Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/226

 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 174. 1894. 197 For collecting statistics for special reports and circulars of informa- Si=·¢i¤fi¤¤- tion, two thousand [ive hundred dollars. For the purchase, distribution, and exchange of educational docu- Dl¤°*ib“*i¤S d°¤¤· ments, and for the collection, exchange, and cataloguing of educational mm; m' apparatus and appliances, text-books and educational reference books, articles of school furniture, and models of school buildings illustrative of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education, and for procuring anthropological instruments of precision, and for repairing the same, two thousand five hundred dollars. Onnrcm on Commssxonnu or Riunnonnsz For Commissioner, four Q;>¤¤¤i¤ i¤¤¤r of thousand five hundred dollars; bookkeeper, two thousand dollars; Bmw3ds` assistant bookkeeper, one thousand eight hundred dollars; one clerk of class one; and one assistant mes enger; in all, ten thousand two hundred and twenty dollars. For examination of books and accounts of certain subsidized rail- Examining b¤¤k¤. road companies, and inspecting roads, shops, machinery, and equip °t°' ments of same, one thousand dollars. Ormcn on run Anonirncr OF run CAPITOL: For Architect, tour .t$r¤¤¤*¤·¤*¤f¢¤•><1¤v— thousand five hundred dollars; one·clerk of class four; one draftsman, I ‘ one thousand eight hundred dollars; compensation to disbursing clerk, one thousand dollars; one assistant messenger; person in charge of the heating of the Congressional Library and Supreme Court, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; one laborer in charge of water—closets in central portion of the Capitol, six hundred and sixty dollars; three laborers for cleaning rotunda, corridors, and dome, at six hundred and sixty dollars each; two laborers in charge of public closets of the House of Representatives and in the terrace, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; seven watchmen employed on the-Capitol grounds, at eight hundred and forty dollars each; in all, twenty thousand six hundred and forty-four dollars. _ Orman or run Drnncron or run Gnonocrcxr. Srmvnr: For G°°‘°g’°“‘S""°Y· Director, five thousand dollars; chief clerk, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; chief disbursing clerk, two thousand four hundred dollars; librarian, two thousand dollars; one photographer, two thousand dollars; three assistant photographers, one at nine hundred dollars, one at seven hundred and twenty dollars, and one at four hundred and eighty dollars; two•clerks of class one; one clerk, one thousand dollars; four clerks, at nine hundred dollars each; tour copyists, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; one watchman, eight hundred and forty dollars; four watchmen, at six hundred dollars each; one janitor, six hundred dollars; four messengers, at four hundred and eighty dollars each; in all, thirty-one thousand three hundred and ninety dollars. The Secretary of the Interior may hereafter authorize one of the A·=*i¤8Di¤¤*•¤· geologists to act as Director of the Geological Survey in the absence of that ofncer. For contingent expenses of the office of the Secret ary of the Interior c¤¤e.n.z¤¤¢¤¤v¤¤¤·¤ and the bureaus, offices, and buildings of the Interior Department, including the Civil Service Commission: For furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, telegraphing, expressage, wagons and harness, food and shoeing for horses, diagrams, awnings, constructing model and other cases, cases for drawings, file-holders, repairs of cases and furniture, and other absolutely necessary expenses, including fuel and lights, seventy-four thousand five hundred dollars. For stationery for the Department of the Interior and its wveral s°““°"°'y‘ bureaus and offices, including the Civil Service Commission and the Geological Survey, fifty-two thousand five hundred dollars. For professional and scientific books and books to complete broken B°°k°· sets, five hundred dollars. For rent of buildings for the Department of the Interiornnamely: R°‘"· For the Bureau of Education, four thousand dollars; Geological Survey, ten thousand dollars; Indian Onice, six thousand dollars; storage