Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 13.djvu/167

 THIRTY—EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 136. 1864. 139 IV. COMMERCIAL AGENCIES. SCHEDULH B. Amoor River, Antigua, Balize, (Honduras,) Gaboon, Madagascar, San C<>¤Pm¤‘9i¤l Juan del Norte, St. Domingo, St. Marc. ag°u°1°S` V. CONSULATES. SCHEDULE 0. __ Barbadoes, Batavia, Bay of Islands, Cape Haytien, Cape Town, Car- U<>¤S¤l¤f¢S- thagena, Ceylon, Cobija, Cyprus, Faulkland Islands, Fayal, Guayaquil, Lanthala, Maranham, Matamoras, Mexico, Montevideo, Omoa, Payta, Para, Paso del Norte, Rio Grande, Sabanilla, St. Catherine, Santa Cruz, W. I., Santiago, (Cape Verde,) Spezzia, Stettin, Tahiti, Talcahuauo, Tumbez, Zanzibar. VI. COMMERCIAL AGENCIES. SCHEDULE 0. Apia, St. Paul de Loando, including loss by exchange thereon, four Commercial hundred and seventy-seven thousand five hundred dollars. And the ¤g¤¤¢i<¢¤· salaries of the consuls at Brindisi, Gibraltar, St. Helena, Boulogne, §¤l¤¥i<>S of WP Zurich, Clifton, Coaticook, Erie, Goderich, Kingston in Canada, Port tm °°"S°1S° Sarnia, Prescott, St. Lambert and Longuieul, Toronto and Windsor, shall of consul at be fifteen hundred dollars each; and the salaries of the consuls at Ceylon Ceylon, and Piraeus shall be one thousand dollars each; and the salary of the con- —Piraens, sul at Chin-Kiang shall be three thousand dollars ; and the salary of thecon- Chi¤·Ki=*¤€» sul at Bankok shall be two thousand dollars; and the salary of the com· B‘*"k°k· mercial agent at Madagascar shall be two thousand dollars ; and the Madagamf. salary of the consul at Nassau shall be four thousand dollars, to com- N”S°“• mence after the close of the present iiscal year, and to continue during the present rebellion; and the salary of the consul at Lyons shall be two Lyons, thousand dollars, to commence after the close of the present fiscal year; and the salary of the consul at Manchester shall be three thousand dol- Manchester. lars, to commence after the close of the present fiscal year. For interpreters to the consulates in China, including loss by exchange I¤l‘i'l;’“?'S t° thereon, five thousand eight hundred dollars. gmail? as m For expenses incurred, under instructions from the Secretary of State, Bringing home in bringing home from foreign countries persons charged with crime, and §£€i°:fig;‘?"g°’d expenses incident thereto, ten thousand dollars. For salaries of the marshals for the consular courts in Japan, China, Marshals of Siam, and Turkey, including loss by exchange thereon, nine thousand °°“s“l"“` °°“‘“‘ dollars. . For rent of prisons for American convicts in Japan, China, Siam, and  gm Turkey, and for wages of the keepers of the same, nine thousand dollars. yic(s_ For salaries of commissioners and consuls-general to Hayti and Libe— Commissiepsfs. ria, eleven thousand five hundred dollars. §_”§,£f“Yt' ““d For 8Xp€DS€S l1D(1€I' the 9.ClJ of CO¤gI’6SS to C3I'I`y 1Dl$O GHBOf the tI‘<-Jaty Suppression of between the United States and her Britannic Majesty for the suppression €“§°““ Sl"€· of the African slave-trade, seventeen thousand dollars. iisé;} eh_ H0_ Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the President be, and is Vol. xii., p. 531; hereby, authorized, whenever he shall think the public good will be pro- a moted thereby, to appoint consular clerks, not exceeding thirteen in num- clgks, ber at any one time, who shall be citizens of the United States, and over eighteen years of age at the time of their appointment, and shall be en- Ass end P¤y· titled to compensation for their services respectively at a rate not exceed- E ing one thousand dollars per annum, to be determined by the President ; and to assign such clerks, from time to time, to such consulates and with such duties as he shall direct; and before the appointment of any such Duties-