Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/669

 FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. SEss. I. Ch. 791. 1900. 617 fifth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, and an law prior thereto, including a custodian of the rum of Casa Grands, six thousand dol- Casa smug. ars. ‘ For the ascertainment, survey, markin, and ermanent establish- B°““"“" "”° ‘°°j ment of the boundary line between the Stalls of Ugah and the Territory xsl? mh and Ad of Arizona, being that portion of the rallel of thirt -seven degrees of north latitude lying between the tllgty-second andythirty-seventh degrees of longitude west from Washington, an estimated distance of two hundred and seventy-seven miles, including the expense of an examination of the survey in the Held, the rate of compensation per mile to the surveyor to be Hxed by the Secretary of the Interior, the same to include the cost of the preparation of the plats and Held notes of the survey in triplicate, twenty-two thousand eight hundred dollars. For the survey of lands in the Fort Buford abandoned military res- Slllyosg Fort Buford ervation, in the States of North Dakota and Montana, to be made in i>°§1(ii»iZt¤iid Mldiiizinisii gheilgianner as other surveys of public lands are made, eleven thousand o rs. ‘ ` UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. .Geologica1 survey. Fon SALARIES or THE SCIENTIFIC ASSISTANTS or THE GEOLOGICAL ggggtggo ¤¤SlS¤*·¤l¤· SURVEY: For two geologists, at four thousand dollars each; ` For one geologist, three thousand dollars; For onegeologist, two thousand seven hundred dollars; ·For two paleontologists, at two thousand dollars each; For one chemist, three thousand dollars; - For one geographer, two thousand seven hundred dollars; For one geographer, two thousand five hundred dollars; For two tofpographers, at two thousand dollars each; in all, twenty- nine thousan nine hundred dollars. ‘ Fon GENERAL EXPENSES or THE GEoLoe1oA1. SURVEY: For the E¤P¤¤¤¢¤- Geological Survey and the classiHcation of the` public lands and examination of.the eo ogical structure, mineral resources, and the products of the nationa¥domain, and to continue the pre;paration of a geological map of the United States, includin the pay o temporary employees in the Held and omce, and all otier necessary expenses, including telegrams, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, namelijl For pay of s ° led laborers and various temporary employees, thir- L**"°'°”· teen thousand dollars; ‘ For to o raphic surveys in various portions of the United States, ve'§,g’P°gT°P‘“° S"' two humgeél and forty thousand dollars, to be immediately available; ` For geolo ical surveys in the Various portions of the United States, Geological surveysone hundreg and “fifty thousand dollars, to be immediately available; For continuation of the investigation of the mineral resources of Alma ¤*¤<>¤*¢¢=*~ Alaska, twenty-five thousand dollars, to be_ immediately available; For paleontologic researches relating to the geology of the United w{’ggggg*°l°gi°¤l ls States, ten thousand dollars; · ` For chemical and physical researches relating to the geology of the Ch¤¤ll¤¤l¤€¤°¤*<>l¤°-¤~ United States, ten thousand dollars; For the preparation of the illustrations of the Geological Survey, m¤¤*¤**l°¤¤· fourteen thousand dollars;. · For the preparation of the report of the mineral resources of the Mi¤°m”€S°“’°°*· United States, including phosphates, fifty thousand dollars; For the urchase of necessary books for the library, and the pav- B°°kS-°t°- ment for the transmission of gublic documents through the Smithsonian exchange, two thousand ollars; _ _ For engraving] and Hrinting the geolog1cal maps of the United Mws- States, seventy thousand dollars; _ _ _ » For gauging the streams and determ1ning the water supply of the p,§[°“F'*”g W’“"’ mp United States, and for the investigation of underground currents and