ton, O. Adjutant-General-James J. Murphy, Washington, D. C. Quartermaster-General-James L. Delaney, New York, N. Y. National Headquarters-Room 710, Woodward building, Washington, D. C. NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. National Board of Management, 1923-1924. Headquarters-Memorial Continental hall, 17th and D streets N. W.. Washington, D. C. President-General-Mrs. Anthony Wayne Cook. Washington, D. C. Vice-Presidents General Terms expire in 1925: Miss Alice Louise McDuffee, Kalamazoo, Mich. Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Newcastle. Wyo.; Mrs. John Laidlaw Buel, Litchfield, Conn.; Mrs. Williard T. Block, Chicago, Ill.; Miss Annie Wallace, Rochester, N. H.; Mrs. Howard H. McCall, Atlanta, Ga.: Mrs. Everest G. Sewell, Miami, Fla. Terms expire in 1926: Mrs. Henry D. Fitts. Newark. N. J.; Mrs. Ellett G. Drake, Beatrice, Neb.; Mrs. Henry E. Beck, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mrs. William McGee Wilson, Xenia, O.; Mrs. Gerald L. Schuyler, Denver, Col.; Mrs. Charles B. Boothe, Pasadena, Cal.; Mrs. Franklin C. Cain, St. Matthews, S. C. Terms expire in 1927: Miss Amy E. Gilbert, State Center, Iowa; Mrs. Logan S. Gillentine, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Mrs. Paul Duane Kitt, Chillicothe, Mo.; Miss Anne Lang, 115 West 4th street. The Dalles, Ore.; Mrs. Russell William Magna, 178 Madison avenue, Holyoke, Mass.; Mrs. Thomas W. Spence, 107 Prospect avenue, Milwaukee, Wis.; Mrs. Hoval A. Smith, Warren, Ariz. Chaplain-General-Mrs. Rhett Goode, Wash- Organizing Secretary-General-Mrs. William S. Registrar-General-Mrs. James H. Stansfield, Washington, D. C. Historian-General-Mrs. George DeBolt, Washington, D. C. Corresponding Secretary-General-Mrs. Franklin Charles S. Whitman, Curator-General-Mrs. Officers of the General Society. Secretary-General-Alfred Coxe Prime, 2212 Locust street, Philadelphia, Pa. Deputy Secretary-General-Clarence G. Anderson, Jr., Savannah, Ga. Treasurer-General-Maj. W. I. Lincoln Adams, 32 Llewellyn road. Montclair, N. J. Deputy Treasurer-General-Josias Pennington, 330 North Charles street, Baltimore, Md. Registrar-General-Prof. Arthur Adams, Trinity college, Hartford, Conn. Historian-General-Frank Hervey Pettingell, room 809, 424 South Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. Chaplain-General-Rt.-Rev. William A. LeonChancellor-General-Hon. ard, 3054 Euclid avenue, Cleveland, O. William Moulton Ingraham, 79 High street, Portland, Me. Surgeon-General-Charles Montraville Green. M.D., 78 Marlborough street, Boston, Mass. NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE SONS OF THE SONS OF THE REVOLUTION. Honorary General President James Mortimer General Vice-President-Prof. William Libbey. General Second Vice-President-Frank Hervey Pettingell, Los Angeles, Cal. General Secretary-W. Hall Harris, Jr., 433 Title building, Baltimore, Md. Assistant General Secretary-Marshall leigh Morgan, 325 Chestnut street, Philadel phia, Pa. General Treasurer-Brig. Gen. Shap George Richards. Navy building. Washington. D. C. Assistant General Treasurer-Nelson John Ludington, 1509 Association building. 19 South LaSalle street, Chicago, Ill. General Registrar-Jackson Wolcott Sparrow. Cincinnati, O. General Historian-G. Richmond, Va. Watson James, Jr.. General Chaplain-Dr. Thomas Edward Green, Washington, D. C. MILITARY ORDER OF FOREIGN WARS OF Officers of the National Commandery. Commander in Chief-Maj.-Gen. Clarence R. Edwards, U. S. A. (ret.). Westwood, Mass. Secretary-General-Capt. Ogden D. Wilkinson, Bellevue-Stratford hotel, Philadelphia, Pa. Deputy Secretary-General-Maj. Pelham St. George Bissell. U. S. A., 641 Washington street. New York city. Treasurer-General-Capt. Harrison A. Bispham, U. S. N., retired, Bellevue-Stratford hotel, Philadelphia, Pa. Surgeon-General-Col. Gilbert E. Seaman, Milwaukee, Wis. Recorder-General-Col. Guy A. Boyle, Anderson, Ind. as The order is a military organization with patriotic objects, having for its scope the period of American history since national independence. It stands for the needed and honorable principle of national defense against foreign aggression. The principal feature of the order is the perpetuating of the names well as the services of commissioned officers who served in either the war of the revolution, the war with Tripoli, the war of 1812, the Mexican war, the war with Spain, the China relief expedition, the campaign in Nicaragua, Vera Cruz, Mexican campaign or the with Germany or shall serve in future campaigns recognized by the United States governVeteran ment as war with foreign powers. companionship is conferred upon such officers and hereditary companionship their direct lineal descendants in the male line. upon war Headquarters-210 Mallers building. President-Charles B. Pike, Chicago, Ill. Mo.: Henry J. Reilly, New York city: Joseph T. Ryerson, Chicago, Ill.; Horace C. Stebbins, New York city. and Archibald G. Thatcher, New York city. On the nomination of the Military Training Camps association certain of its members have been appointed by the war department as civilian aids to the secretary of war: chief civilian aid, Charles B. Pike, Chicago, Ill.; corps area civilian aid. first, Pierpont L. Stackpole, Boston, Mass.: second, James D. Williams, New York city: third. Horace B. Hare, Philadelphia, Pa.; fourth, Clark Howell, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.: fifth, Benson R. Hedges, Columbus, O.; sixth, Noble B. Judah, Chicago, Ill.; seventh, Charles S. Walker. Des Moines, Iowa; eighth, W. S. Hendrick, San Antonio, Tex.; ninth. Roy C. Ward, San Francisco, Cal. Chicago Advisory and Executive Committees -Dr. Frank Billings, R. T. Crane, Stanley Field, Frank O. Lowden, Cyrus H. McCormick. George M. Reynolds, Julius Rosenwald. John Timothy Stone, Harry A. Wheeler. Wharton Clay, E. 111.. I. Cudahy. Marshall Field Robert Gardner, Ralph Poole and W. Edwin Stanley, The Military Training Camps association was organized in 1916 by the men who attended the students' and business and professional men's camps of 1913, 1914 and 1915. At the request of the war department it recruited for the first and second series of officers' training camps in 1917 and helped also in the later camps, furnishing 100.000 com. it missioned officers for the national army. enrolled nearly 250.000 men for different specialist branches, enlisting, for example, in Chicago within three weeks approximately 7.000 skilled mechanics for the ordnance and in the central department by a single drive nearly 12.000 recruits for the navy, as well as candidates for the tank corps, the air service, the engineer corps, the chemical warfare In 1920 service and the quartermaster corps. the association proposed a series of citizens' military training camps as part of the permanent military policy of the country and at the request of the war department helped to Executive Committee-John A. Holabird. Chicago, Ill., chairman; William Marshall Bul-secure over 100,000 applications for the sumlitt. Louisville, Ky.; Grenville Clark, New York city: Arthur F. Cosby, New York city: Charles G. Dawes, Chicago, Ill.: Robert Homans, Boston, Mass.: Phelps Newberry, Detroit, Mich.; Albert T. Perkins, St. Louis. mer camps held under its auspices in 1921. 1922 and 1923. The Military Training Camps association consistently supports a conservative policy of national defense: membership in it is open to all patriotic citizens. LEARNED SOCIETIES OF AMERICA. American Bar Association-President. Charles E. Hughes, Washington, D. C.: secretary. William C. Coleman, Citizens' Bank building. Baltimore, Md.; treasurer, Frederick E. Wadhams, Albany, N. Y.; membership, 21,000. American Chemical Society-President, L. H. Dr. 532 Association-PresiAmerican Dermatological dent, Dr. Howard Fox, New York, N. Y.; University secretary, Dr. Udo Julius Wile, hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich. American Dialect Society-President, W. A. Neilson, Smith college, Northampton, Mass.: secretary, Dr. Percy W. Long, Warren House, Harvard university, Cambridge, Mass. Economic Association - President, American Prof. Wesley C. Mitchell, Columbia university, New York, N. Y.; secretary, Prof. Ray B. Westerfield, Yale university, New Haven, Conn. American Electrotherapeutic Association program President, W. T. Johnson, Philadelphia, Pa.: 223 East secretary, Dr. Richard Kovacs, 68th street. New York, N. Y. American Geographical Society-President, John Greenough: director. Isaiah Bowman, Broadway and 156th street. New York, N. Y. The society has 4.000 members, 85,000 books It issues a quarterly and 57.000 maps. magazine called the Geographical Review, a research series containing original geographic of about material, and gives a eight lectures a year. American Historical Association-Acting presi dent, Charles M. Andrews, Yale university, John S. secretary, New Haven, Conn.; Bassett, Northampton, Mass.: general offices, 1140 Woodward building, Washington, D. C. American Institute of Architects-President, D. Everett Waid, New York, N. Y.; secretary, Edwin H. Brown, the Octagon. Washington, D. C.; executive secretary, Edward C. Kemper, the Octagon, Washington, D. C. Institute of American Banking-President, Richard W. Gratton, Chicago, Ill.; treasurer, George D. Grimm. American Institute of Electrical EngineersPresident, Farley Osgood, Newark, N. J.; secretary, F. L. Hutchinson, 33 West 39th street, New York, N. Y.; membership, 16,791 (Sept. 1, 1924). American Numismatic Society, The-President, American Ophthalmological Society-President. Optometric Association-Stocklein KiekeC. M. Prof. Society-President. Society-President. John American Pharmaceutical Association (organ- American Institute of Homeopathy-Secretary, American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical H. H. B. Meyer, Library of Congress. Washington, D. C.: secretary and executive officer, Carl H. Milam, 86 East Randolph street, Chicago, Ill. American Mathematical Society, 501 West 116th street, New York, N. Y.-President, Oswald Veblen, Princeton university. Princeton, N. J.: secretary, R. G. D. Richardson. Brown university, Providence, R. I.; assistUniversity ant secretary, Arnold Dresden, of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.: San Francisco section, secretary, B. A. Bernstein, Universouthsity of California, Berkeley, Cal.: western section, secretary, E. B. Stouffer, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kas. - President Association American Medical elect. Dr. W. D. Haggard, Nashville, Tenn.: 535 North Dear secretary, Olin West. born street, Chicago, Ill.; editor and general manager, George H. Simmons, 535 North Dearborn street, Chicago, Ill. American Meteorological Society-President, Prof. Willis I. Milham; secretary, Charles F. Worcester, Mass. Brooks, Clark university. American Microscopical Society-President, B. H. Ransom, bureau of animal industry, Washington, D. C.; secretary, Prof. Paul S. Welch, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.: treasurer, William F. Henderson, University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Pa. -President. American Nature Study Society Prof. M. R. Van Cleve, Toledo, O.; secretarytreasurer. Mrs. Anna B. Comstock, Ithaca, Y.: official organ. Nature Magazine. -President. of Wisconsin: American Physical Society-President, Charles E. Mendenhall, University secretary. Harold W. Webb, Columbia uni- American Phytopathological Society-President. American Political Science Association-Presi- President. American Psychiatric Association American Psychological Association-Secretary. American Public Health Association-President. American Railway Engineering Association- American Society of Agronomy-President, M. F. Miller: secretary, P. E. Brown, Iowa State college, Ames, Iowa. American Society of Biological Chemists-President, Philip A. Shaffer, St. Louis, Mo.; secretary. D. Wright Wilson, medical school, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, Pa. American Society of Civil Engineers-President, Carl E. Grunsky; assistant secretary,_Cari E. Beam, 33 West 39th street, New York. American Society for Horticultural SciencePresident. J. H. Gourley; secretary, C. P. Close, College Park, Md. American Society of International Law-President, Charles Evans Hughes; honorary presi dent. Elihu Root. American Society of Mammalogists-President. Society of Naturalists-President, Prof. William H. Howell, Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore, Md.; secretary, Prof. A. F. Shull, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. American Society of Zoologists-President. President, Charles A. Ellwood, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.; secretary, Ernest W. Burgess, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. American Statistical Association-Secretary. Robert E. Chaddock, Kent hall, Columbia university, New York, N. Y. American Surgical Association-President, Dr. Albert J. Ochsner, 2106 Sedgwick street. Chicago, Ill.; secretary, Dr. Robert B. Greenough; treasurer, Dr. Charles H. Peck. American Urological Association-President, Herman L. Kretschmer. 122 South Michigan avenue, Chicago, Ill. Archæological Institute of America (incorporated by act of congress)-President, Prof. Ralph Van Deman Magoffin, New York university: general secretary, Prof. Rollin H. Tanner. New York university, New York, N.Y. Association of American Geographers-President. Curtis F. Marbut. United States bureau of soils; vice-president. Oliver E. Baker, United States bureau of agricultural economics; treasurer, Vernon C. Finch, University of Wisconsin; secretary, Charles C. Colby. University of Chicago. Association of American Law Schools-President, William Draper Lewis, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.; secretarytreasurer, Ralph W. Aigler, University of Michigan law school, Ann Arbor, Mich. Association of Official Agricultural ChemistsPresident, R. E. Doolittle, bureau of chemistry. Chicago, Ill.: vice-president. C. A. Browne, bureau of chemistry, Washington, D. C.: secretary-treasurer, W. W. Skinner, bureau of chemistry, Washington, D. C. Botanical Society of America-President, Dr. William Crocker, Boyce Thompson institute, Yonkers, N. Y.: secretary, Prof. I. F. Lewis. University of Virginia, University, Va. Classical Association of the Middle West and South-President, A. L. Bondurant, University of Mississippi. University, Miss.: first vice-president. Elizabeth McGorey, Glenville high school, Cleveland, O.: secretary-treasurer, W. L. Carr. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons-President, Dr. Albert J. Ochsner. Chicago, Ill.: president-elect. Dr. Charles H. Mayo, Rochester. Minn.; first vice-president. Dr. Ernst A. Somner, Portland, Ore.; second vice-president, Dr. Frederic N. G. Starr, To ronto, Ont.; director-general, Dr. Franklin H. Martin, Chicago, Ill.; business manager. A. D. Ballou, Chicago, Ill. Ecological Society of America-President. Geological Society of America. The-President. National Academy of Science-President, Prof. A. A. Michelson, University of Chicago; home secretary. Dr. David White, Washington, D. C.: assistant secretary, Paul Brockett, Washington, D. C., treasurer, G. K. Burgess. Washington, D. C. National Bureau of Economic ResearchPresident, John P. Frey; executive secretary. Gustav R. Stahl; director of research, Dr. Edwin F. Gay, 474 West 24th street. New York, N. Y. National Eclectic Medical Association-President, Dr. William N. Mundy, Forest. 0.: corresponding secretary, T. D. Adlerman, 696 St. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. National Education Association-President. Jesse H. Newlon, superintendent city public schools, Denver, Col.; secretary, J. W. Crabtree. 1201 16th street N. W., Washington. D. C. National Geographic Society-President and editor, Gilbert Grosvenor: secretary, O. P. Austin; treasurer, John Joy Edson; office. 16th and M streets. Washington, D. Č. National Historical Society. The-President. Frank Allaben, New York, N. Y.; secretary. Mabel T. R. Washburn; magazines of the society, The Journal of American History and The Journal of American Genealogy: editor-in-chief. Frank Allaben; genealogical editor, Mabel T. R. Washburn, 37 West 39th street. New York, N. Y. National Institute of Arts and Letters Presi dent, Dr. John C. Van Dyke, New Bruns wick, N. J.; secretary, John H. Finley, New York Times, New York, N. Y. National Philatelic Society-President. J. W. Taylor: secretary-treasurer. A. M. Wright. 47 Court street. Boston. Mass. It publishes its own bulletin. the National Philatelist. a monthly: membership. 310. National Tuberculosis Association-Executive office, 370 7th avenue, New York, N. Y.; managing director, Dr. Linsly R. Williams, New York, N. Y.: president, Dr. Charles J. Heitfield. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.: secretary, Dr. George M. Kober. 1819 Q street N. W., Washington, D. C. Society of Industrial Engineers, The-President, W. G. Sheehan, Detroit, Mich.: executive secretary, George C. Dent, 608 South Dearborn street, Chicago, Ill. Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers President, Walter M. McFarland; secretary, Daniel H. Cox, 29 West 39th street. New York, N. Y. Society of Philatelic Americans - President. V. W. Rotnem, 204 Craigie hall. Cambridge, 38. Mass.: secretary. William Lycett, 1221 534 Maine. N. Cape J.: Washington street, treasurer, N. R. Hoover. New Rochelle, N. Y.; chairman of the board of governors, Joseph Hoffman, 111 West 190th street, New York, N. Y.; membership. 1,000. There is a resident vice-president in each of the states, territories and principal foreign countries. GENERAL NATIONAL ASSOCIATIONS. American Bankers' Association - President, Walter W. Head, Omaha, Neb.: executive manager, F. N. Shepherd, 110 East 42d street, New York, N. Y.; secretary and assistant treasurer, W. G. Fitzwilson, 110 East 42d street, New York, N. Y.: treasurer, J. Elwood Cox, High Point, N. C. American Civic Association-President. J. Horace McFarland, Harrisburg, Pa.; secretary, Harlean James, 905-7 Union Trust building, Washington. D. C. American Humane Association-President, W. American National Association of Masters of American National Red Cross President. Calvin Coolidge: vice-presidents, William H. Taft and Robert W. De Forest; chairman. John Barton Payne: treasurer, Eliot Wadsworth; counselor, James M. Beck; secretary, chairman executive Boardman: Mabel T. committee. John Barton Payne: vice-chairman in charge of domestic operations, James L. Fieser: vice-chairman in charge of foreign operations, Ernest P. Bicknell. American Protective Tariff League-Office. 33 West 10th street, New York, N. Y.; president, W. Warren Barbour; first vice-presisecond vice. dent, George R. Meyercord; president, Joseph R. Grundy: treasurer and general secretary, Wilbur F. Wakeman. American Secular Union-President. Dr. Lucy Maclaskey, room W. L. Waite: secretary, 841, 127 North Dearborn street, Chicago, Ill. American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty Frank K. Sturgis; to Animals-President. secretary, Richard Welling: general manager, William K. Horton; office, 50 Madison avenue, New York. N. Y. Anti-Saloon League of America President. Bishop Thomas Nicholson, 94 East Elizabeth street, Detroit, Mich.; secretary, S. E. Nicholson, 532 17th street N. W.. Washington. D. C.: treasurer. Foster Copeland, Cothe Rev. F. lumbus, O.; superintendent, Scott McBride, Westerville, O. Chamber of Commerce of the United StatesPresident, Richard F. Grant. Cleveland, O.: secretary, D. A. Skinner: national headquarters, Washington, D. C. Friends of Medical Progress, Inc.-28 New- General Federation of Women's Clubs-Presi- Federation-Consolidat- National Association of Stationary Engineers National Association of Teachers of Speech- National Child Labor Committee-Chairman, avenue, President, Wil- National Congress of Parents and Teachers- Flo National League of Women Voters-President, National Safety Council-President. L. A. De |