Chapter 705. Making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, and for other purposes
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Chap. 705: Making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, and for other purposes. 1929-03-04 705 Chapter 45 Stat. 1562 70 2 United States Government Publishing Office text/xml EN Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain. Digitization Vendor 2025-01-24 public Chapter 705.— An Act Making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, and for other purposes.
March 4, 1929.[[H. R. 15089](/us/bill/70/hr/15089).][[Public, No. 1033](/us/pl/70/1033).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, * Interior Department appropriations, fiscal year, 1930. That the following sums are appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, namely: OFFICE OF THE SECRETARYSecretary’s Office. salaries Secretary, Assistants, and office personnel.Secretary of the Interior, $15,000’ First Assistant Secretary, Assistant Secretary, and other personal services in the District of *Provisos*.Salaries limited to average rates under Classification Act.Vol. 42, p. 1488.*Ante*, p. 776.[U.
S. Code, p. 65](/us/usc/p65).Columbia, $369,000, in all, $384,000: *Provided*, That in expending appropriations or portions of appropriations, contained in this Act, for the payment for personal services in the District of Columbia in accordance with the Classification Act of 1923, as amended (U. S. C., pp. 65–71, secs. 661–673, 45 Stat., pp. 776–785), the average of the salaries of the total number of persons under any grade in any bureau, office, or other appropriation unit shall not at any time exceed the average of the compensation rates specified for the grade by such If only one position in a grade.Act, as amended, and in grades in which only one position is allocated the salary of .such position shall not exceed the average of the compensation Advances for unusually meritorious services.rates for the grade except that in unusually meritorious cases of one position in a grade advances may be made to rates higher than the average of the compensation rates of the grade but not more often than once in any fiscal year and then only to the next Restriction not applicable to clerical-mechanical service.No reduction in fixed salaries.higher rate: *Provided*, That this restriction shall not apply
(1)to grades 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the clerical-mechanical service, or
(2)to require the reduction in salary of any person whose compensation 1563was fixed, as of July 1, 1924, in accordance with the rules of sectionVol. 42, p. 1490.[U. S. Code, p. 66](/us/usc/p66). 6 of such Act,
(3)to require the reduction in salary of any person who is transferred from one position to another position in the sameTransfers to another position without reduction. or different grade in the same or a different bureau, office, or other appropriation unit, or
(4)to prevent the payment of a salary underPayments under higher rates permitted. any grade at a rate higher than the maximum rate of the grade when such higher rate is permitted by the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and is specifically authorized by other law. When specifically approved by the Secretary of the Interior, transfersTransfers from bureau, etc., appropriations to meet reallocation of positions therein. may be made between the appropriations in this Act under the respective jurisdiction of any bureau, office, institution, or service, in order to meet increases in compensation resulting from the reallocation by the Personnel Classification Board of positions under any such organization unit. Any such transfers shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. office of solicitorSolicitor’s Office. For personal services in the District of Columbia, $128,000.Office personnel. contingent expenses, department of the interior For contingent expenses of the office of the Secretary and theDepartment contingent expenses. bureaus and offices of the department; furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, telegraphing, telephone service, including personal services of temporary or emergency telephone operators, street-car fares for use of messengers not exceeding $150, expressage, diagrams, awnings, filing devices, typewriters, adding, addressing, and check-signing machines, and other labor-saving devices, including the repair, exchange, and maintenance thereof; constructing model and other cases and furniture; postage stamps to prepay postage on foreign mail and for special-delivery and air-mail stamps for use in the United States; traveling expenses, includingTraveling expenses, etc. necessary expenses of inspectors; fuel and light; examination of estimates for appropriations in the field for any bureau, office, or service of the department; not exceeding $500 shall be available forProperty damages. the payment of damages caused to private property by department motor vehicles; purchase and exchange of motor trucks, motor cycles, and bicycles, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles and motor trucks, motor cycles, and bicycles to be used only for official purposes; rent of department garage; expense of taking testimony and preparing the same in connectionDisbarment expenses. with disbarment proceedings instituted against persons charged with improper practices before the department, its bureaus and offices; expense of translations; not exceeding $500 for newspapers, for which payment may be made in advance; stationery, includingStationery, etc. tags, labels, index cards, cloth-lined wrappers, and specimen bags, printed in the course of manufacture, and such printed envelopes as are not supplied under contracts made by the Postmaster General, for the department and its several bureaus and offices, and other absolutely necessary expenses not hereinbefore provided for, $110,000; and, in addition thereto, sums amounting to $71,000 for stationeryAdditional from specified appropriations. supplies shall be deducted from other appropriations made for the fiscal year 1930, as follows: Surveying public lands, $2,000; protecting public lands and timber, $1,000; contingent expenses, local land offices, $2,500; Geological Survey, $4,000; Indian Service, $42,000; Freedmen’s Hospital, $1,000; Saint Elizabeths Hospital, $2,500; National Park Service, $4,000; Bureau of Reclamation, $12,000, any unexpended portion of which shall revert and be credited to the reclamation fund; and said sums so deducted shall be credited to and consti-1564tute, together with the first-named sum of $110,000, the total appropriation for contingent expenses for the department and its several bureaus and offices for the fiscal year 1930. Books, periodicals, etc.For the purchase or exchange of professional and scientific books, law and medical books, and books to complete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and other books of reference relating to the business of the department by the several offices and bureaus of the Interior Department herein named, there is hereby made available from Office allotments.any appropriations made for such bureau or office not to exceed the following respective sums: Office of the Secretary, $600; Pension Office, $800; Indian Service, $200; Bureau of Education, $1,500; Bureau of Reclamation, $2,000; Geological Survey, $2,000; National Park Service $500; General Land Office, $500. printing and bindingPrinting and binding. For Department, bureaus, etc.For printing and binding for the Department of the Interior, including all of its bureaus, offices, institutions, and services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, except the Alaska Railroad and the Bureau of Reclamation, $295,000, of which $32,000 shall be for the National Park Service, $47,000 for the Bureau of Education, and $150,000 for the Geological Survey, of which latter amount not more than $35,000 may be used for engraving. GENERAL LAND OFFICEGeneral Land Office. salaries Commissioner, and office personnel.*Proviso*.Acting depositary of public moneys.For Commissioner of the General Land Office and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $717,600: *Provided*, That the depositary acting for the commissioner as receiver of public moneys may, with the approval of the commissioner, designate a clerk of the Clerk to sign land patents.General Land Office to act as such depositary in his absence. One clerk of grade 1, clerical, administrative, and fiscal service, who shall be designated by the President, to sign land patents. general expensesGeneral expenses, public lands. Traveling expenses, maps, etc.For traveling expenses of officers and employees, including employment of stenographers and other assistants when necessary; for separate maps of public-land States and Alaska, including maps showing areas designated by the Secretary of the Interior under the enlarged homestead Acts, prepared by the General Land Office; for Restoring lands in national forests, etc.the reproduction by photolithography or otherwise of official plats of surveys; for expenses of restoration to the public domain of lands in forest reserves and of lands temporarily withdrawn for Hearings in land entries, etc.forest-reserve purposes; and for expenses of hearings or other proceedings held by order of the General Land Office to determine the character of lands, whether alleged fraudulent entries are of that character or have been made in compliance with the law, and of *Proviso*.Deposition fees.hearings in disbarment proceedings, $23,000: *Provided*, That where depositions are taken for use in such hearings the fees of the officer taking them shall be 25 cents per folio for taking and certifying same and 5 cents per folio for each copy furnished to a party on request. Land Office maps.Distribution, etc.For United States maps, prepared in the General Land Office, $15,000, all of which maps shall be delivered to the Senate and House of Representatives, except 10 per centum, which shall be delivered to the Commissioner of the General Land Office for official purposes. All maps delivered to the Senate and House of Representatives hereunder shall be mounted with rollers ready for use. 1565 Surveying public lands: For surveys and resurveys of publicPublic lands.Surveying expenses.*Ante*, p. 1563. lands, examination of surveys heretofore made and reported to be defective or fraudulent, inspecting mineral deposits, coal fields, and timber districts, making fragmentary surveys, and such other surveys or examinations as may be required for identification of lands for purposes of evidence in any suit or proceeding in behalf of the United States, under the supervision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office and direction of the Secretary of the Interior,Section corner monuments. $762,500, of which amount not to exceed $20,000 may be expended by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, for the purchase of metal or other equally durable monuments to be used for public-land survey corners wherever practicable: *Provided further*, That not to exceed*Provisos*.Detailed field employees. $5,000 of this appropriation may be expended for salaries of employees of the field surveying service temporarily detailed to the General Land Office: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $7,500Alaska national forests.Topographic surveys. may be expended for topographic surveys in conjunction with rectangular surveys in national forests in Alaska, and the amount expended under this proviso during the fiscal year 1930 shall be reimbursed to this appropriation from appropriations for the Forest Service which shall be available for such reimbursement: *Provided further*,Oregon and California Railroad lands, etc. That not to exceed $15,000 of this appropriation may be used for the survey, classification, and sale of the lands and timber of the so-called Oregon and California Railroad lands and the Coos Bay Wagon Road lands: *Provided further*, That not to exceedOil and oil shale lands. $50,000 of this appropriation may be used for surveys and resurveys, under the rectangular system provided by law, of public lands deemed to be valuable for oil and oil shale: *Provided further*, That no partNot available for surveys in States advancing money therefor.Vol. 28, p. 395.[U. S. Code, p. 1388](/us/usc/p1388). of this appropriation shall be available for surveys or resurveys of public lands in any State which, under the Act of August 18, 1894 (U. S. C., p. 1388, sec. 863), advances money to the United States for such purposes for expenditure during the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*,Application to other surveys, and reimbursable. That this appropriation may be expended for surveys made under the supervision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, but when expended for surveys that would not otherwise be chargeable hereto it shall be reimbursed from the applicable appropriation, fund, or special deposit. Registers: For salaries and commissions of registers of districtRegisters. land offices, at not exceeding $3,600 per annum each, $70,000, togetherReappropriation.Vol. 44, p. 938. with $21,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1928. Contingent expenses of land offices: For clerk hire, rent, and otherContingent expenses.*Ante*, p. 1563. incidental expenses of the district land offices, including the expenses of depositing public money; traveling expenses of clerks detailed to examine the books and management of district land offices and to assist in the operation of said offices and in the opening of new land offices and reservations, and for traveling expenses of clerks transferred in the interest of the public service from one district land office to another: *Provided*, That no expenses chargeable to*Proviso*.Expenses limited. the Government shall be incurred by registers in the conduct of local land offices except upon previous specific authorization by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, $161,000, together withBalance available.Vol. 44, p. 938. $40,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1928. Depredations on public timber, protecting public lands, and settlementTimber depredations, protecting, and swamp lands claims.*Ante*, p. 1563. of claims for swamp land and swamp-land indemnity: For protecting timber on the public lands, and for the more efficient execution of the law and rules relating to the cutting thereof; protecting public lands from illegal and fraudulent entry or appro-1566priation, adjusting claims for swamp lands and indemnity for swamp lands; and traveling expenses of agents and others employed hereunder, $410,000, together with $20,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1928, including not exceeding $35,000 for the purchase, exchange, operation, and maintenance of motor-propelled passenger-carrying Vehicles.vehicles and motor boats for the use of agents and others employed in Fighting forest fires.the field service and including $40,000 for prevention and fighting of forest and other fires on the public lands, to be available for this and no other purpose, and to be expended under the direction of the commissioner. Indian reservations.Opening to entry.Opening Indian reservations (reimbursable): For expenses pertaining to the opening to entry and settlement of such Indian reservation lands as may be opened during the fiscal year 1930, $300: *Proviso*.Reimbursement.*Provided*, That the expenses pertaining to the opening of each of said reservations and paid for out of this appropriation shall be reimbursed to the United States from the money received from the sale of the lands embraced in said reservations, respectively. BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRSIndian Affairs Bureau. salaries Commissioner, and office personnel.For the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $400,000. general expensesGeneral expenses. Transportation, telegraphing, etc.For transportation and incidental expenses of officers and clerks of the Bureau of Indian Affairs when traveling on official duty; for telegraph and telephone toll messages on business pertaining to the Indian Service sent and received by the Bureau of Indian Affairs at Washington, and for other necessary expenses of the Indian Service for which no other appropriation is available, $12,000. Supplies.Purchase, transportation, etc.For expenses necessary to the purchase of goods and supplies for the Indian Service, including inspection, pay of necessary employees, and all other expenses connected therewith, including advertising, storage, and transportation of Indian goods and supplies, $600,000: *Proviso*.Limitation on payment.*Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be used in payment for any services except bill therefor is rendered within one year from the time the service is performed. Inspectors.For pay of special Indian Service inspector and two Indian Service inspectors, and traveling and incidental expenses, $15,500. Judges.For pay of judges of Indian courts where tribal relations now exist, at rates to be fixed by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, $18,000. Police.For pay of Indian police, including chiefs of police at not to exceed $70 per month each and privates at not to exceed $50 per month each, to be employed in maintaining order, and for purchase of equipments and supplies, $163,000. Suppressing liquor traffic, etc.For the suppression of the traffic in intoxicating liquors and deleterious drugs, including peyote, among Indians, $100,000. Agency buildings.Construction, purchase, repairs, etc.For lease, purchase, repair, and improvement of agency buildings, exclusive of hospital buildings, including the purchase of necessary lands and the installation, repair, and improvement of heating, lighting, power, and sewerage and water systems in connection therewith, $175,000; for construction of physical improvements, exclusive of *Provisos*.Supervising work.hospitals, $75,000; in all, $250,000: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be available for the payment of salaries and expenses of persons employed in the supervision of construction or repair work of roads 1567and bridges on Indian reservations and other lands devoted to the Indian Service: *Provided further*, That no money shall be expendedNew construction limited.Allotments excepted. for new construction at any one agency except as follows: Not to exceed $30,000 for an additional water supply, Southern Navajo Agency, Arizona; not to exceed $7,000 for water and sewage disposal systems, Turtle Mountain Agency and Hospital, North Dakota; not to exceed $13,100 for water-filtration plant, with storage reservoir, at the Standing Rock Agency, North Dakota; for two employees’ cottages, Choctaw Agency, Mississippi, $5,500; for employee’s cottage, Blackfeet Agency, Montana, $3,500; for office building, Rosebud Agency, South Dakota, $7,500; for employee’s cottage, Warm Springs Agency, Oregon, $3,500; for office building, Tomah Agency, Wisconsin, $3,500; for electric system, Consolidated Ute Agency, Utah, $2,500. Not to exceed $150,000 of applicable appropriations made herein forVehicles.Allowance for maintenance, repairs, etc. the Bureau of Indian Affairs shall be available for the maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled and horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of superintendents, farmers, physicians, field matrons, allotting, irrigation, and other employees in the Indian field service: *Provided*, That not to exceed $1,000 may be used in the*Provisos*.Purchases limited. purchase of horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles, and not to exceed $95,000 for the purchase and exchange of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and that such vehicles shall be used only for official service: *Provided further*, That the limitation of $40,000Former limit increased.*Ante*, p. 205. in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1929 (45 Stat., p. 205) for the purchase of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles is hereby increased to $80,000. That to meet possible emergencies, not exceeding $100,000 of theEmergency allowance by diversions from specified appropriations. appropriations made by this Act for support of reservation and nonreservation schools, for school and agency buildings, and for preservation of health among Indians, shall be available, upon approval of the Secretary of the Interior, for replacing any buildings, equipment, supplies, livestock, or other property of those activities of the Indian, Service above referred to which may be destroyed or rendered unserviceable by fire, flood, or storm: *Provided*, That the limitations*Provisos*.Buildings construction. for new construction contained in the appropriations for Indian school, agency, and hospital buildings shall not apply to such emergency expenditures: *Provided further*, That any diversions of appropriationsBuildings construction. made hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. expenses in probate mattersProbate matters. For the purpose of determining the heirs of deceased IndianDetermining heirs of deceased allottees. allottees having right, title, or interest in any trust or restricted property, under regulations prescribed by the1 Secretary of the Interior, $59,000, reimbursable as provided by existing law, of which $15,000 shall be available for personal services in the District ofServices in the District.*Proviso*.Tribes excepted. Columbia: *Provided*, That the provisions of this paragraph shall not apply to the Osage Indians nor to the Five Civilized Tribes of Oklahoma. For salaries and expenses of such attorneys and other employees asFive Civilized Tribes and Quapaws.Attorneys, etc., for. the Secretary of the Interior may, in his discretion, deem necessary in probate matters affecting restricted allottees or their heirs in the Five Civilized Tribes and in the several tribes of the Quapaw Agency, and for the costs and other necessary expenses incident to suits instituted or conducted by such attorneys, $34,500: *Provided*, That no part*Proviso*.Restricted to Civil Service eligibles. of this appropriation shall be available for the payment of attorneys or other employees unless appointed after a competitive examination by the Civil Service Commission and from an eligible list furnished by such commission. 1568 expenses of indian commissioners Citizen Commission.For expenses of the Board of Indian Commissioners, $12,000, of which amount not to exceed $8,700 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. indian landsIndian lands. Surveying, allotting, in severalty, etc.Vol. 24, p. 388.[U. S. Code, p. 711](/us/usc/p711).For the survey, resurvey, classification, and allotment of lands in severalty under the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the allotment of lands in severalty to Indians,” approved February 8, 1887 (U. S. C., p. 711, sec. 331), and under any other Act or Acts providing for the survey or allotment of Indian lands, *Proviso*.Use in New Mexico and Arizona limited.$35,000: *Provided*, That no part of said sum shall be used for the survey, resurvey, classification, or allotment of any land in severalty on the public domain to any Indian, whether of the Navajo or other tribes, within the State of New Mexico and the State of Arizona, who was not residing upon the public domain prior to June 30, 1914. Pueblo Lands Board.Expenses.Vol. 43, p. C40.For carrying out the provisions of section 13 of the Act entitled “An Act to quiet the title to lands within Pueblo Indian land grants, and for other purposes,” approved June 7, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 636), $5,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be immediately available. Advertising land sales.For the payment of newspaper advertisements of sales of Indians lands, $500, reimbursable from payments by purchasers of costs of sale, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. Pueblo Indians, New Mexico.Attorney for.For the pay of one special attorney for the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, to be designated by the Secretary of the Interior, and for necessary traveling expenses of said attorney, $3,700, or so much thereof as the Secretary of the Interior may deem necessary. Five Civilized Tribes.Expenses, sales of property, from proceeds.For payment of salaries of employees and other expenses of surveying, advertising, and sale in connection with the further sales of unallotted lands and other tribal property belonging to any of the Five Civilized Tribes, including the advertising and sale of the land Choctaw and Chickasaw coal and asphalt lands.Vol. 41, p. 1107.within the segregated coal and asphalt area of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, or of the surface thereof, as provided for in the Act approved February 22, 1921, entitled “An Act authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to offer for sale remainder of the coal and asphalt deposits in segregated mineral land in the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, State of Oklahoma” (41 Stat., p. 1107), and of the improvements thereon, which is hereby expressly authorized, Final settlement of tribal affairs.and for other work necessary to a final settlement of the affairs of the Five Civilized Tribes, $10,000, to be paid from the proceeds of sales of such tribal lands and property. Fort Apache Reservation, Ariz.Purchase of land for Indians of.*Ante*, p. 962.For the purchase of certain land and appurtenances thereto situated within the exterior boundaries of the Fort Apache Reservation, Arizona, as authorized by the Act of May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 962), $6,200, or so much thereof as may be necessary, payable from funds on deposit in the Treasury to the credit of the Fort Apache Indians, to be immediately available. Homeless Indians in California.Purchase of lands for.Vol. 44, p. 941.*Ante*, p. 206.For the purchase of lands for the homeless Indians in California, including improvements thereon, for the use and occupancy of said Indians, $8,000, together with the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal years 1928 and 1929, said funds to be expended under such regulations and conditions as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. Full blood Choctaws in Mississippi.Purchase of lands, etc., for.For the purchase of lands, including improvements thereon, not exceeding eighty acres for any one family, for the use and occupancy of the full-blood Choctaw Indians of Mississippi, to be expended 1569under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for its repayment to the United States under such rules and regulations as he may direct, $6,500. For carrying out the provisions of the Act of June 7, 1924 (43Pueblo Indian lands, New Mexico.Vol. 43, p. 636.*Post*, p. 1640. Stat., p. 636), to quiet title in Pueblo Indian lands, New Mexico, and in settlement for damages for lands and water rights lost to the Indians of the Pueblos as recommended in the respective reports ofPayment to designated Pueblos. the Pueblo Lands Board thereon, the sum of $135,381.37, as follows: Santo Domingo, $13,888.20; Sandia, $20,950.90; San Felipe, $20,341.10; Taos $48,497; Santa Ana, $5,035.54; Nambe, $26,668.63; all of said sums so to be expended to be immediately available: *Provided*,*Provisos*.Balance to credit of the Pueblos. That the balance, if any, of the amounts so appropriated for the above Pueblos be placed to their credit on the books of the Treasury at 4 per centum interest per annum, and be subject to future appropriation by Congress: *Provided further*, That $1,000 ofUse for Santo Domingo and Nambe Pueblos. the amount for the Santo Domingo Pueblos be used to purchase thirteen acres of land and water rights for said Indians; that $3,578 of the sum for the Nambe Pueblos be available to purchase ten and seventy-nine one-hundredth acres of land and water rights, and the sum of $8,500 for irrigating and improving the lands of these Pueblos: *Provided further*, That all of the sums credited to theUse for Sandia and Taos, and San Felipe Pueblos. Pueblos of Sandia and Taos, respectively, be used for fencing, irrigating, and improving their lands; that $535.57 of the amount for the San Felipe Pueblos be available for the purchase therefor of sixteen and eight hundred eighty-nine one-thousandths acres of land and water rights, lying west of the Rio Grande, and that $10,000 of the sum credited to these Indians be available for fencing, irrigating and improving the land thereof. Not more than $18,000 of the funds to the credit of the TesuqueTesuque Indians.Purchase of lands etc., for, from tribal funds.Developing water supply.Reimbursement.Vol. 44, p, 942. Indians is hereby made immediately available for the purchase of lands and the development of a water supply, and not to exceed $600 is authorized to be used to reimburse the appropriation for encouraging industry and self-support among Indians, made by the Act of January 12, 1927 (44 Stat., p. 942), for the cost of a hay baler and platform scales purchased from said appropriation for the use and benefit of said Indians; in all, $18,600. For purchase of additional land and water rights for the use andNavajo Indians.Additional land and water rights for benefit of.*Ante*, p. 809. benefit of Indians of the Navajo Tribe, title to which shall be taken in the name of the United States in trust for the Navajo Tribe, $200,000, as authorized by the Act of May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 899), payable from funds on deposit in the Treasury of the United States to the credit of the Navajo Tribe: *Provided*, That in purchasing such*Proviso*.Title for surface only. lands title may be taken, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, for the surface only. The unexpended balance of $6,124.25 of the appropriation ofNisqually Indians.Use of unexpended balance for transferring remains to new cemetery.VOL 44, p. 174, $85,000 for the relief of the Nisqually Indians contained in the Act of December 5, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 684), which unexpended balance was continued available during the fiscal year 1927 by the Act of March 3, 1926 (44 Stat., p. 174), is hereby made available during the fiscal year 1930 for the purpose of removing the bodies of deceased Indians from the old Nisqually cemetery to a new location. For payment to the Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache Indians, ofKiowa, etc., Indians, Okla.Payment to, from oil royalties fund. Oklahoma, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe $200,000, from the tribal trust fund established by Joint Resolution of Congress, approved June 12, 1926 (44 Stat.,Vol. 44, p. 740.*Post*, p. 1642. p. 740), being a part of the Indians’ share of the money derived from the south half of the Red River in Oklahoma. 1570 industrial assistance and advancementIndustrial work, etc. Timber preservation, etc.For the purposes of preserving living and growing timber on Indian reservations and allotments other than the Menominee Indian Reservation in Wisconsin, and to educate Indians in the proper care Agricultural experiments.of forests; for the conducting of experiments on Indian school or agency farms designed to test the possibilities of soil and climate in the cultivation of trees, grains, vegetables, cotton, and fruits, and for the employment of practical farmers and stockmen, including Farmers and stockmen.Agricultural college graduates.$50,000 for the employment of agricultural college graduates scientifically trained and qualified to direct the agricultural activities of the Indians, in addition to the agency and school farmers now employed; for necessary traveling expenses of such farmers and stockmen and for furnishing necessary equipment and supplies for them; and for superintending and directing farming and *Provisos*.Administering forest lands from timber sales, etc.stock raising among Indians, $435,000: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be available for the expenses of administration of Indian forest lands from which timber is sold to the extent only that proceeds from the sales of timber from such lands Forest fire prevention.are insufficient for that purpose: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $100,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be used Amount for soil, etc., experiments.for the prevention of forest fires on Indian reservations: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $20,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be used to conduct experiments on Indian school or agency farms to test the possibilities of soil and climate in the cultivation of trees, cotton, grain, vegetables, and fruits, and for producing and maintaining a supply of suitable plants or seed for issue to Obtaining employment for Indians.Indians: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $10,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be used for obtaining remunerative employment for Indians and when necessary for payment of transportation and other expenses to their place of employment, such expenditures Pay limitations not applicable.to be refunded when practicable: *Provided also*, That the amounts paid to matrons, foresters, farmers, physicians, nurses, and other hospital employees, and stockmen provided for in this Act shall not Vol. 37, p. 521.[U. S. Code, p. 692](/us/usc/p692).be included within the limitations on salaries and compensation of employees contained in the Act of August 24, 1912 (U. S. C., p. 692, sec. 58). Timber sale, etc., expenses.For expenses incidental to the sale of timber, and for the expenses of administration of Indian forest lands from which such timber is Reimbursement.Vol. 41, p. 415.[U. S. Code, p. 720](/us/usc/p720).sold to the extent that the proceeds of such sales are sufficient for that purpose, $210,000, reimbursable to the United States as provided in the Act of February 14, 1920 (U. S. C., p. 720, sec. 413). Klamath Reservation, Oreg.Forest insect control on.For continuation of forest insect control work on the Klamath Indian Reservation in Oregon, $25,000, payable from funds on deposit in the Treasury to the credit of the Klamath Indians. Emergencies for suppressing fires on reservations.To meet possible emergencies, not exceeding $50,000 of the appropriations made by this Act for timber operations in the Indian Service is hereby made available for the suppression of forest fires on Indian reservations, together with the unexpended balance of From tribal funds.the appropriation made for this purpose for the fiscal year 1928 from the funds held by the United States in trust for the respective tribes *Proviso*.Report to Congress.of Indians interested: *Provided*, That any diversions of appropriations made hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. Geological Survey.Supervising mining operations on leased lands, etc., by.Vol. 26, p. 795; Vol. 35. pp. 312, 444, 783.[U. S. Code, p. 717](/us/usc/p717).For transfer to the Geological Survey for expenditures to be made in inspecting mines and examining mineral deposits on Indian lands and in supervising mining operations on restricted, tribal, and allotted Indian lands leased under the provisions of the Acts of February 28, 1891 (26 Stat., p. 795), May 27, 1908 (35 Stat., p. 312), March 3, 1909 (U. S. C., p. 717, sec. 396), and other Acts authoriz-1571ing the leasing of such lands for mining purposes, $75,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary. For the purpose of encouraging industry and self-support amongEncouraging farming, etc., for self support. the Indians and to aid them in the culture of fruits, grains, and other crops, $450,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, which sum may be used for the purchase of seeds, animals, machinery, tools, implements, and other equipment necessary, and for advances to Indians having irrigable allotments to assist them in the development and cultivation thereof, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, to enable Indians to become self-supporting: *Provided*, That*Provisos*.Repayment. the expenditures for the purposes above set forth shall be under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for repayment to the United States on or before June 30, 1935, exceptLoans on irrigable lands. in the case of loans on irrigable lands for permanent improvement of said lands, in which the period for repayment may run for not exceeding twenty years in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That $125,000 shall be immediatelyPima Indians, etc. available for expenditures for the benefit of the Pima Indians and not to exceed $25,000 of the amount herein appropriated shall beLimit to any one tribe, etc. expended on any other one reservation or for the benefit of any other one tribe of Indians: *Provided further*, That no part of this appropriationPurchase of tribal herds excluded. shall be used for the purchase of tribal herds: *Provided further*,Advances to old, etc., allottees. That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized, in his discretion and under such rules and regulations as he may prescribe, to make advances from this appropriation to old, disabled, or indigent Indian allottees, for their support, to remain a charge and lien against their lands until paid. Industrial assistance: For the construction of homes for individualIndustrial assistance.Constructing homes, purchasing farm implements, supplies, etc. from tribal funds. members of the tribes; the purchase for sale to them of seed, animals, machinery, tools, implements, building material, and other equipment and supplies; and for advances to old, disabled, or indigent Indians for their support, payable from tribal funds on deposit in the Treasury, reimbursable, to be expended in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior and to enable Indians to become self-supporting, as follows: Colorado River, Arizona, $25,000; Fort Apache,Tribes designated. Arizona, $50,000; Southern Ute, Colorado, $50,000; Ute Mountain, Colorado, $50,000; Fort Hall, Idaho, $50,000; Consolidated Chippewa, Minnesota, $50,000; Red Lake, Minnesota, $50,000; Flathead, Montana, $50,000; Fort Peck, Montana, $50,000; Pyramid Lake, Nevada, $19,479.60; Jicarilla, New Mexico, $50,000; Mescalero, New Mexico, $25,000; Klamath, Oregon, $50,000; Warm Springs, Oregon, $25,000; Cheyenne River, South Dakota, $50,000; Pine Ridge, South Dakota, $50,000; Uintah, Utah, $50,000; Colville, Washington, $25,000; Menominee, Wisconsin, $50,000; Shoshone, Wyoming, $50,000; in all, $869,479.60, to be immediately available: *Provided*,*Provisos*.Repayment. That the expenditures for the purposes above set forth shall be under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for repayment to the United States on or before June 30, 1935, except in the case of loans on irrigable lands for permanent improvementOf loans of irrigable lands. of said lands, in which the period for repayment may run for not exceeding twenty years in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That all moneys reimbursed duringCredited to moneys reimbursed. the fiscal year 1930 shall be credited to the respective appropriations and be available for the purposes of this paragraph, and theMenominee and Fort Belknap Indians.Unexpended balances for, reappropriated.*Ante*, p. 208. unexpended balance of the Menominee and the Fort Belknap appropriations, for the fiscal year 1929 shall remain available for the same purposes during the fiscal year 1930. 1572 development of water supplyWater supply. Increasing grazing ranges, etc., by developing sources of, on reservations.Developing water supply: For improving springs, drilling wells, and otherwise developing and conserving water for Indian use, including the purchase, construction, and installation of pumping machinery, tanks, troughs, and other necessary equipment, and for necessary investigations and surveys for the purpose of increasing the available grazing range on unallotted lands on Indian reservations; Distribution.not more than $27,500 for the Papago Indians in Arizona, not more than $5,000 for the Pueblo Indian lands in New Mexico, not more than $6,000 for the Hopi Indians in Arizona, and not more than $6,600 for domestic water supply for the Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico, in all, $45,100. Amount from tribal funds.Developing water supply (from tribal funds): For improving springs, drilling wells, and otherwise developing and conserving water for Indian use, including the purchase, construction, and installation of pumping machinery, tanks, troughs, and other necessary equipment, and for necessary investigations and surveys for the purpose of increasing the available grazing range on unallotted lands Reservations designated.on Indian reservations: For the Mescajero Reservation, New Mexico, $10,000; for the Consolidated Ute Reservation, Colorado, $3,000: for the Navajos on the Navajo Reservations in Arizona and New Mexico, $75,000; in all, $88,000, to be paid from funds held in trust for said tribes of Indians, respectively, by the United States. irrigation and drainageIrrigation and drainage. Construction, maintenance, etc., of systems of, on reservations.For the construction, repair, and maintenance of irrigation systems, and for purchase or rental of irrigation tools and appliances, water rights, ditches, and lands necessary for irrigation purposes for Indian reservations and allotments; for operation of irrigation systems or appurtenances thereto when no other funds are applicable or available for the purpose; for drainage and protection of irrigable lands from damage by floods or loss of water rights, upon the Indian irrigation projects named below, in not to exceed the following amounts, respectively: Allotments to districts.Irrigation district one: Colville Reservation, Washington, $5,000; Irrigation district two: Walker River Reservation, Nevada, $6,000; Western Shoshone Reservation, Idaho and Nevada, $4,000; Shivwits, Utah, $2,800; Irrigation district four: Ak Chin Reservation, Arizona, $4,000; Chiu Chui pumping plants, Arizona, $8,000; Coachelja Valley pumping plants, California, $2,000; Morongo Reservation, California, $3,500; Paia and Rincon Reservations, California, $2,000; miscellaneous projects, $4,000; Irrigation district five: New Mexico Pueblos, $14,000; Zuni Reservation, New Mexico, $10,000; Navajo and Hopi, miscellaneous projects, Arizona and New Mexico, $10,000; Southern Ute Reservation, Colorado, $10,000; Administration.For necessary miscellaneous expenses incident to the general administration Supervising engineers, etc.of Indian irrigation projects, including salaries of one chief irrigation engineer, one assistant chief irrigation engineer, one superintendent of irrigation competent to pass upon water rights, not to exceed five supervising engineers, one field cost accountant, one Travel, etc., expenses.assistant cost accountant, and for traveling and incidental expenses of officials and employees of the Indian irrigation service, $85,000; For cooperative stream gauging with the United States Geological Survey, $850; 1573 In all, for irrigation on Indian reservations, not to exceed $160,000,Reimbursements.Unexpended balance reappropriated.*Ante*, p. 210.Vol. 38, p. 582.[U. S. Code, p. 716](/us/usc/p716).*Provisos*.Use restricted. together with the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1929, which is hereby reappropriated, reimbursable as provided in the Act of August 1, 1914 (U. S. C., p. 716, sec. 385): *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended on any irrigation system or reclamation project for which public funds are or may be otherwise available; *Provided further*,Flood damages expenses interchangeable. That the foregoing amounts appropriated for such purposes shall be available interchangeably, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, for the necessary expenditures for damages by floods and other unforeseen exigencies, but the amount so interchanged shallLimitation. not exceed in the aggregate 10 per centum of all the amounts so appropriated: *Provided further*, That the costs of irrigation projectsApportionment of costs on per acre basis. and of operating and maintaining such projects where reimbursement thereof is required by law shall be apportioned on a per acre basis against the lands under the respective projects and shall be collected by the Secretary of the Interior as required by such Jaw, and any unpaid charges outstanding against such lands shall constituteUnpaid charges a first lien on property. a first lien thereon which shall be recited in any patent or instrument issued for such lands. For operation and maintenance of the pumping plants and irrigationGila River Reservation. system for the irrigation of the lands of the Pima Indians in the vicinity of Sacaton, on the Gila River Indian Reservation,Irrigating Pima Indian lands on.Vol. 37, p. 522. Arizona, $5,000, reimbursable as provided in section 2 of the Act of August 24, 1912 (37 Stat., p. 522). For all purposes necessary to provide an adequate distributing,San Carlos project, Ariz.Operation, etc.Vol. 43, p. 475. pumping, and drainage system for the San Carlos project, authorized by the Act of June 7, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 475), and to continue construction of and to maintain and operate works of that project and of the Florence-Casa Grande project; and to maintain, operate,Delivery of water to lands on Gila River Reservation. and extend works to deliver water to lands in the Gila River Indian Reservation which may be included in the San Carlos project, including not more than $5,000 for crop and improvement damages and not more than $5,000 for purchases of rights of way, $500,000,*Ante*, p. 210. reimbursable as required by said Act of June 7, 1924, as amended, and subject to the conditions and provisions imposed by said Act as amended. For improvement, operation, and maintenance of the pumpingColorado River Reservation, Ariz.Extending irrigation system on.Vol. 36, p. 273. plants and irrigation system on the Colorado River Indian Reservation, Arizona, as provided in the Act of April 4, 1910 (36 Stat., p. 273), $18,000, reimbursable as provided in the aforesaid Act. For operation and maintenance of the Ganado irrigation project,Ganado project, Ariz.Operating. Arizona, reimbursable under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, $3,000. For operation and maintenance of the irrigation project on theSan Xavier Reservation, Ariz.Operating pumping plants. San Xavier Indian Reservation, Arizona, $2,000, reimbursable out of any funds of the Indians of this reservation now or hereafter available. For the operation and maintenance of pumping plants for theSan Carlos Reservation, Ariz.Irrigating tribal lands on. irrigation of lands on the San Carlos Reservation in Arizona, $7,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Indians of such reservation: *Provided*, That the sum so*Provisos*.Reimbursement. used shall be reimbursed to the tribe by the Indians benefited, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe: *Provided*, That the funds made available by the Act ofTransmission line.*Ante*, p. 211. March 7, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 211), for the construction of a transmission line, including substation, from the Coolidge Dam to lands available for irrigation by pumping on the San Carlos ReservationFunds available for pumping plants. shall be available also for the purpose of drilling wells and the installation of pumping plants including the purchase of necessary 1574equipment therefor to provide water for the irrigation of lands and for domestic purposes for the San Carlos Indians and shall remain available for the fiscal years 1930 and 1931. Yuma Reservation, Calif.Advancing charges, on lands of, and in Ariz.Vol. 36, p. 1063.For reclamation and maintenance charges on Indian lands within the Yuma Reservation, California, and on ten acres within each of the eleven Yuma homestead entries in Arizona, under the Yuma reclamation project, $33,800, reimbursable as provided by the Act of March 3, 1911 (36 Stat., p. 1063). Fort Hall Reservation, Idaho.Operation.For improvements, maintenance, and operation of the Fort Hall irrigation system, Idaho, including $4,500 for replacement of buildings destroyed by fire, which shall be immediately available, $28,500.Kootenai Indians, Idaho.Drainage of allotments.*Ante*, p. 038.For the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the Act approved May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 938), to provide reclamation of Kootenai Indian allotments in Idaho within the exterior boundaries of drainage districts that may be benefited by drainage works of such districts, $114,000, reimbursable as provided for and subject to the provisions and conditions of such Act. R. E. Hansen.Reimbursement.*Post*, p. 2027.To reimburse R. E. Hansen for destruction of crops, $2,480.65, payable out of funds received from the sale of stored water in the Blackfoot Reservoir, Fort Hall irrigation project, Idaho, as authorized by the Act of May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., pt. 2, p. 327). Sac and Fox Indians in Iowa.Drainage of lands.*Provisos*.Reimbursement from proceeds of lands benefited.For the construction of a drainage system for lands of the Sac and Fox Indians in Iowa, $10,000: *Provided*, That said amount or so much thereof as may be used in the construction of the drainage system shall be reimbursed to the United States from the proceeds of leases covering the Indian lands benefited by the drainage work, and the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to lease -such lands for periods not in excess of five years, and the proceeds derived therefrom shall be used for payment of the cost of said work and the balance placed in the Treasury to the credit of the Indians, to bear interest at the rate of 4 per centum per annum: *Provided further*, Lien against, but not enforceable, while title in Indians.Lands sold subject to lien.That there is hereby created against such lands a first lien which lien shall not be enforced during the period that the title to such lands remains in the Indians, but that in case of sale of any such lands said lands shall be sold subject to the first lien herein created, and a recital of said lien shall be made in all patents or deeds issued for any lands benefited under the drainage ditch. Fort Belknap Reservation.Operating, etc.Vol. 36, p. 270.For maintenance and operation, including repairs of the irrigation systems on the Fort Belknap Reservation, in Montana, $15,000, reimbursable in accordance with the provisions of the Act of April 4, 1910 (36 Stat., p. 270). Flathead Reservation, Mont.Construction.Vol. 44, pp. 464, 945.*Ante*, p. 212.The unexpended balance of the appropriation for continuing construction of the irrigation systems on the Flathead Indian Reservation, Montana, contained in the Act of May 10, 1926 (44 Stat., pp. Balances available.464–466), as continued available in the Act of January 12, 1927 (44 Stat., p. 945), and the Act of March 7, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 212), shall remain available for the fiscal year 1930, subject to the reimbursable *Proviso*.Power plant balance may be used for power distributing system.*Ante*, p. 212.and other conditions and provisions of said Acts: *Provided*, That not more than $10,000 of the unexpended balance of $395,000 made available, by the Act of March 7, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 212), for the construction of a power distributing system and for purchase of power,, or for construction of power plant, shall be available for operation and maintenance, and $40,000 shall be available for construction of laterals near Ronan. Fort Peck Reservation, Mont.Operating divisions of systems on.For maintenance and operation, until January 1, 1930, of the Poplar River, Little Porcupine, and Big Porcupine divisions of the irrigation systems on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana, by and under the direction of the Commissioner of Indian 1575Affairs, including the purchase of any necessary rights or property, $3,000 (reimbursable). For improvement, maintenance, and operation of the Two MedicineBlackfeet Reservation, Mont.Operating divisions of systems on. and Badger-Fisher divisions of the irrigation systems on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Montana, by and under the direction of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, including the purchase of any necessary rights or property, $18,000 (reimbursable). For maintenance and operation of the irrigation systems on theCrow Reservation, Mont.Operating systems on. Crow Reservation, Montana, including maintenance assessments payable to the Two Leggings Water Users’ Association and Bozeman Trail Ditch Company, Montana, properly assessable against lands allotted to the Indians irrigable thereunder, $1,000, to be reimbursed under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. For operation and maintenance of the irrigation system on thePyramid-Lake Reservation, Nev.Operating system on. Pyramid Lake Reservation, Nevada, $4,000, reimbursable from any funds of the Indians of this reservation now or hereafter available. For payment of annual installment of reclamation charges againstNewlands project, Nev.Paying charges on Paiute lands on. Paiute Indian lands within the Newlands reclamation project, Nevada, $3,461; and for payment in advance, as provided by district law, of operation and maintenance assessments, including assessments for the operation of drains to the Truckee-Carson irrigation district, which district, under contract, is operating the Newlands reclamation project, $8,000; in all, $11,461. For improvement, operation, and maintenance of the irrigationLaguna and Acoma Indians, N. Mex.Operating system for. system for the Laguna and Acoma Indians in New Mexico, $3,000, reimbursable by the Indians benefited, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. For improvement, operation, and maintenance of the HogbackNavajo Reservation, N. Mex.Operating Hogback project on. irrigation project on that part of the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico under the jurisdiction of the Northern Navajo Agency, $10,000, reimbursable under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. For repair of damage to irrigation systems resulting from floodNew Mexico pueblos.Repairing flood damages to irrigation systems on. and for flood protection of irrigable lands on the several pueblos in New Mexico, the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1929 shall be available for the same purpose for the fiscal year 1930. For improvement, maintenance, and operation of miscellaneousKlamath Reservation, Oreg.Operating projects on, from tribal funds. irrigation projects on the Klamath Reservation, $5,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Klamath Indians in the State of Oregon, said sum, or such part thereof as may be used, to be reimbursed to the tribe under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. For continuing operation and maintenance and betterment of theUncompahgre,, etc., Utes, Utah.Continuing irrigation to allotments of.Vol. 34, p. 375. irrigation system to irrigate allotted lands of the Uncompahgre, Uintah, and White River Utes in Utah, authorized under the Act of June 21, 1906 (34 Stat., p. 375), $5,000, to be paid from tribal funds held by the United States in trust for said Indians, said sum to be reimbursed to the tribal fund by the individuals benefited under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided*, That not to exceed $500 of the amount herein*Proviso*.Ditch rider’s site. appropriated shall be available for the purchase of a ditch rider’s site on the project. For operation and maintenance, including repairs, of the Toppenish-SimcoeYakima Reservation, Wash.Operating Toppenish-Simcoe unit on.Vol. 41, p. 28. irrigation unit, on the Yakima Reservation, Washington, reimbursable as provided by the Act of June 30, 1919 (41 Stat., p. 28), $1,000. 1576 Reimbursing reclamation fund for furnishing stored water to reservation lands.Vol. 38, p. 604.For reimbursement to the reclamation fund the proportionate expense of operation and maintenance of the reservoirs for furnishing stored water to the lands in Yakima Indian Reservation, Washington, in accordance with the provisions of section 22 of the Act of August 1, 1914 (38 Stat., p. 604), $11,000. Wapato project.Operating Satus unit gravity project.For operation and maintenance of the Satus unit of the Wapato project that can be irrigated by gravity from the drainage water from the Wapato project, Yakima Reservation, Washington, $1,000, to be reimbursed under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. Wind River Reservation, Wyo.Extending irrigation to additional Indian lands, etc.For the extension of canals and laterals on the ceded portion of the Wind River Reservation, Wyoming, to provide for the irrigation of additional Indian lands, and for the Indians’ pro rata share of the cost of the operation and maintenance of canals and laterals and for the Indians’ pro rata share of the cost of the Big Bend drainage project on the ceded portion of that reservation, and for continuing the work of constructing an irrigation system within the diminished reservation, including the Big Wind River and Dry Creek Canals, and including the maintenance and operation of completed canals, $5,000, reimbursable as provided by existing law. unexpended balancesUnexpended Indian balances covered into the Treasury. The following unexpended balances of the appropriations hereinafter enumerated shall be covered into the Treasury and carried to the surplus fund immediately upon the approval of this Act: Santa Fe, N. Mex., School.Vol. 39, p. 144.Yakima Reservation, Wash.Diversion dam, etc.Vol. 40, p. 588.Assembly hall and gymnasium, Indian School, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Act of May 18, 1916 (39 Stat., p. 144), $113.19; Diversion dam, distribution and drainage system, Yakima Reservation, Washington (reimbursable), Act of May 25, 1918 (40 Stat., p. 588), $428.60; Fort Belknap Reservation, Mont.Enrollment, allotment, etc.Vol. 41, p. 1359.Enrollment, allotment, and so forth, Fort Belknap Reservation, Montana (reimbursable), Act of March 3, 1921 (41 Stat., p. 1359). $3,798.45; In all, $4,340.24. educationEducation. Support of schools.For the support of Indian day and industrial schools not otherwise provided for, and other educational and industrial purposes *Provisos*.Deaf and dumb, blind, etc.in connection therewith, $2,850,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $10,000 of this appropriation may be used for the support and education of deaf and dumb or blind or mentally deficient Indian children: Alabamas and Coushattas, Tex.*Provided further*, That $3,500 of this appropriation may be used for the education and civilization of the Alabama and Coushatta Boarding schools with diminished attendance discontinued.Indians in Texas: *Provided further*, That all reservation and nonreservation boarding schools with an average attendance in any year of less than forty-five and eighty pupils, respectively, shall be discontinued on or before the beginning of the ensuing fiscal year. Pupils transferred.The pupils in schools so discontinued shall be transferred first, if possible, to Indian day schools or State public schools; second, to adjacent reservation or nonreservation boarding schools, to the limit Day schools discontinued.of the capacity of said schools: *Provided further*, That all day schools with an average attendance in any year of less than eight shall be discontinued on or before the beginning of the ensuing Moneys returned into the Treasury.fiscal year: *Provided further*, That all moneys appropriated for any school discontinued pursuant to this Act or for other cause shall be returned immediately to the Treasury of the United States: *Provided further*,Education in public schools. That not more than $400,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be expended for the tuition of Indian children enrolled in the public schools under such rules and regulations as the 1577Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, but formal contracts shallNo formal contracts.[R. S. sec. 3744, p. 738](/us/rs/s3744/p738).[U. S. Code, p. 1310](/us/usc/p1310). not be required, for compliance with section 3744 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., p. 1310, sec. 16), for payment of tuition of Indian children in public schools or of Indian children in schools for the deaf and dumb, blind, or mentally deficient: *Provided further*,Amount for library books. That not less than $6,500 of the amount herein appropriated shall be available only for purchase of library books: *And provided further*, That not to exceed $10,000 of the amount herein appropriatedEducation at Miles City Livestock Station, Mont. shall be available for educating Indian youth in stock raising at the United States Range Livestock Experiment Station at Miles City, Montana. For the support of Indian day and industrial schools, and otherSupport of schools from Indian moneys. educational and industrial purposes in connection therewith, other than among the Five Civilized Tribes, there shall be expended from Indian tribal funds and from school revenues arising under the Act of May 17, 1926 (44 Stat., p. 560), not more than $850,000,Vol. 44, p. 560. including the following amounts from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of the Chippewa Indians in Minnesota, arising underChippewas in Minnesota.Vol. 25, p. 645. section 7 of the Act approved January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645): $10,000 for the construction, equipment, and maintenance of public schools in connection with and under the control of the public-school system of the State of Minnesota, said school buildings to be located at places contiguous to Indian children who are now without proper public-school facilities, and $40,000 for remodeling and repairingWhite Earth boarding school. and $70,000 for operating the White Earth boarding-school plant for the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota: *Provided*, That not more*Proviso*.Now construction expenses limited. than $7,500 of the above authorization of $850,000 shall be expended for new construction at any one school unless herein expressly authorized. For the support of schools and for tuition among the Five CivilizedFive Civilized Tribes.Tribal schools, etc., from Indian funds. Tribes, there may be expended from tribal funds of such nations $250,000 as follows: Seminole Nation, $33,000; Chickasaw Nation, $22,000; Choctaw Nation, $195,000, of which latter amount there may be expended $7,000 for addition to kitchen and bakery andWheelock Academy. remodeling dining hall at Wheelock Academy, and $18,000 for auditorium and gymnasium and equipment, $15,000 for dining hall and kitchen and equipment, $10,000 for employees’ building and equipment,Jones Male Academy. and $3,500 for employees cottage, at Jones Male Academy. For collection and transportation of pupils to and from IndianCollecting, etc., pupils. and public schools, and for placing school pupils, with the consent of their parents, under the care and control of white families qualified to give them moral, industrial, and educational training, $90,000: *Provided*, That not exceeding $7,000 of this sum may be*Provisos*.Obtaining employment. used for obtaining remunerative employment for such pupils and, when necessary, for payment of transportation and other expenses to their places of employment: *Provided further*, That when practicableRepayment. such transportation and expenses shall be refunded and shall be returned to the appropriation from which paid. The provisionsAlaska pupils. of this section shall also apply to native Indian pupils of school age under twenty-one years of age brought from Alaska. For lease, purchase, repair, and improvement of school buildings,School buildings.Lease, repairs, construction, etc. including the purchase of necessary lands and the installation, repair, and improvement of heating, lighting, power, and sewerage and water systems in connection therewith, $275,000; for construction of physical improvements, $365,000; in all, $640,000: *Provided*, That*Provisos*.Construction limit. not more than $7,500 out of this appropriation shall be expended for new construction at any one school or institution except for newNew construction at designated schools. construction authorized as follows: Chimopovy day school, Hopi Reservation, Arizona: For new schoolhouse, dining hall, kitchen, wash room, and toilet, $7,500; for electric-light plant, $1,000; in all, 1578$8,500; Hoopa Valley school, California: For remodeling and improving girls’ and boys’ dormitories, $10,000; Ignacio boarding school, Colorado: For enlargement, including equipment, $90,000; Choctaws in Mississippi: For day-school plant, $10,000; Kiowa (Fort Sill) school, Oklahoma: For additions to girls’ and boys’ dormitories, including heating, toilets, and baths, $15,000; Cheyenne and Arapahoe school, Oklahoma: For enlarging girls’ and boys’ dormitories, including equipment, $21,500; Uintah boarding school, Utah: For dining hall and equipment, $15,000; Tulalip boarding school, Washington: For new dining hall and kitchen, including equipment, $13,500; Western Navajo boarding school, Arizona: For construction and equipment of a boys’ dormitory, central heating plant, and mess hall, $125,000. Schools for children of Indian Service in Arizona.For repair, improvement, replacement, or construction of additional public-school buildings within Indian reservations in Arizona, To be maintained by State.attended by children of employees of the Indian Service, to be equipped and maintained by the State of Arizona, $25,000. Support, etc., of designated boarding schools.For support and education of Indian pupils at the following boarding schools in not to exceed the following amounts, respectively: Fort Mojave, Ariz.Fort Mojave, Arizona: For two hundred and fifty pupils, $65,000, for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; for addition to hospital, $6,000; for lavatory annexes, $6,400; for warehouse, $7,000; in all, $99,400; Phoenix, Ariz.Phoenix, Arizona: For nine hundred and seventy-five pupils, including not to exceed $1,500 for printing and issuing school paper, $243,750; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $25,000; for new hospital and equipment, $65,000; for ammonia compressor, $4,000; in all, $337,750; Truxton Canyon, Ariz.Truxton Canyon, Arizona: For two hundred and fifteen pupils, $55,900; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $10,000; in all, $65,900; Theodore Roosevelt, Fort Apache, Ariz.Theodore Roosevelt Indian School, Fort Apache, Arizona: For four hundred and fifty pupils, $117,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $20,000; in all, $137,000. Sherman Institute, Riverside, Calif.Sherman Institute, Riverside, California: For one thousand pupils, including not to exceed $1,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $250,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $18,000; in all, $268,000; Fort Bidwell, Calif.Fort Bidwell Indian School, California: For one hundred pupils, $28,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $8,000; in all, $36,500; Haskell Institute, Kans.Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kansas: For nine hundred pupils, including not to exceed $1,500 for printing and issuing school paper, $225,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, purchase of water for domestic purposes, and general repairs and improvements, including necessary drainage work, $27,000; for remodeling engineering plant, $25,000; for the purchase of additional lands, $20,000; in all, $297,000; Mount Pleasant, Mich.Mount Pleasant, Michigan: For three hundred and seventy-five pupils, $97,500; for pay for superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; for remodeling and repairing hospital, $10,000; for new boiler and boiler house, and repairs to heating, lighting, and water systems, $13,000; in all, $135,500; Pipestone, Minn.Pipestone, Minnesota: For three hundred pupils, $78,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $20,000, including $5,000 for commissary building; in all, $98,000; Genoa. Nebr.Genoa, Nebraska: For five hundred pupils, $130,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, 1579$18,000; for dairy barn and equipment, $4,500; for purchase of additional land, $50,000, to be immediately available; in all, $202,500; Carson City, Nevada: For four hundred and fifty pupils, $117,000;Carson City, Nev. for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $18,000; in all, $135,000; Albuquerque, New Mexico: For eight hundred and fifty pupils,Albuquerque, N. Mex. $212,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; for remodeling and repairing employees’ quarters, $5,000; for dairy building and equipment, $10,000; in all, $242,500. Santa Fe, New Mexico: For five hundred pupils, $130,000; for paySanta Fe, N. Mex. of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; in all, $145,000. Charles H. Burke School, Fort Wingate, New Mexico: For sixCharles H. Burke, Fort Wingate, N. Mex. hundred pupils, $150,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $22,000; for dairy barn, $10,000; and for purchase of livestock, $10,000; in all, $192,000. Cherokee, North Carolina: For four hundred pupils, $104,000;Cherokee, N. C. for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $10,000; for horse barn, $3,000; in all, $117,000: *Provided*,*Proviso*.Payment to Indians for improvements, etc., on reserved lands.Vol. 43, p. 1157. That not to exceed $90 of the appropriation of $10,000 for the purchase of additional land for school and other purposes, contained in the Interior Department Appropriation Act approved March 3, 1925 (43 Stat., p. 1157), is hereby made available until June 30, 1930, for compensating the Indian occupants of approximately six acres of land reserved for school purposes on the Cherokee Indian Reservation, North Carolina, for their improvements and possessory rights; Bismarck, North Dakota: For one hundred and twenty-five pupils,Bismarck, N. Dak. $35,625; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $7,000; for employee’s cottage, $4,750; in all, $47,375; Fort Totten, North Dakota: For two hundred and fifty pupils,Fort Totten, N. Dak. $65,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; for remodeling and enlarging hospital, $22,000; in all, $102,000; Wahpeton, North Dakota: For three hundred and twenty-fiveWahpeton, N. Dak. pupils, $84,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $10,000; for reconditioning steam and water lines, $6,500; for addition to dairy barn, $4,000; for purchase of land, $8,500; and for fuel-burning equipment, $6,000; in all, $119,500; Chilocco, Oklahoma: For eight hundred and fifty pupils, includingChilocco, Okla. not to exceed $2,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $212,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $20,000; in all, $232,500; Sequoyah Orphan Training School, near Tahlequah, Oklahoma:Sequoyah Orphan Training, Okla. For three hundred orphan Indian children of the State of Oklahoma belonging to the restricted class, to be conducted as an industrial school under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, $78,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; in all, $93,000; Bloomfield, Oklahoma: For one hundred and sixty pupils, $45,600;Bloomfield, Okla. for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $7,000; in all, $52,600. Euchee, Oklahoma: For one hundred and fifteen pupils, $32,775;Euchee, Okla. for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $7,000; in all, $39,775; Eufaula, Oklahoma: For one hundred and twenty-five pupils,Eufaula, Okla. $35,625; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and 1580improvements, including $1,000 for enlargement of hospital, $8,000; for dining hall and kitchen, including equipment, $15,000; in all, $58,625; Chemawa, Salem, Oreg.Chemawa, Salem, Oregon: For seven hundred and fifty pupils, including native Indian pupils brought from Alaska, including not to exceed $1,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $141,500, together with $46,000 of the unexpended balance for support of this school for the fiscal year 1929; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $20,000; for boys’ dormitory and equipment, $70,000, to be immediately available; for boilers, *Proviso*.Restriction on Alaska natives.$25,000; in all, $256,500: *Provided*, That except upon the individual order of the Secretary of the Interior no part of this appropriation shall be used for the support or education at said school of any native pupil brought from Alaska after January 1, 1925; Flandreau, S. Dak.Flandreau, South Dakota: For four hundred pupils, $104,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; for hospital and equipment, $35,000; in all. $154,000; Pierre, S. Dak.Pierre, South Dakota: For three hundred pupils, $78,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $47,000, including $35,000 for enlarging and remodeling buildings; in all, $125,000; Hayward, Wis.Hayward, Wisconsin: For one hundred and sixty pupils, $45,600; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $10,000, including $2,000 for a schoolroom and equipment; in all, $55,600; Tomah, Wis.Tomah, Wisconsin: For three hundred and twenty-five pupils, $84,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $12,000; for employee’s cottage, $3,500; for septic tank and extension of sewer line, $3,500; and for the Lindley M. Compton gymnasium and equipment, $30,000; in all, $133,500; *Proviso*.Purchase of library books.In all, for above-named boarding schools, not to exceed $3,889,500: *Provided*, That not less than $6,000 of this amount shall be available only for purchase of library books. Chippewas of Minnesota.Tuition of children in State schools from tribal funds.Vol. 25, p. 645.The Secretary of the Interior is authorized to withdraw from the Treasury of the United States, in his discretion, the sum of $35,000, or so much therof as may be necessary, of the principal sum on deposit to the credit of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota arising under section 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645), and to expend the same for payment of tuition for Chippewa Indian children enrolled in the public schools of the State of Minnesota. Chippewas of the Mississippi.School for.Vol. 16, p. 720.For support of a school or schools for the Chippewas of the Mississippi in Minnesota (article 3, treaty of March 19, 1867), $4,000. Osages in Oklahoma.Educating children from tribal funds.*Proviso*.Saint Louis Boarding School.For the education of Osage children, $8,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Osage Tribe of Indians in Oklahoma: *Provided*, That the expenditure of said money shall include the renewal of the present contract with the Saint Louis Mission boarding school, except that there shall not be expended more than $240 for annual support and education of any one pupil. Five Civilized Tribes.Common schools.For aid to the common schools in the Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole Nations and the Quapaw Agency in Oklahoma, $250,000, to be expended in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, and under rules and regulations to be prescribed by him: *Proviso*.Parentage limitation not applicable.Vol. 40, p. 564.[U. S. Code, p. 708](/us/usc/p708).*Provided*, That this appropriation shall not be subject to the limitation in section 1 of the Act of May 25, 1918 (U. S. C., p. 708, sec. 297), limiting the expenditure of money to educate children of less than one-fourth Indian blood. 1581 For support and maintenance of day and industrial schools amongSioux Indians.Day and industrial schools.Vol. 19, p. 254. the Sioux Indians, including the erection and repairs of school buildings, in accordance with the provisions of article 5 of the agreement made and entered into September 26, 1876, and ratified February 28, 1877 (19 Stat., p. 254), $310,000, of which amount $10,000 shall be immediately available. For aid of the public schools in Uintah and Duchesne CountyUintah and Duchesne Counties, Utah.Aid to school districts. school districts, Utah, $6,000, to be paid from the tribal funds of the Confederated Bands of Ute Indians and to be expended under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided*, That Indian children shall at all times be*Proviso*.Equality with white children. admitted to such schools on an entire equality with white children. conservation of healthConservation of health. For conservation of health among Indians (except at boardingExpenses designated. schools supported from specific appropriations, other than those named herein), including equipment, materials, and supplies; repairs and improvements to buildings and plants; compensation and traveling expenses of officers and employees, and renting of quarters for them when necessary; transportation of patients and attendants to and from hospitals and sanatoria; returning to their former homes and interring the remains of deceased patients; not exceeding $3,000 for expenses (not membership fees) of physicians and nurses when officially detailed, in the interest of health work among the Indians, to attend meetings of medical and health associations; and not exceedingAttendance at meetings.Suppressing trachoma, etc.Allotments to specified hospitals and sanatoria. $1,000 for circulars and pamphlets for use in preventing and suppressing trachoma and other contagious and infectious diseases, $2,658,600, including not to exceed the sum of $1,520,100 for the following-named hospitals and sanatoria: Arizona: Indian Oasis Hospital, $18,000; Kayenta TuberculosisArizona. Sanatorium, $32,000; Fort Defiance Sanatorium, $38,000; Phoenix Sanatorium, $62,000; for infirmary and equipment, $30,000; in all, $92,000; Pima Hospital, $19,000; Truxton Canyon Hospital, $7,500; Western Navajo Hospital, $20,000; for adding wings, $20,000; in all, $40,000; Chin Lee Hospital, $9,000; Fort Apache Hospital, $25,000; Havasupai Hospital, $5,000; Hopi Hospital, $22,000; for new construction, including equipment, to double capacity, $35,000; in all, $57,000; Leupp Hospital, $24,000; San Carlos Hospital, $15,000; Southern Navajo General Hospital, $25,000; Tohatchi Hospital, $9,000; Phoenix Boarding School Hospital, for care of reservation patients, $8,000; California: Hoopa Valley Hospital, $16,000; Soboba Hospital,California. $17,000; Fort Bidwell Hospital, $12,000; Fort Yuma Hospital, $10,000; Idaho: Fort Lapwai Sanatorium, $78,000; Fort Hall Hospital,Idaho. $10,500; Iowa: Sac and Fox Sanatorium, $63,000;Iowa. Mississippi: Choctaw Hospital, $14,000; for purchase of land,Mississippi. $3,100; in all, $17,100; Montana: Blackfeet Hospital, $22,000; Fort Peck Hospital,Montana. $22,000; Crow Agency Hospital, $14,000; Fort Belknap Hospital, $9,000; Tongue River Hospital, $9,000; Nebraska: Winnebago Hospital, $27,000; for milk room, $2,500;Nebraska. for improving water supply, $3,000; in all, $32,500; Nevada: Carson Hospital, $18,100; Pyramid Lake Sanatorium,Nevada. $28,000; New Mexico: Jicarilla Hospital, $11,800; Jicarilla Sanatorium,New Mexico. $36,000; Laguna Sanatorium, $29,000; Mescalero Hospital, $16,000; Eastern Navajo Hospital, $12,500; Northern Navajo Hospital, 1582$20,000; Taos Hospital, $9,000; Zuni Sanatorium, $50,000; Albuquerque Boarding School Hospital, for care of reservation patients, $25,000; Charles H. Burke Boarding School Hospital, for care of reservation patients, $5,000; Santa Fe Boarding School Hospital, for care of reservation patients, $18,000; North Carolina.North Carolina: Cherokee Boarding School Hospital, for care of reservation patients, $5,000; North Dakota.North Dakota: Turtle Mountain Hospital, $13,000; Fort Berthold Hospital, $12,500; Oklahoma.Oklahoma: Cheyenne and Arapahoe Hospital, $25,000; Choctaw and Chickasaw Hospital, $45,000; Shawnee Sanatorium, $60,000; Claremore Hospital, $25,000; Seger Hospital, $7,000; South Dakota.South Dakota: Crow Creek Hospital, $10,000; Pine Ridge Hospital, $14,000; Rosebud Hospital, $20,000; Rapid City Sanatorium School, $94,600; Washington.Washington: Yakima Sanatorium, $43,000; Tacoma Hospital, $100,000; Tulalip Hospital, $8,000; for physician’s cottage, $4,000; in all, $12,000; *Provisos*.Interchangeable expenditure.*Provided*, That 10 per centum of the foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeably for expenditures in the various hospitals named, but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said hospitals or for any particular item within any hospital, and any interchange of appropriations hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget; Construction authorized at designated hospitals.*Provided further*, That this appropriation shall be available for construction of hospitals and sanatoria, including equipment, as follows: Colorado River Hospital and physician’s cottage, Arizona, $50,000; Oraibi Sanatorium, Arizona, $65,000; Fort Belknap Hospital, Montana, $50,000; Tongue River Hospital, Montana, $55,000, including water and sewer systems in connection therewith; Turtle Mountain Hospital, North Dakota, $50,000; Pawnee and Ponca Hospital, Oklahoma, $60,000; Pine Ridge Hospital, South Dakota, $65,000; Cheyenne River and Standing Rock Sanatorium, South Dakota, $70,000; Hayward Hospital, Wisconsin, $50,000; in all, $515,000. Chippewas in Minnesota.For support of hospitals maintained for the benefit of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota, $90,000, payable from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of said Indians arising under Vol. 25, p. 645.section 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645). Onigum, Minn.For construction, including equipment, of a sanatorium building on the Leech Lake Reservation at Onigum, Minnesota, $50,000, payable from funds on deposit in the Treasury to the credit of the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota. Menominee Reservation, Wis.Keshena Hospital.For the construction and equipment of four pavilion additions to the Keshena Hospital on the Menominee Reservation, Wisconsin, $20,000, out of the tribal funds of the Menominee Indians. Health work.Amount from trust funds available for.There shall be available for health work among the several tribes of Indians not exceeding $275,000 of the tribal trust funds authorized elsewhere in this Act for support of Indians and administration of *Proviso*.New construction limited.Indian property: *Provided*, That not more than $7,500 of such amount may be expended for new construction in connection with health activities at any one place. Canton, S. Dak.Insane asylum expenses.For the equipment and maintenance of the asylum for insane Indians at Canton, South Dakota, for incidental and all other expenses necessary for its proper conduct and management, including pay of employees, repairs, improvements, and for necessary expense of transporting insane Indians to and from said asylum, $48,500; for horse barn, $4,500; in all, $53,000. 1583 general support and administrationSupport and administration. For general support of Indians and administration of IndianExpenses. property, including pay of employees, $925,000: *Provided*, That a*Provisos*.Detailed report of Five Civilized Tribes expenditures. report shall be made to Congress on the first Monday of December, 1930, by the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes through the Secretary of the Interior showing in detail the expenditure of all moneys from this appropriation on behalf of the said Five Civilized. Tribes: *Provided further*, That the position of Superintendent ofSuperintendent of, placed under civil service rules. the Five Civilized Tribes is hereby included within the competitive classified civil service and shall be subject to civil service laws and rules. Fulfilling treaties with Indians: For the purpose of dischargingFulfilling treaties. obligations of the United States under treaties and agreements with various tribes and bands of Indians as follows: Coeur d’ Alenes, Idaho (article 11, agreement of March 3, 1891),Coeur d’Alenes, Idaho.Vol. 26, p. 1029. $3,900; Bannocks, Idaho (article 10, treaty of July 3, 1868), $7,580;Bannocks, Idaho.Vol. 15, p. 696. Crows, Montana (articles 8 and 10, treaty of May 7, 1868), $7,480;Crows, Mont.Vol. 15, p. 652. Northern Cheyennes and Arapahoes, Montana (article 7, treaty ofNorthern Cheyennes and Arapahoes, Mont.Vol. 19, p. 256. May 10, 1868, and agreement of February 28, 1877), $75,000; Pawnees, Oklahoma (articles 3 and 4, treaty of September 24,Pawnees, Okla.Vol. 11, p. 731; Vol. 27, p. 644. 1857, and article 3, agreement of November 23, 1892), $51,000; Quapaws, Oklahoma (article 3, treaty of May 13, 1833), $2,280.Quapaws, Okla.Vol. 7, p. 425. Sioux of different tribes, including Santee Sioux of Nebraska,Sioux, different tribes.Vol. 15, p. 640; Vol. 19,p. 254. North Dakota, and South Dakota (articles 8 and 13, treaty of April 29, 1868, 15 Stat., p. 635, and Act of February 28, 1877, 19 Stat., p. 254), $390,000; Confederated Bands of Utes (articles 9, 12, and 15, treaty ofUtes, Confederated Bands.Vol. 15, p. 622. March 2, 1868), $57,000; Spokanes, Washington (article 6, agreement of March 18, 1887),Spokanes, Wash.Vol. 27, p. 139. $1,320. Shoshones, Wyoming (articles 8 and 10, treaty of July 3, 1868),Shoshones, Wyo.Vol. 15, pp. 675 , 676. $8,000; In all, for treaty stipulations, not to exceed $603,560. For expenses incident to the administration of the restricted orQuapaw Agency.Administering trust property of Indians under.Vol. 41, p. 415.[U. S. Code, p. 720](/us/usc/p720). trust property of Indians under the Quapaw Indian Agency, $16,000, reimbursable to the United States, as provided in the Act of February 14, 1920 (U. S. C., p. 720,.sec. 413). For general support of Indians and administration of Indian propertyGeneral support, etc., at specified agencies from tribal funds. under the jurisdiction of the following agencies, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the respective tribes, in not to exceed the following sums, respectively: Arizona: Colorado River, $2,500; Fort Apache, $129,000, of whichArizona. $5,000 may be used for construction, repairs, and improvements at the agency plant; Paiute, $7,200; Pima, $3,000; Salt River, $1,000; San Carlos, $82,300; Truxton Canyon, $36,100; in all, $261,100; California: Mission, $500; Round Valley, $5,000; Tule River, $200;California. in all, $5,700; Colorado: Consolidated Ute (Southern Ute, $5,400; Ute Mountain,Colorado. $15,000); in all, $20,400; Idaho: Coeur d’Alene, $15,800; Fort Hall, $27,100; Fort Lapwai,Idaho. $14,800; in all, $57,700; Iowa: Sac and Fox, $600: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriationIowa.*Proviso*.No tax on trust lands. shall be available for the payment of taxes on any lands held m trust by the United States for the benefit of said Indians; Kansas: Pottawatomie, $2,900;Kansas. Michigan: Mackinac, $200;Michigan. Minnesota: Consolidated Chippewa, $1,500; Red Lake, $61,900,Minnesota. payable out of trust funds of Red Lake Indians; in all, $63,400: 1584 Montana.Montana: Blackfeet, $5,000; Flathead, $42,000; Fort Peck, $15,100; Tongue River, $15,300; Rocky Boy, $3,600; in all, $81,000; Nebraska.Nebraska: Omaha, $1,000; Nevada.Nevada: Carson (Pyramid Lake), $5,200; Walker River, $400; Western Shoshone, $16,200; in all, $21,800; New Mexico.New Mexico: Jicarilla, $60,000; Mescalero, $55,000; Navajo, $110,000, to be apportioned among the several Navajo jurisdictions in Arizona and New Mexico; in all, $225,000; North Dakota.North Dakota: Fort Berthold, $5,100; Standing Rock, $41,800; in all, $46,900; Oklahoma.Oldahoma: Ponca (Otoe, $1,200; Ponca, $2,600; Tonkawa, $700), $4,500; Sac and Fox, $3,000; Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache, $60,000; Cheyennes and Arapahoes, $17,100; in all, $84,600; Oregon.Oregon: Klamath, $163,300, of which $10,000 may be used for construction, repair, and improvement of buildings at the agency plant; Umatilla, $9,600; Warm Springs, $30,500; in all, $203,400; South Dakota.South Dakota: Cheyenne River, $92,900; Pine Ridge, $7,000; Lower Brule, $5,100; in all, $105,000; Utah.*Proviso*.State Experimental Farm.Utah: Uintah and Ouray, $15,200: *Provided*, That not to exceed $500 of this amount may be used to pay part of the expenses of the State Experimental Farm, located near Fort Duchesne, Utah, within the. Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation; Washington.Washington: Colville, $33,400; Neah Bay, $5,300; Puyallup, $4,000; Spokane, $19,400; Taholah (Quinaielt), $11,300; Yakima, $37,400; in all, $110,800. Wisconsin.Home for indigent Menominees at Keshena.Wisconsin: Lac du Flambeau, $1,200; Keshena, $56,250, including $4,000 for remodeling an agency building so as to adapt it for use as a home for old and indigent Menominee Indians, and $4,750 for equipment, furniture and furnishings, operation and upkeep, and $5,000 for monthly allowances, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, to such old and indigent members of the tribe as it is impracticable to place in the home and who reside with relatives or friends; in all, $57,450; Wyoming.Wyoming: Shoshone, $73,400. In all, not to exceed $1,437,550. Chippewas in Minnesota.General support, administering property, etc.Vol. 25, p. 645.For general support, administration of property, and promotion of self-support among the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota $80,000, to be paid from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of said Indians, arising under section 7 of the Act entitled “An Act for the relief and civilization of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota,” approved January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645), to be Purposes specified.used exclusively for the purposes following: Not exceeding $50,000 of this amount may be expended for general agency purposes; not Aiding indigent Indians.Condition.exceeding $30,000 may be expended in aiding indigent Chippewa Indians upon the condition that any funds used in support of a member of the tribe shall be reimbursed out of and become a lien against any individual property of which such member may now or hereafter become .seized or possessed, the two preceding requirements not to apply to any old, infirm, or indigent Indian, in the discretion *Proviso*.Amount immediately available.of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided*, That not to exceed $10,000 of the principal funds on deposit to the credit of the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota shall be immediately available for the purpose of aiding indigent Chippewa Indians upon the conditions herein named. Choctaw and Chickasaws.Per capita payments expenses.For the expenses of per capita payments to the enrolled members of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Tribes of Indians, $5,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for said Indians. Five Civilized Tribes.Apportionment of allotments for fiscal year.For the current fiscal year, money may be expended from the tribal funds of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole Tribes for equalization of allotments, per capita, and other payments author-1585ized by law to individual members of the respective tribes, salaries and contingent expenses of the governor of the Chickasaw Nation and chief of the Choctaw Nation and one mining trustee for the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations at salaries at the rate heretoforeSpecified salaries. paid for the said governor and said chief and $2,000 for the said mining trustee, and the chief of the Creek Nation at a salary not to exceed $600 per annum, and one attorney each for the Choctaw and Chickasaw Tribes employed under contract approved by the President under existing law: *Provided*, That the expenses of any of the*Proviso*.Pay restriction. above-named officials shall not exceed $2,500 per annum each for chiefs and governor except in the case of tribal attorneys, whose expenses shall be determined and limited by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, not to exceed $4,000 each. There is hereby authorized to be expended, out of any money nowChoctaw and Chickasaw Nations.Sum authorized for attorneys thereof, in suits in Court of Claims. standing to the credit of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, or to the credit of either of said nations, in the Treasury of the United States, the sum of not exceeding $30,000, to be paid, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, to attorneys for said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, or to the attorneys for either of said Indian nations, employed under the authority of the Act approved June 7, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 537), the paymentsVol. 43, p. 537. to be made in such sums as may be necessary to reimburseReimbursement for expenses, etc. said attorneys for such proper and necessary expenses as may have been incurred or may be incurred in the investigation of records and preparation, institution, and prosecution of suits of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, or of either of said Indian nations, against the United States under the above-mentioned Act of June 7, 1924: *Provided, however*, That the claims of the attorneys*Provisos*.Submission of claims. shall be filed by said attorneys with the Secretary of the Interior and shall be accompanied by the attorneys’ itemized and verified statement of the expenditures for expenses and by proper vouchers, and that the claims so submitted shall be subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That any sumsReimbursable from amount decreed by court. allowed and paid under this Act to the attorneys shall be reimbursable to the credit of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, or to the credit of either of said Indian nations, as the case may be, out of any amount or amounts which may hereafter be decreed by the Court of Claims to said attorneys for their services and expenses in connection with the tribal claims and suits of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, or of either of said Indian nations, under the above-mentioned Act of June 7, 1924. There is hereby authorized to be expended, out of any money nowSeminole Nation.Sum authorized for attorneys thereof, in suits in Court of Claims.Vol. 43, p. 134. standing to the credit of the Seminole Nation of Indians in the Treasury of the United States, the sum of not exceeding $5,000 to be paid, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, to attorneys for said Seminole Nation of Indians employed under the authority of the Act of Congress approved May 20, 1924 (43 Stat., pp. 133–134), the payments to be made in such sums as may be necessaryReimbursement for expenses, etc. to reimburse the attorneys for such proper and necessary expenses as may have been incurred or may be incurred in the investigation of records and preparation, institution, and prosecution of suits of the Seminole Nation of Indians against the United States under the above-mentioned Act of May 20, 1924: *Provided further*,*Provisos*.Submission of claims etc. That the claims of the attorneys shall be filed by said attorneys with the Secretary of the Interior and shall be accompanied by the attorneys’ itemized and verified statement of the expenditures for expenses and by proper vouchers, and that the claims so submitted shall be subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That any sums allowed and 1586Reimbursable from amount decreed by court.paid under this Act to the attorneys shall be reimbursable to the credit of the Seminole Nation out of any amount or amounts which may hereafter be decreed by the Court of Claims to said attorneys for their services and expenses in connection with the Seminole tribal claims and suits under the above-mentioned Act of Mav 20, 1924. Osages, Okla.Agency expenses from trust funds.For the support of the Osage Agency, including repairs to buildings, and pay of tribal officers, the tribal attorney and his stenographer, and employees of said agency, $180,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Osage Tribe of Indians in Oklahoma. Oil and gas production expenses from tribal funds.For necessary expenses in connection with oil and gas production on the Osage Reservation, including salaries of employees, rent of quarters for employees, traveling expenses, printing, telegraphing and telephoning, and purchase, repair, and operation of automobiles, $80,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Osage Tribe of Indians in Oklahoma. Visits by Tribal Council, etc., to Washington, D. C.For expenses incurred in connection with visits to Washington, District of Columbia, by the Osage Tribal Council and other members of said tribe, when duly authorized or approved by the Secretary of the Interior, $10,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Osage Tribe. Confederated Bands of Utes.Distribution to, from tribal principal funds.The sum of $123,000 is hereby appropriated out of the principal funds to the credit of the Confederated Bands of Ute Indians, the sum of $48,000 of said amount for the benefit of the Ute Mountain (formerly Navajo Springs) Band of said Indians in Colorado, and the sum of $45,000 of said amount for the Uintah, White River, and Uncompahgre Bands of Ute Indians in Utah, and the sum of $30,000 of said amount for the Southern Ute Indians in Colorado, which Self support and administering property, from accrued interest, Vol. 37, p. 934.sums shall be charged to said bands, and the Secretary of the Interior is also authorized to withdraw from the Treasury the accrued interest to and including June 30, 1929, on the funds of the said Confederated Bands of Ute Indians appropriated under the Act of March 4, 1913 (37 Stat., p. 934), and to expend or distribute the same for the purpose of administering the property of and promoting self-support among the said Indians, under such regulations as the Secretary *Proviso*.Restriction on road construction.of the Interior may prescribe: *Provided*, That none of the funds in this paragraph shall be expended on road construction unless, wherever practicable, preference shall be given to Indians in the employment of labor on all roads constructed from the sums herein appropriated from the funds of the Confederated Bands of Utes. roads and bridgesRoads and bridges. Red Lake Reservation, Minn.Construction, etc., from Chippewa trust funds.For the construction and repair of roads and bridges on the Red Lake Indian Reservation, including the purchase of material, equipment, and supplies, and the employment of labor, $15,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota: *Provided*,*Proviso*.Indian labor. That Indian labor shall be employed as far as practicable. Santa Clara Reservation, N. Mex.Road to Puye Cliff Ruins.Payment to Harvey Company for constructing.*Ante*, p. 225.Not more than $4,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for repair and maintenance of the road on the Santa Clara Indian Reservation, New Mexico, leading to the Puye Cliff Ruins, contained in the Act of March 7, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 212), shall be available for repayment to the Harvey Company for cost of construction *Proviso*.Admission fee charged.Proceeds to credit of Santa Clara Pueblo.of said road: *Provided*, That an admission fee of not less than 50 cents each for all persons sixteen years of age or over for the Puye Cliff Ruins is authorized and the proceeds from such fee of admission, less the cost of protection and administration of the rums, shall be deposited in the Treasury of the United States to 1587the credit of the Santa Clara Pueblo, and shall bear interest at the rate of 4 per centum. For the construction, repair, and maintenance of roads on IndianConstruction, etc.Roads on reservations not eligible to aid under Federal Highway Act. reservations not eligible to Government aid under the Federal Highway Act, including engineering and supervision and the purchase of material, equipment, supplies, and the employment of Indian labor, $250,000, to be immediately available: *Provided*, That*Proviso*.Cooperation, etc., of local authorities. where practicable the Secretary of the Interior shall arrange with the local authorities to defray the maintenance expenses of roads constructed hereunder, and to cooperate in such construction. For the construction of two bridges on the Menominee Reservation,Menominee Reservations, Wis.Construction of two bridges on. Wisconsin, $6,000, payable from funds on deposit in the Treasury to the credit of the Menominee Tribe. erection of monumentsErection of monuments. The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $25,000 fromOsages, Okla.Memorial to, who died during World Wars.Vol. 43, p. 1162.Balance available. tribal funds of the Osage Indians, made in the Act of March 3, 1925 (43 Stat., p. 1162), for the erection of a monument as a memorial to Indians of that tribe who gave their lives in the recent war with Germany, is hereby made available until June 30, 1930, for the erection of a memorial to Indians of that tribe who served in such war. For the erection of a suitable monument and historical tablets atSioux and Pawnee Indians.Memorial on site of battle between.*Ante*, p. 939. or near the site of the battle between the Sioux and Pawnee Indians in Hitchcock County, Nebraska, pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Act of May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 939), $7,500: *Provided*,*Proviso*.Not available for site. That no part of this appropriation shall be available for the purchase of a site. annuities and per capita paymentsAnnuities, etc. For fulfilling treaties with Senecas of New York: For permanentSenecas, N. Y.Vol. 4, p. 443. annuity in lieu of interest on stock (Act of February 19, 1831, 4 Stat., p. 442), $6,000. For fulfilling treaties with Six Nations of New York: For permanentSix Nations, N. Y.Vol. 7, p. 46. annuity, in clothing and other useful articles (article 6, treaty of November 11, 1794), $4,500. For fulfilling treaties with Choctaws, Oklahoma: For permanentChoctaws, Okla.Vol. 7, pp. 99, 212, 213, 236. annuity (article 2, treaty of November 16, 1805, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $3,000; for permanent annuity for support of light horsemen (article 13, treaty of October 18, 1820, and articleVol. 11, p. 614. 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $600; for permanent annuity for support of blacksmith (article 6, treaty of October 18, 1820, and article 9, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $600; for permanent annuity for education (article 2, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $6,000; for permanent annuity for iron and steel (article 9, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $320; in all, $10,520. To carry out the provisions of the Chippewa treaty of SeptemberSaint Croix Chippewas, Wis.Purchase of land for, etc.Vol. 10, p. 1109. 30, 1854 (10 Stat., p. 1109), $10,000, in part settlement of the amount, $141,000, found due and heretofore approved for the Saint Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin, whose names appear on the final roll prepared by the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to Act of August 1, 1914 (38 Stat., pp. 582–605), and contained in HouseVol. 38, p. 606. Document Numbered 1663, said sum of $10,000 to be expended in the purchase of land or for the benefit of said Indians by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs: *Provided*, That, in the discretion of*Proviso*.Discretionary cash payment. the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, the per capita share of any of said Indians under this appropriation may be paid in cash. 1588 BUREAU OF PENSIONSPensions Bureau. pensions Army and Navy pensions.Army and Navy pensions, as follows: For invalids, widows, minor children, and dependent relatives, Army nurses, and all other pensioners who are now borne on the rolls, or who may hereafter be placed thereon, under the provisions of any and all Acts of *Provisos*.Navy from naval fund.Congress, $221,000,000, to be immediately available: *Provided*, That the appropriation aforesaid for Navy pensions shall be paid from the income of the Navy pension fund, so far as the same shall be Separate accounting.sufficient for that purpose: *Provided further*, That the amount expended under each of the above items shall be accounted for separately. salaries Commissioner, and office personnel.*Post*, p. 1642.For the Commissioner of Pensions and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $1,225,000. special investigations and examinations Investigations, traveling expenses, etc.For expenses of special investigations pertaining to the Bureau of Pensions, including traveling expenses of persons detailed from that bureau for such purpose, purchase of supplies and equipment for field use, copies of records and documents, and reimbursement of cooperating governmental agencies for expenses necessarily incurred in connection with such investigations; also including not to exceed $1,000 for necessary traveling and other expenses of the commissioner or employees of the bureau assigned, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, to official duty in connection with the annual conventions of organized war veterans, $105,000. Examining surgeons.For fees and mileage of examining surgeons engaged in the examination of pensioners and of claimants for pension, for services rendered *Provisos*.Examinations hereafter by one physician, etc.within the fiscal years 1929 and 1930, $300,000: *Provided*, That hereafter all necessary medical examinations of claimants or pensioners not heretofore ordered shall be made by one physician or Vol. 22, p. 175.[U. S. Code, p. 1194](/us/usc/p1194).surgeon, duly appointed under the Act of July 25, 1882, as amended (U. S. C., p. 1194, secs. 71, 72), and duly designated for such examination by the Commissioner of Pensions, except when in the judgment of the said Commissioner the examination should be made by Fee for each examination.more than one: *Provided further*, That the fee paid any such physician making such examination alone, or otherwise, shall be $5 for each examination, foreign or domestic. retirement actRetirement Act. Expenses of Bureau, under.Vol. 41, p. 619; Vol. 44, p. 912.[U. S. Code, p. 1887](/us/usc/p1887).To enable the Bureau of Pensions to perform the duties imposed upon it by the Act entitled “An Act for the retirement of employees in the classified civil service, and for other purposes,” approved May 22, 1920, as amended (U. S. C., p. 1887, secs. 706a, 707a), including personal services, purchase of books, office equipment, stationery, and other supplies, traveling expenses, expenses of medical and other examinations, and including not to exceed $2,200 for compensationActuary, etc. of one actuary, to be fixed by the Commissioner of Pensions with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, and actual necessary travel and other expenses of three members of the Board of Actuaries, $81,000. Government contribution to retirement fund.Vol. 41, p. 619; Vol. 44, p. 912.[U. S. Code, p. 1887](/us/usc/p1887).For financing of the liability of the United States, created by the Act entitled “An Act for the retirement of employees in the classified civil service, and for other purposes,” approved May 22, 1920, and Acts amendatory thereof (U. S. C., p. 1887, sec. 707a), $20,500,000, which amount shall be placed to the credit of the “civil-service retirement and disability fund.” 1589 BUREAU OF RECLAMATIONReclamation Bureau. The following sums are appropriated out of the special fund inPayments from reclamation fund.Vol. 32, p. 388. the Treasury of the United States created by the Act of June 17, 1902, and therein designated “the reclamation fund,” to be available immediately: Commissioner of Reclamation, $10,000; and other personal servicesCommissioner, office personnel, and expenses. in the District of Columbia, $140,000; for office expenses in the District of Columbia, $23,000; in all, $173,000; For expenses, except membership fees, of attendance upon meetingsAttendance at meetings. of technical and professional societies required in connection with official work of the bureau, $1,000 of the unexpended balance of appropriations for this purpose for the fiscal year 1929 is continued available for the fiscal year 1930; For all expenditures authorized by the Act of June 17, 1902All expenses.Vol. 32, p. 388.*Ante*, p. 1563. (32 Stat., p. 388), and Acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto, known as the reclamation law, and all other Acts under which expenditures from said fund are authorized, including notPurposes designated. to exceed $178,000 for personal services and $27,000 for other expenses in the office of the chief engineer, $25,000 for telegraph, telephone, and other communication service, $8,000 for photographing and making photographic prints, $54,000 for personal services, and $12,000 for other expenses in the field legal offices; examination of estimates for appropriations in the field; refunds of overcollections and deposits for other purposes; not to exceed $20,000 for lithographing, engraving, printing, and binding; purchase of ice; purchase of rubber boots for official use by employees; maintenance and operation of horsedrawn and motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles; not to exceed $40,000 for purchase of horse-drawn and motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles; packing, crating, and transportationTransporting effects of employees. (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; payment of damagesDamages to property. caused to the owners of lands or other private property of any kind by reason of the operations of the United States, its officers or employees, in the survey, construction, operation, or maintenance of irrigation works, and which may be compromised by agreement between the claimant and the Secretary of the Interior, or such officers as he may designate; payment for official telephone service in the field hereafter incurred in case of official telephones installed in private houses when authorized under regulations established by the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided*, That no part of said appropriations*Provisos*.Limit on outside headquarters. may be used for maintenance of headquarters for the Bureau of Reclamation outside the District of Columbia except for an office for the chief engineer and staff and for certain field officers of the division of reclamation economics: *Provided further*, That theMedical attendance, etc., for employees. Secretary of the Interior in his administration of the Bureau of Reclamation is authorized to contract for medical attention and service for employees and to make necessary pay-roll deductions agreed to by the employees therefor: *Provided further*, That noRestriction on use for irrigation districts in arrears for charges. part of any sum provided for in this Act for operation and maintenance of any project or division of a project by the Bureau of Reclamation shall be used for the irrigation of any lands within the boundaries of an irrigation district which has contracted with the Bureau of Reclamation and which is in arrears for more than twelve months in the payment of any charges due the United States, and no part of any sum provided for in this Act for such purposeLands in arrears. shall be used for the irrigation of any lands which have contracted with the Bureau of Reclamation and which are in arrears for more 1590than twelve months in the payment of any charges due from said lands to the United States; Examination, etc., of projects operated by irrigation districts, etc.Examination and inspection of projects: For examination of accounts and inspection of the works of various projects and divisions of projects operated and maintained by irrigation districts or water users’ associations, and bookkeeping, accounting, clerical, legal, and other expenses incurred in accordance with contract provisions for the repayment of such expenses by the districts or associations. $40,000; Operation of reserved works.For operation and maintenance of the reserved works of a project or division of a project when irrigation districts, water-users’ associations, or Warren Act contractors have contracted to pay in advance but have failed to pay their proportionate share of the cost of such operation and maintenance, to be expended under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1929 is continued available for the same purpose for the fiscal year 1930; Yuma, Ariz.-Calif.Yuma project, Arizona-California: For operation and maintenance, $275,000; for continuation of construction of drainage, *Proviso*.Operating commercial system.$20,000; in all, $295,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $25,000 from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; Orland, Calif.Orland project, California: For operation and maintenance, $38,000; Grand Valley, Colo.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 228.Grand Valley project, Colorado: Not to exceed $15,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $75,000, for the fiscal year 1929, is hereby made available for continuation of construction during the fiscal year 1930; Boise, Idaho.Use of balance.Vol. 44, p. 958.*Ante*, p. 228.Boise project, Idaho: The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $400,000 for continuation of investigations and construction, Payette division, for the fiscal year 1928 and of the appropriation of $400,000 for continuation of construction for the fiscal year 1929 shall continue available during the fiscal year 1930 for construction Vol. 44, p. 480.Allotments.of the Payette division, and of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this project for the fiscal year 1927 there is reappropriated for operation and maintenance, Payette division, $20,000; for examination and surveys, Payette division, $6,000; for continuation *Proviso*.Use of revenues from Black Canyon power plant.of construction, Arrowrock division, $60,000: *Provided*, That all net revenues derived from the operation of the Black Canyon power plant shall be applied to the repayment of the construction cost: First, of the Deadwood Reservoir; second, the Black Canyon power plant and power system; and third, one-half the cost of the Black Canyon Dam, until the United States shall have been reimbursed for all expenditures made incident thereto. Thereafter all net revenues shall be covered into the reclamation fund unless and until otherwise directed by Congress. No charge shall be made against any irrigation district for the cost of construction of the said Deadwood Reservoir, the Black Canyon power plant and power system, or more than one-half the cost of the Black Canyon Dam; Minidoka, Idaho.Balance available.Vol. 44, p. 958.*Ante*, p. 228.Minidoka project, Idaho: For operation and maintenance, reserved works, $45,000; continuation of construction, gravity extension unit, $300,000, together with $1,200,000 of the unexpended balances of the appropriations for the fiscal years 1928 and 1929 for construction of *Proviso*.Operating commercial system from power revenues.power plant at American Falls: *Provided*, That not to exceed $50,000 from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930, for the operation of the commercial system; and not to exceed $175,000 from power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930 for continuation of construction, South Side Division, and Construction, etc.for enlargement of the power system; in all, $345,000. 1591 Milk River project, Montana: For operation and maintenance,Milk River, Mont. Chinook and Malta divisions, $17,000; continuation of construction, $17,000; in all, $34,000; Sun River project, Montana: For operation and maintenance,Sun River, Mont. $20,000; continuation of construction, $500,000; in all, $520,000: *Provided*, That the appropriation for continuation of construction*Provisos*.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 229.Control of works by water users. for the fiscal year 1929 shall remain available for the fiscal year 1930, for the purposes for which originally appropriated: *Provided further*, That on or before July 1, 1929, notice shall be given by the Secretary of the Interior requiring the water users to assume the control of the constructed works on January 1, 1931, and to commence payment of construction charges in accordance with the contract of June 22, 1926, between the United States and the Greenfields irrigation district; Lower Yellowstone project, Montana-North Dakota: For completionLower Yellowstone, Mont.-N. Dak. of drainage system, $195,000; North Platte project, Nebraska-Wyoming: Not to exceed $75,000North Platte, Nebr.-Wyo. from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; Newlands project, Nevada: That such portion as may be necessaryNewlands, Nev.Boring of test wells from balance for water storage reservoir. of the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $50,000 for the survey and examination of water storage reservoir sites on the headwaters of the Truckee and Carson Rivers, made available under the*Ante*, p. 902. provisions of the Second Deficiency Act, 1928 (Public, Numbered 563, Session Laws, first session, Seventieth Congress, page 902, Newlands project, Nevada), shall also be available for the boring of test wells in the Truckee Meadows, Washoe County, near the city of Reno, Nevada. Carlsbad project, New Mexico: For operation and maintenance,Carlsbad, N. Mex.*Proviso*.Avalon Reservoir enlargement.Railroad tracks, to be relocated.*Ante*, p. 902. $50,000: *Provided*, That no part of the appropriation of $250,000 contained in the Act of May 29, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 902), for beginning the enlargement of Avalon Reservoir shall be available until contract is entered into between the Secretary of the Interior and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway System, whereby said system agrees to pay one-half of the cost of relocating the tracks and right of way of said system where made necessary by said enlargement of the reservoir. Such appropriation of $250,000 shall continue available for the fiscal year 1930; Rio Grande project, New Mexico-Texas: For operation and maintenance,Rio Grande, N. Mex.-TexVol. 44, p. 959. $250,000, together with $125,000 of the unexpended balances of the appropriations available for continuation of construction during the fiscal year 1929; Owyhee project, Oregon: For continuation of construction,Owyhee, Oreg. $2,000,000; Baker project, Oregon: The unexpended balance of the appropriationBaker, Oreg.Reappropriation.*Ante*, p. 229. for this project for the fiscal year 1929 is reappropriated and made available for the same purpose for the fiscal year 1930; Vale project, Oregon: For operation and maintenance, $6,000;Vale, Oreg.Warm Springs reservoir. for the purchase of a proportionate interest in the existing storage reservoir of the Warm Springs project, $230,000; in all, $236,000; Klamath project, Oregon-California: For operation and maintenance,Klamath, Oreg.- Calif. $40,000; continuation of construction, $301,000: *Provided*,*Proviso*.Refund to Tule Lake lessees.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 229. That the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $30,000 for the fiscal year 1929 for refunds to lessees of marginal lands, Tule Lake, which lands because of flooding could not be seeded prior to June 1, 1927, and/or June 1, 1928, shall remain available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1930, and shall also be available for like refunds for lands which could not be seeded prior to June 1, 1929; in all, $341,000; 1592 Belle Fourche, S. Dak.Belle Fourche project, South Dakota: For continuation of construction, $335,000; Salt Lake Basin, Utah.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 229.Salt Lake Basin project, Utah, first division: The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $1,750,000 for construction of Echo Reservoir and Weber-Provo Canal, for the fiscal year 1929, shall remain available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1930; Yakima, Wash.Yakima project, Washington: For operation and maintenance, $295,000; continuation of construction, $1,000,000; in all, $1,295,000; Kittitas division.Yakima project (Kittitas division), Washington: For operation and maintenance, $20,000; for continuation of construction, $1,112,000:*Proviso*.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 230. *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of $138,000 of the appropriation of $1,500,000 contained in the Act making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year 1929 (45 Stat., p. 277), shall remain available during the fiscal year 1930 for such continuation of construction; in all, $1,132,000; Riverton, Wyo.Riverton project, Wyoming: For operation and maintenance, $50,000; continuation of construction under force account, $511,000: Provisos.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 230.Use of power revenues.*Provided*, That the unexpended balance of the appropriation for continuation of construction, for the fiscal year 1929, shall remain available for the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $20,000 from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; in all, $561,000; Shoshone, Wyo.*Provisos*.Shoshone project, Wyoming: For continuation of construction Willwood division, $44,000; for operation and maintenance, Frannie Balance available, Willwood division.*Ante*, p. 230.division, $3,000; Willwood division, $16,000; in all, $63,000: *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of the appropriation for drainage construction, Willwood division, for the fiscal year 1929, shall remain Garland division drainage.available for the same purpose for the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That the unexpended balances of the appropriations for drainage construction, Garland division, for the fiscal years 1927, 1928, and 1929, shall remain available for the same purpose for the Bower revenue.Operating commercial system.fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $20,000 from power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1930 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; and not to exceed $25,000 from power revenues shall be available during the Transmission lines.Distribution of power revenues.fiscal year 1930 for the construction of transmission lines: *Provided further*, That the net revenues from the operation of the Shoshone power plant shall be applied, first, to the repayment of the construction cost of the power system; second, to the repayment of the construction cost of the Shoshone Dam; and third, thereafter such net revenues shall be covered into the reclamation fund; Secondary projects.Secondary projects: For cooperative and general investigations, $75.000; Development of new projects; etc.Investigations to determine economic conditions, etc.Balance available.Vol. 44, p. 930.The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $100,000 for the fiscal year 1928 for investigations necessary to determine the economic conditions and financial feasibility of new projects and for investigations and other activities relating to the reorganization, settlement of lands, and financial adjustments of existing projects, including examination of soils, classification of land, land-settlement activities, including advertising in newspapers and other publications, and obtaining general economic and settlement data, is hereby *Proviso*.Expenditures supplementary to appropriation for projects.made available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1930: *Provided*, That the expenditures from this appropriation for any reclamation project shall be considered as supplementary to the appropriation for that project and shall be accounted for and returned to the reclamation fund as other expenditures under the Reclamation Act; 1593 Refunds of construction charges: The unexpended balance of theRefunds of construction charges on permanently unpro ductive lands.*Ante*, p. 19.Vol. 44, p. 647.[U. S. Code, Supp. I, p. 265](/us/usc/p265). appropriation of $100,000 contained in the First Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1928, for refunds of construction charges theretofore paid on permanently unproductive lands excluded from the Federal reclamation projects specified in the Act approved May 25, 1926 (U. S. C., Supp. I, p. 265, sec. 423a), in accordance with section 42 of said Act, is hereby made available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1930; That the Secretary of the Interior be, and he hereby is, authorizedNorth Platte project, Nebr.-Wyo.Farmers’ Irrigation District credited for expenses in connection with. and directed to credit the Farmers’ Irrigation District with the sum of $2,376.45, as of January 1, 1927, which represents 50 per cent of the expenses incurred by said district in operating and maintaining the Nine Mile Drain from January 1 to June 30, 1926, under contract with said district dated June 16, 1917, in connection with the North Platte project, Nebraska-Wyoming; Under the provisions of this Act no greater sum shall be expended,Expenditures limited to specific allotments. nor shall the United States be obligated to expend during the fiscal year 1930, on any reclamation project appropriated for herein, an amount in excess of the sum herein appropriated therefor, nor shall the whole expenditures or obligations incurred for all of such projects for the fiscal year 1930 exceed the whole amount in the “reclamation fund” for the fiscal year; Ten per centum of the foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeablyInterchangeable appropriations. for expenditures on the reclamation projects named; but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said projects, except that should existingEmergency flood repairs. works or the water supply for lands under cultivation be endangered by floods or other unusual conditions an amount sufficient to make necessary emergency repairs shall become available for expenditure by further transfer of appropriation from any of said projects upon approval of the Secretary of the Interior; Whenever, during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, the CommissionerUse of motor vehicles for travel, etc. of the Bureau of Reclamation shall find that the expenses of travel, including the local transportation of employees to and from their homes to the places where they are engaged on construction or operation and maintenance work, can be reduced thereby, he may authorize the payment of not to exceed 3 cents per mile for a motor cycle or 7 cents per mile for an automobile used for necessary official business; Total, from reclamation fund, $7,978,000. To defray the cost of operating and maintaining the ColoradoYuma project, Ariz.-Calif.Colorado River front work adjacent to.Vol. 44, p. 1021. River front work and levee system adjacent to the Yuma Federal irrigation project in Arizona and California, subject only to section 4 of the Act entitled “An Act authorizing the construction, repair, and preservation of certain public works on rivers and harbors, and for other purposes,” approved January 21, 1927 (44 Stat., p. 1010), $100,000, to be immediately available. GEOLOGICAL SURVEYGeological Survey. salaries For the Director of the Geological Survey and other personalDirector, and office personnel. services in the District of Columbia, $134,800; general expensesGeneral expenses. For every expenditure requisite for and incident to the authorizedAuthorizations for all services, etc.*Ante*, p. 1563.Vehicles, etc. work of the Geological Survey, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, including not to exceed $30,000 for the purchase and exchange, and not to exceed $50,000 for the 1594hire, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled and horse-drawm passenger-carrying vehicles for field use only by geologists, topographers, engineers, and land classifiers, and the Geological Survey is authorized to exchange unserviceable and worn-out passenger-carrying and freight-carrying vehicles as part payment Travel by motor vehicles.for new freight-carrying vehicles, and whenever, during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, the Director of the Geological Survey shall find that the expense of travel can be reduced thereby, he may authorize the payment of not to exceed 3 cents per mile for a motor cycle or 7 cents per mile for an automobile used for official business and including not to exceed $4,000 for necessary traveling expenses of the Director and members of the Geological Survey acting under Attendance at meetings.his direction, for attendance upon meetings of technical, professional, and scientific societies when required in connection with the authorized work of the Geological Survey, to be expended under the regulations from time to time prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, and under the following heads: Topographic surveys.For topographic surveys in various portions of the United States, $635,000, of which amount not to exceed $300,000 may be expended *Provisos*.Restriction on cooperative work with States, etc.for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended in cooperation with States or municipalities except upon the basis of the State or municipality bearing all of the expense incident thereto in excess of such an amount as is necessary for the Geological Survey to perform its share of standard topographic surveys, such share of the Geological Amount for cooperation.Survey in no case exceeding 50 per centum: *Provided further*, That $497,000 of this amount shall be available only for such cooperation with States or municipalities; Shenandoah National Park, Va.Topographic survey of boundaries of proposed.Vol. 43, p. 958.For a topographic survey of the boundaries of the proposed Shenandoah National Park in the State .of Virginia, for expenditure by the Geological Survey under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; the computation and adjustment of control data; the office drafting and publication of the resulting maps; the purchase of equipment, not to exceed $700 for the purchase and not to exceed $1,000 for the hire, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for field use; and for the securing of such aerial photographs as are needed to make the field surveys, to be immediately available, $45,000; Geologic surveys.For geologic surveys in the various portions of the United States and chemical and physical researches relative thereto, $350,000, of which not to exceed $260,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Volcanologic surveys, etc., Hawaii.For volcanologic surveys, measurements, and observatories in Hawaii, including subordinate stations elsewhere, $21,000; Alaska mineral resources.For continuation of the investigation of the mineral resources of Alaska, $67,500, to be available immecliatelv, of which amount not to exceed $29,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Water supply.Investigations, etc.For gauging streams and determining the water supply of the United States, the investigation of underground currents and artesian wells, and the preparation of reports upon the best methods Gauging stations.of utilizing the water resources, $225,000; for operation and maintenance of the Lees Ferry, Arizona, gauging station and other basegauging stations in the Colorado River drainage, $50,000; in all, $275,000, of which amount not to exceed $90,000 may be expended for *Provisos*.Cooperation expenses with States, etc.personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended in cooperation with States or municipalities except upon the basis of the State or municipality bearing all of the expense incident thereto in excess 1595of such an amount as is necessary for the Geological Survey to perform its share of general water-resource investigations, such share.of the Geological Survey in no case exceeding 50 per centum: *Provided further*, That $157,500 of this amount shall be availableAmount for cooperation. only for such cooperation with States or municipalities; For the examination and classification of lands with respect toClassifiying lands for enlarged homesteads, stock raising, etc. mineral character, water resources, and agricultural utility as required by the public land laws and for related administrative operations; for the preparation and publication of land classification maps and reports; for engineering supervision of power permits and grants under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior; and for performance of work of the Federal Power Commission, $180,000, of which amount not to exceed $120,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; For engraving and printing geologic and topographic mans,Geologic maps. $107,000; For preparation of the illustrations of the Geological Survey,Illustrations. $20,500; For the enforcement of the provisions of the Acts of OctoberNonmetallic mineral mining Acts.Enforcing provisions of.Vol. 38, p. 741; Vol. 40 p. 297; Vol. 41, p. 437, 1363.U. S. Code, pp. 963, 964,1595, 1596. 20, 1914 (U. S. C., p. 1595, sec. 435), October 2, 1917 (U. S. C., p. 963, sec. 141), February 25, 1920 (U. S. C., p. 964, sec. 181), and March 4, 1921 (U. S. C., p. 1596, sec. 444), and other Acts relating to the mining and recovery of minerals on Indian and public lands and naval petroleum reserves; and for every other expense incident thereto, including supplies, equipment, expenses of travel and subsistence, the construction, maintenance, and repair of necessary camp buildings and appurtenances thereto, $250,000, of which amount not to exceed $33,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; During the fiscal year 1930 the head of any department or independentScientific investigations with Departments, etc., by the Bureau. establishment of the Government having funds available for scientific and technical investigations and requiring cooperative work by the Geological Survey on scientific and technical investigations within the scope of the functions of that bureau and which it is unable to perform within the limits of its appropriations may, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, transfer to theTransfer of funds. Geological Survey such sums as may be necessary to carry on such investigations. The Secretary of the Treasury shall transfer on the books of the Treasury Department any sums which may be authorized hereunder, and such amounts shall be placed to the credit of the Geological Survey for the performance of work for the department or establishment from which the transfer is made: *Provided*, That*Proviso*.Expenditure of funds transferred. any sums transferred by any department or independent establishment of the Government to the Geological Survey for cooperative work in connection with this appropriation may be expended in the same manner as sums appropriated herein may be expended; During the fiscal years 1929 and 1930, upon the request of theAerial photographs.Authorized for topographic maps, from Army and Navy aviators. Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of War or the Secretary of the Navy is authorized to furnish aerial photographs required for topographic mapping projects, in so far as the furnishing of such photographs will be economical to the Federal Government and does not conflict with military or naval operations or the other parts of the regular training program of the Army and Navy flying services, and the Secretary of the Interior is authorized to reimburse the WarReimbursement. or Navy Department for the cost of making the photographs, and the Department of the Interior is authorized to furnish copies to any State, county, or municipal agency cooperating with the Federal Government in the mapping project for which the photographs were taken. In the event that the War or Navy Department is unable toContracts with civilians. furnish such photographs in time to meet the needs for which they 1596are requested, the Geological Survey is authorized to contract with civilian aerial photographic concerns for the furnishing of such photographs; Transporting personal effects of employees changing stations.Appropriations herein made shall be available for payment of the costs of packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; Total, United States Geological Survey, $2,085,800. NATIONAL PARK SERVICENational Park Service. Director, and office personnel.Accounting service.For the Director of the National Park Service and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including accounting services in checking and verifying the accounts and records of the various operators, licensees, and permittees conducting utilities and other enterprises within the national parks and monuments, $80,830. Bryce Canyon, Utah.Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah: For administration, protection, and maintenance, $6,300; for construction of physical improvements, $19,800, including not exceeding $8,200 for the construction of buildings, of which $4,000 shall be available for an employee’s residence and $3,600 for two comfort stations; in all, $26,100. Crater Lake, Oreg.Crater Lake National Park, Oregon: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $800 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $42,000; for construction of physical improvements, $17,800, of which not exceeding $2,600 shall be available for a ranger station, $6,000 for a bunkhouse and mess hall, and $2,000 for a comfort station; in all, $59,800. General Grant, Calif.General Grant National Park, California: For administration, protection, and maintenance, $15,650. Glacier, Mont.Glacier National Park, Montana: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including necessary repairs to the roads from Glacier Park Station through the Blackfeet Indian Reservation to various points in the boundary line of the Glacier National Park and the international boundary, including not exceeding $800 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, including $15,000 for fire prevention, $183,000; for construction of physical improvements, $36,400, including not exceeding $13,860, for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $3,235 shall be available for a residence for the chief mechanic, $5,000 for a residence for the United States Commissioner, $4,055 for fire caches and three fire lookout towers, $310 for the completion of a bunk house, $200 for the completion of a mess house, $600 for the completion of a duplex cottage, and $10,350 for one-third of the cost of constructing a telephone line partly outside the park boundary; in all, $219,400. Grand Canyon, Ariz.Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,000 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $123,000; for construction of physical improvements, $22,000, including not exceeding $9,050 for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $2,250 shall be available for a residence building, $3,800 for two comfort stations, and $3,000 for a ranger cabin; in all, $145,000. Hawaii;Hawaii National Park: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $500 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carry-1597ing vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, and including not exceeding $6,000 for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $2,000 shall be available for the construction of a ranger .station, $2,500 for a ranger cottage, and $1,000 for the completion of a ranger cottage to cost not to exceed $2,500; in all, $27,400. Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas: For administration, protection,Hot Springs, Ark. maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $1,400 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motordriven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work; in all, $70,900: *Provided*, That so much as may be necessary out of “Proceeds sales*Provisos*.Reserve Avenue.Paving, etc., from sales of town lots. of town lots, Hot Springs Reservation” is hereby made available for the paving or oiling of that portion of Reserve Avenue bordering Hot Spring National Park and blocks 27, 81, 82, 83, 84, and those portions of Laurel and Spring Streets bordering block 82 on which is located the Government free bathhouse in the city of Hot Springs, Arkansas: *Provided further*, That the said city of Hot Springs orAbutting owners to pay one-half. abutting property owners shall provide for the payment of one-half of the cost thereof. Lafayette National Park, Maine: For administration, protection,Lafayette, Me. maintenance, and improvement, including $2,900 for George B. Dorr*Ante*, p. 1083. as superintendent, and including not exceeding $1,300 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, not exceeding $7,500 for repairs, alterations, and improvements in the Homans residence and the Homans farmhouse, and not exceeding $3,000 for the construction of an equipment storage building, $52,600. Lassen Volcanic National Park, California: For administration,Lassen Volcanic, Calif. protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,250 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $19,500; for construction of physical improvements, $5,800, including not exceeding $4,300 for the construction of buildings; in all, $25,300. Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: For administration, protection,Mesa Verde, Colo. and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,725 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $48,100; for construction of physical improvements, $8,900, including not exceeding $6,050 for the construction of buildings, of which $3,550 shall be available for two ranger stations, $2,500 for a road maintenance camp, and not exceeding $2,100 for the onstruction of a telephone line; in all, $57,000. Mount McKinley National Park, Alaska: For administration,Mount McKinley, Alaska. protection, maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $11,400 for the construction of buildings, of which $8,500 shall be available for a residence for the superintendent; in all, $40,000. Mount Rainier National Park, Washington: For administration,Mount Rainier, Wash. protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $2,300 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $94,800; for construction of physical improvements $27,800, including not exceeding $15,300 for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $2,200 shall be available for an employee’s cottage, $3,000 for an employees’ dormitory, $4,000 for a warehouse, $3,600 for a checking station, $2,000 for the installation of a heating plant in the Long-1598mire community building, and including not exceeding $10,000 for camp ground development at Yakima Park; in all, $122,600. Platt, Okla.Platt National Park, Oklahoma: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement, $16,200. Rocky Mountain, Colo.Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $l,30G for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of, the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $82,400; for construction of physical improvements, $13,600, including not exceeding $7,50C for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $2,000 shall be available for a stable, and $4,000 for employees’ quarters; in all. $96,000. Sequoia, Calif.Sequoia National Park, California: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,200 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, and including not to exceed $10,000 for fire prevention, $105,000; for construction of physical improvements, $25,000, including not exceeding $7,400 for the construction of buildings, of which not exceeding $2,000 shall be available for a warehouse, $3,000 for an employee’s cottage, and $1,700 for a comfort station; in all, $130,000. Wind Cave, S. Dak.Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement, $13,500. Yellowstone, Wyo.Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $7,500 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger- carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, not exceeding $8,400 for maintenance of the road in the forest reserve leading out of the park from the east boundary, not exceeding $7,500 for maintenance of the road in the forest reserve leading out of the park from the south boundary, and including feed for buffalo and other animals and salaries of buffalo keepers, $420,000; for construction of physical improvements, $33,000, including not exceeding $18,900 for extension of sewers and sanitary systems and garbage-disposal facilities, not exceeding $5,000 for auto camps, and not exceeding $12,800 for the construction of buildings, including not exceeding $2,000 for a bunkhouse; in all, $453,000. Yosemite, Calif.Yosemite National Park, California: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $3,500 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, not exceeding $3,200 for maintenance of that part of the Wawona Road in the Sierra National Forest between the park boundary two miles north of Wawona and the park boundary near the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees, and not exceeding $2,000 for maintenance of the road in the Stanislaus National Forest connecting the Tioga Road with the Hetch Fletchy Road near Mather Station, and including not exceeding $10,000 for fire prevention and including necessary expenses of a comprehensive study of the problems relating to the use and enjoyment of the Yosemite National Park and the preservation of its natural features, $325,000; for construction of physical improvements, $87,360, of which not to exceed $4,000 shall be available for a ranger station and barn at Glacier Point, $14,100 for three employees’ cottages, and not to exceed $4,000 for payment of balance of purchase price of electric transmission line constructed in the park in 1925 by the San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation under contract with the 1599Department of the Interior, dated May 21, 1924, and payments heretofore made to said corporation toward purchase of said electric transmission line under the contract hereinbefore referred to by supplying surplus electric energy produced by the Government hydroelectric plant are hereby authorized and confirmed; in all, $412,360: *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of the appropriation of*Proviso*.Camp ground facilities at Glacier Point.Balance available.*Ante*, p. 236. $65,000 for the construction of water supply and camp ground facilities at Glacier Point contained in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1929 shall remain available until June 30, 1930. Zion National Park, Utah: For administration, protection, andZion, Utah. maintenance, including not exceeding $2,000 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $28,500; for construction of physical improvements, $9,800, including not exceeding $6,500 for the construction of buildings, of which $5,000 shall be available for an employee’s cottage; in all, $38,300. National monuments: For administration, protection, maintenance,National monuments.Administration, etc. preservation, and improvement of the national monuments, including not exceeding $550 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the custodians and employees in connection with general monument work, and including $5,000 for the construction of two employees’ quarters at Petrified Forest National Monument, $1,000 for an addition to employees’ quarters at Montezuma Castle National Monument, and $2,500 for an employee’s residence at Tumacacori National Monument, and $2,500 for an employee’s residence at Chaco Canyon National Monument, $46,000. Carlsbad Cave National Monument, New Mexico: For administration,Carlsbad Cave, N. Mex. protection, maintenance, development and preservation, including not exceeding $800 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general monument work, $59,500; for construction of physical improvements, $40,500 including not exceeding $1,500 for an addition to the office building, $4,000 for a power house, $12,000 for additional water supply and water storage, $12,000 for a sewage disposal plant, and $500 for a garage to be constructed in Carlsbad, New Mexico; in all, $100,000: *Provided*, That the Secretary of the Interior is authorized*Proviso*.Acceptance of site for superintendent’s residence. to accept that certain parcel of land in the town of Carlsbad, New Mexico, which has been tendered to the United States of America in fee simple, as a donation, for the site of superintendent’s residence, and the appropriation of $5,000 for the construction of a superintendent’sSum available.*Ante*, p. 236. residence, contained in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1929 shall remain available until June 30, 1930. To enable the Secretary of the Interior to carry out the provisionsShenandoah, Mam. moth Cave, and Great Smoky Mountain Parks.Establishment of.Vol. 43, p. 958; Vol. 44, pp. 616, 635.[U. S. Code, p. 1936](/us/usc/p1936). of the Act entitled “An Act for the securing of lands in the southern Appalachian Mountains and in the Mammoth Cave regions of Kentucky for perpetual preservation as national parks,” approved February 21, 1925 (43 Stat., pp. 958–959), the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the establishment of the Shenandoah National Park in the State of Virginia and the Great Smoky Mountain National Park in the States of North Carolina and Tennessee, and for other purposes,” approved May 22, 1926 (U. S. C., p. 1936, sec. 403), and the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the establishment of the Mammoth Cave National Park in the State of Kentucky, and for other purposes,” approved May 25, 1926 (U. S. C., p. 1936, sec, 404), includ-1600ing personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses of members and employees of the commission, Balance available.*Ante*, p. 236.printing and binding, and other necessary incidental expenses, $3,000, and the unexpended balance of appropriations for the abovementioned purposes for the fiscal year 1929 shall continue available during the fiscal year 1930. Roads, trails, etc.Repairing damages by unavoidable causes.For reconstruction, replacement, and repair of roads, trails, bridges, buildings, and other physical improvements in national parks or national monuments that are damaged or destroyed by flood, fire, storm, or other unavoidable causes during the fiscal year Fighting forest fires.1930, and for fighting forest fires in national parks or other areas administered by the National Park Service, or fires that endanger such areas, and for replacing buildings or other physical improvements that have been destroyed by forest fires within such areas, Diversions authorized.$20,000, together with not to exceed $60,000 to be transferred upon the approval of the Secretary of the Interior from the various appropriations for national parks and national monuments herein contained, any such diversions of appropriations to be reported to *Provisos*.Limit on use.Congress in the annual Budget: *Provided*, That these funds shall not be used for any precautionary fire protection or patrol work Allotment only for incurred obligations.prior to actual occurrence of the fire: *Provided further*, That the allotment of these funds to the various national parks or areas administered by the National Park Service as may be required for firefighting purposes shall be made by the Secretary of the Interior, and then only after the obligation for the expenditure has been incurred. Amounts immediately available.*Provisos*.Limitation on expenditure prior to July 1, 1929.The total of the foregoing amounts shall be immediately available in one fund for the National Park Service: *Provided*, That the Secretary of the Interior shall not authorize for expenditure prior to July 1, 1929, any of the amounts herein appropriated except those for construction of physical improvements, for tree-disease and insect-control work in Crater Lake, Mesa Verde, and Lafayette National Parks, and for administration, protection, and maintenance Interchangeable appropriations limited.of Bryce Canyon National Park: *Provided further*, That in the. settlement of the accounts of the National Park Service the amount herein made available for each national park and other main headings shall not be exceeded, except that 10 per centum of the foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeably for expenditures in the various national parks named, and in the national monuments, but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said parks or monuments or for any Report to Congress.particular item within a park or monument: *Provided further*, That any interchange of appropriations hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. Acquisition of privately owned lands, etc., within parks and monuments.Vol. 25, p. 357.[U. S. Code, p. 1302](/us/usc/p1302).For the acquisition of privately owned lands and/or standing timber within the boundaries of existing national parks and national monuments by purchase or by condemnation under the provisions of the Act of August 1, 1888 (U. S. C., p. 1302, sec. 257), whenever in the opinion of the Secretary of the Interior acquisition by condemnation proceedings is necessary or advantageous to the Government, such condemnation proceedings not to be resorted to for acquisition of lands in Acadia, Glacier, Grand Canyon, Great Smoky, Hot Springs, Platt or Yellowstone National Parks not leased to others but occupied by the owner and used exclusively for residence Subject to equal amount from donations.*Provisos*.Additional land authorized when matched with outside funds.or religious purposes by such owner, $250,000, to be expended only when matched by equal amounts by donation from other sources for the same purpose, to be available until expended: *Provided*, That in addition to the amount herein appropriated the Secretary of the Interior may incur obligations and enter into contracts for additional acquisition of privately owned lands and/or standing timber in the existing national parks and national monuments not exceeding 1601a total of $2,750,000 as matching funds from outside sources are donated for the same purpose, and his action in so doing shall be considered contractual obligations of the Federal Government: *Provided further*,Reimbursement of future donor. That the sum herein appropriated and the appropriations herein authorized shall be available to reimburse any future donor of privately owned lands and/or standing timber within the boundaries of any existing national park or national monument to the extent of one-half the actual purchase price thereof: *Provided further*,Lease of purchased lands to grantor. That as part consideration for the purchase of lands, the Secretary of the Interior may, in his discretion and upon such conditions as he deems proper, lease lands purchased to the grantors for periods, however, not to exceed the life of the particular grantor, and the matching of funds under the provisions hereof shall not be governed by any cash value placed upon such leases: *Provided further*,Payment of expenses incident to purchase, etc. That appropriations heretofore and herein made and authorized for the purchase of privately owned lands and/or standing timber in the national parks and national monuments shall be available for the payment in full of expenses incident to the purchase of said lands and/or standing timber. Construction, and so forth, of roads and trails: For the construction,Roads and trails.Construction, etc., of, in parks and monuments.Special authorizations. reconstruction, and improvement of roads and trails, inclusive of necessary bridges, in national parks and monuments under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior, including the roads from Glacier Park Station through the Blackfeet Indian Reservation to various points in the boundary line of the Glacier National Park and the international boundary, and the grand Canyon Highway from the National Old Trails Highway to the south boundary of the Grand Canyon National Park as authorized by the Act approvedVol. 43, p. 423. June 5, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 423), and including that part of the Wawona Road in the Sierra National Forest between the Yosemite National Park boundary two miles north of Wawona and the park boundary near the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees, and that part of the Yakima Park Highway between the Mount Ranier National Park boundary and connecting with the Cayuse Pass State Highway, to be immediately available and remain available until expended, $5,000,000, which includes $4,000,000, the amount of the contractual authorization contained in the Act making appropriations for the Department of*Ante*, p. 237. the Interior for the fiscal year 1929, approved March 7, 1928 (45. Stat., pp. 237, 238): *Provided*, That not to exceed $18,000 of the*Provisos*.Services in the District. amount herein appropriated may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia during the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*,Contracts for approved projects deemed Federal obligations. That in addition to the amount herein appropriated the Secretary of the. Interior may also approve projects, incur obligations, and enter into contracts for additional work not exceeding a total of $2,500,000, and his action in so doing shall be deemed a contractual obligation of the Federal Government for the payment of the cost thereof and appropriations hereafter made for the construction of roads in national parks and monuments shall be considered available for the purpose of discharging the obligation so created. For the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the Act approvedAbsaroka and Gallatin National Forests.Additions to, for winter feed facilities of game animals.*Ante*, p. 603.[U. S. Code, Supp. I, p. 77](/us/usc/p77). May 18, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 603), entitled “An Act authorizing an appropriation to enable the Secretary of the Interior to carry out the provisions of the Act of May 26, 1926 (U. S. C., Supp. I, p. 77, sec. 37), to make additions to the Absaroka and Gallatin National Forests and the Yellowstone National Park, and to improve and extend the winter-feed facilities of the elk, antelope, and other game animals of Yellowstone National Park and adjacent land,” $75,000, to be available until expended: *Provided*, That the total expenditures from*Proviso*.Expenses not to exceed combined total of private, etc., agencies. this appropriation shall not exceed the combined total of the sums 1602Vol. 44, p. 655.contributed by private or other agencies under the provisions of clause
(a)of section 1 of the Act of May 26, 1926, and the appraised values of land donated or bequeathed under the provisions of clause
(b)of section 1 of said Act. Use forbidden where camp-ground privileges are charged for.None of the appropriations for the National Park Service, whenever made, shall be available for expenditure within any park or national monument wherein a charge is made or collected by the Park Service for camp-ground privileges. Transporting personal effects of employees, on changing stations.Appropriations herein made for national parks shall be available for payment of traveling expenses, including the costs of packing, crating, and transportation (including dray age) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. BUREAU OF EDUCATIONEducation Bureau. salaries Commissioner, and office personnel.For the Commissioner of Education and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $230,960. general expensesGeneral expenses. Travel, attendance at meetings, etc.For necessary traveling expenses of the commissioner and employees acting under his direction, including attendance at meetings of educational associations, societies, and other organizations; for Distributing documents.compensation not to exceed $1,200 of employees in field service; for purchase, distribution, and exchange of educational documents, motion-picture films, and lantern slides; collection, exchange, and cataloguing of educational apparatus and appliances, articles of school furniture and models of school buildings illustrative of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education, and repairing the same; and other expenses not herein provided for, $11,000. All other expenses.For all expenses, including personal service in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of supplies, traveling expenses, printing, and all other incidental expenses not included in the Study of land grant agricultural colleges, etc.foregoing, to enable the Secretary of the Interior, through the Bureau of Education, at a total cost of not to exceed $117,000, to make a study of the organization, administration, and work of the landgrantVol. 12, p. 503; Vol. 26, p. 417; Vol. 34, p. 1281.[U. S. Code, pp. 111–114](/us/usc/p111–114). institutions established and endowed by Acts approved July 2, 1862 (U. S. C., pp. 111–114, secs. 301–308), August 30, 1890 (U. S. C., pp. 113–114, secs. 321–328), March 4, 1907 (U. S. C., p. 113, sec. 322), and Acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto, $8,000: *Provisos*.Balances available.*Provided*, That the unexpended balances of the appropriations for these purposes for the fiscal years 1928 and 1929 shall remain available Employment of specialists, etc.for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That specialists and experts for this investigation may be employed at rates to be fixed by the Secretary of the Interior to correspond to those established by the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and without reference to the Civil Service Act of January 16, 1883. Secondary schools.Study of organization, work, etc., of.For all expenses, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase and rental of equipment, purchase of supplies, traveling expenses, printing, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, to enable the Secretary of the Interior, through the Bureau of Education, at a total cost of not to exceed $225,000, to make a study of the organization, administration, financing, and work of secondary schools and of their *Provisos*.Employment of specialists, etc.articulation with elementary and higher education, $50,000: *Provided*, That specialists and experts for temporary service in this investigation may be employed at rates to be fixed by the Secretary 1603of the Interior to correspond to those established by the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and without reference to the Civil Service Act of January 16, 1883. work in alaskaAlaska. Education in Alaska: To enable the Secretary of the Interior, inEducation of natives. his discretion and under his direction, to provide for the education and support of the Eskimos, Aleuts, Indians, and other natives of Alaska, including necessary traveling expenses of pupils to and from industrial boarding schools in Alaska; erection, purchase, repair, and rental of school buildings; textbooks and industrial apparatus; pay and necessary traveling expenses of superintendents, teachers, physicians,Specified allotments. and other employees; repair, equipment, maintenance, and operation of United States ship Boxer; and all other necessary miscellaneous expenses which are not included under the above special heads, including $299,400 for salaries in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, $16,000 for traveling expenses, $125,000 for equipment, supplies, fuel, and light, $17,500 for repairs of buildings, $64,000 for purchase or erection of buildings, $50,000 for freight, including operation of United States ship Boxer, $4,000 for equipment and repairs to United States ship Boxer, $3,000 for rentals, and $1,500 for telephone and telegraph; total, $580,400, to be immediately available: *Provided*, That not to exceed 10 per centum of the*Provisos*.Interchangeable amounts. amounts appropriated for the various items in this paragraph shall be available interchangeably for expenditures on the objects included m this paragraph, but no more than 10 per centum shall be added to any one item of appropriation except in cases of extraordinary emergency and then only upon the written order of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That of said sum not exceedingServices in the District. $8,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided further*, That all expenditures of money appropriatedSupervision of expenditures by Commissioner of Education. herein for school purposes in Alaska for schools other than those for the education of white children under the jurisdiction of the governor thereof shall be under the supervision and direction of the Commissioner of Education and in conformity with such conditions, rules, and regulations as to conduct and methods of instruction and expenditures of money as may from time to time be recommended by him and approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Medical relief in Alaska: To enable the Secretary of the Interior,Medical and sanitary relief of natives. in his discretion and under his direction, with the advice and cooperation of the Public Health Service, to provide for the medical and sanitary relief of the Eskimos, Aleuts, Indians, and other natives of Alaska; erection, purchase, repair, rental, and equipment of hospital buildings; books, and surgical apparatus; pay and necessary traveling expenses of physicians, nurses, and other employees, and all other necessary miscellaneous expenses which are not included under the above special heads, $171,780, to be available immediately. Reindeer for Alaska: For support of reindeer stations in AlaskaReindeer stations. and instruction of Alaskan natives in the care and management of reindeer, including salaries of necessary employees in Alaska, subsistence, clothing, and other necessary personal supplies for apprentices with Government herds, traveling expenses of employees, purchase, erection, and repair of cabins for supervisors, herders’ and apprentices, equipment, and all other necessary miscellaneous expenses, $19,800, to be available immediately. The appropriations for education of natives of Alaska, medicalTraveling expenses, etc., of new appointees allowed from appropriations. relief in Alaska, and reindeer for Alaska shall be available for the payment of traveling expenses of new appointees from Seattle, Washington, to their posts of duty in Alaska, and of traveling expenses, 1604packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station within Alaska, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. GOVERNMENT IN THE TERRITORIESGovernment in the Territories. territory of alaskaAlaska. Governor and secretary.Contingent expenses.Governor, $7,000; secretary, $3,700; in all, $10,700. For incidental and contingent expenses, clerk hire, not to exceed $3,520; janitor service for the governor’s office and the executive mansion, not to exceed $2,940; traveling expenses of the governor while absent from the capital on official business, and of the secretary of the Territory while traveling on official business under direction of the governor; rent of executive offices, repair and preservation of governor’s house and furniture; for care of grounds and purchase of necessary equipment; stationery, lights, water, and fuel; in all, $14,800, to be expended under the direction of the governor. Care of insane.Insane of Alaska: For care and custody of persons legally adjudged insane in Alaska, including transportation, burial, and *Provisos*.Payment to Sanitarium Company.other expenses, $157,000: *Provided*, That authority is granted to the Secretary of the Interior to pay from this appropriation to the Sanitarium Company, of Portland, Oregon, or to other contracting institution or institutions, not to exceed $624 per capita per annum for the care and maintenance of Alaskan insane patients Return, etc., of persons not Alaska residents.during the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That so much of this sum as may be required shall be available for all necessary expenses in ascertaining the residence of inmates and in returning those who are not legal residents of Alaska to their legal residence or to their friends, and the Secretary of the Interior shall, so soon as practicable, return to their places of residence or to their friends all inmates not residents of Alaska at the time they became insane, and the commitment papers for any person hereafter adjudged insane shall include a statement by the committing authority as to the legal residence of such person. Suppressing liquor traffic.Traffic in intoxicating liquors: For suppression of the traffic in intoxicating liquors among the natives of Alaska, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, $16,200. Alaska Railroad.Maintenance, etc., expenses.The Alaska Railroad: For every expenditure requisite for and incident to the authorized work of the Alaska Railroad, including maintenance, operation, and improvements of railroads in Alaska; Operation of vessels.maintenance and operation of river steamers and other boats on the Yukon River and its tributaries in Alaska; operation and maintenance of ocean-going or coastwise vessels by ownership, charter, or arrangement with other branches of the Government service, for the purpose of providing additional facilities for the transportation of freight, passengers, or mail, when deemed necessary, for the benefit and development of industries and travel affecting territory tributary to the Alaska Railroad; stores for resale; payment of claims for losses and damages arising from operations; payment of amounts Payment for injuries.Vol. 39, p. 750.[U. S. Code, p. 81](/us/usc/p81).due connecting lines under traffic agreements; payment of compensation and expenses as authorized by section 42 of the Injury Compensation Act approved September 7, 1916 (U. S. C., p. 81, sec. 793), Railroad receipts, additional.to be reimbursed as therein provided, $1,200,000, in addition to all amounts received by the Alaska Railroad during the fiscal year 1930, *Provisos*.Services in the District.to continue available until expended: *Provided*, That not to exceed $6,000 of this fund shall be available for personal services in the Printing and bindingDistrict of Columbia during the fiscal year 1930: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $8,000 of such fund shall be available for printing and binding; *Provided further*, That $400,000 of such fund shall be 1605available only for such capital expenditures as are chargeable toCapital account of expenditures. capital account under accounting regulations prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which amount shall be available immediately. territory of hawaiiHawaii. Governor, $10,000; secretary, $5,800; in all, $15,800.Governor, secretary. For contingent expenses, to be expended by the governor, forContingent expenses. stationery, postage, and incidentals, $1,000; private secretary to the governor, $3,100; temporary clerk hire, $500; for traveling expenses of the governor while absent from the capital on official business, $500; in all, $5,100. SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITALSaint Elizabeths Hospital. For support, clothing, and treatment in Saint Elizabeths HospitalMaintenance, etc. for the Insane from the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, inmates of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, persons charged with or convicted of crimes against the United States who are insane, all persons who have become insane since their entry into the military and naval service of the United States, civilians in the quartermaster service of the Army, persons transferred from the Canal Zone who have been admitted to the hospital and who are indigent, and beneficiaries of the United States Veterans’ Bureau,Vehicles, etc. including not exceeding $27,000 for the purchase, exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent, purchasing agent, and general hospital business, and including not to exceed $150,000 for repairs and improvements to buildings and grounds $955,000, including maintenance and operation of necessary facilities for feeding employees and others (at not less than cost), and the proceeds therefrom shall reimburse the appropriation for the institution; and not exceeding $1,500 of this sum may be expended in the removal of patients to their friends, not exceeding $1,500 in the purchase of such books, periodicals, and newspapers, for which payment may be made in advance, as may be required for the purposes of the hospital and for the medical library, and not exceeding $1,500 for actual and necessary expenses incurred in the apprehension and return to the hospital of escaped patients: *Provided*, That so much of this sum as*Provisos*.Returning patients not a Federal charge. may be required shall be available for all necessary expenses in ascertaining the residence of inmates who are not or who cease to be properly chargeable to Federal maintenance in the institution and in returning them to such places of residence: *Provided further*, ThatMonthly payments for District patients. during the fiscal year 1930 the District of Columbia, or any branch of the Government requiring Saint Elizabeths Hospital to care for patients for which they are responsible, shall pay by check to the superintendent, upon his written request, either in advance or at the end of each month, all or part of the estimated or actual cost of such maintenance, as the case may be, and bills rendered by the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital in accordance herewith shall not be subject to audit or certification in advance of payment; proper adjustments on the basis of the actual cost of the care of patients paid for in advance shall be made monthly or quarterly, as may be agreed upon between the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital and the District of Columbia government, department, or establishmentsSums paid for patients to be credited to maintenance accounts. concerned. All sums paid to the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital for the care of patients that he is authorized by law to receive shall be deposited to the credit on the books of the Treasury Department of the appropriation made for the care and maintenance of the patients at Saint Elizabeths Hospital for the year in which the support, clothing, and treatment is provided, and be subject to requi-1606sition by the disbursing agent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital, upon the Allowance of quarters, subsistence, etc., of superintendent, etc., living at the hospital continued without deduction from salary, etc.*Ante*, p. 193.approval of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That the practice of allowing quarters, heat, light, household equipment, subsistence, and laundry service to the superintendent and other employees who are required to live at Saint Elizabeths Hospital may be continued without deduction from their salary, notwithstanding the Act of March 5, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 193), pending determination by the Personnel Classification Board, in accordance with said Act. Medical and surgical building.For completion of the medical and surgical building, $475,000, including cost of supervision of work and including the removal and reconstruction of the isolation building. COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAFColumbia Institution for the Deaf. Maintenance.For support of the institution, including salaries and incidental expenses, books and illustrative apparatus, and general repairs and improvements, $120,000. HOWARD UNIVERSITYHoward University. Salaries.*Ante*, p. 1021.Salaries: For payment in full or in part of the salaries of the officers, professors, teachers, and other regular employees of the university, the balance to be paid from privately contributed funds, $225,000, of which sum not less than $2,200 shall be used for normal instruction; Equipment, supplies, etc.General expenses: For equipment, supplies, apparatus, furniture, cases and shelving, stationery, ice, repairs to buildings and grounds, and for other necessary expenses, including reimbursement to the appropriation for Freedmen’s Hospital of actual cost of heat and light furnished, $95,000; Chemistry building.For the completion of the construction and equipment of a chemistry building, $240,000; Dormitory for young women.*Ante*, p. 904.For an additional amount for the construction and equipment of an additional dormitory for young women, as provided in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1928, to be immediately available, $40,000; Total, Howard University, $600,000. FREEDMEN’S HOSPITALFreedmen’s Hospital. Salaries, etc.For officers and employees and compensation for all other professional and other services that may be required and expressly Contingent expenses.approved by the Secretary of the Interior, $175,220; for subsistence, fuel and light, clothing, to include white duck suits and white canvas shoes for the use of internes, and rubber surgical gloves, bedding, forage, medicine, medical and surgical supplies, surgical instruments, electric lights, repairs, replacement of X-ray apparatus, furniture, motor-propelled ambulance, including not exceeding $300 for the purchase of books, periodicals, and newspapers for which payments may be made in advance; and not to exceed $1,200 for the special instruction of pupil nurses, and other absolutely necessary expenses, One-half charged to the District.$84,960; in all, for Freedmen’s Hospital, $260,180, of which amount one-half shall be chargeable to the District of Columbia and paid in like manner as other appropriations of the District of Columbia are paid. Sec. 2. Field work appropriations available for work animals, vehicles, etc. Appropriations herein made for field work under the General Land Office, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Bureau of Reclamation, the Geological Survey, and the National Park Service shall be available for the hire, with or without personal services, of work animals and animal-drawn and motor-propelled vehicles and equipment. Approved, March 4, 1929.
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cites case law
Chapter 705
Making appropriations for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1930, and for other purposes
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