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NOTE. In the foregoing list "day" indicates a day school and "bdg." a boarding school.

No. 1.
No. 4.
No. 5..
No. 6.

No. 7

No. 9.

No. 10.

No. 12.

No. 13.

No. 14.

No. 15.

No. 16.

No. 17.

No. 18.

No. 19.

No. 20.

No. 21.

No. 22.

No. 23.

No. 24.

No. 25.

No. 26.

No. 27.

No. 28.

No. 29.

No. 30.

SUPPLEMENT No. 1.-PINE RIDGE DAY SCHOOLS.

Agency.

10 miles north of agency on White Clay Creek.

20 miles northwest of agency mouth of White Clay Creek.
25 miles northwest of agency on White River.

15 miles northeast of agency on Wounded Knee Creek.
18 miles north-northeast of agency on Wounded Knee Creek.
22 miles north-northeast of agency on Wounded Knee Creek.
32 miles north of agency on Wounded Knee Creek.
35 miles north-northeast of agency on Porcupine Creek.
52 miles east of agency on Lake Creek.

30 miles north-northeast of agency on Porcupine Creek.
25 miles northeast of agency on Porcupine Creek.
40 miles northeast of agency on American Horse Creek.
45 miles north-northeast of agency on Medicine Root Creek.
40 miles northeast of agency on Little Wound Creek.
45 miles northeast of agency on No Flesh Creek.
50 miles east-northeast of agency on Corn Creek.
65 miles northeast of agency on Bear Creek.
60 miles north-northeast of agency on Potato Creek
80 miles northeast of agency on Lone Tree Creek.
15 miles northwest of agency on White Clay Creek.
30 miles north of agency on White River.

6 miles north of agency on White Clay Creek.

5 miles east of agency on Wolf Creek.

50 miles northeast of agency on Medicine Root Creek.
On Porcupine Creek.

SUPPLEMENT No. 2.-ROSEBUD DAY SCHOOLS.

Blackpipe..
Corn Creek.
Cut Meat..

He Dog's Camp.
Ironwood...
Little Crow's.

Milk's Camp...

Oak Creek..
Pine Creek.
Rosebud Day
Spring Creek.
Upper Cut Meat..

Whirlwind soldier.
Wood...

30 miles northwest of agency on Blackpipe Creek.

37 miles northwest of agency at junction of Blackpipe and Corn Creek.
13 miles northeast of agency on Cut Meat Creek.

18 miles northwest of agency on branch of Cut Meat Creek.

8 miles west of agency.

40 miles northeast of agency; 60 miles north Valentine, Nebr.; 75 miles southwest Chamberlain, S. Dak.

100 miles east of agency on Ponca Creek.

30 miles northeast of agency; 45 miles north of Valentine, Nebr.

28 miles northeast of agency on Little White River.

At agency.

17 miles southwest of agency.

16 miles northwest of agency on Cut Meat Creek.

55 miles northeast of agency on Oak Creek, 4 miles south of White River. 35 miles northeast of agency.

(2) Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Washington, D. C., Percival Hall, president.
(3) Howard University, Washington, D. C., Stephen M. Newman, A. M., D. D., president.
(4) Territory of Alaska.1

VI.-DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE: EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

The department, through the States Relations Service (A. C. True, director), affiliates with the State agricultural colleges and experiment stations, under the acts of Congress granting funds to these institutions for agricultural experiment stations and cooperative extension work in agriculture and home economics, andin carrying out the provisions of acts of Congress making appropriations to this department for farmers, cooperative demonstration work, investigations relating to agricultural schools, farmers' institutes, and home economics and the maintenance of agricultural experiment stations in Alaska, Hawaii, Porto Rico, and Guam.

VII.-DEPARTMENT OF LABOR: EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

The Division of Citizenship Training of the Bureau of Naturalization has charge of the work of promoting instruction and training in citizenship responsibilities of applicants for naturalization by the public schools. This promotion work is now being carried on in over 3,200 cities and towns throughout the United States. It furnishes textbooks, free of charge, to these students, and presents certificates of proficiency and of graduation jointly with the public school authorities to the adult foreigners in these classes who have taken steps to become citizens of the United States.

The public schools are conducting these classes jointly with the Division of Citizenship Training in industrial plants, mines, and logging camps, as well as in the regularly recognized public school buildings throughout the United States. It furnishes naturalization forms to employers of foreign labor, to groups of employees, and to other organizations to aid foreigners in their desire to become American citizens, and in stimulating a desire on their part to attend these classes for citizenship training in the public schools throughout the United States.

VIII.-INDEPENDENT ESTABLISHMENTS: EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

1. Library of Congress, Herbert Putnam, librarian. (While not a lending library, but primarily and essentially a reference library, the Library of Congress maintains an inter-library loan system, by which special service is rendered to scholarship by the lending of books to other libraries for the use of investigators engaged in serious research.)

2. Smithsonian Institution, Charles D. Walcott, secretary:

(a) United States National Museum (including the National Gallery of Art), W. de C. Ravenel, administrative assistant to the secretary in charge; (b) Bureau of American Ethnology, J. Walter Fewkes, chief; (c) International Exchanges, C. G. Abbot, assistant secretary in charge; (d) National Zoological Park, Ned Hollister, superintendent; (e) Astrophysical observatory, C. G. Abbot, director; (f) Regional Bureau for the United States, International Catalog of Scientific Literature, Leonard C. Gunnell, assistant in charge.

3. National Academy of Sciences, Charles D. Walcott, president; C. G. Abbot, home secretary; George E. Hale, foreign secretary.

(a) National Research Council, James R. Angell, chairman; Vernon Kellogg, secretary.

4. The Panama Canal (Canal Zone), A. R. Lang, superintendent of schools.

5. Civil Service Commission, Martin A. Morrison, Geo. R. Wales, Mrs. Helen H. Gardener, Commissioners; John T. Doyle, secretary.

1 See Principal State school officers; County and other local superintendents of schools; Superintendents of public schools in cities and towns.

6. FEDERAL BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION.2

MEMBERS.

William B. Wilson, Secretary of Labor, chairman.

Joshua W. Alexander, Secretary of Commerce.
Edwin T. Meredith, Secretary of Agriculture.

P. P. Claxton, Commissioner of Education.

James P. Munroe, Manufacture and Commerce, vice chairman.
Calvin F. McIntosh, Agriculture.

Arthur E. Holder, Labor.

EXECUTIVE STAFF.

(Office: Maltby Building, 200 New Jersey Avenue NW., Washington, D. C.)

Uel W. Lamkin, director.

E. Joseph Aronoff, secretary.

C. E. Alden, chief clerk.

H. F. Dolan, disbursing officer.

S. N. Quillin, auditor.

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION DIVISION.

Layton S. Hawkins, assistant director for vocational education.

J. C. Wright, chief, industrial education service.

C. W. Lane, chief, agricultural education service.

Anna E. Richardson, chief, home economics education service.

F. G. Nichols, chief, commercial education service.

VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION DIVISION (SOLDIERS).

R. T. Fisher, assistant director for vocational rehabilitation.

C. E. Partch, William A. Clark, E. B. Luce, and E. R. Witman, administrative assistants.
W. I. Hamilton, chief of training relations.
H. L. Brunson, chief of industrial relations.
Col. J. R. McDill, chief of medical relations.

INDUSTRIAL REHABILITATION DIVISION.

Lewis H. Carris, assistant director for industrial rehabilitation.

District.

District No. 1......

District No. 2....
District No. 3..
District No. 4...

District No. 5.......

District No. 6......
District No. 7.....

District No. 8.....
District No. 9......
District No. 10...

District No. 11....
District No. 12...
District No. 13....

District No. 14....

DISTRICT VOCATIONAL OFFICES.

Address.

F. T. A. McLeod, Boston, Mass., 101 Milk Street..

W. F. Shaw, New York City, 23 West Forty-third Street.
R. J. Fuller, Philadelphia, Pa., 140 North Broad Street.
W. H. Magee, Baltimore, Md., 450 Lexington Building..

C. G. Schulz, Atlanta, Ga., 312 Majestic Building...............

L. R. Fuller, New Orleans, La., 412 Maison Blanche
Annex.

Louis Herbst, Cincinnati, Ohio, 505-12 Lyric Theater
Building, Vine Street.

Chas. W. Sylvester, Chicago, Ill., 14 East Congress
Street.

C. E. Partch, St. Louis, Mo., 6801 Delmar Avenue..

C. A. Zuppann, Minneapolis, Minn., 600 Keith-Plaza
Building, 1700 Hennepin Avenue.

H. Allen Nye, Denver, Colo., U. S. National Bank
Building.

Nicholas Ricciardi, San Francisco, Calif., 521 Flood
Building.

C. H. Anderson, Seattle, Wash., fifth floor, Arcade
Building.

W. F. Doughty, Dallas, Tex., Baker Building, Akard
and Pacific Avenue.

State.

Maine, Vermont, New
Hampshire, Massa-
chusetts, Rhode
Island.

Connecticut, New York,
New Jersey.

Pennsylvania, Delaware.
District of Columbia,
Maryland, Virginia,
West Virginia.
North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee,
Georgia, and Florida.
Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana.

Ohio, Indiana, Ken-
tucky.
Michigan, Illinois, Wis-
consin.

Iowa, Nebraska, Kan-
sas, Missouri.
Minnesota,

North Da-
kota, South Dakota,
Montana.
Wyoming, Colorado,
New Mexico, Utah.
California, Nevada, Ari-

zona.

Idaho, Oregon, Wash-
ington.
Arkansas, Oklahoma,
Texas.

Specialists for blind: Harold Molter, supervisor; O. H. Burritt, consultant, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Washington, D. C.

2 The Federal Board for Vocational Education has been charged with the responsibility of reeducating disabled soldiers and sailors. It is the intention of the board to use the resources of existing institutions and, so far as practicable, to train men in institutions as near as possible to their homes. The board is limited in its work of vocational education to beneficiaries of the war-risk insurance act. Men are received for training after they are discharged from the hospitals and from the Army.

LOCAL VOCATIONAL OFFICES.

District.

District No. 1.....

District No. 2...

District No. 3..

District No. 4...

District No. 5..

District No. 6..

District No. 7....

District No. 8..

District No. 9..

District No. 10..........

City.

Portland, Me.
Providence, R. I..
Springfield, Mass..
Albany, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y

Poughkeepsie, N. Y
Rochester, N. Y
Syracuse, N. Y.
Troy, N. Y...
Utica, N. Y.
Camden, N. J..
Jersey City, N. J..
Newark, N.J.
Hartford, Conn..
New Haven, Conn..
Bridgeport, Conn.
Allentown, Pa...

Erie, Pa......

Harrisburg, Pa..
Johnstown, Pa..

Pittsburgh, Pa...

Scranton, Pa..

Williamsport, Pa.
Norfolk, Va...
Richmond, Va...
Roanoke, Va..
Washington, D. C..
Charleston, W. Va.
Clarksburg, W. Va..
Chattanooga, Tenn..
Nashville, Tenn..
Columbia, S. C..
Charlotte, N. C.

Jacksonvile, Fla..
Palatka, Fla...
Savannah, Ga..
Birmingham, Ala.
Mobile, Ala..
Lafayette, La..
New Orleans, La..
Shreveport, La
Jackson, Miss.
Cleveland, Ohio..

Columbus, Ohio..

Toledo, Ohio....
Indianapolis, Ind.
Hopkinsville, Ky.
Winchester, Ky.
Louisville, Ky.

Detroit, Mich.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Jackson, Mich
Marquette, Mich..
Saginaw, Mich.
Eau Claire, Wis.
Green Bay, Wis.
Milwaukee, Wis.
Batavia, Ill
Rockford, Ill.
Peoria, Ill.
Centralia, Ill..
Champaign, Ill
Des Moines, Iowa.
Kansas City, Mo..
Lincoln, Nebr.
Wichita, Kans.
Duluth, Minn..
St. Paul, Minn.
Fargo, N. Dak.

Sioux Falls, S. Dak.
Helena, Mont.

Address.

324 Masonic Building, 415 Congress Street.
214 Jackson Building, 511 Westminster Street.
406 Massasoit Building, 244 Main Street.
327 Educational Building.

Mutual Life Building.

Taylor Building, 35 Market Street.
75 State Street.

327 Montgomery Street.
32 Post Office Building.
47 Mann Building.
312 Temple Building.
571 Jersey Avenue.
9 Franklin Street.
Municipal Building.
740 Chapel Street.
309 Liberty Building.

Room 24 B. and B. Building, Sixth and
Hamilton Streets.

Marine National Bank Building, Ninth and
State Streets.

Spooner Building, No. 9 North Second Street.
Chamber of Commerce, Fort Stanwix Hotel,
Main Street.

491 Union Arcade Building, Fifth Avenue and
Penn Way.

Room 520, Connel Building, 419 Washington
Avenue.

No. 29 Federal Building, Fourth Street.

400 Flat Iron Building.

60 Times Despatch Building.

First National Bank Building.

1410 Pennsylvania Avenue NW.

1081 Capitol Street.

303 Union Bank Building.

Y. M. C. A. Building.

405 Post Office Building.

500 Loan and Exchange Bank Building.
United States Assay Office.

Bell Telephone Building.

Federal Building.

City Auditorium Building.

708 Chamber of Commerce Building.
208 Masonic Temple.

Post Office Building.

Washington Artillery Hall.

Cahn Building.

McRae Building.

Room 610, Standard Parts Building, Twelfth
and Walnut Streets.

Room 211, Columbus Guarantee Mortgage Co.
Building, 38 West Gay Street.

705 Nasby Building, southwest corner Madison
and Huron Avenues.

Meridian Life Building.

Phoenix Building.

Clark Co., National Bank Building.

612 Starks Building, Fourth and Walnut Streets.

207 Henry Street.

217 Fourth National Bank Building.

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District.

District No. 11...

District No. 12....

District No. 13..

District No. 14....

LOCAL VOCATIONAL OFFICES-continued.

City.

Albuquerque, N. Mex.
Pueblo, Colo..
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Casper, Wyo...

Cheyenne, Wyo...
Sheridan, Wyo..
Los Angeles, Calif..

Fresno, Calif..
Phoenix, Ariz.
Portland, Oreg.
Spokane, Wash.
Pocatello, Idaho.
Little Rock, Ark.
Fort Smith, Ark.
Oklahoma City, Okla.

Tulsa, Okla.
Beaumont, Tex.
Fort Worth, Tex..
Houston, Tex..
Paris, Tex

San Antonio, Tex..
Waco, Tex.

El Paso, Tex.

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7. United States Shipping Board.

RECRUITING SERVICE.

Irving L. Evans, director; E. D. Warner, assistant to director.

The activities of the Recruiting Service are divided into three main branches as follows: (1) The Naviga. tion and Engineering Schools for training officers, including turbine engineers; (2) the Sea Training Bureau for training men below the grade of officers; (3) the Sea Service Bureau for placing on ships officers and men trained by the service, as well as those from other sources.

1. Navigation and Engineering Schools. 3

Prof. A. F. Burton, in charge of instruction in navigation; Prof. E. F. Miller, in charge of instruction in engineering.

Section 1 (Eastport to Connecticut River; Harrington Pike, section chief, Boston, Mass.). Schools: Cambridge, Mass., and Rockland, Me.

Section 2 (Connecticut River to Cape Charles, Va.; R. Patterson, section chief, Philadelphia, Pa.). Schools: Baltimore, Md.; Brooklyn, N. Y.; Philadelphia, Pa.; New York City (Seamen's Church) Institute; Norfolk, Va.; Brooklyn (Polytechnic), N. Y.

Section 3 (Cape Charles to Cape Florida and entire Gulf Coast; C. H. Cugle, section chief, New Orleans, La.). Schools: New Orleans, La.; New Orleans, La. (Tulane University).

Section 4 (entire California seaboard: J. W. Jory, section chief, San Francisco, Calif.). Schools: San Francisco, Calif.; Berkeley, Calif. (University of California).

Section 5 (entire Washington and Oregon seaboard; J. H. Payne, section chief, Seattle, Wash.). Schools: Seattle, Wash.; Seattle (University of Washington).

Section 6 (Great Lakes district; P. G. Pettersen, section chief, Cleveland, Ohio). Schools: Chicago, Ill.; Cleveland, Ohio.

Turbine training (J. B. Norton, supervising engineer). Schools: General Electric, Schenectady, N. Y.; Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.

2. Sea Training Bureau.

Camp Stuart, Va.; (Shore Station, E. O. Patterson, supervisor): S. S. Newton; S. S. Utoka; S. S. Sturgeon Bay; S. S. Alabat.

Seattle, Wash. (Shore station, J. Howard Payne, assistant director): S. S. Hollywood.
San Francisco, Calif. (Shore station, J. W. Jory, supervisor): S. S. Brookdale.

3 Only men with satisfactory sea experience on deck are admitted to the navigation schools, and those with satisfactory engineering experience to the engineering schools. A course of instruction on the upkeep and operation of geared turbines is maintained by the Recruiting Service at the plants of the manufactures, and 30 men are kept continuously in these classes. A course is also given on electric drive.

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