Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/291

This page needs to be proofread.

FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 235. 1880. 26] For salaries of superintendents for the life-saving and life-boat stations, as follows: one on the coasts of Lakes Huron and Superior, and of one on the coast of Lake Michigan, at one thousand dollars each. For salary of one hundred and ninety-six keepers of life-saving and life-boat stations and of houses of refuge, at four hundred dollars each, seventy-eight thousand four hundred dollars. For pay of crews of experienced surfmen, employed at the lifesaving and life-boat stations, at a rate not to exceed forty dollars per month each, during the period of actual employment, three hundred and seventy-six thousand nine hundred and sixty dollars. For compensation of volunteer crews of life-boat stations, for actual and deserving service rendered upon each occasion of disaster, at such rate, not to exceed ten dollars for each person, as the Secretary of the Treasury may determine, and for pay of volunteer crews, for drill and exercise, five thousand dollars. Contingent expenses: For fuel for one hundred and ninety-six stations Contingent ox. and houses of refuge; repairs and outfits for the same; supplies and 1><>¤¤<>¤· provisions for houses of refuge and for shipwrecked persons succored at stations; traveling expenses of officers under orders from the Treasury Department; and contingent expenses, including freight, storage, repairs to apparatus, medals, labor, stationery, advertising, and miscellaneous expenses that cannot be included under any other head of lifegaying stations, on the coasts of the United States, sixty-five thousand o ars. ESTABLISHING LIFE-SAVING srAr10Ns. thew nfo-saving ‘ S Bi 10118. For establishing new life-saving stations and life-boat stations on the Appropriation. sea and lake coasts of the United States, twenty thousand dollars. REVENUE-GUTTER snnvion. mggggrrile-¤¤1tt¤`r Expenses of revenuecutter service: For pay of captains, lieutenants, engineers, cadets, and pilots, and for rations for the same; and for pay of petty-officers, seamen, cooks, stewards, boys, coal-passers, and firemen, and for rations for the same; and for fuel for vessels, repairs and outfits for same; ship-chandlery and engineers stores for same; traveling expenses of officers traveling on duty under orders from the Treasury Department; instruction of cadets; commutation of quarters ; and contingent expenses, ineludingwharfage, towage, dockage, freight, advertising, surveys, labor, and miscellaneous expenses, which cannot be included under special heads, eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars. ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. Prglrzggggmjgragg ) I ' For labor and expenses of engraving and printing, namely: For labor (by the day, piece, or contract), including labor of workmen skilled in engraving, transferring, plate-printing, and other specialties necessary for carrying on the work of engraving and printing notes, bonds, and other securities of the United States, the pay for such labor to be iixed by the Secretary of the Treasury at rates not exceeding the rates usually paid for such work; and for other expenses of engraving and printing notes, bonds, and other securities of the United tates; for materials, including paper required in the work of engraving and printing; for purchase of engravers’ tools, dies, rolls, and plates, and for machinery and repairs of same; and for expenses of operating maceratingmachines for the destruction of the United States notes, bonds, nationalbanknotes and other obligations of the United States authorized to be destroyed, three hundred and seventy-ive thousand dollars. Appropriation. LIGHT-HOUSE ESTAJBLISHMENT. t lliiggohopse es. · ‘ 8i IS 111011 . Keepers of light-houses: For salaries, fuel, rations, rent of quarters Keepers. (where necessary), and similar incidental expenses of nine hundred and