Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 41 Part 1.djvu/707

 686 SIXTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 214. 1920. €hi1d1’¢¤’¤B¤f¤¤¤· CHrLmzEN’s BUREAU: Chief, $5,000; assistant chief, $2,400; experts—one on sanitation $2,800, industrial $2,000, social service $2,000, statistical $2,000; administrative clerk, $2,000; editor, $2,000; spipcial agents—one $1,800, four at $1,600 each, ten at $1,400 eac, twelve at $1,200 each; private secretary to chief of bureau, $1,500; clerlm——two of class four, four of class three, four of class two, seventeen of class one, ten at $1,000 each; copyist; messerrilgerg in all, $106,040. ctg?¤iid1iY¤» mvrwiiw, o investigate and report upon matters pertaining to the welfare ` of children and child life, and especially to investigate the questions of infant mortality, including personal services in the District of }{*°°**°-. . Columbia and elsewhere, $80,000: Provided, That not exceeding ayrestnctron. . . eight persons shall be employed hereunder at a rate of compensation PH dim upms of $2,000 each per annum and above that sum. _ ac. ' For traveling expenses and per diem in lieu of subsistence at not exceeding $4 of officers, special agents, and other employees of the Children’s Bureau; experts and temporary assistants, to be paid at a rate not exceeding $6 a day, and interpreters to be paid at a rate not exceeding $4 a ay when actually employed; purchase of reports Mmm, for publ,. and materia for the publications of the Children’s Bureau, news- °°**°°$·°°°· papers and clippings to enable the Children’s Bureau to secure data regarding the pro ess of legislation affecting children and the activities of public andir private organizations dealing with children, and for reprints from State, city, and private publications for distribution when said reprints can be proc1u·ed more cheaply than they can cmungm muws be by the Government, $85,000. _ ` N*r1NcEN·r EXPENSES, DEPARTMENT or Larson: For contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the offices and bureaus of the department, for which appropriations for contingent and miscellaneous expenses are not specifically made, including the purchase of stationery, fmniture, and repairs to the same, carpets, matting, oilcloth, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, sponges, laundry, street car fares not exceeding $200, lighting and heating; purchase, exchange, maintenance and repair of motor cHcles and motor trucks; maintenance and repair of a motor-prope cd passenger-carrying vehicle to be used only for official purposes; freight and express charges, postage to foreign countries, telegraph and telephone service, typewriters, ad hines, and other labor-saving devices; repairs to the buil occuged by the office of the Secretary of _ _ Labor; purchase of law boo, books of reference, and periodicals sum as ma&r e necessary, not m excess of $13,500, to facilitate the purchase, ough the central purchasing office as provided in the V°'·“"·*’·”'· Act of Jime 17, 1910 (Thirty-sixth Statutes at Large, page 531), of pw P 935 aekrtain supplies for; tg; Immigrgtimxrvice, shall be deducterlifrcgm · · · e approprra ron ‘ penses 0 r af immigr-ation" ma e or the fiscal gear 1921 and added to theudliipropriation "Contingent expenses, epartment of Labor," for that year; and the total sum thereof shall be and constitute the appropriation for contingent To be ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, expenses for the Department of Labor, to be expended through the ggggtiogggusuy central purchasing) office (Division of Publications and Supplies), puts. Dipartment of La or. _ Rang ENT: For rent of buildings and parts of buildings in the District of Columbia for the use of the Department of Labor, $24,000. mexem, JUDICIAL. Supreme com-:. SUPREME Comrr: Chief Justice, $15,000; eight associate justices, at $14,500 each; marshal, $4,500; nine law clerks, one for the Chief Justice and one for each associate justice, at not exceeding $3,600
 * d‘¥,{},,°“Q} '"’“‘ {m` not exceedi $2,000; in all, $50,000; and in addition thereto such