Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/828

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

FHFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 177. 1895. 799 laborers for cleaning retunda, corridors, and dome, at six hundred and sixty dollars each; two laborers in charge of public closets of the House of Representatives and in the terrace, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; seven watchmen employed on the Capitol grounds, at eight hundred and forty dollars each; in all, twenty thousand six " hundred and forty-four dollars. Onnrcu or run Dmncron or run Gnonoercn. Sunvnrz For G°°*°¤‘°¤* S¤¤*¤v· Director, Eve thousand dollars; chief clerk, two thousand two hundred and nity dollars; chief disbursing clerk, two thousand four hundred dollars; librarian, two thousand dollars; one photographer, two thousand dollars; three assistant photographers, one at nine hundred dollars, one at seven 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; one watchman, eight hundred and forty dollars; four watchmen, at six hundred dollars each; one janitor, six hundred dollars; four messengers, at four hundred and eighty ·(;l¢;1llars each; inall, thirty-one thousand three hundred and ninety dollars. For contingent expenses of the omce of the Secretary of the Interior 0¤¤¤¤s¤¤*¤¤1>¤¤¤¤¤ and the bureaus, omces, and buildings of the Interior Department, including the Civil Service Commission: For furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, tolegraphiug, expressage, wagons and harness, food and shoeing for horses, diagrams, awnings, constructing model and other cases, cases for drawings, file holders, repairs of cases and furniture, and other absolutely necessary expenses, including incl and lights, seventy~three thousand dollars. _ For stationery for the Department of the Interior and its several S*¤•=i<>¤•¤y- bureaus and omces, including the Civil Service Commission and the Geological Survey, fifty-two thousand five hundred dollars. For professional and scientiiic books and books to complete broken umn sets, five hundred dollars. For rent of buildings for the Department of the Interior, namely: Rent For the Bureau of Education, four thousand dollars; Geological Survey, ten thousand dollars; Indian Omoe, six thousand dollars; storage of documents, two thousand dollars; Civil Service Commission, four thousand dollars; Patent Omoe model exhibit, thirteen thousand dollars; stables for the Department, one thousand five hundred dollars; in all, forty thousand five hundred dollars. _ For postage stamps for the Department of the Interior and its bureaus, P·>¤¤c¤· as required under the Postal Union, to prepay postage on matter adressed to Postal Union countries, three thousand dollars. ` SURVEYOBS-GENERAL AND THEIR CLERKS. °uSurveyors·general, For surveyor-general of the Territory of Arizona, two thousand dol- A"’°“ lars; and for the clerks in his omoe, five thousand dollars; in all, seven thousand dollars. ‘ For rent of omce for the surveyor-general, pay of messenger, fuel, books, stationery, and other incidental expenses, one thousand dollars. _ For surveyor- general of California, two thousand dollars; and for the °“l‘f°"‘"" glepks in his omce, twelve thousand dollars; in all, fourteen thousand ol ars. For books, pay of messenger, stationery, and other incidental expenses, one thousand five hundred dollars. For surveyor-general of the State of Colorado, two thousand dollars; C°'°¤“°~ and for the clerks in his omce, eight thousand five hundred dollars; in all, ten thousand ilve hundred dollars. For rent of omce for the surveyorgeneral, fuel, books, pay of mes senger, stationery, and other incidental expenses, two thousand tive hundred dollars.