FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 210. 1893. 663 RENT on Cover Rooms; For rent of court rooms United States Rm- ' courts, being for deficiencies on account of fiscal years as follows: For eighteen hundred and ninety-three, thirty-five thousand dollars. For eighteen hundred and ninety-two, sixteen thousand dollars. PUBLIC PRINTING AND BINDING. biggiggc rrintingand For public printing and binding, and for paper for the public printing, including the cost of printing the debates and proceedings of Congress in the Congressional Record, and for lithographing, mapping, and engraving for both Houses of Congress, including the salaries or compensation of all necessary clerks or employees, for labor (by the day, piece, or contract), and for all the necessary materials which may be needed in the prosecution of the work, four hundred and seventy thousapd dollars; and from this sum printing and binding may be done as fo lows: For the Treasury Department, seventy-ive thousand dollars. Allomem. For the Department of the Interior, seventy-five thousand dollars. For the Post-Oiiice Department, forty-five thousand dollars. To enable the Public Printer to continue operations under the joint S*¤¤•s¤· resolution approved February sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, Vol- 22, p- 637- for the removal and storage of certain property of the Government mentioned therein, five thousand dollars To make the daily wages of Stephen Caldwell, laborer, and Samuel S“§n¤vl¤;g)bC¤¤v¤¤é Robinson and William Madden, messengers on night duty, three dol- wniizm ulhiizilim lars and sixty cents per day during the session of the Fifty-second Congress, two hundred and eighty dollars and eighty cents. SENATE. Sente- For compensation of the officers, clerks, messengers, and others in cemmgux °**· the service of the Senate, for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and' ` ninety-three, twenty-three thousand and eighty dollars. For stationery and newspapers, one thousand five hundred dollars. S¤¤i<>¤¤ry· ew- For miscellaneous items, exclusive of labor, ten thousand dollars. Miscellaneous. For expenses of inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, rnquines. twenty-five thousand dollars. For miscellaneous items, exclusive of labor, for the fiscal year eight- Mi¤¤¤¤=¤~·¤¤¤- een hundred and ninety-two, ninety dollars and twenty-two cents. For expenses of inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, ¥¤¤¤¤*•=¤· gm] the fiscal year eighteen hundred and ninety-two, eight hundred o lars. For expenses of inquiries and investigations ordered by the Senate, for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and ninety, ninety-two dollars and ninety-seven cents. For miscellaneous items, Maltby building, one thousand dollars. Mvitby ¥·¤i¥<¤i¤¤· For repairs of Maltby building, eight hundred dollars. Repairs- For expenses of maintaining and equipping horses and mail wagons w:f,*;{1=;= °*“l mm for carrying the mails, one thousand five hundred and twenty dollars. ° ' T0 pay Charles Hanback, as extra compensation for services ren- g¤¤¤··_H·¤¤l>¤°l;3_ dered as assistant clerk of the Senate Committee on Pensions during t;..{.°$m° `°°"`°° the Fifty-second Congress, five hundred dollars. _ That John A. Hutchison, clerk to the late honorable John E. Kenna, g:Q‘;,$°§";g”‘;‘Q;,; deceased, a Senator from the State of West Virginia, be continued on mu. the pay roll of the Senate hom the tenth of January, eighteen hundred _ and ninety-three, during the residue of the second session of the Fifty- second Congress. T0 pay the widow of John G. Merritt, late messenger acting assistant {glu gififylxihow doorkeeper of the Senate, one month’s pay, at the salary he was receiv· tr. ym ing when deceased, one hundred and fifty dollars.