Evening Star Newspaper, November 16, 1935, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CHESTERWMARTIN S HEART VICTIM Retired Member of Consular " Service Stricken in Vir- ginia Home. Chester W. Martin,’ 82, a member of the consular service for many years, died last night at his home, 4370 Lee Highway, Arlington County, Va. * He was stricken with a ‘heart attack while reading. Mr. Martin’s last post was at| Toronto, where he served from 1915 to 1925. He was consul at Amherst- burg, Ontario, from 1897 to 1906, at Martinique from 1906 to 1908 and at Barbados from 1908 to 1915. A native of Coldwater, Mich.,, Mr. Martin was educated in the public | schools. For a while he was engaged | in the export business in New York. Subsequently he returned to Michi- | gan and was register of deeds of | Gratiot County four years. He was & member of the Michigan State Benate in 1895-6. Mr. Martin had lived in nearby Virginia since retiring from the con- sular service.’ He was a member of the Foreign Service Association. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Ida Jessie Martin; a daughter, Mrs. Maud Jones of the Virginia address, and a son. Chester W. Martin, jr., of Chicago. He also leaves two grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Private funeral services will be held Monday at the home. i Chest (Cnmmufid From First Page) gifts for a total of $39,020.00, making 303 gifts for a total of $295.361.00 or 81.50 per cent of the unit's quota. Bernard Wyckoff, chairmaa of the Metropolitan Unit, introduced. Corco- ran Thom, jr., who made the report for that unit, which yesterday turned in 1,250 contributions for a monetary value of $18,070.02. total to date to 5914 contributors who had given $102,985.16 or 44.77 per ceat of the unit’s quota. The Capital Unit, headed by Col. West A. Hamilton, yesterday reported 151 gifts amounting to $949.53, making the unit's’ total to date 409 contribu- tions amounting to $2,811.32 or 28.39 per cent of the unit's quota. “Give a loaf of bread & day” is the elogan adopted by the employes of the Corby Baking Co. in the Chest campaign, ‘and it "is bearing fruit, according to Malcolm Sharpe, section chief in charge of the territory in which the company is located. ““The Corby Baking Co. is an out- standing example of the co-operation and- help being- accorded Chest workers by Washington business houses,” Sharpe said. The employes have been organized by James B. Luttes, general manager, George Braund, sales manager, Donald Bal- linger, production ‘manager, and Michael Kain, chief clerk. Luttes is keyman and the others are assistants. . “Speeches at any hour, speeches at 8ll hours,” is the slogan of the Speak- ers’ Bureay of the Chest this year. Engagements all over the city have been filled as early as 7 am., by ex- tremely busy business and professional men and women, including the clergy | some of | and members of the bar, whom have been so enthusiastic that they have reached their destinations before any_ one had arrived to let them in. The earliest appointment to be filled was a meeting at 2 am, at one of the hight clubs. g Many of these prominent men and women have abandoned their office duties and let their secretaries take complete charge of the most impor- tant matters, yet report frequently fo Mrs. Leonard B: Schioss, chairman of the Speakers' Bureau, “just in case an emergency has arisen and you need a speaker.” - Short notice means nothing to the capable and energetic women in the | bureau. A hurry call for a speaker to appear in half an hour several miles {rom the business center of Washing- ton.was filled in 15 minutes. The type of audience, too, is widely varied. From charwomen to college alumnae, from street sweepers to philosophic societies, all have just the right appeal made to them, because the speakers are .well qualified to sense the psychology of their hearers. In the field covered by the “viso- matic” machine, the new picture- sound device showing activities of the various agencies in the Chest, ‘the same thing holds true. If machines are available, and there are eight in service at all times, one is sent, and one clergyman is so enthusiastic over his part in the campaign that he is devoting his entire time to taking the machine and an operator to the private &chools in his parish and speaking for the Chest. > Radio, too, has not been forgotten. fipeakers are giving their time to send- dng messages out in the air. These #ppointments, too, are filled from early in the morning until late at aight. > 2 Promising a “new twist and turn” on the subject of Community Chest, Representative Virginia Jenckes of In- @ana will speak over Station WMAL This brings this smiling. Bobbie, the tiger, is 3 years 15th birthday anniversary. Jenckes is a member of the House District Committee. Gifts of $6,000 Lead. Gifts of $100 or more reported yes- terday were as follows: $6,000, the Hecht Co. and S. Kann Sons Co. $4,500, Lansburgh & Bro.. Inc. $4,000, Victor Kauffmann. $2,000, Mr. and Mrs. Christian Heu- rich. $1,770, National Bank of Washing- ton. $1,750, B. F. Saul Co. | $1,500, Mr. and Mis. Joseph P.! Tumulty. | $1200. Coleman Jennings, Golden-! | berg's department store and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Houghton. $800, Hotel Washington. $675, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Himmelfarb. | $550, Mrs. B. F. Saul. $500, A. C. Moses. $400, John Saul and Columbia Ty- pographical Union, No. 101. $325—Twentieth Century Club. $300, Lady Lindsay, Dr. and Mrs. | Robert Olesen, Fidelity Building & | Losr Association, John B. Nichols, | Prreman’s Insurance Co., James M. | Green, Dr. Thomas L. Rust and Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Myer. $250, Mrs. H. A. Sellhausen, Hugh Reilly Co., and Guy Curran & Co. | | $240, Dr. Leo S. Rowe and Mr. and | Mrs. George Hyman. In $200 Group. $200, the Stockett-Fiske Co., Inc.; A. H. Baker & Co,, Inc.; Mr. and Mrs. |H. G. Smithy, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. | Hubbell, Maj. H. G. Pratt, Gustave Ring, Harry E. Mayer, Continental Life Insurance Co., Mrs. Malcolm 8. McConihe and Mr. and Mrs. Walter | M. Gilbert. $180, Mrs. Lester Buchanan. $175, Marcyl Sperry. $160, Dr. and Mrs. Chester D. Swope. ! $150, Miss Margaret R. Fox, Mr. and | | Mrs. John Lewis Smith, Charles F.| Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nathan, | Mrs. William F. Ham, Rear Admiral | | and Mrs. Spencer S. Wood, Miss Agnes | | A. Saul. Miss Mary C. Saul, Mr. and | Mrs. A. L. Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam B. Wolf, F. M. McClelland, and | Dr. R. L. Spire. | 8135, Col. and Mrs. Spencer Cosby | and Mrs. Emma S. Owen. $125, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Brownell. | 120, Mrs. J. H. Davis, E. J. Mc- {vann, Raymond Morse, Reginald | | Quarles, General Conference of Sev- enth Day Adventists, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Libby, Henry C. Hall, A. Guerin, Dr. and Mrs. Abram Simon, and Mr. and Mrs. William G. Tlich. | $110, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. | McReynolds. Contributors of $100. $100, Dr. W. Sinclair Bowen, Dr. | H. F. Kane, Mr. and Mrs. A F.| | Cleveland, Albert Sigmund, Mrs. Aldis | B. Browne, Mrs. Thena E. Altemus, | | C. M. Greiner, Mrs. Birne T. West, | Edward E. Norwood, Long St. Lewis | & Nyce, R. G. Swing, L. F. Randolf, Henry W. Sohon, Mr. and Mrs. Parker Jones, John A. Selby, Kelly Miller, Soroptimist Club, Sisters of Charity- St. Roses Technical School, Dr. James G. Cumming, ,Whaley Eaton Corp., | Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Callahan, jr.; | Commercial Office Furniture Co., | Howard & Hoffman, Richard G. Park, jr.; Dome Oil Co., Inc.; Henry Wahl, Morton J. Luchs, Mr. and Mrs. John V. Hanson, Houston R. Harper, Mr. and Mrs. George F. Zook, August G. Gutheim, Mrs. Mabel H. Simon, Mr. and Mrs. David H. Solomon, Joseph A. Wilner, Wilson B. Nairn, Mrs. C. Francis Jenkins, Mrs. Howell Moor- head, Miss Elizabeth E. Bryan, Brodie 8. Colbert, Inc.; Louis Levay, Frazee- Potomac Laundry, Mrs. John T. Schaaff, Mrs. H. P. Kingsbury, Mr. and Mrs. Hedley V. Cooke, Bethlehem Chapter, No. 7; J. Marvin Haynes, George F. Muth & Co., Oscar D. Allen, ‘Leaman & Martyn, W. W. Bailey, Moultrie Hitt, James E. Rosenthal, 8. tomorrow at 3:45 p.m. Representative E. Bonneville and H. M. Kaufman. - Chest Dollars in Action in Bank—Is Now _ We all know that a bank is the Pla¥e to gé to procure money, but few of us think of it as a place in whith to find love. "Irene, however, found a love that is more precious than money in just such a prosaic Pplace. Y ~iHer ‘mother had been dead for several years when she entered St. Rode’s Technical School, 1878 Phelps Pplace. At first all was strange to her @hd” she had difficulty in adjusting herself to the new conditions. Béing a studious girl she took a ‘ead interest in her classes and was often a little rebellious at being taken Zrom her books and. sent to the bank on errands for the school. .Sl pursuing her studies, and ArDIng. to . keep house ‘in the way , hag brought such credit to all young graduates of St. Rose’s that into homes, of their own, Irene little ht that these resented visits to the, bank were going to play an im- portant part in her future. On graduation, by one of the #tréfige coincidences that play such e -great part in human life, she was iven a position in the -very. bal which she had been so often seni and, while working there, met the ,Stytfent at St. Rose’s Technical School Gets Position Happily Married. young man to whom she is now mar- ried. He is rapidly climbing the ladder of success, and has given Irene a beautiful home in one of the best residential sections of Washington. Although she now has a maid, Irene has never forgotten the domestic les- sons learned at the school, and she and her young husband often come back to visit the sisters, on which occasions he never fails to tell how much he and his wife owe to this in- stitution, one which was enabled to keep on its good work only because th{ué:ds provided by the Community es! M. | National Zoological Park, NG _STAR, WASHINGTON, A Daring Young Lady Laura Roth, 18 years old, pits her 135 pounds against the mauling tactics of a 450-pound Bengal tiger in a friendly bout. A gentle pat from the huge beast is enough to knock her down, but Laura always comes up old and was given to Laura by her father, Louis Roth, noted animal trainer of Thousand Oaks, Calif., on her —Wide World Photo. Pan American Union. William V. Griffin Post Office. J. Austin Latimer. Bureau of Accounts, W. L. Slatte First Assistant Postmaster General, Vin- cent C. Burke Second Assistant Postmaster General, Jesse M. Donaldson Third Assistant Postmaster General, Roy M. North Fourth Assistant Postmaster F. J. Buckley ___. Office of Chief Clerk, A. T. Davis. Office of Chief of Inspection, Gartland Office of Postmaster General, William J. Bray | Office of Parkman Office of Solicitor, Karl A. Crowley.. Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Max O'Roll Truitt Agency Division, R. A. Brownell Auditing Division, R. J. Lindquist. Board of Directors, John H. Tanner... Examining Division, Richard Rossman.. Information and Personnel Division, Peter Ward Legal Division. John A. Gosnell Office of Secretary, Alexander B. Galt. Office of Mr. Talley, Samuel H. Sabin.. Office of Treasurer, D. B. Griffin.. Railroad Division, J W. Barriger, 3d. Self-Liquid Drainage, Irrigation and Mining, Emil Schram Statistics and Economic Division, David C. Elliott Rural Electrification Administration. Perry R. Taylor. Securities and Exchange Commission. John R. Sheehan.... Offices of the Commissioners, Eleanor Townsend Registration Division, Emily Whalen Trading and Exchange Division, Alta Smith Legal Division, John D. Farnham. Administrative Division and Personnel, Justin A. ShoOK...ccceeee-. eecenans - Smithsonian Institution. H W. National Museum and National Gallery of Art, H. S. Bryant __. General, J. ent, International Exchanges, F. E. Gass__ Freer Gallery of Art, Eleanor Thompson. Smithsonian Buildings and Astrophysical Observatory, J. U. Perkins...eeeeee-.. Social Security Board. Gov. John G. Winant. State Department. Wilbur J. Carr. Tennessee Valley Authority. George O. Gillingham. Third Division Railway Mail Service. John W. JOhNsSON.-ceeeeeee-- e Treasury. Secretary of the Treasury. Mrs. G. E. Forbush_ ... cecccmcccccee Chief Clerk and Supt. Office. S. H Marks. .., -coeoene s e Chief Clerk and Superintendent Divisicn No. 1, Ethel M. Waite Chief Clerk and Superintendent Division No. 2, Francis de 8. Ryan....... Chief Clerk and Superintendent Division No. 3, John T. Burns. Commissioner of Accounts and Deposi W. T. Heffelfinger...--.--. S e Com. Accts. and Deposits (Treas Bldg.), W. T. Heffelfinger Com. of Accourfts and Deposits (Walker- Johnson Bldg.), Fred McNamara.. Division of Disbursement, G. F. All Division of Deposits, E. D. Batchelder... Appointment Division. J. E. Harper, Catherine Flanagan ...« U. 8. Coast Guard. Rear Admiral Harry Hamlet..eoeceea-e Controller of the Currency. Division No. 3, W. P. Folger. Bureau of Customs. James H. MOYle «cccaccccmmennnn Administrative Division, Garrett Lange.. Legal Division, Arthur J. Edwards..... Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Alvin W. Hall _....... Accounting, Adam P. Ruth.. Personnel, May Beckmyer. Order, Laura V. Eckels.... Purchase, Storage and Issue, C. R. Mail and Files, Georgy E. Hudson Federal Reserve Vault, James J. Knibbs Plate Vault. R. L. Pile....-. Press Register, O. P. Anderson. Garage, James E. Chamberlin.... Ink Making, Norman Underwood.. Postage Stamp, John M. Smith.. Engineering and Machine, R. H. Chappell Engraving, Joachim C. Benaing--.----- Surface Printing, George M. Duncan.... LINE TO ABANDON SHIP JACKSONVILLE, Fla., November 16 (#).—The Bull Steamship Line served notice on U. 8. Army engineers here yesterday that the freighter Elizabeth, which went aground off Miami Beach during the November 4 hurricane, will be abandoned. Her back broken, the Elizabeth is a total wreck. She was built in 1919, a334-ton vessel, and was operated by the Bull Line out of New York. Plate Printing, Thomas J. Heany Examining, R. B. O'Hara.. Buildings and Grounds, James horn General Counsel and Legal. Herman Oliphant and C. T. Ellis.ccc..c Bureau of Internal Revenue. ¥ Guy T. Helvering and J. L. McGrew.. Income Tax Unit, Charles T. Russell.... Accounts and Collections Unit, Donald W.P. A. PROJECTS VALUE IS UPHELD Taxpayers Will Get Good Return on Billions, Says Observer. This is the fAfth of a series of articles analyzing the economic and political eflects, the probable developments and early snags of President Roosevelt's $4,000,000,000 job program. BY BLAIR MOODY. CHICAGO, November 13 (N.AN.A). ‘nce the money some day will have to be paid back to those from whom it is b-ing borrowed, perhaps the most pertinent question about the vast re- lief-to-job program now under way is: ‘What are the .xpayers going to get fc. their $4,000,000,000? The cost will be a° least double what | it wo.l” cost to feed, house and clothe an equal number of persons by direct relief for the same period. In the first 10 months of 1935 Uncle Sam handed ¢ in dole $1,261,000,000, a figure that could be expected to fall in 1936 if business continues to go forward. Then why appropriate $4,023,000,000 for synthetic jobs when less than $2,000,000,000 would handle the prob- lein? Is the other $2,000,000,000 going to t poured “down the sewer,” good money after bad, by & lot of super- D. C, SATURDAY, spenders who don't know when to stop? Is the President’s program, particu- larly the W. P. A, just a lot of leaf- raking and boondoggling anyhow, with the taxpayers holding the bag? Johnson's Attitude. Critics of the program, and not alone Republican critics, would have you be- ! ve this is the case. What's more, & person no harder to hear than Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, former W. P. A. administrator for New York City, says that this business of “saving the morale” of unemployed workers by giving tnem jobs instead of dole is strictly the bunk. But, in the next breath, Johnson will defend the work undertaken by his W. P. A. in New York as “damn good projects.” If, in his travels around the country, he stops to in- spect, W. P. A. elsewhere, he will find in some places even better projects. The fact is that the $4,000,000,000 is not being “wasted.” It is going, by and large, into first-class public im- provements, many of which have been in contemplation for years by cities and counties that did not know where to find the money for them. No one would have the temerity to contend that all the projects are good, or"that W. P. A. is operating | “efficiently,” from the standpoint of | getting a dollar’s worth of value for every dollar spent. The world’s easiest job, at the moment, is to sit down and pick flaws in the W. P. A, There are evidences everywhere of delays, confusion, crossed wires, shovel- leaning. Planning Remarkable. But, taken again by and large, survey of the Eastern half of the country shows State progress admin- istrators have done a remarkable job of planning. In every State the in- NOVEMBER 16, 1935. variable boast of the administrator is: “Look at the huge batch of projects I sent to Washington, and— he always adds—*good ones, too!” Considering that the prime purpose of the program is to clear relief rolls, which makes it necessary to fit proj- ects to workmen rather than hire workmen for projects, the variety and ingenuity of the jobs speak well for hundreds of engineers who have been “laying the groundwork.” The number of school houses, from one room up, that will be rehabili- tated, school books rebound, com- forters and mattresses made and other jobs reaching right down into “family America” that will be done under W. P. A. cannot fail to drive home to many taxpayers that, after all, they are geiting something substantial for their money. 5 In the rural areas the bulk of W. P. A. money will go on farm-to-market roads, a practical aid to the “isolated” agrarian citizen. The backbone of the program in citles is on the streets and in the parks and playgrounds. Paving, grad- ing and landscaping projects provide a maximum of direct labor with a minimum of material cost. Buildings are having their “faces lifted,” leaky water mains and creaky sewers are being repaired. The wealth of munic- ipal America is being preserved and augmented. Most of the casual criticism of the program not related to spending cen- ters around “loafing on the job." There is no doubt that the gentle- man who proposed a “preject” to make steel-shafted shovels, so the splinters of wooden ones would not pierce the sides of too-heavy leaners, thus laying the Government open tc compensa- tion damages, had ground for his bright idea. A small minority pouts because it 23 A—13 must “work for dole.” A somewhat larger minority “takes it easy,” if the foreman is not looking. But a large | majority of the workmen seem glad to have the jobs and anxious to do| their best. Silk-stocking critics of shovel-lean- ers often forget, if they ever knew, that uninterrupted handling of a pick, or wheeling a barrow full of dirt,| wearies the back, particularly a back softened by enforced idleness. But a fortnight's inspection of all sorts of jobs in all sorts of communi- ties left this reporter with the im- pression that the work was being done about as well as work is done in any Government white collar office and many private business offices. Not, assuredly, so well as it could be done by a driving contractor, but much more efficlently than you would meas- ure by selecting a specific loafer and timing his lack of activity. = Reward for Real Job. For the “security wage,” to most of those drawing it, is the reward for a real job, the first job many have had in years. It is not the same as under the old “work-relief” set-up, when some one with a tape measure at relief headquarters decided how | much your family needed to keep Ink Stops Jail Breakers. | alive, and then let you work just long | | | GREAT FALLS. Mont. (#) —Sherift | enough to earn it Guy Palagi quickly learned who of | On W.P. A, the workers themselves | nis' 62 prisoners were sawing bars in | point out, there is distinction made on | the night. He threw a bottle of 10k | the basis of ability. If you are trained gt the window where filing could ve [Runcanminte e s much. it 15| heard and removed ink-smeared John ;tf";!-]egutyn‘:‘);:‘::&fg:r‘in:{emm' | Tetter and Don Cullen, alleged bur- ral o v - | ¢ e 5 Ber- ot hotrs ‘each vieek Insteatiatin |0 o ooe e ol THTOE SRR “split shift,” and on pay day you can | ‘:::)‘égr;w;?:e: pay check instead of & | ot glorified “clean-up, paint-up and - o . |pave-up” program. And it means W. P. A. and its fellow job-making | «chins.up” as well in many an Amer- agencies, under the $4,000,000,000 pro- | yoan nome. gram, are putting on the country's' i Rain Forces Delay In Indian Spring Charity Exhibition Course Made Unsafe by Bad Weather—Event Slated November 24. By a 8taff Cortespondent of The Star. FOUR CORNERS, Md, November 16.—The Indian Springs Charity Horse Show, scheduled to be held here today, has been postponed until Sun« day, November 24, because of inclem- | ent weather. Rainfall this week left the course in a muddy condition and members of the committee adjudged it unsafe for use. Proceeds from the show are to go to purchase food and clothing for needy school children of Montgomery County. . (Copyright. 1935.) % of Quota No. Amount Pledged. Pledged. Quota. $403.00 $895.00 55.08 Josephine Roche and Frank Birgfeld.... 10,004 52 230 1,008 21 1717 582 11,474.73 247.50 1,225.08 2,136.15 3,093.73 2,713.61 498.09 835.57 225.00 119.00 381.00 8,285.74 858.00 303.50 357.00 509.00 368.00 1,802.54 851.15 180.00 1,704.05 280.00 132.50 240.00 1,748.90 3,616.00 321.00 1,204.50 455.50 884.50 750.50 989.98 452.98 15.00 85.00 212.00 224.00 448.00 9,205.80 92.00 263.50 68,098.59 820.50 904.30 421.00 431.30 52.00 3,218.17 508.60 913.67 1,789.90 66.00 171.00 1,136.60 2,419.50 1,284.00 172.50 963.00 501.05 336.15 164.90 17,909.35 857.00 189.50 116.00 24.00 40.00 56.00 62.00 100.00 13.00 45.00 38.00 1,102.00 1,138.00 5,341.30 6,066.65 2,410.50 310.40 §73.25 20,117.03 10,882.28 12225 2,884.40 2,740.60 11,013.00 104.19 278.00 89.02 1,180.00 103.82 1,940.00 110.11 2,685.00 115.22 2,588.00 104.85 497.00 100.21 675.00 123.78 51900 4335 119.00 100.00 532.00 71.61 14770.00 56.09 1,058.00 81.09 798.00 38.03 1,526.00 23.39 2,880.00 17.67 253.79 74.88 70.56 48.64 70.70 81.15 145.00 2,407.00 1,348.00 370.00 2,410.00 345.00 1,188.00 6185 205.00 8135 905.00 193.24 6,420.00 56.24 36.68 54.50 875.00 2,210.00 68.49 78.27 665.00 1,130.00 744.00 100.87 3,187.00 31.06 1,172.00 208.00 98.00 245.00 38.65 7.21 81.75 66.53 1,279.00 17.51 241.00 185.89 15,635.00 58.87 169.00 54.43 1,347.00 19.56 110,735.00 61.49 1,525.00 53.80 1,301.00 69.50 45800 91.92 748.00 57.66 95.00 5473 5,979.00 54.82 430.00 118.27 954.00 95.77 3,954.00 45.26 65.00 101.53 125.00 136.80 1925.00 59.04 56.53 50.17 28.04 817.07 4,280.00 2,559.00 615.00 1,106.00 29.50 41.19 18.65 1,700.00 816.00 884.00 20,410.00 87.74 535.00 160.18 112.00 169.19 78.00 148.71 113.00 21.23 31,00 129.03 56.00 100.00 45.00 137.77 130.00 76.92 79.00 16.45 161.00 27.95 797.00 4.76 1,546.00 71.28 1,516.00 75.06 4,947.00 107.97 6,385.00 88.11 2,685.00 89.77 696.00 44.59 975.00 58.79 32,374.00 16,398.00 9300 1541 2,853.00 101.10 4263.00 6438 62.13 66.36 COMMUNITY CHEST (Continued From Twelfth Page.) Personnel Division, J. E. Lynch. % of Quota. Quota $625.00 67.52 957.00 76.85 No. Amount Pledged. Pledged. 52 $422.00 No. Amount Pledged. Plecged. Quota. Army Medical Center, Chaplain F. L. Miller 38 $335.50 $1,000.00 3355 Administrative Division, Joe N. M im 96 735.50 Office of Assistant General Counsei, John ‘W Burrus Alcohol Tax Unit, Edward L. Springer.. Bureau of the Mint. Nellie Tayloe ROSS.-ccceeemcecemmanen-, - Bureau of Narcotics. H. J. Anslinger and L. B. Snowden....... Division of Printing. L. C. Spangler and A. B. Butrick... Procurement Division. Rear Admiral C. J. Peoples Office Management, John H. Schaefer.. Mechanical and Electrical Engineeriig, Structural Engineering Section, John W. Dunham Legal Division, Willlam K. Laws. Executive Division, Fred P. Trott. Section of Space Control, J. Y. Drei- sonstok . Architectural Division No. Arthur L. Blakeslee_. Accounting Section, Howard S. Robinson Architectural Division, R. Q. Evans__.__ Architectural Division No. 4, Dove McKee Architectural Division No. 1, Supervising Engineer's Section, Lillian M. Amick. Branch of Supply, John B. Whitman. Public Debt Service. William S. Broughton and Edwin L. Kilby Office of the Commissioner of Public Debt, Sara O. C. Doolittle. Office of Register of Treasury, Byrd Lea- - Loans and Currercy Public Debt Accoun Public Health Service. Dr. H. 8. Cumming. Surgeon General's Office, Dr. H. 8. Cumming.......... Personnel and Accounts, Dr. W. F. Draper Hospitals and Relief, Dr. S. L. Christian_. Scientific Research, Dr. L. R. Thompson. Domestic Quarantine, Dr. C. E. Waller... Foreign Quarantine, Dr. F. A. Carmelia... Sanitary Reports and Statistics, Dr. R. C. Williams_ p— Menta' Hygiene, Dr W. L. Treadway. Venereal Diseases, Dr. R. A. Vonderl National Institute of Health, Dr George W. McCoy - Chief Clerk’s Office, D. S. Masterson. Division of Research and Statistics. George C. HaaS.ocaeunnn- S — Office of Treasurer of the United States. W. A. Julian, G. C. Emerson.. Accounting, F. L. Church. Cash, J. N. Kline____ Chief Clerk, L. P Allen General Accounts, L. V. Moore.. National Bank Redemption Agency 1,633.00 17 697.00 26 253.00 67 369.00 109.00 11,463.84 91225 1,336.25 1,196.55 239.70 423.95 251.70 1,239.50 404.10 1,050.80 472.00 1,169.76 1216.80 1,550.48 8,073.00 439.00 1,961.65 4,929.40 599.00 14395 3,412.94 159.00 276.60 411.10 587.50 507.44 93.00 88.50 112.80 132.00 687.00 358.00 284.50 6,851.99 3,424.55 468 94 901.00 284.00 4,575.00 1,475.00 141.00 475.00 216.00 15,393.00 1,052.00 1,335.00 1,307.00 289.00 377.00 287.00 1,301.00 325.00 2.219.00 1,280.00 1,220.00 1,647.00 2,754.00 11,314.00 515.00 2.437.00 7,291.00 956.00 115.00 5,248.00 78.00 897.00 633.00 917.00 273.00 128.00 153.00 130.00 160.00 1,572.00 307.00 498.00 6,175.00 2,490.00 440.00 968.00 372.00 35.69 4725 179.43 (ki 68 5046 74.47 86.71 100.00 91.54 82.94 112.45 817.70 95.27 124.33 47131 36.87 95.88 13.87 56.09 7135 8524 80.49 67.60 62.65 125.17 65.03 203.84 3083 66.52 64.06 185.87 72.65 57.84 86.75 82.50 43.70 116.61 57.12 110.96 137.53 106.57 93.07 76.34 367.00 387.50 1,019.00 538.00 536.00 831.00 68.21 72.29 12262 sion, B. C. Gardner. Redemption Division, W. D. Beatty. Securities, Mary E. Brahler......... U. S. Board of Tax Appeals. Eugene Black —eeeeo-.. e emmee—aan———— U. S. Employes’ Compensation Commission. William McCauley 105 United States Tariff Commission. Robert L. O'Brien Executive Division, Mrs. Adele T. Jameson Administrative Division, Serge Benson... Economics, Legal, etc., J. M. P. Donohoe.. Accounting and Statistical Division, Sam= uel W. Pitts_ ... eeccacce: - Commodity Division, Myron Walker..... Veterans’ Administration. Administrator’s Office. 191550 2,240.00 8551 890.40 2,081.00 4278 2,633.00 367.00 560.50 578.00 3,771.00 527.00 685.00 1,089.00 69.82 69.63 81.82 53.07 64.31 83.70 341.50 786.00 531.00 939.00 2,004 1457135 26,510.00 54.96 673 426635 7,203.00 59.23 151.00 127.81 Executive Office, Executive Assistant and Press Relatiens, Miss L. Rya Regulations and Procedure Divisio Jessie Wood ... Budget and Statistics, Esther Burgan. Investigation Division, Mrs. M. E. Buford. Chief Clerk’s Division, Mrs. A. Irvin.... Personnel Division, Dorothy Harper.. Contract Division, J. H. Phillips Classification Committee, J. H. Wel Mt. Alto Facility, Jessica Harvey e-.. Board of Veterans’ Appeals. Maj. T. J. Frailey.cceecmcccacaccece Association Member Group, Mrs. C. L. Stewarte...----. Consultants, R. L. Buttrey.... Administrative, Mrs. E. L. Redmond.. Med. and Dom. Care, Constr. and Supply. Maj. T. J. Frailey...-. ——eeee — Executive Office and Medical Service, Miss F. M. Miller. Construction Service, Supply Service, J. F. Willlams ... Pensions. Maj. T. J. Frailey. - Ex. Of., Com. on Waiv. & For. 18 193.00, 182.00 1,339.00 161.00 2,906.00 572.00 339.00 106.00 1,447.00 92.66 54.30 72.04 57.37 55.41 52.21 123.58 5335 16 131 12 299 4“ 32 16 105 168.65 12115 116.00 1,664.45 317.00 177.00 131.00 172.10 108 52.16 1 30 67 2,076.00 477.00 715.00 883.00 1,083.00 49.26 63.91 4428 235.00 457.00 391.00 224 ' 1,887.65 2,803.00 67.34 811.00 61.03 1,121.00 69.49 800.00 76.70 495.00 779.60 613.65 38 11 75 asé 2,85220 4,979.00 5728 209.35 743.50 1,809.35 723.00 28.95 1,803.00 41.23 Widows and Dependent Claims Service, W. T. Simm« Solicitor’s Office. Ma) T J. Frafley.oeoccccmeaoannnoacaan Exec. Office, Legislation and Legal Service, G. A. Holcombe. 2,452.00 7746 40350 1,036.00 47.63 299.00 445.00 67.19 116.00 336.00 3452 78.50 Quardianship Service, Administrative Assistant, Mrs. Jessie Tate..occeeeecccccoccccan Finance and Insurance. J. P. Thibadeau. .. --cccececccmcccccas Servie 254.00 30.90 3,088.65 4742 2,693.70 1,204.95 8,410.00 5,573.00 48.33 2,837.00 45.64 18,582, 33,754.00 54.90 3,641 4,825.00 7547 43428 1,065.00 40.77 Harry H. WOOArING- - - an-cnnn-nezoceee 3,184 The Adjutant General, y H. Kent.. Air Corps, Capt. Samuel P, Mills. ... Army War College, Maj. Wm. F. Freehoff Assistant Secretary of War, Lieut. Col. Chief of Cavalry, Ma). L. L. Martin_ Chief of Chaplains, Chaplain E. Burling. Chief of Chemical Warfare, Guy B. Tip- Chief of Engineers, Mrs. H. F. Bryan Chief o¢ Finance, Miss M. L. Blanchard. . Chief of Infantry, Lieut. Col. Rapp Brush Insular Bureau, Col. E. A. Stockton, J Chief of Ordnance, Cuiin E. McRae Chuef of Staff, Herbert F. Statesir. Judge Advocate General, Edwin B. Pitts. National Guard Bureau, W. A. Saunders. Quartermaster General, Wm. J. Kendrick Rifle Practice, Sadie E. Roberts. Secretary of War, L F. Nye.... 16th Brigade, Capt. Horace B. Smith Surgeon Gen. Office, Maj. J. A. Rogers.. Washington, D. C., Post Office. W M. Mooney, Harry E. Shilling... Carrier Division, Russell H. Thompson. Executive and Supply Division, Harry M. Pennington Inquiry Division, W. Carroll Gilbert Mailing Division, Frank M. Sommer- kamp. jr ———— Motor Vehicle Division, Douglas B. Horne Registry Division, Staley M. Clarke. Station Division, Joseph Donovan. ... Supt. of Mails Div,, Basil Sillers.. White House. Frank K Sanderson ......... 104 566.00 153.00 169.73 98.00 178.00 196.00 1.441.50 2,889.75 214.50 161.00 890.00 2,201.95 380.02 203.00 2,068.82 76.00 47448 126.72 1,622.00 357865 909.00 571.50 248.00 1,086.00 180.00 197.65 261.50 125.00 83965 Unit Total cccceeccnccccannn-. -eee- 47,930 $349,609.18 GROUP SOLICITATION UNIT. JOHN POOLE. Chairman. AREA I—Robert B. Swope. 1—D. W. Stevens..... 2—James D. Yochum 3—C. B. Bishop-E. C. Carter 4—John W Thompson. 8—Frank Kerr 9—2Z. D. Blackiston 10—Chase Gove - 11—D. LeR. Harris. 13—Edward Pardoe 14—J. S. Baldwin... Total, Area I . eeeeeea--. ——eemmean AREA II—James C. Wilkes. 1—Sumner Wood - 4—James C. Dulin. 5—R. E. Harris.. 7—Albert E. Conradis. 8—S. William Miller. 9—R. Kelvin Shivers. 10—B. L. Colton.... 12—Malcolm S. Sharpe. 13—Joseph A. Keene 14—Diller Groff . AREA I1I—Harold A. Brooks. 1—J. 8. Ball___ 2—Jack Bentley.. 17—J. E. Anderson-. ‘Total, Area III._______.. S AREA IV—John L. Vandegrift. 1—Russell Shelk. 5—Daniel Moorman . 6—F. G. Macarow. 7—T. P. Dowd 8—Eugene C. Gott, J 9—Edgar Morris ... 10—William McNamara 11—Jennings Snider - 13—Martin Wiegand - 14—George B. Kenned: 16—Humphrey Daniel. 17—Julian Brylawski . Total, Area IV......... R AREA V—Nelson B. O'Neal. 1—Wm. V. Simmons......... 2—George E. Flather. 3—Thos. J. Groom.. 4—Archibald McLachlen ... 5—Richard G. Lyne Total, Area V..o ooeeeeconccacances 1— MLA]’!’VI‘L $695.00 135.00 610.00 544.65 44200 1.554.00 768.65 2,204.63 249.50 100.00 250.00 8.491.52 138.00 2,985.00 1,150.00 232.00 98.00 279.00 325.00 2.495.00 4.232.00 360.00 263.00 1.505.00 2,110.00 731.00 761.00 5,117.00 86.00 548.00 85.00 1,887.00 8.147.00 1,891.00 797.00 158.00 2,071.00 368.00 406.00 888.00 262.00 1,098.00 $677,000.00 $5.500.00 4.500.00 2,750.00 4.750.00 2.100.00 6.400.00 775.00 7.100.00 3,500.00 1,100.00 2,000.00 17,225.00 1,800.00 18.96 13.30 7315 100.00 63.79 6030 5797 68.28 59.58 61.21 59.13 10435 53.35 26.67 4043 88.37 8658 149.08 85.95 4392 4806 71.70 163.15 5243 4891 48.68 29 44 612 4,499 454 36 95 115 54 3,104 152 114 214 293 564 26 40 1n7 211 5,589 231 265 81 81 4“4 702 AREA VII—Mrs. John Jay O'Connor, Mr. Allen 1,241 $16,182.95 $42.00 200.00 4.423.56 1,457.30 546.00 153.50 2,050.10 832.00 1.034.95 521.00 400.00 60.25 693.00 1,298.00 $13,711.66 $172.50 330.00 297.00 21,436.91 713.00 2,212.40 206.00 12,026.60 338.00 3,056.75 50.00 204.50 325.00 400.00 2,000.00 2,367.30 2,171.40 $48,307.36 $3,444.50 126.00 1,103.50 754.00 2,438.00 27,901.04 2,053.95 615.92 2,007.60 1,903.25 3,237.55 699.50 261.00 459.60 717.20 $47,632.61 $1,619.00 2,380.10 1,324.00 1,528.82 1,370.50 $8,22242 $65,100.00 $1,550.00 2.010.00 8,500.00 2,500.00 2,890.00 1,640.00 2,500.00 1,200.00 1.350.00 6.260.00 $46,200.00 $1.585.00 860.00 5,505.00 29,465.00 4,915.00 19,385.00 7.620.00 31,245.00 3.005.00 4,430.00 4,820.00 1,590.00 3,235.00 1,600.00 4,255.00 2,465.00 6,620.00 $132,600.00 $5,100.00 2,100.00 3,340.00 1,550.00 7,400.00 34,200.00 4,950.00 1,660.00 2,100.00 7,300.00 #10,000.00 2.300.00 1.750.00 1,100.00 5,925.00 $92,000.00 $4,650.00 5,950.00 2,750.00 3,050.00 3,900.00 $20,300.00 50.1 35.1 40.5 Pope, Mrs. Harry S. Bernton. $1,198.05 393.00 1,396.63 4,541.54 1,081.80 $8.611.02 $2,170.00 1,490.00 3,490.00 3.425.00 1,025.00 $11,600.00 §5.2 26.4 40.0 1326 1055 143 Unit Total mecescecescsscaseesmn-s 16,180 $142,668.02 $388,000.00 36.8

Other pages from this issue: