Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/1052

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1000 FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. Il. Ch. 830. 1901. benefit of agriculture and mechanic arts, established under the rovl.1.12.p. sin visions of an Act of Congress approved July second, eighteen hundéred and sixty-two, one thousand eig t hundred dollars. , Bwk~.<·t<‘- For books for librarv, current educational periodicals, other current publicatioinsi, and completing valuable sets of periodicals, two hundred and fiftv 0 lars. Srarisriva For collecting statistics for special reports and circulars of information, two thousand five hundred dollars. 1>¤¤¤i¤¤¤¤¤. ¢¢¤·· For the purchase, distribution, and exchange of educational docud°°um°m` ments, and for the collection, exchange, and cataloguing of educational apparatus and appliances, text-books and educational reference books, articles of school furniture and models of school buildings illustrative of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education,·and for procuring anthiippological inlstrutpieéitg cg precision, and for repairing the same, two thousand five un re dollars. RQg££*S¤i<>¤°’°‘ Orrion or Comivnssioivnn or RA1LnoA1>s: For Commissioner, four 81thousand five hundred. dollars; bookkeeper, one thousand six hundred dollars; one clerk of class two; one clerk, one thousand dollars; and one assistant messenger; in all, nine thousand two hundred and twenty {)’*H;1’g;j<;émiuat€d_ dollars: Pro/vided, That the office of Commissioner of Railroads is hereby continued until the thirtieth day of June, nineteen hundred G and two, when the same shall terminate, and the duties of the Commissioner shall be transferred to the Secretary of the Interior, together with the records and files of the office. ` Agenaecvsorme, Orrion or THE ARCHITECT or THE CAr1ToL: For Architect, four C*`**“°°l· thousand five hundred dollars; chief clerk and assistant, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, and said officer hereafter in case of the absence or disability of the Architect shall have full power and authority to do and perform all the acts which the Architect might himself do, and in case of a vacancy shall perform the duties of the Architect until the vacancy shall be filled according to law; draftsman, one thousand eight hundred dollars; compensation todisbursing clerk, one thousand dollars; one assistant messenger; person in charge of the heating of the Supreme _Court and central portion of the Capitol, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; laborer in charge of water-closets in central portion of the Capitol, six hundred and sixty dollars; three l&DO1`B1‘S for cleaning Rotunda, 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; in all, fifteen thousand two hundred and fourteen dollars. G<>¤¢i¤s<>¤¤€¤p€¤S¤S- F on GONTINGENT Exrnnsns or THE DEPARTDIENT or THE INTEn1oR, NAMELY: For contingent expenses of the office of the Secretary of the Interior and the bureaus, offices, and buildings of the Interior Department, including the Civil Service Commission: For furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, telegraphing, expressage, wagons and harness, food and shoeing of horses, diagrams, awnings, constructing model and other cases, cases for drawings, file holders, repairs of cases and furniture, and other absolutely necessary expenses, including fuel and lights, ninety thousand dollars. _ For stationery for the Department of the Interior and its several blpreausdand offices, including the Civil Service Commission, sixty thousand dollars. For professional and scientific books, law books, and books to complete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and other books of reference 1(iellating to the business of the Department, seven hundred and fifty 0 lars. mm:. For rent of buildings for the Department of the Interior, namely: For the Bureau_of Education, four thousand dollars; Geological Survey, ten thousand dollars; additional rooms for the engraving and printing divisions of the Geological Survey, one thousand two hundred