Public Law 412.
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/statutes-at-large/vol-48/public-law-412·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(/us/pl/73/411).] *Be if enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That the taxes and Puerto Rico.Legislative resolution, imposing import duty on coffee, ratified.Vol. 46, p. 696.duties imposed by Joint Resolution Numbered 59, enacted by the Legislature of Puerto Rico and approved by the Governor of Puerto Rico May 5, 1930, are legalized and ratified, and the collection of all such taxes and duties made under or by authority of such Joint Resolution of the Puerto Rican Legislature is legalized, ratified, and confirmed as fully to all intents and purposes as if the same had, by prior Act of Congress, been specifically authorized and directed.
Approved, June 18, 1934, 4 p.m. Authorizing the Secretary of War to receive for instruction at the United States Military Academy at West Point, Eloy Alfaro and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro, citizens of Ecuador. 1934-06-18 605 Chapter 48 Stat. 1017 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 605.] JOINT RESOLUTION Authorizing the Secretary of War to receive for instruction at the United States Military Academy at West Point, Eloy Alfaro and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro, citizens of Ecuador.June 18, 1934.[[S.J.
Res., 108](/us/bill/73/sjres/108).][[Pub. Res., No. 35](/us/bill/73/pubres/35).] Resolved by the Senate and dionee of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of U.S. Military Academy, West Point.Eloy and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro permitted to receive instruction.War be, and he is hereby, authorized to permit Eloy Alfaro and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro, citizens of Ecuador, to receive instruction at the United States Military Academy at West Point; *Provided,**Proviso.*Compliance with regulations.That no expense shall be caused to the United States thereby, and that said Eloy Alfaro and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro shall each agree to comply with all regulations for the police and discipline of the Academy, to be studious, and to give his utmost efforts to accomplish the courses in the various departments of instruction, and that neither shall be admitted to the Academy until he shall have passed the mental and physical examinations prescribed for candidates from the United States, and that each shall be immediately withdrawn if deficient in studies or in conduct and so recommended by the academic board: *Provided further,* That in the cases of said [R.S., secs. 1320, 1321](/us/rs/1320/1321), waived.Eloy Alfaro and Jaime Eduardo Alfaro the provisions of sections 1320 and 1321 of the Revised Statutes shall be suspended.
Approved, June 18, 1934. To amend section 72 of the Printing Act, approved January 12, 1895, and Acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, relative to the allotment of public documents, and section 85 of the same Act fixing the date of the expiration of the franking privilege to Members of Congress. 1934-06-18 606 Chapter 48 Stat. 1017 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 606.] JOINT RESOLUTION To amend section 72 of the Printing Act, approved January 12, 1895, and Acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, relative to the allotment of public documents, and section 85 of the same Act fixing the date of the expiration of the franking privilege to Members of Congress.June 18, 1934.[[S.J. Res., 130](/us/bill/73/sjres/130).][[Pub. Res., No. 36](/us/bill/73/pubres/36).] Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That section 72 of chapter Printing Act of 1895.Vol. 28, p. 612; [U.S.C., p. 1425](/us/usc/1425).23 of the Printing Act (U.S.C., title 44, sec. 158), approved January 12, 1895, and Acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, be, and is hereby, amended to read as follows:
" “ Sec. 72. Allotment of documents. The Congressional allotment Congressional allotment of documents.of public documents (except the Congressional Record) printed after the expiration of the term of office of the Vice President of the United States, or any Senator, Representative, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner, shall be delivered to his or her successor in office. 1018 Documents credited at expiration of term; disposition.“The Vice President of the United States and any Senator, Representative, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner in Congress, having public documents to his credit at the expiration of his term of office shall take the same prior to the 30th day of June next following the date of such expiration, and if he shall not do so within such period he shall forfeit them to his or her successor in office.
” " Sec. 2. Vol. 28, p. 622; [U.S.C., p. 1258](/us/usc/1258). That section 85 of chapter 23 of the Printing Act (U.S.C., title 39, sec. 326), approved January 12, 1895, be, and is hereby, amended to read as follows: " “ Sec. 85. Franking privilege; documents sent and received by Vice President, Members of Congress.Secretary of Senate; Clerk, House of Representatives. Franking privilege.— The Vice President of the United States, and Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners in Congress, the Secretary of the Senate, and Clerk of the House of Representatives may send and receive through the mail all public documents printed by order of Congress; and the name of the Vice President, Senator, Representative, Delegate, Resident Commissioner, Secretary of the Senate, and Clerk of the House shall be written thereon, with the proper designation of the office he holds ; and the provisions of this section shall apply to each of the persons named herein until the 30th day of June following the expiration of their respective terms of office.
” " Approved, June 18, 1934. Authorizing appropriation for expenses of representatives of United States to meet at Istanbul, Turkey, with representatives of Turkish Republic for purpose of examining claims of either Government against the other and for expense of proceedings before an umpire, if necessary. 1934-06-18 607 Chapter 48 Stat. 1018 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 607.] JOINT RESOLUTION Authorizing appropriation for expenses of representatives of United States to meet at Istanbul, Turkey, with representatives of Turkish Republic for purpose of examining claims of either Government against the other and for expense of proceedings before an umpire, if necessary.June 18, 1934.[[H.J. Res., 285](/us/bill/73/hjres/285).][[Pub. Res., No. 37](/us/bill/73/pubres/37).] Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,American-Turkish claims.Appropriation authorized to examine and settle.*Post,* p. 1041.
That the sum of $90,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby authorized to be appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for participation by the United States in the examination and settlement at Istanbul, Turkey, or before an umpire, if necessary, of the claims presented by either the American or Turkish Government against the other, including personal services in the District of Columbia or elsewhere without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and rent of offices and rooms for the use of the American representatives, in addition, if deemed necessary by the Secretary of State, to the lawful per diem, stenographic reporting and translating services by contract if deemed necessary, [R.S., sec. 3709](/us/rs/3709); [U.S.C., p. 1309.](/us/usc/1309)without regard to Section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C. title 41, sec. 5); traveling expenses; purchase of law books and books Printing and binding.of reference: printing and binding; official cards; entertainment; expenses or honorarium of a neutral umpire in the event such an Honorarium of neutral umpire.appointment is found desirable; 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 *Provisos.*Expenditures to become first charge upon moneys received.for any of the purposes herein specified: *Provided,* That any expenditures from the amount herein authorized to be appropriated shall become a first charge upon any moneys received from the Turkish Government in settlement of the respective claims and the amount of such expenditures shall be deducted from the first payment by the Turkish Government and deposited in the Treasury of the United States as miscellaneous receipts ; *And provided further,* 1019That the Secretary of State, in distributing to the respective claimants Apportionment of amounts among claimants.Vol. 29, p. 32.the balance of the amounts received from the Turkish Government, as provided by Act of Congress approved February 27, 1896 (29 Stat. 32), shall apportion the amount withheld, as above provided, in such a manner as to constitute a uniform percentage of deduction from the amount found to be due each claimant.
Approved, June 18, 1934. Extending for two years the time within which American claimants may make application for payment, under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, of awards of the Mixed Claims Commission and the Tripartite Claims Commission, and extending until March 10, 1936, the time within which Hungarian claimants may make application for payment, under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, of awards of the War Claims Arbiter. 1934-06-18 608 Chapter 48 Stat. 1019 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 608.] JOINT RESOLUTION Extending for two years the time within which American claimants may make application for payment, under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, of awards of the Mixed Claims Commission and the Tripartite Claims Commission, and extending until March 10, 1936, the time within which Hungarian claimants may make application for payment, under the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, of awards of the War Claims Arbiter.June 18, 1934.[[H.J.
Res, 325](/us/bill/73/hjres/325).][[Pub. Res., No. 38](/us/bill/73/pubres/38).] Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That subsection Settlement of War Claims Act.Vol, 45, p. 254; Vol. 47, p. 318.(g) of section 2 and subsection
(f)of section 5 of the Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928, as amended by Public Resolution Numbered 11, Seventy-third Congress, approved June 12, 1933, are *Ante,* p. 125.Time for making application for payment by American claimants.further amended, respectively, by striking out the words “ six years” wherever such words appear therein and inserting in lieu thereof the words “eight years” Sec. 2. The first sentence of subsection
(h)of section 6 of the Vol. 45. p. 264.Settlement of War Claims Act of 1928 is amended to read as follows : " “No payment shall be made under this section unless application Payments.therefor is made by March 10, 1936, in accordance with such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe.” " Approved, June 18, 1934. Authorizing an appropriation for the participation of the United States in the International Celebration at Fort Niagara, New York. 1934-06-18 609 Chapter 48 Stat. 1019 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 609.] JOINT RESOLUTION Authorizing an appropriation for the participation of the United States in the International Celebration at Fort Niagara, New York.June 18, 1934.[[H.J. Res. 341](/us/bill/73/hjres/341).][[Pub. Res., No. 39](/us/bill/73/pubres/39).] Whereas the Federal Government, through the War Department, International Celebration at Fort Niagara, N.Y.desires to cooperate with the representatives of the Canadian, British, and French Governments, and the State of New York, in the International Celebration to commemorate the fourth centenary of Jacques Cartier, the ratification of the Rush-Bagot Treaty in 1818, and the completion of the restoration of Old Fort Niagara, Niagara. County, New York, as a historic and patriotic shrine symbolizing the history of the common interest of these nations in the evolution of the early American struggle and strife to a lasting peace of vast international significance: Therefore be it Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there is Appropriation authorized for participation. hereby authorized to be appropriated the sum of $6,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to pay the expenses of the participation of certain units of the Army of the United States in the events and ceremonies incident to the International Celebration at Fort Niagara, New York, under such regulations as the Secretary of War may prescribe. Approved, June 18, 1934. To protect the revenue by regulation of the traffic in containers of distilled spirits. 1934-06-18 610 Chapter 48 Stat. 1020 73 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 2024-12-11 public 1020 [CHAPTER 610.] JOINT RESOLUTION To protect the revenue by regulation of the traffic in containers of distilled spirits.June 18, 1934.[[H.J. Res. 370](/us/bill/73/hjres/370).][[Pub. Res., No. 40](/us/bill/73/pubres/40).] Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,Traffic in containers of distilled spirits. That whenever in his judgment such action is necessary to protect the revenue, the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized, by the regulations prescribed by him, and permits issued thereunder if required by him
(1)to Regulation of, authorized. regulate the size, branding, marking, sale, resale, possession, use, and reuse of containers (of a capacity of less than five wine-gallons) designed or intended for use for the sale at retail of distilled spirits (within the meaning of such term as it is used in title II of Requirements of manufacturers, persons dealing in, etc., containers.the Liquor Taxing Act of 1934) for other than industrial use, and
(2)to require, of persons manufacturing, dealing in, or using any such containers, the submission to such inspection, the keeping of such records, and the filing of such reports as may be deemed by Penalty provisions.him reasonably necessary in connection therewith. Whoever willfully violates the provisions of any regulation prescribed, or the terms or conditions of any permit issued, pursuant to the authorization contained in this joint resolution, and any officer, director, or agent of any corporation who knowingly participates in such violation, shall, upon conviction, be fined not more than $1,000 or be imprisoned for not more than two years, or both; and, notwithstanding any criminal conviction, the containers involved in such violation shall be forfeited to the United States, and may be seized and condemned by like proceedings as those provided by law for forfeitures, seizures, and condemnations for violations of the internal-revenue laws, and any such containers so seized and condemned shall Requirements imposed to be additional.be destroyed and not sold. Any requirements imposed under this joint resolution shall be in addition to any other requirements imposed by, or pursuant to, existing law, and shall apply as well to persons not liable for tax under the internal-revenue laws as to persons so liable. Approved, June 18, 1934. To protect the revenue by requiring information concerning the disposition of substances used in the manufacture of distilled spirits. 1934-06-18 611 Chapter 48 Stat. 1020 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 611.] JOINT RESOLUTION To protect the revenue by requiring information concerning the disposition of substances used in the manufacture of distilled spirits.June 18, 1934.[[H J.Res., 373](/us/bill/73/hjres/373).][[Pub. Res., No. 41](/us/bill/73/pubres/41).] Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,Distilled spirits, substances used in manufacture of. That every person disposing of any substance of the character used in the manufacture of distilled spirits shall, when required by the Commissioner, render Return showing disposition to be filed.a correct return in such form and manner as the Commissioner, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, may by rules and Information to be contained.regulations prescribe, showing the names and addresses of the persons to whom such disposition was made, with such details, as to the quantity so disposed of or other information which the Commissioner may require as to each such disposition, as will enable the Commissioner to determine whether all taxes due with respect to any distilled spirits manufactured from such substances have been Penalty provisions.paid. Any person who willfully violates any provision hereof, or of any such rules or regulations, and any officer, director, or agent of any such person who knowingly participates in such violation, shall upon conviction be fined not more than $500 or be imprisoned for Definitionsnot more than one year, or both. As used in this joint resolution
(a)the term “distilled spirits” has the same meaning as that in 1021which it is used in title II of the Liquor Taxing Act of 1934;
(b)the term “ person ” includes individuals, corporations, partnerships, associations, trusts, and other incorporated and unincorporated organizations;
(c)“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; and
(d)the term “ substance of the character used in the manufacture of distilled spirits ” includes, but not by way of limitation, molasses, corn sugar, cane sugar, and malt sugar. Approved, June 18, 1934. Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in certain appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental general and emergency appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1934, and June 30, 1935, and for other purposes. 1934-06-19 648 Chapter 48 Stat. 1021 73 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 2024-12-11 public [CHAPTER 648.] AN ACT Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in certain appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental general and emergency appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1934, and June 30, 1935, and for other purposes.June 19, 1934.[[H.R. 9830](/us/bill/73/hr/9830).][[Public, No. 412](/us/pl/73/412).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That the following Emergency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935.sums are appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to supply deficiencies in certain appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental general and emergency appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1934, and June 30, 1935, and for other purposes, namely: TITLE I— GENERAL APPROPRIATIONSGeneral appropriations. LEGISLATIVE ESTABLISHMENTLegislative. senateSenate. To pay to Eula W. Kendrick, widow of Honorable John B. Kendrick, John B. Kendrick.Pay to widow.late a Senator from the State of Wyoming, $8,500. To pay to Augusta M. Dale, widow of Honorable Porter H. Dale, Porter H. Dale.Pay to widow.late a Senator from the State of Vermont, $8,500. For expenses of inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, Inquiries and Investigations, expenses.including compensation to stenographers of committees, at such rate as may be fixed by the Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, but not exceeding 25 cents per hundred words, fiscal year 1935, $100,000: *Provided*, That no part of this *Proviso*.Restriction on payments for services.appropriation shall be expended for Per diem and subsistence expenses.Vol. 44, p. 688.services, personal, professional, or otherwise, in excess of the rate of $3,600 per annum: *Provided further*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended for per diem and subsistence expenses except in accordance with the provisions of the Subsistence Expense Act of 1926, approved June 3, 1926, as amended. The unobligated balance of the appropriation for expenses of Balance reappropriated.Vol. 47, p. 1354.inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, contingent fund of the Senate, for the fiscal year 1934, is reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year 1935. For miscellaneous items, exclusive of labor, for the following fiscal Miscellaneous items.years: For 1933, $14,305.35: For 1934, $50,000.00. The unobligated balance of the appropriation for folding speeches Folding speeches, etc.Balance reappropriated.Vol. 47, p. 1354.and pamphlets, at a rate not exceeding $1 per thousand, for the fiscal year 1934, is reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year 1935. 1022 Fiscal year for adjusting accounts fixed.Hereafter the fiscal year for the adjustment of the accounts of the Secretary of the Senate for compensation and mileage of Senators shall extend from July 1 to June 30; and all laws and parts of laws inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. Compensation of Senators.When to commence.Senators elected, whose term of office begins on the 3d day of January, and whose credentials in due form of law shall have been presented in the Senate, may receive their compensation monthly from the beginning of their term. Salaries of Senators appointed to fill vacancies in the Senate shall commence on the day of their appointment and continue until their successors are elected and qualified. Salaries of Senators elected to fill such vacancies shall commence on the day they qualify. When no appointments have been made the salaries of Senators elected to fill such vacancies shall commence on the day following their election. When Senators have been elected during a sine die adjournment of the Senate to succeed appointees, the salaries of Senators so elected shall commence on the day following their election. When Senators have been elected during a session to succeed appointees, but have not qualified, the salaries of Senators so elected shall commence on the day following the sine die adjournment of the Senate. Appointment, of clerical assistants.A Senator entitled to receive his own salary may appoint the usual clerical assistants allowed Senators. house of representativesHouse of Representatives. Edward B. Almon.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Edward B. Almon, late a Representative from the State of Alabama, $8,500. Charles H. Brand.Pay to daughters.For payment in equal increments to Caroline Mell. Julia Sasnett. and Louelle Rawlston, daughters of Charles H. Brand, late a Representative from the State of Georgia, $8.500. John D. Clarke.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of John D. Clarke, late a Representative from the State of New York, $8,500. Joseph I. Hooper.Pay to widow.For payment to widow of Joseph I. Hooper, late a Representative from the State of Michigan, $8,500. Lynn S. Hornor.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Lynn S. Hornor, late a Representative from the State of West Virginia, $8,500. Bolivar E. Kemp.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Bolivar E. Kemp, late a Representative from the State of Louisiana, $8,500. James S. Parker.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of James S. Parker, late a Representative from the State of New York, $8.500. Edward W. Pou.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Edward W. Pou, late a Representative from the State of North Carolina, $8,500. Henry W. Watson.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Henry W. Watson, late a Representative from the State of Pennsylvania, $8,500. George F. Brumm.Pay to sisters.For payment to Susan I. Brumm and Joan L. Brumm, sisters of George F. Brumm, late a Representative from the State of Pennsylvania, $8,500. Thomas C. Coffin.Pay to widow.For payment to the widow of Thomas C. Coffin, late a Representative from the State of Idaho, $8,500. The foregoing sums to be disbursed by the Sergeant at Arms of the House. Contested-election expenses.Contested-election expenses: For payments to contestants and contestee for expenses incurred in the contested-election cases of Lovette against Reece, Ellis against Thurston, and McAndrews against 1023 Britten, as audited and recommended by the Committee on Elections Numbered One, respectively, as follows: To O. B. Lovette, contestant, $1,993.61; To B. Carroll Reeee, conteste, $1,782.46; To Lloyd Thurston, conteste, $2,000; To Lloyd Ellis, contestant, $2,000; To James McAndrews, contestant, $1,657.82; To Fred A. Britten, conteste, $2,000; In all, $11,433.89, to be disbursed by the Clerk of the House. For payments to contestants and contestes for expenses incurred in the contested-election cases of Chandler against Burnham, Estep against Ellenbogen, and Gormley against Goss, as audited and recommended by the Committee on Elections Numbered Two, respectively, as follows: To Claude Chandler, contestant, $2,000; To George Burnham, conteste, $2,000; To Henry Ellenbogen, conteste, $805.26; To Edward W. Goss, conteste, $2,000; To Martin E. Gormley, contestant, $2,000; In all, $8,805.26, to be disbursed by the Clerk of the House. For payments to contestants and contestes for expenses incurred in the con tested-election cases of Sanders against Kemp, Fox against Higgins, Shanahan against Beck, Casey against Turpin, Brewster against Utterback, and Weber against Simpson, as audited and recommended by the Committee on Elections Numbered Three, respectively, as follows: To J. Y. Sanders. Junior, contestant, $1,634.18; To Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, contestee, $1,635.55; To William C. Fox, contestant, $2,000; To William L. Higgins, contestee, $1,743.20; To James M. Beck, contestee, $1,339.82; To John J. Shanahan, contestant, $817.75; To John J. Casey, contestant, $2,000; To C. Murray Turpin, contestee, $1,999; To John G. Utterback, contestee, $2,000; To Ralph O. Brewster, contestant, $1,970.17; To Charles H. Weber, contestant, $2,000; To James Simpson, Junior, contestee, $2,000; To In all, $21,139.67, to be disbursed by the Clerk of the House. Compiling testimony in contested-election cases: For services Compiling testimony in contested-election cases.Vol. 24, p. 445.[U.S.C., p. 14](/us/usc/14).compiling, arranging for the printer, reading proof, indexing testimony, stenography and typewriting, supervision of the work, and expenses incurred in the contested-election eases of the following Congresses, as authorized by the Act entitled “ An Act relating to contested elections ”, approved March 2, 1887 (U.S.C., title 2. secs. 201–-226): For the Seventy-second Congress, $500;72d Congress. For the Seventy-third Congress, $1,125.73d Congress. Committee on Revision of the Laws: For the employment of competent persons to assist in continuing the work of compiling, codifying, and revising the laws and treaties of the United States, fiscal years 1934 and 1935. $3,000. For preparation and editing of the laws as authorized by the Preparation and editing the laws, 1934.Vol. 45, p. 1007.[U.S.C.. Supp. VII p. 4](/us/usc/4).Act approved May 29, 1928 (U.S.C., Supp. VI, title 1, sec. 59), fiscal year 1934, $500, to be expended under the direction of the Committee on Revision of the Laws. 1024 United States Code, new edition.Vol. 45, p. 1541.[U.S.C., Supp. VII, p. 2](/us/usc/2).For the preparation and editing of a new edition of the United States Code as authorized by the Act approved May 29, 1928, as amended by the Act approved March 2, 1929 (U.S.C., Supp. VI, title 1, sec. 52d), $37,000, to remain available until expended. Speaker’s table.Parliamentarian and Assistant Parliamentarian.Salary of present incumbents increased.[U.S.C., Supp. VII, p. 7](/us/usc/7).Speaker’s Table: Commencing July 1, 1934, and continuing during such periods as the present incumbents occupy the positions, respectively, of Parliamentarian and Assistant Parliamentarian of the House, the annual rates of compensation of such positions, as fixed by the Legislative Pay Act of 1929 (U.S.C., Supp. VI, title 2, sec. 60a), are hereby increased by the respective sums of $1,500 and $750; and such amounts are hereby appropriated for such purposes for the fiscal year 1935. Telegraph and telephone service.*Proviso*.Deductions to be made for delinquencies.Telegraph and telephone: For telegraph and telephone service, exclusive of personal services, fiscal year 1934, $67,000: *Provided*, That whenever a Representative, Delegate, or Resident Commissioner, or a United States Senator, shall fail to pay any sum or sums due from such person to the House of Representatives or Senate, respectively, the appropriate committee or officer of the House of Representatives or Senate, as the case may be, having jurisdiction of the activity under which such debt arose, shall certify such delinquent sum or sums to the Sergeant at Arms of the House in the. case of an indebtedness to the House of Representatives and to the Secretary of the Senate in the case of an indebtedness to the Senate, and such latter officials are authorized and directed, respectively, to deduct from any salary, mileage, or expense money due to any such delinquent such certified amounts or so much thereof as the balance or balances due such delinquent may cover. Sums so Disposition of.deducted by the Secretary of the Senate shall be disposed of by him in accordance with existing law and sums so deducted by the Sergeant at Arms of the House shall be paid to the Clerk of the House and disposed of by him in accordance with existing law. office of architect of the capitolArchitect of the Capitol. Capitol Building.Relocating statues.Vol. 47, p. 1603.Capitol Building: The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $2,500 for the removal and relocation of statues, contained in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, is hereby continued available for the same purposes during the fiscal year 1935. Enlarging Capitol grounds.Vol. 45, p. 1694; Vol. 46, p. 1522; Vol. 47, p. 17.Enlarging the Capitol Grounds: For an additional amount for completing the enlargement and improvement of the Capitol Grounds in accordance with the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the enlarging of the Capitol Grounds ”, approved March 4, 1929, Limit of cost increased.(45 Stat. 1694), to be available until expended, $189,720.02; and the limit of cost fixed in such Act is increased by $105,587.02 to *Proviso*.Removal of buildings.Vol. 47, p. 17.complete the acquisition of property: *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $50,000 for the removal and demolition of structures in connection with the enlargement of the Capitol Grounds, contained in the First Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1932, is continued available until expended, for the same purposes and for the additional purposes of improvement and development. Capitol Power Plant.Maintenance.Vol. 47, p. 1361.Capitol Power Plant: For an additional amount for lighting, heating, and power for the Capitol, Senate, and House Office Buildings, Supreme Court Building, Congressional Library Buildings, and so forth, including the same objects specified under this head in the Legislative Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934, $55,100. Duplicate steam lines to new buildings.Balance available.Vol. 47, p. 1361.The unexpended balance of the appropriation contained in the Legislative Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1933 and continued available by the Legislative Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934 for the installation of duplicate steam lines to new buildings, 1025clean-water intake screens and auxiliaries, and high-tension switching equipment, and so forth, is hereby continued and made available, together with an additional amount of $25,000 for the same purposes, for the fiscal year 1935. Senate Office Building: For an additional amount for maintenance, Senate Office Building.Maintenance, etc.including the same objects specified under this head in the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act, 1935, to provide for installation, replacement, and reconditioning of elevators, $200,000, to be immediately available. For an additional amount for maintenance, including the same Additional.*Ante*, p. 827.objects specified under this head in the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act, 1935, $29,536, of which $25,000 shall be expended forPainting. additional painting. House Office Buildings: For an additional amount for maintenance, House Office Buildings.Maintenance.Vol. 47, p. 1361.including the same objects specified under this head in the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act, 1935, to provide for installation, replacement, and reconditioning of elevators, $190,000, to be Elevators.immediately available. House Office Buildings: For an additional amount for maintenance, Additional.including the same objects specified under this head in the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act, 1935, $2,950, to be immediately available. Library building and grounds: For an additional amount for Library building and grounds.necessary expenditures for the Library Building under the jurisdiction of the Architect of the Capitol, including the same objects specified under this head in the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act, 1935, to provide for installation, replacement, and reconditioning Elevators.*Proviso*.Damon W. Harding, employment continued.Vol. 47, p. 404.[U.S.C., supp. VII, p. 46](/us/usc/46).of elevators, $30,300, to be immediately available: *Provided*, That the Architect of the Capitol may continue the employment under his jurisdiction of Damon W. Harding, until June 30, 1936, notwithstanding any provision of the Act entitled “An Act for the retirement of employees in the classified civil service, and for other purposes ”, approved May 22, 1920, and any amendment thereof, prohibiting extensions of service after the age of retirement. government printing office For payment to Samuel Robinson, William Madden, Preston L. Government Printing Office.Designated messengers on night duty.George, and William S. Houston, messengers on night duty during the second session of the Seventy-third Congress, $900 each; in all, $3,600, to be paid from the appropriation for printing and binding for Congress for the fiscal year 1934. INDEPENDENT OFFICESIndependent Offices. aviation commissionAviation Commission.Salaries and expenses.*Ante*, p. 933. For five commissioners and for all other authorized expenditures for carrying into effect section 20 of the Act entitled “An Act to revise air-mail laws, and to establish a commission to make a report to the Congress recommending an aviation policy ”, approved June 12, 1934, to be available during the fiscal year 1935, $75,000. chicago world’s fair centennial celebrationChicago World’s Fair Centennial Celebration.Participation, etc.Vol. 47, pp. 30, 645, 703. For the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to amend an Act entitled ‘An Act providing for the participation of the United States in A Century of Progress (the Chicago World’s Fair Centennial Celebration) to be held at Chicago, Illinois, in 1933, authorizing an appropriation therefor, and for other purposes ’, approved February 8, 1932, to provide for 1026*Ante*, p, 785.participation in A Century of Progress in 1934, to authorize an appropriation therefor, and for other purposes ”, approved May 21, 1934, and for each and every object authorized by said Act, including Travel and expenses.Balance continued available.Vol. 47, p. 645.travel expenses, and subsistence at not to exceed $5 per day, $175,000, together with the unexpended balance of the appropriation for the Chicago World’s Fair Centennial Celebration held in 1933 as contained in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Agriculture for the fiscal year 1933, to remain available until June 30, 1935. civil service commissionCivil Service Commission. Salaries and expenses.Salaries and expenses: For an additional amount for personal services and other expenses, including the same objects specified under this head in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1935, $300,000. Printing and binding.Printing and binding: For an additional amount for printing and binding, including the same objects specified under this head in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1935, $34,000. federal trade commissionFederal Trade Commission.Additional, for dairy products investigations.*Ante*, p. 513. For an additional amount for the Federal Trade Commission, including the same objects specified under this caption in section 1, title I, Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1935, to enable the Commission to comply with the provisions of H.Con.Res. 32 of the Seventy-third Congress, fiscal year 1935, $30,000. general accounting officeGeneral Accounting Office.Expenditures, etc., of governmental agencies. To enable the General Accounting Office to employ personnel to examine and settle claims and to audit and settle the accounts of receipts and expenditures of governmental agencies, including governmental corporations created after March 3, 1933, and to make Audit of postal accounts.current the audit of Postal Money Order and Postal Savings Accounts, including rent in the District of Columbia, printing and binding, office equipment and supplies, traveling expenses and other Contingent expenses.necessary contingent and miscellaneous expenses, fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $1,000,000: *Provided*, That persons employed hereunder *Proviso*.Temporary employees.may be appointed for temporary service for a period not in excess of six months, without regard to civil service rules and regulations. national archivesNational Archives. Administration, etc.*Post*, p. 1122.For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to establish a National Archives of the United States Government, and for other purposes”, approved June , 1934, fiscal year 1935, $50,000. securities exchange commissionSecurities Exchange Commission. Administration expenses.*Ante*, p. 881.*Ante*, p. 74.For the purpose of administering the provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Securities Act of 1933 (including, among other things, expenditures for personal services and rent at the seat of government and elsewhere, for law books and books of reference, newspapers and periodicals, and for paper, printing, and binding), fiscal year 1935, $300,000. smithsonian institutionSmithsonian Institution.American Historical Association report. For printing and binding two volumes of that portion of the Annual Report of the American Historical Association devoted to the bibliography, Writings on American History, in the same style and edition as the annual report volumes have heretofore been published, fiscal year 1935, $8,000, to be immediately available. 1027 tariff commissionTariff Commission. Salaries and expenses: The unobligated balance of the appropriation Salaries and expenses.of $785,000 for salaries and expenses of the United States Balance continued.*Ante*, p. 297.Tariff Commission, 1934, contained in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1934, is hereby continued available for the fiscal year 1935, and the limitation of $725,000 on the amount which may Amount for personal sendees increased.*Ante*, p. 517.be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia, contained in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1935, under this head, is hereby increased to $750,000. Printing and binding: The unobligated balance of the appropriation Printing and binding.Balance continued.*Ante*, p. 297.of $15,000 for printing and binding for the Tariff Commission, 1934, contained in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1934, is hereby continued available for the fiscal year, 1935. united supreme court building commissionSupreme Court Building Commission. United States Supreme Court Building: The Architect of the Furnishings, etc.Vol. 46, p. 51.*Ante*, p. 297.Capitol, under the direction of the United States Supreme Court Building Commission, is hereby authorized to provide furnishings for the. United States Supreme Court Building, and the appropriations heretofore made for construction and equipment of such building are hereby made available for the furnishing thereof. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIADistrict of Columbia. contingent and miscellaneous expenses Judicial expenses: For an additional amount for judicial expenses, Judicial expenses.including witness fees, and expert services in District cases before the Supreme Court of said District, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1933, $1,583; For 1934, $574. General advertising: For an additional amount for general advertising, Advertising.authorized and required by law. and for tax and school notices and notices of changes in regulations, fiscal year 1932, $319.92. General advertising: For an additional amount for general advertising, authorized and required by law, and for tax and school notices and notices of changes in regulations, fiscal year 1934, $682: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall not be available for the*Proviso*.Notices in local newspapers. payment of advertising in newspapers published outside of the District of Columbia, notwithstanding the requirement of such advertising provided by existing law. Advertising notice of taxes in arrears: For an additional amount Taxes in arrears.Vol. 30, p. 250.for advertising notice of taxes in arrears July 1, 1933, as required to be given by the Act of February 28, 1898, as amended, to be reimbursed by a charge of 50 cents for each lot or piece of property advertised, fiscal year 1934, $7,895.14. public schoolsPublic schools. Fuel, and so forth: For an additional amount for fuel, Fuel, etc.gas, and electric light and power, fiscal year 1934, $8,000. metropolitan policePolice. Salaries: For an additional amount for the pay and allowances of Salaries.Vol. 43, p. 174; VoL 46, p. 839.officers and members of the Metropolitan Police Force, in accordance with the Act entitled “An Act to fix the salaries of the Metropolitan Police Force, the United States Park Police Force, and the fire department of the District of Columbia ” (43 Stat., pp. 174–175), as 1028amended by the Act of July 1, 1930 (46 Stat., pp. 839–841), including compensation at the rate of $2,100 per annum tor the present assistant property clerk of the police department, fiscal year 1934, $55,000. health departmentHealth Department. For additional amounts for isolating wards for minor contagious diseases at Garfield Memorial Hospital for the fiscal years that follow: For 1933. $849.75; For 1934, $11,000. courts and prisonsCourts and prisons. Police Court.Police court: For an additional amount for witness fees, fiscal year 1932, $6.75. Municipal Court.Municipal court: For an additional amount for compensation of jurors, fiscal year 1934, $125. Supreme Court of District of Columbia.Supreme Court, District of Columbia: For an additional amount for salaries, fiscal year 1934, $15,220. Jurors and witnesses, fees.Fees of jurors and witnesses: For an additional amount for mileage and per diem of jurors, for mileage and per diem of witnesses and for per diem in lieu of subsistence, and payment of the expenses [R.S., sec. 850, p. 160](/us/rs/850/160).of witnesses in said court as provided by section 850, Revised Statutes, fiscal year 1934, $8,000. Court of Appeals.Court of Appeals, District of Columbia: For an additional amount for salaries, fiscal year 1934, $9,900. Lunacy writs.Expenses of executing.Vol. 33, p, 740.Writs of lunacy: For an additional amount for expenses attending the execution of writs de lunatico inquirendo and commitments thereunder in all cases of indigent insane persons committed or sought to be committeed 11So in original. to Saint Elizabeths Hospital by order of the executive authority of the District of Columbia under the provisions of existing law, and expenses of commitments to the District Training School, including personal services, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1932, $225; For 1933, $1,931.83. public welfarePublic welfare. National Training School for Boys.National Training School for Boys: For an additional amount for care and maintenance of boys committee to the National Training School for Boys by the courts of the District of Columbia under a contract made by the Board of Public Welfare with the authorities of said National Training School for Boys, for the fiscal years that follow: For 1932, $1,186.71; For 1933, $5.936.72; For 1934, $38,000. Medical charities.Care, etc., of indigent patients at designated Institutions.Medical charities: For an additional amount for care and treatment of indigent patients under contracts made by the Board of Public Welfare with the following institutions for the following fiscal years and for not to exceed the following amounts, respectively: Children’s Hospital, 1933, $8,512; 1934, $25,000; in all, $33,512; Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital, 1934, $11,000. Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital, 1934, $12,000. Deporting nonresident insane.Vol. 30, p. 811.Nonresident insane: For an additional amount for deportation of nonresident insane persons, in accordance with the Act of Congress entitled “An Act to change the proceedings for admission to 1029the Government Hospital for the Insane in certain cases, and for other purposes ”, approved January 31, 1890, including persons held in the psychopathic ward of the Gallinger Municipal Hospital, fiscal year 1934, $2,675. Burial of exservice men: For an additional amount for burying Burial of indigent exservice men.in the Arlington National Cemetery, or in the cemeteries of the District of Columbia, indigent Union ex-soldiers, ex-sailors, or exmarines, of the United States service, either Regular or Volunteer, who have been honorably discharged or retired, and who died in the District of Columbia, to be disbursed by the Secretary of War at a cost not exceeding $45 for such burial expenses in each case, exclusive of cost of grave, fiscal year 1934, $225. water serviceWater service. For an additional amount for construction of a booster pumping Booster pumping plant at Dalecarlia in it.plant at Dalecarlia Reservoir inlet, including equipment, fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $43,500, to be paid wholly out of the revenues of the Water Department of the District of Columbia. settlement of claims For the payment of claims approved by the Commissioners Settlement of claims and suits.under and in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act authorizing the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to settle claims and suits against the District of Columbia ”, approved February 11, 1929 (45 Stat., 1160), as amended by the Act approved Vol. 45, p. 1160; Vol. 46, p. 500.June 5, 1930 (46 Stat., 500), and reported in Senate Document Numbered 184 and House Documents Numbered 329 and 366, Seventy-third Congress, $47,585.32. refund of assessments For payment of refunds of assessments for paving streets, avenues,Paying refunds of street, etc., assessments. and roads, and laying curbs, as authorized by the provisions of section 11 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for special assessments for the paving of roadways and the laying of curbs and gutters”, Vol. 46, p. 1190.approved February 20, 1931 (46 Stat., 1199), fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $7,164.65. judgments For the payment of final judgments, including costs, rendered Payment of judgments.against the District of Columbia, as set forth in House Document Numbered 359, Seventy-third Congress, $12,358.86, together with the further sum to pay the interest at not exceeding 4 per centum per annum on such judgments, as provided by law, from the date the same became due until the date of payment. audited claimsAudited claims. For the payment of the following claims, certified to be due by Payment of.Vol. 18, p. 110.[U.S.C., p. 1022](/us/usc/1022).the accounting officers of the District of Columbia, under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874 (U.S.C., title 31, sec. 713), being for the service of the fiscal year 1931 and prior fiscal years: For expenses, free public library, District of Columbia, 1931, maintenance. $2.50; For contingent and miscellaneous expenses, District of Columbia, 1931, judicial expenses, $100;1030 For contingent and miscellaneous expenses, District of Columbia, 1931, general advertising, $10.50; For motor vehicles, District of Columbia, 1931, maintenance, care, repair, and operation, $1.20; For extension, and so forth, of streets and avenues, District of Columbia, 1931, $182.25; For public schools, District of Columbia, 1931, science laboratories, $1.44; For fees of witnesses, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1931, $6; For miscellaneous expenses, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1931, $1,068.34; For water department, District of Columbia, 1931, installing and repairing water meters, $31.30; For extension, and so forth, of streets and avenues, District of Columbia, 1930, $297.81; For collection and disposal of refuse, District of Columbia, 1930, $3.44; For school building and playground sites, District of Columbia, 1930, $7.20; For writs of lunacy, District of Columbia, 1930, $240; For miscellaneous expenses, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1930, $420; For support of prisoners, District of Columbia, 1930, $71.82; For relief of the poor, District of Columbia, 1930, $38; For public schools, District of Columbia, 1929 and 1930, contingent expenses, miscellaneous, $38.78; For electrical department, District of Columbia, 1929, lighting, 65 cents; For motor vehicles, District of Columbia, 1928, maintenance and repair, $25.30; For extension, and so forth, of streets and avenues, District of Columbia, 1928, $15; For expenses, trees and parkings, District of Columbia, 1928, $3.40; For municipal court, District of Columbia, 1928, compensation of jurors, $28; For miscellaneous expenses, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1927, $3,295; For public schools, District of Columbia, 1926 and 1927, repairs to buildings, $3.60; For policemen and firemen’s relief funds, Act April 13, 1926, $66.50; For Court of Appeals reports, District of Columbia, 1924, $71.50; For streets, District of Columbia, 1923, $1.02; In all, audited claims, $6,030.55. division of expensesDivision of expenses. From District revenues.The foregoing sums for the District of Columbia, unless otherwise therein specifically provided, shall be paid as follows: Such sums as Fiscal years 1921-1924.relate to the fiscal years 1921 to 1924, inclusive, 60 per centum out of the revenues of the District of Columbia and 40 per centum out of the Treasury of the United States; and such sums as relate to the 1925-1935.fiscal years 1925 to 1935, inclusive, jointly or severally, shall be paid out of the revenues of the District of Columbia and the Treasury of the United States in the manner prescribed by the District of Columbia Appropriation Acts for such respective fiscal years. 1031 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUREDepartment of Agriculture.Miscellaneous expenses.Rent. miscellaneous expenses Rent of buildings: For an additional amount for rent of buildings and parts of buildings in the District of Columbia, including the same objects specified under this head in the Agricultural Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934, $17,296. office of experiment stationsExperiment Statione office. The unexpended balance of the amount appropriated by the Agricultural Salaries and expenses.Balance continued available.Vol. 47, p. 613.Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1933, approved July 7, 1932, for salaries and general expenses, Office of Experiment Stations, including the salaries of employees appointed from the continental United States of the discontinued experiment stations in Alaska, Guam, and the Virgin Islands during such leave as might be granted them under the “ leave ” Acts cited in such Appropriation Act, is hereby made available for the payment of compensation in lieu of such leave to such designated employees as remained with-out Federal employment subsequent to the discontinuance of their stations for a period or periods aggregating at least a year. forest ServiceForest Service. Fighting forest fires: Not to exceed $412,000 of the unexpended Fighting forest fires.Vol. 47, p. 1446.balances of the appropriations for “ Salaries and expenses”, Forest Service, fiscal year 1934, may be transferred to the subappropriation “ Salaries and expenses, Forest Service, fighting forest fires”, fiscal year 1934, to meet obligations and expenditures incurred in fighting Fund available.and preventing forest fires, including the same objects specified under this head in the Agricultural Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934. Forest-fire cooperation: For an additional amount for cooperation Cooperation in forest-fire prevention.with the various States or other appropriate agencies in forest-fire *Ante*, p. 483.prevention and suppression, including the same objects specified under this head in the Agricultural Department Appropriation Act of 1935, $225,000. survey of biological surveyBiological Survey Survey. Administration and enforcement of Federal Hunting Stamp Act: For carrying into effect the provisions of subsections
(b)and
(c)Federal Hunting Stamp Act, administration, etc.of section 4 of the Act entitled “An Act to supplement and support the Migratory Bird Conservation Act by providing funds for the *Ante*, p. 451.acquisition of areas for use as migratory-bird sanctuaries, refuges, and breeding grounds, for developing and administering such areas, for the protection of certain migratory birds, for the enforcement of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and regulations thereunder, and for other purposes’’, approved March 16, 1934 (Public, Numbered 124, Seventy-third Congress), the Secretary of the Treasury shall, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, advance to the Secretary of Agriculture $150,000, to be immediately available, and to remain available until June 30, 1935, of which Services in the District.amount not to exceed $20,760 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia, and not to exceed $8,450 shall be available for the purchase of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles Motor vehicles.necessary in the conduct of field work outside the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That the amount so advanced shall be reimbursed and covered into the Treasury as “ miscellaneous receipts ” *Proviso*.Advances reimbursed and covered in.from the first $150,000 of revenue accruing in the Migratory Bird Conservation Fund from the sale of stamps. 1032 bureau of chemistry and soilsChemistry and Soils Bureau. Chemical Investigations.Agricultural chemical investigations: For an additional amount for agricultural chemical investigations, fiscal year 1935, including the same objects specified under this head in the Agricultural Department Appropriation Act of 1935, $7,500. bureau of public roadsPublic Roads Bureau. Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation, roadways.*Post*, p. 1057.For the construction of roads within the grounds of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation at Monticello, near Charlottesville, Virginia, fiscal year 1935, $30,000. bureau of agricultural economicsAgricultural Economics Bureau. Collecting data for use in foreign trade promotion.*Ante*, p. 943.To enable the Secretary of Agriculture to collect and analyze economic data on agricultural products for use in carrying into effect the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Tariff Act of 1930 ”, approved June 12, 1934 (Public, Numbered 316, Seventy-third Congress), including the employment of persons and means in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, printing, and other necessary expenses, fiscal year 1935, $47,670. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCEDepartment of Commerce. office of the secretarySecretary’s office. Contingent expenses.Contingent expenses, Department of Commerce: For an additional amount for the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, $2,000. aircraft in commerceAircraft in commerce. Air navigation facilities.Air-navigation facilities: For an additional amount for air-navigation facilities, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, $306,550. bureau of foreign and domestic commerceForeign and Domestic Commerce Bureau. Foreign trade restrictions, investigations.Investigation of foreign-trade restrictions: For an additional amount for salaries and expenses, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, $45,210, of which amount not to exceed $44,712 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Customs statistics.Customs statistics: For an additional amount for salaries and expenses, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, $11,580. Allowance for quarters.Allowance for quarters, Foreign Commerce Service: For an additional amount for the same purposes specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, $57,060. bureau of lighthousesLighthouses Bureau. Retired pay.Retired pay: For an additional amount for retired pay of officers and employees of the Lighthouse Service, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Commerce for the fiscal year 1934, $7,500. bureau of fisheriesFisheries Bureau. Propagation of food fishes.Columbia River Basin.Propagation of food fishes: For an additional amount for the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, to be expended in the Columbia River Basin, $9,650. 1033 Inquiry respecting food fishes: For an additional amount Inquiry respecting.for the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Commerce Appropriation Act, 1935, to be expended in the Columbia River Basin, of which amount not to exceed $11,615 may be expended for salaries of permanent employees, $24,140. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIORDepartment of Interior. office of the secretarySecretary’s office. Division of Investigations: Not to exceed $5,000 of the appropriation Unforeseen emergencies.Appropriation available.*Ante*, p. 362.“ Salaries and expenses, Division of Investigations, Department of the Interior, 1935 ”, shall be available to meet unforeseen emergencies of a confidential character, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, who shall make a certificate of the amount of such expenditure as he may think it advisable not to specify, and every such certificate shall be deemed a sufficient voucher for the sum therein expressed to have been expended. bureau of indian affairsIndian Affairs Bureau. Purchase and transportation of Indian supplies: For an additional Indian supplies.amount for expenses of purchase and transportation of goods and supplies for the Indian Service, fiscal year 1933, $117,500. Purchase of land for the Navajo Indians, Arizona, reimbursable: Navajo Indians, Ariz.Purchase of land, etc.*Ante*, p. 960For the purchase of land, and improvements thereon, including water rights, for the Navajo Indians in Arizona, as authorized by and in conformity with the provisions of the Act of June 14, 1934 (Public Numbered 352, Seventy-third Congress), $481,879.38, reimbursable. Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, New Mexico (reimbursable): Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, N.Mex., expenses.Vol. 45, p. 312; Vol. 46, pp. 1128, 1567.To complete payment to the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to execute an agreement with the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district providing for conservation, irrigation, drainage, and flood control for the Pueblo Indian lands in the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, and for other purposes ”, approved March 13, 1928 (45 Stat., 312), fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $400,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, reimbursable as provided in such Act. Irrigation system, Uintah Reservation, Utah (tribal funds): Uintah Reservation, Utah.Irrigation system.Vol. 34, p. 375.For an additional amount for continuing operation and maintenance and betterment of the irrigation system to irrigate allotted lands of the Uncompahgre, Uintah, and White River Utes in Utah, authorized under the Act of June 21, 1906 (34 Stat., 375), fiscal year 1934, $7,000, to be paid from tribal funds held by the United States in trust for said Indians and to be reimbursed to the tribal funds by From tribal funds.the individuals benefited under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. Medical relief in Alaska: For an additional amount to meet out-standing Medical relief In Alaska.obligations in excess of the appropriations for medical relief in Alaska for the fiscal years 1929 and 1930, $28. The Creek Nation: The appropriation of $144,106.01 contained Creek Nation.*Post*, p. 1046.Paying Judgment.in section 4, title I, of this Act for payment of a judgment rendered by the Court of Claims in favor of the Creek Nation shall be placed to the credit of the Creek Nation on the books of the Treasury Department and such sum is hereby appropriated and, after deducting the attorneys’ fees and expenses allowed by the Court of Claims and the estimated expenses of making the roll and the payment herein provided for, shall be paid by the Secretary of the Interior 1034per capita to the members of the Creek Tribe of Indians entitled thereto or their heirs, upon a roll made as of date of December 4, 1933, under the direction of and approved by the Secretary of the Interior. reclamation serviceReclamation Service. Sun River project, Mont.Refund of construction charges.Refund of construction charges: For refund of construction charges heretofore paid on permanently unproductive land designated “Farm Unit F ”, in section 32, township 21 north, range 1 west, Sun River project in Montana, and excluded from said project in accordance Vol. 44, p. 636.with sections 42 and 44 of the Act approved May 25, 1926 (44 Stat. 636), $335.40, payable from the reclamation fund. North Platte project, Nebr.-Wyo.Use of power revenues for Northport district.North Platte project, Nebraska-Wyoming: Not to exceed $6,000 from power revenues allocated to the Northport Irrigation District under subsection I, section 4, of the Act of December 5, 1924 (43 Stat. 703), shall be available during the fiscal year 1935 for payment on behalf of the Northport Irrigation District, to the farmers’ irrigation district for carriage, of water for the Northport district under contract of August 10, 1915, between the United States and the farmers’ irrigation district. national park serviceNational Park Service.Public buildings outside the District. Salaries and expenses, public buildings outside of the District of Columbia: For an additional amount for salaries and expenses for administration, protection, and maintenance of public buildings outside the District of Columbia, including personal services at rates of compensation not in excess of the rates current in the place where such services are employed, fiscal year 1934, $13,000. office of educationOffice of Education. Federal Board for Vocational Education.Federal Board for Vocational Education: For carrying out the provisions of section 1 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the *Ante*, p. 792.further development of vocational education in the several States and Territories ”, approved May 21, 1934 (Public, Numbered 245, Seventy-third Congress), fiscal year 1935, $3,084,603; Salaries and expenses.Salaries and expenses: For carrying out the provisions of section 2 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the further development of vocational education in the several States and Territories ”, approved May 21, 1934 (Public, Numbered 245, Seventy-third Congress), fiscal year 1935, $60,000. government in the territoriesGovernment in the Territories. Care of insane, Alaska,Vol. 47, p. 853.Insane of Alaska: For an additional amount for care and custody of persons legally adjudged insane in Alaska, including the same objects and for the same services specified in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934, $9,300. hward universityHoward University. General expenses.Vol. 47, p. 857.For an additional amount for general expenses, Howard University, fiscal year 1932, including the same objects specified under this head in the Interior Department Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1932, $895.55, which sum shall be paid from any unexpended balance in the appropriation “ Howard University, 1934.” 1035 DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICEDepartment of Justice. office of the attorney general Salaries, Department of Justice: For an additional amount of Salaries.salaries, Department of Justice, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, $250,000: *Provided*, That of this amount $160,000 shall be *Proviso*.Transfers of appropriations.available only for transfer in addition to transfers authorized by existing law to any other appropriation or appropriations under the Department of Justice not to exceed 25 per centum of the appropriation to which transfer is made, when approved by the Director of the Budget. Payment of rewards: For payment of rewards for the capture of Payment of rewards.anyone charged with violation of criminal laws of the United States or any State or the District of Columbia and/or for information leading to the arrest of any such person, as authorized by the Act *Ante*, p. 910.approved June 6, 1934, fiscal year 1935, to be immediately available, $25,000. For an additional amount for traveling and miscellaneous expenses, Travel and miscellaneous.Department of Justice, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, $25,000. contingent expenses, department of justice For additional amounts for contingent expenses, Department Contingent expenses.of Justice, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the following fiscal years: For 1930, $1.79; For 1932, $43.02. For an additional amount for printing and binding for the Printing and binding.Department of Justice and the courts of the United States, fiscal year 1930, $117.76. For an additional amount for printing and binding for the Department of Justice and the courts of the United States, fiscal year 1932, $293.74. For rent of buildings and parts of buildings in the District of Rent.Columbia, fiscal year 1935, $36,683. division of investigationInvestigation Division. Salaries and expenses: Not to exceed $20,000 of the appropriation Salaries, etc.“ Salaries and expenses, Division of Investigation, 1935 ”, shall be available to meet unforeseen emergencies of a confidential character, Unforeseen emergencies.to be expended under the direction of the Attorney General, who shall make a certificate of the amount of such expenditure as he may think it advisable not to specify, and every such certificate shall be deemed a sufficient voucher for the sum therein expressed to have been expended. For an additional amount for salaries and expenses, Division Detection and prosecution of crimes.of Investigation, for the detection and prosecution of crimes, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, and including also the purchase at not to exceed $7,000 each, exchange, maintenance, upkeep, and operation Motor vehicles.of armored automobiles; purchase, exchange, maintenance, and upkeep of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, to be used only on official business; and not to exceed $80,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia; to be immediately available, $1,500,000. 1036 division of accountsAccounts Division. Salaries and expenses.Salaries and expenses, Division of Accounts: For an additional amount for personal services, and expenses of the Division of Accounts in the District of Columbia, fiscal year 1935, $22,570. enforcement of antitrust and kindred lawsAntitrust and kindred laws.Enforcement of. For an additional amount for enforcement of antitrust and kindred laws, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, and including also additional personal services in the District of Columbia, to be immediately available, $125,000. united states supreme courtUnited States Supreme Court.Custody, etc., of building. United States Supreme Court Building and Grounds: For custody and maintenance for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1935, as *Ante*, p, 668.authorized by the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the custody and maintenance of the United States Supreme Court Building and the equipment and grounds thereof ”, approved May 7, 1934, as follows: Domestic care, under the marshal.Domestic care under the marshal: For personal services, exclusive of any librarian service, $25,830; for supplies and materials, uniforms and equipment for employees, telegraph and telephone, advertising, transportation, repairs, and such other miscellaneous and incidental expenses as may be necessary to the duties imposed upon the marshal by such Act, $15,000; in all, $40,830. Mechanical care of building and care of grounds.Structural and mechanical care of the building and care of the grounds under the Architect of the Capitol: For such expenditures as may be necessary to enable the Architect of the Capitol to carry out the duties imposed upon him by such Act, including improvements, maintenance, repairs, equipment, supplies, materials, and appurtenances, and personal and other services, $30,348. marshals, distict attorneys, clerics, and other expenses of united states courtsUnited States courts. Marshals,Salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals: For an additional amount for salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the fiscal year 1931, $6,537.81. Additional.For an additional amount for salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, $100,000. Clerks.Salaries and expenses of clerks, United States courts: For an additional amount for salaries and expenses of clerks, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1935, $75,000. Commissioners.Fees of commissioners: For additional amounts for fees of commissioners, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the following fiscal years: For 1922. $5; For 1925, $10; For 1930, $4,105.75; For 1931, $7,065.37: For 1932, $14,258.52; For 1933, $25,684.33. 1037 Fees of jurors and witnesses: For an additional amount for fees Jurors and witnesses.of jurors and witnesses, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the fiscal year 1931, $1,116.58. Miscellaneous expenses: For an additional amount for miscellaneous, Miscellaneous.expenses, United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the fiscal year 1930, $465.99. Supplies for United States courts: For additional amounts for Supplies.supplies for United States courts, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the following fiscal years: For 1931, $136.55; For 1932, $180.63; For 1935, $15,000. Books for judicial officers: For an additional amount for books Books for judicial officers.for judicial officers, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the fiscal year 1931, $24.26. Compensation of special master in case of United States against Northern Pacific Railway Company.Northern Pacific Railway Company, and others: For payment One-half compensation of special master, in suit against.of one half of the total compensation of the special master in the case of United States against Northern Pacific Railway Company, and others, in accordance with the order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, dated January 25, 1934, $12,500. penal and correctional institutionsPenal, etc., institutions. Support of United States prisoners: For additional amounts for Support of prisoners.support of United States prisoners, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the following fiscal years: For 1924, $978.58; For 1929, $218.44; For 1935, $75,000. NAVY DEPARTMENTNavy Department. secretary’s officeSecretary’s office. Claims for damages by collision with naval vessels: To pay claims Damage claims.for damages adjusted and determined by the Secretary of the Navy under the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Act authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to settle claims for damages to Vol. 42, p. 1066.[U.S.C., p. 1127](/us/usc/1127).private property arising from collisions with naval vessels ”, approved December 28, 1922 (U.S.C., title 34, sec. 599), as fully set forth in Senate Document Numbered 214 and House Document Numbered 328, Seventy-third Congress, except item numbered 6, page 4, of such document in favor of the Panama Railroad Company, $15,126.33. Naval station, island of Guam: For an additional amount for Guam, care, etc., of lepers.maintenance and care of lepers, and so forth, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Navy Department and the naval service for the fiscal year 1933, $808.67. bureau of navigationBureau of Navigation.Transportation. Transportation: For travel allowance, and so forth, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Navy Department and the naval service for the fiscal year 1923, $15.85. 1038 bureau of supplies and accountsBureau of Supplies and Accounts. Pay, subsistence, and transportation.Limitation raised.Pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy: The limitation on expenditures for “transportation of dependents of officers and enlisted men of the Navy ” under the appropriation “ Pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy”, for the fiscal year 1933, is hereby increased from $450,000 to $500,000. Anne E. Richardson.Vol. 47, p. 1740.Relief of Anne E. Richardson: For payment to Anne E. Richardson, widow of Jack C. Richardson, of expenses incurred while traveling around the world on the German airship Graf Zeppelin, as authorized in the Act approved March 2, 1933, $143.04. Elmo K. Gordon.Vol. 47, p. 1739.Relief of Elmo K. Gordon: For payment to Elmo K. Gordon of one year’s back pay as authorized in the Act approved March 2, 1933, $648. Ruth McCarn.Vol. 47, p. 1736.Payment to Ruth McCarn: For payment to Ruth McCarn of an amount equal to six months’ pay of her son, the late John Bush Watson, seaman, United States Navy, as authorized in the Act approved March 1, 1933, $126. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Out of the postal revenues)Post Office Department.Postal Service. office of chief inspectorChief Inspector’s office.Payment of rewards. Rewards: For an additional amount for payment of rewards, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Post Office Department for the fiscal year 1933, $4,900. DEPARTMENT OF STATEDepartment of State. office of the secretary of stateSecretary’s office. Salaries.*Ante*, p. 529.Salaries: For an additional amount for salaries, Department of State, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of State Appropriation Act, 1935, $94,720, to be expended by the Secretary of State without regard to the civil-service laws and regulations or the Classification Act of 1923, as amended. Contingent expenses.*Ante*, p. 529.Contingent expenses: For an additional amount for contingent expenses, Department of State, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of State Appropriation Act, 1935, $4,000. Promotion of foreign trade.*Ante*, p. 945.Promotion of foreign trade: For the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of section 4 of the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Tariff Act of 1930”, approved June 12, 1934, including personal services, stenographic reporting services, by contract if [R.S., sec. 3709. p. 733](/us/rs/3709/733).[U.S.C., p. 1309](/us/usc/1309).deemed necessary, without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5), contingent expenses, printing and binding, and such other expenses as the President may deem necessary, fiscal year 1935, $75,000. Foreign Service, instruction and transit pay.Salaries, Foreign Service officers while receiving instructions and in transit: For an additional amount for salaries, Foreign Service officers while receiving instructions and in transit, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year 1934, $20,000. Transportation.Transportation of Foreign Service officers: For an additional amount for transportation of Foreign Service officers, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making Vol. 47, p. 1374.*Ante*, p. 531.appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year 1934, fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $37,500. 1039 Allowance to widows or heirs of Foreign Service officers who die Allowances to widows or heirs.abroad: For additional amounts for allowance to widows or heirs of Foreign Service officers who die abroad, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of State for the following fiscal years: For 1930, $44.43; For 1933, $316.86. Payment to Harriet C. Holoday: Harriet C. Holoday.*Post*, p, 1360.For payment to Harriet C. Holoday, widow of Ross E. Holoday, late American Consul at Manchester, England, of one year’s salary of her deceased husband, who died while in the Foreign Service, as authorized by the Act approved May 21, 1934, $6,000. Reimbursement of StelioStello Vassiliadis.*Post*, p. 1371. Vassiliadis: For reimbursement of Stelio Vassiliadis for expenditures made by him as Vice Consul of Spain at Kiev, Russia, in representing the interests of the United States at that post from March 1, 1918, to the end of February 1920, as authorized by the Act approved June 6, 1934, $406.53. Bringing home criminals: For an additional amount for bringing Bringing home criminals.Vol. 47, p. 487.home criminals, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year 1933, $304. Relief and protection of American seamen: For an additional Relief, etc., American seamen.Vol. 47, p. 1375.amount for relief and protection of American seamen, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year 1934, $12,500. Waterways Treaty, United States and Great Britain; International Waterways treaty, United States and Great Britain.Vol. 36, p. 2448.Joint Commission, United States and Great Britain: For completing necessary special or technical investigations in connection with matters which fall within the scope of the jurisdiction of the International Joint Commission, including the same objects specified under this head in the Department of State Appropriation Act, 1935, $17,555. Rainy Lake reference: For an additional amount for Rainy Rainy Lake reference, 1929-1930.Vol. 45, p. 1651.Lake reference, fiscal years 1929 and 1930, including the same objects specified under this head in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1929, $9.37. International Institute of Agriculture, Rome, Italy: For the International Institute of Agriculture.Vol. 35, p. 1918.expenses of participation by the United States in the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, Italy, as authorized by the convention of June 7, 1905, including the salary of the American member of the permanent committee at not to exceed $7,500 per annum; compensation of subordinate employees without regard to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended; expenses for the maintenance of the office at Rome, including purchase of necessary books, maps, documents, and newspapers and periodicals (foreign and domestic); printing and binding; allowances for living quarters, including heat, fuel, and light, as authorized by the Act approved Vol. 46, p. 818.[U.S.C. Supp. VII, p. 20](/us/usc/20).June 26, 1930 (U.S.C., Supp. VI, title 5, sec. 118a), for the use of the American member of the permanent committee; and traveling expenses; to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, fiscal year 1935, $11,935. For an additional amount for the payment of the contribution Contribution.of the United States, including the Territory of Hawaii, and the dependencies of the Philippine Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands, toward the support of the International Institute of Agriculture at Rome, Italy, fiscal year 1935, $31,656, together with such additional sum due to increases in rates of exchange as may be necessary to pay in foreign currency the contribution required by the protocol to the convention between the United States and other powers for the creation of an International Institute of Agriculture. 1040 International Prison Commission.International Prison Commission: For subscription of the United States as an adhering member of the International Prison Commission, fiscal year 1934, $4,075. Industrial Property Convention.International Conference for Revising the Industrial Property Convention, London, England: For the expenses of participation by the United States in the International Conference for the Purpose of Revising the Industrial Property Convention signed at The Vol. 47, p. 1789.Hague, November 6, 1925, to be held in London, England, in 1934, including personal services without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; [R.S., sec. 3709, p. 733](/us/rs/733).[U.S.C., p. 1309](/us/usc/1300).stenographic reporting and translating services by contract if deemed necessary, without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5); rent; traveling expenses; purchase of necessary books, documents, newspapers and periodicals; stationery; official cards; printing and binding; entertainment; hire, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled, passenger-carrying vehicles; and such other expenses as may be authorized by the Secretary of State, including the reimbursement of such expenditures as may have been made from other appropriations and expenditures incurred subsequent to March 31, 1934, for the purposes herein specified, fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $8,000. International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications.International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications, Lisbon, Portugal: For the expenses of participation by the United States in the International Technical Consulting Committee on Radio Communications, to be held in Lisbon, Portugal, in 1934, including personal services without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; stenographic reporting and translating services by [R.S., sec. 3709, p. 733](/us/rs/3709/733).[U.S.C., p. 1309](/us/usc/1309).contract if deemed necessary, without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5); rent; traveling expenses; purchase of necessary books, documents, newspapers, periodicals, and maps; stationery; official cards; printing and binding; entertainment; 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, fiscal years 1934 and 1935, $16,000. Third Pan American Financial Conference.Third Pan American Financial Conference, Santiago, Chile, and Commercial Conference, Buenos Aires, Argentina: For the expenses of participation by the United States in the Third Pan American Financial conference, at Santiago, Chile, and in the Commercial Conference, at Buenos Aires, Argentina, including personal services without reference to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere: stenographic reporting and translating services by contract if deemed necessary, without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5); rent; traveling expenses (and by indirect routes if specifically authorized by the Secretary of State): purchase of books, documents, newspapers, and periodicals; stationery; official cards; printing and binding; entertainment; hire, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles 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, fiscal year 1935, $14,000, to be immediately available. Panama General Claims Commission.Vol. 47, p. 484.General Claims Commission, United States and Panama: Not to exceed $166.67 of the appropriation “ General Claims Commission, United States and Panama, 1933 ”, contained in the Act making appropriations for the Department of State for the fiscal year 1933, is continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1934. 1041 General Disarmament Conference, Geneva, Switzerland: The unexpended Disarmament conference.Balance reappropriated.Vol. 47, p. 783.balance of the appropriation “ General Disarmament Conference, Geneva, Switzerland, 1933 and 1934 ”, contained in the First-Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, is continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1935. International Monetary and Economic Conference: The unexpended International Monetary and Economic Conference.Balances reappropriated.Vol. 47, p. 538; *Ante*, p. 278.balances of the appropriations “ International Monetary and Economic Conference, 1933 and 1934 ”, contained in the Second and Fourth Deficiency Acts, fiscal year 1933, are continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1935. Claims adjustment, United States and Turkey: For participation Adjustment of claims with Turkey.*Ante*, p. 1018.by the United States in the examination and settlement at Istanbul, Turkey, of claims as provided for by public resolution entitled “ Joint resolution authorizing appropriation for expenses of representatives of United States to meet at Istanbul, Turkey, with representatives of Turkish Republic for purpose of examining claims of either Government against the other and for expense of proceedings before an umpire, if necessary ”, approved June , 1934, fiscal year 1934, $75,000, to remain available until June 30, 1935. Mixed Claims Commission, United States and Germany: For Mixed Claims Commission, United States and Germany.Vol. 42, p. 2200; Vol. 45, p. 2698.expenses of determining the amounts of claims against Germany by the Mixed Claims Commission established under the agreement concluded between the United States and Germany on August 10, 1922, and subsequent agreement between those Governments, for the determination of the amount to be paid by Germany in satisfaction of the financial obligations of Germany under the treaty concluded between the Governments of the United States and Germany onVol. 42, p. 1939. August 25, 1921, including the expenses which under the terms of such agreement of August 10, 1922, are chargeable in part to the United States, and the preparation of a final report by the American Commissioner and the orderly arrangement for preservation and disposition of the records of the Commission; and the expenses of an agency of the United States to perform all necessary services in Final report.connection with the preparation of claims and the presentation thereof before said Mixed Claims Commission, and the preparation of a final report of the agent and the orderly arrangement for preservation of the records of the agency and the disposition of property jointly owned by the two Governments, including salaries of an agent and necessary counsel and other assistants and employees, rent in the District of Columbia, employment of special counsel, Employment of counsel, etc.translators, and other technical experts, by contract, without regard to the provisions of any statute relative to employment, and for contract stenographic reporting services without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5), law books and [R.S., sec. 3709, p. 733](/us/rs/3709/733).[U.S.C., p. 1309](/us/usc/1309).books of reference, printing and binding, contingent expenses, traveling expenses, press-clipping service, for all necessary and appropriate expenses in connection with proceedings under the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Act approved July 3, 1930 (46 Stat., p. 1005), authorizing Commissioners or members of international tribunals to administer oaths, and so forth ”, approved June 7, 1933, including stenographic transcripts of the testimony of witnesses, and such other expenses in the United States and elsewhere as the President may deem proper, including payment for services rendered and reimbursement for expenditures incurred subsequent to December 31, 1933, fiscal year 1935, to be immediately available, $57,000. General and Special Claims Conventions, United States and Mexican Mixed Claims Commission.Vol. 43, pp. 1722,1730.Mexico: For the expenses of final and complete settlement and adjustment of claims of the citizens of each country against the other under a convention concluded September 8, 1923, as extended, and of citi1042zens of the United States against Mexico under a convention concluded September 10, 1923, as extended, and the protocol and convention signed April 24, 1934, between the United States and Mexico, including the expenses which, under the terms of the above agreements,Agency expenses. are chargeable in part to the United States, the expenses of an agency of the United States to perform all necessary services in connection with the preparation of American claims and the defense of the United States in cases presented by Mexico, and of a general Joint appraiser, etc.claims commissioner to act as a joint appraiser in appraising the claims, and for the expenses of the joint committee in determining the proper classification of claims which have heretofore been filed as both general and special claims, as provided by the agreements of April 24, 1934, including salaries of an agent and necessary counsel and other assistants and employees and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, law books and books of reference, printing and binding, contingent expenses, contract stenographic reporting services, without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec. 5), the employment of special counsel, translators, and other technical experts, by contract, without regard to the provisions of any statute relative to employment, traveling expenses, the reimbursement of other appropriations from which payments may have been made for any of the purposes herein specified, and such other expenses in the United States and elsewhere as the President may deem proper, fiscal year 1935, to be immediately available, $170,000. Inter-American Highway.*Ante*, p. 996Inter-American Highway: To meet such expenses as the President in his discretion may deem necessary to enable the United States to cooperate with the several Governments, members of the Pan American Union, in connection with the survey and construction of the proposed Inter-American Highway, $1,000,000, to remain available until expended. The expenditure of such sum shall be subject to the receipt of assurances satisfactory to the President from such governments of their cooperation in such survey and construction. TREASURY DEPARTMENTTreasury Department. office of the secretarySecretary’s office. Recoinage of Danish West Indian coins for Virgin Islands.Recoinage of Danish West Indian coins of Virgin Islands: To cover the expenses and loss in the recoinage into subsidiary and other coins of the United States of the Danish West Indian franc and fractional coins of the Virgin Islands of the United States in order to provide for the replacement thereof at the rate fixed by Executive Order Numbered 15 of August 8, 1920, of nineteen and three-tenths hundredths of a dollar for each Danish West Indian franc face amount of such coins, $25,000, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury and to remain available until expended. division of bookkeeping and warrantsBookkeeping and Warrants Division. and 1934, Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank, reimbursement.shall be available in the amounts of $635.87 and $105.58, respectively, to enable reimbursement to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for the cost of shipments of cash by armored motor car from July 1, 1932, to August 31, 1933, under contract dated January 4, 1932. 1043 public debt servicePublic Debt Service. Distinctive paper for United States securities: For an additionalDistinctive paper for securities. amount for distinctive paper for United States securities during the fiscal year 1935, including the same objects specified under this head in the Treasury Department Appropriation Act, 1935, as amended by Public Resolution Numbered 23, Seventy-third Congress, approved May 7, 1934, $69,220. bureau of customsCustoms Bureau. The limitation on the amount which may be expended Motor vehicles.for the purchase of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles from the appropriation “ Collecting the revenue from customs, 1935 ”, is increased from $25,000 to $75,000. Not to exceed $1,500 of the appropriation “ Collecting the revenue Buildings, Improvements.from customs, 1935 ”, shall be available for improving, repairing, maintaining, or preserving such buildings, inspection stations, office quarters, including living quarters for officers, sheds, and sites along Border patrols.Vol. 46, p. 817.[U.S.C. Supp. VII, p. 367](/us/usc/367).the Canadian and Mexican borders as are authorized by the Act of June 26, 1930 (U.S.C., Supp. VII, title 19, sec. 68). Bureau of Engraving and PrintingEngraving and Printing Bureau. The limitation in the Act making appropriations for the Treasury Internal revenue, etc. stamps.Number of sheets increased.[U.S.C., p. 742](/us/usc/742).Department for the fiscal year 1934 as to the number of delivered sheets of internal-revenue stamps, including opium orders and special-tax stamps required under the Act of December 17, 1914 (U.S.C., title 26, sec. 211), is increased from ninety-three million six hundred seventy-five thousand four hundred and eighty-six to one hundred eight million six hundred seventy-five thousand four hundred and eighty-six. Procurement Division—Public Works BranchProcurement Division-Public Works branch.Rent of temporary quarters. Rent of temporary quarters, public buildings: For rent of temporary quarters and alterations of same for the accommodation of Government officials and moving expenses incident thereto, and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to enter into leases for this purpose for periods not exceeding three years, fiscal year 1935, $27,150. Furniture and repairs of same for public buildings: For an additional Forniture, etc.amount for furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, including the same objects specified under this head in the Act making appropriations for the Treasury Department for the fiscal year 1932, $3,000. New York (New York) Federal Office Building (Vesey Street): New York Federal Office Building.Limit of cost increased.Vol. 47, p. 1613.The limit of cost fixed under the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, approved March 4, 1933, for the acquisition by purchase, condemnation, or otherwise of the block bounded by Barclay, Vesey, and Church Streets and West Broadway, is hereby increased from $5.020,438 to not to exceed $5,056,246: *Provided*, That this increase *Provisos*.Increase charged against emergency construction.of $35,808, being approximately the amount of the balance owing on the final judgment in excess of the amount deposited in court with the declaration of taking in condemnation proceedings plus interest on such balance from October 13, 1931, the date of the filing of the declaration to the date of payment at the rate of 6 per centum per annum, shall be charged against the $5,715,000 authorized under Vol. 47, p. 718. 1044Act approved July 21, 1932 (47 Stat. 718), as modified by the operation Vol. 47, p. 412.*Ante*, p. 22.Cost not affected by Economy Act.Vol. 47, p. 412.of the Legislative Appropriation Act approved June 30, 1932 (47 Stat. 412), and as further authorized under Act approved March 31, 1933 (48 Stat. 22), for the construction of a building on said site: *Provided further*. That the limit of cost herein fixed shall not be reduced by the operation of section 320 of the Legislative Appropriation Act approved June 30, 1932 (47 Stat. 412). Union City, N.J.Additional site.Union City (New Jersey) Post Office: The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to acquire from the Port of New York Authority, upon such terms and conditions as he may deem to be to the best interest of the United States, as an addition to the Vol. 46, p. 905.Description.present post-office site at Union City, New Jersey, acquired under authority of the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1930, approved July 3, 1930 (46 Stat. 905), the land described as follows: “Beginning at point on the northerly side of Twenty-ninth Street, distant approximately two hundred feet west of the northwesterly intersection of Twenty-ninth Street and Palisade Avenue, said intersection being also the southeast corner of the present post-office site; running thence in a northerly direction and parallel with Palisade Avenue a distance approximately one hundred and twenty-four feet, thence in a westwardly direction a distance of approximately forty-eight feet to a point, thence in a southwardly direction a distance of approximately one hundred and thirty-seven feet to a point in the northerly line of Twenty-ninth Street, thence in an eastwardly direction along the northerly line of Twenty-ninth Street a distance of Exchange of properties.approximately fifty feet to the point of beginning ”, in exchange for that portion of the aforesaid site described as follows: Beginning at a point formed by the southwesterly intersection of Thirty-second Street and Palisade Avenue, being also the northeast corner of the present post-office site; running thence in a northwesterly direction along the southerly line of Thirty-second Street a distance of approximately two hundred and thirty-eight feet to a point, thence in a southerly direction a distance of approximately one hundred and twenty-four feet, thence in an eastwardly direction a distance of approximately two hundred feet to the point of beginning: *Proviso*.Exchange without Federal expense. *Provided, however*, That the exchange of properties shall be without expense to the United States. Minneapolis, Minn.Appropriations available for approaches.Vol. p. 900: Vol. 47, p. 412.Minneapolis (Minnesota) Post Office, and so forth: The Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1930, approved July 3, 1930 (46 Stat. 900), authorizing the acquisition of a site and construction of a building under a limit of cost of $4,075,000, as modified by the operation of section 320 of the Legislative Appropriation Act, approved June 30, 1932 (47 Stat. 412), is hereby amended so as to make not to exceed $25,000 of said amount also available, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, for necessary approaches outside the Government’s lot lines to the loading platform of the building located on High Street. Washington, D.C.Central Heating Plant: furnishing heat to Corcoran Gallery.*Proviso*.Cost.Washington, District of Columbia, Central Heating Plant: The Treasury Department is authorized to furnish heat from this plant to the Corcoran Gallery of Art: *Provided*, That the proper authority of such institution agrees
(a)to pay for heat furnished at such rates, not less than cost, as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, and
(b)to connect such building with the Government mains in a manner satisfactory to the Public Works Branch, Procurement Division, Treasury Department. 1045 WAR DEPARTMENTWar Department. military activitiesMilitary activities. Rifle ranges, Fort Francis E. Warren: For the purchase of one Fort Francis E. Warren, rifle ranges.*Ante*, p. 955.thousand six hundred acres of land adjacent to Fort Francis E. Warren in the State of Wyoming for use of the United States Army for rifle-range purposes in accordance with the provisions of an Act entitled “An Act to authorize an appropriation for the purchase of land in Wyoming for use as rifle ranges for the Army of the United States ”, approved June 14, 1934, $16,000. nonmilitary activitiesNonmilitary activities.Collision damages. Claims for damages by collision with river and harbor vessels: To pay claims for damages by collision with river and harbor vessels adjusted and determined by the War Department under the provisions of section 9 of the River and Harbor Act, approved Vol. 41, p. 1015.[U.S.C., p. 1081](/us/usc/1081).June 5, 1920 (U.S.C., title 33, sec. 564). as set forth in House Document Numbered 316, Seventy-third Congress, $1,833.10. JUDGMENTS AND AUTHORIZED CLAIMSJudgments and authorized claims. damage claimsDamage claims. Section 2. For the payment of claims for damages to or losses Settlement of, not in excess of $1,000.of privately owned property adjusted and determined by the following respective departments and independent establishments under the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for a method for the settlement of claims arising against the Government of the United States in sums not exceeding $1,000 in any one case ”, approved Vol. 42, p. 1066.[U.S.C., p. 989](/us/usc/989).December 28, 1922 (U.S.C., title 31, secs. 215–217), as fully set forth in Senate Documents Numbered 201, 203, and 213, and House Documents Numbered 319 and 332, Seventy-third Congress, as follows: Civil Works Administration, $2,113.97; National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, $81.85; Veterans’ Administration, $673.17: Department of Agriculture, $2,381.42; Department of Commerce, $1,066.85; Department of the Interior, $2,025.64; Department of Justice, $720.05; Department of Labor, $207.30; Navy Department, $4,390; Post Office Department (out of postal revenues), $20,235.32; Treasury Department, $3,714.91: War Department, $15,209.32; In all, $52,819.80. judgements, united states courtsUnited States courts, judgments. Sec. 3. For payment of the final judgments and decrees, including Collecting erroneously assessed taxes.costs of suits, which have been rendered under the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1887, entitled “An Act to provide for the bringing Vol. 24. p. 505; Vol 43, pp. 348, 941, 972.[U.S.C., p. 857](/us/usc/857).of suits against the Government of the United States” as amended by the Judicial Code, approved March 3, 1911 (U.S.C., title 28, sec. 41, par. 20; sec. 258; secs. 761–765), certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Document Numbered 198 and House Docu1046ment Numbered 324 (★ print), under the following departments and establishments, namely: Department of Commerce, $397.20; Department of the Interior, $3,363.74; >Department of Labor, $2,005; Department of State, $1,920; Treasury Department, $5,029.40; Department, $23,868; Interest.In all, 36,583.34, together with such additional sum as may be necessary to pay interest on the respective judgments at the rate of 4 per centum from the date thereof until the time this appropriation is made. Payment of, for suits in admiralty.Vol. 43. p. 1112.[U.S.C., p. 1529](/us/usc/1529).For the payment of judgments, including costs of suits, rendered against the Government of the United States by United States District Courts under the provisions of an Act entitled “An Act authorizing suits against the United States in admiralty for damages caused by and salvage services rendered to public vessels belonging to the United States and for other purposes ”, approved March 3, 1925 (U.S.C., title 46, secs. 781–789), certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Document Numbered 198 and House Document Numbered 324 (★ print), under the following departments, namely: Department of Commerce, $21,000; Navy Department, $3,357.65; Treasury Department, $6,275.77; War Department, $2,635.93; Interest.In all, $33,269.35, together with such additional sum as may be necessary to pay interest as and where specified in such judgments. Judgments, under special acts.For the payment of the judgments, including costs of suits, rendered against the Government by United States District Courts in[U.S.C., p. 1012](/us/usc/1012). special cases and under the provisions of certain special Acts and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Document Numbered 198 and House Document Numbered 324 (★ print), under the following departments, namely: Department of Justice, $45,000; Navy Department, $44,440.40; War Department, $12,167.96; Interest.In all, $101,608.36, together with such additional sum as may be necessary to pay interest as and where specified in such judgments. Time of payments.None of the judgments contained under this caption shall be paid until the right of appeal shall have expired except such as have become final and conclusive against the United States by failure of the parties to appeal or otherwise. Interest.Payment of interest wherever provided for judgments contained in this Act shall not in any case continue for more than thirty days after the date of approval of the Act. judgments, court of claimsJudgments, Court of Claims.Payment of. Sec. 4. For payment of the judgments rendered by the Court of Claims and reported to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Documents Numbered 196, 206, and 212 and House Document Numbered 327, under the following departments and establishments, namely: Architect of the Capitol, $4,347.13; National Advisory Committee, for Aeronautics, $7,715.01; Railroad Administration, $69,671.13; Department of the Interior, $144,106.01; Department of Justice, $25.25; Navy Department, $315,915.56; Treasury Department, $18,652.59; War Department, $854,722.14; 1047 In all, $1,415,154.82, together with such additional sum as may be Interest.necessary to pay interest on certain of the judgments, including number M-183 in favor of the Federal Real Estate and Storage Federal Real Estate and Storage Company.Company and Hugh J. Phillips, Senate Document Numbered 212, at the legal rate per annum as and where, specified in such judgments. None of the judgments contained under this caption which have Time of payment.not been affirmed by the Supreme Court or otherwise become final and conclusive against the United States shall be paid until the expiration of the time within which application may be made for a Vol. 43, p. 939.[U.S.C., p. 900](/us/usc/900).writ of certiorari under subdivision
(b)section 3, of the Act entitled “An Act to amend the Judicial Code, and to further define the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of appeals and of the Supreme Court, and for other purposes ”, approved February 13, 1925 (U.S.C., title 28, sec. 288). audited claimsAudited claims. Sec. 5.
(a)For the payment of the following claims, certified to Payment of.be due by the General Accounting Office under appropriations the balances of which have been carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874 (U.S.C., title 31, Vol. 18, p. 11O.[U.S.C., p. 1022](/us/usc/1022).Sec. 713), and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year 1931 and prior years, unless otherwise stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 of the Act of July 7, 1884 (U.S.C., title 5, sec. 266), as fully set forth in House Document Numbered 323, Seventy-third Congress, there is appropriated as follows. legislative establishmentLegislative Establishment. For salaries, officers and employees, House of Representatives, $7.20. independent officesIndependent offices. For operations under Mineral Act of October 5, 1918, $504,222.25. For Interstate Commerce Commission, $143.67. For traveling expenses, Civil Service Commission, $2.35. For operation of projects, United States Housing Corporation, $38.75. For salaries and expenses, vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry, $4. For Government contribution to American National Red Cross Building, $2,978.98. For medical and hospital services, Veterans’ Bureau, $17,115.51. For military and naval compensation, Veterans’ Administration, $1,858.57. For military and naval insurance, Veterans’ Bureau, $612.72. For salaries and expenses, Veterans’ Bureau, $174.41. For vocational rehabilitation, Veterans’ Bureau, $123. For Army pensions, $297.27. For Navy pensions, $12.50. For fees of examining surgeons, pensions, $5. For investigation of pension cases, Bureau of Pensions, $13.20. For National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Southern Branch, $141.80. department of agricultureDepartment of Agriculture. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Animal Industry, $838.67. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Dairy Industry, $1.75. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Plant Industry, $52.97. For salaries and expenses. Forest Service, $44.65.1048 For salaries and expenses, Forest Service, emergency construction, $45.85. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Entomology, $4.06. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Agricultural Economics, $2.63. For salaries and expenses, Plant Quarantine and Control Administration. $56. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Chemistry and Soils, $10.42. department of commerceDepartment of Commerce. For promoting commerce, Department of Commerce, $78.55. For contingent expenses, Steamboat Inspection Service, $3.60. For air navigation facilities, $38,918.75. For general expenses, Lighthouse Service, $445.13. For investigating mine accidents, $5.50. For party expenses, Coast and Geodetic Survey. $400. For protecting seal and salmon fisheries of Alaska, $90. For pay, and so forth, of officers and men, vessels, Coast Survey, $1,040.65. For transportation of families and effects of officers and employees, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, $81.79. department of the interiorDepartment of the interior. For Geological Survey, $9.52. For National Park Service, $930.21. For general expenses, Bureau of Education, $5.33. For education of natives of Alaska, $47.05. For Howard University, $114.59. For pay of Indian police, $16.88. For Indian boarding schools, $250.20. For industry among Indians, $2,002.88. For conservation of health among Indians, $426. For education of natives of Alaska, $9.82. For Indian school support, $106.86. For relieving distress and prevention, and so forth, of diseases among Indians, $310. For suppressing contagious diseases among livestock of Indians,$125 department of justiceDepartment of Justice. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Prohibition, $749.77. For supplies for United States courts, $532.50. For probation system, United States courts, $45. For contingent expenses, Department of Justice, $5. For books, Department of Justice, $77. For books for judicial officers, $1,375.10. For detection and prosecution of crimes, $159.33. For examination of judicial officers, $4.56. For printing and binding. Department of Justice and courts, $229.73. For protecting interests of the United States in customs matters, $5,000. For repairs to buildings, Court of Claims, $44.97. For salaries of circuit, district, and retired judges, $194.44. For salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals. United States courts, $2.951.09. For salaries and expenses of district attorneys, United States courts, $991.64. For fees of commissioners, United States courts, $5,424.48.1049 For fees of jurors, United States courts, $48.60. For fees of jurors and witnesses, United States courts, $74.78. For miscellaneous expenses, United States courts, $685.71. For support of prisoners, United States courts, $834.30. For support of United States prisoners, $1,254.87. For United States penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas, $39.22. For United States penitentiary, Atlanta, Georgia, $29.88. For United States penitentiary, Atlanta, Georgia, infirmary and isolation buildings, $4.63. For Federal Industrial Institution for Women, maintenance, $16.40. department of laborDepartment of Labor. For expenses of regulating immigration, $1,028.63. navy departmentNavy Department. For increase of compensation, Naval Establishment, $9.09. For pay, miscellaneous, $17.67. For gunnery and engineering exercises, Bureau of Navigation, $10. For organizing the Naval Reserve Force, $4.20. For organizing the Naval Reserves, $96.89. For engineering, Bureau of Engineering, $39,186.65. For construction and repair, Bureau of Construction and Repair, $56.14. For ordnance and ordnance stores, Bureau of Ordnance, $200. For pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy, $18,865.07. For pay of the Navy, $2,154.79. For transportation, Bureau of Navigation, $367.25. For maintenance, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $261.35. For aviation, Navy, $91,451.06. For pay, Marine Corps, $2,532.61. For general expenses, Marine Corps, $180.68. For maintenance, Quartermaster’s Department, Marine Corps, $233.34. For reimbursement to certain persons for loss of Government securities while naval prisoners, $127.04. department of stateDepartment of State. For allowance for clerks at consulates, $315.06. For allowance to widows or heirs of Foreign Service officers who die abroad, $316.68. For contingent expenses, foreign missions, $662.71. For contingent expenses, United States consulates, $35.16. For expenses of Foreign Service inspectors, $5.32. For salaries of ambassadors and ministers, $55.56. For salaries, Foreign Service officers, $80.78. For salaries, Foreign Service officers while receiving instructions and in transit, $501.74. For transportation of Foreign Service officers. $7,208.04. For transporting remains of diplomatic officers, consuls, and consular assistants, $101. treasury departmentTreasury Department. For increase of compensation, Treasury Department, $17.33. For collecting the revenue from customs, $103.50. For compensation in lieu of moieties, $356. For collecting the internal revenue, $235.48. For collecting the war revenue, $155.25.1050 For punishment for violation of internal-revenue laws, $442.65. For refunding internal-revenue collections, $300. For refunding taxes illegally collected, $323.97. For enforcement of Narcotic and National Prohibition Acts, Internal Revenue, $1,599.45. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Narcotics, $4.50. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Industrial Alcohol, $2.25. For Coast Guard, $4,853.83. For pay and allowances, Coast Guard, $7,131.15. For pay of crews, miscellaneous expenses, and so forth, Life Saving Service, $710.18. For contingent expenses, Coast Guard, $277.94. For Coast Guard station, Barataria, Louisiana, $300. For rebuilding and repairing stations, and so forth, Coast Guard, $3.08. For pay of personnel and maintenance of hospitals, Public Health Service, $986.84. For pay of other employees, Public Health Service, $7.65. For freight, transportation, and so forth, Public Health Service, $108.94. For expenses, Division of Venereal Diseases, Public Health Service, $3.50. For medical and hospital services, Public Health Service, $11. For Quarantine Service, $7.96. For studies of rural sanitation, Public Health Service, 20 cents. For field investigations of public health, 45 cents. For preventing the spread of epidemic diseases, $15.99. For suppressing counterfeiting and other crimes, $2. For general expenses of public buildings. $1.55. For mechanical equipment for public buildings, $93.90. For operating force for public buildings, $4.82. For operating supplies for public buildings, $74.27. For repairs and preservation of public buildings, $646.21. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, $4.25. war departmentWar Department. For registration and selection for military service, $14.10. For registration and selection for military service, Act June 15, 1917, $8. For pay, and so forth, of the Army (Longevity Act January 29, 1927), $1,488.84. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $65,318.35. For pay of the Army, $7,335. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, War with Spain, $228.36. For arrears of pay, bounty, and so forth, $294.29. For mileage of the Army, $102.95. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $9,647.36. For Army transportation, $3,119.78. For clothing and equipage, $128.07. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $6,882.03. For incidental expenses of the Army, $42. For horses for cavalry, artillery, engineers, and so forth, $22. For subsistence of the Army, $283.80. For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corps, $622.68. For replacing medical supplies, $136.07. For replacing clothing and equipage, $3,784.33. For replacing ordnance and ordnance stores, $417.16.1051 For Air Corps, Army, $74.42. For medical and hospital department, $131.50. For ordnance service and supplies, Army, $378.80. For seacoast defenses, insular departments, ordnance, $1.13. For seacoast defenses, insular departments, coast artillery, $105. For armament of fortifications, $26,651.42. For field-artillery armament, $62.14. For Chemical Warfare Service, Army, $5.75. For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $1,507.75. For pay of National Guard for armory drills, $788.04. For arms, uniforms, equipment, and so forth, for field service, National Guard, $58.91. For Organized Reserves, $131.37. For Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, $234. For citizens’ military training camps, $6.02. For headstones for graves of soldiers, $3.97. For cemeterial expenses, War Department, $13.07. post office department postal—service (Out of the postal revenues)Post Office Department.Postal Service. For balances due foreign countries, $909.76. For city delivery carriers, $1,348.81. For clerks, first-and second-class post offices, $2,166.65. For compensation to postmasters, $2,311.45. For compensation to assistant postmasters, $100. For freight, express, or motor transportation of equipment, and so forth, $44.58. For indemnities, domestic mail, $1,464.51. For indemnities, international mail, $445.85. For labor-saving devices, $48.26. For miscellaneous items, first-and second-class post offices, $564.68. For railroad transportation and mail-messenger service, $10,253.12. For Railway Mail Service, salaries, $19.38. For rent, light, and fuel, $2,852.79. For Rural Delivery Service, $70.08. For salaries, Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, $14.67. For separating mails, $120. For special-delivery fees, $11.53. For star route service, $44.76. For vehicle service, $132.72. For village delivery service, $300.37. Total, audited claims, section 5 (a), $933,102.46, together with such additional sum due to increases in rates of exchange as may be necessary to pay claims in the foreign currency as specified in certain of the settlements of the General Accounting Office.
(b)For the payment of the following claims, certified to be due Additional claims, certified by General Accounting Office.Vol. 18, p. 110.Vol. 23, p. 264.[U.S.C., pp. 1022, 1052](/us/usc/1022/1052)by the General Accounting Office under appropriations the balances of which have been carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874 (U.S.C., title 31, sec. 713), and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year 1931 and prior years, unless otherwise stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 of the Act of July 7, 1884 (U.S.C., title 5, sec. 266). as fully set forth in Senate Document Numbered 197, Seventy-third Congress, there is appropriated as follows: 1052 independent officesIndependent Offices. For operations under Mineral Act of October 5, 1918, $77,714.26. For Interstate Commerce Commission, $6. For medical and hospital services, Veterans’ Bureau, $140.28. For medical and hospital services, Bureau of War Risk Insurance, $2. For military and naval compensation, Veteran’s Administration, $80. For salaries and expenses, Veterans' Bureau, $163.28. For Army pensions, $28. For investigation of pension cases, Bureau of Pensions, $1. department of agricultureDepartment of Agriculture. For eradication of sweetpotato weevil, $1.50. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Animal Industry, $11.67. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Plant Industry, $77.50. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Chemistry and Soils, $7.51. For salaries and expenses, Food and Drug Administration, $35.52. department of commerceDepartment of Commerce. For contingent expenses, Department of Commerce, $12.21. For air-navigation facilities, $9,548.06. For general expenses, Lighthouse Service, $1.50. For allowance for quarters, Foreign Commerce Service, $75. For aircraft in commerce, $254.86. For operating mine-rescue cars and stations, Bureau of Mines, $15.61. district of columbiaDistrict of Columbia. For street and road improvement and repair, District of Columbia, $20.50, payable from the revenues of the District of Columbia. department of the interiorDepartment of the Interior. For general expenses, Office of Education, $4. For Indian school support, $5.47. For Indian school buildings, $65.97. For support of Indians and administration of Indian property, $49.75. For conservation of health among Indians, $90. department of justiceDepartment of Justice. For miscellaneous expenses, United States courts, $118.07. For salaries and expenses of district attorneys, United States courts, $12.09. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Prohibition, $142.05. For salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals, United States courts, $542.89. For detection and prosecution of crimes, $1.75. For fees of jurors and witnesses. United States courts, $95. For support of United States prisoners, $94. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, $9.50. For salaries and expenses of clerks, United States courts, $387.64. department of laborDepartment of Labor. For expenses of regulating immigration, $19.35. 1053 mavy departmentNavy Department. For pay, miscellaneous, $2.75. For gunnery and engineering exercises, Bureau of Navigation, $5. For maintenance, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $228.38. For engineering, Bureau of Engineering. $4.30. For pay of the Navy, $65.85. For pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy, $162.15. For aviation, Navy, $74,778.56. For pay, Marine corps, $421.35. department of stateDepartment of State. For contingent expenses, foreign missions, $40.23. treasury departmentTreasury Department. For contingent expenses, Treasury Department, freight, telegrams, and so forth, 76 cents. For collecting the revenue from customs, $30.38. For collecting the internal revenue, $67.25. For enforcement of Narcotic and National Prohibition Acts, internal revenue, $744.65. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Narcotics, $2.40. For Coast Guard, $84.45. For pay and allowances, Coast Guard, $24.33. For repairs to Coast Guard vessels, $14.80. For pay of personnel and maintenance of hospitals, Public Health Service, $77.25. war departmentWar Department. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $8,885.61. For pay of the Army, $588.78. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, War with Spain, 21 cents. For mileage to officers and contract surgeons, $11.08. For mileage of the Army, $13.25. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $1,259.63. For increase of compensation, War Department, $98. For Army transportation, $443.38. For clothing and equipage, $38.34. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $10,107. For horses for cavalry, artillery, engineer’s, and so forth, $2. For regular supplies of the Army, $8.33. For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corps, $20,547.49. For replacing ordnance and ordnance stores, $2.24. For sites for military purposes, $100. For Air Corps, Army, $505. For Medical and Hospital Department, $5.88. For seacoast defenses, ordnance, $26.03. For armament of fortifications, $1,217.70. For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $63.84. For pay of National Guard for armory drills, $285.71. For arms, uniforms, equipment, and so forth, for field service, National Guard, $213.44. For Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, $21.90. For headstones for graves of soldiers, $2.12. For Vicksburg National Military Park, $8.49. 1054 post office department—postal service (Out of the postal revenues)Post Office Department.Postal Service. For clerks, first and second-class post offices, $549.35. For freight, express, or motor transportation of equipment, etc., $4.48. For indemnities, domestic mail, $286.52. For indemnities, international mail, $71.23. For labor-saving devices, 25 cents. For post-office equipment and supplies, $2.50. For railroad transportation and mail messenger service, $26.40. For rent, light, and fuel, $10.70. For special-delivery fees, $5.67. Total, audited claims, section 5 (b), $212,001.18, together with such additional sum due to increases in rates of exchange as may be necessary to pay claims in the foreign currency as specified in certain of the settlements of the General Accounting Office.
(c)Additional claims. For the payment of the following claims, certified to be due by the General Accounting Office under appropriations the balances Vol. 18, p. 110.[U.S.C., p. 1022](/us/usc/1022).of which have been carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section 5 of the Act of June 20, 1874 (U.S.C., title 31, sec. 713), and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being Vol. 23, p. 254.[U.S.C., p. 43](/us/usc/43).for the service of the fiscal year 1931 and prior years, unless other-wise stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 of the Act of July 7, 1884 (U.S.C., title 5, sec. 266), as fully set forth in Senate Document Numbered 205, Seventy-third Congress, there is appropriated as follows: independent officesIndependent Offices. For operations under Mineral Act of October 5, 1918, $7,294.62. For medical and hospital services, Veterans’ Bureau, $12.50. department of commerceDepartment of Commerce. For air-navigation facilities, $300. department of justiceDepartment of Justice. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Prohibition, $11.33. navy departmentNavy Department. For pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy $2,880.75. For pay of the Navy, $3,162.07. For transportation, Bureau of Navigation, $11.96. For general expenses, Marine Corps, $67.85. war departmentWar Department. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $845.33. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $167.39. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $468.08. For pay of Military Academy, $10. Total, audited claims, section 5 (c), $15,231.88, together with such additional sum due to increases in rates of exchange as may be necessary to pay claims in the foreign currency as specified in certain of the settlements of the General Accounting Office. Sec. 6. Claims under private acts. Claims under certain private Acts: To pay claims allowed by the Comptroller General of the United States under the provisions of Private Act Numbered 20, Seventy-third Congress, approved 1055February 26, 1934, and certified to the Seventy-third Congress *Post*, p. 1303.in House Document Numbered 317, under the War Department, as follows: Vicksburg National Military Park, 1931, $356;Vicksburg National Park. Payments to claimants under Private Act Numbered 20, approved February 26, 1934, $7,890. For the payment of a claim allowed by the General Accounting Designated Army claims.Vol. 44, p. 1832.Office under the provisions of Private Act Numbered 486, Sixty-ninth Congress, approved March 3, 1927 (44 Stat., pt. 3, 1832), and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in House Document Numbered 318, under the War Department, $10.25. Sec. 7. Judgments against collectors of customs: For the payment Judgments against collectors of customs.of claims allowed by the General Accounting Office covering judgments rendered by United States District Courts against collectors of customs, where certificates of probable cause have been issued as provided for under section 989, Revised Statutes (U.S.C., [R. S., sec. 989, p. 185](/us/rs/989/185).[U.S.C. p. 943](/us/usc/943).title 28, sec. 842), and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Documents Numbered 194 and 207 and House Document Numbered 320, under the Department of Labor, $24,319.25. Sec. 8. Funds of deceased patients, Saint Elizabeths Hospital: For the payment of the claim of the estate of John C. Lederer,John C. Lederer.Payment to estate of.U.S.C. p. 681.deceased, allowed by the General Accounting Office under the provisions of the Act of June 30, 1906 (U.S.C., title 24, sec. 177), and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Document Numbered 199 and House Document Numbered 325, under the Department of the Interior, $137.13. Sec. 9. Interest withheld from claimants: For payment of interest Set offs of Judgments due.Payments of withheld interest.Vol. 47, p. 1516.on amounts withheld from claimants by the Comptroller General of the United States, Act March 3, 1875, as amended by section 13 of the Act of March 3, 1933 (47 Stat., 1516), as allowed by the General Accounting Office, and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in Senate Document Numbered 200 and House Document Numbered 326, under the Navy Department, $351.93, under the Treasury Department, $11,866.27, and under the War Department $11,041.10; in all, $23,259.30. Sec. 10. This title may be cited as the “ Deficiency Appropriation Title.Act, fiscal year 1934.” TITLE II— EMERGENCY APPROPRIATIONSEmergency appropriations. executive For an additional amount for carrying out the purposes of the Act Unemployment relief.*Ante*, p. 22.entitled “An Act for the relief of unemployment through the performance of useful public work, and for other purposes ”, approved March 31, 1933 (48 Stat. 22); the Federal Emergency Relief Act of Federal Emergency Relief.*Ante*, p. 55.Tennessee Valley Authority Act.*Ante*, p. 58.Executive Office Building, addition.National Industrial Recovery Act.*Ante*, p. 210.*Proviso*.Transfer of funds for Federal emergency relief.1933, approved May 12, 1933 (48 Stat. 55); the Tennessee Valley Authority Act of 1933, approved May 18, 1933 (48 Stat. 58); and theNational Industrial Recovery Act, approved June 16, 1933 (48 Stat. 195); and including $325,000 for an addition to the Executive Office Building and for the furnishings and equipment thereof; $899,675,000, to be allocated by the President for further carrying out the purposes of the aforesaid Acts and to remain available until June 30, 1935: *Provided*, That not exceeding $500,000,000 in the aggregate of any savings or unobligated balances in funds of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation may, in the discretion of the President, be transferred and applied to the purposes of the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933 and/or title II of the National Industrial Recovery Act. and any unobligated balances in appropriations (including allocations of appropriations) of the Federal1056Emergency Administration of Public Works may, in the discretion of the President, be transferred and applied to the purposes of such Maximum for public works, etc.Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933: *Provided further*, That the amounts to be made available under the authority of this paragraph for public works under the National Industrial Recovery Act shall not exceed in the aggregate $500,000,000. emergency relief Relief in stricken agricultural areas.Amount available for.To meet the emergency and necessity for relief in stricken agricultural areas, to remain available until June 30, 1935, $525,000,000, to be allocated by the President to supplement the appropriations heretofore made for emergency purposes and in addition thereto for
(1)making loans to farmers for, and/or
(2)the purchase, sale, gift, or other disposition of, seed, feed, freight, summer fallowing Expenditures.and similar purposes; expenditures hereunder and the manner in which they shall be incurred, allowed, and paid, shall be determined by the President, and may include expenditures for personal services and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere and for printing and binding and may be made without regard to the provisions of section 3709 of the Revised Statutes. Special rates and preferences of carriers.If, during the present drought emergency, a carrier subject to the Interstate Commerce Act shall, at the request of any agent of the United States, authorized so to do, establish special rates for the benefit of drought sufferers such a carrier shall not be deemed to have violated the Interstate Commerce Act with reference to undue preference or unjust discrimination by reason of the fact that it applies such special rates only to those designated as drought sufferers by the authorized agents of the United States or of any State. Reconstruction Finance Corporation to purchase securities from Federal Emergency Administration Public Works.Sums acquired available for additional loans.The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is hereby authorized to purchase marketable securities, satisfactory to said Corporation, acquired or to be acquired by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works, and any sums paid for such securities shall be available to said Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works for the making of additional loans (but not grants) under the provisions of title II of the National Industrial Recovery Act: *Proviso*.Maximum investments.Limitation on outstanding obligations.Vol. 47, p. 9. *Provided*, That the amount that the Reconstruction Finance Corporation may have invested at any one time in such securities shall not exceed $250,000,000. The amount of notes, debentures, and bonds or other such obligations which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation is authorized and empowered to have outstanding at any one time pursuant to section 9 of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Act, as amended, is hereby increased by the sums necessary for these purchases, not to exceed $250,000,000. Civilian Conservation Corps.*Ante*, p. 23.Section 3 of the Act entitled “An Act for the relief of unemployment through the performance of useful public work, and for other purposes ”, approved March 31, 1933 (48 Stat. 22), is hereby repealed, Application of employees Compensation Act to enrollees.Vol. 39, p. 742, [U.S.C. p .80](/us/usc/80).insofar as said Act applies to enrollees in the Civilian Conservation Corps, and in lieu thereof the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide compensation for employees of the United States suffering injuries while in the performance of their duties, and for other purposes ”, approved September 7, 1916, as amended (U.S.C., title 5, ch. 15), are hereby made applicable to such enrollees under the said Act of March 31, 1933, to the same extent and under the same conditions as is provided for employees of the Federal Civil Works *Ante*, p. 351.Administration in the Act entitled “An Act making an additional appropriation to carry out the purposes of the Federal Emergency Relief Act of 1933, for continuation of the Civil Works program, 1057and for other purposes”, approved February 15, 1934 (Public, Numbered 93, Seventy-third Congress): *Provided*, That so much of *Proviso*.Special administrative fund to be set aside.the sum appropriated in the first paragraph of title II of this Act as the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, with the approval of the Director of the Budget, estimates and certifies to the Secretary of the Treasury will be necessary for administrative expenses and for the payment of such compensation shall be set aside in a special fund to be administered by the Commission for such purposes; and after June 30, 1935, such special funds shall be available for these purposes annually in such amounts as may be specified therefor in the annual appropriation Acts. petroleum administrationPetroleum administration. For administering and enforcing the provisions of section 9
(c)Enforcing provisions regarding.*Ante*, p. 200.of the National Industrial Recovery Act, approved June 16, 1933 (48 Stat. 195), and the Code of Fair Competition for the Petroleum Industry approved pursuant to the authority of said Act, and for other purposes relating to the regulation of commerce in petroleum, to be allocated by the President, and to include necessary personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere without regard Services In the District.to the civil-service laws and regulations, traveling expenses, rent, and not to exceed $2,750 for books and periodicals, not to exceed Motor vehicles.$48,000 for the purchase, hire, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, not to exceed $20,000 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of four motor boats, fiscal year 1935, $1,500,000. department of agricultureDepartment of Agriculture. For the purpose of increasing employment by providing for emergency Emergency construction of highways.construction of public highways and other related projects, fiscal year 1935, $100,000,000, to remain available until expended, which sum shall be apportioned by the Secretary of Agriculture Apportionment.*Ante*, p. 203. immediately upon the enactment of this Act under the provisions of section 204 of the National Industrial Recovery Act, approved June 16, 1933 (in addition to any sums heretofore allocated under such section), to the highway departments of the several States to be expended by such departments pursuant to the provisions of such Appropriation deemed part of emergency authorization.*Ante*, p. 993.section, and which sum is a part of the $200,000,000 authorized to be appropriated by section 1 of the Act entitled “An Act to increase employment by authorizing an appropriation to provide for emergency construction of public highways and related projects, and to amend the Federal Aid Road Act, approved July 11, 1916, as amended and supplemented, and for other purposes ”, approved June , 1934. For the purpose, of carrying out the provisions of section 23 Forest roads or trails.Vol. 42, p. 218.of the. Federal Highway Act, approved November 9, 1921, fiscal year 1935, $10,000,000 to remain available until expended in accordance with the provisions of such section 23. For the purpose of carrying out the provisions of section 3 of Cooperative road construction through Federal reservations.Vol. 40, p. 805.the Federal Highway Act, approved November 9, 1921, as amended June 24, 1930 (46 Stat. 805), for the survey, construction, reconstruction, and maintenance of roads through unappropriated or unreserved public lands, nontaxable Indian lands, or other Federal reservations other than the forest reservations, fiscal year 1935, $2,500,000; to remain available until expended. 1058 department of the interiorInterior Department. National Park Service.Improvements.For the construction, reconstruction, and improvement of roads and trails, inclusive of necessary bridges in the national parks, monuments, and other areas administered by the National Park Service, including areas authorized to be established as national parks and monuments, and national park and monument approach Vol. 46, p. 1053.roads authorized by the Act of January 31, 1931 (46 Stat. 1053), as amended, fiscal year 1935, $5,000,000, to remain available until expended. Indian Reservation roads.Vol. 45, p. 750.For the construction and improvement of Indian reservation roads under the provisions of the Act approved May 26, 1928 (45 Stat. 750), fiscal year 1935, $2,000,000 to remain available until expended: *Proviso*Approval required. *Provided*, That the location, type, and design of all roads and bridges shall be approved by the Bureau of Public Roads before any expenditures are made thereon, and all such construction done by contract shall be under the general supervision of said Bureau. Alabama flood relief.Vol. 46, p. 90; Vol 47, p. 635.Road and bridge flood relief, State of Alabama: The unexpended balance of the appropriations contained in the First Deficiency Act, fiscal year, 1930, for carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act for the relief of the State of Alabama for damages to and destruction of roads and bridges by floods in 1929 ”, approved March 12, 1930, shall remain available until June 30, 1935. amendments to agricultural adjustment actAgricultural Adjustment Act amendments. *Ante*, p. 33.Section 4 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, is amended to read as follows: " “Sec. 4. Cotton in possession of Secretary; borrowing on.
(a)The Secretary of Agriculture shall have authority to borrow money upon all cotton in his possession or control and may, at his discretion, deposit as collateral for such loans the ware house receipts for such cotton. “(b) Advances by Secretary of Treasury. The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to advance, in his discretion, out or any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, the sum of $100,000,000 to be available, until March 1, 1936, to the Secretary of Agriculture, for paying off any debt or debts which may have been or may be incurred by the Secretary of Agriculture and discharging any lien or liens which may have arisen or may arise pursuant to part 1 of this title, for protecting title to any cotton which may have been or may be acquired by the Secretary of Agriculture under authority of part 1 of this title, and for paying any expenses (including, but not limited to, warehouse charges, insurance, salaries, interest, costs, and commissions) incident to carrying, handling, insuring, and marketing of said cotton and for the purposes described in subsection
(e)of this section. “(c) Availability of advances. The funds authorized by subsection
(b)of this section shall be made available to the Secretary of Agriculture from time to time upon his request and with the approval of the Secretary of theStatement to accompany request.Treasury. Each such request shall be accompanied by a statement any request. showing by weight and average grade and staple the quantity of cotton held by the Secretary of Agriculture and the approximate aggregate market value thereof. “(d) Purposes of subsections. It is the purpose of subsections
(b)and
(c)to provide an alternative method to that provided by subsection (a), for enabling the Secretary of Agriculture to finance the acquisition, carrying, handling, insuring, and marketing of cotton acquired by him under authority of section 3 of this Act. The Secretary of Agriculture may at his discretion make use of either or both of the methods provided in this section for obtaining funds for the purposes herein-above enumerated. 1059 “(e) The Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to use in his Use of advances.discretion any funds obtained by him pursuant to the provisions of subsection
(a)or
(b)of this section or of section 5 for making advances to any agency which may have been or may be established by the Secretary of Agriculture for the handling, carrying, insuring, or marketing of any cotton acquired by the Secretary of Agriculture, to enable any such agency to perform, exercise, and discharge any of the duties, privileges, and functions which such agency may be authorized to perform, exercise, or discharge. “(f) The proceeds derived from the sale of cotton shall be held Proceeds from cotton sale held in special deposit account.for the Secretary of Agriculture by the Treasurer of the United States in a special deposit account and shall be used by the Secretary of Use of.Agriculture to discharge the obligations incurred under authority of part 1 of this title. Whenever any cotton shall be marketed the net Reimbursement of treasury.proceeds (after discharge of other obligations incurred with respect thereto) derived from the sale thereof shall be used, to the extent required, to reimburse the Treasury for such portion of the funds hereby provided for as shall have been used, which shall be covered into the Treasury as a miscellaneous receipt If when all of the cotton acquired by the Secretary of Agriculture shall have been marketed and all of the obligations incurred with respect to such cotton shall have been discharged, and the Treasury reimbursed for any and all sums which may have been advanced pursuant to Balance covered in.subsection (b), there shall remain any balance in the hands of the Secretary of Agriculture, such balance shall be covered into the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts.” " Section 5 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act, as amended, is *Ante*, p. 33.amended to read as follows: " “Sec. 5. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is hereby Reconstruction Finance Corporation.Loans by, for financing cotton.authorized and directed to advance money and to make loans to the Secretary of Agriculture for the purpose of providing funds with which to enable the Secretary of Agriculture to perform the duties and functions which he is directed or authorized to perform under the provisions of part 1 of this title, provided such advance of money Limitation.or such loans shall not be for amounts in excess of the market value of the cotton, or the interest of the Secretary of Agriculture in the cotton, against which the advance or loan is to be made at the time such advance or loan may be applied for by the Secretary of Agriculture, plus costs, expenses, and commissions incurred incidental to handling, carrying, and marketing of such cotton. The Secretary *Security*.of Agriculture shall not be required to pledge or deposit warehouse receipts or other evidences of title to cotton as security for any advance of money or loans made pursuant hereto, but it shall be sufficient if the Secretary shall give to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation a written statement showing the quantity of cotton by weight and the average grade and staple of the cotton against which the advance or loan is to be made. The amount of notes, bonds, Bond, etc., issue, authorized.debentures, and other obligations which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation is authorized and empowered to issue and to have out-standing at any one time under existing law is hereby increased by an amount sufficient to carry out the provisions of this section.” " Treasury DepartmentTreasury Department. office of the secretarySecretary’s office. Salaries, Office of the Secretary of the Treasury: For an additional Office of GeneraL Counsel.*Ante, p. 768*.amount for salaries, Office of the Secretary of the Treasury, under the authority contained in sections 512 and 513 of the Revenue Act of 1934, creating the Office of General Counsel for the 1060Department of the Treasury, and authorizing the Secretary of the Assistants, etc.Treasury to appoint and fix the compensation of five assistants at rates of compensation of not to exceed $10,000 per annum; including necessary traveling expenses, the temporary employment of experts, and the payment of actual transportation and subsistence expenses to any person whom the Secretary of the Treasury may from time to time invite to the city of Washington or elsewhere for conference and advisory purposes in furthering the work of the Department, *Provisos*.Funds available.fiscal year 1935, $100,000: *Provided*, That the unexpended balances of appropriations now available for expenditure by the Treasury Department, and the appropriations for such Department for the fiscal year 1935, to the extent applicable to the legal activities of the Department as constituted prior or subsequent to the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1934, shall be available, during the fiscal year for which appropriated, for expenditure, under the direction of the Secretary, to carry out the provisions of Rate of compensation.section 512 of said Act: *Provided further*, That, with the exception of any office the rate of compensation for which is specifically fixed by the terms of section 512, the lawful rate of compensation of any other office or position provided for by sections 512 and 513 of the Revenue Act of 1934 shall not be in excess of $10,000. Federal land banks.Payments to, due to reduced interest rate on mortgages.Payments to Federal land banks on account of reductions in interest rate on mortgages: To enable the Secretary of the Treasury to pay each Federal land bank such amount as the Farm Loan Commissioner certifies to the Secretary of the Treasury is equal to the amount by which interest payments on mortgages held by suchbank have been reduced, in accordance with the provision of section *Ante*, p. 48.*Proviso*.Amount continued available.*Ante*, p. 279.24 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, approved May 12, 1933 (48 Stat. 31), fiscal year 1935, $7,950,000: *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $15,000,000 made in the Fourth Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, approved June 16, 1933 (48 Stat. 274), for the purposes of said section 24, shall remain available until June 30, 1935. Subscriptions.*Ante*, p. 43.Subscriptions to paid-in surplus of Federal land banks: For an additional amount to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to pay for subscriptions to the paid-in surplus of Federal land banks under section 23 of the Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933, approved May 12, 1933 (48 Stat. 31), fiscal year 1935,'$75,000,000, to be immediately available. Banking and currency.Expenses, under designated Acts, Proclamations. and Executive orders.*Ante*, p. 1.*Ante*, pp. 337, 341.Expenses, Emergency Banking Act of 1933, Gold Reserve Act of 1934, and Silver Purchase Act of 1934: For any purpose in connection with the carrying out of the provisions of any Executive orders and proclamations regarding the bank holiday, any regulations issued thereunder, and the provisions of the Emergency Banking Act, approved March 9, 1933 (48 Stat. 1), the Gold Reserve Act of [R.S., sec. 3653, p. 719](/us/rs/3653/719), [U.S.C., p. 1010](/us/usc/1010).Federal Reserve banks, expenses.1934, approved January 30, 1934 (Public, Numbered 87, Seventy-third Congress), and section 3653 of the Revised Statutes, including costs of transportation, insurance, and protection of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates transferred to Federal Reserve banks and branches, United States mints and assay offices, and the Treasury, after March 9, 1933; losses sustained by Federal Reserve banks due to abrasion of gold coin, and reimbursement to Federal Reserve banks and branches for expenses incurred by them in carrying outinstructions issued by the Secretary of the Treasury after March 4, Deficiencies in Treasurer’s accounts.*Ante*, pp. 466, 834.1933; and to cover any deficiency in the accounts of the Treasurer of the United States, including interest, as authorized by the Act of Mardi 26, 1934 (Public, Numbered 129, Seventy-third Congress), arising out of the arrangement approved by the President on July 106127, 1933; for any purpose in connection with carrying out the Silver Silver Purchase Act Of 1934.*Post*, p. 1178.Purchase Act of 1934, fiscal year 1935, $4,500,000, to be expended under the direction and in the discretion of the President and to be immediately available. Losses in melting gold: There is hereby appropriated, out of the Losses in melting gold.*Ante*, p. 341.receipts to be covered into the Treasury under section 7 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, approved January 30, 1934 (Public, Numbered 87, Seventy-third Congress), by reason of the reduction of the weight of the gold dollar by the Proclamation of the President of January 31, 1934, an amount sufficient to cover the difference between the value of gold as carried in the general account of the Treasurer of the United States and the value of such gold after melting and refining thereof pursuant to the provisions of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. bureau of internal revenueInternal Revenue Bureau. Collecting the internal revenue: For an additional amount for Collections.*Ante*, p. 429.expenses of assessing and collecting the internal-revenue taxes, including the same objects specified under this head, and under the head “ Salaries and expenses. Bureau of Industrial Alcohol ”, in the Treasury Department Appropriation Act, 1935, and including so much as may be necessary for the compensation of one additional Additional deputy commissioner.deputy commissioner, to be immediately available, $10,000,000; of which not to exceed $800,000 may be expended for personal services Services in the District.in the District of Columbia, and not to exceed $71,250 for the purchase of passenger-carrying automobiles to be used on official *Proviso*.Competitive appointment of personnel.business: *Provided*, That after December 1, 1934, no part of the appropriation made herein or heretofore made for the fiscal year 1935 shall be used to pay the salary of any person formerly employed as investigator, special agent, senior warehouseman, deputy prohibition administrator, agent, assistant attorney, assistant prohibition administrator, senior investigator, deputy production administrator, storekeeper or gauger, or any other position in the Prohibition Bureau or Alcoholic Beverage Unit, Department of Justice, who was separated from the service of such Bureau or Unit between June 10, 1933, and December 31, 1933, while in any such position in the Treasury Department, unless and until such person shall be appointed thereto as a result of an open, competitive examination to be hereafter held by the Civil Service Commission. secret service divisionSecret Service Division. Suppressing counterfeiting and other crimes: For an additional Counterfeiting, etc.amount for suppressing counterfeiting and other crimes, fiscal year 1935, including the same objects specified under this head in the Treasury Department Appropriation Act, 1935, $45,000. procurement division, public works branchProcurement Division, Public Works Branch.Public building emergency construction. Public buildings: For emergency construction of public-building projects outside of the District of Columbia (including the acquisition. where necessary, by purchase, condemnation, exchange, or otherwise of sites and additional land for such buildings; the demolition of old buildings where necessary and the construction, remodeling, or extension of buildings; rental of temporary quarters during construction, including moving expenses; purchase of necessary equipment for buildings and such additional administrative expenses and salaries as may be required solely for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this paragraph), $65,000,(tOO; such projects, including 1062the sites therefor, to be selected by the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General, acting jointly, from the public-building projects specified in Statements Numbered 2 and 3 incorporated in House Report Numbered 1879, Seventy-third Congress, pages 24 to 40, Projects to be within estimate, etc.inclusive, and projects selected shall be carried out within the respective estimated or proposed limits of cost specified in such statements except as such limits are authorized to be modified by the provisions of the next paragraph: *Provided*, That with a view to relieving countrywide unemployment the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General, in the selection of towns or cities in which buildings are to be constructed, shall endeavor to distribute the projects equitably throughout the country so far as may be consistent with the needs of the public service; and the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General may also select for prosecution under this appropriation such projects not included in such report as in their judgment are economically sound and advantageous Preparation of plans, etc.to the public service: *Provided further*, That the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to direct the preparation of all sketches, estimates, plans, and specifications (including supervision and inspection thereof), and to enter into all contracts, necessary for carrying out the purposes of this paragraph, and he is hereby authorized, when deemed by him desirable and advantageous, to employ, by Temporary technical, etc., services.contract or otherwise, temporary professional, technical, or nontechnical employees, firms or corporations, to such extent as may be required to carry out the purposes of this paragraph, without reference to civil-service laws, rules, and regulations, or to the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, or to section 3709 of the Revised Acquiring sites for emergency construction; use of standard plans, etc.Vol. 47, pp. 722, 724.Statutes of the United States: *Provided further*, That in the acquisition of any land or sites for the purposes of Federal public buildings and in the construction of such buildings provided for in this paragraph, the provisions of sections 305 and 306 of the Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932, as amended, shall apply. Contracts for public buildings.In order to permit the Secretary of the Treasury to enter into contracts when the bid of the lowest responsible bidder received in Execution where bids exceed available sums.response to public advertisement exceeds the amount available for any project selected under the preceding paragraph and/or for projects for which allotment has been heretofore, or may hereafter be, made to the Treasury Department for public buildings construction by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works (which allotments shall remain available for the execution of the projects concerned unless released by the Secretary of the Treasury), there Appropriation for.shall be made available by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works an additional sum of $2,500,000 out of any unobligated funds under the control of such Administration, which total sum shall be transferred immediately upon the enactment of this Act to the Treasury Department and, when approved by the President, may be used in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury to enter into contracts for public buildings in an amount not exceeding, in any one case, 10 per centum in excess of the amount available *Provisos*.Reno, Nev., retaining wall.therefor: *Provided further*, That not exceeding $30,000 of the sum herein appropriated shall be expended for construction of a retaining wall and/or improvement of grounds of Federal Building at Reno, Nevada. Sec. 2. Citation of title. This title may be cited as the “Emergency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935.” Approved, June 19, 1934. To authorize the Secretary of the Navy to make a long-term contract for the supply of water to the United States naval station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. 1934-06-19 649 Chapter 48 Stat. 1063 73 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 2024-12-11 public 1063 [CHAPTER 649.] AN ACT To authorize the Secretary of the Navy to make a long-term contract for the supply of water to the United States naval station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.June 19, 1934.[[S. 504](/us/bill/72/s/504).][
Connectionstraces to 14
Traces to 14 documents
statutes-at-large
- to regulate the construction of bridges over navigable waters ”, approved March 23, 1906, and subject to the conditions and limitations contained in this ActPublic Law 411
- To provide for the enlarging of the Capitol GroundsChapter 708
- to adjust water-right charges, to grant certain other relief on the Federal irrigation projects, and for other purposes,” approved May 25, 1926 (44 Stat. 636), as amended by the Act of April 23, 1930 (46 Stat. 249), be, and the same is hereby, further amended by adding after the subparagraph (a) inPublic Law 192
- To amend title 13 of the United States Code to provide a limited exemption to the Bureau of the Census from the provisions of section 322 of the Act of June 30, 1932Public Law 96–52
- /statutes-at-large/vol-50/public-law-164Public Law 164
- /statutes-at-large/vol-48/public-law-13Public Law 13
- /statutes-at-large/vol-48/public-law-17Public Law 17
- /statutes-at-large/vol-52/public-law-742Public Law 742
- /statutes-at-large/vol-46/chapter-592Chapter 592
- /statutes-at-large/vol-46/chapter-79-4621279Chapter 79
- To authorize an appropriation for roads on Indian reservationsChapter 756
- to extend the period of time during which final proof may be offered by homestead entrymen”, approved May 13, 1932, is amended to read as follows: " “That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to extend for not exceeding two years the period during which annual Pending entry necessary.Public Law 77
- /statutes-at-large/vol-50/public-law-78Public Law 78
- /statutes-at-large/vol-48/public-law-414Public Law 414
10 references not yet in our index
- 48 Stat. 1018
- 29 Stat. 32
- 48 Stat. 1019
- 48 Stat. 1020
- 48 Stat. 1021
- 43 Stat. 703
- 47 Stat. 718
- 46 Stat. 905
- 46 Stat. 900
- 48 Stat. 31
Citation graph
cites case law
Public Law 412
Stat.48 Stat. 1018
Stat.29 Stat. 32
Stat.48 Stat. 1019
Cites 24 · showing 12Cited by 0 across 0 sources