Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 24.djvu/145

 11O FORTY·N1NTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 600. 1886. Misc•¤11¤¤¤¤¤¤- mscnnrnmnons EXPENSES or LEGATIONS. L ° S S by •¤¤· Loss by exchange in remittances of money to and from lcgations, °b"‘“‘¥°· two thousand five hundred dollars. _ C Hire if 1¤¤i¤¤Ii, Hiring of steam-launch for use of the legation at Constantinople, one °“S“‘“ ‘“°P °· thousand eight hundred dollars. Quit- _ Rent of buildings for legation and other purposes at Peking, or such 'f¤ki¤, Japan- For rent of legation buildings in Tokio, Japan, for the year ending March fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, three thousand tour hundred dollars. . R u rc base of For purchase of building and grounds for legation at Seoul, Corea, :.,‘;§;: °*°·· and repairs upon the same, five thousand dollars. Cape Spartel and Annual proportion of the expenses of Cape Spartel and Tangier light, T=¤¤ei<¢¤ iight- on the coast of Morocco, including loss by exchange, three hundred and twenty-five dollars. B1‘i¤gi¤g home Actual expenses incurred in bringing home from foreign countries i§Q‘;f";;mc°h“’g€‘1 persons charged with crime, five thousand dollars. iextmdition ex- To enable the Secretary of State to comply with the requirement of muses. the fourth section of ·* An act regulating fees and the practice in extra- Vo1. 2-2, p. 216, dition cases,” approved August third, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, to be disbursed by the Secretary of State five thousand (l0ll2»l'S. _LiY¤;S¤*i¤s WS- Forexpenses which may be incurred iii the acknowledgment of the "“‘°‘““I“· services of masters and crews of foreign vessels in rescuing American seamen or citizens from shipwreck, four thousand dollars. _ m5§i;€i:;>¤, ¤¤¤- To meet the necessary expenses attendant upon the execution of the ` ‘ neutrality act to be expended under the direction of the President _ (R-S-. Sec- 291, p- pursuant to the requirement of section two hundred and ninety-one of 4* the Revised Statutes, fifteen thousand dollars, or so much thereof as Y _ may be necessary. ‘ ";;1';§‘;;°“°°“ °m°" To enable the President to meet unforeseen emergencies arising in the °diplomatic and consular service, and to extend the commercial and other interests of the United States, to be expended pursuant to the requirewR.S.,scc. 291,p. ment of section two hundred and ninetyone of the Revised Statutes, · fifty thousand dollars or so much thereof as may be necessary. b Ai ig? ¤1¤¢¤ tv For the payment, uhder the provisions of section seventeen hundred 0fj;f‘h‘;“‘,;¥  and forty-iiine of the liescisead Statutes of the Uglited States, of the dying ,,i,,.,,ad_ wir ows or s eirs-at aw o ip omatic or consu ar o 'cers of the United 11;. s.,sec. 1749, p. States dying in foreign countries in the discharge of their duties, tive 3 · thousand dollars. For defraying the expenses of transporting the remains of ministers and QOH5mg_ P andtconsuls of the United States to their former homes in this country for interment, where such ministers or consuls have died, or who may die, abroad, while in discharge of their official duties, ten thousand dollars. Init ¤ r ¤ =¤_rjv¤=¤1 Contribution to the maintenance of the International Bureau of g;;°§£;§§Q;€;’8h‘S Weights and Measures for the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen V,,l_2O,,,_n‘4_ hundred and eighty-seven, in conformity with the terms of the convention of May twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, the same, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be paid, under the direction of the Secretary of State, to said Bureau on its certificate of apportionment, two thousand two hundred and seventy dollars. Schedule n. SCHEDULE B. S”~1m°*· snnxnins, ooxsutsenunnnr. Ccnsuls-general. thConsn5ségeneral atglondoné PiuI‘iS,t§aVana, alndlliio de Janeiro, at six ousau ollars eac twen y- our ousanr dollars. Consuls-general at Shanghai and Calcutta, at five thousand dollars each. ten thousand dollars. ·
 * "k‘“g· Ch‘““· other place in China as shall be designated, three thousand one hundred dollars.