Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/455

 FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 132. 1881. 4,25 ble recommendation to the Committee on Appropriations the eighth day of February, eighteen hundred and eighty-one: To pay Franklin Temple for services as messenger in the chief clerk’s Fru.uk1iuTemp1e. office, the difference between the pay of a laborer received by him and that of a messenger, during the present Congress, nine hundred and sixty dollars. To pay John P. Maloney for services as messenger to the official re. JohnP.Ma1ouey. porters of debates from December first to fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty, at one thousand dollars per annum, thirty-eight dollars and four cents To pay George T. Rogers for services as clerk to the Select Committee G<¤<>*g<+T- R<>s<=r¤· on the Yorktown Centennial, two hundred dollars. To pay W. C. Garrard for services as clerk to the Committee on War- W. C. Gai-rant. Claims from April thirteenth to eighteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, six days at two thousand dollars per annum, thirty-two dollars and ninety-seven cents. To pay James A. Diiienbaugh, for clerical work to be done during the James A. Diff<>n- coming recess, as clerk to the Committee on Accounts, in completing b““€*‘· the records of sad committee, a sum equal to one month’s pay, one hundred and eighty dollars. To pay M. M. Herr for services as messenger to the Sergeant-at»Arms M. M. Hm. during a part of the second and all of the third session of the Forty- sixth Congress, seven hundred and ten dollars. To pay Adam Reisinger, for services as messenger in the Clerk’s office Adam Rominger. of the House during the present Congress, the difference between the pay of a laborer received by him and that of a messenger, nine hundred and sixty dollars. T0 pay H. Head for services as assistant clerk to the Committee on H- Heml- Elections from the sixth to the sixteenth of December, eighteen hundred and eighty, ten days, at six dollars per day, sixty dollars. To pay Charles E.'O’Connor for clerical aid rendered the Committee Cl1arlcsE.O’Conon Claims during the second and third sessions of the Forty-sixth Con- MR gross, the sum of five hundred dollars. To pay Beaufort C. Lee for services as laborer in the doorkeepeiis B<>=wfY>rt C.L<¤c·. department from October fifteenth to December thirty-first, eighteen hundred and seventy-seven, seventy-nve dollars. To pay to A. Johns, J. J. Gilbert, E. W. Grant, and C. J. Hayes, for GQ-, J°*é"’*»,, reporting done by them at the second session of the present Congress G;,,,,,?`,,;,,, ’(_ _,; upon bills duly audited by the Committee on Accounts, three hundred I~I;i,ym~;, and ninety dollars and seventy-five cents. To pay Charles Christian for services rendered as laborer in the office _ Ch=M‘l<>S Chfietof the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House from March fifth to June thirtieth, ‘““· eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, two hundred dollars. To enable the Clerk of the House to pay the following: To pay Samuel P. Ivins, junior, for the difference between what he _ Samuel P. Ivins, received as an annual messenger in the House post-office and what he J‘“"°"· would have received if he had been a session messenger, four hundred and thirteen dollars and twenty-nine cents. To pay James C. Saunders one montlrs pay as clerk to Committee on Jmws C- Saun- Ventilation of the Hall, one hundred and ei ghty-six dollars. ‘l°”· To pay A. W. C. Nowlan, Postmaster of the House of Representa A·W·0-N<>Wl¤¤- tives, the difference between the pay of postmaster and that of assistant postmaster for the period of time between the seventh of October, eighteen hundred and eighty and the fifteenth of December, eighteen hundred and eighty he having acted as Postmaster of the House during that time, ninety-two dollars and thirty-nine cents. _, _ To pay Edward F. Riggs for services in the Stationery-room, from and Edwardl - R'8»‘§¤· including November tenth, eighteen hundred and eighty to March gngth eighteen hundred and eighty-one, two hundred and seventy-six o ars.