Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 35 Part 1.djvu/979

 962 SIXTIETH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Crr. 299. 1909. For one superintendent for the coasts of Rhode Island and Fishers Island, two thousand dollars; For one superintendent for the coast of Long Island, two thousand two hundred dollars; For one superintendent for the coast of New Jersey, two thousand two hundred dollars; For one superintendent for the coasts of Delaware, Maryland, and Vir `nia, two thousand two hundred dollars; _ _ _ Par one superintendent for the coasts of Virginia and l\orth Carolina, two thousand two hundred dollars; _ _ For one superintendent for the life-saving stations and for the houses of refuge on the coasts of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, one thousand nine hundred dollars; _ For one superintendent for the l1f8—S8,VIDg and lifeboat stations on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, two thousand dollars; _ For one superintendent for the life—saving and lifeboat stations on the coasts of Lakes Ontario and Erie, two thousand two hundred dollars·. For dne superintendent for the life—saving and lifeboat stations on the coasts of Lakes Huron and Superior, two thousand two hundred dollars; For one superintendent for the life-saving and lifeboat station on the coast of Lake Michigan two thousand two hundred dollars; For one superintendent for the life-saving and lifeboat stations on the coasts of California, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska, two thousand two hundred dollars; rn all, twenty-seven thousand nine hundred dollars. K°°P°'°· For salaries of two hundred and ninety kee rs of life-saving and · lifeboat stations and of houses of refuge, two Ifirndred and seventy- six thousand eight hundred dollars. °*°“- For pay of crews of surfmen employed_at the life-saving and lifeboat stations, including the old Chicago station, at the rate of seventy dollars per mont each for the number one surfman in each station, and at the rate of sixty-five dollars per month for each of the other surfmen during the period of actual employment, and three dollars per day for each occasion of service at other times; °,°y{j*{:§;£j’“· °‘°·· rations or commutation thereof for keepers and surfmen; compensation of volunteers at lifesaving and lifeboat stations for actual and deserving service rendered upon any occasion of disaster or in any effort to save persons from drowning, at such rate, not to exceed ten dollars for each volunteer, as the Secreta of the Treasury may F“°‘·’*‘¤***"·°‘*‘· determine; pay of volunteer crews for drill and exercise; fuel for stations and houses of refuge; repairs and outfits for same; rebuilding and improvement of same, including use of additional land where necessary: supplies and provisions for houses of refuge and for shipwrecked persons succored at stations; traveling expenses of mj;·;;:;·*g,·Q·•***“ ‘** officers under orders from the Treasury Department; comrnutation ` i of quarters and allowance for heat and light for officers of the Reve- ¤¤*¤*>*“¤*°"·*‘**‘· nue—(‘utter Service detailed for duty in the Life-Savin Service; for W-*¢—r··*7· carrying out the provisions of sections seven and eight of the Act approved Mav fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two; for draft animals and their maintenance; for telephone lines and care of same; and contingent expenses, including freight, storage, rent, repairs to apparatus, labor, medals, stationery, newspapers for statistical purposes, advertising, and all other necessary expenses not included under any other head of life-saving stations on the coasts of the United States, two million and eighty-seven thousand and fortv dollars. . ` ¤* 5******* Not exceeding ten thousand five hundred dollars of the unexpended ` balance of appropriations for establishing new lifesaving stations and