collected by the Committee from governmental and private agencies in this country and abroad. ; Office of Aeronautical Inventions.— This Office gives preliminary consideration to, and analyzes and prepares reports on, the merits of aeronautical inventions and designs submitted to the Government through any agency. NATIONAL ARCHIVES 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 illustrativeof historical activities of the United States’ are also accepted, pre-served, and made available. Another function of the National Archives is the appraisal of records believed to be appropriate for disposal in order that the Archivist may report to Congress such of them as in his opinion lack sufficient value to warrant their continued preservation by the Government. 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.” An act of July 7, 1943, as amended July 6, 1945, concerning the disposal of records (57 Stat. 380-383; 59 Stat. 434), assigned to the Council the duties of ‘establishing (1) procedures for the compiling and submitting to the Archivist of the United States of lists and schedules of records proposed for disposal, (2) procedures for the disposal of records authorized for disposal, and (3) standards for the reproduction of records by photographic or microphotographic processes with a view to the disposal of the original records.” Such regulations, when approved by the President, are binding on all agencies of the United States Government. 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. 700 Congressional Directory | MISGELLANEOUS 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 admin-ister 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), to preserve and administer collections of historical material 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 Trusteesof 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 HOUSING AUTHORITY The National Capital Housing Authority is the public housing agency for the District of Columbia. In normal times, its dual objective is to reclaim the slums of Washington 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 ageney 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. As the Alley Dwelling Act authorized the President to designate ‘an Authority,” without further specifying the title of the proposed agency, Executive Order No. 6868, above referred to, conferred the name of ‘“The Alley Dwelling Authority” on the organization designated to act for the President in carrying out the pro- visions of the act. This title was used until June 1, 1943, when, under the terms of Executive Order No. 9344, the President redesignated the agency as the “National Capital Housing Authority.” 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 701 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 was 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, but received no funds from this source during the 5-year period. 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 National Capital Housing Authority for the purposes of the District of Columbia Alley Dwelling Act. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION The National Capital Park Commission was created by the act approved June 6, 1924 (Public, No. 202, 68th Cong.), for the purpose of preserving the flow of water in Rock Creek, preventing the pollution of Rock Creek and the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, preserving forests and natural scenery in and about Wash-ington, and to provide for the comprehensive, systematic, and continuous develop-ment of the park, parkway, and playground system of the National Capital. The Director of National Park Service is executive officer of the Commission. The Commission was authorized and directed to acquire such lands as in its judgment shall be necessary and desirable in the District of Columbia and (by agreement with Maryland and Virginia authorities) adjacent areas in Maryland and Virginia, for suitable development of the National Capital park, parkway, and playground system. By act of April 30, 1926, the name of the Commission was changed to the National Capital Park and Planning Commission. The same officials named in the former act were retained as ex officio members and the President was author-ized to add “four eminent citizens well qualified and experienced in city planning, one of whom shall be a bona fide resident of the District of Columbia,” to be appointed, after the original appointments, for the term of 6 years, to serve without compensation. The new Commission retained all the powers of the Park Commission and was given further important advisory powers. It was charged with the duty of preparing, developing, and maintaining a comprehensive, consistent, and coordinated plan for the National Capital and its environs, which plan shall include recommendations to the proper executive authorities as to traffic and transportation; plats and subdivisions; highways, parks, and parkways, school and library sites; playgrounds; drainage, sewer, and water supply; housing; building, and zoning regulations; public and private buildings; bridges and water fronts; commerce and industry; and other proper elements of city and regional planning. Paragraph (c¢) transfers to this Commission the power previously vested in the highway commission, namely, the approval or revision of the 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 Cole for use by the Commission in accelerating park purchases within the istrict. 78349°—T79-2—1st ed.——46 702 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS NATIONAL HOUSING AGENCY The National Housing Agency, established by Executive Order 9070 on Febru-ary 24, 1942, consolidated the nonfarm housing functions of the Federal Gover-ment in a single agency charged with the responsibility for the activities formerly carried on by: 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 Cor-poration, the Division of Defense Housing Coordination, the Central Housing Committee, the nonfarm functions of the Farm Security Administration, the housing functions of the Public Buildings Administration, the Division of Defense Housing, and the Mutual Ownership Defense Housing Division, and the housing functions of the Federal Works Administrator. In addition, housing of the War and Navy Departments outside that on reservations, posts, and bases was taken over. Agency policies were centered in the Office of the Administrator and operations were carried on through three major constituents: The Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, the Federal Housing Administration, and the Federal Public Housing Authority. With the end of the war, the National Housing Agency immediately directed its efforts to stimulating the largest possible volume of home construction and combating inflationary price trends resulting from the acute shortage of housing throughout the country. ; Most wartime controls on building were removed through the rescinding of the War Production Board’s Conservation Order I-41 on October 15, 1945. A substantial core of the home building industry was kept active during the war and as early as 1944 had been enabled to start constructing houses approximating peacetime standards through a transitional program to relieve congestion, auth-orized as the job of housing war workers drew near completion. The task ahead is unprecedented in the Nation’s history. Almost every city and town has a shortage of housing growing out of two conditions—(1) the lack of sufficient construction in pre-war years and (2) during the war home construction had to be limited to meeting the needs of migrating war werkers. Adding to the urgency of the problem were the hundreds of thousands of re-turning veterans in need of homes to reestablish themselves with their families in normal civilian life. Such families were given occupancy preference for vacan-cies in all federally owned housing, builders were urged to give veterans preference in the sales of new houses, and communities were asked to assist in finding them quarters in the existing housing supply. From the long-range point of view, the NHA estimated that the country needs 1214 million new dwellings in the next 10 years to meet the needs of returning veterans, new families and families now living doubled up, and to replace one-half of the clearly substandard housing, assuming the full replacement job must be spread over a 20-year period. The NHA reported that construction of a million and a quarter houses a year would mean an investment of $6 to $7 billion annually and would provide over 4,000,000 jobs, off and on the building site. The war job.—At the conclusion of its war job, the NHA had carried out a pro-gram to provide the necessary shelter to meet the needs of some 4,000,000 migrating war workers and their families, an estimated 9,000,000 persons altogether. Mobilization of existing housing under the leadership of the NHA and with the cooperation of local communities provided quarters for approximately 2,000,000 of these workers, 600,000 with families. Housing for the others had to be created by converting existing structures and by new building. This addi-tional housing was programmed by the NHA and built in 1,300 localities scattered throughout the. United States and its outlying territories. Private financing was called upon to build when it could meet the wartime needs and where there was reasonable assurance that there would be continued need for the housing postwar. Public financing was used to build the remainder. In all categories, private financing had supplied 1,051,549 dwelling units at an approximate costof $4.3 billions, most of it covered by FHA war housing mortgage insurance, byAust 31, 1945. Public financing had supplied 832,241 units at a cost of $2.6 illions. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties ; 703 : FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK ADMINISTRATION One of the three operating units of the National Housing Agency, the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration carries out the functions, powers, and duties authorized by the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, as amended; the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, as amended, and title IV of the National Housing Act, as amended, which formerly were administered by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Thus under the direction of the Bank Administration are (1) the Federal Home Loan Bank System, which functions as a credit reservoir for savings and home financing institutions, (2) the system of Federal savings and loan associa-tions, (3) the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, which insures the safety of funds invested in savings and loan associations, and (4) the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (in liquidation). The United States Housing Corpora-tion, its liquidation practically completed, is also under the Bank Administration. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM The Federal Home Loan Bank System was established by authority of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, approved July 22, 1932, to provide a national medium of reserve credit for thrift and home-financing institutions through the operations of Federal home loan banks, each serving two or more States. The Federal Home Loan Bank 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 acts of Congress approved April 27, 1934, May 28, 1935, and March 28 1941. Twelve Federal home loan banks have been established, located as follows: Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Winston-Salem, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Chicago, Des Moines, Little Rock, Topeka, Portland (Oreg.), and Los Angeles. The chief function of the Federal home loan banks is to advance funds to their member institutions, enabling them to expand their services when there is an unusual demand for mortgage loans in their localities and to augment their resources to meet abnormal withdrawals of their investors’ accounts. Advances by the regional banks are made on a long- or short-term basis, primarily on first mortgage collateral. Each district bank has 12 directors, 4 appointed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, and 8 elected by the member institutions. Pursuant to law, member institutions have been divided into three classes for purposes of electing directors—A, B, and C. These 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. The capital stock of the 12 Federal home loan banks is subscribed by institutions which have been admitted into membership, except $124,741,000 of such stock which was originally subscribed by the Secretary of the Treasury and subse-quently transferred to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Of this amount, $231,100 had been retired as of August 31, 1945 thus reducing the amount of such Government-owned stock outstanding to $124,509,900. The original and minimum stock subscription for each member institution is an amount equal to 1 percent of the aggregate of the unpaid principal of the subsecriber’s home mort-gage loans, but not less than $500. Other sources of funds for Federal home loan banks include deposits accepted from member institutions, deposits from other Federal home loan banks, loans discounted with other Federal home loan banks, and by borrowing money, including the issuance of bonds, debentures, and other obligations. ; Any savings and loan association, building and loan association, cooperative bank, homestead association, insurance company, or savings bank is eligible to become a member of a Federal heme loan bank if it is (1) duly organized under the laws of any State or of the United States, (2) subject to inspection and regulation under the banking laws or 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 Administration, its time deposits warrant making such loans). 704 Congressional Drrectory MISCELLANEOUS ia nn SEN 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 economical home financing or the purposes of the act. The Administration may promulgate such rules, regulations, and orders as shall be necessary to carry out the purposes of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. The total amount of loans outstanding from a bank to any member can at no time exceed 12 times the amount of the member’s 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 Federal home loan banks also may make loans to nonmember lending institutions approved under title IT of the National Housing Act upon the security of mortgages insured under title II of that act. The banks are not authorized to make loans to individuals. Each bank may issue bonds, debentures, or other obligations when authorized by the Administration. To date funds of this character have been 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. The great bulk of the membership of the Federal home loan banks is made up of institutions of the savings and loan type. As of August 31, 1945, the 12 Federal home loan banks embraced 3,699 members, having aggregate assets of $8,087,-000,000. Of these, 3,669 were savings and loan and similar associations, with assets totaling $7,131,484,000. In numbers, these institutions include about 58 percent of all savings and loan associations in the Nation, and they hold more than 87 percent of the assets of the entire industry. Fifteen of the remaining member institutions .of the Bank System were insurance companies and 25 were savings banks. The Federal home loan banks are self-sustaining and do not require or receive appropriations from Government funds. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS The chartering of Federal savings and loan associations is authorized 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. The purpose was to encourage sound and economical home financing by providing for the establishment of private mutual thrift institutions in areas where a need for such services existed. Federal savings and loan associations may also be established by conversion of State-chartered associations which apply and are approved for Federal charter. Each Federal savings and loan association, upon its establishment, automati-cally 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 officers of the district Federal home loan banks in accordance with regulations promul-gated by the Administration. Federal savings and loan 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 monthly repayment first mortgages on homes or combination home and business properties located within 50 miles of their home offices. These associations can be organized anywhere in the United States or its terri-tories 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 incorpo-rators are of good character and responsible, that there is a need for the proposed institution in its community, that the institution will, in all probability, be useful and successful, and that its incorporation will not unduly injure properly con-ducted existing thrift and home-financing institutions. As of August 31, 1945, there were 1,469 Federal savings and loan associations in operation, with combined assets of $3,595,000,000. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 705 FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE: CORPORATION The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation was created under title IV of the National Housing Act, which has been amended by acts of Congress approved May 28, 1935, and February 3, 1938. The protection of savings by insurance, authorized under the act, was designed to strengthen the confidence of investors in local home-financing institutions of the savings and loan type. The safety of investment provided by such insurance also contributes to the national economy by increasing the supply of capital for financing the ownership of homes. . Insurance is mandatory for Federal savings and loan associations; State-chartered institutions of the savings, building and loan type may become insured upon application and approval. By law the Insurance Corporation’s 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. Each holder of a withdrawable (repurchasable) share account, deposit account, or investment certificate in an institution insured by the Corporation is insured against loss up to the amount of his’investment and credited earnings not in excess of $5,000. Each insured institution pays an annual premium charge equivalent to one-eighth of 1 percent of the total amount of all accounts of its insured members, plus any creditor obligations. When the reserve fund of the Corporation equals 5 percent of all 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. Institutions applying for insurance are ‘required to pay an admission fee, based on the amount of the Corporation’s reserves. Insurance may be terminated by the Insurance Corporation for violation by an insured institution of any law applicable to insurance of accounts, or the regu-lations of or agreements with the Corporation, provided for in the statutes. Insurance of accounts can be voluntarily terminated by any insured institution, except a federally chartered 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, the Corporation is author-ized, 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 holder of an insured account either a new insured account of equal amount in a normally operating insured institution, or, at the option of the insured investor, 10 percent of his account in cash and the remainder in non-interest-bearing debentures of the Corporation, payable one half within 1 year and the other half within 3 years from the date the insured institution was taken over for liquidation. The total amount of insurance payable to any member or investor, however, may not exceed $5,000. If a federally chartered savings and loan association is taken over for liquidation, the Insurance Corporation must serve as conservator or receiver. In the event the institution to be liquidated is State chartered, the services of the Insurance Corporation as conservator, receiver, or other legal custodian are tendered to the State. As of August 31, 1945, there were 2,475 insured savings and loan associations with assets totaling nearly $5,700,000,000. HOME OWNERS’ LOAN CORPORATION The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was created by the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, which has been amended by acts approved June 27, 1934 (the National Housing Act), April 27, 1934, May 28, 1935, and August 11, 1939. Provided with $200,000,000 initial capital, the Corporation was authorized to issue United States guaranteed bonds in an aggregate amount not to exceed $4,750,000,000. The total issued was $3,489,453,550, of which $961,000,000 was outstanding on August 31, 1945. The general purpose of the HOLC was to refinance home mortgages of dis-tressed home owners by exchanging its bonds for such mortgages, which were 706 | Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS then taken over by the Corporation as long term, monthly repayment loans. Loans could be made only to those who were unable to procure needed financing through normal channels. Loans were made on the security of dwellings for not more than four families valued at not more than $20,000. In accordance with law, the Corporation ceased lending on June 12, 1936, after making 1,017,821 loans to a total of $3,093,000,000. Since then the Corporation has been engaged in the collection of its loans and the orderly liquidation of the houses it was forced to acquire. Up to August 31, 1945, total loans, subsequent advances, and other investments of the Corporation in its loans, sales contracts, and properties reached a cumulative total of $3,490,-000,000. On the same date $2,561,000,000, or 73.4 percent of this amount, had been liquidated. ; Under the original Home Owners’ Loan Act, loans of the Corporation were written for a term not to exceed 15 years, with interest at 5 percent. 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 414 percent rate until otherwise directed by the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. In addition, the Corporation is authorized to purchase obligations of the Federal home loan banks, shares of federally chartered savings and loan associa-tions, 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. An aggregate of $223,857,000 was so invested in shares of associations (chiefly from 1936 to 1938); $21,507,000 remained outstanding on August 31, 1945. 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 Con-gress, all the money expended by the Corporation is paid out of its funds and in no part from regular governmental funds. 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). Its purpose was to provide housing incident to the mobilization for World War I. The Corporation was transferred 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 for liquidation. 3 FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION Established in June 1934, under the National Housing Act, the Federal Housing Administration was directed by Congress ‘to encourage improvement in housing standards and conditions, to create a sound mortgage market, and to provide a system of mutual mortgage insurance.” The FHA itself lends no money and builds no houses. Its function is to insure approved private financial institutions against loss on loans made for the construction, purchase, repair, and improvement of houses where FHA standards and conditions are met. In addition, FHA is authorized to insure mortgages on large scale rental projects. : Chief innovation of the FHA insured mortgage system was the single, long-term mortgage, repayable monthly over a period of years. Payments include reduction of principal, interest at not more than 4} percent on reducing balances, mortgage insurance premium at one-half of 1 percent on reducing balances, taxes, fire and hazard insurance. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 707 Beside creating the FHA, three titles of the National Housing Act—titles I, IT and VI—relate specifically to the insurance of loans. Insurance coverage under title I amounts to 10 percent of the aggregate loans made by qualified lenders for property improvements, alterations, and repairs. Most such loans are limited to a maximum of $2,500 and a maximum term of 3 years, repayable in monthly installments. An annual insurance premium of three-fourth of 1 percent is charged and the rate of discount, covering all charges, may not exceed $5 per $100 a year. As a means of encouraging private participation in the War Housing Program, Congress authorized the FHA to increase the size of individual loans under title 1 to $5,000 where alterations would provide additional living quarters for essential war workers through conversion of existing structures. Under wartime condi-tions, many title I loans were subject to regulation W of the Federal Reserve Board requiring shorter maturities than allowed by the National Housing Act. Total liability which may be outstanding at any time under present provisions" of title I is $165,000,000, and authority to insure loans under the title runs to July 1, 1947. Insuring operations under title I through August 31, 1945, have involved a total of 5,104,466 loans, amounting to $2,003,492,411. Gross claims paid through August 31, 1945, amounted to 2.58 percent of the face amount of the loans, while net claims after collections and repossessions of property amounted to 1.32 percent. Principal FHA operation in peacetime is under section 203 of title II, which provides for insurance of mortgage loans up to $16,000 and for monthly amorti-zation periods up to 20 to 25 years on one-to-four family dwellings. Such loans may cover either new or existing houses. Insured loans on existing homes may not exceed 80 percent of the value of the property, land and building, as appraised by FHA. Where the mortgage loans are for not more than $5,400 and cover new, single-family houses built for owner-occupancy and under FHA inspection, the insured mortgage may be for 90 percent of the appraised value and may run for 25 years. On new owner-occupied homes valued at not more than $10,000, the FHA may insure a mortgage covering 90 percent of the first $6,000 and 80 percent of the reminder, up to a maximum mortgage of $8,600. The maximum term of repayment of such loans is 20 years. Through August 31, 1945, a total of 1,112,005 mortgages.on one-to-four family dwellings had been insured under section 203 of title II for a total amount of $4,878,041,145. Of this amount, around $2,100,000,000 has been repaid. 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. Such mortgages are limited to 80 percent of the estimated value of the property when the proposed inprovements are completed, but in no event may a mortgage insured under this section exceed the estimated cost of completed physical improve-ments. However, the insurance may cover advances made during the course of construction. Strict regulation of the mortgagor is provided for under section 207, and more than 41,000 units have been built and financed under the provisions of this section of the act. . The total amount of principal obligations of all mortgages insured under title II oustanding at any one time may not exceed $4,000,000,000, an amount which can be increased to $5,000,000,000 with approval of the President. During the war period FHA operations under title IT were limited to insuring mortgages on existing houses, but were again resumed on new construction after the surrender of Japan. In March 1941 Congress added title VI to the National Housing Act to permit FHA to insure risks undertaken by private lenders and builders during the war emergency which under peacetime operations might not be assumed.. The FHA discontinued acceptance of applications under the war housing program in Sep-tember 1945. Mortgages insured under title VI were 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. Ceilings were placed on sale prices and rentals and the houses had to be held for occupancy by war workers under regulations of the National Housing Agency. i As of August 31, 1945, a total of 372,836 war housing units had been financed with mortgages insured under section 603 of title VI amounting to $1,494,167,042. Mortgages on large-scale housing projects also were insured under section 608 = ° of title VI, but could not exceed $5,000,000 and 90 percent of the estimated reasonable replacement cost of the completed project, including the land, and ’ 708 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS could not exceed the estimated cost of the physical improvements exclusive of off-site public utilities and streets, and organization and legal expenses. The mortgagor had to be approved by the FHA Commissioner and could be regulated as to rents or sales, charges, capital structure, rate of return, and methods of operation. The property had to be held for occupancy by eligible war workers until occupancy controls were lifted in October 1945. As of August 31, 1945, mortgages totaling $163,636,575 on 37,673 such units in 470 projects had been in-sured. Maximum interest rate on section 608 mortgages is 4 percent and the mortgage insurance rate is one-half of 1 percent, both on reducing balances. During the war period the facilities of FHA’s field offices were used in processing builders’ applications for priorities under the War Production Board’s controlled materials plan. Currently, FHA is self-sustaining and for the past 5 years has paid all operating expenses out of income derived chiefly from premiums and fees. In addition, net resources exceeding $109,600,000 have been accumulated in its insuring funds for payment of future expenses, losses, and dividends. Gross income during the year 1944 under all insuring operations was greater than any previous year, amounting to $29,596,327. Expenses of administering all titles and sections of the act during 1944 amounted to $10,851,227, leaving an excess of gross income of $18,745,100 to be added to the various insurance funds. Also during 1944 FHA paid the first dividends out of the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund. About $350,600 in dividends is being distributed to nearly 18,500 mortgagors who paid off their mortgages in full during 1944. FEDERAL PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITY The Federal Public Housing Authority has responsibility for federally admin-istered public housing programs. Toward the end of 1945 the FPHA had four principal functions: 1. The management of public war housing during the period of reconversion and demobilization for distressed families of veterans and servicemen, for civilian employees of the War and Navy Departments and of private industries completing war contracts, and for distressed families dislocated or displaced as a result of the war or demobilization. 2. The disposal of public housing determined to be surplus to the above needs. 3. The administration of the low-rent housing built before the war, and the conversion of war housing under the United States Housing Act to low-rent status. 4. The reactivation of deferred low-rent projects as building labor and materials become available. Before the outbreak of war interrupted construction of low-rent housing under the United States Housing Act, local housing authorities in 173 communities built. 334 projects containing 105,600 units for low-income families formerly living in slum dwellings. The total development cost of the prewar low-rent projects was $483,000,000. Although the FPHA is authorized to lend up to 90 percent of the development costs, it has actually supplied only two-thirds of the long-term financing, as a result of the ability of local housing authorities to sell bonds on the private market at an interest saving. All loans from the FPHA or private investors are to be repaid in full, with interest. To help keep rents within the means of low-income families, the FPHA makes an annual contribution, or subsidy, which for 1944 totaled $8,600,000, or $7.19 per dwelling unit per month. To June 30, 1945, Federal subsidy payments totaled $43,409,000; this represents the entire cost to the Federal Government since the beginning of the low-rent program. In addition, the local community is required to make an annual contribution equivalent to at least one-fifth of the, Federal contribution. ‘This is normally done by exempting the projects from State and local taxes, as authorized by the United States Housing Act and State housing laws. . When the war began only half of the program authorized under the United States Housing Act had been completed. Units under construction at that time were completed with the aid of priorities to house war workers, and will be turned back to the use of low-income families as conditions permit. Additional war housing projects were built under Public Law 671, which authorized the use of low-rent housing funds for war housing construction. Low-rent units scheduled MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 709 in areas not requiring more war housing were deferred, pending availability of building labor and materials. Housing Built or Authorized Under United States Housing Act as of Aug. 31, 1945 Proj-| Dwelling ects units Low-rtent; prewar (Public Law 412)... i on 334 105, 625 Fow-tent, forwar use (Public Law 412). a eo, 49 11, 930 Low-rent funds used for war housing (Public Law 671) _ _ _________ o.. © 202 52, 786 DelertediOW-RenRT cons itr a a Ce A Lae a Set LA ail 164 23,225 Motale Les haa oe, CT RS 5 : : 1] 749 193, 566 The major wartime function of FPHA was to provide publicly financed housing for in-migrant war workers and their families, the FPHA being responsible for the construction and management of about four-fifths of the total provided. The remainder was provided by other agencies, principally the War and Navy De-partments and the United States Maritime Commission. For the total public war housing program, some $2,600,000,000 was made available, all from Con-gressional appropriations or loan authorizations except $29,000,000 expended by the New York State Division of Housing. From these funds some 864,000 accommodations were provided for families or single persons; in addition 32,000 had been scheduled but not completed by August 31, 1945. The total includes 610,000 family dwelling units, 171,000 dormitory units, and 83,000 trailers, portable shelters and other forms of stop-gap housing. These figures include accommodations made available by re-use of trailers and temporary or demountable units which were moved from one location to another. Not counting units that may be transferred to the FPHA by the National Housing Agency or the Surplus Property Administration, the FPHA had some 656,000 units, completed or under construction contract, to dispose -of. About 321,000 are temporary units, unsuitable for long-term use as housing. These must be removed from their present sites as promptly as the needs of de-mobilization permit, and not later than 2 years after the end of the emergency. Such projects will be sold to Federal agencies, State and local governments and nonprofit institutions, or to private purchasers who will contract to remove the structures and restore the site. : About 181,000 units are permanent, including 107,000 of standard construction, and 74,000 demountables which may be dismantled and reerected at new locations. These will be sold to occupants or other private purchasers, unless sold or trans-ferred to other Federal agencies, or State and local governments. They may be sold to local housing authorities for low-rent use if officially requested by the community and approved by Congress. The 63,000 war housing family units, built by congressional authorization with United States Housing Act low-rent funds, will be turned to the use of low-income families. The FPHA’s stock of 35,000 trailers will be disposed of by an appropriate agency designated by the Surplus Property Administration. About 56,000 units converted from existing structures, mostly under 7-year lease from private owners, will be returned, usually at the expiration of the lease term. NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD The National Mediation Board was organized under the provisions of Public Act No. 442, Seventy-third Congress, approved June 21, 1934, entitled “An act to provide for the prompt disposition of disputes between carriers and their employees, and for other purposes,’ known as ‘‘the Railway Labor Act.” Itisan independent agency in the executive branch of the Government and is composed of three members appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Board annually designates a member to act as chairman and maintains its principal office in the District of Columbia, but it may meet at any other place. : 710 Congressional Directory ~~ * wisceruaneous The Railway Labor Act applies to express companies, sleeping-car companies, and carriers by railroad subject to the Interstate Commerce Act, provides that such carriers, their officers, agents, and employees shall¥exert every reasonable effort to make and maintain agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, and working conditions, and to settle all disputes, whether arising out of the applica-tion of such agreements or otherwise. All disputes between a carrier and its employees shall be considered, and, if possible, decided with all expedition, in conference between representatives designated and authorized so to confer, 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 interstateor 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, subjeet 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 coneerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions. -The Adjustment Board is divided into four divisions, as outlined in section 3 (h) of the act. In deadlocked cases the National Mediation Board is authorized to appoint a referee to sit with the members of the Division for the purpose of making an award. 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 MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 711 he Sai GS 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 o the activities of each of the four divisions of the National Railroad Adjustment oard. To supplement the Railway Labor Act during the war emergency, the President by Executive Order 9172 established the National Railway Labor Panel from which railroad emergency boards are selected by the chairman of the Panel. The Panel consists of 20 members appointed by the President. Section 10 of the act provides that if a dispute between a carrier and its employees is not adjusted under the provisions of the act and threatens substantially to interrupt interstate commerce, the National Mediation Board shall notify the President, who may thereupon, in his discretion, appoint an emergency board to investigate and report to him with recommendations for settlement of the dispute. By Executive Order 9172 the President has delegated the designation of such emergency boards to the chairman of the Panel in cases where the employees refrain from taking strike votes and setting strike dates. : PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU (Formerly International Sanitary Bureau) The Pan American Sanitary Bureau is the central coordinating sanitary agency as well as the general collection and distribution center of sanitary information of the American Republics. It was created by the Second International Con-ference of American Republics (1901-2), organized by the First Pan American Sanitary Conference (1902), and reorganized by the Sixth Pan American Sanitary Conference (1920). Its functions and duties are fixed by the Pan American Sanitary Code (1924) and modified and amplified by the various international sanitary and other conferences of the American Republics.” The Bureau is con-cerned in maintaining and improving the health of all the people of the 21 Ameri-can Republics and in preventing the international spread of communicable diseases. It acts as a consulting office for the national directors of health of the American Republics, prepares the programs and publishes the proceedings of the Pan American Sanitary Conferences and the Conferences of the National Directors of Health, and carries out epidemiological and other scientific studies and investigations. It also grants and obtains fellowships both from its own funds and from funds obtained from other sources for Latin American graduates in medicine and allied sciences. It also publishes in four languages a monthly Pan American Sanitary Bulletin, weekly and monthly reports on disease prevalence, ‘and other publications on sanitary subjects, including special material for Pan American Health Day, which is celebrated annually on December 2 in all the American Republics. The Bureau is governed by a council elected at each Pan American Sanitary Conference. Its executive officer is a director, also chair-man of the board, who is elected at the same conferences. The necessary person-nel, including an "assistant director, secretary, traveling representatives, epi-demiologists, 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 6, D. C PAN AMERICAN UNION (Formerly International Bureau of American Republics) The Pan American Union is the official international organization of the 21 Republics of the Western Hemisphere. It was established with a view to devel-oping closer cooperation between the nations of America, the fostering of inter-American commerce, the strengthening of intellectual and cultural ties, and the interchange of information on all problems affecting the welfare of the nations of this continent. It is supported through their joint contributions, each na-tion annually paying that part of the budget of expenses which its population bears to the total population of all the Republics. Its general control is vested in a governing board made up of the 21 representatives of the American Govern- wz Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS ments. 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 internationalin 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, 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 123,570 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. Its reading room has upon: its tables the representative magazines and newspapers of Latin America, and is open to the public for con-sultation and study. It occupies and owns buildings and grounds facing Seven-teenth 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 international 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 dames G. Blaine, then Secretary of State. It was reorganized 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 con-ference; 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, considerably enlarged the functions of the Pan American Union. All communications should be addressed to the Pan American Union, Washington 6,D. C. PERMANENT JOINT BOARD ON DEFENSE The Permanent Joint Board on Defense was set up by the United States and Canada for the purpose of undertaking studies relating to sea, land, and air problems, 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 RetirementAct 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 RetirementAct of 1937. Additional responsibility is derived from the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act (52 Stat. 1094), ap-proved 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 related social insurance systems—one for the payment of annuities to aged or disabled 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 unemployment insurance benefits to railroad employees who become unem-ployed. 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 REAR Official Duties -713 Interstate Commerce Act (with the exception of certain electric lines), and com-panies owned or controlled by or under common control with one or more of them and performing any service (except casual, trucking, and mining coal) in connec-tion 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 incidental 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 organiza-tions and employee 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 rec-ommendations of representatives of employees, one upon recommendations of representatives of carriers, and one, the chairman, without designated recom-mendations. Directly responsible to the Board are the secretary, 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 retirement claims, wage and service records and employment and claims, and of the offices of the director of personnel, supply and service, and director of finance. The liaison officer under the direction of the executive officer conducts liaison activities be-tween 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 Service operates an employment service for the railroad industry. Employment offices are part of the organization of each regional office and function in close coordination with the operations involving the receipt and processing of unem-ployment insurance claims. RAILRCAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1937 Annuities—To receive an annuity, an individual who is otherwise qualified a 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 %so for each calendar month that the individual is under age 65 at the time his annuity begins to accrue). The amounts of the monthly annuities are computed by mul-tiplying the number of “years of service’’ by the sum of the following percentages of the average monthly compensation: 2 percent of the first $50; 1% percent of the next $100, and 1 percent of the next $150. In computing the average monthly compensation, no part of any month’s compensation in excess of $300 is recognized. The average monthly compensation used for years of creditable service prior to 1937 is the average earned by an individual in the calendar months included in his years of service in the years 1924-31 (except when in the judgment of the Board the service during 1924-31 is insufficient to constitute a fair and equitable basis). All service subsequent to December 31, 1936, is included 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. 714 -Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS 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, under certain conditions, of death benefits with respect to the death of individuals who were employees after December 31, 1936, to designated beneficiaries or to other persons in the order of precedence established by the act. 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 benefits—The act created an account in the Treasury of the United States known as the Railroad Retirement Account and authorized the appropriation to the account in each fiscal year of an amount actuarially determined by the Board to be sufficient as a premium to provide for the payment of all annuities, pensions, and death benefits under the Railroad Retirement Acts of 1935 and 1937. That part of the premium which is not im-mediately required for the payment of annuities, pensions, and death benefits is invested in obligations of or guaranteed by the United States to bear interest at the rate of 3 percent per annum. 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 2% percent in 1937 and is to increase by ¥ percent every 3 years until it reaches the maximum of 3% percent, effective beginning in 1949. The taxes are collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue and are paid into the Treasury of the United States as internal-revenue collections. THE RAILROAD RETIREMENT ACT OF 1935 The claims of individuals (and the claims of spouses and next of kin of such individuals) who relinquished their rights to return to service and became eligible for annuities before the enactment of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 are adjudicated under the act of 1935; however, individuals who did not become eligible before June 24, 1937, for annuities under the act of 1935 (whether they MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 715 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 IT 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 Stateor 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, daysof 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, E 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 716 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS in the act. Columns III and IV show, respectively, the maximum benefits pay-able with respect to a registration period of 14 days and a benefit year. Maximum benefits pay-able in a— i Daily bene- Total compensation in base year fit rate Registra-Bid : tion period oy of 14 days Fear I II III Iv $1500: S100:0000L Satis ll Ce BE] Cae ER $1.75 $17. 50 $175. 00 $2000 8474.09 1 7 od ball Dos eadonuna gn a ak Sonn ty 2.00 20. 00 « 200. 00 TS 10 8740.90. os a En re ee HL EIS SC 2. 25 22. 50 225. 00 CORTE A DRO RE el ee Lt sl Sl Se he 08 BC SL em le A i 0 2. 50 25. 00 -250.00 $1:00010:31,200.99... oie ELSa SS AS a ea 3.00 30.00 300. 00 $1,300 t0:31;599:99. 0% cc Suan aa. mn = eh min en mm mm 3. 50 35. 00 350. 00 Sl AN OV reae Re T a St ir red 4.00 40. 00 400. 00 Source of benefits and administrative expenses.—To support the unemployment-insurance system, the act levies on covered employers a contribution, which is collected by the Railroad Retirement Board, equal to 3 percent of the compensa-tion, excluding any excess over $300 a month, payable to an employee. Of the proceeds, 90 percent is credited, for the payment of benefits, to a special account designated as the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Account, maintained in the Unemployment Trust Fund established by section 904 of the Social Security Act. The remaining 10 percent is deposited, to meet the expenses of adminis-tering the act, in a special fund designated as the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Administration Fund. Under the act, transfers have been and are being made to the Railroad Unem-ployment Insurance Account from the State accounts maintained in the Unem-ployment Trust Fund of (a) a share of the balance in the State-pooled funds as of June 30, 1939, equal to the ratio of contributions from employers and em-ployees covered by the act to total contributions collected and credited to such fund as of that date; (b) balances in reserve accounts of covered employers as of June 30, 1939; and (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 (Public, No. 22, 73d Cong., approved May 27, 1933), there-tofore administered by the Federal Trade Commission. The scope of duties and powers -of the Commission was extended through the passage of subsequent legislative enactments, namely, the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 (Publie, No. 333, 74th Cong.), approved August 26, 1935; chapter X of the Bank-ruptey 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 Investment 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. The objectives of these acts, and the Commission’s functions thereunder, are discussed below. ; Securities Act of 1933. —This “truth in securities’ law, designed by the Congress for the protection of the interests of investors and the public, requires registration with the Commission of securities. (other than exempt securities or offerings) MISCELLANEOUS = Official Duties 717 proposed to be publicly offered and sold in interstate commerce or through the mails. The objective of registration is to make available to investors pertinent financial and other information necessary for their exercise of an informed judg-ment whether to purchase the securities being offered. Registration is effected through the filing of a registration statement with the Commission; for this purpose, the Commission has promulgated registration forms applicable to particular types of issuing companies and prescribing the nature and extent of information to be disclosed by each such company registering securities. Thé prospectus or selling circular, which must be made available to purchasers or persons receiving offers through the mails, must contain an accurate’ summarization of the ultimate facts contained in the registration statement. The registration statement and prospectus are subjected to detailed examination by the Commission as to the adequacy and accuracy of the information disclosed therein. If a statement is found to be deficient in material respects, the Com-mission may give the registrant an opportunity to file correcting amendments or, if the circumstances warrant, may institute proceedings to deny or suspend effectiveness of the registration statement. The issuance of such a stop order operates to bar public offering of the securities until the registration statement has been corrected. ; It is to be noted that nothing in the act empowers the Commission to disapprove or otherwise pass upon the merits of securities offerings. Accordingly, registration is not to be taken as a guarantee against loss. Instead, investors must judge for themselves, in light particularly of the risk factors involved as contrasted with the earnings prospects, as reflected in the information disclosed, whetber to purchase the securities. However, if a loss is suffered through the purchase. of securities in reliance upon representations as to material facts contained in the registration statement and prospectus, which representations later prove to be false or misleading, the purchaser has a right of recovery against the company and the management and other responsible officials. Among the exemptions from the registration requirements of the act is one permitting the issuance and sale, without registration, of securities in an amount not exceeding $300,000; in connection therewith, a simple letter of notification, together with sales literature, must be filed with the Commission. In addition to the registration requirements applicable to public securities offerings, other provisions of the act prohibit misrepresentation, deceit, and other fraudulent acts and practices in connection with securities transactions generally; and the Commission is given important powers of investigation and enforcement with respect thereto. In the exercise of these functions, facts devel-oped in investigations which evidence fraudulent or other unlawful acts or practices may be used (1) in connection with court applications seeking an injunction against the continuance of such conduct; or (2) in criminal prosecutions of the violators (conducted through the Department of Justice). Securities Exchange Actof 1934.—By this law Congress extended to securities listed and registered upon national securities exchanges the principle of disclosure of information necessary for the protection of investors in their securities transac-tions. The prescribed information is obtained through the filing of reports with the exchanges and the Commission by companies whose securities are so listed and registered. These are subject to examination by the Commission as to the accuracy and -adequacy of the disclosures. Additional protective provisions of the act require disclosure by corporate ‘insiders’ of their holdings and transac-tions in such listed securities; make their short-term trading profits in equity securities recoverable by the issuing company; and prohibit short selling by them. The solicitation of proxies in respect of listed securities is subject to regulation by the Commission in the interest of disclosing pertinent information bearing upon the subject matter of the solicitation. And the act directs the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to prescribe rules to prevent the excessive use of credit in securities trading; these margin rules are administered by the Commission. In addition, the act sets up a comprehensive system for the regulation of trading in securities, both on the organized exchanges and in the over-the-counter markets, in the interest of protecting investors and the public. Exchanges must register with the Commission; their rules and trade practices must be conformed to pro-visions of the act designed to eliminate abuses and to assure the maintenance of just and equitable principles of trade; and the activities of the exchanges and their memberships are subject to Commission surveillance to the end that there shall be strict-adherence to the law. 78349°—79-2—1st ed. 47 — 718 Congressional Directory ~~ wisceranmous The provisions for disclosure of information previously discussed do not apply to securities traded in the over-the-counter markets. However, as part of the Hi regulatory process envisioned by the act, brokers and dealers engaged in an over- : the-counter securities business must register with the Commission; and their business activities must conform to the prescribed standards of conduct. The National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., an association of over-the-counter brokers and dealers was organized and registered with the Commission under-the so-called Maloney Act, which was passed in 1938 as section 15A of the Securities Exchange Act, for the purpose of establishing and maintaining improved standards of conduct within the industry under the general aegis of the Commission. The Commission’s power of surveillance of securities trading in the over-the-counter markets is designed to eliminate abuses, fraudulent activities and other law violations. This system of regulation is buttressed by prohibitions against market manipula- tions, misrepresentation or deceit, and other fraudulent acts and practices in securities transactions. In addition to the remedies of court injunction or criminal prosecution previously mentioned, the Commission is empowered by this act to impose disciplinary measures against brokers or dealers who violate the acts. These include suspension or expulsion of a broker’s or dealer’s registration with the Commission or, in the case of members of exchanges or of the dealers’ association, suspension or expulsion from such membership. Such action operates i deny, temporarily or permanently, the privilege of conducting their securities usiness. Public Utility Holding Company Act of 19356.—This act, which provides for _the regulation of electric and gas public utility holding companies and their sub- sidiaries was designed by the Congress for the protection of the interests of in- vestors, consumers and the public, has a two-fold objective. In the first place, it provides for the regulation of the financial and other related activities of holding company systems in the interest of eliminating the abuses therein which gave rise to passage of the law. Secondly, it directs the adjustment of the incongruous results of past abuses by integration of physical properties, simplification of holding-company systems and capital structures, and equitable redistribution of voting power, In passing upon the issuance and sale of securities (if not exempt by virtue of State commission jurisdiction), the Commission is directed to disapprove such issuance and sale if the security is not reasonably adapted to the security strue- ture and earning power of the issuing company, or is not necessary or appropriate to the economical and efficient operation of the issuer’s business; if fees, commis- sions, or other remuneration, are not reasonable; or if other terms and conditions of the issuance and sale are detrimental to the interests of investors, consumers i or the public. The purchase of utility securities and assets also requires approval by the Commission unless a State commission has approved; such an acquisition cannot be approved if it tends toward interlocking relations or concentration of control not in the public interest; if the consideration, fees, commissions, etec., + are not reasonable; or if it unduly complicates the capital structure of the holding- company system or is detrimental to the integration requirements of the act. ’ Other provisions of the act subject to Commission regulation such matters as service, sales and construction contracts; intercompany loans; dividends; sale of utility assets; proxies. The second objective, constituting one of the most important Congressional mandates contained in the act, is the requirement for simplification of holding- company systems. The Commission is directed to take such action as may be necessary to limit the operations of holding-company systems to a single integrated public utility system (except where special circumstances may permit the re- tention of one or more additional systems or incidental businesses), the utility properties of which are physically interconnected or capable of such and which may be economically operated as a coordinated system confined in its operations to a single area or region, and not so large as to impair the advantages of localized management, efficient operation, and the effectiveness of regulation. Companies, properties and interests found by the Commission not to be retainable as part of such a system must be divested from the system. The requirements of simplification also direct action to ensure that the corporate structure or continued existence of any company in the holding-company system does not undulyor unnecessarily complicate the structure, or unfairly or inequi- tably distribute voting power among security holders, of such system. To this end, useless and uneconomical holding companies must be liquidatedand dis- MISCELLANEOUS : Officzal Duties ) | 719 solved; simple capital structures must be substituted for multiple-security struc- tures; and voting power must be redistributed upon a fair and equitable basis in light of existing equities. | ; ; Bankruptcy Act, Chapter X.—Under chapter X, the Commission has the duty to serve as adviser to United States District Courts in connection with proceedings for the reorganization of debtor corporations in which there is a substantial public interest. Participating as a party to these proceedings at the request or with the approval of the courts, the Commission renders independent expert advice and assistance not previously available to courts because they do not maintain their own staffs of expert consultants. Of primary importance is the Commission’s contribution to the formulation of reorganization plans for debtor corporations which will meet the tests of feasibility by placing the surviving corporation in a sound financial position to continue as a going concern, and the test of fair and equitable treatment of creditors and security holders. The latter calls for a determination of the value of the assets of the debtor, and of the rank and priority of ¢laims thereagainst. The claimants must be accorded full recognition in order of the legal and contractual priority of their claims, junior interests participating only if the value of the assets exceeds the amount of prior claims. In addition to assisting the trustees and other inter-ested parties in the formulation of reorganization plans, the Commission’s views on the feasibility and fairness of reorganization plans are conveyed to the courts, either orally in the case of smaller cases or by means of advisory reports in the case of debtors with scheduled liabilities exceeding $3,000,000. The Commission also participates in such matters as the qualifications and independence of trustees and their counsel, problems involving the administration of the estate such as the sale of properties and interim distributions to security holders, reasonableness of fee allowances to parties and their counsel, and similar matters. Trust Indenture Act of 1939.—This act provides that issues of bonds, notes, debentures, and similar debt securities exceeding $1,000,000 in principal amount, may not be offered for sale to the public unless they are issued under a trust indenture which conforms to specific statutory standards prescribed in the act to safeguard the rights and interests of the purchasers. In addition to requirements for conformance of indentures to these standards, the act contains provisions governing the eligibility and qualification of the indenture trustee, who as the representative of the security holders has the duty to see that the covenants of the indenture are adhered to by the issuing company. Among these is a requirement that the trustee shall be ‘independent’ and free of any conflicting interests which might interfere with the faithful exercise of his duties. Applications for qualifi-cation of indentures are examined by the Commission for conformance to the act’s requirements. 2 Investment Company Act of 1940.—Under this act, companies which are engaged primarily in the business of investing, reinvesting, and trading in securities must register with the Commission; and certain of their activities are subjected to regulation by the Commission in accordance with standards prescribed as neces-sary for the protection of investors and the public. Transactions between affili-ates, for example, are prohibited or made subject to prior Commission approval. Gross misconduct or gross abuse of trust by management officials may subject the individuals to removal by court order upon application by the Commission. Advisory reports upon plans of reorganization, merger, or consolidation may be Drip by the Commission for the information and guidance of security holders affected. Investment Advisers Act of 1940.—Persons or firms engaged in the business of advising others with respect to their security transactions must register with the Commission under this act. Their acts and practices must be conformed to prescribed standards, including a requirement for disclosing the adviser’s interest in transactions executed for his clients; and various acts and practices which would constitute fraud or deceit are made unlawful. Corporation Reports.—The Commission’s files and records, made up of reports from more than 2,000 corporations in 180 industry groups having in excess of 11,000 subsidiaries, contain financial and other information concerning such companies of great value to government, business and industry. These companies by asset size represent over 50 percent of the corresponding national total, and their reports are filed with the Commission under severe sanctions against false -reporting. The information, the greater part of which is not available elsewhere, represents actual figures and not generalized estimates made up from extension of spot tabulations. : 720 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Under a project entitled “Survey of American Listed Corporations,” these data are tabulated by the Commission with the objective of making them more readily accessible. Among the reports thus published, both for individual corporations and by industry groups, are studies of the Return on Invested Capital, Balance Sheet Data, important items making up the profit and loss statements, ete. } SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, THE i hi i h i i i i - 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 Institution 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. In addition to the original Smithsonian endowment, the Institution holds and administers a number of special funds for making scientific researches in particular fields or for other purposes stipulated by their donors. : 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 900,000 volumes, pamphlets, and charts. BraNcHES UNDER TEE DIRECTION OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM The United States National Museum is the depository of the national eollec-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 relati~.g 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 relating to the fine arts, including principally paintings and sculpture not contained in the National Gallery of Art. It contains among other exhibits the George P. Marsh collection of etchings, engravings, and books ,on art; the Harriet Lane Johnston collection, including a number of MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 721 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 devoted principally to oriental fine arts. The building, the collections which it houses, and an endowment fund, were the gift of the late Charles L. Freer of Detroit. Since their installation in 1920, the collections of Chinese bronzes, jades, paintings and pottery, and East Indian and Islamic arts have been importantly augmented, and field work and other research work pursued. A large collection of the works of James McNeill Whistler and a limited group by other American painters is also present in the Freer Gallery. 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 ageney of the United States Govern-ment for the exchange of scientifie, literary, and governmental publications with foreign governments, institutions, and investigators. Under normal conditions it receives and dispatches about 700,000 pounds of printed matter annually. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK The National Zoological Park has an area of 175 acres, and is located in the Rock Creek Valley, 2 miles north of the center of Washington. Its collection comprises about 3,000 animals. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY The Division of Astrophysical Research investigates solar radiation and other solar phenomena. The work of this observatory is carried 'on partly in Washing-ton, D. C., and partly at stations on Mount Wilson and Table Mountain, in California; Mount Montezuma, near Calama, Chile; and Burro Mountain near Tyrone, N. Mex. The Division of Radiation and Organisms was established during the year 1929 for the purpose of making scientific investigations relating to the effect of radiation on the growth and life of plants and animals. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART [Under the direction of the Board of Trustees of the National Gallery of Art] 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 the late Andrew W. Mellon’s gift to the Nation of his art collection and a monumental gallery buildihg. The above act accepting Mr. Mellon's gift pro-vided that the art collections then 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 National Gallery building, costing about $15,000,000, was the gift of the late Andrew W. Mellon, and was erected under the direction and guidance of Paul Mellon, Donald D. Shepard, and David K. E. Bruce, surviving trustees of The A. W. Mellon Educational and Charitable Trust. It was designed by John Russell Pope (1874-1937), architect, Otto R. Eggers, Daniel Paul Higgins, associates, and was dedicated by the President of the United States on March 17. 1941. It is visited by over 2,000,000 persons annually. The building contains, in addition to the Mellon eollection, the notable collection of Italian and French paintings and sculpture given to the Nation by Samuel 722 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS H. Kress; also, the famous collection of paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts given by Joseph KE. Widener in memory of his father, the late Peter A. B. Widener, and a number of paintings given by Chester Dale, who has also placed on indefi-nite loan his outstanding collection of paintings by French Nineteenth Century artists. Lessing J. Rosenwald has given to the Gallery his important collection . of more than 9,000 prints, and additional prints and drawings have been given by Ellen T. Bullard, Elisabeth Achelis, Myron A. Hofer, Dr. Philip Hofer, Mr. and Mrs. J. Watson Webb, Mrs. George Nichols, David Keppel, Mrs. Walter B. James, and others. 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, Mrs. Robert Noyes, Ethelyn McKinney, Harris Whittemore, the children of the late Rt. Rev. William Lawrence, Dr. Horace Binney, the W. L. and May T. Mellon Foundation, Herbert L. Pratt, Mrs. Huttleston Rogers, Mrs. Maude Monell Vetlesen, Mrs. Robert W. Schuette, 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. The Gallery has also received as a gift from the Works Progress Administration, the Index of American Design, consisting of more than 22,000 drawings and water colors made under the auspices of the United States Government as a pictorial record of American source material in design and craftsmanship from early colonial days to the close of the nineteenth century. Another gift to the Gallery is the Richter Archive of Illustrations on Art containing more than 60,000 reproductions of paintings of all schools. This gift was made by Solomon R. Guggenheim of New York. In addition, important loans of paintings from the Harris Whittemore collection are on exlhion. On the ground floor frequent exhibitions are held in the central gallery. TARIFF COMMISSION, UNITED STATES The United States Tariff Commission is an independent establishment of the SU created by the provisions of title VII of the Revenue Act of Septem- ber 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. Although the Commis-sion continues to perform a substantial amount of work for war agencies, the larger part of the Commission’s work at the present time consists of the preparation of reports on problems of foreign trade and foreign trade policy which may be ex-pected to confront the United States at the close of the war. These reports. are being prepared at the request of the Ways and Means Committee of the House of Representatives and the Finance Committee of the Senate. The subjects to be covered include a comprehensive report on the effects of war on the foreign trade position of the United States and a series of extensive reports on United States industries which have been substantially affected by the war in such manner as to alter their competitive position in relation to the industries of foreign countries, particular attention being given to those domestic industries which have had or may be expected to have after the war important problems of competition from imported articles. 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. MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 723 GENERAL FUNCTIONS General powers and duties (sec. 332).—The powers conferred upon the Commis- sion under section 332 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and the duties imposed thereunder are as follows: (1) To investigate the administration and fiscal and industrial effects of the customs laws of the United States and in general the operation of such laws, including their relation to the Federal revenues and the industries and labor of 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 domestie 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 obtained in the United States whenever in the opinion of the Commission foreign costs are necessary and can be reasonably obtained; and to ascertain other data affecting - competition between domestic and imported articles in the principal markets of the United States. (5) To select and describe articles representative of the classes and the kinds of articles imported into the United States and similar or comparable articles of domestic production; to obtain samples of such articles when deemed advisable; to ascertain the import costs of such foreign articles and to ascertain the selling prices of ‘such domestic articles in the principal growing, producing, or manufac- turing centers of the United States. 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 80 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 = 724 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS opportunity for parties interested to be present, to produce evidence, and to be heard at such hearings. lid Unfair practices in import trade (sec. 337).—The Commission is authorized f under section 337 to investigate unfair methods of competition and unfair acts in the importation of articles into the United States, or in their sale after impor-tation. When the findings and recommendations of the Commission, upon its 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 diserim-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. fir 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, y -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 Commission shall in appropriate matters act in conjunction and cooperation with the Treasury I9epartment, the Department of Commerce, the Federal Trade | Commission, or any other departments, or independent establishments of the Government. During the war much of the work of the Commission has been done for agencies engaged in activities concerned with the war effort. Work on postwar problems.—War-created problems have led to numerous requests upon the Tariff Commission from Congress. In the first part of 1945 the Commission completed a study in response to Senate Resolution 341, Seventy-eighth Congress, directing the Tariff Commission, under certain assumptions as to national income and tariff treatment, to estimate for all articles imported in 1939 with a value in excess of $100,000, postwar production, consumption, im-ports, and employment. Currently the Commission has in progress a number of reports being made at the request of the Senate Committee on Finance and the House Committee on Ways and Means. This group includes a report on the effect of the war on United States foreign trade, a series of reports on the effect of the war upon important domestic industries, and a report on the international trade policies of foreign countries and their effect upon the industry and trade of the United States. Another important project is a report on the Customs Administrative Laws, designed to advise Congress of outmoded provisions as well as provisions in need of strengthening to accomplish their objectives. MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutres 725 TAX COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, THE The Tax Court of the United States (see 56 Stat. 798, sec. 504) was formerly the United States Board of Tax Appeals. The latter was created by the Revenue Act of 1924 (43 Stat. 253, title IX), and continued by the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 9, title X) and Chapter 5, Internal Revenue Code, 1939. The principal office of the Court is at Washington, D. C Its funetion is to determine, after hearing, whether there is a deficieney 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 was transferred to and vested in the Tax Court of the United States. The Revenue Act of 1943 (Public, No. 235, 78th Cong., 2d sess., Feb. 25, 1944), gave the Tax Court jurisdiction to redetermine the amount of excessive profits on war contracts in cases brought by contractors aggrieved by determinations made under the Renegotiation Act. 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. Practice 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 doeu-ments, at listed prices. Tax 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 offiee, 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 chairman of the Federal Board of Hospitalization, which board is advisory to the President in all matters having to do with the need for, the location of, and expenditures on account of, increased Government hospital and domiciliary facilities. The Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs is also chairman of the Veterans’ Sain > = Sens 726 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS Placement Service Board, which board was created by Public 346, Seventy-eighth Congress, to cooperate with and assist the United States Employment Service; so as to provide for veterans the maximum of job opportunity in the field of gainful employment. 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, vocational rehabilitation and education, the guarantee of loans for purchase or construction of homes, farms and business property, and readjustment allowance for veterans. 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 97 hospitals. WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES . 127 PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t designates those whose anmariied daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them Name Paper represented Residence *Adams, Phelps H........... Adams, ToS. Ll. * Albright, Robert ©.......... Aldriek, Robert S___......... * Alford, Theodore C.......... *Allen, Frank Beans *Allen, Herman R__________._ Alsop, Joseph W., Jr________. Alsop, Stewart J. O______.... *Andrews, Bert_ _.________.__ * Andrews, Marshall__________ *Arbogast, W. PF... ........ *Armatl, Te Volo al. * Armstrong, Robert B., Jr____ Arne, Sigrid Soll a * Arrowsmith, Marvin L______ Ashby; Helen. ............... rAston, Frank... weiovanii. *Atlas, Benjamin J__________. sAastin, Harold 3... ...... *Austin, James C...__.._.... *Baird, Joseph H.-S. ......... *Baldinger, Wilbur H________ *Baneroft, Griffing............. *Barcella, Ernest L.______.__. *Besale, W.. Li, Jr. coi... *Becker, Peter, Jr__.__ Begeman, Jean_____ *PBelair, Felix, Jr. lol. mani. Bell, Betty... oo oii caine *Boll, Jack Li... ic. onadiiia: *Bell, Samuel W________..__. *Benedict, Bertram__._.______ Berger, Marshall W__________ Berkley, Earl... i... Bierbower, June__________.__.. *Birkenhead, Walter J._..___ *Blackburn, Clyde R._._._... *Blair, Raymond J........... New York Sun... iindennmrnsresnns Associated Press: Sedma Washington Post... col a oon soars: United Press Association _.__________________ Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times._.... International News Service... _______ ASSOCIAted Press cnneb te A a New York Herald Tribune Syndicate ___._. New York Herald Tribune Syndicate ___.__ New York Herald Tribune.........___._.___. Washington Post... oe oat iar con Associated Press... doo D0 igi nie C0 Sydney (Australia) Sun, Associated News-papers Ltd. of Australia. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.......ccanaeena- Associated: Press. iad rie Associated Press... io. saraeias United Press Associations... cocococcaaon Scripps Howard Newspaper Alliance __..... Syracase Herald =i Jl or Lio ill Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald... ______ United Press Association..___________________ Washington Star. Nc.ianniinmnsie iii PM Chieago Bum. -cooio casio on uni on United Press Associations... oo... United Press Associations... oocoooeooo-_ New-York Times... oo manna sain Philadelphia Inquirer... .coaeaeee mao i. Washington Post... cc.eas LSE Associated Press. i. carinii nro Houston Chronicle. finanaii Associated Press... innncinineni Macon News and Telegraph ____.___._______ New-YorkPimes > 2 CoS ol rou Houston Chronicle, Ashtabula Star-Beacon, Raleigh News and Observer, Miami Beach Sun Tropics, Columbus Dispatch. Associated Press. -oo iia New York Herald Tribune... ___.____ Editorial Research Reports. _. coooooooooo_ New York Journal of Commerce... .—....... Associated Press:tlt i oo i ans Omaha World-Herald... .. Co a fii oe New York Herald Tribune... ooo... The Ganadian Press. Lo 0.0 00 Loo SEis Lo0 New York Herald Tribune... ccoooooooo- 4605 North Rock Spring Rd., Arlington, Va. 4704 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 5509 Glenwood Rd., Be- thesda, 3720 Benton St. 1315 35th St. 4115 40th St., Brentwood, Md. 8322 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, 2729 Dunbarton Ave. 1516 26th St. 1661 Crescent Pl. 813 North Highland St., Arlington, Va. 225 East Mason Ave., Alex-andria, Va. Shoreham Hotel. fl jonqma bd, , Bethesda, fs "Mount ak Pl. Alexandria, oe South 34th St., Arling-; n, Va. he “Carrell Ave., Takoma Park 1013 13th St. 3726 Connecticut Ave. 1301 15th St. National Press Bldg. 1028 Connecticut Ave. 1416 F St. 1421 Massachusetts Ave. 607 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 1417 Harvard St. ST St., Kensington, 10 East Leland St., Chevy Chase, 5 1306 30th St. 2116 North 16th St., Arling- ton, Va. 1692 31st St. 2500 Q St. 3209 Stephenson, PI. 2141 I St. 118 1m Fairfax St., Alexandria, Va. 3021 44th Pl. 4285 North Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. 3803 Alton Pl. 1714 Connecticut Ave. 713 Hamlin St. NE. 605 Silver Spring Ave., Sil- ver Spring, Md. Westchester Apartments. 1358 Kennedy St. 4439 Albermarle St. 3900 Hamilton St., Hyatts- ville, Md. 729 Congressional Directory: MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Boeckel, Richard.....coo._.. Bolger, Louise C..vcccuanen--. Booth, John IN. ccciaccancnica SBorsS, JOSEPh Acca nmin Borwick, Harry Goeeeeooeeooo *Bourgholtzer Frank. ..._...... *Bowman, R. T *Brandt, Raymond P__._..___ *Brenneman, Herbert E_..... *Bridge, Gardner........-..-- *Brown, Constantine A_._____ *Brown, George Rothwell... *Brown, Harry J... ovovea-- Buchholz, Christine K._.____ [| Buck, Robert M..ceeeoo____ Burke, Charles...... cde eaa-*Burlingham, LIoyd...ccea---*Butler, James J... een. *Butler, Jerome.caeacan—ee.. « *Byrnes, Robert Daeeaeee-... *Chadwick, John. _ cco. SCarey, Prank... = *Carignan, Norman.._.______ Carpenter, Elizabeth S_______ ¥Carpenter, Leslie E_ ________ *Carter, John Franklin_______ Cassini, Austine:__._......._. Chiang, Joseph... ...--cicen-- *Childs, Marquis Wooo... *Chinn, James B.....ccuae-.. Chy, Yoo Koch iio nnn = oniniinn She ONYO. erica Clarke, W Cleavenger, Morris M_._____. (linc, JohnH... ...:cceee-x-*Coleman, Chiles C.__....... *Cole, Gordon H___._._.__._.. Coles, Marshall... ___.-....... *Collins, Frederic W......._. *Collins, Ralph A... :c._ *Combs, George Wooo ooo. Conroy, Edward A_.......__. 000k, Fe CG. Aria. dinnmns Editorial Research Reports. cceceecccceaaaann Philadelphia Record.-_. International News Service. .oooceccccaaaae-International News Service. aa-cceccecccaca-n New York Journal of Commerce...ceeeeecea-‘Wall Street Journal Southam Newspapers of Canada. .ccceeaea--. St. Louis Post-Dispatch a Washington City News Service. -occceccaea-x Washington Times-Herald. o.oo occceeeee.. Associated Press..__... LE ES Daly Fraffic World. ail Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... _____ Washington-Star. oo. oon aired Hearst Newspapers, King Features Syndi-cate, Los Angeles Examiner, San Fran-cisco Examiner, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Baltimore News-Post, New York Journal American, Milwaukee Sen-tinel, Detroit Times, Seattle Post-Intelli-gencer. Salt Lake Tribune, Spokane Spokesman-Review. Azsooited Press... euicimemeamsommsrnnn Buffalo Evening News... cieamcaconas ‘Wall Street Journal... oooiisioooiols.l. Buffalo Evening News. oc ovmcececennn Washington Daily News. __ occa. Cleveland Plain Dealer... coca... Chicago TriDUNG.cotuia.sin dunnsbaambade io Polish Dally Zgoda_ cane Reuters London News Agency....--....... New Britain Herald, Newark (N. J. 3 Ledger, Long Island Star J ournal, Nassau Daily Review-Star, Long Island Daily Press, Staten Island Advance, West-chester (N. Y.) County Newspapers, Camden (N. J.) Courier Post. Chicago Journal of Commerce. ..-ccaeeoeeeo- Hartford Courant i Associated Press... Associated Press... coon ei cian Associated Press... Coo iia Macon Telegraph and News. _ o.oo. Dallas Times-Herald.. ...cocuioncnnc aaa... Boll SYNAIOOI0.. oo oo diss de ou Cath wa we wes Washington Times-Herald_._.___ cocoa... Atlantic (Iowa) News Telegraph......_...__ Chinese News Service United Features Syndicate £3 Washington Post... a Central News Agency of China_______._____ Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R____..__. Wall Street Journal _______wn eS hrm Winnipeg Free; Press... cco cantonume Associated Press... Cla cuieiinii Washington Evening Stare. oooooeoeeo___ United Press Associations... ..o._.o.__:. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... Providence Journal... ......-ienpoincanenan Harrisburg Evening News and Patriot, General Press Association. Baltimore Evening Sun... .ocicmeeaeaca.. New York Sun London Evening Standard... occ. R. F. D. 4, Rockville, Md. 1726 New Hampshire Ave. 2807 Ontario Road 4240 2d Rd. North, Arling-on, Va. 1530 16th St. 1043 National Press Bldg. 832 National Press Bldg. 4955 Quebec St. 3234 Martha Custis Dr., Alexandria, Va. 1312 N St. 1918 37th St. 6132 30th St. 4614 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. The Kennedy-Warren. 1335 30th St. 6412 Nigsovond Ave. Chevy Chase, Md. 124 Irvington St. SW. 3511 13th St. 4711 Albermarle St. 4620 North Chelsea Lane, Bethesda, Md. 4348 Garrison St. 2642 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. 3815 Gramercy St. 906 Glaizewood Ot., Ta-koma Park, Md. The Roosevelt. 2150 Pennsylvania Ave. 241 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 2012 North Oakland St., Arlington, Va. 428 North Nelson St., Arlington, Va. 5201 Baltimore Ave. 352 North Edison St., Are lington, Va. 4120 14th St. 2480 16th St. 2480 16th St. 2480 16th St. 2130 Le Roy Pl. 1530 16th St. 715 Norway Drive, Chevy 501 Dorset Ave. ., Chevy Chase, Md. 1700 North Calvert St., Arlington, Va. 2800 Woodley Rd. 3545 10th St. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1499 Irving St 1884 Ontario Pl. 1426 K St. Falls Church, Va. 712 North Washington St., Alexandria, Va. 6368 Ridge Dr.2923 Q St. 3929 Jenifer St. 5030 41st St. 6239 33d St. 1426 N St. 717 Albee Bldg. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Cooper, Halt BU. 0 Jl coe Corn, Herbert Bo... ....... *Cornell, Douglas B_______... *Corddry, Charles W., Jr... *Cotten, Felix... ...... Cottrell, Mary James. ---a-.. tCraig, Elisabeth May. ...--- *Crider,, JohnH... .......... Crost, Lyn. =. iin *Crowley, Raymond J..____. *Cullen, George. .....vueesut *Cullinane, Leo Po occoeeae. A Curry, Brack G....._.......0 *Cushman, Norman OC....._.. *Cutter, Jom I... i... *Daniel, James M., 3d... ____ *Davis, J, Wi. 0 lad. Davis, Margaret. ..ccooo_._.. *Pavis, Oscar Ll. tio. .i.. *PDavis, Watson...........J.. Dean, Charles M_____________ Degges, Charles B_.___________ *PDennis, Frank L.C. 0... *Denny, Ludwell_ _ _________. *Deuel, Wallace R_ _......... de Pury, Edward G__. *Dickson;iCaB ll. *Dickson, Edward H___._____ Diefenderfer, Mildred. __.._"_ Dillman, Audrey..._ : *Dillman, Geant. - .__.-. *Dittmer, DSW oi... Dizon, George... J. Soca. *Dixon, Kenneth L_.__...._.. Dodd, Philip Wo iauioidin.. sPoherty, Jack... ..ccoaaaaa-Donahue, Elizabeth. Donovan, James F_ A *Dorvillier, William ART *Drummond, Roscoe. _.._... *Drummond, Spence......... Drary, Allens i 0. La. *Duffy Charles, G........_.. Eades, Mary Alice..__...._.. Eads, Jane L.8...22o ........ *Easley, L Paper represented ASS0CIated Press. av. otlhe nein sasbans; wun] Washington Star-..........coceeeeeesnenaaa.| Associated Press..... . United Press Associations International News Service. «cooceeccucccea- Nashville (Tenn.) Banner, Charlotte . C.) Observer, Greenville (S. C.) News, Troy (N.Y.) Record, Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader, Madison (Wis.) State Jour-nal, Green Bay (Wis.) Press Gazette, An-derson (8. C.) Independent. Portland Press Herald, Portland (Maine) Evening Express, Kennebec (Maine) Journal, Waterville (Maine) Sentinel. New-YorksTimes. cC. cull Loo. Honolulu’Star Bulletin... iii iouiaacana.-Associated Press... .. i. ll dennis United States News Association New York Herald Tribune Assoeiated Pressly Jl li ie Netherlands News Agency. cceccecccccaaa-United Press Associations. oooccoocaoooo- Washington Daily News... occocooocaaaoao Associated Press. oii ciiiodieaia Washington Post iv ns. ald. Loaaiilaatoat. Washington Daily NeWS. ccc ceecoccicomcanan Solence SorVICo. o.oo ea ae de am Cincinnati Enquirer. ...o. oo... Loi aaa... United Press Associations... ..._____ Washington Post ic. aia ous onliind. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... Chicago Pally News. ol. io... United Press Associations________.__________ Gannett News Service, Albany (N. Y.) 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Chicago: Tribune li Lica cite iaiin aan ey York Daily News a Uniied Press Assocations El Mundo (Puerto Rico) _| Christian Science Monitor. ---cccccmmcmcacan Washington Times-Herald. oc ccccamacaaa-United Press... enon 30D ee Washington Times-Herald.________.______.__ ‘Worcester Gazette... 2a noosabo Associated Press... sco i. Associated Press...iain alos o.. Residence 1701. 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Rainier, Md. 2733 O St. 1740 P St. 3129 South Stafford St., Ar-lington, Va. 3204 Highland PI. 1509 16th St. 1136 Valley Drive, Alexan-dria, Va. 1317 H St. 1754 Q St. andria, Va. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Wdson, Arthur Tio... ...... = dson, Peter.15. oii. i. *Edwards, Willard ___________ *Mgan, Charles’ B....0.. oo. Egebjerg, Gudrum___________ *Eleazer, Frank F____________ * Elliott, Jackson’ S........... Ellis, Charles I. 3 ean of Blliston lH. Broo aninn ois Emery, Fred A ....ieaun.a.. *Engelke, Charles B__________ sEngle, J. Bin.RR a *Rrvin, Morris D._._t. ._.__.. Erwin, Julia Gaillard_________ *Erwin, Robert A_.__._._._._.__ Bssary, Helen... uo. onani-s Estill, Alice XKing............. *Evans, Edward riBh as mi Evans, Rowland, Jr__________ *Maherty, Justin L..._........ 2 Fernsler, David ___..-0.._.... Pike, Bvelyn BB. _... oi... * Finney, Nat:S:. cn avaneen: Finney, Ruth: -.....cocu.z Fischer, Ann... .u......} Bish, Phyllis...econo ds ... FleeSon, Doris. 22 his unaanaas Fleisher, Wilfred. ______.._____ Fleming, Dewey Li____._._._..... Hiinn, Sarghe oo il. aaa. *Flynn, Michael W___._._____ *Folliard, Edward T.__....__ Foote, Dorothea... ...... ARoote, Mark...teen. i *Forrester, Leland S__________ *Fox, Joseph A Francis, Lorania X___________ *PFrancis, Warren-B_._.-_____ *Frandsen, Julius, Jr__._______ *Frantz, Harry Free, James S....0..l.cnaa.a Friendly, Alfred... _.._..... *Fullerton, Spencer____._______ Furman, Bess... oi. .cacunux *Gagnon, Jean-Louis. ._______ Gardner, Virginia_____.__.___.. *Geiger, Robert E__._________ Geller, Sylvia. ooo Lonny *Gemmill, Henry... ....._:_.. Associated Press. oo rami bul ais tues 0 Newspaper Enterprise Association_.......__ Chicago: Tribune: © oo «sn.inusadoes. Doin New York Times: lool iasiadiiinnica. Berlingske Tidene:ns. co ut ivariipanada.0 United PressiAssociations.. oooavvneaaaa Associated Press... foo la sdisiaaciicg Philadelphia Inquirer... .. foes iii Lod Washingion Post. ivi siaildesdinanai-United States News Association..___________ United Press Associations______ Associated Press... .ooulol colon ton, Cincinnati Times-Star.. co ..-oi.oo. Durham Morning Herald, Raleigh Times, Rocky Mount Evening Telegram, Eliza-beth City (N. C.) Daily Advance, Charles-ton (S. C.) News and Courier and Even-ing Post. i Salem Journal and Sentinel, Dur-ham Morning Herald, Raleigh Times, Rocky Mount Evening Telegram, Eliza-beth City (N. C.) Daily Advance, Wil-mington (N. C.) Evening Post, Lumber-ton (IN. C.) Robesonian, Charleston (S. C.) News and Courier and Evening Post, Evansville (Ind.) Courier. ‘Washington Times-Herald____.___.._._._._.___ Wall Street Journal... ocean maniacs Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance.___.___. Associated Pressrowtidiae a oy St. Louis Globe-Democrat._.__.._.__..._.__ Associated Press... soiioaa aoa io. Associated Press. .._---.-.__. abil St. Louis Star-Times... lo aos prin Associated Press...._—-__.______._i_ ___._.. International News Service... _.._._______. Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune, Des Moines Register and Tribune. Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune, San Fran- cisco Daily News. United Press Associations... 2... :_ Women Wear Dally.L: oo. io. Sooslionai Associated Newspapers, Ltd., of Australia, Sydney (Australia) Sun. North American Newspaper Alliance_______ New York Herald Tribune Syndicate.__.___ Baltimore:San fon ol. 2h fauna.nat. ‘Washington Evening Star____.____________.__ Washington Times-Herald .._._______________ Washington Post... safe i lil we 10. Newark Evening News. _ o-oo _.____ 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: ily col santanaoo Washington Evening Star____.____....._..... Tos Angeles ‘Times So as oy il nina les Los Angeles Bimests. oo io iti, United Press Associations... ................ United Press Associations__________ ECE Chicago Sam .L i to dana IO Washington Posti---....i....-New York Journal of Commerce. .......____ New. York Times... ii a aardaniiiiinm suas Gannett. News Service...conmmmmnsaracnn-na-Wall Street Journal. oo... .uv mereanne 53 Old Mount Vernon Rd., Alexandria, Va. 3046 R St. 8719 Colesville Rd., Silver Spring, Md 2815 18th St. 2419 Massachusetts Ave. National Press Bldg. 7 os Radnor Rd., Bethesda, d, 3110 Wellington Rd., Alex- andria, Va. 1313 28th St. 3900 Connecticut Ave. 212 T St. NE. 150 Exeter Rd., Bethesda, Md. 4943 Hillbrook Lane. 2720 Wisconsin Ave. 2720 Wisconsin Ave. 2101 Connecticut Ave. 2800 Woodley Rd. 1868 Columbia Rd. 2026 Hillyer Pl. 513) Sova) Rd., Bethesda, Star Bldg. 1201 40 Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 4808 Chevy Chase Blvd., Chevy Chase, Md. 4749 Reservoir Rd. 909 Garland Ave., Tokoma Park, Md. 3900 Connecticut Ave. 1525 28th St. 2440 16th St. 1617 Rhode Island Ave. 1221 National Press Bldg, 5406 Connecticut Ave: 2316 Tracy Pl. 4000 Cathedral Ave. 1419 Chapin St. 6120 Broad Branch Rd. 2659 Connecticut Ave. 2117 Leroy Pl. 4816 Quebec St. 1421 Massachusetts Ave. 1351 Montague St. 2808 McKinley Pl. 2808 McKinley Pl. 3900 Cathedral Avert 7824 Aberdeen RAd., Bethesda, Md. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1645 31st St. 4825 Drummond Rd., Chevy Chase, Md. 513 Selon Rd., Bethesda, Md. 2400 16th St. 227 North Piedmont Ave., Arlington, Va. 8508 Toughboro Pl., Chevy Chase, Md. 1314 Massachusetts Ave. 1545 17th St. North, Arlings ton, Va. Press Galleries 733 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Geoorge, A. Ri iii. Gibney, Raymond. _.___._____ *Gilbert. Ben We 2 oocuu. Gilbert, Nancy: coat... Gmeiner, M. Ruth___________ Goecke, Paul Hats. oo... *Gonzales, Donald J.___._____ Gordon, Evelyn______.____.____ *QGovenar, Sidney A ____._.____ *Qreen, Charles J., Jr._ ______ *Green, Sterling F____________ Green, Walter Si _.........._. Greenwald, Lillian___________ *Gregory, Al B *Gregory, Nicholas P_________ *Gridley, Charles O____._____ *GriffinyBulkley.----2:..-... Griffin, Gerald B............ Griffin, Isabel Kinnear_._____ *Groves, Charles S_____._._... *Gunn, Glenn Dillard________ *Haakinson, Edwin B___.____ *Hachten, Arthur... .......__ *Haestier, Richard ___________ *Hagan, Thomas W__________ Hagner, Anne. c..... oad... *Haley, Pope Ao. outa *Hall, George soca Ho. io *+Hall, Frank-A: ..c.0 0... *Mall,fMax. oor *Paller, EllisM __......... *Ham Busco son asi i Hanibley, Catherine.____.____ Hanlon Joseph ice... 20. Hannify, Tee Mo... oo. Hardcastle, William_. ____.._.__ *Harris, Edward A___________ HarrigiJessie oo. 100... Harris, Morris J............ *Harrison, Alfred. F.......___ Harrison, A. Paul... ..... *Hart, Lee Poe... oo. sisi... Hart, Margarebsocs. 5... Harter, BC. 0 2a... *Haslet, Charles C._.______._ *Haswell, James M_._____.___ *Hayden, Jay @. oct. =i. *Haydon, Stuart o.oo lio. Hazlett, Walter T-........... *Hearst, Joseph F-__._-.._._. *Heath, Bdwin J.......cv.5 *Healy, PaplP.............. *Hedrick, Travis K.......... Heiman, Beatrice ..oooo.___ *Heinzen, Ralph... .....:.. 3Heinl, Robert D.__-......... *Helgeson, Ray... .._.......... 78349°—79-2—1st Associated Press... oo alia Daily News Reeord.... cuiveisiicanuuionntb Washington Poste. ioe) ool coud 10 International News Service ___.._____._____ Washington Daily News. cococooooooo__ Associated Press. i noi assy Senco 8 New York. Daily News. ooo local. Associated Press... woos hascihoogitl +h Shreveport (La.) Journal, Altoona Mirror, Norristown (Pa.) Times-Herald. International News Service... ____._____ United Press Associations... ..._.._..___ PhiladelphiaInquirer......coeaeneeaa-o DOVE POSE... cove mrisiin sit tm esr Hartford Times, Springfield Union, Boston Traveler, Worcester Gazette, Brockton Enterprise, New Haven Register, Water-bury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Holyoke Transcript-Telegram, Pittsfield Eagle. Baltimore SUR... cs oo aia Saesinnn bane Springfield Union, Hartford Times, Worces- ter Gazette, Boston Traveler. Boston Globe... -.. een Gant cana Washington Times-Herald __________________ Associated Press... cgi lion ib aaa d International News Service... .._._____.___ London: Daily. Bxpress. ot....conininu.- ... Miami Daily News, Dayton Daily News._. Washington Daily News... .o.cannaacniaoo. Associated Press_._.... Rh Serr bin wb Rte St.Louis Pest-Dispateh. 2 aoe oon. o. C. W. C. News Service... o.oo. NSS0CIHAd PIORE rots pA Associated Press. viv. ii cri tidan iio su International News Service. ____._._________ St. Louis Post Dispatch. oc Caio in, = Washington City News Service Reuters of London =o. .Loio li doa ood ii St. Louis Post Dispatch... Telegraph Agency of the U,S.S. R__.__.____ Associated Prose. oat head a Washington City News Service. ._ _.......__ United Press Association... ..cocueavmenaa. New York Journal of Commerce......._____ Washington Evening Star___________________ ‘Washington Times-Herald . _._...._.______ Associated Press... ... cit il conidiaans Detroit Press, Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal, Miami Herald. Detrolt News: J or oh. eden nn nena mn Press Alliance, Ine. i. ia ieriisamanas Philadelphia Inquirer. ...-c-z-aeaoecameiaaa- Chicago Tribune... ;...oedersieiin once ae Gallipolis (Ohio) Daily Tribune, Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette. Now York Daily News. coo .o:..cccocol.0 Federated Press ce on seca o ian tonics Jewish Telegraphic Agency. —-ccccceaaaaoo= United Press Association. _..._. Wabash (Ind.) Plain-Dealer - Washington Times-Herald _____________.____ ed.—48 3384 Gunston Rd., Alexan-dria, Va. 1900 Lamont St. 4211 Brandywine St. 2400 13th St. 2325 15th St. 201 2d St. NE. 8718 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 2500 Q St. am Ly P1., Mount Rainier, 2730 Wisconsin Ave. 3904 Edmunds St. 1431 Fairmont St. 1064 31st St. Waterford, Va. 2201 2d St. South, Arlington, Va. 3 Brookdale Rd., Bethesda, 4817 Woodway Lane. 111 Primrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. 4817 Woodway Lane. 1742 Q St. 3620 Connecticut Ave. 4930 Sherrier Pl. 5410 41st St. 532 Bond Bldg. 1506 Seminary Rd., Silver Spring, M 4629 East-West Highway, Bethesda, Md. Presidential Gardens, Alex-andria, Va. 2145B Suitland Ter. SE. 3619 Fordham Rd. 808 Devon Pl., Alexandria, Va. { 4815 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 4137 Henderson Rd., Arling-ton, Va. 4413 Klingle St. 305 Timberwood Lane, Sil-ver Spring, . Franklin Park Hotel. 1730 P St. 1319 Taylor St. Route 1, Falls Church, Va. 1319 Taylor St. 3900 14th St. 4616 48th St. 456 N St. 3007 34th St. 1416 R St. 5010 Reno Rd. 4610 3d St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 1209 Pitt St., Alexandria Va. 1 East Lenox St. Chevy Chase, Md 2745 29th St. 901 Houston Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 2126 Key Blvd.,Arlington,Va. 5224 11th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 1630 Rhode Island Ave. 3014 South Columbus St., Arlington, Va. 2801 Adams Mill Rd: National Press Bldg. 2400 California St. The Roosevelt. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Helm, William P___.__.._... *tHenning, Arthur S_....... =| *Hensley, M. Stewart.......- *Hermann, Arthur F______... *Herrold, Charles H., Jr._._. Hertzmark, Betty Hirsh____. Heymanson, Sydney R_______ Hicks, Annie Childs____....... *Higgs, Edward H *Highley, Leslie C___..._..._.. *Hightower, John M_________ *Hildebrand, W. A. _....... *Hill, Milt Dean EPG Id Ten *Holland, Ceefl. i200 Holleman, igi Cay con Hoke, Mar *Holstein, Ceres Baan oa *Hornaday, Walter C.....___ 3Horner, Garnett D........... *Hovey, Graham B_......... *Hulen, Bertram D..._... Humphries, Harrison B_..... *Hunter, Kent’ A. ........... *Hurd, Charles... 2. 2a Hurd, ‘George Wr hn *| Huston, Luther A *Hutchison, James B._....._. Hutchinson, William K______ Huttlinger, Joseph B.._.____. *Hyde, Nelson C Hynes, Betty... aaainn *Imhoof, Werner:.....>...... Jager, Betsy: 2 ol os iin *Jamieson, Edward..._...____ *Jenks, George P.....o...2t Jensen, Doris B........ 5... 2; Jewell, Ingrid. ......... 0.0.5 *Johnpoll, Bernard K______._ Johnsen, Katherine ________.. Johnson, Alice o P-v.._... Johnson, Charles W., Jr______ *=Johrhson, Glalr 3. oo oe *Johnson, Robert V_.__....___ Johnson; Vanee, hn Joc *Johnson, Walter. ..oouea.-. Johnston, Marguerite S._____ *Jones, Alexander F__________ *Jones, Carter Brooke..._____ *TJones, Coleman'B_.......... Jones, Dee Walker. _ cco... *Rany, Howard Loe cece *Karlstedt, Ruben. ......._.. "Rory David. Lo otic =. Karr, Madeline. _.....-...... *Rassewitz, Jack. .....ce.mi52 Kearney, Martha M...._.._. *RKelly, Francis To... i. *Kennedy, Frank A__________ Paper represented United States News Association. ......... fi Chicago Tribune Press Service. .._coooo_-___ United Press Association... .oceeecaaeannao International News Service. ccecccaaaaao- United Press Association... .oocooeoaooeooo- Australian Newspapers Service... c-co------United Press Associations. ......oooo...___._ Ta Ee BSi Rn Lo Associated Press 20a. Seni fafa We Associated-Press. oo.Ri B00 CL Greensboro Daily News_ 0... i... Associated Press... ooo CUOIGUIQIIGLL, Chicago Sum. uli 2ilol Sail J Saisin ld lag New York Times iy. di Copley: Press, To tii vee iiiiih esas bam duams Associated a SR Dallas Morning’ News...0. 0.0li to... Washington Star: io oon Ud Co Associated Press... ______.. : New York Times Associated Press. i. .owwenn ab SIN IIIAN LS Chicago Herald American, Detroit Times, Milwaukee Sentinel. New York Times... cooesadoli 000000 BL Washington Times-Herald_ ____ _____________ New-York Times... oe. iol DORE a Gannett News Service... ... oo iil i lla. International News Service... occ... Balsa Worlds oS ae or Sn IS Philadelphia Bulletin. o.oo Spios Cos ‘Washington Times-Herald __________________ Neue Zuercher Zeitung... o_o ___ Wichita Beaeon. ll C2 2 EU Toile Houston Chronicle, New Orleans States, San Antonio (Tex.) Express, Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Nashville Tennessean, Youngs-town Vindicator, Honolulu Advertiser. Toledo Blade, Pittsburgh Post Gazette __.__ Chicago Times. i i ao ead Toledo Blades: ada Ted aliue, Jas oy New York Herald Tribune________.___.__.__. Portland (Oreg.) 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Residence olin Ave., Riverdale, 2728 32d St. } : Oe > Chevy Gis Sule Ave., Takoma 2703 Upshur St. 1020 19th St: Shoreham Hotel. 4884 MacArthur Blvd. 330 Star Bldg. 1361 Connecticut Ave. 4608 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 2721 Adams Mill Rd. 1615 Hobart St. 1222 North Evergreen St., Arlington, Va. 3220 Connecticut Ave. 2515 14th St. NE 704 on ole Ave., Silver Spr 4115 Norn a St., Arling-ton 3240 Toth. St. 1306 Randolph St. 3020 Dumbarton Ave. 8004 Eastern Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Falls Church, Va. 2237 Bancroft Pl. 1704 Kenyon St. Box 335, Silver Spring, Md. BitValley Drive, Alexandria, J Connecticut Ave. C St. SE. ee Mount Eagle PI., Alexandria, Va. 1320 31st St. 1026 National Press Bldg. 1526 41st St. SE. 4822 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 325 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase; Md. 406 Aspen St. 724 South St. Asaph St., Alexandria, Va. 1203 Trenton Pl. SE. 3100 Connecticut Ave. 3000 39th St. 2121 Virginia Ave. 2721 Terrace Rd. SE. 7725 Emerson Rd., West Lanham Hills, Hyatts- ville, Md. 1738 19th St. 1933 Lamont St. 3213 4th St., Arlington Va. 4640 Garfield St. 1418 N St. 4419 Greenwich Parkway. 8 Elwyn Court, Silver Spring, Md. 3116 Circle Hill Rd., Alex-andria, Va. 3305 Valley Dr.,Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. 2500 Q St; 25C0 Q St. 1437 Somerset Pl. 1380 Peabody St. 3914 5th St. North, Arlings ton, Va. 1 1413 Crittenden St.™ Press Gallerves MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name * Kennedy, George..... ie ves *Kennedy, Lorne E. ..ccau-.. *Kennedy, William P.eaa.-- *Kenney, Nathaniel T'....... *Kent, Carleton..... RE ah *Rent, Frank B... oi atenen * Kenworthy, Carroll FH...--*Kernan, Edward. .......... Kernodle, Margaret. ...cceea- *Kidney, Daniel M.....cc.... Killeen, Kathryne.... ceca. *Kilpatrick, Carroll. . cacao... *King, Jom E....c....-Weeans *Einney, Wil ovina nn *lein, Sandor S..ceneeenna.-*Kluttz, Jerry... .--«-PSA *Kneeland, Harold....-...-.-> *nebel, Fletcher. ooeucaec... *Knighton, William H. Y., Jr. Korn, Gerald E Krieghbaum, Patricia P...... *Krock,; Arth Ul. ccccaccnnna Krum Tyrrell... voce names *Prylov, BorisN...ouee-.... *Kuhl, Arthur...... AECEI *Lahey, Edwin A_.... inane *Lahr, Raymond M.. ........ Lam, Mildred ...ceocceccce=- *T,a Moore Parker. cece... *Lamm, Lynne M._...caa.... *Lander, William H...caa.... *Lardner, Fred. ice ooniitnan. *Larsen, Douglas A __ _.co.... *Laue, Willlam RR... ceea-.. *Lawrence, David...cecceaea-*Tawrence' NN. H. .. ceiemna-*ileach, Pani BB. ..._........ *T.00, James, Jr tii Cin... *Lee, I *Terch, Oliver B.. ..tmee aan *Leviero, Anthony H _.._._.. *Lewis, Edward W____.__.___. *Lewis, Sir Willmott......... *Limpus, Lowell M_..cocac.n *Lincoln, G. Gould........... *Lindley, Ernest K. cccecce--- Lindsay, Malvina. :.......... *iLinz, Bertram PF... .vaae.- *Lippmann, Walter. cacea---“ *Loftus, Joseph A.....cucaca--¢ Toorance, John. ............... Loving, Pierre. o.oo... Paper represented ‘Washington Evening oc Star. cococmcacan Omaha World Herald._._. Washington Star, Springfield (Mass.) Re-publican, Springfield (Mass.) Daily News. Baltimore Evening:Sun...coceeeccaaaaina... Chicago IME. ih fn ie meeting Loe Baltimore Morning Sum United Press Associations Cleveland Plain Dealer. -ave cccccecccaaaaeae Associated Press... ..ciuaacoca.a ma mai = Indianapolis Times, Evansville (Ind.) Press, Knoxville News-Sentinel, Mem-phis Press-Scimitar. Houston Chronicle... revae-vree-csnnsnnin Chicago Sun:..... osc heanls EREfe DER Daily Oklahoman............. SET LAN Associated Press... oui. Jus li ee United Press Associations ‘Washington Post... Washington Daily News. Cleveland Plain Dealer.....ccaenuecancann- Baltimore Morning Sun... ceccccaaea-Associated Press... ...ceinouis iii an ASS0Ciated Press. oes an meee antennaema Telegraph Agency ofthe U. 8S. S. Rocccaaaae International News Service. -oc-ccceccaeen New York Times “Telegraph Agency of the U.S. 8. Ro... St. LouisiStar-Times. li io...an... Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald. United Press Associations... oc.coococamaaoe New York Journal of Commerce. . ..aeeaea-- Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance__...... Newport (R. I.) Herald United Press Associations... coco. Snolang (Wash.) Chronicle, Hoboken (N. J.) Jersey Observer, Fall River (Mass.) Herald-News. Newspaper Enterprise Association _.____._. New York Ti United States News Association. ...__....._. New York Times... oon nanlnndasdanvnn Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald. International News Service... _.._________ Central News Agency of China__._______.._-Christian Science Monitor... cco. Associated Press. -c..----i The United States News Association........ New-York Rimes. a iia ines London Times__.____... New York Dally News. ...cocememcanenannes-Washington Star.asa aan si Jia oan al Washington Post, Des Moines Register and Tribune. ‘Washington Post. --Newport Daily News. ..--:i-icicicanancacas New: York Times. 00 ou lai daca. Springfield (Mass.) Daily News. _occocaeoaoz International News Service. -.cccecaaoaaoo- Residence 1332 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. 4665 36th St. ‘South, Arling-ton, Va. 2405 1st St. 6642 Hillandale Rd., Chevy ase, 3348-A South Wakefield St., Arlington, Va. - The Carlton. 1425 44th St. 3146 Buena Vista Terrace, SE. 6403 Brookville Rd., Chevy hase, Md. 2121 R St. 1315 Peabody St. ok Harrison 8t., Arlington, Presidential Gardens, Alex-andria, Va. 2120 16th St. 3129 Adams Mill Rd. 3705 Lorcom Lane, Arling-ton, Va. 1314 Massachusetts Ave. ° 1541 North Falkland Lane, Silver Spring, Md. 3600 Morrison St. 1738 19th St. 135 Joliet St. 8 Dahlonega Rd.,Friendship Station. 1602 Hobart St. 3319 Dent Pl. 4615 30th tt, North, Arling- ton 3529 Hertford, Pl. 1827 North 15th: St., Ar-lington, Va. 5643 Western Ave. 1122 South Thomas St., Arlington, Va. 297 North Pitt St., Alexan- dria, Va. 1124 Connecticut Ave. 2408 California St. : 3825 5th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 736 22d St. 2480 16th St. 3821 Jenifer St. 3900 Nebraska Ave. 717 Albee Bldg. 4628 Albemarle St. 916 16th St. 1352 Longfellow St. 1575 Spring Pl. 203 Grace Coolidge Bldg., Alexandria, Va. 3725 S St. 1915 Kalorama Rd. Martha Custis Drive, Alex-andria, Va. 2356 Massachusetts Ave. The Lee Sheraton. 123 Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 2207 Cp Ave. 1028 Connecticut Ave. 1208 North Inglewood St., Arlington, Va. 1525 35th St. 406 Delafield Pl. 1305 N St. 1440 N St. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLEDTO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Lowe, Florence S____.__._____ *T.owe, Herman A. Zio. ....L: *Lowell, William E__________ *Lucey, Charles T'. . ._....... Ta, David... ion Lueas, Jim Gof iiss 2 *Lynch, Donald E_._______._ *Lyon, Gideon A. ..........- *McCabe, Charles R......_.. McClendon, Sarah. _.________ McConnell, June_____.___.._.. McCullough, John M_______. *McCully, Samuel F., Jr_____ McDowell, Eulalie._.._.______ *McQGaffin, J. Marr........... [[McGahan, Paul J___________ *MecGee, Paul B.....200 .... MecEee, Rose. licwiilosiLl *McKelway, Benjamin M____ MeRKusick, France... oc... *McMenamin, William F____ MeNalr, Marie Soo. .o..... McNeil, Marshall. ___________ McWilliams, Ann. _...._._.. *Macomber, Frank J_________ *Magruder, Milton E________ *Mallon,-Paulic...out00 i. i || Mallon, Winifred. _...._.__... Marckres, Earle... *MarKel, Dan _ iio cs. 2o5000 *Marlow, James. __-o-cceee.-. *Martin, Lorenzo W._._.._._.. *Martin, Ovid. =1.00i0..0. *Mayers, Shirley D__.._____. Mellett, Lowell... *Meredith, Luther... _..._____ Mero, sy. oo *Metcalfe, John. coven... *Meyer, Melita A____________ *Michie, Charles A___...____. Miller. Gustav J... 00... Miller, Harold Joseph.._..__.. Miller, Hope Ridings... *Miller, Paull; ono bail iin *Milligan, John Dean. ......_ Million, Virginia N.___._____. *Mills, Edelbert P.___.______ *Miner, William R *Minor, Robert.__.____ | Mitten, Raymond C_.___.._. *Mobley, Radford E., Jr... *Mobley, Willard H___...._.. Dally Variety. (Calif). oo ou si Philadelphia Inquirer... =. oiceicinennn-Associated Press... oli hii sinha Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance ...._ te Central News Agency of China___________.. Scripps Howard Newspaper Alliance_..__._. Gannett News. Service ....zbii Doran to Washington Stars. on nd United Press Associations. __________.______. Philadelphia Daily News, Columbus Dis: patch, Fort Worth Star Telegram. Boston Herald-Traveler --ooti siiiicad. Philadelphia Inquirer. cinco .......iiciican Chicago Sums oor cans loosing l. United Press Associations. .___.__....._..... Philadelphia Inquirer........0 0.208. oo. ~Oheago Suni cc. oo. a aaa International News Service_ _._.__________._ Washington Star o.oo... soils. Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, Wil- mington (N. C.) Evening Post, Evans-ville (Ind.) Courier, Lumberton (N. C.) Rebesonian. United Press Associations. _ __ ______________ Washington Post om 02 oi yy Seale El Paso Herald-Post, Fort Worth Press, Houston Press. Chicago Journal of Commerce. ____._______.._ Copley Press. coin oo Co United Press Associations... _____..._.___ King Features Syndicate... _________.__. New York Tlmegars = 0 oios nis International News Service. _____._._____.. Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Los Angeles Herald-Express, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Oakland Post Enquirer, Detroit Times, Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press... iC ii alii iaiiaii.. Louisville Mimes. da. loi. alli. o.oo Associated Press: iis ies cisedsae Daily Traffic Worldesali oc 3 0 Cio iio. ‘Washington Evening Star_____..o o._.... Chicago Suna oy... cm Ji, ee ralo il Michigan League of Home Dailies, Lansing (Mich.) State Journal, (Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press, Grand Rapids(Mich. )Herald, Jersey Journal. New York Herald Tribune... _..._......... New York Journal American... oo... Chicago Suncil —oofl. sociliismuidosilicb New York Daily Worker. oioii Chon Akron Beacon Journal, Chicago Daily News, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald. Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald, Honolulu Star Bulletin Chicago Daily News. Associated Presses... crbniii lls an anal. 3604 Quesada St. 3604 Quesada St. 4708 Dalton Rd., Chevy Chase, Ashton, Md. 2800 Woodley Rd. 8 North Oakland St., Ar-lington, Va. 2120 16th St. 209 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md 1232 31st St. 4312 South Capitol St. SE. The, Benedick. 1330’ Kalmia Rd. Edgewater, Md. 2325 15th St. 801 Grandview Drive, Alex-andria, Va. The Portner. 2101 New Hampshire Ave. 5003 Hanna Pl. SE. 2071 Park Rd. 1416 Longfellow St. 132 North Wakefield St., Arlington, Va. 2308 Ashmead Pl. Rodney Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 2012 South Oakland St., Arlington, Va 4033 7th St. 4631 Verplanck Pl. Bel Haven, Alexandria, a. 2311 Connecticut Ave. 3200 16th St. 123 Moncure Drive, Alex-andria, Va. 1763 Columbia Rd. 3109 North Military Rd., Arlington, Va. 3513 S St. Quan Lane, Alexandria, a. Box 72, Oakton, Va. 3150 16th St. 9003 Sudbury Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 707 tn Wayne St. Arlington, Va. 2007 R St. 35 Montgomery Ave., Ken-sington 1130 Toth St. South, Arling-ton, Va. The Mayflower. 4844 Quebec St. un 38th St. North, Arling-n, Va. 16h Hod Rd. South, Arling-n, Va. ps nn 34th St., Arling-ton, Va. The Washington. 915 F Street. 2019 O St. 3608 S St. 2714 Upshur St., Mount Rainier, Md. Press Galleries 737 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Monberg, Helene C._......._ Monroe, Beverly A_.__.__.._. Montgomery, Jean. ___.__.__._ Montgomery, Ruth S________ *Moody, Blalr... occir. *Moody, Theophilus P_______ Moore, Courtenay... _._______ *Moore, Reuel S_____________. Moore, Ruth. ota ii *Moore, William. ....caae-... *Morgan, Cole EB... .......... *Moutoux, Joon TP. .......... Mullany, Rosemarie. _.._.... *Munger, Thomas L...:..... *Muann, James C... oo... Murphy, Bay-L.....co0n... *Murray, Milton.............. Musie, Frankie. .c......cdua-*Mylander, William H_______ Myler, J. Vir cisiame 4 *Naumann, Oscar E__________ *Needham, William C________ *Neeson, Vincent Co_________ *Nellor, Edward X_._....... Nelson, Winifred B___._.._._. *Nessly, William V________... *Newman, Edwin Harold.___ Newton, David D............ *Newton, James Y. .......... "Niall, ThomasiMeucnoaut ne. *Nichols, Tee... ft ciltonaand. *Nichols, Robert BE... _...... *Nixon, Robert G *Noel,E. Percy *Nover, Barnet... 00. Nunley, Bloom). euatoinmild *O’Brien, John C....co....... O2Callaghan, B. J... = *QOchs, Adolph Shelby._.._..._ O’Donnell, Irene A______.__.___ *O’Donnell, J *QOlder, Andrew H___.....__._ XO Leary, LA. cvainabaian. Oliver, Frank... loco... *0Oliver, DD. Harold occ2. 1. *O'Rourke, John... .-*Othman, Frederick C_...... *Owen, John B..-.-....... Page, Ralph Wo: -. ... *| Parker, George B_______..__ Parker, Willlam................ Patterson, Eleanor M____.____ *Peacock, W. T Pearson, Drew... ceccecna" Peaslee, Catherine G._____.__ *Peck, PhillipsiJ..cu.cuaea- *Perkins, Fred W.aaeeaaa.... Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R.__._._.. New York Dally News...cuomnaaa. io. Detroit NoWs. oo ievai isms adda Sydney (Australia) Daily Telegraph. ....__. United Press Associations... _____________ United Press Associations... ccaoeee Chicago SUN. oo dies sas beatin ties Chicago Mribune. . —. oi co oa i. New York Journal and American, San Fran- cisco Examiner, Los Angeles Examiner, Milwaukée Sentinel. United Press Associations... ....___.__ aa ‘Washington Times-Herald __ cocoa. United Press Associations... ....ccaooicooo. PM.i aad United Press Associations... .._......... Grand Rapids (Mich.) Herald, Battle Creek Enquirer, Lansing State Journal. Associated Press... .oiauvaoua ae rasa Bell Syndieate. . .. fe dnitn wn u.eciiniinibidioud PM International News Service... occa... Minneapolis Star Journal and Tribune_.____ United Press Associations. .....cooceeaaa New York Journal of Commerce... ASS0CIaled Press. oon trie di nna Baltimore Evening Sun....coccecaceceenaa-NOW YOLK SUN. Rohenre me Washington Posto ocean an Washington Post. ...c.-cuoninmonnendannannen United Press: Association... coon... Reuters (London) news ageNCy-..iceeecaea-Washington Evening Star______________._.__._ Washington Post... J nom ter 0 3 00 United Press Association... .coeeccncncena-Philadelphia Inquirer. ..c.-c.coevuicionrinn. Washington Times-Herald. o.oo... Chattanooga Times. sna. .....c.icmstnabane New York Dally News... .......c.ciienai.... New-York Dally News... Film Daily, Radio Daily, Hollywood Re- porter. Washinglon Star... .... co. uceiets coduscbdn=— London Times. 0 eer idan ii Washington Daily News...o.ocoooooaaan- United Press Associations... .ocococaaaoo- AssociatedPress. 110 i od a ee an Philadelphia Evening Bulletin________.___.. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance__...... Wall-Streel Journal... .. revved caciosamss Washington Times-Herald.________ cccoeeo. ASB0CIalod Pross. ce emer Bell Syndicate, Il Progresso (N. Y.)ococaaa- New York Herald Tribune Syndicate....... International News Service. _« _____ccceaeo. 1028 Buchanan St. NE, 827 Randolph St. 1438 Kennedy St. 4108 Beecher St. Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. 1341 Montague St. 1656 29th St. 2004 Patterson Rd., West Hyattsville, Md. 2209 42d St. 1 Scott Circle. 2123 California St. 2015 North Danville 8t., Arlington, Va. 1329 Orren St. NE. 1314 North Court House Rd., Arlington, Va. Falls Church, Va. 1318 Delafield Pl. National Press Club. 209 Elmira St. SW. 1314 Massachusetts Ave. 3000 Columbus St., Arling-ton, Va. 1602 Hobart St. 202 Baltimore Ave., West-gate, Md. 33 North Fenwick St., Ar-lington, Va. 4817 Reservoir Rd. 203 George Mason Dr., Alexandria, Va. Rufton. Md, 7218 Central Ave., Takoma Park, . 2515 K St. 518 Concord Ave. National Press Bldg. 2500 Q St. 408 Jefferson St. ., Alexan-dria, Va. 1731 New Hampshire Ave 3111 Longfellow St., Hyatts-ville, Md. 1460 Rhode Island Ave. 2100 Connecticut Ave. Nokes Va. R. TF. , Falls Church, Va. 2737 Devonshire PI. 2410 20th St. 3 West Underwood St., Sy Chase, Md 1317 H S 1721 Itnode Island Ave. 1931 K 8 1510 RR St. National Press Club. 1222 Quincy St. NE. 2121 Virginia Ave. 6004 34th Pl. 2219 California St. 2123 Tunlaw Rd. 124 Raymond Ave., Alex-andria, Va. 1 Scott Circle. 1840 24th St. 1813 F St. 15 Dupont Circle. 228 North Edgewood St., Arlington, Va. 2820 Dumbarton Ave. 2110 Florida Ave. 4306 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. 32 West Underwood St., Chevy Chase, Md. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Peters, Mason. ______.__._____| *Phillips, CabelasoS ob Pickett, India ri: SPilat, Oliver... _.......... *Player, William O., Jr._____. ; *Porter, Thurston R_________ *Powers, Richard P......0... *Pusey, MerloJ..........x. Pyper, William F_ _._.___.___ Ronny, Bugene. oi... Radin, Sarg: -roi1Abe 2s *Ragsdale, Warner B_..______ Raleigh, Stuart F., Jr... *Ralph, Henry D_:._. Rankine, Paul Scott._________ *Redmond, Wilfrid ___ _______ *Reichman, John A __________ Reid, Marion__-__. Paper represented Residence Washington Times-Herald._________._...... 1317 H St. New York-Times. =. 0 oli lia. on Dogininy Rd., Mec- ean, Va. United Features Syndicate. o.oo. 1617 34th St. New-York Posh... hunidn ane renne as 1759 Harvard St. an 3000 TRWT A SEA Se SS I RS 1502 Seminary Rd., Silver Spring, Md. New York Daily News. _ coon... 2000 Connecticut Ave. Associated Press. 0 li iL tld 4315 South 35th St., Arling- ton, Va. Washington Post...lliiloi Albemarle St., West- i 9 moreland Hills, Mad. Grand Rapids Press, Kalamazoo Gazette, 1818 G St. Flint Journal, Saginaw News, Ann Har-bor News, Bay City Times, Jackson Citi-zen Patriot, Muskegon Chronicle. Chicago Sun... ie res aii oh 1738 19th St. Schenectady Union Star, Arizona Daily 2310 10th St. North, Arling-Star, La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune, Appleton ton, Va. (Wis.) Post Crescent, Mobile (Ala.) Press Register. United States News Association __.________. 406 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, United States News Association. _____...___. 1608 Spin Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington, Va. Oil City (Pa.) Perrlek. il nid hve 1 4561 Cathedral Ave. Reuters, Ltd.,of London... ....ccocueeaea.... 1566 Wisconsin Ave. American Metal Market... ooo oveeaeeaaae 4105 W St. Indianapolis Star -= lo tll li3iln: 3900 Connecticut Ave. Associated Press: iL Aa sug iniia 214 East Luray Ave., Alex- andria, Va. International News Service. ._ ______ ooo... 2120 16th’ St. King Features Syndicate. .__ vee 4223 46th St. New York Herald Tribune _____.__....__. v 1 205 West Thornapple St., Reid, VirginiaR.., ......... *Resseguie, Harry E__________ *Reston, James B *Reynolds, H. BK... 0: *Reynolds, Thomas F__._____ *Richiards, Ray....o. cc... *Richards, Robert W__..___.. *Richert, Earl HH. .oi==_-L Rieger, Donie C.cvvveeeeos *Riges, Robert LL... i: *Ring, William :. E.___.._.. Ripley, Josephine B__..o...._ *Rippey, Stephens_______.___ *Riseling, John J. W_________ *Roberts, Arthur S___________ *Robertson, Nathan W_______ *tRochester, Edward S_______ Rockwell, Dorothy C_________ *Rogers, Frank’.xd > Roosevelt, Mary Lowe..___.. Roper, James E Roth, Robert............. *Rothman, AD aon *Ruark, Robert Co. =i =F + *Russell, Olang Dit il 0 -:: . Ruttenber, Arwood J...._____ Sadler, Christine. cocoa... Sarles, Ruth in *Seali, John “uci lio. tot Philadelphia Record ....: occ oioncannnnsa-Daily News Record... 5. lla... New -YorkTimes....c.occain. 0k th Chicago Sano iii oo D0 afar far on Los Angeles Examiner, San Francisco Ex-aminer, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Los Angeles Herald-Express, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, Oakland Post-Enquirer, Detroit Times. Copley Press, i desililoiii Ine........iiilo Cleveland Press, Columbus Citizen, Cin-cinnati Post, Kentucky Post. St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch, St. Paul Dispatch, Duluth News-Tribune, Duluth Herald Louisville Courier-Journal... ________.__.__. Louisville Courier-Journal... _______._______ N.C. W. C. News Service... _____.....___.. Christian Science Monitor. _ o.oo comune Bridgeport Post-Telegram.__.._._____._._.__. Washington Post... ci i meianalerieta. AssociatedPress... 0. 0 L208. Ne PM United States News Association__________.__ Chicago Sun... i. io Bi Dan iiian iv in Wall Street Ra rem MRS J Ie --| United Press Association__ -| Philadelphia Record.ooo. . Li 1. leat Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald. _._..._ Seripps-Howard Alliance. _________________._ Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance _______ Worcester Gazette, Boston Traveler. __._____ Washington Postlll fo dr a. Associated Prosar iC so fio Tw Heo New-Yorlc Post 10 0 no JI ela Washington Daily News. eevee cemmmcancen-Associated Press. ....... Associated’ Press... i.a.oill SA ban ToL Chase, Md 2035 K S 3533 Ames St., NE. 3132 0 S 1915 Toth ‘St. 5032 41st St. 1016 16th St. 1509 Mount | agle Pl., Alex-andria, gk Lith "Dakota Ave. 4824 Tinnean Ave. “ 2702 Wisconsin Ave. 4604 Chevy Chase Blvd. Chevy Chase, Md. 1370 Riftenhouse St. 214118 6408 iY Pl. 3608 Park Pl. 1731 Q St. 6 West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. 3107 Macomb St. 2121 T'unlaw Rd. 3432 34th St. 3401 16th St. 1810 Calvert St. 1522 Monroe St. 2920 44th Pl. 4109 18th St. 600 20th St. 1301 15th St. 3000 Connecticut Ave. 1417 Martha Custis Dr., Alexandria, Va. 811 38th St. 2000 Connecticut Ave. Star Bldg ie 36th St., Arlington, 1714 Connecticut Ave. 3415 38th St. 1 Prince St., Alexandria, a. Press Galleries 739 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name "Paper represented Residence Schwartz, Lloyd M___________ Scheibla, Shirley Hoc...__ *Scheleen, Joseph Coo... sqchrefl, Fred H..covenninnwe *Scolt, George A... *Peott, Owen Lo... *Scott, Wilson L *Seligmann, Herbert J_____.__ *Sentner, David Po cceeeaao. Serling, Robert J..ccvaenv-.-sShaekiord, R. H............. *Shalett, Sidney---.....-.-.. Spanahan, Elon SURES eS shields, Art... it aaa. *Shoop, Duke ...iio isl Short, Joseph H............. *Sias, Erwin 0 i..... *|Simms, William Philip.____ Winger, Mort. si... *Singerhoff, John A__________ sSirmay, Maxim... ........ *Sisson, William D_. ae Santer, Harold. ......ciecone- Smith, Carl. Co. Ji... Smith, Mrs. Ss Brooks. . *Smith, Denys H. H..____.. Smith, Douglas N_........... Smith, Frank M_...._...... *Smith, Hal Harrison...._... Smith, Katelon. oon error Smith, Marie ®.............. *Smith, Merriman. _......... Smith, Richard J... : *Smith, Stanley H_ .......... *Smith, Tony Scott RA *Soresi, C. D Spatz, Frances. ...-........ *Spear, William R _| Stavisky, a Biro oot Steele Earl Ba... .....0... *Stecle, Jack. I ooo loo. Stephenson, Malvina_________ *Sterner, Charles J. .___.__... *Stevenson, Charles. _________ Stimpson, George Waeeeooo.. *Stinnettl, JoCk..oeacnaennena= *Stokes, Thomas Lio ccveeea-. Stokey, Kathleen. __.._...._. Dally News Reeord:..... .cconionnoablasl Wall Street Journal. .oooo mime aio. Dally Trafic World... ..o.c iii cecainditannn United Press Associations... ..________ Associated Press. wooo. is iam iia United States News Association Washington Times-Herald ____________._.____ Overseas News AgeNCYe coc coccccccoccnaaa-n New York Journal-American, Baltimore News-Post, Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, Boston American, Albany Times-Union, Boston Record. Washington City News Service. ..._...__.__ United Press Associations... _.__________ New -York-Times. oii. co dori i dodanie: Washington City News Service. __.._._...._. United Press Associations ....._.__..._...__. Jacksonville Journal, Pensacola News- Journal, Frankfort State (Ky.) Journal. New York Daily Worker ........cinncuuu--Kansas Clty Star. totaal om Baltimore Morning Sun... occa. International News Service. ____._.._._... : ak LL Newspaper Alliance...._.__ Dally News Becord onceras nnn ic Washington: Post =... seat voy cali. Washington City News Service Commercial Appeal (Memphis) International News Service. ooo ooo... Oregon Journal, Portland............cceeee-Wheeling Intelligencer, Fairmont (W. Va.) Times, Parkersburg (W. Va.) News. London Daily Telegraph and MorningPost. Cleveland Press, Columbus Citizen, Cincin- nati Post, Kentucky Post... reat ae Washington Times-Herald. .oueenveuveine--New York Times. 5. iit ita iihatanns Washington Times-Herald___.______._______ United States News Association_____________ United Press Associations... _____.._____._ Washington Times-Herald._._ _____.________ Traffic World, Ohfeago.oc. i aan dial Gannett News Service... o_o cocoooo. Associated Pressel i ooo. oo mER AE Washington Post =3-. "5. iil. EAN International News Service... .ccceccoeeanas Associated Presse. ceo n saa ln Daily News Record.._ __| Science Service_..._.._____ Christian Science Monitor «eevee oooeoooo New. York Times... to. oti ina din. Washington Post.2-coi. oi: bv nF) Greensboro (N. C.) Newsand Record________ New York Herald Tribune... .....ccceuue-- Cincinnati Dimes-Star. oo. .c.o ae Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Co., Ltd. Washington Daily News. coo oceeeo oo. Big Spring (Tex.) Herald, San Angelo (Tex.) Times, Corpus Christi (Tex.) Caller Times, Abilene (Tex.) Reporter News, Denison (Tex.) Herald, Paris (Tex.) News, Marshall (Tex.) News Messenger. Associolod Press. oi neni naman United Features Syndicate_____ ALEDE AR A AssociatedPress. «oot nanan 4700 Connecticut Ave. 3331 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. 321 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. 200 Massachusetts Ave. 4264 16th St. South, Arling- ton, Va. 2001 Plymouth St. LL St., Bethesda, .3935 4th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 1825 Summit PI. 1216 16th St. 2014 Tunlaw Rd. 609 Tewksbury Pl. 3714 2d St. SE. 1445 Otis PI. 7221 Central Ave., Takoma Par 954 endl Press Bldg. 3901 Connecticut Ave. 3407 Gilden Drive, Alex- andria, Va. 2700 14th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 2101 Connecticut Ave. 3125 Buena Vista Ter. : ia Rd., Bethesda, 4106 Tunlaw Rd. 120 South Lee St., Alex-andria, Va. 6219 North 19th St., Arling- ton, Va. 3541 R St. 1650 Harvard St. 1630-A 19th St. 1013 13th St. 2700 1st Rd., Arlington, Va.. 1824 Jefferson PI. 2800 Woodley Rd. 6103 Forest Rd., Oiovatty; d. 3415 Haleyon Drive, Alex-an 214 South Te Blvd., Alex-andria, Va. 209 Spee Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 3511 Patterson St. 1643 Massachusetts Ave. 3467-B South Stafford St. Allinson; Va. 314 VS 1611 fir St. 5336 42d St. 2212 I St. 5404 39th St. 1921 Kalorama Rd. 1709 Lanier Pl. 1254 National Press Bldg. in Prince St., Alexandria, a. 1745 K St. 4210 North Washington Blvd., Arlington, Va. 6800 Selkirk Drive, Be: thesda, Md. George Washington Inn. 2929 Connecticut Ave. 2019 Hillyer PI. B03, Park Rd., Alexandria, a. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name tone, LB ois lini. »Stone, Walker... _...coeeee.-Strand, William... 0... Stratton, CHL. Coun. io. %Strauss, Harry: Aoi io... [|Strayer, Martha. _.__________ *Strebig, James J............. *Stringer, William H_________ *Qtrout, Richard L..._._..... *Ctuart, Roger...00h... . Sullivan, Mark |... ....c...... *Suttle, Howard.............. Sweezy, Edith W____________ *Sylvester, Arthur, Jr_________ Pall Jack: Si nell *Tarry, G. Tonan. H.. Roger... 0.C... Tavel, Emilie B.............. *Taylor, Frank E., Jr........ lI Tayior, Robert. J... Lz. ... *Terry, John B *Tharin, Whitney. _........... *Theis, J. William2. os. *Thistlethwaite, Mark. ______ ‘Thomas, Helen... 0... Phompson, JO. 4..crcvennnnue hone, Frank... 0.0. 000. *Phornburg, Dick... ....._.. * Timmons, Bascom N_.__.___ Tobenkin, Paul B__..._._..... 3Todd, Laurence ............ *Torrey, Reginald F_.________ *Pragle, J. Frank... ...... Tss0, Shu-ming, ............ *Tucker, Ray. ..........000.. *acker, Sam: ot.0 lL *Tufty, Esther Van Wagoner. Tupman, Elizabeth S________ *Turner, Kenneth H......__.. > Turner, Richard 1,...-....-: *Tuttle, Frederie B______._._ *Uhl, Alexander Hal 0h Paper represented PM. tla lial a LL Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance ...___. Chicago Tribune: laa i. 00 0 JV rv Kansas City Kansan, Topeka Daily Capital. Chester (Pa.) Times. Reuters... ..* itu siiiem ont sire oia Washington Daily News. oo ooo... ASSOCIA Press. oo. i ieee rs nan merr anni New York Herald-Tribune Syndicate. _.____ Greensboro (N. C.) News and Record, Wilmington (N. C.) Star-News. Hot Springs (Ark.) New Era, Hot Springs (Ark.) Sentinel Record. Newark Evening News. _.__ oo... New York Herald Tribune. _____..._.__.__. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance....___. ‘Washington Times-Herald_______..._..____. New York Daily News. _ io. i ol uoaieo.. United Press Associations... o_o... New York Herald Tribune: io. uiiii.i Associated Press: cine. inna asm Pittsburgh Press. cli Clog doo ......c.dccl.. Honolulu Siar-Bulletin.............o.......... Anderson (S. C.) Daily Mail, Sioux City (Iowa) Journal, Alton (Ill.) Telegraph, Palm Beach (Fla.) Post-Times. International News Service... occoaoama Indianapolis News, Fort Wayne Journal- Gazette, Terre Haute Tribune. ‘Washington City News Service. ________..__ Houston Chronicle, Arkansas Democrat, Shreveport Times, Nashville Tennes-sean, Chattanooga News-Free Press, New Orleans States, Shreveport (La.) Times. Seience Service. oi sail i. fateiaanill Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance.__.____. Chicago Sun, Houston Chronicle, San An- tonio Express, Dallas Times Herald, Fort ‘Worth Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Nash-ville Tennesseean, Shreveport Times, New Orleans States, Columbus Dispatch, Arkansas Democrat, Youngstown Vindi-cator, Raleigh News and Observer, Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times, Amarillo News. New York Herald Tribune. AAR Cy ih3 CB Gannett News Service ___..______ __..._.__._. Associated Press i mn SE A de SA Sh a Chicago Tribune Press Service. --coooeo.... New York Times... usu dood ani! Chinese Central Daily News. coco. McClure Newspaper Syndicate. __-..._..__.. Decatur Herald and Review, East St. Louis Journal, Urbana-Champaign. Courier. Michigan League of Home Dailies, Lansing (Mich.) State Journal, Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press, Grand Rapids (Mich.) Herald, Jersey (N. J.) Journal. International News Service. o-oo ooo... Atlanta Journal i 2 ¥ roe toil United States News Association_._________.. Intomnational News Service... oc... tii. International News Service..._ __ Residence 5618 Nebraska Ave. 2030 Hillyer PI. 4339 South Dakota Ave. NE. The Burlington. 1528 O St. 3849 Garrison St. 8333 16th St., Silver Spring, Md. 0 Park Lane, Bethesda, 4517 Garfield St. 509 Gorman Ave., Laurel, Md 3821 Gramercy St. Fairfax Village, D. 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Van der Veer, Virginia_...__. *Van Devander, Charles. ..-. Van Vranken, Jean_____.._..._ *Waggoner, Walter H___._____ *Wall-Alfred B---ooens *Waithman, Robert... *Waldrop, Frank C..._----.-*Walker, Norman............ ‘Wallop, John Douglass, 3d... fWalsh, Burke... .... —..... *Walsh, Robert K.....ccammaem Walter, James... -=evon-ne- Wale, Tod hula alia *Ward, Harold W..occceeaaa- Word, Paul W. ee ¥Warner, James E_.......___. 2Warren, DONS. mec ccneema= *Warren, Ernest G.__._ *Warren, Lucian C.__..._.... *| Waters, Garrett D_.__._..... *Watkins, Charles D......... ‘Wharton, Elizabeth. _____.____ *White, WilliamS__.......... *Whitney, Robert F__________ *Whittington, Banning E____ *Wilcove, Raymond.......__. Williams, Dorothy E_____.__. *Williams, Gladstone._.....__ *Williams, Leonard...._...... sWilson, Jack... ... coiee-ese= =Wilson, Lyle QC. i. ..—.-*Wilson, Richard I,.....___.. *Wissman, Bert *Wolfe, Bennett *Wood, Lewis__ *[[ Wooton, Paul *Wright, James Li *Wright, J. 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Brown.............. PelixiCotten.... =... -...... Kenneth L. Dixon.._._.____ > Evelyw Fike. t _......... Nancy Gilbert... o.oo... Lillian Greenwald.__.________ Catherine Hanibley....._.__ Arthur F, Hermann_________ Betty Hertzmark___________ Martha Kearney ______....__ Pat Krieghbaum..__......... Jamesthee oo, ups Pierre Loving... ... cobsi-. Earle Marckres............. Rose:MeKee...... a Beverly Monroe. __.__._____ Frances Music.....____. Robert G. Nixon_.____ H. K. a {Jpeg aig Ervin D.Sias. Frances:iSpatz........-on. William Theis. = _........ Betsy Topman.t. o.-------Frederic Tuttle. 7... William L. Umstead.._._.____ Jean Van Vranken_ .__..___._ Garrett D. Waters. _________ Raymond Wilcove_________. William Zimmerman.________ Cecil B. Dickson. _.......... Mark Foote..oo avoneee ns William F. Pyper.-..-...... Walter A. Shead__.......... Frank A. Kennedy._____._. Esther Van ner Tufty. YoisgToMeroor. i... Beatrice Heiman. _ .......... Mark: Foote... ...2c...... William F. 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The Burlington.610 Albee Bldg. 610 Albee Bld g. 1215 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Kentucky Post (e.)-...ecccs== 5 King Features . oeceeeeam o_o Syndicate. Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel (e., S.)-. La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune (€., S.)cceeucaaa-Lansing (Mich.) State Journal (€.) --ccaae- London Dally Express. —-.ccceeecrccane.--London Dally Herald...........-=-nnn-o-=~ London, Daily Telegraph and Morning ost. London Evening Standard. .....ccoooooo--London News Chronicle London Times__._...... Long Island Daily Press Long Island Star-Journal (€.)----cceaeeee--Los Angles Examiner (I0.) -oc cvoccccannaa Los Angeles Herald Express. ..-cceoeceeae-a- Los Angeles Daily News. _ ooo. Los Angeles (Calif.) Times (IN.)ecceceaa-- Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal (m.)..... Louisville (Ky.) Times (e.)--..-oee_-oae--. Lumberton (IN. C.) Robesonian_......__.. Lynn (Mags.) Item (8)... nnvimenccanen--McClure Newspaper Syndicate. -....._... Macon (Ga.) Evening News... cceceeeaa--Macon Telegraph (IN.).ccacaceacencecann~- Madison (Wis.) State Journal (e., S.)-o-._ Malone (N.Y.) Telegram. _..__..._______. Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader (m., e.) -Marshall (Tex.) News Messenger... _...... Massena Observer. __ occa... Memphis Press-Scimitar (e.) --Miami Beach Sun Tropics... Miami (Fla.) Daily News (e Miami (Fla.) Herald (m.) -... - Michigan League of Home Dailies..____.__ Milwaukee Sentinel .________ ___...__. ani Minneapolis Star-Journal and Tribune (m., e., S.). Mitchell (S. Dak.) Republic (e.) hs Mobile Press-Register... Modesto (Calif) Bee. . -nc-ceaeenameme—ncss Muskegon Chronicle ©) Sn mn meu Nashville (Tenn.) Banner 6.) ccceeeano-Nashville (Tenn.) Tennesseean (m., 6.)___. Nason Daily Review Star (0.) cccceccccaean N.C. W. 0. News Service. .ccocemeacoann. Netherlands News Agency --ccecceeccaae-Neue Zuercher Zeitung (Switzerland)___.._ Newark (N. J.) Ledger (I0.) coc ceceaeaeean Douglas Smith. ..cenereemnew 1013 13th St. Borl Tl. Richert...........o-1013 13th St. Paul Mallon. i... 1730 I St. George Rothwell Brown___. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. George Dixon. ........0.oc. 613 Times-Herald Bldg. Marion Reid...=... 613 Times-Herald Bldg. Daniel M. Kidney. ......... 1013 13th St. Sara Radin... ........... 1230 National Press Bldg. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 997 National Press Bldg. Thomas L. M National Press Club. 1.018 J. Me10. ox oon meen nei 997 National Press Bldg. 532 Bond Bldg. Arthur Wood ma 2480 16th St. Denys H. H.Smith_.._..... 999 National Press Bldg. NG. A. Cook....---2... 717 Albee Bldg. 854 National Press Bldg. Sir Willmott Lewis_________ 1292 National Press Bldg. Frank Qliver =... =. 1292 National Press Bldg. Mary Lowe Roosevelt... 1292 National Press Bldg. James J. Butler... .._....... 1383 National Press Bldg. James J. Butler... _....... 1383 National Press Bldg. George Rothwell Brown__._. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. Ray Richards. _............. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Cole E. Morgan._._____...... 603 Times-Herald Bldg, Ray Richards... ............0 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Dan-Markel =o. ....couenn 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Frank Rogers....... ooo. 1040 National Press Bldg. Warren B. Francis__........ 1217 National Press Bldg. 1217-1219 National Press Bldg. RobertL. Biggs.== 1213 National Press Bldg. .: Donie Carmack Rieger..____ 1213 National Press Bldg. Lorenzo W. Martin____..__.. 1025 National Press Bldg. Robert A. Erwin... ...._. 1048 Earle Bldg. Frances McKusick__....._._ 1048 Earle Bldg. Bulkley Griffin _........... 1215 National Press Bldg. Ray Tueker. -....... ......c oa Riliorest Pl., Chevy Chase, Edward S. Rochester....... 1311 G St. Elizabeth S. Carpenter___... 352 Washington Bldg. Jean Begeman... ....c..ece-352 Washington Bldg. Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Frank van der Linden._..... 1230 National Press Bldg. Cecll.B. Dickson. .........-1267 National Press Bldg. Mary James Cottrell._ 1230 National Press Bldg, George W. Stimpson.__ 726 National Press Bldg. Cecil B. Dickson__.. a 1267 National Press Bldg. Daniel M. Kidney ._________ 1013 13th St. Betty Boll.......coeea 1255 Press Bldg. ee, National Thomas W. Hagan_____ 609 Star Bldg. Paul R. Teach. _..... 1286 iy Press Bldg. Radford E. Mobley, Jr._.____ 1286 National Press Bldg. Edwin A. Lahey. .......... 1286 National Press Bldg. Raymond C. Mitten_....... 1286 National Press Bldg. James M. Haswell _______... 1286 National Press Bldg. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty.-997 National Press Bldg. IP rE PLY Fo oR el 997 National Press Bldg. George Rothwell Brown ____ 615 Times-Herald Bldg. Cole Morgan_____ -| 603 Times-Herald Bldg. Kent A. Hunter. -| 607 Times-Herald Bldg. _| 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. _| 852 National Press Bldg. _| 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. _{ 1048 Earle Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. Gladstone Williams._ _ 1246 National Press Bldg. Edward H. Dickson. 1246 National Press Bldg. Mark Foote___________ ~1 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. William F. Pyser__... 906-927 Colorado Bldg. Mary James Cottrell __.___.. 1230 National Press Bldg. . Bascom N. Ti 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. JoThompson.......2....... 1255 National Press Bldg. James J, Butler. .....c.ceue-1383 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Hallo... 1312 Massachusetts Ave,’ 1312 Massachusetts Ave. -William E. Bing En Me ame 1312 Massachusetts Ave. { 712 Jackson PI. | 1026 National Press Bldg. 1383 National Press Bldg. 748 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Newark (N. J.) Evening News____________ Arthur Sylvester, Jr______.__ 903 Colorado Bldg. Poroihen Foote -| 903 Colorado Bldg. New Britain {Gong ), Healy C0) Lappin 2 1383 National Press Bldg. Newburgh (N.Y.) N 1267 National Press Bldg. New Haven (Conn.) iia (0). Loin. Bo Griffin iia 1215 National Press Bldg. New Orleans (La.) States (€.,S.) coco. Bascom Timmons. __._______ 1255 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson_____._.._.. 1255 National Press Bldg. Jo Thompson... canie- 1255 National Press Bldg. : New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune Paul “Wooton ~~".= c- 1252 National Press Bldg. (m Newport (R.I1.) pay? Newsle.)--..o0. Bertram P. Ling... o... 621 Albee Bldg. Newport (R. I.) Herald (m.). ___.__.___.... Lynne M. Lamm. 0020 956 National Press Bldg. Newspaper Enterprise Association__.__.... Peter Bdson 2. oo io 00 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. New York Daily News (m.)...__._._____.___ John O'Donnell... 1272 National Press Bldg. GL Parry. oh ese nnn 1272 National Press Bldg. Thurston R. Porter.._.___. 1272 National Press Bldg. Edward W. Lewis__._______ 1272 National Press Bldg. Jack Dehertyo).. .. ...... 1272 National Press Bldg. Lowell M. Limpus___..__... 1272 National Press Bldg. Ruth S. Montgomery_.______ 1272 National Press Bldg. Irene A. O’Donnell. ._______ 1272 National Press Bldg. Pal BF. Healy... oo rsoooras Charles J. Greene, Jr. __ __ ___ 1272 1272 National National Press Press Bldg. Bldg. New York Dally Worker.......ccna oi220 Artfhislds. o..cnvinnene. 954 National Press Bldg. 954 National Press Bldg. New York Herald Tribune (m.)_____.______ Robert Minor_______. a Teh Bert Andrews.__ 954 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. Samuel W. Bell_ 1285 National Press Bldg. Coleman B. Jone 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. Raymond J. Blair___________ 1285 National Press Bldg. Jack Tall 2 Arey 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. Jay oe A ET Al tn oy Ep 58 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. Jack Steele ALIA ee 1285 National Press Bldg. Robert E. Nichols : 1285 National Press Bldg. Bernard K. Johnpoll..._____ 1285 National Press Bldg. New York Herald-Tribune Syndieate_____ James Mark BE. Warner»... Sullivan. _____________ 1285 National 820 18th St. Press Bldg. Walter Lippmann___________ 1525 35th St. ‘Wilfrid Fleisher. _.______.__ 2320 Tracy Pl. Catherine G. Peaslee________ 1525 35th St. Joseph W. Alsop, Jr.__._.._. 743 Munsey Bldg. Stewart J. O. Alsop. ........ 743 Munsey Bldg. New York Journal American (e.)-_____..__ George Rothwell Brown... _| 615 Times-Herald Bldg. Edelbert P. Mills__._____: x 729 15th St. Cole E. Morgan. i> 603 Times-Herald Bldg. David P. Senter...= 607 Times-Herald Bldg. New York Journal of Commerce (m.).....-. Harry G. Borwick_._______. 619 Albee Bldg. Oscar E. Naumann_________ 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. 619 Albee Bldg. Melita Z. Meyer. se 619 Albee Bldg. Marshall W. Berger...______ 619 Albee Bldg. New York Post (6) cieeaieccmmciniin: tne Charles Van Devander____.. 1370 National Press Bldg. William O. Player, Jr-...... 1370 National Press Bldg. Oliver Pilato. Stir 1370 National Press Bldg. Poul Canmore 1370 National Press Bldg. New York Sun le). i sesame Phelps H. Adams_._._____._ 643 Munsey Bldg. Edward K. Nellor._____.... 643 Munsey Bldg. Edward A. Conroy. _.._.... 643 Munsey Bldg. New York Times (m.) Arthur Kroek.. =v ion 717 Albee Bldg. Frederick R. Barkley. _.__._ 717 Albee Bldg. Felix Belair, Jr 717 Albee Bldg. JohnH. Crider: i or 717 Albee Bldg. Charles BE. Bean... ...... 717 Albee Bldg. Bess Furman. = 1220 270s 717 Albee Bldg. Emmit C. Holleman._.___.__ 717 Albee Bldg. Bertram D. Hulen__.__.___.. 717 Albee Bldg. Charles Hurd...-;. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. ‘W. H. Lawrence... _._.._._. 717 Albee Bldg. Anthony H. Leviero_____.__ 717 Albee Bldg. Joseph A. Loftus._____ _| 717 Albee Bldg. Winifred Mallon... - 717 Albee Bldg. James Reston____._____ _| 717 Albee Bldg. Sidney Shalett___ 717 Albee Bldg. Hal WH. Smith-2 717 Albee Bldg. Press Galleries REPRESENTED—Continued NEWSPAPERS Paper represented New York Times (m.)—Continued...___._ New York World-Telegram (€.) -cocoon North American Newspaper lliance._A____ Norristown (Pa.) Times-Herald......_____ Oakland Post-Inquirer. _ o_o ___ Ogdensburg Advance-News_ ___._._______._ Ogdensburg (N.Y.) Journal __.____._______ Oll City Derrick (mm). a. 28 leaoi Oklahoma City, Oklahoman___._.__._______ Olean (N. Y.) Times-Herald_ ______._.______ Omaha World-Herald (m.,e., S.)._oo______ Oregon Journal, Portland (e., Orlando Sentinel and Reporter ire (m.,e.). Overseas News Agency. __--ccooccoocmooooo Palm Beach Post-Times (m.,e.) __---_____ Panama City News Herald (e.) .---ooo___-Paris (Tex) News. zc. 0000) oo oo 2 Parkersburg (W. Va.) News (m.)_._._--..--Passaic, (N. J.) Herald News._____._._._.... Pensacola (Fla.) Journal and News (m.,e.)_ Philadelphia Bulletin (€.) -c ccoccmmaeccaans Philadelphia Daily News... _.._.___.. Philadelphia Inquirer (m., S.)__________.___ Philadelphia Record (m., S.)....___.__._._ Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gazette (m.)______. Pittsburgh (Pa.) Press (e., S.) ccs Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph_________________ Pittsfield (Mass.) Eagle (e.) .____________._ Plana (N. J.) Courier-News_______._._.. PM (E) Polish Daily Zegoda......0.oo. een Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press (e.) __________ Portland (Maine) Evening Express_______ Portland (Maine) Press Herald (m.)______ Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian... ____________ Press Alliance, IN@Gacin ctr... nnneven Providence (R. I.) Evening Bulletin Providence (R. I.) Journal (m.) RadioPDally (NYY eer Raleigh News and Observer Raleigh Timester out oseg to 0c 05 Reuter’s (Ltd.), London, England Rochester Chronicle and Democrat (m.)._. Rochester Times-Union (e.) 78349°—T79—-2—1st ed. Name Louis Stark. co... Charles or oe ad Jay: Wale. oo ras 3 Robert F. Whitney. __...___ Towis Woods mi cvavninsa Walter H. Waggoner____.___ William S. White_..._...... Ray: Richards... ..........co. DanMarkel.._............. Henry D. Ralph. ........... Jom'B. King: =. o_o. _...... Cecil B. Dickson ............. Lorne Kennedy... June Bierbower__________.__ Corl: Smithoe =... Frank A. Kennedy ___.._.... Herbert J. Seligmann___.... Whitney Tharin_ .__....__.. Frank A. Kennedy ___.._.___ George W. Stimpson-_-.__.. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith. J. Newman Wright _.________ Walter A. Shead.._.__.___. 3 Frank A. Kennedy. ....___-Ralph: W. Page: coveenecn-Nelson C. Hyde_ _ _. ___.__. Sarah McClendon. ___._..__. Paul J. MeGahan........... ie John M. McCullough. 35 Herman A. Lowe___________ Dorothy C. Rockwell Nicholas P. Gregory ._.______ Robert Bary. 1... "o.oo... Charles H. Ellis, Jr... VirginiasR. Reid... _.... Louise C. Bolger En George. EB. Jenks»... George R. Zielke..Bs Robert Taylor. .............. David Sentner:.........cc.v Buckley Griffin... ........... Cecil. B. Dickson............ Rolunk W. Robertson....___ Milton Murray............. Wilbur H. Baldinger._...___ Gordon:H.Cole............. Charles Burke... ... ....__.:. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ Lois J--Mero..._... .... Elisabeth May Craig Elisabeth May Craig. ______ Katherine Johnsen__________ Stuart Haydon. ............. Robert K. Walsh Betty Bells... ..._........ Robert A. Erwin____________ JulisiG. Erwin. .........oa.-Paul Scott Rankine_________ Lloyd Burlingham._____.____ David D. Newton. _.._____. William Hardeastle_ ._....__ Harry A. Strauss. _........ Cecil BiiDickson........c.....a Cecil B. Diekson.... .. cn ee om Robert A. Erwin_____._..____ Julia’ G. Brwint-L........... Office 717 Albce Bldg. 717 Albee: Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 1013 Star 1604 607 607 1267 1267 1224 620 1267 239 239 824 1413 817 708 1413 726 1650 503 1616 1413 1277 1277 1255 13th St. Building. K St. Times-Herald Bldg. Times-Herald Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. Albee Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. Colorado Bldg. Crittenden St. National Press Bldg. Earle Bldg. Crittenden St. National Press Bldg. Harvard St. Colorado Bldg. I St. Crittenden St. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1296-1296 National Press Bldg. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1215 1267 1416 1416 1416 1416 1416 1416 1416 1416 1416 The National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. F St. F St. F Sf. F St. F St. F St. F St. F St. F St. Roosevelt. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 3100 Connecticut Ave. 2745 29th St. 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. 607-608 Hibbs Bldg. National Press Club 1255 1255 1048 1048 1062 1062 1062 1062 1062 1267 1267 1048 1048 National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. Earle Bldg. Earle Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. Earle Bldg Earle Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office St. Louis Globe-Democrat______._..__._._____ St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch (e., 8.)-.__- St. Louis Star-Times (e.) .. o.oo cocoon St. Paul (Minn.) Dispatch (e.)._._____..._. St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press (m.)_....._ St. Petersburg Independent (e.) ___________ Sacramento (Calif.) Bee (e.) oo... Saginaw (Mich.) News (e., 8.) oo... Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune (m.)..__________ San Angelo (Tex.) Standard-Times________ San Antonio (Tex.) Express (m.)____._..___ San Diego Daily Journal... .i........50. San Francisco Call-Bulletin_______._______ San Francisco Daily News (€.) cco... San Francisco Examiner (m.)___...__...____ Saratoga Springs Saratogian_..._._________ Schenectady Union Star... ___..___..__.. Science Service... ll loi il anim. Seattle Post Intelligencer... ___.________. Seattle Times. oo. . oot diiiitainecicuined Shreveport: (1a) Journal... .oceeueaoiod Shreveport (La.) Times (m.). ooo... Sioux City (Iowa). Journal (m.)__.oceceoo.. Southam Newspapers of Canada... Spokane (Wash.) Chronicle_________ Spokane Spokesman-Review (m.)_.__.. A Springfield (Mass.) Daily News (e.)__..__. Springfield (Mass.) Republican (m.)_..__.. Springfield (Mass.) Union (m.,e.)__. -.._.. Staten Island Advance... ......ccceue.... Sydney (Australia) Daily Telegraph.____.. Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald___._._ Sydney (Australia) Sun_.._..__.__.__.._... Syracuse Herald-Journal _________.______.__ Telegraph Agency of the U. 8.8. R_...... Terre Haute (Ind.) Tribune (.).cceeceeeo--Toledo (Ohio) Blade (€.)--coccecmemmunnean Robert B. Armstrong, Jr___. Justin L.. Faherty... ._.__. Raymond P. Brandt.______. Edward A. Harris. __._____. George H. Hall... ..._... Joseph: Hanlon............... Estelle G. Welsh____________ Walter Ridder_ __________ we Frank A. Kennedy. .._______ Gladstone Williams_.._.___.. Edward H. Dickson._.__.____ Mark ¥Peotel ih i... . —.. = William F. Pyper........... Horry J, Brown... cov: George W. Stimpson________ Bascom N. Timmons._.___.. George Rothwell Brown. ___ Ray:Richards......... ...... Dan Markell 1... ...... Ruth:Finney.& _-_.._.....5. George Rothwell Brown. ... Cole E. Morgan___________.. Ray:Richards................ Cecil B. Dickson.__.__....... SsraiRadini-ic..r 7 Watson Davis__ Dick Thornburg... ....___ William Philip Simms______ H.-M.Talbart. Ludwell Denny___.____.____ Edward A. Evans___________ Fred W. Perkins__._________ Charles T. Lucey.....a..... Marshall Coles______________ Parker La Moore__.._..___. Robert C. Ruark........... Ray Richards............... George R. Brown. __________ DanMarkel” == Jo Thompson. __..__.. -| Whitney Tharin_ _ R. T.Bowman____ -| Fred Lardner. ____._.... Harry J. Brown _.-.......... William P. Kennedy. _._._.. John Lorance.-.:........... William P. Kennedy._._.... Bulkley Griffin_________.___.. Isabel Kinnear Griffin. _____ Leander E. Fitzgerald _______ Benjamin J. Atlas..______.___ Lanrence Todd............... SS. Krafsur......c.nuc.caae Olive Chuba................. Boris N. .._ Krylov..._.. Jessio' Harris. JL... ...... Jean Montgomery. ._________ Mark Thistlethwaite George R. Zielke_...._.. George F. Jenks___________._ Ingrid Jewell .__.__________. 711 Albee Bldg. 711 Albee Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. 201 Kellogg Bldg. 1005 National Press Bldg. 1005 National Press Bldg. 1005 National Press Bldg. 625 Albee Bldg. 625 Albee Bldg. -625 Albee Bldg. 1413 Crittenden St. 1246 National Press Bldg. 1246 National Press Bldg. 906, 927 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 713 Transportation Bldg. 726 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 2500 Q St. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1013 13th St. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. 603 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1719 N St. 1719 N St. 1719 N St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 3000 39th St. 1604 K St. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 708 Earle Bldg. 832 National Press Bldg. 1604 K St. 713 Transportation Bldg. Star Bldg. 1305 N St. Star Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1383 National Press Bldg. 1046 National Press Bldg. 1301 15th St. 1301 15th St. 1221 National Press Bldg. 1221 National Press Bldg. 424 Kellogg Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 1374 National Press Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS Paper Represented Topeka (Kans.) Daily Capital (m.)..._._--Traffic World, (Chicago-.~acouimemnnnnnn-- Troy (N.-Y.). Record: (m., 0.)cuemeeeannn-n= Tulsa (Okla.)-World (m.) .ccc-meansmenna—m United Features Syndicate... i-coacaea-- United Press Associations. ..oocovooaaeo-_ United States News Association Urbana-Champaign Courier ._._.._.___..___ REPRESENTED—Continued Name Office CHE Stratton... Cea asaas The Burlington. Stanley H. Smith aa... Joseph C. Scheleen_._._____._ Lewis W. Britton ....._._--Shirley D. Mayers... SAP Mary James Cottrell ______.. 1023 National Press Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons. ._._--1255 National Press Bldg, Joseph B. Huttlinger........ 1255 National Press Bldg. Thomas L. Stokes_.._._..... 1113 National Press Bldg. Marquis W. Childs. _...._.-201 Kellogg Bldg. India Pickett... o.oo... 200 Kellogg Bldg. LyleC., Wilson: . ...........-714 National Press Bldg. Julius Frandsen, Jr_________ 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Sandor S. Klein... ........-... 714 National Press Bldg. Milton E. Magruder._..._.. 714 National Press Bldg. RH. Shackford.............. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Charles W. Corrdry, Ir as 714 National Press Bldg. Charles B. Degges_ ._.._.... 714 National Press Bldg. Helene C. Monberg_____.____ 714 National Press Bldg. Helen Ashby..:............. 714 National Press Bldg. BE. Perey Noel............... 714 National Press Bldg. John L. Cutter .....__.._____ 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Banning E. Whittington____ 714 National Press Bldg. A. Paul Harrison............... 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Dorothy E. Williams_______ 714 National Press Bldg. Raymond M. Lahr_______.__ 714 National Press Bldg. John Douglass Wallop, 3d.__. 714 National Press Bldg. Eulalie McDowell ._._______ 714 National Press Bldg. Gwen Morgan__ ___________-714 National Press Bldg. Couionsy MOOTe..2-... mn 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Charles B. Engelke. ________ 714 National Press Bldg. H. Roger Tatarian__________ 714 National Press Bldg. AllenDrury. 22d..... 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Charles H. Herrold, J 714 National Press Bldg. James C. Austin____ 714 National Press Bldg. Charles R. McCabe 714 National Press Bldg. Rosemarie Mullany 714 National Press Bldg. Dee Walker Jonés 714 National Press Bldg. Eileen A. Nunley.. 714 National Press Bldg. Robert’ S. Aldrich._. 714 National Press Bldg. Frank F. Fleazer____________ 714 National Press Bldg. James'E. Roper... ....._ 714 National Press Bldg. Donald J. Gonzales. ____..___ 714 National Press Bldg. Grant Dillman 0... 714 National Press Bldg. Harry W. Frantz______.____ 714 National Press Bldg. Elizabeth Wharton_________ 714 National Press Bldg. Edward G. de Pury.___._____ 714 National Press Bldg. RalphiHeinzen:.s _......>__ 714 National Press Bldg. Edwin Harold Newman. __. 714 National Press Bldg. Am Pischerat i... ..... 714 National Press Bldg. M. Stewart Hensley _...___ 714 National Press Bldg. William F. McMenamin... 714 National Press Bldg. 24th and N Sts. 24th and N Sts. 24th and N Sts. William P. AE a Gas 24th and N Sts. Warner B. Ragsdale. _....__ 24th and N Sts. Bert C. Clarke. _............ 24th and N Sts. 24th and N Sts. George Cullen... ............ 24th and N Sts. MarietSmithisf 24th and N Sts. Leonard Williams. ___._..... 24th and N Sts. Oliver-B.iTerch. ............ 24th and N Sts. Stuart F. Raleigh, Jr_____.__ 24th and N Sts. L. Nobel Robinson_________._ 24th and N Sts. SamiTucker 3... ......... 523 11th St. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Utica (N. Y.) Daily Press. ___. Utica (N.Y.) Observer-Dispatch.________. Wall Street Journal (m.).____. Wabash (Ind.) Plain Dealer (e.)--.__.._.___ Washington Evening Star_____ Washington City News Service Washington Daily News (e.).. Washington Post (m., 8.)...-- Washington Times-Herald.... Cecil B. Dickson..__..___._[ Cecil B. Dickson_._...._.... George B. Bryant___________ Charles J. Sterner... Henry Gemmill____.________ Shirley H. Scheibla__.______ Alice King Estill _.__________ Ellis'M. Haller ............... ‘William Parker. .___.__._._._ Jonas B. Robitscher, Jr_.__. Frank Bourgholtzer_..._.__._. Albert E. Clark. _........... Peter Becker: Ir... oii Mildred Diefenderfer. ____ ___ Robert D. Heinl.. .......... GG Gould Lincoln. __........ J ALCO eary SC i Constantine A. Brown______ Benjamin M. McKelway._._._ Joseph AA, Fox-%.. li. .l. Herbert F. Corn... .... Gideon A Lyon... ......... Carter Brooke Jones_______. Don Si Warren. -............ Joseph H. Baird............. Lowell Mellett____________... Sarah Flinn___ = JOSEP -YOUNE.......o cvs Margaret Hart. _._...oooeo-Robert J. Serling____________ Lee M. Hannify .. ...._.... HelenThomas.. ....._...... Maxim Sirmay.__.___._..... Eileen Shanahan. __._____._.. Charles W. Johnson, Jr_.____ Herbert E. Brenneman_____ John T'. O’Rourke........-. Martha Strayer... .__._._-. Evelyn Gordon... ........... Robert M. Buek___._____.___ Ruth'Sarless.._ ....__.....-Harold Joseph Miller________ Osear' L. Davis’... .......... John M. Daniel, 8d.._...._. AnneHagner_.._ ._._____._. Alexander F. Jones_._....._. Edward T. Folliard_........ Frank Dennis: J... William V. Nessly..__-----. Christine Sadler_.__.....____ Barnet Nover______ Ernest K. Lindley Merlo J. Pusey... .--.-.-ci.. HuB. Bliston_...-...cncuuna Jerry Klutte 0 oan. Robert ‘Albright..........-.. John J. W. Riseling_.__.___._. Ben'W.Gilbert. ..._........ Malvina Lindsay... _._....___ Mary: Spargoiic.....cnninnaan James E. Chinn_..._........ Marie S. MeNair_.__._____. Margaret Davis. .....ccaaeae Alfred Friendly. _______.___. Samuel E. Stavisky..__._._._. ‘Winifred B. Nelson____..___. John A. Singerhoff._________ Marshall Andrews. ......._. Alan. Barthdoll boo anaini Eleanor Patterson___._..__.. Michael W. Flynn._____.___. Frank C. Waldrop... Alva Brewer. 0... o.oo... Frank Smithiic. Helen Essary === Betty Hynes. ic. ceauanaus-= 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 1043 National Press Bldg. 2400 California St. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania A ve. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101. Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. Post Bldg. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. -Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office ‘Washington Times-Herald—Continued.... Waterbury (Conn.) American (m.,e.)_--.. ‘Waterloo (Iowa) Daily Courier (€.)._....-. Waterville (Maine) Sentinel (m.)..__._.._.-Westchester County Newspapers. _...... J ‘Wheeling Intelligencer (m.) o.oo... ‘Wichita (Kans.) Beacon. __..______.__._.... ‘Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News im), 8 ‘Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times (e.) -_-----Wilmington (N. C.) Evening Post._____._ Wilmington (N. C. ) Star-News (m., e.)..__ ‘Winnipeg Free Press. __ _.___ Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel (m,, 6. 2). Women’s Wear Daily (m.).._.: ooo. Worcester (Mass.) Gazette. .oocoococooo-- Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator (e.)_...-_._ Zanesville (Ohio) News (8.) ccc coco HOUSE G. E. Tankersley._._...___.__ Wilson Li; Scotti. li... mii. Austine Cassini_____________ James Walter... >... Jack 'Kassewitz____.......... BiG Harter. so... s5uiisite. Bert: Wissmans iio coi John Dean She Gam Ray Heleesen... o.oonun Tyrrel Krum Lo 120 20 Richard: J. Smiths... to. i: Spence Drummond. ________ Charles G. Dufly. ~~ © = -B. J. 0Callaghan= 7! 7 Mason Peters aio foie George W., Hurd.t.-....... KatchenSmith..___.. =~. Balkley Griffin. (i. 0... Ralph Young... ci.loo is Elisabeth -May Craig______.. James. Bufler =... .__.. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith__ Betsy Jager_____.____ Edward Jamieson.____ » Bascom N. Timmons. . = Howard: Suttle. ....-ocic-ves William R. Clarke_______.__ Robert A. Erwin_._._____... Harry E. Resseguie......... PhyRisPish, o>.2--= Bulkley Griffin _____._..____. Isabel Kinnear Griffin.____.. Mary Alice Eades .___.__ ___ Arwood J. Ruttenber....._.. Edward Jamieson_._._.__.__ Audrey Dillman. .=--t_...- PRESS GALLERY 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1317-1321 H St. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1758 Q St. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1383 National Press Bldg. 1650 Harvard St. 1526-41st St. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1048 Earle Bldg. 1048 Earle Bldg. 1254 National Poss Bldg. 411 Albee B 1048 Earle Ble. 1048 Earle Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 501 Union Trust Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1215 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 1255 National Press Bldg. 2628 Wayne St. South, Arling- ton, Va. William J. Donaldson, Jr., superintendent, 3730 Brandywine Street. Anthony P. Demma, 4811 South Dakota Avenue NE., and Floyd Artrip, 206 Twentieth Street NE., 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. 754 ; 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 XXXV of the House of Represent-atives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule IV for the regulation of the Senate Wing of the Capitol; and shall state in writing the names of all newspapers or publications or news associations by which they are employed, and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any; and they shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims pending before Congress or the departments, and will not become so engaged while allowed admission to the galleries; that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department of the Government, or by any foreign Government or any representative thereof; and that they are not employed, directly or indirectly, by any stock exchange, board of trade, or other organiza-tion, or member thereof, or brokerage house, or broker, engaged in the buying and selling of any security or commodity or by any person or corporation having legislation before Congress, and will not become so engaged while retaining mem-bership in the galleries. Holders of visitor’s cards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to the restrictions of this rule. 2. The applications required by the above rule shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the standing committee of correspondents who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide corre-spondents of reputable standing in their business, who represent daily news-papers or newspaper associations requiring telegraphic service; and it shall be the duty of the standing committee at their discretion, to report violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker, or to the Senate Committee on Rules, and pending action thereon the offending may be suspended. correspondent 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 SamueL W. Bern, Chairman Joan L. CurtER, Secretary BurLkLEY GRIFFIN WirrLiaMm KNIGHTON ELizaBeTH MAY CRAIG | WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION (Press Room, White House. Phone, REpublic 2121) MEMBERS REPRESENTED The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other Name Abbott, Eugene Li____________ *Alley, C. Bd. i ian.la Brenner, Robert. ............ *Brockhurst, Robert H_______ *Brown, J.C. oi Cancellare, Frank ____________ Carpenter, Marion_____._____. *Chaplis, William C__________ *Chinn, Augustus C__....__._ *Clover, Robert M___.___.._._. Cole; Tred Oi i. Ligh Corte, Charles... LC I *Danor, George... ...... i... *Denton, Robert H._..______. *Desfor, Max... 00. bia. *Dibble, Allen .. C.._....... *DiJoseph, John M___ *Dorsey, George M__ *Edwards, Nelson ._._._______ *Erickson, Erland E_________ Fine, Nate ER SN *Poster, Bert... * Freier, Millon: _o.o.oao. *Qarvey, Jorn H_.._._ _.._ *QGaylin, George R___._..__.. *QGeorges, Harvey Qlick, Teonard H_. ........... Golkoski, Bernard A ___.___.. *Goodwin, Harry E__________ *QGraham, George Li. _________ *QGreenberg, Hyman__..__.___ *Griffin, Henty..........-- oo -| Representing— Associnted Press. 0 ginecoo Sod ue Harris &.Bwing. ...... ood. isominias Pathe News, i Ihe. ouiooiulidaalig. Washington Evening Star Paramount News International News Photos... ___..._____ Associated Press Photos... oo... eance ree ‘Washington Evening Star. International News Photos _.oc_ocococeeeo M-G-M News of the Day. o_o... Acme Newspictures, Inc... _._..___. International News Photos SEILER pony A IS Associated Press. oo, oil aon no... Washington Evening Star... _.._._ Associated Press Photos... ____._. Harris: & Ewing isi coir © oolonaoe ii Acme Newspictures, Ine... ..... concn... Washington Pesto ri 20). ool... Paramount News Reni News Photos Pathe News, Inc Associated. Press 8 aT Washington Times-Herald as anni see Associntod Press. i... ic. earn ibecinenatas Acme Newspictures, INC. occoomeoon Fox Movietonews, ..% Imié............_.___.._ Acme Newspictures, In¢. _ --cccoeoeeee Associated Presse 0 CL ui Nue Washington Times-Herald _-.--o_...___._.. Washington Times-Herald Woshington Post... acieian Universal Newsreel, Inc_ ooo Departmentof Interior... _-..--_--___._ Associated Presfe.... cee ee nanan an mms Associated Press. i mak nthe el lL Shea: Life Magazine, Times, Inc Harris & Ewing. i. es emcee Harris & Ewing___ -| Wide World _~ 0 = Photos... Paramotnt INOWS. ci intone wie enemies mam ladies with them] Residence 8300 Oakford Pl., Silver Spring, Md. Apt. Bl, Fairlington, 4810 South 99th St., Arlington, 8005 Eastern Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 1511 Virginia Ave. NE. 1918 35th St. 18 Lone Oak Dr., Bethesda, 605 Times-Herald Bldg. 4842 1st St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 755 Silver Spring Ave. Silver Spring, Md. 4306 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. 3601 Connecticut Ave. 1361 Fairmont St. 1608 23d St. SE. 3516 28th St. NE. 3606 3d St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 2331 40th St. 2009 Osborn Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1203 Euclid St. 212 O St. SW. 1332 Locust Rd. 3802 South Capitol St. 2114 16th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 1739 Allison St. NE. 1359 Kalmia Rd. 3054 Arunah Ave., Balti- more, 1107 Trenton Pl. NE. 3509 Minnesota Ave. SE. 2245 North Harrison St., Arlington, Va. 2624 29th St. SE. 6313 Sligo Parkway, Green Meadows, Md. 1512 Montana Ave. NE. 3000 Lee Highway, Arling- ton, Va. 1825 New Hampshire Ave. 24 Todd Pl. NE 3617 S St. Commodore Hotel. 5031 7th Pi. 16-B Ridge Rd., Greenbelt, Md 2582 Druid Park Dr., Balti- more, Md. 1727 ie iisehts Ave. 3107 Wooayna Drive. 2900P S 8504 AR St., Bethesda, 1506 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md. 755 *Kany, Howard L *Kelley, Thomas W Klemm, William O *Lanigan, Maurice F *Lyons, James E *Mack, Charles J *May, Andrew J *McAvoy, Thomas D *McNamara, James Mertz, Howard E Miller, Aaron S_._.....__.._. O’Holloran, Thomas J Osborne, Madeleine *Payne, William Berkley *Pridgeon, Irwin Rohland, Henry *Rollins, Byron H *Routt, Francis R *Routt, Randolph J *Schmick, Paul M *Scott, Arthur E *Skadding, George R ith, WeJEiioilcol. eo *Thompson, F. Irving Thompson, ‘George *Thompson, John S Tugander, Harry *Van Tine, Harry M *White, Herbert K *Wilkinson, F. Clyde *Willoner, Andrew *Wilson, Woodrow R Woodsum, C.R Congressional Directory MEMBERS REPRESENTED—Continued Representing— Associated Press Washington Post... Cau ccri cmt omnmanmemanars Washington’ Post. Ls i 0 vse aaac Sao 50 Acme Newspictures, Inc. Universal Newsreel, Inc___. M-G-M News of the Day Haris ® Bwing. LoL 23000 ‘Washington Times-Herald.-____.________.____ ‘Washington Daily News___.______.________..__ Washington Post ta abun oan iioiai only Fox Movictonews, Ine... .....u.ooterevimnzos ‘Washington Evening Star__._________________ Acme Newspictures, Inc Fox Movietonews, Inc Paramount News Harriss Bwingo-Coo 00 7 oh Agricultural Department... ....... Washington Times-Herald M-G-M News of the Day Washington Evening Star__.__________._____ Washington Post. uo fini aio og. Wide World Photos... coin ilies Associated Press oo ooo. ___ Photos_____._ ‘Washington Evening Star___________________ Washington Evening Star______.____________ Washington Evening Star________________.___ International News Photos... ._..___._____ Life Magazine, Time, Inc Wide World Photos. _ccuuicivimanni. i International News Photos Washington Daily News Acme Newspictures, Inc. ___________________ Fox Movietonews, Inc. __ o_o ooo.o_._ Washington Times-Herald___._.__________.___ Universal Newsreel, Inc... .._._....___. International News Photos... ..__._...____ Associated Press... cel nvnmgiSoi. ‘Washington Times-Herald__________..______ Pathe News, INC... eras tran tae res esate ‘Washington Times-Herald War Department... .. ool sovaldgdigst Acme Newspictures, Inc Residence 3200 Circle Hill Rd., Alexan-ria, Va. 906 Garland St., Takoma Park, Md. 2949 Mills Ave. NE. 1220 Allison St. NE. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 7816 Aberdeen Rd., Bradley Woods, Bethesda, Md. 4021 7th St. NE. 1903 37th St. 3306 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Va. 10210 Pierce Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1306 Rhode Island Ave. 601 Park Rd. 4409 Yuma St. 1518 K St. 635 Farragut St. R.F.D. 1, Lanham, Md. 2132 R St. 1943 39th St. 19 Seaton Pl. NE. 1476 Newton St. 1639 Fort Davis St. SE. 1005 New Jersey Ave. 6147 30th St. 2953 Tilden St. 4421 Butterworth Pl. 3500 14th St. 1015 Flower Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 303 Lexington Drive, Wood-moore, Silver Spring Md. 6323 Luzon Ave. 4221 50 St. North, Arling- ton 2816 McKinley PL 4513 17th St. NE. 6002 32d St. 1128 13 St. South, Arling- n, 1901 Toth St. 200 Rhode Island Ave. NE. 9909 Rogart Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Commodore Hotel. 1527 Park Rd. 4644 Tilden St. 3030 North Quincy St., Arlington, Va 2424 39th St. 4415 49th St. 3022 K St. S 3031 30th St. SE. News Photographers’ Association 757 | SERVICES REPRESENTED | Service Name Office STILL PICTURE SERVICE Acme Newspictures, Inc. __.._cooooo__- George R. Gaylin, manager. ..___. 1013 13th St. Andrew Munich, assistant man-| 1013 13th St. ager. : ; : Maurice F. Lanigan.........._..-_ 1013 13th St. Charles Corte 127... 0... oaeaae 1013 13th St. Frank Cancellare_ _______________. 1013 13th St. : Milton Freier_-_____ ----| 1013 13th St. CoRR Woodson oo oa 1013 13th St. John S. Thompson... ...-e.-iian = 1013 13th St. Associated Press Photos. cccooooooeooo Howard L. Kany, manager_....-- 330 Star Bldg. Bert Foster, assistant manager.___ 330 Star Bldg. Herbert K. White. =... 330 Star Bldg. Guy D. Bowman 330 Star Bldg. JohnH. Rouseii. ......ccbiio.” 330 Star Bldg. Harvey Georges.........i-ia.isii. 330 Star Bldg. Eugene'l.. Abbott. zo ch ioiaslod 330 Star Bldg. William C. Chaplis 330 Star Bldg. Erland E. Erickson 330 Star Bldg. Henry Griffin____ 330 Star Bldg. Frank!Maegio. ii Jn oqo 330 Star Bldg. James McNamara Robert Hale_ ____ 330 Star Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. Harpist WING. osnameolin mi Andrew J. May, manager.._._.._.. 1313 F St. CrEd Alley. ii. 0. cindanninn. 1313 F St. George W. Harpls. =o....:. 1313 F St. Fred 0. Cole. :..co.oiciicinnaze 1313 F St. Thomas.J. O’Holloran.. ._-...._._ 1313 F St. International News Photos--..__.__._.___ Walter N. Jacobus. =.-~ =. Harry M. Van Tine, manager_____ F. Irving Thompson, assistant 1313 F St 1317-1321 H St.1317-1321 H St. manager. Arthur B. Seott.-ooo oacaian tiie Walter Bordas.___ 1317-1321 H: St. 1317-1321 H St. Robert H. Brockhurst_____.___.__. 1317-1321 H St. Marion Carpenter... 5... .. 7" 57 1317-1321 H St. Life Magazine, Time, Inc_ __________... Jack Beardwood, manager___.____. 815 15th St. Thomas D. MCAVOY-.-occ George R. Skadding_ _ _ .....______ 815 15th St. 815 15th St. Marie Hansen____ 815 15th St. Wide World: Photos: .ceeaiveime eae Joseph D. Jamieson, manager. .... 330 Star Bldg. Byron H. Rollins 330 Star Bldg. William J. Smith 330 Star Bldg. NEWSREEL SERVICE Fox Movietonews, Inc _ _ ooo. Anthony Muto, manager_____..___ 1518 K St. John A Tondra.. .-.: .ccicn icine 1518 K St. Patrick Moore. .. -.. i... ccinun. 1518 K St. ; JohnH. Garvey. oli naianaai. 1518 K St. M-G-M News ofthe Day._ _____...______ J. C.. Brown, manager............- 1005 New Jersey Ave. Charles. Mack. caviaeenaaeae- 1005 New Jersey Ave. Charles S. Peden. 2... ........ 1005 New Jersey Ave. Poramount NewS. cove nicdinmnnmanans Robert H. Denton, manager. ____. 306 H St. Hugo C.Johnon.. oo . 306 H St Alfred J. Qleth i oii. Coa 306 H St Nelson Edwards... i....... 306 H St. PatheiNows, Ine... oc bio dear. George M. Dorsey, manager... 705 Albee Bldg. Murray Alvey. coon nas 705 Albee Bldg. Andrew Willoner........-cncan... 705 Albee Bldg. Universal Newsreel, Inc... __.__._______ James E. Lyons, manager. ........ 1005 New Jersey Ave. Harry Tugander. .—--.ccciaenn.. 1005 New Jersey Ave. George L. Graham... cee eee ii 1005 New Jersey Ave. NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENT Washington Daily News... oo... Aaron S. VHller......cceeinnne -| 1013 13th St. George H. Thompson.._._. 1013 13th St. Washington: Post... va... Hugh Miller, manager... -| Post Bldg. Harry E. Goodwin____.____ -| Post Bldg. Thomas W. Kelleye............... Post Bldg. George Donor... ar in Post Bldg. William Q. Klemm................2 Post Bldg. Henry Rohland. po of, Post Bldg. Washington Evening Star _...___.____ Irwin Pridgeon, manager_.__...._. Star Bldg. John:C. Mueller. oe: Star Bldg. Francis RB. Boutt_.-.--co. -22 Star Bldg. Paul M.Schmigk........._.._.._. Star Bldg. Randolph. Boutt. : ... ooo Star Bldg. Augustus'C. Chinn... ..__..__- ‘Star Bldg. Elwood: Baker. il. i oid Star Bldg. Star Bldg. 758 Congressional Directory SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Service Name Office NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENT—Con. Washington Times-Herald_ _____________ Steve Kellogg, manager___________ 1317-1321 H St. Leonard. H-Gliek.-: .-....__.-1317-1321 H St. William Berkley Payne._____..__. 1317-1321 H St. Howard BE. Mertz ................ 1317-1321 H St. Jack Willson ~~ ue Loo oo 1317-1321 H St. BF A TT EE i SC ee 1317-1321 H St. F. Clyde Wilkinson............... 1317-1321 H St. Nate Tine. oo x= i i snayii was 1317-1321 H St. Bernard Golkoski. -__._--:._..:2. 1317-1321 H St. OFFICERS OF THE WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION F. Irvine THOMPSON, Fresident ALFRED J. O’ETH, Vice President GeorGE R. Skapbineg, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee CHARLES J. MACK James E. Lyons JosErE D. JAMIESON GeorGE R. GAayLIN RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES ] MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [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] S| i Name Representing— | Residence | 4 *Agronsky, Martin___________ American Broadcasting Co__._____.__.__.____ 3124 Woodley Dr. * Alken Lonige. oi. iot cows WINX; Washinetoh, = 0 J od Francis Scott Key Apts. *Allen, CHfE.... conzl. : Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ Hunters Mill Rd., Box 207, Route 2, Vienna, Va. Allen; Jeans oc. 05 ve siren] American Broadcasting Co... ____________._ 1112 16th St. *Austad, Mark... ...-..... WWDC, Washingtono20 oo Lo. 3200 16th St. *Back, J. Gunnar_____..__.___ Columbia Broadcasting System ___________ 8 oeonivk Rd., Alexan-eria, Va. *Baukhage, H.R... ._.:..-__. American Broadcasting Co... ___._.________ 1735 New Hampshire Ave. *Beatty, Morgan. .._...._____ National Broadcasting Co Burnt Mills Hills, Silver Spring, Md. Berl] Tack i er ae WIZ, : New York Spee Sri adoil+ Di _| 4801 Quebec St. Bennett, Raine... .......] National Broadcasting Co 2139 R St. *Bjornson, Bjorn... National Broadcasting Co 89 Hawaii Ave. NE. Block, Eleanor Frances... _ Stonehouse News Agency... ..._.._....__. 400 Gallatin St. sBlock, Rudolph... -..._..... KIRO, Seattle, L.ohiiyives initonnapenmns 1736 G St. Brinkley, David... .....c..... National Broadcasting Co__________........ 2800 Woodley Rd. “Brote Lon. oral Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ 1347 Bryant St. NE. *Brown, Charles D.....__._.. Transradio Press Service... _._-_..... 1333 Columbia Rd. Buchalter, Helen____.________. American Broadcasting Co.________.________ 1709 H St. ST Ed TS ie lend Silmi h Columbia Broadcasting System_____.________ 4715 Dover Rd. Cavanaugh, Mary Kay______ National Broadcasting Co______.___.._.._.._. 3100 Connecticut Ave. *Coffin, Tristram_....._.-.-.. Columbia Broadcasting System____.________ Gi oan Court, Silver rin ; Corrick, Ann.M,. _............. Transradio Press Service. ______.____________ 3821 Ww St. SE *Costello, William............. Columbia Broadcasting System___._________ 2032 North Stafford St., Ar lington, Va. *Darby, Edwin W____________ Transradio Press Service ~~.» ___.. 3516 Runnymede Pl. *Davig, Elmer: oo... acco American Broadcasting Co__________________ 1661 Crescent Pl. Davis, Gene B_.._-oo... Transradio Press Service _______________.___| 3905 24th St. NE. Dayton, Helen. .........-.._. Stonehouse News Agency... o-oo... 306 North Nelson §8t., Arlington, Va deGattegno, Marie .__.___.___. French News Agency... .o-oeeoomn.-1421 Massachusetts Ave. *Dennis, Albert N___________ Columbia Broadcasting System_____.________ 34 New York Ave. NE. Dobinsky, Peter James____.__ Associated Press Radio...i ...1 1738 19th St. Dwyer;Jomm P.-C WMAL—The Evening Star Station._______ The Franklin Park. sEaton,Richard.....-....--=-Mutual Broadcasting System _ ______________ 2900 Tilden St. Bek, Peg. ..... i. -—_.| WMAL—The Evening Star Station____.__.__ 1112 16th St. Sg John K__ _.| American Broadcasting Co 4627 34th St. Edwards, John... ...... WMAL—The Evening Star Station___ _| 17386 K St. Bid, Tell. ion ot National Broadcasting Co____._.____.. -| 1112 16th St. *Evans, Willis H. (Robert)_..| Columbia Broadcasting System 4024 Loroom Lane, Arling-ton, Va. . *Fanning, Wallace R., Jr_.___ ‘Transradio Press'Service.........._........ Ravenwood, Falls Church, Va. Ferriss Jean. — wl ee Si. 000 WBOW, Terre Haute, Ind.; WGBF-| 1919 19th St. WEOA, Evansville, Ind. *Fleisher, Wilfrid. ________.____ WHAS, Louisville, Ky.; American Broad-| 2320 Tracey Pl. casting Co. Folger, William M___________ National Broadeasting Co______oo ._____ 3126 Ellicott St. *Goad, BEX. Li seciisn-an Transradio Press Service... __._____._________ nr Prince St., Alexandria, . : 3 \ | | | | | i R | | | i | | 3 i ( b h | i 4 | | | | | | ! : A id | | | | 4 | *Godwin, Tarlo... cccusmi Earl Godwin Radio Associates. ____________. 1712 N St. *Gold, Willlam E._........-.. WE Tay a Re I 3647 Minnesota Ave. SE. Goodman, Julian... National Broadeasting Co... ooo... 3209 Adams Mill Rd. *Graham, Gordon. ....... = Radio Washington: =. _ 2 ioe it OL 3441 North Glebe Rd. Grauel;Hugh M — .......... Stonehouse News Agency... ooo. 3000 39th St. Gudridge, Beatrice M___..__ _| Columbia Broadcasting System.____________ 2231 California St. *Harkness, Richard_._._.__.____ National Broadeasting Co.............._.... 3002 P St. Harmon, Mary C......c.... Transradio Press Service...0. ____ 1810 Calvert St. *Harsh, Joseph OC. _........._ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ 2808 N St. *Heonle, BAY. .....0.cucu -ngntne Aneto Broadeasing Co., West Virginia | 3434 Oakwood Terrace. etwor *Henry, William M_.__.______ Columbia Broadcasting System.___._________ 2480 16th St. *Heslep, Charter......2.-.-.20 Mutual Broadcasting System... _______._____ 1906 Hanover St., Silver Spring, Md. Hillman, Willism............ Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ 1701 Massachusetts Ave. *Hoffman, Frederick S__.___. WWDC, Washington... oo aan cao th 3522 Whitehaven Parkway. Holloway, Dorothy. ._........ TransradioPressServiee....-...........oeeu-1516 16th Rd. North, Ar-lington, Va. *RKeller, Cassius M........... National Broadeasting:iCou occ aia 1524 Varnum St. *Kingsbury, GQ. W......-..-... WLW, Cineinnati,;Ohio._ toc coz fe Vo 337 Munsey Bldg. 759 p | J A i i | } 3 Congressional Directory MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Representing— Residence Kompanek, Veronica_________ *Leitch, Albert O_.__._______ Lersch, Betty. Lesser, Nancy. Lesueur, Lawrence (Larry)..__ *Lewis, Fulton, Jr... *Longmire, Carey LATA To *McAndrew, William R______ McBride, Robert *McCafiery, Joseph F___.____ *McCormick, Robert K______ *Mclver, Ernest D., Jr_______ McLean, Charles C__....____ MacFarlane, Louise A_.____._ *Mahoney, Claude A________._ Marble, Joan: oi ioe ivan. *Marder, George J... _.._._. Mechling;, Tom... iin. cio. *Moore, Robert E. Lee.._.._. *Morgan, Thomas. ..-2----... *Morrison, Fred W__________. Nawroeki, Ela......o-o-0.. *Neel, William Osgood, Naney....c..o.iaa.. *Paige, Jack 8. if. ouieatn. *Pope, Loren B................. *Purcell, John: KK... ooo. *Rash, Bryson B........z50.. *Reed, Maeon, Jr. ....-...... *Reed, W. 3Repaid, Billy. ....... .....: *Shoemaker, Milton._________ Simpson, James S_.______..__ *Smith, Carleton D.__.._.____ Stonehouse, Merlin F._._.___ Strum, Millicent. ic. ooai.. *Sulds, IrvimP a. cine... *Swing, Raymond ___._.. -| Tomlinson, Edward *|Torbett, Joe H____________. *Tully, Francis W., Jr. (Pete). *Warner, Albert L Wason, Betty... oe. ‘Whiteside, Hugh__________.__ *Wills, David H *Wood, Robert S..0. 2c... ‘Woodfield, Maxine _._..._._._. ‘Woods, Marjorie Binford.-.._. *Worcester, Charles A ‘Wren, Micajah. .___._.___..__. Young, Amelia Belle_________ Associated Press _.._._._.. Radio. ___ __ American Broadcasting Co__________________ Transradio Press Service..._.. WWDC, Washington_____._______ Columbia Broadcasting System _.___.....__. Mutual Broadcasting System. ______________ WHAS, Louisville, Ky... eens National Broadcasting Co... ... ooo... Stonehouse News Agency Columbia Broadcasting System _._...________ National Broadcasting Co. ooo. Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ Radio Washington, Too coro Ee , Baltimore, Associated Broadcasting CUE EY Sue ene Ol Rb dg. Columbia Broadcasting System_.____._____._ United Press Radios... ti con. ci zin United Press Radio. oaocn i rd WINX, Washington. oc oc .oet enim Transradio Press Service. occ coeccmmeeae ‘Washington Reporters, Ine____________ WMAL—The Evening Star Station__ | National Broadcasting Co... occa. Mututal Broadcasting System ______________ Mutual Broadcasting System____.__..__..._ WMAL—The Evening Star Station. ________ WMAL, The Evening Star Station_______._ Mutual Broadcasting System ____________.__ WWDC, Washington Ee of TT i et WINX National Broadcasting Co.________.________. Stonehouse News Ageney.-----ooooovomao. Transradio Press Service... cocoa. Mutual Broadeasting Commence American Broadcasting Co.. National Broadcasting Co___ Associated Press Radio. -ooo. WMAL—The Evening Star Station__.______ Mutual Broadcasting System ___________.__ ‘Washington Reporters, Inc. _____.______ Mutual Broadcasting System. ______________ WINX, Washiegton .... i... cui nisi mis amb WINX, WashINZEON i. otc mwrt@r mm rb ss = American Broadcasting Co_____________...__ Columbia Broadeasting System______.___.__ Mutual Broadcasting System_______________ WIRE 3 or La MERE sree i 1515 North Adams St., Arlington, Va. 1300 Maine Ave. SW. 1914 G St. 2622 13th St. ,The Raleigh. “4402 Volta PL 6534 Ridgewood Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. 4315 18th St. NE. 3008 Tennyson St. 2901 18th St. 7556 Bradley Blvd., Bethes-da, Md. 1530 16th St. The Occidental. 225 West Monument St., Baltimore, Md. : 225 West Monument St., Baltimore, Md. 1829 Summit Pl. 3110 Mount Pleasant St. 1002 Mississippi St. SE. 4326 Davenport St. 311 Cameron St., Alexan-dria, Va. The Mayflower. Nd D. 2, Silver Spring, d. 1807 19th St. 4431 Nun 15th St. Arling-ton 3901 i ed St. 2000F S t. Falls Church, Va. 246 North Barton St., Art-lington, Va. 3101 45th St. 1620 P St. 503 East Thornapple St. 416 Jogn St., Chevy Chase, Md. 1419 Rhode Island Ave. 1126 South Thomas St., Arlington, Va. ; Lg Sts Hyattsville, 310 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. Falls Church, Va. 404 Shepherd St., Chevy Chase, Md. 2926 Tennyson St. Marlyn Apartments. 1516 16th Rd. North, Ar- lington, Va. 2032 Belmont Rd. 1613 19th St. The Wardman Park. 4631 Hunt Ave., Chevy ase, Md. 4403 14th St. 1500 South Barton St., Arling-ton, Va. 2364 Skyland Pl. 3320 Wha Ave. R. F.D. 1, Haymarket, Va. 1214 S . 1616 Longfellow St. Aldie, Va. 1633 16th St. 3620 16th St. 5415 15th Pl., Hyattsville, Md. 2032 Belmont Rd. Radio Galleries 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 American Broadcasting Co___.__._.._______ Martin Agronsky 724 14th St. JeamAVen. | 724 11th 8§. H.R.;Baukhage.... ....... 1107 I St. Helen Buchalter. .~--|:1613 19th;St. Elmer Davis... =x... ....;.. 724 14th St. John R. Edmunds. _________ 724 14th St. ‘Wilfrid Fleisher... __._. 853 Earle Bldg. Ray Henle...cons 425 Colorado io. Bldg. Albert:Leiteh............... 724 14th St. Raymond Swing. ___________| 1613 19th St. David. Wills... ......-724 14th St. Associated Broadcasting System___________ Ian Ross MacFarlane.______ 1000 Connecticut Ave. Associated Press Radio... o_o. __. Peter James Dobinsky.___.__ 409 Star Bldg. Veronica Kompanek ____.___ 409 Star Bldg. Joe. H. Borbett... o-oo 409 Star Bldg. Micajah Wren.............. 409 Star Bldg. Columbia Broadcasting System___________ Cliff Allen 853 Earle Bldg. 853 Earle Bldg. 857 Earle Bldg. Pristram Coffin...5. 853 Earle Bldg. William Costello. ________ 853 Earle Bldg. Albert N. Dennis_._..._____ 853 Earle Bldg. Willis H. (Robert) Evans___ 853 Earle Bldg. Beatrice Gudridge 853 Earle Bldg. Joseph:C. Harsh... -....... 857 Earle Bldg. Blll'Menry> a 10-7 — = 0% 853 Earle Bldg. Lawrence (Larry) Lesueur. _ 853 Earle Bldg. Claude Mahoney .____._._.... 853 Earle Bldg. Jos. F. McCafory bsg m a 853 Earle Bldg. Ernest D. McIver, Jr 853 Earle Bldg. Willard Shadel__..______.__ 857 Earle Bldg. Robert S. Wood______. 856 Earle Bldg. Charles A. Worcester 606 Earle Bldg. Amelia Belle Young.__._____ 857 Earle Bldg. Earl Godwin Radio Associates .___._....__ Earl Godwin 414 Bond Bldg. French News Agency... occa Marie de Gattegno_________. 1416 F St. KIBO 8eattlos © i coo. ae Rudolph Block: ......._.._. 00 Saional Press Bldg. Mutual Broadcasting System_______._______ Lou Brott 1627 2900 Nileon St. Charter Heslep_ _..____.__.. 712 Jackson Pl. William Hillman 601 13th St. Fulton Lewis, Jr... ...__.._ 1627 K St. Fred W, Morrison. ...._..__. Jack Su: Paigeci i. cL. 0000 TorenaB; Pope... oi Macon Reed, Jr Billy Repaid. Ts oe IrvinP.Sulds:. C. Russell Turner, Jr Albert L. Warner National Broadcasting Co_______.___._____ Morgan Beatty 724 14th St. Raine Bennett: + .:f 724 St. ii. 14th Bjorn Bjornson. _.__.________ 724 14th St. David Brinkley 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. Leo M. Folger____ 724 14th St. Julian Goodman’... __. 724 14th St. Richard Harkness___.__.___. 724 14th St. Cassius M.. Keller__ ____.__.__ 724 14th St. William R. McAndrew 724 14th St. Robert K. McCormick nts 724 14th St. Naney Osgood...= 724 14th St. WalterJ. Royen............ 724 14th St. Corleton D. Smith. ........ 724 14th St. Edward Tomlinson 724 14th St. Radio Washington : Gordon Graham...-__ 1124 Vermont Ave. Charles C. McLean ___.______ 1124 Vermont Ave. Stonehouse News Agency Eleanor Frances Block_._____ 623 RKO, Albee Bldg. Helen Dayton... ........=.. 623 RKO, Albee Bldg. Hugh M. Grauel 623 RKO, Albee Bldg. Robert McBride ........... 623 RKO, Albee Bldg. Merlin F. Stonehouse, __.___ 623 RKO, Albee Bldg. Transradio Press Service Charles:D. Brown... ....... 1258 National Press Bldg. AnniM. Corrick.-........ 1258 National Press Bldg. Edwin W. Darby 1258 National Press Bldg. Gene: B:. Davis... .._..1... 1258 National Press Bldg. Wallace R. Fanning, Jr_ __._ 1258 National Press Bldg. Rex Goad... 1258 National Press Bldg. Mary C. Harmon. ..__.._-_ 1258 National Press Bldg. Dorothy Holloway... 1258 National Press Bldg. 762 Congressional Directory NETWORKS, STATIONS, AND SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Network, station, or service Name Office Transradio Press Service—Continued_____ Betty Lorselv... 0... F 1258 National Press Bldg. Robert E. Lee Moore.._____ 1258 National Press Bldg. RobertiRodos. = ~~... 1258 National Press Bldg. Millicent-Strum...._...c.... 1258 National Press Bldg. United Press Radio. oo... ccaciciass GeorgeJ. Marder___..___... National Press Bldg. Joan™arble. a0 National Press Bldg. Washington Reporters, Inc Francis W. (Pete) Tully, Jr. 1397 National Press Bldg. ‘West Virginia Network ______________._____ Ray Henle: 4 a 425 Colorado Bldg. WGBF, WEOA, Evansville, Ind; Jean Ferriss... ol. .oo 815 15th St. WBOW, Terra Haute, Ind. WHAS, Louisville, Ky Carey Longmire..._________. 853 Earle Bldg. Wilfrid Fleisher 853 Earle Bldg. Washington Post Bldg. Gouis Afren o>"; = oF Washington Post Bldg. ‘Port Mlechling. coro Washington Post Bldg. Penis Sarton coors oorcs Washington Post Bldg. Washington Post Bldg. Betty Wasson... i.....cc..... 8th and I Sts. Hugh Whiteside. __________ Washington Post Bldg. WIRE, Indianapolis, Ind... ..._....:... Marjorie Binford Woods_._-_ 1397 National Press Bldg. WITH, Baltimore... 5.0 i iasaaaanais Ian Ross MacFarlane....__._ 7 LL Lexington St., Baltimore, Louise A. MacFarlane. _.___ 7 East Lexington St., Baltimore, Md WJZ, New York hs odo oo iaiasaias, Jack Beall o.oo as 724 14th St. WLW, Cinelomatl. Jou 0... ol G. W. Kingsbury 337 Munsey Bldg. WMAL—The Evening Star Station William Neel. ____ -| 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. Bryson:B: Rash............. 724 14th St. BiECravige yo 724 14th St. . Thomas P. Morgan_________ The Mayflower. Mark Austad 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. Nancy Lesser... ............ 1000 Connecticut Ave. ‘W. Norman Reed. _______._. 1000 Connecticut Ave. James S. Simpson 1000 Connecticut Ave. Ela Nawrocki 1397 National Press Bldg. SENATE RADIO GALLERY D. Harold McGrath, superintendent, 3533 East Capitol Street. Robert C. Hough,! assistant, 428 Pershin g Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Hardy W. Croxton, assistant, 2415 18th i. 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. 1 On leave of absence during service in the armed forces of the United States. Radio Galleries 763 RULES GOVERNING RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Radio Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXYV of the House of Represent-atives, as amended, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by rule IV, as amended, for the regulation of the Senate wing of the Capitol. Applicants shall state in writing the names of all radio stations, systems, or news-gathering organizations by which they are employed and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any. Applicants shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims or the promotion of legislation pending before Congress, the Departments, or the independent agencies, and that they will not become so employed without resigning from the galleries. They shall further declare that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department or independent agency of the Government, or by any foreign govern-ment or representative thereof; that they are not engaged in any lobbying activ-ities; that they do not and will not, directly or indirectly, furnish special informa-tion to any organization, individual, or group of individuals for the influencing of prices on any commodity or stock exchange; that they will not do so during the time they retain membership in the galleries. Holders of visitors’ cards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to all the restrictions of this paragraph. 2. It shall be prerequisite to membership that the radio station, system, or news-gathering agency which the applicant represents shall certify in writing to the Radio Correspondents’ Association that the applicant conforms to the regu-lations of paragraph 1. 3. The applications required by paragraph 1 shall be authenticated in a 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 bona fide news gatherers and/or reporters of reputable standing in their business who represent radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies engaged primarily in serving radio stations or systems. It shall be the duty of the executive com-mittee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association to report, at their discretion, violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker or to the Senate Com-mittee on Rules, and, pending action thereon, the offending individual may be suspended. 4. Persons engaged in other occupations, whose chief attention is not given to the gathering or reporting of news for radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies primarily serving radio stations or systems, shall not be entitled to admis-sion to the Radio Gallery. The Radio Correspondents’ List in the CONGRESSIONAL Directory shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to the gathering and reporting of news for radio stations and systems engaged in the daily dissemination of news, and of representatives of news-gathering agencies engaged in the daily service of news to such radio stations or systems. 5. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 6. The Radio Galleries shall be under the control of the executve committee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. Approved. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. Harry F. Byrp, Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ ASSOCIATION RicearD HarkNEss, Chairman Rex Goap, Vice Chairman Wirriam CosTELLO, Secretary ALBERT L. WARNER, Treasurer RupoLra Brock, Member at Large EArL GopwiN, Member ex officio PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION idea [The Name Adams, Ruthic. it rican t * Ansboro, David J., Jr_______ *Bafley, §. No. ai iiocer | *Bayless, Glen’... toc: | *Beal,; JohDR..oiiof | pio *Beatty, J. Frank. co 000. *Bjorkback, R. B._ ..ciits. . Blum, Dorothy....... 4.120: *Burton, Malcolm._______..___ *Carll, George S., Jr__.__.____ *Carter; A. N.cooaior cons? > Chamberlain, John Js zen: | *Cherry, Ralph L___.________ *Cipperl dom Cauca inary. | Clapper, Olive E._______..._. Clay, Vers.......classi. t2 Cochrane, Dorothy. __________ Cohen, Stanley E___._____.___ *Conlyy Robert... ..oc..00.. *CookpZenas Deouuiioonaiil Dibble, Allen... ..c. ..o-zoz25 Doying, George E., Jr________ *Elson, Robert 1... ic). Falco, Thomas-A... cc 722... *Fenimore, Watson___________ Field, Carter. ..L 0 Wilas Fitzmaurice, Walter__________ FitzSimmonds, Yoo, Irvin DD... _..... Gay, Mary... ...........0.2% Gaylor, Virginia______________ Hager, Alice Rogers.____.____ sHamilton, Stuart... ......_ *Hardy, Eugene J... __. *Hart, N. Key *Hershey Colin Scott... Howard, Norman. _______.____ Ives, Anna 3 SnSCAR CRNA L, SR Keiffer, Elaine: ican .....ococo Kimball, Virginia B_.________ *Kineajd Ted...)f 2.1 *Kreutzberg, Edgar C__. *Kruckman, Arnold... 5 *Lamm, Lynne M *Larkin, Richard N_________. Laudeman, William D_______ Levy, Jae oo Sa Lindley, Ernest KX... ... .. *Lockett, Edward B.________ *McGill, "George Weoosorioios-cs *McN aughton, Frank: .... *McNeil, Donald S___________ *Mackenzie, DERI Li *Maddox, William J__________ *Markham, Edgar. _______.____ sManry; M: 2 G.-C.Vie *Mehrtens, George W______.. *Mickel, Merlin H.__________ *Moffett, Le Wooo wer Montgomery, Gladys T'._.___ *Oliphant, HiIN.Ci02 aod Perry, Mary Pauline WEEE al 78349°—T79-2—1st * designates those whose wives accompany them] Representing— Office Ylfe o-oo. Coo aaah mea iT ab TO 815 15th St. Thelron Age. so Roodimali.. 1061 Press .........ocoo. National Bldg. Broadeassting.cc.: «cone rimialfiad ol 874 National Press Bldg. Newsweek: -. co = dRseasandy 1227 National Press Bldg. BATTER ee I a Ce Ee TL 815 15th St. Broadeasting. =. 0 ies sate 874 National Press Bldg. National Petroleum News. _______.________._ 1036 National Press Bldg. Tide: Magazine... ..........oxh sealisil.. 442 Munsey Bldg. Pood:Industries. oa lemeagald 1252 stint Press Bldg. Army and Navy Register___________________ 511 St. Engineering News-Record... __...c.._.. i252 National Press Bldg. 815 h St. Oil, Paint, and Drug Reporter________.______ 621 Albeo Bldg. Northwestern Miller... oli bir mgnt.. 713 19th St. Look: Magazine. . lsusiviloeualdmutt) 2101 Connecticut Ave. | Dia Newsweek... .. ._ -.-solagiiaesind 1227 National Press Bldg. i Look Magazine... 20ii ban 1104 852 National Press Bldg. _legsced [ Advertising Age. .oocioailcurd Conan. 995 National Press Bldg. Pathfinder... a... tural calialu ld | 1323 M St. 1323 M St. 1227 National Press Bldg. 1323 M St. Saturday Evening Post 2374 Massachusetts Ave. Collier’s Weekly__________ 601 13th St. TIME.core -op 13 missy 30 815 15th St. 1317 F St. 1252 National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 1252 XN tieaal Press Bldg. 1323 M St. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1227 National Press Bldg. 416 5th St. Business Weak. -= ero. rp 1252 National Press Bldg. IN OW SWRI. a A me noes eps 1227 National Press Bldg. Newsweek Til [uo Jal ani iil 1227 Press Bldg. Siammii National SA EI IT Vg Tl UM So Sm 0 Sn Sh Ge 810 National Press Bldg. 1252 National Press Bldg. 1061 National Press Bldg. Pathander Hse SEs sa LER SST URE Re 1323 M St. Yank. 1090 National Press Bldg. 1 1252 National Press Bldg. | 1036 National Press Bldg. | 1223 National Press Bldg. i 815 15th St. i 815 15th St. ] 1323 M St. | 870 National Press Bldg. | 1123 National Press Bldg. _| 1120 Vermont Ave. 956 National Press Bldg. _| 1252 National Press Bldg. 1036 National Press Bldg. 874 National Press Bldg. Ne Li National Press Bldg. 815 15th St. 4s Parle Bldg. Ti 815 15th St. 1323 vi St. 1092 National Press Bldg. 4230 Fessenden St. 1323 M St. McGraw-Hill Publications. ________________ 1252 National Press Bldg. Army and Navy Journal... ___._._..._... 1701 Connecticut Ave. Avistlon News... =. ca aah 1252 National Press Bldg. PRE TION ATC te coeed isprmeiirsbeso 1061 National Press Bldg. woah Electronics, Textile World) a 1252 National Press Bldg. ole I Toe BUG 0 Bg 1090 Press Bldg. RPI National Aviation News.t 0 got ildilio nine 1252 National Press Bldg. 765 ed. 766 Congressional Directory MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Representing— : Office *Purcell, John... 0.0.5. Ales Br SM al Ble Ri LFA 815 15th St. 3 2Ralph, Henry D.............. Oil and Gas Journal c.f iii irmaene 1224 National Press nara Bldg. *Richards, Robert K___.-___. Broadeasting =o 0) ooo Loo na 870 National Press Bldg. *Ross, Bred-K Cows omnis Army and-Navy Bulletim isu... oc 1049 Earle ial. Bldg. *Rowen, Hobart. ......._.__.. Newsweplts bo de toliy 2 2.5 Tans AZAR 1227 National Press Bldg. sSandifer, T. No... avccaccn-Penton Publications... --| 956 National Press Bldg. *Saunders, Richard E________ Architectural: Forum........o..Co. iia. 1275 National Press Bldg. Shaffer, Samuel... ©... NOWSWERK a ena 1227 National Press Bldg. *Shoenfeld, Jerome. __________ PinaneialWorld: oi oii rerio ooo ih 10 Independence Ave. *Slinkman, John... -....... Army Times = sili Til mans 1419 Irving St. Smith, Martha LeFevre.....J BRYWAYS. i iinrwanda 810 National Press Bldg. 20tavg, Harold CG. _........... Army Times: Ll ineanu A 1419 Irving St. Stephon, John D.__...._.<.... Trade Union Courier........ouneaen...o.%.__{ The Washington. *Stewart, Gilbert W., Jr______ Newsweek... ..... SLL BLE 1227 National Press cancel Bldg. *Stewart, John Duly... Pathfinder... cc. vue ndmswms iam imn sm boat 1323 M St. *Stone, John Bi ts.Li. Newsweek... C ceei loan STHIERNES 1227 National Press Bldg. *Stubblefield, Blaine. .__._.____ AVIBLION i ia eh nwa na Rw 1252 National Press Bldg. salt, Walter: J. o.000. 0... RollWay ns st 1081 National Press Age... ..ccnnecnnuinsnbinmsnit Bldg. Ss Paishoff, Sol...2c oil. Broadeasting. ._ 22200 SIN 0 a) JRE i 874 National Press il Bldg. *Tavenner, OC. i oi... RallWay aR BARE DOE 1081 National Press Bldg. B._J. Age... eared TerrelliJohn Uii =... NeWSWeRk. in isi rane SOL IRAE A NE SL 1227 National Press Bldg. *Vandergrift, Charles R__..___ Drug. Topics... 0 i Sea DES rib 1232 National Press Bldg. *Wecksler, A. N_L..o_.. oli. Conover-Mast Publications. _______.________ 1203 National Press Bldg. Weintal, Edward__ NOWAWOOR. = i ath sr RA TR 1227 National Press Bldg. *Werner, Steven L._ Pathfinder. Jos iuales 40 20S 00 L080) 1323 M St. *Westcott, Henry R., Jr_ Army and Navy Journal _______________. 1701 Connecticut Ave. *Whitman, LeRoy. .| Army and Navy Journal_ 1701 Connecticut Ave. *Wileox, UV. 0. American Banker_______ 1410 H St. Willier, Marian K__ Oil and Gas Journal___ 1224 National Press Bldg. *Willoughby, Jesse D Army and Navy Registe 511 11th St. ‘Wood, Robert H.___ Aviation News_______._. 1252 National Press Bldg. *Wooton, Paul _____ Chilton Publications__.___ -| 1007 National Press Bldg. *Yocom, Herbert A__.________ National Petroleum News_____ coo... 1036 National Press Bldg. 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 economic, industrial, technical, or trade character, published for profit and supported chiefly by adver-tising, and owned and operated independently of any industry, business, associa-tion, 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 corre-spondent 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 ConGgREssIONAL DIrEcTORY shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to such service for news periodicals Periodical Press Galleries 767 as described in rule 2, except that admission shall not be denied if his other work i such as to make him eligible to the Press Galleries or Radio Correspondents’ alleries. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 5. The Periodical Press Galleries shall be under the control of an executive committee elected by members of the Periodical Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Repre-sentatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. Harry F. Byrbp, Chairman, Senate Commatiee on Rules. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GiLBErRT W. STEWART, JR., Chairman RoseErT H. Woop, Secretary J. N. BaiLEY Frank McNAUGHTON LeRoy WHITMAN ELEANOR JAcoBsON, Executive Secretary 1007 National Press Building MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS Maps of Congressional Districts ALABAMA (9 districts) LAUDERDALE LIMESTONE | MADISON \ JACKSON 1 ; BE cov QS PERRY LONOKEWPRAIRIE a E 4 ASAT tze a =5b =Q SALINE & 2 & GARLAND [07] S ~~ SS.X SEVIER DALLAS CLEVELAND S :Q < Zo 7E4p|%ad I % LINCOLN DESHA gi oy >) N .OUACHITA DREW RIVER £3 BRADLEY CALHOUN SCALE -STATUTE MILES MILLE 7 =A 4% w “ | = u UNION E ASHLEY j X / : CHICOT 2 | | 3 v COLUMBIA | Fan J oJ | Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA (23 districts) \{ SISKIYOU MODOC Em SHASTA LASSEN DINO I ' / A 121020 /* NO 4 ee | SCALE-STATUTE MILES h Sut? of \ H O15 30 & 60 75 WN / oar A 0 10 20 30 40 50 GLL fii0300.0(] 10U01889.46U0)) LITCHFIELD HARTFORD ~ \ Li TOLLAND WINDHAM SCALE -STATUTE MILES ° § 0 "5 20 (93181 38 T PUB SIOLIISIP 9) LNDILOANNOD Maps of Congressional Districts DELAWARE v (1 at large) SCALE -STATUTE MILES o 5 0 5 NEW CASTLE KENT SUSSEX v78 Congressional Directory FLORIDA (6 districts) Maps of Congressional Districts 779 GEORGIA (10 districts) | DO. TOOSA S IURRAN FANNIN UN/0O. TOWNS RABUN | Y { N G. ¥$ NN “are & 3 | NJ N S 9 A Q vil Oe s MPR! \ -] CHAT TOOGH [GORDON Hy L y; 3 rEPHEN. SCALE-STATUTE MILES Ls NKS FRANK EA 56 20 30 40 50 30 BARTOW fC HEROREEDAWSO) e > £70 FORSYTH 7 Cal GT id ) Yop) POLK . |coss 27 S : On MEL ARK [OGLETHORPE 5; 2, 08 < ARAL. |Q¥ QO] So my, ng, 10 WV as W [<3 A) TNE 9) bovcLady « ) y okt ol & & te i NANTON N 3 d > 3 2\ © + 3 X 3\ WN oP HEARD 3% & puts: ENE SH ~ (A Zz \ Pe) Y > 3” 5 COWETA Spar ome Burr. ‘ SAMS | pumne OP WeERmETYL eT ASE “s Cy a 3) fi | 7R° So ! ‘ 2) ¥¥ k) Zz 2 © UPSON 2 ST af | #1 6 Gl | HARRIS ( VaLso RON 4 JOHNSON J : Kus > \! N ¥ 0 E) Us ORE A & 0 oa MUSCO. 9 £5 17/0 0) ¢ 4/0 0 By ” \ HATTA $ a * of uri Canoe ee ot & 3 DoOLY MONT \ | Nem\BUtt ¢f TTT 7 @ \3 AS gaal \E/ PULASK] rv 3 N os WILCOX od S N os R > wes _sumren \ STF 8 L > s 6 % . v RI > LEE oF G » QuiT Poe A BEN IL al J & fToRNE =X CLA é N oN RAND OLP & COFFE 5 Cop ME/NTOS. CAL+HOUN|DOUGHERTY |, TIFT 5 3 EA. 2 c A EARLY BAKER ATRINSO olf Ch is 2 coLeurrr 8 AE = MILLER fol iS aA a A a CR SS, 4 2 0 ha N ™ EMINOL DECATUR, RADY] SromasTaroon NLOWNDE: 3 CHARLTON 780 Congressional Directory IDAHO (2 districts) BOUNDARY BONNER py NOOTENA/ SHOSHONE LATAN CLEARWATER WEZ PERCE" SCALE -STATUTE MILES 0 /0 20 30 %0 50 CLARK FREMONT | JEFFERSON MADISON | BLAINE ] ELMORE sans BONNEVILLE BINGHAM 0 | Lincorn 5 0» § 0 & CARIBOU Pryor pi ® POWER “\_ BANNOCK 2, Ny £4 tes CASSIA BEAR ONEIDA LAKE FRANKLIN Maps of Congressional Districts | 781 (25 districts and 1 at large) JO DAVIESS |STEPHENSON WINNEBAGO HENRY ~ WLAKE | 10 : CARROLL OGLE DEKALB RHANE §COOK ! 13 CHICAGO WHITESIDE i DSA 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9 LEE . 1 PTS. 3, 6, 7,10 NEN WILL ALLE HENRY § BUREAU LAS “1 2 <}PTs. 3, 6, 7, 10 GRUNDY ROCK ISLAND : ME, poe : { [mares TARK| PUTHAM NOX WARREN MARSHALLY BLIVINGSTON IROQUIS 3 15 PEORIA & WOODFORD ; ? & 14 FULTON sigan HANCOCK] MEDONOUGH 1 7 ors 2 ! zene VERMILION 5 CHAMPAIGN 1 8 LOGAN SCHUYLER ¥ EWITT A ADAMS 8 . : <5 [Mewaro Ly ©, ch ZN MACON MORGAN SANSAMON 19 DOUGLAS EDGAR lscorT : PS €. | wo COLES MACOUPIN CHRISTIAN, Hp. SHELBY MONTGOM, CUMBERLD A FFGH VETTE EW SPER [CRANES BOND 23' rw TARION RICHL'D [LAWRENCE CLINTON ) STCLAIR how WAYNE PY rT For HINGTON REE FERSON § CLOUD 6 OTTAWA WALLACE LOGAN GOVE, TREGO d ELLIS RUSSELL ar SALINE ELLSWORTH ¥y p— en 778 Fr N MS RICE [FAWNEE HAMILTON [KEARNY [FINNEY HODGEMAN 5 RENO RAY FORD STANTON |CRANT HASKELL: KIOWA PRATT KINGMAN : MORTON |STEVENS [SEWARD MEADE; CLARK 1 COMANCHE BAR ir HARPER (s301135ID 9) SYSNVX Ra0poo.0(] U0188246100) SCALE -STATUTE MILES Co ce comes 0 10 20 30 40 50 HEND, 5,WO eONSSso (a\ Cy (34 Q : $cRITTEN Q o 3 0 = 3 ¢!Vv 0 is ot5 AN ©& on Pe a Q 290 >» y : 2 Can ICARL. [GRAVES TR 166 IN> h MARSH. 2 S SICA. CALLOWA xO N FUL EeSENT SON> )3\§J GRAYSON ED. MO. A fo’ ONi SedAd 1 3 RY ANY 2XPOWEL -of€ oo & SCIs 23 es > rtaa 5 YFP3 N Ra PIKE. Pa) (PS n80 % N << a 2)3) 2 YLESR 27 Q MARION, C p nN 7 SLE ANO7 y y oH 2Aq AYLO! cass; 23 R Rr Q 7, \ J ;io) Ve oei of %{7 a A >) > !A hr Vv fF ?LT 7 -% : A© We KNOX [1%2 d “ = HAUMP @'3 V3 LL N « = © 5 =0 2 & i3 oe ; ; -= a S 2» g = gi anQ oe > A dd = i [=S3©»x S Sy -S$ = x S&o S, QS = j= pn): b~S % ®: & .() 2) 1 00) on SCALE-STATUTE MILES o 10 20 30 40 50 786 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA (8 districts) 2Q © 2 z 9 xX VONVIIONVL 2 2 YNITIH 1S $ ((o] 3 \iz NI3iE 3 wi I 3 > %, 3 : Sy X wy 10d, 234102 FLAN: 3 1S) I uw « oO 3 2S$ INITIONYAZ2 > . 3 $ 3 S > g < 2 3 ~ Sg § O §IN 38 2 ¥37/SS08 Ns 0gavI © Maps of Congressional Districts MAINE (8 districts) _AROOSTOON PISCATAQUIS PENOBSC or SOMERSET 4 3 ) OXFORD 88. 2 2) BALTIMORE SCALE -STATUTE MILES WICOMICO Y s¢1 \WorceSTER zs nef 50 -J ANVIXIVIN 1PU01882.4510,) fi407994(T AQESTER MIDDLESEX FRANKLIN SCALE STATUE MILES -0 5 10 15 20 25 (s30129STD FT) SLLASNHDVSSVIN pr fo sdo Jou0ssaubuo)) $100.8] 790 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN (17 districts) (MONTMOR|ALPENA |0GEMAW | 105C0O i OSCEOLA CLARE ~~ T6LADWIN Be Zon BAY (NEWAYGORMECOSTA |ISABELLA |MIDLAND TUSCOLA|SANILAC SCALESTATUTE MILES - MONTCALM GRATIOT | SAGINAW CT m—m—— 7 0 0 20 3 40 350 8 [iareen GENZSEE STCLAIR /1ONIA CLINTON |SHIAWA | 6 MACOM f i ALLEGAN BARRY [EATON INGHAM | LIVINGSTME 17 IND | VAN BUREN BNALAMA. |CALHOUN JACKSON WASHTENAW 23 3 2 WAYNE i$ CASS STI0SEPHRBRANCH | HILLSDALERLENAWEE {MONROE p. DETROIT 15, PTS. 1 13, 14, 16, 17 PTS. 1,13, 14. 16 17 Maps of Congressional Districts MINNESOT A (9 districts) z SCALESTATUTE -MILES NITE ROSEAY A TTT —— ST 0 ” 30 45 0 5 MARSHA ~~ ol { Lal KOOCHICHING 9 ST.LOUIS POLK PENNINGTON =z) RED LAKE ZS foER A. Td BELTAAM! $ §§ 8 Raorman MANNO. 5 dr CO" WHUBBARD |CASS cay BECKER AITKIN a [crow wine OTTERTAIL CARLTON WILKIN | 6 PINE GRANT | DOUGLAS I ermson lr YAY. 13 of BENTON IN | on STEVENS | POPE STEARNS SE rrr /6 STONE 23 HERBURNE] Go, SWIFT 5 i lunona > ‘ Fry > 7 MEERER Co 3 is 2 4 Ay CHIPPEWA ar mm £2 NE MELEOD 0 RENVILLE CARVER 0 VEL. MED] SeorTi MINNEAPOLIS 5, 3 PT. /BLEY LING [LYON EON “5 free Co00KYE / NICOLLET WF 2 o° A544 Herma BLUE EARTHYWASECA|STEELE |DODGE 2& — [waTonwan| %, Re corromwp 1 OLMSTEAD (ROCK | NOBLES JACKSON | MARTIN FARIBAULT BFREEBORN |MOWER FILLMORE HOUSTON rr 792 Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI (7 districts) DE SOTO MARSHALL | BENTON |1iPPAWBALCORN \ § TATE Ss BS - N CANOLA ot ot N u™ FETS YALOBUSHA TALLAHATCHIE CHICKASAW GRENADA @ WEBSTER hi ARROLL [MoNTGOM| & WASHINGTON oF LEFLORE | oxrissEnA IN ZHoc Yo pr or 3 HUM. . “ ATTALA WINSTON §WNOXUBEE SHARKEY] ; YAZ 00 LEAKE NESHOBA KEMPER a Scory NEWTON LAUDERDALE HINDS a 5 7 JASPER CLARKE cLaiBoRNE |COPIAR SIMPSON 2 JEFFE, Reo JONES WAYNE grr £ NCE [2 OVIN IGTON LINCOLN ADAMS | FRANKLIN JEFF. DAVIS LAMAR | FORREST |PERRY GREENE \ i “ MARIO. - “nso AMITE Yoine 4 Ww oN s 6 PEARL RIVER _|eEoreE STONE JACKSON HARRISON SCALE -STATUTE MILES o 0 20 30 40 50 HANCOCK | ; Maps of Congressional Districts 5. 403 i y2 i! ihi ; { ’ i | 3 i (13 districts) ATCHISON |NODAWAY | WORTH |NARRISONE MERCER | PUTNAM NTRYGENTRY |. 1s EZ HOLY i GRUNDY (OREN 0AV/ESS 3 Of AALS ; TIAN i; jrmasron WUYLER| vy 1 MACON SCOTLAND KNOX SHELBY LEWIS § | MARION fl i i fl | | iy BUCHANAN PLATTE CLToN | eonEug RAY CLAY CARROLL CHARITON 2 = 5 monroe | FALLS & (& SCALE STATUTE MIL 5 EE ———— @ wo 220 30 4 #0 iHi i | iiY \ av I YORAIN§ q W Ons, = KANSAS CITY x0 mn) eaverie| S #0 J800NE LINCOLN HONTGOM, -; i CALLAWAYPT. CooPER4 pT f S PT: JOHNSON | PETTIS4 PT, 5 PTAA \ Q wa ff I sf > ST. LOUIS Sw ¢ > A HENRY ed >) $ S$ rd “ey CITY aes = 3 1, 13, 12 PT. MI S « LER ARIES 3 if 12 PT. ST. CLAIR CAMDEN. CRAWFORD -FermoyYvennon . HICKORY y FroPHELPS : * lcenam! _ DALLAS ny @° a =Se Csreseneveve a POLK | aN O£NT IRON 2) ART S |MADISON | Si] rrr 3 TEXAS REYNOLDS > WEBSTER |WRIGHT 1 a $ GREENE SHANNON. Fl JASPER | ; wane gfLAWRENCE 7 o § oy = heecrmuren :TITAT CHRISTIAN DOUGLAS NOWELL CARTER’ STONE I BARRY. OREGON STODDARD Z, Traner OZARKM$ DORALD oy 3 i i |ii| i H fit 1 i| i| !| !i ) i ! ii Hi ii |i Ii LNCOLN FLATHEADGLACIER Ea i — SHERIDAN T00LE HILL BLAINE To PHILLIPS VALLEY DANIELS pS ROOSEVELT he 3 ™ 9 ~ rovocad CHOUTEAU RICHLAND SANOERS 0 33 x JUDITH 3 BASIN -3 id 3 2 ~ 9 Q MUSSELSHELL FALLON WHEATLAND GALLATIN BPARK CARTER Ww. R. SWEET GRASS 216 HSER POWDER RIVER BEAVERHEAD CARBON -om oY) 3) (S3011981D VYNVINOWfir0p0.42(F 0U01859.4610)) SCALE=STATUTE MILES ly OC QS, 30.45. 80508 sou DAWES SHERIDAN CHERRY a. NS KNOX pre ANTELOPE) PIERCE {wayne SCOTTS BLUFF | morRIL : CARDEN GRANT HOOKER |THOM. AS | BLAINE Lov, 7GARFIELD | WHEELE. BOONE MADISON |STAN 3 CUMING BANNER ARTHUR Mc PHERSON . [LOGAN | CUSTER VALLEY [GREELEY PLATTE Ls KIMBALL A a CNEVENNE DEVEL KEITH PERKINS LINCOLN . 4 ® DAWSON SHERMAN| BUFFALO HOWARD HALL NANCE Lo MERRICK 4 oo YOR W OZALE~ STATUTE MILES Sewn 0 10 20.30 40 50 CHASE DUNDY HAYES HITCHCOCK FRONTIER 6OSPER| |REDWILLOW|FURNAS PHELPS WARLAN A ADAMSKEARNEY 1 |FRANKLIN |WEBSTER .:s|CLAY FILLMORE |NUCKOLLS | THAYER wrap| SALINE JEFFERSON GAGE [JOHNS PAWNEE ON| 796 Congressional Directory: .” ® NEVADA (1 at large) WASHOE |HumBoLoT ELKO PERSHIN: LANDER | EUREKA WHITE PINE CHURCHILL NYE LINCOLN ESMERALDA CLARK SCALE ~STATUTE MILES |wm am = o as so 75 100 Maps of Congressional Districts NEW HAMPSHIRE (2 districts) COOoS C °o SCALE-STATUTE 0 20 MILES 30 40 ARROLL [ BELKNAP STRAFFORD CHESHIRE HILLSBORO 78349°—T9—2—1st ed. 52 798 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY (14 districts) N HUDSON SCALE -STATUTE MILES Maps of Congressional Districts NEW MEXICO @ at large) SAN JUAN 7 RIO ARRIBA UNION SANDOVAL MSKINLEY IST") : SANTA FE SAN MIGUEL HARDING QUAY VALENCIA BERNALILLO GUADALUPE TORRANCE if RH : CATRON SOCORRO DE BACA CURRY i LINCOLN ROOSEVELT CHAVES SIERRA OTERO GRANT EDDY . DONA ANA LUNA | Loen s : SCALE-STATUTE MILES [4 20 40 60 80 HIDALGO SCALESTATUTE MILES - 10 20 30 40 SO % € \ ALLEG, JSURRY |STOKES G. |CASW. |PERSN|GRAN. WARR'N > NORTHA 3 GATES » IQ3 > y = ORSYTHRGYILFORD| _ S|0RA. 3 he ERT ME Yarn 24 53 y= A © ALEX! , N “, Y 25 NZ g| < DO. i $ : “, 0) O3 N CHATHAM <4 > 3 0) A 8 4 EC & Z, Tz &° \ 8 UFO TT DY erseo 2) “ef CATAW. 2 Sa — RN 284 RUTHER. CABAR. MONT.\MOORE : 1 > ¥ a MACO. A \s ¥ AYNE! CHEROKEE, OL CLEVE. Jos. Al 4 Se cL TRAN. Rice, < -go ouPLI Yous Wh i UNION | ANSON NZ 3 BLA RN CAR. 7 2 JPENDER % 2)% ott SCALE -STATUTE MILES NC > © IS 30 45 60 78 SCALE ~STATUTE MILES / ° 20 40 60 80 DIVIDE BURKE RENVILLE | BOTTINEAY ROLETTE |TOWNER | CAVALIER PEMBINA WILLIAMS | MeHENRY ; MOUNTRAIL PIERCE : RAMSEY WALSH BENSON A NELSON GRAND FORKS aQ Zz 8 e HM S FOSTER + - 1 ; fog & gt GOLDEN] By a i 2LINGS BURLEIGH | KIDDER STUTSMAN = S OLIVER. BARNES CASS o 8 Leno) = S > < MORTON 3 Fr 2 an i HETTINGER GRANT | EMMONS | LOGAN Yeamoure [ransOM RICHLAND ————— BOWMAN ADAMS MEINTOSH DICKEY SARGENT . Maps of Congressional Districts OHIO | (22 districts and 1 at large) = CLEVELAND Z AS K WILLIAMS | FULTON 22 PT Ca | 21, 20 GEAUGA : = HENRY A IN TRUMBULL DEFIANCE TOR CUYAHOGA 1 je) PORTAGE [ PAULDING MEDINA|SUMMIT HANCOCK 1 4 AHONING ASHL'D WYANDOT| CRAWFORD RICHL'D WAYNE STARK COLUMBIANA HARDIN 8 1 6 : ~~ _Hcarroul MARION [-HOLMES ey. | ¢ | LOGAN TUNION MORROY, w [KNOX ¥ 18 S rT 1 7 COSHOCTON & HARRISON & ; 4 2 N § CHAMPAIGN CHING === GUERNSE MUSKINGUM BELMONT: FRANKLIN CLARK =a i 5 eaBLE 753 $121 FAIRF 1ELD| PERRY MONROE REENE ] X PICKAWAY MORGAN | VOLE 3 FAYETTE | : E WAR REN Escmon G WASHINGTON BUTLER | Lam |__—Twockin k Sita ATHENS VINTON | (AY | HAMILTON Gs | 1 CLERMT | PIKE Lack son 1 9) ADAMS lGaLLia BROWN 6 oro ] | SCALE STATUTE MILES o 0 20 30 40 9» LAWRENCE CIMARRON TEXAS BEAVER SCALE STATUTE MILES 0 10 20 30 40 50 \FH UMATILLA WALLOWA 3 moRRO" HOOD a> xn N RIVER oc] fi WHEELER MORROW. j=] i [V2] JEFFERSON ERR (=) =H oS R00 | (@] S Noo A : DESCHUTES 1] = W = : : i 2 2 HARNEY ie) S A A 2 8, KLAMATH LAKE 4 ¥ DOUGLAS @* ~ >, S [vA] 4 0 act JOSEPHINE | ooS (@) ¢ IARREN MEKEAN POTTER 17064 BRADFORD SUSQUEHANNA WYOMING & VENANGO| FOREST TEL 4 : & ERCER IS RR CLINTON ’ 3 9 8 : \oaverre SomenrseT Lrmanniin PHILADELPHIA 1 TO 6 £2)VINVATXSNNIALRu0929.42(T (53012351 7) ‘Jou01889.16U0 Maps of Congressional Districts RHODE ISLAND CHEROKEE YORK SCALE-STATUTE MILES J Se Np ; PP 7 p——— CAMPBELL | MSPHERSON BROWN MARSHALL | ROBERTS I frre possan DAY Qo LWORTH | EDMUNDS: | DEWEY ZIEBACH GRANT S (ve) HYDE | HAND SULLY ~ S t ) i = BEADLE BROOKINGS KINGSBURY 1 S HUGHES (S) an) 3 HAAKON Li & % (w LAKE MOODY a2 SANBORN | MINER Z JERAULD BUFFALO LYMAN ; S. EP PENNINGTON 3 S JACKSON o AURORA 3 | MINNEHAHA | M COOK S HANSON (DAVISON rpg MELLETTE ree | WASHA BAUGH WASHINGTON . & od XN. () SS va) ie STEWA, ONTGOM. JROBERTSON, IN, [CLay PIC. -C3 1BORNE Sr yrenan Q O8/ON Senay -Si ACK, 3 rd 4 Gi a 4 2 He = ; Cio 7 1 g usTon JDICK. AST a. ] 0 2D = of ly DYER Ga 4 Ho A Ye, @ NOX JEFF. 3 o 9 3 Carrot & | & & 2d LN A wy % < 8 ” 22 & lJ © Py 3 (4 (1 = TR of Co & S = f=) 7 WADI. |ENOER. & 7 az z s ; 1] 2 Shy 7 Bi) ym a gwia CE A *e ¥ SHELBY FAYETTE 3 ¢ A ARGJ $ WO WAYNE wlio correc 3 4 ? bad SCALE STATUTE MILES t=i pi8 1 O $ ] rid : 0 10 20 30 40 80 S . MSNAIRY S| LINCOLN | FRANKLI JON K Maps of Congressional Districts TEXAS (21 districts) DALLAM | SHER.| HANS.|OCHIL LIPS. HARTLEY | MOORE |HUTCH.|ROB TS HEMP. : OLDHAM |POTTER CARSON GRAY | WHEE. DSMITH |RAND | ARM. | DON. [COLTH) ap WISH] BRIS. |HALL | CHI. BALY|LAMB HALE |FLOYOROT. |COTTR 2 3 e Pr CH aL ) arid) RR AMAR eo 3 [COCH{HOCK LUBB. |CROS. DICK. 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L VERNON SAUK COLUMBIA DOOGE RICHLAND CRAWFORD DANE 2 Ong JEFFERSON | WAUKESHA RNY i A 3 TArAvErTe YC EEN [Rocka WALWORTH | RACINE IXENOSHA YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK PARK BIG HORN SHERIDAN } CAMPBELL CROOK JOHNSON WASHAKIE WESTON NIOBRARA SUBLETTE (0318T)DNINOZX AM CARBON ALBANY LINCOLN | SWEETWATER UINTA SCALE -STATUTE MILES = 0 25 50 75 or 0U01882.4610,) fi.10220.42(] HONOLULU OAHU Ja. J HON TY KALAWAO( MAUI w (pin 1s KAUAI HAWAII HAWAILIs. Maps of Congressional Districts COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES (1 Resident Commissioner) VIEQUES IS. MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES = NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, WASHINGTON RESIDENCE, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the t designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them] THE SENATE > KexNETH MCKELLAR, President pro tempore, the Mayflower. | *LesLIE L. BirrLE, Secretary, the Westchester. *¥| WaLL Doxuy, Sergeant at Arms, the Continental. *fREv. FREDERICK BrowN Harris, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain, 2800 Thirty-sixth Street. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 305-306) | Name Home post office Washington residence wn Page / Aiken, George D_________ Putney, VE > George Washington Inn_| 124 * Andrews, Charles O_____ Orlando, Fla... 3900 Connecticut Ave__.| 18 rE . *Austin, Warren R_______ Burlington, Vt...... The Shoreham. ._____. 124 *}|| Bailey, Josiah W..._... Raleigh, N.C... .. 2332 MassachusettsAve.| 88 “Ball, Joseph HF ~~ = St. Paul, Minn =. 3193, Porter Bt... __.._| 35 1 *Bankhead, John HH, 2d... | Jasper, Ala_..._..._ The Wardman Park____ 3 | *Barkley, Alben W._______ Paducah, Ky... 2101 Connecticut Ave__| 39 Bilbo, Theodore G______._ Poplarville, Miss. ___| The Capitol Towers_.._| 57 : *|| Brewster, Owen_____.__ Dexter, Maine______ The Mayflower____.___ 44 *Bridges, Styles... Concord, N. BH... 2407 Ith St... .... 68 | | A +i Briggs, PrankP___. Brooks, C. Wayland... ¥Buek, €. Douglads,. . _.. Macon, Me Chicago, Tl: Wilmington, o _.___ Del____| 2720 The The Ordway St_______ Westchester. _____ Westchester. _____ 60 25 18 | i | | *Bushfield, Harlan J______ Miller, 8, Dak... __- 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 113 Butler, Hugh... Omaha, Nebr_______ 2114-A 38th St. SE____.| 65 | *Bvrd, Harry Flood. ~ Berryville, Va_______ The Shoreham. 125 | | *Capehart, Homer E______ Washington, Ind____| 4110 Warren St_______ 31 | Capper, "Arthur. =... xCarville 1. P= Topekn, Kang... Reno, Nev... = The 2800 Mayflower. ___.____ Woodley Rd_ _ ___ 36 67 | | *1||Chavez, Dennis_______ Albuquerque,N.Mex_| 1814 19th St________._ 74 i *Connally, Tom. ~~ Marlin, Tex = 3025 Woodland Drive__| 118 | ¥Cordon, Guy. = Roseburg Oreo’ oo fo il rr er 101 *Donnell, Forrest C______ Webster Groves, Mo_| 3945 Connecticut Ave__| 60 | | ~ *t Downey, *Eastland, Sheridan______ James O_______ San Francisco, Calif__| Ruleville, Miss______ 2407 3834 15th St__________ Fulton St________ 9 58 | | | *Ellender, Allen't. ..... ... *PFerguson, Homer... >. *Fulbright, J. William____| Houma La __...__. Detroit, Mieh..._.. Fayetteville, Ark____| 2633 The 2101 16th St...--Westchester_ _ ____ Connecticut Ave. _ 41 51 7 | | *George, Walter F_______ Vienna, Ga... The Mayflower..._____ 21 | *Cerry, Pater Ge. oo... Providence, R. I____| 2209 Wyoming Ave.___| 110 | %Q lass, Carter...".-*Qossett, Charles C______ Lynchburg, Va... Nampa, Idaho. .____ The The Mayflower...____._ Carroll Arms. ____ 125 23 | | ; Green, Theodore Francis__| Providence, R. I. ___| University Club_______ 110 | b l|Guffey, Joseph F_______ Pittsburgh, Pa. 2929 Benton Pl... .-.] 102 | *Qurney, Chan.-= yYankion, 8S. Pak. |-2407 15th St... ....... 113 | *{7Hart, Thomas C...... | Sharon, Conn__.-___| TheShoreham.__..... 16 | Congressional Directory ‘ THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 305-306) Name Home post office Washington residence She Page %Hatch, Carl A... .uueeese Clovis, N. Mex...... 4848 Upton St________ 74 *Hawkes, Albert W______ Montclair, N. J... Hotel Twenty-four 69 : Hundred. . *Hayden, Carl............ Phoenix, Arly.. eae soreness 6 *Hickenlooper, Bourke B_._| Cedar Rapids, Iowa._| 5511 Cedar Parkway, 34 Chevy Chase, Md. SHH Lister... aa Montgomery, Ala..._| 3715 49th St__________ 3 Hooy, Clyde B.....__.....u Shelby, N.-C.. coun The Raleigh... 88 *+ Huffman, James W_____ Columbus, Ohio_____ The Raleigh... .-: 93 *Johnson, Edwin C_______ Craig, Colo... The Carroll Arms_ _ _ __ 14 #Johnston, Olin D.....___.: Spartanburg, 8. C____| 9506 East Stanhope | 111 Rd., Kensington, Md. *Kilgore, Harley M_____._ Beckley, W. Va__... 4849 Upton St... 129 *tKnowland, William F___| Piedmont, Calif_____ 5415 Moorland Lane, 9 : Bethesda, Md. *La Follette, Robert M., Jr.| Madison, Wis_______ 5200 Manning P1...._.._ 132 *t{Langer, William_.__._.._ Wheatland, R. F. D. | The Roosevelt_.._._._ 91 : 1 (Bismarck),. N. Dak. %Fueas, Scott W.......o. Havana, TH. =. -= The Wardman Park___| 24 #iMeCarran, Pat... Beno, Nev....: 4711 Blagden Ave_____ 67 *MecClellan, John Li__ ____ Camden, Ark. ___.__ 3604 Fulton St_._ .._... 7 *t McFarland, Ernest W.._| Florence, Ariz_______ 4404 Windom PI1______ 6 McKellar, Kenneth_______ Memphis, Tenn____._ The Mayflower________ 114 *McMahon, Brien________ Norwalk, Conn._._._... 3201 Woodland Drive__| 16 Magnuson, Warren G__..._ Seattle, Wash_______ The Shoreham. _...... 127 *+ Maybank, Burnet R_.__| Charleston, S. C_____ 3645 49th St________.._ 111 *|| Mead, James M________ Buffalo, N. Vole L030 X08 dan ole moor 75 * Millikin, Eugene D______ Denver, Colo... 2101 Connecticut Ave_| 15 *Mitehell, Hugh B........... _| Everett, Wash_____._ 4004 49th St__________ 128 Moore, BE. H.. ....conva Tulsa, Eins nt 13 Vernon Terrace, 98 Belle Haven, Alex-andria, Va. *Morse, Wayne... ..occa--Eugene, Oreg._. ....._ The Westchester. _ ____ 101 Xi iMurdoek, Abe........ Beaver, Utah_______ 5101 Manning Bl... 123 #*Murray, James E..........-Butte, Mont =... The Shoreham... 64 _ 5: Myers; Francis J... .... Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Mayflower.___.____ 102 *Q’Daniel, W. Lee___.___ Fort Worth, Tex. [132d St. NE_ =~ © 118 *||0’ Mahoney, Joseph C _.| Cheyenne, Wyo_____ The Wardman Park___| 134 %70verton, John HH _.._ __ Alexandria, La_____._ The Wardman Park___| 41 *Pepper, Claude. _-~.__. Tallahassee, Fla_____ 1661 Crescent P1______ 19 *Radecliffe, George L______ Baltimore, Md______ The Shoreham _ .....__ 45 *Reed, Clyde M_ . _....... Parsons, Kans... Stoneleigh Court______ 37 *Revercomb, Chapman___| Charleston, W. Va___| The Westchester____.__ 130 *Robertson, Edward V.___| Cody, Wyo_._____.___ The Mayflower________ 134 Russell, Richard B........ Winder, On... lee ie cnainimn 21 *tSaltonstall, Leverett____| Chestnut Hill, Mass_| 3221 Woodland Drive_.| 47 *Shipstead, Henrik _______ Say D.; Carlos, F1722 19h 86... 55 inn. *Smith, H. Alexander____. Princeton, N. J... otis oasis na 69 *Stanfill, William A____.__ Horard, Ky... =... The Carlton =.__ ic. 39 #1||Stewart, Tom.......... Winchester, Tenn_.._| The Methodist Bldg___| 115 #Palt, Robert A. oc-we Cincinnati, Ohio__..__ 1683831st St... 92 rayior, Glen H. . oanrnr Pocatello, Idaho_____ 140 12th St. 8K _......... 23 tll Thomas, Elbert D..._.. Salt Lake City, Utah_.| 3200 16th St__________ 123 *Phomag, Elmer... -...-. Medicine Park, Okla_| 1661 Crescent P1______ 98 *Tobey, Charles W..__._... Temple, N.H.._.... Army and Navy Club__| 68 *Tunnell, James M_______ Georgetown, Del____| The Mayflower________ 18 *Tydings, Millard E...__._ Havre de Grace, Md_| The Wardman Park___| 45 Members’ Addresses THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 305-306) Name Home post office Washington residence *Vandenberg, Arthur H___ Grand Rapids, Mich _ The Wardman Park__ - Wagner, Robert F________ New York City, N.Y. The Shoreham _ _ ____._ } Walsh, David 2. =. Clinton, Mass Metropolitan Club_____ ' ¥*Wheeler, Burton K______ Butte, Mont The Westchester _ ____ *1 Wherry, Kenneth S_____ Pawnee City, Nebr... 444 Argyle Dr., Alex- andria, Va. *White, Wallace H., Jr__._ Auburn, Maine 2440 Tracy Pl vo *Wiley, Alexander________ Chippewa Falls, Wis_ The Westchester_ _ _ ___ *|| Willis, Raymond E_____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_ *{ Wilson, George A______ Des Moines, Iowa___ 3130 Wisconsin Ave____ *Young, Milton R________ Berlin, N. Dak The Wardman Park____ Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Sam RAYBURN, Speaker, 1300 Q Street. *|||[Soura TrimBLE, Clerk, 10 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. *KENNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms, the Wardman Park. *RavrpH R. RosERTS, Doorkeeper, 2401 Calvert Street. *||Finis E. Scott, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road. *REV. JAMES SHERA MoNTGOoMERY, D. D., Chaplain, 100 Maryland Avenue NE, (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence is Page * Abernethy, Thomas G___| Okolona, Miss______ 2036 Fort Davis St. SE_| 59 *111 Adams, Sherman_____ Lincoln, N. H_.... |i 3352 Gunston Rd, 69 Alexandria, Va. *Allen, A. Leonard__.____._ Winnfield, La... ..... 29 Pannsylee tinder 43 Allen, leo B..._.. ._.. Caleng, INL... University Club... .__ 29 *Andersen, H. Carl_______ Tyler, Minn ___...... 1650 Harvard St__.____ 57 *Anderson, Jack Z______._ San Juan Bautista, | 5509 Grove St., Chevy 10 Calif. Chase, Md * Andresen, August H_____ Red Wing, Minn... | The Dodge. ...-.......-56 * Andrews, George W_____ Union Springs, Ala__| 404 North Thomas St., 4 Arlington, Va. Andrews, Walter G_______ Bufislo, N.Y. ...... Dorchester House______ 87 *Angell, Homer D..........[ Portland, Oreg._.... 2121 Virginia Ave_____ 102 Arends, Leslie C_..____._ Melvin, Tl... _.... The General Scott. ____ 29 *Arnold, Wal. -......... Kirksville, Mo__._.. 834 South Lincoln St., 60 Arlington, Va. * Auchincloss, James C____| Rumson, N. J_______ 509 Queen St., Alexan-| 70 7 dria, Va. Bailey, Cleveland M______ Clarksburg, W. Va. .| 122 BS. NE. _...... 131 *tBaldwin, H..Streett. | Hydes, Md... .. ls uo. loa ord 46 Baldwin, Joseph Clark. ..| New York Oty, N.Y. |. ooo Guna ean ll Sng. 81 Barden, Graham A_______ New Bern, N. C_____ The Hamilton. ........ 89 *+ Barrett, Frank A.__.__. Lusk, Wyo. =... Dorchester House_ _ ___ 134 Barrett, William A. _._. Philadelphia, Pa..." ol. 0 fds ia nana 103 Barry, Willlam B.......-. St. Abang, N.Y. 2228... 76 Bates, George J... .-. Salem, Mags... 2480 16th Sb. oc acon 49 * Bates, Joe B........-... Greenup, Ky. ...... 1201 South Barton St., | 41 Arlington, Va. ’ tis Beall, J.Glenn..._......._. Frostburg, Md... i enna can 47 *Beckworth, Lindley. .___ Cladowainr, Tex., 3305 V-St. SE... ... 119 *11|| Bell, C. Jasper_______ Blue Springs, Mo... sie o.oo vainoo 61 Bender, George H________ long Heights, | The Mayflower___.____ 93 io. : *Bennet, Augustus W_____ Newburgh, N..Y....| 3264 880... Lc n 84 *Bennett, Marion T______ Springfield, Mo a... us ai 62 *Biemiller, Andrew J_____ Milwaukee, Wis_____ 4824 Langdrum Lane, | 133 Chevy Chase, M *Bishop, C. W. (Runt)_..| Carterville, Ill______ 18333 41st PLL.SE......_. 31 *Blackney, William W____| Flint, Mich_________ The Roosevelt..... 52 *Bland, Schuyler Otis_____ Newport News, Va__| 2935 28th St______.___ 125 t+Bloom. Sol. _...........| New York City, N. Y.| 1930 Columbia Rd.-.... 82 Bolton, Frances P.___.__.. Lyndhurst, Ohio____| 2301 Wyoming Ave___.| 98 *|| Bonner, Herbert C_____ Washington, N. C___| The Roosevelt. _______ 89 ¥Boren, Lyle H.... ...... Seminole, Okla______ The Westchester_ _ ____ 100 *Boykin, Frank W...... .. Mobile, Ala.....-The Washington. __.__ 3 *Bradley, Fred... -.-. Rogers City, Mich___| 4121 Argyle Terrace_--.| 53 =i Bradley, Michsgel J... | Philadelphia, Pa. | iil cciecnvnwmmnmnn 103 *Brehm, Walter E________ Logan, Ohjo-........ Ly v Maryland Ave. 96 *Brooks, Overton...--Shreveport, La______ 3726 Connecticut Ave_.| 42 *Brown, Clarence J_______ Blanchester, Ohio-.__ The Alban Towers. ._--95 Members’ Addresses 829 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name #3 (Brown, Paul. .z. I. *Brumbaugh, D. Emmert.__| *Bryson, Joseph BR... *i Buck, Ellsworth B_____ Buckley, Charles A______._ *+ Buffett, Howard H_____ *Bulwinkle, Alfred L_____ *Bunker, Berkeley L_____ *Burch, Thomas G....... ¥Burgin, W..0. ooo. ..c. *Butler, John C.......... Byrne, William T ......0 Byrnes, John W__________ *Camp, A. Sidney... ..... Campbell, Howard E_____ Canfield, Gordon_________ *Cannon, Clarence. ______ *Cannon,; Pat. dics ol %*Carlson, Frank... _....... *Carnahan, A. S.J... _.. Case, Clifford P.. 000... *Cnze; Francis. o vudinus *tCeller, Emanuel ________ Chapman, Virgil... ®Chell, Fran 1.020. *+Chenoweih, J. Bdgar | *Chiperfield, Robert B_.__| ¥*Church, Ralph B.__[__._. ~Qlark, J.-Bayard... >... *Clason, Charles R_______| *Clements, Earle C.______ *Clevenger, Cliff _ ________ *Clippinger, Roy_________ Cochran, John J... .... *Coffee, John M_ ________ *Cole, Albert M_ ._...._ *tCole, William C_______._ *Cole, W. Sterling________ *Colmer, William M______ Combs, J. M...... ...... *t||Cooley,. Harold D_____ Cooper, Jere 0 _____... Corbett, Robert J________ *Courtney, Wirt. .......< *Cox, B. BE... ......00L *t||Cravens, Fadjo_._._____ *Crawford, Fred L_______ | Crosser, Robert. ________ *Cunningham, Paul ______ *Curley, James M________ "Curtis, Carl T..ooocouin *¥D’ Alesandro, Thomas, Jril Home post office Elberton, Ga______._ Claysburg, Pa_______ Greenville, S. C_____ Staten Island, N. Y_| New York City, N. Yu Omaha, Nebr_______ Gastonia, N. C______| Las Vegas, Nev_____ Martinsville, Va_____ Lexington, N. C_____ Buffalo, N.AY ail Youdonville, N.Y. ils. Green Bay, Wis_____ Newnan, Ga. ._ 020. Washington residence Lois Page The Alban Towers_____ 23 The Continental _______ 107 The Independence___.__ 112 1400 34th St.__________ 80 a hand naar 83 4271 49th 8. Loan 0 66 The Wardman Park___| 91 2300 North Washington | 68 Blvd., Arlington, Va. : The Willard. o-0 126 The Wardman Park___| 90 a wd Sin cin 88 oie ad Ugoe 0 00d 85 The Majestle oc -2. 2 133: The Washington House_| 21 Pittsburgh, Pa. i. _._ The Mayflower________ 108 Poterson,; N. J... oiler oilpe cor nn tas 72 Elsberry, Mo. ______ 418 New Jersey Ave.SE_| 62 Miami, Fla_........ 2100 Connecticut Ave_| 20 Concordia, Kans____| 3635 Alabama Ave. SE_| 38 Ellsinore, bi LLL 20148 Si. Star 62 Rahway, N Joo 00 en alia oii ne 71 Custer, %N Ns iP nies SEE IR 114 Brooklyn, N-Yaih The Mayflower________| 80 Parle Kv L000, Army and Navy Club_.| 40 Yeebanon, Ry... ...-3440 Gunston Rd. 40 Alexandria, Va. Trinidad, Colo... ooey iv 7 15 Canton, Il_________ 1 Raymond St., Chevy 29 Chase, Md Evanston, JN_-200 UL The Shoreham. _.___.___ 28 Fayetteville, NICEoe. sss 0 90 Springfield, Mass____| Morganfield, Ky... Bryan, Ohio... 0 Carmi IIL..... St. Louis, Mo... Tacoma, Wash______ Holton, Kans... :.0._ St. Joseph, Mo______ Bath, N. Y.2__..... The Broadmoor_______ 48 (2500 Q 86..._. 39 The Jefferson_ ________ 94 The Wardman Park___| 31 The Shoreham _ _______ 64 3133 Connecticut Ave__| 129. 5525 New Hampshire 37 Ave. NE. 2300-4lst St... 61 1610444h St... 2. 87 Paseagoula, Miss:rf... de odna can nd -59 Beaumont, Tex_ ____ Nashville, N. C_____ Dyersburg, Tenn____| Bellevue, Pa________ Franklin, Tenn______ Camilla, Ga... ...... Fort Smith, Ark_____ Saginaw, Mich______ Cleveland, Ohio_.____ : Des Moines, Iowa___ Boston, Mass__._.___ Minden, Nebr... 1. Baltimore, Md. .0 — of. Lee Coli Arling-| 119 ton, Va. 2037 28th St... a 90 The Washington______ 118 The Continental _______ 109 The Fairfax... =... 117 The Wardman Park___| 21 4735 Woodway Lane___ 8 7531 Allentown Rd. SE_| 53 5418 Edgemoor Lane, 97 Bethesda, Md. A Dione Island Ave. 36 The Statler ~ 2.0. on. 50 6613 31st: Plo 0 oC 66 ico ieccnrainna 46 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office Washington residence he Page *Daughton, Ralph H_____ Norfolk, Via oc -: 2500 Q St Loa onl 125 %Paviz, Clifford... ...0... Memphis, Tenn_____ 4611 Butterworth P1___| 118 *t Dawson, William L_____ Ohieago, I... as 1345 Franklin St. NE__| 25 *De Lacy, Hugh. ._.____.__ Seattle, Wash_______ 6204 New Hampshire | 128 : Ave. NE. Delaney, James J________ ‘Long Island City,N.Y.| The Mayflower.___.__._ 77 x Delaney, John J.......... Brooklyn, N. oor heidi aldol Yui). 78 * . *D’Ewart, Wesley A______ Wilsall, Mont_______ The Dodge... 65 Dingell, John D......... Detroit, Mich... la aanrs ims 54 *+ Dirksen, Everett M____| Pekin, IIl__________._ The Mayflower________ 29 *Dolliver, James I________ Fort Dodge, Towa___| 3752 Jocelyn St_______ 36 *Domengeaux, James_____ Lafayette, La_______ The Shoreham ____._._| 42 *Dondero, George A______ Royal Oak, Mich____| The Continental _______ 55 *tDoughton, Robert L____| Laurel Springs, N. C_| 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 90 *Douglas, Emily Taft_____ Chieago, IN... .....c The Wardman Park____| 25 Douglas, Helen Gahagan__| Los Angeles, Calif ___| 123 Bradley Lane, 12 Chevy Chase, Md. *1 Doyle, Clyde... Long Beach, Calif ___| The Dodge____.________| 13 *PDrewry, Patrick H______ Petersburg, Va______ The Willard 2.00x 126 *tt+1+Durham, Carl T_____ Chapel Hill, N. C___| The Lee Sheraton_____ 90 *Dworshak, Henry C____._ Burley, Idaho_______ The Washington House.| 24 *ttEarthman, Harold H__| Murfreesboro, Tenn_| The Fairfax___________ 116 *Eaton, Charles A.._____._ Watchung; Pladn-i{ >. ...cicnnnosiiadaii. 71 : field, N. J. *Eberharter, Herman P___| Pittsburgh, Pa______ 706 North Tazewell St., | 109 : Arlington, Va. *Elljott, Alfred Joon. Tulare, Calif... The Carroll Arms____._ 11 *Elig, Hubert 8S... ..._. Huntington, W. Va__| 3100 Connecticut Ave._| 131 *t Ellsworth, Harris_______ Roseburg, Oreg_ _ ___ 2135 Tunlaw Rd_____._ 102 Elsaesser, Edward J ______ Buffalo, N.Y... .«.. Dorchester House__ ___ 87 Elston, Charles H. ....... Cincinnati, Ohio_____ The Continental _______ 93 *Engel, Albert J. ovo --Muskegon, Mich____| 4518 Lowell St________ 53 2fEngle, Clair... ciwwainox Red Bluff, Calif. ____ 2108 38th St. SE_____ 9 *Fallon, George H________ Baltimore, Md ic. cu li nr aransmaihanrates 46 *Feighan, Michael A_____ Cleveland, Ohio_____ asl Suitland Terrace 97 Fellows, Frank... ........ Bangor, Maine______ The Wardman Park___| 44 *t{Fenton, Ivor D______ | Mahanoy City, Pa__| 3725 Macomb St______ 105 *iiFernandez, Antonio M_| Santa Fe, N. Mex___| 3001 Cheverly Ave. | 74 : Cheverly, Md. *Fisher, 0. C.. .... 0.60 San Angelo, Tex_____| 2332 24th St. SE______| 123 *Flannagan, John W., Jr__| Bristol, Va_________ 1600 16th St____. A 127 Flood, Daniel-J... Wilkes-Barre, Pa____| The Mayflower_____.___ 104 *Fogarty,, John EB. ....... Harmony, R. 1....._ The Shoreham. _______ 111 Folger, JohnH... ics Mount Airy, N. C___| The Westchester______ 90 #Porand, Alme Jo. ...o.5: Cumberland, R. I___| 2929 Connecticut Ave__| 110 *Fuller, Hadwen C_______ Parish, No YV.uiio uo 212 Whitestone Rd. 85 : Indian Spring Vil-lage, Silver Spring, Md. Fulton, James G_________ Dormont (Pits cv. aangvias 109 burgh), Pa. *||Gallagher, William J____| Minneapolis, Minn__| George Washington Inn_| 56 Gamble, Ralph A________ Tarehmont, N.Y... Lid oor a roifa. 84 Gardner, Edward J___.____ Hamilton; Oho. a6 alin J. con lua iaiSing 94 *QGary,J. Vaughan......... Richmond, Va... .... 2006. N St... al 126 ®@athings, B. C.....0cc:0 West Memphis, Ark_| The New Colonial ____ 7 *Gavin, Leon H._........: Oil City, Paz ola oo, EEE Tang [0 ||Gearhart, Bertrand W.__ Fresno, Calif _______ The General Scott_____ 10 Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name *Geelan, James P________ Gerlach, Charles L.____._. *Gibson, John S.._..._.. Gifford, Charles L...__L.L 1 Gillespie, Dean M_______ *Gillette, Wilson D_______ *QGillie, George W___.____ *tGoodwin, Angier Li_____ *Gordon, Thomas S______ Core, Albert... Liaio Gorski, Martin... .__.i #Gosgett; Bd... coil |Graham, Louis E________ *Granahan, William T____| *Granger, Walter K______ *Grant, George M________ *Grant, Robert A__._____ Green, William J., Jr_____ *1Gregory, Noble J_______ *Griffiths, P. Wo... 1. *1Grozs,!Chester Tc 20 *Gwinn, Ralph W________ *Gwynne, John W________ *t||Hagen, Harold C______ #iHale, Robert... _._ tHall, Edwin Arthur_____ *+Hall, Leonard W_______ *Halleck, Charles A______ *Hancock, Clarence E____| Hand, P. Millet_......... *Hare, Butler B......_..2 [Harless, Richard F______ *Harness, Forest A_______ *Harrje, Oren.....c... . Hart, Edward Joo...) Hartley, Fred A., Jr______ Havenner, Franck R______ *Hays, Brooks. .....(.oc "*Healy, Ned RL. __.. *||Hébert, ¥. Edward_____ ®Hedrick, B. H...._.. *tHeffernan, James J_____ *Hendricks, Joe._ oo2 od *Henry, Robert K________ *Herter, Christian A______ *Heselton, John W._..... *||Hess, William E_______ *Hill, William S_....._ Hinshaw, Carl... ..._ *Hobbs, Sam... _..... Home post office New Haven, Conn___| Allentown, Pa_______ Douglas, Ga__._..._ Cotuit, Mass_._.....| Denver, Colo. ....._ Towanda, Pa____.___ Fort Wayne, Ind____| Melrose, Mass__ ___- Chieago, Tl. 0. b.. Carthage, Tenn. .___. Chicago, TI... Wichita Falls, Tex___| Beaver, Pa... Philadelphia, Pa_____ : : Biog- Washington residence i Page 1128 Valley Rd., Park-| 17 ie, Alexandria, a. The Continental ...____ 104 200 East Cameron Rd., 23 Falls Church, Va. Cosmos Club__._._ x. 49 1661 Crescent P1___._.._ 15 2802 Devonshire P1____| 105 2109 Fort Davis Dr. SE_| 32 3427 Martha Custis 49 Dr., Alexandria, Va. 3930 Southern Ave. SE_|/ 27 203 Arlington Village, | 116 Arlington, Va. 3200: 16th Sto. oo =. 26 2335 Skyland Pl. SE___| 121 The Dodge... c= 107. The Mayflower... _____ 103 Cedar City, Utah___.|:320016th St... _____. 123 Troy, Ala. ooo ls South Bend, Ind.____ Philadelphia, Pa_____ Mayfield, Ky... ..... Marietta, Ohio. _____ York, Pa ol dosed Bronxville, N. Y____| Waterloo, Iowa_____ Crookston, Minn____| Portland, Maine_____ Binghamton, N. Y___| Oyster Bay, N. Y__.| Rensselaer, Ind_ _ ___ Syracuse, N. Y______ Cape May City, N. J_| Saluda, 8S. CL.co ui Phoenix, Ariz_______ Kokomo, Ind... .._. El Dorado, Ark_____ Jersey City No dooule Kearny, NoJ oc iialio San Francisco, Calif .| Little Rock, Ark____| Los Angeles, Calif ___| New Orleans, La____| Beckley, W. Va_____ Brooklyn, N.iY..... Deland, Flac. .cooali. Jefferson, Wis_.______ Boston, Mass_______ Deerfield, Mass_____ Cincinnati, Ohio_____ Fort Collins, Colo___ Pasadena, Calif. ind Selma, Ala__________ 4801 S00 The 2401 2300 oo. The The 4012 Connecticut Ave__ 4 Pennsylvania Ave. | 32 Mayflower_______. 103 Calvert St_ _..___ 39 41st 86 1. Ar 96 L doiudad Sate 106 Hay-Adams______ 84 Wardman Park___| 35 Southern Ave. SE_| 57 2745-20th StL. ao. 44 Colonial Farm, River 86 Rd., Bethesda, Md. 2800 Woodley Rd_____ 76 4926 Upton St________ 32 The Kennedy-Warren__.| 86 University Club_______ 70 The Dodge. coo 000.00 112 6330 81st Pl. i. ol 6 3601 Connecticut Ave._| 32 1627 Myrtle St... 8 on ha slo ved ue 73 on oo lide do 72 The Wardman Park___| 10 The Capitol Towers___| 8 Box 446, Telegraph Rd, | 12 Alexandria, Va. Alnor Heights, Alex-| 42 andria, Va. The Mayflower____.____ 131 The Roosevelt _______ 78 oo tbupo tools 20 1814 29th St. SE______ 132 3336 Dent Pl... aov 49 3921 Benton St... 47 The Broadmoor_______ 93 0A Fort Davis St. 15 o.oo catia lane 13 2231 Bancroft P1______ 4 832 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office ‘Washington residence oe . Page |[Hoch, Daniel K______.___ Reading, Pa________ 130 Maple Ave., Tako-| 105 ma, Park. *tHoeven, Charles B_____ Alton, Iowa... ..... 208 Suitland Terrace | 36 *Hoffman, Clare E_______ Allegan, Mich_______ The Methodist Bldg___ *1| [| Holifield, Chet_______ Montebello, Calif____| 2600 Cameron Mills | 13 : Rd., Alexandria, Va. *Holmes, Hal... 0 o0. 0.0 Ellensburg, Wash____| 2480 16th St___._______ 129 Holmes, Pehr G__________ Worcester, Mass____ oli SR nyleanin 48 ve. SE. *Hook, Frank B.._._...__ Ironwood, Mich_____ 4814 Drummond Ave., 53 Chevy Chase, Md. *Hope, Clifford R......... Garden City, Kans__| 3541 Brandywine St___| 38 * Horan, Walt Loi ol. Wenatchee, Wash___| 2729 Daniel Rd., Chevy | 129 Chase, Md. *Howell, Evan___. ...___. Springfield, Tl. _____ 2027 44th Sg LL 30 *Huber, Walter B________ Akron, Ohioo i 701 North Wayne St., 96 ‘ Arlington, Va. Hull, Merlin... L000 Blo River Falls, | 3808 Garrison St______ 134 is. J *oae, Bd. Vou 000.00. San Diego, Calif_____ 2001 20th St...) 2 14 Jackson, Henry M_______ Everett, Wash______ 206 B Su. NE... 1 128 =Jarman, Pete. 0. %) Livingston, Ala_____ The Burlington_ __ ____ 5 *Jenkins, Thomas A______ Ironton, Ohio....... 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 95 *tJennings, John, Jr______ Knoxville, Tenn_____ The Roosevelt _______ 116 ®Jensen, Ben.FF. _._.__.__.. Exira, Towa... ___. 212016th St... 36 *Johnson, Anton J_____._._ Macomb, TH. 2 _.:.. 2093 New Hampshire | 29 ve. *Johnson, J. Leroy_______ Stockton, Calif ______ 2029-A 38th St. SE____| 10 *tJohnson, Jed .___._____ Anadarko, Okla_____ 1106 House Office Bldg_| 100 . *Johnson, Luther A______ Corsicana, Tex______ The LaSalle. ......20 120 *|| [| Johnson, Lyndon B____|"Johnson City, Tex___|{ 4921 30th P1__________ 121 *tJohnson, Noble J_______ Terre Haute, Ind____| 3807 VSt.SE_________| 33 *|||| Jones, Robert F_______ Lima, Ohio... .... 125 East Thornapple | 94 St., Chevy Chase, Md. *tJonkman, Bartel J_____ Grand Rapids, Mich_| The Methodist Bldg___| 52 *Judd, Walter H__.______| Minneapolis, Minn__| 3503 Lowell St_______ ol 256 *Kean, Robert W________| Livingston, N. J____. 2201 BR St. 0d.aid 73 ae Bernard W. | Gloversville, N. Y___| 2480 16th St__________ 84. at). #1 Kee, John... ...... Bluefield, W. Va____| 3916 Southern Ave. SE_| 131 *Keele, Frank B....... _ Oshkosh, Wis_______ Dorchester House. _ ___ 133 *||Kefauver, Estes. _______ Chattanooga, Tenn__| 1801 16th St__________ 116 *+1t1Kelley, Augustine B__| Greensburg, Pa_____ The Alban Towers____| 108 *1 Kelly, Edward A_______ Chieage, THC... 0 3200. 16th St... 7... 26 Keogh, Eugene J_________ Brooklyn, N.Y... The Mayflower________ 78 Kerr, John Hoo... 2000 Warrenton, Ni C.__.| The Willard. _..___... 89 *1Kilburn, Clarence E____| Malone, N. Y_______ 18Seott Circle...........| 85 *Kilday, Paul J... 0.0 20 San Antonio, Tex____| 3507 Albemarle St_____ 122 *King, Cecil R............ Los Angeles, Calif. o]. _o..oiilia Jumnll 13 *Kinzer, J. Roland..... Lancaster, Pa_______ The Shoreham________ 104 Kirwan, Michael J_______ Youngstown, Ohio___| The Carroll Arms_____ 97 Knutson, Harold... .....: Mops Beach, | 225 BSt. NE_.___.__. 57 inn. *|| || Kopplemann, Herman P_| Hartford, Conn_____ The Mayflower_.______ 17 Runkel, John C....._.._. Harrisburg, Pa. laESI 106 -*tLaFollette, Charles M__| Evansville, Ind______ The Westchester. _____ 33 *tLandis, Gerald W______ Linton, Ind! irons fil css ng, Donia mee 33 Lane, Thomas J... 20.i. Lawrence, Mags... 0 0 oC) JU ls 49 Members’ Addresses 833 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office roems and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office Washington residence Se Page *Lanham, Fritz G0... Fort Worth, Tex____| Woodley Park Towers__| 121 *Larcade, Henry D., Jr___| Opelousas, La_______ The Shoreham ________ 43 Latham, Henry J. Queens Village, NaN... _..-_ JU 1 100 76 *Tea, Clarence F._______. Santa Rosa, Calif____| 110 Maryland Ave. NE._ 9 *LeCompte, Karl M______| Corydon, Iowa______ The Wardman Park___| 35 *tLlePevie, Jay... .._ oC New Paltz, N. Y__._| The Wardman Park___.| 84 *Lemke, William_________ Farge, N. Dak: LU. 15 Myrtle Rd., Forest 92 Grove Park, Silver Spring, Md. Yesinski, John... ..L.. 0000. Dearborn: Mich. ool 0 ns rea a 54 *Lewis, Earl R_.__________| St. Clairsville, Ohio__| 3613 Greenway PI, 97 Parkfairfax, Alex- andria, Va.#|| Link, William W_______ Chicago, Ill. loi l.0 201 Sth St. NE_.___._ 27 Luce, Clare Boothe_______ Greenwich, Conn____| The Wardman Park___| 17 #Ladlow,/ Louis 20200. © Indianapolis, Ind cL {1822 H St... 0 34 *Lyle, John Bo 20-10050 Corpus Christi, Tex__| 200 North Trenton St., | 121 Arlington, Va. *Lyneh, Walter A_s.___._._ New York City, N.Y_| The Mayflower__._...__ 83 *Metonme Samuel K., | Penn Wynne, Pa____| University Club_._._.___ 106 j 2 es *MecCormack, John W____| Dorchester, Mass__._| The Washington______ 50 *|[McCowen, Edward O___| Wheelersburg, Ohio__| George WashingtonInn_| 94 *tMecDonough, Gordon L_| Los Angeles, Calif___| 1507 M St____________ 12 *++McGehee, Dan R_____ Meadville, Miss_____ The Wardman Park_.__| 60 *7MeGlinehey, Herbert J__| Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Mayflower________ 104 #1 McGregor, J. Harry.__| West Lafayette, Ohio_| 2022-A 37th St. SE____| 97 *McKenzie, Charles E____| Monroe, La_________ 1314 MassachusettsAve.| 42 *|||MeMillan, John L_____ Florence, S. C_.____. 1201 South Barton St., | 113 Arlington, Va. *+McMillen, Rolla C_____ Deeatur,: 11.0% 7 2603 36th Pl o_o 30 Madden, Ray J. ....... Gary indi 1 Sr The Continental _______ 32 *+ Mahon, George H______ Colorado City, Tex__| 3700 MassachusettsAve.| 122 *Maloney, Paul H________ New Orleans, La____| The Wardman Park___| 42 *Manasco, Carter________ Jasper, Alas & [00 The Bellevue. __..____ 5 || Mansfield, Joseph J___| Columbus, Tex______ Wakefield Hall________| 120 *Mansfield, Mike. _______ Missoula, Mont_.__._ pr Suitland Terrace | 65 Marcantonio, Vito________ New York City, No YL. CcvsssermaadlioIT] 81 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____ gosin Attleboro, | The Hay-Adams______| 51 Mass. *| Martin, Thomas E_____ Towa City, Iowa____. 2103 Fort Davis St. SE_| 35 *Mason, Noah M________ Oglesby, Tilo. ..._.. The Baronet... ..... 28 *Mathews, Frank A., Jr._.| Riverton, N. J______ 2720 Wisconsin Ave___| 71 May, Andrew J______... Prestonsburg, Ky____| The Roosevelt _______ 41 *Merrow, Chester E______ Center Oggipee, No HLL Lo soo 003000 68 *|| Michener, Earl C______ Adrian, Mich_______ The Wardman Park___| 52 *Miller, ACL 000 0 Kimball, Nebr______ 38090 V-St. SE...00 67 *tMiller, George P_______ Alsveds, Calif, 000 E LonialoinS380 0 10 co *Mills, Wilbur D........... Kensett, Ark__.____. 2701 Connecticut Ave.__ 7 *Monroney, A. 8. Mike___| Oklahoma City, Okla_| 2475 Kalorama Rd____| 100 *Morgan, Thomas K._____ Frederielctown, Pa la, Lr tly sq URl 107 *Morrison, James H______ Hammond, La______ 4607 Connecticut Ave__| 43 *Mundt, Karl EC...2 Madison, S. Dak____| The Capitol Towers___| 114 *Murdock, John R_._____ Tempe, iAvig. J UCU IC aos sl 2000 JUN 6 *Murphy, John W_______ Dunmore: Pal J. 5 00H 1 Lo lan JUTE SI 104 Murray, Reid Fol. oo 0 Ogdensburg, Wis____| 2024 37th St. SE______ 133 Murray; Tom... 203 2310 Jackson, Tenn______ 1900 ¥ Sh. oon 2.000 117 *Neely, Matthew M______ Fairmont, Wai Val lll rian SUSIE oT 130 *Norrell WW. PF... _.. Monticello, Ark_____ 310634th S86 0... 8 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 55 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see Name Norton, Mary TT. ...... *()’ Brien, George D______ 20’ Brien, Thomas J... .._. *O’'Hara, Joseph P_......_ *0O’Konski, Alvin E______ %+10’Neal, Emmet... ... *10’Toole, Donald Li. ____ *QOutland, George E______ *|| Pace, Stephen_ ___._____ *Patman, Wright... ouue- #| || Patrick, Tita eh *|| Patterson, Bilis B...... *Peterson, Hugh. .._.... *| || Peterson, J. Hardin.___ Pfeifer, Joseph L Philbin,’ Philip J... .cacu.. * Phillips, John... wena *Pickett, Tom... . *1Pittenger, William A___ *1Ploeser, Walter C *Plumley, Charles A______ *Poage, W. *Powell, Adam C., Jr_____ Price, Emory H... ..1._ 1. Price, Melvin...Loon . .c Priest, J. Perey. vo in.ii.2 Quinn, Peter A... 000 *Rabaut, louis C........ *Rabin, Benjamin J______ #Rains, Albert. oot *Ramey, Homer A______. *||Randolph, Jennings_ _ _ _ *fRankin, John E Rayburn, Sam.» ..c....-*Rayfiel, Leo BF. ....0.. *tReed, Daniel A. _.____._ #Rees, Edward H__....... *Resa, Alexander J.__.___ #llRich, Robert F....... “Richards, James. Pc ...¢ *Niley, John J... nue *Rivers, L. Mendel..._.... *Rizley, R *Robertson, A. Willis_____ *Robinson, Jor WW. iwi ans *| Robsion, John M:=_____ llRockwell, Robert F_____ *Rodgers, Robert L______ *Roe, Dudley OQ... 220.0 *7{Roe, James A... ... _ Home post office Jersey City, N. J____ Detroit, Mich Chicago, Ill... .... Glencoe, Minn....... Mercer, Wis.......... Louisville, Ky____.__ Brooklyn, NY... Santa, Barbara, Calif _ Americus, Gaz goin. Texarkana, Max ii Birmingham, Ala. o Los Angeles, Calif ___ Afley, Ga... ... ok Lakeland, Fla_______ Brooklyn, N. ¥_.—__ Clinton, Mass... Banning, Calif ___._.. Palestine, Tex_______ Duluth, Minn__.__ Clayton, Mo... . Northfield, Vt....... Waco, Tex. ..c.l.0: New York City, N. Y_ Jacksonville, Fla____ East St. Louis, T11_ __ Nashville, Tenn_____ New York City, N. Y_ Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. New York City, N. Y_ Gadsden, Ala_______ Toledo, Ohio. .....:. Tupelo, Miss____.___ Bonham, Tex_______ Brooklyn, N.Y... Johnson City, Tenn... West Chicago, Ill____ Dunkirk, N. Emporia, Kans______ Chieago, TH. ......u Woolrich, Pa. ioe Lancaster, 8.0 hua Sumter, SiC huni: Charleston, S. C___.. Guymon, Okla______ Lexington, Va. ...... Bismarck, N. Dak... Provo, U Barbourville, Ry... Paonia, Cola, ars Erie, Pa or ah Sudlersville, Md__._._ Flushing, N.Y... .- pp. 307-314) Washington residence The Kennedy-Warren_. 4718 Albemarle St_____ The Hamilton... ..... 2813 31st St. ono 305 Park Rd., Alexan- dria, Va. 110 Maryland Ave. NE._ 3500 14th St... 2806 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Va. 2901 Connecticut Ave__ George Washington Inn._ 3903 4th St. North, Arlington, Va. George Washington Inn. 2929 Connecticut Ave_._ 2309 Skyland Pl. SE... 3 8 Logan Circle__.___ ch 1218 US; SE. 20007 St 1.0 onde The Methodist Bldg. 4608 Reservoir Rd_____ 100 Maryland Ave. NE. 1800: QB. uit niuats 2009 Glen Ross Rd. Silver Spring, Md. The Roosevelt......_.. 1801 16th St... The Wardman Park.__ _ 3913 Huntington St____ George Washington Inn_ The Wardman Park.__._ The Wardman Park___ 1500 Delafield P1.__.___ 1661 Crescent P1______ The Continental ______ George Washington Inn. The Mayflower._._.____ Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office recoms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office Washingtoh residence Hi Page *Rogers, Dwight Li_______ Fort Lauderdale, Fla_| The Claridge_.______. 20 Rogers, Edith Nourse_.__._ Lowell, Mass... 7. The Shoreham... _____ 48 Rogers, George F________ Rochester, N. Y____. Alban Towers. 1...i. 87 Rooney, John J. Jr uli. Brooklyn, N.Y. ... The Mayflower_.______ 79 *tRowan, William A_____ Chieage, sl coolio lo, | ol SL 25 Russell, Sam M__________ Stephenville, Tex... | 232 1st St. 8E_______. 122 *Ryter, Joseph Foo...0 Hartford, Conn_____ 4550 Connecticut Ave__| 16 *1Sabath, Adolph J______ Chicago, J... iol The Mayflower__._.___ 26 *Sadowski, George G:____ Detroit, Mich_______ 2019 30th St... aoc. 51 *Sasscer, Lansdale G_____ Upper Marlboro, Mdi{-. cco. o @ibcaandos 46 *tSavage, Charles R_____. Shelton, Wash______ 2839 South Glebe Rd., | 128 : Arlington, Va. *tSchwabe, George B_____ Mules, Okla oo... 0 Melean, Va. o.oo... 99 *lISchwabe, Max.______... Columbia, Mo_._____ 2108 38th St. SE______ 61 *t||Serivaner, Errett P.._.. Kansas City, Kans___| 2331 Cathedral Ave____| 37 Shafer, Paul Wooo of Battle Creek, Mich.uhx -oc . 0% Brady iol 52 %Sharp, Edgar A... 1; Patchogue, N. Y___._ The Dodge... ool. 75 *Sheppard, Harry R______ Yucaipa, Calif _.______ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 14 *Sheridan, John Edward_.| Philadelphia, Pa___._| 3222d St. NE_______._ 103 *{|Short, Dewey 20. [iL Caleng,"Meo. oo 3i7sl 2301 Connecticut Ave__| 62 *Sikes, Robert L. F_______ Crestview, Fla_ _____ 935 26th St. South, 20 Arlington, Va. ; Simpson, Richard M______ Huntingdon, Pa_____ 4908 Western Ave., | 106 Chevy Chase, Md. Simpson, Sid. .L-.-Carrollton, TI. ______ The Shoreham __.______ 30 %Slaughter, Roger C_..___ Kansas City, Mo._...| 1827 Phelps P1.___.__. 61 *Smith, Frederick C.__.._.| Marion, Chio__...__. 3614 Carpenter St. SE__{ 95 *Smith, Howard W_______| Alexandria, Va______ 204 West Walnut St., | 127 Alexandria, Va. *7Smith, Lawrence H_____ Racine, Wis... oo. = 2480 16th St... 132 Smith, Margaret Chase____| Skowhegan, Maire___| 2745 29th St__________ 44 *Snyder, J. Buell. _--._. . Perryopolis, Pa______ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 107 *Somers, Andrew Brooklyn oo Juss 78 L_______ N."Yuaisiel:binnulld *||Sparkman, John J______ Huntsville, Ala______ 3601 Connecticut Ave.__ 5 *Spence, Brent...“ ¢ Fort Thomas, Ky... | The Roosevelt _-..__.. 40 *||Springer, Raymond S___| Connersville, Ind____| 3339 Stephenson P1____| 34 Starkey, Frank T. St. Paul, Minn The Siratford = 56 Stefan, Karl. = 200% Norfolk, Nebr______. The Mayflower________| 66 *Stevenson, William H____| La Crosse, Wis______ 3626 Austin Ave. SE__| 132 *iStewart, Paul io Antlers, Okla... 2310 Connecticut Ave._| 99 Stigler, William G_______._ Stigler, Okla: 20: 532.20th: St: oon 99 *Stockman, Lowell ______ Pendleton, tiger. oe 102 Oreg. local *Sullivan, John B....._... St.Louis, Mo_..._.. 1800 28th PL-SE. ...... 63 Sumner, Jesgle oc Millard, Jil» on as a ea 29 Sumners, Hatton W______ Dallas, Tex to 200 The Shoreham ________ 120 *Sundstrom, Frank L_____| East Orange, N. J___ Boa Southern Ave. 73 *Taber, John. ossciod. Auburn, N. Yeloicug 2480 16th: Stat. oin.e 86 Talbot; Joseph E_-..= _ Naugatuck, Conn... _| The Dodge. ...._.__.. 17 Talley Henry OQ. -.. Decorah. Town. ol to aaa Sas 35 *|| Tarver, Malcolm C_____ Dalion, Ga... 2.0 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 22 *laylor, Dean-P-= Troy; No Yo oii Dorchester House. _.__ 85 Thom, William R_.-...: Canton; Ohio... ..... The Continental... 96 *Thomas, Albert. ______._ Houston, Texas. _...& 2033 Oh St. oa 120 *Thomas, J. Parnell... _ Allendale, N. J______ 4636 Garfield Si... =~ 72 Thomason, R. Ewing. Tl Paso, Tex... ..... The Kennedy-Warren.__| 122 *Tibbott, Harve... _.... Ebensburg, Pa______ The Baronet... .-..-108 *X olan, Jom IH. .......< Oakland, Calif. _____ Dorchester House_____ 10 Torrens, James HH ~ 5 NewYork City, N.Y [o.ooit 82 Towe, Harry 1...«. Rutherford, N. J____| Dorchester House_.__. 72 836 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 307-314) Name Home post office Washington residence Bi ; Page *Traynor, Philip A... Wilmington, Deli ould Loco cllnmiasiiagg 18 *Trimble, James W_______ Berryville, Ark______ 118 3d 86. 8B. co. 8 Vinson, Carl oes o.oo Milledgeville, Ga___._| 4 Primrose St., Chevy 29 Chase, Md. %#1Voorhis, Jerry....e----San Dimas, Calif____| 3307 Carolina Pl., Al-11 exandria, Va. ®Vorys, John MC...Go Columbus, Ohio_____ 2702 Wisconsin Ave___| 96 *Vursell, Charles W______ Salem, TH. coven George Washington Inn_| 30 *Wadsworth, James W____| Geneseo, N. Y______ 3268 No Stii ni mine 87 Walter, Francis B.____.__. aston, Pads ll socal oda. Si alubaced sad 106 *Wasielewski, Thad F_.___| Milwaukee, Wis__.___ 1637 Preston Rd., Park-| 133 fairfax, Alexandria, Va. Weaver, Zebulon._________ Asheville N.C Leeuinl oo uo ovensoldi 91 Weichel, Alvin F_________ Bandusky, Oho. cold Jo. dobonsn 96 gous *Weleh, Richard J..._.__._ San Francisco, Calif .| The Roosevelt________ 10 West, Milton H__.______. Brownsville, Tex. ...| The Hamilton.____.____ 122 *White, Compton I_______ Clark Fork, Idaho___ 80s. Noun Carolina | 24 ve. SE. *Whitten, Jamie L_._.__._ Charleston, Miss____ aN Fort Davis St. | 59 *Whittington, William M_| Greenwood, Miss____| The Wardman Park___| 59 *11|||| Wickersham, Victor.| Mangum, Okla______ lL Hillerest Drive | 100 *Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Milton, Mass_._._____ 3257 N St. lic iia. 50 *Wilson, Earl oli. 00 Huron Indi. cacao bo tran Soc ie 33 *Winstead, Arthur__.____ Philadelphia, Miss___| 3914 Southern Ave. SE_| 59 *Winter, Thomas D______ Girard, Kans. 2.2... George Washington Inn_| 38 *|| Wolcott, Jesse Po______ Port Huron, Mich___| 109 . East Thornapple | 52 St., Chevy Chase, Md. *Wolfenden, James. ______ Upper Darby, Pac ol. iv i ii lee hs li 104 *Wolverton, Charles A._..| Merchantville, Ni J. |. ...recemeniandionus 70 *Wood, John Saute ais Canton, Ga... ia. 5509 Huntington Park-| 23 way, Bethesda, Md. tWoodhouse, Chase Go-| New London, Conn__| 1245 34th St___._.______ 17 ing. *Wondruft, Roy: 0...... | Bay City, Mich... George Washington Inn_| 53 *Worley, Eugene_________ Shamrock, Tex..____ 369 North Glebe Rd., | 122 Arlington, Va. *Zimmerman, Orville_ ____ Kennett, Mo________ The Roosevelt. _______ 63 1 DELEGATES 2iBartlett, BL... Juneau, Alaska______ 1718384 PLSE. -.... 135 *Farrington, Joseph R____| Honolulu, Hawaii. __| 82 Kalorama Circle____| 135 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS Pifiero; desde T.-C Canovanag, PP. RY 01601 16th St:2 ol 136 *| || Romulo, Carlos P_____ Monila, Pr). >> 1809 24th | ia ov 135 INDIVIDUAL INDEX (For list of Members of Congress, with their addresses, see pp. 825-836) A Page Aamodt, O. S,, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ________ 383 Aaron, Benjamin, National War Labor Board.__ 401 Aarons, Lehman C., Office of General Counsel forthe Treasiiry. oon. A 339 Abbott, Henry D,, Soil Conservation Service_. 390 Abbott, Ben, Administrative Office, Navy _____ 355 Abel-Smith, Capt. E. M. C., British Embassy. 486 Abrahamson, Albert, Office of Secretary of L787) DIR A Up Ft ae IRGC PRR CE WIRE 398 Aburto Valencia, Horacio, Mexican Embassy... 489 Acheson, Dean: Coordinating Committee... boon io 330 Secretary’s Staff Committee... ccaonarcnane-330 Under Secretary State...coocone. 329 of oc Acker, Lawrence W., Office of Budget and I IIONICe. ic oie ils Grit tE gL abd tee Bt ys ord 378 Acosta, Dr. Cesar R., Paraguayan Embassy..._ 491 Acuff, J. Leland, Bureau of Mines. ______._____ 373 Adair, George P., Federal Communications ComMISSION. ootae ao fr Teal 412 Adams, Col. Anthony O., Headquarters Mili-tary District of Washington Re 346 Adams, Capt. B. H., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Cory enon tacks hut sbmitalons MT Jaa 360 Adams, Benjamin F., District assessor’s office__ 471 Adams, Charles W., War Finance Division_____ 342 Adams, Eva B.: Secretary to Senator McCarran. ....___._.___ 273 "Senate Judiciary Committee. ..._._.___.___ 269 Adams, Francis L., Federal Power Comumis-3 [TH fade 3a Be fe Ran Sten Lede LENNIE tig 417 Adams, Commodore John C., Bureau of Medi-cineandeSureery . ie aera 360 Adams, Commander XK. T., Coast and Geodetic SVC ei a 395 Adams, a V., Government Printing Office. 287 Adams, Roger, National Inventors Council ____ 396 Adams, Russell B., Civil Aeronautics Board___ 396 Addison, Taylor a5 General Accounting Office. 284 Adham, "Mohammed, rag Legation. o_o": 488 Adkins, Jesse C., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District oft Colambify. Lhe 2 oii Ua ie drs 461 Adkins, R. E., Veterans’ Administration _______ 445 Adler, John W., Administrative Division ______ 349 Ager, Paul W., Tennessce Valley Authority.___ 444 Agne, Royle Clyde, American Red Cross_______ 407 Agnew, Rear Adm. William J. C., Bureau of Medicine and Sargery li oo at onlay 360 Aguerrevere, Dr. Don Pedro I., Venezuelan Bmbassy | vn nia or isa 494 Ahern, Vincent P., National War Labor Board. 400 Ahlefeldt-Laurvig, Count Benedict, Danish Legation, soditl um ane uri ap eho ama be a 484 Ahmad, M., British Embassy ceo ons 487 .-.o. Aickin, mT, R., New Zealand Legation__________ 490 Ainsworth, Culver M., International Bound- ary and Water Commission, United States and Meaxleo.o oon 0 SE NET a 426 Aitchison, Clyde B., Interstate Commerce EEa EE ee PR ST Akers, Floyd D., National Memorial Stadium Commission. si. ido nde iu iit oiiidas olsen 343 Akers, H. O., District Engineer Department... 474 AKers, Richard H., commissioner, Court of Abii ies PRG aeaded mbit clonal, 458 Akins, Mildred, Senate Committee on Bank- ingandCurreney. ios aarp rh a, 268 Aktarzendi, Lt. Col. Hassan, Iran Legation____ 488 Alareon, Carlos, Mexican Embassy ._...._____.__ 489 Alba, Pedro de, Pan American Union... ...____ 437 Albert, Laurence E., Secret Service... 340 Page Albertson, J. Mark, Tariff Commission _..______ 443 Albin, Harold C.: Office of Marketing Services. __.._.._.._._._. 388 Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Albion, Dr. R. G., Office of Naval History. __.. 358 Albright, David B., Bureau of Accounts________ 354 Aldasoro Suarez, Maj. ¥. A. M. Eduardo: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 426 Mexiean Bmbassy... ic ir. Loi. 489 Alden, Charles E., assistant custodian, Senate Office Building... i is enveicaii-iencse 281 Aldredge, Robert C., Weather Bureau. _._______ 396 Aldrich, Loyal B., Astrophysical Observatory... 442 Aldrich, William T., Commission of Fine Arts_. 410 Alexander, Barbara, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. ........__._....._. 27 Alexander, F. Virginia, Passport Division______ 336 Alexander, Robert C., Visa Division___________ 338 Alford, Hugh E., Office of First Assistant Post-master General... Ci ic lo ale Alk, Isadore G., Office of General Counsel for the Treastly i or it armen rs wee Sms 339 Allanson, H. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultur al Engineering________ 383 Alldredge, J. Haden, Interstate Commerce Commission EDR CO Se LET Allee, Ralph H., Office of Foreign Agtigiural, Relations. ot ry i ab Eat toi ies Allen, Charles W., American Printing House oh an RGRLL ul Lu 422 Allen, Derrick, Combined Shipping Adjustment Board et 327 Allen, Dorothy G., secretary to District Com-missioner... tos ans da al Ie a 471 Allen, Edward W.: International Fisheries Commission. ________ 427 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-mission oo. atusiotu i. mel Bolan Allen, Rear Adm. Ezra G., Office of Budget and Reports, Navy. urs iene t alii 357 Allen, George E.: American Red Cross. ovo ooo J002000 0 406 War Damage Corporation... oi U0 L cia 416 Allen, Mrs. George E., Columbia Hospital for WOON «odo cp fd Sd TN an een Sea Lil 410 Allen; G. G., Panama:Canal ooo Sui. Lois 437 Allen, George V., Division of Near Eastern and Afrieany Nflalyg iol Ul SHIIIH0 2D 80 JUST 331 Allen, Roger A., Weather Bureau... _.__._._____ 396 Allen, S. V., Canadian Embassy loi oil 483 Allen, Thomas J., National Park Service. ______ 372 Allin, Bushrod Ww. Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Per Gen Cai Bik she LSE Ie 4 DRED 377 Allred, Oran H., Securities and Exchange Com-mission: mist h la bamaliy aed du pubes 441 Allsman, Marion F., Marketing Services.__..___ 388 Almagia, Carlo, Italian Embassy icato oats 488 Almon, Helen D., Bureau of the Census._....___ 393 Alomia, Lt. Comdr. Enrique Carrera, Mexican ETHAN DEE il Sinai Smal Bling 489 Alpkartal, Maj. Nureddin Fuad, Turkish TLE BLT Ee hie SR eo LBs acl be Alsabrook, H. K., Office of the Doorkeeper.___ 276 Alsever, John, American Red Cross. .......... 407 Altmeyer, Arthur J., Social Security Board.___ 419 Alves, H. F., Office of Education... 421 Alvey, J. P,, "Bonneville Power Administration. 375 Amatayakul, Chintamye, Siam Legation______ 492 Ambrose, Martena R., transcriber to House committess. .. 0 ti.vomailitunsh eas dnt ado Amidon, Edna P., Office of Education_________ 421 Amidon, George, House post office... __________ 277 Congressional Directory Aminoff, Alexis de, Swedish Legation__________ Amis, Marshall W., Federal Public Housing LA FEA ITE A eeSA a 435 Anderson, Capt. A. B., Board of Review, Dis- : charges and Dismissals... di... 356 Anderson, A. W., Fish and Wildlife Service____ 374 Anderson, Capt. C. A. A., Coast Guard.._.___. 366 Anderson, Dr. Camilla M., Commission on MentaliHegltht: x A a Tai civ 462 Anderson, Clinton P. (Secretary of Agriculture): ISA EI ET SEC batt der OO ie Combined Food Board... _.._lc o-oo. COO a i Bo oan wr eos Satie fa mie 421 Member, Smithsonian Institution. ___________ 441 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission.__ 239 National Archives:Couneil_ :.. 2 >. ~~ 431 National Forest Reservation Commission___. 239 Office of Stabilization Administrator__________ 323 Anderson, Mrs. Clinton P., Congressional Club. 410 Anderson, Elizabeth T., Joint Committee on Printings oor al Danis eid an Anderson, Eugene N., Division of Cultural Cooperation. Halt vet aos Miles 334 Cities’ gi Anderson, Maj. Gen. F. L., Army Air Forces._345 Anderson F. R., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation: «i Gaby 1 434 Anderson, Capt. G. W., Jr., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. ________________ 327 Anderson, John F., Office of General Counsel for ITEM pb pA el Ede er SL 339 Anderson, José Luis, Ecuadoran Embassy______ 485 Anderson, Kenneth, Division of Foreign Activ- Hy Conrelation yo ener 336 Anderson, Leeman: Senate Committee on Immigration. __________ 269 Secretary to Senator Russell ________________. 273 Anderson, Lucille G., Office of Education______ 421 Anderson, Milton J., Office of the Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General. ox .-c= a0 = 0 353 Anderson, Otils L., Bureau of Medical Services. 2 Anderson, R. E., Maritime Commission___ ____ Anderson, Willard A., Mechanical rE tendent, Government Printing Office_______ 287 Andrade, Victor: Bolivian Ambassador... 0: oc thea aa 482 Governing Board, Pan American Union.____._ 438 André, Jule E., Geological Survey_________._.___ 371 Andretta, S. A., Administrative Division...._. 349 Andrews, Charles O. Capital Auditorium Commission. ____________ 237 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds Yo wallin comin pl oduaddo Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission____ 240 Andrews, H. T., Union of South Africa M inister SR Rall La Va Beings: 493 Andrews, John, minority clerk ________________ 276 Andrews, Col. John N., Selective Service Sys- OY es pe I LL DL 324 Andrews, Commander Mark, Material Divi-SION Sretna Fann id Sol SL SSE BOL CRs Se ~=25387 Andrews, T. Coleman, General Accounting Office) i 0) aes il Sarai re Saba 284 Andrews, Walter G.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 240 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment. 242 Andrus, Commodore Carlton L., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. ocoooooooo______ 360 Angel, Lt. Comdr. Herbert, Administrative Office a Bl Cl. ARE EI 356 Angelin, Commodore Olof, Swedish Legation.. 492 Angus, Alice, Women’s Bureau___________.______ 400 Anheier, Harry D., Secret Service... ...._.2___ 340 Annand, P. N., Bureau of Entomology and Plant. Quarantine...vy oF 0 2b 382 Anslinger, H. J., Commissioner of Narcotics-... 340 Antoine, Jacques C.: Governing Board, Pan American Union__.___ 438 Haitian Embassy. to apdfio SE 23 2 iocoid 487 Anzorena, Eugenio de, Mexican Embassy... 489 Appleby, Margaret S., Senate Committee on Tmrpigration aoc 0od) oo JULJog 269 Appleby, Paul H., Bureau of the Budget....._ 318 Arends, Leslie C.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy.__ oe Minoritywhip, HOUSe....ocuellevine eas Page Arey, -Hawthorne, Export-Import Bank of Wiashingtonel so cio. oo v7 io ao Arline, Gertrude, United States Civil at Commission contact office. ___________.______ 283 Armentrout, Sue, Botanic Garden______________ 287 Sry, Charles A., National Institute of TOS TERE S NE E Armstrong, Brig. Gen. Donald, Office of Under Secretary of War... oie vaude is Ai Armstrong, G. G., ieduoiin and Marketing Administration SERRE Re pO RETR Lr LR VS WN 386 Armstrong, James E., secretary to Senator Capehart eaRar Ka 272 Armin Paul V., Wherry Loar bol Ba BINA a0 Sal TR ee Clifford O., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster Genera] iC HERE GHG 352 Arner, GeorgeB. L., Committee for Reciprocity GE Nr Te Rs SLs SLE HE 410 Arnold, C. R., Farm Credit Administration___ 384 Arnold, Edwin G.: Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 374 Office of Secretary of the Interior. ________ ~..."369 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. 375 Arnold, Henry H., General of the Army: Army Aly-Forces... (D500) HEIL BT 345 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain. “oo fe Sonate of 326 4 Ration Advisory Committee for Areo-4 YHA TE piel ol seesiate Vu ie eln Lo 325 Arnold, Leroy D., Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 370 Arnold, Capt. M, E., Bureau of Naval Person- nt oR er 1 ee en he 2 ee Se RE 361 Arnold, Mildred, Children’s Bureau__._________ 399 Arnold, Capt. Ralph J., Material Division_____ 357 Arnold, William W., judge, Tax Court of the Ted Slates. ol odin dos a5 re ob Sri tne 461 Arosemena, Col. Bey Mario, Inter-American Defense Board... i coi anh ts 426 sanaedons Arrington, Commander C. B., Coast Guard ___ 366 Arthur, Col. Joseph D., Jr.: Assistant to Engineer Commissioner_._______ 471 District Engineer Department. ______________ 474 Artrip, Floyd, House press gallery______________ 753 Arundell, C. Rogers, judge, Tax Court of the United States. . . out dlantpcitsast Se dow 461 Arundell, Brigadier R. D. H., Anglo-American Caribbean Commission.«........«... 408 _—.. Asay, Ivan Paul, Office of the Surgeon General 420 Ascher, Charles S., National Housing Agency... 433 Asgeirsson, Thorhallur, Iceland Legation _._____ 488 Ash, John L., Jr., Civil Service Commission Contact: OMe csi don eds. Br ody 283 Ash, Simon H., Bureau of Mines_...___.__.____._ 372 Ashby, Wallace, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, Agricultural Engineering ____________ 383 Asher, John W., Jr., Rural Electrification Ad-TRIISREION. colors.ciel. oro tanns iets. 390 Ashley, Clatie, House Committee on Patents... 278 Ashworth, Dr. Reid R., District Health Depart- ment Askar, Lt. Comdr. Gunnar Swedish Legation__ 492 Askew, John W., Bureau of Accounts__.________ 353 Aston, J. Lee, Office of the Doorkeeper_._______ 275 Athey, Kamilla, Surplus Property Administra- tionlisison office... alti 283 Atkins, Capt. Lew M., Industrial Survey Divi-1 FT eA EC oe CRI Oe IY 11 Ce Rp (1 1 356 Atkinson, C. Newell, Municipal Court of Ap-peals for the District of Columbia__________ 463 Atkinson, Richard R., District Board of Barber Examiners. te 472 Atwood, Albert W., Columbia Institution for the Deal oh i oD iid 422 Atwood, Mrs. Albert, District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Board. _.___...._____ 4 Auchincloss, James C., Thomas Jefferson Me-morial Commission: o.oo leon in uri... 240 Auld, David, District Engineer Department... 474 Individual Index Page Avallone, Oscar J., Corporation Counsel’s Offic RETR EU Re LNG A 4 Bae ST TAs 474 Avendaio S., Maj. Oscar, Chilean Embassy... 483 Avery, Eunice V., Senate Committee on Bank-ing'and:'Curreneyis io iil Jes ui 268 Avery, Hastings P., Securities and Exchange Aro Commander John W., 2d, Office of General Counselil lL x Dine Sie 3 Ayllén, Maj. Miguel: Bolivian Bmbassy.-_c oib oldensy 3 482 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 425 Ayres, Lee M., National War Labor Board.___ 400 Ayres, William A., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Azer, Anis, Egyptian Legation. ______.__________ 485 Aziz, Abdol Hosayn, Afghanistan Legation _____ 481 Aziz, Mohamed Ayoub, Afghanistan Legation. 481 Aznar, Herman, Spanish Embassy. _________.___ 492 B Baba, Nuzhet, Turkish Embassy... ___.... 493 Babcock, Harry A., Federal Trade Commission. 424 Bachman, Byers M. , deputy District assessor___ 471 Backman, J ohn J. Office of Investigatory Serv- (1 A Men AP SRS mits er CE RR 389 Bacon, Sfun) E., Office of Far Eastern jx. 331 Badger, Paul L.: Secretary to Senator Thomas of Utah... 273 Senate Committee on Military Affairs___._____ 269 Baekeland, George, National Inventors Council. 396 Béaez, Dr. Manuel Martinez, Pan American SanitaryiBareal. oriontena teh iia tena 437 Baggarly, F. C., Federal Trade Commission... 423 Bagley, Vice Adm. David W.: Inter-American Defense Board. vucciiin. Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- TEFf ReaPE SE oe Permanent Joint Board on Defense... __._.._ 438 Bagley, Dudley W., General Accounting Office. 284 Bahgat, Dr. Mounir, Egyptian Legation. _.__.. 485 Bailey, A. D., Patent Offlee. o.oo.eoolin. 395 .00 Bailey, Dr. Bruce K.; a Hospital _.__ 422 Bailey, Edward E., District License Bureau._._ 472 Bailey, E. Tomlin, Bpecy] Projects Division. __ 336 Bailey, Col. EldonL., Veterans’ Administra- Bailey, F. J., Bureau of the Budget____.________ 318 Bailey, Harry O., District Fire Department____ 475 Bailey, J ennings, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District AO rn RE 461 Baily, Josiah W., Board of Visitors to the Mer-chant Marine "Academy 241 ate Bailey, Richard H., Jr.: Secretary to Senator Guffey ARE Se a 272 Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. _... 269 Bailey, Robert L.: Civil Service Commission. __..._..___......... 409 Civil Service Commission contact office... 283 Bain, I. Y., Bureau of Internal Revenue.__.__.. 342 Bain, Dr. Katherine, Children’s Bureau........ Bajpai, Girja Shankar, British Embassy. .__...._ Baker, A. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant * Quarantine sono tpatutt. ob wallbiedl so or 382 Baker, Cora W., American Battle Monuments Commission. i REG el DEC Re BTN i SA) 405 Baker, Edith M., Children’s Bureau. _________. 399 Baker, Capt. Felix L., Permanent Joint Homa. on-Delense.. «ho loti hi di Larrea Baker, George P.: Coordinating COMMA, coli iatdine 330 Office of Transport and Communications Policy 334 Baker, George W., Division of Economic Secu-eitviControls iia. dl cael 3 iiniicad. Baker, John C., Office of Information___________ Baker, Ray E., Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce 269 Baker, Walter E., Federal Power Commission__ 417 Baker, Wilbur Dy Home Owners’ Loan Corpo- ration ee NO a al 434 Baker, W. M., Tennessee Valley Authority_____ Bakey, Margaret, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... . co itnonioC 238 Bales A., District deputy purchasing officer. 4 Balfour, J., British Embassy... ii canto Ball, Elizabeth RB. ay to Senator Ball____ B20 Ball, John R., Office of the Speaker. .c..iiio 274 Ball, Capt. Vilém, Czechoslovakian Embassy__ 484 Ballantine, Joseph W., Office of Secretary of Ballif, Louis S., Tarift Commission._.__.________ Ballinger, Billy, Capitol'Police tc. civisaaris Ballinger, E. R., General Accounting Office_.__ 2 Ballinger, Willis, J., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Balls, A. K., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry: c.f code oiiiaisiaanie 381 Band, William F. X., Customs Court..________ 459 Bandel, Frank C., National Mediation Board.__ 436 Bane, Baldwin B., Securities and Exchange Commission: . iris sued ves bidgmas ito ntsl 439 Bang-Jensen, Povl, Danish Legation__._.._______ 484 Banister, Marion, Assistant Treasurer of the United: States. io oli main oe siray Lo, 341 Bannerman, Robert L., Office of Controls_.___. 3306 Bannerman, R. R. B., British Embassy.__...___ 487 Baraibar, German, Spanish Embassy. _____.____ 492 Barash, Max, Geological Survey. ._._______.___. 371 Baraw, Lt. Shirley R., Office of Naval History__ 358 Daa, Don Rodolfo E., Argentine Em- Barber, Willard F., Division of Caribbean and Central American Affairs.__________________ 332 Barbosa, Capt. Santiago, Columbian Embassy. Barbour, Thomas, Advisory Board on National Parks, 00 ihn didnt ante see sh ot ab 376 Barbour, Walworth, Division of Southern Euro- peal AAS. ir oh eh ea Leer 331 Barboza, Mario Gibson, Brazilian Embassy .... 482 Barcus, Thomas R., Acquisitions Department._. 285 Barden, Graham A., Joint Committee on the TAIT cis at a dh a a DES ol a 238 iia Barger, Corinne: Secretary to Senator Tydings._ co oceaoo 273 Senate Committee on Territories and Insular LL TE eS A I RI SE SS SE A 270 Barker, Howard F., Tariff Commission. __ 443 Barker, Jesse E., House post office. _ .cocommao_. 277 Barker, Orlie V., House post office _ _oooouoo.. 277 Barkley, Alben W.: Interparliamentary Union... ____.__._ 239 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- ATTY BRO LL I RR an Ml 238 Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl Harbor Atlack: iio cameras 244 sii. Joint Committee on the Library __...___._.___ 23 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board-.__.._. 287 Majority floor leader, Senate. ___________.___. 261 National Archives Council... .occcoemceao. 431 National Archives Trust Fund Board. __..___ 431 Regent, Smithsonian Institution_____________ 441 Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 247 Barkley, John F., Bureau of Mines_..___..._____ 372 Barkman, Ulf, Swedish Legation. ___.__.________ 492 Barnach-Calbo, Ernesto, Spanish Embassy... 492 Barnard, George M., Interstate Commerce Commission en a we A el 4 Barnes, Roger E., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Barnes, Stuart K.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation.__.__.____ 415 U.S. Commercial Company... co. cific uivas 416 Barnett, Robert, Division of Japanese and Korean Economic Affairs Barnett, Robert M., United States Employ-INCI SOIVICe us viii Sos twa dep B= = 401 Baroja, Lt. Comdr. Vicente M., Argentine Em- Lr PR SR Sa a a CeO 481 Baron, Ly José T., Cuban Embassy.__._.._... 484 Barr, Maj. Gen. ’David G., Army Ground Fore 4 Barr, 2s W., deputy clerk, United States nl Supreme Court Barr, Mason, Division of Territories and Island Possessions [3 i sh ese le NES Le Xara CREA Barr, Ross R., National Mediation Board. ..__. 840 Congressional Directory Barre, H. W., Bureau of Plant Industry _______ 383 Barreto, Dr. Jofio de Barros, Pan American Sanitary Burentl. .... a0 IB Liu ran 437 Barrett, Fern, House folding room ________.___.___ 276 Barrett, Mrs. Frank A., Congressional Club__.. 410 Barrett, L. I., Forest Service RESON PPI SR a ae 385 Barrett, Asst. Supt. Robert J., Metropolitan Police Sy eae DEFRA SER HET oy 5 JE 476 Barringer, John M.: Office of Secretary of Interior __._____...__.... 369 Division of Territories and Island Possessions. 374 Barron, Edward A., Customs Court ___________ 459 Barrows, Jos. , Federal Prison Industries, Inc... 350 Barry, G. Lynn, Office of Attorney General .___ 348 Barse, George P., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia ii zi. oo 00 464 Bari SW. P., Interstate Commerce Commis- Paras, Christopher D., District Fire De- partment. 10 LLG Luca Sat ETE 475 Bartelt, Edward F., Fiscal Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. 5d L030 oak U0 Tahar 0 338 Bartlett, Dorsey Joe, Office of the Doorkeeper.. 275 Bartley, Guy, Inland Waterways Corporation__ 392 Barton, Dr. H., Combined Food Board. ______._ 327 Barton, John Pr, secretary to Senator Murdock. 273 Barton, Richard W., District Corporation Coun- Sel’s Offige robin voi find Go 80 Jon on vee 474 Baruch, Ismar, Civil Service Commission______ 409 Bascufian, Arturo, Chilean Embassy. __________ 483 Bashore, Harry W., Bureau of Reclamation____ 371 Basinger, Mildred, Senate Committee on Post Offices and ania il 270 Post-Roads.....ccaonne. Bass, Rear Adm. Ivan E., Bureau of Ships_____ 362 Bass, Neil, Tennessee Valley Authority _______ 444 Bassett, Dr. Charles T'., District Board of Den- fal Examiners... 5 00 0 LGA 0l LC UE 472 Bassler, R. S., National Museum__.____________ 441 Bassoul, Henri A., Lebanon Legation______ 488 Bastedo, Rear Adm. P. H., Naval Retiring Review Board = U0 S00 Doak SRT 357 Batchelder, Edward D., Office of Secretary of Treasury toc Cel Sidhe 00 Coal fai) 338 Batchelder, Esther L., Bureau of Human Nutri- tion and Home Economies. __.______._______. 383 Batchelder, Capt. Robert F., Material Division. 357 Bateman, G. C., Material Coordinating Com- MIR. oo sa es STE 326 Bates, F. J., National Bureau of Standards_____ 394 Bates, J. T, Maritime Commission. _________ 429 Bates, Sanford, Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 349 Bathurst, M. E., British Embassy... ________._ 487 Batista, Consuelo, Cuban Embassy. _________ 484 Batschelet, Clarence E., Bureau of the Census. _ 393 Batson, J. W., District Engineer Department__ 474 Batt, William L.: Civilian Production Administration__________ 319 Combined Raw Materials Board. ____.________ 327 Joint War Production Committee ____________ 326 Material Coordinating Committee._..________ 326 Battaglia, Frank E., Official Reporter, House__. 279 Baube, Jean, French Embassy ___..._._____.____ 486 Baugh, James B., Jr.: Civil Service Commission. _______________._.__ 409 Civil Service Commission contact office_____ 283 Baughman, Josephine J., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs. __________ 270 Baughman, J. S., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora- 1121] ne CELE ERCC 434 Bawcombe, W. Edward, Office of the Solicitor. _ 380 Baxter, R. W., Surplus Property Administra- Baybutt, Richard, Reconstruction Finance Corporation: ia itioe 415 mOntiisyFi Baydur, Hiiseyin Ragip, Turkish Embassy____ 493 Baz Manero, Javier, Mexican Embassy____.___ 489 Beach, W. Edwards, Office of Investigatory Serviges 2 ta tc Se vibe CIR Ss al 388 Beal, Edwin G., Jr., Reference Department, Library ol Congress... 286 Beall Senate Committee on Enrolled Beaman, Middleton, Office of Legislative Coun-Selous us cenit dD a ds ena 279 Bean, Group Capt. W. W., Permanent Joint Board onDefense iti fusuniald Slee 438 -Page Beard, Charles A., National Historical Publica-tions Commission... oc. wu x Beard, Edward A., District Corporation Coun-selisioffice. ir: obs oionngaa i I mania Ne Live 474 i Beasley, Robert Wo Social Security Board._... 419 Beatty, Willard W.: Indian Arts and Crafts Board.._____________ 370 Office of Indian Affairs... soiocii oy 370 cae Bechhoefer, Bernhard G., Office of the Foreign BOIVICE.. (ooh am gs neta a wins Cl. at 5 es 335 Beck, William C., Jr.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation... sued 413 Rubber Development Corporation___________ 416 Becker, Joseph A., Office of Foreign Agricul-Paral RelotiONS ve te sive. se essesen 379 Beckett, Humphrey, District Engineer Depart-Ree WS MRR ER ee 475 Beckett, Inspector James F., Metropolitan OOO AGES es rr 76 Beckley, Harold R., Senate Press Gallery. ._____ 753 Bedell, Elizabeth B, House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries... concoc 278 Bedsworth, Estelle, Senate Committee on Ter-ritories anda for Affairs Loloti TE 270 Ll SlOmEL Le ll ill 0 aU a Baia ds 417 Behroon, Khosrow, Iran Tegation______________ 488 Bejarano, Dr. Jorge, Pan American Sanitary Buren, i, an Tay 437 Belews A. E,, office of Official Reporters of De-rs pA RT Ses Se LA ER Belikov, Capt. A., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy. cio Boo nani nn rE a Belin, Ferdinand L., National Gallery of Art__ 442 Bell, ‘0. Jasper, Filipino Rehabilitation Com- TOUSBION. 0 Co i eR 243 Bell, Daniel W.: Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ___._____ 384 Under Secretary of the Treasury. __._.._..___ 338 Bell, E. W., General Accounting Office______.___ 284 Bell, Elmer T'., Conciliation Service ___________ 399 Bell, Forrest G., Soil Conservation Service _____ 391 Bell, George L., Office of International Trade Operations. © C01 Logs (UIA Un TE 397 Bell, W. Gordon, Washington city post office___ 477 Bellinghen, Carlos van, Belgian Embassy. _____ 482 Belmont, Mrs. August, American Red Cross... 406 Belovsky, Sidney A., Visa Division______.______ 336 Belsley, G. Lyle, Civilian Production Adminis- frabions. 00. JRL 0 BE i ea 319 Belt, Guillermo: Cuban Ambassador... 008 Jog Feil Tia oy 484 Governing Board, Pan American Union__.___ 438 Beltran, Pedro: Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 438 Peruvian Embassy... feb nda 491 Benard, Jean Pierre, French Embassy... _______ 486 Bendz, Gregar, Swedish Legation______________ 492 Benecke, Carl W., Railroad Retirement Board. _ Benidt, M. M., Combined Food Board ________ 327 Benjamin, Harold, Office of Education_________ 421 Bennett, B. Frank, Federal Board of Hospital- i sad al A I Fd A) Ly Hugh H., Soil Conservation Service__ 390 Bennett, James V.: Bureau of Prisons. 20. oi dalian tind us 349 Federal Board of Hospitalization____._________ 318 Federal Prison Industries, Ine... 350 ___ i... Bennett, John B., Office of Land Utilization____ 36& Bennett, John E., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 278 Bennett, William F., House Select Committee on Small Business. oolLT Bent, Donn N., National Labor Relations Board Ao. Do dri sound 1 vorat yr SO JR TR 436 Bentley, Fay L., judge, juvenile court_._________ 464 Benton, William: Assistant Secretary of State. __________________ 329 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service____ 337 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Boardiil Trans Cara Sa in 337 Individual Index : 841 Page Page Benton, William—Continued. Board of Foreign Service Personnel ___________ 337 Interdepartmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation. _____.__________ 334 Secretary’s Staff Committee ___________._____ 330 Berard, Armand, French Embassy__.__._________ 486 Beresford, Robert F., secretary, District exam- iners and registrars of architects. __._________ 472 Berg, William, Jr., Office of Stabilization Ad- ministeaters:.o = ila Dr nasniihs 323 Berge, Wendell, Assistant Attorney General. ___ 348 Boro Raoul, Office of Alien Property Custo- Foner SNR A ERS Te HE he Tiel #R a ie S 319 Een C. R., Office of Alien Property Cus-todian. scoaaintir. Shoal ahd Bergson, Abram, Division of Foreign Economic Development 2 os as nis co arin la 333 Berkey, Kenneth W., Office of Marketing Sn a So IRB TOTS SE ER a 388 Berkol, Faruk N., Turkish Embassy____________ 493 Berkshire, Stewart, Internal Revenue Bureau.__ 341 Berlin, Charles K., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation... ..__ io. _ oi. 434 Berlinsky, Joseph W., Western Union Tele-graph Co. aaaain asl 282 Bermudez de Castro, Marquez de Lema, Manuel, Spanish Embassy citi ans f Dito aay 492 Semin Washington P., Uruguayan Em-a Berton Merrill, Weather Bureau___._______.__ 395 Bernhardt, Joshua, Office of Marketing Services. 388 Bernstein, Edward M., Division of Monetary Besearehoo. ol... caro HO 340 Berquist, Fred E., Reconstruction Finance CGorporatlonoatiail 7 Aen galiza 414 Berry, Frank G., District Fire Department. ____ 475 Berry, Lt. Col. Joseph H., Jr., Selective Service System wy thwminb a kel) ial Ign 324 Berry, J. H., Joint War Production Committee. 326 Berry, E Lampion, Division of Middle Eastern oard ationian Doe alo Gk rad C. A., New Zealand Legation_.______ 490 Betancourt, Gabriel, Colombian Embassy. ..___. 483 Bethea, Liston P., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System _.._______.__________ 418 Bethea, Lt. Comdr. W. C., Coast Guard ________ 366 Betterley, Joseph F., Office of Fourth AS Sint Postmaster General ot LE SRE Re PATE Ere OWN Betts, PresnellK., American Red Cross... 30s Beuret, Rear Adm. J. D., National Inventors Goumellerlzli pinnae BILEILA 396 Beus, Dr. J. G. de, Netherlands Embassy. _...._ 489 Bevan, L. A., Extension Service ________________ 378 Beyer, Clara M., Division of Labor Standards... 399 Beyer, Sylva S., ‘Women’s Bureatl 400 Bhakdi, Luang "Dithakar, Siam Legation Bialla, Marian L., Office of Secretary of Labor... 398 Bianchi, Dr. Jodo Antonio de, Portuguese Ambassadoriiomo ic sna ol 0H isi 491 Bickers, Thomas E., National Mediation Board. 436 Bicknell, John W., Rubber Development Cor- oration sey Loon. Coa Loo gehen 320 Biedenweg, A. G., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General... ooo ul iain 353 Bieri, Rear Adm. B. H., Naval Operations.._._._ 359 Biffle, Leslie L.: American Battle Monuments Commission.__ 405 Secretary of the Senate (biography). __________ 267 Bigge, George E., Social Security Board. .._____ 419 Biggers, A. Brice, Baresy ofiShips_ oo. aoul.. 362 Biggs, Sormanl , District Engineer Depart-2 Bilbo, i a.: Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academ 240 National | Gapital Park and Planning Com-> 4 National Memorial Stadium Commission._._ 243 Billard, George C., Bureau of Internal Revenue.. 342 Billig, Thomas C., Office of the Solicitor________ 369 Bilmanis, Alfred, Latvian Minister. _._._.__.___ 488 Bird, Commander H. V., Bureau of Naval Per- sonpely. a aE Sneadyd ald 361 elisa Birgfeld, Frank A., Chief Clerk, Treasury De- Bishop, C. W. (Runt), Joint Committee on the LADYorY.. y. colin tial se OEY 2 Bishop, David W., St. Elizabeths Hospital ____ Bishop, E. L., Tennessee Valley Authority. ____ Bishop, William W., Jr., Office of Legal Adviser. 330 Bishopp, F. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine uo; 00 Co ol iil EH 382 Bissell, Maj. Gen. Clayton, War Department GeneralStaff. | Saw sl on fini 344 Bissell, Richard M., Jr., Combined -Shipping djustmentBoard. LilianL000) ous 327 Bittner, Van A., National War Labor Board____ 400 Blosices Ignatius, Columbia Institution for the Es Rt Ra Ti SA ie SR CERO 22 A Commander J., Netherlands Em- DaBSY aeSES ER BRE 489 Black, Atred H., Bureau of Accounts_.._______ 354 Black, Edgar B.: flice of Transportation mL RR Ce SE 388 Production and Marketing Administration___ 386 Black, Eugene, judge, Tax Court of the United tates meddngn ll nudes Wl 30 Fan 461 Black, Hugo L., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography).____ 449 Blackburn, Katherine C., Bureau of the Budget. 318 Blackburn, K. Wilde, Office of the Solicitor ____ 380 Baine, Maude V., Western Union Telegraph Co. 282 Blair, Henry P., Columbia Hospital for Women. 410 Blair, John M., Smaller War Plants Corporation. 325 Blair, Livingston L., American Red Cross.__.._ 407 Blaisdell, Donald C., Division of International Securities Affairs. C.J nogiis) Se iisis 332 Blake, Gilson G., Special Projects Division_____ 336 Blake, Harry, "District Zoning Adjustment Board woof voll Go 474 Blake, Dr. Mabella B., War Finance Division... 342 Blake, Thomas D., Office of Secretary of State.. 330 Blakeslee, George H., Office of Far Eastern Affairs na LE a Ti Sse ad] 331 Blakley, Bernard C., Office of Land Utilization. 369 Blalock, Henry W., Federal Power Commission. 417 Blanchard, Farrar, House post office. .______.__ 277 Blanco, Dr. Carlos, Cuban Embassy _.____._____ 484 Blanco, Juan Carlos, Uruguayan Ambassador... 493 Blanco Macias, Gonzalo, Mexican Embassy... 489 Bland, Oscar E., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography)... ._________ 455 Bland, Schuyler Otis: Bost of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-15. Bey of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy... .. iC less duooiizanaliies 241 Goethals Memorial Commission. _._._...____ 425 Joint Committee on the Library. ___________ 238 Blandford, John B., Jr.: Administrator, National Housing Agency.___ 432 Office of Stabilization Administrator. __._____ 323 Blandford, Maj. John R., Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals... ____________ 356 Blanning, W. Y., Interstate Commerce Com- algslon.: rao iva ane TaRdin P ined 428 Blee, C. E., Tennessee Valley Authority... _____ 444 Blegen, Theodore C., Advisory Board on National Parks, clic 376 ete... ooceot.ain Blesse, Brig. Gen. Frederick A., Army Ground OLEES: A. Full Gu dove 0 goss). Cord 345 Blickensderfer, Joseph P., Library of Congress.. 285 Bliss, Cornelius N., American Red Cross._______ 406 Bliss, D. Spencer, Bureau of Internal Revenue._. 341 Bloom, Frank, National Labor Relations Board. 436 Bloom, Sol: Columbia Institution for the Deaf __..______. 422 Foreign Service Buildings Commission__.._.. 337 Blough, Carman G., War Contracts Price Alo justment. Board. iv. tart dathe dl 10 Blough, Roy J Division of Tax Research... ... aoiua 2.2 342 Office of Secretary of the Treasury. -__._._____ 338 Blowe, Frank C., Federal Deposit Insurance i Corporation. --cogiof io giant cuniolo 2a] Bloyer, Ellen H., Office of Assistant Secretary SS of Navy for Airs caeid i 3 0). Jicks Board, Samuel S., Civil Service Commission... 409 Boardman, Miss Mabel T., American Red CrosSiu: hie oF odie cr BYR tent da Uh. = ne 406 Boetzelaer, Baron W. van, Netherlands Em- Dattmaent RRs 338 ae Re Ee SR a 89 Congressional Directory Page Page Bogardus, R. B., Rubber Development Corpo- rablon. uo ons odp Baan Nd Avant dy 16 Boggs, Samuel W., Division of Geography and z Cartography -33 Bohart, Philip H., Petroleum Administration forward o oun onl Sar eer ah RL Sse 324 Bohlen, Charles E., Office of Secretary of State. 330 Bokat, George, National Labor Relations Board. 436 Boke, Richard L., Bureau of Reclamation___.__ 371 Boissier, Andre, Swiss Tregationi. . lowulsilou 49 Boldin, 'B. E. 52 "Reconstruction Finance Corpo- ration EL TO RL BT £0 a J 2 gg Ee SI LA 4 Bolton, Herbert E., Advisory Board on N giionalul Parks, CLA ERIE Lo FO hi i bE or an a Bonbright, James C. H., Division of Western Buropean-Affairs... nS 331 Bond, Elizabeth, Special Committee on Con- servation of Wildlife Resources_.._____.____ Bond, Lt. Comdr. John A., Coast and Geodetic Survey LE SAN Ie SAA a2 Do SAR SUA RL JR HAAR Bond, William C., Library of Congress...__.._. Bonde, Count Gustof, Swedish Legation_______ Bondy, Robert E., Arnerican Red Cross... Bonesteel, Maj. Gen. C. H., War Department Special Staff io conics. Seniiisa unl 344 Bonesteel, Verne C., Federal Home Loan Bank Systemasenl ols a od ras on lanai ses 434 Bonham, Howard, American Red Cross_._____. 406 Bonner, Francis 2 Office of Price Administra- tons ici ind anidapiy nd 322 earn Bonnet, Henri, French Ambassador____________ 486 Bonstetter, Gilbert A., Office of Secretary of COTIIRICE | eas i vein Sotull nt horn ol] 392 Boochever, Louis C., American Red Cross_____ 407 Boon, Dr. H. N., Netherlands Embassy_______ 489 Boone, Lt. Col. Arthur R., Selective Service System. vs ir ol ROL 324 Boote, Ward E., Employees’ Compensation Commission... vii oral ol SiS 411 Booth, Fenton W., chief justice (retired), Court of Claims SR pA EEL RN J N12 SR 6 457 Boothe, Gardner L., 2d, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System...o. 18.7 35 418 Boots, Charles F., Office of Legislative Counsel, ’ Senalciaorii: oti i penile SIIB EN 271 Boros: d’Altena, Lt. Col. Count Baudouin de, Belgium Embassy £1 LPC TR SEE 481 Borden, Capt. F. S,, tn and Geodetic Sur-5, HL IRIYOGEE DE Bl da a TE 9 Boros, Brig. Gen. William A.: National Inventors Council. ____.-_____._____ 396 War Department Special Staff. _______.________ 344 Bordner, Howard W., General Accounting i. COs tannin TEEN LI DOI U0 SL TIT BR nd iF 2 Borton, Hugh, Division of Japanese Affairs____ 331 Bosch, Leon A., Office of Price Administration. 321 Boss, James G., Reconstructon Finance Corpo- rabionhol J DERE an Ea LLG TOT 414 Boss, Robert L.., Washington city post office_____ 478 Botkin, Claude 0., District Department of Public Welfare... io. oo. ln wadzi Boudail 477 Bouchard, Evelyne, Radio Studios_____.____.___ 282 Bourjaily, Monte F., Office of International Trade: Operations... AiG Gain = ATT R; 397 Bourn, Frank B., Office of Secretary of War____ 344 Bouton, James O., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster Generals... Joupor. Siounias 352 Bovard, Burton C., Federal Housing Adminis-4 i RNa a LN Bowden, Mary G., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining to rbI ar 269 Bowen, Rear Adm. H. G.: National Inventors Couneil ._ .__________._____ 396 Office of Research and Inventions... _______. 359 Bowen, Lewis H., American Red Cross....____ 407 Bowen, Walter S., Secret Service. ______________ 340 Bower, Ward T., Fish and Wildlife Service_._._ 374 Bowles, Chester: Office of Price Administration. _________...____ 321 Office of Stabilization Administrator.____.____ 323 Bowles, Oliver, Bureau of Mines_ _______._._.___.__ 373 Bowman, George M., Jr., House post office_.___ 277 Bowman, Col. H. W., Army Air Forces________ 345 Bowman, James S., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Bowman, Lilian T., Tariff Commission. _.______ 443 Bowman, Raymond T., Surplus Property Ae ministration Sirs 8 no mene TET Bowser, Ivadell, Senate Committee on Irriga-tion and: Reelamations. coi ca ooo ti 000. 269 Boyce, Col. Westray Battle, War Department General Staff... coihreeionas hig rdrin 344 Boyd, G. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. _____._.______.. 383 Boyd, Howard B.: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation: -:=_.... 389 Office of Price. sii cin iat. oh cedfl W 3 387 Production and Marketing Administration.__ 386 Boyd, Lt. Col. Robert G., Inter-American De-fense:Boardof Daill, oc0a il thm. as 426 Boykin, Frank W., Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy ________________ 241 Boykin, L. E., Public Roads Administration___ 424 Boykin, Samuel D., Office of Special Political AOS Sl et ae SER a Braddock, Daniel M., Division of Brazilian Affairs hr Fe ah fr a Yr Braden, Spruille: Assistant Secretary of State___________________ 329 Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service____ 337 Board of Foreign Service Personnel __________ 337 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Board oan, nn i rs an iy 337 Governing Board, Pan American Union_._____ 438 Secretary’s Staff Committee. ____._._________ 330 Bradford, Faith, Acquisition Department, Li-brary of al 5 Congress... nice.aspen Bradionds. W. D., Office of Alien Property Cus-odio aon oral i Sonali asian ails 319 Bradley, Deal Columbia Hospital for OMCN 250 an dnn dara dont bene DI PEE Bradley, John G., Library of Congress... ______ 285 Bradley, Gen. Omar N., Veterans’ Adminis- tration siii asideen 444 nu Lo Bradley, W. H., Geological Survey_____.___.____ 371 Brainerd, Col. Gareth N., Selective Service BYSteMESES. oi ais an dea as 325 Bramhall, Walter F., Municipal Court for the District of Columbia... ............... Fie. 464 Branch, Harllee, Civil Aeronautics Board. _____ 396 Brand, Rear Adm. Charles L., Bureau of Ships. 362 Brandes, E. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ________ 383 Brannan, Charles F., Office of Secretary of Agri-ote el Ri REC Te GUE SoC adie dar 377 40 Brasfield, Karney A., Production and Market- ing. Administration... .. Li. ofied dal 00 386 Brashear, Betty M., House folding room _______ 276 Brassor, Francis P., Civil Service Commission. 409 Braswell, Ethel A., United States attorney’s office a LULA a RE THE 463 Bran, M. B., Farm Security Administration 384 Bratten, Flo. Bs Committee on Conference Majority of tho Sonate. i sits HL denn 268 Brayer, Edward F., Employees’ Compensation Commission... diol Aid ist 41 Brearley, James A., Chief Clerk, Patent Office... 39 Brehm, Walter E., Migratory Bird Conserva- tion Commission coil. Solin di toil. 239 Breining, H. W., Veterans’ Administration____ 445 Brennan, Emmett J., Bureau of Accounts______ 341 Brennan, George M., Farm Credit Adminis- ration. Cait need Ra Sa SAE 384 Brennan, John A., Office of Third Assistant Posimaster General...iu oa 0 352 Brennan, Robert, Irish pk ia JEON 488 472 Brenner, M. L., Commodity Credit Corpora-a5 BON oR NR RS Bres, Bric. Gen. Edward S., War Department SpeelaliSiaffe cio isan BURL 345 Bresnahan, Harold W., Office of Postmaster General. itl ee men A 0 Brewer, E. G., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. co... Flite aah dime atin es 382 Brewer, George E., Office of Secretary of War___ 344 Brewster, Owen, Joint Committee to Investi- gate the Pearl Tashi Attack uy. y, iols 244 Brewton, Charles S., Secretary to Senator Hil OLR Lenn a 272 Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments _______..______..____ 269 Brickell, Herschel, Division of Cultural Coopera-25 Individual Index ; 843 Page Page Bridges, Styles: Brown, Francis W., Civil Aeronautics Board... 396 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-Brown, Grover F., Soil Conservation Service... 391 tial Federal ... __.._.._. 242 Brown, James L., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- Expenditures... National Forest Reservation Commission. .._ 239 fic Commereps.) cusal. iii asides 394 Brierley, D. S.: Brown, J. Maughs, Office of Indian Affairs_____ 370 Maritime Commission... ___._....-a d29 Brown, John C., Administrative Office of the War Shipping Administration... -== 1821 United States courts. o.oo... Sma Brigden, J. B., Australian Legation. __-___..__ 481 Brown, Col. Julian P., Headquarters Marine Briggs, Ellis O.: Corps Jucois omni, dre nln sodsp ai ou 364 Coordinating Committee...oaomeao.. 330 Brown, M. Naval oc Commander V., Hospital Office of American Republic Affairs ___._____ 331 Corps ScHO0L. Unoui ionic il sti sans mes lied 363 Briggs, Lyman J., Federal Fire Couneil....._.. 425 Brown, Norman C., National Capital Park and Briggs, Milton S., Commodity Credit Corpora-Planning Commission: Loco oeuic 0 a0. de 432 LE EEA Ee A Ee tc fe MY LGR gs alt EL Res 389 Brown, Maj. Gen. Philip E., Office of the In-Brigham, Reuben, Extension Service. ____...... 378 spector General, War. coc viviciace tues 345 Bright, J. S., Public Roads Administration__. 424 Brown, Capt. P. P., Bureau of Supplies and Ac-Brill, Charles R., Civil Service Commission____ 409 CORMbE-Co Bot purl UE CE 362 Brimacombe, Forest C., Office of Marketing Brown, Roy W., Captain of Capitol Police__... 281 Services. Loui Don agewasnmn lao SiS an 388 Brown, Walter, Office of Secretary of State.__.__ 330 Brinker, S. W., House folding room. ___________ 276 Brown, Walter D., Office of the Third Assistant Brisson, Auguste, Haitian Embassy. _.__._______ 487 Rostmaster:General... iii. linureniiouian 352 Brister, William G., Office of Inter-American Brown, Walworth, Office of Experiment Sta- BN hy RL Br RR eae 10 Js £1 GC 320 Hons: sors siti d ue a ea nein Brite, Henry D., Reconstruction Finance Cor-Brown, William Adams, Jr., Central Secre-porationiu saan rah oni 415 torial ol Gott suai aan den mnt Sa eseniinihmic 330 Britt, O. L., National Bureau of Standards_____ 394 Brown, Winthrop G.: Brittain, Dr. Marion Luther, Federal Prison Committee for Reciprocity Information....__. 410 Industries, Ine. irri tion nul Jiu 349 Division of Commercial Policy. _..__.__________ 333 Broderick, James W., assistant production Browne, Arthur E., Office of Marketing Serv-manager, Government Printing Office _____ 287 Broderick, Martin J., Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. co. i cin, 433 Bronk, Detlev W., National Academy of Brownell, R. A., Reconstruction Finance Cor-Selenees ce al ited, Se ii i. 430 POYAHION Js iraindecs rnit mnmmr i madd cm aiid 414 Bronson, Lt. Col. Ralph P., Veterans’ Admin-Browning, Edward Jr., Material Coordinating IstrationE cs. clin De 445 COMMIIeE oo. tn eon brtmmt at oh Ei 5 326 Bronz, George, Office of General Counsel for the Browning, Powell, Columbia Hospital for 4LTEy DC SRR i 0 AE IS 28 LAER A 339 WOME zis ae tit ne vast lide so sm ne es ~ mean 410 Bronzonie, John A.: ; Bruce, Clarence N., Office of the First Assistant District Engineer Department. _.____________ 475 Postmaster General... Loo o_oi 2 : 351 District Plumbing: Boardiouoo, oouiio iii] 473 Bruggmann, Charles, Swiss Minister________.___ 492 Brooke, Allan F., Assessor’s Office_ _._.._._.._. 471 Brun, Carl A. C., Danish Legation._.__._._.______ 484 Brooke, E. P., District Engineer Department_ 474 Brun, Constantin, Danish Legation____________ 484 Brooker, Floyde E., Office of Education. _._____ 421 Brunet, Rear Adm. Alberto D., Inter-American Brooks, C. Wayland: Defense Board...=> ri oC 425 Joint Committee on the Organization of Con-Brunke, J. J. D., Joint War Production Com-gresso ut loka rninit sons I tient ot Ip 243 YL Re RE ep el FTTEN CE CS Se RH 326 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 239 Brunot, x ames, President’s War Relief Control Brooks, Janeiro V., Pan American Union_______ 437 Board: of ie iE nea nh oe Brooks, Overton, Board of Visitors to the Mili-Bryan, Brig. Gen. Blackshear M., Jr., Army | SRNIRnUl .._.-346 Brooks, Philip C., National Archives._____._.___ 430 Bryan, Irving, District corporation counsel’s a Brooks, Robert C., office of Official Reporters iil ary Academy. o_o. oo. OL 240 Service Forees.__._._....Z.---o.co-oio | of Debates. oo. Slims lai a Si SE TN 271 Brooks, Robert R. R., Office of Price Adminis-|trations oii ie aa iE 321 Brooks, Roger E., Office of Alien Property |Custodio: &ol iain 93st tule] Lai 320 Broome, John P., Federal Public Housing yAvthoriby oo ein dal aa Tl Rain LL, 435 Buck, Ellsworth B., Board of Visitors to the Brophy, John: . Merchant Marine Academy. oo _______ 241 Committee on Fair Employment Practice... 319 Buck, Solon J.: National War Labor Board... .._.___._ 400 Federal Fire Connell... o-oo oooeoeeee 425 Brophy, William A.: Franklin D. Roosevelt Library... ocooooo____ 431 Federal Board of Hospitalization. _.______.___ 318 National ATehives: oa i cert arenas 430 Officeof Indian Affairs. 0. oii so. 1370 Archives . ____ ..... National Couneil oo 431 Broshek, Rear Adm. Joseph J., Industrial National Archives Trust Fund Board. __._____ 431 Survey: Division. Loin ool (ECE National Historical Publications Commission. 431 oerisns 356 Brossard, Edgar B., Tariff Commission________ 443 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library ___ 432 Brossin de Saint-Didier, Maj. Gen. Auguste, Buckingham, Dr. D. E., District veterinary BUT ECON... io hrs Str pte wisrism meme Sodom Ss oo i 472 Buckingham, Kate, Office of the Under Secre-tary OL sortieete War. th Brown, Addie: Buckley, Mrs. A. J., Senate Committee on Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex-Expenditures in the Executive Depart-amining Beard: oo aoal Sean dl IT IOR ITT en TA RR Veale Ll et Ballin oy —--269 Naval Examining o.oo0.00 357 Board. io Buckley, Francis J., Office of the Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General. ___._ Naval Retiving' Board: Lovie coil 357 oo __-.__ 353 Buckley, James Office Personnel _________ 379 Brown, Bonnar, Board of Governors of the Fed- of L., eral Reserve System: vu ll ool Jl i LU 4 Brown, Bryant C., secretary, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation..___________. Brown, Clara Y., Civilian Production Admin- istration Haison‘offices: i... bh oi Pall Sil Brown, Edward, superintendent, House Office Safety Board... _... CE SSAee 08 Bueno, J., Silvado, Pan American Union.-...... 437 Bafldings Silo 02 CoS a desl oko 287 Buie, Col. Wilson R.: Brown, Ella A., Office of Register of Wills______ 462 Officeol. Labor oi aang Sadana 389 Brown, Elsie, Pan American Union_____________ 437 Production and Marketing Administration___ 386 844 Congressional Directory Page Bulwinkle, Alfred L., Joint Committee on Printing loi it Soda die a eit LL Bunche, Ralph J.: Anglo American Caribbean Commission... 408 Division of Dependent Area Affairs ___.____. 332 Bundy, Vernon E., Division of Commercial Polley. fi dc asl Se di ig Jo SL 333 Bunke, Nichol, Office of the Doorkeeper._.. 276 Bunn, Charles, Office of International Trade Polley a an ean A EG 332 Bra, Charles E., Freedmen’s Hospital__. 422 Burch, Benjamin D., ‘American Red Cross. ._.. 406 Burch, D. S., Bureau of Animal Industry..--.--381 Burden, William A. M.: Assistant Secretary of Commerce. __-.._._..--392 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics 430 Burdick, B. F., Panama Canal _.__......___.__. 437 Burger, ‘Col. J oseph C., Headquarters Marine Corps... Tr ena el 364 Brie iri L., Office of Secretary of State.. 329 Burgess, George W., Office of Secretary of Com- ELC ie imminent = 392 Burgess, Robert S., Office of the Second Assist-ant Postmaster General __--——-....._--352 Burgess, Vera R., Senate Committee on Inter- state Commerce USE OY SI a ER SRN 269 Burgh, David T., Federal Trade Commission... 423 Burke, Capt. A. B, Bureau of Ordnance_______ 362 Burke, Jerome E., National Inventors Council. 396 Burke, John E., Washington city post office... 478 Burke, John P., United States attorney’s office. 463 Burke, Vincent ‘c. , postmaster, Washington city postoffiee. oO ia moat a. 477 Burklin, 2 iin, Federal Home Loan Bank Tea pnd NA SINT A Lb IA 3s ati 3 Burney, Arthur W., National Park Service _.__ 372 Burnham, Paul F. Tariff Comma ESR a 443 Burnham, Maj. WilliamH., Retraining and Reemployment Administration EL 401 Bums, Arar E., Office of Materials and Facili-158 Debates: urs crn Sor out nay ii Sh SEA Burns, Harmon, Jr., House Radio Gallery Burns, J. M. , Federal Prison Industries, Inc..._ 350 Burns, Norman, International Resources Divi- SOT Sn Fane na es Sh Sas SL de ai 332 Burpee, Lawrence J International Joint Com- EE I re eeey Burr, Harold S., Social Security Board ______.__ 419 Burrill, Meredith, Office of Secretary of the Interior nr ahi re Et 369 Burton, Lt. Charles H., Office of Judge Advo-cate General of Navy. ooo oooes 358 Burton, Harold Hitz, Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography) _..____.. 451 Burton, Mrs. Harold H., Congressional Club__ 410 Burton, Ishmael, Federal Trade Commission ___ 423 Burton, Capt. Otto L., Bureau of Medicine and EE A ln NY Pp page pe Wg 360 Bush, Dr. Vannevar: N ational Advisory Committee for Aeronau- COL Se ee SE rl AN Pepi Eo Uh 8 0 Offa of Scientific Research and Development. 320 Regent, Smithsonian Institution ______._____ il Bushfield, Mrs. Harlan, Congressional Club____. 411 Buskie, George F.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation... ____. 413 War Assets Corporation... ... ... =. 416 5... Bustamante, Capt. Jeronimo, Spanish Embassy. 492 Bustamente, Joaquin C., International Bound- ary and Water Commission, United States andeMexieg. cdi no Ed 427 Butkiewicz, Harry C., Reconstruction Finance COLDON Te 415 Butler, George H., Office of American Republic 11 gga tiered BINS nn pe Sa UROL TL 331 Butler, H. B., British Embassy. ............... 486 Butler, Hugh, Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _.____ 242 Butler, Hugh D., Maritime Commission. __.... 429 Butler, Jarvis: General:Board, Navy. oo... io i asdioilig Joint Economy Board Butler, J. Godfrey, War Shipping Administra-BION ch abun, a Si J re iS Eh 321 Buyer Kenneth A., Office of Labor____________ 389 Of DEDAtOE dt aie hats or 27 ome 34 Byerly, Oscar K., Office of is Fo A Postmaster General _ SI ee Byram, William E., Civil Service Commission. 300 Byrd, Harry Flood, Joint Committee on Reduc- tion of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. 242 Byrd, Pauline V., Veterans’ Administration NHalsonroffices S800 ol on duos cruises 282 Byrne, Peter T., Securities and Exchange Com-dssion. oi Ba a Gd a Byrnes, James F. (Secretary of State): American: Red Cross. oii Lios udu nnn nid 406 BlOgIapIIY. Of i is ies Sl Dv mamma 329 Export-Import Bank of Washington__________ 411 Foreign Service Building Commission...._.___ 337 National Archives Couneil. . 2... amecnnn.io. 431 National Gallery of Art. lose i. i ind 442 National Munitions Control Board... _..._.__ 436 Member, Smithsonian Institution... _.......__ 441 Secretary’s Staff Committee... ooo __ 330 C Cabili Tomas, Filipino Rehabilitation Com-mission: aarti 0 Seloa 243 Céceres, Dr. Julian R.: Governing Board, Pan American Union._.... 438 HonduraniAmbassador.. ooo i.aneatabat. 487 Cadenas, Lt. Comdr. Felipe: Cuban Embassy. io. choc allovasioyinaiiats 484 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 426 Caemmerer, H. P., Commission of Fine Arts... 410 Caffrey, Anthony B., District Department of Public Welfare oo onal ol Bioline 477 Caflrey, James J., Securities and Exchange Com-missions colin flan s moana ple non gay Cagle, C. E., Board of Governors of the Podorals Reserve System LGR ata Tlie HL as ened Caillouet, Florence, Senate Committee on Sa ufactures FO ol LATS ER TALE Er RARE Ri 1 SAAD 4 269 Cairns, Huntington: American Commission for Protection of His- toric: Mohuments., oo. osu carbene 405 Committee on Practice. ...omcveuc editions 342 National Gallery of Arto iniciosaa nl 442 Cake, Gilbert L., Bureau of Accounts..___...._. 341 Calahan, Commander E. T., Coast Guard... ... 366 Oy Col. Cloyd T., ’ Selective Service 30% 2 HI ROE CL CC RE a LY 2 Cale, Edward @G., International Resources Divisione oc. . Leii ei BE SL En, Cait 332 Calkin, Ohare E., [¢ Calkins, a W. F., Bureau of Naval Personnel i: olor udu nll sodiseiie Callahan, Anna L., Municipal Court for the Districtiof Columbia... iii saailonid 464 Callahan, Harvey G., Metropolitan Police. .._. 476 Callahan, Joseph H., "House folding room_______ 276 Callahan, Capt. Roy H., Office of Asisians Secretary of Navy for Wir cee 90 ans ok Frederick W., Office of the Pi EIEN SE Le eS 76 oh ay William F., Bureau of the Census... 393 Callender, John W., Railroad Retirement Board Loaas 0a Sidhe tasty 439 Calver, Dr. George W., Capitol physician______ 281 Camacho-Lorenzan, José, Colombian Embassy. 483 Camara, Mario de, ‘Brazilian Embassy....-o...= 482 Cambra, Carlo G., House Select Committee on Small Business LM I LIE Le 212 Cameron, Alice, Senate Committee on Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. __.--268 Caminita, Ludwig, Jr., Petroleum Administra-Honor Wart -coe o ios sucan sion ooo a bas Camp, sn F. C., Bureau of Naval Personnel. 361 Indwidual Index 845 Page Campbell, Charles Henry, British Embassy____ 486 Campbell, Capt. Colin C., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. ._.....__...... 327 Campbell, Edward G., National Archives...___ 431 Campbell, F. Newell, Division of Tax Research. 342 Campbell, Gary, General Accounting Office.___ 284 Campbell, J. Ed., Tennessee Valley Authority _ 444 Campbell, J. Forbes, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 2... 108i J Di Futianooh 413 Campbell, Lt. Gen. L. H., Jr., Army Service Forces: 2 ERB EI00 EMIT 30 J lel ai ans 346 Campbell, Virginia M., Office of Assistant Secre-tary ofthe Navy! Toco 0 niin aang 355 ' Campiche, Samuel Francois, Swiss Legation___ 492 Campos de Carvalho, Dr. Luiz Guimares Vieira de, Portuguese Embassy... Loi. 491 Campos Ros, Dr. Néstor M., Paraguayan Em- bassylo od, fu UAL 2 Pa ORR 491 Campuzano, Felipe, Spanish Embassy. _..o.... 491 Candia, Commander Amado Daniel: Inter-American Defense Board. ______._____.. 426 Paragusyan Embassy... ili 491 Canfield, Gordon, od of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy LR i SA ER 241 Cann, Norman D., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 341 Cann, Lt. Col. Raymond J., French Embassy. 486 Cannon, Clarence: Regent, Smithsonian Institution. _.__________ 441 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditares. .. _.._ Jl J lL... 242 Cannon, Earl, National War Labor Board______ 400 Cannon, Hiram B., Office of the Doorkeeper_.__ 276 Canpplt Lawson J., District Board of Educa- Es CG rR OR TA RE A NG 473 Coral A. W., American Red Cross. ..._.... 407 Canty, George R., Telecommunications Divi- slonsih Tala sed aie os nani at Canyes, Manual, Pan American Union _-______. 437 Capper, Arthur, Foreign Service Buildings Om iion dl Ef SEE A SL ER 337 Cappleman, L. J., Commodity Credit Corpora-wi tlonyiiinetil fof sn SOD won i eS Capron, Capt. Walter C., Coast Guard._________ 366 Capt, J. C., Director, Bureau of the Census._.. 392 Caraway, Hattie W., Employees’ Compensation Commission: 20. 208 Lo 3 0 hE ea 411 Cardenas, Brig. Gen. Cristobal Guzmén: Inter-American Defense Board. _______.______ 426 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- sdssion Et Ld 8 ‘Mexican Embassy... Loo Gos a Bn 489 Cardenas, Juan Francisco de, Spanish Ambassa-i a EE Ee ets eat eA nT 2 Cardillo, Frank A., Employees’ Compensation Commisslon. 04 aol a 411 Cardon, P. V., Agricultural Research Adminis- teation: 0 UT a Ia 380 Careaga, José M., Spanish Embassy_..___._..__ 492 Carey, James Ww, Alaskan International High- way Commission fy SE al AW "239 Cargill, Tom C., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General... 351 Carle, Charles H., Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. ol. 2 00 aaa 353 Carlson, Fred A., Official Reporter, Senate_____ 271 Carlson, Vivian, Civil Service Commission. ____ 409 Carmichael, H. J., Joint War Production Com- GEE ae I nn SR a 326 Carmichael, Dr. Oliver C., American Red LE eC ar is hana J SRE 406 Carmody, John M., Maritime Commission_____ 429 Carnes, D. C., Reconstruction Finance Corpo- rations iol 20 SOUND edad ne 415 Carney, V. Paul, Railroad Retirement Board____ 439 Caron, C. K., Grazing Service Lolodai 2 Ll Carpenter, Otto F., National Mediation Board. Carpenter, Steve, radio studios, Capitol _____.__ = Carpenter, S. R., "Board of Governors of the fol eral Reserve System ER a a het Carr, Adalaine 8. E.: Secretary to Senator Copnally ~ 2. ~-Ji. 272 Senate Committee on Foreign Relations__.___ 269 Carr, Margaret V., United States attorney’s [3%112 De is RE ME eR Le SN nd 462 Carrigan, John Willard, Division of Mexican C1 nd t emit LSU te TR TR RE eed Carrington, John W., House Committee on Un-American Activities =... i Page Carroll, Joseph F., Surplus Pay Adminis-tration 323 Custer, ns A BE. Con] Club... 411 rial Commission a en oe pa 1 Carter, Clarence E., Division of Research and Publication oR Carter, E. E., Forest Service... Carter, iE. [HE+ Fafiroad Retirement Board______ 439 Carter,Te B. Cll Looe Commission___. 409 Pe tors AE mE Sore SE bmw mitre SENS 362 RETR Edmundo: : Ecuadoran Embassy...i i i 485 Sows Charles A. tm of i Jostinion _ 382 Cary, Maj. William H., Jr., District Health Department.) joo. toe Jil blandoo 0a 75 Casanova, Arturo Y., Jr., Patent Office. _______ 395 Cagsassa, "Elsie C., District Nurses Examining Board. er 473 Case, George W., Office of Education. __________ Casey, Walter J., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Colnmblag: i: SolesSoins Cashell, Dr. Irving M., District Board of Ex-aminers, Veterinary Medicine: iL ridoo Cashen, T. C., Office of War Mobilization and Reconyersion.._ tov adn f Bd Cashion, Edward H., Securities and Exchange Commission Ea SIR S ENE) RE EG Ue. 18 BELT i Cashwell, Harvard, House post office. __._..__. 277 Cass, Otto, District Department of Public Welfare 477 Cassard, Capt. Paul, Board of Review, Dis- charges and Dismissals WIRE Coy 6 sy UH EL 356 Cassiday, Norwood P., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts... 0... limi Tats oiiga 362 Cassiday, William J., Director of Purchases, Government Printing Office 287 Castello Branco, Antonio Borges Leal, Brazilian Embas Sy ra a CA IR Ge ERE LTD II 00 TS Castro, Héctor David: 1 Salvadoran Ambassador_ ooo. 485 Governing Board, Pan American Union_____ 438 Castro, Mateo Marques, Governing Board, Pan American Unlon ora 438 Castro, Morris F. de, Territorial Officials_______ 374 Casuso, Eduardo, Spanish Embassy... 492 Cater, Capt. C. J., Bureau of Naval Personnel. 361 Cathcart, James M., Senate post office. ...coo.... 270 Cattell, Roscoe A. Bureau of Mines... 372 Catton, Bruce, Office of Secretary of Commerce. 392 Caudle, Theron Lamar, Assistant Attorney LE EET| er yh SC se 348 Cavanagh, Helen L., District Public Library... 473 Cavin, Edward H., American Red Cross.__-.... 407 Cavness, Olin, Capitol Pollee a0 ook aren 281 Cawley, Francis R., Office of Secretary of Com-TACTOL. around dob] wih eb iY anid LOC le Bs 392 Cayton, Nathan, judge, Municipal Court of Ap-peals for the District of Columbia... .—.__ 463 Cecil, Robert, British Embassy. occ iil 487 Cefalo, Nicholas, Office of the Majority Leader. 274 Cervenka, Dr. Karel, Czechoslovakian Embassy. 484 Chacin, Francisco Alvarez, Venezuelan Em- bassy CEA Tp Ga LST RY SE RR SC LI 494 Chafiee, Y ines E., reading clerk of House__.___ 275 Chalfonte, Robert 'o. District corporation coun- sel’s te 474 Chalker, Rear Adm. L. T'., Coast Guard________ 365 i 846 Congressional Directory Page Chalmers, Philip Owen, Division of Brazilian Vn en rhe sbi Soe Amalie ini ae eC said 332 Chamberlain, Henry T., Office of Contract Set-H Tn toh iseenessloa Silden ig dint ant 322 Chamberlin, Edward H., National Advisory Committee for ACTONAULIOE. olor eee Chamberlin, Herbert S., Office of the Third As- sistant Postmaster Cteneral _______________ 352 Chambers, Justice M., Civil Service. ______..__ 409 Chambers, Robert: Bureay of Customs... co =. ia. sive soe asta ttn 340 Office of General Counsel of the Treasury... 339 Chambery, Thomas B,, Soil Conservation Serv-4 BT or mont atin mn Bs emilee 91 OT Rear Adm. William: National Naval Medical Center__._..________ 363 Board of Examination of Dental Offices_-._____ 363 Board of Examination of Medical Offices... _._ 363 Chambers, Wrightson, Office of Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General... __._._._. Chambliss, Capt. W. C., Office of Public In-formation en ep a 358 Chance, Elora, Senate Committee on the Dibrary of ir ol SEER TON Ee 269 Chandler, Edward G., Office of General Counsel... iol Rt a et 358 Chandler, Henry P., Administrative Office or the Uhited States Courts i. ooo.7c 100 Chandler, Capt. W. D., General Board_________ 44 Chaney, Alvan C., District Public Library... 473 Chaney, Donald J., Fish and Wildlife Service._ 374 Chaney, Ralph W., Advisory Board on Na- tional Parks, ete. co. oli otis 376 Chapin, Selden: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 337 Coordinating Committee __._____._._______.. 330 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Poarde Privat i ai ar Ta GT 337 Office of the Foreign Service. ____________.___ 335 Chapline, W. R., Forest Service ..__._____._._.___ 385 Chapman, E. A Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commarea: oto a LE 393 Chapman, Lt. Col. Earl H., Inter-American Defense Board i009 oasis «3a v 152 J diy 426 Chapman, Harlen M., Solid Fuels Administra-tlonfor War. =. 2 Cae ae 376 Chapman, Nancy, secretary to Senator Johnson ob Colorado: 02 oaloniebailaus aal Sn 272 Chapman, Oscar L., Assistant Secretary of the Interior pe hs Sea ST ns a a RIS 368 Chapman, W. K., Civilian Production Admin-istration liaison suitsayage 283 offices ian Chapoy Vidaurri, Carlos, Mexican Embassy___ 489 Charles, Philipp L., Securities and Exchange Commission io sufi. southLi igi 440 vnee Charles, Robert M., Immigration and Natural-ization Rervice.. susie lista 349 jiviuiels Charles-Roux, Francois, French Embassy. _____ 486 Charles, William K., Office of Information. ____ 379 Charlois, Maurice, French Embassy... fact 486 Charlton, Rear Adm. A. M., Material Division_ 357 Chanion, Millard T., District Accountancy Chase, Ns G., Production and Marketing Administration. >. oo Cr oo LE 386 Chase, John H., Reconstruction Finance Cor- portation: ior ohana a I 414 Chauncey, Maj. Gen. C. C., Army Air Forces__ 345 Chévez, Juan, Peruvian Embassy SRT SEI 491 Chechetkin, Igor V., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy Tp Ch hh, DEE 93 Chen, Chih-Maj,, Chinese Embassy___________. 483 Chen, Maj. Chia-ting, Chinese Embassy _.______ 483 Chesney, Earle D., Veterans’ Administration lislsomofficesitefi ion] Dp i ia uy 282 Chesteen, Gaston D., Joint Committee on Inidrenl BoYons Taxation oi oonioiishs 238 Chew, a , office of Official Reporters of Doms bat Chew, ay J. J., Bureau of Yards and Docks__ 263 Child, Charley Division of Cultural Coopera- Chile. James B., Acquisition Department, Library of:Congresss: ss wien ill aon 285 Page Chilson, Claude M., Office of Investigatory OPVACES Lis ul AL Sh eT et TE 389 Chilver, G. E. F., Combined Food Board__.__. 327 Chinn, Dr. Ben D., District Health Depart-TONE woo JL. rab Lh tari Fol ain all. ST Slain 476 Chinn, Try Public Utilities Commission____. 477 Chinnock, Capt. Ronald J., Administrative Office, ER AE BS NR a a A Cr 355 Chintakananda, Ananta, Siam Legation__._____ 492 Chopitea, Carlos Dorado, Bolivian Embassy... 482 Chott, Fred, Office of the Doorkeeper__________ 276 Chow, Er-Hsun, Chinese Embassy ._____.._.____. 483 Christensen, Frank A., War Damage Corpora-310T1 ET I L a 416 Christensen, Lars, Norwegian Embassy__._____ 490 Christian, Mary B., Senate Appropriations Committee... oo. Ju wens al Lol edt domi 2 Christiansen, Milo F., District Recreation RR a) 473 Christopoulos, George, Greek Kmbassy..___.___ 487 Church, F. L., Office of the Treasurer of the United States. woo... sovietasuies suru 341 Chyle, Dr. Oldrich, Czechoslovakian Embassy. 484 Clagett, Brice, judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. wooiof cilovoneic. > 464 Clague, Ewan, Social Security Board ___________ 419 Clancy, Thomas F., Office of the Architect, Canltol. Li. verity ried ede ban ait ws en 281 Clapp, Gordon R., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Clapp, Raymond F., District Department of PublieyHealtNoic kt south oon dolif InaSt. five 476 Clapp, Verner W., Acquisition Department, Library of Congress. uci. oo cusonnd 285 suas Clark, Bennett Champ, associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia____ 453 Clark, Carroll Cooper, Office of the Doorkeeper. 275 Clark, Charles L., Smaller War Plants Cor- poration i I ee OR ag 325 Clark, Elmer B., Official Reporter, House ____. 279 Clark, Harlie F., House Committee on Insular FE I ie VAL YI J DYN 41 278 Clark, J. Bayard, Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl Harber Attack. _____.___._._______ 244 Clark, Lelia F., Smithsonian Institution ______ 441 Clark, Maj. O. W. Veterans’ Administration. 445 Clark, Lt. Robert J., Board of Review, Dis- eharges:and Dismissals. snide sous sone 356 Clark, Samuel O., Jr., Assistant Attorney Gen- ERY | Eat SLR Ee a le BH 348 Clark, Thomas F., Smithsonian Institution. ____ 441 Clark, Tom C. (Attorr ney General): American ReA Cross. co. ottvei iens 406 Bilographyiol: sesso ooo oo Go alin sand Member Smiinsonion Institution InteRlobec slam va bo oe J Suuiint was 368 fodintnais Clark, W. D., British Embassy. .o....0 cot 487 Clarke, Gilmore D., Commission of Fine Arts__ 410 Clarke, Oscar D., librarian, United States Supreme Court i. .v aaa. iit thoaleadiu, 451 Clarkson, Frank, assistant superintendent, House Office Boildings: oo. CJ eos: 540 281 Clary, Alla, secretary to the Speaker. __________ 274 Clary, Virginia, Juvenile Court... 0.1... i: ii Clason, Mrs. Charles R., Congressional Club__ Clattenburg, Albert E., Jr., Special Si PIUVIsion: av. or ada a 336 Claudel, Henri, French Embassy ____.________.. 486 Claudy, Dr. William D., a oltan Police__ 476 Clausen, C. P., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Saal ean ilies) Jian hey 382 Claveaux, Dr. Enrique, Pan American Sanitary * 43 Clayton, Anne W., Senate Committee on Inter-oceanie-Capals i. vi i000 nc 0 EU RETR 269 Clayton, F. B., International Boundary and ater Commission, United States and Mexioo: woe “ona x a Li Te Ea 426 Clayton, William L.: American Bed Cross... Ji ci shia tx i 406 Assistant Secretary of State____.______________ 329 Board of War Communications... _______._____. 321 Secretary’s Staff Committee... ____. 330 Clearey, Ansel R., Apprentice Training Service. 401 oh i } ¥ 1 RET I ndex 847 + Page Page Clegg, 1 Hugh H., Federal Bureau of Investiga-: RE in EEE SUN 1 2 hr ABR ETE 34 Clevenger, Cliff, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission Aha A OT We gel 242 Clexton, Capt. Edward W., Bureau of Aero-nautiesE erste Solio Llc La Laas iL Click, Commander David G., Office of Secretary of the Navy i oo Ua Oe ad 0 355 Clifford, George E., Post Office Department.____ 351 Climer, ‘Fred, National War Labor Board... 400 Cline, Genevieve R., judge, Customs Court (biography). ou 2 So Saad Sos oN Dn Sd 458 Clinger, Virgil C., Interstate Commerce Com- anigsioniitols Dots nie a ls Soa 0d 4 Clinton, Ralph 8., General Land Office-...____ 369 Clough, Fred HH, Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. o-oo ooooeenn 353 Clouser, Robert O.: District Zoning Adjustment Board. ........0 474 District Zoning Commission. ________.________ 472 Coar, Robert J., radio studios, Capitol ._____.___ 282 Coatsworth, Col. James T., Selective Service System cor oo oor ee a SL a VERS iE 324 Cobos: Capt. ElwoodA., Bureau of Aeronautics. 359 Cochran, H. D., Forest Service i. iii 385 Cochran, John 3 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission c. s oie. vo boven nn LEI 239 Cochran, William P., Jr., Division of Caribbean and Central American Affairs. 0 00 332 Cochran, William T., House post office. ______ 277 Cochran, W. W., Patent Office... o.oo 00 395 Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House____ 279 Cochrane, Vice Adm. Edward L., Bureau of ips. Le Fi alr BE ns Lad UR TR 362 Cockram, B., British Embassy... __.._..___... 486 Codrington, George W., N Y tional Inventors Copncllideinenon a Rea LE bE 396 Coe, Frank: Committee for Reciprocity Information. _____ 410 Division of Monetary Research _____________ 340 Goes Thode lsI., District Zoning Admsient oardiitoadaenlO 0) 2 TIRE TaN Coffman, Edgar S., Federal Power Commission. HE Coffman, John DP; ' National Park Service... 372 Cogan, Louis L. ws Library of Congress... loci 285 Cogswell, Robert F., District rent control administrator HO Se RA Se RL EA 4 Cohen, Benjamin V.: Office of Secretary oifintens . 1 Jd ua 329 Secretary’s Staff Committee... _.______ 330 Cohen, Felix S., Office of Secretary of the In-os terior icii, iu. ne Li a ena 6 Cohen, oh M., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector ats A a BLE Ae aa AS 353 Cohen, Milton H., Securities and Exchange CoOTamISSION.. ool ciate catheterSSE 440 Cohen, Lt. Comdr. Roger S., Commission on Mental Hygiene: 00 lao iL olosel 462 Cohen, is C., Committee Mines Saul House on and mings niin mend SL an Lal Cohn, Herbert B., Securities and Exchange COMMISSION. 1 io oot itty aol 44 Cohran, J. R., Banos of Animal Industry...... 381 Colbert, Rear Adm. . O., Coast and Geodetic Survey SE he pa snp Sa BOLIC LS 394 Colbjornsen, Ole, Norwegian Embassy._____.__ 490 Colby, Orville T., Smaller War Plants Corpo- ration Sees, OJ DG HIRT Ln Ee BR FR An TRU 325 Colclough, Rear Adm. O. 8., Judge Advocate GeneralioftheNavy.. 0... 02 Jl 00] 358 Cole, Arthur G., District Health Department.__ 475 Cole, Francis A Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector. ou. 00 0] nO Loonie 353 Cole, Philip L., Director or planning service, Government Printing Office Lio0 2. i) 87 Cole, Robert F., National Mediation Board._.__ 436 Cole, Capt. W. M. , Bureau of Naval Personnel. 361 Cole, William P., "Jr, judge, Customs Court (AATF Th A ERR oD WR Es © 10 0 fl 459 Cole, Mrs. W. Sterling, Congressional Club__. . 410 Colgate, S. Bayard, National War Labor Board. 400 Colina, ‘Capt. Gabriel de la, Mexican Embassy. 489 Colina, Rafael de la, Mexican Embassy... __.._. 489 Collado, Emilio G. , Office of Secretary of State__ 329 Collet, John Caskie, Office of Stabilization Ad- ministrator PER TS SR a) Ls TR Sh SL EN, 323 Collier, Frank W., minority clerk__._________._ 276 Collins, John F. , Railroad Retirement Board.__ 439 Collins, Lt. Gen. J. Lawton, Army Oran Porges:.o. aoe olan annie Collins, Maurice, Federal Security Agency_____ uw Collins, Faris H., Board of Immigration Ap- Beals a Se AN LT Q Collins, alii E., Canadian Embassy____._____ 483 Colmer, William 'M., National Forest Reserva- tion COMMISSION... o0. 4 otel ®ve 239 Colom, José L., Pan American Union__________ 437 Colt, Mrs. Mason, American Red Cross... _ 406 Colvin, Howard T'., Conciliation Service._ -3908 Colwell, H. Ross, Conciliation Service__________ 399 Colyer, ay Marshal Douglas, Combined Chiefs rE SC RIL i RG Ee er 327 Combs, Rear Adm. Lewis B., Bureau of Yards and Docks. i. Slo didi sivgnatiagaiag 363 Combs, Mollie, Capitol telephone exchange___ 282 Comer, William T., Veterans’ Administration_. 445 Compton, Arthur H., Regent, Smithsonian In- stitution civ utibasl Hgeaatiaoasn Join 441 Compton, Karl T., National Academy of Selenees i oid. ol Slag andorak lg 430 Compton, W. Randall, Office of General Counsel 357 Comstock, Harold D., Bureau of Reclamation... 371 Comstock, John, secretary to Senator Butler.__. 272 Conant, Daniel G., Senate Committee on Pen- BIOS cos td au ut aes 269 linrigrnivh. Conant, Dr. J. B., Office of Scientific Research and Development Ja habit aie oii: 320 Concannon, C. C., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic.Commeres. J... idh Sxl ie daithios 393 Condon, Dr. Edward V.: National Advisory Committee for Aero-YrA TE pe Te Re A at a 430 National Bureau of Standards. _______________ 394 Confesor, Tomas, Filipino Rehabilitation Com- mission. 5 Seee adh 243 Conklin, NM arwii R., Bureau of the Census... 393 Conley, May B., Office of the Secretary of the Interior SS SINE TE LS sh 368 Conliff, John C., Jr., United States attorney’s offiges oon am Sean a dE, Sy 63 Connally, Tom: Interparliamentary Union. Cie maa. 239 Foreign Service Buildings Commission. _____. 337 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 242 Connelly, Matthew J., secretary to President Truman (biography ) EEA Ta ay 317 Conner, A. H., Federal Prison Industries, Inc.. 350 Conner, Charles E., District deputy superin- tendent of iTOSUTON0e. ole 476 Connolly, Edna V., Tariff Commission._._.____ 443 Connor, Cassie, Office of Secretary of State__.__ 330 Connor, B., Bureau of Entomclogy and Plant Quarantine a dims I Bre 3 ER She Connor, Lanham, official reporter to House com-ilies. =. or oy TT 279 Conrad, Capt. Cuthbert P., Bureau of Yards ST DOCS coer os tonsa i TE 363 Conrad, WilliamE, F., Combined Food Board. 327 Consedine, Lucille M, House Committee on BOR em ye 278 Considine, James W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation: -Seis emir ban tia th 413 Consley, Raymond J., Rubber Development Corporations co ie speci fon sotioi srrore 416 Converse, Capt. A. F., Bureau of Naval Person-ne Conway, Capt. Granville, War Shipping Administration 2 bee 321 Conway, Ione, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations oor in ar ST a at ade da od 269 Conway, Rose A., Administrative Assistant in President Truman’s =...22:0 318 office. i. Conway, W. H., Extension Service.._.__.._____ 378 Congle, Lillian, Senate Committee on Immigra-5 Coos Joyce C., Office of Official Reporters of eDate rd a a Ee Tn 279 Ccok, i E., Office of Architect of the Capitol fag nb Agaiang BS Anil Sha 281 Cook, Coleman F., Civil Service Commission__. 409 Cook, Donald C., Office of the Attorney General. 348 Cook, George A., National Mediation Board... 436 Cook, Maj. Gen. Gilbert R., Army Ground Sux Forees. oo i ius BUG Sig aT Cook, James C., Office of Secretary of War_____ 344 Cook, Louis P., " General Accounting Office_____ 284 Congressional Directory Page Cook, Richard F., Office of Transport and Com- munications Policy AEs SENG, Ln 334 Cooke, Vice Adm. C, M., Naval Operations..__ 359 Cooke, John S., Reconstruction Finance Cor- DONAON. at aa Aaa 414 Cooley, A. U., Office of Indian Affairs______.___ 370 Coolidge, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission... _.___________ Coolidge, William D., National Inventors {Councils yal deol nls ane IT RI) Coons, Collie Mae, Bureau of Human and Home Economies BR daste an onal iB Tin 382 Coons, Elmo V., General Accounting Office. ___ 284 Cooper, Capt. GQ. R., Bureau of Naval Personnel 361 Cooper, Irving, Municipal Court for the District of Qolumbia. ot eds 464 Cooper, Jere: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- one La a a a SR AT SIE 238 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures... .___.____.____ 242 Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl Harbor Attacks, or JL i as iia ls 244 Cooper, John C., Office of Budget and Finance. _ 378 Cooper, Joseph E. ., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General... oc. 0. oolull Jill 351 Cooper, Louise V., Administrative Office of the United States Courts... -.o.... 462 Cooper, Mildred C., House Committee on Ter- ritoriesit annie LL HS 278 SREhad Cope, Richard P., District special insurance OXAIINOn Lla SR 476 Coplen, George W., National Housing Agency.__ 433 Copp, Tracy, Office of Vocational Rehabilita-OT) oana a eA 4 Coppock, Joseph D., Office of International Trade-Polley: oxo Soho she oh ve 332 Corbett, Gerald R., Territorial Officials________ 374 Cordiner, Col. Douglas C., United States Sol-iors TIO: Lam ol a os La dno dA LO 443 Corliss, James C., Division of Financial Affairs. 333 Cornell, Francis G., Office of Education._______ 421 Cornwall-J ones, Brig. A. T., Combined Chiefs of Staff 327 Cornwell, Frederick C., Office of Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General 353 Corona, Joseph George, Western Union Tele- Ps Coronado, Enrique, Pan American Union______ Correa, Maj. Mathias F., Office of Secretary of Te NOY rr ehea ey 355 Corse, Carl D., Division of Commercial Policy__ 333 Costas, Emma, Bolivian Embassy _.__.___._____ 482 Costello, William C.: Federal National Mortgage Association ______ The RFC May Company Coster, Leonard L. M Ca Nii attorney’s LT Re ei eteBR 463 Cottam, Clarence, Fish and Wildlife Service.___ 374 Cotten, Anne I., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ______________._____ 417 Cotter, Alice, Bureau of the Comptroller of the Currency A CS I TB Cotter, Charles F., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- neA oh ee ER Sea TU De il 434 Cottone, Benedict P., Federal Communications Commissions 0 0 oo en oh 412 Couch, V. L., Farm Security Administration_.__ 385 Coughlin, John J., Civil Service Commission__ 409 Coulter, Dr. A. Barklie, District Health De- Dantment. Np | Sls a ey a 476 Coulter, Eliot B., Visa Division__________.______ Courts, Lt. M. Bureau of Naval Personnel. 360 Coverdale, J. Ww. , Senate postoffice. oo =o. 270 Covert, Maurice W., secretary to Senator Donnell gl a A Sa NS RE ES 272 Covey, Edwin L., Administrative office of the Einited States Courts. C= Losi 462 Cowell, J. M.., Office of Architect of the Capitol. 281 Cowen, Wilson, Commissioner, Court of Claims. 458 Cox, Inspector Clement P., Metropolitan Police. 476 Cox, E. E.: Joint Committee on the Organization of CoNressS oie. toF sonore oe Ries 243 Regent, Smithsonian Institution_____________ 441 Cox, Hugh B., Surplus Property Administra-LION Sotho tine, NE ty NE ee Xd 323 Page Cox, Mary Virginia, Senate Committeeon Inter-oceanic Canals. 0... ion oc lomans 266 Cox, Raymond E., Office of Secretary of State. 329 Coxen, James R., Office of Education _____.._.. 421 Coy, "Wayne, Filipino Rehabilitation Com-INISSON. Ss aA al aaa rere 243 Coyne, Robert W., War Finance Division____-_ 342 Craft, Edward O., "Office of Legislative Counsel, House sas Re Ee NC bu DIY 279 Crafton, Adrienne L., Senate Committee on Privileges and Bleetions.... oot oil = 270 Crafts, Edward C., Forest Service _._._______.__ 385 Craig, E. G., Federal Power Commission_______ 417 Craig, Glenn H., Combined Food Board_._____ 327 Craighead, F. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. o.oo. Le iif aan tu 382 Cramel,. Horan S., Office of the Secretary of i 4 wn im i id a tl in 398 a C. D., Interstate Commerce Com-mission... Lens Damen Sogn ini) 428 dossseiatoinl Crandall, Col. Harry W., Army Ground Forces. 345 Crane, Jacob, National Housing Agency..______ 432 Crane, Jere J., District Board of Education_____ 473 Crater, William P., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster Generalowy. Seean tl 00 10 road 3 Cravens, C. Russell, Federal Public Housing Authoplby. U0 oi ot di oaiividaiall rowing, Boyd, House Committee on Foreign Affai Cr Charles W., Food and Drug Admin- istration Ap amen I TURE SRN Ts WR TET 422 Creagan, Geraldyne M., Senate Committee on Conference Minority AR RE SE Creighton, C. F., District deputy superintend- ent of insurance Sie da Sia de A aed 4 Creighton, Hobart, Production and Marketing Administration 2h div J ga, Beet (SRR Sain TY 386 Creighton, Thomas H. Jr., Office of Alien Prop- erty. Custodian, ool a ws sa inn Crisler, Irma, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. coo oli. Lospaigalls, 2. Crisp, Rear Adm. F. G., Office of Industrial Relations. tooauiiaoseniall nmad anti 3 Cristadoro, A. 17J., Corporations. uses dose igen: To Sadan d, oo 4 Cristofane, Felix E., Comptroller, Government Printing Offices. Joie cane esas did onion 287 Critchfield, Harry M., Office of Indian Affairs. 370 Cn E. C., National Bureau of Stand-2 hh ep SEL Se TE Ei Ee 6 La 9 rool L Ghnrley J., United States Bios ne Cromwell, Fred W., Superintendent of Docu- ments, Government Printing Office. ___.____ 2! Cronin, Ji ohn ‘W., Processing Department. _____ 2 Cronin, Mary B, House Committee on Labor. Cronin, Thomas ¥, Bureau of Accounts________ 354 Crooks, D. M. , Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering __._______._.... Cropley, Charles Elmore, clerk, United States Supreme: Couto oc oo. Cirareel 451 Crosby, Sumner McK., American Commission for Protection of historic Monuments. _____ 405 Crossley, Fay, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses._____._____ 268 Crouch, William, Law Library, Library of Cong TOSS util issue aie Ty een 286 Crouch, 5. E., Fish and Wildlife Service_._.__ 374 Crouse, Wilma, House Committee on Ways and GANS. naliiashy oo lhenill ol alin 278 Crow, William C.: Office of Marketing Services ___________.______ 387 Production and Marketing Administration__ 386 Crowley, Dr. Jerome, Columbia Hospital for BUTI a SORE SRS a I 410 Croxton, Hardy W., Senate Radio Gallery.___.. 762 Crutcher, mm. We, Farm Security Administra-5 tion 0 CSA Le et rE FR 0 CREE ST AR LU TL 5 Culbertson, Paul T. Division of Western European Affairs... ©. iaivs 1 aiiheri ahd 331 Culkin, Charles L., Railroad Retirement Board 439 Cullinan, F.aP, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ________ 383 Culton, Col. Hugh G., Army Air Forces. _...... Individual Index : + 849 Page Cumming, Dr. James G., District Health De- PArbend Bosal mt ee i Ae 475 Cumming, Surg. Gen. Hugh 8. (retired), Pan American Sanitary Bureau 437 Cumming, Hugh S., Jr.: Columbia Hospital for Women _______________ 410 Division of Northern European Affairs. ______ 331 Office of European Affairs... _____... 330 Office of Secretary of State_.__________.________ 329 Cummings, Herbert J., Division of Foreign Activity Correlations. Jil. toi...oo Cummins, Wallace D., Municipal Court for the District of Columbia 464 Cunningham, EdwardJ., Conciliation Service. 399 Cunningham, J. 'E., The "Alaska Railroad ____ 374 Cunningham, Robert H., Commodity Credit Corporation CE aha 339 Cunningham, Theodore W., Office of General Counsel for the Treasury 339 Curl, L. F., Bureau of Entomology and Plant AArantine oc oo SERS CpG A en 382 Curran, Edward M., United States attorney... 462 Currie, Brainerd, Office of Stabilization Admin- fstpator.l ma 83 LER LoS ale 323 Curtis, George H., secretary to Senator Taylor. 273 Curtis, Air Vice "Marshal W. A., Permanent Joint Boardon . 438 Defense...2.0 Curtiss, C. D., Public Roads Administration__ 424 Curtiss, Lowell, Pan American Union 437 Cushing, Commander D. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel: 18 PUUiLl nt usa Sy ide 361 Cushing, E. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine CoasUNIE Lh SRE TA Cushman, Edward, Retraining and abhi ment ‘Administration Ht LE AS CR ENC) 401 Custer, Cecil E., Civil Service Commission_____ 409 Cuthbert, Frederick A., National Housing AGENCY Sh RR Tae a a Se 433 D Da Costa, Capt. Juan: Honduran Bmbassy... 0. catia bilan, 487 Inter-American Defense Board __ __________ ~. 426 Daftary, Dr. A. A., Iran Legation. _________.___ 488 Dague, Tleanore L., , Office of Recorder of Deeds. 464 Dahle, Dan, Food and Drug Administration. __. 422 Dahlman, Sven, Swedish Legation. ___.________ 492 Daiches, David, British 'Embassy. _..0__.... 487 Daiker, "Fred YH, Office of pid Affairs 370 Dale, Chester, National Gallery of Art. ________ 442 Daley, Lucy K., House Committee on Civil Servieasstitl aa oi I a 277 Dilton Martha, Office of Inter-American a ire lom Lo eed 320 Dalton, Maj. Gen. Joe N., Army Service Forces. 346 Daly, James B., District Engineer Department. 475 Daly, John T., ‘Conciliation Service. .._____ G8 Damon, Mason 0., Office of General Counsel. 358 Dana, Edward, American Red Cross... 406 Dance, James Q@G., Department of Weights, Measures, and Markets... 0. i 475 Daniel, Helen L., Division of Coordination and Daniel, Otis L., House document room._________ 276 Daniels, HH, ' District Engineer Department. 475 Danielson, Percy W., Office of Indian Affairs __ 370 Danos, Joseph A, ‘Department of Weights, Measures, and Markets. ©. oro” 475 Dante, deo 7. District corporation counsel's officer 0 ge ae Bars Col. Carlton S., Selective Brin Syste oe a 324 Darling, George B., National Academy LE Seleneen: io i seanBoasts dial Darnall, Nora, Senate Committee on Mines FA Daroch, Vice Adm. Emilio, Inter-American De-tense; Boarde todo a 426 Dashiell H. H., Railroad Retirement Board. ._. 439 Daubanton, Ch. J. H., Netherlands Embassy. . 489 Dauer, Dr. Carl C., District Health menb raed dial | Tel osbuadattlLore Daughton, Ralph H., Board of Visitors to 0s Coast:Guard: Academy. ooii dil 241 io... Davenport, Frederick M., Civil Service Com-madsglome dll aaa ake Sh 409 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. Page Davidge, Anne W., assistant to ‘District Gone Davidson, Alfred E., United Nations Relief ri Rehabilitation Administration. _ SE ED Davidson, C. Girard, Bonneville Power Admin- Strakion ol nl er ee Davidson, Charles M., Office of the Third As- sistant Dy io General... 352 S ystem a a Divi Walter, American Red Cross________ 407 Davidson, William F., Federal Trade Com- EESTI WARE BER nS NR RRS dca ate 423 Davidson, W. R., Senate Committee on Post Offices’'and Post Roads. _ Sa: ii we Davies, Joseph E., War Relief Control Board. Davies, Ralph x, Petroleum bos ® for War. CLE TR ey 324 Davis, Arnold M., Soil Conservation Service___ 390 Davis, Chester C., Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion pr Ale Se Re a 322 Davis, Mrs. Dwight F., American Red Cross.. 406 Davis, Evan T., United States attorney’s office. 463 Davis, Ewin LL Federal Trade Commission.__ 422 Davis, Facius W., War Damage Corporation___ 416 Davis, “Go House Committee on Educa- BO ve re oT 277 Davis RS orald J., National Archives... ......._..._ 431 Davis, Harold Ww., Office of the Chief Post Office ISDE CLO es snes kr rte ne mains 353 Davis, Harvey N., Regent Smithsonian Insti-5 envp ean Ne bets es i RES En lie 1 pays, 2 Hugh J., District Health Depart- Pa i A., Committee on Fair Employ- ment Practice EL a 319 Davis, Joseph E., House post office..__.________ 277 Davis, J. Lionberger, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. -0. =........ Davis, Capt. L. P., Bureau of Ordnance__.._._._ 362 Davis, Maurice, Federal Housing Agency. _____ 433 Davis, Percy A., oi Fire Department_____ 475 Davis, Robert H., District Engineer inl CII So wr Si Sa i Ss Davis, Thomas H., Reconstruction Tn Corporation i a rans 414 Davis, Thomas W., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector: ote i hc ala Davis, Watson, National Inventors Council. _ 300 Davison, Mrs. Henry P., American Red Cross. 406 Davitt, J S., Administrative Office, Navy.____ 356 Dawes, Howard C., Senate Press Gallery_______ 753 Dawson, Edward S,, District corporation coun- golisroffioe se i ey 474 Dawson, Margaretta B., Veterans’ Administra- ton liaison. offices. nope sao a a iS 282 Day, Albert M., Fish and Wildlife Service. _._. 373 Day, Celeste F., House folding room___________ 276 Day, J. O,, Senate Committee on District of Columbia. A Ae 268 Day, William M., official reporter to House commitiees: rs a 279 Day, William W., Washington city post office__ 478 Dayton, William x. Forest Service. ._._________ 385 Dean, Arthur E., Washington city post office__ 478 Dean, Dr. Benjamin F., Jr., Metropolitan Police. 476 Dean, Col. Fred M., Army Aj: Forees.s soot 315 Dean, Reginald S., Bureau el: Mines. ui. 372 Deards, John W _, Senate folding room... _____.. 270 Debler, Erdman B., Bureau of Reclamation. . 871 DeCourey, William E.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 337 Division of Foreign Service Personnel __.____ 335 Foreign Service Officers’ Training “School Board Ay A a a a 337 Dedrick, Dr. Calvert L., Bureau of the Census. 393 DeEds, Floyd, Bureau of Agricultural and In- dustrial Chemistry a ee 381 Deedes, Brigadier J. G., British Embassy... 487 Deegan, William 7J., Jr. Committee to Investi- gate and Study ‘Small Business... 215 Deerwester, Col. Charles H., Permanent Joint Boardon Defense... ooo... a alin omar 438 DeFlorez, Rear Adm. Luis, Office of Research andiinventions am i oo slo So Geass 359 Deca on George, Office of Under Secretary ad Congressional Directory Page Delahanty, T. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... ...._..c.iwoolol Delahanty, John M., War Finance Division_.__ 342 Delaney, J. J., The Alaska Railroad. _________. 374 Delano, Frederic A.: Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Foil taral Engineering 0. mn ao sais aan. 383 Columbia Institution for the Deaf _____._____ 422 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. ___.________ 441 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... iocao. 240 Washington National Monument Society..__. 445 Delano, Preston: Comptroller of the Currency... SM Tats 339 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. ______ 413 Delano, William A., National Capital Park andy Planning Commission A STE hp Delgado-Pealer, Lt. Comdr. Alfonso, ets” MDA ts ce ats dah I Th oh 493 DeLien, Dr. Horace, Office of Indian Affairs.__ 370 Delk, O. Gordon, General Accounting Office... 284 Delman, David, Senate Committee on Banking CR EE Fe Tr Renta RR Tn 0 268 del Valle, Maj. Gen. Pedro A., Headquarters MAIN Cor Ds. «sinaE. Sham EL 364 Demaray A. E.: Yoderal Fire Council... ol = 425 National Capital Park and Planning Com- 101 EE Nee Se Csi sa Drie A 432 National Park Service... oi .._. x. oo 372 DeMarco, Patrick S., Customs Court... _._____. 459 DeMaret, Seth E., Bureau of Accounts. ______. 354 DeMerit, Merrill, Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Demma, Anthony P., House Press Gallery___.. 753 Demorest, John R., Office of Secretary of Labor. 398 DeNeale, Stanley, District corporation counsel’s GD Ol a i ged wiin a 474 Denfeld, Vice Adm. Louis E.: Bureau of Naval Personnel. ___....--.._._.. 360 Naval Operations. co... oan ir az ct ne io 359 Denit, J. Darlington, General Accounting Office. 284 Dennis, Faustine, Reference Department, Eibraryv of Congress. oo ir. vo reaci-sicoo 286 Denny, Byron C., General Land Office. ...___.. 369 Denny, Charles R., Jr., Federal Communica- tions Commission. eau: 412 Dent, Edward A.: DiSric, as80880r. ee nn mine 471 District Real Estate Commission_____._______ 473 Derato, Salvatore M., Office of Legislative ConNSel, SeNale. , cinemasns = bs sims win 271 Deschler, Lewis, Parliamentarian of the House. 274 Detwiler, Samuel B., Soil Conservation Service.. 391 De Vaughan, William A., Office of Marketing SHA ee ee la Ne SO 388 De Venny, George F.: Court of "Appeals for the District of Columbia. 455 Emergency Court of Appeals. _______________ 461 Devers, Gen. Jacob L., Army Ground Forces... 345 Deviny, John J., Deputy Public Printer.._..___ 287 Devlin, Denis, Irish Legation... -......_._._. 488 DeVries, Peter H., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- HOMMCE a oui bar 377 deWilde, John C., Division of German and Ausfrian Economic Affairs... __.._________ 334 DeWind, Adrian W., Office of the Tax Logistar Ve CI OTNEe eos rp apoE DeWitt, Lt. Gen. J. L., Army and Navy Si | College Sw it hor ae ERE nes A rember ds d de Welf, Francis Colt, I TH Division aR RS Le AES SG 3 d’Harnoncourt, René, Indian Arts and Crafts BOAT 2 Ss it ios iin ons Fk tats bon bl Ha Bd es 370 Diamantopoulos, Cimon P., Greek Ambassador. 487 Diamond, Clark G., Columbia Hospital for WOIHCH oi oo crim iiiia vas borer Ls ago tol Lt) 409 Diamond, H., National Bureau of Standards___ 394 Diamond, Isabella S., Division of Research and 2 Statisties. ood iainhese Be sk ost 339 Dixons, John B., 3d, United States attorney’s OTGe. Cl I Tn i Ed he aaa 4 Diamond, Luna E., Office of Secretary of Agri- a EN 377 Diaz Albertini, Dr. Oscar, Cuban Embassy____ 484 Diaz, Lt. Comdr. Emilio’ Luis, Argentine Em- -bassy A A ECL 8 Sl RN NS TR pr 481 Dick, J. H., District Engineer Department_____ 475 Dick, Col. W. Clement, Canadian Embassy... 482 Page Dicus, Dr. M. Luther, District Optometry Board. oc 0 oo rn A dealt 473 Dieck, C. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey.______ 395 Dieflenbach, Rudolph: Fish and Wildlife Service... _..i.___ i... 374 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. __ 239 Dietrich, Frank F., Office of Secretary of the Treasury. i... soos Lh baru a als 338 Dille, John R., Wage and Hour and Contracts Fvislonse.: ooo ro blo le Janell nn hin Dilli, Reginald C., deputy clerk, United States Supreme Couple oii ib lows ley. susie 451 Dillon, San E., Office of the Clerk of the House. 275 Dillon, Commodore F. P.,; CoagtoGuard: nou: 366 Dillon, W. R., Fish and Wildlife Service. __._.. 374 Dimock, Edward J ., Office of Contract Settle- Ment. oor TT nl an amis 322 Dinbergs, Anatol, Latvian Legation____________ 488 Dingell, John D.: Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. __ Interparliamentary Union...Siicsuis .o0 ‘Dingus, Wallace E., House Committee on Banking and oo... oil ot Curreney...... 27 Dinsmoor, William B., American Commission for Protection of Historic Monuments. _____ 405 Dirksen, Everett M., Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress. _._. i... .......... 243 Dirksen, Mrs. Everett M., Congressional Club. 410 Disney, "Richard L., Judge, Tax Court of the Unllod States ee as. rs TB BL 461 Dittmer, William A., Booneville Power Admin- istration wi Tepe gaa Lar in is ada 3 Diven, Frederick M., Office of Legal Adviser._. 330 Divers, William K., National Housing Agency. 3 ‘Dix, Evroth Amerie Red Cross aan. Jiveies 40 Pree, Capt. Robert BE. Bureau of Aeronautics. 360 Djoemena, Raden, Moehamed Moesa Soeria Nata, Netherlands Embassy ____._._______. 489 Dobbins, Roy W ., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General... bor Joos. Dae 352 Dobbs, John M., National Housing Agency.... 433 Dockens, Clarence A., Office of Recorder of Deeds; cidentbata donalh cern canid 50 464 Dodd, Alice M., Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Aas. Loos savin.sade 270 Dodd, M. A., Office of the Clerk of the House... 275 Dodd, Norris E.: Agricultural Adjustment AgENCY. i. ii des 390 conv Production and Marketing Administration.. 386 Dodge, Vernon B., Washington City Post 7 4 Dodge, Walton, Farm Security Administration. 385 Dodson, James E., Office of Secretary of Labor. 398 Doherty, Agnes, Senate Committee on Indian ARSIIS I mr iin an uate 269 Dolan, Edward G., Bureau of the Public Debt. 341 Dold, Calyin, Federal Power Commission... 417 Domeratzky, T.ouis, Bureau of Foreign and Domesti¢ Commerce...______ 394 Domingues, Alpheu, Brazilian Embassy. ___._. 482 Dompiere, Randy, Senate Committee on Con- ference MINOTIEY co coi esses timo 268 natesie Donald, J. R., Joint War Production Com-5 ire NR SAR SR SR a Bl Donaldson, William J., Jr., superintendent, House Press Gallery. io means ciciuiiium Donayre, Carlos, Peruvian Embassy._____.__._.__ 491 Donnellys John J., Jr., Corporation Counsel’s Donohue, Rear Adm. Robert, Coast Guard... 366 Donovan, Henry A., Bureau of Agricultural and Industria} Chemistry "of hpi Zed vio 380 Donovan, Joseph, Washington city post office_._ 478 Donovan, Maj. Gen. Richard, Army Service Borees.. os Tian 56 Inuial Doran, James J., Chief Post Office Inspector... 353 Dorfman, Ben D., Tariff Commission._______._. 443 Dorny, Carl H., Soi i Individual Index Page Dorokhov, Capt. Mikhail N., Soviet Socialist Republicsi Embassy. s:.o. ius ue. bh oukl 493 Dorosh, John T., Reference Department, Li-brary of CONgress:k. i. oi uiauls anil toa 286 Dorsey, Rear Adm. Benjamin H.: Board of Medical Examiners and Naval Ex-amining Board (medical) Naval Retiring: Boards. .oonetwali 2 ty Dorsey, H. W.: International Exchanges lr bE en LE 442 Smithsonian Institution. 5 oo iat o.oo: 441 Dorsey, Nicholas W., Smithsonian Institution_. 441 Dotson, Floyd E., Office of Secretary of the 3EvaBT ER i Ee SC 368 Dotterer, Harold, United States Employment Serviee wana tr Lu Le ita rat Dougherty, James L.: Federal National Mortgage Association. _____ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. __._____ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company. .________._____ 415 Dougherty, William B., House post office. _____ 276 Doughton, Robert L.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-Ar IR Re SE Ce 238 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures... ...._.° ...._ 242 Douglas, William O., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography)_____ 450 Douglass, Frank P., National Mediation Board. 436 Douglass, George S., Interstate Commerce Com- Fr EO Tr ee Re ed Saale a mele) 428 Don W. S., Bureau of Medicine and Sur-24 Dore aid C. District Plumbing Board. ____ 473 Dow, Frank, Bureau of Customs_______________ 340 Dow, Commodore Jennings B., Bureau of Ships. 362 Dowling, Walter OC. Division of Southern European Affalrs: sc Silo no 00 ha 331 Downey, E. F., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-poration... uc ol ciate taal 413 Downey, Francis X., Office of Under Secretary ofthe Navy. cl ite oo aaelis eal 355 Downey, H. E., Senate Committee on Post Officesiand Post Roads... an . ac. .ooeas 270 Downey, John J., Washington city post office. 478 Downey, William E., Office of Alien Property Custodian... yest ean adn get aia 320 Doxey, Wall, Sergeant at Arms of the Senate (Dlography) seins iret ann 270 Doyle, Anna F., Senate Committee on Terri-tories and Insular EE en thea Ras En bo ine nly 270 Doyle, Mrs. Henry Grattan, District Board ai LT Rn eee iene Cir BD Heiliag Ay Doyle, James A., Office of the Solicitor _________ 380 Doyle, James E., Office of Secretary of State... 329 Doyle, Brig. Gen. John P., Army Ground I aE sind Cedar saltaaicte eth (lh weeny 345 Doyle, Marguerite, Senate Committee on Con-ference, Minority... ei a 268 Doyle, Paul J. Secretary to Senator Boafloy. or aaa 272 Senate Committee on Commerce _..____.____ 268 Dozier, Alline, House Committee on Claims___ 277 Drager, Walter L., Reconstruction Finance CS oBnoratlon sc eae aee 414 Draper, Claude L., Federal Power Commission. 417 Draper, Ernest G.: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 418 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ___________ 422 Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Naval Personnel _ 362 Draper, Warren ¥ Public Health Service... ._. 419 Draper, William A District Engineer Depart- MONE conidiaii LRA VE GED aud HOS 474 Dreier, John C., Division of American Republics Analysisand Liaison...R50 ._. 332 Drescher, George C., Secret Service... _______. 340 Driggers, M. H. Jim, National Housing Agency. 433 Driscoll, A. J., District Public Welfare Board__ 473 Drumright, Everett F., Division of Chinese I ein I hr SO mii 331 Drury, Newton B.: District Zoning Commission... 472 Federal. Fire Connell... cool oll ink 425 National Park Serviee...u. oii iio io oo 0. 371 National Park Trust Fund Board .___________ 376 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Ogtiyshue Boulevard Commission... ____.________ Page Drytin; H. L., National Bureau of Standards. 394 Dublin, Louis 1, American Red Cross DuBois, Josiah E., Jr., Office of Secretary of the IOASUEYL da ca. ado Jo saneniel Gd denn 338 DuBois, Orval L., Commissions. o.oo vo. sual Sind Duckett, Commander E. D., navy yard Duckham, A. N., British Embassy_______.____ Dunes. Eugene, Office of the Secretary of NOVY coven fit, grail Sooke Juss anid Shige 55 Si Frank, Fish and Wildlife Service..._ 374 Duggan, I. W.: Farm Credit Administration ________________ 384 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation_________ 384 Duggan, William H., Office of Investigatory ot VA oa i 389 Duhart, Salvador, Mexican Embassy _________._ 489 Duke, Capt. La Navy Yards coun pl 364 Duke, Ernest R.: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation_ ________ 389 National War ...0.c...dens? 387 Board... iol Duke, Joseph C., Office of the Secretary of the Senates fio. on stasPruaitusWis nate 268 Dukeshire, Capt. Theodore S., Bureau of Aeronantiof ing io BE A sopisictala 360 Dulac, Peter, Coast and Geodetic Survey______ 395 Dulin, Charles T., Office of Official Reporters of 2 he oR wen mag he ei gr 422 De Ralph M., Office of Education _______ 421 Dunbar, Virginia M. , American Red Cross_____ 407 Duncan, Commander C. K., Bureau of N aval Personnel ps tarda Solidi daira ol Hie 361 Duncan, H. J., Geological Survey... ________._.___ 371 Duncan, Paul, Office of Stabilization Admin- istrator RCARTVEL TON Se i AES EL RE 323 Duncan, Capt. Robert E., Naval Hospital .____ 363 Dunlap, Leslie, Reference Department, Library of Congress. vr... . ln oinislil ads Lune 286 Dunlop, John T., Office of Stabilization Ad-MINIStIAtor. il i 323 ifunloandeb Dunn, E. J., Office of Sergeant at Arms of Sen- Pol A BL A PRR EE CLT SIE ER Sa PT Din Dr. HalbertL., Bureau of the Census____ 393 Dunn, James Clement: Assistant Seecrotary:of Biate.. ivi suvcaiiiodss 329 Secretary’s Staff Committee .______ _.______.__ 330 Dunnahoo, Gilbert L., Bureau of Mogiel Services. inl omit I ose So winEl ok Dunning, J. W., Bureau of Agricultural and ok dustrial Chemistry LE TR EN TE a 381 Dunphy, Helen T., Senate Committee on Priv-ilegesandBleetions oii. oo aio ional 270 Dupuy, Col. R. Ernest, War Department Spe- eink Stall. ool ie en Net i dai 344 Duran, Gustavo, Office of Secretary of State_____ 329 Durand, E. Dana, Tariff Commission__________ 443 Durant, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on Agri- culture and Forestry... 4. ceok Jit sl br 268 Durbrow, Elbridge, Division of Eastern Euro-pean ATA aad come T 331 Drei Capt. E. R., Bureau of Naval Person-3 ne Re a EE LL 61 Durkin, John J., Office of the Doorkeeper______ 275 Durkin, Martin r.; National War Labor Board. 400 Durr, Clifford J., Federal Communications Commission. coo a ni. Dn aslo Sis eee 412 Durrett, Dr. James J., Federal Trade Commis-SIOM Leh dessa ian a El SE 423 Durso, Tony J., District Board of Barber Exam- INEYS.Joi rl ono ou J Bossi nies 472 Durst, Vernon R., General Accounting Office... 284 Dustin, Frances E., secretary to Senator Brew-z SHO hh. i Ta an i ISA 2 Dale Elmer J., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector: ia oniots.Ll Sanna a 353 Dutton, Walt L., Forest Service. _______________ 385 Duvall, William A., House Committee on Ap- proprigtions onaon eal miki o 277 Dwyer, Francis X., Law Library, Library of CONEIESS. = ile chinacis ob 0S tn 286 Dwyer, Jeremiah J., Office of First Assistant Postmaster General. zo. al vat ......... 351 Dyer, Rolla E., National Institute of Health___ 420 Dyke, Nathaniel, Jr., Office of Mobilization and ReconVersion,. Cour. Sond covey dl sata 322 Dykes, Jefferson C., Soil Conservation Service. 390 852 Congressional Directory pi E Page Eakens, Robert H. S., Petroleum Division_._.. 333 Eaker, Lt. Gen. Ira J. Aeronautical Boar@rii cl Say Br air 405 ATINY Ad FOrCes.. aos ian ri ann ni wit 345 Eanes, Col. Richard H., Selective Service Sys- 2 Earnest. Edwin B., Visa Division______________ 3 Eastland, James O., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy.» JUN) SladeBe 241 Eastwood, Dan W. Select Committee on Small Business, House Een aa UNE ete a Lo Bk tr 212 Eaton, Charles A.: Foreign Service Building Commission___..__. 337 Interparliamentary Union... __._._.... 239 Eaton, Miared M., Office of Secretary of Com- 10710Wr Laat ar ofl Sl Te CS SS Re ey CL 392 Eaton, ah Adm. P.'B., Coast Guard: ..__.5 367 Eaton, Ramone S., American Red Cross._._.... 407 Ebeid, Osman, Egyptian Legation. i: siligb 485 Evethrs, Capt. A. C., Bureau of Yards and 5 Ehotiact aid 'C., Jr., National Archives____ 430 Eberly, Esther A. ni ‘secretary to District Com-ison ee SST IODC IT Td 471 Ebert, E. M., Interstate Commerce Commis- a Ft fox Jeti a EE SIR RI0E (RU A So SAR 428 Eccard, August, Office of Architect, Capitol.___ 281 Eccles, "Marriner S.: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Ir IT Cr Reel TORR pe 417 Office off Stabiiization Administrator... 323 Echegaray, Miguel de, Spanish Embassy._._.____ 492 Eckler, Dr. A. Ross, Bureau of the Census. ____ 393 Ecklund, Conrad A Geological Survey...____. 371 Economou-Gouras, Paul, Greek Embassy. __._. 487 Eddy, Clarence G., National Mediation : Cnty 436 Eddy, David H., National Housing Agency... 433 Edelstein, Harry M., Office of the Solicitor Bat 369 Eden, Fred I. District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia_________ 461 Edgerton, Maj. Gen. Glen E., Army Service LTHbo ek ae Sn dn RE LR pC LE 346 Edgerton, Henry W., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (hlography)ad Jo oi daa sll 453 Edminster, Lynn R.: Committee for Reciprocity Information. __._. 410 Filipine Rehahilitation Commission __.._____ 243 Pari Commission iil il ii ooo OL 443 Edward, Brig. Gen. Harvey, Army Ground Forces: Cri ane ue Bag A LGD 345 Edwards, Adelaide, House Committee on Elec- Hons No. 2 Li) ain ee Te Edwards, Geniana R., Tariff Commission aaa] 443 Edwards, Maj. Gen. "Idwal H., War Depart- meni General .. ......Jigd 0k Staff... 344 Edwards, John F., Civil Service Commission.. 409 Edwards, AdmiralR. S.: Naval Operations Gra iiasnnad hina Jun 359 The Joint: Board. .-4. ~. 2. 20108 000 suits 428 Efand, Richard W., Export-Import Bank of Washing TER Sp A ENA phy LY BL 411 Egan, To Taylor, Federal Public Housing Anthority > on os aa oa 435 Egbert, Va Lois, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... _............. SHilT Ege, Col. W. S., Army Air Forees........._.... 345 Eggleston, Sir Frederic, Australian Legation____ 481 Eggleton, "Richard E. , Office of Chief Post Office Inspector. a. Sa Lean 353 Ehrenberg, Virginia, Civil Service Commission contagtioffice. .l. soi in dunn ci onl) 283 Eichel, Leslie, Office of Secretary of Labor__.__. 3908 Eidson, Henry M., House post office... ___.___. 277 Eigler, ‘Joseph 2. ' Office of Sergeant at Arms, Honseald Joost Jo aarnlil) L 30taos. adi 275 ig Earl E., Office of Secretary of He NterIOr. ab aC IT nl I HI HElonoes. -oe io oe BE LT 429 Eisenhower, Dwight D., General of the Army: Chiefof Stall, Army... a. il ansns, 344 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain 0 coo. Ticen ing | Jiu) 326 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. .____.____ 428 The Joint! Board: 20 trai 2 03) Jains iid. 4 428 Ekwall, William A., judge, Customs Court COIGRTAPRTY =odla NOBRITT fr 458 ; Page Elder, Walter E., Civil Service Commission__._ 409 Eldridge, M. O., office of District department of yehieles'an@ traffic. = 058 0 JUG 000 475 Eliel, Paul, War Shipping Administration... 321 Eliot, Frank M., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration. UL SSD RSE a dal on 414 Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Children’s Bureau.__.__ 399 Ellender, Allen J., J oint Committee on Occupa- tional Deferment AE aT 242 Ellert, B. H., House document room________._. 276 Bitiott, David C., Reconstruction Finance Cor-1 4 tio Elliott. ’% Winton, Federal Housing Adminis-tration. ALRITE Tate Tot pi Ohad s Lie 435 Ellis, Ae , American Printing House for the Ellis. RET S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve A Fo) Fe A CAA ne 418 Ellis, Jesse B., International Joint Commission. 427 Ellis, Joseph dé. , Office of Secretary of the Senate. 268 Ellis, William 1 General Accounting Office... 284 Ellsworth, L. D., Production and Marketing Admit ation. Lf re fe 397 Ellsworth, G. S., Bureau of Reclamation_______ 371 Elsakkers, A., Netherlands Embassy.__________ 490 Elstad, Leonard M., Columbia Institution for EE TRS ih ae a es on 422 Ely, E. W., National Bureau of Standards... 394 Ely, Dr. J. Edward, Bureau of the Census.____ 393 Ely, Richard S., Federal Trade Commission___ 423 Embick, Lt. Gen. S. D., Inter-American De- fense Board ins iat co te at E 426 Emerson, C. H., Office of the Doorkeeper_ __.__ 276 Emerson, G. C., Office of Treasurer of United BO de a aa 341 Emerson, M. A., Bureau of the Public Debt____ 341 Emerson, Thomas I., Office of War Mobiliza- tion and Reconversion =. 5 co 7% ..c--322 Emery, Charles B., Office of Indian Affairs__.... 370 Emery, George H.: Joint War Production Wii Sod eRe ant 326 Bao William J., Office of Indian Affairs__ 370 Engberg, R. C., Farm Credit Administration _ 384 Engel, Albert is Board of Visitors to the Mili tary Academy ema A Lt Ye hy 240 Engelsman, Ralph G., War Finance Division._ 342 England, William H., Federal Trade Commis- HL A ITN eo eC I Sy BR RS LS 423 Engle, Lavina, Social Security Board. ......____ 419 Englesby, Thomas H.: Office of American Republic Affairs. _ o_o... 331 Office of Secretary of State_________._....__ 329 English, Benedict M., Office of legal adviser____ 330 Englund, Eric, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations Tocoirien fn J da 379 uit Ensey, Commander L., Bureau of Naval Per- Sonmel. = Coin le ase ne ari] 361 Epperson, Allan H., General Accounting Office 284 Epstein, Jesse, Federal Public Housing Author- it (aS SAT LOR I i Cn MR 35 Eralap, Orhan, Turkish Embassy... __.____ 493 Erbe, Doris M., Office of Under Secretary of fan. Navy A A a J Le See tl DR A Erickson, Ethel, Women’s Bureau... ____._.___ Erickson, John L., secretary to Senator Ful- Brights Uo. cleo na ninia ll Luda ane 272 Ericksson, Col. Arvid, Swedish Legation. __.____ 492 Ericksson, Herman, Swedish Minister_.______: 492 Ermolaev, Anatoli A., Soviet Socialist Repub- Hes Embassy... eee a Galea 493 Erskine, Maj. Gen. Graves B., Retraining and a Reemployment Administration __._..__.... 01 Escalante, Dr. Diogenes: 3 Venezuelan Ambassador... o_o cceee-4904 Governing Board, Pan American Union...... 438 Escalante, Jorge R., Costa Rican Embassy_.... 484 Eschauzier, H. F., Netherlands Embassy....... 489 ~Indwidual Index S53 Page Esperdn Urbina, Capt. D. E. M. Victor, Mexi-ean Embassy... 0 489 oae.copoeaespnidbLog Esteves Guillermo, Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration... as. snes dbbads un illo aos 375 Estévez, Dr. C., Pan American Sanitary Bureau 437 Euler, Elizabeth, ‘Office of Secretary of Senate... 267 Evans, A.B. District assessor’s office ___.._.__ 47 Evans, Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Revenue 342 Evans, Jack G., National Labor Relations Board 436 Evans, Luther H Librarian, Library of Congress... cccceonaa 285 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board____.___ 286 Evans, Rudolph M., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.__....._..___.__._..__ 418 Evans, W. Ney, commissioner, Court of Claims. 458 Everett, Clarence D., House Select Committee on:Small Business. caiin 212 vecescannon Everett, Robert A.: Secretary to Senator Stewart. o.cooooooo_.. 273 Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals..__ 269 Everson, F. C., British Embassy... ............ 487 Evison, S. Herbert, National Park Service______ 372 Ewart, Wilson, Australian Legation____________ 481 Ewerhardt, Dr. Paul J., Commission on Mental Health Uo 0s 2nitic Lua piss ioG ims od 462 Ewing, Elmon J., District Plumbing Board____ 473 Exton, Frederick, International Resources Di- wisiont etal Tt 0 pon Leh ano IEG, Rl 332 Exton, Col. Hugh M.., office of Secretary of War_ 343 Eyman, Commander Raymond P., Coast and Geodetic Survey... 0. Lolo ann av... 395 Ezekiel, Mordecai, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-MOIeS Ld Sa A 377 F Fahey, John H., Federal Home Loan Bank Administration co arabe oie ath aX 433 Fahy, Jack B., Division of Territories and Island POSSesSlONSS oars rd en Si 374 beatlesBE Fairbank, H. S., Public Roads Administration__ 424 Fairchild, I. J., National Bureau of Standards__ 394 Faircloth, Oliver G., Office of Collector of Taxes. 471 Fairfield, Vice Adm. A. P., War Shipping Ad-5 Faithial, James i Office of the Second Assist- ant Postmaster General ae0 0 352 Falck, Depue, Grazing Service... 373 Falck, L. James, hed Division. i.e... 334 Falcon Prices Dr Venezuelan Em- Falk, i Superintendent of Library Branch, Government Printing Office: .....cnavineax 287 Falk, I. S., Social Security Board Fallon, Pascal D., General Accounting Office.__ 284 Fangmeyer, A. B, Office of Sergeant at Arms, 1TE ne asa ae edie ey Toren ns imine Sie 275 Farabow, Sidney S., Farm Security Adminis- #0 FT PE Shei, A Mb een 4 ST a re So 385 Farber, Vice Adm. W. S., Naval Operations__._. 359 Faria Tima, Lt. Col. José Vicente de, Brazilian ITIL CE ae EOE Sel Sila As dni 482 TFarioletti, Marius, Division of Tax Research___ 342 Farley, Admiral Joseph F., Commandant, Constb Guard... 365 Farley, W. R., Federal Power Commission_____ 417 Farmer, Lawrence, National Mediation Board... 436 Farrier, Clarence w., National Housing Agency. 432 Farrington, Carl C.: Commodity Credit Corporation... oe. 389 Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Farrington, Robert L.: Farm Credit Administration. ________________ 384 OfficeoftheSolielior 2 ia ai. 380 Faulkner, Perry, United States Employment Sarvs I eSa Sa 401 Fawzi, Mahmond, Egyptian Legation__________ 485 Fearn, Otto E., District Fire Department______ 475 Fechteler, Rear Adm. W. M., Bureau of Naval Personnel a 360 Feeney, John F., General Accounting Office.__. 284 Feight, Lt. J. S., War Contracts Price Adjust- Ent BOA oss ae a 326 Feiker, Frederick M., National Inventors Coun- Feinsinger, Nathan P., National War Labor Boards vrs la A sa mT as 400 Page -| Felix, Robert H., Bureau of Medical Services__. 420 Fellers, Robert E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster Generale. Li 352 oo...ive Feltus, J. H. Randolph, Office of Secretary of TReaSUY Yas tans sien os St md RS 338 Fenachio, Andrés, Mexican Embassy. _____.__. 489 Fenard, Vice Adm. Raymond, French Embassy 486 Fennell, Aubrey B., judge, Municipal Court for the District of. Columbia. ~. tii c= pairs Fenstermacher, W. L., Official Reporter, House. 279 Ferguson, Charles I., Office of Price Adihinistra-_ Ferguson, Edwin E., War Relocation Authority 322 Ferguson, Garland 8. Federal Trade Commis-SION: or tw wii Cus wd dhl nn ble a SE 423 Ferguson, Homer, Joint Committee to Investi- gate Pearl Harborattack -.... “© 244 Ferguson, John H., Office of Secretary of State. 329 Fernald, Kenneth G., District Engineer De- partment SR SB a Be en BE al AS 474 Fernandez, Jorge, Ecuadoran Embassy ________ 485 Fernandez, Col. José, Argentine Embassy ______ 481 Fernandez, Rodolfo M., Mexican Embassy____ 489 Fernandez-Davila, Dr. Humberto, Peruvian Em aaa rethe i ee 491 Fernandez-Madrid, Capt. Francisco, Icua-doran mMBassy-c isi orb toon dr a 485 Ferrenz, Tirrell, Ser Public Housing Au- thority Sri ipsa ora Ti Saw Br 435 Ferris, J. P., Tennessee Valley Authority. ______ 444 Ferris, Walton C., Division of Foreign Service PerSoNMEl eatin Foy a ee 335 Fetter, Frank W., Division of Lend-Lease and Surplus War Property Affairs. _____________ 333 Fewell, Edna, Office of the Speaker_____________ 274 Fickel, Mrs. Maybelle G., liaison officer, Gov- ernment Printing Office......._ 287 Fickinger, Paul L., Office of Indian Affairs______ 370 Fad eons H., Bureau of Community Facili- CP re a 365 Figueroa, Dr. Miguel, Cuban Embassy_.______ 484 Tinelly, John W., United States attorney’s ; A A an a 463 Findlay, Air Commodore J. L., New i Tegation: 0 il a Ce Finke, Commander W. W., Bureau of Naval Personnel Cv a reat ea Finley, David E.: American Commission for Protection of His- toric Monuments: aii cae Canam 40 Commissioner of Fine Arts. NationalbGalleryof Arti. 442 Fincuane, Dr. Daniel L., District Health De-partment... roo ss ar 476 Fincuane, Thomas G., Immigration and Natu-ralization Services. Jo. lo Ca Fisher, Charles T., Jr.: ; Federal National Mortgage Association._.____ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _______ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company. ____.._.__.... 415 War Contracts Price Adjustment Board._.__._ 326 ‘War Damage Corporation... .. 416 Fisher, Edwin L., General Accounting Office... 284 Fisher, Capt. W. G., Bureau of Naval Person- Fite, ibis B., Office of legal adviser. ___.__ 330 FitzGerald, D.A.: Combined Food Board... o-oo ooo coon 327 Office of Requirements and Allocations____.__ 387 Production and Marketing Administration._ 386 Fitzgerald, Henry J., Bureau of Labor Statistics. 399 Fitzwater, J. A., Forest Service. oo --o—owoo-385 Fix, Clifford E., ' Bureau of Reclamation... 371 Fielstad, Anders, Norwegian Embassy. -______ 490 Flack, Joseph, Division of North and West Coast Affairs ly NEL Sg ph RN IR 332 Fladness,S. O., Bureau of Animal Industry.... 381 Flaherty, Francis E. , Division of Foreign Service Administration o.oo annoi 335 Flanagan, James H., Public Utilities Com-11 od 111 Die Si el TTB TE ha oy 00 ERA 477 Flanagan, Marie R., Senate Committee on Privileges:and Elections...uoaunea. = 270 Congressional Directory Flanery, William H., Office of the Solicitor____. Flannery, John Spalding, ‘Washington N ational Monument Society Flavin, Thomas J., Office of Secretary of ry a (FLEn DRE RL IR Re Ta a Fleener, F. E., Railroad Retirement Board. __._ Fleming, Alfred L. , Night Production Manager, Government Printing Office: 5 otatl Ss 287 Fleming, H. Kingston, Office of American Re-pubHeAfalrs oo oe aseaa 331 Fleming, Maj. Gen. Philip B.: Federal Works Administrator Re NY National Power Policy Committee 375 Fleming, W. F., District Department of or lieWelfore — . oo os. oc Siocon dona: Flotoner, Richard D., United States Employ-ment SOLVICE, oi drt owt in cia wink eos 401 Flood, Francis A., Office of Foreign Agricultural BOBIONT ro na 378 Flory, Marcel, French Embassy... 486 Flournoy, Richard W., Office of legal adviser... 330 Flynn, CatherineM., secretary to Senator Hart. 272 Flynn, T. A, Ir., General Accounting Office... 284 Flynn, Teresa M., United States attorney’s Fokes, W. Robert: Secretary to Senator Pepper... ..«icia todioay Senate Committee on Patents. o.oo __ Foley, Edward H., Jr., Office of Gontans 3, Katha RRR A IR MA 322 Folet . Ze Bureau of the Comptroller of the 2 Curre 39 Folk, Hh Lily Advisory Board on National Parks, Bl a ed aa 376 Folkvord, May, Senate Committee on Inter- SALE CORIRITER | oh ra 269 Follebouckt, Georges, Belgian Embassy___..__.._ 482 Folsom, Marion B., Committee on Post-War Economic Policy Planning...= 212 and _.. Fontaina, Roberto, Uruguayan Embassy. ..__.. 493 Foran, Ross J., National Mediation Board... 436 Forand, Mrs. Aime J., Congressional Club_..__ 411 Forbes, John J. V. , Bureau of Mines. ...__.._.. 372 Forbes, John T., ‘Office of Financial and De- velopment Policy SET De aR IE 333 Forbush, Gabrielle E., Office of Secretary of the Treasury Ry EE ea hue Teer 338 Ford, “Davi, Federal Home Loan Bank Sys-Pe Fora. “Ethel M., and Mining Ford, Mary F., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. eat cede SS aie 269 Forest, HerbertL., Office of Marketing Services. oe Forgan, James B. . American Red Cross....._._ 406 Forker, Harry M! , National Archives. .._....... Forrestal, James (Secretary of the Navy): Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- C3 pe a A Se eR AN 408 Blography ofc. oovasoaesicaritmone ---355 Joint War Production Committee... ne 1020 Member, Smithsonian Institution .._.._.____ 440 National Archives Council. ..—___ 431 National Munitions Control Board. ___..._..._ 436 Forsling, Clarence L., Grazing Service ___._.__._ 373 Forster, Chalmers T., Office of Personnel ._____ 379 Fortas, "Abe, Under Secretary of the Interior___. 368 Fortier, Ernest C., Office of Indian Affairs _____ 370 Foster, "Carol H.: Division of Tr ining Services. .c...-vsimarne== 335 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School BOAT, tr: its Tre oi in Shep eb Pot SE 337 Foster, F. J., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission oo... 427 Foster, Howard C., assistant secretary to the Minority Pehle lana eiianin per ed Tae Foster, Roger S., Securities and Exchange Com-missions Ta oe EE aa ent Foster, Sterling J., jr., Reconstruction Finance Corporation so Sea see RN Foulk, O. E., Board of Governors of the Federal, Reserve System rE en ST en Page Fournier, Leslie T., Securities and ‘Exchange Commission... cl oud ova silnriagie 439 Fowler, Agnes, Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs... -. 0. omer eduphialiy 2 Fowler, Inspector John H., Metropolitan Police. Fowler, Walter L., District budget officer. _____ 471 Fowlkes, J. B., Committee on Conference Ma-jority ofithe: Senate... wil. Jtoniiaii= 268 Fox, Helen Cooper, Senate Committee on Ap-Propriations:. coo. ie oe ovis osabedasiiiesuis do 268 Fox, Martin J., Farm Credit Administration.. 384 Fox, Commander Raymond W., Industrial Sur- vey Division... lo. toed. cde Sglabaniagii 356 Foy, Rear Adm. Edward J., Army and Navy Stall. Colleges. ota dn sus uais Sat as ois 429 Fracker, S. B., Agricultural Research Adminis- TAT ei i RR a Le RR 380 Fragoso, A. Boulitreau, Brazilian Embassy... 482 Francis, Col. John R., Army Ground Forces... 345 Francois, Lt. Jorge F., Uruguayan Embassy... 493 Frankfurter, Felix: Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (DIOZIaDNY)...vo duit bmn raion tase ts 450 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.. 242 Frankhauser, Harry S., Office of Second Assist- ant Postmaster Generaleo.. cacao ia 352 Franklin, Charles M., navy yard.._......_.____ 364 Franklin, Esther Cole, Office of Price Adminis- iY B11 DER IE Ad aes © 0 ARI CIE Ca 322 Franklin, J. Morton, Victory Garden Office... Franklin, Lonnie W., Office of the Doorkeeper- Franklin, W. Neil, National Archives __..______ 431 Franklin, Zilpha a Federal Security Agency. Frazer, Te ames R., Rural Electrification Admin- istration Aameienaietiey tals tow Budiataeti eee Re Frazer, Leslie, Patent Office. coooee oo Frazier, Elmer S.: Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- HON cr i in hat Te Ea ee 434 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. ______.___.. 434 Frazier, Emory L., Office of Secretary of the Ee ER BS Rn Ee Cae Frear, Huber, Federal Trade Commission Frech, Walter, Office of the Fourth Assistant | Postmaster General. s.r. iter ote ala eat Erederies, Ralph, Senate Committee on Fi spector RS Ar SBS ET Sa Re L Freed, Clyde, Capitol railroad ticket office... __ Freedman, Walter, Office of International Trade Operations a YY Tn ne 397 Freeman, Col. James W., Army-Navy Explo- sives Safety ceoihn.eee 40. Board... Sos Freeman, Milton V., Securities and Exchange Commission SR a Se 440 Freeman, Dr. Walter, Commission on Men tal Health Ct a els ao nnts 462 Freeman, W. M. B., Procurement Division___. 342 Freer, Robert E., Federal Trade Commission_. 423 French, Commander R. H., Coast Guard. __... 367 Frente, Arthur J., Federal Housing Administra- Frese. Waiter F., Office of Secretary of the oP ORBILY os is woh nth = 2k REE we SR Frickbaum, Earl D., Bureau of the Census..___ Friede, Herbert A., District Engineer Depart- HILL as ee i brs emi Se 474 Friedman, Joseph B., Office of General Counsel for the r ie nian Treasury. rian 339 Froes da Cruz, Paulo, Brazilian Embassy... 482 From, Capt. Reidar, Norwegian Embassy.______ 490 Prost, A. C., British Embassy... __.__. 487 gra , Dudley W., secretary to Senator Know-3 Fu, Si ‘Chinese EMDASSY-oo comm camom man Popa, Ralph E., District Engineer Depart- A Ee i Ae AN pe ET 475 Tule: Ralph M., Extension Service.__.___. 378 Fuller, Justin K., Office of the Surgeon General _ 420 Funderburk, J. ’ Baxter, secretary to Senator J ohnston vat Brak see et San Mona 272 Fuqua, John H., Anglo-American Caribbean Commission SS RE 4 Sl et Rr a i ote 408 Fuquay, Leon M., Federal Power Commission. 417 Furr, William C., Washington City post office... 478 Individual Index 855 | : | Page Page Fushman, Arthur J., War Assets Corporation__ 416 | Gardner, John R., Fish and Wildlife Service._. 374 Futrelle, y: c., Export-Import Bank of Wash-Gardner, Rear Adm. M. B., The Joint Board_._ 428 gion... RBS Den ne 411 | Gardner, O. Max, Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion oan os guy G Gardner, Warner W., Office of Secretary oe Taterlor 0 fiir ho em a Gabrici, Tristano, Italian Embassy. _.__________ 488 | Garfield, James A., Reconstruction Pris Gabrielson, Ira N., Fish and Wildlite Service... 373 Corporation rd ne 2 SRE LE LI, 1 Gaddis, B. M., Bureau of Entomology and Garin, Dr. Vasco Vieira, Portuguese Embassy__ 491 Plant Quarantine TEN ALE Ce CRT 382 Garlock, Charles H., United States Attorney’s Gaffney, James M., Federal Deposit Insurance Offigei ional ada Hoi ZU mal 463 Corporation oss ico Lisi 413 Garlock, Lyle, United States Employment Gage, Beth, Senate Committee on Agriculture BOIVIE le ll a a 401 andTorestny sla i tuiiulinlSe iiadias ale 268 Garman, Cameron G.: Gage, C. E., Production and Marketing Admin-Commodity Credit Corporation _-.___._.__._ 389 istrationo. loach Te dnllil, sont Sa 386 Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Gailani, A.-M. Iraq Legation. oo ion Jil 488 Garretson, Albert H., Office of legal adviser____ 330 Galtan, Dr. Luis, Pan American Sanitary Garrett, Cleo A., Office of the Legislative Counsel, aes 279 Galarza, Ernesto, Pan American Union________ 438 Garrett, Finis J.:Galkovsky, Lt. Col. Anatoly Y., Soviet Socialist American Battle Monuments Commission___ 405Republics'Embagsyls Llu. oo tasty Presiding judge, Court of Customs and PatentGallagher, Andrew F., Jr., transcriber to House Appeals (biography). ........ o.oo. milCommitigest. (..oonini Siu ao tame Garrido, Walter, Panama EmbassyGallagher, Angus J., Selective Service System__ 325 Garrison, Lloyd K.:Gallagher, Edward F., Apprentice Training Office of Stabilization Administrator... -.: 323Serve. Shc voit FLL National War Labor Board. _____._____________Gallagher, Margaret E.: Garst, Delmond, National War Labor Board... 400Secretary to Senator Walsh. __.___.._...._..__ Gartland, Joseph F., Office of the PostmasterSenate Committee on Naval Affairs 269 General. oo buried ta be S Bet Nel 351Gallahan, Wilber A., Bureau of Internal Gaskins, William H., Army War College. ______ 346Bevenme ... 352 Gruening, Ernest H.: : Alaska Road Commission... 375 Alaska International Highway Commission... 239 Governor of Alaska 374 Gruver, Col. E. S., office of the Under Secretary ESse ee 343 Guardia, Col. Bernardo de la, Inter-American Defense Board. --5. 0 oho hee 426 Guardia, Col. Fernando de la, Inter-American Defense Board vor coi wlvs mall oii S800 426 Cai Filho, Capt. Colombo, Brazilian Em- CYTO Ne SCR TY SAR SNE NE EINE LE 10 Ne A Guenther, Lewis H., Civil Service Commission_ 409 Guerra, Miguel, Dominican Embassy 485 Guffey, Joseph F., Washington-Lincoln Memo- rial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ____ Guill, John H., Federal Farm Mortgage Corpo- PALION cis ty rset dy A ER 3 Gulick, Capt. M. A., Coast Guard__.___________ 367 Gundersen, Rasmus S., Norwegian Embassy... 490 Gunderson, Harvey J.: Federal National Mortgage Association. ______ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation... ______ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company... _.._...... 415 War Damage Corporation ____________._._____. 416 War Assets Corporation. oo. Ut oiiilanies 416 Gunning, Harry A., Soil Conservation Service. 391 Gurnette, Commander B. L., Bureau of Naval Personfiel7ol 0 ROG 0 na hel Bo ati a8 Gurney, Chan, Joint Committee on Occupa- tional Deferment loi 00 SSG JU HIBAL LTS 2 Gustin, Don A., secretary to Senator Hayden. _ 272 Guthe, Otto E., Division of Geography and Qartography. cL Ue Lo JB 8 TU 335 Guthrie, Lt. Chester L., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery 3 Cities. Sn de Paula: Ambassador of Cesta Rieal i. filoo ll 484 Governing Board, Pan American Union_______ 438 Gutiérrez Lugo, Tests, Mexican Embassy. ..__. 489 Gutierrez, Ricardo, Peruvian Embassy... 491 Gozwan Donoso, Ernesto, Chilean Embassy... 483 Gyles, Herbert E., commissioner, Court of Clams 00, lL SoS ne Lub pli] 458 Gwynne, Capt. Harold C., Industrial Survey Division i00mT Sur Sef dela Sas 0 356 H Haas, George C., Division of Research and Statistios L000 Jie ELL GEA 339 Haas, Theodore H., Office of Indian Affairs. ____ 370 Haavelmo, Trygve, Norwegian Embassy. ______ 490 Habjanie, Beno, Yugoslavian Embassy. ___.._._.__ 494 Hackworth, Green H.: Legal adviser to Secretary of State. __.._.__._.. 330 Secretary’s Staff Committee... _____________ 330 Hadjeb-Davallou, H., Iran Legation __.________ 488 Hadley, J. Nixon, Office of Indian Affairs_______ 370 Hadlock, Gerald B., Reconstruction Finance Corporation Fos ooo Jon Tama Goi 415 Hadow, Robert Henry, British Embass Haeussler, G. J., Bureau of Entomology and Plant. Qnarantine. once orms ns co... 382 Hafer, Col. George H., Selective Service System _ 324 Hafez, Mahmoud, Lebanon Legation. __._______ 483 Hagenlocker, Horse, House post office_..________ Hager, L., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission... oc... ......._ 427 Haggerty, John J., Bureau of Accounts_________ Hahman, William F., Solid Fuels Adminis- Graton or Wark. la aE 376 Haig, William L., Federal Trade Commission_ 423 Haines, Brook L.., ‘secretary to Senator Capper._ 272 Hainsworth, Edith O., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce PORE SR nL aL Sh 394 Haislip, Robert L., House post office. __________ 277 Hajny, Emmanuel Jan, Czechoslovakian Em- bassy. cuit oa al i Ei, asad 484 Hakansson, Capt. Erik G., Naval Medical Re-gsearchiInstitute zoo ot oo 0 oo aol 363 Hale, E. E. Federal Communications Commis- Slon. 0. oo i aay abnera UA 412 Hale, Mrs. Robert, Congressional Club. ________ 411 Hale, Sarah, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads i. tonsa i Her roast 270 Halifax, the Right Honorable the Earl of, British Ambassador. ooo 486 Hall, Alvin W., Director, Bureau of Engraving and Printing Seat Sr apa LE ran AY 339 Hall, Charles F., District Engineer Department. 475 Hall, Col. Dale C., Army-Navy Explosives Safety Board a ih aah de MAE 408 Hall, Ernest E., Federal Works Agency._..__.... 424 Hall, Florence i: Extension Service__...__...... 378 Hall, Capt. G. B H., Aeronautical Beard /.___. 405 Hall, Lt. Comdr. H. Ww. Board of Review, Dis- charges and Dismissals Fa A LE 356 858 Congressional Directory Hall, Dr. James L., Freedmen’s Hospital._.____ 422 Hall, Jom M,, Interstate Commerce Commis- Holl, rn “Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. 2. A ese es Hall, Commodore Norman B.: 7 Army-Navy Explosives Safety Board.-.-. 0 408 Coast Guard a doa i LL a 366 Hall, Mary Louise, Senate Committee on Im-migration. 0 wor suru ih Ade sn be Ska 269 Hall, Percival, Jr., Columbia Institution for the Dea ab lvadk Senate Sila sd pel donk Hall, oS omas M., Federal Public Housing Authority TR ao J Ch OR LN i Soh Hall, W. D., House Committee on Printing.__. = Halla, Blanche R.: Division of Coordination and Review... 336 Office of Secretary of State... ...._.. 330 Halle, Louis J., Jr., Division of American Re-publics Analysis and Liaison...i uaa .0o 332 Haller, Mabel, House Committee on District of ST eR SS ed Ra 277 Hallett, Ralph H., Maritime Commission__.__. 429 Halliday, Malcolm F., National Labor Rela- tions Board issuers to od nde tae 1 toad 436 Halluin, Felix M., Assistant Superintendent of Composition, Government Printing Office.. 285 Halpin, Franklin J., Employees’ Compensa-tion. Commission. ie, s. swab bavada suites. 411 Halsey, Margie, House Committee on Ways and CANIS eo Ei ol Cd ohm Sa le tw Ea 278 Ham, William T., Division of International Labor, Social, and Health Affairs._________ 333 Hambleton, J. I., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine EE on RE CA oh 382 Hamdy, Seifel Nasr, Egyptian Legation____._.. 485 Hamer, Elizabeth E., National Archives... _.__ 431 Hamer, Philip M.: National ATeiNes. eis 430 National Historical Publications Commission. 431 Hamilton, Carl, Rural Electrification’ Adminis-tration eos sonal eons nds Del cand osodi0oe 390 Hamilton, George E., Washington National Monument Society... .csaci. _sail.oigsl 445 Sapien, Kingsley W., Office of Secretary Shy fate Sigti LL ue pd Fai eis Hammack, William T., Bureau of Prisons______ > Hammond, Bray, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve co. d dh adas 418 Systemcciii) Hamon, Ray L., Office of Education_._____..____ 421 Hampton, Frank A., Federal Power Commis- Hance, Emma, District Public Library_.._____ pik Hancock, Clarence E., Commission in Control of the House Office Building cenit osiusals 237 Hancock, Mrs. ClarenceE., Congressional Club. 411 Hancock, Frank, Commodity Credit Corpora- Hon Co ces ada ul sl a 389 Hancock, William O., General Land Office. .___ 369 Handiboe, William ~ N., District Engineer Department 8008 Cg ALS COR ye Dk ar 474 Handy, Gen. Thomas T.: Thedoint Bodrdu. [ool i fi Cada ro ounis) 428 War Department General Staff_______________ 344 Hanke, Lewis, Reference Department_.__._____ 286 Hankins, Paul A. , Bureau of Internal Revenue. 341 Hanna, &. C., Committee on Practice-......_. 342 Hannat, “Kenneth, National War Labor Board. Fr Hannegan, Robert E. (Postmaster General): Biography (8) SLA Rr TAR EYa gh A Be 3 Ah J ey SUI 351 Member, Smithsonian Institution_._.___.___.. 441 National Archives -— Council... 431 Hansen, C. Irving, Maritime Commission._____ 429 Hansen, Morris H., Bureau of the Census.___._ 393 Hansen, Rasmus Cc. , Washington city post office_ 478 Hanson, Col. A. M., Office of Assistant Secre- tary of War oral, aE sii Da 343 Hanson, HaldoreE., Office of Secretary of State. 329 Hanson, Matilda ¥, National Archives..___... 431 Harde, "Dudley B., Office of Materials ands Bacilitiles ed So. re EGER Bardo, W. V., Interstate Commerce Sona ah Hira, Lt. Melvin A.: Office of General Counsel... ooo occoeeeeo-358 War Contracts Price Adjustment Board._.____ 326 Page Harding, Harold F., District Fire Department. 475 Harding, Victor Hunt, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of House A A REE SSR CBE Sn 275 Hardwicke, Robert E., Petroleum Administra-toniforWapiasoo-guna]sadgual vein 324 Hardy, John D., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General =... roilvitim 352 Hardy, John F., Social Security Board. ________ 419 Hardy, Sam W., House Committee on Ways and Meansg:. 4 Lom sok Bid ogi amd Be on 278 Hardy, Stewart A., United States Attorney’s Offices. tibiaslag Lat rae aE a 463 Hargrave, Gerald C., House post office. ________ 277 Hargrave, Commodore W. W., Bureau of Medi-cineand Surgery iq olor tl migraineLon 360 Hargrove, Margaret, American Red Cross.__.__ 407 Harkness, Madge E., Federal Trade Commis-SOR Ln Rt GT Frat a on 423 Harl, Maple T., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I SNR es LEVEN 1, 11 413 Harlow, Roy L., Office of the Surgeon General__ 420 Harman, Vivien T., Senate Committee on Edu-cation and: labor i saat. saliduiacmast. 269 JL Harmon, William B., Tariff Commission_._____ 443 Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. ii. icoodoll alicia 382 Harney, M. L., Bureau of Narcoties__.__.._.____ 340 Harper, Frank H., House post office____________ 277 Harper, Heber R. ’ Social Security Board_______ 419 Harper, Rear Adm. J ohn, Bureau of Medicine and SurgerViselll adi coud. ude ional 3 Harr, William R., Washington National Monu-mentiSociely.. ono leit 445 Harraman, Jesse C., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster-General. o.oo i. n.i o issu 352 Harrell, Dr. J. Blaine, Metropolitan Police_____ 476 Harrill, D. J., Commodity Credit Corporation_ 390 Harriman, E. Roland, American Red Cross.___ 407 Harrington, Daniel, Bureau of Mines___________ 372 Harrington, E. D., House document room ______ 276 Harrington, Julian F., Office of the Foreign Service roa: Cal AAL UD hvaaidoalidsanib 335 Harris, Bertha S., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... ole 238 sosapalridin ELL Dovid; Division of Central European raw opm srantlee UTE foe nd ARE 331 OrD8y. oo. oanfily ies aznntl oS dled 5 364 Harris, Po: Frederick Brown, D. D., Litt. D., ’ Chaplain of United States Senate. ______.___ 267 Harris, Louis, Office of the Doorkeeper_________ 276 Harris, Ralph L., Congressional Record Clerk, Capitol. coun duadafh 281 dsssbming Harrison, Mrs. Derwood D., House Committee on Census SES alens aa eal UE alin BL sua 277 Harrison, George L., American Red Cross______ 406 Hrs George W., Washington city post oie... EeSSI RIE 478 Harrison, Gladys, Federal Security Agency ._.. 418 Harrison, James L., Office of Price Administra- tion 112iSOD OfACOS — _ -ooo mie oes 283 Harrison, Commander K. S., Coast Guard.___._ 365 Harrison, Lloyd B.: District corporation counsel’s office__...__.____ 474 Public Utilities Commission___________._______ 477 Hin) RaymondL., U. S. Commercial Com- apito SRR SRE seni da eh aal ELA Ee Harrison, Ross G., National Academy of Selenices.. Sanam il LLB ENE LiL Teak Harrison, Col. R. L., Production and rie Administration. sia Uiial. oo Riiindinad 386 Harrison, S. R., District Engineer Department. 474 Harron, Marion J. ., judge, Tax Court of the United HN I Dah | 1 dad EH) 461 SEARLE Hart, Henry M., Jr., Office of Stabilization 2 23 tifon. Hart, Thomas B., Securities and Exchange Commission br mii oh mm a aL HO ETS 441 Hart, Thomas C., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy... oo Lil tals 241 Hart, W. 0., Combined Shipping Adjustment BOTA i lr in rman SEMIS STI 327 Hart, Willard L., Chief Clerk, Court of Claims. 457 Hart, Col. William, Selective Service System__. 324 Individual Index Hartfield, Joseph M., American Red Cross____. 406 Hartley, Charles A., ‘Office of the Doorkeeper__ 276 Hartley, Robert W*, Office of Secretary of State. 330 Hartung, Capt. Theron A., Bureau of Yards and Docks oe ae Ss Spe Sa a 363 Hartwig, Lawrence, Office of Contract Settle-mentiteape Guia nu ins 322 Harvey, George Y., House Committee on Appro- prigtions sian iin Sie e on dal Ciiie nd uu 277 Harvey, O. L., Apprentice Training Service .__ 401 Harleys Patrick D., National Mediation Blo Lei ea Sa ER CR ana Haroon, Charles, Governor of Virgin Islands. 374 Hasbrouck, Maj. Gen. Robert W., Army Ground POTCOB. Lo tvsne sn aria mia arias I 345 Hasley, Mrs. John J., District Public Welfare 74 0a Haspray, Joseph, Commodity Credit Cor- POratioN esis sada too Le lod A Dn Hassan, Mahmoud, Egyptian Legation________ 485 Hassell, Calvin Ww, Office of Postmaster Gen- eral Be LT SE TaN Cer CI SE SE 351 Hasselman, J. B., Production and Marketing Administration a. ooo. Dain i astaa Hassett, William D., Secretary to President Truman (biography) HE 317 Hatoh 11Hiss F., Senate Committee on Military Ef ae ee SRE Rt 269 Hatfield, Ties S., Judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). i coi..zc 455 Hatfield, Gilbert H., Federal Communications COTIINISRON oh itl Comair oy 412 Hathaway, Carson C., Civil Service Com-missions icatisiaimigBio dale 8 Has afin Dy 409 Hauck, Col. C. J., Jr., Special Staff, War De-partment Sas ASS A een NL CR En Cy 344 Haun, H. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce I LRT sel A 394 Hauser, Dr. Philip M., Bureau of the Census__ 392 Havell, Thomas C., General Land Office... 369 Havens, Harry A., "Division of Foreign Service Administration Sa. am Be ee io rt bre Haviland, James N., Railroad Aihceal Board Sah EE To he ihe tile mis Hot mi Hawkins, E. R., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- 110: COTIINERCE: + 2 a BR Te SS io Sig Sie 393 Hawkins, Layton S., Office of Education.__.___ 421 Hawkins, Lt. M. F. Ivey, Office of Novel HST ar hiss mud bet ata 3h we tins ms Hawley, fri Adm. J. H., Coast and Yio debi BUrVOY oon 2. Sa iaiaiii wn at Sd ln 394 Hawley, Maj. Gen. Paul R: Federal Board of Hospitalization _.__.._____. 318 Veterans’ Administration... .... con -basca 445 Haycock, Robert L., District Board of Edu-A YL ea ORR SRG ARS See Jt BATE 472 Hayden, Bernard A., Office of Treasurer oy United Stalesia ss dil Snir ainl salad Hayden, Carl: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 240 Filipino Rehabilitation Commission ____.____ 243 Joint: Committee Printing...ou 238 on oi Haydon, Edith M., superintendent of nurses, St. Elizabeths Hospital RUN A Co pe LT 422 Hayes, Charles H., Solid Fuels Administration JO Ware Fadl sarandaOUR Lae J 376 Hayes, George E. C., District Board of Edu- cations to oan n ILE LLL ea aa 472 Hayes, John A., secretary to Senator Myers___. 273 Hayes, Robert TE, Reconstruction Finance Cor- porationt Lr lL de Usa 414 Haykin, David J., Processing Department, Library ofiCongress: ci.lr doi: 285 Hayler, Rear Adm. R. W.: Board of Decorations and Medals______...___ 356 General Board... ic. oo. il ai 356 Haynes, John L., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tie Commerce. Cir a 393 Haynes, Parke G., Office of Personnel _.________ 379 Hays, H. B., Production and Marketing Ad- ministration... o.ooSEE IIT 387 Hays, William J.: Surplus Property Administration____________. 323 Surplus Property Administration liaison office. 283 Page Hazard, Henry B., Immigration and Naturaliza-tion Service ole Salil Bes oi 9 Hazera, Fernando, Costa Rican Embassy. _ ____ 484 Hazera, Jorge, Costa Rican Embassy Hazur, 1 B., House Committee on Indian Doris airs sonnel ent Horne Robert E., 0 Sompim SNELL wd TE CUE el Cy BA ealey, Joseph F., secretary to Senator Briggs _ 272 Hearst, C. E., Office of Treasurer of United States St SNE RC RL SX Sa he ts RH 341 Heaton, Ruth C., Senate Committee on Privi-legesrand:Blections. ou. lotomedinsGog Hebbard, George M., Reconstruction Finance Corporation sound Suse Lua Wg delot 20) Hébert, Edward F., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. Ago Da In, © REL SY 241 Heberton, K. W. Histon Union Telegraph Co. 282 Hechinger, Sidney L , Columbia Hospital for Porabion. i ihbisbianLanna Daclisa ad Hedge, Alfred M., Soil Conservation Service.__ 391 Hedges, Harold, Farm Credit Administration__ 384 Heers, William H., Geological Survey__________ 371 Heflelfinger, R. A., Bureau of Public Debt_____ 341 Heffelfinger, William T., Office of Secretary of eOSULY i vit ih ns nutes bale SIS AEST Heflin, Cecil R., United States attorney’s office. 463 Hefner, Wilson C. , secretary to Senator Wiley... 273 Heimer, F. B. , Panama Canal 7 Heindel, Richard H., Office of International In- formation and Cultural Affairs Heiner, Capt. J. N., Coast Guard...tio i ¢ Rempiion Adelbert W., District Board of Edu- CATION 0 i en oi pis ior Eo AE Bnd A ATES 473 Heisler, ON nolh G., Federal Home Loan Bank System’ L000 Ln ah He SRA VRE 433 Holts Col.3 G. K., Office of Under Secretary of pC RARER rE UH IRE SWE Fe (0.0 LR 0 NP A GENE 0 10) 3 Helfrich, William G., Office of General Counsel for the Treasury 339 Heller, Harry, Securities and Exchange Com- 4 Heller, J. R., Jr., Bureau of State Services__.___ 420 Heller, Walter W., Division of Tax Research____ 342 Helmbold, Gerald H.: Maritime Commission. i. 0c ri th oa: 429 War Shippng Administration. _____.________ 321 Hemple, Lt. Comdr. Henry W., Coast and Geodetic Sarvey.. iro B io aa th seid dw 395 Hemstreet, V. V., Farm Credit Administration. 384 Henderson, Charles B.: Federal Ioan Agency........ 413 Federal National Mortgage Association._____ 415 National Power Policy Committee __________ 375 Office of Stabilization Administrator ________ 323 Rubber Development Corporation. _________._ 416 U.S. Commercial Company........occaeeien.t 416 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. __.______ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company _______.___.___ 415 War Damage Corporation: oo...0. 416 Henderson, Christopher O., Office of Personnel. 379 Henderson, Loy W.: Coordinating Committe. . .duvenoe Si] nso 330 Office of Near Eastern and African Affairs ____ 331 Henderson, Ruth A., National Archives________ 431 Hendricks, Mrs. Joe, Congressional Club_______ 411 Hendrickson, Roy F., United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration .___________ 328 Hendrix, J. A., American Red Cross_._________. 407 Henkle, Herman H., Processing Department, Library of Congress prime 0 Lei Bitvb medal 285 Henlock, Charles A., Office of the Architect of the Capitol ST ee Se Deda fier Ber Shane 281 Hennessy, Hoey, National War Labor Board... 400 Henry, Conder é. Lan Office: aia 395 Henry, Maj. Gen. ‘Guy Joint Mexican-ous ‘States Defense Com- STERIC L114 I is egy ie oh 0 Ti J Chea mt on nil Sh 328 Pore Joint Board on Defense._.__.._____ 438 Henry,R. Horton, Office of the Foreign Service_. 335 Congressional Directory Page Hensel,H. Struve: Army-Navy Munitions Board... _._.._..... 408 Assistant Secretary of the Navy. ..____.._____ 355 Requirement Review Board._________________ 359 Requirements Review Committee. ________ 359 Hepburn, Admiral A. J., General Board_.______ 356 Hepner, William S., American Red Cross... 407 Herbert, Clara W., District Public Library. .___ 473 Herbner, Elizabeth, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. ..___ 268 Herd, J. Victor, War Damage Corporation.____ 416 Herding, Anna’ A., Department of Public Wel-= wir UE CCR RIAL Be 4100 7 LL Saal 6 Herdt, Clarence E., Office of Labor_.________Z__ 389 Herges, Edward P., Employees’ SS OTTOoASAIn Commission roi 00 S8L 200 Gini. 411 Herliy, Thomas I., United States attorney’s NAA Ee fC (6s BT BRE TL Yh ed TC gLite 463 Hore % ohn, Office of Inter-American Affairs_. 320 Herman, David P. , BudgetiOffice. iii.lis 471 Hermann, Albert B. , secretary to Soto Smith. 273 Hernéndez, Capt. Efrain R., Cuban Embassy.__ 484 Hernandez, Francisco J., Pan American Union. 438 Hernéndez, Jaime, Filipino Rehabilitation Com- mission bee rd anal Ln LL BEER 243 Hernandez Polanco, Capt. Amado: Dominican Embassy... lu ou oil 485 Inter-American Defense Board. _ _____________ 426 Herndon, Radle, secretary to Senator Kilgore. 273 Heroy, William B., Petroleum Administration forsWiarseal Jo snd. IL oad aanidiisl 324 Herrell, Henry G.: Office of Marketing Services... _______.__ 388 Production and Marketing Administration... 387 Herrell, Russel H., administrative assistant, Government Printing Office oid dali 287 Herrell, Strother B., Office of Personnel _______ 379 Herrick, Commander C. E., Coast Guard______ Herrick, H. T., Bureau of Agricultural and In- dustrial Chemistry A RE RE epg 381 Herrle, Colin, American Red Cross__.._..______ Hershey, Maj. Gen. Lewis B., Selective Service ystem Hertford, Dr. Harold B., District Board ore Dental EXaminers. ooo toto oim omen dans Hertford, Brig. Gen. K. F.: Inter-American Defense Board... aati. un Sons Brazil-United States Defense Commis-257 2 Hertle, Louis, National Park Trust Fund 57 Boa 6 hibiriuth CR IRAE A INR Herz, Theodore, General Accounting Office____. Herzog, Paul M., National Labor Relations Wilson CR AE Te ates CR I Re fe 27 Heseltine, Marjorie M., Children’s Bureau._____ Heselton, John W., Joint Committee on the Cor 0 Alexander, Czechoslovakian Em- Hess, in M., Bureau of Naval Personnel__. 360 Hess, J., General Accounting Office. ._____._._.__. i Hess, Mrs. William E., Congressional Club____ 411 Hesselmann, Henry Y House Committee on Earolled Bills, op nisieee 278 Hester, E. D.: Commonwealth of the Philippines... 374 Filipino Rehabilitation Commission__________ 243 Hetherington, Marion F., Federal Power Com- : 21 10a 1011 PERS Bare es SCR Ca ae Sn 417 Hetzel, Naomi H., Public Utilities Commission. Hetzel, Ralph D., "Civilian Production Adminis- RIOT dta RRL JL 319 Heurtematte, Julic Ernesto, Panama Embassy. Hewitt, Francis S., Joint Committee on Reduc- tion of Nonessential Federal Expenditures... 242 Heyman, Philip I., Patent Office... __..________ 395 Heyser, Norman, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations re,ia aa ar ae ue a 269 Hibben, J anes H., Tariff Commission___...___. 443 Hickerson, John D.: Office of European Affairs oi cio ot Permanent Joint Board on Defense_._________ Hickey, Edward J., Office of Secretary of the Senate te as sea Bn as 268 Page Hicks, James E., Federal Housing Administra- (APT REE EERE ar 1s RRR ae IE Sn 435 Hicks, R. C., Office of the Doorkeeper._________ 275 Hickson, William H., assistant tally clerk of HOUSE. iriscnn SHAE 275 inaccabc Bi Higgins, Edward J.: Secretary to Senator Green... __________.._ 272 Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections 270 Higgins, Elmer, Fish and Wildlife Service... __ 374 Hilbun, Henry, Jr., Office of the Solicitor ______ 380 Hildreth, Melvin D., War Relief Control Board. 324 Hilken, Henry C., Office of Alien Property Cus- todian 320 Hill, Arthur D., Jr., Office of Secretary of Labor. 398 Hill, DeVera, Customs Court 459 Hill, Maj. Gen. Edmund W., Inter-American Defense Board... occu. oodiivs fi 426 Hill, Jesse, International Boundary Commis- sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada... 426 Hill, John C., Federal Prison Industries, Inc... 350 Hill, Lee H., National War Labor Board_______ 4 Hill, Lister, Majority whip, Senate_____________ 2 Hill, Robert L., Office of Personnel ____________ Hill, Roscoe R., National Archives_____.________ Hill, Som B., judge, Tax Court of the Gaited © 461 Hill, Mal, Oot W. P. T., Quartermaster De-partmen 365 Hilldring, Nai. Gen. John H., Special Staff, War Departnent. LoonieLila dla 344 Hilleboe, Herman E., Bureau of State Services. 420 Hiller, Louise S., Senate Committee on Public Building and Grounds? . {1500(oi 270 Hilton, William A., Grazing Service _.__________ 373 Hilts, H. E., Public Roads Administration_._.__ 424 Himebaugh, Keith, Office of Information. ______ 379 Hinajoca, Julian Saenz, Mexican Embassy. ____ 489 Hinckley, Robert H., Office of Contract Settle- ment He SRE a aad le 22 Hinrichs, A. F., Bureau of Labor Statistics. ____ 399 Hipsley, S. Preston, Director of Personnel, Government Printing Office. _._.___________ 287 Hirsch, Col. Maurice, War Contracts Price Adjustment Board. co o.oo. nn PUE NU ine 325 Hirschman, George F., Pan American Union___ 438 Hirshberg, "Henry A "Puerto Rico Reconstruc- tion Administration. o_o 0U 00 i x ei 375 Hiscox, Joseph W., Office of Information _ Hisle, John W., Office of Inter-American Affairs. 320 Hiss, ‘Alger: Coordinating: Committee... oc...Lt ot 330 Office of Special Political Affairs. _____________ 332 Hitchcock, Capt. Guy C., Industrial Survey Division, 203i L008, a Bi Leal JJ 356 Riches Col. L. S., Inter-American Defense A I a AT aR Le Ra ID 426 Hitz, Lt. Comdr. William, United States attor- 1 ipiaty11 EE ee Ee ae 463 Hijelle, John O., secretary to Senator Young____ 273 Hoagland, Harrell 0., General Accounting Rane ion cI RW SIRS I 34 Hobart, Frederick P., Civilian Production Ad-ministration liaison offices... 283 Hato Dr. Irma Belk, Commission on Mental 1) (1 BERR EF pit sae na Rs SERV ev LE 4 Hobbs. wa W., commissioner, Court of xen Eien Ra aan Rin a 00 MEATY Led fhm © Buln Kun 00 ABET 458 Hobson, Alfred T., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration Rtas ne aR FO LE MRLs RT Bur S10 CR 413 Hobson, Ivan L., Soil Conservation Service____ 391 Hochbaum, XH, w., Extension Service__________ 378 Hodes, Brig. Gen. ‘Henry I., War Department General Staff... cuiool oneal 344 TESIEHE Hoepelman, Homero, Dominican Embassy_..__ 485 Hoey, Jane M., Social Security Board__________ 419 Hofflund, J ohn L., Office of the Solicitor___.____ 369 Hoffman, Lewis E., General Land Office_______ 369 Hoffman, Dr. Harry L., District Board on Podiatry Examiners... sie go Toi 0 og Hogan, Harry G., General Anthony Wins Memorial Commission... ovoid. 242 Hoidale, P. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine aa npr a 386 Holaren, James M., National Mediation Board. 432 Holcomb, R. D., Office of Architect of the Capitolidif il Delia Clune JADA LS Fai 281 Holden, Queen, Senate Committee on Finance__ 269 Individual Index Page Holden, Walter G., Securities and Exchange oC OTIIISEION. ode oo cmt dae dads 440 Holifield, Mrs. Chet, Congressional Club_______ 410 Hold; G. Kenneth, Office of Inter-American ELCN ARTI 1a Holland, John F., Administrative Office of the United States COUrtS ..—.-ooovvmoamnv-462 Holley, William C., Office of Labor__.________.__ 389 Hollinger, Jacob H., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts saben, Soria si was 362 Hollis, R. A., Office of Information 379 Hollister, Norman A., Office of Architect of the Capitol redacin I atiober 281 liiiannGe Holloran, Looms A, District corporation coun-Sel’sioffiens vu a. vou lisa ie unl 474 Holloway, er Adm. J. L.; Bureau of N vals Personnel. oorambeidtSams Sodan ny ys ui Holm, George E., Bureau of Dairy Industry. ._. a Holmes, Col. Hans W., Army Ground Forces--345 Rolmes, Dr. Chester Ww. District Board of Edu- Tn TT EA a Holmes, Donald C., Library of Congress-...__-285 Holmes, Mrs. Hal., ’ Congressional Chab. .cuises 410 Holmes, Oliver W., National Archives...._---_ 430 Homes, Pehr G.: Capital Auditorium Commission_____________ 237 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Oroands: cs a des ee den 237 Holmes, Ronald M., Selective Service System -_ 325 Holtz, John C., Bureau of Mines... 372 Holtzclaw, Henry J., Bureau of Engraving and CED ReedES (a 399 Slat ae Holtzoft, Nis associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Or nde ei idee ainntel halmadde in clan 461 Hood, Andrew McCaughrin, judge, Municipal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia_. 463 Hood, Brig. Gen. R. C., Jr., Army Air Forces... 345 Hooker, John Stam: Coordinating Committee... ov oeooeveca-330 Office of Financial and Development Policy... 333 Hooker, Robert G., Jr., Division of Eastern European ati os a rT 331 Hooper,H. 0., Combined Raw Materials Board 327 Hoover, Frances B., Senate Committee on Appropriations... oi eof J Te Tl to, 268 Hoover, Herbert, American Red Cross.________ 406 Hoover, J. Edgar, Federal Bureau of Investiga- BOM oe hh he a So ER 348 Hopkins, Frank J., Soil Conservation Service. 391 Hopkins, Harry L.: American Red Cross. --. ooooommioomeeaee 406 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library__._ 432 Hopkins, Howard, Forest Service_.______._.__.__ 385 Hopkins, O. P., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce AE Tl SE a Ses EL I 393 Hopkins, Selden G., Civil Service Commissiom. 409 Hopkins, William 3 executive clerk, the White House ao sd oi TE LTT 318 Horbett, 7. E., Board of Governors of the Fed- g eral Reserve System ui Lill of fanniil 41 Horn, Charles L., Committee on Fair Employ- ment Practice A he TR 319 Horan, Charles A., National Housing Agency... 433 Hornaday, Dr. ¥. A., District Ansmiony BoarG too Le SL Sp NY eT Horne, Douglas B., Washington city post office_ pit Horne, Admiral F. 2; Naval Operations________ 359 Horton, James A., Federal Trade Commission__ 423 Horton, Capt. Mildred McAfee, Bureau of Naval Personnal: = oo.Smiec ol 361 Horton, Robert W., Maritime Commission_____ 429 Hoskins, J. K., Office of the Surgeon General... ae Hosny, Hassan, Egyptian Legation _______._____ Hottel, J. Lee, General Accounting Office... -. Houck, Catherine M., District Public Library. i Hough, Robert C., Senate Radio Gallery_______ on J ames L., War Finance Division_. I House, Dr. Hugh O., Metropolitan Police.....-476 House, Jerry B., Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce A rr ee ST 269 Hone Pip M., Office of Secretary of Com- Howard, Leland, Bureau of the Mint. _________ Howard, Louis B., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry Am ST LAL ESR © RI Howard, Victor A., District Budget Office... 471 Howder, Della S., Surplus Property Adminis- tration liaison ‘office 2 Howe, Fisher, Office of Secretary of State.__ Howe, John E Office of Secretary of State_____ Howe, Paul E., Bureau of Animal Industry... 381 Howell, Copher, Office of Secretary of the SOE diedTs te TE Howell, Herbert A., Copyright Office. _.__.___. Howington, James T., Smaller War Plants Cor- POration. co ois tt a Led Di Hoyt, Avery S., Bureau of Entomology a Plant Quarantine LE RI a RE MG Hoyt, James A., auditor and reporter, Court i Claims. Ean nS Doo EU IG SR Hoyt, W. G., Office of Land Utilization. _____._ 369 Hsiao, Lt. or Sinju Pu, Chinese Embassy.... 483 Hsieh, Ching-Kien, Chinese Embassy... .... 483 Huang, Jen Zien, Chinese Embassy. ___________ 483 Hubbard, Henry F., Civil Service Commission. 409 Hubbard, Henry V., National Capital Parks and Planning Commission... "i Nr 0 432 Hubbard, Nancy I., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs... ....._... Huber, Albert, Office of Indian Affairs_ ___.____ 370 Hubert, George H.: Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. 322 Reconstruction Finance Corporation 413 Rubber Development Corporation __________ 416 Hugdens, Robert W., Farm Security Adminis- Sralion Sosa ial i Ot a Te 384 Hudson, Claude S., National Institute of Health 420 Huebner, Maj. Gen. Clarence R., Army Ground METI Lei eal Ete Sele lane 345 Huff, Gordon S., Capitol Police. ____.__________ 282 Huff, Marion N., Senate Relations Had, oy L., District ealth Hufty, Page, Columbia Hughes, Charles Evans: Amerie Bed Cross. Chief Justice, United abired). oi Hughes, Fred J.: Committee on Foreign Department of panies’ Hospital for Women _ __ o o. St i onl States Supreme Cy SL TL ST i aa Office of Marketing Services: i J a 388 Production and Marketing Administration... 387 Hughes, H. J., American Red Cross. ....__. 406 Hughes; J.-C, Canal........ 437 Panama .. Hughes, Stephen C., Farm Security Adminis-bration a Tar les 384 Hulings, Vera, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses -cceeoa--268 Hull, Lt. Gen. John E.: The Joint Board... -iio coos acon 428 War Department General Staff... ________ 344 | Hull, William C., Civil Service Commission.._ 409 Hull, William % Soil Conservation Service... 390 Hulse, soliton Cc. Division of Budget and Fi- Hulten, Tarrio M., Interim International In-formation Sorvinoee Ce Hulverson, George R., Federal Home Loan Bank Administration... canoe 433 Hummel, Arthur W., Reference Department, Library of Congress a 286 Hummer, Hiram W., House Committee on a a 278 Huneke, Cecelia, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Bconomiecs.. 2 tiomee 382 Hunsaker, Jerome C.: National Academy of Selencos. Cialis 430 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics... 430 Hunsucker, Paul R., House post oifice_._____.__ 277 Hunt, Harry J., J1., Washington city post office. ja Hunt, Mrs. James W., Senate Committee on Expenditures i the Executive Departments _. 269 in Hunt, Joseph, Office of Vocational Rehabilitation. -421 Hunt, Walter H., Capitol Police__..__...... 281 Hunt, William Carl, American Red Cross___._. 407 Hunter, Albert C., Food and Drug Administra-on Howes Andrew J., United States attorney’s office a A Ar Ru 463 862 Congressional Directory Hunter, Burton L., Maritime Commission ____ 429 Hunter, Egerton K. , National Housing Agency. a Hunter, Glen, Bureau of State Services... _.. 420 Hunter, H. G., Public Buildings Administra- Senbobinloarilo draenei ul 424 Hunter W. Carroll, Office of the Solicitor_______ 380 Hurban, Vladimir, Czechoslovakian Ambas- sador Hurley, Cornelius -E., National Mediation Beardie. voioimegi LL penitentks 436 Hursey, Frank, Railroad Retirement Board..__ 439 Husband, William H., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation Chosenl. uta: 434 Husbands, Sam H.: Federal National Mortgage Association. ______ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation .__..._. 413 The RFC Mortgage Company... _iocceoeoo. 415 War Assets Corporation... .... ou. oun iistiads 416 War Damage Corporation. cee. iiin aah aiii 416 Huse, Robert E., Social Security Board. ____.__ 419 Hussey, Hoar Adm. G. F., Jr., Bureau of Ord-i Hie ond D. Division of American Re- publics Analysis and Liaison. ______________ 332 Hustvedt, Vice Adm. O. M., General Board_._. 356 Husum, C. 0., Danish Legation SE I a 484 Hutchins, L. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_________ 383 Hutchinson, Ruby C., secretary to Senator HC Lou rh hsm dm al EE Soi is 273 Hutchinson, Col. William H., Army and Navy Munitions Board... va creidornsadict uid. 408 Hutson, A. G., District Engineer Department... 474 Hutson, J. B.: Production and Marketing Administration__. 386 Under Secretary of Agriculture... _____..__. 377 -Hutter, Edward J., Capitol Police__._.._....... 282 Hutton, M. I.,. Combined Food Board... _.____. 327 Hyde, Anthony, Office of War Mobilization and ReconVerslon lh. a rma dd eda 322 Hyde, Rosel H., Federal Communications Com- : {1s nt De aeons Sige Rela ii eer Ry na YL hen 412 Hylton, Harley A., Capitol Police..________..__. 282 Hyman, Leonard G., Office of Recorder of i a aR LL LR 464 Ibarra-Garecia, Oscar: Argentine Ambassador... 481 Ickes, Harold L. (Secretary of the Interior): BOTT IPI Of. cots vio wif wine = ems f= To Ee wim 368 Capital Auditorium Commission. ____.____.___ 237 Member, Smithsonian Institution.._.__._._____ 441 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission... 239 National:Archives Couneil.. ....c. cme... 431 National Forest Reservation Commission..... 239 National Park Trust Fund Board. ____._.___.. 376 National Power Policy Committee. _____..__ 375 Petroleum Administrator. so eee. 324 Solid Fuels Administration for War__________ 375 Ihlder, John, National Capital Housing Au-FOTe Ae EAR SAP ai Sa TR ATR nc Sn GE 432 Liaas, | Col. GeorgeE., Veterans’ Administra-JOM Dar a pants eR A Iler, Henry C., Federal Security Agency. ...__. 418 Illanes, Mario, Chilean Embassy... ooo... 483 Imam, Ibrahim E., Egyptian Legation_.._.___. 485 Imus, Archie A., Office of the Postmaster Gen- Oa Ce i Sennen a LE ab ri 351 Ingles, Maj. Gen. Harry C.: Army Service Forces. i. i nmin mins 346 Board of War Communications_____._...___.. 321 Ireland, Maj. Gen. Merritt W., Columbia Hos-pital fOr WOOTEN. — os a 410 isisi Irey, Elmer L., Office of Secretary of Treasury. oo Irgens, Francis, Norwegian Embassy _...._.____ 490 Irons, Warren B. , Civil Service Commission___. 409 Irvine, Joseph B District Health Department. 476 Irving, G. W., Jr., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry... ._C.. 2. .. 0 To. 381 Irving, Wilbur C., Office of Departmental Ad- aimstration eanEe ee 336 Irwin, Randall, National War Labor Board _____ 401 Isaminger, Dr. Melvin P., District Health De- pastment C2 Reena 476 Iverson, Sogn, Office of Inter-American fai Ives, Ldn E., Office of Secretary of the Senate__ 268 Page Jack, N. E., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry A eS LTE BE LV 381 Jackling, Roger William, British Embassy_____ 487 Jackson, Andrew, Securities and Exchange Com- BUSSION. = ooaie ea 439 Jackson, Charles E.: International Fisheries Commission. _________ 427 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com-. missoula Sn a LL RR EEE 427 Jackson, Elenora, District Cosmetology Board. 472 J ackson, Grace S., Freedmen’s Hospital 4 Jackson, Joseph R. ., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography)____________ 455 Jackson, Commander R. G. A., United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration... 328 Jackson, Robert H., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography)... L022: 450 Jackson, Wayne G., War Areas Economic Divi- glona BOE Oa LA be a te Ratan 332 Jacobs, H. H., Patent Office... i iia iiss 395 Jacobs, Dr. J. Bay, District Health Department. 476 Jacobsen, William, Surplus Property Adminis- tration. Pa le a ee 323 Jacobson, Walter A., Administrative Office... --356 Jacoby, Robert B., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation...ci: i 434 Jaffee, Samuel H., National Labor Relations Boards yeSet ann Sl TE SE 436 Jager, Harry A., Office of Education..._________ 421 James, Concha Romero, Pan American Union.. 437 J; ames, Fan R., Law Library, Library of Con- J: i . W., Public Roads Administration. _. 424 James, Harold F., Federal Farm Mortgage Cor- poration ih FER Ap PU I Fer Cd or eh 384 James, Macgill, National Gallery of Art_______. 442 James, MC Fish and Wildlife Service... 373 James, Robert W..,Capitol'Police. =. .-2.0 281 James, Brig. Gen. William C., Headquarters Marine COrPS. i. reer me tt adenn 365 Jamieson, Francis A.: Interim International Information Service... 337 Office of Inter-American Affairs... ...________. 320 Jandrey, Arthur S., Tennessee Valley Authority 444 Janson, William N., Office of Secretary of the re Janssen, Walter A., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. . _---—-—---ERT Jardine, James T., Office of Experiment Sta- iTHL PE EEte TE Tl 383 Jarman, Pete, Joint Committee on Printing... 238 Jarnagin, R. L., Veterans’ Administration... 445 Jarrett, Edward, Senate Committee on Inter- state COTAITIOrOR oo SET br iis AF it rots 269 Jarrett, J. Henry, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomies it ie. tnt iia Lod ts Si suei bun 377 A Jasspon, W. H.: Commodity Credit Corporation... --... 389 Office of Marketing Services... __———--387 Production and Marketing Administration___ 386 Jawdat, Ali Iraq Minister_ ooo... 488 Jaynes, Frederick M., Petroleum Administra-tion forsWars wdoad LiLo,arial Fle 324 ll Jeffers, T. C., National Capital Park and Plan-ning Commission a ARN ST) LE 432 Jelke, Capt. Ferdinand, 3d, Bureau of Aero-i nautica. todiioueeboise ale. Shalt oo Jelleff, Frank R., cigs Parole Board. ._..... 473 J enkins, Col. J.H., Permanent Joint Board on Delonge io. it. ier ew a EOE Tt CA 438 Jenkins, John W., Federal Power Commission. 417 J enkins, Ray L., United States attorney’s office. 463 Jenkins, Raymond, House folding room. _._____ 276 Jennen, Joseph, Belgian Embassy_____________. 481 Jennings, R. O., Public Buildings Administra- THT RRL EF cy MACE IY MIEN LE ME SL LS BRA 424 Jessup, G. P., Tennessee Valley Authority... 444 Jester, Perry N., Division of Training Services. 335 Jester, Fridge L., Capitol Police_.____.__________ 281 Jeter, Sinclair v, Committee on Fair Employ- ment Practice Gann I Norske a JERE 0 319 Jett, E. K,, Federal Communications Com- mission. ot Sal Riel Ls SIS TR 413 Jewell, Capt. H. T., Coast Guard... -———---_-367 J ewett, Frank B., National Academy of Sciences 429 Joerg, Ww. L.G.; National Archives... 431 Joffe, B.-M., National War Labor Board... 401 Individual Index Page Johnson, A. Rex., Office of Foreign Agnioimaly Relations oi cit douranmiGidon Califa Johnson, A. Sidney, Bureau of Customs________ 4h Johnson, Col. Campbell C.: District: Parole Board : coo zr 23 uizi ol coos 473 Selective Serviee System __.__________________ 324 Johnson, Carl A., Farm Security Administra- CE TE NPRCa Se Johnson, Charlotte, American Red Cross_._____ 407 Johnson, E. B., Farm Security Administration. 385 J ohnson, Edwin C., Interparliamentary Union. 239 Johnson, Ellwood, District Engineer Depart- TRCN os oN a Se RF I NR Ble BB ie Sr 475 Johnson, Everett C., Office of Third Anita Postmaster Beneral cane stateoes Johnson, Rear Adm. F. L., Bureau of Naval ° Personnel sets seat sir no SSN te 361 Jonson, Fred W., commissioner, General Land Johnson, George M., Committee on Fair Em- ployinentePractiesss. oul wun ua tin iad 31 Johnson, Rear Adm. H. F., Coast Guard_______ 365 Johnson, John DeW., General Accounting Folie Col. John P., The Alaska Railroad .___ 374 J ohnson, Joseph E., Division of International Security, Allaire... oo (ool...ode dece ii 332 Johnson, J. M.: Interstate Commerce Commission __.________ 427 Office of Defense Transportation... __________ 320 Johnson, Mrs. J. Leroy, Congressional Club___. 411 Johnson, Kathryn, Office of Recorder of Deeds... 464 J ohnson, Lorne w., House post office. __________ 276 Johnson, L. A., House Committee on Invalid Pensions RR al RI ee ae Johnson, Lt. L. A., Coast Guard © en i EE 366 J ohnson, 1.:S., District assessor’s office... 471 Johnson, Mordecai W., Howard University____ 423 Johnson, Norman L., Farm Security Adminis- TEIT I A ER a 384 Johnson, Otis B., Federal Trade Commission___ 423 Johnson, Robert, Civilian Production Adminis- AION 2. itm ade So Pu i endian Be a 319 Johnson, Roy, American Red Cross__._________ 407 Johnson, Ruth, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. __________ 268 Johnson, Sherman E., Bureau of Agricultural I CONOIRIOS.. oe dos. Zot ais red as 377 Johnson, S. H., Office of the Doorkeeper________ 276 J ohnson, V. Webster, Bureau of Agricultural Beonomes ooo thle ods os ae Ei 22 377 Johnson, W. J., Reconstruction Finance Corpo- ration Es Bc Hh fr i ng oe it gE a 414 Johnson, W. R., Bureau of Customs_______._____ 340 J ohnston, Earl 5. Astrophysical Observatory... 442 Johnston, Elbert r. , Jr., General Land Office. _ 369 Johnston, Eric A..: Office of Stabilization Administrator _________ 323 Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion._ 322 Johnston, Felton M., Secretaryto the Majority._ 270 J ohnston, Marie A., "Bureau of ‘the Budget ____ 318 Johnston, V. D., Howard University...-.. 423 J ohnstone, Alan, Federal Works Agency. ______ 424 Jonassen, Ingrid, Paymaster Department _______ 365 Jones, A. E., Soil Conservation Service ________ 39 Jones, Anthony O., secretary to Senator Mec- Farland oo. oi odin Od 28 iS Te 273 Jones, Capt. C. H., Coast Guard_________ ---366 Jones, Dan R., Office of the Doorkeeper________ 275 Jones, Lt. Douglas L. C., Lend-Lease Liaison Office Jones, Col, Edmund H., Selective Service Sys-or pA i Ne 324 Jones, Edward R., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General. coc.oil-ocin dius (oi 352 Jones, Galen, Office of Education_______________ 421 Jones, Vice Adm. G. C., Permanent Joint Board Er ER I a 438 Jones, George E., Bureau of Accounts.._.______ 341 Jones, George Lewis, Jr., Division of Near East- op AIS. Cn esEE 331 Jones, George H., Office of Secretary of the Treasury mis ohn anea 339 Jones, Homer: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. _____. 413 : Page Jones, J. Weldon, Bureau of the Budget________ 318 Jones, Joycette, Senate Committee on Agricul- tureiand Forestry. coo... ticoo.o oni 268 Jones-Parra, Col. Juan: Inter-American Defense Board. ______.._____ 426 Venezuelan Embassy... cooinl no oot 494 Jones, I.. A., General Accounting Office________ 284 Jones, Lewis A., Soil Conservation Service ____ 391 Jones, Marvin, judge, Court of Claims (biogra- phy Jones, S. Shepard, Division of Public Liaison___ 335 Jones, Webster N., National Inventors Council. 396 Jonsson, Ake A., Swedish Legation __._._______ 492 Jordaan, J. R., Union of South Africa Legation. 493 Jordan, Albert F., District superintendent of INSULANGEL. Loot vie nin ant or a en nn ORCS 476 Jordan, Louis, National Academy of Sciences... 430 J orion, Paul H., Smaller War Plants Corpora- Boma cateredSA Tate ne cl 325 Jorge, i Comdr. Jeronimo Henriques, Portu- quese Embassy sna ah geile fan on 491 Jorge, Juan Ci) Uruguayan Embassy_______ 493 Jorstad, Lars J., Norwegian Embassy_._________ 490 Joseph, Bertha C., secretary to Senator Rad- cliffe Eee Oa eC RIT RC a eae 273 Joubert, Louis S., Senate Committee on Appro- priations. EE RS eR IRE 268 Joy, Barnard D., Extension Service. __________ 378 Joy, Lois C., Senate Committee on Inter- oceanic Canals. ooo a oi LLL ls en 269 Joyce, James T'., House document room ________ 276 Joyce, Walter E., Reconstruction Finance Cor- POYaioR. 2002 & sarin finns sil? Ft aie inioedist 414 Judge, Anita, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency IS et gi Ct as 268 Judkins, C. J., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMOTION... cers dots ele Gada Bnd Judson, Harold; Office of the Attorney General _ 348 Judson, J.;A., British Embassy... .... 487 Judy, Howard A., Securities and Exchange Commission Lo. fois oC Sa iadie 441 Julian, William Alexander, Treasurer of the United States i onas tr ar ti ves 341 coopers Jump, William A.: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. ________ 389° Office of Budget and Finance. _____________.__ 378 Jurdak, Angela N. M., Lebanon Legation______ 448 Juve, 0. A., Tariff Commission. -_ =... ac... 443 K Kadane, David XK., Securities and Exchange Commission...Lat 440 ol Kaelber, George, Capitol Police... __._.___..____. 282 Kahler, Herbert E., National Park Service.___. 372 Kahn, Herman, National Archives. _.___________ 430 Kaiv, 7 ohannes, Estonian Legation __.__________ 485 Kajeckas, Juozas, Lithuanian Legation_________ 489 Kalaw, Maximo, Filipino Rehabilitation Com- TUSSION. Joshua t Aon So mae A ie Sb bo bd 243 Kalbfus, Admiral E. C.: Goneral Board... auiod sr oY Se seinentomas 356 Office. of Naval HIStory... ooo ot coat d 222 358 Kalich, Harry W., Office of the Clerk__________ 275 Kaltakii, Sirri al-, ‘Syrian Legation soo cinviivan 492 Kane, James M.,, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Erasure Salat ou Tan 413 Kantrowitz, Morris S., technical director, Gov-ernment Printing Office ae 287 Karasik, Monroe, Office of Economic Security Policy rt ot he TI ie IS Cis SY mir SE A 334 Karr, C. L., Tennessee Valley Authority ...... 444 Karr, Day, ’ Securities and Exchange Commis- BIOT is ie Sn ams i oe EN i Fm AEE Karsner, J. W., Federal Trade Gomnmistion. oo. 423 Karsten, Frank M., House Committee on Accounts i maa He EL Te Cal a 277 Karydalsis, Cleo, General Accounting Office__.. 284 Kasius, Peter, Social Security Board ________._. 419 Kaspar, J; oseph L., Office of the Doorkeeper.... 275 Kasten, Maj. Gen, William H.: Army Service FOrceS_._.-_-ooeeecooezmceae 346 United States Soldiers’ Home_ _________...__ 442 Kauffman, Arthur K., Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General __.__.____.___ 353 Office of International Trade Operations___._.. 397 Kauffman, Rodger R., Office of Tnvestiantory Jones, Maj. Gen. J. W., Army Air ForceS___._. 345 al eeeRe aT Congressional Directory Page Kauffmann, Henrik de, Danish Minister_._____ 484 Kavanagh, "Edward N., Office of Land Utiliza- Hono Tie) ae EE Ee REE 369 Kay, Joseph W., District Fire Department_____ 475 Kayalioglu, Bahaeddin, Turkish Embassy ..__-493 Kean, Brig. Gen. Jefferson Randolph: Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 241 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission_____ 240 Kean, Ruth, Senate Committee on Conference Minority Boamey, cr Michael, United States marshal’s Lowe LR Se EE NRE Ss AR ER ON YE SR Kearney, John J., custodian, Senate Office Building 2 Cori oo Dil 0 iE dl In oni 281 Romney) Matthew E., National Mediation ; hs William A., Petroleum Conservation Division. C00 Ul ia sis LEE Kearns, Hilda, Senate Committee on Manu- factures TRE oR aR SNE SRUTTRE Sune BELEN 269 Keating, Phyllis M., House folding room_______ 276 Keatley, G. Harold, Division of Communica- Hon and Recoras. oolena otonn 336 tee Keck, Inspector Ira E., Metropolitan Police... 476 Keech, Richmond B., ' administrative assistant tothe President... © = 4 318 Keefe, Claire L., secretary to Senator Mead.__._ 273 Keefe, Frank B.: Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. _____ 241 Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl Har-bor Attaek-o 0 = de ono JU il 244 Keefe, Might L., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector Sto ans hagas 353 Keefe, Se J., judge, Customs Court (biog-Cal np Aen ad he i tins Rg LOS 458 Keeler, Elsie N., House Committee on Mer-chant Marine Fisheries...iio 2 and: oll Keegin, Archibald C., Administrative Division. 349 Keeler, Erwin P., "Division of Commercial Polley: o.ooSst ones 33 Keenan, Edward L., United States Employ- ment-Servicelsill lu caine Sin E 401 Keester, Commodore W. J., Coast Guard. __._. 367 Keeton, Archer L., Office of the Doorkeeper.... 276 Keim, Walter a, Bureau of Labor Statistics... 399 Keisker, H.F., American Red Cross. . .---.--.. 407 Keith, E. Gordon, Division of Tax Research.__ 342 Keith, N. S., National Housing Agenc 432 Kelchner, Warren, Division of International Conferences ne he Keller, Ajien H., Acquisitions Department... 285 Keller,H. G., Federal Home Loan Bank Sys-po 1 IER a AL RCE Cs ER Keller,HF de, Legation..._..... 462 Swiss i. Kelley, Columbus W., Office of Recorder of LY Re RG SRE Se Cn Rh 464 Kelley, Jerome T.: : Federal National Mortgage Association... a Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 413 Kelley, John C. R., National Housing Agency... 433 Kelley, Leonora B., General Accounting Office. 284 Kelley, Paul L., Office of Secretary of Treasury. 338 Kelley, William T., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Kellogg, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering... ____-._.... 383 Kellogg, Lester S., Bureau of Labor Statistics. . 399 Kellstadt, Charles H. , American Red Cross___. 406 Kellum, William w., "Pan American Union____ 438 Kelly, Edward J 2 Colonel and superintendent, Metropolitan Police... coil iEiiiiss 476 Kelly, Edward W., Office of International Trade Boley et aL oD 332 Kelly, Ernest, Bureau of Dairy Industry._..__. 381 Kelly, Fred J., Office of Education_____________ 421 Kelly, Brig. ‘Gen. Paul B., Army Gronng POreeS:. Lr i ettet oY Kelly, Walter E., Office of Postmaster General. a4 Kelly, Willard Tr, Immigration and Naturaliza-tion Service. ao. oo ST Se 349 Kelsey, Commander Carlton, Coast Guard... 366 Kelsey, Frank W., Veterans’ Administration... 445 Kelsey, Harlan P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering. ________ 383 Kemp, Edward G., Bureau of the Budget___.__ 318 Kemp, Harold A., District Engineer Depart-1£13 A Rann Sea Che Ne Se AT 475 Page Kempainen, Leona L., Federal Works Agency. 424 Kemper, J. M., Bureau of Dairy Industry 81 Kemper, J ames T., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. JLo 0 =i as Kemper, Willis G., Home Owners’ Loan Cor-poration. iio. ool rioeu fuga 434 Kendall, Col. Donald J. Marine Barracks. _.._. 365 Kendrick, J. F., Bureau of Dairy Industry._.... 382 Kendrick, Wayne: Columbia Hospital for Women. ___.._........ 412 District Accountancy Beard. «1. o....... 472 Kenly, Lt. Comdr. W. R., Coast Guard....... 367 Kennedy, Bernard R., National Archives... .... 430 Kennedy, Donald D.: International Resources Division _____.______. 332 Rubber Development Corporation___________ 416 Kennedy, J. Thomas, District Superintendent of Weights, Measures, and Markets________ 475 Kennedy, Col. Selden B., Naval Examining Board (Marine wa = = 365 Corps)s..c.) = Kennedy, Rear Adm. Sherman S., Bureau of 5 dos ar a Kenner, Capt. F. T., Coast Guard.....ceeeeo... 365 Kenney, W. John: Material Division. oo. fadeieene= 357 Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy.____. 355 Kenyon, Walla A., Office of Secretary of War__ 344 Keogh, Eugene J.: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad- SIYSi Te k y Bok 241 Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Aeademy. =F > ekIE ate 241 Kepner, P. V., Extension Service.._.________... 378 Kerans, Grattan, Patent’Ofice’. sceis 395 Korn John W., judge, Tax Court of the Unit ment Sel le Be SE RSE Kernan, Dorothy M., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs. _____________ 270 ere; J omyH., Board of Visitors to the Te cademiy=— tn 1 Sa as a Kershaw, oh A., Office of Price Pym ah istration as ts ae as Kershow, Craig W., General Land Office...__. 370 Kervick, John A., Federal Public Housing. _____ 435 Kessler, David, Railroad Retirement Board____ 439 Kettering, Charles F., National Inventors Cottrell th 396 Keyserling, Leon H., National Housing Agency. 432 Kheel, Theodore W., National War Labor PBoged id sect a a on 400 Khomianin, Alexandre G., Soviet Socialist Re-publics Embassy oC iow vs a 493 Khrolenko, Lt. Col. PN iikhal N, Soviet Si Republics Embassy. ostai io ha Kidder, Alfred V., Indian Arts and Gratis | Board... 3 im Eo awmdes 370 Kidwell, George H., District deputy coliector OLBaNes. Ls Log Lo aah et a ee 471 Kiefer, Helen K., Secretary to Senator Morse__ 273 Kielland, Rolf H., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Kilby, Edwin L., Bureau of the Public Debt__ 341 Elgon, Verne R., United States attorney’s TIL ie Sel SIG ee SI RE 463 Kilgore, Harley M., Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy... & -. 241 Killen, Wythel L., Committee on Conference Majority of theSenate oir es 209 Killinger, Jeannie G., United States attorney’s uifice Be RO HC SE TS S40 AR TT 463 25 Killough, Hugh B., Bureau of Labor Statistics__ 399 Kimball, Dr. Fiske: Advisory Board on National Parks, ete___.__ 376 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission____ 240 Kimball, Jesse J., District Engineer Depart- EE iy) Pte Spee SL RE Ben LLL Se 475 Kimmel, Georgianna L., assessor’s office. __.____ 471 Kincheloe, David H., judge, Customs Court (blography). smeSeiad i 458 Kindleberger, Charles P., Division of German and Austrian Economic Affaire i rod ua rod 334 King, Charles A., Geological Survey. .._.--...__ 371 Indiwidual Index King, Ching, Chinese Embassy... ..__.___.____ 483 King, Clark F., District corporation counsel's ot TH a A TC RE 7 King, Farle C., Securities and Exchange Com-4 King, Eldon P., Bureau of Internal Revenue___ 341 King, Homer C., Office of Defense Transporta-t 32 King, John A., Office of Third Assistant Post-master General... =o cco con Th 352 King, Leland W., Jr., Division of Foreign Bales ings Operations he Sm Se NR King, Leo H., Office of the Doorkeeper__._._.____ oe King, Milton, Columbia Hospital for Women. _ 410 King, Paul, Procurement Division. ____________ 3 42 King, William H., American-Mexican Claims Commission... ci. 0 ure tmlann 337 LE Se Se nN a ET Kinner, Harold C., District Pharmacy Board _ Kirby, Paul L., District Department of bie + Wellaral oo a rhe or 476 Kirch, Arnold J., Bureau of Mines_____._....___ 373 Kirk, Vice Adm. A. G., General Board__._..___ 356 Kirk, Maj. Gen. Norman T.: American Red Cross... co. vain cin an 406 Army Service Borees: ooo naira 346 Federal Board of Hospitalization_______..____ 318 United States Soldiers’ Home____._._..__.__.__ 442 Kirlin, Florence K., Office of Secretary of State. 329 Kirsch, William U., Maritime Commission_____ 429 Kirschling, Bernice, Petroleum Administration ah ELa ae 324 Kisling, George L., Captain of Guards, Govern-ment Printing ‘Office re RR 287 Kitchen, Clarence W.: Office of Marketing Serviess Loa oC 387 Production and Marketing Administration___ 386 Kitts, Rear Adm. W. A., 3d, Bureau of Ordnance 362 Klagsbrunn, Hans A., Office of War Mobiliza-tionand Reconversion......_......... 322 Klapp, Edgar A., International Boundary Com- mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 426 Klee, Harry M., Bureau of Ordnance ___________ 362 Klein, Alfred, Civil Service Commission... 409 Klein, Commander Elmer, Commission on Mental Health... . = iw 462 Kline, Ruth, Processing Department, Library of Congress EA lL ARR LL ME a Sa 2 Klinge, Ernest F., Patent Office________________ 395 Klise, Dorothy J., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System____________________ 418 Klutznick, Philip M Defense Homes Corporation. _________________ 436 Federal Public Housing Authority. __________ 435 Knaebel, Ernest, reporter United States Su-premeCourt. 5...oor st 451 0 Knapp, I. E., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus-tris Chemistry. ©... © 7 cagia on 381 Knarr, Matthias W.: Federal National Mortgage Association. ..___ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company. ______________ 415 War Damage Corporation... =. ~~ ° 416 Knauft, William K., Office of Plant and Opera- tions EE SR EI EE i 379 Knauss, Walter, National War Labor Board.__ 4 Kneipp, L.. F., Forest Service... =... :.. Knickerbocker, Ray G., Bureau of Mines. ____._ oe Knight, Howard L., Office of Experiment Sta-rae ae a 383 Knight, Commodore Telfair, War Shipping Administiation.. .. -321 Knighton, Col. Joseph W., Headquarters Marine @orps..-~~. Toa 365 Knockey, Catherine A., Office of the Sergeant 3 Arms, Houser Sd TU Knowlton, Daniel W., Interstate TH Commission... .. 00 m= my 0 = 1 428 Knox, Commodore D. W., Office of Naval BUSIOLY ol nas. on oat rs 2 Si 358 Knudtson, W. J., Fodiny to Senator Gurney... 272 Knutson, Harold iy iON. I a ea 239 of os Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-> 3 Page Koch, Al S., Civil Aeronautics Administration._ 396 Koch, Henry A., District Department of Public Wellare. -oo mor Doral ol iia 477 Koch, Capt. R. A., Bureau of Naval Personnel__ 361 Kocher, Charles I, Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General _____.__________________ 35% Hoty Nathan, Office of Secretary of Agricul-z 37 Roe Lawrence, District Tax Appeals Board Lo onc i rE es 47 Kogod, Fred S., District Public Welfare Board_. 473 Kolstad, A. H., Norwegian Embassy. ________ 490 | Koons, Elmer L., office of Official Reporters of Debates. cc Jia 0 i 271 Koons, Joseph A., office of Official Reporters of Debates. i ea pS 271 Korman, Milton D., District corporation coun- oT EH TR Sepe al e e 474 Kosch, Col. Lewis F., Selective Service System_ 324 Kotok, E. I., Forest Service AEE 385 Kotschnig, Walter M., Division of International Organization Affairs RE ra re St 332 Koudsi, Dr. Nazem al-, Syrian Legation. _______ 492 Kowalski, Kathryn, United States attorney’s 7110 Pa MR ee en CRISS aR 463 Kraeger, Dewayne, Office of International Trade Operations. oti = nnd aa 397 Kraemer, Albert J., Bureau of Mines___________ 373 Kramer, Andrew J., Office of Secretary of Senate. oi oil ii a eee 268 Kramer, William P., Forest Service. ___________ 385 Krasgkin, Dr. Lewis H., District Optometry SY rh Ba a le a SE Ca EA 473 Kratz, ki ohn Aubel, Office of Vocational Rehabil- itation THEE Dems be aie ie i nr Sg ns wa ot Ai wh 21 Kraus, Mary E., Office of Secretary of Senate... 267 Krause, Robert F., Securities and Exchange Commission... =. ....ii) so ee ois 440 Krebs, William N., Federal Communications Commission — >. ~~ ora so 412 Kreek, IL. B., Patent Offices... ~ rs” 395 Kremer, Alvin W., Library of Congress. _.__.__ 285 Krentz, Kenneth C., Division of Foreign Service Administration... ol tan 335 Kress, Samuel H., National Gallery of Art_____ 442 Krick, E. P., American Red Cross. .__._.....__. 407 Krickbaum, Earl D., Bureau of the Census_____ 393 Krog, Capt. Morten, Norwegian Embassy _____ 490 Krohr, J. J., District assistant disbursing officer. 472 Krooth, David L., Federal Public Housing Authority. C. ... Lior oa ra 435 Kubach, William F., Bureau of Reclamation___ 371 Kugel, H. Kenneth, District Engineer Depart- F101] Hee Sn SEES Ee Ee Le od 475 Kuhn, Delia W., Division of Public Liaison____ 335 Kuhn, Ferdinand, Interim International Infor- mation Servies 0 oc aoa 337 Kunjara, Lt. Col. Mom Luang Kharb, Siam Jemation o.oo nl ol 492 Kunkel, William A., Jr., General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission_____________ 242 Kuo, P. W., United Nations Relief and Rehabil-itation ‘Administration EL ea TE a el a 328 Kuppinger, Eldred D., Special Projects Divi-Lf Se ean ep i SRE ie Sra Kurth, Harry M.: Division of Budget and Finance______________ 336 fice of Departmental Administration. ______ 336 Kwong, Victor Kwonglee, Chinese Embassy. -_ i Kyker, B. Frank, Office of Education__________ 421 Kyttle, F. J., Production and Marketing Ad- ministration he se Rs SE Ra Seed 386 L Lebo Henry R., Jr., Office of Secretary of A 1 ns Os LL Laboyrie, Alex, Netherlands Embassy_.__.._._. 490 Lacoste, Francis, French Embassy ________._.___. 486 LaCovey, August J., General od Office...... 369 Lacunza, Leandro, Chilean Embassy. ....._... 483 Lacy, Dan, National Archives. _____...._.._.. -430 Lacy, Mrs. Douglas Senate Committee on Irri- gation and Reclamation_____._______________ 269 Ladd, D. Milton, Federal Bureau of Investiga-tion Sh Lr i a 348 78349°—T9-2—1st ed. 866 Congressional Directory Page Ladner, Albert H., Jr., Employees’ Compensa-tion Commission in sore viii oni dey 411 LaDu, Blanche, District Department of Public Wellarers rain aia dat an i 477 La Follette, Robert M., Jr.: J on Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-238 IOS ey a Sr is I Soe 243 Lagler, Jane Morgan, Office of the Speaker__.__ 274 LaGuardia, Fiorello H., Permanent Joint Board Pelense ~via guts rederh DRE 438 Laird, A. LD Jr., Interstate Commerce Com-misslonig 0p iM ai a eh 428 Laird, Groote W., Interstate Commerce Com-TISEION hac as oe pi a Se Lally, Josephine E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System___.___.________.____ 418 La Marche, Melville, Administrative Office of the'United:States Cotirts......_ _-.._.._._: 462 Lamb, George A., Bureau of Mines_________.___ 372 Lambert, John W., Office of Secretary of Senate. 268 Lamperi, Lovet American Printing House for the Lambert, Robert E., Senate Committee on Appropriations art Ned Sele ae i fat 277 Lambert, W. V., Agricultural Research Admin- TR a Se SR a CR Ce Sl I 380 Lamont, John Donald, Office of Indian Affairs. 370 Talons Robert H., Railroad Betremony Age Lata Yi Col. Harmon, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission_________..______ 3 Lamson, C. E., Office of Indian Affairs_________ Lamude, C. Gordon, Office of Alien Property Custodion.. 1. Ce aT aT 320 Land, Vice Adm. Emory S.: Combined Shipping astmment Board. vue 327 Maritime Commission. ©... ll... 429 War Shipping Administration____________.___ 321 Landis, Lt. Comdr. E , Office of Savings BONS a hy nim la hr ra Pe A 359 Landon, Kenneth P., Division of Southeast AsiawAflalrs 331 Lane, John D., United States attorney’s office._ 463 Lane, Nora C., Office of Secretary of Labor_____ 398 Lane, Thomas J., Joint Committee on the Or- ganization of = iz 243 Congress... Lanes, Warren S., National Mediation Board... 436 Lang, Commander F. R., Bureau of Medicine Sd BurEery i 360 Langdon, Paul R., Railroad Retirement Board. 439 Langner, Lawrence, National Inventors Council 396 Langston, James A., American-Mexican Claims Commission). oe a aaa 337 Langsion, Col. John D., VS OY Lr ti Sn TT LL TGiiftord, District Engineer Depart-ment I Re ar Cl Se el 4 Lanham, Fritz G.: Capital Auditorium Commission_______._____ Commission on Enlarging the Capitol rots ee 237 Interparliamentary Union... ___.._ :..> 239 National Memorial Stadium Commission. ._. 243 Thomas Jefferson Memorial Commission... 240 Lanigan, Anna C., Office of the Under Secretary DEWAR cael fo aise “ood Co ey 343 Lankford, Jesse W., Civil Aeronautics Board... 396 Lane, Fred M., Civil Aeronautics Administra-i a a Ton A Dare 8 ed Ae 6 Labagnia, Michael J., Securities and Exchange Commission... Jo oa SLT ia 40) Laporte, Maj. Alberto I., Uruguayan Embassy. 493 Lares, Arturo, Venezuelan Embassy 494 Larkin, Frederick: Division of Foreign Buildings Operations_.___ Foreign Service Buildings Commission. ...... 337 Laroche, Col. Roche B.: Haitian EMDASY cic oo a Inter-American Defense Board. _.___.________ LaRoe, Wilbur, Jr., District Parole Board....__ 473 Larrabee, Anne, Women’s Bureat. ianLo in 400 Larrabee, Charles R., Reconstruction Finance Corporation Aah SOR RE SRR 415 Larrea-Alba, Gen. Luis: Ecuadoran Embassy Larrick, George P., Food and Drug Administra-tion Lary, Hal B., Bureau of Foreign and ton COTAINOI00 be rest 4 LaSalle, Jessie, District Board of Education. _ -473 Laso, Dr. Luis Eduardo, Ecuadoran Embassy. 485 Lasseter, Dillar B. , Farm Security Administra- ONS i web da I rn a bee te La Tan: Stephen, Aviation Division. ________ Latimer, Louise P. , District Public Library._ Latimer, Murray W., Railroad Retirement TE er TS er SS Ta Re Lauderdale, James W., People’s Counsel._______ Laufer, Edward E., Securities Exchange Com- Tauman, Capt. Philip G., Bureau of Ships__.__ Lauson, Frithie, Senate ‘Committee on ea state Commerce. © i a ie. Laval, Col. Erik de, Swedish Legation. ________ he Ralph J., Federal Prison Industries, To Mildred O., Veterans’ Administration On OMIoE isiE ey Lawl, J Nik J., Third Assistant Postmaster . 352 463 Tava R. A., Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 350 Lawrence, Charles B., Jr., Federal Public Hous-MEARNeNItY: «i. cedead an F Son Un SS 435 Lawrence, Charles Drummond, judge, Customs Court (biography) 459 Laws, Bolitha James: Chief justice, District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia. ________ 461 Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) __. 460 Lawson, Lawrence M., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Menlo, cians.he RL nai 426 Lawton, David F., Civil Service Commission. _ Lawton, Frederick J., Bureau of the Budget____ 318 Layton, Elton J., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commeree: 5.0. Lea, Mrs. Clarence F., Congressional Club_____ 411 Leahey, Capt. G. A., Jr., Bureau of Naval Personnel hi tbls rea sl 3 Leahey, John J., Office of the First Assistant Postmaster General... ai tac o.oooul Leahy, Fleet Adm. William D.: Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States_.____._____ 428 Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief_. __ 317 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Creal Britain. coon te sds poi nv ad oan a 3 Lesioynad, Mrs. Elmer O., Congressional Leavell, Byrd, Bureau of the Public Debt______ 341 Leavenworth, Lt. Robert W., Industrial Survey DAVIBION.. ta on reeseta iis nae 3 Leavitt, ArthurH., National Archives. ________ 430 Leavey, Maj. Gen. "Edmond H., Army Service PPOLCES. signe mt mn ea rds 346 LeBreton, Rear Adm. David M., Naval Ex-smining Board. -oooh co Ta 35 Lecraw, Raymond H., Director of commercial planning, Government Printing Office___ 287 Leddy, John M., Division of Commercial Polley. so a me a 333 Lederman, Commander Jerome A., Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals_________ 356 Lee, Adelbert W., District Board of Education 472 Lee, B. S., Chinese Embass 483 Lee, Col. Harold, Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. >)...... Ari Lee, Helen B., House Committee on Claims... Lee, H. Rex. War Relocation Authority._...... 3 Lee, James R., Federal Public Housing Au- Phority Sa ssnssn Te ca LL Lee, Josh, Civil Aeronautics Board... _.._._._____ Lee, Dr. Kan, Chinese Embassy... _._...22--- Individual Index 67 i if Page Page |it Lee, Mpurice W., Office of Price Administra- er Lewis, Dr. George W.: l {FUT ROR es SERRA a UN Se LI 10, Ss EE EIT 2 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics 430 Lee, Walter RS, Hoan Committee on Claims... 277 owe, Br Toyons Cound gph Ba Le te id 396 Lee, WilliamE., Interstate Commerce Com- mission i us Tos unua ae rs te JUEREE Sal 427 Leech, J. H., Grazing Service____.______.____.__.._ 373 Leech, J. Russell, judge, Tax Court of the United tam a ER ALE a RS le 278 IE RE ER en a < 461 Lewis, J. Niel, Combined Food Board... __.___ 327 Leeke, Jane, Senate Committee on Territories Lewis, Mitchel D., National Mediation Board_ 436 and Insular Affaire. oi loio oi i ERE 270 Lewis, Reeve, ir. Columbia Hospital for Lees, Frank, Office of the First Assistant Post- Women... lw JE RRL iain A 410 master'General. -_ J. 0 Lol UL UE SG 351 Lewis, Ms, Reeve, Columbia Hospital for LeFevre, LeFevre, Benjamin A., American Red Cross... 406 Robert, Procurement Division. _______ 342 OM os. coi Pp en Ss ae a rE TEE Lewis, Riley V., General Land Office.__________ 41 369 Leffler, W. F., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Lewis, Robert M., House Committee on Appro- Quarantine. sept iil Lodo Guia Jeng 382 priations SRE SS ER Ser 8 LR 277 LeGare, J. Cecil, Office of the Sergeant of Arms_ 270 Lewisohn, Sam A., Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 349 Legendre, Lt. Col. Leonce: Lewitt, Allbert Ww. secretary to Senator Hawkes. 272 Civilian Defense... oo canaries Headquarters Military District of Wash-i731 eeSe RT Te 477 346 Liatis, Alexis S., Greek Embassy. ro us ik 487 Liberti, Phyllis ®, District Tax Appeals Board _ 473 Lichtenwalner, J. 3; The Alaska Railroad _______ 374 Legg, Group Capt. R. J., British Embassy______ 486 Ligon, Col. Stanhope A., Selective Service Legorburu, Federico de,’ Venezuelan Embassy. Lehman, Donald J., Office of Information______ 494 379 System. Liken, Faye, Lu Office 0p Sitavdsbmnigai of the Legislative Counsel. __ 325 271 Lehman, Herbert H.: American Commission for Protection of Historic Monuments: Ueto. oo United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. occa. cath 405 328 Likert, Rensis, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-nomics: lcs LA a aE ais 377 Lilienthal, David E.: -National Power Policy Committee. __________ 375 Tennessee Valley Authority. _________________ 443 Lehman, Paul M., St. Elizabeths Hospital oh 422 Lehman, Ross M., District Assessor’s office... 471 Leibsohn, Ethel, District Government. ________ 471 Leighton, Lucas A., Bureau of Accounts.._____. 354 Leisenring, L.. M., president, District examiners Liliel, R. D., National Institute of Health_______ Linares, Aranda, Francisco, Guatemalan Em-hassyis ula LIARFRE a URCh ee SRT Lincoln, Harold 8., Reference Department, Libraryof Congress... 0. SiG amt 420 487 286 and registrars of architects... ____._._.____ 472 Lindemann, Brig. C. L., British Ambassy_______ 486 Leitdo de Carvalho, Maj. Gen. Estevo, Joint Lindholm, Ny. E., Swedish Legationy cof iio) 492 Brazil-United States Defense Commission. Leitch, Richard D., Bureau of Mines___________ 333 372 Lindley, ‘Walter Charles, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography). ___..___.._ 460 Leland, Waldo G., ‘Advisory Board on Najional Lindow, Wesley, Division of Research and Parks, Le PH OT Sle SE as iy Statistlesi i og sae Dad Pia di 339 LeMan, Blanche, House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads... _ 278 Lemus, Maj. José Maria, Ed Salvadoran Em-bases EIR SER SR a re a et bet 485 ONY oS ny ET I Eh ee a Cr Anan on Katherine F., Children’s Bureau... ___ 399 Lenzner, Brig. Gen. Emil, Army Ground TN Lr Ta ph Ls a Ba eae, 345 Léonard, Charles, Belgian Embassy... _________ 482 Leonard, F. Morton, Tariff Commission_______ 443 Leonard, Robert F., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. tulle on 418 Leonard, Waldron E., Solid Fuels Administra-tionsfors War. oh 30 a I BL ner an 376 Leone, Rose M., Office of Price Administration liaison (Ecos,ERE SE seein 283 Lindsay, Melville D., District assistant pur-chasingofficer.ui lic colossalE08 472 ings, S. Paul, Jr., Farm Credit Administra-tio Lie: Chester A., Office of Information _ 379 Lineweaver, Goodrich 'W., Bureau of Reclama-Hon. loeomdo nb adic Bsa it 371 Linkins, Carroll, Western Union Telegraph Co__ 282 Linkins, Mary B., Railroad Retirement Board. 439 Linn, Col. W. A. , Army and Navy Staff College_ 429 Lintdn, Margaret, Senate Committee on Pinanee. .. cocci ln cual nino any 269 Line we A., International Resources Division... oo Baan i us RRR 332 Lippman, Mrs. Walter, American Red Cross__ 408 Lipske, Alexander J., District Fire Department 475 Litteral, Fred, District Fire Department________ 475 Little Delbert M., Weather Bureau... ________ 395 ury Letterman, Inspector Oscar J., Metropolitan Police. os Letson, Maj. Gen. H. F. G., Permanent Joint Board on Defense Letts, F. Dickinson, associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District ol Colambiy.__ Isnaini0A 476 438 461 Littleton, Benjamin H., judge, Court of Claims (hiography)...o o.ooihe Sol dial Lar Willian, National Advisory Com-mittee for Aeronautics LEE aa wR aS Ra TL Liu, Rear Adm., Ten-fu, Chinese Embassy. Livengood, Evaline C., Veterans’ Administra-tionlinisonoffices. Lob 10 item righ Livesey, Frederick, Office of Financial and De- 456 42 483 281 t Leusenkamp, Harry A., Office of the i velopment Policy. [ool sida tiation d 333 Assistant Postmaster General. c= FE Livingston, S. Morris, Bureau of Foreign and ‘Leva, Marx, Office of the Fiscal Director Domestic Commeree. ~C... So ont Soy 394 Leverich, Henry P., Division of Central Euro-pean Afalrs. 331 Levine, Louis, United States Emplogmens:, BerViee aE ha Levinson, Morris: Reconstruction Finance Corporation U. S. Commercial Company._____._____._____ 416 Levy, S. Frank, District Accountancy Board.__ 472 Ljubicie, Ljubomir, Yugoslavian By ra 494 Lloyd-Thomas, Ralph Hobhouse, British & DaSEY, cr hie sr a i Jo 487 Loafman, M. R., Bureau of the Public Debt__ __ 341 Lo, Hsiao-Ch’ 20, Chinese Embassy... _..__.___ 483 Lobo, Fernando, Brazilian Embassy. ___________ 482 Locher, John, District eee amant Com-pensation Board oroan PE 473 Locke, Charles A., Office of Personnel__________ 379 Lewald, Dr. James, District Department of Lockhart, Frank P., Office of Philippine Affairs_ 331 Public Welfare Lockhart, Maj. J. a British Embassy 486 Lewinson, Paul, National Archives_____________ 431 Lockhart, Oliver C., Division of Foreign Eco- Lewis Charles D., Agricultural Adjustment HE es Lewis, Lt. Col. Charles E., Army War College__ Lewis, Edward McE., Veterans’ Administra-HORa Szae IRE Lewis, Elmer A., House document room_______ 346 445 276 nomic Development Ha SS al Ce 333 Locraft, Thomas, District examiner and regis-trar of architects Loeffler, Carl A., secretary to the Minority. ____ 270 iin w. G., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-poration so LC AIRASiia UE Fala Tie 41 Loftus, J nl A., Petroleum Division 333 868 Congressional Directory Page Page Login, Charles A., Agricultural Research Cen- 3 Logan, Capt. Daniel N., Bureau of Aeronautics. 360 Logan, Eugene, Federal Power Commission_ ___ 417 Lohr, Dr. Vernon J., District Board of Dental EXANMNOIS. a vi sa ce ol wk NE etd bl Bin 472 Lombard, Laurence, Civilian Production Ad- TIISTEALION, forts den rid i hh id wh pias 319 London, Lt. Col. Michael R.; Selective Service System. cot. oie rT te ae 325 Long, Frances B., secretary to Senator Ellender. 272 Long, Clark R. Bureau of Engraving and Uy RE Re Ne ee 339 Long, Cyril W., Office of Plant and Operations... 379 Long, Dr. Howard H., District Board of Edu- A IR ER RT Se 473 Long, J. B.: Commodity Credit Corporation. ____.._._...__ 389 Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Long, Norton E., Office of Price Administration. 321 Longfellow, Capt. W. J., Bureau of Ordnance... 362 Longinotti, David C., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... ____.__.._____ 238 Longstreet, Victor M., Division of Financial ih nautics nih 3 Ta a a a Sl Pn pens 359 Loo, C. H. D. van der, Netherlands Embassy -_ 490 Loomis, Ormond E., Federal Home Loan Bank Administration. oi coal louii aria anal 433 Lopez Henriquez, Maj. Josué: Inter-American Defense Board. ococoooo_-_ 494 Venezuelan Embassy... siot... ioor 494 Lopez-Herrarte, Dr. Enrique, Guatemalan PmbDRssy io ced Jmabrus Sriaiigl blond 487 Lopez, Col. Oscar Morales, Inter-American DefensesBoard o.oo oo nites do dana ids ihanl 426 Lépez, Assemblyman Pedro, Fillipino Rehabili-tation Gommission.. Ln = ClinCio 243 Lorwin, Lewis L., Office of International Trade Operationsgs. Sadi Lb. LST ad cael 397 Loss, Louis, Securities and Exchange Commis- TE a we Rg RCV nes BA ERE I LL, Lotwin, Bernice, Federal Security Agency... 418 Louchheim, Walter C., Jr., Securities and Exchange Commission. ____________________ 440 Loudon, Dr. A., Netherlands Ambassador._.___ 489 Loughran, Edward A., Immigration and Nat- aralization Service Loo Li. . isa 349 Loughry, Maj. Gen. Howard K., United States Soldiers’ Homg sail oh avila ilo gal lus 442 Loveland, Frank, Bureau of Prisons___.._....___ 349 Lovell, Fred F., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation... .....-coaiidlii. 434 Loventhal, Capt. W. F.,, navy yard..___._______ 364 Loveridge, Earl W., Forest Service: ib ais 385 Loving, Ernest L., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster onerall Tor iib ar a 352 Lowdermilk, Walter C., Soil Conservation oo Service. ar. dain. sas STEN ; Lowery, OC. F., Capitol: Police... .... ... 50... 281 Lowman, Clarence A., District Department of Public Welfare. foro:Luni 477 ouioue An Lubin, Isador, Bureau of Labor Statistics... ___ 399 Lucas, John 8S., Office of Plant and Operations__ 379 Lucas, Scott W., Joint Committee to Investigate the Pearl HOrbor ALEAEK. onsen rn 244 Luccia, E. Robert de, Federal Power Commis-ol Portion. ca bl ae ae 415 Luce, Capt. R. F., Coast and Geodetic Survey. 395 Ludwig, Robert E., Immigration and Naturali-pao SOE al 349 Ludewig, Charles K., Pan American Union____ 437 Luguet, Maj. Gen. Charles, French Embassy. 486 Luhn, C. 0O., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce SE LL PU I 393 Luhrsen, J. G., Railroad Retirement Board..__ 439 Lukas, Col. Karel, Czechoslovakian Embassy... 484 Luman, William T., Office of Plant and Opera-1 rH Re ap eR TP Cpe AEP SE SO 379 Lumpkins, Porter M.: District of Columbia Veterans’ Information 477 Lund, Anthon H., Securities and Exchange Commission Se NEAR NE a TT 440 Lund, Charles E., Bureau of Foreign and Do-: mestic Commerce eh Sade CoN SR Ha 393 Lund, Chester B., Social Security Board_______ 419 Lundell, G. E. F., Bureau of Standards. _._._____ 394 Lundvall, Arthur E., Federal Trade Commis- fr a ee SERS Sen eee Luongo, Dr. E. Parker, Civil Service Commis- SION... sat snag rae bile 409 Lusby, James R., District disbursing officer___. 472 Lusby, William E District Fire Department_. 475 Lusk, Frederick Oy Office of Tax Legislative CORBA, Us tas ib ial 341 Lutes, Lt. Gen. LeRoy, Army Service Forces. 346 Luthringer, George F., Division of Financial Affairs. lo basallign a,or 333 sas Luti, Luis: Argentine Embassy... ii a 1 Governing Board Pan American Union______ 438 Luxford, Ansel F Office ‘of Secretary of the Treasury... i. .-i-. 338 U.S. CommercialCompany.-.____..... _. 416 Lyle, Rear Adm. A. G., Bureau of Medicine ANA BUrZOrY anu ianiw is as ants ad i ABT 360 Lyle, Richard H., Social Security Board______._ 419 Lyle, S. P., Extension Service... _.______._______ 378 Lynch, George F., District corporation counsel’s (1 LO ay ME eS LR aCe 474 Lynch, George H., Retraining and Reemploy- ment Administration Rh Le LI 401 Lynch, Grace, secretary to Senator La Follette._ 273 Lynch, John E. Bureau of Internal Revenue... 342 Lynch, John H., Office of Budget and Finance... 378 Lynch, Thomas J., Office of General Counsel Tor the TroaSUrY uve n ee i eo ead 339 Lynn, Col. Clark, United States Soldiers’ 15 Trenfhm dS Si Si a va I 42 Lynn, David: Acting Director of Botanic Gardens. _........ 287 Architectofthe Capitol... __: ~~_.... = 281 Commission on Enlarging: the Capitol (RaaEEO KEE Ee a pl an 237 District Zoning Commission... ______._______... 472 National Capital Housing Authority... ...... 432 Lynn, Fielder J., Washington city post office... 478 Lyon, Frederick 'B.: Coordinating Committee. _.____ See 330 Division of Foreign Activity Correlation_____ 336 Office of Controls... x aa... ooo Bi 2 00 336 Lyon, Commander Glenn F., Naval Schocl of Hospital Administration... ...0C oo 364 Lyons, tig Bureau of Reclamation________ 371 Lyons, Daniel M., Office of Attorney General._ 348 Lyons, Doralynn, Senate Committee on Print- ng Ts Thomas E., Foreign-Trade Zones Board. 425 Lytle, Harvey O., Railroad Retirement Board... 439 M McAllister, John A., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. EIR TU RR ate kg 0 RT 415 McAllister, Thomas Francis, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) -_._____.____._ 460 McAmis, J. C., Tennessee Valley Authority_.. 444 McArdle, sya Office of Secretary of Senate. 268 McArdle, R. E., Forest Service __._______._____ 385 MecArthur, Willie Commodity-Credit Cor- poration a il LR 389 McBride, Harry A., National Gallery of Art___ 442 McBride, John, House Committee on Coinage, ‘Weights and Measures... co cveno>--277 McCabe, John W., minority elerk_.___.________ 276 McCabe, Thomas B.: Coordinating Committee... coca... 330 Office of Secretary of State _____ oo... _. 330 McCall, M. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _______________ 383 MecCallan, Irene, Office of Clerk of the House__ 275 McCallum, George H., International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada hi A ne eS a 426 nate McCamy, Robert, House post office_.._.._...___ 277 McCandless, R. B., Bureau of the Comptroller Of1he CUIIeNOY.. ii ine wenn win amma mn 339 Individual Index Page McCann, Dorothy Rn. Senate Committee on Mines and Mining RS SL ES els 269 McCarthy, Col. Charles W., office of Assistant Secretaryol Wars os ooh oo sh 343 McCarthy, Mary Agnes, Office of the Morin Leader coir oi os Pal a Meo I Taylor H., Federal Security Agency. 418 McCauley, William, Employees Compensation Grn aE asm eR Be ds nl Sena 411 McClellan, John L., Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. = oieion incde 241 McClenon, W. H., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue axation o.oo. 0d 580 10.000 238 McClintock, James K., American Red Cross_.. 406 MecClune, P. H., railroad ticket office in Capitol. 282 McClung, Commander Richard G., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy________.___ 355 McComb, William R., Wage and Hour dy Public Contracts Divisions...0 MecCombe, F. W., British Embassy_______._____ 280 McConnaughey, 'R. Kendall, Securities and Exchange Commission. I. __ o_oJuice ci 439 McConnell, Beatrice, Children’s Bureau.._..__ 399 McCormack, Alfred: Office of Secretary of State. -_ooccooeeeeo-. 330 Secretary’s Staff Committee... .__......... 330 McCormack, John W.: Majority floor leader, House. .uc i... nis 274 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.. 242 McCormick, Edward T., Securities and Ex- change Commission. 4. overran 439 McCormick, J. H., Office of Hatin Saal 379 McCormick, Commander W. , Office of the Management Engineer si Mlaasasioaiill 358 McCoy, H. B., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. See EL Ss araen STIR SE RE a 393 McCoy, W. A., Civil Service Commission.___.__ 409 McCrillis, William H., Office of the Secretary ofthednteriore.. csasioa lt seviuii Li INE 368 McCrory, S. H., Commodity Credit Corpora~ tone neni rs aetnal SERRE 389 McCue, Robert, House folding room... __.______ 276 McCullough, 1Maxwell L., Office of Price Ad ministration... oo. o-oo ceo ims isin Bn dd McCurry, R. R., Railroad Retirement Board--o MecDaniels, Dorothy, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads............_.__...__. 270 McDaniel, Jennie D., Senate Committee on Appropriations la Se Te 268 McDermott, Michael J.: Coordinating Committee mae a atl 330 Office of the Rainy. ofifn Ee na 330 Mobormolt, Peter A., . Commercial Com-a MoD oooh; William J., Jr., bill clerk of the 3yr REA i TO Sa Rega A 275 MeDiarmid, Col. N. L., M. D., Columbia Hos- pital for SWORE: riots etna 410 McDonald, Ed, Social Security Board __________ 419 McDonald, Paul, Office of the Secretary of the Byeasary.}. coe ers ERE EI 3 McDonald, wari, Federal National Mortgage Association SE AR aL 415 McDonald, Willard F., Weather Bureau_______ 395 McDonough, Patrick w., Smaller War Plants Corporation o_o l= ois. lasing 325 McDougal, Commander E. D., War Contracts Price Adjustment Board. __________________ 325 McDougal, Wheeler, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation dn sd ean DO IL 413 MecElfresh, V. A., Public Utilities Commission__ 477 McElligott, Rear Adm. R. T., Coast Guard..._ 366 McElroy, Alice M., United States attorney’s 101 ffi McElvain, Joseph E., Social Security Board.___4 McFarland, Brig. Gen, AndrewJ.: Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain re, os a er 326 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States__.._._..._.. 428 TherJoint Board oe arate 428 20-70) McFarland, Dr. J. Horace, National Park Travis Fond Boarder lian cei McFarland, John C., General Accounting Office. a Page McFarlane, Capt. Robert N., Office of fhe. Under Secretary of the N: avy RE a LE McFarlane, V. H., Bureau of Agricultural od Industrial Chemistry Sea Mart hrs SR 381 MecGahey, Joe, Office of the Doorkeeper_.______ 275 McGann, Joseph H., House Committee on Riversond Harbors...cite co. 278 McGann, Joseph H., Jr., House Committee on Riversand-Harbors: o_o...it 278 McGee, Charles E., Federal Power Commission 417 McGehee, Dan R., Filipino Rehabilitation Commission I~ Dd pr il Ta 243 McGill, George, Tariff Commission____________ 443 MecGill,. Kenneth H., Selective Service System. 325 MecGilvery, Macel, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. _____ 268 McGinnes, G. Foard, American Red Cross. ___ 407 McGinnes, John J., Office of the Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster General. ii. ooo coczaiiice 53 McGranery, James P., Office of the Attorney Generale. cotaSE SALTS A 348 McGrath, D. Harold, Senate Radio Gallery... 762 McGrath, J . Howard, Solicitor General _____.___ 348 McGrath, J oseph S., Bureau of Mines... 373 MecGrat h, M.J.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation_________ 414 The RFC Mortgage Company. ____._________ 415 McGrew, Harry B., Commodity Credit Cor-poration. ul en usl nord an ins 390 McGuigan, Capt. Joseph L., Industrial Survey DINION co ia ho a 356 McGuire, Matthew F., associate justice, Dis-trict Court of the United States for the Dis-trict of Columbia... ool oo oie oiig: et 461 McGuire, Paul F., Division of Financial Affairs 333 ro John BH. United States attorney’s rv PERE esd RIE Ce ST a 463 Ms, Timothy A., Office of the Attorney General. oltre indies a Su ss, 348 MelInnis, Claramai, Senate Committee on Ex-penditures in the Executive Departments. _ 269 Meclntire, Vice Adm. Ross T': American Bed Cross. oo. oii a oli 406 Columbia Hospital for Women. ____________.. 410 Federal Board of Hospitalization_ ____________ 318 Surgeon General, United States Navy________ 360 McIntosh, Kenneth, Interdepartmental Com-mittee on Cultural and Scientific Coopera VOR sr LL SE Er in SR AN 334 McIntyre, Commander Donald: Chilean Embassy... oD al aa id 483 Inter-American Defense Board _ ______________ 426 McIntyre, L. R., Australian Legation _________ 481 Meclver, Pearl, Bureau of State Services... ...__ 420 MecKavitt, Matthew A., Administrative Divi- BION. oi ed a a i ha ne 349 McKay, Brig. Gen. Neal H., Army Service OYCRR Suddennail ahr Sa 346 McKee, John K., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... ___-:.......___ 418 McKellar, Janice Tuchfield, Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads____._______ 270 McKellar, Kenneth: Joint Committee on the Library ___.._.._._._._ 238 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures____..___._.________ 242 President pro tempore of the Senate__________ 267 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ____________________ 240 McKenna, Frank J., Railroad Retirement Board. toil Pid an A ST Sr 439 McKenzie, George Grant, British Embassy.___. 486 Mel ooann, Raymond S., Maritime Commis- Moh ie. Charles F., American-Mexican Claims Commission... ooo. 337 McLaughlin, Col. John A., Army Ground McLaughlin, Walter W., Soil Conservation Service. [iil os i eT as a a 391 870 Congressional Directory Page Page McLean, Arthur B., Federal Security Agency_. 418 McLean, Capt. D. jo) , Bureau of Naval Person-nel isterpiinasoli rl ae lion 361 Morr, John A., superintendent of plate-making, Government Printing Office. ....._ 287 Mellin, Doris W., United States attorney’s AS CE aR he FUR Ce a 463 Noh on Col. Donald G., Army Ground ROPERS: i i ad a 345 McLeod, Herman L.: Office of Marketing Services______________._.._ 388 Production and Marketing Administration___ 387 McMahon, John P., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. _ 2 =f.i. = 464 McMahon, Margaret: Secretary to Senator Lucas. ___________._____._. 273 Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses...o.oo ais 0 268 McMains, W. H.: Secretary to Senator Hatch. ___._____.______. 272 ra Committee on Public Lands and Sur-aN dal Se Sa LR cea 270 MeMin, Capt. Carl H., Bureau of Medicine and Surgeryon. tno suns a ae ial 360 McMillan, Hugh C., Division of Foreign Build- ings Operations. so oo. wines SnEliipens 335 MecMilin, Lucile F., Civil Service Commission_ 408 McNamara, Francis J., Office of Alien Property Custodians oo L0GBu ball Yen 31 i [amara, J. William, Disaster Loan Corpora-AT an AA SSC SI) oh A POA McNamee, W. J., Rubber Development Cor-poration Jl ae aR ph ail 416 McNaughton, Lt. Gen. A. G. L., Permanent Joint Board o% Dons RRA A ER 438 Dial, George E , United States attorney’s 463 McNeil, Ww J., Office of the Fiscal Director___.. 357 McNickle, D’ Arey, Office of Indian Affairs_____ 370 McNutt, Paul V., United States High Commis-. sioner to the Philippines BE Ri 374 McPhail, H. F., Bureau of Reclamation________ 371 McPhee, Hugh {EE Bureau of Animal Industry. 381 McPherson,A. T., Bureau of Standards._._____ 394 MecQuiston, Capt. Irving M., Bureau of Aero- naublesss doen los caer sha sia 360 McRae, Dorothy A., secretary to Senator Alin cnn Ns ead Se dunn Ise 273 McReynolds, James C., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (retired).____ 451 McSherry, N. D., Senate Committee on Public Lands and SOrveys. vuoi. ina. 270 McVeigh, Edward J., Office of Secretary of LADO fs i i hind a tn Sib 39: McWherter, W. R., Court of Customs and Patent Appeals das I Of SR RR Bg 456 McWhorter, Roger B.: Federal Power Commission... 417 International Joint Commission. _____.______.. 427 Mabry, Bill, House post office... 277 Macartney, Morton, Reconstruction Finance Corporations. of 2 iis oa dana 414 Macauley, Capt. Edward: Martime Commission. oa... aaa. doolol 429 War Shipping Administration. __..___________ 321 MacCormick, Austin H., Office of the Under Secretary OL WARS li Shae SRN Jon 343 MacCoy, W. Pierce, Division of Departmental Rergonnel. co... REINS NI LoL IRIEL BRS 336 MacCrae, Kathryn, Senate Committee on Com-110 Le Se ST Ea DS Mie Se RR A Et ed 8 Macdonald, Alice I., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... i. =i: Lo U0 394 MacDonald, Dr. A. Magruder, District Coroner. 472 MacDonald, Donald, Alaskan International Highway COMIN. onl iliesubie ors 239 MacDonald, Commander H. A., Office of Navy Photographie Serviees_ 0 40 SEU 358 MacDonald, J. E., Solid Fuels Administration for: War. Lh. 00 as aah IN UL SIRE 376 Macdonald, Joseph, Maritime Commission..___ 429 MacDonald, Thomas H.: Public Roads Administration. __ _._......_..__ 424 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... ......_--2.l...1 240 Macdonnell, R. M., Permanent Joint Board on £8 1 EaLL Ra fal 438 Mace, Clarence M., Washington city post office. 478 MacFarlane, Jessie, Bureau of Medical Services. 420 Macgowan, H. P., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commerce Lome Eel Sa TE Re 394 MacGregor, Rafael Ferndndez, International Boundary and Water Commission, United Statesand Mexiep... 0.7 0 W7 FSioi 427 Machado, Dr. Eduardo A. Bacelar, Portuguese Embassy hh prs re ee PS a) 491 Machlup, Fritz, Office of Alien Property Cus- STE Ee OL hl Ret ae a I Mack, Clifton E., Procurement Division_______ 342 Mack, Curt, Federal Housing A dministration_. 435 Mack, J oseph A., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Connie sarki Se SI I SE 394 LE , Col. Kenneth, British Embassy... 486 Macklin, Ww. Jos Railroad Retirement Board.___ 439 fel Ne 486 MacLeod, Guy F., Office of Niatorials and Facilities 388 MacLeod,W Macmahon, Arthur W., Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs___________ 334 Macpherson, Gregor, Official Reporter, Senate. 271 Macpherson, John 8. Anglo-American Carib- bean Commission.mL RA an aT 408 MacQuilliam, Joseph H., District Printing and Publication Division of Sta Macy, J. Noel, International Information 335 Madden, Joseph Warren, judge, Court of Claims (biography) fas Cai Rea LE BN LRT Madden, M. K., St. Elizabeths Hospital _.______ Maddox, James G., Bureau of Agricultural Economics Modan Me be LJ JE Sea 377 Madill, E.J., Office of Contract Settlement. Madrid G. Fausto, Mexican Embassy ___.._______ Magalhdes, Dr. José Calvet de, Portuguese Embassy isl alulal saint sr mall Je 491 Magdoft, Harry, Bureau of Foreign and Domes-1 COMMIT ee os one ei 394 Magness, J. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering 383 Magnuson, Warren G., Alaskan International Highway Commission...mi tie 239 Magnusson, Magnus V., Iceland Legation: ______ 488 Magoon, Charles A, "Agricultural Research Administration in epee Ls A 380 Magowan, J. H., British Embassy... __________ 486 Magruder, Calvert, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) Senile shan alieis Bega) 460 Magruder, Elizabeth R., United States attor-NETS OM00 it crise dors or ont aa Ps Mague, Roscoe E., Office of the Chief Post Office INSDRIOT inn oii yn nna Sa Se SCL IN, 353 Maguire, Philip, Civilian Production Adminis-tration sat ina Sui oad ca ine 319 Maeahaffie, Charles D., Interstate Commerce Gi CR Be Ean LC We UL 4 ORs Maher John, House Committee on Roads____.__ 278 Mahon, Edith A. Office of the Solicitor. ________ 369 Mahon, George H., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 5 oon nd ......... 240 Mahoney, Edna B., Tariff Commission. ._______ 443 Mahoney, Edward J., Office of the Hotomd Assistant Postmaster General ______________ Mpponey, Eldred N., General Aoovaniing fii Mahoney, Merchant, Canadian Embassy ._._.__ 43 Mahood, Doris, Senate Committee on Mines and MIRING co idiots Be dan va dus tues ean 269 Makiedo, Dr. Sergije, Yugoslavian Embassy.... 494 Makins, Roger, British Embassy... __..__.. 486 Makover, Dr. Henry B., Office of Labor._...__.. 389 Maksimovich, Lt. Col. V., Soviet Socialist Re- publicS Embassy. cis cto a a os 493 Indivrdual Index I a t— Page Maktos, John, Division of International Organi-zation Affofre en olan 332 Malik, Dr. Charles, Lebanon Legation. ___.____ 488 Mallory, Capt. Charles K., Material Division. __ 357 Malone, Dumas, N ational Historical Publica-tions COMMISION. or econo or enconi ban is 431 Malone, William M., Securities and Exchange Commission. 20. investoromit 440 coli na Maloney, James J., Secret Service... _._..___. 340 Maloney, Patrick 1s Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration SL EA ASTRA La Lal Sha LI AR pi 434 Maloney, Thomas G., Superintendent of Bind-ing, Government Printing Office. __...._.____ 287 Maloney, William B., National War Labor » 4 TREE DINER i al Batt TS Sal Se Manchester, Allen -W., Agricultural Adjust-MENGIATONCY.. . .cuvn sins bbb ans nnd aes DL 399 Mandele, Dr. K. E. van der, Netherlands Em- DOBRY. ce eens SL Zo SE SERIE 489 Manger, William, Pan American Union__.._____ 437 Mann, Clare, Capitol telephone exchange _____ 281 Mann, Thomas C., Division of River Plate 7. ERE Ahk ad 000 RD YL i RM of SURES | hu LI J A 1 332 Mann, William M., National Zoological Park__ 442 Manning, Rear Adm. John J., Bureau of Yards a5 6 Mansfield, William B., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster Generals co Cl oon cll 352 Manzoni, Lt. Oscar, Argentine Embassy... 481 Mareellino, J. F., District Priorities and a Analyst SE CSR RCL CL el LPR March, Frank A.: Coordinating Committee)... Lit. coat CBr 330 Office of Departmental Administration.______ 336 Marcotte, Jerry J., bailiff, Court of Claims. __.. 457 Margold, Nathan R., judge, Municipal Court for the Districtof Columbia... ..._..______ 464 Margolin, Bessie, Office of Secretary of Labor... 398 Marion, Joseph F., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration... cx Et i i 390 Maris, Albert Branson, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals so. lite 459 (biography)... Maris, Paul V., Farm Security Administration. 385 Marker, Murray H., Office of International rode ODErations. Si aie le 397 o.oodems Markey, D. John, American Battle Monuments Bn Hy A RE PES hE 405 Markey, Commodore Gene, Office of Navy Photographie Services... io i oo. ii ll 358 Markham, James E., Office of Alien Property Custodian of ns ire RR 319 Markhus, Andrew, General Land Office__..____ 369 Markie, Viola, Senate Committee on Patents... 270 Marks, "Frank B., District poundmaster-___.___ 472 Marks, Herbert g. Office of Secretary of State__ 329 Markwell, Kenneth W., Bureau of Reclama-10d got, Sh ae ET LS CaS ig 371 Marland, Dr. Albert E., Commissioner on Men-TIER le Ge a Gl ee, 462 Marlett, D. L., Bonneville Power Administra-ER RE Le a ie CARA se, 375 Marley, James B., Social Security Board_______ 419 Marquez, Lt. César, Spanish Embassy... 492 Marquis, J. Gilmore, American Red Cross___.. 407 Marris, Aubrey R., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 342 Marsden, Maj. Howard J., Maritime Commis- Marsh, E. P., Conciliation Service. _...____.___ oo Marsh, RB. Forest Service. loiio 0 Marshall, Lt. Comdr. Brewster He Tnited ° States attorney’sioffice.......oon] il 463 Marshall, Rear Adm. Edward L., Bureau of Yardsand Docks...0o coos oil il np 363 Marshall, Rodney E., Senate Committee on Appropriations. oo. oth ede SLO 3s 268 Marshall, Rowland 8., District Public Welfare Board oS esas 473 Marston, H. W., Agricultural Research Admin-Ista tion eR a 380 Martin, Aaron W., Washington city post office. 478 Page Martin, Edwin M., Division of Japanese and Korean Economic Affairs... ____._________ 334 Martin, George E., retired chief justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia____ 454 Martin, Guy, American-Mexican Claims Com-81TEES) ne i ee RO Rh (LS LAS TE 337 Martin, Henry Gee, House post office. _________ 277 Martin, I. Jack, secretary to Senator Taft ___._ 273 Martin, James L., District Assessors office______ 471 Martin, J. F., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine iS a Eh ER RR a BE Sa 382 Martin, Joseph F., Congressional Record mes-genger: oii tL UE EL LOAN Cray 71 Martin, Joseph W., Jr.: Commission on Enlarging the A Grounds. 27 oil oy 30 nN RSS Minorty Leader, House... 0.2 ci lon oa Martin, L. F., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial Chemistyy Do Cb ie Lis 2000 381 Martin, Leo C., Bureau of the Budget_____...__ 318 Martin, Reed F., General Accounting Office____ 284 Martin, Roy M., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General...ll 30 352 ia Martin, Mrs. Thomas E., Congressional Club.. 410 Martin, William McChesney, Jr., Export-Im- port Bank'of Washington... 10. 411 Martinez, Rafael Arévalo, Governing Board, Pan AmericanUnion.. 2 aE 38 Martins, Carlos: Brazilian Ambassador... = UC oF Tio 482 Governing Board, Pan American Union._____ 438 Martyn, John W., Office of the Secretary of War_ 343 Marvin, Cloyd "Heck, ‘Washington National Monument Society. TE 445 Masefield, Peter, British Embassy .----..______ 487 Mason, Mrs. Agnes K., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board... ooeooemeooen 472 Mason, Charles N., Office of Budget and Fi-NANCE i oni So he smn ae Ea Mason, Joseph C., secretary to Senator Brooks.. 272 Mason, Guy: Columbia Hospital for Women. _________._____ 410 District:Commissioner-. ____ = ---C-t--_t23._ 471 District Unemployment Compensation Board. 473 District Zoning Commission ________________ 472 Mason, Lowell B., Federal Trade Commission-. 423 Massey, E. Ralph, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System______.___________.__ 418 Massing, William P., Federal Communications Commission... osSa ont 412 Matchett, EugeneJ., Administrative Division.. 349 Mathias, "Bingham W., House Committee on Invalid Pensions... 0c _--. s-sc-ocit. 278 Magis, James O., Western Union Telegraph on BS on det Te i 282 Mathis, Mary, Civil Service Commission...___ 409 Matscheck, Walter, Railroad Retirement Board nn Ee Sa 439 Matteson, Jack, House Committee on War Clalitwaa Ie 278 Matthews, H. Freeman: Coordinating Committee. coccaccomemcanaa 330 Office of European Affairs... occoaecanaa-330 Matthews, Ralph, secretary to Senator McClel-lan Mataons, W. Bruce, United States marshal _ 462 Maulding, Mrs. J. Atwood, Office of Secretary ofthelnterior. tie. cit vpisdoaatson 368 Maull, Capt. H. C., Jr., War Contracts Price Adjustment Board. i oarmoni oa o..coci 326 Maurer, George Ty reading clerk of House__.___ 275 Maurer, RobertA., District Board of Educa- HON id col te Uh er A Ey 472 Mauser, David, Office of the Doorkeeper____._._ 275 Maverick, Maury: Civilian om Administration... _..... 319 Smaller War Plants Corporation _____._____... 325 Maxie, Marjorie, Senate Committee on Library. 269 Maxwell, David L., District Pharmacy Board. 473 Maxwell, James A., "Division of Lend-Lease and Surplus War Property Afar. oa nae 333 Martin, Arthur E., Office of the Third Assistant Maxwell, Maj. Gen. Russell L., War Departs Postmaster General... oc... iverdeanna ius 352 ment General Staflcc iil iid ac Sn La Martin, Edwin G., Tariff Commission.......-- 443 Maxwell, Robert W., Bureau of Accounts._._._ 3: Congressional Directory Page May, Andrew J.: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy_.. 240 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment. 242 May, George O., Office of Contract Settlement_ 322 May, O. E., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry. fois Susi Gakeead 380 Maybank, Burnet R.: Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment. 242 Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 240 Maycock, Richard W., Commodity Credit COrDOYALION LC ais val so AR ea 389 Mayer, Arthur L., American Red Cross_._.._-. 406 Mayhew, Joseph 7 District Fire Department_ 475 Mayo, Maurice, Veterans’ Administration lgisonioffiees. Lone cnn nol vciunnen 282 Mayo, Virginia M., Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. _._.. 2 Mead, George H.: Office of Stabilization Administrator____.__._... 323 Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. 322 Mead, James M., National Memorial Stadium Wellare i ol oes ad i rt a NE nal 477 Meany, George, National War Labor Board.... 400 Mearns, David Chambers, Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress. ai 7 >. i... Medhen, Blatta Ephrem Tewelde, Ethiopian Legalion i aig nt 485 Medina, Gen. Hector J.: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ Uruguayan Embassy Medina-Parker, Col. Ernesto: Chilean Embassy = oo ia ee 483 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 426 Meebean, O. Lloyd, Fish and Wildlife Service. 374 Meehan, John I., Library of Congress. _._._.__.___ 285 Meehan, M. Joseph, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree.. ili Tn 394 Meekins, Lynn W., Division of Foreign Service A i ce Re 335 Megill, H. Newlin, assistant enrolling clerk of the louse: 2, oY 275 Meginnis, H. Glenn, Forest Service. ______._.____ 386 Mehaffey, Maj. Gen. Joseph C., the Panama ak lea aie DERE al I sea Te ed 437 Mehl, J. M. Office of Investigatory Services. _________.____._ 388 Production and Marketing Services _._._____ 386 Meletio, M. L., Republican Pair Clerk of the 3 Ea peel RO CT i AS eS Sil 276 Melhorn, Rear Adm. Kent C., Bureau of Med- icine and SEY es es 360 Mellema, Dr. G. E., Netherlands Embassy ____ 489 Mellili, Felice Catalano Nobile di, Italian Em- RV Lp SNE ES EC le a Seay 488 Mello, Edgard de, Brazilian Embassy .______.____ 482 Mellon, Paul, National Gallery of Art AEE Sri 42 Mellott, Arthur J., judge, Tax Court of the nied tates a 461 Melton, Dolores, Senate Committee on Finance. 269 Menaugh, Robert M., superintendent, House Radio Gallery 762 Menefee, M. J.: SecretarytoSenatorByrd.. io. Co Senate Committeeon Rules_________._._______ Meneses, Group Capt. Arturo: Chilean Bibassy -== nc ae on 483 Inter-American Defense Board. __.____________ 426 Menhinick, H. K., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Mensh, Dr. Maurice, Metropolitan Police._____ 476 Menshikov, Michail, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration aE Le Meredith, William P., District Alcoholic Bever-ageControl: Board. tL i osxLT be 472 Meriling, Frank J., Office of the Secretary ofa Sta Merriam, Dr. Charles E., Territorial ney Memorial Commision.SL Re pane ee 241 Affairs i as wat CRE Ty Merriam, Lawrence C., National Park Service. 372 Merrick, y ohn R., District assessor’s office______ 471 Merrill, Charles Ww. Bureau of Mines. _________ 373 Merrill, M. C., Office of {nim 379 Page Merritt, . Arthar B., Beonitiacia Finance Corporation EE a it a Tr sor 414 Merritt, Donald M., Bureau of the Public Debt. 341 Mersch, Victor S., Office of Register of Wills___ 462 Messitte, Jesse B., Solid Fuels Administration vr re EN a TO 376 Meyer, Mrs. Eugene, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board 287 Meyer, Emanuel A.: Office of Marketing Services... _____.__._____ 387 Production and Marketing Administration _ Meyer, Dr. JoaquinE., Cuban Embassy._____. Meyer, Paul T., Division of Communications THES Toe iy lee ja Lateran 336 Michel, Carl: Coast Guard. gos senna Saabs SF bh se Office of the Surgeon General______________.__ Michener, Anna M., Division of Research and Statisties. Scots nm Lr rm ALT 339 Michener, Earl C., Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress St haa hab, 243 Mickelsen, Pauline E., House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. _.____... 278 Middleton,G. H., British Embassy. _._ .________ 487 Middleton, Howard E., Soil Tai Service... usedes to sgi al gr 391 Mijuskovie, Maks, Yugoslavian Embassy______ 494 Mino, Miriam, Senate Committee on Com- ase eo Fe a 268 Milberg, %F S., Official Reporter, House________ 279 Milburn, R., British Embassy. sooues tialind 487 Miles, Col. Francis H. Jr., Army-Navy Explo- sives Safety. Board. o_o Loi ln 408 Miles, Richard, tm Embassy JR ASN Se 487 LEAT I Aen Sash msiee Lape Co ind 351 Milhollen, Hirst D., Reference Department. 286 Mill, Edward w., Division of Philippine Affairs SE A Sos gas Tel ee a Ne Se 331 Miller,A. L., Columbia Hospital for Women ___ 410 Miller, Adolph C., Library of Congress Trust Fund Board i mer ay SEL Inspector Arthur E., Metropolitan Miller, ral Interstate Commerce Commis- SionoaL A Nir h wh is aI se Lis 427 Miller," C."M., Capitol Police. 7 «= 281 Miller, Charles Pq Li pA 5Office.. = 471 Miller, Edward G., SEA TA REEen or TET 329 Miller, Fred E., Capitol Police__________.._____. 282 Miller, Fred R., Senate Committee on Pensions. 269 Miller, Frieda S. Women’s Bureau. __._.______ 399 Miller, Gordon N., Bureau of Accounts 54 Miller, Rear Adm. Ee B., Office of Public Infor- mation eo eb Bi Lo Re 358 Miller, Henry, Federal Trade Commission _____ 423 Miller, Howard S., Patent Office_______________ 395 Miller, Hugh M., National Park Service. _....._ 372 Miller, Brig. Gen. L. rmy Air Forces.____ 345 Miller, Leo L., Federal Security Agency. ______ 418 Miller, Nelson A., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce Sn en diseltainliiibit Sub Cetin 393 Miller, Paul H., secretary to Senator Huffman__ 272 Miller, Paul Y. Clerk, Official Reporters of Debate, House 279 Mun.R. 0) Bureau of the Comptroller of the UIYeNCY: Cn he i a Ri 339 Miller, ot T., 3d, Division of Research and Publication all LL near rae 335 Miller, Robin R., Department of Public Welfare i Miller, Stanley Ww. , secretary to Senator Chavez. 272 Miller, Sills, House Committee on Ways and el Da tn ea 463 Miller, Na H., Bureau of Mines_____...____ 373 Miller, Watson B.: Federal Security AZONCY.... cilesiiiiwerite 418 Howard University. co oil 0 ua os 423 Miller, Walter L., Office of Investigatory Serv-A OE I aaah 389 Miller, Wayne, House post office 217 Miller, W. Moseley, Office of the Sergeant at Arms of House 275 Miller, Wilbur K., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Miller, Willard 8., Senate post office Individual Index 873 Page Milligan, E. J., Public Utilities Commission... 477 Milliken, Capt. Rhoda J., Women’s Bureau, Metropolitan Police: oo. 2 coi las 476 Mu Aniey C., Inland Waterways Corpora-2 EAN AT 2h da SR Lu So RM aR BT eee or SL 92 Mil, Co Adm. Earle W., Bureau of Ships___ 362 Mills, Fred U., Office of the First Assistant Post- master General Car in ERR AD ae ant 351 Mis, Shiney N., Interstate Commerce Com- Angin: cond al Cad on een ant 272 Milne, George H., Reference Department, Librarviof Congress... .. i... i. =r 28 Milne, James N., Office of the Minority Leader... 274 Minchin, Capt. H. Cotton, British Embassy____ 487 Mindello, Maj. Frederico, Brazilian Embassy. 482 Minderman, Earl A., Federal Communications Cotnnission. ons Ne Eautl ro oia ding 412 Minogue, Adelaide E., National Archives._.____ 431 Minor, Harold B.: Division of Middle Eastern Affairs____________ 331 Office of Near Eastern and African Affairs. ____ 331 Minor, James B., Jr., Office of the Legislative Counsel... 0. oo Bre 271 Minor, William A., Office of Secretary of Agri-CHOY sau. fie i. tessa SSB BT B00 377 Mitch, Lucy, Civilian Production Administra-tionliaisonoffices..... . ix ol ol 283 Mitchell, A. K., Western Union Telegraph Co_._ 282 Mitchell, Charles L., Weather Bureau 396 Mitchell, Clarence M., Committee on Fair Em-ployment Practice i oo iN oo Oil 319 Mitchell, Harry B., Civil Service Commission__. 408 Mitchell, Squadron Leader J. L., British Em-4 Mitchell, Landon, Office of the Doorkeeper_____. 275 Mitchell, Laurence M., American Red Cross_.__ 406 Mitchell, Maude W.: Secretary to Senator Wheeler__________________ 273 Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce.__ 269 Mitchell, Reginald P., Office of Secretary of State Mitchell, William F., Jr., National Mediation Board -oC hate Tr Ine 436 Mitchell, William L., Social Security Board. _.__ 419 Mitman, C. W., National Museum... ___..___.. 441 Mitscher, Vice Adm. Marc A..: Aeronautical Board: a 405 Naval Operations or 359 TheJoint Board wo. er ter ow oa 428 National Advisory Committee for Aero- LT RR ira te Sees te OR he i 430 Mode, Douglas D., secretary to Senator Fergu- Moons, Capt. L. A., Aeronautical Board. ______ 405 Moeur, Mary Carter, House Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation. ________________ 278 Moffat, Abbot Low, Division of Southeast Asian Leis ances Selon Be Lr Si 331 Mohler, Dr. John R., District Board of Exam- iners, Veterinary Medicine______________.___ 473 Mohun, Mrs. Barry, Columbia Hospital for WOMEN -; cot oie rain. cima Ea de Sri 410 Mokaish, Muktar, Lebanon Legation___________ 488 Moleno), Edward, United States attorney’s 5 Rraspcren aan Bata bo toneanitd reas 46 Moliakov Nikolai I., Soviet Socialist Republics EmMDASSY sida. rn a Trian po 493 Molina, Juan G. de, Spanish Embassy. ________ 492 Moling, Walter H., secretary, Court of Claims___ 457 Moll, Dr. Aristides A., Pan American Sanitary ULeAll Cli eta Te A 37 Mollison, Irvin C., judge, Customs Court (hlography)s: oa a eis eet) 459 Moltke-Huitfeldt, Count Adam, Danish Le- THT Rebel Cn Uhl Sd RR i be 484 Monaghan, Thomas, House post office. ________ 277 Monahan, John P., Office of Materials and Fa- EA SE SEEA a 388 Moncharsh, George, Office of Price Adminis- i AD BR a Bee Se STL a i a 321 Mondello, Mario, Italian Embassy. _____________ 488 Monroe, Charlie, General Accounting Office... 284 Monroe, Robert A., Tennessee Valley Au- thority: i oh oe ra een a 444 Page Monroney, A. S. Mike, Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress...0 iii Monsma, George N., Division of Economie Security Policy Monson, Col. G.E Monson, Roxie L., Office of Price Administra- tion liaison offices Montagne, Adhemar, Peruvian Embassy_______ 491 Monteros, ’ Antonio Espinosa de los: Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 438 Mexican Ambassador......... 489 Montgomery, E. G., Maritime Commission____ 429 Montgomery, Edward G., Bureau of Foreign mg Domestic on ia La BORE 394 ian Col. vH.-G.,. Jr., foaming Board. oocoicd le oi aa Montgomery, Rev. James Shera, D. D. Fe lam ol House. 2 criesoat Montgomery, Mary Taylor, Children’s Bureau. iy Moon, Lowell B., Bureau of Mines 373 Moon, Mary G., Bureau of Community Fa- cilities. en A a ns ed a Sab 424 Moers Capt. Charles J.: Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. .._._.__. 428 Tholoint: Board... iF fica tins os 428 Moore, C. W.,.Patent Office... oooic.oo 395 Moore, Ernest G., Agricultural Research Ad-ministration]. vib seal lb anaty 380 Moore, J. Francis, Federal Home Loan Bank Administration...soli eaesnbiotdl ni Moore, John, House folding room_____._________ 276 Moore, John R., Soil Conservation Service. .__._ 391 Moore, John T., Bureau of the Census_________ 393 Moore, Lawrence W., Tariff Commission_______ 443 Moore, Lyman S., National Housing Agency... 432 Moore, M. B., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and 0 eT EERORR Ep a 426 Moore, Miss Ray E., House Committee on the Disposition of Executive Papers_____.______ Moore, Ross E., Office of Foreign Avplowtipnsl Relations Reviews ot Lei Ar 336 Moore, Vernon E., Filipino Rehabilitation Com-mission co a ar 3 Moore, William H., Office of Alien Property Custodian. = oo or aa hae 319 Moore, William L., Farm Credit Administration. 384 Mora, Col. Hernando: Colombian Embassy ~~ oc. i saa 483 Inter-American Defense Board... _____._...___ 426 Mora, Marcial: Governing Board, Pan American Union_..___ 438 Chilean Ambassador. eek 483 Morales Lopez, Col. Oscar, Guatemalan Em-DasSY El i tne i a a Te 487 Moran, Yonr Adm. E. J., War Shipping Admin-istration Fp ETE TSA Ea J 0 A MLN ih Re BAC A Li 321 LaborEdward C., Jr., Office of Secretary of DOLL cin ne wi REA Er a tn En ts bassyidoidai is oth saunas lial mesma 493 Morn Yi Adm. Ben: Federt] Fire Counell. ooo iota 425 Matéelel Division. ==. 2. loa ne 357 Moronouss, PGad B., Federal Trade Commis-a A DE 423 Morgan, Albert L., Office of Investigatory Serv-de Morgan, Arja, Interstate Commerce Commis-2 EN hata REN ai SRS EN 28 Moron: George W., Library of Congress_.___.. 285 Morgan, Gerald D., Office of Legislative Coun- sel cHouse. Cano 279 Morgan, Harcourt A., Tennessee Valley Au-ETE Eanes EECa Ah SL Togo 443 Morgan, John H., Division of Northern Eurc-Dean Aflrs raeae 331 Morgan, Nathan V., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance-Corporation. .._ 0...0 00 434 Congressional Directory Page Morgan, Sidney, Tariff Commission______._____ 443 Morgan, Stokeley W., Aviation Division ______ 334 Morgan, Thomas P., Ir. District Boxing Com- mission LL fr i LG a ed a SS 472 Morine, Capt. L. H., Coast Guard ________._____ 366 Morison, Samuel E., trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library -ocupi ior LaisilJaded 432 Morison, Commander S. E., Office of Naval History Moritz, oni A., Bureau of Reclamation. ____ Morrill, Chester, Board of Governors of the Fed- eral Reserve System... suntanHus uns 418 Morris, Edgar, District Public Welfare Board__ 473 Moris, Helen E., Office of the Minority Leader. 274 Morris, James W., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the District -ol Columbia: -ue sea LT Sa said 461 Morris, John P., Civil Aeronautics Adminis-tration Morris, Roland S., Regent, Smithsonian Insti-futio 11 WTA Ce NIU Lak K AREY DC EE RdL 24 Morrison, B. Y., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ________ Morrison, Loyle A., Tariff Commission___.____ Morrison, Maxey xX. Civilian Production Ad- ministration TSR ORE hh TH EAR Ca 319 Morrow, Graham, Canadian Embassy. Morrow, William1L., General Accounting Office. 284 Monthy Eustis E., Government Printing Offi More oh M., Processing Department, Library of Congress aa RE Morse, David A., National Labor Relations x Board: Sissy) cli essianalityBl J oe 36 Morse, Harold S., General Accounting Office... 284 Morse, H. T'., War Shipping Administration__. 321 Morse, Dr. Robert T., Commissioner on Mental Health er aa is Mortimer, Frank H., Director of typography and design, Government Printing Office___ 287 Mosh yoann ‘W., Solid Fuels Administration for Mosby, Leonard W., Solid Fuels Administration for Wa 376 Moseley, roid W., Office of European Affairs. 330 Mosely, Philip E., Office of Secretary of State__ 329 Moseman, Albert BH, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_._______ 383 Moser, Charles K., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mesticCommeree. >. 0 tinaon 4 Moses, Mrs. Radford, District Welfare Board._ 473 Moss, Enrique, Argentine Embassy. _...__.___.. 481 Moss, Marjorie, Division...0... 336 Visa 0... Motinov, Col. Peter S., Soviet Socialist Repub. HS Embassy. «coor ss hii ate snags ae Motley, Emmett J., District corporation RT gelsioffice. ior. rata lsd 474 Mott, Dr. Frederick D., Farm Security Ad-INISEIAbION. vin oi oo ata tae rie se Se 385 Motta, Lt. Col. Lourival Seroa da, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission._.___.___ 328 Moultrie, Minnie, Senate Committee on Irriga- tionand Reclamation... «0.7 269 Mountin, J. W., Bureau of State Services. ___._ 420 Moya, Miguel R. de, Dominican Embassy _..._ 484 Moya, Mario E., de, Dominican Embassy-__.. 484 Moyer, Forrest T., Bureau of Mines. _.._..... 373 Moyer, Lawson A Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 337 Civil Service Commission. ......._._< ______. 409 Mrozowski, Chester, House Committee on In-SG I ee Ran et Lie 278 Muck, Lee: ; Office of Land UtiHzation. cen emnn ns ....ee 369 Office of Secretary of the Interior. ________.___ 369 Mudd, Robert L., Assistant District Auditor.. 471 Muesebeck, C. F. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant. Quarantine. .L_ .. .... Liiuee. 382 Muir, Raymond D., Division of Protocol... Mullaney, Joseph E., Library of Congress Muller, George W., Bureau of Foreign and Do- Page Muller, Joseph L., Bureau of Fordign and Do-mestic Commerce As Shs i nl He EE 93 Mulligan, Henry A.: Federal National Mortgage Association _____. 416 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 413 The RFC Mortgage Company. _.._ co... 415 ‘War Damage Corporation... ..._ ......coeoil 416 Mulligan, Minot C.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 413 War Assets’ Corporation.c.._.._... -...0oloiie 416 Mulliken, Otis E., Division of International Labor, Social, and Health Affairs.._________ 333 Mullikin, Kent R., Federal Housing Adminis-SEBO TL te a SR EE 435 Mulloy, Thomas E., Jr., Capitol Police________ 282 Mulvihill, Bernard M., Bureau of Accounts._._ 341 Mumford, Commander M. O., Bureau of Naval Persommelis ooo lian ah dea aad 361 Munchmeyer, Frederick, Food and Drug Administration. i ciaoSa 422 Mundy, Lucille, Office of the Secretary of War_ 344 Munns, "Edward N., Forest Service 385 Munro, CG. H., Australian Legation Munthe de Morgenstierne, Wilhelm, Norwegian Emibassador ic. ht shai 490 Murdock, J. Edgar, judge, Tax Court of the United oe RR ee are 461 Bureau_ CS EE Se ahd SLE el SS 437 sel, S Murphy, Clement, District Fire Department_. 475 Murphy, Edward J ., Office of Marketing Bervices. cous anda Laue nol sini Sal 388 Murphy, Frank, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography).... 450 Murphy, Frank J., Reconstruction Finance Corporation se oc hv rn To ree Sa tt 414 Murphy, Henry C., Division of Research and Siatistion, Lorin tami la sn i 339 Mwy James L., War Shipping Administra-tio 321 missions 2h a Ch el ee ee 428 Murphy, James R., Office of the Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster ___ ____..__. 353 General... Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Senate... 271 Murphy, John B., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- POFARION Si pion i eins AE A Cem dR 434 Murphy, John W., Joint Committee to Investi-gate the Pear! Harbor Attack... _-____ 244 Murphy, Dr. Joseph A., District Health Depart- IRCH NNra 476 Murphy, Mary C., House folding room ________ 276 Murphy, P. F., Railroad Retirement Board.___ 439 Murphy, Raymond E., Office of European Af- {LLELA CI] DB Se ST nA A eA 330 Murphy, Russell, Territorial Expansion Me-morial Commission _..-.C.. Coo... 241 Murphy, W. Arthur, Reconstruction Finance Corporation. solr fo alin ino 415 Murray, Charles A.: Secretary to Senator Murray... __________ 273 Senate Committee on Education and Labor__ 269 Murray, Charles B., United States BOTY Murray, John F., National Mediation Board._. Murray, J. Richard, Canadian Embassy.___._ 483 Murray, Philip: Office of Stabilization Administrator ____._____ 323 Office of War Mobilization and Reccnversion. 322 Murray, Timothy, Office of Architect of the Caploll. sao sh eh oe wield 281 Murray, William D., secretary to Senator Willis. 273 Murrey, Sarah H., Senate Committee on Inter- DCEANIC ConBIS. seon a rrr seta 269 Murtha, Donald M., Office of Secretary of ar 398 Musgrave, George W., Soil Conservation Serv- ee ae a ga ae Sa 391 Myer, Dien S., War Relocation Authority.... 376 Myer,W. H., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic CoOMTRToD. ons 393 Myers, Maj. F. Weaver, War Contracts Price Adjustment Board 326 Mya George Hewitt, Columbia Hospital for 0 nestle Commerce. oc 2s wooo ail a tana 393 Individual Index : Page Myers, Lawrence, Office of Secretary of Agri-yeh 377 Myos Walter: Federal Fire.Counell. cr of Sanne noacait 425 Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ________ 353 Myron, Paul V., Office of Alien Property Custo-Fy RE SC lS NT Pe We 319 N Nabrit, James M., Jr., Howard University..... 423 Nachtrieb, Robert E., Smaller War Plants Cor-poration ihe Sn ba Hr CRC A Le eee? 325 Nagle, Raymond 189 Commissioner, Court of alNS-s vaste edad stale sa YE Cala Ur a 458 Namias, Jerome, Weather Bureau. ___._._._______ 396 Napoledo, Aluizio, Brazilian Embassy. ....____-482 Naramore, Ellouise, Senate Committee on For- eign Relations oo. i coset claslo al 269 Naron, Wesley, Office of the Doorkeeper-_._____ 275 Nash, William H., District Fire Department__. 475 Nason, Rachel C., ' Women’s Bureau... 400 Nathan, Robert Xr, Office of War Mobliization and Reconversion Ee a er hn Sat 322 Naudé, Dr. W. C., Union of South Africa Dy EI TE 493 Nazary, Fred, House post office... 277 Nazary, Johnnie, House post office. _--._.____-277 Neal, George C., Civil Aeronautics Board....--396 Neal, Harry E., "Secret Service ooo... 340 Neal, Jack D., Division of Foreign Activity Correlations ARE RES SRL CL 4) SR Rk es 337 Neal, Paul A., National Institute of Health. ___ 420 Neal, William J., Rural Electrification Adminis- tration aA LC aE a et 390 Neale, J. Henry, Office of General Counsel..___ 357 Neary, Bernard A., Office of Personnel _________ 379 Nearman, Harold B., American Red Cross... 407 Needham, Capt. H. P., Bureau of Yards nd, Decks he aes TR eS NAT Neff, Blanche, Municipal Court for the Disiict | OE CoIambin: Ait de ea aa Neft, Harold H.: Committee for Reciprocity Information. _.___ 410 Office of the Under Secretary of War_________ 343 Neff, Ruth D., District corporation counsel’s office: owed ro aE Les Ld EE 474 Neihardt, John G., Office of Indian Affairs_____ 370 Neilson George D., judge, Municipal Court for the Distrietof Columbia_ J: i 22. 464 =...2 Nelson, Alf Z., General Land Office____________ 370 Nelson, Elmer M., Food and Drug Adminis- ration. oo sl a en LRT 422 Nelson, F. A., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System rus. oaiioo hm. Jie 418 Nelson, James C., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic COTIOI0. o-oo smo Dn vari 393 Nelson, Leonard L., Office of Indian Affairs____ 370 Nelson, Lloyd A.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _ _..__.. 414 ‘War Assets Corporation. = 2. oi 5% 416 Nelson, Philip E., Smaller War Plants Cor- POAbION. oir GL iihs Jol ee i A Td le dd 325 Nelson, Wesley R., Bureau of Reclamation._.___ 371 Ness, Norman T., Division of Monetary Re- Searels ioc uo lis Conan Sn Le 340 Nosy Flow A., Office of Budget and Fi-SN eth i ah en A A TAA 378 Nettleship, Lt. Comdr. C. F., Jr., Requirements Review DIVISION oor at e adele 359 rnin Nettleton, Leigh L., Immigration and Natural-{zation Service. listolinus anian 349 Neubrech, W. LeRoy, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... iz. =o:3035080 393 Neumann, Alan B., Division of Territories and Island Possessions coi. . o. bho rho 0 374 Neustadt, Richard M., Social Security Board... 419 Nevitt, J. C., General Accounting Office_____._ 284 Newbegin, Robert, Division of Caribbean and Central American Affairs... 332 Newcomer, Brig. Gen. F. K., Panama Canal.___ 437 Newell, R. J., Office of Reclamation ARE pi NR 371 Newell, Stirling R., Office of Marketing Ser- VIOUS. friea 1 Su BRL SR a 388 et Newhall, Beatrice, Pan American Union._._.._. 438 Newland, John R. Apprentice Training Service. 401 Newlin, Gurney E., American Red Cross. __-__ 406 Page Newlin, James E., National Mediation Board... 436 Newman, John W., office of Majority Leader____. 274 Newman, Marian, Civil Aeronautics Board ___ 396 Newman, Rufe B., Jr., Bureau of Community faeflitien ces tat le adn an a i 424 Newman, W. A., Joint War Production Com-Tnittee DERI SE SA A lh Cl DE A fa 326 Newton, Harry P., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. 20. (oo.0 381 Newton, Commander James Q., Office of As-sistant Secretary of Navy for Air___________ 355 Newton, Mary A., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. oC a a 269 Newton, Lt. Col. MilesS., Headquarters Marine 3 Newton, Thomas M., House post office ._______ 277 Ney, Jerome M., Office of Price Administration. 321 Niazi, Anwar, Egyptian Legation. _____________ 485 Niblack, Donald R., Office of the First Assistant 3 Nichols, Cecil M., Civil Service Commission. _ is: Nichols, Clarence W., International Resources Division. ooo etal 332 Sd&EdwmongBaath Nichols, J. C., National Capital Park and Plan-ning Commission 432 Nichols, Louis B., Federal Bureau of Investi- 348 Nichols, Mark L., Soil Conservation Service-__ 391 Nichols, Maude G., Reference I epartment, Library of Congress: 000 (0 finingmig 286 Nichols, S. M., American Red Cross... _________ 407 Nicholson, James T., American Red Cross. ____ 406 Nickell, Wheeler, secretary to Senator Stanfill__ 273 Nickerson, G. W., International Fisheries Com- mission: Sow iI Teti ARRE en TS a 427 Nicol, rs Belle, Court of Customs and Patent aE a SN Se ROM eI Eo 0 456 Nidifter, Frank D., Office of Economic Security Polley. oi. vnii enn D0 ras man Ol 334 Niehoff, Yhado., National Housing Agency. 433 Neilson, Leo.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation... 413 U.S. Commercial’ Company... _.......... 416 Nieto, Capt. Manual R.: Inter-American Defense Board_______________ 426 Peravian Embassy. ct. oi eam ail 491 Nijdam, Lt. A. ,Netherlands Embassy. ___.___. 489 Niles, David Y, Administrative Assistant to the President. ae AE SN Ee a 318 Nimitz, Fleet Adm. Chester W.: Chief of Naval Operations... ...... coal. 359 Combined Chiefs of Staff, United States and Great Britain... o.oo onion s2000 00 326 Joint Chiefs of Staff, United States. _....._____ 428 TheJdJoinb Board... .... ois COE aiaeoaclan 428 Nisley, Brig. Gen. Harold A., Army Ground Porees sco: RR OE Dl suo 345 Nisot, Joseph, Belgium Embassy.______________ 481 Nixon, EEdgar B., Franklin Dy Roosevelt Li- Nixon, big Ethel L., District Public Welfare Boar Asia on rare PRET UG DE El 473 Noble,C. Stott, Farm Security Administration. 384 Noble, John E., District Health Department__. 476 Noce, Maj. Gen. Daniel, Army Service Forces... 346 Nolan, John L., Acquisitions Department, Ii brary of Congress ee eC 285 Nolan, Louis C., Office of Foreign Amtentingl Relations NI TE Te eR ¢ Noland, Thomas B., Geological Survey._...... iL Nolen, John, Jr,: District Zoning Adjustment Board. ____._____ 474 National Capital Housing Authority. _____.___ 432 National Capital Park and Planning Com- FT Dh [1 ee Sneed nL AS EE SRS 432 Noonan, J. Joseph, National Mediation Board. 436 Norberg, Everett &, Office of Plant and Opera-Sr 141771 1 amc aR led Lg SEP lB OS SE TR a FL Noce, Maj. Gen. Daniel, Army Service Forces. 540 Norcross, T. W., Forest Service LEE Sle el Norelli, Vincent 'B. , District Pharmacy Board. Norfleet, VT Federal Communications pat L108 Corot Li 11 ee a SGSE Rs Sa 412 Congressional Directory Page Norgren, William A., Municipal Court for the District of Columbia... 464 Noronha, Lt. J Jee Dente de: Brazilian Embas 4 Yolk Brazil-United States Defense Commis-5 BA d SE AR TER LE Sle SI 28 NOt Vice Adm. Sylvio de: Brazilian Embassy. i; tna lol Slane Inter-American Defense Board. __._______.._._. Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis- BION A Se RS a 328 Norstad, Maj. Gen. Lauris, Army Air Forces... 345 North, Roy M., Office of Third Assistant Post- master Generali. al Jon Couo Lo lial 352 Northrop, Vernon D., Office of the Secretary of theiInterlor. solosio Laie io Northrup, Frederic B., Office of Materials and Facilities. oul dni nu oioialk 388 Norton, Alice B., House Committee on Pen- Songs anc fs Los Llamas ioe San Jaks Norton, Ethan A., Soil Conservation Service. 391 Norton, Garrison, "Office of Transport and Com- munication Polley. oo ti. 5 ia lain 34 Norton, Mary T., Columbia Hospital for iG Norton, Ralph A., assistant secretary to the Board, District ‘government 471 Norwood, John W., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Notter, Harley Aes Office of Special Political Affai 32 Nottingham, C. T., District License Bureau... 472 Notz, Cornelia, Tariff Commission__._._________ 443 Notz, Lt. Col. Jean, Swiss Legation_______.____ 492 Novikov, Nikolai N Soviet Socialist Republics TmBassY io By dt smn Sk a We a Sa a 493 Noyes, Theodore W.: Columbian Institution for the Deaf... 422 District Public Library ‘Washington National Monument Society.-_._ 445 Nuber, Rear Adm. H. D., Bureau of Supplies AOACACCOUTIES. oi viv iim mm mgs im i 362 Nunan, Joseph D., Jr., Bureau of Internal Rev- oh CR SR a a Sie ele ie i ER a LL 341 Nunan, Sean, Irish Legation__._.___._ _....._.. 488 Nutting, Charles B., Office of the Solicitor_._____ 380 Nye, Edna B., Federal Trade Commission. .... 423 Nye, L. Frank, Office of Secretary of War__.___ 344 Nylander, Louise I., Office of Secretary of Agri- culture Bee SE De Le RU LS 377 Nystron, Paul H., Federal Advistory Board for Vocational Education. .....ceememamcmnenan-421 Oo Oaks, Claude 8., Capitol Police... Ober, John, Office of Sergeant at Arms, 2 oO’ Hovid John Lord, SY National Monument Society EE SA i TE Re Sea O’Brien, Dan J., secretary to Senator Hicken-LFOLE] foo he nd Rt Lo Se bn Se SED rs SAY 272 oO’ Bros David H: Surplus Property Administration.__._._-._.___ 323 ‘War Assets Corporation... .cccoeacaaa-416 O’Brien, Joseph, House Post Office.__._._.___.__ 277 O’Brien, Mary C., office of Secretary of War___ 344 O’Brien, Richard 7 ., District Boxing Commis-: i 7 O’Brien, Robert Lincoln, Washington National Monument Seelety tC fro lial 44 O’Brien, Ruth, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Floime Heonomies CFTe NT 382 O’Brien, Thomas J., Solid Fuels Administra-HORA War ooai ea 376 oO’ pam, Capt. T. J., Bureau of Naval Person-oi ray W. C., Commodity Credit Corporation__ 390 0O’Connell, Ambrose, Judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). _..._.____ 4 O’Connell, Anne L., Pan American Union_____ O’Connell, John M., Jr., Office of Price Adminis- tration ligison'ofices. 2x fo. 00 Tho ol 283 O’Connell, Joseph J., Jr., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury EEA etn alls Page -O’Connor, Basil: Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library_._. 432 American Red Cross 406 O’Connor, George H., District Unemployment Compensation Board. eal rr 0’Connor, Helene, Senate Committee on Bank- ing and Currency RT LE SR BORE DLS LL is 0O’Daniel, Eugene P., Bureau of Accounts______ O’Daniel, W. Lee, Board of Visitors to the Coit _ Guard Academy ST AN SR A O’Day, Burnita L., office of Assistant PIE of ear jor Air 343 0O’Day,C A oricy Cp LEAR NT ng aT a O’Dea, J District corporation counsel’s office 474 Ory Ethel J., District Nurses’ Examining Board _. OS, Charles J., Jr., Securities and Ex- change Commission..2.0 lao of Jim vio: 441 Odom, Edward E., Veterans’ Administration___ 445 O’Donnell, Al F., Division of Research and Sta- Hsblen i. so nls udasae AUS E00 BNL Ud 339 O’Donnell, Walter J., Reconstruction Finance COrDOTatION Sivan ierads = Divs a wow iio iia 414 0’Donoghue, Daniel W., associate justice, Dis- triet Court of the United States for the Dis- trict ofkColumbia ct (00 50h 0 ns a 461 Oehmann, John W., District Engineer Depart-p11 LR SE SE SRA ER ae SOF BL EEE Li 475 Oerthy, Charlotte, Senate Committee on Bank-ing and.Cmrrency....... cooiifzwih nd 268 O’Eth, Alfred J., White House News Photog- raphers Association EA RN EY 758 Offutt, CharlesE., Office of Marketing Services. 388 Oftedal, oe Norwegian Embassy. 2Co 2. 490 OgonB RK, Maritime Commission... 429 i ti Ogilvie, Noel J., International Boundary Com-mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 426 0’Grady, Emmett M., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. usosiins,i 269 cL aise O’Hara, Francis, J., Jr., Reconstruction Finance Corporation REPEATER A Rl LAS SNE BL 414 O’Hara, R. E., National Housing Agency. __. 433 O’Kelliher, Sat. Victor J., Selective Service Sys- tem EH Re NE SOREL AIR Ee er SR 324 oO’ ii Col. John Callan, Goethals Memo- rial Commissioni i Coot Ud Go 425 wamnliis Olav, Hans, Norwegian Embassy _ ______.______ 490 Olds, Leland: Federal Power Commission. _______________.__ 417 National Power Policy Committee. .____._____ 375 O’Leary, John, House post office. _____________ 277 O’Leary, John J., United States attorney’s office. 463 Olesen, O. H. L., Danish Legation_____________ 484 Oliphant, Charles, Office of General Counsel for the Treasurys 4 Tie hana ir aoe in mage 339 Oliveira Campos Roberto de, Brazilian Em-bassy 4 Oliver, Covey T., Division of German and Austrian Economic Affairs. ________________ 334 Oliver, Maj. Gen. Lunsford E., Army Ground (1 LE AR LO A IDE BES en SE DL 1 © Oliver, Perry M., Immigration and Naturali-gation Servieed. Lx lA pio Tie ia 349 Oliver, Webster J., presiding judge, Customs Court (biography) 458 Olmsted, Frederick Law, Bureau of Plant In-dustry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. 383 Olmsted, O. R., Federal Public Housing AMbority. ool oo ae a a read 435 Olsen, Capt. Carl B., Coast Guard.__________._ 366 Olsen, Col. Everard F., Army Ground Forces. 345 O’Neal, Edward A.: Office of Stabilization Administrator....__.. 323 Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. 322 0O’Neal, Mrs. Emmet, Congressional Club______ 410 O’Neal, Nelson B., Columbia Hospital for Women... oobi ranks OI TE 409 O’Neil, Doreen, Airlines Ticket Office. ___._____ O’N oil, James Y, Office of Assistant Secretary of Navy for Air ER ne GL UR AR 355 O’Neill, Anna A., Office of legal adviser--._ .__. 330 Onofrio, Thomas, Office of the Doorkeeper_____. 276 Timi Inde Page Page Ooms, Casper W.: National Inventors Councilo_o-cocoioceeo_. 396 Patent: OMen.. oust asi Li Soa Tayi 395 Opie, Redvers, British Embassy... 486 Oppegard, Goodwin 3.» itd Deposit Insur-ance:Corporation 0 iuiolin ns 413 Oppentaied Dr. Ella, District Health Depart- ODEs ae V., judge, Tax Court of the UREA States. al. eae in ina al 461 Oram, Russel M., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tazation. ooo oo ooo nn ue 23 Ordéfiez-Diaz, Dr. Pedro H., Pan American Sanitary Bureau. oo oe Lo oseiuiloon 437 Orekhov, Fedor T., Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy Sel SER LR rn Gr LR 493 Orescan, Corba D., House Committee on Ap- propriations..: iii din Lar nai lols, 277 Orlandi-Contucei, Corrado, Italian Embassy... 488 Orozco, Hugo, Venezuelan Embassy Sli ENE Ca 494 Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appropria-5 tions ie Ba ed RE U0 EET Orr, iy W., Office of General Counsel_.__ 358 Orr, William C., Jr., Farm Security Adminis- tration Sa ER EY BR ARE Ea 4 eRe REA Ca 385 Orsinger, Fred G., Fish and Wildlife Service._ 374 Orttzar, Fernando, Chilean Embassy..._----_-483 Osborn, Maj. Gen. Frederick H., War Depart- ment Special. Staff .co. CooL cia nine 34 O’Shaughnessy, J. K., Rural Electrification Administration Lo C10. 0 0 0a 390 Osmeria, Sergio, President of the Common- wealth of the Philippines. _____.___________ 374 Ossenfort, W. F., office of the Surgeon General. 420 Ostby, Capt. Kristian, Norwegian Embassy... 490 Ostrander Earl D., Bonneville Power Adminis-525 RTE AT RE SE Se PO Rae 0 Or Capt. John E., Jr., Industrial Survey Division eT eR aah ATR Et RG 356 Ostroff, Nathan, office of International Trade Operations eC ad RE ONE 397 Osizow, Jr. A . Harry, District Health Depart 0O’Toole, Donald L.: Joint Committee on the Tibrary. i. 0.000 238 National Archives Council __ _____________.__. 431 National Archives Trust Fund Board. ____.__ 431 Otterman, Harvey B., Telecommunications Division: 2.00 ves TUL o A Sl Otway-Smithers, Lt. P. H. B., British Embassy 487 Oustinov, Alexander T., Soviet Socialist Re- publics Bmbasgy.... co... __. illo. 493 Oven, Frans von, Netherlands Embassy... _.__. 490 Overholser, Dr. "Winfred, Superintendent, St. Rlizabeths Hospital 220. 422 =...Sil. Overley, S. Earle, Bureau of Foreign and Domes-ticiComImereer test ea ena 393 Overton, Ruth: Secretary to Senator Overton__.______________ 273 Senate, Committee on Manufactures. _._._.___ 269 Owen, Claude W., District Boxing Commission. 472 Owen, L. B., Farm Security Administration.___ 385 Owen, L. Bureau of the Public Debt_______ L.W. 341 Owen, Mabel M , Tax Court of the United States stn Cos oon dnt on Rage 461 Owen, Marguerite, Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Owen, Thomas M., Jr., National Archives______ 431 Owings, C.W,, Capital railroad ticket office... 282 P Pachachi, Adnan, Iraq Legation _____._._..__.___ 488 Pacheco, Lt. Col. Alfredo: Bolivion: Embassy on oe io oaaasasiiid 482 Inter-American Defense Board. ._______._____ 425 Packard, C. M., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. t __ 0...i i lol .. 382 Page, Arthur S., Office of Fourth Assistant Post-mastepGeneral cilAE Ei LL E 353 Page, John C., Office of Clerk of House -cau.... 275 Page, Thad: NationalArehivesy oo i isi aiiiaie a 430 National Aree Counell. suis oini, 431 Engineer EAR ART SCT TCS SRS eR LEE So Paine, Helen, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House. i Pair, Hubert B., District corporation ¢ounsel’s office ii Som Jn nian Lo nels 474 Palen, Russell A., Office of Materials and Facilities 38 Palic, Dr. Vladimir, Czechoslovakian Embassy. 484 Palkin, Dr. Joseph R., District Board of Dental Examiners... 0c ol i a 472 Palmer, Archie M.: Division of Foreign Service Planning_________ 335 Division of Foreign Reporting Services. ______ 335 Pansa, Paolo, Italian Embassy... ......ol8 488 Panuch, Anthony J, Office of Yeciotars of State. 329 Paradiso, Louis J., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 394 Pare, Viscount Alain du, Belgian Embassy _____ 481 Pardini, Juan Francisco, Panamanian Embassy. 490 Pareja, Maria Rossa, Ecuadoran Embassy_.___ 485 Pares,; P., British Embassy. lc joo. 486 .-.... Parisius, Herbert W., Office of International Trade Operations. .... .. buns oxco-cs-sesbbe 397 Park, Rear Adm. C. A., Coast Guard__________ 366 Parke, Commander Lee W., Division of Cryp- LOgraDY a SEES 336 Parker, Alice Lee, Reference Department, Li-brary of Congress: £ oiii mein i mina 286 Parker, F. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _______________ 383 Parker, Col. George, Special Staff, War Depart- 117511 ARC SR TRE CR ae SE LCT AV Lag A 344 Parker, G. L., Geological Survey. ..__._._.______. 371 Parker, Raymond T., General Accounting OR ara ee Ree Sl By etd Parker, Sue H., House folding room ____________ 276 Parkhurst, D. on Coast and Geodetic Survey._ 395 Parkinson, Dana, Forest Service... ......_..... 385 Parkmal, C. Bred, Office of Legislative Coun- gel,House. Li. aciniSEO 279 oi aS PT is H., clerk, Official Reporters of Debates, House. Sr Tene dete n 2 Parkin, Harrison, Office of Postmaster Gen-era Parkman, Robert B., secretary to Senator Cordon oe re a See 272 Parks, George A., Capitol Police. _ _....._______ 281 Parks, Thomas ’E Reconstruction Finance Corporation. oo. ae i so Cb dee Se 415 Parran, Dr. Thomas: Federal Board of Hospitalization. ........._.__ 318 Public Health Services ioc. icv. on nonin 419 Parris, Donald S., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic COMINGIE0 5. «esteih ors 393 oe Parry, Carl E., Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve System... =. ions cities 418 Parsons Douglas E., National Bureau of Stand-garde oe i ae a Parsons, Henry S., Reference Department, Con- gressiopal Library 0 286 o-oona Parsons, J. Graham, Division of British Com-monwealth Affairs. er ol i tne 331 Parsons, William W., Office of Secretary of TRrCHASUNY os at tae men oh 338 Partearroyo, H. G. de, International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Meson SEE eS RC TE See 427 IL Leo: Office of Secretary of State i .-ccicmiammcanat 330 Secretary’s Staff Committee. -cmcmmamamaaaa-330 Pate, Maurice, American Red CrossS..cacceee--407 Paterson, George R.: Conadian Embassy. oo. oc tecintansionms 483 Combined Food Board... co ooeeunanas 327 Patraw, P. P., National Park Service.......... 372 Patrick, Capt. H. G., Board on Decorations suds odalgy Tn tr a ae na Patterson, Donald G., Reference ee Library of Congress Ra LUD Sl 286 Patterson, John C., Office of Education________ 421 Patterson, Robert P. (Secretary of War): Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- Slo css la to rene re Re a a Biography-of +l Si: oo a Sine 0 Tsai 343 Foreign-Trade Zones Board _ __________._.___. 325 Joint War Production Committee... .____.___ 326 Member, Smithsonian. 2. od 0-000 0 441 National Archives Council ooooo ovll 431 National Forest Reservation Commission.._. 239 National Munitions Control Board __________ 436 878 Congressional Directory Page Page Patterson, William F., Apprentice Training To [De En SRNR I ay Si Lh 401 Patterson, William J., Interstate Commerce Commissions re isis oo sean, Si i 27 Patton, James G.: Office of Stabilization Administrator. _______ 323 Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion_ 322 Paul, A. Harding, District Public Welfare Boa VE Se IR SR EIS de ¥ SE SEP St 473 Paul, ars Office of International Trade Commission SEE Jag pr ER TR 397 Paul, M. Rea, Smaller War Plants Corporation. 325 Paul, Maj. Gen. W. S., War Department Gen- eral Stal wnt ssa iid. Judo tea el gues 344 Paulger, Leo H., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System___________________._ 418 Paulick, Margaret, Office of Vocational Reha-LOHNER HAT (oh ISM 00000. 0 00% Ben ah 421 Paull, John R.: Maritime Commission. loi ........c..olaiioi 429 War Contracts Price Adjustment Board_.____ 326 Paulsen, C. G., Geological Survey._____.________ 371 Paus, Tharleif, Norwegian Embassy___._________ 490 Pavlov, Leonid Ivanovich, Soviet Socialist Republics Embassy al =o Du 0 500] 493 Payne, Alan W., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board: ooo, Jao, lo. ios 3004 472 Pazos, Dr. Felipe, Cuban Embassy____.________ 484 Peacock, Lt. Comdr. John L., ed of Review, Discharges and Dismissals SATS SEE SR 0 0 356 Pearson, Guy W., District collector of taxes____ 471 Pearson, Lester B., O. B. E., Canadian Ambas- SAAOY. oo A OR 482 Pearson, Col. William F., Special Staff, War DPA conse sh sa ea 344 Pechin, David M., transcriber to House Com-mittees a a CE nh LL 279 Pehle 7 ohn W., Office of Secretary of the Treas-pre TRY 35S Le pl ed eR Pehrson, Elmer W., Bureau of Mines__________ 373 Peirce, Earl S., Forest Service_._______._______. 385 Pelton, Walter E., Office of legal adviser _______ 330 Pembleton, E. S., Anglo-American Caribbean Commission: see iit Tags ol ale Sea 408 Pemberton, Commander F. J. D., Canadian EE a Se Le a Dl Peiialoza, Miguel, Mexican Embassy ._____._...__ 489 Pendleton, T'. P., Geological Survey. _.______.___ 371 Penfield, James K., Office of Far Eastern Affairs. 331 Pega, Alexander D., National Mediation Poi ‘Wang-Yih, Chinese Embassy _______.____. 438 Penman, James OC., Federal Security Agency.__ 418 Penniman, William F., Federal Home Loan. Bapk Administration i oo maar 433 Penney, Dr. A. Owen, District Board of Podia- br aI Ners. a 473 Penteado, Eurico, Brazilian Embassy __________ 482 Penticoft, Merritt C., War Assets Corporation__ 416 Penticoff, M.G., Surplus Property Administra- Peoples, J. W., Geological Survey _____.._.__.___. 371 Pepper, Claude, Joint Committee on the Organi- gation of Congress =o tN Sm 243 Pereira, Alberto Mendez, Panama Embassy ____ 490 Pereira Machado, Commander Jodo, Brazilian BmDassy sade tal nai aliie di i ar 482 Perez-Cismeros, Enrique, Cuban Embassy _.__ 484 Perkins, T. T., Reconstruction Finance Cor-PORE ON tr a a an ENT 414 Perkins, Velma M., Veterans’ Administration liaison offices... .Jcag iio bu, willbe 282 Perkins, Virginia C., Civilian Production Ad-ministration liaison offices._______.__________ 283 Perley, Allan H., Office of Legislative Counsel, HOUSE Er ronan rare set nd sane 279 Perlmeter, Irving, Bureau of Internal Revenue... 342 Perrault, J. E., International Joint Commission. 427 Perrott, George St. J., Office of Surgeon General. 420 Perry, Dorothy M., Office of Secretary of Agri-CRICHre fr Dr bl dn Ea 877 Perry, John R., Office of the Sergeant at Arms Pershing, Gen. John J.: American Battle Monument Commission____ 405 Goethals Memorial Commission 4 Person, Harlow S., Rural Electrification Ad-ministration REE SE vn CR ke RIN Persons, Maj. Gen. Wilton B., Special Staff, War Departmientes. ii i oo Peter, Albert A., General Accounting Sas ie Cal'W., Office of Inter-American Peters, L. A. H., Netherlands Embassy._.______ Petersen, Howard C., Assistant Secretary of War. 343 Poms, Capt. W. F., Bureau of Naval Sidi Pola Col. Arthur S., Joint Brazil-Gaited © States Defense Commission in BR Ls Peterson, C. S., District Fire Department_.____ 475 Peterson, Ivar, National Labor Relations Board. 436 Peterson, J. Hardin, Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy ________________ 2 Petry, Lucile, Office of the Surgeon Gonemiah 420 Pett, H. G., Railroad Retirement Board___.____ 439 Pettersson, "Joel, Swedish Legation_______._____ 92 Petterson, Severt H., Reconstruction Finance Corporations es nl viain te si damnntnld 414 Petty, John A., District Real Estate Commis-C01 ER ARI Uh Nl Cee SM 2 5 SE YE FLA 473 Peurifoys John E.: Office of International Information and Cult-nal ARSIIS 0 a aL 334 Office of Public Affairs... 0. ol eo ho 35 Whi Allen C., Federal Trade Commission___ 423 Phelps, Dudley 'M., Division of Foreign Eco-nomic Development SS TU ER Se 333 Phelps, Vernon L., Division oi Commercial Phillips, David G., House post office. _____ Phillips, Duncan, N ational Gallery of Art Philipson, J. Bion, National Housing Agency _. 433 Pica, Ralph H., Farm Security Administra- tio 385 Pichetto, Stephen S., National Gallery of Art_. 442 Pickering, Marshall W., Minority caucus room. 276 Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth, Women’s Bureau._._. 400 Pike, Albert, Geological Survey i a a ding SA 371 Pike, Sumner T., Securities and Exchange Commissions Loc. ais nd 0s emda 439 Pilcher, Walter H., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector...os tsi. ate ae to 3 3 Pilkerton, Arthur R., District auditor. _________ 471 Pina Chevalier, Plinio B., Dominican Embassy. 485 Pine, David A., associate justice, District Court of ins United States for the District of Co- Soneraalee 2 Platt, in S., Reference Department Plaza, Galo: Ecuadoran Ambassador... ____________.. 485 Governing Board, Pan American Union______ 438 Plotkin, Harry M., Federal Communications Commission...Soles otener 412 ino i Lind Plumb, Milton M., Jr., Library of Congress_____ 285 Plumley, Charles A., Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress. _ .____ coo... 243 Plunkett, Margaret L., Women’s Bureau...... 400 Podell, David L., Smaller War Plants Corpora-5 BOY a a sm tre mR we 32 Poe, Ty Federal Advisory Board for Voca- HONAl BAUGHHION. . ivein soot dati oss iutns 421 Pogge, Oscar C., Social Security Board __........ 419 Pogue, L. Welch, Civil Aeronautics Board..__.. 396 Pois, Capt. J oseph, Coast:Guard 2 ut 2 Ld. 365 Polak, J. J., United Nations Relief and Rehabili- of Senate. tain a desta niialpn ti Sanu tation ‘Administration ha SR 328 I ndiwidual Index Page Poleman, Horace I., Reference Department, Library ofCongress. i. Desoiicennile. ein 286 Pollard, William B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. _..._..ooocaccenin-418 Pollio, Capt. F. E., Coast: Guard. ......._...... 367 Ponce, Capt. Alfredo, Ecuadoran Embassy.__.. 485 Ponce, Dr. L. Neftali, Ecuadoran Embassy.... 485 Poniatowski, George, House post office. ._______ 276 Pool, John C., Division of British Common- wealth Affaire. 0» oa chmiihg 331 Pool, M. E.: Secretary to Senator Thomas of Oklahoma___ 273 Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. 268 Poole, Jean H., Airlines Ticket Office. ________ 282 Poole, Lt. Comdr. Nathan, Columbia Institu- tion fortheDeafy. ns. oie i. coi nuuial 422 Pope, Gustavus D., American Red Cross_.__.__ 406 Pope, James P., Tennessee Valley Authority... 443 Pope, Capt. Loverne A., Bureau of Aeronautics. 360 Popham, Valerie, Office of the Sergeant at Arms_ 275 Popham, W Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Chae el aa AEN SE, 382 Porch, Jesse P., District Health Department___ 476 Porter, B.-A, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine 2-0 oa oar le hem 382 Porter, Claude R., Interstate Commerce Com- mission. ooo: Sena SEL Subd reat hen 427 Porter, Eloise, Senate Committee on Commerce. 268 Porter, Floyd J., Patent Office... o.oo... 395 Porter, Henry G., Civil Service Commission... 409 Porter, Irwin S.: Columbia Hospital for Women. ___._...__..._. 410 Examiners and registrars of architects. —...... 472 Porter, Paul A.: Board of War Communications... ._ooooaeo__ 321 Federal Communications Commission. __.____ 412 Porter, Maj. Gen. Ray E., Special Staff, War Department. coin. uh. ein aaa ad 344 Porter, Stephen T., Chief, District Fire De- partment... oa i caad tr re Ii 475 Portner, Stuart, National Archives_._.__________ 430 Posada, Francisco Carlos de, Argentine Em- Ed FT EV Rr SL LR RR 481 Poss, Lurlene, Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation... ooo... Coons 269 Post, Langdon W., Federal Public Honma Authority RE op eS ACA RL Re Poteat, Douglass, American Red Cross. ........ pr Potter, Charles J.: Office of Secretary of the Interior... .c.ooo._. 369 Solid Fuels Administration for War_.._______ 375 Potter, D. Roland, secretary to Senator A RIT ER a eS 273 Potter, Elwin A., Public Utilities Commission. 477 Potter, Paul, National War Labor Board__._____ 401 Potter, Zenas L, Office of Price Administration. 322 Pow. Clyde L., Federal Housing Administra- Pony Oscar M., Social Security Board._______ 419 Powell, Wesley, secretary to Senator Bridges... 272 Powers, Maj. Gen. E. M.: Acronautical Board... 2... i aio 0 lll 405 National Advisory Committee for Aero- nautien ol Cade ans 430 Army Adr Torees. =. 5.2 J giin vo 345 igemuiaaia Poynton, A. E., Office of Indian Affairs. _______ 370 Pratt, Mrs. Harold I., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering________ 383 Preacher, G. Lloyd, Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration. snail dre bela aa Predmore, Merrill L., War Finance Division. __ 342 Preece, Dr. Alec x, Columbia Hospital for WOMEN. ans os iit Re i a 410 Preinkert, Clara E., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry races SAR Reaitar J 381 Prescott, Josephine ay District Health Department 476 Press, Emil A., District Engineer Department__ 475 Preston, Howard A., Office of Labor___________ 389 Preston, James D., Office of Secretary of Senate. 268 Preston, John F., Soil Conservation Service. 391 Preston, Paul R., Agricultural Adjustment AZENCY. ins eR A Ta Prettyman, Elijah Barrett, associate justice, Court of Claims for the District of Columbia. 454 Page Prevost, Commander G. M., Army and Nave ~ Munitions Board... iti bl auld ied AcgQemY. Gil r ioedead sesli Sra 241 Price, Jackson E., National Park Service. ______ 372 Price, Marcus W., National Archives___________ 430 Price, Myrtle, District Cosmetology Board ____ 472 Price, Walter L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue CU as ete iE Say rigi, Dr Ramoén, Pan American Sanitary He Dr. FRITS Lah San Ses Cd Sl Se Sy REO SL IAI 3 Pritchett. Got. Clifton A., Headquarters Mili-tary District of Washington.o 6 oa 346 Proctor, James M., associate justice, District Court of the United States for the Distriet - of: Columbia... it. neal aroareraiired 461 Profe, Paul, Office of Fourth Assistant Post- master General PIR VARIA [21 be ed TB 353 Propst, Herbert L., Federal Trade Commission. 424 Prosser, Lillian, Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments. _ 269 Provinse, John H., War Relocation Authority__ 376 Pryor, Cabell N., Court of Customs and Patent Peale ilu situs ined lab natenie oy 56 Pryor, Earl, Office of Legislative Counsel, enale suelo an lasniie Tob dese din 0 oa 271 Puckle, Frederick Hale, British Embassy.___.__ 486 Pudifin, Dayvetta M., Senate Committee on Manufactures... o.oo iio ih dd0i a 269 Pugh, Caro M., Senate Committee on Com- 2 Pugh, Capt. HerbertL., Naval Medical School. 364 Pugh, John C., House Committee on Appro-; priations AE REN Cr Ra Td a 77 Purcell, Ganson: National Power Policy Commission. .oeeeae.. 375 Office of Stabilization Administrator.......-_. 323 Securities and Exchange Commission __._____ 439 Purdy, Bettie F., United States Attorney’s 5 office RE a AU EL RE Te 3 Pusack, ns F., Railroad Retirement Board. 439 Putnam, Herbert, "Librarian of Congress emer- HARES ER I a ear Ea 322 Pyle ere. Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... _..__ 383 Q Queen, William A., Food and Drug Adminis- AON oe i tree a SESE 422 Quesada, Maj. Gen. E. R., Army Air Forces... 345 Quella, Vittorio, Italian Embassy he Ei 488 Quigley, E. T., Office of Secretary of Commerce. 392 Quigley, William R., Office of Budget and Fi- Quinn, J. M.., War Shipping Administration____ 321 Quinn, Samuel G., Office of Plant and Opera-Hons oo i i Reb rl 380 Quinn, Thomas D., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia op sui 464 Quirk, Timothy J., Bureau of the Mint____.____ 340 R Rackstraw, Elsie, Reference Department... 286 Radcliffe, Senator George L.: Bon of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acade- Ba RE Re aS TRE EY 241 Cant Hospital for Women._..__.__._.___. 410 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission___ 239 Radius, Walter A., Office of Transport and CommunieationsiPoliey--~.o.._ ..c._.._ 334 Raedy, Ellen K., judge, Municipal Court of the Districtof-Columbia... L.Cio 00 Clio. 4 Ragan, Claude E., House Committee on Public “Lands Phin meni sae La I SS Oe Raines, Sara Jean, United States attorney’s Rainwater, R. C., Federal Power Commission. -417 Rait, Donald M., Reconstruction Finance Corporation RE AE aS So ee Wea -414 Ramey, Elizabeth, Secretary to District Com-issioner-2 aio ata) Tin HCI sl 471 Bamjrep Ds, Anita, Panamanian Em-os dT Ee RC Ne lf WE Sa TR 49 Rotel, Helen C., secretary to Senator Tobey. 273 880 Congressional Directory Page Page Ramser, Charles E., Soil Conservation Service.. 391 Ramspeck, Ernest W., Securities and Exchange Commission Jase ol] a oui om gions 439 Rampspeck, Robert, Majority whip, House.... 274 Randers-Pehrson, Nils H., Reference Depart- ment, Library of Congress Sebi En 286 Randic, Ivan, Yugoslavian Embassy... __.___..__ 494 Randolph, F. P., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce... ______.___.__. 2 Randolph, Jennings: National Capital Park and Planning Com-missiontieisdtubaiiihome Taha Ll a 432 National Memorial Stadium Commission____ 243 Ranken, G. R., British Embassy... ___._._._.._._ 487 Ranneft, Rear Adm. J. E. Meijer, Netherlands Bmbassyu ass sl od C0 Lo, ne RI OE 489 Rangdell, Commander R. C., Bureau of Med-icine and Surgerys. . .......o satin pa 360 Ranson, Ronald, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systemmicae, Ciilial oi 417 Rao, Paul P., Assistant Attorney General _____ 348 Rasmussen, Rulon E., Senate Committee on Military Affairs nisi Bn J is BERT 269 Rathell, Geron E. , Commodity Credit Corpora-tion apr GR Ei OR Ce SHEAR engl ST Pe 389 Rauber, Margaret E., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ________________.____ 418 Rault, Capt. Clemens V., Naval Dental School. 363 Raver, Paul J.: Bonneville Power Administration. __________ 375 National Power Policy Committee. _____.____ 375 Baws Rear Adm. Norborne L., Bureau of sd Ray, tf Eldon, Library of Congress____________ Ray, J. Franklin, Jr., United Nations Relief ri Rehabilitation Administration _ cid ihn witht 328 Ray, Jeter S., Office of Secretary of Labor______ 398 Rayburn, Sam: Commission in Control of the House Office Building oo 0 So I ai 237 Commission on Englarging the Capitol Grounds sr a 237 bo.cnrCT Speakerof the. House... clo a cov nid) 274 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard-Commission:._.....___.._ _..__. 240 Rayner, CharlesB., Office of Secretary of State_. 330 Raynor, G. Hayden, Office of European Affairs. 330 Rea, Mrs. Henry R., American Red Cross_____ 406 Rea, Maj. Gen. Leonard E., Quartermaster De- Datel. aeee re SA 365 Reagh, Russell R., Division of Research and Statistics. a.auioiisnigsdlsd. onal 339 Reagle, Hilda R., District juvenile court_______ 464 Real, Fritz, Swiss Fegation o_o...iu. 492 Reams, R. ‘Borden, Office of Secretary of State__ 330 Reaves, Morris H., Superintendent of printing, Government Printing Office... nal 287 Bop Commander DE oa E., British Em- Atta: Roddie 5 ohn M., Surplus Property Adminis-nA ee ST SR CE SR 323 Reddington, Delia, Senate Committee on Manu-faehOreS ie bab oe ae Le Redman, Rear Adm. Joseph R., Board of War Communications. ir. al ionsil oso bag Redrow, Walter L., Patent Office Reeds 2 Carroll, Regent, Smithsonian Institu- Tord, OS W., office of District department of vehicles BRA IOTIC ei as 475 Reed, Daniel A., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue PARBLION, tobe ot oenoe ae amen 238 Reed, Mrs. Daniel A., Congressional Club_____ 411 Reed, David A., American Battle Monuments Commission HE RR WLM RT RR 405 Reed, Helena D., United States attorney’s office. 463 Reed, Harry E.: Office of Marketing BOERS beter va 387 Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Reed, Dr. J. A., Metropolitan Police___.__..... 476 Reed, John B., District health department ______ 476 Reed, Louis, secretary to Senator Revercomb.__ 273 Reed, O. E., Chief, Bureau of Dairy Industry._. 381 Reed, Otie M., Commodity Credit Corporation. 389 Reed, Stanley F., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography). __________ 449 Reed, William B., Bureau of Mines___________. 73 Reed-Hill, Commodore Ellis, Coast Guard.____ 36 Rees, Lt. Comdr. P. T., Bureau of Medicine and. Surgery. lors Deis nRLIED asi 360 Reese, Elmer A., Office of Foreign Agricultural Belablons. och immo sie Si rg 379 Reese, Lemuel V., Reconstruction Finance Cor-pozationiai slo nn PRN 414 Reeves, Admiral J. M.: Lend-Lease Liaison (1 SARA Ae EA EER ER DS CC Ba Reeves, Joseph Y., District Court of the pa States for the District of Columbia. _..._.... Regis Bittencourt, Aluysio Guedes, Haren Bmbassy. 0. L300 Jaea Rehm, Col. William F., Headquarters Military District of Washington 346 Reichard, Louis E., transcriber to House Com-2 Reichelderfer, Francis W.: National Advisory Committee for Aeronau-lee Lo a hr a Weather Bares...» oo 0 ini pili o 2 395 Reichmuth, Rear Adm. F. L.: Commandant of Navy Yard. ..________._.____ 364 Potomac River Naval Command____.__.___.____ 364 Reid, Edwy B., Farm Credit Administration. 384 Reid, Escott, Canadian Embassy 482 Reid, Harvey T., Court of peat for the Dis- trict of Columbia 455 Reid, J. S., New Zealand Legation. _____________ 490 Reid, Laura S., secretary to Senator Shipstead.. 273 Reid, Mar; garet G., Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics MEET NSRo Ne aR a SS Reid, Thelma, Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds Reid, T. Roy, Office of Personnel. ..___._..____._ 379 Reid, Tom, International Pacific Salmon Fish- eries Commission... 2. ii ne oo 427 Lloesiviri Reidy, Edward P., Board of Parole.._....___.__ Reilly, orang v, National Labor Relations Boa 4 Reilly, eT A., National Memorial Stadium COMMISION. i Es 243 Reilly, Lt. Comdr. W. V.: Requirements Review Committee Requirements Review Division______________ 359 Reinhard, L.. Andrew, Commission of Fine Arts. 410 Reinstein, Jacques J., Division of Financial 7.9300Fy; VEN lea Ne SE SN OY TE 333 Rempe, Henry W., Civil Service Commission__ 409 Renfrow, Col. Louis H., Selective Service Sys- tem Renner, Frederick G., Soil Conservation Serv- JOO LL it dete Res i ee SRT 391 Renner, William D., Office of the Doorkeeper.._ 276 Rennie, Robert R., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration cl nl Sion co Un TH THREE 434 Reno, Royice, Office of the Legislative Counsel, QUIS: oo toh Sy TL El oh nie DE fe 79 Reuchlin, Jonkheer O., Netherlands Embassy... 489 Revoredo, Gen. Armando: Inter-American Defense Board... ____ 426 Peruvian Embassy... i i oi xiiia tio 491 Reyer, Hugo, Federal Communications Com-wrisslon ot ssl Mendig inc iain ad ihe 412 Reyes, Brig. Aristobulo F., Inter-American De- tense Board. co sl La Ua 0 0 a asl 425 Reyes, Jorge, Ecuadoran Embassy. ......_____ 485 Reynolds, EK. L,, Patent:iOffiee.. ii rl oy 395 Reynolds, James R., secretary to Senator Salton- sta Reynolds, John J., District Printing and Publi-cations Division fea | ATR LL 472 Reynolds, George M., Office of Secretary of COMIMEree: . .-huidie ti ne fn ha BESS 392 Reynolds, W. E.: ’ Federal Pire Counelli oii oiuiasiion 425 Public Buildings Administration........._-424 Rhea, W. E.: Farm Credit ‘Administration... __-~. _.._. 384 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation.____._.__. 384 Rhine, James L., Capitol Telephone Exchange. 282 Rhodes, John Dn Official Reporter, Senate... 271 Individual Index Page Page Rhodes, James R., House Committee on World War Veterans’ Legislation... ______________ 278 Ribenack, W. C., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration: ass ai boar Se Sus ag Ste 414 Rice, Alfred M., Office of the Doorkeeper_..___ 276 Rice, me, Office of the Under Secretary o Senate cnn DEEL 971 Rice, Stuart A., Bureau of the Budget. ...._.__-318 Rice, William n Bureau'of Mines... .__:_-:. 373 Rich, Robert F., "Joint Committee on Printing. 238 Richard, A:T. secretary to Senator Robertson__ 273 Richard, Vernon T,, Patent Office: toe ooo. 395 Richards, Dr. A. N., Office of Scientific Research and Development CARS La A SA 320 Richards, Edward A.,pone pestoffice. .._..._ 277 Richards, FranklinD., Federal Housing Ad- TRIISEIREINTY. ooo oes ange ons Spe 435 Richards, Maj. Gen. George J., Special Staff, War Department coo i. eam 344 Richards, John S., Foreign Funds Control_..___ 340 Richardson, Guy A., Office of Defense Trans- portation Ah I RC RS Sa 320 Richardson, Harold E., Office of Fourth Assist-ant Postmaster ener i ar a 353 Richardson, Rear Adm. L. B.: “Aeronautical Board.na 405 *Bureauof Aeronautics... ooo. 359 National Advisory Committee for Aero- TEI(oR a Rs a OL 430 Richardson, L. S., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 381 Richardson, W. W., General Accounting Office. 284 Richardy, Agnes M., Veterans’ Administration liaison offices ai at a ri SR WE Es 282 Richmond, Capt. A. C., Coast Guard-__..___.___ 365 Riddle, Ellen, Joint Committee on Asien Revenue Taxation oe Riddle, Mae M., Tariff Commission_..________ 23 Riddleberger, James W., Division of Central Funopean Affaire. = of a ee 331 Ridgely, Paul, House Radio Gallery__.___. Ridgway, Ruth M., Tariff Commission Riegel, 0. W., Office of War Information... 325 Rieger, Edith J., District Minimum Wage al Industrial Safety Board. ey Soo oles Riemens, Dr. H., Netherlands Embassy_._._____ = Rieve, Emil, National War Labor Board__.... 400 Riggleman, J ohn R., General Land Office._____ 369 Right, Denzil A., Office of the Secretary of the I Se Sa BeSR eB 338 Riley, Henry W.: Export-Import ‘Bank of Washington... _..:-. 411 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation_______ 413 Riley, Herbert E., Washington city post office. 4 Riley, H. F., Procurement Division... 342 Ring, J ames, National Capital Housing Au- Phorlty lsc a ied nh neal 432 Rip Wiliam R., National Labor aT Rint ArthurC., War Relief Control Board._ 239 Riordan, James J., Securities and Exchange Commission Sh nt SS ne ARE 440 Rioseco, Victor, Chilean Embassy. ..__._______ 483 Ritchie, A. E., Canadian Embassy______.._______ 483 Rittase, Roger M., National Park Service. _._____ 372 Ritzka, Mary, Senate Committee on Banking andiCUITeNeY sol Leasans 268 Riva, Dr. Valentin, Cuban Embassy ____..__.___ 484 Rivas-Mena, Col. Arturo: El Salvadoran Cc. Lia... 000 Embassy... 485 Inter-American Defense Board _____________.__ 426 Rivas S., Fernando, International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and DOXIO0 di dais ras sma ii a ES 427 Rivero, Dr. Nicholas, Cuban Embassy____.______ 484 Rivers, Hugh F., District Parole Board. ________ 473 Roamer, Col. J. M., Army Service Forces. ______ 346 Roark, R. C., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quavantine. Soobiol Lr i GE Sel] 382 Roberson, Bawa F., Office of the Third ih poration A EE DI nl a a 413 Boa Bonnie, House Committee on Judi- Roberts, Christopher, Bureau of Foreign and DomesticCommeree. «...-.t.on.. Le. Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr., Bureau of American Bthaolegy oo. 0X os aed 442 Roberts, Owen J.: American Commission for Protection of His-toric Monuments... oo. beeen an 405 Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Courtifretived)s io ood me lis Pits 451 Roberts, Ralph R., Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives pre Re Oy Eel Roberts, Ralph S., Office of Budget and Fi-|. 17% fu SEE GG SS PLL EE SL OW 78 Roberts, Raymond C., District Fire Depart- ment ioe J BEER de 47! Roberts, Capt. R. H., Office of Ordnance_.______ 362 Robertson, Capt. A. J., Bureau of Naval Per- gonmel Lago ol Sout Sates wit asd i 36 Robertson, David A., Petroleum Division _______ 333 Robertson, Edward V.: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-OMAN is sh aN ah de Sh Ea AAR 241 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy ___.___ 241 Robertson, J. L., Bureau of the Conptroller of the Currency. SE eR ere Ey 339 Bobhertym, J. N., District Engineer Depart-SH ny Thomas J., Rural Electrification Admintettion o.oo u ioe ten 390 Robertson, Turner N., librarian of House_.__.___ 275 Robertson, William B., Federal Communica- tions’Commission "= sna 412 Robinson, Capt. C.R.,navy yard. .... ol. ....i 364 Robinson, Carl H., Office of Marketing Services. 387 Robinson, Maj. Gen. C. F., Army Service Robinson, H.K., Tennessee Valley Authority..._ 444 Robinson, Jean, transcriber to House Commit- 3808s ii ill ese cl LN 279 Robinson, Mary V., Women’s Bureau______.___ 400 Robinson, Commander R. V., Bureau of Naval Personnel EAR I CRN Be TRE ld 361 Robison, George H., United States attorney’s OIA0R: in ii ai va Senne ania Ae De 53 Robin Jesse, Smaller War Plants Corpora-ION cde Bo ini Stl Ba BR Pi ri) Shi Rocha, Antonio, Governing Board, Pan Ameri-rial BEET ER EE PT 438 Roddewig, Clair M., Office of Defense Trans-0YA TT PO SY I hh ea ER 320 Rodgers, Edward O., Joint Committee on Printing. vou. ioe une dibaannlo 238 Rodriguez, Dr. J. R., Dominican Embassy_.___ 484 Rodriguez-Rivera, Ramon, Chilean Embassy... 483 Rodriguez de San Miguel, Manuel, Mexican Embassy... cisuisanssinlatds ede seit 489 Rogers, Edgar F., Library of Congress_..__..__. 285 Rogen James G., Jr., Office of Price Administra- OI eRe er ALS Sr a de 321 Rogers, John L., Interstate Commerce Com-IMSSION. atune 27 Rogers, Ralph H., Bureau of Agricultural Hoonomies:; [ataates 0 ana Sean 377 Rogers, Robert W., Soil Conservation Service_. 391 Rogers, William J., United States Employment Service 2 oo nina ne ae teh 401 Rohwer, S. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. Zion Cr 382 Rojas, Lt. Comdr. Aristides: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 426 Venczuelan-Embassy. oi Co.... .. 494 Roll, Eric, Combined Food Board ____________.__ 327 Rollins, Paul, United States attorney’s office... 463 Rollins, Robert H., House post office_._________ 277 Romney, Kenneth, Sergeant at Arms of House DlograpRY) Sor sre oi ai a at 275 Romulo, Brig. Gen. Carlos P., Filipino Re-habilitation Commission... --.. i. 243 Ronan, Frank T., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... i 0 ooo iB sn i 414 Rooks, Maj. Gen. L. W., United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. _______ 328 Boopshers, William A., Railroad Retirement pon Roos, Col. R., Netherlands Embassy AS ES 489 Root, Irving eH National Park Service__.______ 372 Ropes, Ernest 1] Bureau of Foreign and Do- Robo Charles, N ational War Labor Board...4 mestie:Commeres.. oi. oo de ona 394 78349°—T79-2—1st ed. 58 882 Congressional Directory Page Page Rose, Eh Col. H. C., Office of Contract Settle- ri 1) 1] Re A a RE PR IR ie 322 Rosen, Sag Federal Bureau of Investigation__._ 348 Rosenberg, Anna M. , Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion A A EE rp od et Fon 322 Rosenfield, Harry N., Federal Security Agency. 418 Rosenman, Samuel I.: Special counsel to the President. ____________ 31 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library_.__. 432 Rosenson, Alexander M., Division of Financial Ross, Andrew N., Federal Trade Commission__ 423 Ross, Charles G., secretary to President Truman (hIoZraphy i. Shy Soalion rir 317 .oumasiai:re Ross, James A., Jr., Division of Commercial ACB le i LT 333 Ross, John, National War Labor Board________ 401 Ross, John C., Office of Special Political Affairs. 332 Ross, Malcolm, Committee on Fair Employ- ment Practiee.. co loer colarns Dol 319 Mint Ross, Robert M., Soil Conservation Service..__ 391 Roth, Capt. E. E., Bureau of Ships_______...._ 362 Rothwell, C. Easton, Central Secretariat ___.__ 330 Rouchdy, Hussein, Egyptian Legation. ________ 485 Rouse, John G., Federal Housing Administra-2 tions iS a nhs a damn a dio seae dis api oles. cot Le TRG 281 Rovira, German, Bolivian Embassy .._.________ 482 Rowan, Ida, House Committee on World War id Legislation. oc 0b ina a uss 278 Rowe, C. Edward, Smaller War Plants Corpora-aod BOM JLT a LSI De EI Ll SLT Rowe, pn F., Office of Information.___.____ 379 Rowe, Le S., Director General, Pan American 7 LE rr ANE NS BT nel TE Sy Cl SA Bowen, ard A., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General ________________._______ 352 Rowell, Elwyn J., Office of Marketing Services.. 388 Rowen, Paul R., Securities and Exchange Com-mfsglon. LoS or Ane STs ne 441 Rowland, Donald W., Office of Inter-American A oe I A ES a a id 320 Cro Roy, Wiliam T., Assistant Parliamentarian of ther oneal do a A ama 274 Royall, Kenneth C.: Army and Navy Munitions Board. ....c.c... 408 National Power Policy Committee. ___._..___ 375 Under Secretary of War________ pep rh 343 Royall, Nathaniel, Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration. Soros ota As le Cs ee 414 Royce, H. G., Western Union, House Office ELLEE i OSTA Sat ee oh A Xe be lh Sd 282 Rubin, Robert S., Securities and Exchange CO OIINISEIOMN iae rr 440 Rubin, Seymour J.: Coordinating Commitee...eeemnmeran= nn 330 Office of Economic Security Policy... 334 Rubio-Melhado, Capt. Adolfo, El Salvadoran ETE AE TRA SeeI ee 485 Rue, ns de la, Anglo-American Caribbean CMAN. eg 4 Ruhland, Dr. George C., District Health De- partment Re as A RL a Sh 475 Ruiz Rada, Juan J., Bolivian Embassy. ______.. 482 Rule, Glenn K., Soil Conservation Service--..-390 Rupert, Allison, Committee on Practice _.____. 342 Rupp, Wallace a ., National Mediation Board.. 436 Ruppert, Minna L.: Secretary to Senator WALHET os oo visidiimsto 273 Senate Committee on Banking and Currency. 268 Russell, C. P., National Park Service... ._...... 372 Russell, Donald Si Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 337 Board of Foreign Service Personnel ._________ 337 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School OECR Ro EL 337 Office of Secretary Of State. aioli. iodine. 329 Secretary’s Staff Committee... ......:... 330 Russell, Rear Adm. George L., Office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy a Prantl 358 Russell, Francis H.: Coordinating Committee... o_o.... 2. 330 Division of Liaison...c-oo. 335 Public ox Office of Pol Aftojes LE Bae 35 tio 35 Russell, Richard B., Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress 243 Russell, William F., minority clerk...______.___ 276 Russo, Michael J., Customs Coury. “Toaho 459 Ruth, "Thomas DeC., American Red Cross____. 406 Rutherford, R.M., Fish and Wildlife Service... 374 Rutland, Herbert Jia Reconstruction Finance Corporation Eee AE il res SRE 414 Rutledge, Wiley, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography) .____ 450 Rutter, Capt. J. B., of Personnel. 361 BureauNaval Ryan, Archie D., Grazing Service 373 Ryan, Dr. George J., Thomas Jefferson Me- Torin] COTMBEON. sroe 240 Ryan, Gerald, Office of Secretary of Commerce. re Ryan, Kenneth N., Library of Congress_.__.._. 285 Ryan, Oswald, Civil Aeronautics Board.________ 396 Ryan, Philip EB. American Red Cross_.____..__. 407 om John x, Office of Secretary of the In- BEIOL 2 on ime tn RATS et ee ea 3 mmm ————— S Saavedra, Dr. Pedro, Cuban Embassy... ...... 84 Sabath, Adolph J., Commission in LAE of the House Office Bullding. cit Coal ou Sabins, Charles M., Office of aor of Taxes. 471 Saboia’ de Mederios, Fernando, Brazilian Em- A RRPe ASR SE 482 Sabuncu, Talha, Turkish Embassy...__._______ 493 Sacasa, Alfredo J., Nicaraguan Embassy... ___ Sachs, PaulJ., American Commission for Protec- tion of Historieio Monnments Sachse, Richard. Federal Power Commission... 417 Sachse, Victor a Surplus Property Adminis- Ae ee SE la 1 323 Sadler, C. L., Geological Survey... _______..___ 371 Sadler, Clarence T., Federal Trade Commission. 423 Sager, Fred A., Public Utilities Commission____ 477 Sahlou, Petros, Ethiopian Legation .___________ 485 Sailor, Vance, L., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. psi brs idoSon ean toast 0 413 Salant, Walter S., Office of Stabilization Admin-istration eis edd J Fad seed Pa Ae) pr ad in Salb, Francis J., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General... iui iE utioiiedlSas Salisbury, Morse, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration__.__.________ 328 Sallada, Rear Adm. Harold B., Bureau of Aero- rs SRRCI ST 359 Salmon, David A., Division of Cryptography. ged Saimond, Gordon Besifiones; Service 1 ati R. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering... ... oooae 383 Saltonstall, Leverett: Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy._.___ 241 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee__ 242 Salyer, J. Clark, 2d, Fish and Wildlife Service.. 374 Sample, Paul, Senate Committee on Education aA LADO 5 iho dunia dames SS 269 Sampson, LaVantia M., Office of the Solicitor_. 380 Samuels, Maurice M., Rural Electrification Administration... co egos. Optrav5 390 Sanasen, Mani, Siam Legation____.__.______._._ 491 Sanchez Gavito, Vicente, Mexican Embassy... 489 Sande, Olin R., Office of Indian Affairs_.__._.__. 370 Sanders, Lottie N., National Archives.__._.____ 431 Sanders, Lt. Otha R., Metropolitan Police... 476 Sanders, Samuel D., ‘Farm Credit Administra-Ya BIOL 0 da SAS sag i Lea Snail Sanders, William, Division of International Organization ATAIPY, bass oe, od 332 Individual Index Page Sanderson, Lt. R. M., Bureau of Naval Per-sonnel nas LoL Drab atdi oA UE Ti 361 Sandifer, DurwardV., Division of International Or ganization Affairs MESO TE eb LL 332 a M. M., Commodity "Credit Corpo-o 9 Ine dr a EE Sansom, George, Dm Embassy. tio oli ik Santiviago, Col. Luis: Paraguayan Bmbassy. oot.ial i fai 491 Inter-American Defense Board. _ _____________ 426 Sanz, Dr. J. M., Dominican Embassy _______.__ 485 Sanz de Santamaria Carlos, Colombian Ambas-SRO nL ah A BAR av mh er Bs LIN Eos Bah hs 483 Saraev, Maj. Gen. Ilia M., Soviet Socialist Re-publics Bmbassy. i. ot. easoa 493 Sargeant, Howland H.: Office of Alien Property Custodian...._ 320 Office of International Trade Operations____.__ 397 Sar at Commander Willis, Administrative Sarle, rg F., Weather Bureau.._.._.__.... 396 Sarmiento, Emilio, Bolivian Embassy.___...... 482 Sarmiento, Col. Jorge: Inter-American Defense Board _____________.. 426 Peruvian Embassy... oci si rin tas ies 491 Sartain, Arthur: : Secretary to Senator Bankhead _______________ 272 Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclama- {31s per SI SR I SR SS rs MET 269 Sasscer, E. R., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quar ADEN oo nos Tai Tod is ets magia 382 Sasscer, Lansdale G., Board of Visitors to the Naval ARACIY foal aE la 241 Sater, Lenore E., nn of Home Nutrition and Home Economics ee aden ks Satterlee, Carl W., Federal Deposit Insurance W Corporation. ooo oh tl Sls nia un a 4 Satterthwaite, Joseph O., Division of Near Basterm ARAINS. 2. oriontinal 2 331 ns Saucerman, Sophia A., Division of Geography and Cartography... ii as iia Ul 335 Sauer, Eugene C., Court of Claims.____________ 457 Sauer, Walter C., Export-Import Bank of Washingtones. Lull).rabid cial Job Sauerbrey, Edmund E. H., Botanic Garden... 287 Sauers, Charles G., Advisory Board on National Parke, eteiv zo ww Sl SalaE 376 Saugstad, Bi esse E., Shipping Division. _________ 334 Saunders, Charles 'N., House post office. ______ 277 Saunders, Capt. William V., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy for AT iter ct 355 Savage, Carlton, Office of Secretary of State _ 330 Savoretti, J oseph, Immigration and N aturaliza- tion Service eT Te Se EE RG Savoy, A. Kiger, District Board of Education. _ 473 Sawwaf, Husni A., Syrian Legation ____________ 492 Sawyer, Charles HH. American Commission for Protection of Historic Monuments... 405 Sawyer, Capt. Merle A., Army-Navy Explosives Safety Board. cit Le Tae 408 Sayers, R. R., Bureau of Mines________________ 372 Sayre, Francis B., United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration 328 Scaife, Lt. SQ W. M., Coast and Geodetic Scammahorn, James, Office of i and RinaneesciaenL ch fh Ooi gi iin ait Scanlan, John J., Passport Division____________ 336 Scanlan, William, Division of Foreign Economie Dovolopment.. ooo ons. ti 333 Scantlin, H. D., District assessor’s office________ 471 Scaretti, Enrico, Italian Embassy... _........ 488 Schaetzel, Js Robert, Office of Internationales Trade Polleys on. “Loainiy fo0sar Scharf, John G., hn Hospitalfor Women _ 410 Scheckel, Claude S., Official Reporter, House___ 259 Scheid, Clara E., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation...i oi oll 238 Schell, Orville H., Jr., Office of General Counsel 358 Schell, S. D Maritime Commission: a. li ol oi 429 War Shipping Administration. _____________._ 321 Schager, C. Walter, Western Union Telegraph oR TR na LE TER Sh eet le Page Jon, DeWitt C., U. S. Commercial Com-rt mm a TUCKER SCT SE TTT 416 Schioftelin, Lt. Col. Bayard, Office of Under Secretary of Way hdl tml a 43 Schiff, E. L. C. Ee Embassy.....o.-. 489 Schindler, Alfred: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service_.. 337 Board of Foreign Service Personnel. __________ 337 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Bomndos io uss si8a tL Niles a diate 337 Under Secretary of Commerce... __..._.. 392 Schlemmer, F. C., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Schley, Maj. Gen. Julian L., Goethals Memorial Commission i oo sawpiienar aaim iii in 425 Schlup, Lester A., Extension Service. ____._..__. 378 Schmid, Eileen Desmond, District Cosmetol- ooy Boapdes. oo iT tase 472 Schmidt, Orvis A., Foreign Funds Control... 340 Schmidt, Reinhart C., Weather Bureau_____.___ 396 Schmitt, Bernadotte E., Division of Research and: Publieation co ut ill cana it na 335 Schmitt, Irvin H., Extension Service _.._._______ 378 Schmitt, Waldo L. , National Museum ___....._ 441 Schneeberger, Ernst, Swiss Legation. __.__...... 492 Schneider, Albert, official reporter to House. (EITEE NE eR a CNR TD 279 Schnellbacher, E. E., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce... io ooo.fees Schnitzer, Julius, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commerce: oi... oc nsoce toto nn oN 393 Schoeneman, Charles R., Office of Secretary of the TreastLy: tl i instses vases stl maiot de Schoeneman, George J., special executive assist- ant tothe Presidents. cicivrns-woiamaneaa 318 chomnisiaer, Otto W., Office of Secretary of Schoenhals, C. E., Agricultural Research Ad- ministration Re SA RE BS ee 380 Schoening, H. W., Bureau of Animal Industry. 381 Schollenberger, Herbert K., District Alcoholic BeverageiControl Board... .: -.__....._. 472 Schott, John W., Office of Secretary of War____ 343 Schram, Emil, Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 349 Schram, John L., Office of Treasurer of the United Stated. 7.0. oor cove Cota lis TREY i Schrenk, Helmuth H., Bureau of Mines__._____ 372 Schroeder, Frank W ., secretary tn Senator Buck. 272 Schroeder, Max H., Office of Under Secretary of COINTNOICE othe. ore yoni had Sond ho Stains Ed aw 392 Schroeder, Wilbur C., Bureau of Mines_____.____ 373 Schulte, George J., House Select Committee on Small Business. cri end oimansan 212 on, S. E., Bonneville Power Administra- BDCOLOL toa oes Hondo as BS ff ra Al Schurz, William L., Division of Cultural Co- Operation... i... a Tard as 334 Schutt, Marie E., Office of Education... _..____ 421 Schuyler, Franklin J., Bureau of Naval Per- sonnel SR AAT AW es SRN SER nL Si 361 Schuyler, Capt. G. L., Bureau of Ordnance.__. 362 Schwab, James E., District Recreation Board... 473 Schwalb, Fernando, Peruvian Embassy._.____. 491 Schwalm, Harry R., Bureau of Accounts_______ 341 Schwartz, Benjamin, Bureau of Animal Indus- By A 381 Schwarz, Edward E., Children’s Bureau..______ 399 Schwartz, H. H., National Mediation Board.._ 436 Schwartz, Sylvan, United States attorney’s office Schwegmann, George A., Processing Depart-en LN EE aC tat 285 Schweinhaut, Henry A., associate justice, Dis- trict Court of the United States for the Dis- frict of Columbia... Luo indi oid 461 Schwellenbach, Lewis B. (Secretary of Labor): Blographyeolss Bo tlio an oi Dan 398 Federal tury Board for Vocational Edu- eationt adn RE La es ae 421 Member, Smithsonian Institution. __________ 441 National Archives Council .__________._______ 431 Office of Stabilization Administrator _________ 323 Scott, Armond W., judge, Municipal Court for the District-of Columbia. i. oo... 464 Scott, Eunice Mae, Surplus Property Adminis-tration lislsonofice. ____._.._........--.. 283 J ike 884 & Congressional Directory Page Page Scott, Harry A., Canadian Embassy. __________ 482 Scott, James A., Grazing Service. ______________ 373 Scott, Capt. Leon B., Maritime Commission___ 429 Scott, Walter K., Division of Communications and-Recofds. i odor mila ie 336 Scoular, Agnes, Senate Committee on Terri-torieS'and Insular =...lll 270 Affairs __. Scrivener, Samuel, Jr., District Zoning Adjust-ment Board. oc nod So CT i 474 Sen Dongle J., Agricultural Adjustment 2 tration si is uu Co SIE IN 321 Seaman, Brig. Gen. A. Owen, United States Soldiers’ HOMO. esisat do all 4 Seaman, Commander B. P., Bureau of Naval Persornel. ... ooHaRe OE Seaman, Fred A., General Accounting Office... 284 Seaman, Guy x Interstate Commerce Com- misdion LSE RL EAE 428 Seamon, Margaret H., Administrative Office of the United States Courts. _____.______..___ 462 nish: W. H., National Bureau of Standards. 394 Sears, J. D., Geological Survey. FCsoo 1 = 490 Sonnett, John F., Assistant Attorney General__ 348 Sorensen, Soren, Danish Legation 2 0 484 Sorenson, H., Railroad Retirement Board______ 439 Soto, Fausto, Chilean Bmbassy i... =. 483 Souder, Wilmer, National Bureau of Standards. 394 Sourwine, J. G., Senate Committee on Judiciary 269 Sousa Pernes, Pedro P. Bon de, Portuguese Easy a a ees 491 Southall, Sara, Committee on Fair Employment PractiCe eee 319 Sowerby, Emily M., Reference Department, Li- Prary Of COnETess rr 286 Spaeth, Carl B., Office of Secretary of State.__. 329 Spain, Jack, secretary to Senator Hoey... _.... 272 Spalding, Maj. Gen. Sidney P.: Army and Navy Munitions Board. __________ 408 Office of Under Secretary of War. ____________ 343 Spanton, W. T., Office of Education._...____.___ 421 Sparkman, J ohn Fes Board of Visitors to the Military Academy.__ 240 Majority whip a a 274 Spaulding, E. Wilder: Division of Research and Publication.________ 335 National Archives ._ 27” 431 Counell. -o--co-Spears, Rear Adm. W. O., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission... ______________ 327 Speck, David J., Office of General Counsel for EA MTTr A at a ln al Hh ea ogc 339 Spector, Theodore, Office of the Solicitor ______ 369 Speh, Carl F., Bureau of Agricultural and In- dustrial Chemistry ERR are pon pe 380 Spelman, H. J., Public Roads Administration__ 424 Speilman, Archbishop F.J., American Commis- sion for Protection of Historic Monuments. 405 Spencer, F. H., Bureau of Entomology and Phong Qasrantine: z-..0 i C0 oo 382 Spencer, George O., Securities and Exchange Commission... L.. So aaa sop. sredr BL 440 Spencer, Kenneth W., District assessor’s office... 471 Spencer, Rear Adm. Lyndon, Coast Guard_____ 366 Spencer, Robin E., Weather Bureau____________ 395 Spencer, R. R., National Institute of Health___ 420 Spiegel, Harold R., Division of Financial Affairs. 333 Spilman, Joseph L., Civil Service Commission. 409 Spilman, Laura M., Civilian Production Ad- ministration Haison ol 1 lL offices... 283 Spivacke, Harold, Reference Department_______ 286 Splawn, Walter M. W., Interstate Commerce Commission. cuss. on Sion sia tL Bl 427 Sprague, George, Jr., Securities and Exchange Commission: | usio: ab. wr ll nif ii songak 440 Spring, Isadore, Women’s Bureau __.____..._. 400 Springer, Elizabeth, Senate Committee on BINAACE ct of Ast oenl nil Sadist. 269 Springer, Lewis S., District Unemployment Compensation Board... cou. cai ao tui 473 Spurgeon, Commander S. H. K., Australian Leoallon. oe. 0 ih nt eu Livni deen 481 Squire, F. C., Railroad Retirement Board. ._.__ 439 Squires, Marion Wills, Senate Committee on CMS de moo TE mind Se BE ed 268 Srygley, Sue, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. ot cir. mah se de ra Si Aa 69 Staack, J. G., Geological Survey... ._.._..... 371 Stackpole, Ralph, Commission of Fine Arts____ 410 Page Stafford, Wendell P., District Public Library_. 473 Stahl, Michael A, Office of Materials and Fa-cilities TL a ee Er eR Boi ST 388 Stainback, Ingram M., Governor of Hawaii____ 374 Brel, Thomas E., Jr., Maritime Commis-a [11 BR ae Se St pe ay 429 Stallings, Robert, House post office___._________ 277 Stam, Colin Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation lm trl Salo a 238 Stambaugh, Lynn U., Export-Import Bank of Washington o.oo ae 411 Stamm, H. B., Federal Trade Commission. ____ 423 Stamps, Edith G., Civil Service Commission Contact Office Cc cee 283 Stang, Preston J., Assessor’s Office. _.__________ 471 Stanley, A. O., International Joint Commission. 427 Stanley, Louise, Agricultural Research Admin-RTSITT fern mh asa ue Ese ete Ca 380 Stansfield, Edgar A.: The RFC Mortgage Company... _..__.._____ 415 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 413 ‘War Assets'Corporation =... ort 416 Stanton, Charles I., Civil Aeronautics Adminis-A OD sr arai rs 396 Stanton, G. Frederick, Howard University__.__ 423 Sm, XE. Public Buildings Administra-lon 424 Stapleton, ie “Warren, Office of Secretary “of the Interior mm A a 369 Stapleton, Daniel V., Division of Foreign Serv-ice Personnel Ade SN RSE a SOR 335 Stapleton, F. H., Railroad Retirement Board__ 439 Starek, Herbert, Court of Claims_______________ 457 Stark, P. C., Production and Marketing Admin-istration. fh I SS CA 386 Starratt, A. W., Office of Treasurer of United SIRIpe mE nee SL SR at pia lieu 341 Stauber, B. R., War Relocation Authority_____ 376 Steagall, Edward C., Office of the Second ry and Postmaster General ___________________ 352 Steelman, John R., special assistant to President Rr EERE SI Se Se AR 318 Steely, E. Newton, Civil Service Commission__ 409 Stefano, Mario di, Italian Embassy oS 488 Steichen, Capt. Edward J., Navy Si Institute Se Ce SE AE Se A wi DE 358 Steig, Olga M., Securities and Exchange Com-ToT 1 Ea ea ee ol ei See Sa be i Se 40 Stein, Edward T., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration JET EES Ri CE Rha re IPC IEE Se es 414 Steinbager, Helen T., District Public Library__. 473 Steiner, G., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... iii 383 Stenger, Jerome J., Division of Foreign Econo-mic Development ECR eS Re 333 Stephens, Edmund, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ________ 383 Stephens, Harold M., associate justice, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia OlogZraphy). iain da eis 453 Stephens, M. A., Federal Security Agency_____ 418 Stephenson, Charles H., Office of the Sood Assistant Postmaster Genergls . ...Luiiao 352 Sterling, George E., Federal Communications Commission... 0 Sli Ses Nang 412 Sterling, Hawley W., Alaska Road Commission. 375 Sterling, Ralph J., ’ official reporter to House commitiees. ©. ov ne eda Naa aE 279 Stern, Ben, Civil Aeronautics Administration. 396 Stern, Charles G., Federal Public Housing Authority a Eo a eh AR ee ER a 435 Sterne, Maurice, Commission of Fine Arts_____ 410 Sternhagen, John M., judge, Tax Court of the United Blates. era 461 «ooeal Stevens, Alla G., superintendent of stores and traffic manager, Government Printing Of-BBL oo a At i if did a 287 Stevens, Francis B., Division of Eastern Euro-Dean AfAIrS. iat.)any 331 ooo de Stevens, Henry, Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry... o_o. io... 381 Stevens, Loyd A., Weather Bureau. __._.___.___ 396 Stevens, Margaret, Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments_____._________ 269 Stevens, BR. B., British Embassy_......_...._.. 486 Stevens, William H. S., Interstate Commerce COMMISSION ol si a han eit oasespd Stevenson, Charles, Bureau of Customs. _._____ 340 Indwidual Index Page Page Stevenson, J. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering 383 Stevenson, Perry J., Bureau of Foreign and Pomestic Commerce. oo. ano fl end Stewart, Charles, International Joint Commits: 4 Stewart, Charles E., District Court of the tinted | States for the District of Columbia. ___._._. Stewart, David R., National War Labor Board... -Stewart, Erskine, "House Committee on Ways and Meang: aus lanai bo aime ie ay 278 Stewart, Capt. G. V., Bureau of Naval Per-sonnel cae oo ook a SR 361 Stewart, Grace M., Office of the Attorney General. ANE DO Sn Le i 348 Stewart, Dr. Irwin, Office of Scientific Research andiDevelopment. laiDos irl 320 Stewart, Joseph W., Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia / Stewart, Nathaniel, Processing Department____ 285 Stewart, Tom, Board of Visitors to the Military Aeadem\¥i sn Lana hain La a 240 Steyne, Alan Ny Office of the Foreign Service.. 335 Bilakner, Capt. F. R., Bureau of Naval Person-261 Stiebeling, Hazel K., Bureau of Human Nutri- tion and Home Economics SULT 382 Stiles, Grace B., United States attorney’s office. 463 Stiles, Capt. N. R.,Coast'Guard...._...._.._.. 366 Still, Frances, House Committee on Post Office and-Bost Rods a aust a on ea 278 Stine, Harry E., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General ».0 70 0 natu 352 Stine, Oscar C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-NOMS tanSR He 77 Stinebower, Leroy D., Office of International Prado Policy ti tbl maaGran: 332 Stirling, H. V., Veterans’ Administration______ 445 Stirling, M.. W., Bureau of American Ethnology _ 442 Biol Aner R., United States attorney’s Stites, ona G2 Office of Marketing Servicesias. ratoiow 387 Production and Marketing Administration___ 386 Stockburger, Arlin E., Civil Aeronautics Ad-ministration. Se ata 396 Stocking, Collis, United States Employment BOTVICE: os ee ay SL 401 Stocking, Ernest J., Civil Service Commission. 409 Stockman, Mrs. Lowell, Congressional Club___ 411 Stofberg, Charles, assistant to District Commis- TEE) Eat Le Se i OO 471 Stohlman, Dr. Martin A., District Board of Pental Examiners. i ian, 472 Stokes, Isaac N. P., Division of Tgeastondl Organization Affairs I te Stokes, Lt. Comdr. J. M., Bureau of Naval | Bonnet Stokke, Tor, Norwegian Embassy... _.__._._..___ oe Stone, Donald C., Bureau of the op Es 318 Stone, Earle L., "Office of the First Assistant Postmaster Clonerale. tas:lo 351 Stone, H. Chase, War Shipping Administration. 321 Stone, Harlan F. (Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court): American Bed Cross. -o ot. oui cada 406 Blographyiof od i aa hah sires 449 Chancellor, Smithsonian Institution___.______ 441 Member, Smithsonian Institution. __________ 441 National Gallery of Art: ono tornielSee 442 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee.__ 242 Washington National Monument Society... 445 Stone, Harold A., Office of Budget and Finance_ 378 Stone, Thomas A., Canadian Embassy. __._____. 482 Stone, Virgil C., Bureau of Accounts... ._.....__ 354 Stone, William T.: Coordinating Committee... ._—.... 330 Interdepartmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation .______________._ 334 Office of International Information and Cul- Pura Afairs anion J le Lee 334 Stoner, A. L., Officeof Alien Property Custodian. 320 Stoner, George B.: Reconstruction Finance Corporation......... 413 U.S. Commercial Company... ..........__.._ 416 Storch, Henry H., Bureau of Mines. __..._.._.. 373 Story, Tsabelle F. ! National Park Service....-.. 372 Story, Lt. Comdr. R. W., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts Stracke, Joseph, House folding room____________ Stratton, Capt., Dorothy C., Coast Guard.__._ Stratton, Henry, House Committee on Rules___ 278 Stratton, Lynn L., Joint Committee on Inter-. nal Revenue Taxation) (oo. 0 oo. 5 val, 238 Straubinger, George W., Office of the Secretary of the Senate: 0 1 Gy iicall cont Ta i 268 Straus, Michael W., First Assistant Secretary of sive aiii a 368 Strauss, Rear Adm. Lewis L.: Army and Navy Munitions Board. _______.__ 408 Office of Secretary of the Navy... _________ 355 Strauss, Simon D., Reconstruction Finance Corporation.coii ss muir vin 0 ram ro 14 Stroberg, H. R., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration. ooh oe i na ee ee 14 Strom, Alfer B., Office of the Postmaster Gen-ral int ial i Se Se fe 351 Strom, Lewis H., Reconstruction Finance Corporatlonaiiisbuicsais Nl vin 414 alma Strong, Albert L., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration... [ool co isan nna ten ie 414 Stroud, W. A., Production and Marketing Administration a re i os AR a 387 Stroud, W. E., Reconstruction Finance Corpo-ration La he aR Sei Sn be Se 414 Struthers, Esther G., Employees’ Compensation Commission be mt Ce BR 411 Stuart, W. G., official reporter to House com-Ilias. oo 279 Stucchio, John H., Office of Assistant Secretary DLW: tia te 343 Studebaker, John W.: y Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu-CREO oi odoin Tr A eR ea Sede 421 Office:of Bduealionisii oo tl ct cool oo 420 Stumph, Louis P., Commission on Mental Health. te isinaay 462 Sturdevant, W. L., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Sturgeon, S., Senate Committee on Agriculture and BoTesiry. oa a Ns a ee 268 Stuyt, G. C., Netherlands Embassy. __________ 490 Suarez, Guillermo Eliseo, Colombian Embassy... 483 Sucre, Graciela Rajas, Panama Embassy ________ 50 Suit, Joseph E., District Fire Department______ 475 Sullivan, A. C., Farm Credit Administration __ 384 Sullivan, Estelle, Senate Committee on Con- ference MINOrItY... oo ceeat enon a 268 Sullivan, Francis P., District examiners and registrars ofarchiteets. -..l 472 .....—ooo..oo. Sullivan, Gael, Second Assistant Postmaster Generals aridraiedparte bene tbe oni 352 Sullivan, Harry L., Reconstruction Finance COrDorAbON ath vis abn a aa Si 413 Sullivan, John L., Assistant Secretary of the Nev IOLA. tens oe cnt nem rd oh 355 Sullivan, Col. Leo, Paymaster Department____ 365 Sullivan, Mark, Washington National Monu- Tet Seley: i 445 Sullivan, Robert E., National War Labor Board. 400 Sullivan, William W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation: uv... 0 cr a ar 414 Sultan, Lt. Gen. Daniel I., The Inspector General, War... ancl a Aa sa 344 Sulzberger, Arthur Hays, American Red Cross__ 406 Summerlin, George T., Office of the Secretary of State. oe edi at eS 330 Summers, Lionel M., office of legal adviser_____ 330 Summerscale, J. P., British Embassy_.__.______ 486 Sumsky, Mikhail M., Soviet Social Republics Embassy a dee on a RL SE 493 Sundaram, M. S., British Embassy. _.__..______ 487 Sunstrom, E. A., Tennessee Valley Authority. . 444 Surles, Maj. Gen. Alexander D., War Depart-ment: Special Staff... nm ill toni T 344 Suro, Guillermo A., Translating Office___.______ 335 Surrey, Walter S., "Division of Economic Secu-rity Controls rit asa Sob fain nil 334 Sutleff, Maj. O. L.: Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds: Cra rg aE 270 Secretary to Senator Andrews. _._._____.______ 272 Sutter, Dr. Victor Arnoldo, Pan American Sani-tary BOreal:. io te Co aa Btu Sad 888 Congressional Directory Page Sutton, Rear Adm. Dallas G., Bureau of Medi-cine and Surgery... ross hk Un) 360 ninucia Sutton, Marion, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the’ Contingent Expenses... __._.___ 268 Sutton, Millard H., District Fire Department__ 475 Suverkrup, Arthur N. ., secretary to Senator Gapvillle. amissnad ime lini ad 272 Swadley, R. A., Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 350 Swain, C. E., Public Roads Administration___. 424 Swain, C. Garton, Weather Bureau. _._________ 395 Swain, Larsen, Washington city post office. ____ 478 Swainson, Capt. , Coast and Geodetic Survey TRL a Ce IL RB BRIERE 395 Swanson, Edward B.: Office of Secretary of the Interior _____._______ 369 Petroleum Administration for War______.____ 324 Petroleum Conservation Division.___________ 375 Swanson, Irving W., assistant reading clerk, 1 Et ie SEY a rr SRL 1 275 Sweeney, Dr. Alvin R., Health Department___ 476 Sweeny, "Robert P., Bureau of F oreign and Do-mestic COMMRree. ooitis ais 393 Sweet, G. H., Veterans’ Administration________ 445 Sweet, Oliver E., Interstate Commerce Com-El De Re Se AS RG TR Sweet, Theodore L., Office of Materials andi Facilities eo me ink a me SR RIS Swenson, T. L., Bureau of Agricultural and 5 dustrial Chemistry. 5. ono ts 381 Swift, Lloyd W., Forest Service... ___.._._._.____ 385 Swigart, Richard P., American Red Cross_._._-407 Switzer, John B., Interstate Commerce Commis-SORE SE saues hes been tn Switzer, Mary E., Federal Security Agency.._. 418 Swofford, Mrs. Jewell W., Employees’ Compen-sation Comission. an thcis 411 .o.coat Swope, Commander Gerard, Jr., Office of Gen-erm¥Counsels ecg oa oanINE 35. Symington, H. J., Material Coordinating Com-4 mittee Ly W. Stuart, Surplus Property Ad-ministration co. Lot hl i eT 323 Szymezak, M. S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System hs 418 T Taber, David F., Office of Contract Settlement_. 322 Taber, John, Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures ._______ 242 Tabet, Maurice Jacques, Lebanon Legation_____ 488 Tadjeddin, Said, Afghanistan Legation... ______ 481 Taeuber, Conrad, Bureau of Agricultural Eco- NORMES 2 LoL 0s ce lL Ia 377 Tacha, Carl, Bureau of Agricultural Econom- Taft, i P., War Relief Control Board ______ 324 Taft, Robert A.: Capital Auditorium Commission. __-_..___ 237 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Crotmndg a aan General Anthony Wayne Memorial Com-misslon Slat i nd Cli eau a 242 Taitel, Martin, Office of Contract Settlement____ 322 Talbert, T. R., Washington city post office _.___ 478 Talbot, J oseph E., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy hk de wi 241 Talley, Inspector Clarence: Metropolitan'Police. o_o.alo sgl 476 oi District Boxing Commission... oo... 472 Tallman, Commander J. H., Bureau of Naval Personnel. co ko ooo JEU Crna IE 362 Tamm, Edward A., Federal Bureau of Investi- FABIO, SL sin Eo it natn ln i a 348 Tandy, A. H., British Embassy_._____.____ Lh an 486 Tannehill, Ivan B., Weather Bureau.__..___._.__ 395 Tarchiani, Alberto, Italian Ambassador....._..__ 488 Tartalja, Col. Mihovil, Yugoslavian Embassy... 494 Tate, Frederick W., Bureau of the Mint... 340 Tate, Jack B. , Federal Security Agency... _._...._ 418 Tate, Lt. Vernon D. , National Archives _..__.... 431 Tatem, Sylvia L., Office of Recorder of Deeds... 464 Taube, Mortimer, Acquisition Department_____ 285 Taussig, Charles W., Anglo-American Carib- Page Tawney, James A., House Cominitzes on Ways and Means... 0 ili nlll hy ei vo Oh 278 Tawressy, Capt. Alfred, Office of Budget ane Reports, Navy i a md Taylor, Amos E.: Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 393 Committee for Reciprocity Information _______ 410 Taylor, Ancel N., Division of Foreign Service Administration 2. cual cal 0 sat oie 335 Taylor, Aubrey E., Federal Works Agency._____ 424 Taylor, Augustus C., District Pharmacy Board. 473 Taylor, Carl C , Bureau of Agricultural Eco-NOINIGE. hh siren Sanne a AE Star 377 Taylor, C. V., Civil Service Commission __._.____ 409 Taylor, Claire, Joint Committee on Internal RevenueTaxation: ..o.. .._.. 00. ili i= 238 Taylor, Capt. Edmund B., Office of Secretary ofthe Navy. oc fil iii loa dbadovoniiniis 355 Taylor, Evan, ns Ee clerk of the House_..____ 275 Taylor, Francis H., American Commission for Protection of Historic Monuments_ ________. 405 Taylor, Frank D., Office of the Doorkeeper_____. 275 Taylor, H. Elmo, House post office. ___._________ 277 Taylor, Ike P., Alaska Road Commission. _____ 375 Taylor, J ames S. Retraining and Reemploy-ment Administration... 401 Taylor, Jess, House Committee on Appropria-1111 PM I CBI IS RAT ICR a oho DS 0) Taylor, John W., Court of Claims. _______..____ 457 Taylor, Leon B.: Office of Materials and Facilities _ .________.__ 388 Production and Marketing Administration. __ 386 Taylor, Mark, Patent Office or socio 395 _...oo Taylor, Oliver G., National Park Service__..___ 372 Taylor, Ralph Kipling, British Embassy....__. 487 Taylor, Fuh G; Children’ s Bureau... -.......-399 Taylor, R. J ., Reconstruction Finance Corpora- HON i een 41 ertiesEr Taylor, R. T., Railroad Retirement Board_____ 439 Taylor, Wayne C., Export-Import Bank of Washington...See 411 tier Taylor, William H., Division of Monetary Re- TTLLH] Ea a oie Won GN SR I oR ea EE 340 Tebelen, A. Menna, Turkish Embassy._._____.__ 493 Tedrow, Lt. Comdr. Richard L., Naval Clem- ency and Prison Inspection Board... re 357 Tenley, Christopher S., Extension Service._____ 378 Tenney, E. Paul, Division of Foreign Service Administration... ca es So Tennyson, Alfred L., Office of General Come. o for the Treasury.RNC he REET EE Tercero, Dorothy M., Pan American Union____ a3 Terrill, Robert » International Resources Pivislon. mi a Ta ea 332 Terry, Edward P.: National Memorial Stadium Commission.____ 243 Secretary to Senator Bilbo____________________ 272 Ee Committee on the District of Colum- Tessema, Getahoun, Ethiopian Legation. _____ 485 Teuton, F. L., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial Chemistry a aE NL 381 Tewell, Harold S., Division of Foreign Service Personnel. 0 JIE a ail lun 335 Tharp, Flip A., Home Owners’ Loan Corpo- Thatoher, Arthur B., Office of Plant and Opera-4 (1 MOE oilerle 379 Thau, Readers L., Securities and Exchange Commission] lo. rasaTa, 4 Theard, Daniel, Haitian Embassy____________._ Buren. 20 nie ia ie yeaa Thebo, Joan, Senate Committee on Banking and-Curreney. i Co 0 oil he Sais. 26 Thickstun, William R., Weather Bureau_.___.. 395 Thom, Corcoran, Washington National Monu- ment Boclety ©... oo Tunaray 445 Thom, Corcoran, Jr., Columbia Hospital for Women! oy... ies Ll a anan Tak 410 Thomas, A. B., General Accounting Office...___ 284 Thomas, Alice M., Senate Committee on Immi- grationof os oa silanol a huni 269 Thomas, Elbert D.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf _____._____ 422 Dean COTIISSION os or ero nis dma oan oa 408 Joint Committee on the Organization of Con-7 Taussig, Vice Adm. J. K., Naval Clemency and ro TOE gr CR CB Te SET CRE EERE TL wat Prison Inspection Board... C2usl locos 357 Than: Jefferson Memorial Commission..__ 240 Individual Index 889 Page Page Thomas, Elmer: Timm, Tyrus, Office of Price Administration... 322 Board of Visitors to the Military Academy___ 240 Timmons, Francis L., Jr., assistant to District Joint Committee on the Library ___._________ 238 Engineer Commissioner... 471 Thomas, Ferris B., Reconstruction Finance Tinkham, Capt. R. R., Coast Guard_____.______ 367 Corporation oi. fh. 00 suisa le (Se Saalsl 413 Toal, Commander F. C., Army-Navy Ex-Thomas, Fred C., District Wage and Industrial plosives Safety Board: oofiio an 408 Lol Safety. Board. oo siipus, Taso LL naan 473 Todd, Col. William N., Jr.: Thomas, Rear Adm. George C., Bureau of Army Ground Forees. oii. imal 345 Medicine and SUrgery ee. Sasi. onan nat 360 Army War College. c= i irronssnaemToa 346 Thomas, George H., Federal Farm Mortgage Tolan, Mrs. John H., Congressional Club______ 411 Corporation: sii nothin io ded tian 384 Tolbett, Dont TH, Senate Committee on Appro-orn Thomas, Brig. Gen. Gerald C., Headquarters pristiong.cc sineTan ll Sl a Marine Corps, fo tensa ial anit 364 Tolbo Nd R., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- Thomas, J esse 0O., American Red Cross____.___ 406 BOMIOS. 2 ola ees ai Tae 377 Thomas, John F., "Office of Contract Settlement. 322 Tolman, R. P., National Collection of Fine Arts. 442 . Thomas, Nena dc. , Capitol telephone exchange. 282 Tolson, Clyde A., Federal Bureau of Investiga- Thomas, R.J., N ational War Labor Board_____ 400 PHT EELS vl TE 348 Thomas, Rear Adm. W. N., Bureau of Naval Tolson, Hillory A., National Park Service______ 371 Personnels: fo rian 2 whe Saag 361 Tolton, Julius H., House document room_______ 276 Thomas, Woodlief, Board of Governors of the Tomlin, C. B., Patent Office. soil oouid 395 Federal Reserve System___..._____:.___:..__ 418 Tomlinson, O. A., National Park Service.______ 372 Thomason, R. Ewing: Tompkins, Lida, Columbia Hospital for Board of Visitors to the Military Academy.__. 240 WOMB. oe th ei "oi haere 410 Joint Committee on Occupational Deferment. 242 Tonry, Richard J., journal clerk of the House... 275 Thomen, Dr. F., Pan American Sanitary Toombs, Fred A., Civil Aeronautics Board_____ 396 Gy Charles R Office of Architect of the Thompson, Lt. Clary, Potomac Hives Naval apibol. on aE ey Command RES Shute Ll LR TN aE 364 Toss Luigi Silvestralli Novile di, Italian Thompson, Dr. Edward E., District Board of Embassy a Aa at Ee aS LS 1 488 Podiatry Examiners: o..f. i000 Seseaill 473 Thompson, Elwood N., Office of Special Political AES: rend os nal nh 332 Tower, R. S., General Accounting Office. ______ 284 Thompson, Eugene C., National Mediation Towers, Albert G., Federal Deposit Insurance Board ddd A a a 436 Corporation, oo. aed Salli is Shaded a 413 Thompson, F. Irving, White House News Towers, Edward, office of District department Photographers’ Association. _______________ 758 of vehicles and 9710 Toy AEGA ae 475 Thompson, George F., assistant financial clerk, Townsend, Lt. Col. Elias C., Headquarters Office of Becretary of the Senate... _._ 5c. . 268 Military District of Washington Or 346 Thompson, Glenn D., Bureau of Reclamation__ 371 Townsend, J. G., Bureau of State Services______ 420 Thompeon, GG. N:, National Bureau of Stand-394 Townsend, J. Léonard, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ________________ 418 Townsend, Rex, Petroleum Division___________ 333 Tozier, Morrill, 'M., ‘War Relocation Authority. 376 Trabold, John F., Office of the Third Assistant La Postmaster Aneta) ees 352 on Fo, Lester H., Federal Housing Ad-Tracy, Daniel W., Office of Secretary of Labor.. 398 minisfrabion chase 0) Sul Sin ang as 435 Tracy, Edward J., Maritime Commission______ 429 Thompson, L. R., Bureau of State Services.._. 420 Tracy, Robert C., Tax Court of the United Thompson, Luke, "Washington City Post Office. 478 LE TI LE ae le SRR EB 61 Thompson, Mildred A., Senate Committee on Tracy, Stanley J., Federal Bureau of Investiga- Foreign Relations. os. ioeen 269 AER enn SR RE Sdn ite 348 Thompson, Oco, financial clerk, Office of Secre-Travassos, Lt. Col. Clovis Monteiro: tary.of the Senatec . reo oo tow 268 Embassy Che Sorel 482 Brazilion o.oo Thompson, Perry A., Forest Serviee___________ 385 Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ 425 Thompson, Ralph L., District Public Library... 473 Travers, Howard K., Visa Division____________ 336 Thompson, Russell H., Washington city post Trayer, George W., Forest Service__ ___________ 385 ORA0G IS LL ateTA 478 5 Frances, Union A Tear, Western Telegraph Thompson, William, National Archives________ 431 0 ot dE he had el A 282 Thomsen, F. L., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-Treanor, James A., Jr., Securities and Exchange ROMICS, | foc cad TE ey 377 Commission op. dee SNe ga san fa nadlaiinn 440 Thomson, Charles A., Office of International Tremblay, Paul, Canadian Embassy ___.________ 483 Information and Cultural Affairs Tevelyan, Humphrey, British Embassy________ 486 Thomson, J. C., British. Embassy... ..-._ ... Trexler, George W., Office of Fourth Assistant Thomson, Col. James H., Territorial Expansion Postmasgter'General o_o 353 Memorial Commission... _......... 241 Tribble, Grover W., Director of plant planning, Thornett, G. M., secretary to the Board, Dis-Printing ..........= Government Office. 0 287 trict government A aT Ne) 471 Trice, J. Mark, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of the Thornthwaite, C. Warren, Soil Conservation Senate El a py 270 a SG EN RR SR PERE 391 Trimble, its, Clerk of the House (biography). 274 Thorp, Willard L., Office of Secretary of State__ 2 Trimble, South, Jr., Inland Waterways Corpora-Thors, Thor, Minister of Iceland ...c..ooo VERN SAE ee eV 92 | a [en AT a BR EE Thorson, Waldemar, United States EE Trimble, William C., Division of Northern ment Sal RT, Sea European Affairs... . 5. ooo ries 331 TTRi Thresher, M. B., British Embassy... True, Webster P., Smithsonian Institution..___ 441 Thuee, Frederick A., Commission on Mental Truesdell, Dr. Leon E., Census Bureau_.______ 393 Te Trullinger, R. W., Office of Experiment Thurston, Elliott, Board of Governors of the Btationg eC oor aa a a ra 383 Federal Reserve System 418 Toupan, Foy S. (President of the United Tickton, Sidney G., Division of Research and tate Salient Biography of. irc i na 317 Tietjens, Norman O., Office of General Counsel Member, Smithsonian Institution... __________ 441 of the reastiry. colo ne 3 Patron ex officio, Columbia Institution for the Tijan, Teodor, Yugoslavian Embassy..._.__.__. 494 Do a 422 Tillotson, M. RB; National Park Service__.___.__ 372 Tilson, William J. ., judge, Customs Court (biog-President ex officio, Washington National raphy) 458 Monument Society Washington-Sg Memorial, Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... _.____.__ 240 890 ~~ Congressional Directory Page Page Truppner, William C., Bureau of the Census... 393 Valleau, Thomas G., Solid Fuels Administration Truscott, H. Neil, Australian Legation... ....... 481 for Wario ol ais Glee Ll BR I Bh 376 Tsui, Tswen-ling, ’Chinese Binbassy iii 483 Van Aalten, Elly, Reference Department_______ 286 Tubby, Roger, Office of International Trade Van Arsdale, Henry, Patent Office. ____________ 395 J Operations iio a do Ian dl 397 Van Blarcom, Herbert P., Bureau of Foreign Tucker, Wendell P., District Department of and Domestic COMMErts..... boii: Public Wolare. ... --hdiendniglliLLDL 477 Van Alma Franklin Roosevelt i Curan, A., D. Tufts, Joseph P., National Housing Agency... 433 rl I SR SRR LT St LS ie Tugwell, Rexford G.: Vandegrift, Gen. Alexander A., Commandant, Rico...li Corpeuct Governorof Puerto L. iil 374 Marine Asi Jollee)sud Anglo-American Caribbean Commission_..._._ 408 Vandegrift, John L., District Minimum Wage Tulloss, S. B., General Accounting Office__.____ 284 and Industrial Safety Board... Jin Tumulty, Joseph P., Thomas Jefferson Memo-Van Deman, Ruth, Bureau of Home Nutrition rial Commission. own tenure eatin comandol 240 and Home ECONOMICS. o-oo. ooo. 383 ‘Tuohy, tos M., House Committee of Indian Vandenberg, Arthur H.: AfGire fo chai ie ali ol Filipino Rehabilitation Commission... 243 Tuohy, oe A., Government Printing Interparliamentary Union_______________._._.___ 239 Offer =v Bare i as it 287 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- adeno if Maj. Gen. Allen H., Headquarters 1 7) 1 frei i ha Se RE 238 Marine Corps... iit snl ean lal 364 Vandenberg, Lt. Gen. H. S., Army Air Forces._ 345 Turnbull, Commander A. D., Office of SN Van Den Berghe, Léon, Belgian Embassy. ____. 482 History dor a LeRoiLL AER Van Dersal, William R., Soil Conservation Turner, A. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, © Seyvige tion J ILJaNE DU oT ER 1 0 IRE 391 and Agricultural Engineering. JL...0.0 383 Van Duzer, William A., District director of Turner, B. R., New Zealand Legation__._______ 490 vehiclesand trae. Jo Lan 475 Turner, Bolon B., judge, Tax Court of the Vanech, A. Devitt, Office of the Attorney nite Staten. voi lo von moan dU 461 Turner, George S., Federal Communications Van Fossan, Ernest H., judge, Tax Court of the OIISSION. onan stay, J cau Sas BT United: States. = oo Doi (oi. [as Human 461 Turner, J. B., Federal Power Commission_____ 417 Van Fossen, J. R., Board of Governors of the Turner, James C., District Minimum Wage and Federal Reserve System._...___________1:.__. IndustrialiSalety Board... iio ao. 473 Van Horn, Dr. A. L., Children’s Bureau.__.___ 399 Turner, L. C., Office of Defense Transportation. 320 Van Horn, Arthur L., Office of the Second Assist-| Turner, Robert, Civilian Production Admini-ant Postmaster General. __._._____..____.. 52 SUrRtION SL eo SR SL iran 319 Van Horne, C. E., secretary to Senator Langer__ 273 Turner, William T., Division of Japanese yen, Natta, C. H., Farm Security Administra-Sy RMA SS eR CE Ma ie EL et TORE 10 RE BO RR a Rl Se 385 Twohy, James, Federal Home Loan Bank Van Orsi, R. A., Columbia Hospital for Systemoole No loos th lin a bostip nd 33 Wom 409 Tydings, Millard E.: Van On: ty Division of Economic Se-Filipino Rehabilitation Commission. _________ 243 curity Controls.» ion ooo mn polis 334 Interparliamentary Union... __._ _...._.... 2 Van Patten, Frederick A., Federal Housing Washington-Lincoln Memorial Getryshung 0 Administration SFE eB wl SR pie Boulevard Commission 2.0/0 oo Van Wyck, Philip S., United States Employ-Tyler, Capt. G. A., Coast Guard... .-21 7 ment Service Tynan, MauriceI.,, Office of Education... ._.__ 421 Varalda, Maurilio G., Italian Embassy__________ = Tyrrell, Gerald, British Bmbagsy i PMs 486 Vargas Narifio, Alberto, Colombian Embassy._. 483 Evan, John A., judge, Tax Court of the Unieed Vasquez Ayllon, Carlos, Peruvian Embassy_____ 491 CE et Sh A apa Vassiliev, Lt. Col. Boris D., Soviet Socialist Tyson, William S., Office of Secretary of Labor. _ 208 Republics BIDagsy. oTeh Vaughan, David B., Office of International Trade Operations 397 U Vaughan, L. M., Extension Service '___________ 378 Vega Espaillat, Dr. José, Dominican Embassy__ 485 Uhland, Russell E., Soil Conservation Service__ 391 Vega--Gomez, Dr. Don’ Felipe, El Salvadoran Ulinski, John A. , International Boundary Com-Embassy a it 485 mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 426 Vega, Otto, Dominican Embassy ___.___________ 485 Underwood, J..0..T., Brifish Embassy PER 487 Vehue, Mary Olga, House foldingroom__________ Unzicer, Willard E.: Veintemillas, Dr. Félix, Pan American Sanitary Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ._..-... 413 Bureaw. oi. pih es HEE oo. Taal . S. Commercial Company i=... io aniill 416 Velazquez, Dr. Celso R.: War Damage Corporation... i dl 001 416 Paraguayan Ambassador. 02 05 Tila 491 Opdeomtl, George C., Corporation Counsel’s Governing Board, Pan American Union_______ 438 Veldee, Milton V., National Institute of Health. 420 Velthuis, Adrian E., Bureau of the Census 393 EEER a 368 Vendel, Margaret C., Senate Committee on Upham, C. B., Bureau of the Comptroller of the Indian Affairs... o-anniag co rier Currency...A SO A RP Se i a A 339 Vernon, Raymond, Securities and Exchange Urias, Jesus Franco, International Boundary Commission... oxox oo or ee a Y and Water Commission, United States and Vest, George B., Board of Governors of the Rma 427 Federal Reserve System. ___________________ 418 Uriburu, Don Guillermo, Argentine Embassy... 481 Vestal, Mrs. Vivian, Congressional Club________ 411 Uriburu, Don Ernesto C., Argentine Embassy__ 481 Viacava, Anselmo M., Argentine Embassy______ 481 Urich, Walter K., Board of Parole... ..,_..0 2 349 Vicecellio, Mary P., Senate Committee on Tig ation 2 269 EERE RST a YL AS ANI LR LR 396 Vickery, Vice Adm. Howard L.: Uttlag Clinton B., Office of the First Assistant Joint War Production Committee _. ooo oo. 326 Postmaster General... __....___..__ 351 Maritime Commission 7c 0 =. or, 429 Utz, E. J., War Relocation Authority. __._.____. 376 ‘War Shipping Administration. .________.._._. 321 Vickory, Howard F., National Housing Agency. 432 Victory, John F., National Advisory Com- Vv mitteefor Aeronautics. ... oc... oem 430 Villard, Henry S., Division of African Affairs____ 331 Valensi, Christian, French Embassy. __._.. 486 Vifias, Julia MacLean, Pan American Union.... 438 Vallarino, Alberto, Panama Embassy. .cceeeee-490 Vincent, John Carter: Vallarino, i Coordinating Committee. . a caenemew—— 330 Governing Board, Pan American Union__.__. 438 Office of Far Eastern Affairs -/ool Panama Ambassador...comeuiacaen. -. 49% Vincent, J. H., Material Division. ..eveeeeeeman-357 Indwidual Index -891 Page Vinson, Carl, Board of Visitors to the Naval Aesdemy naivenl ag Grab FH 241 Vinson, Fred M. (Secretary of the Treasury): American Red: Cross a zl oral aia 406 Blogpaphyiol coladaoe dnt fos 338 Foreign Service Buildings Commission________ 337 Foreign-Trade Zones Board. ______..___.___._._ 425 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures... i. i Library of Congress Trust Fund Board_______. 286 Member, Smithsonian Institution... .________ 441 National Archives Couneils = i ze i of i 431 National Galleryof Art. solo contin 442 National Munitions Control Board. _.________ 436 National Park Trust Fund Board ______._____.__ 376 Office of Stabilization Administrator. _________ 323 Trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library _____ 432 Vint, Thomas C., National Park Service____.___ 372 Vinton, Warren J., Federal Public Housing Authority Vitae Sano Ty RE po Bn CO Gt 435 Vipond, KennethC., Civil Service Commission. 409 Virgin, Eric de, Swedish Legation. c. -Gisamiasy 492 Vislych, Alexander G., Soviet Socialist Re- publics EmDasEY rrhinnn tnd 493 Vogliolo, Vincenzo, Italian Embassy. __.________ 488 Vogt, Walter, House postoffice.____.____.______.. 276 Volkmer, Eldon A. House post office _________._ 277 Yoorhers, Col. Tracy S., office of Secretary of et Re Mee See he 343 Vesseller, Capt. A. B., Office of Under Secretary of Navy es Se ie SRE LO de 355 Vredenburch, Jonkheer H. F. L. K. van, Nether-Inds Embassy. af ards) 489 Vullings, Leo, Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General...Vc... ... 353 Wadimoister Count Fredrik, ‘Swedish Lega-Sw Waddle, “Catherine, Administrative Office of the United: States Courts...c=. --:.. 5 Wade, Hugh J., Social Security Board._._._._____ wm Wade, Irene, Office of the Speaker:_ “o.oo. 274 Wadsworth, Eliot, American Red Cross_.._..___ 406 Wadsworth, James W., Interparliamentary Afei Dr OEE RA RRIT SE LE St Se Waeber, Lt. Comdr. F. W., Requirements Re-view. Pivision oo. ait Waggaman, Thomas E., marshal of United States Supreme CO sr io diane 451 Wagman, Frederick H., Library of Congress... 285 ‘Wagner, Robert F., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy La Se AER 240 Wahrenbrock, Howard E., Federal Power Commission A CTE ANE EAM es or ta Wailes, Edward T., Division of British Com- monwealth Affairs ______..__.____.___: 331 Wainhouse, Col. Donald W., Office of Under iy A Ee I I 343 Wait,D. J., Federal Power Commission._______ 417 Waite, Ww. E. stent Ofc, o... 0 Ca siliou 395 Waitt, Maj. "Gen. Alden H., Army Service TE ReEe Oa 346 Wakefield, Ray C., Federal Communications EE 412 Wakeland, Claude, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Ce Lr eR a ph CO Lh 382 Walcott, Frederic C., Regent, Smithsonian THSILon le. en Ye 441 Waldron, Maj. Gen. Albert W., Army Ground Pree tT An 345 Wales, Robert W., Office of Tax Legislative Counsel oo i a La aA 341 Walker, Alva B., Library of Congress.._..._.__ 285 Walker, Clarence N., National Housing Agency. 433 LE Clovis D., Agricultural Adjustment 0 Walker, Fodith, Senate Committee on Privileges and El QELIOnE. 270 Walker, Ernest P., National Zoological Park..__ 442 Walker, Frank o., trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library pram ol antl Sn LH LR UE 432 Walker, Maj. Gen. Fred, Army Service Forces__ 346 Walker Jonny L., District corporation counsel’s Page Walker, John: American Commission for Protection of Historic Monuments: 200 _.._....a0 National Galleryiof Art: cx coeivs ~oiioe Walker, Paul A., Federal Communications Commission... ah i. Jody faa” Nass Wall, Norman J., Bureau of Agricultural Lobe nomics: Si lon lm OF ME Sold Gratis 377 Wallace, Benjamin B., Tariff Commission______ 443 Wallace, Henry A. (Secretary of Commerce): Blography of... sbaan i nll hg ies 392 Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Bdueatlon. i ol it nara 421 Foreign Service Buildings Commission. ______ 337 Foreign Trade Zone Board ____._.________._ 425 Inland Waterways Corporation______________ 392 Member, Smithsonian Institution... ______.__ 441 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission..__ 239 National Archives Couneil.-.._....___._.____._. 431 National Munitions Control Board__.________ 436 323 Wallaee, Col. John, United States Soldiers’ Wallace, 7 Xdvisory Board on “Tom, Nation BERS, OB ana es BT ET LR es Wallace, Save P., Office of Secretary of the Interior. Delunagions sli v aun oie 369 Waller, Fletcher C., Office of Secretary of War___ 344 Waller, Capt. John B. W., Potomac River Naval Command: 5... tas i sa aime 364 Walling, L.. Metcalfe, Wage and Hour and Pub- lic Contracts Divisions Walsh, A. J., Procurement Division_____.___.___. 342 Walsh, David I: Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy_____ 242 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax- BEIOTE ites or re a tT 238 Joint Committee on Printing ________________ 238 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee___._ 241 Walsh, Edmund J., Bureau of Accounts 5 Walsh, J. Herbert, Agricultural Adjustment Agenc (ES po Sl a Be Bon Usd ol 390 Walsh, John D., secretary to Senator Mitchell. 273 Walsh, John w., National Mediation Board____ 436 Walsh, Lucille Ww, House folding room_________ 276 Walsh, Maj. Gen, Robert L., Inter-American Defense Board. i i ian te ben SE 426 Walsh, Thomas Gillespie, Commission on Men- WEHGIth oe oo a 462 i 334 Walters, Allyn A., Rural Electrification Ad- ministration a0 ao ir les Cait, a Wang, Ke-chin, Chinese Embassy __..__.._.._.__ Wang, Lt. Col. Ko-T'san, Chinese Embassy... iss Wann, Harry A., American Red Cross. ____.____ Wapler, Arnauld, French Embassy. __.______.. Ward, Capt. James H., Army-Navy Explosives Safety Board... oii i rar sage 408 Ward, Raymond B., District Engineer Depart-i Ware, on E., Jr., Office of International Information and Cultural Affairs... _.___... 334 Ward, Sara, Senate Committee on Post Offices and. Post Ronds. ocala bilan te 270 Ward, Truman, Majority caucus room. ________ 276 Wardwell, Aubrey St. C., District Real Estate Commission: coon etna nL 473 Warfel, Harry R., Division of Cultural Coopera- yg I es SR Le Ee Se 334 Waring, Frank A., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMMErce. ..... zi is cose oma-393 Warlick, Col. H. O., Production and Marketing Administration. vo 386 Warne, William E., Bureau of Reclamation____ 371 Warner, Dr. Edward, National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics LS AE al el al 430 Warner, K. F., Extension Service. _.._...._.____. 378 Warner, Kenneth 0., Office of Education_______ 421 Warner, Commodore Richard A., Naval Dis- DERSAPY. ta EL a a 364 Warner, Sam Bass, Copyright Office. _.___._____ 286 Warren, Charles, War Relief Control Board. __. 324 Warren, Charles, Washington National Monu- ment Society. aa aeaie ale 445 Warren, Edgar Te United States Conciliation 08 Services ir i Te a a a saben Warren, Ly L., Office of Secretary of State_. 329 892 Congressional Directory Page Warren, Lindsay C., Comptroller General _____ 284 Warren, Marjorie Ge, Senate Committee on Immigration I tot SA EE LL A 269 Washburn, Robert C., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions___.._________.__. 399 Wasserman, Jack, Board of Immigration Ap- Beale bout nian 8 No Ln las Wasserman, Jacob N., General Land Office____. 369 Wistfelt, C. A. de, Swedish Legation___________ 492 Waterman, Dr. A. T., Office of Scientific Re- search and Development i er 320 Waters, Vincent B., Office of the Second Assist- Watkins, Elise Z., District Board of Education. _ pia ‘Watson, Maj. Gen, Thomas E. , Headquarters Marine Corps... hora saab bo usa 365 Watt, Alan S., Australian Legation______._______ 481 ‘Watt, Robert: Federal Advisory Board for Vocational Edu- CAbIONS J Tr ol SE a i eek 421 National War Labor Boar Watt, Commodore R. M., Material Division... 357 Watterson, Julia, House Committee on Military LL Oe i RG WY SL re Watts, Lyle T.: Forest: Service: oo. oii otha nanan 385 National Capital Park and Planning Commis- slopes CNet Se a eS 43 Watzlavick, George E., Office of the Doorkeeper. 276 Wayne,-William, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission... .-5. imi 242 Weaver, Benjamin W., District Fire Depart- :TET EAN TS EO 475 Weaver, Frank L., Federal Power Commission. 417 Weaver, Frederick S., Office of Recorder of Dds Lee rahe Se oi binaries 464 ‘Webb, Chester A., Office of the Doorkeeper____ 276 ‘Webb, Capt. Leland D., Bureau of Aeronautics. 360 Weber, Frances J., Se Department. 365 ‘Weber, MargaretD., United States attorney’s a RE Weber, wll M., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General _______________________ 352 ‘Weber, William, Weather Bureau... _________ 395 Weber, Lt. Comdr. W. A., Maritime a Staton dl ERI CA eT 34 ‘Webster, Commodore E. M., Coast Guard_____ 366 ‘Webster, Milton P., Committee on Fair Em- ployment Practice... coi ro.Eo 0 319 Webster, R. L., Office of Information___________ 379 ‘Wechsler, Herbert, Assistant Attorney General. 348 Wenner, Jean, Office of Assistant Secretary of Wars oe aeTRU 43 Wehrly, Max S., National Capital Park 2 Planning Commission SA SRE dh a ma ‘Wei, Dr. Tao-ming, Chinese Embassy________._ Weightman, R. Hanson, Weather Bureau._____ 396 Weingartner, Werner, Swiss Legation__________ 492 Weir, Raymond J., Office of Plant and Opera- Hons. ».. til lal Sof oie Dn 379 Weir, William E., Office of Plant and Opera-FONE por aned eine son fen ba 8 ARR Ra Eh Weir, William M., Division of Research and Statigties -roorsayio~ragesea oo tocar, HE 339 Weiss, Ethel, Senate Committee on Banking aNd OWTeNeY. os. er aad 268 Weiss, Harry, Wage and Hour and Public Con-tracts Divisions ooo inhiils, alot 399 Weiss, J. H., Civil Service Commission__¢______ 409 Weitzel, Frank H., General Accounting Office. 284 Welch, a i Department of Public Welfare___. 477 Welch, Henry, Food and Drug Administration__ 422 Welch, Richard J.: Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine ACARCIMIY oie revi ani sie = aa 241 Filipino Rehabilitation Commission__.___.___ 243 Weldin, Clyde, General Accounting Office._..__ 284 Weller, ‘Capt. 0. A., Bureau of Ordnance__..__.. 362 Wells, Chester, Washington National Monu- ment-Soclely 0300 00h Lu aaa 445 Wells, Cops. Chester H., Columbia Hospital for Ww 409 Page Wells, Homer M., Soil Conservation Service.. 391 Wells, J. E., Jr., Farm Credit Administration__ 384 Wells, John L., Office of Budget and Finance__ 378 Wells, L. N. D., National Labor Relations Board ner Ee 436 Wells, P. A., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus-trial Chemistry. lini i. mild node 58 381 Weim, Col. Earl Gordon, Selective Service Sys- Woreon, William, Office of General Counsel 358 Wenchel, John P., Office of General Counsel of the Treasury ACR a Ratan ES San aE LL 339 Wendell, Edward E., Home Owners’ Loan Cor- poration. ines Slee oN raat 434 Wender, Harry S., District Recreation Board. _ 473 Wenley, Archibald G., Freer Gallery of Art. ___ 442 Wenrich, Charles C., Office of the First A Postmaster Gobet Lo ER A a Se I BIOR chestsae iN LER aes 9 Wentworth, Howard F., office of District de-partment of vehicles and traffic 475 Wentzel, Nelson B., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster General 352 Wenzel, Mary Virginia Lee, Civil Service Commission ern CUR Te SR a I ER Werner, MelvilleT., General Accounting Office. 284 Werntz, William Ww. Securities and Exchange Commission -L-c joivs as ei Aah gis Wesley, Marvin, Bureau of the Public Debt___ Wesselius, Walter, American Red Cross... ____. 406 Wessenauer, G. O., Tennessee Valley Authority 444 West, Douglas N., "District Health Department. 476 West, Vernon E.: District Corporation co2 474 Counsel...oo Public Utilities Commission..________________ 477 Westman, Elsie M., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System...‘7 18 Wesipodl, Harry C., secretary to Senator Bush-Er wri wm EE ahs eek a ECE pa 272 Westrich, Sherman, United States attorney’s office. re RNA EE ST RT 463 Wetmore, Alexander: National Advisory Committee for Aero- NOUEIES. cn dT 430 National Gallery of Art. oi. i... nov 442 National Museum... coil ui inet 441 Smithsonian Institution... oii,0 Tr 441 Wexberg, Dr. Leopold E., District Health Department... oo. ambi iE 476 Wand John T., Agricultural Adjustment Brrr ne eal tel 390 Whaley, Richard S., chief justice, Court of Claims (biography). os. ii. fC f= lea 456 Wheeler, Dan A., Solid Fuels Administration for War so ood vonfe Bh Ue 376 Wheeler, Joseph C., Office of Budget and Nance. col sh od PESaE 78 Wheeler, J. E., Capitol Police... __._____ 282 Wheeler, Katherine, House Committee on Agriculture dls. Sad iw art onrelidivdl & 277 ‘Wheeler, Leslie A.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service___ 337 Board of Foreign Service Personnel ___________ 337 Foreign Service Officers’ Training School Boar}. iE re Ea 337 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations. _____ 378 Wheeler, Lynde P., Federal Communications Commision... nan neo nr 412 ‘Wheeler, Lt. Gen. Raymond A.: Army Service Forces. . .... i. iu ieeiiinainids 346 Federal Fire Counelli.. cb. conduit ny 425 National Capital Parks and Planning Com- missions vo sa se en bd od 432 United States Soldiers’ Home. ___.___________ 442 ‘Wheeler, Raymond H., Bureau of Accounts.... 354 Whelden, Chester H., Jr., American Red Cross 407 Wherry, Kenneth S., Minority whip, Senate___ 267 Whitaker, Samuel E., judge, Court of Claims (blogrophy Yih al di i, Eos 456 ‘Whitcomb, Eben M., Tariff Commission_...._. 443 White, Alfred G., Bureau of Mines. ir 373 Individual Index Page Page Lah Capt. D. A., Bureau of Naval Person- SE mI pL A od SLL Se LE 361 White, E. D., Office of Surplus Property SR Reconversion bln Bt im AA White, Edward L., House document room White, George, Jr. Reconstruction Finance Corporation... iii oo hii wiS an. White, Harry D., Assistant Secretary of the Pronstry i ol ale ea Re Le aE White, Henry M., Federal Trade Commission. _ White, Commander H. Spottswood, Office of Assistant Secretary of Navy. ______._________ 355 Walle Joseph L., Office of Defense Transporta- tio White, ines Office of Secretary of State_____ White, M. A., Federal Trade Commission_.__.. White, Mackey W., Office of Plant and Opera-i ti ‘White, Tom D., House post office. _....__.__. 277 White, W. B., Food and Drug Administration.. 422 White, W. F., Conciliation Service.....__..._.._ 399 White, Wallace H:, Ir: Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress its ede Ra 243 Mion Bloor: Lender: i. rc ao ean 267 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. _...._______ 441 White, W. H., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quanrantine TR gh iy SA br Bn LIS 0s Sip 382 White, Wilford, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COO on heres 394 Whitehead, R. F., Patent Office... ............ 395 Whitehurst, Elmore, Administrative Office of the United States Courts... Whitehurst, Herbert C., District Engineer rt partment 474 Whitelaw, Clara, Senate Committee on Public Buildingsand Grounds... =... ....._... Whitelaw, Lt. Comdr. J. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel 361 423 Whe i Marjorie M., office of legal adviser. 330 Whiteside, Dale B., General Land Office. ______ 369 Whiteside, Garrett, Office of Secretary of Senate. Whiting, R. Combined Raw Materials BOA Gr bet es em em Sa a Whitman, Roy L., Official Reporter, House... Whitmore, A. J.: International Fisheries Commission... .___.___ International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- TREO Tooe wards 427 Whitson, Virginia, secretary to Senator Moore... 273 Whittemore, W. D., Export-Import Bank of DATELEE Er PAT) a efsn Ce ae 411 Whittington, Mrs. William M., Congressional TI ei a A SR Ce ee i SE Da 411 Whittle, Virginia Ann, Office of the Speaker._.. 274 Why. Shoo, R., District Engineer Depart-Sh Wins Claude R.: National Power Policy Committee... 375 Rural Electrification Administration. .__.__.__ 390 Wigton Aryness Joy, Bureau of Labor Statis- TBI Zo ih mmm Ab Bo ER a Bor Wiersema, Harry, Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Wigglesworth, Richard B., Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee. ________.____._... Wight, A. E., Bureau of Animal Industry.__... Wilbert, Leonard J., Social Security Board_____ 419 Wilcox, Clair: Coordinating Committee... ooo... 330 Office of International Trade Policy. .__._..._. 332 U.S. Commercial Company... ..-._-ii 416 Wilcox, Commander Robert, Coast Guard...__ 366 Wiles, Winifred, Federal Board of Hospitaliza- Wilder NIL HT MOD. renee Wilder, Col. William Ma Office of Labor wien Alexander, Board of Visitors to the Mer-chant Marine Academy... .c...ua ii Wiley, Sumner K., Federal Public Housing ry Wilkinson, Dr. Garnet C., District Board of Wilkinson, on P., House Committee on Ti state and Foreign Commerce 278 Wilkinson, Vernon, Federal Communications Commission. oa ra 412 Wilkison, Lt. Comdr. Harry, Coast Guard____. 366 Will, Capt. J. M., Bureau of Naval Personnel_. 361 Will, Ralph R., Office of Water Utilization_____ 388 Willard, Clarke L., Division of International BITTY CO ISS Cal al sh SI Et Willcox, Alanson W., Federal Security Agency. Willie, Rear Adm. Frank J., Bureau of Ships__. Willette, W. E., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration,» iu bs sed UE Willey, Harold B., deputy clerk, United States Supreme Court. il oil...ndaaa inl ae 451 Williams, A. J.: Maritime Commission. Ul 429 ic...ses War Shipping Administration__________._.__.. 321 Williams, Bonnie, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations fix on Si ei nn oe ak Williams, C. David, Reconstruction Finance Corporation... ... oc. 0s ot eh ol a assis 414 Williams, C. H., Conciliation Service ______..__ 399 Williams, C. L., Bureau of State Services___.... 429 Williams, Chester 8., Division of Public PEE Er Bee 2 Bl i I NR TL Williams, Constance, Women’s Bureau___.__.... 400 Williams, Ernest, Office of the Doorkeeper-...-275 Williams, Guy C., Of of Indian Affairs ____. 370 Williams, ee James W , District Board of Williams, Mal. Gen. John F., War Department Special SHOT Ee SR CR 0 Se 345 Williams, Lewis E., National Housing Agency... 433 Williams, Llewellyn M., Territorial Officials... 374 Williams, Mary, Senate ‘Committee on Banking and Currency SHEER SL RE Ie a 268 Williams, Lt. Col. R. A. F., British Embassy... 487 Williams, R. C., Bureau of "Medical Services... 420 Williams, Robert P., House Committee on Ap- proprighions.. oo ia Williamson, Constance, Senate Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses. 268 Williamson, Dr. Fred Y., Metropolitan Police. Williamson, H. H., Extension Service__..__.._. Williamson, Col. Raymond J., Headquarters Military District of Washington____________ 3 Williamson, William R., Social Security Board. Willingham, Harris E.: Farm Credit Administration_._..__.. _....... Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation._______. Willingham, W. A., General Accounting Office. Willis, Alene, Senate Committee on Expendi- tures in the Executive Departments _______ 269 Willis, Daniel P., Federal Security Agency._____ 418 ‘Willis, Francis E., Office of Secretary of State__ 329 wis z Boymnd E., Joint Committee on Print-oh RES EIEN AIRC ERR en. SERS Sn Fe 8 Williston, Sidney W., Office of Official Re- porters of Debates. = ic Sh salvia Willmette, Terese, Office of Official Reporters OL DEDAIOS ori ri RS eA a 79 Willoughby, John A., Federal Communications ommissiontEin Liv yoink Soy SE oS 412 Willoughby, Westel R., National Archives____ 431 Willoughby, Woodbury, Division of Commer- clal Polley... oor Sirah ri entire 333 Wills, Joseph E., Senate Press Gallery__.________ 753 Wills, Wilbur S., General Land Office. __._.__.__ 370 Wills, William Henry, Federal Communication Commission... =. 0 Shah Shan dine 412 ‘Wilson, Charles, House post office... .oooo..__ 276 Wilson, Earl B.: Commodity Credit Corporation. ____.__.__.... 389 ¥ Production and Marketing Administration... 386 Wilson, Frank J., Secret Service 340 Wilson, Frank P., National Archives. _.__...... 431 Wilson, Frank R., Bureau of the Census___._.. 393 Wilson, G. Lloyd, Office of Defense Transporta- Wilton, Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland, Combined Chiefs of Staff. oo. li 0. ...... Wilson, Gaston, Chilean Embassy _ o-oo... 3 Wilson, John, American Red Cross_.__...___._.. 407 Wilson, John’ H., District Board of Education. 472 Wilson, Lloyd vr, American Red Cross__.__.__ 406 894 Congressional Directory Page Wilson, Margaret, Senate Committee on Civil aT LR AY 268 Win, sare Senate Committee on Com-o6 i ge ne BE Eo BE RMR A ai 8 Wilson, i: C. Extension Service.....ocmvaeao.. 378 ‘Wilson, MilburnL.: Extension Serviee. . -o coo ooooioboienes Office of Marketing Services Wilson, Robert R., Division of Commercial Polloyoi si. ord inin Loo ii 333 Selaranluiti Wilson, Sarah E., Public Utilities Commission__ 477 Wilson, TT. Webber, Board of Parole _._____.__ 349 Wilson, Theodore F the TE BAY hg Bh 0 RE Cu § SAA V3 Wilson, Thomas R., Bureau of Foreign Domestic Commerce £2 SET Me Aled Ren SE (11 Wilson, W. C., Home Owners’ Loan Corpora-1 Fr Mee RE fa pS See I SL SN PDR Wiman, Cecil V., Office of the Third Assistant Postmaster Generals: Si i 0000 clini 352 Wimberly, Harrington, Federal Power Commis-Sion oo i a Bg SE EE Coin 417 Winekler, Jean-Claude, French Embassy ______ 486 Winfrey, Fred A., American Red Cross_.__.... 407 Winfrey, Loraine, Committee on Conference Majority of the'Senate. ...... ..aua..lilL 268 Wing, Lesher S., Federal Power Commission... 417 Wingate, Carl J., Office of Indian Affairs_______ 370 Winings, L. Paul, Immigration and Naturaliza- ton Seryiee 10011 Sl ol D0 tania la ois 349 ‘Winslow, Thacher, Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divislonse Xo 0 0. a a 399 Winston, Carey, District Real Estate Com-mission i armas 473 Winston, Oliver C., Federal Public Housin®s Authority aa et RE le ls el HL Winter, Thomas D., Territorial Bada Memorial Commmlasion. ooo en ir 241 Winter, Mrs. Willie S., House Committee on CivilService. Loo oo i UT 277 Winters, George H., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Winters, Rhett Y., Agricultural Research Ad-Tans oN. ee tt ie re SE mee ah 380 rat Wirtz, W. Willard, National War Labor Board... 400 Wise, 'Arthur ey District examiner and life in- surance actuary. rt a Te Sr 476 Parks, SihEb Tie ba Ss Sr ta Sea be 376 Wistrand, Tor Hugo, Swedish Legation________ 492 Witman, 'E. R., Public Buildings Administra HI Ee The Sn tas i BT Ra UR FR aa 424 Witsell, Maj. Gen. Edward F.: Army Service-Porees. o.oo i. alii man 346 United States Soldiers’ Home_____._._________ 442 Witt, Edgar E., American-Mexican Claims Commission. oo wes UF Liebe 0 | Sik) 337 Witte, Edwin, National War Labor Board. ____ 400 < Wixcey Col. Earl B., Special Staff, War De-partment... o.ooChad al 344 Sah Wixon, Henry E., Goipiiation Counsel’s Office. 474 Woehlke, ‘Walter v, Office of Indian Affairs.__ 370 Wolcott, C. L., Patont Office. onl. iin 395 Wold, Ansel, Joint Committee on Printing, HT EN Ee Re Ym 238 Wolfe, Cassie L., General Accounting Office_.._ 284 Wolfe, Virginia M. , National Archives_____.___ 431 Wolfsohn, Joel David: General Lang Office. oon Saati. 369 National Power Policy Committee. ..__._.___ 375 Woll, Matthew: ¢ National War Board...__..... 400 Labor .... Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 241 Wood, Arthur D., Board of Parole. __.._____.__ 349 Wood, Charles, secretary to Senator Gossett.___ 272 Wood, C. Tyler, Office of Secretary of State____ 329 Wood, N. O., Jr., Solid Fuels Administration AR NE TR CL SB CIS | [1 376 Wood, Brig. Gen. R. E., Goethals Moma Commission RATE LR Xia Me aR ie Ter eo] Wood, Will S., Bureau of Narcotics...___._____. 7H Woodbury, Coleman, National Housing Agency. 432 Wooden, Walter B. , Federal Trade Commission. 423 Woodfill, Web, Federal Trade Commission... 423 Page Woodhouse, Chase Going, Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy. ______________. 241 Woodmansee, Glen D., Civil Aeronautics Ad- ministration... oo .coulac ono an Sede non IF 396 Woodruff, Clarence A., Civilian Production Administration. cou oo iE. Seto saan Joa 19 Woodruff, Marion T., Smaller War Plants Cor- oration Sana hed Eps Sl BLE LL ra EE ey 25 Woodruff, Roy O., National Forest Reservation Commission FREE Co ROR AR NS 239 Woodruff, W. W., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 ‘Woceds, Albert Ww, House Committee on Public Buildingsiand Gronmnds. ou _. lL ciaoof 278 Woods, Dena, Senate Committee on Agriculture and Borestry sn. oon) ancy 268 oitesod =u Woods, Mary E., Social Security Board.________ 419 Woodside, Byron D., Securities and Exchange COMMASEION. oo oor nr easeSales 439 Woodside, Robert G., American Battle Monu- ments: Commission. lL landd C0 00 LY 405 ‘Woodson, Joseph A., Bureau of Accounts_______ 341 Woodward, Cliff, Farm Credit Administration. 384 Woodward, Ellen S., Social Security Board__.__ 419 Woodward, H. 5. Union of South Africa Lega- 7110 PEsTear aRsr CR ke i ie ose 493 Woodward, Marion, Federal Communications COMMISSION ais Shem Lob deid os BE aa Sas 412 Woodward, Stanley, Division of Protocol ______ 336 Woodworth, Li. N., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxatio oo apm mio of A RAPE 238 Woody, ArthurE., Tarif Commission. 2. ____: 443 Wooford, Milton, Office of the Doorkeeper._____. 276 Woofter, ‘Thomas 7J., Federal Security Agency... 418 Woolard, Logan L., District Fire Department... 475 ‘Woolf, Ww. H., Bureau of Internal Revenue... 342 Wooten, Herbert L., Federal Public Housing Authority Pi neues sett oS Rains SU Y 435 Worden, Floyd, official Reporterof Debates_____ 271 Workmaster, William E., Office of Secretary of TY Thre pr ee Rel ol Se Bs dS 398 Works, ore A., United States Employment Service Soi li oe iri 401 Wrather, William Embry, Geological Survey__._ 371 Wray, Louise, .__.__'.___... 471 Assessor’sOffice.. 1 Wright, Dorothy, Senate Committee on Agri- culture end Forestryc. . 0 oo + 268 Wright, Douglas G., ey sihorn Power Adminis- 3 Wright, Col. E. K., Veterans’ Administration___ 445 Wright, Frank C., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. 3 eT ere 413 Wright, Fred E., National Academy of Sciences. 430 Wright, Henry H, Chief Clerk, Government Printing JCS as eB as Ee Tr 287 Wright, J. Carl, Federal Crop Insurance Cor- porationss uo ial Ss i 389 Wright, James H., Office of Secretary of State____ 329 Wright, John C., Office of Edneation. ii. il 420 Wrshh Kenney P., District deputy ng Wright Michael, British Embassy... _______. 486 Wright, Dr. Orville: N: ational Advisory Committee for Aero-ben GREE RRB ES Tam SRR CL RE 430 National Inventors Couneil___________________ 396 Wright, PrestonL., National Housing Agency... 433 Wright, Gen. Raymond R., Paymaster Depart- RR RNS RN Ga A Kanon a Aen Se We Se 365 Wright, Dr. Theodore P.: Civil Aeronautics Administration Phi la 396 National Advisory Committee for Aero- nagties cont Ss SE Re ol 430 Wright, Willard H., National Institute of Healt 420 ices Wright, W T,Jr., Office of the Surgeon General. 419 Wrong, Hume, Joint War Production Com- Mdthee soul at unis irons pm ae ae 326 Wurts, Col.John W., Army Ground Forces___._ 345 Wyatt, Walter, Board of Governors of the Fed- eral ReserveSystem. oo 418 o.oo.uo) Wyckoft, J. B., Production and Marketing ad ministration I a Re es Individual Index Page Page Wydra, Miriam, House Committee on Immi-gration and Naturalization__________________ 278 Wyeth, Nathan C., District Engineer Depart ment Wyman, Henry C., Office of the First CRE Ta Postmaster General... __ 351 Wyman, John M., Federal Home Loan Bank BVSlem es i Drea h oe Bo ea 434 ORCS Spa ee Se a 345 Wythe, George, Bureau of Foreign and Domes-HeCommenee.r wr ll soon ta Sui ary 39 X Ranier, William A., District Engineer Depart-475 Ary, George, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. ___ _________ Y Yaden, James G., Civil Service Commission_.___ 409 Yardley, Edward, Committee for Reciprocity Information. Jo. nl woos 410 Yates, Frank L., General Accounting Office.___ 284 Yates, Lloyd D, Division of Foreign Activity Cortolations or 336 Yazici, Biilent, Turkish Embassy_____._._._____.. 493 Yeager, Capt. H. A., Bureau of Naval Per- CTI EA LO ae Ma Pe TE Lee Sa 362 Yeagley, John D., Office of Inter-American er AE NS ye Yekta, Abdol-Ahad, Iran Legation. ____________ 488 Yellowlees, Ruth E. Senate Committee on Manufactures se a on Bd A A LAR 269 Yingling, Raymund T., Office of legal adviser___ 330 Yntema, Hessel E., Committee on Practice... 342 Yohalem, Morton E, Securities and Exchange Commission... oaar et 440 Young, Arthur E., National Archives IRAE SRR 430 Young, Brig. Gen. "Gordon R District Engineer Commissioner NE Set 472 District Zoning Commission... _..__._.____: 430 National Capital Parks and Planning Com- HES ERA Ta ae be eR Tle Se DE Public Utilities Commission. __________.____. 477 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. 0 0.0 240 ............0.. Young, Charles H., Tennessee Valley Authority. 444 Young, Harold H., Office of Secretary of Com-IACLCE = at lt Sin a in small i Sor SL 392 Young, James W., Indian Arts and Crafts Boards nh ah ae a aT 37 Young, John Parke, Division of Foreign Eco-nomic Development. ..... occurmmm nien 333 mama Young, John Russell: Civilian Defense... las nL ol acoso 477 District Commissioner... onincnc once 471 District Unemployment Compensation Board. 473 District Zoning: Commission... ......c.aein. 472 National Capital Housing Authority. _...... 432 National Memorial Stadium Commission.... 243 Young, John Russell—Continued. Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... _.__.__._..__._._ 240 Young, P. B., Howard University... .__..._. 423 Young, Brig. Gen. Robert N:., Headquarters Military District of Washington ______._._ 346 Young, Samuel R., Office of Postmaster General 351 Young, Walker R., Bureau of Reclamation______ 71 Young, William A., House Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments.__ 278 Young, Col. William C., Army-Navy Ex- plosives SafetyyBoard _-....__ oi... _.. 408 Yriat, Juan Felipe, Uruguayan Embassy. ______.. 493 Yturralde, Mariano de, Spanish Embassy... 492 Yu, Kien-wen, Chinese Embassy. __ coo... 483 Yu, Tso-min, Chinese Embassy____________.... 483 Z Zabala, Romulo M., Argentine Embassy ________ 481 Zadeikis, Povilas, Lithuanian Minister. ________ 489 Zafa, Dr. Urbano, Filipino Rehabilitation Com- HUSSION. Lo ohn ands ie ad te al ie Zahm, Albert F., Reference Department, Iibrary of Congress: -.. il... =. 0. Ua 286 Zaldo, Lt. Col. D. E. M. Raul de, Mexican I DEY. ce is SE le wi Bam mm 489 Zannelli, Augustus, General Land Office. __._.__ 369 Zebley,J. S., District Engineer Department____-475 Zeder, Fred, National Investors Council ._______ 396 Zevon, 2 oseph A., Office of Contract Settle-: IT8121 11 hve AS es SE Sa TOLL Te ER 22 IE "iia A., Defense Homes Corpora- HOT aie er i te Zileri, Manlio A., Argentine Embassy_________. 481 Zimmer, Verne A., Division of Labor Standards. 399 Zimmerli, O. A., Forest Service. ______..________ 38 Zimmerman, Capt. A. G., Bureau of Ord- DRIER. al of a a UTES 362 Zimmerman, C.J., Office of Savings Bonds______ 359 Zimmerman, Gordon K., Soil Conservation OE OO i iin we mm i sm 391 Zimmerman, Mrs. Orville, Congressional Club. 411 Zimmerman, Ralph E., Federal Deposit Insur- ance. Corporation. Sr: aus Train i 413 Zimmerman, Raymond R.: Administrative assistant to the President ____ 318 Liaison Office for Personal Management______. 318 Zimmerman, William, Jr., Office of Indian ARIE. oo re a A NS 370 Zoltowski, Janusz, Polish Embassy __.___.______ 491 Zoole, Capt. Ephraim, Coast Guard _._____.__.___ 366 Zore, Dr. Slavko, Yugoslavian Embassy. ______ 494 Zubiaurre, Carlos Macchi, Argentine Embassy. 481 Zuckert, E. M., Surplus Property Administra- 323 Zunino, Capt. Frank A., Bureau of Aeronautics. oe Zurayk, Dr. Costi K., Syrian Tegation. i... Zwemer, Raymund L.: Division of Cultural Cooperation a he as 334 Interdepartmental Committee on Cultural and Scientific Cooperation ___.______________ 334 Office of International Information and Cul-tara Aas erae a ee 334 Zychlinski, Louis Y. de, Office of the Bonnin Assistant Postmaster General _____________ &