Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/767

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 384. 1910. 743 UNITED sryrus GEOLOGICAL sURvr1Y. Geological Survey. Oilice of the Director of the Geological Survey: For director, six e“§°J¤*’i°¤°‘Di¤°°*¤*· thousand dollars; chief clerk, two thousand five hundred dollars; ` chief disbursing clerk, two thousand five hundred dollars; librarian, two thousand dollars; photographer, two thousand dollars; two assistant photographers, one at nine hundred dollars and one at seven hundred and twenty dollars; one clerk of class two; three clerks of class one; one clerk, one thousand dollars; four clerks,`at nine hundred dollars each; four copyists, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; watchman, eight hundred` and forty dollars; four watchmen, at six hundred dollars each; janitor, six hundred dollars; four messengers, at four hundred and eighty dollars each; in all, thirty-four thousand eight hundred and sixty dollars; Scientific assistants of the Geological Survey: For two geologists, et§¤i¢¤¤¤¤¤¤¤i¤*¤¤t · at four thousand dollars each; ` For one geologist, three thousand dollars; · For one geologist, 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 to graphers, at two thousand dollars each; in all, twenty- nine thousango nine hundred dollars; General expenses of the Geological Survey: For every ex(penditure E¤P°¤¤¤¤· requisite for and incident to the authorized work of the eological Survey, including personal services in the District of Columbia and in the field, to be expended under the regulations from time to time prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, and under the following eads, name y: For pay of skilled laborers and various temporary employees, $k*"°<*l***><>*¤¤‘¤· twenty thousand dollars; For topographic surveys in various ortions of the United States, ve'§,§’°¤'”P“’° ““"’ tlggee hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be immediately availa e; For geologic surveys in the various portions of the United States, G¢<>*¤¢*¤ ¤¤¤v¤Y¤· three hundred thousand dollars, to be immediately available; For chemical and physical researches relating to the geolog of the icghétggxgd P¤¥·· United States, twenty thousand dollars; " For the preparation of the illustrations of the Geological Survey, m¤=¤*¤¢*·>¤S- eighteen thousand two hundred and eighty dollars; For the preparation of the report ol the mineral resources of the m“°""'“°“'°°" United States, seventy-five thousand dollars; For gauging the streams and determining the water supply of the w‘“°‘ ”“"*’1" United States, and for the investigation of underground currents and artesian wells and the preparation of reports u on the best methods gf lptilizing the water resources, one hundred) and fifty thousand o ars; For the purchase of necessary books for the library, including direc- B°°*”- °‘°- tories and professional and scientific periodicals needed for statistical purposes, two thousand dollars; For engraving and printing the geological maps, one hundred thou- “*’·P°· sand dollars; . So much of the Act establishing a Bureau of Mines, approved May l_i;§g“°*“'“‘ '”°·"°‘ sixteenth, nineteen hundred and ten, as transfers to said Bureau the Transfer or york ro supervision of the investigations of structural materials and equip- Ql§',,§,'$ °f M""’s m` ment therefor is repealed; A”‘°· P- 37** For continuation of the topogra hic surveys of the public lands ,,§:_“°°‘“"'°“"°"" that have been or mag hereafter lie designated as national forests, seventy-five thousand ollars, to be immediately available; In all, for the United States Geolo °cal Surve, one million one hundred and seventy-five thousand andlfifteen dollars.