USA > North Carolina > Buncombe County > Asheville > Baldwin's and Advocate's Asheville North Carolina City Directory [1935] > Part 2
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HOTELS AND INNS
Asheville, because of its resort trade, is equipped with some of the finest hotels to be found in any city. In addition to the noted Grove Park Inn, The Manor in Albemarle
Park is one of the well-known hostelries of the city. European plan uptown hotels in- clude The George Vanderbilt, the Battery Park, the Asheville Biltmore, the Langren, the Hotel Charmil, the Hotel Asheville, the Swannanoa-Berkeley and others.
In the nearby resort region are many mountain inns and hotels which offer many and varying types of comfortable accom- modations. In short, in the Asheville section the visitor may obtain any variety of accommodation desired.
SCENIC BEAUTY
Noted for its scenic beauty, "The Land of the Sky" offers many points of interest which are of international fame. Near Ashe- ville in the Blue Ridge section short motor trips take the visitor to Chimney Rock, towering a thousand feet on a mountain slope above the blue surface of Lake Lure, to Mount Mitchell, highest peak in eastern America, and to the Royal Gorge beyond Black Mountain, N. C.
A longer tour will take the traveller to the famous high altitude section of Blowing Rock, N. C., where the noted rock with its peculiar upward current of air may be seen. In this same region the Linville resort region with Table Rock, Hawksbill, Grandfather
Asheville Normal and Teachers College
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ASHEVILLE
Mountain and the Linville Falls and Gorge, are of inter- est.
In the Tryon sec- tion of the southern Blue Ridge is the noted thermal belt which is a region free from dew and frost and a noted center for grape cul- ture. This is also a winter and spring resort center, fam- ous for its hunt club and spring horse show.
The Sapphire Country with White- side Mountain and many waterfalls, as well as many golf courses and resort centers, is an attrac- tive region for tour- ing parties. Resorts and scenic points near Hendersonville and Waynesville are of interest to travel- lers.
NATIONAL FORESTS
Western North Carolina is heavily wooded and has earned a national reputation for its trees. It has large
-779
CHIMNEY ROCK One of the most beautiful views in Eastern America
3
A Hydro Electric Plant
areas of forest lands set aside for forest pre- serves in the Pisgah, Nantahala, Cherokee and Unaka National Forests. These forest areas are public recre- ational centers, as well as national conserva- tion areas. Within their boundaries are located five great game pre- serves and the streams of the forest are stocked with brook and rain-
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"IN THE LAND OF THE SKY"
OUTDOOR SPORTS
2
SWIMMING POOLS ATTRACT MANY DURING THE SUMMER
4
HORSEBACK RIDING IS A FAVORITE SPORT IN ASHEVILLE
3
TENNIS IS POPULAR WITH YOUNG OR OLD
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ASHEVILLE
bow trout. Public camping grounds are pro- vided in the forests and the region has an extensive number of trails through the moun- tains which are very popular with horseback and hiking parties.
THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
Asheville is the eastern gateway city to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, one of the nation's newest playgrounds and probably destined to become the most popular of the national parks.
Located in a region of surpassingly beau- tiful mountain grandeur, the Great Smokies offer to the beholder a vast terrain of virgin wilderness where the forest still stands un- touched by the ax of the lumberman and the towering ridges guard the last remnants of the original American wilderness.
In the Great Smoky Mountains are fifteen or more peaks which are higher than Mount Washington. The elevation of the base of these mountains averages about 1,200 feet above the sea. The highest summits rise to above 6,600 feet. In visual elevation as they appear to the be- holder, they are as high as the Rockies and as impressive. (The Rocky Moun- tains rise from a base level of between 5,000 and 6,000 feet and therefore have the same visual impres- sion of height as the Smokies.)
Because of the sud- den change in level from base to summit of these mountains, the Great Smokies present to the scien- tist a great natural storehouse of plant and animal life, for study. At the base of the mountains the flora and fauna is similar to that indi- genous to northern Georgia. At the sum- mits of the great peaks and ridges may be found species of trees and forest conditions which are indigenous to southern Canada.
A WATERFALL IN THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS
MANY HUNDREDS OF MILES OF FINE TROUT STREAMS ARE TO BE FOUND IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
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"IN THE LAND OF THE SKY"
RECREATION
Asheville Country Club
YOUR MELF US TAKE CARE OF
1
McCORMICK FIELD The Pride of Asheville's Baseball Fans
The Asheville-Hendersonville Airport
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ASHEVILLE
Within the Great Smoky Mountains Na- tional Park therefore may be found more species of trees and plants than are to be found on the continent of Europe or in a trans- continental tour of the United States.
Since the establish- ment of the national park highways have been built into and around the great wil- derness area, making it accessible to the mo- torist. The trans-park motor route which crosses the great ridge of the Smokies at Newfound Gap is probably the most popular route through the park and the completion of this highway in Tennessee, expected in 1935, will add to the flow of travel by this route.
On the eastern boundary of the Smokies in North Carolina, 3,000 Cherokee Indians still dwell on their 60,000-acre reservation. The customs and native sports of these In- dians are of absorbing interest to visitors in Western North Carolina who tour through the national park.
The game of Indian ball, an ancient form of lacrosse, the blowgun and archery con- tests, occasionally staged, and the native arts and craftwork in Indian baskets, bead- work and the like, are a part of the exotic glamour surrounding these people. The Eastern Band of Cherokees are the last of their nation living on their original hunting grounds in the east.
1
ARCADE BUILDING From the Battery Park Hotel
THE PARKWAY
The Federal Government has appropri- ated $16,000,000 for the construction of a magnificent scenic highway to connect the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia with the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina and Tennessee. This great motor route will traverse the highest ranges of the Appalachian highlands through Vir- ginia and North Carolina to the Great Smokies.
When completed, this route will be one of the most ambitiously designed tourist routes in the world. It will reveal to the traveler the finest scenic attractions of the eastern highlands and will offer vast panoramas of the mountains along the route.
At Mount Mitchell a traveller on the high- way will have an opportunity to see from this highest point in eastern America a glimpse into the territories of seven different southern states. On the Craggies near Mitchell the highway will traverse the largest high altitude garden of the great purple rho- dodendrons to be found anywhere in the world. This vast garden is ten miles in length and in portions is more than a mile in width. During its blossom season in June and July the rho- dodendron area is one vast colorful mass of purple flowers.
Throughout its length the highway will be of outstanding caliber
1
ARCADE BUILDING From Battery Park Place
17
"IN THE LAND OF THE SKY"
INDUSTRIAL PLANTS
American Enka Corporation
2
Carolina Wood Products Company
1
Sayles Biltmore Bleacheries
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ASHEVILLE
in its construction and in the beauty of the surroundings through which it will pass. Surveys of portions of the route are already under way and construction should be pushed forward with all possible speed fol- lowing the completion of surveys.
SPORTS
Western North Carolina, because of its climate, has long been a region noted for its sports and other types of recreational activi- ties. Asheville has five fine golf courses, the Asheville Country Club, the Biltmore Forest Country Club, the Malvern Hills Golf Club, the Lake View Golf Club and the Municipal Golf Links.
Approximately twenty other courses are to be found in other resort centers in "The Land of the Sky." Tournaments are held on various courses at various seasons, the high- lights of the golf year being the invitation tournaments on the Asheville and Biltmore Forest Club courses in August, each season.
SUMMER CAMPS
Over 50 summer camps for boys and girls are located in the region near Asheville. These are listed among the finest camps of the kind to be found in the eastern United States. Their physical equipment is of the highest order and their type of summer activity programs attract many hundreds of boys and girls to this section every year.
INDUSTRIES
Due to abundant pure water supply and the generation of cheap electric power from
the many mountain rivers and streams, the Asheville section has become in later years a growing center for industries. 1
Abundant forest areas of the mountains, the nearby cotton fields of the South, ample transportation facilities, the many differing mineral deposits and the products of the mountain farms produce raw materials for a great diversity of manufacturers.
Plants located here include those making rayon, finished cotton goods and cotton . yarns, leather and wood products, mica products, mineral products, clothing, hos- iery, the famous Biltmore Homespuns, food products, caskets, and a vast diversity of other manufactured goods.
THE ASHEVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Serving all of Western North Carolina as an advertising, promotion and information agency, the Asheville Chamber of Com- merce offers to visitors a well-rounded serv- ice of information. Those interested in home sites, in the health-giving qualities of the Western North Carolina climate, may secure such information from the Chamber of Com- merce.
Those interested in the region as a loca- tion for industrial plants may find through the Chamber of Commerce helpful service of information and cooperation which will be very valuable.
For information address
The Information Bureau THE ASHEVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Asheville, N. C.
An Apartment House in Asheville
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BALDWIN'S AND ADVOCATE'S
ASHEVILLE
NORTH CAROLINA
Miscellaneous Directory 1935
QUALITY DIRECTORIES
PROMPT
by
ACCURATE
CONSERVATIVE
BALDWIN
1 Containing valuable information concerning local, state and national governments with the namse of United States senators and representa- tives; legal holidays; populations of states and other useful information.
COPYRIGHT 1935 BY ROBERT MORTON BALDWIN
United States Government
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President John Nance Garner, Vice-President
THE CABINET
Cordell Hull, Secretary of State. Henry Morgenthau, Secretary of the Treasury.
George Henry Dern, Secretary of War. Homer Stille Cummings, Attorney General. Claude A. Swanson, Secretary of the Navy.
Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the In- terior.
Henry Agard Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture. Daniel Calhoun Roper, Secretary of Commerce. Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor.
THE SUPREME COURT
Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice. Associates
Willis Van Deventer, James Clark McReynolds, Lewis Dembitz, George Sutherland, Pierce Butler, Harlan F. Stone, Owen J. Roberts, Benja- min N. Cordozo.
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT President of the United States
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
Treasurer of the United States: William Alexander Julian. Comptroller of Currency: J. F. T. O'Conner. Director of the Mint: Nellie Tayloe Ross. Register of the Treasury: Edward E. Jones. Director of the Bureau of Engraving: Alvin W. Hall.
Judge Advocate General of the Army: Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Quartermaster General of the Army: Gen. J. L. Dewitt. Surgeon General of the Army: Maj. Gen. Robert U. Patterson. Judge Advocate General of the Navy: Rear Admiral O. G. Murfin. Quartermaster General of the Navy: Brig. Gen. Hugh Matthews. Chief of the Weather Bureau: Charles F. Marvin. Chief of the Bureau of Animal Indus- try: John R. Mohler. Chiet of the Bureau of Dairy Indus- try: O. E. Reed.
Chief of the Bureau of Plant Industry: William A. Taylor.
20
BALDWIN'S AND ADVOCATE'S
United States Senate
Democrats 70, Republicans 24; Farmer-Labor 1; Progressives 1.
Alabama: Hugo L. Black and John H. Bankhead (D).
Arizona: Henry F. Ashurst and Carl Hayden (D).
Arkansas: Joseph T. Robinson (D) and Hattie Caraway (D).
California: Hiram W. Johnson (R) and William Gibbs Mc- Adoo (D).
Colorado: Edward P. Costigan (D) and Alva B. Adams (D). Connecticut: Augustine Lonergan (D) and Francis T. Ma- honey (D).
Delaware: Daniel O. Hastings (R) and John G. Townsend, Jr. (R).
Florida: Duncan U. Fletcher (D) and Park Trammell (D).
Georgia: Walter F. George (D) and Richard B. Russell, Jr. (D). .
Idaho: William E. Borah (R) and James P. Pope (R). Illinois: J. Hamilton Lewis and William H. Dieterich. Indiana: Frederick Van Nuys (D) and Sherman Minton (D). Iowa: L. J. Dickinson (R) and Louis
Murphy (D).
Kansas: Arthur Capper (R) and George McGill (D).
Kentucky: A. W. Barkley (D) and M. M. Logan (D).
Louisiana: Huey P. Long (D) and John H. Overton (D).
Maine: Frederick Hale (R) and Wal- lace H. White, Jr. (R).
Maryland: Mildred E. Tydings (D) and George W. Radcliffe (D).
Massachusetts: David I. Walsh and Marcus A. Coolidge.
Michigan: James Couzens (R) and Arthur H. Vanderberg (R).
Minnesota. Henrik Shipstead (FL) and Thomas D. Scall (R).
Mississippi: Pat Harrison (D) and Theodore G. Bilbo (D).
Missouri: Bennett Champ Clark (D) and Harry S. Truman (D). Montana: Burton K. Wheeler (D) and James E. Murray (D).
ROBERT R. REYNOLDS United States Senator from North Carolina
Nebraska: George W. Norris (R) and Edward R. Burke (D). Nevada: Key Pittman (D) and Patrick McCarran (D).
New Hampshire: Henry W. Keyes (R) and Fred H. Brown (D).
New Jersey: W. Warren Barbour (R) and Harry Moore (D). New Mexico: Carl A. Hatch (D) and Dennis Chavez (D).
New York: Royal S. Copeland (D) and Robert F. Wagner (D). North Carolina: Josiah W. Bailey (D) and Robert R. Rey- nolds (D).
North Dakota: Lynn J. Frazier (R) and Gerald P. Nye (R) Ohio: Robert J. Bulkley (D) and Vic Donahey (D). Oklahoma: Elmer Thomas (D) and Thomas P. Gore (D).
Oregon: Charles L. McNary (R) and Frederick Steiwer (R). Pennsylvania: James J. Davis (R) and Joseph F. Guffey (D). Rhode Island: Jessie H. Metcalf (R) and Peter G. Gerry (D).
South Carolina: Ellison D. Smith (D) and James F. Byrnes (D).
South Dakota: Peter Norbeck (R) and W. J. Bulow (D).
Tennessee: Kenneth McKellar (D) and Nathan L. Bachman (D).
Texas: Morris Sheppard (D) and Tom Connally (D).
Utah: William H. King (D) and Elbert D. Thomas (D).
Vermont: Warren R. Austin (R) and Ernest W. Gibson (R).
Virginia: Carter Glass (D) and Harry Flood Byrd (D).
Washington: Homer T. Bone (D) and Lewis B. Schwellenbach (D).
West Virginia: M. M. Neely (D) and Rush D. Holt (D).
Wisconsin: Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (D) and F. Ryan Duffy (D).
Wyoming: Robert D. Carey (R) and Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D).
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
ALABAMA
John McDuffie (D), Monroeville. Lister Hill (D), Montgomery. Henry B. Steagall (D), Ozark. Sam Hobbs (D), Selma. Joe Starnes (D), Guntersville. William B. Oliver (D), Tuscaloosa. William B. Bankhead (D), Jasper. A. H. Carmichael (D), Tuscumbia. George Huddleston (D), Birmingham.
ARIZONA
Isabella Greenway (D), Tuscon.
ARKANSAS
William J. Driver (D), Osceola. John E. Miller (D), Searcy. Claude A. Fuller (D), Eureka Springs. Ben Cravens (D), Fort Smith. David D. Terry (D), Little Rock. John L. McClellan (D), Malvern. Tilman B. Parks (D), Camden.
CALIFORNIA
Clarence F. Lea (D), Santa Rosa Harry L. Englebright (R), Nevada City. Frank H. Buck (D), Vacaville. Florence P. Hahn (R), San Francisco. Richard J. Welch (R), San Francisco. Albert E. Carter (R), Oakland. J. H. Tolan (D), Oakland. John J. McGrath (D), San Mateo.
B. W. Gearhart (R), Fresno. Henry E. Stubbs (D), Santa Maria. John S. McGroarty (D), TuJunga. John H. Hoeppel (C), Arcadia. Charles Kramer (D), Los Angeles. Thoms F. Ford (D), Los Angeles. William I. Traeger (R), Hollywood. John F. Dockweiler (D), Los Angeles. Charles J. Colden (D), San Pedro. John H. Burke (D), Long Beach. Sam L. Collins (R), Fullerton. George Burnham (R), San Diego.
COLORADO
Lawrence Lewis (D), Hartford. Fred Cummings (D), Fort Collins. John A. Martin (D), Pueblo. Edward T. Taylor (D), Glenwood Sprinç
CONNECTICUT
Herman P. Kopplemann (D), Hartford. William L. Higgins (R), South Coventry. James A. Shanley (D), New Haven. Schuyler Merritt (R), Stamford. J. Joseph Smith (D), Waterbury. William M. Citron (D), Middletown.
DELAWARE
J. George Stewart (D), Wilmington. FLORIDA
J. Harden Peterson (D), Lakeland. R. A. Green (D), Starke.
Millard F. Caldwell (D), Milton. J. Mark Wilcox (D), West Palm Beach. William J. Sears, Jacksonville.
GEORGIA
Hugh Peterson, Jr. (D), Ailey. E. E. Cox (D), Camilla. Bryant T. Castellow (D), Cuthbert.
E. M. Owen (D), Griffin. Robert Ramspeck (D), Atlanta. Carl Vinson (D), Milledgeville. Malcolm C. Tarver (D), Dalton. Braswell Deen (D), Alma. Frank Welchel (D),"Gainesville. Paul Brown (D), Elberton.
IDAHO
Compton I. White (D), Clarks Fork. D. Worth Clark (D), Pocatello.
ILLINOIS
Arthur H. Mitchell (D), Chicago. Raymond S. McKeough (D), Chicago. Edward A. Kelly (D), Chicago. Harry P. Beam (D), Chicago. A. J. Sabath (D), Chicago. Thomas J. O'Brien (D), Chicago. Leonard W. Schuetz (D), Chicago. Leo Kocialkowski (D), Chicago. James McAndrews (D), Chicago. Ralph E. Church (R), Evanston. Chauncey W. Reed (R), W. Chicago. John T. Buckbee (R), Rockford.
MISCELLANEOUS DIRECTORY
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Leo E, Allen (R), Galena. Chester Thompson (D), Rock Island, J. Leroy Adair (D), Quincy. Everett M. Dirksen (R), Pekín, L. C. Arends (R), Melvin, James A. Meeks (D), Danville. Donald C. Dobbins (D), Champaign. Scott W, Lucas (D), Havana Harry H. Mason (D), Pawnee, Edwin M. Schaefer (D), Belleville, William W, Arnold (D), Robinson, Claude V. Parsons (D), Golconda, Kent E, Keller (D), Ava. Martín A, Brennan (D), Bloomington, Michael L, Igoe (D), Chicago,
INDIANA
William T, Schulte (D), Hammond, Frederick Landis (R), Logansport. Samuel B. Pettengill (D), South Bend, James I. Farley (D), Auburn. Glenn Griswold (D), Peru, Virginia E, Jenckes (D), Terre Haute. Arthur H. Greenwood (D), Washington. John W, Boehne, Jr, (D), Evansville,
KENTUCKY
W. V. Gregory (D), Mayfield. Glover H, Gray (D), Owensboro. Emmet O'Neal (D), Louisville. Cap R. Cardon (D), Munfordville, Brent Spence (D), Fort Thomas. Virgil Chapman (D), París, A. J, May (D), Prestonburg. Fred M. Vinson (D), Ashland, John M. Robíson (R), Barbourville,
LOUISIANA
Joachim O, Fernandez (D), New Orleans Paul H. Maloney (D), New Orleans. Numa F, Montet (D), Thibodaux, John N. Sandlin (D), Minden, Riley J. Wilson (D), Ruston, Jared Y, Sanders, Jr, (D), Baton Rouge, Rene L, DeRouen (D), Ville Platte, Cleveland Dear (D), Alexandria,
MAINE
Simon M. Hamlin (D), S, Portland. Edward C. Moran, Jr. (D), Rockland. Ralph O, Brewster (R), Dexter,
MICHIGAN
George G, Sadowski (D), Detroit. ' Earl C, Michener (R), Adrian. Henry M. Kimball (R), Kalamazoo, Clare Hoffman (R), Allegan. Carl E, Mapes (R), Grand Rapids, William W. Blackney (R), Flint Jesse P, Wolcott (R), Port Huron, Fred L, Crawford (R), Saginaw. Albert J, Engel (R), Lae City, Roy O. Woodruff (R), Bay City. Prentiss M. Brown (D), St, Ignace, Frank E. Hook (D), Ironwood Clarence J, McLeod (R), Detroit, Louís Rabaut (D), Grosse Pointe Park. John D. Dingell (D), Detroit. John Lesinski (D), Dearborn. George A. Dondero (R), Royal Oak.
MINNESOTA
August H. Andresen (FL), Red Wing Elmer J. Ryan (D), St. Paul. Ernest Lundeen (D), Minneapolis, Melun J. Maas (R), St. Paul Theodore Christianson (R), Minneapolis
1-16-31
United States Post Office at Asheville
Eugene B. Crowe (D), Bedford. Finly H. Gray (D), Connorsville. Louis Ludlow (D), Indianapolis. William H, Larrabee (D), New Palestine.
IOWA
Edward C. Eicher (D), Washington. Bernhard M. Jacobsen (D), Clinton. John W. Gwynne (R), Waterloo. Fred Biermann (D), Decorah. Lloyd Thurston (R), Osceola. Hubert Utterbeck (D), Des Moines. Otha D. Wearin (D), Hastings. Fred C. Gilchrist (R), Laurens. Guy Mark Gillette (D), Cherokee.
KANSAS
W. P. Lambertson (R), Fairview. U. S. Guyer (R), Kansas City. Edward W. Patterson (D), Pittsburg. Randolph Carpenter (D), Marion. Jack Houston (D), Newton. Frank Carlson (R), Concordia. Clifford R. Hope (R), Garden City.
MARYLAND
T. Alan Goldsborough (D), Denton. William P. Cole, Jr. (D), Towson. Vincent L. Palmisano (D), Baltimore. Ambrose J. Kennedy (D), Baltimore. Stephen W. Gambrill (D), Laurel. David J. Lewis (D), Cumberland.
MASSACHUSETTS
Allen T. Treadway (R), Stockbridge. William J. Granfield (D), Longmeadow, Joseph E. Casey (D), Clinton. Pehr G. Golmes (R), Worcester. Edith Nourse Rogers (R), Lowell. A. Píatt Andrew (R), Gloucester. William P. Connery, Jr. (D), Lynn. Arthur D. Healey (D), Somerville. Richard M. Russell (D), Cambridge. George Holden Tinkam (R), Boston. John P. Higgins (D), Boston. John W. McCormack (D), Boston. Charles L. Gifford (R), Barnstable. Joseph W. Martin, Jr. (R), North Attlebc Richard B. Wigglesworth (R), Boston.
Harold Knutson (R), St. Cloud. Paul John Kvale (FL), Benson, William A. Pittenger (R), Duluth. R. T. Buckler (FL), Crookston.
MISSISSIPPI
John E. Rankín (D), Tupelo. Wall Doxey (D), Holly Springs. William M. Whittington (D), Greenwooc A. L. Ford (D), Ackerman. Aubert Dunn (D), Merídían. William M. Colmer (D), Pascagoula. Dan McGhee (D), Meadville.
MISSOURI
M. A. Romjue (D), Macon. William L. Nelson (D), Columbia. Richard M. Duncan (D), St. Joseph. C, Jasper Bell (D), Kansas City. Joseph B. Shannon (D), Kansas City. Reuben T. Wood (D), Springfield. Dewey Short (R), Galena. Clyde Williams (D), Hillsboro. Clarence Cannon (D), Elsberry.
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BALDWIN'S AND ADVOCATE'S
Orville Zimmerman (D), Gennett. Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. (D), St. Louis. James R. Claiborne (D), St. Louis. John J. Cochran (D), St. Louis.
MONTANA
Joseph P. Monaghan (D), Butte. Roy E. Ayers (D), Lewiston.
NEBRASKA
Henry C. Luckey (D), Lincoln. Charles F. Mclaughlin (D), Omaha. Karl Stefan (R), Norfolk. C. G. Binderup (D), Holdrege. Harry B. Coffee (D), Chadron.
NEVADA
James G. Scrugham (D), Reno.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
William N. Rogers (D), Sanbornville. Charles W. Tobey (R), Temple.
NEW JERSEY
Charles A. Wolverton (R), Merchantsville Isaac Bacharach (R), Atlantic City. William H. Sutphin (D), Matawan. D. Lane Powers (R), Trenton. Charles A. Eaton (R), Watchung. Donald H. McLean (R), Elizabeth. Randolph Perkins (R), Woodcliff Lake. George N. Seger (R), Passaic. Edward A. Kenney (D), Cliffside Park. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. (R), Kearny. Peter A. Cavicchia (R), Newark. Frederick R. Lehlbach (R), Newark. Mary T. Norton (D), Jersey City. Edward J. Hart (D), Jersey City.
NEW MEXICO
J. J. Dempsey (D), Santa Fe.
NEW YORK
Robert L. Bacon (R), Westbury. William F. Brunner (D), Rockaway Park. J. L. Pfeifer (D), Brooklyn. Thomas H. Cullen (D), Brooklyn. Marcellus H. Evans (D), Brooklyn. Andrew L. Somers (D), Brooklyn. John J. Delaney (D), Brooklyn. Richard J. Tonry (D), Brooklyn. Stephen A. Rudd (D), Brooklyn. Emanuel Celler (D), Brooklyn. James A. O'Leary (D), West New Bright Samuel Dickstein (D), New York City. Christopher D. Sullivan (D), New York William I. Sirovich (D), New York City. John J. Boylan (D), New York City. John J. O'Connor (D), New York City. Theodore A. Peyser (D), New York City. Martin J. Kennedy (D), New York City. Sol Bloom (D), New York City. Vito Marcantonio (R), New York City. Joseph A. Gavagan (D), New York City. Anthony J. Griffin (D), New York City. Charles A. Buckley (D). Bronx. James M. Fitzpatrick (D), Bronx. Charles D. Millard (R), Tarrytown. Hamilton Fish, Jr. (R), Garrison. Philip A. Goodwin (R), Coxsackie. Parker Corning (D), Albany. William D. Thomas (R), Hoosick Falls. Frank Crowther (R), Schenectady. Bertrand H. Snell (R), Potsdam. Francis D. Culkin (R), Oswego. Fred J. Sisson (D), Whitesboro. Bert Lord (R), Afton. Clarence E. Hancock (R), Syracuse. John Tabor (R), Auburn. W. Sterling Cole (R), Bath. James P. B. Duffy (D), Rochester. James W. Wadsworth, Jr. (R), Geneseo. Walter G. Andrews (R), Buffalo. Alfred F. Beiter (D), Williamsville. James M. Mead (D), Buffalo. Daniel A. Reed (R), Dunkirk. Matthew J. Merritt (D), Flushing. Caroline O'Day (D), Rye.
NORTH CAROLINA
Lindsay C. Warren (D), Washington. John H. Kerr (D), Warrenton. Graham A. Barden (D), New Bern. Harold D. Cooley (D), Nashville. Frank W. Hancock, Jr. (D), Oxford. William B. Umstead (D), Durham. J. Bayard Clark (D), Fayetteville. Walter Lambeth (D), Thomasville.
Robert L. Doughton (D), Laurel Springs. Alfred L. Bulwinkle (D), Gastonia. Zebulon Weaver (D), Asheville.
NORTH DAKOTA
Usher L. Burdick (R), Bismarck. William Lemke (R), Fargo.
OHIO
John B. Hollister (R), Cincinnati. William E. Hess (R), Cincinnati. Byron B. Harlan (D), Dayton. Frank L. Kloeb (D), Celina. Frank C. Kniffin (D), Napoleon. James G. Polk (D), Highland.
L. T. Marshall (R), Xenia. Brooks Fletcher (D), Marion. Warren J. Duffey D), Toledo. Thomas A. Jenkins (R), Ironton. Mell G. Underwood (D), New Lexingto Arthur P. Lamsneck (D), Columbus. William L. Fiesinger (D), Sandusky. Dow W. Harter (D), Akron. Robert T. Secrest (D), Senecaville. William R. Thom (D), Canton. William A. Ashbrook (D), Johnstown. Lawrence E. Imhoff (D), St. Clairsville. John G. Cooper (R), Youngstown. Martin L. Sweeney (D), Cleveland. Robert Crosser (D), Cleveland. Chester C. Bolton (R), Cleveland. Stephen M. Young (D), Cleveland. Charles V. Truax (D), Bucyrus.
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