Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 10.djvu/567

 THIRTY-—THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 242. 1854. 547 For compensation and mileage of members of the House of Representatives, and delegates from Territories, three hundred and forty-four thousand eight hundred dollars; For compensation of the officers, clerks, messengers, and others receiving an annual salary, in the service of the Senate, fifty-seven thousand and ten dollars ; Y For compensation of the officers and clerks of the House of Representatives, thirty-four thousand four hundred and sixty dollars. For the contingent expenses of the Senate, viz: For binding, thirty-tive thousand dollars ; For lithographing and engraving, forty-ive thousand dollars ; For books, ten thousand dollars; For stationery, fifteen thousand dollars ; For newspapers, two thousand six hundred dollars; For Congressional Globe, and binding the same, sixty-five thousand dollars; For reporting proceedings, thirteen thousand dollars; For clerks to committees, pages, police, horses, and carryalls, thirty thousand dollars ; For miscellaneous items, thirty thousand dollars ; For paper and printing of the Senate, eighty-tive thousand dollars: Provided, That whenever, in the opinion of the Joint Committee on Proviso as to Printing, the character of any document ordered to be printed may Sm if d°°“· render such change necessary and proper, the size of the page may be mm ` changed from octavo to quarto form; but in no case shall the prices to be paid for composition and press-work exceed, pro rata, those established by the printing act of August the twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and fifty-·two, for the printing of Congressional documents. For the contingent expenses of the House of Representatives, viz : For binding documents, thirty-nine thousand three hundred and seventy-five dollars ; For furniture and repairs, three thousand eight hundred and seventy- five dollars ; For stationery for members, fifteen thousand dollars; For twenty-one messengers, twenty thousand dollars; For horses and carriages, four thousand and fifteen dollars; For fuel, oil, and candles, three thousand dollars; For newspapers for members, twelve thousand five hundred dollars; For engraving and lithographing, seventy thousand dollars; For Capitol police, three thousand five hundred and sixty dollars ; For miscellaneous items, twenty thousand dollars ; For messenger in charge of hall, one thousand four hundred and fifty dollars ; For two messengers in clerk’s office, three thousand dollars ; For saddle horses, eight hundred dollars; For laborers, two thousand five hundred dollars ; For pages, four thousand Eve hundred dollars; For folding documents, seven thousand five hundred dollars ; For paper and printing of the House, one hundred and twelve thousand seven hundred and twenty-one dollars. Library of Congress.- For compensation of librarian, two assistant Library, librarians, and messenger, four thousand five dollars ; For contingent expenses of said library, one thousand dollars; For purchase of books for said library, five thousand dollars; For purchase of law books for said library, two thousand dollars ; ’ For the completion and the publication of the works of Thomas Jeffer- Works o1’Tho¤, son, and pay of the editor of said work, seven thousand two hundred ~l°H°"°”· dollars ; To enable the Joint Committee on the Library of Congress to replace