Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/556

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526 FIF1'Y—NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 3561. 1906. For pay of assistant plumber, nine hundred dollars; For pay of one scavenger, at sixty dollars a month, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For compensation of chapel organist, two hundred dollars; For pay of superintendent of post cemetery, one thousand two hundred dollars· For pay Jr engineer and janitor for Memorial Hall, nine hundred dollars· For pay of printer at headquarters United States Military Academy, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of one assistant printer at headquarters, United States Military Academy, to be selected and appointed by the superintendent, seven hundred and twenty dollars;' For pay of one janitress, Memorial Hall, six hundred dollars; For pay of one master mechanic, one thousand eight hundred dollars; For pay of attendant and skilled photographer in the department of drawing, one thousand dollars· For pay of one typewriter, copyist, and attendant in charge of the library in the department of law and history, seven hundred and fifty dollars• For l of one steno her and t pewriter in the adjutant’s office, WY 8'mP Y seven hundred and twenty dollars; For pay of one everseer of the waterworks, five hundred and forty dollars; For pay of engineer of steam, electric and refrigerating apparatus for the cadets’ mess, one thousand two hhndred dollars; For pay of one assistant engineer of steam, electric, and refricrerating apparatus for the cadets’ mess, seven hundred and twenty dollars; or pay of one copyist, typewriter, and attendant in the department of modern languages, seven hundred and fifty dollars; In all, to civilians employed at Military Academy, fifty-seven thousand nine hundred and twenty ollars. “““'°“*°"P°"**"· For current and ordinary expenses as follows: B"'“'d °*V““”’*· hl<`or expenses of thel Board of Visitors, including mileage, three thousand five hundred ollars• · Contingencies for superintendent of the academy, two thousand dollars; ` R¤P¤¤¤· ew- Repairs and improvements, namely: Timber, planks, boards, joists, wall strips, laths, shingles, slate, tin, sheet lead, zinc, nails, screws, locks, hinges, glass, paints, turpentinc, oils, varnish, brushes, stone, brick, flag, lime, cement, plaster hair, sewer and drain pipe, blasting powder, fuse, iron, steel, tools, machinery, mantels, and other similar materials, renewing roofs, and for pay of architect overseer and citizen mechanics. and labor employed upon repairs and improvements that can_ not be done by enlisted men, forty thousand dollars; FW'- ¤°¢· B or fuel and apparatus, namely: Coal, wood, charcoal, stoves, grates, heaters, f_urnaces, ranges and lixtures, lire bricks, clay, sand, and for repairs ot steam heating and coabconveying apparatus, grates, stoves, heaters, ranges, and furnaces, mica, thirty thousand dollars; _ F or gas pipes, gas and electric lixtures, electric lamps, telephone and lighting supplies, lamp·posts, gasometers and retorts, and annual repairs ot the same, two thousand five hundred dollars; (préfnel for cadets’ mess hall, shops, and laundry, fourteen thou— san dollars; g,§§,§:"g° ’"‘° °°l°' For postage and telegrams, three hundred and fifty dollars; S*¤¤<>¤¤¤’· For stationery, namely: Blank book s, paper, envelopes, quills, steel pens, rubbers. erasers. pencils, mucilage, wax, wafers, folders, fasteners, rules, files, mk, inkstands, typewriters, typewriting supplies, office furniture, penholders, tape, desk knives, blotting pads, and rnbber bands, one thousand Eve hundred dollars;