539 7 D35 py 1 REPORT OF WAR WORK OF THE i^ational ^ocietp OF THE ©auBijters of tfje American Ecbolution DURING THE GREAT WORLD WAR FROM August 14, 1914-November 11,1918 REPORT PPESENTED TO THE 28TH CONTINENTAL CONGRESS. HELD IN WASHINGTON. D. C. APRIL 14-19. 1919 NATIONAL OFFICERS OF THE N. S. D. A. R., 1917-1919. PR^smeNT-GeNERAL MRS. GEORGE THACHER GUERNSEY Chaplain-Generai, MISS ELISABETH F. PIERCE Recording Secretary-General MISS EMMA L. CROWELL Corresponding Secretary-General MRS. WOODBURY PULSIFER Organizing Secretary-General MRS. DUNCAN U. FLETCHER Registrar-General MISS GRACE M. PIERCE Treasurer-General MRS. ROBERT J. JOHNSTON Historian-General MRS. GEORGE K. CLARKE Director-General, in charge of report to Smithsonian Institution MRS. BENJAMIN D. HEATH Librarian-General MRS. JAMES M. FOWLER Curator-General MISS CATHERINE BRITTIN BARLOW Vice-Presidents-General. (Term of office expires igi8) Mrs. J. F. Maupin Mrs. C. B. Letton Mrs. Joseph S. Wood Mrs. Edmund P. Moody Mrs. Eliza Ferry Leary Mrs. G. Wallace W. Hanger Mrs. William C. Robinson {Term of office expires iQig) Mrs. George Maynard Minor Mrs. Harold R. Howell Mrs. William G. Spencer Mrs. C. Hamilton Tebault Mrs. William Butterworth Mrs. Mmn. V. Lane Mrs. George W. Gedney {Term of office expires ig2o) Mrs. James Benton Grant Miss Jeanie D. Blackburn Mrs. Fred H. H. Calhoun Mrs. Samuel McKnight Green Mrs. Charles E. Longley Mrs. Sheppard W. Foster Mrs. William H. Talbott {Term of office expires IQ21) Mrs. William N. Reynolds Mrs. Andrew Fuller Fox Mrs. Frank B. Hall Miss Stella Pickett Hardy Mrs. Charles H. AuU Mrs. Benjamin Ladd Purcell Mrs. William A. Guthrie REPORT OF THE PUBLICITY DIRECTOR WAR RELIEF SERVICE COMMITTEE OF THE i^ational ^ocietp OF THE ©augfjters of tJje American Eebolution NMar /eli«e£'£,erL/rce Co -rvx. nrv-^ : i t e, e. TO THE TWENTY-EIGHTH CONTINENTAL CONGRESS APRIL 14-19, 1919 '■aii iUi H .<\ REPORT OF THE PUBLICITY DIRECTOR WAR RELIEF SERVICE COMMITTEE OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION TO THE TWENTY=EIGHTH CONTINENTAL CONGRESS, APRIL 14-19, 1919 Madam President-General and Members of the Twenty- Eighth Continental Congress: Patriotism translated into facts and figures is the keynote of this report which is a brief history of our part as Daughters of the American Revolution in the World War. Acting on the authority vested in her by the Twenty-Sixth Continental Congress, the President-General, Mrs. George Thacher Guernsey, upon the ad- journment of Congress, appointed a permanent War Relief Service Committee with Mrs. Matthew T. Scott, chairman, and Mrs. Albert S. Burleson, \'ice-chairman. This Committee met and divided the country into six Districts with a District Director at the head of each District. Mrs. James Benton Grant, Col. Western; Mrs. Fred H. H. Calhoun, S. C, South Eastern; Mrs. Frank D, Ellison, Mass., North Eastern; Mrs. James Lowry Smith, Tex., Southern; Mrs. Frank W. Banhsen, 111., Central; Mrs. Albert S. Burleson, D. C, Eastern; Mrs. William Henry Wait, Mich., Publicity Director. It was found advisable to re-district the country for our work and to add other members including Vice-Chairmen to the Committee. Those changes were made by the President-General, the Committee now standing: Chairman — Mrs. Matthew T. Scott, District of Columbia. Vice-CHAiRMEN — Mrs. Albert Sidney Burleson, District of Columbia; Mrs. Thomas A. Edison, New Jersey. Director of Publicity — Mrs. William Henry Wait, Michigan. Secretary — Mrs. Howard L. Hodgkins, District of Columbia. Northern Division — Mrs. Frank D. ElHson, Director, Massachusetts; Mrs. John Laidlaw Buel, Vice-Director, Connecticut. Eastern Division — Mrs. G. Wallace W. Hanger, Director, District of Columbia; Miss Helen E. C. Overton, Vice-Director, Pennsylvania. Southeastern Division — Mrs. Fred H. H. Calhoun, Director, South Carolina; Mrs. Sheppard W. Foster, Vice- Director, Georgia. Central Division — Mrs. Harold R. Howell, Director, Iowa; Mrs. John Lee Dinwiddle, Vice-Director, Indiana. Western Division — Mrs. James Lowry Smith, Director, Texas; Miss Stella Pickett Hardy, Vice- Director, Arkansas. Pacific Coast Division — Mrs. James Benton Grant, Director, Colorado; Mrs. Maynard Force Thayer, Vice-Director, California. During the period of service, Mrs Andrew F. Fox, Miss., for a time served as Director of the Southeastern Division and Mrs. S. P. Davis, Ark., as Vice-Director of the Western Division. At its meeting April 24th, 191 7, the Committee authorized the issuance of Registration Blanks to the entire membership in order that every Daughter might measure her ability for service to her country at war. These registration blanks issued within a month after the declaration of war by the United States preceded . the National registration of women by many months and proved most valuable as a measure which taught many Daughters the necessity of preparing for active war service, stimulated in others long dormant talents, and aroused in many the consciousness that the time had come when the services of every American woman as well as every American man might be needed in the struggle which was impending. In the same consignment with the Registration Blanks were also sent a copy of a letter from the Chairman, Mrs. Scott, to Monsieur Jusserand, French Ambas- sador, asking him how best the Daughters could show their appreciation of and sympathy for France, a copy of Monsieur Jusserand's reply to Mrs. Scott teUing us the needs of the children of France, and a copy of a letter from Mr. Vrooman, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, suggesting how women could serve their Government in agricultural Hues. Mrs. Scott also sent a most appealing letter to the Chapters settmg forth the needs of the little French Orphans. . At a meeting of the Committee, June 21, 191 7, it was decided to distribute information on work made necessary by the war, and to that end a series of forty- four Bulletins has been written and issued by the PubHcity Director, The subjects cover Knitted Garments (3 Bulletins), Clippings, French Orphans, Jelly (2 Bulletins), Marking of Gifts, Food, Reports of War Work, Questionnaires to Regents, Home Service Paraffin Candles, Sending Gifts to U. S. Navy, An All American America, Liberty Loans (4 Bulletins), Business Bulletin, Trench Caps, Patriotism versus Thoughtlessness, Tilloloy (2 Bulletins), War Resolutions adopted by the Twenty- Seventh Continental Congress, The Enemy Within our Gates, Allies, England and the Daughters of the American Revolution, Salvage, National Service Schools, Vacations and D. A. R. Roll of Honor Pins, the D. A. R. Magazine as a War Factor, Rechickenizing France, Eyes for the Navy, Keep the Home Fires Burning, Exhibit at Twenty-Eighth Continental Congress, Reconstruction in France, and Stump Socks . The plan of distribution adopted at the Committee meeting, June 21, 19 17, was found to be so satisfactory that it has been continued without interruption. The Bulletins were counted out for each State and tied together in the office of the Publicity Director. To each District Director were sent the packages of Bulletins for the States in her District. She in turn sent the parcels to the State Regents in her District, and the State Regents forwarded them to the Chapter Regents. So to all these Daughters who have served in the distribution of these Bulletins, to the Chapter Members who have worked so efficiently, to all the members of the War Relief Service Committee who have planned so wisely and served so faith- fully, especially to Mrs. Hodgkins who has had charge of the French Orphan list, and to Mrs. Hanger who compiled our Registration Blanks, to Mrs. Scott, our Chairman, who has been untiring in her enthusiasm for the cause, and to the President-General, Mrs. Guernsey, who has been most helpful with suggestions and advice, belongs the honor of having made possible this report of the War Work of the National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. It is a record that shames not our claim of loyalty to the Flag of our forefathers, and of faith- fulness to the cause of Freedom for which they lived and died. Requests for our literature reached us from other organizations, notably the National Committee of Patriotic Societies which several times included our Bulletins in their distribution of literature of Patriotic Societies; also the National Security League; Women's Di\nsion, Bureau of Public Information, National Y. W. C. A.; Russell Sage Foundation, and from Miss Ida Tarbell, Chairman Publicity Committee, Women's Division, Council of National Defense. It is most gratifying to know that our Bulletins were republished by news- papers in various parts of the country and were used by the Committee ol Council of National Defense in some States. We also received a letter from the former Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. McAdoo, in response to our Bulletins and a state- ment of the work of the Daughters for the Liberty Loans, expressing appreciation of our work in the cause. In all, we made a distribution of 179,200 D. A, R. Registration Blanks and Bulletins. Besides these publications of our own, your Committee has distributed other helpful war-time letters and literature — the former written by Mrs. Guernsey and Mrs. Scott, the latter furnished by the Nax'y League, Woman's Com. Navy League, Woman's Naval Service (Inc.), National Committee Patriotic Societies, etc. and etc., to the number of 25,000, making a total distribution of 214,200 Bulletins and Pamphlets. The Daughters were invited by the War Department through Mrs. Clara Sears Taylor, Women's Division, Bureau of Information, to take part in the com- pilation of a photographic history of the w^ar, as it is "the purpose of the War Department to include a comprehensive series of photograph to illustrate war activities of the women of the country." Responding to this call, many Chapters sent pictures of the Daughters engaged in War Activities, of Hostess Houses and Rooms, etc., for the Exhibit at the Twenty-Seventh Continental Congress. At the close of the Exhibit, the War Pictures, with a full report of the War Work of the Daughters, were given by us to Mrs. Taylor for the National files at the Army War College. A Report of our War Work was also sent Mrs. Heath for Smithsonian Report. It being deemed advisable by the President-General and the Editor of the Magazine, Miss Lincoln, to have a page in the Magazine given over to the War Relief Service Department, an invitation was sent to the State Regents to furnish items of War W^ork being done by the Daughters in their States. Cuba, Hawaii, the Philippines and the Orient, as well as many States, have been represented on this page. Today the result of all the efforts of the Daughters is before us. The record covers the beginning of our War Work when, as women of a neutral nation, we worked for National Surgical Dressings, Red Cross and other War Relief, to the present hour when as women of a victorious nation we are welcoming back to our shores America's victors, meeting with a brave front the problems of reconstruction and readjustment. With this record of our work, we dare look into the eyes of men who stood in the front-line trenches because we have been true to our trust and have stood in the second-line trenches of Home Service. The Daughters of the American Revolution have made no "Drives" for the benefit of our War Work. We are not included as beneficiaries in the United War Work Campaign Fund. We have not received from the Government any salaries for our war work as an organization. We had no "franking" privileges, no free use of the mails, express or telegraph. We ourselves have financed all our overhead expenses incurred by the war. The National Report is compiled from Reports received in March, 1919, by the Publicity Director from the State Regents regarding French Orphans, Tilloloy, D. A. R. Liberty Loan and National Service Schools. A supplementary Report of States is appended to this Report. GIFTS FOR ALL BRANCHES OF THE SERVICE AT HOME AND ABROAD AND FOR HOME RELIEF. Not priced Priced 50c each $1 , 964 . 50 48,346 13,812 46 7,323 3,018 1,111 2 , 090 . 00 5,962.72 407.00 40,954 96 65,399- 13 230.00 3,871.70 200.00 Barrack bags, 3,929 Box-lunches Candy Christinas boxes Chrstmas celebrations Christmas packets Comfort kits, 58,734 @, $2.00 Flowers Games Home relief Hospitality houses Hospitality rooms Housewives, 23,752 @ 75c each Jelly, 93,752 glasses, @ 20c each Knitted garments, 296,268 garments or 74,067 sets. Mending bureau Mess funds Miscellaneous gifts Musical instruments National Service Schools National surgical dressings and Red Cross, prior to April 6, 19 17. Money contributions Hospital garments 20,538 Surgical supplies 331 ,686 Knitted garments 328 Miscellaneous gifts 20, 100 To Belgium To France To other war objects Picture puzzles 2 ,048 Property bags, 10,815, @ 50c each Red Cross: Money contributions Comfort kits 30,585 Hospital garments 163 ,590 Knitted garments 126,649 Surgical supplies 3,230,813 Miscellaneous gifts 6,162 Work given to Red Cross, Red Cross material used : Hospital garments 379 , 1 14 Surgical supplies 23 ,903 , 104 Knitted garments 194,812 Comfort kits 21,510 Refugee garments 385 Special work for Red Cross: Proceeds of salvage sale given Red Cross Proceeds of concert given Red Cross Solicited for Red Cross Collected for Red Cross by one Chapter Scrap books 20,429 Special gifts: A Chapter in the desert met each troop train and served lemonade. Wayiarer's Club for War- Working Girls Rent of business store given Use of entire building given to Red Cross: Thanksgiving dinner Monthly salary of $85.00 given to Hostess in Community House Park purchased and tree planting begun as memorial to one county's soldiers. Memorial to men of Jackson and Duvall counties, Florida Camp welfare and war relief rooms Equipping three women to go abroad 507,086.65 Cash $117,468.00 13,639.75 28,606.68 I ,910.20 17,814.00 18,750.40 888,804.00 3,414 91 7,486.45 II ,007.29 7 , 7 1 2 . 00 67,484.43 27,680. 12 263.00 808.00 5,407-50 759,140.55 10,800.00 3 , 000 . 00 15,390.00 473,953-00 500.00 I , 600 . 00 75.00 100.00 I ,000.00 350.00 Not priced Priced Cash Special comforts given for soldiers 4,854.00 Gift of one member: Purchase Camp Pike, twenty-six aviators outfitted, lunches to six trainloads of soldiers 500.00 Furnishing Khaki Club i , 200 . 00 Loan fund established for incapacitated soldiers 5 ,000.00 Room in base hospital furnished. Three dozen mattresses made for soldiers stationed at Viaduct. Battery adopted i , 050 . 43 Rubber beds for wounded aviators 150.00 97 sons adopted. Milk purchased all summer for 20 babies. 7 soldiers, 2 nurses, and 2 sailors adopted. Hospital ward adopted. Hospitahty to men in service: House guests 42 ,398 Table guests 96 , 329 Guests at public tables 50, 109 Dances, dinners, luncheons and picnics given. Ice cream and cake served 1,000. Dinner to company starting for Mexican border. Entertainment of 50 convalescent soldiers 3 days. Welcome-home dinner to one company. Three sailors entertained as week-end guests for 3 months, etc., etc. Smileage books 2 ,333 296.00 Tobacco 3 ,640.65 Vehicles : Ambulances 16 29,684.40 Automobiles i 977.00 Diet kitchens 672 .00 Field kitchens 3 5 ,065 .00 Trucks 1 520.00 Vests 1 ,653 Victrola records, etc 681 140.00 CONTRIBUTIONS TO OTHER ORGANIZATIONS DOING WAR WORK. Not priced Priced Cash United War Work campaign 468 ,061 . 85 Speakers 672 Speeches 3 , 363 Y. M. C. A 157,606.10 Books 1 ,052 ,025 Magazine subscriptions 8,631 2 ,702 .00 Newspaper subscriptions i ,431 74i 69 Pianos and Victrolas 69 3 ,756 .00 Y. W. C. A 59,046.40 Miscellaneous gifts 405 472 .00 Knights of Columbus 10 , 236 . 00 Miscellaneous gifts 5 Salvation Army 10 , 454 . 50 Miscellaneous gifts 82 .00 Jewish Relief 75 00 6,230.50 Miscellaneous gifts American Library Association 9,256.00 Miscellaneous gifts 34,474 383 .00 War Camp Community Service 13 ,340. 25 Salary of camp mother for two years. Other organizations 57 ,350.55 Miscellaneous gifts 287 639 .00 Screening camp kitchen. Liberty Loans: Taken by Chapters 333, 538. 50 Taken by States 2 ,400.00 Taken by individual Daughters 36,447 ,074.28 Sold by Daughters 51 ,951 ,363.00 D. A. R. Liberty Loan (totaled under list of gifts). 8 Not priced Priced Cash Thrift stamps: Taken by Daughters 36 , 761 .00 Sold by Daughters 565 . 00 War Savings stamps: Taken by Daughters ^ 212 ,959.03 Sold by Daughters 67 , 45 1 . 00 France: Cash 5,554-73 French orphans 137,994.28 Garments 65 , 497 Miscellaneous 5,581 17, 737 05 Poultry farms 9,135-73 Tilloloy , 42 ,365 . 84 Our other allies: Cash 71 ,225.06 Garments 30 , 106 Miscellaneous 3,235 23,321.61 Miscellaneous gifts include boxes and barrels of clothing, provisions and fruit, cakes, doughnuts, eggs, milk, jam, bottles of grape juice, nuts, toilet articles, writing materials, linens, crate of bicarbonate, cots, wheel chair, athletic equip- ment, electric iron, Bibles, Testaments, flags to Members of the Service, sewing machine, bed in Neuilly, 4 French soldiers adopted, French mother maintained, 2 Belgian; 5 Armenian; i Italian orphan adopted; equipment of an American soldier serving in the French Army; i Belgian prisoner adopted; etc., etc. Miscellaneous gifts do not include bundles of second-hand newspapers and magazines, rolls of old linen and cotton, post cards, picture cards, envelopes of clippings, pin wheels, trench candles, valentines, gun wipes, handkerchiefs made from old linen, and 3,562,499 surgical supplies. RECAPITULATION. GIFTS Cash and priced gifts $3 , 730 , 385 . 60 One million seven hundred and eleven thousand, three hun- dred and seventy two miscellaneous gifts impriced. WAR INVESTMENTS Liberty Loans, Thrift and War Savings Stamps taken by Daughters 37 , 032 , 732 . 8 1 N. S. D. A. R. Liberty Loan 100,000.00 Total War Expenditures of Daughters 40 , 863 ,118.41 Total sales of War Investments by Daughters 52 ,019,379.00 The Daughters in many States early recognized the value of preserving for future generations the war records of our men in service and also realized the psychological value to the man himself, and the effect on the morale of the service if the men knew the people of their home towns and counties had vital interest and pride in their records. To this end many hundreds of letters were written "to the boys" — the most unique example being that of a Daughter teaching in one of om- Government Indian Schools who has written 20 letters each month to her soldier pupils overseas. In one State, this work systematically commenced by the Daughters was taken over by the State. Realizing the importance of training our young women in agricultural lines when oiur men were being called from the ploughshare to the sword, the Daughters contributed for scholarships in National Service Schools held in Washington, D. C, and Chautauqua, N. Y., spring and summer of 191 8. That the American girl is worthy of all the advantages that can be given her is proved by the splendid answer to the "Call to Colors," made by 279 of our Daughters who enlisted for service in the United States, their services being recognized and paid for by the United States Government. One hundred and twenty-five of our Daughters enUsted for foreign service but were not called; but honor is due them because, forgetting self, they answered to roll call for service on foreign soil when the crisis came. The names of all these patriotic women have been collected, and are ready with their data for the part they will play in the War History of the Daughters when it is written. Two hundred and sixty-two of our Daughters joined that great crusade of women who, the first in the history of the world, left native shores to help struggle on foreign soil with disease and death in the presence of the most horrible war of all time in order that the world might be kept a decent place for the children of the men. SERVICE ABROAD. (In every case where the country is not mentioned, the service is in France.) A.l,abama: Miss Katherine Gardner, Hut Entertainment; Mrs. Mary Steiner Crommelin, Canteen; Mrs. H. M. Taylor, Red Cross; Miss Julia tide. Red Cross Nurse, Base Hospital No. 17. Arkansas: Miss Myra C. Meeks, Superintendent of Hospital. California : Ruth Rogers, Casualty Searcher, Red Cross ; Miss Harriet Northrup, Nurse; Mrs. Margaret Stevenson, British Hospital Service Nurse. Colorado: Miss Mary Brand Chew, Canteen Service, Red Cross; Miss Dorothy Plumb Haynes, Entertainer in Concert Company. Z!onne;cticut : Miss Alice C. Rogers, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Lillian Mack Hitchcock, Hospital Service; Miss Lillian Estelle Farrell, Canteen Service; Miss Anna Rumbaugh, Nurses' Aid; Miss Frances Elliot Hickox, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Esther Voorhees Hasson, Nurse, American Expeditionary Forces; Miss Ruth Lane Daniels, Supervisor of Nurses, U. S. Base Hospital No. 15; Miss Lucy Pratt Mitchell, Army Nurse Corps, U. S. Base Hospital No. 12, American Expeditionary Forces; Miss J. Alice Maxwell, at the head of the "Mayfair Relief"; Miss Elsie Livingston Hepburn, Canteen Work; Miss Edith Brooks, Red Cross Nurse, Palestine; Mrs. Vera J. Edwards, A. R. C, Hospital Unit; Miss Alice Cunningham Rogers. Delaware: Mrs, Edith Knowles, Canteen; Miss Virginia G. Yardley, Maker of Surgical Dressings and Secretary at Washington Inn, London, England. District of Columbia: Mrs. Flora Stanton Kalb, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Emma Steed, Red Cross Matron; Miss Alma Winningham, Stenographer; Miss Jean Flickinger, Service Abroad; Miss Virginia R. Hicks, Stenographer; Miss Cornelia H. Hill, Secretary Red Cross, Italy; Miss Mary Benton Wright, Stenographer for Treasury Department; Miss Florence Caldwell, Nurse American Expeditionary Forces; Mrs. Hoover Hanger, Surgical Dressings and General Sewing. Florida: Lucy J. Chamberlain, Secretary; Bernice W. Lyle, Director in Recreation Hut. Georgia: Miss Mary Brown, Reconstruction Work, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Isoline Campbell, Reconstruction Work, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Elleigh Page Tucker, Y. W. C. A.; Mrs. Frances Gordon Smith, Diet Department, Rolland Hospital; Miss Mary Davis, Canteen; Miss Maude Fisher, Canteen; Miss Ettiene Baldwin, Y. W. C. A. 'llinois: Mrs. Carl Vrooman, Canteen; Mrs. Lucile Irion Ryan, Red Cross; Miss Elizabeth Craig, Nurse; Miss Amy Gort, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Margaret lO M. Mclllvaine, Nurse; Miss Alice Pratt, Hospital; Miss Harriet Fulmer, Nurse; Miss Gail Myers, Miss Mabel Ellis, Y. M. C. A., England; Miss Mabel Parrott, Nurse; Miss Helen Green, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Elizabeth Hendricks, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Bessie Mabel Fuller, Nurse; Miss Eva Hunt, Canteen. Indiana: Miss Mary Agnes Goldthwaite, Nurse, Hospital No. i8; Miss Louise Wright, Entertainer; Miss Martha Royce, Canteen; Dr. Caroline Lawrence, Head of Children's Hospital, Jerusalem; Miss Leah Graves, Secretary; Dr. Ada McMahan, Base Hospital; Miss [Mary Hohday, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Lila Frew Kurtz, Y. M. C. A. Canteen, London; Miss Catherine Lory, Nurse. Iowa: Miss Hattie B. Lymenstahl, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Eunice Wolcott, in France with Peace Commission; Miss Margaret Reid, Y. W. C. A.; Miss Mildred R. Gilson, Red Cross Nurse, Unit K of Council Bluffs; Mary Katherine West, Superintendent Unit No. 12 Hospital; Miss Ruth E. Hamiel, Red Cross Nurse; Celene Virginia Barger, Canteen Worker and Entertainer; Edna Sedgwick, Reconstruction Work. Kansas: Miss Elizabeth Gorsline Flagg, Y. M. C. A. Educational Work; Miss Guila Adams, Y. M. C. A. Entertainer; Miss Rachael Pugh, Secretary Y. M. C. A.; Miss Lucile Otto, Nurse; Miss Ada Allen, Hospital Hut Service; Miss Lydia Dow, Nurse; Miss Lucy Porter, Canteen, London; Miss Clara Francis, Red Cross Searcher; Mrs. H. E. Don Carlos, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Anna E. Insley, Y. M. C. A. Kentucky: Miss Mary Wheeler, Red Cross Entertainer as Singer, France and England; Mrs. B. A. Evans; Miss Harriett Cleek, Nurse; Miss Kate Pence, Clerk; Miss Mary W. Arvin, Nurse, Base Hospital No. 5; Miss Margaret Druien, Red Cross Nurse. Louisiana: Miss Fay Alcock, Hut Worker, Base Hospital No. 104; Romar Hening Smith, Clerical and Canteen Work. Massachusetts: Ruth Monroe Welton (Mrs. Ranna H.), Canteen; Miss Grace Mabel Bacon, Educational Commission, A. E. F. ; Miss Helen Dodge, Furlough Areas as Hostess; Miss Sibyl Robeson, Auto Driver; Miss Ellen Pierce Clark, London, England; Miss Mary A. Frye, with Army of Occupation, Germany; Miss Helen Mae Frances Lincoln, U. S. Army Nurse; Miss Florence Nesmith, Canteen Worker; Mrs. John Craig (Mary Young), Y. M. C. A.; Miss Grace Nichols, Canteen Worker, Red Cross; Miss Agnes Smith, Red Cross Nurse, Evacuation Hospital; Miss Maude Pfaffman, Clerical Work, General Pershing's Headquarters; Mrs. Fred H. Smith, Canteen Worker; Miss Madehne M. Bell, Canteen and Clerical Worker for Red Cross. Michigan: Miss Eleanor Cook, Reconstruction, Turkey; Miss Doris Mauck, Hostess Club, Women's Furlough Home; Mrs. Priscilla P. Burd, Y. M. C. A. Canteen; Ada Dickie Hamblin; Miss Ethel Evelyn Hathaway, Red Cross Hospital Hut Service, Scotland, and Brest, France; Dr. Maria Belle Coolidge, Physician as Lieutenant in American Red Cross; Miss Edith Gibson Haskell, Reconstruction Aid; Dr. Rhoda Grace Hendricks, Physician and Surgeon, Scottish Women's Hospital, French Military Hospital, Poitiers and Asnieres; Sophia Fuller Sweet, Assistant Hospital Nurse; Miss Kate Baldwin, Canteen Worker, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Josephine Sherzer, Red Cross Searcher. Minnesota: Amy Robbins Ware, Wireless and Telegraphy for the Blind, now in charge of largest canteen in Paris, inspecting canteens for the Government in France ; Marion Moir, Orphilantis des Armes ; Mary Smith Jones, Red Cross Hospital Hut Service; Miss Franc Matthews, Nurse. II Mississippi: Miss Maude Cooley, Red Cross Nurse, Hospital Unit No. 24; Mrs. Emma Gene Venn, Red Cross Searcher, Nurse; Miss Ruth Burnside, Canteen Work, Y. M. C. A. Missouri: Ethel Sikes, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Daisy File, Red Cross Nurse; Mrs. Walter Sanford, Red Cross Searcher; Miss Julia Smiley Balbraith, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Katherine Mathews, Stenographer; Miss Naomi Walton, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Florence Helm, Red Cross Stenographer; Miss Virginia Russell, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Virginia George, K. of C. Canteen. Montana: Miss Ethel Seeley, Reconstruction; Miss Isabell Hawkins, Reconstruc- tion. Nebraska: Ella King Morrison, Canteen; Margaret Jean Butter, Red Cross; Anne Caldwell, Y. M. C. A., Russia; Bess A. Richards, Stenographer. New Hampshire: Miss Laura E. Sanborn, Nurse, Base Hospital No. 6, American Expeditionary Forces; Dr. Marion L. Bugbee, Children's Branch American Red Cross; Miss Myrna S. Howe, Head Aide Physical Reconstruction, Base Hospital No. 27, A. E. F.; Miss Dorothy Merrill, Base Hospital No. 61; Miss Clara A. Mitchell. New Jersey: Persis Snodgrass, Y. M. C. A.; Dorothy Clark; Amy Clark; Violet Bennett; Dr. Elsie Rose, Hospital. New Mexico: Miss Clarissa Hale Spencer, Secretary World's Com., Y. W. C. A., Russia. New York: Miss Elaine Rawlins, Canteen Work; Miss Edith L. Gros, Nurse, Military Hospital, London, England; Helem M. Sweet, Canteen Y. M. C. A.; Susan L. Heermance, Canteen Y. M. C. A.; Maude M. Woolsey, Nurse, returned to this country and then made second trip abroad; Miss Ruth Sherman Bentley, Red Cross Nurse, year in LaPann, Belgium; year in Ru Oraye, France; year in Salonika, Greece; now Mrs. Fredcello; Miss Edith Dean, Hostess Entertainer; Elizabeth G. Patterson, Red Cross Nurses' Aid; Margaret D. Cook, Y. W. C. A. ; Marian D. Campbell, American Expeditionary Forces; Katherine Feeck, American Expeditionary Forces; Anna K. Wellman, Canteen Work; Kate Huntley, Private Secretary, England; Margaret H. Mabee, Motor Corps; Lydia C. French, Red Cross Nurses' Aid; Anna W. Gillett, Canteen; Caroline B. Dow, Y. W. C. A. Director, France, England and Scotland; Mrs. Radcliffe B. Lockwood, Y. M. C. A.; Mrs. Claudia Hall Fleming, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Adele Boston, full charge Base Hospital, 400 beds. North Carolina: Miss Anne Penland, Nurse; Miss Rebecca Routh Bridges, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Edith Wynne, Red Cross; Miss Sura Heath, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Marion Torrence, Singer; Miss Alary Murphy. Ohio: Miss Flora Mason, Y. M. C. A. Canteen; Miss Lois Tappan, Canteen; Miss Anna Pauline Harrison, Canteen; Miss Lavina Belle Hart, Y. W. C. A. Canteen; Mrs. Nellie Steel Armstrong, Nurse, Serbia (Belgrade); Miss Clara D. Shuart, Red Cross Analysis of Character; Miss Sharp (daughter of Ambassador) Y. M. C. A. Canteen; Mrs. Zorab W. Bowman, National Surgical Dressing and Home Communication Bureau, Red Cross; Miss Martha Kinsey, Y. M. C. A. Hut; Miss Julia P. Norton, Canteen, Paris and Issoidun; Miss Katherine Geddes, Home Communication and Surgical Dressings; Miss Lois Ruth Campbell, Nurse; Miss Ruth Hargrave, Base Hospital No. 114, Reconstruction Aid; Miss Grace Young, Nurse; Miss Janet Jones, Telephone Operator; Mrs. Webb C. Hayes, Librarian; Miss Clara Wright, Red Cross Nurse; Eda Kerr Ohland, Nurse; Miss Grace Stucky, Canteen; Miss M. 12 Sydna Sheldon, Nurse, Base Hospital No. 115; Miss Harriett Long, American Library Association. Oregon: Mrs. Ruby Flint Hughes, Wounded Soldiers, Geneva; Mrs. Henry Talbot, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Elizabeth Freeman Fox, Y. W. C. A.; Miss Jessie Finch, Nurse. OkIvAHOMa: Miss Mynn Coggswell, Entertainer, Y. M. C. A. Pennsylvania: Miss S. Elizabeth Arnold, Canteen Work with Y. M. C. A Mrs. Nelson Courtland Brown, Canteen Red Cross; Miss Lois Brundred,* Army of Occupation, Coblenz, Canteen; Miss Bessie Eastman, Y. M. C. A. Miss Helen Minerva Garverich, United States Army Nurse; Miss Vera L Keagle, A. W. C, Unit 93, equipped for Servia; Miss Edith Lewis, Nurse Red Cross, Military Hospital No. i ; Miss Jennette P. Mechling, Nurse United States Base Hospital, A. E.F.; Miss Geraldine Houtz Masser, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Alberta E. McKeever, Red Cross Nurse, Base Hospital; Miss Edith Dill Patton, Equipment Manager of the Red Cross Motor Equipment Park, Neuilly; Miss Rebecca N. Rhodes, Canteen Service, Y. M. C. A.; Miss Mary Weimer Spencer, Canteen Work; Miss Urnia Clare Turner, Red Cross Nurse; Miss Katherine White, in American Hospital; Miss Clara Waring, Secretary Y. M. C. A.; Miss Mary C. Warner, Canteen in Gare, Red Cross; Miss Florence Whiteside, Nurse; Miss Helen Yerkes. Philippines: Miss Mary Fee, Canteen; Miss Mary Polk, Library Work, Siberia; Mrs. Applegate, Red Cross Nurse, Siberia. Rhode Island: Miss Jennie B. Stanton, Cantonment; Amelia Spicer Crane, Chief Nurse, Base Hospital No. 30; Gertrude Cottrell Bray, Attendant Y. M. Hut at Zinzig on the Rhine with the Rainbow Division. South Carolina: Miss Jennie Elder White, Red Cross Nurse, American Base Hospital, Vichy; Miss Theresa McDavid, Y. M. C. A. Canteen Service, London and Paris. Tennessee: Fannie O. Walton, Anna Blanton, Lillian Byrd, Anna McGhee Sanford; 4 others from Tennessee, names not given. (5 Nurses, 2 Canteen, I Y. W. C. A.) Texas: Miss Ethel Hilton, Red Cross; Miss Dorothy Love, Canteen Service; Miss Ruth Sanderson, Y. M. C. A., Paris; Miss Ella Day Herring, Y. W. C. A. Vermont: Mrs. Alice Easton, Canteen Y. M. C. A.; Miss Helen Raulett; Mrs. Mary L. Stickney, Canteen; Miss Cathleen Sherman, Red Cross Worker. Virginia: Mrs. Ellen B. Rixey, Base Hospital No. 17, Italy; Miss M. A. Anderson, Base Hospital No. 27, Italy; Mrs. Madge C. Taffany, Red Cross Helper Nurse, Italy; Mrs. Arthur Taylor, Rehabilitation Work; Miss Lizzie Gill Thurmond, Hospital Unit No. 41. Washington: Miss Wemner, Canteen; Mrs. Peck, Nurse; Miss Stanford, Nurse; Miss Laney, U. S. Signal Corps, Telephone Operator. West Virginia: Miss Mayme Anderson, Knights of Columbus; Miss Gertrude Garden, Y. M. C. A. Canteen; Miss Gertrude Latham, American Red Cross Canteen; Mrs. Sue Watson Stockley, Reconstruction Work. Wisconsin: Miss Jane Taylor, Camp Hospital 31, A. P. O.; Miss Georgia Sheldon, American Hospital for Italian Wounded, Italy; Miss Stella Matthews, head *Miss Brundred furnished her own equipment; also gave money for luxuries to the soldiers to the amount of $4,354. 13 of loo Nurses, Base Hospital No. 22; Nellie M. Wilcox, Nurse; Miss Helen McArthur, Red Cross Nurses' Aid; Miss Evelyn Smith, Base Hospital No. 104. Were there a Service Flag for women, the Service Flag of the Daughters of the American Revolution would have on it today two gold stars, for two of our members have made the supreme sacrifice that Freedom might live. Mrs. Emma Gene Venn, a Daughter, of Mississippi, died in a hospital in France of influenza, October 24, 1918. Miss Alice Cunningham Rogers, a Daughter, of Connecticut, died very recently in Paris, France. All honor to these two women who gave their own lives that others might live in peace. We now come to that portion of our Report which seems "the holy of holies" to womanhood today. We meet 7,482 of our Daughters who have given to the world as heroes the child who has lain next their hearts — Daughters representing 9,506 sons and daughters. Before 286 of our Daughters whose stars in their Service Flags have turned to gold, we "spiritually uncover" and pray that they may be given that "Peace which passeth all understanding." The Armistice brought with it to the Daughters a realizing sense of the magni- tude of the work before us, and without delay our attention and energy were turned to furnishing knitted garments, comfort kits, jelly, scrap-books, games, fruit, flowers, etc., etc., to our wounded and sick men returning from "over there" to convalescent and reconstruction hospitals in America. At present, many Chapters are busily engaged in knitting stump socks for those heroes who for life will be handicapped by the price they paid when they battled for World Freedom. Our National Board of Management and many other Daughters eagerly responded to the plea of our sisters in France that we sign their petition to the Peace Conference that women maltreated by the enemy should not be considered by the world as dishonored, but as wounded for their country's sake. The names of thousands of Daughters were included in the seven million names of American women forwarded on the petition to the Peace Conference. The War found us a body of loyal American women with a beautiful building of our own, a memorial to our ancestors. The War has left us a National Organiza- tion with a record for War Service — thus establishing for us a reputation which the world will expect us to maintain for all future time. Our building has been hallowed by the salute given it by our troops, as they passed it, "marching on to war." To be worthy of that salute means a future dedicated anew at this Congress to the Service of God and Freedom. Respectfully submitted Clara Hadley Wait. (Mrs. William Henry Wait.) 14 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, previous to entrance of the United States into the Great War National Surgical Dressings and Red Cross Cash Hospital garments Surgical supplies Knitted garments Miscellaneous gifts Priced Not priced Alabama. . . . Arizona Arkansas. . . California . . . Colorado . . . . 1 Connecticut. Delaware . . . ^District of Columbia. Florida Georgia Idaho 5.00 $206.20 81 .00 10,196.81 67 4,712 1,550 18,306 159 42.50 I ,984.00 300.00 160.00 394 5,112 257 5,002 160.00 350 10,344 105 50 Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . . ^Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hanipshire. New Jersey New Mexico. . . . Wew York North Carolina. . North Dakota. . . *Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island . . . . South Carolina. . South Dakota. . . Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia . . . Wisconsin Wyoming Argentina Cuba 10,240.00 216.00 1,533-75 167 .00 7,500.00 22.50 720.50 182 1,259 200 229 14,000 I ,762 .00 2,860 227 6,018 7,024 32.50 1,552.05 4,36764 I ,205.00 424.40 4,681.56 462 . 80 991 .00 I ,869.50 1,097 3,035 26,378 66,888 I ,200.00 12 501 39,475 900 152 20,000 514 84.50 25.00 8,210.02 1,309-50 I ,i 45,146 126 2 ,228. 10 342.00 360.00 2,143 3,874 15.00 5.00 390 359 939.00 546 11,813 50,693 15.00 2 , 125 .00 197 .00 100 100 20 6 50 337 770 258 1,158 36 150 6,000 391-30 loi .00 5,000 280.00 200.00 I ,493.00 83 59.00 250 40 67,484.43 20,538 331,686 328 3,871.70 20, 100 "^ I " barrel " silver coin. * 5,000 yards gauze. ' 5 base hospital equipments. ■* Electric machine for Red Cross hospital. Dinner to company starting for Mexican border. ^ 2 hospital beds. 15 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, previous to entrance of the United States into the Great War France Belgium Various War Objects Cash Gifts priced Gifts not priced Cash Gifts priced Gifts not priced Cash Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado $5-00 $220.39 2,894.45 Connecticut $151-50 Delaware District of Columbia.... 300 (') $200.00 Florida 142.00 131.86 194-50 Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana 76.00 Iowa 3 , 000 . 00 Kansas Kentucky 66.00 Louisiana Maine 85-75 Massachusetts.. 155 00 Minnesota . . . Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska I 2500 New Jersey .... New Mexico. . New York 100.00 248.10 48.60 North Carolina... (') North Dakota. . . Ohio 115-50 380.56 Oklahoma. . . . Pennsylvania 1,111-73 25.00 South Carolina. . . * Tennessee 4 Utah Virginia 19,220.43 West Virginia 14-75 Wyoming Argentina Cuba 263.00 I 27,680. 12 200.00 4 808.00 ^ Outfit for bed and patient in French hospital. * Dinner to 3 companies starting for Mexican border. i6 War Work National Society, Daughters A merican Revolution, from declaration of war States to A pril lo, iqiq hy the United Mending Biu-eau Cash Hours Number garments New garments Alabama 1,280 Arizona Arkansas $151 .00 2,520 575 California Colorado 35 25 ^Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia 58.00 25-00 40.00 41,919 1 ,217 Florida Georgia 1,625 1 ,622 Idaho Illinois 36.00 Indiana 915 76 12 Iowa Kansas ^Kentucky I , 000 . 00 3,050 27 600 Louisiana 20 'Maine Massachusetts 755-38 169-53 380.00 385.00 100.00 8,284 9,780 684 II , 118 5,575 800 1,642 Minnesota Missouri 590 880 Nebraska 1,992 1 ,240 New Hampshire New Jersey New York 100.00 375 500 North Carolina 502 North Dakota Ohio 211 Oklahoma 900 15,724 Pennsylvania 15.00 2,060 South Carolina 1,000 Tennessee 1,503 5,006 Utah Virginia 200.00 800 256 750 800 West Virginia 1 ,000 Wyoming Cuba 3,414-91 89,260 38,588 1 ,642 * I day a week by 5 members. * 12 weeks. ' I day a week at four forts by 4 to 6 women for over a year. Mending groups furnished all supplies. * Make, present and sew on division insignia at Camp Custer. 17 War Work, National Society, Daughters A merican Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, igiQ. To all branches of the service Comfort Equipment -or. 0^ §.> a. u 1 Smileage books Cash No. Alabama 7,889 1,407 164 283 471 127 25 117 Arizona Arkansas 2,521 4,621 8,403 19,332 263 1,479 660 1,574 52 124 330 516 169 90 50 ■■"87 480 164 176 674 164 195 300 32 92 5 126 California 30 64 45 Colorado Connecticut Delaware 10 260 6 147 15.00 Dist. of Columbia. Florida 7,637 1 ,048 3,118 1,250 13,843 13,495 11,297 5,688 8,527 234 17,168 1,632 604 1,238 55 2,002 2,046 4,368 1,705 2,857 138 1,306 221 5 593 1,188 126 892 136 285 365 61 433 612 10 606 134 135 34 21 207 2.00 37 Georgia Idaho. 213 20 391 2,596 964 3,204 50 187 50 275 501 27 25 400 41 256 2 23 557 1,376 3 305 76 6 Illinois 333 3 155 63 19 no 15 112 Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana .... "36 25 75 I I 7 . 00 62.50 46.50 I 150 Maine 69 58 12 29 Maryland Massachusetts. . . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana 17,565 14,326 7,051 566 14,875 222 3,344 6,059 9,539 800 11,104 1,023 lOI 15,534 2 ,041 766 18,678 18,366 3,164 3,018 1,825 985 196 2,412 769 702 989 1,556 171 1,031 827 5 1,885 162 61 168 3,000 269 14 939 1 ,009 800 1,813 629 422 28 1,215 100 291 118 265 32 14 310 75 330 19 200 37 439 49 66 89 127 29 15 ■500 60 123 3 80 620 300 25 147 300 21 60 42 4 8 20 25 150 57 38 Nebraska. . . New Hampshire . . New Jersey New Mexico 15 200 New York 2,441 327 37 4,462 245 144 2,103 769 229 80 149 453 1,357 160 170 138 611 1 ,002 16 165 2,427 279 24 17 29 I I 51 24 129 117 North Carolina.. . North Dakota. . . . Ohio I 350 56 291 1,141 510 50 30 75 '"318 555 24 3 1,096 I 24 380 215 175 2 40 188 Oklahoma 203 Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island .... South Carolina . 20 234 85 19 3 70 475 370 297 7 100 South Dakota . . 25 53 Tennessee. . . . I ,027 4,459 50 19 50 500 2,085 17 Texas 4 Utah Vermont 3,906 975 9,702 2,599 3,884 455 990 787 2,115 1 ,721 310 505 2,155 50 250 32 305 86 247 20 548 50 686 6 17 3 00 Virginia Washington West Virginia. . . . Wisconsin 5 20 254 27 10 249 50.00 579 188 12 Wyoming . Argentina. . . . Cuba 258 94 ' Honolulu The Orient Philippine Islands 868 296,267 58,734 23,752 3,929 10,815 20,243 3,007 1,653 2,048 $296.00 2,333 i8 ■^ -^ CO CO =1^ 2 2 -i CO O t^ -^ Tj- >-• M CN O) fO Thoo O ot O >o Tf vo O t^ r^ t^ .22 d . 2.2 cs 19 u > u "S 3 9, <" ^o o Ov o :++ O O -^oo Or--o-< M O 00 t^ 1-1 C 7? O -2 2^ a; CO CIS iP 2 (U u d • ^ C rt o S U >> o rrt' fi ^V,-^^l /^ cd ir;^ oOQ d ffi ►^^>^ ja j3 c o w tn : + O O O iO>0 i-i "0 O 1^ I^ w VO 00 w t^ r-1 •'— Tl Iz; :z; ;z; :z; ^ O O O d. 92+. o S a gs T-3 x! .fl J- 2 3 3 e >< S iri i^ rt 4J .22 >. m-" s-^i-^i^ii 20 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ. To all branches of the service at home and abroad Gifts Tobacco Candy Christ- mas boxes Christ- mas packets Musical instnunents Victrola records Lbs. Cash Cash No. $172 .00 $125.00 1 ,212 1 ,691 Arkansas California Colorado 6.00 159-50 55-70 10.00 100 42.50 179.00 16.00 5.00 295 412 96 55 53 93 191 163 $200.00 victrola. $130.00 2 victrolas 150 100 f I pianola Connecticut .... \2 victrolas 20 Delaware .... ID of Columbia. 236.00 12 .00 II .00 52 42 .00 176 95 1,051 33 507 367 846 500 341 30 422 "5 29 88 Florida fi guitar 1 \ I piano \ 95 Georgia Idaho . . . 196 17.00 [i victrola j Illinois 130.00 303 • 00 39-00 309 75 80 phonographs. . 117-50 260 fi phonograph. . . I24 68 Indiana { I victrola [2 ukeleles. 15.00 269.00 100 187 10 244 50 Kentucky 50.00 32-50 12.00 15 Maryland . . . Massachusetts. . Michigan 93.00 272.50 49.00 193.00 112.50 517 179 717 318 1 ,080 20 173 287 1 ,000 416 177 Missouri 105 .00 110.00 800 I victrola. 180.00 II .00 171.50 91 37 300 New Hampshire New Jersey 12.15 106.50 1,352-05 25.00 15.00 69.00 5.00 607 117 47 523 22 28 II 200 9 64 I ,163 I victrola 10.00 North Carolina. North Dakota.. Ohio 27.50 2 150 9 10 621 233 boxes 450 45.00 26.00 25 00 6s Oklahoma Pennsylvania. . . 232.75 70.00 183.00 South Dakota 9 23 409 Texas 28.50 13.00 Utah Vermont Virginia Washington. . . . 57.00 28.00 14.00 22.00 25.00 45 99 100 48 83 18 victrola I victrola 5.00 36 I victrola 20 Wisconsin 10.00 10.00 587 38 Cuba , 3,640.65 2 , 090 . 00 13,812 7,323 96-I-230.00 1 70 . 00 681 ' Phonograph records. 21 0^ Co ^^ n a O en w u U a. 22 !3 rt I' 0*43 u U 00 Ov ii Tj- rj- 0\ O O -+00 pO o Cv O o o o o vO 00 00 O ri- Tl- i^ « vo >- O lO o ■* o 1-1 TfvO • o o • lO O . _ o Tj-O • o (N • f^ .*^ vO lO O r< 0\ t^ O O ro ro M 00 O >0 Ov O t^ CT- O O M « CO O O fO >0 O O O •+ (N O to 0^ fO O •>+00 Th lO <0 On O to (S I^ Ovoo 0 Tl O lo f^ to M o VO Ov t^ lO "-i O vO M lO >0 Ov to w to O to •O O VO OO VO VO VO VO O O o -^ to r^ >-i M •3° ■ a 2 IS a "o a #Tt r I vy r^ :;; <<< ^oSrt*:-d^^S.2tsg-g.SS>>i;?j3C-KO-g 22 9 T3 <3 O ••SO « I te! Co ffi il'" KJ3 m§ y en M 0 O T}- CO n lOiOtOtOOOVO O CO ■* (N O fOOO O O ■^ 1^ CN M M O O t^iO >0 1-1 VO O rl- M O I^Tfi-1 fOO 10-* vO vO CO 1-1 CO O ra K oi rT", ti ^ i? tn h-i '1' ^ >^ rt i-i-i t— >i< K*' j2 J- M CO O CO M CO lO On CO 00 00 5- 5 C3 ^ o o lO lO On h O O lO CS >0 0\ M n C4 ■H O OS covo c g S;S^ o Ba ^ : ^ O E^*^ j3 J3 S^ ^ J g ^ ^ ^ ^ ^-^t.o^ g'g oil 5 S-S E-a-^^ ^ o ai| 23 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April 6, IQIQ. To all branches of the service Special gifts Cash Not priced Alabama Arizona Arkansas Three sailors entertained as week-end guests for three months. Gift of one member to purchase Camp Pike. Milk for twenty babies purchased for the svunmer. Entertained fifty convalescent soldiers three days. A Chapter in the desert met each troop train and served lemonade. Seven soldiers, two nurses, and two sailors adopted. Ice cream served for a thousand soldiers. Six hospital equipments. California $500 00 Colorado Connecticut Delaware 75 500 1 ,000 100 350 1 ,600 00 00 00 00 00 00 Thanksgiving dinner. District of Columbia. . Florida Wayfarers' Club for War Working Girls. Camp Welfare and War Relief Rooms. Memorial women of Duvall and Jax Counties. Georgia Idaho Illinois Equipping three women to go abroad. Indiana Rent of entire floor of business building given for work shop. 26 aviators outfitted. Rent of entire building for Red Cross use. Welcome-home dinner to Company I. Iowa 97 sons adopted. Kansas $85.00 a month. Supports hostess for community house. Kentucky 500 00 Lunches to six trainloads of soldiers. Raised by tag day, funds used for soldiers' necessities. Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Luncheon, dinner and dance for Jackie Band. Minnesota 1 ,200 5 , 000 00 00 Mississippi Furnishing Khaki Club, West Point. Missouri Park purchased and tree planting begun as memorial to Claibourne County soldiers by one Chapter. Loan fund for incapacitated soldiers while learning a new Nebraska branch of work suited to their handicap. Furnished room in base hospital. New Hampshire 4 god-sons adopted. New Jersey New Mexico New York I destroyer equipped. North Carolina I submarine outfitted. Sponsor to company of 120 boys and met with their North Dakota Ohio 1,050 43 mothers each month. 4 months' teaching of French and Spanish. Oklahoma Chapter adopted a battery. S?>40.oo a month for sick in hospital. Oregon New magazines supplied men in spruce camps. 24 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ. To all branches of the service — continued Special Gifts Cash Not priced Pennsylvania Rhode Island 150.00 4,35400 Three rubber beds for wounded aviators. Gift of one Daughter for luxuries for soldiers. South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Tea wagon for convalescent ward. West Virginia Wisconsin Wards have been adopted. Twelve equipments. Wyoming Argentina Expense of boy in Red Cross Hospital. Cuba Honolulu The Orient Philippine Islands .... $16,379.43 25 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQ19. To all branches of the service Miscellaneous gifts Cash Priced Not priced Alabama. Arizona . . Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia. Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts. . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire. New Jersey New Mexico .... New York North Carolina . North Dakota... Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania. . . Rhode Island. . . South Carolina . . South Dakota. . . Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington. . . West Virginia. Wisconsin. . . . Wyoming Argentina Cuba $500.00 1 , 96 1 . 00 310.80 124.00 253 00 I ,068.50 599 50 1 10.00 281 .00 100.00 565-44 I , 060 . 00 15-40 135-75 245-95 179.00 3, 70.00 583-75 150.00 951-50 65.00 161.50 801.93 991 .00 2.50 2 ,850.00 1,173-48 2,285.66 775-00 815-50 280.00 69.47 10, 161 .07 1,421.49 935 00 1, 537 00 2,383-85 20.00 938.14 945-75 I .000,00 I ,010.50 I , 900 . 70 308.50 2 1 1 . 00 900.00 865 . 00 121.05 22,125.33 981 .60 85.00 2,954.00 9 32 60 4,672 1 , 142 1,644 718 495 ,752 19 508 217 34 807 575 166 10,402 384 577 196 3 325 1,893 267 7,370 348 593 17 431 75 4 II ,007.29 56.00 1 ,767 .80 I 85 . 00 75-00 65,399-13 3,216 100 1,365 538 40,954 26 *i tic 0< to M O O O O -(J 8 : en 01 "^ '^ r^ — ti^ as rt iS • tn rt • J2 g . 4_) o _o o CJ ! o 00 kH ii -M '> '> '> ■ '> ;■> (-t .9 t^i p< t~* t-4 (N • H-t Ov "^ (A o o • o o o o » giS^ o o : 9 °. o q 00 T en O aj O ^3 CJ § ■ lo d 00 o ►- o HH C o 'C • M N M " o ~o o ~o o o o ■ • o (« >. o o o o o O "O O > Sl o t^ d lO d lo d M M M o (S O t^ w to o Tj- tJ- W ^ 1& ^ *«. ^< • o n to . ,_, O (S «5 . d O 1^ o • ON vo >o 1" o cs • t^ ts Is 6 ►1 yD CI o 0^ o o o o o • ■ o o o o d pi O to lO o o ^ «Q. + M O lO •o N • M o . t- r^ _» O 00 IN 00 r~- lo 1-1 l^ O O O "■ ■> • r^vo "Ti 2l +j o CO (N lO O M !N lO lO t^ O l-l O 1- • « o N r^ -l o 'C " •^ o o M a ■ji (u o o > ^ O O Tj-\0 T)- O >0 C O ro O O to ■* C ■ « lO (N t^ S-i (N o o» to lO O (N u- T O vO -i- O •O >O0C • O 0) « vo in (U 05 t-» CO r^ O lO >-i 1- (^ 0> 0^ ■^ 1-1 r ^ • >H M >0 >-l T^ S M o t-i M to *-t •1 N • M 1-1 >o o O o ooooooooc O O O O " ■) • lO O O O "O o q ooooooooc O O O lO O O P • cs O O O t-» HH vo 0\t^00 O iO>oC 00 ■* t^ I^^ t^ P • t^OO O 0) O lO l-l 00 O ooo O 1-1 t-- '* C 00 O 1-1 O t^ to " ■3 • to CN lO -rh OO lO rj- lO -^00 (N 00 '^ r •"4- M 1-1 lO -^ M ^ - - - - O - - • r^ 1-1 O (S 0\ o VO (-1 Ti" 1-1 1-1 M t- • VO M 0) N N ^ (S " "0 M lO o On lO I*- ^ • O (S VO Tj- M M M cs ts t^ n \0 • M P) t1- M-) tJ- Speeches »H M O -i o bo o\ >O00 M ^o •o o o o >o ■ lO M to t-» i-i M (-1 HH \c (N to to 01 t^ '^ l-r-3^ 1^ c3 rt lOOOObroOOOQ t^ioOOioOOtsOO "~o o o o o o c • lO O O O o O lO to o o o c ) ■ Tt- o o o -^ o 'S >> Ooo O '-I 00\000 0\Tj- © 00 O Ov M Tf u • rhvO O t^OO \0 C o 00 OvO^M3CO O O roa> O ^ t^ O O -+ ^ ■- • Tt (N 00 CT> " vo ;::3 fOCN OOvO t^wO fO^ w w M VC CO VO C ■ to o vo o t^ S VO CS t^ >0 >-i -+ 1-1 CS 00 ^O (N to r t- • to O - I 1 h- a. J I'd = u t/ c c c 1 1. 1 27 oi o> 00 T u 0) e > o o . go Is s c _o +J 3 •c +j a o y i-> O 1 M to w SJ2 in '3) 6 o " 1-^ VI p (U £ > 8 o M S8 O >0 8 I CO Mi rt.p ■^ 3 o o o 8 o o o NO 88§ CO d >o 8 d O On o o NO 8 ri O 00 CO CO i-< o o CO NO 00 oj 5 a.2 a a en O o o CO 8 NO ■O -1 8 d On NO 6 S^8 >0 CO >o CO > ^ OvOO O >- O (>. CO •<*• O 0 uOVO r^ On tJ-tJ- m00mnC1t)-wio CO " T^ CO " On r-. M CO r^ lo (N NO O 11 NO l-l CO t^ o" tn .:^ o o m 00 lO C vo O O On CO O ►-« O CO Tj- Tj- CO lONO i-i O r^ CO NO i-( Hi o^no t^ 1-1 lO OC On CO NO O NO lo r^ CO P) O On iOnO 00 O -"i-NO -+ lO IN lO t^ Oi o__ (S ° 1-1 J3 tn o O On ON O CO O CO '1 On 00 COOO Tt- CO CO M QiO OOOOmO >0 t^ "ONO M O (NC^ (SCOvOMNOM i-*On Oni-iCOOntJ'i.h Tt NO CO ■* OOO lo O "o On d Tt- co (N O Tl-00 CO lO O O O lO 1^ O lo O O r^ O t^ O O On O 00 O " TfNO ON O O w "CO O NO o NO__ o 'S 1^ Speeches 8 r- O O 00 \n 1-1 NO ON NO CO lO lOOO to M On CS CH 00 (N, CO NO CO CO en CO O o VO -1 On CO O lO >0 ■* Tl- 1-1 M W 1-1 lO CO On NO a o 8 on8 COOO O P) lO O O On O lO t^ ■* u-)io OOOOcoOOOOO NOOO 0000 i. 12 c I. c d c g: c 1- c c \ c c I- C "c > a. C «• 1— ■^ 0. c X. C c 3 c IX (L c > 'c '5 > c '5 > C c c C E c > c u < U 28 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, 191Q. Gifts to other organizations Other contributions made previous to November 11-18, 191 8 Y. W. C. A. Knights of Columbus Cash Miscellaneous Cost Cash Miscellaneous Cost Alabama $571.00 30.00 62 1 . 00 3 , 807 . 00 1 , 464 . 00 1,115.00 30.00 622.15 125.00 367-50 125.00 1,245.00 1 ,224.00 3,123.00 3 , 000 . 00 1 ,620.00 59.00 100.00 150 books. . $105.00 Arizona Arkansas Victrola .... $165.00 100.00 2,360.00 577-50 1,342.00 California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia. . 95-50 {') Florida Flag 5-25 Georgia Idaho Illinois 630 . 00 150.00 Indiana Iowa Kansas 50.00 60.00 Kentucky War chest. . War chest. . Louisiana Maine 83.00 Maryland Massachusetts 907 . 00 1,855.00 10,870.00 645.00 2,372.75 20.00 2,506.00 625 .00 3 , 000 . 00 101.75 157-00 156.00 Michigan 230 books. . Minnesota Mississippi Missouri 70.00 Montana Nebraska 1,535-50 205.00 12.50 New Hampshire. . . New Jersey New Mexico New York 631-75 3 1 1 . 00 188.00 I ,280.00 86.00 219.25 6 , 630 . 00 877.00 233.00 North Carolina. . . . North Dakota 129.00 I ,050.00 110.00 43 50 493-25 Ohio 1. flasrs. Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania {') Rhode Island South Carolina. . . . South Dakota 51-00 906 . 00 3,308.50 Tennessee 200 . 00 120.00 Texas Utah Vermont 25.00 35-00 805 . 00 715 00 928.50 128.25 Virginia Washington Refreshments Gifts 40.00 West Virginia Wisconsin 200.00 Wyoming Argentina Cuba 59,046.40 405 472.00 10,236.00 3 Vestments for two Chaplains. * Canned goods, clothing. ^ Twenty-flve Christmas boxes. 29 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lO, 191 9. Gifts to other organizations Other contributions made previous to November 11 -18, 191 8 Salvation Army Jewish Relief Cash Miscellaneous Cost Cash Miscellaneous Cost Alabama $151 .00 Clothing .... $72.00 Arizona Arkansas 50.00 165.00 140.00 1,548.00 50.00 California Clothing .... Colorado 100.00 46.50 Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia. . Florida 212 .50 6.25 78.00 110.50 276.00 35 00 40.00 500.00 50.00 25.00 126.00 Bedding. . . . $50 . 00 10.00 Books $75 00 Georgia Idaho I 84 . 00 25.00 I , 800 . 00 2.00 1 2 1 . 00 I ,081 .00 I ,015.00 209.00 105.00 Illinois . . Indiana (}) Iowa Kansas Kentucky Clothing Clothing. . . Louisiana 8,000 Magazines 1 Maine Maryland Massachusetts 500 . 00 45.00 Clothing Groceries. . . 32.00 60.00 42.50 Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri 90.00 889.25 10.00 17-50 967.50 I , 000 . 00 10.00 62 .00 156.00 10.00 Montana Nebraska 13 -00 225 .00 2 .00 New Hampshire . . . New Jersey New Mexico. . . New York 17.00 74.00 129.00 10.00 10.00 25.00 63.00 North Carolina North Dakota. 221 .00 100.00 5.00 380.00 I , 700 . 00 Ohio 0) Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina. . . 10.50 140.00 399-00 Tennessee 150.00 1 1 I . 00 Texas Utah Vermont 89-50 93 50 Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin 100.00 125.00 80.00 17.00 200.00 2 .00 Wyoming Argentina Cuba 10,454.50 82.00 6,230.50 75.00 ^ Fifty pairs shoes, 39 pairs socks. ' Shoes, clothing. so War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, 191Q. Gifts to other organizations Other contributions made previous to November 11 -18, 191 8 American Library Association War Camp Community Service Cash Miscellaneous Cost Cash Miscellaneous Cost Alabama $135 00 $346.00 C) Arizona 105 books Arkansas 140.00 500 . 00 340.00 90.00 (») California 500 books 426 books 606 books Colorado Connecticut 7 I . 00 746 50 30.00 287.25 80 books Delaware Dist. of Columbia 422.50 40.00 406 books 100 books 5,091 books Florida Georgia . I , 000 . 00 Idaho Illinois 2 1 8 . 00 Indiana 189.00 93 50 156.00 1,587.00 572 books Iowa . . . Kansas. . I ,120 books Books $40 . 00 500 . 00 Kentucky Louisiana Maine 40.00 1 ,335 books 32.00 Maryland Massachusetts 94.00 483.00 626 books 862 books 15,200 books I , 440 books 204.00 52.00 Michigan . . Minnesota Mississippi Missouri 223.25 1 ,219.00 78.00 161 .00 41 .00 2,566.75 Montana . Books 275 books 120 books Nebraska . . . 350.00 13.00 2 , 000 . 00 New Hampshire. . . New Jersey 50 books New Mexico 8.50 275.00 New York 3,642 books 10.00 5.00 5.00 174.00 North Carolina 56.00 675 .00 21 .00 39 00 263.00 5.00 242 books 200 books Books 106 books 10.00 33 00 Ohio Oklahoma Oregon 133.00 1 ,718.00 Pennsylvania 440 books 100.00 South Carolina South Dakota 16.75 200.00 937.00 Tennessee 2 50 . 00 85.50 55 Books 100.00 Utah Vermont 105.75 35 00 I ,250.00 Virginia 100 books 490 books 50 books 365 books 100.00 I ,056.00 30.00 Washington West Virginia . Wisconsin 155 00 Cuba 9,256.00 34,474 383.00 13,340.25 ^ 390 pieces bed linen and towels. 2 Jam, flowers, etc. 31 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ. Gifts to other organizations Other organizations doing war work Home Relief Cash Gifts priced Gifts un- priced Cash Miscel- laneous gifts Alabama $247-25 Arizona Arkansas Wife of soldiei supported. Free medical treatment California $250.00 2,615.00 202.00 2,627.50 50 Colorado $46 . 00 757-75 17.00 346 . 00 Connecticut 50.00 Delaware Dist. of Columbia 25.00 14 437.00 5.00 Florida I Georgia 95 Idaho 10.00 640 . 00 443 00 1,342.00 30.00 900 . 00 Illinois 500.00 5.00 1 ,000 Hospital bill paid. Gift to aged father of soldier. Indiana Iowa Kansas 30.00 165.00 286.00 Layettes and coal furnished Layettes and hospital care. Kentucky Louisiana Maine 6 , 083 . 00 37 Maryland Massachusetts. . . 5,131-57 102.35 50.00 208 . 00 600.00 412 .00 576.00 392.00 75.00 300 . 00 Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire. 35-00 1,819.13 49 52 248.00 172.00 Fuel, etc. New Jersey Rent, coal, etc. New Mexico .... 160.00 240.00 25.00 35 to soldiers' mothers. New York 4,831-50 200.00 3 00 20,858.00 Board of 2 small children North Carolina. . paid in orphan asylum. North Dakota.. . Ohio 40 250.00 25 Burial of child. Oklahoma Oregon I ,252 .00 9,163.00 55-00 2,300.00 442 . 00 Pennsylvania .... Rhode Island.. . 3 nurses to emergency hos- South Carolina. . pital. South Dakota. . . 84-25 54.00 50.00 54.00 Tennessee Texas 803.00 10.00 Utah Vermont 104.00 1 85 . 00 Virginia I I 2 . 00 217.00 175.00 West Virginia Wisconsin 1 , 2 1 1 . 00 200 . 00 410.00 Wyoming . . . Argentina Cuba 57,350.55 639.00 287 13,639.75 1 ,111 32 War Work, National Society, Daughters A merican Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, 1919. France Garments Refugee garments Shawls Layettes Poultry farms Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia . Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Argentina Cuba Honolulu The Orient Philippine Islands . . 444 150 640 400 4,450 1,859 306 3,028 13,434 3,573 2,544 1,500 94 7,666 6,659 619 174 8,263 250 98 6,518 500 2,549 1,358 78 1 ,000 1,451 34 30 24 12 59 15 I 50 57 25 5 100 2 12 19 6 5100.00 100.00 29.00 28.20 "•75 209.00 75 00 650 . 00 75.00 34.00 2,463.68 84.00 580.00 2 , 000 . 00 28.30 1500 5.00 1 ,210.00 9 30 57700 5.00 50 633 5,483 40 12.30 685.00 149.20 64,896 401 9,135-73 33 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, 191 9. France Miscellaneous Cash Priced Not priced articles Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Disti'ict of Columbia . Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Argentina Cuba 500.00 hospital bed. ,124.00 , 467 . 00 192.50 4)333-00 cafeteria, hospital bed, etc. I ) 139 75 maintenance of French mother, etc. 150.00 666 . 00 hospital bed in Neuilly 70.00 5,128.50 123.00 80.00 71 .00 28.16. 6.00 2,439.00 1,318.89 to children of So. France, etc. 245 50 435 00 50 . 00 fruit trees. , 046 . 00 400.50 597 00 156.00 40.00 23 50 246.23 30.00 35 00 240.00 1 1 1 . 00 600 . 00 270.00 44 25 3500 50.00 1,554-73 $17,737-05 34 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ. France Special Gifts — (not priced) Alabama. Arizona. Arkansas. California. Colorado. Connecticut. Donations for French soldier's family (soldier a prisoner). Donations for ambulance driver in France. Delaware. District of Columbia. Two Americans serv- ing as officers inFrench Army equipped. Florida. Entire French family adopted. Georgia. Idaho. Illinois. Indiana. Iowa. Kansas. Linen for 300 layettes. Kentucky. Louisiana. Maine. Aided in support of Foulenay. Maryland. Massachusetts. Michigan. Minnesota. Mississippi. Missouri. Montana. Nebraska. New Hampshire. Four men adopted. New Jersey. New Mexico. New York. North Carolina. North Dakota. Ohio. Fifty fruit trees. Oklahoma. Oregon. Pennsylvania. Rhode Island. South Carolina. South Dakota. Tennessee. Texas. Hospital bed. Utah. Vermont. Virginia. Washington. West Virginia. Crippled French soldiers are being educated by Daughters at State University. Wisconsin. Wyoming. Argentina. Cuba. War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April 10, 1Q19 Our Allies (other than France) Cash Gar- ments Gifts priced Gifts not priced Miscellaneous Alabama $1,058.00 1,146 131 2 Belgian orphans adopted. Arizona. Arkansas 37750 5 , 646 . 00 782.35 3 , 963 ■ 83 3 Armenian orphans adopted. California 725 495 734 Colorado 3 Belgian babies adopted. One-fourth cost of ambu- lance for Italy. Connecticut Delaware $939 • 50 District of Columbia. 2,022.39 758.00 41703 45.00 630 . 00 548 • 00 6,249.60 806 . 00 5,170.00 1 84 . 00 255-95 554 1,245 1,330 150 476 3 20 220.93 91-50 562 Florida Georgia 1,084 Idaho Illinois 50 250 74 Indiana Iowa 1 ,041 2,686 2,262 58 134 Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine 25.00 30 Maryland Massachusetts 4, 185 .00 3 ' 336 569 . 00 35 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, igig — continued Our Allies (other than France) Cash Gar- ments Gifts priced Gifts not priced Miscellaneous Michigan Minnesota Mississippi 1 ,100.8 1 1,675-25 173-50 1,039 1,025 109 240 125 822 126 46 1 Belgian prisoner adopted. 19,200.00 4-45 180 100.00 I ,320.50 I ,032.60 Nebraska New Hampshire 250.00 2 Belgian orphans adopted. 15,343-70 278.60 319.00 2,500.00 1 70 . 00 128.50 7,345 00 67.00 3,671 124 63 2,072 25 15 North Carolina North Dakota Ohio 8.50 654 Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island 1,233 312 446 108 675 410 I ,915.28 44-25 South Dakota 899.14 350.00 385-60 15 I Italian orphan adopted. Texas 10.00 Utah Vermont 3,837 00 324.00 362 . 00 145.00 269.21 170 25 638 Virginia Washington 300 West Virginia 49 40.00 21 Cuba 50 71,225.06 30,106 23,321 .61 3,235 12 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April 10, igig Gifts to Red Cross Cash Hospital garments Surgical supplies Knitted garments Comfort kits Miscellaneous gifts Priced Number Alabama $14,144.93 401 .00 3,411 .00 19,500.00 27,962.75 101,677.73 394.00 6 , 62 2 . 00 5,105 24,874 Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Columbia 71 14,801 3,099 3,135 634 1,450 2 , 000 559,526 60 2 1 , 000 1 ,017 5,267 12 560 174 716 I512 $708.40 1 ,462 578 I ,900 733 24.00 "2,327 1 Ambulance pillows. 2 Sewing machines. Set of instrimients. 36 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, iqiq.. France Gifts to Red Cross Cash Hospital garments Surgical supplies Knitted garments Comfort kits Miscellaneous gifts Priced Mumber Florida 2 , OOO . OO 8,197-39 2 ,025 .00 5 , 600 . 00 27,757-85 1 8 , 9 1 8 . 00 40,543.00 4,241 .00 4,016.00 19,193.05 200 10,990 5,000 106,121 3,036 700 7,660 3,475 3,528 458 545 142 1,334 42 3,528 150 Georgia 600.00 ^2 ,560 Idaho Illinois 4,917 19, 140 25,964 3,090 2,518 84 564 14,800 43,000 111 ,480 50,650 4,024 5,775 385 49 "3 454 350.00 300.00 (^) Indiana C) Iowa 30 Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine 24,928 217 169.25 16 Maryland Massachusetts . . . 22,396.91 26,697.00 62,060.39 6,835.70 7,530.47 1,226.51 23,553-25 / 9,924-90 100,000.00 4,413 7,681 3,416 718 74,222 305,514 5,522 3,018 2,808 21,657 1,797 322 6,065 296 1 , 121 324 642 2,148 Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri 1,418 590 77 593 700 470 255 1,236 1,573 150 139,657 6,024 1 ,000,000 Nebraska New Hampshire. . New Jersey. New Mexico *io,8oo.oo New York North Carolina . 20,608. n 22,206.00 5,254-00 35,778.72 2,398.00 998 . 00 47 , 600 . 00 18,949.25 628.00 1,346.25 4,845.00 9,221 .25 14,690 304 413,663 44 13,755 225 14 2,102 184 600 10,546 4,577 3,695 124 '3 , 000 . 00 North Dakota . . . Ohio 3,618 20,106 1,575 25 75 3,792 130 Oklahoma Oregon 205 14,441 6,041 911 1 ,000 232,263 40,380 ^473, 953 00 Pennsylvania .... Rhode Island .... South Carolina. . . South Dakota. . . . C) Tennessee 64 516 2 158 94 Texas 994 27,825 Utah Vermont 4,722.57 3,884.00 739-00 4,200.00 8,678.57 2,396 698 3,540 250 202 2,447 3,056 2,008 400 1,441 250 113 897 135 688 Virginia 594 70 West Virginia .... Wisconsin Wyoming . 8,976 '30 . 00 Argentina Cuba (10) Honolulu 254 00 The Orient Philippine Islands 868 2,720 292 "600 . 00 759,140.55 163,590 3,2305813 126,649 507,086.65 1 Hospital bed, Neuilly, France. ' Rent of building given Red Cross. Equipment of women to go abroad for service. ' Electric cutter. * Given Red Cross proceeds, salvage sale. ^ Given Red Cross, proceeds of concert. Room furnished Base Hospital No. i. * $15,390.00 soHcited for Red Cross. $150.00 Red Cross nurse. ^ Collected for Red Cross by one Chapter. * Three Hospital Equipments. ^ Knitting machine. i" Canvas stretchers. " Raised and given to Red Cross. 37 War work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, igiQ Work given to Red Cross (Red Cross material used) Hospital garments Surgical supplies Knitted garments Comfort kits Refugee garments Alabama 9,362 44,877 4,687 635 1,133 168 10,734 35,220 648 Arizona ^Arkansas 6,975 413 6,101 51,643 13,090 69 , 900 165,811 281,939 California 110 918 3,357 Colorado Connecticut 385 Delaware District of Columbia 6,631 21, n6 175 109,744 3,770 543 Florida Georgia 1,025 90 2,300 49,250 10,580 14,945 2,290 1 ,290 1,304 3,154 300 4,936 8,207 8,216 5,474 4,461 350 5,602 1,109 25 220 409 3,781 514 658 40 610 Idaho Illinois 53,240 288,819 86,276 2 ,907,291 15,913 26,742 51,767 Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maryland 27,214 1,3" 31,447 959 98,480 514 4,662 210 120,742 27,705 546,690 5,000 1 8 , 000 , 000 7,488 163,423 12,436 14,286 2,357 1 2 , 000 1,314 560 900 2,205 3,794 25 2,316 30 Michigan Mississippi Missouri 210 52 337 146 Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York 8,677 773 774 1,648 883 346 5,850 5,678 8,228 1,113 678 5,473 287,282 7,500 3,560 23,849 2,000 963 159,055 11,875 17,666 962 807 12,772 912 730 8,444 3,390 2,136 445 2 738 North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oregon 35 722 220 Rhode Island . . . South Dakota 800 25,000 329,688 1,790 902 3,129 65 50 476 Texas Utah Vermont III 1,670 1,319 1 ,000 4,720 536 4,448 3,000 2,013 2 ,800 1,148 4,500 22,900 Washington 300 288 Wisconsin . Argentina . ... Cuba... Total 379,114 23,903,104 194,812 21,510 385 1 3,200 button holes. 38 War work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQ19 Liberty Loans Chapters States Individual Daughters Sold by Daughters Alabama Arizona Arkansas CaUfomia Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia . Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah ?3,950. 50. 400. 4,050. 3,450. 12,275. 2 , 200 . 00 5^8,920.00 255,600.00 1,239,269.00 988,225.00 4,366,275.00 8,750. 450. I 2 , 900 . 500. 2,3 , 000 . 3,900. 2,427. 6, 100. 1 ,600 500 1,250 503 265 3,759 36 1,744 4,450 1,032 307 293 122 901 ,050.00 ,850.00 ,811 .00 , 200 . 00 , 098 . 00 , 000 . 00 , 960 . 00 ,710.00 , 900 . 00 , 000 . 00 ,957-28 9,500. 3,300. 3,392. 500. 1,850. 300. 1,371- 1,650. 80 , 000 . 11,250. 15,200. 425- 50. 6, 100. 1,253- 700. 10,100, 1,655 5,550 1,150 200 76,510 50.00 24.00 2,108,800.00 982,691 .00 I ,600,050.00 478,875.00 346,640.00 30 , 000 . 00 484,035.00 662,505.00 1,227, 336, 55, 1,965, 85, 18, 2 , 800 , 491, 215, 30, 156, 802, 750.00 807 . 00 I 90 . 00 400 . 00 628.00 500.00 000 . 00 900 . 00 310.00 000 . 00 000 . 00 400 . 00 450.00 $637,835.00 47,250.00 168,000.00 202,000.00 167,425.00 2 , 243 , 000 . 00 1,153 1,416 3,365 24 1,656 1 ,011 581 581 559 51 8,740 ,950.00 ,500.00 ,650.00 ,950.00 ,548.00 ,550.00 ,550.00 ,350.00 ,950.00 , 600 . 00 , 800 . 00 69 I , 400 . 00 558,700.00 781 ,680.00 266,375.00 42 , 000 . 00 122,800.00 254,585.00 I ,842 ,210.00 560,500.00 I , 000 . 00 I, 715, 899 00 259,250.00 400 , 000 . 00 II ,204,450.00 106,400.00 240,000.00 7,592,606.00 I , 403 , 000 . 00 Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Argentina Cuba Honolulu The Orient Philippine Islands. I , 100.00 600 . 00 I ,500.00 1 ,200.00 1,450.00 404,750.00 124,600.00 344,350.00 130,838.00 193,050.00 1 , 132 ,400.00 7,050.00 322 ,000.00 126,950.00 6,450.00 Total . 333,538.50 2474.00 36,447,074-28 51,951,363-00 39 War work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ Thrift Stamps War Savings Stamps Taken by Daughters Sold by Daughters Taken by Daughters Sold by Daughters Alabama » Arizona Arkansas California Colorado $28,796.00 Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia $22,395.00 1,35500 Idaho $200 . 00 $565 ■ 00 Illinois Indiana ' 18,201 .00 27,300.00 Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine I , 300 . 00 6,390.65 Massachusetts Minnesota 31 ,487.00 Missouri Nebraska 35,235.00 New Jersey I 8 , 000 . 00 260.00 2,423.00 36,372.50 7, 935 00 70,462.00 1,322.50 2 , 000 . 00 New York North Dakota ••.... Ohio . . Oklahoma Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee Utah . . Virginia 4,615.00 West Virginia Wyoming Cuba 26.00 1,095.38 The Orient 36,761.00 565 00 212,959.03 67.4.S1.00 40 War Work, National Society, Daughters American Revolution, from declaration of war by the United States to April lo, IQIQ Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia. Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana National Service School. $55 -oo 60.00 I , I 80 . 00 35 00 96.00 10.00 96.00 153 00 60.00 180.00 1 , 2 1 2 . 00 320.00 125.00 159-77 Nebraska New Hampshire. New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina. North Dakota . . Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania . . . Rhode Island . . . South Carolina . . South Dakota. . Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington .... West Virginia . . . Wisconsin Wyoming Argentina Total . National Service School. MO. 00 66.00 30.00 515-91 1,038.92 90.00 8.50 1 , 095 . 00 310.00 3-00 30.00 270.00 255-00 100.00 127.00 7,712.00 41 ^ OOOOOQOOOO «r)00«oOO>oOio>r> ^8 •QOO\0>OOvOOQ • O >OVO O P< »0 On >0 8 OOOooOfiOOOOO OOQO i000v0>o>r>0>0>o00>o000 to • a* po-»}-ONfOO>oON ■ lO O fO >0 " CO 00 Ci CO Ci o 00 C4 11 t^ xn^ CO TfvO t^ O 00 O NO 00 "(Sio oOi-iTj- O OnOO>- o O « CO 'I- n cooo CO 1-1 Ci K OOOOr^OOOOO '^O c t^ lO C •OOiOioOOOOO 8 QOOooOcoOOOOOOOnoO OOOi-iOcoO>OOOOOOmO 1) CO X5 O lO r^ 00 't On "-> C< •>0 N '^•ONCOt^cot^ON • 0\ On lOOO CO >o • « O Tj- « n CO 00 00 co>H O ■^^t^cocoO^ONO OnoO 01 00 CO (SNOOOwisi-coi-'NONi-ii-i-iTj- ir> <7v r^ NO M tJ- to u-> 1-1 M 1-1 >-i a 00 M M cor^OONO ■^0>coO O»00 COP* coo (Nl i-i N OtOOO>OOONNO-< w i-nnO chu cs lorJ-csoONNOi-iTj-Tj-u-) M Ni-i>0 c< CO lOrotOi-iiH w t/)4j(/)4;tflajtnaji/)ajt«(U(nDtn(i;tnaJ(/)i>«(U> rt 44 fl to o rt rt 3 m 4-1 CI 1 rt lU o W w 1-t 42 f 00 tfiO to u- w '>^ 10 i-i 00 ^0 K 0\ to O "OVO O OvOvOiOOr^OO O w->to>0>OiOOOt-»00>0>OOtoOto>0«OOMioO • ^ \n<) O i-i\ooO>OTf-i4-w M «o o^vo •* >o 11 to p-1 r^ r-00 to to t^vo ■*\0 '^■vO ID U-) Tj- w to 1000 VO • =3 O t^oo CO to M VO M ■* VO vO tOM vOMCi t^'H'* ►" 00lO>-i' rl- vO 00 O M to -^ r^i^ VO"-* owMt^ H Ci >-c to • OOOOOOOOOOOOOOioO • OvOOOOOQioOOOOOOOoOQOQOOQ • OvOOOOOOi-'>ou-)000>oOvOO>oO>oOO ■ K >oooooo>ooooaNOOocoo ^ s tooto tovo Ov rl- to t^ to • «J rt \0>-i\Oi-'r^"r^«'0 mnO vo 00 to tovO OvOO»-i miomO m Ot^to- J2^ r^ (HiHvo to ^ >o •-< O OOvO 111-100 Ov'^l-tOOO ia"" «* - ~ ~ r^ to « to ti vO to to * 00 rl-vO w O (OlOt^f*"-! '*M ■^ OvOO »0 lovo 1-1 00 ts t~-r^vot-0 >oO r-Tf tooo r~oo ■<+ tj-vo •»!- tooo tor^Th(N t^t-vo to^ tot^'^-^O I-I ■^ tooo M so M -i OOOvi-1 OCSVO 10 C4-t/)a;tn4jt/)a)a)cniut«i'iuin(ytno >o 6 00 "O (X to 1-1 1^ 1-1 Ci V* M bo t-» 000 -to»O0000000000t^00>o0 t^'^ioci t-»t^io>o>o>oO tovoo too wor^io r^Oit^wjo toO^ooo r^to'^toO" >ooo '^iJ x^ ^^„ Tj-oo^ to^- >- -^lO" Ti-tooo tooo 00vO00r0>O>OPItO a^•<*■'-l^>O►1O^t0'-lC1>-> •- P< ^[»,_.~~~ >^ feS tOOO'"*-?*'-' «w^ « 10 •0 ^ rt a (0 tn C tS •a "^ S '^ Co A) >> 'S, CO -t-i 1 i I 1 1 •5 c ' 1 1 c « J •a J" 51 •- 000 0>0000>000000000 O O >oioO >oioO r^>oio >ovo >o>oiot~0 loO "OO io"0>o O >O00 t)- t^ r~ t^ On vOi-it~-rOCS OO 0> O r^ Tt-OO Tt- CS O ■«J-00 fO O fO N lOO \0 VO l-i S .9 J *^ 8 CO c« H H P ^ ^ ^ to ■-- O t« 2-- h -3 rt o o o" o « . 3 .« ^ o . E rt 2g;3 •^ rt M s s ^-1 > '".S s o S'-'-g c (fl >, 5. ^ rt •M.S o - f5 t^ "5 rj rt "-^ M 2 c 44 Amounts pledged during Twenty-Eighth Congress (April 14-19, 1919) but not redeemed at close of books. May 8, 1919. States Liberty Loan Tilloloy Alabama Arizona California Cuba District of Columbia. Iowa Kentucky Massachusetts Michigan Missouri New York New Jerse North Carolina Pennsylvania Texas Virginia Washington 3 13 00 10.00 110.00 8.00 10.00 50.00 65.00 45.00 221 .50 85.00 10.00 10.00 Total . 944-50 S5.00 1300 460.50 24.00 37.00 10.00 3500 23 .00 405 • 75 10.00 10.00 I .033.25 Maryland has pledged full quota for Liberty Loan. Contributions to French Orphan Fund, Liberty Loan, and Tilloloy will be found in report made by the Treasurer-General. The above is correct as shown by the records and books of my office. Mary H. S Johnston (Mrs. Robert J Johnston), Treasurer-General, N. S., D. A. R.