Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/341

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. Crr. 174. 1910. 317 dogg; pay of engineer and janitor for Memorial Hall, nine hundred C0§`,“,{'¤u*g,_°iV*‘*°“s· For pay of printer at headquarters, United States Military Academly, one thousand five hundred dollars; or peg of one assistant printer at headquarters, United States Military cademy, one thousand dollars; For pay of one j anitress, Memorial Hall, six hundred dollars; I For pay of one master mechanic, one thousand eight hundred dol- US; For pay of attendant and skilled photographer in the department of drawing, one thousand one hundred dollars; For pay of one typewriter, copyist, and attendant in char e of the library in the department of law, seven hundred and fifty d§lars; For pay of one stenographer and typewriter in the adjutant’s office, one thousand dollars; For pay of one overseer of the waterworks, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For pay of one engineer of steam, electric, and refri erating apparatus for the cadet’s mess, eight hundred and forty do§ars; · For pay of one copyist, typewriter, and atten ant in the department o modern languages, seven hundred and fifty dollars; For pay of one mechanic and attendant skilled in the operation necessary for the preparation of lectures and of material in the department of drawing, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For pay of j anrtor for bachelor officers’ quarters, six hundred dollars ; For pay of one chief engineer of power plant, two thousand four hundred dollars; For pay of three engineers for power plant, three thousand six hundred dollars; For pay of two oilers for power plant, one thousand four hundred and forty dollars; For pay of one attendant in the department of philosophy for the handling of models and materials used in the instruction of cadets, four hundred and eighty dollars; For pai of one copyist, typewriter, and attendant in the department of Eng is and history, seven hundred and fiftyldollars; For pay of one boo binder at headquarters, mted States Military Academy, one thousand two hundred dollars; For pay of two book sewers in bindery, at thirty dollars per month each, seven hundred and twenty dollars; For ay of one skilled pressman in the printing office, headquarters, Unitedp States Military Academy, one thousand dollars; All the money hereinbefore appropriated for pay of the Military Academy shall be disbursed and accounted for by officers of the Pay De artment as pay of the Military Academy and for that purpose shrill constitute one fund. Cu max uw For current and ordinary expenses as follows: me wg; “ For the expenses of the mem ers of the Board of Visitors, one thou- °°“'°° W"' sand five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary; d gontingencies for superintendent of the academy, two thousand $¤v¤¤¤*°¤d°¤*- o ars; Repairs and improvements, namely: Timber, planks, boards, R°P¤i’*· °‘°· joists, wal] strips, laths, shingles, slate, tin, sheet lead, zinc, nails, screws, locks, hmges, glass, paints, turpentine, oils, varnish, brushes, stone, brick, flag, lime, cement, plaster hair, sewer and drain pitpe, blasting powder, fuse, iron, steel, tools, machinery, mantels, and other similar materials, renewing roofs, and for pay of architect overseer and citizen mechanics, andrlabor emplo ed upon repairs and improvements that can not be done by enlisted, men, fort thousand dollars; For fuel and apparatus, namely: Coal, wood)? charcoal, stoves, ’°°‘·°“’·· grates, heaters, furnaces, ranges and fixtures, fire bricks, clay, sand,