FOBTYTHIRD CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 275. 1874. 67 for the consular and diplomatic service approved May twenty-second, {$72, ch. 194, vol. eighteen hundred and seventy-two, ten thousand dollars. X"¤*» P· 142- _ For minister resident at Urugua.y, also accredited to Paraguay, tau Uruguay and pm. thousand dollars. ¤8¤¤y· For minister resident and consul-general to Hhyti, seven thousand Hajti. tive hundred dollars._ d {for minister resident and consul-general to Liberia, four thousand Libcrin- 0 ars. For chargés d’:é1ii'a.ires ad interim and diplomatic officers, abroad, forty Chhrgés ¢1’¤1i°=»ires, thousand dollars. &°~ For salaries to secretaries to legations at Loudon, Paris, Berlin, and Scprctarics of Saint Bctzarsburg, at two thousand six hundred and twenty-Eve dollars 1°·%’”·**°“· each, ten thousand five hundred dollars. Aud the Secretary of State is authorized to allow and pay to the secretary of legation and to the Auovqaqce to mpsccopd secretary of logation and to the messenger of the logation in *°'&*¤`¤°¤» &°·» *¤ Paris, hom the moneys collected at the legatiou tbr the tram mission of P“““‘ consular invoices, an amount not to exceed in the aggregate six hundred dollars in any one year, to be divided and distributed as. the Secretary of State. may direct, provided that the surplus receipts are sumcioutfor that purpose. For salary of secretary to lcgatiou ati‘Jnpan, two thousand flvo hundred dollars. _ ‘ ` For secretaries to legations at Austria, Brazil, Italy, Mexico, and Spain, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each, nine thousand dollurs. For second secretaries to lcgations at Great Britain, France, and Garmany, ma two thousand dollars each, six thousand dollars. For secretary to lcgation (acting also` as interpreter) at China, five thousand dollars. d 501* salary of the interpreter to legatiou in Turkey, three thousand Interpreters. o ars. For the interpreter to the logatiou at Japan, two thousand five hundred dollars. , To enable Robert G. Schenck, minister to Great Britain, to employ _Priv¤t<» smsnuena private amsmuensis, according to joint resolution approved January gmh *° 1;-*°b°’* C- plevcnthmightaeu hundred and seventy-ono, two thousand tivo hundred °1$‘1° }6s_ N 0 6 `¤]0HM' · vol. xv!i,p. 590. I I For contingent expenses of foreign intercourse proper and of all the Contingent cxmissious abroad, onc hundred thousand dollars, ‘ 1•¢¤¤¤¤- For consuls-general, consuls, vicwcousuls, commercial agents, and` Ccnsuis — general, thirteen cousular clerks, three hundred and sixt,y.fom· thousand jvg gzaignlsknconsulax hundred dollars; and the bonds which consular officers who are not Boggs fgwmum compensated by salaries are required by the thirteenth section of the act officers to be upof August eighteenth, eighteen hundred and fifty-six, to enter into, shall vicved by Secretary hereafter be made with such sumties as the Secretary of State shall °*F8*;5*·°éb 127 M3 a rove. — . . ‘ ’ .‘ ’ ’ pighat Schedules B and 0 in section three of theach entitled *‘An acia lskgglsggzgi 5;;% to regulate the diplomatic a.nd.c0usular systems of the United Sbp.tes_,” Schedules B and C. approved August eighteenth, eighteen hundred and iifby-six, shall, hom and after the first: day of July next, read as follows: , SCHEDULE B. The agent and consul-general at Cairo shall be entitled to compensa- Compensation of tion for his services at the rate of four thousand dollars por annum. :§g;‘;Eég°“°'”»1 °“‘ The cousuls-general at London, Paris, Havana, and Rio Janeiro shall ` cach_ be entitled to compensation for their services at the rata of six thousand dollars per annum. _` _ . The musulsgcucral at Calcutta and Shanghai shall each be entitled to compensation for their services at the ram of five thousand dollars per annum. _ The consul-general at Melbourne shall be entitled to compensation.