Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 23.djvu/432

 404 FOBTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. SEss. H. C11. 343. 1885. For washing and hemming towels, for the purchase of awnings and nxtures, alcohol, baskets, belting, bellows, bowls, brooms, buckets, brushes, canvas, crash, cloth, chamoisskins, door and window fasteners, dusters, flour, garden and street hose lace-leather, lye, nails, oil, plants, picks, pitchers, powders, stencil-plates spittoons, soap, sponge, tacks, traps, thermometers, tools, towels, tumblers, wire, and zinc, and for blacksmithing, repairs of machinery, removal of rubbish, sharpening tools, and other absolutely necessary articles, twelve thousand dollars. COLLECTING INTERNAL REVENUE. Collectors a ii d For salaries and expenses of collectors and deputy collectors, one milld°P¤’°Y ¤<>U¤<=*- ion eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars: Provided, however, That g,';,? “‘°°"‘*1 ’°" the number of deputy collectors, gaugers, storekeepers, and clerks em- · p,Q,,,;,,_ ployed in the collection of internal revenue shall not be increased, nor shall the salary of said officers and employees be increased beyond the salaries paid during the last fiscal year. pay of ,g,,m,, For salaries and expenses of agents and surveyors, for fees and eximrvoyors, src. penses of gaugers, for salaries of storekeepers, and for miscellaneous expenses, two million one hundred thousand dollars; and hereafter storekeepers, or storekeepers and gaugers, who are assigned to distil- 05,,,,,, ;,, wm. leries whose registered capacity is twenty bushels or less, shall receive mission not to ex- two dollars per day for their services; and no collector in any district ged ¤¤<>¤ tlxmtlgy shall recommend, nor shall there be appointed or commissioned, more um£°b;r° °:°t;mu$ deputy collectors, storckeepers, storekeepers and gaugers, gaugers, inengaged in,, H 3 spectors, or other officers, or allowed to remain in commission more of uecessaryfor duty. any of said officers, at any one time, than fifteen per centum in excess of the number actually engaged in performing duty at the time and indispensably necessary for the performance of said duty: Provided further, That the compensation of the chief of the internal-revenue agents Ccmpgnsaticnof shall not exceed ten dollars per day, and of the other agents not exrevenue agents ceeding seven dollars per day each; and for perdiem in hen of subsist- Ii¤if¤d· ence, while traveling on duty, said agents shall receive at a rate to be glxed by the Secretary of the Treasury, not exceeding three dollars per y. INDEPENDENT crREasURY. A,,;,,,,,, tm,. Ormcn or Assrsu-sm- Tnmsunuu AT Bnrmoan. For assistant u re r, Baltimore: treasurer, four thousand five hundred dollars; for cashier, two thousand ¤l*¤k¤» °*¢· five hundred dollars; for three clerk, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each ; for two clerks, at one thousand four hundred dollars each ; for two clerks, at one thousand two hundred dollars each; one clerk, at one thousand dollars; one messenger, eight hundred and forty dollars; three vault watchmen, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; in all, twenty-one thousand six hundred dollars. Assistant mu- Omucm or THE Assxsraur TREASURER AT B0s·roN.-For assistant wer, B 0 ¤ t ¤ u; treasurer, five thousand dollars; for chief clerk, two thousand ive hun- °l°"‘°· °*°· dred dollars; paying-teller, two thousand five hundred dollars; assistant paying-teller, two thousand two hundred dollars; vault clerk, two thousand dollars; receiving·teller, two thousand dollars; ilrst bookkeeper, one thousand eight hundred dollars; second bookkeeper, one thousand four hundred dollars; spccie clerk, one thousand eight hundred dollars; assistant specie clerk, one thousand five hundred dollars; money clerk, one thousand five hundred dollars; coupon clerk and redemption clerk, at one thousand four hundred dollars each; receipt clerk and general clerk, one thousand two hundred dollars each · assistant redemption clerk, one thousand one hundred dollars; two clerks, at one thousand dollars each; one clerk, eight hundred dollars; messenger and chief watchman, one thousand and sixty dollars; two watchmen, at eight hundred and fifty dollars each; in all,  thousand and sixty dollars. -