H. Doc. 108-222

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H. Doc. 108-222 SEVENTY-THIRD CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1933, TO JANUARY 3, 1935 1 FIRST SESSION—March 9, 1933, to June 15, 1933 SECOND SESSION—January 3, 1934, 1 to June 18, 1934 SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1933, to March 6, 1933 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN N. GARNER, of Texas PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—KEY PITTMAN, 2 of Nevada SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—EDWIN A. HALSEY, 3 of Virginia SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—CHESLEY W. JURNEY, 4 of Texas SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—HENRY T. RAINEY, 5 of Illinois CLERK OF THE HOUSE—SOUTH TRIMBLE, 6 of Kentucky SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—KENNETH ROMNEY, of Montana DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH J. SINNOTT, of Virginia POSTMASTER OF THE HOUSE—FINIS E. SCOTT ALABAMA ARKANSAS Albert E. Carter, Oakland SENATORS Ralph R. Eltse, Berkeley SENATORS John J. McGrath, San Mateo Hugo L. Black, Birmingham Joseph T. Robinson, Little Rock Denver S. Church, Fresno John H. Bankhead II, Jasper Hattie W. Caraway, Jonesboro Henry E. Stubbs, Santa Maria REPRESENTATIVES William E. Evans, Glendale REPRESENTATIVES William J. Driver, Osceola John H. Hoeppel, Arcadia John McDuffie, Monroeville John E. Miller, Searcy Charles Kramer, Los Angeles Lister Hill, Montgomery Claude A. Fuller, Eureka Springs Thomas F. Ford, Los Angeles Henry B. Steagall, Ozark Ben Cravens, Fort Smith William I. Traeger, Los Angeles Lamar Jeffers, Anniston Heartsill Ragon, 10 Clarksville John F. Dockweiler, Los Angeles Miles C. Allgood, Gadsden David D. Terry, 11 Little Rock Charles J. Colden, San Pedro William B. Oliver, Tuscaloosa D. D. Glover, Malvern John H. Burke, Long Beach William B. Bankhead, Jasper Tilman B. Parks, Camden Samuel L. Collins, Fullerton Edward B. Almon, 7 Tuscumbia George Burnham, 12 San Diego A. H. Carmichael, 8 Tuscumbia CALIFORNIA George Huddleston, Birmingham SENATORS COLORADO Hiram W. Johnson, San Francisco SENATORS ARIZONA William Gibbs McAdoo, Los Angeles Edward P. Costigan, Denver SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES Alva B. Adams, Pueblo Henry F. Ashurst, Prescott Clarence F. Lea, Santa Rosa REPRESENTATIVES Carl Hayden, Phoenix Harry L. Englebright, Nevada City Lawrence Lewis, Denver Frank H. Buck, Vacaville Fred Cummings, Fort Collins REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Florence P. Kahn, San Francisco John A. Martin, Pueblo Isabella Greenway, 9 Ajo Richard J. Welch, San Francisco Edward T. Taylor, Glenwood Springs 1 Pursuant to the Twentieth Amendment to the Con- 7 Died June 22, 1933. 10 Resigned June 16, 1933, having been appointed a stitution, the regular sessions of Congress will hereafter 8 Elected November 14, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by judge of the United States District Court, Western District begin on January 3 of each year. death of Edward B. Almon, and became a member of of Arkansas. 2 Elected March 9, 1933. the House on January 3, 1934. 11 Elected December 19, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by 3 Unanimously elected March 9, 1933. 9 Elected October 3, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by res- resignation of Heartsill Ragon, and became a member of 4 Elected March 9, 1933. ignation of Representative-elect Lewis W. Douglas in pre- the House on January 3, 1934. 5 Elected March 9, 1933; died August 19, 1934. ceding Congress, and became a member of the House on 12 Election unsuccessfully contested by Claude Chandler. 6 Reelected March 9, 1933. January 3, 1934. [ 343 ] 344 Biographical Directory CONNECTICUT Thomas C. Coffin, 17 Pocatello Richard Louis Murphy, Dubuque REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS ILLINOIS Frederic C. Walcott, Norfolk Edward C. Eicher, Washington SENATORS Augustine Lonergan, Hartford Bernhard M. Jacobsen, Clinton J. Hamilton Lewis, Chicago Albert C. Willford, Waterloo REPRESENTATIVES William H. Dieterich, Beardstown Fred Biermann, Decorah Herman P. Kopplemann, Hartford REPRESENTATIVES Lloyd Thurston, 22 Osceola William L. Higgins, 13 South Coventry Cassius C. Dowell, Des Moines Francis T. Maloney, Meriden Oscar De Priest, Chicago P. H. Moynihan, Chicago Otha D. Wearin, Hastings Schuyler Merritt, Stamford Fred C. Gilchrist, Laurens Edward A. Kelly, Chicago Edward W. Goss, 14 Waterbury Guy M. Gillette, Cherokee At Large–Charles M. Bakewell, New Harry P. Beam, Chicago Haven Adolph J. Sabath, Chicago KANSAS Thomas J. O’Brien, Chicago SENATORS Leonard W. Schuetz, Chicago DELAWARE Arthur Capper, Topeka Leo Kocialkowski, Chicago SENATORS George McGill, Wichita Fred A. Britten, 18 Chicago Daniel O. Hastings, Wilmington James Simpson, Jr., 19 Wadsworth REPRESENTATIVES John G. Townsend, Jr., Selbyville Frank R. Reid, Aurora W. P. Lambertson, Fairview REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE John T. Buckbee, Rockford U. S. Guyer, Kansas City Wilbur L. Adams, Wilmington Leo E. Allen, Galena Harold McGugin, Coffeyville Chester Thompson, Rock Island Randolph Carpenter, Marion 23 FLORIDA J. Leroy Adair, Quincy W. A. Ayres, Wichita Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy, 24 Hays SENATORS Everett M. Dirksen, Pekin Clifford R. Hope, Garden City Duncan U. Fletcher, Jacksonville Frank Gillespie, Bloomington Park Trammell, Lakeland James A. Meeks, Danville KENTUCKY D. C. Dobbins, Champaign REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS Henry T. Rainey, 20 Carrollton J. Hardin Peterson, Lakeland J. Earl Major, 21 Hillsboro Alben W. Barkley, Paducah R. A. Green, Starke Marvel M. Logan, Bowling Green Edwin M. Schaefer, Belleville Millard F. Caldwell, Milton William W. Arnold, Robinson REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE J. Mark Wilcox, West Palm Beach Claude V. Parsons, Golconda Fred M. Vinson, Ashland At Large–William J. Sears, Kent E. Keller, Ava John Y. Brown, Lexington Jacksonville At Large–Martin A. Brennan, Andrew J. May, Prestonsburg Brent Spence, Fort Thomas GEORGIA Bloomington At Large–Walter Nesbit, Belleville Virgil Chapman, Paris SENATORS Glover H. Cary, Owensboro Walter F. George, Vienna INDIANA William V. Gregory, Mayfield Cap R. Carden, Munfordville Richard B. Russell, Winder SENATORS Finley Hamilton, London REPRESENTATIVES Arthur R. Robinson, Indianapolis Homer C. Parker, Statesboro Frederick Van Nuys, Indianapolis LOUISIANA E. E. Cox, Camilla REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS Bryant T. Castellow, Cuthbert William T. Schulte, Hammond Huey P. Long, New Orleans E. M. Owen, Griffin George R. Durgan, La Fayette John H. Overton, Alexandria Robert Ramspeck, Decatur Samuel B. Pettengill, South Bend Carl Vinson, Milledgeville REPRESENTATIVES James I. Farley, Auburn Joachim O. Fernandez, New Orleans Malcolm C. Tarver, Dalton Glenn Griswold, Peru Braswell Deen, Alma Paul H. Maloney, New Orleans Virginia E. Jenckes, Terre Haute Numa F. Montet, Thibodaux John S. Wood, Canton Arthur H. Greenwood, Washington 15 John N. Sandlin, Minden Charles H. Brand, Athens John W. Boehne, Jr., Evansville Paul Brown, 16 Elberton Riley J. Wilson, Ruston Eugene B. Crowe, Bedford Bolivar E. Kemp, 25 Amite IDAHO Finly H. Gray, Connersville Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., 26 Baton Rouge William H. Larrabee, New Palestine Rene´ L. DeRouen, Ville Platte SENATORS Louis Ludlow, Indianapolis Cleveland Dear, Alexandria William E. Borah, Boise James P. Pope, Boise IOWA MAINE REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS SENATORS Compton I. White, Clark Fork Lester J. Dickinson, Algona Frederick Hale, Portland 13 Election unsuccessfully contested by William C. Fox. 19 Election unsuccessfully contested by Charles H. 24 Biographical information under Kathryn Ellen 14 Election unsuccessfully contested by Martin E. Weber. O’Loughlin. Gormley. 20 Died August 19, 1934; vacancy throughout remainder 25 Died June 19, 1933. 15 Died May 17, 1933. of the Congress. 26 Contested the election of Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp who 21 16 Elected July 5, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by death Resigned October 6, 1933, having been appointed a had presented credentials as a Member-elect to fill the of Charles H. Brand, and became a member of the House judge of the United States District Court, Southern Dis- vacancy caused by the death of her husband, Bolivar E. on January 3, 1934. trict of Illinois; vacancy throughout remainder of the Con- Kemp, but who was not permitted to qualify, the seat 17 gress. Died June 8, 1934; vacancy throughout remainder of 22 Election unsuccessfully contested by Lloyd Ellis. being declared vacant; subsequently elected May 1, 1934, the Congress. 23 Resigned August 22, 1934, having been appointed a and became a member of the House on May 21, 1934. 18 Election unsuccessfully contested by James member of the Federal Trade Commission; vacancy McAndrews. throughout remainder of the Congress. SEVENTY-THIRD CONGRESS 345 Wallace H. White, Jr., Auburn Carl M. Weideman, Detroit Roy E. Ayers, Lewistown John D. Dingell, 29 Detroit REPRESENTATIVES NEBRASKA Carroll L. Beedy, Portland John Lesinski, Dearborn Edward C. Moran, Jr., Rockland George A. Dondero, Royal Oak SENATORS John G. Utterback, 27 Bangor George W. Norris, McCook MINNESOTA Robert B. Howell, 33 Omaha MARYLAND SENATORS William H. Thompson, 34 Grand Island Henrik Shipstead, Miltona Richard C. Hunter, 35 Omaha SENATORS Thomas D. Schall, Excelsior REPRESENTATIVES Millard E. Tydings, Havre de Grace REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Phillips Lee Goldsborough, Baltimore John H. Morehead, Falls City Magnus Johnson, Kimball Edward R. Burke, Omaha REPRESENTATIVES Paul J. Kvale, Benson Edgar Howard, Columbus T. Alan Goldsborough, Denton Henry Arens, Jordan Ashton C. Shallenberger, Alma William P. Cole, Jr., Towson Ernest Lundeen, Minneapolis Terry M. Carpenter, Scottsbluff Vincent L. Palmisano, Baltimore Theodore Christianson, Minneapolis Ambrose J. Kennedy, Baltimore Einar Hoidale, Minneapolis NEVADA Stephen W. Gambrill, Laurel Ray P. Chase, Anoka SENATORS David J. Lewis, Cumberland Francis H. Shoemaker, Red
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