Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/789

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SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. p Ch. 384. 1910. 765 employees of the Division of Naturalization in Washington while absent on official duty outside of the District of Columbia; for telegrams, veriiications to legal papers, telephone service in offices outside of the District of Columbia; not to exceed three thousand dollars for rent of offices outside of the District of Columbia where suitable ' quarters can not be obtained in public buildings; and for the pu ose g*S;{,§;gg§°§lmuhm_ of carrying into effect that part of section thirteen of the Act oflilhne mira-mon mes. twenty-ninth, nineteen hun red and six (Thirt —fourth Statutes, p e V"` 34* p" °°°‘ eight hundred and ninety-six), which providies: "And in case iilie P°•*» P- W- clerk of any court collects fees in excess of the sum of six thousand dollars in an one year, the Secretary of Commerce and Labor may allow to such clerk`from the money which the United States shal receive additional com ensation for the employment of additional clerical assistance, but For no other pur ose, if in the opinion of the ` said Secretary the business of such clerl; warrants such allowance:" Provided, That the total compensation for the additional clerical prmqao. assistants authorized by that portion of the said section quoted above m"“°‘ to be employed .by the clerks of courts shall in no case exceed onehalf of the (gross amount of fees collected by such clerks in naturalization cases uring the fiscal year immediately preceding, and that the expenditures from this appropriation shall be in the manner and under .’ such regulations as the Secretary of Commerce and Labor may prescribe, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Payment of fees to Austrian seamen detained at Ellis Island to be $,,‘;{;*'§s¤I$¢_,{;im used as witnesses: To enable the Secretary of Commerce and Labor to rama. ay to seven Austrian seamen, who were detained at the Ellis Island Immigrant Station for several months in order that they might be used as witnesses in the prosecution arising under the immigration laws, a fee of one dollar per day for the time actually detained, one thousand eight hundred and twenty dollars. snmrmo smzvrcm. ¤¤Pvi¤8¤¢¤·i¤¢· For rent, stationery, and other requisites for the transaction of the <><>¤¤¤s·-=¤¢ ¢¤w¤•¤•· business of shipping commissioners offices, including rent of office quarters for the United States shipping commissioner at San Francisco, California, for not exceeding six months of the fiscal year, one thousand and fifty dollars, and rent of temporary; cpéarters for the United States shipping commissioner at New Yor , ew York, not to exceed two thousand eight hundred dollars, ten thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars. For tools, appliances, and instruments for the admeasurement of ,,,.,°§§§§§§§§§,§°"‘ vessels and the counting of passengers, one thousand dollars. BUREAU or STANDARDS. ”§§"°““ °‘ “‘°""‘ For the continuation of the investigation of the structural materials I“"°S"¤°"*}" °‘ both belonging to and for the use of the United States, such as stone, mucmmmm m` clays, cement and so forth, under the supervision of the Director of the Bureau of, Standards, including necessary personal services, to be immediately available, fifty thousand dollars. ` UNDER THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. ‘ S,gg}·¤¤·¤¤¤= ·>* To meet the e enses on the art of the United States in the N°"“‘ ‘“‘“{"*° Ml" arbitration beforeylblhe Permanent gourt of Arbitration at The Hague, m1$:.r;it;1ai1?u` under the s ecial agreement of January twenty-seventh, nineteen hundred andp nine, for the submission of questions relatin to fisheries on the North Atlantic coast under the general trea§y og arbitration V°’· ”·P·*°°°· concluded between the United States and Great ritain on April fourth, nineteen hundred and eight, one hundred thousand dollars, i or so much thereof as may be necessary.