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MORRIS, CLARA (MRS. F. C. HARRIOT), 79.New Canaan, Conn., November 20; actress. MORRIS, REV. JAMES R., 63.-Passaic, N. J., July 10; clergyman and missionary. MORSE, EDWARD S., 87.-Salem, Mass., December 29; Zoologist and formerly professor at Imperial University at Tokio. MORTON, G. NASH, 84.-New York, December 14; Presbyterian lay missionary. MORTON, MARTHA, 59.-New York, February 18; playwright.

MOTZ, C. HENRY, 55.-Cincinnati, O., November 14; newspaper man.

MUELLER, CARL, 63.-Chicago, July 12; author of Municipal Traction Law. MUNSEY, FRANK A., 71.-New York, December 22; publisher and merchant. MURRAH, WILLIAM B., 73.-Memphis, Tenn., March 5; educator and Methodist Episcopal churchman.

MURRAY, GEN. ARTHUR, 74.-Washington, May 12; soldier.

MYERS, CARL E., 83.-Atlanta, Ga., November 30; pioneer in aeronautics.

N

NEELY, REV. THOMAS B., 84.-Philadelphia, Pa., September 4; former Methodist Episcopal Bishop of Philadelphia. NIGHTINGALE, DR. AUGUSTUS F., 82.-Evanston, Ill., December 4; educator. NILES, THEOPHILUS E., 59.-Providence, R. I., November 8; newspaper editor. NORRIS, HENRY M., 77.-Cincinnati, O., December 24; mechanical engineer and in

ventor.

NORRIS, W. E., 78.-Torquay, Eng., November 20; novelist.

OCHSNER, DR. ALBERT J., 67.-Chicago, July

25; surgeon and former president of

American College of Surgeons. O'DONAGHUE, REV. DENIS, 77.-Louisville, Ky., November 7; former Catholic Bishop of Diocese of Louisville.

OLIN, STEPHEN H., 78.-New York, August 6; lawyer and former Acting President of Wesleyan University. O'NEILL, HUGH, 53.-Denver, Colo., October 8; editor and journalist. O'NEILL, JAMES T., 60-Brooklyn, N. September 21; New York City Magistrate. OSTROM, DR. HOMER I., 73.-Boston, April 5; homeopathic surgeon.

Y.,

OTTINGER, MOSES, 83.-New York, November 18; realty man, philanthropist and a founder of the Jewish Theological Seminary.

P

PACH, GOTTHELF, 73.-New York, April 17; photographer.

PAGE, CARROLL S., 82.-Hyde Park, Vt., December 3; formerly Governor of Vermont and U. S. Senator.

PARKER, GEN. DAINGERFIELD, 92.-Washington, February 25; soldier.

PARKER, EDWARD M., 70.-New Orleans, La., October 21; Protestant Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire.

PARKER, STEPHEN H., 73.-Florence, Italy, May 17; portrait painter.

PARMLY, RANDOLPH, 72.-Red Bank, N. J., August 16; lawyer.

PARSONS,

PARRISH, CLARA WEAVER.-New York, November 12; painter and stained glass window designer. HERBERT, 55.-Pittsfield, Mass., September 16; Republican leader and former Congressman from New York. PATTERSON, FRANK L., 67.-Irving, N. Y., November 5; President of the Seneca Nation of Indians.

PECK, DR. FREDERICK B., 65.-Easton, Pa., November 2; professor of Mineralogy and Geology at Lafayette College.

PECK, DR. PAUL F., 52.-Chicago, November 20; professor of History at Northwestern University.

PENFIELD, EDWARD, 59.-Beacon, N. Y., February 8; illustrator.

PENROSE, DR. CHARLES B., 63.-Washington, February 27; physician and scientist. PETIT, DOUGLAS E., 67.-Syracuse, N. Y., December 21; Vice-President of the New York State Savings Bank Association. PHILIPP, EMANUEL L., 64.-Milwaukee, Wis., June 15; former Governor of Wisconsin. PHIPPS, GEN. FRANK H., 81.-Washington, March 28; soldier and ordnance expert. PIERSON, ANDREW N., 75.-Cromwell, Conn., October 29; horticulturist.

PLUMMER, WILLIAM A., 59.-Laconia, N. H., November 29; New Hampshire jurist. POMROY, HENRY K., 71.--New York, December 22; financier and former president of the New York Stock Exchange. POND, FREDERICK E. (WILL WILDWOOD), 69.New York, November 1; sports writer. PONTON, JOHN, 96.-Jersey City, N. J., November 8; editor and inventor. POST, GEORGE A., 71.-Somerville, N. J., October 31; manufacturer and chairman of the Railroad Committee of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce. POUND, GEORGE

W., 60.-Buffalo, N. Y., December 2; corporation lawyer. POWELL, EDWARD A., 87.-Syracuse, N. Y., November 19; agriculturist and cattle

breeder.

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QUAYLE, WILLIAM A., 65.-Baldwin, Kan., March 9; Bishop of Kansas and Chautauqua lecturer.

QUICK, HERBERT, 64.-Columbia, Mo., May 10; novelist.

R

PAINE, RALPH D., 53.-Concord, N. H., April 29; author and war correspondent. PAM, MAX, 60.-New York, September 14; corporation lawyer and philanthropist. PARKER, CHARLES D., 98.-River Falls, Wis., December 28; former Governor of Wis- RABY, GEORGE, 96.-St. Louis, Mo., Novemconsin.

ber 10; architect.

RALSTON, SAMUEL M., 67.-Indianapolis, Ind., | RYON, DR. WALTER G., 51.-Poughkeepsie,
October 14; U. S. Senator from Indiana N. Y., December 5; alienist and Superin-
and former Governor of Indiana.
tendent of the Hudson River State Hos-
RAMA VI, 45.-Bangkok, Siam, November pital.
26; King of Siam.

RANSOM, DR. BRAYTON H., 46.-Washington,
September 18; chief of Zoological Division
of the Bureau of Animal Industry.
RAWLINSON OF TRENT, BARON, 63.-Delhi,
India, March 27; British soldier.
RAY, GEORGE W., 70.-Norwich, N. Y., Janu-
ary 10; Federal jurist.
RAYMOND, HENRY W., 76.-Philadelphia, Feb-
ruary 18; journalist.

READ, MAJOR HARMON P., 65.-Albany, N.
Y., December 22; heraldic authority.
REALS, GRACE.-New York, August 31; ac-
tress and singer.

REED, JOSEPH REA, 90.-Council Bluffs, Ia.,
April 2; former Chief Justice of Iowa Su-
preme Court.

REID, DANIEL G., 66.-New York, January
17; financier.

REID, MRS. LIZZIE E., 71.-Yonkers, N. Y.,
December 5; first American woman golfer.
REID, WILLARD P., 63.-Bay Shore, L. I.,
N. Y., October 12; lawyer and politician.
REINHARDT, COL. R. S., 63.-Lincolnton, N.
C., September 11; former president of
American Cotton Manufacturers' Associa-
tion.

REUTERDAHL, HENRY, 54.-Washington, De-
cember 20; naval artist.

REYNOLDS, MAJOR A. D., 78.-Bristol, Va.,
September 23; Confederate veteran and
former candidate of Prohibition Party for
Vice-President.

RHODES, DR. JOHN E., 74.-Chicago, Sep-
tember 2; physician and author.
RICHARDSON, WILLIAM O., 46.--New York,
August 12; Brigadier-General and leader
in New York National Guard,
RITCHEY, DANIEL P., 55.-Paris, France, No-
vember 5; hotel promoter.
ROBI, ARMAND, 38.-New York, September 4;
playwright and composer.

ROBINSON, PROF. HENRY H., 62.-New Ha-
ven, Conn., October 20; member of Yale
University faculty and Director of the
Connecticut Geological and Natural History
Survey.

RODGERS, RAYMOND P., 76.-Monte Carlo,
December 28; Rear Admiral, U. S. N.,
retired, and former president of Naval
War College.
ROGERS, GEN. HARRY L., 58.--Philadelphia,
December 12; aide to Gen. Pershing.
ROGERS, JOHN JACOB, 43.-Washington, March
29; member of U. S. House of Representa-
tives from Massachusetts.

ROGERS, MISS JOSEPHINE C., 79.-New York,
September 9; teacher.

ROSENBLOOM, SOL, 56.-New York, Novem-
ber 16; banker and philanthropist.
ROSSITER, CLINTON L., 65.-Brooklyn, N. Y.,
November 12; banker and former presi-
dent of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Com-
pany.
ROSSNER-EDDY, AUGUSTA, 65.-Staten Island,
N. Y., September 21; actress.
RUSSEL, EDGAR, 63.-New York, April 27;
Major-General, U. S. A.

RUSSELL, LOUIS A., 71.-Newark, N. J., Sep-
tember 5; conductor, composer and author.
RYAN, PATRICK, 72.-New York, November 7;
contractor and one of the builders of the
Manhattan Bridge.

S

SAGE, JOHN H., 78.-Boston, August 16; ornithologist.

SAKS, HORACE A., 43.-New York, November 27; merchant.

SAMPSON, ALDEN, 72.-New York, January 6;
author and naturalist.

SANDERSON, GEORGE A., 57.-Washington,
April 24; secretary of United States
Senate.

SANDOW, EUGENE, 58.-London, Eng., Octo.
ber 14; leader in physical culture.
SARGENT, JOHN SINGLETON,

April 15; artist.

69.-London,

SAYRE, LUCIUS E., 78.-Lawrence, Kan., June
20; Dean of School of Pharmacy of Kansas
University.

SCARBOROUGH, DR. H. SARGEANT, 55.-Water.
bury, Conn., September 22; Methodis
clergyman.
SCHIFFERLI, F. X., 76.-Buffalo, N. Y., Sep-

tember 8; Catholic editor and journalist. SCHUYLER, JAMES E., 65.-Amityville, L. I., June 21; former battalion commander in 107th Infantry.

SCUDDER, MRS. SOPHIA WELD.-Vellore, In-
dia, August 30; Reformed Church in Amer.
ica missionary in India.

SEELYE, MRS. HENRIETTA CHAPIN.-North-
ampton, Mass., September 12; widow of
Dr. L. Clark Seelye, first president of
Smith College.

SEMPLE, REV. HENRY C., 72.-New Orleans,
La., June 27; Catholic theologian.
SENFT, DR. F. H., 68.-Tenafly, N. J., No-
vember 24; clergyman and secretary of the
Christian and Missionary Alliance.
SEWARD, DR. F. W., 80.-Goshen, N. Y.,
October 1; specialist in mental diseases.
SHANDELLE, REV. HENRY, 77.-Washington,
November 27; Dean Emeritus of Graduate
School of Georgetown University.
SHATTUCK, ALBERT R., 72.-Lenox, Mass.,
November 4; banker.

SHAW, CAPT. DAVID, 86.-Cleveland, O., No-
vember 13; horse owner and sportsman.
SHEARS, DR. JOSEPH H., 61.-New York, Oc-
tober 1; sanitation expert.

SHELDON, E. S., 74.-Cambridge, Mass., Oc tober 16; Harvard Professor Emeritus of Etymology.

SHERMAN, GORDON E., 71.-Morristown, N.
J., November 28; former Assistant Pro-
fessor of International Law at Yale Uni-
versity.

SHERWOOD, GEN. ISAAC R., 90.-Toledo, O.,
October 15; Civil War veteran and for-
mer Congressman from Ohio.
SHIELDS, G. O., 79.-New York, November
10; editor, publisher and game protection
advocate.

SHIPP, CAPT. JOHN F., 80.-Chattanooga,
Tenn., September 18; Confederate veteran
and Quartermaster-General of United Con-
federate Veterans.

SIEDLE, EDWARD, 66.-Port Chester, N. Y.,
March 30; musical director.
SIM, JOHN R., 76.-New York, December 22;
Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Col-
lege of City of New York.
SIMONSON, SELIE, 76.-Jersey City, N. J., No-

vember 11; composer and former symphony conductor of Gilbert and Sullivan operas. SKINNER, ALANSON B., 39.-Tokio, N. D., August 17; anthropologist.

SLADE, MRS. WILLIAM G., 78.-New York,
September 5; civic leader and club woman.
SLOANE, A. BALDWIN, 52.-Red Bank, N. J.,
February 21; composer.

SMEDLEY, J. HARVEY, 84.-Woodmere, N. Y.,
July 5; banker and originator of public
school savings-bank system.
SMITH, EUGENE H., 72.-Boston, May 9;
Dean of Harvard Dental School.
SMITH, DR. GEORGE W., 88.-Washington,
December 27; former President of Trinity
College.

SMITH, JOHN W., 80.-Baltimore, Md., April 19; former Governor and U. S. Senator from Maryland.

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June 21; merchant and sportsman. THOMAS, ALBERT D., 84. Crawfordsville, Ind., November 13; jurist.

SMITH, MRS. J. O. D. (TEMPLE OLIVER), 89. THEBAUD, PAUL G., SR., 59.-New York,
Johnstown, N. Y., November 16; author.
SNIDER, DR. DENTON J., 84.-Kirkwood, Mo.,
November 25; psychologist and author.
SNOW, ELBRIDGE G., 84.-New York, Novem-
ber 7; insurance specialist.

SMYTH, DR. NEWMAN, 81.-New Haven, Conn., January 6; clergyman and theological writer.

SPACKMAN, WILLIAM, 78.-New York, November 18; banker.

SPAETH, DR. REYNOLD A., 38.-Bangkok,
Siam, June 26; physiologist.

SPIERING, THEODORE, 53.-Munich, Bavaria,
August 11; conductor and composer.
STANTON, THEODORE, 74.-New Brunswick,
N. J., March 1; journalist.
STEINKE, DR. FRANK, 40.-Elizabeth, N. J.,
November 5; dermatologist and World
War veteran.

STETTINIUS, EDWARD R., 60.-Locust Valley,
L. I., September 3; banker, partner in
J. P. Morgan & Company.
STEVENSON, GEORGE, 80.-Groton, Conn., Sep-
tember 28; banker.
STILLMAN, MRS. SARAH RUMRILL, 73.-New
York, November 28; mother of James A.
Stillman.and widow of James Stillman.
STODDARD, WILLIAM O., 90.-Madison, N. J.,
August 30; former private secretary to
Abraham Lincoln.

STOECKEL, CARL, 66.-Norfolk, Conn., November 1; music patron.

STONE, MRS. MARY M., 82.-Lincoln, Eng., September 28; widow of Gen. Roy Stone, U. S. A., and Federal army nurse at Gettysburg.

STONE, WARREN STANFORD, 65.-Cleveland, O., June 12; labor leader.

STONER, COL. JAMES BUCHANAN, 64.-New
York, July 22; leader in public health.
STORM, GEORGE L., 44.-Greenwich, Conn.,
July 11; industrialist.

STRATTON, MARGARET E., 81.-Stratford,
Conn., December 17; former Dean of
Wellesley College.
STRECKFUS, CAPT. JOHN, 69.-St. Louis, Mo.,
October 12; Mississippi River navigator.
STRONG, ANN HERVEY.-Boston, June 17;
nurse and teacher.

STUDDIFORD, DR. WILLIAM E., 58.-New York, November 17; surgeon and authority in diseases of women.

STURGIS, WILLIAM P., 85.-Brooklyn, N. Y., November 7; banker.

SUN YAT SEN, 58.-Peking, March 12; South China leader.

SWAN, WILLIAM L., 75.-Baltimore, Md., No

THOMAS, EDITH M., 71.-New York, Septem-
ber 13; poet and journalist.
THOMAS, DR. HENRY M., 64.-Summit, Pa.,
June 21; neurologist.

THOMAS, JOHN LLOYD, 67.-New York, Feb-
ruary 6; humanitarian.
THOMPSON, CHARLES T.,

66.-New York,

April 18; journalist. THOMPSON, VANCE, 62.-Nice, France, June 5; writer.

THRASHER, SAMUEL P., 67.-Chicago, September 11; vice crusader.

TICKNOR, THOMAS B., 76.-Brookline, Mass., June 21; publisher.

Ton, J. KENNEDY, 72.-Sound Beach, Conn., June 2; banker.

TODD, HENRY ALFRED, 69.-New York, January 3; professor of Romance Philology at Columbia University.

TOOKER, L. FRANK, 71.-Greenwich, Conn.,
September 17; editor and author.
TOWELL, HENRY, 69.-Milwaukee, Wis., Oc-
tober 31; editor and publisher.

TRACEY, JAMES F., 71.-Altamont, N. Y., September 19; former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippine

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VANDERBILT, REGINALD C., 44.-Portsmouth, R. I., September 4; horseman and social leader.

VANDERPOEL, GEORGE B., 79.-Chatham, N.
J., October 16; merchant and publicist.
VAN DE WATER, DR. GEORGE ROE, 70.-New
York, March 15; Episcopal clergyman.
VAN INGEN, GILBERT, 55.-Princeton, N. J.,
July 7; paleontologist and geologist.
VAN RENSSELAER, DR. HOWARD, 66.-Wash-
ington, March 31; physician and teacher
of medicine.

VAN RENSSELAER, MRS. JOHN KING, 76.-New
York, May 11; author and antiquarian.
VAN SANT, HOWARD D., 60.-Dunfermline,
Scotland, September 1; American Consul
at Dunfermline.

VAN SLYKE, WARREN C., 51.-New York, April 7; lawyer.

VIVIANI, PHILIPPE RENÉ, 61.-Paris, France, September 7; French orator and former Premier.

W

WARNER, JOHN DE WITT, 73.-New York,
May 27; lawyer and writer.
WILLIAMS, PARDON C., 82.-Watertown, N.
Y., January 18; New York jurist.
WADLIN, HORACE G., 74.-Winchester, Mass.,
November 5; former librarian of the Bos-
ton Public Library.

WALL, REV. FRANCIS H., 73.-New York, September 22; Roman Catholic clergyman and foe of Ku Klux Klan.

WARD, GEN. HENRY H., 82.-Wellesley Hills, Mass., November 16; Civil War veteran. WARD, REGINALD H., 63.-New York, November 20; banker, clubman and Papal Count.

WATERS, DR. HENRY J., 59.-Kansas City, Kan., October 26; agricultural expert and editor.

WATSON, DR. EDWARD W., 82.-Philadelphia,
November 20; physician and writer.
WATSON, DR. WILLIAM P., 73.-Jersey City,
N. J., July 17; former President of Ameri-
can Pediatric Association.

WEST, G. BERNARD, 77.-Los Angeles, Cal.,
November 2; newspaper editor and writer.
WHEELER, EVERETT PEPPERELL, 84.-New
York, February 8; reformer.
WHEELER, DR. HENRY, 90.-Ocean Grove, N.
J., April 25; clergyman and writer.
WHEELER, MRS. MARY.-Rochester, N. Y.,
August 18; pioneer suffragist.
WHEELWRIGHT, JOHN T., 69.-Boston, De-
cember 23; lawyer, author and one of
founders of Harvard Lampoon.
WHITE, REV. DR. EDWIN A., 70.-Belgrade

Lakes, Me., July 6; clergyman and writer on canon law. WHITING, WILLIAM HENRY, 82.-Berkeley, Cal., July 26; Rear Admiral, U. S. N., retired.

WILCOX, HENRY T., 37.-Vigo, Spain, June 22; U. S. Consul at Vigo. WILKINSON, REV. WILLIAM, 77.-New York, December 7; Episcopal clergyman known as "Bishop of Wall Street." WILLIAMS, GEORGE W., 56.-Charleston, S. C., July 16; Rear Admiral, U. S. N. WILLIAMS, BRIG. GEN. ROGER D., 69.-Lexington, Ky., December 12; Indian fighter and veteran of Spanish War.

WILLS, DAVID C., 53.-Cleveland, O., October 22; Chairman of the Board of the Federal Reserve Bank at Cleveland.

WILSON, GEN. JAMES HAMILTON, 87.-Wilmington, Del., February 23; cavalry leader in Civil War and author. WINSLOW, REV. WILLIAM C., 85.-Boston, February 2; archæologist.

WITMER, CHARLES B., 62.-Baltimore, Md.,
April 7; Federal jurist.

WOOD, JAMES, 86.-Mt. Kisco, N. Y., Decem.
ber 19; humanitarian.
WOODRUFF, ROLLIN S., 70.-Guilford, Conn.,
June 30; former Governor of Connecticut.
WOODS, CHARLES A., 73.-Florence, S. C.,
June 21; Federal jurist.

WOODS, ROBERT A., 60.-Boston, February
18; author and editor.
WOODWORTH, PROF. JAY BACKUS, 60.-Cam
bridge, Mass., August 5; Professor of Ge-
ology at Harvard University.
WOODWORTH, NEWELL B., 64.-Syracuse, N.
Y., January 12; lawyer and philanthro-
pist.

WORKMAN, MRS. FANNY BULLOCK.-Cannes, France, January 23; mountain climber. WOOLWINE, THOMAS LEE, 50.-Los Angeles, Cal., July 8; lawyer and reformer. WRENN, ROBERT D., 53.-New York, November 12; athlete and former national tennis champion.

WRIGHT, DR. MERLE S., 65.-New York, April 26; Unitarian clergyman.

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INDEX

Agriculture, 473-507

Atlas, 878

General conditions, 473-477
Hawaii, 214
Income, 502

Labor, 734, 741
Laws, 501-502
President's views, 26
Relief proposals, 8, 9, 116
Virgin Islands, 221
Agriculture Department, 18
Activities, 116
Aeronautic work, 586
Roster, 125

Vocational education, 1098
Agriculture, Secretary of, 116
Air mail, 112, 833

Air Service, Army, 362-365,
586

Forest fire patrol, 363
Aircraft carriers, 384, 389
Aircraft inventions, 551
Airplane design, 833
Airplane engines, 388, 834
Airways, 364

Mapping, 879
Alaska, 210-213

Commerce, 212

Education, 212
Finance, 211
Fisheries, 210

Geologic studies, 265, 859
Governor, 125

Health conditions, 212
Industries, 210, 212
Labor, 210

Mining, 212, 522

364,

Reindeer in, 211

Roads, 211, 371

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Spraying

operations,

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Statistics, 228

Alaska Board of Road Commis-
sioners, 371

Alaska Railroad, 113, 211
General manager, 125
Albutt, Sir Clifford, 950
Alcohol, fuel uses, 824
Alcohol, industrial, in prohi-
bition, 251
Alcohol, wood, 557, 887, 901
Alderman, Dr. L. E., 1077
Ali, John Mohammed, 77, 82
Alien Property Custodian, 128
Aliens (see also Immigration)
Deportation, 711

Ineligible for citizenship, 82-

85
Naturalization, 76-85, 714-
719

Registration, 19, 711, 713
Labor's attitude, 727
Smuggling, 19, 711, 713
Statistics, 719-722
Unnaturalized, 715

League, 195

American Council on

tion, 1085, 1090

American Engineering Stand-
ards Committee, 853
American Ethnology, Bureau
of, 127

American Experience Table,

463

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All-Russian Evangelical Union, American

764

Marine Insurance
Syndicate, 470

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