Public Law 232. to relieve restricted Indians in the Five Civilized Tribes whose nontaxable lands are required for State, county, or municipal improvements or sold to other persons, and for other purposes,” approved March 2, 1931, is amended to read as follows:Reinvestment of receipts from sale, etc., of nontaxable
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/statutes-at-large/vol-47/public-law-232·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(/us/pl/72/231).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,* That the Act entitled Five Civilized Tribes, Okla.Vol. 46, p. 1471, amended.“An Act to relieve restricted Indians in the Five Civilized Tribes whose nontaxable lands are required for State, county, or municipal improvements or sold to other persons, and for other purposes,” approved March 2, 1931, is amended to read as follows:Reinvestment of receipts from sale, etc., of nontaxable land of a restricted Indian.
" “That whenever any nontaxable land of a restricted Indian of the Five Civilized Tribes or of any other Indian tribe is sold to any State, county, or municipality for public-improvement purposes, or is acquired, under existing law, by any State, county, or municipality by condemnation or other proceedings for such public purposes, or is sold under existing law to any other person or corporation for other purposes, the money received for said land may, in the discretion and with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, be reinvested in other lands selected by said Indian, and such land so Restriction on selected lands.selected and purchased shall be restricted as to alienation, lease, or incumbrance, and nontaxable in the same quantity and upon the same terms and conditions as the nontaxable lands from which the reinvested funds were derived, and such restrictions shall appear in the conveyance.
” " Approved, June 30, 1932. Amending the joint resolution providing for the suspension of annual assessment work on mining claims held by location in the United States and Alaska, approved June 6, 1932. 1932-06-30 334 Chapter 47 Stat. 474 72 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 2024-12-27 public [CHAPTER 334.] JOINT RESOLUTION Amending the joint resolution providing for the suspension of annual assessment work on mining claims held by location in the United States and Alaska, approved June 6, 1932.June 30, 1932.[[S.
J. Res. 188](/us/bill/72/sjres/188).][[Pub. Res., No. 30](/us/bill/72/pubres/30).] *Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,* That the joint Mining claims, United States and Alaska.Joint resolution suspending work on, fiscal year 1932, amended.resolution providing for the suspension of annual assessment work on mining claims held by location in the United States and Alaska, approved June 6, 1932, be, and the same is hereby, amended to read as follows:*Ante,* p. 290.Correction in time authorized.R.
S. sec. 2324, p. 426.U. S. C., p. 955. " “That the provision of section 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States which requires on each mining claim located, and until a patent has been issued therefor, not less than $100 worth of labor to be performed, or improvements aggregating such amount to be made each year, be, and the same is hereby, suspended as to all 475mining claims in the United States, including Alaska, during the year beginning at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1931, and ending at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1932.
” " Approved, June 30, 1932. Making appropriations for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary, and for the Departments of Commerce and Labor, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, and for other purposes. 1932-07-01 361 Chapter 47 Stat. 475 72 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 2024-12-27 public [CHAPTER 361.] AN ACT Making appropriations for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary, and for the Departments of Commerce and Labor, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, and for other purposes.July 1, 1932.[[H.
R. 9349](/us/bill/72/hr/9349).][[Public, No. 232](/us/pl/72/232).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,* That the following Appropriations for Departments of State and Justice, the Judiciary, and Departments of Commerce and Labor fiscal year ending June 30, 1933.*Post,* p. 1781.sums are appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the Departments of State and Justice and for the Judiciary, and for the Departments of Commerce Labor, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, namely:
TITLE I— DEPARTMENT OF STATEDepartment of State. office of the secretary of state Salaries: For Secretary of State, $15,000; Under Secretary of Secretary, Undersecretary, and office personnel.State, $10,000; and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including temporary employees, and not to exceed $6,500 for employees engaged on piecework at rates to be fixed by the Secretary Piecework employees.*Provisos.*Salaries limited to average rates under Classification Act.Vol. 42, p. 1488;
Vol. 45, p. 776; Vol. 46, p. 1003.U. S. C., p. 60; Supp. V, p. 28.Exceptions.of State, $1,875,540; in all, $1,900,540: *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, with the exception of the four Assistant Secretaries of State and the legal adviser of the Department of State, the Assistant to the Attorney General and six Assistant Attorneys General, the Assistant Secretaries of Commerce, the Assistant Secretary and the Second Assistant Secretary of Labor, 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 Act, as amended: *Provided,* That this restriction shall not apply
(1)to grades 1, 2, 3, Restriction not applicable to clerical-mechanical service.No reduction in fixed salaries.Vol. 42, p. 1490.U. S. C., p. 60.Transfers to another position without reduction.and 4 of the clerical-mechanical service, or
(2)to require the reduction in salary of any person whose compensation was fixed as of July 1, 1924, in accordance with the rules of section 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 same or different grade in the same or a different bureau, office, or other appropriation unit, or
(4)to prevent the payment of a salary under any grade at a rate higher Higher salary rates permitted.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, or
(5)to reduce the compensation of If only one position in a grade.any person in a grade in which only one position is allocated. contingent expenses, department of state For contingent and miscellaneous expenses, including stationery, Contingent expenses of department.furniture, fixtures; typewriters, adding machines, and other laborsaving devices, including their exchange, not exceeding $10,000; repairs and material for repairs; books, maps, and periodicals, domestic and foreign, and when authorized by the Secretary of State for dues for library membership in societies or associations which issue publications to members only or at a price to members 476lower than to subscribers who are not members, not exceeding $15,880; newspapers not exceeding $1,500; maintenance, repair, and storage of motor-propelled vehicles, to be used only for official purposes (one for the Secretary of State and two for dispatching mail, and one motorcycle for the general use of the department); automobile mail wagons, including storage, repair, and exchange of Refund of passport fees, erroneously charged.Vol. 41, p. 750: Vol. 44, p. 887.U. S. C., Supp. v, p. 339.same; street-car fare not exceeding $150; refund of fees erroneously charged and paid for the issue of passports to persons who are exempted from the payment of such fee by section 1 of the Act making appropriations for the Diplomatic and Consular Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1921, approved June 4, 1920 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, sec. 214a); the examination of estimates of appropriations in the field; and other miscellaneous items not included in the foregoing, $80,000. printing and bindingPrinting and binding. For all printing and binding in the Department of State, including all of its bureaus, offices, institutions, and services located in Washington, District of Columbia, and elsewhere, $220,000. passport agenciesPassport agencies.Salaries and expenses. For salaries and expenses of maintenance, traveling expenses not to exceed $1,000, and rent outside the District of Columbia, for passport agencies at New York City, New York; San Francisco, California; Chicago, Illinois; Seattle, Washington; New Orleans, Louisiana; and Boston, Massachusetts, $65,000. collecting and editing official papers of territories of the united statesOfficial papers of Territories.Collecting, etc., for publication. For the expenses of collecting, editing, copying, and arranging for publication the official papers of the Territories of the United States, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, printing and binding, and contingent and traveling Vol. 45, p. 1412.Balance available.Vol. 46, p. 1310.expenses, as provided by the Act approved February 28, 1929, the unexpended balances of the appropriations made available for this purpose in the State Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1932 are continued available until June 30, 1933. foreign intercourseForeign intercourse. ambassadors and ministersAmbassadors. Ambassadors extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Poland, Spain, and Turkey, at $17,500 each;Belgium, and minister to Luxemburg. Ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Belgium and envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Luxemburg, $17,500;Ministers.China and Netherlands. Envoys extraordinary and ministers plenipotentiary to China and the Netherlands, at $12,000 each;Other countries. Envoys extraordinary and ministers plenipotentiary to Albania, Austria, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Dominion of Canada, Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Irish Free State, Liberia, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, *Post,* p. 1781.Persia, Portugal, Rumania, Salvador, Siam, Union of South Africa, 477Sweden, Switzerland, Uruguay, and Venezuela, at $10,000 each; Yugoslavia, $10,000; and to Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, $10,000; In all, not to exceed $625,000; *Provided,* That no salary herein appropriated shall he paid to any *Proviso.*Salary restriction.official receiving any other salary from the United States Government. For salaries of Foreign Service officers or vice consuls while acting Chargés d’affaires, etc.as chargés d’affaires ad interim or while in charge of a consulate general or consulate during the absence of the principal officer, $20,000. salaries of clerks in the foreign service For salaries of clerks in the Foreign Service, as provided in the Clerks at embassies and legations.Vol. 46, p. 1207.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 336.Act approved February 23, 1931 ( U. S. C. Supp. V, title 22, sec. 23a), including salaries during transit to and from homes in the United States upon the beginning and after termination of service, $2,365,438. contingent expenses, foreign missions To enable the President to provide at the public expense all such Contingent expenses, missions.stationery, blanks, record and other books, seals, presses, flags, and signs as he shall think necessary for the several embassies and legations in the transaction of their business, and also for repairs including minor alterations, repairs, supervision, preservation, and maintenance of Government-owned diplomatic properties in foreign Government buildings abroad.Vol. 44, p. 403.U. S. C., Supp. V, p.341.countries, and properties acquired under the Act approved May 7, 1926, as amended (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, secs. 291, 296), and including also custodial service, water, materials, supplies, tools, seeds, plants, shrubs, and similar objects; newspapers (foreign and domestic), postage, telegrams, advertising, ice, and drinking water for office purposes, hire of motor-propelled or horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles, and purchase, maintenance, operation, and hire Furniture, etc.of other passenger-carrying vehicles, uniforms, furniture, household furniture and furnishings, except as provided by the Act of May 7, 1926, as amended, for Government-owned or rented buildings when in the judgment of the Secretary of State it would be in the public interest to do so, not to exceed $50,000, typewriters and exchange of same, messenger service, and operation, maintenance, and rental of launch for embassy at Constantinople not exceeding $3,500, compensation of kavasses, guards, dragomans, porters, interpreters, translators, and supervisors of construction, compensation of agents and employees of and rent and other expenses for dispatch agencies at Dispatch agencies.London, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, and New Orleans, traveling expenses of Diplomatic and Foreign Service officers, including attendance at trade and other conferences or congresses under orders Attendance at meetings, etc.Vol. 43, p. 143; Vol. 46, p. 1209.U. S. C., p. 643; Supp. V, p. 334.Loss by exchange.of the Secretary of State as authorized by the Act approved February 23, 1931 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, sec. 16), miscellaneous expenses of embassies and legations, and for loss on bills of exchange to and from embassies and legations, including such loss on bills of exchange to officers of the United States Court for China, and payment in advance of rent of dispatch agencies, cost, not exceeding $350 per annum each of the tuition of Foreign Service officers assigned for the study of the languages of Asia and Eastern Europe, telephone and other similar services under this appropriation are hereby *Proviso.*No payment for clerical services to persons not citizens.authorized, $750,000: *Provided,* That no part of this sum appropriated for contingent expenses, foreign missions, shall be expended for salaries or wages of persons (except interpreters, translators, and messengers) not American citizens performing clerical services, whether officially designated as clerks or not, in any foreign mission. 478 expenses of foreign service inspectorsForeign Service inspectors. For the traveling expenses of Foreign Service officers detailed for inspection while traveling and inspecting under instructions from the Secretary of State, $10,000. contingent expenses, united states consulatesContingent expenses, consulates. For expenses of providing all such stationery, blanks, record and other books, seals, presses, flags, signs, repairs, including minor alterations, Government buildings abroad.Vol. 44, p. 403; Vol. 45, p. 971.U. S. C., Supp. V, p.340.supervision, preservation, and maintenance of Government-owned consular properties in foreign countries, and properties acquired under the Act approved May 7, 1926, as amended (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, secs. 291,296), and including also custodial service, water, materials, supplies, tools, seeds, plants, shrubs, and similar objects, postage, furniture, household furniture and furnishings, except as provided by the Act of May 7, 1926, as amended, for Government- owned or rented buildings when in the judgment of the Secretary of State it would be in the public interest to do so, not to exceed $25,000, typewriters and exchange of same, statistics, newspapers (foreign and domestic), freight, telegrams, advertising, ice and drinking water for office purposes, hire of motor-propelled or horsedrawn passenger-carrying vehicles, and purchase, maintenance, operation, and hire of other passenger-carrying vehicles, uniforms, messenger service, traveling expenses of Consular and Foreign Attendance at trade conferences, etc.Vol. 43, p. 143; Vol. 46, p. 1209.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 334.Service officers, including attendance at trade and other conferences or congresses under orders of the Secretary of State as authorized by the Act approved February 23, 1931 (U. S. C. Supp. V, title 22, sec. 16); compensation of interpreters, kavasses, guards, dragomans, translators, Chinese writers, and supervisors of construction, loss by exchange, and such other miscellaneous expenses as the President may think necessary for the several consulates and consular agencies in the transaction of their business and payment in advance of telephone, and other similar services under this appropriation are hereby authorized, $700,000. relief and protection of american seamenRelief, etc., of American seamen. For relief, protection, and burial of American seamen in foreign countries, in the Panama Canal Zone, and in the Philippine Islands, and shipwrecked American seamen in the Territory of Alaska, in the Hawaiian Islands, in Porto Rico, and in the Virgin Islands, $15,000. salaries of foreign service officersForeign Service officers.Salaries.Vol. 46, p. 1207. U. S. C., Supp. V, p.333. For salaries of Foreign Service officers as provided in the Act approved February 23, 1931 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, secs. 3, 3a), $3,075,000. salaries, foreign service officers while receiving instructions and in transitInstruction and transit pay.R. S., sec. 1740, p. 309.U. S. C., p. 650. To pay the salaries ambassadors, ministers, consuls, vice consuls, and other officers of the United States for the period actually and necessarily occupied in receiving instructions and in making transits to and from their posts, and while awaiting recognition and authority to act in pursuance with the provisions of section 1740 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 22, sec. 121), $15,000. 479 transportation of foreign service officers To pay the traveling expenses of Diplomatic, Consular, and Transportation, etc., expenses.Foreign Service officers, and other employees of the Foreign Service, including officers and employees of the United States Court for China, and the itemized and verified statements of the actual and necessary expenses of transportation and subsistence, under such regulations as the Secretary of State may prescribe, of their families and effects, in going to and returning from their posts, including not to exceed $25,000 incurred in connection with leaves of absence, Leaves of absence.and of the preparation and transportation of the remains of those officers and said employees of the Foreign Service, who have died Bringing home remains of officers, etc., dying abroad.or may die abroad or in transit while in the discharge of their official duties, to their former homes in this country or to a place not more distant for interment and for the ordinary expenses of such interment, $450,000: *Provided,* That this appropriation shall be available *Proviso.*Officials of United States Court for China.also for the authorized expenses of the judge and district attorney of the United States Court for China while attending sessions of the court at other cities than Shanghai, not to exceed $7 per day each, and for the authorized subsistence expenses of Consular and Foreign Service officers while on temporary detail under commission. emergencies arising in the diplomatic and consular service To enable the President to meet unforeseen emergencies arising in Emergencies.the Diplomatic and Consular Service, and to extend the commercial and other interests of the United States and to meet the necessary expenses attendant upon the execution of the Neutrality Act, to be Neutrality Act expenses.R. S., sec. 291, p. 49.U. S. C., p. 982.expended pursuant to the requirement of section 291 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 31, sec. 107), $130,000. allowance to widows or heers of foreign service officers who die abroad For payment under the provisions of section 1749 of the Revised Allowances for officers dying abroad.R. S., sec. 1749, p. 311.U. S. C., p. 650.Statutes (U. S. C., title 22, sec. 130) to the widows or heirs at law of Diplomatic, Consular, and Foreign Service officers of the United States dying in foreign countries in the discharge of their duties, $1,000. foreign service retirement and disability fundForeign Service retirement, etc., fund. For financing the liability of the United States, created by the Act Federal contribution.Vol. 46, p. 1211.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 335.approved February 23, 1931 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 22, $416,000, which amount shall be placed to the credit of the “Foreign Service retirement and disability fund.” rent, heat, fuel, and light, foreign service For rent, heat, fuel, and light for the Foreign Service and the Rent, heat, fuel, and light.United States Court for China.Tokyo, ground rent.Vol. 46, p. 818.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 19.United States Court for China for offices and grounds, including annual ground rent of the embassy at Tokyo, Japan, for the year ending March 15, 1933, and, as authorized by the Act approved June 26, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 5, sec. 118a), for living quarters and for allowances for living quarters, including heat, fuel, and light, $1,800,000: *Provided,* That payment for rent may be made *Provisos.*Advance payment for rent.Leases authorized.Allowance for quarters limited.in advance: *Provided further,* That the Secretary of State may enter into leases for such offices, grounds, and living quarters for periods not exceeding ten years: *Provided further,* That no part of this appropriation shall be used for allowances for living quarters, including heat, fuel, and light in an amount exceeding $3,000 for 480an ambassador or a minister, and not exceeding $1,700 for any other Custodial, etc., services.Foreign Service 11 So in original.: *Provided further,* That under this appropriation and the appropriation for “Contingent expenses, foreign missions,” or the appropriation for “Contingent expenses, United Limitation on expenditure.States consulates,” not more than $3,000 shall be expended for custodial service, heat, fuel, and light in any Government-owned building used for residence or residence and office purposes for an ambassador or minister, and not more than $1,700 for such purposes in the case of any other Foreign Service officer, except that at any post at which the expenditures for such purposes for the fiscal year 1932 were in excess of the limitation of $3,000 in this last proviso in the case of an ambassador or minister there may be expended during the fiscal year 1933 an amount equal to the sum expended during the fiscal year 1932 but in no event to exceed $5,000; and during the incumbency of a charge d’affaires the limitation on such expenditures shall be the same as for the occupancy of the principal officer. INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS, COMMISSIONS, BUREAUS, AND SO FORTHInternational obligations, etc. cape spartel light, coast of moroccoCape Spartel, etc., Light. For annual proportion of the expenses of Cape Spartel and Tangier Light on the coast of Morocco, including loss by exchange, $868.50. rescuing shipwrecked american seamenLife-saving testimonials. For expenses which may be incurred in the acknowledgment of the services of masters and crews of foreign vessels in rescuing American seamen or citizens from shipwreck or other catastrophe at sea, $1,000. international bureau of weights and measuresInternational Bureau of Weights and Measures.Vol. 20, p. 714. For contribution to the maintenance of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, in conformity with the terms of the conventions of May 20, 1875, and October 6, 1921, the same to be paid, under the direction of the Secretary of State, to said bureau on its certificate of apportionment, $4,342.50. international bureau for publication of customs tariffsInternational Customs Tariff Bureau.Vol. 26, p. 1518. To meet the share of the United States in the annual expense for the year ending March 31, 1933, of sustaining the international bureau at Brussels for the translation and publication of customs tariffs, pursuant to the convention proclaimed December 17, 1890, $1,400. water boundary, united states and mexicoMexican Water Boundary Commission.Vol. 24, p. 1011; Vol. 26, p. 1512; Vol. 34, p. 2593. For expenses of meeting the obligations of the United States under the treaties of 1884, 1889, 1905, and 1906 between the United States and Mexico, including subscriptions to newspapers (foreign and domestic), rent, purchase, exchange, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled vehicles for official use in field work, installation, maintenance, and operation of gauging stations where necessary and their equipment, and so much of the amount herein appropri-481ated as may be necessary for these purposes may be transferred by Transfer to Geological Survey.the Secretary of State to the United States Geological Survey or other Federal agencies for direct expenditure, $70,000. international water commission, united states and mexico International Water Commission, United States and Mexico: International Water Commission, United States and Mexico.Expenses.Vol. 46, p. 1162.For the expenses of the International Water Commission, United States and Mexico, as authorized by the public resolution approved February 14, 1931, including personal services and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, fees for professional services at rates and in amounts to be determined by the Secretary of State; travel expenses, including transportation of effects; subsistence or per diem in lieu of subsistence notwithstanding the provisions of Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 or regulations prescribed pursuant thereto; printing and binding; subscriptions to foreign and domestic newspapers and periodicals; purchase, exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled, passenger and freight carrying vehicles; drilling and testing of dam sites, by contract if R. S. sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.deemed necessary without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5); equipment, and such other miscellaneous expenses as the Secretary of State may deem proper, the unexpended balance in the appropriation for this purpose contained Vol. 46, p. 1579.in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1931, is continued available until June 30, 1933. Effective July 1, 1932, the International Water Commission, American section abolished, effective July 1, 1932.United States and Mexico, American section, is hereby abolished, and the powers, duties, and functions of such section of such commission shall be exercised by the International Boundary Commission, Powers, etc., transferred to International Boundary Commission.United States and Mexico, American section. All records, files, and property of any nature whatsoever (including office equipment) of the American section of the International Water Commission, United States and Mexico, are transferred to the American section, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. All appropriations and unexpended balances of appropriations Transfer of funds.made to either of such sections of such commissions in this or prior appropriation Acts shall be available for expenditure by the American section, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico, in the same manner as though such latter commission had been named in the laws providing for such appropriations, and the appropriations herein made available for the fiscal , year 1933 shall be merged and constitute one fund: *Provided,* That *Proviso.*Limitation.the amount reappropriated under the preceding paragraph shall not exceed $70,000. The Commissioner of the American section, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico, is authorized Personal services.to appoint to positions in such section, such employees of the American section, International Water Commission, United States and Mexico, or other persons as he may deem necessary in carrying out the provisions of this paragraph, and such commissioner is further authorized to designate and redesignate, as he may determine to be necessary, the duties and headquarters’ station of all employees under his supervision. international boundary commission, united states and canada and alaska and canada To enable the President to perform the obligations of the United Boundary treaty of 1925, United States and Great Britain.Expenses under.Vol. 44, p. 2102.States under the treaty between the United States and Great Britain in respect of Canada, signed February 24, 1925; for salaries and expenses, including the salary of the commissioner and salaries of 482the necessary engineers, clerks, and other employees for duty at the seat of government and in the field; cost of office equipment and supplies; necessary traveling expenses; commutation of subsistence to employees while on field duty, not to exceed $4 per day each; for payment for timber necessarily cut in keeping the boundary line clear, not to exceed $500; and for all other necessary and reasonable Maintenance of established lines.expenses incurred by the United States in maintaining an effective demarcation of the international boundary line between the United States and Canada and Alaska and Canada under the terms of the treaty aforesaid, including the completion of such remaining work as may be required under the award of the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal and existing treaties between the United States and Great Britain, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, $30,000. pan american unionPan American Union.Quota for support of, and printing. For the payment of the quota of the United States for the support of the Pan American Union, $167,367.60, and for printing and binding of the union, $20,000; in all, $187,367.60. international bureau of the permanent court of arbitrationInternational Bureau, Permanent Court of Arbitration.Vol. 36, p. 2222. To meet the share of the United States in the expenses for the calendar year 1932 of the International Bureau of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, created under article 43 of the convention concluded at The Hague, October 18, 1907, for the pacific settlement of international disputes, $2,000. bureau of interparliamentary union for promotion of international arbitrationInterparliamentary Union for Promoting International Arbitration.Contribution. For the contribution of the United States toward the maintenance of the Bureau of the Interparliamentary Union for the promotion of international arbitration, $5,031.77; and in addition $2,468.23 of American group.Sum reappropriated.Vol. 46, p. 1316.the unobligated balance of the appropriation “Expenses, American Group of the Interparliamentary Union, 1932,” is hereby reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year 1933 for such contribution. pan american sanitary bureauPan American Sanitary Bureau. For the annual share of the United States for the maintenance of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau for the fiscal year 1933, $29,986.70. international office of public healthInternational Office of Public Health.Vol. 35, pp. 2061, 1834; Vol. 42, p. 1823. For the payment of the quota of the United States for the calendar year 1933 toward the support of the International Office of Public Health, created by the international arrangement signed at Rome, December 9, 1907, in pursuance of article 181 of the International Sanitary Convention signed at Paris on December 3, 1903, $3,015.62. international radiotelegraphic conventionInternational Radiotelegraphic Convention. For the share of the United States for the calendar year 1933 as a party to the international radiotelegraphic conventions heretofore signed, of the expenses of the radiotelegraphic service of the International Bureau of the Telegraphic Union at Berne, $7,527. 483 international radiotelegraph convention, madrid, spainInternational Radiotelegraph Convention. For participation by the United States in the Conference for Participation, at Madrid, Spain.Revision of the International Radiotelegraph Convention of November 25, 1927, to be held in Madrid, Spain, including personal services, *Post,* p. 1378.without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, stenographic reporting and translating services by contract if deemed necessary without R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5); traveling expenses and subsistence or per diem in lieu of subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 or regulations prescribed pursuant thereto); Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.hire of automobiles; purchase of necessary books and documents; stationery; official cards; newspapers and periodicals; printing and binding; entertainment; equipment; and such other expenses as may be authorized by the Secretary of State, including the reimbursement of other appropriations from which payments may have been made for any of the purposes herein specified, to be immediately available, $80,000. united states section of the inter-american high commissionInter-American High Commission. To defray the actual and necessary expenses on the part of the United States section.United States section of the Inter-American High Commission, $10,000, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State. waterways treaty, united states and great britain : international joint commission, united states and great britain For salaries and expenses, including salaries of commissioners, International Joint Commission, United States and Great Britain.Salaries, expenses, etc.not to exceed $7,500 each, and salaries of clerks and other employees appointed by the commissioners on the part of the United States, with the approval solely of the Secretary of State; for necessary traveling expenses, and for expenses incident to holding hearings and conferences at such places in Canada and in the United States as shall be determined by the commission or by the American commissioners to be necessary, including travel expense and compensation of necessary witnesses, making necessary transcript of testimony and proceedings; for cost of law books, books of reference and periodicals, office equipment and supplies; and for one-half of all reasonable and necessary joint expenses of the International Joint Commission incurred under the terms of the treaty between Vol. 36, p. 2448.the United States and Great Britain concerning the use of boundary waters between the United States and Canada, and for other purposes, signed January 11, 1909, $35,855, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State: *Provided,* That traveling *Provisos.*Travel expenses.Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.expenses of the commissioners, secretary, and necessary employees shall be allowed in accordance with the provisions of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 (U. S. C., title 5, ch. 16): *Provided further,* That a part of this appropriation may be expended for rent of Rent.offices for the commission in the District of Columbia in the event that the Public Buildings Commission is unable to supply suitable office space. For an additional amount for necessary special or technical investigations Special and technical investigations.in connection with matters which fall within the scope of the jurisdiction of the International Joint Commission, including personal services in the District of Columbia or elsewhere, traveling Personal services. expenses, procurement of technical and scientific equipment, and the purchase, exchange, hire, maintenance, repair, and operation of 484motor-propelled and horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles, $82,000, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, who is authorized to transfer to any department or independent establishment of the Government, with the consent of the head thereof, any part of this amount for direct expenditure by such department or establishment for the purposes of this appropriation. payment to the government of panamaPanama.Annual payment to. To enable the Secretary of State to pay to the Government of Panama the twenty-first annual payment, due on February 26, 1933, Vol. 33, p. 2238.from the Government of the United States to the Government of Panama under article 14 of the treaty of November 18, 1903, $250,000. international hydrographic bureauInternational Hydrographic Bureau. For the annual contribution of the United States toward the maintenance of the International Hydrographic Bureau, $5,790. foreign hospital at cape townSomerset Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa. For annual contribution toward the support of the Somerset Hospital (a foreign hospital), at Cape Town, $50, to be paid by the Secretary of State upon the assurance that suffering seamen and citizens of the United States will be admitted to the privileges of said hospital. international trade-mark registration bureau, quota of united statesInternational Trade Mark Registration Bureau.Share of expenses.Vol. 39, p. 1682; Vol. 41, p. 533. For the annual share of the United States of the expenses for the maintenance of the International Trade-Mark Registration Bureau at Habana, in conformity with the convention of February 20, 1929, $14,330.20. international bureau of the union for the protection of industrial propertyIndustrial Property Union. For the share of the United States in the expense of conducting the International Bureau of the Union for the Protection of Industrial Property, at Berne, Switzerland, $1,350. general claims commission, united states and panamaPanama General Claims Commission. General Claims Commission, United States and Panama: For the expenses of the United States in the arbitration of the claims pursuant to the claims convention between the United States and Panama, *Post,* p. 1915.signed July 28, 1926, including the share of the United States in the joint expenses of the two Governments under the terms of the convention; salaries, without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, of the American commissioner, the American secretary, special counsel, stenographers, translators, other assistants and employees and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, stenographic reporting and translating services, by contract if R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.deemed necessary without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5); traveling expenses and subsistence or per diem in lieu of subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 or regulations prescribed pursuant thereto); purchase of necessary books and documents; stationery; official cards; printing and binding; and such 485other expenses as may be authorized by the Secretary of State, $50,000, and the unexpended balance, not to exceed $29,000, of the Balance available.Vol. 46, p. 1580.appropriation for this purpose contained in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1931, is continued available until June 30, 1933. gorgas memorial laboratory The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory: To enable the Secretary of Gorgas Memorial Laboratory.Annual contribution.Vol. 45, p. 491.State to pay the annual contribution of the United States to the maintenance and operation of the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, as provided by the Act approved May 7, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 491), $40,000. international fisheries commission For the share of the United States of the expenses of the International International Halibut Fisheries Commission.Share of expenses.Treaties, p. 84.Fisheries Commission, under the convention between the United States and Great Britain, concluded May 9, 1930, including salaries of two members and other employees of the commission, traveling expenses, charter of vessels, purchase of books, periodicals, furniture, and scientific instruments, contingent expenses, rent in the District of Columbia, and such other expenses in the United States and elsewhere as the Secretary of State may deem proper, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, $25,000. joint investigation of the fisheries of passamaquoddy and cobscook bays by united states and canadaPassamaquoddy and Cobscook Bays. For the share of the United States of the expenses of an investigation to be made jointly by the United States and Canada of the Party expenses, investigating effect on fisheries of, by generating electric power, etc.Vol. 46, p. 530.probable effects of proposed international developments to generate electric power from the movement of the tides in Passamaquoddy and Cobscook Bays on the fisheries of that region, including travel and subsistence or per diem in lieu of subsistence, compensation of employees, stenographic, and other services, by contract if deemed Advertising waived.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.Supplies and equipment.Other funds available.Vol. 46, pp. 888, 1319.necessary without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5), rent in the District of Columbia or elsewhere, printing and binding, purchase of supplies and materials and necessary equipment, charter of vessels, and such other expenses as may be authorized by the Secretary of State, to be disbursed under the direction of the Secretary of State, the unexpended balances, not to exceed $18,500, of the appropriations for the joint investigation of the fisheries of Passamaquoddy and Cobscook Bays by the United States and Canada, made by the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1930, approved July 3, 1930, and by the Act making appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1932, approved February 23, 1931, are continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1933. american international institute for the protection of childhood For the annual contribution of the United States of $2,000 per American International Institute for Protection of Childhood.Vol. 45, p. 487.annum to the American International Institute for the Protection of Childhood at Montevideo, Uruguay, as authorized by the public resolution approved May 3, 1928 (45 Stat., p. 487). international statistical institute at the hague For the annual contribution of the United State 11So in original. to the International International Statistical Institute.Statistical Bureau at The Hague for the calendar year 1933 as 486Vol. 43, p. 112. authorized by public resolution approved April 28, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 112), $2,000, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State. central bureau of the international map of the world on the millionth scaleInternational Map of the World.Vol. 44, p. 384. For the annual contribution on the part of the United States toward the expenses incurred by the Central Bureau of the International Map of the World on the Millionth Scale for the calendar year 1932, $50. international technical committee of aerial legal expertsInternational Technical Committee of Aerial Legal Experts.Vol. 46, p. 1162. International Technical Committee of Aerial Legal Experts: For the share of the United States of the expenses of the International Technical Committee of Aerial Legal Experts as authorized by the public resolution approved February 14, 1931, for the calendar year 1933, $250. fourteenth annual convention of the french veterans of the world war, district of columbiaFrench Veterans of the World War.Contribution for entertainment of, Washington, D. C.Vol. 46, p. 1521. For the contribution of the United States for the expenses and entertainment while in the United States of delegates and members participating in the Fourteenth Annual Convention of the French Veterans of the World War, to be held in the District of Columbia Personal services.in September, 1932, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere without reference to the Classification Act Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.of 1923, as amended, travel and subsistence or per diem in lieu of subsistence (notwithstanding the provisions of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 or regulations prescribed pursuant thereto), stenographic or other services by contract if deemed necessary without regard to the provisions of section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5), rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of necessary books and documents, newspapers and other periodicals, purchase of insignia, medals and souvenirs, printing and binding, entertainment, official cards, rental, operation and maintenance of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and such other expenses as the Secretary of State shall deem proper to be expended by the national treasurer of the American Legion under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of State may prescribe, to be immediately available, $40,000. one thousandth anniversary of the national parliament of icelandMillennial of National Parliament of Iceland.Participation expenses.Balance available.Vol. 46, p. 57. Not to exceed $2,500 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $55,000 contained in the joint resolution approved January 20, 1930 (46 Stat. 57), for the expenses of participation by the United States in the celebration of the one thousandth anniversary of the Althing, the National Parliament of Iceland, is continued available Transportation, subsistence, etc.Vol. 44, p. 688.until June 30, 1933, for the same purposes, and for the transportation and subsistence or per diem in lieu thereof (notwithstanding the provisions of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926, as amended, or regulations prescribed pursuant thereto) of a representative or representatives of the Government of the United States to make the Lief Ericsson.Expenses, presentation of statue.Vol. 46, p. 40.formal presentation of the statue of Lief Ericsson, including such expenses of entertainment as the Secretary of State shall deem proper. 487 JUDICIAL united states court for chinaUnited States Court for China. For salaries of the judge, district attorney, and other officers Salaries and expenses.and employees of the court; court expenses, including reference law books, ice, and drinking water for office purposes, $35,000. prisons for american convicts For expenses of maintaining in China, the former Ottoman Empire, Consular prisons, etc.Egypt, Ethiopia, Morocco, and Muscat institutions for incarcerating American convicts and persons declared insane by the United States Court for China of11So in original. any consular court; wages of prison keepers; rent of quarters for prisons; ice and drinking water for prison purposes; and for the expenses of keeping, feeding, and Keepers, quarters, etc.transportation of prisoners and persons declared insane by the United States Court for China or any consular court in China, Countries specified.the former Ottoman Empire, Egypt, Ethiopia, Morocco, and Muscat, so much as may be necessary; in all $7,600. bringing home persons charged with crime For every expenditure requisite for or incident to the bringing Bringing home criminals.R. S., sec. 5275, p. 1022.U. S. C., p. 511.home from foreign countries of persons charged with crime as authorized by section 5275 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 18, sec. 659), $2,000. Section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, Sec. 5) Minor purchases without advertising.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733 waived.U. S. C., p. 1309.shall not apply to any purchase or service rendered payable from the foregoing appropriations when the aggregate amount involved does not exceed $100 or when the purchase or service relates to the packing of personal and household effects of Diplomatic, Consular, and Foreign Service officers and clerks for foreign shipment. No portion of the sums appropriated in Title I of this Act shall, Rent restriction in United States.unless expressly authorized, be expended for rent or rental allowances in the District of Columbia or elsewhere in the United States. Wherever the Secretary of State, in his discretion, procures Expenses of securing information for corporations, etc.information on behalf of corporations, firms, and individuals, the expense of cablegrams and telephone service involved may lie charged against the respective appropriations for the service utilized; and reimbursement therefor shall be required from those for whom the information was procured and, when made, be credited to the appropriation under which the expenditure was charged. TITLE II.— DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICEDepartment of Justice. office of the attorney general Salaries: For Attorney General, $15,000; Solicitor General, $10,000; Attorney General, Solicitor General, Assistant to Attorney General, etc.Solicitors, and office personnel.Assistant to the Attorney General, $9,000; and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including the Solicitors of the Treasury, Commerce, and Labor Departments, and the office forces of the Solicitors of the Treasury, Commerce, and Labor Departments, $1,100,000; in all, $1,134,000. For the purchase of law books, books of reference, and periodicals, Law books, etc.including the exchange thereof, for the Department of Justice, $7,500: *Provided,* That not to exceed $2 per volume shall be paid *Proviso.*Price limit for United States Code, Annotated.for the current and future volumes of the United States Code, states code, Annotated. 488 contingent expenses, department of justiceDepartment contingent expenses.*Post,* p. 782. For stationery, furniture and repairs, floor coverings not exceeding $1,500, file holders and cases; miscellaneous expenditures, including telegraphing and telephones, postage, labor, typewriters and adding machines and the exchange thereof and repairs thereto, street-car fares not exceeding $300, newspapers, press clippings, and other necessaries ordered by the Attorney General; official transportation, including the repair, maintenance, and operation of five 11So in original. motor-driven passenger cars, two for the Attorney General, one for general use of the department, two for the Bureau of Investigation, and one for the Bureau of Prohibition for investigative work, delivery truck, and motor cycle, to be used only for official purposes, *Proviso.*Reimbursement for car expenses.and purchase and repair of bicycles, $80,000: *Provided,* That this appropriation may be reimbursed for expenditures in connection with cars herein authorized for the Bureau of Investigation and Bureau of Prohibition from the appropriations for the expenses of said bureaus when approved in writing by the Attorney General.Rent, D. C. For rent of buildings and parts of buildings in the District of Columbia, $122,000, if space can not be assigned by the Public Buildings Commission in buildings under the control of that commission.Printing, etc. For printing and binding for the Department of Justice and the courts of the United States, $300,000.Travel and miscellaneous, etc., expenses. For traveling and other miscellaneous and emergency expenses, authorized and approved by the Attorney General, to be expended at his discretion, $10,000. miscellaneous objects, department of justiceMiscellaneous.Conduct of customs cases.Assistant Attorney General, special attorneys, etc. Conduct of customs cases: Assistant Attorney General, special Assistant Attorney attorneys and counselors at law in the conduct of customs cases, to be employed and their compensation fixed by the Attorney General; necessary clerical assistance and other employees at the seat of government and elsewhere, to be employed and their compensation fixed by the Attorney General, including experts at such rates of compensation as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General; supplies, Supreme Court Reports and Digests, and Federal Reporter and Digests, traveling, and other miscellaneous and incidental expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General; in all, $110,000.Defending suits in claims. Defending suits in claims against the United States: For necessary expenses incurred in the examination of witnesses, procuring evidence, employment of experts at such rates of compensation as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General, and such other expenses as may be necessary in defending suits in the Court Indian depredation claims.of Claims, including Indian depredation claims, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $60,000.Detection and prosecution of crimes.Protection of the President.*Post,* p. 782. Detection and prosecution of crimes: For the detection and prosecution of crimes against the United States; for the protection of the person of the President of the United States; the acquisition, collection, classification, and preservation of identification and other records and their exchange with the duly authorized officials of the Federal Government, of States, cities, and other institutions; for such other investigations regarding official matters under the control of the Department of Justice and the Department of State as may be directed by the Attorney General; hire, maintenance, upkeep, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles when 489necessary; fire arms and ammunition, such stationery, supplies, and equipment for use at the seat of government or elsewhere as the Attorney General may direct, including not to exceed $13,000 for taxicab hire to be used exclusively for the purposes set forth in this paragraph and to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General; traveling expenses; purchase of a motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle, including the exchange allowance of any vehicle given in part payment therefor; payment of rewards when specifically authorized by the Attorney General for information leading to the apprehension of fugitives from justice, and including not to exceed $477,356 for personal services in the District of Services in the District.Columbia, $2,775,000. examination of judicial offices Examination of judicial offices: For the investigation of the official Examination of judicial offices.acts, records, and accounts of marshals, attorneys, clerks of the United States courts and Territorial courts, probation officers, and United States commissioners, for which purpose all the official papers, records, and dockets of said officers, without exception, shall be examined by the agents of the Attorney General at any time; Investigating official acts, records, etc., of court officers.and also, when requested by the presiding judge, the official acts, records, and accounts of referees and trustees of such courts; for copying, in the District of Columbia or elsewhere, reports of examiners Services in the District.at folio rates; traveling expenses; and including not to exceed $136,940 for personal services in the District of Columbia; in all, $200,000; to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General. Enforcement of antitrust laws: For the enforcement of antitrust Enforcing antitrust laws.laws, including experts at such rates of compensation as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General, including not to exceed $42,560 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $150,000. salaries and expenses, bureau of prisonsBureau of Prisons. Salaries and expenses: For salaries and expenses in connection with Salaries and expenses.the supervision of the maintenance and care of United States prisoners, including not to exceed $180,240 for personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses, and Vol. 46, p. 325.expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of such bureau when authorized by the Attorney General, $215,000. bureau of prohibitionProhibition Bureau. Salaries and expenses: For expenses to enforce and administer Salaries and expenses.the applicable provisions of the National Prohibition Act, as amended, and supplemented (U. S. C., title 27), and internal revenue Vol. 41, p. 305; Vol. 42, p. 222; Vol. 44, p. 1381; Vol. 46, p. 427.U. S. C., p. 853; Supp. V, pp. 451, 22, 452.laws, pursuant to the Act of March 3, 1927 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 5, secs. 281–281e), and the Act of May 27, 1930 (46 Stat., p. 427), including the employment of executive officers, attorneys, agents, inspectors, investigators, supervisors, clerks, messengers, and other personnel, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, to be appointed as authorized by law; the securing of evidence of violations of the Securing evidence, etc.Acts; the cost of chemical analysis made by other, than employees of the United States and expenses incident to the giving of testimony in relation thereto; the purchase of stationery, supplies, equipment, Supplies, etc.mechanical devices, newspapers, periodicals, books, including law books and books of reference, and such other expenditures as may be necessary in the District of Columbia and the several field offices; costs incurred in the seizure, storage, and disposition of liquor Expenses of seizures, etc.and property seized under the National Prohibition Act, including 490seizures made under the internal revenue laws if a violation of the National Prohibition Act is involved and disposition is made under R. S., sec. 3460, p. 685; U. S. C., p. 846.section 3460, Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 26, sec. 1193); costs incurred in the seizure, storage, and disposition of any vehicle and team or automobile, boat, air or water craft, or any other conveyance, Vol. 41, p. 315.seized pursuant to section 26, Title II, of the National Prohibition Act, when the proceeds of sale are insufficient therefor or where there is no sale; purchase of passenger-carrying motor vehicles at a total cost of not to exceed $50,000, including the value of any vehicles exchanged, and the hire, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled or horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; and for rental of quarters; in all, Services in the District.$10,250,000, of which amount not to exceed $335,120 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. JUDICIALJudicial. united states supreme courtUnited States Supreme Court.Salaries of Justices.All other officers, etc. Salaries: Chief Justice, $20,500; eight Associate Justices, at $20,000 each; and all other officers and employees, whose compensation shall be fixed by the court, except as otherwise provided by law, and who may be employed and assigned by the Chief Justice to any office or work of the court, including an additional assistant to the reporter of the court, if the court deems one necessary, to enable the reporter to expedite the publication of its reports, $100,000; in all, $280,500.Printing and binding. For printing and binding for the Supreme Court of the United States, $21,000, to be expended as required, without allotment by quarters. The printing and binding for the Supreme Court shall be done by the printer it may employ, unless it shall otherwise order. miscellaneous expenses, supreme courtMiscellaneous expenses. For miscellaneous expenses of the Supreme Court of the United States, including rent of office for the reporter in Washington, to be expended as the Chief Justice may direct, $15,000.Reporter. For the salary of the reporter, $8,000. salaries of judgesJudges.Circuit and district. For salaries of forty circuit judges, at $12,500 each; one hundred and fifty-one district judges (including two in the Territory of Retired.Vol. 40, p. 1157; U. S. C., p. 908.Customs Court.Vol. 46, p. 737; vol. 42, p. 972.*Proviso.*Availability.Hawaii, one in the Territory of Porto Rico, and four in the Territory of Alaska), at $10,000 each; and judges retired under section 260 of the Judicial Code, as amended, and section 518 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and general appraiser retired under section 518 of the Tariff Act of 1922; in all $2,174,000: *Provided,* That this appropriation shall be available for the salaries of all United States justices and circuit and district judges lawfully entitled thereto, whether active or retired. court of customs and patent appealsCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals.Salaries. Salaries: Presiding judge and four associate judges, at $12,500 each; and all other officers and employees of the court, $37,500; in all, $100,000.Printing and binding. For printing and binding, $5,000.Books, miscellaneous expenses, etc. For books and periodicals, including their exchange; stationery, supplies, traveling expenses; drugs, chemicals, cleansers, furniture; and for such other miscellaneous expenses as may be approved by the presiding judge, $4,500. 491 customs courtCustoms Court. Salaries: Presiding judge and eight judges, at $10,000 each; and Judges.Other officers, etc.all other officers and employees of the court, $140,000; in all, $230,000. For books and periodicals, including their exchange; stationery, Books, miscellaneous expenses, etc.supplies, traveling expenses; and for such other miscellaneous expenses as may be approved by the presiding judge, $15,000. For printing and binding, $3,000.Printing and binding. court of claimsCourt of claims. Salaries: Chief justice, $12,500; four judges, at $12,500 each; and Salaries.all other officers and employees of the court, $55,000; in all $117,500. For printing and binding, $35,000.Printing and binding. For stationery, court library, repairs, including repairs to bicycles, Miscellaneous expenses.fuel, electric light, electric elevator, and other miscellaneous expenses, $6,000. Salaries and expenses of commissioners: For salaries of seven commissioners Commissioners, salaries, etc.at $7,500 each, and for travel expenses, compensation of stenographers authorized by the court, and for stenographic and other fees and charges necessary in the taking of testimony and in Vol. 43, p. 964; Vol. 46, p. 799.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 469.the performance of the duties as authorized by the Act entitled “An Act amending section 2 and repealing section 3 of the Act approved February 24, 1925 (43 Stat., p. 964, ch. 301), entitled ‘An Act to authorize the appointment of commissioners by the Court of Claims and to prescribe their powers and compensation,’ and for other purposes,” approved June 23, 1930 (46 Stat., p. 799), $75,000. For necessary repairs and improvements to the Court of Claims Repairs to buildings.buildings, to be expended under the supervision of the Architect of the Capitol, $4,000. territorial courtsTerritorial courts. Hawaii: Chief justice, $10,500; two associate justices, at $10,000 Hawaii.each; in all, $30,500.For judges of circuit courts at $7,500 each for the first circuit, and $7,000 each for the second, third, fourth, and fifth circuits, $58,000. marshals, district attorneys, clerks, and other expenses of united states courtsUnited States courts. For salaries, fees, and expenses of United States marshals and their Marshals.Salaries, etc.deputies, including services rendered in behalf of the United States or otherwise, services in Alaska in collecting evidence for the United Alaska.States when so specially directed by the Attorney General, traveling Traveling expenses, etc.expenses, and maintenance, alteration, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles used in connection with the transaction of the official business of the United States marshals, $4,100,000. For salaries, traveling, and other expenses of United States district District attorneys Salaries, etc.attorneys and their regular assistants, clerks, and other employees, including the office expenses of United States district attorneys in Alaska, and for salaries of regularly appointed clerks to United States district attorneys for services rendered during vacancy in the office of the United States district attorney, $3,050,000. For compensation and traveling expenses of special attorneys and Special assistants.assistants to the Attorney General and to United States district attorneys employed by the Attorney General to aid in special cases, and for payment of foreign counsel employed by the Attorney Gen-Foreign counsel.492*Proviso.*Pay restriction.eral in special cases, $360,000: *Provided,* That the amount paid as compensation out of the funds herein appropriated to any person employed hereunder shall not exceed $10,000.Clerks of courts, etc.Salaries, etc. For salaries of clerks of United States circuit courts of appeals and United States district courts, their deputies, and other assistants, Travel expenses.Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S.C., Supp. V, p. 40.travel expenses pursuant to the subsistence expense Act of 1926 (U. S. C., title 5, secs. 821–833), and other expenses of conducting their respective offices, $1,925,000.Commissioners, etc.R. S., sec. 1014, p. 189; U. S. C., p. 506. For fees of United States commissioners and other committing magistrates acting under section 1014, Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 18, sec. 591), $550,000.Jurors and witnesses.Mileage and per diem.R. S., sec. 850, p. 160.U. S. C., p. 927.*Ante,* p. 782. Fees of Jurors and witnesses, United States courts: For mileage and per diems of jurors; for mileage and per diems of witnesses and for per diems in lieu of subsistence; and for payment of the actual expenses of witnesses, as provided by section 850, Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 28, sec. 604), including the expenses, mileage, and per diems of witnesses on behalf of the Government before the United States Customs Court, such payments to be made on the certification of the attorney for the United States and to be conclusive as R. S., sec. 846, p. 159.U. S. C., p. 924.*Provisos.*Pay, etc., on approval of Attorney General.provided by section 846, Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 28, sec. 577), $3,750,000: *Provided,* That not to exceed $10,000 of this amount ; shall be available for such compensation and expenses of witnesses or informants as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General, which approval shall be conclusive: *Provided further,* That no Attendance fee restriction.part of the sum herein appropriated shall be used to pay any witness more than one attendance fee for any one calendar day.Rent of court rooms. For rent of rooms for the United States courts and judicial officers, $90,000.Bailiffs. For bailiffs, not exceeding three bailiffs in each court, except in the southern district of New York and the northern district of Expenses, judges.Vol. 36, p. 1161.U. S. C., pp. 864, 926.Illinois; expenses of circuit and district judges of the United States and the judges of the district courts of the United States in Alaska, Porto Rico, and Hawaii, as provided by section 259 of the Act entitled “An Act to codify, revise, and amend the laws relating to the judiciary,” approved March 3, 1911 (U. S. C., title 28, secs. 9 and Jury expenses.596); meals and lodging for jurors in United States cases, and of bailiffs in attendance upon the same, when ordered by the court, Alaska.Vol. 31, p. 639.U. S. C., pp. 864, 921, 926.Jury commissioners.and meals and lodging for jurors in Alaska, as provided by section 193, Title II, of the Act of June 6, 1900 (31 Stat., p. 639); and compensation for jury commissioners, $5 per day, not exceeding three *Proviso.*Service restriction.days for any one term of court, $400,000: *Provided,* That no per diem shall be paid to any bailiff unless the court is actually in session and the judge present and presiding or present in chambers.Miscellaneous.*Ante,* p. 782. For such miscellaneous expenses as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General, tor the United States courts and their officers, including experts at such rates of compensation as may be authorized or approved by the Attorney General, including also so much as may be necessary in the discretion of the Attorney General Alaska, etc.Travel expenses.Vol. 44, p. 688.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 40.*Proviso.*Law clerk’s salary.Supplies, etc.for such expenses in the District of Alaska and in courts other than Federal courts, and including traveling expenses pursuant to the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926 (U. S. C., title 5, ch. 16), $900,000: *Provided,* That the maximum salary paid to any law clerk to any circuit judge shall not exceed $2,400 per annum. For supplies, including the exchange of typewriting and adding machines, for the United States courts and judicial officers, including firearms and ammunition therefor, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $75,000. 493 For the purchase of law books, including the exchange thereof, for Law books for judicial officers.United States judges, district attorneys, and other judicial officers, including the libraries of the ten United States circuit courts or appeals, for the purchase of the Federal Reporter and continuations Federal Reporter.thereto as issued, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, $75,000: *Provided,* That such books shall in all *Provisos.*Transmittal to successors.cases be transmitted to their successors in office; all books purchased thereunder to be marked plainly, “The property of the United States ”: *Provided further,* That not to exceed $2 per volume shall Price limit for United States Code, annotated.be paid for the current and future volumes of the United States Code, Annotated. penal and correctional institutionsPenal, etc., institutions. For all services, supplies, materials, and equipment in connection Services, supplies, etc.with or incident to the subsistence and care of inmates and maintenance and upkeep of Federal penal and correctional institutions, including farm and other operations not otherwise specifically provided for in the discretion of the Attorney General; gratuities for inmates at release, provided such gratuities shall be furnished to inmates sentenced for terms of imprisonment of not less than six months, and transportation to the place of conviction or bona fide residence at the time of conviction or to such other place within the United States as may be authorized by the Attorney General; expenses of interment or transporting remains of deceased inmates to their homes in the United States; maintenance and repair of passenger-carrying vehicles; traveling expenses of institution officials and employees when traveling on official duty, including expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the several institutions when authorized by the Attorney General, and including expenses incurred in pursuing and identifying escaped inmates; traveling expenses of members of advisory boards authorized by law incurred in the discharge of their official duties; rewards for the capture of escaped inmates; newspapers, books, and periodicals; firearms and ammunition; tobacco for inmates; and the purchase and exchange of farm products and livestock, when authorized by *Provisos.*Interchangeable appropriations.the Attorney General: *Provided,* That upon the written order of the Attorney General not to exceed 10 per centum of the amounts herein appropriated under this heading, except the appropriations for construction and repair and working capital funds of penal and correctional institutions and for support of United States prisoners, shall be available interchangeably for expenditures on the objects named, but the total of any appropriation shall not be increased by more than 10 per centum and under the following heads: *Provided,* Prison commissaries.That any part of the appropriations under this heading used for payment of salaries of personnel employed in the operation of prison commissaries shall be reimbursed from commissary earnings, and such reimbursement shall be in addition to the amounts appropriated herein. Prison industries working capital fund: Prison industries working Prison industries working capital fund.Reappropriation.Vol. 46, p. 1327.capital fund, 1932 and prior years, is reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year 1933, including payment of obligations incurred in prior years; and the said working capital fund and all receipts credited thereto may be used as a revolving fund for the Receipts credited to revolving fund.Vol. 46, p. 391.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 219.to fiscal year 1933, for the purposes authorized by the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the diversification of employment of Federal prisoners for their training and schooling in trades and occupations, and for other purposes,” approved May 27, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, secs. 744d, 744e, 744f). 494 medical and hospital serviceMedical and hospital service.Public Health Service details. For medical relief for, and incident to the care and maintenance of, inmates of penal and correctional institutions, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, and not to exceed $60,568 for pay and allowances of regular commissioned officers of the Public Health Service, and including medical, surgical, and hospital Medical appliances.supplies, materials, equipment, and appliances, together with appliances necessary for patients, $312,000, which amount, in the Transfer of funds.discretion of the Attorney General, may be transferred to the Public Health Service for direct expenditure under the laws, appropriations, *Proviso.*Sum for personal services.and regulations governing the Public Health Service: *Provided,* That of this appropriation not to exceed $191,000 may be expended, for personal services.Penitentiaries.Leavenworth, Kans.Maintenance. United States penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas: For the United States penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, including not to exceed $657,608 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $1,645,000.Building construction, etc. For construction and repair of buildings, including the purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all expenses incident thereto, to be expended so as to give the maximum amount of employment to inmates of the institution, $8,000.Atlanta, Ga.Maintenance. United States penitentiary, Atlanta, Georgia: For the United States penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia, including not to exceed $390,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $1,045,000.Building construction, etc. For construction and repair of buildings, including the purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all expenses incident thereto, to be expended so as to give the maximum amount of employment to inmates of the institution, $8,500.McNeil Island, Wash.Maintenance. United States penitentiary, McNeil Island, Washington: For the United States penitentiary at McNeil Island, Washington, including not to exceed $200,000, for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $428,500.Building construction, etc. For construction and repair of buildings, including the purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all expenses incident thereto, to be expended so as to give the maximum amount of employment to inmates of the institution, $32,000.Northeastern Penitentiary.Maintenance, etc. United States Northeastern Penitentiary: For the United States penitentiary in the Northeast, including not to exceed $244,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $440,000.Industrial Institution for Women.Maintenance. Federal Industrial Institution for Women, Alderson, West Virginia : For the Federal Industrial Institution for Women at Alderson, West Virginia, including not to exceed $137,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $300,000.Industrial Reformatory.Maintenance, etc. United States Industrial Reformatory, Chillicothe, Ohio: For the United States Industrial Reformatory at Chillicothe, Ohio, including not to exceed $260,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $634,000.Construction, etc.Vol. 43, p. 724.U. S. C., p. 520. Construction: For the remodeling and construction of the necessary buildings and appurtenances, purchase of mechanical equipment, and other expenses incident to the construction of buildings in accordance with the provisions of “An Act for the establishment of a United States Industrial Reformatory,” approved January 7, 1925 (U. S. C., title 18, sec. 832), to be expended under the direction and upon the written order of the Attorney General, or his authorized representative, by contract or purchase of material and hire of labor and services and utilization of labor of United States prisoners, as the Attorney General may direct, $521,000, to be immediately 495available and to remain available until expended: *Provided,* That *Provisos.*Cost limitation.the total sum to be expended for such purposes shall not exceed $3,000,000: *Provided further,* That the Secretary of the Treasury, if in his discretion it would be impracticable to cause the plans, Outside architects, etc., authorized.drawings, designs, specifications, and estimates for the remodeling and construction of the necessary buildings to be prepared in the Office of the Supervising Architect of the Treasury Department, and the work of remodeling and constructing the said buildings to be supervised by the field force of said office, may contract for all or any portion of such work to be performed by such suitable person or firm as he may select. United States Southwestern Reformatory—Maintenance: For the Southwestern Reformatory.Maintenance.United States Southwestern Reformatory, including not to exceed $130,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees and not to exceed $2,000 for the purchase of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, $284,000. United States Southwestern Reformatory, construction: For the Construction.United States Southwestern Reformatory, including any cost incident to the acquisition and occupation of the site selected on the Reno Quartermaster Depot Military Reservation, Oklahoma, and for remodeling, constructing, and equipping the necessary buildings thereon, purchase of mechanical equipment, and other expenses incident thereto, as authorized by the Act entitled “An Act establishing Vol. 46, p. 389.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 223.two institutions for the confinement of United States prisoners, approved May 27, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, secs. 901, 911, 912), to be expended under the direction and upon the written order of the Attorney General, by contract or purchase of material and hire of labor and services and utilization of labor of United States prisoners, as the Attorney General may direct, $520,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended: *Provided,* That the *Proviso.*Cost limitation.total sum to be expended for such purposes shall not exceed $3,000,000, and authority is hereby granted to enter into contracts for not to exceed such amount. United States Hospital for Defective Delinquents: For the United Hospital for defective delinquents.Maintenance.*Ante,* p. 782.States Hospital for Defective Delinquents, including not to exceed $31,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees and not to exceed $2,500 for the purchase of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, $270,000. For the United States hospital for defective delinquents, including Site, construction, etc.the cost of purchasing a site, remodeling, constructing, and equipping the necessary buildings thereon, purchase of mechanical equipment, and all other expenses incident thereto, as authorized by the Act entitled “An Act to establish a hospital for defective delinquents,”Vol. 46, p. 270.U. S. C., Supp. V., p. 222.approved May 13, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, secs. 871, 872, 880), to be expended under the direction and upon the written order of the Attorney General, by contract or purchase of material and hire of labor and services and utilization of labor of United States prisoners, as the Attorney General may direct, $468,000, to remain available until expended. Federal jails: For maintenance and operation of Federal jails Federal jails.Maintenance, etc.Vol. 46, p. 325.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 220.House of detention.established under authority of the Act of May 14, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, sec. 753b), and the house of detention for Federal prisoners in New York City, including not to exceed $453,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $815,000. Federal jails: For the purchase of sites, constructing, remodeling, Establishment, etc.and equipping necessary buildings, purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all necessary expenses incident thereto, for establishing new Federal jails and altering and adapting other Government property for jail purposes, as authorized by the 496Act entitled “An Act to reorganize the administration of Federal prisons; to authorize the Attorney General to contract for the care of United States prisoners; to establish Federal jails, and for other purposes,” approved May 14, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, secs. 753c, 753d), to be expended under the direction and upon the written Contracts authorized.order of the Attorney General, by contract or purchase of material and hire of labor and services and utilization of labor of United States prisoners, as the Attorney General may direct, $500, to remain available until expended; and the Attorney General may contract with such suitable person or firm as he may select for the work of preparing plans, drawings, designs, specifications, and estimates for remodeling and construction of the necessary buildings.Prison camps.Construction, maintenance, etc. Prison camps: For the construction and repair of buildings at prison camps, the purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all necessary expenses incident thereto, and for the maintenance of United States prisoners at prison camps, including the maintenance, alteration, repair, and operation of a motor-propelled passenger-carrying bus, to be expended so as to give the maximum amount of employment to prisoners, $800,000: *Provided,* That reimbursements *Proviso.*Repayment basis.from this appropriation made to the War or other departments for supplies or subsistence shall be at the net contract or invoice price notwithstanding the provisions of any other Act.National Training School for Boys, D. C.Maintenance. National Training National Training School for Boys, Washington, District of Columbia: For the National Training School for Boys, Washington, District of Columbia, including not to exceed $120,000 for salaries and wages of all officers and employees, $248,000.Construction, etc. For construction, repairs, and alterations of buildings, including the purchase and installation of machinery and equipment, and all expenses incident thereto, to be expended so as to give the maximum amount of employment to inmates of the institution, $76,000.Probation system.Maintenance, etc.Vol. 43, p. 1259; Vol. 46, p. 503.U. S. C., p. 516; Supp. V, p. 218.*Provisos.*Travel, etc., expenses.Salary limitation. Probation system, United States courts: For salaries and expenses of probation officers, as authorized by the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Act of March 4, 1925, chapter 521, and for other purposes,” approved June 6, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, sec. 726), $415,000: *Provided,* That not to exceed $70,000 of this appropriation may expended for travel and subsistence: *Provided further,* That no part of the appropriation herein made shall be used to pay any probation officer a salary in excess of $2,600 per annum: *Provided further,* That no part of this or any other appropriation shall be used Conditions imposed.to defray the salary or expenses of any probation officer who does not comply with the official orders, regulations, and probation standards promulgated by the Attorney General.Support of prisoners. Support of prisoners: For support of United States prisoners, in non-Federal institutions and in the Territory of Alaska, including necessary clothing and medical aid, discharge gratuities provided by law and transportation to place of conviction or place of bona fide residence in the United States, or such other place within the United States as may be authorized by the Attorney General; and including Rent.Vol. 46, p. 326.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 216.rent, repair, alteration, and maintenance of buildings and the maintenance of prisoners therein, occupied under authority of sections 4 and 5 of the Act of May 14, 1930 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 18, sec. 696); support of prisoners becoming insane during imprisonment, and who continue insane after expiration of sentence, who have no friends to whom they can be sent; shipping remains of deceased prisoners to their friends or relatives in the United States, and interment of deceased prisoners whose remains are unclaimed; expenses incurred in identifying and pursuing escaped prisoners 497and for rewards for their recapture; and for repairs, betterments, and improvements of United States jails, including sidewalks, $2,855,000. TITLE III.— DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCEDepartment of Commerce. office of the secretary Salaries: Secretary of Commerce, $15,000; Assistant Secretary Secretary, Assistant, and other personnel.and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including the chief clerk and superintendent, who shall be chief executive officer of the department and who may be designated by the Secretary of Commerce to sign official papers and documents during the temporary absence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary of the department, $300,000; in all, $315,000. contingent expenses, department of commerceContingent and miscellaneous expenses. For contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the offices and bureaus of the department, except the Patent Office, including those for which appropriations for contingent and miscellaneous expenses are specifically made, including professional and scientific books, law books, books of reference, periodicals, blank books, pamphlets, maps, newspapers (not exceeding $2,500); purchase of atlases or maps; stationery; furniture and repairs to same; carpets, matting, oilcloth, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, sponges; fuel, lighting, and heating; not to exceed $3,500 for the purchase and exchange of one passenger-carrying automobile for the Secretary of Commerce; purchase and exchange of motor trucks and bicycles; maintenance, repair, and operation of three motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles (one for the Secretary of Commerce and two for the general use of the department), and motor trucks and bicycles, to be used only for official purposes; freight and express charges; postage to foreign countries; telegraph and telephone service; typewriters, adding machines, and other labor-saving devices, including their repair and exchange; first-aid outfits for use in the buildings occupied by employees of this department; street-car fares, not exceeding $500; and all other miscellaneous items and necessary expenses not included in the foregoing, $238,200, which sum shall constitute the appropriation for contingent expenses of the department, except the Patent Office, and shall also be available for the Available for field service.purchase of necessary supplies and equipment for field services of bureaus and offices of the department for which contingent and miscellaneous appropriations are specifically made in order to facilitate the purchase through the central purchasing office (Division of Purchases.*Proviso.*Restriction on maintenance, etc., of passenger vehicles.Purchases and Sales), as provided by law: *Provided,* That expenditures from appropriations contained in this Act for the maintenance, upkeep, and repair, exclusive of garage rent, pay of operator, fuel, and lubricants on any one motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle used by the Department of Commerce shall not exceed one-third of the market price of a new vehicle of the same make or class, and in any case more than $500. For all printing and binding for the Department of Commerce, Printing and binding.including all of its bureaus, offices, institutions and services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, except the Patent Office, $600,000: *Provided,* That an amount not to exceed $2,000 of this *Proviso.*Copy editors.appropriation may be expended for salaries of persons detailed from the Government Printing Office for service as copy editors. 498 federal employment stabilization boardFederal Employment Stabilization Board. Salaries and expenses: To enable the Secretary of Commerce to carry out the provisions of the “Employment Stabilization Act of Vol. 46, p. 1084.U. S. C., Supp. VI, p. 629.1931,” approved February 10, 1931 (46 Stat., pp. 1084-1087), including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses, purchase of equipment, furniture, stationery and office supplies, printing and binding, repairs to equipment, law books, books of reference, and other necessary publications, and to procure by contract or otherwise any information or data concerning construction which may be considered pertinent, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, $75,000, of which amount not to exceed $58,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. radio divisionRadio Division.Wireless communication on steam vessels.Enforcing laws requiring.Vol. 36, p. 629; Vol. 37, pp. 199, 1565; Vol. 44, p. 1162.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 661. Wireless communication laws: To enable the Secretary of Commrce 11 So in original. to enforce the Acts of Congress “to require apparatus and operators for radio communication on certain ocean steamers” and “to regulate radio communication” and carry out the provisions of the international radiotelegraphic convention, examine and settle international radio accounts, including personal services in the District of Columbia, and to employ such persons and means as may be necessary, traveling and subsistence expenses, purchase and exchange of instruments, technical books, tabulating, duplicating, and other office machinery and devices, rent, improvement and care of grounds and repairs to buildings not to exceed $1,500, and all other miscellaneous items, including rubber gloves, aprons, rubber Services in the District.boots, and necessary expenses not included in the foregoing, $490,000, of which amount not to exceed $65,315 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. aircraft in commerceAircraft in commerce.Personal services and all expenses.Vol. 44, p. 568.U. S. C., p. 2119. Aircraft in commerce: To carry out the provisions of the Act approved May 20, 1926, entitled “An Act to encourage and regulate the use of aircraft in commerce, and for other purposes ” (U. S. C., Vol. 45, p. 1404.U. S. C., Supp. V, p.698.title 49, secs. 171–184), as amended by the Act approved February 28, 1929 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 49, sec. 173d), including salary of Assistant Secretary of Commerce (provided for in the Act cited above), and other personal services in the District of Columbia (not to exceed $325,520), and elsewhere; rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; traveling expenses; contract stenographic reporting services; fees and mileage of witnesses; purchase of furniture and equipment; stationery and supplies, including medical supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs; purchase, including exchange, not to exceed $3,000; maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; purchase and replacement, Purchases of airplanes, accessories, etc.including exchange, of airplanes (not to exceed $65,000); purchase of airplane motors, airplane and motor accessories and spare parts; maintenance, operation, and repair of airplanes and airplane motors; purchase of special clothing, wearing apparel, and similar equipment for aviation purposes; purchase of books of reference and periodicals; newspapers, reports, documents, plans, specifications, maps, manuscripts, and all other publications; and all other necessary expenses not included in the foregoing; in all, $1,000,000. 499 Air-navigation facilities: For the establishment and maintenance Air navigation facilities.Establishing and maintaining aids, mail routes, etc.of aids to air navigation, including the equipment of additional air-mail routes for day and night flying; the construction of necessary lighting, radio, and other signalling and communicating structures and apparatus; repairs, alterations, and all expenses of maintenance and operation; investigation, research, and experimentation to develop and improve aids to air navigation; for personal services in Services in the District.the District of Columbia (not to exceed $155,310) and elsewhere; purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled, passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, including their exchange; replacement, including exchange, of not to exceed four airplanes, maintenance, operation, and repair of airplanes, including accessories and spare parts and special clothing, wearing apparel, and suitable equipment for aviation purposes; and for the acquisition *Proviso.*Use restricted.Vol. 44, p. 568.of the necessary sites by lease or grant, $7,553,500: *Provided,* That no part of this appropriation shall be used for any purpose not authorized by the Air Commerce Act of 1926. Appropriations herein made for aircraft in commerce and air Attendance at meetings.Appropriations available.navigation facilities shall be available for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the promotion of civil aeronautics, and also expenses of illustrating the work of the Aeronautics Branch by showing of maps, charts, and graphs at such meetings, when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce. bureau of foreign and domestic commerceForeign and Domestic Commerce Bureau. Salaries: For the director and other personal services in the District Director, and office personnel.of Columbia, $250,000. For carrying out the provisions of the Act approved March 3, Foreign Commerce Service.Expenses of.Vol. 44, p. 1394.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 146.Personal services.1927 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 15, secs. 197–197f), to establish in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department of Commerce a Foreign Commerce Service of the United States, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, the compensation of a clerk or clerks for each commercial attaché at the rate of not to exceed $3,000 per annum for each person so employed, rent outside the District of Columbia, telephone service, Outside rent.purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, duplicating, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, law books, books of reference and periodicals, uniforms, maps, reports, documents, plans, specifications, manuscripts, newspapers (foreign and domestic) not exceeding $4,000, and all other publications, traveling expenses of officers and employees, ice and drinking water for office purposes, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, and under the following heads: Promoting commerce in Europe and other areas: Investigations Promoting commerce in Europe, etc.in Europe and other areas for the promotion and development of the foreign commerce of the United States, $670,000; Promoting commerce in Latin America: Investigations in Latin In Latin America.America for the promotion and development of the foreign commerce of the United States, $431,000; Promoting commerce in the Far East: Investigations in the Far In the Far East.East for the promotion and development of the foreign commerce of the United States, $360,000; Promoting commerce in Africa: Investigations in Africa for the In Africa.promotion and development of the foreign commerce of the United States, $85,000; 500District and cooperative office service.Maintenance, etc. District and cooperative office service: For all expenses necessary to operate and maintain district and cooperative offices, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, rent outside of the District of Columbia, traveling and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, purchase of maps, books of reference and periodicals, reports, documents, plans, specifications, manuscripts, not exceeding $1,200 for newspapers, both foreign and domestic, and all other publications necessary for the promotion of *Proviso.*Conditions for opening new offices.the commercial interests of the United States, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, $510,000: *Provided,*That the Secretary of Commerce shall require as a condition for the opening of a new office or the continuation of an existing office, except in cases where space is available in Federal buildings or in Federal buildings for the construction of which contracts have been let, that commercial organizations in the district affected provide suitable quarters without cost to the Government on and after September 1, 1932;China Trade Act.Enforcement expenses.Vol. 42, p. 849; Vol. 43, p. 995.U. S. C., p. 367. Enforcement of China Trade Act: To carry out the provisions or the Act entitled “China Trade Act) 1922 ” (U. S. C., title 15, secs. 141–162), including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding and computing machines, accessories and repairs, purchase of books of reference and periodicals, reports, documents, plans, specifications, maps, manuscripts, and all other publications; rent outside the District of Columbia; ice and drinking water for office purposes, and all necessary expenses not included in *Proviso.*Advance payments authorized.the foregoing, $17,000: *Provided,* That payment in advance for telephone and other similar services under this appropriation is hereby authorized;Export industries.Investigating problems of. Export industries: To enable the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce to investigate and report on domestic as well as foreign problems relating to the production, distribution, and marketing, in so far as they relate to the important export industries of the United States, including personal services in the District of Columbia, traveling and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, Outside rent.books of reference and periodicals, reports, documents, plans, specifications, manuscripts, and all other publications, rent outside of the District of Columbia, ice and drinking water for office purposes, and all other incidental expenses connected therewith, $765,000;Domestic raw materials and manufactures.Compiling data as to disposition of, etc. Domestic commerce and raw-materials investigations: For all expenses, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of books of reference and periodicals, furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, medical supplies and first-aid outfits, reports, documents, plans, specifications, manuscripts, maps, and all other publications, rent outside of the District of Columbia, traveling and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, to enable the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce to collect and compile information regarding the disposition and handling of raw materials and manufactures within the United Foreign raw materials.States; and to investigate the conditions of production and marketing of foreign raw materials essential for American industries, $300,000; 501 Customs statistics: For all expenses necessary for the operation Customs statistics.Expenses of collecting, compiling, etc.of the section of customs statistics transferred to the Department of Commerce from the Treasury Department by the Act approved January 5, 1923 (U. S. C., title 15, sec. 194), including personal Vol. 42, p. 1109.U. S. C., p. 373.services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; rent of or purchase of tabulating, punching, sorting, and other mechanical labor-saving machinery or devices, including adding, typewriting, billing, computing, mimeographing, multigraphing, photostat, and other duplicating machines and devices, including their exchange and repair; telegraph and telephone service; subsistence and traveling expenses of officers and employees while traveling on official business; freight, express, drayage; tabulating cards, stationery, and miscellaneous office supplies; books of reference and periodicals; furniture and equipment; ice, water, heat, light, and power; street-car fare; and all other necessary and incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, $270,000; Lists of foreign buyers: For all necessary expenses, including personal Directory of foreign buyers.Compiling, etc., expenses.services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, lists of foreign buyers, books of reference, periodicals, reports, documents, plans, specifications, rent outside of the District of Columbia, traveling Outside rent.and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, to enable the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce to collect and compile lists of foreign buyers, $60,000: *Provided,* That the Secretary of *Proviso.*Charges authorized.Commerce may make such charges as he deems reasonable for lists of foreign buyers, special statistical services, special commodity news bulletins, and World Trade Directory Reports, and the amounts collected therefrom shall be deposited in the Treasury as “Miscellaneous receipts ”; Investigation of foreign trade restrictions: For all necessary Foreign trade restrictions.Expenses of collecting, etc., information.expenses, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of furniture and equipment, stationery and supplies, typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs, books of reference and periodicals, reports, documents, plans, specifications, manuscripts, and all other publications, rent Outside rent.outside of the District of Columbia, traveling and subsistence expenses of officers and employees, and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, to enable the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce to collect and compile information regarding the restrictions and regulations of trade imposed by foreign countries, $50,000; Transportation of families and effects of officers and employees: Transportation of families and effects.To pay the itemized and verified statements of the actual and necessary expenses of transportation and subsistence, under such regulations as the Secretary of Commerce may prescribe, of families and effects of officers and employees of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce in going to and returning from their posts, or when traveling under the order of the Secretary of Commerce, and also for defraying the expenses of preparing and transporting the Bringing home remains of officers, etc., dying abroad.remains of officers and employees of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce who may die abroad or in transit, while in the discharge of their official duties, to their former homes in this country, or to a place not more distant for interment, and for the ordinary expenses of such interment, $45,000; 502Furnishing living quarters, etc.,Vol. 44, p. 1395; Vol. 46, p. 163. To enable the Secretary of Commerce, under such regulations as he may prescribe, in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Act entitled ‘An Act to establish in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department of Commerce, a Foreign Commerce Service of the United States, and for other purposes,’ approved March 3, 1927,” approved April 12, 1930 (46 Stat., p. 163), to furnish the officers in the Foreign Commerce Service of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce stationed in a foreign country, without cost to them and and within the limits of this appropriation, allowances for living R. S. sec., 1765, p. 314.U. S. C., p. 32.*Proviso.*Maximum allowance.quarters, heat, and light, notwithstanding the provisions of section 1765 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 5, sec. 70), $175,000: *Provided,* That the maximum allowance to any officer shall not exceed $1,700;Attendance at meetings, etc. Appropriations herein made for the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce shall be available for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the promotion of foreign and domestic commerce, or either, and also expenses of illustrating the work of the bureau by showing of maps, charts, and graphs at such meetings, when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce;Minor purchases in foreign countries. The purchase of supplies and equipment or the procurement of services for the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, in R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.foreign countries, may be made in open market without compliance with section 3709 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5), in the manner common among business men, when the aggregate amount of the purchase or the service does not exceed $100 in any instance;Services in the District. Total, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, $3,988,000, of which amount not to exceed $1,670,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. bureau of the censusCensus Bureau.Fifteenth Census.Expenses of compilation, etc. For expenses for securing information for and compiling the census reports provided for by law, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; per diem compensation and expenses of enumerators, special agents, supervisors, supervisor’s clerks, and interpreters in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; traveling expenses; the cost of transcribing State, municipal, and other records; temporary rental of quarters outside the District of Columbia; not to exceed $5,000 for the employment by contract of personal services for the preparation of monographs on census subjects; not to exceed $26,000 for constructing tabulating machines and repairs to such machinery and other mechanical appliances, including technical, mechanical, and other personal services in connection therewith in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, and the purchase of necessary machinery and supplies; and not to exceed $2,000 for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the collection of statistics when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce, $862,125, of which amount not to exceed $672,330 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia, including not to exceed $130,000 for temporary employees who may be appointed by the Director of the Census under civil-service rules, at per diem rates to be fixed by him without regard to the provisions of the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, for the *Provisos.*Leaves of absence to temporary employees,purpose of assisting in periodical inquiries: *Provided,* That temporary employees of the Bureau of the Census may be allowed leave of absence with pay at the rate of two and one-half days per month: 503*Provided further,* That any balance of the appropriations made for Balance reappropriated.the expenses of the Fifteenth Census remaining unexpended on December 31, 1932, is hereby reappropriated and made available for use until June 30, 1933, to be used only for the same purpose for which it was originally appropriated. steamboat inspection serviceSteamboat Inspection Service.*Ante,* p. 415.Supervising Inspector General and office personnel. Salaries: For the Supervising Inspector General and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $35,000. Steamboat inspectors: For eleven supervising inspectors; inspectors Inspectors.Assistants at designated ports.of hulls and inspectors of boilers; assistant inspectors, as authorized by law, for the following ports: New York, forty-seven; Pittsburgh, two; New Orleans, ten; Baltimore, ten; Providence, four; Boston, ten; Philadelphia, twelve; San Francisco, eighteen; Buffalo, eight; Cleveland, eight, Milwaukee, four; Chicago, six; Grand Haven, two; Detroit, four; Norfolk, eight; Seattle, fourteen; Portland (Oregon), six; Albany, two; Portland (Maine), four; Los Angeles, six; Galveston, four; Mobile, four; Savannah, two; Toledo, two; and six traveling inspectors; in all, $833,625. Clerk hire, Steamboat Inspection Service: For compensation of Clerk hire.clerks to boards of steamboat inspectors, to be appointed by the Secretary of Commerce in accordance with the provisions of law, $150,000. Contingent expenses: For the payment of fees to witnesses; for Contingent expenses.traveling and other expenses when on official business of the Supervising Inspector General, Deputy Supervising Inspector General, supervising inspectors, traveling inspectors, local and assistant inspectors, and clerks; for instruments, furniture, stationery, streetcar fares not to exceed $25, janitor service, contract stenographic reporting services without reference to section 3709 of the Revised R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5), and every other thing necessary to carry into effect the provisions of title 46, chapter 14, United States Code, $110,000. bureau of navigationNavigation Bureau. Salaries: For the commissioner and other personal services in the Commissioner, and office personnel.*Ante,* p. 415.District of Columbia, $65,000. Admeasurement of vessels: To enable the Commissioner of Navigation Admeasurement of vessels.to secure uniformity in the admeasurement of vessels, including the employment of an adjuster of admeasurements, purchase and exchange of admeasuring instruments, traveling and incidental expenses, $4,000. Enforcement of navigation laws: To enable the Secretary of Commerce Motor boats to enforce navigation laws.to provide and operate such motor boats and employ thereon such persons as may be necessary for the enforcement, under his direction, of laws relating to navigation and inspection of vessels, boarding of vessels, and counting of passengers on excursion boats, including insignia, braid, and chin straps, and coats, caps, and aprons, for stewards’ departments on vessels, $100,000. Preventing overcrowding of passenger vessels: To 11So in original. such persons Preventing overcrowding of vessels.as may be necessary, of whom not more than enable the Secretary of Commerce to employ, temporarily, two at any one time may be employed in the District of Columbia, to enforce the laws to prevent overcrowding of passenger and excursion vessels, and all expenses in connection therewith, $15,000. 504Shipping commissioners.Clerk hire. Shipping commissioners: For shipping commissioners, $38,100. Clerk hire: For compensation, to be fixed by the Secretary of Commerce, to each person or clerk in the offices of shipping commissioners, $95,000.Contingent expenses, office of commissioners. Contingent expenses: For rent, stationery, and other requisites for transaction of the business of shipping commissioners’ offices, including janitor service; in all $11,000.Load lines on American vessels.Enforcing law regulating, etc. Load lines on American vessels: To enable the Secretary of Commerce to carry out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to establish load lines for American vessels, and for other purposes,” Vol. 45, p. 1492.U. S. C., Supp. V, p. 649.approved March 2, 1929 (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 46, secs. 85–85g), including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses, rentals, purchase of instruments and other equipment, furniture, stationery and office supplies, repairs to equipment, books of reference and other necessary publications, documents, Advertising.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733U. S. C., p. 1309.plans and specifications, contract stenographic reporting services without reference to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5), and all other incidental expenses not included in the foregoing, $19,440, of which not to exceed $14,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. bureau of standardsBureau of Standards.Director, and office personnel. Salaries: For the director and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $645,000.Equipment. Equipment: For apparatus, machinery, tools, and appliances used in connection with buildings or work of the bureau, typewriters, adding machines, and other labor-saving devices, laboratory supplies, materials, and supplies used in the construction of apparatus, machinery, or other appliances, including their exchange; piping, wiring, and construction incident to the installation of apparatus, machinery, or appliances; furniture for laboratories and offices, cases for apparatus, $80,000, including $17,000 for repairs and necessary alterations to buildings.General expenses. General expenses: For fuel for heat, light, and power; office expenses, stationery, cleaning and toilet supplies, books and periodicals, which may be exchanged when not needed for permanent use; traveling expenses; street-car fares not exceeding $100; expenses of the visiting committee; expenses of attendance of American member International Committee of Weights and Measures.at the meeting of the International Committee of Weights and Measures; purchase of gloves, goggles, rubber boots, and aprons; supplies for operation, maintenance, and repair of motor trucks and a passenger automobile for official use, including their exchange; and contingencies of all kinds, $60,000.Care, etc., of grounds. Improvement and care of grounds: For grading, construction of roads and walks, piping grounds for water supply, lamps, wiring for lighting purposes, and other expenses incident to the improvement and care of grounds, including foreman and laborers in the District of Columbia, $12,000.Structural materials investigations. Testing structural materials: For continuation of the investigation of structural materials, such as stone, clays, cement, and so forth, Services in the District.*Proviso.*Disseminating information as to housing, etc.including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $270,000: *Provided,* That as much of this sum as necessary shall be used to collect and disseminate such scientific, practical, and statistical information as may be procured, showing or tending to show approved methods in building, planning and construction, standardization, and adaptability of structural units, including building materials and codes, economy in the manufacture and utilization of building materials and supplies, and such other matters 505as may tend to encourage, improve, and cheapen construction and housing. Testing machines: For maintenance and operation of testing Testing machines for physical constants.machines, including personal service in connection therewith in the District of Columbia and in the field, for the determination by the Bureau of Standards of the physical constants and the properties of materials as authorized by law, $45,000. Investigation of fire-resisting properties: For investigation of Fire-resisting building materials.fire-resisting properties of building materials and conditions under which they may be most efficiently used, and for the standardization of types of appliances for fire prevention, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $25,000. Investigation of public-utility standards: For investigation of the Public utility standards, etc., investigations.standards of practice and methods of measurements of public utilities, such as gas, electric light, electric power, water, telephone, central station heating, and electric-railway service, and the solution of the problems which arise in connection with standards in such service, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $90,000. Testing miscellaneous materials: For testing miscellaneous materials, Testing miscellaneous materials.such as varnish materials, soap materials, inks, and chemicals, including supplies for the Government departments and independent establishments, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, as authorized by law, $40,000. Radio research: For investigation and standardization of methods Radio standardization.and instruments employed in radio communication, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $74,280; Color standardization: To develop color standards and methods Industrial color standardization.of manufacture and of color measurements, with special reference to their industrial use in standardization and specification of colorants, such as dyestuffs, inks, and pigments, and other products, paint, paper, and textiles, in which color is a pertinent property, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $12,000; Investigation of clay products: To study methods of measurement Clay products processes.and technical processes used in the manufacture of pottery, brick, tile, terra cotta, and other clay products, and the study of the properties of the materials used in that industry, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000; Standardizing mechanical appliances: To develop methods of Mechanical appliances. Testing mechanical, hydraulic, and aeronautic devices, etc.testing and standardizing machines, motors, tools, measuring instruments, and other apparatus and devices used in mechanical, hydraulic, and aeronautic engineering; for the comparative study of types of apparatus and methods of operation, and for the establishment of standards of performance; for the accurate determination of fundamental physical constants involved in the proper execution of this work; and for the scientific experiments and investigations needed in solving the problems which may arise in connection therewith, especially in response to the requirements of aeronautics and aviation for information of a purely scientific nature, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000; Investigation of optical and other types of glass: For the investigation Optical glass production problems.of the problems involved in the production of optical and other types of glass, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $22,000; Investigation of textiles: To investigate textiles, paper, leather, Textiles, paper, etc., standardization.and rubber in order to develop standards of more durable quality and methods of measurement, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $50,000; 506Sugar standardization. Sugar standardization: For the standardization and design of sugar-testing apparatus; the development of technical specifications for the various grades of sugars, especially involving the standardization and manufacture of sugars; for the study of the technical problems incidental to the collection of the revenue on sugar and to determine the fundamental scientific constants of sugars and Rare and unusual types.other substances; for the standardization and production of rare and unusual types of sugars required for the medical service of the Government departments; and for other technical and scientific purposes, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $75,000;Gauges and screw threads.Cooperative standardization, etc. Gauge standardization: To provide by cooperation of the Bureau of Standards, the War Department, and the Navy Department for the standardization and testing of the standard gages, screw threads, and standards required in manufacturing throughout the United States, and to calibrate and test such standard gages, screw threads, and standards, including necessary equipment and personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000;Testing large scales, etc. Testing railroad-track, mine, and other scales: For investigation and testing of railroad-track scales, elevator scales, and other scales used in weighing commodities for interstate shipments and to secure equipment and assistance for testing the scales used by the Government in its transactions with the public, such as post-office, navy-yard, and customhouse scales, and for the purpose of cooperating with the States in securing uniformity in the weights and measures laws and in the methods of inspection; for investigating the conditions and Mine scales and cars.methods of use of scales and mine cars used for weighing and measuring coal dug by miners, for the purpose of determining wages due, and of conditions affecting the accuracy of the weighing or measuring of coal at the mines, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $50,000 ;High temperature measurements. High temperature investigations: For laboratory and field investigations of suitable methods of high temperature measurements and control in various industrial processes and to assist in making available directly to the industries the results of the bureau’s investigations in this field, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $6,000;Metallurgical research. Metallurgical research : For metallurgical research, including alloy steels, foundry practice, and standards for metals and sands; casting, rolling, forging, and the properties of aluminum alloys ; prevention of corrosion of metals and alloys; development of metal substitutes, as for platinum; behavior of bearing metals; preparation of metal specifications; investigation of new metallurgical processes and study of methods of conservation in metallurgical manufacture and Railway equipment.products; investigation of materials used in the construction of rails, wheels, axles, and other railway equipment, and the cause of their failure, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $50,600;Sound investigation. Sound investigation : For the investigation of the principles of sound and their application to military and industrial purposes, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $8,000 ;Industrial research.Cooperative investigations. Industrial research: For technical investigations in cooperation with the industries upon fundamental problems involved in industrial development, with a view to assisting in the permanent establishment of new American industries, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, $100,000 ; 507 Standardization of equipment: To enable the Bureau of Standards Cooperative standardization of industrial devices, etc.to cooperate with Government departments, engineers, and manufacturers in the establishment of standards, methods of testing, and inspection of instruments, equipment, tools, and electrical and mechanical devices used in the industries and by the Government, including the practical specifications for quality and performance of such devices, and the formulation of methods of inspection, laboratory, and service tests, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $150,000; Standard materials: For purchase, preparation, analysis, and Standards for checking chemical analyses.distribution of standard materials to be used in checking chemical analyses in the testing of physical measuring apparatus, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $8,000; Investigation of radioactive substances and X rays: For an investigation Radioactive substances and X-ray investigations.of radioactive substances and the methods of their measurements and testing; for investigations relative to the development of standard specifications for X-ray equipment and operation; for the investigation of the hazards of X-ray practice; for the testing and standardization of X-ray protective materials; for the standardization and design of X-ray testing equipment; for the determination of fundamental physical constants essential to X-ray diagnosis and therapy to X-ray analysis of materials and to other technical and scientific applications, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $20,000; Utilization of waste products from the land: For the survey of Utilizing waste products from the land.the possibilities of the industrial utilization of waste products from the land, including cooperation with colleges, other institutions, and manufacturers, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000: *Provided,* That the Bureau of Standards *Proviso.* Cooperation with Chemistry Bureau without duplicating work. Automotive engines, investigations, etc.cooperates with the Bureau of Chemistry and Soils, Department of Agriculture, without duplication of work; Investigation of automotive engines: For the promotion of economy and efficiency in automotive transportation by land and by air through investigations of the basic principles underlying the design, Performance, operation, and testing of automotive engines, their fuels, lubricants, accessories, and the power-transmitting system used in connection with them, also such elements as brakes and brake linings; to promote economy in the use of liquid fuels and safety in vehicular traffic, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000; Investigation of dental materials: To investigate the physical and Dental materials investigations.chemical properties of dental materials, including the method of their application and the causes of deterioration of such materials in service, for the purpose of developing standards of quality and standard methods of test, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $5,000; Hydraulic laboratory research: For the determination of fundamental Hydraulic laboratory research.data useful in hydraulic research and engineering, including laboratory research relating to the behavior and control of river and harbor waters, the study of hydraulic structures and water flow, and the development and testing of hydraulic instruments and accessories, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, $40,000; During the fiscal year 1933 the head of any department or independent Cooperative work with departments, etc., in scientific investigations, etc.establishment of the Government having funds available for scientific investigations and requiring cooperative work by the Bureau of Standards on scientific investigations within the scope of the functions of that bureau, and which the Bureau of Standards is unable to perform within the limits of its appropriations, may, 508Transfer of funds to credit of bureau.with the approval of the Secretary of Commerce, transfer to the Bureau of Standards 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 Bureau of Standards for performance of work for the department or establishment from which the transfer is made, including, where necessary, compensation for personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field;Attendance at meetings, etc. Appropriations herein made for the Bureau of Standards shall be available for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with standardization and research, or either, when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce, and for the compensation and expenses of medical officers of the Public Health Service detailed to the Bureau of Standards for the purpose of maintaining a first-aid station and making clinical observations;Services in the District, Total, Bureau of Standards, $2,137,280, of which amount not to exceed $1,800,664 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. bureau of lighthousesLighthouses Bureau.Commissioner, and office personnel. Salaries: For the commissioner and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $110,000.General expenses.Objects specified. General expenses: For supplies, including replacement of and necessary additions to existing equipment, repairs, maintenance, and incidental expenses of lighthouses and other lights, beacons, buoyage, fog signals, lighting of rivers heretofore authorized to be lighted, light vessels, other aids to navigation, and lighthouse tenders, including the establishment, repair, and improvement of beacons and day marks, and purchase of land for same; establishment Oil, etc., houses.*Provisos.*Limit for buildings.of post lights, buoys, submarine signals, and fog signals; establishment of oil or carbide houses, not to exceed $10,000: *Provided,* That any oil or carbide house erected hereunder shall not exceed $1,000 in cost; construction of necessary outbuildings at a cost not exceeding $1,000 at any one light station in any fiscal year; Restoring stations, etc.improvement of grounds and buildings connected with light stations and depots; restoring light stations and depots and buildings connected Limitation on use.therewith: *Provided further,* That such restoration shall be limited to the original purpose of the structures; wages of persons attending post lights; temporary employees and field force while engaged on works of general repair and maintenance, and laborers Rations, etc.and mechanics at lighthouse depots; rations and provisions or commutation thereof for working parties in the field, officers and crews of light vessels and tenders, and officials and other authorized persons of the Lighthouse Service on duty on board of such tenders or vessels, and money accruing from commutation for rations and provisions for the above-named persons on board of tenders and light vessels or in working parties in the field may be paid on proper vouchers to the person having charge of the mess of such vessel or Transferring household effects on change of station.party; not exceeding $2,000 for packing, crating, and transporting personal household effects of employees when transferred from one official station to another for permanent duty; purchase of rubber boots, oilskins, rubber gloves, and coats, caps, and aprons for stewards’ departments on vessels; reimbursement under rules prescribed by the Secretary of Commerce of keepers of light stations and masters of light vessels and of lighthouse tenders for rations Relief of shipwrecked persons.and provisions and clothing furnished ship-wrecked persons who may be temporarily provided for by them, not exceeding in all 509$5,000 in any fiscal year; fuel, light, and rent of quarters where necessary for keepers of lighthouses; purchase of land sites for Land sites, etc.fog signals; rent of necessary ground for all such lights and beacons as are for temporary use or to mark changeable channels and which in consequence can not be made permanent; rent of offices, depots, and wharves; traveling expenses, including travel for the examinations Travel expenses.Retirement examinations.Vol. 43, p. 1261.U. S. C., p. 1096.authorized by the Act entitled “An Act to provide for retirement for disability in the Lighthouse Service,” approved March 4, 1925 (U. S. C., title 33, sec. 765); mileage; library books for light stations and vessels, and technical books and periodicals not exceeding $1,000; traveling and subsistence expenses of teachers while actually employed by States or private persons to instruct the children of keepers of lighthouses; all other contingent expenses Contingent expenses.of district offices and depots, including the purchase of provisions for sale to lighthouse keepers at isolated stations, and the appropriation reimbursed, purchase not to exceed $3,600, exchange, maintenance, Vehicles.Rewards, etc.operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; payment of rewards for the apprehension and conviction, or for information helpful to the apprehension and conviction of persons found interfering with aids to navigation maintained by the Lighthouse Service, in violation of section 6 of the Act of May 14, 1908 (U. S. C., title 33, Vol. 35, p. 162.U. S. C., p. 1094.sec. 761), and not exceeding $8,500 for contingent expenses of the office of the Bureau of Lighthouses in the District of Columbia, $4,200,000. Keepers of lighthouses: For salaries of not exceeding one thousand Keepers.eight hundred lighthouse and fog-signal keepers and persons attending lights, exclusive of post lights, $2,105,280. Lighthouse vessels: For salaries and wages of officers and crews Officers and crews of vessels.of light vessels and lighthouse tenders, including temporary employment when necessary, $2,370,000. Superintendents, clerks, and so forth: For salaries of eighteen Superintendents, clerks in the field, etc.superintendents of lighthouses, and of assistant superintendents, clerks, draftsmen, and other authorized permanent employees in the district offices and depots of the Lighthouse Service, exclusive of those regularly employed in the office of the Bureau of Lighthouses, District of Columbia, $600,000. Retired pay: For retired pay of officers and employees engaged Retired pay.in the field service or on vessels of the Lighthouse Service, except persons continuously employed in district offices and shops, $414,000. Public works: For establishing and improving aids to navigation Aids to navigation.and other works as may be specifically approved by the Secretary of Commerce, $50,000, to be immediately available. coast and geodetic surveyCoast and Geodetic Survey. For every expenditure requisite for and incident to the work of the All expenses.Objects specified.Coast and Geodetic Survey, including maintenance, repair, exchange, and operation of motor-propelled or horse-drawn vehicles for official use in field work, purchase of motor cycles with side cars, including their exchange, not to exceed $1,000, surveying instruments, including their exchange, rubber boots, canvas and rubber gloves, goggles, and caps, coats, and aprons for stewards’ departments on vessels, extra compensation at not to exceed $1 per day for each station to employees of the Lighthouse Service and the Weather Bureau while observing tides or currents, services of one tide observer in the District of Columbia at not to exceed $1 per day, and compensation, not otherwise appropriated for, of persons employed in the field work, and for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the 510 Coast and Geodetic Survey when incurred on the written authority Distribution.of Secretary of Commerce, to be expended in accordance with the regulations relating to the Coast and Geodetic Survey subscribed by the Secretary of Commerce, and under the following heads:Field expenses.Atlantic coast. Field expenses, Atlantic coast: For surveys and necessary resurveys of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States, including the coasts of outlying islands under the jurisdiction of the United *Proviso.*Outlying islands.States, $150,000: *Provided,* That not more than $35,000 of this amount shall be expended on the coasts of said outlying islands and the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal;Pacific coast. Pacific coast: For surveys and necessary resurveys of coasts on the Pacific Ocean under the jurisdiction of the United States, $200,000.Physical hydrography. Tides, currents, and so forth: For continuing researches in physical hydrography, relating to harbors and bars, and for tidal and current observations on the coasts of the United States, or other coasts under the jurisdiction of the United States, $20,000;Coast Pilot. Coast Pilot: For compilation of the Coast Pilot, including the employment of such pilots and nautical experts, and stenographic help in the field and office as may be necessary for the same, $5,500.Magnetic and seismological observations. Magnetic work: For continuing magnetic and seismological observations and to establish meridian lines in connection therewith in all parts of the United States; making magnetic and seismological observations in other regions under the jurisdiction of the United States; purchase of additional magnetic and seismological instruments; lease of sites where necessary and the erection of temporary magnetic and seismological buildings; and including the employment in the field and office of such magnetic and seismological observers and stenographic services as may be necessary, $40,000.Federal, State, etc., surveys.Determining lines of exact levels. Federal, boundary, and State surveys: For continuing lines of exact levels between the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts; determining geographic positions by triangulation and traverse for the control of Federal, State, boundary, county, city, and other surveys and engineering works in all parts of the United States; including special geodetic surveys of first-order triangulation and leveling in regions subject to earthquakes, not exceeding $10,000; determining Ukiah and Gaithersburg observatories.field astronomic positions and the variation of latitude, including the maintenance and operation of the latitude observatories at Ukiah, California, and Gaithersburg, Maryland, not exceeding $2,500 each; establishing lines of exact levels, determining geographic positions by triangulation and traverse, and making astronomic observations Alaska observations.in Alaska ; and continuing gravity observations in the United States and for making such observations in regions under the jurisdiction of the United States and also on islands and coasts adjacent thereto, $150,000, of which amount not to exceed $25,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia, and not to exceed Observation at Potsdam, Germany.$1,500 may be expended to determine the difference in gravity between the international base station at Potsdam, Germany, and that of the United States;Miscellaneous; For objects not hereinbefore named that may be deemed urgent, including the preparation or purchase of plans and specifications of vessels and the employment of such hull draftsmen in the field and office as may be necessary for the same; the reimbursement, under rules prescribed by the Secretary of Commerce, of officers of the Coast and Geodetic Survey for food, clothing, medicines, and other supplies furnished for the temporary relief of distressed persons Relieving shipwrecked persons, etc.in remote localities and to shipwrecked persons temporarily provided for by them, not to exceed a total of $550; actual necessary expenses of officers of the field force temporarily ordered to the office in the District of Columbia for consultation with the director, and 511not exceeding $1,000 for the expenses of the attendance of representatives of the Coast and Goedetic 11So in original. Survey who may be designated as delegates from the United States at the meetings of the International International Hydrographic Bureau.Special surveys.Hydrographic Bureau, and not exceeding $3,000 for special surveys that may be required by the Bureau of Lighthouses or other proper authority, $7,000. In all, field expenses, $572,500. Vessels: For repairs of vessels, including traveling expenses of Vessels, repairs, etc.persons inspecting the repairs, and exclusive of engineer’s supplies and other ship chandlery, $60,000. For all necessary employees to man and equip the vessels, including Equipment employees.professional seamen serving as mates on vessels of the survey, to execute the work of the survey herein provided for and authorized by law, $555,000. Pay, commissioned officers: For pay and allowances prescribed by Pay, etc., commissioned officers.law for commissioned officers on sea duty and other duty, holding relative rank with officers of the Navy, including one director, with relative rank of captain, six hydrographic and geodetic engineers with relative rank of captain, ten hydrographic and geodetic engineers with relative rank of commander, seventeen hydrographic and geodetic engineers with relative rank of lieutenant commander, forty-seven hydrographic and geodetic engineers with relative rank of lieutenant, sixty-one junior hydrographic and geodetic engineers with relative rank of lieutenant (junior grade), twenty-nine aides with relative rank of ensign, and including officers retired in accordance with existing law, $662,313: *Provided,* That the Secretary of *Proviso.*Assistant director.Commerce may designate one of the hydrographic and geodetic engineers to act as assistant director. Office force: For personal services, $500,000.Office force. Office expenses: For purchase of new instruments (except surveying Office expenses.instruments), including their exchange, materials, equipment, and supplies required in the instrument shop, carpenter shop, and chart division; books, scientific and technical books, journals, books of reference, maps, charts, and subscriptions; copper plates, chart paper, printer’s ink, copper, zinc, and chemicals for electrotyping and photographing; engraving, printing, photographing, rubber gloves, and electrotyping supplies; photolithographing and printing charts for immediate use; stationery for office and field parties; transportation of instruments and supplies when not charged to party expenses; telegrams; washing; office furniture, repairs; traveling expenses of officers and others employed in the office sent on special duty in the service of the office ; miscellaneous expenses, contingencies of all kinds, not exceeding $90 for street-car fares, $50,000. Appropriations herein made for the Coast and Goedetic 1 1So in original. Survey Subsistence restrictions.shall not be available for allowance to civilian or other officers for subsistence while on duty at Washington (except as hereinbefore provided for officers of the field force ordered to Washington for short periods for consultation with the director), except as now provided by law. bureau of fisheriesFisheries Bureau. Commissioner’s office: For the commissioner and other personal Commissioner, and office personnel.services in the District of Columbia, $175,000. Administration: For expenses of the office of the commissioner, Office expenses, etc.including stationery, scientific and reference books, periodicals and newspapers for library, furniture and equipment, telegraph and tele-512phone service, street-car fares not exceeding $150, compensation of temporary employees, and all other necessary expenses connected therewith, $3,500.Propagation expenses. Propagation of food fishes: For maintenance, repair, alteration, improvement, equipment, and operation of fish-cultural stations, general propagation of food fishes and their distribution, including movement, maintenance, and repairs of cars, purchase of equipment (including rubber boots and oilskins) and apparatus, contingent expenses, pay of permanent employees not to exceed $412,550, temporary labor, and not to exceed $10,000 for propagation and distribution of fresh-water mussels and the necessary expenses connected therewith, and not to exceed $10,000 for the purchase, collection, and transportation of specimens and other expenses incidental to the maintenance and operation of aquarium, of which not to exceed $5,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia, $886,730.Vessels.Maintenance. Maintenance of vessels: For maintenance and operation of vessels and launches, including purchase and repair of boats, apparatus, machinery, and other facilities required for use with the same, hire of vessels, temporary employees, and all other necessary expenses in connection therewith, including not to exceed $1,000 for the purchase of plans and specifications for vessels or for contract personal services for the preparation thereof, and money accruing from commutation of rations and provisions on board vessels may be paid on proper vouchers to the persons having charge of the mess of such vessels, $200,000, of which not to exceed $32,600 may be expended for pay of officers and employees of vessels of the Atlantic coast and not to exceed $66,000 for pay of officers and crews of vessels for the Alaska service.Shipment of supplies to Pribilof Islands.Alaska Fisheries Service, and $10,000 shall be immediately available for the procurement of supplies and equipment required for shipment to the Pribilof Islands for the service of the fiscal year 1933.Commutation of rations. Commutation of rations (not to exceed $1 per day) may be paid to officers and crews of vessels of the Bureau of Fisheries during the fiscal year 1933 under regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Commerce.Food fishes inquiry. Inquiry respecting food fishes: For inquiry into the cause of the decrease of food fishes in the waters of the United States, and for investigation and experiments in respect to the aquatic animals, plants, and waters, and screening of irrigation ditches in fishways, in the interests of fish culture and the fishery industries, including pay of permanent employees not to exceed $125,000, temporary employees, maintenance? repair, improvement, equipment, and operations of biological stations, expenses of travel and preparation of reports, $200,000.Fishing industry.Statistical, etc., inquiries. Fishery industries: For collection and compilation of statistics of the fisheries and the study of their methods and relations, and the methods of preservation and utilization of fishery products, including pay of permanent employees not to exceed $36,200, compensation of temporary employees, travel and preparation of reports, including temporary employees in the District of Columbia not to exceed $1,800, and all other necessary expenses in connection therewith, including the purchase not to exceed $1,250, exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in the field work of the Bureau of Fisheries, $95,790.Sponge fisheries.Protecting. Sponge fisheries: For protecting the sponge fisheries, including employment of inspectors, watchmen, and temporary assistants, hire of boats, rental of office and storage, care of seized sponges and other property, travel, and all other expenses necessary to carry out the 513provisions of the Act of August 5, 1914 (U. S. C., title 16, secs. 781–785), Vol. 38, p. 692.U. S. C., p. 440.to regulate the sponge fisheries, $3,000. Alaska, general service: For protecting the seal fisheries of Alaska.Seal fisheries protection, food to natives, etc.Alaska, including the furnishing of food, fuel, clothing, and other necessities of life to the natives of the Pribilof Islands, of Alaska; not exceeding $54,000 for construction, improvement, repair, and alteration of buildings and roads, transportation of supplies to and from the islands, expenses of travel of agents and other employees and subsistence while on said islands, hire and maintenance of vessels, purchase of sea otters, and for all expenses necessary to carry out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to protect the seal fisheries of Alaska, and for other purposes,” approved April 21, 1910 Vol. 36, p. 326.U. S. C., p. 431.(U. S. C., title 16, secs. 631–658), and for the protection of the fisheries of Alaska, including pay of permanent employees not to exceed $87,940, contract stenographic reporting service, travel, subsistence (or per diem in lieu of subsistence) of employees while on duty in Alaska, hire of boats, employment of temporary labor, and all other necessary expenses connected therewith, $390,000, of which $100,000 shall be immediately available. Mississippi Wild Life and Fish Refuge: For construction of buildings, Mississippi Wild Life and Fish Refuge.Construction, equipment, etc., expenses.boats, and ponds, for purchase of equipment, including boats, for maintenance, operation, repair, and improvements, including expenditures for personal services at the seat of government and elsewhere as may be necessary, as authorized in the Act approved June 7, Vol. 43, p. 650.U. S. C., p. 437.1924 (U. S. C., title 16, secs. 721–731), $7,000. Construction of stations: The appropriations made under this head Fish cultural, etc., stations.in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1930, and in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Commerce for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1932, are hereby continued and made available until June 30, 1933, and the appropriation contained in the last-mentioned Act for the purchase of the Mill Creek station in the State of California shall be available for repairs and improvements to said station. Enforcement of black bass law: To enable the Secretary of Black bass law.Expenses enforcing.Vol. 44, p. 576; Vol. 46, p. 845.U. S. C., Supp. V. p. 207.Commerce to carry into effect the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Act entitled ‘An Act to regulate interstate transporation 1 1 So in original. of black bass, and for other purposes,’ approved May 20, 1926 ” (U. S. C., Supp. V, title 16, secs. 851–856), approved July 2, 1930 (46 Stat., pp. 845–847), $15,000, of which not to exceed $2,600 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Not to exceed $1,000 of the appropriations herein made for the Attendance at meetings.Bureau of Fisheries shall be available for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of said bureau when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce, and not to exceed $1,500 shall be available for the rental of suitable quarters in the District of Columbia for laboratory and storage purposes. patent officePatent Office. The following sums are appropriated for the Patent Office for the Sums from available revenues thereof.fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, out of the revenues of such office in conformity with section 5 of the Act approved April 11, 1930 (46 Vol. 46, p. 156.U. S. C., p. 695.Stat., p. 155), to the extent that such revenues are sufficient therefor and any remainder out of the general fund of the Treasury, namely: For the Commissioner of Patents and other personal services in Commissioner and office personnel.*Proviso.*Temporary typists, etc.the District of Columbia, $3,465,000: *Provided,* That of the amount herein appropriated not to exceed $25,000 may be used for special and temporary services of typists certified by the Civil Service Com-514mission, who may be employed in such numbers, at $4 per diem, as may, in the judgment of the Commissioner of Patents, be necessary to keep current the work of furnishing manuscript copies of records.Reference books, etc. For purchase of law, professional, and other reference books and publications and scientific books, including their exchange, and expenses of transporting publications of patents issued by the Patent Office to foreign governments, directories, and for other contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the Patent Office, $30,000.Weekly issue of patents, reproductions, etc. For producing copies of weekly issue of drawings of patents and designs; reproduction of copies of drawings and specifications of exhausted patents, designs, trade-marks, and other papers, such other papers when reproduced for sale to be sold at not less than cost plus 10 per centum; reproduction of foreign patent drawings; photo prints of pending application drawings; and photostat and photographic supplies and dry mounts, $275,000.Multigraphed headings allowed. The headings of the drawings for patented cases may be multigraphed in the Patent Office for the purpose of photolithography.Investigating prior use of inventions. For investigating the question of public use or sale of inventions for two years or more prior to filing applications for patents, and such other questions arising in connection with applications for patents and the prior art as may be deemed necessary by the Commissioner Defense in suits.Attendance at meetings.of Patents; for expense attending defense of suits instituted against the Commissioner of Patents, $700, and for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the Patent Office when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce.Furniture, etc. For furniture and filing cases, $20,000.Printing, etc. For printing the weekly issue of patents, designs, trade-marks, prints, and labels, exclusive of illustrations; and for printing, Official Gazette.engraving illustrations, and binding the Official Gazette, including weekly and annual indices, $1,050,000; for miscellaneous printing and binding, $50,000; in all, $1,100,000. BUREAU OF MINESMines Bureau. salaries and general expensesSalaries and general expenses.Director, office and field personnel. Salaries and general expenses: For general expenses, including pay of the director and necessary assistants, clerks, and other employees, in the office in the District of Columbia, and in the field, and every other expense requisite for and incident to the general work of the bureau in the District of Columbia, and in the field, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, $70,000, of which amount not to exceed $63,945 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia.Investigating mine accidents, etc. Investigating mine accidents: For investigations as to the causes of mine explosions, causes of falls of roof and coal, methods of mining, especially in relation to the safety of miners, the appliances best adapted to prevent accidents, the possible improvement of conditions under which mining operations are carried on, the use of explosives and electricity, the prevention of accidents, statistical studies and reports relating to mine accidents, and other inquiries and Mining industry.technologic investigations pertinent to the mining industry, including all equipment, supplies, and expenses of travel and subsistence, purchase not exceeding $2,400, exchange as part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots, and aprons, $435,325, of which amount not 515to exceed $77,310 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Mining investigations in Alaska: For investigations and the dissemination Mining investigations, etc., in Alaska.of information with a view to improving conditions in the mining, quarrying, and metallurgical industries as provided in the Act authorizing additional mining experiment stations, approved March 3, 1915 (U. S. C., title 30, sec. 8), and to provide tor the Vol. 38, p. 959.U. S. C., p. 953.inspection of mines and the protection of the lives of miners in the Territory of Alaska, including personal services, equipment, supplies, and expenses of travel and subsistence, $9,000; Operating mine rescue cars and stations: For the investigation Mine rescue cars and stations.and improvement of mine rescue and first-aid methods and appliances and the teaching of mine safety, rescue, and first-aid methods, including the exchange in part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of mine rescue trucks, and motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, the expenditure for the purchase of passenger-carrying vehicles not to exceed $4,200, the construction of temporary structures and the repair, maintenance, and operation of mine rescue cars and Government-owned mine rescue stations and appurtenances thereto, personal services, traveling expenses and subsistence, equipment, and supplies; travel and subsistence, and other incidental expenses of employees in attendance at meetings and conferences held for the Attendance at meetings.purpose of promoting safety and health in the mining and allied industries; the purchase and exchange in part payment therefor of cooks’ uniforms, goggles, gloves, and such other articles or equipment as may be necessary in the operation of mine rescue cars and stations, including not to exceed $15,640 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $306,000: *Provided,* That of this amount not to exceed *Proviso.*Rescue trophies, etc.$500 may be expended for the purchase and bestowal of trophies in connection with mine rescue and first-aid contest; Testing fuel: To conduct inquiries and scientific and technologic Investigating mineral fuel, etc.investigations concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and use of mineral fuels, and for investigation of mineral fuels belonging to or for the use of the United States, with a view to their most efficient utilization; to recommend to various departments such changes in selection and use of fuel as may result in greater economy, and, upon request of the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, to investigate the fuel-burning equipment in use by or proposed for any of the departments, establishments, or institutions of the United States in the District of Columbia, $155,000, of which amount not to Services in the District.exceed $30,700 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Mineral mining investigations: For inquiries and scientific and Mineral mining.Studies, investigations, etc., for improving conditions in.technologic investigations concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of ores and mineral substances, other than fuels, with a view to improving health conditions and increasing safety, efficiency, economic development, and conserving resources through the prevention of waste in the mining, quarrying, metallurgical, and other mineral industries; to inquire into the economic conditions affecting these industries; and including all equipment, supplies, expenses of travel and subsistence, and the purchase, not to exceed $2,500, including exchange, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, including not to exceed $17,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $135,000: *Provided,* That no part of this *Proviso.*Private work forbidden.appropriation may be expended for an investigation in behalf of any private party; 516Oil, gas, and oil shale investigations. Oil and gas investigations: For inquiries and investigations and dissemination of information concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of petroleum and natural gas, including economic conditions affecting the industry, with a view to economic development and conserving resources through the prevention of waste; for the purchase of newspapers relating to the oil, gas, and *Proviso.*Purchase of newspapers, etc.R. S., sec. 192, p. 30.U. S. C., p. 35.allied industries: *Provided,* That section 192 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 5, sec. 102) shall not apply to such purchase of newspapers from this appropriation; and for every other expense incident thereto, including supplies, equipment, expenses of travel and subsistence, All other expenses.purchase, not to exceed $7,000, exchange as part payment for, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots and aprons, $180,000, of which amount Services in the District.not to exceed $24,940 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia;Mining experiment stations.Personal services, etc. Mining experiment stations: For the employment of personal services, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots and aprons, the purchase not to exceed $3,000, exchange as part payment for, maintenance and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, and all other expenses in connection with the establishment, maintenance, and operation of mining experiment stations, as provided in the Act authorizing additional mining experiment stations, approved March 3, 1915 Vol. 38, p. 959.U. S. C., p. 953.Services in the District.(U. S. C., title 30, sec. 8), $200,000, of which amount not to exceed $14,200 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia;Pittsburgh, Pa., station.Expenses of. Buildings and grounds, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: For care and maintenance of buildings and grounds at Pittsburgh and Bruceton, Pennsylvania, including personal services, the purchase, exchange as part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of passenger automobiles for official use, and all other expenses requisite for and incident thereto, including not to exceed $5,000 for additions and improvements, $70,000;Temporary details from the field for service in the District. Persons employed during the fiscal year 1933 in field work outside of the District of Columbia under the Bureau of Mines may be detailed temporarily for service in the District of Columbia for purposes of preparing results of their field work; all persons so detailed shall be paid in addition to their regular compensation only traveling expenses in going to and returning therefrom: *Proviso.*Necessary expenses allowed.*Provided,* That nothing herein shall prevent the payment to employees of the Bureau of Mines of their necessary expenses, or per diem in lieu of subsistence, while on temporary detail in the District of Columbia for purposes only of consultation or investigations on behalf of the United States. All details made herein-under, and the purposes of each, during the preceding fiscal year Report to Congress.shall be reported in the annual estimates of appropriations to Congress at the beginning of each regular session thereof;Details from Public Health Service. The Secretary of the Treasury may detail medical officers of the Public Health Service for cooperative health, safety, or sanitation work with the Bureau of Mines, and the compensation and expenses of the officers so detailed may be paid from the applicable appropriations made herein for the Bureau of Mines;Government fuel yards.Purchase of fuel maintenance, etc. Government fuel yards: For the purchase and transportation of fuel; storing and handling of fuel in yards; maintenance and operation of yards and equipment, including two motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle 1 1 So in original. for inspectors, purchase of equipment, rentals, 517and all other expenses requisite for and incident thereto, including personal services in the District of Columbia, the unexpended balance of the appropriations heretofore made for these purposes is reappropriated and made available for such purposes for the fiscal year 1933, and for payment of obligations for such purposes of prior years, and of such sum not exceeding $500 shall be available to settle claims for damages caused to private property by motor vehicles used in delivering fuel: *Provided,* That the appropriation herein made *Provisos.*Amount reduced.for the maintenance and operation of the fuel yards for the fiscal year 1933 is hereby reduced by the amount of $64,768.01: *Provided further,* That all moneys received from the sales of fuel shall be Sales credited to appropriation.credited to this appropriation and be available for the purposes of this paragraph: *Provided further,* That the term “fuel” wherever “Fuel” to include fuel oil.used in this appropriation shall be understood to include fuel oil: *Provided further,* That the requirements of sections 3711 and 3713 of Inspection requirements not applicable.R. S., secs. 3711, 3713, pp. 733, 734.U. S. C., p. 1296.the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 40, sec. 109) relative to the weighing of coal and wood and the separate certificate as to the weight, measurement, or quantity of coal and wood purchased shall not apply to purchases by the Government fuel yards at free-onboard destinations outside of the District of Columbia; Helium production and investigations: The sums made available Helium production, etc.for the fiscal year 1933 in the Acts making appropriations for the War and Navy Departments for the acquisition of helium from the Advances for, from Army and Navy appropriations.Vol. 44, p. 1387.Bureau of Mines shall be advanced from time to time upon requisition by the Secretary of Commerce in such amounts as may be determined by the President not in excess of the sums needed for the economical and efficient operation and maintenance of the plants for the production of helium for military and/or naval purposes, *Ante,* p. 437.*Post,* p. 676.including purchase, not to exceed $2,500, and exchange as part payment for, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, and all other necessary expenses, $13,460 for personal services in the District of Columbia; For investigations of resources of helium-bearing gas and the Investigating sources of helium-bearing gas.conservation thereof, and of processes and methods of producing, storing, purifying, and utilizing helium and helium-bearing gas, including supplies and equipment, stationery, furniture, expenses or travel and subsistence, purchase, not exceeding $1,200, exchange as part payment for, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots and aprons, and all other necessary expenses, including not to exceed $17,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $50,000; Helium plants: For helium production and conservation, including Helium plants.Production, etc.Purchase of plants, etc.acquisition of helium-bearing gas land or wells by purchase, exchange, lease, or condemnation, or interest in such land or wells, the purchase, lease, construction, or modification of plants, pipe lines and accessories, compressor stations, camp buildings, and other facilities for the production, transportation, storage, and purification of helium and helium-bearing gas, including acquisition of sites and rights of way therefor, by purchase, lease, or condemnation, and including supplies and equipment, expenses of travel and subsistence, maintenance and operation of motor-propelled, passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, and all other necessary expenses, including not to exceed $6,560 for personal services in the District of Columbia, and including the payment of obligations incurred Balances available.under the contract authorization carried under this heading in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1932, the unexpended balances of the appropriation made under Vol. 46, p. 1350.518this heading for the fiscal year 1932, and of the deficiency appropriation under the same heading for 1930-1931, are reappropriated and *Provisos.*Subject to approval of President.made available for the above purposes for the fiscal year 1933: *Provided,* That no part of the appropriation herein made may be expended except with the approval of the President: *Provided further,* Leases, etc.That the acquirement of leases, sites, and rights of way under terms customary in the oil and gas industry, including obligations to pay rental in advance and to pay damages to lands, crops, or structures arising out of the Government’s operations is authorized: Disposal of products in wells other than helium-bearing gas. *Provided further,* That should valuable products other than helium-bearing gas be discovered in wells acquired or drilled for helium-bearing gas under this appropriation the Secretary of Commerce is authorized to provide for the disposal of said wells or the products therefrom, by the contracts under which the property is acquired, or otherwise, in accordance with the interests of the Government therein and in the manner which, in his opinion, is most advantageous to the Government;Economics of mineral industries.Investigations for disseminating information as to problems of, etc. Economics of mineral industries: For inquiries and investigations, and the dissemination of information concerning the economic problems of the mining, quarrying, metallurgical, and other mineral industries, with a view to” assuring ample supplies and efficient distribution of the mineral products of the mines and quarries, including studies and reports relating to uses, reserves, production, distribution, stocks, consumption, prices, and marketing of mineral commodities and primary products thereof; preparation of the Report of mineral resources.reports of the mineral resources of the United States, including special statistical inquiries; and including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; purchase of furniture and equipment; stationery and supplies; typewriting, adding, and computing machines, accessories and repairs; newspapers; traveling expenses; purchase, not exceeding $1,200, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; and for all other necessary expenses not included in the foregoing, $250,000, of which amount not to exceed $221,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia;Scientific investigations for departments, etc., by the bureau. During the fiscal year 1933 the head of any department or independent establishment of the Government having funds available for scientific investigations and requiring cooperative work by the Bureau of Mines on scientific 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 Transfer of funds to credit of bureau.of Commerce, transfer to the Bureau of Mines 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 Bureau of Mines for the performance of work for the department *Proviso.*Expenditure of funds transferred.which the transfer is made: *Provided,* That any sums transferred by any department or independent establishment of the Government to the Bureau of Mines for cooperative work in connection with this appropriation may be expended in the same manner as sums appropriated herein may be expended; Purchase of supplies.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309. The purchase of supplies and equipment or the procurement of services for the Bureau of Mines, at the seat of government, as well as in the field outside of the District of Columbia, may be made in open market without compliance with section 3709 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, in the manner common among busi-519ness men, when the aggregate amount of the purchase or the service does not exceed $100 in any instance; For the purchase or exchange of professional and scientific books, Purchase of books, etc.law looks, 1 1 So in original. and books to complete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and other books of reference relating to the business of the Bureau of Mines, there is hereby made available from any appropriations made for such bureau not to exceed $2,500; For necessary traveling expenses of the director and employees Attendance upon meetings.of the bureau, acting under his direction, for attendance upon meetings of technical, professional, and scientific societies, when required in connection with the authorized work of the Bureau of Mines and incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Commerce, there is hereby made available from any appropriations made to the Bureau of Mines not to exceed in all $1,000; Total, Bureau of Mines, $1,860,325. TITLE IV.— DEPARTMENT OF LABORDepartment of Labor. office of the secretary Salaries: Secretary of Labor, $15,000; Assistant Secretary, Second Secretary, Assistants, and office personnel.Assistant Secretary, and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $185,000; in all, $200,000. Commissioners of conciliation: To enable the Secretary of Labor Commissioners of conciliation.Vol. 37, p. 738.U. S. C., p. 62.to exercise the authority vested in him by section 8 of the Act creating the Department of Labor (U. S. C., title 5, sec. 611) and to appoint commissioners of conciliation, traveling expenses, and not to exceed $16,260 for personal services in the District of Columbia, and telegraph and telephone service, $205,000. contingent expenses. department of labor For contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the offices and Contingent expenses.bureaus of the department, for which appropriations for contingent and miscellaneous expenses are not specifically made, including the purchase of stationery, furniture, and repairs to the same, carpets, matting, oilcloths, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, sponges, laundry, street-car fares not exceeding $200; lighting and heating; purchase, exchange, maintenance, and repair of motor cycles and motor trucks; maintenance, operation, and repair of a motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle, to be used only for official purposes; freight and express charges; newspaper clippings not to exceed $1,800, postage to foreign countries, telegraph and telephone service, typewriters, adding machines, and other labor-saving devices; purchase of law books, books of reference, newspapers, and periodicals, not exceeding $5,000; in all, $55,500; and in addition Additional, from immigration expense appropriations, for supplies.Vol. 36, p. 531.U. S. C., p. 1309.thereto such sum as may be necessary, not in excess of $25,000, to facilitate the purchase, through the central purchasing office as provided in the Act approved June 17, 1910 (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 7), of certain supplies for the Immigration Service, shall be deducted from the appropriation “Salaries and expenses, Bureau of Immigration ” *Post,* p. 520.made for the fiscal year 1933 and added to the appropriation “Contingent expenses, Department of Labor,” for that year; and the total sum thereof shall be and constitute the appropriation Expenditure through Publications and Supplies Division.for contingent expenses for the Department of Labor, to be expended through the central purchasing office (Division of Publica-520*Provisos.*Limitation on motor vehicles.tions and Supplies), Department of Labor: *Provided,* That expenditures from appropriations contained in this Act for the maintenance, upkeep, and repair, exclusive of garage rent, pay of operator, fuel, and lubricants, on any one motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle used by the Department of Labor shall not exceed one-third of the market price of a new vehicle of the same make or class and in any case not more than $500: *Provided further,* That Minor purchases.R. S., sec. 3709, p. 733.U. S. C., p. 1309.section 3709 of the Revised Statutes of the United States shall not be construed to apply to any purchase or service rendered for the Department of Labor when the aggregate amount involved does not exceed the sum of $50.Printing and binding. Printing and binding: For printing and binding for the Department of Labor, including all its bureaus, offices, institutions, and services located in Washington, District of Columbia, and elsewhere, $240,000. bureau of labor statisticsLabor Statistics Bureau.Commissioner, and office personnel. Salaries and expenses: For personal services, including temporary statistical clerks, stenographers and typewriters in the District of Columbia, and including also experts and temporary assistants for field service outside of the District of Columbia; traveling expenses, including expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the Bureau of Labor Statistics when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Labor; purchase of periodicals, documents, envelopes, price quotations, and reports and materials for reports and bulletins of said bureau, $450,000, of which amount not to exceed $370,830 may be expended for the salary of the commissioner and other personal services in the District of Columbia. bureau of immigrationImmigration Bureau.Salaries and expenses.*Post,* p. 782. Salaries and expenses: For enforcement of the laws regulating the immigration to, the residence in, and the exclusion and deportation from the United States of aliens, and persons subject to the Chinese exclusion laws; salaries, transportation, traveling, and other expenses of officers, clerks and other employees appointed to enforce said laws; care, detention, maintenance, transportation, and traveling Deportation expenses.expenses incident to the deportation and exclusion of aliens, and persons subject to the Chinese exclusion laws, as authorized by law, in the United States and to, through, or in foreign countries; purchase of supplies and equipment, including alterations and repairs; purchase, exchange, operation, maintenance and repair of motor-propelled vehicles, including passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; cost of reports of decisions of the Federal courts and digests thereof for the use of the Commissioner General of Immigration; Refund of head tax, etc.refunding of head tax, maintenance bills, immigration fines, registry fees, and reentry permit fees, upon presentation of evidence showing conclusively that collection and deposit was made through error of Government officers; and for all other expenses necessary to enforce said laws; $9,450,000, all to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of Labor, of which amount not to Commissioner General, etc.exceed $300,000 may be expended for the salary of the Commissioner General and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including services of persons authorized by law to be detailed there Coast and land border patrol.*Provisos.*Limitation on motor vehicles.for duty, and not to exceed $2,194,180 shall be available for coast and land border patrol: *Provided,* That not to exceed $80,000 of the sum herein appropriated shall be available for the purchase, including exchange, of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and of such sum of $80,000 not more than $70,000 shall be available for the 521same purposes for the coast and land border patrol: *Provided further,* That the Commissioner General of Immigration, with the Allowance to employees using their automobiles, etc.approval of the Secretary of Labor, may contract with officers and employees stationed outside of the District of Columbia whose salaries are payable from this appropriation, for the use, on official business outside of the District of Columbia, of privately owned horses, and the consideration agreed upon shall be payable from the funds herein appropriated: *Provided further,* That not to exceed $65,000 Allowance for living quarters.Vol. 46, p. 818.of the total amount herein appropriated shall be available for allowances for living quarters, including heat, fuel, and light, as authorized by the Act approved June 26, 1930 (46 Stat., p. 818) not to exceed $1,700 for any person. Immigration stations: For remodeling, repairing (including Ellis Island, immigrant station.Remodeling, etc.repairs to the ferryboat, Ellis Island), renovating buildings and purchase of equipment, $30,000. bureau of naturalizationNaturalization Bureau. Salaries and expenses: For the expenses of carrying on the work Salaries and expenses.of the Bureau of Naturalization, as provided in the Acts authorizing a uniform rule for the naturalization of aliens throughout the United States, and establishing the Bureau of Naturalization, approved Vol. 34, p. 596; Vol. 37, p. 376; Vol. 40, p. 542; Vol. 45, p. 1545.U. S. C., p. 157; Supp. V, p. 73.June 29, 1906, and March 4, 1913, and subsequent Acts (U. S. C., title 8, secs. 331–416; U. S. C., Supp. V, title 8, secs. 355–384); including personal services; traveling expenses, and not to exceed $400 for expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the Attendance at meetings.naturalization of aliens when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Labor; street-car fare, telegrams, verifications of legal papers, telephone service in field offices and telephone toll service in the bureau; necessary supplies and equipment for the Naturalization Service; refunding of naturalization fees upon presentation of evidence showing conclusively that the collection and deposit was made through error; not to exceed $25,000 for rent of Outside rent.offices outside of the District of Columbia where suitable quarters can not be obtained in public buildings; and for mileage and fees to witnesses subpoenaed on behalf of the United States, the expenditures from this appropriation to be made in the manner and under such regulations as the Secretary of Labor may prescribe, $975,770, of which not to exceed $239,260 may be expended for the salary of the commissioner and other personal services in the bureau in the District of Columbia: *Provided,* That no part of this appropriation *Proviso.*Clerks of Federal courts excluded.shall be available for the compensation of assistants to clerks of United States courts. children’s bureauChildren’s Bureau. Salaries and expenses: For expenses of investigating and reporting Salaries and expenses.upon matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life, and especially to investigate the questions of infant mortality; Child welfare and infant mortality, etc., investigations.personal services, including experts and temporary assistants; traveling expenses, including expenses of attendance at meetings for the promotion of child welfare when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Labor; purchase of reports and material for the publications of the Children’s Bureau and for reprints from State, city, and private publications for distribution when said reprints Bureau publications.can be procured more cheaply than they can be printed by the Government, and other necessary expenses, $375,500, of which amount not to exceed $305,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. 522 women’s bureauWomen’s Bureau.Salaries and expenses. For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to establish in the Department of Labor a bureau to be known as the Vol. 41, p. 987.U. S. C., p. 947; Supp. V, p. 481.Women’s Bureau,” approved June 5, 1920 (U. S. C., title 29, secs. 11–16; U. S. C., Supp. V, title 29, secs. 12–14), including personal services in the District of Columbia, not to exceed $136,000; purchase of material for reports and educational exhibits, and traveling expenses $160,000, which sum shall be available for expenses of Attendance at meetings.attendance at meetings concerned with the work of said bureau when incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of Labor. employment serviceEmployment Service.Promoting welfare of wage earners. To enable the Secretary of Labor to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, including juniors legally employed, to improve their working conditions, to advance their opportunities for profitable employment by regularly collecting, furnishing, and publishing employment information as to opportunities for employment; maintaining a system for clearing labor between the several States; cooperating with the Veterans’ Administration to secure employment for veterans; cooperating with and coordinating the public employment offices throughout the country, including personal services in the District of Columbia and Traveling expenses.Attendance at meetings.elsewhere; traveling expenses, including expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the Employment Service when specifically authorized by the Secretary of Labor; supplies and equipment, telegraph and telephone service, and miscellaneous expenses; $765,000, of which amount not to exceed $51,000 may be expended for *Provisos.*Rent restriction.personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided,* That no part of this appropriation shall be expended for the establishment or maintenance of any employment office unless suitable space therefor can be found in a Federal building or is furnished free of rent by State, county, or local authority, or by individuals, or Field service pay restrictions.organizations: *Provided further,* That no part of this appropriation shall be used to pay any salary in any field employment office at an annual rate in excess of $2,000, except one director in each State whose salary shall not exceed $3,500, and twenty-three managers of the Veterans’ Employment Service whose salary shall not exceed $2,400. united states housing corporationHousing Corporation.Salaries and expenses. Salaries and expenses: For officers, clerks, and other employees, and for contingent and miscellaneous expenses, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, including blank books, maps, stationery, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, freight and express charges, communication Miscellaneous items.service, travel expense, printing and binding not to exceed $150, and all other miscellaneous items and expenses not included Receipts from sales operation, etc.in the foregoing and necessary to collect and account for the receipts from the sale of properties and the receipts from the operation of unsold properties of the United States Housing Corporation, the Bureau of Industrial Housing and Transportation, property commandeered by the United States through the Secretary of Labor, and to collect the amounts advanced to transportation facilities and Payment of assessments, etc.others; for payment of special assessments and other utility, municipal, State, and county charges or assessments unpaid by purchasers, and which have been assessed against property in which the United States Housing Corporation has an interest, and to defray expenses incident to foreclosing mortgages, conducting sales under 523deeds of trusts, or reacquiring title or possession of real property under default proceeding, including attorney fees, witness fees, court costs, charges, and other miscellaneous expenses; for the maintenance Maintenance of unsold property.and repair of houses, buildings, and improvements which are unsold; in all, $14,000: *Provided,* That no person shall be employed *Provisos.*Salary restriction.hereunder at a rate of compensation exceeding $4,000 per annum, and only one person may be employed at that rate: *Provided further,* That no part of the appropriations heretofore made and available Prior appropriations not available for present purposes.for expenditure by the United States Housing Corporation shall be expended for the purposes for which appropriations are made herein. Sec. 2. No part of any money appropriated by this Act shall be Restrictions on purchase, operation, etc., of motor vehicles.used for purchasing any motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle (except busses, ambulances, and station wagons) at a cost, completely equipped for operation, in excess of $750, except where, in the judgment of the department, special requirements can not thus be efficiently met, such exceptions, however, to be limited to not to exceed 10 per centum of the total expenditures for such motor vehicles purchased during the fiscal year, including the value of a vehicle exchanged where exchange is involved; nor shall any money appropriated herein be used for maintaining, driving, or operating any Government-owned motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle not used exclusively for official purposes; and “official purposes” shall not include the transportation of officers and employees between their domiciles and places of employment, except in cases of officers and employees engaged in field work the character of whose duties makes such transportation necessary and then only when the same is approved by the head of the department. The limitations of this Exemptions.proviso shall not apply to any motor vehicle for official use of the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Commerce, and the Secretary of Labor. Sec. 3. No part of any appropriation made by this Act shall be Subsistence, etc., allowance.Limitation.used to pay actual expenses of subsistence in excess of $6 each for any one calendar day, or per diem allowance for subsistence in excess of the rate of $5 for any one calendar day, to any officer or employee of the United States, and payments accordingly shall be in full notwithstanding any other statutory provision. Approved, July 1, 1932. Amending an Act entitled “An Act authorizing the State of West Virginia by and through the State Bridge Commission of West Virginia, or the successors of said commission, to acquire, purchase, construct, improve, maintain, and operate bridges across the streams and rivers within said State and/or across boundary-line streams or rivers of said State,” approved March 3, 1931. 1932-07-01 362 Chapter 47 Stat. 523 72 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 2024-12-27 public [CHAPTER 362.] AN ACT Amending an Act entitled “An Act authorizing the State of West Virginia by and through the State Bridge Commission of West Virginia, or the successors of said commission, to acquire, purchase, construct, improve, maintain, and operate bridges across the streams and rivers within said State and/or across boundary-line streams or rivers of said State,” approved March 3, 1931.July 1, 1932.[[S. 4898](/us/bill/72/s/4898).][
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- 47 Stat. 475
- 47 Stat. 523
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Public Law 232
to relieve restricted Indians in the Five Civilized Tribes whose nontaxable lands are required for State, county, or municipal improvements or sold to other persons, and for other purposes,” approved March 2, 1931, is amended to read as follows:Reinvestment of receipts from sale, etc., of nontaxable
Stat.47 Stat. 475
Stat.47 Stat. 523
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