Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/426

 396 FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 130. 1881, V ing feeding and shoeing, and for wagons, harness, and repairs of the same six thousand dollars. For ice, buckets, tile-holders, book-rests, labonhclocks,1 and repairs of the same and for care of grounds seventeen thousand five hundred dollars; ten thousand dollars of this sum to be expended for shelving and iile-holders in the Second Auditor’s Office. For coal, wood, grates, grate-baskets and fixtures, stoves and fixtures, blowers, coal—hods, hearths, shovels, tongs, pokers, matches, and matchsafes nine thousand dollars. For gas drop-lights and tubing, gas-burners, brackets and globes, candles, lanterns, and wicks, seventeen thousand dollars. For carpets, oil-cloth, and matting, and repairs, cleaning, and laying of the same, eight thousand dollars. For desks, tables, and chairs, and shelving for file-rooms, and cases, repairs of furniture, boxes, rugs, chaircovers and caning, cushions, cloth for covering desks, locks, screws, hand saws, turpentine, and varnish, thirty thousand dollars. For washing towels, brooms, brushes, crash, cotton, cloth, cane, chamois-skins, clusters, iiour, keys, lye, matches, nails, oil, powders, sponge soap tacks wall-paper and for repairs of machinery baskets spittoons, files, wager-coolers, tumblers, ice-picks, bowls anrhpitchers, traps, thermometers, ventilators, towels, awnings and fixtures, alcohol, window-shades and fixtures, wire screens, hernming towels, axes, bellows, chisels, canvas, candlesticks, door and window fasteners, bells and bellpulls, hammers, mallets, leather, gum and other belting, stencil-plates, Eools, whletstones, wire and zine, and other absolutely necessary expenses, , wenty thousand dollars. Independent INDEPENDENT TREASURY. tI‘6$l·SIIl`y. Onnron on Assrsrimm Tnnnsunnn AT Bnrrmonn.-For assistant c,,,,k,,_ ,,,1,, ,,,,,m_* treasurer, four thousand five hundred dollars; for cashier, two thousand five hundred dollars; for three clerks at one thousand eight hundred dollars each fo; two clerks at one thousand four hundred dollars each; for wo c er s a one. ousand two hundred dollars each- one messenger eight hundred and forty dollars; three vault watchmen, two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars; in all, twenty thousand six hundred. e dollars. urg;’*’l:*f**;;0;*:$¤:· OFFICE OF THE Assrszunr TREASURER Air Bostroiv.-—For aSSiSi¤· ,,,,,,kB_ md 0,,,mj ant treasurer, five thousand dollars; for chief clerk, two thousand HVB hundred dollars; paying-teller, two thousand five hundred dollars; assisglagit payingitelleir, gwg phousand dollars; chief interest clerlk, tvs; an ve un re _ dollars ·‘ -t11 th ci hundred dollars; first bookkeeper, Idhldlijdgidsgndldegdd huddsjddollads; second bookkeeper, depositors’ accounts, one thousand five hundred dol- 3;;; specxedplerk, pine thousand ilgedhundred dollars; assistant1Sl>G<>£<; r, ne thousand our un re ollars· clerk one thousan eig hundred dollars; two coupon clerks, at one, thousand four hundred dollars each; two clerks, one thousand two hundred dollars each; assistant bookkeeper, eight hundred dollars; two clerks, at one thousand dollars each; assistant currency-redemption clerk, one thousand one hundred dollars; messenger and chief watchmen, one thousand and sixty dollars; two watchmen, at eight hundred and nfty dollars each; in all, _ thirty-six thousand and sixty dollars. mgg€’¤zeFiU°f¤¤g· OFFICE OF ASSISTANT TREASURER AT GHICAGO.—FOP assiswllli clerks, and O,i§mj UYGGISUPBY, four thousand five hundred dollars; for cashier, two thwsand five hundred dollars; for paying-teller, one thousand eight hundred dollars; for bookkeeper and receiving-teller, at one thousand ive hundred dollars each; for two clerks, at one thousand two hundred dollars each; for one messenger, eight hundred and forty dollars; and one g;d$§§Y£3££§§€D élundjreg and twenty dollars; in all, fifteen thousand an six y dollars.