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Code · STATUTES-AT-LARGE · Vol. 48 STAT. · May 13, 1932 · Public Law 77

Public Law 77. 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.

5,078 words·~23 min read·/statutes-at-large/vol-48/public-law-77·

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(/us/pl/73/76).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*,Homestead entries, public lands.Extension of time for offering final proof, authorized.Vol. 47, p. 153, amended. That the Act entitled “An Act 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. or final proof may be offered by any person who has a pending homestead or desert-land entry upon public lands of the United States on which at the date of this Act or on any date on or prior to Proof of residence, etc.*Provisos*.Adverse conditions to be shown.
December 31, 1934, under existing law, annual or final proof is required, showing residence, cultivation, improvements, expenditures, or payment of purchase money as the case may be: *Provided*, That any such entryman shall be required to show that it is a hardship upon himself to meet the requirements incidental to annual or final proof upon the date required by existing law due to adverse weather Limitation on application of Act. or economic conditions: *And provided further*, That this Act shall apply only to cases where adequate relief is not available under existing law.
“Sec. 2.Rules to be prescribed. The Secretary of the Interior is authorized to make such rules and regulations as are necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act.” " Approved, June 16, 1933, 1:15 p.m. Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in certain appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1933, and June 30, 1934, and for other purposes. Chapter 100 48 Stat. 274 1933-06-16 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 73 1 public [CHAPTER 100.] AN ACT Making appropriations to supply deficiencies in certain appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1933, and June 30, 1934, and for other purposes.June 16, 1933. [[H.R. 6034](/us/bill/73/hr/6034).] [[Public, No. 77](/us/pl/73/77).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*,Fourth Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933.
That the following 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, 1933, and prior fiscal years, to provide supplemental appropriations for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1933, and June 30, 1934, and for other purposes, namely: Legislative. LEGISLATIVE ESTABLISHMENT Pages, Houses of Congress. *Ante*, p. 29. For the payment of pages from the end of the first session of the Seventy-third Congress to and including June 30, 1933, as follows:
For twenty-one pages for the Senate Chamber at the rate of pay provided by law, so much as may be necessary. For forty-one pages for the House of Representatives, including ten pages for duty at the entrances to the Hall of the House, at the rate of pay provided by law, so much as may be necessary. Senate. senate Inquiries and investigations, expenses. For expenses of inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, including compensation to stenographers of committees, at such rate as may be fixed by the Committee to Audit and Control 275 the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, but not exceeding 25 cents per hundred words, fiscal year 1934, $100,000. house of representatives House of Representatives.
Police force, House Office Building, under the Sergeant at Arms: Police force, House Office Building. Six privates at the rate of $1,620 per annum each, fiscal year 1934, $8,910. capitol police Capitol Police. Salaries: Eight privates at $1,620 per annum each, fiscal year Salaries. 1934, $11,880; one half of such privates to be selected by the Sergeant at Arms of the Senate and one half by the Sergeant at Arms of the House. For purchasing and supplying uniforms and motor cycles to Uniforms, motorcycles, contingent expenses.
Disbursement. Capitol police, and for contingent expenses, fiscal year 1934, $1,460. One half of the foregoing amounts under “Capitol Police” shall be disbursed by the Secretary of the Senate and one half by the Clerk of the House. architect of the capitol Architect of the Capitol. Senate Office Building: For four female attendants, Senate Office Senate Office Building. Female attendants. Building, at $1,080 per annum each, fiscal year 1934, $3,960. EXECUTIVE OFFICE AND INDEPENDENT Executive, etc.
ESTABLISHMENTS national industrial recovery and tennessee valley authority National Industrial Recovery and Tennessee Valley Authority. For the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the Act *Ante*, p. 195. entitled “An Act to encourage national industrial recovery, to foster fair competition, and to provide for the construction of certain useful public works, and for other purposes”, approved June 16, 1933, and also for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act for the relief of unemployment *Ante*, p. 22. through the performance of useful public work, and for other purposes”, approved March 31, 1933, and for each and every object thereof, to be expended in the discretion and under the direction of the President, to be immediately available, and except as hereinafter provided to remain available until June 30, 1935, $3,300,000,000; of which not to exceed $50,000,000 shall be available to the Sum available for Tennessee Valley Authority. board of directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority, and to remain available until expended, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the Act of Congress entitled “The Tennessee Valley *Ante*, pp. 58, 71.
Authority Act of 1933”, approved May 18, 1933, including the Purchase of land, etc. Construction, etc. acquisition of necessary land, the clearing of such land, relocation of highways, and the construction and/or purchase of transmission lines and other facilities, the construction of the Cove Creek Dam and powerhouse and all other necessary works authorized by said Act, and for printing and binding, law books, books of reference, Printing and binding, etc. newspapers, periodicals, purchase, maintenance and operation of passenger-carrying vehicles, rents in the District of Columbia and elsewhere and all necessary salaries and expenses connected with the organization, operation, and investigations of the Tennessee Valley Authority, including reimbursements for any expenses prior to the Reimbursement for prior expenditures. enactment of this appropriation incurred at the direction of the President. 276 Farm Credit Administration. farm credit administration Additional sum.
For an additional amount for the revolving fund created by *Ante*, p. 258.section 5 of the Farm Credit Act of 1933, approved June 16, 1933, $40,000,000. Production Credit Corporations and Associations. Administrative expenses. *Ante*, p. 258. For all necessary administrative expenses in connection with the establishment and supervision of the Production Credit Corporations and the Production Credit Associations authorized by the Farm Credit Act of 1933, approved June 16, 1933, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, printing and binding, and all other necessary expenses, fiscal year 1934, $2,000,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended.
Federal Trade Commission. federal trade commission Additional sum. *Post*, p. 291. For an additional amount for the Federal Trade Commission for the fiscal year 1934, including the same objects specified under this head in the Independent Offices Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1934, $250,000, of which $25,000 shall be available immediately. Printing and binding. For an additional amount for printing and binding for the Federal Trade Commission, fiscal year 1934, $15,000.
Federal Home Loan Bank Board. federal home loan bank board Home financing, etc. *Ante*, p. 134. Encouragement of savings and home financing: To enable the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to encourage local thrift and local home financing and to promote, organize, and develop Federal Savings and Loan Associations or similar associations organized under local law’s, in accordance with the provisions of section 6 of an Act entitled “Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933,” approved June 13, 1933, $150,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended.
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission. Completion of memorial. *Post*, p. 292. george rogers clark sesquicentennial commission That there is hereby appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, the sum of $250,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, for the completion of the Vol. 45, p. 724.memorial authorized by section 2 of the joint resolution approved May 23, 1928, as amended, to be erected at or near the site of Fort Sackville in the city of Vincennes, Indiana, in commemoration of the winning of the Old Northwest and the achievements of George Rogers Clark and his associates in the war of the American Revolution, and for the acquisition and removal of all structures on the site of such memorial, and for the grading, filling, and landscaping of the Expenditure. grounds thereof.
Such sum shall be expended by the George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission in the manner provided in section 2 of such joint resolution, as amended. District of Columbia. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Judgments. judgments Payment of. For the payment of final judgments, including costs, rendered against the District of Columbia, as fully set forth in schedules accompanying the letters of the budget officer for the District of Columbia, dated June 2, 1933, and June 10, 1933, to the Director of the Bureau of the Budget separately transmitted to the Seventy-third Congress, first session, with communications from the President of the United States to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Interest. dated June 9, 1933, together with the further sum to pay 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 277 of payment, $11,278.71, and such sum shall be paid out of the Fund from which payable.
Vol. 47, p. 343. revenues of the District of Columbia and the Treasury of the United States in the manner prescribed in the District of Columbia Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1933. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Interior Department. general land office General Land Office. To pay to Marion F. Blackwell the fair and reasonable value of all Marion F. Blackwell. Land improvement. improvements placed by him upon the southeast quarter southwest quarter section 27, township 2 south, range 6 west, Saint Stephens meridian, Mississippi, as determined by the Secretary of the Interior, Vol. 47, p. 1724. in accordance with the Act of February 15, 1933, fiscal year 1933, $1,000. bureau of indian affairs Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Sequoyah Orphan Training School, Tahlequah, Oklahoma: The Sequoyah Orphan Training School, Okla. Balance available. Vol. 47, p. 106. unexpended balances of appropriations available during the fiscal year 1933 for the construction of physical improvements at the Sequoyah Indian Orphan Training School, near Tahlequah, Oklahoma, are hereby continued available for use during the fiscal year 1934. Compensation to non-Indian claimants, Pueblo Indian Lands, New Mexico, pueblos. Compensation to non-Indian claimants. *Ante*, p. 108.
Vol. 43, p. 636. New Mexico: For carrying out the provisions of the Act of May 31, 1933, in settlement of the liability of the United States to non-Indian claimants on Indian Pueblo grants whose claims, extinguished under the Act of June 7, 1924, have been found by the Pueblo Lands Board to have been claims in good faith, fiscal year 1933, $232,086.80, to remain available until June 30, 1934, and to be apportioned to claimants within the several Pueblos as follows: Tesuque, $1,094.63;
Nambe, $19,393.59; Taos, $14,064.57; Tenorio Tract, Taos Pueblo, $43,165.26; Santa Ana (El Ranchito grant), $846.26; Santo Domingo, $66; Sandia, $5,354.46; San Filipe, $16,424.68; Isleta, $6,624.45; Picuris, $11,464.73; San Ildefonso, $16,209.13; San Juan, $19,938.22; Santa Clara, $35,350.88; Cochiti, $9,653.81; Pojoaque, $1,767.26; Laguna, $30,668.87. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Department of Justice. contingent expenses Contingent expenses. For additional amounts for contingent expenses, Department of Justice, including the same objects specified under this head in the Acts making appropriations for the Department of Justice for the fiscal years that follow:
For 1930, $2.87; For 1932, $116.91. united states courts United States Courts. Fees of commissioners: For additional amounts for fees of commissioners, 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 fiscal years that follow: For 1925, $7.80; For 1930, $11.05; For 1931, $3,896.70; For 1932, $12,374.92. Miscellaneous expenses: For an additional amount for miscellaneous Miscellaneous expenses. 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, $24.61. 278 Supplies.
Supplies: For additional amounts for 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 fiscal years that follow: For 1931, $1.40; For 1932, $545. Department of Labor. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Employment Service. united states employment service National employment system. *Ante*, p. 113. For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the establishment of a national employment system and for cooperation with the States in the promotion of such system, and for other purposes”, approved June 6, 1933, including personal services and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; traveling expenses, including expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the United States Employment Service when specifically authorized by the Secretary of Labor; law books, books of reference and periodicals, printing and binding, supplies and equipment, telegraph and telephone service, and miscellaneous expenses, fiscal year 1934, $1,500,000.
Department of State. DEPARTMENT OF STATE International Monetary and Economic Conference.Expenses of participation. Vol. 47, p. 538. *Post*, p. 1041. international monetary and economic conference For an additional amount for the expenses of participation by the United States in an international monetary and economic conference to be held in London, including the same objects specified under this head in the Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, $125,000, to remain available during the fiscal year 1934.
Mixed Claims Commission, United States and Germany. Vol. 42, p. 2200; Vol. 45, p. 2698. Mixed Claims Commission United States and Germany: For 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 Vol. 42, p. 1939. concluded between the Governments of the United States and Germany on 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 connection with the preparation of claims and the presentation thereof before said Mixed Claims Commission, and the Final report. 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 Employment of counsel, etc. employees, rent in the District of Columbia, employment of special counsel, 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 [R.S., sec. 3709, p. 733](/us/rs/s3709/p733). [U.S.C., p. 1309](/us/usc/p1309).
Printing and binding. section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U.S.C., title 41, sec 5), law books and books of reference, printing and binding, contingent expenses, traveling expenses, press-clipping service, for all neces-279sary and appropriate expenses in connection with proceedings under Traveling expenses. Vol. 46, p. 1005. *Ante*, p. 117. 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 Stenographic, etc., expenses. of witnesses, and such other expenses in the United States and elsewhere as the President may deem proper, fiscal year 1934, $35,700.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT Treasury Department. office of the secretary Secretary’s Office. Subscriptions to paid-in surplus of Federal land banks: To enable Federal land banks. Subscription to paid in surplus. *Ante*, p. 43. *Post*, p. 1060. the Secretary of the Treasury to pay for subscriptions to the paid-in surplus of Federal land banks in accordance with the provisions of section 23 of an Act entitled “Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933”, approved May 12, 1933, $50,000,000, to be available immediately and to remain available until expended.
Payments to Federal land banks on account of reductions in Payments to, reduction in interest on mortgages. *Ante*, p. 43. 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 such bank have been reduced, in accordance with the provisions of section 24 of an Act entitled “Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933”, approved May 12, 1933, fiscal year 1934, $15,000,000.
Subscriptions to preferred shares in Federal Savings and Loan Federal Savings and Loan Associations. Subscriptions to shares. *Ante*, p. 133. Associations: To enable the Secretary of the Treasury to make payments on account of subscriptions to preferred shares in Federal Savings and Loan Associations in accordance with the provisions of section 5
(g)of an Act entitled “Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933”, approved June 13, 1933, $50,000,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended. Payment for capital stock of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. *Ante*, p. 168. To enable the Secretary of the Treasury to make payment for capital stock of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in accordance with the provisions of paragraph
(c)of section 12B of the Act entitled “Banking Act of 1933”, approved June 16, 1933, $150,000,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended. office of the supervising architect Supervising Architect’s Office. Agricultural Department Buildings, Washington, District of Extensible building, Department of Agriculture. Appropriations available for equipment, etc. Vol. 44, p. 874; Vol. 46, p. 1604. Columbia: The authorization contained in the Act of July 3, 1926 (44 Stat., p. 874), for the acquisition of a site and the construction of an extensible building for the use of the Department of Agriculture, as modified by the Act of March 4, 1931 (46 Stat., p. 1604). under an estimated total cost of $12,800,000, is hereby further modified so as to make the appropriations provided under the authority of said Acts available for the purchase and installation of all necessary fixed laboratory equipment and fixed mechanical equipment incident thereto and for special treatment of floors and walls in connection with laboratories. TITLE II— JUDGMENTS AND AUTHORIZED CLAIMS Judgments and authorized claims. damage claims Damage claims. Section 1. For the payment of claims for damages to or losses of Settlement of, not in excess of $1,000. privately owned property, adjusted and determined by the following respective departments and independent office, under the provisions 280Vol. 42, p. 1066. [U.S.C., p. 989](/us/usc/p989). 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 December 28, 1922 (U.S.C., title 31, secs. 215–217), and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in a communication from the President of the United States to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, dated June 9, 1933, under the following departments and independent office, namely: Department of Agriculture, $302.07; Department of Commerce, $20.24; Department of Justice, $608.89; Post Office Department, payable out of postal revenues, $3,930.47; Treasury Department, $95.80; Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, $167.81; In all, $5,125.28. judgments, united states courtsUnited States courts, judgments. Sec. 2.Payment of, for suits in admiralty. For the payment of judgments, including costs of suits, rendered against the Government of the United States by United Vol. 43, p. 1112. [U.S.C., p. 1529](/us/usc/p1529). 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, sec. 787) and certified to the Seventy-third Congress in a communication from the President of the United States to the Speaker of the House of Representatives dated June 9, 1933, under the following departments, namely: Under Navy Department. Navy Department: C. Pateras and Sons and others (United States District Court, Eastern District of Virginia, May 8, 1933, damages due to collision between the steamship Constantinos Pateras and the United States steamship Falcon), $10,942.55. War Department. War Department: Wilmington and Pennsgrove Transportation Company (United States District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, May 11, 1933, loss of ferryboat Harding Highway owing to collision with United States dredge W. L. Marshall), $28,819.80. Vol. 43, p. 1112. [U.S.C., p. 1529](/us/usc/p1529). Total judgments under Public Vessels Act, $39,762.35, together with such additional sum as may be necessary to pay interest on Interest. any such judgment where specified therein and at the rate provided by law. 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. judgments, court of claimsJudgments, Court of Claims. Sec. 3.Payment of. For the payment of the judgments rendered by the Court of Claims as set forth in the schedule transmitted to the Seventy-third Congress, first session, in a communication from the President of the United States to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, dated June 9, 1933, under the following departments, namely: Under Interior Department. Interior Department: William S. Ferris, trading as Do/More Chair Company (March 13, 1933, M–365, chairs purchased under contract), $585. Navy Department. Navy Department: Snare and Triest Company (now Frederick Snare Corporation), a corporation (June 6, 1932, E–325, contract for water-front improvement), $5,474.80; John R. Brady (March 13, 1933. H–173, difference in pay), $768.75; Tampa Shipbuilding and 281 Engineering Company (March 13, 1933, M–128, repair of dredge), $1,892.60; Clarence V. Lee (May 8, 1933, M–318, rental and subsistence allowances), $4,685.47; Arthur L. Bristol (May 8, 1933, M–330, rental and subsistence allowances), $8,883.16; in all, under Navy Department, $21,704.78. War Department: International Arms and Fuze Company (December War Department. 5, 1932, C–220, contract for rifle grenades—Ordnance), $102,459.85; Johnson and Higgins, of California (March 13, 1933, K–89, damage to and loss of cargo), $2,365.12; L. Gertner, senior, trading as Fort Dodge Boiler Works (January 9, 1933, K–438, contract for installation of heating system at Army and Navy General Hospital, Hot Springs, Arkansas), $9,992; in all, War Department, $114,816.97. Total, judgments, Court of Claims, $137,106.75: *Provided*, That *Proviso*. Time of payment. none of the judgments contained under this caption which have 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 writ of certiorari under subdivision (b), section 3, of the Act entitled Vol. 43, p. 939. [U.S.C., p. 900](/us/usc/p900). “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). Payment of interest wherever provided for judgments contained Interest. in this Act shall not in any case continue for more than thirty days after the date of approval of the Act. AUDITED CLAIMS Audited claims. Sec. 4. For the payment of the following claims, certified to be due Payment of. 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), Vol. 18, p. 110. [U.S.C., p. 1022](/us/usc/p1022). and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year 1930 and prior years, unless otherwise stated, and which have been certified to Congress under section 2 of Vol. 23, p. 254. [U.S.C., p. 43](/us/usc/p43). the Act of July 7, 1884 (U.S.C., title 5, sec. 266), in the schedule transmitted to the Seventy-third Congress, first session, by the President of the United States in a communication to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, dated June 9, 1933, there is appropriated as follows: legislative establishment Legislative Establishment. For salaries, officers and employees, House of Representatives, $21.60. independent offices Independent Offices. For medical and hospital services, Veterans’ Bureau, $35,159.51. For military and naval compensation, Veterans’ Administration, $1,515. For military and naval insurance, Veterans’ Bureau, 10 cents. For vocational rehabilitation, Veterans’ Bureau, $30.33. department of agriculture Department of Agriculture. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Animal Industry, $50. For salaries and expenses, Bureau of Entomology, $2.47. department of commerce Department of Commerce. For air navigation facilities, $3,900.90. 282 Department of the Interior. department of the interior For conservation of health among Indians, $33. Department of Justice. department of justice For books, Department of Justice, $4.25. For books for judicial officers, $88.84. For printing and binding, Department of Justice and courts, $63.65. For detection and prosecution of crimes, $11. For supplies for United States courts, $3.35. For protecting interests of the United States in customs matters, 60 cents. For salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals, United States courts, $2,797.89. For salaries and expenses of clerks, United States courts, $59.64. For fees of commissioners, United States courts, $355.95. For fees of jurors, United States courts, $165. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, $54.60. For fees of jurors and witnesses, United States courts, $27.90. Department of Labor. department of labor For expenses of regulating immigration, $1,529.47. For miscellaneous expenses, Bureau of Labor Statistics, $2.80. Navy Department. navy department For pay, miscellaneous, $8.40. For increase of compensation, Naval Establishment, $7.38. For ordnance and ordnance stores, Bureau of Ordnance, $5,957.20. For engineering, Bureau of Engineering, $2,823. For pay of the Navy, $650.06. For pay, subsistence, and transportation. Navy, $706.32. For maintenance, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $20.68. For medical department, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, $137. For care of the dead, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, $29. For aviation, Navy, $59,475.16. For pay, Marine Corps, $144.39. For general expenses, Marine Corps, $33.99. Department of State. department of state For contingent expenses, foreign missions, $47.73. Treasury Department. treasury department For increase of compensation, Treasury Department, $303.75. For public-debt service, $36.02. For Coast Guard, $375.75. For collecting the internal revenue, $4. For refunding internal-revenue collections, $5. For pay of other employees, Public Health Service, 90 cents. For rebuilding and repairing stations, and so forth, Coast Guard, $150. For marine hospital. Carville, Louisiana, $101.55. War Department. war department For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $17,952.56. For pay of the Army, $2,712.60. For armament of fortifications, $31,731. For registration and selection for military service, $24. 283 For citizens’ military training camps, $138.60. For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $2,870.89. For Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, $60. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, War with Spain, $41.25. For Army transportation, $985.32. For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $988.94. For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corps, $7.48. For replacing ordnance and ordnance stores, $1,990.04. For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $46.31. For pay of National Guard for armory drills, $127.85. For mileage of the Army, $24. For Air Corps, Army, $136.66. For manufacture of arms, $4,658.51. For construction and repair of hospitals, $24. For headstones for graves of soldiers, $4.58. post office department—postal service Post Office Department. (Out of the postal revenues) Postal Service. For city delivery carriers, $436.16. For clerks, first- and second-class post offices, $140.15. For compensation to postmasters, $261.93. For indemnities, domestic mail, $239.07. For indemnities, international mail, $28.28. For miscellaneous items, first- and second-class post offices, $1,300. For rent, light, and fuel, $276.27. For separating mails, $170.80. For special delivery fees, $146.38. For star route service, 33 cents. Total, audited claims, section 4, $184,419.09, 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. 5. Section 8 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the Reconstruction Finance Corporation purchase of insurance company bonds, etc. *Ante*, pp. 20, 99, 121. purchase by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of preferred stock and/or bonds and/or debentures of insurance companies” approved June 10, 1933, is hereby amended to read as follows: Sec. 8. The seventh sentence of paragraph
(6)of section 201
(a)Amount increased. of such Act, as amended, is hereby amended to read as follows: “The aggregate of loans made under clause
(a)shall not exceed $8,000,000, and the aggregate of loans made under clause
(b)shall not exceed $12,000,000.” SHORT TITLEShort title of Act. This Act may be cited as the “Fourth Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933.” Approved, June 16, 1933, 1:20 p.m. Making appropriations for the Executive Office and sundry independent executive bureaus, boards, commissions, and offices, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and for other purposes. Chapter 101 48 Stat. 283 1933-06-16 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 73 1 public [CHAPTER 101.] AN ACT Making appropriations for the Executive Office and sundry independent executive bureaus, boards, commissions, and offices, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and for other purposes.June 16, 1933.[[H.R. 5389](/us/bill/73/hr/5389).][
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  • 48 Stat. 283
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Public Law 77
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.
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U.S.C.×1
Stat.48 Stat. 283
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