Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 46 Part 1.djvu/1224

 SEV EN TY- FI RST CONGRESS. SEss. III. CH. 234. 1931. 1181 Successors to any of the employees provided for in the five pre- ceAp poi ntm ent of su e- ceding paragraphs may be named by the House of Representatives at any time. Office of majority floor leader : Legislative clerk, $3,960 ; clerk, $3,180 ; assistant clerk, $2,100 ; for official expenses of the majority lead er, a s aut horiz ed b y Hou se Re solu tion Numbe red 101, Seven ty- first Congress, adopted December 18, 1929, $2,000 ; in all, $11,240. Conference minority : Clerk, $3,180 ; legislative clerk, $3,060 ; assistant clerk, $2,100 ; janitor, $1,560 ; in all $9,900. The foregoing employees to be appointed by the minority leader. Two messengers, one in the majority caucus room and one in the Caucus room s mes- minority caucus room, to be appointed by the majority and minority sengers, whips, r espective ly, at $1 ,740 each, $3,480. POST OFFI CE Post office. Salaries : Postmaster, $5,000 ; assistant postmaster, $2,880 ; registry Postmaster, assist- four messengers (including ant, etc' and money-order clerk, $2,100 ; thirty- one to superintend transportation of mails) at $1,740 each ; substi- tute messengers and extra services of regular employees, when requi red, a t the rate o f not to exc eed $14 5 per month each, $1,240 laborer, $1,260 ; in all, $71,640. For the purchase, exchange, maintenance, and repair of motor vehicles for carrying the mails, $3,400. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES Salaries : Seven official reporters of the proceedings and debates of the House at $7,500 each ; assistant, John J. Cameron, $3,000 ; clerk, $3,360 ; six expert transcribers at $1,740 each ; janitor, $1,440 ; in all, $70,74 0. COMMITTEE STENOGRAPHERS o ther than Majority floor leader. Conference minority. Motor vehicles. Official reporters. Number, increased. Stenographers to Salaries : Four stenographers to committees, at $7,000 each ; janitor, committees. $1,440 ; in all, $29,440. Whenever the words " during the session " occur in the foregoing "Durin cthese ssion °' paragraphs they shall be co nstrued to mean the two hun dred and to mean 213 days . thirteen days from December 1, 1931, to June 30, 1932, both inclusive . CLERK HIRE, MEMBERS AND DELEGATES For clerk hire necessarily employed by each Member, Delegate, and Resident Commissioner, in the discharge of his official and representative duties, in accordance with the Act entitled "An Act to fix the co mpensa tion o f offi cers a nd empl oyees of the Legis lative Branch of the Government," approved June 20, 1929, $2,200,000 . CONTINGENT EXPENSES OF THE HOUSE For furniture and materials for repairs of the same, including not to exceed $22,500 for labor, tools, and machinery for furniture repair shops, $42,500 . For packing boxes, $4,500 . For miscellaneous items, exclusive of salaries and labor unless specifically ordered by the House of Representatives, including reimbursement to the official stenographers to committees for the amounts actually and necessarily paid out by them for transcribing hearings, and including materials for folding, $75,000 . For stenographic reports of hearings of committees special and select eoinluittees, $2 :x,000 . Clerk hire of Mem- bers, etc . Ante, p 38. U.S. C., Supp. IC, p. 5. Contingent expenses . Furnitu re, etc . Packing boxes . Miscellaneous items . Committee reporting.

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