Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/451

 FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 3514. 1906. 421 Secretary of War shall each year, in the annual estimates, report to Congress the number of persons so employed, their duties, and the amount paid to each. Orman or THE BUREAU or INsULAn Arnms: For law officer, four mf,;‘,'“"*' Am" 1**** thousand five hundred dollars; chief clerk, two thousand dollars; eight ` clerks of class four; three clerks of class three; eight clerks of class two; fifteen clerks of class one; thirteen clerks, at one thousand dollars each; fourteen clerks, at nine hundred dollars each; two messengers; two assistant messengers; five laborers; two charwomen; in all, eighty-seven thousand four hundred dollars. Co1·:T1Nc1¤NT Exrmusms or THE WAR DEPARTMENT! For purchase C°““”¤°“‘°*¥’°““°“· of professional and scientific books, law books, books of reference, periodicals, blank books, pamphlets, newspapers, maps; furniture and repairs to same; carpets, matting, oilcloth, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, sponges, fuel, gas and heating apparatus for and repairs to the buil ings (outside of the State, ar, and Navy Department building) occupied by The Military Secretar ’s Office, the Surgeon- General’s Ofhce, Pa master-General’s and Ordnance offices, Signal Oiiice and building flor signal stores and su lies, the depot quartermaster’s office, and the other offices of the War Department and its bureaus located in the Lemon Building; expenses of horses and wagons to be used only for oitlicial purposes; freight and express charges, temporary labor not to exceed one thousand dollars, and other absolutely necessary expenses, fifty thousand dollars. . ~ For stationery for the lVar Department and its bureaus and omces, S*¤¤°¤¤¤'· twenty-five thousand dollars. For rent of buildings for use of the War Department, as follows: R·=¤*· ~ For medical dispensa, Surgeon—General’s Office, one thousand dollars; for Ordnance andSignal offices, twoithousand five hundred dollars; for depot quartermaster’s office, two thousand five hundred dollars; for War Department, seven thousand two hundred dollars; for The Military Secretary’s Office, two thousand three hundred dollars; and for Bureau of Insular Affairs, two thousand eight hundred and twenty dollars; in all, eighteen thousand three hundred and twenty dollars. ‘ For postage stam for the War Department and its bureaus, as *’°*'°*¢°¤°*¤¤* required un er the lhlostal Union, to prepay posta e on matters addressed to Postal Union countries, five hundred dollars. ‘ • PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS. ,m*[,‘:;},Q;},(,‘;f"‘“*“¤“ Om;-rom or runmc BUILDINGS AND orcouxnsz For one assistant E"¤***°°'·**‘°""·°‘°· engineer, two thousand four hundred dollars; assistant and chief clerk, two thousand four hundred dollars; one clerk of class four; one clerk of class three; clerk and stenographer, one thousand four hundred dollars; one messenger; landscape gardener, two thousand dollars; surveyor and draftsman, one thousand five hundred dollars; in all, thirteen thousand nine hundred and forty dollars. For foremen, gardeners, mechanics, and laborers employed in the public grounds, thirty-one thousand two hundred dollars. ` For one sergeant of park Wutchmen, nine hundred and fifty dollars. w¤°°hm°“- For day watchmen as follows: One in Franklin Park; one ID Lafay- ette Park: two in Smithsonian Grounds; one in Judiciary Park; one in Lincoln Park and adjacent reservations; one at Iowa Circle; one at Thomas Circle and neighboring reservations; one at Washington Circle and neighboring reservations; one at Dupont Circle and neighboring reservations; one at McPherson and Farragut parks; one at Stanton Park and neighboring reservations; two at Henry and Seaton parks: one at Mount Vernon Park and adjacent reservations; one for