Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 57 Part 1.djvu/474

 57 STAT.] 78TH OONG., 1 ST SESS.-CH. 219-JULY 12, 1943 los, $24,300; Mescalero, $2,500; Oregon: Warm Springs, $3,500; Washington: Colville, $5,000, together with $5,000, collections; Lummi diking project, $500, together with $2,000, collections; and for necessary miscellaneous expenses incident to the general admin- istration of Indian irrigation projects, including pay of employees and their traveling and incidental expenses, $68,835: Provided, That Interch'nge of the foregoing amounts shall be available interchangeably in the dis- cretion of the Secretary, for necessary expenditures for damages by floods and other unforeseen exigencies, but the amounts so inter- changed shall not exceed in the aggregate 10 per centum of all the amounts so appropriated: Provided further, That the cost of irriga- cApportioment of tion projects and of operating and maintaining such projects where reimbursement thereof is required by law shall be apportioned on a per-acre basis against the lands under the respective projects and shall be collected by the Secretary as required by such law, and any unpaid charges outstanding against such lands shall constitute a first lien thereon which shall be recited in any patent or instrument issued for such lands. For operation and maintenance of the San Carlos project for the s carlos project, irrigation of lands in the Gila River Indian Reservation, Arizona, $125,000 (operation and maintenance collections), and $220,000 (power revenues), of which latter sum not to exceed $20,000 shall be available for major repairs in case of unforeseen emergencies caused by fire, flood, or storm, from which amounts, of $125,000 and $220,000, respectively, expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts cov- ered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent 3Au. s.. 72c. Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934; in all, $345,000. For continuing subjugation and for cropping operations on the Sgbjiugtioo and lands of the Pima Indians in Arizona, there shall be available not cropping operations. to exceed $200,000 of the revenues derived from these operations and deposited into the Treasury of the United States to the credit of such Indians, and such revenues are hereby made available for payment of irrigation operation and maintenance charges assessed against tribal or allotted lands of said Pima Indians. For improvement, operation, and maintenance of the irrigation diCio Reservtion system on the Colorado River Indian Reservation, Arizona, as pro- Arir. vided in the Act of April 4, 1910 (36 Stat. 273), $9,000, reimbursable, together with $18,495, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accord- ance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropriation Repeal Act, 48'S. l c 7 72. 1934. For reclamation and maintenance charges on Indian lands within ^Yum Rwvation,' the Yuma Reservation, California, and on ten acres within each of the eleven Yuma homestead entries m Arizona under the Yuma reclamation project, $11,500, reimbursable. For improvements, maintenance, and operation of the Fort Hall ostH °rigation irrigation systems, Idaho, $24,825, together with $23,100, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered 48 Stat. 1=7. into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent 31 U.Sc. I 725c. Appropriation Repeal Act, 1934. For maintenance and operation, repairs, and purchase of stored Fort Beon p Res- waters, irrigation systems, Fort Belknap Reservation, Montana, $11,625, reimbursable, together with $3,875, from which amount expenditures shall not exceed the aggregate receipts covered into the Treasury in accordance with section 4 of the Permanent Appropria- 31 .s. c. S72c. tion Repeal Act, 1934. For maintenance and operation of the several units of the Fort MFor Pek Peck project, Montana, including not to exceed four thousand acres under the West Side Canal of the Poplar River Division, $500 461

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