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

 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.