Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/1219

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 237. 1911. 1195 sand three hundred dollars; suppressing counterfeiting and other crimes four hundred dollars; ex enses of RevenueCutter Service, two thousand one hundred doll)ars; Public Health and Marine- Hosp1tal_ Service, one thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars; Quarantine Service, five hundred an ninety dollars; preventin the of epidemic diseases, two hundred and sixtgl dollars;gLifeavrng Service, one thousand four hundred dollars; el, lights, and water for public buildrngs, four thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; general expenses of public buildings, three thousand five hundred and fifty dollars; collectin the revenue from customs, thutyl-seven thousand three hundred dollars ; miscellaneous expenses of co ectmgmternal revenue, eighteen thousand seven hundred dol- ~ lars· and for expenses of collecting the corporation tax, three thou-,  one hundred   fifty dollars; and said sums so deducted shall be . credited to and constitute together with the first-named sum of fifty thousand dollars, the total appropriation for stationery for the Treasury Department and its several bureaus and ofslices for the fiscal yearn11§teenfl;1crm<;red ang twelpre. 1 Pu h I I m erea rt e urc asc o statione for the Interns ·Revenue Serv- _R’° '“°“ °' “ ' ice shall be mage under the dnectieliiri of the Secretary of the Treas- ml emma Bmw. ury as m the case of other branches of the public service under the Treasury Department. _ For postage required to prepay matter addressed to Postal Union P°”°‘“°‘ countries, and for postage for the Treasury Department, one thousand, twp hundred dollars. h 18 books ‘ Nwséspm m" . · or newspa rs, newspaper c_`p ings, w _, city directories, ‘ ‘ and other bookli of reference relatihg to the business of the depart- _ ment, one thousand·dollar·s. _— — · — · g » » i _ methods of a§hnn1s' tration, with a view to greater economy in the‘_¤¤¤v¤ ¤¤¤¤¤·>¤¤· expenditure of public money, including necessag traveling expenses, in connection with special work, or obtaining of etter administrative methods in any branch of the service withm or under the Treasury Department, including the temporary employment of agents, stenographers, accountants, or other expert services either within or without the District of Columbia, seventy-five thousand dollars. For freight, expressage, telegraph and telephone service, seven thou- F¤¢¤¤¤¢- M- sand dollars. For lppnt of buildings, ’fifty-two thousand four hundred and eighty- “°“‘· six do rs. For purchase and exchange of horses and wagons, for office and mail H°”°’ ‘“" *'·‘“°“’· ervice, to be used only for oHicial purposes, car·e and subsistence of horses, including shoeing, and of wagons, harness, and repairs of the same, three thousand five hundred dollars. _ For purchase of file holders and file cases, six thousand dollars. l""°* For purchase of coal, wood, enigline oils and grease, grates, grate ’“°‘·°‘°· baskets and fixtures, blowers, co hods, coal shovels, pokers, and torigs, eleven thousand dollars. _ _ or purchase of as, electric current for lighting and power purposes, L*8““"$· gas and electricdlght fixtures, electric-light wiring and material, candles, candlesticks, dro lights and tubing, gas burners, gas torches, globes, lantems, and wiclgs, seventeen thousand dollars. _ For washir§ and hemming towels, for the purchase of awmngs and m°°°”‘”°°""· fixtures, win ow shades and fixtures, alcohol, benzine, turpentine, varnish, baskets, belting, bellows, bowls, brooms, buckets, rushes canvas, crash, cloth, chamois skins, cotton waste, door and winded fasteners, dusters; flower—garden, street, and engine hose; lace leather, lye, nails, oils, plants, picks, pitchers, powders, stencil plates, hand stamps, and repairs of same, stamp ink, spittoons, soap, matches, match safes, sponges, tacks, traps, thermometers, toilet paper, tools,
 * For invesf ation of accounts and records, and to secure better