Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 24.djvu/630

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FORTY—NINTH CONGRESS. SEss. ll. Ch. 392. 1887. 597 gent Expenses of the Senate or from the contingent fund of the House of Representatives, unless sanctioned by the Committee on Accounts of the House of Representatives; and payments made upon vouchers ap- - Vouchers upproved by the respective committees shall be deemed, held, and taken, Pijoved by wmand are hereby declared to be conclusive upon all the departments and *° b° °°“· ' officers of the government ' For reporting the debates and proceedings of the Senate, twenty-tive Reporting u e - thousand dollars, payable in equal monthly installments. buss- CAPITOL POLICE. Capitol Police. For one captain, one thousand six hundred dollars ; three lieutenants Pay. at one thousand two hundred dollars each ; twenty-two privates, at one thousand one hundred dollars each; and eight watchmen, at nine hundred dollars each; in all, thirty-six thousand six hundred dollars, onehalf to be disbursed by the Secretary of the Senate and the other half to be disbursed by the Clerk of the House of Representatives. For contingent fund, one hundred dollars Contingent fund. CONGRESSIONAL m12EOT01m:. Ccngressionnlm. Tectory. For expenses of compiling, preparing, and indexing the Congressional Directory, to be expended under the direction of the Joint Committee on Public Printing, one thousand two hundred dollars. ` HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. mgggszvgf Rvp· For compensation of » Members of the House of Representatives and . Pay of Members Delegates from Territories, one million six hundred and ninety-tlve thou- Md D°l°s¤*¤¤- sand dollars. For mileage, one hundred and ten thousand six hundred and twenty- Mileage. four dollars. For compensation of the officers, clerks, messengers, and others in the Salaries. service of the House of Representatives, three hundred and eighty-eight thousand three hundred and sixty-three dollars and fifty cents, namely: UFFICE or THE S1·EAKE1z.—For private secretary to the speaker, BGSé?::]:,?: ,°m"‘;; twenty-one hundred and two dollars and forty cents; and for clerk to c1,,,k_ ° an the Speaker’s table, twenty-one hundred and two dollars and forty cents ; in all, forty-two hundred and four dollars and eighty cents._ For chaplain of the House, nine hundred dollars. Cl'“Pl‘““· · Ormon or THE CLEm:.·—For Clerk of the House of Representatives, H;“°'kc,°¥k t l* ° including compensation as disbursing officer of the contingent fund, u°°’ H °’°"°' four thousand five hundred dollars; and for hire of horses and wagons and cartage for the use of the Clerk’s Office, one thousand two hundred dollars; clerk to prepare the general index to the journals of Congress, underresolution of June eighteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-eight, two thousand five hundred dollars ; assistant for one year to person pre paring the general index to Journals of Congress, under the resolution of May twenty-second, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, two thousand dollars; for chief clerk, journal clerk, and two reading clerks, at three thousand and six hundred dollars each, and for the journal clerk for ` preparing Digest of the Rules, one thousand dollars per annum; tally clerk, three thousand dollars; for printing and bill clerk. and dislmrsing clerk, at two' thousand five hundred dollarseach; for tile clerk, und enrolling clerk, at two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars each ; for assistant disbursing clerk, assistant enrolling clerk, resolution and petition clerk, index clerk, superintendent of document room, and librarian, at two thousand dollars each; for distributing clerk and sta= tionery clerk, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each; for one bookkeeper and seven clerks, including three clerks to index private claims, at one thousand six hundred dollars each; for document clerk, locksmith, and two assistant librarians, at one thousand tour hundred