Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/1242

 1218 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Srzss. III. Ch. 237. 1911. eighty dollars each; laborer, four hundred dollars; in all, seventy- two thousand eight hundred dollars. _ _ _ I·¤¤*!· For books for forary, current educational periodicals, other current publications, and completing valuable sets of per1od1cals, mcludmg gaHment in advance for subscriptions to publicatrons, five hundre o ars. _ _ Br>¤¤i¤lr•1>¤r¤. For collecting statistics for special reports and circulars of mforma— tion, four thousand dollars. _ _ Disfdgig-“¤8 ¤¤¢¤· For the urchase, distribution, and exchandge of educational docume ments, and) for the collection, exchange, an cataloguing of educa- books, articles of school furniture and models of school burldmgs illustrative of foreign and domestic systems and methods of education, and for repairing the same, two thousand five hundred dollars. c:¤r>~{*gc·*¤¤d¤¤* ¤* 01*1*101: or- Tram Surnnmrnnnmm or mn Carrror. BUILDING Ann pm" Gaourmsz Su eriutendent of the Capitol Building and Grounds, •S1X thousand dolliirs; chief clerk two thousand dollars; chief electrical engineer, three thousand dollars; crvrl engineer, two thousand four hundred dollars; two draftsmen, at one thousand two hundred dollars each; clerk, one thousand six hundred dollars; stenographer and typewriter, one thousand dollars; compensation to disbursing clerk one thousand dollars; memenger; person in charge of the heating of the Supreme Court and central portion of the Capitol, one thousand dollars; laborer in charge of water—closets in central portion of the Capitol six hundred and  dollars; seven laborers for cleaning Rotunda, corridors, Dome, an old libra portion of Capitol, at six hundred and sixty dollars each; two laiborers in charge of public _ closets of the House of Representatives and in the terrace, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each; bookkeeper and accountant, one thousand eight hundred dollars, and one stenographer at seven hundred and twenty dollars; in all, thirty thousand four hundred and eighty dollars. °°°“°¤°”*°*P°'”°’* Cpmrnonm nxrnusns Dnranmnm or rnn Irrrnmon: The follplwing sums, which shall be so apportioned as to prevent dehciencies erern, name y: · r··¤¤smm,m. For- contingent exigenses of the office of the Secretary of the Interior and the bureaus, offices, and buildings of the Interior Department, including seven thousand five hundred dollars for the Civil Service Commission: For fumiture, carpets, ice, lumber, hardware, dry goods, advertrsmg, telegraphing, expressage, wagons, and harness, motor_ trucks, food and shoerng of orses, diagrams, awnings, constructing model and other cases and furniture, and other absolutely necessary expenses, including fuel and lights, typewriting machines ping exchange of same. one · hundred and twenty-two thousand o ars. B'°*“°°°'Y·°‘°· For· stationery, including tags, labels, index cards, cloth—lined wrappers, and specimen bags, printed in the course of manufacture, and such printe envelopes as are not supplied under contracts made by the Postmaster General, for the Department of the Interior and its several bureaus and offices, including not to exceed five thousand dollars for the Civil Service Commission, sixty-nine thousand five _ hundred dollars. B°°k¤·°°°· For professional and scientilic books, law books and books to complete broken sets, periodicals, directories, and lother books of réeflzirence relating to the business of the department, one thousand o ars,_of which sum two hundred and fifty dollarsmay be used for the Civil Serv1ce_Comm1ssion. R¤¤¢· F Foééept otgdbiérldings for the Department of the Interior, namelyi Mpsi _ ogrc urvey, twenty-nine thousand two hundred dollars; tional rooms for the engraving and printing divisions of the
 * tional apparatus and apphances, text—books, and educatronalreference