Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 40 Part 1.djvu/1344

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1326 SIXTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Crr. 123. 1919. B“*g*“'*“ md S°’bi*‘· Envo s extraordin and ministers leni otenti to Bulgaria, Jniiigli lmich 1 to and Serliia, at the raatleyof $10,000 per eachijlfiom March 1, · 1919, to June 30, 1919, both dates inclusive, $6,666.68. _ Envoys extraordinaryland ministers plenipotentiarjy to Bolivia, Bulgaria, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Greece and Montenegro, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Norwa , Panama, Paraguay, Uruguay, Persia, Portplgal, Roumania, Salvarigcgr, Serbia, Siam, Sweden, witzerland, and enezuela, at $10 000 eac $250 000; m;¥gl{,i;2?;;§;{d°¤*¤d Minister resident and consul general to Liberia, $5,000; Agam,em.` Agent and consul general at angier, $7 ,500; _ Agent and consul general at Cairo, $6,500; _ §°,{,‘§’,,"?°;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,_ Pm/veiled, That no salary herein afppropriated shall be paid to any official receiving any other salary rom the United States Government; Total, $600,66668. SALARHIS, crraneés D’AFFAIRES AD INTERIM. Cb”g$ d’am’°S- For salaries for charges d’affaires ad interim, $50,000. sALArrms or sncrarrramns IN THE DIPLOMATIC smzvrcn. m§€§’°SE,°,‘$i’§,;_ D“"°' For secretaries in the Diplomatic Service, as provided in the Act 39V<>1h53g» P- 805: VOL of February 5, 1915, entitled "An Act for the Improvement of the 'P' foreign service/’ as amended by the Act making appropriations for ` the Diplomatic and Consular Service for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1917 , approved July 1, 1916, $289,45833, of which sum $5,083.33 Sw t _ shall be immediately available. pmmgf °’Y ’“"°" Secretary—interpreter of embassy to Japan, $3,600; Secretary-interpreter of embassy to Turkey, $3,600; Secretary-interpreter of legation to China, $3,600; Assistant secretary-interpreter to the legation to China, to be apgsinted from the corps o student interpreters, $2,000; - istant secretary—inte reter to the embassy to Japan, to be appointed from the corps iii) student interpreters, $2,000; Assistant secretary-interpreter to the embassy to Turkey, to be appornagecg ffglg the corps 0 student interpreters, $2,000; ot , 30 ,..58.33. Etiggisaiiii rifiiiiiie The following persons formerly connected with the American g'm”n§•;_?mQ{o:gS¤*; Embassy at Berlin be, and they are hereby, authorized to accept fggeeaa with Amer- pieces of plate presented to them by the British Government in recognition of services rendered by the embassy while in charge of British interests in German : Mr. Joseph C. Grew, counselor of ernbassly; Messrs. Hugh R. Wilson, Albert B. Ruddock, Alexander C. Kirk, . Lanier Winslow, Litheow Osborne, Oliver B. Harriman, Robert M. Scotten, and Charles H. Russell, junior, secretaries of embassy or legation; Brigadier General Jose h E. Kuhn and Major George T. Langhorne, United States Army; Iiieutenant Colonel C. L. Furbush, Medical Corps, National Army; Major Albert H. Roler, Medical Reserve Corps, United States Army; Lieutenant Grafton W. Minot, Ordnance Reserve Corps, United States Army; Lieutenant Jerome P_. Webster, Medical Reserve Corps; Mr. H. R. Pyne, Aviatron Service, United States Army; Commander Walter R. Gherardi and SurgVeon Karl OhnesorgIirUnited States Navy; Director A. E. Taylor, ar Trade Board; _ . Christian A. Herter, Department of iiéarifé $1IrétlEBI§i1,Dl(?resel and Miss G. de Courcy, employed at American

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