Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/1212

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1160 FIFTY-sixT11 ooivomiss. sm. 11. os. ssa. 1901. Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, the Territories of Arizona and New Mexico, and the district of Alaska, there may be allowed, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, for the sur- _ vey and resurvey of lands heavily timbered, mountainous, or covered _ with dense undergrowth, rates not exceeding twenty-five dollars per linear mile for standard and meander lines, twenty-three dollars for elgggggyngyfggecgg; township, and twenty dollars for section lines. The provisions of seciimesa of the mnt in tion twenty-four hundred and eleven, Revised Statutes of the United 2,‘Q$§,‘§§€’§"l§“L}{§’,{‘$§ Etates, authoigzgng algpvweanple fcg surveysip galiforniai alnd Oregon arg Smss- ereb exten e toa o the a ove-name tates an erritories an §é§{£1$g§§ju1’p`441' distridl. And of the sum hereby appro riated there may be expended such an amount as the Commissioner of) the General Land Office may deem necessary for examination of public surveys in the several surveying districts, by such competent surveyors as the Secretary of the Interior may select, or by suc competent surveyors as he inay authorize the surveyor—general to select, at such compensation, not exceeding six dollars per day, and such per diem allowance in lieu of subsistence, not exceeding three dollars, while engaged in field examinations, as he may prescribe, in order to test the accuracy of the work in the field, an to prevent payment for fraudulent and imperfect surveys returned by deputy surveyors, and for examinations of surveys heretofore made and reported to be defective or fraudulent, and inspecting mineral ~ deposits, coal fields, and timber districts, and for makin by such competent surveyors such fragmentary surveys, and such otgier surveys or examinations as may be required for identification of lands for urposes of evidence in any suit or proceeding in behalf of the United) States. mgggafrlxg Prime For survey ofjprivate land claims in the States of Colorado, Nevada, ` W yomin , and tah, and in the Territories of Arizona and New Mexico, V<>i-26»r·854- confirmed under the provisions of the Act of Congress entitled "An Act to establish a Court of Private Land Claims, and to provide for the settlement of private land claims in certain States and Territories," approved March third, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, and for the resurvey of such private Sand claims heretofore confirmed as may be deemed necessary, ten thousand dollars, said sum to be also available for pfhpelgvork on such surveys and for the examination of the surveys in the e . rggggggzid miumr For necessary expenses of survey, appraisal, and sale of abandoned ' military reservations transferred to the control of the Secretary of the "°l· 23- P-103 Interior under the provisions of an Act of Congress approved Julv fifth, Cm Gmnds- eighteen hundred and eighty-four, and any law prior thereto, includinria custodian of the ruin of Casa Grande, six thousand dollars. v§;>£S?;·>$)¤¤ Rem- or pay of a custodian of Fort Sherman abandoned military reserva- 'tion, Idaho, four hundred and eighty dollars. . m};$}*;;;j,j_°¤*‘> Nr For survey of and marking, under the direction of the Secretary of _Mark1¤g bounce- the Interior, the unsurveye portions of the northern and western ,~ rm boundaries of the Yellowstone N ational Park, estimated at sixty miles, at not exceeding fifty dollars per mile, three thousand dollars, and for the examination of said survey in the field, three hundred dollars; in all, three thousand three hundred dollars. G<>¤1¤gic¤1S¤¤·er- Uxrrnn srarns GEOLOGICAL sonvnr. §,“;}*;'§$;, em Ormon or THE Dmnocron or run GEOLOGIGAL Srmvnr: For Director, six thousand dollars; chief clerk, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; chief disbursing clerk, two thousand four hundred dollars; librarian, two thousand dollars; photographer, two thousand dollars; three assistant photographers, one at nine hundred dollars, _ one at seven hundred an twenty dollars, and one at four hundred and eighty dollars; two clerks of class one; one clerk, one thousand dol-