Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 29.djvu/597

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FIFTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 265. 1897. 567 For a clerk of class four, to act as census clerk, and for rent, salaries, C°¤¤¤¤ dak- ¤*¢· heat and light incident to the proper care and preservation of the records of the Eleventh and previous censuses, six thousand eight hundred dollars, to be immediately available. OFFICE or ASSISTANCl‘ A·rronNax*-Gmnnnxn: For assistant attor- G,g;*,f,E:¤(§;g:°¤¤¥· ney, two thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; assistant attorney, ` two thousand five hundred dollars; two assistant attorneys, at two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars each; thirteen assistant attor neys, at two thousand dollars each; three clerks of class three, one of ` whom shall act as stenographer; one clerk of class one; and one clerk, gin? hundred dollars; in all, forty-two thousand six hundred and fifty o ars. For per diem in lieu of subsistence of one special land inspector con- mfgjcfjgm- °*°·· md nected with the administration of the public land service, while travel- ` ing on duty, at a rate to be iixed by the Secretary of the Interior, not exceeding three dollars per day, and for actual necessary expenses of transportation, two thousand dollars, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior. Gmwnnn. LAND Orman: For the Commissioner of the General °•=¤¤¤¤·¤¤<>*¤¤·- Land Oillce, five thousand dollar ; Assistant Commissioner to he appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, who shall be authorized to sign such letters, papers, and documents, and to perform such other duties as may be directed by the Commissioner, and shall act as Commissioner in the absence of that otltieer or in case of a vacancy in the office of Commissioner, three thousand five hundred dollars; chief clerk, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; two law clerks, at two thousand two hundred dollars each; three inspectors of surveyors-general and district land offices, at two thousand dollars each; recorder, two thousand dollars; ten chiefs of division, at two thousand dollars each; two law examiners, at two thousand dollars each; ten principal examiners of land claims and contests, at two thousand dollars each; thirty-one clerks of class four; fifty-seven clerks of class three; fifty-nine clerks of class two: sixty-one clerks of class one; forty-nine clerks, at one thousand dollars each; fifty-five copyists; two messengers; nine assistant messengers; twelve laborers: and six packers, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; in all, Soar hundred and eighty-eight thousand eight hundred and fifty ollars. For per diem in lieu of subsistence of inspectors and of clerks detailed ,,_f§‘;·f,mg '"·· *'* to in vesti gate fraudulent land entries, trespas es on the public lands, and cases of official misconduct; also of clerks detailed to examine the books of and assist in opening new land offices, while traveling on duty, at a rate to be fixed by the Secretary of the Interior, not exceeding three dollars per day, and for actual necessary expenses of transportation, seven thousand dollars. For law books for the law library of the General Land Office, four L"' "°°"’~ hundred dollars. For connected and separate United States and other maps prepared M“*"‘ in the General Land Office, fourteen thousand eight hundred and forty dollars, and of the• United States maps nine hundred and seventy-six copies shall be delivered to the General Land Office, tour thousand six hundred and sixty-four copies shall be delivered to the Senate, and nine thousand three hundred and sixty copies shall be delivered to the House of Representatives for distribution. _ _ Mum msrncrons: For salaries of two mine inspectors, authorized Q.‘,;{;6m;Pffg,°”· by the Act approved March third, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, for' - ` the protection of the lives of miners in the Territories, at two thousand dollars per annum each, four thousand dollars. For per diem, subiect to such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, in lieu of subsistence at a rate not exceeding three dollars per day each, while absent from their homes on duty, and for actual necessary traveling expenses of said in spectors, three thousand three hundred and fifty dollars.