SIXTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 364. 1925. 1051 To investigate and report u n matters ertainin to the welfare Chu? welfare; *1**3*%* of children and child life, andpdispecially topinvestigaigte the questions §iii$ty' °m"l°vm` of infant mortality, including not to exceed $130,000 for personal services in the District of Columbia, $135,000. — For traveling expenses and per diem in lieu of subsistence at not 'f¤v¤“¤€ ¢¤¤¤¤¤<·>S· exceeding $4 of officers, special agents, and other employees of the °xp°rtS’°m' 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 day when actually employed; purchase of reports t,M¤*·¤ri¤¤ for pubumand material for the publications of the Children’s Bureau, news- on papers and clippings not exceeding $700 to enable the Children’s Bureau to secure data regarding the progress of legislation affecting children and the activities of public and private organizations dealinv with children, and for reprints from State, city, and private publications for distribution when said reprints can be procured more cheaply than they can be printed by the Government, $58,000. Promotion of the welfare and hygiene of maternity and infancy: ,a,,“§;‘§;,‘;’§§,,, 2*;% i“` For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled "An Act for the §,¤;>¤¤S¤S egzcfutmz. promotion of the welfare and hy `ene of maternity and infancy, °`42’p' ` and for other purposes," approve? November 23, 1921, and of the Act entitled "An Act to extend the rovisions of certain laws to the A”"'p`U' Territory of Hawaii," approved llfiirch 10, 1924, $1,000,000: Pro- ,f;,°,,'f,’;’;,0,,mm ,_,_ vided, That the apportionments to the States, to the Territory of Stem Hawaii, and to the Children’s Bureau for administration shall be computed on the basis of not to exceed $1,252,079.%, as authorized by such Acts of November 23, 1921, and March 10, 1924. ' womnN’s BUREAU W°‘“°"`* B“'°"'* For carrying out the provisions of the Act entitled “An Act to §,“Q’ff‘§’;§{‘§§§P°“s°‘· establish in the Department of Labor a bureau to be known as the Women’s Bureau," a proved June 5, 1920, including personal services in the District oi) Columbia, not to exceed $92,1 0; purchase of material for reports and educational exhibits, includin newspaper clippings not exceeding $200, and traveling expenses, §.05,000. nmrnoxmmvr smzvrcn ,,,f"""°Y“‘°“‘ S°"' To enable the Secretary of Labor to foster, promote, and develop w,,*;'_j’_,'_}‘},§§§},*§,_"°"*"° "' the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, including juniors legally employed, to improve their working conditions, to advance their opportunities for profitable employment by regularly °"l°°'“ ""“*¥°°‘°"· collecting, furnishing, and publishing employment information_as to opportunities for emplogment; maintaining a system for clearing labor between the several tates; cooperating with and coordmating the public employment offices throughout the country, including ersonal services in the District of Dolumbia and elsewhere, and lfbr their actual necessary traveling expenses while absent from their _ _ ofiicial station, together with their per diem in lieu_of subsistence, {}$,§_d:_%,g°f‘§“6g‘f,{S‘°“°°· when allowed pursuant to section 13 of the Sundry Civil Appropriation Act approved August 1, 1914;_supplies and equipment, telegraph and telephone service, and miscellaneous expenses, $205,000, _ _ of which amount not to exceed $31,590 may be expended for personal m§§f"‘°°S “‘ “‘° D*" services in the District of Columbia. Approved, February 27, 1925.