Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 43 Part 1.djvu/182

 SIXTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 183. 1924. 151 clerk, $1,520; janitor, $1,010. Civil Service——clerk, $2,360; janitor, $1,,010. Revision of the Laws-—clerk, $3,000; janitor, $1,010. Rivers and Harbors—clerk, $2,880; assistant clerk, $2,150; janitor, $1,310. Roads-clerk, $2,360; janitor, $1,010. Rules-clerk, $2,360, assistant clerk, $1,830; janitor, $1,010. Territories—clerk, $2,360; janitor, $1,010. War C1aims—clerk, $2,880; assistant clerk, $1,520; janitor, $1,010. _Ways and Means——c1erk, $3,600; assistant clerk and stenogra her, $2,360; assistant clerk, $2,250; janitors——one $1,310, one $1,010. World War Veterans’ Legislation—clerk, $2,880; assistant clerk, $2,150. ormcrx or SERGEANT A·r ARMS. Sergeant at Arms, $6 500; De ut Ser ant at Arms, $2,880; dS°"°°“‘,,f, “‘ Mms; cashier $4,000; two bookkeepers, Et $2,640g§aeh; Deputy Sergeant Plggi Mmmm at Arms in charge of pairs, $2,150; pair clerk and messenger, $2,150; messenger, $1,730; stenographer and typewriter, $1,200; skilled laborer, $1,140. · _ Police Force, House Office Building, under the Sergeant at Arms: B§§’,l`§,°g_H°“° °m°° ‘ Lieutenant, $1,520; nineteen privates, at $1,360 each. ormon or rrm noonxnnrna. Doorkeeper, $5,000; special employee, $2,040; superintendent of ,,,?,1°§§l§§,f§g,,§,‘§§§i,,‘?} House press gallery, $2,240; assistant to the superintendentof the M °°*‘°' °m¤*°Y°°°· House press gallery, $1,520; janitor, $2,040; messengers-—·seventeen at $1,500 each, fourteen on soldiers’ roll at $1,520 each; laborersseventeen at $1,010 each, two known as cloakroom men at $1,140 each, eight known as cloakroom men, one at $1,010, and seven at $890 each; two female attendants in ladies’ retiring rooms at $1,440 F1 each; superintendent of folding room, $2,880; foreman of folding p;0§’.,,,di?° mm °m` room, $2,340; chief clerk to superintendent of folding room, $2,150; three clerks at $1,940 each; janitor, $1,010; laborer, $1,010; thirty- one folders, at $1,200 each; shipping clerk, $1,520; two drivers, at P $1,140 each; two chief pages at $1,140 each; two telephone pages, °‘°°'°t°' at $1,440 each; two floor managers of telephones (one for the minority), at $2,400 each; assistant messenger in charge of telephones, $1,830; forty-two pages during the session at $3,30 per day each; laborer, $1,100; superintendent of document room, $3.050; Dwummtmmm. assistant superintendent of document room, $2,460; clerk, $2,040;v1¤ye¤· assistant clerk, $1,940; eight assistants, at $1,600 each; janitor, $1,220; messenger to pressroom, $1,310. srmcnu. AND mrmonrrr mzm-Lornns. ,_¤§g;;g¤;S={¤d mi¤¤ri¢v Special employee (Joel Grayson) in the document room, $2,740. I°°'°""‘”°“· Six minority employees at $2,150 each, authorized and named in Mi¤¤ri¢:r¤¤¤1>1¤s·¤¤s. the resolution of December 5, 1923. Assistant foreman of the folding room, authorized in the  in ‘°m”8 resolution of September 30, 1913, at $4.:6 per day. $ Laborer, authorized and named in the resolution of April 28, 1914, L°l’°'°”‘ 1,140. Laborer, authorized and named in the resolution of December 19, 1901, $1,140. I k mc, k I Clerk, under the direction of the Clerk of the House, named in the mg §w;l °t ° resolution of February 13, 1923, $2,740. Successors to any of the employees provided for in the five w,§,’,,°‘f‘““”°“*°‘S“° preceding paragraphs may be named by the House of Representatives at any time.