Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 14.djvu/471

 THIRTY—NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 166. 1867. 441 dollars each; one page, at seven hundred and twenty dollars; sergeant- Payofoilicm at-arms and doorkeeper, two thousand four hundred dollars; assistant &°·°f S°““*°· doorkeeper, two thousand and forty 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 boys, at one thousand two hundred dollars each; superintendent of the document room, one thousand eight hundred dollars; two assistants in document room, at one thousand four hundred and forty dollars each; superintendent of the folding room, one thousand eight hundred dollars; three messengers, acting as assistant doorkeepers, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each; seventeen messengers, at one thousand four hundred .and forty dollars each; clerk or 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 to the committee on printing records, two thousand two hundred and twenty dollars; superintendent in charge of the furnaces, one thousand four hundred and forty dollars; assistant in charge of furnaces, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; laborer in charge of private passages, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; two laborers, at eight hundred and sixty-four dollars each; chaplain to the Senate, nine hundred dollars; one special policeman, eight hundred- and sixty-four dollars; making ninety-eight thousand seven hundred and four dollars and eighty cents. For contingent expenses of the Senate, viz :— Contingent sx- For stationery, twenty-five thousand dollars. P°§‘;°:: For newspapers, five thousand dollars. N:w;°,il:£,T,_ For Congressional Globe, thirty-tive thousand five hundred and thirty- Cong-mmol,,,] two dollars. Globe- For reporting and printing the proceedings in the Daily Globe for the first session of the fortieth Congress, twenty-one thousand two hundred and dfty dollars. For the usual additional compensation to the—reporters of the Senate Additional for the Congressional Globe for reporting the proceedings of the Senate °°’¤P°¤”“°¤ *° for the first session of the fortieth Congres, eight hundred dollars each, r°p°rm°' four thousand dollars. For one complete set of the Congressional Globe and Appendix for Globe and Apeach senator in the fortieth Congress, who has not already received them: P°°dl"i jim *° Provided, however, That any senator who has already, as a member of °°f·v,;:i;,_ iS` the House of Representatives, received a portion of a set of the Congressional Globe shall only be entitled to receive, as such senator, the additional volumes required to complete one full set, nine thousand three hundred and seventy-five dollars. For paying the publishers of the Congressional Globe and Appendix, Globe and Apaccording to the number of copies taken, one cent for every five pages P°“d"‘ exceeding three thousand, including the indexes and laws of the United States, fifteen thousand dollars. For clerks to committees, pages, horses, and carryalls, fifty-Eve thou- clsrkstoooinsand seven hundred and fifty dollars. ml“°°*• &°- For capitol police, twenty-Eve thousand five hundred dollars. Capitol police. For expenses of heating and ventilating apparatus, twenty-tive thou- Heating and sand dollars_ ventilating. For miscellaneous items, thirty thousand dollars. Miscellaneous. For compensation and mileage of members of the House of Representa— Psy and mile tives and delegates from Territories, one million one hundred thousand WY °f '°l"°°°“‘ dollars, *“°"°’· *">’· For compensation of the officers, clerks, messengers, and others receiving of owen, KD annual salary in the service of the House of Representatives, viz: Clerk °l°"k’· °· of the House of Representatives, four thousand three hundred and twenty