USA > Washington DC > Washington (District of Columbia), city directory, 1922 > Part 13
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Steam Fitters and Helpers, No 602; meets first and third Wednesdays; sec, L D Zea, 2108 G
Stone and Building Laborers Union, Local 46; meets first . and third Friday night at Cadets' Armory Hall, 708 0 nw; sec, F Holmes, 1101 I sw
Stone and Marble Cutters; meets second and fourth Tues- day of each month at Jonadah Hall
Stenographers, Typewriters, Bookkeepers and Assistants As- sociation, No 11773; meets first Tuesday of each month, Pythian Temple; sec, Mrs Marion Webster, A F of L bldg. 719 9th nw
Street Carmen's Union, Division 689; meets Typographical Temple, first and third Tuesdays at 10:30 a m and 8:30 p m; fin sec and bus agt, J H Cookman, room 412 Wash- ington Loan & Trust bldg
The High School Teachers Union of Washington, D C, No 8; meets in the ilbrary of the New Central High School at 3:30 p m the second Tuesday in the months of October, December February and May; sec, Miss Elizabeth I Gatch
Theatrical Stage Employees International Alliance, Local No 22; meets first Friday at 5 p m at Musicians' Hall; sec, Mr Trundle, 1006 E nw
Typographical Union, Columbia, No 101; meets on the third Sunday of each month, 2.30 p m, Typographical Temple; sec, Geo G Seibold, Typographical Temple; E P Richard- son, 1214 Girard nw
United National Association of Post Office Clerks
Waiters Union, No 78]; meets first and third Fridays at 1012 H nw; sec Chas H Mayer, 1012 H nw
Washington Building Trades Council; meets every Tuesday night, 430 9th nw
Western Union Employees Association, 210, 1311 G nw
Waitresses Union, No 781; meets every Tuesday evening at 719. 6th nw bus agt, Mrs F Hipp
Wood Finishers, Local No 1053; sec, H Baumgarten, 414 10th sw
Women's Trade Union League; meets 1423 N Y av nw; sec, Ethel M Smith, 1423 N Y av nw
INTERNATIONALS
International Association of Machinists, headquarters Ma- chinists bldg; intl pres, Wm H Johnston; sec-treas, E C Davison
Plate Printers of North America (International Steel and Copper) ; intl sec-treas, Jas E Goodyear, Philadelphia, Pa Yeast. C'ereal, Beverage and Soft Drink Workers, Local No 18; meets third Saturday at 8 p m at 205 John Mar- shall pl nw; sec, W H Schaefer; bus agt, Henry Miller, 606 5th nw
l'pholsterers Union, No 58; meets second and fourth Wednes- day of each month, Moose Hall, 7th and G nw
LOCAL AUXILIARIES
Bakers Union, No 118; meets second Saturday at 7:30 p m; John G Schmidt, sec; 426 5th nw
Ladies' Auxiliary, Carpenters; meets Tuesday nights, Hutchins bldg, 10th and D nw
National Capital Lodge, No 92 (Ladies' Auxilary Intl Asso Mach) ; meets first and third Tuesdays of each month at 7:30 p m at National Capital Bank Hall, 316 Pa av se
Woman's Auxiliary, No 13, of Columbia Typographical Union No 101; meets at Typographical Temple fourth Monday in each month
. LEGAL SOCIETIES
AMERICAN PATENT LAW ASSOCIATION, office and library 612-18 Washington Loan & Trust bldg, 900-02 F nw; pres, Wallace R Lane; sec, Arthur L Bryant
BAR ASSOCIATION, District of Columbia, 2d fl City Hall;
meets 2d Tuesday in January, March, June and October; pres, James B Archer; sec, George C Gertman; treas, W W Milan
LIBRARIES
AMERICAN PATENT LAW ASSOCIATION LIBRARY, 612- 18 Washington Loan & Trust bldg, 900-02 F nw; librar- ian, A M Parkins
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM, 601 Colorado bldg; librarian, Mrs Leona N Crabbe
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, 1st bet Capitol and B se
History-The Library of Congress was established by Section 5 of an act to make further provision for the removal and accommodation of the Government of the United
States, approved April 24, 1800. This
act granted $5,000 for the purchase of books and for the fitting up a room in the Capitol for the collection. In 1814 the collection was destroyed by the burning of the Capitol. In 1815 the Jefferson library of 6700 volumes was pur- chased from ex-President Jefferson as a basis for a new collection. A fire in 1851 destroyed 35,000 volumes
out of a collection of 55,000, including two-thirds of the Jefferson library. By an appropriation of $10,000 in January and of $75,000 in March, for the purchase of books, the library was replenished. The collection was strengthened by the transfer of the Smithsonian library in 1867, consisting of about 40,000 volumes of trans- actions of learned and scientific societies. In 1897 the main collection was removed from the Capitol to the building erected for it under the acts of Congress a.p- proved April '5, 1886, Oct 2, 1888 and March 2, 1889, at a cost of $6,347,000 (limit by law, $6,500,000) ex- clusive of the land, which cost $585,000. The building was completed in February, 1897; opened to the public November, 1897. The building occupies 334 acres, upon a site 10 acres in extent, and is the largest library building in the world. In the decorations some 40 painters are represented-all American citizens. The book stacks contain
8 total of about 100 miles of shelving, with capacity for 3,540,000 octavo volumes of bco's and 84,000 volumes of newspapers
Organization-Prior to 1807 the library was administered by the Librarian of Congress under rules and regulations established by the Joint Committee on the Library. In 1897 the Committee stated that an act, approved June, 1867, provided that the Librarian of Congress should have complete and entire control of the library proper, including the copyright business; that he should pre- wribe rules and regulations under which this assistants Were to be employed; and should have the custody and management of the library. Although executive in
function, the library
is under no executive department of the government; it is rather a dependent of the legislative. The librarian and superintendent of the building submit their annual estimates direct to Con- ress (where they are considered, not by the Library Committee, but by the Committee on Appropriations) ; the appropriations granted are controlled and expended direct by them; and they report direct to Congress. On the other hand the library, though still entitled the Library of Congress, is no longer solely nor chiefly a legislative library. In its general relations, character, scope and service it is the National Library of the United States
Divisions -- There are seventeen divisions
the in library proper, entitled as follows: Reading Room, Bibliography, Binding, Card, Catalogue, Classification, Documents, Mail and Delivery, Manuscripts, Maps and Charts, Music, Order, Periodical Prints, Semitic, Smithsonian, Law Library. The printing office and bindery, though located in the library, are branches of the Government Printing Office and the employees are on the rolls of the Public Printer. 'The Legislative Reference Division, established in 1915, undertakes for Congress the service of research and compilation familiar in certain of the states. It does not, however, draft bills. It is pro-
vided for by a lump'sum appropriation of $25,000 yearly Hours-On week days (except legal holidays) the library building, main reading room, periodical reading room and law library are open from 9 a m to 10 p m; other parts of the library from 9 a m to 4:30 p m. On Sundays and certain legal holidays the building, main reading room, periodical reading room, division of prints, music division and maps division, are open from 2 to 10 p m, the librarian's office and the office of the chief clerk from 2 to 6 p m
Volumes-The collection is now the largest on the Western Hemisphere and the third in the world. It comprised at the end of the fiscal year (June 30, 1921) about 2,918,256 printed 'books and pamphlets (including the law library of 193,929 volumes, which, while a division of the Library of Congress, still remains at the Cap- itol), 170,005 maps and charts, 919,041 pieces of music. and 424,783 photographs, prints, engravings and litho- graphs
43
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION (1922,
Among the special book collections are the Yudin, of Rus- sian literature (80,000 volumes) ; the Schiff, of Judaica (about 20,000); the Weber, of India; the Huitfeld- Kaas (Scandinavian) ; the John Boyd Thacher, of In- cunabula (930 titles). The Orientalia include some 5,000 volumes (fascicules) of Japanese books and about 40,000 volumes (facicules) of Chinese. The Division of Prints includes certain collections, given or lent, besides a large mass of material received by copyright and some by purchase. The manuscript collections are especially noteworthy for material on American history, some of the most disinguished of which have been re- ceived by transfer from the executive departments, the library being now regarded as the main custodian of the historical archive material in the possession af the government. It has the papers of nine presidents and of various American statesmen. Franklin, Morris, Hamilton, etc
The library is copying largely from doouments in foreign archive offices, and other institutions, of concern to American history. It has already a large body of transcripts from such sources. This policy of trans- crihing and copying, where necessary by facsimile, is applied also to maps and to music. Through it, the collection of music, in bulk one of the largest in the world, is especially strengthened in full scores of or- chestral and operatic music
The library's sources of increase are: (1) copyright (two copies of articles registered being deposited and avail- able for the library. A deliberate selection for this purose is made); (2) transfer from other government establishments; (3) international exchange with various governments, 100 sets of all Federal publications being at its disposal for this purpose; (4) exchanges with institutions; (5) exchanges by Smithsonian with other learned societies; (6) gift or bequest; (7) purchase Circulation-Records of this are no longer published. They are kept in the reading room and other divisions; but as they represent only recorded use, while the more important use, by reason of direct access by investi- gators to the shelves, is unrecorded, these statistics were incomplete and publication of then was abandoned in 1905
Use-For reference the library is free and accessible with- out formality. It is under statutory provisions, a lend- ing library for members of Congress and their families and other higher officials of the Government at Wash- ington. Special permits issued by the librarian, pro- vide for investigators engaged in serious research, and inter-library loans for such investigators at a distance Publications-The publications of the Library fall into five classes : (1) Annual reports of the librarian; (2) Biblio- graphies, consisting of exhaustive lists of works con- tained in the library, such as the list of books on the Philippine Islands, Biblioteca Filipina, etc; (3) Reference lists consisting of select lists on subjects of immediate interest-marine subsidies, reciprocity, trusts, Federal control of commerce, etc; (4) Catalogues of special col- lections belonging to the library; e g, Catalogue of the Gardiner Greene Hubbard collection of engravings, Cata- logue of the John Boyd Thacher collection of Incunabula; (5) Calendars of, and - reprints of special collections of manuscripts; e g, Calendar of the courespondence of George Washington, 4 volumes, Journals of the Contin- ental Congress; (6) Reports and compendiums on library history and methods; catalogue rules, classification, schedules, etc. The bibliographical publications and administrative reports are distributed free to libraries and istitutions. Copies of most of the publications are on sale by the Superintendent of Documents. Government printing Office
Printed Catalogue Cards The most important publication of the library is its printed catalogue cards. Fifty sets are deposited, without charge, in as many different institutions. Copies of the cards are also sold at cost to institutions and individuals. The institutions (chiefly libraries) buying cards number now over 3,000. The cards so brought are placed in their own catalogues. A' purpose of the purchase is to save themselves the expense of cataloging certain books in their possession. The sale and distribution of cards is handled by the card division, for the service in which an annual appro- priation is made (in 1922 $50,900). The cost of the service is more than offset by receipts of sales (in 1921 $88,565.09) which are covered into the Treasury
Copyright-The Copyright Office, though attached to the library and under general direction of the librarian, is in effect a distinct bureau. The appropriation for it (in 1922, $104,740) is more than offset by fees covered into the Treasury (in 1921, $134,516.15)
Library Staff-The library has 583 employees including in the library proper, 266; Copyright Office, 91; Legislative Reference, 22; department for the distribution of cata- logue cards, 55; disbursement service and care of build- ing and grounds, 149. In addition to these are 83 em- ployees, 25 in the Branch Printing Office, and 68 in the Branch Bindery (employees of the Public Printer)
Income The library is maintained by annual appropriations by Congress, for various purposes, including the purchase of boo' s. For the year 1920-21, these amounted to $711,745 (not including allotment for printing and bind- ing, $250,000) as follows: $580,745 for services and con- tingent expenses (including the Copyright Office, and including also the care of the building) ; $98,000 for books and periodicals; $16,000 for fuel, supplies and miscel- laneous purposes; $12,000 for furniture and shelving ; extension of the steel stack $5,000
Expenditures-Expenditures correspond to the appropriations NAVAL RECORDS AND LIBRARY, supt, Chas W Stewart, 1211 Kenyon nw
The libraries of the Departments of the Government are ac- cessible to the employees and to other executive depart- ments. In addition, there are private circulating libraries, the aggregate number of volumes therin being over 1,100,000
PUBLIC LIBRARY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Central building. Mt Vernon square, K bet 7th and 9th nw; librarian and treasurer, George F Bowerman, cen- tral library hours 9 a m to 9 p m for circulation, reading rooms open till 9 pm week days including holidays; Sundays, hours 3 p m to 9 p m; Takoma Park branch, 5th and Cedar sts; hours, 2 to 9 p m. This library was established by Congress in 1896 as a municipal library and adjunct of the public educational system of the District of Columbia. The first appropriation was made in June, 1898, and it was opened to the public Deo- 16, 1898. It is a free circulating and reference library of 237,000 volumes of general literature, including books in the principal foreign languages. It has a general reading room, with reference books, current and bound sets of periodicals. It has special reading rooms with industrial literature and books for children. It also circulates books through social settlements, schools, play- grounds and home libraries. It
has a collection of about 50,000 mounted pictures. Home circulation last fiscal year, 935,309 volumes and 72,100 mounted pictures Nearly 700,000 persons visit its central building annually. Maintenance expenses last fiscal year, $156,919, of which Congress appropriated $140,385. Central building cost $375,000, the gift of Andrew Carnegie, Board of trustees; Pres, Theodore W Noyes; vice-pres, Wendell P Stafford ; sec, John B Larner; other trustees, Charles J Bell, Daniel A Edwards, Mrs Marie M Gasch, Benjamin W Guy, Mrs Lyman B Swormstedt, Ernest L Thurston
PUBLIC LIBRARY TAKOMA PARK BRANCH, sw cor 5th and Cedar nw; branch librarian, Miss Rebecca P Warner; children's librarian, Mildred A Page; asst librarian, Jeannette Marley
MASONIC LIBRARY, Masonic Temple, 13th cor H and N Y av; librarian and clerk, Horace S Nay lor
NATIONAL LIBRARY FOR THE BLIND, 1800 D nw; pres, Mrs Thomas P Gore; director, Etta Josselyn Giffin ORIENTAL ESOTERIC LIBRARY, 1443 Q nw; librarian, Agnes E Marsland
PEABODY LIBRARY, 3243 O nw; 9,000 volumes; librarian, Eva Nelson Gilbert
SUPREME COUNCIL THIRTY-THIRD DEGREE LIBRARY. 16th and S nw; 95,000 volumes; librarian, Wm I Boyden
LITERARY SOCIETIES
CAPITOL HILL LITERARY SOCIETY; pres, Aaron Frear: treas, Mrs Blanch Beaton; reo sec, Mrs Laura B Lawson ; cor sec, E V Carr
COLUMBIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY, inc May 3, 1894; meets the third Tuesday of each month from October to May inclusive, in the Assembly Hall of the Cosmos Club, at 8 o'clock p m; officers, pres, Allen C Clark; 1st vice- pres, Job Barnard; 2d vice-pres, W B Bryan; treas. Victor B Deyber; sec, Miss Maud Burr Morris; cor sec. Wm F Roberts; curator, James F Hood; chronicler, Frederick L Fishback; library room, .57 Pacific bldg
GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSO- CIATION, 2023 G nw; pres. H L Hodgkins
SCHLARAFFIA WASHINGTONIA; meets in hall 2d floor 721 6th nw, weekly, on Saturday (except June to No- vember), Chancellor, Capt C Theo Schwegler, 904 But- ternut nw
FRATERNITIES
Kappa Alpha Fraternity, Alpha Nu Chapter, 2511 14th nw Chi Delta Nu, 301 T nw
Delta Theta Phi Law Fraternity, 1 Dupont Circle nw
Delta Sigma Fraternity, Washington Chapter, 1101 E nw Sigma Nu Fraternity, 1733 N nw
Delta Tau Delta Club, 1750 Mass av nw, mgr, R L Dural Gamma Eta Chapter, pres, W Waverly Taylor
Washington Alumni Chapter, Kappa Alpha Fraternity, 251} 14th nw
Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity, 1709 G nw Alpha Phi Fraternity, 2347 Ga av nw
Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity, 1715 Mass av nw; justice, Walter B Henretty
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, 1810 Calvert nw
Phi Sigma Kappa Lamba Chapter, 1916 16th nw
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, 325 T nw
Phi Alpha Fraternity, 1726 P nw
Phi Mu Sigma Fraternity, Phi Epsilon Chapter, 1346 Meri-" dian nw
Phi Kappa Iota Fraternity, 314 C nw
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, 1829 19th nw Tau Delta Sigma, 1820 9th nw
Theta Delta Chi Fraternity
The Washington Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1842 Calvert nw; pres, Detlow M Marthinson
Chi Deuteron Charge of Thelta Delta Chi, George Washing- ton Univ, 1842 Calve"; meets Tuesday night 8:30 p m: pres, H Janney Nichols jr
THE AMERICAN WORKMEN INSURANCE FRATERNITY. 620 F nw; sec, Rudolph T Harrell, 1864 Monroe nw
LEAGUE OF AMERICAN PENWOMEN, Washington, D C; pres, Mrs Ada O DuPuy; vice-pres, Mrs Frances P Keyes; ree sec, Eliza P VanDyne; treas, Mrs Thos & Wallis; historian, Mrs Theodore Tiller
SCOTTISH ST ANDREW'S SOCIETY; pres, Sterling Kerr: Ist vice-pres, George Wright; 2dl vice-pres, Thos Weir: treas, John M McLachlen; sec, Robert Watson; 700 10th nw, almoner, Dr George McDonald
SOCIETY OF ALUMNI OF GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY. office of the society, room 914 Union Trust bldg; pres. Martin Conboy; Ist vice-pres, James E Wilcox ; 2d vice- pres, J S Easby-Smith; 3d vice-pres, Dr John Fotte; 4th vice-pres, John F Murphy; 5th vice-pres, John G Price; scc, Henry R Gower; treas, Hugh J Fegan : executive committee. Rev John B Creeden, S J. Dr
James A Gannon, F P Martin, Barry Mohun, Conrad Reid, John J Hamilton, John O La Gorce, Maurice Spratt, Thomas Spellacy, F W Sullivan, Hugh J Fegan. ex officio, Henry R Gower, ex officio
44
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION (1922)
STUDENTS' ESPERANTO LEAGUE, Washington Ronde No 1, 1440 H nw; meets every Saturday evening at 7:30 for the study of Esperanto and for conversation practice
MEDICAL SOCIETIES
ELECTRIC MEDICAL SOCIETY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Manor House, 1324 Monroe nw; meets first Tuesday of each month; pres, Dr L D Walter; treas, Dr George MacDonald
MEDICAL SOCIETY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, a continuation of the Medical Society of the District of Columbia, founded Sept 26, 1817, and the Medical As- sociation of the District of Columbia, founded in 1833, amalgamated 1911; meets Wednesday 8 p m at 1718 M nw; officers, pres, Dr A W Boswell; vice-prests, Dr W H Hough, Dr P Wilson; rec sec, Dr C B Conklin; cor seo, J R Verbrycke jr; treas, E G Seibert; chairman ex com, Dr H C Macatee
MILITARY
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MILITIA, THE, consists of the organized Militia, which is the District of Columbia National Guard, and the unorganized Militia, consisting of all able bodied male citizens of the District of Columbia. The authorized units of the District of Columbia National Guard are one regiment engineers, one battalion field artillery, two companies coast artillery, one military police company and certain other army corps and division units. The commanding general is Brig Gen Anton Stephan; the adjutant general, Lieut-Col Richard D LaGarde; Headquarters 472 L st nw; Recruit Officer same address
NATIONAL GUARD, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, see Dis- trict of Columbia Militia
OLD GUARD, 1412 Pa av nw; an independent military as- sociation organized as the Union Veteran Corps, April 9, 1880; incorporated as the Old Guard, Aug 2, 1883; composed exclusively of honorably discharged Union soldiers, sailors and mariners who served during the late rebellion, and all members in good standing in the G A R; business meeting 3d Mondays in the month; capt, James M Pipes; 1st lieut, R H Cook; 2d Heut, Ephraim Phillips; adjt, John B Dowd; surgeon, Dr Thomas Calver; quartermaster, Bernard Mooney; com missary, Samuel Morton
UNITED STATES INFANTRY ASSOCIATION, 504-510 Union Trust bldg; pres, Gen C S Farnsworth; sec, Col Wm H Waldron; treas, G H Powell
NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS
ADVENT REVIEW AND SABBATH HERALD THE, Takoma Park, D C; Francis Mcclellan Wilcox, editor; published every Thursday by The Review and Herald Publishing Association; terms, $2.50 per year, by mail, in advance
ADVOCATE OF PEACE, 612-14 Colorado bldg; published by The American Peace Society; $2 per year ;. Arthur D Call, editor
AMERICAN ANNALS OF THE DEAF; published five times a year; in Juanary, March, May, September and Novem- ber; editor, Irving S Fusfield, M A, Gallaudet College; Kendall Green; $2 per year
AMERICAN FORESTRY MAGAZINE, 1214 16th nw; pub- lished monthly by The American Forestry Association ; $4 per annum; Percival S Ridsdale, editor
AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 1140 Woodward bldg; published quarterly ; editor, J F Jameson
AMERICAN MOTORIST, 506-10 Riggs bldg; vice-pres and genl mgr, A G Batchelder; editor and business mgr, Wm Ullman
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY COURIER THE, published quarterly by American University; circulation, 5,000; editor, Albert Osborn
AMERICAN STANDARD, 44 G ne; published monthly; 50 cents per year
ARMS AND THE MAN, 1111 Woodward bldg; published weekly by the National Rifle Association of America; $3 per year
ARMY AND NAVY MAGAZINE, 606 F nw; published monthly; $3 per year: editor, Herbert C Lewis
ARMY AND NAVY REGISTER, 511 11th nw; published every Saturday by the Army and Navy Publishing Co; $3 per annum
BEE THE, 1109 I nw; established June 3, 1880; issued weekly; $2 per year, in advance
BULLETIN THE, 510 12th nw; published twice daily; pres, John J Walsh; sec-treas, Henry T Rodier; subscriptions, 40 cents a week
CATHOLIC NEWS BULLETIN, E L Scharf, Ph D, prop; 2603 Mozart pl, published monthly
CHRISTIAN EDUCATOR, Takoma Park; published 10 times a year by the Review and Herald Publishing Association ; W E Howell, editor; subscription, $1 per year
COCKRELL'S TRANSCRIPT, 923 11th nw; Frederick Griggs, pres, E L Cockrell; treas and mgr, W J Wallace; $1 per annum
CLUB FELLOW AND WASHINGTON MIRROR THE, 822 Colorado bldg; the National Journal of Society; a weekly published by the West End Publishing Co every Wednes- day
EVENING AND SUNDAY STAR THE, Star bldg, 11th cor Pa av nw; published every evening and Sunday morning by the Evening Star Newspaper Co. daily 2 cents per copy; 20 to 40 pages; Sunday, 5 cents a copy; served by carrier dally and Sunday, 60 cents per month; by mail, 70 cents per month; the Sunday Star, $2.40 per year in Maryland and Virginia; elswhere in the United States, higher rates
FLEET REVIEW THE INC, 511 11th nw; the journal of the enlisted men of the navy; pres, John E Jenks; seo- treas, Martin P Ward; editor, John R Cox
FREE LANCE THE, 313 Pa av nw; The Free Lance Co pub- lishers; published monthly ; subscription, $1 per year GEORGETOWN COLLEGE JOURNAL, a magazine of 70 pages, edited at Georgetown University by the students in the interest of the university; non-political; monthly; editor, James J Sweeney; $3 per year
GOVERNMENT ADVERTISER, U S, 511 11th nw; published weekly; $10 per year; U S Government Advertiser Ino, publishers
HOYA THE, a paper of 8 pages edited at Georgetown Unt- versity by the students in the interests of the University: non-political; weekly; editor, Leo J Casey; $3 per year
INFANTRY JOURNAL (monthly) Union Trust bldg; pub- ilished by U S Infantry Assn; $3 per annum; editor, Col J M R Taylor; managing editor, G H Powell
INVENTION AND MANUFACTURING SUPPLEMENT, Kresge bldg, 11th and G nw; published monthly; 50 cents per year; American Industries Inc, publishers
LABOR GAZETTE, 710-711 Southern bldg; published month- ly; $1 per annum; editor, W Jett Lauck
LIBERTY, a magazine of religious freedom, Takoma Park, published quarterly ; editor, Charles S Longaore
LIFE AND HEALTH, Takoma Park; published monthly by the Review and Herald Publishing Assn; editor, L A Housen; $1 per annum
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