Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/1009

 FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 1635. 1907. 979 of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education, ahd for reppiring the same, two thousand five hundred dollars. FFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT or rim Cnrrror. BUILDING AND (,S*;P¤fi¤¤*¤¤•=¤¤ of GROUNDS: For Superintendent of the Capitol Building and Grounds, mw ’°i°` five_thousand dollars; chief clerk, two thousand dollars; chief electrical engineer, two thousand four hundred dollars; draftsman, one thousand dollars; assistant draftsman, eight hundred dollars; one clerk, one thousand four hundred dollars; stenographer and typewriter, one thousand two hundred dollars; foreman, one thousand two hundred dollars; compensation to disbursing clerk, one thousand dollars; one messenger; person in charge of the heating of the Supreme Court and central portion of the Capitol, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; laborer in charge of water-closets in central portion of the Ca itol, six hundred and sixty dollars; seven laborers for cleaning Rotunila, corridors, Dome, and old library portion of Capitol, 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; in all, twenty-four thousand four hundred and twenty-four dollars. _ CONTINGENT mxrmxsrzs, Dmanmmr or run INTERIOR1 For the °°“"“‘°“‘“‘*’°"“°*’· following sums, which shall be so apportioned as to prevent deficiencies therein, namely: For contingent expenses of the office of the Secretary of the Interior and the bureaus, offices, and buildings of the Interior Department, including six thousand five hundred dollars for the Civil Service Commission: For furniture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertising, telegraphing, expressage, wagons and harness, tood and shoeing o horses, iagrams, awnings, constructing model and other cases and furniture, and other absolutely necessary expenses, including fuel and lights, one hundred and five thousand dollars. _ For stationery, including tags, labels, index cards, cloth-lined tile S°"°'°“°"·°°°‘ wrappers, andbgpecimen bags, printed in the rourse of manufacture, and such prin envelopes as are not supplied under contracts made bv the Postmaster-General, for the Department of the Interior and its several bureaus and olliees. including not to exceed five thousand dollars for the Civil Service Commission, sixty thousand dollars. _ For professional and scientific books. law books, and hooks to com- B"°“·°“’· plete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and other books of reference relating to the business of the Department. one thousand dollars, of which sum two hundred and fifty dollars may be used for the Civil Service Commission. Rc t For rent of buildin s for the Department of the Interior, namely: °' For the Bureau of Edxucation, four thousand dollars: Geological Survey, twenty-nine thousand two hundred dollars; additional rooms for the engraving and printing divisions of the Geological Survey, one thousand two hundred dollars; storage of documents, one thousand dollars; Civil Service Commission, four thousand five hundred dollars; Patent Office model exhibit, nineteen thousand five hundred dollars; in all, fifty-nine thousand four hundred dollars. _ For postage stain s for the Department of the Interior and its P¤¤¤¤z¢¤¤¤v¤ bureaus, as requiredp under the Postal Union, to prepay postage on matter addressed to Postal Union countries, four thousand two hundred dollars. sunvnrons-GENERAL AND rnnm crnxxs, S“"°*’°‘“°“°’“‘· For snrvevor-general and ex officio secretary of the district of Alaska, *““““· four thousand dollars; clerks in his office, seven thousand dollars; in all, eleven thousand dollars.