Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 17.djvu/102

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62 FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. Sess. II. C11. 140. 1872. ceive no fees, &c. whatever for performing the duties of the office, or in connection therewith, otherwise than as aforesaid; assistant doorkeeper, two thousand five hundred and ninety-two dollars; postmaster to the Senate, two thousand one hundred dollars; assistant postmaster and mail-carrier, one thousand seven hundred and twenty-eight dollars; two mail-carriers, at one thousand two hundred dollars each; superintendent of the document—room, two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars; two assistants in document-room, at one thousand four hundred and forty dollars each; superintendent of the folding-room, ·two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars ; three messengers, acting as assistant doorkeepers, at one thousand eight hundred A!>I><>i¤¢¤¤¤¤¢ dollars each; twenty messengers, to be appointed and remoyed by the gggmggmuggggegi sergeant-at-arms, with the approval of the 00mm1lb6G to audit and congsrs. trol the contingent expenses of the Senate, at one thousand four hundred and forty dollars each; secretary to the president of the Senate, two thousand one hundred and two dollars and forty cents; clerk to the committee on finance, two thousand two hundred and twenty dollars; clerk to the committee on claims, two thousand two hundred and twenty dollars ; clerk of printing records, two thousand two hundred and twenty dollars ; clerk to committee on appropriations, two thousand two hundred and twenty dollars ; one laborerrin charge of private passage, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; one laborer in stationery-room, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; one special policeman, one thousand dollars; chaplain to the Senate, nine hundred dollars; chief engineer, two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars ; three assistantpiigineers, at one thousand four hundred and forty dollars each ; two firemen, at one thousand and ninety-five dollars each; three laborers, at seven hundred and thirty dollars each ; making, in all, one hundred and twenty thousand two hundred and twenty-eight dollars and eighty cents. Temporary For temporary clerks in the office of the secretary of the Senate, ten °l“k*· thousand dollars. C<>¤fi¤g¢¤¢ 6X- For contingent expenses of the Senate, viz. :-— P°§i;2§0w,y md For stationery and newspapers for seventy-four senators, at the rate of newspapers. one hundred and twenty-five dollars each per annum, nine thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. For stationery for committees and officers, Eve thousand dollars. _ m$;’;;f“ °° °°m` For clerks to committees, twenty-five thousand dollars. Pages, &¤. For fourteen pages for the Senate-chamber, two riding pages, one page for the Vice-Presidentfs room, and one page for the office of the secretary of the Senate, making eighteen pages in all, at the rate of three dollars Appommmt per day while actually employed, said pages to be appointed and removed and removal of by the sergeant-at arms, with the approval of the committee to audit and P"€°’~ control the contingent expenses of the Senate, eight thousand dollars. Homes, &¤· For horses and carryalls, seven thousand dollars. £¤<*>l·_£$¤¤· I For fuel and oil for the heating-apparatus, eight thousand dollars ; for boryugg ur°’ °` furniture and repairs of furniture, five thousand dollars; for labor, thi1‘— I _ teen thousand dollars; for folding documents, and materials therefor, eight P¤°kmG`°°X°¤· thousand dollars; for packing-boxes, seven hundred and forty dollars; for _ _ miscellaneous items, exclusive of labor, thirty thousand dollars. G03x52E3g; M For the usual additional compensation to the reporters of the Senate for ,.,,,0,;.,,,, s,, gm- the Congressional Globe, for reporting the proceedings of the Senate zréssivual Gl<>b¤· for the session of the forty-second Congress, beginning on the first Monday in December, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, eight hundred _ _ dollars each, four thousand dollars. C**P**°l P°h°°· Oapitol Police. — For one captain, two thousand and eighty-eight dollars ; three lieutenants, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each ; twenty-seven privates, at one thousand five hundred and' eighty-four dollars each, forty-two thousand seven hundred and sixty-eight dollars; and eight watchmen, at one thousand dollars each, eight thousand dollars; I¤f<> Wim funds making, in all, fifty-eight thousand two hundred and fifty-six dollars, one-