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Code · STATUTES-AT-LARGE · Vol. 49 STAT. · June 30, 1937 · Public Law 742

Public Law 742.

27,430 words·~125 min read·/statutes-at-large/vol-49/public-law-742·

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

(/us/pl/74/741).]. *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That the following Interior Department appropriations, fiscal year 1937.sums are appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1937, namely: OFFICE OF THE SECRETARYSecretary’s office. salariesSalaries. Salaries: For the Secretary of the Interior, Under Secretary, Secretary, Under Secretary, Assistants, and office personnel.First Assistant Secretary, Assistant Secretary, and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $392,970: *Provided*, That in *Provisos*.Salaries limited to average rates underClassification Act.Vol. 42, p. 1488;
Vol. 45, p. 776; Vol. 46, p. 1003.[U. S. C., p. 85](/us/usc/p85).expending appropriations or portions of appropriations, contained in this Act, for the payment for personal services in the District of Columbia in accordance with the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, with the exception of the First Assistant Secretary and the Assistant Secretary the average of the salaries of the total number of persons under any grade in any bureau, office, or other appropriation unit shall not at any time exceed the average of the compensation rates specified for the grade by such Act, as amended, and in grades in which only one position is allocated the salary of such position shall not exceed the average of the compensation rates for the grade, except that in unusually meritorious cases of one Exception.position in a grade advances may be made to rates higher than the average of the compensation rates of the grade but not more often than once in any fiscal year and then only to the next higher rate: *Provided*, That this restriction shall not apply
(1)to grades 1, 2, 3, Restriction not applicable to clerical-mechanical service.No reduction in fixed salaries.Vol. 42, p. 1490; [U. S. C., p. 86](/us/usc/p86).Transfer without reduction.and 4 of the clerical-mechanical service, or
(2)to require the reduction in salary of any person whose compensation was fixed, as of July 1, 1924, in accordance with the rules of section 6 of such Act,
(3)to require the reduction in salary of any person who is transferred from one position to another position in the same or different grade in the same or a different bureau, office, or other appropriation unit,
(4)to prevent the payment of a salary under Payments under higher rates permitted.any grade at a rate higher than the maximum rate of the grade when such higher rate is permitted by the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and is specifically authorized by other law, or
(5)to reduce the compensation of any person in a grade in which If only one position in a grade.only one position is allocated. office of solicitorSolicitor’s office. For personal services in the District of Columbia and in the Personal services.field, $284,600. division of territories and island possessionsDivision of Territories and Island Possessions. For personal services in the District of Columbia, $55,520.Personal services.*Post*, p. 1896. division of investigationsDivision of Investigations. For investigating official matters under the control of the Department Protecting timber and public lands.of the Interior; for protecting timber on the public lands, and for the more efficient execution of the law and rules relating to the cutting thereof; for protecting public lands from illegal and fraudu-1758 Swamp lands.lent entry or appropriation; for adjusting claims for swamp lands and Traveling expenses.indemnity for swamp lands; and for traveling expenses of agents and others employed hereunder, $391,700, including not exceeding Vehicles and motor boats.$22,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia; not exceeding $35,000 for the purchase, exchange, operation, and maintenance of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles and motor boats for the use of agents and others employed in the field service; and not Emergencies.to exceed $5,000 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. Grazing Control division.division of grazing control Salaries and expenses.Vol. 48, p. 1269.[U. S. C., p. 1851](/us/usc/p1851).For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to stop injury to the public grazing lands by preventing overgrazing and soil deterioration, to provide for their orderly use, improvement, and development, to stabilize the livestock industry dependent upon the public range, and for other purposes”, approved June 28, 1934 Traveling, etc., expenses.(48 Stat. 1269), including traveling and other necessary expenses, payments for the cost of packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Services in the District.Interior, not to exceed $55,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia, not to exceed $20,000 for the purchase, exchange, operation, and maintenance of motor-propelled passenger-carrying Classification, etc., of lands.vehicles, and not to exceed $150,000 for examination and classification of lands with respect to agriculture and agricultural utility as required by the public-land laws and for related administrative Advisory committee expenses.operations and for the preparation and publication of land classification maps and reports, $300,000; for payment of a salary of $5 per diem while actually employed and for the payment of necessary travel expenses, exclusive of subsistence, of members of advisory committees of local stockmen, $100,000; in all, $400,000. Range improvements.Vol. 48, p. 1273.[U. S. C., p. 1853](/us/usc/p1853).For construction, purchase, and maintenance of range improvements within grazing districts, pursuant to the provisions of sections 10 and 11 of the Act of June 28, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 1269), and not including contributions under section 9 of said Act, $250,000: *Proviso*.Limitation on expenditure in any district.*Provided*, That expenditures hereunder in any grazing district shall not exceed 25 per centum of all moneys received under the provisions of said Act from such district during the fiscal years 1936 and 1937. contingent expenses, department of the interior Department contingent expenses.For contingent expenses of the office of the Secretary and the bureaus and offices of the Department; furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, telegraphing, telephone service, including personal services of temporary or emergency telephone operators; street-car fares for use by messengers not exceeding $150; expressage, diagrams, awnings, filing devices, typewriters, adding and addressing machines, and other labor-saving devices, including the repair, exchange, and maintenance thereof; constructing model and other cases and furniture; postage stamps to prepay postage on foreign mail and for special-delivery and air-mail stamps for use in the United States; traveling expenses, including necessary expenses of inspectors and attorneys; fuel and light; examination of estimates for appropriations in the field for any bureau, office, 1759or service of the Department; not exceeding $500 for the payment ofProperty damages. damages caused to private property by Department motor vehicles; purchase and exchange of motor trucks, motorcycles, and bicycles, Vehicles.maintenance, repair, and operation of two motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles and motor trucks, motorcycles, and bicycles to be used only for official purposes; rent of Department garage; expense of taking testimony and preparing the same in connection Disbarment proceedings.with disbarment proceedings instituted against persons charged with improper practices before the department, its bureaus and offices; expense of translations, and not exceeding $1,000 for contract stenographic reporting services; not exceeding $700 for newspapers; stationery, including tags, labels, index cards, cloth-lined Stationery, etc.wrappers, and specimen bags, printed in the course of manufacture, and such printed envelopes as are not supplied under contracts made by the Postmaster General, for the Department and its several bureaus and offices, and other absolutely necessary expenses not hereinbefore provided for, $94,000; and, in addition thereto, sums Additional, from specified appropriations.amounting to $41,700 for stationery supplies shall be deducted from other appropriations made for the fiscal year 1937 as follows: General Land Office, $3,500; Geological Survey, $5,500: Freedmen’s Hospital, $1,000; Saint Elizabeths Hospital, $2,200; National Park Service, $10,000; Bureau of Reclamation, $7,500, any unexpended portion of which shall revert and be credited to the reclamation fund; Division of Investigations, $1,000; Bureau of Mines, $9,000; Division of Grazing Control, $2,000; and said sums so deducted shall be credited to and constitute, together with the first-named sum of $94,000, the total appropriation for contingent expenses for the department and its several bureaus and offices for the fiscal year 1937. For the purchase or exchange of professional and scientific books, Professional, etc., books, periodicals, etc.law and medical books, and books to complete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and other books of reference relating to the business of the Department, $600, and in addition there is hereby made available from any appropriations made for any bureau or office of the Department not to exceed the following respective sums: Sums for designated offices.Indian Service, $500; Office of Education, $2,000; Bureau of Reclamation, $2,000; Geological Survey, $2,500; National Park Service, $2,000; General Land Office, $500; Bureau of Mines, $2,500. printing and binding Printing and binding. For printing and binding for the Department of the Interior, For Department, bureaus, etc.including all of its bureaus, offices, institutions, and services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, except the Alaska Railroad, the Geological Survey, Vocational Education, and the Bureau of Reclamation, $219,000, of which $50,000 shall be for the National Park Service, $65,000 for the Bureau of Mines, and $46,500 for the Education Office; restriction.Office of Education, no part of which shall be available for correspondence instruction. COMMISSION OF FINE ARTSCommission of Fine Arts. For expenses made necessary by the Act entitled “An Act establishing Expenses.Vol. 36, p. 371.[U. S. C., p. 1776](/us/usc/p1776).a Commission of Fine Arts”, approved May 17, 1910 (U. S. C., title 40, sec. 104), including the purchase of periodicals, maps, and books of reference, and payment of actual traveling Attending meetings, etc.expenses of the members and secretary or the Commission in attending meetings and committee meetings of the Commission either within or outside of the District of Columbia, to be disbursed on 1760vouchers approved by the Commission, $9,400, of which amount not to exceed $6,200 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Printing and binding.For all printing and binding for the Commission of Fine Arts, $300. Total, Commission of Fine Arts, $9,700. Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission.MOUNT RUSHMORE NATIONAL MEMORIAL COMMISSION Expenses.Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission: For carrying Vol. 45, p. 1300; Vol. 48, p. 1223.into effect the provisions of the Act creating the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission, approved February 25, 1929 (45 *Ante*, p. 962.Sums immediately available.*Ante*, p. 179.Stat., p. 1300), as amended by the Act approved June 26, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 1223), and the Act approved August 29, 1935 (Public, Numbered 393, Seventy-fourth Congress), $100,000, of which $30,000 shall be immediately available, together with the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1936: *Proviso*.Restriction.*Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended for work on any figure, in addition to the four figures authorized by law, upon which work has not commenced as of the date of enactment of this Act. Perry’s Victory Memorial Commission.PERRY’S VICTORY MEMORIAL COMMISSION Administration, etc., expenses.For administration, protection, maintenance, and preservation of the Perry’s Victory Memorial at Put in Bay, Ohio, including traveling and other expenses of members of the Commission in connection with official matters pertaining to the memorial, printing and binding, personal services, and the purchase of souvenirs for resale, *Proviso*.Limitation.$4,000: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the Vol. 48, p. 1227.aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. War Minerals Relief Commission.WAR MINERALS RELIEF COMMISSION Administrative expenses.Administrative expenses: For administrative expenses made necessary by section 5 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide relief in cases on contracts connected with the prosecution of the war, and Vol. 40, p. 1272.for other purposes”, approved March 2, 1919 (40 Stat., p. 1272), including personal services, without regard to the civil-service laws and regulations; traveling and subsistence expenses; supplies and all other expenses incident to the proper prosecution of this work, both in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, $13,600. Petroleum Administration.PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATION Salaries and expenses.*Ante*, p. 30.For administering and enforcing the provisions of the Act approved February 22, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 30), entitled “An Act to regulate interstate and foreign commerce in petroleum and its products by prohibiting the shipment in such commerce of petroleum and its products produced in violation of State law, and for other purposes”, and to include necessary personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere without regard to the civil-service laws and regulations, traveling expenses, contract stenographic reporting Printing and binding.services, rent, stationery, and office supplies, not to exceed $4,000 for printing and binding, not to exceed $500 for books and periodicals, Vehicles.not to exceed $6,000 for the purchase, exchange, hire, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and not to exceed $8,000 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of boats, $300,000. 1761 NATIONAL BITUMINOUS COAL COMMISSIONNational Bituminous Coal Commission. Salaries and expenses: For all necessary expenditures of theSalaries and expenses. National Bituminous Coal Commission in performing the duties imposed upon said Commission by the Bituminous Coal Conservation Act of 1935, approved August 30, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 991), including *Ante*, p. 991.personal services and rent in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses, contract stenographic reporting services, stationery and office supplies and equipment, printing and binding, and not to exceed $2,500 for newspapers, reference books and periodicals, $900,000. Salaries and expenses, office of the Consumers’ Counsel of the Office of the Consumers’ Counsel.National Bituminous Coal Commission: For all necessary expenditures of the office of the Consumers’ Counsel of the National Bituminous Coal Commission, in performing the duties imposed upon said office of Consumers’ Counsel by the Bituminous Coal Conservation Act of 1935, approved August 30, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 991), *Ante*, p. 993.including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, traveling expenses, printing and binding, contract stenographic reporting services, rent, stationery and office supplies and equipment, and not to exceed $500 for reference books and periodicals, $90,000. GENERAL LAND OFFICEGeneral Land Office. SALARIESSalaries. For Commissioner of the General Land Office and other personalCommissioner, and office personnel. services in the District of Columbia, $587,700, including one clerk, who shall be designated by the President, to sign land patents. GENERAL EXPENSESGeneral expenses. For traveling expenses of officers and employees, including employment Traveling expenses, maps, etc.*Ante*, p. 1759.of stenographers and other assistants when necessary; for separate maps of public-land States and Alaska, including maps showing areas designated by the Secretary of the Interior under the enlarged homestead Acts, prepared by the General Land Office; for the reproduction by photolithography or otherwise of official plats of surveys; for expenses of restoration to the public domain of lands Restoration of lands to public domain.in forest reserves and of lands temporarily withdrawn for forest-reserve purposes; and for expenses of hearings or other proceedings Hearings.held by order of the General Land Office to determine the character of lands, whether alleged fraudulent entries are of that character or have been made in compliance with the law, and of hearings in disbarment proceedings, $16,000. For United States maps, prepared in the General Land Office,Maps; distribution. $15,000, all of which maps shall be delivered to the. Senate and House of Representatives, except 10 per centum which shall be delivered to the Commissioner of the General Land Office for official purposes. All maps delivered to the Senate and House of Representatives hereunder shall be mounted with rollers ready for use. Surveying public lands: For surveys and resurveys of public lands, Public lands, surveying, etc.examination of surveys heretofore made and reported to be defective or fraudulent, inspecting mineral deposits, coal fields, and timber districts, making fragmentary surveys, and such other surveys or examinations as may be required for identification of lands for purposes of evidence m any suit or proceeding in behalf of the United States, under the supervision of the Commissioner of . the General Land Office and direction of the Secretary of the Interior, $700,000, including not to exceed $5,000 for the purchase, exchange, operation, 1762 Vehicles.and maintenance of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles: *Provided*, That not to exceed $5,000 or this appropriation may be expended for salaries of employees of the field surveying service temporarily detailed to the General Land Office: *Provisos*.Temporarily detailed employees.Oregon and California Railroad and Coos Bay Wagon Road lands.*Provided further*, That not to exceed $10,000 of this appropriation may be used for the survey, classification, and sale of the lands and timber of the so-called Oregon and California Railroad lands and the Coos Bay Wagon Other surveys; reimbursable.Road lands: *Provided further*, That this appropriation may be expended for surveys made under the supervision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, but when expended for surveys that would not otherwise be chargeable hereto it shall be reimbursed from the Surveys and resurveys.Sums reappropriated.Vol. 48, p. 200.applicable appropriation fund, or special deposit: *Provided further*, That of the unexpended balance of moneys appropriated to carry out the provisions of title II of the National Industrial Recovery Act of June 16, 1933, such amount, not exceeding $750,000, as the Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works may deem necessary is hereby made available for surveys and resurveys of public lands during the fiscal years 1936 and 1937, to be expended under the supervision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works. Registers; salaries, etc.Registers: For salaries and commissions of registers of district land offices, $77,500. Contingent expenses, land offices.Contingent expenses of land offices: For clerk hire, rent, and other incidental expenses of the district land offices, including the expenses of depositing public money; traveling expenses of clerks detailed to examine the books and management of district land offices and to assist in the operation of said offices, and for traveling expenses of clerks transferred in the interest of the public service from one *Proviso*.Restriction.district land office to another, $160,000: *Provided*, That no expenses chargeable to the Government shall be incurred by registers in the conduct of local land offices except upon previous specific authorization by the Commissioner of the General Land Office. Payments to States from sales of public lands.Payments to States of 5 per centum of proceeds from sales of public lands: For payment to the several States of 5 per centum of the net proceeds of sales of public lands lying within their limits, for the purpose of education or of making public roads and *Proviso*.Limitation.Vol. 48, p. 1227.improvements, $2,000: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Coos Bay Wagon Road lands and timber, payment of proceeds of sales of.Payment of proceeds of sales of Coos Bay Wagon Road grant lands’ and timber: For payment of 25 per centum of the balance of the proceeds from sales of the Coos Bay Wagon Road grant lands and timber within each of the counties of Coos and Douglas, Oregon, after deducting the accrued taxes in said counties and a sum equal Vol. 40, p. 1179.to $2.50 per acre for the land title to which revested in the United States pursuant to the Act of February 26, 1919 (40 Stat., p. 1179), to be paid to the treasurer of the county for common schools, *Proviso*.Expenses limited.Vol. 48, p. 1227.roads, highways, bridges, and port districts, $2,000: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Payments in lieu of taxes, Oregon, etc., lands.Vol. 44, p. 915.Payments to certain counties in Oregon in lieu of taxes on Oregon and California grant lands: For payment to the several counties in the State of Oregon, pursuant to the Act of July 13, 1926 (44 Stat., p. 915), amounts of money in lieu of the taxes that would have accrued against the revested Oregon and California Railroad Company grant lands if the lands had remained privately owned 1763and taxable, $250,000: *Provided*, That payments to the counties *Proviso*.Limitation.Vol. 48, p. 1227.shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Payment to Oklahoma from royalties, oil and gas, south half of Oil and gas royalties.Payment to Oklahoma.Vol. 42, p. 1448.[U. S. C., p. 1350](/us/usc/p1350).Red River; For payment of 37½ per centum of the royalties derived from the south half of Red River in Oklahoma under the provisions of the Act of March 4, 1923 (U. S. C., title 30, sec. 233), which shall be paid to the State of Oklahoma in lieu of all State and local taxes upon tribal funds accruing under said Act, to be expended by the State in the same manner as if received under section 35 Vol. 41, p. 450.[U. S. C., p. 1344](/us/usc/p1344).of the Act approved February 25, 1920 (U. S. C., title 30, sec. 191), $11,000: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the *Proviso*.Limitation.Vol. 48, p. 1227.aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRSIndian Affairs Bureau. salaries For the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and other personal services Commissioner and office personnel.in the District of Columbia, $493,770. general expensesGeneral expenses. For transportation and incidental expenses of officers and clerks Traveling, etc., expenses.of the Bureau of Indian Affairs when traveling on official duty; Radio, etc., tolls.for radio, telegraph, and telephone toll messages on business pertaining to the Indian Service sent and received by the Bureau of Indian Affairs at Washington, and for other necessary expenses of the Indian Service for which no other appropriation is available, $34,000. For advertising, inspection, storage, and all other expenses incident Supplies; purchase, transportation, etc.to the purchase of goods and supplies for the Indian Service and for payment of railroad, pipe-line, and other transportation costs of such goods and supplies, $685,000: *Provided*, That no part of *Proviso*.Restriction on payments.this appropriation shall be used in payment for any services except bill therefore is rendered within one year from the time the service is performed. For pay of judges of Indian courts where tribal relations now Judges, Indian courts.exist, at rates to be fixed by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, $15,000. For pay and expenses of Indian police, including chiefs of police Police.at not to exceed $100 per month each and privates at not to exceed $75 per month each, to be employed in maintaining order, and for purchase of equipment and supplies, $117,390. For the suppression of the traffic in intoxicating liquors, marihuana, Suppressing liquor, etc., traffic.and deleterious drugs among Indians, $75,000. For lease, purchase, repair, and improvement of agency buildings, Agency buildings.Lease, purchase, repair, etc.*Ante*, p. 1620.exclusive of hospital buildings, including the purchase of necessary lands and the installation, repair, and improvement of heating, lighting, power, and sewerage and water systems in connection therewith, $159,200, of which amount $10,000 shall be immediately available. For expenses of organizing Indian chartered corporations, or other Tribal organizations, expenses.Vol. 48, p. 986.[U. S. C., p. 1032](/us/usc/p1032).tribal organizations, in accordance with the provisions of the Act of June 18, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 986), including personal services, purchase of equipment and supplies, not to exceed $10,000 for printing and binding, and other necessary expenses, $160,000, of which not to exceed $41,060 may be used for personal services in the District of Columbia. 1764 Vehicles, maintenance, etc.Vehicles, Indian Service: Not to exceed $290,000 of applicable appropriations made herein for the Bureau of Indian Affairs shall be available for the maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled and horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles for the use Transporting Indian pupils.of employees in the Indian field service, and the transportation of Indian school pupils, and not to exceed $160,000 of applicable appropriations may be used for the purchase and exchange of Use restricted.motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and such vehicles shall be used only for official service, including the transportation of Indian school pupils. Emergency replacement of property.Replacement of property destroyed by fire, flood, or storm: That to meet possible emergencies not exceeding $35,000 of the appropriations made by this Act for support of reservation and non reservation schools, for school and agency buildings, and for conservation of health among Indians shall be available, upon approval of the Secretary of the Interior, for replacing any buildings, equipment, supplies, livestock, or other property of those activities of the Indian Service above referred to which may be destroyed or rendered unserviceable *Proviso*.Report of diversions to Congress.by fire, flood, or storm: *Provided*, That any diversions of appropriations made hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. Attendance at meetings.Authorization for attending health and educational meetings: Not to exceed $7,000 shall be available from applicable funds for expenses (not membership fees) of employees of the Indian Service when authorized by the Secretary of the Interior to attend meetings of medical, health, educational, agricultural, forestry, engineering, and industrial associations in the interest of work among the Indians. Indian lands.indian lands Purchase of land and water rights, and so forth, Pueblo Indians, Pueblo Indians, N. Mex.Land and water rights, etc.Reappropriation from tribal funds.*Ante*, p. 182.New Mexico (tribal funds): The unexpended balances of appropriations heretofore made, from the trust funds of the several pueblos, for the purchase of land and water rights, purchase of equipment for industrial advancement and fencing, irrigating, and improving lands, are hereby continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1937. Pueblo Indians, N. Mex., compensation to.Compensation to Pueblo Indians, New Mexico: For the first of three installments for additional compensation to the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, for loss of land and water rights, and in settlement of the liability of the United States to said Pueblos as declared by Vol. 43, p. 636; Vol. 48, p. 109.the Act of June 7, 1924 (43 Stat., p. 636), and as authorized by the Act of May 31, 1933 (48 Stat., p. 109), $253,960.61, which amount shall be deposited in the Treasury of the United States to the credit of the following-named pueblos: Pueblos designated.Jemez, $628.33; Nambe, $15,813.17; Taos, $28,235.70; Santa Ana, $969.46; Santo Domingo, $1,418.85; Sandia, $4,326.87; San Felipe, $4,984.84; Isleta, $15,917.10: Picuris, $22,191.47; San Ildefonso, $12,352.76; San Juan, $51,287.68; Santa Clara, $60,371.39; Cochiti, $12,608.79; Pojoaque, $22,854.20: *Provided*, That expenditures may *Proviso*.Acquisition of lands, water rights, etc.be made from the foregoing sums, as authorized by the Act of May 31, 1933, for the purchase of lands and water rights, purchase or construction of reservoirs, irrigation works, or other permanent improvements upon or for the benefit of the lands of said pueblos. Sioux Indians failing to receive allotments, payment to.Payment to Sioux Indians for failure to receive allotments: For payment to various Sioux Indians, or their heirs, on account of allotments of land to which they were entitled but did not receive, *Ante*, p. 340.and for compensation to attorneys for services performed, all as authorized by the Act of June 14, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 340), $81,540.49, to remain available until expended. 1765 Compensation to Chippewa Indians of Minnesota for certain lands Chippewas of Minnesota.Payment for certain treaty lands.*Ante*, p, 321.patented to the State of Minnesota under the Swamp Land Act: For payment, as authorized by the Act of June 4, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 321), to the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota in full compensation for one hundred and seventy-eight thousand five hundred and thirty and ten one-hundredths acres of land embraced within the reservations established by the treaties of March 11, 1863 (12 Stat., p. 1249), Vol. 12, p. 1249; Vol. 13, p. 693; Vol. 16, p. 719.May 7, 1864 (13 Stat., p. 693), and March 19, 1867 (16 Stat., p. 719), for the future homes of said Indians, and later patented to the State of Minnesota under the provisions of the amendatory Swamp Land Act of March 12, 1860 (12 Stat., p. 3), without compensation Vol. 12, p. 3.Credit to tribal trust fund.to said Indians, $223,162.62, which shall be credited immediately to the trust fund of said Chippewa Indians of Minnesota arising under the provisions of section 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., Vol. 25, p. 645.p. 645), and shall bear interest in accordance with said Act of 1889. Compensation to non-Indian claimants, Pueblo Indian lands. NewPueblos in New Mexico.Non-Indian claimants.*Ante*, p. 800.Vol. 43, p. 636.Awards.Vol. 48, p. 108.Mexico: For carrying out the provisions of the Act of August 26, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 800), in supplemental 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 entitled to awards under said Act, as supplemented by the Act of May 31, 1933 (48 Stat., p. 108) , $45,377.33, to remain available Apportionment.until June 30, 1938, to be apportioned to claimants within the several pueblos as follows: Isleta, $1,876.72; San Ildefonso, $9,371.52; San Juan, $23,122.83; Santa Clara, $2,810.69; Pojoaque, $2,474.13; Nambe, $1,985; Sandia, $368.90; Picuris, $278.64; Cochiti, $1,088.90; Jemez, $2,000: *Provided*, That the unexpended balance of *Proviso*.Balance available.Vol. 48, p. 277.Vol. 48, p. 109; *Ante*, p. 183.the appropriation contained in the Fourth Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1933, and subsequently continued available until June 30, 1936, for carrying out the provisions of the Act of May 31, 1933, is hereby continued available, until June 30, 1937. Purchase of land for the Navajo Indians, Arizona, reimbursable: Navajo Indians, Ariz.Purchase of lands.Reappropriation.Vol. 48, p. 1033.The unexpended balance of the appropriation contained in the Deficiency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1934, for the purchase of land, and improvements thereon, including water rights, for the Navajo Indians in Arizona, as authorized by and in conformity with Vol. 48, p. 961.the provisions of the Act of June 14, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 961), is hereby continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1937. Leasing of lands for Navajo Indians (tribal funds): For lease, Leasing lands and water rights.pending purchase, of land and water rights for the use and benefit of Indians of the Navajo Tribe in Arizona and New Mexico, $20,000, payable from funds on deposit to the credit of the Navajo Tribe. For the acquisition of lands, interest in lands, water rights and Acquisition of lands, etc.surface rights to lands, and for expenses incident to such acquisition, in accordance with the provisions of the Act of June 18, 1934 (48 Vol. 48, p. 984.Stat., p. 985), including personal services, purchase of equipment and Balance reappropriated.*Ante*, p. 183.supplies, and other necessary expenses, $1,000,000, together with the unexpended balance of the appropriation for this purpose for the fiscal year 1936, of which not to exceed $30,540 shall be available for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That within *Provisos*.Use outside reservations restricted.the States of Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming no part of said sum shall be used for the acquisition of lands outside of the boundaries of existing Indian reservations: *Provided further*, That Contracts.in addition to the amount herein appropriated the Secretary of the Interior may also incur obligations, and enter into contracts for the acquisition of additional land, not exceeding a total of $1,000,000, and his action in so doing shall be deemed a contractual obligation of the Federal Government for the payment of the cost thereof, and 1766appropriations hereafter made for the acquisition of land pursuant to the authorization contained in the Act of June 18, 1934, shall be available for the purpose of discharging the obligation or obligations so created. Industrial assistance and advancement.industrial assistance and advancement Timber preservation, etc.For the preservation of timber on Indian reservations and allotments other than the Menominee Indian Reservation in Wisconsin, the education of Indians in the proper care of forests, and the general administration of forestry and grazing work, including fire prevention and payment of reasonable rewards for information leading to arrest and conviction of a person or persons setting forest fires, or taking or otherwise destroying timber, in contravention of law on Indian lands, $260,000: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be *Proviso*.Forest lands, administration from proceeds of sales, etc.available for the expenses of administration of Indian forest lands from which timber is sold to the extent only that proceeds from the sales of timber from such lands are insufficient for that purpose. Timber sales, etc., expenses; reimbursable.For expenses incidental to the sale of timber, and for the expenses of administration, including fire prevention, of Indian forest lands from which such timber is sold to the extent that the proceeds of Vol. 41, p. 415.[U. S. C., p. 1029](/us/usc/p1029).such sales are sufficient for that purpose, $120,000, reimbursable to the United States as provided in the Act of February 14, 1920 *Proviso*.Rewards for information.(U. S. C., title 25, sec. 413): *Provided*, That this appropriation shall be available for the payment, of reasonable rewards for information leading to arrest and conviction of a person or persons setting forest fires, or taking or otherwise destroying timber, in contravention of law. Suppression, etc., of forest fires.For the suppression or emergency prevention of forest fires on or threatening Indian reservations, $15,000, together with $25,000 from funds held by the United States in trust for the respective tribes of *Provisos*.Additional sums available.Indians interested: *Provided*, That not to exceed $50,000 of appropriations herein made for timber operations and for support and administration purposes may be transferred, upon the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, for fire-suppression or emergency prevention purposes, and allotments of funds so transferred shall be made by the Secretary of the Interior only after the obligation for Report of diversions to Congress.the expenditure has been incurred: *Provided further*, [a-z]hat any diversions of appropriations made hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. Geological Survey.Transfer of sum to, for supervising mining operations, etc.*Ante*, p. 1620.For transfer to the Geological Survey for expenditures to be made in inspecting mines and examining mineral deposits on Indian lands and in supervising mining operations on restricted, tribal, and allotted Indian lands leased under the provisions of the Acts of February Vol. 26, p. 794; Vol. 35, pp. 312, 444, 783.[U. S. C., p. 1025](/us/usc/p1025).28, 1891 (U. S. C., title 25, secs. 336, 371, 397), May 27, 1908 (35 Stat., p. 312), March 3, 1909 (U. S. C., title 25, sec. 396), and other Acts authorizing the leasing of such lands for mining purposes, $65,000. Employment for Indians.For the purpose of obtaining remunerative employment for Indians, $40,750. Agriculture and stock raising.For the purpose of developing agriculture and stock raising among the Indians, including necessary personnel, traveling and other expenses, and purchase of supplies and equipment, $600,220, Agricultural experiments and demonstrations.of which not to exceed $15,000 may be used to conduct agricultural experiments and demonstrations oh Indian school or agency farms and to maintain a supply of suitable plants or seed for issue to Navajo sheep-breeding station.Indians, and not to exceed $30,000 may be used for the operation and maintenance of a sheep-breeding station on the Navajo Reservation. Encouraging industry, etc., among Indians.For the purpose of encouraging industry and self-support among the Indians and to aid them in the culture of fruits, grains, and other crops, $165,000, which sum may be used for the purchase of 1767seeds, animals, machinery, tools, implements, and other equipment necessary, and for advances to Indians having irrigable allotments to assist them in the development and cultivation thereof, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, to enable Indians to become self-supporting: *Provided*, That the expenditures for the *Provisos*.Conditions for repayment.purposes above set forth shall be under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for repayment to the United States on or before June 30, 1942, except in the case of loans on irrigable Loans on irrigable lands.lands for permanent improvement of said lands, in which the period for repayment may run for not exceeding twenty years, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior: *Provided further*, That not Limitation.to exceed $25,000 of the amount herein appropriated shall be expended on any one reservation or for the benefit of any one tribe of Indians: *Provided further*, That the Secretary of the Interior Advances to old, etc., allottees.is hereby authorized, in his discretion and under such rules and regulations as he may prescribe, to make advances from this appropriation to old, disabled, or indigent Indian allottees, for their support, to remain a charge and lien against their lands until paid: *Provided further*, That not to exceed $15,000 may be advanced to Advances to young students; repayment.worthy Indian youths to enable them to take educational courses, including courses in nursing, home economics, forestry, and other industrial subjects in colleges, universities, or other institutions, and advances so made shall be reimbursed in not to exceed eight years, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. Industrial assistance (tribal funds): For the construction of homes Industrial assistance.Constructing homes, purchase of seed, equipment, etc.for individual members of the tribes; the purchase for sale to them of seed, animals, machinery, tools, implements, building material, and other equipment and supplies; and for advances to old, disabled, Advances to old, etc., Indians.or indigent Indians for their support, and Indians having irrigable allotments to assist them in the development and cultivation thereof, to be immediately available, $356,000, payable from tribal Allotments.funds as follows: Fort Yuma, California, $10,000; Fort Hall, Idaho, $25,000; Blackfeet, Montana, $5,000; Flathead, Montana, $15,000; Rocky Boy, Montana, $8,000; Tongue River, Montana, $10,000; Omaha, Nebraska, $8,000; Summit Lake, Nevada, $4,000; Western Shoshone, Nevada, $15,000; Mescalero, New Mexico, $10,000; Standing Rock, North Dakota, $20,000; Klamath, Oregon, $25,000; Cheyenne River, South Dakota, $50,000; Pine Ridge, South Dakota, $10,000; Rosebud, South Dakota, $10,000; Colville, Washington, $25,000; Puyallup, Washington, $10,000; Quinaielt, Washington, $25,000; Neah Bay, Washington, $20,000; Spokane, Washington, $6,000; Yakima, Washington, $25,000; Bad River, Wisconsin, $5,000; Lac du Flambeau, Wisconsin, $15,000; and the unexpended balances Funds available.*Ante*, p. 185.Vol. 47, p. 335.of funds available under this head in the Interior Department. Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1936, and the Act of June 27, 1932 (47 Stat., p. 335), are hereby continued available during the fiscal year 1937: *Provided*, That, the expenditures for the purposes *Provisos*.Conditions for repayment.above set forth shall be under conditions to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior for repayment to the United States on or before June 30, 1942, except in the case of loans on irrigable Loans on irrigable lands.lands for permanent improvement of said lands in which the period for repayment may run for not exceeding twenty years, m the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, and advances to old, disabled, or indigent Indians for their support, which shall remain a charge and lien against their land until paid: *Provided further*,Advances to young students.That advances may be made to worthy Indian youths to enable them to take educational courses, including courses in nursing, home economics, forestry, and other industrial subjects in colleges, 1768 Reimbursement.universities, or other institutions and advances so made shall be reimbursed in not to exceed eight years under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe: *Provided further*, Credits and availability.That all moneys reimbursed during the fiscal year 1937 shall be credited to the respective appropriations and be available for the purposes of this paragraph. Revolving fund for loans to Indian corporations.*Ante*, p. 185.For an additional amount to be added to the appropriation of $2,500,000 contained in the Interior Department Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1936, for the establishment of a revolving fund for the Vol. 48, p. 986.purpose of making loans to Indian chartered corporations, in accordance with the Act of June 18, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 986), $980,000, of which amount not to exceed $65,000 shall be available for personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, for purchase of equipment and supplies, and for other necessary expenses of administering such loans. Indian arts and crafts.*Ante*, p. 891.For the development of Indian arts and crafts, as authorized by the Act of August 27, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 891), including personal services, purchase of equipment and supplies, not to exceed $2,500 for printing and binding, and other necessary expenses, to be immediately available, $42,500, of which not to exceed $18,000 shall be *Proviso*.Salary restriction.available for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be used to pay any salary at a rate exceeding $7,500 per annum. Water supply.development of water supply Developing and conserving, in Arizona and New Mexico.Developing water supply: For developing and conserving water for domestic and stock purposes on lands of the Navajo and Hopi Indians in Arizona and New Mexico, the Papago Indians in Arizona, and the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, including the purchase and installation of pumping machinery, and other necessary equipment, and for operation and maintenance thereof, $70,000. Irrigation and drainage.irrigation and drainage Construction, maintenance, etc.For the construction, repair, and maintenance of irrigation systems, and for purchase or rental of irrigation tools and appliances, water rights, ditches, and lands necessary for irrigation purposes for Indian reservations and allotments; for operation of irrigation systems or appurtenances thereto when no other funds are applicable or available for the purpose; for drainage and protection of irrigable lands from damage by floods or loss of water rights, upon the Indian irrigation projects named below, in not to exceed the following amounts, respectively: Allotments.Miscellaneous projects, $17,000; Arizona: Ak Chin, $4,000; Chiu Chui, $4,000; Ganado, $1,500, together with $1,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934; Navajo and Hopi, miscellaneous projects, Arizona and New Mexico $6,500; Salt River, $5,000; San Xavier, $2,000; California: Coachella Valley, $1,000; Morongo, $4,000; Paia and Rincon, $2,000, together with $2,000, from which expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of said Repeal Act; Colorado: Southern Ute, $10,000, together with $5,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the said Repeal Act; Nevada: Pyramid Lake, $3,000; Walker River, $5,000; Western Shoshone, $4,000; New Mexico: Miscellaneous Pueblos, $4,000; Zuni, $4,000; Washington: Colville, $3,500, together with 1769$500, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate Limitation on expenditure.Vol. 48, p. 1227.receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of said Repeal Act; Lummi Diking Project, $1,000, together with $2,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of said Repeal Act; For necessary miscellaneous expenses incident to the general administration Administrative expenses.of Indian irrigation projects, including pay of employees and their traveling and incidental expenses, $60,000; In all, for irrigation on Indian reservations, not to exceed $152,000, Total; reimbursable.reimbursable: *Provided*, That the foregoing amounts shall be *Provisos*.Amounts interchangeable.available interchangeably, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, for the necessary expenditures for damages by floods and other unforseen 11 So in original. exigencies, but the amount so interchanged shall Limitation.not exceed in the aggregate 10 per centum of all the amounts so appropriated: *Provided further*, That the cost of irrigation projects Apportioning costs on per-acre basis.and of operating and maintaining such projects where reimbursement thereof is required by law shall be apportioned on a per-acre basis against the lands under the respective projects and shall be collected by the Secretary of the Interior as required by such law, and any unpaid charges outstanding against such lands Unpaid charges a first lien.shall constitute a first lien thereon which shall be recited in any patent or instrument issued for such lands. For operation and maintenance of the San Carlos project for San Carlos project, Ariz.Maintenance, etc.the irrigation of lands in the Gila River Indian Reservation, Arizona, $98,750, reimbursable, together with $99,250 (operation and maintenance collections) and $106,000 (power revenues), of which latter sum not to exceed $25,000 shall be available for major repairs in case of unforeseen emergencies caused by fire, flood, or storm, from which amounts of $99,250 and $106,000, respectively, Limitation.expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Vol. 48, p. 1227.Repeal Act, 1934; in all, $304,000. For improvement, operation, and maintenance of the pumpingColorado River Reservation, Ariz.Irrigating tribal lands.Vol. 36, p. 273. plants and irrigation system on the Colorado River Indian Reservation, Arizona, as provided in the Act of April 4, 1910 (36 Stat., p. 273), $17,000, reimbursable, together with $17,000 from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered Vol. 48, p. 1227.into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Operation and maintenance, pumping plants, San Carlos Reservation, San Carlos Reservation, Ariz.Irrigating tribal lands.Arizona (tribal funds): For the operation and maintenance of pumping plants for the irrigation of lands on the San Carlos Reservation, in Arizona, $5,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Indians of such reservation: *Provided*, That the sum so used shall be reimbursed to the tribe *Proviso*.Reimbursement.by the Indians benefited, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. For reclamation and maintenance charges on Indian lands within Yuma Reservation.Calif.-Ariz.Reclamation, etc., charges.the Yuma Reservation, California, and on ten acres within each of the eleven Yuma homestead entries in Arizona under the Yuma reclamation project, $14,000, reimbursable, together with $4,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. For improvements, maintenance, and operation of the Fort Hall Fort Hall system, Idaho.Maintenance, etc.irrigation system, Idaho, $20,000, together with $25,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered 1770into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Fort Belknap Reservation, Mont.Irrigating tribal lands.For maintenance and operation, repairs, and purchase of stored waters, irrigation systems, Fort Belknap Reservation, Montana, $14,800? reimbursable, together with $4,200 from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Fort Peck project, Mont.Maintenance, etc.For maintenance and operation of the several units of the Fort Peck project, Montana, including not to exceed four thousand acres under the West Side Canal of the Poplar River Division, $7,000, reimbursable, together with $3,000 from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Flathead Reservation, Mont.Irrigating tribal lands.For operation and maintenance of the irrigation systems on the Flathead Indian Reservation, Montana, $12,000, reimbursable, together with $80,000 (operation and maintenance collections) and $45,000 (power revenues), from which amounts of $80,000 and $45,000, respectively, expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934; in all, $137,000. Crow Reservation, Mont.Operating, etc., irrigation systems.For improvement, maintenance, and operation of the irrigation systems on the Crow Reservation, Montana, including maintenance assessments payable to the Two Leggins Water Users’ Association and Bozeman Trail Ditch Company, Montana, properly assessable against lands allotted to the Indians and irrigable thereunder, Reimbursable.$10,000? reimbursable, together with $30,000 from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Vol. 48, p. 1227.Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Newlands project, Nev.Paying charges against Paiute lands.For payment of annual installment of reclamation charges against Paiute Indian lands within the Newlands reclamation project, Nevada, $5,381; and for payment in advance, as provided by district law, of operation and maintenance assessments, including assessments for the operation of drains to the Truckee-Carson irrigation district, which district, under contract, is operating the Newlands reclamation project, $7.033, to be immediately available; in all, $12,414. Navajo Reservation, N. Mex.Hogback project, maintenance, etc.For operation and maintenance of the Hogback irrigation project on that part of the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico under the jurisdiction of the Northern Navajo Agency, $15,000, reimbursable, together with $5,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Fruitlands project.Maintenance, etc.For maintenance and operation of the Fruitlands irrigation project, Navajo Reservation, New Mexico, $14,000, reimbursable, together with $4,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, N. Mex.Maintenance, etc.For operation and maintenance assessments on newly reclaimed Indian lands within the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, New Mexico, $11,250, or so much thereof as may be necessary, reimbursable. Klamath Reservation, Oreg.Maintenance, etc., of projects.Irrigation systems, Klamath Reservation, Oregon: For improvements, maintenance, and operation of miscellaneous irrigation 1771projects on the Klamath Reservation, $2,000, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the Klamath Indians in the State of Oregon, said sum, or such part thereof as may be used, to be reimbursed to the tribe under such rules and regulations as Reimbursable.the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, together with $2,000 from the general fund of the Treasury, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts from operation and maintenance collections on the Sand Creek unit covered into the Sand Creek unit.Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. For continuing operation and maintenance and betterment of the Uncompahgre, Uintah, and White River Utes, Utah.Irrigating tribal lands.irrigation system to irrigate allotted lands of the Uncompahgre, Uintah, and White River Utes in Utah, authorized under the Act of June 21, 1906 (34 Stat., p. 375), $20,000, reimbursable, together with $38,000, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the Vol. 34, p. 375.aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. For operation and maintenance of the Wapato irrigation andYakima Reservation, Wash.Wapato system, maintenance, etc. drainage system, and auxiliary units thereof, Yakima Indian Reservation, Washington, $1,000, reimbursable, together with $140,000 (collections from the water users on the Wapato-Satus, Toppenish-Simcoe, and Ahtanum units), from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. For reimbursement to the reclamation fund the proportionate Water payments.expense of operation and maintenance of the reservoirs for furnishing stored water to lands in the Yakima Indian Reservation, Washington, in accordance with the provisions of section 22 of the Act Vol. 38, p. 604.of August 1, 1914 (38 Stat., p. 604), $11,000. For operation and maintenance of irrigation systems within the Wind River Reservation, Wyo.Irrigating tribal lands.ceded and diminished portions of the Wind River Reservation, Wyoming, including the Indians’ pro-rata share of the cost of operation and maintenance of the Riverton-Le Clair irrigation district, Riverton-Le Clair district.the Big Bend drainage district on the ceded reservation, and for payment of the Indians’ pro-rata share of the cost of operation and maintenance of the Big Bend drainage district for the years 1925 Big Bend district, 1925 to 1933.to 1933, inclusive, in accordance with the terms of a contract between the United States and said district dated September 22, 1931, $32,000, reimbursable, together with $15,000 from which amount expenditures Reimbursable.shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Vol, 48, p. 1227.Repeal Act, 1934. For the construction, repair, and rehabilitation of irrigation systems Irrigation and drainage.Construction, maintenance, etc.on Indian reservations; for the purchase or rental of equipment, tools, and appliances; for the acquisition of rights-of-way, and payment of damages in connection with such irrigation systems; for the development of domestic and stock water and water for subsistence gardens; for the purchase of water rights, ditches, and lands needed for such projects; and for drainage and protection of irrigable lands from damage by floods or loss of water rights, as follows:Allotments. Arizona: Havasupai, $5,000, reimbursable; Hopi, $50,000, reimbursable; Navajo, $60,000, reimbursable; Ak Chin, $3,000, reimbursable; Arizona.Navajo and Hopi (domestic and stock water), $45,000; Chiu Chui, $5,000, reimbursable; Papago (domestic and stock water), $26,400; Montana: Fort Belknap, $12,000, reimbursable; Fort Peck, Montana.$100,000, reimbursable;1772 Nevada.Nevada: Fort McDermitt, $2,000, reimbursable; Moapa, $5,000, reimbursable; Summit Lake, $5,000, reimbursable; Walker River, $5.000, reimbursable; miscellaneous (garden tracts), $5,000; New Mexico.New Mexico: Navajo, $30,000, reimbursable; Pueblo, $100,000, reimbursable; Jicarilla, $13,000, reimbursable; Navajo and Pueblo (domestic and stock water), $50,000; North Dakota.North Dakota: Miscellaneous (domestic and stock water and garden tracts), $15,000; Oklahoma.Oklahoma: Miscellaneous (garden tracts), $16,000; Oregon.Oregon: Warm Springs, $10,000, reimbursable; miscellaneous (garden tracts), $5,000; South Dakota.South Dakota: Miscellaneous (domestic and stock water), $10,000; Utah.Utah: Uncompahgre, $10,000, reimbursable; Oljeto and Montezuma Creeks, $3,500, reimbursable; miscellaneous (garden tracts), $5,000; Washington.Washington: Lummi, $20,000, reimbursable; Makah (dikes and flood gates), $5,000, reimbursable; miscellaneous (domestic and stock water and garden tracts), $20,000; Wisconsin.Wisconsin: Miscellaneous (garden tracts), $5,000; Wyoming.Wyoming: Wind River, $85,000, reimbursable; Administrative expenses.For administrative expenses, including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, $50,000, of which amount $35,000 shall be reimbursable; *Provisos*.Amounts interchangeable.In all, $780,900, to be immediately available: *Provided*, That the foregoing amounts may be used interchangeably in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, but not more than 10 per centum of any specific amount shall be transferred to any other amount, and no appropriation shall be increased by more than 15 per centum: Subjugating lands, etc.Basis of apportionment.*Provided further*, That when necessary the foregoing amounts may be used for subjugating lands for which irrigation facilities are being developed: *Provided further*, That the cost of the foregoing irrigation projects and of operating and maintaining such projects where reimbursement thereof is required by law, but not including the cost of domestic and stock water projects and of projects for the development of water for garden tracts, shall be apportioned on a per-acre basis against the lands under the respective projects and shall be collected by the Secretary of the Interior as required Unpaid charges a first Hen.by such law, and any unpaid charges outstanding against such lands shall constitute a first lien thereon which shall be recited in any patent or instrument issued for such lands. Education.education Support of schools.For the support of Indian schools not otherwise provided for, and other educational and industrial purposes in connection therewith, including educational facilities authorized by treaty provisions, care of children of school age attending private schools, and tuition for *Provisos*.Deaf and dumb, blind, etc.Indian pupils attending public schools, $5,379,820: *Provided*, That not to exceed $15,000 of this appropriation may be used for the support and education of deaf and dumb or blind, physically Alabamas and Coushattas, Tex.handicapped, or mentally deficient Indian children: Subsistence, boarding schools.*Provided further*, That $4,500 of this appropriation may be used for the education and civilization of the Alabama and Coushatta Indians in Texas: *Provided further*, That $45,000 of this appropriation shall be available for subsistence of pupils in reservation and nonreservation boarding Vocational, etc., courses.schools during summer months: *Provided further*, That not more than $15,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be expended for the tuition (which may be paid m advance) of Indian pupils attending vocational or higher educational institutions, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, 1773but formal contracts shall not be required, for compliance with section Formal contracts not required.[R. S., sec. 3744, p. 738](/us/rs/s3744/p738).[U. S. C., p. 1805](/us/usc/p1805).3744 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 16), for payment of tuition of Indian pupils attending public schools, higher educational institutions, or schools for the deaf and dumb, blind, physically handicapped, or mentally deficient. Support of Indian schools from tribal funds: For the support Support of schools from tribal funds.of Indian schools, and other educational and industrial purposes in connection therewith, other than among the Five Civilized Tribes, there shall be expended from Indian tribal funds and from school revenues arising under the Act of May 17, 1926 (U. S. C., title 25, Vol. 44, p. 560.[U. S. C., p. 1005](/us/usc/p1005).sec. 155), not more than $330,820, including not to exceed $63,750 for payment of tuition for Chippewa Indian children enrolled Chippewas of Minnesota.in public schools and care of children of school age attending private schools in the State of Minnesota, payable from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota arising under section 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889 Vol. 25, p. 645.(25 Stat., p. 645). Education, Osage Nation, Oklahoma (tribal funds): For the Saint Louis Mission Boarding School, Okla.Osage pupils.education of unallotted Osage Indian children in the Saint Louis Mission Boarding School, Oklahoma, $2,000, payable from funds held in trust by the United States for the Osage Tribe. For reimbursable loans to Indians for the payment of tuition Vocational and trade schools; educational loans.and other expenses in recognized vocational and trade schools, including colleges and universities offering recognized vocational, trade, and professional courses, in accordance with the provisions Vol. 48, p. 986.Balance reappropriated.*Ante* , p. 190.of the Act of June 18, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 986), the unexpended balance of the appropriation for the fiscal year 1936 is continued available until June 30, 1937: *Provided*, That not more than $50,000 of such *Proviso*.Liberal arts courses.unexpended balance shall be available for loans to Indian students pursuing liberal-arts courses in high schools and colleges. For lease, purchase, repair, and improvement of buildings at School buildings.Lease, improvement, etc.Indian schools not otherwise provided for , including the purchase of necessary lands and the installation, repair, and improvement of heating, lighting, power, and sewerage and water systems in connection therewith, $345,000. Construction, enlargement, or improvement of public-school Public school buildings, construction, etc.buildings: The unexpended balance of the appropriation of $931,000 contained in the Second Deficiency Appropriation Act, fiscal year *Ante*, p. 584.1935, for cooperation with public-school districts in the construction, enlargement, or improvement of local public elementary or high schools, including purchase of necessary equipment, as authorized by and in conformity with numerous Acts of the Seventy-fourth *Ante*, pp. 327–331, 333, 336.Congress approved June 7, 1935, and June 11, 1935, is hereby continued available for the same purposes and under the same conditions until June 30, 1937. The appropriation of $125,000 contained in the Second DeficiencyShannon County, S. Dak.Appropriation continued available.*Ante*, p. 584. Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, for cooperating with the public-school board, of Shannon County, South Dakota, for the construction of a consolidated public high-school building at Pine Ridge, South Dakota, is hereby made available until June 30, 1937, which amount shall be for expenditure by the Indian Service for the construction and equipment of a high-school building at Pine Ridge, South. Dakota, the same to be used in conjunction with other educational facilities maintained by the Indian Service, and recoupment Recoupment waived.*Ante*, p. 584.of this expenditure, as required by the provisions of the Act of August 12, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 584), is hereby waived: *Provided*,*Proviso*.White and Indian pupils.*Ante*, p. 331.That the school shall be conducted for both white and Indian children in accordance with the provisions of the Act of June 7, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 331). 1774 Nonreservation boarding schools.Support, etc., of designated.For support and education of Indian pupils at the following nonreservation boarding schools in not to exceed the following amounts, respectively: Phoenix, Ariz.Phoenix, Arizona: For four hundred and seventy-five pupils, including not to exceed $1,500 for printing and issuing school paper, $168,625; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $25,000; in all, $193,625; Sherman Institute, Riverside, Calif.Sherman Institute, Riverside, California: For six hundred and fifty pupils, including not to exceed $1,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $221,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $22,000; in all, $243,000; Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kans.Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kansas: For six hundred and twenty-five pupils, including not to exceed $2,500 for printing and issuing school paper, $212,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, including necessary drainage work, $24,000; in all, $236,500; Pipestone, Minn.Pipestone, Minnesota: For two hundred and seventy-five pupils, $89,625; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; in all, $104,625; Carson City, Nev.Carson City, Nevada: For five hundred and twenty-five pupils, $168,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $17,000; in all, $185,500; Albuquerque, N. Mex. Albuquerque, New Mexico: For six hundred pupils, $204,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $24,000; in all, $228,000; Santa Fe, N. Mex.Santa Fe, New Mexico: For four hundred pupils, $142,000; for drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $23,000; in all, $165,000; Bismarck, N. Dak.Bismarck, North Dakota: For one hundred and ten pupils, $39,850; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $12,500; in all, $52,350; Wahpeton, N. Dak.Wahpeton, North Dakota: For three hundred pupils, $97,250; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $13,000; in all, $110,250; Chilocco, Okla.Chilocco, Oklahoma: For six hundred and fifty pupils, including not to exceed $2,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $221,000; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $23,000; in all, $244,000; Sequoyah OrphanTraining School, Okla.Sequoyah Orphan Training School, near Tahlequah, Oklahoma: For three hundred and fifty orphan Indian children of the State of Oklahoma belonging to the restricted class, to be conducted as an industrial school under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, $114,250; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $13,000; in all, $127,250; Carter Seminary, Okla.Carter Seminary, Oklahoma: For one hundred and sixty-five pupils, $57,525; for pay of principal, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $6,500; in all, $64,025; Euchee, Okla.Euchee, Oklahoma: For one hundred and fifteen pupils, $39,525; for pay of principal, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $6,000; in all, $45,525; Eufaula, Okla.Eufaula, Oklahoma: For one hundred and forty pupils, $48,650; for pay of principal, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $6,500; in all, $55,150; Jones Academy, Okla. Jones Academy, Oklahoma: For one hundred and seventy-five pupils, $61,125; for pay of principal, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $6,500; in all, $67,625; Wheelock Academy, Okla.Wheelock Academy, Oklahoma: For one hundred and thirty pupils, $45,050; for pay of principal, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $6,500; in all, $51,550; 1775 Chemawa, Salem, Oregon: For three hundred pupils, including Chemawa, Salem, Oreg.not to exceed $1,000 for printing and issuing school paper, $106,500; for local vocational-training program directed from the school, $20,500; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $17,000; in all, $144,000: *Provided*, That *Proviso*.Unexpended balance available.*Ante*, p. 191. the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $60,000 for the fiscal year 1936 for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, including improvements to the heating system and shop facilities, is hereby continued available for the same purposes until June 30, 1937; Flandreau, South Dakota: For four hundred and fifty pupils, Flandreau, S. Dak.$159,750; for pay of superintendent, drayage, and general repairs and improvements, $16,000; in all, $175,750; Pierre, South Dakota: For three hundred pupils, $97,750; for Pierre, S. Dak.pay of superintendent, dray age, and general repairs and improvements, $15,000; in all, $112,750: *Provided*, That not more than *Proviso*.Acquisition of adjacent lands.$1,000 of the foregoing amount may be used for the acquisition of lands adjacent to this school; In all, for above-named nonreservation boarding schools, not to Total; nonreservation boarding schools.*Proviso*.Sums interchangeable.exceed $2,606,475: *Provided*, That 10 per centum of the foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeably for expenditures for similar purposes in the various boarding schools named, but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said boarding schools or for any particular item within any boarding school. Any such interchanges shall be Report to Congress.reported to Congress in the annual Budget. For aid to the common schools in the Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Five Civilized Tribes, Okla. Common schools.Chickasaw, and Seminole Nations and the Quapaw Agency in Oklahoma, $397,200, to be expended in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior and under rules and regulations to be prescribed by him: *Provided*, That this appropriation shall not be subject to the *Provisos*.Parentage limitation not applicable.Vol. 40, p. 564; [U. S. C., p. 1015](/us/usc/p1015).Printing, etc., school paper.limitation in section 1 of the Act of May 25, 1918 (U. S. C., title 25, sec. 297), limiting the expenditure of money to educate children of less than one-fourth Indian blood: *Provided further*, That of this appropriation not to exceed $2,500 may be expended in the printing and issuance of a paper devoted to Indian education, which paper shall be printed at an Indian school; not to exceed $10,000 may be expended under rules and regulations of the Secretary of the Interior, in part payment of truancy officers in any county or two Truancy officers.or more contiguous counties where there are five hundred or more Indian children eligible to attend school, and not to exceed $10,000 Employing public school teachers where facilities inadequate.may be expended in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior for the payment of salaries of public-school teachers, employed by the State or county, in special Indian day schools in full-blood Indian communities, where there are not adequate white day schools available for their attendance. Natives in Alaska: To enable the Secretary of the Interior, Alaska natives.in his discretion and under his direction, to provide for support and education of the Eskimos, Aleuts, Indians, and other natives of Alaska, including necessary traveling expenses of pupils to and from industrial boarding schools in Alaska; purchase, repair, and rental of school buildings, including purchase of necessary lands; textbooks and industrial apparatus; pay and necessary traveling expenses of superintendents, teachers, physicians, and other employees; repair, equipment, maintenance, and operation of vessels; and all otherMiscellaneous expenses. necessary miscellaneous expenses which are not included under the above special heads, including $338,380 for salaries, $19,500 for traveling expenses, $191,000 for equipment, supplies, fuel, and light, 1776 Relief of destitution.$25,000 for relief of destitution, $25,000 for repairs of buildings, $65,000 for freight and operation and repair of vessels, $1,000 for rentals, and $2,000 for telephone and telegraph: in all, $666,880, to be immediately available and to remain available until June 30, *Provisos*.Sums interchangeable.1938: *Provided*, That not to exceed 10 per centum of the amounts appropriated for the various items in this paragraph shall be available interchangeably for expenditures on the objects included in this paragraph, but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to any one item of appropriation except in cases of extraordinary emergency and then only upon the written order of the Secretary of the Report to Congress.Interior: *Provided further*, That a report shall be made to Congress covering expenditures from the amount herein provided for relief of destitution. Conservation of health.conservation of health Designated expenses.For conservation of health among Indians, including equipment, materials, and supplies; repairs and improvements to buildings and plants; compensation and traveling expenses of officers and employees and renting of quarters for them when necessary; transportation of patients and attendants to and from hospitals and sanatoria; returning to their former homes and interring the remains of deceased patients; and not exceeding $1,000 for printing and binding circulars Suppressing trachoma, etc.Allotments to specified hospitals.and pamphlets for use in preventing and suppressing trachoma and other contagious and infectious diseases, $4,062,360, including not to exceed $2,935,360 for the following-named hospitals and sanatoria: Arizona.Arizona: Indian Oasis Hospital, $24,260; Kayenta Sanatorium, $50,000; Fort Defiance Sanatorium and Southern Navajo General Hospital, $111,000; Phoenix Sanatorium, $85,700; Pima Hospital, $27,600; Truxton Canyon Hospital, $14,000; Western Navajo Hospital, $38,300; Chin Lee Hospital, $15,000; Fort Apache Hospital, $29,700; Hopi Hospital, $40,000; Leupp Hospital, $27,800; San Carlos Hospital, $32,300; Tohatchi Hospital, $17,200; Colorado River Hospital. $23,000; San Xavier Sanatorium, $42,500; Phoenix Hospital, $37,200; Winslow Sanatorium, $45,000; California.California: Hoopa Valley Hospital, $25,000; Soboba Hospital, $22,000; Fort Bidwell Hospital, $24,600; Fort Yuma Hospital, $20,000; Colorado.Colorado: Ute Mountain Hospital, $15,000; Edward T. Taylor Hospital, $26,700; Idaho.Idaho: Fort Lapwai Sanatorium, $90,000; Fort Hall Hospitals, $17,000; Iowa. Iowa: Sac and Fox Sanatorium, $75,000; Minnesota. . Minnesota: Pipestone Hospital, $22,500; Mississippi. Mississippi: Choctaw Hospital, $25,000; Montana. Montana: Blackfeet Hospital, $30,000; Fort Peck Hospital, $26,400; Crow Agency Hospital, $28,000; Fort Belknap Hospital, $30,000; Tongue River Hospital, $30,000; Nebraska. Nebraska: Winnebago Hospital, $48,000; Nevada. Nevada: Carson Hospital, $23,000; Walker River Hospital, $22,000; Western Shoshone Hospital, $15,000 New Mexico. New Mexico: Albuquerque Sanatorium, $100,000; Jicarilla Hospital and Sanatorium, $61,000; Mescalero Hospital, $24,000; Eastern Navajo Hospital. $32,000; Northern Navajo Hospital, $39,700; Taos Hospital, $20,000; Zuni Sanatorium, $50,000; Albuquerque Hospital, $52,100; Charles H. Burke Hospital, $12,000; Santa Fe Hospital, $43,000; Toadlena Hospital, $12,000: North Carolina. North Carolina: Cherokee Hospital, $16,000; North Dakota. North Dakota: Turtle Mountain Hospital, $42,600; Fort Berthold Hospital, $16,000; Fort Totten Hospital, $24,000; Standing Rock 1777Hospital, $30,000; Fort Totten Preventorium, $30,000, including $10,000 for improvements to the heating plant; Oklahoma: Cheyenne and Arapahoe Hospital, $36,000; Choctaw Oklahoma.and Chickasaw Sanatorium, $55,000; Shawnee Sanatorium, $100,000; Claremore Hospital, $76,300; Clinton Hospital, $18,000; Pawnee and Ponca Hospital, $34,000; Kiowa Hospital, $122,700; Oregon: Warm Springs Hospital, $12,000;Oregon. South Dakota: Crow Creek Hospital, $22,000; Pine Ridge Hospitals, South Dakota.$50,000; Rosebud Hospital, $30,600; Yankton Hospital, $15,000; Cheyenne River Hospital, $30,000; Sisseton Hospital, $35,000; Utah.Utah: Uintah Hospital, $30,000; Washington.Washington: Yakima Sanatorium, $40,000; Tacoma Sanatorium, $206,000; Tulalip Hospital, $11,000; Colville Hospital, $35,000; Wisconsin.Wisconsin: Hayward Hospital, $40,600; Tomah Hospital, $31,000; Wyoming.Wyoming: Shoshone, $25,000; *Provided*, That 10 per centum of the foregoing amounts shall be *Provisos*.Sums interchangeable.available interchangeably for expenditures in tire various hospitals named, but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said hospitals or for any particular item within any hospital, and any interchange of appropriations hereunder shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget:Report to Congress. *Provided further*, That nonreservation boarding schools receiving Hospitalization of pupils.specific appropriations shall contribute on a per-diem basis for the hospitalization of pupils in hospitals located at such schools and supported from this appropriation. Sioux Sanatorium and employees’ quarters, South Dakota: That Sioux Sanatorium, etc., S. Dak.*Ante*, p. 584.in addition to the $337,500 made available by the Second Deficiency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, for the. construction of an Indian sanatorium and employees’ quarters, in South Dakota, a Sums reappropriated.Vol. 46, p. 1136.further sum of $29,875, representing the remainder of the original appropriation of $375,000 contained in the Interior Department Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1932, and not reappropriated by the Second Deficiency Appropriation Act, fiscal year 1935, is hereby reappropriated and made available until June 30, 1937, for the construction of such sanatorium and employees’ quarters. For clinical surveys and general medical research in connection Clinical surveys, etc., of disease conditions.with tuberculosis, trachoma, and venereal and other disease conditions among Indians, $20,000: *Provided*, That in conducting such *Proviso*.State, etc., cooperation.survey the cooperation of such State and other organizations engaged in similar work shall be enlisted wherever practicable and where services of physicians, nurses, or other persons are donated their travel and other expenses may be paid from this appropriation. Support of hospitals, Chippewas in Minnesota (tribal funds): Chippewas in Minnesota.Hospitals for, from tribal funds.For support of hospitals maintained for the benefit of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota, $80,000, payable from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of said Indians arising under section 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645). Vol. 25, p. 645. Medical relief in Alaska: To enable the Secretary of the Interior, Medical relief in Alaska.in his discretion and under his direction through the Bureau of Indian Affairs, with the advice and cooperation of the Public Health Service, to provide for the medical and sanitary relief of the Eskimos, Aleuts, Indians, and other natives of Alaska; purchase, repair, rental, and equipment of hospital buildings; books and surgical apparatus; pay and necessary traveling expenses of physicians, nurses, and other employees, and all other necessary miscellaneous expenses which are not included under the above special heads, $340,000, to be available immediately and to remain available until Availability.June 30, 1938. 1778 General support and administration.general support and administration Sundry agencies and reservations.*Ante*, p. 1621.For general support of Indians and administration of Indian property, including pay of employees authorized by continuing or permanent treaty provisions, $2,375,000, of which amount $10,000 shall be immediately available. Metlakahtla Indians, Annette Islands Reserve, Alaska.For pay of employees, village improvements, relief of destitution, and such other purposes as may be requested by the town council of Metlakahtla, Annette Islands Reserve, Alaska, and approved by the *Proviso*.Limitation.Vol. 48, p. 1227.Secretary of the Interior, $50,000: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Specified agencies, from tribal funds.For general support of Indians and administration of Indian property under the jurisdiction of the following agencies, to be paid from the funds held by the United States in trust for the respective tribes, in not to exceed the following sums, respectively: Arizona.Arizona: Fort Apache, $50,000; San Carlos, $55,800; Truxton Canyon, $6,500; in all, $112,300; California.California: Mission, $5,000; Idaho.Idaho: Fort Hall, $4,800; Iowa.Iowa: Sac and Fox, $2,000; Minnesota.Minnesota: Red Lake, $36,500; Montana.Montana: Flathead, $16,000; Rocky Boy, $800; in all, $16,800; North Carolina.Sum reappropriated.*Ante*, p. 194.Oklahoma.North Carolina: Cherokee, $25,000, together with the unexpended balance under this head for the fiscal year 1936; Oklahoma: Quapaw (Seneca), $200; Shawnee (Iowa), $300; in all, $500; Oregon.Oregon: Klamath, $69,000, of which $4,000 shall be available only for traveling and other expenses of members of the tribal council, or representatives of the tribe engaged on business of the tribe at the Revolving fund created.seat of government, and $10,000 shall be available in a permanent revolving fund for loans to cover burial expenses of members of the tribe, and payments in liquidation of such loans shall be credited to the revolving fund and shall be available for loans for similar purposes under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; South Dakota.South Dakota: Cheyenne River, $42,500; Utah.Utah: Uintah and Ouray, $6,500; Washington.Washington: Puyallup, $1,000 for upkeep of the Puyallup Indian cemetery; Taholah (Quinaielt), $20,000; (Neah Bay), $26,000 ($4,000 for monthly allowances for care of old and indigent Indians, $3,500 for development of a cemetery site, and $1,000 for burial expenses); (Quileute), $2,000; (Hoh), $500; Yakima, $400; in all, $49,900; Wisconsin.Wisconsin: Keshena, $61,500, including $10,000 for monthly allowances, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, to old and indigent members of the Menominee Tribe who reside with relatives or friends; In all, not to exceed $432,300. Chippewas in Minnesota.General support, from tribal funds.Support of Chippewa Indians in Minnesota (tribal funds): For general support, administration of property, and promotion of self-support among the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota, $85,000, to be paid from the principal sum on deposit to the credit of Vol. 25, p. 645.said Indians, arising under section 7 of the Act entitled “An Act for the relief and civilization of the Chippewa Indians in the State of Minnesota”, approved January 14, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 645): *Proviso*.Aiding indigent, etc.*Provided*, That not to exceed $40,000 of the foregoing amount may be expended, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, in aiding indigent Chippewa Indians including boarding-home care of pupils 1779attending public or high schools upon the condition that any funds used in support of a member of the tribe shall be reimbursed out of and become a lien against any individual property of which such member may now or hereafter become seized or possessed, the two preceding requirements not to apply to any old, infirm, or indigent Indian, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior. Expenses of tribal officers, Five Civilized Tribes, Oklahoma Five Civilized Tribes, Okla.Expenses, etc., tribal officers.(tribal funds): For the current fiscal year money may be expended from the tribal funds of the Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole Tribes for equalization of allotments, per capita, and other payments authorized by law to individual members of the respective tribes, salaries and contingent expenses of the governor of the Chickasaw Nation and chief of the Choctaw Nation, one mining trustee for the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, at salaries at the rate heretofore paid for the said governor and said chief and $3,000 for the said mining trustee, chief of the Creek Nation at $600 for the current fiscal year to be expended from the tribal funds of the Creek Nation, and one attorney each for the Choctaw and Chickasaw Tribes employed under contract approved by the President under existing law: *Provided*, That the expenses of the above-named officials shall *Proviso*.Limitation.be determined and limited by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, at not to exceed $2,500 each. For acquisition, rehabilitation, and preservation of the Tuskahoma Tuskahoma Council House, Pushmataha County, Okla.Acquisition, etc. Council House, in Pushmataha County, Choctaw Nation, Oklahoma, $7,500, or so much thereof as may be necessary, Fund available.to be immediately available, payable from the fund “Fulfilling Treaties with Choctaws, Oklahoma”, now to the credit of the Choctaw Indians of Oklahoma. Support of Osage Agency and pay of tribal officers, Oklahoma Osages, Okla.Agency expenses, from tribal funds.(tribal funds): For the support of the Osage Agency, and for necessary expenses in connection with oil and gas production on the Osage Reservation, Oklahoma, including pay of necessary employees, the tribal attorney and his stenographer, one special attorney in tax and other matters, and pay of tribal officers; payment of damages to individual allottees; repairs to buildings, rent of quarters for employees, traveling expenses, printing, telegraphing, and telephoning, and purchase, repair, and operation of automobiles, $159,000, payable from funds held by the United States in trust for the Osage Tribe of Indians in Oklahoma. Expenses of tribal councils or committees thereof (tribal funds): Tribal councils, traveling, etc., expenses.For traveling and other expenses of members of tribal councils, business committees, or other tribal organizations, when engaged on business of the tribes, including visits to Washington, District of Columbia, when duly authorized or approved in advance by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, $50,000, payable from funds on deposit to the credit of the particular tribe interested: *Provided*, *Provisos*.Limitation on expenditures.That, except for the Navajo Tribe, not more than $5,000 shall be expended from the funds of any one tribe or band of Indians for the purposes herein specified: *Provided further*, That no part of this Per diem, etc., limitation. appropriation shall be available for per diem in lieu of all other expenses of members of tribal councils, business committees, or other tribal organizations, when in Washington, in excess of $6, nor for more than a thirty-day period, unless the Secretary of the Interior shall in writing approve a greater amount or a longer period. roads and bridgesRoads and bridges. For maintenance and repair of that portion of the Gallup-Shiprock Gallup-ShiprockHighway, N. Mex., maintenance, etc.Highway within the Navajo Reservation, New Mexico, including the 1780*Proviso*.Indian labor. purchase of machinery, $20,000, reimbursable: *Provided*, That other than for supervision and engineering only Indian labor shall be employed for such maintenance and repair work. Reservation road construction, etc.Vol. 45, p. 750; Vol. 48, p. 995.[U. S. C., p, 1016](/us/usc/p1016).For construction, improvement, repair, and maintenance of Indian reservation roads under the provisions of the Acts of May 26, 1928 (U. S. C., title 25, sec. 318a), and June 18, 1934 (48 Stat., p. 995), $3,500,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until *Proviso*.Services in the District. expended: *Provided*, That not to exceed $8,000 of the foregoing amount may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Annuities and per-capita payments.annuities and per-capita payments Senecas, N. Y.Vol. 4, p. 442. For fulfilling treaties with Senecas of New York: For permanent annuity in lieu of interest on stock (Act of February 19, 1831, 4 Stat., p. 442), $6,000. Six Nations, N. Y.Vol. 7, p. 46.For fulfilling treaties with Six Nations of New York: For permanent annuity, in clothing and other useful articles (article 6, treaty of November 11, 1794), $4,500. Choctaws, Okla.Vol. 7, pp. 99, 212, 213, 236; Vol. 11, p. 614. For fulfilling treaties with Choctaws, Oklahoma: For permanent annuity (article 2, treaty of November 16, 1805, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $3,000; for permanent annuity for support for light horsemen (article 13, treaty of October 18, 1820, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $600; for permanent annuity for support of blacksmith (article 6, treaty of October 18, 1820, and article 9, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $600; for permanent annuity for education (article 2, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $6,000; for permanent annuity for iron and steel (article 9, treaty of January 20, 1825, and article 13, treaty of June 22, 1855), $320; in all, $10,520. Pawnees, Okla.Vol. 11, p. 729; Vol. 27, p. 644.For fulfilling treaties with Pawnees, Oklahoma: For permanent annuity (article 2, treaty of September 24, 1857, and article 3, agreement of November 23, 1892), $30,000. Indians of Sioux reservations.Vol. 25, p. 895. For payment of Sioux benefits to Indians of the Sioux reservations, as authorized by the Act of March 2, 1889 (25 Stat., p. 895), as amended, $190,000. Saint Croix Chippewas. Wis.Vol. 41, p. 433.The unexpended balances of appropriations made for the benefit of the Saint Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin by the Act of February 14, 1920 (41 Stat., p. 433), and subsequent Acts, is hereby made available for the purchase of material for the repair of homes, for the care of aged and indigent Indians of this band, and for other necessary purposes for their benefit. Menominee Indians in Wisconsin.Per capita payments.The Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to withdraw from the Treasury of the United States $105,000 of any funds on deposit to the credit of the Menominee Indians in Wisconsin (except the Menominee Log Fund), and to expend said sum, or so much thereof as may be necessary, for an immediate per capita payment of $50 to each enrolled member of the Menominee Tribe. Interest on trust funds.For payment of interest on moneys held in trust for the several Indian tribes, as authorized by various Acts of Congress, $475,000. Field service employees.Funds for, available for supplies, etc.When, in the judgment of the Secretary of the Interior, it is necessary for accomplishment of the purposes of appropriations herein made for the Indian field service, such appropriations shall be available for purchase of ice, for rubber boots for use of employees, for travel expenses of employees on official business, and for the cost of packing, crating, drayage, and transportation of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station. Funds avail able for traveling, etc., expenses.The appropriations for education of natives of Alaska and medical relief in Alaska shall be available for the payment of traveling 1781expenses of new appointees from Seattle, Washington, to their posts of duty in Alaska, and of traveling expenses, packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station within Alaska, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. bureau of reclamationReclamation Bureau. The following sums are appropriated out of the special fund Payments, from reclamation fund.Vol. 32, p. 388.[U. S. C., p. 1862](/us/usc/p1862).*Ante*, p. 1759.in the Treasury of the United States created by the Act of June 17, 1902 (U. S. C., title 43, secs. 391, 411), and therein designated “the reclamation fund”, to be available immediately: Salaries and expenses: For the Commissioner of Reclamation Commissioner, office personnel, and other expenses.Printing and binding.and other personal services in the District of Columbia, $115,000; for travel and other necessary expenses, $35,000, including not to exceed $15,000 for printing and binding; in all, $150,000; Administrative provisions and limitations: For all expenditures Administrative provisions and limitations.Vol. 32, p. 388.[U. S. C. p. 1862](/us/usc/p1862).authorized by the Act of June 17, 1902, and Acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto, known as the reclamation law, and all other Acts under which expenditures from said fund are authorized, including not to exceed $100,000 for personal services and $15,000 Expenses designated.for other expenses in the office of the chief engineer, $20,000 for telegraph, telephone, and other communication service, $5,000 for photographing and making photographic prints, $41,250 for personal services, and $7,500 for other expenses in the field legal offices; examination of estimates for appropriations in the field; refunds of overcollections and deposits for other purposes; not to exceed $15,000 for lithographing, engraving, printing, and binding; purchase of ice; purchase of rubber boots for official use by employees; maintenance Vehicles.and operation of horse-drawn and motor-propelled passenger vehicles; not to exceed $20,000 for purchase and exchange of horse-drawn and motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles; packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; payment of Property damages.damages caused to the owners of lands or other private property of any kind by reason of the operations of the United States, its officers or employees, in the survey, construction, operation, or maintenance of irrigation works, and which may be compromised by agreement between the claimant and the Secretary of the Interior, or such officers as he may designate; payment for official telephone service in tile field hereafter incurred in case of official telephones installed in private houses when authorized under regulations established by the Secretary of the Interior; not to exceed $1,000 for expenses, except membership fees, of attendance, when authorized by the Secretary, Attendance at meetings, etc.upon meetings of technical and professional societies required in connection with official work of the Bureau; payment of rewards, when specifically authorized by the Secretary of the Interior, for information leading to the apprehension and conviction of persons found guilty of the theft, damage, or destruction of public property: *Provided*, *Provisos*.Headquarters.That no part of said appropriations may be used for maintenance of headquarters for the Bureau of Reclamation outside the District of Columbia except for an office for the chief engineer and staff and for certain field officers of the division of public relations: *Provided further*, That the Secretary of the Interior in his administration Medical services for employees.of the Bureau of Reclamation is authorized to contract for medical attention and service for employees and to make necessary pay-roll deductions agreed to by the employees therefor: *Provided further*, Restriction on use where district is in arrears.That no part of any sum provided for in this Act for operation and maintenance of any project or division of a project by the 1782Bureau of Reclamation shall be used for the irrigation of any lands within the boundaries of an irrigation district which has contracted with the Bureau of Reclamation and which is in arrears for more than twelve months in the payment of any charges due the United States, and no part of any sum provided for in this Act for such purpose shall be used for the irrigation of any lands which have contracted with the Bureau of Reclamation and which are in arrears for more than twelve months in the payment of any charges due from said lands to the United States; Examination and inspection of projects.Examination and inspection of projects and operation and maintenance of reserved works: For examination of accounts and inspection of the works of various projects and divisions of projects operated and maintained by irrigation districts or water users’ associations, and bookkeeping, accounting, clerical, legal, and other expenses incurred in accordance with contract provisions for the repayment of Maintenance, etc., of reserved works.such expenses by the districts or associations; and for operation and maintenance of the reserved works of a project or division of a project when irrigation districts, water users’ associations, or Warren Act contractors nave contracted to pay in advance but have failed to pay their proportionate share of the cost of such operation and maintenance, to be expended under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, $10,000; Yuma project. Ariz.-Calif.Yuma project, Arizona-California: For operation and maintenance, Reservation division, $45,000; Mesa division (Yuma auxiliary *Proviso*.Operating commercial system.project), $28,000; in all, $73,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $25,000 from the power revenues shall lie available during the fiscal year 1937 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; Orland, Calif.Orland project, California: For operation and maintenance, $36,000; Boise, Idaho.Boise project, Idaho: For operation and maintenance, $30,000; Minidoka, Idaho.Minidoka project, Idaho: For operation and maintenance, *Proviso*.Operating commercial system.South side, construction.reserved works, $11,600: *Provided*, That not to exceed $50,000 from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1937 for the operation of the commercial system; and not to exceed $100,000 from power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1937 for continuation of construction, south side division; North Platte, Nebr. Wyo.North Platte project, Nebraska-Wyoming: Not to exceed $60,000 from the power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year Operating commercial system.1937, for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; and not to exceed $6,000 from power revenues allocated to the Payment to Farmers’ district for water.Vol. 43, p. 703; [U. S. C., p. 1873](/us/usc/p1873).Northport irrigation district under subsection I, section 4, of the Act of December 5, 1924 (U. S. C., title 43, sec. 501), shall be available during the fiscal year >1937 for payment on behalf of the Northport irrigation district, to the Farmers’ irrigation district for carriage of water; Rio Grande, N. Mex.-Tex.Rio Grande project, New Mexico-Texas: For operation and maintenance, $340,000; Owyhee, Oreg.Owyhee project, Oregon: For operation and maintenance, $75,000; Klamath, Oreg.-Calif.Klamath project, Oregon-California: For operation and maintenance, *Proviso*.Revenues from Tule Lake division.$50,000: *Provided*, That revenues received from the lease of marginal lands, Tule Lake division, shall be available for refunds to the lessees in such cases where it becomes necessary to make refunds because of flooding or other reasons within the terms of such leases; Yakima, Wash.Yakima project, Washington: For operation and maintenance, *Proviso*.Power system.$265,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $25,000 from power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1937 for operation and maintenance of the power system; 1783 Riverton project, Wyoming: For operation and maintenance, Riverton, Wyo.$40,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $25,000 from the power *Proviso*.Operating commercial system.revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1937 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; Shoshone project, Wyoming: For operation and maintenance, Shoshone, Wyo.*Proviso*.Operating commercial system.Willwood division, $13,000: *Provided*, That not to exceed $25,000 from power revenues shall be available during the fiscal year 1937 for the operation and maintenance of the commercial system; Secondary and economic investigations: For cooperative and Secondary and economic investigations.general investigations, including investigations necessary to determine the economic conditions and financial feasibility of projects and investigations and other activities relating to the reorganization, settlement of lands, and financial adjustments of existing projects, including examination of soils, classification of land, land-settlement activities, including advertising in newspapers and other publications, and obtaining general economic and settlement data, the unexpended balance of the appropriation for these purposes for the fiscal year 1936 shall remain available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1937: *Provided*, That the expenditures from this appropriation for *Provisos*.Expenses considered supplementary; accounting.any reclamation project shall be considered as supplementary to the appropriation for that project and shall be accounted for and returned to the reclamation fund as other expenditures under the Reclamation Act: *Provided further*, That the expenditure of any Division of expenses for investigations.sums from this appropriation for investigations of any nature requested by States, municipalities, or other interests shall be upon the basis of the State, municipality, or other interest advancing at least 50 per centum of the estimated cost of such investigation; Operation and maintenance administration: For necessary pay of Operation and maintenance administration.employees, traveling and other expenses incident to the general administration of reclamation projects, either operated and maintained by the Bureau or transferred to water users’ organizations for operation and maintenance, including giving information and advice Information to settlers.to settlers on reclamation projects in the selection of lands, equipment, and livestock, the preparation of land for irrigation, the selection of crops, methods of irrigation and agricultural practice, and general farm management, the cost of which shall be charged to the general reclamation fund and shall not be charged as a part of the construction or operation and maintenance cost payable by the water users under the projects, $75,000; Limitation of expenditures: Under the provisions of this Act no Limitation of expenditures.greater sum shall be expended, nor shall the United States be obligated to expend during the fiscal year 1937, on any reclamation project appropriated for herein, an amount in excess of the sum herein appropriated therefor, nor shall the whole expenditures or obligations incurred for all of such projects for the fiscal year 1937 exceed the whole amount in the reclamation fund for the fiscal year; Interchange of appropriations: Ten per centum of the foregoing Interchange of appropriations.amounts shall be available interchangeably for expenditures on the reclamation projects named; but not more than 10 per centum shall be added to the amount appropriated for any one of said projects, except that should existing works or the water supply for lands under Emergency flood repairs.cultivation be endangered by floods or other unusual conditions an amount sufficient to make necessary emergency repairs shall become available for expenditure by further transfer of appropriation from any of said projects upon approval of the Secretary of the Interior; Total, from reclamation fund, $1,168,600. To defray the cost of operating and maintaining the Colorado Yuma project, Ariz. Calif.Colorado River front work and levee system.River front work and levee system adjacent to the Yuma Federal irrigation project in Arizona and California, subject only to section 1784Vol. 44, p. 1016.4 of the Act entitled “An Act authorizing the construction, repair, and preservation of certain public works on rivers and harbors, and Balance available.*Ante*, p. 200.for other purposes”, approved January 21, 1927 (44 Stat., p. 1010), the unexpended balance of the appropriation for the fiscal year 1936 is continued available for the fiscal year 1937. Construction of designated projects.Construction: For continuation of construction of the following projects in not to exceed the following amounts, respectively, to be expended from the Reclamation Fund under the same general conditions as those specified for projects hereinbefore included under the Payable from Reclamation Fund.caption “Bureau of Reclamation” and payable from the Reclamation Fund: Gila project, Arizona, $1,250,000; Salt River project, Arizona, $1,500,000; Grand Valley project, Colorado, $200,000; Pine River project, Colorado, $1,000,000; Boise project, Idaho, Payette division, $1,000,000; Boise project, Idaho, drainage, $160,000; Carlsbad project, New Mexico, $900,000; Deschutes project, Oregon, $450,000; Owyhee project, Oregon, $200,000; Yakima project, Washington, Roza division, $1,000,000; Provo River project, Utah, $500,000; Casper-Alcova project, Wyoming, $1,000,000; Riverton project, Wyoming, $250,000; Shoshone project, Wyoming, Heart Mountain division, $700,000; Administrative expenses.For administrative expenses on account of the above projects, including personal services and other expenses in the District of Columbia and in the field, $750,000, in addition to and for the same *Ante*, p. 1781.objects of expenditure as enumerated in paragraphs 2 and 3 under the caption “Bureau of Reclamation”; in all, $10,860,000, to be immediately *Provisos*.Services in the District.Deferment of payment of moneys advanced to reclamation fund.Vol. 47, pp. 78, 1427.available: *Provided*, That of this amount not to exceed $75,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided further*, That the last line of section 10 of the Act of April 1, 1932 (47 Stat., 75), as amended by the Act of March 3, 1933 (47 Stat., 1427), is hereby further amended by substituting “1938” for “1936”. Grand Coulee Dam, Wash.Construction, etc.*Ante*, p. 1040.Grand Coulee Dam, Washington: For continuation of construction of the Grand Coulee dam, $20,000,000; for administrative expenses, $750,000, including personal services in the District of Columbia Availability.and in the field; in all, $20,750,000, to be immediately available and to be available for the same purposes as those specified for projects hereinbefore included under the caption “Bureau of Reclamation”, *Provisos*.Services in the District.Personal services without regard to civil-service laws.[U. S. C., pp., 81, 85](/us/usc/pp81/85).and to be reimbursable under the reclamation law: *Provided*, That not to exceed $75,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided further*, That this appropriation shall be available for the employment of personal services without regard to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, Limit on obligations.as amended: *Provided further*, That the obligations for the construction of the Grand Coulee dam and appurtenant works, including those heretofore entered into, shall not exceed a total of $63,000,000, and no obligations in excess of that amount shall be incurred for such dam, or dams, canals, structures, or incidental works in connection therewith under section two of the Rivers and Harbors Act, *Ante*, p. 1040.approved August 30, 1935 (49 Stat., 1039, 1040), until appropriations, or contract authorizations, or both, therefor are hereafter specifically granted by Congress. Boulder Canyon project.Construction, etc.*Ante*, p. 1040.Boulder Canyon project: For the continuation of construction of the Boulder Can von Dam and incidental works in the main stream of the Colorado River at Black Canyon, to create a storage reservoir, 1785and of a complete plant and incidental structures suitable for the fullest economic development of electrical energy from the water discharged from such reservoir; to acquire by proceedings in eminent domain or otherwise, all lands, rights-of-way, and other property Acquisition of lands, etc.necessary for such purposes; and for incidental operations, as authorized by the Boulder Canyon Project Act, approved December Vol. 45, p. 1057.[U. S. C., p. 1879](/us/usc/p1879).21, 1928 (U. S. C., title 43, ch. 12A); $9,600,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until advanced to the Colorado River Dam fund, which amount shall be available for personal services Services in the District.in the District of Columbia (not to exceed $25,000) and in the field without regard to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and for all other objects of expenditure that are specified for projects included in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1937, under the caption “Bureau of Reclamation”: *Provided*, That not to exceed $350,000 *Proviso*.Boulder dam, etc., maintenance and operation.from revenues shall be available for the operation and maintenance of the Boulder dam, power plant, and other incidental operations. Boulder Canyon project (All-American. Canal): For continuation Boulder Canyon project (All-American Canal).Construction, etc.of construction of a diversion dam, and main canal (and appurtenant structures) located entirely within the United States connecting the diversion dam with the Imperial and Coachella Valleys in California; to acquire by proceedings in eminent domain, or otherwise, Acquisition of lands, etc.all lands, rights-of-way, and other property necessary for such purposes; and for incidental operations, as authorized by the Boulder Canyon Project Act, approved December 21, 1928 (U. S. C., title 43, [U. S. C., p. 1879](/us/usc/p1879).ch. 12A); to be immediately available and to remain available until advanced to the Colorado River Dam Fund, $6,500,000, which amount shall be available for personal services in the District of ColumbiaServices in the District. (not to exceed $15,000) and in the field without regard to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and for all other objects of expenditure that are specified for projects included in the Interior Department Appropriation Act for the fiscal year 1937 under the caption “Bureau of Reclamation”. No part of any appropriation in this Act for the Bureau of Use for investigating new projects forbidden.Reclamation shall be used for investigations to determine the economic and financial feasibility of any new reclamation project. GEOLOGICAL SURVEYGeological Survey. salariesSalaries. For the Director of the Geological Survey and other personal Director, and office personnel.services in the District of Columbia, $140,000; general expenses For every expenditure requisite for and incident to the authorized General expenses.*Ante*, p. 1759.work of the Geological Survey, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, including not to exceed $30,000 for the purchase and exchange, and not to exceed $55,000 for the hire, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled and horse-drawn passenger-carrying vehicles for field use only by geologists, topographers, engineers, and land classifiers, and the Geological Survey is authorized to exchange unserviceable and worn-out passenger-carrying and freight-carrying vehicles as part payment Vehicles.for new freight-carrying vehicles, and including not to exceed $2,000 for necessary traveling expenses of the Director and members of Traveling expenses.the Geological Survey acting under his direction, for attendance Attendance at meetings, etc.upon meetings of technical, professional, and scientific societies 1786when required in connection with the authorized work of the Geological Survey, to be expended under the regulations from time to time prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, and under the following heads: Topographic surveys.Topographic surveys: For topographic surveys in various portions of the United States, $650,000, of which amount not to exceed $250,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provisos*.Cooperation with States, etc.*Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended in cooperation with States or municipalities except upon the basis of the State or municipality bearing all of the expense incident thereto in excess of such an amount as is necessary for the Geological Survey to perform its share of standard topographic surveys, such share of the Geological Survey in no case exceeding 50 per centum of the Allotment for cooperation.cost of the survey: *Provided further*, That $217,000 of this amount shall be available only for such cooperation with States or municipalities; Geologic surveys.Geologic surveys: For geologic surveys in the various portions of the United States and chemical and physical researches relative thereto, $500,000, of which not to exceed $315,000 may be expended *Proviso*.Occurrence, etc., of granite in Northeastern States.for personal services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That so much as may be necessary but not to exceed $10,000 of this appropriation shall be available for a survey of the occurrence and uses of granite in the Northeastern States; Alaska, mineral resources.Mineral resources of Alaska: For continuation of the investigation of the mineral resources of Alaska, $60,000, to be available immediately, of which amount not to exceed $34,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Gaging streams, investigations.Gaging streams: For gaging streams and determining the water supply of the United States, the investigation of underground currents and artesian wells, and the preparation of reports upon the best methods of utilizing the water resources, $791,317, of which amount not to exceed $130,000 may be expended for personal *Provisos*.Division of expenses.services in the District of Columbia: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be expended in cooperation with States or municipalities except upon the basis of the State or municipality bearing all of the expense incident thereto in excess of such an amount as is necessary for the Geological Survey to perform its share of general water resource investigations, such share of the Allotment for cooperation.Geological Survey in no case exceeding 50 per centum of the cost of the investigation: *Provided further*, That $589,317 of this amount shall be available only for such cooperation with States or municipalities; Classifying lands as to mineral character, etc.Classification of lands: For the examination and classification of lands with respect to mineral character and water resources as required by the public-land laws and for related administrative operations; for the preparation and publication of mineral-land classification and water-resources maps and reports; for engineering supervision of power permits and grants under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior; and for performance of work of the Federal Power Commission, $100,000, of which amount not to exceed $70,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Printing and binding.Printing and binding, and so forth: For printing and binding, $120,000; for preparation of illustrations, $21,500; and for engraving and printing geologic and topographic maps, $110,000; in all, $251,500; Nonmetailic Mineral Acts.Enforcing provisions.Mineral leasing: For the enforcement of the provisions of the Acts of October 20, 1914 (U. S. C., title 48, sec. 435), October 2, 17871917 (U. S. C., title 30, sec. 141), February 25, 1920 (U. S. C., title Vol. 33, p. 742; Vol. 40, p. 297; Vol. 41, pp. 437, 1363.[U. S. C., pp. 2140, 1342, 2141](/us/usc/pp2140/1342/2141).30, sec. 181), as amended, and March 4, 1921 (U. S. C., title 48, sec. 444), and other Acts relating to the mining and recovery of minerals on Indian and public lands and naval petroleum reserves; and for every other expense incident thereto, including supplies, equipment, expenses of travel and subsistence, the construction, maintenance, and repair of necessary camp buildings and appurtenances thereto, $315,000, of which amount $30,000 shall be immediately available and not to exceed $75,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; During the fiscal year 1937 the head of any department or independent Cooperative work on scientific, etc., investigations for government agencies.establishment of the Government having funds available for scientific and technical investigations and requiring cooperative work by the Geological Survey on scientific and technical investigations within the scope of the functions of that bureau and which it is unable to perform within the limits of its appropriations may, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, transfer to the Geological Survey such sums as may be necessary to carry on such investigations. The Secretary of the Treasury shall transfer on the books of the Treasury Department any sums which may be authorized hereunder, and such amounts shall be placed to the credit Credit of funds.of the Geological Survey for the performance of work for the department or establishment from which the transfer is made: *Provided*, That any sums transferred by any department or independent *Provisos*.Expenditure of transferred funds.establishment of the Government to the Geological Survey for cooperative work in connection with this appropriation may be expended in the same manner as sums appropriated herein may be expended: *Provided further*, That any funds herein appropriated Cooperative work; availability. for the Geological Survey for cooperative work may be utilized prior to July 1, 1936, as required to enable the Geological Survey to continue its cooperative work pending reimbursement from cooperative agencies, the amount so utilized to be repaid to the appropriation from which advanced; During the fiscal year 1937, upon the request of the Secretary Aerial photographs for aviators, etc.of the Interior, the Secretary of War, or the Secretary of the Navy is authorized to furnish aerial photographs required for mapping projects, insofar as the furnishing of such photographs will be economical to the Federal Government and does not conflict with military or naval operations or the other parts of the regular training program of the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps flying services, and the Secretary of the Interior is authorized to reimburse the Reimbursement.War or Navy Department for the cost of making the photographs, such cost to be confined to the actual cost of gasoline, oil, film, paper, chemicals, and the labor performed in developing the photographic negatives and the printing of copies of photographs, and the per-diem expenses of the personnel authorized by law, together with such incidental expenses as care and minor repairs to plane and transportation of personnel to and from projects, and the War Department or the Navy Department, on request of the Department of the Interior, is authorized to furnish copies to any State, county, or municipal agency cooperating with the Federal Government in the mapping project for which the photographs were taken. In Contracts with civilians.the event that the Director of the Geological Survey deems it advantageous to the Government, the Geological Survey is authorized to contract with civilian aerial photographic concerns for the furnishing of such photographs; Appropriations herein made shall be available for payment of the Transporting effects of employees.costs of packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of 1788personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; Total, United. States Geological Survey, $2,807,817. Bureau of Mines.BUREAU OF MINES salaries and general expenses Salaries and expenses.*Ante*, pp. 1622, 1759.Salaries and general expenses: For general expenses, including pay of the Director and necessary assistants, clerks, and other employees, in the office in the District of Columbia and in the field, and every other expense requisite for and incident to the general work of the Bureau in the District of Columbia and in the field, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, $65,000, of which amount not to exceed $52,000 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Mine rescue cars and stations.Investigations.Operating mine rescue cars and stations and investigation of mine accidents: For the investigation and improvement of mine rescue and first-aid methods and appliances and the teaching of mine safety, rescue, and first-aid methods; investigations as to the causes of mine explosions, causes of falls of roof and coal, methods of mining, especially in relation to the safety of miners, the appliances best adapted to prevent accidents, the possible improvement of conditions under which mining operations are carried on, the use of explosives and electricity, the prevention of accidents, statistical studies and reports relating to mine accidents, and other inquiries and technologic investigations pertinent to the mining industry; the exchange in part payment for operation, maintenance, and repair of mine rescue trucks; the construction of temporary structures and the repair, maintenance, and operation of mine rescue cars and the Government-owned mine rescue stations and appurtenances thereto; personal services, traveling expenses and subsistence, equipment, and supplies; travel and Attendance at meetings.subsistence, and other incidental expenses of employees in attendance at meetings and conferences held for the purpose of promoting Vehicles.safety and health in the mining and allied industries; purchase not exceeding $5,000, exchange as part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; purchase and exchange in part payment therefor of cooks’ uniforms, goggles, gloves, rubber boots, aprons, and such other articles or equipment as may be necessary in connection with the purposes of this paragraph; including not to exceed $67,100 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $609,365: *Proviso*.Rescue trophies.*Provided*, That of this amount not to exceed $500 may be expended for the purchase and bestowal of trophies in connection with mine-rescue and first-aid contests; Testing fuel.Testing fuel: To conduct inquiries and scientific and technologic investigations concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and use of mineral fuels, and for investigation of mineral fuels belonging to or for the use of the United States, with a view to their most efficient utilization; to recommend to various departments such changes in selection and use of fuel as may result in greater economy, and upon request of the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, to investigate the fuel-burning equipment in use by or proposed for any of the departments, establishments, or institutions of the United States in the District of Columbia, $185,400, of which amount not to exceed $29,400 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; 1789 Mineral mining investigations: For inquiries and scientific and Mineral mining investigations.technologic investigations concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of ores and mineral substances, other than fuels, with a view to improving health conditions and increasing safety, efficiency, economic development, and conserving resources through the prevention of waste in the mining, quarrying, metallurgical, and other mineral industries; to inquire into the economic conditions affecting these industries; and including all equipment, supplies, expenses of travel and subsistence, and the purchase, not to exceed $12,000, including exchange, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, including not to exceed $24,700 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $250,860: *Provided*, That no part of this *Proviso*.Private investigations, restriction.appropriation may be expended for an investigation in behalf of any private party; Oil and gas investigations: For inquiries and investigations and Oil and gas investigations.dissemination of information concerning the mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of petroleum and natural gas, including economic conditions affecting the industry, with a view to economic development and conserving resources through the prevention of waste; for the purchase of newspapers relating to the oil, gas, and allied industries: *Provided*, That section 192 of the Revised Statutes *Proviso*.Purchase of newspapers, etc.[R. S., sec. 192, p. 30](/us/rs/s192/p30).[U. S. C., p. 43](/us/usc/p43).(U. S. C., title 5, sec. 102) shall not apply to such purchase of newspapers from this appropriation; and for every other expense incident thereto, including supplies, equipment, expenses of travel and subsistence, purchase, not to exceed $6,000, exchange as part payment for, maintenance, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots, and aprons, $265,866, of which amount not to exceed $22,600 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Mining experiment stations: For the employment of personal Mining experiment stations.services, purchase of laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots and aprons, the purchase not to exceed $3,000, exchange as part payment for, maintenance and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, and all other expenses m connection with the establishment, maintenance, and operation of mining experiment stations, as provided in the Act authorizing additional mining experiment stations, approved March 3, 1915 Vol. 38, p. 959.[U. S. C., p. 1332](/us/usc/p1332).(U. S. C., title 30. sec. 8), including not to exceed $10,000, to be immediately available, for the purchase from Six Companies, Incorporated, Boulder City, Nev., main garage, purchase of.of the steel-frame corrugated-iron building in office and dormitory group known as main garage situated on Government-owned land at Boulder City, Nevada, $279,850, of which appropriation not to exceed $17,100 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. Buildings and grounds, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: For care and Pittsburgh, Pa., station, maintenance, etc.maintenance of buildings and grounds at Pittsburgh and Bruceton, Pennsylvania, including personal services, the purchase, exchange as part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of passenger automobiles for official use, and all other expenses requisite for and incident thereto, including not to exceed $5,000 for additions and improvements, $87,690; Economics of mineral industries: For inquiries and investigations, Economics of mineral industries.Investigations, etc.and the dissemination of information concerning the economic problems of the mining, quarrying, metallurgical, and other mineral industries, with a view to assuring ample supplies and efficient distribution of the mineral products of the mines and quarries, including studies and reports relating to uses, reserves, production, dis-1790 Reports, etc.tribution, stocks, consumption, prices, and marketing of mineral commodities and primary products thereof; preparation of the reports of the mineral resources of the United States, including Statistical inquiries.special statistical inquiries; and including personal services in the District of Columbia and elsewhere; purchase of furniture and equipment; stationery and supplies; typewriting, adding and computing machines, accessories and repairs; newspapers; traveling expenses; purchase, not exceeding $1,200, exchange as part payment for, operation, maintenance, and repair of motor-propelled Services in the District.passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work; and for all other necessary expenses not included in the foregoing, $339,990, of which amount not to exceed $255,700 may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia; Helium production and investigations.*Ante*, pp. 1291, 1413.Helium production and investigations: The sums made available for the fiscal year 1937 in the Acts making appropriations for the War and Navy Departments for the acquisition of helium from the Bureau of Mmes shall be transferred to the Bureau of Mines on July 1, 1936, for operation and maintenance of the plants for the production of helium for military and naval purposes, including laboratory gloves, goggles, rubber boots, and aprons; purchase, not to exceed $2,500, and exchange as part payment for, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, and all other necessary expenses, and including $11,300 for personal services in the District of Columbia; Gas production for helium plants.Gas production for helium plants: For production of natural gas for helium plants, including construction, repair, maintenance, and operation of wells, pipe lines, and other facilities therefor, and including purchase, not to exceed $750, and exchange as part payment for, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for official use in field work, $9,179: *Proviso*.Expenditure limitation.Vol. 48, p. 1227.*Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934; Scientific Investigations for departments, etc.During the fiscal year 1937 the head of any department or independent establishment of the Government having funds available for scientific investigations and requiring cooperative work by the Bureau of Mines on scientific investigations within the scope of the functions of that bureau and which it is unable to perform within the limits of its appropriations may, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, transfer to the Bureau of Mines such sums as may Transfer of sums.be necessary to carry on such investigations. The Secretary of the Treasury shall transfer on the books of the Treasury Department any sums which may be authorized hereunder, and such amounts shall be placed to the credit of the Bureau of Mines for the performance of work for the department or establishment from which *Proviso*.Expenditure.the transfer is made:*Provided*, [a-z]hat any sums transferred by any department or independent establishment of the Government to the Bureau of Mines for cooperative work in connection with this appropriation may be expended in the same maimer as sums appropriated herein may be expended; Minor purchases without advertising.The purchase of supplies and equipment or the procurement of services for the Bureau of Mines, at the seat of government, as well as in the field outside of the District of Columbia, may be made in [R. S., p. 3709, p. 733](/us/rs/s3709/p733).[U. S. C., p. 1803](/us/usc/p1803).open market without compliance with section 3709 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 41, sec. 5) of the United States, in the manner common among business men, when the aggregate amount of the purchase or the service does not exceed $100 in any instance; Attendance at meetings.For necessary traveling expenses of the director and employees of the Bureau, acting under his direction, for attendance upon 1791meetings of technical, professional, and scientific societies, when required in connection with the authorized work of the Bureau of Mines and incurred on the written authority of the Secretary of the Interior, there is hereby made available from any appropriations made to the Bureau of Mines not to exceed in all $2,500; Persons employed during the fiscal year 1937 in field work outside Detail of field employees.of the District of Columbia under the Bureau of Mines may be detailed temporarily for service in the District of Columbia for purposes of preparing results of their field work; all persons so detailed shall be paid m addition to their regular compensation only traveling expenses in going to and returning therefrom: *Provided* *Proviso*.Paying employees’ expenses.That nothing herein shall prevent the payment to employees of the Bureau of Mines of their necessary expenses, or per diem in lieu of subsistence, while on temporary detail in the District of Columbia for purposes only of consultation or investigations on behalf of the United States. All details made hereinunder, Report, to Congress.and the purposes of each, during the preceding fiscal year shall be reported in the annual estimates of appropriations to Congress at the beginning of each regular session thereof; The Secretary of the Treasury may detail medical officers Details from Public Health Service.of the Public Health Service for cooperative health, safety, or sanitation work with the Bureau of Mines, and the compensation and expenses of the officers so detailed may be paid from the applicable appropriations made herein for the Bureau of Mines; Total, Bureau of Mines, $2,093,200. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE National Park Service. Director, and office personnel.Accounting services.Salaries: For the Director of the National Park Service and other personal services in the District of Columbia, including accounting services in checking and verifying the accounts and records of the various operators, licensees, and permittees conducting *Ante*, p. 1759.utilities and other enterprises within the national parks and monuments, and including the services of specialists and experts for Specialists and experts. investigations and examinations of lands to determine their suitability for national park and national monument purposes and members of the commission appointed under the provisions of the Vol. 43, p. 958.Act of February 21, 1925 (43 Stat., p. 959): *Provided*, That such *Proviso*.Employment without reference to Classification, etc., Acts.[U. S. C., pp. 81, 85](/us/usc/pp81/85).specialists and experts may be employed for temporary service at rates to be fixed by the Secretary of the Interior to correspond to those established by the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, and without reference to the Civil Service Act of January 16, 1883, $189,880, of which amount not to exceed $26,620 may be expended Field employees.for the services of field employees engaged in examination of lands and in developing the educational work of the National Park Service. General expenses: For every expenditure requisite for and incident General expenses.to the authorized work of the office of the Director of the National Park Service not herein provided for, including traveling expenses, telegrams, photographic supplies, prints, and motion-picture films, necessary expenses of attendance at meetings concerned with the work of the National Park Service when authorized by the Secretary of the Interior, and necessary expenses of field employees engaged in examination of lands and in developing the educational work of the National Park Service, $27,000: *Provided*, *Proviso*.Field employees, expenses.That necessary expenses of field employees in attendance at such meetings, when authorized by the Secretary, shall be paid from the various park and monument appropriations. 1792 National Parks, administration, etc.Acadia, Me.Acadia National Park, Maine: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including $3,000 for George B. Dorr as superintendent without regard to the requirements of the provisions of the Civil Vol. 41, p. 614.[U. S. C., p. 92](/us/usc/p92).Service Retirement Act approved May 22, 1920 (U. S. C., title 5, secs. 691–693, 697–731), as amended, $3,000 for temporary clerical services for investigation of titles and preparation of abstracts thereof of lands donated to the United States for inclusion in the Acadia National Park, and not exceeding $2,750 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $46,000. Bryce Canyon, Utah.Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $305 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with the general park work, $12,000. Carlsbad Caverns, N. Max.Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,550 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and *Proviso*.Admission fees, tax exempt.employees in connection with general park work, $64,000: *Provided*, [a-z]hat hereafter any admission fee charged for entrance to Carlsbad Caverns and any fee charged for guide service therein shall be exempt from all taxes on admissions. Crater Lake, Oreg.Crater Lake National Park, Oregon: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,500 for the purchase, maintenance, operation and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $62,600. General Grant, Calif.General Grant National Park, California: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $315 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of a motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicle, $15,000. Glacier, Mont.Glacier National Park, Montana: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including necessary repairs to the roads from Glacier Park Station through the Blackfeet Indian Reservation to the various points in the boundary line of the Glacier National Park and the international boundary, including not exceeding $1,800 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $175,000. Grand Canyon, Ariz.Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,750 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $113,500. Grand Teton, Wyo.Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $300 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $19,900. Great Smoky Mountains, N. C.-Tenn.Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not to exceed $900 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for use in connection with general park work, $59,900. Hawaii.Hawaii National Park: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,600 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carry 1793vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $45,600. Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas: For administration, protection, Hot Springs, Ark.maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $1,450 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $71,200. Lassen Volcanic National Park, California: For administration, Lassen, Calif.protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $500 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $28,400. Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: For administration, protection, Mesa Verde, Colo.*Ante*, p. 1622.and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,400 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $47,250. Mount McKinley National Park, Alaska: For administration, protection,Mount McKinley, Alaska. and maintenance, $25,000. Mount Rainier National Park, Washington: For administration, Mount Rainier, Wash.protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,450 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $121,800. Platt National Park, Oklahoma: For administration, protection, Platt, Okla.and maintenance, including not exceeding $800 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $20,600. Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado: For administration, Rocky Mountain, Colo.protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $2,300 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $82,000. Sequoia National Park, California: For administration, protection, Sequoia, Calif.and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,600 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work and including maintenance and repair of the Generals Highway between the boundaries of Sequoia and General Grant National Parks, $99,500. Shenandoah National Park, Virginia: For administration, protection, Shenandoah, Va.and maintenance, including not exceeding $2,000 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $39,800. Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota: For administration, Wind Cave, S. Dak.protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $1,000 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $15,900. Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming: For administration, Yellowstone, Wyo. protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $6,700 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, not exceeding $15,000 for maintenance of the roads in the national forests leading out of the park from the east, southwest, and south boundaries, 1794and including feed for buffalo and other animals and salaries of buffalo keepers, $391,250. Yosemite, Calif.Yosemite National Park, California: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $2,550 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, not exceeding $1,000 for maintenance of the road in the Stanislaus National Forest connecting the Tioga Road with the Hetch Hetchy Road near Mather Station, and including necessary expenses of a comprehensive study of the problems relating to the use and enjoyment of the Yosemite National Park and the preservation of its natural features, $284,000. Zion, Utah.Zion National Park, Utah: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including not exceeding $620 for the maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent and employees in connection with general park work, $39,800. National monuments, administration, etc.National monuments: For administration, protection, maintenance, and preservation of national monuments, including not exceeding $5,000 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-car lying vehicles for the use of the custodians and employees in connection with general monument work, $167,000. National historical parks and monuments.National historical parks and monuments: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $3,600 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles, $109,400. Appomattox Court House, Va.Appomattox Court House National Historical Monument, *Ante*, p. 613.Virginia: For development and improvement in accordance with the provisions of the Act approved August 13, 1935 (49 Stat, 613), to *Proviso*.Acquisition of title.remain available until expended, $100,000: *Provided*, That no part of this appropriation shall be available for expenditure until title to the land is acquired by the United States. National military parks, battlefields, etc.National military parks, battlefields, monuments, and cemeteries: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement, including not exceeding $6,800 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles, $257,900. Kennesaw Mountain, Ga.*Ante*, p. 584.Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park: The unexpended balance of the appropriation “Kennesaw Mountain National Battle-field Park, Georgia, 1936”, is continued available for the same purposes for the fiscal year 1937. Boulder Canyon project, Ariz.-Nev. Boulder Canyon project, Arizona and Nevada: For administration, protection, and maintenance of the recreational activities of the Boulder Canyon project and any lands that may be added thereto by Presidential or other authority, including not exceeding $1,050 for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles, $10,000. Emergency reconstruction and fighting forest fires.Emergency reconstruction and fighting forest fires in national parks: For reconstruction, replacement, and repair of roads, trails, bridges, buildings, and other physical improvements and of equipment in national parks or national monuments that are damaged or destroyed by flood, fire, storm, or other unavoidable causes during the fiscal year 1937, and for fighting or emergency prevention of forest fires in national parks or other areas administered by the National Park Service, or fires that endanger such areas, $40,000, Unexpended balance; availability.*Ante*, p. 209.and in addition thereto the unexpended balance for this purpose for the fiscal year 1936 is continued available during the fiscal year 1937 together with not to exceed $100,000 to be transferred upon the 1795approval of the Secretary of the Interior from the various appropriations for national parks and national monuments herein contained, any such diversions of appropriations to be reported to Congress in the annual Budget: *Provided*, That the allotment *Proviso*.Restriction on allotments.of these funds to the various national parks or areas administered by the National Park Service as may be required for fire-fighting purposes shall be made by the Secretary of the Interior, and then only after the obligation for the expenditure has been incurred. Forest protection and fire prevention: For the control and the Forest insect, etc., control.prevention of spread of forest insects and tree diseases, including necessary personnel and equipment for such work; and for fire-prevention Fire-prevention, etc.measures, including necessary personnel and fire-prevention equipment, $90,000, to be immediately available. The total of the foregoing amounts shall be available in one fund Accounting.for the National Park Service: *Provided*, That 10 per centum of the *Proviso*.Sums interchangeable.foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeably and shall be reported to Congress in the annual Budget. Appropriations made for the national parks, national monuments, Lectures.and other reservations under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service, shall be available for the giving of educational lectures therein and for the services of field employees in cooperation with such nonprofit scientific and historical societies engaged in educational work in the various parks and monuments as the Secretary, in his discretion, may designate. Appropriations herein made for the Department of the Interior Trucks, etc.shall be available for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of vehicles generally known as quarter-ton or half-ton pick-up trucks without such trucks being considered as passenger-carrying vehicles and without the cost of purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair being included in the limitation in the various appropriation items for the purchase, maintenance, operation, and repair of motor-driven passenger-carrying vehicles. Roads and Trails, National Park Service: For the construction, Roads and trails.Construction, etc.reconstruction, and improvement of roads and trails, inclusive or necessary bridges, in the national parks, monuments, and other areas administered by the National Park Service, including the Boulder Dam Reservation, and other areas authorized to be established as national parks and monuments, and national park and monument approach roads authorized by the Act of January 31, 1931 (U. S. C., Vol. 46, p. 1053.[U. S. C., p. 592](/us/usc/p592).title 16, sec. 8a and 8b), as amended, including the roads from Glacier Park Station through the Blackfeet Indian Reservation to various points in the boundary line of the Glacier National Park and the international boundary, $6,500,000, to be immediately available and to remain available until expended: *Provided*, That not to exceed *Proviso*.Services in the District.$25,000 of the amount herein appropriated may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia during the fiscal year 1937. Historic sites and buildings survey: For all expenses requisite Historic sites and buildings survey.for and incident to the making of a survey of historic and archeologic sites, buildings, and objects for the purpose of determining which possess exceptional value as commemorating or illustrating the history of the United States, as provided in the Act of August 21, *Ante*, p. 666.1935 (49 Stat., p. 666), $24,000. Investigation and purchase of water rights: For the investigation Water rights, Investigation, etc.and establishment of water rights, including the purchase thereof or of lands or interests in lands or rights-of-way for use and protection of water rights necessary or beneficial in connection with 1796the administration and public use of the National parks and monuments, and including the purchase at not to exceed $750 and the operation and repair of one passenger-carrying vehicle, $25,000, to be immediately available. Public buildings and grounds, D. C.Maintenance, etc.Salaries and general expenses, public buildings and grounds in the District of Columbia: For administration, protection, maintenance, and improvement of public buildings, monuments, memorials, and grounds in the District of Columbia under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service, including the National Archives Building; per-diem employees at rates of pay approved by the Director, not exceeding current rates for similar services m the District of Miscellaneous expenses.Columbia; rent of buildings; demolition of buildings; expenses incident to moving various executive departments and establishments in connection with the assignment, allocation, transfer, and survey of building space; traveling expenses and car fare; leather and rubber articles and gas masks for the protection of public property and employees; not exceeding $13,000 for uniforms for employees; and the maintenance, repair, exchange, storage, and operation of two motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles; $5,975,900, of which amount not to exceed $4,283,500 shall be available for personal services in the District of Columbia. Administration, etc., outside the District.Salaries and expenses, public buildings outside the District of Columbia: For administration, protection, and maintenance, including improvement, repair, cleaning, heating, lighting, rental of buildings and equipment supplies, materials, personal services, and every expenditure requisite for and incidental to such maintenance and operation of public buildings outside of the District of Columbia under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service, $560,000: *Proviso*.Services in the District.*Provided*, That not to exceed $5,040 of the amount herein appropriated may be expended for personal services in the District of Columbia. National Capital parks.Salaries expenses.Salaries and expenses, National Capital parks: For administration, protection, maintenance and improvement of the Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, Arlington Memorial Bridge, George Washington Memorial Parkway, Federal parks in the District of Columbia, and Vol. 46, p. 482.Vol. 43, p, 174.other Federal lands authorized by the Act of May 29, 1930 (46 Stat., 482), including the pay and allowances in accordance with the provisions of the Act of May 27, 1924, as amended, of the police force for the Mount Vernon Memorial Highway and the George Vehicles.Washington Memorial Parkway, and the operation, maintenance, Miscellaneous expenses.repair, exchange, and storage of two motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, revolvers, ammunition, uniforms, and equipment necessary for this force, per-diem employees at rates of pay approved by the Director not exceeding current rates for similar services in the District of Columbia, the hire of draft animals with or without drivers at local rates approved by the Director, traveling expenses and carfare, and leather and rubber articles for the protection of public property and employees, $166,000. National Park Service.Unobligated balance covered in.Salaries and expenses, National Park Service (no year): Effective on date of the approval of this Act, the unobligated balance of the appropriation “Salaries and expenses, National Park Service (no year)” shall be covered into the surplus fund of the Treasury and Proceeds from leases of certain park lands.thereafter the proceeds from the leases of lands of the Chickamauga, Chattanooga, and Gettysburg National Parks shall be deposited into the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts. 1797 OFFICE OF EDUCATIONOffice of Education. salaries Salaries. For the Commissioner of Education and other personal services Commissioner, and office personnel.in the District of Columbia, $262,980. general expensesGeneral expenses. For necessary traveling expenses of the Commissioner and Travel, attendance at meetings, etc.employees acting under his direction, including attendance at meetings of educational associations, societies, and other organizations; for compensation, not to exceed $500, of employees in field service; for purchase, distribution, and exchange of educational documents, motion-picture films, and lantern slides; collection, exchange, and cataloging of educational apparatus and appliances, articles of school furniture and models of school buildings illustrative of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education, and repairing the same; and other expenses not herein provided for, $20,000. For making surveys, studies, investigations, and reports regarding Libraries of educational institutions.Surveys, reports, etc., of.public, school, college, university, and other libraries; fosteringCoordination of research materials, etc. coordination of public and school library service; coordinating library service on the national level with other forms of adult education; developing library participation in Federal projects; fostering Nation-wide coordination of research materials among the more scholarly libraries, inter-State library cooperation, and the development of public, school, and other library service throughout the country, and for the administrative expenses incident to performing these duties, including salaries of such assistants, experts, clerks, and other employees in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, as the Commissioner of Education may deem necessary, necessary traveling Travel, etc.Miscellaneous expenses.expenses, including attendance at meetings of educational associations, societies, and other organizations, purchase of miscellaneous supplies, equipment, stationery, typewriters, and exchange thereof, postage on foreign mail, purchase of books of reference, law books, and periodicals, printing and binding, and all other necessary expenses, $25,000. Further endowment of colleges of agriculture and the mechanic Agriculture and the mechanic arts.Further endowment of colleges.arts: For carrying out the provisions of section 22 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for research into basic laws and principles relating to agriculture and to provide for the further development of cooperative agricultural extension work and the more complete endowment and support of land-grant colleges”, approved June *Ante*, p. 439.29, 1935 (Public Act Numbered 182, Seventy-fourth Congress), $1,480,000. vocational educationVocational education. Salaries and expenses: F or carrying out the provisions of section Salaries and expenses.Vol. 39, p. 933; Vol. 40, p. 345.[U. S. C., p. 906](/us/usc/p906).7 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational education, and so forth”1, 1 So in original.approved February 23, 1917, as amended by the Act of October 6, 1917 (U. S. C., title 20, sec. 15), $192,000. Salaries and expenses, further development of vocational education:Further development, expenses.Vol. 48, p. 792.[U. S. C., p. 907](/us/usc/p907). 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 (48 Stat., p. 792), $73,000. Further development of vocational education: For carrying out Further development in States and Territories.Vol. 48, p. 792.[U. S. C., p. 906](/us/usc/p906). the provisions of section 1 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the further development of vocational education in the several 1798States and Territories”, approved May 21, 1934 (U. S. C., title 20, sec. *Proviso*.Basis of apportionment.15d), $3,000,000: *Provided*, That the apportionment to the States shall be computed on the basis of not to exceed $3,084,603 for the fiscal year 1937, as authorized by the Act approved May 21, 1934. Extending benefits to Hawaii.Vol. 39, p. 929.[U. S. C., p. 905](/us/usc/p905).Vol. 43, p. 18.[U. S. C., p. 910](/us/usc/p910).For extending to the Territory of Hawaii the benefits of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational education, and so forth”11 So in original., approved February 23, 1917 (U. S. C., title 20, secs. 11–18), in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to extend the provisions of certain laws to the Territory of Hawaii”, approved March 10, 1924 (U. S. C., title 20, sec. 29), $30,000. Extending benefits to Puerto Rico.Vol. 39, p. 929.[U. S. C., p. 905](/us/usc/p905).For extending to Puerto Rico the benefits of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational education, and so forth”l1 So in original., approved February 23, 1917 (U. S. C., title 20, secs. 11–18), in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to extend the provisions of certain laws relating to vocational education Vol. 46, p. 1489.[U. S. C., pp. 905, 1320, 910](/us/usc/pp905/1320/910).and civilian rehabilitation to Puerto Rico”, approved March 3, 1931 (U. S. C., title 20, secs. 11–18; title 29, secs. 31–35; U. S. C., title 20, sec. 30), $105,000. Cooperative vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry.Vol. 41, p. 735; Vol. 43, p. 431; Vol. 46, p. 524; Vol. 47, p. 448.[U. S. C., pp. 1320–1322](/us/usc/pp1320–1322).Cooperative vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry: For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry or otherwise and their return to civil employment”, approved June 2, 1920 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 35), as amended by the Act of June 5, 1924 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 31), and the Acts *Ante* , p. 633.of June 9, 1930, and June 30, 1932 (U. S. C., title 29, sees. 31–40), and section 531
(a)of the Act of August 14, 1935 (49 Stat., p. 620), *Proviso*.Basis of apportionment.$1,891,000: *Provided*, That the apportionment to the States shall be computed on the basis of not to exceed $1,938,000, as authorized by the Acts approved June 2, 1920, June 5, 1924, June 9, 1930, June 30, 1932, and August 14, 1935. Salaries and expenses, vocational rehabilitation.[U. S. C., pp. 1320, 1322](/us/usc/pp1320/1322).*Ante*, p. 633.Salaries and expenses, vocational rehabilitation: For carrying out the provisions of section 6 of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry, and so forth”11 So in original., approved June 2, 1920 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 35), and the Acts of June 5, 1924 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 31), June 9, 1930, and June 30, 1932 (U. S. C., title 29, secs. 31, 40), and August 14, 1935 (49.Stat., 620), $74,420. Cooperative vocational rehabilitation of disabled residents of the District of Columbia.Cooperative vocational rehabilitation of disabled residents of the District of Columbia: For personal services, printing and binding, travel and subsistence, and payment of expenses of training, placement, and other phases of rehabilitating disabled residents of the Vol. 45, p. 1260.District of Columbia under the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the vocational rehabilitation of disabled residents of the District of Columbia”11 So in original., approved February 23, 1929 (45 Stat., p. 1260), $15,000. Provisions extended to Hawaii.Promotion of Vol. 43, p. 18.[U. S. C., p. 1320](/us/usc/p1320).vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry in Hawaii: For extending to the Territory of Hawaii the benefits of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry”11 So in original., approved June 2, 1920, as amended (U. S. C., title 29, secs. 31–44), in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to extend the provisions of certain laws to the Territory of Hawaii”, approved March 10, 1924 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 45), $5,000. Extending benefits to Puerto Rico.Promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry in Puerto Rico: For extending to the island of Puerto Vol. 39, p. 930; Vol. 46, p. 1489.[U. S. C., p. 1320](/us/usc/p1320).Rico the benefits of the Act entitled “An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry”11So in original., approved June 2, 1920, as amended (U. S. C., title 29, 1799secs. 31–44), in accordance with the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to extend the provisions of certain laws relating to vocational education and civilian rehabilitation to Puerto Rico”, approved March 3, 1931 (U. S. C., title 29, sec. 45a), $15,000. Not to exceed an aggregate of $3,000 of appropriations available Attendance at meetings.to the Office of Education for salaries and expenses for vocational education shall be used for expenses of attendance at meetings of educational associations and other organizations which in the discretion of the Commissioner of Education are necessary for the efficient discharge of its responsibilities. GOVERNMENT IN THE TERRITORIES Government in the Territories. territory of alaskaAlaska. Salaries of the Governor and of the secretary, $15,600. Governor, and secretary.Incidental and contingent expenses. For incidental and contingent expenses of the offices of the Governor and the secretary of the Territory, clerk hire, not to exceed $8,600; janitor service for the Governor’s office and the executive mansion, not to exceed $3,180; traveling expenses of the Governor while absent from the capital on official business and of the secretary of the Territory while traveling on official business under direction of the Governor; repair and preservation of Governor’s house and furniture; for care of grounds and purchase of necessary equipment; stationery, lights, water, and fuel; in all, $15,890, to be expended under the direction of the Governor. Legislative expenses: For salaries of members, $21,500; mileage Legislative expenses.of members, $9,600; salaries of employees, $5,200; printing, indexing, comparing proofs, and binding laws, printing, indexing, and binding journals, stationery, supplies, printing of bills, reports, and so forth, $9,600; in all, $46,000, to be expended under the direction of the Governor of Alaska. Reindeer service: For supervision of reindeer in Alaska and Reindeer service.instruction in the care and management thereof, including salaries and travel expenses of employees in Alaska, travel expenses of employees of the Indian Service while performing duties in Alaska for the reindeer service, travel expenses of new appointees from Seattle, Washington, to their posts of duty in Alaska, expenses of packing, crating, and transportation (including drayage) of personal effects of employees upon permanent change of station within Alaska, purchase, rental, erection, and repair of range cabins, purchase and maintenance of communication and other equipment, and all other necessary miscellaneous expenses, including $1,000 for the purchase and distribution of reindeer, $33,500, to be immediately available, and to be expended under the direction of the Governor of Alaska. For the establishment and maintenance of public schools, Territory Public schools.of Alaska, $50,000: *Provided*, That expenditures under such $50,000 *Proviso*.Limitation.shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Vol. 48, p. 1227. Act, 1934. Insane of Alaska: For care and custody of persons legally adjudged Care of insane.insane in Alaska, including compensation of medical supervisor, transportation, burial, and other expenses, $190,600: *Provided*, That *Provisos*.Payments to Sanitarium Company, etc.authority is granted to the Secretary of the Interior to pay from this appropriation to the Sanitarium Company, of Portland, Oregon, or to other contracting institution or institutions, not to exceed $600 per capita per annum to and including January 15, 1937, and, thereafter, the per-capita rate of the lowest responsible bidder, for the care and maintenance of Alaskan insane patients during the fiscal 1800Returning nonresidents. year 1937: *Provided further*, That so much of this sum as may be required shall be available for all necessary expenses in ascertaining the residence of inmates and in returning those who are not legal residents of Alaska to their legal residence or to their friends, and the Secretary of the Interior shall, so soon as practicable, return to their places of residence or to their friends all inmates not residents of Alaska at the time they became insane, and the commitment papers for any person hereafter adjudged insane shall include a statement by the committing authority as to the legal residence of such person. Roads, bridges, trails, etc.Vol. 47, p. 446.[U. S. C., p. 2128](/us/usc/p2128).For the repair and maintenance of roads, tramways, ferries, bridges, and trails, Territory of Alaska, to be expended under the provisions of Public Resolution Numbered 218, approved June 30, 1932 (U. S. C., title 48, secs. 321a–321c), $525,000, including not to Juneau, wharf pair, etc.exceed $3,000 for repair and maintenance of Government wharf at Juneau, Alaska, to be immediately available. Road, etc., construction.For the construction, repair, and maintenance of roads, tramways, bridges, and trails, Territory of Alaska, $130,000, to be available *Proviso*.Limitation.until expended: *Provided*, That expenditures hereunder shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. Alaska Railroad.Maintenance, etc.The Alaska Railroad: For every expenditure requisite for and incident to the authorized work of the Alaska Railroad including maintenance, operation, and improvements of railroads in Alaska; maintenance and operation of river steamers and other boats on the Operation, etc., of vessels.Yukon River and its tributaries in Alaska; operation and maintenance of ocean-going or coastwise vessels by ownership, charter, or arrangement with other branches of the Government service, for the purpose of providing additional facilities for the transportation of freight, passengers, or mail, when deemed necessary, for the benefit and development of industries and travel affecting territory tributary to the Alaska Railroad; stores for resale; payment of claims for losses and damages arising from operations, including claims of employees of the railroad for loss and damage resulting from wreck or accident on the railroad, not due to negligence of the claimant, limited to clothing and other necessary personal effects used in connection with his duties and not exceeding $100 in value; payment of amounts due connecting lines under traffic agreements; payment of Injury Compensation Act, payments.Vol. 39, p. 750.[U. S. C., p. 102](/us/usc/p102).compensation and expenses as authorized by section 42 of the Injury Compensation Act approved September 7, 1916 (U. S. C., title 5, sec. 793), to be reimbursed as therein provided, $200,000, in addition to all amounts received by the Alaska Railroad during the fiscal year *Provisos*.Services in the District.Salary restriction.1937, to continue available until expended: *Provided*, That not to exceed $6,000 of this fund shall be available for personal services in the District of Columbia during the fiscal year 1937, and no one other than the general manager of said railroad shall be paid an annual salary out of this fund of more than $6,000: Printing and binding.*Provided further*, That not to exceed $10,000 of such fund shall be available for Capital expenditure chargeable to capital account.printing and binding: *Provided further*, That $100,000 of such fund shall be available only for such capital expenditures as are chargeable to capital account under accounting regulations prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which amount shall be available immediately. Hawaii.territory of hawaii Governor and secretary.Contingent expenses.Salaries of the Governor and of the secretary, $15,800. For contingent expenses, to be expended by the Governor for stationery, postage, and incidentals, $1,000; private secretary to the 1801Governor, $3,100; temporary clerk hire, $500; for traveling expenses of the Governor while absent from the capital on official business, $1,250; in all, $5,850. Legislative expenses, Territory of Hawaii: For compensationLegislative expenses. and mileage of members of the Legislature of the Territory of Hawaii as provided by the Act of June 27, 1930, $47,000. temporary government for the virgin islandsVirgin Islands. For salaries of the Governor and employees incident to the execution Governor, and other personal services.Vol. 39, p. 1132.[U. S. C., p. 2202](/us/usc/p2202).of the Act of March 3, 1917 (U. S. C., title 48, sec. 1391), traveling expenses of officers and employees while absent from place of duty on official business, necessary janitor service, care of Federal grounds, repair and preservation of Federal buildings and furniture, purchase of equipment, stationery, lights, water, and other Miscellaneous expenses.necessary miscellaneous expenses, including not to exceed $5,000 for purchase, including exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, and not to exceed $4,000 for personal services, household equipment, and furnishings, fuel, ice, and electricity necessary in the operation of Government House at Saint Thomas and Government House at Saint Croix; $125,000. For salaries and expenses of the agricultural experiment station Agricultural experiment station and vocational school.and the vocational school in the Virgin Islands, including technical personnel, clerks, and other persons; scientific investigations of plants and plant industries and diseases of animals; demonstrations m practical farming; official traveling expenses; fixtures, apparatus, and supplies; clearing and fencing of land; and other necessary expenses, including not to exceed $2,000 for purchase, including exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles, $35,000. For defraying the deficits in the treasuries of the municipal governments Deficits of municipal governments.because of the excess of current expenses over current revenues for the fiscal year 1937, municipality of Saint Thomas and Saint John, $70,000, and municipality of Saint Croix, $60,000; in all, $130,000. puerto rican hurricane reliefPuerto Rican Hurricane Relief. To enable the Division of Territories and Island Possessions to Administrative expenses.continue collection and administration of moneys due the United Vol. 45, p. 1067; Vol. 46, p. 57.States on account of loans made under the joint resolutions approved December 21, 1928 (45 Stat. 1067), and January 22, 1930 (46 Stat. 57), not to exceed $25,000 of any unobligated balances of appropriations made by authority of those joint resolutions, including repayment of principal and payments of interest on such loans, is hereby made available for administrative expenses during the fiscal year 1937. SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITALSaint Elizabeths Hospital. For support, clothing, and treatment in Saint Elizabeths Hospital Maintenance, etc.*Ante*, p. 1759. for the Insane of insane persons from the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard, insane inmates of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, persons charged with or convicted of crimes against the United States who are insane, all persons who have become insane since their entry into the military and naval service of the United States, insane civilians in the quartermaster service of the Army, insane persons transferred from the Canal Zone who have been admitted to the hospital and who are 1802 Insane citizens in Canada.indigent, American citizens legally adjudged insane in the Dominion of Canada whose legal residence in one of the States, Territories, or the District of Columbia it has been impossible to establish, insane beneficiaries of the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, insane beneficiaries of the United States Veterans’ Vehicles.Administration, and insane Indian beneficiaries of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, including not exceeding $27,000 for the purchase, exchange, maintenance, repair, and operation of motor-propelled passenger-carrying vehicles for the use of the superintendent, Repairs and improvements.purchasing agent, and general hospital business, and including not to exceed $185,000 for repairs and improvements to buildings and grounds, $1,185,840, including maintenance and operation of necessary facilities for feeding employees and others (at not less than cost), and the proceeds therefrom shall reimburse the appropriation for the institution; and not exceeding $1,500 of this sum may be expended in the removal of patients to their friends; not exceeding $1,500 in the purchase of such books, periodicals, and newspapers Return of escaped patients.as may be required for the purposes of the hospital and for the medical library, and not exceeding $1,500 for the actual and necessary expenses incurred in the apprehension and return to the *Provisos*.Returning inmates no longer Federal charges.hospital of escaped patients: *Provided*, That so much of this sum as may be required shall be available for all necessary expenses in ascertaining the residence of inmates who are not or who cease to be properly chargeable to Federal maintenance in the institution and in returning them to such places of residence: *Provided further*, Butter substitutes restriction.That no part of this appropriation shall be expended for the purchase of oleomargarine or butter substitutes except for cooking purposes:Patients in the District. *Provided further*, That during the fiscal year 1937 the District of Columbia, or any branch of the Government requiring Saint Elizabeths Hospital to care for patients for which they are responsible, shall pay by check to the superintendent, upon his written request, either in advance or at the end of each month, all or part of the estimated or actual cost of such maintenance, as the case may be, and bills rendered by the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital in accordance herewith shall not be subject to audit or certification in advance of payment; proper adjustments on the basis of the actual cost of the care of patients paid for in advance shall be made monthly or quarterly, as may be agreed upon between the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital and the District of Columbia government, department, or establishments Credit for sums paid for patients.concerned. All sums paid to the Superintendent of Saint Elizabeths Hospital for the care of patients that he is authorized by law to receive shall be deposited to the credit on the books of the Treasury Department of the appropriation made for the care and maintenance of the patients at Saint Elizabeths Hospital for the year in which the support, clothing, and treatment is provided, and be subject to requisition upon the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. Continuous-treatment building.Construction and equipment.For construction and equipment of a continuous-treatment building, including preparation of plans and specifications, advertising, and supervision of construction, $250,000. Columbia Institution for the Deaf.COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF Maintenance, etc.For support of the institution, including salaries and incidental expenses, books and illustrative apparatus, and general repairs and improvements, $132,000. 1803 HOWARD UNIVERSITYHoward University. Salaries: For payment in full or in part of the salaries of the Salaries, etc.*Ante*, p. 1623.officers, professors, teachers, and other regular employees of the university, the balance to be paid from privately contributed funds, $450,000; General expenses: For equipment, supplies, apparatus, furniture, General expenses.cases and shelving, stationery, ice, repairs to buildings and grounds, and for other necessary expenses, including reimbursement to the appropriation for Freedmen’s Hospital of actual cost of heat and light furnished, $225,000; Total, Howard University, $675,000. FREEDMEN’S HOSPITAL Freedmen’s Hospital. For officers and employees and compensation for all other professional Salaries, etc.*Ante*, p. 1759.and other services that may be required and expressly approved by the Secretary of the Interior, $212,840; for subsistence, fuel and light, clothing, to include white duck suits and white canvas Contingent expenses. shoes for the use of internes, and rubber surgical gloves, bedding, forage, medicine, medical and surgical supplies, surgical instruments, electric lights, repairs, replacement of X-ray apparatus, furniture, purchase of ambulance at not to exceed $2,500, and maintenance and operation of passenger-carrying vehicles, including not exceeding $300 for the purchase of books, periodicals, and newspapers; and not to exceed $1,200 for the special instruction of pupil nurses, and other absolutely necessary expenses, $100,260, of which sum not to exceed 12 per centum may be transferred, with the approval of the Division of expenses.Director of the Bureau of the Budget, to the sum herein appropriated for personal services; in all, for Freedmen’s Hospital, $313,100, including reimbursement to the appropriation for Howard University of actual cost of heat and light furnished, of which amount of $313,100 one-half shall be chargeable to the District of Columbia and paid in like manner as other appropriations of the District of Columbia are paid. Sec. 2. Appropriations herein made for field work under the Office Field work appropriations available for work animals, etc.of the Secretary, the General Land Office, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Bureau of Reclamation, the Geological Survey, the Bureau of Mines, and the National Park Service shall be available for the hire, with or without personal services, of work animals and animal-drawn and motor-propelled vehicles and equipment. Approved, June 22, 1936. To authorize the Secretary of the Interior to investigate and adjust irrigation charges on irrigation lands within projects on Indian reservations, and for other purposes. 1936-06-22 692 Chapter 49 Stat. 1803 74 2 United States Government Publishing Office text/xml EN Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain. Digitization Vendor 2025-01-07 public [CHAPTER 692.] AN ACT To authorize the Secretary of the Interior to investigate and adjust irrigation charges on irrigation lands within projects on Indian reservations, and for other purposes. June 22, 1936.[[S. 1318](/us/bill/74/s/1318).][[Public, No. 742](/us/pl/74/742).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of American in Congress assembled*, That the SecretaryIndian irrigation projects.Investigation and adjustment of irrigation charges on non-Indian lands under, authorized. of the Interior is authorized and directed to cause an investigation to be made to determine whether the owners of non-Indian lands under Indian irrigation projects and under projects where the United States has purchased water rights for Indians are unable to pay irrigation charges, including construction, maintenance, and operating charges, because of inability to operate such lands profitably by reason of lack of fertility of the soil, inadequacy of water supply, defects of irrigation works, or for any other causes. Where the1804 Secretary finds that said landowners are unable to make payment due to the existence of such causes, he may adjust, defer, or cancel such charges, in whole or in part, as the facts and conditions warrant. Contracts for payment of past duo charges; limitation.In adjusting or deferring any such charges the Secretary may enter into contracts with said land owners for the payment of past due charges, but such contracts shall not extend the payment of such charges over a period in excess of ten years. Sec. 2. Lands found temporarily nonirrigable; suspension of assessments. Where the Secretary finds that any such lands cannot be cultivated profitably due to a present lack of water supply, proper drainage facilities, or need of additional construction work, he shall declare such lands temporarily nonirrigable for periods not to exceed five years and no charges shall be assessed against such lands during such periods. Sec. 3. Action if found permanently nonirrigable. Where the Secretary finds that any such lands are permanently nonirrigable he may, with the consent of the landowner, eliminate such lands from the project. Sec. 4. Cancelation of unpaid charges at time Indian title extinguished. Where irrigation assessments against any such lands remained unpaid at the time the Indian title to such lands became extinguished and no lien existed and attached to such lands for the payment of charges so assessed and no contract for the payment of such charges was entered into, the Secretary shall cancel all such charges. Sec. 5. Rules and regulations. The Secretary shall have power to make such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act. Sec. 6. Reports to Congress. The Secretary shall make reports to the Congress on the first Monday of each regular session, and from time to time thereafter, showing the action taken under the provisions of this Act Approval of proceedings.during the preceding year. No proceedings under this Act shall become effective until approved by the Congress. Approved, June 22, 1936. To provide for the appointment of additional district judges for the eastern and western districts of Missouri. 1936-06-22 693 Chapter 49 Stat. 1804 74 2 United States Government Publishing Office text/xml EN Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain. Digitization Vendor 2025-01-07 public [CHAPTER 693.] AN ACT To provide for the appointment of additional district judges for the eastern and western districts of Missouri. June 22, 1936.[[S. 2075](/us/bill/74/s/1318).][
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