Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 33 Part 1.djvu/573

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FIFTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 17 62. 1904. 485 That all the powers now exercised by the Court of Private Land Lfnguglgigg *"“’¤*<* Claims in the approval of surveys executed under its decrees of con- rnwmponisr-mon firmation shall e conferred upon and exercised by the Commissioner g,?,1""Q§°('§§{c‘{,i G°"' of the General Land Office from and after the thirtieth day of June, nineteen hundred and four. For necessary expenses of survey, appraisal and sale of abandoned Ab¤¤<1¤¤<¤-1<>3- fifth, eighteen hunciied and eighty-four, and any law prior thereto, including a custodian of the ruin 0 Casa Grande, six thousand dollars. ¤•¤¤G¤·¤•’*¢· For pay of a custodian of Fort Sherman abandoned militar reser- mffgt ¤¤¤¤¤¤¤· vation, Idaho, four hundred and eighty dollars: Provided, 'llnat the mm. Secretary of the Interior -is hereby authorized, in his discretion, to set d»K§§f,§,‘}°§°g,§’?°“ gpart from the Fort Sherman abandoned military reservation in- the tate of Idaho, twenty acres of land on the southeast corner thereof, immediately west of the depot grounds, extending forty rods alon the lake front and eighty rods back, and the same is hereb muted and donated to the town of Coeur d’Alene, in the State of {dino, for the use or said municipality as a (public park, and which shall be used for such purpose exc usive?. hetit e of said land so detached is hereléygreste in the town o Coeur d’Alene for the purposes above 1 e . Splicor the reestablishment, by permanent and colpspieuous monuments, §‘Q‘f,§,”,£‘u§‘fL‘;, wm of the west boundary line of the State of South ota, the same being b°¤¤d·¤’ “¤°· the boundary line between the State of South Dakota and the States _ of Wyoming and Montana, an estimated distance of two hundred and six rmles, ata rate dp-)er mile to be fixed by the Secretary of the Interior, · twenty thousand llars, to be immediately available. · rmrmn surns emonoexon. srmvrr. ¤¤>1¤¤<=·¤ ¤¤¤¤r- Ormcm or mn Dmncroic or rm: G1·:o1.oe1cA1. Sruzvmr: For e,§P"""“ °"”'°°*"'· Director, six 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; three assistant photographers, one at nine hundred dollars, one atseven hundred and twenty dollars, and one at four hundred and eighty dollars; two 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-two thousand seven hundred and forty dollars; Scrmrrrrro Assisnxrs or rm: Grzonooxcu. Suavmr: For two geolo- S¤’°¤*“*° ¤¤*°°°·¤*¤ gists, at four thousand dollars each· - For one geologist, three thousand dollars; For one geologist two thousand seven hundred dollars; For two paleontoiogists, 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 ographers, at two thousand dollars each; in all, twenty- nine thousand) nine hundred dollars. Fon omrmiun nxrnxsns or rim GEOLOGICAL SURVEY: For the E‘*’°"“”· Geological Survey and the classification of the public lands and examination of the geological structure, mineral resources, and the products of the national domain, to continue the preparation of a geological map of the United States, gauging streams an determining the water supply, and for surveying forest reserves, including the