Section 556 codifies[2][3] the second and third provisos to the paragraph[4] of the Act of 11 May 1922, ch. 185,[5][2] H.R. 10730,[6] sometimes called the Agriculture Department Appropriation Act of 1923[7] or the Agriculture Appropriation Act 1923,[6] that starts on page 520 and finishes on page 521.[4] The two provisos are cited as, and are at, 42 Stat. 521.[8] The section relates to "Traveling Expenses - Publication Activities";[9] and, in particular, to the use for transportation or traveling expenses, or for the preparation or publication of newspaper or magazine articles, of appropriations for the Forest Service.[2][10] This provision was amended by section 8 of the Act of 20 June 1958, Public Law 85–464, 72 Stat. 218.[11] The said two provisos[12] in the Agriculture Department Appropriation Act of 1923 replaced (with the addition of the word "hereafter") the corresponding similar provisions in the fourteen previous Agriculture Appropriation Acts,[13] beginning with the provisos at 35 Stat. 259 in the Act of 23 May 1908,[12] 35 Stat. 251, sometimes called the Agriculture Appropriation Act of 1909[14] or the Agricultural Appropriation Act of 1909.[15][16]
16 U.S.C. ch. 3A—Unemployment Relief Through Performance of Useful Public Work
16 U.S.C. ch. 4—Protection of Timber, and Depredations
This chapter codifies the Forest Pest Control Act, the Federal Timber Contract Payment Modification Act, the Forest Resources Conservation and Shortage Relief Act of 1990, the Forest Resources Conservation and Shortage Relief Amendment Act of 1993, and the Forest Resources Conservation and Shortage Relief Act of 1997.[17]
Sections 604 to 606 codify the Act of 3 June 1878, ch. 150, 20 Stat. 88, popularly called the Mineral Land Free Timber Act,[18] or the Nonsale Disposals Act of 1878,[19] and also called the Timber Cutting Act.[20]
Sections 614 and 615[21] of this chapter formerly codified the Act of 4 March 1913, ch. 165, 37 Stat. 1015, commonly called the Burnt Timber Act.[22][23][24][25][26][27][28] This Act "authorized the Secretary of the Interior to sell from the public lands timber which had been killed or damaged by fire".[29] The Bill for this Act was H.R. 24266.[30][31][32] This Act was amended by the Act of 3 July 1926, ch. 779, 44 Stat. 890.[33] The Burnt Timber Act is no longer in force,[34] having been repealed on 25 September 1962 by section 2 of Public Law 87–689, subject to the saving in that section.[35][36] There was previously a Burnt Timber Act of 19 January 1895 (28 Stat. 634).[37]
16 U.S.C. ch. 5—Protection of Fur Seals and Other Fur-Bearing Animals
16 U.S.C. ch. 5A—Protection and Conservation of Wildlife
^ a b cThe Code of the Laws of the United States of America . . ., 1926, p 426
^United States Code, 2006 Edition, vol 9, Title 16, sections 1-785, p 986
^ a bRevision of Title 16, U.S. Code, 1954, p 528
^Fed Stat Ann - 1922 Supp, title "Agriculture", p 4 (Edward Thompson, 1923)
^ a bUnion List of Legislative Histories, Law Librarians' Society of Washington, D.C., 1950, p 11
^Proposal for a Uniform Federal Procurement System, p 114
^42 Stat. 521
^The Principal Laws Relating to Forest Service Activities, January 1974, p 85; Harry Iron (comp), The Principal Laws relating to the Establishment and Administration of the National Forests and to other Forest Service Activities, May 1951, p 31.
^1925 Cumulative Supplement to the U.S. Compiled Statutes Compact Edition, West Publishing Co, 1925, p 354. Barnes' Federal Code, 1923 Supplement, title "The Department of Agriculture", p 32. United States Code Service, Lawyers Edition, 16 USCS, sections 461-828c, 1978, Lawyers Co-Operative Publishing Company, p 178.
^United States Code, 1988 Edition, Volume 6, p 750
^ a bDarrell Hevenor Smith, The Forest Service, The Brookings Institution, 1930, p 180
^Otis H Gates (comp), Laws Applicable to the United States Department of Agriculture 1923, Government Printing Office, 1924, p 306
^America's highways, 1776-1976, p 546.Desert Valleys' Cotton Conference, 1981, p 26
^Gifford Pinchot, Report of the Forester for 1908, p 38. Development of the United States Cotton Standards, p 25
^For Pub. 367, H.R. 15812, see Acts of Congress Affecting the District of Columbia, Commissioners of the District of Columbia, 1921, title "Public No 367", p 18. For 41 Stat. 710, see Fed Stat Ann - 1920 Supp, p 262.
^United States Code, 2000 Edition, vol 27, p 880. "Public Trust in Land Law" (1980) 14 U.C. Davis Law Review 295. United States Code Service, Lawyers Edition, 1936, vol 5, p 510. The Public Trust Doctrine in Natural Resources Law and Management: Conference Proceedings, 1981, p 193.
^Code of Federal Regulations, Revised to 1 October 2003, vol 43, s 5510.0-3(a) at p 889. United States Code Annotated 2010, Popular Name Table, I to Z, p 254.
^23 American and English Annotated Cases 621
^Sometimes incorrectly cited as sections 1614 and 1615
^12 Fed Stat Ann (2nd Ed), p 38
^United States Code, 2000 Ed, vol 27, title 50, p 747
^Laws Relating to the Department of the Interior Passed by the Sixty-second Congress, Third Session, p 392
^McKinney (ed), Federal Statutes Annotated, Supplement 1914, Edward Thompson Company, 1914, 347
^Mallory (ed), United States Compiled Statutes: Annotated: 1916, West, 1916, vol 5, p 5981; Complied Statutes of the United States 1913, vol 2, s 4995
^Barnes' Federal Code, Virginia Law Book Company, 1919, s 4325 [1]
^Barnett (ed), United States Statutes Annotated, TH Flood & Company, 1919, vol 7, p 970
^Highlights in the History of Forest and Related Natural Resource Conservation. Conservation Bulletin 41. United States Department of the Interior. Revised 1962. p 13
^37 Stat 1015
^Senate, 62nd Congress, 2d Session, Report No 1039.
^Senate, 18 January 1913, p 1718
^44 Stat 890
^United States Code Annotated 2010, West Publishing Company, 2010, title "Popular Name A to I", p 314
^76 Stat 587 at 588
^16 U.S. Code § 614, 615. Cornell University.
^Report of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, 1895, pp 4, 5, 313 & 315