Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 32 Part 1.djvu/479

 FIFTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Suss. I. Ch. 1300. 1902. 413 For pay of one librarian, two thousand five hundred dollars; For pay of librarian’s assistant, one thousand dollars; For pay of one superintendent of gas works, one thousand five hundred dollars; _ For pay of engineer of heating and ventilating ap aratus for the academic buildin, the cadet barracks and oiHce building, cadet hospital, chapel, and philosophical building, including the library, one thousand five hundred dollars; For pay of assistant engineer of same, one thousand dollars; For pay of eleven firemen, six thousand six hundred dollars; For pay of one draftsman in department of civil and military engineering, one thousand dollars; or pay of mechanic and attendant skilled in the technical preparations necessary to chemical and electrical lectures and to the instruction in mineralogéy and geology, one thousand dollars; For pay o mechanic assistant in department of natural and experimental p ilosophy, one thousand dollars; hrlgor pay of custodian of new academy building, one thousand dol- 7 For pay of one electrician, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of one civilian plumber, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of assistant plumber, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For pay of one scavenger, at sixty dollars a month, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For compensation of chapel organist, two hundred dollars; For pay of keeper of post cemetery, nine hundred dollars; ~ d gpr pay of eng1neer· and janitor for Memorial Hall, nine hundred o rs; For pay of printer at headquarters United States Military Academy, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of one janitress, Memorial Hall, six hundred dollars; For pay of one master mechanic, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of attendant and skilled photographer· in the department of drawing, one thousand dollars; In all, to civilians employed at Military Academy, thirty-six thousand two hundred and forty dollars. ` For current and ordinary e nses, as follows: C“"°“‘°*P°”°”· For ex nses of the Boarilphf Visitors, including mileage, three ”°“"‘ °f '““°"°* thousand dgllars; d Contingencies for Superintendent of the Academy, one thousand S“*’°“"°°“°°“‘* ollars; Repairs and improvements, namely: Timber, planks, boards, joists, R°"“*”·°‘°· wall strips, laths, shingles, slate, tin, sheet lead, zinc, nails, screws, locks, hinges, glass, parnts, turpentine, oils, varnish, brushes, stone, brick, fla, lime, cement, plaster, hair, sewer and drain pipe, blasting powder, Fuse, iron, steel, tools, machinery, mantels, and other similar materials, renewing roofs, and for pay of architect ovcrseer and citizen mechanics, and labor employed upon replairs and improvements that can not be done by enlisted men, t irty thousand dollars; . For fuel and apparatus, namely: Coal. wood, charcoal, stoves, grates, '“°‘- °“’· heaters, furnaces, ranges and fixtures, lire bricks, clay, sand, and for repairs of steam heating apparatus, grates, stoves, heaters. ranges. and furnaces, mica, thirty thousand dollars; ' For gas pipes, gas and electric fixtures. electric lamps, and lighting supplies, lamp—posts, gasomcters and retorts, and annual repairs of the same, two thousand five hundred dollars; d For fuel for cadets’ mess hall, shops, and laundry, four thousand ollars; For postage and telegrams, two hundred dollars;  “‘° *1** For stationery, namely: Blank books, paper, envelopes, cauills, steel S*¤¤°¤¤¤’Y· pens, rubbers, 818885, pencils, mucilage. wax, wafers, fo ders, fas-