Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 46 Part 1.djvu/449

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SEVENTY-FIRST CONGRESS . SEss . II . Ca. 341. 1930 . ing a study of flax diseases, and for the investigation and improve- ment of broomcorn and methods of broomcorn production, $535,000 . l rsts. fo~' a and for e applying eradication : other the

of eradication and control of ppyg such cereal rusts as in the judgment of the Secretary of Agriculture may be necessary, including the' payment of such expenses and the employ- ment of such p ersons and means, i n the city of Washi ngton and Cooperation .

elsewhere, and cooperation with such authorities of the States con- cerned, organizations of growers, or individuals, as he may deem Provisos .

necessary to accomplish such purposes, $379,920 : Provided, That Subject to equal con- tribution of States, etc . $75,000 of this amount shall be available for expenditure only when an equal amount shall have been appropriated, subscribed, or contrib- uted by States, counties, or local authorities, or by individuals or organizations for the accomplishment of such purposes : Provided No pay for property furt her, That no part of the money herein appropriated shall be des tro yed .

used to pay the cost or value of property injured or destroyed . Tobacco production, Tobacco : For the investigation and improvement of tobacco and etc'

the methods of tobacco production and handling, $80,310 . Sugar plant invesii- Sugar plants : For sugar-plant investigations, including studies of gations .

diseases and the improvement of sugar beets and sugar-beet seed, $412,926 . ing l Wild ands .antsandgraz- Botany : For investigation, improvement, and utilization of wild plants and grazing lands, and for determining the distribution of weeds and means of their control, $53,800 . Dry land, etc., crop product ion .

Dry-land agriculture : For the investigation and improvement of ovisos .

methods of crop production under subhumid, semiarid, or dry-land Cheyenn e, Wyo ., conditions, $363,900 : Provided, That $100,000, including construc- station .

tion of physical improvements, shall be available for the horticultural experiment station at Cheyenne, Wyoming : Provided further, That Pla ins Southern . Gr eat $35,000 shall be available for carrying into effect the Act approved Woodward, Okla . April 16, 1928 (U . S . C ., Supp . III, title 7, sees . 387-388a), entitled U.lS4 C., Supp. IV, "An Act providing for horticultural experiment and demonstration p .45. work in the Southern Great Plains area," at Woodward, Oklahoma ca Cost limit not appli- Provided further, That the limitations in this Act as to the cost of farm buildings shall not apply to this paragraph : Provided further, No new field station . That no part of this appropriation shall be used for the establishment of any new field station . claimed lands . Utilizing la western re- Western irrigation agriculture : For investigations in connection with western irrigation agriculture, the utilization of lands reclaimed under the Reclamation Act, and other areas in the arid and semiarid Proviso. limit not regions, $150,600 : Provided, That the limitations in this Act as to applicable.

the c ost of farm buil dings shall not apply to th is par agrap h . Horticultural cro ps Horticultural . crops and diseases : For investigation and control and diseases . Investigating and of diseases for improvement of methods of culture propagation, control, improved breeding, selection and related activities concerned with the produc- me thods, etc . tion of fruits, nuts, vegetables, ornamentals, and related plants, for investigation of methods of harvesting, packing, shipping, storing, and utilizing these products, and for studies of the physiological and related changes of such products during processes of marketing and wh ile in commercial storage, $1,277,000, of which $2,000 shall be immediately available . Phony peach eradi- cation .

Phony peach eradication : For conducting such investigat ions of Investigating and ap- the nature and means of communication of the disease of peach trees ply in g methods for . known as phony peach, and for applying such methods of eradication or control of the disease as in the judgment of the Secretary of Agri- culture may be necessary, including the payment of such expenses and the employment of such persons and means, in the city of Wash- Subject to equal con- ington and elsewhere, and cooperation with such authorities of the tr ibutio ns fro m Stat es, etc .

States concerned, organizations of growers, or individuals, as he may