Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 16.djvu/280

 246 FORTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 251. 1870. Y¤*’°l*”° md For purchase and distribution of new and valuable seeds, twenty-five dl’°mb°°i°° °f thousand dollars. seeds. . . For expense of putting up the same, for labor, bagging, paper, twine, gum, and other necessary materials, five thousand dollars. • Experiments.! For labor on the experimental garden, and for flower·pots, repairs to E”*l°¤· &°· greenhouse and heating-apparatus, gravel forxwalks, and purchase of new plants, and seeds for the same, ten thousand dollars. Stationary, For stationery, two thousand dollars. l¤*?l» Ugh W For freight and charges, one thousand eight hundred dollars. pm"' °‘ For fuel, one thousand eight hundred dollars. For lights, five hundred dollars. For repairs of building, furniture, fences, and water, one thousand two hundred dollars. For keep of horses, fifteen hundred dollars. For new furniture, one thousand dollars. For cases for the department museum, one thousand five hundred dollars. For collecting and model[l]ing specimens of fruit, one thousand dol- Iars. For cases for the library, one thousand dollars. Periodicals, For foreign and domestic agricultural and scientific periodicals, two hun- ’For completing valuable sets of the same, two hundred and nfty dollars. For current publications and works of reference, five hundred dollars. Collections. For collections for the herbarium, one thousand dollars. Analysis. For chemicals and incidentals in analysis, furnaces, fine chemical apparatus, microscope, and Debasque saccharometer for laboratory, one thousand three hundred and fifty dollars. Appmgue, For philosophical apparatus, two hundred and fifty dollars. Minerals and For collection of minerals and ores, one hundred dollars. °\'°¤· For incidental and miscellaneous items, two thousand dollars. For paper, twine, gum, and necessary materials for folding room, tive hundred dollars. Post-Omoo POST—OF FICE DEPARTMENT. Department. pay of pm, For compensation of the Postmaster·General, eight thousand dollars; N¤§t°l`·G°¤9ml» three assistant postmasters-general, at three thousand five hundred dollars xmgzlgasgz each; superintendent of money—order system, three thousand dollars; suohlefs of divis- perintendent of foreign mails, three thousand dollars; chief of division of l°“· °l°'l*’· G"- dead-letter office, two thousand five hundred dollars; chief clerk, two thousand two hundred dollars; three chief clerks, at two thousand dollars each; additional to one clerk- of class four, as disbursing clerk, two hundred dollars; twelve clerks of class four, fifty-one clerks of class three, forty-five clerks of class two, fifty clerks of class one; fifty female clerks, at nine hundred dollars each; ten folders, seven thousand two hundred dollars; one messenger, at eight hundred and forty dollars; and four assistants, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; nine watchmen, at 137], cp, up seven hundred and twenty dollars each; fifteen laborers, at seven hundred Post, p. mo. and twenty dollars each; twenty-five clerks in dead-letter office, nt eight hundred dollars each,- making in all, three hundred and thirty-two thousand four hundred and twenty dollars. f etationery, For stationery; nine thousand dollars; for fuel for the general post- “° · &°‘ office building, including the auditor’s office, seven thousand four hundred dollars; for gas, four thousand dollars; for plumbing and gas-fixtures, three thousand dollars; for telegraphing, three thousand dollars; for painting, one thousand five hundred dollars; for carpets, three thousand dollars; for furniture, three thousand five hundred dollars; for livery, seven hun-
 * g;"*8;·‘: '°"°" dred and fifty dollars.