Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 41 Part 1.djvu/218

 SIXTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 24. 1919. 197 the State of Utah, and the $5,000 for construction of a wagon road {{;’¤°,g”§,,;Qgg °¤· through the said reservation, acpprogriated by the Indian Ap ropria- Vo1P4%.1i)-581 ` tion Act for the fiscal year en ing une 30, 1919 (Fortieth Statutes at Large, page 587), are hereby reappropriated and made available for the fiscal year ending Jime 30, 1920, reimbursable as provided in _ the Act aforesaid: Provided, That should the cost of the proposed §Q'§’{fi'{§;k,,, 0,, use bridge exceed $10,000 no part of the money herein sgppropriated shall M bridge be expended until the Secretary of the Interior sh have obtained from the proper authorities of the State of Utah satisfactory guaranties of the payment ng the said State of any and all exipenses above that amount and at the {proper authorities of the said State shall assume full responsibility or, and will at all times maintain and repair, said bridge and approaches thereto. Umrnn sryrns enonoercar. srmvnr. G°°1°g‘°°IS“"°" Office of Director: Director, $6,000; chief clerk, $2,500; disbursing a§a]m°s' D”°°t°r’ clerk, $2,500; librarian, $2,000; photoggapher, $2,000; assistant photographers-one $900, one $720; cler —one of class two, three of class one, one $1,000, four at $900 each· four copyists, at $720 each; four messenger boys, at $480 each; in all, $31,020; Sd tm msmts Scientific assistants: Geologists—two at $4,000 each, one $3,000, °° ° ' one $2,700; two paleontologists, at $2,000 each; chemist, $3,000; geograpl1ers—one $2,700, one $2,500; two topographers, at $2,000 eacG€; malall, $29,900;F dl f d d t G mgmm ner ex nses: or every expen `ture requisite oran inci en Y§§f"{§’ _ 25, to the authorliged work of the Geological Survey, including personal P services in the District of Columbia and in the field, including not to V exceed $10,000 for the purchase and exchange, and not to exceed °“°1°°‘ $30,000 for the hire, maintenance, repair, and oppration of motorpropelled and horse-drawn passengepcarrying ve `cles for field use only by geologists, topogra hers, engineers, and land classifiers, to be expen ed tmder the regiilations from time to time prescribed by by the Secretary of the Interior, and under the following heads: For pay of sldlled laborers and various temporary employees, °““°° '“"°'°”·°’°· _ T0p0gI‘lQhlG SUP For topographic surveys in various portions of the United States, wereincluding lands in national forests, $325,000; Gum, ,,,,.,,,,,_ For geologic surveys in the various portions of the United States, $347,073.50; . Gwmwmd pmb For chemical and physical researches relating to the geology of the an marches. United States, including researches with a view o determming P°'·•*'* °°¤°°“’· gzlological conditions favorable to the presence of deposits of potas s ts, $40,000; $ For preparation of the illustrations of the Geological Survey, m“’°'°¤°“` 18,280; _ For preparation of reports of the mineral resources of the United P,,,*??°'°1 r°` States, $110,000; _ Amb. n_ For continuation of the investigation of the mineral resources of wma. Alaska, $75,000, to be available immediateli; wm, sum, For  streams and determining e water suppl? of $119 ` United tates, the investigation of underground currents an artesian wells, and the preparation of reports upon the best methods of ntiliz- nming the water resources, $175,000, of which $25,000 may be used_to B°’*°* test the existence of artesian and other water supplies suigble for irrigation in the arid and semsand regions by boring we. mm, Ijor purchase of neces books for the library,’includingVd1repc· ' tones and professional anhiiyscieutific periodicals neededpfor statst1calpurposes,$2,000; _ _ _ _ .>  ,