Report of the Department of the Interior ... [with Accompanying Documents].U.S. Government Printing Office, 1935 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 94
Page 51
... RIVER PROJECT , ARIZONA Agricultural results showed better returns than last year , im- proving the economic situation materially . Gross crop values on the project increased from $ 9,660,000 in 1932 to $ 16,500,000 in 1934 , and bank ...
... RIVER PROJECT , ARIZONA Agricultural results showed better returns than last year , im- proving the economic situation materially . Gross crop values on the project increased from $ 9,660,000 in 1932 to $ 16,500,000 in 1934 , and bank ...
Page 52
... River at the Bartlett site was in progress by the Denver office of the Reclamation Bureau and the construction , estimated at $ 6,800,000 will be done by the Bureau . The Indian Office is to have an $ 800,000 interest in the Bartlett ...
... River at the Bartlett site was in progress by the Denver office of the Reclamation Bureau and the construction , estimated at $ 6,800,000 will be done by the Bureau . The Indian Office is to have an $ 800,000 interest in the Bartlett ...
Page 53
... river through tunnel no . 1 , under control of the slide gates , and commencing storage in the reservoir . At the end of the fiscal year the reservoir was approximately 78 miles long , contained 3,875,000 acre - feet of water , covered ...
... river through tunnel no . 1 , under control of the slide gates , and commencing storage in the reservoir . At the end of the fiscal year the reservoir was approximately 78 miles long , contained 3,875,000 acre - feet of water , covered ...
Page 54
... River was at its lowest point in history , team excavation by Gov- ernment forces was authorized for several miles of canal in the vicinity of Calexico . Farmers and farmer stock were employed insofar as possible . At its peak nearly ...
... River was at its lowest point in history , team excavation by Gov- ernment forces was authorized for several miles of canal in the vicinity of Calexico . Farmers and farmer stock were employed insofar as possible . At its peak nearly ...
Page 57
... River drainage area during the winter of 1934-35 , and the run - off in the spring was well main- tained . In Jackson Lake , the maximum storage in 1935 was 713,460 20481-35--5 acre - feet , and some 95,000 acre - feet BUREAU OF ...
... River drainage area during the winter of 1934-35 , and the run - off in the spring was well main- tained . In Jackson Lake , the maximum storage in 1935 was 713,460 20481-35--5 acre - feet , and some 95,000 acre - feet BUREAU OF ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres activities addition Agency agricultural Alaska allotted amount appropriations Arizona assistance Bank of Hawaii Board building Bureau camps Civilian Conservation Corps coal Colorado completed construction continued cooperation cost Croix crops Dakota Department district Division economic ended June 30 enrollment farm Federal field fiscal year 1935 funds Geological Survey Government graduate grazing Hawaii homestead hospital Howard University increase Indian industry Interior investigations irrigation June 30 leases maps ment miles mineral mining National Monument National Park Service Navajo Oahu Office oil and gas operation organization Paiute patients percent personnel petroleum plant prepared production prospecting permits public lands Public Works Administration Pueblo quadrangle P. W. reclamation rehabilitation Reservation revenues River road South Dakota staff Stat supervision Taylor Grazing Act teachers Territory Territory of Hawaii tion total number tribes United Utah vocational education Washington
Popular passages
Page 11 - An act to stop injury to the public grazing lands by preventing overgrazing and soil deterioration, to provide for their orderly use, improvement, and development, to stabilize the livestock industry dependent upon the public range, and for other purposes," approved June 28, 1934 (48 Stat.
Page 309 - SEC. 531. (a) In order to enable the United States to cooperate with the States and Hawaii in extending and strengthening their programs of vocational rehabilitation of the physically disabled, and to continue to carry out the provisions and purposes of the Act entitled "An Act to provide for the promotion of vocational rehabilitation of persons disabled in industry or otherwise and their return to civil employment," approved June 2, 1920, as amended (USC, title 29, ch.
Page 20 - Federal Laws for the protection and preservation of the navigable waters of the United States.
Page 307 - AN ACT To provide for the further development of vocational education in the several States and Territories.
Page 152 - An Indian, as defined by the Indian Service, Includes any person of Indian blood who through wardship, treaty, or inheritance has acquired certain rights. The Census Bureau defines an Indian as a person having Indian blood to such a degree as to be recognized in his community as an Indian.
Page 305 - State received by the terms of this act an amount of public land or land scrip equal to 30,000 acres for each Senator and Representative then in Congress.
Page 94 - USC 321, 323, 325, 327-329), provides for the making of desert-land entries in the States of Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. § 2226.0-5 Definitions. (a) As used in the desert-land laws and the regulations of this subpart: (1) "Reclamation...
Page 149 - This is an act to authorize appropriations to pay in part the liability of the United States to Indian pueblos under the act of June 7, 1924 (43 Stat.
Page 25 - Four-year high schools, accredited by the University of Washington, are maintained in 10 cities, as follows: Anchorage, Cordova, Douglas, Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchikan, Petersburg, Seward, Sitka and Wrangell. The high schools at Anchorage, Cordova, Douglas, Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchikan, Nome, Petersburg, Seward, Sitka, Skagway and Wrangell are also accredited by the Northwest Association of Secondary and Higher Schools. Non-accredited high schools are maintained at Haines, Nenana, and Valdez.
Page 94 - State may request that patent issue subject to grazing lease. Where a State application for exchange under the provisions of the Taylor Grazing Act approved June 28, 1934 (48 Stat. 1269), as amended by the act of June 26. 1936 (49 Stat. 1976) , is found to embrace lands Included in an outstanding lease issued under section 15 of said act, before final action is taken by the Bureau of Land Management with a view to...