Chapter 1. Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and prior fiscal years, supplemental appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and subsequent fiscal years, and for other purposes
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CHAP. 1.— An Act Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and prior fiscal years, supplemental appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and subsequent fiscal years, and for other purposes. December 15, 1921.[[H. R. 9237](/us/bill/67/hr/9237).][[Public, No. 109](/us/67/pl/109).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That the following sums areFirst Deficiency Appropriation Act, 1922.Deficiency appropriations. appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to supply deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and prior fiscal years, supplemental appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, and subsequent fiscal years, and for other purposes, namely:
LEGISLATIVE.Legislative. Senate.Senate. To pay Lillie S. Knox, widow of Honorable Philander C. Knox,Philander C. Knot.Pay to widow. late a Senator from the State of Pennsylvania, $7,500. For the purchase or exchange of an automobile for the ViceAutomobile for Vice President. President, $4,000. For driving, maintenance, and operation of an automobile for theMaintenance, etc. Vice President for fiscal year 1921, $93.35. House of Representatives.House of Representatives. To pay the widow of Samuel M.
Taylor, late a Representative fromSamuel M. Taylor.Pay to widow. the State of Arkansas, $7,500, to be disbursed by the Sergeant at Arms of the House. 327 328 C. B. Kennamer.Contested election expenses.For payment to C. B. Kennamer for expenses incurred as contestant in the contested-election case of Kennamer versus Rainey, audited and recommended by the Committee on Elections Numbered Three, $2,000. Miscellaneous items, etc.For miscellaneous items and expenses of special and select committees, exclusive of salaries and labor unless specifically ordered by the House of Representatives, fiscal year 1921, $7,254.81.
Stenographers to committees.Expenses.For reimbursement to the official stenographers to committees for the amounts actually and necessarily expended by them for transcribing hearings during the period from April 11 to November 15, 1921, inclusive, $600 each, $2,400. House restaurant.For remodeling and requipment of the restaurant of the House, including reimbursement of the appropriation “Capitol Building and Repairs, 1922,” for expenditures on this account, $20,591.94. Total, House of Representatives, $39,746.75.
Executive.EXECUTIVE. Board of Mediation and Conciliation.BOARD OF MEDIATION AND CONCILIATION. Salaries and expenses closing up business of.For all necessary expenses in connection with closing up the business of the United States Board of Mediation and Conciliation, including payment of salaries of the Commissioner of Mediation and Conciliation, the Assistant Commissioner of Mediation and Conciliation, and employees of the board, and all other outstanding indebtedness incurred by the board during the fiscal year 1922; and the inventory of the property and records of the board and their delivery to the proper department of the Government, $6,650.
Offices abolished.The offices of Commissioner of Mediation and Conciliation and Assistant Commissioner of Mediation and Conciliation are abolished after December 31, 1921. District of Columbia.DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. Surveyor’s office.Temporary services.Surveyor’s office: For services of temporary draftsmen, computers, laborers, additional field party when required, purchase of supplies, care or hire of teams, $4,000, all expenditures hereunder to be made only on the written authority of the commissioners.
Rent Commission.Vol. 41, p. 299.*Ante*, p. 200.*Post*, p. 543.Rent Commission: For an additional amount for salaries and expenses authorized by Section 103, Title II, of “The Food Control and the District of Columbia Rents Act,” approved October 22, 1919, and the Act approved August 24, 1921, extending the Rent Commission until May 22, 1922, $25,000, to continue available during the life of the commission. Employees Compensation Fund.ExpensesVol. 41, p. 104.Vol. 39, p. 742.Employees’ Compensation Fund:
For carrying out the provisions of section 11 of the District of Columbia Appropriation Act, approved July 11, 1919, extending to the employees of the Government of the District of Columbia the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide compensation for employees of the United States suffering injuries while in the performance of their duties, and for other purposes,” approved September 7, 1916, $4,000. Public schools.Henry D. Cook School.Public schools: For furniture and equipment, including clocks and window shades, for the four-room addition to the Henry D.
Cook School, $2,893.75. Gallinger Hospital.Construction.Gallinger Municipal Hospital: For continuing the construction of the Gallinger Municipal Hospital, $150,000. Supreme Court.Miscellaneous expenses.Supreme Court, miscellaneous expenses: For such miscellaneous expenses as may be authorized by the Attorney General for the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia and its officers, including the furnishing and collecting of evidence where the United States is329or may be a party in interest, including also such expenses other than for personal services as may be authorized by the Attorney General for the court of appeals, District of Columbia, $7,500.
Temporary services: The limitation of $100,000 on theTemporary personal services.Limitation increased.Vol. 41, p. 1143, amended. employment of personal services, as fixed by section 2 of the District of Columbia Appropriation Act for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, is increased to $1 12,000. Judgments: For payment of judgments, including costs, renderedJudgments.Payment of. against the District of Columbia, as set forth in House Document Numbered 117 of the Sixty-seventh Congress, $2,353.20, together with a further sum to pay the interest at not exceeding 4 per centum per annum on such judgments, as provided by law, from the date the same became due until date of payment.
Sixty per centum of the foregoing sums for the District of ColumbiaSixty per cent from District revenues. shall be paid from the revenues of the District of Columbia and 40 per centum from the Treasury of the United States. Total, District of Columbia, $195,746.95. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION.Interstate Commerce Commission. For all other authorized expenditures necessary in the executionGeneral expenses. of laws to regulate commerce, and to take care of additional duties placed upon the commission by the Transportation Act, 1920, $300,000.
Valuation of property of carriers: To enable the InterstatePhysical valuation of railroad property.Vol. 37, p. 701; Vol. 40, p. 271. Commerce Commission to carry out the objects of the Act entitled “An Act to amend an Act entitled ‘An Act to regulate commerce,’ approved February 4, 1887, and all Acts amendatory thereof,” by providing for a valuation of the several classes of property of carriersIssues of stocks, etc. subject thereto and securing information concerning their stocks, bonds, and other securities, approved March 1, 1913, fiscal year 1916, $181.02.
Total, Interstate Commerce Commission, $300,181.02. SHIPPING BOARD.Shipping Board. For the purchase of law books, fiscal year 1917, $1,316.05.Law books. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION.Smithsonian Institution. National Museum: For heating, lighting, electrical, telegraphic,National Museum. and telephonic service, $2,300. UNITED STATES VETERANS’ BUREAU.Veterans’ Bureau. Vocational rehabilitation: For an additional amount for carryingVocational rehabilitation of discharged disabled soldiers, etc.Vol. 40, pp. 617,1179;Vol. 41, p. 159.*Ante*, p. 148. out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the vocational rehabilitation and return to civil employment of disabled persons discharged from the military or naval forces of the United States, and for other purposes,” approved June 27, 1918, as amended, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, funeral and other incidental expenses (including transportation of remains) of deceased trainees of the board, necessary medical service and treatment to trainees hereafter required in cases where such service or treatment is not provided by the United States Veterans’Limitation.
Bureau, and not more than $35,000 may be used for such service and treatment heretofore furnished; printing and binding to be done at the Government Printing Office; law books, books of reference, and periodicals; $40,000,000: *Provided*, That the salary limitations placed*Provisos*.Pay restriction.Vol. 41, p. 178. upon the appropriation for vocational rehabilitation by the Sundry330Civil Appropriation Act approved July 19, 1919, modified as provided by the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act approved June 5, 1920, shall Construction at Army camps restricted.apply to the appropriation herein made: *Provided further*, That no part of the foregoing appropriation shall be expended for construction work (except necessary minor repairs) at any Army camp acquired by the United States Veterans’ Bureau for use as a training center.
Medical and hospital service for beneficiaries.Medical and hospital services: For medical, surgical, and hospital services, medical examinations, funeral expenses, traveling expenses, and supplies, including court costs and other expenses incident to proceedings heretofore or hereafter taken for commitment of mentally incompetent persons to hospitals for the care and treatment of the Provisos.Compensation restricted.insane, $25,000,000: *Provided*, That no part of the money hereby appropriated shall be used for the payment of commutation of quarters, subsistence and laundry or quarters, heat and light and longevity to any employee other than the commissioned medical officers Disbursement and allotment of appropriations.provided for by statute.
This appropriation shall be disbursed by the United States Veterans’ Bureau, and such portion thereof as may be necessary shall be allotted from time to time to the Public Health Service, the Board of Managers of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, and the War and Navy Departments, and transferred to their credit for disbursement by them for the purposes Improving facilities at Volunteer Soldiers’ Home.set forth in this paragraph. The allotments to the said Board of Managers shall also include such sums as may be necessary to alter, improve, or provide facilities in the several branches under its jurisdiction so as to furnish adequate accommodations for such beneficiaries of the United States Veterans’ Bureau as may be committed to its care.
Expenses authorized for allotment to Public Health Service.The allotments made by the United States Veterans’ Bureau to the Public Health Service for the care of beneficiaries of that bureau by the said service shall also be available for expenditure by the Public Health Service on that account for necessary personnel, regular and reserve commissioned officers of the Public Health Service and clerical help in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, maintenance, equipment, leases, fuel, lights, water, printing, freight, transportation and travel, and maintenance and operation of passenger motor vehicles.
Use of allotments to War and Navy Departments.The allotments made to the War and Navy Departments shall be available for expenditure under the various headings of appropriations made to said departments as may be necessary. Total, United States Veterans’ Bureau, $65,000,000. Department of Agriculture.DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Animal Industry Bureau.bureau of animal industry. Tuberculosis in animals.Payment for cattle slaughtered.Vol. 41, p. 1318.General expenses: To enable the Bureau of Animal Industry, Department of Agriculture, to perform the duties imposed upon it by the Agricultural Appropriation Act approved March 3, 1921, for the payment of indemnities on account of cattle slaughtered in connection with the eradication of tuberculosis from animals, $600,000: *Provided*, *Provisos*.Ownership restriction.That this sum shall be expended only in payment to owners whose cattle have been in their possession for a period of at least Limitation hereafter.six months prior to slaughter: *Provided further*, That no part of said sum shall be expended for the payment of indemnities to owners of herds hereafter placed under Federal and State supervision, unless such herds are located in circumscribed areas designated and agreed upon by the States and the Federal Government in which to conduct cooperative tuberculosis eradication work. 331 forest service.Forest Service.
Fighting and preventing forest fires: For fighting and preventingFighting forest fires. forest fires endangering the national forests, $341,000. Prevention of loss of timber from insect infestations on publicInsect infestation.Preventing loss of timber from, In Oregon and California. lands in Oregon and California: To enable the Secretary of Agriculture to prevent further loss of timber from insect infestations within the national forests and on other lands owned or administered by the United States in Oregon and California, $150,000, to remain available until December 31, 1922, of which sum not exceeding $90,000 shall be expended in cooperation with the Secretary of the Interior to prevent further loss of timber from insect infestationsOn Indian reservations.Revested Oregon-California railroad lands.Vol. 39, p. 218.*Proviso*.Cooperation required. on Indian reservations, on lands title to which was revested in the United States by the Act of June 9, 1916, and on unreserved public lands in Oregon and California: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation, except necessary expenditures for preliminary investigations, shall be expended unless the States of Oregon and California, or the owners of pine timberland adjacent to or intermingled with lands owned or administered by the United States shall have satisfied the Secretary of Agriculture that the insect infestations on said adjacent and intermingled lands will be abated, in accordance with State law or voluntarily by the owners of such lands, to the extent necessary in the judgment of the Secretary of Agriculture to protect the timber on lands owned or administered by the United States from reinfestation. miscellaneous.Miscellaneous.
Center Market, Washington, District of Columbia, operation: ToCenter Market, Washington, D. C.Expenses of operation, etc.Vol. 41, p. 1441.Vol. 16, p. 124. enable the Secretary of Agriculture to defray all necessary expenses in carrying out the Act approved March 4, 1921, entitled “An Act to repeal and annul certain parts of the charter and lease granted and made to the Washington Market Company by Act of Congress entitled ‘An Act to incorporate the Washington Market Company, ’” approved May 20, 1870; to pay for ice, electricity, gas, water, fuel, travel, stationery, printing, telegrams, telephones, labor, supplies, materials, equipment, miscellaneous expenses, necessary repairs and minor alterations to be reimbursed by any person for whose account any such expenditure may be made; to employ necessary persons, including, for a period of six months after the property of the Washington Market Company is taken over by the Secretary of Agriculture and without reference to civil-service requirements, such employees of said company as the said Secretary may deem necessary; to provide a fund for the payment of freight, express, drayage, and other charges and claims against commodities accepted for storage, and to require reimbursement thereof with interest at the rate of 6 per centum per annum; and to remove, sell, or otherwise dispose of such commodities held as security for such payments when such reimbursement is not made when due, all reimbursement of such payments and all receipts from such disposition of commodities to be credited to such fund and to be reexpendable therefrom for the same purposes during the fiscal year 1922, $75,000.
Enforcement of the Future Trading Act: To enable the SecretaryFuture Trading Act.Enforcement.*Ante*, p. 187. of Agriculture to carry into effect the provisions of the Future Trading Act, approved August 24, 1921, $47,500: *Provided*, That no person*Proviso*.Pay restriction. shall be employed hereunder at a rate of compensation exceeding $5,000 per annum and only one person may be employed at the rate of $5,000 per annum. Total, Department of Agriculture, $1,213,500. 332 Interior Department.DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR.
Public lands.General Land Office. Oregon and California Railroad lands.Protecting revested.For the protection of the so-called Oregon and California Railroad lands and Coos Bay Wagon Road lands: To enable the Secretary of the Interior, with the cooperation of the Secretary of Agriculture or otherwise, as in his judgment may be most advisable, to establish and maintain a patrol to prevent trespass and to guard against and Vol. 39, p. 218.check fires upon the lands revested in the United States by the Act Coos Bay Wagon Road lands.Vol. 40, p. 1179.approved June 9, 1916, and the lands known as the Coos Bay Wagon Road lands involved in the case of Southern Oregon Company against United States (numbered 2711, in the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit), fiscal year 1921, $6,512.17.
Department of Justice.DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. Contingent expenses.Contingent expenses: For miscellaneous expenditures, including telegraphing, fuel, lights, foreign postage, labor, repairs of buildings, care of grounds, books of reference, periodicals, typewriters and adding machines and exchange of same, street car fares not exceeding $200, and other necessaries, directly ordered by the Attorney General, fiscal year 1919, $0.38. Detection and prosecution of crimes.Detection and prosecution of crimes:
For the detection and prosecution of crimes against the United States, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Acts, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1918, $1.66; For 1919, $8.75. Traveling, etc., expenses.Traveling and miscellaneous expenses: For traveling and other miscellaneous and emergency expenses, including advances made by the disbursing clerk, authorized and approved by the Attorney General, to be expended at his discretion, the provisions of section 3648, Revised Statutes, to the contrary notwithstanding, fiscal year 1921, $188.24.
Washington Market Company.Allowance for court expenses.Not to exceed $3,500 of the appropriation of $35,000 made in section 6 of the Act approved March 4, 1921, entitled “An Act to repeal and annul certain parts of the charter and lease granted and Vol. 41, p. 1443.made to the Washington Market Company by the Act entitled ‘An Act to incorporate the Washington Market Company,’” approved May 28, 1870, is made available to enable the Attorney General to compensate expert witnesses and pay necessary expenses incident to the duties imposed upon him by section 7 of such Act.
Judicial.judicial. Judges.North Dakota, and West Virginia southern districts.*Ante*, pp. 66, 67.District courts: For the salaries of the United States district judges for the districts of North Dakota and southern West Virginia, provided by the Act approved June 25, 1921, at the rate of $7,500 per annum, $11,812.50. Hawaii district court.Pay of reporter.*Ante*, p. 120.District court, Territory of Hawaii: For compensation of reporter from July 9, 1921, to June 30, 1922, both dates inclusive, at the rate of $3,000 per annum, in addition to the amount heretofore appropriated, $1,760.
Pay of judges.*Ante*, p. 120.Supreme court, Territory of Hawaii: For compensation of chief justice at the rate of $7,500 per annum, and of two associate justices at the rate of $7,000 per annum each, for the period from July 9, 1921, to June 30, 1922, both dates inclusive, in addition to the amounts heretofore appropriated, $4,400.01. 333 Books for judicial officers: For purchase and rebinding ofBooks for Judicial officers. law books, including the exchange thereof, for United States judges, district attorneys, and other judicial officers, including the nine libraries of the United States circuit courts of appeals, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, for the fiscal years that follow:
For 1917, $115; For 1918, $33.93; For 1919, $20.50. Court of Claims Building: Repairs to heating plant, $4,100;Court of Claims.Repairs to building. painting, $2,500; electrical fixtures, $600; miscellaneous items, $300; in all, $7,500, to be expended under the supervision of the Architect of the Capitol. For salaries, fees, and expenses of United States marshals andMarshals.Salaries and expenses. their deputies, including the office expenses of United States marshals in the District of Alaska, services rendered in behalf of the United States or otherwise, services in Alaska and Oklahoma in collecting evidence for the United States when so specially directed by the Attorney General, and maintenance, alteration, repair, and operation of horse-drawn and motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles used in connection with the transaction of the official business of the office of United States marshal for the District of Columbia, $140,000.
For salaries of United States district attorneys and expenses ofDistrict attorneys.Salaries and expenses. United States district attorneys and their regular assistants, including the office expenses of United States district attorneys in Alaska, and for salaries of regularly appointed clerks to United States district attorneys for services rendered during vacancy in the office of the United States district attorney, $100,000. For salaries of clerks of United States district courts, their deputies,Clerks.Salaries and expenses. and other assistants, expenses of travel and subsistence, and other expenses of conducting their respective offices, in accordance with the provisions of the Act approved February 26, 1919, for the fiscalVol. 40, p. 1182. years that follow:
For 1920, $392.37; For 1922, $125,000. For fees of United States commissioners and justices of the peaceCommissioners, etc.[R.S., sec. 1014, p. 189](/us/rs/sec1014/p189). acting under section 1014, Revised Statutes of the United States, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1920, $74.70; For 1922, $150,000. For fees of jurors, fiscal year 1921, $9,155.32.Jurors. For such miscellaneous expenses as may be authorized by theMiscellaneous. Attorney General, for the United States courts and their officers, including so much as may be necessary in the discretion of the Attorney General for such expenses in the District of Alaska, for the fiscal years as follows:
For 1916, $35; For 1919, $659.85; For 1920, $1,978.52. For supplies, including the exchange of typewriting and addingSupplies. machines for the United States courts and judicial officers, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $25,000. For support of United States prisoners, including the same objectsSupport of prisoners, etc. specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Acts for the fiscal years that follow: For 1921, $27,147.58; For 1922, $300,000.
Total, Department of Justice, $905,284.31. 334 Department of Labor.DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. Immigration Bureau.bureau of immigration. Elite Island Immigration station.Improvements.Ellis Island, New York: For reconstruction and reconditioning of laundry building, Island Numbered Two, $32,270.75. For renewal of plumbing system on Island Numbered Two, including installation, $20,000. Enforcing immigration laws.Regulating immigration: For enforcement of the laws regulating immigration of aliens into the United States, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Acts for the fiscal years that follow:
For 1921, $150,000; For 1922, $300,000. Pacific Mail Steamship Company.Refund of fine.For refund of immigration fine erroneously assessed and collected from the Pacific Mail Steamship Company at Honolulu, Hawaii, $1,000. Whitney-Bodden Brokerage Company.Refund of fine.For refund of immigration fine erroneously assessed and collected from the WhitneyBodden Brokerage Company at Mobile, Alabama, $40. Alfredo Saborde.Refund of fine.For refund of immigration fine erroneously assessed and collected from Alfredo Saborde, master Cuban tug Caibarien, at Tampa, Florida, $50.
Total, Bureau of Immigration, $503,360.75. Women in Industry.women in industry. Continuing investigations.To enable the Secretary of Labor to continue the investigation touching women in industry, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1920, $1,200; For 1921, $600. Employment Serviceemployment service. Maintaining employment offices, etc.To enable the Secretary of Labor to foster, promote, to develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, to improve their working conditions, and so forth, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Acts for the fiscal years that follow:
For 1920,$400; For 1921, $3,500. Commissioners of Conciliation.commissioners of conciliation. Expenses.To enable the Secretary of Labor to exercise the authority vested Vol. 37, p. 738.in him by section 8 of the Act creating the Department of Labor, and to appoint commissioners of conciliation, for per diem in lieu of subsistence at not exceeding $4, and traveling expenses, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1920, $2,500; For 1922, $50,000. Total, Department of Labor, $561,560.75.
Navy Department.NAVY DEPARTMENT. Collision damages claims.Damage claims: To pay the claims adjusted and determined by the Navy Department under the Naval Appropriation Act for Vol. 36, p. 607.the fiscal year 1911, on account of damages occasioned to private property by collisions with vessels of the United States Navy and for which naval vessels were responsible, certified to Congress in House Document Numbered 121 of the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress, $7,413.26. 335 POSTAL SERVICE.Postal Service. out of the postal revenues. office of the first assistant postmaster general.First Assistant Postmaster General.
For compensation to clerks and employees at first and secondClerks, etc., first and second class offices. class post offices, including substitutes for clerks and employees absent without pay, $725,000. For miscellaneous items necessary and incidental to post offices ofMiscellaneous items. the first and second classes, $50,000. For pay of letter carriers at offices already established, includingLetter carriers. substitutes for letter carriers absent without pay, City Delivery Service, fiscal year 1920, $2,000.
For fees to special-delivery messengers, for the fiscal years thatSpecial deliver; fees. follow: For 1920, $11.54; For 1921. $999,439. 88. Total, Office of First Assistant Postmaster General, $1,776,451.42. office of the second assistant postmaster general.Second Assistant Postmaster General. For inland transportation by steamboat or other power-boatSteamboat routes. routes, $341,093.45. For pay of freight or expressage on postal cards, stamped envelopes,Freight on postal cards, etc. newspaper wrappers, and empty mail bags, fiscal year 1921, $1,389.21.
For the operation and maintenance of the airplane mail service,Airplaneservice New York and San Francisco. between New York, New York, and San Francisco, California, via Chicago, Illinois, and Omaha, Nebraska, including necessary incidental expenses and employment of necessary personnel, $175,000. Railway Mail Service: For rent, light, heat, fuel, telegraph,Railway Mail Service.Miscellaneous expenses. miscellaneous and office expenses, schedules of mail trains, telephone service, and badges for railway postal clerks, including rental of offices for division headquarters, and chief clerk, Railway Mail Service, in Washington, District of Columbia, and rental of space for terminal railway post offices for the distribution of mails when the furnishing of space for such distribution can not under the Postal Laws and Regulations properly be required of railroad companies without additional compensation, and for equipment and miscellaneous items necessary and incidental to terminal railway post offices, $817,000.
For transportation of foreign mails by steamship or otherwise forForeign malls. the fiscal years that follow: For 1921, $1,960,000; For 1922, $480,000. Total, Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General, $3,774,482.66. office of the third assistant postmaster general.Third Assistant Postmaster General. For payment of limited indemnity for the injury or loss of pieces ofIndemnity, lost domestic mail. domestic registered matter, insured, and collect-on-delivery mail, fiscal year 1921, $1,200,000.
Total, Postal Service, $6,750,934.08. DEPARTMENT OF STATE.State Department. interpreters to embassies and legations.Diplomatic and Consular Service. For ten student interpreters at the embassy to Turkey, who shallStudent Interpreters, Turkey. be citizens of the United States, and whose duty it shall be to study the language of Turkey and any other language that may be336necessary to qualify them for service as interpreters to the embassy and consulates in Turkey, at $1,000 each, fiscal year 1916, $1,000. transportation of diplomatic and consular officers.
Traveling expenses.For the transportation of diplomatic and consular officers in going to and returning from their posts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Diploma tic and Consular Appropriation Acts for the fiscal years that follow: For 1919, $450; *Proviso*.Reimbursing emergency fund, 1922.Vol. 41, p. 1208.For 1921, $36,000: *Provided*, That out of this amount the Secretary of State may reimburse the appropriation for “Emergencies arising in the Diplomatic and Consular Service, fiscal year 1922,” on account of expenditures therefrom for objects specified under this head.
International Institute of Agriculture.international institute of agriculture. Additional quota.For the payment of the additional quota of the United States for the support of the International Institute of Agriculture in accordance with the resolution of the general meeting of the institute held at Rome, November, 1920, said amount to be paid in United States currency on the basis of the fixed rate of exchange at par, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1921, $11,577; For 1922, $11,577.
National defense.national defense. Under the President.For the national security and defense, and for each and every purpose connected therewith, to be expended at the discretion of the President, fiscal years 1918 and 1919, $118,500. Arbitration with Peru.arbitration with peru. Expenses arbitrating claim of John Celestin Landreau.For the expenses of the arbitration between the United States and Peru of the claim of John Celestin Landreau against the Government of Peru under the protocol concluded on May 22, 1921, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, and actual and necessary traveling and subsistence expenses notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, and to continue available until the conclusion of such arbitration and the completion of the work in connection therewith, $45,000.
Arbitration with Norway.arbitration with norway. Expenses arbitrating claims against Shipping Board, etc.*Post*, pp. 1325,2335.For the expenses of the arbitration between the United States and Norway of certain claims of Norwegian subjects against the United States arising out of requisitions by the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, under the special agreement between the United States and Norway, signed on June 30, 1921, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, and actual and necessary traveling and subsistence expenses notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State and to continue available until the conclusion of such arbitration and the completion of the work in connection *Proviso*.Reimbursing incurred expenses.therewith, $60,000: *Provided*, That any appropriations from which expenditures have been made on account of the aforesaid arbitration may be reimbursed from the amount hereby appropriated. 337 international latitude observatory at ukiah, california.Latitude Observatory, Ukiah, Calif.
For the maintenance of the International Latitude ObservatoryMaintenance. at Ukiah, California, and for the continuance of the work thereof until the station is turned over to the Geodetic and Geophysical Union, $2,000. international exposition at rio de janeiro, brazil.Brazilian Exposition. For the expenses of taking part in an international exposition toExpenses of representation at.*Ante*, p. 209. be held at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as authorized by the joint resolution approved November 2, 1921, including the payment of salaries of commissioners and employees, personal services in the District of*Post*, pp. 651, 1548.
Columbia, and travel and subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act), the cost of preparing various Government exhibits, transportation, installation, display, care and return of exhibits, acquisition, preparation, maintenance, and disposition of sites and grounds, construction, equipment, furnishing, and disposition of building or buildings, and such other expenses as the President shall deem necessary to the accomplishment of the purposes expressed in the aforesaid resolution, to be disbursed under the direction and subject to the approval of the Secretary of State, $1,000,000, to remain available during the fiscal year 1923.
Total, State Department, $1,286,104. TREASURY DEPARTMENT.Treasury Department. Office of the Secretary.Secretary’s Office. Division of Customs: For salaries and expenses of Dye andDye and Chemical section. Chemical Section from November 27, 1921, to June 30, 1922, $17,000. Contingent expenses: For stationery, including tags, labels, andStationery. index cards printed in course of manufacture, for the Treasury Department and its several bureaus and offices, $40,000. mints and assay offices.Mints and assay offices.
New York Assay Office: For wages of workmen and otherNew York, N. Y. employees, $25,000. internal revenue.Internal Revenue. For expenses of assessing and collecting the internal-revenue taxes,Collecting, etc., taxes under Revenue Act, 1918.Vol. 40, pp. 1057,1140. as provided by the Revenue Act of 1918, including the employment of the necessary officers, attorneys, experts, agents, accountants, inspectors, deputy collectors, clerks, janitors, and messengers in the District of Columbia and the several collection districts, to be appointed as provided by law, telegraph and telephone service, rental of quarters outside the District of Columbia, postage, freight, express, and other necessary miscellaneous expenses, and, the purchase of such supplies, equipment, furniture, mechanical devices, printing, stationery, law books and books of reference, and such other articles as may be necessary for use in the District of Columbia and the several collection districts, $1,792,000.
For refunding taxes illegally collected under the provisions ofRefunding illegally collected taxes.[R.S., secs. 3220, 3689, pp. 618, 725](/us/rs/sec3220/sec3689/p618/p725).Vol. 40, p. 1145. sections 3220 and 3689, Revised Statutes, as amended by the Act of February 24, 1919, for claims accruing as follows: Prior to July 1, 1920, $12,422,000; During the fiscal year 1921, $10,635,000. Total, Bureau of Internal Revenue, $24,849,000. 338 Public Health Service.public health service.
Freight, travel, etc.For freight, transportation, and traveling expenses, including the expenses, except membership fees, of officers when officially detailed to attend meetings of associations for the promotion of public health, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1920, $4,298.07; For 1921, $24,590.14. Interstate quarantine service.Interstate quarantine service: For cooperation with State and municipal health authorities in the prevention of the spread of contagious and infectious diseases in interstate traffic, fiscal year 1921, $466.69.
Hospital facilities, etc., for war risk insurance patients, etc.For medical, surgical, and hospital services and supplies for war risk insurance patients and other beneficiaries of the Public Health Service, including necessary personnel, regular and reserve commismissioned officers of the Public Health Service, clerical help in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, maintenance, equipment, leases, fuel, lights, water, printing, freight, transportation and travel, maintenance and operation of passenger motor vehicles, and reasonable burial expenses (not exceeding $100 for any patient dying in hospital), fiscal year 1920, $87,776.81.
For beneficiaries other than war risk patients.For medical, surgical, and hospital services and supplies for beneficiaries (other than war-risk insurance patients) of the Public Health Service, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1921, $130,000. Lepers.Expenditures home for, increased.Vol. 41, p. 1377, amended.The amount which may be expended during the fiscal year 1922 for the maintenance of the home for lepers, including transportation of lepers, maintenance, care, and treatment of patients, and pay and maintenance of necessary officers and employees, is increased from $80,000 to $280,000.
Quarantine service.Quarantine service: For maintenance and ordinary expenses, exclusive of pay of officers and employees, of quarantine stations, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $389,000. Prevention of epidemics.Prevention of epidemics: To enable the President, in case only of threatened or actual epidemic of cholera, typhus fever, yellow fever, smallpox, bubonic plague, Chinese plague or black death, trachoma, influenza, or infantile paralysis, to aid State and local boards, or otherwise, in his discretion, in preventing and suppressing the spread of the same, and in such emergency in the execution of any quarantine laws which may be then in force, fiscal year 1920, $1,000.
Total for Public Health Service. $637,131.71. Public buildings.public buildings, construction and rent. Santa Fe, N. Mex.Construction.Santa Fe, New Mexico, post office, and so forth: For completion (site and building), $61,500. Claims of contractors.Payment of.Vol. 41, p. 281.Claims of contractors: For an additional amount for the payment of claims of contractors, and so forth, arising under the Act entitled “An Act for the relief of contractors and subcontractors for the post offices and other buildings and work under the supervision of the Treasury Department, and for other purposes,” approved August 25, 1919, as amended, $250,000.
San Francisco, Calif.Marine hospital water supply, etc.San Francisco, California, Marine Hospital: For extension to water-supply system, and repairs and additional fire-protection system, including necessary work incident thereto, $31,000. public buildings, operating expenses. Operating supplies.Operating supplies: For fuel, steam, gas for lighting and heating purposes, water, ice, lighting supplies, electric current for lighting and power purposes, and so forth, including the same objects specified339under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1921, $164,000.
Total for public buildings, $506,500. coast guard.Coast Guard. For payment of damages caused by collision of Coast Guard cutterAcostia and Cia.Collision damages. Manning with the schooner Alice May Davenport, belonging to Acostia and Cia, $110. Total, Treasury Department, $26,074,741.71. WAR DEPARTMENT.War Department. quartermaster corps.Quartermaster Corps Military posts, United States: For the completion of the Military posts.Lands for designated camps.acquisition of lands at Camps Custer, Devens, Dix, Grant, Jackson, and Lee, $408,200, to remain available during the fiscal year 1923.
Inland and port storage and shipping facilities: For completingInland, etc., shipping facilities.John F. Phillips. Purchase of land.*Ante*, p. 87. the acquisition of certain land near Fairmont, West Virginia, from John F. Phillips, and expenses incident thereto, the Secretary of War is authorized to expend $29,750 from the sum of $7,000,000 pertaining to the appropriation “Inland and port storage and shipping facilities,” the expenditure of which after June 30, 1921, was authorized by the Army Appropriation Act approved June 30, 1921, and reappropriated. national guard.National Guard.
In addition to the sums heretofore appropriated for the followingDiversion of designated appropriations for.*Ante*, p. 92. purposes of the National Guard for the fiscal year 1922, there may be used for such purposes from any of the other appropriations for the National Guard for such fiscal year, the following sums, namely: For travel of officers and noncommissioned officers of the RegularTravel, Army officers. Army in connection with the National Guard, $100,000; For transportation of supplies, $175,000;Transporting supplies.Sergeant instructors.
For expenses of sergeant-instructors, $100,000. payment of award.War contracts. The unexpended balances of appropriations made available byGeorge A. Carden and Anderson T. Herd.Payment of award to.*Ante*, p. 63. the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1921, approved June 16, 1921, for the settlement of claims resulting from the suspension or termination of contracts or other procurement obligations of the War Department, consequent upon the suspension of hostilities, and with the adjustment of claims under the Act approved March 2, 1919, shall be available for the payment of an award made by the Secretary of War in the sum of 3550,000 in favor of George A.
Carden and Anderson T. Herd. national home for disabled volunteer soldiers.Volunteer Soldiers, Home. For support of the National Homo for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers,Hampton, Va. as follows: Southern Branch, Hampton, Virginia: For current expenses,Current expenses. including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $8,000; For subsistence, including the same objects specified under thisSubsistence. head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $43,000; 340 Household.For household, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $30,000;
Hospital.For hospital, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $20,000; Repairs.For repairs, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $3,000; Farm.For farm, including the same objects specified under this head in the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1922, $2,500; In all, Southern Branch, $106,500. Total, War Department, $514,700.
Government Printing Office.GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. Leaves of absence.Leaves of absence: To enable the Public Printer to comply with the provisions of the law granting thirty days’ annual leave to the employees of the Government Printing Office, $17,618. Public printing and binding.public printing and binding. Post Office Department.For printing and binding for the Post Office Department, exclusive of the money-order office, $150,000. Total, Government Printing Office, $107,618.
Judgments, United States courts.JUDGMENTS, UNITED STATES COURTS. Payment of.Vol. 24, p. 505.For payment of the final judgments and decrees, including costs of suits, which have been rendered under the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1887, entitled “An Act to provide for the bringing of suits against the Government of the United States,” certified to Congress during the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress by the Attorney General in House Document Numbered 120, and which have not been appealed, namely:
War Department.Under the War Department, $47,404.38. Additional.Vol. 24, p. 505.For payment of the final judgments and decrees, including costs of suits, which have been rendered under the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1887, entitled “An Act to provide for the bringing of suits against the Government of the United States,” certified to Congress during the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress by the Attorney General in Senate Document Numbered 81, and which have not been appealed, namely:
War Department.Interest.Under the War Department, $4,371.80, together with such additional sum as may be necessary to pay interest on the respective judgments at the rate of 4 per centum per annum from the date thereof until the time this appropriation is made. Judgments, Court of Claims.JUDGMENTS, COURT OF CLAIMS. Broadbent Portable Laundry Corporation.*Ante*, p. 195.For payment of the judgment rendered by the Court of Claims in favor of the Broadbent Portable Laundry Corporation, and certified to Congress in Senate Document Numbered 63 of the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress, $106,992.33.
Other judgments.For payment of the judgments rendered by the Court of Claims and reported to Congress during the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress in House Document Numbered 119 and Senate Document Numbered 82, namely: War Department.Under the War Department, $103,264.44; Navy Department.Under the Navy Department, $275,237.40; Department of Labor.Under the Department of Labor, $11,875; In all, $390,376.84. 341 None of the judgments contained herein shall be paid until theRight of appeal. right of appeal shall have expired.
AUDITED CLAIMS.Audited claims. Sec. 2. That for the payment of the following claims, certifiedPayment of, certified by General Accounting Office. to be due by the General Accounting Office under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus*Ante*, p. 23. fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874, and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being forVol. 18, p. 110. the service of the fiscal year 1919 and prior years, unless otherwiseVol. 23, p. 254. stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 of the Act of July 7, 1884, as fully set forth in House Document Numbered 116, reported to Congress during the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress, there is appropriated as follows: treasury department.
For contingent expenses, Treasury Department: NewspaperTreasury Department. clippings and books, $12. For contingent expenses, Treasury Department: Fuel, and so forth, $544.21. For collecting the revenue from customs, $1.88. For freight, transportation, and so forth, Public Health Service, $38.73. For maintenance, hygienic laboratory, Public Health Service, S15. For care of seamen, Public Health Service, S199.60. For pay of personnel and maintenance of hospitals, Public Health Service, $569.24.
For preventing the spread of epidemic diseases, $244.39. For control of biologic products, Public Health Service, $36.25. For suppressing Spanish influenza and other communicable diseases, $1.82. For collecting the war revenue, $363.08. For miscellaneous expenses, Internal-Revenue Service, 75 cents. For refunding internal-revenue collections, $5. For redemption of stamps, $1,037.28. For allowance or drawback (internal revenue), $480.60. For materials and miscellaneous expenses, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, $752.92.
For Coast Guard, $2,324.62. For contingent expenses, assay office at New York, 56 cents. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, $1,635.25. For repairs and preservation of public buildings, $113.45. For mechanical equipment for public buildings, $48.53. For operating supplies for public buildings, $17.25. For general expenses of public buildings, $31.40. war department. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $13,086.96.War Department. For registration and selection for military service, $949.34.
For Signal Service of the Army, $59,745.33. For increase for aviation, Signal Corps, $16,229.83. For Air Service, military, $3,258.74. For Air Service, production, $218,415.49. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $5,054.95. For mileage to officers and contract surgeons, $5.60. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $74,290.41. For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corns, $124,672.65. 342 For subsistence of the Army, $11. For incidental expenses of the Quartermaster Corps, $29.
For barracks and quarters, $17,625.55. For roads, walks, wharves, and drainage, $1,230.73. For construction and repair of hospitals, $12.24. For inland and port storage and shipping facilities, $47.32. For medical and hospital department, $5,204.39. For engineer equipment of troops, $580.80. For engineer operations in the held, $110,957.05. For ordnance service, $1,276.18. For ordnance stores, ammunition, $580.58. For small arms target practice, $2,318.40. For manufacture of arms, S48.90.
For ordnance stores and supplies, $113.80. For automatic rilles, $600. For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $365.61. For encampment and maneuvers, Organized Militia, $405.58. For repairs of arsenals, $68.75. For supplies for seacoast defenses, $89.10. For fire control at fortifications, $57,118.86. For aviation stations, seacoast defenses, $111.37. For armament of fortifications, $77,239.05. For fortifications in insular possessions, $1,415.69. For electrical and sound ranging equipment, and so forth, $2,062.89.
For proving ground facilities, $146.19. For rebuilding levees on Mississippi River and tributaries damaged by flood, $2,988.03. For increase of compensation, rivers and harbors, $217.60. For headstones for graves of soldiers, $10.62. For disposition of remains of officers, soldiers, and civil employees, $535.82. For prevention of deposits, harbor of New York, $60. navy department. Navy Department.For contingent and miscellaneous expenses, Naval Observatory, $6. For increase of compensation, Naval Establishment, $14.15.
For pay, miscellaneous, 8964.17. For aviation, Navy, $44,477.63. For pay, Marine Corps, $3,855.20. For maintenance, Quartermaster’s Department, Marine Corps, $2,181.45. For contingent, Marine Corps, $1,088.15. For transportation, Bureau of Navigation, $17,202.42. For gunnery exercises, Bureau of Navigation, $20. For Naval War College, Bureau of Navigation, $12. For outfits on first enlistment, Bureau of Navigation, $1,448.43. For instruments and supplies, Bureau of Navigation, $5,570.82.
For ordnance and ordnance stores, Bureau of Ordnance, $138,230.06. For ammunition for vessels, $5,033.75. For new batteries for ships of the Navy, Bureau of Ordnance, $669.16. For reserve ordnance supplies, Bureau of Ordnance, $42,228.91. For maintenance, Bureau of Yards and Docks, $220.29. For care of hospital patients, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, $1,230. For pay of the Navy, $37,859.93. For provisions, Navy, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $329.26. For maintenance, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $43.17. 343 For freight, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $68,711.16.
For fuel and transportation, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $11,935.60. For construction and repair, Bureau of Construction and Repair, $3,209.45. For engineering, Bureau of Steam Engineering, $13,995.91. For Navy pensions, $75. interior department. For contingent expenses, Department of the Interior, 24 cents.Interior Department. For scientific library, Patent Office, $17.09. For protecting public lands, timber, and so forth, $14.10. For Geological Survey, $14.77. For expenses, mining experiment stations, Bureau of Mines, $13.68.
For investigating mine accidents, Bureau of Mines, $2.04. For investigation, drainage, and so forth, of cut-over lands, Reclamation Service, $21.01. For Saint Elizabeths Hospital, $78.38. For suppressing liquor traffic among Indians, 48 cents. For relieving distress and prevention, and so forth, of diseases among Indians, $25. For Indian schools, support, $255. For Indian school transportation, $42.63. For industrial work and care of timber, $510. For purchase and transportation of Indian supplies, $14.60.
For telegraphing and telephoning, Indian Service, $1.30. For determining heirs of deceased Indian allottees, $510. For support of Indians in Arizona and New Mexico, $510. For support of Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewas, North Dakota, $255. For industry among Klamath Indians, Oregon (reimbursable), $727.68. For education, Sioux Nation, South Dakota, $7. public printing and binding.Public printing and binding. For public printing and binding, $81.63. state department.State Department.
For relief, protection, and transportation of American citizens inDiplomatic and Consular Service. Europe, $1.86. For salaries and expenses, Committee on Public Information, $438.30. For salaries and expenses, War Industries Board, $139.34. For salaries of ambassadors and ministers, $1,409.73. For salaries of secretaries, Diplomatic Service, $3,283.52. For transportation of diplomatic and consular officers, $762.59. For contingent expenses, foreign missions, $8,432.08. For clerks, at embassies and legations, $2,501.27.
For salaries, Consular Service, $216.80. For salaries, consular assistants, $403.14. For post allowances to diplomatic and consular officers, $7,602.34. For allowance for clerks at consulates, $3,102.49. For contingent expenses, United States consulates, $5,126.38. For emergencies arising in the Diplomatic and Consular Service, $569.35. For relief and protection of American seamen, $462. For boundary line, Alaska and Canada, and United States and Canada, $11.53. 344 For national security and defense, Department of State, $1,380.72.
For national security and defense, Department of State, $102.55. For representations of interests of foreign Governments growing out of hostilities in Europe, and so forth, $500. miscellaneous. State, etc., Department buildings.For fuel, lights, and so forth, State, War, and Navy Department buildings, $72.40. Council of National Defense.For Council of National Defense, $253.24. For national security and defense, Council of National Defense, Interstate Commerce Commission.$975.80.
For Interstate Commerce Commission, $187.36. Food and Fuel Administrations.For salaries and expenses, United States Food Administration, $200.72. For national security and defense, Food and Fuel Administrations, educational, $13.61. For national security and defense, United States Fuel Administration, $139.25. Veterans’ Bureau.For salaries and expenses, Veterans’ Bureau, 30 cents. For national security and defense, Veterans’ Bureau, $3.27. department of agriculture. Department of Agriculture.For library, Department of Agriculture, $33.60.
For general expenses, Weather Bureau, $21.16. For general expenses, Bureau of Animal Industry, $145.38. For meat inspection, Bureau of Animal Industry, $101.73. For general expenses, Bureau of Plant Industry, $374. For stimulating agriculture and facilitating distribution of products, $132.03. For general expenses, Forest Service, $90.47. For general expenses, Bureau of Chemistry, $1.83. For general expenses, Bureau of Entomology, $1.24. For general expenses, Bureau of Biological Survey, $3.48.
For general expenses, States Relations Service, $2.70. For general expenses, Office of Public Roads and Rural Engineering, $1. For general expenses, Bureau of Markets, $60.77. For experiments and demonstrations in live-stock production, 21 cents. department of commerce. Department of Commerce.For promoting commerce, Department of Commerce, $18.98. For promoting commerce in the Far East, $1.39. For general expenses, Bureau of Standards, $39.83. For military research, Bureau of Standards, $818.76.
For testing structural materials, Bureau of Standards, $17.06. For investigation of public utility companies, Bureau of Standards, $581.50. For armament of fortifications, commerce transfer, $27.83. For party expenses, Coast and Geodetic Survey, $127.56. For general expenses, Lighthouse Service, $9,579.41. For miscellaneous expenses, Bureau of Fisheries, $5.45. department of labor. Department of Labor.For salaries and expenses, commissioners of conciliation, $21.83. For contingent expenses, Department of Labor, $2.73.
For national security and defense, Department of Labor, $67.71. For miscellaneous expenses, Bureau of Naturalization, $14,39. For War Labor Administration, $5.09. 345 For expenses of regulating immigration, $19.04. For investigation of child welfare, Children’s Bureau, $17.29. For enforcement of the child labor law, $2.34. department of justice. For increase of compensation, Department of Justice, $7.68.Department of Justice. For United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas, $10.52.
For fees of clerks, United States courts, $17.40. For fees of commissioners, United States courts, $234.45. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, $48.50. For support of prisoners, United States courts, $13,689.45. Total audited claims, section 2, $1,276,005.64. AUDITED CLAIMS.Audited claims. Sec. 3. That the payment of the following claims, certified to bePayment of. certified by General Accounting Office.*Ante*, p. 23. due by the General Accounting Office, under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874, andVol. 18, p. 110. under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year 1919 and prior years, unless otherwise stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 ofVol. 23, p. 254. the Act of July 7, 1884, as fully set forth in Senate Document Numbered 80, reported to Congress during the first session of the Sixty-seventh Congress, there is appropriated as follows:
For suppressing counterfeiting and other crimes, $2.50.Treasury Department. For freight, transportation, and so forth, Public Health Service, $28.73. For maintenance, marine hospital, Public Health Service, $70.36. For care of seamen, and so forth, Public Health Service, $10. For pay of personnel and maintenance of hospitals, Public Health Service, $164.56. For field investigations of public health, $1.64. For expenses, Division of venereal Diseases, Public Health Service, $1.
For collecting the war revenue, $25.87. For restricting the sale of opium, and so forth, $2.50. For refunding taxes illegally collected, $34.99. For Coast Guard, $1,625.77. For operating supplies for public buildings, $71.87. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, $19.53. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $5,128.81.War Department. For registration and selection for military service, $589.90. For contingencies, Military Information Section, General Staff, $18 29.
For Signal Service of the Army, $1,528.12. For increase for aviation, Signal Corps, $684.47. For Air Service, military, $181.13. For Air Service production, $5,636.57. For national security and defense, War Department, $29.13. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $83,276.67. For subsistence of the Army, $2.75. For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corps, $101,596.63. For transportation of the Army and its supplies, $54.30. For barracks and quarters, $2,377.15.
For roads, walks, wharves, and drainage, $69.69. For inland and port storage and shipping facilities, $10,933.14. For medical and hospital department, $3,000.45. For engineer operations in the field, $218.07. 346 For ordnance service, $344,44. For ordnance stores and supplies, $2.25. For support of dependent families of enlisted men, $2.50. For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $446.33. For repairs of arsenals, $17.06. For fire control at fortifications, $10,227.
For contingent expenses, sea-coast fortifications, $12,470.40. For armament of fortifications, $14,180.41. For proving ground facilities, $43.61. For proving grounds, Army, $1,087. For submarine mines, $3,636. For armament of fortifications, Panama Canal, $320.58. For ordnance depot, Panama Canal, $158.76. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $2,362.11. For increase of compensation, rivers and harbors, $20. For headstones for graves of soldiers, $4.61. For national cemeteries, 58 cents.
For disposition of remains of officers, soldiers, and civil employees, $152.93. For National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Central Branch, $146.90. Navy Department.For increase of compensation, Naval Establishment, $59.56. For pay, miscellaneous, $1,900.94. For aviation, Navy, $608.60. For pay, Marine Corps, $2,130.86. For maintenance, Quartermaster’s Department, Marine Corps, $699.44. For contingent. Marine Corps, $348.25. For transportation, Bureau of Navigation, $7,132.84.
For outfits on first enlistments, Bureau of Navigation, $579.93. For instruments and supplies, Bureau of Navigation, $132.49. For Naval War College, Bureau of Navigation, $1.65. For ordnance and ordnance stores, Bureau of Ordnance, $586.30. For Naval Gun Factory, Washington, District of Columbia, $1,650. For reserve ordnance supplies, Bureau of Ordnance, $40,288.33. For maintenance, Bureau of Yards and Docks, $491.96. For Medical Department, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, $7,814.68.
For bringing home remains of officers, and so forth, Navy Department, $32.84. For pay of the Navy, $16,042.47. For provisions, Navy, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $1,293.91. For maintenance, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $122.83. For freight, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $26,945.56. For fuel and transportation, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $2,331.15. For construction and repair. Bureau of Construction and Repair, $977.60. Interior Department.For engineering, Bureau of Steam Engineering, $987.17.
For scientific library, Patent Office, $66.65. For classification of lands involved in Oregon and California Railroad forfeiture suit, $6.28. For Geological Survey, $13.74. For operating mine rescue cars, Bureau of Mines, $1.95. For testing fuel, Bureau of Mines, 53 cents. For increase of compensation, Indian Service, $10. 347 For relieving distress and prevention, and so forth, of diseases among Indians, $7.99. For Indian school and agency buildings, $7.10. For industrial work and care of timber, $28.15.
For purchase and transportation of Indian supplies, $581.65. For telegraphing and telephoning, Indian Service, $1.52. For drainage assessments, Omaha and Winnebago allotments, Nebraska (reimbursable), $2,126.95. For Indian school, Carson City, Nevada, irrigation, $7.60. For support of Sioux of different tribes, subsistence and civilization, South Dakota, $1,301.25. For salaries and expenses, Committee on Public Information, $1.71.Executive.Diplomatic and Consular Service. For transportation of diplomatic and consular officers, $48.09.
For salaries of secretaries, Diplomatic Service, $100. For post allowances to diplomatic and consular officers, $166.67. For contingent expenses, foreign missions, $474.70. For salaries, Consular Service, $1,287.17. For allowance for clerks at consulates, $2,075.93. For contingent expenses, United States consulates, $3,187. For relief and protection of American seamen, $11,487.54. For national security and defense, Department of State, $90. For representation of interests of foreign Governments growing out of hostilities in Europe, and so forth, $1,683.42.
For salaries and expenses, United States Food Administration,Food and Fuel Administrations. $30.17. For national security and defense, United States Fuel Administration, 22 cents. For library, Department of Agriculture, $26.50.Department of Agriculture. For general expenses, Weather Bureau, $16.36. For general expenses, Bureau of Animal Industry, $3.54. For purchase and distribution of valuable seeds, $22.44. For stimulating agriculture and facilitating distribution of products, $166.97.
For national security and defense, Department of Agriculture, $1.53. For general expenses, Forest Service, $13.17. For general expenses, Bureau of Chemistry, $1.44. For general expenses, Division of Publications, $4.20. For general expenses. States Relations Service, $177.06. For enforcement of the United States cotton futures Act, $2.76. For enforcement of the United States grain standards Act, 25 cents. For commercial attachés, Department of Commerce, $14.27.Department of Commerce.
For promoting commerce, Department of Commerce, 40 cents. For military research, Bureau of Standards, $2.16. For general expenses, Lighthouse Service, $4,769. For contingent expenses, Department of Labor, $2.21.Department of Labor. For salaries and expenses, Commissioners of Conciliation, $4.89. For war labor administration, $57.34. For national security and defense, Department of Labor, $46.07. For expenses of regulating immigration, $7.57. For miscellaneous expenses, Bureau of Naturalization, $90.76.
For investigation of child welfare, Children’s Bureau, $4.09. For fees of commissioners, United States courts, $82.75.Department of Justice. For fees of jurors, United States courts, $11.40. Total audited claims, section 3, $406,490.53. Sec. 4. That this Act hereafter may be referred to as the “FirstTitle of Act. Deficiency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1922.” Approved, December 15, 1921.