Chapter 204. Making appropriations for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1923, and for other purposes
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CHAP. 204.— An Act Making appropriations for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1923, and for other purposes. June 1, 1922.[[H. R. 11065](/us/bill/67/hr/11065).][[Public, No. 229](/us/67/pl/229).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That the following sums are Departments of State and Justice appropriations.appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary, or the fiscal year ending June 30, 1923, namely:
TITLE I—Department of State. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. office of secretary of state. Salaries: For Secretary of State, $12,000; Undersecretary Secretary, Undersecretary, and Assistants.of State, to be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, $7,500; Assistant Secretary, $5,000; Second and Third Assistant Secretaries, at $4,500 each; Director of the Consular Service, $4,500; officers to aid in important drafting work— Director of Consular Service, officers on drafting work.eight at $4,500 each, five at $4,000 each, fifteen at $3,500 each, fifteen at $3,000 each, seventeen at $2,500 each, to be appointed by the Secretary, any one of whom may be employed as chief or assistant chief of division or as chief of bureau, or upon other work in connection with the foreign relations; assistant solicitors of the department, Assistant solicitors.to be appointed by the Secretary—one $4,500 (who shall also represent the interests of the United States in all matters or investigations Vol. 36, p. 2448.*Post*, p. 607.before the International Joint Commission created by the treaty of January 11, 1909, between the United States and Great Britain), five at $3,000 each, two at $2,500 each; chief clerk, who shall sign Chief clerk, law clerks, clerks, etc.such official papers and documents as the Secretary may direct, $3,000; law clerks—one $2,500, two at $2,250 each, three at $2,000 each; law clerk and assistant, to be selected by the Secretary to edit the laws of Congress and perform such other duties as may be required of them, at $2,500 and $1,500, respectively; two translators, at $2,100 each; private secretary to the Secretary, $2,500; private secretary to the Undersecretary, $2,000; clerk to the Secretary, $1,800; clerks—twenty-seven of class four, thirty of class three, forty of class two, sixty-three of class one (three of whom shall be telegraph operators), forty at $1,000 each, ten at $900 each; lithographer, $1,400; chief messenger, $1,000; eight messengers at $840 each; twenty-seven assistant messengers at $720 each; four messenger boys at $420 each; packer, $720; seven laborers at $660 each; four telephone switchboard operators at $720 each; chauffeur, $1,080; ten charwomen at $240 each; in all, $608,140. 600 Temporary employees.*Proviso*.Pay restriction.For temporary employees in the Department of State, $260,000: *Provided*, That no person shall be employed hereunder at a rate of compensation exceeding $2,500 per annum and not more than eight persons shall be employed hereunder at a rate of compensation exceeding $1,800 per annum. contingent expenses, department of state.
Contingent expenses.For stationery, furniture, fixtures, typewriters, including exchange Automobile for the Secretary.of same, repairs and material for repairs, $27,000. Library.For the exchange of a passenger automobile for official use of the Secretary of State, to be immediately available, $4,500. Miscellaneous.For books, maps, and periodicals, domestic and foreign, for the library, $4,000. For miscellaneous expenses, including maintenance, repair, and storage of motor-propelled passenger vehicles, to be used only for official purposes; automobile mail wagons, including storage, repair, and exchange of same; street car fare not exceeding 3150, and other items not included in the foregoing, $13,200 printing and binding Printing and binding.For printing and binding for the State Department, $69,193.
Passport bureaus.passport bureaus. Salaries and expenses.For salaries and expenses of maintenance, including rent outside the District of Columbia, of passport bureaus at New York City, New York; San Francisco, California; Chicago, Illinois; Seattle, Washington; and New Orleans, Louisiana, 355,000. Diplomatic and Consular Service.Diplomatic and Consular Service. ambasadors and ministers.DiplomatiC Service. Ambassadors.For ambassadors extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Spain, and Turkey, at $17,500 each, $227,500;
For envoys extraordinary and ministers plenipotentiary to China, Cuba, the Netherlands and Luxemburg, at $12,000 each, $36,000. For envoys Envoys extraordinary and ministers plenipotentiary.*Post*, p. 1548.extraordinary and ministers plenipotentiary to Austria, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Persia, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Salvador, Siam, Sweden, Switzerland, Uruguay, and Venezuela, at $10,000 each, and to the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, $10,000; in all, $310,000;
Minister resident and consul general.Agent and consul general.Egypt.Minister to, authorized.Amount for fiscal year, 1922.Vol. 41, p. 1206.Minister resident and consul general to Liberia, $5,000; Agent and consul general at Tangier, $7,500; The President is hereby authorized to appoint as the representative of the United States an envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Egypt, who shall receive as compensation the sum of $10,000 per annum, and there is hereby appropriated for the fiscal year 1922 for said salary the sum of $600 m addition to the unexpended balance of the amount already appropriated for salary of an agent and consul general, which amount is also made available for the salary of a minister when appointed. *Proviso.*Salary restriction. *Provided*, That no salary herein appropriated shall be paid to any official receiving any other salary from the United States Government;
Total, ambassadors and ministers, $586,600. 601 chargés d’affaires ad interim. For salaries for chargés d’affaires ad interim, $50,000.Charges d’affaires. secretaries in the diplomatic service. For salaries of secretaries in the Diplomatic Service, as provided Secretaries, Diplomatic Service.Vol. 38, p. 805: Vol. 39, p. 252.in the Act of February 5, 1915, entitled “An Act for the improvement of the foreign service,” as amended by the Act making appropriations for the Diplomatic and Consular Service for the fiscal year endingVol. 41, p. 740 June 30, 1917, approved July 1, 1916, and the Act making appropriations for the Diplomatic and Consular Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1921, approved June 4, 1920, $379,000;
Japanese secretary of embassy to Japan, $5,500;Designated secretaries, japan, Turkey, and China. Turkish secretary of embassy to Turkey, $5,500; Chinese secretary of legation to China, $5,500; Chinese assistant secretary of legation to China, $4,000; Japanese assistant secretary of embassy to Japan, $4,000; Turkish assistant secretary of embassy to Turkey, $4,000; Total, $407,500. clerks at embasies and legations. For the employment of necessary clerks at the embassies and legations, Clerks at embassies and legations.who, whenever hereafter appointed, shall be citizens of the United States, $350,000; and so far as practicable shall be appointed under civil-service rules and regulations. interpreters to embassies and legations Interpreter to legation and consulate general to Persia, $2,000;Interpreters.
Interpreter to legation and consulate general to Bangkok, Siam, $2,000; For fifteen student interpreters at the legation to China and the Student interpreters.China, Japan, and Turkey.embassies to Japan and Turkey, who shall be citizens of the United States, and whose duty it shall be to study the language of the country to which assigned with a view to supplying interpreters to the legation or embassy and consulates in such country, at $1,500 each, $22,500: *Provided*, That the method of selecting said student interpreters shall *Provisos*.Nonpartisan selectionTerm of servicebe nonpartisan: *And provided further*, That upon receiving such appointment each student interpreter shall sign an agreement to continue in the service as an interpreter at the legation, embassy, or consulate in the country to which assigned so long as his services may be required within a period of five years;
For the payment of the cost of tuition of student interpreters Tuition.in China, Japan, and Turkey, at the rate of $350 per annum each, $5,250; No person drawing the salary of interpreter or student interpreter Restriction on salaries.as above provided shall be allowed any part of the salary appropriated for any secretary of legation or other officer; Total, $31,750. quarters for student interpreters at embassies. For rent of quarters for the student interpreters attached to the Quarters for student interpreters.embassy to Japan, $1,200;
For rent of quarters for the student interpreters attached to the embassy to Turkey, $600; Total, $1,800. contingent expenses, foreign missions. To enable the President to provide, at the public expense, all such Contingent expenses, foreign missions.stationery, blanks, records, and other books, seals, presses, flags, 602and signs as he shall think necessary for the several embassies and legations in the transaction of their business, and also for rent, repairs, postage, telegrams, furniture, typewriters, including exchange of same, messenger service, compensation of kavasses, guards, dragomans, and porters, including compensation of interpreters, translators, Dispatch agents.and the compensation of and rent for dispatch agents at London, New York, San Francisco, and New Orleans, and for traveling Printing in Department of State.Loss by exchange.and miscellaneous expenses of embassies and legations, and for printing in the Department of State, and for loss on bills of exchange to and from embassies and legations, including such loss on bills of exchange to officers of the United States Court for China, and payment in advance of subscriptions for newspapers (foreign and domestic) *Proviso*.No payment for clerical services to persons not Americans.under this appropriation is hereby authorized: *Provided*, That no part of this sum appropriated for contingent expenses, foreign missions, shall be expended for salaries or wages of persons not American citizens performing clerical services, whether officially designated as clerks or not, in any foreign mission, $750,000. steam launch for embassy at constantinople.
Steam launch, Turkey.For hiring of steam launch for use of embassy at Constantinople, $1,800. ground rent of embassy at tokoy, japan. Ground rent, Japan.For annual ground rent of the embassy at Tokyo, Japan, for the year ending March 15, 1923, $250. salaries of the consular service.Consular Service. Consuls general, consuls, and vice consuls.For salaries of consuls general, consuls, and vice consuls, as provided in the Act approved February 5, 1915, entitled “An Act for the Citizenship required.Vol. 38, p. 805.improvement of the foreign service,” $1,900,000.
Every consul general, consul, vice consul, and wherever practicable every consular agent, shall be an American citizen; Consular inspectors.For salaries of seven consular inspectors, at $5,000 each, $35,000; Total, $1,935,000. expenses of consular inspectors. Expenses of consular inspectors.For the actual and necessary traveling and subsistence expenses of consular inspectors while traveling and inspecting under instructions *Proviso*.Subsistence allowance.from the Secretary of State, $25,000: *Provided*, That inspectors shall not be allowed actual and necessary expenses for subsistence, itemized, exceeding an average of $8 per day. salaries of consular assistants.
Consular assistants.For fifteen consular assistants, $26,250. allowance of clerk hire at united states consulates. Clerks at consulates.For allowance for clerk hire at consulates, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, $1,400,000. Clerks, whenever hereafter appointed, shall, so far as practicable, be appointed under civil-service rules and regulations. salaries and expenses of interpreters and guards to consulates. Interpreters and guards at consulates.For interpreters and guards to be employed at consulates, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, $103,700. 603 contingent expenses, united states consulates.
For expenses of providing all such stationery, blanks, record and Contingent expenses, consulates.other books, seals, presses, flags, signs, rent (so much as may be necessary), repairs to consular buildings owned by the United States, postage, furniture, including typewriters and exchange of same, statistics, newspapers, freight (foreign and domestic), telegrams, advertising, messenger service, traveling expenses of consular officers and consular assistants, compensation of Chinese writers, loss by exchange, and such other miscellaneous expenses as the President may think necessary for the several consulates and consular agencies in the transaction of their business and payment in advance of subscriptions for newspapers (foreign and domestic) under this appropriation is hereby authorized, $1,150,000. relief and proetection of american seamen.
For relief and protection of American seamen in foreign countries, Relief of American seamen.and in the Panama Canal Zone, and shipwrecked American seamen in the Territory of Alaska, in the Hawaiian Islands, Porto Rico, the Philippine Islands, and the Virgin Islands, $220,000: *Provided*, *Proviso.*Limitation on steam-ship passage.That no part of this appropriation shall be available for payment for the transportation on steam vessels of any seamen in excess of the amount agreed upon between the consular officer and the master Rate restricted.of the vessel in each individual case; and hereafter the amount so agreed upon not in excess of the lowest passenger rate of such vessel and not in excess of 2 cents per mile, together with such additional compensation for transporting sick or disabled seamen as is now provided by law, shall in each case constitute the lawful rate. expenses, passport-control act.Passport control.
For expenses of regulating entry into the United States, in accordance Expenses regulating alien entries.Vol. 40, p. 559.with the provisions of the Act approved May 22, 1918, $350,000. salaries, diplomatic and consular officers while receiving instructions and in transit. To pay the salaries of ambassadors, ministers, consuls, vice consuls,Instruction and tran sit pay. and other officers of the United States for the period actually and necessarily occupied in receiving instructions and in making transits to and from their posts, and while awaiting recognition and authority [R.
S., sec. 1740, p. 309](/us/rs/s1740/p309).to act in pursuance with the provisions of section 1740 of the Revised Statutes, $50,000. transportation of diplomatic and consular officers. To pay the itemized and verified statements of the actual and Transportation expenses.necessary experifees of transportation and subsistence, under such regulations as the Secretary of State may prescribe, of diplomatic and consular officers and clerks in embassies, legations, and consulates and their families and effects in going to and returning from their posts, or of such officers and clerks when traveling under orders of the Secretary of State, but not including any expense incurred in connection with leaves of absence, $290,000. emergencies arising in the diplomatic and consular service.
To enable the President to meet unforeseen emergencies arising Emergencies.in the Diplomatic and Consular Service, and to extend the commercial and other interests of the United States and to meet the necessary Neutrality Act.expenses attendant upon the execution of the Neutrality Act, to [R. S., sec. 291, p. 49](/us/rs/s291/p49).be expended pursuant to the requirement of section 291 of the Revised Statutes, $400,000. 604 allowance to widows or heirs of diplomatic or consular officers who die abroad.
Allowances for officers dying abroad.[R. S., sec. 1749, p. 311](/us/rs/s1749/p311) .For payment under the provisions of section 1749 of the Revised Statutes of the United States to the widows or heirs at law of diplomatic or consular officers of the United States dying in foreign countries in the discharge of their duties, $2,500. payment to daisy crawford carroll. Mrs. Daisy Crawford Carroll.Payment to.To Daisy Crawford Carroll, widow of B. Harvey Carroll, late consul to Cadiz, Spain, $3,500, one year’s salary of her deceased husband, who died while at his post of duty from illness incurred in the Consular Service. payment to alice potter.
Mrs. Alice Potter. Payment to.To Alice Potter, widow of Julian Potter, late consul to Rouen, France, $3,000, one year’s salary of her deceased husband, who died as a result of illness incurred in the Consular Service. transporting remains of diplomatic and consular officers, consular assistants, and clerks to their homes for interm Bringing home remains of officers.For defraying the expenses of transporting the remains of diplomatic and consular officers of the United States, including consular assistants and clerks, who have died or may die abroad or in transit, while in the discharge of their official duties, to their former homes in this country for interment, and for the ordinary and necessary expenses of such interment, at their post or at home, $5,000. embassy, legation, and consular buildings and grounds.Diplomatic and consular premises.
London, England.Alterations, etc., embassy building.Vol. 41, p. 1214.For expenses of the alteration, repair, and furnishing of the American Embassy building in London, England, located at numbers 13-14 Prince’s Gate, including the installation and repair of heating, lighting, and electrical apparatus, and such other items as the Secretary of State shall deem proper, $150,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be immediately available. Tangler, Morocco. Improvement.For the improvement of the agency and consulate buildings at Tangier, Morocco, $14,435. post allowances to diplomatic and consular officers.Post allowances.
Special provisions for officers to meet living expenses.To enable the President, in his discretion, and in accordance with such regulations as he may prescribe, to make special allowances by way of additional compensation to diplomatic and consular officers and consular assistants and officers of the United States Court for China in order to adjust their official income to the ascertained cost of living at the posts to which they may be assigned, $200,000. cape spartel light, coast of morocco.
Cape Spartel Light.For annual proportion of the expenses of Cape Spartel and Tangier Light on the coast of Morocco, including loss by exchange, $250. rescuing shipwrecked american seamen. Life saving testimonials.For expenses which may be incurred in the acknowledgment of the services of masters and crews of foreign vessels in rescuing American seamen or citizens from shipwreck or other catastrophe at sea, $3,000. 605 international bureau of weights and measures For contribution to the maintenance of the International Bureau lnternational Bureau of Weights and Measures.Vol. 20, p. 1714.of Weights and Measures, in conformity with the terms of the convention of May 20, 1S75, the same to be paid, under the direction of the Secretary of State, to said bureau on its certificate of apportionment, $2,895. international bureau for publication of customs tariffs.
To meet the share of the United States in the annual expense for International Customs Tariffs Bureau.the year ending March 31, 1923, of sustaining the international bureau at Brussels for the translation and publication of customs tariffs, pursuant to the convention proclaimed December 17, 1890, Vol. 26, p. 1518.$3,000. international boundary commission, united states and mexico. To enable the President to perform the obligations of the United Mexican Boundary Commission.Vol. 24, p. 1011:
Vol. 26, p. 1512; Vol. 34, p.2953.States under the treaties of 1884, 1889, 1905, and 1906, between the United States and Mexico, including not to exceed $600 for rent, $15,000. boundary line, alaska and canada, and the united states and canada. To enable the Secretary of State to mark the boundary and make Boundary, Alaska and Canada.Vol. 32, p. 1961.the surveys incidental thereto between the Territory of Alaska and the Dominion of Canada, in conformity with the award of the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal and existing treaties, including employment at the seat of government of such surveyors, computers, draftsmen, and clerks as are necessary; and for the more effective demarkation Boundary.United States and Canada.Vol. 35, p. 2003.and mapping, pursuant to the treaty of April 11, 1908, between the United States and Great Britain, of the land and water boundary line between the United States and the Dominion of Canada, as established under existing treaties, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, including the salaries of the commissioner and the necessary engineers, surveyors, draftsmen, computers, and clerks in the field and at the seat of government, expense of printing and necessary traveling, for payment for timber necessarily cut in determining the boundary line not to exceed $500, and com-mutation to members of the field force while on field duty or actual expenses not exceeding $5 per day each, to be expended in accordance with regulations from time to time prescribed by the Secretary of State, $49,400: *Provided*, That when the commissioner is absent *Proviso*.Subsistence when absent from Washington.from Washington and from his regular place of residence on official business he shall not be allowed actual and necessary expenses of subsistence in excess of $8 per day. international bureau at brussels for repression of the african slave trade.
To meet the share of the United States in the expenses of the Bureau for Repressing African Slave Trade.Vol. 27, p. 917.special bureau created by articles 82 and 85 of the general Act concluded at Brussels July 2, 1890, for the repression of the African slave trade and the restriction of the importation into and sale, in a certain defined zone of the African continent, of firearms, ammunition, and spirituous liquors, for the year 1923, $125. 606 international prison commission.
International Prison Commission.For subscription of the United States as an adhering member of the International Prison Commission, and the expenses of a com-mission, including preparation of reports, $2,550. pan american union. Pan American Union.*Proviso*.Use of moneys from other Republics.Pan American Union, $100,000: *Provided*, That any moneys received from the other American Republics for the support of the union shall be paid into the Treasury as a credit, in addition to the appropriation, and may be drawn therefrom upon requisitions of the chairman of the governing board of the union for the purpose of meeting the expenses of the union and of carrying out the orders of the said governing board.
Printing and binding Monthly Bulletin.For printing and binding for the Pan American Union, and the Public Printer is authorized to print an edition of the monthly bulletin not to exceed 6,000 copies per month, for distribution by the union during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1923, $20,000. international bureau of the permanent court of arbitration. International Bureau, Permanent Court of Arbitration.Vol. 32, p. 1793.To meet the share of the United States in the expenses for the calendar year 1921 of the International Bureau of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, created under article 22 of the convention concluded at The Hague, July 29, 1899, for the pacific settlement of international disputes,. $2,000. international commission on annual tables of constants and so forth International Commission on Tables of Constants, etc.To the International Commission on Annual Tables of Constants and Numerical Data, Chemical, Physical, and Technological, as established by the Seventh International Congress of Applied Chemistry in London and as continued by the eighth congress in New York, as a contribution by the United States toward the publication of annual tables of constants, chemical, physical, and technological, $500. bureau of interparliamentary union for promotion of international arbitration.
Interparliamentary Union for Promoting International Arbitration.For the contribution of the United States toward the maintenance of the Bureau of the Interparliamentary Union for the promotion of International Arbitration, $4,000. international institute of agriculture at rome, italy. International Institute of Agriculture.Quota.For the payment of the quota of the United States for the support of the International Institute of Agriculture for the calendar year 1923, $19,577;
Member of committee.For salary of the one member of the permanent committee of the International Institute of Agriculture for the calendar year 1923, $5,000; Translating publications.For the payment of the quota of the United States for the cost of translating into and printing in the English language the publications of the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, $5,000; Total, $29,577. 607 interantional railway congress. To pay the quota of the United States as an adhering member International Rail-way Congress,of the International Railway Congress for the year ending April 15, 1923, $400. international sanitary bureau.
International Sanitary Bureau.For the annual share of the United States for the maintenance of the International Sanitary Bureau for the year 1923, $11,323.16. international office of public health. For the payment of the quota of the United States for the year 1923 International Office of Public Health.toward the support of the International Office of Public Health, created by the international arrangement signed at Rome, December Vol. 35, p. 2061.Vol. 35, p. 1834.*Post*, p. 18239, 1907, in pursuance of article 181 of the International Sanitary Convention signed at Paris on December 3, 1903, $3,860. arbitration of outstanding pecuniary claims between the united states and great britain.
For the expenses of the arbitration of outstanding pecuniary claims British-American Pecuniary Claims Commission.Vol. 37, p. 1635.Salaries and expenses.between the United States and Great Britain, in accordance with the special agreement concluded for that purpose August IS, 1910, and the schedules of claims thereunder, including salary and expenses of the tribunal, and of the agent, to be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, counsel, joint secretary and other assistants, contingent expenses, and personal services and rent in the District of Columbia, and elsewhere, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, $60,000. international radiotelegraphic convention.
For the share of the United States for the calendar year 1923, International Radio-telegraphic Convention.Vo. 37, p. 1569.as a party to the international radiotelégraphie conventions heretofore signed, of the expenses of the radiotelegraphie service of the International Bureau of the Telegraphic Union at Berne, $2,250. united states section of the interamerican high commission. To defray the actual and necessary expenses on the part of the Inter-American High Commission.United States section.Vol. 39, p. 8.United States section of the Inter-American High Commission, $19,600, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State. waterways treaty, united states and great britain: international joint commission, united states and great britain.
For salaries and expenses, including salaries of commissioners and Canadian Boundary Waters Joint Commission.*Ante*, p. 599.salaries of clerks and other employees appointed by the commissioners on the part of the United States, with the approval solely of the Secretary of State, expense of printing, cost of law books, books of reference, and periodicals, and necessary traveling expenses, and for one-half of all reasonable and necessary mint expenses of the International Joint Commission incurred under the terms of the treaty Vol. 36, p. 2448.between the United States and Great Britain concerning the use of boundary waters between the United States and Canada, and for other purposes, signed January 11, 1909, $38,000, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State: *Provided*, That no *Provisos*.Subsistence, when absent from Washington.part of this appropriation shall be expended for subsistence of the commission or secretary, except for actual and necessary expenses, not in excess of $8 per day each, when absent from Washington and 608from his regular place of residence on official business: *Provided further*, Rent allowance in the District.That a part of this appropriation may be expended for rent of offices for the commission in the District of Columbia in the event that the Public Buildings.
Commission is unable to supply suitable office space. third pan american scientific congress. Pan American Scientific Congress.To meet the actual and necessary expenses in going from their Expenses of delegates to Third.*Post*, p. 1547.homes to Lima, Peru, and return, by the most direct route, of the delegates of the United States to the Third Pan American Scientific Congress, to be held at the city of Lima, Peru, in the year 1923, and of their clerical assistants, $20,000, to be expended in the discretion of the Secretary of State. payment to the government of panama.
Panama.Annual payment to.Vol. 33, p. 2238.To enable the Secretary of State to pay to the Government of Panama the eleventh annual payment, due on February 26, 1923, from the Government of the United States to the Government of Panama under article 14 of the treaty of November 18, 1903, $250,000. international research council. International Research Council, etc.To pay the annual share of the United States, as an adhering member of the International Research Council and of the Associated Unions, organized at Brussels, July 18–28, 1919, as follows:
International Research Council, $200; International Astronomical Union, $1,200; International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, $450; International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics, $2,080; International Union of Mathematics, $100; in all, $4,030, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State. international commission on public and private international law. International Commission on International Law.Vol. 37, p. 1554.For the payment of compensation to and the necessary expenses of the representative or representatives of the United States on the International Commission of Jurists, organized under the convention signed at the Third International American Conference August 23, 1906, approved by the Senate February 3, 1908, and ratified by the President February 8, 1908, for the purpose of preparing drafts of codes of public and private international law; and for the payment of the quota of the United States of the expenses incident to the preparation of such drafts, including the compensation of experts under Vol. 37, p. 1557.article 4 of the convention, $15,000. international hydrographic bureau.
International Hydrographic Bureau.For the second annual contribution of the United States toward the maintenance of the International Hydrographic Bureau, $3,860. foreign hospital at cape town. Somerset Hospital, Cape Town.For annual contribution toward the support of the Somerset Hospital (a foreign hospital), at Cape Town, $50, to be paid by the Secretary of State upon the assurance that suffering seamen and citizens of the United States will be admitted to the privileges of said hospital. 609 world war foreign debt commision.
For the expenses of the World War Foreign Debt World War Debt Commission.*Ante*, p. 363.Commission, to be immediately available, $20,000. international trade-mark registration bureau quota of united states. For the annual share of the United States for the expenses of the International Trade Mark Registration.Habana Bureau expenses.Vol. 39, p. 1680.Vol. 41, p. 533.maintenance of the International Trade-Mark Registration Bureau at Habana, including salaries of the director and counselor, assistant director and counselor, clerks, translators, secretary to the director, stenographers and typewriters, messenger, watchmen, and laborers, rent of quarters, stationery and supplies, including the purchase of books, postage, traveling expenses, and the cost of printing the bulletin, $9,600. international latitude observatory at ukiah, california.
For the maintenance of the International Latitude Observatory International Latitude Observatory.Expenses at UkiahCalif.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 conference on maritime law. For expenses necessary for the representation of the United States Maritime law.Representation at International Conference on.at the International Conference on Maritime Law to be held at Brussels, Belgium, for the purpose of considering draft conventions relating to collisions, salvage, the liability of shipowners, and cognate subjects, $5,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be made immediately available. commission of jurists to consider amendment of laws of war.
To enable the United States Government to carry out its obligations Laws of war.Commission of jurists to consider amendments of.arising under the resolution adopted by the Conference on the Limitation of Armaments on February 4, 1922, for the appointment of a commission of jurists to consider the amendment of the laws of war, $3,750, to be immediately available. fifth international conference of american states, santiago, chile. For the expenses of the United States in participating in the Fifth Fifth Pan American Conference.Expenses of participating in, at Santiago, Chile.International Conference of American States to be held at the city of Santiago, Chile, in 1923, including the compensation of employees, travel and subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act), and such miscellaneous and other expenses the President shall deem proper, $75,000. united states court for china.United States court for China.
Judge, $8,000; district attorney, $4,000; marshal, $3,000; clerk, Salaries.$3,000; stenographer and court reporter, $2,400; printing and binding opinions of the court and court expenses, including reference law books, $10,000; The judge of the said court and the district attorney shall, when Sessions at other than Shanghai.the sessions of the court are held at other cities than Shanghai, receive in addition to their salaries their necessary actual expenses during such sessions, not to exceed $8 per day each, and so much as 610may be necessary for said purposes during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1923, is appropriated;
Total, $30,400. Transportation expenses allowed.*Ante*, p. 603.The appropriation for the transportation of diplomatic and consular officers carried elsewhere in this Act shall be available for the transportation of the officers of the United States Court for China to the same extent as for the transportation of such diplomatic and consular officers. revision of chinese customs tariff. Chinese Customs Tarilfs.Expenses of representatives undertreaty.*Post*, p. 1548.To enable the United States Government to carry out its obligations arising under the treaty relating to the Chinese customs tariff signed February 6, 1922, including the compensation of delegates or other representatives, clerks, and employees, rent of offices, expenses of transportation and subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act), stationery and supplies, telegraph, and such other objects as the President may deem necessary, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, $47,750, to be immediately available. inquiry into extraterritoriality in china.
Extraterritoriality in China.Expenses under treaty for inquiry regarding.To enable the United States Government to carry out its obligations arising under Resolution Numbered Four, adopted by the Conference on the Limitation of Armament at the fourth plenary session, December 10, 1921, regarding extraterritoriality in China, including the compensation of delegates or other representatives, clerks, and employees, rent of offices, expenses of transportation and subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act), stationery, and supplies, telegraph and such other objects as the President may deem necessary, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, $21,000, to be immediately available. prisons for american convicts.
Consular prisons.For expenses of maintaining at Shanghai, under charge of the United States marshal for China, an institution for incarcerating American convicts and insane in China, $2,000; for salary of deputy marshal, $1,200; assistant deputy marshal, $800; in all, $4,000; Keeping prisoners.For paying for the keeping, feeding, and transportation of prisoners in China and Turkey and of those declared insane by the United States Court for China, $9,000; Rent, etc., of prisons.For rent of prison for American convicts in Smyrna, Turkey, and for wages of keepers of the same, $1,000;
For rent of prison for American convicts in Constantinople, Turkey, and for wages of keepers of the same, $1,000; Total, $15,000. bringing home criminals. Bringing home criminals.For actual expenses incurred in bringing home from foreign countries persons charged with crime, $2,000. claims of government of norway. Norway.Payment to, as indemnity to Norwegian subjects.To pay, out of humane consideration without reference to the question of liability therefor, to the Norwegian Government as full indemnity to Trygve Andersen, Sigurd Nilsen, and Arthur Rasmussel for hardships and expenses suffered by them as the result of 611their detention as witnesses to the damage caused the Norwegian vessel Ingrid by an explosion at Jersey City, February 1, 1911, $2,200.
No portion of the sums appropriated in Title I of this Act shall, Rent restriction.unless expressly authorized, be expended for rent in the District of Columbia or elsewhere in the United States. TITLE II.—Department of Justice. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. office of the attorney general. Salaries: Attorney General, $12,000; Solicitor General, $10,000; Attorney General, Solicitor General, Assistants.Solicitors for departments, etc.assistant to the Attorney General, $9,000; six Assistant Attorneys General, at $7,500 each;
Solicitor for the Department of the Interior, $5,000; Solicitor for the Post Office Department, $5,000; Solicitor of Internal Revenue, $5,000; Solicitor for the Department of State, $5,000; four attorneys at $5,000 each, one of whom shall have charge Attorneys, etc.of all condemnation proceedings in the District of Columbia and supervise the examination of titles and matters arising from such condemnation proceedings in which the United States shall be a party or have an interest, and no special attorney or counsel, or services of persons other than of those provided for herein, shall be employed for such purposes; attorneys—one $4,500, one $3,750, four at $3,500 each, one $3,250, fourteen at $3,000 each, two at $2,500 each; assistant attorneys—one $3,500, two at $3,000 each, two at $2,750 each, five at $2,500 each, one $2,400, two at $2,000 each; assistant examiner of titles, $2,000; chief clerk and administrative assistant and ex officio Chief clerk, law clerks, etc.superintendent of buildings, $3,500; superintendent of buildings, $500; assistant chief clerk, $3,000; private secretary and assistant to the Attorney General, $3,600; clerk to the Attorney General, $1,800; stenographer to the Solicitor General, $1,600; law clerks— three at $2,000 each, two at $1,800 each; clerk in the office of Solicitor Pardon attorney.of Internal Revenue, $1,800; attorney in charge of pardons, $4,200; superintendent of prisons, $4,000; disbursing clerk, $2,750; appointment Superintendent of prisons.Clerks, messengers, etc.clerk, $2,000; librarian, $1,800; clerks—eight of class four, twelve of class three, twelve of class two, twenty-seven of class one, sixteen at $1,000 each, eleven at $900 each; chief messenger, $1,000; packer, $900; messenger, $960; six messengers at $840 each; thirteen assistant messengers at $720 each; seven laborers at $660 each; seven watchmen at $720 each; engineer, $1,200; two assistant engineers, at $900 each; two telephone switchboard operators, at $720 each; four firemen, at $720 each; four elevator conductors, at $720 each; head charwoman, $480; twenty-four charwomen, at $240 each.
Division of Accounts.Division of Accounts: Chief, $3,000; administrative accountant, $3,000; chief bookkeeper and record clerk, $2,200; examiners— two at $2,500 each, four at $2,250 each, two at $2,000 each, three at $1,800 each; clerks—three of class four, six of class three, seven of class two, five of class one, in all, $479,010. Office of Solicitor of the Treasury: Solicitor, $5,000; two Solicitor of the Treasury.assistant solicitors, at $3,000 each; chief clerk, who shall also dis- charge the duties of chief law clerk, $2,250; law clerk, $2,000: two docket clerks, at $2,000 each; clerks—two of class four, two ot class three, two of class two; assistant messenger, $720; laborer, $660; in all, $30,230.
Office of Solicitor of the Department of Commerce:Solicitor of Department of Commerce.Solicitor, $5,000; Assistant Solicitor, $3,000; clerks—two of class four, two of class three, three of class two, one of class one; messenger, $840; in all, $21,040. Office of Solicitor of the Department of Labor:Solicitor of Department of Labor.Solicitor, $5,000; law clerk, $2,000; clerks—two of class four, two of class one; messenger, $840; in all, $13,840. 612 contingent expenses, department of justice.Contingent expenses.
Furniture, etc.For furniture and repairs, including floor covering; file holders, and cases, $6,000. Law books, etc.For books for law library of the department, including their exchange, $3,000. For purchase of session laws and statutes of the States and Territories for library of department, including their exchange, $500. For books for office of Solicitor of the Department of Commerce, $500. For law books, including their exchange, for office of the Solicitor of the Treasury, $500.
For law books, books of reference, and their exchange, for office of Solicitor of the Department of Labor, $500. Stationery.For stationery for department and its several bureaus, $15,000. Miscellaneous.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 $300, and other necessaries, directly ordered by the Attorney General, $40,000.
Vehicles, etc.For official transportation, including the maintenance, repair, and operation of a motor-driven passenger car, delivery truck, and motor cycle, to be used only for official purposes, and purchase and repair of bicycles, $2,700. Rent.For rent of buildings and parts of buildings in the District of Columbia, $75,000, if space can not be assigned by the Public Buildings Commission in buildings under the control of that commission. Printing and binding. Traveling, etc., expenses.For printing and binding for the Department of Justice, $38,205.
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, [R. S., sec. 3648, p. 718](/us/rs/s3648/p718).the provisions of section 3648, Revised Statutes, to the contrary notwithstanding, $7,500. miscellaneous objects, department of justice.Miscellaneous objects. Conduct of customs cases.Assistant Attorney General, attorneys, etc.Conduct of customs cases:
Assistant Attorney General, $8,000; special attorneys and counselors at law in the conduct of customs cases, to be employed and their compensation fixed by the Attorney Vol. 36, p. 108.General, as authorized by subsection 30 of section 28 of the Act of Services, supplies, etc.August 5, 1909; necessary clerical assistance and other employees at the seat of government and elsewhere, to be employed and their compensation fixed by the Attorney General; supplies, Supreme Court Reports and Digests, and Federal Reporter and Digests, printing, traveling, and other miscellaneous and incidental expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General; in all, $86,100.
Witnesses, Board of General Appraisers.For traveling expenses, fees, and mileage allowance of witnesses before the Board of United States General Appraisers, $1,000. National ProhibitionAct.Services and supplies, enforcing.Vol. 41, p. 307.For the enforcement of the provisions of the National Prohibition Act of October 28, 1919, including the employment, as authorized by said Act, of experts, clerks, and other employees in the District of Columbia or elsewhere, and the purchase of such supplies and equipment as may be deemed necessary by the Attorney General, including also the expense of necessary printing and binding, the Attorney Other allotments.General may allot from appropriations applicable to the enforcement of law carried elsewhere in tins Act under the Department of Justice not to exceed a total of $150,000.
W. L. Dunham.Payment to estate of.To pay the estate of W. L. Dunham, deceased, of Richton, Mississippi, on account of the death of said Dunham while in the discharge 613of his duty as a posse man under the Federal prohibition enforcement officer for the southern district of Mississippi, $1,500. Defending suits in claims against the United States: For necessaryDefending suits in claims. expenses incurred in the examination of witnesses, procuring evidence, employment of experts, and such other expenses as may be necessary in defending suits in the Court of Claims, including Indian Indian depredation claims.depredation claims, and including not exceeding $500 for law books, which shall be available to keep current existing sets of United States Supreme Court reports, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $50,000.
Detection and prosecution of crimes: For the detection and prosecution Detection and prosecution of crimes.of crimes against the United States; the investigation of the official acts, records, and accounts of marshals, attorneys, and clerks of the United States courts and the Territorial courts, and United States commissioners, for which purpose all the official papers, records, and dockets of said officers, without exception, shall be examined by the agents of the Attorney General at any Protection of the President.time; for the protection of the person of the President of the United States; for such other investigations regarding official matters under the control of the Department of Justice or the Department of State as may be directed by the Attorney General; hire, maintenance, upkeep, and operation Vehicles.or motor-propelled or horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles when necessary, including not to exceed $3,750 for purchase of one automobile, *Post*, p. 1080.and including not to exceed $10,000 for taxicab hire to be used exclusively for the purposes set forth in this paragraph and to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, whose certificate as to the expenditure thereof shall be conclusive on the accounting officers of the Treasury Department; per diem in lieu of Per diem subsistence.Vol. 38, p. 680.subsistence when allowed pursuant to section 13 of the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act approved August 1, 1914, incluffing not to exceed $250,000 for necessary employees at the seat of government, and including a Director of the Bureau of Investigation at not exceeding Bureau of Investigation.$7,500 per annum, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $2,250,000: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be available *Provisos*.Advances.for advances to be made by the disbursing clerk of the Department of Justice when authorized and approved by the Attorney General, the provisions of section 3648 of the Revised Statutes [R.
S., sec. 3648, p. 718](/us/rs/s3648/p718).to the contrary notwithstanding: *Provided further*, That for the purpose of executing the duties for which provision is made by this Special agents authorized.appropriation, the Attorney General is authorized to appoint officials who snail be vested with the authority necessary for the execution of such duties. Enforcement of antitrust Enforcing antitrust laws.Vol. 38, p. 730.laws: For the enforcement of antitrust laws, including not exceeding $10,000 for clerical services and not exceeding $40,000 for compensation of attorneys at the seat of government, $225,000: *Provided, however*, That no part of this money Provisos.Use for prosecuting labor organisations, etc., forbidden.shall be spent in the prosecution of any organization or individual for entering into any combination or agreement having in view the increasing of wages, shortening of hours, or bettering the conditions of labor, or for any act done in furtherance thereof, not in itself unlawful: *Provided further*, That no part of this appropriation shall Associations of fanners, etc.be expended for the prosecution of producers of farm products and associations of farmers who cooperate and organize in an effort to and for the purpose to obtain and maintain a fair and reasonable price for their products.
Enforcement of Acts to regulate commerce: For salary and expenses Enforcing Interstate commerce laws.Vol. 34, p. 379; Vol. 36, p. 539; Vol. 37, p. 701; Vol. 38, p. 219; Vol. 40, p. 272; Vol. 41, p. 474.of assistant to the Solicitor General in representing the Government in all matters arising under the Act entitled “An Act to regulate commerce,” approved February 4, 1S87, as amended, including traveling expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney 614 General, including salaries of employees in the District of Columbia, $10,000. united states supreme court.Judicial.
United States Supreme Court.Salaries: Chief Justice, $15,000; eight associate justices, at $14,500 each; marshal, $4,500; nine law clerks, one for the Chief Justice and one for each associate justice, at not exceeding $3,600 each; nine stenographic clerks, one for the Chief Justice and one for each associate justice, at not exceeding $2,000 each; in all, $185,900. Printing and binding.For printing and binding for the Supreme Court of the United States, $17,000, and the printing for the Supreme Court shall be done by the printer it may employ, unless it shall otherwise order. circuit court of appeals.Circuit Court of Appeals.
Judges.Salaries: Thirty-three circuit judges, at $8,500 each, $280,500. district courts.District courts. Judges.*Proviso*.Availability.Salaries: One hundred and one-district judges, at $7,500 each, $757,500: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be available for the salaries of all United States district judges lawfully entitled thereto for the fiscal year 1923. Hawaii.Territory of Hawaii: Two judges, at $7,500 each; reporter, $1,200: *Proviso*.Reporter’s pay. *Ante*, p. 120.Porto Rico. *Provided*, That from and after July 1, 1922, the salary of the reporter shall be $1,200 per annum; in all, $16,200.
Porto Rico: District judge, $7,500. retired judges. Retired judges.Vol. 40, p. 1167.For salaries of judges retired under section 260 of the Judicial Code (Thirty-sixth Statutes at Large, page 1161), $140,000. national park commissioners.National Park Commissioners. Salaries.For commissioners in the Crater Lake, Glacier, Mount Rainier, Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Sequoia and General Grant National Vol. 29, p. 184.Parks, at $1,500 each, $9,000. The provisions of section 21 of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Appropriation Act approved May 28, 1896, shall not be construed as impairing the rights of said commissioners to receive the salaries provided herein. court of customs appeals.Court of Customs Appeals.
Salaries.Salaries: Presiding judge and four associate judges, at $8,500 each; marshal, $3,000; clerk, $3,500; assistant clerk, $2,000; five stenographic clerks, at $1,600 each; stenographic reporter, $2,500; messenger, $840; in all, $62,340. Rent and miscellaneous expenses.For rent of necessary quarters in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, $7,000; books and periodicals, including their exchange; stationery, supplies, traveling expenses; heat, light, and power service; drugs, chemicals, cleansers, furniture, and not to exceed $500 for printing and binding; pay of bailiffs and all other necessary employees not otherwise specifically provided for; and for such other miscellaneous expenses as may be approved by the presiding judge, $3,965; in all, $10,965. court of claims.Court of Claims.
Salaries.Salaries: Chief justice, $8,000; four judges, at $7,500 each; chief clerk, $5,000; assistant clerk, $2,500; bailiff, $1,500; clerks—two at 615$1,600 each (one of whom shall be a stenographer), one $1,400, two at $1,200 each; four stenographers, at $1,200 each; chief messenger, $1,000; two assistant messengers, at $720 each; three firemen, at $720 each; three watchmen, at $720 each; elevator conductor, $720; two laborers, at $660 each; two charwomen, at $240 each; in all, $68,080.
For auditors, and additional stenographers, when deemed necessary, Auditors, etc.in the Court of Claims, to be disbursed under the direction of the court, $12,000. For stationery, court library, repairs, including repairs to bicycles, Contingent expenses.fuel, electric light, electric elevator, and other miscellaneous expenses, $6,600. For reporting the decisions of the court and superintending Reporting decisions.the printing of the fifty-seventh volume of the reports of the Court of Claims, $1,000, to be paid on the order of the court to the reporter, notwithstanding section 1765 of the Revised Statutes or section 2 [R.
S. sec. 1765, p. 314](/us/rs/s1765/p314).Vol. 28, p. 205.of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Appropriation Act approved July 31, 1894, or section 6 of the Legislative, Executive, Vol. 39, p. 126.and Judicial Appropriation Act approved May 10, 1916. For custodian of the building occupied by the Court of Claims, Custodian.[R. S., sec. 1765, p. 314](/us/rs/s1765/p314).Vol. 18, p. 109.$500, to be paid on the order of the court, notwithstanding section 1765 of the Revised Statutes or section 3 of the Act of June 20, 1874.
For printing and binding for the Court of Claims, $25,470.Printing and binding. territorial courts.Territorialcourts. Alaska: Four judges, at $7,500 each; four attorneys, $5,000 each; Alaska.four marshals, at $4,000 each; four clerks, at $3,500 each; in all, $80,000. Hawaii: Chief justice, $7,500; two associate justices, at $7,000 Hawaii.*Ante*, p. 120.each; in all, $21,500. For judges of circuit courts, at $6,000 each, $42,000. marshals, district attorneys, clerks, and other expenses of United States courts.united states courts.
For salaries, fees, and expenses of United States marshals Marshals.Salaries and expenses.and their deputies, including the office expenses of United States marshals in the District of Alaska, and hereafter the Attorney General shall pay the office expenses of United States marshals in the District of Alaska from the appropriation, “Salaries, fees, and expenses of United States marshals and their deputies,” services rendered in behalf of the United States or otherwise, services in Alaska in collecting evidence for the United States when so specially directed by the Attorney General, and maintenance, alteration, repair, and Vehicles, D.
C.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, $2,275,000, and the Secretary of War is authorized and directed, if available, to deliver to the office of the United States marshal for the District of Columbia, without payment therefor, one passenger-carrying motor vehicle: *Provided*, That there shall be paid hereunder *Provisos*.Cost of keeping attached vessels, etc.any necessary cost of keeping vessels or other property attached or libeled in admiralty in such amount as the court, on petition setting forth the facts under oath, may allow: *Provided further*, That marshals Per diem subsistence.and office deputy marshals (except in the District of Alaska) may be granted a per diem of not to exceed $4 in lieu of subsistence, instead of, but under the conditions prescribed for, the present allowance for actual expenses of subsistence: *And provided further*, That from Marshal.
Hawaii.*Ante*, p. 120.and after July 1, 1922, the salary of the United States marshal, United States District for Hawaii, shall be $3,000 per annum. 616 District attorneys.Salaries and expenses.For salaries of United States district attorneys and expenses of 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 *Provisos*.Per diem subsistence.of the United States district attorney, $900,000: *Provided*, That United States district attorneys and their regular assistants may be granted a per diem of not to exceed $4 in lieu of subsistence, instead of, but under the conditions prescribed for, the present allowance Hawaii.*Ante*, p. 120.for actual expenses of subsistence: *Provided further*, That, from and after July 1, 1922, the salary of the United States district attorney for Hawaii shall be $4,000 per annum.
Regular assistants.For regular assistants to United States district attorneys who are appointed by the Attorney General at a fixed annual compensation, *Proviso.*Compensation.$550,000: *Provided*, That except as otherwise prescribed by law the compensation of such of the assistant district attorneys authorized Vol. 29, p. 181.by section 8 of the Act approved May 28, 1896, as the Attorney General may deem necessary, may be fixed at not exceeding $3,500 per annum. Assistants in special cases.For assistants to the Attorney General and to United States district attorneys employed by the Attorney General to aid in special Enforcing prohibition.cases, including $200,000 for assistant attorneys to enforce the National Prohibition Act, and including not to exceed $50,000 for Foreign counsel.clerical help for such assistants, and for payment of foreign counsel employed by the Attorney General in special cases (such counsel Oath.[R.
S., sec. 366, p. 62](/us/rs/s366/p62).shall not be required to take oath of office in accordance with section 366, Revised Statutes of the United States), $850,000 to be available for expenditure in the District of Columbia. Clerks.Salaries and expenses.Vol. 40, p. 1182.For salaries of clerks of United States circuit courts of appeals and United States district courts, their deputies, and other assistants, expenses of travel and subsistence, and other expenses of conducting their respective offices, in accordance with the provisions of the Act *Provisos*.Office expenses, pay, etc., of circuit court or appeals to be paid by marshals.approved February 26, 1919,81,300,000: *Provided further*, That from and after July 1, 1922, office expenses of clerks of United States circuit courts of appeals, also the personal compensation of said clerks, their deputies, and other assistants, and their expenses of travel and subsistence, when absent from official headquarters on official business, shall be allowed after authorization and approval by the Attorney General, and shall be paid from this appropriation by the respective United States marshals designated by the Attorney Circuit court of appeals.Pay of clerks.General: *Provided further*, *however*, That the salaries of clerks of the United States circuit courts of appeals shall not be fixed at a rate in Deposit of fees, etc.excess of $5,000 per annum.
All fees and other moneys of every character and description received by said clerks, by virtue of their offices, shall be paid into the Treasury, as in the case of clerks of Hawaii.Clerk’s pay.*Ante*, p. 120.United States district courts: *And provided further*, That from and after July 1, 1922, the salary of the clerk of the United States district Vol. 40, p. 1182court for Hawaii shall be fixed in the same manner as salaries of clerks of United States district courts under the Act of February 26, 1919.
Commissionerrs, etc.[R. S., sec. 1014, p. 189](/us/rs/s1014/p189).For fees of United States commissioners and justices of the peace acting under section 1014, Revised Statutes of the United States, $375,000. Jurors.For fees of jurors, $1,250,000. Witnesses.[R. S., sec. 850, p. 160](/us/rs/s850/p160).For fees of witnesses and for payment of the actual expenses of witnesses, as provided by section 850, Revised Statutes of the United States, $1,100,000. Rent of court rooms.For rent of rooms for the United States courts and judicial officers, $50,000.
Bailiffs, etc.For bailiffs and criers, not exceeding three bailiffs and one crier in each court, except in the southern district of New York and the 617northern district of Illinois: *Provided*, That all persons employed *Provisos*.Attendance.[R. S., sec. 715. p. 136](/us/rs/s715/p136).under section 715 of the Revised Statutes shall be deemed to be in actual attendance when they attend upon the order of the courts, but no such person shall be employed during vacation; expenses of Traveling expenses of Judges, etc.circuit and district judges of the United States and the judges of the district courts of the United States in Alaska, Porto Rico, and Hawaii, as provided by section 259 of the Act entitled “An Act to Vol. 36. p. 1161.codify, revise, and amend the laws relating to the judiciary,” approved Jury expenses.March 3, 1911; meals and lodging for jurors in United States cases, and of bailiffs in attendance upon the same, when ordered by the In Alaska.Vol. 31, p. 363.
Jury commissioners.court, and meals and lodging for jurors in Alaska, as provided by section 193, Title II, of the Act of June 6, 1900; and compensation for jury commissioners, $5 per day, not exceeding three days for any one term of court, $240,000. For such miscellaneous expenses as may be authorized by the Miscellaneous.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, and in courts other than Federal courts, $600,000.
For supplies, including the exchange of typewriting and adding Supplies.machines for the United States courts and judicial officers, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $90,000. For purchase and rebinding of law books, including the exchangeBooks for judicial officers. 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: *Provided*, That such books shall in all cases be*Proviso.*Transmittal to successors. transmitted to their successors in office; all books purchased there-under to be marked plainly, “The property of the United States,” $25,000, of which not to exceed 10 per centum, in the discretion of the Attorney General, may be used for the purchase of United States Reports and the Federal Reporter.
For one hundred and eighty-one copies of continuations of the Federal Reporter.Federal Reporter, as issued, estimated at ten volumes per year, to continue sets now furnished various officials, at $2 per volume, $3,620. For fifteen copies of volume 66 of the Lawyers’ Edition of the Lawyers Edition Supreme Court Reports.Volume 66.Supreme Court Reports, including advance sheets to continue the sets now in the hands of certain officials, at $7.50 per volume, $112.50. For two hundred and seventy copies of volume 259 Supreme Supreme Court ReportsVolume 259.Court Reports, to continue the sets now in the hands of certain officials, at $1.75 per volume, $472.50. penal institutions.Penal institutions.
Leavenworth, Kansas, Penitentiary: For subsistence, including Leavenworth, Kans.Subsistence.supplies from the prison stores for warden, deputy warden, and physician, tobacco for prisoners, kitchen and dining-room furniture and utensils, seeds and implements, and for purchase of ice if necessary, $200,000; For clothing, transportation, and traveling expenses, including Clothing, transportation, etc.materials for making clothing at the penitentiary; gratuities for prisoners at release, provided such gratuities shall be furnished to prisoners sentenced for terms of imprisonment of not less than six months, and transportation to place of conviction or place of bona fide residence in the United States, or to such other place within the United States as may be authorized by the Attorney General; expenses of shipping remains of deceased prisoners to their homes in the United States; expenses of penitentiary officials while traveling on official duty; expenses incurred in pursuing and identifying escaped prisoners, and for rewards for their recapture, $90,000; 618 Miscellaneous.For miscellaneous expenditures in the discretion of the Attorney General, fuel, forage, hay, light, water, stationery, fuel for generating steam, heating apparatus, burning bricks and lime; forage for issue to public animals, and hay and straw for bedding; not exceeding $500 for maintenance and repair of motor-propelled and horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles; blank books, blank forms, type-writing supplies, pencils and memorandum books for guards, books for use in chapel, paper, envelopes, and postage stamps for issue to prisoners; labor and materials for repairing steam heating plant, electric plant, and water circulation, and drainage; labor and materials for construction and repair of buildings, general supplies, machinery, and tools for use on farm and in shops, brickyards, quarry, limekiln, laundry, bathrooms, printing office, photograph gallery, stables, policing buildings and grounds; purchase of cows, horses, mules, wagons, harness, veterinary supplies, lubricating oils, office furniture, stoves, blankets, bedding, iron bunks, paints, and oils, library books, newspapers and periodicals, and electrical supplies: payment of water supply, telegrams, telephone service, notarial and veterinary services; advertising in newspapers; fees to consulting physicians called to determine mental conditions of supposed insane prisoners, and for other services in case of emergency; pay of extra guards or employees when deemed necessary by the Attorney General, $160,000;
Hospital.For hospital supplies, medicines, medical and surgical supplies, and all other articles for the care and treatment of sick prisoners; and for expenses of interment of deceased prisoners on the penitentiary reservation, $9,000; Salaries.For salaries: Warden, $4,000; deputy warden, $2,000; chaplains— one $1,500, one $1,200; phvsician, $1,800; pharmacist and physician’s assistant, $1,000; chief clerk, $1,800; record clerk, 1,200; stenographer, $900; clerks—one $1,200, one $1,000, four at $900 each; head cook, $1,000; steward and storekeeper, $1,200; superintendent of farm and transportation, $1,200; three captains of watch, at $1,500 each; guards, $124,800; two teamsters, at $600 each; engineer and electrician, $1,500; two assistants, at $1,200 each; in all, $159,000;
For foreman, laundryman, tailor, printer, blacksmith, and shoe- maker, at $1,200 each when necessary, $4,800; Completing construction.For completing construction, $135,000, to remain available until expended, and to be so expended as to give the maximum amount of employment to the inmates of said penitentiary; In all, Leavenworth, Kansas, Penitentiary, $757,800. Atlanta, Ga. Subsistence.Miscellaneous.Atlanta, Georgia, Penitentiary: For subsistence, including the same objects specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, $200,000;
Clothing, transportation, etc.For clothing, transportation, and traveling expenses, including the same objects specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, $110,000; Miscellaneous.For miscellaneous expenditures, including the same objects specified under this head for the penitenitary at Leavenworth, Kansas, and not exceeding $500 for maintenance and repair of horse-drawn and motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, $130,000; Hospital.For hospital supplies, including the same objects specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kanses, $7,500;
Salaries.For salaries: Warden, $4,000; deputy warden, $2,000; chaplains— one $1,500, one $1,200; chief clerk, $1,800; physician, $1,800; pharmacist and physician’s assistant, $1,000; bookkeeper and record clerk, $1,200; stenographer, $900; clerks—one $1,200, one $1,000, four at $900 each; engineer and electrician, $1,500; two assistants, at $1,200 each; steward and storekeeper, $1,200; superintendent of farm and transportation, $1,200; two teamsters, at $600 each; 619head cook, $1,000; three captains of watch, at $1,500 each; guards, $92,800; in all, $127,000;
For foremen, tailor, shoemaker, laundryman, and carpenter, when necessary, $4,000; The appropriation of $150,000 for the fiscal year 1922, for a working Working capital fund reappropriated, etc.Vol. 41, p. 1414.capital fund, is reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year 1923; and the said working capital fund and all receipts credited thereto may be used as a revolving fund during the fiscal year 1923; In all, Atlanta, Georgia, Penitentiary, $578,500. McNeil Island, Washington, Penitentiary:
For subsistence, including McNeil Island, Wash. Subsistence.Subsistence.the same objects specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, and for supplies for guards, $37,500; For clothing, transportation, and traveling expenses, including Clothing, transportation, etc.the same objects specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, $23,000; For miscellaneous expenditures, including the same objects Miscellaneous.specified under this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, $34,000;
For hospital supplies, including the same objects specified under Hospital.this head for the penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, $2,000; For salaries: For warden, $2,000; deputy warden, $1,200; physician, Salaries.$1,600; steward and cook, $1,000; chief clerk, $1,200; stenographer, $900; captain of watch, $1,500; engineer and electrician, $1,200; superintendent of boats, $1,200; chaplain and teacher, $1,000; guards, $24,000; in all, $36,800; For the purchase of additional boiler and engine room equipment, Additional boiler, etc.$16,000;
In all, McNeil Island (Washington) Penitentiary, $149,300. National Training School for Boys: Superintendent, $2,500; assistant National Training School for Boys, D. C. Salaries.superintendent, $1,500; teachers and assistants, $12,900; chief clerk, $1,000; nurse, $900; matron of school and nurse, at $600 each; storekeeper and steward, $720; farmer, $660; baker, $660; tailor, $720; parole officer, $900; office clerk, $720; assistant office clerk, $480; physical director, $720; six matrons of families, at $240 each; foremen of shop and skilled helpers, $4,200; assistant farmer and assistant engineer, at $420 each; laundress, $360; teamster, $420; florist, $540; engineer and shoemaker, at $600 each; cook, $600; dining-room attendants—boys $300; officers, $240; housemaid, $216; seamstress, $240; assistant cook, $300 ; eight watchmen, at $420 each; secretary and treasurer, $900; in all, $40,736;
For support of inmates, including groceries, flour, feed, meats, dry Maintenance.goods, leather, shoes, gas, fuel, hardware, furniture, tableware, farm implements, seeds, harness and repairs to same, fertilizers, books and periodicals, stationery, printing, entertainments, plumbing, painting, glazing, medicines and medical attendance, stock, maintenance, repair, and operation of passenger-carrying vehicles, fencing, roads, all repairs to buildings, and other necessary items, including compensation, not exceeding $2,000, for additional labor or services, for identifying and pursuing escaped inmates, for rewards for their recapture, and not exceeding $500 for transportation and other necessary expenses incident to securing suitable homes for discharged boys, $20,000;
In all, National Training School for Boys, $60,736. Appropriations in this Act under the Department of Justice shall Use for other buildings, etc., forbidden.not be used for beginning the construction of any new or additional building, other than those specifically provided for herein, at any Federal penitentiary. Support of prisoners: For support of United States prisoners, Support of prisoners, etc.including necessary clothing and medical aid, discharge gratuities 620provided by law and transportation to place of conviction or place of bona fide residence in the United States or such other place within the United States as may be authorized by the Attorney General; support of prisoners becoming insane during imprisonment, and who continue insane after expiration of sentence who have no friends to whom they can be sent; shipping remains of deceased prisoners to their friends or relatives in the United States and interment of deceased prisoners whose remains are unclaimed; expenses incurred in identifying and pursuing escaped prisoners and tor rewards for their recapture; and not exceeding $2,500 for repairs, betterments, and improvements of United States jails, including sidewalks, $1,050,000.
Inspection of prisons and prisoners.Inspection of prisons and prisoners: For the inspection of United States prisons and prisoners, and for the collection, classification, and preservation of criminal identification records and their exchange with the officials of State and other institutions, including salary of the assistant superintendent of prisons, $2,500; to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $12,000. Approved, June 1, 1922.