Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 30.djvu/924

 886 FIFTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 187. 1899. For carpets and matting, including one thousand dollars for the office of the Auditor for the Post-Office Department, three thousand dollars. For furniture, including one thousand dollars for the office of the Auditor for the Post-Oiiice Department, two thousand five hundred dollars. For purchase, exchange, and keeping of horses and repair of wagons and harness to be used only for official purposes, one thousand three hundred dollars. For hardware, nve hundred dollars. For miscellaneous items, including one thousand five hundred dollars for the office of the Auditor for the Post-Oiiice Department, eleven thousand dollars, of which sum not exceeding nve hundred dollars may be expended for law books, books of reference, railway guides, city directories, and books necessary to conduct the business of the Department. nlm. For rent of a suitable building for the storage of post-office supplies, four thousand dollars. For rent of buildings for a period not exceeding the three months beginning July nrst, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, as follows: For topographer’s office, at the rate of one thousand five hundred dollars per annum; for a suitable building or buildings for the use of the Money·Order Office of the Post-Oflice Department, at the rate of eight thousand dollars per annum; for building for use of the Auditor tor the Post·Oiiice Department, at the rate of eleven thousand dollars per annum; for a suitable building for storing records of the Auditor for the Post—Office Department, at the rate of one thousand dollars per annum; in all, five thousand three hundred and seventy-five dollars, said rentals to be paid at the rates named only during such period of said three months as said buildings shall be respectively occupied for the purposes indicated. 0¤$¤i¤P¤¤*¤lG¤i<*€- For the publication of copies of the Official Postal Guide, including not exceeding one thousand five hundred copies for the use of the Executive Departments, twenty thousand dollars. P°°*·'°“‘° “‘“¥"‘· For miscellaneous expenses in the topograpl1er’s office in the preparation and publication of the post-route maps, twenty thousand dollars. And the Postmaster—General may authorize the sale of post-route maps to the public at cost of printing and ten per centum thereof added, the proceeds of such sales to be used as a further appropriation ior the preparation and publication of post-route maps. Y¤¤*=*¤° **"mP*>· For postage stamps for correspondence addressed abroad which is V<>1-2*% M40- not exempt irom postage under article eight of the Paris convention of the Universal Postal Union, five hundred and fifty dollars. hggepartment of Jus- Pay of Attorney- Ormcn or run Arromncr-GENERAL : For compensation of the §§,Q‘§§j};_§_§f,;‘}fj_“hT,’;j Attorney-General, eight thousand dollars; Solicitor—General, seven thousand dollars; tour Assistant Attorneys—General, at five thousand dollars each; Assistant Attorney-General of the Post-Oilice Department, four thousand dollars; Solicitor of Internal Revenue, four thousand nve hundred dollars; Solicitor for the Department of State, four thousand five hundred dollars ; two assistant attorneys, at three thousand dollars each ; four assistant attorneys, at two thousand five hundred dollars each ; assistant attorney, two thousand dollars; assistant attorney, in charge of dockets, two thousand five hundred dollars ; law cmks. clerk and examiner of titles, two thousand seven hundred dollars ; chief clerk and ex officio superintendent of the building, two thousand five hundred dollars ; private secretary to the Attorney-General, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars ; stenographer to the Solicitor-General, one thousand six hundred dollars : three stenographic clerks, at one thousand six hundred dollars each; two law clerks. at two thousand dollars each; seven clerks of class four; chief of division of accounts, two thousand five hundred dollars; attorney in charge of pardons, two