Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 26.djvu/315

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FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 667. 1890. 2612 ing 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 eight dollars each; in all, thirty-five thousand five hundred and forty dollars. CONTINGENT Exrnxsns INTERIOR DEPARTMENT: For contingent conangemxpeuan 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 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 fuel and lights, sevent -nve thousand dollars. For statione for the Depgrtment of the Interior and its several ¤¢¤¢i¤¤¤m Bureaus and dEces, inclug the Civil Service Commission and the Geological Survey, fifty thousand dollars. d Sor new books an books to complete broken sets, five hundred B<>¢>k¤- o ars. For; rent of buildings for the De artment of the Interior, Reutnamely: For the Bureau of Education, ibur thousand dollars; Geologica Survey, ten thousand dollars- Indian Office, five thousand five hundred dollars; General Land Cfiice, two thousand dollars ; in all, twenty-one thousand five hundred dollars. For postage-stam s for the Department of the Interior and its Postage- * Bureaus, as required under the Postal Union, to prepay posta e on matter addressed to Postal Union countries, four thousand dollars. sURvEYoRs-GENERAL AND THEIR oLmRKs: 8t§¤¤v¤y¤r¤·G¤¤¤¤k For surve or- eneral of the Territory of Arizona, two thousand ¤'*¤°¤*·· five hundredydodars; and for the clerks in his office, three thousand dollars; in all, five thousand five hundred dollars. For rent of office for the surveyor-general, pay of messengers, `_ fuel, books, stationery, and other incidental expenses, one thousand five hundred dollars. For surve or-general of California, two thousand seven hundred ¤¤¤f¤¤*¤·. and fifty dollars; and for the clerks in his office, ten thousand dollars; in all, twelve thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars. For books, stationery, ay of messenger, and other incidental ex penses, two thousand dollars. For surve or-general of the State of Colorado, two thousand five Coloradm hundred dollars; and for the clerks in his office, six thousand dollars; in all, eight thousand five hundred dollars. For rent of office for the surveyongeneral, fuel, books, stationery, ay of messenger, and other incidental expenses, one thousand five hundred dollars. For surveyor-general of North Dakota, two thousand dollars; and Nmh D¤k°¤ for the clerks in his office, ive thousand dollars; in all, seven thousand dollars For rent of office for the surveyor-general, fuel, books, stationery, and other incidental expenses, one thousand five hundred dollars. For surveyor-general of South Dakota, two thousand dollars; and S°“*~** Wm _ for the clerks in his office, seven thousand five hundred dollars; in all, nine thousand five hundred dollars. For rent of office for the surveyor-general, fuel, books, stationery, and other incidental expenses. one thousand five hundred dollars.