Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 24.djvu/261

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226 FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. C11. 902. 1886. Life~saving sta- LIFE-SAVING STATIONS tions. Superintendents’ For salaries of superintendents for the life-saving stations as follows: · ¤°l°"i°*· On the coasts of Maine and New Hampshire, one, and on the coast of Massachusetts, one, at one thousand five hundred dollars each; on the coasts of Rhode Island, and Long Island, one, at one thousand eight hundred dollars; of one assistant superintendent on the coasts of Rhode Island and Long Island, who shall reside on the mainland of the State of Bhode Island one thousand dollars. For salary of one superintendent on the coast of New Jersey one thousand eight hundred dollars. For salaries of superintendents on the coasts of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, one. at one thousand five hundred dollars; on the coasts of Virginia and North Carolina, one, at one thousand eight hundred dollars. ` For salary of one superintendent of life-saving stations and for the houses of refuge on the coasts of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida one thousand two hundred dollars; of one superintendent for the lifesaving and life-boat stations on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, one thousand five hundred dollms ; and of one on the coasts of Lakes Ontario and Erie, one thousand eight hundred dollars. For salaries of superintendents for the life-saving and life-boat stations, one on the coasts of Lakes Huron and Superior, one on the coast of Lake Michigan and one on the coasts of Washingrton Territory, Oregon and California, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each. Keepers. For salaries of two hundred and twenty three keepers of life-saving and lifeboat stations and of houses of refuge, one hundred and fifty-six thousand one hundred dollars. crews. For pay of crews of surfinen employed at the life-saving and lifeboat . stations during the period of actual employment; compensation of volunteers at lifesaving and lifeboatstations, for actual and deserving service rendered upon any occasion of disaster, or in any effort to save persons nom drowning, at such rate, not to exceed ten dollars for each Miscella n eo ur volunteer, as the Secretary of the Treasury may determine; pay of vol- •=¤1»e¤se¤. unteer crews for drill and exercise; fuel for stations and houses of refuge; repairs and outiits for same; rebuilding and improvement of same; supplies and provisions for houses of refuge and for shipwrecked persons succored at stations; traveling expenses of officers under orders from the Treasury Department; for carrying out the provisions of sec- Vol. 22, p. 57. tions seven and eight of the act approved May fourth eighteen hundred and eighty two; for draught animals and maintenance of same; and contingent expenses, including freight, storage, repairs to apparatus, medals, labor, stationery, advertising and miscellaneous expenses that cannot be included under any other bead of life-saving stations on the goalsts of the United States, seven hundred and thirty-eight thousand o ars. New stations- For establishing new lifesaving stations and lifeboat stations on the sea and lake coasts of the United States, authorized by law, forty thousand dollars. _ _€_§_‘;;':f‘“° °““°" nnvnsns-currsu snuvicn. Salaries and ex- For expenses of the Revenue-Cutter Service: For pay of captains, Wnses. lieutenants engineers, cadets, and pilots employed, and for rations for the same; for pay of petty officers, seamen, cooks, stewards, boys, coalpassers and Bremen, and for rations for the same; for fuel for vessels. and repairs and outfits for the same; ship-chandlery and engineers’ stores for the same; travelling expenses of officers travelling on duty under orders from the Treasury Department; instruction of cadets; commutation of quarters; contingent expenses including wharfage, towage, dockagc, freight, advertising surveys, labor and miscellaneous