Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 14.djvu/45

 THlR'I`Y—NlNTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 28. 1866. 15 and petty officers and men of the navyemployed in the work, one hun- C M Suwc dred and twenty thousand dollars. _ O y For continuing the survey of the western coast of the United States, including compensation of civilians engaged in the work, seventy-Eve thousand dollars. For continuing the survey of the reefs, shoals and keys of South Florida, including compensation of civilians engaged in the work, and excluding pay and emoluments of the officers of the army and navy and petty ofiiccrs and men of the navy employed in the work, eleven thousand dollars. For publishing the observations made in the progress of the survey of the coast of the United States, including compensation of civilians employed in the work, four thousand dollars. For repairs of steamers and sailing schooners used in the coast survey, twenty thousand dollars. For pay and rations of engineers for steamers used in the hydrography of the Coast Survey, no longer supplied by the Navy Department, six thousand dollars. Lig/tt-House Establishment. -—-For the Atlantic, Gulf, and Lake coasts, Light-house Viz : Establishment. For supplying the light-houses and beacon-lights with oil, wicks, glass chimneys, and other necessary expenses of the same, and repairing and keeping in repair the lighting apparatus, one hundred and eighty-three thousand two hundred and eighty-seven dollars. To supply deficiency in estimate for supplies of oil, wicks, glass chimneys, and other necessary expenses of the same, and repairing and keeping in repair the lighting apparatus, seventeen thousand dollars. For repairs and incidental expenses of light-houses and lighted beacons, one hundred and thirty thousand dollars. To supply a deficiency in estimate for repairs and incidental expenses of light—houses, fifty thousand dollars. For salaries of five hundred and eighty-nine keepers of light-houses and lighted beacons, and their assistants, two hundred and thirteen thousand one hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirty-three cents. For salaries of forty-three keepers of light—vessels, twenty-three thonsand nine hundred dollars. For mates} and seamen’s wages, repairs, supplies, and incidental expenses of forty-three lightwessels, two hundred and eighteen thousand nine hundred and seventeen dollars and seventy-five cents. To supply deficiency in estimates for seaman’s wages, repairs, supplies, and incidental expenses for light-vessels, twenty-three thousand three hundred and twenty-one dollars and seventy-five cents. For expenses of weighing, cleaning, repairing, painting, replacing, and supplying losses of buoys, chains, moorings, and incidental expenses of the same, and for repairing and keeping in repair all the day-marks, beacons, spindles, and monuments, and for expenses of coloring and numbering all the buoys and beacons, one hundred and twelve thousand three hundred and fifty dollars. For expenses of visiting and inspecting lights and other aids to navigation, two thousand dollars. _For the Coasts of Cali/`0rm`a, Oregon, and Washingt0n.—For supply- Light-houses, ing light-houses and beacon-lights with oil, glass chimneys, and wicks, §°gj3‘?,§‘°F°"S"“ chamois skins, polishing powder, and other cleaning materials, transporta- Orgp·;Oi·;, ?,i3’ tion, and expenses of keeping lamps and machinery in repair, thirty-three W¤5hi¤2¤<>¤· thousand and thirty dollars. For repairs and incidental expenses of light-houses and lighted beacons, fifteen thousand dollars. For salaries of forty keepers and assistant keepers of light-houses, at an average not exceeding eight hundred dollars per annum, thirty-two thousand dollars.