Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 35 Part 1.djvu/260

 242 SIXTIETH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 186. 1908. machinery, or other appliances; piping, wiring, and construction moident to the installation of ap ratus, machinery, or appliances; furni- . ture for laboratories and ogaces, cases for apparatus, forty thousand dollars. R°P•*¤·°*°· For repairs and necessary alterations to buildings, one thousand dollars. ¥·•”°¤'°'¥· Toward the construction of a fire roof laborator to rovide addib¤(i1-gsiit M mw tional laborato space, to cost not exl)-eedinglone huridreci) and seventy- five thousand zdlars, under a contract w 'ch is hereby authorized therefor, fift thousand dollars. _ M*¤°°“**°°°'”- For fuel {br heat light, and power; office expenses, stationery, books and periodicals (subscriptions to periodica may be paid rn advance); travelin expenses; expenses of- the visiting committee; rmmuousr com- expenses of atten<Ence of American member at the meeting of the "‘"°°“‘ International Committee of Weights and Measures; traveling expenses of two delegates to the International Committee on Electrical Units and Standards, one of whom shall be an officer or employee of the Bureau of Standards; and contingencies of all kinds, fifteen thousand dollars. · B¤•¤¤·"•l¤·°*°· For grading, construction of roads and walks, piping grounds for water supply, lamps, wiring for lighting purposes, and other expenses incident to the improvement an care of grounds, three thousand dollars. · ¤¤¤¤¤¤¢¤°¢*P¢¤¤¢¤· Coxrmemxr mxrnusus, DEPARTMENT or Conmmwm AND Larson: For contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the offices and bureaus of the Department, including the A askan fur-seal fisheries and the Alaskan salmon fisheries services, for which appropriations for contingent and miscellaneous expenses are not specrli)call)y made, including the purchase ofxprofessional and scientific books, law books, books of reference, peri icals, blank books, pamphlets, maps, newspa rs (not exceeding two thousand five hundred ollars), stationery, g:;‘Dltl11‘6 and repairs to the same, car ets, matting, oilcloth, file cases, towels, ice, brooms, soap, s nges, ihel, lighting and heating; for the purchase, exchange, and)0 care of horses and vehicles, to be used only for official purposes; freight and express charges, postage to foreign · countries, telegraph and telephone service, typewriters, and addin machines, including their exchange; repairs to the building occupied by the offices of the Secretar of Commerce and Labor; stora of documents belonging to the Light-House Board, not to exceecfbne thousand five hundred dollars, and for storage of documents belon 'ng to the Bureau of Labor, not to exceed seven hundred and fifty dolgrs and all other miscellaneous items and necessary expenses not included in the foregoing, fifty thousand dollars. R¤¤¤~ For rent of buildings, and parts of buildings in the District of Columbia for the use of the Department of Commerce and Labor, fifty thousand dollars. ’°*“"’**'· JUDICIAL. §:{jggg;$ 0°“”· Suramrn Coeur: For the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, thirteen thousand dollars; and for eight associate justices, at twelve thousand Eve hundred dollars each; imma, For marshal of the Supreme Court of the United States, three thou— sand five hundred dollars; <‘1¤·rk¤<·>i¤—>¤i¤¤s- For stenographic clerk for the Chief Justice and for each associate justice of the Supreme Court, at not exceeding one thousand six hundred dollars each; in all, one hundred and thirtv thousand nine hundred dollars. ` €ir¤¤¤**i*¤¤¤¤*· Crnctrr comers: For twenty-nine circuit judges, at seven thousand _ _ dollars each, two hundred and three thousand dollars; °£g'_;§,g}'°°*‘°°¤’*¤ For nine clerks of circuit courts of appeals, at three thousand live hundred dollars each, thirty-one thousan five hundred dollars;