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For medical and hospital services, Veterans' Bureau, $4,651.74. For salaries and expenses, Veterans' Bureau, $1.

For Interstate Commerce Commission, $2.

[Total, $4,765.85.]

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

For Freedmen's Hospital, District of Columbia, $26.75.

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

For salaries and expenses, Extension Service, $12.79.

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

For air navigation facilities, $21,094.10.

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

For support and civilization of Indians, $11.75. For conservation of health among Indians, $49.58. [Total, $61.33.]

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

For salaries, fees, and expenses of marshals, United States courts, $345.46.

For fees of commissioners, United States courts, $734.40.
For United States penitentiary, Atlanta, Georgia, $1.90.

[Total, $1,081.76.]

NAVY DEPARTMENT

For transportation, Bureau of Navigation, $236.36.
For organizing the Naval Reserve, $111.82.

For engineering, Bureau of Engineering, $6.50.

For pay, subsistence, and transportation, Navy, $3,457.38.

For pay of the Navy, $3,438.11.

For freight, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, $128.34.
For pay, Marine Corps, $1,059.39.

For general expenses, Marine Corps, $107.16.
[Total, $8,545.06.]

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT-POSTAL SERVICE

(Out of the postal revenues)

For balances due foreign countries, $2,456.04.

For clerks, first and second class post offices, $1.27.

For clerks, third-class post offices, $251.17.

For compensation to postmasters, $63.66.

For freight, express, or motor transportation of equipment, and

so forth, $8.63.

For indemnities, domestic mail, $287.01.

For indemnities, international mail, $25.70.

For railroad transportation and mail messenger service, $29.17. For unusual conditions at post offices, $150.

[Total, $3,272.65.]

DEPARTMENT OF STATE

For contingent expenses, United States consulates, $14.81.
For immigration of aliens, Department of State, $13.14.
[Total, $27.95.]

TREASURY DEPARTMENT

For stationery, Treasury Department, $2.91.

For collecting the war revenue, $7.55.

For enforcement of Narcotic and National Prohibition Acts,

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For pay, and so forth, of the Army, $11,212.34.

For pay of the Army, $2,369.10.

For pay, and so forth, of the Army, war with Spain, $3.47.

For increase of compensation, Military Establishment, $273.14.
For mileage of the Army, $25.50.

For arrears of pay, bounty, and so forth, $6.84.

For Army transportation, $520.58.

For barracks and quarters, $910.

For general appropriations, Quartermaster Corps, $1,462.16.

For incidental expenses of the Army, $50.

For subsistence of the Army, $20.09.

For supplies, services, and transportation, Quartermaster Corps, $39.96.

For Ordnance Service, $1,600.

For Field Artillery armament, $56.94.

For ordnance stores: Ammunition, $8.43.

For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard (Act May 22, 1928), $74.90.

For arming, equipping, and training the National Guard, $294.85.
For Organized Reserves, $31.12.

For pay of National Guard for armory drills, $291.14.

For Reserve Officers' Training Corps, $19.20.

For headstones for graves of soldiers, $181.10.

[Total, $19,450.86.]

Total, audited claims, section 5, $60,411.17, together with such additional sum due to increases in rates of exchange as may be necessary to pay claims in the foreign currency as specified in certain of the settlements of the General Accounting Office.

$60, 411. 17

SEC. 6. For payment of interest on amounts withheld from claim-1 and indefinite. ants by the Comptroller General of the United States, Act March 3, 1875 (U. S. C., title 31, sec. 227), as allowed by the General Accounting Office, and certified to the Seventy-second Congress, in House Document Numbered 328, under the War Department.

For the payment of claims allowed by the General Acounting1 Office covering judgments rendered by United States district courts against collectors of customs, where certificates of probable cause have been issued as provided for under section 989, Revised Statutes (U. S. C., title 28, sec. 842), and certified to the Seventysecond Congress in Senate Document Numbered 118, and House Document Numbered 328, under the Treasury Department.

For the payment of the claim allowed by the General Accounting Office under the provisions of Private Act Numbered 524, approved March 2, 1929 (45 Stat., Pt. 2, p. 2364), and certified to the Seventysecond Congress in House Document Numbered 328, under the War Department

Total audited claims, section 6, $8,936.63.

1 So in original.

1,641.90

7,233.75

60.98

SHORT TITLE

This Act may be cited as the "Second Deficiency Act, fiscal year 1932."

Approved, July 1, 1932.

Total, Second Deficiency Appropriation Act_

$22, 682, 623. 20

NOTE. The following tabulation is a classification by fiscal years and by departments and establishments of the appropriations made in the foregoing act:

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA APPROPRIATION ACT

[PUBLIC-No. 208-72D CONGRESS]

[H. R. 11361]

By the Act making appropriations for the government of the District of Columbia and other activities chargeable in whole or in part against the revenues of such District for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, and for other purposes, approved June 29, 1932.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That in order to defray the expenses of the District of Columbia for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, any revenue (not including the proportionate share of the United States in any revenue arising as the result of the expenditure of appropriations made for the fiscal year 1924 and prior fiscal years) now required by law to be credited to the District of Columbia and the United States in the same proportion that each contributed to the activity or source from whence such revenue was derived shall be credited wholly to the District of Columbia, and, in addition, $7,775,000 is appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to be advanced July 1, 1932, and all the remainder out of the combined revenues of the District of Columbia, and the tax rate in effect in the fiscal year 1932 on real estate and tangible personal property subject to taxation in the District of Columbia shall not be decreased for the fiscal year 1933, namely:

GENERAL EXPENSES

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

For personal services, $49,580, plus so much as may be necessary to compensate the Engineer Commissioner at such rate in Grade 8 of the professional and scientific service of the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, as may be determined by the Board of Commissioners: Provided, That in expending appropriations or portions of appropriations contained in this Act for the payment of personal services in accordance with the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, with the exception of the two civilian commissioners 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: Provided, That this restriction shall not apply (1) to grades 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the clerical-mechanical service; (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 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 only one position is allocated__.

$49, 580.00 and indefinite,

Purchasing division: For personal services---
Building inspection division: For personal services.

Plumbing inspection division: For personal services, $42,280;
for temporary employment of additional assistant inspectors of
plumbing and laborers for such time as their services may be required,
$5,000; two members of plumbing board at $150 each; in all---
In all, Executive Office, $314,320.

PUBLIC CONVENIENCE STATIONS

For maintenance of public convenience stations, including compensation of necessary employees---.

For the demolition of public convenience station numbered 4 at Fifteenth Street and Maryland Avenue northeast_.

$60, 560.00

156, 600.00

47, 580.00

14,000.00

3,000.00

CARE OF DISTRICT BUILDING

For personal services, including temporary labor, $90,280; service of cleaners as necessary, not to exceed 48 cents per hour, $15,000; in all, $105,280: Provided, That no other appropriation made in this Act shall be available for the employment of additional assistant engineers or watchmen for the care of the District Building.

For fuel, light, power, repairs, laundry, and miscellaneous supplies--

ASSESSOR'S OFFICE

For personal services, $228,650; temporary clerk hire, $5,000, to be immediately available; in all...

COLLECTOR'S OFFICE

For personal services, including $1,000 for temporary clerk hire___

AUDITOR'S OFFICE

For personal services $129,720; and the compensation of the present incumbent of the position of disbursing officer of the District of Columbia shall be exclusive of his compensation as United States property and disbursing officer for the National Guard of the District of Columbia___.

OFFICE OF CORPORATION COUNSEL

Corporation counsel, including extra compensation as general counsel of the Public Utilities Commission, and other personal services___

CORONER'S OFFICE

For personal services, including deputy coroners, in accordance. with the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, $11,140, and appropriations for personal services for this office for the fiscal year 1932 shall be available for compensation of two deputy coroners at the rate of $1.600 per annum each commencing July 1, 1931

For the maintenance of a nonpassenger-carrying motor wagon for the morgue, jurors' fees, witness fees, ice, disinfectants, telephone service, and other necessary supplies, repairs to the morgue, and the necessary expenses of holding inquest, including stenographic services in taking testimony, and photographing unidentified bodies__

105, 280.00

32, 500.00

233, 650.00

49,790.00

129, 720.00

89, 780.00

11, 140. 00

5,000.00

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